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<pb facs="00058043_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity fa over 50 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of over<lb/>
8,500, this issue is 1<lb/>
pages.<lb/>
Fountcrinhead<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
Handicapped vanp. 3<lb/>
Peace Corpsp. 6<lb/>
Women in lovep. 8<lb/>
Lady Bucslosep. 13<lb/>
Vd. No. 53, No. 4B" East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
16 March 1978<lb/>
Study to be held on<lb/>
overpass alternatives<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
A new feasibility study on the<lb/>
proposed overpass at the inter-<lb/>
section of Tenth Street and<lb/>
College Hill Drive and possible<lb/>
alternatives to an overpass will be<lb/>
conducted later this year, accord-<lb/>
ing to Neil Sessoms, Student<lb/>
Government Association (SGA)<lb/>
president and head of the Tenth<lb/>
Street Intersection Task Force.<lb/>
The task face, composed<lb/>
of Tommy Joe Payne, David<lb/>
Cartwright, and Jerry Cox, met<lb/>
Monday maning with Tan Brad-<lb/>
shaw, seaetary of transpotatiai<lb/>
with the Nath Carolina Depart-<lb/>
ment of Transpatatioi, Henry<lb/>
Oegg, assistant to the seaetary,<lb/>
Ashley Futrell, a member of the<lb/>
ECU Board of Trustees, and<lb/>
Geage Harper and Joe Thomas,<lb/>
members of the Nath Carolina<lb/>
Board of Transpatatioi.<lb/>
Search for<lb/>
art dean<lb/>
continues<lb/>
ByJEANNIE WILLIAMS<lb/>
Assistant News Edita<lb/>
The Search Committee fa the<lb/>
new dean of the School of Art is<lb/>
currently completing its prelim-<lb/>
inary saeenings of about 50<lb/>
applicants, accading to Frances<lb/>
Daughtery, chairman of the<lb/>
oommittee.<lb/>
The committee will soon narrow<lb/>
the field to about 8 to 10<lb/>
candidates.<lb/>
Frances Daughtery, chairman<lb/>
of the Search Committee, said<lb/>
that there were about 5 candid-<lb/>
ates who had not been considered<lb/>
yet in preliminary saeenings<lb/>
because sufficient mataial had<lb/>
not been received.<lb/>
"The conmittee will begin a<lb/>
thaough study of the 8 to 10<lb/>
candidates after the saeening<lb/>
said Daughtery.<lb/>
"The oommittee will oonsult<lb/>
references, famer a current<lb/>
associates, and the candidates<lb/>
themselves in an attempt to<lb/>
develop oomplete profiles of the<lb/>
qualifications of each candidate,<lb/>
" Daugherty said.<lb/>
Daugherty explained that<lb/>
when the research is completed,<lb/>
the committee will make a second<lb/>
saeening to produce a group of 3<lb/>
(possibly 4) candidates to be<lb/>
considered by the faculty as a<lb/>
whole.<lb/>
The 3 a 4 candidates will be<lb/>
invited to visit the campus during<lb/>
the last 2 weeks in March and the<lb/>
first 2 weeks in April, where<lb/>
See ART, p. 3<lb/>
A plan to reroute traffic<lb/>
through the intersection was<lb/>
discussed at the meeting. The<lb/>
plan resembled one proposed last<lb/>
fall by Herb Carlton, a professa<lb/>
in the political science depart-<lb/>
ment, accading to Sessoms.<lb/>
"This plan will be cheaper<lb/>
than an overpass and will allow<lb/>
bicycles to ctoss safely Payne<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Sessoms said ECU was very<lb/>
fatunate to have the top highway<lb/>
official in the state to come and<lb/>
personally look the situation over.<lb/>
" This is the surest way to get<lb/>
quick action on a problem that's<lb/>
been plaguing the students fa<lb/>
years. I'm ootvinoed we'll see<lb/>
quick steps taken to alleviate this<lb/>
problem.<lb/>
"We owe Mr. Futrell a lot fa<lb/>
getting these officials down<lb/>
here Sessoms said.<lb/>
Payne added that the higher<lb/>
cost of the overpass would make it<lb/>
much mae difficult to get any<lb/>
kind of change in the intersection.<lb/>
"An ovapass would have to<lb/>
be voted on by the highway board<lb/>
and would compete fa funds with<lb/>
other road projects throughout<lb/>
the state.<lb/>
"The proposed rerouting<lb/>
would be funded by rechanneli-<lb/>
zation, rather than the board<lb/>
having to vote on the matta<lb/>
Payne said.<lb/>
Cartwright expressed the task<lb/>
face's appreciation of Brad-<lb/>
shaw's visit.<lb/>
ACTION IS UNDERWAY to make the intersection of Tenth Street and College Hill Drive safer for<lb/>
pedestrians.<lb/>
Sessoms elected chairman<lb/>
ECU Media Board meets<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
i News Edita<lb/>
Neil Sessans, Student Gov-<lb/>
anment Association (SGA) pres-<lb/>
ident, was elected chairperson of<lb/>
the Media Board at the board's<lb/>
first meeting Wednesday afta-<lb/>
noon.<lb/>
The board familiarized itself<lb/>
with the Media Board constitu-<lb/>
tion, approved Feb. 22 by Chan-<lb/>
cel la Leo Jenkins, and set a<lb/>
regular meeting time of Wednes-<lb/>
days at 515 p.m. in Mendenhall.<lb/>
The faculty and student re-<lb/>
fcfJ.ti�KiH"<lb/>
presentatives on the board have<lb/>
not been selected yet.<lb/>
Persons interested in either of<lb/>
these positions may apply in the<lb/>
office of the dean of student<lb/>
affairs, second floa Whichard<lb/>
building, from March 20 to 21.<lb/>
An agenda of topics to be<lb/>
oovered fa the remainder of the<lb/>
semester was adopted.<lb/>
Included on the agenda is the<lb/>
appointment of editas and man-<lb/>
agers fa the 1978 - 1979 school<lb/>
year, approval of the budgets fa<lb/>
the upooming school year, and<lb/>
review the operations manuals<lb/>
which govern each medium.<lb/>
A proposed $600 line item<lb/>
transfer in the FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
budget was denied.<lb/>
The transfer, from the salaries<lb/>
line item to the travel line item,<lb/>
would have allowed Robert<lb/>
Swaim, advertising manager, and<lb/>
anaher advertising employee to<lb/>
attend an advertising convention<lb/>
in Chicago next month.<lb/>
Swaim argued that represen-<lb/>
tation at the convention would<lb/>
benefit the paper through in-<lb/>
creased advertising revenue,<lb/>
See MEDIA, p. 6<lb/>
Pres. candidate outlines platform<lb/>
JEFF WILLIAMS, CANDIDATE for SGA president Photoby Pete<lb/>
Podeszwa)<lb/>
By JULIE EVERETTE<lb/>
Assistant News Edita<lb/>
Jeff Williams, candidate fa<lb/>
Student Government Association<lb/>
(SGA) president, says he would<lb/>
like to see a student priaity<lb/>
referendum go into effect.<lb/>
"The refaendum would list<lb/>
what the students would like to<lb/>
see funded he said.<lb/>
"It would serve as a guideline<lb/>
fa appropriations.<lb/>
"The money would be spent<lb/>
as the students see fit<lb/>
Williams, a junia fran Win-<lb/>
stai Salem, isdouble-majaing in<lb/>
Chemistry and Psychology and is<lb/>
presently serving asaday student<lb/>
legist ata.<lb/>
Williams says he would also<lb/>
like to see the president's office<lb/>
fully suppat ECU in getting an<lb/>
FM radio station.<lb/>
"I believe in actively getting<lb/>
out and reauiting fa funds<lb/>
said Williams.<lb/>
' � A lot has been said about it<lb/>
but so little has been done<lb/>
Accading to Williams, ECU<lb/>
should have a grievance board set<lb/>
up to handle the students'<lb/>
complaints.<lb/>
"I would also like to see the<lb/>
housing contract reduced to one<lb/>
semester and a professa rating<lb/>
system established which would<lb/>
benefit the grad students he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Williams said he would like to<lb/>
see a consumer board set up<lb/>
which would draw up and print a<lb/>
pamphlet listing the quality and<lb/>
prices of local services.<lb/>
Williams said he decided to<lb/>
campaign fa SGA presidency<lb/>
because he feels the SGA needs<lb/>
"aggressive leadership that<lb/>
might make a mae harmonious<lb/>
waking situation"<lb/>
"The SGA needs to aganize<lb/>
into a waking face and dispense<lb/>
with pretty partisan groups he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"I'd like to see something<lb/>
doie fa the students rather than<lb/>
fa the SGA members' egos<lb/>
Williams is a member of the<lb/>
ski dub and Alpha Epsilon Delta,<lb/>
an hoxxary fraternity fa pre-<lb/>
mer students.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058043_0002"/><lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 16 March 1978<lb/>
Moty<lb/>
NCVA<lb/>
CPR<lb/>
Grafts<lb/>
Register now for one of the<lb/>
crafts workshops which are being<lb/>
offered by the Crafts Center at<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
Sign up fa Beginning Dark-<lb/>
room, Basic Pottery, Handbuilt<lb/>
Pottery, Silkscreen, Woodwok-<lb/>
ing, Crochet, Floa Loom Weav-<lb/>
ing, Enameling, a Caitempaary<lb/>
Basket ery.<lb/>
Upoi payment of $10 sem-<lb/>
ester Crafts Center membeship<lb/>
fee, an individual may register fa<lb/>
any of the available wakshops<lb/>
with out additional charges, ex-<lb/>
cluding costs of personal supplies<lb/>
and a small lab fee should the<lb/>
Crafts Center furnish supplies.<lb/>
Fa details, call a visit the<lb/>
Crafts Center during the hours of<lb/>
3 p.m. until 10 p.m Monday<lb/>
through Friday, and 10 a.m. until<lb/>
3 p.m. Saturday.<lb/>
Class space is limited and the<lb/>
registration deadline fa all wak-<lb/>
shops is Sat March 18.<lb/>
Also, membership fees will<lb/>
not be refunded after the registra-<lb/>
tion deadline.<lb/>
Flea market<lb/>
Looking fa sane good bar-<lb/>
gains? You will probably be able<lb/>
to find them at the ECU Spring<lb/>
Flea Market spoisaed by Mend-<lb/>
enhall.<lb/>
The Flea Market will be held<lb/>
on Wed April 5, fran 10 a.m.<lb/>
until 6 p.m. on the Mall.<lb/>
The rain date will be Thurs<lb/>
April 6.<lb/>
Beautiful pottery ware, hand-<lb/>
made jewelry, and small plants<lb/>
were a few of the items sold in the<lb/>
Flea Market last time.<lb/>
Back by popular demand is<lb/>
the sale of unclaimed articles,<lb/>
held by the University's lost and<lb/>
Founa Department. Don't miss it!<lb/>
If you're interested in selling<lb/>
items, any ECU student, staff a<lb/>
faculty member is eligible. Each<lb/>
individual must register to sell<lb/>
items and a $5 refundable deposit<lb/>
is required at the time of<lb/>
registration.<lb/>
Registration is Monday<lb/>
through Friday, from 9 a.m. until<lb/>
5 p.m. at the Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Infamatiai Center.<lb/>
Registration ends Mai April<lb/>
3.<lb/>
Roiy arts<lb/>
This Sat March 18, the Roxy<lb/>
will present its third annual<lb/>
Spring Arts Festival.<lb/>
There will be eight hours of<lb/>
music, art, and aafts on display<lb/>
and fa sale. If you are a<lb/>
aaftsperson and want a table,<lb/>
registration is $5. There is no<lb/>
concession charge a percentage.<lb/>
Please bring extension oads,<lb/>
lamp, and table cloth.<lb/>
This program is supported by<lb/>
the Nath Carolina Council of the<lb/>
Arts' "Grass Roots Fund a<lb/>
state suppated agency.<lb/>
Fa further infamatiai, call<lb/>
758-0620 after 4p.m.<lb/>
Problems<lb/>
Having a problem with your<lb/>
spouse, boyfriend a girlfriend, a<lb/>
roommate?<lb/>
The department of sociology's<lb/>
Marriage Counseling Program<lb/>
sepcializes in resolving inter-<lb/>
personal problems.<lb/>
Call 757-6883 and ask fa Dr.<lb/>
Knox. He will arrange a confid-<lb/>
ential (free) interview with a<lb/>
graduate intern.<lb/>
Musical<lb/>
The Student Union Minaity<lb/>
Arts Canmittee presents the<lb/>
debut of Marshal B. McAden's<lb/>
"Ebonie D'Lite N' Big Brite<lb/>
Lites a sparkling and,oolourful<lb/>
new musical on Sun. and Mon<lb/>
March 19-20.<lb/>
The musical will be held in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Auditaium<lb/>
(aud. 244) beginning at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Admission will be $1.<lb/>
Tickets are available at the<lb/>
doo.<lb/>
Outing<lb/>
The Outing Club will meet<lb/>
Thursday evenings at 730 p.m.<lb/>
room 106 in the basement of<lb/>
Memoial Gym.<lb/>
If you like the outdoas and<lb/>
are intoested in leading a<lb/>
participating in outdoo trips,<lb/>
please attend.<lb/>
Alpha Delta Mu<lb/>
Alpha Delta Mu is spoisaing<lb/>
a oof fee the moning of March 21<lb/>
from 10 a.m. until 12 p.m. fa all<lb/>
new majas to the department.<lb/>
Hopefully, this will give<lb/>
students and professos a chance<lb/>
to get to know one another.<lb/>
Refreshments will be served.<lb/>
su<lb/>
The Student Union will be<lb/>
accepting applications fa can-<lb/>
mittee members until March 24.<lb/>
Canmittee members will be<lb/>
selected ai the basis of qualifica-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
All students in a position will<lb/>
be required to complete an<lb/>
application and have an intoview<lb/>
with the committee chairperson.<lb/>
Applications fa the positions may<lb/>
be obtained in Mendenhall room<lb/>
234 a the Infamatiai Desk.<lb/>
Seminar<lb/>
Dr. E.M. (Betty) Movers,<lb/>
Analytical Chemist with the<lb/>
Foods Division of Proda and<lb/>
Gamble will present a seminar on<lb/>
"The Synthesis, Characteriza-<lb/>
tion, and Application of Chelating<lb/>
lon-Exohance Resins" on March<lb/>
17 at 2 p.m. in room 201 Flanagan<lb/>
building.<lb/>
Refreshments will be served<lb/>
in the conference room.<lb/>
Eleano Moty, a faculty mem-<lb/>
ber of the University of<lb/>
Wisconsin, will give a wakshop<lb/>
demonstration oi shotoetching on<lb/>
metal.<lb/>
The wakshop will be held in<lb/>
Jenkins Fine Arts Building fran 9<lb/>
to 4 p.m. this Thursday and<lb/>
Friday.<lb/>
There will be a slide present-<lb/>
ation of May's wak Thursday<lb/>
evening at 8 p.m. in the Jenkins<lb/>
Auditaium.<lb/>
Moty has both national and<lb/>
international reputation in her<lb/>
field and is represented in many<lb/>
publications and private collect-<lb/>
ions.<lb/>
She is a professional member<lb/>
of SNAG, Society of Nath<lb/>
American Goldsmiths<lb/>
Funding fa this wakshop has<lb/>
been provided by the SGA and<lb/>
being oo-odinated by Craftsmen<lb/>
East, a student design oganiza-<lb/>
tioi.<lb/>
F-G<lb/>
The Foever General ioi meets<lb/>
this Monday night fa an evening<lb/>
of Christian fellowship and fun.<lb/>
We'll be having a relevant<lb/>
Bible study, good singing, and<lb/>
delicious refreshments.<lb/>
Why not join us? That's<lb/>
Monday night at 9 p.m. in<lb/>
