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<pb facs="00058047_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity for over 50 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of 8,ouu,<lb/>
this issue is 12 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
"v m? n,?iii? Nr?th Carolina 4 April 1978<lb/>
0NTHEIN3DE<lb/>
Mid-East peacep. 3<lb/>
Geologyp. 5<lb/>
Mangionep. 8<lb/>
losesp. 10<lb/>
Voi. No. 53, HO.M East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
SGA off<lb/>
take oath of office<lb/>
by JEANNIE WILLIAMS<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Newly elected officers of the<lb/>
Student Government Association<lb/>
(SGA) were sworn into office by<lb/>
Kieran Shanahan, attorney<lb/>
general, at Monday's legislature<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
Sworn in during the ceremony<lb/>
were Tommy Joe Payne, SGA<lb/>
president; David Cartwright,<lb/>
vice-president; Zack Smith, trea-<lb/>
surer; and Lynn Bell, secretary.<lb/>
In his first address before the<lb/>
legislature as president, Payne<lb/>
spoke on his efforts to seek<lb/>
student support and ideas fa<lb/>
changing the existing visitation<lb/>
policy.<lb/>
Payne said that he will ask<lb/>
dorms to hold hall meetings for<lb/>
suggestions and ideas to see if a<lb/>
better solution was available.<lb/>
Payne also reoommended<lb/>
publishing a four-page leaflet<lb/>
before summer freshmen orienta-<lb/>
tion to explain the purposes of the<lb/>
SGA to all inooming freshmen.<lb/>
Former SGA president Neil<lb/>
Sessoms said in his farewell<lb/>
speech before the legislature that<lb/>
overall, the SGA had been a very<lb/>
good experience fa him.<lb/>
"A la of people accuse the<lb/>
SGA of being egaistical, but I<lb/>
think that the legislatas had the<lb/>
students in mind said Sessans.<lb/>
Ron Lewis, Chairperson of the<lb/>
Elections Committee, reported on<lb/>
theresultsof last week'selections<lb/>
and the passage of the constitu-<lb/>
tional amendment.<lb/>
Lewis said that no famal<lb/>
charges a complaints had been<lb/>
made concerning the elections.<lb/>
Lewis reoommended that the<lb/>
legislature not push a constitu-<lb/>
tional amendment through so<lb/>
late as the recent one was.<lb/>
He also reoommended that<lb/>
next year's committee oonsider<lb/>
rules fa off-campus campaign-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
During the legislature's busi-<lb/>
ness meeting, the Law Society<lb/>
was appropriated $350 fa 12 to 14<lb/>
members to go to Washington,<lb/>
DC- w<lb/>
The Law Society plans to meet<lb/>
with North Carolina Senatas<lb/>
Jesse Helms and Robert Magan<lb/>
See LEGISLATURE, p. 5<lb/>
Outstanding women<lb/>
students awarded<lb/>
by JULIE EVERETTE<lb/>
Assistant NewsEdita<lb/>
Outstanding women students<lb/>
from each department on campus<lb/>
were recognized last Wednesday<lb/>
at Women's Awareness Night<lb/>
a program presented in Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center.<lb/>
The program was sponsaed<lb/>
by the Wanen's Reisdence<lb/>
Council.<lb/>
Pamela Holt, Residence Hall<lb/>
Administrata and Panhellenic<lb/>
Advisa, received the ECU Out-<lb/>
standing Woman of the Year<lb/>
award fa 1978.<lb/>
Guest speaka was Lillian<lb/>
Woo, from Raleigh, who spoke on<lb/>
the program's theme, "Do you<lb/>
know where you're going to?"<lb/>
Woo was the first woman<lb/>
candidate fo N.C. State Audita ,<lb/>
and isfounda and directa of the<lb/>
Consumer center in Raleigh.<lb/>
Woo served on the N.C.<lb/>
Legislative Service Committee<lb/>
Conmission, served as president<lb/>
and treasurer on the Executive<lb/>
Council, and was a member of the<lb/>
jimmy Carter steering commit-<lb/>
tee.<lb/>
Woo spoke on women's chan-<lb/>
ging role in society.<lb/>
"Fa all who believe that<lb/>
women are delicate and placed on<lb/>
a pedestal, autal reality lets us<lb/>
know that it just isn't so she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"We women have rxrt taken<lb/>
our full role. W now acknowledge<lb/>
our goals, and those goals are out<lb/>
thae fa the reaching and<lb/>
attaining Woo said.<lb/>
Woo said North Carolina has<lb/>
not yet elected a woman fa<lb/>
state wide office.<lb/>
"I feel in the near future we<lb/>
will elect a woman fa state wide<lb/>
offioe she said.<lb/>
"We have created, a betta<lb/>
environment fa wanen candi-<lb/>
dates offaing public services.<lb/>
"They are much mae dedi-<lb/>
cated and hard-waking than their<lb/>
See WOO, p. 3<lb/>
sSaEXECUTIVEOFFICERS for 1978-79 were<lb/>
sworn in by Attorney General Kieran Shanahan at<lb/>
the legislature meeting Monday. (L-R) Zack Smith,<lb/>
treasurer; Lynn Bell, secretary; David Cartwright,<lb/>
vice-president; Tommy Joe Payne, president. Photo<lb/>
by Kirk Kingsbury<lb/>
ttributes his victory<lb/>
rsonalized campaign<lb/>
NCSL meets April 5<lb/>
ByMARCADLER<lb/>
Staff Writa<lb/>
The Nath Carolina Student<lb/>
Legislature (NCSL) will oonvene<lb/>
in the Old Capital Building on<lb/>
April 5 at 1230 p.m.<lb/>
This is the first time since<lb/>
1961 that the NCSL will meet in<lb/>
the Old Capital Building.<lb/>
The request to open the<lb/>
forty-fii at Annual Legislative Ses<lb/>
siai was granted by the Legisla-<lb/>
tive Service Commission.<lb/>
Also, the NCSL will hold the<lb/>
closing ceremonies in the Old<lb/>
Capital building on Sun April 9<lb/>
at 10 a.m.<lb/>
Doug Marlet, a cartoonist fa<lb/>
the Chariate Observa, will be<lb/>
guest speaker fa the banquet on<lb/>
Sat April 8 at 7 p.m.<lb/>
The ECU delegatioi will<lb/>
attend with about 18 active<lb/>
members.<lb/>
Faty percent of all the<lb/>
student's past legislation has<lb/>
become state law.<lb/>
The Fatieth Annual Legisla-<lb/>
tive Session, 1977, produced<lb/>
legislation that is presently befae<lb/>
the Genaal Assembly.<lb/>
Such as; Unifam Child Cus-<lb/>
tody Act of N.C, Migrant Sea-<lb/>
sonal Workers, and the Executive<lb/>
Refam Act which went befae the<lb/>
Genaal Assembly during the fall<lb/>
moiths.<lb/>
By ROBERT SWAIM<lb/>
Advertising Manger<lb/>
Student Government Associa-<lb/>
tion (SGA) President-elect<lb/>
Tommy Joe Payne said Monday<lb/>
that he attributes his victay in<lb/>
last Wednesday's SGA election to<lb/>
his "pasonalized campaign<lb/>
"From the first day of the<lb/>
campaign I visited all but three<lb/>
dorms said Payne.<lb/>
"I went doa todoa to explain<lb/>
some of my programs that I plan<lb/>
to wak on<lb/>
Payne said that visiting the<lb/>
students in the dams made them<lb/>
feel I ike the offioe of the president<lb/>
can be accessible.<lb/>
"The main issues I talked<lb/>
about were campus security,<lb/>
dam contracts and a three year<lb/>
textbook adoption program said<lb/>
Payne.<lb/>
Accading to Payne he re-<lb/>
ceived a good response in the<lb/>
dams.<lb/>
Payne received 44.1 pacent of<lb/>
the vrte cast in the presidential<lb/>
race, the nearest runna-up was<lb/>
10 pacent behind.<lb/>
"I was suppated by a cross-<lb/>
section of all studenta I did not<lb/>
have the backing of any particular<lb/>
school a department said<lb/>
Payne. "I didn't try to appease<lb/>
any special intaest groups<lb/>
Payne said that one of his first<lb/>
actions as president wi" to to<lb/>
appant his cabinet.<lb/>
Accading to Payne, he will<lb/>
scon begin wak on a new<lb/>
visitation policy.<lb/>
" I am sending a letta to evay<lb/>
hall advisa to request that they<lb/>
get some ideas from the students<lb/>
on how to improve visitation<lb/>
policy. We will be in contact with<lb/>
sevaal rtha schools in the UNC<lb/>
system and probably the Univa-<lb/>
sity of Virginia said Payne.<lb/>
Payne said that he is planning<lb/>
an SGA infamatioi sheet fa<lb/>
freshmen. The pamphlet would<lb/>
explain what SGA is all about and<lb/>
how they can get involved in<lb/>
SGA.<lb/>
"These will be distributed this<lb/>
sumrrer during freshman aienta-<lb/>
tioi Payne said.<lb/>
Aooading to Payne, he is<lb/>
already laying the groundwak fa<lb/>
his three year textbook adoption<lb/>
program.<lb/>
"We will be waking with Mr.<lb/>
May at the Student Supply Stae<lb/>
on this program said Payne.<lb/>
Payne said that he plans fa<lb/>
the Secretary of Acadmic Affairs<lb/>
tofam an aganizatiai fa hawr<lb/>
fratanities, something similar to<lb/>
the Inta-Fratanity Council.<lb/>
Monitor raising 'feasible<lb/>
but finances are crucial<lb/>
By GEORGE OLSEN<lb/>
Staff Writa<lb/>
The raising of the Civil War<lb/>
ship Monita is feasible accading<lb/>
to Gaadn Watts of the N.C.<lb/>
Division of Archives and Histay.<lb/>
Structural integrity studies of<lb/>
the remains of the vessel located<lb/>
off Cape Hattaas will detamine<lb/>
whetha raising the Mrjnita is a<lb/>
possibility, Watts said.<lb/>
Watts said that "state-of-the-<lb/>
art" technology would be requir-<lb/>
ed to aing the remains up in the<lb/>
near future.<lb/>
Methods of raising the ship<lb/>
include lifting the ship up with a<lb/>
pallor, of the sea bed whae it<lb/>
rests, or disassembling the ship<lb/>
on the sea flea and ainging the<lb/>
remains up piece by piece.<lb/>
A masta plan fa collecting<lb/>
infamatia on the feasibility of<lb/>
raising the Monita will be made<lb/>
this summa, aooading to Watts.<lb/>
Watts said that previous "<lb/>
tempts to raise aha sunken<lb/>
ships have been failures.<lb/>
Finanoes are aucial to the<lb/>
actual raising of the ship. Costs<lb/>
oould run upwards of $20,000,000<lb/>
said Watts.<lb/>
Aooading to Watts, the<lb/>
"most effective way of intapret-<lb/>
ing the site" oould be studying<lb/>
the ship in great detail, then<lb/>
making a reconstruction of the<lb/>
ship.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058047_0002"/><lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 4 April 1978<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi Bowling<lb/>
Scholars<lb/>
Photo Jobs Film<lb/>
There will be several positions<lb/>
open fa the 1978-79 school year<lb/>
as campus photographer. Any<lb/>
