<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058048_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity fa over 50 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of 8,500,<lb/>
this issue is 12 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
ON THE IN9DE<lb/>
Ratp. 3<lb/>
Terrorismp. 5<lb/>
Brass reviewp. 6<lb/>
Softball winsp. 10<lb/>
Vol. No. 53, No. 45<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
6 April 1978<lb/>
(Juss of 78 senior class gift<lb/>
Scholarships offered<lb/>
byDOUGWHIT,E<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Ten $250 scholarships are<lb/>
being offered to full time ECU<lb/>
students as this year's senior<lb/>
class gift, according to Mark<lb/>
Snyder, chairperson of the<lb/>
Student Government Association<lb/>
(SGA) Senio r3ifi Committee.<lb/>
The oommittee will be made<lb/>
up of not more than nine seniors<lb/>
who will select the scholarship<lb/>
recipients.<lb/>
English<lb/>
By MARTHA OAKLEY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
An ECU English professor<lb/>
recently co-edited and published<lb/>
a book fa business and technical<lb/>
writers.<lb/>
Applications are available in<lb/>
the SGA office until 5 p.m. Fri<lb/>
April 7.<lb/>
REQUIREMENTS<lb/>
Applicants must be (1) pre-<lb/>
sently enrolled at ECU. (2) be a<lb/>
full time student at ECU fall<lb/>
semester 1978, (3) have excelled<lb/>
academically, and (4) have prov-<lb/>
ided outstanding service to the<lb/>
university, according to Snyder.<lb/>
"These scholarships are open<lb/>
to any full time student whether<lb/>
they are undergraduate a grad-<lb/>
uate students Snyder said.<lb/>
Snyder said the scholarships<lb/>
will not be cash awards, but will<lb/>
be sent to the Cashier's Office<lb/>
and deducted from the student's<lb/>
tuition.<lb/>
"Scholarships are usually<lb/>
based on need, but while most<lb/>
people here may not be needy, fa<lb/>
many, college tuition puts quite a<lb/>
burden on their parents Snyder<lb/>
said.<lb/>
wi<lb/>
"Hopefully, this scholarship<lb/>
I help relieve that burden<lb/>
The<lb/>
THE RECENT WARM spell has enticed many students outdoors,<lb/>
but some must mix homework with sunshine. Photo by Brian<lb/>
Stotler<lb/>
The text, "The Practical<lb/>
Craft: Readings fa Business and<lb/>
Technical Writers coitains es-<lb/>
says oi business and technical<lb/>
writing. The essays cone fron a<lb/>
variety of sources.<lb/>
Dr. Keats Sparrow said the<lb/>
sources fa the essays include the<lb/>
Harvard Business Review,<lb/>
Readers Digest, and other well-<lb/>
known and lesser-known books.<lb/>
Sparrow and Donald H.<lb/>
Cunningham of Maehead State<lb/>
University, the junia edita,<lb/>
together wrote introductions to<lb/>
each of the essays.<lb/>
Accading to Sparrow, the text<lb/>
is designed to transcend class-<lb/>
room writing and to aocomodate<lb/>
non-student and experienced<lb/>
writers.<lb/>
Sparrow spent two years<lb/>
preparing the book and was<lb/>
halfway through when<lb/>
Cunningham became involved.<lb/>
Printing took up another two<lb/>
years.<lb/>
The text is being published by<lb/>
the Houghton Mifflin Co. and is<lb/>
now available in the ECU Student<lb/>
TALENTED STUDENTS MAKE a sunny day all the<lb/>
more enjoyable by jamming on the mall. Impromptu<lb/>
concerts like this one will probably continue to<lb/>
spring up around campus as long as the weather<lb/>
holds.<lb/>
'But the giris weren't interested'<lb/>
Unescorted males 'just making time'<lb/>
when caught trespassing in female dorm<lb/>
ByJEANNIE WILLIAMS<lb/>
Assistant News Edita<lb/>
Two males were arrested fa<lb/>
trespassing in a wonen' s dami-<lb/>
tay this week aocading to<lb/>
Francis Eddings, chief of campus<lb/>
police .<lb/>
Eddings said the two males<lb/>
were seen unesoated in a<lb/>
wonen's dam and repated to<lb/>
polioe, who identified the men<lb/>
and issued a warrant.<lb/>
Eddings said that the two<lb/>
males were identified as being<lb/>
involved in a similar incident<lb/>
about a year ago.<lb/>
A warrant was issued and the<lb/>
men arrested.<lb/>
"The two black males were<lb/>
involved in an incident about a<lb/>
year ago and were banned from<lb/>
the women's dams and the<lb/>
campus said Eddings.<lb/>
"Basically, they were just<lb/>
making time, trying to get a<lb/>
date said Eddings.<lb/>
"But the girls weren't inter-<lb/>
ested at all" he added.<lb/>
Eddings saia that there had<lb/>
been other incidents of unes-<lb/>
oated males repated but said<lb/>
campus security didn't arrive in<lb/>
time to catch the men.<lb/>
Supply Stae.<lb/>
Sparrow said the preliminary<lb/>
reports about the book have been<lb/>
exciting.<lb/>
This is Sparrow's first cook,<lb/>
but he said he has signed<lb/>
contracts fa future aies.<lb/>
Sparrow has been teaching at<lb/>
ECU since 1973.<lb/>
He teaches "Writing fa Bus-<lb/>
iness and Industry" at both the<lb/>
undergraduate and graduate<lb/>
levels.<lb/>
Befae coming to ECU.<lb/>
Sparrow taught at the University of<lb/>
Kentucky.<lb/>
Media Board selects<lb/>
temporary chairman<lb/>
By STUART MORGAN<lb/>
News Edita<lb/>
The Media Board oonsented<lb/>
last night to having Dean James<lb/>
H. Tucker serve as its temporary<lb/>
chairman.<lb/>
"There will be new members<lb/>
joining the media board, and his<lb/>
serving as temporary chairman<lb/>
will allow the new members the<lb/>
opportunity to get to know each<lb/>
aher said Tommy J. Payne,<lb/>
SGA President.<lb/>
"And, it will prevent present<lb/>
members from acquiring an edge<lb/>
of experience over the members<lb/>
who'll soon be joining the<lb/>
board added Payne. "This way,<lb/>
everyone who will be serving on<lb/>
the board will have a fair chance<lb/>
to oompete fa its several posi-<lb/>
tions<lb/>
Also, the board agreed to<lb/>
purchase a new $4,108 dollar<lb/>
headliner machine fa FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD.<lb/>
To do so, the board had to<lb/>
transfer $2,000 dollars from the<lb/>
newspaper's salary budget and<lb/>
$2,200 from its supply<lb/>
budget to aeate a new equipment<lb/>
budget of $4,200.<lb/>
"FOUNTAINHEAD didn't<lb/>
have an equipment budget said<lb/>
Robert Swaim, advertising man<lb/>
ager of FOUNTAINHEAD.<lb/>
"Therefae, it was necessary fa<lb/>
the board to aeate such a budget<lb/>
in ader to purchase the new<lb/>
headliner machine<lb/>
"We've had several mechani-<lb/>
cal failures with our machines this<lb/>
year said Cindy Broome. edita<lb/>
of FOUNTAINHEAD. "Fa<lb/>
example, we couldn't print one<lb/>
paper last semester due to the<lb/>
developer machine breaking<lb/>
down.<lb/>
"The headliner machine is<lb/>
giving us alot of trouble now, and<lb/>
if we don't get another one soon, I<lb/>
don't know whether the present<lb/>
one will make it through the year<lb/>
or not added Broome.<lb/>
"The machines we have now<lb/>
were used by aher newspapers<lb/>
befae we bought them. They're<lb/>
old, and we need new equipment<lb/>
periodically she further added.<lb/>
In addition, the board decided<lb/>
to examine the budgets of FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD,EBONY HERALD,<lb/>
BUCCANEER, REBEL, and<lb/>
WECU.<lb/>
On April 18, it will also tour<lb/>
their offioes to examine their<lb/>
equipment and view operations.<lb/>
Next Friday, the board will<lb/>
elect a new day representative.<lb/>
The filing date fa that position<lb/>
has ended<lb/>
<pb facs="00058048_0002"/><lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 6 April 1978<lb/>
BUG<lb/>
Pinball<lb/>
Walk<lb/>
Photo jobs Rebel checks<lb/>
There will be several positions<lb/>
open for the 1978-79 school year<lb/>
as campus photographer. Any<lb/>
interested ECU student may<lb/>
come by the FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
office between 9 a.m. and 4:30<lb/>
p.m. weekdays to obtain an<lb/>
application for screening.<lb/>
Be prepared to list previous<lb/>
work experience and photogra-<lb/>
phic knowledge. Also, small<lb/>
portfolio, (preferably black and<lb/>
white, although color will be<lb/>
accepted), must be submitted.<lb/>
The portfolio is not necessary<lb/>
until after the applicant has been<lb/>
contacted for an interview.<lb/>
The SGA needs your help in<lb/>
working on a new visitation<lb/>
policy. If you have some good<lb/>
ideas, goto your hall advisor and<lb/>
g-ve them a list of what you think<lb/>
will be a better plan.<lb/>
Be sure and do it before April<lb/>
21. We appreciate your help!<lb/>
Peace corps<lb/>
The Peace Corps is not fa<lb/>
everyone. It's demanding, but it<lb/>
could be the toughest job you will<lb/>
ever love.<lb/>
We would like you to think<lb/>
about it so you can deacfejf-ite fa<lb/>
you.<lb/>
I f you are interested in finding<lb/>
out mae about the Peace Caps<lb/>
opportunities, phaie (757-6586)<lb/>
a visit our office in room 425<lb/>
Flanagan Bldg.<lb/>
Life<lb/>
Tired of the hum-drum dam<lb/>
life? Got the uptown same thing<lb/>
blues? Dr. Artie Hansen from<lb/>
N.C. State puts life into religion<lb/>
tonight at 730 p.m. in room 221<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
This weekend, the Student<lb/>
Union Coffeehouse Committee<lb/>
will present 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 rcom<lb/>
15, Mendenhall.<lb/>
A native of Goldsbao, 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/>
BIRD 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 aher campus.<lb/>
Doit miss this excpetional<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/>
The following people have<lb/>
checks in the Rebel office: Tim<lb/>
Wright, Roxanne Reep, Tony<lb/>
Eder, John Quinn, John Maris,<lb/>
and Daethea Finlay.<lb/>
Phi Sigma<lb/>
Tau chapter of Phi Sigma<lb/>
national hona fraternity is spon-<lb/>
saing an exhibit in the lobby of<lb/>
Joyner Library displaying the<lb/>
many awards and recognitions<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi received over the<lb/>
years, plus some of the histay of<lb/>
the fraternity, the oldest fraternal<lb/>
aganization of campus<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma<lb/>
Initiates into Phi Eta Sigma,<lb/>
Freshman Hona Society, are<lb/>
reminded that the initiaiton cer-<lb/>
emony will take place on Thurs<lb/>
April 13, in the multipurpose<lb/>
room of Mendenhall, beginning<lb/>
at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Dress should be casual but<lb/>
neat. Male students should wear<lb/>
coats (tie optional). Any questions<lb/>
should be directed to Dr. John D.<lb/>
Ebbs (214 Austin).<lb/>
Nag's Head<lb/>
There will be a Christian<lb/>
Coffeehouse at Nag's Head this<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
All interested in finding out<lb/>
mae about it come to a meeting<lb/>
Tues April 11 at 8 p.m. in room<lb/>
221 Mendenhall a contact Karen<lb/>
King (752-8023) a Matt Garrett<lb/>
(752-5480).<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
