<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057175_0001"/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
North<lb/>
Voi. 55 Ho.JT<lb/>
1 February 1979<lb/>
REAL CRISIS CENTER provides information referral and short-time counseling 24 hours a day. Photo by<lb/>
Chap Gurley<lb/>
REAL Center offers service<lb/>
By JULIE EVERETTE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
REAL Crisis Center,<lb/>
located at 1117 E.<lb/>
Evans St provides in-<lb/>
formation referral and<lb/>
short-time counseling 24<lb/>
hours daily to Pitt<lb/>
County citizens in crisis.<lb/>
According to Mary<lb/>
Smith, Program coor-<lb/>
dinator, REAL offers<lb/>
seven major programs<lb/>
to help citizens in need:<lb/>
Help-Line, a 24 hour<lb/>
telephone service;<lb/>
Calkin service; Off-site<lb/>
service, a program re-<lb/>
quiring the REAL team<lb/>
to go to the individual<lb/>
in crisis who is unable<lb/>
to come to the REAL<lb/>
center; Dial-A-Teen, a<lb/>
youth employment ser-<lb/>
vice. Outreach Edu-<lb/>
cation, a service that<lb/>
informs the communitv<lb/>
through speaking en-<lb/>
gagements and a<lb/>
newsletter; Rape, a<lb/>
service providing<lb/>
counsel for the rape<lb/>
victim; and Battered<lb/>
Persons, a service<lb/>
providing counsel for<lb/>
the battered person.<lb/>
REAL is a non-profit<lb/>
organization and is<lb/>
funded by the state<lb/>
division of Mental<lb/>
Health Services, United<lb/>
Way funds grant, and<lb/>
local membership<lb/>
drives.<lb/>
The organization also<lb/>
receives money through<lb/>
donations from com-<lb/>
munity individuals and<lb/>
periodical fund-raising<lb/>
events.<lb/>
According to Smith,<lb/>
REAL helps citizens<lb/>
with problems ranging<lb/>
from loneliness to<lb/>
suicide.<lb/>
Smith added that<lb/>
REAL encounters a high<lb/>
percentage of problem<lb/>
pregnancy, drugs and<lb/>
alcohol, and familv<lb/>
problems.<lb/>
Currently REAL has<lb/>
two paid employee<lb/>
volunteers, a volunteer<lb/>
director and Resident<lb/>
Counselor, 11 volunteer<lb/>
staff members, and 11<lb/>
persons in training.<lb/>
Smith said many of<lb/>
the volunteers are ECU<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Because ECU<lb/>
students usually leave<lb/>
during the summer<lb/>
months, Smith feels<lb/>
REAL needs to gain<lb/>
more volunteers from<lb/>
the community.<lb/>
Smith hopes REAL<lb/>
will continue to develop<lb/>
the programs more to<lb/>
benefit more people.<lb/>
According to Smith,<lb/>
What's inside <lb/>
? Local economic outlook predicted,<lb/>
see p.3<lb/>
? ECU beats William and MAry, see<lb/>
P-<lb/>
? Black Arts Festival set for Feb. 11,<lb/>
see p.6<lb/>
? Eugene Fodor packs the house, see<lb/>
p.6<lb/>
CLINT EASTWOOD'S<lb/>
LATEST . . . See p. 6.<lb/>
REAL needs to help<lb/>
increase the knowledge<lb/>
of the community about<lb/>
some of the problems<lb/>
through speaking en-<lb/>
gagements and a<lb/>
monthly newsletter.<lb/>
Smith does feel that<lb/>
REAL receives good<lb/>
publicity in Pitt County<lb/>
by distributing news-<lb/>
letters and REAL<lb/>
stickers, speaking to<lb/>
community groups, and<lb/>
Public Service<lb/>
Announcements.<lb/>
A Board of Directors<lb/>
governs the organization<lb/>
and meets the second<lb/>
Tuesday of each month.<lb/>
The Board consists of<lb/>
20 members.<lb/>
According to Smith,<lb/>
REAL began in the late<lb/>
1960's when a con-<lb/>
cerned group of stu-<lb/>
dents wanted to help<lb/>
students with drugs and<lb/>
other problems. A Hot-<lb/>
-line was established<lb/>
and REAL was chart-<lb/>
ered in November,<lb/>
1974.<lb/>
Anyone purchasing a<lb/>
membership card will<lb/>
eceive a monthly<lb/>
tewsletter, and may<lb/>
i-ttend the monthly<lb/>
board meetings.<lb/>
The cost of a<lb/>
membership card is $10<lb/>
for individuals and $50<lb/>
? or groups.<lb/>
Smith said anyone<lb/>
nterested in volun-<lb/>
.eering for REAL should<lb/>
contact her for infor-<lb/>
mation at 758-HELP.<lb/>
Volunteers are<lb/>
trained and required to<lb/>
work a minimum of 16<lb/>
hours a month.<lb/>
Brewer to present REBEL awards<lb/>
By LUKE WH1SNANT<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Chancellor Thomas<lb/>
Brewer will present<lb/>
three awards from the<lb/>
REBEL to ECU students<lb/>
this Thursday night at 7<lb/>
p.m. in the Mendenhall<lb/>
Coffeehouse.<lb/>
The winning students<lb/>
are: Sue Aydelette;<lb/>
Greg Schroder; and<lb/>
Marylou Warwick.<lb/>
Each year, the<lb/>
REBEL sponsors a liter-<lb/>
ature contest and an art<lb/>
show open to all<lb/>
students. Prize money is<lb/>
donated by interested<lb/>
businesses around the<lb/>
Greenville area. The<lb/>
winners of this year's<lb/>
awards will each receive<lb/>
a plaque and a check<lb/>
for $100.<lb/>
In the literature<lb/>
division, Sue Aydelette's<lb/>
poem "Screens" won<lb/>
the Jeffrey's Beer &amp;<lb/>
Wine Award. The<lb/>
Anheuser-Busch Award<lb/>
went to Greg Schroder's<lb/>
two stories, "Wasps"<lb/>
and "Birdladies The<lb/>
winning pieces will be<lb/>
published in the REBEL<lb/>
this spring.<lb/>
Marylou Warwick's<lb/>
"Self-Portrait" won the<lb/>
Best-in-Show Attic<lb/>
Award in the Fourth<lb/>
Annual REBEL Art<lb/>
Show held last October<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. Other winners<lb/>
in the show included<lb/>
ECU students Jeff<lb/>
Fleming, Janet Rose,<lb/>
Robert T. Dick, Mike<lb/>
Duggins, Brenda Wil-<lb/>
liams, Art Shirer, Ro-<lb/>
bert Danial, Eric Thiele,<lb/>
Kathy Fahrenbruch,<lb/>
Carol Ann Roberts, and<lb/>
James Jorden.<lb/>
Money for this<lb/>
year's prizes was do-<lb/>
nated by Tom Haines of<lb/>
?he Attic and Mickey<lb/>
Cochran of Jeffrey's<lb/>
Beer and .Wine.<lb/>
The Award presenta-<lb/>
tion Thursday night will<lb/>
be followed by a poetry<lb/>
and prose reading,<lb/>
sponsored by the<lb/>
REBEL staff.<lb/>
Good morning<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD has become a morning news-<lb/>
japer. The change came to serve you better ? to<lb/>
;et the latest campus news, sports, and changing<lb/>
rends, along with thought provoking editorial<lb/>
;ommentary and national reporting frm the wires of<lb/>
he Associated Press to you faster. "The main<lb/>
source" is constantly updating its service to its<lb/>
eaders and advertisers, so that we can become the<lb/>
est we can be! Now, you can pick up<lb/>
'OUNTAINHEAD at any of the standard distribution<lb/>
)oints at 11 a.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Keep<lb/>
ibreast of what's going on on campus. Read<lb/>
OUNTAINHEAD ? your student newspaper.<lb/>
EBONY HERALD is<lb/>
Media Board topic<lb/>
By MARC BARNES<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Discussion of the fate of EBONY HERALD<lb/>
dominated yesterday's Media Board meeting.<lb/>
According to Tommy Joe Payne, chairman of the<lb/>
Media Board, he entered the EBONY HERALD<lb/>
office on Mon Jan. 29 to find the office closed<lb/>
down with copies of Media Board minutes dating<lb/>
from January 17 strewn upon the floor.<lb/>
There was no evidence of any work having been<lb/>
done, according to Associate Dean of Student<lb/>
Affairs Rudolph Alexander.<lb/>
Payne added that he assumed no work was done<lb/>
since September, because the minority-oriented<lb/>
newspaper had not been published since then. "They<lb/>
haven't done anything Payne commented. "When<lb/>
we went over the EBONY HERALD's budget, we<lb/>
told them that this fall would be a testing period<lb/>
In the course of the meeting, there was a<lb/>
question of salaries being paid to personnel at the<lb/>
newspaper while the publication was not being<lb/>
printed.<lb/>
Payroll checks totalling $1,014 were dispursed to<lb/>
staff members at EBONY HERALD between October<lb/>
and December, accoring to figures released by the<lb/>
Student Fund Accounting Office. A paycheck for the<lb/>
month of January in the amount of $278 was<lb/>
requisitioned by EBONY HERALD, but payment was<lb/>
stopped on the check by Payne.<lb/>
The last issue of EBONY HERALD was<lb/>
published in September, 1978. The total budget for<lb/>
the publication was approximately $6,000, according<lb/>
to Payne. The newspaper was supposed to be<lb/>
published once a month, during the academic year.<lb/>
A copy of EBONY HERALD was passed around<lb/>
during the meeting, and some members of the<lb/>
Board criticized its layout and design. One member,<lb/>
who asked not to be identified, stated that it looked<lb/>
like a junior high school newspaper.<lb/>
Executive Editor Jerry Simmons was brought into<lb/>
the meeting, and was asked why he had been<lb/>
paying salaries to personnel at the publication while<lb/>
the newspaper was not being printed. "I have been<lb/>
paying salaries because they have been doing the<lb/>
work Simmons commented. "We couldn't use<lb/>
National's layout room (a local printing company<lb/>
which printed the first HERALD), and we couldn't<lb/>
use FOUNTAINHEAD's<lb/>
According to a directive issued Oct. 18, 1978,<lb/>
the Media Board established certain guidelines for<lb/>
EBONY HERALD to use during layout at the<lb/>
facilities located at FOUNTAINHEAD. The directive<lb/>
stated that FOUNTAINHEAD would open its office<lb/>
for use on Tuesday, Thursday and Friday from 9 to<lb/>
5 p.m. and from 5 until 9 on Tuesday nights before<lb/>
the newspaper came out. Also, the directive stated<lb/>
that EBONY HERALD had to give FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
48 hours notice concerning use of the facilities.<lb/>
According to FOUNTAINHEAD editor Doug<lb/>
White, neither Simmons nor any member of his<lb/>
staff have contacted FOUNTAINHEAD to use the<lb/>
layout room since the guidelines were issued.<lb/>
Dr. Thomas Eamon asked Simmons how many<lb/>
hours a week the staff put into production at<lb/>
EBONY HERALD. "This semester none, last<lb/>
semester plenty. Last semester, I went every day<lb/>
Simmons remarked.<lb/>
He added, "I assign storiesit keeps on coming<lb/>
down to no layout area<lb/>
Alexander pointed out the agreement worked out<lb/>
between FOUNTAINHEAD and EBONY HERALD<lb/>
would have allowed Simmons to have a layout area,<lb/>
"I don't understand why people can't work out their<lb/>
schedules Simmons said that his schedule<lb/>
prevented him from knowing what he would be<lb/>
doing a week in advance, and he added "I cannot<lb/>
do it with circumstances the way they are now<lb/>
Simmons said that if the Board wanted to<lb/>
combine the two newspapers, or if thev wanted to<lb/>
find someone else to do the job at EBONY<lb/>
HERALD, that it would be fine with him. He<lb/>
accused FOUNTAINHEAD of not allowing him to<lb/>
use the layout room, and he added that if he had a<lb/>
key to the layout room he would be able to put out<lb/>
a newspaper.<lb/>
Several members of the Media Board asked<lb/>
Simmons why they hadn't come to the Board to<lb/>
complain, and he replied that he had ? at the<lb/>
meeting that was set to lay down the guidelines for<lb/>
use of the lavout room.<lb/>
"There was no work done this month Payne<lb/>
said. "Why did you sign a requisition for salaries?"<lb/>
After a long pause, Simmons said, "Checks were<lb/>
written Payne said, "I had to stop the checks<lb/>
"All I'm asking for is a typewriter, an office and<lb/>
a layout room Simmons declared. "I got the<lb/>
office, I got the typewriter, but I didn't get the<lb/>
layout room He added, "I know what I have<lb/>
sacrificed, I know what I have gone through last<lb/>
semester<lb/>
Were vou denied<lb/>
access<lb/>
???<lb/>
avne<lb/>
? ked.<lb/>
Simmons stated that he had called Cathrine Mercer<lb/>
(secretary to the Media Board) and she told him to<lb/>
get in touch with FOUNTAINHEAD advertising<lb/>
manager Robert Swaim. When asked, Swaim said<lb/>
that he had never heard from Simmons on the<lb/>
