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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058042_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity for over 50 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of 8,500,<lb/>
This issue is 16 pages<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Vd. No. S3, No5 East Carolina Untvaralty Greenville, North Carolina 14 March 1978<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
Jenkins retiresp.3<lb/>
Candidatesp.5<lb/>
Styxp.8<lb/>
Gillmanp.13<lb/>
??f<lb/>
Dr. Leo Jenkins to retire<lb/>
Dr. Thomas Brewer to succeed<lb/>
ByKENTYNDALL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Dr. Thomas Bowman Brewer<lb/>
was elected by the UNC Board of<lb/>
Governors Friday to succeed<lb/>
retiring Chancellor Dr. Leo Jen-<lb/>
kins of East Carolina University.<lb/>
Brewer, 45, is a native of Fat<lb/>
Wath, Texas.<lb/>
The scholar and histaian has<lb/>
served as Vice Chancel la and<lb/>
Dean of Texas Christian Univer-<lb/>
sity since 1972.<lb/>
Brewer, a seasoned adminis-<lb/>
trator, has held teaching and<lb/>
administrative posts at universi-<lb/>
ties in Texas, Ohio, Iowa, and<lb/>
Kentucky.<lb/>
Accading to Troy W. Pate,<lb/>
Jr Chairman of the ECU Board<lb/>
of Trustees, the process of<lb/>
choosing a new chancel la began<lb/>
over 13 months ago, when the<lb/>
board reviewed the general pro-<lb/>
cedures and experiences relating<lb/>
to other institutions which had<lb/>
undertaken a similar task.<lb/>
Brewer was chosen fa the<lb/>
ECU chanceilaship from a field<lb/>
of more than 200 candidates.<lb/>
President William C. Friday of<lb/>
the 16-campus University of<lb/>
North Carolina system chose Dr.<lb/>
Brewer from two final recom-<lb/>
mendations submitted by the<lb/>
ECU Chanceila Selection Com-<lb/>
mittee and approved unanimously<lb/>
by the ECU Board of Trustees.<lb/>
Brewer received his Ph.D. in<lb/>
American Histay fran the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Pennsylvania in 1962,<lb/>
after earning a B.A. and MA.<lb/>
from the University of Texas,<lb/>
Austin.<lb/>
Brewer will assume duties<lb/>
July 1 as the seventh chief<lb/>
administrative officer in the 71<lb/>
year histay of ECU.<lb/>
Jenkins is retiring after 18<lb/>
years as president and chanceila<lb/>
and a tenure of 31 years during<lb/>
which ECU grew from a small<lb/>
teachers college into a maja<lb/>
university.<lb/>
Brewer is married and has<lb/>
three children.<lb/>
Sessoms announces chancellor<lb/>
selection at SGA meeting<lb/>
By STUART MORGAN<lb/>
News Edita<lb/>
Neil Sessans, SGA president,<lb/>
announced at Monday's SGA<lb/>
meeting the selection of Dr.<lb/>
Thomas B. Brewer as the new<lb/>
chanceila of ECU.<lb/>
Dr. Brewa, vice chanceila of<lb/>
Texas Christian College since<lb/>
1972, will jucceed Dr.<lb/>
Leo Jenkins who will soon be<lb/>
retiring after serving ECU as<lb/>
chanceila fa the past 18 years.<lb/>
Dr. Brewer is scheduled to<lb/>
assume his new position as<lb/>
chanceila here at July 1, 1978.<lb/>
"The chanceila selection<lb/>
committee waked real hard to<lb/>
select the best man fa the<lb/>
positiai said Sessoms. "Dr.<lb/>
Brewer is first class, top-notch,<lb/>
and I expect him to serve ECU<lb/>
real well<lb/>
" It's a great aedit to ECU to<lb/>
have a man like this as our next<lb/>
chanceila said Sessoms. "I<lb/>
think the student body here will<lb/>
find him to be a useful and<lb/>
straightfaward friend<lb/>
"Dr. Brewer is open-minded<lb/>
and fair and he'll consider any<lb/>
rational, well-planned proposal<lb/>
that the SGA submits to him<lb/>
concerning the visitation policy<lb/>
here added Sessoms.<lb/>
Sessoms later infamed the<lb/>
SGA that he vetoed the $6,325<lb/>
dollar art bill requested by the<lb/>
appropriations oommittee, and<lb/>
said tnat it was basically the same<lb/>
bill submitted to him in Novem-<lb/>
ber.<lb/>
"If these activities are essen-<lb/>
tial to a quality program the<lb/>
department concerned should<lb/>
fund them explained Sessoms.<lb/>
 Such an expenditure would have<lb/>
left the SGA budget in sad<lb/>
shape<lb/>
Kieran Shanahan, SGA Atta-<lb/>
ney General, announced that the<lb/>
review board had ruled unconsti-<lb/>
tutional Tommy Joe Payne's<lb/>
removal from his position as<lb/>
speaker of the legislature, and he<lb/>
reinstated Payne to that position.<lb/>
However, immediately after<lb/>
Payne was reinstated, he deliver-<lb/>
ed a brief speech and resigned.<lb/>
DR. THOMAS BREWER, ECU'S<lb/>
Following Payne's resigna-<lb/>
tion, another SGA memba, Ricky<lb/>
Price was elected as the new<lb/>
speaker of the legislature.<lb/>
"I feel it'stime the legislature<lb/>
got on to doing the student's<lb/>
business said Prioe. "It'stime<lb/>
fa wak, truthfulness, responsi-<lb/>
bility, and respectibility<lb/>
Afterwards, Ron Lewis, chair-<lb/>
man of the selection review<lb/>
oommittee, announced the candi-<lb/>
dates who will be running fa next<lb/>
year's SGA offices.<lb/>
That election will be this<lb/>
semester on April 29.<lb/>
new Chancellor.<lb/>
The candidates ??s; Tommy<lb/>
Joe Payne, Tim Sullivan, Jeff<lb/>
Williams, and Willie Bell, fa<lb/>
president; David Cartwright,<lb/>
Libby Lefla, fa vioe president;<lb/>
Wiley Belts, Bernard (Zack)<lb/>
Smith, fa treasurer; and Lynne<lb/>
Bell, fa secretary<lb/>
"Cindy Broome (FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD Editaand I agreed<lb/>
today on a centerfold truck. The<lb/>
truck, a folder, will be located in<lb/>
the center of the March 23 issue<lb/>
See SGA, o. 3<lb/>
Board says Payne's removal unconstitutional<lb/>
KIERAN SHANAHAN, SGA Attorney General Photo by Brian<lb/>
Stotler.<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
News Edita<lb/>
The Student Government<lb/>
Association (SGA) Judicial Re-<lb/>
view Board upheld the decision of<lb/>
SGA Attaney General Kieran<lb/>
Shanahan reinstating Tommy Joe<lb/>
Payne as Speaker of the SGA<lb/>
Legislature and declaring the<lb/>
procedure used to remove Payne<lb/>
unconstitutional in their meeting<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
The vote was five to two,<lb/>
accading to Shanahan.<lb/>
Robert Miller, chairman of the<lb/>
review board, handed down the<lb/>
decision and Shanahan delivered<lb/>
the decision to the legislature.<lb/>
Shanahan argued the case fa<lb/>
the university aid was suppoted<lb/>
by the testimony of Dr. John<lb/>
East, a professor in the political<lb/>
science department<lb/>
Day legislata Ricky Price<lb/>
argued that the speaker served at<lb/>
the pleasure of the legislature and<lb/>
that the body could remove the<lb/>
speaker at any time, quoting from<lb/>
the Jeffersonian Rules of Order.<lb/>
"However, that set of rules<lb/>
was inapplicable in this case since<lb/>
the SGA constitution clearly<lb/>
defines the binding documents of<lb/>
the legislature as the constitution,<lb/>
the SGA By-laws, and Robert's<lb/>
Rules of Order, respectively<lb/>
Shanahan said.<lb/>
Price argued that the legisla-<lb/>
ture can, by a two-thirds vae,<lb/>
overrule any part of Robert's<lb/>
Rules of Order, and thus have the<lb/>
power to reconsider the election<lb/>
of the<lb/>
Robert's Rules of Order pro-<lb/>
hibits the removal of an elected<lb/>
official by a motion to reconsider<lb/>
under the section devoted to<lb/>
reconsideration.<lb/>
Shanahan argued that even if<lb/>
they had the power, which he<lb/>
termed questionable, the legisla-<lb/>
ture took no vote to override<lb/>
Robert's Rules of Order concern-<lb/>
ing reconsideration.<lb/>
East felt that chaos would<lb/>
result if a parliamentary body had<lb/>
the power to reconsider motions<lb/>
of adjournment, election, and<lb/>
others listed under the section in<lb/>
Robert's Rules of Order dealing<lb/>
with reconsideration.<lb/>
Such power, he said, would<lb/>
prevent a body from eva adjourn-<lb/>
ing, since as soon as the motion to<lb/>
adjourn was passed, someone<lb/>
could move to reconsider the<lb/>
motions to adjourn, and this<lb/>
process could conceivably con-<lb/>
tinue indefinitely.<lb/>
Price concluded his argu-<lb/>
ments by accusing the attaney<lb/>
general of bias and of having<lb/>
political motivations<lb/>
Shanahan oountaed by say-<lb/>
ing, "personal accusations are<lb/>
the lowest form uf argument<lb/>
"I went to the review board to<lb/>
dear my name of any wrong-<lb/>
doing. I didn't resign from the<lb/>
legislature out of spite because of<lb/>
what they did to me, but I wanted<lb/>
to avoid a conflict of interest,<lb/>
since I am a candidate fa SGA<lb/>
president Payne said.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058042_0002"/><lb/>
vm<lb/>
m<lb/>
; S" '??? ? ?'?? <lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 14 March 1978<lb/>
I<lb/>
Ball<lb/>
Study<lb/>
Barbershop<lb/>
A non-credit, Study Skills<lb/>
class will be conducted by Dr.<lb/>
Weigand beginning March 20.<lb/>
There will be two groups. One<lb/>
will meet on Monday and Wed-<lb/>
nesday at 1 p.m. in room 306<lb/>
Wright Annex and the other<lb/>
group will meet on Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday at 1 p.m. in room 306<lb/>
Wright Annex.<lb/>
The class is available to all<lb/>
students. Attendance is voluntary<lb/>
- no formal registration is re-<lb/>
quired.<lb/>
Moty<lb/>
Internationally famous metal<lb/>
smith, Eleanor Moty, will conduct<lb/>
a workshop March 16 and 17.<lb/>
There will be a slide lecture<lb/>
open to the public March 16, at 8<lb/>
p.m in the Leo Jenkins Fine Arts<lb/>
Building Auditorium.<lb/>
For additional information<lb/>
check the art school bulletin<lb/>
boards.<lb/>
Rooms<lb/>
Applications fa residence hall<lb/>
rooms for Summer School 1978<lb/>
and School Year 1978-79 may be<lb/>
obtained from the Housing Office<lb/>
as well as one of the residence hal<lb/>
offices as of Tues March 14.<lb/>
Room deposits fa these terms<lb/>
will be accepted in the Cashier's<lb/>
Office beginning March 20.<lb/>
The required deposit fa Sum-<lb/>
mer School is $67 ($101 fa<lb/>
private roan) and fa Fall Semes-<lb/>
ter, $60. The deposit(s) must be<lb/>
accompanied by the appropriate<lb/>
applications).<lb/>
Rooms will be assigned in the<lb/>
offices of the respective residence<lb/>
halls accading to the following<lb/>
schedule:<lb/>
Tues March 21: Students<lb/>
who desire to return to the room<lb/>
they presently occupy fa Fall<lb/>
Semester will be assigned.<lb/>
Wed March 22: Graduates,<lb/>
rising senias, and rising junias<lb/>
will be assigned.<lb/>
Thurs March 23: Rising<lb/>
sophomaes will be assigned.<lb/>
Detailed infamatioi pertain-<lb/>
ing to the sign-up procedure will<lb/>
be made available to each resi-<lb/>
dence hall resident.<lb/>
Day students may receive this<lb/>
infamatioi by ooitacting the<lb/>
Housing Office.<lb/>
Hunger<lb/>
The N.C. Hunger Coalition<lb/>
has come to Pitt County.<lb/>
This aganizatioi trys to lo-<lb/>
cate households eligible fa food<lb/>
stamp assistance that are not<lb/>
receiving it.<lb/>
Volunteers are needed to aid<lb/>
in prescreening applicants.<lb/>
If you are interested in<lb/>
helping, please contact Pat Che-<lb/>
nier at 756-1593.<lb/>
The Greenville chapter of<lb/>
S.P.E.B.S.Q.S.A. invites ECU<lb/>
faculty, students, and friends to<lb/>
join in singing barbershop har-<lb/>
mony on Monday nights at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in Our Redeemer Lutheran<lb/>
Church (2 blocks noth of the<lb/>
bypass on Elm St.) New student<lb/>
members are especially welcome.<lb/>
Who's who<lb/>
All "Who's Who Among<lb/>
American College and University<lb/>
Students" please meet Wed<lb/>
March 29 at 8 p.m. in the<lb/>
BUCCANEER office fa a group<lb/>
shot.<lb/>
Gift committee<lb/>
Interested senias who wish to<lb/>
apply fa the senia class gift<lb/>
conmittee must fill out an<lb/>
application in the SGA office<lb/>
between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.<lb/>
Monday through Friday befoe<lb/>
March 15.<lb/>
The purpose of this conmittee<lb/>
is to soeen applicants fo the<lb/>
1978 Senia Class Scholarships.<lb/>
Problems<lb/>
Having a problem with your<lb/>
spouse, boyfriend a girlfriend a<lb/>
roommate?<lb/>
The department of sociology's<lb/>
Marriage Counseling Program<lb/>
specializes in resolving interper-<lb/>
sonal problems.<lb/>
Call 757-6883 and ask fa Dr.<lb/>
Knox.<lb/>
He will arrange a ooifidential<lb/>
(free) interview with a graduate<lb/>
intern.<lb/>
Art<lb/>
Currently on exhibition in the<lb/>
upper gallery of Mendenhali<lb/>
Student Center is Folio, a selec-<lb/>
tion of woks by artists Linda<lb/>
Burney and Lucien M. Koonoe.<lb/>
This exhibit includes textiles<lb/>
by Ms. Burney, along with<lb/>
cermaics and drawings by Mr.<lb/>
Koonoe.<lb/>
GMAT<lb/>
The Graduate Management<lb/>
Admission Test will be offered at<lb/>
ECU on Sat March 18. Applica-<lb/>
tion blanks are to be oompleted<lb/>
and mailed to Educational Test-<lb/>
ing Service, Box 966-R,<lb/>
Pnnoeton, NJ 08540 to arrive by<lb/>
Feb. 24. Applications are also<lb/>
available at the Testing Center,<lb/>
Speight Bldg, Room 105, ECU.<lb/>
Get your tickets now fa the<lb/>
Alpha's Black and Gold Ball to be<lb/>
held Sat. March 18.<lb/>
Ticket sales daily, from 10<lb/>