Every Friday fron 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/>
INDT<lb/>
The INDT Club issponsaing i<lb/>
Pig Pickin' on Sat April 8, at 5<lb/>
p.m. at the Pitt County Wildlife<lb/>
Club. Tickets are $2 and can be<lb/>
purchased from any dub member<lb/>
a at the gate.<lb/>
Fencing<lb/>
The Fencing Club is having an<lb/>
aganizatioial meeting Mai<lb/>
April 10.<lb/>
It is impatant that all these<lb/>
interested attend. We will be<lb/>
discussing business and setting<lb/>
up new meeting dates.<lb/>
We will meet at 730 p.m. in<lb/>
the dancing rcom at the bottom of<lb/>
Memaial Gym. All new comers<lb/>
are welcome.<lb/>
Any aganizatioi that does na<lb/>
have a picture and an inamatiai<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 cone<lb/>
to the BUCCANEER office any<lb/>
Tuesday a Thursday afternoon<lb/>
and identify the members in your<lb/>
picture. We must have this<lb/>
infamatioi fa the yearbook, too.<lb/>
Real estate<lb/>
The Pho Epsilon Real Estate<lb/>
fraternity, in cooperation with the<lb/>
Nath Carolina Association of<lb/>
realtas and the Nath Carolina<lb/>
Real Estate Educational Founda-<lb/>
tion, will sponsa its third annual<lb/>
symposium on April 12 in Men-<lb/>
denhall Student Center.<lb/>
The program will begin at 9<lb/>
a.m. and conclude at 4 p.m.<lb/>
The topics to be covered<lb/>
include Residential Brokerage,<lb/>
Property Management, Matgage<lb/>
Banking, Residential Land Deve-<lb/>
lopment, Commercial Brokerage,<lb/>
and Real Property Valuation.<lb/>
The purpose of this program is<lb/>
two-fold: First, to give the<lb/>
student some insight into the<lb/>
oppatunities open to them in<lb/>
real estate specialties; second, fa<lb/>
those realtas having openings in<lb/>
their firms to offer such positions<lb/>
to graduating students of interest<lb/>
to them.<lb/>
Several real estate firms have<lb/>
expressed an interest in hiring<lb/>
ECU graduates. All interested<lb/>
persons are invited to attend.<lb/>
Dinner<lb/>
The International Student As-<lb/>
sociation is holding a fund raising<lb/>
dinner Mon April 10, fron 4.30 -<lb/>
8 p.m. at the Internatioial House<lb/>
309 East 9th St. Greenville.<lb/>
Tickets are $3 and can be<lb/>
obtained by calling 752-5355.<lb/>
Elbo<lb/>
Social time at the Elbo Room,<lb/>
April 12, from 830 p.m. to 1 a.m.<lb/>
Doa prizes, contests, and<lb/>
mae fa just 50 cents admission.<lb/>
Crusade<lb/>
Leadership Training Class,<lb/>
sponsaed by Campus Crusade<lb/>
fa Christ, meets ai Thurs. at 7<lb/>
p.m. in Brewster C-103.<lb/>
After a time of fellowship,<lb/>
there is an opportunity to learn<lb/>
mae about how to love God and<lb/>
love others. The four classes<lb/>
offered are Christian life, dyn-<lb/>
amics of disapleship, dynamics of<lb/>
ministry, and life of Christ which<lb/>
is open to those interested in<lb/>
investigating the person of Jesus<lb/>
Christ.<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 Monday<lb/>
through Thursday, from 9 a.m.<lb/>
until 11 p.m April 3 through<lb/>
April 20.<lb/>
There are 13 chances to win<lb/>
with the Grand Prize going to the<lb/>
person who accumulates the most<lb/>
high soaes fa the tournament.<lb/>
The first place winner will<lb/>
choose from prizes wath $25<lb/>
each - a Happy Stae 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 second 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/>
Pho Epsilon<lb/>
The Pho Epsilon Real Estate<lb/>
fraternity will meet on Thurs<lb/>
April 6, in room 221 Mendenhall<lb/>
at 4 p.m.<lb/>
The symposium is April 12,<lb/>
and it will be planned at this<lb/>
meeting. New officers will be<lb/>
nominated.<lb/>
Seniors<lb/>
ATTENTION: Second Semester<lb/>
Graduates.<lb/>
Undergraduate caps and<lb/>
gowns are on ader.<lb/>
Delivery date fa 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 Stae.<lb/>
These Keepsake gowns are<lb/>
your to keep providing the $10<lb/>
graduation fee has been paid.<lb/>
Fa those receiving the<lb/>
Masters Degree the $10 fee pays<lb/>
fa your cap and gown, but there<lb/>
is an extra fee of $7.95 fa your<lb/>
hood. Any quest ions pertaining to<lb/>
caps and gowns should be<lb/>
referred to the Students Supply<lb/>
Stae, Wright Building.<lb/>
Fellowship<lb/>
Looking fa Christian fellow-<lb/>
ship?<lb/>
The Fa ever Generatiai will<lb/>
meet Maiday night fa Christian<lb/>
fellowship and fun.<lb/>
We'll be having a relevant<lb/>
Bible study, good singing, and<lb/>
delicious refreshments.<lb/>
Jim Zimmer, a prospective<lb/>
missionary to Japan, will speak.<lb/>
That's Monday night, April<lb/>
10, at 9 p.m. in Brewster C-304.<lb/>
Why not join us?<lb/>
Can Vou walk 20 kilometers<lb/>
(12V? miles?).<lb/>
Well the ECU Hunger Coal-<lb/>
ition invites you totry on April 22.<lb/>
The fun starts at Green<lb/>
Springs Park at 7:45 A.M.<lb/>
check-in, then a pleasant walk<lb/>
through Greenville. The money<lb/>
that is raised will help fund the<lb/>
Campus Ministers Kitchen Aid<lb/>
Drive as well as a Caribbean<lb/>
self-help food program.<lb/>
Free lunch is provided at the<lb/>
BSU after the walk. So start<lb/>
looking fa sponsas to suppat<lb/>
you perkilometer a help out by<lb/>
sponsaing another walker. Visit<lb/>
our sign carrier outside the<lb/>
Student Supply Stae fa mae<lb/>
info a call 752-4646. Please "put<lb/>
a little heart in your soul<lb/>
Thanks.<lb/>
Inter-varsity<lb/>
Inter-Varsity Christian Fel-<lb/>
lowship will meet this Sunday<lb/>
night, at 8 p.m. at the Afro-<lb/>
American Cultural Center.<lb/>
SOULS<lb/>
Our weekly S.O.U.L.S. meet-<lb/>
ing will be on Thurs April 6 at 7<lb/>
p.m. at the AACC. Please be<lb/>
prompt.<lb/>
Outing<lb/>
The Outing Club meets Thurs-<lb/>
day evenings in Memaial Gym at<lb/>
7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Anyoie interested on plan-<lb/>
ning, leading, and a participat-<lb/>
ing in outdoa trips is encouraged<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
Extravaganza<lb/>
The first Annual Spring Extra-<lb/>
vaganza is being held in Green-<lb/>
ville Wednesday through Satur-<lb/>
day this week.<lb/>
This four day sale sponsaed<lb/>
by the Merchants Committee of<lb/>
the Greenville Area Chamber of<lb/>
Commerce, is the second of four<lb/>
city-wide promotions sponsaed<lb/>
by the committee this year.<lb/>
Accading to John Shannon-<lb/>
house and Bill Fuqua, co-<lb/>
chairman of the Merchants Com-<lb/>
mittee of the Chamber, all<lb/>
merchants who are members of<lb/>
the Greenville Area Chamber of<lb/>
Commerce will be offering special<lb/>
bargains and encouraging shop-<lb/>
pers to dress up, fix up, and dean<lb/>
up to celebrate the beginning of<lb/>
Spring.<lb/>
The maja shopping areas in<lb/>
which merchants will be partici-<lb/>
pating in the Spring Extravagan-<lb/>
za are as follows: Pitt Plaza,<lb/>
Downtown Merchants, Nichols<lb/>
Area Merchants, Arlington Bou-<lb/>
levard Merchants, Greenville<lb/>
Square Merchants, and West End<lb/>
Shopping Center Merchants.<lb/>
Shoppers can readily locate<lb/>
part id pat ing merchants by look-<lb/>
ing fa the official Spring Extra-<lb/>
vaganza posters displayed in the<lb/>
merchants' windows.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058048_0003"/><lb/>
�HMLHVOMBsWH<lb/>
�MHBBHB<lb/>
Psychology experiment involves operant conditioning<lb/>
6 April 1978 FQUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
Laboratory rat learns to paint<lb/>
Ome Oh VAN Gogh" the rat's original finger paintings.<lb/>
A Put. . MR<lb/>
A rhe Advertising Council "��!<lb/>
Coux�<lb/>
We make<lb/>
By A RAH V ENABLE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A laboratory rat in the psych-<lb/>
ology department is learning to<lb/>
fingerpaint by means of operant<lb/>
conditioning.<lb/>
The rat's name is Van Gogh<lb/>
and his teacher is Jenny Miller, a<lb/>
psychology graduate student.<lb/>
Miller is experimenting with<lb/>
the art as a project for Dr.<lb/>
Tacker's Contingency Manage-<lb/>
ment dass.<lb/>
Miller said her first task was<lb/>
to get the rat to press the bar for<lb/>
food.<lb/>
The rat receives a pellet of<lb/>
food for each correct response.<lb/>
The second task for Miller was<lb/>
to get the rat to stick his paws in<lb/>
the paint. Everytime he did, he<lb/>
was rewarded with a pellet.<lb/>
The final and most difficult<lb/>
task was to make the rat stick his<lb/>
a little<lb/>
go a long<lb/>
way.<lb/>
Give.<lb/>
Red Cross<lb/>
is counting<lb/>
on you.<lb/>
J<lb/>
Tonite is Concert Nite with<lb/>
HIGH ft MIGHTY<lb/>
at the<lb/>
eeso Bear<lb/>
Don't Miss Em.<lb/>
Fri. 3-7 End of Week Party<lb/>
Sat. - Sat Nite Fever<lb/>
(Only 3 weeks left before finals!)<lb/>
Sun. - Ladies Nite<lb/>
Students come to the<lb/>
SPRING<lb/>
EXTRAVAGANZA<lb/>
in Greenville April 5-8<lb/>
Special Spring Bargains Will Be<lb/>
Featured By Merchants Throughout<lb/>
The City Of Greenville !<lb/>
w<lb/>
e�<lb/>
3V<lb/>
cv<lb/>
Major Shopping Areas Participating :<lb/>
. Pitt Plaza Merchants<lb/>
. Downtown Merchants<lb/>
. Nichols Area Merchants<lb/>
. Arlington Boulevard Merchants<lb/>
. Greenville Square Merchants<lb/>
. West Knd Merchants<lb/>
VV<lb/>
VV<lb/>
Sponsored By The Merchants Committee<lb/>
Greenville Area Chamber Of Commerce<lb/>
I<lb/>
paws on the paper after sticking<lb/>
them in the paint. He has to stand<lb/>
on his hind legs to do so.<lb/>
The rat is put in a cage. A<lb/>
sheet of white cardboard is placed<lb/>
on one side of the cage. The paint<lb/>
is placed in a jar lid and taped to<lb/>
prevent the rat from turning it<lb/>
over.<lb/>
Behavior Modification is be-<lb/>
ing used on Van Gogh. He is<lb/>
being reinforced with food pellets<lb/>
to get him to behave a certain<lb/>
way.<lb/>
Van Gogh learns to associate a<lb/>
dick with the food he is given.<lb/>
The click and the food are<lb/>
used to strengthen responses.<lb/>
The projects are scheduled for<lb/>
six weeks. This is the fifth vr�k<lb/>
Each student in Dr. Tacker's<lb/>
dass must do a project. Some<lb/>
students are using children in<lb/>
their projects, teaching them<lb/>
multiplication tables and other<lb/>
things. Tacker said it's the same<lb/>
prindple.<lb/>
If a student has no access to a<lb/>
child, Tacker said, then a lower<lb/>
organism, such as a rat, must be<lb/>
used.<lb/>
Saads Shoe Shop<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
at<lb/>
College View Cleaners<lb/>
<pb facs="00058048_0004"/><lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 6 April 1978<lb/>
'Obscene' material<lb/>
merits protection<lb/>
Much controversy has arisen during the last year<lb/>
concerning pornography and whether it warrants<lb/>
protection of the First Amendment.<lb/>
Many people consider Penthouse and Hustler<lb/>
magazines "obscene Some want to see these<lb/>
publications cease to be printed.<lb/>
The people who dislike magazines such as those<lb/>