matter of using the lavout room at FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD.<lb/>
"If you had a key to the FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
office, then you could publish the EBONY<lb/>
HERALD? Payne asked. Simmons said that he<lb/>
could. Several members of the board expressed a<lb/>
apreference for doing away with the HERALD<lb/>
entirely, and appointing a minoritv editor to work<lb/>
for FOUNTAINHEAD. This editor would have a<lb/>
certain set amount of space, and would devote<lb/>
himself herself entirely to covering campus events<lb/>
which concern minority students at this university.<lb/>
Alexander pleaded to the board that any decision<lb/>
concerning the future of EBONY HERALD be free<lb/>
of politics, and the board adopted a wait-and-see<lb/>
stance on the issue, saying that if EBONY HERALD<lb/>
is published, the staff would be paid. "If no papers<lb/>
are printed, no one will be paid for it Payne said.<lb/>
FROZEN FINGERS CUNG to a wall of Whichard as<lb/>
a crystal reminder of winter's grip. Photo by<lb/>
Marianne Baines).<lb/>
?. ?r m0 0 0- Mr irv-nrmr.xr id &amp;r ? - - . . , , .2&amp;naarsR- 2??is<lb/>
v<lb/>
?mmm n<lb/>
<pb facs="00057175_0002"/><lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 1 February 1979<lb/>
Christian<lb/>
The Fountain of Life<lb/>
Christian Fellowship will<lb/>
sponsor a revival on<lb/>
Feb. I, 2 &amp; 3. Services<lb/>
will begin nightl) at 7<lb/>
p.m. m Wright Auditor-<lb/>
ium. Chaplain Kenneth<lb/>
P. Edwards will be the<lb/>
guesi speaker.<lb/>
Psi-Chi<lb/>
Psi Chi, the National<lb/>
Honor Fraternity lor<lb/>
Pihology, is now<lb/>
aeeepting applications<lb/>
? membership.<lb/>
uirements are as<lb/>
P<lb/>
follows: the applicant<lb/>
-houhi be a psychology<lb/>
major, minor or grail-<lb/>
uate student with at<lb/>
least eight semester<lb/>
hour- in psychology. A<lb/>
3.0<lb/>
average must<lb/>
psyc<lb/>
be<lb/>
;hol-<lb/>
maintained in<lb/>
og) courses.<lb/>
All applications<lb/>
should be turned in no<lb/>
later than Feb. 16. The<lb/>
membership fee is $30.<lb/>
rhis includes a lifetime<lb/>
membership with no<lb/>
additional or annual<lb/>
Applications may<lb/>
be obtained from the<lb/>
psychology office in<lb/>
Speighl Building.<lb/>
Chi Beta<lb/>
The honorary Scien-<lb/>
tific Fraternity Chi Beta<lb/>
Phi vsi hod its Initi-<lb/>
ation Banquet for its<lb/>
pledges on Thur Feb.<lb/>
I at the Villa Roma<lb/>
restaurant. The banquet<lb/>
begins at 6 p.m. and<lb/>
all pledges are expected<lb/>
expected<lb/>
attend. Additional<lb/>
information may be ob-<lb/>
tained from Ken Russell<lb/>
at 758-6747.<lb/>
Darlings<lb/>
There will be an or-<lb/>
ganizational meeting of<lb/>
the Diamond Darlings<lb/>
for the 1979 Baseball<lb/>
season on Wed Feb.<lb/>
7. 7 p.m. in classroom<lb/>
1 12 Minges. All attract-<lb/>
ive, interested females<lb/>
who want to support<lb/>
ECU Pirate Baseball are<lb/>
urged to attend. If<lb/>
unable to attend meet-<lb/>
ing, please call 752-9989<lb/>
weekdays after 5 p.m.<lb/>
Wanted<lb/>
Wanted - Young<lb/>
Beautiful Girls! For<lb/>
Miss Black and Gold<lb/>
Pageant in March. All<lb/>
oung ladies interested<lb/>
please contact Michael<lb/>
Harrison, Plat Simmons,<lb/>
Anthonv Richmond.<lb/>
Beta Kappa<lb/>
Beta Kappa Alpha<lb/>
will hold its monthly<lb/>
meeting, Mon. Feb. 5,<lb/>
at 3 p.m. in Rm. 103,<lb/>
Rawl. Mr. Furney<lb/>
James, ECU Placement<lb/>
Dir. will speak on<lb/>
career planning. All<lb/>
members and interested<lb/>
students are urged to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Speaker<lb/>
Carol Simmermacher,<lb/>
Director of the Land<lb/>
Resources Information<lb/>
Service of N.C. Dept. of<lb/>
Natural Resources and<lb/>
Community Development<lb/>
will speak and show<lb/>
slides explaining<lb/>
workings of the Land<lb/>
Information System.<lb/>
Computers are used to<lb/>
store data from line<lb/>
maps and manipulate<lb/>
and present results in<lb/>
the form of line maps.<lb/>
This is an advanced<lb/>
system designed to<lb/>
assist in making land<lb/>
use decisions on state,<lb/>
regional, and local<lb/>
levels. Mon Feb. 5, 7<lb/>
p.m. Brewster B102.<lb/>
Law<lb/>
There will be a Law<lb/>
Society meeting Feb. 6<lb/>
at 7:30 in Rm 221<lb/>
Mendenhatl. The<lb/>
speaker will be John<lb/>
Matthis who is Special<lb/>
Deputy Attorney<lb/>
General with the<lb/>
Consumer Protection<lb/>
Agency. This meeting<lb/>
should prove to be very-<lb/>
interesting and all<lb/>
students are invited to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
LAE<lb/>
The American<lb/>
Criminal Justice As-<lb/>
sociation, Lambda Alpha<lb/>
Epsilon, is actively in-<lb/>
volved in the constant<lb/>
improvement and re-<lb/>
search in the areas of<lb/>
criminal justice. The<lb/>
ECU chapter will be<lb/>
having its installation<lb/>
banquet Feb. 16, 7<lb/>
p.m. at the Ramada<lb/>
Inn's Restaurant. There<lb/>
will be a guest speaker<lb/>
and members Qf LAE<lb/>
will be receiving their<lb/>
certificates.Tickets are<lb/>
$5.63 and money for<lb/>
tickets must be in by<lb/>
Feb. 7. Applications to<lb/>
LAE are taken year<lb/>
round but are only to<lb/>
be sent in to the<lb/>
national organization<lb/>
once every semester.<lb/>
The deadline for this<lb/>
semester is Feb. 15.<lb/>
All persons wishing to<lb/>
join should get in touch<lb/>
with Mr. Campbell<lb/>
757-6961 or Toni Dye<lb/>
752-8501<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Smoker<lb/>
Spring Smoker,<lb/>
Wed Feb. 7, 9 p.m.<lb/>
Aycock Dorm Basement.<lb/>
For all young men who<lb/>
are planning to pledge<lb/>
either Spring or Fall<lb/>
1979.<lb/>
Gays<lb/>
The East Carolina<lb/>
Gay Community will<lb/>
present Claude and<lb/>
Carol Andrews from<lb/>
Creative Living Associ-<lb/>
ates who will discuss<lb/>
relationship counselling<lb/>
on Tues Feb. 6, 5<lb/>
p.m. at 608 E. 9th St.<lb/>
Anyone associated with<lb/>
East Carolina is invited<lb/>
to attend. Regular<lb/>
meetings of the East<lb/>
Carolina Gay Com-<lb/>
munity are on Tuesdays<lb/>
at 5 p.m. at 608 E. 9th<lb/>
St.<lb/>
SNEA<lb/>
The Student National<lb/>
Education Association will<lb/>
be meeting Feb. 5,<lb/>
Mon. at 4 p.m. in<lb/>
Speight building, room<lb/>
129. Mr. Oliver John-<lb/>
son, consultant of the<lb/>
Division of Human Re-<lb/>
lations and Student Af-<lb/>
fairs of the North Caro-<lb/>
lina Department of Pu-<lb/>
blic Instruction will be<lb/>
speaking. The public is<lb/>
invited. Refreshments<lb/>
will be served.<lb/>
cso<lb/>
If you are studying<lb/>
toward a career in a<lb/>
health-related major, the<lb/>
Center for Student<lb/>
Opportunities wants you<lb/>
to know about new<lb/>
opportunities to learn<lb/>
speedreading, effective<lb/>
organization of lecture<lb/>
notes, and Active<lb/>
Reading-knowing more<lb/>
about what you read, in<lb/>
a shorter time. Your<lb/>
course notes and text-<lb/>
books will be used, so<lb/>
time spent developing<lb/>
these skills will also<lb/>
serve as course study!<lb/>
For information about<lb/>
individual or smail-<lb/>
-group sessions, contact<lb/>
Beth Stephenson, 208<lb/>
Ragsdale, or call 757<lb/>
6122, 6081 or 6075.<lb/>
Signing<lb/>
There will be a<lb/>
meeting for Sign Lan-<lb/>
guage Club held at BD<lb/>
101 at 7:30 p.mNOT<lb/>
6:30 as said earlier,<lb/>
Thurs Feb. 1. Mem-<lb/>
bers are urged to at-<lb/>
tend the meeting. The<lb/>
meeting is open to<lb/>
interested students and<lb/>
faculties regardless of<lb/>
how much they know<lb/>
sign language (if at all.)<lb/>
We meet in the same<lb/>
classroom every Thurs.<lb/>
at the same time.<lb/>
tSsmtns<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi will<lb/>
meet on Thurs Feb. 1,<lb/>
7 p.m. in Biology 103.<lb/>
All members are urged<lb/>
to attend. Semester<lb/>
dues are payable at this<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
The Men's Residence<lb/>
Council is sponsoring a<lb/>
Valentine's Dance on<lb/>
Mon Feb. 12 at the<lb/>
Greenville Moose Lodge.<lb/>
This event is open to<lb/>
any of the men on the<lb/>
hill and their dates.<lb/>
Tickets can be pur-<lb/>
chased for $5 from any<lb/>
MRC member or dorm<lb/>
official. Tickets may<lb/>
also be purchased dur-<lb/>
ing office hours in the<lb/>
MRC office located in<lb/>
the Scott Hall lobby.<lb/>
The Embers will be<lb/>
providing the<lb/>
entertainment from 8<lb/>
p.m. to 12 a.m. Couples<lb/>
only.<lb/>
Gamma Rho<lb/>
Sigma Gamma Rho<lb/>
service sorority is<lb/>
having a spring rush<lb/>
Tues. Feb. 6 at 7 p.m.<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. This rush is<lb/>
open to all interested<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Ski Club<lb/>
All persons in-<lb/>
terested in joining the<lb/>
Ski Club are invited to<lb/>
meet Thurs. Feb. 8 at 7<lb/>
p.m. in Rm 104 of<lb/>
Memorial Gym. Plans<lb/>
for upcoming ski trips<lb/>
will be discussed. If<lb/>
unable to attend, please<lb/>
call 758-5375 and ask<lb/>
for Jeff or Rick.<lb/>
Tennis<lb/>
If you enjoy playing<lb/>
table tennis, stop by<lb/>
the Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center table tennis<lb/>
rooms each Tuesday<lb/>
evening at 7 p.m. when<lb/>
the Table Tennis Club<lb/>
meets. You will find<lb/>
players of all levels of<lb/>
ability participating.<lb/>
Various activities such<lb/>
as ladder tournaments<lb/>
are often scheduled. All<lb/>
ECU students, faculty<lb/>
and staff are welcome.<lb/>
Rebel<lb/>
The REBEL, ECU's<lb/>
LiteraryArt Magazine,<lb/>
sponsors a program of<lb/>
prose and poetry read-<lb/>
ing monthly. Refresh-<lb/>
ments are served, dress<lb/>
is informal and the<lb/>
atmosphere is relaxed in<lb/>
Mendenhall's Coffee-<lb/>
house.<lb/>
Previously selected<lb/>
writers read original<lb/>
work, and occasionally<lb/>
the program is varied<lb/>
with contributions by<lb/>
artists from disciplines<lb/>
other than literature.<lb/>
The writers and<lb/>
other artists are usually<lb/>
ECU students or facul-<lb/>
ty. Readings are open<lb/>
to the public.<lb/>
The Feb. 1 program<lb/>
will feature the follow-<lb/>
ing writers: Dr. Peter<lb/>
Makuck, Alison Thomp-<lb/>
son, Robert Jones, and<lb/>
Ray Harrell. Chancellor<lb/>
Thomapr-Brewer will also<lb/>
attgffdT fo present the<lb/>
REBEL Literature and<lb/>
Art awards.<lb/>
The REBEL annually<lb/>
presents two literature<lb/>
awards, one for the<lb/>
best poem accepted by<lb/>
the magazine, and one<lb/>
for the best story. An<lb/>
award is also presented<lb/>
for the "Best in Show"<lb/>
piece from the REBEL<lb/>
Art Show. Money for<lb/>
these awards is prov-<lb/>
ided by Jeffrey's Beer<lb/>
and Wine Co. and The<lb/>
Attic.<lb/>
Would you like to<lb/>
learn more about how<lb/>
to live a fruitful life in<lb/>
the body of our Lord?<lb/>
Well, come to Leader-<lb/>
ship Training Class in<lb/>
Brewster-D, Rm 311 on<lb/>
Thurs. night. There is<lb/>
alot of good fellowship<lb/>
and singing too! The<lb/>
time is from 7-9 p.m.<lb/>
and it is sponsored by<lb/>
Campus Crusade for<lb/>
Christ.<lb/>
Crafts<lb/>
The Crafts Center at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center is now offering<lb/>
introductory level work-<lb/>
shops in a variety of<lb/>
crafts. Beginning Dark-<lb/>
room, Pottery, Floor<lb/>
Loom Weaving, Wood-<lb/>
working, Quilting, Lea-<lb/>
ther Craft, Enameled<lb/>
Mirrors, Printmaking,<lb/>
Kite Making, Beginning<lb/>
Jewelry, and Contem-<lb/>
porary Basketry will be<lb/>
offered.<lb/>
Chess<lb/>
All persons interes-<lb/>
ted in playing chess are<lb/>
invited to stop by the<lb/>
Mendenhall Coffeehouse<lb/>
each Monday evening at<lb/>
7 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/>
Delta Mu<lb/>
Alpha Delta Mu will<lb/>
meet Mon Feb. 5 in<lb/>
Allied Health Building<lb/>
at 5:10. Room to be<lb/>
announced.<lb/>
Gamma Rho<lb/>
Sigma Gamma Rho<lb/>
service sorority is hav-<lb/>
ing a spring rush Sun<lb/>
