<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058033_0001"/>
Were it left tome to decide whether we<lb/>
should have a government without news-<lb/>
papers or newspapers without government, I<lb/>
should not hesitate a moment to prefer the<lb/>
latter - Thomas Jefferson<lb/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity fa over 50 years.<lb/>
With a drculation of 8,500,<lb/>
this issue is 12 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
ONTHEINSDE<lb/>
Chancellorp. 3<lb/>
SU chairpersonsp. 5<lb/>
Montoya. p. 7<lb/>
Lady Bucs winp. 10<lb/>
Vol. No. 53, No. 33<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
2 February 1978<lb/>
Trustees free campus media of SGA<lb/>
trol<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The ECU Board of Trustees<lb/>
removed all campus media from<lb/>
the authority of the SGA and<lb/>
created an independent media<lb/>
board at its meeting Tuesday.<lb/>
The proposal presented by<lb/>
Neil Sessoms, SGA president and<lb/>
member of the board, provided<lb/>
fa the immediate transfer of all<lb/>
appropriated funds and property<lb/>
currently in use by campus media<lb/>
from the SGA to the newly<lb/>
created Media Board.<lb/>
The board is responsible for<lb/>
approving the budgets and ap-<lb/>
propriating funds for FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD, BUCCANEER, The<lb/>
REBEL, EBONY HERALD,<lb/>
WECU, and the Photo Lab.<lb/>
The board also selects the<lb/>
editors or managers of the<lb/>
organizations.<lb/>
The proposal was the result of<lb/>
several months work by Sessoms,<lb/>
Reed Warren, SGA vice-presi-<lb/>
dent, Charles Sune, legislator and<lb/>
Robert Swaim, FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
advertising manager.<lb/>
The proposal dted freedom of<lb/>
the press, more effident opera-<lb/>
tion of campus media, and the<lb/>
two to one vote by the student<lb/>
body, in a referendum on the fall<lb/>
elections ballot, favoring media<lb/>
free of government control.<lb/>
Sessoms said the need for an<lb/>
independent, non-political board<lb/>
was long overdue and the time<lb/>
would never be better to separate<lb/>
the media from SGA.<lb/>
The Media Board is compos-<lb/>
ed of the SGA president, Student<lb/>
Union president, MRC president,<lb/>
WRC president, IFC president,<lb/>
Panhellenic president, an admin-<lb/>
istrator, a faculty member, and a<lb/>
day student.<lb/>
The administrator is appoint-<lb/>
ed by the chancellor, while the<lb/>
faculty member is appointed by<lb/>
the Media Board, in consultation<lb/>
with the chairperson of the<lb/>
Faculty Senate.<lb/>
The IFC and Panhellenic<lb/>
presidents will have one-half vote<lb/>
each. The dean of student affairs<lb/>
will serve as the permanent<lb/>
advisor to the board.<lb/>
The chairperson is a student<lb/>
member elected by the board.<lb/>
A committee composed of two<lb/>
appointments of the chancellor,<lb/>
three appointments of the SGA<lb/>
president, and the SGA presi-<lb/>
dent, will be organized todraw up<lb/>
Rentals position<lb/>
available<lb/>
By RICHY SMITH<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
This year the refrigerator<lb/>
rentals program underwent<lb/>
complete change, according to<lb/>
Ron Lewis, refrigerator rentals<lb/>
manager.<lb/>
One thousand new refrigera-<lb/>
tor units were ordered to meet the<lb/>
needs of the students at ECU.<lb/>
"They were a necessity to<lb/>
the program commented Lewis.<lb/>
According to Lewis, the old<lb/>
refrigeration units had worn<lb/>
themselves out.<lb/>
 We were looking towards the<lb/>
future when we purchased the<lb/>
1,000 new units added Lewis.<lb/>
"We had two choices, buy the<lb/>
needed units on a lease or<lb/>
through a loan. We dedded we<lb/>
would defeat our purpose by<lb/>
buying them on a lease<lb/>
Cliff Moores, vice chancellor<lb/>
for business affairs, helped in<lb/>
setting up the loan with Wachovia<lb/>
Bank and Trust Cc , along with<lb/>
the SGA.<lb/>
"We have a payment to make<lb/>
every Sept. 9 fa five years and so<lb/>
far it has been made stated<lb/>
Lewis.<lb/>
"We also traded in the old<lb/>
units which helped<lb/>
The refrigerata program bud-<lb/>
get is set on what it takes to run<lb/>
the program from year to year.<lb/>
Because there is no profit involv-<lb/>
ed, the refrigeration rental price<lb/>
fluduates yearly.<lb/>
"Laba cost to repair the<lb/>
units have been cut because<lb/>
they're new, so we have an<lb/>
unexpeded surplus of money.<lb/>
This will be used fa another<lb/>
payment Lewis continued.<lb/>
There are usually 950 units<lb/>
rented out to the student body<lb/>
with the freshman dass having 50<lb/>
per cent of the rentals.<lb/>
"We had no problems in the<lb/>
past and we haven't had to turn<lb/>
anyone rway who wanted a unit<lb/>
Lewis said.<lb/>
"I'veenjoyed the year. It's<lb/>
a constitution fa the Media<lb/>
Board.<lb/>
"Student fees will not have to<lb/>
be raised because of the board's<lb/>
action; all the proposal does is<lb/>
take the money the SGA spends<lb/>
on the media and place it under<lb/>
anotha authaity said Ses-<lb/>
soms.<lb/>
"The money spent on the bus<lb/>
system, legal aid, refrigerata<lb/>
rental, and other SGA programs<lb/>
hasn't been touched<lb/>
James H. Tucker, dean of<lb/>
student affairs, explained the<lb/>
aganization of publications on<lb/>
other campuses throughout the<lb/>
state and said that ECU was part<lb/>
�- �<lb/>
of a small minaity of schools with<lb/>
government contrdled media.<lb/>
"Only UNC at Chapel Hill,<lb/>
UNC at Wilmington, Western<lb/>
Carolina Univasity, and the N.C.<lb/>
School of the Arts have media<lb/>
which is contrdled, to some<lb/>
extent by the student govern-<lb/>
ment Tucker said.<lb/>
THESE PERSONS ARE responsible for creating a<lb/>
media board for overseeing campus publications.<lb/>
Left to right, Neil Seaaoms, Robert Swaim, Charles<lb/>
Sune, and Reed Warren. Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
Bad weather slows<lb/>
expansion<lb/>
PON LEWIS<lb/>
Photo by Brian Stotler<lb/>
been a successful one added<lb/>
Lewis.<lb/>
"It's been wak, but fun and<lb/>
I've made a lot new friends. The<lb/>
SGA has really been cooperative<lb/>
and I've had a lot of help<lb/>
Because Lewis will graduate<lb/>
this spring, applications fa the<lb/>
manager position are being ac-<lb/>
cepted daily until Feb. 10 in the<lb/>
SGA office and the refrigeration<lb/>
rentals room in Mendenhall<lb/>
The new manager will start<lb/>
training March 1 so he will be<lb/>
familiar with the program.<lb/>
If interested pasons need<lb/>
more infamatioi, oontad Ron<lb/>
Lewis fa details and make next<lb/>
year's program as successful as<lb/>
this one.<lb/>
r: �<lb/>
By STEVE WILSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Ficklen Stadium expan-<lb/>
sion program has been slowed by<lb/>
recent bad weatha conditions,<lb/>
aooading to James Lowry, direo-<lb/>
ta of the physical plant.<lb/>
Lowry said that the recent<lb/>
rains have delayed the driving of<lb/>
the pilings which support the<lb/>
stands, and that future delays<lb/>
may be caused by freezing wea-<lb/>
ther, which prevents the pouring<lb/>
of oonaete.<lb/>
He also said that the McDevitt<lb/>
and Street Co the Charlotte<lb/>
oontradas responsible fa the<lb/>
projed, face sevae monetary<lb/>
penalties if the wak is not<lb/>
finished by the start of the<lb/>
football season next fall. Lowry<lb/>
said that the oontradas have<lb/>
allowed fa plenty of "down<lb/>
time and at present they see no<lb/>
problems in completing the pro-<lb/>
ject with time to spare.<lb/>
The project cost will be $2.6<lb/>
million, which indudes all design<lb/>
and oonstrudion fees plus a<lb/>
contingency fund to oova any<lb/>
unfaeseen expenses.<lb/>
Lowry said that the stadium's<lb/>
seating capacity will be increased<lb/>
approximately 17,000 seats<lb/>
to a total of approximately<lb/>
35,000 seats.<lb/>
The seating will be contained<lb/>
in four new quadrants, which will<lb/>
be built on each end of the<lb/>
existing stands. The new qua-<lb/>
drants will be angled inward to<lb/>
provide the best view of the field.<lb/>
The expansion projed also<lb/>
indudes replacing the existing<lb/>
press box with three-tier press<lb/>
boxcornmunication center indu-<lb/>
ding eievata service.<lb/>
The bottom level will be fa<lb/>
spats writers and sports-casters,<lb/>
and the second level will be a<lb/>
communication center between<lb/>
field and press box, and will<lb/>
house the oontrds fa the score-<lb/>
board. The third level will cons, at<lb/>
of a deck fa television cameras.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058033_0002"/><lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 2 February 1978<lb/>
Concert<lb/>
Practice<lb/>
Handball<lb/>
Red cross<lb/>
An instructa course in<lb/>
American Red Cross Standard<lb/>
First Aid and Personal Safety will<lb/>
begin Tues Feb. 7 from 7-10<lb/>
p.m. in Minges Coliseum, room<lb/>
142.<lb/>
The course is fifteen dock<lb/>
hours; cost, $.75 fa a book.<lb/>
Eligibility: student must have a<lb/>
current Standard First Aid and<lb/>
Personal Safety certification and<lb/>
be at least 17 years old.<lb/>
Fa further infamation, oon-<lb/>
tact Mrs. Ruth Tayla, Executive<lb/>
Secretary, American Red Cass,<lb/>
752-4222, a Nell StaJ lings,<lb/>
Minges, room 151.<lb/>
ERA<lb/>
Student rates are available fa<lb/>
those desiring to attend the ERA<lb/>
ratification campaign this week-<lb/>
end in Raleigh.<lb/>
Students may register fa the<lb/>
meeting fa $1, luncheon not<lb/>
included; also, students may<lb/>
travel on the chartered bus fa $2.<lb/>
Atheists<lb/>
Atheists wanted! I am doing<lb/>
research on student approaches<lb/>
to religion and intellectualism. I<lb/>
am looking fa sincere and<lb/>
articulate atheists and agnostics,<lb/>
and skeptics. I would like to talk<lb/>
with faculty and students, and<lb/>
would appreciate your input. Call<lb/>
758-2039 and ask fa Sarah.<lb/>
iergy<lb/>
Second Passive Solar<lb/>
iference will be held in<lb/>
Madelphia, March 15-19. The<lb/>
is sponsored by the<lb/>
rtment of Energy, the Inter-<lb/>
nal Solar Energy Society,<lb/>
1ccordinated by the Mid-<lb/>
