<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058057_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity for over 50 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of 4,500<lb/>
this issue is 16 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Vol. No 53, No. S<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
June 7, 1978<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
Family Practice, p.3<lb/>
Steeplejacks, p.6<lb/>
John Hartford, p.8<lb/>
Alston All America p.13<lb/>
Mrs. Jenkins ill<lb/>
By JIM BARNES<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Mrs. Lillian Jacobsen Jenkins,<lb/>
the wife of ECU Chancellor Leo<lb/>
Jenkins, was admitted to Pitt<lb/>
Memorial Hospital on May 31<lb/>
with chronic hepatitis and re-<lb/>
mains in poor oondition.<lb/>
According to Dr. Edwin W.<lb/>
Monroe, vice-chancellor for health<lb/>
affairs, Mrs. Jenkins' condition<lb/>
has become somewhat worse<lb/>
since her admission to the<lb/>
hospital last Wednesday. "The<lb/>
doctors are very concerned<lb/>
Monroe told FOUNTAINHEAD.<lb/>
Rick Gilstrap, associate<lb/>
director of Pitt Memorial Hospi-<lb/>
tal, stated Monday that Mrs.<lb/>
Jenkins' condition was listed as<lb/>
"poor When asked to elabor-<lb/>
ate, Gilstrap added that ?poor<lb/>
oondition means basically that the<lb/>
patient is "real sick<lb/>
Tuesday afternoon, Monroe<lb/>
stated that the medical bulletin on<lb/>
Mrs. Jenkinb oondition was<lb/>
essentially unchanged? she is still<lb/>
seriously ill.<lb/>
Mrs. Jenkins, who has been in<lb/>
deteriorating health fa several<lb/>
months, came to Greenville in<lb/>
1947 with her husband, who had<lb/>
accepted the position of dean of<lb/>
instruction at East Carolina<lb/>
Teacher's College, later ECU.<lb/>
A native of Lavallette,<lb/>
N.J Mrs. Jenkins, who will be<lb/>
63 on July 27, was a schoolteacher<lb/>
in Raritan, N.J. prior to her<lb/>
marriage to Jenkins in 1941. In<lb/>
her 18 years as "first lady" of<lb/>
ECU, Mrs. Jenkins has been<lb/>
hostess for some 5,000 recept-<lb/>
ions, dinners, and other social<lb/>
functions connected with the<lb/>
university.<lb/>
MRS. LILUAN JENKINS<lb/>
HERALD editor named<lb/>
JERRY SIMMONS EBONY HERA LD editor. "hoto by Brian Stotler<lb/>
Intercessor<lb/>
Dear Editor,<lb/>
A oouple of days ago I was a<lb/>
full-time student enrolled in<lb/>
courses here at ECU but I was<lb/>
forced to withdraw from the<lb/>
summer program because of<lb/>
impending employment conflicts.<lb/>
I was under the impression<lb/>
that I would receive a refund of<lb/>
my tuition fees, if not a full<lb/>
refund, then at least a partial one.<lb/>
. The registrar told me that a<lb/>
new cutoff date, May 25, had<lb/>
been decided on and that no<lb/>
refunds of any kind oould be<lb/>
granted after this date.<lb/>
If the above is true, then why<lb/>
weren't we informed of the new<lb/>
date? When was the date decided<lb/>
on? Just how tentative are these<lb/>
"dates?" How many other stu-<lb/>
dents have been duped and is<lb/>
there any possibility, of even the<lb/>
remotest nature, of getting a<lb/>
refund?<lb/>
Signed Z. T.<lb/>
Editor's note: The above letter<lb/>
was received too late for INTER-<lb/>
CESSOR to contact the registrar<lb/>
or Dean Mallory's office. The<lb/>
next INTERCESSOR will report<lb/>
fully on the issue raised by Z. T.<lb/>
Also, future letters to INTER-<lb/>
CESSOR must be signed by the<lb/>
student and include the student's<lb/>
ID number.<lb/>
By JEANNIE WILLIAMS<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The Media Board has approv-<lb/>
ed Jerry Simmons as the 1979-80<lb/>
EBONY HERALD editor.<lb/>
Simmons, 21, a junior from<lb/>
Fayetteville majoring in biology<lb/>
and pre-med, was editor of the<lb/>
EBONY HERALD last spring<lb/>
semester.<lb/>
Simmons was the only candid-<lb/>
ate who filled an application for<lb/>
the position of editor.<lb/>
 I applied because I know that<lb/>
the EBONY HERALD doesn't<lb/>
have to in the position that it's<lb/>
in said Simmons.<lb/>
Simmoms cited apathy and<lb/>
misconceptions as major reasons<lb/>
for the position of the paper.<lb/>
"There is a big apathy and<lb/>
misconception problem here on<lb/>
campus. Blacks on campus don't<lb/>
seem to really have the time and<lb/>
there are very few black journal-<lb/>
ism students he said.<lb/>
"The misconception problem<lb/>
is that people feel that the<lb/>
EBONY HERALD is here just for<lb/>
the black people, but it's suppose<lb/>
to be that. Its supposed tobe an<lb/>
informative publication tor the<lb/>
whole campus, not just for the<lb/>
blacks or minorities Simmons<lb/>
explained.<lb/>
Media Board approves budget, photographer<lb/>
ByTERREPIRKEY<lb/>
Staff Reporter<lb/>
At the Tues June 6<lb/>
meeting, the Media Board tenta-<lb/>
tively approved the 1978-79 bud-<lb/>
get of the EBONY HERALD.<lb/>
The $5,270.00 nine-issue<lb/>
EBONY HERALD budget includ-<lb/>
ed raises fa the edita, news<lb/>
edita, and features edita.<lb/>
Although most of the staff will<lb/>
be returning in the fall, inaeas-<lb/>
ing the staff size is a present<lb/>
effat. "We are also hoping to<lb/>
buy anaha typewriter said<lb/>
Jerry Simmons, edita of the<lb/>
EBONY HERALD.<lb/>
Pete Podeszwa was approved<lb/>
head phaographa of the Pbrto<lb/>
Lab.<lb/>
His duties will include heading<lb/>
the staff of phrtographers and<lb/>
giving assignments requested by<lb/>
university publications.<lb/>
The total fa the proposed<lb/>
Media Board budget fa 1978-79<lb/>
thus far is $88,194.92.<lb/>
Robat Swaim, WECU<lb/>
Business Managa, requested a<lb/>
transfa of $75.00 from loop<lb/>
charges to office supplies "to<lb/>
start a filing system Doug<lb/>
White, FOUNTAINHEAD Edita,<lb/>
asked fa a $1,104.75 transfer<lb/>
fron printing to telephone. Bah<lb/>
transfers in the budget were<lb/>
approved.<lb/>
The next meeting of the<lb/>
Media Board will be Tuesday,<lb/>
June 13 at 3 p.m.<lb/>
Simmons said that thae was a<lb/>
definite need fa a good papa on<lb/>
campus, as thae was fa most<lb/>
campuses in the state.<lb/>
"Quite frankly he said, "if I<lb/>
didn't read FOUNTAINHEAD, I<lb/>
wouldn't know vay much about<lb/>
the overall picture of the camo-<lb/>
us. "By the same token it would<lb/>
be a shame to say that you<lb/>
graduated from a univasity and<lb/>
have such a narrow image of<lb/>
trvngs that the publications con-<lb/>
fine themselves to Simmons<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"What I mean is, thae is a la<lb/>
of shadowing left out of the<lb/>
ovaall picture that I feel the<lb/>
college student has a right to at<lb/>
least know a little about. That's<lb/>
what I'm going to try my best to<lb/>
do to get the papa up he said.<lb/>
Simmons said that biases and<lb/>
predjudioes and the misconcept-<lb/>
ions had held the papa back.<lb/>
T m not going to allow those<lb/>
biases and prejudices and mis-<lb/>
conceptions to stand in the way<lb/>
because it has held the papa<lb/>
back too long and besides that,<lb/>
has allowed it to stagnate he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"I'm going to get the job done<lb/>
and I m going to do it to the best<lb/>
of my abilities, 9mmonssaid.<lb/>
Simmons said that a pria<lb/>
problan of the papa was not<lb/>
having a centralized place to work<lb/>
but that the EBONY HERALD<lb/>
was recently given an office in the<lb/>
publications building.<lb/>
Simmons also discussed the<lb/>
upcoming year and goals of the<lb/>
HERALD.<lb/>
"Myp.iaitiesaretoget a<lb/>
solid staff built and a solid<lb/>
publishing foundation set up he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"We're going to try our best<lb/>
to improve the range of the papa<lb/>
and get more intaest in, a<lb/>
ratha, more quality and quantity<lb/>
fa each issue, and more divasity<lb/>
fa the papa Simmons said.<lb/>
Simmons said that he wanted<lb/>
to get more minaities involved<lb/>
and was trying to plan ways to<lb/>
ovacome the apathy and misco-<lb/>
nception problems.<lb/>
"I really don't know how I'm<lb/>
going to do it, but I realize I have<lb/>
to do it he said. Tve been<lb/>
racking my aain to find the best<lb/>
ways to achieve that.<lb/>
He explained that the<lb/>
HERALD had na had a staff pa<lb/>
se befae and that it needed one<lb/>
vay badly.<lb/>
"The campus itself and the<lb/>
way things are hae aids the<lb/>
problem of apathyit s hard<lb/>
encHjgh to get out of hae with just<lb/>
your majaitself and when you try<lb/>
to have extra-curricular activities,<lb/>
it's an extreme burden, he said.<lb/>
"I -undastand how that is<lb/>
because I try to spread myself too<lb/>
thin Simmons said with feeling.<lb/>
"Jary Smmons has ga this<lb/>
bad thing in him said Simmons<lb/>
of himself, "to actually care fa<lb/>
otha people when they don't care<lb/>
that much<lb/>
"It'll be the downfall of him,<lb/>
but he s one of those people that<lb/>
neva learn<lb/>
Center holds<lb/>
open house<lb/>
By DIANE PAQUETTE<lb/>
Staff Repata<lb/>
The Eastan Carolina Family<lb/>
Practice Coita celeaated its<lb/>
opening Sunday, June 4th, with<lb/>
an Open House and ribbon<lb/>
cutting by Dr. Leo Jenkins.<lb/>
The opening of the oenta is<lb/>
the final implementation of the<lb/>
main purpose of ECU'S School of<lb/>
Medicine: to train family physic-<lb/>
ians.<lb/>
The new Family Practice<lb/>
Centa, opaated by the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Family Medicine of the<lb/>
ECU School of Medicine, opened<lb/>
in Decemba 1977 and is already<lb/>
attracting patients from a 50-mile<lb/>
radius of Greenville. Its two<lb/>
full-time and fioe part-time fao-<lb/>
See OPcN HOUSE, p. 3J<lb/>
<pb facs="00058057_0002"/><lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD June 7 1978<lb/>
Scuba<lb/>
REAL<lb/>
Runners<lb/>
The following changes have<lb/>
been made in the 13 miles<lb/>
marathon sponsored by the<lb/>
Washington Jaycees' fa June 11,<lb/>
in Washington, N.C.<lb/>
The race is still scheduled for<lb/>
Sun June 11, at 5:30 p.m. and<lb/>
will run for 10,000 meters (6.2<lb/>
miles). The starting point will be<lb/>
Havens Gardens and a fee of $3<lb/>
will be charged each contestant.<lb/>
This gives each runner a number-<lb/>
ed souvenir bib to wear during<lb/>
the race.<lb/>
Three trophies will be given to<lb/>
the first, second and third place<lb/>
runner in each age bracket.<lb/>
The age brackets are 25 and<lb/>
under, 26 to 35, and 36 and over.<lb/>
For more information write:<lb/>
Mayhew Cox, P.O. Box 521,<lb/>
Washington, N.C.27889.<lb/>
HTC<lb/>
The National Teachers Exam-<lb/>
inations (NTE) will be given at<lb/>
ECU July 15.<lb/>
Scores from the examinations<lb/>
are used by states fa certification<lb/>
of teachers, by school systems fa<lb/>
selection and identification of<lb/>
leadership qualities, and by col-<lb/>
leges as part of their graduation<lb/>
requirements.<lb/>
Further infamatioi and regis-<lb/>
tratioi fams are available fron<lb/>
the ECU Testing Center, 105<lb/>
Speight Bldg a directly from<lb/>
the Educational Testing Service,<lb/>
Box 911, Princeton, NJ 08541.<lb/>
The deadline fa regular regis-<lb/>
tratioi is June 22. On-the-spot<lb/>
registration isna permitted.<lb/>
A basic scuba certification<lb/>
course will be offered beginning<lb/>
in July to ECU students.<lb/>
The course will be offered July<lb/>
through Aug. 1 from 7 to 10 p.m<lb/>
and will be taught at Mmges<lb/>
Coliseum, Room 145.<lb/>
Fee is $45 per person with a<lb/>
maximum of 20 students to be<lb/>
admitted.<lb/>
Each student must have his<lb/>
own flippers, mask and snakel.<lb/>
The remainder of the equipment,<lb/>
including the air may be<lb/>
obtained from the instructa fa<lb/>
$32.50 fa the course duration.<lb/>
Instructa will be Robert<lb/>
Eastep, who is recognized as one<lb/>
of the outstanding scuba instruct-<lb/>
as in the Southeast. He has<lb/>
taught the Los Angeles County<lb/>
Certification Program fa several<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Fa mae infamatioi contact:<lb/>
Non-Credit Programs, Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education, ECU,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
Registration must be received<lb/>
no later than July 5. -<lb/>
REAL will start anaher<lb/>
course in aisis intervention<lb/>
beginning June 12 at 6 p.m.<lb/>
Fa those who are unfamiliar<lb/>
with the course, REAL teaches<lb/>
the dynamics of crisis interven-<lb/>
tion, concentrating effats in<lb/>
many different problem areas,<lb/>
such as drugs, suiade, rape,<lb/>
alcohol, etc and teaching shat<lb/>
term counseling skills.<lb/>
REAL will be offering a shat<lb/>
course this summer lasting only<lb/>
five weeks instead of the usual 12<lb/>
week session.<lb/>
All those interested in taking<lb/>
the course are invited to call<lb/>
REAL to receive further informa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Gospel<lb/>
Would you like to know the<lb/>
difference between knowing who<lb/>
Jesus is and really knowing him<lb/>
with a personal relationship?<lb/>
Well, the folks at Full Gospel<lb/>
Student Fellowship are getting<lb/>
together again this summer every<lb/>
Thursday evening at 7:30 in<lb/>
Biology N106.<lb/>
Workshop<lb/>
Operation Inform, Waking<lb/>
with the Liaary Community" is<lb/>
the title of a one-day wakshop to<lb/>
be offered here by the ECU<lb/>
Department of Liaary Science<lb/>
Alumni Assoaatioi and Lenor<lb/>
Community College June 20.<lb/>
The program will begin at 9<lb/>
a.m. in Lenor's Student Union<lb/>
building. Opening the event will<lb/>