mentioned above should ask themselves what<lb/>
obscene" really means. The U.S. Supreme Court<lb/>
cannot define "obscene Actually, the definition<lb/>
should depend upon the individual's own interpreta-<lb/>
tion of the word and his own likes and dislikes of<lb/>
various material.<lb/>
A painting, for example, may be obscene to one<lb/>
person and art to another. The same thing goes for a<lb/>
story or a photograph.<lb/>
Hustler publishe Larry Flynt has been under fire<lb/>
concerning the material which is printed in Hustler<lb/>
each month. The question has been asked whether he<lb/>
should be allowed to print such material and whether<lb/>
this "obscene" material is protected by the First<lb/>
Amendment.<lb/>
The First Amendment states: "Congress shall<lb/>
make no lawabridging the freedomof the<lb/>
press If this amendment is to be interpreted<lb/>
literally, then the government has no right to demand<lb/>
the cessation of a publication, even if it is offensive to<lb/>
a group of people.<lb/>
Perhaps these people have not realized one<lb/>
thing�they have the freedom of choice not to buy.<lb/>
No one is forcing any individual to buy a magazine<lb/>
just because it is there. Besides, some people<lb/>
apparently enjoy these magazines, otherwise they<lb/>
would have gone out of business long before now.<lb/>
Perhaps these magazines should be placed in an<lb/>
area where children will not have access to them.<lb/>
Other than that, the people should reserve their right<lb/>
to buy them if they choose to do so. If others find<lb/>
them offensive, then they don't have to buy them.<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/>
EditorCindy Broome<lb/>
Managing EditorLeigh Coakley<lb/>
Advertising ManagerRobert M. Swaim<lb/>
News Editors Doug 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 Media 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/>
Forum<lb/>
Student angered at Secretary Califano<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
"Warning: The Surgeon<lb/>
General Determined that Ciga-<lb/>
rette Smoking is Dangerous to<lb/>
Your Health<lb/>
The words above are noted on<lb/>
the side of a cigarette pack. All<lb/>
brands are required to have this<lb/>
important warning. This is the<lb/>
subject the Secretary of Health,<lb/>
Education and Welfare (HEW) is<lb/>
speaking on.<lb/>
At the head of HEW is Joseph<lb/>
A. Califano, Jr. who was appoin-<lb/>
ted tr this cabinet post by Pres.<lb/>
Carter. Califano is telling the<lb/>
people what tney stiouia not ao<lb/>
But how is he affording to do this?<lb/>
Is it by taxpayers' money? Or is it<lb/>
by private groups?<lb/>
Mr. Califano is preaching his<lb/>
philosophy to the people to do this<lb/>
and don't do that on a $30 million<lb/>
budget.<lb/>
But the cigarette companies<lb/>
spend in advertising an excess of<lb/>
$500 million. These oompanies<lb/>
want to draw more oonsumers<lb/>
than they already have.<lb/>
Compare and oontrast the two<lb/>
advertising campaigns. Cali-<lb/>
fano's is a mere $30 million and<lb/>
Cigarette Companies a small<lb/>
half-billion dollars. Both are to<lb/>
benefit the consumer, however,<lb/>
in oontrary viewpoints. This is<lb/>
like David against Goliath. But<lb/>
who is to say who the victor will<lb/>
be? Will it be government<lb/>
regulation (if that) or oorporate<lb/>
spending?<lb/>
The enterprise doesn't care at<lb/>
all who smokes cigarettes, as long<lb/>
as they make their payroll. But,<lb/>
Mr. Califano preaches no, don't<lb/>
smoke; stay alive and healthy.<lb/>
Evidently Mr. Califano<lb/>
doesn't understand human<lb/>
nature. When an authority tells<lb/>
one not to do something the result<lb/>
is the tendency to rebel. This is<lb/>
human nature.<lb/>
Fa example, remember when<lb/>
the Church said no one should see<lb/>
the movie The Exorcist? What<lb/>
happened? Most people had to go<lb/>
see it.<lb/>
As a matter of fact, Mr.<lb/>
Califano used to be a smoker. He<lb/>
at one point must have found total<lb/>
enjoyment in this habit. But out of<lb/>
fear from statistics he quit this<lb/>
habit. Statistics are the almighty<lb/>
numbers broken down by items<lb/>
on a blank piece of paper.<lb/>
It is said that little numbers on<lb/>
a piece of paper can be read and<lb/>
interpreted in whatever a re-<lb/>
searcher wants understood.<lb/>
A trend of thought is found by<lb/>
several statistics supporting the<lb/>
idea that cigarettes do harm to a<lb/>
smoker's health.<lb/>
Furthermore, here is no sub-<lb/>
stantial evidence to form a sound<lb/>
theory that cigarette smoking<lb/>
does cause harm.<lb/>
Cigarette smoking has many<lb/>
ambiguous facts about it. These<lb/>
ambiguous facts are what Mr.<lb/>
Califano is preaching to the<lb/>
public. But how is Mr. Califano<lb/>
able to do this?<lb/>
It is my opinion that Mr.<lb/>
Califano is not totally sincere<lb/>
about this campaign against<lb/>
smoking. In reflecting back in this<lb/>
nation's history, one will acknow-<lb/>
ledge that a similar campaign was<lb/>
brought to a head againU booze.<lb/>
When people were living<lb/>
comfortably, there was Prohibi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The 18th Amendment or<lb/>
otherwise known as Prohibition<lb/>
was ratified in 1919. This amend-<lb/>
ment "Forbade manufacturing,<lb/>
sale or transportation of intoxica-<lb/>
ting liquors This was contrived<lb/>
by a small percentage of people<lb/>
with great influence.<lb/>
There were bootleggers,<lb/>
blackmarkets, and underground<lb/>
organizations that sold liquor<lb/>
illegally. Today there are many<lb/>
wealthy and influential families<lb/>
as a result of this market.<lb/>
As you know, this was repeal-<lb/>
ed by the 21st Amendment in<lb/>
1933. This amendment took 14<lb/>
years to do away with all the<lb/>
provisions in the 18th Amend-<lb/>
ment. As a result, citizens can<lb/>
buy booze legally.<lb/>
Now if Mr. Califano was<lb/>
sincere about this venture he<lb/>
would have initiated and propos-<lb/>
ed the 28th Amendment.<lb/>
This amendment would liter-<lb/>
ally formalize another limitation<lb/>
of our civil I iberes granted in the<lb/>
Constitution.<lb/>
One must realize that all of the<lb/>
consequences that occurred in the<lb/>
1920s will happen again.<lb/>
Can you Imagine today ciga-<lb/>
rettes being bootlegged or sold on<lb/>
a black market?<lb/>
Can you fantasize running into<lb/>
your basement to have a smoke?<lb/>
Mr. Califano, how about making<lb/>
your proposals formal and stop<lb/>
wasting the governments invalu-<lb/>
able time?<lb/>
Mr. Califano, aren't there<lb/>
more pressing matters that<lb/>
ought to be resolved than this<lb/>
tobacco fiasco?<lb/>
MarcAdler<lb/>
L<lb/>
<pb facs="00058048_0005"/><lb/>
���������IB<lb/>
nnm<lb/>
6 April 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
Greek forum<lb/>
ByRICKIGLIARMIS<lb/>
Co-Greek Public Relations<lb/>
The fraternities and sororities<lb/>
will be kicking off Greek Week<lb/>
this Saturday at Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
Field Day.<lb/>
All socializing will begin at 10<lb/>
a.m. Saturday morning and the<lb/>
activities will begin at 11 a.m.<lb/>
Some activities include horse-<lb/>
shoe throwing, volleyball, tug-of-<lb/>
war, a pie-eating contest, and<lb/>
that inevitable "swimming and<lb/>
drown-proofing contest<lb/>
When Saturday arrives there<lb/>
will seldom be a dull moment.<lb/>
Activities for Greek Week will be<lb/>
as follows:<lb/>
Monday - Greek Games and<lb/>
Track Meet.<lb/>
Tuesday - Delta Sigma Phi<lb/>
Bed Race; Alpha Delta Pi VW<lb/>
Stuffing Contest; Co-Greek Ban-<lb/>
quet; Panhellenic Happy Hour.<lb/>
Wednesday - Lambda Chi<lb/>
Kappa Sigma<lb/>
Alpha Raft Race.<lb/>
Thursday -<lb/>
"Funky Nassau<lb/>
Friday - Phi Kappa Tau Happy<lb/>
Hour; Co-Greek Dance.<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau Frater-<lb/>
nity will hold an Hawaiian Luau<lb/>
on Fri. April 7, consisting of a<lb/>
Hawaiian feast and dancing to<lb/>
beach music.<lb/>
The Phi Taus will sponsor a<lb/>
Italian terrorism described by<lb/>
former ECU biology student<lb/>
K101 Spring Fling Disco Party on<lb/>
April 14 from 330 until 6:30 p.m.<lb/>
at the house.<lb/>
There will be free beer for<lb/>
everyone and several door prizes.<lb/>
The drawing for the Beach<lb/>
Weekend for two will be held<lb/>
during this Spring Fling.<lb/>
Tickets are still available from<lb/>
any Phi Tau or Little Sister fa $1<lb/>
The Pi Kappa Pi Fraternity<lb/>
recently initaited two new bro-<lb/>
thers and elected new officers.<lb/>
The Sigma Nu's completed<lb/>
their annual Greeville Area clean-<lb/>
up week where they collected<lb/>
trash throughout the city.<lb/>
The Sigma Nu Beach Week-<lb/>
id will be held April 29, at<lb/>
Emerald Isle.<lb/>
The Chi Omega Sorority held<lb/>
their Spring Cocktail Party last<lb/>
weekend for all sisters and<lb/>
alumnae.<lb/>
On April 9, the Chi O's honor<lb/>
their seniors at the Beef Barn.<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma will be<lb/>
celebrating their Founder's Day<lb/>
on April 18.<lb/>
The Tri-Sigma's Spring For-<lb/>
mal will be held on April 21 at the<lb/>
RIGGAN<lb/>
SHOE SHOP<lb/>
REPAIR ALL<lb/>
LEATHER GOODS<lb/>
downtown Greenville<lb/>
111 West 4th St. 758-0204<lb/>
By KINGSLEY HOEMANN<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD European<lb/>
Correspondent<lb/>
Editor's Note: Kingsiey<lb/>
Hoemann is a senior biology<lb/>
student at ECU who is currently<lb/>
attending Medical School in Sas-<lb/>
sari, Italy. FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
received this article in a letter<lb/>
from Hoemann.<lb/>
The News Desk felt his<lb/>
reporting of the turbulent situa-<lb/>
tion in Italy would provide a more<lb/>
personal, human angle than<lb/>
standard wire reports of the<lb/>
political climate there.<lb/>
SASSARI, ITALY-The kidnap-<lb/>
ping of ex-premier Aldo Moro<lb/>
occured after nearly 60 days<lb/>
without a government-that' s how<lb/>
messed up things are over here.<lb/>
As I'm in the center of things<lb/>
over here I thought you might<lb/>
want an eye-witness report.<lb/>
After the Red Brigades, (an<lb/>
Italian terrorist group) trial pre-<lb/>
paration was finished, the as-yet-<lb/>
uncaught members of the Brigisti<lb/>
Rossi (BR, Red Brigade) tried to<lb/>
stop the trial by kidnapping an<lb/>
important politician, Aldo Moro,<lb/>
who is the chief of the Christian<lb/>
Democrats and who was going to<lb/>
be (many experts think) the next<lb/>
Italian president.<lb/>
The President (here it's the<lb/>
number two post in the govern-<lb/>
ment, since the premier is the<lb/>
head of the government and the<lb/>
presidential term ends this com-<lb/>
ing December) and the Premier<lb/>
are, of oourse, very heavily<lb/>
guarded.<lb/>
Moro, being one of the five<lb/>
most important persons in the<lb/>
