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<pb facs="00058027_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/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
Stadiumpg. 3<lb/>
Panama Canalpg. 7<lb/>
X-Mas Assemblypg. 12<lb/>
ECU defeats UNC.pg. 17<lb/>
Vol. 53 No. 27<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
8 December 1977<lb/>
University officials meet,<lb/>
discuss visitation policy<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Univerisity administrators and<lb/>
city officials met last Friday to<lb/>
discuss a revision of the dorm<lb/>
visitation policy which, if propos-<lb/>
ed to the chancellor and approved,<lb/>
would take effect early next<lb/>
semester, according to Carolyn<lb/>
Fulghum, associate dean of<lb/>
student affairs.<lb/>
The meeting was composed of<lb/>
representatives of the offices of<lb/>
dean of men, the associate deans<lb/>
of student affairs, the university<lb/>
attorney, the campus police,<lb/>
representatives of the Greenville<lb/>
Police Department and District<lb/>
Attorney's office, and Greenville<lb/>
and university attorneys.<lb/>
"The meeting was called to<lb/>
discuss the visitation policy and<lb/>
see if any changes were needed.<lb/>
City officals were concerned<lb/>
because on some days, the oourt<lb/>
docket was composed mostly of<lb/>
persons arrested for trespassing<lb/>
in the dams.<lb/>
"There is also a question of<lb/>
whether a person is trespassing if<lb/>
they are an invited guest in<lb/>
someone's room after hours. My<lb/>
major ooncern is unescorted men<lb/>
in the women's dorms.<lb/>
"I feel that if a person is in a<lb/>
student's room with that<lb/>
student's permission, then<lb/>
neither person should be arrested<lb/>
either for trespassing or aiding an<lb/>
abeting trespassing Fulghum<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Fulghum said there is another<lb/>
legal question of whether a<lb/>
person can be arrested for<lb/>
violating a university policy, since<lb/>
the state of North Carolina does<lb/>
not necessarily consider an invit-<lb/>
ed guest in a student's room to be<lb/>
a trespasser.<lb/>
"Whatever plan, if any, is<lb/>
ever adopted will apply equally to<lb/>
males and females in accordance<lb/>
with Title IX Fulghum said.<lb/>
Faculty Senate supports<lb/>
SGA funded retreats<lb/>
By STEVE WILSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Faculty Senate adopted a<lb/>
resolution Tuesday that supports<lb/>
SGA-funded faculty-student re-<lb/>
treats, which have been held the<lb/>
past three years, but have not<lb/>
been alloted any funding so far<lb/>
this year by the SGA.<lb/>
The resolution was supported<lb/>
at the Faculty Senate by SGA<lb/>
Treasurer Craig Hales and Legis-<lb/>
lator Tim Sullivan. The retreats<lb/>
have been offered on a first-come<lb/>
first-served basis to both the<lb/>
departments and the students<lb/>
wishing to participate, according<lb/>
to Sullivan.<lb/>
The major criticism of the<lb/>
retreats, according to Ed Bean,<lb/>
Secretary of Academic Affairs, is<lb/>
that there is "not enough money<lb/>
left to adequately fund the<lb/>
Faculty-Student Retreats<lb/>
Mark Brinson, chairperson of<lb/>
?h� Camous Facilities Planning<lb/>
and Development Committee,<lb/>
spoke concerning the committee's<lb/>
involvement with the parking<lb/>
problem that exists on campus fa<lb/>
ECU faculty.<lb/>
Among proposals being con-<lb/>
sidered is the construction of a<lb/>
$900,000 level above the larger lot<lb/>
that now exists at the bottom of<lb/>
College Hill Drive.<lb/>
This proposed parking level<lb/>
would inaease faculty parking<lb/>
decal fees from the current $5 to<lb/>
an estimated $40. Anaher propo-<lb/>
sal being considered is the paving<lb/>
of the lot that now exists behind<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
The paving of the lot would<lb/>
allow more efficient use of the<lb/>
space, in the range of 300 spaces,<lb/>
acoording to Brinson. The final<lb/>
proposal being considered by the<lb/>
committee is to preserve the<lb/>
existing system, possibly making<lb/>
some parking regulations<lb/>
changes such as coding parking<lb/>
decals to specific lots.<lb/>
The Senate also adopted a<lb/>
resolution proposed by the Cre-<lb/>
dits Committee, which recom-<lb/>
mends that seven credit hours be<lb/>
the maximum namal load that a<lb/>
student may carry during a<lb/>
Summer School Session.<lb/>
Bob Nischan, of the Library<lb/>
Committee reported that due to a<lb/>
cut-back in funds, less money can<lb/>
be spent on serial publications<lb/>
this year. The committee is<lb/>
proposing miao-filming all of the<lb/>
library's serial holdings, except<lb/>
fa current issues. Opponents of<lb/>
this proposal oontend that miao-<lb/>
film mataial is difficult to use<lb/>
is a strain on the eyes. The<lb/>
oommittee is also proposing allo-<lb/>
cating funds fa serials by depart-<lb/>
ment in an attempt to simplify<lb/>
bookeeping and reduce expense.<lb/>
The late Dr. Wellington B.<lb/>
Gray was recognized as having<lb/>
been a famer Faculty Senate<lb/>
member, and as having served en<lb/>
many Faculty Committees.<lb/>
"LISTEN GIRLS, I'M serious. I really am Santa Claus Photo by<lb/>
Pete Podeszwa)<lb/>
Congress continues<lb/>
debate on abortion<lb/>
ByCELECARNES<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
While negotiations continue in<lb/>
the House and Senate on the issue<lb/>
of federally financed abortions,<lb/>
many low inoome women in Pitt<lb/>
County do not have money fa<lb/>
abortions.<lb/>
Federal funds fa abatiais<lb/>
were cut off August 5, 1977,<lb/>
according to the Pitt County<lb/>
Department of Social Services.<lb/>
"The birth rate will definitely<lb/>
go up said Martin MacDoweli,<lb/>
County Health Educata.<lb/>
"Possible 100 excess births<lb/>
will occur. Last year 1,216 births<lb/>
were reported in Pitt County<lb/>
The effect of these unwanted<lb/>
births, accading to MacDoweli,<lb/>
could produce long range social<lb/>
problems which may result in a<lb/>
need fa funds in other federal<lb/>
programs.<lb/>
Lai year 461 women were<lb/>
seen fa abatiais counseling by<lb/>
the county's Family Planning<lb/>
social worker.<lb/>
Costs of abortions here range<lb/>
from $225 to $360 depending on<lb/>
the doctor and time spent in the<lb/>
hospital, said McDowell.<lb/>
Editor Devins graduates;<lb/>
new senior editor selected<lb/>
THIS TYPE OF holiday display<lb/>
Christmas approaches.<lb/>
soon be seen everywhere as<lb/>
By ROBERT SWAIM<lb/>
Advertising Manager<lb/>
The Communications Board<lb/>
yesterday selected Cindy Brcome<lb/>
to succeed Kim Devins as senia<lb/>
edita of FOUNTAINHEAD.<lb/>
Devins is graduating this<lb/>
semester and will be moving to<lb/>
Raleigh with her husband.<lb/>
Broome is presently FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD news edita, and will<lb/>
assume her new duties at the<lb/>
beginning of Spring Semester.<lb/>
A member of the FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD staff fa two years, she has<lb/>
waked ai the production staff<lb/>
doing layout, and proofreading,<lb/>
and as a reporter and assistant<lb/>
news edita.<lb/>
Broome is a French rruja and<lb/>
journalism maja; she has com-<lb/>
pleted all but four courses offered<lb/>
in the ECU journalism program.<lb/>
"I think that students should<lb/>
be encouraged to take as many<lb/>
journalism courses as possible if<lb/>
they want to work fa FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD said Broome.<lb/>
"I want to encourage fresh-<lb/>
men and sophomaes to get<lb/>
involved with the staff. Last year,<lb/>
we lost many of our experienced<lb/>
personnel to graduation. I believe<lb/>
next year our staff will be<lb/>
stabilized<lb/>
Broome also said she wants to<lb/>
uplift the credibility of FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD.<lb/>
"I want this newspaper to be<lb/>
as objective as we, as human<lb/>
beings, can make it. Our aedibil-<lb/>
ity has been challenged and I<lb/>
See EDITOR, page 9)<lb/>
CINDY BROOME<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00058027_0002"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 8 December 1977<lb/>
Party<lb/>
Auditions GMA<lb/>
Festival<lb/>
The Roxy Music Arts and<lb/>
Crafts Center will hoid its Third<lb/>
Annual Christmas Arts Festival<lb/>
Sat Dec. 10 from 10 a.m. to 6<lb/>
p.m and Sun Dec. 11 from 1<lb/>
p.m. to 6 p.m.<lb/>
Several local artists and<lb/>
craftsmen will show and sell their<lb/>
wares, including ceramics,<lb/>
leather goods, and candles.<lb/>
FG<lb/>
The Forever Generation will<lb/>
now be meeting on Monday<lb/>
nights. If you've been wanting to<lb/>
come to an FG meeting, but are<lb/>
away on weekends, noWs your<lb/>
chance. Our new meeting time is<lb/>
9 p.m. and our new place is<lb/>
Brewster O304. So, fa a good<lb/>
time of Christian fellowship and<lb/>
Bible study, why not plan on<lb/>
being there?<lb/>
Seminar<lb/>
Everyone is invited to attend a<lb/>
three-night teaching seminar<lb/>
Dec. 7,8,9 at 730 p.m. in the<lb/>
American Legion building here in<lb/>
Greenville. The Rev. Rodney<lb/>
Lloyd will be teaching the Wad<lb/>
of God each night. He is a<lb/>
graduate from Rhema Bible<lb/>
College and isa pasta in Johnson<lb/>
City, Term. He also has a radio<lb/>
program on a local station WBZQ<lb/>
which can be heard at 7:15 a.m.<lb/>
Land Use<lb/>
What is to be the fate of your<lb/>
favaite canoeing creek, fishing<lb/>
hole, hiking path, a boating area<lb/>
during the next two decades?<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina is ripe fa<lb/>
development with its large sup-<lb/>
plies of water, long areas of<lb/>
coastline and other natural re-<lb/>
sources. Will we reaeational<lb/>
users have any say in its<lb/>
development a are we going to<lb/>
consign ourselves to the mercy of<lb/>
commercial interests? To the<lb/>
extent that we remaini aloof from<lb/>
and ignaant of the facts of land<lb/>
use planning we forfeit our<lb/>
control over the fate of our future<lb/>
environment- the quality of our<lb/>
lives in the 19803 and '90" s. So,<lb/>
how do you introduce yourself to<lb/>
this rather esoteric-sounding<lb/>
topic of land-use planning? Bring<lb/>
your quest fa knowledge to the<lb/>
next group meeting Man Dec.<lb/>
12, 8 p.m. and relax while Dr.<lb/>
John Fraser Hart (Author of 7 he<lb/>
Southeastern United States and<lb/>
The Look of the Land) presents<lb/>
his ideas and photographs on the<lb/>
topic of land use. Dr. Hart is a<lb/>
professor at the University of<lb/>
Minnesota on a short leave as a<lb/>
Distinguished Visiting Professor<lb/>
in the Department of Geography<lb/>
at ECU. His slide-illustrated talk<lb/>
will concern the beat and wast<lb/>
land use choices fa rural areas.<lb/>
The meeting will be held in the<lb/>
basement of the First<lb/>
Presbyterian Church, oorner of<lb/>
Elm and 14th, Greenville.<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 fa publication in the<lb/>
magazine. Manuscripts may be<lb/>
mailed to The Rebel, Mendenhall<lb/>
ECU, Greenville, N.C. 27834, a<lb/>
brought by the office in the<lb/>
publications center.<lb/>
Artwak fa the Third Annual<lb/>
Rebel Art Show can be entered by<lb/>
registering each piece at The<lb/>
Rbbet offioe a at the Mendenhall<lb/>
Information Desk. Ail artwak<lb/>
must be registered by 4 p.m. Jan.<lb/>
18 a it cannot be included in the<lb/>
show. Fa further details, call The<lb/>
Rebel office at 757-6502.<lb/>
Surfing<lb/>
All those interested in the<lb/>
Surfing Club are eligible to<lb/>
compete this weekend in a contest<lb/>
against USOC, UNC-W a the<lb/>
Jacksonville non-student teams.<lb/>
Contest will be at Paradise Pier,<lb/>
Topsail Island at 12 noon. Every-<lb/>
one try to be there to represent<lb/>
our teem. We need you!<lb/>
Frig Rentals<lb/>
Retngeratas that were rented<lb/>
from the SGA fa fall semester<lb/>
should be turned in Dec 12, 13,<lb/>
14. (same locations as in Sept.<lb/>
delivery.) Refrlgeratas rented fa<lb/>
the entire year are not subject to<lb/>
this turn-in deadline. For rnae<lb/>
infa. call 757-6611 between 2-4<lb/>
M-F.<lb/>
Bahai<lb/>
Tonight at 7:30 pm in<lb/>
Mendenhall 238 Harry Kurit will<lb/>
lead a discussion on Iran, the<lb/>
elanguage, literature and culture<lb/>
sponsaed by Bahai Association.<lb/>
Everyone is welcome.<lb/>
Toy Drive<lb/>
Psi Chi and the ChildFamily<lb/>
Association are co-sponsaing a<lb/>
Christmas toy and Book drive fa<lb/>
the less fatunate children in the<lb/>
Greenville area. The toys should<lb/>
be functional and the books<lb/>
readable. Please wrap all donat-<lb/>
ions amd mark with appropriate<lb/>
agesex. A large receiving box<lb/>
fa donations is located in the<lb/>
Psychology Departmental office<lb/>
and in the Child Development and<lb/>
Family Relations Office (Home-<lb/>
Economic Building) till Dec. 16.<lb/>
Your donation will be very much<lb/>
appreciated.<lb/>
IV<lb/>
Inter-Varsity Christian<lb/>
Fellowship will meet this Sunday,<lb/>
at 8 p.m at the Afro-American<lb/>
Cultural Center A prayer meet-<lb/>
ing will also he held at 4 p.m. this<lb/>
Thursday at the Methodist<lb/>
Student Center<lb/>
Alpha Epsilon Delta, the<lb/>
Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental<lb/>
Society will have a Christmas<lb/>
party Sat Dec. 10, at 3 p.m. The<lb/>
party will be held at Dr. W.<lb/>
Ayer's house which is located at<lb/>
3307 S. Evans a. Extension.<lb/>
Admission to the party will be<lb/>
payment of Spring Semester<lb/>
dues.<lb/>
Pledges are also reminded of a<lb/>
mandatcry pledge meeting Thur<lb/>
Dec. 8, at 6 p.m. in Flanagan 307.<lb/>
Yard Ssle<lb/>
Pi Lambda Phi located on 410<lb/>
Elizabeth St. will be having a yard<lb/>
sale including clothing, Xmas<lb/>
items and other household goods.<lb/>
Saturday Dec 10 ail day. Rain<lb/>
date is Dec 17.<lb/>
Fencing<lb/>
The Fencing Club will meet in<lb/>
the balcony of Minges at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Monday. Take a break from your<lb/>
studies and come learn an<lb/>
exciting and ohattenging sport.<lb/>
Our first meeting after the break<lb/>
