<?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="00058065_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity fa over 50 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of 8,500,<lb/>
this issue is 16 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
Exhibitp. 3<lb/>
Infant mataiityp. 5<lb/>
Faulknerp. 7<lb/>
Pirates losep. 9<lb/>
Vd. No. 53. No. 29 East Carolina University Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
19 January 1978<lb/>
Exam hours are<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
News Edita<lb/>
The library's extended sche-<lb/>
dule during fall semester exams<lb/>
received a successfull turnout of<lb/>
students, acoording to Reed War-<lb/>
ren, SGA vice-president.<lb/>
"Dee Brockman, circulation<lb/>
librarian, and myself were plea-<lb/>
santly surprised at the turnout.<lb/>
Although the figures vary, at<lb/>
various times there were 100<lb/>
people in the library during the<lb/>
extended hours Warren said.<lb/>
Brockman and Warren colla-<lb/>
borated to extend the library's<lb/>
operating hours an additional<lb/>
three and one half hours until 3<lb/>
a.m. during exam week.<lb/>
A similar project was attempt-<lb/>
ed several years ago but received<lb/>
a pcor response, according to<lb/>
Warren.<lb/>
Due to the success of the<lb/>
extended hours during the fall,<lb/>
hours will again be extended<lb/>
during spring semester.<lb/>
"We hope to better publicize<lb/>
the extra hours this time in ader<lb/>
to insure a better turnout. We are<lb/>
also planning to purchase a coffee<lb/>
machine befae spring exams.<lb/>
We were unable to acquire one<lb/>
fa fall exams dueto lack of funds.<lb/>
"When I aiginally got the<lb/>
idea of extended study hours, I<lb/>
had planned to seek outside<lb/>
funding to pay fa the additional<lb/>
employee hours. The library,<lb/>
however, provided the necessary<lb/>
$103 to pay the skeleton staff who<lb/>
waked the extra time. No SGA<lb/>
funds were used Warren said.<lb/>
Warren expressed his hope<lb/>
that mae students would use the<lb/>
added study period next time to<lb/>
further justify the library's ex-<lb/>
penditures.<lb/>
"Hopefully, the interest<lb/>
shown by the turnout shows an<lb/>
inaeased academic awareness at<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
REED WARREN<lb/>
Beginning Monday, January 23, Student Buying Power Cards wil<lb/>
be available from the SGA.<lb/>
These cards entitle students to a discount from the fdlowinj<lb/>
merchants: The Tree House, The Bicyde Shop, Pet Kingdom,<lb/>
Headstrong Boutique, and Schod Kids Reoods.<lb/>
To get a card you must be a full-time student with a valid ID anc<lb/>
activity card.<lb/>
Cards are available between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. at the SGA Of ice ir<lb/>
Mendenhall. " .����<lb/>
Marine Research<lb/>
receives shells<lb/>
Anderson cance<lb/>
due to oversight<lb/>
By STUART MORGAN<lb/>
Assistant News Edita<lb/>
The lecture by syndicated<lb/>
columnist Jack Anderson aigi-<lb/>
nally scheduled fa Tuesday at<lb/>
8 p.m. in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Uniai was cancelled.<lb/>
The cancellation occurred due<lb/>
to an oversight on the part of<lb/>
Anderson and the agency from<lb/>
which the ledure was booked.<lb/>
"We were nd ndified about<lb/>
the cancellation until 5 p.m<lb/>
Tuesday said Dennis Ramsey,<lb/>
Student Union President.<lb/>
"On behalf d the Ledure<lb/>
Series Committee of ECU Student<lb/>
Union I would like to apdogize to<lb/>
those students who woe incon-<lb/>
venienced by the cancellation<lb/>
added Ramsey.<lb/>
It is nd known yet whetho<lb/>
the ladure will be rescheduled a<lb/>
a substitute program planned fa<lb/>
lato in the semesto.<lb/>
Howevo, an announcement<lb/>
will be made scon.<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
East Cardina Univosity<lb/>
has been seleded to redeve a gift<lb/>
of a large cdledion d rare and<lb/>
beautiful seashdls.<lb/>
The 10,000 item cdledion is<lb/>
being donated to ECU by AJ.<lb/>
(Bob) DaMdta, an Amoican<lb/>
businessman living in Bangkok,<lb/>
Thailand, who has spent years<lb/>
assembling the cdledion.<lb/>
Dr. William H. Queen, dired-<lb/>
or of the Institute fa Coastal and<lb/>
Marine Research at ECU, des-<lb/>
cribed the Da Mdta gift as "one<lb/>
of the wold's foemost cdled-<lb/>
ionsd pohapsthe most intoest-<lb/>
ing family d seashdls that is<lb/>
known today Plans are being<lb/>
made fa a repositoy fa this and<lb/>
otho odledions in a coastal<lb/>
marine museum on the campus.<lb/>
Dr. Leo Jenkins, ECU chance-<lb/>
llo, Queen and DaMdta an-<lb/>
nounced the gift at a news<lb/>
confoenoe. "This is ate d the<lb/>
most significant odledions re-<lb/>
ceived by East Cardina Univo-<lb/>
sity in its history Dr. Jenkins<lb/>
said. "It will do much to enrich<lb/>
nd only our students and scien-<lb/>
tists but the entire citizenry. It is<lb/>
impotant bdh scientifically and<lb/>
culturally<lb/>
Da Mdta said the cdledion<lb/>
will be shipped to Greenvillein tne<lb/>
next few months. Presently in<lb/>
Greenville hdding discussions<lb/>
with ECU dficialsconconing the<lb/>
conation, DaMdta said he fdt<lb/>
ECU was an "appropriate" re-<lb/>
positoy fo his cdledion.<lb/>
He became intoested in ECU<lb/>
and its coastal and marine<lb/>
research programs through<lb/>
friends and business acquaint-<lb/>
ances Mr. and Mrs. Ed Skinno of<lb/>
Greenville Skinno is a tobacco<lb/>
oompany official.<lb/>
Faculty<lb/>
fitness<lb/>
begins<lb/>
By CHRIS MISENHflHER<lb/>
Staff Writo<lb/>
The Physical Education De-<lb/>
partment is currently dfoing a<lb/>
fitness program fo all faculty and<lb/>
staff membos evoy Moiday,<lb/>
Wednesday, and Friday fron 12-1<lb/>
in Memoial Gym.<lb/>
Basketball, badmitoi, vdley-<lb/>
ball, jogging, swimming, and<lb/>
calisthortics are some d the<lb/>
activities available.<lb/>
The program is headed by<lb/>
Gingo Parish and Kirby Patter-<lb/>
son, graduate students in Phys-<lb/>
ical Education.<lb/>
They wok with the faculty by<lb/>
leading exodses, counting and<lb/>
reooding laps, and poiodically<lb/>
checking heartbeat to maintain a<lb/>
safe maximum heart rate.<lb/>
"Jogging seems to be the<lb/>
main intoest among the 21<lb/>
faculty membos currently enrd-<lb/>
led in the program accoding to<lb/>
Parish.<lb/>
She said that one member d<lb/>
the class won the 5.8 mile<lb/>
intramural marathon last Ncv-<lb/>
embo.<lb/>
"The emphasis d the pro-<lb/>
gram is nd to reduce wdght but<lb/>
to break the stress d the wok day<lb/>
and to decrease the chance d<lb/>
heart disease said Pattoson.<lb/>
Any faculty membo intoest-<lb/>
ed in this free program should go<lb/>
to the gymnastics room anytime<lb/>
between 12 an 1 on Monday,<lb/>
Wednesday, a Friday.<lb/>
A stress test and physical are<lb/>
recommended.<lb/>
Lack of money stalls<lb/>
snack bar work<lb/>
Winter is here<lb/>
WINTER ARRIVED IN full force this week as<lb/>
temperatures dipped to a frigid 15 degrees one<lb/>
night. The frost on this rear window, however, is<lb/>
evidence of the delicate jeauty winter creates as it<lb/>
sweeps across the land.<lb/>
ByJUUEEVERETTE<lb/>
Assistant News Edito<lb/>
Renovation d the snack bar in<lb/>
the dd student uniai is presently<lb/>
at a standstill because d lack d<lb/>
money, accoding to Curtis May,<lb/>
assistant manago d the student<lb/>
supply stoe.<lb/>
"The snack bar has been<lb/>
completed to a pdnt said May.<lb/>
"We lack the flooing and<lb/>
movable equipment, howevo we<lb/>
do nd have the money right now<lb/>
to complete it<lb/>
Accoding to May, the deci-<lb/>
sion was made to oomplde the<lb/>
new book stoe and to wok as<lb/>
much as posade on the snack ba<lb/>
with the alldted money.<lb/>
Wok on the snack bar was<lb/>
started in Novembo 1976,<lb/>
acooding to May.<lb/>
The dd student union book<lb/>
stoe and snack ba is being<lb/>
renovated because more space is<lb/>
needed.<lb/>
Accoding to May, the dd<lb/>
snack ba could nd adequatdy<lb/>
serve the students.<lb/>
"The new snack ba will be<lb/>
self-service said May. "The<lb/>
layout will be voy similar to the<lb/>
Croatan<lb/>
The student supply stoe,<lb/>
which is self supporting, is<lb/>
financing the renovation through<lb/>
a loan, accoding to May.<lb/>
"To oomplde the snack bo,<lb/>
we will probably have to barow<lb/>
mae money said May.<lb/>
"Just as soon as we feel we<lb/>
can wok furtho cm the snack ba,<lb/>
the studoitscan rest assured that<lb/>
we will oompld it as sickly as<lb/>
possiWe said fvMv<lb/>
<pb facs="00058065_0002"/><lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 19 January 1978<lb/>
Models<lb/>
Crusade<lb/>
Language<lb/>
OTSA<lb/>
Two castles<lb/>
The O.T.S.A. will meet<lb/>
Thurs Feb. 19 at 12:00 . in the<lb/>
O.T. Lab.<lb/>
Election of offioers for the<lb/>
1978 school year will be held at<lb/>
this time. All interested students<lb/>
are encouraged to attend.<lb/>
Law<lb/>
The Law Society will meet at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. Tues Jan. 24 in the<lb/>
multipurpose room of Menden-<lb/>
hall. District Judge Robert D.<lb/>
Wheeler will be the speaker. All<lb/>
interested persons are urged to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
SRTP<lb/>
The Southern Regional Train-<lb/>
ing Program in Public Adminis-<lb/>
tration is now accepting applica-<lb/>
tions fa fellowships for the<lb/>
1978-79 academic year. The pro-<lb/>
gram prepares students in gover-<lb/>
nment and is sponsored by the<lb/>
Universities of Alabama, Ken-<lb/>
tucky and Tennessee.<lb/>
Students who are awarded<lb/>
fellowships will serve a 10-week<lb/>
internship during the summer of<lb/>
1978. They will spend the Fall at<lb/>
the University of Alabama. After<lb/>
the Christmas holidays, one<lb/>
group of Fellows will spend the<lb/>
Spring at the University of<lb/>
Kentucky and another at the<lb/>
University of Tennessee. Upon<lb/>
satisfactory completion of the<lb/>
program, Fellows receive a Cert-<lb/>
ificate in Public Administration.<lb/>
In addition, course work complet-<lb/>
ed in the Program will be<lb/>
accepted for an M PA degree at<lb/>
one of the institutions which they<lb/>
attended.<lb/>
The fellowships have a value<lb/>
of $4,600 which includes a stipend<lb/>
of $3,300 and remission of fees<lb/>
and tuition i which at present<lb/>
amount to $1,300. Married<lb/>
students receive a grant of $400 in<lb/>