Solar Energy Assoc.<lb/>
:Ai This will be a confer-<lb/>
evaluate developments<lb/>
ive Solar Energy; to<lb/>
the state of the art, and<lb/>
te widescale application,<lb/>
of the noted speakers<lb/>
David Wright, architect,<lb/>
rnia; Peter Van Dresser,<lb/>
I, New Mexico; Maria<lb/>
IES Delaware, Harold<lb/>
therm, California; Steve<lb/>
rks, New Mexico,<lb/>
22 other designers,<lb/>
scientists and re-<lb/>
rarf admission fee fa<lb/>
iis$50 and must be<lb/>
6. For further<lb/>
Linda Knapp,<lb/>
Architecture,<lb/>
Fine Arts,<lb/>
lia, Phil-<lb/>
and<lb/>
Home Ec<lb/>
The School of Home Econo-<lb/>
mics is sponsaing a staff dev-<lb/>
elopment wakshop on WRITING<lb/>
FOR PUBLICATION on Mon<lb/>
Feb. 6, from 4 to 7:45 p.m in room<lb/>
205 of the Home Economics<lb/>
building.<lb/>
Ms. Mary Kay Overholt,<lb/>
directa of the publications divi-<lb/>
sion, American Home Eoonomics<lb/>
Association, Washington, D.C.<lb/>
will lead the wakshop. Ms.<lb/>
Overholt will provide direct con-<lb/>
sultation fa students and staff<lb/>
wanting to begin an article fa<lb/>
publication and fa those who<lb/>
have articles in progress. Besides<lb/>
this direct consultation Ms.<lb/>
Overholt will also present a brief<lb/>
overview of writing techniques<lb/>
used fa publishing.<lb/>
The infamation presented<lb/>
should be especially valuable to<lb/>
graduate students in home econo-<lb/>
mics as well as graduate students<lb/>
and staff in other related discip-<lb/>
lines.<lb/>
Further infamation can be<lb/>
obtained from Dr. Lilla Hdsey,<lb/>
School of Home Economics, 757-<lb/>
6903.<lb/>
cso<lb/>
The Center fa Student Oppa-<lb/>
tunities has funds available to<lb/>
employ sophomaes, junias, and<lb/>
seniors who are interested in<lb/>
tutaing students in subject mat-<lb/>
ter areas such as chemistry,<lb/>
biology, physics, math and other<lb/>
oourses fa prehealth and health<lb/>
professional trainees. Contact the<lb/>
Center fa Student Oppatunities,<lb/>
208 Ragsdale Hall.<lb/>
SOULS<lb/>
There will be a S.O.U.L.S.<lb/>
meeting this Thursday as prev-<lb/>
iously announced. The next meet-<lb/>
ing will be Thurs Feb. 9, at 7<lb/>
p.m. in the Afro-American Cul-<lb/>
tural Center.<lb/>
Communion<lb/>
A service of Holy Communion<lb/>
will be celebrated Ash Wednes-<lb/>
day at 5:30 p.m. at St. Paul's<lb/>
Episcopal church. Infamal fel-<lb/>
lowship discussion will follow. All<lb/>
interested students are cordially<lb/>
invited to oome. The Rev. Bill<lb/>
Hadden, Episcopal chaplain, will<lb/>
celebrate the service and lead the<lb/>
discussiai.<lb/>
Fellowship<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
King Youth Fellowship on Tues-<lb/>
7, at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
The Popular Entertainment<lb/>
Committee of the Student Union<lb/>
will present Arlo Guthrie in<lb/>
ooncert Mon Feb. 13. The<lb/>
concert will begin at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
Wright Auditaium. Tickets will<lb/>
be $3.00 fa students and $5.00<lb/>
fa the public. Seating is limited,<lb/>
so get your tickets now befae<lb/>
they're all gone.<lb/>
Diamond D<lb/>
There will be a meeting fa<lb/>
anyone interested in being a<lb/>
Diamond Darling fa the East<lb/>
Carolina baseball team Tues<lb/>
Feb. 7, at 7 p.m. The meeting will<lb/>
be held in room 143 of Minges<lb/>
Coliseum.<lb/>
Tutoring<lb/>
Free tutaing services are<lb/>
available fa minaity and or<lb/>
disadvantaged students who are<lb/>
interested in improving their<lb/>
academic progress to become<lb/>
nurses, allied health profes-<lb/>
sionals, and physicians. Contact<lb/>
the Center fa Student Oppatun-<lb/>
ities, 208 Ragsdale Hall.<lb/>
Alpha Xi<lb/>
Pledges of Alpha Xi Delta<lb/>
saaity are having a fashion<lb/>
show, "Spring into Summer at<lb/>
8 p.m. in Mendenhall. Come and<lb/>
see all the latest spring and<lb/>
summer fashions.<lb/>
Prophecy<lb/>
call day, Feburars<lb/>
There's a growing interest in<lb/>
Biblical prophecy today. There<lb/>
will be a lecture by Martin<lb/>
Magan on messianic prophesy,<lb/>
Thurs. at 7:30 p.m. in Flanagan<lb/>
307. Mr. Magan has traveled<lb/>
throughout the U.S. and has<lb/>
spoken to students at over 25<lb/>
colleges.<lb/>
Fellowship<lb/>
This Sunday night, why not<lb/>
take a break from studying and<lb/>
oome to the meeting of Inter-<lb/>
Varsity Christian Fellowship and<lb/>
join us as we sing praises to the<lb/>
Lad and discuss some of the<lb/>
problems that we encounter in<lb/>
relationships. The meeting will be<lb/>
at Mendenhall, room 221, at 8<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Psychology<lb/>
All psychology majas and<lb/>
minas are invited to apply fa<lb/>
membership in the Psychology<lb/>
Hona Society, Psi Chi.<lb/>
Applications are located in the<lb/>
psychology departmental offioe.<lb/>
Minimum requirements are: be-<lb/>
ing in the upper 13 of you class,<lb/>
and having completed at least 8<lb/>
semester hours in psychology,<lb/>
and having at least a B average in<lb/>
"psveriorogy.<lb/>
Alright girls, pracuce those<lb/>
kicks, trim that waist! Pom Pom<lb/>
tryouts will be held tha weekend<lb/>
of March 17, 18, &amp; 19. Check<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD and dam bull-<lb/>
etins for mae infamation later.<lb/>
Plan ahead<lb/>
Psycology<lb/>
Dr. Linda Wilson, the ocord-<lb/>
inata of psychological services at<lb/>
Caswell Center, and Dr. Steve<lb/>
Tacker, a professa of psychology<lb/>
at ECU, will give a presentation<lb/>
of the behaviaal modification<lb/>
techniques employed at Caswell<lb/>
Center fa the severly mentally<lb/>
retarded. Field placement posi-<lb/>
tions are available to graduate<lb/>
students and certain undergrad-<lb/>
uate students. Everyone interest-<lb/>
ed is oadially invited to attend.<lb/>
The location is in room 129<lb/>
Speight at 7 p.m. on Tues Feb.<lb/>
7.<lb/>
Phi Alpha<lb/>
Phi Alpha Theta, international<lb/>
histay hoia society, will meet<lb/>
Mon Feb. 6, at 7:30 p.m. in the<lb/>
Richard Todd Room (across from<lb/>
Brewster D-110). Individuals<lb/>
seeking membership in the soc-<lb/>
iety must fulfill the following<lb/>
requirements:<lb/>
Undergraduate: 1) 20 quarter<lb/>
hours or the equivalent in histay.<lb/>
2) A 3.1 grade-point average in<lb/>
histay. 3) A 2.67 OVERALL<lb/>
grade point average.<lb/>
Graduated) One third of the<lb/>
residence requirements fa a<lb/>
masters degree should be com-<lb/>
pleted. 2) A 3.5 grade point<lb/>
average in histay ,<lb/>
All interested histay majas<lb/>
and minas are invited to attend.<lb/>
Refreshments will be served.<lb/>
Prayer<lb/>
Inter-varsity Christian fellow-<lb/>
ship will have a prayer meeting<lb/>
this Thursday afternoon at 4 p.m.<lb/>
at the Methodists Student Center.<lb/>
Outing<lb/>
The Outing Club will meet<lb/>
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in Brew-<lb/>
ster B-205. We have some really<lb/>
nice trips scheduled and would<lb/>
like to let you know about them.<lb/>
Come join us and bring a friend!<lb/>
Film<lb/>
The Minaity Arts rjommittee<lb/>
will sponsa the filmfla's'n In The<lb/>
Sun, Sun Feb.5 in Mendenhall<lb/>
Theatre. The film will be shown at<lb/>
8 p.m. and admission is by ID and<lb/>
activity card.<lb/>
Scholars<lb/>
The ECU League of Scholars<lb/>
will have an important meeting on<lb/>
Tues Feb. 7 at 7 p.m. in room ,�<lb/>
247: MsWdehhhr<lb/>
Anyone interested in playing<lb/>
European team handball should<lb/>
meet at Memaial Gym, Sat<lb/>
Feb. 4 at 8 a.m. In oder to<lb/>
practice, everyone will need a<lb/>
physical; if anybody doesn't have<lb/>
a physical contact Jim Chastam,<lb/>
758-8619 a 309-C Belk.<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
Thurs. and f-ri Feb. 2 and 3<lb/>
are ladies nights at ECU'S finest<lb/>
entertainment center, the ECU<lb/>
Coffeehouse. Shows begin at 9<lb/>
and 9:45 p.m. on Thursday night<lb/>
and at 9and 10 p.m. Friday night.<lb/>
Holly Van Auken McKee, first<lb/>
lady of American tradition, tunes<lb/>
along with some British Isles and<lb/>
old Scottish songs. Holly accom-<lb/>
panies herself on guitar, auto-<lb/>
harp, and dulcimer.<lb/>
Maria Dawkins, a proclaimed<lb/>
product of the Roxy, Tree House,<lb/>
and even the Rathskeller, will<lb/>
perfom songs by Carly Simon<lb/>
and many aiginals.<lb/>
 u can enjoy these talented<lb/>
perfr mers fa the low, low, price<lb/>
of fit cents, which includes all<lb/>
the Qvxjies your gluttonous heart<lb/>
desires. Come on down to the<lb/>
Coffeehouse this weekend, room<lb/>
15, Mendenhall.<lb/>
Real peace<lb/>
Good news. If you ate dealing<lb/>
with drugs as an answer to your<lb/>
search fa real peace of mind, and<lb/>
haven't found any answers, oome<lb/>
see and hear a fellow student who<lb/>
has already been over this<lb/>
ground. Myles Cartrette will<lb/>
share his experience in a candid<lb/>
and interesting way. Fall Gospel<lb/>
Student Fellowship, Thur Feb.<lb/>
2, 730-9 p.m. in Mendenhall,<lb/>
room 221. You will not want to<lb/>
miss this meeting.<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
Attention all singers, players,<lb/>
bellydancers, jugglers, clowns,<lb/>
and dancing bears: auditions fa<lb/>
the ECU Coffeehouse will be held<lb/>
Thurs. and Fri Feb. 9 and 10,<lb/>
from 8 until 11 p.m.<lb/>
Persons interested in audit-<lb/>
ioning should sign up by Feb. 1 in<lb/>
the Student Union offioe.<lb/>
Eta Mu<lb/>
I he Eta Mu chapter of Sigma<lb/>
Gamma Rho soraity will hold a<lb/>
rush on Feb. 7, 8, and 9 at 7 p.m.<lb/>
at the Afro-American Culture<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
All women who are interested<lb/>
in learning more about the<lb/>
saaity should attend these<lb/>
meetings.<lb/>
WAF<lb/>
W.A.F. will present a film<lb/>
Occurences at Owl Creek Bridge,<lb/>
Fri March3in JenkinsHne Arts<lb/>
Center Auditaium.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058033_0003"/><lb/>
2 February 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
jld<lb/>
to<lb/>
ive<lb/>
in,<lb/>
Chancellor<lb/>
candidates<lb/>
visit ECU<lb/>
By JOYCE EVANS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Candidates fa successor to<lb/>
Dr. Leo Jenkins are visiting the<lb/>
ECU campus, according to Troy<lb/>