a.m3 p.m. in the lobby of the<lb/>
Students Supply Stoe.<lb/>
Debate club<lb/>
Are there any students that<lb/>
find it difficult to clearly express<lb/>
what is on their mind?<lb/>
If you are one of these people,<lb/>
the Debating Qub is fo you.<lb/>
The club will help develop a<lb/>
student's confidence in public<lb/>
speaking plus the dub will better<lb/>
a student's capacity on investiga-<lb/>
ting issues.<lb/>
The Debating Club will cause<lb/>
a student to speak his thoughts<lb/>
much faster. This ability shall<lb/>
make the student mae valuable<lb/>
oi the job marker.<lb/>
Wouldn't you like to speak in<lb/>
front of people without your knees<lb/>
knocking?<lb/>
Fa mae infamatioi, ooitact<lb/>
Marc Adler, room 161 Umstead,<lb/>
758-9523.<lb/>
Symposium<lb/>
The ECU chapter of the<lb/>
National Student Speech and<lb/>
Hearing Association will present<lb/>
the eight Annual Speech and<lb/>
Hearing Symposium on Friday,<lb/>
March 17.<lb/>
The symposium will be in the<lb/>
Allied Health Auditoium fron<lb/>
8:30 a.m. until 5 p.m.<lb/>
The speakers and their topics<lb/>
are Dr. William Healey on<lb/>
"Public Law 94-142: Its impact<lb/>
and How to Manage It" and Dr.<lb/>
David Yoder on "Current Trends<lb/>
in Language Intervention<lb/>
The fee fo professionals is $5<lb/>
if pre-registered and $6 at the<lb/>
doo.<lb/>
The fee fo ECU students is<lb/>
$2.<lb/>
Pre-registratioi foms are<lb/>
available at the Speech and<lb/>
Hearing Clinic, Allied Health<lb/>
Annex.<lb/>
Cheer<lb/>
Want to pick up a girl?<lb/>
Girls want to get picked ?<lb/>
Be an ECU cheerleader.<lb/>
Meeting Thurs March 16 at 5<lb/>
p.m. in the lobby outside Minges<lb/>
Coliseum.<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
Moonlight<lb/>
"Red Pin Bowing" is back fa<lb/>
Spring Semester. Held every<lb/>
Sunday evening fron 7 until 10<lb/>
p.m. at the Bowling Center at<lb/>
Mendenhali, Red Pin Bowling is a<lb/>
game fa everyoie. If you can<lb/>
make a strike when the red pin is<lb/>
the head pin, you win one free<lb/>
game. It's that simple! Come on<lb/>
over and try it out this Sunday. It<lb/>
could be your lucky day.<lb/>
Have you ever tried bowling in<lb/>
the moonlight7 Here's your<lb/>
chanoe! Friday evenings from 8<lb/>
until 10 p.m "Moonlight Bowl-<lb/>
ing" is held at the Mendenhali<lb/>
Student Center Bowling Center.<lb/>
Try your bowling skills in this<lb/>
different enviroment. If you're as<lb/>
sharp as ever you may win a free<lb/>
game. The bowler with the<lb/>
highest sooe during each hour of<lb/>
Moonlight Bowling will win one<lb/>
free game. There are always two<lb/>
winners and one of them could be<lb/>
you.<lb/>
Bake sale<lb/>
Theta Alpha Chapter of Alpha<lb/>
Kappa Alpha will sponso a bake<lb/>
sale Wed March 15, in froit of<lb/>
the book stoe on campus.<lb/>
Cupcakes, pies, cookies, cakes<lb/>
and a variety of treats will be on<lb/>
sale.<lb/>
Pom-pom<lb/>
The ECU Pom Pom squad<lb/>
'tryoutswill be held March 17, 18,<lb/>
and 19.<lb/>
All interested girls should<lb/>
meet in Fletcher Music Bldg. on<lb/>
Fri March 17 at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Tryoutswill be Sat. evening,<lb/>
March 18.<lb/>
If vou have questions call Jo<lb/>
Ellen at 752-0354 a Glenda<lb/>
752-9416.<lb/>
BUG<lb/>
Organization that have black<lb/>
and white pictures that they wish<lb/>
to go in the Buccaneer, please<lb/>
send them to the office.<lb/>
Any aganizatioi that has had<lb/>
their group picture taken, please<lb/>
come by the Buccaneer office and<lb/>
identify the picture.<lb/>
Flick<lb/>
Step-by-Step, a free flick, will<lb/>
be shown Tuesday at 4:00 p.m. in<lb/>
rm. 242, Mendenhali.<lb/>
Bahai Association invites any-<lb/>
one interested in religion a Latin<lb/>
America to come view the film.<lb/>
Much of the dialogue is in<lb/>
Spanish and the setting is rural<lb/>
Central and South America.<lb/>
Convocation<lb/>
The School of Home Econom-<lb/>
ics will hold its annual Spring<lb/>
Convocation at the Willis Build-<lb/>
ing on Thurs March 16, at 4<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Jo Graham Foster, an outstan-<lb/>
ding educata and member of the<lb/>
N.C. House of Representatives<lb/>
will be the majo speaker.<lb/>
Elections fo the Dean's Advi-<lb/>
soy Council and the Home<lb/>
Economics Curriculum Commit-<lb/>
tee will be held.<lb/>
The Phi U Schaarship Awards<lb/>
and the outstanding senia will<lb/>
also be announced.<lb/>
Attendance is required fo all<lb/>
Hone Economics majos.<lb/>
Get shot<lb/>
Any aganizatioi that has not<lb/>
contacted the Buccaneer about a<lb/>
group picture o returned their<lb/>
infamatioi sheets by March 24,<lb/>
1978. will no receive coverage in<lb/>
the 1977-78 Buccaneer.<lb/>
Call a cane by the Buccaneer<lb/>
office between 3-5, Monday thru<lb/>
Thursday, o phone 757-6501 a<lb/>
6502.<lb/>
Kid ed<lb/>
The Association fo Childhood<lb/>
Education International will hold<lb/>
an oganizatioial meeting Mai-<lb/>
day, March 20, at 4:30 p.m. in<lb/>
rm. 129 Speight.<lb/>
All students interested in the<lb/>
education and well-being of chil-<lb/>
dren are invited to attend.<lb/>
Write!<lb/>
Writers needed fa Trends<lb/>
and News sections of Fountain-<lb/>
head. You'll love the long hours,<lb/>
low pay and good company. Come<lb/>
by Fountainhead Office a call<lb/>
757-6309.<lb/>
Dearth<lb/>
Due to the dearth of flashes,<lb/>
there is no flash in this space.<lb/>
Any student o aganizatioi may<lb/>
insert a flash here by dropping<lb/>
their announcement by the<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD office. Flashes<lb/>
must be typed o printed neatly.<lb/>
CPR<lb/>
All students interested in<lb/>
taking a Cardio Pulmonary Resus-<lb/>
citation (CPR) course, should be<lb/>
willing to devote four nights a<lb/>
week, three hairs each night.<lb/>
Dates will be announced.<lb/>
Contact Cindy Merntt at<lb/>
758-3933.<lb/>
Crafts<lb/>
Register now fa aie of the<lb/>
aafts wokshops which are being<lb/>
offered by the Crafts Center at<lb/>
Mendenhali Student Center.<lb/>
Sign up fa Beginning Dark-<lb/>
room, Basic Pottery, Handbuilt<lb/>
Pottery. Silksaeen, Woodwak-<lb/>
mg, Crochet, Flax Loom Weav-<lb/>
ing, Enameling, Coitempoary<lb/>
Basketry.<lb/>
Upon payment of a $10.00<lb/>
semester Crafts Center member-<lb/>
ship fee, an individual may<lb/>
register fa any of the available<lb/>
wokshops without additional<lb/>
charges, excluding costs of per-<lb/>
sonal supplies and a small lab fee<lb/>
should the Crafts Center furnish<lb/>
supplies.<lb/>
Fo details, call o visit the<lb/>
Crafts Center during the hours of<lb/>
3 p.m. until 10 p.m Monday<lb/>
through Friday, and 10 a.m. until<lb/>
3 p.m Saturday.<lb/>
Class spaoe is limited and the<lb/>
registration deadline fo all wok-<lb/>
shops is Sat March 18.<lb/>
Also, membership fees will<lb/>
not be refunded after the registra-<lb/>
tion deadline.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058042_0003"/><lb/>
? ?$jb &amp;3&amp;BSSW<lb/>
lter 37 years af ?C(<lb/>
14 March 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Pay 3<lb/>
ECU School of Nursing in 1964;<lb/>
Dr. Leo Jenkins to retire<lb/>
ByJUUEEVERETTE<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Dr. Leo Warren Jenkins,<lb/>
outgoing ECU Chanoetlor, came<lb/>
to East Carolina in September,<lb/>
1947, as vioe president and dean<lb/>
of the university.<lb/>
He had been professor of<lb/>
political science at Montdair<lb/>
State Teachers College, N.J. and<lb/>
assistant to the Commissioner of<lb/>
Higher Education for the state of<lb/>
New Jersey.<lb/>
Jenkins was elected president<lb/>
of East Carolina College January<lb/>
1, 1960.<lb/>
He was the sixth president in<lb/>
the history of East Carolina<lb/>
University.<lb/>
He succeeded Dr. John D.<lb/>
Messick who served as president<lb/>
from 1947 through 1959.<lb/>
In 1965, Dr. Jenkins made the<lb/>
proposal for university status and<lb/>
two years later, East Carolina<lb/>
College officially became East<lb/>
Carolina University.<lb/>
In 1972, under another legisla-<lb/>
tive act, ECU became an integral<lb/>
part of the University of North<lb/>
Carolina system and President<lb/>
Jenkins became Chancellor Jen-<lb/>
kins.<lb/>
He was attempting to esta-<lb/>
blish a School of Medicine at the<lb/>
time and shortly won approval of<lb/>
a two-year school.<lb/>
This proved unworkable, and<lb/>
in 1976 final approval was given<lb/>
fa admitting the first class to a<lb/>
four-year degree granting Medi-<lb/>
cal School this year.<lb/>
The accomplishments of Dr.<lb/>
Leo Jenkins are many.<lb/>
His achievements include:<lb/>
the expansion of Joyner Library;<lb/>
the oompletion of the new School<lb/>
of Art building which bears his<lb/>
name, the Leo W. Jenkins Fine<lb/>
Arts Center; establishment of the<lb/>
construction of Ficklen Stadium,<lb/>
begun in 1962; construction of<lb/>
Minges Coliseum in 1968.<lb/>
Also inducted is the construc-<lb/>
tion of Brewster building, the<lb/>
Biology building, and Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center.<lb/>
Jenkins was a graduate of<lb/>
Rutgers with a B.S. degree in<lb/>
1935.<lb/>
He also received a MA. at<lb/>
Columbia University in 1939 and<lb/>
an Education degree from New<lb/>
York University in 1941.<lb/>
Jenkins received the "Citizen<lb/>
of the Year" Award from the<lb/>
Greenville Chamber of Commerce<lb/>
in 1967 and the North Carolina<lb/>
Public Service Award in 1977.<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
Continued from p. 1<lb/>
of FOUNTAINHEAD explained<lb/>
"It will oontain each candi-<lb/>
date's platform and pidure he<lb/>
said. "In it, each candidate will<lb/>
be limited to 150 words<lb/>
"Students here are sickened<lb/>
with SGA meetings and their<lb/>
controversial topics said Mike<lb/>
Cunningham, day student legisla-<lb/>
tor. "I hope the SGA gets rid of<lb/>
this next year<lb/>
Cunningham then commen-<lb/>
ded Ron Lewis for doing a good<lb/>
job with the review board.<lb/>
 I hope that next year we' II be<lb/>
able to have a definite winner and<lb/>
not another recount of ballots as<lb/>
we had this year, added Cunning-<lb/>
ham.<lb/>
"We should now forget the<lb/>
controversial issues such as the<lb/>
independent media board and<lb/>
ooncern ourselves with next<lb/>
year said Cunningham.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058042_0004"/><lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAO 13 March 1978<lb/>
The people's choice?<lb/>
Approximately this time last year, many people<lb/>
were worried that the U.S. Food and Drug<lb/>
Administration was going to ban saccharin, an<lb/>
artificial sweetner, from the market. That possibility<lb/>
has not faded.<lb/>
Rumors have recently been circulating that hair<lb/>
dyes may be banned because they allegedly cause<lb/>
cancer, too. Reports have stated that in the tests, the<lb/>
rats were forced to drink extraordinary amounts of<lb/>
this dye. Cases of cancer in these laboratory animals<lb/>
have been reported.<lb/>
In the first place, no human being interested in<lb/>
coloring his or her hair is going to drink the hair<lb/>
color. Hair color is applied to the hair, contrary to<lb/>
what those doing the testing seem to believe. Had<lb/>
they truly been interested in researching the hair dye<lb/>
as a cause fa cancer, they would have applied the<lb/>
dye to the animals' hair, as is normally done.<lb/>
Even more important than hair dye, though, is<lb/>
the saccharin issue. People can live without hair dye,<lb/>
even though some may think that they cannot. Some<lb/>
individuals, however, rely heavily upon saccharin as<lb/>
a sugar substitute.<lb/>
Some of these people are diabetic. Some are<lb/>
overweight and wish to curb their daily intake of<lb/>
sugar. To ban saccharin from the market would be a<lb/>
grave injustice to these people.<lb/>
I n a Canadian rat experiment, 100 rats were given<lb/>
saccharin as seven per cent of their diet. Of the 100,<lb/>
three developed bladder tumors. However, the<lb/>
amount of saccharin consumed by the rats who had<lb/>
cancer would equal a human being consuming 800<lb/>
diet drinks daily for a long period of time to get<lb/>
cancer.<lb/>
Such an idea is totally absurd. Certainly it's safe<lb/>
to say that no human being could drink 800 diet<lb/>
drinks in one day anyway. Who would want to? Also,<lb/>
there have been no reports of saccharin, taken<lb/>
moderately, causing cancer in human beings.<lb/>
Cigarettes are known to cause cancer, when<lb/>
consumed excessively, but a warning label was<lb/>
merely applied to each pack. Why can't the same be<lb/>
done fa saccharin? Or hair dye? Does the U.S.<lb/>
government have the right to decide what the public<lb/>
can and cannot buy? Can't the public be infamed of<lb/>
the dangers, if any exist, and then decide fa<lb/>
themselves whether to buy a not ?<lb/>
The American people should write their congress-<lb/>
men and women and inform them of their stands.<lb/>
Perhaps something can be done.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community tor over fifty years.<lb/>
"Were it left to -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 Coakley<lb/>
Advertising ManagerRobert M. Swaim<lb/>