addition to the regular stipend.<lb/>
Candidates must be American<lb/>
citizens who hold a bachelor's<lb/>
degree or who expect to receive a<lb/>
bachelor's degree by June of<lb/>
1978. No opecific major or area of<lb/>
stuc'y isrtquired. Fellowships are<lb/>
awarded on the basis of high<lb/>
academic achievement, scores on<lb/>
the quant it i ve and qualitative<lb/>
portions of the Graduate Record<lb/>
Exam, and a real interest in<lb/>
pursuing a career in public<lb/>
administration in the South.<lb/>
Applications must be received<lb/>
by February 15, 1978. For infor-<lb/>
mation and applications write to:<lb/>
Coleman B. Ransone, Jr Direct-<lb/>
or. Southern Regional Training<lb/>
Program in Public Administra-<lb/>
tion, Drawer I, University, Ala.<lb/>
35486.<lb/>
The Visual Arts Forum will<lb/>
present a short animated film<lb/>
"TwoCastles" Fri Jan 20 at the<lb/>
Art Dept. in Jenkins Auditorium.<lb/>
12:00.<lb/>
Peace Corps<lb/>
A Peace Corps reauiting<lb/>
office will be opening here,<lb/>
staffed by two famer wakers.<lb/>
The office is in Flanagan 425.<lb/>
Come by to ask questions and get<lb/>
information, a oontad Dr.<lb/>
Mattheis in the Science Education<lb/>
dept.<lb/>
NCFWBA<lb/>
The Nath Carolina Farm<lb/>
Writers and Broadcasters Anoc.<lb/>
is offering a $500 scholarship to<lb/>
a rising junia a senia who is<lb/>
interested in a career in agricul-<lb/>
ture communications and is<lb/>
majaing in some area of com-<lb/>
municatiois.<lb/>
Entrants must write an essay<lb/>
of 500 wads a less telling why<lb/>
they are interested in agricultural<lb/>
communications and why they<lb/>
think they should receive this<lb/>
scholarship. Essays should be<lb/>
mailed to: Bill Humphries,<lb/>
Scholarship Chairman, P.O. Box<lb/>
5807, Raleigh, N.C. 27607.<lb/>
Please include your name, age,<lb/>
class, mail address, and tele-<lb/>
phone, numbers at both school<lb/>
and home with your essay.<lb/>
Deadline is Fri Feb. 3.<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
Get a team together and sign<lb/>
up now fa the Spring Semester<lb/>
Bowling Leagues. Each team<lb/>
member's name must be entered<lb/>
on the poster located on the<lb/>
ground floa main bulletin board<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student Center by<lb/>
Monday, January 23. Play will<lb/>
begin at 7 p.m. on Jan. 23 and 24.<lb/>
The mixed doubles leagues will<lb/>
meet each Mon. a Tues. evening<lb/>
and will axiast of six four-<lb/>
member teams composed of two<lb/>
men and two women each. Fa<lb/>
further infamatiai contact L.<lb/>
Huntley, 752-4908.<lb/>
Pria to league play, all<lb/>
participants signing after January<lb/>
16 should contact L Huntley,<lb/>
752-4908, fa more infamatiai.<lb/>
Visit the Baptist Student<lb/>
Union fa Tuesdays "Celebra-<lb/>
tiois A meal is served at 530<lb/>
followed by programs that add<lb/>
depth to your life. 511 E. 10th St.<lb/>
Models needed fa Figure<lb/>
Drawing Classes. Contact School<lb/>
of Art, Wesley Crawley, Eliza-<lb/>
beth Ross, Geage Danhires a<lb/>
Marilyn Gadley in the Jenkins<lb/>
Building and provide time periods<lb/>
that you would be available to<lb/>
wak.<lb/>
Crafts<lb/>
Mr. Bill Brouilliard, resident<lb/>
potter of Penland School of Crafts<lb/>
will be on campus Thurs. and<lb/>
Fri Jan 19 and 20 fa a wakshop<lb/>
sponsaed by the Ceramics Guild<lb/>
in cooperation with VAF and<lb/>
SGA.<lb/>
Mr. Brouilliard's area of<lb/>
specialization includes salt glaze<lb/>
and wood fired clay. He received<lb/>
his undergraduate degree at the<lb/>
University of Wisconsin<lb/>
(Madison) and his MFA at Alfred<lb/>
University.<lb/>
The wakshop is as follows:<lb/>
Thurs. J-103, demo, 10-4 p.m.<lb/>
Fri same as above<lb/>
Sat. and Sun :Kilnyard fa firing.<lb/>
Slide presentation Thurs.<lb/>
evening, 8 p.m. Jenkins<lb/>
Auditaium<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
It's back and it's better! The<lb/>
ECU Coffeehouse is jumping with<lb/>
new talent and new blood. Thurs.<lb/>
and Fri Jan. 19 and 20. ECU<lb/>
Coffeehouse will present Frank<lb/>
and Mike, two professional per-<lb/>
famers who will entertain you<lb/>
with songs by: Seals and Croft.<lb/>
Bob Dylan, James Tayla, aig-<lb/>
mals and sane jazz.<lb/>
Only .50 will get you in, and<lb/>
let you fill up on the goodies.<lb/>
PHIS<lb/>
Any students who were em-<lb/>
ployed by the Program fa<lb/>
Hearing Impaired Students as<lb/>
notetakersa tutas need to check<lb/>
with the Program Office about<lb/>
Income Tax statements. If you<lb/>
were employed by any other<lb/>
office on campus we will not have<lb/>
your statement. If you were only<lb/>
employed through our program<lb/>
PLEASE oome get your state-<lb/>
ment. Thank You<lb/>
Gong show<lb/>
Do you have talent?<lb/>
If na, we want you fa our<lb/>
Gong Show.<lb/>
Auditions are Wed Jan 25<lb/>
fron 7 til 9 p.m. at the Methodist<lb/>
Student Center. The show will be<lb/>
Thurs Feb. 2 from 8-10 p.m.<lb/>
Prizes will be awarded fa the<lb/>
tost and wast acts. Fa mae<lb/>
infamatiai contact David Hunt<lb/>
752-1919.<lb/>
P.S. We accept people with talent<lb/>
also.<lb/>
The Campus Crusade fa<lb/>
Christ will meet Thurs Jan. 17,<lb/>
at 7 p.m. in Brewster B-101 fa a<lb/>
time of fun, fellowship, and Bible<lb/>
study. Everyone is invited to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
CSO<lb/>
The Center fa Student Oppor-<lb/>
tunities is offering cost-free tuta-<lb/>
ial help to majas in mediane,<lb/>
premediane, nursing and allied<lb/>
health upon request. CSO is also<lb/>
offering the chance fa certain<lb/>
majas in mediane, premedidne,<lb/>
nursing, allied health, biology,<lb/>
chemistry and physics to earn an<lb/>
income at standard campus wage<lb/>
per hour waking as tutas to<lb/>
their peers. Students interested<lb/>
in either asped of this program<lb/>
should contact the Center fa<lb/>
Student Oppatunities, 208 Rags-<lb/>
dale Hall in oerson immediately.<lb/>
The deadline is Fri Feb. 10.<lb/>
French<lb/>
A French cultural festival<lb/>
featuring French wines and<lb/>
cheeses will be held at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Thurs Jan. 26 in ECU'S Inter-<lb/>
national House at 306 E. 9th St<lb/>
aaoss from Mendenhall. Due to<lb/>
the amount and quality of wines<lb/>
and cheeses to be served, a<lb/>
contribution of $2 is requested.<lb/>
Tickets will be sold by aganiza-<lb/>
tioial members and the Faeign<lb/>
Langauge departmental office.<lb/>
Please buy your tickets in ad-<lb/>
vance.<lb/>
Physics<lb/>
David Montgomery, a mem-<lb/>
ber of the physics faculty of the<lb/>
College of William and Mary, will<lb/>
speak at a Jan. 27 program<lb/>
sponsaed by the ECU Dept. of<lb/>
Physics. Prof. Montgomery's<lb/>
topic will be "Turbulence in<lb/>
Navier-Stokes and Magneto-<lb/>
hydrodynamics Fluids The pro-<lb/>
gram is scheduled fa 3 p.m. in<lb/>
rcom 213 of the ECU physics<lb/>
building. The public is invited to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
NTE<lb/>
Prospedive teachers who plan to<lb/>
take to National Teachers Exam-<lb/>
inations on Feb 18 at ECU are<lb/>
reminded that they have less than<lb/>
two weeks to register with<lb/>
Educational Testing Service<lb/>
(ETS) of Prinoeton, NJ.<lb/>
Registrations must be mailed<lb/>
in time to reach ETS no later than<lb/>
January 26. Registration fams<lb/>
and instrudiois may be obtained<lb/>
from the ECU Testing Center,<lb/>
iroom-105 Speight Building,<lb/>
ECU, a (directly from the<lb/>
Natiaial Teachers Examinations,<lb/>
ETS, Box 911, Princeton, NJ<lb/>
08540. On-the-spot registration is<lb/>
not permitted.<lb/>
There will be an aganiza<lb/>
-tiorial meeting of the Inter-<lb/>
national Language Organization<lb/>
fa members and guests in room<lb/>
248 Mendenhall, at 8 "p.m.<lb/>
Thurs Jan. 19. The purpose of<lb/>
the meeting will be to discuss this<lb/>
semester's adivities and make<lb/>
final arrangements fa the Soiree<lb/>
Francaise. Everyone is invited.<lb/>
Gospel<lb/>
Tonight! Thursday January 19 at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. in Mendenhall 221, the<lb/>
Full Gospel Student Fellowship<lb/>
will meet to sing and share<lb/>
testimonies about what Jesus is<lb/>
doing in their lives. Everyone is<lb/>
invited to attend. Any questions<lb/>
a comments should be direaed<lb/>
to John Crowe, 758-9538.<lb/>
Auditions<lb/>
Auditions fa the dinner thea-<lb/>
tre produdion of "The Owl and<lb/>
The Pussycatt" will be held on<lb/>
Thurs Jan. 19 fron 7:30 p.m. to<lb/>
9:30 p.m. in 248 Mendenhall and<lb/>
on Fri Jan. 20 from 7:30 p.m. to<lb/>
9:30 p.m. in Auditaium 244<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
The show is an MSC Produc-<lb/>
tion direded by Del Lewis. Actors<lb/>
will be paid.<lb/>
Handball<lb/>
All interested persons who<lb/>
would like to join a dub,<lb/>
(turopean) Team Handball,<lb/>
should come to rm. 105 Memorial<lb/>
Gym ai Mai Jan 23at 4:30 p.m.<lb/>
Come oi out and lets get this dub<lb/>
team going.<lb/>
Fellowship<lb/>
inter-Varsity Christian<lb/>
Fellowship will meet this Sunday<lb/>
night at 8 p.m. in the Afro-<lb/>
American Cultural Center. The<lb/>
topic will be Prayer: Responding<lb/>
to God.<lb/>
Showtime<lb/>
Barry Lyndon , a film by<lb/>
Stanley Kubrick, will be shown<lb/>
Fri. and Sat Jan 19 and 20, in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Theater. Showtimes are 6 p.m.<lb/>
and 9:15 p.m. Starring Ryan<lb/>
O'Neal, Marisa Berenson and<lb/>
Patrick Magee.<lb/>
SGA seats<lb/>
Screening fa SGA legislata's<lb/>
will be held Wed Jan 25 at 4<lb/>
p.m. m Mendenhall. There are<lb/>
two openings in Belkoorm, one in<lb/>
Umstead, and three day student<lb/>
openings. Apply now in the SGA<lb/>
office.<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058065_0003"/><lb/>
�<lb/>
����IBH<lb/>
Jane Abrams and Samia Halabv will speak<lb/>
19 January 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Pig 3<lb/>
SGA sponsors art exhibitions and lectures<lb/>
By A RAH V ENABLE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The SGA is sponsoring an art<lb/>
exhibition in the art department<lb/>
January 24th and January 26th at<lb/>
3 p.m. in the Leo Jenkins Fine<lb/>
Arts Auditorium. Jane Abrams<lb/>
and Samia Haiaby are the speak-<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
Tuesday, Jane Abrams is to<lb/>
present a paper on her work.<lb/>