government, had only five body-<lb/>
guards.<lb/>
The BR want to establish a<lb/>
Marxist dictatorship in Italy.<lb/>
They have been terrorizing the<lb/>
country by assasinating or inten-<lb/>
tionally shooting to wound all<lb/>
those public figures who are<lb/>
loudest in criticizing the terrorism<lb/>
of the BR.<lb/>
When some (actually about<lb/>
18, more than half of all BRs)<lb/>
were captured, the BR said that<lb/>
the captured members, since they<lb/>
were "fighting to change the<lb/>
political order of Italy were<lb/>
actually prisoners-of-war and<lb/>
should not be tried in criminal<lb/>
courts since their bombings,<lb/>
murders, and assaults were poli-<lb/>
tically, and not criminally, based.<lb/>
The BR has decided not to<lb/>
participate in any way in their<lb/>
trial, as they feel they're political<lb/>
prisonersPOWs and the verdict<lb/>
has already been decided.<lb/>
The BR told the judges,<lb/>
jurors, witnesses and BR's own<lb/>
PEACE CORPS<lb/>
It offers professional development and<lb/>
challenge.<lb/>
Requirements:<lb/>
� must be a U S citizen<lb/>
� although the minimum age is 18 years, very few applicants<lb/>
under 20 have the skills and experience necessary to qualify<lb/>
� must meet medical and legal criteria<lb/>
Training.<lb/>
� lasts from 4 to 14 weeks, usually in the host country<lb/>
� empha. izes language and cu'tural studies<lb/>
Compensation:<lb/>
� monthly allowance for food, lodging, incidentals<lb/>
� medical care<lb/>
. readjustment allowance of $125 per month, set aside in the<lb/>
U.S usualK payable at completion of service<lb/>
� optional n�e insurance at minimum rate<lb/>
� personal Mtisfaction and overseas career development<lb/>
NEEDED: People with experience or degrees In:<lb/>
Agriculturefarming<lb/>
Business<lb/>
Education, especially mathscience<lb/>
special education, Industrial arts<lb/>
Engineering, especially Civil Engineering<lb/>
Nutrition, Home Ec (Degree required)<lb/>
Health Professions<lb/>
Skilled Trades<lb/>
AutoDiesel Maintenance<lb/>
interviews: Frank Cook cr David Jenkins<lb/>
Room 425 Flanagan Building ECU<lb/>
Tel. 757-6586<lb/>
court-appointed attorneys that<lb/>
the BR will kill anyone participa-<lb/>
ng in the "farce of a trial<lb/>
They have already killed<lb/>
several persons involved, includ-<lb/>
ing the president of the Regional<lb/>
Law Society.<lb/>
This kidnapping of one of the<lb/>
�nost widely-respected and known<lb/>
en in Italy has everyone up in<lb/>
ms.<lb/>
The Fascists (the Italian<lb/>
jocialist Movement or MSI) want<lb/>
a establish a strong government<lb/>
to stop these BR actions.<lb/>
The communists PCI (34 per<lb/>
cent in the last election voted PCI,<lb/>
i.e. Communist, and that was<lb/>
only 4 per cent less than the<lb/>
largest party, the Christian<lb/>
Democrats) have condemned the<lb/>
BR.<lb/>
The BR is trying to provoke<lb/>
the beginning of a police state<lb/>
which they hope would develop<lb/>
into a full-scale civil war, during<lb/>
which the Marxists (the 'pure'<lb/>
communists, not the less-radical<lb/>
and more conservative off-sal<lb/>
Communist Party, or PCI) could<lb/>
seize power.<lb/>
IN THE LAST EDITION OF<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD THERE<lb/>
APPEARED AN AD FOR UBE<lb/>
WITH COUPONS. THE AD<lb/>
STATED THAT COUPONS<lb/>
WERE GOOD 1JNOL SAT.<lb/>
APRIL 1. THE COUPONS<lb/>
ARE IN FACT GOOD UIYITL<lb/>
SAT. APRDL8. THIS WAS A<lb/>
TYPOGRAPHICAL ERROR.<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
GARDEN LOVERS<lb/>
cA<lb/>
A LIQUIDATION ON ALL GARDEN SUPPLIES II!<lb/>
ALL BLACK &amp; DECKER EDGERS,<lb/>
HEDGE TRIMMERS, etc. Less20<lb/>
ALL ORTHO PRODUCTS Less 25<lb/>
ALL FERTILIZER �r PEAT MOSS Less 25<lb/>
ALL GARDEN HAND TOOLS Less 25<lb/>
ALL RELATED GARDEN ITEMS Less 25<lb/>
MANY ITEMS AT BELOW COST.<lb/>
1 only Smith 3 gal. Sprayer $19.00 Reg. $29.75<lb/>
Peat pots - Pkg. of 25 2 in. pots 29� pkg.<lb/>
Aluminum I Lawn Edging edging 20 ft 50 40 ft $1.00<lb/>
6 only Garden dusters reduced to $4.75 Reg. $7.39<lb/>
3 only Gal. Ortho Lawn Green $2.50<lb/>
6 only Gal. Ortho Greenol- Liquid Iron $2.50<lb/>
1 only Junior Set of Garden Tools $5.00 Reg. $10.50<lb/>
and many other items at give away prices<lb/>
COME EARLY FOR CHOICE ITEMS SORRY NO PHONE<lb/>
ORDERS-NO HOLDS �ALL SALES MUST BE CASH AT<lb/>
THESE PRICES III<lb/>
H.L.HODGES<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00058048_0006"/><lb/>
�<lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 6 April 1978<lb/>
Canadian Brass 'first-rate fun, first-rate music9<lb/>
By SUSAN CHESTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Canadian Brass is first-rate<lb/>
fun, first-rate music. In their<lb/>
Mendenhall performance on<lb/>
Monday, April 3rd, the young<lb/>
Canadian musicians played<lb/>
"straight" music with wonderful<lb/>
taste and "light" music with<lb/>
magnificent tackiness.<lb/>
The concert opened with<lb/>
works by Scheidt, Handel, Purcell<lb/>
and Gabrieli played with expert<lb/>
attention to dynamics, articula-<lb/>
tion and the delights of Baroque<lb/>
ant i phony.<lb/>
Amusing introductions to the<lb/>
music helped musicians and<lb/>
non-musicians alike to hear and<lb/>
appreciate the themes and tech-<lb/>
nical difficulties of each piece.<lb/>
A demanding organ tran-<lb/>
scription of Bach's "Toccata and<lb/>
Fugue in D Minor" showed off<lb/>
technique, but just missed the<lb/>
perfection of the original organ<lb/>
piece.<lb/>
The subdued humor was let<lb/>
loose in the "Suite from the<lb/>
Monteregan Hills" of Canadian<lb/>
composer Morley Calvert.<lb/>
Each artist proved himself to<lb/>
be a frustrated oomedian in this<lb/>
hilariously tacky work full of<lb/>
musical puns, slapstick, and<lb/>
teasing comic dialogue between<lb/>
instruments.<lb/>
The only aspect of their<lb/>
performance I would question is<lb/>
how they keep from laughing as<lb/>
they play.<lb/>
A schmaltzy medley of all the<lb/>
favorite Sousa marches followed<lb/>
intermission.<lb/>
Then, with carefully planned<lb/>
spontaneity, the quintet intro-<lb/>
duced Ronald Romm on the<lb/>
trumpet solo of "La Virgin de la<lb/>
Macarena The brass were<lb/>
Trends<lb/>
THIS YEAR'S YOUNG Artist Award Winner, Mario Gaetano will<lb/>
perform Tuesday night at 8 p. m. in the Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Theatre.<lb/>
Goings On<lb/>
THURSDAY:<lb/>
Noted film-lecturer John Roberts will appear at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center to present his travel-film Caribbean Paradise. The film<lb/>
will be shown at 8:00 p.m. in MSC Theatre Adm. ECU ID and Activity<lb/>
Card.<lb/>
Coffeehouse: Talented singer-songwriter Sally Spring returns to<lb/>
the Coffeehouse at 9 p.m. Adm. fifty cents. Copies of her new album<lb/>
Bird will be available.<lb/>
FRIDAY.<lb/>
Coffeehouse, 9 p.m. (See above).<lb/>
School of M use presents Contemporary Chamber Ensemble at 815<lb/>
p.m. in A.J. Fletcher Recital Hall. Adm. it free.<lb/>
Student Union Free Flick The Seven Percent Solution at 7 and 9<lb/>
p.m. Adm. by ID and Activity Card.<lb/>
SATURDAY:<lb/>
Free flick at 7 and 9 p.m. (See above).<lb/>
ECU Jazz Ensemble performs at 815 p.m. in A.J. Fletcher Recital<lb/>
Hall. Adm. is free.<lb/>
SUNDAY:<lb/>
The Fourth Annual lllumina Art Show and Competition will be<lb/>
held in the Menu-Yihall Gallery through April 23.<lb/>
MONDAY:<lb/>
Mime Keith Berger will perform in the Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center at 800.<lb/>
relatively straightif you don't<lb/>
count the ay of "Hole at the<lb/>
end.<lb/>
The Vivaldi "Conoerto in G"<lb/>
was also relatively serious, if you<lb/>
ignored the introductory compari-<lb/>
son of piccolo trumpeter Fre<lb/>
Mills' face to the four seasons.<lb/>
(The dead face of winter moves<lb/>
through the rosy glow of spring<lb/>
and bright red cheeks of summer<lb/>
to the exciting climax of autumn<lb/>
when poor Fred turns purple and<lb/>
his hair fallsout, all in time to the<lb/>
music, of oourse.)<lb/>
Tubaist Dr. Charles Daellen-<lb/>
back next performed great feats<lb/>
of manual and digital dexterity on<lb/>
Rimsky-Korsakov's "The Flight<lb/>
of the Bumble Bee<lb/>
TUBAIST PERFORMSGREA T<lb/>
FEA TS OF MA NUA LAND<lb/>
DIGITAL DEXTERITY<lb/>
Jelly Roll Morton's "Shreve-<lb/>
port Stomp" included not just the<lb/>
Brass's remarkable agility and<lb/>
musicianship, but a few flapper<lb/>
style hand waves as well.<lb/>
The conoert closed with<lb/>
Bach's "little Fugue in G Minor,<lb/>
performed with a beauty that<lb/>
gave new insight to the well<lb/>
known organ work.<lb/>
A lively encore of "Just a<lb/>
Closer Walk With Thee" in a<lb/>
Dixieland-gospel theme and var-<lb/>
iations led to an enthusiastic<lb/>
standing ovation.<lb/>
The highly successful perfa-<lb/>
mance was sponsaed by the<lb/>
Student Uniai Artist Series Com-<lb/>
mittee.<lb/>
TRUMPET PLA YER RONA LD Romm wails in lively encore ' 'Just a<lb/>
Closer Walk With Thee" with Dixieland-gospel variations. The<lb/>
"Canadian Brass was first-rate fun, first-rate music. "<lb/>
Photo by Brian Stotler)<lb/>
Award winning percussionist Mario<lb/>
Gaetano performing in recital Tuesday<lb/>
By RENEE DIXQN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Young Artist Award winner,<lb/>
Mario Gaetano, Jr. will perfam<lb/>
Tuesday evening, April 11 at 8:00<lb/>
p.m. in the Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Theatre. Mario is a<lb/>
graduate student in the ECU<lb/>
School of M usic and is completing<lb/>
his Master of Music Degree in<lb/>
Percussion Perfamanoa. He is a<lb/>
student of Mr. Harold Jones.<lb/>
Mario graduated Magna Cum<lb/>
Laude from Cran School of Music,<lb/>
State University of New Yak at<lb/>
Potsdam with a Bachela's<lb/>
Degree in Music Education. In<lb/>
1977 he won the Crane Merit<lb/>
Award fa academic excellence,<lb/>
and the Crane Perfamer's Certi-<lb/>
ficate.<lb/>
This talented musician has<lb/>
perfamed all over the eastern<lb/>
United States with such groups as<lb/>
the New Yak Youth Orchestra,<lb/>
the Crane Wind Ensemble, the<lb/>
Crane Percussion Ensemble, the<lb/>
Union and Wheaton , Colleges<lb/>
Combined Chaale, and the ECU<lb/>
Percussion Ensemble.<lb/>
In addition to being an<lb/>
outstanding student and perfam-<lb/>
er Mario also shares the musical<lb/>
art as an educata and composer.<lb/>
He has participated in the<lb/>
 Crane Youth M usic program at<lb/>
State University of New Yak as a<lb/>
summer staff oounsela and per-<lb/>
cussion instructa. Mario has also<lb/>
taught private perscussion les-<lb/>
sons in Upstate New Yak fa the<lb/>
past six summers.<lb/>
Two of Mario's compositions,<lb/>
"Song of the Libra" fa vibra-<lb/>
phoie, and "Prelude No. 1" fa<lb/>
marimba have been ooitracted<lb/>
fa release next year by Music fa<lb/>
Percussiai, Inc.<lb/>
Mario composed "Prelude<lb/>