will be Motday after classes<lb/>
start. Come and join us. Fa<lb/>
further infamation, a it you<lb/>
need a ride, cell Bev. a Blake at<lb/>
756-4357.<lb/>
Food Drive<lb/>
Get into the Christmas spirit<lb/>
and help a needy family. Bring<lb/>
canned or novperlehable food<lb/>
items to either the lobby of<lb/>
Mendenhall or a girl's dam<lb/>
lobby. Sponsaed by the Salvation<lb/>
Army.<lb/>
Sierra Club<lb/>
The Sierra Club will meet Dec.<lb/>
12 in the basement of the First<lb/>
Presbytaian Church at 8 p.m.<lb/>
GRE<lb/>
The Graduate Reoad 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 BldgECU.<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/>
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 perfam<lb/>
classic, now, aiginal and a great<lb/>
variety of Seals &amp; Croft<lb/>
Auditions fa the third produc-<lb/>
tion in the current season of the<lb/>
East Carolina Playhouse, Petar<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 fa mature males.<lb/>
Scripts fa the play are on reserve<lb/>
in Joyner Library fa study pria<lb/>
to auditioning. The play will run<lb/>
Feburary 25 through March 1 in<lb/>
the 9udio Theatre.<lb/>
REAL<lb/>
REAL Crisis Center is begin-<lb/>
ning a course in crisis counseling<lb/>
this week. This is the course<lb/>
required fa ail REAL volunteer<lb/>
counsekrs but ft is open to<lb/>
anyone wanting to take it. Con-<lb/>
tinuing education credit is award-<lb/>
ed through Prtt Tech. Come learn<lb/>
how to be of REAL help to people<lb/>
in need. Fa further infamatiai,<lb/>
call Mark Larew at REAL 756-<lb/>
HELP.<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 Bldg. All<lb/>
Pre-med students interested are<lb/>
urged to attend.<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 weloome.<lb/>
We also need any baked goods a<lb/>
a large quantity of gifts (pens,<lb/>
pencils, etc.) fa the men. Make<lb/>
Christmas a happy one fa some<lb/>
lonely folks. Fa mae infama-<lb/>
tion, contact Father Charles<lb/>
Mulholland, Newman Chaplin at<lb/>
758-1504 a oome to St. Gabriel's<lb/>
Church, 1120 W. 5th St. at 630<lb/>
p.m. Thurs.<lb/>
Tutoring<lb/>
Start preparation for final<lb/>
examinations now. Minority<lb/>
and a educationally disadvant-<lb/>
aged( regardless of race) students<lb/>
in the prehealth professions pro-<lb/>
grams (General College and<lb/>
College of Arts and Sciences),<lb/>
Allied Health, Medicine, and<lb/>
Nursing are invited to register fa<lb/>
free tutaial servioss in areas of<lb/>
academic weakness and lor read-<lb/>
ing and study skills deficiencies.<lb/>
Applications fa participation can<lb/>
be obtained from the Center fa<lb/>
Student Opportunities, rm 208,<lb/>
Ragsdale Hall, 757-6122<lb/>
The Graduate Management<lb/>
AdmissiaisTest will be offered at<lb/>
ECU Sat Jan. 28, 1978. Applica-<lb/>
tion blanks are to be oompleted<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 Bldg Room-105,<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
AHPTest<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 Yak 10017 to arrive by Dec.<lb/>
24, 1977. Applications may be<lb/>
obtained from the Testing Centa,<lb/>
Room-105, Speight Bldg ECU.<lb/>
Positions<lb/>
There will be positions avail-<lb/>
able on the student residence hall<lb/>
staff fa Spring Semester. These<lb/>
are fa hail advisas, assistant<lb/>
residence advisors, and residence<lb/>
advisas.<lb/>
Any students who wishes to<lb/>
apply fa any of these positions,<lb/>
a fa FALL SEMESTER 1978,<lb/>
should complete 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 coed residence hall on<lb/>
campus. Applications fa Spring<lb/>
Semester should be completed<lb/>
and submitted by Dec. 9<lb/>
Heweii<lb/>
Reduced tee fa 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/>
SGA<lb/>
All SGA loans must be paid<lb/>
back by Dec. 9.<lb/>
Lambda Chi<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 waahtub will be<lb/>
pulled aloig to aocept contribu-<lb/>
tions to the ECU basketball<lb/>
program. Fa furtha infamatiai,<lb/>
oontact Bruce Whitten a Bob<lb/>
Clark at the Lambda Chi Alpha<lb/>
fraternity house.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058027_0003"/><lb/>
�iMMMHHMHMHniHBHHHiHi<lb/>
8 December 1977 FQUMTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
Jenkins proposal brings wide citizen support<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A recent proposal by ECU<lb/>
Chancellor Leo Jenkins for a<lb/>
convention center for the<lb/>
Greenville area has brought wide-<lb/>
spread support from local citizens<lb/>
and officials.<lb/>
At a recent Chamber of<lb/>
Commerce meeting, Jenkins said<lb/>
Greenville is the ideal location for<lb/>
a convention center in eastern<lb/>
N.C. and the community should<lb/>
make every effort to oonstruct<lb/>
such a facility in the near future.<lb/>
"We are fast approaching the<lb/>
day when the absence of a con-<lb/>
vention center will be far out of<lb/>
character for the reputation held<lb/>
by Greenville said Jenkins at a<lb/>
meeting in November.<lb/>
Greenville has no large meet-<lb/>
ing center other than Minges<lb/>
Coliseum on the ECU campus.<lb/>
Even though several civic<lb/>
clubs have separate meeting<lb/>
headquarters, none of the facili-<lb/>
ties are big enough to accommo-<lb/>
date a large business convention<lb/>
or show, according to Ed Walker,<lb/>
executive vice-president of the<lb/>
Greenville Chamber of Com-<lb/>
merce.<lb/>
"Greenville simply does not<lb/>
have any adequate meeting facil-<lb/>
ity for any large scale convention<lb/>
or business meetings said<lb/>
Walker.<lb/>
"The civic dub buildings we<lb/>
have now do not allow enough<lb/>
space to comfortably seat a crowd<lb/>
of more than 500 to 600 people<lb/>
Walker has organized a Civic<lb/>
Center Task Force which will<lb/>
study the feasibility of a large<lb/>
convention center here.<lb/>
Reed Hooper, a vioe president<lb/>
at Wachovia Bank in Greenville,<lb/>
will head the committee of 10<lb/>
volunteers.<lb/>
The Task Force will begin its<lb/>
study Feb. 1,1978 and will report<lb/>
its research on the convention<lb/>
center at the end of next July.<lb/>
"Their objectives will be to<lb/>
study the need for a civic center<lb/>
and to relate the findings to<lb/>
officials at ECU, the city, and the<lb/>
Stadium expansion begins<lb/>
after five years of planning<lb/>
By LENORA REEVES<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Construction began a week<lb/>
ago Monday on the $2.6 million<lb/>
expansion of ECU'S Ficklen Sta-<lb/>
dium after five years of planning.<lb/>
Cliff Moore, vice-chancellor of<lb/>
business affairs, outlined the<lb/>
proposal for the shape of the new<lb/>
stadium.<lb/>
Additional seats will be con-<lb/>
structed on each end of both the<lb/>
visiting and home bleachers. The<lb/>
seating capacity will accommo-<lb/>
date approximately 46,000 per-<lb/>
sons, according to Moore.<lb/>
Moore said the reason for<lb/>
enlarging the stadium is to not<lb/>
only bring more revenue into the<lb/>
university, but to also attract<lb/>
better quality opponents.<lb/>
Moore said schools such as<lb/>
N.C. State and North Carolina<lb/>
will be more likely to play ECU if<lb/>
they are guaranteed adequate<lb/>
seating for their fans plus an<lb/>
adequate portion of gate receipts.<lb/>
"Not only will the seating<lb/>
capacity be increased said<lb/>
Moore, "but the stadium will<lb/>
have a three-ttieredi modern<lb/>
pressbox, serviced by an eleva-<lb/>
tor<lb/>
The new pressbox will be<lb/>
better able to aooommodate visit-<lb/>
ing journalists than the present<lb/>
pressbox, said Moore.<lb/>
As a result, East Carolina<lb/>
football will have more exposure,<lb/>
Moore said.<lb/>
About 1.5 million will be taken<lb/>
from excess reserve funds and the<lb/>
remaining money for the project<lb/>
will come from individual and<lb/>
group contributions, said Moore.<lb/>
county said Walker.<lb/>
"Right now, Greenville is the<lb/>
hub of eastern N.C, but in 10<lb/>
years it's going to be the<lb/>
Charlotte of the east. I, along with<lb/>
everyone else in the oommunity,<lb/>
anticipate that type of growth fa<lb/>
the Greenville area<lb/>
" W ithout a oonvent ion center,<lb/>
Greenville is not able to tap the<lb/>
tourist dollar he said.<lb/>
"Tourism is the second largest<lb/>
industry in N.C, and we're not<lb/>
getting our share. A facility which<lb/>
will accommodate anywhere from<lb/>
750 to 1000 people should be<lb/>
sufficient<lb/>
Hooper said he also feels<lb/>
Greenville needs a large conven-<lb/>
tion center since it is an important<lb/>
center for eastern N.C.<lb/>
"Greenville is the logical<lb/>
place for the center because of its<lb/>
location explained Hooper.<lb/>
"But I think there are a lot of<lb/>
other factors people are going to<lb/>
have to consider before a conven-<lb/>
tion center is built, such as<lb/>
adequate hotel facilities, restau-<lb/>
rants, and other convention type<lb/>
service.<lb/>
"We're going to have to<lb/>
establish our goals and begin<lb/>
working from there<lb/>
Although Hooper has named<lb/>
only one oommittee member, Ed<lb/>
Rawl, a local businessman, he<lb/>
plans to ask Jenkins to serve as an<lb/>
honorary chairman for the Civic<lb/>
Center Task Faroe.<lb/>
"Dr. Jenkins has firmly sup-<lb/>
ported the idea all along said<lb/>
Hooper. "He'sbeen instrumental<lb/>
in the growth of the ECU and the<lb/>
Greenville oommunity, and I<lb/>
think he'll be extremely valuable<lb/>
to the oommittee<lb/>
Rawl proposed the construc-<lb/>
tion of a convention center more<lb/>
than 15 years ago fa all the local<lb/>
civic organiztions, but could not<lb/>
gather the needed support from<lb/>
local civic leaders<lb/>
Rawl proposed the construc-<lb/>
tion on a multi-purpose facility<lb/>
which would seat 1200 people and<lb/>
would also house the offioes of<lb/>
eight local civic dubs.<lb/>
Pantana Bob's<lb/>
Open 1:00 For<lb/>
Reading Day<lb/>
<lb/>
Thurs. &amp; Fri.<lb/>
Dec. 8th &amp; 9th<lb/>
9:00-3:00<lb/>
"Seasons<lb/>
Greetings"<lb/>
Every ArtCarvcd College Ring is one-of-a-kind and custom-made.<lb/>
It has the taoks, craftsmanship and quality that only a fine<lb/>
jewelry company like ArtCarved can give vou.<lb/>
And their college rings, like their world-famous engagement and<lb/>
wedding rings, are guaranteed to stay beautiful for a lifetime.<lb/>
We have the ArtCarved ring designed just for the Business School.<lb/>
See it soon, and make a smart investment.<lb/>
That's when the ArtCarved<lb/>
representative will be here<lb/>
to help you select your<lb/>
custom-made college<lb/>
jewelry. It's also tf edayyou<lb/>
can charge your ArtCarved<lb/>
college jewelry on Master<lb/>
Charge or BankAmericard.<lb/>
College Jewelry bv<lb/>
7IRK7IRVED<lb/>
World-famous tor<lb/>
diamond and wedding rms<lb/>
Student Supply Store<lb/>
Oid CU in Wright Aud.<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
<pb facs="00058027_0004"/><lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 8<lb/>
1977<lb/>
Christmas today<lb/>
good as yesterday<lb/>
The News &amp; Observer recently reported that<lb/>
Christmas sales across North Carolina are already<lb/>
doing better this year than last year. People are<lb/>
buying early and buying big. Expensive items, such<lb/>
as winter coats and wool sweaters, are having to be<lb/>
reordered for the demand. Needless to say, the<lb/>
merchants are loving it.<lb/>
So what does this mean? The first reaction might<lb/>
be the old, worn-out complaint mat Christmas is too<lb/>
commercial, that it's nothing but a capitalistic<lb/>
gimmick to make people buy and to fatten the<lb/>
merchants' pocketbooks. The true meaning of<lb/>
Christmas is lost in all the flash and glitter of the<lb/>
"sale" signs, right? Wrong.<lb/>
No one can really say what Christmas means. It<lb/>
means different things to different people. But<lb/>
somehow, in the middle of all the discrepancies and<lb/>
commercialism, one aspect of this special holiday has<lb/>
remained: the spirit of giving.<lb/>
Perhaps the Christmas tree was bought at a store<lb/>
instead of being personally chopped down in a forest.<lb/>
Perhaps it's not even a real tree and the halls are<lb/>
decked with boughs of plastic hdly. But all of this<lb/>
doesn't really matter. What counts is that the spirit<lb/>
of giving still lives at the heart of the Christmas<lb/>
season, as the sales facts seem to indicate.<lb/>
At least there is one time out of the year when<lb/>
people think about giving to others. Many banks<lb/>
have even started special Christmas savings accounts<lb/>
to help people prepare for the Christmas spending.<lb/>
It's one time of the year when people go shopping<lb/>
and think about what might please someone else,<lb/>
what might make a friend or relative's eyes light up<lb/>
when the wrappings and bows are torn off. It's even<lb/>
an excuse for some people to give to other's when<lb/>
they would normally feel they oouldn't afford it.<lb/>
A lot has changed about Christmas over the<lb/>
years. The modern holiday season barely resembles<lb/>
those the old folks remember. Strung cranberries and<lb/>
popcorn have been replaced by aluminum tinsel, and<lb/>
glass balls hang on the trees where hand-made<lb/>
ornaments used to hang.<lb/>
But, nevertheless, the meaning is all the same.<lb/>
Christmas is a time for happiness and giving, today<lb/>
as yesterday. And we at FOUNTAINHEAD hope this<lb/>
Christmas will be the best yet for all our readers.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD will return Jan. 17, 1978.)<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community tor over titty years.<lb/>
Senior EditorKim J. Devins<lb/>
Production ManagerLeigh Coakley<lb/>
Advertising Manager  .Robert Swaim<lb/>
News EditorCindy Broome<lb/>
Trends EditorDavid W. Trevino<lb/>
sports EditorChrjs Hoiloman<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, 757-6306.<lb/>
Subscriptions. $10.00 annually.<lb/>
Fm aimmi<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Freedom of speech is for everyone<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
