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<pb facs="00057178_0001"/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
North<lb/>
Vol. 55 No. ??<lb/>
13Febr<lb/>
uary 1979<lb/>
Afro-American Center dedicated Sunday<lb/>
Bj RICKI G LI ARM IS<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
I he fro-American<lb/>
Cultural Center at EGl<lb/>
vsa- to Jl dedicated<lb/>
Sun Feb. I  The<lb/>
it-ri nun dedicated<lb/>
the cei lei to the late<lb/>
Professor Ledonia Smith<lb/>
Vv right.<lb/>
Vv right, until her<lb/>
death in June. I976,<lb/>
was involved with coun-<lb/>
seling minorit) students<lb/>
on v ampus. During the<lb/>
dedi at i n ceremonies,<lb/>
an portrait of right<lb/>
was unveiled bv her<lb/>
son, Steven right. The<lb/>
portrait was accepted by<lb/>
ln Pate, Jr chairman<lb/>
o the ECl Board of<lb/>
Frustees.<lb/>
mcellor Thomas<lb/>
Brewer, Faye Elliott,<lb/>
chairperson ol the cen-<lb/>
ter's Vdvisorj Board.<lb/>
and Kt. Kenneth Ham-<lb/>
mond were also present<lb/>
at the dedication pro-<lb/>
im.<lb/>
The principal speaker<lb/>
program was<lb/>
Dr. ndrew Best, ECl<lb/>
trustee and Greenv ille<lb/>
phv sician.<lb/>
Best thanked former<lb/>
chancellor Leo Jenkins<lb/>
lor his help in the<lb/>
establishment of the<lb/>
renter and also thanked<lb/>
the Board of Trustees<lb/>
tor naming the center<lb/>
alter Wright.<lb/>
Best thanked the<lb/>
Ad-hoc committee for<lb/>
working to make the<lb/>
memorial scholarship a<lb/>
reality.<lb/>
Best told the<lb/>
audience that commend-<lb/>
able leadership by the<lb/>
administration at ECl<lb/>
was a major influence<lb/>
in the dedication ol the<lb/>
center. He said that the<lb/>
administration quietly<lb/>
hut skillfull) accom-<lb/>
plished its goal without<lb/>
incident and this work<lb/>
required courageous<lb/>
leadership ot tin' high-<lb/>
est order.<lb/>
Best focused his<lb/>
comments toward the<lb/>
HEW -North Carolina<lb/>
controversies and said<lb/>
that these problems<lb/>
underscore the impor-<lb/>
tance ol leadership<lb/>
necessary lor progress<lb/>
in difficult time<lb/>
The center for many<lb/>
years has been known<lb/>
as the "Y-Hut" and<lb/>
was used for various<lb/>
social and religious acti-<lb/>
vities. For the past two<lb/>
years, it was used by<lb/>
ECU's black students as<lb/>
a center for lectures,<lb/>
meetings, and perfor-<lb/>
mances.<lb/>
Best said that the<lb/>
center will act as an<lb/>
inspiration to the unin-<lb/>
spired and motivation to<lb/>
the listless and uncon-<lb/>
cerned. He said that<lb/>
the center is to function<lb/>
a- an integral part of<lb/>
campus machinery for<lb/>
the enrichment of aca-<lb/>
demic process.<lb/>
The dedication coin-<lb/>
cides with ECU's annual<lb/>
Black Arts Festival<lb/>
which is held Feb.<lb/>
II-17. So far, this is<lb/>
the first center of its<lb/>
kind and size.<lb/>
Best stated that he<lb/>
hopes the center will<lb/>
stand as a blueprint for<lb/>
other institutions.<lb/>
Wright was a pro-<lb/>
fessor in the School of<lb/>
Allied Health and Social<lb/>
Professions since 1974.<lb/>
Before coming to ECU,<lb/>
Wright taught at Bos-<lb/>
ton, Harvard Universi-<lb/>
ties and at Roxbury and<lb/>
Simmons Colleges.<lb/>
She was Chief of<lb/>
Governmental and Pri-<lb/>
vate Sector Relations<lb/>
from 1970 until 1973 for<lb/>
the U.S. Office of<lb/>
Economic Opportunity,<lb/>
New England Region.<lb/>
Wright served on a<lb/>
special committee<lb/>
appointed by Massa-<lb/>
chusetts Governor Pea-<lb/>
body to evaluate the<lb/>
effectiveness of the<lb/>
State's Commission<lb/>
Against Discrimination.<lb/>
Best described<lb/>
Wright as a prime<lb/>
mover in the establish-<lb/>
ment of the center.<lb/>
"Ledonia Wright, affec-<lb/>
tionately known as Le<lb/>
Wright was a part of<lb/>
the leadership responsi-<lb/>
ble for the birth of the<lb/>
center said Best.<lb/>
"Seldom in our his-<lb/>
tory has one individual<lb/>
given as much to as<lb/>
many as Wright <lb/>
said Best.<lb/>
4I like the job'<lb/>
Prewett enjoys his job<lb/>
By MIKE ROGERS<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Dr. Clinton R. Prewett. assistant to the<lb/>
icellor-s assignments, says that lie is<lb/>
enjoying his job.<lb/>
In describing his job, Prewett said, "Em<lb/>
assistant b chancellor lor special assignments.<lb/>
Sometime- they're not so special in that they<lb/>
involve collecting material.<lb/>
Prewett added, "In athletic I've been appointed<lb/>
chairman ol the athletic program. Also, I work in<lb/>
area- concerning relationships between the university<lb/>
and the NCAA (National Collegiate Athletic<lb/>
sso iation.)<lb/>
Prewett enjoys his job, but is impatient with the<lb/>
?vness with which changes are brought about.<lb/>
However, Prewett enjoys and respects the people he<lb/>
work- with.<lb/>
He explained that Chancellor Brewer works hard<lb/>
and is an excellent scholar. He's oriented toward<lb/>
improvement in all areas at ECU, academics,<lb/>
student life, athletics, and alumni affairs.<lb/>
as Athletic Director Bill Cain, University Attorney<lb/>
David Stevens, Mr. Cliffmore, vice-chancellor for<lb/>
business affairs, and Mr. Richard Blake, assistant to<lb/>
the chancellor. All these people work hard and are<lb/>
completely identified with ECU<lb/>
Prewett also commented on his plans for the<lb/>
future. "In the immediate future, we hope to clear<lb/>
up our backlog of problems so that we can proceed<lb/>
sensibly in our major responsibilities at ECU<lb/>
Prewett's past record shows that he used to<lb/>
teach science, was a principal of a junior high<lb/>
school, a superintendent of schools, a chemical<lb/>
engineer, and training foreman. He still teaches<lb/>
applied psychology at ECU.<lb/>
Prewett has also been active in various<lb/>
professional associations. He is an Educational<lb/>
Consultant for the American Psychological Associa-<lb/>
tion at Appalachian State University and Goldsboro<lb/>
Citv Schools. Prewett was also on the committee<lb/>
that selected Brewer as Chancellor at ECU.<lb/>
In closing, Prewett said, "I like the school. I<lb/>
like Dr. Brewer. In general, I like the whole staff<lb/>
and my job<lb/>
He added, "I don't want this interview to end<lb/>
without special notice being given to Kathy Jones<lb/>
for being a most efficient and loyal secretary. Kathy<lb/>
makes sure that visitors are always welcome in<lb/>
He added. "I also work closely with such people Spilman 102 and 104.<lb/>
SU applications being accepted<lb/>
By RICKI GLIARMIS<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
itions tor Student I nion committee<lb/>
for the 1979-80 school vear will be<lb/>
ppli<lb/>
positions<lb/>
accepted from Feb. 12 through Feb. 26 according to<lb/>
Charle- Sune, Student Union president-elect.<lb/>
CHARLES SUNE, STUDENT Union president-elect,<lb/>
announced that applications for committee members<lb/>
are being accepted. Photo by John H. Grogan<lb/>
Sune explained one of his responsibility as<lb/>
president-elect is to select committee chairpersons.<lb/>
The people he selects will then be approved by the<lb/>
Board of Directors.<lb/>
Once the committee chairpersons are selected<lb/>
and approved, they are responsible for selecting<lb/>
committee members. The committee members will<lb/>
be selected from the applications submitted.<lb/>
The committee members, in turn, will be<lb/>
approve by Sune.<lb/>
The Student Union consists of 11 committees.<lb/>
These include Art Exhibition Committee which<lb/>
deals with art exhibitions in Mendenhall, and Artist<lb/>
Series Committee which provides classical entertain-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
The Coffeehouse Committee presents local<lb/>
amateur acts in the coffeehouse room in<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
The films Committee schedules popular film<lb/>
series which are scheduled every Friday and<lb/>
Saturday nights and the special films which are<lb/>
shown on Wednesday nights.<lb/>
The Lecture Series Committee deals with<lb/>
speakers generally for educational enrichment.<lb/>
Major Attractions Committee present major<lb/>
concerts of popular interest. Minority Arts<lb/>
Committee programs functions geared for minorities<lb/>
at ECU. For example, in the past, this committee<lb/>
has sponsored Black and Jewish Arts Weeks<lb/>
Special Attraction Committee bridges the gap<lb/>
between Major Attractions and Coffeehouse. This<lb/>
committee presents such groups as Nantucket.<lb/>
Theatre Arts Committee presents theatre related<lb/>
acts. The Entertainer Committee is responsible for<lb/>
presenting the monthly guide to Student Union<lb/>
entertainment.<lb/>
Finally, the Travel Committe sponsors trips for<lb/>
students and faculty at reduced prices.<lb/>
"There are several broad areas of entertain-<lb/>
ment said Sune. "Now when people want to get<lb/>
involved in entertainment, they have many areas to<lb/>
choose from<lb/>
OFFICIALS UNVEIL THE portrait of the Late<lb/>
Ledonia S. W right at the dedication ceremonies<lb/>
Sunday for the Ledonia S. Wright Afro-American<lb/>
Cultural Center at ECU. . Wright was a<lb/>
professor of Community Health at ECU.<lb/>
Vandalism, shoplifting<lb/>
Participating in the ceremonies are. left to right.<lb/>
Chancellor Thomas Brewer: Dr. Andrew Best, a<lb/>
member of the ECU Board of Trustees: Steven<lb/>
Wright: and Troy W. Pate, chairman of the ECU<lb/>
Board of Trustees.<lb/>
Honor Council busy<lb/>
By CHRIS CACLE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Two vandalism cases which occurred in the<lb/>
men's residence hall and one shoplifting case which<lb/>
occurred at the Student Supply Store came before<lb/>
the Honor Council last week, according to Jim<lb/>
Mallory, dean of men.<lb/>
"When a violation of the code of conduct occurs<lb/>
in the residence hall, the case is usually heard by<lb/>
the House Council. In the two vandalism cases the<lb/>
violation was so excessive that it was referred to<lb/>
the Honor Council for dispostion stated Mallory.<lb/>
Reports of violations ol conduct are submitted to<lb/>
Dean Mallory and the Student Attorney General,<lb/>
Kieran Shanahan, from the campus police, faculty<lb/>
members and the Student Supply Store.<lb/>
According to Mallory, he meets with Shanahand<lb/>
and they look over reports that the office has<lb/>
received and decide whether or not the report is<lb/>
liegitimate.<lb/>
Mallory went on to explain that the student is<lb/>
allowed three days to obtain recommendations and<lb/>
information for the Honor Council meeting.<lb/>
Shanahan is the student's public defender. He<lb/>
presents the facts to the Honor Council and sees<lb/>
that the student gets a fair hearing.<lb/>
The student is then charged with a specific<lb/>
violation of the code of conduct and is called in for<lb/>
a preliminary hearing. 72 hours are allowed to the<lb/>
student before the Honor Council meets. The<lb/>
student is told the charge- at the meeting and is<lb/>
al-o given all preliminary information.<lb/>
The Honor Council hears any case that is a<lb/>
violation of the code of conduct. "The violations<lb/>
mav range from anything to lying, -tealing and<lb/>
cheating said Mallory.<lb/>
The Honor Council is made up of seven students<lb/>
and three alternates who listen to the evidence and<lb/>
decide if the student is innocent or guiltv. It the<lb/>
student is found innocent the case is dismissed. If<lb/>
the student is found guilty, the Honor Council<lb/>
debates the penalty for him. The penalty decided<lb/>
may be a reprimand, a warning, or suspension from<lb/>
school.<lb/>
"If the Honor Council want- to suspend the<lb/>
student from school, they can only recommend<lb/>
suspension. The chancellor must suspend the<lb/>
student. He has the final say-so stated Mallory.<lb/>
"The students who serve on the Honor Council<lb/>
are dedicated and sincere. They try to figure what's<lb/>
best for the students and the university<lb/>
commented Mallorv.<lb/>
SGA approves Gay Community<lb/>
constitution at recent meeting<lb/>
Bv CHRIS CAGLE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A motion to recon-<lb/>
sider the appropriation<lb/>
of $3,000 for SGA<lb/>
Transit System was pas-<lb/>
sed by SGA members<lb/>
in i.ts meeting on Mon-<lb/>
According to Wiley<lb/>
Betts, member of the<lb/>
Screenings and Appoint-<lb/>
ment, "We are depriv-<lb/>
ing students out of<lb/>
$3,000 for this semes-<lb/>
ter. The $3,000 will not<lb/>
solve the problem for<lb/>
new buses. We are<lb/>
taking workable money<lb/>
out of the hands of the<lb/>
students Betts also<lb/>
added, "It will take 7<lb/>
and one half years to<lb/>
pay for a new bus<lb/>
Some of the mem-<lb/>
bers felt that the buses<lb/>
now being used will be<lb/>
run down in a year or<lb/>
two.<lb/>
Tommy Joe Payne,<lb/>
SGA president, spoke to<lb/>
the members on behalf<lb/>
of the needed $3,000<lb/>
for a new bus account.<lb/>
"Buses we have now<lb/>
are made for highways,<lb/>
they are not built for<lb/>
starting and stopping.<lb/>
The transit system is in<lb/>
bad shape. The buses<lb/>
are not going to all the<lb/>
places to pick up stu-<lb/>
dents<lb/>
Payne stated, "I feel<lb/>
it is good on the part<lb/>
of the legislature to see<lb/>
the need for a new bus.<lb/>
We would be unable to<lb/>
have classes at Minges<lb/>
or Health Affairs if it<lb/>
were not for the transit<lb/>
system. $3,000 is a<lb/>
good resolution for the<lb/>
problem<lb/>
The bill was tabled<lb/>
by members until next<lb/>
week's meeting.<lb/>
"Approval of the<lb/>
Constitution for East<lb/>
Carolina Gay Commun-<lb/>
itv was passed by SGA<lb/>
members. According to<lb/>
Jeff Triplett, chairman<lb/>
of the Rules and Judi-<lb/>
ciary Committee, "The<lb/>
goal of our committee is<lb/>
to pass the constitution<lb/>
itself without any bias<lb/>
against the club Trip-<lb/>
lett also stated, "The<lb/>
constitution came to the<lb/>
committee, met all the<lb/>
guidelines of a SGA<lb/>
recognized organization<lb/>
and passed favorably. It<lb/>
was one of the better<lb/>
written constitutions<lb/>
received all<lb/>
we ve<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The<lb/>
val of<lb/>
bill for "Appro-<lb/>
SGA Elections<lb/>
Chairperson Jeff Wil-<lb/>
liams was passed by<lb/>
members. Williams stat-<lb/>
ed that he would try to<lb/>
up student participation<lb/>
in voting this year by<lb/>
alloting two days for<lb/>
the students to vote.<lb/>
Two bills which were<lb/>
voted out unfavorably<lb/>
by the Appropriations<lb/>
Committee, because<lb/>