be Dr. Jesse McDaniel, president<lb/>
of Lenoir Community Cdlege,<lb/>
who will welcome wakshop parti-<lb/>
cipants and guests, and Dr. Gene<lb/>
Lanier, chairperson of the ECU<lb/>
Department of Library Saence,<lb/>
who will introduce the panel<lb/>
speakers.<lb/>
Partiapants in the program<lb/>
may receive one-half ECU credit.<lb/>
A small registration fee will be<lb/>
charged persons desiring aedit.<lb/>
Further infamatioi and pre-<lb/>
registratioi materials are avail-<lb/>
able fron Millie Matthis. Learn-<lb/>
ing Resources Center, Lenor<lb/>
Community College, Box 188,<lb/>
Kinstm 28501, o fron the<lb/>
Department of Library Saence,<lb/>
FCII Grppnville 27834.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
f-UH MtNi : umpieteiy turnisn-<lb/>
ed effiaency apt. with AC.<lb/>
Utilities included. Available July<lb/>
1. Also 2 bedrooms in private<lb/>
home available oi 14th St.<lb/>
758-2585. <lb/>
FOR SALE: Magnavo 8-track<lb/>
AMFM stereo. A steal at $80.<lb/>
Come by 309-B Scott Dam. "<lb/>
HOUSEMATE NEEDED: fa 4<lb/>
bdrm. furnished house close to<lb/>
campus. Private bdrm. Rent is<lb/>
37.50 per month. Call 758-3841<lb/>
nights o see David in Ceramics<lb/>
Studio. ALSO: need ride to<lb/>
Charlotte this Fri. Can leave<lb/>
anmielDwithexDensea<lb/>
FOR SALE: '66 Chevy station-<lb/>
wagoi. PS, PB, AC, good tires,<lb/>
AMFM cassette, airsjocks, 396<lb/>
with 4 barrel great fa beach<lb/>
trips, only $500. Call 752-6806.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: needed.<lb/>
Looking fo a responsible girl who<lb/>
is willing to share expenses with 3<lb/>
other girls fo the summer. If<lb/>
interested please call 752-0760.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Private room with<lb/>
ACfo male. Call 752-4006 1 p.m.<lb/>
til 10 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE 71 Datsun 240Z with<lb/>
excellent inteno. Brand new<lb/>
gglTiL Can 752-0026 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: Own<lb/>
room in 3-bdrm. house 2 blocks<lb/>
from art bldg. $58 month plus<lb/>
utilities. Available immediately,<lb/>
Call Maggie at 758-2940 o<lb/>
758-3308.<lb/>
LOST: Green nOebook that's my<lb/>
journal. Very valuable to me.<lb/>
Michele 758-8724. Also I want a<lb/>
house in country. Will pay<lb/>
reward.<lb/>
WATERBED: king sized, heater<lb/>
shelved headboard, and 6-drawer<lb/>
pedestal. 752-1478.<lb/>
Texas Instruments<lb/>
IN OHPOH A T I O<lb/>
Student Supply Store<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
Texas Instruments<lb/>
I N(OHPOH AIIO<lb/>
Your Calculator Headquarters<lb/>
SR-40<lb/>
Portable<lb/>
Rechargeable<lb/>
SBde Rule Functions<lb/>
I A brief summary y<lb/>
of the SR-40'8 features<lb/>
, and capabilities. S<lb/>
?JPl Cocrad lo H dgaa (rounoad lot tor aaplay on)<lb/>
Raaprocai ?dn tha diapiar r?ua Mo 1<lb/>
Conalanl ttoroa a numba, and fta aaaooalad<lb/>
aggraaon lor r<lb/>
" 'Chanoawgn<lb/>
I numancal anpraaatona tor oonact<lb/>
???MCII InMrprMMon TIM SH-40<lb/>
prondaa 16 aau o parettnaaaa ?Wi uo to tour<lb/>
POMMTS<lb/>
"Squar.<lb/>
and Roots<lb/>
7 j 8qw fool<lb/>
rrI'y?tan<lb/>
LOO.<lb/>
ftTTNa<lb/>
mi Natural (baaa a)<lb/>
. '?? i Common (oaaa K<lb/>
Trio. Functions<lb/>
o?q Oagraa. Radwi Gran Satacu tha un tor angular<lb/>
maaaurarnart Can oa cnangad ?nanavar daarraO<lb/>
.V Srna ol ?? dttplarad angu<lb/>
? ? Coama ol ma ovpkjyad angia<lb/>
Mowory Functions<lb/>
We have a full line of Texas instalments calculators<lb/>
and accessories.<lb/>
Student Supply Store<lb/>
?aa1 &amp;? data to mamory<lb/>
?C r irtianoai tia ouman ol ?. mamory -? as<lb/>
Mon-Fri 8:30-500<lb/>
VISA<lb/>
WANT TO SELL: G.E. Refig. 21<lb/>
cu. ft. in good cond. $130. Call<lb/>
Laurie at 752-7308.<lb/>
NEEDED: Female needs an inex-<lb/>
pensive plaoe to live. Immediately<lb/>
846-9760.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sunfish sailboat and<lb/>
trailer in excellent cond. Blue and<lb/>
white. Call 752-2109 ask for<lb/>
Wayne.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Two rooms with air<lb/>
conditioning across from campus.<lb/>
758-2585.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 69 Dodge Coronet<lb/>
with slant six engine standard<lb/>
shift, anc good tires. How about<lb/>
it. O.K.? 758-7434.<lb/>
!15 REWARD: for info leading to<lb/>
rental of house in Greenville or<lb/>
country. Call 758-1008 after 5:30<lb/>
Any student interested in doing<lb/>
volunteer work for Senator Jesse<lb/>
Helms re-election should attend<lb/>
the organizational meeting on<lb/>
Wed. June 14 at 7:00 pjn. on<lb/>
the 2nd floor of the Minges<lb/>
Building (above the First State<lb/>
Bank on the Evans St Mall<lb/>
downtown, across from Big<lb/>
woow.<lb/>
Refreshments will be served.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058057_0003"/><lb/>
Family Practice Center opens<lb/>
Ju?7 1978 FOUMTAIHHEAD<lb/>
Eastern N.G reaches health care goal<lb/>
TERREPIRKEY<lb/>
Gtaff Reporter<lb/>
Eastern Area Health Educat-<lb/>
ion Center, Inc. (EAHEC) Re-<lb/>
gional Offices and Eastern Carol-<lb/>
ina Family Practice Center<lb/>
(ECFPC) celebrated their opening<lb/>
on Sunday, June 4 at an Open<lb/>
House from 2 t 5 p.m.<lb/>
Some fifty Greenville citizens<lb/>
attended the ribbon cutting,<lb/>
including ECU Chancellor Leo<lb/>
Jenkins; Dr. James G. Jones,<lb/>
chairman of Family Medicine at<lb/>
the ECU Med School and Director<lb/>
of ECFPC; Dr. F.M. Simmons<lb/>
Patterson, executive director of<lb/>
EAHEC; Dr. Edwin Monroe,<lb/>
vice-chancellor for Health Affairs.<lb/>
ECU, and president of EAHEC;<lb/>
and Dr William E. Laupus. dean<lb/>
of he ECU Med School.<lb/>
Each person attending the<lb/>
Open House received a map of<lb/>
the EAHECECFPC facility<lb/>
which adjoins the new Pitt County<lb/>
Memorial Hospital.<lb/>
ECFPC staff members briefed<lb/>
the guests on the tour of<lb/>
Dentistry, Radiology, Medical<lb/>
Records. Patient Education, Cen-<lb/>
tial Laboratory. Library rooms<lb/>
and the Medical Social Worker,<lb/>
ECFPC and EAHEC Business<lb/>
and Administrative offioes.<lb/>
One of the main points of<lb/>
interest in each room was the<lb/>
modern equipment used to accel-<lb/>
erate such processes as labora-<lb/>
tory tests and x-rays.<lb/>
Although EAHEC funded<lb/>
ECFPC, which is managed by the<lb/>
ECU Med School, the two are<lb/>
separate operations.<lb/>
EAHEC, organized in Sept-<lb/>
ember 1974, is the largest of the<lb/>
nine centers in North Carolina.<lb/>
Since then, North Carolina<lb/>
AH EC's have become a national<lb/>
model with the goal to improve<lb/>
quality and distribution of health<lb/>
care manpower.<lb/>
To accomplish this goal,<lb/>
EAHEC has a two-part program:<lb/>
clinical education and continuing<lb/>
education. According to Joel<lb/>
Vicars, EAHEC Deputy Director,<lb/>
clinical education is the liason fo<lb/>
the student and school in the<lb/>
23-oounty region of EAHEC.<lb/>
Improving the student rotat-<lb/>
ion sites is a main factor in this<lb/>
liason as quality of rotation sites<lb/>
is stressed.<lb/>
AHEC is one of the reasons<lb/>
students are not asafnad to go to<lb/>
OPEN HOUSE<lb/>
Continued from p. 1<lb/>
ulty physicians plus seven resi-<lb/>
dents are presently seeing 200<lb/>
patients a week, a figure that will<lb/>
grow to 1,000 when all of the<lb/>
faculty is completed.<lb/>
When the N.C. General As-<lb/>
sembly approved ECU as the site<lb/>
for a four-year medical school in<lb/>
1975, special emphasis was plac-<lb/>
ed on the education of family<lb/>
practitioners. The legislation<lb/>
stressed the need for medical<lb/>
students to oonsider rural areas in<lb/>
eastern N.C. for their practices,<lb/>
especially for family practices.<lb/>
There is a limited supply of<lb/>
family practitioners in eastern<lb/>
N.C, according to Dr. James G.<lb/>
Jones, director of the Family<lb/>
Practice Center and chairman of<lb/>
the Department of Family Med-<lb/>
icine, ECU Shoo! of Medicine.<lb/>
"Especially in eastern N.C,<lb/>
there is a crisis in manpower<lb/>
where medicine is concerned.<lb/>
Most of the practicing physicians<lb/>
in this area are old and will soon<lb/>
retire said Jones.<lb/>
The ECU School of Medicine<lb/>
hopes to ease this shortage by<lb/>
locating their students as resi-<lb/>
dents in eastern N.C. Jones states<lb/>
that statistics show most physic-<lb/>
ians locate their practices within<lb/>
100 miles of where they received<lb/>
their medical residency training.<lb/>
The ECU medical students are<lb/>
in "pre-clinical" training and do<lb/>
not work with patients; but with<lb/>
the patient's oonsent, they may<lb/>
observe physicians in patient care<lb/>
practice on closed-circuit TV<lb/>
monitors.<lb/>
Local physicians play a big<lb/>
part at the Family Practice<lb/>
Center. Practioners from group i<lb/>
practices spend one day a week<lb/>
there either teaching or acting as<lb/>
preceptors for medical residents,<lb/>
and worked physicians refer<lb/>
patients to the center.<lb/>
Dr. Jones says there will be no<lb/>
"scientific disease research at<lb/>
the Famny Practice Center. The<lb/>
family practitioners at the center<lb/>
concentrate on ordinary people<lb/>
with common, everyday illnesses,<lb/>
Jones says. This is where family<lb/>
medicine and the Family Practice<lb/>
Center will make its mark.<lb/>
Salad Bar Special<lb/>
at the Tree House<lb/>
$1.50<lb/>
AD You Can Eat<lb/>
Wed. From 6:00 - 8:00<lb/>
iv@&amp;<lb/>
.<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
rural areas Vicars commented.<lb/>
The rotation usually lasts a<lb/>
month, during which time AHEC<lb/>
provides housing for students.<lb/>
AHEC also partially reimburses<lb/>
hospitals for students wages<lb/>
during rotations because of the<lb/>
excellent training. After the rotat-<lb/>
ion, the student returns to the<lb/>
central point - EAHEC.<lb/>
The Schools of Medicine,<lb/>
Nursing, Home Economics, and<lb/>
Allied Health Professions of East<lb/>
Carolina, Dentistry, Pharmacy,<lb/>
and Public Health of UNC-Chapel<lb/>
Hill, Duke University Medical<lb/>
Center and Bowman Gray School<lb/>
of Medicineoomprise the EAHEC<lb/>
program.<lb/>
The involvement of physic-<lb/>
ians, dentists, nurses, physical<lb/>
therapists, and other heath-<lb/>
oriented personnel in the contin-<lb/>
uing education phase of EAHEC<lb/>
THE FAMILY PRACTICE Center<lb/>
residency program in dentistry.<lb/>
has grown from last year's 14,000 '<lb/>
to this year s 17,000. Thisphase<lb/>
is the opportunity for health care<lb/>
will also house the two-year<lb/>
Photo by Jeannie Williams<lb/>
professionals to keep abreast of<lb/>
new developments in their parti-<lb/>
cular fields<lb/>
Wiener King<lb/>
Try Our World Famous<lb/>
Foot Long Hot Dog<lb/>
99<lb/>
BIG FRANK, mustard, onions, chili<lb/>
WIENER KING SPECIAL, cheese, mustard, onions, slaw, chili<lb/>
CHEESE DOG, mustard, cheese, onions<lb/>
KRAUT DOG, mustard, onions, chili, sauerkraut<lb/>
SLAW DOG, mustard, onions, cole slaw <lb/>
CHILI DOG, mustard, onions, chili <lb/>
99<lb/>
69<lb/>
.66<lb/>
.66<lb/>
66<lb/>
.59<lb/>
KING BURGER SINGLE<lb/>
14 lb. pattie on toasted bun,<lb/>
cheese 10? txtra, fixed to order<lb/>
KING BURGER DOUBLE<lb/>
V4 lb. pattie on toasted bun,<lb/>
cheese 10 extra, fixed to order<lb/>
KING CORN DOG <lb/>
89<lb/>
1 19<lb/>
59<lb/>
SOUP<lb/>
All you can eat<lb/>
SALAD BAR<lb/>
All you can eat<lb/>
SOUP &amp; SALAD<lb/>
ONION RINGS <lb/>
FRENCH FRIES <lb/>
APPLE PIE <lb/>
LEMON PIE <lb/>
COLE SLAW <lb/>
79<lb/>
 1.69<lb/>
 1.99<lb/>
 59<lb/>
40 55<lb/>
 40<lb/>
 40<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
DRINKS<lb/>
SOFT DRINKS<lb/>
COFFEE <lb/>
ICE TEA <lb/>
MILK <lb/>
.30<lb/>
40<lb/>
.47<lb/>
.25<lb/>
30<lb/>
25<lb/>
Cooked fresh to taste better<lb/>
? at Wiener King ?<lb/>
WIENER KING DOLLAR DINNER<lb/>
STORE HOURS<lb/>
Sunday Thursday<lb/>
11 00 am 10 00pm<lb/>
Friday - Saturday<lb/>
11:00a.m. 1100 p.m.<lb/>
CHILI DOG, PIE OR<lb/>
SMALL FRIES AND SMALL DRINK<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
? WITH THIS COUPON ?<lb/>
Offer Expire June 30, 1978<lb/>
Wiener King<lb/>
<pb facs="00058057_0004"/><lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD June 7 1978<lb/>
EBONY HERALD a waste<lb/>
The Media Board successfully wasted over $5,000<lb/>
Tuesday when it tentatively approved the budget for<lb/>
the EBONY HERALD.<lb/>
For the past three years, the HERALD has<lb/>
disgraced its readers and the ECU campus with its<lb/>
shoddy appearance and elementary content. Aside<lb/>
from the abysmal quality of the paper, it is inherently<lb/>
racist by its almost total devotion to blacks on<lb/>
campus. It is not a minority newspaper as claimed;<lb/>
its name states the paper's focus quite plainly.<lb/>
Just as FOUNTAINHEAD is not devoted entirely<lb/>
to the activities of the white students, neither should<lb/>
the EBONY HERALD devote its pages entirely to the<lb/>
blacks.<lb/>
The idea of a newspaper concentrating solely on<lb/>
black students is just as bigoted as a nawspaper<lb/>
which covers only the activities of white students. If<lb/>
one minority deserves its own newspaper, then every<lb/>
minority deserves its own. By rights, there should be<lb/>
a separate newspaper for foreign, Jewish, gay, and<lb/>
left handed students. Each is a minority.<lb/>
Almost every story printed in the EBONY<lb/>
HERALD had been covered by FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
when it was newsworthy, not when it was two months<lb/>
old.<lb/>