Feb. 4, at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. This rush is<lb/>
open to all interested<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Courses<lb/>
Students may reg-<lb/>
ister for a mini-course<lb/>
in Beginning Bridge,<lb/>
Billiards, or CPR train-<lb/>
ing, sponsored by Men-<lb/>
denhall Student Center.<lb/>
The courses are open to<lb/>
ECU full-time students,<lb/>
faculty and staff MSC<lb/>
members and their<lb/>
spouses or guests.<lb/>
Persons must regi-<lb/>
ster and pay fees at the<lb/>
MSC Central Ticket<lb/>
office between the hours<lb/>
of 10 a.m. and 4 p.m<lb/>
Monday through Friday.<lb/>
The first course begins<lb/>
Jan. 29.<lb/>
Biology<lb/>
Anyone wishing to<lb/>
go on the Biology Club<lb/>
field trip to Burroughs-<lb/>
Wellcome on feb. 2 are<lb/>
asked to sign up by-<lb/>
Thursday, Feb. 1 on the<lb/>
sign up sheet in the<lb/>
Biology Reading Room<lb/>
(second floor in the<lb/>
biology building.)<lb/>
? AnyfimgHsttd -stu<lb/>
dent is welcome.<lb/>
Fellowship<lb/>
The Fountain of Life<lb/>
Christian Fellowship will<lb/>
sponsor a revival on<lb/>
Feb. 1, 2, and 3.<lb/>
Services will begin<lb/>
nightly at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Chaplin Kenneth P.<lb/>
Edwards will be the<lb/>
guest speaker.<lb/>
Gammon<lb/>
The newly formed<lb/>
Backgammon Club gets<lb/>
together on Monday ev-<lb/>
enings at 7 p.m. in the<lb/>
table games area, off<lb/>
the ground floor at<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
Interested students<lb/>
are asked to bring their<lb/>
sets.<lb/>
Race<lb/>
The Coastal Carolina<lb/>
Track Club will sponsor<lb/>
the First Annual Green<lb/>
?ille Road Race on<lb/>
April 1 at 3 p.m. Thi-<lb/>
race is being sponsored<lb/>
bv H.L. Hodges and the<lb/>
funds received from the<lb/>
entry fees will go to<lb/>
benefit the Easter Seal<lb/>
Society.<lb/>
The race will begin<lb/>
on the Town Common-<lb/>
and circle around<lb/>
Greenville for a distance<lb/>
being 10,000 meters.<lb/>
Merchandise prizes will<lb/>
be awarded for the top<lb/>
finishers in the age<lb/>
divisions, both male and<lb/>
female. Everyone who<lb/>
finishes the race, no<lb/>
niattchow long it takes<lb/>
will receive a certificate<lb/>
from the CCTC.<lb/>
The first 500 to<lb/>
enter will receive a race<lb/>
T-shirt. All entry fees<lb/>
are tax-deductible, re-<lb/>
freshments will be pro-<lb/>
vided throughout the<lb/>
race.<lb/>
Applications and in-<lb/>
formation are available<lb/>
by calling the Easter<lb/>
Seals at 758-3230 or<lb/>
Robert R. Gotwals Jr.<lb/>
at 752-3411.<lb/>
Bail<lb/>
Tickets are inns on<lb/>
sale for the Alpha's<lb/>
Black and Gold Bail<lb/>
March 24, 1979. Contar!<lb/>
an Alpha Member.<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
Applications for these Committee<lb/>
Chairmanships are NOW<lb/>
being taken through Tue?, Feb. 6<lb/>
?ART EXHIBITION<lb/>
 ARTISTS SERIES<lb/>
 COFFEEHOUSE<lb/>
 FILMS<lb/>
 LECTURE<lb/>
 MAJOR<lb/>
ATTRACTIONS<lb/>
?? univniKY <lb/>
r<lb/>
234<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
 SPECIAL<lb/>
ATTRACTIONS<lb/>
 MINORITY ARTS<lb/>
THEATRE ARTS<lb/>
THE<lb/>
ENTERTAINER<lb/>
 TRAVEL<lb/>
foment?!<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
needed immediately to<lb/>
share 2 bedroom apt.<lb/>
Call Marsha at<lb/>
758-2081.<lb/>
Large furnished bed-<lb/>
room for rent, some<lb/>
kitchen privileges.<lb/>
Across from university.<lb/>
758-2585.<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT:<lb/>
Male, $50 per mo. plus<lb/>
13 utilities, phone &amp;<lb/>
cable TV. Fully<lb/>
furnished, color TV.<lb/>
Only need bed &amp;<lb/>
dressser. on ECU bus<lb/>
route. Call 752-7225,<lb/>
113B N. Holly St.<lb/>
Would like to sublease<lb/>
2 bedroom duplex 3<lb/>
blocks from campus.<lb/>
Call 752-1792.<lb/>
for sate<lb/>
SKI SET - Hart<lb/>
Freestyle 175 cm skis<lb/>
with Salomon "S" type<lb/>
binding with ski poles<lb/>
included. All for just<lb/>
190. Must sell. Call<lb/>
7582272.<lb/>
'71 Mustang, good<lb/>
condition. P'B, PS,<lb/>
AC, Automatic, V-8,<lb/>
AMFM Stereo. Call<lb/>
756-7965 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
freisono?!<lb/>
CHANELO's now has<lb/>
openings for delivery<lb/>
personnel. 758-7400.<lb/>
BELLY DANCE<lb/>
Lessons for fun tnd<lb/>
exercise! Call Sunshine<lb/>
758-0736 (mornings and<lb/>
evenings).<lb/>
YOGA: a night course<lb/>
in Hatha Yoga is be-<lb/>
ginning Feb. 27. All<lb/>
interested persons<lb/>
please call Sunshine at<lb/>
758-0736. (Mornings &amp;<lb/>
nights).<lb/>
Junior &amp; Seniors:<lb/>
Looking for a part time<lb/>
job? Get a jump on a<lb/>
summer job with good<lb/>
income, flexible hours,<lb/>
and real experience in<lb/>
the business world. Call<lb/>
Northwestern Mutual<lb/>
Life for an appointment.<lb/>
752-4080.<lb/>
SENIORS ? resume<lb/>
preparation is the key<lb/>
factor in job placement.<lb/>
National Printing Com-<lb/>
pany is offering resume<lb/>
preparation to seniors.<lb/>
You merely submit the<lb/>
information and we<lb/>
provide the resume.<lb/>
Photographs can be in-<lb/>
cluded. Low prices. For<lb/>
more information contact<lb/>
Richard Cole at Office<lb/>
758-286 or Home<lb/>
752-1662.<lb/>
DISCO DANCE - A<lb/>
course in disco is be-<lb/>
ginning Feb. 2, early<lb/>
Fri. evenings to warm<lb/>
you up for the weekend<lb/>
- specializing in spins<lb/>
and partnering with an<lb/>
emphasis on arms. A<lb/>
more bask class will<lb/>
begin Feb. 4 Sundays<lb/>
" P;m. specializing ,n<lb/>
fancy footwork. You can<lb/>
,earn ver complex<lb/>
movements golng<lb/>
bs?ep. l?'s really v?y<lb/>
e,as and such ; fui<lb/>
class There' ?i<lb/>
for i ?n,v ro?m<lb/>
r f more tuples or 6<lb/>
 ? call .U<lb/>
OnTyllO 2T t0d<lb/>
0736? ?J? C?<lb/>
evenings.<lb/>
T<lb/>
t <lb/>
sr?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057175_0003"/><lb/>
Local economic outlook<lb/>
for '79 predicted good<lb/>
1 February 1979 FOUNTAINHEAO Page 3<lb/>
B MARTHA OAKLEY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Greenville area<lb/>
businessmen and wo-<lb/>
men, in a recent<lb/>
survey, predicted im.<lb/>
provements m the<lb/>
economy h?r 1979.<lb/>
Several people were<lb/>
hosen a a repre-<lb/>
sentative sample of<lb/>
economic life in<lb/>
Greenville. Asked about<lb/>
their general outlook on<lb/>
economy, each of<lb/>
them gave a favorable<lb/>
liction tor the<lb/>
i oming year.<lb/>
D.J. Carter.<lb/>
senior<lb/>
assistant manager of<lb/>
Roses, said sales in his<lb/>
store were up, and the<lb/>
future for business<lb/>
looked bright.<lb/>
"January sales are<lb/>
up 12 percent said<lb/>
Waverly Phelps of<lb/>
Phelps Chevrolet. "I<lb/>
expect a 10 percent<lb/>
increase in car sales for<lb/>
1979, and a very strong<lb/>
ear<lb/>
Lynne Olmstead,<lb/>
manager of community<lb/>
development and re-<lb/>
x-arch in the Greenville<lb/>
Chamber of Commerce,<lb/>
said the economic future<lb/>
looked very good<lb/>
locally.<lb/>
"Indications of that<lb/>
are the extreme rapid<lb/>
growth and prosperity<lb/>
in the Greenville area<lb/>
said Olmstead. "There<lb/>
will be new business<lb/>
and industry, and right<lb/>
now there are<lb/>
approximately 25 new<lb/>
families moving into the<lb/>
area per week<lb/>
"On the national<lb/>
level, however, 1 believe<lb/>
the economy still has a<lb/>
way to go in order to<lb/>
improve itself Olm-<lb/>
stead added.<lb/>
"We are doing fine<lb/>
so far, ' said Peggy<lb/>
Lockhart of Eastern<lb/>
Construction Co "and<lb/>
I hope we will continue<lb/>
to do well<lb/>
"Business is about<lb/>
the same as it was this<lb/>
time last year Lock-<lb/>
hart added.<lb/>
Manager of the Book<lb/>
Barn, Grace Smith, said<lb/>
sales in her store had<lb/>
increased since the<lb/>
same time last year.<lb/>
"In spite of what<lb/>
everyone is saying<lb/>
about a recession, I<lb/>
expect the economy as<lb/>
a whole to get better<lb/>
Smith added.<lb/>
Controversy stirs in Co-op dept.<lb/>
B GLENN THOMAS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
re-<lb/>
v ording to a<lb/>
nl rumor, the co-op<lb/>
artmenl has not<lb/>
essfully doing<lb/>
: Several people<lb/>
have said that they feel<lb/>
op Dept. should<lb/>
investigated.<lb/>
Bets) Harper,<lb/>
r of the Co-op<lb/>
Dept said in an in-<lb/>
yesterdaj that<lb/>
not heard the<lb/>
dn that no<lb/>
a : approached<lb/>
complaints about the<lb/>
Co-op Dept they<lb/>
should come forward<lb/>
and speak up about<lb/>
them. Dr. Harper<lb/>
addedI really would<lb/>
like some student in-<lb/>
put<lb/>
Dr. Harper went on<lb/>
to say that there were<lb/>
many students who are<lb/>
very pleased with the<lb/>
program. She said there<lb/>
are many students who<lb/>
have gone to other<lb/>
schools to express their<lb/>
happiness and praise of<lb/>
the program. Dr.<lb/>
Harper said, "Many<lb/>
students have been to<lb/>
other institutions to<lb/>
speak out for the<lb/>
program<lb/>
Libby Lefler, SGA<lb/>
Speaker, said that she<lb/>
still wants to investigate<lb/>
the program.<lb/>
Lefler said that<lb/>
they (SGA) are still<lb/>
trying to find people to<lb/>
fill the investigative<lb/>
committee. When asked<lb/>
if she had contacted the<lb/>
director of the Co-op,<lb/>
Lefler replied,<lb/>
"No<lb/>
it h<lb/>
anv<lb/>
com-<lb/>
Hr. Harper said<lb/>
- that it there<lb/>
students with<lb/>
rten<lb/>
756-9222<lb/>
HAMSTERS Reg. $2.99<lb/>
NOW $2.49<lb/>
GUINEA PIGS Reg. $7.99<lb/>
NOW $6.49<lb/>
HAMSTER &amp; GUINEA PIG<lb/>
CAGES 10 OFF<lb/>
Sale ends Saturday Feb. 3.<lb/>
FEafcWlfi<lb/>
Cr????ilia, N.<lb/>
A Night Of Magic With<lb/>
BILL "DOC" ROBINSON<lb/>
Also<lb/>
The Music Of<lb/>
Kurt Fortmeyer<lb/>
Sat Feb. 3<lb/>
ALL GOLF SHOES 25 OFF<lb/>
ALL GOLF BALLS $12.00 a dozen<lb/>
ALL CHILDREN IZOD SWEATERS, V2 price Sizes 2<lb/>
to 20<lb/>
W OFF ON ALL MENS GOLF AND CASUAL<lb/>
PANTS<lb/>
ALL CHILDRENS GOLF SETS Regulary $90. NOW<lb/>
ONLY $50 2 woods - 4 irons - putter &amp; bag-tees<lb/>
&amp; balls<lb/>
50OFF ON ALL KNIT HEAD COVERS AND ODD<lb/>
SETS OF HEAD COVERS<lb/>
ALL IZOD MENS V-NECK &amp; CARDIGAN<lb/>
SWEATERS NORMALLY ABOUT $22. NOW $14<lb/>
ALL GOLF GLOVES BUY 2 get one free - You may<lb/>
mix sizes<lb/>
SPECIAL SALE ON ALL GOLF CLUBS - WE ALSO<lb/>
ACCEPT USED GOLF CLUBS ON TRADE<lb/>
ALL GOLF BAGS 25off<lb/>
LARGE BARREL OF H&amp;B DRIVERS LEFT and<lb/>
RIGHT HAND MODELS IN ALL FLEXES &amp;<lb/>
WEIGHTS Reg $44.50 NOW V2 PRICE<lb/>
ALL TENNIS EQUIPMENT, BALLS, SHOES,<lb/>
ACCESSORIES AND APPAREL V2 off<lb/>
40 off on All Ski Bibs, Coats, Jackets,Pants &amp;<lb/>
Jump Suits for men, women and children<lb/>
40off on all turtle necks ski sweaters<lb/>
LARGE RACK LADIES FALL &amp; WINTER, Skirts,<lb/>
Pant Suits, Jackets and tops 750FF<lb/>
ALL CAPS. Hats. Toboggans, Ski Masks, Gloves,<lb/>
Mittens and Long Underwear for Men,<lb/>
Women and Children 25off<lb/>
All Ski Boots &amp; Apre Ski Boots bv Caber, Longe,<lb/>
San Marco, and Blondo NOW 3COFF<lb/>
LARGE Selection Ski Socks Reg. $4.50 now only $2<lb/>
All Izod Short Sleeve Junior Shirts<lb/>
SIZES 2-20 NOW $8<lb/>
raoDONjt4<lb/>
GORDON D FULP<lb/>
GOLF PROFESSIONAL<lb/>
LOCATED AT GREENVILLE COUNTRY CLUB<lb/>
COUNTRY CLUB DRIVE<lb/>
OFF MEMORIAL DRIVE<lb/>
TGREENVBJLE, NORTH CAROLNA 27834<lb/>
You<lb/>
? t<lb/>
n't have to be<lb/>
rich to own<lb/>
the best tr<lb/>
names<lb/>
s<lb/>
MWW<lb/>
audio!<lb/>
JVC<lb/>
Semi-Automatic Quartz<lb/>
lock turntable<lb/>
Model QL-A2<lb/>
system price<lb/>
$999.00<lb/>
Model SK-1000S<lb/>
?3 way speaker-system with 12 inch woofer<lb/>
Model JR-S301<lb/>
? Receiver with 60 watts per channel RMS<lb/>
? Semi - Automatic Belt<lb/>
Drive Turntable<lb/>
AM-FM Tuner<lb/>
Model JLA20<lb/>
I<lb/>
-<lb/>
J<lb/>
JVC<lb/>
ModelJT-V22<lb/>
trui price<lb/>
$729.00<lb/>
3 ? Q9?9<lb/>
ModelJA-S22<lb/>
u<lb/>
n 3 <lb/>
Model SK-700<lb/>
? 3 wa speaker tern with 10 inc<lb/>
