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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057190_0001"/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
North<lb/>
Vol. 55, No. yT<lb/>
3 April 1979<lb/>
VM-Pres.dent-Elert Chadie Sherrod was sworn in<lb/>
londa night, and for a while his duties will<lb/>
include IW of SGA president. Sherrod was the<lb/>
wnl executive officer sworn in.<lb/>
Sherrod<lb/>
By LUKE WHISNANT and RICHY SMITH<lb/>
News Editor Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Vice-President-Elect Charlie Sherrod was sworn in<lb/>
Monday night at the 5:00 p.m. Student Government<lb/>
Association (SGA) meeting. The oath of office was<lb/>
administered by Kieran Shanahan, Attorney General.<lb/>
The vice-president was the only officer of the<lb/>
four executive positions to be sworn in, and since<lb/>
President Tommy Joe Payne's term of office ends<lb/>
today, Sherrod will begin his year as acting<lb/>
president.<lb/>
Brett Melvin, who won the presidential election<lb/>
in a recount of last Wednesday's ballots, was not<lb/>
sworn in Monday due to alleged campaign<lb/>
violations, according to Shanahan.<lb/>
The swearing in of Treasurer-Elect Ricky Lowe<lb/>
was also postponed due to campaign charges<lb/>
brought against him by his opponent, Steve<lb/>
U Geary. Lowe was unavailable for comment at<lb/>
press time.<lb/>
Lynn Calder, Secretary-Elect, was out of town<lb/>
for the ceremony. She will be sworn in at a later<lb/>
date.<lb/>
About the alleged violations, Shanahan said that<lb/>
he had referred the cases to the Review Board, and<lb/>
that he hoped the Board would act on the matter<lb/>
by next Monday or Tuesday.<lb/>
The charges against Melvin were filed by his<lb/>
Acting Presid<lb/>
KSElf har T Un?n<lb/>
.??rCnXM,Ure ?f <lb/>
MeJvin declined comment on the matter.<lb/>
recounted IITt ??? election were<lb/>
cou' of1 L hay.l l? 3 ?????"? first<lb/>
Vice-Prefident n m 'n8' according to then<lb/>
ballotV DaV,d Cartw?ght. "Some of the<lb/>
ballots were counted over and there was some<lb/>
discrepancy in the count he said.<lb/>
by a m.???Umf 7nOWed' h?WeVer' that MeIvin won<lb/>
the needeTw 1? V?teS more than<lb/>
MeW PerCem ?f the t0tal votes ??<lb/>
Croats M-SUPP?rti " the e,eCti?n Came froPra the<lb/>
Heailh10868' J?neS' S,a' A-k, .?dP Allied<lb/>
wi the presidenual race, was backed bv the polls at<lb/>
Be Ik, Garret Fleming, Greene.Clement, Cotton and<lb/>
.ndVe?iedd?Mndenh "er<lb/>
aa Ifl Umstead dorm<lb/>
from Flehe'rWhTe6 1, 'T "UPP?rt<lb/>
Student SuM; Sore '  d?rmS a"d the<lb/>
Charlie Sherrod, who was running unopposed<lb/>
wonthe vice-presidential race with a fotal ofljti<lb/>
CheA-l thFelheCretarS Lyn" Ca,der deated<lb/>
Cheryl Felb.nger by 668 votes, even though<lb/>
Felbinger was disqualified for not turning in an<lb/>
expense account two days prior to the election<lb/>
Kicky Lowe defeated Steve O'Cearv for SGA<lb/>
treasurer by 290 votes.<lb/>
"There were the typical write-in votes for<lb/>
offices, said Cartwright, "including Thomas<lb/>
Jefferson, M.ckey Mouse, and some other<lb/>
well-known personalities<lb/>
As usual, voter turnout was low. "The voter<lb/>
turnout ,s absolutely apathetic, ridiculous said<lb/>
Lester Wad, freshman class president. "Onlv twenty<lb/>
percent of the student body took the time to vote<lb/>
lor a person who is going to represent them in all<lb/>
activities concerning the university, and it is onlv<lb/>
those twenty percent who will have the right to<lb/>
complain. 6<lb/>
. A 0t?erL SGArelated news, Kieran Shanahan<lb/>
introduced the recommendations of the Joint Judicial<lb/>
Board to the legislature Mondav night (see related<lb/>
story this page).<lb/>
The legislature defeated a motion to chance<lb/>
the recommendation to "Favorable" on LB 21-4 a<lb/>
bill to appropriate $500 to the National Student<lb/>
Speech and Hearing Association. The monev was<lb/>
to be used for the group to attend a speech<lb/>
convention in London, England.<lb/>
The SGA decided to leave five vacant legislator<lb/>
positions unfilled, since there are onlv two regular<lb/>
business meetings left this year.<lb/>
"MW -mW-w-  lc,uger tV o6? votes even thn??u I ???, uictr mere are onlv two regu<lb/>
m W W S' eVen though business meeting, left this year<lb/>
Ur. Home retires after almost 20 rears<lb/>
By WILLIAM SHIRES always active educator hnhh L 7 ' 5<lb/>
ECU New. Bureau administer . flT' .h,?bb!e8' but. TC? had Ity, facilities and "Fin??. .M ;? ??, ?<lb/>
Dr. John H. (Jack)<lb/>
?iornc is retiring this<lb/>
-pring after nearly 20<lb/>
a Dean of<lb/>
idmissions of East<lb/>
Carolina University, to<lb/>
ursue his many hob-<lb/>
bies and at the same<lb/>
ime maintain a lifelong<lb/>
nterest in young people<lb/>
n preparing themselves<lb/>
veil to go to college.<lb/>
"HI keep busy<lb/>
ays the trim, slim and<lb/>
always active educator<lb/>
administrator, a familiar<lb/>
figure with wavy white<lb/>
hair, much loved and<lb/>
respected both on the<lb/>
campus and in Green-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
"I'll golf, fish, do<lb/>
some traveling, raise<lb/>
flowers, re-do the house<lb/>
inside and outside,<lb/>
repair furniture which I<lb/>
have collected, and<lb/>
read says Home, who<lb/>
turns the traditional<lb/>
retirement age of 65<lb/>
this month. "I've been<lb/>
piddling with these<lb/>
hobbies, but never had<lb/>
the time to do them<lb/>
Working with pros-<lb/>
pective students knock-<lb/>
ing hopefully at East<lb/>
Carolina's doors has<lb/>
been the chief ocupier<lb/>
of Home's time for the<lb/>
past two decades during<lb/>
which the term most<lb/>
frequently applied to<lb/>
the school was "rapidly<lb/>
growing<lb/>
And rapid growth of<lb/>
ECU into a major,<lb/>
diversified university m<lb/>
terms of an enrollment<lb/>
of more than 12,500,<lb/>
What's Inside<lb/>
ECl Playhouse production of A<lb/>
Cry of Players is reviewed pictorially,<lb/>
See p.6.<lb/>
Governor Jim Hunt, Leo Jenkins,<lb/>
and Thomas Brewer dedicate the new<lb/>
Medical School. See p. 3<lb/>
? George C. Scott's hardcore<lb/>
portrays a "sleazy underworld" and<lb/>
"erotic exploitation See p. 6.<lb/>
GEORGE C. SCOTT<lb/>
faculty, facilities and<lb/>
programs indeed has<lb/>
been spectacular. Twen-<lb/>
ty years ago, for<lb/>
example, the combined<lb/>
offices of the director of<lb/>
admissions and registrar<lb/>
of then East Carolina<lb/>
Teachers College ECTC<lb/>
handled only about<lb/>
1,800 admissions appli-<lb/>
cations per year. This<lb/>
year, not counting the<lb/>
graduate schools, appli-<lb/>
cation for admission<lb/>
total more than 10,000.<lb/>
The baby booms<lb/>
which followed World<lb/>
War II and Korea were<lb/>
big contributing factors<lb/>
to the college<lb/>
pressure of the 60's and<lb/>
70's, Home said.<lb/>
"When it came, 18<lb/>
and 19 years later the<lb/>
colleges were not<lb/>
equipped for it. They<lb/>
didn't have the dorms.<lb/>
Students were looking<lb/>
for any school which<lb/>
had the space for<lb/>
themhe said. And<lb/>
limited space continues<lb/>
to be a problem.<lb/>
'The goal is to<lb/>
achieve a happy medi-<lb/>
um between quality and<lb/>
quantity he says.<lb/>
Home also notes<lb/>
other factors. There is a<lb/>
"greatly different clien-<lb/>
tele today he says.<lb/>
ECU Judicial Board meets,<lb/>
makes recommendations<lb/>
By RICKI GLIARMIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Joint Judicial Board, after meetina this<lb/>
pnng for the first time in three years hlsmade<lb/>
everal recommendations for the improvement oHhe<lb/>
ampus judiciary system. ' the<lb/>
The recommendations will now go to the Student<lb/>
-overnment Association for review<lb/>
Kieran Shanahan, SGA attorney general and<lb/>
airman of the Judicial board, said" that lie work<lb/>
t the board is now over and the proposals will be<lb/>
produced to the SGA. He said that the board<lb/>
harges the SGA to fulfill its responsibly ? the<lb/>
wiftT k308 Whh aH du' P-d-ce and<lb/>
oard ?" recoramendations proposed by the<lb/>
Seven recommendations are being sent to the<lb/>
islature. The first is the SGA create a new all<lb/>
oundl t0 bC eDtitled "Acdem Honor<lb/>
Shanahan explained that the existing Honor<lb/>
ounal ,s weighed down with cases. If "he<lb/>
.commendanon passes disciplinary problems will be<lb/>
Ul be hind, r KC?UnCil While academic m"ers<lb/>
Ui be handled by the proposed board.<lb/>
e Lmn fUrrther "PUined th? t?e board would<lb/>
e 7h7Tl 8even pLerson8-The chairm? ???<lb/>
on?r r F ?? who ? the "iT? of the<lb/>
onor Councfi. Three faculty members will be<lb/>
eT,Let1nbHhe dreUor ? thrCC udenfrot<lb/>
on a"? "?n0r kCouncil- (The members would<lb/>
piinaVbr) ?" membere ?f ?<lb/>
The Academic Honor Council will try cases<lb/>
dealing with cases of academic dishonesty referred<lb/>
by the appropriate dean. Appeals from the board<lb/>
will be to the chancellordf.<lb/>
of ?nh"i rtecommendations include the establishment<lb/>
ol an Interim Honor council" for the fall srhnnl<lb/>
year of 1979-80. Chooi<lb/>
J It was recommended that the SGA allocate<lb/>
annually the sum of money required to fun" Te<lb/>
Student GovevaBent.udical Handbook. It was also<lb/>
suggested that the Judiciary annually submit a<lb/>
budget for approval by the SGA. This budget would<lb/>
include the salaries of the judiciary positions and all<lb/>
other costs mcdental to the operation and<lb/>
mamtenance of the Judiciary including the allocation<lb/>
for the Judicial Handbook, according to Shanahan<lb/>
SGA attorney general was also proprosed to be<lb/>
bXT f f?.r Preparing and 8ubm?"ing the annual<lb/>
Blue8 RihKr 'r JudlCUry- In ?ther ? the<lb/>
Blue Ribbon Committee members will be asked to<lb/>
submit two names to the SGA president for hi.<lb/>
selection of attorney general no later than one week<lb/>
after he is named the winner of the election in the<lb/>
spnnff.<lb/>
?k J!Z la,8t re?mmendstion made to the SGA is<lb/>
tha the Honor Council and Review board be picked<lb/>
in the spring proceeding the fall that they will take<lb/>
office It was also proposed that the board leave<lb/>
-LHF, ?peVn,each board M n dtc"??e to be<lb/>
selected from the freshmen class.<lb/>
Shanahan explained that some of the<lb/>
recommendations will have to be presented to the<lb/>
SGA in the form of bills while other proposals can<lb/>
be introduced as resolutions or constitutional<lb/>
amendment ? <lb/>
'Financial aid is avail-<lb/>
able and has made a<lb/>
tremendous difference in<lb/>
enabling people to go to<lb/>
college.<lb/>
"For someone who<lb/>
wants to go to college,<lb/>
if he will prepare<lb/>
himself in high school<lb/>
there's no reason in the<lb/>
world he cannot get a<lb/>
college education this<lb/>
day and time. Preparing<lb/>
himself is the kev<lb/>
Home, himself a<lb/>
teacher and professor<lb/>
for 44 years-tenured as<lb/>
a full professor in<lb/>
education-believes that<lb/>
today's "average" stud-<lb/>
ent doesn't have the<lb/>
"background in math,<lb/>
reading and grammar"<lb/>
of those of a few years<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
"Certainly my inter-<lb/>
est in young people<lb/>
preparing for college<lb/>
and preparing well will<lb/>
not be diminished<lb/>
Home said. "It's a<lb/>
lifelong interest<lb/>
Recently he atte-<lb/>
nded an occasion at<lb/>
Grainger High School in<lb/>
Kinston, N.C, and<lb/>
tound the meeting in a<lb/>
third floor room. "It<lb/>
was the same room that<lb/>
housed the oldchemistry<lb/>
lab where I began<lb/>
teaching, in chemistry<lb/>
and physics, and urging<lb/>
scholarship back in<lb/>
1936 he recalls.<lb/>
Born in Rocky Mount<lb/>
and raised Spencer,<lb/>
N.C, Home attended<lb/>
the University of Chic-<lb/>
ago and holds BA<lb/>
MA, and Edc. degrees<lb/>
from UNC- Chapel Hill.<lb/>
He taught at Grainger<lb/>
for six years, at Polkton<lb/>
in Anson County for<lb/>
one year, served as<lb/>
principal at Grainger for<lb/>
10 years and joined the<lb/>
East Carolina faculty as<lb/>
associate professor of<lb/>
education in 1957. IN<lb/>
1963, he became Dean<lb/>
of Admissions and the<lb/>
Office of Registrar was<lb/>
separated from Admis-<lb/>
sions.<lb/>
He and his wife,<lb/>
former Marguerite Coc-<lb/>
hran of Lacona, Iowa,<lb/>
are parenty of two<lb/>
children- John Jr a<lb/>
Laurinburg "attorney<lb/>
recently named one of<lb/>
five "Outstanding You-<lb/>
ng Men in North<lb/>
Carolina by the<lb/>
Jaycees, and daughter<lb/>
Ann, of New Orleans,<lb/>
La.<lb/>
The Homes will<lb/>
continue to make their<lb/>
home in Greenvillle.<lb/>
"We've lived in eastern<lb/>
North Carolina for 40<lb/>
years or more-with the<lb/>
exception of World War<lb/>
II (Home landed in<lb/>
Normandy June 6, 1944<lb/>
and won six campaign<lb/>
stars, other decorations<lb/>
including the Bronze<lb/>
Star, Silver Star and<lb/>
Purple Heart) - and we<lb/>
see no reason to move<lb/>
away to Florida, or<lb/>
somewhere. Our friends<lb/>
are here<lb/>
So is East Crolina<lb/>
University and the<lb/>
young people the<lb/>
Homes love.<lb/>
"I'd like to see East<lb/>
Carolina with a multi-<lb/>
million dollar scholar-<lb/>
ship fund10 million the<lb/>
proceeds of which would<lb/>
be used for academic<lb/>