Aaron Karp, director of Gray Art<lb/>
Gallery describes her work as<lb/>
being "humorousand neurotic<lb/>
Abrams works deals with explor-<lb/>
ation and definition of a woman,<lb/>
says Karp.<lb/>
Abrams is an assistant pro-<lb/>
fessor at the University of New<lb/>
Mexico, teaching drawing and<lb/>
print making. She was educated<lb/>
at Indiana University and Univer-<lb/>
sity of Wisconsin and has since<lb/>
received prizes in national and<lb/>
international exhibitions.<lb/>
She was allowed to give a<lb/>
one-woman show at the Martha<lb/>
Jackson Gallery in New York.<lb/>
Haiaby is appearing .Thursday<lb/>
and will lecture on her personal<lb/>
way of seeing in an artistic-<lb/>
historical context. She will also be<lb/>
presenting slides.<lb/>
Nationally known, Haldby is<lb/>
an assistant professor at Yale<lb/>
University. She received her<lb/>
education at Indiana University,<lb/>
Michigan State, and Univeraty of<lb/>
Cinnanatti.<lb/>
Her work has appeared at<lb/>
places such as Susan Caldwell<lb/>
Gallery and Guggenhein<lb/>
Museum, both in New Yak.<lb/>
The speakers will meet se-<lb/>
perately with graduate art<lb/>
students: Jane Abram-Monday;<lb/>
and Samia Haiaby Thursday morn-<lb/>
ing. They will give their personal<lb/>
pants of view on the work done<lb/>
by the students.<lb/>
The funds have been made<lb/>
available by the SGA through the<lb/>
efforts of Visual Arts Forum.<lb/>
Karp says that he urges<lb/>
student participation. The works<lb/>
of the two artists are now on<lb/>
exhibit.<lb/>
NA TIONALLY RECOGNIZED ARTIST Samia Haia-<lb/>
by will present a lecture and slides on her personal<lb/>
way ot seeing in an artistio-nistoricai ooniexi on<lb/>
Thurs Jan. 26, at 3 p.m.<lb/>
SHOESHOP<lb/>
HEPAW ALL<lb/>
LEATHER QOOOS<lb/>
Downtown Graanvilte<lb/>
111W��4�ha<lb/>
ATiTIC<lb/>
Wed<lb/>
Thurs<lb/>
Blaze<lb/>
Semiannual Vi price Sale<lb/>
Fall &amp; Winter Merchandise<lb/>
<lb/>
752-1828 �o<lb/>
SP1CCD HAM<lb/>
BOLOGNA A CHEESE<lb/>
HAM &amp; SWISS<lb/>
HAM. SWISS A SALAMI<lb/>
TUNA<lb/>
BOAST BEEF<lb/>
(7) TURKEY<lb/>
(8) CLUB<lb/>
(9) SUPER<lb/>
(10) CHEESE<lb/>
(11) HOT PASTROMI<lb/>
(12) HOT CORNED BEEF<lb/>
BUMP1E3BEST<lb/>
Tuesday Buck Day AH Day<lb/>
(any sub 1.00 wpurchase of soft drink)<lb/>
Wed. Buck Day (12:00-2:30 pm)<lb/>
We Deliver Everyday After 6:00 nm.<lb/>
Also Watch Your Favorite Sports Events<lb/>
m 6ft t.v.<lb/>
REFRIGERATORS<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
The SGA Refrigerator Service<lb/>
now has 100 refrigerators<lb/>
available for rent.<lb/>
Come by today<lb/>
and rent a refrigerator<lb/>
while the supply lasts I<lb/>
Total charges for one semester<lb/>
$21.00 Rent<lb/>
10-00 Deposit<lb/>
$31.00 Total<lb/>
OFFICE: 231 Mendenhall<lb/>
Phone: 757- 6611 Ext. 215<lb/>
Fall Semester Office hours:<lb/>
M&amp;W 12:00-2:30 TfrTh 125-3:15<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058065_0004"/><lb/>
������������I<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 19 January 1978<lb/>
Registering bikes:<lb/>
for service or cash?<lb/>
Campuspolice will begin impounding unregister-<lb/>
ed bicycles soon, according to Joe Calder, director of<lb/>
security and traffic.<lb/>
In the Tuesday edition of FOUNTAINHEAD,<lb/>
Calder said he "would like to advise bicycle owners<lb/>
to reqister their bicycles if they have not already done<lb/>
so This is, indeed, practical advice if one doesn't<lb/>
want his bicycle mercilessly hauled off.<lb/>
The "ECU Traffic Regulations' pamphlet states:<lb/>
All bicycles operated on the ECU campus must be<lb/>
registered with the traffic office and bear a bicycle<lb/>
registration permit andor City of Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
bicycle license.<lb/>
The reason bicycles should be registered,<lb/>
according to the traffic dept. is to ensure a better<lb/>
chance to retrieve a bicycle should it be stolen.<lb/>
Granted, this is a sound argument.<lb/>
But, suppose a student prefers not to register his<lb/>
bike, for whatever reason. Should he be forced to<lb/>
register it anyway?<lb/>
It's only logical that a student would register his<lb/>
jar, the main reason being, of course, that parking<lb/>
spaces are so limited that any car parked on campus<lb/>
not registered with the traffic dept. should be<lb/>
towed. But a bicycle? It hardly seems likely that<lb/>
bicycle racks and trees are growing scarce and<lb/>
bicyclists have no place to chain their bikes. Neither<lb/>
does it seem likely that so many bicyclists exist on<lb/>
this campus that ground space is running to short to<lb/>
accommodate all bicycles.<lb/>
If half the students on campus own bicycles, and<lb/>
approximately 12,000 students are enrolled, (regis-<lb/>
tering one's bike costs only .50) then the traffic dept.<lb/>
could make approximately $3,000  if all the<lb/>
bicyclists registered their bikes.<lb/>
In its campaign to scare students into registering<lb/>
their bikes, the traffic dept. is using the<lb/>
easy-to-trace-your-bike-if-it's-stolen line to cover its<lb/>
apparent interest in the money it could be making.<lb/>
The bike owners should not be threatened to<lb/>
register their bikes when there's no logical<lb/>
explanation as to why they should. Impounding<lb/>
bicycles based on a flimsy excuse as to why they<lb/>
should be registered is unjust.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community tor war titty years.<lb/>
Senior EditorCindy Broome<lb/>
Managing EditorLeigh Coakley<lb/>
Advertising ManagerRobert M. Swaim<lb/>
News Editors<lb/>
Doug White<lb/>
joe Taeger<lb/>
Trends EditorDavid W. Trevino<lb/>
Sports EditorChris Hdloman<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student newspaper oi East Carolina<lb/>
University sponsored by the Student Government Association of<lb/>
ECU and is distributed each Wednesday during the summer,<lb/>
d twice weekly during the school year.<lb/>
uiailing address: Old South Building, Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
Editorial offices: 757-6366, 757-6367, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually.<lb/>
HEY chief! t think, WV� Got another<lb/>
u n Registered B KBl<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Student defends former senior editor<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
In Tuesday s edition of the<lb/>
Forum a letter appeared offering<lb/>
"a clear understanding of<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD and the people<lb/>
who work here Rather than an<lb/>
accurate portrait of the paper and<lb/>
its staff, the letter was little more<lb/>
than an unfortunate profile of a<lb/>
stereotypical figure to be found<lb/>
infesting all walks of life.<lb/>
Whatever opinions Kim<lb/>
Devins held, she was willing to<lb/>
defend them in the presence of<lb/>
her detractors. Whether- widely<lb/>
shared or not, her positions<lb/>
appeared in the editorial column<lb/>
where they could not be miscon-<lb/>
strued as the concensus of the<lb/>
staff.<lb/>
The past failure of<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD were not the<lb/>
sole responsibility of any indiv-<lb/>
idual. The paper is the result of a<lb/>
concentrated effort and it would<lb/>
be absurd for any single person to<lb/>
be saddled with blame a crowned<lb/>
with praise.<lb/>
If the production conditions<lb/>
avaibale are less than stable they<lb/>
do allow fa the achievement of a<lb/>
level of excellence. East Carolina<lb/>
deserves a superior college news-<lb/>
paper and the FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
staff desires nothing less. Most of<lb/>
us are willing to have our<lb/>
mistakes pointed out to us, if<lb/>
need be repetitively, so that<lb/>
problems not caused by mechan-<lb/>
ical failings can be rectified in the<lb/>
future.<lb/>
The new spirit at<lb/>
FOUNTAI NHEAD is to produce a<lb/>
quality newspaper and not unsat-<lb/>
isfactory equivocations.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
David W. Trevino<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
A tribute to the late Senator Humphrey<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
THE UNWORSHIPPED HERO<lb/>
War raged onward for victory,<lb/>
Contests continue to be waged,<lb/>
Leaders continue to grit their<lb/>
teeth for the cause of victory,<lb/>
International politics and jeal-<lb/>
ousies among sovereign states<lb/>
linger on with the saged,<lb/>
But one world was lost.<lb/>
Ethnic groups of past and present<lb/>
seek fit to stereotype,<lb/>
Economics evolve in a viscious<lb/>
circle to beat the better types,<lb/>
Races seek to blindly see the<lb/>
other colors,<lb/>
Yet, not a soul seeks to accent<lb/>
other odors,<lb/>
But one world was lost.<lb/>
People will be people till seasons<lb/>
run dry,<lb/>
To accept the competition is to<lb/>
oompare yourself,<lb/>
Life is a struggle till death to us<lb/>
in,<lb/>
Lover of life is to triumph with<lb/>
defeat,<lb/>
But one world was lost.<lb/>
Toolimb a mountain is to stumble<lb/>
along the pebbles,<lb/>
To never reach the top is a treble,<lb/>
But one world was lost.<lb/>
To give of oneself to others is<lb/>
more than the contrary,<lb/>
To laugh is the universal feeling<lb/>
of pain,<lb/>
To ay is another feeling of cain<lb/>
But one wald was lost.<lb/>
But one wald was lost<lb/>
After,<lb/>
One wald was oice gained,<lb/>
But Hubert H. Humphrey lost<lb/>
everything and gave his wald<lb/>
everything.<lb/>
But an H.H.H. will never be<lb/>
again.<lb/>
MarcS. Adler<lb/>
Don't forget<lb/>
Forum Policy<lb/>
<pb facs="00058065_0005"/><lb/>
���iHHHHHMHHBHI<lb/>
HBH<lb/>
�Hi<lb/>
Nursemid-wife credits better prenatal care<lb/>
19 January 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
Infant mortality rate declines in Pitt County<lb/>
ByJEANNIE WILLIAMS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The infant mortality rate in<lb/>
Pitt County has declined about 50<lb/>
per cent since 1970, according to<lb/>
Josephine Hookway.<lb/>
The infant mortality rate<lb/>
(IMR) is the number of infants<lb/>
who die before their first birth-<lb/>
day, according to Josephine<lb/>
Hookway, a member of the<lb/>
Department of Obstetrics and<lb/>
Gynecology in the ECU School of<lb/>
Mediane.<lb/>
There has been a gradual<lb/>
improvement in the infant mort-<lb/>
ality rate, but there remains much<lb/>
to be done she said.<lb/>
Ms. Hookway said that the<lb/>