i wooier<lb/>
D.C. Intergrated Amp with 40 watts<lb/>
per channel RMS<lb/>
JVC<lb/>
Model SK-500<lb/>
Model JR-S81H<lb/>
?Receiver with 35 watts per channel RMS<lb/>
Garrard<lb/>
system price<lb/>
$499.00<lb/>
Model 730M<lb/>
2 way speaker system with 8 inch woofer . FuU automatic beltdrive turntable<lb/>
TDK-SA-C90<lb/>
90 minute state of the art cassette tape<lb/>
REG. $4.79<lb/>
SALE PRICE $3.69<lb/>
Buy 10 tapes for $35.00.<lb/>
QUICK CHANGE<lb/>
SONY KV 19-22<lb/>
ARTIST.<lb/>
? 19 inch<lb/>
? TRINITRON COLOR TV<lb/>
? NEW EXPRESS TUNING<lb/>
REG.<lb/>
$604.95<lb/>
SALE PRICE<lb/>
$504.94<lb/>
"IT'S A SONY<lb/>
M<lb/>
model H723<lb/>
speakers<lb/>
CZJXIC COMPACT STEREO<lb/>
Model H363 with built in 8 track recorder player<lb/>
speakers included<lb/>
REQ. $349.95 SALE PRICE $249.95<lb/>
Financing Available<lb/>
VISA<lb/>
mast chargt<lb/>
3U Arlington IM<lb/>
Greenville N C<lb/>
le'eoHone ?56 9988<lb/>
Open Monday - Friday 10-9, Saturday 10-6<lb/>
t<lb/>
f<lb/>
?<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057175_0004"/><lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 1 February 1979<lb/>
Abolish the HERALD<lb/>
Fall semester was a testing period<lb/>
or the EBONY HERALD, and it<lb/>
failed the test. There is only one<lb/>
course of action for the Media Board<lb/>
to take, and that is to completely<lb/>
abolish the EBONY HERALD<lb/>
Contrary to HERALD Executive<lb/>
Editor Jerry Simmons' excuses for<lb/>
only publishing one issue last semes-<lb/>
ter, access to FOUNTAINHEAD layout<lb/>
facilities was not the cause. After a<lb/>
misunderstanding between the editors<lb/>
of the two publications in late<lb/>
September which delayed publication<lb/>
of a second issue, the Media Board<lb/>
adopted a set of guidelines and<lb/>
timetables for use of the FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD offices by the HERALD staff.<lb/>
rFfi Jhe adoption of those rules,<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD has not been con-<lb/>
tacted by the HERALD.<lb/>
These guidelines were adopted to<lb/>
insure that no FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
equipment would be damaged by the<lb/>
inexperienced HERALD staff. Com-<lb/>
mLtme! weLe a,so made to train<lb/>
HbHALD staffers and to provide a<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD employee in the<lb/>
office whenever the HERALD was<lb/>
laying out. FOUNTAINHEAD reser-<lb/>
ved Mondays and Wednesdays for<lb/>
wSpeRA,and??e?cBCL its doors to the<lb/>
HERALD staff 28 hours a week for a<lb/>
total of 112 hours a month' a<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD manages to put<lb/>
out an eight to 10 page broadsheet<lb/>
paper twice a week in less than 48<lb/>
hours of office use, yet the HERALD<lb/>
is unable to put out a four page<lb/>
tabloid each month. <lb/>
These problems have not arisen<lb/>
during the past few months.<lb/>
Conditions have gotten progressivelv<lb/>
worse over the past three years. The<lb/>
paper has consistently set a standard<lb/>
of such poor quality that it pales in<lb/>
comparison with any high shcool<lb/>
paper. It is, quite simply, an<lb/>
embarrassment to the students of<lb/>
' FOUNTAINHEAD has given ECU<lb/>
minorities a good deal of coverage<lb/>
this year including articles about the<lb/>
first black owned newspaper, George<lb/>
Washington Carver, the Student Union<lb/>
Black Arts Week, and a black<lb/>
sorority Articles about the Student<lb/>
Union Jewish Arts Festival and an<lb/>
Iranian student are slated for future<lb/>
issues. A minority paper or a<lb/>
minority section in FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
is unnecessary.<lb/>
criMM-fiftt!?ir.sJ?!fers are welcome at<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD. Our doors are<lb/>
always open to anyone who can write<lb/>
or who has the interest and potential<lb/>
Josr out" scfiAtL<lb/>
HXXJuSTfrjfwT AMD oo SHoulD<lb/>
Be ftfrtDV To (bLL-<lb/>
-To AoM A Ct?CtL Of ALL YouL<lb/>
CiAcuiTtf -? &amp;r 7tie douse hold '<lb/>
ajo ujr vit?( me PRoee 4?&amp;<lb/>
Au.j I'm josr all Tito up.<lb/>
tiEl?um the v.l<lb/>
TMtE'S Son&amp;TrtivG- 5ouSlY<lb/>
LOG-C OACuiTS<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Uppity Women<lb/>
Potholes plague unpaved parking lot<lb/>
Women after the Gvil War<lb/>
By CHARLENE CARTER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A discussion of the history of more than half the<lb/>
human race, in the space of a few columns, will<lb/>
entail a lot of skimming and scanning. This column<lb/>
be confined, for the most part, to the years<lb/>
jusl before, during and after the Civil War.<lb/>
In earlier centuries most women in America<lb/>
worked, and they worked throughout their adult<lb/>
Exceptions were the small minority middle ?<lb/>
ami upper ? income families, who lived in urban<lb/>
raters.<lb/>
The major change in the pattern of American<lb/>
women's lives occured after the Civil War, when<lb/>
accelerating industrialization and urbanization ush-<lb/>
ered in a rapid increase in the urban middle<lb/>
classes. This isolation of women from work was a<lb/>
significant phenomenon in American life for only<lb/>
about 80 years ? from after the Civil War to the<lb/>
end of World War II.<lb/>
Throughout the United States, at the time just<lb/>
before the Civil Was, the status of individual<lb/>
women, with few exceptions, was determined not<lb/>
only by the prevailing convention reflecting male<lb/>
dominance, but also by the position and disposition<lb/>
of individual fathers and husbands. Few women<lb/>
could escape this placement. Neither wealth nor<lb/>
poverty liberated them.<lb/>
Even if they were financially independent and<lb/>
entirely free from any man's supervision, which was<lb/>
in itself difficult status to attain, there were still<lb/>
strong, definite, thoroughly-supported codes which<lb/>
were too entangling to give any woman, whatever<lb/>
her station, any considerable degree of inde-<lb/>
pendence.<lb/>
In a society where the role of women was so<lb/>
definitely drawn and masculine dominance so<lb/>
secure, perhaps' it was natural for compensatory<lb/>
sentiment to glorify the virtues of the woman and<lb/>
to place her on a pedestal. It was rare to find<lb/>
women protesting the idealization,the homage, and the<lb/>
practices of social courtesies characteristically carried<lb/>
on by men.<lb/>
Along with this system went a definition of<lb/>
status alter marriage often in sharp contrast with<lb/>
the spirit of courtship days. The older woman<lb/>
appears to have accepted, as a matter of course<lb/>
her adult responsibilities (long-suffering was one of<lb/>
the outstanding women's virtues back then).<lb/>
The brutally sentimental 19th century provided<lb/>
for the division of women into "good" and "bad"<lb/>
and the setting off of "lust" from "pure love<lb/>
Extramarital sex (for men, of course) was provided<lb/>
by prostitution much more than by adultry.<lb/>
Love was divided into "sacred" and "profane"<lb/>
a situation which is usually thought of from the<lb/>
male point of view as offering a chance for eating<lb/>
one s cake and having it, too. Marriageable girls had<lb/>
something to bargain with, their virginity, and this<lb/>
provided a social balance for women who had little<lb/>
or no economic base for bargaining.<lb/>
These same pampered goddesses descended from<lb/>
their pedestals in angelic throngs, when they were<lb/>
needed to maintain the home fires while their men<lb/>
were fighting the Civil War. . They maintained<lb/>
homes, worked in the fields, in war industries and as<lb/>
nurses.<lb/>
The increase of interest in woman's suffrage was<lb/>
one of the most important influences that the war<lb/>
had on northern women. The demand there for<lb/>
political equality had been gradually gathering<lb/>
strength, but after the war it grew rapidlv and<lb/>
became more assertive. rapidly and<lb/>
The agitators led the way, but the strength of<lb/>
this insistence upon the rights of women came from<lb/>
changing economic social conditions and from<lb/>
recognition of the handicap to women from society's<lb/>
discrimination between the sexes. The placement of<lb/>
the word 'male" in the 14th Amendment brought<lb/>
forth bitter resentment from such leaders as<lb/>
Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony.<lb/>
It represented an attitude that was nothing less<lb/>
than an insult. The agitation for women's rights<lb/>
given momentum by women's war experiences and<lb/>
granting the vote to Negro men, was soon to force<lb/>
both men and women's attention on a great national<lb/>
issue.<lb/>
Rather than go forward at this point, however,<lb/>
the next three columns will briefly cover women's<lb/>
history from (1) early America to the Civil War, (2)<lb/>
old England to early America, and (3) a brief<lb/>
discussion of women in the ancient world. With a<lb/>
more far-reaching history as a back-drop, discussion<lb/>
ot the more recent history (some call it 'herstory')<lb/>
of women will be resumed.<lb/>
I would like to take a little space here to<lb/>
respond to Ms. Holtzclaw's letter, from last<lb/>
Ihursday s issue. Regarding the use of the words<lb/>
bitches and "uppity Because this column is a<lb/>
university-wide publication, I must of necessity<lb/>
address this column to both male and female<lb/>
readers. The word "bitches" was used in a part of<lb/>
a sentence which was a clarification of a male<lb/>
attitude.<lb/>
I think if you will go back and examine the<lb/>
context, that you will find this to be the case. The<lb/>
word uppity" is used as a tribute to women's<lb/>
history ,n the United States, and is certainly not<lb/>
intended to be derogatory. It is my firm belief that<lb/>
issues are better dealt with out in the open<lb/>
particularly in an academic community, rather than<lb/>
being hidden, as if they do not exist, or have never<lb/>
existed in the past.<lb/>
If this requires the use of certain descriptive<lb/>
words for clarification, I feel that we are all old<lb/>
enough now to see past the superficial, through to<lb/>
what is really being said.<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I've thought about<lb/>
writing this letter for a<lb/>
long time, usually every<lb/>
morning when I drive to<lb/>
school. Each day, as I<lb/>
attempt to park my car,<lb/>
there is a constant<lb/>
reminder of the reason<lb/>
I wish to write ? the<lb/>
parking lot behind Joy-<lb/>
ner Library and Men-<lb/>
denhall.<lb/>
I personally would<lb/>
not even go so far as<lb/>
to call it a parking lot.<lb/>
The only resemblance I<lb/>
see is by the fact that<lb/>
there are cars there.<lb/>
Otherwise, the space of<lb/>
land would better be<lb/>
classed as the Pits.<lb/>
When I went home<lb/>
over Christmas vacation<lb/>
I was sure someone<lb/>
would have the fore-<lb/>
sight to use the time to<lb/>
fill in the water holes<lb/>
which constitute a large<lb/>
percentage of the lot. I<lb/>
should have known bet-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
And so I am writing.<lb/>
It has taken awhile, but<lb/>
my anger is slow to<lb/>
rise to a state of action.<lb/>
I see letters in FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD about stu-<lb/>
dent apathy (of which I<lb/>
am also a victim), but<lb/>
now ask how can we<lb/>
really ignore the park-<lb/>
ing problem behind<lb/>
Jovner and Mendenhall<lb/>
any longer?<lb/>
Anyone who parks<lb/>
there in the morning<lb/>
knows how difficult it<lb/>
can be to find a space.<lb/>
Sometimes spaces can<lb/>
be found which others<lb/>
pass by, and no wonder<lb/>
when getting to them<lb/>
requires driving through<lb/>
a small pond.<lb/>
The holes alone are<lb/>
bad enough but when<lb/>
they fill with water ?<lb/>