In the November 29<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD, an editorial<lb/>
appeared concerning abortion<lb/>
that came out strongly against the<lb/>
anti-abortion groups.<lb/>
Our country was founded<lb/>
upon freedom of speech, includ-<lb/>
ing the right to express opinions,<lb/>
among other things. Although I<lb/>
don't agree with some move-<lb/>
ments, I do allow them the night<lb/>
to their opinion. You may dis-<lb/>
agree with a person's opinion but<lb/>
how can you say it's wrong?<lb/>
Opinion is based not on fact but<lb/>
personal belief. If prcrabortion-<lb/>
ists have a right to assemble,<lb/>
speak out, lobby, why shouldn't<lb/>
their opposition?<lb/>
Possibly you are worried the<lb/>
abortion laws will be removed<lb/>
from the books if these people get<lb/>
a lot of support. One phrase in the<lb/>
editorial says "especially in this<lb/>
day and age and in THIS<lb/>
country If so many people are<lb/>
open-minded "in this day and<lb/>
age why worry about the views<lb/>
of the minority? We allow the<lb/>
Communist and Nazi Parties to<lb/>
survive in this country although<lb/>
the majority doesn't agree with<lb/>
them. Do we worry about their<lb/>
views becoming national opinion9<lb/>
Our country is great because<lb/>
we allow the freedom to speak<lb/>
out, to show how we feel. Because<lb/>
we don't agree with someone,<lb/>
have we the right to suppress<lb/>
their views?<lb/>
More verbal abuse in the SGA Legislature<lb/>
Ann Dorffeld<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
At the last legislative<lb/>
meeting I was taken to task by<lb/>
Alonza Newby, (also known as<lb/>
"Senator Alomozo"), for attend-<lb/>
ing a meeting of the screenings<lb/>
and appointments committee.<lb/>
Alonzo, to his discredit, told<lb/>
several flagrant lies.<lb/>
He accused me of "attacking<lb/>
Campus police missing the point<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
This letter concerns our<lb/>
so-called ECU Campus Pol ice.<lb/>
It appears evident to certain<lb/>
individuals that the police have<lb/>
over-stepped their bounds and<lb/>
are no longer serving the interest<lb/>
of our student body.<lb/>
Pointfl: At a time when<lb/>
simple possession of marijuana is<lb/>
becoming decriminalized ($100<lb/>
fine), it appears the campus<lb/>
polioe have increased thier under-<lb/>
cover "narcotics" activity.<lb/>
Point 2: Even though we<lb/>
read in FOUNTAINHEAD that<lb/>
rapes (reported cases) are de-<lb/>
creasing and bicycle thefts are on<lb/>
the decrease, we who are exposed<lb/>
to this find it to be untrue.<lb/>
Point 3: The attitiude of the<lb/>
police is unneccessarily harsh<lb/>
towards students. Fa example:<lb/>
you bring a girl back to the dorm<lb/>
after it is locked. First the polioe<lb/>
take their time getting there,<lb/>
which is not only rude, but it<lb/>
could lead to a bad scene (rape,<lb/>
theft etc.) Then when the police<lb/>
let the girls ir, they act rude and<lb/>
ask questions which have nothing<lb/>
to do with their duty.<lb/>
Final point. This is supposedly<lb/>
a modern campus with upcoming<lb/>
facilities and programs. We, the<lb/>
students, must raise our voices<lb/>
and demand a police force that is<lb/>
going to serve the students,<lb/>
Students for the Abolition of<lb/>
the Pol ice State (S. A. P. S.)<lb/>
1iiiie.in.il. �lt<lb/>
several members" of the commit-<lb/>
tee. This is totally untrue and ar.y<lb/>
member of the committee who<lb/>
was present for that particular<lb/>
meeting will back me up.<lb/>
Then he went on to say I<lb/>
attempted to force the Speaker of<lb/>
the Legislature to cast a vote in<lb/>
committee. This too is a lie. All I<lb/>
did was make the statement that<lb/>
the speaker, by virtue of his of-<lb/>
fice, is a member of all legislative<lb/>
oommittees and therefore has the<lb/>
right to cast a vote in any<lb/>
committee meeting.<lb/>
Mr. Newby did not embarass<lb/>
me with his idiotic speech a<lb/>
resolution. He merely proved that<lb/>
what I have thought about him all<lb/>
along is true. He can't seem to<lb/>
get his feet on the ground andf<lb/>
out of his mouth.<lb/>
In closing I would like to urge<lb/>
those in the legislature to be wary<lb/>
of what Alonzo and his crowd tell<lb/>
them. Take nothing at face value.<lb/>
Robert M.Swaim<lb/>
iV.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058027_0005"/><lb/>
��MHHHMI<lb/>
8 December 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
Page<lb/>
Attorney advisor deals with ECU policy problems<lb/>
By ROBERT SWAIM<lb/>
Advertising Manager<lb/>
The office of attorney advisor<lb/>
was created in the spring of 1974<lb/>
to provide an office of equal<lb/>
opportunity fa the purpose of<lb/>
administering federal regulations<lb/>
that were applicable to ECU<lb/>
through the Education Amend-<lb/>
ments Act of 1972, acoording to<lb/>
Dr. David B. Stevens, university<lb/>
attaney.<lb/>
ECU was the first state<lb/>
university in N.C. to have an<lb/>
attaney advisa and directa of<lb/>
equal opportunity employment.<lb/>
Since the position was aeated<lb/>
UNC-Gand UNC-Chave followed<lb/>
ECU and aeated similar posi-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
ECU'S attorney advisor,<lb/>
(university attaney), and directa<lb/>
of equal oppatunity is Dr. David<lb/>
B. Stevens.<lb/>
Dr. Stevens is a native of<lb/>
Augusta, Geagia. He received a<lb/>
B.S. from the UNC-CH School of<lb/>
Business in 1949, a Juris Docta-<lb/>
ate from UNC law school in 1951,<lb/>
and an L.L.M(master of law),<lb/>
from Duke University in 1965.<lb/>
Dr. Stevens was a professa of<lb/>
air science at Duke from 1952 to<lb/>
1956, from 1959 to 1963 he was an<lb/>
assistant professa of law at the<lb/>
U.S. Air Face Academy.<lb/>
A retired Air Face colonel, he<lb/>
came to ECU in 1970 as an<lb/>
assistant professa of business.<lb/>
Accading to Stevens, he is<lb/>
the compliance officer fa all<lb/>
federal regulation that apply to<lb/>
the university.<lb/>
Stevens said that a large part<lb/>
of his job is advising the<lb/>
administration.<lb/>
"I advise the administration<lb/>
on topics ranging from distribu-<lb/>
tion of birth control pillsto minas<lb/>
to jurisdiction of the campus<lb/>
police said Stevens.<lb/>
Stevens said that when<lb/>
questions arise which involve<lb/>
university policy, he coadinates<lb/>
the resolution of the problem with<lb/>
the N.C. Attorney General's<lb/>
office.<lb/>
"If we had a lawsuit against<lb/>
the university, the attorney<lb/>
general would represent ECU and<lb/>
I would assist in the preparation<lb/>
fa trial, interview witnesses, and<lb/>
gather evidence said Stevens.<lb/>
Stevens said that a few years<lb/>
ago he adv i sed st udent s as wel I as<lb/>
the administration, but with the<lb/>
additional workload of equal<lb/>
opportunity employment pro-<lb/>
grams, this service is no longer<lb/>
available.<lb/>
"I no longer advise students<lb/>
on legal problems said Stevens.<lb/>
"It isdifficult to find time to do all<lb/>
the things that need to be done<lb/>
James B. Mallay, ECU dean<lb/>
of men, said Dr. Stevens advises<lb/>
his offioe very often and that he<lb/>
values Stevens opinions highly.<lb/>
" He gives legal interpretation<lb/>
on any legal question involving<lb/>
theSGA judiciary said Mallay.<lb/>
"Fa example, he had to get<lb/>
in on the act last sorina to<lb/>
determine the legality of the SGA<lb/>
elections.<lb/>
 He helped us write the SGA<lb/>
judicial handbook and he writes<lb/>
all of our legal opinions said<lb/>
Mallav.<lb/>
Aooading to Mallay, Stevens<lb/>
is the chairman of the Hearings<lb/>
Board and the Residency<lb/>
Committfip .<lb/>
Mallory said Stevens also<lb/>
waks closely with C.C. Rowe on<lb/>
the handicapped program.<lb/>
Carolyn Fulghum, dean of<lb/>
women, said Dr. Stevens often<lb/>
advises her offioe on matters<lb/>
relating to title nine.<lb/>
"If we are in need of legal<lb/>
advice we go to him said<lb/>
Fulghum.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD staff meeting<lb/>
Weds Jan. 11 at 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
DR. DAVID B. STEVENS.<lb/>
SOPHOMORES<lb/>
IT'S NOT TOO LATE TO ENROLL<lb/>
IN AIR FORCE ROTC<lb/>
and here are sane facts that should interest you:<lb/>
r xirsesopen tocollegemen and women.<lb/>
'Four hours academic aedit per semester.<lb/>
'No service obligation now.<lb/>
'Full scholarships available that pay tuition, all fees, plus<lb/>
$100 a month tax-free allowance.<lb/>
'An Air Face officer oommissiai when you receive your<lb/>
baccalaureate.<lb/>
'Oppatunity fa a challenging job with excellent starting<lb/>
salary of $11,700.<lb/>
Talk with our Air Face ROTC representative.<lb/>
Contact: Captain Ashley Lane<lb/>
ECU Wright Annex 206<lb/>
Phone:757-6597<lb/>
Air Force ROTC<lb/>
Gateway<lb/>
to a GreatWay<lb/>
of Life<lb/>
PLEASE HELP INSURE THE<lb/>
CONTINUATION OF THE<lb/>
YEARBOOK TRADITION AT ECUI<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 FEE1<lb/>
There will be no wait if you'll<lb/>
make an APPOINTMENT-EARLY!<lb/>
Call Now I 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/>
. slipa . S35SJ<lb/>
<pb facs="00058027_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 8 December 1977<lb/>
Campus security changes with students<lb/>
By DAVE THOMPSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Studentsand the changes they<lb/>
have gone through over the years<lb/>
have helped to dictate policies of<lb/>
East Carolina's security system,<lb/>
according to Joe Calder, Chief of<lb/>
Campus Police.<lb/>
Calder said that both the<lb/>
students of ECU and the security<lb/>
system have changed drastically<lb/>
since the Korean War.<lb/>
Up to that point, the ECU<lb/>
security system had been nothing<lb/>
but a group of night-watchmen<lb/>
looking out for students and staff<lb/>
on campus, according to Calder.<lb/>
Today, the ECU security staff<lb/>
is a full-fledged police force, with<lb/>
22 officers and a new high-band<lb/>
communications system.<lb/>
It was a very different system<lb/>
prior to Calder's arrival in 1970.<lb/>
After the Korean War, mili-<lb/>
tary veterans returned home with<lb/>
the chance to obtain a college<lb/>
education.<lb/>
According to Calder, the<lb/>
veteran attending school at ECU<lb/>
started questioning the authority<lb/>
of persons such as the deans. The<lb/>
system was then starting to be<lb/>
tested, he said.<lb/>
The system started being<lb/>
tested a little more when the<lb/>
students of the late 1960's were at<lb/>
ECU, Calder said. Mae and more<lb/>
"dropouts" and "fallouts" start-<lb/>
ed frequenting the university<lb/>
grounds protesting, stealing, and<lb/>
dealing drugs, he said.<lb/>
The 1960's were also a time<lb/>
when oourts were challenging the<lb/>
power of deans to expel students,<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
This was the period, according<lb/>
to Calder, that student power was<lb/>
at a height and university power<lb/>
at a low because the "night<lb/>
watchman system could no<lb/>
longer defend against the stu-<lb/>
In1970, Dr. Leo Jenkins hired<lb/>
Calder to head the security<lb/>
system.<lb/>
Calder said that in 1970, ECU<lb/>
had 4 a 5 good officers out of 13.<lb/>
He said he realized that sinoe the<lb/>
power of deans was at an all time<lb/>
low, the campus security would<lb/>
have to take up the slack.<lb/>
Calder then started shaping<lb/>
the security system into a polioe<lb/>
force, fully equipped with loaded<lb/>
guns and trained with 160 hours<lb/>
of classroom instruction.<lb/>
Calder was asked whether he<lb/>
thought that a fully equipped<lb/>
polioe system was necessary on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
"What do you want?" he<lb/>
replied. "A night watchman or a<lb/>
polioe foroe? A night watchman<lb/>
isn't going to protect you when<lb/>
you're being raped<lb/>
Calder said that since he's<lb/>
been here his officers have only<lb/>
had to fire their weapons on<lb/>
campus four a five times, two of<lb/>
which were uncalled fa.<lb/>
This year has been a very<lb/>
good year so far, he said, with no<lb/>
maja problems on campus.<lb/>
Calder attributes this to the<lb/>
changing student.<lb/>
During the past three a four<lb/>
years, he said, the student has<lb/>
changed and now wants a good<lb/>
education and a good job.<lb/>
"They seem to be uncon-<lb/>
cerned with the activities of the<lb/>
past he said.<lb/>
N.C. delegates attend<lb/>
women's conference<lb/>
By JA NE T NE THERfiU TT<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Barbara Ragland of ECU'S<lb/>
General A ssi stance Center and<lb/>
Tennala Gross of the mathematics<lb/>
department were two of Nath<lb/>
Carolina's 32 delegates at the<lb/>
National Women's Conference in<lb/>
Houston last month.<lb/>
Nath Carolina delegates and<lb/>
five alternates were selected in<lb/>
Winston-Salem last June.<lb/>
North Carolina's delegates<lb/>
represented a aoss section of this<lb/>
state's women, just as the<lb/>
conference represented a mixture<lb/>
of women from all 50 states and<lb/>
six territories, said Gross.<lb/>
She said North Carolina's<lb/>
delegation oonsisted of 17 whites,<lb/>
12 blacks, and three native<lb/>
Americans from all walks of life<lb/>
and all ages.<lb/>
"It was a real treat to be<lb/>
se'ected said Ragland.<lb/>
This was the first federally-<lb/>
funded women's meeting in the<lb/>
U.S. Important issues such as the<lb/>
Equal Rights Amendment (ERA),<lb/>
abation, and sex disaiminatioi<lb/>
Faulkner:<lb/>
politically<lb/>
By JIM BURKE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Wonen are becoming inaeas-<lb/>
ingly mae active in politics,<lb/>
accading to Janice Faulkner, an<lb/>
associate professa in the ECU<lb/>
department of English.<lb/>
Faulkner made this assertion<lb/>
on a television show on WCTI-TV,<lb/>
Channel 12 in New Bern last<lb/>
Tuesday.<lb/>
"We try to get women who<lb/>
have any interest in public life<lb/>
were discussed.<lb/>
Resolutions regarding these<lb/>
matters were adopted and sub-<lb/>
mitted to President Carter.<lb/>
Carter will make decisions on<lb/>