Brewster C-304.<lb/>
Monitor<lb/>
Godon Watts, Nath<lb/>
Carolina's leading underwater<lb/>
archaeologist, will present a<lb/>
combination lecture and slide<lb/>
show, "The U.S.S. MONITOR<lb/>
and Fat Branch on Tues<lb/>
March 28.<lb/>
This outstanding presentation<lb/>
will begin at 8 p.m. in Menden-<lb/>
hall room 244.<lb/>
The public is codially invited<lb/>
to attend. There will be no<lb/>
admission charge.<lb/>
Marshall<lb/>
Anyone interested in applying<lb/>
fa marshal I positions may do so<lb/>
at the SGA Office, 228 Menden-<lb/>
hall. Must have completed 64<lb/>
semester hours by the end of<lb/>
Spring semester 1978 and must<lb/>
have an ovoall grade average of<lb/>
3.0 Deadline fa applying is April<lb/>
1.<lb/>
The Nath Carolina American<lb/>
Vocational Association (NCVA)<lb/>
will hold its monthly meeting,<lb/>
Mon March 20 in the Menden-<lb/>
hall Multi-purpose room at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Kenneth Brantley, inooming<lb/>
state NCVA president will be the<lb/>
guest speaker.<lb/>
Refreshments will be served<lb/>
and all persons interested in<lb/>
vocational education are invited<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
Openings<lb/>
It's not too late in the year to<lb/>
get involved.<lb/>
SGA Legislature now has<lb/>
openings: Two day students, one<lb/>
Greene Dam, one Fletcher dam,<lb/>
two Belk dam.<lb/>
Sign up immediately in the<lb/>
SGA office in Mendenhall.<lb/>
Screenings will be Wed<lb/>
March 22 at 4:30 p.m.<lb/>
All students interested in<lb/>
taking a Cardio Pulmonary Resus-<lb/>
citation (CPR) course, should be<lb/>
willing to devote four nights a<lb/>
week, three hours each night.<lb/>
Dates will be announced.<lb/>
Contact Cindy Merritt at<lb/>
758-3933.<lb/>
Get shot<lb/>
Any aganizatioi that has na<lb/>
contacted the Buccaneer about a<lb/>
group picture o returned their<lb/>
information sheets by March 24,<lb/>
1978, will not receive coverage in<lb/>
the 1977-78 Buccaneer.<lb/>
Call o come by the Buccaneer<lb/>
office between 3-5, Monday thru<lb/>
Thursday, a phone 757-6501 a<lb/>
6502.<lb/>
Kid ed<lb/>
Crusade<lb/>
The Association x Childhood<lb/>
Education International will hold<lb/>
an oganizatioial meeting Mai-<lb/>
day, March 20, at 4:30 p.m. in<lb/>
rm. 129 Speight.<lb/>
All students interested in the<lb/>
education and well-being of chil-<lb/>
dren are invited to attend.<lb/>
GMAT<lb/>
A time of fun, fellowship and<lb/>
Bible study sponsoed by Campus<lb/>
Crusade fa Christ, meeting an<lb/>
Thursday at 7 p.m. in Brewster<lb/>
C-103.<lb/>
This includes dynamics of the<lb/>
Christian life, dynamics of dis-<lb/>
cipleship, dynamics of ministry<lb/>
and dynamics of the life of Christ<lb/>
fa skeptics, as well as those<lb/>
interested in growing in their<lb/>
relationship with Christ.<lb/>
Bake sale<lb/>
Psi Chi will hold a bake sale on<lb/>
Wed March 22 in front of the<lb/>
Student Store.<lb/>
Everyone come out and get<lb/>
some midweek munchies on your<lb/>
way to class.<lb/>
Fellowship Pom-pom<lb/>
The Graduate Management<lb/>
Admission Test will be offered at<lb/>
ECU on Sat March 18. Applica-<lb/>
tion blanks are to be completed<lb/>
and mailed to Educational Test-<lb/>
ing Service, Box 966-R,<lb/>
Princeton, NJ 08540 to arrive by<lb/>
Feb. 24. Applications are also<lb/>
available at the Testing Center,<lb/>
Speight Bldg, Room 105, ECU.<lb/>
Are you looking fa Christian<lb/>
fellowship?<lb/>
Come and join us in praising<lb/>
Jesus Christ and sharing test-<lb/>
imonies about what God is doing<lb/>
in our lives.<lb/>
Tonight as every Thurs. we<lb/>
will meet in room 221 in Menden-<lb/>
hall from 730-9 p.m.<lb/>
The Full Gospel Student<lb/>
Fellowship weloomes everyone to<lb/>
attend our meetings.<lb/>
The ECU Pom Pom squad<lb/>
tryoutswill be held March 17, 18,<lb/>
and 19.<lb/>
All interested girls should<lb/>
meet in Fletcher Music Bldg. on<lb/>
Fri March 17 at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Tryouts will be Sat. evening,<lb/>
March 18.<lb/>
If vou have questions call Jo<lb/>
Ellen at 752-0354 a Glenda<lb/>
752-9416.<lb/>
Debate club TKE sisters Mangione<lb/>
Are there any students that<lb/>
find it difficult to clearly express<lb/>
what is on their mind?<lb/>
If you are one of these people,<lb/>
the Debating Club is fa you.<lb/>
The club will help develop a<lb/>
student's oonfidenoe in public<lb/>
speaking plus the club will better<lb/>
a student's capacity on investiga-<lb/>
ting issues.<lb/>
The Debating Club will cause<lb/>
a student to speak his thoughts<lb/>
much faster. This ability shall<lb/>
make the student mae valuable<lb/>
on the job market.<lb/>
Wouldn't you like to speak in<lb/>
front of people without your knees<lb/>
knocking?<lb/>
Fa mae infamatiai, contact<lb/>
Marc Adler, room 161 Unmstead,<lb/>
758-9523.<lb/>
The TKE Little Sisters are having<lb/>
a party at Chapter X on Sun<lb/>
March 19 at 9 p.m.<lb/>
There will be a golden bev-<lb/>
erage chugging contest reward-<lb/>
ing the winner with a free fifth of<lb/>
the hard stuff.<lb/>
Come on out and join the fun.<lb/>
Art<lb/>
Currently on exhibition in the<lb/>
upper gallery of Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center is Folio, a selec-<lb/>
tion of woks by artists Linda<lb/>
Burney and Luden M. Koonce<lb/>
This exhibit includes textdei<lb/>
by Ms. Burney, along with<lb/>
cermaics and drawings by Mr<lb/>
Koonoe.<lb/>
The Student Uniai Popular<lb/>
Entertainment Committee will<lb/>
present Chuck Mangione on<lb/>
March 29. The concert will begin<lb/>
at 8 p.m. in Wright Auditaium.<lb/>
. Tickets fa the conoert will be<lb/>
$3 fa ECU students and $5 fa<lb/>
the public.<lb/>
All tickets can be purchased<lb/>
from the Central Ticket Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
Puolic tickets can be purchas-<lb/>
ed from the following plaoes:<lb/>
Apple Reoods-East Fifth Street;<lb/>
School Kids Recods-University<lb/>
Arcade; and The Music Shop-<lb/>
Greenville Square Mall.<lb/>
AH tickets will be $5 at the<lb/>
0 or<lb/>
<pb facs="00058043_0003"/><lb/>
�MHBaBBIBHiHMMnni<lb/>
�MPHHH<lb/>
16 March 1978 FOUnTTAINHEAD Pag 3<lb/>
Dissatisfaction cited with SGA Handicapped Man<lb/>
By STEVE WILSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
There is general dissatisfac-<lb/>
tion with the use of the Student<lb/>
Government Association (SGA)<lb/>
Handicapped Van, according to<lb/>
Gene Summerlin, SGA transit<lb/>
manager.<lb/>
Last year, the SGA was<lb/>
approached by several handicap-<lb/>
ped students who cited a state<lb/>
statute requiring equal services<lb/>
for all students.<lb/>
Since the SGA provided free<lb/>
ART<lb/>
Continued from p. 1<lb/>
faculty members will have an<lb/>
opportunity to meet them.<lb/>
Following the visits, tenured<lb/>
faculty will be asked to vote on<lb/>
the acceptably of each candid-<lb/>
ate. Faculty of the School of Art<lb/>
will also be asked to rank the<lb/>
candidates.<lb/>
Daugherty said that if the<lb/>
committee is successful in finding<lb/>
two candidates which meet with<lb/>
the approval of the majority of<lb/>
tenured faculty, those two will be<lb/>
presented to the University ad-<lb/>
ministration, with an indication of<lb/>
preference.<lb/>
The administration if free to<lb/>
accept or reject committee's<lb/>
preference, or to reject both<lb/>
candidates submitted.<lb/>
If none of the candidates are<lb/>
accpetable to the majority of<lb/>
tenured faculty, or if the admin-<lb/>
istration rejects the two candid-<lb/>
ates, the search will be continued<lb/>
fa an additional year.<lb/>
"At this point the committee<lb/>
feels that we have an excellent<lb/>
group of prospects and we are<lb/>
optimistic about obtaining the<lb/>
services of a Dean who will be<lb/>
acceptable to all in the fall of<lb/>
1978 said Daugherty.<lb/>
Criteria for the position in-<lb/>
ch appropriate terminal<lb/>
iMFA, PhD, EdD), prev-<lb/>
ious administrative experience.<lb/>
I preferably 10 years exper-<lb/>
ience in visual arts education at<lb/>
jmversity level.<lb/>
"The candidates should also<lb/>
demonstrate for intellectual lead-<lb/>
ership which suggests that they<lb/>
would be able to strengthen our<lb/>
existing program for artists, art<lb/>
education, and art historians<lb/>
said Daugherty.<lb/>
"We also want the candidate<lb/>
to be able to respond sympath-<lb/>
etically to the needs and interests<lb/>
of all areas and departments of<lb/>
the School of Art Daugherty<lb/>
added.<lb/>
TOTHI<lb/>
MARCH OF DIMES<lb/>
transportation for the majority of<lb/>
students, the statute required<lb/>
that it do so for handicapped<lb/>
students as well<lb/>
The SGA subsequently appro-<lb/>
priated approximately $6800 to<lb/>
purchase a van, according to<lb/>
David Cartwright, former SGA<lb/>
Appropriations Committee chair-<lb/>
person.<lb/>
After the van was purchased,<lb/>
it was sent to Raleigh several<lb/>
times to be equipped with a lift to<lb/>
handle wheelchairs.<lb/>
It was not until early this<lb/>
semester that the van began<lb/>
operating, according to Summer-<lb/>
lin.<lb/>
Summerlin said the dissatis-<lb/>
faction comes from the poor<lb/>
response to the operation by the<lb/>
handicapped students.<lb/>
Only three students have used<lb/>
the van to date, and only one<lb/>
student uses the van frequently.<lb/>
According to Summerlin, an<lb/>
important consequence of this<lb/>
peer response is that SGA funds<lb/>
are being spent to pay a driver for<lb/>
the van who seldom works.<lb/>
"I'm paying drivers $3 an<lb/>
hour to sit in my office on call<lb/>
most of the time said Summer-<lb/>
lin.<lb/>
The reasons for the lack of<lb/>
response by the handicapped<lb/>
students are not easy to deter-<lb/>
mine. One of the few students<lb/>
who has used the service said that<lb/>
since the initial request for the<lb/>
van, the many delays faced some<lb/>
handicapped students to pur-<lb/>
chase their own vehides a find<lb/>
their own alternate means of<lb/>
transpatatioi.<lb/>
Willie Bail, a handicapped<lb/>
student who has used the service,<lb/>
said "It's a great service, but<lb/>
more students need to use it to<lb/>
ensure that it will remain avail-<lb/>
able<lb/>
He does not believe that all of<lb/>
the approximately 40 students<lb/>
classified as handicapped on<lb/>
campus have been infamed of<lb/>
the service.<lb/>
Bell would also like to see the<lb/>
service operated at night, since<lb/>
one of the SGA buses routes runs<lb/>
at night.<lb/>
Pitch in! Clean up<lb/>
even win some<lb/>
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<lb/>
<lb/>
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Budweiser Announces 1978 National College "Pitch In Week<lb/>
(April 10-16)<lb/>
Get up a group and Pitch In! You can help improve the<lb/>
environment around your college and have a shot at<lb/>
one of five $1,000 first place, five $500 second place,<lb/>
or five $250 third place educational awards, courtesy<lb/>
of Budweiser and ABC Radio.<lb/>
Any college, university, or approved organization<lb/>
(fraternities, sororities, campus groups, etc.) is<lb/>
eligible to participate. Just return the coupon<lb/>
for rules and "Pitch In! Week program kit.<lb/>
Competition void where prohibited by law<lb/>
Re i imc �<lb/>
Pitch this in the mail!<lb/>
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Name<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058043_0004"/><lb/>
&amp;�&amp;� -� Vry)-fi<lb/>
�<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 16 March 1978<lb/>
PLO, Israel halt<lb/>
peace process<lb/>
Israel lashed out angrily Tuesday against<lb/>
Palestine guerrillas by attacking Palestine Liberation<lb/>
Organization (PLO) bases on the Lebanese frontier<lb/>
which borders Israel. Palestine guerrillas killed 33<lb/>
Israelis last Saturday in an attack on a tourist bus in<lb/>
Tel Aviv.<lb/>
Israel's attack, while not surprising, has only<lb/>
served to set back peace negotiations even further.<lb/>
The government of Israel, however, stated that the<lb/>
attack was not retaliatory, but to protect 'the State of<lb/>
Israel and its citizens from incursions of members of<lb/>
Fatah and the PLO who use Lebanese territory to<lb/>
attack citizens of Israel (N &amp; O, March 15).<lb/>
Israel cannot be entirely blamed for the halt in<lb/>
peace negotiations. The PLO, upset, to say the least,<lb/>
because it doesn't have a homeland, is not helping<lb/>
the peace plan at all. Certainly the Palestinians want<lb/>
territory for a homeland.<lb/>
But, the PLO seems hell-bent on thwarting any<lb/>
attempt whatsoever made to help bring peace to the<lb/>
Middle East. The PLO, with Libya and Syria,<lb/>
condemned Egyptian President Anwar el-Sadat when<lb/>
he visited Jerusalem last November, thus recogniz-<lb/>
ing Israel as a sovereign state, which no Arab country<lb/>
had done before.<lb/>
While the PLO and these countries, among others,<lb/>
were criticizing Sadat for his historic move of visiting<lb/>
Israel, what were they doing to initiate peace in the<lb/>
Holy Land? Sadat should be highly oommended for<lb/>
risking his political career, and even his life, for a<lb/>
dramatic move to try to bring peace to this turbulent<lb/>
land.<lb/>
The Palestinian issue is a delicate one. Israel has<lb/>
refused thus far to discuss returning occupied<lb/>
territories, namely, the West Bank. Meanwhile, the<lb/>
Palestinian Arabs are wandering around antagonizing<lb/>
many with their terrorist activities.<lb/>
It appears as if the PLO is not interested in having<lb/>
peace in the Middle East. Perhaps if the Palestinian<lb/>
Arabs would join the peace talks, some measures can<lb/>
be taken to provide them with some territory that<lb/>
they could call their own.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over fifty years.<lb/>
 Were it left to me to decide whether we should have<lb/>
a government without newspapers or newspapers<lb/>
without government, I should not hesitate a moment to<lb/>
prefer the tdtter<lb/>
Thomas Jefferson<lb/>
EditorCindy Broome<lb/>
Managing EditorLeigh Coakley<lb/>
Advertising ManagerRobert M. Swaim<lb/>
News EditorsDoug White<lb/>
Stuart Morgan<lb/>
Trends EditorSteve Bachner<lb/>