No. 1" to perfam ai a recital<lb/>
befae the young participants in<lb/>
the "Crane Youth Music" pro-<lb/>
gram during the summer he<lb/>
taught on their staff.<lb/>
The Thematic material in<lb/>
"Prelude No. 1" evolves from an<lb/>
opening motif of four descending<lb/>
arpeggios. Mario composed this<lb/>
marimba work to display the<lb/>
virtuoso qualities of the instru-<lb/>
ment in a musical presentation<lb/>
that junia and senia high scholl<lb/>
students could understand and<lb/>
enjoy.<lb/>
"Prelude No. 1" will be a<lb/>
premiere ECU perfamance oi<lb/>
Tuesday evening's program.<lb/>
Other selections from the<lb/>
recital program include "Two<lb/>
Movements Fa Marimba<lb/>
Tanaka; "Four Verses Fa Tym-<lb/>
paniHoullif; "Logarithms" -<lb/>
Sebesky; "Mexican Dance<lb/>
No. 2Stout; and "Sources III<lb/>
Burge.<lb/>
Mario will be assisted by Pat<lb/>
Flaherty-percussion, and Ronnie<lb/>
Woot en-clarinet<lb/>
Annual'Day of Dance' Sunday<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
The Department of Drama and<lb/>
Speech at ECU will sponsa its<lb/>
seoond annual "Day of Danoe"<lb/>
fa young danoe students at<lb/>
Wright Auditaium April 9.<lb/>
The Sunday afternoon's activi-<lb/>
ties will include master classes in<lb/>
ballet, jazz dance, and modern<lb/>
danoe, as well as a lecture<lb/>
demonstration of the classical<lb/>
Indian Kathak fam.<lb/>
Conducting the ballet master<lb/>
classes this year will be Melissa<lb/>
Hayden, wald-renowned prima<lb/>
ballerina fa nearly two decades<lb/>
with Geage Balanohine's New<lb/>
Yak City Ballet.<lb/>
At her retirement fron the<lb/>
oonpany in 1973, Balanchine<lb/>
ohaeographed a farewell ballet,<lb/>
"Catege Haigrois in her<lb/>
haia, which she perfamed to<lb/>
invariable standing ovations.<lb/>
Her talents were honaed by<lb/>
the City of New Yak that same<lb/>
year, when Maya Lindsay pre-<lb/>
sented her with the Handel<lb/>
Medal!irjn, the city's highest<lb/>
cultural award.<lb/>
An outstanding dance educa-<lb/>
ta as well as perfamer, Ms.<lb/>
Hayden received honaary de-<lb/>
grees from Skidmae and Siena<lb/>
Colleges.<lb/>
The jazz dance master classes<lb/>
will be conducted by Frank<lb/>
Wagner, head of ECU'S dance<lb/>
program.<lb/>
Wagner has waked through-<lb/>
out the professional wald of<lb/>
danoe on both sides of the<lb/>
Atlantic, and has ohaeographed<lb/>
Broadway musicals, variety<lb/>
shows, touring revues, operas<lb/>
and television specials.<lb/>
MASTERCLASSESIN<lb/>
MODERN DANCE<lb/>
In response to requests from<lb/>
people who participated in the<lb/>
"Day of Dance" last spring, this<lb/>
year's program will feature mas-<lb/>
ter classes in modern danoe, to be<lb/>
oonducted by ECU dance faculty<lb/>
member Patricia PertaJion.<lb/>
Registration fa the "Day of<lb/>
Danoe" is limited to danoers ten<lb/>
years old a older.<lb/>
The registration fee is $5.00.<lb/>
Registratioi fa fams are availa-<lb/>
ble by mail from " Day of Dance<lb/>
Dept. of Drama and Speech, East<lb/>
Carolina University, Greenville,<lb/>
N.C 27834.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058048_0007"/><lb/>
' ��������<lb/>
wtmrn, JB&amp;&amp;&amp;<lb/>
�HH<lb/>
Recently visited the Carolinas<lb/>
6 April 1978 FOUMTAINHEAD Pig� 7<lb/>
Eric Clapton again finds the road to success<lb/>
By MICHAEL FUTCH<lb/>
Special to FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
Clapton was off Friday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
But his seemingly inexhaust-<lb/>
able supply of creative energy<lb/>
was not to be denied the following<lb/>
evening.<lb/>
RSO recading artist Eric<lb/>
Clapton performed on successive<lb/>
nights in Charlotte, N.C (March<lb/>
24) and Columbia, S.C (March<lb/>
25), during his current RSO<lb/>
labeled "World Tour .1978 It<lb/>
includes his first American tour in<lb/>
approximately 212 years.<lb/>
The tour, coupled with SLOW-<lb/>
HAND, his hottest-selling LP<lb/>
since the 461 OCEAN BOULE-<lb/>
VARD comeback album of '74,<lb/>
has managed to revitalize attent-<lb/>
ion to one of the (if not THE)<lb/>
premiere blues guitaristsvocal-<lb/>
ists, white or black, of the modern<lb/>
amplified blues age.<lb/>
At his best, Clapton is a<lb/>
master of blues interpretation and<lb/>
rock musicianship. During the<lb/>
60's he became the prototype of<lb/>
the guitar hero, or more accurate-<lb/>
ly, the guitar superhero. Luckily<lb/>
for Clapton, as well as fa his<lb/>
devoted audience, the young man<lb/>
was able to live up to the majority<lb/>
of the hype expectations. How-<lb/>
ever, when the pressures became<lb/>
unbearable, Clapton made his<lb/>
retreat into seclusion until the<lb/>
timely Rainbow Concert and 461<lb/>
OCEAN BOULEVARD.<lb/>
Clapton has had a lengthy<lb/>
diverse and interesting career.<lb/>
He was hurled into the spotlight<lb/>
after he became lead guitarist for<lb/>
the Yardbirds. and the groups<lb/>
that he later temporarily joined<lb/>
are numerous and legendary:<lb/>
John M avail's Bluesbreakers,<lb/>
Cream, Blind Faith, Delaney &amp;<lb/>
Bonnie &amp; Friends, and Derek and<lb/>
the Dominos.<lb/>
Currently there is talk of a<lb/>
�comeback" - the truth of the<lb/>
matter is that since he kicked an<lb/>
almost 3-year junk habit in the<lb/>
early 70' s, the guy has never left.<lb/>
Alcohol has been, and remains,<lb/>
his current crutch since he<lb/>
re-surfaced in yet another stage<lb/>
of his varied career, with the<lb/>
vocals as the focus of his music.<lb/>
Alcohol seems to have imobi-<lb/>
lized the Clapton-as-God Figure-<lb/>
head of the blues-rooted '60's.<lb/>
461 OCEAN BOULEVARD,<lb/>
THERE'S ONE IN EVERY<lb/>
CROWD (75), NO REASON TO<lb/>
CRY ('76), SLOWHAND ('TD-aW<lb/>
possess a quiet, delicate and<lb/>
reserved sound, showing traces of<lb/>
an artist satisfied with his role in<lb/>
a unit. Adding a supporting role.<lb/>
And overly-generous at sharing<lb/>
the spotlight.<lb/>
These albums are not except-<lb/>
ionally strong. But on the other<lb/>
hand, they are not to be discarded<lb/>
and forgotten - some of the<lb/>
material has already become<lb/>
standara Clapton' during live<lb/>
perfor maces.<lb/>
One exception during this<lb/>
period, reaffirming the critics that<lb/>
arthritis has yet to cripple those<lb/>
fingers, was E.C. WAS HERE<lb/>
('75) - material. The intensity he<lb/>
so often produces onstage is<lb/>
CLAPTON VISITED THE U.S. for<lb/>
(' 75)a tasty and definite acknow-<lb/>
ledgement of where Clapton<lb/>
stands with live mateial. The<lb/>
intensity he so often produces<lb/>
onstage is never more apparent<lb/>
than on this blues-powered disc.<lb/>
The current tour material has<lb/>
been changed since that album,<lb/>
his first time in 2V2 years.<lb/>
but the looseness, spontaneity<lb/>
and imagination remain.<lb/>
Clapton was not necessarily<lb/>
bad in Charlotte; he was definite-<lb/>
ly not good, but rather mediocre.<lb/>
Luckily the bluesman was in no<lb/>
possible way of being over-<lb/>
shadowed by the back-up act.<lb/>
X<lb/>
<lb/>
John Martynan Island re-<lb/>
cording artist from Scotland) had<lb/>
recently replaced Player as back-<lb/>
up before Clapton's entry on-<lb/>
stage. Martyn proves himself "an<lb/>
entertainerRobin Trower of<lb/>
the accoustic-lineplaying his<lb/>
accoustic through an assorted<lb/>
collection of phase-control gad-<lb/>
getry, machine-gunning his way<lb/>
oh uga-ch uga-ch uga- wah- wah-<lb/>
wah-wahthrough his overlong<lb/>
set.<lb/>
The Chardtte crowd used his<lb/>
set to find a seat or take a leak<lb/>
before the main attraction. The<lb/>
Columbia audience enjoyed<lb/>
Martyn much more - they<lb/>
applauded. Martyn's electronic<lb/>
display was piercing, quasi-<lb/>
impressive. But how much of the<lb/>
exhibit should be attributed to the<lb/>
guitarist and how much should<lb/>
be attributed to the prominent<lb/>
pedal panel on the floor?<lb/>
wxv<lb/>
The Eric Clapton Band took<lb/>
more than ample time both nights<lb/>
before rambling onstage for their<lb/>
14-number set. Totally distress-<lb/>
ed, the Charlotte audience was<lb/>
left desiring much more than<lb/>
Clapton could muster. Through<lb/>
binoculars, he appeared needy,<lb/>
irritable and rarely cracking a<lb/>
smile, ready fa the show to end<lb/>
befae it began.<lb/>
The true highlights of the<lb/>
show proved to be his live<lb/>
renditions of J.J. Cale's rejuvena-<lb/>
ted "Cocaine and Clapton's<lb/>
craftsmanship handling of<lb/>
"Layla" - his immatal 'chef<lb/>
d'oeuvre' - with piano ending<lb/>
intact, and a hearty guitar<lb/>
trade-off between Clapton and<lb/>
guitar foil Geage Terry.<lb/>
At ate point the band seemed<lb/>
to instrument ally fall apart, on<lb/>
See CLAPTON, p. 8<lb/>
Evans St. Mall, Greenville<lb/>
open daily 9:30-6<lb/>
Phone: 752-8965<lb/>
<lb/>
ApriL vStawi<lb/>
of<lb/>
cSaviaigtS<lb/>
IK) OEAOS�<lb/>
OEAJAA<lb/>
WI7W RAP pocxCT -rJf?�M,<lb/>
ELASTIC-BACJC WAIST CXZ.<lb/>
PAiretts7 stvl� f090<lb/>
598,<lb/>
VXi-OCS<lb/>
AJ SKI GTSvgrfU Popular split FRonf<lb/>
OR. MlLITA�7ferM 4jQ98<lb/>
IT WITH TEWRYT<lb/>
HOODET T&amp;rrv BloU5aa)-T TOF5<lb/>
$5QQ VALUES $&amp;8<lb/>
EAJTRB- STOCK. DRESS PAaJHS<lb/>
fA) A RMAJBOW OT SPRJMSr COLORS Otf<lb/>
or &amp; Pmcc<lb/>
<pb facs="00058048_0008"/><lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 6 April 1978<lb/>
SU presents mime Keith Berger<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
The Student Union Theatre<lb/>
Arts Committee will present<lb/>
KEITH BERGER, one of Ameri-<lb/>
ca's most exciting performers of<lb/>
the ancient art of mime, at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center on<lb/>
April 10, 1978 at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Berger is only 24, but he has<lb/>
been called "the best by the<lb/>
best-Marcel Marceau.<lb/>
Keith Berger works com-<lb/>
pletely alone. He, the audience<lb/>
and the stage are his only<lb/>
properties.<lb/>
His performing credits range<lb/>
from television commercials to<lb/>
the New Orleans Superdome.<lb/>
With all the words and music<lb/>
television has to offer, Keith<lb/>
Berger has created some of its<lb/>
most eloquent moments with<lb/>
silence For all the colors availa-<lb/>
ble in print, this small, lithe<lb/>
mime, in black leotard and white<lb/>
face, often catches attention first.<lb/>
Whether moving or still,<lb/>
Keith Berger expresses the emo-<lb/>
tions of joy, surprise, fear and<lb/>
wonder.<lb/>
Whether Mechanical Man,<lb/>
gorilla in a cage, or hard-shooting<lb/>
cowboy, Keith Berger has every<lb/>
eye on him. Attention never<lb/>
wavers.<lb/>
Before Berger's performance,<lb/>
he does a teaser on campus or<lb/>
city grounds. Don't be surprised<lb/>
if, on the morning of April 10, you<lb/>
discover that you have an extra<lb/>
shadow.<lb/>
You will surely recognize<lb/>
yourself in the illusion Berger<lb/>
creates of your personality.<lb/>
In addition to Berger's eve-<lb/>