well, you try and keep<lb/>
a car clean. I would<lb/>
like to see how the ad-<lb/>
ministration would like<lb/>
parking there.<lb/>
Every year I hear<lb/>
rumors about the park-<lb/>
ing lot being paved.<lb/>
Well I would like to say<lb/>
that right now I would<lb/>
be very grateful if<lb/>
someone just filled it in<lb/>
to make it easier to<lb/>
park. I'm sure others<lb/>
must feel the same way<lb/>
as they drive around<lb/>
there in the mornings.<lb/>
There must be<lb/>
something that can be<lb/>
done. I would also say<lb/>
that I would love to<lb/>
save myself a hassle<lb/>
and some gas and take<lb/>
the bus, but then they<lb/>
aren't too reliable if you<lb/>
are on the Brown<lb/>
Route.<lb/>
Diane McCovern<lb/>
Sport of name-calling is alive at ECU<lb/>
To FOUNTIANHEAD:<lb/>
Attention Name Cal-<lb/>
lers:<lb/>
There is a sport in<lb/>
this world that does not<lb/>
get the body in shape<lb/>
but is immensely help-<lb/>
ful in the development<lb/>
of the mind. To elim-<lb/>
inate the inexcusable<lb/>
sin of redundancy, the<lb/>
mind had to search<lb/>
painstakingly for new<lb/>
nomenclature, and for<lb/>
the effort a visible<lb/>
change can be seen.<lb/>
Truly, the sport is quite<lb/>
fitting for the mature,<lb/>
sensible college student.<lb/>
Quite common is this<lb/>
sport of name-calling in<lb/>
my family. I can't re-<lb/>
member not using it,<lb/>
since its inception in<lb/>
me started practically at<lb/>
birth (please excuse my<lb/>
reminiscing, but my<lb/>
Fountainhcod<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over 50 yeers<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Doug White<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER ADVERTISING MANAGER<lb/>
Steve Bachner ws EDTQRS Robert M. Sw.im<lb/>
RMd GUarmt<lb/>
TRENDS EDITOR<lb/>
Jeff Rollins<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
Sem Rogers<lb/>
of East<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student newaDM<lb/>
SK diiTryT. SI? b th "sdlaBoaro of ECU<lb/>
and is distributed each Tuesday and Thuradav wekiv<lb/>
during the summer). ?rtursoay (?eeiy<lb/>
27834 addrti: m th ??"?. Greenville, N C.<lb/>
l'fiSJlil57-6300' W3S7, 757309<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10 annually, alumni $6 annually.<lb/>
frame of reference<lb/>
doesn't include the fu-<lb/>
ture, and the present<lb/>
leaves me in a state of<lb/>
confusion so utter that I<lb/>
find it impossible to put<lb/>
into words).<lb/>
A big bully would<lb/>
always pick on me<lb/>
when I was but a wee<lb/>
lad. In retaliation I<lb/>
would call on all my<lb/>
resources and voice out<lb/>
a series of bad names<lb/>
in his direction. He<lb/>
would then proceed to<lb/>
beat me severely in the<lb/>
face.<lb/>
Boy would he get<lb/>
punished for that. Our<lb/>
teacher would make him<lb/>
beat out erasers for a<lb/>
whole week in a row. I<lb/>
really showed him. Right<lb/>
then I realized there<lb/>
was a lot to be had<lb/>
from name-calling, and<lb/>
I have been an advocate<lb/>
of it ever since.<lb/>
I was quite pleased<lb/>
when it came to my<lb/>
attention that we had<lb/>
numerous name-callers<lb/>
at ECU. Why, some of<lb/>
them impress even me,<lb/>
the now dethroned King<lb/>
of the sport.<lb/>
I've heard such<lb/>
goodies as selfish, im-<lb/>
mature, ignorant, demo-<lb/>
gogue (wow!), vicious,<lb/>
and liar. Bravo I say!<lb/>
Just think of the great<lb/>
things you're doing rat-<lb/>
tling off these names,<lb/>
the people you impress,<lb/>
the good will you en-<lb/>
courage, and the co-<lb/>
operation that results.<lb/>
Now, to get to the<lb/>
point of this article.<lb/>
What I want to do is<lb/>
form a name-caller's<lb/>
club. We could meet at<lb/>
my house once a week,<lb/>
or maybe twice (fpr a<lb/>
small fee naturally, to<lb/>
cover the utilities, pay<lb/>
for my food, etc.). With<lb/>
heads combined we<lb/>
could assimilate some<lb/>
great names, and then<lb/>
begin our assault on<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD, SGA,<lb/>
and other campus or-<lb/>
ganizations.<lb/>
We could bring<lb/>
great changes to the<lb/>
campus, maybe even<lb/>
convince the most con-<lb/>
servative teachers to<lb/>
call their students ugly<lb/>
names. We'd revol-<lb/>
utionize! Then we could<lb/>
send people to other<lb/>
colleges to preach our<lb/>
gospel.<lb/>
It could even spread<lb/>
all across the country,<lb/>
and we could have the<lb/>
national convention right<lb/>
here at our own school.<lb/>
The great good we<lb/>
could do! And it<lb/>
wouldn't be so hard,<lb/>
not with the foundation<lb/>
of experience we have<lb/>
here in our laps.<lb/>
Now, for an end to<lb/>
this letter. What, at last<lb/>
you say? Why , thmk<lb/>
all of you are stupid,<lb/>
lowdown, scallywags<lb/>
Probably didn't like<lb/>
that, did you (or mavbe<lb/>
you did). Now vou're<lb/>
wondering if name-cal-<lb/>
ling is really okay (or<lb/>
maybe you're not) Let<lb/>
me assure you that it<lb/>
is, I think.<lb/>
Steven M. Fisher<lb/>
MSC staff praised for<lb/>
letting movie finish<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
On Jan. 21, I went<lb/>
to Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center for the sole pur-<lb/>
pose of seeing the new<lb/>
5-foot Panasonic televi-<lb/>
sion recently purchased.<lb/>
Since the movie, The<lb/>
Longest Yard was on I<lb/>
decided to watch the<lb/>
two-hour show.<lb/>
Because of network<lb/>
difficulties, the movie<lb/>
lasted about 10-15<lb/>
minutes past the 11<lb/>
P.m. dosing time for<lb/>
the center.<lb/>
instead of makina<lb/>
myself and the 15 other<lb/>
students viewing the<lb/>
movie leave the prem-<lb/>
5? ' tne ?PPropriate<lb/>
??? (ID, the staff at<lb/>
M2- were very con-<lb/>
siderate and jet us<lb/>
cont.nue to watch the<lb/>
mov,e Lunl?' ?ts condu-<lb/>
f?on, which was approx-<lb/>
imately 11:15.<lb/>
? this, I WouJd<lb/>
Me to express mv<lb/>
appreciation to the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Staff, especially<lb/>
pbby Cook, Dougoh<lb/>
unidentified mpus<lb/>
policeman, who allowed<lb/>
us to sta and watch<lb/>
the conchi-inn<lb/>
If the rest of the<lb/>
tCU Student Activities<lb/>
were run in this man-<lb/>
ner, I believe the stu-<lb/>
dent body would have s<lb/>
more favorable attitude<lb/>
ECU1 UfC here ?<lb/>
Duane Grooms<lb/>
I<lb/>
m<lb/>
"??T. ?-? ?<lb/>
. d<lb/>
<pb facs="00057175_0005"/><lb/>
?.<lb/>
1 February 1979 FOUNTAINHEAD Paga 5<lb/>
Eastwood and<lb/>
up in simian<lb/>
Clyde team<lb/>
"High<lb/>
and, of<lb/>
Harrv<lb/>
East-<lb/>
h WILLIAM JONES<lb/>
tssistant Trends Editor<lb/>
Clinl Eastwood. A<lb/>
that universally<lb/>
gs to mind an<lb/>
ige. Tough, grim,<lb/>
hless-supennacho. An<lb/>
tg that has become<lb/>
ingrained fr0m<lb/>
- like "A Fist Full<lb/>
Ol Dollars<lb/>
is Drifter"<lb/>
rse, "Dim<lb/>
invariable<lb/>
In "Ever) Which<lb/>
W But Loose East-<lb/>
Fs currently plaving<lb/>
re, the character<lb/>
ains basically the<lb/>
e. Tough and<lb/>
'? yel with a softer<lb/>
Inside he's a ver<lb/>
guy. In fact, he<lb/>
head over heels in<lb/>
i<lb/>
Directed by James<lb/>
go, "Every Which<lb/>
But Loose" re-<lb/>
ts the adventures of<lb/>
Beddovt. his 165<lb/>
orangutan Clyde,<lb/>
his sidekick Orville.<lb/>
Ph'jo is a truckdriver.<lb/>
He s also one of the<lb/>
best backstreet brawlers<lb/>
W the San Fernando<lb/>
Vall,e Eastwood<lb/>
n t play this part, no<lb/>
one can).<lb/>
Philo won Clyde in a<lb/>
f?ght from the owner of<lb/>
one of these snakes 'n<lb/>
gaters zoos you see on<lb/>
the highways' of warmer<lb/>
states.<lb/>
Philo picks up extra<lb/>
money by having Orville<lb/>
set up fights and place<lb/>
side bets. Philo rarely<lb/>
loses. The money goes<lb/>
toward fixing up Or-<lb/>
ville's car, Philo's pick-<lb/>
UP and keeping Or-<lb/>
ville's Ma reasonably<lb/>
quiet by feeding Clyde<lb/>
and repairing the dam-<lb/>
ages he incurs to Ma's<lb/>
property and peace of<lb/>
mind.<lb/>
One day Philo falls<lb/>
in love with an at-<lb/>
tractive country-western<lb/>
singer playing amateur-<lb/>
night at his favorite<lb/>
nightspot. Lynn Halsey-<lb/>
Taylor, played by Son-<lb/>
dra Locke, is deter-<lb/>
mined to a recorded<lb/>
star and own her own<lb/>
nightclub one day.<lb/>
When she moves off to<lb/>
another performing en-<lb/>
gagement out of state,<lb/>
Philo takes out after<lb/>
her.<lb/>
But! In the mean-<lb/>
time, due to his short<lb/>
temper and fast lists,<lb/>
Philo has incurred the<lb/>
wrath of a pitifully<lb/>
bumbling motorcycle<lb/>
gang and two inept<lb/>
cops. And they take out<lb/>
after Philo.<lb/>
The character of<lb/>
Philo is perfectly com-<lb/>
plemented by his re-<lb/>
liable but not too pretty<lb/>
or bright sidekicks Or-<lb/>
ville and Clyde. Orville,<lb/>
played by Geoffery<lb/>
Lewis, is under constant<lb/>
haranguing from Clyde.<lb/>
Clyde is continually<lb/>
looking for something to<lb/>
get into. Like driving a<lb/>
steamroller over bikes<lb/>
of some motorcycle<lb/>
gang members who've<lb/>
insulted him. What he<lb/>
usually get himself,<lb/>
Philo and Orville into is<lb/>
trouble. Clyde's "I<lb/>
don't give a f<lb/>
expression and attitude<lb/>
is the most humorous<lb/>
thing "Every Which<lb/>
 has to offer.<lb/>
 my knowledge,<lb/>
Eastwood's first<lb/>
in a com<lb/>
Every Which<lb/>
is. as a whole,<lb/>
and loaves one<lb/>
where the<lb/>
Way<lb/>
To<lb/>
this is<lb/>
involve<lb/>
edy.<lb/>
Way<lb/>
erratic<lb/>
w ondering<lb/>
laughs went. In the en-<lb/>
tanglements with motor-<lb/>
cycle gang, for instance,<lb/>
you know what's going<lb/>
to<lb/>
uoe-<lb/>
happen<lb/>
But<lb/>
iefore it<lb/>
sket-<lb/>
are<lb/>
they<lb/>
manage<lb/>
in this<lb/>
ovei ter-<lb/>
be re-<lb/>
elf- sucn :<lb/>
usually iuun<lb/>
somehow don<lb/>
to pull it ol<lb/>
picture. The<lb/>
eotyping may<lb/>
sponsible.<lb/>
"Every Which W ay<lb/>
should have been a<lb/>
hilarious movie. It has<lb/>
all the ingredient The)<lb/>
jusl don't come together<lb/>
successful: v liich<lb/>
CLINT EASTWOOD (RIGHT) and Clyde (left) mean<lb/>
monkey business in "Every Which Way But Loose<lb/>
ntal<lb/>
zzi.<lb/>
ers<lb/>
isty<lb/>
3pe<lb/>
I it<lb/>
vay<lb/>
illy<lb/>
to<lb/>
in<lb/>
'00<lb/>
er<lb/>
ee<lb/>
ail<lb/>
op<lb/>
?ie<lb/>
?<lb/>
s<lb/>
?n<lb/>
ie<lb/>
and the audience goes bananas.<lb/>
leaves the blame in<lb/>
James Fargo's (the dir-<lb/>
ector) lap.<lb/>
Country-music con-<lb/>
noiseurs will be pleased<lb/>
by the cameo appear-<lb/>
ances and songs ol Mel<lb/>
Tillis, Charlie Rich, and<lb/>
Phil Everly. The mo-<lb/>
vie's theme is the<lb/>
current 1 country sin-<lb/>
gle. "Every Which Way<lb/>
But Loose" by Eddie<lb/>
Rabbitt.<lb/>
If vou want action<lb/>
J<lb/>
and some fair-to-mid-<lb/>
dling fight scenes,<lb/>
you'll enjo) "Ever)<lb/>
Which Way But re-<lb/>
member, as far a com-<lb/>
edy goes, an orang-<lb/>
utan is the filmV saving<lb/>
grace.<lb/>
Violinist Eugene Fodor packs Hendrix<lb/>
B) JEFF ROLLINS<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
La-t night violinist<lb/>
gene Fodor astounded<lb/>
rilled and delighted a<lb/>
? i house at Hen-<lb/>
1 Theatre. The hand-<lb/>
some violin virtuoso had<lb/>
aristocratic, athletic<lb/>
anng and a dynamic<lb/>
stage presence. His art-<lb/>
-tr was nothing less<lb/>
sublime.<lb/>
lor divided the<lb/>
: halt of the program<lb/>
the pre-Clas-<lb/>
1! composer, Guisep-<lb/>
Tartini, and the<lb/>
Ru-?ian reactionary.<lb/>
Serge Prokofieff.<lb/>
Tartini's Sonata in G<lb/>
minor (Devil Trill) was<lb/>
a cheerful, sensitive<lb/>
piece, with melodies<lb/>
imbued with a lyrical<lb/>
quality which resembles<lb/>
that of vocal arias.<lb/>
Fodor's cadenza in the<lb/>
allegro assai has a tour<lb/>
de force of sparkling<lb/>
virtuosity.<lb/>
Fodor handled Prok-<lb/>
ofieffs Sonata No. 2 in<lb/>
D Major, a complex,<lb/>
difficult to interpret<lb/>