scholarshipsa million<lb/>
dollars a year. Think<lb/>
what could be done he<lb/>
says. "That's what we<lb/>
need more than any-<lb/>
thing right now<lb/>
Tributes to Home<lb/>
were voiced by ECU<lb/>
Chancellor Thomas B.<lb/>
Brewer and by Dr.John<lb/>
M. Howell, Vice Chan-<lb/>
Dr. John H Home, retiring Dean of Admisak<lb/>
has served through 19 years of often sTul<lb/>
growth in enrollment, facdities a?3 SPectactti?<lb/>
Fri u ? ? "Y ? l,es &amp;nd programs at<lb/>
ECL. He joined the East Carolina faculty in 1957.<lb/>
cellor for Academic<lb/>
Affairs.<lb/>
"I have known Dr.<lb/>
Home during the entire<lb/>
time he has been at<lb/>
ECU, and our associa-<lb/>
tions have been varied.<lb/>
For four years, I also<lb/>
an admissions officer as<lb/>
I was serving as dean<lb/>
of the graduate school.<lb/>
1 have interacted with<lb/>
him as a fellow<lb/>
professor and as his<lb/>
immediate administrative<lb/>
superior. In all of these<lb/>
relationships, he has<lb/>
been an extraordinarily<lb/>
satisfactory colleague.<lb/>
He has been in tune<lb/>
with the growth of ECU<lb/>
?n the paM and he ha<lb/>
contributed immeasu-<lb/>
rably ,o the progress<lb/>
which has been<lb/>
realized Howell said.<lb/>
Brewer said, "Dur-<lb/>
ing my First vear at<lb/>
?ast Carolina , Dr.<lb/>
Home completely cap-<lb/>
tured my confidence<lb/>
and gained mv deep<lb/>
appreciation for the<lb/>
many contributions he<lb/>
has made to this<lb/>
institution. He has<lb/>
played a unique role in<lb/>
helping build East<lb/>
Carolina into a major<lb/>
diversified university<lb/>
White removed<lb/>
Photo by Jobs Grogaa<lb/>
Marc Barnes<lb/>
Acting Editor<lb/>
By LUKE WHISNANT<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
Editor Doug White was<lb/>
removed from office last<lb/>
Tuesday by an executive<lb/>
session of the Media<lb/>
Board. The removal was<lb/>
effective immediately.<lb/>
Several members of<lb/>
the Board declined to<lb/>
comment on the decis-<lb/>
ion, which was reached<lb/>
in closed session. No<lb/>
official reason for<lb/>
White's removal has yet<lb/>
been given; however,<lb/>
there is some specu-<lb/>
lation that the Board's<lb/>
action is a temporary<lb/>
one.<lb/>
A History major<lb/>
from New Bern, White<lb/>
had been a staff<lb/>
member since his fresh-<lb/>
man year and editor<lb/>
since last April. He is<lb/>
also chairman of the<lb/>
Student Union Coffee-<lb/>
house Committee.<lb/>
The Media Board<lb/>
named Marc Barnes as<lb/>
Acting Editor. Barnes<lb/>
had been FOUNTAIN.<lb/>
HEAD News Editor until<lb/>
last week.<lb/>
Due to the change<lb/>
u? personnel, FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEADS anou.<lb/>
Mampoon <lb/>
will be ' delayed. i he.<lb/>
issue traditionally<lb/>
appears on April Fool's<lb/>
Day.<lb/>
'?.<lb/>
t<lb/>
<lb/>
??-?? ?<lb/>
VV ' ?-r?r ?"r - r?? rr f ? , , TM0<lb/>
- W - 'T ?? w t<lb/>
fSj JS44&amp;fMytoQ<lb/>
<pb facs="00057190_0002"/><lb/>
j<lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 3 April 1979<lb/>
REBEL<lb/>
We<lb/>
Phil Arrington and<lb/>
e Blaylock will be<lb/>
featured writers at<lb/>
RKBEL reading on<lb/>
Vpnl 4 at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Mendenhall Co-<lb/>
ise. Alter they<lb/>
we will open the<lb/>
any attending<lb/>
would like to<lb/>
his or her work.<lb/>
reshments will be<lb/>
1 d Everyone is<lb/>
Housing<lb/>
REBEL<lb/>
rhe following people<lb/>
he ks in the<lb/>
office: Janet<lb/>
Rickey Lowe;<lb/>
Stalls Toni<lb/>
Michael F.<lb/>
and John<lb/>
Checks may be<lb/>
up from " 3-5,<lb/>
MonThurs. at the<lb/>
KEBEL office in the<lb/>
ation i,enter.<lb/>
Lecture<lb/>
rhurs April 5,<lb/>
ni. in BD-302,<lb/>
S iology-Anthropo-<lb/>
I ub will sponsor a<lb/>
ion bv Dr.<lb/>
Phelps entitled:<lb/>
HEOLOG1 OF<lb/>
WU NORTH<lb/>
VROUNA. All in-<lb/>
are welcome<lb/>
d to attend.<lb/>
Students with an<lb/>
interest in foreign<lb/>
languages, cultures, or<lb/>
simply wishing to<lb/>
broaden their under-<lb/>
standing of people from<lb/>
other nations: Vacancies<lb/>
are expected for the<lb/>
rail Semester for<lb/>
American students who<lb/>
are interested in sharing<lb/>
rooms with foreign<lb/>
;indents enrolled JZCUJ<lb/>
these vacancies are<lb/>
expected in the Inter-<lb/>
national Area of Aycock<lb/>
Hall for men, in the<lb/>
proposed International<lb/>
Area of Tyler Hall for<lb/>
women, and at the<lb/>
International House<lb/>
located on Ninth Street<lb/>
for male or female<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Applicants for the<lb/>
International House<lb/>
must be junior classifi-<lb/>
cation or above, includ-<lb/>
ing graduate students.<lb/>
Applicants for the In-<lb/>
ternational Areas od<lb/>
the residence halls may<lb/>
be any classification. If<lb/>
interested, see Mr. Ron<lb/>
Scronce in the Counse-<lb/>
lors Office in Aycock<lb/>
Hall for further infor-<lb/>
mation about the "In-<lb/>
ternational Area "in<lb/>
?KB contest<lb/>
The deadline for the<lb/>
submission of papers in<lb/>
the AKD PaPer<lb/>
contest has been<lb/>
extended to Fri.<lb/>
April 6. Cash prizes will<lb/>
be awarded to winning<lb/>
papers. Runners-up<lb/>
awarded prizes also.<lb/>
Submit your paper on<lb/>
any sociological topic, to<lb/>
the Soc. Dept. Office,<lb/>
4th floor Brewster.<lb/>
Gamma Beta<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi will<lb/>
meet on Thurs April 5<lb/>
at 7 p.m. in Menden-<lb/>
hall 244. The drawing<lb/>
for the dinner will be<lb/>
held at this meeting.<lb/>
All members are re-<lb/>
minded to bring their<lb/>
tickets.<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
Auction<lb/>
ng your own<lb/>
"S " put up for bid,<lb/>
'? items such as<lb/>
records, refriger-<lb/>
rk, etc. Ref-<lb/>
ts served. Wed.<lb/>
p.m. at the<lb/>
-i Student Cen-<lb/>
E. 5th St. For<lb/>
rmation call 758-2030<lb/>
1 eeds go to the<lb/>
House.<lb/>
ACU k<lb/>
tioi<lb/>
El.<lb/>
ormation<lb/>
room<lb/>
als ?<lb/>
residence<lb/>
the Interna-<lb/>
ise and Mrs.<lb/>
unting for inf-<lb/>
attout sharing<lb/>
(o internation-<lb/>
al women'<lb/>
halls.<lb/>
Comics<lb/>
The ECU Comic<lb/>
Book Club will meet<lb/>
Wed April 4 at the<lb/>
Nostalgia Newsstand at<lb/>
919 Dickinson Ave. at 7<lb/>
p.m. Topics of dis-<lb/>
cussion will include the<lb/>
upcoming Minicon on<lb/>
April 22. All interested<lb/>
persons are invited. For<lb/>
more information, call<lb/>
758-6909.<lb/>
The Department of<lb/>
Housing and Manage-<lb/>
ment, School of Home<lb/>
Economics, will sponsor<lb/>
an Annual Senior Show<lb/>
of student projects in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Multi-Purpose<lb/>
Room on April 3 and 4.<lb/>
The exhibition will be<lb/>
open to the public<lb/>
between the hours of 9<lb/>
a.m. and 4 p.m.<lb/>
Included in the show<lb/>
will be projects such as<lb/>
floor plans, renderings<lb/>
and swatch boards, as<lb/>
well as slides of display<lb/>
and refinishing projects.<lb/>
Senior Housing majors<lb/>
and members of Young<lb/>
Home Designers<lb/>
League, a student<lb/>
organization sponsored<lb/>
by the department, will<lb/>
be available to answer<lb/>
questions. The Senior<lb/>
Show is being directed<lb/>
by Dr. Patricia G. Rice<lb/>
and Ms. Marilyn D.<lb/>
Casto.<lb/>
Guinness<lb/>
The ECU Sign<lb/>
Language Club is pre-<lb/>
senting World Guinness<lb/>
Night at the Elbo<lb/>
Room, Thurs Apr. 5<lb/>
from 7-9:30 p.m.Over 20<lb/>
different sponsors have<lb/>
provided door prizes<lb/>
and there will be 3 big<lb/>
contests. The Coca-Cola<lb/>
Company will present<lb/>
its newest soft drink,<lb/>
Mello-Yellow, and a fast<lb/>
drinking contest will be<lb/>
held. There will also be<lb/>
a Krispy-Kreme<lb/>
Doughnut eating contest<lb/>
and hamburger eating<lb/>
contest sponsored by<lb/>
Pollard's Trading Post.<lb/>
These contests will be<lb/>
held in an attempt to<lb/>
set new world records<lb/>
as judged by the Guin<lb/>
ness World Book of<lb/>
Records. Winners will<lb/>
receive unbelievable<lb/>
gifts. Twenty Door<lb/>
Prizes will be given<lb/>
away from 7:15 p.m. on<lb/>
and will include one<lb/>
free hour of flying<lb/>
instruction from ALFA<lb/>
Company and dinner for<lb/>
two at a number of<lb/>
local restaurants, and<lb/>
free T-shirts and rec-<lb/>
ords.<lb/>
Tickets for the con-<lb/>
tests and a chance to<lb/>
win one of 20 door<lb/>
prizes can be purchased<lb/>
at the Office of The<lb/>
Program for Hearing<lb/>
Impaired Students,<lb/>
A-114 and A-115<lb/>
Brewster, at the Elbo<lb/>
Room, and from mem-<lb/>
bers of the Sign Lang- '<lb/>
uage Club. Advance<lb/>
tickets are 75 cents and<lb/>
SI at the door.<lb/>
EGGC<lb/>
The Student National<lb/>
Education Association<lb/>
will be meeting Apr. 10<lb/>
in Rm. 244, Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. It will<lb/>
begin at 5 p.m. so as<lb/>
to accomodate student<lb/>
teachers. All members<lb/>
are urged to attend;<lb/>
this meeting is very<lb/>
important. It is our last<lb/>
meeting; old and new<lb/>
business must be dis-<lb/>
cussed, a convention<lb/>
shared, and officers<lb/>
elected for next year.<lb/>
Please send nominations<lb/>
for president, vice-<lb/>
president, and secretary<lb/>
treasurer to the add-<lb/>
ress given, or post it on<lb/>
my door. Please send to<lb/>
Anna Myers, 305<lb/>
Greene Drm, ECU, or<lb/>
call 752-9093.<lb/>
Concert<lb/>
The Plymouth<lb/>
Ministerial Association<lb/>
will present the West-<lb/>
minster Chapel Choir in<lb/>
concert on April 20 at 8<lb/>
P-m. in the First<lb/>
Christian Church, Ply-<lb/>
mouth. The public is<lb/>
cordially invited and<lb/>
there will be no charge<lb/>
for admission.<lb/>
The East Carolina<lb/>
Gay Community will<lb/>
hold a meeting Tuesday<lb/>
at 5 p.m. at 608 E.<lb/>
Ninth St. Business<lb/>
matters will be dis-<lb/>
cussed and further<lb/>
plans will be made for<lb/>
those members who are<lb/>
attending the Southeas-<lb/>
tern Gay Conference in<lb/>
Chapel Hill April 6-8.<lb/>
All interested persons<lb/>
are invited to come.<lb/>
Marshalls<lb/>
Applications for<lb/>
1979-80 Marshalls are<lb/>
now being accepted in<lb/>
Room 228 Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center (SGA<lb/>
Office). In order to<lb/>
qual.i) lor this position,<lb/>
you mut have com-<lb/>
pleted 95 hours by the<lb/>
end of Spring Semester<lb/>
and have a 3.0 average.<lb/>
Deadline for filing is<lb/>
April 6, 1979.<lb/>
SFC<lb/>
Nurses<lb/>
Everyone is welcome<lb/>
to participate in the<lb/>
wr,kl discussion of<lb/>
spiritual topics as they<lb/>
appJ) to our dailv life.<lb/>
Students for Christ meet<lb/>
every Tues. from 8:30-<lb/>
9:30 p.m. in Bi<lb/>
D-308.<lb/>
(rewster<lb/>
LAE<lb/>
There will be a<lb/>
mandatory meeting of<lb/>
LAE on Thurs April 5<lb/>
at 101-A Belk Building.<lb/>
The meeting will be at<lb/>
4:30 p.m. and important<lb/>
issues will be discussed<lb/>
and voted on.<lb/>
The representative<lb/>
from Nightingale Uni-<lb/>
form Company will be<lb/>
in the School of Nursing<lb/>
building, Rm. 105, on<lb/>
April 18, 8:30 a.m. until<lb/>
1 p.m. to measure each<lb/>
freshman nursing<lb/>
student for uniforms.<lb/>
The total amount for<lb/>
uniforms will be as fol-<lb/>
lows. $70.65 for female<lb/>
students, $46.30 for<lb/>
male students. A money<lb/>
order for the exact<lb/>
amount must be sub-<lb/>
mitted with the uniform<lb/>
order. Please stop bv<lb/>
the School of Nursing<lb/>
Office, Room 152, to<lb/>
make an appointment.<lb/>
Study Hall<lb/>
A Learning Center<lb/>
with various reference<lb/>
books has been set up<lb/>
'n e Scott Hall<lb/>
basement Study Hall.<lb/>
The supervisor will help<lb/>
you find the appropriate<lb/>
texts in BIOL, ENGL,<lb/>
or HIST or college<lb/>
catalogues for many<lb/>
Graduate Schools. It is<lb/>
open from 8-12 p.m. on<lb/>
Sunday through Thurs.<lb/>
nights. Anyone is wel-<lb/>
come to this quiet area<lb/>
for studv.<lb/>
Family Fun<lb/>
Each Thursday<lb/>
during April is Family<lb/>
Fun Night at Menden-<lb/>
hall. From 6-10 p.m. all<lb/>
children under age 18,<lb/>
accompanied by a<lb/>
parent or responsible<lb/>
adult, may bowl, play<lb/>
billiards or play table<lb/>
tennis for 12 off the<lb/>
regular price. Each<lb/>
game or line of bowling<lb/>
will be half-price for<lb/>
children and billiards<lb/>
and table tennis will be<lb/>
halfprice for the entire<lb/>
family.<lb/>
Only one adult per<lb/>
group must have a<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Membership<lb/>
Card or ECU ID card to<lb/>
participate.<lb/>
Dental Tost<lb/>
The Dental Aptitude<lb/>
Test will be offered at<lb/>
ECU on Sat April 28.<lb/>
Application blanks are<lb/>
to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to Division of<lb/>
Education Measure-<lb/>
ments, American Dental<lb/>
Association, 211 East<lb/>
Chicago Ave Chicago,<lb/>
IL 60011 to arrive by<lb/>
April 2. These appli-<lb/>
cations are also avail-<lb/>
able at the Testing<lb/>
Center, Room 105,<lb/>
Speight building, ECU.<lb/>
Senior show<lb/>
Dora Hernandez and<lb/>
Karen Bruce will pre<lb/>
sent their senior show<lb/>
in Joyner Library from<lb/>
Apr. 6-12. Works ex<lb/>
hibited will be primanh<lb/>
in clay and mixed<lb/>
media. Karen Bruce will<lb/>
be graduating with d<lb/>
BFA in Ceramics and a<lb/>
minor in Art Histr<lb/>
and Dora Hernandez<lb/>