News EditorsDoug White<lb/>
Stuart Morgan<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, 757-6387, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10 annually, alumni $6 annually.<lb/>
posr-spRii&amp;0&amp;<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Seniors outraged at dorm contract<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
This isour senior year at ECU,<lb/>
and we feel that an expression of<lb/>
our grievances is long overdue.<lb/>
Although there are many poten-<lb/>
tial gripes we oould discuss, there<lb/>
is one in particular that we feel is<lb/>
in definite need of attention.<lb/>
Any student who has ever<lb/>
lived in the dorms has exper-<lb/>
ienced the end of the year<lb/>
procedure of "reserving a dorm<lb/>
room You are handed a spe-<lb/>
cially prepared contract, told to<lb/>
sign on the bottom line, and you<lb/>
walk away knowing that a dorm<lb/>
room will be awaiting you in the<lb/>
fall. But! Have you ever tried to<lb/>
get a dorm room without signing<lb/>
aoontract? Have you ever tried to<lb/>
get a room fa only one semester?<lb/>
Have you ever tried to move off<lb/>
campus during the year and been<lb/>
infamed that you didn't have<lb/>
valid reasons fa moving out, and<lb/>
therefae must pay dam rent fa<lb/>
the remainder of the year?<lb/>
Have any of you every really<lb/>
read this contract that is so<lb/>
conveniently prepared by the<lb/>
school? If anybody attempts any<lb/>
of the above, a if any of you ever<lb/>
take time to really read the<lb/>
contract, you will no doubt realize<lb/>
that the Housing Officj has<lb/>
ooncocted a very one-sided, very<lb/>
unfair, and very legally binding<lb/>
contract that serves the interests<lb/>
of the school-not the students.<lb/>
Both of us are senias this<lb/>
year, and we felt that we would<lb/>
prefer an off-campus living situa-<lb/>
tion. This past September, after<lb/>
looking unsuccessfully all sum-<lb/>
mer, we found a house off<lb/>
campus. We found however, that<lb/>
although we were free to move,<lb/>
we were legally bound to be<lb/>
responsible fa dam rent fa the<lb/>
entire year because we signed the<lb/>
contract.<lb/>
This would entail a loss of<lb/>
approximately $500 apiece if we<lb/>
were to move out of the dam. We<lb/>
consulted several sources, inclu-<lb/>
ding Dr. Leo Jenkins, Dean<lb/>
Fulghum, and Mr. Vainwright of<lb/>
Business Affairs, and told them of<lb/>
our plight. We indicated to all of<lb/>
them that we were willing to pay<lb/>
fa Fall Semesta. Yet we felt that<lb/>
to have to pay fa Spring<lb/>
Semester if we were na living in<lb/>
the dam was unjust.<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins and Dean Ful-<lb/>
ghum were sympathetic to our<lb/>
cause and referred us to Mr.<lb/>
Vainright. Our discussion with<lb/>
the Business Affairs Office was<lb/>
our first introduction to the<lb/>
school's policy and mentality<lb/>
regarding the issue of students<lb/>
terminating their dam contracts.<lb/>
While Mr. Vainright was very<lb/>
polite and frequently assured us<lb/>
that the school's policy was "fa<lb/>
the students and was sympathe-<lb/>
tic to our situation, after wading<lb/>
through the administrative<lb/>
doubletalk it became very appar-<lb/>
ent that the school's primary<lb/>
interest was in assuring their<lb/>
financial gains.<lb/>
Although the results of our<lb/>
discussion were discouraging, we<lb/>
felt that all was na lost. We were<lb/>
infamed that we oould appeal to<lb/>
the Housing Appeals Committee.<lb/>
This Committee was famed<lb/>
especially to handle those cases of<lb/>
contract termination that did not<lb/>
fall under the situations listed in<lb/>
the contract.<lb/>
We wrae our letters of appeal<lb/>
stating our reasons fa wishing to<lb/>
terminate our contracts and also<lb/>
expressing our willingness to be<lb/>
held responsible fa Fall Semes-<lb/>
ter dam rent. We had been living<lb/>
in the dams fa three years and<lb/>
felt we had had enough of dam<lb/>
life. Bah of us had large amounts<lb/>
of independent work to complete.<lb/>
As everybody knows, the<lb/>
dams are na exactly conducive<lb/>
to study. Also, one of us was<lb/>
almost assaulted in the shower of<lb/>
Umstead last year and did na<lb/>
relish the thought of that happen-<lb/>
ing again. Our main oomplaint<lb/>
was that we-and all dam stu-<lb/>
dents-had to sign the contracts<lb/>
under duress. The school supplies<lb/>
the contract, they are na nego-<lb/>
tiable, they are binding fa two<lb/>
semesters, and they canna be<lb/>
terminated except fa very<lb/>
extenuating circumstances.<lb/>
Ifastucnt hasnoaher plaoe<lb/>
to live at the end of the year and<lb/>
the University has the monopoly<lb/>
on housing, what are you suppos-<lb/>
ed to do but sign a contract that is<lb/>
an all a nahing deal? The<lb/>
University is free to put any<lb/>
stipulations it wants in the<lb/>
contract and the student can say<lb/>
nahing. We were told to deliver<lb/>
our letters to the Office of Student<lb/>
Affairs.<lb/>
If we thought the runaround<lb/>
with the Business Office was<lb/>
outrageous, it in no way prepared<lb/>
us fa our encounter with the<lb/>
Office of Student Affairs which<lb/>
handles student appeals. Until<lb/>
See FORUM, p. 5<lb/>
<pb facs="00058042_0005"/><lb/>
Forum<lb/>
14 March 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
this time we had at least received<lb/>
polite and oourteous treatment<lb/>
from those officials we talked to<lb/>
before. Not so this time. The<lb/>
Dean of Student Affairs is Dr.<lb/>
Tucker.<lb/>
Dr. Tucker obviously knew<lb/>
who we were and why we were<lb/>
there. As soon as we walked in his<lb/>
office, we were greeted with an<lb/>
obnoxious attitude and rudely<lb/>
stated questions about our ap-<lb/>
peal. Since Dr. Tucker was not a<lb/>
voting member of the oommittee,<lb/>
we saw no reason to answer his<lb/>
questions. We told him that our<lb/>
explanations were in our letters of<lb/>
appeal, and considering his be-<lb/>
havior, we had no desire to<lb/>
discuss anything with him. As we<lb/>
left the offios, we were told that<lb/>
our appeals "better be good" or<lb/>
else we were wasting our time.<lb/>
While in the office, we were<lb/>
told by Dr. Tucker's secretary<lb/>
that the Committee would meet<lb/>
late in the next week and that we<lb/>
would be allowed to attend the<lb/>
meeting. We were moving out of<lb/>
the dorm the next day and gave<lb/>
her the phone number of a<lb/>
neighbor at our new residence.<lb/>
She told us that they would call us<lb/>
and let us know when the meeting<lb/>
would be held.<lb/>
We had the mistaken notion<lb/>
that we would be given some<lb/>
advanced notioe of the meeting-<lb/>
at least one day. Instead, Dr.<lb/>
Tucker's office called our neigh-<lb/>
bor (we didn't have a phone yet)<lb/>
the morning of the meeting day.<lb/>
We didn't get the message until<lb/>
too late and consequently lost any<lb/>
chance we had to defend our<lb/>
position in person. We had<lb/>
delivered our letters five days<lb/>
before the oommittee met, giving<lb/>
Dr. Tucker ample opportunity to<lb/>
give us advance notioe.<lb/>
We were later informed by a<lb/>
student member of the oommittee<lb/>
that the fact that we were not at<lb/>
the meeting severely decreased<lb/>
our chances of winning our<lb/>
appeal. At any rate, we received<lb/>
written notioe that our appeal had<lb/>
been turned down. This means<lb/>
that we had to pay $286 more this<lb/>
semester for an ernpty dorm<lb/>
room. We acquired information<lb/>
regarding students whose peti-<lb/>
tions were honored and found out<lb/>
that although extenuating, their<lb/>
reasons were more or less similar<lb/>
to the circumstances stated in the<lb/>
contract. It seemed that our<lb/>
reasons were not.<lb/>
The Housing Appeals Com-<lb/>
mittee states its purpose as one to<lb/>
review cases other than those<lb/>
listed in the dam contract. Yet it<lb/>
appears that unless one has a<lb/>
reason fa termination that is<lb/>
listed in the contract, there is no<lb/>
hope fa appeal. The oommittee,<lb/>
in our eyes, is a faros - a show<lb/>
conceived by the administration<lb/>
as they pretend to "wak fa the<lb/>
good of tne students<lb/>
This attitude seems to extend<lb/>
to most members of school. A<lb/>
oonversatiai with Mrs. Bunting,<lb/>
directa of women's housing<lb/>
proved to be equally fruitless.<lb/>
The main interest" expressed at<lb/>
the Housing Office was again,<lb/>
"concern fa the students<lb/>
However, when questioned about<lb/>
policies obviously one-sided, their<lb/>
replies are covered with dollar<lb/>
signs. Mrs. Bunting was asked<lb/>
why the oontracts aren't made fa<lb/>
one semester oily, and she<lb/>
answered that if that was the<lb/>
case the school might lose money.<lb/>
This was by far the most<lb/>
straight-faward response given<lb/>
by any official and such canda<lb/>
was uncommon.<lb/>
So, students: BEWARE<lb/>
When you sign your dam con-<lb/>
tract this week, READ befae you<lb/>
sign There's not too much you<lb/>
can do if you have to live there<lb/>
now, but you can raise some hell<lb/>
and complain about it when you<lb/>
do sign. We took the contract to<lb/>
an attaney and he infamed us<lb/>
that the University has construc-<lb/>
ted a vay one-sided and airtight<lb/>
contract with legally-binding<lb/>
responsibilities on the sjudents -<lb/>
and few fa the school. Rease<lb/>
keep these points in mind:<lb/>
(1) The school has not always<lb/>
had this type of contract; it was<lb/>
changed three years ago fa "our<lb/>
benefit although they seemed to<lb/>
have no problem filling the dams<lb/>
without the contract.<lb/>
(2) Once you sign you' re stuck<lb/>
with the financial responsibilities<lb/>
fa the whole year - even if you<lb/>
vacate the room.<lb/>
(3) Unless some catastrophe<lb/>
befalls you, the contract cannot<lb/>
be terminated.<lb/>
(4) Be prepared fa the hassle<lb/>
of your life anytime you question<lb/>
University policy - this will<lb/>
include doubletalk, rudeness, and<lb/>
snotty secretaries.<lb/>
It'stoolatefa us, but there's<lb/>
hope fa others if enough people<lb/>
start yelling and tell them how<lb/>
they feel.<lb/>
Thaoughly disgusted,<lb/>
June Schaf fad<lb/>
Janet Hceppel<lb/>
Don't forget<lb/>
Forum policy<lb/>
Western Sizzlin<lb/>
Steak House<lb/>
Hours: Sun. thru Thurs. 11:00 to 10:00<lb/>
Fri. ?r Sat. 11:00 to 11:00<lb/>
TUESDAY DINNER SPECIAL<lb/>
No. 12 Chopped Sirloin Steak with or without Mushroom Gravy<lb/>
Toiat Toast with Baked Potato and molted butter or Freneh Fries<lb/>
All for<lb/>
$1.49<lb/>
Candidates attend meet<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
News Edita<lb/>
All nine registered candidates<lb/>
fa Student Government Associa-<lb/>
tion (SGA) executive offioes<lb/>
attended the mandatay candi-<lb/>
dates meeting Monday night.<lb/>
The meeting's purpose was to<lb/>
familiarize candidates with the<lb/>
election rules and to outlien<lb/>
regulations concerning the distri-<lb/>
bution of campaign literature,<lb/>
aooadingto Ron Lewis, Elections<lb/>
Committee chairperson.<lb/>
Candidates fa SGA president<lb/>
are: Tonmy Joe Payne, Jeff<lb/>
Williams, Willie Bell, and Tim<lb/>
Sullivan.<lb/>
Candidates fa SGA vioe-<lb/>
president are: David Cartwright<lb/>
and Libby Lefler.<lb/>
Candidates fa treasurer are:<lb/>
Bernard (Zack) Smith, and Wiley<lb/>
Betts.<lb/>
Lynn Bell is running fa SGA<lb/>
secretary unopposed.<lb/>
The election, scheduled fa<lb/>
March 29, is open to all full time<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Students must have a valid ID<lb/>
and Activity card in ader to vote<lb/>
in the election.<lb/>
Campaigning began imme-<lb/>
diately after the meeting and will<lb/>
oontinue until election day.<lb/>
Saads Shoe Shop<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
at<lb/>
College View Cleaners<lb/>
?'PERMATHENE-12<lb/>
Once-A-Day Continuous-Action<lb/>
Capsule Reducing Plan'?Gradually<lb/>
aims<lb/>
JWWFAT<lb/>
Yes. it's true NOW low pound, after<lb/>
? without crash diets<lb/>
? without torturous exercise<lb/>
? just read and follow important<lb/>
Permathene low calorie reducing plan<lb/>
booklet in every package<lb/>
Continuous Action Attadu Bit Maior Canst of OvafwttpM<lb/>
Ovoraoiat?Taa Major Caosa of Pal Butia-Up<lb/>
Thanks to PERMATHENE-12 s miss-no-meals eating program not only do<lb/>
you eat better than ever betore. but this once-a-day continuous action time-<lb/>
release capsule reducing plan actually helps your body Turn Food into Burned<lb/>
Up Energy Instead Of into Fat'<lb/>
Hire s what happens<lb/>
? Gaiaiat. avatar hV art uaaraurt M ? 0M l?s tost" it Mttcfy ft.<lb/>
?? mmthymmtmttmuiu Art. tolas ytaOsaM<lb/>
wnM Ml MHMt IM MMflf MlttM p W<lb/>
? BtaOt twrtOt acfeaa IMpa MmmmM) tutu artar art) Mttt<lb/>
? AmI. tvtt fttaea vw mm mm Mart mm pmmt. Mtk aftar<lb/>
c? ?? ft ratucrt talari. aatMf rutnm m war, MCksaa<lb/>
aawy tmnmtimmm<lb/>
I tt Mfca t MtM<lb/>
Mmrtart<lb/>
etveri<lb/>
Nat ? cm a<lb/>
FMJrtM TMi'i<lb/>
MNMVW<lb/>
? Remember you must loaa wokjM startiMj tie vary<lb/>
flrst day see results tnt vary first wool results<lb/>
you can measure on your scale and in the smaller trimmer<lb/>