interested ECU student may<lb/>
come by the FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
offioe between 9 a.m. and 4:30<lb/>
p.m. weekdays to obtain an<lb/>
application fa saeening.<lb/>
Be prepared to list previous<lb/>
wak experience and photogra-<lb/>
phic knowledge. Also, small<lb/>
portfolio, (preferably black and<lb/>
white, although cola will be<lb/>
accepted), must be submitted.<lb/>
The portfolio is not necessary<lb/>
until after the applicant has been<lb/>
contacted fa an interview.<lb/>
Crusade<lb/>
Leadership Training Class<lb/>
sponsaed by Campus Crusade<lb/>
fa Christ, meets ai Thursdays at<lb/>
7 p.m. in Brewster C-103.<lb/>
After a time of fellowship,<lb/>
there is an oppatunity to learn<lb/>
mae about how to love God and<lb/>
love others.<lb/>
The four classes offered are<lb/>
Christain life, dynamics of discip-<lb/>
leship, dynamics of ministry, and<lb/>
life of Christ which is open to<lb/>
those interested in investigating<lb/>
the person of Jesus Christ.<lb/>
SOULS<lb/>
Elections fa S.O.U.L.S. offic-<lb/>
ers fa the 78-79 term will be held<lb/>
this caning Wed April 5, fran 9<lb/>
a.m. to 4 p.m. at the AACC.<lb/>
Please come out and suppat<lb/>
thiseffat. I.D. and activity card<lb/>
will be required.<lb/>
Our weekly S.O.U.L.S. meet-<lb/>
ing will be oi Thurs April 6 at 7<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Please be prompt.<lb/>
Raquetball<lb/>
All people who are interested<lb/>
in faming a Raquetball Spats<lb/>
Club are urged to attend the<lb/>
meeting Wed April 5, at 7 p.m.<lb/>
at 104 Memaial Gym to discuss<lb/>
Sports Club Council guidelines,<lb/>
elect officials, and aher impa-<lb/>
tant matters concerning the<lb/>
Raquetball Spats Club.<lb/>
There will also be a meeting<lb/>
Thurs 7 p.m 104 Memaial<lb/>
Gym. April 6.<lb/>
Buc<lb/>
Anyaganizatioi that does not<lb/>
have a picture and an inomatioi<lb/>
sheet into the BUCCANEER<lb/>
office by Tues April 11, will not<lb/>
appear in the 1977-78<lb/>
BUCCANEER. If you have had<lb/>
your picture made, please come<lb/>
to the BUCCANEER offioe any<lb/>
Tuesday a Thursday afternoon<lb/>
and identify the members in your<lb/>
picture. We must have this<lb/>
infamation fa the yearbook, too.<lb/>
Come see the beginnings of<lb/>
new wald ader based complete-<lb/>
ly oi spiritual principles.<lb/>
A film (set in Nicar,agua and<lb/>
several rural Latin American<lb/>
countries) will be shown in room<lb/>
242 of Mendenhall at 4 p.m.<lb/>
Wednesday. Everyone weloome!<lb/>
Phi Alpha Theta<lb/>
Phi Alpha Theta, international<lb/>
histay hana society, will be<lb/>
meeting Mon April 10, at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in the Richard Todd Room.<lb/>
Election of new officers and<lb/>
constitution revision will be mat-<lb/>
ters of business. All members<lb/>
please attend. Refreshments will<lb/>
be served.<lb/>
Scholarships<lb/>
The Senia Class of 1978 is<lb/>
awarding $250 scholarships to ten<lb/>
students at ECU who will be<lb/>
enrolled as a full-time student<lb/>
Fall Semester 1978, and who has<lb/>
excelled academically and has<lb/>
provided outstanding service to<lb/>
the University.<lb/>
If you feel that you qualify fa<lb/>
aie of these scholarships, drop by<lb/>
the SGA Office between 9 a.m.<lb/>
and 5 p.m Monday thru Friday<lb/>
and fill out an application. The<lb/>
deadline fa applications is Fri-<lb/>
day, April 7. Again: befae you<lb/>
can be considered fa aie of these<lb/>
scholarships, you must:<lb/>
1. Be presently enrolled at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Be a full-time student at<lb/>
ECU fall semester 1978.<lb/>
3. Have excelled academically<lb/>
at ECU.<lb/>
4. Have provided outstanding<lb/>
service to ECU.<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
This weekend, the Student<lb/>
Union Coffeehouse Committee<lb/>
will p-esent what is probably our<lb/>
finest act of the year: Sally<lb/>
Spring, Thursday and Friday<lb/>
night, at 9 and 10 p.m in room<lb/>
15, Mendenhall.<lb/>
A native of Gddsbao, she<lb/>
now lives in Winston-Salem. She<lb/>
has appeared in the Coffeehouse<lb/>
fa the past two years to<lb/>
enthralled audiences.<lb/>
Copies of her latest album<lb/>
BIRO will be available.<lb/>
Sally writes and sings some of<lb/>
the most tender and introspective<lb/>
songs you're likely to hear on this<lb/>
a any other campus.<lb/>
Don't miss this exceptional<lb/>
perfamer.<lb/>
Fa the token sum of fifty<lb/>
cents, you can enjoy the inimit-<lb/>
able Sally Spring, plus all the<lb/>
snacks you want a need<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi wilj -hold a<lb/>
business meeting, Wed April 5<lb/>
at 6 p.m. in Austin 132.<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
Mandatay meeting fa all<lb/>
NCSL members. Tues April 4 at<lb/>
4 p.m. in MSC by Information<lb/>
Desk.<lb/>
The importance of this meet-<lb/>
ing is final preparation fa the<lb/>
41st Annual Legislative Sessioi.<lb/>
Matters that will be discussed<lb/>
are: Bills, Transportation arran-<lb/>
gements, and Parlimaentary Re-<lb/>
view amoig a few.<lb/>
Please be pranpt - much to<lb/>
do.<lb/>
Fa further information call<lb/>
Joe Tanahey, 758-7968 o Marc<lb/>
Adler 758-9523.<lb/>
Pinball<lb/>
Who's the ECU "Pinball<lb/>
Wizard?"<lb/>
Mendenhall would like to<lb/>
know. So, to find out who's<lb/>
campus champ, a Spring Pinball<lb/>
Tournament sponsaed by Men-<lb/>
denhall will be held Moiday<lb/>
through Thursday, from 9 a.m.<lb/>
until 11 p.m April 3 through<lb/>
April 20.<lb/>
The amusement games area<lb/>
located on the ground floa of<lb/>
Mendenhall, is the site of the<lb/>
three-week event.<lb/>
There are 13 chances to win<lb/>
with the Grand Prize going to the<lb/>
person who accumulates the most<lb/>
high scores fa the tournament.<lb/>
The first place winner will<lb/>
choose from prizes woth $25<lb/>
each - a Happy Stoe gift<lb/>
certificate, dinner fa two at the<lb/>
King &amp; Queen, a billiards cue<lb/>
stick with case, a a Brody's gift<lb/>
certificate, plus the ECU Pinball<lb/>
Championship Trophy.<lb/>
Fa secaid prize, T-shirts will<lb/>
be awarded to the twelve indiv-<lb/>
idual winners.<lb/>
If you're into pinball, get on<lb/>
over to Mendenhall fa the Spring<lb/>
Pinball Tournament.<lb/>
You may be the ECU  Pinball<lb/>
Wizard<lb/>
Tournament rules are avail-<lb/>
able at the billiards center in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma will meet<lb/>
Wed April 5, at, at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
room 221 Mendenhall.<lb/>
Elections will be held and<lb/>
plans fa the car wash will be<lb/>
finalized. All members are urged<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
Outing<lb/>
The Outing Club will meet on<lb/>
Thursday evenings at 7 30 p.m. in<lb/>
the basement of Memaial Gym.<lb/>
We have some exciting trips<lb/>
planned so any interested student<lb/>
is invited to attend.<lb/>
Every Friday from 2 p.m. until<lb/>
5 p.m. is Happy Hour at the<lb/>
Bowling Center in Mendenhall.<lb/>
Prices are one-third off so come<lb/>
over and take advantage of the<lb/>
great savings.<lb/>
PRC<lb/>
Attention PRC majos a<lb/>
potential majos!<lb/>
There will be a PRC society<lb/>
meeting tonight at 7 p.m. in room<lb/>
221 Mendenhall.<lb/>
A film may also be shown if<lb/>
available from the Australian<lb/>
Information Servioe.<lb/>
Furthermoe, APril<lb/>
Nominations will be accepted fo<lb/>
next year's PRC officers and<lb/>
elections will be held on April 12<lb/>
and 13.<lb/>
Also, on Wed April 5,<lb/>
Special Olympics are going to be<lb/>
held. Fo further information<lb/>
oontact Ted Waters 752-1026.<lb/>
Fit, April 7, the N.C. Reaeat<lb/>
-ion and Parks Society begins 8:30<lb/>
a.m. and ends at 4:30 p.m. A<lb/>
variety of speakers will be there.<lb/>
Seniors<lb/>
ATTENTION: Second Semester<lb/>
Graduates.<lb/>
Undergraduate caps and<lb/>
gowns are on Oder.<lb/>
Delivery date fo caps and<lb/>
gowns is April 4, 5, and 6 at the<lb/>
Student Supply Stae.<lb/>
Graduate caps and gowns will<lb/>
be delivered April 4, 5, 6 at the<lb/>
Student Supply Stoe.<lb/>
These Keepsake gowns are<lb/>
your to keep providing the $10<lb/>
graduation fee has been paid.<lb/>
Fo those receiving the<lb/>
Masters Degree the $10 fee pays<lb/>
fo your cap and gown, but there<lb/>
is an extra fee of $7.95 fo your<lb/>
hood. Any questions pertaining to<lb/>
caps and gowns should be<lb/>
referred to the Students Supply<lb/>
Stoe, Wright Building.<lb/>
Fellowship<lb/>
Full Gospel Student Feilow-<lb/>
ship will meet Thursday night.<lb/>
Dr. Art Hansen from N.C.<lb/>
State will be the special guest at<lb/>
our Student Fellowship.<lb/>
Anyone who hasn't heard<lb/>
Artie talk about the exciting life in<lb/>
the Lad won't want to miss it!<lb/>
Room 221 Mendenhall at 7:30<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Lost ft found<lb/>
The campus Lost and Found<lb/>
Department is located at the<lb/>
Information Desk in Mendenhall.<lb/>
We have books, rings, glass-<lb/>
es, coats, watches, umbrellas.<lb/>
If you have lost an item,<lb/>
please oome by the Infamation<lb/>
Desk and see if we have it.<lb/>
Any unclaimed articles will be<lb/>
sold at bargain prioes at ECU'a<lb/>
Flea M-ket, sponsaed by Men-<lb/>
denhall, April 5, on the Mall.<lb/>
There will be a League of<lb/>
Scholars meeting Tues April 4 at<lb/>
7 p.m.<lb/>
It will be in Mendenhall<lb/>
Multi-Purpose Room.<lb/>
All eligible members please<lb/>
come to this meeting.<lb/>
Nurses<lb/>
The Student Nurses Associa-<lb/>
tion will hold its monthly meeting<lb/>
Wed April 5 at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
Nursing 101.<lb/>
The speaker will be Dr.<lb/>
Bryson Trexler from the depart-<lb/>
ment of Geology.<lb/>
The topic will be "The Geo-<lb/>
logical Environment and How It<lb/>
Relates to Health<lb/>
Please come. You do not have<lb/>
to be a member to enjoy the<lb/>
speaker.<lb/>
Tests<lb/>
Arrangements have been<lb/>
made fo a special administration<lb/>