they regarded trips<lb/>
were brought back for<lb/>
SGA members to re-<lb/>
consider.<lb/>
One of the bills was<lb/>
the "Appropriation to<lb/>
ECl Medical Techno-<lb/>
logy Club. Cathy Dixon,<lb/>
a member of the club,<lb/>
spoke on its behalf to<lb/>
SGA members. "I feel<lb/>
our bill i- just as<lb/>
important as Team<lb/>
Handball. We under-<lb/>
stand why the travel<lb/>
expense was cut oil the<lb/>
bill, but the cause is<lb/>
important to us<lb/>
The other bill<lb/>
"Appropriation<lb/>
ROTC<lb/>
Libby Lefler,<lb/>
speaker said the<lb/>
must receive two-thirds<lb/>
majority vote to be<lb/>
brought back on the<lb/>
floor and be recon-<lb/>
sidered. The bills did<lb/>
not receive the majority<lb/>
vote and were not<lb/>
discussed by SGA mem-<lb/>
bers.<lb/>
was<lb/>
to<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
bills<lb/>
What's inside<lb/>
Buckminster Fuller, . . . see p. 5<lb/>
Halloween review, . . . see p. 7<lb/>
Panhellenic officers elected, . . . see<lb/>
p. 2<lb/>
Calder says "no snowballs" . . .<lb/>
see p. 3<lb/>
Pirates rout USC-Aiken . . . see p. 8<lb/>
Lady Pirates win Winthrop tourney<lb/>
. . . see p. 8<lb/>
HALLOWEEY<lb/>
see p. 7<lb/>
t<lb/>
 0- w m?. <lb/>
im-0i-4m? ?o ir ??f pr -t -?? ? - ?? -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057178_0002"/><lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAP 13 February 1979<lb/>
Greek Furum<lb/>
By RICKI GLIARMIS<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Panhellenic held<lb/>
election of officers on<lb/>
Thursday, Feb. 8.<lb/>
These are the offi-<lb/>
cers tor 1979-80: Eva<lb/>
Pittman, president,<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma;<lb/>
Sandra Moretz, vice<lb/>
president, Alpha Delta<lb/>
Pi; Diane Gray, rush<lb/>
chairman, Alpha Phi;<lb/>
Margaret Uhlig, record-<lb/>
ing secretary, Alpha<lb/>
0 micron Pi; Cathy<lb/>
Swiggard, corresponding<lb/>
secretary, Delta Zeta;<lb/>
Tammy Whiteside, trea-<lb/>
surer, Chi Omega; Lynn<lb/>
Landough, parliamen-<lb/>
tarian and Chujdain.<lb/>
Alpha Xi Delta; Lihby<lb/>
Lefler, public relations,<lb/>
Kappa Delta; and Shelia<lb/>
Mendoze, ex-officio<lb/>
member. Alpha Kappa<lb/>
Alpha. Congratulations<lb/>
to all these girls and<lb/>
good luck in the upcom-<lb/>
ing car.<lb/>
Announcements:<lb/>
Kappa Alpha cele-<lb/>
brated its Convivium on<lb/>
Jan. 20 at the Ramada<lb/>
Inn here in Greenville.<lb/>
Convivium is celebrated<lb/>
in honor of Robert E.<lb/>
Lee's birthday and the<lb/>
founding of Kappa<lb/>
Alpha in 1865. Seven<lb/>
other KA chapters in<lb/>
North Carolina attended<lb/>
the event.<lb/>
Joni Wheeler was<lb/>
selected as the KA<lb/>
Rose for 1979-80. Whee-<lb/>
ler is an Alpha Delta Pi<lb/>
and succeeds Caren<lb/>
Bills, who is a Delta<lb/>
Zeta.<lb/>
Spring rush was suc-<lb/>
cessful for the KA s<lb/>
while they inducted<lb/>
eight new pledges. 18<lb/>
new brothers were ini-<lb/>
tiated on Feb. 4.<lb/>
Tau Kappa Epsilon<lb/>
will be holding their<lb/>
Fourth Annual Boxing<lb/>
Tournament on Feb. 20,<lb/>
21, and 22 in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium. A pre-<lb/>
boxing tournament party<lb/>
will be held on Tuesday<lb/>
night, Feb. 13 at the<lb/>
Elbo Room featuring a<lb/>
goldfish eating contest.<lb/>
Sigma Nu is plan<lb/>
ning their formal at the<lb/>
Holiday Inn in Kinston,<lb/>
N.C. on Feb. 24. The<lb/>
band for the evening is<lb/>
Cleveland 0.<lb/>
The car wash was<lb/>
cancelled and has been<lb/>
rescheduled for Feb. 17<lb/>
on the corner of 14th<lb/>
and Charles Streets.<lb/>
The brothers and<lb/>
pledges are selling<lb/>
roses and singing<lb/>
Valentine s for Valen-<lb/>
tine's Day.<lb/>
The Sigma Tau<lb/>
Gammas are coming off<lb/>
a successful rush get-<lb/>
ting 15 new pledges.<lb/>
The brothers would like<lb/>
to congratulate last<lb/>
semester's pledges and<lb/>
welcome them into bro-<lb/>
therhood.<lb/>
The Sig Taus are<lb/>
planning a trip to Ship-<lb/>
pensburgh, Pa. this<lb/>
weekend for a get-<lb/>
together with the bro-<lb/>
thers at Shippensburg<lb/>
State University.<lb/>
The Phi Kappa Taus<lb/>
are presenting The<lb/>
Dynamic Upsetters on<lb/>
Feb. 17 at the Green-<lb/>
ville Moose Lodge from<lb/>
9 p.m. until 1 a.m.<lb/>
Set-ups will be avail-<lb/>
able. Tickets can be<lb/>
purchased at the<lb/>
Clothes Horse or from<lb/>
any Phi Tau. Make<lb/>
plans to attend and see<lb/>
The Dynamic Upsetters.<lb/>
Upcoming events sla-<lb/>
ted at the Phi Tau<lb/>
house are Little Sister<lb/>
Champagne Breakfast,<lb/>
Sat. Feb. 24; Alumni<lb/>
Weekend, March 23-25;<lb/>
Second Annual Lau<lb/>
Party, March 30; and<lb/>
Beach Weekend, April<lb/>
20-22.<lb/>
The Sig Eps are<lb/>
having a Valentines Day<lb/>
Party with their Little<lb/>
Sisters on Wednesday<lb/>
and their Valentines<lb/>
Dance on Saturday.<lb/>
Monday, the Sig Eps<lb/>
visited all the sorority<lb/>
houses to sing and wish<lb/>
them a happy Valen-<lb/>
tines Day. This Friday,<lb/>
they will start remodel-<lb/>
ing their kitchen and<lb/>
later this month, the<lb/>
pledges will be collec-<lb/>
ting money for the<lb/>
Heart Fund.<lb/>
The Chi Omegas<lb/>
would like to congratu-<lb/>
late their new officers:<lb/>
<lb/>
Cathy McLean, presi-<lb/>
dent; Mara Flaherty,<lb/>
vice president; Suzanne<lb/>
Disher, secretary; Anne<lb/>
White, treasurer; Debi<lb/>
Gooder, pledge trainer;<lb/>
Laura Hubbard, person-<lb/>
nel; Molly Jordan, rush;<lb/>
Tami Whiteside, house<lb/>
manager; and Lianne<lb/>
Ractliffe, social.<lb/>
The Chi Omega fall<lb/>
pledges are having a<lb/>
Valentines Day Happy<lb/>
Hour at Chapter X.<lb/>
The Alpha Delta Pi's<lb/>
are proud to announce<lb/>
that they have four new<lb/>
pledges.<lb/>
The Alpha Delta Pi's<lb/>
would like to congratu-<lb/>
late Sandra Moretz, a<lb/>
sister who was elected<lb/>
vice-president of Panhel-<lb/>
lenic last week.<lb/>
Alpha Omicron Pi<lb/>
elected their new offi-<lb/>
cers on Jan. 31. The<lb/>
new officers are Linda<lb/>
Evans, president; Alice<lb/>
Martin, vice-president;<lb/>
Margie Uligh, treasurer;<lb/>
Marcia Garrison, chap-<lb/>
ter relations; and Debby<lb/>
Cleek, recording secre-<lb/>
tary.<lb/>
The chapter sent a<lb/>
rush team to Duke<lb/>
University this weekend<lb/>
to help set up an Alpha<lb/>
Omicron Pi chapter<lb/>
there. Another group of<lb/>
sisters went to Raleigh<lb/>
to install an alumni<lb/>
chapter called Triangle<lb/>
Chapter.<lb/>
The Delta Zeta<lb/>
Sorority has changed<lb/>
their pancake dinner to<lb/>
Feb 25. It will be held<lb/>
from 4-7 p.m. Everyone<lb/>
is welcome to attend.<lb/>
Congratulations to<lb/>
the 16 newly initiated<lb/>
Alpha Phi sisters.<lb/>
Spring rush begin<lb/>
tonight at the Alpha Phi<lb/>
house with a Valentine<lb/>
Banana Split Party.<lb/>
The Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Sigmas congratulate Eva<lb/>
Pittman, a sister, for<lb/>
being elected Panhel<lb/>
lenic president last<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Piraaiiuti<lb/>
AMERICAS FAVORITE PIZZA<lb/>
?<lb/>
2?<lb/>
fe?<lb/>
PIZZA BUFFET<lb/>
ALL THE PIZZA AND<lb/>
SALAD YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
Mon. -Frl. 11:30-2:00<lb/>
?PMon. &amp; Tues. 6:00 8:00<lb/>
J<lb/>
758 6266 Hwy 264 bypass Greenville , It. C.<lb/>
1<lb/>
L<lb/>
Contest<lb/>
If you are a full-time j<lb/>
undergraduate at ECl .<lb/>
you can now enter the<lb/>
1979 Student Library <lb/>
Competition to win a I<lb/>
prize for te qualit) 0f<lb/>
our personal library.<lb/>
Three prizes will be<lb/>
awarded: first. $75;<lb/>
second,$50; and third,<lb/>
$25. inner?- will be I<lb/>
announced during Na-<lb/>
tional Librar Week,<lb/>
April 1-7. 1979.<lb/>
Libraries will be<lb/>
judged on quality of the<lb/>
collection and on ima-<lb/>
gination and intelligence<lb/>
shown in creating the<lb/>
collection.<lb/>
Libraries of all types'<lb/>
are eligible: collections<lb/>
centered on one subject,<lb/>
collections on a single<lb/>
author or a few special<lb/>
authors, or general<lb/>
collections.<lb/>
You may submit<lb/>
your entire library or a<lb/>
minimum of 15 books<lb/>
from it. Even though<lb/>
there is no upper limit,<lb/>
quantity is secondary to<lb/>
quality.<lb/>
The committee of<lb/>
judges will be composed<lb/>
ol one board member<lb/>
from the Friends of the<lb/>
Library, one ECU<lb/>
faculty member, and<lb/>
one member of the<lb/>
library faculty. The<lb/>
competition is sponsored<lb/>
by the Friends of the<lb/>
ECU Library to en-<lb/>
courage undergraduates<lb/>
to creat good personal<lb/>
libraries.<lb/>
Requirements are:<lb/>
an application, a list of<lb/>
the books in your coll-<lb/>
ection by author and<lb/>
title (author's last name<lb/>
first), and a statement<lb/>
of between 350 and 500<lb/>
words on any facet of<lb/>
your collection (attach<lb/>
jhis to the list and the<lb/>
application).<lb/>
Deadline for entries:<lb/>
March 1.<lb/>
LAE<lb/>
The American Crim-<lb/>
inal Justice Association,<lb/>
Lambda Alpha Epsilon, I<lb/>
is actively involved in<lb/>
the constant improve ?'(<lb/>
ment and research in<lb/>
the areas of criminal<lb/>
justice. The ECU<lb/>
chapter will be having<lb/>
its installation banquet<lb/>
Feb. 16, 7 p.m. at the<lb/>
Ramada Inn restaurant.<lb/>
There will be a guest<lb/>
speaker and members of<lb/>
LAE will be receiving<lb/>
their certificates. All<lb/>
persons interested in<lb/>
joining LAE should get<lb/>
their applications in by<lb/>
Feb. 15. For more info,<lb/>
call Mr. Campbell<lb/>
757-6961 or Toni Dye<lb/>
752-8501.<lb/>
ACEI<lb/>
The Association for<lb/>
Childhood International<lb/>
(ACEI) will meet on<lb/>
Tues Feb. 13, 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in room 103,<lb/>
Speight. Dr. James<lb/>
Wright, Associate Prof<lb/>
Dept. of English, will<lb/>
speak on "Black Dialect<lb/>
in the Teaching of<lb/>
Reading All members<lb/>
and interested persons<lb/>
are urged to attend.<lb/>
Pti Chi<lb/>
Psi Chi will have a<lb/>
meeting Tues Feb. 13<lb/>
at 7 p.m. in Speight<lb/>
129. The guest speaker<lb/>
will be Dr. Mike<lb/>
Campion and the topic<lb/>
of discussion will be<lb/>
Behavior Modification in<lb/>
Organizations. All<lb/>
members and interested<lb/>
persons are invited.<lb/>
Refreshments will be<lb/>
served.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Pi Sigma<lb/>
There will be a<lb/>
meeting of the Political<lb/>
Science Honor Fraternity<lb/>
Pi Sigma Alpha at 7<lb/>
?ptH?t?n Fab. 13, m Rm<lb/>
BC-105. All members &amp;<lb/>
new inductees are asked<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
FCA<lb/>
The Family Child<lb/>
Association will meet on<lb/>
Tues Feb. 13 in Rm<lb/>
143, Home Ec bldg. All<lb/>
majors and minors are<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
Writers<lb/>
The Writer's Guild<lb/>
will hold a meeting in<lb/>
Austin 207 on THurs<lb/>
Feb. 15 at 7 p.m. A<lb/>
reading is scheduled.<lb/>
Official business will be<lb/>
discussed. All members<lb/>
are strongly urged to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
ECGC<lb/>
INDT<lb/>
Anyone interested in<lb/>
Industrial Technology is<lb/>
invited to attend the<lb/>
next Industrial and<lb/>
Technical Education<lb/>
Club meeting. The<lb/>
meeting will be held in<lb/>
Flannagan 104 on Turs<lb/>
Feb. 15 at 5 p.m. Plans<lb/>
for the spring semester<lb/>
will be discussed.<lb/>
Everyone is welcome.<lb/>
Gamma Beta<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi will<lb/>
meet on Thurs Feb.<lb/>
15, 7 p.m. in Menden-<lb/>
hall 244. .All members<lb/>
are urged to attend.<lb/>
Semester dues are<lb/>
payable at this meeting.<lb/>
Bodies<lb/>
There will be a dinner<lb/>
Tues Feb. 13, at the<lb/>
East Carolina Gav<lb/>
Community Discussion.<lb/>
The discussion wrtlHwf"<lb/>
held after dinner. All<lb/>
interested people are<lb/>
invited. Please bring a<lb/>
beverage to drink with<lb/>
dinner that will be<lb/>
appropriate with spa-<lb/>
ghetti.<lb/>
Contests<lb/>
White Hall Special<lb/>
at Attic, Tues Feb. 13,<lb/>
9-12 p.m. Free pinball<lb/>
&amp; footsball, beer<lb/>
chugging contest and<lb/>
other contests. Bring<lb/>
your Valentine.<lb/>
Phi Sigma<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi will<lb/>
hold its monthly-<lb/>
business meeting Wed<lb/>
Feb. 14 at 5 p.m. The<lb/>
meeting is at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Multipur-<lb/>
pose Room.The Spring<lb/>
Smoker will follow the<lb/>
business meeting.<lb/>
Proper dress is re-<lb/>
quired, and all brothers<lb/>
?me urged to attend.<lb/>
Bio. Club<lb/>
The Biology Club<lb/>
will meet Turs Feb. 15<lb/>
at 7 p.m. in Rm.<lb/>
BN-102. This will be<lb/>
our first business<lb/>
meeting. Business dis-<lb/>
cussed will be projects,<lb/>
pre-registration, under-<lb/>
graduate research op-<lb/>
tions, and committee<lb/>
work. This will be a<lb/>
short meeting. Plan to<lb/>
be there! Everyone<lb/>
invited.<lb/>
The Sociology-An-<lb/>
thropology Club will<lb/>
sponsor a lecture pre-<lb/>
sentation on Wed<lb/>
Feb. 14, 7:30 p.m. in<lb/>
BD 302. Dr. Paul<lb/>
Tschetter will speak on<lb/>
"Where the Bodies are<lb/>
Buried: History of<lb/>
Italian Cemetaries<lb/>
All interested welcome.<lb/>
Refreshments served.<lb/>
Weight<lb/>
Would you like to<lb/>
lose weight and get in<lb/>
shape for the warm<lb/>
weather ahead? A class<lb/>
of graduate and under-<lb/>
graduate students are<lb/>
conducting a weight<lb/>
reduction class each<lb/>
week for a nutrition<lb/>
class project. Partici-<lb/>
pants are needed.<lb/>
Anyone interested is<lb/>
asked to come to the<lb/>
Infirmary on Sun 7<lb/>
p.m. For more info, call<lb/>
Joan at 752-1366. Only<lb/>
a limited number will<lb/>
be accepted, so call<lb/>
now.<lb/>
SOULS<lb/>
There will be a<lb/>
S.O.U.L.S. meeting<lb/>
Thurs Feb. 15, 6 p.m.<lb/>
at the Ledonia S.<lb/>
Wright Afro-American<lb/>
Cultural Center. We are<lb/>
in the process of<lb/>
planning activities and<lb/>
cultural events for the<lb/>
spring. If you have any<lb/>
ideas that will be<lb/>
helpful, please feel free<lb/>
to share them with us.<lb/>
It is very important that<lb/>
you be present and on<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Bake sale<lb/>
The Theta Alpha<lb/>
Chapter of the Alpha<lb/>
Kappa Alpha Sorority,<lb/>
Inc. is having a bake<lb/>
sale on Wed Feb. 14<lb/>
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.<lb/>
in the lobby of the<lb/>
Student Supply Store.<lb/>
Come and get some<lb/>
sweets for the sweet on<lb/>
Valentine's Day.<lb/>
Service<lb/>
An Episcopal service<lb/>
of Holy Communion will<lb/>
be celebrated<lb/>
tonight in the chapel of<lb/>