sue of your clothing or money back<lb/>
I to "MM tUtHfm ?mj Maaoal satMOl MMrtt tMM<lb/>
MM Htao and Mow lab directions cjreluMy<lb/>
Quality ? Cemp?lltlr0 P'ir? ? Svrvirt<lb/>
hrMllai lwii Ik tot<lb/>
Mo I<lb/>
?n Ofckintan Av?<lb/>
nwWJM<lb/>
? ?m -730 p in<lb/>
?mil t M?rwrl?l Oriv.<lb/>
nmixiti<lb/>
8a.m10p m<lb/>
<pb facs="00058042_0006"/><lb/>
?Mm<lb/>
ftHGSSERfWE<lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAlNHEAD 14 March 1978<lb/>
ECU employees participate in<lb/>
statewide pilot health program<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Full tiem and permanent<lb/>
part-time employees of ECU are<lb/>
participating in a pilot health<lb/>
education and screening program<lb/>
which began this week for all<lb/>
state employees in Pitt, Wayne<lb/>
and Burke counties.<lb/>
The program includes both<lb/>
educational lectures and a health<lb/>
screening examination. It is avail-<lb/>
able to approximatley 1,800 ECU<lb/>
employees who are among a total<lb/>
of some 3,000 state employees in<lb/>
Pitt County.<lb/>
Educational lectures for<lb/>
groups of approximatley 50 to 75<lb/>
employees began Tuesday morn-<lb/>
ing in Brewster Building at ECU<lb/>
with health screening examina-<lb/>
tions scheduled following the<lb/>
lecture. Examinations were being<lb/>
conducted at the ECU Infirmary.<lb/>
Three sessions of lectures<lb/>
daily were scheduled through<lb/>
Friday, to cover about half of the<lb/>
eligible employees at ECU. A<lb/>
second series of lectures and<lb/>
examinations will be scheduled<lb/>
later in March and April, officials<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The program, which is free<lb/>
and voluntary, is aimed at<lb/>
improving the ovrall health of<lb/>
state employees and thereby<lb/>
containign health care costs of the<lb/>
state of North Carolina.<lb/>
At the educational lectures,<lb/>
information is presented on<lb/>
cancerm uiabetes, hypertension<lb/>
and the physical screening pro-<lb/>
cess. Males and females attend<lb/>
seperate sessions.<lb/>
Employees were given time<lb/>
off from their jobs to participate.<lb/>
All examinations results were to<lb/>
be strictly confidential and if tests<lb/>
revelaed a health problem, the<lb/>
employee was referred to a<lb/>
physician.<lb/>
State government is paying<lb/>
the costs, approximatley $10 per<lb/>
employee, of the program. The<lb/>
three counties, Pitt, Wayne and<lb/>
Burke, together have about<lb/>
10,000 state employees. The pilot<lb/>
project is being conducted to<lb/>
determine whether such a pro-<lb/>
gram will be offered to all state<lb/>
employees.<lb/>
In anearlier pilot screneing<lb/>
program at Cannon Mills in<lb/>
Cabarrus County, statistics show-<lb/>
ed that out of 1,000 adults<lb/>
screened two had an early cancer,<lb/>
seven had diabetes and 150 had<lb/>
high blood pressure.<lb/>
The method of education and<lb/>
screening was developed by Dr.<lb/>
Siegfried Hayden of Duke<lb/>
Medical Center. Dr. Hayden was<lb/>
scheduled to be on the scene as<lb/>
the Pitt County program began<lb/>
Tuesday.<lb/>
Lecture to examine Panama<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
The Panama Canal Zone, its<lb/>
history and the controversial new<lb/>
treaties will be examined in a<lb/>
public lecture here Wed March<lb/>
15.<lb/>
RIGGAN<lb/>
SHOE SHOP<lb/>
REPAIR ALL<lb/>
LEATHER GOODS<lb/>
downtown Greenville<lb/>
111 West 4th St. 7584)204<lb/>
The lecture, featuring Dr.<lb/>
Edward Leahy of the ECU faculty,<lb/>
a speaalist in Latin American<lb/>
geography, is scheduled for 7:45<lb/>
p.m. at the Jarvis Methodist<lb/>
Church Fellowship Hall.<lb/>
Support fa the program is<lb/>
provided by a grant from the N.C.<lb/>
Humanities Committee.<lb/>
The Panama Canal program is<lb/>
the first of a series of public<lb/>
lectures on current issues in<lb/>
wald affairs planned in conjunc-<lb/>
tion with theGreat Decisions'78<lb/>
series. The series is sponsored in<lb/>
eastern N.C. by the ECU Division<lb/>
of Continuing Education.<lb/>
The lecture will be followed by<lb/>
a40-minuteopen discussion to be<lb/>
moderated by Dr. Bodo Nischan,<lb/>
associate professor of history at<lb/>
ECU. All interested persons are<lb/>
invited to attend.<lb/>
Opinion ballots regarding the<lb/>
issue will be available to persons<lb/>
attending the program.<lb/>
The ballots are distributed<lb/>
nationwide by the Faeign Policy<lb/>
Association, aiginatas of the<lb/>
"Great Decisions" series, and<lb/>
will be tabulated fa a report to<lb/>
Congress later this year.<lb/>
Helpful background informa-<lb/>
tion on the Canal's histay, the<lb/>
Panamanians' viewpoint and the<lb/>
treaties is given in the "Great<lb/>
Decisions '78" booklet, which is<lb/>
available fa $4 from the ECU<lb/>
Division of Continuing Education.<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
SIGNS OF SPRING cause spring fever.<lb/>
Durham schools may<lb/>
station police in halls<lb/>
(LNS)-Plans to put police<lb/>
officers in the oaridas and<lb/>
classrooms of junia and senia<lb/>
high schools have touched off<lb/>
angry protests in Durham, North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
As described by enthusiastic<lb/>
school officials, the "police<lb/>
school liaison program" will be<lb/>
paid fa by a $70,000 grant from<lb/>
the federal Law Enfacement<lb/>
Assistance Administration and<lb/>
will put unarmed, plainclothes<lb/>
cops in schools throughout Dur-<lb/>
ham County.<lb/>
"I think these officers can<lb/>
contribute to our classes in driver<lb/>
education, social studies, histay<lb/>
and government in explaining the<lb/>
rights and responsibilities of<lb/>
students as well as waking with<lb/>
kids who are now in trouble a<lb/>
may be heading fa trouble said<lb/>
County School Superintendent<lb/>
Frank yeager, a famer Secret<lb/>
Service agent.<lb/>
At least some Durham resi-<lb/>
dents aren't convinced they want<lb/>
police teaching civics, histay and<lb/>
government courses.<lb/>
A number of students, parents<lb/>
and local political activists have<lb/>
called fa abandoning the police<lb/>
liaison program.<lb/>
Charles Finch of the African<lb/>
Liberation Support Committee<lb/>
(ALSC) charged that Yeager was<lb/>
"misrepresenting the program's<lb/>
purpose<lb/>
What it really involved, says<lb/>
Finch, is "a special police face<lb/>
fa the schools<lb/>
"Yeager didn't mention that<lb/>
the police will report and be<lb/>
responsible directly to the police<lb/>
department and not to the school<lb/>
system where they are working<lb/>
Finch added.<lb/>
"It'stoo bad he's fooling the<lb/>
public into accepting the program<lb/>
as he describes rather than how it<lb/>
actually is<lb/>
Comments by Durham Pol ice<lb/>
Chief T.B. Seagroves tended to<lb/>
oonfirm some of Finch's conten-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Seagroves stated that one<lb/>
purpose of the program is to<lb/>
"identify incipient anti-sodal be-<lb/>
havia problems<lb/>
Critics have pointed out that<lb/>
unless the idea is to slap<lb/>
"incipient anti-social" students<lb/>
in jail, the job sounds like<lb/>
something most schools assign to<lb/>
guidance counseias, not police<lb/>
officials.<lb/>
"If they want counseias, why<lb/>
don't they hire guidance counse-<lb/>
ias?" asked Paul Bermanzohn of<lb/>
the ALSC.<lb/>
"If they want police patrols,<lb/>
why don't they admit that's what<lb/>
they're after?<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058042_0008"/><lb/>
PageB FOUNTAINHEAD 14 March 1978<lb/>
Styx in concert 'lacks substance<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The Styx concert in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum. March 1, reminded me<lb/>
of that radio ad for a National<lb/>
Lampoon comedy album: "it's a<lb/>
bunch of crap, but. but that's<lb/>
what you want ' If that's what<lb/>
the audience wanted, the cer-<lb/>
tainly got it.<lb/>
The stars of the show were by<lb/>
far the opening act. Charlie. The<lb/>
hard rocking, intelligent songs of<lb/>
Charlie provided a stark contrast<lb/>
to the repititious heavy metal<lb/>
licks of Styx.<lb/>
Their opening performance<lb/>
included a fierce rendition of one<lb/>
of their best songs. Johnny Hold<lb/>
Back, off their second album No<lb/>
Second Chance. The band's uni-<lb/>
population of Pitt County and half<lb/>
of Cherry Point Marine base, I<lb/>
could never face my way close<lb/>
enough to actually see Styx.<lb/>
This review will concern itself<lb/>
only with the music played, not<lb/>
the visual performance, although<lb/>
I did see a guitarist's head fly<lb/>
backward, much to the excite-<lb/>
ment of the almost hysterical<lb/>
crowd.<lb/>
Opening with The Grand<lb/>
Illusion, a lame song which tries<lb/>
to express the old "life is a<lb/>
game spiel. the band wowed the<lb/>
audience with showmanship right<lb/>
out of the Liberace handbook. The<lb/>
musicians in Styx reminded me of<lb/>
those Las Vegas show band<lb/>
musicians: flawless, flashy, and<lb/>
soporific.<lb/>
Trends<lb/>
STYX, THE BAND that 'Wowed the audience with showmanship<lb/>
Photos by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
que mixture of harmonies with<lb/>
hard rock Aas at its best during<lb/>
this number.<lb/>
Charlie played a wide range of<lb/>
their songs, choosing freely from<lb/>
all three of their albums. Unlike<lb/>
the top billed act. they were not<lb/>
content to play only the songs the<lb/>
public was familiar with, but even<lb/>
ventured so far as to play songs<lb/>
the public had never heard.<lb/>
Charlie's twin drummers<lb/>
allow fa a great diversity of<lb/>
rhythmic possibilities, plus being<lb/>
able to use other percussion<lb/>
instruments simultaneously with<lb/>
drums. The sound of both drums<lb/>
is awesome.<lb/>
"A DEFINITE<lb/>
DISAPPOINTMENT"<lb/>
After an exciting show like<lb/>
Charlie, Styx was a definite<lb/>
disappointment.<lb/>
Thanks to what must have<lb/>
been the entire pre-pubescent<lb/>
From that point onward, the<lb/>
show seemed like a K-Tel great-<lb/>
est hits collection. Styx played all<lb/>
the audience favaites, and the<lb/>
masses gobbled it up. They<lb/>
seemed to be having a good time,<lb/>
though, and since it was their six<lb/>
bucks, I guess that's the impa-<lb/>
tant thing.<lb/>
Aside fron a lack of sub-<lb/>
stance, the maja flaw in Styx's<lb/>
perfamarce was the intolerably<lb/>
loud sound system. Ruma has it<lb/>
that the concert could be heard as<lb/>
far away as Jones dam.<lb/>
The sad part is that most of<lb/>
the audience, especially the<lb/>
juveniles, simply do not realize<lb/>
the damage such higfo volume<lb/>
does to the human ear. Styx's<lb/>
overwhelming sound system<lb/>
faced many people to leave<lb/>
rather than withstand decibel<lb/>
levels at a above the threshhdd<lb/>
of pain.<lb/>
The bright side of the picture<lb/>
STYX PERFORMED IN Minges Coliseum on March 1 to a crowd of "almost 5.000 people<lb/>
is that almost 5,000 people<lb/>
attended the concert and enjoyed<lb/>
it. While not officially a sell out,<lb/>
I'd hate to have had to crowd<lb/>
another 1,000 people into Minges<lb/>
that night. The Popular Enter-<lb/>
tainment Committee also made a<lb/>
tidy profit on the show.<lb/>
With financial successes like<lb/>
Styx, it looks like maja attrac-<lb/>
tioisare runningoi an even keel,<lb/>
and we can expect entertainment<lb/>
of the magnitude we have seen so<lb/>
far thisyear to continue coming to<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Fountainhead interviews guitarist Thomas<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
News Edita<lb/>
Charlie, a six man band fron<lb/>
England, had oompleted their set<lb/>
as the opening act fa Styx at their<lb/>
concert in Minges Coliseum,<lb/>
March 1, when a repater fa the<lb/>
TECHNICIAN (NC State s news-<lb/>
paper) and myself were led<lb/>
backstage to interview Charlie.<lb/>
The backstage area was in its<lb/>
typical state of aganizes chaos,<lb/>
roadies hustling back and fath, a<lb/>
technician swearing, and several<lb/>
people merely standing around<lb/>
wait i ng fa a chance to see anyone<lb/>
in the show<lb/>
Like us.<lb/>
Finally, we were allowed to<lb/>
see Terry Thomas, lead guitarist<lb/>
and vocalist fa Charlie As we<lb/>
were escorted fo the dressing<lb/>
room, I could hear cries of<lb/>
?albatrosses, get yer red ot<lb/>
albatrosses ere in one of the<lb/>
thickest east London accents<lb/>
either of us had ever heard.<lb/>
When we first saw the band,<lb/>
John Anderson, bass: Julian<lb/>
Col beck, keyboards; Steve Gadd,<lb/>
drums; Shep Lonsdale, drums;<lb/>
and Eugene Organ, guitar), they<lb/>
were busy making publicity<lb/>
phaos with some obnoxious DJ<lb/>
from an area radio station. We<lb/>
had also found the albatross<lb/>
venda.<lb/>
What followsisthebulkof our<lb/>
conversation with Thomas.<lb/>
Q: Your tour with the Doobie<lb/>
Brahers was cut shat last year.<lb/>
Why?<lb/>
"We were supposed to stay<lb/>
longer, but unfatunately our<lb/>
drummer, Steve Gadd had his<lb/>
hand broken by a drunken<lb/>
security guard in Louisville. He<lb/>
played fa two weeks with a<lb/>
broken hand, quite something fa<lb/>
a drummer, so we had to stop<lb/>
cause hp could have damaged it;<lb/>