Sports EditorChris Hdloman<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student newspaper of East Carolina<lb/>
University sponsored by the Madia Board of ECU and is<lb/>
distributed each Tuesday and Thursday, weekly during the<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
Mailing address: Old South Building, Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
Editorial offices: 757-6366, 757-6367, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10 annually, alumni $6 annually.<lb/>
JVU)<lb/>
UlrfTBV�R tfFPPEN�t To PBMB?<lb/>
f M I<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Student st<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
� �:�<lb/>
!s Payne, Cartwright<lb/>
Election time has rolled<lb/>
around again at ECU and there is<lb/>
a wide field of candidates. Two of<lb/>
these candidates stand out as<lb/>
being very representative of<lb/>
student interests: Tommy Joe<lb/>
Payne and David Cartwright.<lb/>
Payne is running for president<lb/>
and Cartwright for vice-<lb/>
president. Both are down to earth<lb/>
and seem to reflect the concerns<lb/>
of the average student.<lb/>
I believe that we need a couple<lb/>
of people in SGA who are<lb/>
concerned about what students<lb/>
want and not so much about<lb/>
pleasing just special interest<lb/>
groups. I am tired of hearing<lb/>
campus politicians gripe and<lb/>
grumble all of the time about<lb/>
everything under the sun except<lb/>
what concerns students.<lb/>
Payne and Cartwright can<lb/>
probably get the SGA back on the<lb/>
track of giving us (the students)<lb/>
more attention and more service<lb/>
than we have been getting. I'd<lb/>
like to see these guys get elected<lb/>
so maybe the SGA can do<lb/>
something besides scream about<lb/>
how the big, bad newspaper has<lb/>
been so mean.<lb/>
Probably the most unique<lb/>
characteristic that Payne and<lb/>
Cartwright possess is their sincer-<lb/>
ity, honesty, and the desire to do<lb/>
something good for someone else.<lb/>
It has been a while since anybody<lb/>
with these qualities has run fa<lb/>
office. I really think it is time to<lb/>
put some people in office who<lb/>
care about something besides<lb/>
power and politics.<lb/>
Payne and Cartwright are<lb/>
intelligent and interested in posi-<lb/>
tive work. They are talking about<lb/>
extended bus routes (both day<lb/>
and night routes), better dorm<lb/>
contracts since the present ones<lb/>
are slanted in favor of the state an<lb/>
not the student, and maybe some<lb/>
improved security. These are<lb/>
things that interest students, and<lb/>
would benefit ALL students. This<lb/>
is a positive step forward in<lb/>
comparison with past campaigns<lb/>
and elections where some candid-<lb/>
ates would go around and<lb/>
promise special interest groups<lb/>
the moon and everything else.<lb/>
I appreciate candidates like<lb/>
Payne and Cartwright who come<lb/>
around to the dorms and talk to<lb/>
students to find out what our<lb/>
problems are and express concern<lb/>
with what interests us.<lb/>
I think that this year instead of<lb/>
voting for a politician, I'll vote for<lb/>
two good students, Tommy Joe<lb/>
Payne and David Cartwright.<lb/>
They deserve to be elected<lb/>
and the students deserve to have<lb/>
two good representatives as pres-<lb/>
ident and vice-president.<lb/>
I hope the students vote<lb/>
PAYNECARTWRIGHT on elect-<lb/>
ion day. I know that I will.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Douglas Jones<lb/>
Styx review blasted<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Having just finished reading the<lb/>
March 14 edition of your paper, I<lb/>
can't believe you write and<lb/>
publish an article as biased and<lb/>
shallow as Mr. White's review of<lb/>
the Styx concert. The article was a<lb/>
"definite disappointment" as I<lb/>
see little validity in hiscomments.<lb/>
It seems he let his attitude<lb/>
towards true rock and roll con-<lb/>
certs come through like an atomic<lb/>
blast. I was shocked that anyone<lb/>
could make such comments about<lb/>
such an incredibly talented and<lb/>
tightly performing group a Styx<lb/>
In the review, Mr. White does<lb/>
not attempt to hide the fact that<lb/>
he did not enjoy the concert. This<lb/>
was due to several reasons, one<lb/>
being the "lack of substance" in<lb/>
the performance. I would row like<lb/>
to challenge Mr. White to define<lb/>
 substance<lb/>
What would a concert consist<lb/>
of if it contained "substance?"<lb/>
Mr. White uses words as vague<lb/>
as this to denounce the show, yet<lb/>
fails to elaborate on why the show<lb/>
merited denouncement.<lb/>
He did, in fact, compare<lb/>
Styx's performance to a "flashy,<lb/>
flawless" Vegas show, which<lb/>
contradicts this earlier remark.<lb/>
Unless, of course, he feels that<lb/>
Las Vegas shows lack of "sub-<lb/>
stance Or, maybe this fact was<lb/>
too difficult for the other 4,999<lb/>
people to figure out, so he is now<lb/>
kindly pointing it out.<lb/>
I feel that Mr. White compris-<lb/>
es a minute minority of the people<lb/>
that where present at the concert.<lb/>
His comment, "They seemed to<lb/>
have a good time sounds like<lb/>
he's shoving the fact that every-<lb/>
one else enjoyed the show under a<lb/>
rug. How, may I ask, can he fend<lb/>
4,999 opinions like that?<lb/>
See HEVIEW, p. 5<lb/>
<pb facs="00058043_0005"/><lb/>
BBS H$�JSEK �5<lb/>
HlHMHHBHMMHBnMMMHB9BHMB9MBIHMHiHMHiBHI<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
16 March 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
Student endorses Payne, Cartwright for SGA pres vice-pres.<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
The time to elect SGA<lb/>
executive officers is here once<lb/>
again, and after studying the<lb/>
candidates and talking with<lb/>
people who are more knowledge-<lb/>
able than myself about each<lb/>
candidate's record in student<lb/>
government, I have reached 'he<lb/>
conclusion that two candidat s<lb/>
stand out head and shoulders<lb/>
above the rest.<lb/>
Those two candidates are<lb/>
Tommy Joe Payne, running for<lb/>
SGA President, and David<lb/>
Cartwright, running for SGA<lb/>
Vice-President.<lb/>
Both students have been<lb/>
involved in many campus activi-<lb/>
ties other than SGA, which I feel<lb/>
makes them far more accessible<lb/>
to the student body. Mae<lb/>
.�'identsare likely to be in regular<lb/>
contact with Payne and<lb/>
C-twright though the various<lb/>
aganizatiois the two are involv-<lb/>
ed in, since those involved solely<lb/>
in SGA, a any other aganiza-<lb/>
tion, fa that matter, tend to come<lb/>
in contact only with others<lb/>
involved in that aganizatioi and<lb/>
become somewhat isolated from<lb/>
the rest of the campus.<lb/>
Tommy Joe Payne's and<lb/>
David Cartwright's campaign<lb/>
literature lists several planks of<lb/>
their platfom which are of vital<lb/>
importance to the students.<lb/>
Readers upset with Styx review<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD: ,<lb/>
The Trends section rarely<lb/>
offers a truly professional, much<lb/>
less, collegiate scale review of<lb/>
current albums and acts playing<lb/>
at ECU.<lb/>
We were among the 5,000<lb/>
pre-pubescent population, The<lb/>
Marines, and numerous juveniles<lb/>
REVIEW<lb/>
Continued from p. 4<lb/>
In conclusion, in the future I<lb/>
wish that the Trends Edita would<lb/>
send a mae open-minded persai<lb/>
to review concerts. Mr. White<lb/>
should also try practicing judging<lb/>
perfomances, not ears. Or may-<lb/>
be next time, he could watch the<lb/>
concert like everybody else.<lb/>
Dutifully,<lb/>
KyleS. Inman<lb/>
who throughly enjoyed the repiti-<lb/>
tious heavy metal offered by Styx.<lb/>
We found the concert the best<lb/>
that Maja Attract ions has offered<lb/>
since Linda Ronstadt appeared at<lb/>
Minges.<lb/>
The music played by Styx was<lb/>
loud, but compared with acts like<lb/>
Yes, Kiss, Heart, and The<lb/>
Eagles, Styx was like a quiet<lb/>
summer evening.<lb/>
As fa the band Charlie, a<lb/>
group we had not heard of befae<lb/>
the ccocert, we found them<lb/>
rather mediocre and to our<lb/>
knowledge do no have a hit song.<lb/>
Styx is no a visual act. If you<lb/>
wish to see a stage act, go see<lb/>
Queen a Kiss, but if you like<lb/>
diversified music, then Styx is the<lb/>
band to see!<lb/>
Signed,<lb/>
Mae Decibals<lb/>
Mark Rimer<lb/>
MikeLange<lb/>
Assist, sports ed. praised<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Re: Pressbox,<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD, February 28,<lb/>
1978. Steve Byers should be<lb/>
commended. With the glaring<lb/>
exception of the term "half-wit"<lb/>
in the final paragraph, this<lb/>
editoial column is one of the<lb/>
most refreshing pieces of writing<lb/>
I've read in quite a while. It was<lb/>
clearly written, infomative and<lb/>
as unbiased as it should be.<lb/>
Mr. Byers has a potentially<lb/>
great cancer of him.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is very fotun-<lb/>
ate.<lb/>
Danny Miller<lb/>
Payne and Cartwright don't<lb/>
promise pie in the sky prosperity.<lb/>
Instead, they promise that they<lb/>
will wok towards their stated<lb/>
goals, and if those goals are<lb/>
unattainable, then they will try to<lb/>
reach the best compromise pos-<lb/>
sible.<lb/>
Tommy Joe Payne and David<lb/>
Cartwright have the most balano-<lb/>
ed, thought-out platfom of any<lb/>
Oher candidates, a platfom that<lb/>
will give every student oi this<lb/>
campus a voice in their student<lb/>
government.<lb/>
Matlynn Bryant<lb/>
Vacation<lb/>
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June 20 thru 27<lb/>
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Jet "United" from Greensboro<lb/>
To a Room in Sheraton's<lb/>
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Hotel in WAIKIKI<lb/>
With People From Your Own Area<lb/>
(Fa free brochure complete &amp; Days�7 Nights<lb/>
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Iff you haven't ordered your Class Ring yet<lb/>
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wed. thur&amp; March 22-23 ln the<lb/>
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lobby of the old C.U. The ARTCARVED representative<lb/>
I will be here to help you select your custom made<lb/>
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College rings , like their world famous<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058043_0006"/><lb/>
ic.t sags  :<lb/>
6 FOUNTAINHEAD 16 March 1978<lb/>
Carter commemorates<lb/>
Peace Corps anniversary<lb/>
many ziuutNii tin tne tawns toaay xo oaten muse nrst rays ot spring.<lb/>
THE WHITEHOUSE- Seven-<lb/>
teen years ago this March,<lb/>
President John F. Kennedy sign-<lb/>
ed the executive order that<lb/>
created the Peace Caps.<lb/>
On March 8, President Jimmy<lb/>
Carter issued a statement com-<lb/>
memorating its 17th anniversary.<lb/>
In that statement he asked the<lb/>
American people to join him in<lb/>
commemorating the thousands of<lb/>
American citizens of all ages who<lb/>
have served in the Peace Corps<lb/>
and similar programs.<lb/>
Carter also called fa suppat<lb/>
of the voluntary effats which he<lb/>
said are so impatant both to our<lb/>
own nation and the rest of the<lb/>
wald.<lb/>
The TI-57 The super slide-rule that'll<lb/>
get you into programming fast and easy<lb/>
Even if you've never programmed before.<lb/>
cient use of your time in prob-<lb/>
lem-solving.<lb/>
All this and more is ex-<lb/>
plained in our unique, illus-<lb/>
trated, easy-to-follow guide-<lb/>
book, "Making Tracks Into<lb/>
Programming This 200-page<lb/>
book comes with the TI-57. It<lb/>
contains simple, step-by-step<lb/>
instructions and examples to<lb/>
help you quickly learn to use<lb/>
programming functions to<lb/>
make your problem-solving<lb/>
faster, more accurate and fun.<lb/>
TEXAS INSTRUMENTS Pawn<lb/>
INNOVATORS IN vftP)<lb/>
PERSONAL ELECTRONICS j<lb/>
For the student who re-<lb/>
quires slide-rule functions, the<lb/>
TI-57 delivers an exceptional<lb/>
combination of advanced<lb/>
mathematical and statistical<lb/>
capabilities. From functions<lb/>
such as trig, logs, powers, roots<lb/>
and reciprocalsto mean, var-<lb/>
iance, standard deviation and<lb/>
much more.<lb/>
And as long as you're in<lb/>
the market for a super slide-<lb/>
rule calculator, why not buy<lb/>
one that can also put the power,<lb/>
speed and convenience of pro-<lb/>
gramming at your disposal?<lb/>
Programming a calculator<lb/>
simply means giving it a logical<lb/>
set of instructions for accom-<lb/>
plishing what you want it to<lb/>
do. Programming enables you<lb/>
to solve lengthy and repetitive<lb/>
problems<lb/>
quickly Jfe&amp;iio,<lb/>
by sub-<lb/>
stituting<lb/>
new vari-<lb/>
ables into<lb/>
the set of<lb/>
instructions<lb/>
which you<lb/>
have al-<lb/>
ready entered into the machine.<lb/>
The end result is more effi-<lb/>
Texas Instruments<lb/>
"The spirit of Peace Caps<lb/>
and VISTA springs fran the<lb/>
deepest wells in our culture, fran<lb/>
the reasoned and stroigly felt<lb/>
impulses of our people to share<lb/>
with their neighbas their caring<lb/>
and their laba Carter said in<lb/>
that statement. <lb/>
MEDIA<lb/>
Continued from p. 1<lb/>
since FOUNTAINHEAD dele-<lb/>
gates could come in contact with<lb/>
several maja national adverti-<lb/>
sers.<lb/>
The board gave no official<lb/>
reason fa its decision.<lb/>
"I was encouraged by the<lb/>
attitude of the board members<lb/>
and by the way business was<lb/>
conducted at this initial meet-<lb/>
ing said Sessoms.<lb/>
"I am even more certain now<lb/>
that this new media board is a<lb/>
mae effective and objective way<lb/>
to govern the media. The board<lb/>
has a lot left to do this year, but<lb/>
I'm sure we can take care of<lb/>
everything officially and on sche-<lb/>
dule<lb/>
Sessoms said the results of the<lb/>
first meeting reaffirmed his belief<lb/>
that the student body would<lb/>
benefit from the new arrange-<lb/>
ment governing campus media.<lb/>
"I'm also honaed to have<lb/>
been elected chairperson. I'll do<lb/>
everything I can to make the<lb/>
board operate effectively and<lb/>
serve both the students and the<lb/>
media Sessoms added.<lb/>
� 1978 Texas instruments Incorporated<lb/>