the Methodist Student<lb/>
Center, (Fifth Street<lb/>
across from Garrett<lb/>
Dorm). The service will<lb/>
be at 5 p.m. with the<lb/>
Episcopal Chaplain, The<lb/>
Rev. Bill Hadden<lb/>
celebrating.<lb/>
A supper will be<lb/>
served at 6 p.m. at. the<lb/>
home of Eleanor Cole-<lb/>
man, 1003 E. Fifth St.<lb/>
(across from the main<lb/>
gate). Bible study will<lb/>
follow. All students<lb/>
welcome.<lb/>
Study<lb/>
If your room is too<lb/>
noisy or you dread the<lb/>
long walk to the library,<lb/>
don't despair. There is<lb/>
a study area available<lb/>
on the hill for any<lb/>
students who wish to<lb/>
take advantage of its<lb/>
presence. It is located<lb/>
?n the M.R.C. meeting<lb/>
room in the basement<lb/>
of Scott Hall. Enjoy a<lb/>
quiet, supervised study<lb/>
area on Sunday through<lb/>
Thursday nights, 8-12<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
torrent?!<lb/>
needed; Responsible fe-<lb/>
male roommate to share<lb/>
2 B.R. apt. at East-<lb/>
brook. Call immediately<lb/>
758-5794.<lb/>
ROOM F"R RENT in<lb/>
big hous' blocks<lb/>
from campus, 137.50<lb/>
per mo. plus utilities.<lb/>
Phone 752-9325.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Plymouth<lb/>
Sattelite, 2 doors, V-8<lb/>
361 engine, in good<lb/>
condition, has new tires.<lb/>
3<lb/>
vmmmtmm<lb/>
j <lb/>
mm ?-<lb/>
mm<lb/>
$480. Call 756-2362 any<lb/>
time.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Pioneer<lb/>
SX-550 Receiver, Pio-<lb/>
neer PL-112D turntable,<lb/>
1 pr. Craig Series 5000<lb/>
speakers, S425; also<lb/>
Pioneer Supertuner 8-<lb/>
track with FM radio,<lb/>
$125 or best offer; call<lb/>
946-5356 after 5 p.m<lb/>
ask for Henry.<lb/>
fretsona?<lb/>
STUDENT HELPERS<lb/>
with an interest in<lb/>
electronics and compu-<lb/>
ters to assist in devel-<lb/>
opment of an instru-<lb/>
ment-computer system<lb/>
for blind science<lb/>
students, S3 per hour.<lb/>
Contact David Lunney,<lb/>
Dept. of Chemistry,<lb/>
757-6713 or 757-6711.<lb/>
SOMEONE NEEDED to<lb/>
keep church nursery<lb/>
(ages 1 12-4 yrs.)<lb/>
every Sunday, 11-12.<lb/>
$20 monthly. Call<lb/>
756-3988 anytime.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE<lb/>
term papers, resumes,<lb/>
etc. Call Deborah,<lb/>
752-2508.<lb/>
BELLY DANCE classes<lb/>
with Sunshine beginning<lb/>
soon. Call 758-0736<lb/>
(phone recently out of<lb/>
order, call again).<lb/>
YOGA classes be-<lb/>
Greenpeaee<lb/>
The next meeting of<lb/>
Greenpeace will be held<lb/>
Wed Feb. 14 at 7<lb/>
p.m. in the Board Room<lb/>
, ,af, Shepja9cU Memorial<lb/>
Library " fifrrubwn -on-<lb/>
Evans St.). Very im-<lb/>
portant material about<lb/>
upcoming harp seal and<lb/>
whale action to be<lb/>
discussed. Also, two<lb/>
slide shows: Greenpeace<lb/>
ConfrontationHistory,<lb/>
and Greenpeace Whale,<lb/>
will be presented.<lb/>
Anyone may attend and<lb/>
all members are urged<lb/>
to attend this important<lb/>
meeting. Much strategy<lb/>
will be planned. For<lb/>
more Information,<lb/>
contact Jerry Adderton<lb/>
at 758-6259 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
on weekdays.<lb/>
LTC<lb/>
Eye Will<lb/>
The Greenville<lb/>
Lions Club will sponsor<lb/>
an Eye Will drive in<lb/>
the Student Supply<lb/>
store foyer from 9<lb/>
a.m3p.m. on Thurs<lb/>
Feb. 15. Tables will be<lb/>
manned by club mem-<lb/>
bers who are on the<lb/>
faculty and staff at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
There are over one<lb/>
million visually handi- ;<lb/>
capped persons in the j<lb/>
U.S. today. You can !<lb/>
help one or more of<lb/>
these blind persons to<lb/>
be as fortunate as you<lb/>
are. The priceless gift<lb/>
of sight that you can<lb/>
give will cost you<lb/>
nothing, and the eyes<lb/>
that you pledge, to be<lb/>
used after your death,<lb/>
are given without<lb/>
charge to a visually<lb/>
impaired recipient. All<lb/>
of the simple details<lb/>
and a donor pledge<lb/>
form are yours for the<lb/>
asking.<lb/>
ginning Feb. 27 at 7:30<lb/>
p-m. Ail interested<lb/>
persons are invited to<lb/>
attend. Call Sunshine<lb/>
758-0736 mornings &amp;<lb/>
evenings.<lb/>
ANOTHER DISCO<lb/>
CLASS - due to demand<lb/>
will begin this Friday.<lb/>
Still $10mo. AH levels.<lb/>
Call 758-0736 mornings<lb/>
Are you looking for<lb/>
relief from all the<lb/>
pressures of the week?<lb/>
 hy not come to<lb/>
Leadership Training,<lb/>
Class and not ualy -pel<lb/>
that relief, but a!<lb/>
learn how those pres-<lb/>
sures can be taken<lb/>
more easily. Come to<lb/>
Brcwstrr-D, 311 on<lb/>
Thursday night for<lb/>
fellowship and plenty of<lb/>
singing, too. It is held<lb/>
from 7-9 p.m. and is<lb/>
sponsored b Campus<lb/>
Crusade for Christ.<lb/>
Tutoring<lb/>
Don't let a cloud<lb/>
doubt about our<lb/>
studies hang over our<lb/>
spring break! If you<lb/>
have or will declare a<lb/>
major in a health re-<lb/>
lated field (including<lb/>
medicine, premedicine.<lb/>
predentistr, nursing, or<lb/>
allied health and social<lb/>
professions), you mas<lb/>
qualify for free tutoring<lb/>
from the Center for<lb/>
Student Opportunities.<lb/>
For information about<lb/>
tutoring, health careers,<lb/>
counseling, test anxietx<lb/>
assistance, lessons in<lb/>
focusing or speed-<lb/>
reading, and other free<lb/>
professional services,<lb/>
stop b CSO, Ragsdale<lb/>
208, or call 757-6122 or<lb/>
6075.<lb/>
Bake tale<lb/>
Sign Language Club<lb/>
will have a Bake Salt<lb/>
held at the Student<lb/>
Supply Store Thurs<lb/>
Feb. 15 from 1U<lb/>
a.m3 p.m. Come over<lb/>
and enjoy various<lb/>
homemade sweets for a<lb/>
very low price.<lb/>
evenings.<lb/>
w<lb/>
WBWwliiai- imimt<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057178_0003"/><lb/>
Valentine's Day a boom for merchants<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
St. Valentine's Day<lb/>
Has been, as usual, a<lb/>
financial boom to local<lb/>
merchants. The buving<lb/>
1,1 gifts tor loved ones<lb/>
fnends, and relatives<lb/>
Jas h'? fast and<lb/>
furious.<lb/>
JKLEebruary1979 FOUNTAINHEAD Paoe 3<lb/>
News writers needed.<lb/>
Call 757-6366<lb/>
A wide<lb/>
gifts have<lb/>
variety of<lb/>
been pur-<lb/>
chased. Some of the<lb/>
traditional and<lb/>
most definitely unique.<lb/>
 alentine cards, of<lb/>
course, have been the<lb/>
m<lb/>
some<lb/>
biggest sellers. Card<lb/>
counters have been<lb/>
mobbed with sweet-<lb/>
hearts, wives, and hus-<lb/>
bands looking for that<lb/>
perfect card.<lb/>
From loving, to<lb/>
comic, to cruel, the<lb/>
cards express almost<lb/>
everyone's feelings. And<lb/>
if by some off chance<lb/>
you can not find the<lb/>
card which expresses<lb/>
your feelings exactly,<lb/>
then there are cards<lb/>
which are blank on the<lb/>
inside so that your own<lb/>
message can be inser-<lb/>
ted.<lb/>
The traditional gifts<lb/>
have been selling well,<lb/>
too. Heart shaped boxes<lb/>
of chocolates seem to<lb/>
be a popular item for<lb/>
both guys and girls.<lb/>
Some shops have even<lb/>
offered special prices on<lb/>
these items.<lb/>
Jewelry has also<lb/>
been a big seller this<lb/>
year. Shopkeepers say<lb/>
that any kind of jewelry<lb/>
that has to do with<lb/>
hearts or flowers will<lb/>
sell well. Simple gold<lb/>
chains are a good item<lb/>
to consider, too.<lb/>
Local florists say<lb/>
that flowers have been<lb/>
a fast selling item.<lb/>
Roses in groups of two<lb/>
or throe, or up to a<lb/>
dozen have been order-<lb/>
ed lor the big day.<lb/>
Specialty bouquets, us-<lb/>
ing any and all types of<lb/>
spring flowers have also<lb/>
been popular choices<lb/>
with both men and<lb/>
women. Some girls are<lb/>
also ordering green<lb/>
plants for their boy-<lb/>
friends. A few guys on<lb/>
earn pus will be re-<lb/>
ceiving red carnations,<lb/>
too.<lb/>
Girls have been<lb/>
getting their special<lb/>
guys a wide variety of<lb/>
items. In one store,<lb/>
contacted mobiles, were<lb/>
the most popular item,<lb/>
while another said that<lb/>
wall hangings were the<lb/>
best sellers. Pot candles<lb/>
have also been a big<lb/>
item in Valentine gift<lb/>
giving.<lb/>
One strange, but<lb/>
popular, item is some-<lb/>
thing called the "Horny<lb/>
Toad I can not des-<lb/>
cribe them fully in this<lb/>
article (after all this is<lb/>
a campus newspaper)<lb/>
but let it suffice to say<lb/>
that these are very<lb/>
masculine little frogs.<lb/>
two<lb/>
has<lb/>
B) Mark Jacobs<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
I" the past<lb/>
weeks, Greenville<lb/>
received a considerable<lb/>
amount of snow. Many<lb/>
problems arise when the<lb/>
Nmte blanket appears.<lb/>
vet tlies, problems can<lb/>
be solved with a little<lb/>
Help from the ECL<lb/>
Securit Police.<lb/>
in<lb/>
Ten windows<lb/>
y-cock Hall were<lb/>
ken due to the<lb/>
n of a few<lb/>
ts, said Calder.<lb/>
He also stated that<lb/>
i ases of broken<lb/>
i ar w indshields and<lb/>
dent.  autos, caused b)<lb/>
alls tossed at cars<lb/>
re reported.<lb/>
ing<lb/>
w ing<lb/>
men<lb/>
"II top<lb/>
? if<lb/>
continued.<lb/>
an leeball at<lb/>
the same as<lb/>
a rock ;?(<lb/>
e. l e'll charge<lb/>
with assault<lb/>
reasoned that<lb/>
are on dutj<lb/>
of college hill,<lb/>
no people are<lb/>
damage<lb/>
cars, how is<lb/>
determine who<lb/>
he to<lb/>
actually<lb/>
is doing the damage!<lb/>
A<lb/>
to<lb/>
person may<lb/>
the security<lb/>
come<lb/>
office<lb/>
a damaged<lb/>
but without<lb/>
in<lb/>
to report<lb/>
windshield,<lb/>
the identification of the<lb/>
violator nothing can be<lb/>
throwing snowballs at<lb/>
By MARC BARNES<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Rumors which have<lb/>
been circulating during<lb/>
this past week concern-<lb/>
ing a redesign of the<lb/>
campus mall are un-<lb/>
founded- at least for the<lb/>
moment, according to<lb/>
James Lowry, Director<lb/>
of the Physical Plant.<lb/>
Rumor had it that a<lb/>
plan was afoot to create<lb/>
little hills and valleys in<lb/>
the mall by bringing in<lb/>
fill dirta style reminis-<lb/>
cent of New York City's<lb/>
famed Central Park.<lb/>
"Dr. Brewer has<lb/>
done to assist.<lb/>
Calder warns those<lb/>
who enjoy the act of<lb/>
target-snow ball practice<lb/>
by adding, "at N.C.<lb/>
State a group of college<lb/>
students were tossing<lb/>
snowballs at passing<lb/>
cars and one ear was<lb/>
hit. The driver jumped<lb/>
untrue<lb/>
been discussing the idea<lb/>
(of relandscaping the<lb/>
mall) Lowry said. He<lb/>
added that someone had<lb/>
come up with a plan of<lb/>
building hills into the<lb/>
mall, but the idea was<lb/>
quickly shot down lie-<lb/>
cause handicapped stu-<lb/>
dents could not nego-<lb/>
tiate land designed in<lb/>
this way.<lb/>
"We had a land-<lb/>
scape architect to come<lb/>
out and look at the mall<lb/>
for a day or so Lowry<lb/>
said, but there were no<lb/>
definite plans made.<lb/>
He added, "There is<lb/>
nothing, really, to re-<lb/>
port at this time<lb/>
from his car, pulled ;<lb/>
gun and shot into tin<lb/>
group hitting one<lb/>
student in the hip.<lb/>
Think twice before<lb/>
throwing your next<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
4 Howdy ECU Students "<lb/>
Clip this coupon for<lb/>
good Western Eatin'<lb/>
WESTERN BIG<lb/>
CHEESEBURGER<lb/>
HOLSTER OF FRIES<lb/>
MEDIUM DRLK<lb/>
$1.60<lb/>
offer good 'til 3 10 79<lb/>
You almost have to see<lb/>
them to believe them.<lb/>
A lot of other, more<lb/>
conventional stuffed<lb/>
animals have been pur-<lb/>
chased by the local<lb/>
men. Small, fuzzy rab-<lb/>
bits, bears, monkeys<lb/>
and almost any other<lb/>
animals that could be<lb/>
named have been pur-<lb/>
chased to warm the<lb/>
hearts of the ECU<lb/>
women. Many more<lb/>
decorative items such as<lb/>
ceramic hearts and<lb/>
heart shaped candles<lb/>
have also been pur-<lb/>
chased for sweethearts<lb/>
on Valentine's Day.<lb/>
2to?20&amp;,<lb/>
cars<lb/>
snowball at someone or<lb/>
something, Calder<lb/>
concluded.<lb/>
10th &amp; Evans Struts<lb/>
Cm Of 1t Ox Cam<lb/>
Budweiser, Schiitz. Miller, Strort's $7.88 j<lb/>
Budweiser, Schtiti. Mtlter.StrohsKeos $39.00<lb/>
50 Lbs. Ice $2.75!<lb/>
 OPtW 24 HAS.<lb/>
3IL<lb/>
faze.bo<lb/>
i? having a.<lb/>
 vaU.ntin?.? cSate.<lb/>
fox you<lb/>
30 off cW ttfing<lb/>
20 offcACEOtkx<lb/>
C7? azdjo -downtown xzznviltz<lb/>
itchell's Hair Styling<lb/>
O  x Chopping Cenrrr<lb/>
-ICrccnv.llr North Clrohni 37S34<lb/>
756-2950<lb/>
CALL ONE OF OUR<lb/>
HAIRSTYLISTS FOR A NEW<lb/>
SPRING HAIRDO<lb/>
756-2950<lb/>
L'H'WKjG S<lb/>
FOR ALL<lb/>
PIZZA LOVERS<lb/>
ON<lb/>
VALENTINES DAY<lb/>
LttiRNBH) S<lb/>
Buy 2 pizzas and get<lb/>
the third one of the same size FREE!<lb/>
Free COKES to all the Ladies<lb/>
DRINK<lb/>
DINE IN AND DELIVERY<lb/>
7587400<lb/>
ifaafTftri<lb/>
HAVE A<lb/>
HEART!<lb/>
MonThurs. 11:30-1:00<lb/>
Fri. Sat. 11:30 2:00<lb/>
Sun. 11:30 12:00<lb/>
507 14th St<lb/>
v<lb/>
9<lb/>
VY?9<lb/>
 Am r5? '??"???'?'?"r .?- ? w? <lb/>
<pb facs="00057178_0004"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
Pag 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 13 February 1979<lb/>
Few suffer from<lb/>
udden snowfall<lb/>
Well, it was fun while it lasted.<lb/>
Last week's snow storm, a blizzard<lb/>
by eastern North Carolina standards,<lb/>
slowed Greenville life to a crawl and<lb/>
gave natives of the region a chance to<lb/>
practice their latent talents for<lb/>
snowman building and snowball throw-<lb/>
ing. Northerners were happy to be<lb/>
reminded of home and southerners<lb/>
reveled in the alien precipitation.<lb/>
For awhile there was even hope<lb/>
that school might be closed for a few<lb/>
days, giving everyone a chance to rest<lb/>
up, catch up, or just enjoy the<lb/>
weather, but those party poopers in<lb/>
Spilman decided conditions weren't<lb/>
hazardous enough to warant such<lb/>
measures. Even the city schools only<lb/>
opened later instead of treating their<lb/>
pupils to a glimpse of snow while<lb/>
they were still young to fully<lb/>
appreciate it.<lb/>
Countless snowballs were pitched<lb/>
at helpless pedestrians and autos,<lb/>
with no injuries reported. Icy roads<lb/>
gave natives of the area a rare<lb/>
opportunity to lose control of their<lb/>
cars with some degree of regularity,<lb/>
and many were forced to quickly learn<lb/>
how to come out of a skid. Some<lb/>
even tried skiing on a hill near the<lb/>
river.<lb/>
All in all, folks made the best of<lb/>
it. Chimneys all over town were<lb/>
busier than usual pouring smoke<lb/>
plumes out over the neighborhood. It<lb/>
was a time to slow down and take in<lb/>
the activities going on around you and<lb/>
enjoy life. Maybe we'll get lucky<lb/>