sonata, with supreme<lb/>
modern musicianship.<lb/>
The Presto of this work<lb/>
gave the audience a<lb/>
glimpse of the violinists<lb/>
ability to play pizzicato,<lb/>
whereas the Andante<lb/>
was otherworldly and<lb/>
almost eerie.<lb/>
The second part of<lb/>
the program was com-<lb/>
promised of seven short<lb/>
work- that would each<lb/>
make excellent encore<lb/>
pieces. Fodor began<lb/>
with the lovely, gypsv-<lb/>
like Tzigane by Maurice<lb/>
Ravel. Then he played<lb/>
Tchaikowsky's Serenade<lb/>
Malancolique which po-<lb/>
ssesses one of the com-<lb/>
poser's characteristically<lb/>
beautiful themes.<lb/>
Kreisler<lb/>
Fodor exhibited the<lb/>
dexterity of his touch<lb/>
on Fritz Kreisler<lb/>
Tambourin Chinois. The<lb/>
piece began with daz-<lb/>
zelingly fast arpeggio-<lb/>
and then slowed to a<lb/>
waltze of exceeding<lb/>
technical demands.<lb/>
The highlight of the<lb/>
evening was when Fo-<lb/>
dor played three Ca<lb/>
prices b the violin<lb/>
 irtuoso and composer<lb/>
nonpareil, Nicolo I'ag-<lb/>
anini. The aprices<lb/>
,s. Ik 9 ami 24 are<lb/>
surel) -erne f the" mos<lb/>
difficult and most strik-<lb/>
ingly effectiv composi-<lb/>
tions written for the vi-<lb/>
olin. Fodor played them<lb/>
with insuperable ability<lb/>
and with unquestionable<lb/>
musical sense.<lb/>
H W ieniawski's<lb/>
Caprii se is a<lb/>
 ery 1 ri al wot k that<lb/>
gave Fodor opportunit)<lb/>
to displav the poetic<lb/>
The theme is anguished<lb/>
and lovely which Fodor<lb/>
rendered with an im-<lb/>
peccable sense of what<lb/>
makes music music.<lb/>
Pag<lb/>
qualities<lb/>
an in i<lb/>
The final piece on<lb/>
the program was La<lb/>
hette The Bell by<lb/>
Paganini. Three times<lb/>
during the piece the<lb/>
violin is made to sound<lb/>
like a bell, "ringing"<lb/>
three notes, immediately<lb/>
after which the aceom-<lb/>
pnisl rang a real bell<lb/>
three times. Again, we<lb/>
see Paganini, and Fo-<lb/>
dor, stretching the ex-<lb/>
pressive qualities of the<lb/>
violin to unexceeded<lb/>
limits.<lb/>
The virtuoso re-<lb/>
turned from the curtains<lb/>
to the applause of an<lb/>
audience that was on its<lb/>
feet. The encore was<lb/>
Melodie by Gluck, a<lb/>
slow, lyical piece that<lb/>
was a pleasant con-<lb/>
tretemps to the impres-<lb/>
sive Paganini that pro-<lb/>
ceded it.<lb/>
The Artists Series<lb/>
Committee of the Stu-<lb/>
dent Union deserves re-<lb/>
cognition for scheduling<lb/>
such musicians as Eu-<lb/>
gene Fodor and guitar-<lb/>
ist Christopher Park-<lb/>
ening. Parkening will<lb/>
appear here February<lb/>
20th and can play the<lb/>
guitar, like, well, Fodor<lb/>
the violin.<lb/>
Eugene Fodor<lb/>
Student Union announces 1979 Black Arts Festival<lb/>
The ECU Student Union has announced plans for<lb/>
the 1979 Black Arts Festival. The festival, which<lb/>
will begin on Feb. 11 and conclude on Feb. 17, will<lb/>
feature a varied series of activities. Plans for the<lb/>
tival are being coordinated by the Student Union<lb/>
Minority Arts Committee with support and<lb/>
assistance from other committees of the Student<lb/>
I mon.<lb/>
On Sun Feb. 11 a gospel group concert has<lb/>
been planned for the Hendrix Theatre. Gospel music<lb/>
is an integral part of the Black Experience. This<lb/>
concert will feature selections ranging from tradition<lb/>
Negro Spirituals to the contemporary sound of<lb/>
gospel music today. The program begins at 5 p.m.<lb/>
and there will be no admission charge.<lb/>
Walter Atkins, founder of Poetry Pusher<lb/>
Productions, will appear in the Ledonia S. Wright<lb/>
Afro-American Cultural Center on Mon Feb. 12 at<lb/>
8 p.m. to present a reading of his poetry. Aikens, a<lb/>
Greensboro native, attended A&amp;T State University.<lb/>
He has appeared on several local television -hows<lb/>
and has read his poetry at numerous ? s. The<lb/>
poetry reading is free; however, si will be<lb/>
limited to 75.<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre will be the site of a Black<lb/>
Experience Film Festival. The film festival, which<lb/>
will begin at 7 p.m. on Tues Feb. 13 will feature<lb/>
two films, "Imitation of Life" starring Juanita<lb/>
Moore, Susan Kohnoer, Lana Turner, and Sandra<lb/>
Dee and "Blue Collar" starring Richar Pryor and<lb/>
HArvey Koetal. Admission is by ID and Activity<lb/>
Cards for ECU students and MSC Membership Card<lb/>
for ECU faculty and staff members.<lb/>
Ramona Austin will present a dramatic<lb/>
presentation on Wed Feb. 14 at 8 p.m. For the<lb/>
duration of her presentation Ramona is the Black<lb/>
Experience. The works of Richard Wright, Imamu<lb/>
Baraka, Nikki Giovanni, Sonia Sanchez and others<lb/>
are infused into her presentation which she calls<lb/>
"New Seed Admission for ECU students will be<lb/>
by ID and Activity Cards while admission for ECU<lb/>
faculty and staff members -will be by MSC<lb/>
Membership Card. Public tickets are priced at<lb/>
SI.50.<lb/>
On Thurs Feb. 15, Ed Bradley will present a<lb/>
lecture in the Hendrix Theatre. Bradley is the first<lb/>
black to host a network news program, the CBS<lb/>
Sunday Night News. With assignments ranging from<lb/>
the Vietnam War to his present position as White<lb/>
House correspondent, he is uniquely suited to<lb/>
present perceptions and perspectives different from<lb/>
the "run of the mill" correspondent. Admission to<lb/>
the lecture will be by ID and Activitv Cards for<lb/>
ECU students and MSC Membership Card for ECU<lb/>
faculty and staff. Public Tickets are priced at $3.<lb/>
A "Disco Jam" has been scheduled for Fn<lb/>
Feb. 16. It will feature the Leroy Dawson Mobile<lb/>
Disco. The disco gets underway at 8 p.m. and will<lb/>
be held in the Student Center Multi-Purpose Room.<lb/>
Admission will be $1.<lb/>
The Black Arts Festival will conclude with the<lb/>
showing of the film "Conrack Based on the Pat<lb/>
Conroy's factual book The Water Is Wide, the film<lb/>
stars Jon Voight and Paul Winfield. Showtime is 7<lb/>
and 9 p.m. The film will also be shown Sat. night<lb/>
at 7 and 9 p.m. Admission is by ID and Activitv<lb/>
Cards or MSC Membership Card.<lb/>
THE NORTH CARO-<lb/>
LINA premiere of<lb/>
"Emily a startling<lb/>
new play for mature<lb/>
audiences, is set for<lb/>
Feb. 7 in the Studio<lb/>
Theatre at the East<lb/>
Carolina Playhouse.<lb/>
Written by Thomas Pat-<lb/>
terson, Professor Emeri-<lb/>
tus of Playwriting al the<lb/>
University of North Car-<lb/>
olina at Chapel Hill, the<lb/>
play delves into the life<lb/>
of Emily Dickenson to<lb/>
examine how secret per-<lb/>
sonal agonies of unful-<lb/>
fdled desire and love<lb/>
stimulated her creative<lb/>
spirit and contributed to<lb/>
her development as a<lb/>
poet.<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057175_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 F0UNTAINHEAD1 February 1979<lb/>
Sherrod directs Telerama<lb/>
B SUSAN CLIFFORD<lb/>
Staff Uriter<lb/>
For the second con-<lb/>
secutive ear, WXH-TV<lb/>
12 ol inston-Salem<lb/>
and Ilu' Forsyth County<lb/>
Chapter ol tin1 March<lb/>
(' Dimes requested<lb/>
EG student, Charlie<lb/>
Sherrod to direcl the<lb/>
lloor and stage pro-<lb/>
ductions for last week-<lb/>
end's 1979 March of<lb/>
Dimes Icleraina.<lb/>
Charlie, a junior<lb/>
political science major,<lb/>
worked with the crew of<lb/>
W1I-TY 12 and the<lb/>
national talent coordin-<lb/>
production events<lb/>
ivere tele ised live<lb/>
for 18 hours in the<lb/>
Winston-Salem and<lb/>
Greater Greensboro<lb/>
viewing areas. WX11-TV<lb/>
12 requested Charlie to<lb/>
return for work this<lb/>
year's Telerama because<lb/>
of his success with last<lb/>
year's program.<lb/>
A telerama presents<lb/>
a unique and difficult<lb/>
situation for a floor dir-<lb/>
ector. For 18 hours<lb/>
straight he has to co-<lb/>
ordinate with the talent<lb/>
exactly what will be<lb/>
lone and who will do<lb/>
it. The show is non-stop<lb/>
and the entertainment<lb/>
or interviews are con-<lb/>
tinuous. Also the floor<lb/>
director must insure<lb/>
Arts Forum<lb/>
presents lectures<lb/>
The Visual Arts<lb/>
f irum, an art student<lb/>
gi Fast Carolina<lb/>
1 ni ersitv. will present<lb/>
series ol lecturers<lb/>
king on the effects<lb/>
societj and<lb/>
the individual beginning<lb/>
F ebruary.<lb/>
1 he -eric- of lec-<lb/>
to be presented<lb/>
the Leo V. Jenkins<lb/>
rts Center aud-<lb/>
: . will begin on<lb/>
with Richard<lb/>
n gallerv direc-<lb/>
festival<lb/>
itor in Fdin-<lb/>
speak-<lb/>
artist as an<lb/>
- ond lecture<lb/>
). when<lb/>
stei Fuller ol<lb/>
will<lb/>
symposium.<lb/>
- - n to t h e<lb/>
e will be S3<lb/>
r. All the<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY STORE<lb/>
1501 S Evans<lb/>
B-15 bomber, field,<lb/>
sck, flight, snorkel jackets<lb/>
Back Packs<lb/>
other lectures are free<lb/>
of charge and all lec-<lb/>
tures begin at 7:30.<lb/>
On March 13, Jan<lb/>
van der Wfarck, director<lb/>
of the Dartmouth Col-<lb/>
lege Museum and Cal-<lb/>
ler) will talk about art<lb/>
as an intellectual pur-<lb/>
suit, especially dealing<lb/>
with art in the seventies<lb/>
and eighties. Van der<lb/>
Marck is noted for his<lb/>
writings about Christo.<lb/>
A native North Car-<lb/>
olinian. Kenneth Pol-<lb/>
and, co-founder of the<lb/>
X ashington Color<lb/>
School is the fourth<lb/>
speaker. He is known<lb/>
tor his target paintings,<lb/>
banded color patterns<lb/>
and shaped canvasses.<lb/>
The lectures arc<lb/>
being tun.led by the<lb/>
East Carolina Student<lb/>
Government Association<lb/>
and with special funding<lb/>
from Chancellor Thomas<lb/>
Brewer.<lb/>
SAAD S SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
113 GRANDE AVE.<lb/>
at<lb/>
COLLEGE VIEW<lb/>
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SHARON MITCHELL<lb/>
?"?" JOHN LESLIE ? CLEA CARSON<lb/>
GIL PERKINS<lb/>
Wr.Men by ANNE CARSON<lb/>
IN COLOR x ADULTS ONLY I<lb/>
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Budweiser, Schirtz. Miller. Stroh s $7.88<lb/>
Budweiser ScWfe Miller. Strctf s Kegs $39.00<lb/>
i 50 Lbs. Ice $2.75.<lb/>
OPCN 24 HAS.<lb/>
BEFORE YOU<lb/>
GRADUATE<lb/>
LEARN<lb/>
WHERETO<lb/>
FIND THE<lb/>
BEST JOBS<lb/>
and what you might<lb/>
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First of a five-pan series i<lb/>
FEBRUARY REDBOOK<lb/>
uxmanna:<lb/>
rmAuvtt<lb/>
uiftsrcxuciHs<lb/>
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MWOCWIT<lb/>
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WHI MAM TOU<lb/>
OHOWBTf<lb/>
AT ALL NEWSSTANDS NOW!<lb/>
that the lighting and<lb/>
audio are in good order<lb/>
for television. For 18<lb/>
grueling hours he is the<lb/>
person that insures the<lb/>
producer and the dir-<lb/>
ector have a telerama to<lb/>
present to the home<lb/>
audience.<lb/>
The talent for ? the<lb/>
tlerama include Wesley<lb/>
Eure of NBC's Days of<lb/>
Our Lues, Lee Kirk, a<lb/>
Los Angeles based<lb/>
singer and actress, and<lb/>
Pete Saver an enter-<lb/>
tainer from England.<lb/>
These three headliners<lb/>
plus a cast of regional<lb/>
and local talent pro-<lb/>
vided the entertainment<lb/>
in an effort to raise<lb/>
money for children with<lb/>
birth defects.<lb/>
When the Telerama<lb/>
concluded Sunday at<lb/>
6:30 p.m. the total<lb/>
hoard showed $110,000<lb/>
and calls were still<lb/>
being received. That<lb/>
ligure will grow even<lb/>
higher once other<lb/>
March of Dimes events<lb/>
report their totals.<lb/>
Charlie is a full-time<lb/>
student at ECU but<lb/>
does some TV and film<lb/>
work along the way. He<lb/>
is a past recepient of<lb/>
the Thomas Jefferson<lb/>
journalism award given<lb/>
by the producers of<lb/>
CBS television's 60<lb/>
Minutes, and in 1978<lb/>
won a Goldren Screen<lb/>
award for a film he<lb/>
produced and directed<lb/>
entitled "Laurie the<lb/>
story of a young world-<lb/>
class female marathon<lb/>
runner.<lb/>