Pate, chairman of the Chancellor<lb/>
Selection Committee.<lb/>
The field has been narrowed<lb/>
down, but Pate declined to gre<lb/>
specific details.<lb/>
"I'm not able to talk about<lb/>
specifics at this point he said.<lb/>
Originally, the list of appli-<lb/>
cants contained 200 names, but<lb/>
the figure is less than that now,<lb/>
according to Pate.<lb/>
Pate said no deadline has<lb/>
been set for announcing the<lb/>
committee's final selection. How-<lb/>
ever at this time the commit-<lb/>
tee's goals are to decide on two<lb/>
candidates and to submit these<lb/>
names to UNC President William<lb/>
C. Friday about March 1. If the<lb/>
candidates are approved, they<lb/>
will be considered fa the select-<lb/>
ion.<lb/>
"The Chancella Selection<lb/>
Committee set internal guidelines<lb/>
attempting to find the best and<lb/>
most qualified person said<lb/>
Pate.<lb/>
The candidates are from a<lb/>
broad range of people from all<lb/>
over the country, accading to<lb/>
Pate.<lb/>
Accading to the mandate by<lb/>
the UNC Board of Governas, the<lb/>
canmittee must operate under<lb/>
strict confidentiality.<lb/>
The canmittee will not be<lb/>
directly involved with the select-<lb/>
ion of the next chancella. There<lb/>
are 14 persons on the selection<lb/>
committee.<lb/>
Thirteen join<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
Thirteen persons have<lb/>
been inducted as members of<lb/>
ECU chapter of PhiSigmaPi hona<lb/>
society.<lb/>
New student membrs are Bill<lb/>
Balance and Jerry Price of<lb/>
Freemont, Tona Black of Kann-<lb/>
apoiis, Carolina Blaokwekk of<lb/>
Oxfad, Keith Fuller of Louis-<lb/>
burg, Jimmy Hooper of Burling-<lb/>
ton, Robert Magill of Falls<lb/>
Church, Va Jamie McKinney<lb/>
and Caty Burns of Kinston, Jean<lb/>
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Henry Peele of Williamston and<lb/>
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Greek Forum<lb/>
By JAY CHAMBERS<lb/>
I.F.C. Public Relations<lb/>
The Greek system provides<lb/>
mae than a social life at ECU. It<lb/>
offers an oppatunity to improve<lb/>
one's academic standing.<lb/>
Academics are the main<lb/>
reason we are attending ECU.<lb/>
The Greeks can play an impatant<lb/>
role in our educational system.<lb/>
With the experience of upperclas-<lb/>
smen you will have personal<lb/>
guidance in planning curriculum,<lb/>
choosing classes and instuctas,<lb/>
and waking through problems of<lb/>
school. Many chapters have tutor -<lb/>
ing programs, and a few organ-<lb/>
izatiois have a filing system to<lb/>
help in review fa quizzes and<lb/>
tests.<lb/>
Statistics show that a greater<lb/>
number of Greeks graduate then<lb/>
independent students, nationally<lb/>
and at ECU. It has also been<lb/>
shown that the grade point<lb/>
average of Greeks is higher than<lb/>
that of independents.<lb/>
Although the Greek system<lb/>
offers a tremendous social life,<lb/>
academic excellence is a maja<lb/>
goal of each chapter. Each<lb/>
fraternity and saaity will help<lb/>
you as much as they can,<lb/>
However, it is up to the individual<lb/>
to put fath the effat ta do his a<lb/>
her very best.<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
Alpha Xi Delta has plans<lb/>
underway fa their 18th annual<lb/>
All-Sing. Fraternities and soror-<lb/>
ities participate by doing a<lb/>
musical number a arrangement,<lb/>
with the best perfamance award-<lb/>
ed by a trophy. Janette Inman<lb/>
says the March 2 production will<lb/>
prove to be the best ever.<lb/>
The Sig Eps have just comp-<lb/>
leted the third rush of the '77- 78<lb/>
school year. The Sigma Phi<lb/>
Epsilon District Convention will<lb/>
be held this weekend in Knox-<lb/>
ville, Tennessee, with five re-<lb/>
presentatives planning to attend.<lb/>
This weekend the Phi Kappa<lb/>
Tau fraternity will hold its annual<lb/>
Little Sister Brunch at the<lb/>
Candlewick Inn. The "original"<lb/>
champagne breakfast will start at<lb/>
11 a.m. on Saturday.<lb/>
The brahers of Kappa Alpha<lb/>
are proud to announce the<lb/>
induction of their faculty advisa,<lb/>
Ovid Pierce, into their order's<lb/>
Council of Hona. The indict ion<lb/>
was held at the statewide con-<lb/>
vivium in Raleigh. Only three<lb/>
aher men have had this hona<lb/>
bestowed upon them. The ECU<lb/>
chapter also celebrated convivium<lb/>
in Greenville last Saturday.<lb/>
"Convivium as it isknown toall<lb/>
KA's, celebrates the founding of<lb/>
Kappa Alpha and Robert E. Lee's<lb/>
birthdav.<lb/>
The TI-57 The super slide-rule that'll<lb/>
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TEXAS INSTRUMENTS Q5-1<lb/>
 INNOVATORS IN jUf)<lb/>
PERSONAL ELECTRONICS jf<lb/>
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� 1978 Texas instruments Incorporated<lb/>
INCORPORAT ED<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058033_0004"/><lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 2 February 1978<lb/>
ECU media declared<lb/>
independent - at last<lb/>
The ECU Board of Trustees granted indepen-<lb/>
dence to all campus media in its meeting Tuesday,<lb/>
thus freeing all publications, the photo lab, and<lb/>
WECU radio from any government control. The<lb/>
Board should be highly commended for making a<lb/>
move that finally gives the student body the free<lb/>
press that they wanted and most definitely deserve.<lb/>
SGA President Neil Sessoms, Vice-President<lb/>
Reed Warren, Legislator Charles Sune, and Robert<lb/>
Swaim, former legislator and FOUNTAINHEAD ad<lb/>
manager deserve thanks for preparing the proposal<lb/>
and should be commended for the hard work they did<lb/>
in assimilating information that was needed in<lb/>
creating a Media Board.<lb/>
A referendum was presented to the student body<lb/>
during the fall SGA elections asking if the students<lb/>
favored independent publications and a one-term<lb/>
presidency. Students voted two to one in favor of<lb/>
independent publications.<lb/>
The creation of the Media Board will hopefully<lb/>
end the political problems that faced ECU<lb/>
publications while they were under SGA control. No<lb/>
newspaper in the United States, be it a student<lb/>
newspaper or other, should be under the control of<lb/>
any government-student or otherwise. The First<lb/>
Amendment applies to all newspapers in this<lb/>
country.<lb/>
The Media Board will be a non-political body<lb/>
whose chief function is to set policy, provide<lb/>
direction, and offer continuity-in other words, the<lb/>
board will serve as publisher. A media board of this<lb/>
sort is long, long overdue. Too much politicking in<lb/>
the past has hampered not just the publications, but<lb/>
most importantly, the students.<lb/>
The students did not receive a yearbook last year<lb/>
because of hassles between publications and the<lb/>
SGA. The students paid fa a yearbook that was<lb/>
never printed because the SGA legislature did not<lb/>
appropriate enough money for the BUCCANEER<lb/>
taff to print a yearbook the size ECU students were<lb/>
jstomed to having. Hopefully, hassles of this sort<lb/>
in the past forever.<lb/>
fhile many students on campus believe in<lb/>
lorn of the press there are, unfortunately, some<lb/>
not. Some students in the SGA who wanted<lb/>
rtions to remain under the control of the SGA<lb/>
jr-mongers, wanting only to be able to<lb/>
the budgets of the publications and try to<lb/>
le press itself.<lb/>
students resent power being taken away<lb/>
power that should not be given to a<lb/>
nt anyway. Unfortunately, the press in the<lb/>
States is not totally free for the U.S. Supreme<lb/>
as the power to censor the press. However, no<lb/>
(tion should be subject to government control.<lb/>
haps some students tend to forget that the<lb/>
s who responded to the referendum voted in<lb/>
h independent publications.<lb/>
NTAINHEAD would like to thank the Board<lb/>
ees members on behalf of the publications,<lb/>
lab, and WECU for approving the creation of a<lb/>
 Board.<lb/>
 members of the Board are as follows: Dr.<lb/>
L Bridgers, Mrs. J.G. Burgwyn, Dr. J. Earl<lb/>
�y, Glenn R. Jernigan, William L. Powell, Jr<lb/>
pd Greene, Dr. Andrew A. Best, John F.<lb/>
Kahley B. Futrell, Troy W. Pate, Jr<lb/>
i, A. Louis Singleton, William H. Stanley,<lb/>
 Jenkins, chancellor, and Neil Sessoms,<lb/>
3ss can of course be good or bad, but,<lb/>
without freedom It will never be<lb/>
Albert Camus<lb/>
WE'RE BIG" F0T1S Nw, pAPPy SAYS WH"<lb/>
CAN SPEND OU.R OWN tAONBYll hJOMORE ALLOWAMCK!<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
REBEL editor explains art selections<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Re: the REBEL Art Show-<lb/>
-there have been some pretty low<lb/>
oomments directed towards the<lb/>
REBEL staff this past week<lb/>
oonoerning the selection of work<lb/>
in the show. This letter is<lb/>
intended to clear up some of the<lb/>
more blatant misconoeptions<lb/>
we've encountered while fending<lb/>
off irate art students.<lb/>
Over 165 pieces were signed<lb/>
up for the show. There is no way<lb/>
the Mendenhall Gallery can ac-<lb/>
commodate that many pieces-<lb/>
there is simply not enough space.<lb/>
Most open art competitions-like<lb/>
the lllumina and the Delta Phi<lb/>
Delta shows-are juried before the<lb/>
show is hung. We had no way of<lb/>
knowing how many pieces would<lb/>
enter the show, so the following<lb/>
rule was included on the REBEL<lb/>
Art Show poster. "The staff of<lb/>
The REBEL and lllumina reserve<lb/>
the right to refuse any submis-<lb/>
sions due to limited space<lb/>
These posters have been display-<lb/>
ed on every bulletin board in the<lb/>
Art building since mid-<lb/>
December.<lb/>
We knew, however, that<lb/>
people would resent the REBEL<lb/>
staff-who supposedly can't tell<lb/>
Duchamp from a Rockwell-<lb/>
making snap decisions about<lb/>
"fine art We therefore asked<lb/>
Nancy Krowl, one of the three<lb/>
outside judges for the show, to<lb/>
help us jury out some pieces in<lb/>
order to keep the whole thing<lb/>
down to a managable size.<lb/>
One of the most frequent<lb/>
complaints we heard about last<lb/>
year'b show was that the judges,<lb/>
being ECU art faculty, were<lb/>