of the NTE on May 13, fa<lb/>
individuals who have NTE prob-<lb/>
lems which need to be corected<lb/>
prio to the regualr NTE test date<lb/>
in July.<lb/>
The following are examples of<lb/>
individuals who should take the<lb/>
exams on May 13.<lb/>
1. Individuals who are em-<lb/>
ployed but paid less than full<lb/>
salary becuase of the absense of<lb/>
o inadequate NTE 9ooes.<lb/>
2. Individuals with permits<lb/>
expiring June 30, who wish to<lb/>
establish their status fo employ-<lb/>
ment fo the 1978-79 school year.<lb/>
3. Individuals who are non-<lb/>
standard becuase of NTE regula-<lb/>
tions who wish to re-establish<lb/>
their certificate.<lb/>
4. Individuals who wish to<lb/>
improve their scoes fo improved<lb/>
employment oppotunities.<lb/>
5. Individuals who need either<lb/>
the weighted common exam o a<lb/>
teaching area to combine with an<lb/>
existing soae. (Noe: ALL exam-<lb/>
inations will be available at each<lb/>
test center.)<lb/>
The exams will be offered at<lb/>
four testing center: Ashville City<lb/>
Sctnools, High Pont City Schools,<lb/>
Fayetteville City Schools, East<lb/>
Carolina University.<lb/>
Registration will be through<lb/>
the State Department of Public<lb/>
Instruction only.<lb/>
Registration forms must be<lb/>
secured from the Certification<lb/>
Offioe by and a fo individuals.<lb/>
The forms must be completed<lb/>
and returned to the Certification<lb/>
Offioe by April 24.<lb/>
The registration fee includes a<lb/>
special $5 charge fo everyone<lb/>
plus a $26 fo the common<lb/>
examination and one area exam<lb/>
a $13 fo the common exam only<lb/>
o an area exam only.<lb/>
Payment must be made by<lb/>
check o money ader payable to<lb/>
National Teachers Examinations.<lb/>
Dona send cash.<lb/>
Each individual will receive<lb/>
notification of registration from<lb/>
the Testing Department which<lb/>
will serve asthe admissions ticket<lb/>
to the exam center on May 13.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058047_0003"/><lb/>
?(??????B<lb/>
4 April 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
Artist George McClancy lectures to students<lb/>
By JULIE HETTIGER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"Art has a life of its own<lb/>
said George McClancy as he<lb/>
spoke to a group of art students<lb/>
on Tues. March 28, in Jenkins<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
McClancy's informal lecture<lb/>
covered the process of making<lb/>
art, its realities and the education<lb/>
of an artist.<lb/>
M Clancy, a former North<lb/>
Carolinian, is a New Yak artist<lb/>
with both post graduate degrees<lb/>
in art history and philosophy.<lb/>
He has taught in both fields<lb/>
and in studio arts.<lb/>
He is coordinator for one of<lb/>
the most innovative programs in<lb/>
creative arts today, the Empire<lb/>
State College, a branch of New<lb/>
York State University.<lb/>
The Empire State Program<lb/>
offers art students of both gra-<lb/>
duate and undergraduate levels<lb/>
the opportunities to study paint-<lb/>
ing, sculpture, graphics, photo-<lb/>
graphy, and arts management.<lb/>
The program includes weekly<lb/>
critiques with other new York<lb/>
artists and internships with them<lb/>
during their semester.<lb/>
The program is offered to all<lb/>
serious art students.<lb/>
McClancy became interested<lb/>
in the education of an artist in<lb/>
1954 while studying with Ken<lb/>
Noland in Washington.<lb/>
He proceeded to complete a<lb/>
masters degree in art history and<lb/>
then returned to college to<lb/>
complete a study in philosophy.<lb/>
McClancy then taught studio<lb/>
'Great Decisions '78'<lb/>
Middle East peace<lb/>
By STEVE WILSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The prospect fa peace in the<lb/>
Middle East remains intact,<lb/>
accading to Dr. Hisham Barakat,<lb/>
a professa with the ECU School<lb/>
of Medicine.<lb/>
Dr. Barakat advanced this<lb/>
opinion during a lecture entitled<lb/>
"The Changing Middle East<lb/>
which is one in a series called<lb/>
"Great Decisions 78<lb/>
The lecture series is sponsa-<lb/>
ed by the National Endowment<lb/>
fa the Humanities, and hosted oi<lb/>
campus by the ECU Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education.<lb/>
Dr. Barakat said that the oae<lb/>
of the conflict in the Middle East<lb/>
involves the controversy concern-<lb/>
ing the rights of the Palestinians<lb/>
to land presently occupied by the<lb/>
Israelis.<lb/>
He said that the UN resolution<lb/>
of 1947 allowed oontrol of Pales-<lb/>
tine by a minaity owning one<lb/>
third of the land and comprising<lb/>
only seven per cent of the<lb/>
population.<lb/>
The Israeli land conquest<lb/>
during the war of 1948 produced<lb/>
an excess of Israeli-occupied<lb/>
land, and drove most Palestinians<lb/>
out of the area to seek refuge<lb/>
from further Israeli advances.<lb/>
The Palestinians remain refu-<lb/>
gees today.<lb/>
Israel widened its baders<lb/>
further in the wars of 1956, 1967<lb/>
and the October war of 1973, until<lb/>
it occupied the land on the West<lb/>
Bank of the Jadan River, the<lb/>
Golan Heights, the Sinai region,<lb/>
and the Gaza strip, none of which<lb/>
were intended as part of the<lb/>
Israeli state mandated by the UN.<lb/>
Dr. Barakat said that the<lb/>
Palestinian problem had lost<lb/>
priaity by the mid-sixties. He<lb/>
said that the Palestinian repatria-<lb/>
tiai oonoerns which were quite<lb/>
radical at first have been sub-<lb/>
dued, and that the general<lb/>
concern of the Palestinians is fa a<lb/>
peaceful settlement to their prob-<lb/>
art and art histay at Yak College<lb/>
in Queens where he realized how<lb/>
unfamilar students were with the<lb/>
real art wald.<lb/>
McClancy began his talk by<lb/>
saying that experience is the only<lb/>
way to learn to love art.<lb/>
He believes that art is an<lb/>
innate human capacity and is<lb/>
capable of being developed in<lb/>
every discipline.<lb/>
How one conceives of himself<lb/>
and his capabilities is the key.<lb/>
One must believe in his own<lb/>
potential.<lb/>
The development of an artist's<lb/>
potentials is most critical at the<lb/>
beginning, said McClancy.<lb/>
Production of wak in large<lb/>
amounts faoes practice in<lb/>
development of talents. The<lb/>
discusses<lb/>
settlement<lb/>
lem.<lb/>
He also said that a maja<lb/>
motivation fa a settlement cones<lb/>
fron the economic advantages<lb/>
available to all of the oountries in<lb/>
the area.<lb/>
He said that since Israel is a<lb/>
potential industrial center, and<lb/>
the Arabs own most all of the<lb/>
land, manpower, and natural<lb/>
resources, that economic consi-<lb/>
deratiois stroigly favo settle-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Dr. Barakat was ban in<lb/>
Palestine in 1923,and settled in<lb/>
Lebanoi after the war of 1948.<lb/>
He attended the University of<lb/>
Geirut, and holds his doctaate<lb/>
from the University of Massachu-<lb/>
setts.<lb/>
WOO<lb/>
Continued from p. 1)<lb/>
male opponents<lb/>
Woo feels that women have a<lb/>
greater sense of justice and a<lb/>
greater sensitivity toother human<lb/>
beinqs.<lb/>
"Our greatest challenge is to<lb/>
convince ourselves that we can go<lb/>
beyond the traditional role of<lb/>
wanen<lb/>
Dr. Susan McDaniel, asso-<lb/>
ciate vice-chancel la fa academic<lb/>
affairs, awarded the certificates<lb/>
in academic areas.<lb/>
Dean Carolyn Fulghum, asso-<lb/>
ciate dean of student affairs,<lb/>
awarded certificates in other<lb/>
areas, including athletics, mar-<lb/>
shals, residence halls, service and<lb/>
social sooities, and Who's Who<lb/>
in American Universities and<lb/>
Colenes.<lb/>
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Phone Quotes 814 536 1611<lb/>
function of a teacher should be to<lb/>
oonfront the student with con-<lb/>
crete experience.<lb/>
McClancy emphasized New<lb/>
Yak City as being the cento fa<lb/>
abstract Twentieth century art.<lb/>
He stressed the impotance of<lb/>
just being in the city to be in<lb/>
touch with the art wold.<lb/>
He also warned young artists<lb/>
of the pitfalls one must confront<lb/>
in the city.<lb/>
McClancy answoed student's<lb/>
questiais oaioerning how one<lb/>
becomes accepted in the art wold<lb/>
and discussed Oiefly his own<lb/>
wok.<lb/>
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THURS. APRIL 6<lb/>
?<lb/>
HIGH &amp; MIGHTY<lb/>
4 RITHE<lb/>
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This is their 1st appearance in over 1 year.<lb/>
Dont miss 'em.<lb/>
f Tues. X II Fund Raising Party<lb/>
Fri. 3-7 End of Week Party <lb/>
SAT NITE FEVER SUN LADIES NITE<lb/>
<pb facs="00058047_0004"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 4 April 1978<lb/>
Politics vs. The Presi<lb/>
Politics and the press. Probably never have any<lb/>
two things been pitted against each other with such<lb/>
intensity as these.<lb/>
Politicians endeavor to manipulate the press in<lb/>
ways which will benefit them personally and<lb/>
politically. When a story which portrays a politician<lb/>
in a bad light is printed, the politician and his cohorts<lb/>
cry "foul The press is then labeled "biased<lb/>
"unobjective and is called names which are<lb/>
unprintable.<lb/>
Student politicians seem to think that they have<lb/>
the power to oversee the operations of their campus<lb/>
publications. The recent controversy at N.C. State<lb/>
University proves this point only too well.<lb/>
Two N.C. State students, both of them campus<lb/>
politicians, were arrested on a charge of scalping<lb/>
tickets to the Atlantic Coast Conference basketball<lb/>
tournament.<lb/>
One politician is a member of the Student Senate<lb/>
and the other is a member of the Judicial Review<lb/>
Board. The Technician, N.C. State's campus<lb/>
newspaper, printed news stories and editorials<lb/>
concerning the arrests. The students were arrested<lb/>
by Raleigh City Police.<lb/>
Former Technician editor Lynne Griffin in an<lb/>