I N( OR F'OR AT I<lb/>
A Public Service ol This Newspaper l<lb/>
4 The Advertising Council ttT�l<lb/>
Would<lb/>
you<lb/>
help<lb/>
this kid?<lb/>
When the dim broke at Buffalo (reek. West<lb/>
Virginia, a lot ol people werenl as lucky as<lb/>
this little guy<lb/>
Jarrueandlhereslol iheMoslcy family<lb/>
made H up the hill iusi in the ruck of lime<lb/>
Seconds later, a wall of water swept all their<lb/>
earthly possessions away<lb/>
Here you sec Jamie in the Red Cross<lb/>
shelter, thinking it all over<lb/>
One look at that lace, and were awfully<lb/>
glad vu were there to help<lb/>
Every year, you know, Red Cross<lb/>
touchei the lives of millions upon millions<lb/>
ol Americans Rich Poor Average Black<lb/>
White Christian and Jew With support<lb/>
Wnh comfort. With a helping hand when<lb/>
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S. i when you open your heart, wnh your<lb/>
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in the right place<lb/>
<lb/>
Red Cross<lb/>
is counting<lb/>
on you.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058043_0007"/><lb/>
16 March 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
ByRICKIGLIARMIS<lb/>
Co-Greek Public Relations<lb/>
The fraternities and sororities<lb/>
are entering into the busiest<lb/>
phase of the school year, not to<lb/>
mention the most exciting.<lb/>
With the ooming of spring<lb/>
fever, the Greeks leave snowballs<lb/>
and midterms behind and turn<lb/>
their attention to field days,<lb/>
formals, and Greek Week.<lb/>
One of the main events during<lb/>
the spring is the annual Pi Kappa<lb/>
Phi Field day, where there is<lb/>
never a dull moment.<lb/>
The event brings fraternities<lb/>
and sororities togeher in a day of<lb/>
games and field events. At Pi Kap<lb/>
Field Day there in a day of<lb/>
games and field events. At Pi Kap<lb/>
Field Day there s seldom a dry<lb/>
moment either.<lb/>
The lake located at the<lb/>
fraternity house proves to be a<lb/>
disadvantage to those who stand<lb/>
too close to the water. This is<lb/>
probably the biggest unofficial<lb/>
game during the day: who can<lb/>
stay dry the longest.<lb/>
When the weater gets warm<lb/>
and shortsleeves and sandals<lb/>
appear, the beach is seldom off of<lb/>
anyone's mind. The fraternities<lb/>
then sponsor their beach week-<lb/>
ends complete with a lot of<lb/>
sunshine, swimming, and party-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Endless numbers of formals<lb/>
and banquets are held during this<lb/>
time of the school year. Greeks<lb/>
set aside their jerseys and visors,<lb/>
but only for a while, as they<lb/>
"dress to impress<lb/>
Greek Week, a farewell and<lb/>
finale to a school year full of good<lb/>
times, is held for fraternities and<lb/>
sororities. The week begins with a<lb/>
track meet and fieid day. Other<lb/>
Greek forum<lb/>
activities during the week include<lb/>
a Bed Race, a Raft Race, a<lb/>
Volkswagon stuffing contest, a<lb/>
beer drinking contest, a banquet,<lb/>
and a dance.<lb/>
Moser's Farm is held the last<lb/>
day of Greek Week and is by far,<lb/>
an appropriate finale.<lb/>
Moser's Farm is a "lay back,<lb/>
take it easy, enjoy yourself day<lb/>
The Greeks arrive early Saturday<lb/>
morning fully equipped with<lb/>
blankets, ice chests, and<lb/>
Kentucky Fried Chicken dinners.<lb/>
Bands playing music during the<lb/>
day provide the people with all<lb/>
types of entertainment from easy<lb/>
listening music to dancing music<lb/>
to "plain ole good time" music.<lb/>
Spring is definitely the best<lb/>
time of the year fa the Greeks<lb/>
and having a good time and<lb/>
making new friends is what being<lb/>
a Greek and having spring fever<lb/>
is all about.<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
soraity is waking ai a volunteer<lb/>
basis at the Special Olympics as a<lb/>
philanthropic project. The Special<lb/>
Olympics will be held in April at<lb/>
Harrington Field.<lb/>
Marcia Goughnour, a Tri-Sig<lb/>
has been named Volunteer Co-<lb/>
adinata fa this year's Olympics.<lb/>
The Kappa Sigma fraternity<lb/>
has been busy this spring, having<lb/>
inducted five pledges, initiated<lb/>
eight Little Sisters, and initiated<lb/>
four new brothers.<lb/>
Two Kappa Sigma brothers<lb/>
and one Little Sister were elected<lb/>
fa the East Carolina Budweiser<lb/>
Superstar team.<lb/>
They are Chuck Freedman,<lb/>
Roy Turner, and Rita Davis,<lb/>
Tri-Siq.<lb/>
The fraternity congratulates<lb/>
brother Dalton Denson, new IFC<lb/>
president.<lb/>
Campus police busy<lb/>
during spring break<lb/>
By JEANNIE WILLIAMS<lb/>
Assistant NewsEdita<lb/>
A nai-student was arrested<lb/>
fa trespassing in a women's<lb/>
damitay during spring break,<lb/>
according to Frances Eddings,<lb/>
chief of campus police.<lb/>
Eddings said the non-student,<lb/>
a male, was caught unesoated in<lb/>
a women's dam Sat March 4,<lb/>
and was arrested.<lb/>
The nai-student will<lb/>
charges of trespassing.<lb/>
face<lb/>
Two rooms were entered and<lb/>
personal property stolen in ano-<lb/>
ther damitay during the break.<lb/>
No arrests have been made<lb/>
yet, according to Eddings.<lb/>
No arrests have been made in<lb/>
the case where three students<lb/>
were assaulted, none seriously,<lb/>
last Feb. 22.<lb/>
Eddings said that inquiries<lb/>
into the identification of the<lb/>
suspects, four males, and their<lb/>
car, have been unsuccessful so<lb/>
far.<lb/>
Western Sizzlin<lb/>
Steak House<lb/>
Hours: Sun. thru Thurs. 11:00 to 10:00<lb/>
Fri. �r Sat. 11:00 to 11:00<lb/>
THURSDAY DINNER SPECIAL<lb/>
No. 12 Chopped Sirloin Steak with or without Mushroom Bravy<lb/>
Texas Toast with Baked Potato and moltod butter or Fronoh Fries<lb/>
All for<lb/>
$1.49<lb/>
Lee Huggins is also congratu-<lb/>
lated fa being inducted into Phi<lb/>
Sigma Pi hona fraternity.<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity<lb/>
did very well at District Day held<lb/>
at UNC-C placing second in<lb/>
volleyball and foot shall.<lb/>
Sig-Eps would like to extend<lb/>
best wishes to Terry Hartley, a<lb/>
brother who was married over<lb/>
spring break. Many of the<lb/>
brothers attended the wedding in<lb/>
Green sbao.<lb/>
The Phi Kappa Tau's are<lb/>
proud to announce that they will<lb/>
host one of the seven regional<lb/>
IMPACT programs sponsered by<lb/>
the fraternity's national, on Fr<lb/>
March 31 through Sun April 2.<lb/>
This is a leadership develop-<lb/>
ment program which is amied at<lb/>
how-to-do-it sessions and open<lb/>
discussions fa a purposeful and<lb/>
progressive influence on the<lb/>
operations of all chapters.<lb/>
The Phi Taus are sponsoring a<lb/>
drawing fa a Beach Week-end<lb/>
fa two at the Ramada Inn at<lb/>
Atlantic Beach.<lb/>
The winner will receive room<lb/>
expenses, fifteen dollars fa gas,<lb/>
te case of your favaite bever-<lb/>
age, twenty-five dollars spending<lb/>
money, and ate-half gallon of<lb/>
your choice of an alooholic<lb/>
beverage.<lb/>
��<lb/>
<pb facs="00058043_0008"/><lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 16 March 1978<lb/>
Screen version of Lawrence novel free flick<lb/>
COURTESY UNITED<lb/>
ARTISTS CORP.<lb/>
Women in Love, a fine screen<lb/>
adaptation of the D.H. Lawrence<lb/>
novel, will be shown Friday and<lb/>
Saturday night in the Mendenhal!<lb/>
Student Center Theatre as this<lb/>
week's Student Union Free Film.<lb/>
Times for the film are 7 p.m. and<lb/>
9 p.m.<lb/>
The latest screen interpreta-<lb/>
tion of a D.H. Lawrence work is a<lb/>
beautiful film, its beauty glowing<lb/>
far beyond the surface.<lb/>
What is relevant to the film<lb/>
is its intensity, the saturation<lb/>
scriptwriter Kramer and Ken<lb/>
Russell, the director, have provi-<lb/>
ded in a specific time and place so<lb/>
that universality of human behav-<lb/>
ior ana its contemporary signifi-<lb/>
cance glitter throughout.<lb/>
Judith Christ of TV Guide<lb/>
writes, "It is difficult to recall<lb/>
another film that so successfully<lb/>
recreated the past with a depth<lb/>
that brings to life every album<lb/>
snapshot we have seen of the<lb/>
time<lb/>
Women in Love is the stay of<lb/>
two sisters, sexually mature and<lb/>
intellectually active, who struggle<lb/>
against the oonfines of a rural<lb/>
English mining town and its<lb/>
rigidly classed layers of society.<lb/>
THE CAST OF "Women in Love Oliver Reed,<lb/>
Glenda Jackson, Alan Bates, Jennie Linden, and<lb/>
Eleanor Bron. "The latest interpretation of a<lb/>
Lawrence work is a beautiful film<lb/>
The more placid sister, played<lb/>
by Jennie Linden, becomes enga-<lb/>
ged to local school teacher Alan<lb/>
Bates, a man who longs for true<lb/>
spiritual oompanionship with<lb/>
everyone and represents Law-<lb/>
rence himself. The other sister,<lb/>
played by Glenda Jackson, has a<lb/>
tangled relationship with Oliver<lb/>
Reed, the son of the mine owner.<lb/>
Around them, Lawrence<lb/>
weaves one of his best studies of<lb/>
sexual uneasiness and doubt.<lb/>
Now filmed for the first time (and<lb/>
called the best film adaptation of<lb/>
Lawrence by most film aitics),<lb/>
the stay expiates with subtle<lb/>
frustrations, warped joys, and<lb/>
Trends<lb/>
bitter passions.<lb/>
Under Ken Russell's(Tommy)<lb/>
vivid, faceful direction, the four<lb/>
leads strike dramatic sparks of<lb/>
rare luminescence.<lb/>
AsGerlad, Oliver Reed proves<lb/>
to be one of the film's best<lb/>
choices. The character is an<lb/>
unsatisfying one but Reed waks<lb/>
hard and well to realize the part.<lb/>
Jennie Linden plays Ursula<lb/>
with wit and passion. Glenda<lb/>
Jackson isna an actress in ader<lb/>
to be loved but in ader to act.<lb/>
Her Gudrun catches the buried<lb/>
wildness, the appetite fa self of<lb/>
this Now Woman.<lb/>
Of directa Russell, aitic<lb/>
Stanley Kauffman of The New<lb/>
Republic writes, "He shows<lb/>
talent fa human revelatioi and<lb/>
fa the camera ma ion dictated by<lb/>
it<lb/>
Admission to the film is by ID<lb/>
and Activity Card fa students.<lb/>
Faculty and staff may use their<lb/>
Mendenhal I Student Center<lb/>
Membership Cards.<lb/>
The next Student Union spon-<lb/>
saed free film will be Mel<lb/>
Brook's oomedy The Producers<lb/>
which stars Gene Wilder and the<lb/>
late Zero Mostel. The film will be<lb/>
shown on March 31 and April 1 in<lb/>
the Mendenhal I Student Center<lb/>
Theatre.<lb/>
Fantastic Animation Festival comes to Greenville<lb/>
A rare film, The, Fantastic<lb/>
Animation Festival, will be shown<lb/>
in Greenville this week. Festival<lb/>
is a cumulative effort; a two-and-<lb/>
a-half year project which involved<lb/>
saeening over a thousand anima-<lb/>
ted films from all over the wald.<lb/>
Unlike the wald of Saturday<lb/>
maning television a the classics<lb/>
from the Walt Disney Studio, the<lb/>
Fantastic Animation Festival pre-<lb/>
sents a prime selection of the<lb/>
avant-garde wak being daie in<lb/>
animatiai today.<lb/>
The review depicts the true<lb/>
renaissance in the arts, namely,<lb/>
the recent flowering of the<lb/>
animated film. The animated film<lb/>
is now over seventy years old and<lb/>
European animated films began<lb/>
trickling into American theatres<lb/>
with regularity around 1960.<lb/>
Animation is now a serious<lb/>
artfam with mature themes and<lb/>
new techniques. Artists are final-<lb/>
ly seeing the possibilities inher-<lb/>
ent in the medium and are<lb/>
constantly breaking new ground.<lb/>
The first feature-length ani-<lb/>
mated film of this new wave to<lb/>
employ a radically new visual<lb/>
style and capture the public<lb/>
imagination was "Yellow Sub-<lb/>
marine and it is safe to assume<lb/>
that its popularity was due as<lb/>
much to the Peta Max style as to<lb/>
the Beatles music.<lb/>
Following "Yellow Submarine<lb/>
came an artistic avalanche of<lb/>
animated innovation. Stanley<lb/>
Kubrick employed animated se-<lb/>
quences in "2001 Another view<lb/>
of some future wald was Rene<lb/>
THE VISUAL BRILLIANCE of "Cosmic Cartoon"<lb/>
earned it an Academy A ward Nomination. "Cosmic<lb/>
Cartoon" is just one of sixteen innovative animation<lb/>
shorts featured<lb/>
Festival To be<lb/>
LaLoux's "Fantastic Planet<lb/>
Then Ralph Bakshi came up with<lb/>
the inevitable, an X-rated ani-<lb/>
mated feature where all the little<lb/>
furry aeatures we grew up with<lb/>
were street wise and speaking<lb/>
the previously unprintable. The<lb/>
feature was Fritz the Cat. Fritz<lb/>
the Cat will cone to the ECU<lb/>
campus as a student free flick<lb/>
April 14 and 15 at 7 p.m. and 9<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Although it is the feature-<lb/>
length animated waks that gen-<lb/>
erate the most commentary and<lb/>
publicity, the new wave in<lb/>
animatiai finds its best and most<lb/>
varied expression in the shat<lb/>
film. Thae, artists, freed fron<lb/>
many of the constraints of time<lb/>
and budget, can let their visions<lb/>
rule.<lb/>
Animation is the most free of<lb/>
the cinematic arts, and labas<lb/>
uncter few of the restrictions that<lb/>
limit the earthbound camera. The<lb/>
animatas who yearly turn out<lb/>
hundreds of films waldwide are<lb/>
breaking away into areas where<lb/>
the live action film simply canna<lb/>
follow.<lb/>
Through animation, the<lb/>
natural laws of space and time,<lb/>
and gravity and dimension are<lb/>
surmounted. The surreal vision,<lb/>
static under the brush of a Dali, is<lb/>
allowed to come alive.<lb/>
To Animate. Dreams, pre-<lb/>
viously the taritay of mystics<lb/>
and Freudians, are fleshed out<lb/>
and given life. Most impatantly,<lb/>
animatiai is able to present the<lb/>
fantastic wald of the imagination<lb/>
in a palpable, believable way.<lb/>
in "The Fantastic Animation<lb/>
shown in Greenville this week.<lb/>
With animation, this wald be-<lb/>
oomes mae than believable, it<lb/>
becomes real.<lb/>
Selected from ova one-thou-<lb/>
sand nominees around the wald,<lb/>
sixteen animated shat films<lb/>
(most by artists in their 20's a<lb/>
early 20 s) are being presented<lb/>
together in one feature-length<lb/>
program which runs 107 minutes<lb/>
without the intamission. Samp-<lb/>
lings fron this well deserved<lb/>
showcase follow this introduction<lb/>
in synopsis.<lb/>
