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<pb facs="00057172_0001"/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina Vo1 ss No ??<lb/>
23 January 1979<lb/>
Wants to teach<lb/>
Dr. Howell resig<lb/>
LIBRY LEFLER, SGA speaker, read a letter thanking<lb/>
the SGA for its efforts in the recent Phone A-Thon.<lb/>
By MARC BARNES<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Dr. John Howell,<lb/>
Vice Chancellor for Aca-<lb/>
demic Affairs at ECU<lb/>
has announced his in-<lb/>
tentions to return to the<lb/>
classroom, according to<lb/>
a press release from the<lb/>
Chancellor's office re-<lb/>
leased through the ECU<lb/>
News Bureau. Howell's<lb/>
resignation will be ef-<lb/>
fective as soon as a<lb/>
successor is found.<lb/>
Dr. Thomas Brewer,<lb/>
Chancellor of ECU, an-<lb/>
nounced that a Search<lb/>
Committee would be<lb/>
named soon to choose a<lb/>
new academic officer for<lb/>
the university.<lb/>
According to the<lb/>
same release, Dr. How-<lb/>
ell plans to return to his<lb/>
professorship in the De-<lb/>
partment of Political<lb/>
Science.<lb/>
He joined the faculty<lb/>
as a professor of gov-<lb/>
ernment and chairman<lb/>
of the Department of<lb/>
Political Science in 1957.<lb/>
Howell received the AB<lb/>
and MA degrees from<lb/>
the University of Ala-<lb/>
bama and the PhD from<lb/>
Duke University. He is<lb/>
married to the former<lb/>
Gladys David of Jack-<lb/>
sonville, Fla who is a<lb/>
member of the ECU<lb/>
Sociology faculty. They<lb/>
have two sons.<lb/>
Howell is a member<lb/>
of Phi Beta Kappa, and<lb/>
is the author of several<lb/>
articles in political sci-<lb/>
ence journals and co-<lb/>
author of a published<lb/>
monograph on inter-<lb/>
national law.<lb/>
According to Dick<lb/>
Blake, Assistant to the<lb/>
Chancellor, Dr. Howell<lb/>
made it clear when Dr.<lb/>
Brewer arrived that he<lb/>
wished to go back to the<lb/>
classroom, and that he<lb/>
looked forward to it.<lb/>
"When you start looking<lb/>
at a new administration,<lb/>
it is not unusual that<lb/>
changes are made<lb/>
Blake said. He added,<lb/>
"This was completely<lb/>
benevolent<lb/>
Blake went on to say<lb/>
that Dr. Brewer and Dr.<lb/>
Howell had great mutual<lb/>
respect and admiration<lb/>
for each other. "There<lb/>
is no ounce of un-<lb/>
satisfactory feeling be-<lb/>
tween them Blake<lb/>
said. He added,<lb/>
"There is an abundance<lb/>
of mutual respect and<lb/>
admiration<lb/>
them<lb/>
between<lb/>
According to the<lb/>
press release from the<lb/>
Chancellor's office,<lb/>
Howell stated that the<lb/>
main reason he decided<lb/>
to make the move now<lb/>
was to create stability in<lb/>
the position as the uni-<lb/>
versity makes plans for<lb/>
the next decade.<lb/>
Chancellor Brewer, in<lb/>
speaking of Dr. Howell<lb/>
said, "Dr. John Howell<lb/>
has rendered dedicated<lb/>
and outstanding service<lb/>
to East Carolina Uni-<lb/>
versity<lb/>
He added "It<lb/>
has been a joy to come<lb/>
to know and work with<lb/>
such a fine man<lb/>
A election chairperson towra ? ? i<lb/>
named at next meeting What S inside . ? .<lb/>
DR. JOHN HOWELL. vice chancellor for Academic<lb/>
Affairs, has announced that he will return to the<lb/>
calssroom.<lb/>
Pitt's buses safe<lb/>
By CHRIS CACLE<lb/>
Writer '<lb/>
The Screening and<lb/>
V.? j"ointments Committee<lb/>
submitted the names of<lb/>
four new legislative<lb/>
members to the SGA in<lb/>
it- meeting on Monday.<lb/>
Libb) Lefler, SGA<lb/>
Speaker, presided.<lb/>
The tour new mem-<lb/>
bers are: Glenda Kit-<lb/>
ingsworth, Greene Dorm<lb/>
representative; Robert<lb/>
Matthews, Curt Win-<lb/>
irne and Bill Martin.<lb/>
Dav representatives.<lb/>
The members were<lb/>
-worn in and ad-<lb/>
ministered the oath of<lb/>
bj Drake Mann,<lb/>
Chairman of the Honor<lb/>
Council.<lb/>
Zack Smith, SGA<lb/>
Treasurer presented the<lb/>
budget reported to the<lb/>
SGA. A question was<lb/>
directed to Smith con-<lb/>
rune wh) the SGA<lb/>
was minus in cash in<lb/>
the bank. Smith stated,<lb/>
The funds have not<lb/>
be appropriated to<lb/>
the rash in the bank<lb/>
vet According to<lb/>
Smith, the money left<lb/>
to be appropriated is<lb/>
$5,694.06.<lb/>
Lefler read the SGA<lb/>
an appreciation letter<lb/>
received from the<lb/>
Alumni Association. The<lb/>
Association thanked the<lb/>
SGA for its efforts in<lb/>
the recent Phone-A-<lb/>
Thon.<lb/>
A seminar on stu-<lb/>
dent government and<lb/>
parlimentary procedures<lb/>
will be held at Wells<lb/>
College in Aurora, New-<lb/>
York on March 2-5,<lb/>
commented Lefler. "All<lb/>
interested persons<lb/>
should eontact me<lb/>
Lefler said.<lb/>
"Noth Carolina Stu-<lb/>
dent Government will<lb/>
hold a state conference<lb/>
in Raleigh on Jan. 31-<lb/>
Feb. 2, according to<lb/>
Lefler. She stressed to<lb/>
SGA that L'NC Pre-<lb/>
sident, William Friday,<lb/>
will attend the confer-<lb/>
ence.<lb/>
Charlie Sherrod, a<lb/>
member of the Student<lb/>
 elfare Committee re-<lb/>
ported to the SGA his<lb/>
talk regarding parking<lb/>
with Joseph Calder,<lb/>
director of Traffic and<lb/>
Security. Accoridng to<lb/>
Sherrod, a new park-<lb/>
ing lot will be built to<lb/>
accomodate staff parking<lb/>
and also there wil be<lb/>
new staff spaces open-<lb/>
ing in front of Memorial<lb/>
Gym. "They hope to<lb/>
begin a lot behind<lb/>
Mendenhall stated<lb/>
Sherrod.<lb/>
A discussion was<lb/>
held by the SGA mem-<lb/>
bers concerning the<lb/>
elections<lb/>
According<lb/>
chairperson,<lb/>
to Lefler,<lb/>
"The president submits<lb/>
the recommendation for<lb/>
the chairperson and the<lb/>
legislature then has to<lb/>
approve the person<lb/>
"The name of the<lb/>
election chairperson will<lb/>
be submitted in next<lb/>
week's meeting and this<lb/>
person will set the date<lb/>
for elections to be<lb/>
held stated Payne,<lb/>
SGA president.<lb/>
Albee directs Albec.See p.6.<lb/>
Midnight Express reviewedSee p.6.<lb/>
Greek Forum begins new semester<lb/>
See p.3.<lb/>
The Other Side Of Madness See<lb/>
p.5.<lb/>
Pirates fall to the Detroit TitansSee<lb/>
p.8.<lb/>
Lady Pirates blast Appalachian State<lb/>
See p.8.<lb/>
RR ID DAVIS STARS as<lb/>
Billy Hayes in "Mid-<lb/>
night Express. " See<lb/>
p. 6<lb/>
By GLENN THOMAS<lb/>
Staff If riter<lb/>
Although most of<lb/>
Norh Carolina seems to<lb/>
be under a deluge of<lb/>
school bus accidents,<lb/>
Pitt County appears to<lb/>
be in control of the<lb/>
situation.<lb/>
According to Rodney<lb/>
Bullock. supervisor of<lb/>
the county's school bu<lb/>
-stem, Pitt County ha-<lb/>
had only 22 bus related<lb/>
accidents this year. Of<lb/>
that 22 only four in-<lb/>
volved any injuries.<lb/>
No students have<lb/>
died on any ni the<lb/>
county's busses so far<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
Bullock said that of<lb/>
the accident- that oc-<lb/>
cured. many were<lb/>
caused b one or more<lb/>
driver- "(ailing to see<lb/>
movement<lb/>
14 ot the accidents<lb/>
were by drivers that<lb/>
were -till iti school. Al-<lb/>
though thev constitue<lb/>
ju-t over halt of the<lb/>
accidents that occured,<lb/>
Bullock feel that the<lb/>
students are complete!)<lb/>
capable of driving the<lb/>
buses -aielv.<lb/>
Bullock also -aid<lb/>
that s?me of the ac-<lb/>
cidents could be a.Lri-<lb/>
buted to students riding<lb/>
the bus not practicing<lb/>
enough safetv. This<lb/>
could distract from a<lb/>
driver's attention.<lb/>
Campus cop presents prevention<lb/>
ram<lb/>
Radio license<lb/>
exam offered<lb/>
; and staff<lb/>
Advertising the meeting time and place is the<lb/>
responsibility of each group and the students always<lb/>
respond by placing advertising around campus. The<lb/>
program has received gooc word-of-mouth advertising<lb/>
and sororities and fraternities as well as other<lb/>
campus based groups are beginning to request the<lb/>
presentation.<lb/>
As the different groups send in requests,<lb/>
Singleton changes the program to fit the situation<lb/>
that she is addressing. Warnings that are applicable<lb/>
in dorms, are not applicable in the more home-like<lb/>
atmosphere of the sorority or fraternitv house.<lb/>
Lynne Singleton is originally from Washington,<lb/>
but has received training and worked in<lb/>
several areas of North Carolina before coming<lb/>
t0 ECU . She received her Police Basic Training<lb/>
at the Guilford County Sheriffs Department and<lb/>
worked at the University of North Carolina at<lb/>
 Greensboro prior to coming back to the east. She has<lb/>
enjoyment of her job gives her good rapport with the taken part in several special training programs and<lb/>
students. has a total of 320 classroom hours of police training.<lb/>
The proliferation of cars equipped with expensive<lb/>
CB radios, stereo and FM systems has opened up<lb/>
another area where students must be careful to<lb/>
protect their property. The prevention program<lb/>
stresses that cars should always be parked in well<lb/>
lighted areas and should always be locked.<lb/>
In the informal talk and question and answer<lb/>
sessions that always go with the slide and movie<lb/>
presentations, Lynne particularly stresses alertness<lb/>
and an awareness of the people around as the<lb/>
greatest preventative to crime. She reiterates that<lb/>
people should not travel alone on foot at night but<lb/>
should always be with one other person or a group.<lb/>
The program's popularity can be based on two<lb/>
things. Its common sense approach to a common<lb/>
problem and the refreshing enthusiasm of Lynne<lb/>
Singleton. Her youth, intelligence and obvious<lb/>
Ed News Bureau<lb/>
A course to prepare<lb/>
amateur radio enthusi-<lb/>
asts i(Hams)i for the<lb/>
FCC General Class<lb/>
amateur radio license<lb/>
exam will be taught at<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
this spring.<lb/>
Offered by the ECU<lb/>
Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education and the<lb/>
Department of Industrial<lb/>
and Technical Education,<lb/>
the course will consist of<lb/>
ten sessions meeting<lb/>
Wednesday evenings, 7<lb/>
- 10 p.m Feb. 7 - April<lb/>
18, 1979. Sessions will<lb/>
be held in the elec-<lb/>
tronics lab and the<lb/>
language listening lab-<lb/>
oratory located in ECU's<lb/>
Flanagan Building.<lb/>
Class time will be<lb/>
divided between code<lb/>
practice and instruction<lb/>
in electronic theory.<lb/>
Students will actually<lb/>
build circuits and work<lb/>
with test equipment.<lb/>
A complete ham<lb/>
station (160-2 meter) will<lb/>
be available to illustrate<lb/>
radio principles and<lb/>
provide practice in<lb/>
operating procedures.<lb/>
Instructors for the<lb/>
course are Gary Arnert<lb/>
and Dr. Jerry Tester,<lb/>
members of the ECU<lb/>
faculty. Ambert holds an<lb/>
FCC Extra Class license<lb/>
and Tester has an<lb/>
Advanced Class license.<lb/>
Both are experienced in<lb/>
code instruction.<lb/>
The fee is $50 per<lb/>
person and a maximum<lb/>
of 18 students can be<lb/>
accepted.<lb/>
For more information<lb/>
contact: ECU NonCredit<lb/>
Programs, Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. (Phone<lb/>
757-6143.) Registration<lb/>
deadline is Feb. 5, 1979.<lb/>
By MARGARET BUNCH<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Thinking of a university as a town is a strange<lb/>
idea at First glance, but take a look at the numbers<lb/>
and it is easy to see that the idea is not so far<lb/>
fetched after all.<lb/>
East Carolina University has a population of<lb/>
12,000 students, approximately 2,000 faculty and staff<lb/>
members, a little over 376 acres of land and 60<lb/>
buildings. That is a fair sized little country village.<lb/>
Like every small town, ECU has its own police force<lb/>
to protect and preserve people, buildings and land.<lb/>
ECU's campus police are well trained, experi-<lb/>
enced, and far more interested in prevention than<lb/>