his brain's already damaged, so<lb/>
we couldn't risk his hands<lb/>
Q: Do you like touring in<lb/>
America?<lb/>
"Oh, it's fantastic, I tell you,<lb/>
like fa us, being English, that the<lb/>
scene is so apathetic, the aud-<lb/>
iences are so apathetic, uh, the<lb/>
music scene is, you see one of the<lb/>
problems is that we have no FM<lb/>
radio like you do and we have a<lb/>
national station which tries to<lb/>
program every sat of music, so<lb/>
you can have a program, right,<lb/>
where you hear disco, R &amp; B,<lb/>
soul, and all of it in five minutes,<lb/>
you know, and it's just a big<lb/>
mess, so we love coming here,<lb/>
really love it<lb/>
Q: What's your popularity like<lb/>
in England?<lb/>
"Zero. We've got a few<lb/>
people, right, but we're na very<lb/>
well known in Britain<lb/>
Q: Do you find you're getting<lb/>
better known over here?<lb/>
Much better known Our last<lb/>
album, No Second Chance.<lb/>
was on the charts fa 18 weeks<lb/>
over here last year. It reached<lb/>
about 75-80 and was on the top 40<lb/>
radio charts fa 20 weeks, which<lb/>
is fantastic. Over in England,<lb/>
zilch<lb/>
Q: When did Charlie get<lb/>
together?<lb/>
"Charliestarted in 1972, right<lb/>
and of that aiginai group,<lb/>
myself, Steve Gadd, and John<lb/>
Anderson are still left. Julian<lb/>
joined in 1976; Eugene janed the<lb/>
beginning of' 77, and Shep joined<lb/>
yesterday<lb/>
Q: Why did you add two extra<lb/>
people to the band?<lb/>
"Originally, when we reoad-<lb/>
ed No Second Chance , when<lb/>
we started to recad it, we were<lb/>
two guitars, bass and drums and<lb/>
we decided to get a keyboard<lb/>
player in to do sessions, just to do<lb/>
sessions, and that was Julian.<lb/>
The other guitar player, who was<lb/>
in the aiginai group quit, just as<lb/>
we started the album, so I had to<lb/>
do all the guitar parts, and we<lb/>
asked Julian to jan, and we did<lb/>
about 10 dates in England as<lb/>
guitar, bass, keyboards, and<lb/>
drums, and I did all the lead<lb/>
singing. It was OK, but it could<lb/>
have been better, you know, I had<lb/>
to do all the parts, all the lead<lb/>
parts, all the rhythm parts, so we<lb/>
got another guitar player in.<lb/>
When we came over last time, to<lb/>
America as I said, we toured with<lb/>
the Doobie Brothers, and that's<lb/>
when Steve broke his hand, and<lb/>
Shep has been sound engineer fa<lb/>
theDoobies, and he's a drummer,<lb/>
and he came and sat in with us<lb/>
every night, cause Steve's hand<lb/>
was a bit shakey, and he played<lb/>
with us about 10 gigs and it<lb/>
waked really well, so we asked<lb/>
him to jan<lb/>
See CHARLIE p. 11)<lb/>
s'jiTBa<lb/>
HMBnam<lb/>
<pb facs="00058042_0009"/><lb/>
?????Hi<lb/>
??HHH<lb/>
?i<lb/>
Vivid portrayal' of playwright<lb/>
14 March 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
Hellman<lb/>
By DAVID WHITSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Understatement is the key<lb/>
ord in Fred Zimmerman's<lb/>
a , the moving story of the<lb/>
relationship between two women.<lb/>
Zimmerman leaves as much<lb/>
unrevealed as revealed in portray-<lb/>
ing the relationship between<lb/>
playwright Lillian Hellman (play-<lb/>
ed by Jane Fonda) and Julia<lb/>
(Vanessa Redgrave), using cameo<lb/>
flashbacks to provide glimpses of<lb/>
their lifelong friendship.<lb/>
The co-starring heroines em-<lb/>
body numerous complex themes.<lb/>
Julia is the classic spoiled rich<lb/>
girl who. like Buddah, lives a life<lb/>
of pampered opulence until she is<lb/>
faced with the realization of<lb/>
suffering in the world.<lb/>
Julia rejects worldliness fa<lb/>
academics, studying at Oxfad<lb/>
befae entering medical school at<lb/>
Vienna. When her school is<lb/>
VA NESSA REDGRA VE A ND Jane Fonda, in a scene from ' -Julia,<lb/>
the stay of a lifelong friendship. The movie has produced a total of<lb/>
11 Academy A ward nominations.<lb/>
raided by pro-Nazi fanatics, Julia<lb/>
diverts her energies into the<lb/>
German underground movement<lb/>
which seeks to destroy Hitler at<lb/>
any cost.<lb/>
Lillian is an alter-ego to Julia,<lb/>
as she epitomizes the young artist<lb/>
who must fight her way up in the<lb/>
world. Just as she rises to fame<lb/>
because of the success of her first<lb/>
V IGI II I ? ? ?<lb/>
Warhol's Bad Wed. special film<lb/>
rjQnt acQinnmpnts are<lb/>
BySTEVEBACHNER<lb/>
Trends Edita<lb/>
Andy Warhol's controversial<lb/>
pilgrimage into the world of camp<lb/>
and nausea. Bad, will be shown<lb/>
Wednesday night in the Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center Theatre. The<lb/>
movie is free to ECU students and<lb/>
is being presented as a speaa'<lb/>
film sponsored by the Student<lb/>
Union. Bad begins at 8 p.m. and<lb/>
will undoubtedly end earlier fa<lb/>
some than it will fa those with<lb/>
strong stomachs.<lb/>
The renowned "pop" artist-<lb/>
cum-filmmaker has an ever-grow-<lb/>
ing list of acconplishments which<lb/>
range from the famous "Camp-<lb/>
bell's Soup" patrait, a latter day<lb/>
staple of the pop culture, to his<lb/>
mae recent ultra-violent at-<lb/>
tempts at movie making.<lb/>
His updated versions of the<lb/>
hara classics Frankenstein and<lb/>
Dracula, both shot in 3-D fa<lb/>
maximum shock effect, were far<lb/>
gaier than they were atmos-<lb/>
pheric But then, perhaps that is<lb/>
Warhol's pant.<lb/>
Bad is Warhol at hisoffensive.<lb/>
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Our research papers are sold for<lb/>
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Enclosed is $1<lb/>
N,imt ??<lb/>
well. best. The film depicts the<lb/>
typical American middle class<lb/>
housewife and plunges her into a<lb/>
maelstrom of Warhdean situa-<lb/>
tions. To wallow in this kind of<lb/>
campiness requires either an<lb/>
unquenchable desire to view<lb/>
violence a a cast-iron stomach.<lb/>
Waking straight from his<lb/>
premise that the film should<lb/>
include something to offend<lb/>
everyone Warhol has concocted<lb/>
the ultimate "satire of middle<lb/>
class maality that makes outra-<lb/>
geous comments on the brutality<lb/>
of 'normal' life<lb/>
The frenetic Carrol Baker<lb/>
gives an all too convincing<lb/>
perfamance as the disturbed<lb/>
organizer of a frightening, mania-<lb/>
cal clique of hit-persons (almost<lb/>
all of those chosen are women)<lb/>
who perfam the unwanted tasks<lb/>
of the middle class with ruthless<lb/>
abandon. One by one the outra-<lb/>
geously violent assignments are<lb/>
carried out. In one scene, a baby<lb/>
is dropped from a windown and<lb/>
his ascent traced with unmiti-<lb/>
gated audacity. Warhol's camera<lb/>
is unshy and lingers on every<lb/>
detail.<lb/>
The film also stars Susan<lb/>
Tyrrell and Perry King (Mandin-<lb/>
go). But most memaable is<lb/>
Carrol Baker as the heartless<lb/>
go-between who is interested less<lb/>
in human life than lining her<lb/>
pockets.<lb/>
Whether Bad is viewed as art<lb/>
a camp a just plain garbage, it<lb/>
pronises to offend on any level.<lb/>
Admission to the film is by<lb/>
ECU ID and Activity Card.<lb/>
Faculty and staff may use their<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Membership Cards.<lb/>
The next special film presen-<lb/>
tation will be Fellini's Amacord to<lb/>
be shown Wed. April 5.<lb/>
.iihAlki<lb/>
Re joke! Its Easter!<lb/>
ii)<lb/>
I<lb/>
Addre3S<lb/>
pity<lb/>
LL'iL-<lb/>
Zip<lb/>
I<lb/>
play on Broadway, Lillian is faced<lb/>
with a great personal challenge<lb/>
when asked by Julia to deliver<lb/>
$50,000 to Berlin to aid the<lb/>
anti-Hitler movement<lb/>
The explats of the Jewish<lb/>
writer, as she smuggles the<lb/>
money into Nazi Germany, pro-<lb/>
vides some of the most nerve-<lb/>
wracking suspense in years<lb/>
?A CHALLENGE FOR FONDA<lb/>
As Jane Fonda remarked,<lb/>
concerning characterization of<lb/>
Lillian Hellman, "It was a<lb/>
challenge to play a woman who is<lb/>
stimulated mae by ideas than by<lb/>
ronantic events- na that she<lb/>
isn't ronantic. I've never had to<lb/>
play, fa example, a woman who<lb/>
is writing a play.<lb/>
"You know, the process by<lb/>
which someone actually sits in<lb/>
front of a typewriter and creates.<lb/>
That gave me some problems, it<lb/>
wasn't easy "<lb/>
I once met Lillian Hellman,<lb/>
like smoke, very briefly. We<lb/>
passed in the midst of waiting fa<lb/>
a hurricane Th two of us came<lb/>
together hammering windows<lb/>
shut, cutting roses back. This<lb/>
hurricane was supposed to sweep<lb/>
up the East Coast last August,<lb/>
but it never happened<lb/>
So we said ocod-bye and I<lb/>
went to England to another kind<lb/>
of hurricane. The hurricane of<lb/>
trying to put her poetry of prose<lb/>
on the screen<lb/>
Fonda's vivid patrayal of<lb/>
Lillian Hellman has earned fa<lb/>
her an Academy Award nomina-<lb/>
tion fa best actress. The movie<lb/>
has produoed a total o 11<lb/>
Academy Award nominations.<lb/>
?Julia" is playing at the Pitt<lb/>
Theater.<lb/>
?JULIA' IS DIRECTOR Fred<lb/>
Zinnemann's first film in four<lb/>
years.<lb/>
JA NE FONDA PLA YS Lillian<lb/>
Hellman in a scene from<lb/>
'Julia<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058042_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 14 March 1978<lb/>
Vocal Ensemble In recital Thurs<lb/>
ByLYNNBEYAR<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
The New York Vocal Arts<lb/>
Ensemble will be presented in<lb/>
concert this Thursday night,<lb/>
March 16, at 8:15 p.m. in A.J.<lb/>
Fletcher Recital Hall, as part of<lb/>
the School of Music FESTIVAL<lb/>
'78.<lb/>
This year's FESTIVAL of all<lb/>
chamber music also includes a<lb/>
Wednesday night performance by<lb/>
the contemporary chamber group<lb/>
Speculum Musicae also at 8:15<lb/>
p.m. in Fletcher Recital Hall.<lb/>
The New York Vocal Arts<lb/>
Ensemble is comprised of five<lb/>
members. The artistic director<lb/>
and pianist is Raymond Beegle,<lb/>
and the singers are Lila Deis,<lb/>
Soprano: Linda Edward, Alto;<lb/>
Howard Crook, Tenor; and Jan<lb/>
Opalach, Bass-Baritone.<lb/>
The ensemble made its debut<lb/>
in New York in 1971 and has since<lb/>
been invited to perform on<lb/>
distinguished concert series<lb/>
throughout the United States and<lb/>
Europe.<lb/>
The group recently com-<lb/>
pleted its second European tour,<lb/>
when they performed in Berlin,<lb/>
Paris, Brussels, Amsterdam,<lb/>
Vienna and other Eastern Euro-<lb/>
pean cities.<lb/>
Spring fashion sales!<lb/>
Starting at the top<lb/>
with 20 off.<lb/>
Salo starts<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
JCPenney<lb/>
L<lb/>
Shop J C P?nn?y, Pitt Plaza. Opan lOaM to 9:30PM, Hon. Through Sat<lb/>
The concert program for<lb/>
Thursday's performance will in-<lb/>
clude Four Holy Songs by Franz<lb/>
Schubert; four Scottish Folk<lb/>
Songs, arranged by Beethoven;<lb/>
and selections from "Sins of My<lb/>
Old Age" by Gioaochino Rossini.<lb/>
Works by American Compo-<lb/>
sers Stephen Foster, T. Frank<lb/>
Allen, Will S. Hayes, Septimus<lb/>
Winner, Henry Clay Work, and<lb/>
the ever-popular Scott Joplin will<lb/>
also be performed. The program<lb/>
will be concluded with a selection<lb/>
of three Russian Cabaret Songs<lb/>
which are examples of how<lb/>
intense and rooted to the central<lb/>
issues of the heart Russian<lb/>
popular music can be<lb/>
The Vocal Arts Ensemble's<lb/>
first recording, "The Great Sen-<lb/>
timental Age of American Music"<lb/>
was recently released by Vox<lb/>
Records, and will soon be follow-<lb/>
ed by a series of recordings of<lb/>
Russian, French, German and<lb/>
Italian vocal chamber works.<lb/>
On Thursday, workshops wt"<lb/>
be held by both of th FF.ST1-<lb/>
VAL's attractions. The Speculum<lb/>
Musicae will hold their workshop<lb/>
from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. and the<lb/>
Vocal Arts Ensemble from 3 to 5<lb/>
p.m. Both will be held in the A.J.<lb/>
Fletcher Music Building.<lb/>
Both concerts and workshops<lb/>
are free and open to the public.<lb/>
THE NEW YORK Vocal Arts Ensemble: Raymond Beegle, pianist and<lb/>
singers Lila Deis, Linda Edkard, Howard Crook and Jan Opalach of<lb/>
whom the New York Times says "they perform their music with<lb/>
impeccable musicianship and great ioy in performance<lb/>
WOMEN.<lb/>
YOU'RE<lb/>
EQUAL IN<lb/>
THE AIR<lb/>
FORCE.<lb/>
Woman start out on the same fooling .is men m Air f on t<lb/>
KOTC Women wear the same insignia inff hold the same<lb/>
i adel positions m Al ROTC usi .is they do latei on .i- An<lb/>
I iiti e o(fi ers<lb/>
And the same AfHOK scholarship can he yours .is ,i<lb/>
woman If vou qu,iMi. you can have your tuition book cost<lb/>
and lab fees paid hy the A? I orce and receive $100 a month<lb/>
lor other eenses ll helps Iree vou to concentrate "ii you<lb/>
education An thrti s important<lb/>
A in Air I orceofhcei you'll be expo ted to useyout train<lb/>
in.) ind education, and Iv  leader managing people and<lb/>
complex systems You'll he handed executive re ponsibilin,<lb/>
starting with vour lirsr oh<lb/>
Ii ,i great  ay i'i !?? equal and . ureai way to serve vour<lb/>
Countryhi k Into the Al ROTC program ,it vow . ampu?<lb/>
Be Miir io ash ,ilut AIHOIC scholarships uou mav be<lb/>
helping v. mrsell earn ,in exciting nev. lifestvle<lb/>