slightly less than impartial since<lb/>
they already knew most of the<lb/>
work and the artists involved.<lb/>
This year we attempted to<lb/>
side-step that problem by recruit-<lb/>
ing qualified judges from outside<lb/>
the ECU community. In addition<lb/>
to helping judge the show on<lb/>
Wednesday, Ms. Krowl was kind<lb/>
enough to lend her expertise (a<lb/>
MFA in Art) in jurying last<lb/>
Sunday.<lb/>
Quality of the work was not<lb/>
the only factor considered in<lb/>
jurying each individual piece. We<lb/>
wanted to present a large variety<lb/>
of work which represented all<lb/>
mediums. Some individual pieces<lb/>
were just too large to be included<lb/>
in a show where the space<lb/>
involved was critical. A few 3-D<lb/>
pieces simply would not fit in the<lb/>
cases. Personalities of each in-<lb/>
dividual artists were NOT discus-<lb/>
sed. No member of the REBEL<lb/>
staff or of lllumina juried his or<lb/>
her own work.<lb/>
To those of you whose work<lb/>
See FORUM, p. 5<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community tor over titty years.<lb/>
"Were it left to me to decide whether we should have<lb/>
a government without newspapers or newspapers<lb/>
without government, I should not hesitate a moment to<lb/>
prefer the latter<lb/>
Thomas Jefferson<lb/>
EditorCindy Broome<lb/>
Managing EditorLeigh Coak'ey<lb/>
Advertising ManagerRobert M. Swaim<lb/>
News EditorsDoug White<lb/>
Joe Yaeger<lb/>
Trends EditorSteve Bachner<lb/>
Sports EditorChris Hdloman<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student newspaper of East Carolina<lb/>
University sponsored by the Media Board of ECU and is<lb/>
distributed each Tuesday and Thursday, weekly during the<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
Mailing address: Old South Building, Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
Editorial offices: 757-6366, 757-6367, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10 annually, alumni $6 annually.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058033_0005"/><lb/>
Forum<lb/>
2 February 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Papa 5<lb/>
was not included in the show:<lb/>
thank you fa your understanding<lb/>
and interest. Every member of<lb/>
the staff has experienced rejec-<lb/>
tions of their own work-whether<lb/>
it was a poem, a story, a a<lb/>
photo-and we sincerely sympat-<lb/>
hize. To those of you who have<lb/>
threatened to remove your work<lb/>
because of the way it was hung:<lb/>
we made every effort to work<lb/>
around the problems of fitting an<lb/>
already oversized show into a<lb/>
comparatively small space without<lb/>
cutting any more pieces. Every<lb/>
piece cannot be hung at eye-level.<lb/>
The REBEL Art Show was<lb/>
intended to benefit the students<lb/>
by giving them a chance to exhibit<lb/>
their workandtooompete openly<lb/>
for publication in the magazine.<lb/>
Judging from the reactions we've<lb/>
seen this week, perhaps work<lb/>
appearing in the REBEL should in<lb/>
the future be selected as it was<lb/>
several years agc�by invitation<lb/>
only. It certainly would be a lot<lb/>
easier on the staff. Anyone who<lb/>
knew the amount of grief, worry,<lb/>
physical labor, and sheer inoon-<lb/>
vience we went through to plan<lb/>
and hang the show would realize<lb/>
that we didn't hold the Third<lb/>
Annual REBEL Art Show just to<lb/>
acquire pieces fa the magazine.<lb/>
There are easier way to fill pages.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
LukeWhisnant,<lb/>
Edita, The REBEL<lb/>
Student Union to accept<lb/>
chairperson applications<lb/>
The Student Uniai will be<lb/>
accepting applications fa Com-<lb/>
mittee Chairpersons fa the 1978-<lb/>
79 academic year beginning<lb/>
Mon Feb. 6.<lb/>
All students interested in a<lb/>
positioi will be required to<lb/>
complete an application and have<lb/>
an interview with the Student<lb/>
Union President-elect who will<lb/>
make the selectiaio. Applications<lb/>
fa the 11 positions may be<lb/>
obtained at the Infamatioi Desk<lb/>
of Mendenhall Student Center a<lb/>
through the Student Union office<lb/>
in room 243 Mendenhall.<lb/>
The deadline fa filing is Feb.<lb/>
24.<lb/>
The Student Uniai is ate of<lb/>
the largest student aganizatiois<lb/>
oi campus, the other being the<lb/>
S.G.A. The Uniai is the maja<lb/>
programmer of entatainment<lb/>
and cultural events on campus.<lb/>
Every student who pays an<lb/>
activity fee is a member of the<lb/>
Union and it is from these fees<lb/>
that its income is derived.<lb/>
The committees which one may<lb/>
choose from are:<lb/>
Art Exhibition - This oommit-<lb/>
tee is responsible fa providingthe<lb/>
students with a wide variety of art<lb/>
displays and aher visual arts<lb/>
programs within the student<lb/>
center.<lb/>
Artists series-This committee<lb/>
is responsible fa programming<lb/>
cultural and musical attractions to<lb/>
be presented at ECU. The aim of<lb/>
the oommittee's programming is<lb/>
the education as well as the<lb/>
entertainment of the student<lb/>
body. This year the oommittee<lb/>
has presented such well known<lb/>
artists as Ruth Laredo, the<lb/>
Norman Luboff char, the Buffalo<lb/>
Philharmonic, and ahers.<lb/>
Coffeehouse - The Coffee-<lb/>
house oommittee provides a quiet<lb/>
atmosphere fa students to enjoy<lb/>
music far removed from the<lb/>
mainstream of oontempaary<lb/>
commercial music. Located on the<lb/>
ground floa of Mendenhall<lb/>
the Coffeehouse aeates a<lb/>
unique atmosphere of intimacy<lb/>
between the perfamer and the<lb/>
audience.<lb/>
Entertainer - The purpose of<lb/>
this committee is the publication<lb/>
of the monthly Entertainer and<lb/>
the pronohon of the Student<lb/>
Uniai as a whole. This is an ideal<lb/>
oommittee fa anyaie wishing to<lb/>
gain experience in promotion and<lb/>
writing.<lb/>
Lecture- The Lecture oommit-<lb/>
tee is responsible fa selecting,<lb/>
planning, promoting, and pre-<lb/>
senting a lecture series consisting<lb/>
of widely recognized personalities<lb/>
from a wide range of interests.<lb/>
This year's series will include<lb/>
Leonard Nimoy.who will appear<lb/>
in February.<lb/>
Minaity Arts - This commit-<lb/>
tee is responsible fa presenting<lb/>
programs of particular interests<lb/>
to minaity students and to<lb/>
educate the campus about mina-<lb/>
ity cultures. This canmittee<lb/>
should prove of particular interest<lb/>
to international students and<lb/>
blacks.<lb/>
Films - The Films committee<lb/>
is responsible fa the Friday &amp;<lb/>
Saturday popular films, the Wed-<lb/>
nesday night classics, and film<lb/>
festivals. This year's committee<lb/>
has been the most suocessfu1<lb/>
ever, presenting such great films<lb/>
as Rocky, Network, Casablanca,<lb/>
The Front, and Silver Streak. The<lb/>
Films oommittee is probably the<lb/>
most popular in the Union and<lb/>
hopes to oontinje in that vein.<lb/>
Theatre Arts - The presenta-<lb/>
tion of professional theatre fa the<lb/>
ECU campus is the goal of this<lb/>
committee. This year such shows<lb/>
as Grease, Cabaret, Keith Berger<lb/>
- Mimi, and William Windom<lb/>
playing Thurber have been pre-<lb/>
sented.<lb/>
Travel - The Travel oommittee<lb/>
aganizes low-cost trips fa<lb/>
students, staff, and faculty of<lb/>
ECU. This year the oommittee<lb/>
has sponsaed trips to New Yak,<lb/>
Hawaii, and the Bahamas.<lb/>
Maja Attractions - This<lb/>
oommittee is responsible fa<lb/>
presenting oontempaary enter-<lb/>
tainers to satisfy the campus need<lb/>
fa big-time popular entertain-<lb/>
ment. So far this year the<lb/>
oommittee has presented<lb/>
"Firefall  and "Jimmy Buffett"<lb/>
with ahers still to come.<lb/>
Special Entertainment - This<lb/>
committee is responsible fa<lb/>
presenting concerts that bridge<lb/>
the gap between Coffeehouse and<lb/>
Maja Attractions programming.<lb/>
The committee presents the free<lb/>
mall concerts- and most smaJler<lb/>
shows in Wright Auditaium.<lb/>
Reviewer chastised - again<lb/>
ToFOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
The readers of the<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD might have<lb/>
been served better by a factual<lb/>
news coverage of the Young<lb/>
Artist Competition than by the<lb/>
vay poaly written aitical review<lb/>
of Kent Johnsoi, (Jan. 24, 1978,<lb/>
Page 9). Mr. Johnson appears to<lb/>
lack the credentialses a musician,<lb/>
a listener, a aitic, a writer, and a<lb/>
gentleman.<lb/>
Beatrice Chauncey,<lb/>
Professa of Music<lb/>
Forum policy<lb/>
Forum letters<lb/>
should be typed or<lb/>
printed, signed and<lb/>
include the writer's<lb/>
address or telephone<lb/>
number. Letters are<lb/>
subject to editing for<lb/>
taste and brevity and<lb/>
may be sent to FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD or left at<lb/>
the Information Desk<lb/>
in Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center.<lb/>
STORE-WIDE CLEARANCE<lb/>
Continues<lb/>
Shoes<lb/>
SWEATERS<lb/>
Dress Shirts<lb/>
Jeans<lb/>
Price<lb/>
Sport Shirts<lb/>
Belts<lb/>
Leather Jackets<lb/>
Outerwear<lb/>
1 Group of<lb/>
Dress Shirts &amp; Short Shirts2 for $16.00<lb/>
A Large Group Levi Cords$8.00<lb/>
All Alterations Extra<lb/>
HEADSTRONG CLOTHING<lb/>
University Arcade<lb/>
218E 5th St.<lb/>
752-5621<lb/>
Western Sizzlin will feature a<lb/>
luncheon special on number 1.<lb/>
Sat. 11.00-4.00<lb/>
8 oz. of Sirloin steak with baked potato<lb/>
or French fries &amp; Texas toast.<lb/>
ALL FOR<lb/>
2.39<lb/>
<pb facs="00058033_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 2 February 1978<lb/>
ill<lb/>
VAH<lb/>
INIWEMAK<lb/>
MUSIC, IT'S MAGIC!<lb/>
On sale February 3-9<lb/>
MOTOWN'<lb/>
Stevie<lb/>
Wonder<lb/>
LOOKING BACK<lb/>
<lb/>
L<lb/>
Limited Edition<lb/>
LP<lb/>
s6.<lb/>
Pitt PI<lb/>
�V , .t - I<lb/>
 ��'���-� " � " " �� , .� ��<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058033_0007"/><lb/>
Montoya wet received<lb/>
Flamenco guitarist a success<lb/>
By SUSAN CHESTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Carlos Montoya brought<lb/>
flamenoo guitar to life in his<lb/>
performance at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Theatre last Monday<lb/>
night. The capacity audience<lb/>