these resolutions in the very near<lb/>
future �<lb/>
women<lb/>
involved<lb/>
and decision-making processes as<lb/>
they affect private life to use the<lb/>
caucus as a faum to air their<lb/>
views she said.<lb/>
Faulkner, who helped found<lb/>
the North Carolina Women's<lb/>
Political Caucus, has done exten-<lb/>
sive research on the issues of<lb/>
racism and sexism in society and<lb/>
in higher education.<lb/>
"I think I have a responsibility<lb/>
to stay infamed when I make<lb/>
public statements she said.<lb/>
<lb/>
�.<lb/>
UW 1jr. (knm 1W <lb/>
Weekend Special Thurs Fri Sat AU Day<lb/>
6" mini cheese &amp; small drink<lb/>
ONLY $1.00<lb/>
Of G�Ef<lb/>
 Phone 752-6130<lb/>
PHONE IN ORDERS FOH PICK UP<lb/>
Stuff a pizza<lb/>
521 COTANCHESTRETT<lb/>
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W.J W V �� v V" <lb/>
<pb facs="00058027_0007"/><lb/>
BB"V"WKSiBHBHBHBHnHi BmH<lb/>
�MHHH<lb/>
8 Dante 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
NCSL endorses Panama Canal Treaty at meeting<lb/>
Chambers is a member ofthe<lb/>
By CAROL CHASE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The N.C. Student Legisla-<lb/>
ture's Interim-Council ,endorsed<lb/>
the Panama Canal Treaty at its<lb/>
meeting in late November at<lb/>
Western Carolina University.<lb/>
More than 125 students from<lb/>
about 18 universities and colleges<lb/>
attended.<lb/>
The NCSL is a model State<lb/>
Legislature in which students<lb/>
write meaningful and effective<lb/>
legislation. Over 40 per oent of<lb/>
NCSL legislation has eventually<lb/>
become state law.<lb/>
The Panama Canal Treat v was<lb/>
major topic at the Interim-Coun-<lb/>
cil according to Frark Saubers,<lb/>
NCSL governor.<lb/>
The Associated Press covered<lb/>
the meeting because of its<lb/>
interest in the NCSL's stand on<lb/>
the Panama Canal issue.<lb/>
Saubers established, by<lb/>
executive order, a rules commit-<lb/>
tee which will study, .research,<lb/>
and recommend additional by-<lb/>
laws to the Interim-Council.<lb/>
In other business, three<lb/>
schools rejoined the NCSL at the<lb/>
November meeting. They were<lb/>
Appalachian State University,<lb/>
Meredith College, and UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington.<lb/>
The NCSL also made prepara-<lb/>
tions for the NCSL session in<lb/>
Raleigh next year.<lb/>
Agenda and oonvention coor-<lb/>
dinators were appointed fa a<lb/>
five-day session next April.<lb/>
Each delegation will then sub-<lb/>
mit two bills fa discussion. ECU<lb/>
wai an Haiaable Mention at last<lb/>
year's session.<lb/>
The NCSL choee, by a maja-<lb/>
ity vae, to invite Julius Cham-<lb/>
bers to speak at the 1978 session.<lb/>
UNC Board of Govanas.<lb/>
The next Intaim-Council is<lb/>
Jan. 20 in Chariate, N.C, and<lb/>
will be a Demoaatic nomination<lb/>
fa urn opposing the Republican<lb/>
incumbent Jesse Helms.<lb/>
Interested students should<lb/>
call Joe Tanahey, the Chairpason<lb/>
of the ECU delegation, at<lb/>
758-7968.<lb/>
Premiums for young men to drop<lb/>
By KAY WILLIAMS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In an effat to redistribute the<lb/>
high insurance premiums of male<lb/>
drivers under age 25, a new<lb/>
rating classification system went<lb/>
into effect Dec. 1, 1977.<lb/>
The rating system was pre-<lb/>
viously based on driver age and<lb/>
sex, vehicle use, and driving<lb/>
recad, accading to Donald C.<lb/>
McGlohon of Hines Agency, Inc.<lb/>
The system was discrimina-<lb/>
tay to males with good driving<lb/>
recads since they paid higher<lb/>
premiums than females with the<lb/>
same driving recad, accading to<lb/>
McGlohon.<lb/>
The entire rate structure has<lb/>
been discarded and a new means<lb/>
of charging has been put into<lb/>
effect. The new rating system is<lb/>
based on experience, driving<lb/>
recad, vehicle use, and type of<lb/>
oovaage.<lb/>
An inexperienced driver isone<lb/>
with less than two years driving<lb/>
experience, accading to McGlo-<lb/>
hon.<lb/>
The premium redistribution is<lb/>
a compromise between the Insur-<lb/>
ance Industry and State Insurance<lb/>
Commissioner John Ingram.<lb/>
Under the new rating system,<lb/>
the premiums fa a young man<lb/>
will deaease considaably,�<lb/>
MATTRESS MART<lb/>
Wholesale to Everyone<lb/>
Retail<lb/>
WATERBEDS $52.00<lb/>
FRAMES<lb/>
$70.00<lb/>
MATTRESS &amp; $149 no<lb/>
FOUNDATION<lb/>
Our Price<lb/>
$37.00<lb/>
$35.00<lb/>
$87.00<lb/>
1302 N. Greene St. 758-1101<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
4th Annual Brice Street<lb/>
Christmas Party<lb/>
Thursday Dec. 15<lb/>
Door Prizes Given Away At The<lb/>
Beginning Of The Last Set<lb/>
� T-Sftirts and Line Passes<lb/>
� Attic Passes and Records<lb/>
� Grand Prize:<lb/>
Free Trip For Two To:<lb/>
isney World<lb/>
To be eligible, must arrive<lb/>
between 8:30 and 9:30<lb/>
FriSat. Dec. 16-17 Jesse Bolt<lb/>
Cheeseburger<lb/>
Texas Taters<lb/>
Bottomless Coke<lb/>
Dec. 10-20<lb/>
8 p.m. - 3 a.m.<lb/>
�b<lb/>
<pb facs="00058027_0008"/><lb/>
�HMHBHHIHH<lb/>
P�ge 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 8 December 1977<lb/>
Computing center work load increases steadily<lb/>
By JOYCE EVANS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Computing Center's<lb/>
work load has steadily increased<lb/>
during the past several years,<lb/>
according to Richard Lennon,<lb/>
director of the center.<lb/>
This inaease in work and the<lb/>
lack of funds to inaease the<lb/>
center's staff are problems the<lb/>
center now faces, according to<lb/>
center managers.<lb/>
Requests to open the center<lb/>
for longer hours and on weekends<lb/>
could not be responded to,<lb/>
according to Lennon.<lb/>
"For third shift and Satur-<lb/>
days, we need additional compu-<lb/>
ter operatas said Little.<lb/>
"The demand for computer<lb/>
services are outstripping our<lb/>
ability to provide these services<lb/>
said Lennon.<lb/>
In addition to these problems,<lb/>
the center has undergone two<lb/>
major conversions�a,machine<lb/>
conversion and the semester<lb/>
system conversion, according to<lb/>
William Little, operations mana-<lb/>
ger.<lb/>
"Conversions have been a<lb/>
maja problem, especially the<lb/>
semester system conversion<lb/>
said Little.<lb/>
"Semester system conversion<lb/>
involved rewriting every program<lb/>
we've got he said.<lb/>
"No one took the time to ask<lb/>
computer personnel what actually<lb/>
was involved in setting up the<lb/>
semester system conversion<lb/>
said Dr. James Joyce of the<lb/>
physics dept.<lb/>
The machine conversion invol-<lb/>
ved rewriting programs too,<lb/>
according to Danny Griffen, pro-<lb/>
gramming manager for the cen-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
All of the Registrar's office<lb/>
programs were in other lan-<lb/>
guages, and the programmers<lb/>
had to write them in Cobol, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Griffen said they had a limited<lb/>
programming staff and they were<lb/>
under tremendous time con-<lb/>
straints.<lb/>
had to be transferred to tapes and<lb/>
discs, he said.<lb/>
The machine conversion com-<lb/>
bined the academic and adminis-<lb/>
trative user under one system<lb/>
instead of the dual system that<lb/>
existed. This had a definite effect<lb/>
on the register's off ice, according<lb/>
to Registrar Gilbert Moore.<lb/>
"Before the conversion, we<lb/>
had our own people said<lb/>
Moore.<lb/>
According to Moore, the<lb/>
Registrar's office had their own<lb/>
computer installation. Thev had<lb/>
programmers, key punch opera-<lb/>
tors, computer operators, a data<lb/>
processing manager, and a seae-<lb/>
Also, the aiginal card system tary.<lb/>
Biologist researches<lb/>
heart disease<lb/>
ByRICKIGLIARMIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Dr. James E. Akers, a miao-<lb/>
biologist with the ECU School of<lb/>
Medicine, is currently research-<lb/>
ing heart disease and may publish<lb/>
the results of his research next<lb/>
semester.<lb/>
Akers is using a $5,000<lb/>
research grant from the N.C.<lb/>
Heart Association for his studies<lb/>
on heart disease.<lb/>
Akers, a 1976 graduate of the<lb/>
University of Kansas School of<lb/>
Medicine, said he is concentra-<lb/>
ting his research on myocarditis,<lb/>
an infection of the muscle tissue<lb/>
of the heart.<lb/>
Myocarditis is caused by the<lb/>
Coxsackie B viruses, according to<lb/>
Akers.<lb/>
These viruses are thought to<lb/>
have killed 35 to 40 per cent of<lb/>
those who have died of heart<lb/>
prooiems over the past several<lb/>
years, said Akers.<lb/>
Akers plans to study the<lb/>
infectious process of Coxsackie<lb/>
viruses by working with cultured<lb/>
heart cells. Akers said he is<lb/>
studying the effect of certain<lb/>
anti-viral drugs on the cultured<lb/>
cells.<lb/>
The Coxsackie viruses are<lb/>
closely related to polio virus and<lb/>
produce symptoms similar to<lb/>
influenza, according to Akers.<lb/>
The viruses have also caused<lb/>
encephalitis, panaeatitis, liver<lb/>
infections, and meningitis.<lb/>
Currently, no effective<lb/>
therapy is available for the cure of<lb/>
the viruses, and, as of now, no<lb/>
study has been made on both<lb/>
myocarditis and the Coxsackie<lb/>
viruses, according to Akers.<lb/>
"I surveyed the literature that<lb/>
was available and it was evident<lb/>
and there was wak that needed<lb/>
to be done said Akers<lb/>
With the operation under the<lb/>
control of the registrar's office,<lb/>
they received priaity in work<lb/>
scheduling, except fa payroll.<lb/>
Moae said he doubts that<lb/>
anyone would argue about payroll<lb/>
getting priaity.<lb/>
Under the new system, natur-<lb/>
ally the registrar could not control<lb/>
the operations and the job<lb/>
priaity, he said.<lb/>
"Their (the computer cen-<lb/>
ter's) scope became much broad-<lb/>
er and we had to fit in among<lb/>
many users said Moae.<lb/>
During registration, Moore<lb/>
said their data processing section<lb/>
would wak all night, if neces-<lb/>
sary.<lb/>
The computer center no long-<lb/>
er had a third shift and that<lb/>
caused problems fa the regis-<lb/>
trar's office, according to Moae.<lb/>
He said advance arrange-<lb/>
ments would be necessary to get<lb/>
center personnel to wak laiger<lb/>
hours. And that there are times<lb/>
when their office does na know<lb/>
the job will run into anaher shift<lb/>
A oanputer operata would<lb/>
start a job and could na complete<lb/>
the job befae his shift was over,<lb/>
the job would possibly have to be<lb/>
run sometime during the day,<lb/>
Moae said. With the third shift,<lb/>
the job could be continued that<lb/>
night. This would free the com-<lb/>
puter fa other jobs, he said.<lb/>
The registrar'soffice isa large<lb/>
user with over 200 applications,<lb/>
said Little.<lb/>
This offioe processes all statis-<lb/>
tical data relating to students-<lb/>
grades, quality point averages,<lb/>
applications fa graduatiai and<lb/>
numerous aher jobs.<lb/>
"All statistical information<lb/>
relating to the student come from<lb/>
our file said Moae. "Unless<lb/>
our file is accurate and contin-<lb/>
ually updated, no one else can<lb/>
have access to this file he said.<lb/>
WESTERN SIZZLIN<lb/>
will feature a luncheon special on Number 1<lb/>
Saturday, December 10 , 11:00-4:00<lb/>
EAST10THST.<lb/>
8 oz. of Sirloin steak with baked potato<lb/>
or French fries &amp; Texas toast.<lb/>
ALL FOR<lb/>
$2.29<lb/>
<pb facs="00058027_0009"/><lb/>
8 Decsmbsr 1977 FOUNT AINHEAD<lb/>
reek Forum<lb/>
The Lambda Chis are contin-<lb/>
uing their support of the 1977<lb/>
ECU Basketball Team by spon-<lb/>
soring the first annual "Dribbie<lb/>
On<lb/>
This is a project conceived by<lb/>
the fraternity to raise money for<lb/>
the basketball squad, and invol-<lb/>
ves dribbling a basketball be-<lb/>
tween Greenville and Raleigh!<lb/>
On Fri Dec. 16, the members<lb/>
of Lambda Chi Alpha will begin a<lb/>
journey that will make Greenville<lb/>
history. The project will start on<lb/>
the ECU campus, and will wind<lb/>
its way through Greenville in a<lb/>
quest for donations which are<lb/>
both welcome and tax deductible.<lb/>
After the trip around Green-<lb/>
ville, the brothers will then head<lb/>
toward Raleigh, expecting to<lb/>
arrive at Reynolds Coliseum on<lb/>
Paving may be delayed<lb/>
By WILLIAM DELOACH<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The paving of the Garret<lb/>
parking lot may be farther off<lb/>
than expected.<lb/>
According to Joseph H. CaJ-<lb/>
der, director of security and<lb/>
traffic, the parking lot may not be<lb/>
ready for next semester.<lb/>
Calder said the Barns Con-<lb/>
struction Company had Novem-<lb/>
ber and December to complete<lb/>
the job.<lb/>
Calder pointed out that even<lb/>
though the job wouldn't take too<lb/>
long, now is a bad time to start<lb/>
because of the cold weather.<lb/>
"Concrete can't be poured in<lb/>
cold weather, so we may have to<lb/>
wait said Calder.<lb/>
The oontract states that they<lb/>
have to have it finished by the end<lb/>
of December he said.<lb/>
1' As such, the weather will be<lb/>
a decisive factor in the completion<lb/>
of the paving of the parking lot<lb/>
Students participate<lb/>
in field education<lb/>
By JUUA STRICKLAND<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Twenty-four students are<lb/>
participating in field education<lb/>
seminars this semester at ECU.<lb/>
Field education seminars are<lb/>
held each semester as a final step<lb/>
toward preparing students in the<lb/>
Department of SooiaJ Work and<lb/>
Corrections, School of Allied<lb/>
Health and Social Professions for<lb/>
the job market.<lb/>
Participation in a field se-<lb/>
minar is a required part of the<lb/>
students' curriculum. It is usually<lb/>
done in the senior year.<lb/>
Work in a professional capa-<lb/>
city accompanies the seminar<lb/>
class in pulling together theory<lb/>
and practical experience, accord-<lb/>
ing to Ted Gartman, an associate<lb/>
professor at ECU and coordinator<lb/>
of the program. This is the main<lb/>
intention of the program<lb/>
Most people involved in the<lb/>
program feel that it is very<lb/>