will receive a BFA in<lb/>
Ceramics with a minor<lb/>
in Communications Art<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
Doubles, singles, and<lb/>
mixed doubles will be<lb/>
the events of the Spring<lb/>
Bowling Tournament<lb/>
scheduled for April 2,3<lb/>
and 1 at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. From 3<lb/>
until 10 p.m. each dav.<lb/>
ECU students may bowl<lb/>
anytime and enter their<lb/>
scores in the tourna-<lb/>
merit. Detailed infor<lb/>
mation and rule- are<lb/>
available at the Bowling<lb/>
Center. Trophies will be<lb/>
given in all events.<lb/>
Seniors<lb/>
MCAT<lb/>
The Medical College<lb/>
Admission Test (MCAT)<lb/>
will be offered at ECU<lb/>
?n Sat April 28.<lb/>
Application blanks are I<lb/>
to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to The American<lb/>
College Testing pro.<lb/>
gram, P.O. Box 414,<lb/>
Iowa City, Iowa 52240,<lb/>
to arrive by April 2,<lb/>
1979. Application blanks<lb/>
are available at the<lb/>
Testing Center, Speight<lb/>
building, Room 105<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
? YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN' IS: THRILLINGLY CRAZY<lb/>
? RICH WITH LAUGHTER. A CLASSY Sew<lb/>
TO BE WITH US FOR YEARS<lb/>
-Charles Champlm. LOS ANGELES TIMES<lb/>
in<lb/>
FUNNIEST FIUT<lb/>
Student Union Films<lb/>
Committee presents<lb/>
All second semester<lb/>
graduates should<lb/>
purchase their caps and<lb/>
gowns for graduation b<lb/>
April 5 at the Student<lb/>
Supply Store on cam-<lb/>
pus. The delivery dates<lb/>
for caps and gowns are<lb/>
Apr. 3,4 and 5. The<lb/>
gowns will be delivered<lb/>
to the Student Supplv<lb/>
Store. The delivery<lb/>
dates and points " of<lb/>
delivery are the same<lb/>
for both graduates and<lb/>
undergraduates. These<lb/>
Keepsake gowns, are<lb/>
ours to keep providing<lb/>
the $10 graduation fee<lb/>
which is paid. For those<lb/>
receiving the Masters<lb/>
Degree the $10 fee pays<lb/>
for your cap and gown,<lb/>
but there is an extra<lb/>
(w of $9.75 for yotir<lb/>
hood.<lb/>
-G?ne Shaht. NBC-TV<lb/>
YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN'IS: MORE ZANINESS<lb/>
!KS BEEN SEEN IN ANY MOVIE<lb/>
SINCE THE MARX BROTHERS<lb/>
Bruce Cook. NATIONAL OBSERVER<lb/>
"MADDER, FUNNIER,<lb/>
MORE INSPIRED THAN<lb/>
ANYTHING BEING DONE<lb/>
IN MOVIES TODAY<lb/>
Jay Cocks TIME MAGAZINE<lb/>
YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN' IS: ONE OF THE<lb/>
FUNNIEST MOVIES OF THE YEAR "L<lb/>
Ul 'nc ' "?? loseph GHms. NEWS0AY<lb/>
-? SCREEN NvtAlSWZ,SS ?<lb/>
-PmuUne ? THCNEw VO?Kf <lb/>
MASTERPIECE:<lb/>
-?? Aloft SATUfiOAr fV!?r<lb/>
BKUUKb. -Judith Cnst. N? YORK MAGAZINE<lb/>
Ploo Woody Allen EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED TOVwliwTLl<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Si<lb/>
rii<lb/>
ng is here! Time for'<lb/>
th1 portrait you've been<lb/>
thinking about. Have it<lb/>
done OUTDOORS. Call:<lb/>
758-0962, portraits by<lb/>
P te Podeszwa also<lb/>
resume pictures in black<lb/>
and wliite, weddings<lb/>
and all types of group<lb/>
hots.<lb/>
19o dwcc Kawasakifc?<lb/>
sale, excellent condition.<lb/>
Has carry-all rack and<lb/>
back rest, also Hi-way<lb/>
foot rests. 2 new tires<lb/>
go with it - 1800. Call<lb/>
758-0962 after 7 p.m. If<lb/>
you call earlier, leave<lb/>
name and no. with ans.<lb/>
service.<lb/>
BSR Quanta 450 turn-<lb/>
table, mint condition - 5<lb/>
mos. old, must sell,<lb/>
price negotiable. 758-<lb/>
9686.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 50 mm.<lb/>
Minolta Rokkor Lens,<lb/>
brand new, never been<lb/>
used. Will sell at low<lb/>
price of $59. Day 758<lb/>
9942 or 752-0567<lb/>
between 7-10 p.m.<lb/>
STEREO equipment<lb/>
available through college<lb/>
dealer. Check prices<lb/>
before you buy else-<lb/>
where. Call Michael,<lb/>
752-2601.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Ranger 23<lb/>
sailboat, loaded, immac-<lb/>
ulate condition , 1978<lb/>
motor, knot meter,<lb/>
compass, stove, life-<lb/>
lines, bow and stern<lb/>
pulpits, anchor and<lb/>
much more. Day 758-<lb/>
9942 or 752-0567 be-<lb/>
tween 70 p.m.<lb/>
WANTED: Female<lb/>
roomate, preferably a<lb/>
gradute student. Begin-<lb/>
ning May 1 for both<lb/>
sessions summer school.<lb/>
Would have furnished<lb/>
private room. Rent<lb/>
187.50 plus half utili-<lb/>
ties and phone. Call<lb/>
758-1636 after 5:00.<lb/>
i<lb/>
S<lb/>
 ??<lb/>
2 ROOMMATES<lb/>
NEEDED: For summer<lb/>
months; Duplex on 3rd<lb/>
St. $160 per mo. plus<lb/>
utilities split equally.<lb/>
Call Mike at 758-9173.<lb/>
NEEDED: Two female<lb/>
roommates to share 2<lb/>
bedroom apartment at<lb/>
River Bluff Apts. for<lb/>
summer andor fall. 13<lb/>
rent and utilities. Call<lb/>
752-1598.<lb/>
NEED: 2 female room.<lb/>
-<lb/>
m?tes to share 3 B R<lb/>
?P? 1 block from '<lb/>
campus. $58.76mo.<lb/>
plus 13 utilities. Call<lb/>
758-2417 a?d .sk <lb/>
tvim or Sue.<lb/>
WANTED. Raleigh<lb/>
roommate - female t0<lb/>
??r the summer ' oalv<lb/>
c?? Ruth 758-8293 <lb/>
?g?W FOR RENT .<lb/>
 StwJent St -et<lb/>
JeTcTllTsgJ<lb/>
Jjefore 11 p.m.<lb/>
NEED: A roommate lo<lb/>
jW ? 2 B.R. apt. J<lb/>
-?? 758-5794 after 4<lb/>
Part-<lb/>
????? Eperim?<lb/>
 ApiOy at Pai-<lb/>
aaao or call 756-7300.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057190_0003"/><lb/>
Medical school dedicated<lb/>
tiunt principal speaker<lb/>
B STEPHEN WILSON . . . ?"?<lb/>
B STEPHEN WILSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
P"na?plurgt?Veril0r James B Hunt was th<lb/>
e Medical Educ T breaking ceremony for<lb/>
' jnhol of Medicine last Friday.<lb/>
ceremony marL. ti , . ? .<lb/>
onstmclio, ?r what ?, I k a b"K?"?"g of<lb/>
facility of the Shll 7? j e t'rimary leaching<lb/>
?e School of Med.cine, and will centralize<lb/>
?? -?? ? u? ?rs:? vharare now heing ,au?ht<lb/>
Medical EducC Facing ! ?n? T"8' L"<lb/>
?????. offices ScTool <lb/>
?.a?, i?' aK,man ?"ed ?? and<lb/>
speakers w?rl7l educators. Among the o.her<lb/>
Wuhan, lda' 'VEC "fN Carolina President<lb/>
Brewer ECll  tCha???or Dr. Thomas<lb/>
EC. Board' .ChTamellor E?eruS Leo W. Jenkins,<lb/>
I, n Trustees Chairman Trov W Pale<lb/>
?? WiC EMUnp?:f MEDU SCh001 rf MedidDe<lb/>
future hT .we'?med  "tendents ,o the<lb/>
School oTMedjJne "XT'5 d"??' ?f<lb/>
support of the IN R , ,?? rec0?n?d the<lb/>
Pi? Count, Board of r ?' (l"r?" ?" the<lb/>
I Ihe Schotl Com? i? reading the<lb/>
recoEenLdM1,diCa' u00 D,a" Willi"? E. Laupus<lb/>
' h;7nkrn; ?' f?? Ed' Med.can<lb/>
 Wallace Woolc, who is now chairman<lb/>
Edwin.Monroe ECU Vice Chancellor for Health<lb/>
sa.d that the stor) ol the foundation fo the<lb/>
School ol Medicine at ECU was unique ,n North<lb/>
Carolina history. He said that the Medical School is<lb/>
a monument to those who forsaw the needs of the<lb/>
region.<lb/>
Governor Hunt remarked that the legislators<lb/>
present a. the ceremony "show the scars from the<lb/>
fight for ECU's School of Medicine He also<lb/>
remarked that those who fought for the School<lb/>
knew that the Lord was on their side and that<lb/>
todays weather proved it He called it "one of<lb/>
North Carolina s greatest days, and, perhaps,<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina's greatest days "<lb/>
The addresses were followed by 'a benediction by<lb/>
the Reverend Tommy J?.e Payne, after which the<lb/>
ground breaking took place.<lb/>
The ceremony was followed bv a reception in the<lb/>
dmmg area ol Pitt County Memorial Hospital.<lb/>
Rebel reading to be held<lb/>
B KAREN WENDT<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Phillip Arrington and<lb/>
Faye Blaylock will be<lb/>
presenting a reading of<lb/>
their poetry and prose<lb/>
a' Mendenhall Coffe-<lb/>
house Wed. at 7 p.m.<lb/>
in this year's fourth<lb/>
REBEL reading, accord-<lb/>
ing to Renee Dixon,<lb/>
Associate Editor.<lb/>
Arrington is an ECU<lb/>
professor and a former<lb/>
REBEL editor. Blaylock<lb/>
is a member of ECU'S<lb/>
w n'ters' Guild and an<lb/>
English major.<lb/>
After these readings<lb/>
the floor will be open<lb/>
to the public, and<lb/>
anyone who wishes to<lb/>
read some of their own<lb/>
work may do so.<lb/>
"There are a lot of<lb/>
writers on campus who<lb/>
enjoj sharing their work<lb/>
with an interested<lb/>
audience said Dixon.<lb/>
"We feel like it's the<lb/>
 3a<lb/>
torn<lb/>
All AROUND<lb/>
Next time you get hungry for some-<lb/>
ng really good to ear, head for<lb/>
Hardee's. And bring a friend and<lb/>
this coupon with you. It'll get you<lb/>
the best eatin' in tow<lb/>
th,<lb/>
n, up n<lb/>
down, all around. And lots of it<lb/>
Hardee's Best Eatin Special.<lb/>
Two of the biggest, most<lb/>
special tastin' sandwiches you<lb/>
have ever sunk your teeth<lb/>
into. And at a price that's<lb/>
real special, too. So special,<lb/>
you're gonna think Hardee's<lb/>
is downright crazy to charge<lb/>
so little for so much fine eatin<lb/>
?<lb/>
???:$&amp;?<lb/>
REBEL'S place to<lb/>
encourage that sort of<lb/>
artistic exchange as<lb/>
much as possible.<lb/>
That's why we sponsor<lb/>
the readings<lb/>
The REBEL is<lb/>
ECU'S literary arts<lb/>
magazine. h js an<lb/>
annual publication and<lb/>
contains many different<lb/>
pieces of poetry, prose<lb/>
and artwork from<lb/>
different sources usually<lb/>
connected with ECU.<lb/>
3 April 1979 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised .terns<lb/>
quired to be readily available for sale<lb/>
each' Aatptthe advert's?d P"c? in<lb/>
each A&amp;P Store, except as spec.fi<lb/>
cally noted in this ad<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT APR 7 AT AAP im Gr,<lb/>
.TEMS OFFEBED FOB SALE NOT aSa.I.TO OTHERRETAIL<lb/>
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START YOUR <lb/>
m TODAY HearthsWe<lb/>
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HANDPilNTPncTr,nrur V<lb/>
HANDPAINTED STONEWARE<lb/>
A New Piece<lb/>
Will Be On Sale<lb/>
Each Week!<lb/>
ON SALE THIS WEEK<lb/>
j<lb/>
Choice of 3 Patterns<lb/>
Prairie Flowers<lb/>
Sunshine Flowers<lb/>
Highland Flowers<lb/>
COCA-COLA I AP ' a d??cate8sen<lb/>
DTN Vfc,l BAR-B-Q CHICKEN<lb/>
$129<lb/>
I R<lb/>
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Good at all participating Hardee's. Please present this coupon before orderina<lb/>
One coupon per customer, please. Customer must pay any sales tax due <lb/>
on the purchase pnce.Thiscoupon not good in combination with any omeroffers<lb/>
Mited<lb/>
NUTS<lb/>
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A&amp;P COUPON<lb/>
S?50c TOWARD THE PURCHASE<lb/>
OF 36 OZ OR 40-O2<lb/>
A&amp;P CANNED NUTS<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON<lb/>
LIMIT ONE COUPON<lb/>
gooo thru sat apr.l 7 at aap .NGreen, tile<lb/>
P SAlTEO peanuts<lb/>
AAP DR ROASTED<lb/>
PEANUTS 36 OZ<lb/>
AAP SALTED SPANISH<lb/>
PEANUTS 40 OZ<lb/>
EXCEL MIXED NUTS 36 OZ<lb/>
mf<lb/>
E-FAl<lb/>
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? Coupon expires 4979<lb/>
<pb facs="00057190_0004"/><lb/>
V<lb/>
Pago 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 3 April 1979<lb/>
In memorium<lb/>
what's All "Wis, mEAS?<lb/>
A.J. Fletcher, prominent North<lb/>
Carolinia philanthropist and patron of<lb/>
the arts died late Saturday at the age<lb/>
of 91 at Rex Hospital in Raleigh. He<lb/>
was the chief executive officer of<lb/>
WRAL-Television<lb/>
In his early career, Fletcher was a<lb/>
newspaperman. He served as editor of<lb/>
The Enterprise in Mooresville, and<lb/>
the Journal in Apex.<lb/>
He attended law school at Wake<lb/>
Forest, and in addition to his law<lb/>
practice he was active in the business<lb/>
community. He founded Capitol<lb/>
Broadcasting Company, which operates<lb/>
WRAL, WRAL-FM, The North<lb/>
Carolina News Network, and Capitol<lb/>
Publications.<lb/>
He was also founder of Dixie Life<lb/>
Insurance Company, which later<lb/>
became the Southern Life Insurance<lb/>
Company.<lb/>
In the area of the arts, he founded<lb/>
what later became the National Oera<lb/>
Company in 1948. His purpose in<lb/>
doing this was to bring opera to<lb/>
students. Fletcher also helped to<lb/>
found the Hayes Barton Baptist<lb/>
Church in Raleigh,and he gave<lb/>
generously of his time and resources<lb/>
to the Baptist State Convention. In<lb/>
fact, convention honored him in 1975<lb/>
by naming their new communications<lb/>
facility the A.J. Fletcher Baptist<lb/>
Communications Center.<lb/>
Fletcher was described as a very<lb/>
courtly gentleman of the old school.<lb/>
Throughout his lifetime, he gave of<lb/>
himself and of his resources quite<lb/>
freely. One of the largest benefactors<lb/>
of his gifts was the ECU School of<lb/>
M usic.<lb/>
From 1973 to the present, Fletcher<lb/>
has donated funds to make educations<lb/>
in music possible here at ECU.<lb/>
According to Dean Everett Pittman,<lb/>
Fletcher took a personal interest in<lb/>
each student who received a<lb/>
scholarship.<lb/>
Pittman reported that Fletcher<lb/>
corresponded with each recipient after<lb/>
the students had left school.<lb/>
Fletcher had also arranged concerts<lb/>
each year, with the musical duo of<lb/>
the ECU Orchestra and the National<lb/>
OPera Company in Raleigh. In the l<lb/>
local area, he also supported the<lb/>