grew increasingly amazed and<lb/>
respectful as the eld Spanish<lb/>
guitarist demonstrated his dex-<lb/>
terity and skill.<lb/>
Flamenoo guitar is the ancient<lb/>
art of the gypsies, combining the<lb/>
passions of gypsy tradition with<lb/>
the expressive potential of six-<lb/>
stringed guitar.<lb/>
Montoya's great contribution<lb/>
is capturing and notating the<lb/>
folklore into written music. Each<lb/>
of the pieoes performed Monday<lb/>
night were Montoya's own<lb/>
arrangements of ancient gypsy<lb/>
themes with his own composition<lb/>
in the traditional vigorous<lb/>
rhythms.<lb/>
As with the best of any<lb/>
improvisatory art, the music<lb/>
becomes a unique communication<lb/>
between performer and audience.<lb/>
True to folklore form, Montoya's<lb/>
music became a tribute to his<lb/>
infectious sprirt, given extra zest<lb/>
by the drama of Gypsy tradition.<lb/>
In "Fiesta the audience was<lb/>
introduced to the crisp flamenco<lb/>
style of complex rhytims and<lb/>
embellished melodies over simple<lb/>
harmonies. In Soleares<lb/>
Zapateao and "Tarantas<lb/>
Montoya demonstrated intricate<lb/>
variations drawn from his rich<lb/>
vocabulary of flamenoo tech-<lb/>
niques.<lb/>
Rapid percussive strumminq,<lb/>
cadenzas played entirely with the<lb/>
left hand, light knocking on the<lb/>
guitar wood, vibrato, trills and<lb/>
repeated notes all displayed both<lb/>
the technical virtuosity and flex-<lb/>
ibility of the guitarist.<lb/>
In "Seguinya y Solea por<lb/>
Medio Montoya'shard playing<lb/>
took its toll on intonation.<lb/>
Bulenas" ended the first set<lb/>
with passionate flamenoo<lb/>
rhythms that brought visions of<lb/>
red-oostumed Spaniards dancing<lb/>
for a carnival crowd.<lb/>
Trends<lb/>
2 February 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
FLA MENCO GUI TA RIST CA RLOS Montoya drew standing ovation<lb/>
Monday night.<lb/>
The second set included the<lb/>
highly syncopated "La Rosathe<lb/>
more melodic "Fandango and<lb/>
the bullfighter's "Macareno en<lb/>
Tango<lb/>
After exploring a different<lb/>
flamenco flavor with the Cuban<lb/>
Caribe Aflamencao Montoya<lb/>
cooled the overly intense atmos-<lb/>
phere with the lighter<lb/>
"Garrotin the only arrange-<lb/>
ment designed to show humor<lb/>
instead of Spanish fire.<lb/>
The second set closed with the<lb/>
tragic "Taranto in which a<lb/>
long, exating cadenza moved<lb/>
over slowly changing harmonies.<lb/>
Despite on-stage tuning, the<lb/>
climax was marred by the intona-<lb/>
tion problems created by<lb/>
Montoya's furious music.<lb/>
Following a 15 minute inter-<lb/>
mission, Montoya opened the<lb/>
final set with the steely<lb/>
"Zambrilla "Granaina"<lb/>
featured the shimmery agitation<lb/>
of repeated melodic notes.<lb/>
With "Zambra Montoya<lb/>
again captured gypsy fantasies<lb/>
through imitations of the dancing<lb/>
girl's tambourine. The rich bass<lb/>
melody of "Malaga" created a<lb/>
romantic contrast to the dazzling<lb/>
dexterity of the finale,<lb/>
"Fabruca<lb/>
An immediate standing<lb/>
ovation brought forth a heavily<lb/>
accented "Thank You<lb/>
Montoya's first spoken words in<lb/>
an hour and a half rich in<lb/>
communication. A teasing enoore<lb/>
called out the militia with plucked<lb/>
bugle calls and the rattle of the<lb/>
snare drum on Montoya's ever<lb/>
versatile guitar.<lb/>
Montoya pleaded enough with<lb/>
a second enoore "por finish,<lb/>
because it is very hard for me<lb/>
Difficult or not. the final tune was<lb/>
a foot tapping celebration of the<lb/>
best of flamenco guitar.<lb/>
Whether or not they liked the<lb/>
sometimes harsh sound of<lb/>
flamenco guitar, the audience<lb/>
responded to the Spanish charm-<lb/>
er who, in his old black suit and<lb/>
bow tie, threw his heart into his<lb/>
music and shared it with them.<lb/>
Company will perfon<lb/>
Sousa's 'El CapHan'<lb/>
COURTESY<lb/>
ECU School of Music<lb/>
John Phillip Sousa is quite<lb/>
likely America's best-known<lb/>
oomposer. The rousing tunes by<lb/>
"The March King" are familiar<lb/>
to anyone who has attended a<lb/>
football game or a band ooncert.<lb/>
Sousa also brought his gift of<lb/>
melody to a series of comic<lb/>
operettas which were popular in<lb/>
the United States from around<lb/>
1895 to 1913.<lb/>
So successful was the operetta<lb/>
"ElCapitan" that Sousa pub-<lb/>
lished a medley of tunes from the<lb/>
work asa march bearing the same<lb/>
name. A revival of the operetta<lb/>
has shown it to be a grand<lb/>
entertainment, full of political<lb/>
satire as well as a rich assortment<lb/>
of musical plums.<lb/>
The National Opera Company<lb/>
will offer a rare opportunity to<lb/>
enjoy this Sousa stagework when<lb/>
a sparkling new production of EL<lb/>
CAPITAN will be presented in the<lb/>
A.J. Fletcher Recital Hall on the<lb/>
ECU campus this Sunday, Feb-<lb/>
ruary 5, at 8 p.m.<lb/>
The National Opera Company<lb/>
was founded in 1948 by Mr. A.J.<lb/>
Fletcher, a Raleigh, N.C. attorney<lb/>
and businessman, and Chairman<lb/>
of the Board of WRA-TV.<lb/>
Theaspirationsof the founder<lb/>
were simple: To introduce as an<lb/>
art form to North Carolina school<lb/>
students; to create audiences by<lb/>
presenting opera in the language<lb/>
of the audience; and to give<lb/>
experience and employment to<lb/>
young singing artists. The results<lb/>
have been outstanding.<lb/>
Bedford and Hoffman daring due<lb/>
free flick All the President's Men<lb/>
Kathleen Carroll of, the New<lb/>
York Daily News calls it "A<lb/>
riveting and unforgettable exper-<lb/>
ience Vinoent Canby, New Yak<lb/>
Times, raves: a spellbinding<lb/>
detective storya breathless<lb/>
adventurean unequivocal<lb/>
smash-hitfirst and foremost a<lb/>
fascinating newspaper film<lb/>
The list of superlatives goes on<lb/>
and on.<lb/>
Robert Redford and Dust in<lb/>
Hoffman give brilliant perfor-<lb/>
mances as Bob Woodward and<lb/>
Carl Bernstein, the Washington<lb/>
Post's dynamic reporting duo who<lb/>
nail the Nixon gang with persis-<lb/>
tence and daring journalistic<lb/>
abandon. Their sage-like editor,<lb/>
Ben Bradlee, is portrayed by<lb/>
veteran of stage and screen Jason<lb/>
Robards, Jr.<lb/>
The film, recipient of numer-<lb/>
ous Academy Awards, traces the<lb/>
reporters in their plight for<lb/>
political justioe as they dissect the<lb/>
oorrupt executive organ of the<lb/>
U.S. Government.<lb/>
All the President's Men is a<lb/>
post-Watergate recount that<lb/>
accurately and precisely depicts<lb/>
all of the events, times, places,<lb/>
and people involved in the<lb/>
controversial "cover-up<lb/>
The dramatic tension is<lb/>
heightened by the recounting of<lb/>
every incredible event that led to<lb/>
the unprecendented resignation<lb/>
of an American president. With<lb/>
Bernstein and Woodward as<lb/>
technical consultants, facts re-<lb/>
main intact and a high level of<lb/>
accuracy is achieved.<lb/>
All the President's Men, this<lb/>
week's free flick, will be shown<lb/>
DUSTIN HOFFMAN AND Robert Redford are hot on the Nixon<lb/>
gang's trail in a scene from "All the President's Men<lb/>
The National Opera Company,<lb/>
a highly professional troupe,<lb/>
believes that through dedication<lb/>
to the presentation of opera the<lb/>
language of the audience, opera<lb/>
will achieve its rightful popularity<lb/>
in American culture.<lb/>
��AMAZING TROUPE"<lb/>
This amazing troupe of sing-<lb/>
ing artists has been proving the<lb/>
validity of this belief since 1948 in<lb/>
tours oovering some 36 states.<lb/>
Through oolorful production of<lb/>
well-known operas in English,<lb/>
they have in many instances<lb/>
created audiences where none<lb/>
previously existed. This troup<lb/>
believes that it is noteworthy that<lb/>
in European countries, where<lb/>
opera has always been an out-<lb/>
standing popular art form, the<lb/>
audiences demand that the opera<lb/>
be presented in the vernacular.<lb/>
"ENGAGING, ENTHUSIASTIC"<lb/>
These engaging, enthusiastic<lb/>
young performers, chosen from<lb/>
nationwide auditions prove daily<lb/>
that "Opera in English" is both<lb/>
entertaining and fun, as witnes-<lb/>
sed by the spontaneous laughter<lb/>
and applause-ingredients too<lb/>
often missing when an English-<lb/>
speaking audience attends a<lb/>
conventional performance of<lb/>
opera sung in a foreign tongue.<lb/>
The troupewill be accompani-<lb/>
ed by an orchestra comprised of<lb/>
students from the East Carolina<lb/>
Universty School of Music, under<lb/>
the directing of Donald Wilder.<lb/>
The National Opera Company<lb/>
is brought to Greenville aud-<lb/>
ienoes by the generosity of its<lb/>
founder, Mr. A.J. Fletcher. The<lb/>
performance Sunday night is free<lb/>
and open to the public.<lb/>
9 9<lb/>
Friday and Saturday night at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Theatre at 7 p.m. and 9:15 p.m.<lb/>
Student admission is by ECU<lb/>
ID and activity card. Staff and<lb/>
faculty members may use their<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
membership cards.<lb/>
THANK YOU<lb/>
By Catherine Roberson<lb/>
You gave me presents<lb/>
without boxes or bows.<lb/>
Gifts I oould not hold<lb/>
or touch<lb/>
but I could feel.<lb/>
Things I oould not see<lb/>
until I closed my eyes.<lb/>
You sang me a song<lb/>
without any words.<lb/>
The tune was in your heart.<lb/>
A thank-you note seems<lb/>
inappropriate for a gift you cannot<lb/>
see,<lb/>
� � � � .<lb/>
13 I I �-�'�<lb/>
<pb facs="00058033_0008"/><lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 2 February 1978<lb/>
Visual Arts Forum<lb/>
Artist Holt begins symposium<lb/>
COURTESY<lb/>
Visual Arts- Forum<lb/>
The Visual Arts Forum will<lb/>
begin a symposium of nationally<lb/>
and internationally renowned<lb/>
artists on Monday, February 6,<lb/>
with the work of Nancy Holt, an<lb/>
environmental sculptor,of inter-<lb/>
national reputation.<lb/>
Her showing will begin at 10<lb/>
a.m. with a slide lecture on Ihe<lb/>
artist's work , in the Jenkins Fine<lb/>
Arts Center Auditorium. At 3p.m.<lb/>
two films by the artist, Swamp<lb/>
(oo-authored with Robert<lb/>
Smithsen) and Pine Barrens will<lb/>
be shown, also in Jenkins Audi-<lb/>
torium.<lb/>