?wri JWoiiri<lb/>
ROTC<lb/>
Gotpwoy to a great way of life<lb/>
<pb facs="00058042_0011"/><lb/>
?mniH<lb/>
?i<lb/>
14Mardi1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
Charlie lead guitarist Terry Thomas does interview<lb/>
Continued from p 8<lb/>
Q: Do you like working with<lb/>
two drummers?<lb/>
Yeah, it's great, yeah, once<lb/>
we get it worked out really nice<lb/>
and tight, course it's very difficult<lb/>
when you're opening, cause you<lb/>
ain't got control of the situation,<lb/>
you ain't got control of the sound,<lb/>
you don't really know what's<lb/>
working.<lb/>
Q: When is your next album<lb/>
due out?<lb/>
"In about a week. It's called<lb/>
LINES, and we're really looking<lb/>
forward to seeing what happens<lb/>
with it.<lb/>
Q: What's it like?<lb/>
"Well we're very pleased with<lb/>
it, I'll put it like that. That's all<lb/>
I'm gonna say<lb/>
Q: What kind of music did you<lb/>
listen to wtien you grew up?<lb/>
"Everything, really, I mean, I<lb/>
listened to rock and roll, and<lb/>
when you listen to rock and roll<lb/>
and you know the good rock and<lb/>
roll from the bad rock and roll,<lb/>
then influences just, just, go. I<lb/>
started off, like the 60 s with the<lb/>
Beatles, the Yardbirds, the<lb/>
Stones, the Who, and then from<lb/>
there I went, the first American<lb/>
band that sort of turned me onto<lb/>
harmonies was Crosby, Stills and<lb/>
Nash. That's what we're trying to<lb/>
do really, the hard English rock<lb/>
with the American vocals, that's<lb/>
what we're looking fa<lb/>
Q: You had a oouple of singles<lb/>
out last year that did fairly well on<lb/>
the charts, didn't you?<lb/>
"We had Turning To You<lb/>
made the top 100, albeit very<lb/>
briefly, and JOHNNY HOLD<lb/>
BACK was a big song on radio<lb/>
but it never made the charts.<lb/>
We released it as a single, and it<lb/>
was very popular on FM, but it<lb/>
never made the charts<lb/>
Q: Do you consider yourself a<lb/>
singles band, or are you oriented<lb/>
more towards albums?<lb/>
"Oh, albums. But, you know,<lb/>
a song's a son, if you listen and<lb/>
you like what we can call singles,<lb/>
we don't sit down and say we got<lb/>
to write singles, cause that's very<lb/>
cold blooded, you say alright,<lb/>
we've got to write a single, it's<lb/>
got to be three minutes, 10<lb/>
seconds maximum two minutes,<lb/>
50 seconds minumum, and you<lb/>
can't write a song like that, you<lb/>
just gotta write sonc But what<lb/>
you have to do i , cut this<lb/>
out a what eve ' jrten it into<lb/>
a single<lb/>
Q: He. c js the band get<lb/>
along on the road?<lb/>
"Great. I mean, it's very<lb/>
important, you see, we're a<lb/>
group, right, and as a group<lb/>
there's no conflicts, as we go on,<lb/>
if anybody, we'd never have<lb/>
anybody in the band that was not<lb/>
going to fit personality wise, it<lb/>
would be a disaster. Can you<lb/>
imagine being on the road for<lb/>
three months, being oooped up<lb/>
for three months and you don't<lb/>
get along? Forget it<lb/>
Q: Do you like touring?<lb/>
"Yeah. Sometimes it gets, uh,<lb/>
but once you start playing. This<lb/>
was our first gig tonight, and in<lb/>
March we've got several dates,<lb/>
and we're looking forward to it.<lb/>
It's when you've got two days off<lb/>
and you don't know what to do,<lb/>
like we've been in Greenville for<lb/>
three days and we're wondering,<lb/>
you know, what can we do?!<lb/>
What can we do?<lb/>
Q: Do you ever go sightsee-<lb/>
ing?<lb/>
"No, we sleep all day. To-<lb/>
night was our first date on this<lb/>
tour, as a matter of fact, it's the<lb/>
first time we've ever played in<lb/>
public since last July. We don't<lb/>
play at all in England. The last<lb/>
date we played was in Cincinatti,<lb/>
last July<lb/>
O- One of the songs on your<lb/>
second album, Guitar Hero<lb/>
(False Messiah) seems to<lb/>
lake a swipe at the filthy rich rock<lb/>
superstar. I hate to link you with<lb/>
the punk rock movement or<lb/>
anything of the sort, but it sounds<lb/>
as if you're expressing the same<lb/>
sentiments.<lb/>
"You've got to think when it<lb/>
was written. The album was<lb/>
recorded in August '76, so the<lb/>
song was written in March of '76,<lb/>
so the song was written long<lb/>
before the New Wave thing. It's<lb/>
just a personal thing I felt when I<lb/>
read in a music paper about a<lb/>
certain big star, who wasn't a<lb/>
guitarist, as it happens, who six<lb/>
months after he announoed he<lb/>
was retiring forever, this was it,<lb/>
no more, and then he's back<lb/>
doing big concerts. As I said, he<lb/>
wasn't a guitarist, but I like guitar<lb/>
heros, false messiah, it's a<lb/>
parody, the words<lb/>
' Home is the hero his last<lb/>
farewell tour one last time for<lb/>
his fans<lb/>
Then once more in Europe move<lb/>
onto the States then finish off in<lb/>
Japan'<lb/>
Q: Have you toured outside<lb/>
the United States?<lb/>
Q: You haven't hit the con-<lb/>
tinent yet?<lb/>
"We've been meaning to. We<lb/>
were supposed to go this year to<lb/>
Germany, but we never made it<lb/>
G: Where do your albums sell<lb/>
best?<lb/>
"In the states, and in<lb/>
Germany<lb/>
Q: You write most of the<lb/>
music. Do the rest of the band<lb/>
members just not write many<lb/>
songs a what?<lb/>
"On the second album, I<lb/>
wrote all the songs, but on the<lb/>
but on the new album I, wrote all<lb/>
the songs but three of them I<lb/>
wrote with Julian, our keyboard<lb/>
player, and the band has total say<lb/>
over what songs we play. If I give<lb/>
them a song, and they don't like<lb/>
it. then we don't play it. And then<lb/>
the arrangement, I do the basic<lb/>
arrangement, and then we just<lb/>
work out what suits everybody<lb/>
best.<lb/>
STILL MORE QUESTIONS<lb/>
Q; What kind of playing<lb/>
experience have you or any of the<lb/>
other band members had outside<lb/>
of Charlie?<lb/>
"I've been playing in bands<lb/>
since I was 16, and the other<lb/>
members played in just different<lb/>
bands, nobody famous, no one<lb/>
you've ever heard of. We've been<lb/>
together for six years just playing<lb/>
as Charlie.<lb/>
Q: Hasn't Steve Gadd done<lb/>
alot of session work? Didn't he<lb/>
play on Steely Dan's AJA?<lb/>
"Our drummer is the English<lb/>
Steve Gadd. The other one is the<lb/>
American Steve Gadd<lb/>
Q: A lot of people get the two<lb/>
confused.<lb/>
"I know. It's his real name,<lb/>
though, cause we've got Steve<lb/>
Gadd and then there's the<lb/>
American Steve Gadd and they' re<lb/>
both drummers, but the<lb/>
American Steve Gadd is a very,<lb/>
very good drummer, and the<lb/>
people think our Steve Gadd is<lb/>
the other Steve Gadd, but you<lb/>
know, that's good fa our Steve<lb/>
Gadd<lb/>
Q: What does the future hold<lb/>
fa Charlie? Can you see your-<lb/>
selves headed in a particular<lb/>
di-ection?<lb/>
"Well, you can't really pro-<lb/>
ject, because you've got to take a<lb/>
directional thing as you are, the<lb/>
record industry has ga to look at<lb/>
the business product and alrt of<lb/>
bands get stuck with being<lb/>
successful and they stay in that<lb/>
successful famula. I don't want<lb/>
to be like that. I want to be able to<lb/>
do just what I want to do. At the<lb/>
moment, it seems that people like<lb/>
what we do, and that's terrific,<lb/>
that is just so good, you know? As<lb/>
I say, it'sverybadfa us, well it's<lb/>
not very bad, it's just so apathetic<lb/>
V us in England and just befae<lb/>
the last -eoord was released, No<lb/>
Second Chance was released<lb/>
AIR FORCE ALWAYS<lb/>
NEEDS MORE LEADERS<lb/>
We're looking for pilots navigators missile<lb/>
men engineers math majors people manag<lb/>
ers doctors scientists journalists and more<lb/>
Ami the Ait I on e KOTC program is a great way to gel into a<lb/>
job like one of these which can help you improve your leader<lb/>
ship ability and vour professional competence<lb/>
As ,i on in tis sioned office in the An hone, vou can he proud<lb/>
of the role vn play in your community and the contribution<lb/>
you make to vour country's security You can know that<lb/>
you're doing a job of importance, a job with responsibility<lb/>
The Air Force ROTC program offers a way to help you<lb/>
achieve these goals As an AFROTC cadet youH learn about<lb/>
leadership, management, and more You'll learn about bene<lb/>
fits ol being an officer later on. like an excellent salary, medi<lb/>
, al and dental care, housing and food allowances, and .H)<lb/>
davs of paid vacation each yeai You'll discover a whole new-<lb/>
world open to you in the Air Force And you can get there<lb/>
through Af ROTC<lb/>
I (ok into it nght ,nKi. Will le glad you did.<lb/>
ROTC<lb/>
here, it was looking very bleak fa<lb/>
us and we were going to disband,<lb/>
but then our second recad was<lb/>
released over here, and we were<lb/>
selling albums and getting on the<lb/>
radio, and it was just great, it was<lb/>
really a rush fa that to happen.<lb/>
And you know, we're just gonna<lb/>
keep going and try to keep in<lb/>
touch with everybody, maybe a<lb/>
tcur later on this year a next<lb/>
Q: Are most of the band<lb/>
members from London?<lb/>
"All of them are from London.<lb/>
Shep Lonsdale lives in San<lb/>
Francisco now, but he'saiginally<lb/>
fran Laidai<lb/>
Q: What sat of background<lb/>
does the band have, waking<lb/>
class, middle class, etc.?<lb/>
"The class thing in Britain is<lb/>
very diffuse now. There are still<lb/>
distinctions, but it's more areas<lb/>
than backgrounds. Many of the<lb/>
older people are still rather class<lb/>
conscious, but most of the<lb/>
younga people really don't care.<lb/>
Because of the tax laws, there<lb/>
really isn't too much of a middle<lb/>
class, because the tax is so<lb/>
punitive. The more you earn, the<lb/>
less incentive you have to earn<lb/>
anymae, awe you start earning<lb/>
alot of money, the govanment<lb/>
will take 90 per cent of what you<lb/>
earn. It's what they call supertax.<lb/>
That's why so many rock stars<lb/>
oome to America, because if you<lb/>
earn ova $30,000 a year, then the<lb/>
government will take 90 percent,<lb/>
a 90 cents out of every dollar you<lb/>
earn. The unions are trying to tax<lb/>
the rich even more. I'm not rich,<lb/>
so it doesn't affect me<lb/>
Q A lot of people are singing<lb/>
requiems fa England, they're all<lb/>
saying England's going down the<lb/>
tube fast. Your music is angry,<lb/>
and it says a number of things. Do<lb/>
you think your songs are mae<lb/>
political a mae personal?<lb/>
Personal. I ain't got any<lb/>
messages. England, it's not fair,<lb/>
England looks wase fran the<lb/>
outside, thae's a big economic<lb/>
recovery program gang on now<lb/>
and things are getting much<lb/>
easier. The rate of inflation is<lb/>
running at nearly 20 per cent, but<lb/>
nobody's starving. It looks much<lb/>
wase than it is. The things I write<lb/>
about are clearly personal, I'm<lb/>
not saying to anybody ' you' ve ga<lb/>
to believe this it's just as I see<lb/>
thinas<lb/>
Now Offers You<lb/>
Backgammon Sets<lb/>
Ml ADVENTURE IN EATING<lb/>
TuesSat. 11:30pm. 1:30 pm.<lb/>
All subs for $1.00<lb/>
with purchase of soft drink<lb/>
not valid on deliveries<lb/>
752-1828 706 Evans St<lb/>
open Mon-Sat at 11:00 Sun 12:00<lb/>
Gateway ?o a great way of M?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058042_0012"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
12 FOUNTAINHEAD 14 March 1978<lb/>
Seniors star as Dye's first recruiting class<lb/>
This is a list of the graduating<lb/>
seniors of the ECU football team<lb/>
and their accomplishments over<lb/>
the last four years. These seniors<lb/>
were Pat Dye's first recruits ana<lb/>
had a combined record of 32-12<lb/>
over their 4 years here at ECU.<lb/>
They have brought ECU much<lb/>
glory over the last four years and<lb/>
their names certainly deserve<lb/>
mentioning again.<lb/>
School record fa highest recep-<lb/>
tion yards average fa single<lb/>
season at 33.3, 1975<lb/>
Second team All-Southern Inde-<lb/>
pendent, 1977<lb/>
Steve Hale - Columbus, Ga.<lb/>
Starting free safety, 1977<lb/>
Two career interceptions<lb/>
Willie Hawkins - Grimesland,<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Wayne Bolt - Augusta, Ga.<lb/>
Four year starter at offensive<lb/>
guard<lb/>
Outstanding Freshman Award<lb/>
1974<lb/>
All-Southern Conference 1976<lb/>
Outstanding Blccker Award 1976<lb/>
All State by Greensboro Daily<lb/>
News 1976<lb/>
All Southern Independent Team<lb/>
1977<lb/>
Junia Creech - Smithfield, N.C.<lb/>
Starting kicking specialist, 1977<lb/>
School recad field goal of 48<lb/>
yards vs South Carolina 1977<lb/>
30 of 31 PATS 1977<lb/>
6 of 15 field goals 1977<lb/>
48 points 1977 - tied as leading<lb/>
scaer fa the year<lb/>
Tied school recad fa most field<lb/>
goals in single game with three<lb/>
Drew Fish - Fuquay-Varina, N.C.<lb/>
Safety<lb/>
Two pass interceptions fa 14<lb/>
return yards<lb/>
Harold Fat - Raleigh, N.C.<lb/>
Parttime starter 1976, 1977 at<lb/>
linebacker<lb/>
Southern Conference Defensive<lb/>
Player of the Week vs Furman,<lb/>
1975 (13 tackles- 4 assits- one<lb/>
interception)<lb/>
119 career tackles<lb/>
Four career interceptions fa 77<lb/>
return yards<lb/>