editorial accused the two students of setting a " poor<lb/>
example" as student leaders. Griffin called for the<lb/>
removal of the students from their student<lb/>
responsibility positions.<lb/>
The Student Senate then began impeachment<lb/>
proceedings against Editor Griffin, charging her with<lb/>
"malfeasance in office which included libel,<lb/>
undocumented allegations, undue harassment and<lb/>
attacks on personal integrity.<lb/>
The Student Senate had absolutely no authority to<lb/>
begin impeachment proceedings. All N.C. State<lb/>
publications are overseen by the Publications<lb/>
Authority, which has the power to hire and fire<lb/>
editors. The campus media is in no way connected to<lb/>
the student government at N.C. State.<lb/>
Why, then, did six student senators think that<lb/>
they had the right to impeach Griffin? Certainly U.S.<lb/>
Senators would not take it upon themselves to begin<lb/>
impeachment proceedings against Katharine Gra-<lb/>
ham, Washington Post publisher, for printing stories<lb/>
about Washington politicians which do not portray<lb/>
them favorably.<lb/>
This country's forefathers created the Bill of<lb/>
Rights and the First Amendment to protect<lb/>
publications from government control. If student<lb/>
politicians don't want their shady dealings printed in<lb/>
the newspaper, then they should straighten out their<lb/>
sense of morals before even considering running for<lb/>
an office.<lb/>
It's about time to<lb/>
improve intersection<lb/>
Students and staff members have complained<lb/>
loudly about the dangerous intersection of Tenth<lb/>
Street and College Hill Drive. Many people have<lb/>
hoped that an overpass could be constructed.<lb/>
However, an overpass would run into a lot of<lb/>
money, approximately $200,000 or more, and there is<lb/>
no guarantee that the students would use it.<lb/>
A Tenth Street Intersection Task Force, compos-<lb/>
ed of Tommy Joe Payne, David Cartwright, and Jerry<lb/>
Cox was set up last month to study alternate ideas to<lb/>
an overpass.<lb/>
The Task Force met with N.C. Department of<lb/>
Transportation officials last month to discuss various<lb/>
plans to the intersection problem.<lb/>
A task force to study alternate ideas to the<lb/>
overpass is long overdue. Perhaps something will be<lb/>
done scon to alleviate the danger that thousands of<lb/>
students face daily.<lb/>
icci<lb/>
r?'<lb/>
THOUGHT We HAD<lb/>
z rooRF WORTHS 1 -r-<lb/>
7ose fBooKSr.<lb/>
n<lb/>
1978<lb/>
o o<lb/>
AS<lb/>
o<lb/>
,tffoCW<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
y<lb/>
the April tpiot<lb/>
v?<lb/>
JDune<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Jazz has no bright future in Greenville<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
Dave Thompson should<lb/>
have researched his "Jazz has a<lb/>
bright future in Greenville' a<lb/>
little more thoroughly. The Line<lb/>
which has sponsored some excel-<lb/>
lent jazz is scheduled to close at<lb/>
the end of the semester due to<lb/>
lack of support. It will be<lb/>
absorbed by The Attic to produce<lb/>
the kind of sound that ECU<lb/>
students like.<lb/>
Chuck Mangione and May-<lb/>
Why does ECU<lb/>
store heat?<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Why is ECU Cafeteria<lb/>
empty and warm while Jenkins<lb/>
Fine Arts Center with its over-<lb/>
crowded studio spaces forced to<lb/>
shut down at 6 p.m. Fridays,<lb/>
Saturdays and Sundays becuase<lb/>
of the energy crunch?<lb/>
On Friday night, March 17 (a<lb/>
rather chilly evening) I walked<lb/>
through East Cafeteria on my way<lb/>
across campus and was surprised<lb/>
to find it a balmy 70 degrees at<lb/>
1:30 a.m.<lb/>
Why is this building with its<lb/>
huge empty spaces heated while<lb/>
students are prevented from<lb/>
working in others under the<lb/>
pretense of saving energy?<lb/>
Storing heat in East Cafeteria<lb/>
doesn't seem to be a very<lb/>
satisfactory method of energy<lb/>
conservation.<lb/>
Perhaps this edifice could be<lb/>
more efficiently used as a reposit-<lb/>
ory for University red tape.<lb/>
Jan Welborn<lb/>
Graduate Student<lb/>
nard Ferguson both attracted<lb/>
large crowds, but then both were<lb/>
enjoying the exposure of a tune in<lb/>
the Top 40. The attendance two<lb/>
months earlier at the Thad<lb/>
Jones-Mel Lewis concert was<lb/>
dismal. Where were all your jazz<lb/>
lovers? They are among the best<lb/>
in big band jazz.<lb/>
As for Rampal, his program<lb/>
was classical, not jazz or even<lb/>
'Classical jazz" (sic). He has<lb/>
recorded one jazz album but his<lb/>
skills and his repertoire are<lb/>
classical.<lb/>
I don't think that you can get<lb/>
the students to support musicians<lb/>
with whom they are not familiar.<lb/>
Top 40 has a bright future in<lb/>
Greenville but sadly jazz does<lb/>
not.<lb/>
Doug Williams<lb/>
Short n sweet<lb/>
To -OUNTAINHEAD.<lb/>
What is your most disappoint-<lb/>
ing radio station? WRQR.<lb/>
David Latham<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 latter<lb/>
Thomas Jefferson<lb/>
Cindy Broome<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
Managing EditorLeigh rjoakley<lb/>
Advertising ManagerRobert M. Swaim<lb/>
EditorsDoug White<lb/>
Stuart Morgan<lb/>
TrendsEditorSteve Bachner<lb/>
SportsEditorChris Hdloman<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student newspaper of East Carolina<lb/>
University sponsored by the Media Board of ECU and is<lb/>
distributed each Tuesday and Thursday, weekly during the<lb/>
summer. m<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/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00058047_0005"/><lb/>
????????HBI<lb/>
Predicted top profession of 1980's<lb/>
4 April 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
Energy crisis spurs interest in Geology field<lb/>
By JO ANN SMITH<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
According to a November,<lb/>
1977, issue of Money magazine,<lb/>
one of the top professions of the<lb/>
1980's will be geology.<lb/>
The estimated percentage<lb/>
growth rate for the geology field<lb/>
is a significant 38 per cent for the<lb/>
time period of 1976-1985; that<lb/>
percentage is the largest growth<lb/>
rate of the top ten professions.<lb/>
The reasons for this increased<lb/>
interest in geology are many, but<lb/>
the main issue is the energy<lb/>
dilemma, according to Dr.<lb/>
Michael O'Connor, head of the<lb/>
ECU Geology department.<lb/>
The search for petroleum and<lb/>
other energy forms has forced<lb/>
industries to seek out qualified<lb/>
geologists to aid them. O'Connor<lb/>
cited an inaeasing interest over<lb/>
the past several years in the<lb/>
department here.<lb/>
The number of jobs is grow-<lb/>
ing and the importance of the<lb/>
positions is increased by the need<lb/>
for the development of new<lb/>
resources and energy sources, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The three main job areas for<lb/>
graduates of the geology depart-<lb/>
ment are in energy, natural<lb/>
resources, and environment.<lb/>
According to O'Connor, the<lb/>
deaease in energy and the<lb/>
deaease in natural resources has<lb/>
affected the geology field in that<lb/>
all industries are being forced to<lb/>
realize their limitations and set<lb/>
reasonable alternatives.<lb/>
"The environmental aspect of<lb/>
the field encompasses almost all<lb/>
portionsof our life; any oonstruct-<lb/>
ion job or development requires<lb/>
environmental impaa statements<lb/>
and restrictions O'Connor said.<lb/>
LEGISLATURE<lb/>
Continued from p. 1<lb/>
and with Supreme Court Justice,<lb/>
William Renquist.<lb/>
Senator Morgan will give a<lb/>
Law Day address at ECU on April<lb/>
21.<lb/>
Mark Snyder announced that<lb/>
the Senior Class of 1978 is<lb/>
awarding $260 scholarships to ten<lb/>
students at ECU next fall.<lb/>
Students may apply at the<lb/>
SGA office between 9 a.m. and 5<lb/>
p.m. and fill out an application.<lb/>
The deadline for applications is<lb/>
Fri April 7.<lb/>
The student must be presently<lb/>
enrolled at ECU be a full-time<lb/>
student at ECU fall semester<lb/>
1978, and have excelled aca-<lb/>
demically and provided outstan-<lb/>
ding service to ECU.<lb/>
A resolution was passed to<lb/>
thank the Parks and Reaeation<lb/>
Club fa tending the polls in last<lb/>
week's elections.<lb/>
In other business, the consti-<lb/>
tutions fa the International Lan-<lb/>
guage. Club, the ECU Team<lb/>
Handball Club and the Student<lb/>
Advisay Council for Intercolle-<lb/>
giate Athletics were all approved<lb/>
by the legislature.<lb/>
Teachers are also needed to<lb/>
prepare the future geologists, but<lb/>
field jobs are mae profitable,<lb/>
with double a triple salaries as<lb/>
compared to teaching positions.<lb/>
At ECU, the geology depart-<lb/>
ment is growing.<lb/>
In the last several years, a lot<lb/>
of growth has resulted from the<lb/>
influx of students from other<lb/>
areas.<lb/>
"The geology department is<lb/>
the smallest science department<lb/>
with the seccod largest graduate<lb/>
program he said.<lb/>
The biggest problem may be<lb/>
the lack of educational back-<lb/>
ground that prevents college<lb/>
freshmen from being aware of the<lb/>
geology program.<lb/>
OGonna said the growth in<lb/>
the geology field also results from<lb/>
other changes in our life-style.<lb/>
Although geologists have<lb/>
been anticipating the energy<lb/>
shatage fa about 20 years, the<lb/>
public has refused to acknow-<lb/>
ledge the problem; geologists can<lb/>
only present the problem, not<lb/>
solve it.<lb/>
Also, the "apathy" of the<lb/>
nation is beginning to fade;<lb/>
people are finally awakening to<lb/>
the thought that our resources<lb/>
will na last faever. Here in<lb/>
Nath Carolina, the problems are<lb/>
basically with our phosphate<lb/>
deposits and the coastlines, ao-<lb/>
oading to O'Conna.<lb/>
There are endless experi-<lb/>
ment s to be done on the effects of<lb/>
phosphate mining, shaeline ero-<lb/>
B.F.Goodrich<lb/>