beneficial to student interns, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Carl Worthington, field ed-<lb/>
ucation supervisor at the Juvenile<lb/>
Probation Program in Greenville,<lb/>
compared the internship to prac-<lb/>
tice teaching. He said the interns<lb/>
are treated as staff members and<lb/>
carry a limited caseload.<lb/>
Worthington said his depart-<lb/>
ment has had good luck with the<lb/>
students. He also said they are<lb/>
academically well prepared for<lb/>
job experiences.<lb/>
L<lb/>
t J I 4<lb/>
FREE 1'FAST<lb/>
DELIVERY<lb/>
Pizza Mike<lb/>
Offers You Free Delivery<lb/>
to your Home, Office ,<lb/>
or School<lb/>
Also Sit-in or Pick-up<lb/>
Call 758-6500<lb/>
hours MonThurs<lb/>
Fri. Cr Sat.<lb/>
Sun<lb/>
4pm-1am<lb/>
4pm-2am<lb/>
4pm-12K)0 pm<lb/>
the N.C. State campus right on<lb/>
time for the game between the<lb/>
Pirates and the Wolfpack, sche-<lb/>
duled fa 7:30 p.m. on Sat Dec.<lb/>
17.<lb/>
This project is designed<lb/>
wholly to support the basketball<lb/>
squad, and all monies donated<lb/>
will be used toward this end. It<lb/>
carries the support of the ECU<lb/>
Athletic Department, and hope-<lb/>
fully the support of the entire<lb/>
student body.<lb/>
If all goes well, over 60 miles<lb/>
will be covered by this trip, and<lb/>
this could be one of the biggest<lb/>
money making projects since the<lb/>
APO rock-a-thon!<lb/>
Just before Thanksgiving, the<lb/>
Kappa Alpha little sisters played<lb/>
the Pi Kappa Phi little sisters in<lb/>
flag football. With both teams<lb/>
displaying an awesome defensive<lb/>
show, they managed to play to a<lb/>
nothing to nothing tie.<lb/>
After the game, the KA's and<lb/>
the Pi Kap's and ail the little<lb/>
sisters met at the KA house to<lb/>
celebrate.<lb/>
The brothers and pledges of<lb/>
Kappa Alpha were recently<lb/>
awarded another first place tro-<lb/>
phy in the ROTC Blood Drive.<lb/>
Everyone was proud to add this<lb/>
one to the unbroken string of<lb/>
blood drive trophies in the past.<lb/>
They are also very happy to<lb/>
announoe the initiation of 10 new<lb/>
brothers.<lb/>
Upcoming events for the near<lb/>
future include a band party Dec<lb/>
10, 1977 and the annual Christ-<lb/>
mas gag party.<lb/>
Alpha Phi would like to extend<lb/>
their congratulations to the new<lb/>
1978 recently elected officers. On<lb/>
Dec. 10, the Alpha Phi's are<lb/>
having a Christmas cocktail party.<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Continued from page 1)<lb/>
intend to change all that she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Broome also said she would<lb/>
like to see the campus media<lb/>
become independent of the SGA.<lb/>
"The students voted in an<lb/>
opinion poll in the fail elections<lb/>
that they would like to see<lb/>
independent publications she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"A press is not free if it is<lb/>
under government oontrol. The<lb/>
First Amendment is applicable to<lb/>
all newspapers- college and<lb/>
otherwise.<lb/>
Take Some of Eastern Carolina<lb/>
Home for the Holidays.<lb/>
Raw Peanuts Shelled<lb/>
or UnsheMed<lb/>
Keel Peanut Co. Memorial Drive,<lb/>
GreenvMe. (next to Bat em an's<lb/>
Animal Ho pital)<lb/>
Poster Girl Proves There9s Hope<lb/>
for Children with Birth Defects<lb/>
by Arthur J. Salisbury, M.0.<lb/>
Vice President for<lb/>
Medical Services<lb/>
The National Foundation-<lb/>
March of Dimes<lb/>
The disfiguring disease rick-<lb/>
ets was finally conquered more<lb/>
than 50 years ago with the dis-<lb/>
covery that vitamin D brought<lb/>
about striking cures. Under<lb/>
this regimen a child's distorted<lb/>
and softened bones would<lb/>
strengthen and straighten.<lb/>
But gradually doctors no-<lb/>
ticed that while the vast ma-<lb/>
jority of children with rickets<lb/>
were cured by this treatment,<lb/>
others weren't. Not until 1937<lb/>
was it found that some patients<lb/>
needed at least 100 times the<lb/>
normal dosage of vitamin D.<lb/>
Then it was clear this type of<lb/>
rickets was due not to a de-<lb/>
ficient diet, but to some other<lb/>
problem.<lb/>
Researchers learned that<lb/>
these children had vitamin D-<lb/>
resistant rickets, an inherited<lb/>
disorder, traced to a defective<lb/>
gene on the X chromosome.<lb/>
Patients with this birth de-<lb/>
fect of body chemistry do not<lb/>
retain calcium or phosphates<lb/>
from foods. Because these min-<lb/>
erals are necessary for normal<lb/>
bone formation, rickets result<lb/>
Denises fight<lb/>
Denise Nankivell, 1978<lb/>
March of Dimes National<lb/>
Poster Child, has vitamin ID-<lb/>
resistant rickets. Her father,<lb/>
uncle, and grandmother also<lb/>
have it. When Denise was six<lb/>
months old, her legs started to<lb/>
bow. Tests at The Milton S.<lb/>
Hershey Medical Center in<lb/>
Pennsylvania confirmed vita-<lb/>
min D-resistant rickets.<lb/>
At age two Denise had sur-<lb/>
gery to straighten her legs. She<lb/>
wore casts and braces to pre-<lb/>
vent her legs from bowing. Ini-<lb/>
tially, doctors thought she<lb/>
would need to wear braces<lb/>
through adolescence, but<lb/>
Denise responded to treatment<lb/>
so well that her braces have<lb/>
been removed for a four month<lb/>
trial period<lb/>
Denis' takes large doses of<lb/>
phosphate and vitamin D<lb/>
daily. This treatment allows<lb/>
mmmmn<lb/>
MARCH OF DIMES National Potter Child Deni�e Nankivall wai barn with<lb/>
vitamin D-reiistant rickets. Five-year-old Deniie hat had turgary to<lb/>
straighten her bowed logt. She rakei meditation daily to strengthen them.<lb/>
correct bone formation and<lb/>
also seems to be important in<lb/>
assuring normal growth.<lb/>
Finding the right dosage of<lb/>
phosphates and vitamin D re-<lb/>
quires sophisticated skill. Too<lb/>
much phosphate causes diar-<lb/>
rhea. The high dosage of vita-<lb/>
min D needed is nearly toxic<lb/>
and can cause weakness and<lb/>
weight loss. Overdosage can<lb/>
cause kidney damage and even-<lb/>
tually death Denise's calcium<lb/>
and phosphate levels are<lb/>
checked monthly The doctors<lb/>
also monitor her growth. So<lb/>
far, it is normal.<lb/>
A puzzling inheritance<lb/>
When doctors first investi-<lb/>
gated vitamin D-resistant rick-<lb/>
ets, it w. ?n't clear how it was<lb/>
inherited. An examination of<lb/>
the patient's family tree often<lb/>
failed to reveal any ancestors<lb/>
with rickets. Not until doctors<lb/>
began using blood phosphates<lb/>
as an indicator did a clear in-<lb/>
heritance pattern emerge.<lb/>
Family studies indicate that<lb/>
vitamin D-resistant rickets is<lb/>
caused by an abnormal gene<lb/>
on the X chromosome. Accord-<lb/>
ing to the laws of hereditv if<lb/>
a man has the disorder all of<lb/>
his daughters will also lie af-<lb/>
fe. ted. but none of his sons. If<lb/>
a woman has the disorder, all<lb/>
of her children hoys or girls<lb/>
have a 50-50 chance of receiv-<lb/>
ing the faulty gene.<lb/>
Problems and outlook<lb/>
Most children with vitamin<lb/>
D-resistant rickets never grow<lb/>
to normal height for several<lb/>
reasons Often diagnosis and<lb/>
treatment is started after de-<lb/>
formities and growth retarda-<lb/>
tion have become serious,<lb/>
especially for children with<lb/>
no clear family history of the<lb/>
disorder<lb/>
Also, it is very difficult to<lb/>
maintain medication in the<lb/>
growing years. If vitamin D<lb/>
overdose occurs, treatment<lb/>
may have to stop and not be<lb/>
reinstated until active rickets<lb/>
reappear so that the benefits<lb/>
of therapy are lost. In severe<lb/>
cases, patients show little<lb/>
benefit from doses of vitamin<lb/>
D high enough to risk kidney<lb/>
damage<lb/>
hrough its birth defects re-<lb/>
search program. The National<lb/>
Foundation March of Dimes<lb/>
supports scientists who are try-<lb/>
ing to pinpoint the flaw in<lb/>
body chemistry that interferes<lb/>
with the body's absorption of<lb/>
minerals Their findings may<lb/>
lead to nev methods of treat-<lb/>
ment that will Ixmefit children<lb/>
who cannot yet be helped.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058027_0010"/><lb/>
8 December 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 8 December 1977<lb/>
��'� m<lb/>
m<lb/>
�.<lb/>
i<lb/>
X<lb/>
esajwte<lb/>
an) a<lb/>
from all e Staff of<lb/>
owttamljeqb<lb/>
-  �����r��r�r�f� 1 "i . e ' i i i f<lb/>
� ' ' f ' ' ' ' ' '�  ' ' ' ' ' f ' ' 'T-r . 1 ff<lb/>
?lZ i ' i i cnzm<lb/>
a.<lb/>
i<lb/>
Ginby Sroome<lb/>
�f)ri3 5?olloman<lb/>
�auto Treuino<lb/>
Robert Stoatm<lb/>
�eigf) Soakley<lb/>
5Kim T)euin3<lb/>
SWiccIIc �aniate<lb/>
<pb facs="00058027_0011"/><lb/>
12 F0UNTA1NHEAD 8 Dmmrtm 1977<lb/>
THE EAST CAROUNA University Concert Choir under the direction of Dr. Brett Watson will perform in the Annual Christmas Assembly on Tuesday, December 13, at<lb/>
4.W p.m. in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Annual Christmas Assembly next Tuesday<lb/>
By SUSAN CHESTON<lb/>
Trends Staff<lb/>
A program of traditional<lb/>
Christmas music will be presen-<lb/>
ted Tues Dec 13, at 4DO p.m. in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium. The pro-<lb/>
gram, in honor of Dr. Leo W.<lb/>
Jenkins' last year as Chance) la of<lb/>
the University, is a tribute to his<lb/>
dedication to the development of<lb/>
ECU and programs that benefit<lb/>
ail of eastern North Carolina. A<lb/>
highlight of the assembly will be a<lb/>
Christmas message from Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins.<lb/>
Special music will be perform-<lb/>
ed by various groups from the<lb/>
School of M usic, and the audience<lb/>
will participate in the singing of<lb/>
carols. Guests will be welcomed<lb/>
in the foyer by music played by<lb/>
the Trombone Ensemble, under<lb/>
the direction of George Brous-<lb/>
sard.<lb/>
"Joy to me World sung by<lb/>
the entire assembly, will open the<lb/>
program. Other familiar carols to<lb/>
be sung by the audience will<lb/>
include "O Come, All Ye Faith-<lb/>
ful" and "0, Christmas Tree<lb/>
The Symphonic Wind Ensem-<lb/>
ble, under the direction of<lb/>
Herbert L. Carter, will play the<lb/>
favorite "Sleigh Ride The<lb/>
University Chorale, directed by<lb/>
Charles Moore, will sing "Christ-<lb/>
mas Medley" and "The Christ-<lb/>
mas Song" with soprano soloist<lb/>
The Conoert Choir, with con-<lb/>
ductor Brett Watson, will sing the<lb/>
familiar "Lo, How a Rose E'er<lb/>
Blooming" and "Fum, Fum,<lb/>
Fum The program will oondude<lb/>
Trends<lb/>
Denise Moore and Eddie Hender-<lb/>
son, accompanist.<lb/>
Women's Glee Club, con-<lb/>
ducted by Edward Glenn,<lb/>
will perform the English carol<lb/>
"Christmas Is Coming" and "In<lb/>
Dulci Jubilo" by Praetorius,<lb/>
Robin Porter, accompanist.<lb/>
with the entire assembly singing<lb/>
"Silent Night. '<lb/>
The assembly promises to be<lb/>
one of special meaning to the<lb/>
entire university and Greenville<lb/>
community. The event is free and<lb/>
open to all student sand friends of<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
THE 1977 ANNUAL Christmas Assembly will be presented in honor<lb/>
of Dr. Leo W. Jenkins' last yeai as Chancellor of ECU.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058027_0012"/><lb/>
WHHHHMHIHIHH<lb/>
MM<lb/>
6 Doambef 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Pgg� 13<lb/>
ACUI regional representatives chosen<lb/>
All-Campus Recreational Tournaments<lb/>
TRENDS STAFF REPORT<lb/>
Winners of the MendenhaJI<lb/>
Student Center 1977 All-Campus<lb/>
Recreational Tournaments have<lb/>
been selected and will represent<lb/>
East Carolina University in the<lb/>
Association of College Unions-<lb/>
International Regional Tourna-<lb/>
ments in Blacksburg, Virginia,<lb/>
February 9, 10 and 11.<lb/>
Keith Britt was first board and<lb/>
Jeff Seidenstein was second<lb/>
board in the chess competition.<lb/>
The five-round Swiss Tournament<lb/>
was set up over a period of<lb/>
several weeks with eight players<lb/>
involved in the competition.<lb/>
Regional individual champions<lb/>
may be selected to participate in<lb/>
the national intercollegiate cham-<lb/>
pionship face-to-face tournament<lb/>
to be held at the University of<lb/>
Minnesota.<lb/>
Billy Collier, Phil Dulin and<lb/>
Cheri Cousins won the Men's and<lb/>
Women's Table Tennis Tourna-<lb/>
ment. In winning the men's<lb/>
championship, Collier defeated<lb/>
Dulin in the final match of the<lb/>
double elimination tournament by<lb/>
the scores of 21-7 and 21-14.<lb/>
Cousins went undefeated in the<lb/>
women round-robin competition.<lb/>
Singles regional winners will be<lb/>
invited to represent their regions<lb/>
at the International Champion-<lb/>
ships to be held at the University<lb/>
of Houston.<lb/>
Bill Harper won the All-<lb/>
Campus Billiards Championship<lb/>
and will represent ECU in the<lb/>
regionals at Blacksburg. In win-<lb/>
ning the championship, Harper<lb/>
defeated William Bradley in the<lb/>
final match by a score of 50-44.<lb/>
Eleven players participated in<lb/>
the tournament. The competitors<lb/>
played 14.1 continuousor straight<lb/>
pool. Play was to 35 points until<lb/>
the semi-finals where play was to<lb/>
50 pants. The tournament was<lb/>
set up in a double elimination<lb/>
system.<lb/>
Regional winners in billiards<lb/>
will be selected to compete in the<lb/>
Intercollegiate Billiard Cham-<lb/>
pionships to be held at Florida<lb/>
State University in Tallahassee.<lb/>
A men's team and women<lb/>
individuals were selected in the<lb/>
All-Campus Bowling Tourna-<lb/>
ment. Mike Stand I, Jeff For-<lb/>
sythe, Mike Sidelinger, Terry<lb/>
Whitford and Mark Matthews will<lb/>
represent East Carolina as the<lb/>
total of fifteen games with the<lb/>
winners having the biggest total<lb/>
pintail for the games.<lb/>
The regional top all-�vents<lb/>
scorer in both the Men's and<lb/>
Women's Divisions may be invi-<lb/>
Tournament. The men's event<lb/>
will be held in St. Louis and the<lb/>
women's event in Miami, Florida.<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center,<lb/>
sponsor of the campus tourna-<lb/>
ments, will send all the winners to<lb/>
MENDENHALL STUDENT CENTER was the scene of intense competition during the 1977 All-Campus<lb/>