Terry Gallaher - Warner Robins,<lb/>
Ga.<lb/>
Three year starter at split end<lb/>
Career school recad fa pass<lb/>
receptioi yards with 1214<lb/>
Career school recad tied fa most<lb/>
TD receptions with 11<lb/>
Fifth leading receiver in school<lb/>
history with 54 receptions<lb/>
Tied fa second in school histay<lb/>
fa most reception yards in oie<lb/>
season with 512, 1977<lb/>
Tied fa fifth In school histay fa<lb/>
most receptions in one seasai<lb/>
with 27, 1977<lb/>
Led pass reception yardage three<lb/>
oonsecutiv irs<lb/>
Holds NC ecad fa average<lb/>
yards per C n fa three a fewer<lb/>
passes m a single game with<lb/>
catches of 82, 59 and 77 yards vs<lb/>
Appalachian State fa 72.7 aver-<lb/>
age 1975<lb/>
Tied fa top team scaer with 42<lb/>
points, 1975<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
starter at running<lb/>
Three year<lb/>
back<lb/>
Hoiaable Mentioi All-Southern<lb/>
Conference, 1976<lb/>
Sngle game school recad fa<lb/>
most yards per rush with 12.2 vs<lb/>
William &amp; Mary, 1975<lb/>
Single season school recad fa<lb/>
most kickoff returns with 22, 1977<lb/>
Single season school recad fa<lb/>
most kickoff return yards with<lb/>
525,1977<lb/>
Career recad fa most kickoff<lb/>
returns with 47<lb/>
Career recad fa most kickoff<lb/>
return yards with 1,009<lb/>
Sixth leading rusher in school<lb/>
histay with 1,754 yards<lb/>
Ninth leading scaer in school<lb/>
histay with 104 points<lb/>
27 career catches fa 452 yards<lb/>
Rickie Holiday<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
William st on,<lb/>
Starting offensive center, 1977<lb/>
Originally a walkon that earned a<lb/>
scholarship<lb/>
Barry Johnson - Farmville, N.C.<lb/>
Two year starter at tight end<lb/>
Originally a walkon that earned a<lb/>
scholarship<lb/>
Second in receiving with eight<lb/>
catches fa 120 yards, 1977<lb/>
14 career catches fa 214 yards<lb/>
Vince Kolanko - Weinton, W. Va.<lb/>
Fullback 1975-1977<lb/>
Ten career kickoffs fa 173 yards<lb/>
Four career catches fa 40 yards<lb/>
Career total 420 yards taal<lb/>
offense<lb/>
Eddie Murphy - Raleigh, N.C.<lb/>
Noseguard<lb/>
Ed Nelson - Commerce, Ga.<lb/>
Defensive End<lb/>
Larry Paul - Raleigh, N.C.<lb/>
Linebacker and kicking specialist j<lb/>
Originally a walkon that earned a m-<lb/>
scholarship<lb/>
Longest field goal of 1974,<lb/>
30-yards vs Nath Carolina<lb/>
Kicked 11 of 11 PATS in 1975 in<lb/>
reserve role<lb/>
Harold Randolph - Greenville,<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
Three year starter at linebacker<lb/>
Honaable Mentioi All-America<lb/>
by Associated Press, 1976 &amp; 1977<lb/>
Third team pre-season all-<lb/>
America by Football News, 1977<lb/>
All-Southern Conference 1975,<lb/>
1976<lb/>
All-State by Greensboro Daily<lb/>
Vewsl975, 1976<lb/>
All-Southern Independent Team,<lb/>
1977<lb/>
Leading tackier on team three<lb/>
consecutive years, 1975, 1976,<lb/>
1977<lb/>
358 career tackles, 135 career<lb/>
assists<lb/>
43 tackles fa loss fa minus 195<lb/>
yards<lb/>
Four career pass interceptions fa<lb/>
87 yards<lb/>
Jimmy Southerland - Wilming-<lb/>
ton, N.C.<lb/>
Starting quarterback, 1977<lb/>
Tied as leading scaer with 48<lb/>
points, 1977<lb/>
Single game school recad fa<lb/>
highest pass oonpletiai percen-<lb/>
tage with 87.5 vs Appalachian<lb/>
State, 1977<lb/>
Single game school reoad fa<lb/>
most yards per play total offense<lb/>
with 14.9 vs Richmond, 1977<lb/>
Career school recad fa highest<lb/>
passing conpletioi percentage<lb/>
with 57.1 1974-77<lb/>
Led team in total offense with<lb/>
1190 yards, 1977<lb/>
Led team in passing with 47 of 84<lb/>
passes fa 779 yards, 1977<lb/>
Seventh leading all-time passer<lb/>
with 921 yards<lb/>
Sixth leading all-time pass oom-<lb/>
pletion leader with 60<lb/>
Eighth all-time single season total<lb/>
offensive leader with 779, 1977<lb/>
Seventh all-time single season<lb/>
leader in passes with 47, 1977<lb/>
Seventh all-time single seasa<lb/>
leader in passing yardage with<lb/>
779,1977<lb/>
JMflMfw"<lb/>
JIMMY SOUTHERLAND<lb/>
HAROLD RANDOLPH<lb/>
STEVE HALE<lb/>
DREW FISH<lb/>
BARRY JOHNSON<lb/>
RICKIE HOLIDAY<lb/>
m hh J<lb/>
WAYNE BOLT<lb/>
LARRY PAUL<lb/>
m<lb/>
HAROLD FORT<lb/>
TERRY GALLAHER<lb/>
VINCE KOLANKO<lb/>
WILLIE HAWKINS<lb/>
????j<lb/>
-?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058042_0013"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
?????????M<lb/>
14 March 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Pay 13<lb/>
Virginia-North Carolina showdown at Richmond<lb/>
The second annual Virginia-<lb/>
North Carolina Basketball Show-<lb/>
down, which features the top<lb/>
college seniors from both states,<lb/>
will tip off March 30 at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
the University of Richmond's<lb/>
Robins Center.<lb/>
The Showdown, sponsored by<lb/>
Richmond Sports International, is<lb/>
a non-profit event with this year's<lb/>
proceeds going to the Clyde W.<lb/>
Biggers Memorial Scholarship<lb/>
fund. Biggers is the former<lb/>
University of Richmond athletic<lb/>
director who passed away in<lb/>
December 1976.<lb/>
Tickets can be purchased at<lb/>
the Robins Center ticket office,<lb/>
which is open 830 to 5 p.m.<lb/>
Monday through Friday and 830<lb/>
to noon Saturday. Admission is $4<lb/>
for adults and $2 for oollege<lb/>
students and younger. All seats<lb/>
are reserved.<lb/>
Last year's contest, which was<lb/>
organized on just two weeks<lb/>
notioe, drew more than 3,500<lb/>
people to the Robins Center to see<lb/>
the North Carolina Stars edge<lb/>
Virginia 94-93.<lb/>
Richmond's Jeff Butler, who<lb/>
scored 21 points, was selected the<lb/>
game's MVP. Duke's Mark Crow<lb/>
won the slam dunk contest which<lb/>
is conducted at halftime.<lb/>
Other notables who participa-<lb/>
ted were Olympic star Tate<lb/>
Armstrong of Duke, Wake For-<lb/>
est's Jerry Schellenberg, Virginia<lb/>
Tech's Ernest Wansley and Phil<lb/>
Thieneman, Virginia's Billy Lang-<lb/>
loh, and VMI's John Krovic and<lb/>
Will Bynum.<lb/>
Dana Kirk, Virginia Common-<lb/>
wealth's head basketball ooach,<lb/>
has been selected head coach of<lb/>
the Virginia All-Stars in the<lb/>
Virginia-North Carolina Basket-<lb/>
ball Showdown to be held March<lb/>
30 at 8 p.m. in the University of<lb/>
Richmond's Robins Center.<lb/>
Hampton Institute's Hank Ford<lb/>
and Washington and Lee's Verne<lb/>
Canfieldwill be Kirk's assistants.<lb/>
Kirk, who led VCU t its best<lb/>
season ever this year, was<lb/>
selected "Coach of the Year" in<lb/>
Virginia by the Richmond Times-<lb/>
Dispatch. The Rams stand 24-4<lb/>
entering Thursday night's contest<lb/>
at Detroit in the first round of the<lb/>
NIT. Prior to its NIT berth, VCU<lb/>
ventured into post-season play for<lb/>
the first time since becoming a<lb/>
Division I competitor last season<lb/>
with two ECAC playoff games.<lb/>
After upsetting Georgetown in<lb/>
the first round, it lost to St.<lb/>
Bonaventure in the closing se-<lb/>
conds of the finals, eliminating it<lb/>
from the NCAA tournament.<lb/>
Kirk, a graduate of Marshall<lb/>
University, began his coaching<lb/>
career in the West Virginia high<lb/>
3J o I 0! ?"<lb/>
Head Basketball Coach Larry<lb/>
Gillman to continue at post<lb/>
ByCHRISHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
It was announced last week<lb/>
that ECU will retain coach Larry<lb/>
Gillman.<lb/>
The announcement came<lb/>
directly from chancellor Leo W.<lb/>
Jenkins.<lb/>
Gillman, the controversial<lb/>
basketball coach, had been under<lb/>
fire for a number of weeks fa the<lb/>
Pirates verall poor performance.<lb/>
In a prepared statement Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins outlined the reasons for<lb/>
keeping the former San Francisco<lb/>
assistant.<lb/>
"I have completed a post<lb/>
season evaluation of the univer-<lb/>
sity's basketball program Jen-<lb/>
kins said. "This process included<lb/>
a review of reoommendations by<lb/>
many interested persons who<lb/>
follow ECU athletics.<lb/>
"It is my decision Jenkins<lb/>
oontinued, "that it is in the best<lb/>
interest of the university to retain<lb/>
coach Larry Gillman as head<lb/>
basketball coach<lb/>
" I am confident our basketball<lb/>
program will continue to improve.<lb/>
The university is grateful to all of<lb/>
our many friends who are provi-<lb/>
ding loyal support fa our pro-<lb/>
grams<lb/>
Pirate athletic directa Bill<lb/>
Cain said of the decision We will<lb/>
continue to wak toward impro-<lb/>
ving the basketball program.<lb/>
Upon hearing Dr. Jenkins'<lb/>
decision, Gillman said, "I have no<lb/>
comment. I'm just going out and<lb/>
start recruiting<lb/>
Gillman still has two years<lb/>
remaining on a three year con-<lb/>
tract. His team posted a 9-17<lb/>
recad this past season.<lb/>
PIRA TE HEAD COACH Larry Gillman Photo by Brian Stotler)<lb/>
Beef n Shakes Breakfast<lb/>
Special Breakfast 7 am till 11 am for .99<lb/>
two scrambled eggs, sausage,<lb/>
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Our quarter pound Beefburgers<lb/>
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only open 7 am till 2am Daily.<lb/>
dip this coupon!<lb/>
i<lb/>
And get three games for only $1.25.<lb/>
Bring three friends along. We'll let<lb/>
let them in on the deal, too.<lb/>
( Per Person Rate )<lb/>
Washington Hwy. Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Phone 758-1820<lb/>
school ranks before becoming<lb/>
head ooach at Tampa University.<lb/>
When Tampa dropped its basket-<lb/>
ball program, Kirk joined Denny<lb/>
Crum at Louisville where he<lb/>
assisted until coming to VCU last<lb/>
season. In his two years at VCU,<lb/>
he has compiled a 37-17 record.<lb/>
His19-mark is 236-114.<lb/>
Ford, in his third year at<lb/>
Hampton Institute, led the<lb/>
Pirates to their best season ever<lb/>
also, 23-6. The first 20-win season<lb/>
in Hampton Institute's history<lb/>
qualified the squad fa the NAIA<lb/>
playoffs for the second year in a<lb/>
row. A win over Choppin State<lb/>
Wednesday night would have<lb/>
qualified the Pirates fa the NAIA<lb/>
national tournament.<lb/>
Named CJAA and NAIA Dis-<lb/>
trict 19 "Coach of the Year" this<lb/>
season, Fad had a 54-37 mark at<lb/>
Hamptoi Institute and a 74-61<lb/>
recad overall. Befae coming to<lb/>
Hampton Institute, Fad ooached<lb/>
at Tuskegee Institute and Mary-<lb/>
land Eastern Shae. At Eastern<lb/>
Shae, Fad's alma mater, he<lb/>
ooached the freshman team to a<lb/>
17-0 reoad in 1970-71 and an 18-0<lb/>
recad in 1972-73.<lb/>
Canfield has been at Wash-<lb/>
ingtoi and Lee 14 years. During<lb/>
that time, he has registered a<lb/>
225-126 mark and has led the<lb/>
Generals to 20-win seasons the<lb/>
last two years. This year's 22-6<lb/>
team advanced to the finals of the<lb/>
NCAA Division III South Atlantic<lb/>
Regional befae losing to Keane<lb/>
Last year's squad finished 23-5<lb/>
and fourth in the final NCAA III<lb/>
poll, earning Canfieid District III<lb/>
and Old Dominion Athletic Con-<lb/>
ference "Coach of the Yea'<lb/>
The Generals have ventured<lb/>
into post-season play three of the<lb/>
last four years and have had 12<lb/>
straight winning seasons.<lb/>
INI Y6UR ?aRKR lL AN NINO<lb/>
have you considered<lb/>
the next civilization?<lb/>
Write today for booklet "The Challenge<lb/>
of Lahloe Send name and address to:<lb/>
k. gordon lowiet, suite 4t?, (220 ?kel<lb/>
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 Thur. March 16?h -<lb/>
 THE EMBERS ?<lb/>
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Sun. Ladies Nite<lb/>
All men's and ladie's sweaters<lb/>
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All ski gloves 25 off<lb/>
All car racks 20 off<lb/>
All golf balls 811.50dozen<lb/>
Shag balls 10c each<lb/>
All golf clubs 25 off<lb/>
close out -<lb/>
All short sleeve IZOD golf shirts<lb/>
- Reg. $19.00 Now S13.95<lb/>
Large selection FOOT JOY and<lb/>
GREEN JOY golf shoes 12 price<lb/>
All new golf clubs purchased fitted<lb/>
with loft and lie adjustments<lb/>
free of charge<lb/>
GaoonD. Fulp<lb/>
Located At<lb/>
Greenville Country Club<lb/>
Phone 756-0504, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Open 7 days a week until dark<lb/>
v &amp;arauEn<lb/>
J<lb/>
<pb facs="00058042_0014"/><lb/>
Page<lb/>
14 FOUNTAINHEAD 14 March 1978<lb/>
Football scrimmage in Jacksonville Saturday<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
football team opened spring drills<lb/>
Feb. 26, the beginning of<lb/>
Coach Pat Dye's fifth season as<lb/>
head coach the Pirates. During<lb/>
previous four years, the Pirates<lb/>
have compiled a 32-12 record.<lb/>
The spring drills will continue<lb/>
through April 1, with only 20 days<lb/>
of work allowed by the NCAA.<lb/>
The week of March 4-12 is spring<lb/>
break on campus, thus no pract-<lb/>
ices will occur during the break. A<lb/>
Purple-Gold game will climax the<lb/>
spring work on Saturday, April 1.<lb/>
The first public scrimmage will be<lb/>
A? ttypptp- Jvffiyt<lb/>
?<lb/>
BUDWEISER<lb/>
MILLER LITE<lb/>
PLAYERS<lb/>
PEPS a<lb/>
BLUE RIBBON<lb/>
ICE<lb/>
MILLER<lb/>
OPEN<lb/>
24HRS<lb/>
MTHfc<lb/>
EVANS STREETS<lb/>
kO, C,r, $5.69<lb/>
$6.99<lb/>
$8.00<lb/>
$3 99<lb/>
$7 36<lb/>
$2.50<lb/>