He also finds time<lb/>
to get involved with<lb/>
school activities. For<lb/>
two years he has served<lb/>
on the Student Union's<lb/>
film committee and this<lb/>
year joined the SGA as<lb/>
an elected day legi-<lb/>
slator.<lb/>
STUDENT CHARLIE SHERROD ?? Lives<lb/>
Susan Hayes of NBC's "Days of Our<lb/>
lVfrMii&amp; 5<lb/>
mm m? s<lb/>
Had a piece Lately?<lb/>
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directly across from the Beef Barn, 50kegs of beer,<lb/>
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FRIDAYS<lb/>
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Sunday-Couples Night: 2 delicious<lb/>
seafood platters of Shrimp, Oysters, Fish<lb/>
Cole Slaw, French Fries and our Famous Hush<lb/>
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Only $7.99 for 2<lb/>
Monday-Shrlmp-A-Roo: a delicious<lb/>
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AH For Only $2.99<lb/>
Tuesday-Fish FryiAii the Fried Fish<lb/>
(Trout or Perch) you can eat with French Fries,<lb/>
Slaw, and Hush Puppies. No takeout<lb/>
Only $2.25<lb/>
Wednesday-Fried Oystersrooiden<lb/>
Brown Fried Oysters with French Fries, Cole<lb/>
Slaw and Hush Puppies.<lb/>
Only $2.99<lb/>
Thursday-Family Night: Great<lb/>
Specials on Shrimp, Oysters Trout Or Perch,<lb/>
No Takeout<lb/>
Shrimp$4.25<lb/>
Trout Or Perch $2.25<lb/>
Oysters$4.25<lb/>
Flounder$3.95<lb/>
"All You Can Eat"<lb/>
Hours: Open 4:30 P.M. To 9 P.M.<lb/>
Sunday-Thursday<lb/>
4:30 P.M10 P.M.<lb/>
Friday and Saturday<lb/>
fill<lb/>
fact-<lb/>
calling this a "brush"<lb/>
'm<lb/>
is like calling this a "radio"<lb/>
T?chinai<lb/>
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Located On Evans Street<lb/>
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beside Tarheel Toyota, on 107 Trade St<lb/>
phone 756-2291<lb/>
 ?. ? - ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057175_0007"/><lb/>
w<lb/>
?w<lb/>
1 February 1979 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
Sfflemovedback lo 7:30<lb/>
Pirate women face eighth-ranked Wolf pack<lb/>
 SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
alreadf madele S?Uth Caroli- -d Detroit have<lb/>
;? "Pi?earanceS in Minges Coliseum this<lb/>
, . tI?tic Coast Conference member<lb/>
hfduled ?n late February.<lb/>
"l" perhaps the h???i t,<lb/>
I m jes show is vet to come.<lb/>
' ranked North Carolina State -women's<lb/>
ges this vear showcase of talent in<lb/>
 Pirate's 106-74 loss to State earlier<lb/>
N( h(l has destroyed Longwood and<lb/>
5 7l"in' ,n ,ts "? two games and is now<lb/>
C State game is always very important to<lb/>
Pirate coach Cathy Andruzzi a. a press<lb/>
fuesdaj afternoon. "When we played<lb/>
" ? ?he season, it was only our second<lb/>
: ' honeath though, we played as<lb/>
 tha? time. We got into foul<lb/>
. i <lb/>
omething we can't 'afford to d<lb/>
well as<lb/>
trouble<lb/>
o agaic-t<lb/>
ECU wrestlers<lb/>
set for quad<lb/>
B SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
uch needed two week break behind<lb/>
wrestling It-am swings back into<lb/>
? nd when the Bucs trael to<lb/>
for a quad meet against William<lb/>
Dominion and Virginia Tech.<lb/>
 disappointing 0-4 dual record this<lb/>
ach Bill Hill believes the quad is<lb/>
his team for more than just one<lb/>
? ? -t victories would certainly bolster<lb/>
lene which hasn't tome close to<lb/>
tal match this season. And secondly,<lb/>
lings tor the upcoming Eastern<lb/>
be determined. The regionals serve<lb/>
 round tor the NCAA Champion-<lb/>
h will be held m Ames, Iowa in earl<lb/>
Ma<lb/>
I rtant match for the entire team<lb/>
Hil M lav before practice. "We could sure<lb/>
wins, but the regional seeding- are<lb/>
rv important to us. I'm sure the other team-<lb/>
meeting with us. are also very well<lb/>
important those seedings are.<lb/>
Th.<lb/>
wly record this season has<lb/>
trgeh to the rash of injuries which<lb/>
-quad. The Bucs have been forced to<lb/>
man) a- seven freshmen in dual<lb/>
H - Hill said he expect- most of his<lb/>
: ai k by Saturday. Vic Northrup,<lb/>
- been sidelined since November with a knee<lb/>
injurv. will be ready while 158 pounder, Steve<lb/>
- also expected to be back in the lineup.<lb/>
missed the Pirate last two dual-<lb/>
Northrup, a member ol last season's NCAA<lb/>
wrestled since the Monarch tournament<lb/>
irl November.<lb/>
We're -til! not at lull strength, but we're still<lb/>
better off than we have been during the lat<lb/>
matches Hill said. " ic has been<lb/>
- hard in practice, although I don't know<lb/>
he will be aide to wrestle in all three<lb/>
Saturday. Steve Goode still has some<lb/>
swelling in his leg. but I think he'll be ready<lb/>
William and Mary, Virginia Tech and Old<lb/>
finished one-two-three in the Virginia<lb/>
;iate Championships last weekend. Old<lb/>
1-3 overall, will face ECU at 1:30 and<lb/>
Will and Mary, 5-1 this season, will meet the<lb/>
Virginia Tech, 11-2, will square off<lb/>
? Bucs at 1:30.<lb/>
'All three of these teams did well in the<lb/>
Ias1 vear. and Virginia Tech has had a<lb/>
ssful season so tar Hill noted. "Most of<lb/>
individual performers in the regional- come<lb/>
? team too. There will be a lot of<lb/>
sting matchup<lb/>
homore Buddy Lee, a 134-pounder is Old<lb/>
Dominion's top wrestler with a 29-0-1 record. Lee<lb/>
firsl in the Virginia Intercollegiate's last<lb/>
weekend and i- currentl) ranked sixth in the nation<lb/>
Amateur W restling News. Junior Tim Davidson<lb/>
at 150 has a 20-8 record while Sophomore Eric<lb/>
Webb at 1 2 boasts a 20-12 mark.<lb/>
Indian- are led by 167-pounder Colin Steele<lb/>
who ha- a 12-1 slate while Jim Tagano at 118 is<lb/>
and Tom Braun at 134 has logged an<lb/>
impressive 21-3 mark.<lb/>
Virginia Tech's Mark Miller, a 190-pounder, has<lb/>
a 12-0 dual record and is 15-1 overall while Chuck<lb/>
Broderick at 158, has a 11-0 dual mark and is 16-2<lb/>
overall this season. North Carolina transfer Chris<lb/>
Conkwright is 14-2-1 this season, but will probably<lb/>
mi the quad meet because of a broken toe.<lb/>
ECU's top individual performers are Frank<lb/>
Schaede at 150, Goode at 158, Northrup at 167 and<lb/>
Butch Revils at 177.<lb/>
Jay Dever is still suffering from a back injury<lb/>
and will miss the quad meet while 142-pounder Tom<lb/>
Robinson will also miss the match because of a leg<lb/>
injurv.<lb/>
Following the quad meet, the Pirates will face<lb/>
Old Dominion again in a dual match in Norfolk, Va.<lb/>
Feb 7 and will conclude their season Feb. 17<lb/>
against North Carolina in Chapel Hill.<lb/>
The Eastern Regionals will be held Feb. 23-24.<lb/>
Lydia Rountree Cathy Andruzzi<lb/>
However, we've really matured lately and we've<lb/>
played very well during our last two games. We're<lb/>
playing aggressive!) on defense ' and more<lb/>
importantl) we're playing team ball. And a team<lb/>
efforl is what it will take to beat State<lb/>
Alter the Pirates dr?pped a tough 92-90 decision<lb/>
to East Tennessee State in double overtime, the<lb/>
Bucs have roared back to destroy Longwood College<lb/>
82-12 and UNC-Greensboro 109-43.<lb/>
Gail Kerbaugh gunned in 25 points, Rosie<lb/>
rhompson had 23 and Lydia Rountree added 18 in<lb/>
the Hue- victory over UNC-Greensboro Mondav<lb/>
night. Thompson continues to lead the Pirates as<lb/>
well as the NCAIAW Conference in scoring with an<lb/>
impressive 24.5 average.<lb/>
Kerbaugh is scoring at a 14.3 clip while Rountree<lb/>
is averaging 13.2 points a game followed by center<lb/>
Marsha Girven who has a 11.4 average. Thompson<lb/>
is also the Pirate's top rebounder with 12.7 a game.<lb/>
However, the Pirates will face an NC State team<lb/>
loaded with talent and one that has also improved<lb/>
drastically since the beginning of the season.<lb/>
All America center Genia Beasley heads the<lb/>
Wolfpack's balanced scoring with a 19.7 average per<lb/>
game followed by Ginger Rouse (14.7), Trudi Lacey<lb/>
(13.6), Ronnie Laughlin (13.2) and June Doby (10.0).<lb/>
"Everyone talks about Genia Beasley and she's<lb/>
certainly an outstanding player, but State has<lb/>
unbelievable depth said Andruzzi. "Once anyone<lb/>
gets tired, they can go right to their bench and find<lb/>
a very capable replacement. They've got excellent<lb/>
inside and outside shooting which presents us with<lb/>
a lot of problems<lb/>
State, now 15-4 overall and 6-0 in the NCAIAW<lb/>
conference has won its last four games with its la-t<lb/>
loss coming against Atlantic Coast Conference rival<lb/>
Clemson 86-73.<lb/>
VXr " have l0 be very, verj fundamental<lb/>
against them arid avoid turnovers noted Andruzzi<lb/>
Xi ur?' "ut  defend all five ol their plavers<lb/>
in the game. Thev will run on us.<lb/>
We'll try to put a lot ol pressure on Christv<lb/>
Earnhardt and force<lb/>
some turnover- which vs hope<lb/>
will take them out of their offensive pattern. Hut<lb/>
will certainly be a tough matchup the whole way<lb/>
round.<lb/>
NOTESThe ECU-STATE contest was origin<lb/>
scheduled lor 7 p.m. but ha- been moved ha<lb/>
?:30State has gone over the eentun mark in<lb/>
seven games this season and has come'within 100<lb/>
points in tour other contestsEC1 has scored<lb/>
100 point- m three games tin- year. .Lydia R<lb/>
'J KU 1' assist maker with 53 while<lb/>
Kerbaugh has 36. .Marsha Girven is the team top<lb/>
-hot blocker with 22 to her credil while R<lb/>
Lhompsonis the team leader in -teal- with 27<lb/>
Thompson only need- -even points against C<lb/>
State to become the second player in ECI history<lb/>
to ore more than 1500 points in a career<lb/>
Beasley has a total of 11 bio ked shots this<lb/>
along with 19 stealsChrist) Earnhardt is<lb/>
Pack - leader in assists with 73<lb/>
Thompson seeks record<lb/>
Record setting Rosie Thompson<lb/>
Photo by Chap Curler<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
With five games still remaining on the 1979<lb/>
schedule, ECU junior Rosie Thompson needs only<lb/>
seven points to become only the second Lady Pirate<lb/>
to score 1,500 points in her career.<lb/>
Thompson managed only 23 points in ECU's<lb/>
109-43 stomping of UNC-Greensboro Mon but she<lb/>
only played 75 percent of the game.<lb/>
Thompson began the season with 1,051 points,<lb/>
but her solid 24.5 average has enabled her score<lb/>
442 through 18 games.<lb/>
Thompson has been in double figures in each of<lb/>
the Lady Pirates 18 contests, with her high being<lb/>
35 against UNC-Wilmington.<lb/>
She presently holds a career average of 21.3,<lb/>
which is also tops by any Lady Pirate eager.<lb/>
Thompson currently holds nine team records;<lb/>
most points (single game and season), most free<lb/>
throws and free throws attempted (single game,<lb/>
season and career), and most field goals (season.)<lb/>
She is presently second on the career scoring<lb/>
table behind Debbie Freeman with 1,570.<lb/>
In the current AIAW Region II standings, she<lb/>
ranks second in scoring and forth in rebounding.<lb/>
She lead the NCAIAW in both of those categories,<lb/>
as well as free throw accuracy with 75.8 percent.<lb/>
"When people think of ECU women's basketball,<lb/>
they think of Rosie Thompson praises coach Cathv<lb/>
Andruzzi. "Rosie has put East Carolina on the<lb/>
women's basketball map<lb/>
Although Thompson is only -even shy ol the<lb/>
1.500 plateau, -he will have to work hard, a- the<lb/>
opposition Friday will be provided by N.C State,<lb/>
currently ranked sixth in the national poll.<lb/>
NCSU defeated the Pirate- in Raleigh 106-74,<lb/>
but Thompson has confidence m her teammat -<lb/>
There are four other girl- out there capable<lb/>
scoring she emphasized.<lb/>
Thompson joined the -quad <lb/>
participation in volleyball, but she refuses I<lb/>
that as an excuse for her meager 12 point I<lb/>
against State.<lb/>