Aocording to the department of Institutional<lb/>
Research, 11,968 students were enrolled during fall<lb/>
semester. Of that number, 879, roughly 14 percent,<lb/>
were black.<lb/>
Presumably, one of the reasons for having a<lb/>
minority newspaper was to cover stories not reported<lb/>
in FOUNTAINHEAD. In practice, however, the<lb/>
EBONY HERALD merely duplicates the efforts of<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD has been charged in the past<lb/>
with not hiring any black writers. The fact of the<lb/>
matter is virtually no blacks, or any other minorities,<lb/>
apply. FOUNTAINHEAD discriminates only on the<lb/>
basis of ability.<lb/>
This division and duplication of efforts between<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD and the EBONY HERALD is<lb/>
counterproductive to the goal of both papers: to<lb/>
oover the campus and community as fully as possible.<lb/>
If the EBONY HERALD were terminated, the<lb/>
present staff would be welcomed at FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD. This paper has never had a surplus of<lb/>
writers.<lb/>
Fountairthead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for arm fifty years.<lb/>
"Were it left to me to decide whether we should have<lb/>
a government without newspapers or newspapers<lb/>
without government, I should not hesitate a moment to<lb/>
prefer the latter<lb/>
Thomas Jeff arson<lb/>
EditorDoug White<lb/>
Managing EditorLeigh Coakley<lb/>
Advertising ManagerRobert M. Swaim<lb/>
News Editors?an2le Williams<lb/>
Jim Barnes<lb/>
Trends EditorSteve Bachner<lb/>
Sports EditorChris Hdlorrtan<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD la the student newspaper of Eait Carolina<lb/>
University aponaorad by the Maola Board of ECU and is<lb/>
dMributad aaoh Tusaday anu Thursday, waatdy during the<lb/>
Matting addraas: OW South BuHdng, OraamHIe, N.C. 278M<lb/>
Editorial orttoaa: 757-6366, 757-4367, 757-6309.<lb/>
$10 annually, alumni 66 annually<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Sune attacks Trends 'editorial'<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I write with referenoe to the<lb/>
article "Summer School Students<lb/>
are 'shortchanged by David<lb/>
Latham.<lb/>
Although the "article"<lb/>
appeared in the Trends section of<lb/>
the paper, it was anything but a<lb/>
feature or news story.<lb/>
I do not claim to have a broad<lb/>
knowledge of journalism, since<lb/>
my background in it is limited to<lb/>
high school journalism classes;<lb/>
however, without question,<lb/>
Latham's article was an editorial.<lb/>
It is my understanding that<lb/>
editorials should be placed on<lb/>
editorial pages a at least labeled<lb/>
as editorials.<lb/>
Latham not only editorialized,<lb/>
but was grossly inaccurate. This<lb/>
fact made this alleged article not<lb/>
just bad, but poor.<lb/>
By spreading his inaccuracies<lb/>
in editorial form, he has deceived<lb/>
students to thinking they have<lb/>
been "shortchanged when in<lb/>
fact, they have not been.<lb/>
Latham begins his editorial by<lb/>
announcing that summer school<lb/>
students are not equal. He states<lb/>
"surely it doesn't take 10,000 of<lb/>
us to have services<lb/>
To some degree, it does take<lb/>
that many of us to have equal<lb/>
services. If Latham had checked<lb/>
with Mendenhall officials, as he<lb/>
did not, he would have found that<lb/>
the Student Center is hardly used<lb/>
when it is open during the<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
The university decided to<lb/>
close Mendenhall at 5 p.m. on<lb/>
weekdays and on weekends be-<lb/>
cause of lack of use.<lb/>
I was told when I inquired,<lb/>
that it would be opened, if<lb/>
students showed the interest.<lb/>
Unfortunately, students do not<lb/>
show the interest.<lb/>
Perhaps Latham is suggesting<lb/>
we pay n ore student fees to keep<lb/>
Mendenhall open on weekends<lb/>
for his private use.<lb/>
If Latham had further re-<lb/>
searched his editorial, he would<lb/>
have found that Mendenhall and<lb/>
films are related about as much as<lb/>
Mendenhall and Athletics. The<lb/>
fact of the matter is that they are<lb/>
not related at all.<lb/>
The films which sometimes<lb/>
are shown in Mendenhall are<lb/>
presented by the Student Union,<lb/>
(a student funded and student<lb/>
operated organization). The<lb/>
? Student Union has offices in<lb/>
Mendenhall, but there is where<lb/>
the similarity ends.<lb/>
Besides being inaccurate,<lb/>
Latham infers that there are<lb/>
droves of students, just waiting to<lb/>
use the many facilities he men-<lb/>
tioned. The facts show to the<lb/>
contrary.<lb/>
Registration is lower than in<lb/>
many past summer sessions.<lb/>
Attendance for the free films is<lb/>
also at a low point.<lb/>
Yet Latham suggests that<lb/>
Mendenhall should be open as<lb/>
should many other buildings.<lb/>
The answer is an economic one.<lb/>
If there are few students to use<lb/>
the faalities, and the few choose<lb/>
not to use them, then close them<lb/>
or limit their hours.<lb/>
ChailesSune<lb/>
'Chauvinist' doctor outrages student<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Well, well. I'm glad to know<lb/>
we have defenders of truth and<lb/>
right on the East Carolina<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
The infirmary doctor, whose<lb/>
name, I am told, is Dr. McLean,<lb/>
"won't prescribe narcotics for<lb/>
dysmenorrhea In other words,<lb/>
the man won't prescribe Empirin<lb/>
3 for cramps.<lb/>
Okay, let's get some back-<lb/>
ground here. Last summer I went<lb/>
to the infirmary to get a pain killer<lb/>
for my cramps.<lb/>
I had used Empirin 3 previ-<lb/>
ously, and it had helped<lb/>
immensely. Empirin 3 has 30<lb/>
milligrams of codeine. Also,<lb/>
having previously used Midol ar d<lb/>
Darvon, with barely diminished<lb/>
pain as the result, I told the<lb/>
doctor that I needed something<lb/>
strong. "This is the best thing<lb/>
I've found in 25 years . . he<lb/>
replied.<lb/>
Unfortunately, I didn't look up<lb/>
the medication in the Physician's<lb/>
Dest Reference until after I took<lb/>
the stuff and suffered through a<lb/>
gruesome siege of cramps. One<lb/>
of the main ingredients was<lb/>
meprobamate, a tranquilizer.<lb/>
Ho, ho, ho Having research-<lb/>
SeeCRAMPS,p. 5<lb/>
<pb facs="00058057_0005"/><lb/>
????????????nHHBHI<lb/>
mm<lb/>
I<lb/>
Crosswinds<lb/>
SBI should test pot for paraquat<lb/>
By JIM BARNES<lb/>
I just wanted to get a few<lb/>
words in before everyone tires of<lb/>
the Paraquat controversy. We<lb/>
have all been aware for some<lb/>
time of the dangers of Paraquat-<lb/>
oontaminated marijuana, b i not,<lb/>
unfortunately enough, as la i as<lb/>
the government has been.<lb/>
There will be arguments rang-<lb/>
ing over the propriety, moral or<lb/>
otherwise, of the government's<lb/>
failureto alert the American public<lb/>
totheexistenoeof Paraquat weed<lb/>
in the U.S. market. What con-<lb/>
cerns me is the direction of some<lb/>
of these arguments and what<lb/>
appears to be a gross oversight on<lb/>
the part of the North Carolina<lb/>
State Bureau of Investigation<lb/>
(SBI).<lb/>
It is understood that the<lb/>
moderate, steady ingestion of<lb/>
Paraquat marijuana may, in a<lb/>
matter of months, lead to per-<lb/>
manent lung damage in the user.<lb/>
There will be those among us<lb/>
who take the attitude that "They<lb/>
had it coming. That'll teach 'em<lb/>
to fool around with drugs<lb/>
Perhaps so; one must, however,<lb/>
pity the individual who expresses<lb/>
such a viewpoint. Such a person<lb/>
places his a her personal moral-<lb/>
izing against the health and<lb/>
safety of the millions of Ameri-<lb/>
cans who are regular users of<lb/>
marijuana.<lb/>
And just who oomprises these<lb/>
millions? Anyone who supposes<lb/>
that all pot smokers are long<lb/>
haired "hippies' who look bad<lb/>
and smell worse probably also<lb/>
believes that frog handling causes<lb/>
warts. In both cases the evidence<lb/>
is to the contrary.<lb/>
It is clear that marijuana users<lb/>
are to be found in every social,<lb/>
economic and education level one<lb/>
cares to name. What should<lb/>
concern us most, however, is the<lb/>
child or teen-<lb/>
age user of pot contaminated with<lb/>
Paraquat.<lb/>
Like it a not people are going<lb/>
to smoke marijuana. And, unfort-<lb/>
unately, many of the users of the<lb/>
CRAMPS<lb/>
continued from p. 4<lb/>
ed the psychological abstracts (of<lb/>
research studies) on the subject<lb/>
of dysmenorrhea, I am aware that<lb/>
cramps are widely considered to<lb/>
be the province of neurotics.<lb/>
OK, so I'm neurotic and so are<lb/>
all my friends and relations. In<lb/>
my life I've known two whole1<lb/>
women who didn't suffer it, and<lb/>
both of them subsequently qot the<lb/>
IUD and now do. I'd like to see<lb/>
some statistics on this!<lb/>
Now for my opinion on the<lb/>
subject. Dr. McLean is a male<lb/>
chauvinist.<lb/>
He is in no danger of ever<lb/>
suffering thiscondition. It is very<lb/>
easy for men to ridicule women<lb/>
about "female complaints<lb/>
Aren t we a sad group of<lb/>
hypochondriacs, though?<lb/>
Someday we'll have more<lb/>
women doctors, glory hallelujah,<lb/>
and a lot of this discriminatory<lb/>
nonsense will go out the window.<lb/>
One final thing off my chest. I<lb/>
strongly resent the implication,<lb/>
implicit in the line about not<lb/>
prescribing narcotics, that I may<lb/>
be a filthy drug-abuser. Noti ing<lb/>
definite, of course, but if I am<lb/>
going to take it once a month as a<lb/>
pain killer, as I claim, then the 30<lb/>
milligrams of codeine per pill is<lb/>
certainly no addiction threat.<lb/>
And the only reasons I can<lb/>
think of why he refuses to<lb/>
prescribe it are either because he<lb/>
doesn't believe that cramps are<lb/>
seriously painful, or he's afraid<lb/>
that the drug will be abused.<lb/>
Now. I'll have to pay $10. the<lb/>
minimum charge for an office<lb/>
visit, to get my gynecologist to<lb/>
re-prescribe this for me.<lb/>
Why am I being charged for<lb/>
infirmary service?<lb/>
Eleanor Webber<lb/>
W<lb/>
a 7521828 oL<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
S<lb/>
(1) SPICED HAM<lb/>
(2) BOLOGNA A CHEESE<lb/>
(3) HAM &amp; SWISS<lb/>
(4) HAM. SWISS &amp; SALAMI<lb/>
(5) TUNA<lb/>
(6) ROAST BEEF<lb/>
(7) TURKEY<lb/>
(8) CLUB<lb/>
(9) SUPER<lb/>
(10) CHEESE<lb/>
(11) HOT PASTROMI<lb/>
(12) HOT CORNED BEEF<lb/>
BUM PIES BEST<lb/>
Come By For The Best<lb/>
Subs In Town<lb/>
Watch Major Sports Events On<lb/>
Our 6 Ft. TV 706 EVANS ST<lb/>
contaminated drug supply will be<lb/>
the youth of America, youngsters<lb/>
who face a life of pulmonary<lb/>
debilitation for the smoking of<lb/>
contaminated pot.<lb/>
This brings us around to the<lb/>
role of our SBI in dealing with this<lb/>
situation. In a FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
article on Paraquat (May 24,<lb/>
1978), the SBI told a reporter that<lb/>
it s lab did not test confiscated<lb/>
marijuana for the presence of<lb/>
Paraquat.<lb/>
Here, then, is the issue. Does<lb/>
the North Carolina public have a<lb/>
right to know if the SBI has<lb/>
confiscated any marijuana fa the<lb/>
traces of Paraquat?<lb/>
There is currently no index<lb/>
available to indicate the amounts<lb/>
of Paraquat found in marijuana<lb/>
which finds its way into the U.S.<lb/>
from Mexioo. Doubtless such an<lb/>
index, however limited in scope,<lb/>
is badly needed.<lb/>
The SBI, while it seizes only<lb/>
minimal amounts of pot reaching<lb/>
the state, is in the best position to<lb/>
test fa the toxicant in pot. Its<lb/>
seizures are random, and any<lb/>
testing fa Paraquat would at<lb/>
least give the public some small<lb/>
indication of the presence of the<lb/>
contaminated drug in the state.<lb/>
If the SBI lab were to routinely<lb/>
test fa Paraquat and then make<lb/>
public the findings, it would have<lb/>
two immediate beneficial effects.<lb/>
First, it would alert the public to<lb/>
the danger of the drug and keep<lb/>
the warning alive in the minds of<lb/>
pa smokers. Secondly, the an-<lb/>
nounced presence of Paraquat-<lb/>
pot in Nath Carolina might curb<lb/>
the use of pot among the young,<lb/>
whose infamatioi oonoerning the<lb/>
danger is most likely to be<lb/>
minimal.<lb/>
It is quite possibly na in best<lb/>
judgement fa people to smoke<lb/>
marijuana until the present aisis<lb/>
is resolved. Yet fa those who<lb/>
'4<lb/>
xitinue to gamble that their pa<lb/>
ill na contain Paraquat does<lb/>
le State na owe some indicat-<lb/>
n, however innaocurate a part-<lb/>
ial, of the amounts of Paraquat<lb/>
being found in marijuana confisc-<lb/>
ated in Nath Carolina?<lb/>
The decision may na be an<lb/>
easy one, but reduced to terms of<lb/>
the value of human health and life<lb/>
itself, perhaps we should put the<lb/>
welfare of all citizens, pot<lb/>
smokers a na, befae any<lb/>
maalizing as to the relative merit<lb/>
a justice of oonsequenoes result-<lb/>
ing from an action of an indivi-<lb/>
dual, whetha it isa misdemeana<lb/>
a merely distasteful.<lb/>
Mfe<lb/>
Mendenhail Student Center<lb/>
WITH COUPON:<lb/>
BOWL 1 game, get the 2nd game<lb/>
FREE!<lb/>
OR<lb/>
Play BILLIARDS Vi hour, get the<lb/>
2nd V2 hour FREE!<lb/>
Limit: 1 coupon per customer<lb/>
Arby's<lb/>
a delicious<lb/>
change<lb/>
of taste!<lb/>
Clip these coupons and SAVE!<lb/>
$210<lb/>
Buy up to 6 in multiples of 2<lb/>
save<lb/>
Buy up to 8 In multiples o? 2<lb/>
save<lb/>
A 65<lb/>
J L<lb/>