Nancy Holt recently docu-<lb/>
mented her work in "Probing the<lb/>
Earth: Contemporary Land Pro-<lb/>
jects an exhibition at Washing-<lb/>
ton's Hirshorn Museum. She has<lb/>
shown extensively on an interna-<lb/>
tional scale and has had over fifty<lb/>
articles and commentaries written<lb/>
about her in prestigious arts<lb/>
publications.<lb/>
She has exhibited in the Sao<lb/>
Paolo and Whitney Bienelles and<lb/>
her films and video presentations<lb/>
have been presented at the<lb/>
Concora, Whitney, Hirshorn;<lb/>
Modern Museum of Art, Paris,<lb/>
and many more. Ms. Holt's most<lb/>
widely recognized land sculpture<lb/>
is Sun Tunnels located near<lb/>
Ludn, Utah.<lb/>
She has been awarded Na-<lb/>
tional Endowment for the Arts<lb/>
Grants in both sculpture and<lb/>
video.<lb/>
SUN TUNNELS LOCA TED near Lucin, Utah, is Nancy Holt's most<lb/>
widely recognized land sculpture.<lb/>
Other artists included in this<lb/>
series will be Jack Burnham on<lb/>
Feb. 27; Diane Waldman on<lb/>
March 28; George Kokinas on<lb/>
April 3; Donald Kuspit on April 4;<lb/>
and Nicholas Krushenick on April<lb/>
10<lb/>
Wind Ensemble, Jazz Ensemble in concert Feb. 10<lb/>
The Annual Winter Concert<lb/>
by The Symphonic Wind Ensem-<lb/>
ble and The University Jazz<lb/>
Ensemble will be Friday, Feb-<lb/>
ruary 10, at 8:15 p.m. in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
The Wind Ensemble, under<lb/>
the direction of Herbert Carter,<lb/>
ECU School of Music, will feature<lb/>
oboist David Hawkins in an<lb/>
original composition fa oboe and<lb/>
winds by William P. Latham<lb/>
entitled Andante and Allegro.<lb/>
Before joining the ECU School of<lb/>
Music faculty this fall, Mr.<lb/>
Hawkins was instructor of oboe at<lb/>
Washington State University an<lb/>
performed for two seasons with<lb/>
'<lb/>
�<lb/>
.o<lb/>
V<lb/>
o.<lb/>
r,<lb/>
uff<lb/>
Entire month of February<lb/>
AAJkyie ou Come xfad I<lb/>
BE OUR VALENTINE<lb/>
BUY A SUB<lb/>
&amp; YOUR SOFT DRINK IS 10c<lb/>
Phone in order fa pick-up a delivery � Phaie: 752-6130 � 521 CotancheSt Geagetown Shoppes<lb/>
the Spokane Symphony Orches-<lb/>
tra. He is a graduate of the New<lb/>
England Conservatay of Music in<lb/>
Boston. He has perfamed with<lb/>
chamber ensembles in Carnegie<lb/>
Recital Hall and the Concert Hall<lb/>
of the Kennedy Center fa the<lb/>
Perfaming Arts in Washingtai.<lb/>
He appeared most recently as<lb/>
guest artist with the Idaho Falls<lb/>
Symphony Orchestra in Novem-<lb/>
ber. Other selections to be<lb/>
perfamed by the Wind Ensemble<lb/>
will include Opus 99 March by<lb/>
Prokofiev, William Byrd Suite by<lb/>
RIGCAIS<lb/>
SHOfTSHOP<lb/>
�E�AW ALL<lb/>
LEATMCR 00006<lb/>
Oowntonwi Greenville<lb/>
JjHSBScl.<lb/>
Gadon Jacob, Masquerade for<lb/>
Band by Persichetti, Variation on<lb/>
a Theme by Robert Schumann by<lb/>
Robert Jager, and Bugler's Holi-<lb/>
day by Leroy Anderson, featuring<lb/>
the trumpet section.<lb/>
JAZZ ENSEMBLE<lb/>
The Jazz Ensemble, conduc-<lb/>
ted by Benny Ferguson, graduate<lb/>
teaching fellow in the ECU School<lb/>
ol Music, will perfam Ornitho-<lb/>
logy by Charlie Parkerarr. Ded-<lb/>
rick, Hay Burner by Sammy<lb/>
Nestico. The Blues by Dai Ellis,<lb/>
and Ain't Gonna Ask No More<lb/>
and Road Time Shuffle by To<lb/>
shiko Akiyoshi.<lb/>
The program is free and open<lb/>
to the public.<lb/>
ipeau<lb/>
MOTN�R<lb/>
COUMG�<lb/>
mnJAer cAticlre<lb/>
THE<lb/>
OTHER<lb/>
HALF<lb/>
February 7,8,9, and 10<lb/>
Students $4.50 per show<lb/>
or<lb/>
See All Four For $10.<lb/>
King<lb/>
Stop By The Playhouse Box Office<lb/>
In McGirmis Auditorium<lb/>
or Call 757-6390<lb/>
NOW OPEN<lb/>
WED - SUN<lb/>
752-7303<lb/>
<lb/>
-�t�K) behind THE ATTIC<lb/>
Fri Open House<lb/>
sat PEARL<lb/>
Two fine female vocalists<lb/>
Sun Open House flf<lb/>
dnema 1&amp;2<lb/>
PITT PLAZA CENTER � 756-0088<lb/>
THE BEST OF THE BEST<lb/>
IN LATE SHOW ENTERTAINMEN<lb/>
FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS<lb/>
12 MIDNIGHT<lb/>
CINEMA 2<lb/>
CINEMA 1<lb/>
K<lb/>
;lhs Heroes.<lb/>
All Seats $1.50<lb/>
WOODY IMAM.<lb/>
AIIFA KEATON<lb/>
LOVKandDKATII'<lb/>
Untied Artists<lb/>
<pb facs="00058033_0009"/><lb/>
2 February 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
MID<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POUCY<lb/>
Each of these advertised<lb/>
items is required to be<lb/>
readily available for sale at<lb/>
or below the advertised price in each AbP<lb/>
Store, except as specifically noted in this ad.<lb/>
prices effective thru sat feb 4 at aap in Greenville<lb/>
: WINTER SALE<lb/>
$1000 cosh bonanza<lb/>
H000 WINNER HO WINNER Hi WINNER MS WINNER<lb/>
H Sl � a<lb/>
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Hope Mill NC rt Mill tC Mineral BiuM Q� Wadciboro NC<lb/>
$333,742 CASH PRIZES<lb/>
145,757 CASH WINNERS<lb/>
Mi WINNER<lb/>
WW MtMlHi rKltime yoo .Hit phtc�l"flito" you'<lb/>
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x a ft'iruj tmeti jno MiiKi Game rd, lone p� request:<lb/>
. earn �e jivo t,�art in mjfcng j mmped � addTised<lb/>
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000 dependentli o' Tie Greit ABantti 1<lb/>
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� m It ?4 Clt AflJjPtK 1 Pkc Tti Co<lb/>
 m ikxit UciMn Vegma horrr iroMl<lb/>
 n SoufftCyohtu Finnn Cry Georgu �a<lb/>
� m Ptnceton itoitvcgrnij The, promoton<lb/>
� '� 'i scheduled lo end on ffWuer. '0 WB<lb/>
� ' HOOO CASH BOtAN;A�iiotic.�ir end<lb/>
however when v gime iw?i iff duB<lb/>
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AAP QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN-FED BEEF<lb/>
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PORTERHOUSE OR<lb/>
T-BONE STEAKS<lb/>
168<lb/>
STEAKS<lb/>
BEAUTIFUL HOLLOWARE<lb/>
tainlessCJ'Ltware<lb/>
ON SALE THIS WEEK<lb/>
4 ICED TEA<lb/>
SPOONS<lb/>
ONLY 2<lb/>
NO PURCHASE<lb/>
REQUIRED<lb/>
U.S.O.A. INSPECTED FRESH<lb/>
BOX-0- CHICKEN<lb/>
CONTAINS<lb/>
� 3 BREAST QTRS.<lb/>
� 3 LEG QTRS.<lb/>
� 3 QIBLET PACKS<lb/>
� 3 WINGS<lb/>
� 3 NECKS<lb/>
LB.<lb/>
TWO PATTERNS TO CHOOSE FROM'<lb/>
AP QUALITY TENDER FULLV COOKED<lb/>
SMOKED HAM<lb/>
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PORTION<lb/>
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WITH EVERY SS PURCHASE<lb/>
A&amp;P picks the best<lb/>
dairy products<lb/>
PILLSBURY<lb/>
BISCUITS<lb/>
10 ct afeLwaLf<lb/>
cans Vaaa<lb/>
BUTT PORTION LB 88c<lb/>
PEPSI COLA<lb/>
159<lb/>
carton of<lb/>
6 32 0z<lb/>
returnable<lb/>
LITE BEER<lb/>
CARTON OF , Q<lb/>
g 12 Oz cans �JJJ<lb/>
bottles plus deposit<lb/>
ITEMS OHIKD 'OR SALE 1.01 AVAILABLE 10 OTHER RETAIL DEALERS AND WHOLESALERS<lb/>
APPLE<lb/>
SAUCE<lb/>
offer good only in greenville offor 9� o�ry in greenviHe<lb/>
n � ��:<lb/>
1 i<lb/>
V<lb/>
AAP picks the best frozen toods<lb/>
<lb/>
BREYER S ICE CRcAM<lb/>
SAVE 60c<lb/>
ALL FLAVORS<lb/>
EICEPT<lb/>
BUTTER PECAN<lb/>
� I GAL<lb/>
CTN<lb/>
JENO S FROZEN<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
HAMBURGER<lb/>
SAUSAGE<lb/>
PEPPERONI<lb/>
89<lb/>
13 OZ tJC<lb/>
PKG<lb/>
 MWIUlslKUII)<lb/>
ENCYCLOPEDIA<lb/>
(it the ANIMAL WORLD.<lb/>
IN 21 DHCXE HARD WH'ND<lb/>
VtHl'MI-s<lb/>
COLLECT ALL 21 VOLUMES<lb/>
a new volume will be introduced<lb/>
each week for ii weeks stop in<lb/>
at our display ano start building<lb/>
your collection this week'<lb/>
VOLUME<lb/>
NO. 1<lb/>
PURCHASE ONLY<lb/>
VOLUMES 2 THRU 21 EACH $1"<lb/>
c<lb/>
We pick the best produce<lb/>
j<lb/>
U.S. NUMBER ONE BURBANK<lb/>
RUSSET POTATOES<lb/>
FLORIDA GROWN (100 SiEi<lb/>
TEMPLE OR<lb/>
FLORIDA GROWN DELICIOUS IN STEWS<lb/>
TOMATOES<lb/>
FRESH KALE OR<lb/>
FRESH SPINACH<lb/>
HORIDA GHOWN (10U 5I�I - -�. - �<lb/>
53. M00 TEMPLE ORANGESiOo'r. I00<lb/>
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RED R.Pf GREAT IN SALADS , cy QQc FLORIDA GROWNDELICIOUS ,N IW,<lb/>
2 ctn. 88c CARROTS 4pkgsOO<lb/>
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AAPs GREENERY CORNER<lb/>
69c JADE PLANTS<lb/>
�an<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058033_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 2 February 1978<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
by JOHN EVANS<lb/>
ECU drops Marines 3-1<lb/>
The East Carolina intramural basketball representatives toon two of<lb/>
three men's games and the women's games in Saturday's games<lb/>
against the teams from Camp Lejeune that visited here.<lb/>
Next week, four other ECU teams travel to Camp Lejeune for the<lb/>
rematch. Representing ECU in those games will be the Mudsharks, the<lb/>
Carolina Stars and the Belk Pleasers from men's play and a yet-to-be<lb/>
determined women's representative. In Saturday's Play, the Scott Ball<lb/>
Team took an exciting, 76-72, win over the Marines third team,<lb/>
The Marines led at the half, 35-30, but the Scott Ball Team rallied in<lb/>
the second half behind Kent Chamberlain. -Chamberlain scored 22 of<lb/>
the ECU teams 4e second-half points to finish the game with 36 points,<lb/>
the top individual performance in the four games. We hit 13 field goals<lb/>
and 10 of 14 free throws. Teammate Mark Hill added 13 points and<lb/>
Keith Biggs scored 12 points.<lb/>
The only ECU loss came in the second game as the Marines 2 team<lb/>
demolished the Fraternity All-Stars, 99-51. The high scorer for the<lb/>
All-Stars was Bob Wylie of Pi Kappa Phi with 17 points.<lb/>
In the women's garrjeat 4 p.m ECU s representative, the Peace<lb/>
Pirates, routed the Lady Marines, 56-24, after grabbing a 31-4 halftime<lb/>
lead. Sherry Coats led the ECU team with 21 points.<lb/>
In the feature game of the night, ECU' stop-ranked men' steam, the<lb/>
Nutties Buddies, took an easy 92-73 win over the Marines. Leading<lb/>
only 39-36 at the half, the Buddies tore away fa 53 points in the second<lb/>
half for the easy win. Tony Collins led the Nutties Buddies with 18<lb/>
pontsand Eric Dawson and Cliff Williams added 17 points each for the<lb/>
winners.<lb/>
JMEN'SBASKETBALL<lb/>
Well, Marty is back jn prime form this week in regards to his picks<lb/>
for the Intramural Top Ten. After being fooled by the early season<lb/>
antics of the Belk Enforcer, Martinez turned his backon the Enforcers<lb/>