national I MR is also declining.<lb/>
In 1960 the national IMR was<lb/>
26 per 1,000 live births, and by<lb/>
1975 it had fallen to 16.1 per<lb/>
1.000, Hookway said.<lb/>
Pitt County rates have declin-<lb/>
ed from 36.5 in 1970 to 17.9 in<lb/>
1976, said Hookway.<lb/>
The bulk of infant deaths<lb/>
occur in the first 28 days of life<lb/>
said Ms. Hookway.<lb/>
The leading cause of death is<lb/>
prematurity, she said. "Next<lb/>
comes respiratory disease,<lb/>
Sudden Infant Death Syndrome<lb/>
and, fourth, congenital abnormal-<lb/>
ities.<lb/>
A study of premature births in<lb/>
Pitt County by Ms. Hookway<lb/>
showed that non-white women<lb/>
had more premature births than<lb/>
white women.<lb/>
Figures fa 1974 and 1975<lb/>
showed 183 premature births fa<lb/>
nai-whites as compared to 83 fa<lb/>
whites.<lb/>
Ms. Hookway noted that these<lb/>
figures oarespond with national<lb/>
statistics that show higher pre-<lb/>
mature birth rates fa nai-whites.<lb/>
Nineteen per cent of all Pitt<lb/>
County births between 1970 and<lb/>
1976 were to women age 18 a<lb/>
under. Thirteen per cent were to<lb/>
those age 30 and over.<lb/>
Ms. Hookway found that Pitt<lb/>
County white women are follow-<lb/>
ing a national trend of waiting<lb/>
until their twenties to have their<lb/>
first child.<lb/>
In 1974 and 1975 more white<lb/>
wonen between the ages of 23<lb/>
and 29 years had more babies<lb/>
than any other age group.<lb/>
Non-white women have babies<lb/>
relatively early. The peak years<lb/>
are between 17 and 26, according<lb/>
to Hookway.<lb/>
Ms. Hookway said that<lb/>
women in general were postpon-<lb/>
ing pregnancies fa many<lb/>
reasons, including time to com-<lb/>
plete their education, waking to<lb/>
help put their husbands through<lb/>
MATTRESS MART<lb/>
Wholesale to Everyone<lb/>
RetailOur Price<lb/>
WATERBEDS $52.00$37.00<lb/>
FRAMES $70.00$35.00<lb/>
MATTRESS &amp; $149.00 FOUNDATION$87.00<lb/>
1302 N. Greene St.758-1101<lb/>
"DISCOUNT FURNITURE"<lb/>
AT<lb/>
AZALEA MOBILE HOMES<lb/>
THESE ITEMS ARE PRICED TO SELL<lb/>
COFFEE TABLE�25.00 A!ND UP<lb/>
COUCH AND CHAIRS60.00 AND UP<lb/>
WASHING MACHINEStl25.00 AND UP<lb/>
SWIVEL ROCKERS20.00 AND UP<lb/>
CHEST S40.00 AND UP<lb/>
DINETTE SUITS$50.00 AND UP<lb/>
REFRIGERATORS 80.00 AND UP<lb/>
SEE TOMMY WILLIAMS TODAY<lb/>
AZALEA MOBILE HOMES<lb/>
PHONE 756-7815 � 264 BY-PASS WEST<lb/>
(ACROSS FROM BILL HADDOCK CHRYSLER)<lb/>
school, and waiting to beoome<lb/>
financially secure.<lb/>
Pitt County has been able to<lb/>
improve its infant mortality rate<lb/>
gradually through the dedicated<lb/>
efforts of area obstetricians and<lb/>
pediatricians, Ms. Hookway said.<lb/>
Ms. Hookway also cited the<lb/>
high risk fa mothers and infants<lb/>
that was established three years<lb/>
ago at the Pitt County Health<lb/>
Department.<lb/>
She also credited a govern-<lb/>
ment-sponsored nutrition pro-<lb/>
gram fa pregnant mothers and<lb/>
newban babies that was started a<lb/>
year ago. The program provides<lb/>
cheese, milk, and eggs to xip-<lb/>
piement inadequate diets.<lb/>
Women are becoming more<lb/>
conscious of the need fa prenatal<lb/>
care and are seeking it earlier,<lb/>
said Ms. Hookway.<lb/>
"A significant number, how-<lb/>
ever only seek pre-natal care<lb/>
just befae delivery she said.<lb/>
Ms. Hookway feels that the<lb/>
establishment of the ECU<lb/>
Medical School will have a very<lb/>
positive impact on future mat-<lb/>
ernal and infant care in the area.<lb/>
The Department of Obstetrics<lb/>
and Gynecology, directed by Dr.<lb/>
Robert G. Brame, will wak<lb/>
towards the early identification<lb/>
and treatment of high risk<lb/>
pregnant women.<lb/>
The greatest gain in im-<lb/>
provement in prenatal care will be<lb/>
made through prevention of pre-<lb/>
maturity and identification and<lb/>
treatment of women of high<lb/>
risk, said Dr. Brame.<lb/>
Pitt Memaial Hospital is the<lb/>
designated regional center fa<lb/>
pregnant wonen and newban<lb/>
infants who need specialized<lb/>
attention.<lb/>
A new neonatal critical care<lb/>
nursery is presently under con-<lb/>
struction at Pitt Memaial Hos-<lb/>
pital.<lb/>
The center is scheduled to<lb/>
open in April a May.<lb/>
AT<lb/>
BARRE,ltd.<lb/>
 ryro t. jvpjj<lb/>
G�fNMli,NC 2KX<lb/>
Newest<lb/>
Think<lb/>
Spring<lb/>
Danskin<lb/>
Now<lb/>
swimsuitleotards available<lb/>
BILL DEAL &amp; THE RONDELLS<lb/>
Tonight Only At The New<lb/>
R94ftr<lb/>
Fri Sat GRAND REOPENING<lb/>
First 50 people each<lb/>
night get FRF RLBO T-SHIRTS<lb/>
Dance Contest $50.00 Grand Prize Finals Sat.<lb/>
This Weekend Fri 3:30- 7:00<lb/>
Don't Forget Sun is Ladies Night<lb/>
<pb facs="00058065_0006"/><lb/>
�����������S<lb/>
Papa 6 FOUNT AINHEAD 19 January 1978<lb/>
HHi Great A&amp;PQuaBty<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised<lb/>
items is required to be<lb/>
readily available for sale at<lb/>
or below the advertised price in each A&amp;P<lb/>
Store, except as specifically noted in this ad.<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY JAN 21 AT A�P IN Greenville<lb/>
at Low Cost!<lb/>
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH WHOLE<lb/>
S1000 cash bonanza<lb/>
SIM WMNtH I' "<lb/>
t �<lb/>
GAMIS ilts<lb/>
121 mm $374,946 CASH PRIZES<lb/>
Mf� 163.4S6 CASH WINNERS<lb/>
IS<lb/>
M . �� onf or ffoueit'<lb/>
�Pw. S'OI SH BONANZA<lb/>
�4UHRT McCitA<lb/>
MtfORO N C �it�ltl� Mwlt<lb/>
�<lb/>
dei�ng � M �CmtK 4<lb/>
oooi oooa oooi<lb/>
u �<lb/>
�'  �,T� lOOO CASH BONANZA sm<lb/>
� NW riKJi UN<lb/>
 � loerw onfetHLurj'0 i9?fl<lb/>
 " " t'OOC -<lb/>
 t nmt itcfcrh �' A<lb/>
( A&amp;P picks the best dairy ")<lb/>
PARKAY QUARTERS �AO<lb/>
MARGARINE 2 pU� 5Iou<lb/>
PILLSBURY BUTTERMILK -�j<lb/>
BISCUITS J&amp; 59<lb/>
(a&amp;P picks the best bakery )<lb/>
JANE PARKER BAKE N SERVE<lb/>
TWIN 3<lb/>
ROLLS<lb/>
12 CT.<lb/>
11-OZ.<lb/>
PKGS.<lb/>
JANE PARKER CRACKED WHEAT<lb/>
BREAD<lb/>
( A4P picks the best frozen foods)<lb/>
"sEALTESfTiGHT N LIVELY<lb/>
�j<lb/>
SAVE 36c<lb/>
49<lb/>
CUT FROM<lb/>
THE CHUCK<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN-FED BEEF<lb/>
� Bjfejaj Mfe MM! � MB A�H UUALII Y MtAVY WtbltMN UMHin-I-CU DEtr<lb/>
ICE MILK e��Enw QQC roast<lb/>
' ��aaaiB a Bjjm n wm a ajafcr �tp country hum po�� shop<lb/>
89<lb/>
CHEF-BOY-AR-DEE<lb/>
A4P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN-FED BEEF<lb/>
GROUND 3<lb/>
MORE<lb/>
PORK CHOPS<lb/>
ANN PAGE BRAND<lb/>
SLICED<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
SAUSAGE 13'j-OZ.<lb/>
HAMBURGER 14-OZ<lb/>
PEPPERONI 13-OZ<lb/>
GROUND 3 LBS AAA SLICED AIAQ<lb/>
CHUCK 199 BACON " 2 $1"<lb/>
TEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL OEALERS AND WHOLESALERS<lb/>
MILLER LITE BEER<lb/>
CAW ON OF<lb/>
12 OZ CANS<lb/>
rffriscoV<lb/>
THOMPSON CORN<lb/>
MUFFIN MIX<lb/>
LUCK S (WITH PORKj<lb/>
PINTO BEANS<lb/>
BETTY CROCKER LAYER<lb/>
CAKE MIXES<lb/>
5<lb/>
3<lb/>
8-OZ 3� I<lb/>
PKGS<lb/>
POUND CAK� it 0<lb/>
VtLLOW BUTTtfl IB rOl<lb/>
DfVIUS FOOD U , 01 EA.<lb/>
CfRMANCMOC IIjO OMIV<lb/>
yh i ntM i� nr w�-�<lb/>
$-100<lb/>
59c<lb/>
ORANGE GRAPE. OR FLORIDA PUNCH<lb/>
MI"C S3 <lb/>
� I<lb/>
We pick the best produce<lb/>
WASHINGTON STATE RED OR GOLDEN<lb/>
DELICIOUS APPLES<lb/>
SAVE UP TO'<lb/>
3<lb/>
99�<lb/>
IL0 AND TENOER<lb/>
YELLOW ONIONS3 da 49c<lb/>
79<lb/>
YOUR CHOICE SALE!<lb/>
RFSH KALE OR<lb/>
io oz LlC<lb/>
BAG<lb/>
SPINACH eSSS.<lb/>
OR OUR LITTLE FRIENDS - - <lb/>
BIRDSEED 10 babg 177<lb/>
RED GHAPEFRUIT (48 SIZE) EACH<lb/>
WHITE GRAPEFRUIT (4S SIZE) EAC<lb/>
FRESH LEMONS 1140 SIZE) EACH<lb/>
2 TANGERINES (176 SIZE)<lb/>
TEMPLE ORANGES (100 SIZE)<lb/>
WHITE POTATOES U S SIZE A LB.<lb/>
10<lb/>
AiP COUPON<lb/>
PURE<lb/>
VEGETABLE<lb/>
SHORTENING<lb/>
LIMIT ONf WITH<lb/>
COUPON AND<lb/>
ADDITIONAL<lb/>
7 50 ORDER<lb/>
CRISCO<lb/>
3 a $I9<lb/>
, 50c <lb/>
LIMIT ONE COUPON<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT. JAN 21 AT A4P IN GHEENVILLE<lb/>
PRICE t PRIOE � PRICE A PRIDE �<lb/>
PRICE A PRIDE �<lb/>
A�P COUPON<lb/>
PRICE PRIOE<lb/>
LAUNDRY<lb/>
DETERGENT<lb/>
�?j? 49 OZ.<lb/>
LIMIT ONE BOX WITH  40c  nnu<lb/>
TMISCOi ON AND Bu<lb/>
ADDITIONAL lS .<lb/>
7 SO ORDER<lb/>
CHEER<lb/>
99<lb/>
PRICE t PRIDE � PRICE A. PRIDE �<lb/>
PRICE 4 PRIDE<lb/>
'�I PRIOE �<lb/>
A4P COUPON<lb/>
CONTAINS RICH BRAZILIAN COFFEES<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON<lb/>
ANO ADDITIONAL<lb/>
7 SO OROER<lb/>
INSTANT<lb/>
COFFEfl29<lb/>
LIMIT ONE COUPON �M2<lb/>
OOOO THRU SAT, JAN 21 AT A4P IN GREENVILLE<lb/>
PRICE PRIDE � PRICE A PRIDE �<lb/>
PRICE A PRIOF<lb/>
<pb facs="00058065_0007"/><lb/>
��MH<lb/>
�HnnnnH<lb/>
1 Loving Gentleman<lb/>
biography<lb/>
By SUE ELLEN McLEOD<lb/>
Trends Staff<lb/>
Meta Carpenter has written a<lb/>
detailed expose of her intimate<lb/>
relationship with one of the most<lb/>
noted authorsof thisage, William<lb/>
Faulkner. Considering the nature<lb/>
ot Faulkner s adversity to public<lb/>
display of his private life, one<lb/>
wonders why a woman would<lb/>
write an account of their affair<lb/>
and make it available to anyone<lb/>
with a dollar and ninety-five<lb/>
cents.<lb/>
Carpenter writes of her loving<lb/>
and sensitive relationship with<lb/>
Faulkner while he was in Holly-<lb/>
wood writing screen plays. She<lb/>
claims that they shared a com-<lb/>
plete understanding of each<lb/>
other s mutual needs and wants.<lb/>
Yet, after his death, the woman<lb/>
who knew him so well, chooses to<lb/>
reveal their aose and private<lb/>
moments with anyone who will<lb/>
take the time to read them.<lb/>
In her fa ward, Carpenter<lb/>
states her reason tor writing this<lb/>
expose is to prevent other people<lb/>
Iran distorting the relationship<lb/>
she ana Faulkner shared. While<lb/>
this reason seems valid to a<lb/>
certain degree, Carpenter s book<lb/>
uestroys this validity by relating<lb/>
intimacies about which no one<lb/>
could speculate. True, people in<lb/>
Hollywood who knew Faulkner<lb/>
and Carpenter could recount<lb/>
places they were seen together<lb/>
and the times they spent with<lb/>
each other, but no one could<lb/>
relate the intimate actions and<lb/>
vvords which passed between<lb/>
them when they were alone. Only<lb/>
Meta Carpenter can reveal those<lb/>
intimacies, and, unfortunately,<lb/>
she chooses to do so in A Loving<lb/>
WILLIAM FAULKNER, NOBEL Prize winning Southern novelist is<lb/>