Recreational Tournaments.<lb/>
men's bowling team at the<lb/>
regional competition.<lb/>
Individual winners in the<lb/>
women's division were Cynthia<lb/>
Rutten and Jeannie Williams.<lb/>
The competition consisted of a<lb/>
ted to participate in the Interna-<lb/>
tional Intercollegiate Champion-<lb/>
ships which will be held as a<lb/>
special event of the American<lb/>
Bowling Congress and Women's<lb/>
International Bowling Congress<lb/>
Blacksburg, Virginia in February<lb/>
to compete in the Region 5<lb/>
tournaments with champions<lb/>
from schools in Kentucky, Ten-<lb/>
nessee, Virginia, South Carolina<lb/>
and North Carolina.<lb/>
Alvey, Holland in recital tonight<lb/>
By RENEE DIXON<lb/>
Trends Staff<lb/>
Pianist Michael Alvey and<lb/>
trombonist Butch Holland will<lb/>
perform a joint senior recital on<lb/>
Thurs Dec. 8 at 7:30 p.m. in<lb/>
A.J. Fletcher Recital Hall.<lb/>
Poetry<lb/>
U NT IT LED<lb/>
BySISSYTYNDALL<lb/>
Like cool autumn nights,<lb/>
I've come to know you,<lb/>
expect your sighs.<lb/>
But what, when winter<lb/>
chases away the golden dreams?<lb/>
Memories don't calm-<lb/>
They only play in my mind.<lb/>
Sissy Tyndall is a French major<lb/>
from Goldsboro.<lb/>
Michael Alvey, a resident of<lb/>
Culpeper, Va. is a candidate for a<lb/>
Bachelor's Degree in Music Ed-<lb/>
ucation and a student of Dr.<lb/>
Charles Bath of the ECU Music<lb/>
faculty. He is a member of the<lb/>
ECU Stage Band, the ECU<lb/>
Marching Pirates, and Music<lb/>
Educator's National Conference.<lb/>
Mike is also the organist at<lb/>
Oakmont Baptist Church.<lb/>
The pianist's program in-<lb/>
cludes works by Brahms,<lb/>
Beethoven. Gershwin, and a<lb/>
special arrangement of Stephen<lb/>
Sondheim's "Send in the<lb/>
Clowns<lb/>
Butch Holland, a resident of<lb/>
Richmond, Va is also a cand-<lb/>
idate for a Bachelor's Degree<lb/>
in Music Education and a student<lb/>
of Mr. George Broussard of the<lb/>
ECU Music Faculty. He is a<lb/>
member of the ECU Symphony<lb/>
Orchestra, Jazz Ensemble, Con-<lb/>
temporary Ensemble, Trombone<lb/>
Ensemble, and Music Educator's<lb/>
National Conference.<lb/>
Butch will perform trombone<lb/>
selections by Poulenc, Leib,<lb/>
Busser, McKay, and Saint-Saens.<lb/>
He will be accompanied by Robert<lb/>
Sullivan, piano, and assisted by<lb/>
Robert Burford, french horn, and<lb/>
Bill Frazier, trumpet.<lb/>
Michael and Butch plan to<lb/>
teach as high school band direct-<lb/>
ors after graduation and are<lb/>
considering graduate school for<lb/>
the future. Michael will travel to<lb/>
Europe this summer as a percus-<lb/>
sionist with All Student Marching<lb/>
Band-USA.<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
EMt PIERCING<lb/>
No Appointment Necessary<lb/>
$c Afc includes plain studs<lb/>
7 95 indudes birthstones<lb/>
J.D. MWSM CO.<lb/>
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0UDAV5 AT<lb/>
UNITY STAR NATURAL<lb/>
FOODS NOW HAS<lb/>
GIFT<lb/>
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A Natural Gift<lb/>
For Christmas<lb/>
We Carry Natural: Vitamins,<lb/>
Cosmetics, Protein Powders, Teas,<lb/>
and More. Books On: Natural<lb/>
Cooking And Nutrition, AI SO :<lb/>
Cooking Utensils, T-Shirts And More<lb/>
P.H. 752-9336 � E. 5th St.<lb/>
Open MonSat. 10:30 6:00<lb/>
MS<lb/>
CELEBfWE<lb/>
-fi4e Moudavs in SNie.<lb/>
AMD AT<lb/>
A<lb/>
SAVINGS<lb/>
ALL DAte MoLibty 4-FW?TV ViBNL<lb/>
ljD<lb/>
Lonfir �A�D Sttffl<lb/>
LoGS7&amp;5T-L&amp;JGTH F&amp;JZTV ocesses OuhpsuiTs<lb/>
LUCE SwEAJESS<lb/>
SHAWLS<lb/>
Ia&amp;l A&amp;onWf Pmsy Tops8oosts<lb/>
Wed. ro SsT<lb/>
oniv<lb/>
ON THE MALL-GREENVILLE<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00058027_0013"/><lb/>
Page 14 FOUNTAINHEAD 8 December 1977<lb/>
Keith Jarrett's latest 'a sine qua non for collectors'<lb/>
"Byablue" shows strong Eastern influence<lb/>
By JEFF ROLLINS<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
In his latest album, Byablue,<lb/>
the prolific jazz composer Keith<lb/>
Jarrett has taken several strides<lb/>
forward in the direction hisearlier<lb/>
albums were heading. The Asian<lb/>
influence is particularly strong on<lb/>
Byablue, as it was on his<lb/>
Misteries album. Jarrett is a<lb/>
moderate jazz avant-gardist, as<lb/>
such, his music is some of the<lb/>
most stylistically modern in jazz<lb/>
that is being written today, and<lb/>
for this he is interesting alone.<lb/>
But it is less for his innovations<lb/>
than fa the distinctive,personal-<lb/>
ity of his music that we, listen fa<lb/>
and look faward to .the next<lb/>
Jarrett album. His music bears<lb/>
his indelible signature in each<lb/>
phrase, much as T,helonius<lb/>
Monk's music is unmistakably<lb/>
his own.<lb/>
The song, 'Byablue is a pro-<lb/>
gress piece fa piano, tena sax,<lb/>
bass and drums that is made up of<lb/>
the iteration of a basic theme with<lb/>
only slight musical variations<lb/>
thrown in fa interest and di-<lb/>
versiai. Unfortunately it isaplain<lb/>
and underwritten piece This is<lb/>
the one song oi the album where<lb/>
Jarrett allows himself to get<lb/>
"jazzy" in the lay sense of the<lb/>
wad, meaning that it has a beat<lb/>
you can stamp your feet too, at<lb/>
least parts of it do. But the "bop"<lb/>
moments of "Byablue" are far<lb/>
between and while we aren't<lb/>
snapping our fingers we are<lb/>
being treated to some moderately<lb/>
entertaining sax wak by Dewey<lb/>
Redman. The soig has mae<lb/>
potential than is realized here,<lb/>
one senses, especially since this<lb/>
was chosen as the title cut, and it<lb/>
is surprising that Jarrett didn't<lb/>
try to make it mae substantial by<lb/>
writing in solos anda additional<lb/>
melodic motives.<lb/>
"Kenya' is a beautiful East-<lb/>
ern anthem written fa soprano<lb/>
sax, (by Keith Jarrett) tena sax,<lb/>
bass and percussion. It is all too<lb/>
brief. Too bad the oomposer<lb/>
KEITH JARRETT, PROLIFIC jazz composer.<lb/>
released a new album with a strong eastern influence.<lb/>
All Square Dance<lb/>
Shoes<lb/>
Pr<lb/>
7.00<lb/>
At Barre, Ltd.<lb/>
805 Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
 Phone 752-51<lb/>
didn't see fit to lengthen this one<lb/>
of the truly aiginal and startling<lb/>
pieces on the album. The phras-<lb/>
ing is such that you've probably<lb/>
never heard befae unless you've<lb/>
been trekking through Pakistan<lb/>
on a yak, and probably na even<lb/>
then.<lb/>
The last song on the.first side,<lb/>
"Rainbow" is the brightest, most<lb/>
up-beat song on the album. Its<lb/>
melodic sheen is one that lovas<lb/>
of his solo conoert albums will<lb/>
recognize and love. Good Jarrett-<lb/>
jazz, with excellent basslicks<lb/>
Saadn Shoe ShoP<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.at<lb/>
College View<lb/>
Cleaners<lb/>
THE STUDENTS SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
WRIGHT BUILDING<lb/>
Is Pleased to announce that it is now<lb/>
accepting both MASTER CHARGE<lb/>
and VISA (bank americard)<lb/>
for your convenience.<lb/>
BANKAMERICARD<lb/>
ue&amp;omeWie<lb/>
master charge<lb/>
THE INTERBANK CARD<lb/>
FREE Gift Wrapping on purchases of<lb/>
$2.00 or more. Do your Christmas<lb/>
shopping in the Students supply store<lb/>
am 5:00 pm<lb/>
Sat 9:00am-12noon<lb/>
thrown in by the ubiquitiously<lb/>
recorded bass-master, Paul<lb/>
Motian. This is the song that you<lb/>
would hear at the beginning of a<lb/>
particularly good party.<lb/>
"Trieste as its name im-<lb/>
plies, is a dreamy legato piece.<lb/>
The song embodies the type of<lb/>
modern melancholia one might<lb/>
feel while he is drinking a bottle<lb/>
of Chateau Neuf under a Jackson<lb/>
Pollock. In other words, in this<lb/>
song Jarrett does weakly what<lb/>
Bartok did with genious seventy<lb/>
years ago. But, then, we could<lb/>
say that about a lot of people.<lb/>
"Fantasm" is the shortest<lb/>
song on the whole album. It is<lb/>
composed of one musical thought<lb/>
(melody really would be too old<lb/>
fashioned a term) written for<lb/>
tenor sax and piano with bass<lb/>
punctuation. Even though the<lb/>
piece is sparsely written and very<lb/>
short (less than two minutes) it is<lb/>
extremely musically effective.<lb/>
"Yahllah" with its Moham-<lb/>
medan name, combines a pre-<lb/>
dominant Asian influence with<lb/>
some of Jarrett's most successful<lb/>
piano wak. Increasingly a stylis-<lb/>
tic trademark of Jarrett's, the<lb/>
Cine<lb/>
WE WILL<lb/>
BE<lb/>
OPEN<lb/>
JAN. 278<lb/>
FOR BOWL GAMES<lb/>
Asian percussion instruments and<lb/>
rhythms in "Yahllah" are ex-<lb/>
tremely evocative. The<lb/>
"musette an Eastern wind<lb/>
instrument, has a pagan sound,<lb/>
just right fa dancing around a<lb/>
fire to, and its peculiar sound, (at<lb/>
least to Western ears) is excell-<lb/>
ently utilized fa the most possi-<lb/>
ble musical potential. Jarrett<lb/>
contrasts the cobra-ooming-out-<lb/>
of-the-basket Asian parts of<lb/>
Yahllah' with a very pretty piano<lb/>
interlude about halfway through<lb/>
the song and this oontrast we<lb/>
sense is somehow aesthetically<lb/>
very necessary.<lb/>
The album ends with a<lb/>
pensativo shaty of the themes<lb/>
mae prosaically rendered at the<lb/>
beginning of the album in "Bya-<lb/>
blue<lb/>
Byablue is a sine qua non fa<lb/>
the Jarrett oollecta and a recom-<lb/>
mended buy fa the Jarrett fan,<lb/>
but fa the unintroduced his other<lb/>
albums would be wiser buys,<lb/>
particularly his solo conoert al-<lb/>
bums a Hourglass. If aie is<lb/>
Jarrett's wast and ten his Koln<lb/>
Concerts, then Byablue barely<lb/>
scrapes by with a seven.<lb/>
Saads Shoe Shop<lb/>
113 Grande Ave. at<lb/>
(College View<lb/>
Cleaners<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Will Be Open<lb/>
Mon. 12th Thurs 15th<lb/>
Till 3:00 am To Coincide<lb/>
With Ubrary Hours<lb/>
Coffee, Small Sandwiches &amp;<lb/>
Doughnuts Will be Available<lb/>
J<lb/>
<pb facs="00058027_0014"/><lb/>
��������iMHBBMHi<lb/>
Aja'accessible for masses, cerebral enough for progressives  1977 F��"TAINHEAD p-r15<lb/>
Steely Dan repeats successful formula<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Steely Dan, over the past five<lb/>
years, developed a unique blend<lb/>
of intelligent, often cryptic lyrics<lb/>
with freshly inventive pop tunes.<lb/>
On Aja, their sixth album, they<lb/>
stray not an inch from their<lb/>
successful formula.<lb/>
This album backs off from the<lb/>
latin and reggae influences of<lb/>
their last album, The Royal Scam,<lb/>
in favor of a more jazz oriented<lb/>
sound. The major difference in<lb/>
Steely Dans music from most<lb/>
pop recorded today is in the<lb/>
band's musical foundation:<lb/>
whereas most pop and rock are<lb/>
direct descendants of the blues,<lb/>
Steely Dan traces its roots to<lb/>
swing and bebop. The result is a<lb/>
pleasant alternative to basic Top<lb/>
40 puffery.<lb/>
Steely Dan, or rather Walter<lb/>
Becker (guitarist and bassist) and<lb/>
Donald Fagen (keyboards), view<lb/>
society in odd, usually cynical<lb/>
terms. Their calculated precision<lb/>
is antithetical to many people's<lb/>
conception of rock as a strong<lb/>
musical expression of strong<lb/>
emotion, specifically, love, and<lb/>
anger. Becker and Fagen choose<lb/>
instead to observe the gangs on<lb/>
from a dark corner, detached and<lb/>
methodical, rather than take an<lb/>
active part and risk injury.<lb/>
With the exception of "Home<lb/>
at Last" and "I Got the News<lb/>
every song on this album is single<lb/>
material. Already, the title track<lb/>
and "Peg" are receiving quite a<lb/>
bit of airplay.<lb/>
Side one opens with "Black<lb/>
Cow a bitter goodbye to a dead<lb/>
love affair telling her in so many<lb/>
words that it's over now so get<lb/>
lost. Like most of the other songs<lb/>
on the album, this one is upbeat<lb/>
with original chord changes and<lb/>
imaginative melodic hooks, com-<lb/>
plimented by the polished perfec-<lb/>
tion of top session musicians.<lb/>
The dreamy title track is a<lb/>
radical departure from anything<lb/>
Becker and Fagen have done in<lb/>
the past. Clocking in at just under<lb/>
eight minutes, this is the longest<lb/>
song they have ever recorded.<lb/>
The piece moves through distinct<lb/>
stages, for lack of a better word,<lb/>
movements, finally climaxing in a<lb/>
furious competitior between<lb/>
Wayne Shorter (tenor sax), and<lb/>
Steve Gadd (drums). The lyrics<lb/>
are typically wierd, using such<lb/>
phrases as "double helix in the<lb/>
sky tonightthrow out the hard-<lb/>
wareLet's do it right lines<lb/>
apparently about sexual activi-<lb/>
ties. Or biology lab.<lb/>
"Deaoon Blues" oonoerns its-<lb/>
elf with the label society gives<lb/>
winners and losers. The song is<lb/>
undistinguished either by lyrics<lb/>
or music, simply textbook Dan.<lb/>
"Peg the second single off<lb/>
this album, bids farewell to yet<lb/>
another lover, this one an aspir-<lb/>
Whiteware-Ready To Paint<lb/>
Downtown Evans Street Mall<lb/>
Open Evenings<lb/>
752-0761<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
r -<lb/>
DONALD FAGEN, KEYBOARDIST<lb/>
ing film actress. One of the best<lb/>
tunes on the album, this song is<lb/>
blessed with the backing vocals of<lb/>
former Dan Member and current<lb/>
Doobie Brothers Michael<lb/>
McDonald, adding an upper<lb/>
register bite to the background<lb/>
chorus.<lb/>
A new interpretation of<lb/>
Homer's "Odyssey" is supposed-<lb/>
ly offered in "Homeat Last but<lb/>
doesn't quite oome off. The song<lb/>
is however, a change of pace from<lb/>
the rest of the album, this piece<lb/>
being a bluesy piano shuffle.<lb/>
The remaining two tracks, "I<lb/>
Got the News" and "Josie" are<lb/>
more typical of Steely Dan during<lb/>
tor steely Dan.<lb/>
the time Pretzel Logic was<lb/>
recorded. The former resembles<lb/>
"Parker's Band while later is<lb/>
most like "Through with Buzz<lb/>
"I Got the News" is a<lb/>
dispassionate description of a<lb/>
love-making session, at times<lb/>
needlessly vulgar. "Josie" deals<lb/>
with a similar theme, threaten-<lb/>
ing, or perhaps promising Josie a<lb/>
friendly gang-bang when she gets<lb/>