and has ranked the Carolina Stars as the top intramural team this<lb/>
week. He dropped the Nutties Buddies to third and the Enforcers to<lb/>
fifth after watching them play last week.<lb/>
In one game last week the Scott Semitoughs, led by Billy Bass and<lb/>
Chris Seagraves, almost handed the Nutties Buddies their first loss of<lb/>
the season. The Buddies didn't win until the dosing seconds, 50-48,<lb/>
but stayed unbeaten. The Enforcers also squeaked out a narrow win<lb/>
last week, nipping the Ayoock 5-0's, 43-39.<lb/>
In another key game last week the Sociology Anthropology Club<lb/>
handled FCA, 43-27, in a battle of unbeaten teams.<lb/>
Among our unmentionable teams that are on probation, the Belk<lb/>
Pleasers and the Scott No Playing White Boys remain unbeaten, as the<lb/>
Pleasers dropped the previously unbeaten Scott Ball Team, 76-31.<lb/>
MARTINEZ<lb/>
1. Belk Carolina Stars-4-0<lb/>
2. Jones Jaguars-4-0<lb/>
3. Belk Nutties Buddies-3-0<lb/>
4. Mudsharks-4-0<lb/>
5. Belk Enforoers-4-0<lb/>
Belk Our Gang-4-0<lb/>
KappaAlpha-5-0 ,<lb/>
break Kids-4-0<lb/>
es Bones�4-0<lb/>
Anth. Qub-3-1<lb/>
EVANS<lb/>
1. Belk Nutties Buddies-4-0<lb/>
2. Belk Carolina Star s-4-0<lb/>
3. Belk Enforcers-4-0<lb/>
4. Hatchets-4-0<lb/>
5. Mudsharks-4-0<lb/>
6. Kappa Alpha-5-0<lb/>
7. Heartbreak Kids-4-0<lb/>
8. Jones Bones-4-0<lb/>
9. Soc.Anth. Qub-3-1<lb/>
10. Belk Who Knows-4-0.<lb/>
MUELLER REPEA TS FOR THIRD WIN<lb/>
I M ueller defeated M iokey Francis in the 176-200 pound division<lb/>
his third straight intramural arm-wrestling championship.<lb/>
finals were held in Minges Coliseum on Wednesday at 9 p.m.<lb/>
, who won in the 156-175 pound class the past two years,<lb/>
ly through the higher class.<lb/>
Browning took a surprise victory in the 150 and under<lb/>
defending two-time champion Paul Osman did not even<lb/>
finals. Browning defeated Greg Copeland in the finals.<lb/>
151-175 pound weight class, Mike Godfrey defeated<lb/>
oung<lb/>
yweight championship, Nathaniel Wigfall took the title<lb/>
s.<lb/>
-ever women's arm-wrestling championship, Donna<lb/>
Kathy Markle<lb/>
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL<lb/>
's bf ketball play last week the first big game of the<lb/>
act Monday when the Peace Pirates took a 50-35 win<lb/>
and previously unbeaten Tyler Cool and the Gang. The<lb/>
Pirates into first place in the women's top ten, ahead of<lb/>
mies. Cool and the Gang dropped to third, just ahead of<lb/>
Lady Bucs win big<lb/>
ByCHRISHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Tuesday nights win over<lb/>
Campbell College was quite plea-<lb/>
sing to Catherine Bolton and her<lb/>
Lady Pirates basketball team.<lb/>
After a loss to Longwood over the<lb/>
weekend a win at Campbell, who<lb/>
almost beat ECU in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum in the season opener,<lb/>
was a question mark. As it turned<lb/>
our however, Pirate fans had<lb/>
nothing to fear as ECU routed<lb/>
Campbell 83 to 65.<lb/>
The high scorer for ECU was<lb/>
Debbie Freeman with 18. points.<lb/>
She was followed by Rosie<lb/>
Thompson with 13. Rosie playing<lb/>
with a broken nose played only 14<lb/>
minutes the entire game. Two of<lb/>
those minutes were at the begin-<lb/>
ning of the game when the injury<lb/>
oocured. The last 12 minutes was<lb/>
when she returned to spark the<lb/>
Pirate rout.<lb/>
Marcia Girven a 6-0 freshman<lb/>
center had a great all around<lb/>
game. She scored 8 points and<lb/>
blocked 7 shots, haulting Camp-<lb/>
bell drives under the boards.<lb/>
Lydia Roundtree continued<lb/>
her improvement in every phase<lb/>
of the game. Many times during<lb/>
the game she would daze the<lb/>
Campbell players with her speed<lb/>
and ball handling ability.<lb/>
April Ross a 5-7 junior from<lb/>
Bath added 8 points and played<lb/>
solid defense to aid in the rout.<lb/>
Coach Bolton on reflecting on<lb/>
the game Wednesday afternoon<lb/>
was pleased with the win and with<lb/>
the play of the team as a whole.<lb/>
"Our offense has been coming<lb/>
along throughout the season<lb/>
Bolton said. "Lydia Roundtree is<lb/>
just solid. She gave us so much on<lb/>
defense. Even though she only<lb/>
soored 4 points she helped out in<lb/>
so many ways. Her quickness and<lb/>
speed are something to behold<lb/>
"April Ross has matured<lb/>
greatly and is doing a very fine<lb/>
job for us<lb/>
"Gail Kerbaugh is currently<lb/>
playing the third guard role. She<lb/>
had a good game at both ends of<lb/>
the oourt and finished with 8<lb/>
points<lb/>
"Kathy Suggs came off the<lb/>
bench and shot 5 of 5 from the<lb/>
floor.<lb/>
"Overall everybody played<lb/>
well and we certainly hope the<lb/>
momentum from that game will<lb/>
take us into the UNC-CH game<lb/>
"We must be ieady fa<lb/>
UNC Bolton was quick to say.<lb/>
"Three nights ago they blew<lb/>
Appalachian State off the oourt<lb/>
Our girls are not intimidated<lb/>
by UNC though Bolton said.<lb/>
"They feel they can and should<lb/>
win the game.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Blue destroys ECU<lb/>
By STEVE BYERS<lb/>
Assistant Sports Edita<lb/>
The Monarchs of Old Domi-<lb/>
nion invaded Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Tuesday night and clobbered the<lb/>
Bucs 112-81 behind the shooting<lb/>
of Ronnie Valentine and Richie<lb/>
Wright.<lb/>
The Pirates could not slow<lb/>
down the running gunning Big<lb/>
Blue as they pushed towards a<lb/>
59-31 halftime lead. <lb/>
Wright pulled off some in-<lb/>
credible off the wall shots that<lb/>
dampened the Pirate spirits and<lb/>
Valentine waked inside to the<lb/>
tune of 22 points and numerous<lb/>
rebounds.<lb/>
Eight points separated the<lb/>
teams with 8.50 to play in the first<lb/>
half when Oliver Mack hit a<lb/>
jumper to make the 25-17 but<lb/>
then the Big Blue went ape and<lb/>
went on a 25-4 surge that buried<lb/>
the Bucs in a rut from which they<lb/>
could ntf recover.<lb/>
��� i �<lb/>
40 K YLE POWERS blocks shot against ODU. Powers has been a<lb/>
bright spot in an otherwise lackluster week. Photo by Kirk<lb/>
Kingtbury  tfBHHMH<lb/>
In the second half the ODU<lb/>
lead was cut to 20 at 82-62 behind<lb/>
some strong play by Kyle Powers<lb/>
and Greg Canelius.<lb/>
Powers played well in the<lb/>
Duke game Sat. also and finished<lb/>
with nine points against the<lb/>
Monarchs despite playing fa oily<lb/>
a shat period of time. He, along<lb/>
with Herb Krusen, combined fa<lb/>
23 points at the one faward<lb/>
position.<lb/>
The Pirates played the rest of<lb/>
the game on even terms until a<lb/>
stretch with seven minutes re-<lb/>
maining when a 3-point play by<lb/>
Wright sparked a rally that put<lb/>
the Blue up by 32 at 99-67.<lb/>
Oliver Mack led Pirate sooring<lb/>
with 22 points despite still being<lb/>
slowed by the flu, and Herb<lb/>
Krusen added 14. Herb Gray led<lb/>
the board play with 14 rebounds.<lb/>
The loss was even more<lb/>
dissapointing considering a<lb/>
strong showing at Duke last<lb/>
Saturday. Coach Larry Gillman<lb/>
explained really don't under-<lb/>
stand it He oontinuedWe<lb/>
played well at Indiana, in the<lb/>
Charlotte tournament and we had<lb/>
good halves at State and Duke.<lb/>
But here I think we played only<lb/>
one good game, against Athletes<lb/>
in Action. We had good halves<lb/>
against St. Peter's, William and<lb/>
Mary, but that was it<lb/>
The Bucs are at home Satur-<lb/>
day against Richmond as the<lb/>
Spiders will carry a 3-14 reoad<lb/>
into the game.<lb/>
Bernard Hill is likely to return<lb/>
to add some depth at faward.<lb/>
Hill has missed two games due to<lb/>
the flu. Garry Kerr was back in<lb/>
action Tuesday after missing the<lb/>
game at Duke<lb/>
The Pirates are 4-13 on the<lb/>
season with nine games remain-<lb/>
ing It is possible fa the team to<lb/>
finish .500 fa the year. A rout<lb/>
Saturday would be helpful. Tipoff<lb/>
isaf'730: : '�� �<lb/>
<pb facs="00058033_0011"/><lb/>
2 February 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
Lady Pirates win two of three games on road<lb/>
By DAVID MERRIAM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
With three of five consecutive<lb/>
road games already played, the<lb/>
Lady Pirates are ready to head fa<lb/>
hone. The girls have already<lb/>
played three very tough and<lb/>
emotional games against Virginia<lb/>
Canmonwealth University, Long-<lb/>
wood College and Campbell Col-<lb/>
lege, including wins over V.C.U.<lb/>
and Campbell College.<lb/>
The Pirates opened their road<lb/>
series invading the Richmond<lb/>
Coliseum and beating the Rams<lb/>
of V.C.U. 62-61.<lb/>
"The scae (62-61) doesn't<lb/>
clearly indicate the game com-<lb/>
mented Coach Bolton, 'we were<lb/>
in conplete oontrol the entire<lb/>
game. They (V.C.U.) really put<lb/>
pressure on us the second half but<lb/>
I feel the outcome was never in<lb/>
doubt<lb/>
However the Ladies next<lb/>
game was against a very strong<lb/>
Longwood team, in which ECU<lb/>
came up shy of the winning<lb/>
basket.<lb/>
Rosie Thompson left the game<lb/>
early because of foul trouble and<lb/>
thus the offensive punch was<lb/>
muffled.<lb/>
With the scae 45-28 at the<lb/>
half the Pirates were in need of<lb/>
something, the answer came from<lb/>
the quiet faward Debbie Free-<lb/>
man. Debbie had oily 6 points at<lb/>
the half and finished the game<lb/>
with a game high 31 points.<lb/>
"Debbie was unreal, she<lb/>
played just super. Without a<lb/>
doubt it was her best single game<lb/>
ever said Coach Bolton, "I was<lb/>
very pleased with her<lb/>
With Thompson fouling out<lb/>
early in the second half freshmen<lb/>
reserve Lynne Emerson came off<lb/>
the bench to spark a second half<lb/>
comeback. She hit seven points<lb/>
and ignited a comeback that saw<lb/>
the Pirates out scae Laigwocd 50<lb/>
to 34. However the deficit of the<lb/>
first half proved too great and the<lb/>
Pirates lost 79-78.<lb/>
"Foul trouble seemed to be<lb/>
our biggest problem declareo<lb/>
Bolton. "Rosie fouled out, Debbie<lb/>
had three, and Lynne Emerson<lb/>
somehow managed to get into<lb/>
foul trouble too<lb/>
The third stop on the road trip<lb/>
was with small,but tough Camp-<lb/>
bell College.<lb/>