FRENCH WINDOWS<lb/>
By: Ian Ernes, England<lb/>
Music: Pink Floyd<lb/>
Pink Floyd's "One Of These<lb/>
Days" na only accompanies Ian<lb/>
Ernes' striking film, it was the<lb/>
inspiration fa it as well. The<lb/>
music and image blend together<lb/>
as one entity so that neither<lb/>
seems quite oomp'ete without the<lb/>
a her.<lb/>
A shadowy figure is the center<lb/>
of the piece, floating freely<lb/>
through space, time and dimen-<lb/>
sion, through recognizable land-<lb/>
scapes and surroundings of the<lb/>
surreal. It is the perfect mating of<lb/>
picture and sound.<lb/>
"French Windows" was pre-<lb/>
sented with the Gold Award at the<lb/>
Atlanta Film Festival.<lb/>
" would like to create the perfect<lb/>
experience, a musical time-space<lb/>
event, not designed to convey a<lb/>
'Message but more a state of<lb/>
mind' resulting from the reaction<lb/>
to the experience and the many<lb/>
components within it<lb/>
"Though it is a tedious medium,<lb/>
animation gives access to the<lb/>
impossible, opening up a fantasy<lb/>
world where one can control every<lb/>
line and every oolor, every sound<lb/>
and every second<lb/>
Ian Ernes<lb/>
ICARUS<lb/>
By: Mihai Badica, Romania<lb/>
World Premiere<lb/>
The Greek myth of Daedalus<lb/>
and Icarus tells about a man and<lb/>
his son, who when imprisoned by<lb/>
King Minow, construct some<lb/>
wings of wax and feathas with<lb/>
which to fly ova the high<lb/>
labyrinth walls. But alas, Icarus<lb/>
fliestoonearthesun, which melts<lb/>
See FESTIVAL, p. 11),<lb/>
<pb facs="00058043_0009"/><lb/>
Vinyl Review<lb/>
by David Whltson<lb/>
Bat McGrath: the Spy<lb/>
In this age of stars and superstars, it's refreshing to hear someone<lb/>
who is simply an entertainer. And Bat MoGrath's new album firmly<lb/>
establishes him as one of the finest entertainers performing today.<lb/>
No he " ain't got no hundred dollar suit as he sings in the title cut;<lb/>
Bat's not fancy, just good. He sings the songs of small town America,<lb/>
not the blues of the touring rocker. The characters evoked in<lb/>
McGrath's music aren't playing with groupies in their limousines,<lb/>
they're chopping wood or shopping in the I.G.A.<lb/>
McGrath explores the feelings of these characters, which range<lb/>
from the frustrations of a jealous lover in "The Spy to the<lb/>
desperation of a veteran who kidnaps his married girlfriend in<lb/>
"Angel to the comic relief of the lovelorn youth who, to win hisgirl,<lb/>
threatensto: cut up her tires, beat up her pa,Then I'll takeoff my<lb/>
clothes in the mall ("How Would You Like a Punch, 1978 Bat<lb/>
McGrath B.M.I.).<lb/>
Another fine album from a fine performer.<lb/>
Automatic Man: Automatic Man<lb/>
" Who's gonna be t he one<lb/>
Who's gonna be my lady<lb/>
Who's gonna be my love<lb/>
It'sabout to drive me crazy<lb/>
("Comin Through 1975 Island MusicAutomatic Man<lb/>
Publishing Co B.M.I.)<lb/>
Heavy stuff, guys. Real heavy. And the next song has little more to<lb/>
say than "My pearl my precious little girl repeated about forty<lb/>
times. Need I say more?<lb/>
All right, I will. The only way this album sounds interesting is after<lb/>
tooting a dime of strawberry mesc' or a few bongs of Columbian.<lb/>
This band takes itself entirely too seriously; they see themselves as<lb/>
great rock poets in the Hendrix vein, powered by Astral World Energy<lb/>
(whatever that is), but with such fluff fa lyrics they'll never make it.<lb/>
The lyrics drone and the instrumentals meander monotonously, in<lb/>
keeping with thetitle cut's proclamation: "Automatic Man moves like<lb/>
a computer<lb/>
Thanks to Bill Sheppard at the Roxy Theater fa the Bat McGrath<lb/>
LP, Bob at School Kid's Recads fa "Automatic Man<lb/>
ECU graduate returns<lb/>
to direct original musical<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
Marshall B. McAden, a 1977<lb/>
graduate of ECU is returning to<lb/>
the campus to direct two per-<lb/>
famancesof EBONY D' LITE N'<lb/>
BIG BRITE LITES. The play,<lb/>
which was written by McAden, is<lb/>
a musical adaptation of Grimm's<lb/>
Fairy Tale "Snow White<lb/>
In the wads of McAden the<lb/>
play isdesaibed as a "sparkling<lb/>
and colaful new musical He<lb/>
refuses to give out any other<lb/>
infamatioi about its stayline<lb/>
play has a cast of 15 of the most<lb/>
innovative and aeative talents<lb/>
avai'able. Its warmth and huma<lb/>
runs throughout like a refreshing<lb/>
stream.<lb/>
There will be two perfam-<lb/>
ancesof EBONY D'LITE, oie on<lb/>
Sunday, March 19 and the other<lb/>
on Monday, March 20. The play is<lb/>
scheduled fa Auditaium 244 of<lb/>
Mendenhall with a 8 p.m. curtain.<lb/>
Tickets fa the pertamance will<lb/>
be available at the doa and are<lb/>
Horse Feathers! Duck Soup 16 March 1978 fountainhead pane 9<lb/>
Marx bros. festival Sun.<lb/>
The Student Unioi will pre-<lb/>
sent its fourth film festival, this<lb/>
time featuring the Marx Brtf hers,<lb/>
this Sunday at the Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center Theatre. Films to<lb/>
be shown are, respectively, Night<lb/>
at the Opera, Monkey Business,<lb/>
Horse Feathers, and Duck Soup.<lb/>
The following is an excerpt<lb/>
from an article by Richard F.<lb/>
Shepard, Cultural News Edita<lb/>
fa The New York Times.<lb/>
Film has done for the Marx<lb/>
Brothers and others who went on<lb/>
camera what no writer can do for<lb/>
the actor who faced only the<lb/>
footlights It has bestowed an<lb/>
immortality that is more part of us<lb/>
than part of them.<lb/>
The Marx Brothers foresha-<lb/>
dowed today's reality for us. They<lb/>
cannot be blamed that the reality<lb/>
is somewhat more joyless than<lb/>
their prescience. In their films,<lb/>
they appear as comic supermen,<lb/>
characters of no past, no ties, no<lb/>
future.<lb/>
A vacuum is created and they<lb/>
rush in to fill it-a hospital head<lb/>
who is a horse detective on the<lb/>
lam, a department store detective<lb/>
who revels in incompetence, an<lb/>
international statesman nuttily<lb/>
escalating tension. They return<lb/>
the status to a questionable quo<lb/>
by ousting the blowhards, the<lb/>
grasping, the baddies.<lb/>
The Marxes were seminal<lb/>
performers. Even in the age of<lb/>
artificial insemination, it must be<lb/>
admitted that they were naturally<lb/>
seminal. Nobody like them<lb/>
appeared before they did. They<lb/>
initiated a style that has been<lb/>
imitated but never equaled.<lb/>
What, you ask, has all this got<lb/>
to do with you? What can the<lb/>
Marx Brothers do for you? They<lb/>
can make you laugh, dear reader,<lb/>
and if you're half the worried,<lb/>
beset, polluted, traffic-jammed,<lb/>
debt-ridden, family-bugged citi-<lb/>
zen that I suspect you are,<lb/>
laughing is not something that<lb/>
you can toss off lightly<lb/>
NIGHT AT THE OPERA<lb/>
To be shown at 4 p. m.<lb/>
The Marx Brahas are at their<lb/>
peak as they deliver their unique<lb/>
satire oi the ponp and circum-<lb/>
stance surrounding grand opera.<lb/>
SeeMAFtX BROS p. JQ<lb/>
� Misses Spring Tops, �3.84-$5.84<lb/>
�Men's Straight Leg Jeans,<lb/>
slightly irregular, $8.84<lb/>
�Grab Table, 50c to $4.84, consisting of<lb/>
Misses Blazers, vests, slacks, skirts, sweaters, and tops.<lb/>
�Misses Sundresses, $11.88<lb/>
COME IN AND SEE OUR SPRING AND SUMMER<lb/>
MERCHANDISE ARRIVING DAILY<lb/>
NOW OPEN TILL 9:00 p.m. MonFri Sat. 10-6 p.m.<lb/>
VISA AND MASTER CHARGE ACCEPTED<lb/>
USE OUR CONVENIENT LAYAWAY PLAN<lb/>
the<lb/>
except to say "don't miss it The priced at $1.00 each.<lb/>
factory<lb/>
for blue bell apparel<lb/>
703 GREEMVIUE BLVD. � GREENVILLE. N.C. 2783�<lb/>
919) 750-0337<lb/>
Gordleys'<lb/>
art shown<lb/>
in Kinston<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
Painting and drawings by<lb/>
ECU faculty artists Marylin and<lb/>
Tran Gadley are oi display this<lb/>
moith at the Kinstoi Art Center.<lb/>
Marilyn Gadley is showing<lb/>
waks fran her "Rose" series,<lb/>
and Tran Gadley is represented<lb/>
by waks fran his Food series.<lb/>
Bah artists, members of the<lb/>
painting faculty of the ECU<lb/>
School of Art, have exhibited<lb/>
widely, at museums and galleries<lb/>
in several states.<lb/>
The Gadleys' Kinstoi show<lb/>
opens March 5 with an aftanoon<lb/>
receptiai given by the Kinstoi<lb/>
Arts Council.<lb/>
DISCOUNT FURNITURE<lb/>
AT<lb/>
AZALEA MOBILE HOMES<lb/>
New and used furniture and appliances<lb/>
Call Tommy Williams 756-7815.<lb/>
AZALEA MOBILE HOMES<lb/>
1<lb/>
(264 by-pass West, across from Bill Haddock Chrysler)<lb/>
<pb facs="00058043_0010"/><lb/>
Pay 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 16 March 1978<lb/>
Wyman, Papas presented in art workshops<lb/>
COURTESY<lb/>
VISUAL ARTS FORUM<lb/>
On Monday and Tuesday,<lb/>
March 20 and 21, The Ceramic<lb/>
Guild and Craftsmen East in<lb/>
cooperation with the SGA and<lb/>
VAF will sponsor ooncurrent<lb/>
workshops featuring William<lb/>
Wyman (Clay) and his wife,<lb/>
Marilyn Pappas (Fiber).<lb/>
The schedule is as follows:<lb/>
Monday, March 20:<lb/>
Pappas-9:30-3 00, Workshop<lb/>
Demonstration, J-223<lb/>
Wyman-1000-12.00 and 200-<lb/>
WorkshopDemonstratiorvs, J-<lb/>
103<lb/>
Both-Slide Lecture. Auditorium.<lb/>
7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Tuesday, March 21 :<lb/>
Pappas-9 30-3 00, Workshop <lb/>
Demonstration, J-223<lb/>
Wyman-9 30-300, Workshop<lb/>
Demonstration, J-103<lb/>
Both artists have exhibited<lb/>
nationally and internationally and<lb/>
their works are in world-wide<lb/>
public and private collections.<lb/>
Marilyn Pappas received her<lb/>
BSin Art Education at Massachu-<lb/>
setts College of Art and the M.<lb/>
Ed. at Penn, State. She had<lb/>
taught at Miami-Dade Junior<lb/>
College and presently teaches at<lb/>
Massachusetts College of Art in<lb/>
located behind<lb/>
THE ATTIC<lb/>
752-7303<lb/>
Thlir Billiards Tourn. 9 PM<lb/>
Backgammon Tourn 9:30<lb/>
Fri<lb/>
JASMINE<lb/>
ONCE A YEAR<lb/>
BOUTIQUE SPECIAL!<lb/>
Houbigant<lb/>
CHANTILLY<lb/>
Spray Mist<lb/>
The romantically<lb/>
beautiful fragrance<lb/>
for all your<lb/>
I feel very Chantilly<lb/>
moods In a non-aerosol<lb/>
spray so you get<lb/>
more fragrance and<lb/>
every drop is<lb/>
pure fragrance<lb/>
1 75 oz net wt<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
Quality 9 Competitive Prices e Service<lb/>
Stmif firteeville Fir tor 35 Yurs ffcj W ���"<lb/>
?.� Ath St &amp; Memorial Drive<lb/>
�11 Dickinson Ave. �" �'� �� w<lb/>
Phone 752 7105 TTZwmYm<lb/>
8 a.m7:30 p.m. 8a.rn10 p.m.<lb/>
Boston, and at one time was the<lb/>
Elementary Art Supervisor at<lb/>
State College, Pa. She has written<lb/>
articles for "School Arts" and has<lb/>
been featured in "Craft Hori-<lb/>
zons" and her work is included in<lb/>
numerous books such as Objects<lb/>
USA, Meaning in Crafts, and<lb/>
many others. She has also taught<lb/>
workshops at the Penland School,<lb/>
Haystack Mountain School, Bos-<lb/>
ton University, and others. Her<lb/>
present work deals with soft<lb/>
sculpture in fiber.<lb/>
William Wyman received his<lb/>
BS in Art Education from the<lb/>
Massachusetts College of Art and<lb/>
the MA from Columbia University<lb/>
and has done further study at<lb/>
Alfred University. Bill has taught<lb/>
at Drake University, University of<lb/>
Maryland, the Deoordova Mu-<lb/>
seum and the Massachusetts<lb/>
College of Art. He presently<lb/>
teaches at the Boston Museum<lb/>
School. He also is included in<lb/>
Objects USA and has exhibited<lb/>
throughout the United States and<lb/>
Europe. His present work is<lb/>
involved in developing a series of<lb/>
fired clay sculptures called Tem-<lb/>
ples, Entrances. Facades and<lb/>
Interior Spaces<lb/>
Both artists have a superb<lb/>
collection of slides of their own<lb/>
work and also work in their<lb/>
respective disciplines which is<lb/>
historical and chronologically illus-<lb/>
trates certain styles and phases of<lb/>
the contemporary crafts move-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
ARTIST WILLIAM WYMAN and his wife, Marilyn<lb/>
Papas, whose works have been exhibited nationally<lb/>
and internationally, will be presented in workshops<lb/>
March 20 and 21. See schedule above.<lb/>
MARX BROS'<lb/>
Continued from p. 9<lb/>
Groucho, with dubious assistance<lb/>
from his brothers, crosses the<lb/>
ocean with an Italian opera<lb/>
company and contrives to get two<lb/>
young singers a break.<lb/>
HORSE FEA THERS<lb/>
To be shown at 5:35 p.m.<lb/>
Said Allen Eyles in The Marx<lb/>
Brothers, "In Horse Feathers has<lb/>
some of the most direct satire of<lb/>
any Marx oomedy. "In Horse<lb/>
Feathers the Marxes all reach<lb/>
their full sature and the area of<lb/>
attack is much wilder: education,<lb/>
college life, sport, love and the<lb/>
Depression all come under accur-<lb/>
ate and devastating fire<lb/>
MONKEY BUSINESS<lb/>
To be shown at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
In this film, they are on the<lb/>
run as stowaways aboard a<lb/>
transatlantic liner where they are<lb/>
chased by the crew, become<lb/>
involved with winsome wenches<lb/>
and are paired off as rival<lb/>
bodyguards to two feuding gang-<lb/>
sters.<lb/>
DUCK SOUP<lb/>
To be shown at 9:15 p m<lb/>
Allen Eyles in The Marx<lb/>
Brothers said, "Duck Soup is the<lb/>
most highly regarded of the<lb/>
Marxes' pictures. Groucho him-<lb/>
self thinks it's the craziestit is<lb/>
almost mint-fresh today and will<lb/>
be timelessly funny<lb/>
ou<lb/>
Oorf<lb/>
fl!P<lb/>
stuff<lb/>
w<lb/>
out <lb/>
ood�<lb/>
ft<lb/>
AWeM- tyu Com 3ust I<lb/>
BUY A REG. SUB &amp; GET ANOTHER<lb/>
Vo PRICE<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
Phone in order for pjck-up or delivery � Phone 752-6130 � 521 GotantfieS Georgetown Shoppes<lb/>
<pb facs="00058043_0011"/><lb/>
������������(������H<lb/>
16 March 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
Page 11<lb/>
The Fantastic Animation Festival is visually brilliant<lb/>
Continued from p. 8<lb/>
his wings and hurls him into the<lb/>
sea, where he drowns.<lb/>
The film uses the innovative<lb/>
Icarus character to demonstrate<lb/>
incisive truths about humans<lb/>
through the familiar animation of<lb/>
clay figures.<lb/>
As the music's vibrant tones<lb/>