$1.79<lb/>
1. Cij Cai<lb/>
a M I A ?'??<lb/>
II Ol Ca?<lb/>
w 00Mgir Jmm<lb/>
im nt 'J Oj "ari<lb/>
Or l.ri<lb/>
March 18 in Jacksonville at the<lb/>
high school.<lb/>
Sx offensive starters from last<lb/>
year's club that was 8-3, while<lb/>
nine defensive starters return.<lb/>
However, the coaches will ap-<lb/>
proach the spring drills with a<lb/>
situation of having someone who<lb/>
has started at every position at<lb/>
some time the past, excepting<lb/>
split end.<lb/>
"It is no secret that myself,<lb/>
the coaches and the players were<lb/>
very disappointed with the way<lb/>
our season ended last year said<lb/>
Dye Our entire group is excited<lb/>
about spring practice, with en-<lb/>
thusiasm high and attitudes exce-<lb/>
llent. Overall, we are excited<lb/>
about the possibilities of the 1978<lb/>
team<lb/>
Basically, there are three<lb/>
areas of major concern in spring<lb/>
practice. One, a split end must be<lb/>
found to replace record setting<lb/>
Terry Gallaher, a three-year<lb/>
starter. Two, a tight end must be<lb/>
found. And three, the center<lb/>
situation is again open. All three<lb/>
B.F.Goodrich<lb/>
Car Care Service<lb/>
4 POINT BRAKE CHECK<lb/>
1. Pull Front Wheels. Impact Linings and Drums<lb/>
i. Check Grease Seal. Wheel Cylinders for Leakage.<lb/>
1. Inspect Front Wheel Bearings.<lb/>
4. Adus? Brakes on All Four Wheels for Full Pedal<lb/>
Braking.<lb/>
Reg. Price 9 50-With Cert Service Only 13.50<lb/>
Most US Cars, Toyotas &amp; Datsuns<lb/>
call for appointment<lb/>
WKKCKKR SERVICE AVAILABLE I!N CITY,<lb/>
SI I DENT PRICE 88.50 WITH STUDENT ID<lb/>
Charge BankAmencard American Express.<lb/>
r -shown at 8 F Goodrich stores Competitively priced at B F Goodnch dealers<lb/>
ilFGoodrich Coggins Car Care<lb/>
ilt;3:Ii3:<lb/>
SAUSiStPVICl<lb/>
Phone 75 504<lb/>
310 W. HWY 24 BY PASS<lb/>
SKECNVILLC. M C<lb/>
Roffler of Greenville,<lb/>
formerly HERMANS,<lb/>
IS NOW OPEN.<lb/>
Located across from Umstead Dorm<lb/>
at 602 E. 10th Street, Suite A<lb/>
By appointment 758-0880<lb/>
owners- Tim Mills and Herman Hines<lb/>
Wed.<lb/>
ATTIC th<lb/>
urs.<lb/>
CHOICE ?<lb/>
Live and Remote on WRQR 911<lb/>
positions will have several strong<lb/>
candidates, but none are clear cut<lb/>
winners as yet.<lb/>
"We would also like to find<lb/>
another quarterback to work with<lb/>
Leander Green as we did last<lb/>
year explained Dye. "And<lb/>
another full back to spell Theodore<lb/>
Sutton is needed<lb/>
Defensively, it's a matter of<lb/>
finding someone to replace<lb/>
Harold Randolph at linebacker<lb/>
and Steve Hale at safety. But<lb/>
there are players who have<lb/>
started at both positions previous-<lb/>
ly-<lb/>
"We will have more exper-<lb/>
ience on defense this year said<lb/>
Dye.  I never thought we were a<lb/>
good defensive team last year,<lb/>
but we could have a chance to be<lb/>
pretty good this season. We have<lb/>
a lot of bodies to work with in the<lb/>
interior, two linebackers with<lb/>
starting experience and several<lb/>
strong backups and just more<lb/>
people with more experience in<lb/>
the secondary<lb/>
While three or four positions<lb/>
are very questionable, Dye does<lb/>
not look upon this year's spring<lb/>
drills as a time like the past of<lb/>
finding primary starters.<lb/>
"We have to try and develop<lb/>
depth and find the winners or<lb/>
right people for the areas we are<lb/>
not completely settled on said<lb/>
Dye. "We need more depth<lb/>
behind the ones we know can play<lb/>
and we need above all to develop<lb/>
further our skills and overall<lb/>
fundamentals of a good football<lb/>
team<lb/>
1978EAST CAROLINA FOOTBALL RlCRUITS<lb/>
NAMEHOMETOWNHIGH SCHOOLH. W. POS.<lb/>
Barren, JamesWilson, NC.Fike6'3'22b Dt<lb/>
Bayne, ErnestHigh Point, N.CAndrews62'218DEDT<lb/>
Bennet, GeorgeLexington, N.C.Lexington5'11"200LBRB<lb/>
Bentley, AndreGddsboro, N.CGoldsboro6'10" 195 LB<lb/>
Beutley, MickeyPensacola, Fla.W.J. Woodham6'3'180QBK<lb/>
Blue, Harold L.Laurinburg, N.C. Scotland6'0'180 RB<lb/>
Cainion, Jessy L. Kathleen, Ga.Warner Robins5'9'150 RB<lb/>
Cobb, Marvin A. Raleigh, N.C.Raleigh Broughton60'180 RB<lb/>
Crump, GeorgeChesapeake, Va S II Birmingham,Indian River6'3'215DETE<lb/>
Daniel, RichardE.B. Erwin511'210 LB<lb/>
LeeAla.<lb/>
Elliott, Marvin J. Alexandria, Va.Bishop Ireton510' 185RBDB<lb/>
Felton, John A.Edenton, N.C.John A. Holmes5'11' 180 QB<lb/>
Griff en,Tabb, Va.Tabb6'1"230DENG<lb/>
Hiawatha<lb/>
Hallow, JohnGreenville, S.C.East side5'11'210NG<lb/>
Hilton, JessieEnfield, N.C.Enfield5'10170QB<lb/>
LaCock, JaysonWilmington, NC John T. Hoggarc6'1"215 Dt<lb/>
Lawson, Leon E.Virginia Beach,First Colonial6'2"205 RB<lb/>
Lowery, Thomas East Spencer, NCNorth Rowan6'3'220C<lb/>
Mann, CharlesVirginia Beach,Princess Anne6'0"205 LB<lb/>
IIVa.<lb/>
McDaniel, BrianWeldon, N.C.Weldon6'3"205 LB<lb/>
Meadows,Maysville, N.C.White Oak5'11' 175 RB<lb/>
Melvin L.<lb/>
Montgomery,Goldsboro, N.C.Goldsboro511' 190 RB<lb/>
Gregory<lb/>
Morris, GlenGreensboro, N.C.Western Guilford6'2"215 LB<lb/>
Norris, HenryClinton, N.C.Clinton5'10 170RBDB<lb/>
Jay<lb/>
Pardi, WilliamBurlington, N.C.Cummings62"235 0TOG<lb/>
Sykes, GeraldFayettevihe, NCPine Forest5'10 170 RB<lb/>
Tyson, MindellVirginia Beach, Va. Richiiiond, Va.Bay side6'4"270 DT<lb/>
Tyson, OscarMaggie L.6'0"230 OT<lb/>
Walker<lb/>
Washington,Greenville, N.C.J. H. Rose6'1"185 RB<lb/>
McDonald<lb/>
Wiley, Roy Lee<lb/>
At journalism conference<lb/>
Burlington, N.C. Cummings 6'1" 230FB<lb/>
Woody Peele guest speaker<lb/>
By MARK PART ERF I ELD<lb/>
Prospective East Caroline<lb/>
journalists held their first press<lb/>
conference of the semester last<lb/>
month. The guest speaker was Mr.<lb/>
Woody Peele, Sports Editor for<lb/>
the Greenville Reflector. Mr.<lb/>
Peele spoke both factually and<lb/>
philosophically about the career<lb/>
field of journalism, stating that<lb/>
there are jobs available, but<lb/>
future journalists must "Be pre-<lb/>
pared to eat a lot of hot dogs and<lb/>
beans<lb/>
an outline of his weekly routine,<lb/>
of which his major responsibility<lb/>
is to get the paper out every day.<lb/>
As well as desk work, the colorful<lb/>
editor travels daily to both the<lb/>
Rose High and East Carolina<lb/>
campuses, talking to coaches and<lb/>
players in search of the sports<lb/>
page s weekly feature story. But<lb/>
the job of writing the feature stay<lb/>
is not always as easy as finding<lb/>
the story, says Mr. Peele. The<lb/>
editor must be responsible for<lb/>
everything he prints, and that<lb/>
ing a stay as well. According to<lb/>
Peele, he s hurt himslef as a<lb/>
repater "by not revealing some<lb/>
staies I've heard off the recad,<lb/>
but I'd rather bethought of as the<lb/>
kind of guy who has ethics, rather<lb/>
than sonecne you can't talk to<lb/>
Certainly there are many writers<lb/>
today who could take a lesson<lb/>
from this line of thinking.<lb/>
Woody Peele has waked on<lb/>
the Reflecta fa fourteen years.<lb/>
He is a graduate of Wake Faest<lb/>
with a degree in political science<lb/>
Mr. Peele began his talk with means finding means of support- and a resident of Greenville.<lb/>
Pom Pom tryouts to be held<lb/>
this weekend in Minges<lb/>
Ru DAVID MFRRI AM <lb/>
By DAVID MERRIAM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Can you kick your legs high?<lb/>
How about dance routines in front<lb/>
of thousands of people? And do<lb/>
you like to travel, meet new<lb/>
people?<lb/>
If the answer to any a all of<lb/>
the above questions is yes, maybe<lb/>
you (girls only) should consider<lb/>
being, a trying out fa the<lb/>
pan-pan squad of 78-79.<lb/>
The oppatunities fa girls<lb/>
making tne select squad of 20-25<lb/>
are well wath any individual's<lb/>
time and effats.<lb/>
'It requires plenty of time<lb/>
says Captain Jo Ellen Foxbut<lb/>
the travel and fun far outshine the<lb/>
work.<lb/>
Wr represent the band just<lb/>
like any musician a cola guard,<lb/>
we have pride in our squad and<lb/>
the girls usually become pretty<lb/>
close<lb/>
The start of the weekend<lb/>
tryout will be March 17, 18, and<lb/>
19, which is the first weekend<lb/>
after Spring break.<lb/>
All girls, whether on last year's<lb/>
squad a not, will be require to<lb/>
tryoul again.<lb/>
"Everyone must try-out<lb/>
again states Jo Ellen, "it<lb/>
doesn't matter if anyone from last<lb/>
year was on the squad a not.<lb/>
There will be no favaism involv-<lb/>
ed. There will be 4 a 5 different<lb/>
judges- unbiased people who will<lb/>
scae girls ai points accumulated<lb/>
by categaies<lb/>
Thecategaiesfa competition<lb/>
include: coordination, high kick-<lb/>
ing ability, personality, and over-<lb/>
all poise.<lb/>
All girls will be taught a<lb/>
routine in a master class, given a<lb/>
day of practice, then judged.<lb/>
Being a Pom-Pan girl is<lb/>
plenty of fun and is time<lb/>
consuming, it also requires a<lb/>
great deal of dedication,however,<lb/>
if you want to see the State,<lb/>
Carolina, and Richmond games<lb/>
next year, consider the try-out<lb/>
dates of March 17-18, and 19.<lb/>
march 17 there will be a general<lb/>
meeting at 7:30 in the Minges<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058042_0015"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
14 March 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 15<lb/>
The Pirate baseball team currently stands 4-3<lb/>
'3 4<lb/>
- <lb/>
-<lb/>
??.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
for sale 0<lb/>
FOR SALE: Travel Trailer, $795<lb/>
or best offer. Call 752-2933 after<lb/>
5:00<lb/>
FOR SALE: '66 Mustang with<lb/>
3-speed classic. Excellent cond.<lb/>
800.00 Call 752-8151 or Wilming-<lb/>
ton 799-0794 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: FM8-track stereo<lb/>
player (Brand: Automatic Radio)<lb/>
looks and performs like new<lb/>
Retails $130.00 will sell fa $80.<lb/>
Leave name and phone no. at<lb/>
758-8168 or come by 415-B Belk<lb/>
Tues. or Thurs. 10:30-12:30 A.M.<lb/>
FOR SALE : 72 Cricket Plymouth.<lb/>
37,000. Burgundy four door with<lb/>
new tires, just tuned up and in<lb/>
excellent cond. $1500 or best<lb/>
offer. Call Neema a Seema<lb/>
752-4313.<lb/>
for rent W<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: Grad<lb/>
student needs responsible room-<lb/>
mate at Village Green. Right at<lb/>
SGA bus stop. 3 minutes ride to<lb/>
Memorial Gym. 758-3830.<lb/>
ROOMS AVAILABLE : Super loc-<lb/>
ation for serious and or working<lb/>
male students 136 N. Library St.<lb/>
On brown SGA route. Washer<lb/>
and dryer, central air and heat,<lb/>
private bath adjoining 2 bdrms. in<lb/>
back. 65.00 plus V3 utilities. Call<lb/>
Steve Aldndge, proprieta 758-<lb/>
0022.<lb/>
ROOMMATES NEEDED: fa 3<lb/>
bedroom apt. in Eastbrook. Sum-<lb/>
mer and fall. Call Cindy at<lb/>
752-8405.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Mobile home, $120<lb/>
month. Single person preferred.<lb/>
Call after 530 p.m. 758-5712.<lb/>
TWO ROOMM ATESneeded fa 3<lb/>
bdrm duplex 5 blocks from<lb/>
campus. Bus service. $40.00<lb/>
monthly. Call 758-7318 a 752-<lb/>
0865.<lb/>
personal?<lb/>
LOST: in Memaial Gym on Sun<lb/>
Feb. 25 a St. Christopher initials<lb/>
M.A.P. engraved on the back. If<lb/>
found please call 752-2712 a<lb/>
come by 373 Jones. Reward.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Student to do<lb/>
light yard wak ate a two<lb/>
afternoons a week. Must be<lb/>
reliable and conscientious woker.<lb/>
Near campus. Apply in person.<lb/>
Mrs. J.W. Shumate. 1041 E. Rock<lb/>
Springs Rd.<lb/>
WANTED: Acoustic guitarist to<lb/>
play with singerguitarist. Wil-<lb/>
ling to relocate to Nags Head fa<lb/>
summer. Male a female. Call fa<lb/>
details 758-3109.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Part timea full<lb/>
time. Apply in person at Hatteras<lb/>
Hammocks. 11th and Clark St.<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
SPEEDO TYPIST: typing term<lb/>
papers, manuscripts, theses, etc.<lb/>
Reasonable rates. Call after 6<lb/>
p.m. Susan Cassdy 758-S241<lb/>
WORK IN JAPAN: Teach English<lb/>
oonverstaion. No experienoe<lb/>
degree, a Japanese required.<lb/>
Send loig, stamped, self-addres-<lb/>
sed envelope fa details. Japan-<lb/>
327, 411 W. Center, Centralia,<lb/>
WA 98431.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058042_0016"/><lb/>
16 FOUNTAINHEAO 14 March 1978<lb/>
LISTEN<lb/>
HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH<lb/>
(ANNUAL)<lb/>
WAREHOUSE SALE<lb/>
EVERYTHING REDUCED<lb/>
LISTEN<lb/>
NEW<lb/>
TRADE-INS<lb/>
DEMOS<lb/>
RECEIVERS, TURNTABLES, SPEAKERS, TAPE DECKS<lb/>
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5 ?"??<lb/>
?<lb/>
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YOU CAN LAY-A-WAY NOW AT THE SALE PRICE AND PAY WHEN<lb/>
YOUR TAX CHECK COMES OR WHEN YOU RETURN FROM THE BREAK I<lb/>
A GREAT SELECTION NEW &amp; USED<lb/>
SONY, FISHER, AKAI, SHERWOOD, DUAL, PIONEER, BOSE,<lb/>
TEAC, CRAIG, KENWOOD, APOLLO, SANYO, EMPIRE, OTHERS<lb/>
MANY ONE OF A KIND!<lb/>
DISCWASHER, SOUND-GUARD. HEADPHONES, CARTRIDGES<lb/>
GREATLY REDUCED!<lb/>
LISTEN-NOW<lb/>
HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
vJ:v<lb/>
<pb facs="00058042_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>