Greenville Youth Orchestra.<lb/>
Perhaps the most important thing<lb/>
that Fletcher aided this university<lb/>
with was the building of the facility<lb/>
which now bears his name. Dean<lb/>
Pittman recalled that when the<lb/>
A.J.Fletcher Building was before the<lb/>
Legislature for funding, it ran into<lb/>
strong opposition. Fletcher reportedly<lb/>
went to the governing body, and did<lb/>
some lobbying on ECU's behalf. The<lb/>
result? A new music building named<lb/>
at East Carolina in Greenville. In the<lb/>
fall of 1970, the building was justly<lb/>
named for him. "We all admired him<lb/>
a lot Pittman said. He added, "He<lb/>
was vitally interested in each<lb/>
student<lb/>
He was admired. And it is a<lb/>
certainty that we will all miss him.<lb/>
Uppity Women<lb/>
By CHARLENE CARTER<lb/>
The following state-<lb/>
ment is a paraphrased<lb/>
quote by Phyllis<lb/>
Schlafly, made at a<lb/>
celebration of the sup-<lb/>
posed "defeat of the<lb/>
ERA This is the<lb/>
greatest victory for<lb/>
women since they won<lb/>
the right to vote.<lb/>
In case some readers<lb/>
are unaware of who<lb/>
Phyllis Schlafly isshe<lb/>
is one of the most<lb/>
active 'leaders' of the<lb/>
opposition to the ERA.<lb/>
Her group is called<lb/>
Stop ERA.<lb/>
Here is some back-<lb/>
ground on Phyllis<lb/>
Schlafly. She worked in<lb/>
an ammunition plant to<lb/>
put herself through col-<lb/>
lege, where she grad-<lb/>
uated Phi Beta Kappa,<lb/>
and later got her mas-<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community tor ovor SO yaara<lb/>
ACTING EDITOR<lb/>
MARC BARNES<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER<lb/>
STEVE BACHNER<lb/>
NEWS EDITORS<lb/>
Marc BarnM<lb/>
Luke Whianant<lb/>
Assistant Maw Editors<lb/>
Ricfiy Smith<lb/>
Karart Wandt<lb/>
Mika Rooms<lb/>
TRENDS EDITOR<lb/>
Jaff Rollins<lb/>
Assistant Tttnom Editors<lb/>
Barry Clayton<lb/>
Bill<lb/>
ADVERTISING MANAGER<lb/>
ROBERT M. SWAIM<lb/>
Am taut AovartraJng Manaoar<lb/>
Tarry Harndon<lb/>
AaVarfisino<lb/>
Paul Uncka<lb/>
CMaf Ad Artist<lb/>
Jans Walls<lb/>
Tmwmtmv<lb/>
Mary Storey<lb/>
Sua Hurtard<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
CnarlM Chandler<lb/>
Datdra Oelahvnty<lb/>
Sua<lb/>
Cindy<lb/>
Certoonrers<lb/>
Sua Lenmt<lb/>
Berry Clayton<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD Is lit studani<lb/>
mwiptptr of East Carolina Unlveraity<lb/>
sponsorad by lha M adla Beard el<lb/>
ECU and Is dlatrlbalad aaeh Tuasdsy<lb/>
and Thursday during lha acadamic<lb/>
year (araakly during tha summsr).<lb/>
Editorial opinions ara thosa el tha<lb/>
Editorial Board and de net nscasssri-<lb/>
ly raflael tha opinions ef lite<lb/>
univarslty or tha Madia Beard.<lb/>
Oiliest ara leeated en lha aaeend<lb/>
floor of tha Publications Canlar (Old<lb/>
South Building). Oar mailing<lb/>
addrass la: Old Beuth Building.<lb/>
ECU, Oreanvilla, N.C. 27134.<lb/>
Tha phana numbara ara:<lb/>
757-63M, tS?7, ?30l. Subscriptions<lb/>
are $10 annually, alumni SB annually.<lb/>
<lb/>
ter's degree at Harvard.<lb/>
She was employed as a<lb/>
research assistant in a<lb/>
bank when Fred<lb/>
Schlafly "came along and<lb/>
saved me They mar-<lb/>
ried, had six children,<lb/>
and her husband<lb/>
became a Congressman.<lb/>
They worked together in<lb/>
various right-wing<lb/>
causes. She joined the<lb/>
John Birch Society in<lb/>
1960, and began to<lb/>
appear on rightist radio<lb/>
and television programs,<lb/>
such as the programs of<lb/>
the Reverend Billy<lb/>
James Hargis, a notor-<lb/>
ious 'evangelist whose<lb/>
radio 'ministry' grosses<lb/>
more than 10 million<lb/>
dollars a year.<lb/>
Phyllis Schlafly has<lb/>
run for political office a<lb/>
number of times since<lb/>
1952. She is the author<lb/>
or co-author of eight<lb/>
right-<lb/>
wing-type books. She is<lb/>
the author of a regular<lb/>
newsletter called the<lb/>
Phyllis Schlafly Report,<lb/>
which has eighteen<lb/>
thousand subscribers.<lb/>
She has a regular CBS<lb/>
radio program called<lb/>
'Spectrum she writes a<lb/>
syndicated newspaper<lb/>
column, and she makes<lb/>
speeches and special<lb/>
radio and television<lb/>
appearances all over the<lb/>
country. Ail this activity<lb/>
is very interesting when<lb/>
' is compared to her<lb/>
basic stance that a<lb/>
woman's place is in the<lb/>
home, and not in the<lb/>
mainstream of outside<lb/>
activity.<lb/>
Be that as it may,<lb/>
she is one of the most<lb/>
active campaigners<lb/>
against the ERA. She<lb/>
claims that the funds to<lb/>
support her huge enter-<lb/>
prise come from sub-<lb/>
scriptions and small<lb/>
contributions to the<lb/>
Eagle Forum, which<lb/>
publishes the Phyllis<lb/>
Schlafly Report, and<lb/>
from the proceeds of<lb/>
thousands of bake sales<lb/>
put on by dedicated<lb/>
supporters.<lb/>
A little extra re-<lb/>
search might be re-<lb/>
quired to reveal the<lb/>
support of huge corpor-<lb/>
ations, including the<lb/>
Coors Company. (This<lb/>
revelation was especially<lb/>
painful to me, because<lb/>
in my opinion they<lb/>
make the best beer in<lb/>
this country, but never-<lb/>
theless, I have boy-<lb/>
cotted Coors beer, and<lb/>
urge readers to do so.)<lb/>
Here is another<lb/>
quote from Phyllis<lb/>
Schlafly: "I think I am<lb/>
a good example of how<lb/>
women can do whatever<lb/>
they want with their<lb/>
lives. They don't need<lb/>
legislation to have a<lb/>
fun, exciting, fulfilling<lb/>
life<lb/>
Phyllis Schlafly is<lb/>
obviously adept at<lb/>
double-thinking.<lb/>
The following are<lb/>
organizations that have<lb/>
gone on record as<lb/>
opposing the ERA: the<lb/>
Communist Party, the<lb/>
Daughters of the Amer-<lb/>
ican Revolution, the<lb/>
John Birch Society, the<lb/>
Knights of Columbus,<lb/>
the KuKlux Klan. Their<lb/>
skill at double-thinking<lb/>
has become obvious<lb/>
over the yean. And we<lb/>
all know how much<lb/>
they, and Phyllis<lb/>
Schlafly, are concerned<lb/>
with the good of our<lb/>
country.<lb/>
WO, I uAS fctuwrJiMro. o cdeci<lb/>
A TIC T?T ??CMrt th.s ,1<lb/>
Loejic Ckgyt,Lat<lb/>
CMC- IT Oor? T4? ?ol?S flrte SiPctT<lb/>
hLL TA? V'CtT fltoD rtoo? YouA. ptrc?<lb/>
Akeot Ttte 8?4Ab. tfets You TA&amp;: th?<lb/>
PYAI'Oj I'LL USE T4? BA&amp;6L iou oll.<lb/>
f,AS.T<lb/>
L3?c t??'3.I'??<lb/>
Aertp?- LtM<lb/>
xXCo TO THC GAX4<lb/>
Go DtftECTLV To TH? G-AzA.<lb/>
T loor PASS 3"?fcJSALerr).<lb/>
C?X-L?CT fuC rTTjrtjotf OiLFi?US. "<lb/>
rtmm wrtrrr Do Y?o call TtftS G-4?e ?<lb/>
'SHoTTLfc tiPLOvrtCV<lb/>
<lb/>
Greenpeace<lb/>
By JERRY ADDERTON<lb/>
Over the past few<lb/>
weeks there have been<lb/>
many developments that<lb/>
relate to ecology and<lb/>
peace. Some are good,<lb/>
and some are not so<lb/>
good, and some uncer-<lb/>
tain. I will mention<lb/>
some things here that I<lb/>
believe to be significant<lb/>
and worthy of notice,<lb/>
and if anyone knows of<lb/>
anything that I missed,<lb/>
please inform me,<lb/>
because now is a good<lb/>
time to get going on<lb/>
important issues; spring<lb/>
brings renewed vitalyV<lb/>
and a recommitment to<lb/>
things that will hopeful-<lb/>
ly make life and<lb/>
preservation of life a<lb/>
little closer to us all.<lb/>
On the whaling<lb/>
issue, there have been<lb/>
two major points that<lb/>
have been and are still<lb/>
being acted upon.<lb/>
President Carter opted<lb/>
to delay invocation of<lb/>
the Pelley Amendment<lb/>
against the outlaw<lb/>
whaling nations of Peru,<lb/>
Chile, and Korea and<lb/>
gave the reasons for<lb/>
doing so. He said that<lb/>
since the threat of<lb/>
invoking the amendment<lb/>
was brought to public<lb/>
notice, Korea has joined<lb/>
the International Whal-<lb/>
ing Commission, and<lb/>
Peru and Chile have<lb/>
expressed 1 intentions to<lb/>
following suit. If Peru<lb/>
and Chile do not act<lb/>
within a month to join,<lb/>
there will be a renewed<lb/>
effort by Greenpeace<lb/>
and other concerned<lb/>
groups to again push<lb/>
for invocation of the<lb/>
Pelley Amendment. It<lb/>
appears that this is also<lb/>
Carter's intentions, so<lb/>
we can consider this a<lb/>
positive step forward in<lb/>
the fight to save the<lb/>
whales from extinction<lb/>
by the hands of a<lb/>
misguided minority of<lb/>
men wno still do not<lb/>
see the implications of<lb/>
their actions.<lb/>
More immediate now<lb/>
is the effort to persuade<lb/>
the U.S. delegation to<lb/>
the upcoming I.W.C.<lb/>
meeting to press for a<lb/>
ten year moratorium<lb/>
on all commercial<lb/>
whaling. Just as letters<lb/>
from concerned people<lb/>
(many from this area -<lb/>
thank yon!helped to<lb/>
bring about such<lb/>
positive action on the<lb/>
Pelley Amendment iss-<lb/>
ue, the same action will<lb/>
certainly be beneficial to<lb/>
this very important part<lb/>
of our plan to save the<lb/>
whales. It is generally<lb/>
believed that if the U.S.<lb/>
initiates this proposal, it<lb/>
would pass - meaning a<lb/>
major victory for the<lb/>
whales. Please write<lb/>
your letter expressing<lb/>
your support of the<lb/>
moratorium now. I will<lb/>
be glad to supply the<lb/>
envelope and stamp,<lb/>
and it is such a small<lb/>
thing to do for such an<lb/>
important issue. Just<lb/>
give me your letter or<lb/>
leave it at the Founta-<lb/>
inhead office, and walk<lb/>
away knowing you have<lb/>
helped to save a part of<lb/>
this troubled Earth.<lb/>
I don't really know<lb/>
what the future will<lb/>
hold for the Middle<lb/>
East, but I do believe<lb/>
the Egypt-Israel peace<lb/>
treaty is a very<lb/>
significant and reassu-<lb/>
ring action for peace in<lb/>
that volatile area. I<lb/>
hope you will join with<lb/>
me in commending this<lb/>
brave step toward<lb/>
peace. I think it<lb/>
represents something to<lb/>
inspire the people of<lb/>
the world to strive for,<lb/>
whether it be in<lb/>
Ireland, Vietnam-China,<lb/>
Uganda-Tanzania, or<lb/>
Newfoundland.<lb/>
Now, another matter<lb/>
on a local level: I need<lb/>
to know from musicians<lb/>
and crafts people<lb/>
concerned about our<lb/>
environment and the<lb/>
work of Greenpeace to<lb/>
perserve it, if they<lb/>
would like to participate<lb/>
in a benefit event by<lb/>
offering their services<lb/>
and wares for the sake<lb/>
of ecology.<lb/>
I need input<lb/>
from you all on just<lb/>
how you would contri-<lb/>
bute to this and how it<lb/>
could be beneficial to<lb/>
both ecolocv and the<lb/>
local-community. What I<lb/>
have in mind is having<lb/>
workshops, shows,<lb/>
music and educational<lb/>
information on ecology<lb/>
related themes. The<lb/>
event would be a fund<lb/>
raiser with the money<lb/>
going to Greenpeacea<lb/>
non-profit organization<lb/>
whereby all money<lb/>
comes from events of<lb/>
this kind and donations,<lb/>
at large) and an<lb/>
attempt to raise consci-<lb/>
ousness; all in having a<lb/>
good time to boot. What<lb/>
do you say? I am open<lb/>
to suggestions and<lb/>
anyone in any capacity<lb/>
relating to ecological<lb/>
theme could be part of<lb/>
it. If it comes together,<lb/>
we can get to work on<lb/>
a site and date(s). Right<lb/>
now, its just an idea,<lb/>
but with a little work<lb/>
and cooperation. it<lb/>
could be something! Let<lb/>
me hear from you.<lb/>
One final item: The<lb/>
Extinction Committee in<lb/>
Congress met to decide<lb/>
the fates of the Tellico!<lb/>
Dam and the snail<lb/>
darter. This was the<lb/>
first test of the newly<lb/>
formed Extinction Com-<lb/>
mittee. The Committee<lb/>
decided in favor of the<lb/>
snail darter and the<lb/>
dam would not be used.<lb/>
With such a decision,<lb/>
the Extinction Commi-<lb/>
ttee itself now qualifies<lb/>
as endangered.<lb/>
If you would like to<lb/>
discuss anything men-<lb/>
tioned above, please call<lb/>
me or leave word at the<lb/>
Fountainhead office.<lb/>
Any help will be<lb/>
needed anH greatlv<lb/>
appreciated. Thank you.<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Reader criticizes paper<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I would like to<lb/>
congratulate Ms. Elliott<lb/>
?on her letter ques-<lb/>
tioning Fountainhead's<lb/>
policies. If I am not<lb/>
mistaken, this' is a<lb/>
school newspaper sup-<lb/>
ported and read mostly<lb/>
by ECU students. Yet<lb/>
when one thinks, it<lb/>
that this person when<lb/>
told it would have to be<lb/>
cut "took it back and<lb/>
left with it, never to be<lb/>
seen again by the<lb/>
newspaper staff Yet<lb/>
on page five under<lb/>
Lowe's platform which<lb/>
was "temporarily lost<lb/>
the editor's note stated<lb/>
that it should have been<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Forum letters must contain the name, address,<lb/>
fchone number, and signature of the authors) and'<lb/>
?hould be typed or neatly printed.<lb/>
) Letters are; subject to editing for brevitv<lb/>
obscenity, and libel.<lb/>
No more than three letters on any subject will be<lb/>
printed in one issue. Letters should be limited to<lb/>
three typewritten, double-spaced pages. :<lb/>
Letters must be received by noon on Mondavs aaWl<lb/>
Wednesdays at the FOUNTAINHEAD office, second<lb/>
floor, Publications Center.<lb/>
, Authors nanes will be withheld only whe<lb/>
inclusion of the name will embarrass or subject<lb/>
(ridicule the author (such as letters discuasin<lb/>
homosexuality, drug abuse, etc.).<lb/>