they are in investigation. Chief Francis Eddings has<lb/>
one officer who is so intensely interested in a<lb/>
prevention program that she is willing to give many<lb/>
more hours than are legally required of her to<lb/>
perpetuate the program.<lb/>
Sgt. Lynne Singleton has continued an idea<lb/>
started by another officer who is no longer with the<lb/>
force; she not only continued what was already<lb/>
begun, but has added to it and spent many hours<lb/>
presenting the program to students and personnel.<lb/>
Singleton's presentation has been successful<lb/>
among female students, mostly because of the strong<lb/>
backing of Dean of Women, Carolyn Fulghum. Dean<lb/>
Fulghum believes that this is probably the most<lb/>
popular program that we have ever had. The kids<lb/>
have responded mostly because something was<lb/>
needed. There has been no negative reaction. This<lb/>
type of program is being developed on many<lb/>
campuses simply as a precautionary measure<lb/>
The program that Lynne Singleton presents to the<lb/>
students in dorm sessions and meetings of other<lb/>
interested groups around the campus, deals mainly<lb/>
with the prevention of theft and assault. Theft is by<lb/>
far the more common crime on campuses.<lb/>
She offers simple, common sense solutions to the<lb/>
problem, but these suggestions are welcome and<lb/>
many times new thoughts to the students because<lb/>
they are away from home for the first time and have<lb/>
never had to think about protecting property and<lb/>
person before. Most students have always been able<lb/>
to rely on parents for that kind of protection.<lb/>
One of the simple rules, shown to the students in<lb/>
short movie presentations and slide programs, is to<lb/>
always lock doors, even if only going down the hall SGT. LYNNE SINGLETON of the ECU police llen ?&amp; l') ?<lb/>
for a short time. And students are .asked to always department, discusses good rules for the protect Photo hr Marianne Barnes<lb/>
report strangers in the dorms. of property and person with ECU students Mary<lb/>
r<lb/>
 I<lb/>
 -<lb/>
- - -   -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057172_0002"/><lb/>
- . ????-?.<lb/>
  <lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 23 January 1979<lb/>
AAS<lb/>
Arnold Air Society<lb/>
rush will be held Tues.<lb/>
&amp; Wed. at 6-7 p.m.<lb/>
Jan. 23 &amp; 24 in Wright<lb/>
Annex Rm. 201. Any<lb/>
second semester GMC<lb/>
or POC cadet will be<lb/>
eligible to pledge. Re-<lb/>
freshments will be<lb/>
served.<lb/>
Fellowship<lb/>
"Then said Jesus to<lb/>
those Jews which be-<lb/>
lieved in Him, If ye<lb/>
continue in my word,<lb/>
then you are my<lb/>
disciples indeed; and ye<lb/>
shall know the truth,<lb/>
and the truth shall make<lb/>
you tree John 8:31,<lb/>
32.This is one reason<lb/>
why ever) Christian<lb/>
should study the Bible.<lb/>
The reasons for study-<lb/>
ing the Bible is the<lb/>
topic of this Thurs. Jan.<lb/>
25 Full Gospel Student<lb/>
Fellowship meeting.<lb/>
John Crowe will be<lb/>
teaching this in hope<lb/>
that everyone will see<lb/>
the need to build their<lb/>
lives on God's Word,<lb/>
and see the folk of<lb/>
building their lives on<lb/>
the word- of finite man.<lb/>
Come this Thurs. night<lb/>
in Mendenhall 212 at<lb/>
7:30-9:30 to Praise Cod.<lb/>
hear this message, for<lb/>
fellowship, and praver.<lb/>
COME EXPKCTING' A<lb/>
MIRACLE!<lb/>
cso<lb/>
If you have. or<lb/>
intend to declare, a<lb/>
major in a health-related<lb/>
curriculum. you may<lb/>
qualif) lor the following<lb/>
-tree services from<lb/>
the Center for Student<lb/>
Opportunities: career-<lb/>
planning assistance;<lb/>
academic, personal and<lb/>
financial counseling;<lb/>
tutorial assistance;<lb/>
alleviation of test<lb/>
anxiety; improved<lb/>
reading speed and<lb/>
comprehension; better<lb/>
note-taking and test<lb/>
taking techniques; and<lb/>
others.CSO also has<lb/>
immediate openings for<lb/>
student tutors, partic-<lb/>
ularly in the sciences<lb/>
and mathematics. For<lb/>
information stop by the<lb/>
Center, Ragsdale 208, or<lb/>
(all 757-6075, 6081 or<lb/>
6122.<lb/>
Tennis<lb/>
If you enjoy playing<lb/>
table tennis, stop by the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Table Tennis<lb/>
Rooms each Tues. at 7<lb/>
p.m. when the Table<lb/>
Tennis Club meets. You<lb/>
will find players of all<lb/>
levels of ability partici-<lb/>
pating. Various activities<lb/>
such as ladder tourna-<lb/>
ments are often sched-<lb/>
uled. All ECU students,<lb/>
faculty and staff are<lb/>
welcome.<lb/>
Art<lb/>
Sergei Eisenstein's<lb/>
Battleship Potemkin will<lb/>
be shown tonight at 7<lb/>
p.m. in the Jenkins Art<lb/>
Building auditorium.<lb/>
This film is universally<lb/>
considered to be one of<lb/>
the most important films<lb/>
in the history of the<lb/>
silent cinema.<lb/>
It is regarded by<lb/>
many to be Eisenstein's<lb/>
most powerful display of<lb/>
his theories of Cinematic<lb/>
Art. An episode of Dick<lb/>
Tracy vs. Crime, Inc.<lb/>
will be shown prior ro<lb/>
this feature and will<lb/>
continue every week<lb/>
thereafter. Tonight's ep-<lb/>
isode, Chapter One: The<lb/>
Fatal House. Admission<lb/>
is free to all ECU<lb/>
students and facultv.<lb/>
Breakfast<lb/>
"For as the body is<lb/>
one, and hath many<lb/>
members, and all the<lb/>
members of what one<lb/>
body, .being many, are<lb/>
one body: so also is<lb/>
ChristNow ye are the<lb/>
body of Christ, and<lb/>
members in partic-<lb/>
ularNow I blessed<lb/>
you. bretheren, by the<lb/>
name of our Lord Jesus<lb/>
Christ, that ye all speak<lb/>
the same thing, and<lb/>
there be no divisions<lb/>
among you; but that ye<lb/>
be perfectly joined<lb/>
together in the same<lb/>
judgement I Cor-<lb/>
inthians 12:12, 27; 1:10.<lb/>
You are invited to<lb/>
participate in a prayer<lb/>
breakfast on Sat. Jan.<lb/>
27at 9 a.m. in the<lb/>
Methodist Student<lb/>
Center. A good whole-<lb/>
some breakfast for .75<lb/>
will be served, and the<lb/>
Chaplain of N.C. Wes-<lb/>
eyn College, Dr. Bob<lb/>
Price, will be speaking<lb/>
to us. Come! Pray for a<lb/>
spiritual awakening here<lb/>
at ECU.<lb/>
"If my people, which<lb/>
are called by my name,<lb/>
shall humble them-<lb/>
selves, and pray, and<lb/>
seek my face, and turn<lb/>
from their wicked ways;<lb/>
then will I hear from<lb/>
heaven, and will forgive<lb/>
their sin, and heal their<lb/>
land II Chronicles<lb/>
7:14.<lb/>
"By this shall all<lb/>
men know that you are<lb/>
my disciples, if ye have<lb/>
love one to another<lb/>
JH. 13:35. This is being<lb/>
sponsored by Inter-<lb/>
varsity Christian Fel-<lb/>
lowship and Full Gospel<lb/>
Student Fellowship.<lb/>
Theta Alpha<lb/>
The Theta Alpha<lb/>
chapter of Alpha Kappa<lb/>
Alpha Service Sorority is<lb/>
sponsoring its spring<lb/>
rush. Wed Jan. 24th at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Auditorium at 7<lb/>
p.m. Come out and<lb/>
enjoy the fun!<lb/>
Chess<lb/>
All persons in-<lb/>
terested in playing chess<lb/>
are invited to stop by<lb/>
the Mendenhall Coffee-<lb/>
house each Mon. at 7<lb/>
p.m. when the Chess<lb/>
Club holds its weekly<lb/>
meeting. Competition is<lb/>
at all levels and every-<lb/>
one is welcome to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
ccc<lb/>
Can Christ make<lb/>
college life more ex-<lb/>
citing? Come by and<lb/>
meet lots of other<lb/>
students who have<lb/>
found an exciting life in<lb/>
Christ. Also learn some<lb/>
practical ways to grow-<lb/>
in your relationship with<lb/>
Christ. Stop by Brewster<lb/>
D311 this Thurs. from<lb/>
7-9 p.m. Sponsored by<lb/>
the Campus Crusade for<lb/>
Christ.<lb/>
Christ<lb/>
You are invited to<lb/>
participate in an in-<lb/>
formal, directed Bible<lb/>
study which focuses<lb/>
attention on the practical<lb/>
application of God's<lb/>
word to our everyday<lb/>
lives. Meet with us for<lb/>
an hour on Tues. at<lb/>
8:30 p.m. in Brewster<lb/>
D-308; sponsored by<lb/>
Students for Christ.<lb/>
Phi Eta<lb/>
Coming up Wed<lb/>
Jan. 24 will be Phi Eta<lb/>
Sigma's most important<lb/>
meeting this year. All<lb/>
committee members<lb/>
should attend. Make<lb/>
plans now to be there,<lb/>
in Rm. 242 Mendenhall<lb/>
at 7 p.m. If you want a<lb/>
great social, your input<lb/>
is necessary.<lb/>
IL0<lb/>
Are you interested in<lb/>
meeting foreign people,<lb/>
speaking foreign lang-<lb/>
uages, travel, sharing<lb/>
your knowledge of a<lb/>
foreign country, such as<lb/>
dance, music, history,<lb/>
food, culture, etc.?<lb/>
Would you like to visit a<lb/>
foreign country? Our<lb/>
foreign students can<lb/>
share with you inex<lb/>
pensive methods of<lb/>
living in foreign<lb/>
countries. Our members<lb/>
and advisor can help<lb/>
with all kinds of infor-<lb/>
mation. If you're in-<lb/>
terested, then you are<lb/>
invited to the next<lb/>
meeting of the Inter-<lb/>
national Language Or-<lb/>
ganization to be held<lb/>
Wed. Jan. 24 at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. at 2509 E. 5th St<lb/>
Apt. 3. This semester's<lb/>
projects will include re-<lb/>
novation of the Interna-<lb/>
tional House, having<lb/>
guest speakers, and the<lb/>
"Noche Latina For<lb/>
further information<lb/>
contact Tammy De-<lb/>
Jaager 758-7144 or Prof.<lb/>
Luis Acevez 758-3149.<lb/>
Education<lb/>
The Association for<lb/>
Childhood Education<lb/>
International will meet<lb/>
on Wed Jan. 24 at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. in Rm 129<lb/>
Speight. Dr. Thomas<lb/>
Chambliss, Dir. of<lb/>
Student Teaching will be<lb/>
our guest speaker. Al<lb/>
members and interested<lb/>
persons are invited to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Discount<lb/>
Check our "Discount<lb/>
Day" every Mon. after-<lb/>
noon at the Mendenhall<lb/>
Bowling Center. From<lb/>
l-4p.m. the price of<lb/>
bowling is 13 off. Don't<lb/>
miss this opportunity to<lb/>
really save!<lb/>
Gammon<lb/>
Enjoy playing back-<lb/>
gammon? All persons<lb/>
interested in forming a<lb/>
Backgammon Club to<lb/>
meet on a regular basis<lb/>
may sign up at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Billiards<lb/>
Center. An organiza-<lb/>
tional meeting will be<lb/>
held on Tues Jan. 23<lb/>
at 7 p.m. in the<lb/>
Billiards Center. Bring<lb/>
your sets!<lb/>
Violinist<lb/>
Eugene Fodor, pre-<lb/>
sented by the Artist<lb/>
Series, can be seen in<lb/>
concert on Tues. Jan. 30<lb/>
at the Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Theatre. He is<lb/>
considered to be one<lb/>
of the world's foremost<lb/>
living violinists Ad-<lb/>
vance tickets are: stu-<lb/>
dents $2, public $5. All<lb/>
tickets are $5 at the<lb/>
door.<lb/>
Alpha Psi<lb/>
There will be a<lb/>
meeting of all those<lb/>
individuals interested in<lb/>
becoming a pledgee for<lb/>
the Kappa Alpha Psi<lb/>
Fraternity during spring<lb/>
semester on Thurs<lb/>
Jan. 25. A format<lb/>
highlighting the up-<lb/>
coming pledge period as<lb/>
well as fraternity<lb/>
activities will be pre-<lb/>
sented. The event is<lb/>
scheduled for 7 p.m. at<lb/>
the Ledonia Wright Afro<lb/>
American Cultural Cen-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
Students, sign up<lb/>
today to bowl on a MSC<lb/>
Mixed-Doubles bowling<lb/>
league. Sign up for the<lb/>
Mon. or Tues. night<lb/>
league on the poster<lb/>
located on the ground<lb/>
floor main bulletin board<lb/>
in Mendenhall. The first<lb/>
meetingbowling nights<lb/>
will be Mon. Jan. 22<lb/>
and Tues. Jan. 23. You<lb/>
don't have to be a pro<lb/>
to participate. Get some<lb/>
friends together and<lb/>
sign up today.<lb/>
Courses<lb/>
Register now for a<lb/>
mini-course in Beginning<lb/>
Bridge, Billiards, or<lb/>
CPR training. Sponsored<lb/>
by Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center, the courses are<lb/>
open to ECU full-time<lb/>
students, faculty and<lb/>
staff MSC members and<lb/>
their spouses or guests.<lb/>