Coupons expire 61778<lb/>
Capons expire 61778<lb/>
These money-saving coupons good at:<lb/>
Arby's in Greenville<lb/>
E Greenville Blvd. in Greenville Square<lb/>
<pb facs="00058057_0006"/><lb/>
6 FOUNTAINHEAD Jura 7 1978<lb/>
Father-son steeplejacks<lb/>
STEEPLEJACK J. L. button hangs in were.<lb/>
 Photo by Jeannie Williams<lb/>
a Baylor daydate quartz watch<lb/>
lets him know he's done all right!<lb/>
Both available in yellow or white finish,<lb/>
a. $135 b. $150<lb/>
Father's Day is June 18.<lb/>
Elegant gift wrap at no extra charge.<lb/>
Charge it!<lb/>
Open a Zales account or use<lb/>
one of five national credit plans<lb/>
Zales Revolving Charge ? Zales Custom Charge<lb/>
VISA ? Master Charge ? American Express<lb/>
Diners Club ? Carte Blanche ? Layaway<lb/>
ZALES<lb/>
The Diamond Store<lb/>
illustration enlarged<lb/>
The family that hangs together. . .<lb/>
By JIM BARNES<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Vernon Morris and his dad<lb/>
were on campus Monday, literal-<lb/>
ly. Or, to be more specific, they<lb/>
were on Greene dorm.<lb/>
YOU see, Vernon Maris and<lb/>
his son (middle names are<lb/>
different) are steeplejacks  those<lb/>
adventurous folks who hang from<lb/>
buildings, washing windows and<lb/>
generally doing things which may<lb/>
only be done by hanging on the<lb/>
side of a building.<lb/>
Vernon Morris Sr. has been a<lb/>
steeplejack for some 43 years and<lb/>
his father taught him the profes-<lb/>
sion. So it was natural for<lb/>
Vernon's son Vernon to pick up<lb/>
the family talent when he was 16<lb/>
years old.<lb/>
High Court ruling<lb/>
Heights do not bother the<lb/>
steeplejacks, Maris said. How-<lb/>
, ever he added, "you don't<lb/>
faget where you are a you're<lb/>
liable to make a mistake<lb/>
The most challenging job in<lb/>
recent memay fa Maris &amp; Sai<lb/>
occurred last winter during the<lb/>
high winds in New Bern. "The<lb/>
wind had blown some large<lb/>
copper plates loose from the<lb/>
steeple of this church in New<lb/>
Bern he said, "and we had to<lb/>
go up there and secure them in<lb/>
the high winds, in the dark<lb/>
Maris recalled that that job<lb/>
resulted in publicity and instant<lb/>
fame in the New Bern area<lb/>
Although most steeplejacking as-<lb/>
signments are not as dangerous<lb/>
as the steeple in New Bern, there<lb/>
is inherent to the job a danger<lb/>
which most people would not<lb/>
consider inconsequential<lb/>
The basic equipment fa a<lb/>
steeplejack is a board sling device<lb/>
attached to what looks like a large<lb/>
grappling hook. The hook is<lb/>
placed over the roof of a building<lb/>
and the steeplejack is then<lb/>
lowered down to wherever the<lb/>
wak is needed. There is no safety<lb/>
device aside from the vigilance of<lb/>
co-wakers and the hook itself.<lb/>
Mans and his father, along<lb/>
with J.L. Suttof were on the<lb/>
campus Monday to patch some<lb/>
cauik-wak between the windows<lb/>
of Greene Dam.<lb/>
Injuries? Na a problem, ac-<lb/>
oading to the younger Mans.<lb/>
You dai t have mina accidents<lb/>
in this business he observed<lb/>
cooly. "you just get killed<lb/>
Little to return to N.C.<lb/>
By JIM BARNES<lb/>
News Edita<lb/>
The U S Supreme Court<lb/>
Monday effectively ended Joan<lb/>
Little's attempts to escape extrad-<lb/>
ition to Nath Carolina, where she<lb/>
is scheduled to finish a prison<lb/>
term fa breaking, entering and<lb/>
larceny.<lb/>
William Kunstler, Little's at-<lb/>
taney, had petitioied Supreme<lb/>
Court Justice Thurgcod Marshall<lb/>
fa a delay of extradition pending<lb/>
federal appeal.<lb/>
Mr. Justice Marshall deferred<lb/>
the request to the full court,<lb/>
which denied, the request fa<lb/>
delay without comment.<lb/>
Kunstler'snext step will be made<lb/>
in Nath Carolina, where he plans<lb/>
to file suit and "attack all the<lb/>
,hings done to her a threatened<lb/>
to to be done to her  denial of<lb/>
parole, denials of rights and<lb/>
privileges, brutalizations, depriv-<lb/>
ations - everything we've alleged<lb/>
up here (New Yak)<lb/>
Little, acquitted in the ice-pick<lb/>
slaying of Beaufat County jailer,<lb/>
Clarence Allegcod in 1975. es-<lb/>
caped from a Nath Carolina<lb/>
prison and fled to New Yak<lb/>
where her case has become a<lb/>
causecelebre for civil rights and<lb/>
feminist aganizatiois.<lb/>
After her arrest following a<lb/>
high-speed auto chase in New<lb/>
Yak City, Little, mainly through<lb/>
her attaneys Kunstler and Jerry<lb/>
Paul, has repeatedly voiced con-<lb/>
cern fa her persaial safety if she<lb/>
was faced to return to Nath<lb/>
Carolina to complete her mini-<lb/>
mum 7 year sentence.<lb/>
Nath Carolina officials i epea-<lb/>
tedly have denied the existence of<lb/>
any threat to Little, and now plan<lb/>
fa her return to the state wihtin a<lb/>
few days.<lb/>
Noting that "the principle<lb/>
concern is to get her (Little) back<lb/>
into a namal routine William<lb/>
T. Noblitt. infamatioi and com-<lb/>
municatiois co-adinata fa the<lb/>
N.C. Department of Carections.<lb/>
stated that the famahties of<lb/>
Little's return to Nath Carolina<lb/>
would take several days.<lb/>
In the suit to be filed in<lb/>
Raleigh, Kunslter is expected to<lb/>
make public the name of the<lb/>
"highly placed prison source"<lb/>
who is to substantiate the legiti-<lb/>
macy of the threats to Little's life<lb/>
upon her return to the N.C.<lb/>
prison.<lb/>
tliL ??? J J Sb JJi!) 0<lb/>
iib, J iib'2. ttU&amp;UUlM 3MNNIS&amp; 9&amp;M<lb/>
??<lb/>
. .? ? 'ji t<lb/>
<pb facs="00058057_0007"/><lb/>
????MBnnBeseMBHBMBnMenlBlHBInnH<lb/>
??Ml<lb/>
June 7 1978 FOUNTAINMEAD<lb/>
at<lb/>
iot<lb/>
a<lb/>
oe<lb/>
ge<lb/>
is<lb/>
ng<lb/>
en<lb/>
he<lb/>
rty<lb/>
of<lb/>
g<lb/>
he<lb/>
ne<lb/>
vs<lb/>
k<lb/>
is.<lb/>
its<lb/>
ed<lb/>
;a-<lb/>
of<lb/>
an<lb/>
i a<lb/>
tie<lb/>
ck<lb/>
im<lb/>
n-<lb/>
ie<lb/>
is,<lb/>
of<lb/>
la<lb/>
in<lb/>
to<lb/>
he<lb/>
5<lb/>
ti-<lb/>
fe<lb/>
C.<lb/>
univiicv<lb/>
East Carolina University's largest<lb/>
student operated and largest<lb/>
student budgeted organization.<lb/>
Michael Morse<lb/>
President<lb/>
Committees<lb/>
Chair people<lb/>
Art Exhibition Jeff Fleming<lb/>
Artist Series<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
Jay Downie<lb/>
Doug White<lb/>
ENTERTAINER Joyce Mourning<lb/>
Films Lynda Taylor<lb/>
Lecture Kathy Dixon<lb/>
Major Attractions Charles Sune<lb/>
Minority Arts Faye Elliott<lb/>
Special Attractions Randy Sessoms<lb/>
Theatre Arts Linda Bowden<lb/>
Travel Bill Martin<lb/>
FREE FILMS<lb/>
1978<lb/>
Summer Calendar<lb/>
JUNE<lb/>
6 Islands in the Stream Mall g p m<lb/>
12 Watermelon Feast, Mall, Noon<lb/>
13 Thieves, Mall, 9p.m.<lb/>
19 Watermelon Feast, Mall, Noon<lb/>
20 Black Sunday, Mall, 9 p.m.<lb/>
26 Watermelon Feast, Mall, Noon<lb/>
27 Chinatown, Mall, 9 p.m.<lb/>
Exams<lb/>
28 Registration, Wright Auditorium and Memorial Gym, 9a.m4 p.m.<lb/>
JULY<lb/>
CINfM<lb/>
3 Watermelon Feast, Mall, Noon<lb/>
4 Independence Day<lb/>
10 Watermelon Feast, Mall, Noon<lb/>
Warehouse, Mall, 8 p.m.<lb/>
11 The Possession of Joel Delaney, Mall, 9 p.m.<lb/>
17 Watermelon Feast, Mall, Noon<lb/>
18 Play it Again Sam, Mall, 9 p.m.<lb/>
25 The Last Tycoon, Mall, 9 p.m.<lb/>
AUGUST<lb/>
Exams<lb/>
UniVEIMCV<lb/>
?riTinn-<lb/>
7S7-66U (Ex. MO)<lb/>
FREE CONCERT<lb/>
JUNE 12, 1978<lb/>
COOD HUfflOR<lb/>
of Richmond, Va.<lb/>
Campus Mall - 8:00 P.M.<lb/>
In cast of rainWright Auditorium<lb/>
Sponsored by Special Attractions Committee<lb/>
Offices: 233,234 235,236&amp;237 Located in Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
i - - -<lb/>
<pb facs="00058057_0008"/><lb/>
  ?? - ???,??<lb/>
Pages FQUNTAINHEAD June 7 1978<lb/>
Captivated audience<lb/>
Hartford's Roxy concert 'polished and refreshing<lb/>
By CHRIS FARREN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Country-folk musician, John<lb/>
Hartford performed hi? own<lb/>
brand of homespun melodies this<lb/>
past Tuesday and Wednesday<lb/>
nights at the Roxy Theatre here in<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Most widely recognized for his<lb/>
appearances on the Glen Camp-<lb/>
bell show and for writing "Gentle<lb/>
on My Mind Hartford is also no<lb/>
stranger to the studio, with<lb/>
several albums to his credit, so<lb/>
evening not soon forgotten.<lb/>
Stone faced and silent, he<lb/>
grabbed his fiddle and plunged<lb/>
into a rousing country tune, all<lb/>
the while keeping time in a<lb/>
syncopated kind of tap dance with<lb/>
his elednc shoes.<lb/>
The nearly ten minute fiddle<lb/>
jam was interspersed with mono-<lb/>
tone like lines about "greezy<lb/>
flour or something like that.<lb/>
If ever there was a modern<lb/>
day Vaudeville, this ad and this<lb/>
night would epitomize it, for<lb/>
Hartford fused aspects of danc-<lb/>
Trends<lb/>
the scene was set for his<lb/>
Greenville shows.<lb/>
After hearing of his unenthus-<lb/>
iastic perfromance to a half filled<lb/>
ho"se Tuesday, I approached the<lb/>
Roxy Wednesday night with<lb/>
mixed ideas of what to exped.<lb/>
ever, once I turned off<lb/>
street on to Elizabeth, I<lb/>
realized that this night would be<lb/>
"erent.<lb/>
The street was filled with<lb/>
pickups and economy imports<lb/>
white people, coolers in hand and<lb/>
pockets filled, swarmed around<lb/>
the entrance to the Roxy, Green-<lb/>
ville sown folk arts center.<lb/>
Certainly something must be<lb/>
said for the good-time feeling of<lb/>
the crowd.for the place was alive,<lb/>
filled, and ready for some good<lb/>
tunes.<lb/>
After inspired performances<lb/>
by two of Greenville's top female<lb/>
acts. Frankie Martin and Maria<lb/>
Dawkins, Hartford took the stage.<lb/>
From that point on, one could<lb/>
sense that this would be an<lb/>
mg. singing, playing and humor<lb/>
together, and the audience re-<lb/>
ceived it all with open arms.<lb/>
Finishing this opening song<lb/>
to a thunderous response, (more<lb/>
yells than dapping), Hartford<lb/>
moved to the banjo.<lb/>
This time he utilized both his<lb/>
feet and his mouth for percussion<lb/>
on a kind of stepped up banjo-<lb/>
blues number.<lb/>
It was during this tune that<lb/>
Haifad first acknowledged the<lb/>
crowd with the words, "let me<lb/>
hear you dap to which the<lb/>
audience immediately responded.<lb/>
At this point, Hartford's crazy<lb/>
one-man-band act had the crowd<lb/>
totally captivated; however, one<lb/>
could not be sure whether it was<lb/>
because of amazement or pure<lb/>
enjoyment.<lb/>
From there the show took on a<lb/>
more serious tone as Hartford<lb/>
segued into the dassic "Gentle<lb/>
on My Mind showing a truly<lb/>
different more sensitive side and<lb/>
proving his ability to any skeptics<lb/>
as a serious songwriter.<lb/>
Whether played on a banjo or<lb/>
a jewsharp, one must acknow-<lb/>
ledge the greatness of this song,<lb/>
both musically and lyrically.<lb/>
From here, Hartford moved<lb/>
steadily through his 90 minute<lb/>
show with a very casual yet<lb/>
solemn attitude, and all the while<lb/>
the crowd stayed with him;<lb/>
through the dimax of the call'n<lb/>
respond "We Both Still Love The<lb/>
Mississippi River to the night's<lb/>
low spot, "Hey Babe You Wanna<lb/>
Boogie<lb/>
In a show that contained such<lb/>
favorites as "Going Off To Work<lb/>
In Tall Buildings" and another<lb/>
song which utilized chord names<lb/>
for its entire lyrics, somehow this<lb/>
light hearted performace contain-<lb/>
ed just enough sincerity to<lb/>
showcase Hart fad's professiona-<lb/>
lism.<lb/>
However, while Hartford's<lb/>
expertise on his instruments<lb/>
cannot be questioned, his song<lb/>
selection can.<lb/>
As the first part of the show<lb/>
was thoroughly refreshing and<lb/>
enjoyable, after an hour, his<lb/>
novelty oriented ad began to get<lb/>
a little too novelty oriented.<lb/>
Where the tongue-in-cheek<lb/>
lyrics, call'n-response, and tap<lb/>
dancing ideas were used effed-<lb/>
ively through the initial sedions,<lb/>
by the end they were steadily<lb/>
losing their punch.<lb/>
"THE CROWD RALLIED<lb/>
WITH TREMENDOUS<lb/>
PARTICIPATION<lb/>
Still, Hartford ended with<lb/>
a foot stomping fiddle tune, and<lb/>
once again the crowd rallied with<lb/>
tremendous partidpation, while<lb/>
dancers swung frantically in<lb/>
front.<lb/>
Exiting with several deep<lb/>
bows, the crowd brought him<lb/>
back to the tune of "Orange<lb/>
HA R TFOHU FLA YS THE baniowithabandor!SIKypnot, <lb/>
fiddle. He also creates a unique sound with his six string guitar<lb/>
Hartford's fame skyrocketed with Glenn Campbell's recording of<lb/>
'Gentle on my Mind which won three Grammies and was for two<lb/>
years the most recorded song in the world After the success of this<lb/>
song, Hartford began to reevaluate his own musical development and<lb/>
ultimately concluded that performing solo would be challenging<lb/>
Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
Hart fad's perfamance had<lb/>
been totally at a musical level, fa<lb/>
he said nothing, and the aowd<lb/>
had accpeted it as just that.<lb/>
His ad was polished and<lb/>
shing.andlel sjust h.pethe<lb/>
ontinue to bring us<lb/>
ts, and that<lb/>
futun noes will oontinu<lb/>
be so di ei.<lb/>
Blossom Special putting every-<lb/>
one present on their feet.<lb/>
A second encae was in ader,<lb/>
and the grateful aowd was<lb/>
rewarded with another rousing<lb/>
fiddle tune.<lb/>
At the end the tl<lb/>
filled with smiles and the air with<lb/>
good vibes.<lb/>
HA RTFORD' S PROFESSION A L SUCCESS<lb/>
has given him the fre dom to take time off for his<lb/>