home. "Josie" iseasilythe better<lb/>
of the two, even though its'<lb/>
strange guitar line is out of place<lb/>
in this setting.<lb/>
Steely Dan appears to be<lb/>
moving closer towards jazz with<lb/>
each album, especially soon this<lb/>
Lint<lb/>
located behind<lb/>
THE ATTIC<lb/>
o<lb/>
A<lb/>
JASMINE - Fri �r Sat<lb/>
8 THURPUBLIC OPEN HOUSE<lb/>
9 FRIj  JASMINE<lb/>
�10 SATj JASMINE<lb/>
11 SUN (CLOSED FOR PRIVATE PARTY)<lb/>
12 MONCOWBOYS vs. 49ERS<lb/>
�13 TUESFeatures<lb/>
14 WEDBACKGAMMON TOURN.<lb/>
� �15 THURPUBLIC OPEN HOUSE<lb/>
I 16 FRIPAUL TARDIF QUARTFetI<lb/>
��17 SAT.  MOVIE &amp; SAT. NIGHT LIVE<lb/>
19 MON LINE'S CHRISTMAS PARTY<lb/>
�20 TUESFeatures<lb/>
21 WED (CLOSED FOR PRIVATE PARTY)<lb/>
� Tuas � Member Night<lb/>
�� Thur - Specials<lb/>
��� Sat - Ladies Night<lb/>
WE WILL BE<lb/>
OPEN JAN. 278<lb/>
FOR BOWL GAMES<lb/>
MERRY CHRISTMAS<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
HAPPY NEW YEAR<lb/>
MERRY CHRISTMAS<lb/>
outing, using sidemen such as<lb/>
Wayne Shorter, Tom Scott, and<lb/>
Victor Feldman. The result is a<lb/>
sort of thinking man's opo:<lb/>
accesible enough for the mass<lb/>
audience, yet cerebral enough for<lb/>
the so-called progressive crowd.<lb/>
SHofcsHOP<lb/>
REPAIR AU.<lb/>
LEATHER ODOOS<lb/>
OONTHOMffi GrOTrtvllto<lb/>
POSTER CHILD<lb/>
HAS A BALL<lb/>
PLAYING TENNIS<lb/>
TENNIS ANYONE? "Yes says March of Dimes National<lb/>
Poster Child Denise Nankivell. First lesson: concentration<lb/>
is the key to success on the tennis court<lb/>
KEEPING YOUR EYE on the ball is important but five-<lb/>
year-old Denise prefers the "close your eyes and swing<lb/>
method Unfortunately, It doesn't work as well.<lb/>
WHEN THE GAME of hit or miss becomes mostly miss,<lb/>
Denise decides It's more fun to piay catch. After all, she<lb/>
says, "Tennis Isn't for everyone<lb/>
�hbb<lb/>
<pb facs="00058027_0015"/><lb/>
Page 16 F0UNTA1NHEAD 8<lb/>
NED BE A TTY QIVES a superlative performance as Arthur Jensen<lb/>
in '�Network to be screened as this weekend's Free Flick.<lb/>
WOODY ALLEN, ACTOR, author, comedian, industry during the 1950's "The Front" will be<lb/>
director and spoiler of women stars in ' The Front shown next weekend in the MSC Theatre, Friday<lb/>
a film about "blacklisting" in the entertainment and Saturday at 7 and 9 p.m.<lb/>
Expletives deleted from TV<lb/>
talk draw response<lb/>
PETER FINCH WON a posthumous Academy A ward for his role in<lb/>
"Network to be shown this Friday and Saturday at 7 and 9 in the<lb/>
MSC Theatre.<lb/>
UNIQUE GIFTS<lb/>
BYSETH DAVID LATHAM<lb/>
Trends Staff<lb/>
It can happen at any time.<lb/>
There you are sitting in your most<lb/>
comfortable chair, feeding your<lb/>
face with potato chips, and<lb/>
soaking up your favoritf program<lb/>
on the tube when suddenly you<lb/>
hear, "I thought it was a -beep<lb/>
beep- good act<lb/>
This is just one example of<lb/>
how television oensors what is not<lb/>
permissible over the airways.<lb/>
It could be that T.V. is<lb/>
starving for humor and takes<lb/>
these cheap shots just to get a<lb/>
quick laugh. Or maybe this<lb/>
new-found abbreviated censor-<lb/>
ship is simply reflecting the<lb/>
wishes that we, society, want<lb/>
more down-to-earth language on<lb/>
television. But perhaps the real<lb/>
reason for the introduction of<lb/>
these "beep" words into sound<lb/>
media is fa audience participa-<lb/>
tion. The listeners can substitute<lb/>
any wad a wads that they see<lb/>
fits the blank left by the onissive<lb/>
"beep" wad.<lb/>
What you replace the  beep<lb/>
wad with depends ai who you<lb/>
are and how your mind waks. If<lb/>
you have a perverted mind, you<lb/>
will undoubtedly think of some-<lb/>
thing perverted. If your mind<lb/>
revolved around sex, there are<lb/>
numerous four-letter wads to<lb/>
pick from. And if you're a radical,<lb/>
a whole underground of scheming<lb/>
diction awaits your call. To each<lb/>
his own.<lb/>
You can hear "beep" wads<lb/>
ai any given comedy show, many<lb/>
television variety shows, and<lb/>
frequently in radio commercials.<lb/>
The "almost" live Gong Show<lb/>
has at least half-a-dozen visual<lb/>
beeps in its 30 minutes, while if<lb/>
you watch Maude you can expect<lb/>
no less than one "beep" per<lb/>
show. Late night T.V especially<lb/>
Johnny Carson, is infamous fa its<lb/>
deleted and beeped wads.<lb/>
"Beep" wads really aren't<lb/>
that bad. They keep kids fron<lb/>
hearing things they (probably)<lb/>
shouldn't hear, and the wads do<lb/>
cause us to think a little. My only<lb/>
complaint is the difficulty in<lb/>
finding a wad to take the place of<lb/>
the "beep" wad.<lb/>
The most reosnt beep wad<lb/>
I had trouble with was in an<lb/>
advertisement about Kentucky<lb/>
Fried Chicken, and it went like<lb/>
thisThat's mighty good-beep-<lb/>
chicken "Sure, there are plenty<lb/>
of wads that will fit, but to<lb/>
describe a chicken?<lb/>
Still, we are missing sane-<lb/>
thing we shouldn't, and are<lb/>
finding how dirty our minds really<lb/>
are. So to all you "beep" wad<lb/>
users: Take your-beep beep<lb/>
beep-and stuff it up your-beep<lb/>
beep- and then-beep beep beep<lb/>
beep.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058027_0016"/><lb/>
���HBBIhH<lb/>
�<lb/>
:��i- :� .��� IK9R<lb/>
8 December 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 17<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
by JOHN EVANS,<lb/>
Team handball meet<lb/>
The Team Handball champions from East Carolina and<lb/>
Appalachian State University met last Thursday and Friday in<lb/>
Memorial Gym and the teams each came away with one win.<lb/>
Representing East Carolina were the Belk Embalmers and<lb/>
additional players from the other three teams in the all-campus Team<lb/>
Handball tournament. ECU'S team was led by Jim Chastain, who<lb/>
played during the regular season for the Embalmers, and alternates<lb/>
Dennis Ballamy, of the Time Outs, and Bob Peak of the Ayoock Giants.<lb/>
In the first game played on Thursday night, Chastain scored 10<lb/>
points, including the winning goal, astne ECU champs beat ASU 31-30<lb/>
at the buzzer. Peak scored six in the game and Bellamy tallied five<lb/>
points. In Friday afternoon's game Appalachian gained a measure of<lb/>
revenge with a 37-33 win over East Carolina. Chastain led the ECU<lb/>
representatives with 11 points and Brad Middleton scored six points.<lb/>
Bellamy scored four times and Peak and Daryll Smith of the Tekes<lb/>
scored three points in the losing cause<lb/>
Appalachian had two excellent Handball players in Bill Revelleand<lb/>
Randy McCaslin. Both scored 20 points over the two-day series.<lb/>
Revelle had been invited to try out for the 1976 Olympic Handball<lb/>
team, but did not accept the invitation. Chastain's performance<lb/>
matched that of the Appalachian stars, as he finished the two-game<lb/>
series with 21 points-the series high.<lb/>
The Belk Embalmers won the intramural team title earlier in the<lb/>
week when they downed the Ayoock Giants 22-17. Chastain had eight<lb/>
pants in the win and Middleton added six, but the high scorer fa the<lb/>
game was Peak. He soared 13 points and finished as the high scorer in<lb/>
the all-campus playoffs with 21 points.<lb/>
The Giants reached the finals with a 15-12 win over Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
and the EmbaJmers reached the finals with a 23-18 win over the Tekes.<lb/>
Roy Turner and Chuck Freedman of Kappa Sigma won the<lb/>
Intramural Sports Trivia contest fa the second year in a row as they<lb/>
downed Bill Greene and Larry Schick in the finals.<lb/>
Turner and Freedman won last year with a more oomplete area ot<lb/>
questioning, but this year's trivia quest ions covered only major league<lb/>
baseball. The first place trophies were presented by Hal Baird, a major<lb/>
league baseball player who goes to school here in the offseason. Baird<lb/>
was a pitcher on the ECU team.<lb/>
Among the contestants Freedman and Turner had to overoome was<lb/>
the team of Dr. Jimmy Grimsley, a famer maja league umpire, and<lb/>
Gary Overton, a famer ECU baseball player.<lb/>
The intramural two-on-two basketball title was decided last week as<lb/>
Darius Harris and Sheila Bowe defeated Al McCrimmon and Gwen<lb/>
Scott in a best-of-three contest. The title game had been postponed<lb/>
from earlier in the year because of an injury to McCrimmons' hand.<lb/>
Men'sand women's intramural basketball began Tuesday with 125<lb/>
men's teams registered and only 26 women's teams registered in the<lb/>
competitive student leagues. Two other leagues, the faculty-staff<lb/>
league and the non-competitive student league, will start after break.<lb/>
Registration runs from Jan. 9-12 on the faculty-staff league. Men'sand<lb/>
women's bowling registration will also begin on the ninth of January<lb/>
and end onJ,an. 12.<lb/>
New raoquetball court reservation policif have been established.<lb/>
Beginning Jan. 9, reservation fa Court O have to be made in the<lb/>
Minges equipment room from 8-12 each maning and registration fa<lb/>
court two must be made in Memaial's equipment room fron 8-12.<lb/>
Pirates down UNC<lb/>
By RAY HARRELL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
Pirates gained one of the greatest<lb/>
athletic victaies in the school's<lb/>
histay Tuesday night when the<lb/>
men's swim team soundly whip-<lb/>
ped the UNC Tarheels, 61-52, in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Pirates swim coach Ray Scharf<lb/>
called it "A good victay, the best<lb/>
in my tenure here. We have had<lb/>
mances even in a trial team<lb/>
effat, and this meet had several.<lb/>
Senior John McCauley set a<lb/>
new varsity recad in the 50 meter<lb/>
free style with a time of 20:79.<lb/>
Senia Billy Thane set a pool<lb/>
recad fa the 200 meta freestyle<lb/>
at 1:42.2, and Kevin Meisel set a<lb/>
new freshman and pool recad of<lb/>
935.39 in the 1000 meta free-<lb/>
style.<lb/>
Freshman diva Tom Bell won<lb/>
the 3 meta dive as the Pirates<lb/>
split the boards with UNC.<lb/>
Ted Nieman, sophomae,<lb/>
gave a dramatic effort by entaing<lb/>
the 1000 and 200 meta freestyle<lb/>
events back-to-back, capturing<lb/>
second place in both, and also<lb/>
taking second in the 500 meta<lb/>
freestyle.<lb/>
The 400 meta freestyle relay<lb/>
team alsoaet a new varsity recad<lb/>
of 3 04.89 This was the last<lb/>
swimming event, and it clinched<lb/>
the win for the Pirates<lb/>
BUC SWIMMERS A WAIT start.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Photo by Ron WoooWbx<lb/>
The Pirate swimmas have a<lb/>
very tough schedule in such<lb/>
teams as Duke, N.C. State,<lb/>
Maryland, and a dual meet with<lb/>
LSU and Alambama, the nation's<lb/>
second-ranked team.<lb/>
big victaies in tne past, such as<lb/>
beating Army in 1972; when we<lb/>
defeated Florida State by 8<lb/>
points, who, by the way, have rrot<lb/>
scheduled us since; and when we<lb/>
defeated Maryland fa the first<lb/>
time three years ago, and follow-<lb/>
ed that with anotha victay in the<lb/>
Cde Field House.<lb/>
The team we most like to beat,<lb/>
though, is Carolina. We always<lb/>
have special feelings fa any meet<lb/>
with Carolina; we feel that we<lb/>
have to wak harda to show them<lb/>
that we deserve their respect;<lb/>
that we are not just "that school<lb/>
down east<lb/>
We have always given our<lb/>
best against them, but until last<lb/>
night it was neva good enough. I<lb/>
have had some long rides home<lb/>
from these meets, and I'm sure<lb/>
their coach had a long ride back to<lb/>
Chapel Hill last night<lb/>
Coach Scharf was thrilled with<lb/>
his teams win, saying, "It was a<lb/>
team effort, evay one did what<lb/>
they had to do when they had to<lb/>
do it, and everyone gave 100<lb/>
pacent<lb/>
The meet was extremely com-<lb/>
petitive-with recads set in 11 of<lb/>
13 events: 6 by the Pirates and 5<lb/>
by UNC. The victay is even mae<lb/>
impressive because UNC's times<lb/>
were faster than when they won<lb/>
the Penn State Relays.<lb/>
Theie are standout pafa-<lb/>
SWIMMING HEAD COACH Ray Scharf.<lb/>
X��i<lb/>
�.������'<lb/>
� �.� .� � t � .t <lb/>
.�.�w�.mdMMIN<lb/>
<pb facs="00058027_0017"/><lb/>
Page 18 FOUNTAINHEAD 8 December 1977<lb/>
Old story aided Pirate victory<lb/>
Wherever you are, Joe San-<lb/>
ders, Ray Scharf would like to<lb/>
thank you.<lb/>
Scharf is the head swimming<lb/>
coach at East Carolina University.<lb/>
In 1968, Joe Sanders was a staff<lb/>
writer for the Daily Tar Heel, a<lb/>
daily newspiiper in Chapel Hill.<lb/>
You see, the way Ray Scharf has<lb/>
it figured, Sanders had as much<lb/>
to do with the Pirates 61-52 win<lb/>
over the University of North<lb/>
Carolina swim team as anyone<lb/>
else.<lb/>
If all this seems a little<lb/>
strange, let us go back to the year<lb/>
1968 for a moment. That was Ray<lb/>
Scharf s first year as head coach<lb/>
at ECU. It was also the year that<lb/>
East Carolina College was host to<lb/>
the AAU National Champion-<lb/>
ships. In honor of the occasion,<lb/>
Mmges Natatorium was built. At<lb/>
the time, and to the present, the<lb/>
facility ranks as one of the finest<lb/>
in the United States.<lb/>
However, Mr. Sanders did not<lb/>
see it that way. In an article that<lb/>
he wrote for the DTM, Sanders<lb/>
made specific reference as to his<lb/>
opinion of the East Carolina<lb/>
operation.<lb/>
it seems that a few years<lb/>
ago, someone at East Carolina<lb/>
convinced the college that what<lb/>
an aspiring regional university<lb/>
MERRY<lb/>
CHRISTMAS<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
from<lb/>
GIVE 'EM THE GOOD<lb/>
STUFF FOR CHRISTMAS!<lb/>
needed was an expensive swim-<lb/>
ming pool and a national champ-<lb/>
ionship. So they built an expen-<lb/>
sive pool, and hosted a national<lb/>
championship and when it was<lb/>
over, all the visiting swimmers<lb/>
and reporters went home.<lb/>
"Now there the pool sits-<lb/>
presumably full of water. As far<lb/>
as anyone has heard, the new<lb/>
pool has boosted neither the<lb/>
athletic nor academic standing of<lb/>
ECU, but if we detect an<lb/>