Car Care Service<lb/>
4 POINT BRAKE CHECK<lb/>
1. Pull From Wheats. Impact Linings end Drum<lb/>
7. Check Grease Seel. Wheel Cylinders for Leakage<lb/>
3. Inspect Front Wheel Bearings.<lb/>
4. Adlust Brakes on All Four Wheels tor Full Pedal<lb/>
Braking.<lb/>
Rag. Prlca JO - with Cart. Service Only 13 so<lb/>
e. m??run<lb/>
Moat US Cars, Toyotas &amp; Datauns<lb/>
call for appointment<lb/>
WRECKER SERVICE AVAILABLE IN CITY,<lb/>
STUDENT PRICE $8.50 WITH STUDENT ID<lb/>
Master Charge BankAmencard. American Express.<lb/>
Offers as shown at B.F.Goodrich stores Competitively priced at B.F.Goodrich dealers.<lb/>
UPGoodrich Coggins Car Care<lb/>
TIRE CENTER<lb/>
Phone 754-514<lb/>
SO W. HWY. Me BY PASS<lb/>
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COUPON<lb/>
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Coupon Offers Good Thru Apri 30, 1978<lb/>
Anytime Specials<lb/>
USOA CHOICE<lb/>
 SIRLOIN STEAK<lb/>
Includes All You Can Eat Salad Bar.<lb/>
Choice oi Potato. Te?as Toaat And Free<lb/>
Raima Of Soda. Tea Or Coffee<lb/>
COUPON lXPIRES?-30-7B<lb/>
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11am close I<lb/>
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Includes All You Can Eat Salad Bar.<lb/>
Choice of Potato ???? Toast and Free<lb/>
Refills Of Soda. Tea Or Coffee<lb/>
COUPON tIPIRtS 30-79<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
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Offer Good I<lb/>
Sunday T"a <lb/>
Thursday <lb/>
Mam -Close ?<lb/>
Lunch Specials<lb/>
This Offer Will Change to -1.79 Soon!<lb/>
GET OUf? FAMOUS<lb/>
1 RIB EYE STEAK TINNER<lb/>
$149<lb/>
Inciudet All You Can Eat Salad Bar.<lb/>
Choice Of Potato. Tesaa Toaat And Free<lb/>
Retail Of Soda. Tea Or Coffee.<lb/>
COUPON EXPIRES 4 ?r?<lb/>
1<lb/>
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Monday Thro<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
11 a m -4 p m<lb/>
CIT THE FAMOUS<lb/>
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RIB EYE DINNER SPECIAL<lb/>
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-OFFtatNo MMtoa citium aho t?uckw? ottcousm<lb/>
We've<lb/>
Changed!<lb/>
aon, and beach development.<lb/>
The United States has reached<lb/>
a "saturation level of population,<lb/>
affluence, etc and the future<lb/>
holds only the development of<lb/>
"marginal lands" which in the<lb/>
past have been excluded from<lb/>
consideration during growth.<lb/>
O'Connor's major oonoern is<lb/>
that students be aware of the job<lb/>
possibilities a Geology graduate<lb/>
will be offered<lb/>
The conservation and "sane"<lb/>
use of our resources must be<lb/>
monitored and supplimented by<lb/>
the work of qualified geologists<lb/>
who will be in great demand over<lb/>
the next decade.<lb/>
Saads Shoe Shop<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
at<lb/>
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The most<lb/>
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Tampax tampons are<lb/>
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And here's some-<lb/>
thing else vou'll like<lb/>
about Tampax<lb/>
tampons: the price.<lb/>
The economy-size<lb/>
package of 40 costs<lb/>
less ?tampon for<lb/>
tampon ?than any<lb/>
other brand.<lb/>
So if you want a lot<lb/>
ot protection at very<lb/>
little cost, open a<lb/>
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tampons. We promise<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058047_0006"/><lb/>
?????1<lb/>
c?jfj.ij$Sw<lb/>
?<lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 4 April 1978<lb/>
Highlights from TKE's 3rd An<lb/>
&amp;i<lb/>
i<lb/>
Pic<lb/>
tout<lb/>
f?<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
?? 1<lb/>
<pb facs="00058047_0007"/><lb/>
????????????<lb/>
???????????IB<lb/>
4 April 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
d Annual Boxing Tournament<lb/>
Photography<lb/>
by<lb/>
Peter E. Podeszwa<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00058047_0008"/><lb/>
HViM<lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 4 April 1978<lb/>
He captured a whole new set of fans but.<lb/>
Mangione: 'Heplayed down to his audience'<lb/>
By SUSAN CHESTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Chuck Mangione played his<lb/>
way to a standing ovation at<lb/>
Wright Auditorium last Wednes-<lb/>
day night. The auditorium was<lb/>
full of students turned on to the<lb/>
new rock sound that has made<lb/>
Mangione's popularity explode.<lb/>
I'm tired of the old cliche<lb/>
critics use on any artist who<lb/>
becomes popular: "He's lost his<lb/>
integrity, he'splaying down to his<lb/>
audience, he's changed to suit the<lb/>
crowd However, as an old<lb/>
Chuck Mangione fanatic, I must<lb/>
admit that was my reaction to his<lb/>
ECU performance.<lb/>
Sure, the audience loved it!<lb/>
But I missed some of the<lb/>
subtleties that made Mangione<lb/>
worth listening to over and over<lb/>
again.<lb/>
Mangione dhye to play a lot<lb/>
of his newer music from the<lb/>
Feels So Good" album, perhaps<lb/>
because the restless audience<lb/>
responded best to its driving<lb/>
beat.<lb/>
After the opening number, the<lb/>
title tune of "Feels So Good the<lb/>
quartet swung comfortably into<lb/>
"The Day After Our First Night<lb/>
Together<lb/>
They were really tight, with<lb/>
rhythmic precision that took the<lb/>
opening theme to an exciting<lb/>
climax. That number and "Chase<lb/>
the Clouds Away introduced the<lb/>
audience to the red-hot, street-<lb/>
wise sound of the versatile Chris<lb/>
Vadala on flutes and saxes.<lb/>
This was all program music<lb/>
with a message, the kind of<lb/>
feeling-so-good, chasing-the-<lb/>
clouds-away message that has<lb/>
"Soft" provided a rare and<lb/>
beautiful contrast in style and<lb/>
volume. The alto flute of Chris<lb/>
Vadala captured the warmth of<lb/>
"sips of brandy wine (and) white<lb/>
coals of a fire even without the<lb/>
magic of the lyrics themselves.<lb/>
From then on, Chuck Man-<lb/>
gione played to his often rude<lb/>
audience.<lb/>
In" The I Xth Commandment<lb/>
the band played as one perfect<lb/>
Trends<lb/>
been part of the Mangione magic.<lb/>
The next selection, title tune of<lb/>
the not yet released film, "The<lb/>
Children of Sanchez left fantasy<lb/>
for a new depth of emotion.<lb/>
The lyrics and Latin music<lb/>
both told a tragic and anqry story.<lb/>
Bassist Charles Meeks sang a<lb/>
haunting vocal backed sensitively<lb/>
by talented Grant Geissman on<lb/>
acoustic guitar.<lb/>
An explosive drum break by<lb/>
James Bradley, Jr. carried the<lb/>
quartet with missionary ferver to<lb/>
the end.<lb/>
rhythmic unit, but it was too loud<lb/>
to tell much else about it. The<lb/>
crowd wanted volume, and they<lb/>
got it.<lb/>
After intermission Mangione<lb/>
returned with "Hill Where the<lb/>
Lord Hides "Maui-Maui<lb/>
"Hide and Seek and "Land of<lb/>
Make Believe<lb/>
A standing ovation brought an<lb/>
encore of "Main Squeeze<lb/>
Mangione captured a whole<lb/>
new set of fans, but he disappoin-<lb/>
ted those of us who prefer his<lb/>
mellow jazz to volume and<lb/>
repetition.<lb/>
Scheduled for Washington Cathedral<lb/>
??SURE THE AUDIENCE loved it! But I missed some of the<lb/>
subtleties that make Mangione worth listening to over and over<lb/>
takes annual<lb/>
CARLTON WLUAMSAND David Weaver per form with the ECU<lb/>
' Char in a recital at the A.J. Fletcher Music Center. The<lb/>
'??? annual spring tour Thursday through Sunday,<lb/>
 Photo by Brian Stotler<lb/>
By RENEE DIXON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Concert Choir will<lb/>
take their annual spring tour<lb/>
Thursday through Sunday, April<lb/>
6-9.<lb/>
The tour includes performan-<lb/>
ces at Mulberry Baptist Church,<lb/>
Charlotte; Bluefield West Virgin-<lb/>
ia; and Washington Cathedral,<lb/>
Washington, DC.<lb/>
PERFORMANCE GROUP<lb/>
The forty-five member perfor-<lb/>
mance group is composed of men<lb/>
and women students who are<lb/>
voice majors in the ECU School of<lb/>
Music or have studied voice<lb/>
privately.<lb/>
Under the direction of Mr.<lb/>
Brett Watson, the choir performs<lb/>
a variety of musical styles includ-<lb/>
ing GregorianGhant, Renaissance<lb/>
and uassicai wotks, spirituals,<lb/>
pop tunes, and avant garde<lb/>
selections.<lb/>
WA SHING TON CA THEDRA L<lb/>
The Washington Cathedral<lb/>
performance is becoming a trad-<lb/>
itional spring conoert; this is the<lb/>
third year the choir has ended<lb/>
their spring tour with a Sunday<lb/>
morning performance at the<lb/>
Cathedral.<lb/>
EXCELLENT EXPOSURE<lb/>
FOR THE CHOR.<lb/>
The choir sings at 1030 a.m.<lb/>
as a prelude to the 11 ?? service<lb/>
which usually draws a congre-<lb/>
gation of nearly 1000. About half<lb/>
of the people are tourists visiting<lb/>
the DC area.<lb/>
Singing before people from<lb/>
across the nation is excellent<lb/>
exposure for the choir.<lb/>
Director Brett Watson feels<lb/>
that the Washington performance<lb/>
is a rare opportunity because the<lb/>
Cathedral is one of the best<lb/>
churches in the world for per-<lb/>
forming sacred music, particular-<lb/>
ly Renaissance selections.<lb/>
The programs for Sunday<lb/>
morning includes works by Bach,<lb/>
Brahms, Palestina, Schutz, and<lb/>
Rorem. All selections will be<lb/>
performed a cappella.<lb/>
Mr. Watson describes the<lb/>
choir a "young, talented, and<lb/>
enthusiastic" and says they are<lb/>
looking forward to the tour.<lb/>
year include Jarvis Methodist<lb/>
Church, Emmanuel Baptist<lb/>
Church, the Rotary Club, and the<lb/>
ECU Christmas assembly.<lb/>
The choir also performed in<lb/>
Winston-Salem last November at<lb/>
a joint conference of the North<lb/>
Carolina Music Educators and the<lb/>
American Choral Directors Assoc-<lb/>
iation.<lb/>
Last year the spring tour<lb/>
included a few days in New York.<lb/>
The choir appeared at Rockefeller<lb/>
Plaza and also performed during<lb/>
a Saturday afternoon mass at St.<lb/>