the subject of Meta Carpenter's intimate expose, "A Loving<lb/>
Gentleman Rather than a sensitive explanation to prevent future<lb/>
distortion, Carpenter's novel is little beyond an explotation of her<lb/>
relationship with one of the 20th centuries maor writers.<lb/>
Gentleman.<lb/>
Carpenter uses the book and<lb/>
her relationship with Faulkner as<lb/>
a vehicle to present the story of<lb/>
her life. As a script girl in<lb/>
Hollywood, Carpenter worked<lb/>
among many well-known stars.<lb/>
She makes a habit of dropping<lb/>
names which eventually begins<lb/>
to read iiKe a list of major motion<lb/>
picture stars of the Twentieth<lb/>
Century. Ihe purpose of this<lb/>
repetitive ana unnecessary listing<lb/>
could only be to boost Carpenter s<lb/>
seit-image in the eyes ot her<lb/>
readers. It failed to make the<lb/>
desired impression.<lb/>
fhe tame Faulkner s writing<lb/>
and person have achieved com-<lb/>
Dined with the notoriety ot<lb/>
scandal will no doubt ease Meta<lb/>
Carpenter s financial concerns. It<lb/>
is pity that Faulkner's work, as<lb/>
wen as his family must be faced<lb/>
with this story which should have<lb/>
remained untold. The nature of<lb/>
carpenter s story reveals that it is<lb/>
merely exploitation of the<lb/>
affection and trust placed in her<lb/>
Dy her lover.<lb/>
Pianists Pittman and Stevens<lb/>
to give duo-concert Jan. 25th<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
Pianist Everett Pittman<lb/>
and Charles Stevens will present<lb/>
a duo-piano reatal Wednesday,<lb/>
Jan. 25, at 8:15 p.m. in the A.J.<lb/>
Fletcher Ftecital Hall.<lb/>
Dr. Pittman is dean of the<lb/>
ECU School of Music, and Dr.<lb/>
Stevens is assistant dean. Their<lb/>
program will include the Bartok<lb/>
Sonata fa Two Pianos and<lb/>
Percussion and the Poulenc Con-<lb/>
certo in D mina.<lb/>
Assisting them in the Bartok<lb/>
are percussionists Patrick<lb/>
Flaherty of Base, Idaho, and<lb/>
John Stamp of College Park, Md.<lb/>
Both are graduate students in the<lb/>
ECU School of Music and are<lb/>
studying with ECU faculty per-<lb/>
cussionist Harold Jones.<lb/>
The reatal is free and open to<lb/>
the public.<lb/>
Trends<lb/>
19 January 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
Hemingway's wife<lb/>
describes fife with Papa<lb/>
By TON A BLACK<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The list of superlatives one<lb/>
could string behind the name of<lb/>
Mary Welsh Hemingway isextra-<lb/>
adinary. To save those of us<lb/>
would-be stringers the task of<lb/>
researching these superlatives,<lb/>
particularly the ones which were<lb/>
ban during her fairly loig<lb/>
innuendo with Ernest<lb/>
Hemingway, Mary Hemingway<lb/>
does it fa us. By the end of How<lb/>
It Was one is as well infamed<lb/>
about Mary as one is about<lb/>
Ernest. Beginning the book is an<lb/>
auspicious, inherent promise that<lb/>
once it is read, an intimate<lb/>
acquaintance with Ernest will<lb/>
have been acquired. By page one<lb/>
hundred and seventeen, where<lb/>
Hemingway finally appears, the<lb/>
reader is on edge, feeling saely<lb/>
denied and distressed at Mary's<lb/>
usfructcny of Ernest's fame to<lb/>
find her own immatality.<lb/>
By repating her life<lb/>
in her jaunty journalistic fashion,<lb/>
Mary Hemingway has aeated a<lb/>
book which reads like a Time<lb/>
Magazine; through, with dates,<lb/>
speafic settings, and multitudes<lb/>
of literary and faeing allusions.<lb/>
Wisely, fa Hemingway is a topic<lb/>
nearly overwaked. Mary lures<lb/>
the reader into her share with the<lb/>
bait of, heretofae unpublished<lb/>
exerpts from letters written by<lb/>
Hemingway. (This bait I found<lb/>
offensive, yet alluring, fa Mary<lb/>
Hemingway had violated a writ-<lb/>
ten request by her husband which<lb/>
stated that none of his personal<lb/>
letters were to be published. Ah,<lb/>
sweet executrix!)<lb/>
Mrs. Hemingway, a really<lb/>
good reporter, had always kept a<lb/>
day by day journal. With material<lb/>
from her journals neatly consum-<lb/>
ing the space between Ernest's<lb/>
letters, she fulfills the book<lb/>
inherent promise within it's bulk<lb/>
See PAPA, p. 8<lb/>
ERNEST HEMINGWAY BATHING in Africa before the plane<lb/>
crashes.<lb/>
Renowned Jazz orchestra<lb/>
to appear in Wright<lb/>
DR EVERETT PITTMAN (right) and Dr. Charles duo-piano reatal next Wednesday at 8:15 in the<lb/>
Stevens of the School of Music will present a A.U. Fletcher Recital Hall.<lb/>
By RENEE DIXON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Thad JonesMel Lewis<lb/>
Jazz Orchestra will appear in<lb/>
concert in Wright Auditaium ai<lb/>
Maiday, January 23,1978 at 800<lb/>
p.m. This renowned jazz aches-<lb/>
tra lends itself to expression of<lb/>
the total jazz scene. Their variety<lb/>
in repertoire ranges from Big<lb/>
Band selections to modern pro-<lb/>
gressive, realizing jazz styles of<lb/>
the past, present, and tuture.<lb/>
Rather than the loud, brassy<lb/>
style of many big bands, the<lb/>
JonesLewis achestra aims fa a<lb/>
mellow, "laid back" sound, dis-<lb/>
playing their versatility and sub-<lb/>
tlety in instrumentation. Much of<lb/>
the band's music is aiginal,<lb/>
written and a arranged by the<lb/>
band members.<lb/>
A clinic will be held Monday<lb/>
afternoon at 300 p.m. led by<lb/>
Jones and Lewis with the aid of<lb/>
their achestra.<lb/>
Student tickets (concert) -<lb/>
$1.50 Students will be admitted to<lb/>
the wakshop by showing their<lb/>
tickets to the evening concert plus<lb/>
ID and activity card. ECU faculty<lb/>
and staff (concert and dime) -<lb/>
$3.00. Non-ECU students<lb/>
(concert only) - $2.00. Public<lb/>
(concert only) - $4.00, and<lb/>
(concert and clinic) $5.0C<lb/>
<pb facs="00058065_0008"/><lb/>
'age 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 19 January 1B<lb/>
Art film<lb/>
TRENDS STAFF REPORT<lb/>
The Challenge: A Tribute To<lb/>
Modern Art will be shown in the<lb/>
dendenhall Student Center<lb/>
heater on January 22 at 7 p.m.<lb/>
ind January 24 and 26 at 8 p.m.<lb/>
This unprecedented film<lb/>
itilizes unique footage of great<lb/>
xxlern artists in their studios<lb/>
reating and commenting on their<lb/>
ork. Academy Award-winning<lb/>
9 �<lb/>
to be shown at Mendenhall<lb/>
director Herbert Kline combed<lb/>
the world for rare footage of<lb/>
Picasso, Matisse and Braque.<lb/>
Among the other artists in-<lb/>
cluded in Kline's film are Dali,<lb/>
Chagall, Moore, Mondnan and<lb/>
De Kooning<lb/>
The film shows great<lb/>
galleries of the world,<lb/>
including the Louvre, the<lb/>
Museum of Modern Art and the<lb/>
Guggenheim, but it is more than<lb/>
a mere travel film about art<lb/>
around the globe.<lb/>
Narrated by Orson Wells, The<lb/>
Challenge begins by asking,<lb/>
What is modern art?" Relation-<lb/>
ships between different styles are<lb/>
explained as well as how Cubism<lb/>
oompleted the revolution begun<lb/>
by Cezanne.<lb/>
The film also investigates<lb/>
stylistic development including<lb/>
Impressionism, Expressionism,<lb/>
Fauvism, Cubism, Futurism,<lb/>
Dadaism, Surrealism, Pop, Op,<lb/>
and the Conceptualists.<lb/>
Students are admitted free<lb/>
with ID and activity cards and<lb/>
faculty and staff by MSC mem-<lb/>
bership card. Public admission is<lb/>
$1.00.<lb/>
The Challenge: A Tribute to<lb/>
Modern Art is presented by the<lb/>
Student Union Art Exhibition<lb/>
Committee, "lllumina<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Sun<lb/>
Bands<lb/>
Rascal Jade<lb/>
Marz Fingergie<lb/>
PAPA<lb/>
Continued from p. 7<lb/>
of 681 pages. One emerges from<lb/>
it, refreshed and enlivened to<lb/>
have read a documented account<lb/>
of how Mary and Ernest did<lb/>
indeed live, so fully and so well.<lb/>
Hemingway looms only more<lb/>
realistically, not only as a demi-<lb/>
god of prose, but as an embodi-<lb/>
ment of fortitude.<lb/>
What of Mary? Does her<lb/>
presence in Hemingway's life<lb/>
more quickly exhaust or extend<lb/>
his talents? Mary makes no bones<lb/>
about her need to assert herself in<lb/>
the Hemingway relationship.<lb/>
"The heat of exuberanoe he<lb/>
engendered around him seemed<lb/>
tome, to rrelt away my identity, I<lb/>
reflected occasionally and al-<lb/>
though I was entirely enthralled<lb/>
by him, especially when we were<lb/>
alone, I felt dubious about the<lb/>
11:15 pm<lb/>
obc<lb/>
Pitt<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
'�n seatt l00<lb/>
FILM<lb/>
5fcS,<lb/>
�&amp;SSS&amp;<lb/>
&amp;$&amp;5<lb/>
 j?-<lb/>
NOW PLAYING!<lb/>
4 YOU LIGHT UP MY LIFE'<lb/>
With the number One hit song of 77!<lb/>
Shows Fri7:30, 9:05 SatSun -4:24, 5:55, 7:30,9:05<lb/>
wisdom of any formal commit-<lb/>
ment between us<lb/>
Hemingway obviously needed<lb/>
her and used her strength at<lb/>
times during hisdispair. She was<lb/>
not only a' durable wife, but his<lb/>
comrade. Hemingway said of<lb/>
Mary, "She does not suffer fools<lb/>
gladly. She does not suffer them<lb/>
at all That she loved him is a<lb/>
fact undisputed. Theirs was an<lb/>
ideal relationship, amidst cham-<lb/>
paigne breakfast, bullfights, and<lb/>
airplane crashes. Only<lb/>
Hemingway's suicide, for reasons<lb/>
of age and health, ended it.<lb/>
The lady deserves a brass ring<lb/>
fa her effort. She has proven her<lb/>
talent and her zest for life by<lb/>
containing with simple book and<lb/>
adventure stay of fact. How It<lb/>
Was is a travel log within it's<lb/>
poetic descriptions of locale, a<lb/>
love stay and a diary. Most<lb/>
definitely Mary Hemingway<lb/>
knows it was.<lb/>
NOW OPEN<lb/>
WED - SUN<lb/>
752 7303<lb/>
located behind THE ATTIC<lb/>
fm PAUL TARDIF<lb/>
TRIO<lb/>
SAT<lb/>
"preservation<lb/>
JAZZ CO-<lb/>
Members are urged to make reservations<lb/>
Watch for aai FRY Jan 28tn<lb/>
 JmM ; MW-MlM<lb/>
mM&amp;mmm$m<lb/>
<pb facs="00058065_0009"/><lb/>
I 'v5S-?7f ?SHK f:f- <lb/>
nHI<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
by JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Top two teams to meet<lb/>
Tonight will mark oie of the biggest intramural games of the<lb/>
season, and it won't even oount in the standings as the Belk Enforoers<lb/>
and the Belk Nutties Buddies will meet in an exhibition game prior to<lb/>
the East Carolina - lona College varsity basketball game in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum.<lb/>
Not only are the two teams rates as the top two dormitory teams on<lb/>