build, viewers see a aatered<lb/>
globe moving toward them<lb/>
through an empty space. As it<lb/>
draws nearer, comical little heads<lb/>
appear on the surface. One of the<lb/>
heads, Icarus, tries to free his<lb/>
arms while the others laugh and<lb/>
ridicule him. He succeeds, how-<lb/>
ever, and manages to swim<lb/>
around among his comrades, who<lb/>
soon follow suit. Icarus then frees<lb/>
his legs to first crawl and then<lb/>
walk while his fellow beings<lb/>
snicker but eventually imitate<lb/>
him. At last, when Icarus at-<lb/>
tempts to fly but fails, and his<lb/>
friends desert him, his persever-<lb/>
ance is rewarded with the miracu-<lb/>
lous transformation of his hands<lb/>
into wings, enabling him to soar<lb/>
in the sky.<lb/>
A SHORT HISTORY OF THE<lb/>
WHEEL<lb/>
By: Lor en Bowie<lb/>
World Premiere<lb/>
This film is a mythical fantasy<lb/>
about the origins of man's most<lb/>
universally applied invention, and<lb/>
more. It is a visual statement<lb/>
Luboff choir<lb/>
to perform<lb/>
The international famed<lb/>
Norman Luboff Char will perform<lb/>
at ECU Wed March 22 at 8 p.m.<lb/>
in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Since Luboff began touring<lb/>
with his choral ensemble in 1963,<lb/>
the Choir has received enthusias-<lb/>
tic response from music critics<lb/>
and audiences everywhere.<lb/>
A typical program will include<lb/>
Renaissance motets, Bach<lb/>
choraJes, folk songs, "pop"<lb/>
music, Beatles numbers and<lb/>
avant-garde experiments.<lb/>
Luboff has selected singers<lb/>
who can adapt to this wide range<lb/>
of choral music, and the result isa<lb/>
performance of "precision,<lb/>
beauty and understanding<lb/>
Public tickets for the Luboff<lb/>
Choir's ECU appearance are $4<lb/>
each and will be sold at the door<lb/>
on the evening of the perfor-<lb/>
mance.<lb/>
relying solely on shifting images<lb/>
and a surrealistic recombination<lb/>
of familiar elements to convey its<lb/>
theme. As such, it is a prime<lb/>
example of animated expression's<lb/>
superiority to live action film or<lb/>
verbal description in conveying<lb/>
idea through image. The narra-<lb/>
tive oonsists of visuaJ, not literary<lb/>
links, the effect of which is unique<lb/>
to the animated films.<lb/>
Loren Bowie is currently an<lb/>
assistant animator at the Walt<lb/>
Disney Animation Studio in Bur-<lb/>
bank, California.<lb/>
COSMIC CARTOON<lb/>
By: Steven LisbergerEric Ladd<lb/>
Music: Hoist's "The Planets"<lb/>
Stream of consciousness was<lb/>
originally the province of fiction<lb/>
writers, and was never well<lb/>
adapted to the live action cinema<lb/>
where the logic of time and place<lb/>
worked always to make it seem<lb/>
contrived and ridiculous. The<lb/>
animated film, however, is the<lb/>
ideal medium, as exemplified by<lb/>
"Cosmic Cartoon From a lone<lb/>
candle burning far out in the<lb/>
cosmos we begin the zoom of all<lb/>
zooms, which takes us through<lb/>
the void and eventually to the<lb/>
distant earth, to a beach, to a<lb/>
metamorphosizing woman dan-<lb/>
cing on the waves, then back<lb/>
again to deep space.<lb/>
The visual brilliance of "Cos-<lb/>
mic Cartoon" earned it<lb/>
Academy Award Nominee.<lb/>
an<lb/>
THE LAST CARTOON MAN<lb/>
By: Jeffrey Hale and Derek Lamb<lb/>
What better subject for an<lb/>
animated film than the current<lb/>
state of animation itself? "The<lb/>
Last Cartoon Man" isa hilarious<lb/>
5 minute entertainment that<lb/>
manages to disturb as well as<lb/>
entertain. Its only character is a<lb/>
comic only too willing to please<lb/>
hisaudience by detaching various<lb/>
parts of his anatomy, only to find<lb/>
that he can't find his own head,<lb/>
which keeps shouting "over<lb/>
here" to the bumbling body.<lb/>
Whether it is taken as a<lb/>
comment on the role of the artist,<lb/>
or simply a bit of animated black<lb/>
humor, the film is a delight.<lb/>
It is the winner of the First<lb/>
Prize at the World Festival of<lb/>
Animated Film, Zagreb, Yugo-<lb/>
slavia.<lb/>
CAT'S CRADLE<lb/>
By: Paul Driessen<lb/>
Cat's Cradle is the simplest of<lb/>
child's games where a loop of<lb/>
string is transformed by the<lb/>
fingers into magical shapes and<lb/>
images. The transformations in<lb/>
the film of the same name,<lb/>
however, are much more complex<lb/>
and mystifying. It begins with a<lb/>
DANCE MAGAZINE<lb/>
NOW AVAILABLE<lb/>
AT BARRE.LTD.<lb/>
806 Dickinson Avt.<lb/>
712-6181<lb/>
TONITE<lb/>
THE EMBERS<lb/>
ONE NITE ONLY<lb/>
TH<lb/>
EHBO R9flMr<lb/>
FRI - end of week party 3- 7<lb/>
SAT - "SAT NITE FEVER<lb/>
am<lb/>
dance-<lb/>
thon<lb/>
SUN - ladies nite<lb/>
spider instead of a loop of string,<lb/>
and what transpires is striking an<lb/>
unique. The metamorphoses are<lb/>
alternatively funny and disturb-<lb/>
ing. The plot, such as it is,<lb/>
remains an enigma, and its<lb/>
interpretations, from the meta-<lb/>
physical to the Freudian, remain<lb/>
in the eye of the beholder. The<lb/>
result is a childish and simple<lb/>
concept transformed into some-<lb/>
thing provocative and mature.<lb/>
"Cat's Cradle" is the winner<lb/>
of the Special Jury Award at the<lb/>
World Film Festival, Zagreb,<lb/>
Yugoslavia.<lb/>
ECU A NIMA TION FESTIVA L<lb/>
East Carolina's own animated<lb/>
film festival will be shown April<lb/>
16 in the Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Theatre and is sponsored<lb/>
by the ECU Student Union. Three<lb/>
feature-length films are sche-<lb/>
duled: Milestones for Mickey,<lb/>
Wizards, and the aforementioned<lb/>
Yellow Submarine.<lb/>
The Fantastic Animation Fes-<lb/>
tival will be shown as a special<lb/>
late show this Friday and Satur-<lb/>
day night at Greenville's Plaza<lb/>
Cinema. Showings begin at 11 30<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Saads Shoe Shop<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
at<lb/>
College View Cleaners<lb/>
Questions?<lb/>
If you have<lb/>
an<lb/>
unwanted<lb/>
pregnancy<lb/>
� � help<lb/>
is as close<lb/>
as your<lb/>
phone<lb/>
If you're troubled and uncertain <lb/>
Call Hallmark Clinic and Counseling Service.<lb/>
One of our telephone counselors can help you.<lb/>
She can tell you about the personal and dignified<lb/>
care you receive at Hallmark . . . and about a<lb/>
free pregnancy test.<lb/>
Our Hallmark staff includes a gynecologist,<lb/>
qualified nurses . . . and specially trained<lb/>
counselors. We offer first trimester abortions<lb/>
for $175.00 . . . and that one fee includes lab tests,<lb/>
examination, birth control information, private<lb/>
counseling and follow-up visit.<lb/>
First<lb/>
abortion dink: la North Carotin.<lb/>
HALLMARK CLINIC<lb/>
1316 East More head Street<lb/>
Charlotte, N. C. 28204<lb/>
Cmtt: Charlotte � 376-1615<lb/>
Long Dimtance Toll-Frem:<lb/>
N. C: 1-800-432-6066<lb/>
All other states: 1-800-438-4094<lb/>
<pb facs="00058043_0012"/><lb/>
Pap� 12 FQUMTAINHEAD 16 Mardt 1978<lb/>
'COAT QUILT"IS one,of artist Marilyn Papas' works. She and<lb/>
husband, William Wyman will teach workshops on March 20 and<lb/>
21. See story p. 10.<lb/>
THE BEAUX ARTS Jrio, a world renowned-<lb/>
chamber ensemble will appear in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center on Thursday, March 30at 8 p.m. as<lb/>
part of the Schoof of Music FESTIVAL '78, in<lb/>
conjunction with the Student Union as an Artist<lb/>
Series Attraction. The group, which has had sell-out<lb/>
tours season after season and won the coveted<lb/>
"Grand Prix du Disque" consists of: Menahem<lb/>
Pressler, piano; Isidore Cohen, violin; and Bernard<lb/>
Greenhouse, cello. Admission for students is by<lb/>
ECU ID and Activity card; Faculty and Staff by MSC<lb/>
Card; and Public tickets are $4. For further<lb/>
information about the Beaux Arts Trio, see next<lb/>
week's FOUNTAINHEAD.<lb/>
HALF-LIFE<lb/>
poetry<lb/>
The bursting of apples in sunlight<lb/>
Joggle my mind into thinking of times<lb/>
When we would sit upon rich tapestries<lb/>
and trace the illusions from the hookah<lb/>
We would skate across great diamond deserts<lb/>
and climb spiral rock mountains to the too<lb/>
and shout to the world below in voices<lb/>
that made the eagle tilt his head in flight<lb/>
This was all the half-life of my own life<lb/>
Falling like dominoes all in order<lb/>
Till the clock stopped ticking above me<lb/>
and I looked around and I was alone.<lb/>
TO LYNN<lb/>
Even this day<lb/>
You showed your head,<lb/>
To the lights<lb/>
You gave a ay.<lb/>
And they licked you clean.<lb/>
Oh! how you shined!<lb/>
Then they cut your cord<lb/>
And left you to stand.<lb/>
Alone�to die.<lb/>
In past times,<lb/>
Even this day<lb/>
Nancy Moore<lb/>
Sojo<lb/>
Wiener King<lb/>
Apply in person<lb/>
Monday thru<lb/>
Friday,<lb/>
1-4 p.m.<lb/>
Now hiring full<lb/>
and part time help wiener King<lb/>
Conner of Charles and 11th Street<lb/>
An � qul Opportunity Employer<lb/>
MIDNIGHT<lb/>
AN ADVENTURE IN EATING<lb/>
TuetSat. 11:30 p.m1:30 a.m.<lb/>
All Subs for $1.00 with purchatt of toft drink<lb/>
(not valid on deliveries) 752-1828<lb/>
706 Evant St.<lb/>
optn MonSat. at 11:00, Sun. 12:00 �<lb/>
Art will be<lb/>
shown' sold<lb/>
A special exhibition and sale<lb/>
of Original Oriental Art will be<lb/>
presented on the ECU campus<lb/>
Thurs March 16 at the Gray<lb/>
Gallery-Leo Jenkins Art Building<lb/>
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.<lb/>
Marson Ltd. of Baltimore,<lb/>
Maryland specializes in exhibit-<lb/>
ing for sale a collection of Original<lb/>
Oriental Art totaling approx.mat-<lb/>
ely 500 pieces from Japan, China,<lb/>
India, Tibet, Nepal and Thailand<lb/>
The oldest prints date back to<lb/>
the 18th and 19th Century and<lb/>
include Chinese woodcuts, Indian<lb/>
miniature paintings and manu-<lb/>
scripts and master works by such<lb/>
artists as Hiroshige, Kuniyoshi,<lb/>
and Kunisada.<lb/>
The modern pieces consist of a<lb/>
large group of original woodcuts,<lb/>
etchings, lithographs, serigraphs<lb/>
and mezzotints created by such<lb/>
world renowned contemporaries<lb/>
as Saito, Azachi, Mori, Katsuda<lb/>
and Maki.<lb/>
A representative will be pre-<lb/>
sent to answer questions about<lb/>
the work, artists, and the various<lb/>
graphic techinques employed.<lb/>
Prints are shown in open port-<lb/>
folios in an informal atmosphere<lb/>
and you are invited to browse<lb/>
<pb facs="00058043_0013"/><lb/>
Sports<lb/>
16 March 1978 FOUNT AINHEAD<lb/>
13<lb/>
Intramural<lb/>
by JOHN EVANS<lb/>
r<lb/>
Softball starts,basketball overfinally!<lb/>
This week promises to be a busy one around the intramural off ioe as<lb/>
Softball play begins and spring registration fa numerous other<lb/>
activities will get underway.<lb/>
Softball for both men and women began on Monday, with over 90<lb/>
men's teams and over 40 women's teams competing. Tennis play in the<lb/>
mixed doubles co-rec tennis tournament also began Monday.<lb/>
Registration is being held Wpdnesday and Thursday for the co-rec<lb/>
Novelty swim meet on Friday March 17. Registration fa men's and<lb/>
women'sHaseshoes and Badminton will also be held this week thru<lb/>
Thursday and oompetitiai will begin on Monday, March 20. There will<lb/>
be both singles and doubles competition. The intramural wrestling<lb/>
tournament will begin next Monday and the signup dates will run from<lb/>
Monday through Thursday. The weigh-in fa the tournament will be<lb/>
held from 1-5 p.m. Monday in the Intramural Off ioe, 204 Memaiai<lb/>
Gym. We'd like to remind fraternal aganizatiais, dams and clubs<lb/>
that this spat counts toward team trophies in the President's Cup<lb/>
competition.<lb/>
Other events start registration next week. Among them are Team<lb/>
Tennis fa the men, Co-Rec Volleyball and Innertube Water<lb/>
Basketball. All will begin play on March 27.<lb/>
The four-day golf tournament will run from March 28-31 and each<lb/>
competita will play 36 holes. This year's event will be spiosd up with<lb/>
several special awards such as closest tothe pin, longest drive, longest<lb/>
putt, etc. Once again it will be played on the delightfully contoured<lb/>
Ayden Gold Course. Registration will be held the week befae, March<lb/>
20-23.<lb/>
BELK PLEASERS TAKE BASKETBALL TITLE<lb/>
The Belk Pleasers broke open a dose game early in the second half<lb/>
in the intramural all-campus basketball championship and went on to a<lb/>
79-49 win over the Hatchets.<lb/>
The Pleasers, who went through the season on probation, proved<lb/>
their power in the all-campus playoffs as they also beat Tau Kappa<lb/>
Epsilon, the fraternity champs, in the semifinals by a 61-44 scae.<lb/>
The Hatchets defeated last years all-campus champions, the Belk<lb/>
Nutties Buddies 59-57 in overtime, to reach the finals.<lb/>
Gerlad Hall led the Pleasers in the championship game with 16<lb/>
points as James Robbins, Woodrow Stevenson and Eddie Hicks all<lb/>
added 12 points. Stevenson soaed 20 in the semifinal victay and<lb/>
finished as the high scaer with 32 points in two games.<lb/>
Greg Pechman led the Hatchets with 15 points, but Terry Nobies<lb/>
was held to only six points after scaing 23 in the semifinal win over the<lb/>
Nutties Buddies.<lb/>
The all-campus all-tournament team consisted of Hall, Robbins and<lb/>
Stevensa of he Pleasers, Nobles and Pechman of the Hatchets, and<lb/>
Clifton Williams of the Nutties Buddies.<lb/>
The ECU Toilet Bowl championship was won by the Kappa Sigma<lb/>
Cheap Thrills, who dropped a 30-15 final to Delta Sigma Phi's "B"<lb/>
team.<lb/>
WILLIAMS HILUARD WIN SLAM DUNK CONTEST<lb/>
Clifton Williams and Avery Hilliard won the Intramural Slam Dunk<lb/>
Contest held befae break. Williams wot the all-around championship<lb/>
in the Under 6-3 categay, while Hilliard was the champiai in the 6-3<lb/>
and over oompetitiai. Williams also woi the freestyle competition, but<lb/>
Jim Knocke nosed out Hilliard fa the championship in the 6-3 and over<lb/>
freestyle competition. Hilliard took second place by beating Andrew<lb/>
Schaffer in a sudden death dunk-off.<lb/>
The competition was tight in the 6-3 and over all-around<lb/>
competition as Hilliard barely nosed out Knocke, 45-43.7. Knocke<lb/>
would have won handily except that he missed his last mandatay dunk<lb/>