Persons must register<lb/>
and pay fees at the<lb/>
MSC Central Ticket<lb/>
office between the hour-<lb/>
of 10 a.m. and 4 p.m<lb/>
MonFri. The first<lb/>
course begins Jan. 29.<lb/>
Register today!<lb/>
Photo<lb/>
Staff photographer<lb/>
needed for the ECL<lb/>
Photo Lab. Applications<lb/>
taken at the FOl Y<lb/>
TAINHEAD office. See<lb/>
secretary between 8<lb/>
a.m 5 p.m.<lb/>
Ski Club<lb/>
There will be a<lb/>
mandatory Ski Club<lb/>
Meeting Wed. Jan 21<lb/>
at 5 p.m. in the bottom<lb/>
of Memorial Gym.<lb/>
ttendanre necessar)<lb/>
or netting up phv-ial-<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
Won't you please apply? 757-6611<lb/>
'<lb/>
MENDENHALL STUDENT CENTER<lb/>
PRESENTS:<lb/>
THE FIRST ANNUAL CRAFTS CENTER<lb/>
PHOTO CONTEST<lb/>
ENTRY DATES MARCH 12 - 26 PHONOGRAPHY WORKSHOPS<lb/>
SHOW DATES APRIL 2-6<lb/>
OPEN TO ALL FULL TIME<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS<lb/>
BLACK &amp; WHITE WORK ONLY<lb/>
FURTHER DETAILS LATER<lb/>
NOW AVAILABLE<lb/>
CALL CRAFTS CENTER<lb/>
FOR MORE<lb/>
INFORMATION<lb/>
ON WORKSHOPS<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
Applications for these Committee<lb/>
Chairmanships begin this Thursday!<lb/>
(Thur Jan. 25 thru Tue Feb. 6)<lb/>
ART EXHIBITION<lb/>
ARTISTS SERIES<lb/>
COFFEEHOUSE<lb/>
FILMS<lb/>
LECTURE<lb/>
MAJOR<lb/>
ATTRACTIONS<lb/>
mm<lb/>
COUNTING<lb/>
YCUt<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
ATTRACTIONS<lb/>
MINORITY ARTS<lb/>
THEATRE ARTS<lb/>
THE ENTERTAINER<lb/>
TRAVEL<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
torrent ?l<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
NEEDED: 2 blocks from<lb/>
campus, rent approx.<lb/>
$58 plus 13 utilities.<lb/>
758-7676.<lb/>
ROMMATE NEEDED:<lb/>
male or female to share<lb/>
two-bedroom apt. King's<lb/>
Row Apts. located on<lb/>
bus route. Call Burton<lb/>
at 752-1929.<lb/>
WANTED: Female<lb/>
roommate, preferably a<lb/>
graduate student or a<lb/>
quiet. settled person.<lb/>
Would have private<lb/>
room, can be furnished,<lb/>
1 block from campus,<lb/>
close to downtown.<lb/>
$87.50 plus Vi utilities<lb/>
and phone. Needed<lb/>
immediately! Call<lb/>
758-1636.<lb/>
ROOMS FOR RENT in<lb/>
large house, close to<lb/>
campus. 407 W. 4th St.<lb/>
Call 752-9325 $35-$50<lb/>
rent plus utilities.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED: to share<lb/>
furnished, 3 B.R. apt. in<lb/>
East brook. $70 a mo.<lb/>
plus 13 utilities. Call<lb/>
752-9390 if interested.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Urge<lb/>
blue-green couch and<lb/>
beige chair. Call 758-<lb/>
-6712.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1973 Brown<lb/>
Capri, 4 speed, U-6<lb/>
2600 cc, air cond. Must<lb/>
sell $400 or best offer.<lb/>
Call 756-3610 between<lb/>
6-8 p.m.<lb/>
GUITAR and soft shell<lb/>
case. Great tone, perfect<lb/>
for Bluegrass, or any<lb/>
other style. $150. Call<lb/>
756-6835.<lb/>
Complete ski outfit<lb/>
$99. Olin MK I, 190 cm;<lb/>
Lange boots, size 10<lb/>
Tyrolia bindings, polls<lb/>
and carrying cases.<lb/>
758-8794.<lb/>
FOR SALE: BIC 981<lb/>
turntable $100; pair BIC<lb/>
formula 4 speakers $200;<lb/>
Marantz 2226B receiver<lb/>
$150. Call 758-5252 or<lb/>
come to 342 Garrett.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Two pair<lb/>
women's ski boots: 1 pr.<lb/>
? Hansons, 612, red. 1<lb/>
pr. ? Humanics 7 12,<lb/>
red. Both pairs in good<lb/>
condition. $30. a pair.<lb/>
Call Susan 758-3225.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 6 12'<lb/>
Fenwick spin, rod, slide<lb/>
duplicater, Polaroid<lb/>
Sx-70, all in excellent<lb/>
condition. Call 756-1219.<lb/>
Sell<lb/>
mi<lb/>
BELLY DANCE - Let<lb/>
1979 be your year for<lb/>
health and beauty.<lb/>
Dance! A course in the<lb/>
ancient art of Belly<lb/>
Dancing taught by<lb/>
Sunshine will begin Jan.<lb/>
15. Rides from campus<lb/>
available. Call 758-0736.<lb/>
(Mornings and even-<lb/>
ings).<lb/>
ur mobile<lb/>
mmiiwtr ?tMM?U?ia t<lb/>
home in Mav If<lb/>
ve a 12' x 50' or 55'<lb/>
f bedroom mobile home,<lb/>
am ah interested<lb/>
?e0r0 Terms negotiable.<lb/>
752-8241 ask forCheryle<lb/>
WEIGHT LOSS through<lb/>
yoga. Special juice<lb/>
fasting - control tech<lb/>
n?ques - tension release<lb/>
? supple body. Call<lb/>
Sunshine 758-0736<lb/>
mornings or evenings.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057172_0003"/><lb/>
23 January 1979 FOUNTAINHEAO Page 3<lb/>
Greek Forum<lb/>
If you liked Cliffs Notes,<lb/>
you'll love these <lb/>
Bv RCKI GLIARMIS<lb/>
"a Editor<lb/>
l?,nrk ?? has<lb/>
lUi, fe-scheduled. In-<lb/>
 nT?;  Primed ln<lb/>
Ti - issues<lb/>
? ,h, deadlines<lb/>
'or articles haw. k<lb/>
changed. been<lb/>
Pay close attention to<lb/>
 ,chan?e- The indi-<lb/>
'dual articles from lhe<lb/>
,raernities and sororities<lb/>
;tr" ??' be turned in to<lb/>
Dea" Fulghum's office<lb/>
'ater an noon on<lb/>
Mondavs.<lb/>
The articles are to be<lb/>
placed in the Sigma<lb/>
Sigma Sigma box in<lb/>
Dean Fulgham's office<lb/>
which is located on the<lb/>
second floor of the<lb/>
Whichard Building.<lb/>
If the articles are not<lb/>
in the box by noon<lb/>
Mondays, they will not<lb/>
be printed.<lb/>
List the activities<lb/>
which should be printed.<lb/>
II possible, please type<lb/>
the articles. If not,<lb/>
please print the infor-<lb/>
mation. It would be to<lb/>
the advantage of the<lb/>
fraternity or sorority to<lb/>
select one correspondent '<lb/>
to be responsible for the<lb/>
weekly articles. -<lb/>
This is an oppor-<lb/>
tunity to communicate<lb/>
with the other organi-<lb/>
zations on campus. It is<lb/>
also a chance to pub-<lb/>
licize the activities which<lb/>
are taking place in fra-<lb/>
ternities and sororities.<lb/>
Participation is need-<lb/>
ed from each group in<lb/>
order for the Greek<lb/>
Forum to be a success.<lb/>
The Greek Forum tries<lb/>
not to be partial to any<lb/>
specific group. The ma-<lb/>
terial which is turned in<lb/>
will be printed.<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS:<lb/>
The Chi POmegas<lb/>
held their formal onSat-<lb/>
urday, Jan. 20. The<lb/>
dance was held at the<lb/>
Greenville Country Club.<lb/>
The affair included a<lb/>
cocktail party and din-<lb/>
ner. Following dinner,<lb/>
entertainment was pro-<lb/>
vided by a live bnd.<lb/>
The Phi Kappa Tay<lb/>
fraternity is planning its<lb/>
formal for Feb. 3 at the<lb/>
Greenville Country Club.<lb/>
The weekend will be a<lb/>
combination of Parent's<lb/>
Weekend and Founder's<lb/>
Dav.<lb/>
The Phi<lb/>
aus<lb/>
are<lb/>
having a party for their<lb/>
Little Sisters at the Tar<lb/>
River party room<lb/>
Tuesday night.<lb/>
Please remember<lb/>
turn in all articles<lb/>
noon on Monday<lb/>
Dean Fulghum's office.<lb/>
Tahnk vou.<lb/>
on<lb/>
to<lb/>
by<lb/>
in<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
needs news writers<lb/>
Call 757-6366<lb/>
Catch up<lb/>
fast with<lb/>
Cliffs<lb/>
Keynote<lb/>
Available in<lb/>
RevieWS ?vef 24 s-jbiect areas<lb/>
Unique programmed format<lb/>
pinpoints your weak areas<lb/>
leads you right to the tacts<lb/>
without wasting time Includes seit-<lb/>
tests and a Dictionary Index of Terms<lb/>
Keep up<lb/>
with Tney re keei '?<lb/>
W y" maior texts and include<lb/>
Cliffs sugqested objective<lb/>
Coiirc and essav Questions<lb/>
I  Great for ore-exam review<lb/>
Outlines<lb/>
Here<lb/>
UBE<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
Across Cotanche<lb/>
frorr, Gif'S Oo-<lb/>
ECU Marching Pirates<lb/>
have new band directoi<lb/>
NOTICE:<lb/>
Bv MARK JACOBS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Marching Pirates<lb/>
' a new band direc-<lb/>
this year and along<lb/>
with that. some very<lb/>
' iting plans for next<lb/>
Mar.<lb/>
"Our biggest job<lb/>
?' year is organiza-<lb/>
tion says Dennis<lb/>
Reaser, the Marching<lb/>
tes director.<lb/>
Reaser has devised a<lb/>
rarchy tor the band <lb/>
system of organization<lb/>
allows its higher<lb/>
members to function as<lb/>
luncil.<lb/>
'The control of the<lb/>
d is with the stu-<lb/>
ivho are in high<lb/>
Six captains were<lb/>
chosen to be under the<lb/>
two assistants.<lb/>
Their job primarily is<lb/>
one of leadership and<lb/>
direction-giving.<lb/>
Each captain is in<lb/>
charge of four squad-<lb/>
leaders.<lb/>
The' squadleaders<lb/>
have the job of making<lb/>
sure that each band<lb/>
member performs to his<lb/>
fullest and each band<lb/>
member is completely<lb/>
informed.<lb/>
The band makes the<lb/>
preliminary choices for<lb/>
its leaders.<lb/>
Those people then<lb/>
choose the other people<lb/>
for lesser positions.<lb/>
"One person cannot<lb/>
stand in front of<lb/>
200-some people and<lb/>
give orders effectively<lb/>
commented Reaser.<lb/>
Reaser does not like<lb/>
to dwell on the past,<lb/>
but prefers to consider<lb/>
the future.<lb/>
He encourages these<lb/>
people to register for<lb/>
marching band for next<lb/>
vear.<lb/>
ir<lb/>
-nip positions he<lb/>
Ibf band will be<lb/>
ler the field direction<lb/>
one drum major <lb/>
assistant drum<lb/>
majors will function<lb/>
urn.<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY STORE<lb/>
1501 S Evans<lb/>
B-15, bomber, field,<lb/>
deck, flight, snorkel jackets<lb/>
Back Packs<lb/>
SAADS SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
113 GRANDE AVE.<lb/>
at<lb/>
COLLEGE VIEW<lb/>
CLEANERS<lb/>
As a special incentive to get you to drive to Kinston, we are<lb/>
offering the entire line of Akai receivers at 10 over<lb/>
dealer cost or less.<lb/>
This offer is good through Sat. Jan. 27, 18 1979.<lb/>
Seuficls I II t tli is Kinston s newest and largest stereo<lb/>
store offering some of the finest stereo equipment available.<lb/>
Scuricls fantastic<lb/>
Vernon Park Mall<lb/>
Kinston, N.C.<lb/>
Open 10-9 MonSat.<lb/>
SALE ENDS SATURDAY Jan 30th.<lb/>
UBE - DOWNTOWN IN GREENVILLE<lb/>
UBE THANK YOU SALE<lb/>
r-??iv- Jh5.HS? aM?reates the business of all ECU Students,<lb/>
rou've made this our most successful 5TOBS.ever!To show our<lb/>
?? ?!?? IZ?U' we're 8,ashl?8 the prices of all our sports<lb/>
Lar.l?ri"8A? ?? coupons and save<lb/>
 ?f f ECU ?tS ! ICO S ??<lb/>
Zipper Hooded I Hooded Pullove<lb/>
Sweatshirt Sweatshirt<lb/>
Reg. 9.9S now 7.9S j eg 7.9 now.9S<lb/>
I ofIS2 of fS2 off S2 oi<lb/>
ioi? $1 of f j si oilT " si off1<lb/>
ECU Jersey j ECUTShlrt<lb/>
reg. f .95&amp;6.0S 1<lb/>
now only 4.9S&amp;5.9S Reg. 2 f ROWl.Og<lb/>
Si off j Si off<lb/>
"SSoff<lb/>
$2 Off $2 Off<lb/>
ECU Regular<lb/>
Sweatshirt<lb/>
Reg. 7.9S &amp;S.9S<lb/>
now f.9f&amp; 3.95<lb/>
?2L$ off<lb/>
siof f si"off<lb/>
Sweatpants<lb/>
Keg. f .so now 4.S0<lb/>
$2of f $2 of<lb/>
ECU Sportshirt<lb/>
Reg. 9.95 ?8.95<lb/>
now 7.9s &amp; 6.95<lb/>
$2 Off$2 Of!<lb/>
Sioif si"of<lb/>
ECU Hats<lb/>
Reg. 29 &amp; Up<lb/>
SloffjSjoff<lb/>
Gymshorts<lb/>
Reg. 2.99 ? S-49<lb/>
Warni up Suits<lb/>
Reg. 19.95 now 24.9s<lb/>
ooff<lb/>
rOOff SSOff<lb/>
of fI S3 off<lb/>
I5f fJ$ off<lb/>
1 oSf ecu $3 of fjsi off<lb/>
Lined Jackets Tennis Shorts<lb/>
Reg. 1493 &amp; Up j Reg. 9.9S &amp; 7.9S<lb/>
I aowS.9SCf9.9S<lb/>
S3 off I SI off si of!<lb/>
0 0 0<lb/>
'0000mm<lb/>
5H6 i .?<lb/>
? m m m m -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057172_0004"/><lb/>
L<lb/>
??<lb/>
??<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 23 January 1979<lb/>
Unfetter the bikes<lb/>
Is there a parking problem for<lb/>
bicycles at ECU? If not, why are<lb/>
students required to register their<lb/>
bikes with campus security?<lb/>
Bicycle registration is supposedly a<lb/>
service offered by the campus police<lb/>
to help them trace and identify a<lb/>
stolen bike, and also as proof of<lb/>
ownership in case someone is suspect-<lb/>
ed of stealing a bike, according to<lb/>
Joseph Calder, director of Campus<lb/>
Security.<lb/>
Penalty<lb/>
The penalty for noncompliance with<lb/>