campus intramural basketball, but the winner of the game will<lb/>
represent ECU's dormitories againt a team from Camp Lejeune Marine<lb/>
Base. The Marines will be visiting the ECU campus next Saturday,<lb/>
January 28, fa a series of four basketball games, three men's games<lb/>
and one women's games. Then on Feburary 4 four different teams from<lb/>
ECU will travel to Camp Lejeune. fa another series of four games.<lb/>
In addition to the winners of the Nutties Buddies - Enfacers game<lb/>
two other men's teams will be chosen to represent the school One<lb/>
women steam will also be chosen. Themens' teams will play one game<lb/>
each. The women's team will play at 4 p.m. Saturday. Times fa the<lb/>
mens games will belOa.m 12 noon and 6 p.m. All four games will be<lb/>
played using the 30 second clock.<lb/>
The teams fa the ECU hone games will be picked this coming<lb/>
week from the leading intramural teams. The four teams that will<lb/>
travel to Camp Lejeune will be picked the following week.<lb/>
The Nutties Buddies were last season's intramural basketball<lb/>
champions and the Enfacers are expected to be the best team from<lb/>
their damitay division. This will be the oily meeting between the two<lb/>
teams unless they meet in the campus playoffs. Although the game<lb/>
won't oount in either team's regualr season intramural record, there<lb/>
could be a lot of disputes settled since one team is ranked atop each of<lb/>
the two men s intramural top ten rankings published by the Intramural<lb/>
Department.<lb/>
The game should begin around 5:30. Cone at out and see what<lb/>
caliber of basketball the ECU student has to offer. Then stay around<lb/>
and watch the ECU Pirates battle a fighting lona College team.<lb/>
The best dressed award fa the first week of intramural piay goes to<lb/>
Ja.ec. Damitay s fine intramural team, the Dealers. Clad in aange<lb/>
and blue ierseys and shats, the Dealers are certainly the flashiest<lb/>
team so far this season. In addition, they have been playing good<lb/>
basketball. So far they have compiled a 3-0 mark<lb/>
Although the team hasn't been picked yet it seems a certainty that<lb/>
ECU will send a Handball team to the national championships at<lb/>
Hofstra University in May. The Pirates will be meeting some of the top<lb/>
collegiate handball teams in the country in the competition and will be<lb/>
the only school represented from Nath Carolina.<lb/>
That is quite an accomplishment fa this school considering the<lb/>
program had only been an intramural spat fa 12 months. The Team<lb/>
Handball dub won't hold its first meeting until Monday, January 23.<lb/>
The time and place fa that meeting will be 430 p.m. in room 105<lb/>
MemaialGym. JimChastain. perhaps the best team handballeroi the<lb/>
ECU campus, is in charge of aganizing this dub and some of the team<lb/>
members fa the ECU competitive team will be picked from the ECU<lb/>
dub. Tryouts will be held later on to complete the team.<lb/>
The women were aoadentaly omitted from Tuesday's intramural<lb/>
basketball roundup, so let's give them their just due this time around.<lb/>
There seems to be a number of fine teams competing this time around -<lb/>
the best of which will come from one of three teams: the Peace Pirates,<lb/>
the Tyler team of Cool and the Gang, and the Cotten Bunnies. All three<lb/>
teams started off their play with one-sided vidaies. Cool and the Gang<lb/>
beat Unread 53-5 to open their season, while the Bunnies and Peaoe<lb/>
Pirates scored two lopsided vidaies. Lillian Barnes scored 45 points<lb/>
fa the week's highest output while Tammy Whited of the Jolly Greene<lb/>
Giants pumped in a single game taal of 26 points. Other top teams in<lb/>
the girl's rankings are the P.E. Majas, the Jarvis Jumpshots and the<lb/>
Garrett Yardapes. The leading saaity teams so far seem to be Sigma<lb/>
Sigma Sigma and Alpha Xi Delts.<lb/>
There are new hours of operation fa the two pools at ECU. These<lb/>
pools will be available fa student reaeational swim at different times.<lb/>
The Minges pool will be open from 8-10 p.m. during the week and from<lb/>
2-8 p.m. on the weekends and the Memaial Gym pool will be open<lb/>
from 12-1 and 4-6 Monday through Friday. The upcoming handicapped<lb/>
swim program, which will start in early Feburary, is expeded to run<lb/>
from 5-8 p.m. Sunday's. Only a part of the pool will be used fa the<lb/>
program<lb/>
19 January 1978 FOUKTAINHEA age 9<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
By STEVE BYERS<lb/>
Assistant Spats Edita<lb/>
He lives by the swad, he dies<lb/>
by the swad. It was never rrore<lb/>
true than in the game Tuesday<lb/>
n�flnt, when the Pirates of coach<lb/>
In a second half where refer-<lb/>
ees thought the "elbow" was a<lb/>
Greenville night spot, the William<lb/>
and Mary Indians nipped the<lb/>
Pirates 77 to 76 to snap a three<lb/>
game winning streak.<lb/>
inside game with assists from<lb/>
referees Hank Nichols and Jerry<lb/>
Austin. Using Pirate frontoourt<lb/>
men as footstools, William and<lb/>
Mary turned a 16-12 rebound<lb/>
defidt of the first half into 43-38<lb/>
WALTER MOSELEY AGAINST W &amp; M<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Larry Gil I man canned G7 percent<lb/>
of their shots in the first half<lb/>
much to the delight of 5,250 fans<lb/>
in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
However, the game of Basket-<lb/>
ball is 40 minutes long and a 36.4<lb/>
shooting percentage in the rest of<lb/>
the game spelled defeat fa the<lb/>
ever maturing Bucs. The percen-<lb/>
tages, however don't show all of<lb/>
what was painfully obvious to the<lb/>
fans on hand.<lb/>
The Pirates jumped out to 17<lb/>
to 10 lead after a three pant play<lb/>
by Cornelius, and led by 13 with<lb/>
1:48 left in the first half oily to<lb/>
have the tribe stage a gradual<lb/>
comeback in the second stanza.<lb/>
Led by Jack Arbogast and<lb/>
John Lowenhaupt, the tribe cut a<lb/>
56 to 46 Pirate lead to two with<lb/>
11 09 in the second half. Ted<lb/>
O'gaman and Rooky Copley<lb/>
literally hacked away at the Pirate three years<lb/>
Photo by Brian utotlerl<lb/>
lead at game's end.<lb/>
The tribe cause was aided by a<lb/>
cold shooting second half fa the<lb/>
Bucs to which William and Mary<lb/>
Coach Bruce Parkhill commented,<lb/>
"We were lucky to be down by<lb/>
only 11 at the half the way they<lb/>
(the Pirates) were shooting" (in<lb/>
the first half).<lb/>
Coach Gil I mar, offered no<lb/>
excuses but the experience of<lb/>
William and Mary's four senia<lb/>
starters.<lb/>
"We both learned fron this<lb/>
game he said, Jbut they will<lb/>
benefit the next 14 a 15 games,<lb/>
while we will benefit fa the next<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
wns Pirates<lb/>
Ice Ball registration was held this week and ends this afternoon.<lb/>
Adual piay begins on Tuesday with games to be played at the Twin<lb/>
Rmks floureation Center.<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The battle fa in-state wrest-<lb/>
ling supremacy began last Thurs-<lb/>
day in Chapel Hill and afta round<lb/>
one Bill Lam's Nath Carolina Tar<lb/>
Heelshave taken the early season<lb/>
lead.<lb/>
The Heels used their strength<lb/>
in the lower weight dassesto take<lb/>
an early 16-0 lead and held on in<lb/>
the upper weights to win over the<lb/>
Pirates 25-15.<lb/>
Although East Carolina picked<lb/>
its first win of the season last<lb/>
Wednesday over West Chester<lb/>
35-7, the loss to UNC dropped Bill<lb/>
Hill's youthful grapplers to 1-4<lb/>
this season. It Mas ECU'S first<lb/>
loss to Nath Carolina after six<lb/>
straight wins.<lb/>
"I have to give Bill Lam and<lb/>
the rest of this team aedit said<lb/>
Hill after the match They were<lb/>
ready fa us and they just went<lb/>
out and did what they had to do to<lb/>
beat us<lb/>
 I don't think the fad that we<lb/>
were wrestling two nights in a<lb/>
row really bothered anybody<lb/>
continued Hill. "However, I think<lb/>
our home aowd will probably be<lb/>
an impatant fada when they<lb/>
oane down here to wrestle us<lb/>
The Tar Heels jumped to a<lb/>
quick start when Bobby Monahan<lb/>
upset BobPassno12-6inthe118<lb/>
weight dass. UNC'shighly touted<lb/>
freshman CD. Mock pinned John<lb/>
Koenigs at 126 and ECU was<lb/>
down 9-0.<lb/>
Kenny Evans made it three<lb/>
straight vidaies fa the Heels<lb/>
with the big upset of the evening<lb/>
with a dose 8-7 dedsion over Paul<lb/>
Osman.<lb/>
Dave Jurgens nailed the cor-<lb/>
ner on the Pirates coffin with a<lb/>
14-4 maja dedsion at 142. That<lb/>
gave to Heels an insurmountable<lb/>
16-0 lead although the Pirates<lb/>
came back to win four of the next<lb/>
six matches.<lb/>
"Passino's losses at 118 and<lb/>
Osnian's loss at 134 really hurt<lb/>
us said Hill. 'That turned the<lb/>
match around early and they<lb/>
certainly had the advantage after<lb/>
Paul was beaten<lb/>
"I'm not really waried about<lb/>
the loss to UNC because we've<lb/>
got too good a team: I think our<lb/>
home crowd might make the<lb/>
difference in the next match<lb/>
Frank Schaede defeated Bill<lb/>
Rumley at 150, while freshman<lb/>
Butch Revils edged his old school<lb/>
teammate Mike Benzel 4-3 at 167<lb/>
to give ECU its first two vidaies.<lb/>
Jay Denver won another dose<lb/>
match at 190 with a 6-5 dedsion<lb/>
over Dean Bna and D.T. Joyner<lb/>
had no trouble whatsoever pin-<lb/>
ning Jody Truesdale another<lb/>
highly regarded freshman.<lb/>
"D.T. is just wrestling super<lb/>
fa us said Hill. "Hegot beat m<lb/>
the Wilkes tournament and told<lb/>
me after it was over that nobody<lb/>
else is going to beat him this vtiar.<lb/>
He really has his mind made up<lb/>
that he is gang to place in the<lb/>
nationals this year. His attitude<lb/>
has improved 100 percent this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The Pirates will get another<lb/>
chance at the Heels February 16<lb/>
which will be in Minges.<lb/>
However, the next key match<lb/>
fa ECU will be January 26 when<lb/>
N.C. State comes to town.<lb/>
East Carolina returns this<lb/>
Wednesday when the Pirates<lb/>
travel to Boone, N.C. to face<lb/>
Appalachian state.<lb/>
�MBBHMHHMI<lb/>
<pb facs="00058065_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 19 January 1978<lb/>
D.T. Joyner striving for All-American status<lb/>