Patrick's Cathedral on 5th Ave.<lb/>
The proposed itinerary for<lb/>
next year's tour includes perfor-<lb/>
mances at Duke University<lb/>
'The choir is a tremendous asset to ECl<lb/>
culturallysinfrinfr before people who do<lb/>
not know the choir and have not heard<lb/>
them before is important<lb/>
TOURING<lb/>
"Touring is fun he com-<lb/>
ments, "but also hard work<lb/>
Long bus rides between morning<lb/>
and evening performances make<lb/>
a busy schedule tiring.<lb/>
Brett Watson feels that the<lb/>
choir is a tremendous asset to<lb/>
ECU culturally. He says that<lb/>
singing before people who do not<lb/>
know the choir and have not<lb/>
heard them before is an important<lb/>
facet of public relations for ECU.<lb/>
PERFORMANCES<lb/>
Concert Choir performan-<lb/>
ces in the Greenville area this<lb/>
Chapel, Perm State University,<lb/>
the Washington Cathedral, and<lb/>
St. Patrick's Cathedral and Cath-<lb/>
edral of St. John the Divine in<lb/>
New York.<lb/>
AUDITION COMPETITION<lb/>
Most choir members will be<lb/>
returning next year, and Watson<lb/>
says that audition competition<lb/>
will tv s?'M<lb/>
The Conoert Choir wishes to<lb/>
thank the many churches, busi<lb/>
nessesand private citizens in the<lb/>
Greenville area, and the ECU<lb/>
SGA for their generous support<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00058047_0009"/><lb/>
???????????????????????????????i<lb/>
What is life?<lb/>
4 April 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
By MICHAELCROFOOT<lb/>
Special to FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
I was making sawlog tops<lb/>
into firewood with my brother out<lb/>
in Iowa when the logger who<lb/>
felled the trees came down and<lb/>
asked, "Do you want some<lb/>
honey?"<lb/>
"Does a fish favor wate- <lb/>
we oountered, and thereupon<lb/>
inspected the honey tree maple<lb/>
he had regrettably cut down.<lb/>
Hearing the bees a-buzzing<lb/>
down a knothole, we cut into the<lb/>
hollow and opened the tree up to<lb/>
find 8 a 10 (always get them<lb/>
mixed up) oombs four foot long<lb/>
holding 40 pounds of light to very<lb/>
dark honey and well over 1,000<lb/>
bees.<lb/>
It was Iowa cold out and the<lb/>
bees died within minutes. We<lb/>
reasoned from the start, with the<lb/>
tree felled, either the oold or<lb/>
honey-loving animals would do<lb/>
them in - so we did the doing and<lb/>
got the honey.<lb/>
My brother and I learned how<lb/>
not to separate honey from oomb,<lb/>
that winter bee stings have lost<lb/>
their potson, that wild honey is<lb/>
the nectar of the gods, and more.<lb/>
Much as we agree to disagree<lb/>
my brother and I now have in<lb/>
oommon a certainty of bees and<lb/>
honey.<lb/>
Now we know each other<lb/>
better. Now that we have an<lb/>
understanding more in oommon<lb/>
we can work together better.<lb/>
I say that we, on the macro-<lb/>
scene level, have been losing our<lb/>
common sense at least since the<lb/>
Philosopher finds true meaning of Coca-Cola<lb/>
industrial age became self<lb/>
defining.<lb/>
That our collective human<lb/>
consciousness has become more<lb/>
and more polarized as we share<lb/>
fewer and fewer experiences and<lb/>
perspectives. But now the tide<lb/>
has begun to turn. A consensus<lb/>
has begun to grow again.<lb/>
The industrial age started<lb/>
singing its own tune, started<lb/>
making the dominant, tyrannical<lb/>
reality when it began to have<lb/>
systematic government oontrol of<lb/>
our information, our experiences;<lb/>
that is, our reality makers. Mass<lb/>
productionconsumptionmedia<lb/>
may have turned Life into a bowl<lb/>
of oereal, Joy into a soap and<lb/>
most of us into Pepsi generators,<lb/>
but within the sameness of the<lb/>
bars, classrooms and workplaces<lb/>
a oommon sense of what's real<lb/>
and right did not grow. Anybody<lb/>
out there know what?<lb/>
Here's some guesses: We all<lb/>
know that there isno"ooca cola"<lb/>
in Coca Cola. That some people<lb/>
are in control in our country and it<lb/>
ain't us.<lb/>
??TELEVISION ISA<lb/>
PREFABRICATED LIE"<lb/>
Most of us feel that the reality<lb/>
on television is a prefabricated<lb/>
lie. Even the news is manufactur-<lb/>
ed to support the status quo.<lb/>
Baba Wawa and Roger Mudd<lb/>
don't want to lose their jobs.<lb/>
We lose our jobs and our<lb/>
minds by not fitting in. But the<lb/>
endemic rise in alienation moral<lb/>
confusion, maladjustment and<lb/>
social disintegration since the last<lb/>
grisly world war shows us that the<lb/>
nature of human nature can not fit<lb/>
into the technocratic society. We<lb/>
become unfit in our own incon-<lb/>
gruous society.<lb/>
In our search for a place, a<lb/>
home to fit into wi turned to God,<lb/>
drugs, the woods, sex, money,<lb/>
ignorance, "academic sophis-<lb/>
try'  and more - so diverse were<lb/>
our perspectives on reality.<lb/>
These alternative realities<lb/>
polarized by default, our collect-<lb/>
ive consciousness begetting the<lb/>
credibility and generation gaps.<lb/>
Does this make sense.?<lb/>
??THE ECOLOGICAL<lb/>
IMPERATIVE IS COMING<lb/>
HOME"<lb/>
Now the gaps in understand<lb/>
-ing have begun to close. The<lb/>
ecological imperative is ooming<lb/>
home and we all know it. Women<lb/>
and blacks and gays and hand-<lb/>
icappers and old folks are starting<lb/>
to see their oommon chore.<lb/>
Farmers and alternative tech-<lb/>
nicians and enviromentalists are<lb/>
beginning to talk turkey.<lb/>
Even Jimmy Carter, as inept<lb/>
andhogtiedashisorganization is,<lb/>
i s responsive to this " amalgamat-<lb/>
ed perspective Solidarity be-<lb/>
comes more than only a word.<lb/>
What turned the tide? Your<lb/>
guess is better than mine because<lb/>
I'm prejudiced. Being a white-<lb/>
male student, I favor the educa-<lb/>
tion theory. Nietzsche said<lb/>
"Knowledge is action<lb/>
I think he was wrong. Know-<lb/>
ledge can give us confusion as<lb/>
well. It's just that now it seems<lb/>
that knowledge is oonvergmg to<lb/>
give us a oommon sense of real<lb/>
and right. The knowledge is being<lb/>
realized.<lb/>
Quote of the day from a book<lb/>
of the century Beyond The Crisis,<lb/>
edited by Norman Birnbaum:<lb/>
"When we speak of crisis, we are<lb/>
looking at society from the point<lb/>
of views of the ruling forces;<lb/>
when we speak of transformation,<lb/>
we imply that we are studying the<lb/>
formation of a new cultural field.<lb/>
Are we not the beginning of<lb/>
societies defined by their moral<lb/>
codes of change rather than their<lb/>
civilization or mode of product-<lb/>
ion?"<lb/>
<lb/>
Crofoot is a sophomore at<lb/>
Michigan State University major-<lb/>
ing in agriculture communication.<lb/>
Beef n Shakes Breakfast<lb/>
Special Breakfast 7 am till 11 am for .99<lb/>
two scrambled eggs, sausage,<lb/>
hash browns, english muffin, jelly<lb/>
Our quarter pound Beefburgers<lb/>
are from fresh ground chuck daily.<lb/>
Downtown 5th St.<lb/>
only open 7 am till 2am Daily.<lb/>
Students' joint recital Thursday<lb/>
ECU NEW BUREAU<lb/>
Two ECU School of Music<lb/>
students will present a joint<lb/>
recital in percussion and oboe<lb/>
Thursday, April 6, 1978, at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in the A.J. Fletcher Recital<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
Performers will be Larry Car-<lb/>
man, senior, and Harvey Stokes,<lb/>
junior.<lb/>
Larry Carman, percussionist,<lb/>
will perform "Aggressions" by<lb/>
Serry, "Sonata for Timpani and<lb/>
Piano" by Cirone, "Recital Suite<lb/>
for Marimba by Watson, and<lb/>
"Concerto for Percussion and<lb/>
Orchestra" by Milhaud.<lb/>
He will be accompanied by<lb/>
Jodie McDowell and Shelia<lb/>
Marsh burn.<lb/>
He is a student of Mr. Harold<lb/>
Jones of the School of Music<lb/>
percussion faculty.<lb/>
His performance is given in<lb/>
partial fulfillment of the require-<lb/>
ments for the Bachelor of Music<lb/>
degree in Music Therapy.<lb/>
Harvey Stokes, oboist, is in<lb/>
the theory-oomposition degree<lb/>
program and studies oboe with<lb/>
David Hawkins of the School of<lb/>
Music double reeds faculty.<lb/>
He will perform "Conoertino"<lb/>
by Bruno Labate and "Concerto<lb/>
No. 1 in B flat" by K.P.E. Bach.<lb/>
Assisting him is Denise<lb/>
Dupree, pianist and music<lb/>
therapy major.<lb/>
Diamond Suppliers you Can trust<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058047_0010"/><lb/>
WPw?f M<lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 4 April 1978<lb/>
ODU and W &amp; M hand Pirates tough losses<lb/>
ByCHRISHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Monte Little's Pirate baseball<lb/>
team had quite a rough time this<lb/>
week losing three straight games<lb/>
to William &amp; Mary and ODU.<lb/>
On Friday the Indians of<lb/>
William and Mary handed the<lb/>
Pirates a demoralizing 7-6 loss.<lb/>
The game, which went for 13<lb/>
innings was the third loss in a row<lb/>
for ECU.<lb/>
Tom Stiller was the losing<lb/>
pitcher coming out of the bullpen<lb/>
in the 7th inning.<lb/>
William and Mary got on the<lb/>
scoreboard first with 2 runs in the<lb/>
second inning.<lb/>
ECU then countered three<lb/>
runs in the fourth inning to take<lb/>
the lead.<lb/>
Pete Paradosa walked and<lb/>
Rayme Styons reached on an<lb/>
error with Tim Hardison pinch<lb/>
running for Styons.<lb/>
Paradossi moved to third on<lb/>
an error and later scored on<lb/>
Bobby Supel's sacrifice fly.<lb/>
Hardison scored for ECU<lb/>
when Max Rainer hit a triple.<lb/>
Rainer scored later on Robert<lb/>
Brinkley's single.<lb/>
William and Mary wasted no<lb/>
time however in tieing up the<lb/>
score again with a run in the 5th.<lb/>
In the 6th inning the Indians<lb/>
scored another run by Joe Man-<lb/>
derfield.<lb/>
The 7th inning once again saw<lb/>
the Indians score a run to take a<lb/>
5-3 lead.<lb/>
ECU scored two runs in the<lb/>
8th inning to tie the game up once<lb/>
again. Rayme Styons singled and<lb/>
Bobby Supel hit but both runners<lb/>
gained bases on an Indian error.<lb/>