this service, however, is a cut lock<lb/>
and an impounded bike. Since<lb/>
when are people penalized for<lb/>
refusing a service? They are further<lb/>
punished by having to pay a fine to<lb/>
release their bicycle from the clutches<lb/>
of the same benevolent folk who offer<lb/>
this service.<lb/>
If. as officials say, the purpose<lb/>
behind registration is solely for the<lb/>
protection of the bicycle owner, then<lb/>
shouldn't that decision be left up to<lb/>
the owner, just as a merchant must<lb/>
decide for himself whether he wants<lb/>
burglar alarms? Granted, registration<lb/>
is a good idea, and bicycle owners<lb/>
would be wise to follow the police's<lb/>
recommendation to register their<lb/>
bikes, but there is no justification for<lb/>
requiring registration and then penal-<lb/>
izing the owner for choosing instead<lb/>
to take his chances.<lb/>
The security office says it makes<lb/>
no money from these registration and<lb/>
impoundment fees, so chasing around<lb/>
campus in hot pursuit of an<lb/>
unregistered bike only wastes time<lb/>
and money for the campus police and<lb/>
creates yet another hassle for students<lb/>
to have to live with.<lb/>
If no reasonable justification for<lb/>
these requirements can be found, then<lb/>
this service should become such, a<lb/>
voluntary effort by the bicycle owner<lb/>
to protect his property.<lb/>
Greenpeace<lb/>
Atomic wastes<lb/>
By JERRY ADDERTON<lb/>
Greenpeace Support of Greenville<lb/>
Thi is the first of a weekly series of articles<lb/>
dedicated to the problems and issues concerning<lb/>
world ecology. Some will be written by myself and<lb/>
some vill be reprints of essays and reports<lb/>
assembled and prepared by the Greenpeace<lb/>
Foundation.<lb/>
I sincerely hope these articles will be read and<lb/>
considered by everyone because the message I hope<lb/>
to convey, concerns us all. I will be writing about<lb/>
-aing the dying species of whales, seals, and<lb/>
dolphins, but that won't be all. The world's forests,<lb/>
seas, and atmosphere are also dying slow but sure<lb/>
death<lb/>
Certainly, there are many groups and organi-<lb/>
zation- who are aware of this and great efforts are<lb/>
being made, even as you read this, to provide<lb/>
solutions to the many environmental problems the<lb/>
world hue- today. But if we are to be really<lb/>
effective in these efforts, there must be more<lb/>
widespread support.<lb/>
One obstacle in our way is ignorance. A great<lb/>
many people are simply not aware of the very real<lb/>
problems that exist and this is the first problem we<lb/>
must overcome.<lb/>
A valuable learning experience goes hand in hand<lb/>
with this sort of undertaking. I invite you all to<lb/>
hare in this with me. Perhaps you will find as I<lb/>
have that it is not just a case of saving a few<lb/>
? ndangered species (there are actually over 900) or<lb/>
nursing a sick environment; we are involved in a<lb/>
struggle lor the survival of our planet home, the<lb/>
Earth.<lb/>
If you should read anything in these articles that<lb/>
you di-agree with or know to be wrong, please let<lb/>
me know either by way of "Forum" letters to this<lb/>
newspaper or by contacting me personally.<lb/>
Dissenting opinions are welcome, for how can I<lb/>
intelligently present the issues without knowing both<lb/>
-ides of the story?<lb/>
Nuclear power and nuclear waste disposal were<lb/>
the subjects of a lecture sponsored by ECU's Science<lb/>
Education Department Jan. 17 in Hendrix Theatre at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
The guest speaker was Sandy Keiffer, senior<lb/>
scientist of the Nuclear DesignNuclear Fuel Division<lb/>
of the Westinghouse Electric Corporation in<lb/>
Pittsburgh, Pa.<lb/>
After some opening remarks by the chairperson of<lb/>
the Science Education Department, Floyd Mattheis,<lb/>
Keifer opened her lecture by explaining how a light<lb/>
water nuclear reactor works.<lb/>
Steel fuel rods containing many small ceramic<lb/>
fuel pellets in which uranium238 and small quantities<lb/>
of uranium 235 react in a process called nuclear<lb/>
fission, are immersed in water. The heat resulting<lb/>
from this reaction transforms the water into steam<lb/>
which turns large turbines to produce electricity.<lb/>
These fuel rods are used for a year and then<lb/>
replaced and stored at the facility for several months<lb/>
to allow the substances with a short half-life to<lb/>
decay.<lb/>
These "high level" wastes are presently kept in<lb/>
pits at the facility (isoloated from the environment)<lb/>
and are now creating a problem because the pits are<lb/>
filling up and the utilities companies need more<lb/>
room to store the wastes. Since the government will<lb/>
not at this time allow the wastes to be reprocessed,<lb/>
there is a long-term storagedisposal problem.<lb/>
According to Keifer, the industry is looking into<lb/>
the prospect of containing high level wastes in a<lb/>
glass (similar to Pyrex) medium that effectively<lb/>
contains the radiation and enclosing this in a thick<lb/>
stainless steel canister. This canister could then be<lb/>
buried at a proposed federally operated underground<lb/>
depository in southeastern New Mexico.<lb/>
This method would seem to be relatively safe<lb/>
because the canisters would be buried at a depth of<lb/>
approximately one half mile in a large deposit of salt<lb/>
or granite. These deposits would isolate the canister<lb/>
from any ground water that may carry the radiation<lb/>
eventually to drinking water.<lb/>
This method would also deter any possibility of<lb/>
theft (by terrorists) and would not likely be<lb/>
threatened by an earthquake. Keifer also mentioned<lb/>
that no wastes are currently deposited in the oceans<lb/>
and the idea of sending it into space by rocket is<lb/>
unlikely and personally undesireable.<lb/>
After the lecture, Keiier fielded questions from<lb/>
the audience, some of which dealt with the<lb/>
transportation of radioactive materials and safety<lb/>
measures involved (specifically in the case of<lb/>
accidents or hijacking in transit and the education of<lb/>
drivers, pilots, etc. in emergency procedures). These<lb/>
points seemed to be well covered by the industry, as<lb/>
Keifer explained.<lb/>
The points I still wonder about are the effects on<lb/>
the ecology around a nuclear power plant in regard<lb/>
to the water that comes out from a plant, back to<lb/>
the biosphere hotter than it went in. This is known<lb/>
to have an adverse effect on the marine<lb/>
environments close to the plants.<lb/>
Hopefully, public reaction and "watchdogging"<lb/>
will insure the continued efforts to iron out the<lb/>
wrinkles in the nuclear industry. Everyone should<lb/>
become more aware of the nuclear power issues and<lb/>
work toward a goal of ecological harmony between<lb/>
nuclear power and our environment.<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
WECU blames FCC for FM delays<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
In regard to Brett<lb/>
Melvin's letter of Jan.<lb/>
16, I politely say BARF.<lb/>
People only hate or fear<lb/>
something that they are<lb/>
ignorant of or do not<lb/>
totally understand.<lb/>
Obviously Mr. Mel-<lb/>
vin suffers from both<lb/>
situations. The issue<lb/>
that I am referring to is<lb/>
not whether editorials<lb/>
are biased but simply<lb/>
that of the Media Board<lb/>
and WECU-FM. Mr.<lb/>
Melvin obviously does<lb/>
not have his facts<lb/>
completely together.<lb/>
When a student pays<lb/>
his university fees, it is<lb/>
no longer the property<lb/>
of the students. It<lb/>
becomes the property of<lb/>
the state of North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
The Media Board has<lb/>
simply been given the<lb/>
authority to appropriate<lb/>
the funds to the proper<lb/>
media organization by<lb/>
the state through the<lb/>
Board of Trustees.<lb/>
Thank God that the<lb/>
SGA demogogues no<lb/>
longer have control of<lb/>
the media funds. Mr.<lb/>
Melvin is ignorant of<lb/>
the fact that had it not<lb/>
been for the Media<lb/>
Board WECU would not<lb/>
exist and certainly the<lb/>
filing of an FM license<lb/>
application with the FCC<lb/>
would only be a faded<lb/>
dream never to be<lb/>
rekindled.<lb/>
Some of the SGA<lb/>
members have about as<lb/>
much responsibility and<lb/>
concern as a retarded<lb/>
Tarsier, and I don't<lb/>
mind saying so. Mr.<lb/>
Melvin has obviously<lb/>
never had to face a<lb/>
partial mockery of<lb/>
student government and<lb/>
plead for enough funds<lb/>
to at least try to operate<lb/>
a student radio station<lb/>
that never could get out<lb/>
SU film series is defended<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Perhaps when Mr.<lb/>
Bosnick was here there<lb/>
was indeed a great lack<lb/>
of quality film enter-<lb/>
tainment. Let it be<lb/>
noted, however, that last<lb/>
semester, not to mention<lb/>
the preceeding one, the<lb/>
Student Union Films<lb/>
Committee, not only the<lb/>
Greenville Cinema Co-<lb/>
ceity, offered a wide<lb/>
range of quality enter-<lb/>
tainment.<lb/>
Completely aside<lb/>
from the Friday-Saturday<lb/>
Pop films (which many<lb/>
students consider "qual-<lb/>
ity"), the Committee<lb/>
also offered, and offers,<lb/>
a fine selection of<lb/>
Fbuntainhcod<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for ovor 50 years<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Doug White<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER ADVERTISING MANAGER<lb/>
Steve Bachner K-W8 E0T0R$ Robert M. Swaim<lb/>
TC<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
Sam Rogers<lb/>
TRENDS EDITOR<lb/>
Jeff Rollins<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student newssap?r of East<lb/>
Carolina University sponsored toy the Mettaftoertf of ECU<lb/>
and is distributed oeoh Tuesday and Thursdsy (woofcty<lb/>
during the summer).<lb/>
Matting addrsss: Old Sooth Sutidmg, Greenville,<lb/>
Editor offtass: 75743M, OT-iSeT, 7S7430S<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10 annually,<lb/>
N C<lb/>
avant-garde, foreign, and<lb/>
classic films.<lb/>
Last semester alone,<lb/>
students, faculty and<lb/>
staff coulr see Fellini's<lb/>
Casanova, Welle's Citizen<lb/>
Kane, Bergman's Smiles<lb/>
of a Summer Night,<lb/>
Wertmueller's Seven<lb/>
Beauties, Truffaut's The<lb/>
Man Who Loved Wo-<lb/>
men, and a wide variety<lb/>
of film festivals and<lb/>
other special topics. No<lb/>
matter how one looks at<lb/>
it, these are quality<lb/>
films.<lb/>
Already this semester<lb/>
the Committee has<lb/>
screened Truffaut's Sto-<lb/>
len Kisses and Berg-<lb/>
man's The Wild Staw-<lb/>
berries. Unfortunately,<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD did<lb/>
not see fit to publicize<lb/>
those films; fortunately,<lb/>
attendance was good<lb/>
anyway.<lb/>
Yet to come are two<lb/>
Peter Brook films. King<lb/>
Lear and Marat Sade,<lb/>
plus Hester Street, Imi-<lb/>
tation of Life, Olivier's<lb/>
Wuthering Heights, a-<lb/>
long with Outrageous,<lb/>
The Burmese Harp, and<lb/>
Love and Anarchy.<lb/>
This commentary is<lb/>
by no means a criticism<lb/>
of the Cinema Sociaty.<lb/>
Most of the Studenot<lb/>
Union films Committee<lb/>
members also hold Cin-<lb/>
ema Society member-<lb/>
ship. This is merely a<lb/>
reminder that quality<lb/>
film entertainment is<lb/>
available on campus at<lb/>
no charge except that<lb/>
activity fees a student<lb/>
ha already paid, or (for<lb/>
faculty and staff) the<lb/>
cost of a Mendenhall<lb/>
Membership Card ($5).<lb/>
If you admire good<lb/>
film, get it whereever<lb/>
you can; a good place to<lb/>
start is the Student<lb/>
Union.<lb/>
Steve Bachner<lb/>
Student Union Films<lb/>
Committee Chairman<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
bhoncTumber T' C?nUin lhe "am ??<lb/>
phont number and signature of the author) ami<lb/>