ning performance, there will be<lb/>
an afternoon workshop. Please<lb/>
contact the Program Office at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center for<lb/>
details on the workshop.<lb/>
Tickets are $1.00 for ECU<lb/>
students, $2.00 for ECU faculty<lb/>
and staff, $2.00 fa groups of<lb/>
twenty or more, and $3.00 for the<lb/>
public.<lb/>
�<lb/>
;<lb/>
��HE HAS BEEN called 'the best' by the best-Marcel Marceau.<lb/>
The exciting and versatile Keith Berger has mastered the ancient<lb/>
art of mime. Berger will perform in the Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Theatre this Monday night at 8 p. m.<lb/>
CLAPTON<lb/>
Continued from p. 7<lb/>
Otis Rush's 'Double Trouble a<lb/>
blues number from The Band-<lb/>
inspired NO REASON TO CRY.<lb/>
Clapton is a brilliant soloist but<lb/>
there were few flashes of flurried<lb/>
brilliance during the Charlotte<lb/>
performance.<lb/>
The hard punchiness of Bot-<lb/>
tle of Red Wine" - the enoore -<lb/>
allowed Qapton to end the<lb/>
evening on an essential high note.<lb/>
It, along with "Layla" and<lb/>
"Cocaine" salvaged the unin-<lb/>
spired concert.<lb/>
Eric Clapton is one of the few<lb/>
guitarists (or any instrumentalists<lb/>
for that matter) who manages to<lb/>
transcend the physical obstacles<lb/>
of human and instruments as<lb/>
individual entities - when<lb/>
Clapton is on the mark, the two<lb/>
become one. His emotions are<lb/>
transferred to his guitar, whether<lb/>
it be anguish, pain, ectasy or<lb/>
pleasure, the results can be<lb/>
electrically spinetingling. Clapton<lb/>
is a master guitar virtuoso who<lb/>
decided to use the rock medium to<lb/>
display his talents<lb/>
Like a true professional who<lb/>
bounoss back from a weak<lb/>
showing, Clapton came back and<lb/>
clicked in depressing Columbia.<lb/>
His band, consisting of: Carl<lb/>
Radle, bass; George Terry,<lb/>
guitar; Marcy Levy, vocals, guitar<lb/>
harmonica; Dick Sims, key-<lb/>
boards, accordian; and Jamie<lb/>
Oldmaker, drums, jelled for the<lb/>
show and delivered the 'fire' that<lb/>
they are capable of when mentally<lb/>
prepared.<lb/>
Clapton apparently enjoys his<lb/>
social as well as vocational<lb/>
relationship with this group of<lb/>
�WflMT<lb/>
STARVING<lb/>
1� ��<lb/>
ARTIST<lb/>
When- Sat. Apr.Q<lb/>
lOAM-fcPM<lb/>
Where'thcKEvans<lb/>
 &amp;t. Twnair<lb/>
�No �nTru JtFce-<lb/>
� fsio CdmnVris L<lb/>
� iiur �ed - SuDm'it<lb/>
rTsHcies or<lb/>
rby mar. 31 to<lb/>
The. Siluf r Three<lb/>
318-A E. 5th. St<lb/>
or<lb/>
TVt Mo room<lb/>
EvanS St. A a<lb/>
?ar sale,<lb/>
RhT)ou)inou)r� Gremjiit<lb/>
&amp; Assoc, Xnc<lb/>
CrjanaaVe-Apr.5)<lb/>
NotW.na<lb/>
mcj Annual StarVinq ArtsT Show<lb/>
NarvNfiPhone�<lb/>
Ud ress��<lb/>
Zio<lb/>
T-1 <lb/>
.Laojree to o.H<lb/>
rules c$ Wt sVioco<lb/>
and uiill abide kcj lrerv<lb/>
S ig n eA<lb/>
Tulsa-based musicians - it is a<lb/>
unity born of compatability. The<lb/>
group remains basically intact<lb/>
(minus Yvonne Elliman, now on<lb/>
her own) from its formation in<lb/>
1974. The line-up has also<lb/>
survived longer than any other<lb/>
outfit Clapton has been a member<lb/>
of. This dose-knit relationship<lb/>
from years of work was never<lb/>
more obvious than in the Satur-<lb/>
day night perfromance.<lb/>
Clapton used a workmanlike<lb/>
approach both nights, rarely<lb/>
addressing the audience, but<lb/>
rather letting the music speak for<lb/>
him. He weaved rock ("Badge<lb/>
"Layla"), country ("Rodeo<lb/>
Man"), blues ("Key to the<lb/>
Highway "Double Trouble"),<lb/>
and reggae ("Knockin' On Hea-<lb/>
ven's Door") throughout the<lb/>
show, pleasing the old cult of fans<lb/>
along with the newly acquired<lb/>
SLOWHAND fans. Clapton also<lb/>
professionally altered the<lb/>
material's focus - whether it be<lb/>
vocals or guitar. He is an artist<lb/>
who is as proud of his songwriting<lb/>
and singing abilities (after years<lb/>
of encouragement), as he is with<lb/>
his guitar-work.<lb/>
As should have been expect-<lb/>
ed, SLOWHAND material made<lb/>
up the nucleus of Clapton's<lb/>
repertoire fa both shows - an<lb/>
intentional album push, by RSO<lb/>
andor Clapton for promotional<lb/>
reasons. "The Core with its<lb/>
heavy intro opened the per-<lb/>
formance on the strong side and it<lb/>
was evident that the guitarist was<lb/>
in a much more relaxed state than<lb/>
in Charlotte.<lb/>
The current single, "Lay<lb/>
Down Sally was given an<lb/>
enhanced dimension with a solid<lb/>
Clapton solo. "Wonderful To-<lb/>
night" was vinyl-strong, proving<lb/>
Clapton's vocals to be genuine.<lb/>
Marcy Levy, who joined the<lb/>
bad a short time before THERE'S<lb/>
ONE IN EVERY CROWD, was<lb/>
given two solo spots (a B-side<lb/>
Buddy Holly number which<lb/>
Clapton himself wanted to record<lb/>
at one time, "Fool's Paradise<lb/>
and the standard, "Nobody<lb/>
Knows You When You're Down<lb/>
and Out"), besides her frequent<lb/>
contributions on harmony. She<lb/>
torched her way through both.<lb/>
Clapton acutally caught stride<lb/>
on a Don Williams-ish<lb/>
country song, "Rodeo Man<lb/>
The band, with old sideman Carl<lb/>
Radle (he's been with Clapton<lb/>
sinoe the Dominos) supplying his<lb/>
melodic bass-bottom, came tog-<lb/>
ether on this number and power-<lb/>
ed its way through the remaining<lb/>
material.<lb/>
Clapton worked "Cocaine<lb/>
into a frenzy, vertically extending<lb/>
the solo at a hot and determined<lb/>
pace. "Badge "Layla "Key<lb/>
to the Highway" and "Bottle of<lb/>
Red Wine" furthered the inspired<lb/>
direction that the entire band was<lb/>
achieving at will.<lb/>
The Eric Clapton Band proved<lb/>
itself as one of the belter rock and<lb/>
roll bands around. Even on a sour<lb/>
night, there were enough pyro-<lb/>
technics to save the price of the<lb/>
ticket. Like a good wine, Eric<lb/>
Clapton seems to get better with<lb/>
age. He can rook, sway, amaze,<lb/>
funk, out-country most of the<lb/>
country establishment, and tran-<lb/>
scend the standard, the norm,<lb/>
much in the tradidtion of a rock<lb/>
and roll Coltrane.<lb/>
Western Sizzlin<lb/>
Steak House<lb/>
Hours: Sun. thru Thurs. 11:00 to 10:00<lb/>
Fri.fr Sat. 11:00 to 11:00<lb/>
hursday Lunch and Dinner Speck<lb/>
No. 12 Chopped Sirloin Steak<lb/>
with or without Mushroom Gravy<lb/>
Texas Toast with Baked Potato and melted<lb/>
butter or French Fries<lb/>
Altar<lb/>
$1.59<lb/>
<pb facs="00058048_0009"/><lb/>
����IHM<lb/>
��m<lb/>
6 April 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
ADVERTISED<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 A&amp;P<lb/>
Store, except as specifically noted in this ad<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY. APRIL 8 AT A&amp;P IN GrttllVillt<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS AND WHOLESALERS<lb/>
LOOK FOR THE ACTION PRICE SIGN - THROUGHOUT<lb/>
YOUR A&amp;P STORE When A&amp;P buyers make a special pur-<lb/>
chase at a lower price we pass the savings on to you that<lb/>
lower price is an action price And these Action Prices are in<lb/>
addition to our money-saving weekly specials.<lb/>
 HIDRI<lb/>
? PAPER TOWELS 2 &amp;TS 88c<lb/>
HUNTS<lb/>
1 WESSON OIL 2b4t�lz 88c<lb/>
 CHEF BOY AR DEE GROUND BEEF. MUSHROOM<lb/>
V SPAGHETTI SAUCED 59�<lb/>
 CHEF BOY AR-DEE<lb/>
9 BEEF RAVIOLI 3 �3 $100<lb/>
m CHEF BOY-AR DEE FROZEN 4 LITTLE<lb/>
D177AC � sausage 10'jOz QQc<lb/>
T rlttMO � PEPPERONI PKG 79<lb/>
?CHEF BOY AR DEE<lb/>
CHEESE PIZZA So02 85c<lb/>
CANS<lb/>
OEE FROZEN 4 LITTLE<lb/>
SAUSAGE 10'iOZ<lb/>
PEPPERONI PKG<lb/>
CHEF BOY-AR-DEE<lb/>
CHEESE PIZZA ,5pkgoz<lb/>
FRENCH S MASHED POTATOES<lb/>
IG TATE<lb/>
M PURINA<lb/>
DOG CHOW 50 babg $8"<lb/>
SENECA<lb/>
if? 59c<lb/>
z 88c<lb/>
� LE IJUH<lb/>
TOOTHPASTE<lb/>
CLOSE-UP : mnt<lb/>
� REGULAR 4 6 OZ<lb/>
TUBE<lb/>
BRUT 33<lb/>
SPLASH-ON LOTION<lb/>
gf DEODORANT-REGULAR<lb/>
 RIGHT GUARD<lb/>
M TWICE AS FAST AS ASPIRIN TABLETS<lb/>
89c<lb/>
$-39<lb/>
99c<lb/>
BUFFERIN<lb/>
B6TCLT 99'<lb/>
A&amp;P INSTANT NON-FAT<lb/>
DRY MILK 5SS<lb/>
ANN PAGE<lb/>
APPLE SAUCE 3<lb/>
ORANGE. GRAPE. OR<lb/>
YUKON CLUB COLa6<lb/>
64 oz $Q88<lb/>
PKG<lb/>
'3'<lb/>
88'<lb/>
"DELI SPECIALS<lb/>
BEEF OR HUT<lb/>
BOLOGNA<lb/>
LB<lb/>
99<lb/>
P0TIT0 SALAD OR<lb/>
COLE SLAW lb 59-<lb/>
almar brand sliced<lb/>
CORNED BEEF ROUNDS lb'2.29<lb/>
marshias brand<lb/>
PLAIN CAKES H oz. pkg 88'<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN-FED BEEF<lb/>
BONELESS<lb/>
ROAST<lb/>
FROM <lb/>
THE <lb/>
HUCK<lb/>
A&amp;P is a poultry shop<lb/>
U.S.DA. INSPECTED FRFSH FRYER<lb/>
BOX-O-CHICKEN<lb/>
TALMADGE FARM BRAND<lb/>
FRANKS<lb/>
OR<lb/>
SLICED<lb/>
BOLOGNA<lb/>
W<lb/>
38<lb/>
8&amp;<lb/>
HUNT S TOMATO<lb/>
SEALTEST ICE MILK<lb/>
LIGHT N LIVELY<lb/>
? GAL.<lb/>
CTN.<lb/>
KETCHUP<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH<lb/>
ADDITIONAL 17 50 ORDER<lb/>
58<lb/>
G4W FROZEN<lb/>
r IkZA '� p'pp'iioNi pkg . f C<lb/>
SALISBURY STEAK SLICED BEEF MEAT BALLS LASAGNA<lb/>
FREEZER QUEEN �8<lb/>
A�P INSTANT NON DAIRY<lb/>
COFFEE CREAMERS 88c<lb/>
MARVEL SANDWICH SLICED<lb/>
WHITE BREAD 3 L04A?is88(<lb/>
JANE PARKER CR WHEAT WHOLE WHEAT. VIENNA<lb/>
88C tT VARIETY BREAD 2 &amp;g88t<lb/>
ij.iy<lb/>
AP COUPON<lb/>
CONTAINS RICH BRAZILIAN COFFEES<lb/>
EIGHT O'CLOCK INSTANT<lb/>
COFFEE<lb/>
SAVE UP TC .<lb/>
LIMIT ONE COUPON �<lb/>
PRICES GOOD THRU SAT APR 8 AT A&amp;P INGf�9VJM<lb/>
AP COUPON<lb/>
Mi.iaj.mawj.ii<lb/>
SWEET AND JUICY<lb/>
FULL OF FLAVOR<lb/>
TREAT YOURSELF TO A TASTE OF THE TROPICS<lb/>
DOLE GOLDEN YELLOW<lb/>
CANTALOUPES f(� BANANAS<lb/>
ANN PAGE<lb/>
"AVONNAlS1<lb/>
LOW IN CALORIES<lb/>
4<lb/>
88�<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH THIS<lb/>
COUPON AND ADDITIONAL<lb/>
7 SO ORDER<lb/>
LIMIT ONE COUPON<lb/>
PRICES GOOD THRU<lb/>
MAYONNAISE<lb/>
s168<lb/>
� PRICE A PRIOf � PRICE � PNIOC - PRKTF t PRIDE - PRICE A PRIDE - PRICE 1 PR)<lb/>
rnrdprau?"<lb/>
AAP COUPON<lb/>
RED RIPE-FULL OF FLAVOR f f<lb/>
WATERMELONS 4 &amp;, 88'<lb/>
CALIFORNIA GROWN CALAVO f f<lb/>
AVOCADOSLARGE.0SIZE,2 ON�LRY OO'<lb/>
FRESH ff<lb/>
CALAVO LIMES 4 �X 88<lb/>
FLORIDA GROWN VALENCIA<lb/>
ORANGES oosize,<lb/>
SWEET AND TASTY l-RESH<lb/>
PINEAPPLES<lb/>
FRESH<lb/>
DAFFODILS<lb/>
99c<lb/>
99c<lb/>
69c<lb/>
LIMIT TWO WITH<lb/>
THIS COUPON AND<lb/>
ADDITIONAL<lb/>
7 50 ORDER<lb/>
 MRS. FILBERT'S<lb/>
'MARGARINE<lb/>
2 88'<lb/>
1-LB PKGSI<lb/>
IN OTRS<lb/>
LIMIT ONE COUPON .<lb/>
PRICES GOOD THRU SAT APR B AT AAP IN SftaRVIM<lb/>
LJi4iiiJKiJ.imij.il <lb/>
PRICE A PRIDE PRICEPRIOE<lb/>
<pb facs="00058048_0010"/><lb/>
Sports Softballers now 7-4<lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 6 April 1978<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
by JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Frisbee Tournament<lb/>
McDonald's and the ECU Department of Intramurals will<lb/>
co-sponsor a Frisbee Tournament on Tuesday, April 25 on the ECU<lb/>