again next year.<lb/>
Greenpeace<lb/>
American Journal<lb/>
Seal massacres must stop<lb/>
Chinese athletics differ from U.S.<lb/>
By DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
Harry Edwards is a star athlete who left the<lb/>
playing field a long time ago, but he is still not<lb/>
through with sports. Now a sociologist and activist<lb/>
whose speciality is the relationship between sports<lb/>
and society. Edwards has recently returned from<lb/>
2hina, where he found marked differences between<lb/>
Chinese and American approaches to sports.<lb/>
Those differences can be summed up in two<lb/>
words, Edwards says: 'participant' and 'spectator<lb/>
"China operates a mass sports program Edwards<lb/>
explains, "whereby everyone is encouraged to<lb/>
participate on one level or another in sports, games<lb/>
and daily recreation<lb/>
The U.S he says, despite the current boom in<lb/>
recreational sports like running, skiing and tennis,<lb/>
and the popularity of rec leagues and intramurals,<lb/>
has essentially "an elitist program geared towards<lb/>
the production of superstars for spectator sports and<lb/>
the promotion of expensive sports equipment.<lb/>
"In China Edwards observes, "you see people<lb/>
on sidewalks, in the streets and in other public<lb/>
places, in the pre-dawn hours before work, doing<lb/>
Ta'i Chi and other basic exercises designed for<lb/>
people of all ages and both sexes. No specialized<lb/>
equipment is necessary, and no one thinks this is<lb/>
weird, Here if you were out at that hour doing<lb/>
pushups in the yard, folks would think you were<lb/>
crazy-and you'd be lucky if you weren't mugged.<lb/>
"The Chinese also do exercises during work<lb/>
breaks, which is especially valuable for people with<lb/>
rountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community lor ovor SO yoors<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
OOUG WHITE<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER<lb/>
STEVE BACHNER<lb/>
NEWS EDITORS<lb/>
RICK I GLIARM IS<lb/>
MARC BARNES<lb/>
Assistant News Editors<lb/>
Richy Smith<lb/>
Mike Rogers<lb/>
TRENDS EDITOR<lb/>
JEFF ROLLINS<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editors<lb/>
Barry Clayton<lb/>
Bill Jonas<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Charlas Chandlar<lb/>
ADVERTISING MANAGER<lb/>
ROBERT M. SWAIM<lb/>
Assistant Advertising<lb/>
Manager<lb/>
Tarry Harndon<lb/>
Advertising Salesman<lb/>
Paul Lincka<lb/>
Chief Ad Artist<lb/>
Jana Walls<lb/>
Proofreaders<lb/>
Daidra Dalahunty<lb/>
Su? Johnson<lb/>
David MMsr<lb/>
Typesetters<lb/>
Jaanatt Coats-<lb/>
Dabbia Nolaiing<lb/>
Cartoonists<lb/>
Sua Lamm<lb/>
Barry Clayton<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD la tha sludant<lb/>
nawspapar of Eaat Carolina Unlvarslty<lb/>
sponsors by tha Madia Board ol<lb/>
ECU and Is distrlbutad aaeh Tuaaday<lb/>
and Thursday during tha acadamic<lb/>
yaar (weakly during tha aummar).<lb/>
Editorial opinions ara thoss ol tha<lb/>
Editorial Board and do not nseassart-<lb/>
ly rafloct tha opinions of tha<lb/>
unlvarslty or tha Madia Board<lb/>
OMicas ara locatad on tha sacond<lb/>
floor ol tha Publications Cantar (Old<lb/>
South Building). Oar mailing<lb/>
ECU, Oraanvilla, N.C. 27SJ4.<lb/>
Tha phona numbara ara:<lb/>
7S7-mt, ?3?7 SJOt. Subscriptions<lb/>
ara $10 annually, alumni ? annually.<lb/>
inactive jobs, like clerical workers. The body is<lb/>
regarded as a tool and people have a responsibility<lb/>
to keep it in repair. The Chinese refer to this as<lb/>
physical culture and it's actively promoted, even<lb/>
written into their constitution<lb/>
Edwards' observations come from a tour of<lb/>
several weeks' time that he, along with several<lb/>
dozen American academics, athletes and sports-<lb/>
writers, took at the invitation of the Chinese<lb/>
government.<lb/>
"You can analyze this thing for the price of a<lb/>
ticket he says.<lb/>
'You can walk into a stadium and you can find out<lb/>
what is going on with women, with blacks, with the<lb/>
working class. You can find out what is going on at<lb/>
the top<lb/>
If China's approach to sports reflects the<lb/>
cooperative work ethic of its people, America's<lb/>
obsession with stardom and victory at any cost<lb/>
reflects our basic values of competitiveness and<lb/>
individual achievement.<lb/>
In our system, success is promised to all who<lb/>
work for it, and the greatest success story of all is<lb/>
that of the professional athlete. "The reality is that<lb/>
there are only a few thousand individuals in this<lb/>
country who are good enough to play professional<lb/>
sports Edwards says, "and the rest of us are<lb/>
relegated to playing increasingly prohibitive prices to<lb/>
watch them do it<lb/>
Speaking of millionaire club owners and<lb/>
promoters, Edwards is openly scornful. "They'll see<lb/>
you turn into a bag of pus, they'll see you turn<lb/>
into an egg, as long as you go through those<lb/>
turnstiles he says. Spectator sports, in Edwards'<lb/>
view, reinforces a type of vicariousness, a passivity<lb/>
"that is not only unviable, but malignant<lb/>
Harry Edwards has the air of a person who has<lb/>
seen too much pornography to retain much interest<lb/>
in sex. "I lost interest in sports when I stripped off<lb/>
my basketball uniform at San Jose State in 1964<lb/>
he says. "I haven't thrown a ball or attended a<lb/>
contest for pleasure since. I'm interested in society<lb/>
not sports<lb/>
Recreational sports in America are lucrative<lb/>
sources of income for athletic entrepreneurs, as the<lb/>
sales of new skis and running shoes, tennis rackets<lb/>
and other products, attest. "It's a trendy thing in<lb/>
certain circles to be into, let's say, running<lb/>
Edwards remarks; "especially business and govern-<lb/>
ment circles in the big cities. And having the<lb/>
'right' equipment is a status thing. You'll notice<lb/>
very few people doing things you can do alone,<lb/>
without namebrand gear<lb/>
A Super Bowl, a World Series or a Stanley Cup<lb/>
final would be an anomaly in China, where, says<lb/>
Edwards, sport-as-spectacle is down-played and the<lb/>
motto governing athletics is "friendship first,<lb/>
competition second This pacific outlook will be<lb/>
tested, however, when the Chinese enter the<lb/>
Olympics, as they may do for the 1980 Games.<lb/>
"The Chinese may have a profound impact on<lb/>
international sports, or the contact may change<lb/>
them. It'll be interesting to see which way it will<lb/>
go Edwards muses.<lb/>
"You have to change society as a whole before<lb/>
you can change sports Edwards says flatly. "If<lb/>
you could change sports before you change society,<lb/>
it would be the first time in history that the tail<lb/>
has wagged the dog <lb/>
David AraMttroag, a former editor of the Berkeley<lb/>
Bat is a syndicated eaJaavaart hawed is Berkeley,<lb/>
Ca.<lb/>
By JERRY ADDERTON<lb/>
Greenpeace Support of Greenville<lb/>
It is approaching a grim time on the ice floes of<lb/>
Newfoundland. Thousands of baby harp seals are<lb/>
about to meet a cruel and senseless death so that<lb/>
the world's affluent may flaunt their wealth under<lb/>
the guise of "fashion<lb/>
Protests of the hunt have become as much a<lb/>
part of the spring ritual as the slaughter itself. Year<lb/>
after year people stand by and watch in helpless<lb/>
horror as the massacre of infant harp seals takes<lb/>
In 1977 at least half of all pups born were killed<lb/>
a frightening percentage of a species that has<lb/>
been so heavily depleted. The 1978 kill quota was<lb/>
increased over the '77 level by 10,000 and neither<lb/>
me or 78 quotas were ever reached.<lb/>
An argument raised by the Canadian government<lb/>
officials is that the hunt is an economic necessity -<lb/>
nothing is farther from the truth. In actuality, .1<lb/>
percent of the Newfoundland economy is dependent<lb/>
upon sealing and only .2 percent of the Province's<lb/>
560,000 people are employed in the commercial<lb/>
sealing industry.<lb/>
Each spring since 1976, Greenpeace has sent<lb/>
members to the ice floes off the coast of<lb/>
Newfoundland to try to bring an end to the seal<lb/>
hunt. By non-violently interfering with the hunt we<lb/>
have attempted to save the seals, and at the same<lb/>
time draw increased public attention to the hunt.<lb/>
Our real successes have been in magnifying public<lb/>
outrage. In the last year:<lb/>
-The United States House and Senate passed a<lb/>
joint resolution condemning the hunt.<lb/>
-The governments of France and Italv have<lb/>
banned the importation of harp seal pelts.<lb/>
-The Frankfurt Fur Auction, the largest of its<lb/>
kind, has now refused to handle harp seal pelts.<lb/>
-Public demand for seal furs has decreased<lb/>
considerably, as well as the price of the pelts<lb/>
themselves.<lb/>
We will again go to the ice this March.<lb/>
Greenpeacers will again do their utmost to save the<lb/>
seals and insure their continued existence. The<lb/>
pressure is on those responsible for this outrage. It<lb/>
is up to all of us to keep applying that pressure<lb/>
until the hunt is brought to a halt.<lb/>
Write letters to these people and let them knew<lb/>
of your opposition to this senseless slaughter - let<lb/>
your voice be heard so that the seals mav live:<lb/>
Prime Minister Trudeau<lb/>
House of Commons<lb/>
Ottawa, Ontario Kla OA3<lb/>
Premier Frank Moores<lb/>
Confederation Bldg.<lb/>
St. Johns, Newfoundland<lb/>
A1C 5T7<lb/>
Canadian Ambassador<lb/>
Mr. J.J. Warren<lb/>
1746 Massachusetts Ave.<lb/>
Washington, DC 20036<lb/>
Norwegian Ambassador<lb/>
Mr. Soren C. Sommerfelt<lb/>
4200 Wisconsin Ave. NW<lb/>
Washington, DC 20016<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Society bans ECU for trangression<lb/>
8<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD.<lb/>
Day 4, Year of the<lb/>
Sheep<lb/>
East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity Chapter, Secretary<lb/>
American Horological<lb/>
Society<lb/>
East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity<lb/>
Dear Secretary:<lb/>
The Executive Com-<lb/>
mittee of the American<lb/>
Horological Society re-<lb/>
grets to inform you that<lb/>
as a result of a vote of<lb/>
the general membership<lb/>
(215 2360 to 117 560)<lb/>
the East Carolina Uni-<lb/>
versity Chapter has<lb/>
been put on probation.<lb/>
The Committee on<lb/>
Aberrations reported at<lb/>
the Winter Soltice meet-<lb/>
ing that a recent inves-<lb/>
tigation of the docks on<lb/>
your campus revealed<lb/>
that:<lb/>
1. Graduate students<lb/>
in the Department of<lb/>
Ecology had implanted<lb/>
electrodes in several<lb/>
large sea mammals and<lb/>
that clocks in the<lb/>
Speight Building were<lb/>
then programmed to<lb/>
indicate the local time<lb/>
at the location of each<lb/>
implanted organism.<lb/>
2. The results ob-<lb/>
tained by the proce-<lb/>
dures indicated above<lb/>
were almost useless be-<lb/>
cause while data on<lb/>
longitudes were good,<lb/>
data on latitudes were<lb/>
insufficient.<lb/>
The Executive Com-<lb/>
mittee of AHS suggest<lb/>
that steps be made at<lb/>
your institution to pre-<lb/>
vent, in the future, the<lb/>
use of clocks in poorly<lb/>
designed studies.<lb/>
The. duration of pro-<lb/>
bation has been set at<lb/>
eight lunar months, at<lb/>
the end of which the<lb/>
Committee on Aberra-<lb/>
tions will re-evaluate<lb/>
your situation. In the<lb/>
meantime, you are in<lb/>
structed to limit your<lb/>
time-keeping mechan-<lb/>
isms to sun duds (cali-<lb/>
brated according to pro-<lb/>
cedure 3Xi-009).<lb/>
Any questions you<lb/>
may have should be<lb/>
directed to the Execu-<lb/>
tive Committee hero at<lb/>
the national headquar-<lb/>
ters.<lb/>
PS. This is in<lb/>
reference to all the<lb/>
operating but inaccurate<lb/>
clocks .? the Speight<lb/>
Executive Committee,<lb/>
Chairkeeper<lb/>
American Horological<lb/>
it c ? Society<lb/>
-T-S. Naval Observatory<lb/>
Annex<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
praised by Cole, Schti<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
We received a pack-<lb/>
age from BUI Sheppard<lb/>
?t week which ?.<lb/>
tamed an article entitled<lb/>
The Roxy Books II<lb/>
Cale and Don Schliti<lb/>
Audie, ajraeif <lb/>
?nd Don cannot eXprea.<lb/>
The<lb/>
ta'S!<lb/>
?uVout<lb/>
m" ? by word of<lb/>
Efts :? kTr<lb/>
Cale anfj D?? ci<lb/>
saufer<lb/>
A?fce Aahworth<lb/>
Terry Herb<lb/>
J?J. Cak<lb/>
? bbbSjB I<lb/>
f<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057178_0005"/><lb/>
ww<lb/>
13 February 1979 FOUNTAINHEAD Pager 5<lb/>
?B-<lb/>
Cafe &amp; Schlitz give<lb/>
concert at the Roxy<lb/>
Bv CHRIS FARREN<lb/>
Staff Reporter<lb/>
This past weekend, J.J. Cale and Don Schlitz<lb/>
dayed tour shows to a packed and energy-filled<lb/>
o rheater. The show was another in a series of<lb/>
fine concerts tin- Roxy has been providing the<lb/>
enville area lor the past few years.<lb/>
Don Schlitz. a new name in the Nashville music<lb/>
scene, opened the show, and while the majority of<lb/>
audience had come to see Cale, Schlitz' bright<lb/>
attitude and soothing voice were a pleasant surprise.<lb/>
He moved through a thirty-five minute set which<lb/>
included man) different kinds" of tunes, from country<lb/>
lu - and even a 'gospel song for atheists<lb/>
Playing acoustic guitar and accompanied by a<lb/>
ami electric guitar, Schlitz's sound was diverse<lb/>
yel perceptivel) affected by the rambunctious energy<lb/>
rowd. He kept the majority of his tunes up<lb/>
tempo arnJ dared to slow the pace down only once<lb/>
for a beautiful song he had written while visiting<lb/>
the Outer Banks of North Carolina.<lb/>
He played with the kind of innocence that only a<lb/>
new performer has, and gained the crowd's approval<lb/>
it revealing he was born and lived for twenty<lb/>
in Durham, North Carolina. Schlitz seemed<lb/>
uineh excited to be playing in his home<lb/>
for the tir- time, and told the crowd straight<lb/>
i ii he  a performer that they are<lb/>
hear a lot more from. He ended his set<lb/>
witl hit -ingle 'The Gambler a rambling<lb/>
with thought-provoking lyrics.<lb/>
Wl il the response to Schlitz was nothing<lb/>
rwhelming, his job as an opening act was well<lb/>
and he proved himself as a rising<lb/>
songwriter. After all, the job of an opening<lb/>
act for someone else is not an easy one, and the<lb/>
vl was itching to see Hale.<lb/>
After a brief intermission and numerous trips to<lb/>
the Roxy's natural food concession stand, the crowd<lb/>