fa a scae of 1.3 out of 10 fa the dunk.<lb/>
The slam dunk playoff was judged by Pat Dye, Dr. Edgar Hooks<lb/>
and spatswriter Jim Kyle of the Gfr jnville Daily Reflecta.<lb/>
ICE BUSTERS WIN ICE BALL CHAMPIONSHIP<lb/>
The Ice Bustas took the Intramural Co-Rec championship with a<lb/>
12-6 win ova the Ioe Picks and finished the season with a perfect 9-0<lb/>
mark.<lb/>
Led by Kevin Cameron and Bill Bugbee, who scored six points<lb/>
each, the Ice Busters never trailed and held off the Ioe Picks with a fine<lb/>
perfamance by goalie Kim Carlyle.<lb/>
Other members of the winning team were John Evans, Brian<lb/>
See INTRAMURALS, p. 14<lb/>
Lady Bucs falter in play-offs<lb/>
By TERRY YEARGAN<lb/>
Staff Writa<lb/>
The Lady Pirates finished a<lb/>
vay competitive season with a<lb/>
trip to the regional play-offs.<lb/>
East Carolina lost to Kentucky<lb/>
(81-65), and to the University of<lb/>
South Carolina (77-70).<lb/>
"Our execution against U.K.<lb/>
was pea said coach Cathaire<lb/>
Bdton.<lb/>
The Pirates shot 40 from teh<lb/>
floa while Kentucky hit 48.<lb/>
Kentucky out rebounded the<lb/>
Pirates 42-33.<lb/>
"We played well against<lb/>
South Carolina, but the ball<lb/>
wouldn't drop said coach Bol-<lb/>
ton. East Carolina shot only 33<lb/>
while the Gamecocks sha 45.<lb/>
The oonsolation game against<lb/>
Nath Carolina left no question of<lb/>
the number two team in the state;<lb/>
East Carolina.<lb/>
EC-73, UNC-72 was the final<lb/>
oount. The number one, NCSU<lb/>
Wolf pack will go on to represent<lb/>
this region.<lb/>
Coach Bolton finishes this<lb/>
season with an excellant (20-10)<lb/>
recad. The Pirates will lose<lb/>
senias Lacy and Freeman but<lb/>
remain optimistic fa next seasai.<lb/>
"I will expect a great deal<lb/>
from returnas Lynn Emerson and<lb/>
Debbie Tritt said coach Bolton.<lb/>
Though the lady Pirates work<lb/>
with a small budget, staff and<lb/>
people they do a fine job at<lb/>
representing our school.<lb/>
Fa the Lady Pirates the<lb/>
mission was accomplished.<lb/>
LYDIA ROUND TREE<lb/>
LYNN EMERSON<lb/>
Football team ranks high in<lb/>
nationwide NCAA statistics<lb/>
Over the last five years, East<lb/>
Carolina is the 14th winningest<lb/>
team in the oountry, tied with<lb/>
UCLA with a 41-14-0 reoad, fa a<lb/>
.745 mark. During the last five<lb/>
years, 125 schools have been<lb/>
eligible fa this ranking amaig<lb/>
the Division I schools that play<lb/>
football.<lb/>
Ova the last ten years, East<lb/>
Carolina is the 32nd winningest<lb/>
team in the oountry, with a<lb/>
63-43-0 reoad, fa a .594 mark.<lb/>
During the last ten years, 114<lb/>
schools have been eligible fa this<lb/>
ranking amaig the Divisiai I<lb/>
schools that play football.<lb/>
Consicter these rankins as well<lb/>
as individual team categories:<lb/>
East Carolina is 9th ova the<lb/>
last five years in rushing offense-<lb/>
276.6 yards pa game<lb/>
THE TOP 15<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Ohio State<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Texas<lb/>
Houston<lb/>
TexasA&amp; M<lb/>
-EASTCAROLINA-<lb/>
Oklahona State<lb/>
SouthanCal<lb/>
GeagiaTech<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
South Carolina<lb/>
East Carolina is 14th ova the last<lb/>
five years in scaing defense-<lb/>
13.5 points pa game.<lb/>
East Carolina is 14th ova the last<lb/>
five years in total defense- 271.1<lb/>
yards pa game.<lb/>
East Carolina is tied fa 14th ova<lb/>
the last five years in scaing<lb/>
defense- 13.5 points pa game<lb/>
East Carolina is 16th ova the last<lb/>
five years in scaing offense-<lb/>
26.3 points pa game.<lb/>
BASEBALL SCORES AS OF MARCH 15<lb/>
ReoadECU-3<lb/>
1-0Double Header<lb/>
ECU-5<lb/>
2-0ECU-0<lb/>
2-1ECU-3<lb/>
2-2Double Header<lb/>
3-2<lb/>
3-3<lb/>
4-3<lb/>
5-3<lb/>
ECU-6<lb/>
ECU-4<lb/>
Double Heaoer<lb/>
ECU-HB-<lb/>
ECU-2<lb/>
East Carolina is 19th ova the last<lb/>
five years in rushing defense-<lb/>
148.9 yards pa game.<lb/>
East Carolina is 31st ova the last<lb/>
five years in total offense- 357.6<lb/>
yards pa game.<lb/>
East Carolina is 3rd ova the<lb/>
last five years in turnova mar-<lb/>
gin- .93 possessions gained via<lb/>
turnovas.<lb/>
� This is a new category to be<lb/>
released this fall. Turnova mar-<lb/>
gin is based oi numba of<lb/>
turnovas gained vs numba of<lb/>
turnovas givai up, thus produc-<lb/>
ing numba of possession gained<lb/>
via the diffaenos. East Carolina<lb/>
has gained 192 turnovas ova the<lb/>
last five years, while giving up<lb/>
141.<lb/>
THE TOP THREE<lb/>
SouthanCal 1.6<lb/>
Ohio State 1.1<lb/>
-EAST CAROLINA-0.93<lb/>
Elon-2<lb/>
NCState-0<lb/>
NCState-5<lb/>
Uni.of&amp;C4<lb/>
Purdue-2<lb/>
Purdue-7<lb/>
Madison-6<lb/>
Madison-1<lb/>
<pb facs="00058043_0014"/><lb/>
Pay 14 FOUNTAINHEAD 16 March 1978<lb/>
'Small' D. T.Joyner looks toward national tourney<lb/>
After losing a narrow 7-5<lb/>
decision to Waft Groteof the N.Y.<lb/>
Athletic Qub earlier in the season<lb/>
during the Wilkes Open, East<lb/>
Carolina heavyweight D.T.<lb/>
Joyner stormed off the mat rather<lb/>
frustrated with his performance<lb/>
"I was mad at myself because<lb/>
I didn't wresHe hard against<lb/>
him Joyner remembers, "I was<lb/>
kind of scared of him because I<lb/>
had heard he had broken three<lb/>
ribs in a match against another<lb/>
guy<lb/>
"I changed my style against<lb/>
him because of that, but after I<lb/>
lost I told Coach Hill I was going<lb/>
to wrestle my way and nobody<lb/>
else was going to beat me the rest<lb/>
of the season<lb/>
Joyner wasn't kidding.<lb/>
Since his loss to Grote in the<lb/>
Wilkes Open, Joyner's only set-<lb/>
back of the year, the Norview, Va.<lb/>
native has won 12 straight<lb/>
matches, pinning five of his<lb/>
opponents during that stretch.<lb/>
Last weekend, Joyner upset the<lb/>
defending champion and number<lb/>
one seed Bob Pfeiffer of Virginia<lb/>
Tech in the finals to win the<lb/>
favfo)Strt<lb/>
�<lb/>
OPEN<lb/>
24HRS<lb/>
WTHl<lb/>
6VANSST�ers<lb/>
BUDWEISER "�"<lb/>
MILLER LITE '��.<lb/>
players m7,?,cszr<lb/>
Pfcrol Cut O r"�<lb/>
BLUE RIBBON <lb/>
ICE<lb/>
MILLER<lb/>
$5.69<lb/>
$6.99<lb/>
$8.00<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
$7.36<lb/>
$2.50<lb/>
$1.79<lb/>
Eastern Regionals.<lb/>
The victory qualifies Joyner<lb/>
for the NCAA Championships<lb/>
which opens Thursday at Cole<lb/>
Field House in College Park, Md.<lb/>
"I'm really looking forward to<lb/>
this tournament said Joyner,<lb/>
who now boasts a 20-1 overall<lb/>
record. "I feel like I can hold my<lb/>
ground against the best of them.<lb/>
I'm just determined to do well in<lb/>
the nationals. I've wrestled hard<lb/>
all season and I don't want to<lb/>
mess up here at the end of the<lb/>
year when it really oounts<lb/>
Joyner has oompiled a most<lb/>
impressive list of wrestling cred-<lb/>
entials this season. He manhan-<lb/>
dled Oregon State's Howard<lb/>
Harris 16-3 and topped N.C.<lb/>
State's highly regarded Lynn<lb/>
Morris 11-3 in dual matches.<lb/>
Harris finished fifth in the nation<lb/>
last year at 190 while Mans was<lb/>
the Atlantic Coast Conference<lb/>
champion.<lb/>
Joyner is currently ranked<lb/>
sixth in the nation at heavyweight<lb/>
by Netional Mat News and is<lb/>
listed as the number two prospect<lb/>
in the south behind Kentucky's<lb/>
Harold Smith.<lb/>
"D.Ts attitude has been<lb/>
tremendous all season long<lb/>
said ECU head coach Bill Hill.<lb/>
"Heavyweightsdon't have to run<lb/>
�s much and watch their weight<lb/>
RIGGAN<lb/>
SHOE SHOP<lb/>
REPAIR ALL<lb/>
LEATHER GOODS<lb/>
downtown Greenville<lb/>
111 West 4th. St. 758-0204<lb/>
as everybody also on the team,<lb/>
but D.T. works as hard as<lb/>
anybody. Everyone really res-<lb/>
pects him on the team. He's been<lb/>
our leader all year<lb/>
At 230 pounds, Joyner is not a<lb/>
"big" heavyweight oompared to<lb/>
most of the monsters who will be<lb/>
oompeting in the NCAA tourn-<lb/>
ament like Jimmy Jackson of<lb/>
Oklahoma State, Harold Smith of<lb/>
Kentucky and John Bowl by of<lb/>
Iowa. Joyner admits wrestling<lb/>
300 pounders is no easy task.<lb/>
"Yes, it does kind of bother<lb/>
me when I'm wrestling against<lb/>
guys who weigh a lot more than<lb/>
me said Joyner, who also plays<lb/>
defensive tackle on the Pirate<lb/>
football team. "Winning's great,<lb/>
but I don't want to get torn apart<lb/>
doing it.<lb/>
"But wrestling against those<lb/>
big guvs makes me wrestle even<lb/>
harder' continued Joynei 'When<lb/>
I' m smaller the best thing to try to<lb/>
do is get control of my man. Most<lb/>
of the real big guys are slow and I<lb/>
think my quickness really helps<lb/>
me there. But I've always believ-<lb/>
ed if I get out there and hustle<lb/>
and wrestle hard, anything can<lb/>
happen<lb/>
Hill, East Carolina's only<lb/>
wrestling Ail-American, feels<lb/>
Joyner is certainly capable of<lb/>
placing in the nations but admits<lb/>
it will take a superb performance<lb/>
for three straight days. "The<lb/>
nationals is an endurance test as<lb/>
much as anything noted Hill.<lb/>
"All the wrestlers who make it<lb/>
this far are good. But D.Ts<lb/>
confidence has improved so much<lb/>
H.L. Hodges<lb/>
Fun in the Sun Special<lb/>
All Day Friday Only!<lb/>
� Large selection of men's and ladies<lb/>
tennis shorts and shirts - V2 price<lb/>
� Large selection of warmup suits- 54 price<lb/>
� Large selection of tennis dresses- Y2 price<lb/>
� Large selection of Softball and<lb/>
baseball aluminum bats- $5.00<lb/>
� Large selection of softball and baseball<lb/>
wooden bats- $2.50<lb/>
�All swim suits- 10 off Ladies by Head,<lb/>
Adidas, Speedo and Arena Men's bv<lb/>
Adidas and Birdwell<lb/>
�All tennis jackets- V off<lb/>
� All men's and ladies brown maple leather<lb/>
deck shoes- $16.95<lb/>
PltlS- During our 3- 5 p.m. Happy<lb/>
Hour Special WRQR'S Steve Hardy will<lb/>
be broadcasting live from H.L. Hodges.<lb/>
Free t- shirts and other gifts<lb/>
to be given away, plus extra special<lb/>
items at great savings I<lb/>
from his freshman and sopho-<lb/>
more year that I think it might<lb/>
just make the difference. He's<lb/>
capable of placing, but he's<lb/>
certainly going to have to pull off<lb/>
some upaets along the way<lb/>
Joyner has pointed all season<lb/>
towards the nationals and feels<lb/>
his teammates have been his<lb/>
biggest fans.<lb/>
"Coach Hill and his assistants<lb/>
Willie Bryant have spent a lot of<lb/>
time with me explained Joyner,<lb/>
"Any my teammates have been<lb/>
pushing me hard. They all want<lb/>
me to do well. I just don't want to<lb/>
let any of them down<lb/>
Continued from p. 13<lb/>
Webb, Joanna Denton, Carrie Johnson, Qaudia Mundit, Debbie<lb/>
Justice, Patty Collins and Jo Bradberry.<lb/>
The Ice Busters advanced to the finals with a 10-5 win over Teke<lb/>
Bourbon on Ice and a 12-2 win over the Macaroni Malefactor. The Ice<lb/>
Picks reached the finals with a 6-0 win over the Who Knows and a 6-3<lb/>
win over the Necromancers.<lb/>
HEADHUNTERS, MILLER KILLERS WIN BOWLING A WARDS<lb/>
Intramural Bowling has closed its regular season and for the second<lb/>
year in a row the Miller Killers have won the dormitory title, as they<lb/>
defeated The Greene FFWC.<lb/>
Representing Fleming Dorm, the Miller Killers rolled their way to<lb/>
an easy 1665-1341 win over the FFWC's. Gaylan Hoyle led the Miller<lb/>
Killers with a 514 series.<lb/>
The women's sorority title was won by Alpha Omicron Pi, which<lb/>
took a 1574-1465 win over Alpha Xi Delta.<lb/>
In men's play, the dormitory division was won by the Belk<lb/>
Headhunters. Led by Bill Rhyne the Headhunters whalloped the Soott<lb/>
Studs, 2133-1943. Rhyne rolled a 595 set fa the Headhunters, but<lb/>
Soott's Doug Boyette was the high bowler in the finals with a 600 set.<lb/>
In the fraternity division, Sigma Nu beat Kappa Sigma 1994-1830.<lb/>
John Fox led Sigma Nu with a 566 series and a 223 high game.<lb/>
Definitely ran its season record to 40-0 in the Independent league<lb/>
with a 1911-1618 win over the Beer Frame. Lee Moore and Colin Leisy<lb/>
led Definitely with three-game sets of 490 and 487, respectively.<lb/>
The regular season men'stop bowler was JeffForsythe of the Jones<lb/>
Zack Attack. Forsythe rolled a 175.4 average for the season, beating<lb/>
out the Headhunters' Rhyne by two pins. Rhyne had a 173.4 average.<lb/>
Mark Matthews was the men's leader in the race for high game and<lb/>
high set. He had a high set of 585 and a high game of 234. Matthews'<lb/>
regular season high was topped in the playoffs, though, by Boyette's<lb/>
600 set. Rhyne rolled a set of 584.<lb/>
Over in women's play, Jeannie Williams finished with the highest<lb/>
average. She rolled a 146.5 average during the season as she helped<lb/>
lead the Miller Killerstothedorm championship. Williams' teammate,<lb/>
Gaylan Hoyle, had the second highest average of 144.2.<lb/>
Hoyle also had the highest set of the year with a 532 set. White<lb/>
Dorm's Nancy Quincy rolled a 217 game to take the honors in that<lb/>
category.<lb/>
AT LONG LAST WE,RE DONE<lb/>
Weil this has been a lengthy newsletter thi : I hope you<lb/>
got ail the way through it. I thank the h<lb/>
indulgence and their typing skills. And thanks to J<lb/>
Large Selection of Golf Suoes <lb/>
12 Pric' by Foot Joy and<lb/>
ETOINIC TITLFIST,<lb/>
TOPFLITE, AND<lb/>
<lb/>
PROSTAFF Golf balls,<lb/>
$11.50dozen <lb/>
All IZOD LaCosta shirts L<lb/>
in stock $13.95, reg. $19.00.<lb/>
20 off on all golf bags,<lb/>
over 100 to chose from<lb/>
located at<lb/>
Greenville Golf &amp; Country Club<lb/>
OK of Memorial Dr.<lb/>
Gordon Pulp Phne 756-0504<lb/>
Pro Shoo<lb/>
<pb facs="00058043_0015"/><lb/>
16 March 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page IS<lb/>
Joyner, Northrup qualify for nationals<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The finals of the Eastern<lb/>
Regional Championships las<lb/>
weekend in Williamsburg, Va.<lb/>
looked more like a dual match<lb/>
between old Southern Conference<lb/>
rivals East Carolina and Wiliam<lb/>
and Mary.<lb/>
The Indians sent seven<lb/>
wrestlers into the finals and<lb/>
advanced five to the NCAA<lb/>
Championships as they outdist-<lb/>