other love- river boat! . He spends every moment he<lb/>
can aboard the graor ul beauties just as he did in his<lb/>
youth He spent ountless hours memorizing the<lb/>
minute details of jur greatest river, the Mississippi,<lb/>
a basic requirement for becoming a licensed<lb/>
nverboat pilot This love of life on the river was<lb/>
beautifully expressed in his music. When Hartford<lb/>
sang "Skippm in the Mississippi Dew and "Julia<lb/>
Belle Swaim the words and music were true and<lb/>
tender expressions. Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
If ever there was a modern<lb/>
day for Vaudeville, this act<lb/>
would epitomize it, for<lb/>
Hartford fused aspects of<lb/>
dancing, singing, playing<lb/>
and humor together, and<lb/>
the audience received it<lb/>
all with open arms<lb/>
<pb facs="00058057_0009"/><lb/>
???????????????????iBBBBBBBWMBBBI<lb/>
The album features his acoustic guitar<lb/>
June 7 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Paged<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
Magic in Your Eyes is Earl Klugh's latest LP<lb/>
By JEFF ROLLINS<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
Earl Klugh plays the guitar in<lb/>
iat is a bright oonooction<lb/>
and disco. On his<lb/>
im, Magic In Your Eyes,<lb/>
plays the acoustic guitar<lb/>
isively, and is accompanied<lb/>
by electric bass, drums, and<lb/>
'ic piano with brief prances<lb/>
the synthesizer.<lb/>
Klugh plays the guitar ex-<lb/>
sively. One of the songs on<lb/>
the album is the old favorite,<lb/>
Cast Your Fate to the Wind<lb/>
and he succeeds in interpreting<lb/>
this jazz standard in a new and<lb/>
interesting way.<lb/>
He makes the song effective<lb/>
igain. This song, in its stirring<lb/>
optimism, is indicative of the<lb/>
tig of the whole album.<lb/>
Klugh's is a happy, contemporary<lb/>
, ic.<lb/>
Another familiar song on the<lb/>
album is "Good Time Charlie's<lb/>
Got the Blues<lb/>
Because of the rhythm and<lb/>
Klugh's insouciant interpreta-<lb/>
tion, mis generally melancholy<lb/>
song has a twinkle we rarely see<lb/>
tseye.<lb/>
"Mayaguez" is a strident<lb/>
-American melody and<lb/>
Klugh plays it con brio. "Cry a<lb/>
e While Alicia" are<lb/>
other songs on the album which<lb/>
Klugh invests with his own<lb/>
rgy.<lb/>
"LodeStar" has a synthesizer<lb/>
beginning which is almost too<lb/>
reminiscent of the beginning of<lb/>
Steppenwdf's'Born to be Wild<lb/>
"Magic in Your Eyes the<lb/>
title cut, is a formulaic disco<lb/>
number and il is surprising that<lb/>
Klugh would choose the song in<lb/>
which he is least himself and most<lb/>
like everybody Hse for the title<lb/>
ce.<lb/>
Klugh is an impeccable studio<lb/>
musician who plays with wit and<lb/>
with rich interpretations that<lb/>
bring out the dramatic possibili-<lb/>
ties of his songs.<lb/>
He is accompanied by Gregory<lb/>
Philhnganes, who plays electric<lb/>
piano, and who also does some of<lb/>
the most interesting musical<lb/>
things on the album.<lb/>
Unfortunately though, the<lb/>
bass and percussion are mixed<lb/>
much too loudly and are down-<lb/>
right distracting from the per-<lb/>
formances of Klugh and<lb/>
Philhnganes.<lb/>
Even after this reviewer<lb/>
turned the tone knob to nearly<lb/>
maximum treble, the electric basc<lb/>
and drums obscured some of<lb/>
Klugh sguitar work on the lower<lb/>
strings. The bad mixing is an<lb/>
unfortunate blunder on an other-<lb/>
wise soundly put-together<lb/>
product album.<lb/>
Magic in Your Eyes makes up<lb/>
in performance what it lacks in<lb/>
musical innovation.<lb/>
The music on the album is<lb/>
finely done popular jazz and<lb/>
disco. It is music a la Mann and<lb/>
Hancock with the added flavor<lb/>
and character of the guitar.<lb/>
Album courtesy of Record Bar<lb/>
EARL KLUGH PLA YS the guitar in a style that is a bright concoction of up-beat azz<lb/>
Nova attempts to mix<lb/>
and rock on Wings<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
Religion and rock have never<lb/>
ed particularly well, especial<lb/>
ly a relatively obscure religion<lb/>
nat of Guru Sri Chinmoy.<lb/>
Nevertheless, he has inspired<lb/>
som besl musicians in the<lb/>
or, more precisely, fusion<lb/>
genre, notably Mahavishnu John<lb/>
McLaughlin and Narada Michael<lb/>
len<lb/>
Under Waiden's tutelage, -<lb/>
(Elio D'Anna, sax and<lb/>
. Corrado Rustia, guitars;<lb/>
Renato Rosset, keyboards; Barry<lb/>
Johnson, bass; and Ric Parnell,<lb/>
percussion), has glorified it's<lb/>
pi ritual leader without compro-<lb/>
mising it's originality. In the<lb/>
process, they succeeded in re-<lb/>
cording one of the best rockjazz<lb/>
hybrids in recent years, Wings of<lb/>
Love,<lb/>
Nova's music is based primar-<lb/>
ily around Rustid's guitars and<lb/>
D Anna's woodwinds. The result<lb/>
is an invigorating sound, accent-<lb/>
uated by a forceful rhythm<lb/>
section.<lb/>
The album opens with "You<lb/>
? Are Light, "a bright song with i<lb/>
several clever changes, climaxing<lb/>
in a fiercely percussive guitar<lb/>
solo, then mellowing out to the<lb/>
original melody.<lb/>
"Marshall Dillon an instru-<lb/>
mental piece, displays Johnson's<lb/>
skills as a bassist. The flute solo is<lb/>
reminiscent of the old "Mission:<lb/>
Impossible theme song.<lb/>
"Blue Lake" is one of the<lb/>
band's odes to how great it is to<lb/>
know Him and to follow His<lb/>
guidance. The music is solemn, at<lb/>
times more like an Indian chant<lb/>
than a song. The slow, sensual<lb/>
rhythm serves as a perfect<lb/>
counterpoint to the eerie sax line.<lb/>
The lyrics aren't nearly as<lb/>
pretentious as one would expect<lb/>
from the subject matter, but they<lb/>
still must be taken with a grain of<lb/>
salt.<lb/>
Side one ends with "Beauty<lb/>
Dream-Beauty Flame a seem-<lb/>
ingly endless acoustic number.<lb/>
This band is best when it's fast.<lb/>
They seem to lose control of their<lb/>
ideas and flounder in lush washes<lb/>
of sound whenever they unplug<lb/>
their instruments and slow their<lb/>
music to a plodding fourfour<lb/>
time.<lb/>
The band regains its stride on<lb/>
side two with "Golden Sky Boat<lb/>
another one of their "gee, like<lb/>
sure was a drag until I heard<lb/>
about the guru songs. The<lb/>
breakneck pace of this tune<lb/>
compensates for the simplistic<lb/>
philosophisizing of the lyrics.<lb/>
Devotion is one thing, but blind<lb/>
religion<lb/>
of Love<lb/>
obedience is a little much.<lb/>
Ric Parnell demonstrates his<lb/>
impressive abilities as a percus-<lb/>
sionist here, with an impeccable<lb/>
drum solo towards the end.<lb/>
A bizarre chord change by<lb/>
Rustia violently shifts gears<lb/>
towards the end of the song, with<lb/>
the chord pattern repeated under<lb/>
See NOVA, p. <lb/>
BOYD'S BARBER<lb/>
AND HAIRSTYUNG<lb/>
1008 S. Evans St<lb/>
Phone 758-4056<lb/>
by Appointment Only<lb/>
Melvin H. Bovd<lb/>
Melvin H. Boyd jr.<lb/>
Franklin C Tripp<lb/>
I onitc and Tlmrs. Site at the<lb/>
(reenvilles own Hard llrivin<lb/>
i<lb/>
TEiVTH AVE BAiYD<lb/>
He There Tonite &amp; Tlmrs.<lb/>
I ri. &amp; Sat. It.H Specials Till 11:00<lb/>
Sun. is I.ailicrs Xitc &amp; Oriciitation<lb/>
Hon. Orientation Specials<lb/>
Tne.rav Tne.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058057_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD Juno 7 1978<lb/>
Th?a'Cola van is a new mobOe sculpture<lb/>
ByJEANNIE WILLIAMS<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
You' re driving along the high-<lb/>
way on a summer day when you<lb/>
catch a red light and pull up at the<lb/>
intersection, waiting impatiently<lb/>
for the light to change.<lb/>
Then you see it.<lb/>
Arms, legs, heads and torsos<lb/>
clinging precariously to the sides<lb/>
of a 78 Ford Van as though<lb/>
emerging from its mass. A red<lb/>
and white ?Coca-Cola" logo<lb/>
wraps itself around the figures,<lb/>
distorting the images. One of the<lb/>
figures lies spread eagle on the<lb/>
roof, gazing at the sky.<lb/>
As the van turns, laughing<lb/>
faces emerge from the closed<lb/>
back doors.<lb/>
The traffic that had come to a<lb/>
standstill now begins to move<lb/>
again, drivers shaking their heads<lb/>
in amazement.<lb/>
What drivers have .seen and<lb/>
what thousands will be seeing<lb/>
this summer is a fiberglass<lb/>
sculptural piece of figures attach-<lb/>
ed to a 1978 Ford van.<lb/>
The sculptural piece was<lb/>
conceived by Rich Griendling,<lb/>
currently an artist-in-residence in<lb/>
Elizabethtown, Kentucky.<lb/>
Griendling has held a variety<lb/>
of positions including artist-in-the<lb/>
-schools, graphic designer for<lb/>
education television and a<lb/>
publishing studio, and freelanc-<lb/>
ing in the fields of painting,<lb/>
drawing and sculpture.<lb/>
Griendling graduated from<lb/>
ECU in Greenville, N.C. in 1972<lb/>
THIS1978 FORD van is a fiberglass sculptural p,ece conceiv!<lb/>
Gnendl.ng, currently an artist-s-revdence SZSS2SJK<lb/>
with a B.F.A. in commercial art<lb/>
and minor in painting and crafts.<lb/>
His work has earned him<lb/>
several awards, including gold<lb/>
medals for magazine oovers from<lb/>
the Philadelphia Art Directors<lb/>
Club.<lb/>
"The idea for the van was<lb/>
conceived in December of 1976<lb/>
and began taking shape in<lb/>
September of last year Griendl-<lb/>
ing said.<lb/>
"It came from my previous<lb/>
work, which was dealing with<lb/>
three-dimensional canvases that<lb/>
used a Coca-Cola logo. Being in a<lb/>
two-dimensional space, I used the<lb/>
logo to define the three-dimens-<lb/>
The Coca-Coa Company in Elizabethtown funded the protect.<lb/>
Art &amp; Camera Shop<lb/>
526 SOUTH COTANCHE STREET GREENVILLE. N. C 27834<lb/>
ional space<lb/>
"The defining aspect comes<lb/>
by the logo distorting on the<lb/>
figures so that this d?nrtina on<lb/>
the figures is what shows the-<lb/>
three- dimensional space coming<lb/>
forward he explained.<lb/>
MADE 18-PAGE<lb/>
DESCRIPTION<lb/>
Griendling made an 18-page<lb/>
presentation of his art work and<lb/>
his plans fa the van and<lb/>
presented it to the president of<lb/>
the Elizabethtown Coca-Cola bot-<lb/>
tling company.<lb/>
"I sent it to Mr. William<lb/>
Schmidt, the president of the<lb/>
local company, because he had<lb/>
earlier bought a painting in one of<lb/>
my shows Griendling said.<lb/>
I thought it would be a good<lb/>
idea sinoe he knew something<lb/>
about my work as opposed to just<lb/>
.sending it jiway to the Coke<lb/>
12 Exp. Color<lb/>
Dwwtopedandf<lb/>
? OAF<lb/>
(roiW0rt FMm<lb/>
$2.49<lb/>
VAUUASLI COUPON <lb/>
mX ACCOMPANY r-<lb/>
W<lb/>
20 Exp. Color film<lb/>
Developed and Printe<lb/>
. ? OAF<lb/>
Mot Inducted<lb/>
$3.49<lb/>
'mus<lb/>
VAUMBUI COUPON i<lb/>
IwSl ACCCM?AWYO?Ot?l<lb/>
UPON<lb/>
MOVIE OR SLIDE<lb/>
Ektachrom or Kodachromo Processing<lb/>
20 Ea<lb/>
$1.49 ?"?<lb/>
, VALUABU COUPON ,<lb/>
I mm ACCOMPANY OHQtK'<lb/>
PLAZA CAMERA<lb/>
WECU RADIO<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
LEGAL NOTICE<lb/>
Notice is hereby given that<lb/>
on Wed May 24, 1978, East<lb/>
Carolina University tendered an<lb/>
application to the Federal Com-<lb/>
munications Commission in<lb/>
Washington D.C requesting a<lb/>
construction permit for a new<lb/>
Educational FM Broadcasting<lb/>
Station in Greenville, North Car<lb/>
olina to operate on FM Channel<lb/>
217D, 91.3 M Hz, with a transmit-<lb/>
ter power output of 10 watts and<lb/>
an effective radiated power of<lb/>
18.78 watts from an antenna<lb/>
radiation center 134 feet above<lb/>
average terrain. The proposed<lb/>
studios and transmitter will be<lb/>
located on the campus of East<lb/>
Carolina University in Greenville.<lb/>
The proposed antenna support<lb/>
structure will extend a total of 139<lb/>
feet above ground level. A copy of<lb/>
the above referenced application<lb/>
which contains a complete listing<lb/>
of the applicants, officers, and<lb/>
governing board is on file for<lb/>
public inspection during normal<lb/>
business hours at the offices of<lb/>
WECU, and Tommy Joe Payne,<lb/>
President of The ECU Student<lb/>
Government Association at Men-<lb/>
denhall Student Center. May 24<lb/>
26,29,31, 1978.<lb/>
company<lb/>
The Coca-Cola company in<lb/>
Elizabethtown decided to fund<lb/>
the project with supplies includ-<lb/>
ing the van and all the fiberglass.<lb/>
At the same time, the Harding<lb/>
County school district in Kent-<lb/>
ucky heard about it and approach-<lb/>
ed Griendling with a proposal.<lb/>
"They thought it would be<lb/>
good if they would fund it as far<lb/>
as providing a salary and a studio<lb/>
for me and in turn I would work<lb/>
with 8 to 10 students every day as<lb/>
apprentices Griendling explain-<lb/>
ed. "The whole idea was to show<lb/>
the student how a professional<lb/>
works in the art field, how they<lb/>
make a living at it he said.<lb/>
"I've worked with these students<lb/>
sinoe, and they've been a really<lb/>
good group he said, smiling.<lb/>
The project began in October<lb/>
of last year with the expected date<lb/>
of completion to be around June<lb/>
10, according to Griendling.<lb/>
"It will be approximately 8<lb/>
months, and that's working 8 to<lb/>
10 hours a day myself and the<lb/>
students working a total of 5<lb/>
hours a day Griendling said.<lb/>
TOOK 5,000 HOURS<lb/>
OF WORK<lb/>
"I think it's somewhere a-<lb/>
round 5,000 hours, which is a hell<lb/>
of alot of work he said grinning.<lb/>
Griendling discussed the fu-<lb/>
ture plans fa the van once it is<lb/>
completed.<lb/>
2&amp;J22&amp;&amp;,<lb/>
"<lb/>
R<lb/>