printed in last weeks<lb/>
edition and was re-<lb/>
ceived in time!<lb/>
When one turns to page<lb/>
four, Low Ricky Lowe is<lb/>
the first thing which is<lb/>
seen!<lb/>
The editorial states<lb/>
that Lowe's platform<lb/>
when sent by a mes-<lb/>
senger, did not meet<lb/>
the one hundred and<lb/>
fifty word limit and also<lb/>
time (an entire week);<lb/>
meaning that the failure<lb/>
in printing Lowe's plat-<lb/>
form hurt his campaign<lb/>
beyond repair. The<lb/>
main thing is that I feel<lb/>
Fountainhead abused<lb/>
Lowe very badly and a<lb/>
public apology is necea-<lb/>
?7- In case you did<lb/>
not realise, this is<lb/>
known as being cour-<lb/>
teous and respectful<lb/>
which is<lb/>
Fountainhe<lb/>
?ble of doin<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057190_0005"/><lb/>
Greek Forum<lb/>
<lb/>
3 April 1979 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
" 1<lb/>
By RJCKI GUARMIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi Field<lb/>
Da was held Saturday<lb/>
and was a big success!<lb/>
The six foot trophy<lb/>
served as an incentive<lb/>
to compete, not only<lb/>
part<lb/>
The Kappa Deltas<lb/>
were the winners of the<lb/>
field day in the sorority<lb/>
division and the Sigma<lb/>
lau Gammas won the<lb/>
trophj for the fraternity<lb/>
division of competition.<lb/>
Tht Greek games<lb/>
and track meet were<lb/>
held Monday. The<lb/>
winners of those events<lb/>
will be announced<lb/>
tonight at the Co-Greek<lb/>
Banquet.<lb/>
There is still more<lb/>
come this week as<lb/>
far as games and<lb/>
rtying are concerned.<lb/>
Today the Bed Race<lb/>
will be held on the<lb/>
mall. Wednesday, the<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alphas are<lb/>
sponsoring their annual<lb/>
Raft Race which will be<lb/>
followed by a dance at<lb/>
the American Legion<lb/>
Wednesday night.<lb/>
Thursday, the Kappa<lb/>
Sigma Funky Nassau<lb/>
will be held at the<lb/>
fraternity house on<lb/>
Tenth Street.<lb/>
Friday, the Phi<lb/>
Kappa Taus are st ging<lb/>
their annual Spring<lb/>
Fling.There will be<lb/>
plenty of refreshments<lb/>
and plenty f good<lb/>
times. Moser's Farm<lb/>
will round out the<lb/>
Greek Week, 1979 on<lb/>
Saturday afternoon.<lb/>
Announcements:<lb/>
The Sigma Tau<lb/>
Gammas were visited<lb/>
Wednesday, March 28,<lb/>
by their regional direc-<lb/>
Looking fr a job<lb/>
or Career?<lb/>
Piui D. Otman<lb/>
Northwestern<lb/>
Mutual Life<lb/>
NML Agents are confi-<lb/>
dent types who actively<lb/>
seek out what they want<lb/>
in life. If you think you<lb/>
can meet the challenge<lb/>
call for an appointment.<lb/>
752-4080<lb/>
tor and expansion<lb/>
director, Ron Erickson<lb/>
and Mike Motznik,<lb/>
respectfully. The visitors<lb/>
were treated to a social<lb/>
Wednesday night with<lb/>
the Alpha Delta Pi's.<lb/>
The Sig Tau's first<lb/>
annual golf tournament<lb/>
to be held at the Ayden<lb/>
Country Club has been<lb/>
moved back to April 9,<lb/>
10, 12, and 13. The<lb/>
final day for registra-<lb/>
tion is April 5. There is<lb/>
a $10 entry fee which<lb/>
covers both rounds of<lb/>
golf.<lb/>
The Phi Taus held<lb/>
their Second Annual<lb/>
Hawaiian Luau Party<lb/>
this past Friday night.<lb/>
The party began at 6<lb/>
p.m. with a meal<lb/>
consisting of some<lb/>
typical Hawaiian foods.<lb/>
Following the meal<lb/>
everyone continued to<lb/>
have a good time<lb/>
getting sand in their<lb/>
shoes and dancing the<lb/>
night away.<lb/>
The Phi Taus are in the<lb/>
process of selling tickets<lb/>
for a Beach Weekend for<lb/>
two. The winner will<lb/>
receive room expenses<lb/>
at the Whaler Inn, $50<lb/>
spending money, and<lb/>
one half of a gallon of<lb/>
liquor. Tickets are only<lb/>
a dollar and you do not<lb/>
have to be present to<lb/>
win. The drawing will<lb/>
be held at the Phi Tau<lb/>
house during the Spring<lb/>
Fling.<lb/>
Mike Smith was<lb/>
elected IFC president<lb/>
last week. The Phi Taus<lb/>
would like to congrulate<lb/>
Mike.<lb/>
The Alpha Delta Pi's<lb/>
are having a beer blast<lb/>
at the Chapter X on<lb/>
Friday, April 6, immed-<lb/>
iately following the Phi<lb/>
Tau Spring Fling. It will<lb/>
last from 6 p.m. until 9<lb/>
p.m. and everyone is<lb/>
encouraged to ateend.<lb/>
The Chi Omegas will<lb/>
be celebrating their<lb/>
Founder's Day which is<lb/>
April 5, with a cookout.<lb/>
The Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Sigmas held a very<lb/>
successful rush work-<lb/>
shop Sunday. Sisters<lb/>
and pledges were in<lb/>
attendance and everyone<lb/>
benefitted from the<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
The Sigmas are<lb/>
planning their Founder's<lb/>
Day for April 18 and<lb/>
their Senior Send-on for<lb/>
Reading Day.<lb/>
Kappa Delta National<lb/>
Collegiate Advisor, Jen-<lb/>
nifer Williamson, visited<lb/>
the ECU chapter last<lb/>
week. Three new<lb/>
pledges were inducted<lb/>
this month.<lb/>
The Kappa Delta<lb/>
annual Cocktail Party<lb/>
was held Friday night<lb/>
in the backyard. Many<lb/>
alumnae returned for<lb/>
the event.<lb/>
The "Kaydees" are<lb/>
currently enjoying a<lb/>
winning season in<lb/>
volleyball. Plans are<lb/>
under way for Parent's<lb/>
Day, April 22.<lb/>
The Kappa Deltas<lb/>
were also busy this<lb/>
weekend supplying<lb/>
water and Gatorade for<lb/>
the runners in the<lb/>
Greenville Road Race.<lb/>
Writers! Poets!<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
j This year's fourth Rebel<lb/>
Reading is Wed 7:00 at<lb/>
the Coffeehouse, featuring<lb/>
Phil Arrington and Faye g<lb/>
B Blaylock. All writers<lb/>
m welcome to read.<lb/>
I<lb/>
HOSIER'S FARM<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
? One case of your<lb/>
favorite l2oz. premium<lb/>
party beverage<lb/>
?Bag of Ice<lb/>
?SO cups<lb/>
All for the low price of $9.99<lb/>
IX os. Premium Single Case Price $7.89<lb/>
12 os. Light Beers Single Case Price<lb/>
$8.19<lb/>
l2os. Michelob s Single Case Price $9.19<lb/>
Offer good April 3-S)<lb/>
at 10th St. Stop-n-Go ONLY<lb/>
SPAGHETTI<lb/>
Shoney's Real<lb/>
Italian Spa-<lb/>
ghetti with su-<lb/>
perb, tasty,<lb/>
meat sauce,<lb/>
Parmesan<lb/>
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Grecian<lb/>
Bread<lb/>
WED.<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
SHOMEYS<lb/>
Located beside<lb/>
the Ramada Inn,<lb/>
204 By-pass.<lb/>
WITH<lb/>
SALAD<lb/>
ART ?P CAMERA<lb/>
526 S. Contanehe St.<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
COUPON EXPIRES<lb/>
LIMITED TIME OFFER<lb/>
12 Exp. Color Film<lb/>
Developed and Printed<lb/>
? OAF<lb/>
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1 must accompany oaoet 1<lb/>
COUPON EXPIRES<lb/>
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VALUVMMJI COUPON<lb/>
I MUST ACCOMPANY OftOCftJ<lb/>
COUPON EXPIRES<lb/>
LIMITED TIME OFFER<lb/>
MOVIE OR SLIDE<lb/>
EMechrome or Kodechrome Processing<lb/>
20 Exp.<lb/>
AQ Slides<lb/>
S Movtc<lb/>
110.<lb/>
128 or<lb/>
196<lb/>
I MUST ACCOMPANY i<lb/>
PLAZA CAMERA<lb/>
2nd Annual<lb/>
SPRING FLING AND KEG RALLY<lb/>
April 6 at the Phi Kappa Tau House, 409 Elizabeth St.<lb/>
25 FREE Kegs<lb/>
Everyone is invited to attend.<lb/>
The Drawing for the Beach Weekend raffle<lb/>
will be held at the Keg Rally.<lb/>
0002<lb/>
DRAWING FOR<lb/>
PHI KAPPA TAU<lb/>
BEACH WEEK-END FOR (2)<lb/>
At<lb/>
vwv<lb/>
Room<lb/>
IDfoiterlnn<lb/>
Includes:<lb/>
$50.00 Spending Money xh Gal. of Liquor<lb/>
$1.00 DONATION<lb/>
You do not have to be present to win!<lb/>
Sponsors<lb/>
Fast Fare<lb/>
Coca Cola Bottling Co. of Greenville<lb/>
Shirley's Cut 6t Style<lb/>
Bond's Sporting Goods<lb/>
Beer Supplies Through the Happy Store<lb/>
Mike's Bike Shop<lb/>
The Tree House Restaurant<lb/>
The Attic<lb/>
UBE<lb/>
Stereo Village<lb/>
Pepsi Cola Bottling Co. of Greenville<lb/>
Pipeline Restaurant<lb/>
The College Shop<lb/>
Rum Runners Dive Shop<lb/>
Bakntines Cafeteria<lb/>
Roy Rogers<lb/>
Traffic Light<lb/>
Apple Records<lb/>
Jason's Restaurant<lb/>
Roffler of Greenville<lb/>
Blue Bell Factory Outlet<lb/>
H. L. Hodges Sporting Goods<lb/>
Proctor's Ltd.<lb/>
Jerry's Sweet Shop<lb/>
Blount Fertilizer<lb/>
Allied Industrial Service, Inc.<lb/>
Rick's Guitar Shop<lb/>
Quick Copy<lb/>
Burger Barrel<lb/>
The Pride Car Wash, E. 10th St<lb/>
at these<lb/>
wwv<lb/>
Big Discounts!<lb/>
Save up<lb/>
to $3.00!<lb/>
Records<lb/>
Top artists!<lb/>
Major labels!<lb/>
C Hundreds of records! Classics included!<lb/>
w j many selections in this special purchase.<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
SALE NOW IN PROGRESS<lb/>
Frless Start at Sl.fC<lb/>
DON'T MISS THIS SALE<lb/>
Come early for best<lb/>
f<lb/>
?<lb/>
 "???? -s? s ?"? <lb/>
<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057190_0006"/><lb/>
tr, i m<lb/>
1 ?<lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 3 April 1979<lb/>
? fH<lb/>
Scott heacQines in<lb/>
Shrader's Hardcore<lb/>
B M. JONES<lb/>
and<lb/>
BARRY CLAYTON<lb/>
sst. Trends Eds.<lb/>
Paul Shrader, writer-<lb/>
director of Hardcore,<lb/>
describes the movie as,<lb/>
'a confrontation betw-<lb/>
een the hardcore of the<lb/>
old morality and the<lb/>
hardcore of the new<lb/>
 hile the concept of<lb/>
intercultural collision<lb/>
makes tor an interesting<lb/>
?lot, it cannot, on its<lb/>
own, deliver a movie<lb/>
worth seeing. Hard-<lb/>
rore's moral message is<lb/>
substanciated thoroughlv<lb/>
l realistic cinemato-<lb/>
graphy, convincing<lb/>
portrayals, and an<lb/>
excellent screenplay.<lb/>
George C. Scott<lb/>
stars in the film. A<lb/>
like an Dorm, a<lb/>
lurniture manufacturer<lb/>
from Grand Rapid<lb/>
Michigan, he plays a<lb/>
true here, a capable<lb/>
man with a worthy<lb/>
ise. Jake i- deeply<lb/>
religious, in the "old<lb/>
hioned" sense. He is<lb/>
levout member of<lb/>
the Dutch Reformed<lb/>
Church (Calvinist),<lb/>
embracing predestination<lb/>
and the hopeless state<lb/>
of man due to original<lb/>
sin.<lb/>
Van Dorn's daugh-<lb/>
ter, Kristen (note the<lb/>
closeness in pronuncia-<lb/>
tion to Christian,<lb/>
summarizing Van Dorn's<lb/>
background), is played<lb/>
by Ilah Davis. While on<lb/>
a church sponsored trip<lb/>
for teenagers to Calif<lb/>
Kristen runs away.<lb/>
Subsequently, Van Dorn<lb/>
hires an oddballish Los<lb/>
Angeles private-eye,<lb/>
named Andy Mast, to<lb/>
find his daughter. The'<lb/>
seemingly incompetent<lb/>
detective is played to a<lb/>
tee by Peter Boyle.<lb/>
Boyle is able to bring<lb/>
across the mixed<lb/>
personality of the<lb/>
investigator accurately;<lb/>
pity, detached warmth<lb/>
and a humorous,<lb/>
humbling "regularness"<lb/>
of everyday mistake<lb/>
making create a sad but<lb/>
lovable character.<lb/>
After firing Mast,<lb/>
 an Dorn begins to<lb/>
-earch the porno jungles<lb/>
of the West Coast for<lb/>
his daughter. All Mast<lb/>
had been able to turn<lb/>
up was a pornographic<lb/>
film of Kristen. Van<lb/>
Dorn TsnTraTn-peredjinit,<lb/>
ally by the tola!<lb/>
strangeness of the<lb/>
sleazy underworld of<lb/>
erotic exploitation. He<lb/>
soon learns to adapt to<lb/>
this new environment<lb/>
and begins to make<lb/>
some progress in search<lb/>
alter hiring a "parlor<lb/>
girl" who had met his<lb/>
daughter.<lb/>
Season Hubley por-<lb/>
trays this teenage<lb/>
hooker, Niki. Hubley's<lb/>
performance is nothing<lb/>
less than perfect. She<lb/>
delivers the wordly wise<lb/>
innocence of heart<lb/>
neccessary to make<lb/>
believeable the coalition<lb/>
between Niki and Van<lb/>
Dorn. Niki sees in Van<lb/>
Dorn, hope. Hope that<lb/>
if someone as "stra-<lb/>
ight" as Van Dorn can<lb/>
brave the wilds of the<lb/>
pornographic jungle for<lb/>
someone he cares for,<lb/>
perhaps someone might<lb/>
care for her also.<lb/>
Unfortunately, she mis-<lb/>
takes this "someone"<lb/>
for Van Dorn.<lb/>
! can envision no<lb/>
other actor portraying<lb/>
as accurately the lead<lb/>
role in Hardcore as<lb/>
George C. Scott. As is<lb/>
generally the case,<lb/>
superlative ability to<lb/>
evince, disgust, heart-<lb/>
sickness, and particul-<lb/>
arly, rage, is well<lb/>
exercized in this film.<lb/>
Scott describes Har-<lb/>
dcore as a "verymoral<lb/>
film Hardcore's moral<lb/>
message is delivered<lb/>
strong and clear. It is a<lb/>
cry to all parents to<lb/>
stay in touch with their<lb/>
children. It screams out<lb/>
to parents the dire<lb/>
possible consequences of<lb/>
alienating their children.<lb/>
The use of nudity in<lb/>
Hardcore is absolutely<lb/>
necessary for realism<lb/>
and impact. I hope<lb/>
people generally offen-<lb/>
ded by nudity in the<lb/>
movies will not avoid<lb/>
Hardcore because of its<lb/>
inclusion.<lb/>
And I sincerely hope<lb/>
those who see Hardcore<lb/>
will take its message to<lb/>
heart. v<lb/>
In his role as Jake Van Dorm, Academy Award winner<lb/>
George C. Scott searches the sordid night world of Los<lb/>
Angeles for his runaway daughter Krisen.<lb/>
Second Annual Bluegrass Festival held Thursday<lb/>
Bv MARC BARNES<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
The Second Annual Bluegrass Festival was<lb/>
held last Thursday night in the Jenkins Fine Arts<lb/>
ter Auditorium.<lb/>
The festival was sponsored by the English<lb/>
Department, and expenses were defraved bv funds<lb/>
ated through the office of Dean Richard Capwell,<lb/>