anced East Carolina for first<lb/>
place.<lb/>
East Carolina had six in the<lb/>
finals, and came away with two<lb/>
individual champion to finish with<lb/>
75.5 points just ahead of third<lb/>
place Virginia Tech with 67.5<lb/>
coins.<lb/>
D.T. Joyner and Vic Northrup<lb/>
won their respective weight<lb/>
classes to qualify lor the NCAA<lb/>
Championships which opens to-<lb/>
day at Cole Field House in<lb/>
College Park, Md.<lb/>
Joyner upset the defending<lb/>
champion and number one seed<lb/>
Bob Pfeiffer of Virginia Tech in<lb/>
the heavyweight finals while Vic<lb/>
Northrup edged Slippery Rock's<lb/>
John Stroup 10-8 in the 177 pound<lb/>
weight class.<lb/>
"We wrestled well as a<lb/>
team said ECU head coach Bill<lb/>
Hill. "I think we suprised a lot of<lb/>
teams there when we got six in<lb/>
the finals. I was real pleased to<lb/>
see D.T. Joyner and Vic Northrup<lb/>
advance to the nationals, al-<lb/>
though I wish we could have<lb/>
gotten a few more individual<lb/>
champions<lb/>
Joyner, currently ranked sixth<lb/>
in the nation by National Mat<lb/>
News, pinned Bruce Uvegas of<lb/>
Farleigh Dickinson and John<lb/>
Ceremina of Williams and Mary<lb/>
and decisioned Chuck Tursky of<lb/>
Slippery Rock 6-1 to reach the<lb/>
finals before upsetting Pfeiffer.<lb/>
"Although Pfeiffer was bigger<lb/>
than D.T. he really handled him<lb/>
with very little trouble noted<lb/>
Hill. "He was probably the<lb/>
biggest heavyweight D.T. has<lb/>
wrestled this season. But I was<lb/>
glad to see him wrestle well<lb/>
against a much bigger opponent<lb/>
because it will certainly help him<lb/>
in the NCAA tournament<lb/>
Probably the tournament's<lb/>
biggest suprise was Vic Northrup.<lb/>
Northup, a native of Waverly,<lb/>
N.Y. pinned two of his oppo-<lb/>
nents and took a narrow 4-3<lb/>
decision over Va. Tech's Bob<lb/>
Reisch to reach the finals.<lb/>
"Vic has consistently im-<lb/>
proved through the season<lb/>
explained Hill. "He was definite-<lb/>
ly an underdog going into the<lb/>
tournament, but I thought it was<lb/>
the first time he wrestled to his<lb/>
potential in quite awhile<lb/>
The Pirates had a total of<lb/>
seven place winners in the<lb/>
tournament. Jay Dever defeated<lb/>
Cincinnati's Mith Kearby 8-7 to<lb/>
win third place in the 190 weight<lb/>
class.<lb/>
Paul Osman took second at<lb/>
134 after losing in overtime to Old<lb/>
Dominion's Anthony Lee. Frank<lb/>
Schaede lost to William and<lb/>
Mary's Max Lorenzo 9-3 in the<lb/>
150 weight class while Steve<lb/>
Goode dropped another overtime<lb/>
decision to Gary Drewry of<lb/>
William and Mary to finish<lb/>
second at 158.<lb/>
William and Mary's Greg<lb/>
Fronczak avenged an earlier<lb/>
season loss against Butch Revils<lb/>
Women's softball team abuses North Carolina<lb/>
Central in doubleheader debut ; Tarheels next<lb/>
Q nA m A4PQD A kA .ui.   . . .  <lb/>
By DAVID MERRM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Girl's softball, East Carolina's<lb/>
newest sport, opened its season<lb/>
Saturday with a double header<lb/>
against North Carolina Central.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates softball<lb/>
debut oegan with proper style,<lb/>
taking a double header 10-4 and<lb/>
16-6 .at the expense �f an<lb/>
unsuspecting NCCU team.<lb/>
Womens softball has arrived<lb/>
at ECU and thus another step in<lb/>
the development of a well roun-<lb/>
ded athletic program has been<lb/>
taken.<lb/>
'We felt that we needed to<lb/>
expand women's athletics. It<lb/>
definitely will be well worth the<lb/>
schools time and continuing ef-<lb/>
forts supporting a program such<lb/>
as this said first year coach<lb/>
Alita Dillon.<lb/>
"We have developed a varsity<lb/>
program here, and although this<lb/>
is Softball's biggest year at ECU<lb/>
many people have expressed<lb/>
support and an excellent display<lb/>
of desire to keep women's softball<lb/>
at East Carolina<lb/>
"Since we are a young team<lb/>
and first starting out, our budget<lb/>
is not quite as high as other<lb/>
school we play.<lb/>
"Fortunately fa us, the girls<lb/>
know many of the other teams<lb/>
from either summer league a<lb/>
high school commented Dillon.<lb/>
Womens softball has evolved<lb/>
from what used to be a sandlot<lb/>
game to a very competitive level<lb/>
of play.<lb/>
In November, 40 girls tried<lb/>
out for the first ever softball<lb/>
team; after a few weeks of<lb/>
practice, twenty girls were cut.<lb/>
"After we had the team, we<lb/>
went through a seven week period<lb/>
of weight conditioning and prepa-<lb/>
ration for the season opener, said<lb/>
Dillon. "We worked hard and I<lb/>
am pleased to say that the girls<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
really look good<lb/>
And look good they did as the<lb/>
Lady Pirates handed two lopsided<lb/>
defeats to NCCU.<lb/>
"We played very well toge-<lb/>
ther said senior co-captain<lb/>
Gaye Hines.<lb/>
"It surprised me to see a<lb/>
group of girls like us play so well<lb/>
together, after never playing as a<lb/>
team before<lb/>
A truer word hath never been<lb/>
spoken as ECU pounded a total of<lb/>
over forty hits, twenty-six runs,<lb/>
and only one error.<lb/>
"All the girls played well,<lb/>
everyone on the team played, and<lb/>
I kept switching teams to see how<lb/>
the girls could play together.<lb/>
All combinations were win-<lb/>
ners and now I'm faced with the<lb/>
dilemma of deciding who plays<lb/>
when stated Mrs. Dillon.<lb/>
Hobm Faggart and Gae<lb/>
Hines are co-captains fa this<lb/>
years squad.<lb/>
A real test comes to the girls<lb/>
this Friday when the Tar Heels of<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill invade Pirate<lb/>
territay to play a double header<lb/>
against ECU.<lb/>
Fan support is essential and a<lb/>
good aowd can change a whote<lb/>
game.<lb/>
for sale �?<lb/>
FOR SALE: Used Electrophonic<lb/>
stereo fa $50.00. Call 756-6307.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Lafayette 950-A 100<lb/>
watt stereo amp. and RK-84<lb/>
8-track tape player. Call Brian in<lb/>
evenings. 756-1459.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Calssic sports car.<lb/>
Triumph GT6. Very sound mech-<lb/>
anically. Radials, new battery<lb/>
$1295.00. May trade. 758-7397<lb/>
days.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1971 BMW motor-<lb/>
cycle. 750CC. "Best road mach-<lb/>
ine in the world $1200.00<lb/>
partial trades considered. Phone<lb/>
756-7059 4 to 10 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: "69 Mustang in good<lb/>
cond. $500.00. Ftrone 758-1491.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Variety of house-<lb/>
plants, potted and unpotted,<lb/>
$1.00 and up, all extremely<lb/>
healthy; 2 plant stands hand<lb/>
built, 6 hand framed pictures.<lb/>
Call 758-4395 ask fa Rai Apt.<lb/>
200 Geagetown Apts.<lb/>
FOR SALE: AMFM 8-track<lb/>
stereo system. Call 752-8676.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Nickel-plated piccolo.<lb/>
New pads and wires. Appraisal of<lb/>
$195.00 Will sell fa $130.00<lb/>
Includes case and tun'ng rod. Call<lb/>
752-9039 ask fa Sue.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '70 Buick in very<lb/>
good cond. $700.00 Also '73<lb/>
Honda 500-four in excellent cond.<lb/>
Only 7500 miles $850.00 Call<lb/>
756-3054.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 7 cubic feet refrigera-<lb/>
ta in good oond. $40.00 Call<lb/>
758-8688.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Used guitar with<lb/>
steel strings. Black. $25.00 Call<lb/>
758-2577 after 530 p.m.<lb/>
for rent (jj<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: College<lb/>
View Apts. $55.00 month plus Vi<lb/>
utilities. Call 758-2580 a come by<lb/>
Apt. 914.<lb/>
NEEDED: Furnished apt. fa 2<lb/>
responsible females from May<lb/>
20th to July 15. If you can help<lb/>
call 752-4461 a 752-8014.<lb/>
NEEDED. A responsible female<lb/>
roommate to share a 2 bedroom<lb/>
apt. Call 758-5794.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Third<lb/>
person needed to share apt. at<lb/>
Langston Park Apts. $66 plus V4<lb/>
utilities. Call David at 758-4406.<lb/>
ROOMS AVAILABLE: Super loc-<lb/>
ation fa serious and a waking<lb/>
male students. 136 N. Library St.<lb/>
On brown SGA route. Washer<lb/>
and dryer, central air and heat,<lb/>
private bath adjoining 2 bed-<lb/>
rooms in back. $65.00 plus Vi<lb/>
utilities. Call Steve Aldridge,<lb/>
proprieta 75&amp;O022.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Partially furnished<lb/>
apt. on Chicod St Grimesland.<lb/>
$35 mo. Contact Roland Howell at<lb/>
N. Chicod St. beside Sears.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: needed<lb/>
to share apt. dose to campus.<lb/>
$58.75 per month plus V utilities.<lb/>
Phone 758-7786.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Grad<lb/>
student needs responsible person<lb/>
at Village Green. Right at SGA<lb/>
bus stop. 3 minute ride to<lb/>
Memaial Gym. 758-3830.<lb/>
WANTED TO RENT: Room in<lb/>
house, a small apartment fa<lb/>
summer and fail. Call Sharon at<lb/>
756-6137.<lb/>
ROOMMATES NEEDED: fa 3<lb/>
bdrm. apt. in Eastbrook. Summer<lb/>
and fall. Call Cindy at 752-8405.<lb/>
lost<lb/>
2�<lb/>
LOST: Pair of brown frame<lb/>
glasses between White Dam -<lb/>
Bus stop - Speight - Austin.<lb/>
Glasses were in a blue jean case<lb/>
with gold stitching on front.<lb/>
Anyone knowing the whereabouts<lb/>
please call 758-8100 a cane by<lb/>
315 White. REWARD<lb/>
LOST: A man's Bulova watch at<lb/>
the Styx concert. Great senti-<lb/>
mental value. Substantial reward<lb/>
offered. Call 758-1744 befae 12.<lb/>
$20 REWARD: Lost etched silver<lb/>
Parker Fountain Pen of aentimen-<lb/>
tal value. If still intact, "P"<lb/>
monogram on each end. Call<lb/>
752-6710 a 752-8579.<lb/>
personaKj)<lb/>
FOUND: One ladies "Cross" pen<lb/>
and pencil set with case in front of<lb/>
Graham Bldg. Tues March 14.<lb/>
Call 752-0752 to identify. Ask fa<lb/>
Taiy.<lb/>
NEED SEVERAL people to assist<lb/>
Associated Photographic Services<lb/>
and the Greenville Rescue Squad<lb/>
in a fund raising project. Earn<lb/>
$3-5 per hour on commission. Call<lb/>
Jim Anderson at 752-7497 a<lb/>
Capt. DR. Daniels at 752-4090.<lb/>
ALTERATIONS: Winter things<lb/>
too long - too big? Call Kathy<lb/>
752-8642 a 752-8444.<lb/>
FLEA MARKET: Pitt County<lb/>
located on Pactolus Hwy 33 eighth<lb/>
of a mile off Greene St. Open<lb/>
Wed. &amp; Fri. 12-5 Sat. 10-5 Sun.<lb/>
1-5. Las of used furniture and<lb/>
brie brae.<lb/>
WANT TO BUY: Used bike either<lb/>
Raleigh a Pega. Call 752-8676.<lb/>
WORK IN JAPAN: Teach English<lb/>
caiversatiai. No experience,<lb/>
degree, a Japanese required.<lb/>
Send loig, stamped, self-addres-<lb/>
sed envelope fa details Japan<lb/>
327, 411 W. Center, Centralia,<lb/>
WA 98531.<lb/>
PROFESSORS: Lawn care service<lb/>
- now taking aders fa summer<lb/>
sessiai, beginning May 1. Inex-<lb/>
pensive, expert wak. Call now;<lb/>
we do have a quota. Phone<lb/>
758-8226. Greenville area oily.<lb/>
NEEDED: Persot who goes home<lb/>
to Kinston a drives through<lb/>
Kinston evay Friday. Will help<lb/>
pay fa gas expenses. Canna leave<lb/>
until 3 p.m. Call Mike 752-5238<lb/>
after 3 p.m. MW &amp; after 2 p.m. T<lb/>
TH.<lb/>
EXCELLENT MONEY-MAKING<lb/>
oppatunity. Make good money<lb/>
part-time - campus representative<lb/>
needed fa fun and easy to sell<lb/>
product - no gimmicks - proven<lb/>
campus winner. Send your name,<lb/>
address, phone, school, year of<lb/>
graduation, and self-addressed<lb/>
stamped envelope to: Fantasy<lb/>
Productions, Inc. 23 Stone Ave<lb/>
Ashland, Ma. 06721.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058043_0016"/><lb/>
Page 16 FOUNTAINHEAD 16 March 1976<lb/>
AOVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised<lb/>
items is required to be<lb/>
readily available for sale at<lb/>
or below the advertised price in each A4P<lb/>
Store, except as specifically noted in this ad.<lb/>
prices effective thru SATURDAY, mar 1. at ap in Greenville<lb/>
A4P is a poultry shop<lb/>
Wrida Feelin<lb/>
Sweepstakes<lb/>
A4P is a butcher shop<lb/>
A4P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
WHOLE BEEF RIBS<lb/>
18 TO 24 LB.<lb/>
AVERAGE<lb/>
7<lb/>
) CUT FREE<lb/>
 INTO STEAKS<lb/>
&amp; roasts'<lb/>
$39<lb/>
A4P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN-FED BEEF<lb/>
BONELESS TOP<lb/>
ROUND<lb/>
OR BONELESS BOTTOM<lb/>
ROUND STEAK<lb/>
Y WESTERN GRAIN-FED BEEF<lb/>
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A ONE WEEK TRIP ��<lb/>
FOR TWO TO tfel<lb/>
Busch Gardens<lb/>
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Includes<lb/>
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79<lb/>
Trip lor two to Buch Gardans<lb/>
Including round top air far hold<lb/>
accommodations tor aavan nights<lb/>
ground transportation athlla In Flonda.<lb/>
and unlimited admlaaions to lh� Dark<lb/>
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rani a car<lb/>
�13-877-6051<lb/>
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RATH BRAND MILD BREAKFAST<lb/>
SAUSAGE<lb/>
A&amp; P Quality Heavy Western Fed Beef<lb/>
SIRLOIN STEAKS<lb/>
PORTERHOUSE OR<lb/>
T�BONE STEAKS<lb/>
$1.78<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
3"er good only in Greenville<lb/>
OR BONELESS<lb/>
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OR<lb/>
NAVY BEANS<lb/>
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15 02. TTi <lb/>
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Busch Gardens is 300<lb/>
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in their natural<lb/>
surroundings, plus<lb/>
rides and other<lb/>
attractions. The<lb/>
area Is covered by train,<lb/>
monorail, and boat It is<lb/>
second to Disney World<lb/>
in Florida attractions<lb/>
with a 2,500,000 attendance<lb/>
�, year ��<lb/>
WtlhUMl Hum<lb/>
Ct�.t, �,� r B-Ww �, � ����� �n<lb/>
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BFKaSjrjS WIN A �lp TOR 2 TO FLORIDAS BUSCH<lb/>
55( ,&amp;'�'���"� GARDEN?. OR ONE OF MANY OTHER<lb/>
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���m �miHs. M afj sum, I fpv-y<lb/>
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