campus. Cash prizes will be awarded to the top three finishers in the<lb/>
overall competition. Overall competition will be based on five<lb/>
categories which will test a thrower's accuracy, distance and hang<lb/>
time<lb/>
The cash prizes will be awarded by McDonald's. First prizes will be<lb/>
$50.00. second prize will be $25.00 and third-prize will be $10.00. In<lb/>
addition the top 30 finishers will receive t-shirts made especially fa<lb/>
this event. Everyone will be a winner, though, because certificates fa-<lb/>
free french fries will be given to each Frisbee tournament contestant.<lb/>
Registration fa the event will begin on Friday, April 14 and run<lb/>
through Friday, April 21. Register at the McDonald's oi Fifth Street.<lb/>
Bobby White won the title in the annual intramuial golf tournament<lb/>
held last week. White finished with a six-over par, 36-hde total of 150<lb/>
for the tournament and nipped Ron Stuber and Joey Hines by one<lb/>
stroke. Rusty Baird and Mike Wrobel tied fa fourth place with 153<lb/>
totals. The rest of the top ten were; Alien Smith 154, Pat Patrick 155,<lb/>
Mike Dickens 156, Ben Gilliam 157, Lee Fulcher 158. Dasett Ward<lb/>
160, and Ron Hughes and Lee Norman at 161.<lb/>
The Kappa Alpha fraternity won the individual team title with a<lb/>
team scae of 631, finishing eight strokes ahead of the Belk<lb/>
Headhunters, who had a 639 total. The Duck Hooks finistied third with<lb/>
a 671 total.<lb/>
The intramural co-rec Innertube Water Basketball season begins<lb/>
Tuesday night and the defending champions are so confident that they<lb/>
have already issued a challenge to the rest of the teams.<lb/>
Monkberrry Moon Delight is the only team to ever win the campus<lb/>
championship in the three-year histay of the spat. Now, in the fourth<lb/>
year of water basketball on this campus, the team's captains are after<lb/>
another title. This will be their last year befae they graduate and the<lb/>
team made up of ECU swimmers want to finish their four-years of<lb/>
Water Basketball with an undefeated recad and their fourth straight<lb/>
title.<lb/>
Their closest competitiai from among the other 12 teams will be<lb/>
from the Neaomancers. The Neaomancers are also in their fourth<lb/>
season and each year they have finished second behind the Moikberry<lb/>
Mcon Delight<lb/>
All games will be played in Memaial Gym and games will be<lb/>
played oi Tuesdays and Thursdays.<lb/>
MIXED DOUBLES TENNIS ENTERSQUARTERFINALS<lb/>
Conpeiitioi in the Co-Rec Mixed Doubles tennis intramurals has<lb/>
reached the final four teams, with a few upsets along the way spicing<lb/>
up the action in the early rounds.<lb/>
As expected, two of the pre-tourney favaites have reached the final<lb/>
four teams, but two of the top seated teams were eliminated earlier<lb/>
The favaites, Lee Weeks and Warren Marshall, disposed of fifth<lb/>
seeded Paula Godard and Joe Zahran, 7-5. 4-6. 6-4, to reach the<lb/>
quarterfinals.<lb/>
In the other quarterfinal bracket, Janice McVeigh and David Helm<lb/>
downed the team of Wiggs and Lupton; 6-3, 6-2; to reach<lb/>
quarterfinals. They will play Speed and Joyner, a darkhase team mat<lb/>
has been impressive so far. Speed and Joyner knocked off Donner and<lb/>
Scott in the second round. 7-5. 6-2, after Donner and Scott knocked off<lb/>
the third-seeded te Janet Hoepp and John Irby in th<lb/>
the maja upset so far<lb/>
Congratualtions are appropraite fa Greenvilles Bill McDonald.<lb/>
Mci � ictor fry the ECU Karate Club,<lb/>
amed I f of the Year fa 1977 by � ast<lb/>
ed Instructa of the Yoar fa 1977<lb/>
Sou: ial Kar<lb/>
This � 'imethat a sport v �KA)<lb/>
full o ition (the NKA) have voted th<lb/>
ructa of the year<lb/>
Arm � canoe<lb/>
u i ia 2 1<lb/>
ns to M � K rir.it (Jut,<lb/>
ByCHRISHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Spats Edita<lb/>
The Lady Pirates soft ball team<lb/>
had quite a busy week with five<lb/>
games.<lb/>
Two were a double header<lb/>
agmst N.C. State and the other<lb/>
three were in the UNC-Charlotte<lb/>
Womens Softball Tournament.<lb/>
Last Friday the Pirates split<lb/>
the double header with N.C.<lb/>
State<lb/>
The Pirates won the first game<lb/>
in a close 2 to 1 decision and lost<lb/>
the second to the Wolfpack 8-6.<lb/>
I n Charlotte the Pirates played<lb/>
against UNC-G, last year's N.C.<lb/>
Softball champ, Eton and Camp-<lb/>
bell.<lb/>
Also participating in the event<lb/>
were teams from N.C. State and<lb/>
Appalachian State.<lb/>
ECU was the only undefeated<lb/>
team in the six team field.<lb/>
In the first game the Lady<lb/>
softballers defeated Elon 8 to 7<lb/>
behind the pitching of Mary<lb/>
Bryan Carlyle. ECU had 12 hits<lb/>
and 12 erras. Gay Hins was the<lb/>
outstanding player of the game<lb/>
with three hits and five assists.<lb/>
The second game saw the<lb/>
Pirates win a big 12 to 4 game<lb/>
over UNC-G.<lb/>
The Pirates jumped all over<lb/>
the defending state champs in the<lb/>
first two innings fa eleven hits<lb/>
and eleven runs.<lb/>
UNC-G was held only four<lb/>
rui s of their own and , Pirates<lb/>
added one more run to win teh<lb/>
game 12 to4. The winning pitcher<lb/>
was once again Mary Bryan<lb/>
Carlyle.<lb/>
After the big win over UNC-G<lb/>
head Softball coach Anita Dillon<lb/>
was elated with the girls perfa-<lb/>
mances.<lb/>
"We feel like this is a big<lb/>
victay fa us Dillon Commen-<lb/>
ted "It was a super win because<lb/>
they were the defending state<lb/>
champs in Division I<lb/>
In the third game behind the<lb/>
pitching of Lee Sellers the Pirates<lb/>
destroyed Campbell 15-3 to<lb/>
avenge an earlier defeat by the<lb/>
Camels.<lb/>
The Pirates collected six hits<lb/>
including one grand slam by<lb/>
Denise Dickson.<lb/>
The game was called due to<lb/>
the ten run rule which requires<lb/>
the game to be halted if one team<lb/>
is ahead by ten runs in the 6th<lb/>
inning.<lb/>
After the tournament was over<lb/>
coach Dillon was pleased with her<lb/>
team to say the least and was<lb/>
looking forward to the rest of the<lb/>
i ison.<lb/>
"These wins bring our recad<lb/>
to 7 and 4 and we go to A &amp; Ton<lb/>
Tuesday (April fajrth), then to<lb/>
ASU said Dillon.<lb/>
"We would like to have as<lb/>
ly people as possible come out<lb/>
to Thursday's game. '<lb/>
The game is against Carnbell<lb/>
igh<lb/>
. on<lb/>
W .t ur foui <lb/>
Dillon<lb/>
ire<lb/>
tournament m �<lb/>
maal booster fa us because<lb/>
everybody was able to play. That<lb/>
will help us because we play in a<lb/>
tournament at N.C. State next<lb/>
weekend<lb/>
Dillon also oommented on the<lb/>
overall areas that need improve-<lb/>
ment .<lb/>
"We're still looking to<lb/>
improve especially on our erra<lb/>
problem oommented Dillon.<lb/>
"Our hitting<lb/>
looking better<lb/>
is definitely<lb/>
r� nr.<lb/>
�ATHLETE OF THE Week  Herman Mdntyre.<lb/>
Herman Mdntyre<lb/>
is FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
'Athlete of the Week'<lb/>
by David Merriam<lb/>
Fountainhead has decided tore-instate a tradition that was stopped<lb/>
over the summer months. It will be a special column run once weekly<lb/>
on Thursdays called "Athlete of the Week<lb/>
This will highlight and give special attention to a deserving athlete<lb/>
who, under the estimation of the spats staff, should have special<lb/>
recognition.<lb/>
The first recipient of the "Athlete of the Week" award is triple<lb/>
jumper and All-American Herman Mdntyre.<lb/>
Herman over the past week has broken several triple jump records<lb/>
fa ECU along with his concentrated efforts to help develop the track<lb/>
program.<lb/>
This past week Mdntyre jumped a recad breaking 53 feet 1 inches,<lb/>
in what Mdntyre calls his "second leg of the journey<lb/>
"My first objective was getting in shape, next was jumping well<lb/>
and qualifying fa the nationals, and the thirdwell, if you couldn't<lb/>
guess, was being national champion in the triple jump stated<lb/>
Mdntyre.<lb/>
"I really feel that ECU deserves sane national attention in sports<lb/>
We have a oouple of the best athletes in track and quiti � few in many<lb/>
other spats. I just want to do my share in helping ECU gain that<lb/>
recognition<lb/>
Mdntyre has successfully achieved two of his pri lUS<lb/>
far. He is in top physical shape and qualified fa tl , �lie<lb/>
weeks back.<lb/>
A dose call with a bruised heel howevei i ,an<lb/>
from jumping his besl<lb/>
I bruised my right heel in prad ,Pr<lb/>
l wouldand, a try to extend the a<lb/>
l took it easy fa a while and tri,<lb/>
erybody else practio<lb/>
ke you hav (s<lb/>
part of your daily routine, and wi<lb/>
wh" . iff<lb/>
Now M<lb/>
m gut! and deti i on<lb/>
Mdntyre, after heannrj of h<lb/>
ichonaedt<lb/>
rill)<lb/>
<pb facs="00058048_0011"/><lb/>
�����������������WHBiBBBHI<lb/>
HHIHHBHBI<lb/>
6 April 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
Styons out to disprove sophomore slump ' theory<lb/>
The term sophomore slump is<lb/>
nothing new to the world of<lb/>
sports. Many athletes, both ama-<lb/>
teur and professional, fall victim<lb/>
to this malady each year. It does<lb/>
not strike in one sport only. It can<lb/>
strike any player of any sport<lb/>
who is in his second year at the<lb/>
current level.<lb/>
There is one player on the<lb/>
East Carolina University baseball<lb/>
team who is out to disprove the<lb/>
idea. In fact, he says he doesn't<lb/>
even believe in it.<lb/>
"I don't even think about a<lb/>
sophomore slump said second-<lb/>
year Pirate catcher Raymie<lb/>
Styons. "You always hear about<lb/>
it. but I put it out of my mind<lb/>
completely before this baseball<lb/>
season began<lb/>
That statement holds a lot of<lb/>
truth toit. Through ECU'S first 18<lb/>
games of the season, the Ply-<lb/>
mouth, N.C. native is the team's<lb/>
leading hitter, with a .339 aver-<lb/>
age. This follows a freshman<lb/>
season in which Styons finished<lb/>
with a .254 mark.<lb/>
"Last year the Pirate back-<lb/>
stop explained, "I had a lot to<lb/>
think about trying to learn to be a<lb/>
catcher. It was the first time I'd<lb/>
ever done that for any length of<lb/>
time. I concentrated more on<lb/>
becoming familiar at the position<lb/>
that I did on my hitting.<lb/>
"This year he continued,<lb/>
"I'm still learning to be a catcher,<lb/>
but I feel like I'm comfortable<lb/>
enough there to concentrate more<lb/>
on my hitting<lb/>
And concentrate he has.<lb/>
Through March 30, Styons was<lb/>
the team co-leader in home runs,<lb/>
with four, and was second on the<lb/>
team in RBI's (11; and total bases<lb/>
(33), besides having the top<lb/>
hitting percentage.<lb/>
It's really the first time since<lb/>
Peatu A1Tnc<lb/>
i; zi<lb/>
WI. � Iliur. M I Student.<lb/>
1 : prior nil l (O tin �)<lb/>
rri. S�i. A Sun. Ki-iluml admission<lb/>
from 9 BW� 9:30 on m�.t nights<lb/>