I wasn't taking outside shots then she<lb/>
explains. "With a lot of help from the coaches, I've<lb/>
-tarted to shoot outside more. Mv mam (<lb/>
when I go up to the basket is squaring off<lb/>
Andruzzi observes that. "She ha- a whole lot of<lb/>
pressure on her. She withstands a lot of thai<lb/>
pressure through her outside interests<lb/>
"Dirk Jones (WiTN-TV) had Rosie and I<lb/>
March ol Dime- Telethon last weekend and Rosi<lb/>
presented the poster child with a Lad Pirate<lb/>
Basketball tee-shirt.<lb/>
Some ol the kids asked her tor her aut<lb/>
and she jusi blushed adds Andruzzi.<lb/>
Andruzzi considers Thompson a "team-oriented"<lb/>
player. "She a very unselfish bail player;<lb/>
sometimes we have to tell her to shoot<lb/>
"The only time she get- me mad is when -he<lb/>
fouls she added jokingly .<lb/>
W ith another vear o eligibility remaining. Rosie<lb/>
Thompson has the potential to establish a point<lb/>
total which will stand untouched long after si ?<lb/>
leave- Ladv Pirate basketball.<lb/>
ECU wins 61-59 in 2 OT<lb/>
Mack's bucket lifts Bucs past W&amp;M<lb/>
By SAM ROCERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
For the second straight game, ECU was forced<lb/>
to put in more than its share of overtime, yet the<lb/>
Hue- needed ever) second to subdue a determined<lb/>
William and Mary team 61-59 Tuesday night in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Pirate guard Oliver Mack drove down the middle<lb/>
tor the winning basket with just four seconds<lb/>
remaining in the second overtime period which gave<lb/>
the improving Bucs their third consecutive victory.<lb/>
William and Mary had a chance to send the<lb/>
game into a third overtime, but Billy Harrington's<lb/>
25 footer bounced off the rim at the final buzzer.<lb/>
I'm sure glad we only have to play them twice<lb/>
a year said a relieved Larry Gillman after the<lb/>
game. It just seems like every game we play<lb/>
against them is just murder. We played well in the<lb/>
first half, but really let it get away in the second<lb/>
half.<lb/>
"We sure didn't play very well tonight, but<lb/>
anytime you don't play well and still win you have<lb/>
to be happy. One thing's for sure, we've got a lot<lb/>
of work to do before Saturday when we play Old<lb/>
Dominion<lb/>
After building a seemingly insurmountable 35-24<lb/>
halftime advantage, the Pirates quickly watched<lb/>
William and Mary tie the score at 38-38 on Kenny<lb/>
Bowen's bucket with 14:43 remaining in the second<lb/>
half.<lb/>
But ECU quickly regained the lead 40-38 on<lb/>
Mack's jumper and extended the margin to as many<lb/>
as five points in the final ten minutes of play.<lb/>
However, William and Mary continued to gradually<lb/>
chip away at the Bucs lead with Bowen and forward<lb/>
Scott Whitley working inside for easy buckets.<lb/>
With just over six minutes remaining and ECU<lb/>
ahead 53-52 Gillman sent the Pirates into their<lb/>
delay game. And it failed miserably.<lb/>
Herb Krusen hit one free throw with 3:47 which<lb/>
was the only point the Pirates managed during their<lb/>
stalling tactics. Meanwhile, Bowen worked his way<lb/>
inside again for a bucket with 24 seconds remaining<lb/>
to tie the score at 54-54.<lb/>
And with five seconds left, Mack missed a 15<lb/>
footer which sent the game into the first overtime.<lb/>
Al Tyson scored the Bucs first basket in overtime<lb/>
on a follow shot and after the officials missed an<lb/>
obvious goal tending call under the William and<lb/>
Mary basket, ECU had the lead and control with<lb/>
2:41 remaining. But then George Maynor turned the<lb/>
ball over and Whitley canned a 15 footer to tie the<lb/>
score with 1:31 left.<lb/>
The Bucs gave the ball back again when Tyson<lb/>
fumbled the ball out of bounds, but Harrington's 25<lb/>
footer at the horn was no good.<lb/>
Bowen put the Indians ahead early in the second<lb/>
overtime 57-56 on a free thrown, but a free thrown<lb/>
by Greg Cornelius and a 15 footer by Krusen gave<lb/>
the Bucs a 59-57 advantage.<lb/>
Bowen canned two more free throws with 1:58<lb/>
remaining to tie the score, which set the stage for<lb/>
Mack's winning bucket. "Herb, George or me had<lb/>
the opportunity to make the move said Mack who<lb/>
scored 13 points. "I just happened to get the<lb/>
opening at the basket and the shot went in. I really<lb/>
thought the official was going to call charging, but<lb/>
he didn't<lb/>
The loss was just another one of many<lb/>
frustrating setbacks this season for William and<lb/>
Mary's young Bruce Parkhill. "It was very tough<lb/>
for our kids to lose one like this, but they showed<lb/>
a lot of character out there. It's games like this<lb/>
that can really get you down, but our kids just keep<lb/>
hanging in there.<lb/>
"Our plan in the second half was to get the ball<lb/>
into Kenny Bowen and it really worked well. He's<lb/>
come a long way this season and he certainly<lb/>
doesn't look like a freshman anymore<lb/>
Bowen, a freshman from Richmond, Va was the<lb/>
Indians' top scorer with 19 points while Whitley<lb/>
added 16. Krusen led the Bucs with 19 while<lb/>
Cornelius was the game's top rebounder with 12.<lb/>
"Everything just came too easy in the first half<lb/>
for us admitted Gillman. "In the second half I<lb/>
think everybody was standing around waiting for<lb/>
someone to take control and no one did.<lb/>
"We're happy to win, but we certainly weren't<lb/>
the same team out on the floor as we were during<lb/>
the last few games.<lb/>
Herb Krusen manuevers for shot<lb/>
Photo by Chap Gurley<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057175_0008"/><lb/>
 ?<lb/>
 n <lb/>
 <lb/>
 ? <lb/>
1 ? I<lb/>
Pag. 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 1 F?bru.rv 187<lb/>
Wolfpack swimmers top ECU<lb/>
By DAVID MAREADY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Pirate swimming<lb/>
teams traveled to Ral-<lb/>
eigh Tuesday night and<lb/>
were soundly defeated<lb/>
by superior N.C. State<lb/>
teams in a dual swim<lb/>
meet action. The men<lb/>
lost 66-47 while the<lb/>
women were beaten<lb/>
78-29.<lb/>
"I had hoped for a<lb/>
closer meet commen-<lb/>
ted Pirate coach Ray<lb/>
Scharf, "but we lacked<lb/>
the intensity needed to<lb/>
beat a team as good as<lb/>
State. They also have a<lb/>
very strong womens<lb/>
team. In fact, they gave<lb/>
our women a lot of<lb/>
points toward the end<lb/>
of the meet.<lb/>
John Tudor was the<lb/>
ECU hooters<lb/>
place eighth<lb/>
only bright spot for the<lb/>
Pirates during the<lb/>
men's competition. Tu-<lb/>
dor placed first in the<lb/>
100 and 200 yd. free-<lb/>
style events and was on<lb/>
? the winning 400 yd.<lb/>
freestyle relay team.<lb/>
Bill Fehling was the<lb/>
only other Pirate indi-<lb/>
vidual event winner.<lb/>
Fehling took the top<lb/>
spot in the 50 yd. free-<lb/>
style.<lb/>
The best the Pirates<lb/>
could do in the diving<lb/>
competition was a se-<lb/>
cond place finish by<lb/>
Tom Bell in the three<lb/>
meter diving event. Bell<lb/>
also placed third in the<lb/>
one meter event.<lb/>
For the Lady Pir-<lb/>
ates, Julie Malcora<lb/>
broke the women's var-<lb/>
sity record in the 100<lb/>
yd. breastroke with a<lb/>
time of 1.12.98. Sharon<lb/>
Burns captured first<lb/>
place in the 200 yd<lb/>
freestyle; and, Cindy<lb/>
Sailer won the 50 yd<lb/>
butterfly.<lb/>
Tuesday's loss broke<lb/>
the men's three meet<lb/>
win streak as they fell<lb/>
to 3-3 on the season.<lb/>
The women's record<lb/>
also dropped to 3-2.<lb/>
The Pirates wrap up<lb/>
their dual meet season<lb/>
next Saturday, Feb. 3,<lb/>
in Greenville, when they<lb/>
face long time rival, the<lb/>
Duke Blue Devils.<lb/>
Starting time for the<lb/>
meet is 1 p.m. in<lb/>
Minges Natatorium.<lb/>
ECU-State 8wimming action<lb/>
B) SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
North Carolina State<lb/>
Iged North Carolina<lb/>
1-3 to capture the North<lb/>
Carolina Wesleyan In-<lb/>
door soccer tournament<lb/>
held last weekend in<lb/>
Rock Mount, N.C.<lb/>
ECl finished the<lb/>
two-da) event with a<lb/>
2-3 record and placed<lb/>
eighth. The Pirates<lb/>
dropped their first game<lb/>
10 to Atlantic Christian<lb/>
College and lost again<lb/>
m the second round 2-1<lb/>
to High Point College.<lb/>
However, the Bucs<lb/>
bounced back in their<lb/>
last two games, edging<lb/>
State 1-0 in overtime<lb/>
and defeating Guilford<lb/>
College 3-1. ECU also<lb/>
lost a consolation game<lb/>
t Wesleyan 1-0.<lb/>
"Indoor soccer was<lb/>
something new for us<lb/>
and we had never even<lb/>
played the game until<lb/>
we stepped out on the<lb/>
?urt against Atlantic<lb/>
Christian aid Pirate<lb/>
"r coach Brad<lb/>
Smith. "The skills in-<lb/>
volved in indoor soccer<lb/>
arc much more refined<lb/>
that the outside game,<lb/>
but our plavers picked<lb/>
up the game prettv<lb/>
quickly<lb/>
Freshman Shawn<lb/>
Berry scored the Bucs<lb/>
only goal in ECU's<lb/>
narrow victory over<lb/>
tournament champion,<lb/>
N.C. State. Berry along<lb/>
with Brad Winchell and<lb/>
sophomore Devid Rad-<lb/>
ford all scored goals in<lb/>
the Pirate's 3-1 victory<lb/>
over Guilford.<lb/>
Kris Soit, Stan Griff,<lb/>
and Eric Tucker were<lb/>
all credited with assists<lb/>
in the game. Berry was<lb/>
also named to the<lb/>
All-Tournament team.<lb/>
The victory over<lb/>
N.C. S tate was cer-<lb/>
tainly the highlight of<lb/>
the tournament for us<lb/>
said Smith. "We got<lb/>
outstanding performan-<lb/>
ces from a lot of our<lb/>
younger players. Kenny<lb/>
Lovette, our goalie,<lb/>
made a lot of crucial<lb/>
saves and had a fine<lb/>
tournament. Howard<lb/>
Bern us and San Griff<lb/>
also played well.<lb/>
Although Smith said<lb/>
the team will not per-<lb/>
ticipate in any more<lb/>
indoor tournaments this<lb/>
season, the Pirates have<lb/>
a scrimmage against the<lb/>
Goldsboro Club team<lb/>
this Saturday.<lb/>
. KORE-O-MAT<lb/>
WELCOMES ECU STUDENTS<lb/>
e. MthACK TO SCHOOL<lb/>
 Visit us for yonr laundry needs.<lb/>
? 36 washer change plaball<lb/>
? SO dryer machine color T.V.<lb/>
? ryctoaning pick-op station<lb/>
? attendant 8:oo a.m4:00 p.m. dally<lb/>
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MONDAY<lb/>
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$.20 OFF ON ANY MEAL<lb/>
Coupon offer effective Jan. 30<lb/>
Feb. 2,1979<lb/>
MrirrtJIS?8 CLASS PR0GRAM (PLC) 0FFERS A COMMISSION AS A 2ND<lb/>
rt?2?2uDX,J!Er!LS; WRm C0RPS AFTER GRADUATION FROM COLLEGE.<lb/>
HRFp? I R?rGRJcUS INCLUDING LAW STUDENTS ARE ELIGIBLE TO JOIN.<lb/>
HERE ARE A FEW OF THE PROGRAM FEATURES AVAILABLE TO MEN WHO CAN QUALIFY:<lb/>
1. No on campus requirements (Summer Training - Good Salary).<lb/>
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4. Challenging career with competitive salary and benefits after<lb/>
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5. Option to drop from program up to nraduation from college.<lb/>
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EeqS975 T? INTERVIEW ?0SE INTEREST" c? ? ? no resuhe<lb/>
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CALL CAPTAIN FLORENCE'S OFFICE COLLECT AT<lb/>
The Few.The Proud.The Marines.<lb/>
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WESTERN<lb/>
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No. 1 8?fc. SIRLOIN<lb/>
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Reservations available<lb/>
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Offer good Feb. 5-8<lb/>
HA<lb/>
Wright<lb/>
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Feb. 5<lb/>
6-9pm<lb/>
ALL ECU<lb/>
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ARE INVITED<lb/>
To ATTEND<lb/>
f<lb/>
t<lb/>
? ?? ?? v j <lb/>
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<pb facs="00057175_0009"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>