should be typed or neatly printed.<lb/>
Letters are subject to rAii c<lb/>
obscenity, and libel. d,Ung f?r brtv<lb/>
No more than three letters on any subiect ui k-<lb/>
printed in one issue. Utters ?K??u u , !l <lb/>
three typewritten, double, ? ??<lb/>
WeJfnXr.8; tToiUNdTteAD?n "<lb/>
floor, Publications Center EA? ofr,CC' sec?<lb/>
ridicule the author (8Jcl t ?t" ??? l<lb/>
f?omo8?ual?ty, drug abuse, etc.).<lb/>
sin<lb/>
t<lb/>
worth a damn with the<lb/>
carrier current systems<lb/>
that we had.<lb/>
As for WECU-FM<lb/>
"almost" becoming a<lb/>
reality, Mr. Melvin<lb/>
obviously knows zero<lb/>
about our present<lb/>
circumstances. I have<lb/>
done my homework and<lb/>
have long since com-<lb/>
pleted all of the work<lb/>
necessary for the station<lb/>
in terms of its licensing<lb/>
application.<lb/>
It is not our fault for.<lb/>
the delay, nor is it the<lb/>
fault of the Media<lb/>
Board. The FCC is to<lb/>
blame. They are super<lb/>
slack which is typical of<lb/>
any governmental auth-<lb/>
ority.<lb/>
we are waiting on<lb/>
them and no one else.<lb/>
The application is being<lb/>
shifted around and has<lb/>
been assigned a file<lb/>
number. This mean<lb/>
that WECU is a reality,<lb/>
but the question is,<lb/>
when? The station itself<lb/>
will broadcast in FM<lb/>
stereo and it is going to<lb/>
happen.<lb/>
To Mr. Melvin and<lb/>
his cohorts I simplv sav<lb/>
"Ad Inferos Tecum<lb/>
Piano!<lb/>
John Denny Jeter<lb/>
General Manager,<lb/>
WECl<lb/>
ECU should<lb/>
have a<lb/>
Pep Band<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
This past week it<lb/>
as so good to see<lb/>
Minges Coliseum filled<lb/>
w,th ? good crowd and<lb/>
nngmg with enthusiasm<lb/>
for the basketball team!<lb/>
One question: What<lb/>
has become of the Pep<lb/>
Band that aided the<lb/>
t?m spirit in previous<lb/>
years?<lb/>
Saturday night the<lb/>
rginia Commonwealth<lb/>
.ni81 ? koosi<lb/>
to the crowd. With a<lb/>
of ECU a, pba, t mmdi<lb/>
deserving basketball<lb/>
e?m, surely the two caa<lb/>
??? together! How abo?t<lb/>
v<lb/>
 ?-??TWilfcA. ?<lb/>
SKi-  <lb/>
 wov?iffWMusK<lb/>
<pb facs="00057172_0005"/><lb/>
-SchoolofScie<lb/>
R<lb/>
nceand Math<lb/>
23 January 1979 FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
t<lb/>
DURHAM, N.c. (AP)<lb/>
l,??mmiitee of the k 7<lb/>
of ?k e D?ard<lb/>
P ? Proposed North<lb/>
L"oi,?. school 0f Scr<lb/>
?<lb/>
novations to cost millions<lb/>
J? ?d TMahematics<lb/>
Hds ?W Tuesday that<lb/>
renovations to the"<lb/>
pool's campus could<lb/>
0081 b?weeB $6 and $8<lb/>
million.<lb/>
The school recently<lb/>
selected the unused<lb/>
Waits Hospital in Dur-<lb/>
?am as the site for the<lb/>
school, which hopes to<lb/>
admit students by the<lb/>
 ???? between a .wo-d fall break<lb/>
would ? -   Christmw vaa.ion which<lb/>
?n.iogou ,?ts.For ?-5, ? -? ??<lb/>
 n ice ?Ty e" '  " ' <lb/>
Jon wjfjotL-ia  - ?<lb/>
,K " Ta kn"W' ECl' ha" "? fa" break<lb/>
"?) a two and one-half week Christinas break.<lb/>
U n one of lb universities governed bv the<lb/>
schools opera e under the same schedule. Why is<lb/>
"MS- Ihey a operate under the same governing<lb/>
group, and all are accredited for their well-known<lb/>
departments. The only difference I can see is the<lb/>
prestige that the athletic teams bring to each<lb/>
individual university.<lb/>
here is my question: Why does each school<lb/>
operate under a different schedule?<lb/>
Fake UNC-Chapel Hill for example. Chapel Hill<lb/>
Mart, two school days before ECU and gets out the<lb/>
same day as ECU. But yet. Chapel Hill has a<lb/>
two-da) fall break and one month off lor Christmas.<lb/>
when ECU changed from the quarter to semester<lb/>
system, vacation time was not properly awarded, as<lb/>
we have only 23 school days od a opposed to N.C.<lb/>
State's 25. UNC-Greensboro's 27. Appalachian State's<lb/>
29 and UNC-Chapel Hill's 30.<lb/>
Last semester the Faculty-Senate at ECU voted<lb/>
down the passage of a fall break for Fall Semester<lb/>
1979<lb/>
Through an interview with Melanie Hite,<lb/>
lirman ot the SGA calendar committee, some of<lb/>
the reasons we don't have a fall break are as<lb/>
follow (1) Chancellor Brewer doesn't feel we are in<lb/>
ol long enough to have a fall break; (2) having a<lb/>
fall break would interfere with science labs (to mv<lb/>
understanding, every university has science labs )<lb/>
ami. (3) the student legislature is composed mainlv<lb/>
seniors and working for a fall break seems a<lb/>
waste of time tor those who will not be here to enjov<lb/>
The reasons given for not having a fall break<lb/>
appear to be somewhat vague. No real reason has<lb/>
en given, just assumptions of what seems to be.<lb/>
1 feel all ot you would like to see some addition<lb/>
ol vacation time instituted into our schedule ? either<lb/>
a fall break, a Christmas break extension, or both.<lb/>
Students deserve a break.<lb/>
A fall break would be a good time for us to catch<lb/>
up on our work or even take a vacation up in the<lb/>
mountains for the four day weekend. Even a<lb/>
Christmas extension would be good for some because<lb/>
? t would allow the student to earn more money if he<lb/>
worked, and it would increase time for visits with<lb/>
family and. friends.<lb/>
Several solutions have popped into my mind as to<lb/>
how we as students could get more vacation time.<lb/>
How about a demonstration in front of Chancellor<lb/>
Brewer's office? ()r maybe an organized boycott of<lb/>
classes? These solutions would surely cause a stir<lb/>
within the university.<lb/>
But, as you can see, these are pretty-<lb/>
unreasonable measures to take. For one thing, I<lb/>
don't think we could get the average, apathetic, ECU<lb/>
student to do this sort of thing, and secondly, I feel<lb/>
the onlv vacation we will earn through demonstrating<lb/>
is a permanent one ? out of school ? forever.<lb/>
Realistically, speaking, there is one course of<lb/>
action we could take to see to it that more vacation<lb/>
time be added to the schedule. The first step is to<lb/>
take the problem to the SGA.<lb/>
The second step is to form a committee to take<lb/>
immediate action on the problem with research,<lb/>
publicity, and petitions. Once we get ourselves<lb/>
organized. we can request to speak to the<lb/>
Faculty-Senate and present our requests.<lb/>
Ibis solution is reasonable, logical, and could<lb/>
possibly gam us some vacation time if handled<lb/>
properly.<lb/>
Since there is more strength in numbers 1 am<lb/>
inviting you to join me in forming a group to study<lb/>
the problem and present it to the SGA. If we get<lb/>
organized quickly and get a solid case in our favor,<lb/>
there might be a chance tor a re-vote in the<lb/>
Faculty-Senate for a change in the schedule, if not<lb/>
tor next year, surely the year after.<lb/>
Just remember that this is our university, so we<lb/>
should be willing to take that extra step and vo.ee<lb/>
our wants and need (in a reasonable' manner) and<lb/>
see them through. It's not entirely impossible.<lb/>
The students at Chapel Hill fought for a fall<lb/>
break and got it. If they can change university policy<lb/>
we can too ? but only if we are willing to take that<lb/>
extra step.<lb/>
NOTE: If you are interested in forming a group to<lb/>
study this situation please leave your name and<lb/>
phone number in the FOUNTAINHEAD office or mail<lb/>
it in care of this column.<lb/>
facilities committee esti-<lb/>
mated that renovations<lb/>
fall of 1980. totalling at least 16<lb/>
A study presented to million may be necess-<lb/>
the school's physical ary.<lb/>
The study was pre-<lb/>
pared by Carr, Harrison<lb/>
and Pruden, a Durham<lb/>
architectural firm.<lb/>
The committee mem-<lb/>
bers agreed that the<lb/>
school may have to<lb/>
restrict use at First to<lb/>
the campus' newest and<lb/>
largest building, which<lb/>
was constructed in 1954.<lb/>
One of the campus'<lb/>
15 buildings dates back<lb/>
to 1908.<lb/>
Charles Jordan, the<lb/>
state's chief construction<lb/>
officer, said before the<lb/>
meeting that the study<lb/>
was "just an estimate to<lb/>
help us find out where<lb/>
we are and where we<lb/>
are going<lb/>
"It's hard to pin<lb/>
down how accurate the<lb/>
estimate might be be-<lb/>
cause we don't know the<lb/>
extent of the renovations<lb/>
we'll be doing Jordan<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Robert W. Carr, one<lb/>
of the architects, said,<lb/>
"We found the struc-<lb/>
tures to be sound in<lb/>
every respect<lb/>
The major areas<lb/>
needing work, Carr said,<lb/>
are tile roofs on the<lb/>
buildings and the re-<lb/>
placement of all utilities.<lb/>
Carr said plumbing,<lb/>
heating and electrical<lb/>
wiring will have to be<lb/>
replaced in at least four<lb/>
of the buildings.<lb/>
"It will be very time<lb/>
consuming and a major<lb/>
expense he said.<lb/>
Carr added that insu-<lb/>
lation will also have to<lb/>
be added.<lb/>
Help save a life.<lb/>
Give generously<lb/>
to the Red Cross.<lb/>
t FM GOT YOU DOWN?<lb/>
GET IT UP WITH<lb/>
FINCO<lb/>
FM<lb/>
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ON THE SPOT 8:30-12:30 SATURDAY<lb/>
FINANCING AVAILABLE<lb/>
Payroll<lb/>
increase<lb/>
possible<lb/>
GREENSBORO, (AP)<lb/>
The North Carolina<lb/>
Restaurant Association<lb/>
has concluded that the<lb/>
sale of mixed drinks in<lb/>
Greensboro would mean<lb/>
5r8 new jobs and a<lb/>
payroll increase of $6.8<lb/>
million annually.<lb/>
Jerrv Williams, ex-<lb/>
ecutive vice president of<lb/>
the association, said the<lb/>
new jobs and payroll<lb/>
would be generated<lb/>
within 18 months, if the<lb/>
sale of mixed drinks is<lb/>
approved in the refer-<lb/>
endum to be held Feb.<lb/>
9.<lb/>
Citing a study<lb/>
released Monday, Wil-<lb/>
liams also said that<lb/>
during that period, 12<lb/>
new hotels, motels or<lb/>
restaurants would open.<lb/>
With each of the<lb/>
payroll dollars changing<lb/>
hands 15 times, there<lb/>
would be a ripple effect<lb/>
of $101 million, said<lb/>
Williams, vvho repre-<lb/>
sents 2,500 restaurants<lb/>
in North Carolina.<lb/>
The Rev. William<lb/>
Claffey, leader of forces<lb/>
opposed to mixed<lb/>
drinks, saw approval in<lb/>
different light. "Even<lb/>
when you compare jobs<lb/>
to the estimated cost of<lb/>
alcohol-related problems,<lb/>
you come up short he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Claffey, chairman of<lb/>
Citizens United for a<lb/>
Beter Greensboro, said<lb/>
that for each dollar<lb/>
generated by mixed<lb/>
drink sales, S5 to $10 in<lb/>
alcohol-related problems<lb/>
would result.<lb/>
In every bowl of Wendy's rich, meaty Chili, you get almost<lb/>
a quarter pound of 100 pure beef. Blended with just the right<lb/>
mixture of tomatoes and spices. Goes great with Wendy's<lb/>
Old Fashioned Hamburgers, crisp French Fries and thick Frostys.<lb/>
264 By-Pass &amp; Evans Street<lb/>
Due to the popularity of our<lb/>
MONDAY PIZZA SPECIAL,<lb/>
we will offer our regular pizza special<lb/>
( small pizza with one ingredient,<lb/>
tossed salad, and tea) for only<lb/>
$2.25<lb/>
Copyright Q197S by Kent's Intwnjtioml, Int. ll n?Mt r??r??d.<lb/>
s?<lb/>
 " <lb/>
 <lb/>
? <lb/>
I<lb/>
?? r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057172_0006"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
JK mi<lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 23 January 1979<lb/>
Edward Albee<lb/>
directs two plays<lb/>
Edward Albee is<lb/>
widelv acclaimed as A-<lb/>
mci i a's foremost dram-<lb/>
atist writing toda) and<lb/>
?i- one u! the most irn-<lb/>
ant contemporary<lb/>
playwrights in the<lb/>
world. He has won two<lb/>
? r prizes and nu-<lb/>
other scholarl)<lb/>
atrical awards,<lb/>
ronnesee Williams<lb/>
lbee is the only<lb/>
playwright we've<lb/>
I in America. Clearly<lb/>
sensus is that<lb/>