got their first taste of J.J. Cale.<lb/>
Dressed in jeans, Cale silently took the stage<lb/>
followed bv his six piece band (including two girls<lb/>
in sparkled silk pants). The group started straight<lb/>
into a song and proceeded to move, rather<lb/>
haphazardly through a show which contained all of<lb/>
Cale's FlM hits, including "Cocaine "Magnolia"<lb/>
and "After Midnight<lb/>
Cale is truly a good songwriter and a very<lb/>
creative guitarist; however, his singing is extremely<lb/>
low-energy and practically non-melodic, which is<lb/>
probably why other performers make out better<lb/>
recording his songs than he does himself.<lb/>
Cale and his band played no-frills music, and<lb/>
while not as basic as traditional blues and played<lb/>
with very little outward emotion, the songs seemed<lb/>
to express his gut feelings.<lb/>
The Roxy is an extremely unique place to see a<lb/>
concert, because the traditional and typical mystique<lb/>
between the audience and performer is broken<lb/>
down. In other words, the casualness of the<lb/>
atmosphere and the closeness of the surroundings<lb/>
put the performer on more an even level with the<lb/>
listeners, just as you might see a performer in a<lb/>
bar. One gets the feeling that the artist is playing<lb/>
and relating to real people in the audience and not<lb/>
just a mass ot faces.<lb/>
A lot deserves to be said about the intimacy and<lb/>
air of a small and casual concert like those put on<lb/>
at the Roxy; and even though J.J. Cale is a man of<lb/>
few words, he let his guitar do the talking and the<lb/>
bond he developed with the audience was more on<lb/>
a musical level, which is probably the way it should<lb/>
be, anyhow.<lb/>
Cale performed steadilv for nearly two hours.<lb/>
His guitar playing captivated many listeners, while<lb/>
'One of the great minds of the century9<lb/>
J. J. Cale<lb/>
his refusal to really "boogie" dissappointed others<lb/>
who had come to get crazy.<lb/>
Still, the music was good and the sound<lb/>
surprisingly consistent and clean. It was more a<lb/>
concert to sit, listen and relax to, rather than one<lb/>
to lose control at. Exemplary of this casualness on<lb/>
stage was Cale's request to the band during his last<lb/>
Don Schlitz<lb/>
encore.<lb/>
The request?<lb/>
"Play something somebody<lb/>
In the end, people were happy, and the Roxy<lb/>
had succeeded in bringing another worthy and<lb/>
talented performer to this area.<lb/>
 11J I U A U !?<lb/>
Scholar Buckminster Fuller lectures at McGinnis<lb/>
By WILLIAM JONES<lb/>
ssistant Trends Editor<lb/>
On Feb. lJ . ECU was priviledged to<lb/>
host oi great minds of this century.<lb/>
Dr Buckminster Fuller, at the invitation of<lb/>
ECl - Visual Art- Forum, spoke to a ne-third<lb/>
filled McGinnis Auditorium. Those attending had<lb/>
braved roads ice-slickened by one of the area's rare<lb/>
-now storms.<lb/>
Dr. Fuller is, perhaps, best known as an<lb/>
architect. His most famous design is the "geodesic<lb/>
dome which received world wide recognition at<lb/>
Expo '67. (Quite an accomplishment for a man who<lb/>
at the age of 32, "lost his shirt" in the<lb/>
run-1ruction business.)<lb/>
Dr. Fuller has been granted 41 honorary<lb/>
degrees. He belongs to far too many societies, clubs<lb/>
and fraternities (serving executive functions in<lb/>
manv) to elaborate upon. He has authored dozens of<lb/>
book on topics ranging from physics to poetrv.<lb/>
Despite his advanced age, the 84 year old<lb/>
scholar manages to make public appearances on an<lb/>
average of once every four days.<lb/>
The McGinnis audience expressed their apprecia-<lb/>
tion b) a standing ovation as "Bucky" came on<lb/>
stage.<lb/>
Dr. Fuller seemed warmed and grateful for this<lb/>
reception. He asked that the house lights be turned<lb/>
up or the spotlights dimmed so lie could see the<lb/>
faces in the audience. Neither of these being<lb/>
possible, he moved out of the brightly illuminated<lb/>
area of the stage to establish eye contact.<lb/>
This informal easiness pervaded throughout his<lb/>
talk. The endeared audience listened, attentive and<lb/>
respectful as the aged pansophist spoke; falteringly<lb/>
at first, (Dr. Fuller prefers to deliver his speeches<lb/>
impromptu) and then with such speed as to make<lb/>
catching each detail difficult. Dr. Fuller's honest<lb/>
modesty served to generate all the more respect for<lb/>
the man.<lb/>
Dr. Fuller began his speech with a short<lb/>
autobiography. He was born in 18, the year<lb/>
Marconi invented the wireless. He turned 8 the year<lb/>
of the Wright Bros famous "first flight<lb/>
The "horse and buggy" world into which Dr.<lb/>
Fuller was born affected him with its" "limited<lb/>
viewpoint" of reality. The same mentality which saw<lb/>
steamships as the ultimate method of travel, while<lb/>
viewing flight as impossible, could not conceive of<lb/>
the technological changes to come.<lb/>
To illustrate the inaccuracies held as truth when<lb/>
he was voung, Dr. Fuller showed a slide of a world<lb/>
map in common use during the early years of this<lb/>
century. Among other proportionalities, the map<lb/>
showed Greenland to be 3 times the size of<lb/>
Australia.<lb/>
This society, which held as truth what, today, is<lb/>
known to be falsehood, discouraged individual<lb/>
thinking and imagination. Children in particular,<lb/>
were told, "what you think is not important Keep<lb/>
your mouth shut and listen.<lb/>
Dr. Fuller attended Harvard 1913-1917. After-<lb/>
wards, during the first World War, he served in the<lb/>
Navy.<lb/>
Upon leaving the Navy, he went into the<lb/>
construction business, using money borrowed from<lb/>
friends as a stake.<lb/>
After a short while, it became obvious to Bucky<lb/>
that he could not honestly make a living in the<lb/>
construction world. He could make a profit, or give<lb/>
his clients their money's worth. Not willing to cheat<lb/>
people, he chose to lose money.<lb/>
Bv 1927, he was "busted<lb/>
This marked the turning point in Buckminster<lb/>
Fuller's life. The guilt he felt for having lost his<lb/>
friends' money was intolerable. He was ready "to<lb/>
do away with himself<lb/>
To justify living, he decided to spend the rest of<lb/>
his life serving humanity. He felt he could best do<lb/>
this by learning from his mistakes, and most of all,<lb/>
thinking for himself.<lb/>
"Thinking for one's self trusting one's<lb/>
intuition, is the foremost philosophy Dr. Fuller seeks<lb/>
to convey. By propogating it, he believes we can<lb/>
continue to see the tremendous increase in<lb/>
technology that has marked the last 300 years.<lb/>
Without it, modern world problems will continue<lb/>
without solution.<lb/>
As for the future, Bucky believes there must be<lb/>
major changes within the next decade.<lb/>
"Nature he says, "apparently wants us here<lb/>
as local information gatherers and problem solvers<lb/>
But, science is making this difficult for us by using<lb/>
tools "indigestible" to humanity. The general<lb/>
Sf Fl LLFR. p. 7<lb/>
Fuller: 'not an optimist'<lb/>
This is the first installment of a two part<lb/>
interview with Buckminster Fuller. The remainder<lb/>
will be published in the next issue of<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD.<lb/>
Buckminster Fuller<lb/>
By BARRY CLAYTON<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
After the lecture, I spoke to William Bream who<lb/>
suggested that Dr. Fuller was exhausted, but said<lb/>
that Dr. Fuller would grant an interview. I nodded,<lb/>
and suggested that the interview would be brief,<lb/>
and mentally crossed off about a dozen questions of<lb/>
personal interest from my notes (after all, the man<lb/>
is 84, had just spent nearly three hours lecturing<lb/>
under hot stage-lights after a jet flight and a<lb/>
gruelling car trip on icy roads from Raleigh).<lb/>
I was led backstage, through a maze of small<lb/>
rooms strewn with ladders and drop cords, and<lb/>
finally to a room that looked as if it might once<lb/>
have been a dressing room.<lb/>
It was a sordid little box of a room with high<lb/>
windows, and lit with a single electric bulb. la the<lb/>
center of the room there was a table that looked as<lb/>
if had been hammered together from salvaged<lb/>
packing crates. Several mirrors were affixed to one<lb/>
wall, and a shoddy make-up counter stretched out<lb/>
beneath them.<lb/>
Dr. Fuller sat wearily in a stiff-backed wooden<lb/>
chair amidst all the flotsam, and I wasn't quite able<lb/>
to swallow a vague sense of anger that a man of<lb/>
Buckminster Fuller's calibre would be brought to<lb/>
such a squalid scene to rest.<lb/>
Mr. Bream made the introductions. I<lb/>
seat and we began the interview.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
"First of all, I'd like to thank you for agreeing<lb/>
to the interview. I know that you must be tired. I'll<lb/>
try to be brief.<lb/>
"I enjoyed your talk. I think the thing that most<lb/>
impressed me was your sense of optimism I had<lb/>
been reaching for the proper descriptive, and with<lb/>
'optimism' I proved to have grabbed the wrong one.<lb/>
'Positivism' would have been much better.<lb/>
Fuller:<lb/>
"I'm going to immediately interfere, because I<lb/>
say that an optimist is a pessimist off center. I'm a<lb/>
very hard mechanic, sailor, navigator. I don't tell<lb/>
people I can take them across the ocean when I<lb/>
don't know ray ship or my navigation.<lb/>
"To know that we have an option is not to be<lb/>
optimistic. When people didn't know we had an<lb/>
option, they didn't know we had a boat. They<lb/>
didn't even know we had an option to make it in.<lb/>
They were getting more and more dismayed by the<lb/>
news. So it looks very bad.<lb/>
"So, when I tell themshow themso that they<lb/>
are personally convinced by the way I'm talking that<lb/>
we do have an option, they feel much better.<lb/>
"You don't have to know a thing to be negative.<lb/>
To be positive you have to know a whole lot. I<lb/>
know exactly what I'm talking about. So my<lb/>
positiveness and the fact that I know we can make<lb/>
it, and my feeling of responsibility to let you know<lb/>
that I know we can make it, is what you call<lb/>
optimism, but it shouldn't be confused that way. I<lb/>
find it amazing how many people-almost everybody-<lb/>
call me an optimist. It's very hard, it's touch and<lb/>
go, and I don't know we're going to make it. But I<lb/>
can show you that we have the possibility of<lb/>
making it<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
OT<lb/>
mmmmmmm<lb/>
???:<lb/>
<pb facs="00057178_0006"/><lb/>
 1<lb/>
age 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 13 February 1979<lb/>
Halloween is 'frightening9<lb/>
B BARR CLAYTON<lb/>
?i?iaiit (Vends Kditor<lb/>
I, personally, have<lb/>
r been a fan of the<lb/>
movie genre.<lb/>
I he reason tor this<lb/>
more than anything<lb/>
the penchant on<lb/>
part ol directors<lb/>
mo-t especially<lb/>
Vmerican directors) to<lb/>
their mater-<lb/>
m problem<lb/>
this approach i<lb/>
tkes tiio thing<lb/>
- supposed to be<lb/>
 isible, ami<lb/>
I an see some-<lb/>
it becomes less<lb/>
ng. I he prob-<lb/>
es ii h the recent<lb/>
k I lie Muuitou<lb/>
the audience<lb/>
understand h<lb/>
medi-<lb/>
w as anxious<lb/>
? into the twentieth<lb/>
in When Fried km<lb/>
l he Exorcist, he<lb/>
heavil from<lb/>
id it ion.<lb/>
de Palma's<lb/>
i arrie was jusl a re-<lb/>
familiar<lb/>
P; powers,<lb/>
id about<lb/>
menon? At<lb/>
point that<lb/>
familiar with the<lb/>
11 what about the<lb/>
X hat<lb/>
things that<lb/>
ler-<lb/>
?ave<lb/>
gore,<lb/>
me<lb/>
Ut<lb/>
dark-<lb/>
. -<lb/>
e en<lb/>
a<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
 i v o r s<lb/>
: is<lb/>
ime<lb/>
Direi lor John Car-<lb/>
lerstands this.<lb/>
? the less<lb/>
-ar is,<lb/>
a person<lb/>
with it.<lb/>
a chair<lb/>
? ? i- a<lb/>
in the<lb/>
a<lb/>
Halloween n<lb/>
-? ?<lb/>
film<lb/>
genen<lb/>
a - u 'A' 1<lb/>
v 11 h a<lb/>
than you<lb/>
kely I<lb/>
a<lb/>
ill) -talk high<lb/>
girls ? Hallo-<lb/>
ght.<lb/>
iii' ol a<lb/>
in the<lb/>
a pleasing<lb/>
 I I a knife ami<lb/>
hing the<lb/>
will walk a<lb/>
avoid. But<lb/>
i new one.<lb/>
the best<lb/>
e insane killer<lb/>
Roger Corman's<lb/>
Silent Niuht. Evil Nijjht<lb/>
: babbling<lb/>
? ?- a soro-<lb/>
lialloween is<lb/>
-(??( ial.<lb/>
ot the<lb/>
- i- that we don't<lb/>
? i er in the film's<lb/>
ourse do we<lb/>
know the killer's<lb/>
tor the murders<lb/>
n mits. Instead, ve<lb/>
an asked by the direr<lb/>
tor to accept the art oi<lb/>
 iolenl death as the<lb/>
' r the killer<lb/>
Students<lb/>
share<lb/>
recital<lb/>
Timothy W. Love<lb/>
and Meggi Louise<lb/>
James will share a<lb/>
recital on Feb. 15 at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. in the A.J.<lb/>
Fletcher Recital Hall at<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
The recital is open<lb/>
to the public.<lb/>
Thi- flies in the face<lb/>
ot all human reason,<lb/>
and since the movie-<lb/>
goer cannot make the<lb/>
necessary connection in<lb/>
term- familiar to<lb/>
humanity, he is forced<lb/>
to regard the killer as<lb/>
something outside that<lb/>
realm.<lb/>
v hen done well,<lb/>
this is terrifying. And it<lb/>
i- done magnificently in<lb/>
Halloween. It i rein-<lb/>
forced b the bone-<lb/>
scraping musical score<lb/>
(also by Carpenter) and<lb/>
the uncanny and innova-<lb/>
tive cinematography.<lb/>
1 he film opens with<lb/>
a tracking-shot of some-<lb/>
one peering in through<lb/>
the parlor window ol<lb/>
the Myers house. In the<lb/>
parlor, we see, looking<lb/>
through thekiller's eyes,<lb/>
a young couple necking.<lb/>
As they get up and<lb/>
begin to climb the<lb/>
stairs to the girl's<lb/>
bedroom, the camera<lb/>
move- to enter the<lb/>
house through the back-<lb/>
door. A hand open- a<lb/>
i utlery drawer and with-<lb/>
draws an over-sized<lb/>
butcher knife. In the<lb/>
parlor. the camera<lb/>
pauses to watch the<lb/>
boyfriend leave through<lb/>
the front door. and<lb/>
then silently makes its<lb/>
way up the stairs where<lb/>
it pauses momentarily<lb/>
while a hand picks up a<lb/>
clown mask and affixes<lb/>
it to the lens.<lb/>
Now we watch the<lb/>
progression through the<lb/>
upstairs rooms through<lb/>
the twin slits of the<lb/>
mask's eve Inexpli-<lb/>
cably, the expectation<lb/>
has increased, the inevi-<lb/>
table ha- become more<lb/>
terrible.<lb/>
Through these same<lb/>
lits we -ee the Myers<lb/>
girl slashed to death.<lb/>
I hen the camera dashes<lb/>
down the stairs and out<lb/>