ol the College of Arts and Sciences.<lb/>
Dr. Paul Dowell, professor of English, was<lb/>
master ol ceremonies for the occasion. Dowell is<lb/>
iated with the ECU Folklore Archive, and prior<lb/>
to the concert, bluegrass musicians played for his<lb/>
klore classes.<lb/>
Five groups performed in the festival. They<lb/>
included The Pierce Family from Richlands, NC; a<lb/>
group of two folklore students from one of Dowell's<lb/>
es; the Pine Wood Ramblers, an all-female<lb/>
bluegrass band from ECU; the Bassett Mountain<lb/>
String Band, another bluegrass group from the<lb/>
university and the Carolina Bluegrass Band, from<lb/>
 anceboro, NC.<lb/>
The Pierce Family played an inspired, down<lb/>
home variety of bluegrass. Led by one of the<lb/>
hottest fiddlers in this writer's recollection, they did<lb/>
a variety of traditional tunes, and they were the<lb/>
only band that I saw use an autoharp in their set.<lb/>
They were unique in that their band represented<lb/>
two generations of Pierces, a father and two sons.<lb/>
The second group to perform was helped out by<lb/>
the fact that a fiddle player from a local band<lb/>
playing at the Attic that night stepped in<lb/>
Lack of rehearsal hurt the two students, but<lb/>
they were enthusiastic, and the instrumentals were<lb/>
good.<lb/>
The third group to appear was the Pine Wood<lb/>
Ramblers. I hope that I won't get letters about this,<lb/>
but I have never heard of an all female bluegrass<lb/>
band. Until now. Those girls can really play<lb/>
bluegrass, and they can play it quite well. The Pine<lb/>
Wood Ramblers are Dee Braxton, fiddle and<lb/>
penny whistle, I Lin Langler, guitar; Ann Massengill,<lb/>
banjo; Lorraine Jordan, mandolin; and Susan<lb/>
Merritt, bass.<lb/>
The Ramblers lent a great amount of slapstick<lb/>
comedy to their act. At one point, a large voice<lb/>
microphone fell off the stand in front of the banjo<lb/>
picker. The guitarist politely started to pick it up,<lb/>
when she knocked another microphone off its stand<lb/>
in front of the fiddler. Her guitar strap promptly<lb/>
fell off, and she caught the instrument before it hit<lb/>
the floor. The fiddler and the banjo picker juggled<lb/>
the microphones for a while, for comic effect, and<lb/>
the guitarist desplayed a huge frowning clown face<lb/>
which was printed on the back of her guitar in<lb/>
green ink.<lb/>
The audience roared, and at the end of their<lb/>
set, they gave the Ramblers a standing ovation,<lb/>
which brought them back to the stage.<lb/>
The Basset Mountain String Band played next,<lb/>
and they were Nelson Jarvis, fiddle; Chris Tacker,<lb/>
banjo; and Marc Basset, guitar. They were one of<lb/>
the more unusual bands of the night because Basset<lb/>
Mountain's guitarist had a style all his own. He<lb/>
played the accoustic guitar in almost the same<lb/>
manner that one would play an electric bass guitar.<lb/>
It was unusual to see, but it was highly<lb/>
entertaining to listen to.<lb/>
The fiddle and the banjo were also good, and<lb/>
the entire group displayed a talent for music beyond<lb/>
their years.<lb/>
The Carolina Bluegrass Band from Vanceboro<lb/>
took the stage for the final set of the evening.<lb/>
Despite some problems with the sound system, the<lb/>
band was well received and very entertaining. Led<lb/>
by Dickie "Poochie" Robinson, who is billed as<lb/>
North Carolina's number two fiddler, the band<lb/>
featured Theodore Morris on banjo, Odis Whitaker<lb/>
on guitar, Joe Whitaker on bass, Lorraine Jordan<lb/>
(also of the Pine Woods Ramblers) on mandolin,<lb/>
and Hattie Morris, singing tenor.<lb/>
Bluegrass bands generally have an announcer,<lb/>
that is, one of the performers who jokes with the<lb/>
audience, and tells stories about how his fellow<lb/>
performers are "hams or are always getting in<lb/>
trouble with their wives for coming in late at night.<lb/>
One of the most effective "announcers" was<lb/>
"Poochie" Robinson of the Carolina Bluegrass Band.<lb/>
One of Robinson's favorite lines was to tell the<lb/>
audience that he had just started playing the fiddle<lb/>
two weeks ago. Naturally, he would then go into a<lb/>
fast rendition of "Orange Blossom Special which<lb/>
told the world that he had been playing that fiddle<lb/>
for a good many years.<lb/>
Some of the featured bluegrass songs were<lb/>
"Rocky Top "Rawhide "Lonesome Fiddle<lb/>
Blues and "Cripple Creek<lb/>
This reviewer has only one complaint about the<lb/>
festival. Songs were auplicated by several bands. I<lb/>
think I counted "Orange Blossom Special" played<lb/>
four times. Dowell hopes to see the bluegra?<lb/>
concert played once every semester.<lb/>
Bluegrass is a particularly entertaining form of<lb/>
oral narrative which is handed down from<lb/>
generation to generation. It had its root? in country<lb/>
music.<lb/>
Country music started out as slower dance tunes.<lb/>
and it was played by instruments imported from the<lb/>
old country. The guitar started being used in<lb/>
country music, around the turn of the century.<lb/>
With the advent of recording equipment came<lb/>
record producers into the Appalachian foothills<lb/>
around the first quarter of the century. They felt,<lb/>
evidently, that they could create a market in other<lb/>
places for Appalachian-style country music. Mando-<lb/>
lins then saw increased usage, and with the<lb/>
influence of the Monroe brothers, bluegrass was<lb/>
born.<lb/>
The main difference between bluegrass and<lb/>
country is that bluegrass is played much faster. A?<lb/>
musician Mike Cross jokingly puts it, "You take a<lb/>
three minute song, and hella bluegrass band ought<lb/>
to be able to do it in seventeen, eighteen seconds<lb/>
Another difference between bluegrass and<lb/>
country is the style in which the fiddle is played. In<lb/>
country, each stroke of the bow counts for one note,<lb/>
and in bluegrass, each stroke may count for three<lb/>
or four notes. This lends a slurred, sliding sound to<lb/>
the effort.<lb/>
Del Lewis' A Cry of Players is<lb/>
a 'demanding' production<lb/>
1<lb/>
Director Del Lewis and daughter Amy watch<lb/>
rehearsals for A Cry of Players Photo by Pete Podemw<lb/>
The East Carolina<lb/>
Playhouse production of<lb/>
A Cry of Players,<lb/>
William Gibson's fast-<lb/>
paced and moving por-<lb/>
trait of the young Will<lb/>
Shekespeare which<lb/>
opens tomorrow evening<lb/>
at the East Carolina<lb/>
Playhouse Studio<lb/>
Theatre, will offer both<lb/>
actors and technicians a<lb/>
chance to show their<lb/>
mettle. The modern<lb/>
work offers an intri-<lb/>
guing challenge to the<lb/>
many artists and arti-<lb/>
sans who go into<lb/>
making the play ready<lb/>
for a A audience.<lb/>
A Cry of Players<lb/>
offers our actors a<lb/>
chance to extend them<lb/>
selves in a number of<lb/>
ways says noted dir-<lb/>
ector Del Lewis. 'The<lb/>
characters are, many of<lb/>
them, actual figures<lb/>
from history-some of<lb/>
the most noted thea-<lb/>
trical figures from<lb/>
Shakespeare's day. But<lb/>
they are so much more<lb/>
than figures from the<lb/>
theatre history books.<lb/>
Gibson has painted real<lb/>
people, and it is the<lb/>
actor's task to bring<lb/>
these figures from the<lb/>
page into living,<lb/>
breathing reality. The<lb/>
play calls for an assort-<lb/>
ment of low-life types,<lb/>
Will's cohorts in Strat-<lb/>
ford, as well as an<lb/>
acting tourpe made up<lb/>
of Will Kemp, Ned<lb/>
Heminges, and so many<lb/>
other famous names<lb/>
from the Elizabethan<lb/>
theatre, and, of course,<lb/>
Will's family, his wife<lb/>
Anne, his daughter<lb/>
Susanna, his brother<lb/>
Gilbert-all of whom<lb/>
have sparked conjecture<lb/>
from scholars for cent-<lb/>
turies.<lb/>
This play makes use<lb/>
of all that conjecture,<lb/>
but it does it in such a<lb/>
way that we never<lb/>
forget that these are<lb/>
the people, real,<lb/>
flesh-and-blood folks<lb/>
who helped to shape<lb/>
the man who gave us<lb/>
the best drama written<lb/>
in our language. It's<lb/>
a real challenge for our<lb/>
actors to strike that<lb/>
balance between histor-<lb/>
ical figure and human<lb/>
being, and I must say I<lb/>
think our actors have<lb/>
met that challenge<lb/>
well<lb/>
If the actors face a<lb/>
challenge, no less can<lb/>
be said of the techni-<lb/>
cians for this play. The<lb/>
realistic mode of the<lb/>
play requires a number<lb/>
of technical devices<lb/>
which Shakespeare him-<lb/>
self might have shied<lb/>
away from as too dif-<lb/>
ficult to carry ott.<lb/>
Scenically, the play<lb/>
jumps from the woods,<lb/>
to the upper room at the<lb/>
inn, to the town square,<lb/>
to a room in Will's<lb/>
house. Ed Havnes'<lb/>
imaginative unit setting<lb/>
deals with the problems<lb/>
of localization through<lb/>
suggestion and economic<lb/>
use of shifting machin-<lb/>
ery.<lb/>
Costumer Maria<lb/>
Jurgianis is faced with<lb/>
transforming a two-<lb/>
armed actor into a<lb/>
one-armed character, as<lb/>
well as designing<lb/>
clothes which can be<lb/>
torn off during a fight<lb/>
scene night after night.<lb/>
Prop Master Michael<lb/>
Banks has had to locate<lb/>
a life-like fox which has<lb/>
been trapped, mugs<lb/>
which will break on<lb/>
cue, and fish which<lb/>
have been caught (but<lb/>
will last lor the entire<lb/>
ten-night run). "Most<lb/>
of those were prettv<lb/>
eas to find he<lb/>
pointed out. "The<lb/>
most difficult thing I<lb/>
had to get was a bunch<lb/>
of marigolds. Did you<lb/>
ever try to get mari-<lb/>
golds at this time of<lb/>
year:<lb/>
A Cry of Players<lb/>
opens tomorrow night at<lb/>
the Studio Theatre in<lb/>
the Drama Building,<lb/>
and runs ever) night<lb/>
except Sunday, through<lb/>
Saturday, April H.<lb/>
Tickets are $1.00 for<lb/>
ECU Students with<lb/>
activity card, or $2.50<lb/>
for the general public,<lb/>
and can be obtained<lb/>
through the Playhouse<lb/>
Box Office, room 108 of<lb/>
the Drama Building<lb/>
between 10 and 4 Mo<lb/>
day through Friday.<lb/>
Call 757-6390 for reset-<lb/>
vations.<lb/>
3<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
??vii? jwv cr<lb/>
?Si<lb/>
?-liillU m-rn'mmmm m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057190_0007"/><lb/>
Acting in Rog?r8 demands a certain level of camp<lb/>
3 April 1979 FOUNTAiNHEAD Page 7<lb/>
Buck Rogers flick limps from lack of innovation<lb/>
By BARRY CLAYTON<lb/>
and<lb/>
BILL JONES<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editors<lb/>
Well, there's a new<lb/>
sci-fi flick in town.<lb/>
So what? you ask.<lb/>
And well you may.<lb/>
lor not many save<lb/>
comic-book enthusiasts<lb/>
anc hard-core<lb/>
science fiction fan<lb/>
could find much to<lb/>
become exited about<lb/>
with this latest of camp<lb/>
pulp movies.<lb/>
I m talking about<lb/>
Buck Rogers ,<lb/>
course.<lb/>
of<lb/>
Presenting itself as a<lb/>
sort of watered-down<lb/>
mashed potato cross-<lb/>
breed of two relatively<lb/>
innovative popular films<lb/>
Star Wars and<lb/>
Superman, Buck<lb/>
Rogers limps across<lb/>
the silver screen con-<lb/>
veying little in the way<lb/>
ot socially redeeming<lb/>
qualities, and of inno-<lb/>
vation nothing at all.<lb/>
The acting, which<lb/>
obviously demands a<lb/>
certain level of camp,<lb/>
hammy deliveries, suc-<lb/>
ceeds only in that it<lb/>
manages to put the<lb/>
Swiss Premium company<lb/>
to shame. Some of the<lb/>
lines actually do come<lb/>
off, but by far they<lb/>
Although there are a<lb/>
few very well designed<lb/>
shots of the Inner City<lb/>
(a modernistic haven for<lb/>
the remanants of<lb/>
Earth's population), the<lb/>
Cinema<lb/>
hover somewhere bet-<lb/>
ween being moronicaliy<lb/>
trite and merely sopho-<lb/>
moric.<lb/>
space battle scenes,<lb/>
which should embrace<lb/>
the imagination of<lb/>
moviegoers, do not<lb/>
manage to get past the<lb/>
handshake level. This is<lb/>
really unforgivable since<lb/>
shots of brawling<lb/>
spaceships can be seen<lb/>
(properly done) on any<lb/>
Galactic Sunday<lb/>
night episode.<lb/>
The plot centers<lb/>
around the fact that a<lb/>
20th century American<lb/>
astronaut by the name<lb/>
of Buck Rogers spends<lb/>
some five hundred years<lb/>
drifting around the<lb/>
cosmos in suspended<lb/>
animation until he is<lb/>
picked up and thawed<lb/>
out by the fighter<lb/>
Kaczender's In Praise of Older Women<lb/>
'is certainly no Academy Award winner9<lb/>
B DARREN<lb/>
BLRGSTEIN<lb/>
Staff Reporter<lb/>
In Praise of Older<lb/>
women is somewhat of<lb/>
an oddity. While view-<lb/>
ing it. almost wondered<lb/>
at times if it was<lb/>
supposed to be a<lb/>
comedy, or a serious<lb/>
piece of filmaking.<lb/>
The film is both. It<lb/>
is somewhat tongue-in-<lb/>
cheek, because vou<lb/>
cannot take Andres'<lb/>
escapades seriously, for<lb/>
surelj this can happen<lb/>
to no one man, right?<lb/>
Tom Berenger<lb/>
portrays Andras. a<lb/>
young man who begins<lb/>
to yearn for some of<lb/>
the more adult things in<lb/>
life (earlj in hi child-<lb/>
hood), and immediately<lb/>
makes his wishes come<lb/>
true with an all too<lb/>
promising prostitute<lb/>
whom some absent<lb/>
marine had left lying<lb/>
about. Not long after<lb/>
that, Andras' desires<lb/>
reach full magnitude,<lb/>
and, as a teenager, his<lb/>