-fox hlcnLcA ox that<lb/>
rejJ&amp;ml at fJL (jzacfi<lb/>
$2.98 ami $6.08<lb/>
"Coke actually owns the van. I<lb/>
have total use of it for just over<lb/>
two years. At the end of that<lb/>
period it will be turned over to the<lb/>
Elizabethtown bottling company<lb/>
unless something happens be-<lb/>
tween now and the two years he<lb/>
explained.<lb/>
Griendling discussed his plans<lb/>
for the van this summer.<lb/>
"This summer my wife and I<lb/>
will do some traveling, to Georgia<lb/>
and then back up to North<lb/>
Carolina and then New Jersey<lb/>
then back to Kentucky. Then<lb/>
we're going to head out for<lb/>
California and be out there<lb/>
around the end of July or early<lb/>
August.<lb/>
WHOLE IDEA TO<lb/>
HAVE FUN<lb/>
"The whole idea of the thing<lb/>
was to have fun. I was enjoying<lb/>
what I was doing and the idea of<lb/>
the van was to have a contmuat-<lb/>
,on of that fun and not worry<lb/>
aoout it being wrecked or about<lb/>
exhibiting ,t. just by driving it<lb/>
ound ?'? be exhibiting it he<lb/>
"lalwaysthought.twaskind<lb/>
0 funnVhe 'dea that the people<lb/>
always had to come to the work<lb/>
and gallery, the museum or<lb/>
atever. At least this is one<lb/>
chance where ,t can actually come<lb/>
,0 ,hem' ' Greindling explained.<lb/>
"As far as getting wrecked,<lb/>
t s always possible. It's some-<lb/>
,ng you just don't worryabout I<lb/>
i, if you want to be realistic<lb/>
You just don't worry. If (, gets<lb/>
Pamaged, which it probably will<lb/>
some sense, you just hope it's<lb/>
e minor damage and that it<lb/>
be repaired he said<lb/>
grinning.<lb/>
"Fiberglass repairs fairly<lb/>
b it's not like metal. It cracks<lb/>
ten you hit it, but I'm not<lb/>
-rned about it Griendling<lb/>
aid. a<lb/>
"I think it's interesting for<lb/>
ne thing that 90 percent of<lb/>
ale we drive by see it .It's very<lb/>
ious. They stand there and<lb/>
(are You think of driving around<lb/>
nd the actual millions of people<lb/>
hat you will exhibit this work to,<lb/>
See TRAVELING, p. ij)<lb/>
<pb facs="00058057_0011"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
June 7 1978 FOUNTAINHSAP Page 11<lb/>
Traveling piece of art will be seen by 'millions'<lb/>
continued from p. 10<lb/>
and you're talking about thous-<lb/>
ands Griendling said excitedly.<lb/>
"In this type of exhibiting,<lb/>
you'll be hitting millions directly<lb/>
and it'll be that many million<lb/>
more that will be told about it<lb/>
Greindling desribed some of<lb/>
the reactions he had gotten<lb/>
through very limited driving of he<lb/>
van.<lb/>
"When we oome to a traffic<lb/>
light, nobody wants to go. I'm not<lb/>
sure they want to see us pass so<lb/>
they can see the rest of it if<lb/>
they're just sitting there, looking.<lb/>
Usually it all comes to a big<lb/>
stop he laughed.<lb/>
"The same thing happens<lb/>
when we drive down the road. We<lb/>
hear a lot of people screeching to<lb/>
a halt or speeding up to catch up<lb/>
with us<lb/>
Griendling discussed the ac-<lb/>
tual building of the van.<lb/>
"To me the use of the van is<lb/>
basically an armature. Like a clay<lb/>
sculpture you have a steel cord<lb/>
inside to support the weight of the<lb/>
sculpture.<lb/>
"The van is something to<lb/>
work on, I really don't think of it<lb/>
so much as a van. I try to stay<lb/>
away from that. I really don't<lb/>
associate with the van although it<lb/>
is a van Griendling added.<lb/>
? When we began, we strip-<lb/>
ped the paint off the van so that<lb/>
the adhered to the actual metal<lb/>
and not the paint. If we adhered it<lb/>
to the paint, the paint oould pop<lb/>
off and the figures would too he<lb/>
explained.<lb/>
"So we took the paint off and<lb/>
then the plaster cast of the<lb/>
students, who are the actual<lb/>
models of the figures on the van.<lb/>
We use the material that they use<lb/>
on broken arms and legs. We<lb/>
actually put this gauze on their<lb/>
clothing and their face and make<lb/>
casts or shells of hollow casts.<lb/>
Then we figure how they'll work<lb/>
on the contours of the van. We<lb/>
have 18 figures on the van.<lb/>
"Next we fiberglass the van,<lb/>
which requires a lot of work with<lb/>
hands and brushes. It also takes a<lb/>
lot of sanding to get it smooth<lb/>
Griendling described the in-<lb/>
terior of the van and how it would<lb/>
be done.<lb/>
"It'sgoing to be dean in the<lb/>
respect that it's by no means<lb/>
going to be the typical gaudy<lb/>
interior that's popular with vans<lb/>
today he said.<lb/>
"It will be basically a kind of<lb/>
warm feeling with mostly wood<lb/>
tones in it. It will have blacks,<lb/>
greys and whites, in that vein of<lb/>
cola.<lb/>
"There will be cabinet space,<lb/>
a bed that lowers from the ceiling,<lb/>
a flourescent lighting system, a<lb/>
4-speaker stereo system, a refrig-<lb/>
erator, TV and a CB radio.<lb/>
Anything we use in it will be of<lb/>
real quality, and everything will<lb/>
be insulated he said.<lb/>
The paint job is what's going<lb/>
to tell it all. When you paint<lb/>
something like that, you see all<lb/>
your mistakes Griendling add-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
"The paint will bring out all<lb/>
the mistakes, which will be a<lb/>
frightening experience to see<lb/>
done<lb/>
"I'm really looking forward to<lb/>
it (the trip this summer). We're<lb/>
going to see what publicity we can<lb/>
pick up from it. It should be<lb/>
interesting Griendling said.<lb/>
"The local bottling company<lb/>
has been so supportive of the<lb/>
project. Coca-Cola in the main<lb/>
headquarters in Atlarta has not<lb/>
been exposed to it to any real<lb/>
extent he said.<lb/>
Nova utilizes a wide<lb/>
variety of musical<lb/>
talent and imagination<lb/>
continued from p. 9<lb/>
the howling sax. The effect is<lb/>
unnerving at first, but electrifying<lb/>
in the end.<lb/>
Loveliness About You" -<lb/>
comes perilously dose to falling<lb/>
into the same mire as "Beauty<lb/>
Dream-Beauty Flame but is<lb/>
saved by a pleasant chorus and an<lb/>
awesome, grinding guitar finale.<lb/>
The album's zenith is "Inner<lb/>
Star a funky song charadenzed<lb/>
by Barry Johnson's soulful tenor.<lb/>
Whereas each band member's<lb/>
performance had been merely<lb/>
superlative throughout the rest of<lb/>
the album, their performance is<lb/>
positively inspiring here. Espec-<lb/>
ially noteworthy is Ric Parnell's<lb/>
incredible drum solo at the end<lb/>
Narada Michael Walden has<lb/>
found an able disciple to his<lb/>
' hands and feet" style of drum-<lb/>
ming.<lb/>
This would have been a<lb/>
perfed place to end the album on<lb/>
a high note. Instead, the slothful<lb/>
"Last Silence" crawls relentless-<lb/>
ly towards the end. It is a poor<lb/>
imitation of a poor Weather<lb/>
Report song.<lb/>
Nova's musicianship is re-<lb/>
markable. The four band mem-<lb/>
bers play 19 instruments through-<lb/>
out the course of the album, and,<lb/>
more importantly, they play those<lb/>
19 instruments extremely well.<lb/>
Their compositions are fresh and<lb/>
original, and their use of wood-<lb/>
winds in conjundion with the<lb/>
eledric guitar is innovative.<lb/>
Corrado Rustia and Barry<lb/>
Johnson are fine vocalists, and<lb/>
Narada Michael Walden is to be<lb/>
complemented for not fordng<lb/>
himself too heavily upon the<lb/>
band. His produdion is crisp and<lb/>
well-defined, but never flashy.<lb/>
NOVA HAS METAPHYSICAL<lb/>
He avoids the studio gimmickery<lb/>
so many new producers fall back<lb/>
on as a crutch fa poa musidan-<lb/>
ship.<lb/>
With continued good advice<lb/>
from Walden, plus a publidty<lb/>
push by Arista, the band's<lb/>
recading label Nova could very<lb/>
well fill the void left by the<lb/>
dissolution of the Mahavishnu<lb/>
Orchestra. If only they would<lb/>
learn to axitrot their self-indul-<lb/>
gences on the slow songs.<lb/>
pretensions the effect is unnerving at first<lb/>
Art students eligible for Camp<lb/>
4 SAXB- j ?<lb/>
By ROBERT JONES<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU School of Art has<lb/>
been invited to partidpate in the<lb/>
Yale Norfolk Summer Fellowship<lb/>
beginning next fall.<lb/>
Junia painting majas will<lb/>
become elligible fa selediai,<lb/>
said Dr. Tran Gadley, ading<lb/>
dean of the School of Art.<lb/>
fJor"aleV SIB" that students<lb/>
will be recommended by the<lb/>
faculty. One student from ECU<lb/>
will ultimately be reoominended.<lb/>
The student that will submit<lb/>
portfdios and compete with stud-<lb/>
ents from other invited schools.<lb/>
Dr. Gadley was unsure just<lb/>
which schools are participating<lb/>
with ECU but said it is probably a<lb/>
"very elite group Dr. Gadley<lb/>
said that it is a "prestigious<lb/>
fellowship, which pays everything<lb/>
- housing and supplies<lb/>
The student who wins the<lb/>
Fellowship spends a summer in<lb/>
studio at Yale. At the end of the<lb/>
summer the students returns to<lb/>
his school fa his senia year to<lb/>
share his experiences. The invita-<lb/>
tion added Gadley came about<lb/>
largely by the recommendation of<lb/>
last years' visiting artist Joan<lb/>
Rubin. Joan Rubin, a previous<lb/>
Yale Nafdk Summer Fellow, is<lb/>
presently in New. Yak.<lb/>
STUDENT ID.(A&amp;D<lb/>
(SXP1R.ES SBPT I, 978)<lb/>
FREE BOTTOMLeSSW<lb/>
WITM THf PURCHASE O AUY<lb/>
PLATTEft. SWOU; CASH-ET&amp;-<lb/>
I1AIIDC OU-A&amp;D 2S.60<lb/>
HUUKO TMCX25- SAT" 2.00<lb/>
Saads Shoe Shop<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
at<lb/>
College View Cleaners<lb/>
J<lb/>
SUBURBAN<lb/>
BEAUTY SALON<lb/>
Style and Cut Treatment<lb/>
Vi Price, Reg. $13.00, NOW $6.50<lb/>
Located on East 10th Street<lb/>
Next to Kings Sandwich<lb/>
Phone 752-7630<lb/>
IfW-NIKB S<lb/>
jr ?<lb/>
Buy 2 short subs<lb/>
and get 1 free<lb/>
Call in Orders from pay phones<lb/>
and get your .20 back.<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
MONDAY thru THURSDAY1130a.m. til 1:00a.m.<lb/>
FRIDAY and SATURDAY11:30 a.m. til 2:00 a.m.<lb/>
SUN- Y  13? im' til 12:00 pm'<lb/>
<pb facs="00058057_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD June 7 1978<lb/>
Mendenhall Free Flick next week is Thieves<lb/>
MARLO THOMAS<lb/>
This week's Student Union<lb/>
Free Flick is the contemporary<lb/>
romantic comedy, Theives, star-<lb/>
ring Mario Thomas and Charles<lb/>
Grodin. The film will be shown<lb/>
Tuesday , June 13, at 9 p.m.<lb/>
on the Mall.<lb/>
The rain site will be Wright<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
Based on a play by Herb<lb/>
Gardner, Theives is a film about a<lb/>
oouple who grew up together in<lb/>
June 7<lb/>
Foot loose.<lb/>
2.99<lb/>
Head for the beach in our colorful terry tatami Blue<lb/>
orange or yellow in sizes 5-10M.<lb/>
3.99<lb/>
Sandals that are almost better than<lb/>
barefoot: our rainbow layered thong.<lb/>
Navy, yellow, red or orange. 5-10M<lb/>
6.99<lb/>
Wiggle your toes this summer in our<lb/>
colorful fashion thongs Rope on a<lb/>
polyurethane wedge in tan for sizes 5-1 OB.<lb/>
T?dCPenney<lb/>
Shop 10 AM 'til 9:30 PM<lb/>
New York's Lower East Side, got<lb/>
married, and became successful<lb/>
school teachers only to see the<lb/>
city life wreck their marriage -<lb/>
temporarily.<lb/>
It is a bittersweet oomedy set<lb/>
against the background of high-<lb/>
rise life, urban decay, and the<lb/>
deteriorating school systems in<lb/>
which the couple work.<lb/>
Nonetheless, it is a film filled<lb/>
with the essence of the archetypal<lb/>
New Yorker who is bound by the<lb/>
film's message, time is the<lb/>
greatest thief of all.<lb/>
Charles Grodin, American's<lb/>
fastest rising dramatic comedian,<lb/>
bursts with vitality and optimism<lb/>
as Martin Cramer, principal of an<lb/>
exclusive private school.<lb/>
John McMartin, as a publish-<lb/>
er with designs on Mrs. Cramer<lb/>
Capezio<lb/>
Danskin<lb/>
New Danskin Swimsuits<lb/>
AT BARREiTD. Now In Stock<lb/>
805 Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 756-0761<lb/>
Pantana Bob<lb/>
says<lb/>
Get Pantanasized j<lb/>
lOpen Daily at 4KX) p.m <lb/>
WIN<lb/>
$50.00<lb/>
Food or Beverage<lb/>
Present coupon below to the TREE HOUSE and<lb/>
recieve a 10 discount and register to<lb/>
win $50.00 in Food andor Beverage.<lb/>
Drawing will be Friday, July 7, 1978<lb/>
TREE HOUSE SUMMER SPECIAL<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address<lb/>
Phone<lb/>
ECU Classification Fr. Soph. Jr. Sr. Other<lb/>
TREE HOUSE 123 E. 5th St Creenville, NC<lb/>
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY for Registration<lb/>
(played by Mario Thomas with<lb/>
her characteristic spunkiness"),<lb/>
brings an air of amusing inno-<lb/>
cence to the story.<lb/>
A bizarre cast of supporting<lb/>
players make the film a fascinat-<lb/>
ing mosaic, a oomedy which<lb/>
depends as much on the incident-<lb/>
al character as the star.<lb/>
Next week's film is the<lb/>
espionage thriller Black Sunday,<lb/>
starring Robert Shaw, Bruoe<lb/>
Dern, and, fresh from her role in<lb/>
Marathon Man, Marthe Keller.<lb/>
Schmidt<lb/>
selected<lb/>
for class<lb/>
Violinist Rodney Schmidt of<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina, has<lb/>
been selected from an internat-<lb/>
ional field of applicants to per-<lb/>
form for Henryk Szeryng in Ann<lb/>
Arbor this summer.<lb/>
Schmidt, a member of the<lb/>
music faculty at ECU. is one of<lb/>
only twenty violinists chosen by<lb/>
autition to aprticipate in the first<lb/>
masterclass given in this country<lb/>
by Szeryng. who is one of the<lb/>
half-dozen finest violinists in the<lb/>