VII more than good<lb/>
ho is on the verge of<lb/>
ess<lb/>
Now Edward Albee<lb/>
g his plays as<lb/>
them. Two, The<lb/>
Dream and<lb/>
Zoo Story, will he<lb/>
d in Menden-<lb/>
l n Center on<lb/>
24, at 8 p.m. The<lb/>
fit I nion Theatre<lb/>
 is Committee is spon-<lb/>
ihe performance.<lb/>
' lbee Directs<lb/>
project began a<lb/>
?- an idea of<lb/>
Albee himself. Manv<lb/>
people. students and<lb/>
theatre patrons. had<lb/>
said that though there<lb/>
were man) productions<lb/>
of Albee's plays, none<lb/>
spoke clearly of his in-<lb/>
tentions.<lb/>
 plan for a 16 week<lb/>
tour was developed, but<lb/>
it mushroomed into 40<lb/>
weeks. It seems that<lb/>
everyone wanted to<lb/>
know what Albee has to<lb/>
saj for and about him-<lb/>
self.<lb/>
I've been sneaking<lb/>
up on this second car-<lb/>
eer, this directing thing,<lb/>
over the years, " says<lb/>
Albee. He continues<lb/>
with the comment, "1<lb/>
think not every play-<lb/>
wright should direct his<lb/>
own work. You won't<lb/>
necessarily end up with<lb/>
the most effective pro-<lb/>
duction, but you'll hae<lb/>
what you originally in-<lb/>
tended<lb/>
As to the content of<lb/>
the plays themselves,<lb/>
lbee claims. "I take<lb/>
substance from wherever<lb/>
I can get it. Chekov,<lb/>
Beckett, Noel Coward.<lb/>
I'm involved in a life<lb/>
and death struggle with<lb/>
myself As for the<lb/>
direction, that is Albee<lb/>
drawing Albee.<lb/>
Is he a good dir-<lb/>
ector? Only actors can<lb/>
say (or sure, and they<lb/>
say he evokes an under-<lb/>
standing they never ex-<lb/>
pected to achieve. They<lb/>
are suddenly of the<lb/>
play, not merely of<lb/>
production.<lb/>
Tickets are now<lb/>
ale for the "Albee<lb/>
rects Albee" perform-<lb/>
ance. Prices are SI.50<lb/>
tor ECU students, S3 for<lb/>
faculty and staff, S4 for<lb/>
the public, and S3 for<lb/>
groups of 20 or more.<lb/>
Tickets are available<lb/>
at the Central Ticket<lb/>
Office, Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center, phone<lb/>
757-6611, ext. 266. For<lb/>
further information con-<lb/>
tact Wanda Yuhas in<lb/>
the Program Office.<lb/>
757-6611. ext 213.<lb/>
tin<lb/>
on<lb/>
Di-<lb/>
EDWARD ALBEE IS widely acclaimed as America's<lb/>
foremost dramatist writing today and as one of the<lb/>
most important contemporary playwrights in the<lb/>
world.<lb/>
Midnight Express tells Hayes nightmare<lb/>
By BARRY CLAYTON<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
??I "m' of the most fascinating films to<lb/>
industrj in recent years is Alan<lb/>
- I?  Midnight Express.<lb/>
m the book by William Hayes which<lb/>
the author tribulations at the hand of<lb/>
kish penal system, the film derives much of<lb/>
not so much from the fact that Hayes<lb/>
ifter nearl five years to finally effect an<lb/>
was not planned, but desperately<lb/>
? n he accidentally kills the chief<lb/>
but from the object lesson that we are<lb/>
ndividuals who daily walk a thin line in a<lb/>
us and sometimes hideously cruel world.<lb/>
In the case of William Hayes (who is portrayed<lb/>
by a total newcomer to the world of feafuife' film's,<lb/>
Brad Davis) the transgression tnat sends him off intoV<lb/>
the nightmare world of Turkish justice' is the "<lb/>
relativelv minor offense of attempting to smuggle two<lb/>
kilos of hashish out of Istanbul.<lb/>
Through the eye of the camera we are led<lb/>
through the citv of Istanbul to the Haves' lodging<lb/>
where he is immersed ,? the process of taping two<lb/>
kilos of hash, wrapped in tinfoil, to his abdomen.<lb/>
That evening Hayes winds his way through the<lb/>
customs officers with much cold sweat and manv a<lb/>
nervous glance. It is difficult to believe, on 'his<lb/>
behavior alone, that he is not subjected to a closer<lb/>
search.<lb/>
But he is not, and much assured of success, he<lb/>
An American in Paris<lb/>
TUESDAY JAN. 23 there will be a showing of two<lb/>
classic musicals. The films scheduled are<lb/>
"An American m Paris" and "Seven Brides<lb/>
Eor Seven Brothers Show times are slated for 7<lb/>
and 9 respectively. Of the well-known Gene Kelly<lb/>
??"? "Time"magazine says: "a grand show ? a<lb/>
brilliant combination oj Hollywood opulence and<lb/>
technical wizardry with the kind of taste and<lb/>
creativeness that most high-budgeted musicals<lb/>
notoriously lack. The films will<lb/>
be shown in Hendrix Theatre at Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
calmly rejoins his girlfriend Susan (Irene Miracle)<lb/>
wnowe-ntlnftJugh customs ahead of him.<lb/>
I U Jbe. arjipfl, however, the calm is replaced with<lb/>
calam.ty as Hayes catches his first sight of the<lb/>
scores of troops surrounding the plane that is to jet<lb/>
them back to the states. There ha- been one too<lb/>
many terrorist raids, and the Turkish government has<lb/>
decided to crack down.<lb/>
A brief search soon turns up Haves' catch, and<lb/>
as busan is helplessly carried awav bv the aircraft<lb/>
Hilly is carted off by the militia.<lb/>
Soon Billy is thoroughly searched and forced to<lb/>
stand totally slipped beofre the Turkish police while<lb/>
an American translator (Bo Hopkins), who claims to<lb/>
be from the American embassy, strikes a deal for<lb/>
him: if he cooperates with the authorities and he will<lb/>
be quickly released.<lb/>
But once he has led a group of native<lb/>
plainclothesmen to the cafe where he has explained<lb/>
he bought the stash, Hayes panics and ducks out the<lb/>
back door.<lb/>
All this leads to an exciting and well-filmed chase<lb/>
scene through the alleys and back-streets of Istanbul.<lb/>
Eventually he is captured by the interpretor and<lb/>
thrown into Turkey's infamous Sagmalcilar Prison<lb/>
where he is hung upside down while the prison chief<lb/>
of guards Hamidou (played with credible despicable-<lb/>
ness by Paul Smith) visciously bludgeons the sole of<lb/>
his feet.<lb/>
His crime? Stealing a blanket from an unoccupied<lb/>
cell.<lb/>
All this before he has even been tried for his<lb/>
crime.<lb/>
But tried he is. Hayes' only friends in<lb/>
Sagmalcilar are three non-nationals (to the native<lb/>
Turks foreigners are dirt and few will associate with<lb/>
them).<lb/>
These friends are of various nationalities: a<lb/>
Swede named Erich (Norbert Wesisser), an<lb/>
Englishman going by the name of Max (John Hurt),<lb/>
and Jimmy Booth (Randy Quaid) who, like Hayes, is<lb/>
an American.<lb/>
Hayes quietly sits out his sentence, but with only<lb/>
fifty-three days before his term is up he is informed<lb/>
that it will be extended another twenty-five years.<lb/>
One is given the impression that, more than<lb/>
anything else, the decision on the part of America<lb/>
not to sell arms to Turkey is to blame.<lb/>
Understandibly, Hayes is upset about this<lb/>
inhuman slap in the face, and, subsequently, he<lb/>
decides to catch the 'midnight express' (a prison<lb/>
term for escape).<lb/>
This operation, however, is foiled by a prison<lb/>
informer and truely blackhearted villian named Rifski<lb/>
(played by Paolo Bonicelli) who stumbles onto the<lb/>
plan and babbles treacherously to the guards.<lb/>
Rifki pays for this in the long run, and for other<lb/>
transgressions, when Hayes assaults him in a<lb/>
dramatic (if totally ficticious) attack in which Haves<lb/>
beats him to death and then bites off his tongue.<lb/>
Marvelously grotesque.<lb/>
For this Hayes is placed in Section 13, a penal<lb/>
sanatorium for the criminally insane from which<lb/>
there is virtually no chance of escape.<lb/>
The most impressive point about the time we see<lb/>
Hayes pass in Section 13 is the sense of mental and<lb/>
emotional tedium in which humanity is quickly<lb/>
stripped from him. This is most evident is a scene in<lb/>
which Hayes is visited by his patiently-waiting<lb/>
girlfriend Susan.<lb/>
All the while that Susan is trying to talk to him,<lb/>
Hayes is staring at her breasts. Pathetically, he asks<lb/>
her to drop her blouse, and when she does he<lb/>
proceeds to masturbate furiously.<lb/>
Ihis i- definitely one of the most repulsive<lb/>
images to ever have crawled up onto the silver<lb/>
screen.<lb/>
But it work We can see clearly the human<lb/>
depth- to which Hayes has been reduced bv his<lb/>
captors.<lb/>
Of obvious import is the photo album that Susan<lb/>
has brought for Billy. Hidden within is a handful of<lb/>
hundred-dollar bills which set into movement a<lb/>
.ham of unpredictable events that lead ultimatelv to<lb/>
Have escape.<lb/>
The film is exciting enough and is supposed to<lb/>
give an accurate view of the Turkish penal svstem.<lb/>
There is violence and cruelty aplenty, and wonderful<lb/>
cinematography. There is even a nice, neat statement<lb/>
about the frailty of the individual in a world that<lb/>
grows a little more authoritarian with each passing<lb/>
day. 5<lb/>
But there is one major problem with the film.<lb/>
For a film that is supposed to recount the true<lb/>
story of Billy Hayes' hideous interment and his<lb/>
ultimate delivery from his tormentors, there are too<lb/>
many erronious points.<lb/>
First, of all, in the movie Hayes makes an<lb/>
impassioned speech about the cruelty of the Turki-h<lb/>
people and how the worth of a nation can be judged<lb/>
bv the quality of mercy it shows to its miscreants<lb/>
But. in real life, Hayes never made anv such speech<lb/>
Nor did Hayes murder Rifki.<lb/>
Shucks, he didn't even bite out his tongue<lb/>
There is one particular scene in the movie where<lb/>
the audience watches Haves and his prison<lb/>
compatriot Erich engage in Yoga exercises The<lb/>
exercise scene dissolves into a shower scene replete<lb/>
with a soaring violin accompaniment in which the<lb/>
two share a kiss. Hayes, however, resists Erich's<lb/>
further advances.<lb/>
Lh-uh.<lb/>
In his book, Hayes admits to having an extensive<lb/>
homosexual affair with the Swede extensive<lb/>
It's got to make you wonder when a director<lb/>
would rather include ,n his "true to Kfe" Um <lb/>
ficticious brutal murder than show two men getting u<lb/>
The photography, though, is inspired<lb/>
Most of ,t was done with only one camera Onlv<lb/>
for the fight scenes were multiple-camera techniques<lb/>
utilized, and then on v for the sakp nf ,trtnn,ques<lb/>
feel of quick action. ' ?f Pres?g the<lb/>
Much of the film (very nearly al Gf ,t) was sho.<lb/>
through smoke generated from a special ?<lb/>
inorder to impasrt a sense of surrealism TlL J n<lb/>
effect is one of dreamlike JESS Tt<lb/>
supported by the extensive use of foreign I<lb/>
wUhout subtitles - you can figure mis ' flt <lb/>
It is, however, overdone in the seen- . ?<lb/>
in Section 13. There the iLlZ J " <lb/>
amorphous, and the fr.il ghouTish ,k ,OC<lb/>
Tder about ,n their white tSp gtlnsT, <lb/>
effect none at all. F gowns help the<lb/>
Yet, the acting is good, aided bv the f.?<lb/>
most of the cast are so littL. i aCt lhat<lb/>
characters are able to ?Tve the v " ,h,t the<lb/>
familiar ground o??S t fireseT 2<lb/>
essential gruesomeness of the story the<lb/>
In addition, there was a real ?<lb/>
of director Al.n P.rker "???? ,h? P??<lb/>
honesty with regard ,o loceP ?? J th? <lb/>
was actually done on location in lk ?  filn"n<lb/>
was done i? . verv Mt.ht? ? .hough ?<lb/>
Turkish -government known what .k. r ' h,d ,h?<lb/>
?hey probably wouldn't have allotLVT" "<lb/>
anywhere near Istanbul. ?'??ed the film crew<lb/>
t?e EXPRSSS p.7l<lb/>
t<lb/>
e<lb/>
?'??"?'?-?.? ? m <lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057172_0007"/><lb/>
23 January 1979 FOUNTAINHEAO Page 7<lb/>
Various recitals are planned<lb/>
By SUSAN CHESTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Joseph Kasmark and<lb/>
Michael Fussell will<lb/>
perform in Senior<lb/>
Recital on Wednesday<lb/>
t. Jan. 24, at 7:30<lb/>
rhe trombone<lb/>
mpet recital will be<lb/>