improvement, we'll let you<lb/>
know<lb/>
Those words were written ten<lb/>
years ago. But from that day,<lb/>
until Tuesday night, when North<lb/>
Carolina visited Minges Coli-<lb/>
seum, Ray Scharf has had one<lb/>
burning disireto beat the Uni-<lb/>
versity of North Carolina.<lb/>
"Now you understand why it<lb/>
means so much that we beat<lb/>
them Scharf reflected. "That<lb/>
story has been eating at me ever<lb/>
since 1968. That was an insult to<lb/>
our program, to the school, and to<lb/>
the community in general. All<lb/>
those years of pent-up frustration<lb/>
I can now let out, because we<lb/>
finally did it, we beat them<lb/>
(61-52, if you hadn't heard.)<lb/>
"I have put the article on our<lb/>
bulletin board every year before<lb/>
the Carolina meet said Scharf.<lb/>
 I wanted our guys to realize why<lb/>
it was so important for us to beat<lb/>
them. I wanted them psyched<lb/>
And psyched they were in<lb/>
1977. The Pirates set six new<lb/>
varsity records, four new pool<lb/>
records, and six meet records as<lb/>
well. In addition, the Pirates<lb/>
qualified John McCauley in two<lb/>
events, the 50 and 100 freestyle,<lb/>
for the NCAA championships and<lb/>
also qualified the 400 freestyle<lb/>
relay team of McCauley, Billy<lb/>
Thorne, John Tudor and Bill<lb/>
Fehling fa the nationals.<lb/>
"That was a great, great win<lb/>
for us &amp; .arf said. "The guys<lb/>
swam out of their heads. I'm<lb/>
proud of every one of them. This<lb/>
has to be the greatest.<lb/>
Maryland defeats Bucs<lb/>
By STEVE BYERS<lb/>
Reporting From College Park<lb/>
Despite a 38 point perfor-<lb/>
mance by East Carolina's Oliver<lb/>
Mack, the University of Maryland<lb/>
led by the ballanced attack of Jo<lb/>
Jo Hunter, Albert King and<lb/>
Lawrence Boston, went on to<lb/>
defeat the Pi rates 130-106.<lb/>
The Terps who jumped out to<lb/>
a first half 25-10 lead saw it scon<lb/>
PANTANA BOB'S<lb/>
Open 4 00 Daily<lb/>
MERRY CHRISTMAS<lb/>
To All And To All A Good Night<lb/>
become 25-18 as Oliver Mack led<lb/>
the Pirate comeback. With eight<lb/>
minutes left in the first half the<lb/>
Pirates were down by only five at<lb/>
33-28. At this point the Terps ran<lb/>
off 18 points to ECU's 5 and never<lb/>
lost control of the game after-<lb/>
ward.<lb/>
Mack led all scorers with 38.<lb/>
Herb Gray had 18, Bernard Hill<lb/>
20, Greg Cornelius 13 and Roger<lb/>
Carr 9.<lb/>
For Maryland Albert King<lb/>
controlled the boards finishing<lb/>
with a game high of 13 rebounds.<lb/>
He helped Maryland outrebound<lb/>
ECU 67-42.<lb/>
The Pirates next ,game is<lb/>
Friday night against LaSalle.<lb/>
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6 Oacember 1t77 FOUNTAIMHEAD Papa 19<lb/>
Pirate wrestlers face tough opposition<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The East Carolina wrestling<lb/>
team journeys northward to<lb/>
Bethlehem, Pa. this weekend to<lb/>
face nationally ranked Oregon<lb/>
State and Lehigh along with East<lb/>
Stroudsburg State in a quad<lb/>
meet.<lb/>
Bill Hill's youthful Pirate<lb/>
grapplers have been impressive<lb/>
in their first two tournament<lb/>
appearanoBS this season, but will<lb/>
be heavy underdogs against<lb/>
Oregon State and Lehigh.<lb/>
"We're going up there with<lb/>
the attitude we can win against<lb/>
all three teams says Hill.<lb/>
"However, it will be extremely<lb/>
tough to beat a national caliber<lb/>
team like Lehigh at home. We've<lb/>
got everybody healthy so we<lb/>
should be ready to give it<lb/>
everything<lb/>
The Amateur Wrestling News<lb/>
latest ooliegiate rankings have<lb/>
Oregon State in fourth place while<lb/>
the Engineers of Lehigh are<lb/>
ranked eighth.<lb/>
Oregon State finished fifth in<lb/>
the NCAA Championships last<lb/>
year and have four returning<lb/>
national plaoe winners. Lehigh<lb/>
took seventh in the nationals and<lb/>
returned two All-Americans,<lb/>
Although the Pirates boast of<lb/>
no All-Americans, there will be<lb/>
several interesting matchups<lb/>
among the teams.<lb/>
ECU'S Bob Passino, a fresh-<lb/>
man will go against Oregon<lb/>
State's Pat Plourd in the 118<lb/>
weight class. Passino has a 7-3<lb/>
record this season with a second<lb/>
place finish in the Carolina<lb/>
Invitational.<lb/>
Plourd took sixth in the<lb/>
nationals last year and will be<lb/>
favored to win it a'l at 118 this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Both Oregon State and Lehigh<lb/>
have national place winners at<lb/>
177 and 190. Oregon State<lb/>
sophomore Marty Ryan took sixth<lb/>
in the nation last year as a<lb/>
freshman at 177 and will face<lb/>
ECU'S Jay Dever or Butch Revils.<lb/>
Dever or Revils will also face<lb/>
Lehigh's Mark Lieberman who<lb/>
was the runner-up in the nation<lb/>
last year at 177. Dever is 7-1 this<lb/>
season and defeated Revils in the<lb/>
finals of the Carolina Invitational<lb/>
two weeks ago.<lb/>
Revils, a freshman from<lb/>
Norfolk, Va boasts a 6-1 record<lb/>
and captured the 177 pound<lb/>
championship in the Monarch<lb/>
Open earlier in the season.<lb/>
At 190, Oregon State will use<lb/>
sophomore Howard Harris, who<lb/>
took sixth in the nationals while<lb/>
Lehigh has Mike Brown who<lb/>
placed fifth in the NCAA Champ-<lb/>
ionships. Greenville native<lb/>
Arkansas coach selected for Pizza Hut Claseic<lb/>
Sutton selected for classic<lb/>
WICHITA, KanEddie Sutton<lb/>
who was named national Coach of<lb/>
the Year by the U.S. Basketball<lb/>
Writers' Association last season<lb/>
after his Arkansas Razorbacks<lb/>
posted a 26-2 record, has been<lb/>
selected to pilot the West squad<lb/>
in the 6th annual Pizza Hut<lb/>
Basketball Classic. The NCAA<lb/>
and NAiA sanctioned charity all-<lb/>
star event for senior collegians is<lb/>
scheduled April 1 at the Las<lb/>
Vegas Convention Center.<lb/>
Sutton, who was named<lb/>
Southwest Conference Coach of<lb/>
the Year in both 1975 and 1977,<lb/>
shows a stunning 62-20 record In<lb/>
three years at the Arkanaas helm.<lb/>
In SWC play, his Porkers are<lb/>
36-10, including last season's<lb/>
16-0 mark en route to the league<lb/>
title.<lb/>
As a major college head<lb/>
coach, the Brooklyn native<lb/>
has a 144-68 mark. He was 82-48<lb/>
in five years at Creighton before<lb/>
assuming the Razorback reins.<lb/>
A graduate of OWahoma State<lb/>
where he started three years<lb/>
under the fabled Henry Ida,<lb/>
Sutton" had his first head<lb/>
coaching position at Tuiaa (Okia.)<lb/>
Central High School where he<lb/>
built a 119-51 in six campaigns<lb/>
Sutton, who was a graduate<lb/>
assistant under Ida fa one year<lb/>
Ronnie Goodall with an impres-<lb/>
sive 8-4 record will be matched up<lb/>
against these two All-Americans.<lb/>
Paul Osman will return to<lb/>
action after missing the Carolina<lb/>
Invitational because of a hyper-<lb/>
extended elbow injury. The<lb/>
McLean, Va. native is 5-1 this<lb/>
season and placed third in the<lb/>
Monarch Open.<lb/>
Frank Schaede 8-3 will wrestle<lb/>
at 150 and Steve Goode 6-3 will be<lb/>
used at 158. D.T. Joyner who won<lb/>
the heavyweight title in the<lb/>
Carolina Invitational will make<lb/>
the trip along with Charlie<lb/>
McGimsey, Jame Kirby and<lb/>
freshman Vic Northrup who is 7-3<lb/>
this season.<lb/>
Following the quad meet in<lb/>
Bethlehem, ECU will oornpete<lb/>
in the Wilkes Open over the<lb/>
Christmas holidays. The Pirates<lb/>
will open at home January 11<lb/>
against West Cheater.<lb/>
after his eligibility was complet-<lb/>
ed, left Tulsa Central to build a<lb/>
program at Southern Idaho, a<lb/>
junior college that had never had<lb/>
a basketball team. In three years<lb/>
under Sutton, Southern Idaho was<lb/>
83-14.<lb/>
Sutton is the first Southwest<lb/>
Conference coach to appear In the<lb/>
Pizza Hut Basketball Classic,<lb/>
whose series is knotted at 3-3.<lb/>
Voting for participants in the 1978<lb/>
event has just begun at the<lb/>
nation's 3,000 Pizza Hut res-<lb/>
taurant and participating univer-<lb/>
sities. The 1978 East coach will be<lb/>
Dave Gavitt of Providence<lb/>
College.<lb/>
Rugby<lb/>
I guess first you'll say-<lb/>
WHAT? Now say- WHEN HOW<lb/>
&amp; WHERE. Let's don't let ECU<lb/>
be the last to incorporate<lb/>
women's rugby in N.C. There are<lb/>
now two women's rugby dubs in<lb/>
N.C, one in Wilmington and one<lb/>
at N.C. State. Did you know that<lb/>
even now it is a part of High<lb/>
School curriculum in California?<lb/>
Get involved this year, in a<lb/>
sport of the future. One that<lb/>
combines several skills and is one<lb/>
of the few women's team sports.<lb/>
Please call 7528930.<lb/>
Brakes Checked<lb/>
H I (jouririi h<lb/>
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1. Pull Front Wheels, Inspect Linings and Drums.<lb/>
2. Check Grease Seals, Wheel Cylinders for Leakage.<lb/>
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� , ���� . M<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058027_0019"/><lb/>
Pay 20 FOUNTAINHEAD 8 Dcwwbr 1977<lb/>
MERRY<lb/>
CHRISTMAS<lb/>
Who makes<lb/>
our<lb/>
American<lb/>
Economic<lb/>
System<lb/>
Iwork?<lb/>
Business7 Labor0<lb/>
Investors? Government?<lb/>
(if we don't understand<lb/>
�who makes our system<lb/>
iwork, and how, we'll<lb/>
Inever be able to improve<lb/>
it. That's why we've pre-<lb/>
pared this special booklet.<lb/>
"It's free. Every American<lb/>
�ought to know wha<lb/>
Jsays. For a "<lb/>
Doyon realty<lb/>
know what<lb/>
happens when<lb/>
business<lb/>
profits ton?<lb/>
or down?<lb/>
If we citizens don't under-<lb/>
stand the basic workings<lb/>
of our Amencan Econ-<lb/>
omic System, how can<lb/>
we make intelligent<lb/>
decisions about it?<lb/>
Every Amencan n'<lb/>
toknowtthsbo?klet<lb/>
jy ffs easy to read,<lb/>
interesting�and free. For<lb/>
a copy, write: "Economies<lb/>
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How much<lb/>
change does<lb/>
coir American<lb/>
Economic<lb/>
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ATot?Alittie1<lb/>
None?<lb/>
The more we all know about<lb/>
our system and how it<lb/>
works, the better we can<lb/>
decide what to preserve,<lb/>
what to change in the years<lb/>
ahead That's why this<lb/>
special booklet has been<lb/>
prepared. Every Amencan<lb/>
ought to know what it says.<lb/>
For a tree copy, write:<lb/>
"Economies' Pueblo,<lb/>
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Does America<lb/>
need more<lb/>
government<lb/>
regulation?<lb/>
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Your informed opinion<lb/>
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we're offering a free<lb/>
booklet that explains the<lb/>
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excellent cond Micheiin tires.<lb/>
$1,450 Call 752-2098 or 752-7227<lb/>
FOR SALE: 68 Fad pick-up,<lb/>
looks super!1 Newinteria, paint,<lb/>
seat, glass, new baby blue paint<lb/>
inside and out. Good running<lb/>
cond. Must sell befae Xmas. Call<lb/>
752-5892.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Pioneer SR-202W,<lb/>
Reverb amp. Bought 5 wks. ago.<lb/>
Best offer over $70. Call 752-5692<lb/>
after 7 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Old English sheep<lb/>
dogs AKC registered. Mike<lb/>
Robinson 758-2452.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Hernandez, 2-0 Gui-<lb/>
tar whardshell case. Perfect<lb/>
condition. Bought 2 yrs. ago fa<lb/>
$375.00. Will sell now fa $290.00<lb/>
a will trade down (plus cash) Fa<lb/>
a lesser guitar. Leave phone for<lb/>
Dave at Unity Star Health Food<lb/>
Stae Downtown.<lb/>
forwent JH<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE: needed fa<lb/>
next semesta . Fully furnished<lb/>
apt. at Eastbrook. Call 752-6068.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: Serious<lb/>
male student needs a place to live<lb/>
- prefers to have 1 roommate to<lb/>
split 112 of living expenses. Call<lb/>
752-5714, 212 Green Mill Run<lb/>
Apts.<lb/>
DESPERATELY NEEDED: place<lb/>
to live fa waking female. Room<lb/>
in house or apt, (hopefully<lb/>
furnished) close to campus. Need<lb/>
to move in by Jan. 1. Call<lb/>
758-8452(nights), 757-6366(day))<lb/>
ask fa Michelle D.<lb/>
MOBILE HOME SACRIFICE:<lb/>
Pay small equity and assume loan<lb/>
on Oakwood's finest two bedroom<lb/>
home. Total electric, central air,<lb/>
shag carpet, large bar, washer<lb/>
and dryer. 752-0568 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEED�D: for<lb/>
Spring tarn (a now) at East-<lb/>
brook. $90. Includes dishwasher.<lb/>
Call 752-9827 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: at<lb/>
College View Apts. Call Doug at<lb/>
758-2650.<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT: Carriage<lb/>
House Apts. Need male to share<lb/>
1 3 rent and utilities. Call after 6<lb/>
p.m. 756-4029.<lb/>
NEEDED IMMEDIATLEY: 1<lb/>
female roommate to share a<lb/>
house near campus. 56.00 month<lb/>
plus utilities. Call anytime SOON!<lb/>
758-2840.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: needed.<lb/>
Will split rent on mobile home<lb/>
and share all expenses. Please<lb/>
call Judy 75&amp;6085.<lb/>
NEEDED: 1 roommate beginning<lb/>
1st of Jan. Nice house, conven-<lb/>
iently located 1 block from central<lb/>
part of ECU on 4th St. If<lb/>
interested call 758-7854.<lb/>
NEED FEMALE ROOMMATE:<lb/>
in your apt. fa next semester? If<lb/>
30,6336 0311752-9778.<lb/>
RIDE: Anyone needing a ride to<lb/>
Hickay, N.C Winstai-Salem,<lb/>
Greensboro, Raleigh. Over<lb/>
Christmas break call Judy 758-<lb/>
6085.<lb/>
TYPING: for complete typing<lb/>
servioes call Cynthia at 756-3815<lb/>
anytime after 5 p.m. IBM wak,<lb/>
ressonable rates.<lb/>
FREE KITTENS: 2 of them to a<lb/>
good home. 1 white and 1 white,<lb/>
black and gray. Both love out-<lb/>
doors, and they mind very well. If<lb/>
interested call 758-7854.<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED: To, Florida<lb/>
around 15 Dec. Call 758-9229.<lb/>
FOUND: Gray high school class<lb/>
ring. Please come by<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD and identify.<lb/>
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