schoolmates of the<lb/>
feminine variety poke<lb/>
fun at his advances,<lb/>
and he begins to doubt<lb/>
himself.<lb/>
It is only when he<lb/>
tries to deflower a girl<lb/>
vhom he had been<lb/>
dating that he decides<lb/>
that he must be<lb/>
taught-and by educated<lb/>
women who had manv<lb/>
years of experience<lb/>
under their belts.<lb/>
Andras meets Maya,<lb/>
juicily portrayed by<lb/>
Karen Black, a pretty<lb/>
astute woman who<lb/>
catches Andras longing.<lb/>
Andras asks her to<lb/>
spend the night with<lb/>
him and to his surprise,<lb/>
she accepts, and Andras<lb/>
starts on what may be<lb/>
called the Golden Road.<lb/>
Director George<lb/>
Kaezender handles the<lb/>
various love scenes with<lb/>
tasteful, but erotic style.<lb/>
Here, also, is where his<lb/>
mode ol tongue-in<lb/>
cheek' SURFACES.<lb/>
Kaezender surrounds his<lb/>
love scenes with light-<lb/>
hearted, 1930's style<lb/>
background music, to<lb/>
give the scenes more of<lb/>
a humorous, softened<lb/>
approach, as if<lb/>
Kaezender wanted to<lb/>
play down the eroticism<lb/>
ami make it more of a<lb/>
'game<lb/>
Berenger portrays<lb/>
his role with consider-<lb/>
able gusto, obviously<lb/>
enjoying himself thor-<lb/>
oughly. He manages to<lb/>
keep the character,<lb/>
Andra, down-to-earth,<lb/>
while at the same time<lb/>
crating a sort of young<lb/>
Casanova that sweeps<lb/>
older women off their<lb/>
feet. Andras approaches<lb/>
the women he picks<lb/>
with nearly child-like<lb/>
innocence, and evenual-<lb/>
lv enacts his debonair<lb/>
qualities to them.<lb/>
And the women in-<lb/>
deed are very beautiful.<lb/>
Karen Black looks pret-<lb/>
tier than ever, and this<lb/>
seems to be a much,<lb/>
much better role for her<lb/>
than the little nothing<lb/>
part she landed in<lb/>
Capricorn One.Here, she<lb/>
portrays a complex and<lb/>
involved character, and<lb/>
makes her grow.<lb/>
Also in the film are<lb/>
Helen Shaver, who por-<lb/>
trays Anne MacDonald,<lb/>
the last of Berenger's<lb/>
red hot lovers (no pun<lb/>
intended). Shavers looks<lb/>
pretty indeed, and<lb/>
comes across as the<lb/>
very character she por-<lb/>
trays, that of an adul-<lb/>
terous American house-<lb/>
wife.<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO 12TH<lb/>
WEEK OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
$150.22<lb/>
Free pregnancy test, birth control and<lb/>
problem pregnancy counseling For<lb/>
further information call 832-0535 (toll-<lb/>
free number 800-221-2568 between<lb/>
9AM-5PM weekdays<lb/>
Raleigh Women's Health<lb/>
Organization<lb/>
917 West Morgan St.<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C. 27603<lb/>
Hill fitf EACINC INC<lb/>
X6O4 Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
75S-34S9<lb/>
IHI 11 41 It 14f<lb/>
Stock &amp; HI Performance<lb/>
Filters ? Brakes<lb/>
Rpllbars Headers<lb/>
Open Evenings eo<lb/>
&amp; Saturday lOf<lb/>
PURE PRAIRIE LEAGUE<lb/>
ln concert<lb/>
at N. C. Azalea Festival<lb/>
Friday night, 8 o'clock, Apr! 6<lb/>
TRASK COLISEUM<lb/>
Tickets: $7, $8 and $10<lb/>
On Sals! Azalea Festival Offlcs<lb/>
Wilmington, N.C.<lb/>
121 Chsetnut Street<lb/>
OpsnollvJJIajgh<lb/>
In Praise of Older<lb/>
Women is certainly no<lb/>
Academy Award winner,<lb/>
but for its efforts, I can<lb/>
say it merits a small<lb/>
amount of praise.<lb/>
ARMY?NAVY STORE<lb/>
1501 S. Evans<lb/>
<lb/>
??<lb/>
-<lb/>
B-15, bomber, field, J<lb/>
deck, flight, snorkel <lb/>
jackets. Back Packs. <lb/>
M:MMMMMM ?<lb/>
RIGGAN'S<lb/>
SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
AND<lb/>
LEATHER SHOP<lb/>
New leather pocketbooks,<lb/>
belts, and belt buckles.<lb/>
Shoes repaired to look<lb/>
like new.<lb/>
II W. 4th St.<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
Wed.<lb/>
900 ?<lb/>
Ladies Nite<lb/>
Music of<lb/>
KURT<lb/>
FORTMEYER<lb/>
?h?rlock,ii<lb/>
On 5th St. across from<lb/>
the Book Barn<lb/>
Good Food<lb/>
&amp; Good People<lb/>
Negetarian diets<lb/>
respected.<lb/>
MonSat. 11a.m9p.m.<lb/>
itchelTs Hair Styling<lb/>
? P.tt Fin,<lb/>
TCrcenv.lle<lb/>
Shopping Cefei<lb/>
North Carolina 17U<lb/>
Retro HairShort<lb/>
OUR STYLISTS<lb/>
HAVE RECEIVED PRI-<lb/>
VATE! PROFESSIONAL<lb/>
TRAINING IN THE NEW<lb/>
RETRO-CUTS.<lb/>
COME IN AND TRY<lb/>
THIS NEWEST LOOK.<lb/>
CALL 756-2950 or COME IN<lb/>
CHANELO'S<lb/>
ANNOUNCES OUR<lb/>
99 SPAGHETTI<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
li??rlN vB 5 4<lb/>
,11 day eyery Tuesday. A large<lb/>
plate of spaghetti Is only 99<lb/>
when yon dine with as. It's<lb/>
cheaper than eating at home,<lb/>
and we do the dishes<lb/>
pifcXA CHANELO'S siUghizt,<lb/>
PIZZA fiP SPAGHETTI HOUSE?<lb/>
SUBS 507 E. 14th Ste tA?AOiVA<lb/>
768-7400 FOR FREE DELIVER<lb/>
squadron of the flagship<lb/>
of the Draconian peace<lb/>
mission. The flagship is<lb/>
en route to Earth to<lb/>
establish trade relations<lb/>
and is not supposed to<lb/>
be armedbut then,<lb/>
you've got to have a<lb/>
villain, right?<lb/>
Draconian<lb/>
Since the Draconians<lb/>
cannot bring themselves<lb/>
to believe Rogers' story,<lb/>
they quite naturally<lb/>
assume that he is a spy<lb/>
and set him free in his<lb/>
spaceship.<lb/>
The plan?<lb/>
To track his space-<lb/>
craft down through the<lb/>
Earthmen's impenetrable<lb/>
force-field and thereby<lb/>
learn how to success-<lb/>
fully invade Earth.<lb/>
A dm<lb/>
ission<lb/>
Told vou they<lb/>
up to no good.<lb/>
were<lb/>
Exactly why the<lb/>
Draconians, who by<lb/>
their own admission<lb/>
control fully three<lb/>
quarters of the univ-<lb/>
erse, are so facinated<lb/>
with the conquest of<lb/>
one small, burned-out<lb/>
world is not clear. But<lb/>
DONT MISS<lb/>
A CRY OF<lb/>
EL2YERS<lb/>
William Gibson's colorful and moving<lb/>
portrait of the youthful Will Shakespeare<lb/>
April 4-7 and 9-14<lb/>
Studio Theatre East Carolina Playhouse<lb/>
$2.50 ECU students $1.00<lb/>
Call 757-6390 for reservation<lb/>
then, why should this<lb/>
be any different than<lb/>
the rest of the film.<lb/>
Buck Rodgers<lb/>
As for the rest of<lb/>
storyline-?well, wh)<lb/>
both -ry<lb/>
Beyond a doubt,<lb/>
Burk Rogers would<lb/>
appeal to a lew isolated<lb/>
groups ol -par?- fantasj<lb/>
afficianados, but th-<lb/>
vast majority of viewers<lb/>
would be happier with<lb/>
anj ol tiic several fine<lb/>
movies currently plaving<lb/>
in town.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Wed. &amp; t<lb/>
Thun.V<lb/>
(filmed<lb/>
for TV)<lb/>
Notice is hereby given that on March 1, 1979 East Carolina<lb/>
University tendered an application to the Federal Communications<lb/>
Commision in Washington, D.C. requesting a constuction permit<lb/>
for a new Educational FM Broadcast Station in Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
to operate on FM Channel 21 7A, 91.3 MHz, with total input<lb/>
power of 150 watts and an effective radiated power of 282 watts<lb/>
from an antenna radiation center 1 34 ft. above terrain.<lb/>
The proposed studies and transmitter will be located on the<lb/>
campus of East Carolina University in Greenville, N.C. The<lb/>
proposed antenna support stucture will extend a total of 139 ft.<lb/>
above ground level. A copy of the above referenced application<lb/>
which contains a complete listing of the applicants, officers,<lb/>
and governing board is on file for public inspection during normal<lb/>
business hours at the office of WECU Radio and the SGA<lb/>
President's office.<lb/>
EYEGLASS SPECIAL<lb/>
Lxecvi- Juz<lb/>
OPTICIANS<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
opticians<lb/>
association<lb/>
of america<lb/>
REMEMBER!<lb/>
Your Eyeglass<lb/>
And Contact Lens<lb/>
Prescription<lb/>
Is Yours! , r<lb/>
YOUR DOCTORS PRESCRIPTION<lb/>
ACCURATELY FILLED<lb/>
I ? ' <lb/>
iscount to all ECU Students<lb/>
lOfcD<lb/>
(Excluding Specials)<lb/>
FIRST QUALITY<lb/>
EYEGLASSES<lb/>
Single vision white<lb/>
glass lenses and an<lb/>
attractive selection of<lb/>
20 American made<lb/>
frames.<lb/>
s24<lb/>
95<lb/>
Complete<lb/>
FIRST QUALITY<lb/>
BIFOCALS<lb/>
Any type bifocal with<lb/>
white glass lenses CAAQC<lb/>
and an attractive V X<lb/>
selection of 20 Ww<lb/>
American made Compete<lb/>
frames.<lb/>
UnalMt style not included<lb/>
COMPLETE E YEGLASS SERVICE<lb/>
? CONTACT LENSES (HARD I SOFT)<lb/>
? PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED<lb/>
? BROKEN LENSES DUPLICATED<lb/>
? PRESCRIPTION SUN GLASSES<lb/>
? FRAMES REPAIRED I REPLACED<lb/>
? CHEMICAL HARDENED LENSES<lb/>
? SELECTION OF OVER 1000 FRAMES<lb/>
? ARTIFICIAL EYES<lb/>
? OSHA APPROVED INDUSTRIAL GLASSES<lb/>
J<lb/>
Contact Lenses<lb/>
by<lb/>
Bausch ft Lomb Soflens or<lb/>
Milton Roy Nature Vue<lb/>
Soft Lens$200<lb/>
Semi Soft LensM30<lb/>
Hard Lenssg<lb/>
Urtra-Vue Plastic Lenses<lb/>
tint of choke in ?i<lb/>
Oscar Do U Rento ?<lb/>
95<lb/>
todies and Man Complete<lb/>
Oscar De La Rente<lb/>
With Single Vision Plastic Lenses<lb/>
d"  Lodl? '? Complata<lb/>
Any Prescription tRA<lb/>
Complata<lb/>
Choice Of Tints<lb/>
CLEAR-VUE OPTICIANS<lb/>
752-1446 rJftSSi<lb/>
ADJACENT TO EAST CAHOUNA EYE CLINIC<lb/>
"? M(Hm ? ?"?"? "c- tw, tour PHL,<lb/>
WCO. I A.N1 P.M.<lb/>
BERKLEY HALL<lb/>
QOLDSBORO<lb/>
114 E. WALNUT<lb/>
DOWNTOWN QOLDSBORO<lb/>
? m m<lb/>
-<lb/>
0 e7 0 w el ??<lb/>
L i -s. - ta s ? ev 4 a<lb/>
 , ?<lb/>
V<lb/>
?" ?? ? -? ,m t<lb/>
 m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057190_0008"/><lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 3 April 1979<lb/>
Purple-Gold scrimmage<lb/>
scheduled for Saturday<lb/>
B SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Spring practice ends in seven days for the East<lb/>
Carolina football team and like most coaches during<lb/>
spring Pat Dye just isn't overly pleased with<lb/>
Pirates performance.<lb/>
Injuries have plagued the Bucs during their<lb/>
spring drill- and Dye admits the necessary<lb/>
siveness and intensity just haven't been there.<lb/>
Hi wever, Dye hopes some of those things will<lb/>
ehang Saturday when East Carolina stages its<lb/>
Purple-Gold .scrimmage which highlights the<lb/>
-?ring practice drills.<lb/>
ght now, the only unit that looks like its<lb/>
with an enthusiasm out there is our first<lb/>
ve unit Dye said Saturday after a lengthy<lb/>
nmage session. "We haven't had any injuries<lb/>
therefore we haven't had to use too many<lb/>
players offensively. Our first offensive team<lb/>
ver) experienced unit and they've played well<lb/>
during most of the spring drills. I hope it<lb/>
tinues<lb/>
However, we didn't look that quick out there today<lb/>
worries me hut we had some real tough<lb/>
workouts both Thursday and Friday which may have<lb/>
Minted t.r some ol the problems<lb/>
Meanwhile, several defensive starters have seen<lb/>
ited practice time because of injuries which has<lb/>
the coaching staff the opportunitv to<lb/>
nent with new players.<lb/>
the Bucs expected starting ends next<lb/>
John Morris and Clifford Williams, are<lb/>
while linebackers Jeffrev Warren and Glenru<lb/>
Mo<lb/>
rn<lb/>
lave also been sidelined.<lb/>
- Brewington i the only linebacker we've<lb/>
right now who has played Dye said.<lb/>
the injuries our players are not surgical<lb/>
ones, but they're keeping people off the field and<lb/>
they need to be out there getting the work. It's<lb/>
given our coaches the opportunity to see some of<lb/>
our younger players and we've had several who<lb/>
have looked good and could help us next fall<lb/>
One of the biggest question marks entering the<lb/>
spring drills was the quarterback situation. Leander<lb/>
Green returns next season for his final year, but<lb/>
the search for a reserve quarterback has progressed<lb/>
slowly.<lb/>
Henry Trevathan, a junior from Greenville is<lb/>
currently the number two quarterback but the other<lb/>
possible replacements, John Felton, Aaron Stewart<lb/>
and Jess Eberdt have all been hampered with<lb/>
injuries.<lb/>
Felton, a freshman from Edenton, missed last<lb/>
year with a severe knee injury he suffered before<lb/>
pre-season drills? Eberdt, a walk on during the fall<lb/>
has been awarded a scholarship and is considered<lb/>
one of the Pirates top passing QB'S.<lb/>
"Henry Trevathan is our number two<lb/>
quarterback right now, but the rest of our<lb/>
quarterbacks have missed a lot of practice time<lb/>
because of injuries Dye said. "They have all<lb/>
looked good at times, but we're looking for that<lb/>
consistency. It's important we have a capable<lb/>
backup quarterback in the wishbone system. Leander<lb/>
was injured a lot early last year and we had more<lb/>
than our share of problems at quarterback<lb/>
Saturday's Purple-Gold scrimmmage game will not<lb/>
conclude the Pirates spring drills. The NCAA allows<lb/>
teams 20 actual practice days and Dve. said spring<lb/>
drills would probably end Thursday, April 12.<lb/>
East Carolina, the defending Independence Bowl<lb/>
champions, opens its season Sept. 1 at home<lb/>
against Western Carolina University. The Pirates<lb/>
will then play N.C. State, Duke and Wake Forest<lb/>
following their opener before returning home again.<lb/>
The Bucs have 12 returning starters back from<lb/>
last year's team which finished the season with a<lb/>
9-3 record.<lb/>
?w ?Ml $<lb/>