ol the house to stand<lb/>
motionless while a car<lb/>
Hills up to the curb<lb/>
and an adult couple<lb/>
climb out.<lb/>
I he tracking-shot<lb/>
breaks and the camera<lb/>
picks up tht" image of a<lb/>
young child standing on<lb/>
the trout lawn of the<lb/>
Myers house. He is<lb/>
full) outfitted with a<lb/>
clown suit, an empty<lb/>
-tare, and a long blood-<lb/>
caked knife. Just the<lb/>
proper image. Alter all,<lb/>
it Halloween. 1963.<lb/>
I he scene lade- out<lb/>
t" be flicked up fifteen<lb/>
Mir later. Halloween<lb/>
1978. Young Michael<lb/>
Myers who has spent<lb/>
the last fifteen years of<lb/>
his lite in the Illinois<lb/>
Hospital tor the Crimi-<lb/>
nally Insane has escap-<lb/>
ed, driving a car that<lb/>
he could not possibh<lb/>
know how to drive back<lb/>
to his home town to<lb/>
celebrate Halloween in<lb/>
hi- own terrifying fash-<lb/>
ion.<lb/>
I'm not going to go<lb/>
into the plot of the<lb/>
story because anybody<lb/>
who seeks out horror<lb/>
films already knows the<lb/>
?lot: oodles  people<lb/>
die, but the heroine<lb/>
survives.<lb/>
FEBRUARY<lb/>
1979<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
FEBRUARY<lb/>
1979<lb/>
N.C. No.<lb/>
Nightclub<lb/>
13 TuesWhite Dorm Special<lb/>
14 Wed Super Grit Valentines<lb/>
15 ThurSuper Grit<lb/>
????????????????????<lb/>
???????????<lb/>
15 ThurSuper Grit<lb/>
16 FriSidewinder<lb/>
17 SatSidewinder<lb/>
18 SunSidewinder<lb/>
21 Wed ?.Fragile W Jack Frost<lb/>
Wet T- Shirt Contest<lb/>
16 Fri<lb/>
17 Sat.<lb/>
18 Sun.<lb/>
????????????????????.(<lb/>
??????i<lb/>
????????????????<lb/>
22 ThurFragile<lb/>
23 FriBrice Street<lb/>
24 SatBrice Street<lb/>
25 SunBadge W Doubles<lb/>
Footsball Tournament<lb/>
26 MonJesse Bolt Free Concert<lb/>
?????????<lb/>
jr? hi iummj3iimii?n in ? ? ?-?j-?-?-?-?<lb/>
! ?anxxrDcxaaxHjiQ3j3XK<lb/>
Manager's<lb/>
Birthday<lb/>
Special<lb/>
Tues. and Wed<lb/>
Feb. 13th and 14th<lb/>
No. 1- 8 oz.<lb/>
Chopped Sirloin includes<lb/>
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french fries<lb/>
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TRY OUR SOUP, CHEESE,<lb/>
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3005 E. 10th St.<lb/>
An especially nice<lb/>
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however, when an<lb/>
occult theme that has<lb/>
been kept lm-kc<lb/>
throughout the film i<lb/>
finally laid hare.<lb/>
But that would reall<lb/>
he giving it away.<lb/>
It you like shockers,<lb/>
and espe(iajy if you<lb/>
like to he scared into a<lb/>
high blood-pressure con-<lb/>
dition, see Halloween.<lb/>
t a big o?<lb/>
SUB SHOPS n GREENVILLE and NAGS HEAD NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
Wed. is<lb/>
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Tuesday-Fish FryiAII the Fried Fish<lb/>
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Wednesday-Fried Oysters:Goiden<lb/>
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Thursday-Family Night: Great<lb/>
Specials on Shrimp, Oysters Trout Or Perch,<lb/>
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Trout Or Perch$2.25<lb/>
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Hours: Open 4:30 P.M. To 9 P.M.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057178_0007"/><lb/>
13 February 1979 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
Dinner Theatre features Black Comedy<lb/>
B JEFF ROLLINS<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
The Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center Dinner<lb/>
l heatre was every bit a<lb/>
success this year, as<lb/>
the sell-out crowds can<lb/>
lil attest. After<lb/>
lhe dined, the au-<lb/>
dience was treated to a<lb/>
sparklingly witty and<lb/>
just down-right funny<lb/>
play, Peter Shaffer's<lb/>
Black Comedy, adroitlv<lb/>
directed b Mane f.<lb/>
K.irr.<lb/>
Ms. Farr chose a<lb/>
perfect ola for a din-<lb/>
ner theatre, and she<lb/>
had a powerfully talen-<lb/>
ted cast to work with.<lb/>
Black Comedy is a<lb/>
comedy of errors with<lb/>
sight gags, overlapping<lb/>
dialogue and stichomy-<lb/>
thic dialogue that all<lb/>
demand precision tim-<lb/>
ing. In this perfor-<lb/>
mance, the characters<lb/>
ran and knocked each<lb/>
other around the stage<lb/>
with an impeccable<lb/>
sense of spontaneity.<lb/>
The can<lb/>
Marvin Hunt, as<lb/>
Brindsley Miller, played<lb/>
with much ability a<lb/>
young sculptor for<lb/>
whom everything goes<lb/>
wrong. He managed to<lb/>
look totally scared out<lb/>
of his wits and hand-<lb/>
some at the same time,<lb/>
the combination of<lb/>
which made for an<lb/>
appealingly comic<lb/>
character.<lb/>
Phyllis Kivett was<lb/>
excellent as the frivo-<lb/>
lous daughter of a<lb/>
commanding Colonel.<lb/>
She was amusing and<lb/>
lovely and portrayed a<lb/>
woman who used words<lb/>
like "screamingly" and<lb/>
"Daddy-peggs" with<lb/>
disarming believability.<lb/>
Karen Baldwin was<lb/>
delightful as the old<lb/>
maid who spouts reli-<lb/>
gious cliches while shp<lb/>
ful. She possesses a<lb/>
strong stage bearing as<lb/>
well as a remarkable<lb/>
ability to act.<lb/>
Lee Baker had the<lb/>
Theatre<lb/>
covertly imbibes gin.<lb/>
Ms. Baldwin delivered<lb/>
her dialogue with fine<lb/>
insight into the charac-<lb/>
ter and her facial ex-i<lb/>
pressions were wonder-<lb/>
Roy Ayers album 'rejectable <lb/>
Angela Bo fill 'delectable'<lb/>
By DAVID MILLER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
R,<lb/>
vrrs You Send Me<lb/>
len years ago Roy Ayers played the xylophone<lb/>
as well as anyone in the world. Later, Roy Ayers<lb/>
became renowned for playing a fair facsimile' of<lb/>
commercial jazz. Today, Roy Ayers has decided he<lb/>
wants to play plastic disco (Is there anv other<lb/>
kind?).<lb/>
Imitation jazz is slick as suntan oil; imitation<lb/>
i- as unpalatable as castor oil. Listen to<lb/>
yers' voice long enough and you'll begin to<lb/>
believe George Benson can sing. This album was<lb/>
mixed a-la-letsgetaquikdiscosmashmakeamiltodaylay<lb/>
backwithprettyladeestomorrow.<lb/>
u Send Me sent mestraight to the turntable<lb/>
I -witch.<lb/>
Avers should go back to playing vibes. That is<lb/>
the one thing he can do very well.<lb/>
D-minus<lb/>
Angela Bofill-Angie<lb/>
Angela Bofill sends me, too?straight into a big<lb/>
city, slick, jazz dream. She brings me gold light in<lb/>
a world of black rainbows. She brings me visions of<lb/>
the soft, dark wood of banyan trees and river reeds<lb/>
towering high under an afternoon topazine sun. Ms.<lb/>
Bofill's music is so many things.<lb/>
Even though I've never liked to compare one<lb/>
artist to another, this woman possesses the most<lb/>
innovative, the most phenomenal new voice I've<lb/>
heard since Phoebe Snow's debut disc.<lb/>
Over the Moon and Under the Sky is magical,<lb/>
mystical and it gives me chills every time I hear it.<lb/>
The girl is a female Stevie Wonder-<lb/>
The album was arranged by Dave Grusin (who<lb/>
also works with Earl Klugh and Noel Pointer). His<lb/>
lush, layered instrumentation works beautifully not<lb/>
only to back-up, but also to accentuate, Ms. Bofill's<lb/>
vocals. Great support from session players Eric<lb/>
Gale, Ralph McDonald, Dave Valentin, Francisco<lb/>
Centeno, Steve Gadd and Grusin.<lb/>
Every cut is extraordinary! This is the album of<lb/>
the year!<lb/>
A-plus<lb/>
FULLER<lb/>
continued from p. 5<lb/>
populace i baffled rather than inspired by science<lb/>
luse it is presented as a complicated, confusing<lb/>
enigma.<lb/>
Dr. Fuller has made effort to help rectify this<lb/>
problem by writing books on such topics as<lb/>
'Synergetics Synergetics is "the coordinate<lb/>
system of the universe It makes physics easily<lb/>
understood, simple enough for children.<lb/>
Dr. Fuller has based his projections for the<lb/>
future on large "patterns" in human history.<lb/>
ccording to the patterns of scientific discovery, we<lb/>
arc due lor another major technological break-<lb/>
through around 1985.<lb/>
Eventually, there will be a one-world govern-<lb/>
ment, whose economic system will not be monitarily<lb/>
based. It will, rather, have an economy based on<lb/>
rgy; "the economic system of the universe<lb/>
But. b) tar. the single most important change,<lb/>
which mut take place if we are to survive on<lb/>
this planet, i- a change in conciousness.<lb/>
s the doctor puts it, "When I was young,<lb/>
reality was everything you could see, smell, touch,<lb/>
and hear We must realize reality is "like the<lb/>
spectrum Only what we can see is not all that<lb/>
exists.<lb/>
"Conditioned reflexes" keep us from new<lb/>
knowledge. Because we have been taught what<lb/>
reality is, we need to "dare" to see for ourselves.<lb/>
If we can learn to think freely, to respect each<lb/>
other as individuals, (dare I say love each other?)<lb/>
we will survive as a species, and prosper.<lb/>
For example, if all the nations of the world were<lb/>
to take the money alloted for defense and turn it to<lb/>
constructive purposes, we could easily achieve a<lb/>
tremendously high standard of living world wide. At<lb/>
the same time we could become completely<lb/>
independent of fossil fuels for energy within ten<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Dr. Fuller believes our survival or destruction is<lb/>
our own choice. We have the potential for both.<lb/>
The younger generations are "doing their own<lb/>
thinking They are "in love with the truth An<lb/>
eight year old, for instance once asked Dr. Fuller,<lb/>
"if we can send men to the moon, why can't we<lb/>
solve the problems here?"<lb/>
If enough people come to see things in such a<lb/>
light, perhaps we'll make it.<lb/>
At the close of his talk, Buckminster Fuller<lb/>
again received a standing ovation. He seemed<lb/>
genuinely moved by the audience, and said, "I<lb/>
appreciate your standing because by it you are not<lb/>
so much saying 'I agree with you as, 'I even want<lb/>
to let the other persons in the audience know I<lb/>
agree with you<lb/>
I am convinced that Buckminster Fuller<lb/>
wholeheartedly believes his ideas to be well-founded<lb/>
and very important to the human race.<lb/>
We might do well by lending an ear to his sage<lb/>
advice.<lb/>
Bradley-<lb/>
appears<lb/>
this week<lb/>
Ed Bradley, anchor-<lb/>
man lor CBS News, will<lb/>
appear in the Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre on<lb/>
Thurs Feb. 15 to<lb/>
explore 'he impact of<lb/>
television on world<lb/>
events and American life<lb/>
The lecture, which is<lb/>
under the sponsorship<lb/>
of the ECU Student<lb/>
Union Lecture Series<lb/>
Committee, will begin<lb/>
at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Ed Bradley was<lb/>
named CBS News White<lb/>
House Correspondent<lb/>
and anchorman for the<lb/>
Sunday evening news in<lb/>
November, 1976. During<lb/>
the 1976 presidential<lb/>
campaign, Bradley was<lb/>
assigned to cover the<lb/>
activities of Jimmy Car-<lb/>
ter. Prior to joining<lb/>
CBS News, Bradley was<lb/>
a reporter for WDAS<lb/>
Radio in Philadelphia. A<lb/>
native of Pennsylvania,<lb/>
Bradley received his<lb/>
degree from Cheyney<lb/>
State College.<lb/>
10 Discount to all ECU Students - Greenville Store Only<lb/>
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91<lb/>
BUILDING A<lb/>
17P5W.STHST.<lb/>
Berkley Mall<lb/>
o<lb/>
114 E. Walnut<lb/>
looks and the manner of<lb/>
a no-nonsense military<lb/>
Colonel. His confronta-<lb/>
tions with Brindsley<lb/>
Miller are some of the<lb/>
funniest scenes in the<lb/>
play. Baker handled his<lb/>
part with a capability<lb/>
that was more than<lb/>
adequate.<lb/>
Roberson<lb/>
Bill Roberson played<lb/>
the gay proprietor of an<lb/>
antique shop with<lb/>
finesse. He didn't camp<lb/>
it up too much, as<lb/>
actors are tempted to<lb/>
do, and yet he was not<lb/>
too understated either.<lb/>
His character and that<lb/>
of Ms. Baldwin were the<lb/>
two funniest in the<lb/>
play.<lb/>
McCutcheon<lb/>
Bob McCutcheon's<lb/>
Schuppanzigh was ano-<lb/>
ther appealing charac-<lb/>
ter. Mr. McCutcheon<lb/>
delivered his lines with<lb/>
a little more reserve<lb/>
than we would like to<lb/>
have seen, but then,<lb/>
much of the role's<lb/>
humor stemmed from<lb/>
his straight faced,<lb/>
understated delivery.<lb/>
McLeod<lb/>
Sue Ellen McLeod<lb/>
played a lovely Clea. In<lb/>
one of the funniest<lb/>
scenes Clea is in the<lb/>
room, unseen by the<lb/>
other characters, listen-<lb/>
ing to them talk about<lb/>
how ugly she is, an<lb/>
imprecation that could<lb/>
not be farther from the<lb/>
truth. She was a deci-<lb/>
ded asset to a strong<lb/>
cast.<lb/>
Although Gregory S.<lb/>
Smith had little more<lb/>
than a walk-on part as<lb/>
the millionaire, Gerog<lb/>
Bamberger, what he did<lb/>
he did with a marvelous<lb/>
comic flair. Dana Mills<lb/>
deserves credit for<lb/>
designing a simple, yet<lb/>
effective stage.<lb/>
Comedy<lb/>
Take a talented cast,<lb/>
a hilariou plav and a<lb/>
good director to put<lb/>
them together uell and<lb/>
you have a wonderful<lb/>
evening's entertainment.<lb/>
And that is exactly<lb/>
what Black Corned <lb/>
va<lb/>
This week's<lb/>
Free Flick<lb/>
is Conrack<lb/>
at Hendrix<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
Shows begin<lb/>
at 7:00<lb/>
and 9:00<lb/>
On Friday<lb/>
and Saturday<lb/>
nights.<lb/>
 CASINO PARTY <lb/>
at ECU's own DELTA HOUSE<lb/>
Feb.13,1979<lb/>
8:30-until<lb/>
Enjoy "Hairy Buffalo"<lb/>
Play craps, blackjack and poker with "Blcto<lb/>
High winner-dinner at Gathering Place<lb/>
2nd prize-fifth of liquor<lb/>
Delta Sigma Phi House<lb/>
2721 Memorial Dr.<lb/>
Beside Three Steers<lb/>
For info, call 756-4916<lb/>
Admission 25 4<lb/>
20 chips per person upon entrance<lb/>
OPEN<lb/>
ATHLETES' FOOT-WEAR &amp; ACCESSORIES<lb/>
RUNNING ? TENNIS - BASKETBALL - RACQUETBALL - SOCCER<lb/>
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styles of footwear.<lb/>
Specializing in<lb/>
Nike Footwear<lb/>
and Accessories<lb/>
M<lb/>
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756-0309<lb/>
10 OFF all equipment with this coupon GOOD THROUGH FEB. 17<lb/>
DANCE<lb/>
 featuring<lb/>
"THE DYNAMIC UPSETTERS<lb/>
 at<lb/>
The Moose Lodge<lb/>
Sat. Feb. 17th<lb/>
9:00 1:00<lb/>
BYOB<lb/>
Set-ups Available<lb/>
$2.50 in advance $3.00 at the door<lb/>
Tickets may be purchased at the Clothes Horse<lb/>
or from any Phi Kappa Tan brother or pledge<lb/>
or call 752-4379.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
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<lb/>