world.<lb/>
Schmidt will perform sonatas<lb/>
by Beethoven and the unaccomp-<lb/>
anied violin works of J.S. Bach<lb/>
during the masterclass to be held<lb/>
July 24 - August 1 on the<lb/>
University of Michigan campus.<lb/>
A recent feature article about<lb/>
Henryk Szeryng (pronounced<lb/>
Share-ing) in the New Yak Times<lb/>
by Shirley Fleming, editor of<lb/>
Musical America, spoke of him as<lb/>
standing for a kind of patrician<lb/>
musicmaking that gets to the<lb/>
essence of a score without<lb/>
belaboring the point<lb/>
A native Pole who first came<lb/>
to international prominence<lb/>
through the efforts of Arthur<lb/>
Rubenstem, he is an adopted<lb/>
citizen of Mexico and travels on a<lb/>
Mexican diplomatic passport; he<lb/>
is fluent is seven languages; he is<lb/>
active in UN. cultural affairs and<lb/>
gives benefit concerts unstinting-<lb/>
iy.<lb/>
A recent week in New York<lb/>
City saw him give an all Bach<lb/>
recital at the Metropolitan<lb/>
M useum on Sunday, speak at an 8<lb/>
o'clock breakfast at the United<lb/>
Nations on Monday, perform the<lb/>
Sibelius Concerto with the Phil-<lb/>
harmonic for a pair of concerts<lb/>
beginning on Thursday, followed<lb/>
by a pair of concerts with the<lb/>
Chamber Music Society of Lincoln<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Shirley Fleming further states<lb/>
that when he remarks that "I<lb/>
believe in the miracle of music,<lb/>
which should bring about a drser<lb/>
uinderstand g and fraternity be-<lb/>
tween no is, "or say that<lb/>
"music is the most universal<lb/>
language bringing oomfort, joy,<lb/>
peace and inspiration to man-<lb/>
kind one feels that he has won<lb/>
the right to make these state-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
!?? ! i $p: <lb/>
<pb facs="00058057_0013"/><lb/>
Alston is All America<lb/>
June 7 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
Pag<lb/>
13<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
ByCHRISHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
ECU'S All-American star<lb/>
Calvin Alston became a two time<lb/>
All-American in the NCAA track<lb/>
meet in Eugene, Oregon this past<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
Alston placed sixth in the<lb/>
200-meter dash in a time of 20;76<lb/>
seconds to earn the All-American<lb/>
status.<lb/>
Alston, a junior, had run in<lb/>
the qualifying round earlier in the<lb/>
day and had finished second to<lb/>
Aubern's Harvey Glance with a<lb/>
clocking of 20.70.<lb/>
However an inside lane draw<lb/>
prevented Alston from doing as<lb/>
well as had been the case the first<lb/>
time.<lb/>
I drew an inside lane and the<lb/>
curves were tighter than I<lb/>
thought Alston said.<lb/>
"But I'm happy to make<lb/>
All- american fa the second<lb/>
straight year Alston who hails<lb/>
from Henderson, N.C. was fifth in<lb/>
the NCAA meet last year.<lb/>
Alston as well as other<lb/>
members of the ECU track team<lb/>
Gillman names<lb/>
Kunze assistant<lb/>
ByCHRISHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
It has been announced that<lb/>
Terry Kunze, an assistant basket-<lb/>
ball coach at the University of<lb/>
Minnesota the last three years,<lb/>
has resigned his position there to<lb/>
become an associate coach at<lb/>
CALVIN ALSTON<lb/>
plan to remain on the west coast<lb/>
to run in next weeks AAU<lb/>
Championships in Los Angeles.<lb/>
The only other North Carolina<lb/>
athlete to receive All-American<lb/>
honors in the NCAA meet was<lb/>
Ralph King of UNC-Ch with a<lb/>
fifth place finish in the 5,000<lb/>
meter event.<lb/>
The team winner in the NCAA<lb/>
track meet for 1978 was Southern<lb/>
California, with a team total of 59.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
ECU under head coach Larry<lb/>
Gillman.<lb/>
Kunze was an assistant under<lb/>
Minnesota coach Jim Dutcher<lb/>
during 1975-76.<lb/>
Kunze who is a native of<lb/>
Duluth, Minnesota, played for the<lb/>
Golden Gophers for three years in<lb/>
the mid-1960's and still has a<lb/>
share of one of the Big Ten single<lb/>
game shooting records.<lb/>
Walt Atkins new SID at ECU<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS -<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
ECU athletic director Bill Cain<lb/>
oertainly selected one of the best<lb/>
sports publicists in the business<lb/>
when he named Wait Atkins the<lb/>
Pirates new sports information<lb/>
director.<lb/>
Atkins, a 28-year-old native of<lb/>
Atlanta, Ga. is a veteran of the<lb/>
sports information business and<lb/>
is recognized by the N.C. news<lb/>
media as one of the hardest<lb/>
working drum beaters around.<lb/>
He served four years as a<lb/>
student assistant at the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Maryland before moving<lb/>
on to N.C. State where he has<lb/>
been for the last six years as the<lb/>
assistant sports information dir-<lb/>
ector.<lb/>
"I believe in the promotion of<lb/>
the entire athletic program<lb/>
explained Atkins Monday after-<lb/>
noon from his office in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum. "I've done a lot of<lb/>
work with the non-revenue sports<lb/>
for both men and women. My<lb/>
past record shows that I'm<lb/>
interested in all the teams and<lb/>
their participants. We want to<lb/>
touch all the sports here at ECU.<lb/>
Like other members of the<lb/>
athletic department, Atkins came<lb/>
to ECU because of its rapid<lb/>
development and its move to-<lb/>
wards big time college athletics.<lb/>
"It's an excellent sports in-<lb/>
formation position at a dynamic<lb/>
and growing university noted<lb/>
Atkins. "The athletic program<lb/>
here has 18 men's and women's<lb/>
sports. We want to reach all the<lb/>
sports and let the public know<lb/>
about them. I'm really looking<lb/>
forward to that challenge<lb/>
During his ten years at both<lb/>
Maryland and N.C. State, Atkins<lb/>
has worked at 16 NCAA champ-<lb/>
ionship events in five different<lb/>
sports and has also worked at five<lb/>
bowl games. He has written and<lb/>
edited dozens of press guides and<lb/>
received a national award for one<lb/>
of his wrestling brochures at<lb/>
Maryland and two of his swim-<lb/>
ming publications at N.C. State.<lb/>
Atkins is also one of the<lb/>
biggest promoters of the profes-<lb/>
sion. One of his major goals at<lb/>
ECU is to develop student<lb/>
assistants who will move right<lb/>
into the business fulltime after<lb/>
graduation.<lb/>
"I want to establish a compet-<lb/>
ent sports information staff much<lb/>
like Rod Gompton has in the<lb/>
Sports Medicine Department<lb/>
said Atkins. "We wantthe type of<lb/>
people working here that really<lb/>
want to work and are sincerely<lb/>
interested in what they're doing.<lb/>
We want people that will set goals<lb/>
for themselves and work hard to<lb/>
achieve them<lb/>
Atkins already has plans for a<lb/>
sports information seminar for<lb/>
high school students the morning<lb/>
before the Texas-Arlington foot-<lb/>
ball gamethisfall. The seminar is<lb/>
designed to aid high shoool<lb/>
students, promote their programs<lb/>
and interest them in taking<lb/>
positions as student assistants at<lb/>
colleges they may attend after<lb/>
graduation.<lb/>
Atkins also has plans for a<lb/>
week long sports information<lb/>
camp next summer at ECU where<lb/>
high school students may oome<lb/>
and receive instruction from<lb/>
selected media representatives.<lb/>
"I have a lot of new ideas I<lb/>
hope I can use at ECU<lb/>
continued Atkins. "The sports<lb/>
information seminars are just a<lb/>
few of them<lb/>
And with the 1978 football<lb/>
season right around the oorner,<lb/>
Atkins has a press guide to<lb/>
prepare along with promotional<lb/>
work on the Pirate Radio Network<lb/>
and a thousand and one other<lb/>
things.<lb/>
"But you know smiled<lb/>
Atkins. "The hardest thing I've<lb/>
ever had to do lately is try to<lb/>
remember everyone who keeps<lb/>
coming in my office. I don't think<lb/>
I've seen the same face twice. It's<lb/>
a pretty big athletic department<lb/>
By Andy Stewart<lb/>
Sports programs offered<lb/>
for summer school<lb/>
The ECU Intramural Department is in full swing with a summer<lb/>
program that should fit everyone's needs.<lb/>
Such sports as tennis and raoquetball are still open for registration<lb/>
for men, women and co-rec.<lb/>
Also, this year there is a 30 mile jogging club and a five mile<lb/>
swimming club. In both of these clubs you only have to jog 30 miles or<lb/>
swim five miles in the entire semester to receive a certificate from the<lb/>
Intramural department.<lb/>
To join the clubs, get in touch with the intramural department and<lb/>
tell them to sign you up. Then phone or tell the Intramural department<lb/>
in person every time you run ana swim and they will record the<lb/>
distance for you.<lb/>
Another sport that has caught the interest of several ECU students<lb/>
is "three on three" basketball. There are 16 teams in league play ihis<lb/>
summer. The rules have been modified this year however.<lb/>
The teams will make use of official NBA rules to make the games<lb/>
more exciting to watch and more importantly more exciting to play.<lb/>
Another sport which is ever popular on campus from spring until<lb/>
fall is softball. This summer there are twelve teams involved in<lb/>
intramural softball. The teams involved have proven to be surprisingly<lb/>
competitive.<lb/>
One of the strong contenders is last summer s champs, the<lb/>
Strokers. Returning for the Strokers are Sam Williams, Vann Pennell<lb/>
and Mark Newton.<lb/>
Other strong oontenders for the league title are Laid Back,<lb/>
Summertime Blues, Lumber and Lightening and the Supersonics.<lb/>
On last weeks games Summertime Blues defeated Delta Sg 13 to 2<lb/>
while Sigma Phi Epsilon and Friends won a close game over Kappa Sig<lb/>
Cold Beers by a nine to eight soore.<lb/>
Later on rn the week Sigma Phi Epsilon and Friends were defeated<lb/>
by Lumber and Lightening four to nothing and Laid Back stopped the<lb/>
Nads 13 to six. Delta Sigma Phi beat Once Again by a lopsided soore of<lb/>
20 toO.<lb/>
In getting off to a string start the Strokers beat Dead End Kids 14 to<lb/>
2.<lb/>
All softball games will be held at the fields behind Ficklin Stadium.<lb/>
The games will be played between 630 and 10:00 on Monday and<lb/>
Tuesday nights. Due to lack of funds for umpires, the intramural<lb/>
department is asking that some of the players involved volunteer to<lb/>
umpire some of the games. Those interested may sign up for times<lb/>
desired in the intramural offioe.<lb/>
The Swimming pool at Minges and the equipment rooms at both<lb/>
Minges and Memorial will be open this summer.<lb/>
The pool hours are:<lb/>
M-F4-8p.m.<lb/>
Sat. Dosed<lb/>
Sun 4-7 p.m.<lb/>
If there is enough student interest the pool will be open on Saturday.<lb/>
Memorial is not open because it is being painted at this time. It<lb/>
should be open by Fall semester.<lb/>
The equipment Room hours are:<lb/>
Minges<lb/>
Thurs. 7:45-530<lb/>
Fri. 7.45 - 7:00<lb/>
Sat. 12X?- 700<lb/>
Sun 2:00- 7:00<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
Mon-Thurs4fl0-11:00<lb/>
<pb facs="00058057_0014"/><lb/>
IPIIffS ?'? Wjjsm<lb/>
Page 14 FOUNTAINHEAD June 7 1978<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
byCHRISHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
This week due to lack of<lb/>
information we will cover the<lb/>
Western Carolina offensive team<lb/>
and next week we will finish our<lb/>
report with the Western Carolina<lb/>
defense and a report on Texas<lb/>
Arlington.<lb/>
When speaking of the Cata-<lb/>
mounts of WCU some people<lb/>
refer to them as "one of those<lb/>
pushover home openers. How-<lb/>
ever nothing could be any further<lb/>
from the truth as WCU posseses<lb/>
the talent and ability to beat any<lb/>
team on their schedule including<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Last year WCU finished<lb/>
the season in rush winning the<lb/>
last five games. What is most<lb/>
impressive about these wins are<lb/>
the way in which they dominated<lb/>
their opponents.<lb/>
Over that stretch the Cats<lb/>
averaged over forty points! per<lb/>
game and many of their scores<lb/>
such as 44-14 rout of ASU<lb/>
sounded more like basketball<lb/>
scores rather than football.<lb/>
One of the big reasons that the<lb/>
Cat offense found itself after a<lb/>
1-4-1 start is quarterback Mike<lb/>
Pusey. Pusey, a transfer, was<lb/>
inserted at quarterback at mid<lb/>
season and lead the Cats to that<lb/>
five game win streak. Pusey<lb/>
finished eighth in the nation in<lb/>
total offense and his wide receiver<lb/>
Wayne Toilison led the nation in<lb/>
pass receiving.<lb/>
Tcdison is gone this year but<lb/>
his replacement is certainly of<lb/>
equaJ ability. He is 5'7" Gerlad<lb/>
Harp. The siminutive Harp is a<lb/>
threat every time he gets the ball,<lb/>
though he saw little action last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Fred Meadows is the other<lb/>
new wideout and has plenty of<lb/>
speed and ability<lb/>
As far as the backfield is<lb/>
concerned ail the fullbacks re-<lb/>
turn. They are Andy Jordan and<lb/>
Jeff Norman. Jordan is a 5'10"<lb/>
senior and Normal is a 5'11"<lb/>
senior. The fullbacks in the Cats I<lb/>
formation do very little actual<lb/>
running the ball. They are<lb/>
primarily blockers.<lb/>
The running game will be left<lb/>
up to the tailbacks. Last years<lb/>