eander Green and Anthony Collins arc the Bucs top offen<lb/>
sive returners<lb/>
Golfers finish 12th in tourney<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
The East Carolina<lb/>
golf team concluded its<lb/>
1979 season this week-<lb/>
end with a disappoint-<lb/>
ing 12th place finish in<lb/>
the Camp Lejeune Invi-<lb/>
tational tournament.<lb/>
The Pirate<lb/>
gether a three<lb/>
of 937 which<lb/>
behind the tea<lb/>
pion North Care<lb/>
finished with<lb/>
strokes. Duke tc<lb/>
while Old Domi<lb/>
put to-<lb/>
ay total<lb/>
vas far<lb/>
i cham-<lb/>
ina who<lb/>
870<lb/>
ok third<lb/>
lion fin-<lb/>
ished fourth, followed<lb/>
by Elon and North<lb/>
Carolina-Charlotte.<lb/>
North Carolina's<lb/>
Steve Smith captured<lb/>
the individual title while<lb/>
Duke's Jeff Goettman<lb/>
finished in<lb/>
place.<lb/>
"We left<lb/>
our regulars<lb/>
for this tournament so<lb/>
that some of our<lb/>
younger players could<lb/>
get some tournament<lb/>
experience East Car-<lb/>
olina coach Bob Helmick<lb/>
said. "We still didn't<lb/>
play as well as I hoped<lb/>
we would, but I think,<lb/>
we've got a good<lb/>
second<lb/>
most of<lb/>
at home<lb/>
nucleus of players for<lb/>
next season plus the<lb/>
fact we're bringing sev<lb/>
eral talented freshmen<lb/>
which should help us<lb/>
immediately<lb/>
Carl Beaman was<lb/>
the low man for the<lb/>
Pirates with a three-day<lb/>
total of 233 strokes.<lb/>
Beman had rounds of<lb/>
78-78-77. Frank Acker<lb/>
followed Beman in the<lb/>
Pirate lineup with<lb/>
ounds of 74-79-83 for a<lb/>
236 total.<lb/>
Other East Carolina<lb/>
scores were Joe Dillon<lb/>
77-81-85-243, Joey<lb/>
Huntley 84-77-85-246,<lb/>
and Robin Saleeby<lb/>
84-81-84-246.<lb/>
"This was not a<lb/>
loaded tournament; and<lb/>
since it was the last<lb/>
tournament of the year<lb/>
for us, I was glad to<lb/>
see some of our<lb/>
younger players get<lb/>
some experience<lb/>
Helmick noted.<lb/>
"Besides, the way<lb/>
we've been playing, we<lb/>
really didn't expect to<lb/>
win either<lb/>
 race<lb/>
Rick Clear heads for finish line in Sunday<lb/>
Clear captures first<lb/>
Greenville Road Race<lb/>
By CHRIS FARREN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
I- Jf rf,ruSt AnUUal Gretville Road Race was<lb/>
kicked off this past Sunday, and nearly 550 entrants<lb/>
showed up to tackle the 6.2 mile course.<lb/>
Kick Clear from Cherry Point captured first place<lb/>
overall for male runner, with a time of 31:28 East<lb/>
Carolina own Linda Mason was the top women<lb/>
iin.sher, completing the course with a 41-54<lb/>
clocking. ????<lb/>
W iZ?? irthue,ma,e categories included:<lb/>
21 29 R r?d bC,OW' ChaHie Powe11 the<lb/>
21-29 group, R,ck Clear in the 30-39 group, Edward<lb/>
to theen5oV 40"49 gr?UP 3nd Ken"e'h Ada?<lb/>
in tne DU-59 category.<lb/>
The female winners were: May Forbes for 20<lb/>
and below, Linda Mason in the 21-29 group<lb/>
fn :he4R9itCh 'n " "d G k<lb/>
in the 40-49 category.<lb/>
Hundreds of spectators showed up Sunday<lb/>
afternoon to watch the mass of runners Lrt down"<lb/>
Keed St. at 3 p.m. Thirty-one minutes and<lb/>
wenty-eight seconds later the runners staged<lb/>
returning, first one and two at a time, and later on<lb/>
in groups.<lb/>
It was a beautiful day to be outside, but the hot<lb/>
sun forced the runners to put up with over 80<lb/>
degree temperatures. Rest stops were positioned<lb/>
throughout the course to help the racers combat the<lb/>
heat. Still many runners dropped out and collapsed<lb/>
from heat exhaustion.<lb/>
The Greenville Police and Rescue Squad did a<lb/>
superb job of controlling the traffic and helping the<lb/>
injured runners. According to Bob Gotwals, race<lb/>
director, all of the injured runners who were taken<lb/>
to the hospital, were treated and released bv<lb/>
Sunday night.<lb/>
The race was sponsored bv H.L. Hodges<lb/>
Sporting Goods in collaboration with the Coastal<lb/>
Carolina Track Club, with all the proceeds going to<lb/>
the Easter Seal Foundation.<lb/>
The event was very well organized and an<lb/>
overwhelming success. Thanks are in order to: Bob<lb/>
Gotwals, the race coordinator and director; the girls<lb/>
of the Alpha Delta Pi and the Kappa Delta<lb/>
sororities; Jim Woods; and to Jo Perkins and the<lb/>
Easter Seals Society.<lb/>
More than 500 people competed in the Greenville Road Race Sund<lb/>
r<lb/>
?.<lb/>
-? -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057190_0009"/><lb/>
r ? t f ,<lb/>
 t t r<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
? t t '<lb/>
Softball team<lb/>
improves record<lb/>
By JIMMY DUPREE<lb/>
Sports Writer<lb/>
ThuTrsdavUdJ l SWePl a double-header<lb/>
t- win in ,k r Mary Bryan Car,y,e daime ?<lb/>
the sJcond si gamC WhUe D?nna Ea8?n t0?k<lb/>
shelV f tHe SCOrin? for the Buc. when<lb/>
Lu nn nl ? lT innin and ?"? home on<lb/>
It Ld S d?Ub,e- The bi? innin? for E? was<lb/>
erroCTonnaCkruJaniS Par,?n reached base on ?<lb/>
Parl on ! " Sin?,C Teres W"itley.<lb/>
Par n scored on a single by Mary Powell and<lb/>
Wtattej on a sacnfice from Shirley Brown. Powell<lb/>
Has.driven home by Donnn LaVictoire's sacrifice.<lb/>
?nly offensive glimmer for St. Augustine's<lb/>
was. two-run homer by Brenda Rozier in the<lb/>
ixtn.<lb/>
second meeting was somewhat more<lb/>
SrS5 r yn" Hurd,e and Whit, e?ch singled in<lb/>
he third frame and were sent across the plate on a<lb/>
long double by Jo Carol Barrow<lb/>
In the fourth, Cindy Meekins led off with a single<lb/>
followed by a double by Eason. Meekins scored<lb/>
hen a grounder by Addie Carter was errored.<lb/>
Lason and Carter scamperedl home when St.<lb/>
Augustine s shortstop bobbled a grounder by<lb/>
Hurdle. J<lb/>
St. Augustine's cut the margin to one in the sixth<lb/>
when Rozier tripled home Mary Knowell and later<lb/>
-cored. They were unable to pr?duce the necessary<lb/>
run to knot the game, however.<lb/>
In Saturday action at Lindlev Park in<lb/>
Greensboro, the Lady Bucs did not fair so well.<lb/>
The Lady Wolfpack of N.C. State conquered ECU<lb/>
in the opener, 3-2.<lb/>
The Pirates' runs came in the second inning<lb/>
when Robin Faggart singled and scored on an<lb/>
infield grounder by Carlyle. Barrow doubled and<lb/>
crossed home on a Parlon single.<lb/>
State capped the game in the sixth as Wagner<lb/>
got to first on an error by Carlyle and later scored.<lb/>
Romano and Allen each singled and scored as the<lb/>
Pack forged ahead of ECU.<lb/>
Western Carolina University fell to the Bucs in<lb/>
the second contest, 11-10.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates exploded for 10 runs in the<lb/>
se? nd, as they were awarded five walks bv the<lb/>
WCL' hurler.<lb/>
The Bucs received nine free passes during the<lb/>
contest. The winning run came in the sixth when<lb/>
Donna LaVictoire walked and scored on Barrow's<lb/>
single.<lb/>
Cl netted three runs in the second with a<lb/>
homer by Whitworth. Mintor also added a three-RBI<lb/>
homer in the sixth.<lb/>
Revenge belonged to N.C. A&amp;T University in the<lb/>
finale as they masacred ECU 17-1. The Bucs took a<lb/>
twinbill from A&amp;T earlier in the season.<lb/>
Two four-baggers sparked an eight run second<lb/>
frame for A&amp;T. Debbie Lyons paced the A&amp;T<lb/>
batters with two homers, while Jones and Capehard<lb/>
legged one each.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates drop to 7-7 on the season with<lb/>
pitchers Marv Bryan Carlyle 5-5 and Donna Eason<lb/>
2-2.<lb/>
ECU hosts North Carolina Wednesday in a<lb/>
double-header on the softball field adjacent to<lb/>
Harrington Field.<lb/>
 Mpiw mn ruuNiAiwrifcAP Page g<lb/>
One of the more attractive entrants in Sunday's Road R<lb/>
rhrtn by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
A $<lb/>
contribution<lb/>
is enclosed<lb/>
Please send me the symbol of support checked below<lb/>
Belt Buckre($10) j Winter Games Tote Bag ($25)<lb/>
u Ski Cap ($25) - Bookends ($50)<lb/>
sntrtbutiOd<lb/>
'ai deductible<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
edges Pirates 9-8<lb/>
By CHARLES<lb/>
CHANDLER<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
'We're not down.<lb/>
We still feel like we<lb/>
have a fine ball club<lb/>
These were the<lb/>
words of East Carolina<lb/>
baseball coach Monte<lb/>
Little shortly after his<lb/>
Pirates had dropped a<lb/>
heart-breaking decision<lb/>
to North Carolina 9-8<lb/>
Monday afternoon. The<lb/>
loss was the East<lb/>
Carolina's third in their<lb/>
last four outings, a<lb/>
stretch of games Little<lb/>
had deemed vital one<lb/>
week ago.<lb/>
"We're not out of<lb/>
anything yet Little<lb/>
said. "We still have<lb/>
over half of our sched-<lb/>
ule left. We just need<lb/>
to get a good string of<lb/>
wins going. That's<lb/>
vitally important now.<lb/>
Our schedule will get<lb/>
easier. It sure cannot<lb/>
get any tougher<lb/>
While the loss was a<lb/>
big blow to the Pirates,<lb/>
there was something<lb/>
very positive gained<lb/>
from it. Down 9-3 going<lb/>
into the ninth inning,<lb/>
the Pirates battled back<lb/>
to cut the lead to 9-8<lb/>
and actually had the<lb/>
tying run on third base<lb/>
before UNC ace Greg<lb/>
Norris entered the con-<lb/>
test to kill the ECU<lb/>
rally.<lb/>
The rally began with<lb/>
a double by Raymie<lb/>
Styons and was followed<lb/>
by three consecutive<lb/>
Pirates reaching base<lb/>
via walks, which scored<lb/>
Styons. Highlighting the<lb/>
rally was a two-run<lb/>
single by Jerry Carr-<lb/>
away.<lb/>
Carraway eventually<lb/>
scored on a single to<lb/>
right center by Billy<lb/>
Best. Best's single<lb/>
moved Bob Neff to<lb/>
third, making him the<lb/>
potential tying run.<lb/>
The Tarheels then<lb/>
replaced reliever, Steve<lb/>
Streeter with ace Greg<lb/>
Norris, to face Raymie<lb/>
Styons, who had started<lb/>
the rally, in the two-out<lb/>
situation.<lb/>
Styons then ground-<lb/>
ed out hard to short to<lb/>
end the game.<lb/>
Before the contesi<lb/>
with the Tarheels, the<lb/>
Pirates had dropped<lb/>
decisions to UNC-<lb/>
Wijmington and Virginia<lb/>
and won at Harrington<lb/>
Field against the<lb/>
Terrapins of Maryland.<lb/>
Today the Pirates<lb/>
now 11-10 have a<lb/>
double-header slated<lb/>
here against Old<lb/>
Dominion, a team that<lb/>
took a twin bill from<lb/>
the Pirates last season.<lb/>
Pizza inn<lb/>
AMERICA'S FAVORITE PIZZA<lb/>
9<lb/>
PIZZA BUFFET<lb/>
ALL THE PIZZA AND<lb/>
SALAD YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
$2.39<lb/>
Mon. -Fri. 11:30-2:00<lb/>
fiPMon. fiP Toes. 6:00 8:00<lb/>
758-6366 Hwy 364 bypass Greenville , IV. C.<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
Grlmesland Tire and<lb/>
Parts Is now giving<lb/>
all ECU students a<lb/>
a? discount on all<lb/>
automotive tiros and<lb/>
parts. Engines, trans-<lb/>
missions, starters,<lb/>
alternators, used and<lb/>
recapped tiros, etc<lb/>
????<lb/>
Located en Hwy. 33 East,<lb/>
f miles outside<lb/>
?f Greenville<lb/>
Must show ECU ID card<lb/>
to receive discount<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
Two contestant battle for position in Road Race<lb/>
?? Howdy ECU Students "<lb/>
Clip tills coupon for<lb/>
good Western Eatin'<lb/>
double<lb/>
r bar burger<lb/>
REGULAR<lb/>
FRENCH FRIES<lb/>
MEDIUM DRINK<lb/>
$1.60<lb/>
offer good fttl 41479 v<lb/>
SPECIAL 10 OFF SALE AT<lb/>
11 ii 11 ucm<lb/>
All Mens tennis shorts, golf shirts, and<lb/>
all other short-sleeve shirts<lb/>
All Ladies painter shorts,<lb/>
satin shorts, gym shorts<lb/>
also all Ladies short-sleeve shirts.<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
10d0-9X) MonSat Phone 756-8320<lb/>
K<lb/>
?<lb/>
tHm-m<lb/>
??,?? lMHW Ii<lb/>
<pb facs="00057190_0010"/><lb/>
? ?. ?, s  s S  ??<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
-Mrr<lb/>
HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH<lb/>
NORTHERN CONNECTION<lb/>
N<lb/>
a a<lb/>
L?4<lb/>
has just arrived!<lb/>
p ? o C C pp o<lb/>
We now have great buys on hew<lb/>
 discontinued receivers, speakers,<lb/>
turntables, and tape players. All equipment comes with<lb/>
new warrantys.There is a limited supply and all listings<lb/>
are subject to prior sale.<lb/>
?S2SSS??<lb/>
IO.WI.A<lb/>
?g?j?Mfc Here are a few examples: KtytyWwc<lb/>
Toshiba SA-775 (75 W&amp;J)$349.95<lb/>
Sansui 2020$142.95 Marantz 2240$367.95 Scott R337.<lb/>
Sansui G2000$185.95 Marantz 2226$280.00 Scott R307<lb/>
V<lb/>
<lb/>
.$244.50<lb/>
.$143.00<lb/>
Sansui 5050$311.95 Marantz 1530$311.00 Sony 7055$279.95<lb/>
Sansui G3000$231.95 Marantz 2216$187.95 Technichs SA5170$220.00<lb/>
Sansui 221$112.95 Techfiichs SA5070$158.00 Fisher RS-1022$220.00<lb/>
One Pair Base 601 Demo's$510.00 a pair<lb/>
3<lb/>
?<lb/>
 :<lb/>
There is no way we can<lb/>
list all the specials we now<lb/>
have at Harmony House South but we have<lb/>
loads of tape, headphones and accessories<lb/>
at ridiculously low prices .Why pay more when you<lb/>
can pay less at<lb/>
HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH<lb/>
"<lb/>
on the mall<lb/>
NORTHERN CONNECTION SALE<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
"??W??V . W H. V ?? . ?o? ???-? ??<lb/>
 ?? I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057190_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>