<pb facs="00057178_0008"/><lb/>
Pirates earn rout of<lb/>
USC-Aiken 103-72<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
fter tour straight overtime games, even ECU<lb/>
h Larry Gillman admitted it was nice for a<lb/>
change to -it on the bench and relax while the<lb/>
Pirates coasted to an easy victory for the first time<lb/>
more than a month.<lb/>
W ith -i players scoring in double figures led by<lb/>
rge Maynor's 18 points, ECU cruised to a<lb/>
2 victory here Saturday night over a hapless<lb/>
I SC Viken team.<lb/>
iv i- really the first time all year that I<lb/>
-it on the bench for 15 minutes and relax<lb/>
tn said afterwards. "1 think we're improving<lb/>
We're back on our feet now, but we<lb/>
il have much time to relax. We have to go to<lb/>
I NC W ilmington Tuesday and they're always a<lb/>
team tor us<lb/>
Fortunately, however, one team which certainly<lb/>
sift rank among the nation's elite was the<lb/>
from Aiken, S.C. With sharpshooting forward<lb/>
Herb Krusen, Oliver Mack and freshman Al Tyson<lb/>
 from everywhere in the first half, the<lb/>
opened up a comfortable 51-35 halftime<lb/>
Pacers pulled with five points at 16-11 in<lb/>
earh stages on Zaeh Norris' bucket, but<lb/>
g lumpers and the inside play of Tyson<lb/>
the Pirate- a 37-21 lead just five minutes<lb/>
Vnd after that the outcome was never in<lb/>
Ma 'rod ten of the Bucs first 16 points in<lb/>
half to give the Pirates a big 67-43 lead<lb/>
? 54 remaining and Gillman unloaded the<lb/>
ifter that.<lb/>
ight that our defense after the first two<lb/>
second half was good Gillman<lb/>
ive a tendency to relax some when you<lb/>
id. But we went out in the second half<lb/>
iea to work out our defense and we<lb/>
ur match-up ahm' to their patterns real<lb/>
well. 1 hope we can continue to apply that to the<lb/>
other teams we've got coming up in the next few<lb/>
game<lb/>
Following Maynor in the scoring column were<lb/>
Greg Cornelius with 17 points while Mach had 16.<lb/>
Krusen and Tyson scored 14 points apiece while<lb/>
Mo-elv had 10. Cornelius was the top rebounder for<lb/>
the Bucs with 13.<lb/>
Once again, the Pirates 1-2-2 zone worked<lb/>
extremely well in stretches. The Bucs forced a<lb/>
whopping 21 turnovers and also outrebounded the<lb/>
much -mailer Pacers 51-44.<lb/>
ECU also had several players who came oft the<lb/>
bench and played well in the second half. Walter<lb/>
Mo-elv scored 10 points and handed out five assists<lb/>
while seldom used forward Marc McLaurin chipped<lb/>
in with six point<lb/>
"We got to use a lot of players tonight<lb/>
Gillman noted. "March McLaurin for example has<lb/>
been playing well in practice and tonight he had a<lb/>
chance to play. You don't want to be greedy. I<lb/>
think players like Mack and Cornelius and the<lb/>
other- enjoyed being able to sec some of the others<lb/>
play, too<lb/>
"I thought we shot the hall well, and we had<lb/>
some nice assists he continued. "Walter Mosely<lb/>
came in and played real well. And our open court<lb/>
game worked well against them. But, again, it's<lb/>
just nice to be at home<lb/>
ECU outshot USC-Aiken from the field 57.2<lb/>
percent to 38.6 percent while the Pirate- also had<lb/>
11 free throw- to the Pacer- four.<lb/>
 alker Keefe was I SC-Aiken's top scorer with<lb/>
14 points while Rob Matwich ami Dennis Seiple had<lb/>
10 points apiece. Keefe was also the Pacers top<lb/>
rebounder with 13.<lb/>
The Pirates are now 10-12 overall while<lb/>
USC-Aiken fell to 13-12.<lb/>
Lady Pirates uin<lb/>
Winthrop tourney<lb/>
Bv JIMMY DUPREE<lb/>
Staff W riter<lb/>
HOCK HILL.S.CThe Lady Pirates ventured to<lb/>
i and brought back first place honors<lb/>
nnual Winthrop Invitational women's<lb/>
tournament.<lb/>
opened the tourney against defending<lb/>
College of Charleston. The Lady Bucs<lb/>
i 74-67 victorv in that contest.<lb/>
Li.I never trailed, as Charleston kept the game<lb/>
R - ? Thompson led the attack with 19 points<lb/>
unds, followed by Gale Kerbaugh with<lb/>
14. Lydia Rountree 12, April Ross 11, and Marcia<lb/>
10.<lb/>
I Connie Culbreth and forward Jane West<lb/>
Charleston with 15 and 14 points, respectively.<lb/>
?h pulled down 10 rebounds.<lb/>
"We did a super job in the second half said<lb/>
mentor Cathy Andruzzi. "All six of the girls<lb/>
ed hit in double figures<lb/>
md round action pitted ECU with Francis<lb/>
Mari liege. The Lady Bucs struggled to a 99-97<lb/>
n.<lb/>
ECl led by up to 21 points at one stage in the<lb/>
ond half, but fouls plagued the Lady Pirates'<lb/>
efforts. Thompson, Girven, Ross and Lillian Barnes<lb/>
all disqualified in the second half.<lb/>
The two team- combined tallied 59 personal<lb/>
an unusuallv high total for women's<lb/>
ketball.<lb/>
Thompson led ECU with 38 points and 12 grabs.<lb/>
Lvdia Rountree followed with 30 points and 10<lb/>
rebounds. Kerbaugh poured in 14.<lb/>
? big -lory of the game came from Francis<lb/>
M Pearl Moore, who pumped in 52 points to<lb/>
id all scorers.<lb/>
"April Ross played tough defense in the first<lb/>
half and held Moore to 14 points said Andruzzi.<lb/>
- last five that were in there had more<lb/>
pressure on them than any other time this year.<lb/>
Lynne (Emerson) didn't start but she came in and<lb/>
played very well on defense. Lydia was a real key<lb/>
thai game<lb/>
Alter two hard-fought victories, the Pirates faced<lb/>
the tournament host in the finals and came away<lb/>
with a victory, 76-63 over Winthrop, and the<lb/>
irney trophy.<lb/>
Thompson again paced the Bucs with 25 points<lb/>
and I 1 boards. Rountree poured in 17 and Girven<lb/>
13 with nine rebounds.<lb/>
"Lynne started this game and gave one of her<lb/>
best performances of the season praised Andruzzi.<lb/>
"Her numbers (10 points and 10 rebounds) weren't<lb/>
all that high, but all of her baskets came at critical<lb/>
stages of the game<lb/>
"Our offense was run really well. They were all<lb/>
three pressure games. They proved to themselves<lb/>
that all the training is paying'off<lb/>
Region II AIAW statistics for games through<lb/>
February 2 show that Lady Pirate Rosie Thompson<lb/>
leads the regional scoring race with a 24.5 clip. She<lb/>
also stands in second place in rebounding with 12.7<lb/>
per contest.<lb/>
ECU stands in second place for team rebounding<lb/>
with 49.8 per contest.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates travel to High Point<lb/>
Wednesday before closing out their home slate<lb/>
Saturday at 6:30 against Appalachian State. <lb/>
ECU FORW RI HERB<lb/>
KruM-n puts up a shot<lb/>
in the Pirate- 103-72<lb/>
rout of USC-Aiken la-t<lb/>
Saturday night. I he<lb/>
6 5 junior from Stiver<lb/>
Spring. Md. tallied 1 <lb/>
points for the name,<lb/>
krusen's hot outside<lb/>
shooting of late ha-<lb/>
been a big plu- for<lb/>
Larrv Cillman - Pirates.<lb/>
Photo bv<lb/>
Grogan<lb/>
John H<lb/>
<lb/>
Tough road games in<lb/>
sight for pesty Pirates<lb/>
Marcia Girven makes her move<lb/>
Photo by Chap Curley<lb/>
Host Pirates tonight<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
The final horn sounded in Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Saturday night and tor the first time in four games,<lb/>
the ECl players headed straight for the locker<lb/>
room.<lb/>
Fortunately, not one overtime period remained,<lb/>
and more importantly the Pirates managed a<lb/>
v ictory.<lb/>
something sorely needed before the Bucs begin a<lb/>
crucial five game stretch Tuesday night against<lb/>
I NC-v ilmington.<lb/>
Many Pirate basketball observers still feel Larry<lb/>
Gillman's job may be in limbo at the end of the<lb/>
season. The Bucs have five games remaining, three<lb/>
which are on the road, and they may determine<lb/>
whether the talkative New Yorker will be around for<lb/>
another year.<lb/>
UNC-W awaits rematch<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
ECU coach Larry Gillman has pulled more than<lb/>
a few hairs from his head lately with four of the<lb/>
Pirates last five games decided in overtime. And<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington head coach Mel Gibson can<lb/>
certainly sympathize with him.<lb/>
Gibson's Seahawks have dropped two of their<lb/>
last three games in overtime periods and will trv to<lb/>
snap out of a two-game losing streak tonight when<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington squares off against ECU at 8:00 in<lb/>
Trask Coliseum.<lb/>
The Seahawks, now 15-7 overall, lost to Southern<lb/>
Conference front runner Appalachian State, 62-60, in<lb/>
overtime Saturday night and also dropped a 75-57<lb/>
decision to UNC-Charlotte last Thursday.<lb/>
However, Gibson is anxious for the Seahawks<lb/>
rematch against the Pirates. Gary Cooper,<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington's big forward, who suffered a<lb/>
broken bone in his foot in the ECU game earlier<lb/>
this year, is expected to return to the lineup after a<lb/>
six game absence.<lb/>
Before Cooper was injured, the 6'6 210<lb/>
pounder from Merritt, was averaging 14.3 points per<lb/>
game and was the team's second leading rebounder.<lb/>
"We're a. close knit group and losing Gary in<lb/>
that game was a traumatic experience for us<lb/>
Gibson said from his office Monday afternoon. "His<lb/>
loss in the first half against ECU bothered us<lb/>
because we needed his scoring and rebounding<lb/>
strength inside<lb/>
After Cooper left the game early in the first<lb/>
half, the Pirates quickly took control and opened up<lb/>
a big 16 point lead at the break.<lb/>
Although ECU eventually went on to win the<lb/>
gam?, 92-79, the Seahawks badly outrebounded the<lb/>
Gibson<lb/>
Wolff<lb/>
Pirates 51-39. The Bucs 1-2-2 zone proved to be the<lb/>
key factor in the game, forcing numerous turnovers<lb/>
while the Seahawks could manage only 39.5 percent<lb/>
from the field.<lb/>
"We had seen the zone before, but they<lb/>
matched up well against us and we didn't make the<lb/>
proper adjustments Gibson noted. "But give ECU<lb/>
a lot of credit. They've played a tough schedule this<lb/>
season and they've gotten some big wins.<lb/>
"Probably the biggest thing they've got going<lb/>
for them right now is the play of George Maynor<lb/>
he continued. "Maynor's the catalyst. He takes a<lb/>
lot of pressure off Oliver Mack which make ECU a<lb/>
much more dangerous team. Herb Krusen has really<lb/>
gone on a tear with his outside shooting over the<lb/>
last few games<lb/>
W'ith Cooper out of the lineup, sophomore Danny<lb/>
Davis has emerged as a capable inside scorer and<lb/>
rebounder Davis who played with Cooper at Pamlico<lb/>
High School , has been averaging 14.3 points per<lb/>
game while veteran center Dave Wolff has been<lb/>
getting 16 points and 6.9 rebounds per game.<lb/>
After the UNC-Wilmington contest. ECU returns<lb/>
home to face Tennessee-Chattanooga and Georgia<lb/>
Tech before concluding tis season on the road<lb/>
against Old Dominion and the top ranked Fightii<lb/>
Irish of Notre Dame.<lb/>
"Everybody out there tonight wa real unselfish<lb/>
and believe me we're going to need that team<lb/>
effort with the tough games we've got remaining on<lb/>
our schedule Oliver Mack said after ECl - easy<lb/>
103-72 win over USC-Aiken Saturday. "It- nice<lb/>
win and be able to relax for a change. But the<lb/>
last five games are going to be tough ones<lb/>
"If we win four of the five games we can finish<lb/>
14-14 he continued. "And to me that will be like<lb/>
a pretty successful season especiallv after la-t vear.<lb/>
We've been in some awfully frustrating game- this<lb/>
year and maybe with a few breaks we could have a<lb/>
better record. But sometimes you just have to take<lb/>
what you can get<lb/>
Mack, who set a school scoring record agains<lb/>
USC-Aiken last year with a 47 point barrage, scon<lb/>
just 16 points against the Pacers. However, the<lb/>
Pirates had five other players in double figure- led<lb/>
by his running mate in the backcourt, George<lb/>
Maynor, who had 18 points.<lb/>
"A win like this helps the team more than<lb/>
anything Mack explained. "The overall attitude i-<lb/>
better when everybody gets to contribute ami we<lb/>
still played as a team out there<lb/>
The win over USC-Aiken snapped a two-game<lb/>
losing streak for the Pirates and also ended a<lb/>
stretch of four consecutive overtime games. ECU i-<lb/>
now 10-12 overall and has an outside chance ol<lb/>
finishing above the .500 mark with a strong finish.<lb/>
"It's always nice to have a couple of ea-v ones<lb/>
like this forward Herb Krusen said. "But 1 would<lb/>
rather play the tough ones all the time. It is nice to<lb/>
get a win without playing overtime, though. We ran<lb/>
the break a lot better tonight and looked a lot<lb/>
better on defense than we have in the la-t tew<lb/>
games<lb/>
Krusen, the sharp shooting forward from Silver<lb/>
Spring, Md. has now scored in double figure- in<lb/>
the last nine games and gunned in 14 points<lb/>
against USC-Aiken, 12 which came in the first half<lb/>
"It's all just been a matter of confidence over<lb/>
the last few games he said. "The guvs are<lb/>
confident in me and are looking for me when I've<lb/>
got the open shot. I'm hoping 1 can contr.bute more<lb/>
to the team as the season finishes<lb/>
Lady Pirates lose<lb/>
Old Dominion's top-ranked<lb/>
women s basketball team defeated<lb/>
ECU s Lady Pirates 95-70 last night.<lb/>
ECU's Rosie Thompson was the<lb/>
game's leading scorer with 28 points.<lb/>
Old Dominion never trailed en<lb/>
route to their 24th consecutive wln<lb/>
this season against no defeats The<lb/>
loss dropped ECU to 15-9.<lb/>
t<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057178_0009"/><lb/>
t f<lb/>
f r<lb/>
r r f<lb/>
I I <lb/>
13 February 199 POUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
Smith heads impressive list of Pirate grid recruits<lb/>
this<lb/>
have<lb/>
who<lb/>
h CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Vdistant Sports Editor<lb/>
rhough the national<lb/>
signing dav is not until<lb/>
February 21, the ECU<lb/>
tball coaching staff is<lb/>
pleased with<lb/>
ing lor the fresh-<lb/>
lass of 179.<lb/>
ate assistant coach<lb/>
Ken Hutcherson savs<lb/>
s tnaj be the best<lb/>
?up ol freshmen ECl<lb/>
has ever had.<lb/>
' e wont after the<lb/>
'lasers this year<lb/>
Hutcherson.<lb/>
 e've had to compete<lb/>
with some of the larger<lb/>
But we are<lb/>
II pleased at<lb/>
int.<lb/>
Though they<lb/>
signed six players<lb/>
rtieipated in the N.C.<lb/>
Ml-Star Came,<lb/>