Both later scored on a Max Rainer<lb/>
triple.<lb/>
The score remained the same<lb/>
until the 13th inning.<lb/>
The run was scored by Raynor<lb/>
who singled home Carraway.<lb/>
William &amp; Mary didn't give<lb/>
up however and add two runs of<lb/>
their own to win the game 7-6.<lb/>
On Saturday the Pirates saw<lb/>
ROBERT BRINK LEY<lb/>
PETEPARRADOSSI<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
victory slip away from them not<lb/>
once but twice and ECU dropped<lb/>
two one point games to Old<lb/>
Dominion 4-3 and 11-10.<lb/>
Pete Conaty was hit with his<lb/>
4th loss of the year in the opener<lb/>
which saw the Pirates lead in the<lb/>
first inning.<lb/>
Eddie Gates singled and then<lb/>
stole second. The stolen base by<lb/>
Gates set a new ECU record of 31.<lb/>
Pete Parradosi singled which<lb/>
allowed Gates to score.<lb/>
ODU came back with a run of<lb/>
their own in the first.<lb/>
the lead adding two more runs.<lb/>
ECU scored two runs in the<lb/>
3rd to even the game at 3 apiece.<lb/>
Gates got a walk and then<lb/>
Hardison bounced a ball over the<lb/>
fence for a homerun.<lb/>
ODU came right back in the<lb/>
4th inning and sealed their 15th<lb/>
win of the season.<lb/>
In the second game it appear-<lb/>
ed the Pirates were back to form<lb/>
as Pete Parradosi hit a solo<lb/>
homer.<lb/>
It wasn't long though before<lb/>
ODU came back and scored 6 runs<lb/>
In the 2nd inning ODU took jn the bottom of the third.<lb/>
Later in the fifth inning ODU<lb/>
ran their lead to 9-2.<lb/>
In the bottom of the 5th with<lb/>
help from Best, Parradosi and<lb/>
Supel, ECU rallied fa 5 runs to<lb/>
tighten the game up 9-7.<lb/>
ODU however scored one of<lb/>
their own at the bottom of the 5th<lb/>
to take the lead again.<lb/>
ECU tied the game onoe again<lb/>
in the 6th inning.<lb/>
Davis hit a single and moved<lb/>
up on an error. Macon Moye also<lb/>
singled. Then senior Robert<lb/>
Brinkley scored the tie run on a<lb/>
double steal.<lb/>
ODU countered with an addi-<lb/>
tional run to ice the game.<lb/>
After the games Monte Little<lb/>
was quite frustrated and just<lb/>
couldn't understand the Pirates<lb/>
problems.<lb/>
"The ooaching staff will not<lb/>
take the blame for any of these<lb/>
losses Little said.<lb/>
 Right now, we' re not a good<lb/>
baseball team and we're playing<lb/>
that way. I'm not use to losing<lb/>
like this. We just don't do the<lb/>
things we have to do to win<lb/>
"Against Southeastern Mas-<lb/>
sachuetts, we got two and they<lb/>
got three. We got two and UNC<lb/>
got four. We got six against<lb/>
William and Mary and they got<lb/>
seven. Today, we get three and<lb/>
they get four, then we get ten and<lb/>
they get eleven<lb/>
"We're making too many<lb/>
mental errors Little stated.<lb/>
"We're not thinking. I don't<lb/>
know what the problem is. But<lb/>
something is gang to have to<lb/>
happen to snap us out of this<lb/>
Pirates pound Virginia Weslayan 16-4 to even out the<lb/>
seasonal mark at 11-11: Pirates to face UNC tomorrow<lb/>
By STEVE BYERS<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
East Crolina released a bar-<lb/>
rage of bats against Virginia<lb/>
Weslayan College and gained a<lb/>
16-4 victory to salvage what was<lb/>
left of a disappointing weekend.<lb/>
The Bucs had lost three<lb/>
straight one run games before<lb/>
Sunday's game, and Pirate bat-<lb/>
ters were eager to take out their<lb/>
Monte Little's troops broke<lb/>
open a 2-2 ballgame with three<lb/>
runs in the third inning and were<lb/>
never threatened again.<lb/>
The game was 11 -3 going into<lb/>
the ninth inning when the Pirates<lb/>
hit three home runs to put nails in<lb/>
the ooffin.<lb/>
Mike Sage hit a solo homer,<lb/>
Butch Davis hit a two-run shot,<lb/>
and Boddy Supel hit his fifth of<lb/>
the season to blast open the<lb/>
already decided contest<lb/>
Tim Hardison added a triple to<lb/>
nearly add another homerun.<lb/>
Every Pirate starter had at<lb/>
least one hit.<lb/>
Mack continues to win post season honors<lb/>
By STEVE BYERS<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Oliver Mack has been named<lb/>
one of the top 10 basketball<lb/>
players in the country, according<lb/>
to Ozark Airlines Publications.<lb/>
Mack garnered the honors to<lb/>
join an illustrious group and<lb/>
-e the only East Carolina<lb/>
 receive such an<lb/>
THE TOP TEN<lb/>
Larry Bird, Indiana State<lb/>
Winford Boynes, San Francisco<lb/>
Bill Cartwright, San Franasco<lb/>
Phil Ford, North Carolina<lb/>
David Greenwood, UCLA<lb/>
Rod Griffin, Wake Forest<lb/>
Butch Lee, Marquette<lb/>
Oliver Mack, East Carolina<lb/>
Micheal Thompson, Minnesota<lb/>
Jerome Whitehead, Marquette<lb/>
Mack hao also been named to<lb/>
the All-Southern Independent<lb/>
team selected by a panel of sports<lb/>
writers and broadcasters.<lb/>
He was the only unanimous<lb/>
selection on a team with such<lb/>
stars as Jackie Gilloon of South<lb/>
Carolina and Calvin Natt of<lb/>
Northeast Louisiana who led the<lb/>
U.S. team to victory at the World<lb/>
University games in Bulgaria last<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
With an average of 37.5 points<lb/>
per game over the last seven<lb/>
games, Mack finished fourth in<lb/>
the nation 28 ppg average.<lb/>
Associated Press Honorable<lb/>
Mention All-America, Basketball<lb/>
weekly 1st team All-America<lb/>
transfer team, All Atlantic Coast<lb/>
team, North Carolina Athelete of<lb/>
the week (Feb. 4-11), and Most<lb/>
Valuable Player in the First Union<lb/>
invitational tournament are<lb/>
earlier honors bestowed upon the<lb/>
Queens, N.Y. native.<lb/>
Oliver broke every single<lb/>
season scoring record at ECU,<lb/>
along with averaging 37.5<lb/>
minutes playing time per game<lb/>
(out of a possib'o 40). He was the<lb/>
3rd leading rebounder, 2nd lead<lb/>
ing assist man, and 1st in steals.<lb/>
"I think he would trade it all<lb/>
for a few more wins said Pirate<lb/>
head coach Larry GiUrnan<lb/>
With "national letter o: itent<lb/>
day" being Wed April 11. Mack<lb/>
will find out who will join him.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058047_0011"/><lb/>
HHHK<lb/>
Expansion of Ficklen Stadium to<lb/>
schedule for fall opening against<lb/>
4 April 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
The expansion of ECU'S Fiok<lb/>
len Stadium is well underway<lb/>
with assurance that the Pirate<lb/>
football team will be opening at<lb/>
home as scheduled on Sept. 2,<lb/>
against Western Carolina Uni-<lb/>
versity.<lb/>
The expansion project will<lb/>
expand Ficklen Stadium's seating<lb/>
capaciy from the current 20,000 to<lb/>
35,000, giving East Carolina the<lb/>
fourth largest football stadium in<lb/>
the state. Only Carter Stadium in<lb/>
Raleigh, Wallace Wade Stadium<lb/>
in Durham and Kenan Stadium in<lb/>
Chapel Hill will seat more than<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
"The construction work is a<lb/>
week or two ahead in some areas<lb/>
and a week a two behind in<lb/>
others said Jim Lowry, director<lb/>
of the physical plant at East<lb/>
Carolina. "In general, however,<lb/>
construction work is about on<lb/>
schedule, particularly in the<lb/>
major areas.<lb/>
"All steel work is scheduled to<lb/>
be oompleted within six weeks,<lb/>
while pre-cast oonaete seats are<lb/>
already being placed in one<lb/>
corner of the stadium.<lb/>
"There should not be any real<lb/>
problem in having the construc-<lb/>
tion work oompleted on sche-<lb/>
dule<lb/>
The $2.7 million project is<lb/>
being handled by the Parke<lb/>
Construction Company of Char-<lb/>
lotte.<lb/>
"It's really got me excited<lb/>
said Pat Dye, head football coach.<lb/>
"Everyday I sit here and can<lb/>
watch the work outside my<lb/>
window. I can't help but get<lb/>
excited thinking about those<lb/>
35,000 fans in the stands. That's<lb/>
what it's all about fa us.<lb/>
"Everywhere we go with the<lb/>
Pirate Club there's enthusiastic<lb/>
conversation about the stadium<lb/>
expansion. Thisoouldopen upso<lb/>
many doas fa us in getting<lb/>
bigger name teams to come to our<lb/>
place and play.<lb/>
"But the first thing after the<lb/>
stadium expansion is finished, is<lb/>
to start filling it up with East<lb/>
Carolina fans<lb/>
In addition to the seating<lb/>
expansion, a modern three level<lb/>
media facility is being construct-<lb/>
ed, along with a ohancella' s box,<lb/>
an elevata to service the media<lb/>
facility and additional rest roan<lb/>
facilities.<lb/>
The media facility will be<lb/>
partially completed fa 1978, but<lb/>
the structure fa future comple-<lb/>
tion is being built. The 1978<lb/>
season will find all spatswriters,<lb/>
spatscasters and others involved<lb/>
with staging a game housed on<lb/>
the first flea of the media facility.<lb/>
The f.rst level will contain two<lb/>
rows fa the waking media, dark<lb/>
room facilities fa phaographers,<lb/>
a food service area, rest roans,<lb/>
newspaper copy filing area and<lb/>
staage areas.<lb/>
The second level of the media<lb/>
facility will only be floaed and<lb/>
waled-in, but not oompleted<lb/>
inside.<lb/>
The third level of the media<lb/>
facility will be fa film crews fa<lb/>
televisiat and coaches film. This<lb/>
will be completed and operable<lb/>
fa the 1978 seasai.<lb/>
The chanceJIa's box will be<lb/>
underneath the media facility,<lb/>
complete with cushioned seats,<lb/>
food service area and rest rooms.<lb/>
The elevata will also service the<lb/>
chancella'sbox.<lb/>
"It just looks great to me<lb/>
said Bill Cain, directa of athle-<lb/>
tics. "Noone can imagine what a<lb/>
beautiful sight that is to all of us<lb/>
here who have dreamed of such<lb/>
fa so many years.<lb/>
ECU signs Tyson<lb/>
East Carolina University head<lb/>
basketball coach Larry Gillman<lb/>
announced last week the signing<lb/>
of Al Tyson to a grant-in-aid with<lb/>
the Pirates. This is the first<lb/>
announced signing by the basket-<lb/>
ball staff.<lb/>