I t" A.J. Fletcher<lb/>
ital Hall. Admission<lb/>
and the public is<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
loe Kasmark is a<lb/>
rombone major working<lb/>
Is ? degree in<lb/>
r ducat ion. He<lb/>
performed with the<lb/>
v mphony Orches-<lb/>
ECU jazz<lb/>
le, the Wind<lb/>
and the<lb/>
choir.<lb/>
Mr Ka-mark will<lb/>
m the Wagenseil<lb/>
icerto tor E flat<lb/>
Trombone the<lb/>
tor Trombone<lb/>
-t Hinde-<lb/>
? I the Monaco<lb/>
v ita tr Trombone<lb/>
He will be<lb/>
on piano<lb/>
Mrs Robert Hause.<lb/>
 student teach-<lb/>
Norfolk, Va , Mr.<lb/>
ill begin a<lb/>
ssistantship at<lb/>
Baylor, working towards<lb/>
a Master's in trombone<lb/>
performance.<lb/>
Mr. Kasmark is the<lb/>
son of Mr. and Mrs.<lb/>
John M. Kasmark of<lb/>
Virginia Beach, Va.<lb/>
Mike Fussell is a<lb/>
trumpet major working<lb/>
towards a Music Educa-<lb/>
tion degree. His portion<lb/>
of the program will<lb/>
include the "Introduc-<lb/>
tion and Fantasy" of<lb/>
Bernard Fitzgerald and<lb/>
the "Concerto in E flat"<lb/>
of Hummel, movements<lb/>
one and three. Mrs.<lb/>
Robert Hause will<lb/>
accompany the trumpet<lb/>
pieces.<lb/>
Mr. Fussell has<lb/>
performed with the ECU<lb/>
Jazz Ensemble, Wind<lb/>
Ensemble, Symphony<lb/>
Orchestra, and the<lb/>
Marching Pirates. After<lb/>
his recital he plans to<lb/>
student teach in Clinton,<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
He is the son of Mr.<lb/>
and Mrs. David J.<lb/>
Fussell, Sr of New<lb/>
Bern, N.C.<lb/>
24 in the A.J. Fletcher<lb/>
Recital Hall at ECU.<lb/>
Fussell, student of<lb/>
Bary Shank, will be ac-<lb/>
compnaied by Karen<lb/>
Hause in Fitzgerald's<lb/>
"Introduction and Fan-<lb/>
tasy" and the First and<lb/>
Third movements of<lb/>
"Concerto in E Flat" by<lb/>
Johann Humme.<lb/>
The recital is at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. and is free and<lb/>
open to the public.<lb/>
Pia<lb/>
no<lb/>
Leaptrott is the son<lb/>
of Dr. and Mrs. Richard<lb/>
B. Leaptrott of States-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
Ellen R. Nagode,<lb/>
assistant professor in<lb/>
East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity's School of Music<lb/>
will present a faculty<lb/>
piano recital on Feb. 4<lb/>
at 8:15 in the A.J.<lb/>
Fletcher Recital Hall.<lb/>
Ms. Nagode, who is<lb/>
a frequent accompanist<lb/>
at recitals and who<lb/>
performs chamber music<lb/>
throughout the state,<lb/>
received her degrees<lb/>
from Alverno College, in<lb/>
Milwaukee and from the<lb/>
University of Michigan.<lb/>
She will present a<lb/>
program that includes<lb/>
"Fantasia in C Major<lb/>
by Haydn; "Sonata in<lb/>
A-Flat Major, Opu 110<lb/>
by Beethoven; "Music<lb/>
for Piano" by Irving<lb/>
Fine and "Sonata No. 4,<lb/>
Opus 30 by Scriabin.<lb/>
The Sunday night<lb/>
recital is free and open<lb/>
to the public.<lb/>
Trumpet<lb/>
Michael R. Fussell<lb/>
will present his senior<lb/>
trumpet recital on Jan.<lb/>
A junior piano recital<lb/>
will be played by Ben<lb/>
Leaptrott of Statesville<lb/>
at East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity on Jan. 23. The<lb/>
performance will be at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. in the A.J.<lb/>
Fletcher Recital Hall and<lb/>
is free and open to the<lb/>
public.<lb/>
Leaptrott, who is<lb/>
studying under Dr. Paul<lb/>
Tardif, is working<lb/>
toward a Bachelor of<lb/>
Music.<lb/>
His program will<lb/>
include two selections by<lb/>
Brahms, "Preludes,<lb/>
Book 1" by Claude<lb/>
Debussy, a sonata by-<lb/>
Beethoven, and "Fan-<lb/>
tasie in C Minor" by<lb/>
Bach.<lb/>
EXPRESS<lb/>
continued from p.6.<lb/>
The Sagmalicilar Prison scenes were shot at an<lb/>
abandoned fortress on the island of Malta, which had<lb/>
been rebuilt to the point that it resembled the<lb/>
Turkish prison in most of the important respects,<lb/>
though to accomplish this convincingly certain<lb/>
additions were constructed of real stone. Which, of<lb/>
course, means real money.<lb/>
And if you thought those inmates in the prison<lb/>
asylum looked convincingly like real inmates<lb/>
Congratulations. They were. A great number of<lb/>
those wan and dissapated figures belong to actual<lb/>
hospital geriatrics patients from the nearby Malta<lb/>
hospital.<lb/>
If what you would like to do, for the modest<lb/>
(ah-ha) price of a theatre ticket, is to share ? to<lb/>
some degree of authenticity ? William Haves'<lb/>
experience, then you will find The Midnight Express<lb/>
a rewarding (and sobering) film.<lb/>
Emily appears Feb. 7<lb/>
in the Studio Theatre<lb/>
.????.<lb/>
Ai4L'?<lb/>
Zt<lb/>
?<lb/>
N rth Carolina<lb/>
? ?! Emily, a<lb/>
new play for<lb/>
. I tences, is set<lb/>
7 in the Studio<lb/>
at the East<lb/>
Plavhouse.<lb/>
a<lb/>
l<lb/>
?une<lb/>
Thomas Pat-<lb/>
ssor Emer-<lb/>
Play writing at<lb/>
u ot North<lb/>
? Chapel Hill.<lb/>
ay lelves into the<lb/>
Emily Dickenson<lb/>
how secret<lb/>
tgonies ot un-<lb/>
sire and love<lb/>
her creative<lb/>
ntributed to<lb/>
velopment as a<lb/>
Long an admirer of<lb/>
nson's poet-<lb/>
ry, Patterson began<lb/>
hing through the<lb/>
? some key to<lb/>
igma of the ident-<lb/>
? secret lover to<lb/>
m they were written.<lb/>
"Everybody agrees that<lb/>
? try wa love<lb/>
try, but no one<lb/>
Know who they<lb/>
.ntten to. At one<lb/>
another, just<lb/>
it anybody who<lb/>
within three miles<lb/>
rst during that<lb/>
: ? en identified.<lb/>
based on several<lb/>
irnng references in<lb/>
poems, I think I<lb/>
nd the man. I believe<lb/>
vas her brother<lb/>
Having drawn this<lb/>
elusion based upon<lb/>
the poetrj itself, Pat-<lb/>
terson began a pain-<lb/>
staking examination of<lb/>
Emily Dickenson's cor-<lb/>
respondence with ther<lb/>
brother. "The story of<lb/>
the play come from<lb/>
those letters<lb/>
Director Edgar R.<lb/>
Loess in described the<lb/>
play a- "a fascinating<lb/>
and startling look at the<lb/>
life of Emily Dickenson<lb/>
a it emerges through<lb/>
poetry. The work<lb/>
contains a number of<lb/>
erpts from the<lb/>
poems, and we see her<lb/>
at work, painfully baring<lb/>
pieces of her soul in<lb/>
poetry until, in the end,<lb/>
she has told her cryptic<lb/>
story in full. It is a play<lb/>
about the stimulating of<lb/>
a creative spirit from<lb/>
suffereing<lb/>
The Playhouse pro-<lb/>
duction of Emily is<lb/>
unique, too, in that it<lb/>
brings together the cre-<lb/>
ative activities of people<lb/>
from three different<lb/>
state universities in<lb/>
North Carolina. Featured<lb/>
prominently in the pro-<lb/>
duction is original music<lb/>
by composer Benjamin<lb/>
Keaton of the faculty of<lb/>
the Department of Mu-<lb/>
sic at North Carolina<lb/>
Central University in<lb/>
Durham.<lb/>
For this production.<lb/>
Keaton has written a<lb/>
theme to express the<lb/>
tensions and the varied<lb/>
emotions of the play and<lb/>
to enhance the mood of<lb/>
the poems in it.<lb/>
A graduate of the<lb/>
ECU School of Music,<lb/>
Keaton is an accom-<lb/>
plished composer of<lb/>
theatrical pieces, inclu-<lb/>
ding among his credits<lb/>
the music for "The<lb/>
Liberty Cart "The<lb/>
Summer Tree and the<lb/>
score for Pennsylvania's<lb/>
bicentennial drama,<lb/>
"The National Road<lb/>
Talents<lb/>
"This pooling of tal-<lb/>
ents from three different<lb/>
universities in the state<lb/>
is significant noted<lb/>
director Loessin, "of<lb/>
something we hope will<lb/>
continue in the future.<lb/>
We all believe that the<lb/>
entire university system<lb/>
benefits from projects<lb/>
which share each other's<lb/>
creative activity<lb/>
Emily will run Feb.<lb/>
7-10 and 12-17 at 8:15<lb/>
p.m. in the Studio<lb/>
Theatre of the East<lb/>
Carolina Playhouse on<lb/>
the ECU Campus. Gen-<lb/>
eral admission tickets<lb/>
are $2.50 each ($1 for<lb/>
ECU students) and may-<lb/>
be reserved by calling<lb/>
the East Carolina Play-<lb/>
house Box Office,<lb/>
757-6390, between 10<lb/>
and 4 Mon. through Fri.<lb/>
The cast of Emily<lb/>
features Ann Franklin, a<lb/>
senior from Henderson,<lb/>
in the role of Emily the<lb/>
poet, and Paige Weaver<lb/>
a Wilmington junior, as<lb/>
young Emily. Winston-<lb/>
Salem junior Donald<lb/>
Wagoner plays the mat-<lb/>
ure Austin, Emilv's bro-<lb/>
ther, while Frank Alt-<lb/>
schuler, a Greenville<lb/>
sophomore, is the young<lb/>
Austin.<lb/>
SUB SHOPS r QHEENVIU.E and HAGS HEAD NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
Wed. is<lb/>
Dollar Day at<lb/>
Newby's<lb/>
V Sub for $1.00<lb/>
with purchase<lb/>
of a soft drink.<lb/>
All dajr Wed. Every Wed.<lb/>
<lb/>
ritchells Hair Styling<lb/>
Pitt Plaza Shopp?ng Crorei<lb/>
Greenville North Carolina 37634<lb/>
756-2950<lb/>
' J CALL ONE OF OUR<lb/>
HAIRSTYLISTS FOR A NEW<lb/>
SPRING HAIRDO<lb/>
756-2950<lb/>
jr, r -r ?on ?a?BD?BBBooaa t poboooobb<lb/>
iranfly<lb/>
SSSW<lb/>
i<lb/>
YOUR<lb/>
FAVORITE<lb/>
STEAKS<lb/>
33 ITEM<lb/>
SALAD BAR<lb/>
We brought<lb/>
Mom to ECU<lb/>
MOM DIGH<lb/>
ENTERING THE<lb/>
DANCE CONTEST?<lb/>
ALL DANSK1N WRAP<lb/>
SKIRTS 016.00<lb/>
Reg. ?<lb/>
At Barre , LTD<lb/>
805 Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
Greenville 752-5186<lb/>
Pizza inn<lb/>
AMERICAS FAVORITE PIZZA<lb/>
??.<lb/>
PIZZA BUFFET<lb/>
ALL THE PIZZA AND<lb/>
SALAD YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
MonFri. 11:30 2:00<lb/>
?PMon. ?P Tues. 6:00 8:00<lb/>
758 6266 Hwy 264 bypass Greenville , N. C<lb/>
Ltvj<lb/>
Lunch and<lb/>
Dinner<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
$2.50<lb/>
MONDAY hamburger steak with<lb/>
french fries or hash browns and<lb/>
salad or slaw<lb/>
TUESDAY -spaghetti with salad<lb/>
WEDNESDAY beef tips with riee<lb/>
THURSDAY chicken pastry with peas<lb/>
FRIDAY-Salisbury steak with peas<lb/>
and baked potato<lb/>
PLENTY TO EAT<lb/>
coffee, tea. and rolls<lb/>
Open 24 Hours<lb/>
RECORD YOUR RECITAL<lb/>
IN STYLE WITH MAXELL<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
maxeii<lb/>
.0<lb/>
ULTRA-DYNAMIC<lb/>
8:30-5:30<lb/>
WEEKDAYS<lb/>
8:30-12:301<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
ui<lb/>
35-90<lb/>
Reel to Reel<lb/>
$6.99<lb/>
PAIR<lb/>
STEREO and SOUND<lb/>
Corns, ix?t<lb/>
maxeii<lb/>
Cassette<lb/>
UD-90<lb/>
$3.73<lb/>
sees?<lb/>
CSSS9SSS9S!<lb/>
asssssssgssssgsssssgs<lb/>
?<lb/>
0 W 0 - ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057172_0008"/><lb/>
II<lb/>
scr<lb/>
Duerod leads<lb/>
Titans to 81-69<lb/>
win over FA,I<lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 23 January 1979<lb/>
? ' ? 9 ? n x:<lb/>
State wrestlers<lb/>
blow past<lb/>
Pirates, 30-14<lb/>
RfH<lb/>
? .1<lb/>
: K( -<lb/>
then<lb/>
iii<lb/>
Jam' Ellison works for tnknloun against Stair<lb/>
Photo by I i, Podeszu<lb/>
i?<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Schaede slams opponenl to mat<lb/>
David Jerose work, for escape<lb/>
Lady Pirates blast<lb/>
Appalachian State<lb/>
David ndertvood shoots over Detroit defenders<lb/>
John II<lb/>
 Iln DuPRKE<lb/>
n<lb/>
BOONf- ft i leading<lb/>
b the half,<lb/>
tlir Lad Pirates put<lb/>
a scoring exhibition in<lb/>
the linal tram- to d<lb/>
atate the Mountaineers<lb/>
ol ppala hian V! i<lb/>
17.<lb/>
fhe litn - -? u rt j I <lb/>
-?'I oil the boards to<lb/>
M o u n t a i n ee i I r o n I<lb/>
hi personnel, grab-<lb/>
bing 60 rebounds com-<lb/>
pared to M <lb/>
Karl) wv weren't<lb/>
talking on defense and<lb/>
we weren t getting but<lb/>
one shot on offense<lb/>
anal) zed Pirate coai h<lb/>
Cath) ndruzzi -<lb/>
had a 13 point lead at<lb/>
one point, but the had<lb/>
a good zone defense and<lb/>
some fine outside -hunt<lb/>
ing and cut it to two.<lb/>
We played m<lb/>
game in the second halt<lb/>
that was it I didn't<lb/>
realize vr had won <lb/>
 until the game was<lb/>
over It va- that kind ol<lb/>
game<lb/>
I he leader lor the<lb/>
Bin - in s oring and re<lb/>
wa- senior<lb/>
Ro-ii I .ii w ith 2 <lb/>
i I ? -<lb/>
Gale Kei<lb/>