Although East Carolina Uni-<lb/>
versity's wrestling team was<lb/>
soundly trounced in all three of its<lb/>
opening matches in a quad up at<lb/>
Lehigh, one positive element<lb/>
came out of the meetD.T.<lb/>
Joyner can wrestle with anyone<lb/>
this season.<lb/>
All Joyner did was beat a<lb/>
national place winner by a 16-3<lb/>
oore, and handle two other<lb/>
ighly-reyarded wrestlers with-<lb/>
ut much problem.<lb/>
The junior heavyweight from<lb/>
(orfolk, Va destroyed Howard<lb/>
�arris of Oregon State in the<lb/>
�nale of the opening night's<lb/>
tction. Harris placed sixth in the<lb/>
nation last season at 190 for the<lb/>
Beavers in helping them to a fifth<lb/>
place finish in the NCAAs.<lb/>
 He was an ail-American last<lb/>
year?" said a somewhat sur-<lb/>
prised Joyner after the match. "If<lb/>
I had known that coming into the<lb/>
match, I would have wrestled<lb/>
more cautiously. Now I'm glad I<lb/>
didn't know<lb/>
It was the aggressive style<lb/>
employed by Joyner that first-<lb/>
year Pirate coach, Bill Hill, cites<lb/>
as the key to victory.<lb/>
Since last year D.V has lost<lb/>
20 pounds and gained a lot more<lb/>
strength with the weight program<lb/>
he's been in said Hill. "That's<lb/>
why he's a lot better. It's given<lb/>
him more confidence on the<lb/>
mat<lb/>
During his first two years at<lb/>
East Carolina, Joyner has had<lb/>
seasons of 7-3 and 9-7, not really<lb/>
setting the world on fire. He was<lb/>
twice runner-up in the Southern<lb/>
Conference although the Pirates<lb/>
are not currently affiliated with<lb/>
that organization.<lb/>
"D.T. is definitely due<lb/>
added Hill. "Heck, this is only his<lb/>
fourth year of wrestling, period. It<lb/>
takes most wrestlers five or six<lb/>
years to reach their peak, but<lb/>
most wrestlers begin wrestling in<lb/>
junior high<lb/>
Joyner is an impressive 6-0 for<lb/>
the season with a first place finish<lb/>
in the Carolina Invitational. He<lb/>
has one pin, one superior deci-<lb/>
sion, two major decisions and two<lb/>
regular decisions to his credit. In<lb/>
the five matches that he did not<lb/>
pin his opponents, the combined<lb/>
score of his victories is 57-14.<lb/>
The victory in the Carolina<lb/>
Invitational came right on the<lb/>
heels of football season. Joyner<lb/>
had practiced just one day prior to<lb/>
the tournament.<lb/>
Hill dtes the hiring of Willie<lb/>
Bryant as graduate assistant as<lb/>
an asset to Joyner. Bryant is a<lb/>
two-time national junior college<lb/>
place winner and two-time South-<lb/>
ern Conference champ at East<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
"Willie has helped D.T. quite<lb/>
a bit noted Hill. "For the past<lb/>
two years, D.T. has not had<lb/>
anyone on the team that was big<lb/>
with him<lb/>
Joyner agrees, saying, "It has<lb/>
helped having Coach Bryant<lb/>
around. He has a lot of knowledge<lb/>
of the sport. Everyone on the<lb/>
team has been helping me learn<lb/>
new moves and they've all given<lb/>
me a lot of support on the mat<lb/>
As far as goals go, Joyner is<lb/>
no different from any other<lb/>
wrestler In America.<lb/>
"I want to make all Amer-<lb/>
ica he says. "But, so does<lb/>
everybody else I feel if I work<lb/>
hard enough, I can make it. But,<lb/>
I'll have to take each match one a;<lb/>
a time-consider each a chal-<lb/>
lenge<lb/>
Saads Shoe Shop<lb/>
113 Grande Ave. at<lb/>
College View<lb/>
Cleaners<lb/>
Pirate tankers down Maryland 65-48<lb/>
CHRIS HOLLOMAN<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
The East Carolina Swimming<lb/>
f<lb/>
UNLESS YOU<lb/>
PRINT YOUR<lb/>
OWN<lb/>
e <lb/>
it seems like a student never comes up with enough money to cover<lb/>
school expenses and have anything left over to just �njoy.<lb/>
It you re one of ttiose people who has to spend too much study time<lb/>
earning school money, read on Air Force ROTC otters a four, three or<lb/>
two-year scholarship for ttiose who can quality The plan pays $100 a<lb/>
month for expenses, plus all tuition, book costs and lab fees<lb/>
Whue you re working on your degree, you re also working toward a<lb/>
commission m the Air Force After grodudtion and commissioning,<lb/>
you II enter active duty, and discover a whole new world<lb/>
You'll fmd challenge, responsibility, a demand for your talents, and a<lb/>
high regard for what you re contributing There's more As an officer in<lb/>
me Air Force you'll hove an excellent salary with a full slate of benefits<lb/>
Look into AFR0TC scholarships And while you re at :t ask about the<lb/>
Air Force way of life You II discover more thon just o way to moke your<lb/>
finances come out while you re in college You'll discover o whole new<lb/>
world of opportunity<lb/>
ROTC<lb/>
Gateway to a great way ot life.<lb/>
team remained undefeated last<lb/>
Sunday with a 66-48 win over the<lb/>
University of Maryland. The win<lb/>
marked the third straight year<lb/>
that the Pirates had defeated the<lb/>
Terps.<lb/>
In the 400 medley relay the<lb/>
Pirate team of Tudor, Newhaller,<lb/>
Schnell, McCauley won with a<lb/>
time of 3:36.08.<lb/>
The 100 freestyle was won by<lb/>
Carpouyis of Maryland with<lb/>
Nieman and Meisel of ECU<lb/>
finishing second and third.<lb/>
Billy Thorne took top honors<lb/>
in the 200 yard freestyle and Ross<lb/>
Bohlken placed second giving the<lb/>
Pirates a 1,2 sweep.<lb/>
In the 50 freestyle Fehling of<lb/>
ECU placed first and John<lb/>
McCauley finished second for the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
Joe Kushy a junior from New<lb/>
York won the 200 individual<lb/>
medley with a time of 2:00.47.<lb/>
In the one meter diving event<lb/>
IvatlisWJf<lb/>
Live Maria Dawkins<lb/>
Thurs. Jan 19<lb/>
Sat. Jan 21<lb/>
Check It Out!<lb/>
No Cover with E.C.U. LDs mon &amp;� tues<lb/>
Customer Appreciation Night from 8-12<lb/>
Maryland placed 1 and 2 with<lb/>
Lund Sox of ECU placing third.<lb/>
The Terps took first and<lb/>
second place in the 200 butterfly<lb/>
event with the Pirates, Mark Lov-<lb/>
ette finishing third.<lb/>
The 100 freestyle was won by<lb/>
Billy Thorne with a time of 47.39.<lb/>
Bill Fehling was second for the<lb/>
Pirates with a time of 47.83.<lb/>
ECU'S domination continued<lb/>
as John Tudor took the 200<lb/>
backstroke with Barny McCarthy<lb/>
finishing third.<lb/>
This win leaves the Pirates<lb/>
with a 5-0 won-loss mark. The<lb/>
Pirates next meet will be Jan. 21<lb/>
against the University of Rich-<lb/>
mond at Richmond.<lb/>
ACADEMIC<lb/>
RESEARCH<lb/>
10,000 TOPICS<lb/>
QUALITY GUARANTEED!<lb/>
HMD SIM ton rOUK tit M6I<lb/>
mAll 00i CATALOG<lb/>
ftCSIARCK ASSISTANCE<lb/>
11JM IDAHO AVE 704-�<lb/>
10S ANGELES CA. fOCIS<lb/>
(Ull 477-M74<lb/>
B.F.Goodrich<lb/>
Car Care Service<lb/>
co��t<lb/>
4 POINT BRAKE CHECK<lb/>
1. Pull Front Wheels, inspect Linings and Drums.<lb/>
2. Check Grease Seals, Wheel Cylinders for Leakage.<lb/>
3. Clean, Inspect and Repack Front Wheel Bearings.<lb/>
4. Adjust Brakes on All Four Wheels for Full Pedal<lb/>
Braking.<lb/>
Reg. Price 9 JO - With Cert. Service Only $3.90<lb/>
Most U.S. Cars, Toyotas &amp; Datauns<lb/>
call for appointment<lb/>
&amp;TIRE CENTER<lb/>
GALES &amp; SERVICE<lb/>
Phone 756 5244<lb/>
320 W. HWY. 24 BY-PASS<lb/>
OKCCMVILLE. N.C.<lb/>
WRECKER SERVICE AVAILABLE IN CITY,<lb/>
STUDENT PRICE $8.50 WITH STUDENT ID<lb/>
Master Charge, BankAmericard, American Express.<lb/>
Often as shown at B.F.Goodrich stores. Competitively priced at B.F.Goodrich dealers.<lb/>
IFGoodrich Coggins Car Care<lb/>
SKI SALE<lb/>
All ski boots, gloves, and<lb/>
apparel 25 off<lb/>
All snow skis 20 off.<lb/>
We have a full line of ski equipment<lb/>
for rental.<lb/>
We also have a nice selection of golf<lb/>
and tennis equipment at reasonable<lb/>
prices.<lb/>
Gordon D. Fulp<lb/>
Located At<lb/>
Gteenville Country Club<lb/>
Phone 756-0504, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Open 7 days a week until riark<lb/>
<pb facs="00058065_0011"/><lb/>
MIMMMHMMMHBPMHBB<lb/>
�����i<lb/>
�������I<lb/>
19 January 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
East Carolina to be Division 1-A<lb/>
By WOODY PEELE<lb/>
Reflector Sports Editor<lb/>
East Carolina University has<lb/>
nothing to fear from the newly<lb/>
voted-in legislation by the NCAA<lb/>
creating the so-called "Super<lb/>
Conference according to Athle-<lb/>
tic Director Bill Cain.<lb/>
Cain, who returned Friday<lb/>
night from the NCAA Convention<lb/>
in Atlanta, said that as far as he<lb/>
oould tell, East Carolina would<lb/>
remain in the upper bracket of the<lb/>
collegiate governing body's foot-<lb/>
ball division, now designated<lb/>
Division l-A.<lb/>
The NCAA, during the con-<lb/>
vention, voted in the controversial<lb/>
"split" of Division I, into a two<lb/>
groups, l-A and l-AA. The idea<lb/>
had been fermenting for several<lb/>
years, brought up by the nation's<lb/>
super football powers, who wan-<lb/>
ted more say in their future.<lb/>
To a certain extent, they got<lb/>
what they wanted, but according<lb/>
to Cain, it will take several years<lb/>
fa further legislation to be<lb/>
brought in to put things together<lb/>
as those powers want it.<lb/>
The main thing achieved isthe<lb/>
right of the Division l-A schools to<lb/>
vote on what will affect them,<lb/>
with no voting on the same<lb/>
proposals by the schools in<lb/>
Division l-AA. Division II and<lb/>
Division III. n the past, all<lb/>
groups voted as one on proposals.<lb/>
Under the rules passed this<lb/>
week, there will be three criteria<lb/>
for membership in l-A. The first<lb/>
calls fa a school to field eight<lb/>
varsity spats, including football.<lb/>
Rules were also established that<lb/>
set up how many games a team<lb/>
must play to be oounted as a<lb/>
"spat" and how many people<lb/>
must partiqpate as a team to<lb/>
count.<lb/>
The second criteria calls fa<lb/>
those schools to schedule at least<lb/>
60 per cent of their games with<lb/>
other Division l-A schools.<lb/>
The third is an option group-<lb/>
ing. A school may meet any one of<lb/>
three stipulations: they must<lb/>
average 17.000 per home football<lb/>
game over a four-year period:<lb/>
they must have a 30,000 seat<lb/>
(permanent seats) stadium, and<lb/>
have 17,000 attendance reoaded<lb/>
in one of the past four years; a<lb/>
they must participate in a total of<lb/>
12 intercolletiate spats recog-<lb/>