WCU had one of the nations best<lb/>
backs in Darrll Lipford as Lipford<lb/>
gained over a thousand yards. His<lb/>
backup throughout last year was<lb/>
Mitchell Ray, a 5'1V senior. Ray<lb/>
is quite a threat when he touches<lb/>
the ball also as he averages a<lb/>
whopping 6.3 yards per carry<lb/>
ball.<lb/>
The Cat offensive line returns<lb/>
in tact this year. The line<lb/>
although not very big does have<lb/>
alot of speed. They pull their<lb/>
guards and run a lot of sweeps.<lb/>
The tackles are Chuck Dellin-<lb/>
ger a 60 224 pound senior and<lb/>
Joel Potts a 6'2" 237 pound<lb/>
sophomore.<lb/>
Returning at the guards are<lb/>
Robbie Vannoy a 6 2" 217 pounc<lb/>
senior and Linnett Price a 60<lb/>
220 sophomore.<lb/>
At the center position Steve<lb/>
Dunn a6' 1" 209 pound senior will<lb/>
be hiking the ball to Pusey once<lb/>
again.<lb/>
At the tight end position<lb/>
returns Gary Satyshur a 6'2"<lb/>
junior who at 224 has good size<lb/>
and weight fa a tight end.<lb/>
The punting department is<lb/>
taken care of as quarterback M ike<lb/>
Pusey who averaged 40.5 yards<lb/>
per punt last year is back to take<lb/>
that job.<lb/>
A new place kicker will have to<lb/>
be found.<lb/>
To return punts Gerald Harp<lb/>
(22.7 yards per return) has coach<lb/>
Featuring the Fmest in Live Coffee House<lb/>
Music Every TuesdaySaturcfa<lb/>
No Cover ?<lb/>
Contest Friday and Saturday<lb/>
liii:<lb/>
9th and 10th with Special Guests<lb/>
'The Piedmont Serenades"<lb/>
Oer $250.00 in Prizes with Special gifts<lb/>
Apple Records, The Attic ,The Roxy,<lb/>
The EDbo Room<lb/>
Register Now!<lb/>
THE TREE HOUSE<lb/>
comer of 5th and Cofanche<lb/>
Bob Waters feeling quite good<lb/>
about that position.<lb/>
It appears that if last year is<lb/>
any indication the Cats will have<lb/>
an explosive exciting offensive<lb/>
team and one which will certainly<lb/>
test the Pirate defense. Coach<lb/>
Bobby Wallace is in charge of<lb/>
soouting the WCU offense and he<lb/>
noted that the Cats will throw the<lb/>
ball as much as 30 to 40 times a<lb/>
game. The thing that can really<lb/>
hurt a team against those passes<lb/>
is that the majority of them were<lb/>
completed last year and chances<lb/>
are that the receivers are just as<lb/>
capabale this year.<lb/>
I would like to thank Coach<lb/>
Bobby Wallace fa his help in<lb/>
soouting the WCU offense.<lb/>
THE LAST TIME ECU met Western CAroiina in<lb/>
1976 the Pirates won a dose 24-17 decision. Here<lb/>
former Pirate and now defensive end coach H76 Cary<lb/>
occette ana former Pirate taoie wx jake Dove put<lb/>
the pressure on m Western Carolina's Keith<lb/>
Scoggms. Photo by Tirr Chalmers<lb/>
WCU offensive stars<lb/>
BOB WATERS<lb/>
Robbie Vannoy JwM Normon Andy Jord(Jn<lb/>
Stv? Dunn<lb/>
Summer Intramurals<lb/>
ByJOHNMONDS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Intramural Office is<lb/>
offering both new as well as<lb/>
traditional activities in this sum-<lb/>
Tonight<lb/>
TRUCKS<lb/>
with former<lb/>
Allitian<lb/>
Brothers<lb/>
member<lb/>
Thur Kiufolkj<lb/>
Fri,Sat, &amp; Sum<lb/>
EraPouiid<lb/>
next week<lb/>
Wcfl Merging<lb/>
Traffic<lb/>
flu I eh Truel?TlMr S<lb/>
mer's activities.<lb/>
Marty Martinez, director of<lb/>
intramurals, says that sumemr<lb/>
events include softball and bas-<lb/>
eball, but even these activities<lb/>
have gone through some chanaes.<lb/>
Ust summer, softball was<lb/>
played in the afternoon with a<lb/>
competitive atmosphere.<lb/>
Martinez says that this summer<lb/>
he wants to rid the games of some<lb/>
of the competition. A new rule<lb/>
designed to cool tempers states<lb/>
that the team at bat must be<lb/>
pitched only three pitches per<lb/>
batter by its pitcher. This rule will<lb/>
also help the problem of not<lb/>
having umpires to call the games.<lb/>
Games will also be played only<lb/>
at night to avoid the heat which<lb/>
has hampered play in the past<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Basketball returns with the<lb/>
three-on-three type using NBA<lb/>
rules. Summer activities also<lb/>
include the thirty-mile run, five-<lb/>
mile swim, tennis, raquetball,<lb/>
and free play in the pool.<lb/>
Anyone can sign up for<lb/>
activities anytime during the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058057_0015"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
Three<lb/>
June 7 1978 FQUNTAiNHEAD By m<lb/>
1<lb/>
NCAA News<lb/>
Three new football bowl<lb/>
games were certified by the<lb/>
NCAA Council at its recent<lb/>
meeting in Kansas City,<lb/>
Missouri.<lb/>
The Garden State Bowl in East<lb/>
Rutherford, New Jersey, and the<lb/>
Holiday Bowl in San Diego,<lb/>
California, both will be played<lb/>
sometime in 1978. The Pineapple<lb/>
Bowl in Honolulu, Hawaii, will be<lb/>
initiated at the conclusion of the<lb/>
1979 season.<lb/>
In all cases, the COunal was<lb/>
acting on the reoommendation of<lb/>
the NCAA Extra Even's Commit-<lb/>
tee.<lb/>
The Garden State Bowl will be<lb/>
played at the Meadowlands<lb/>
Sports Complex sometime in<lb/>
early December. It will be the<lb/>
only bowl game in the Northeast<lb/>
and is expected to attract a team<lb/>
from that region as one of its<lb/>
participants. The net proceeds<lb/>
will be given to a scholarship fund<lb/>
for New Jersey high school<lb/>
graduates.<lb/>
The winner of the Western<lb/>
Athletic Conference will be one of<lb/>
the participating teams in the<lb/>
Holiday Bowl, which probably<lb/>
will be played between December<lb/>
22 and 28. The designated charity<lb/>
is the Crippled Childrens' Hos-<lb/>
pital and Burn Insitute in San<lb/>
Diego.<lb/>
Plans are for the Pineapple<lb/>
Bowl to be part of a week-long<lb/>
festival in Honolulu, which also<lb/>
will include the Rainbow Basket-<lb/>
ball Classic and the Hula Bowl as<lb/>
well as competition in other<lb/>
sports. Because of the magnitude<lb/>
of the event, additional time will<lb/>
be required for hotel and other<lb/>
arrangements; therefore, the<lb/>
Extra Events Committee recom-<lb/>
meded the bowl game not be<lb/>
played until the conclusion of the<lb/>
1979 season.<lb/>
The Extra Events Committee<lb/>
certified 14 established bowl<lb/>
games and five all-star games for<lb/>
the 1978-79 academic year.<lb/>
BOWLS MAKE MILLIONS<lb/>
Committee chairman David H.<lb/>
Strack, University of Arizona<lb/>
Director of Athletics, said the 14<lb/>
postseason games certified for<lb/>
1977-78 produced gross receipts<lb/>
of nearly $18 million, $13.8<lb/>
million of whihc was returned to<lb/>
the participanting teams.<lb/>
OTHER 1978-79 CERTIFIED BOWL GAMES<lb/>
Bowl Date<lb/>
MEAC-CIAA Gold Bowl December 2<lb/>
Independence Bowl December 16<lb/>
Hall of Fame Game<lb/>
Sun Bowl<lb/>
Liberty Bowl<lb/>
Tangerine Bowl<lb/>
Fiesta Bowl<lb/>
Peach Bowl<lb/>
Gator Bowl<lb/>
Bluebonnet Bowl<lb/>
Sugar Bowl<lb/>
Rose Bowl<lb/>
Cotton Bowl<lb/>
Orange Bowl<lb/>
December 20<lb/>
December 23<lb/>
December 23<lb/>
December 23<lb/>
December 25<lb/>
December 25<lb/>
December 29<lb/>
December 31<lb/>
January 1<lb/>
January 1<lb/>
January 1<lb/>
January 1<lb/>
Local Time<lb/>
130pm<lb/>
1 30pm<lb/>
7 pm<lb/>
To be determined<lb/>
To be determined<lb/>
8 p m<lb/>
To be determined<lb/>
To be determined<lb/>
9pm<lb/>
To be determined<lb/>
To be determined<lb/>
To be determined<lb/>
To be determined<lb/>
To be determined<lb/>
Site<lb/>
Richmond. Virginia<lb/>
Shreveport Louisiana<lb/>
Birmingham. Alabama<lb/>
El Paso Texas<lb/>
Memphis Tennessee<lb/>
Orlando Florida<lb/>
Tempe Arizona<lb/>
Atlanta. Georgia<lb/>
Jacksonville Florida<lb/>
Houston Texas<lb/>
New Orleans Louisiana<lb/>
Pasadena California<lb/>
Dallas. Texas<lb/>
Miami. Florida<lb/>
1978-79 CERTIFIED ALL-STAR GAMES<lb/>
Blue-Gray Classic<lb/>
American Bowl<lb/>
East-West Shrine<lb/>
Hula Bowl<lb/>
Japan Bowl<lb/>
December 22 or 30 To be determined<lb/>
January 6 To be determined<lb/>
January 6 or 14 To be determined<lb/>
January 6 To be determined<lb/>
January 14 To be determined<lb/>
Montgomery. Alabama<lb/>
Tam(, i Florida<lb/>
Palo Alto California<lb/>
Honolulu, Hawaii<lb/>
Tokyo. Japan<lb/>
Billy Lee named head coach at Pembroke State<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Billy Lee, an assistant coach<lb/>
for two years at East Carolina,<lb/>
was named Monday as the new<lb/>
head coach at Pembroke State.<lb/>
Lee. a 28-year-old native of<lb/>
Mt. Olive, was chosen from a<lb/>
field of more than 50 applicants,<lb/>
according to Pembroke State<lb/>
officiaJs,<lb/>
"I'm very exated about my<lb/>
new job said Lee. "The people<lb/>
at Pembroke are 100 percent<lb/>
behind the basketball program.<lb/>
They re a lot of things I want to<lb/>
try here and I'm very happy I've<lb/>
gotten the opportunity<lb/>
Lee, who served one year<lb/>
under former ECU head ooach<lb/>
Dave Pat ton and one season<lb/>
under Larry Gil I man replaces Joe<lb/>
Gallaher, now an assistant coach<lb/>
at Richmond.<lb/>
Lee began his coaching career<lb/>
as an assistant at Wake Forest<lb/>
High School before assuming<lb/>
duties as head coach at East<lb/>
Montgomery High School for one<lb/>
season.<lb/>
He then moved on to New<lb/>
Ben High where he remained fa<lb/>
three years as head coach before<lb/>
ooming to ECU in 1976 as the<lb/>
defensive coordinator under Dave<lb/>
Patton.<lb/>
"I'm a defensive minded<lb/>
ooach explained Lee. "I'll use<lb/>
as many as five different defenses<lb/>
in a game if necessary. On<lb/>
offense, we'll move quickly with<lb/>
the ball. I don't like anyone<lb/>
standing still. We'll use offenses<lb/>
somewhat similar to North<lb/>
Carolina and Indiana. '<lb/>
Pembroke State finished last<lb/>
season with a 13-13 record, but<lb/>
lost three of its five starters.<lb/>
"Recruiting is my major con-<lb/>
oern right now said Lee. "We<lb/>
lost some good players from last<lb/>
year and we've still got to try to<lb/>
find some replacements although<lb/>
it's still late in the recruiting<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Lee said Dan K inney, a former<lb/>
graduate assistant at ECU would<lb/>
remain on his staff next season<lb/>
Kinney recently completed his<lb/>
first year at Pembroke State<lb/>
Welcome back students.<lb/>
Remember Coggins for your car service needs<lb/>
' B.F.Goodrich<lb/>
Car Care Service<lb/>
4 POINT BRAKE CHE( K<lb/>
1 mi Front Wee 1. Impact Lining end Drum<lb/>
2 Check Grease SmIi. Wneel Cylinder! tor Leakage<lb/>
3 Clean. Inapecl end Repack Front Wneel Bearings<lb/>
4 Adlutt Brake on All Four Wheels tor Foil ?eoei I<lb/>
Braking.<lb/>
Reg Price X -With Cart Service Only USD<lb/>
? ?i.n ? ? ii o?.<lb/>
Most U S Cars. Toyotas a Ddsuns<lb/>
call for apfHtintmcnt<lb/>
Master Charge. BankAmencard American Express<lb/>
is shown at B f GTodnch stores Competitively pncea at B r Goodrich dealers<lb/>
IjFQoodrioh Coggins Car Care<lb/>
BILLY LEE<lb/>
SJIRE CENTER<lb/>
PTsone i?SU<lb/>
HO W. HWV. Ma iY PASS<lb/>
MMMVILUL ?.C<lb/>
Title IX clarification made<lb/>
NCAA News<lb/>
A statement "reaffirming the<lb/>
applicability to revenue-produc-<lb/>
ing intercollegiate athletics of<lb/>
Title IX" has been issued by the<lb/>
Department of Health, Education<lb/>
and Welfare.<lb/>
In a memorandum to HEW<lb/>
Secretary Joseph A. Califano Jr<lb/>
General Counsel F. Peter Libassi<lb/>
said "Title XI of the Education<lb/>
Amendments of 1972 prohibits<lb/>
sex discrimination in any 'educat-<lb/>
ion program or activity' receiving<lb/>
Federal financial assistance. In<lb/>
our opinion, a revenue-producing<lb/>
intercollegiate program is (a) an<lb/>
education program or activity<lb/>
within the meaning of Title IX,<lb/>
and (b) and integral part of the<lb/>
general undergraduate education<lb/>
program of an institution of<lb/>
higher learning.<lb/>
' Accordingly Libassi con-<lb/>
tinued, "m our opinion, an<lb/>
institution of higher education<lb/>
must oomply with the prohibition<lb/>
against sex discrimination impos-<lb/>
ed by that title and its implement-<lb/>
ing regulations in the administra-<lb/>
tion of any revenue-producung<lb/>
intercollegiate athletic activity if<lb/>
either the athletic activity or the<lb/>
general education program of<lb/>
whihc the athletic activity is a part<lb/>
is receiving Federal financial<lb/>
assisatnce<lb/>
Clip this ctXapon!<lb/>
??<lb/>
And gat three games for only 1.25.<lb/>
( Per Person Rate )<lb/>
LOCATED BESIDE RIVER BLUFF APTS<lb/>
Phone 758-1820<lb/>
JLKM<lb/>
CWCL<lb/>
ITALIAN RESTAIRAXT<lb/>
$1.00 OFF<lb/>
n pizza<lb/>
WITH CXHPOIV<lb/>
2713 E. 10th St.<lb/>
75 1042<lb/>
OIIIK EXPIRES afUSE 14, 18-8<lb/>
!<lb/>
<pb facs="00058057_0016"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
Page 16 FOUNTAINHEAP June 7 1978<lb/>
SUMMER<lb/>
SCHOOL<lb/>
WAREHOUSE<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
We have bought a large supply of<lb/>
Demo &amp; New Equipment from a Nor-<lb/>
thern dealer who needed money!<lb/>
HIS LOSS IS YOUR GAIN!<lb/>
SONY<lb/>
PIONEER<lb/>
SANSUI<lb/>
KENWOOD<lb/>
ONKYO<lb/>
MARANTfc<lb/>
CRAIG<lb/>
YAMAHA<lb/>
DYNA<lb/>
HOSE<lb/>
rimiiii?<lb/>
BEAT INFLATION NOW<lb/>
INVEST YOUR TAX CHECH<lb/>
PRICES<lb/>
SLASHED<lb/>
TEAC<lb/>
AKAI<lb/>
TECHNIC<lb/>
PANASONIC<lb/>
OPTONICA<lb/>
B&amp;O<lb/>
 FINANCING<lb/>
 TRADES<lb/>
 SERVICE<lb/>
HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH<lb/>
OX THE .MALI, IMWXTOWX GREENVILLE<lb/>
752-3651<lb/>
.<lb/>
nMUS<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00058057_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>