baugh bourn i<lb/>
md Allis Hiltz<lb/>
 ided M 's <lb/>
ngth, pulling down<lb/>
2 ! i mil bin :<lb/>
I hi- u a- an impor-<lb/>
froni a recent scoring tant garni fur<lb/>
lucing 19<lb/>
the Pirate to<lb/>
1 entei Mania -iren<lb/>
poured in 15, while<lb/>
snatching Id ebounds<lb/>
Lydia Rountrei added 12<lb/>
and sophomore l. mi<lb/>
Kmerson eight.<lb/>
I here wasn't a<lb/>
single individual sa m<lb/>
this one -aid ndru<lb/>
zzi "All five of our<lb/>
people out there iusl<lb/>
I kndruzzi. " Thr<lb/>
i a lot ' talent and<lb/>
had playi I two close<lb/>
games with North Caro-<lb/>
lina W e had lost ?uir<lb/>
last league game<lb/>
K( I (87)<lb/>
I hompson 9 6 9 24,<lb/>
Kmerson 3 2 8, Ker-<lb/>
baugh 7 5-6 19, Girven<lb/>
dI 15, Rountree -5<lb/>
Ross 2 0-0 I, Howell<lb/>
2 J, Versprille 0 0 0<lb/>
played our game and Q, Inslev 0 0 0, Youni<lb/>
played it well in the<lb/>
second halt<lb/>
Kppalai hian started<lb/>
getting t heii outside<lb/>
shooting going again in<lb/>
t he -n oiid hall and we<lb/>
brought in April Ross<lb/>
who helped shut off that<lb/>
an a Patt) Howell came<lb/>
in at forward and eon<lb/>
tributed signifii anth to<lb/>
night also<lb/>
I he Mou ntaineers<lb/>
were paced by ngeleta<lb/>
Horton and Carol<lb/>
Mmond v ith and 12.<lb/>
respei lively<lb/>
Forwards Tina M<lb/>
1 0-0 2. TOTALS 2<lb/>
21 30 87.<lb/>
Sl (57)<lb/>
Almond 5 2-2 12 M.<lb/>
Entire 3 2-6 8. Norton h<lb/>
2-4 14, Hiltz 0 0-0 0,<lb/>
Higgenbotham 2 2-2 6,<lb/>
Stanford 11-13, Fausl<lb/>
2 0-0 I- Lo 2 12 5,<lb/>
Rit( hie 1 I 2 3, Wilmonl<lb/>
0 2 3 2, Larrimore 0 0-0<lb/>
0 TOTALS 22 I J-23 57<lb/>
Halftime ? ECU 35,<lb/>
Sl $1 Fouled out<lb/>
none Total fouls EC!<lb/>
20, S 26 1?hk?<lb/>
I<lb/>
H.<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
H<lb/>
 u<lb/>
ta?.k.<lb/>
Rosie Thompson<lb/>
 Ph ?<lb/>
 G<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057172_0009"/><lb/>
f r<lb/>
t ' f r r t<lb/>
T<lb/>
23 January 1979 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
ECU swims past Spiders<lb/>
The Pirate swimming team destroy<lb/>
Intramural<lb/>
basketball<lb/>
continues<lb/>
ed Richmond 82-30 Saturday<lb/>
Photo by John H. Grogan<lb/>
C Mn EDEMEYER<lb/>
Staff U riter<lb/>
- firsl week of<lb/>
comes tu a<lb/>
eral teams re-<lb/>
el big win- to es-<lb/>
emselves as<lb/>
Lral. Belk<lb/>
ontinuing<lb/>
their<lb/>
with the Belk<lb/>
rs cruising to a<lb/>
the Jones<lb/>
itangs 60-1 2.<lb/>
ms re-<lb/>
ling ictories w ere<lb/>
Belk Players s-<lb/>
over the Jones<lb/>
B ist. 2 .7. the Belk<lb/>
over the Scott<lb/>
? 6 and Brlk<lb/>
S Motion over Scott's<lb/>
in the dorm<lb/>
Epsilon defeated Alpha<lb/>
Sigma Phi 29-23, and<lb/>
Kappa Alpha Psi de-<lb/>
feated Beta Theta Phi<lb/>
$2-24.<lb/>
<lb/>
omen<lb/>
pia was<lb/>
dominated h a coupie<lb/>
ol one-sided i ictories in<lb/>
t he Sororit) di ision.<lb/>
Defending Sororiu<lb/>
Champ- Alpha i Delta<lb/>
defeated Chi Omega<lb/>
I Tri Sigma<lb/>
-ion<lb/>
the<lb/>
avstead<lb/>
teated Jones<lb/>
Bu? I.?e 60-28,<lb/>
laguars defeated<lb/>
? - Buckles 16-23,<lb/>
W orsl defeated<lb/>
tt Challengers<lb/>
tnd the Scott<lb/>
defeated A-<lb/>
rop-of-the-Roosl<lb/>
Not all of the<lb/>
mes were that ea<lb/>
er. The Scott<lb/>
Is barel) beat the<lb/>
B Ik viators 38-36 and<lb/>
th v otl Rockets de-<lb/>
I the Belk Cast-<lb/>
ivs l ttie same<lb/>
?<lb/>
Moving over to the<lb/>
Club Independent divi-<lb/>
n, tin- Tasmanian De-<lb/>
have emerged a- a<lb/>
rhouse b) irtue of<lb/>
lef  over the<lb/>
Sorn Six 62-26. Other<lb/>
tms cording w ins<lb/>
w.ere the Langston<lb/>
D Js over the Dirtv<lb/>
DoU- W-23, the Blue-<lb/>
Brother- over Tourist<lb/>
19-35, Heartbreak Kids<lb/>
o er S ii inlogv -<lb/>
Anthropology "B" 53-<lb/>
Pac over Pi kappa<lb/>
Phi "B" 56-24, Kinks<lb/>
over K.C. and the Bov-<lb/>
l-ft-3 Bouncers over<lb/>
Heatless 50-36, Locals<lb/>
over TKF "B" 23-18,<lb/>
Phi Sigma Phi over the<lb/>
Body Mechanics 39-11,<lb/>
the Nugget- over Mad<lb/>
Dog 52-29, PRC Ozone<lb/>
Airmen over On Your<lb/>
Back 39-36. and No<lb/>
Jumping Fool over the<lb/>
Jerks 56-45.<lb/>
The Fraternity Divi-<lb/>
sion competition was<lb/>
highlighted by two big<lb/>
wins, Sigma Phi Epsilon<lb/>
over Delta Sigma Phi<lb/>
67-28 and Phi Kappa<lb/>
Tau over Sigma Tau<lb/>
Gamma 59-22. In the<lb/>
few other games played<lb/>
this week Omega Psi<lb/>
Phi defeated Kappa Sig-<lb/>
ma 42-38, Kappa Alpha<lb/>
defeated Alpha Phi Al-<lb/>
pha 40-21. Tau Kappa<lb/>
W-0 am<lb/>
rurnier-ups in the divi<lb/>
sion la-1 vear defeated<lb/>
Delta Zeta 30-2. In the<lb/>
"tilv other -nroritv game<lb/>
scheduled Alpha Omi-<lb/>
cron Pi forfeited to<lb/>
lpha Phi. The Tyler<lb/>
Pop-a- I ops in Dorm play<lb/>
defeated Garrett 27-21.<lb/>
1 he Cotten Jumper- de-<lb/>
feated Fletcher- Flingers<lb/>
28-20. The White Sha-<lb/>
dow- defeated Clement<lb/>
Clementine- 21-( and in<lb/>
a close game Tvler<lb/>
laper- defeated Fleming<lb/>
Bad "I Fiver- 1 4-13. fM<lb/>
the Independent division<lb/>
the Rippers overcame<lb/>
the Foxes 2f-l and the<lb/>
Peacepirates forfeited to<lb/>
I ndecided.<lb/>
 e would like to<lb/>
remind everyone of the<lb/>
ECU Fitness Club which<lb/>
is an activit) that run-<lb/>
throughout the vear.<lb/>
Activities offered are<lb/>
running, swimming, bik-<lb/>
ing and walking. The<lb/>
format of the club is<lb/>
-elf-directed in the form<lb/>
of challenge- and is<lb/>
open to all ECU stu-<lb/>
dents, facultv and staff.<lb/>
 meeting will be held<lb/>
Fehruarv 8 at 7:30 in<lb/>
Memorial 105 tor all<lb/>
those interested.<lb/>
Registration for Rol-<lb/>
lerball, a new activity<lb/>
designed to take the<lb/>
place of iceball, has<lb/>
been extended. We were<lb/>
not able to offer iceball<lb/>
thi- vear because there<lb/>
is no more ice at the<lb/>
rink and rollerhall is<lb/>
played with just about<lb/>
the same format. The<lb/>
new deadline is Thurs<lb/>
Jan 24. For those teams<lb/>
who have already en-<lb/>
tered, the IM office has<lb/>
reserved the rink this<lb/>
week for you to practice.<lb/>
By the way, one league<lb/>
is -et up to allow<lb/>
players to wear tennis<lb/>
-hoes for those of you<lb/>
who are not quite so<lb/>
brave.<lb/>
Other registrations<lb/>
going on this week<lb/>
include arm wrestling<lb/>
which was extended<lb/>
through the 24th, Men's<lb/>
and Women's Bowling<lb/>
and Men's and Wo-<lb/>
men's Racquetball sing-<lb/>
les anddoubles.<lb/>
By DAVID MAREADY<lb/>
Staff Writer o<lb/>
The Pirate swimming<lb/>
team captured twelve of<lb/>
thirteen swimming<lb/>
events en route to a<lb/>
stunning 82-30 blowout<lb/>
victory over a previously<lb/>
undefeated University of<lb/>
Richmond squad last<lb/>
Saturday in Minges<lb/>
Natatorium.<lb/>
Pirate caoch Ray<lb/>
Scharf was surprised, to<lb/>
say the least, with the<lb/>
superb performance<lb/>
demonstrated by the<lb/>
Spiders. "I knew we<lb/>
could beat them, but not<lb/>
by as much as we did<lb/>
to day. Their schedule<lb/>
so far this season isn't<lb/>
very impressive even<lb/>
though they were 4-0<lb/>
Several Pirates post-<lb/>
ed multiple wins inclu-<lb/>
ding John Tudor in the<lb/>
50 yd. freestyle and 200<lb/>
yd. hreastroke, Tom Bell<lb/>
in the one and three<lb/>
meter dives, and Ted<lb/>
Niernan in the 200 indi-<lb/>
vidual medley and 100<lb/>
yd. freestyle.<lb/>
"After we built up<lb/>
such a big lead midwa)<lb/>
ECU Team Handball Club's<lb/>
1st Annual<lb/>
BREW BLAST<lb/>
at Bllmpie's<lb/>
Thursday dan. 25, 1979<lb/>
7:00-10:00 pm<lb/>
Help send the<lb/>
ECU Team Handball Club<lb/>
to the<lb/>
West Point Invitational<lb/>
m SOY SPCQ<lb/>
mm<lb/>
ana<lb/>
ii i ii<lb/>
t?rr<lb/>
10 OFF<lb/>
Any Menu Item<lb/>
(Except Specials)<lb/>
With Valid College I.D.<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
Located<lb/>
beside the Ramada Inn,<lb/>
264 By-pass.<lb/>
SUN. Couples Night<lb/>
2 delicious Seafood Platters of Shrimp,<lb/>
Oysters, Flounder with Cole Slaw,<lb/>
French Fries and our famous Hush<lb/>
Puppies ONLY $7.99 for 2<lb/>
a delicious<lb/>
with French<lb/>
our famous<lb/>
you can eat<lb/>
with French<lb/>
our famous<lb/>
MON. Shrimp-A-Roo ?<lb/>
order of Fried Shrimp,<lb/>
Fries, Cole Slaw, and<lb/>
Hush Puppies $2.99<lb/>
TUES. FISH FRY - Al<lb/>
of TROUT or PERCH<lb/>
Fries, Cole Slaw, and<lb/>
Hush Puppies $2.25<lb/>
WED. Fresh select Fried Oysters<lb/>
with Cole Slaw, French Fries and<lb/>
Hush Puppies $2.99<lb/>
THURS. FAMILY NIGHT SPECIAL<lb/>
? ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
Perch or Trout<lb/>
$2.25<lb/>
HUM'S<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Flounder<lb/>
Shrimp<lb/>
Oysters<lb/>
$3.95<lb/>
4.25<lb/>
$4.25<lb/>
CEi<lb/>
Friday9 Seafood<lb/>
Sun. thru Than,<lb/>
430-9:00<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat. 4:30-10:00<lb/>
a3ll S. Evans St.<lb/>
through the meet<lb/>
continued Scharf, "we<lb/>
juggled out guys in and<lb/>
out of their individual<lb/>
events to give them<lb/>
more experience and we<lb/>
swam as many freshmen<lb/>
as we could<lb/>
Scharf was pleased<lb/>
with the times of his<lb/>
freshmen swimmers. He<lb/>
credited several with<lb/>
fine performances in-<lb/>
cluding Mike Triau,<lb/>
Doug Niernan and Scott<lb/>
Ross.<lb/>
Although Tom Bell<lb/>
was the only Pirate<lb/>
diver in competition, he<lb/>
won both the one and<lb/>
three meter diving<lb/>
events by a respectable<lb/>
margin over the Rich-<lb/>
mond diver<lb/>
"Torn did a<lb/>
job1 said Scharf,<lb/>
was consistent in<lb/>
events and dove<lb/>
well for u overall'<lb/>
The win, second<lb/>
straight for the Pirate<lb/>
wa- the third this sea-<lb/>
good<lb/>
"he<lb/>
both<lb/>
v?-r<lb/>
son as they upped their<lb/>
record past the .500<lb/>
mark to 3-2. The<lb/>
Richmond Spiders suf-<lb/>
fered their first loss of<lb/>
the season falling to 4-1.<lb/>
Pirate Swimming ac-<lb/>
tion resumes next Sat-<lb/>
urday. Jan. 27, at 1<lb/>
p.m. in Minges Nata-<lb/>
torium where the Pirates<lb/>
both men and women,<lb/>
will battle a highly<lb/>
regarded Seahawk squad<lb/>
from lC-W ilmington.<lb/>
10th ft EvanoStraats<lb/>
Of 11 Oj Cm<lb/>
BudwsiMf, Schlitz. Miller, Stroh s $7.88<lb/>
a-Mw.Mfe.Mto.SM'ifep $39.00<lb/>
50 Lbs. Ice  $2 75<lb/>
OPCN 24 MRS.<lb/>
Deli Kitchen<lb/>
Located on the corner of Raleigh<lb/>
and Dickinson Avenue.<lb/>
HOME-COOKED FOODS<lb/>
AND REASONABLE PRICES.<lb/>
Ham and sausage biscuits<lb/>
Homemade cakes , banana pudding<lb/>
Free refills on coffee and tea<lb/>
Open 7:00 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Pizza &amp; Spaghetti House<lb/>
Tuesday Night<lb/>
Spaghetti Special<lb/>
Large plate of Spaghetti<lb/>
with Garlic Bread<lb/>
$1.49<lb/>
7587400<lb/>
507 E. 14th St<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
OVERSTOCKED<lb/>
OD<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
ALLIZOD<lb/>
MEN'S SHIRTS<lb/>
$ 13.75<lb/>
ALLIZOD<lb/>
SWEATERS<lb/>
V-NECK<lb/>
AND<lb/>
CARDIGAN<lb/>
$14.00<lb/>
Off ol Memorial Or<lb/>
Phone 756-0504<lb/>
Open 7 days a week unM cla?k<lb/>
<pb facs="00057172_0010"/><lb/>
' Mn t nmi<lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAO 23 January 1979<lb/>
WESTERN SIZZLIN<lb/>
STEAKHOUSE<lb/>
Western Sizzlin Steak House<lb/>
PRESENTS<lb/>
AQUARIUS SPECIAL<lb/>
SIRLOIN TIPS<lb/>
with or without green peppers and onions<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
$1.99<lb/>
WITH COUPON<lb/>
and ECU ID<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
2903 E 10th St.<lb/>
t<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
AQUARIUS SPECIAL<lb/>
SIRLOIN TIPS<lb/>
WITH OB WITHOUT GREEN PEPPERS<lb/>
&amp; onions<lb/>
ONLY $1.99 with COUPON i<lb/>
?P ECU ID<lb/>
OFFER GOOD<lb/>
Jan. 23, 24 and 25.<lb/>
Sun Thur. 1110pm<lb/>
FrI. ? Sat. U-U<lb/>
i ? jp <lb/>
- - ??, ?  .<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057172_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>