nized by the NCAA.<lb/>
This last proposal, accading<lb/>
to Cain, brought in many schools<lb/>
that would not otherwise have<lb/>
been listed as l-A.<lb/>
"There will probably be 125 to<lb/>
130 Division l-A schools now<lb/>
Cain said. "Division l-AA is<lb/>
going to be made up largely of<lb/>
some of the more ambitious<lb/>
Division II schools, who want<lb/>
mae televisiai maiey. Actually,<lb/>
the big schools ga very little of<lb/>
what they wanted exoept the<lb/>
voting rights<lb/>
So unless the current rules are<lb/>
changed again at next year's<lb/>
NCAA Coiventioi, East Carolina<lb/>
is secure as a Division l-A school.<lb/>
Cain said that each member<lb/>
NCAA school was given 60 days<lb/>
to let the NCAA office know<lb/>
which division it will be a member<lb/>
of. After that, a school has three<lb/>
years to meet the aiteria if it does<lb/>
na already.<lb/>
Cain naed that one reason the<lb/>
1978 East Carolina football sche-<lb/>
dule hasn't been announced is<lb/>
that he has been waiting to see<lb/>
the results of the NCAA vote. He<lb/>
added that he expects the sche-<lb/>
dule to be announoed later this<lb/>
week.<lb/>
As far as future scheduling is<lb/>
concerned, Cain said he is waiting<lb/>
to see the list of who gets in which<lb/>
divisions. "We'll see which<lb/>
teams are l-A and work from<lb/>
there<lb/>
A aitical point, he observed,<lb/>
came with the 12-spat qualifica-<lb/>
tion. "A la of schools that<lb/>
wouldn't have been in the l-A<lb/>
group will be with this rule. There<lb/>
was some question as to whether<lb/>
this might not have been voted<lb/>
down in a recall on Thursday, but<lb/>
it never materalized<lb/>
Cam said he discussed sche-<lb/>
duling with other schools at the<lb/>
meeting, but most of them were,<lb/>
like East Carolina, independents.<lb/>
Most conference schools are<lb/>
waiting to see who is on the list,<lb/>
too.<lb/>
"The conferences are reluc-<lb/>
tant to schedule until they see<lb/>
who is where Cam said. "But I<lb/>
don't see how any shoool can be<lb/>
less reluctant than they are now<lb/>
to talk with us. So I can only see<lb/>
things getting better when the list<lb/>
comes out<lb/>
Cain added that published<lb/>
lists late last week which did not<lb/>
include East Carolina among the<lb/>
l-A schools were pure speculation<lb/>
by The Associated Press and had<lb/>
no meaning as far as the NCAA<lb/>
wasooncemed.<lb/>
Cam also said that there was<lb/>
some mae mfamal talk with<lb/>
sane schools about the possible<lb/>
famatioi of a new conference in<lb/>
the south, but that nrthing<lb/>
hard has oome about yet.<lb/>
The key, apparently, is the<lb/>
12-spat rule, which will allow<lb/>
sane schools without big sta-<lb/>
diums, a big attendance, to<lb/>
remain in the l-A grouping and<lb/>
thus qualify as part of East<lb/>
Carolina s 60 per cent I sche-<lb/>
duling, at least until the schedule<lb/>
can be improved in the future.<lb/>
Young Basketball team is improving with age<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
basketball team faces a crucial<lb/>
week of play with two games at<lb/>
home in Mi nges Coliseum befae<lb/>
hitting the road again fa three<lb/>
strenuous tests.<lb/>
The Pirates, winners in their<lb/>
last three outings, although one<lb/>
was an exhibition game against<lb/>
the Athletes in Action, appear to<lb/>
have aled the machine and have<lb/>
things clicking far mae than<lb/>
early m the seasoi. Wins have<lb/>
oome over William and Mary<lb/>
58-56 on the road, 90-77 over St.<lb/>
Peter's an 117-107 over the<lb/>
Athletes in Action.<lb/>
This team has had a chance<lb/>
to play with each other fa several<lb/>
games now and I think they are<lb/>
beginning to understand each<lb/>
other and what each one is<lb/>
doing said first-year coach<lb/>
LarryGillman. "We'rebeginnmg<lb/>
to play mae as a unti. We're<lb/>
beginning to get it together<lb/>
Several factashave been very<lb/>
apparent in the last three games.<lb/>
All are most impatant in regard<lb/>
to the upcoming games this week.<lb/>
One, the Pirates rebounded<lb/>
much better over the last three<lb/>
games, with 31-24 margin over<lb/>
William and Mary, 35-29 over St.<lb/>
Peter's and 57-37 over the<lb/>
Athletes in Action. The one key<lb/>
person in the rebounding differ-<lb/>
ence has been junta center Greg<lb/>
Canelius. Over the three-game<lb/>
span, the 6-9 Canelius has had<lb/>
11,11 and 15 rebounds.<lb/>
"Greg has been getting the<lb/>
ball off the boards and getting it<lb/>
down the court on the outlet<lb/>
pass noted Gillman. "This has<lb/>
allowed us to get our fast break<lb/>
going mae often and that has<lb/>
been a big help<lb/>
Another facta is patience.<lb/>
The Pirates have shown mae<lb/>
willingness to get the good shot<lb/>
on- offense than earlier in the<lb/>
year. That in turn has resulted in<lb/>
the third key improvement area,<lb/>
shooting percentages.<lb/>
The Pirates have been over 50<lb/>
 fa three oonsecutive games,<lb/>
the only times this year over the<lb/>
50 mark exoept fa the LaSalle<lb/>
game back on Dec. 9.<lb/>
On Thursday night the Pirates<lb/>
face an up and coming team in<lb/>
lona. The Gaels feature one of the<lb/>
nation? best freshmen centers in<lb/>
Jeff Ruland at 6-10, and a fine<lb/>
freshman faward, 6-10 Kevin<lb/>
Vesey. Top scorer is sophomae<lb/>
guard Glenn Vickers, 19.8 per<lb/>
game. Ruland is averaging 19.4<lb/>
per game with 9.8 rebounds.<lb/>
UNC-Asheville will finish off<lb/>
this home stand on Saturday<lb/>
night, a team that is greatly<lb/>
improved over last year.<lb/>
"We've got a chance to<lb/>
almost even our recad with three<lb/>
wins this week said Gillman. "I<lb/>
wish AIA had counted and we<lb/>
oould have gone back on the road<lb/>
at .500. But it didn't and if we're<lb/>
up to6-7, then I'll have to be very<lb/>
happy<lb/>
Junia center Greg Canelius,<lb/>
6-9 fran New Albany, Ind has<lb/>
suddenly gaten physical and his<lb/>
rebounding has shown consider-<lb/>
able improvement. In the last<lb/>
three games, Canelius has had<lb/>
11,11 and 15 rebounds. His best<lb/>
perfamance in the Pirate unifam<lb/>
came against the Athletes in<lb/>
Action, which, unfatunately fa<lb/>
Greg, will na count in his<lb/>
statistics. He had 20 pants on<lb/>
eight of 14 field goals, four of five<lb/>
free throws and 15 big rebounds.<lb/>
After a season's low rebound-<lb/>
ing percentage after the First<lb/>
Union Invitational Tournament of<lb/>
45.9 fa the team, the Pirates<lb/>
have gradually upped that per-<lb/>
centage with board play of late.<lb/>
The Pirates are now up to 48.1 <lb/>
on the year. Over the last four<lb/>
games, the Pirates have captured<lb/>
52.4 of the rebounds.<lb/>
The improved rebounding by<lb/>
the Pirates should mean mae<lb/>
wins says ooach Larry Gillman.<lb/>
"If we can continue to get the<lb/>
rebounds off the board and down<lb/>
the oourt fa our fast break, we<lb/>
will soae ala of pants and win<lb/>
ala of games<lb/>
And, sheeting percentages<lb/>
from the floa can't be overlooked<lb/>
either. The Pirates are currently<lb/>
shooting the best of the year,<lb/>
45.7.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR SALE.lQne good quality<lb/>
Astronomical telescope with<lb/>
triple axis equataial mount and<lb/>
3ettir�g drdes; 2 good 10-speed<lb/>
b'kes; 1 good guitar with case.<lb/>
Good prices, must move. Call<lb/>
758-9526.<lb/>
STEREO FOR SALE: All equip.<lb/>
Purchased recently. Yamaha CR<lb/>
620, BIC 980, Bose 501, Teac<lb/>
2300SD. Call John Marcus 316<lb/>
Belk Dam 752-7692.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 35mm Asahi Pentax<lb/>
camera spotmatic II, with a<lb/>
135mm telephao lens, a wide<lb/>
angle lens, bellows extender, UV<lb/>
haze filter and mae !160. Call<lb/>
Steve at 758-8688.<lb/>
WANTED TO BUY: A good old<lb/>
used car fa around town will pay<lb/>
100-150. Call Joe 752-5214.<lb/>
mJ<lb/>
FOR RENT: 2 private rooms close<lb/>
to campus with kitchen priv-<lb/>
iliges 114 E. 12th 9. 752-2647.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: Prefer<lb/>
female in mid-to-late 20 s to share<lb/>
half of expenses of a 2 bdrm. apt.<lb/>
on 10th St. Call 752-5344.<lb/>
NEEDED IMMEDIATELY.a fa<lb/>
the beginning of Feb. Female<lb/>
roommate fa house on 4th St.<lb/>
near ECU. 56.00 month plus<lb/>
share of utilities. Call 758-2840<lb/>
Soon<lb/>
NEEDED IMMEDIATELY fe-<lb/>
male to share 13 expenses at<lb/>
Eastbrook Apts. Call Diane at<lb/>
758-2522.<lb/>
FOR SUBLEASE: Til May. 2<lb/>
bdrm 2 mi. from campus. 85.00<lb/>
mo. Call 756-4834.<lb/>
(ptwonaffil<lb/>
JOBS: On a off campus. We<lb/>
place students on jobs that are in<lb/>
their maja fields whenever pos-<lb/>
sible. If there is anything that we<lb/>
an do please call.<lb/>
SUMMER JOBS: Guaranteed a<lb/>
money back. Nations largest<lb/>
directay. Minimum fifty employ-<lb/>
ersastate. Indudesmasterapplic<lb/>
at ion. Only $3 Sumchace, Box<lb/>
645. State College. Pa. 16801.<lb/>
WANTED. Wedding photo-<lb/>
grapher. Samples of past work<lb/>
desired. Call 756-1536.<lb/>
RIDERS WANTED: to Rocky<lb/>
Mount Wed. - Fri. at 730 Call<lb/>
7586967.<lb/>
LOST: Bulova watch - white gold<lb/>
casing - tiny diamond each end of<lb/>
faoe - mesh type band - lost in<lb/>
vidnity of Elbo Room and parking<lb/>
lots there abouts. Lost Sat. night<lb/>
Jan 15. Reward. Please call Pam<lb/>
758-9637.<lb/>
RANO AND GUITAR lessons by<lb/>
Richard J. Knapp, B.A. Cajl<lb/>
756-2563 befae 7 p.m.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058065_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 19 January 1978<lb/>
Help Insure The<lb/>
Continuation Of The<lb/>
Yearbook Tradition<lb/>
At ECU<lb/>
A photographer will be here from Tuesday,<lb/>
February 14th through Friday, February 24th<lb/>
from 9-5 in the BUC office.<lb/>
It does not cost you a cent to have your<lb/>
picture takenthere is no sitting fee.<lb/>
There will be no waiting rff you will make an<lb/>
appointment early. Group pictures will also be<lb/>
taken at the same time.<lb/>
P3"<lb/>
V7<lb/>
�<lb/>
If your group does not<lb/>
receive<lb/>
<lb/>
sheet by January 24th<lb/>
nail the BUC office.<lb/>
Make your<lb/>
YEARBOOK<lb/>
PORTRAIT<lb/>
appointment<lb/>
q� io� late<lb/>
0<lb/>
now<lb/>
at<lb/>
�&amp;<lb/>
���<lb/>
'llllllft<lb/>
BUC office: 757-6501, 6502<lb/>
<pb facs="00058065_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>