Tyson is a 6-11, 215 pound<lb/>
center from D.H. Conley High<lb/>
School, located only ten minutes<lb/>
from the East Carolina campus.<lb/>
While, playing fa coach<lb/>
Shelly Marsh, Tyson started fa<lb/>
three seasais at oenter, avera-<lb/>
ging in double figures each<lb/>
season. As a senia, Tysai<lb/>
averaged 18.6 points per game<lb/>
and 12 rebounds per game as<lb/>
Conley recorded a 19-6 record.<lb/>
Honas fa Tysai thus far<lb/>
have included all-Eastern Caro-<lb/>
lina Conference, all-America East<lb/>
Region by Street and Smith,<lb/>
35,000 seats is on<lb/>
Western Carolina<lb/>
'You know, back in 1963 we August 31, although it appears<lb/>
had one side completed. Then in<lb/>
1968 we put up the aher side and<lb/>
it took us five years to have a<lb/>
capacity aowd. Now, in 1978,<lb/>
we'll have nearly double the<lb/>
seating capacity of the last ten<lb/>
years, but it certainly will not take<lb/>
us five years to fill 35,000 seatsas<lb/>
it took in 1968 to fill 20,000<lb/>
The deadline fq completion is<lb/>
completioi will occur earlier than<lb/>
thisdate. Should the stadium not<lb/>
be oompleted by August 31, a<lb/>
$100,000 penalty clause is written<lb/>
into the oontract<lb/>
The Pirates will play the<lb/>
opening game of the 1978 season<lb/>
in the expanded Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
against Western Carolina Uni-<lb/>
versity.<lb/>
 Special Power Blit driver sale, over 150<lb/>
to choose from, reg. $44.50 NOW $33.50<lb/>
 Largest selection of golf shoes in area<lb/>
at sale prices, sizes 3 to 16.<lb/>
 Titleist, Topflite, Wilsfm, Hogan and all<lb/>
other golf balls, $11.50dozen.<lb/>
 Excellent selection of used golf clubs<lb/>
at unbelievably low prices.<lb/>
 New arrivals, tennis shorts &amp; shirts,<lb/>
8rv warm-up suits, Etonic KM pro<lb/>
fessional jogging shoes.<lb/>
All tennis rackets 30-50 off<lb/>
We accepted Master Charge<lb/>
Gordon D. Fulp<lb/>
Golf Professional<lb/>
Greenville Golf &amp; Country Club<lb/>
Off of Memaial Dr.<lb/>
Phone 756-0504<lb/>
Open 7 days a week until dark<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
for sate<lb/>
FOR SALE: 74 Honda 175. Runs<lb/>
like a dog in heat. When you feel<lb/>
this baby pulsating between your<lb/>
legs you'll really stand up &amp; take<lb/>
notioe. Call Gary's at 758-4330<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1 men's 10-speed<lb/>
bike in excellent oond. $100. Call<lb/>
752-9048.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '69 Dodge Coronet<lb/>
with slant six cylinder engine and<lb/>
standard shift. Excellent econo-<lb/>
my. Call 758-7434.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1 Pilot 360 4 channel<lb/>
stereo receiver, rated 60 watts per<lb/>
channel stereo, 30 watts at quad;<lb/>
BIC 940 turntable, 1 Wallensak<lb/>
top-loading cassette deck; also 1<lb/>
Nikon F Body with TN meterfind-<lb/>
er. Must sell. Call 7566094.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 2 Jensen Model 4<lb/>
stereo speakers. Excellent oond.<lb/>
?no.OO. Call 752-8862 and ask<lb/>
?ji Briai<lb/>
FOR SALL: Panasonic top-of-the-<lb/>
line stereo cassette deck. Dolby<lb/>
NR, Oo2, auto-stop and auto-<lb/>
release. Perfect oond. Cost $300<lb/>
when new. Sell fa $200. 752-<lb/>
1292.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Handmade silver<lb/>
jewelry for guys and girls.<lb/>
Turquoise, tigereye, coral, jade,<lb/>
ivory, mother of pearl, and more!<lb/>
Good quality at good prices. Call<lb/>
752-5070.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 2 plant stands, 1<lb/>
bookcase, 4 framed pictures, one<lb/>
double bed, variety of house<lb/>
plants. See at Apt. 200 George-<lb/>
town Apts. 758-4395.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Girls 10-speed<lb/>
Peugot. Call Karen 752-8023 after<lb/>
1:30 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 70 Buick in very<lb/>
good oond. $700.00 ALso 73<lb/>
Honda 500 - four in excellent<lb/>
cond. Only 7500 miles $850. Call<lb/>
756-3054.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Yamaha guitar FG75<lb/>
in good oond. Price negotiable.<lb/>
Call 756-0146.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 7 cubic foot refriger-<lb/>
ator in good oond. $35.00 Call<lb/>
758-8688.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Abraham Lawson<lb/>
Robot Kits. Coming Soon<lb/>
Inquire 758-7434.<lb/>
torrent (ffT<lb/>
, ?????????,? ? .?<lb/>
TWO FEMALES: needed to<lb/>
sublet for summer at Tar River<lb/>
Estates in two bedroom town-<lb/>
house. Call 752-3573.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE: wanted to<lb/>
share apt. for summer and or next<lb/>
school year. Near campus. Seper-<lb/>
ate bedrooms. $35 mo. plus<lb/>
utilities. Prefer reasonably quiet<lb/>
and clean person. Call 752-4043<lb/>
before 9 a.m. and after 9 p.m.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 2 males need room-<lb/>
mates to share apt. for the<lb/>
summer. New apts. in good<lb/>
location near campus. Furnished,<lb/>
dishwasher, and heat pumps. $78<lb/>
a month plus V3 utilities. Call<lb/>
758-3497 or oome by 215F Stanal<lb/>
Dr.<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT: across from<lb/>
college. Call 758-2585.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Mobile Home for<lb/>
single person. $120.00 month.<lb/>
Call 758-5712 after 530 p.m.<lb/>
FOR RENT: New 2 bedroom<lb/>
duples in quiet location. 14th St.<lb/>
extended available in April $225.<lb/>
756-5346.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 3 Bdrm. duplex. Will<lb/>
allow pets. Lease required. Call<lb/>
and leave message 756-5346.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 72 12x60 mobile<lb/>
home with 2 bedrooms, air oond.<lb/>
Located on large lot 15 minutes<lb/>
from campus. Call 758-5920.<lb/>
NEEDED IMMEDIATELY: Res-<lb/>
ponsible female to share 2<lb/>
bderoom furnished duples located<lb/>
outside the city limits just 3 miles<lb/>
from ECU main campus. No dogs<lb/>
 will oonsider housebroken cat.<lb/>
If interested call 752-1340 bet-<lb/>
ween 5 and 11 p.m. weekdays.<lb/>
ROOMMATES NEEDED: 2 fe-<lb/>
males needed for this summer at<lb/>
University Condominiums. Rents<lb/>
$48.50 plus Va utilities. Call Tina<lb/>
752-8590 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR RENT: One bedroom, fully<lb/>
furnished apt one block from<lb/>
campus (On 4th St.). Two double<lb/>
beds in bedroom. Rent is 150.00<lb/>
month. I want to sublease it May<lb/>
1 through Aug. 31. Please call<lb/>
752-1009.<lb/>
WANTED: One responsible to<lb/>
work and share expenses with 5<lb/>
other girls in furnished 3 bedroom<lb/>
condominium near Cherry Grove<lb/>
Beach, S.C. Area fa entire<lb/>
summer. Fa details call Sharon<lb/>
758-9078 a Soott 758-9428.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 2 bedroom town-<lb/>
house over the summer, furnish-<lb/>
ed, nice place. Good deal. Univer-<lb/>
sity Condo's, 2. Call Steve at<lb/>
758-4039.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 1 a 2 bedroom apt.<lb/>
fa sublease fa summer oily.<lb/>
Fully furnished dose to campus<lb/>
on 9th St. $100.00 a maith plus<lb/>
utilities. Private drive, backyard,<lb/>
front pa oh and swing. Call<lb/>
758-4402.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: needed<lb/>
by May 1st to slare a 2 bdrm.<lb/>
townhouse apt. with 2 other girls.<lb/>
$58 mo. plus V3 utilities. Call Lee<lb/>
at 758-9721 between 9 p.m. and 1<lb/>
a.m. a Mari 758-9802.<lb/>
personal?<lb/>
RIDE WANTED: to vicinity of<lb/>
Charleston, S.C fa the weekend<lb/>
of April 7th. Will share expenses.<lb/>
Call Cathy at 758-1115.<lb/>
WANTED: Commercial fashion<lb/>
artists fa free-lance work with ad<lb/>
agency. Can possibly work<lb/>
through mail and phone contact.<lb/>
Call a write: Severance, Givens<lb/>
and Co. 703 W. Nash St Suite<lb/>
B Wilson, N.C. 27893 919-237-<lb/>
2111.<lb/>
NEEDED: I need a ride to<lb/>
Winston-Salem Thurs April 13.<lb/>
Can leave after 4 p.m, Will be<lb/>
gald to help with gas. Call<lb/>
752-8458.<lb/>
HELP! need ride to Chariate and<lb/>
back (if na Chariate, then any<lb/>
pant between Ashville and back)<lb/>
fa April 7-9. Can leave anytime.<lb/>
Will be glad to pay fa gas,<lb/>
expenses, etc. John Weyla 458<lb/>
Ayoxk 752-8525.<lb/>
SPEEDO TYPIST: Will type<lb/>
theses manuscript, term papers,<lb/>
etc. Reasonable rates. Call Susan<lb/>
Cassidy 758-8241 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
lost<lb/>
2<lb/>
LOST: a pair of black rimmed<lb/>
glasses near Speight. Please turn<lb/>
in to Lost and Found dept. at<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
FOUND: Calculata ai SGA bus.<lb/>
Identify by student ID no. and<lb/>
description. Call Lynn at 758-9079<lb/>
a come by 108 Tyler.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058047_0012"/><lb/>
Pag 12 FOUKTAINHEAD 4 April 1978<lb/>
SPRING SALE<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
U.B.E.<lb/>
UNIVERSITY BOOK EXCHANGE<lb/>
528 S. COTANCHE STREET<lb/>
$1 off$1 off<lb/>
1JERSY<lb/>
REG.5.95<lb/>
$1 off$1 off<lb/>
$2 Off$2 Off<lb/>
1SP0RTSHIRT<lb/>
REG.8.95<lb/>
$2 Off$2 Off<lb/>
$2 Off $2 Off<lb/>
1 HOODED<lb/>
PULLOVER<lb/>
SWEATSHIRT<lb/>
REG. 7.95<lb/>
$2 Off $2 Off<lb/>
COUPONS<lb/>
GOOD THRU<lb/>
SATURDAY,<lb/>
APRIL 1ST<lb/>
$1 Off $1 Off<lb/>
1 T-SHIRT<lb/>
REG. 2.95<lb/>
$1 Off $1 Off<lb/>
$1 Off $1 Off<lb/>
1PR.TEHHIS SHORTS<lb/>
REG.7.95 &amp;6.9S<lb/>
$1 Off $1 Off<lb/>
50 off 50e off<lb/>
1 VISOR<lb/>
REG.2.49<lb/>
50? off 50c off<lb/>
$2 Off $2 Off<lb/>
1 HOODED<lb/>
SWEATSHIRT<lb/>
WZIPPER<lb/>
REG.9.95<lb/>
$2 Off $2 Off<lb/>
50e off 50e off<lb/>
1PR.GYM SHORTS<lb/>
2.95- 5.49<lb/>
50? off 50c off<lb/>
75c off 75c off<lb/>
SWEATPANTS<lb/>
REGA95<lb/>
75c off off<lb/>
$1 Off $1 Off<lb/>
1 SWEATSHIRT<lb/>
REG.6.95 &amp; 5.95<lb/>
$10ff $1 Off<lb/>
BRING YOUR<lb/>
COUPONS<lb/>
AND SAVE!<lb/>
<pb facs="00058047_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>