The Pirates had no problem as<lb/>
they quickly mounted a lead that<lb/>
was never relinquished. Unfor-<lb/>
tunately the game held some bad<lb/>
Sands Shoe Shop<lb/>
113 Grande Ave. at<lb/>
College View<lb/>
Cleaners<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Thurs. A Fri.<lb/>
 brice street:<lb/>
Sat. Nightshirt<lb/>
moments fa Rosie Thompson.<lb/>
Two minutes into the game<lb/>
Rosie went up fa a rebound and<lb/>
received a sharp punch in the<lb/>
nose. She was faced to leave the<lb/>
game and her injury was diagnos-<lb/>
ed as a broken nose. Onoe again<lb/>
Debbie Freeman came to the<lb/>
rescue and stabilized the offense.<lb/>
However Rosie returned the<lb/>
second half and did her share of<lb/>
soaing, bioken nose a not,<lb/>
ending wit'i 13 points, second<lb/>
only to Debbie with 18.<lb/>
Marsha Girven did a fine job<lb/>
of defense fa ECU having 7<lb/>
blocked shOs and several re-<lb/>
bounds.<lb/>
The Pirates have two remain-<lb/>
ing games befae they head fa<lb/>
hone, the biggest game being<lb/>
against Nath Carolina at Chapel<lb/>
Hill and Duke. The game will be<lb/>
fa undisputed second place<lb/>
$ DOLLAR DAYS $<lb/>
<lb/>
Thursday, Friday, and Saturday<lb/>
9:00 to 5:30<lb/>
All Sales Final<lb/>
 ALL Warmup Suits- Ys OFF<lb/>
 ALL Ladies Tennis Shorts &amp; Shirts- 25 OFF<lb/>
 ALL Men's Tennis Shorts (other than Boast) - OFF<lb/>
 ALL Men's Boast Tennis Shorts &amp; Shirts- 20 OFF<lb/>
� ALL Tennis Jackets- 1a OFF<lb/>
� SHOE CLOSE OUT- Will be sold at dealer cost andor less<lb/>
Puma Hardcourt (Men's)<lb/>
Adidas Cadet (Children)<lb/>
Yamaha Asahi (Ladies �r Men)<lb/>
Adidas BSK II (Ladies)<lb/>
Adidas Newcombe (Men)<lb/>
Bata Poiymate (Ladies)<lb/>
Adidas Bill (Children)<lb/>
Nike Junior Allcourt Navy<lb/>
(Children)<lb/>
Nike Junior Woffle Trainer (Children)<lb/>
Tiger Enduro Woffle Trainer<lb/>
Nike Leather Cortez (Men)<lb/>
Nike Nylon Cortez (Men)<lb/>
Adidas SL76 (Men)<lb/>
Adidas Superstar II (Men)<lb/>
Puma Nylon Jogging Shoe<lb/>
Pro Keds Navy wCushion Collar<lb/>
Hi Cr Low Tops<lb/>
 ALL Wilson, Marcraft, Vittert, &amp; Davis Racketball Rackets- OFF<lb/>
 Archery Supplies- 25 OFF<lb/>
Recurved Bows- OFF<lb/>
Compound Bows- 10 OFF<lb/>
 ALL Hunting Pants, Coats, Vests, Shirts- Va OFF<lb/>
 Down &amp; Polar Guard Coats, Vests, Ski Pants- OFF<lb/>
 Thermal �r Insulated Underwear- OFF<lb/>
 Hunting Caps, Hats, &amp; Tobogans- OFF<lb/>
 ALL Rods- 25 OFF<lb/>
 Rod building supplies. Rod Blanks- 20 OFF<lb/>
 ALL Tackle- 20 OFF<lb/>
 ALL Reels- 10 OFF<lb/>
Free Monofilament Line<lb/>
Dog Training Supplies- 10 OFF<lb/>
 Reloading Supplies- 10 OFF<lb/>
 Black Powder Guns �r Kits- 10 OFF<lb/>
 Used Rifles &amp; Shotguns- 10 OFF<lb/>
 Gun Cases- 10 OFF<lb/>
 Decoys- 20 OFF<lb/>
 Field- Goose Decoys- $35doz.<lb/>
 Buck, Gerber, Browning Knives- 10 OFF<lb/>
 Freeze Dried Foods- 10 OFF<lb/>
 ALL Camping Supplies- 10 OFF<lb/>
 ALL Swimsurts by Head &amp; Speedo- OFF<lb/>
 ALL Tennis Dresses- price<lb/>
 Al TOP- OF- THE- LINE RACKETS reduced to dealer cost or<lb/>
less- large selection of rackets by PDP, Head, Aldila Cannon,<lb/>
Wilson, Slazenger, Spalding, Adidas, �r Yamaha<lb/>
H.L.H0DGES<lb/>
AND COMPANY, INC.<lb/>
210 E. 5th St. Phon� 752-4156<lb/>
<pb facs="00058033_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 2 February 1978<lb/>
Alabama ar<lb/>
By ANDY STEWART<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina men's and<lb/>
womens swimming teams drop-<lb/>
ped two last Saturday in a double<lb/>
dual meet at Tuscaloosa, Ala-<lb/>
bama.<lb/>
The men lost to last years<lb/>
B.F.Goodrich<lb/>
Car Care Service<lb/>
4 POINT BRAKE CHECK<lb/>
1 Pull Front Whaalt. Impact Lining and Drum.<lb/>
I Chack Grea Saala. W��l Cyllndartfor LMkagt.<lb/>
i inttMCt Front Wheel Bearings.<lb/>
4. Adlust Brakaa on All Four Wheelt for Foil Pedal<lb/>
lleg. Price ��-With Cert. Service Only $3.SB<lb/>
����"�<lb/>
Most US. Cars, Toyotas 4 Datsuns<lb/>
call for appointment<lb/>
" wIkerIervice'avaIlableTn city,<lb/>
STUDENT PRICE S8.50 WITH STUDENT ID<lb/>
MOT,ZtTZr P�- a, B.F.Goodrich de.ie.<lb/>
HlFGoodrich Coggins Car Care<lb/>
STIRE CENTER<lb/>
Phone 754-5144<lb/>
BO W. HWY. 24 BY-PASS<lb/>
0�HMVILLK.N.C<lb/>
number two team in the nation,<lb/>
Alabama, 72-38 and to LSU 64-49.<lb/>
Coach Flay Scharf said that<lb/>
John McCauley swam excellent<lb/>
against Jonty Skinner in the 50<lb/>
and 100 meter freestyle but lost<lb/>
both. Jonty Skinner holds the<lb/>
world record in the 100 meter<lb/>
freestyle. John Tudor finished<lb/>
second in the individual medley,<lb/>
but swam his best time at 1 56.8<lb/>
Ted Nieman won the 500 meter<lb/>
freestyle but lost to Ail-American<lb/>
Scott McDonald in the 200 meter<lb/>
freestyle. Diver Tom Bell finished<lb/>
second in the diving competition<lb/>
against LSU.<lb/>
Coach Scharf said that the<lb/>
pirates swam poorly against<lb/>
Alabama and LSU. He said they<lb/>
could have beaten LSU but, in the<lb/>
freestyle eventsour strong point,<lb/>
they were able to pick up points<lb/>
1<lb/>
� �<lb/>
- Fri. End of Week Party<lb/>
IH4frflHltf 3:30 to 7:0�<lb/>
For their 1st Appearance In Greenville<lb/>
MA URICE WILLIAMS &amp; THE ZODIAC<lb/>
 WITH THEIR MILLION SELLING HITS STAY AND MAY l<lb/>
Sat.<lb/>
the contest you have been waiting for 1<lb/>
! SAT NIGHT FEVER : Dance a Thon<lb/>
Beginning this Sat. nite and runninq for 12 weeks with weekly winners rv1'n9rf(v<lb/>
dinner for two at the Villa Roma Resturant and $25.00 plus a chance p<lb/>
at the GRAND PRIZE OF $500.00 CASh"<lb/>
or $!000.00 m<lb/>
TO THE SCHOOL OF nflI<lb/>
2nd place winners recievelOU-UU JV<lb/>
gift certificates from Scraps and Snooty Fox<lb/>
3rd place $100.00 in albums from<lb/>
apple records.<lb/>
I by10:00 Sat. nite. No entry fee and it is possible to enter more than"crar<lb/>
Dont miss out on the ! A in<lb/>
SAT NITE FEVER dance - a- thon<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
and break up our soorina.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates had an<lb/>
equally rough time last Saturday.<lb/>
They lost toAlabama63-24 and to<lb/>
LSU 82-30.<lb/>
Julie Shafferbroke three uni-<lb/>
versity records fa women's var-<lb/>
sity swimming. She broke her<lb/>
own record in the 100 and 200<lb/>
meter butterfly. In the 100 meter<lb/>
butterfly her record time was<lb/>
1 00.9. while it was previously<lb/>
1 02.18. In the 200 meter butter-<lb/>
fly she broke her old record time<lb/>
Coach Scharf said that the<lb/>
lady swimmers swam well con-<lb/>
sidering the layoff they had had.<lb/>
This was the first time they had<lb/>
swam since December.<lb/>
The Pirates next meet will be<lb/>
at Duke next Saturday at 1 00<lb/>
where they will try to up their<lb/>
record to 6-2. Coach Scharf says<lb/>
that Duke should be tougher than<lb/>
Carolina and we barely got by<lb/>
them. He said that the Pirates can<lb/>
win this meet but it depends on<lb/>
how hard they work and how<lb/>
determined they are to win.<lb/>
Coach Scharf asked that ev-<lb/>
eryone oome to Duke Saturday<lb/>
and back the Pirate swimmers.<lb/>
for sale<lb/>
FOR SALE: Toyota Celica, '72<lb/>
with AMFM stereo radio and<lb/>
tape-player, AC , landau vinyl<lb/>
top. Steel belted radials. Good<lb/>
oond. Excellent transportation.<lb/>
Call 756-4046 a 756-4136. (leave<lb/>
name if not there.)<lb/>
rOR SALE: AM FM radio. $5.00.<lb/>
Call Alex Cunningham, 324 Slay<lb/>
dam 752-9943.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Stereo equipment,<lb/>
Kenwood Receiver 7600, 80 watts<lb/>
pch; Pioneer 7171 cassette play-<lb/>
er; Koss Earphones, and two<lb/>
Tempest Lab 3 speakers. Asking<lb/>
$700.00. Call 758-9706.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Vega hatchback.<lb/>
AC, AMFM, power steering,<lb/>
steel radials, factay rebuilt<lb/>
engine, properly maintained.<lb/>
Excellent oond. 758-3830.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 5 piece bedrm. suite<lb/>
includes dresser with mirra,<lb/>
chest of drawers, 2 angle beds,<lb/>
and night table. $125.00 cash.<lb/>
Call 758-2577 after 530 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: New Serta perfect<lb/>
sleeper, double box springs,<lb/>
mattress, and frame set. Cost<lb/>
$250, will sell fa $190. Call<lb/>
Richard at 752-1884.<lb/>
torrent (J<lb/>
FEMALE ROOM MATE: Wanted<lb/>
to share house across the street<lb/>
from campus. Only $50 moith<lb/>
rent plus a share of the utilities<lb/>
Call 752-4152 a 752-2064 after 6<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOM MATE: Needed.<lb/>
Summer oily. On Jarvis St. Bus<lb/>
service. Only $50 per month plus<lb/>
DANSKIN'S<lb/>
Newest swmsuHleotards<lb/>
available MOW.<lb/>
AT BARREltd<lb/>
806 Dickinson Ivs.<lb/>
762-6186<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
Winter Inventory<lb/>
vN no s Jp <lb/>
V" W GOLF SHIRTS<lb/>
 d&amp;lAF' LONG AND SH0R7<lb/>
sX JtwL ' sleeve<lb/>
J&amp;l 0l SPERRV T0P-SIDER:<lb/>
HA RAIN SLltKERS, PANTS,<lb/>
 Tll 'rn<lb/>
jv<lb/>
Vs. <lb/>
�<lb/>
SHOES<lb/>
SftT.<lb/>
utilities. Call Cathy 758-7894.<lb/>
found 3<lb/>
FOUND: In parking la behind<lb/>
library, ladies gold oolaed Timex<lb/>
bracelet watch. To claim oome by<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD office.<lb/>
WANTED: Infamatioi leading to<lb/>
purchase of '56 VW a parts. Call<lb/>
752-0582.<lb/>
NEEDED: Part-time seaetary fa<lb/>
a medical office now through<lb/>
May, 1978. Needs typing and<lb/>
secretarial skills. Reply to PO.<lb/>
Box 6043, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
JOBS ON SHIPS: American,<lb/>
faeign. No experience required.<lb/>
Excellent pay. Waldwide travel.<lb/>
Summer job a career. Send $3.00<lb/>
fa infamatioi. SEAFAX, Dept.<lb/>
I-5 Box 2049, Port Angeles,<lb/>
Washington, 98362.<lb/>
WANTED: Persons interested in<lb/>
faming a car pool from Washing-<lb/>
ton Mon. thru Fri. My classes are<lb/>
MWF 9-12 T-Th 10-330. Willing<lb/>
to compromise on the time.<lb/>
Please call 946-9812.<lb/>
ALTERATIONS: Winter things<lb/>
too long? Too big? Call Kathy<lb/>
752-8444 a 752-8642.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058033_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>