Pirate coaching staff<lb/>
: about to let up<lb/>
 in their efforts to<lb/>
the best talent<lb/>
a ailable.<lb/>
W c' e signed some<lb/>
standing players<lb/>
i Hutcherson. "but<lb/>
we hope that national<lb/>
ning day will be a<lb/>
day for us and<lb/>
ise that total. Even<lb/>
that day doesn't go<lb/>
as planned, I'll still feel<lb/>
we've had a great year<lb/>
? iiiting<lb/>
1 among the<lb/>
Pirate signees is Doug<lb/>
a 6'5 255<lb/>
noseguard from<lb/>
Pamir. C unty High in<lb/>
Bayboro. Smith was<lb/>
named to the All-South<lb/>
tm, was named the<lb/>
 tnding player in<lb/>
the Shrine Game, and<lb/>
generally considered<lb/>
best graduating<lb/>
lineman in the state.<lb/>
Smith will play in<lb/>
the East-West all-Star<lb/>
ime this summer. His<lb/>
aeh in that game.<lb/>
Roanoke's Nolan Re-<lb/>
pess says Smith runs<lb/>
like a sprinter and has<lb/>
tremendous upper-<lb/>
body strength.<lb/>
"We've made Smith<lb/>
the nucleus of our<lb/>
defense Respess said<lb/>
proudly. "We have to<lb/>
play the 50 defense and<lb/>
he should be very<lb/>
effective at noseguard<lb/>
The Pirates have<lb/>
also signed another All-<lb/>
South performer, quar-<lb/>
terback Tol Avery from<lb/>
South Johnston. But the<lb/>
Pirates will have to wait<lb/>
until national signing<lb/>
day before they can be<lb/>
sure Avery will don the<lb/>
purple and gold for the<lb/>
next lour seasons.<lb/>
Avery signed letters<lb/>
of intent with both ECU<lb/>
and N.C. State in order<lb/>
to slow down the mass<lb/>
recruiting problems that<lb/>
have beset the talented<lb/>
high school senior.<lb/>
Avery will sign with<lb/>
either the Pirates or the<lb/>
Wolfpaek on February<lb/>
21.<lb/>
An All-East perform-<lb/>
er of local interest who<lb/>
has signed with the<lb/>
Pirates is Willie Swin-<lb/>
son, a super-swift run-<lb/>
ning back from Kinston.<lb/>
Swinson became the<lb/>
first player in his<lb/>
school's history to gain<lb/>
1000 yards in a season<lb/>
this past year. He<lb/>
gained an amazing 277<lb/>
yards in a game with<lb/>
Goldsboro this past<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The graduation of<lb/>
Terry Gallaher brings<lb/>
about a wide opening in<lb/>
the Pirate receiving<lb/>
corps. The ECU coach-<lb/>
ing staff hopes they<lb/>
have compensated some-<lb/>
what for that loss iwth<lb/>
the signing of Lloyd<lb/>
Black, an All-East<lb/>
receiver from Lee<lb/>
County Senior High in<lb/>
Sanford.<lb/>
Other than Swinson,<lb/>
Hutcherson mentioned<lb/>
two other backs signed<lb/>
by the Pirates thus far.<lb/>
Tony Elliott from Tabor<lb/>
City, and Norwood Vann<lb/>
from James Kenon High<lb/>
were both spoken of<lb/>
highly.<lb/>
Elliot was selected<lb/>
All-State this year after<lb/>
accounting for nearly<lb/>
2,000 yards for Jack<lb/>
Holley's club at Tabor<lb/>
City. '<lb/>
Though Smith has<lb/>
received the most publi-<lb/>
city of the Pirates'<lb/>
recruited linemen<lb/>
Coach Pat Dye and his<lb/>
staff have several other<lb/>
men who will probably<lb/>
see much action for the<lb/>
Pirates during the next<lb/>
four seasons.<lb/>
Anthony Robbins<lb/>
from Bertie, Gary Gam-<lb/>
brell from Eastern<lb/>
Wayne, and Kenneth<lb/>
Brown from Tarboro are<lb/>
all Pirate signees.<lb/>
Hutcherson noted<lb/>
that the Pirates have<lb/>
also signed three play-<lb/>
ers who participated in<lb/>
the Shrine Game for the<lb/>
West squad. Tight end<lb/>
John Robertson from<lb/>
Eden, defensive tackle<lb/>
Maury Banks of<lb/>
Thomasville, and defen-<lb/>
sive tackle-offensive<lb/>
guard Mark Ervin from<lb/>
Morgantown have all<lb/>
signed with the Pirates.<lb/>
Hutcherson also cited<lb/>
the signings of split end<lb/>
Keith Cowell of Pam-<lb/>
lico, and Linebacker<lb/>
Robert Boyette of West<lb/>
Carterett.<lb/>
Hutcherson noted<lb/>
that the Pirates have<lb/>
also signed several out-<lb/>
standing players from<lb/>
Virginia, some of which<lb/>
will play in the Virginia<lb/>
East-West All-Star<lb/>
Game.<lb/>
"We've signed a<lb/>
couple of real 'supers'<lb/>
from Virginia said<lb/>
Hutcherson.<lb/>
One of the Virginia<lb/>
signees is James Bar-<lb/>
ren, a tackle from<lb/>
Virginia Military Aca-<lb/>
demy.<lb/>
A complete list ol<lb/>
Pirate signees will be<lb/>
available after the Feb-<lb/>
ruary 21 national sign-<lb/>
ing date.<lb/>
A<lb/>
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with this coupon<lb/>
Welcome to our new and enlarged<lb/>
self service cosmetics center. Make<lb/>
your own selection from Greenville's<lb/>
most complete Revlon Department.<lb/>
DISCOUNTCENTER<lb/>
Shoney's Real<lb/>
Italian Spa-<lb/>
ghetti with su-<lb/>
perb, tasty,<lb/>
meat sauce,<lb/>
Parmesan<lb/>
Cheese, Hot<lb/>
Grecian<lb/>
Bread<lb/>
WITH<lb/>
SALAD<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
Located beside<lb/>
the Ramada Inn,<lb/>
264 By-pass.<lb/>
<lb/>
f'<lb/>
r<lb/>
"N<lb/>
e?<lb/>
itt?<lb/>
THE FINALS OF ECU'S<lb/>
STROH'S? HALLOW<lb/>
DISTRIBUTING CO.<lb/>
CASE STACKING CONTEST<lb/>
will be held during HALFTIME at the<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
CHATTANOOGA Basketball Game<lb/>
February 15<lb/>
te'<lb/>
CHI OMEGAs VS. P.A.S.T. of Cotton hall<lb/>
<lb/>
?,<lb/>
ECU RUGBY TEAM VS. ELIMINATORS<lb/>
g<lb/>
1st PRIZE ? $200.00 &amp; TROPHIES<lb/>
RUNNERS UP ? PLAQUES<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057178_0010"/><lb/>
 <lb/>
 <lb/>
1 <lb/>
1 <lb/>
1 1<lb/>
rage iu rumt M.mriCMu ?? ??wiu?i) .??<lb/>
Monarch wrestlers upset Pirates 20-19<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Just when the ECU<lb/>
wrestling team appeared<lb/>
on the verge of break-<lb/>
ing out its season long<lb/>
slump. Old Dominion<lb/>
suddenly popped up and<lb/>
upset the Pirates 20-19<lb/>
in Norfolk, Va. last<lb/>
 ednesday night.<lb/>
The Bues had just<lb/>
snapped their four<lb/>
match losing streak last<lb/>
weekend against the<lb/>
Monarchs and were<lb/>
favored to pick up their<lb/>
second dual victory of<lb/>
the early season. But<lb/>
Old Dominion seized<lb/>
control of the match<lb/>
with three straight wins<lb/>
in the lower weights<lb/>
and held on in the<lb/>
upper weights to cap-<lb/>
ture its fifth victory of<lb/>
the season.<lb/>
The Monarchs<lb/>
improved their record to<lb/>
5-6 overall while the<lb/>
Pirates fell to 1-7.<lb/>
"It was another<lb/>
tough loss for us<lb/>
Pirate coach Bill Hill<lb/>
said. "Those lower<lb/>
ueight classes really<lb/>
hurt us, but I thought<lb/>
we might have been<lb/>
able to pull it out near<lb/>
the end. If Mindell<lb/>
1 -on had been able to<lb/>
pin his opponent we<lb/>
would have won, but he<lb/>
still wrestled a fine<lb/>
match.<lb/>
After a double forfeit<lb/>
at 118, Old Dominion<lb/>
reeled off three straight<lb/>
victories to grab a 14-0<lb/>
lead before the Pirates<lb/>
could register their ini-<lb/>
tial win in the match.<lb/>
Old Dominion's<lb/>
Wayne Martin pinned<lb/>
David Jerose in 4:46 at<lb/>
126, while Ed Carlson<lb/>
and Buddy Lee both<lb/>
earned major decisions<lb/>
at 134 and 142. Carlson<lb/>
topped Jim Osborn 12-4<lb/>
and Lee decisioned Bob<lb/>
Harris 15-7.<lb/>
Hill moved Tom<lb/>
Robinson to 150 before<lb/>
the match and the<lb/>
strategy paid off.<lb/>
Robinson, who has mis-<lb/>
sed most of the season<lb/>
with a knee injury<lb/>
pinned Tim Davidson in<lb/>
6:07.<lb/>
But the Monarchs<lb/>
came right back when<lb/>
Arturo Holmes upset<lb/>
ECU's Steve Goode 10-6<lb/>
at 158. Tom Braine won<lb/>
by forfeit for the Pirates<lb/>
at 167. but ODU's John<lb/>
Nowland captured a<lb/>
hard fought 10-5 victory<lb/>
over Vic Northrup at<lb/>
177.<lb/>
Pins in either the<lb/>
190 or heavyweight<lb/>
matches would have<lb/>
won the match, but<lb/>
neither Butch Revils nor<lb/>
Tyson could pull it off.<lb/>
Revils, however,<lb/>
came close with a 17-6<lb/>
major decision over Pat<lb/>
Ryan and Tyson conclu-<lb/>
ded the match with a<lb/>
3-0 win over Frank<lb/>
Nowland. Nowland<lb/>
defeated Tyson last year<lb/>
in the finals of the<lb/>
Virginia State High<lb/>
School championships.<lb/>
"I didn't count on<lb/>
some of those losses in<lb/>
either the lower or<lb/>
upper weights Hill<lb/>
explained. "I knew the<lb/>
match was going to be<lb/>
close because we just<lb/>
got by them last week-<lb/>
end in the quad. We<lb/>
still got great effort<lb/>
from several individuals.<lb/>
Want to write SPORTS?<lb/>
757 6366<lb/>
757-6309<lb/>
Call 757-6366 or 757 6309<lb/>
Pirate track team gets<lb/>
divided weekend results<lb/>
East Carolina split<lb/>
its men's track team<lb/>
this past weekend and<lb/>
came up with similarly<lb/>
divided results.<lb/>
The sprinters and<lb/>
hurdlers dominated the<lb/>
group sent to N.C.<lb/>
State's indoor invita-<lb/>
tional which left with<lb/>
some good performan-<lb/>
ces, while the quarter-<lb/>
milers had a disappoint-<lb/>
ing trip to Delaware.<lb/>
In Raleigh Saturday,<lb/>
high jumper Russell<lb/>
Parker won with a 6-11<lb/>
effort, while Marvin<lb/>
Rankins was second in<lb/>
the 60-yard high hurdles<lb/>
in 7.46 seconds and<lb/>
teammate Valentino<lb/>
Robinson was sixth in<lb/>
7.58 seconds. Bobby-<lb/>
Phillips was clocked<lb/>
7.66 seconds in heats.<lb/>
All three hurdlers<lb/>
won heats, as did<lb/>
Anthony Fields, who<lb/>
heat of the<lb/>
dash in 6.52<lb/>
but did not<lb/>
won a<lb/>
60-yard<lb/>
seconds,<lb/>
place.<lb/>
In<lb/>
Antoine<lb/>
events,<lb/>
other<lb/>
Holloman won<lb/>
his heat of the 440 in<lb/>
54.1 seconds but did<lb/>
not score, the same fate<lb/>
which struck Tony<lb/>
McCoy in the 600<lb/>
despite a 1:14.7<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
LaMont Bvrd<lb/>
third in the 1,000-yard<lb/>
run in 2:16.91, the<lb/>
same place earned by<lb/>
clock-<lb/>
was<lb/>
Jim Dill in the three-<lb/>
miles at 14:30.2. Darryi<lb/>
McKoy placed fifth in<lb/>
the long jump at 22-9<lb/>
'4- Charlie Powell was<lb/>
limed in 14:59.2 in the<lb/>
three-miles.<lb/>
In Delaware Sunday,<lb/>
Calvin Alston was<lb/>
second at 48.6 seconds<lb/>
and Otis melvin fourth<lb/>
in 48.9 seconds in the<lb/>
quarter-mile, but an<lb/>
injury to James Fields<lb/>
and an illness which<lb/>
finally sidelined Melvin,<lb/>
aborted the Pirates'<lb/>
attempt to qualify for<lb/>
the NCAA meet in the<lb/>
mile relay.<lb/>
Bill Miller ran well<lb/>
in the mile, taking<lb/>
fourth in 4:12.4.<lb/>
RIGGAN'S<lb/>
SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
AND<lb/>
LEATHER SHOP<lb/>
New leather pocketbooks<lb/>
belts, and belt buckles.<lb/>
S ?- repaired to look<lb/>
like now .<lb/>
Ill w . 1th St.<lb/>
Don't miss the<lb/>
Premiere Production of<lb/>
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B-15, bomber, field,<lb/>
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Back Packs<lb/>
by Thomas Patterson<lb/>
A startling new play for mature audiences<lb/>
?ased on the life and work of Emily Dickinson.<lb/>
Studio Theatre<lb/>
East Carolina Playhouse<lb/>
$2.50 (ECU Students SI)<lb/>
Call 757-6390 tor reservation-<lb/>
 EatlisWk<lb/>
CrttmtilU, I. C.<lb/>
Valentine's Day<lb/>
Special<lb/>
Wed. Feb.14 4-8p.ni.<lb/>
Ladies tap free<lb/>
Door prizes<lb/>
Gents discount<lb/>
?n't forget Fri. afternoon<lb/>
Quality ? Competitive Prices ? Service<lb/>
"Swill firtiifille Fir Over 35 Years Ewyiay Of Tfci fiir<lb/>
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8 a.m10 p.m.<lb/>
Candies by:<lb/>
? ?2qw Valentine<lb/>
Russell Stover<lb/>
Whitman<lb/>
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RED FOIL HEART<lb/>
I LB.<lb/>
SATIN HEART 2 LB.<lb/>
I ASSORTED<lb/>
CHOCOLATES<lb/>
I I LB.<lb/>
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NOW OFFERING<lb/>
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7581042<lb/>
Appetizels<lb/>
Jintipastofoi two 2. 75<lb/>
fol foul y. 75<lb/>
fJCoona<lb/>
Jlew QJolk Style ttizza<lb/>
Jegula ?5<lb/>
m<lb/>
oups<lb/>
Coup du jou<lb/>
mestione Cuam of 3tushioom<lb/>
cup. no bowl .60<lb/>
Jjiozzalella<lb/>
eppeis<lb/>
Unions<lb/>
zieen Olives<lb/>
Jn us hi ooms y.<lb/>
Sausage . .<lb/>
Ufeppeloni 4<lb/>
ztloundbeef<lb/>
3iam<lb/>
Lsxtia Cheese<lb/>
Special (ariy foul items) 5<lb/>
3tastei (all items) 6.<lb/>
C ach extta item<lb/>
uxe 1 7<lb/>
Gallic Dead<lb/>
Oauteea urtushlooms<lb/>
to<lb/>
95<lb/>
Salads<lb/>
Jiesh dossed Salad65<lb/>
Chefs ibalaa a. 50<lb/>
Spinach Salad2.50<lb/>
Choice of Dessmg?SFiench, Russian, Stalian, Oil &amp; Vmega<lb/>
. 15 exta<lb/>
vegetatian ztizza 5 <lb/>
Onion peppei, mushtoom, sliced tomatoes, eggplant, geen olt<lb/>
7-45<lb/>
tves<lb/>
maunes<lb/>
Biut a<lb/>
eese<lb/>
Jegula 8<lb/>
nnes ? a la cate<lb/>
Sewed with Gallic ZUead<lb/>
ZDaKed JLasagna2.95 Stuffed Qieen ZPeppeti<lb/>
Daked Ziti2.95 Chicken Caccitoti<lb/>
s? t.anicotti2.95 Chicken Ltaimtgiana.<lb/>
Cggplant ZTatmigiana2.95 Shtimp 3Hainaa. . .<lb/>
zuaked Zucchini2.95 Shtimp Scampi<lb/>
Wtnnets seved with UTleat Sauce ? .35 exta<lb/>
Siae Cae of Spaghetti<lb/>
served with Wtnnes only ? .25 exta<lb/>
Mot<lb/>
1) Meatball<lb/>
) C 75<lb/>
2 Oausage<lb/>
3) Sausage, ?leppes, Onions<lb/>
With Potato Chips, Pickle <lb/>
Cold<lb/>
1) 3iam, Salami, ?Povolone <lb/>
2 3am and cheese <lb/>
3) Roastbeef<lb/>
.? r, w' &amp;???? a, sttt '75<lb/>
with Cheese<lb/>
25<lb/>
Spaghetti<lb/>
y?lam Sauce 95<lb/>
zuutleX Sauce95<lb/>
Jrleat Sauce2.35<lb/>
Unushtooms2.50<lb/>
uneatballs2.65<lb/>
Sausage2.65<lb/>
Uxny Jtwo Sttms3.<lb/>
'?95<lb/>
00<lb/>
Zui<lb/>
zclain Sauce<lb/>
jjutte Sauce?? 95<lb/>
Jrleat Sauce2.35<lb/>
Jrlushtooms2.50<lb/>
urleatoallsa. 65<lb/>
Sausage9.65<lb/>
lny -iuw Stems3.00<lb/>
SFetticini Jllfudo<lb/>
Spinach Jllfudo.<lb/>
Golden egg noodles smotheud with ou special butteiu cxeam sauce and pamesan cheese<lb/>
JUsh spinach sauteed in ou special buttety cuam sauce ana pamesan cheese.<lb/>
2.50<lb/>
2.50<lb/>
Vitiq !Roma j Special Pizza Subs . . $3.<lb/>
Rolled and $aked m ouX own fusk pitta dough<lb/>
t) Cheese, $eppeis, Onions, 3Latballs, Sauce, Spices<lb/>
) Cheese, QeppeU, Onions, Sausage, Sauce, Spices<lb/>
3) Cheese, Peppeu, Onions, Cqgpil, Sauce, Spices<lb/>
4) Cheese, QppeU, Onions, Spinach, Sauce, Spices<lb/>
5) Cheese, Peppeu, Onions, Sausage, Meatballs, geppeiom .w, ?<lb/>
X) (X 0 ?L Of C I ? -Ltppexoni, Oauce, Spices<lb/>
6) Cheese, XeppeKs, Onions, J(am, Salami, Sauce, Spices<lb/>
7) Ckeese, Peppeu, Onions, SRoastbtef, Sauce, Spices<lb/>
8) 3Ueaulld cheeu, 9licotta cheese, SToatoes, Onions, ?<lb/>
25<lb/>
'PPets, Spices<lb/>
Subs mtth mushtoom J5, i<lb/>
Jlo Substitutions<lb/>
<pb facs="00057178_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>