 Special Power Hilt driver side, 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, Toplite, Wilson, Hogan and all<lb/>
other golf balls, SI 1.50dozen.<lb/>
� Excellent selection of used golf clubs<lb/>
at unbelievably loir prices.<lb/>
 IS etc arrivals, tennis shorts � shirts,<lb/>
��. s warm-up suits, Etonic KM pro<lb/>
gf fessional jogging shoes,<lb/>
 ill tennis rackets 30-50Vt off<lb/>
 We accept Master Charge<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
4<lb/>
Gordon D. Fulp<lb/>
Golf Professional<lb/>
Greenville Golf &amp; Country Club<lb/>
Off ('i Memorial Or.<lb/>
Phone 756-0504<lb/>
Open 7 days a Aeek until dark<lb/>
my sophomore year in high school<lb/>
that I've started a baseball season<lb/>
hitting the ball well the sopho-<lb/>
more stated. "I've changed my<lb/>
stance a little and gotten rid of a<lb/>
hitch in my swing, so now I can<lb/>
hit the better pitching. I hit it well<lb/>
during the summer (a .336<lb/>
average), but I usually start a<lb/>
season slowly. Not this year,<lb/>
though<lb/>
East Carolina sported a 10-8<lb/>
record through the first 18 games<lb/>
of the season, but the ever<lb/>
optimistic catcher feels that the<lb/>
independent Pirates can still get a<lb/>
playoff berth.<lb/>
That's the most important<lb/>
thing to me right now he said.<lb/>
"To me it's more important than<lb/>
hitting home runs, or getting<lb/>
some personal honor. I want us to<lb/>
win, and get back to the region-<lb/>
als. Personal goals do not mean a<lb/>
thing unless the team is win-<lb/>
ning<lb/>
Lest one's thinking of Styons'<lb/>
abilities get out of hand, he<lb/>
maintains that despite his .339<lb/>
average, he is not hitting the ball<lb/>
as well as he can.<lb/>
"I've only had about three or<lb/>
four games where Ive hit well<lb/>
he said. "One of them was the<lb/>
game against Southeastern Mas-<lb/>
sachusetts.<lb/>
ARMYNAVY<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
Pa coat. fi�W flight, bomb<lb/>
snorkel, tanker jack, lainwtr<lb/>
parkas, comboot. work clothes,<lb/>
dlsrtes 1501 S Evans Street Open<lb/>
11:30-5 30<lb/>
We now have<lb/>
a large selection<lb/>
of wicker<lb/>
picture frames.<lb/>
H.L. Hodges<lb/>
FISHING SPRING BONANZA<lb/>
5i HiLilVL.5 Giant Grab Box of assorted Lures<lb/>
Fly rod and reel combo - $12.95<lb/>
9 Surf rod and reel combo - $29.95<lb/>
10 Surf rod and Garcia Ball Bearing Reel with 20 lb.<lb/>
Stren line - $34.95<lb/>
Fresh water Spinning rod and reel combo - 19.95<lb/>
Free ice chest to first 8 rodreel combo sold<lb/>
18 lb. spool of Trilene mono 8,12,14,17, lb. 2.95 reg. 5.95<lb/>
Ande Leader Mono 3.50 18 lb. spool reg. 4.95<lb/>
Air Cel Fly Line less 20 White Stag framed back packs less 21<lb/>
Line free on all reels purchased<lb/>
 line will be 12 price on all Penn Senators<lb/>
All Rod Blanks and Supplies 10 off<lb/>
 all loz. spool Standard D thread 50 off<lb/>
All rods 20 off includes Daiwa, Ugly Stick, Fenwick, Eagle<lb/>
am i ii i� -cw ni Claw, Browing Browning, etc.<lb/>
Mann,s Jelly worms .60 Pkg. 6<lb/>
Igloo Coolers 20 off Jansport framed back packs less 10<lb/>
Cypress Garden W ater Skis less 20 All Takle Boxes less 10<lb/>
New Uncle Josh Ripple Pork Rind .99 jar<lb/>
All sinker molds less 50 Coleman Propane lantern 17.50<lb/>
All Buck, Browning, Gerber Long Sheath Knives less 20<lb/>
Dog Training Supplies includes Dummies Books leads.<lb/>
Low Boy Fish Coolers 6.50 reg 10.95 less 20<lb/>
Coleman Double Mantle gas lanterns 21.95<lb/>
60 lb. test wire trolling line 5.50 for 100 yards<lb/>
Back pack tents less 10 Freeze Dried food less 10<lb/>
1 group Rods at very special discount prices<lb/>
<pb facs="00058048_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 6 April 1978<lb/>
Lady track team now coming of age and performing<lb/>
SPECIAL TO FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
Overall they are young, quick,<lb/>
aggressive, good looking and out<lb/>
to let the students of East<lb/>
Carolina know that to be a woman<lb/>
athlete is something of which to<lb/>
be proud.<lb/>
In her third year as founder of<lb/>
the women's track team, Coach<lb/>
Laurie Arrants has something to<lb/>
be smiling about when talking<lb/>
about women's track at ECU-and<lb/>
smile she does.<lb/>
"We certainly haven't burned<lb/>
the national record books - but<lb/>
then we never anticipated that -<lb/>
not for a while anyway. We want<lb/>
to build a very stable program;<lb/>
not just one of sprinters, or<lb/>
distance people a just jumpers or<lb/>
throwers. We will certainly have<lb/>
areas which excel over others, but<lb/>
we want some strength in all<lb/>
areas<lb/>
And the young lady pirate<lb/>
squad is showing a good founda-<lb/>
tion for such a team.<lb/>
"Returnees from last year's<lb/>
team are really producing for us<lb/>
this year says Ms. Arrants.<lb/>
Cookie McPhatter never broke<lb/>
the 60 second mark last year yet<lb/>
she has been oonsistantly in the<lb/>
58 and 57 second range in every<lb/>
meet this year. At Madison she<lb/>
ran the open 440, the mile relay<lb/>
(a 440 anchor leg) and the 440 leg<lb/>
in the 880 medley relay. She also<lb/>
took 2nd in the long jump.<lb/>
Another pleasant onslaught<lb/>
on personnel best records has<lb/>
been given by the team's only<lb/>
haif-miler Joy Forbes.<lb/>
" I just can't say enough about<lb/>
Joy's attitude, hard work and<lb/>
pure determination oomments<lb/>
Ms. Arrants. Forbes best time<lb/>
last year was a 2:36 and in the<lb/>
indoor meet at Deleware she<lb/>
brought it down to a 228. Since<lb/>
that time the trend has continued.<lb/>
At the Madison meet Forbes<lb/>
blistered everyone in the field of<lb/>
half milers by four seconds or<lb/>
better with a time of 225.1.<lb/>
Then this past weekend<lb/>
Forbes ran her best yet- a 222.1.<lb/>
"I think the Virginia meet<lb/>
gave Joy the confidence she's<lb/>
been needing. She led her heat<lb/>
the entire way, yet placed seventh<lb/>
overall. Had she been in the<lb/>
faster heat and been pushed, I<lb/>
truly feel her times would have<lb/>
been even better commented<lb/>
Ms. Arrants.<lb/>
Other returnees who have<lb/>
really tumbled their own personal<lb/>
best marks are Anne Holmes,<lb/>
Anna Bailey and Linda Mason.<lb/>
Holmes and Bailey perform in<lb/>
the mile and two mile events.<lb/>
"At Madison these two girls<lb/>
ran the mile, the two miles, the<lb/>
three miles, and each ran a half<lb/>
mile leg on the two mile relay<lb/>
team. That's six and one half<lb/>
competitive miles. They're just<lb/>
two super competitors Linda<lb/>
Mason isour only 440 hurdler and<lb/>
also runs a leg on the mile relay<lb/>
team. She may not be your classic<lb/>
runner in technique, but she's<lb/>
described as a "winner" by her<lb/>
coach.<lb/>
In the field events two return-<lb/>
ees are turning their own record<lb/>
books upside down. Debbie<lb/>
Knight, who specializes in the<lb/>
javelin released a throw of 107'8"<lb/>
in the heats at Virginia and<lb/>
knowing that to be her personal<lb/>
best relaxed and threw another<lb/>
personal best on her next throw<lb/>
witha110'11-12" flight.<lb/>
Ms. Arrants commented,<lb/>
"Debbie is so dedicated and<lb/>
studies her event so thoroughly. I<lb/>
was so pleased with her perfor-<lb/>
mance because it was certainly a<lb/>
result of many hours of patient,<lb/>
dedicated practice<lb/>
Debbie Freeman has returned<lb/>
for her final year in the throwing<lb/>
events. In the meet at Madison<lb/>
she set a personal best mark in<lb/>
the shot with 391-V4<lb/>
Coach Arrants comments on<lb/>
the senior shot putter "Debbie<lb/>
isn't perfaming near her capacity<lb/>
as yet since she came in late due<lb/>
to basketball. She's just now<lb/>
beginning to iron out some<lb/>
technique problems and I feel the<lb/>
upcoming three meets will be her<lb/>
PIRATE TRACK MEMBER wins first place<lb/>
best<lb/>
As fa newoomers to this<lb/>
year's team, Ms. Arrants is once<lb/>
again get reason to be positive.<lb/>
"We've definitely added strength<lb/>
to our program with year's<lb/>
freshman athletes. We've been<lb/>
awfully weak in sprinters in the<lb/>
past, but this year certainly<lb/>
turned that around<lb/>
All one has to do is look at the<lb/>
440 yard relay team to understand<lb/>
the sparkle in the coach's eyes.<lb/>
An all freshman relay team of<lb/>
Dawn Henderson, Cathy Suggs,<lb/>
Maria Gudjohnsen, and Lydia<lb/>
Rountree is only 1.5 seconds away<lb/>
from national qualification.<lb/>
The team has only run in two<lb/>
meets fa in Virginia Rountree<lb/>
was pulled out with an injury. But<lb/>
with three very fast and competi-<lb/>
tive meets to go in the season, the<lb/>
team should be leaving only<lb/>
smoke and opponents behind<lb/>
them.<lb/>
Other standouts are Maria<lb/>
Gudjohnsen who in addition to<lb/>
running on the relay team also<lb/>
runs the 100 hurdles and long-<lb/>
jumps. Sandy Sampson has been<lb/>
perfaming well in the high jump.<lb/>
As with any young team,<lb/>
perfamances have been some-<lb/>
what inconsistent, but what a<lb/>
future to look to. It looks like Ms.<lb/>
Arrants will have reason to keep<lb/>
smiling.<lb/>
"We've got the youngest<lb/>
team we've ever had and the best<lb/>
potential we've ever had. We<lb/>
haven't had the budget to travel<lb/>
to as many of the quality meets as<lb/>
we would like, but I feel that the<lb/>
situation will improve each year.<lb/>
The girl's track programs in the<lb/>
high schools are expanding rapid-<lb/>
ly and since East Carolina has the<lb/>
best developed oollege program, I<lb/>
think we will surely reap benefits<lb/>
from the quality high school<lb/>
programs<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will be<lb/>
traveling to Dover Deleware on<lb/>
April 15th and to the University of<lb/>
South Carolina on April 22nd.<lb/>
Then they will host the First<lb/>
AIAW State Track Championship<lb/>
on Friday, April 28th at Bunting<lb/>
Field.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
tor rent<lb/>
�<lb/>
APT. FOR SUBLEASE: May 1 -<lb/>
Aug. 31. 2 bdrm kitchen, liv.<lb/>
rm furnished. Great location -1<lb/>
block from campus, 2 blocks from<lb/>
Overtons, 2 blocks from down-<lb/>
town. Prefer responsible female<lb/>
grad. student a marrieds. call<lb/>
758-1636 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 1 bdrm. apt. fa<lb/>
sublease during summer. Call<lb/>
752-8065 after 6 p.m. Grad<lb/>
student preferred.<lb/>
MALE COLLEGE graduate mov-<lb/>
ing to Raleigh by May, looking fa<lb/>
someone to share an apt. Call<lb/>
756-5645 atr 3.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE: needed fa<lb/>
summer Rent 62.00 plus Va<lb/>
utilities. Call 752-2492. Close to<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
GET OUT OF THE DORM: Pay<lb/>
$10 more a moith and enjoy life.<lb/>
Two males needed to sublet apt.<lb/>
fa summer. Call 752-6123.<lb/>
WANTED: 1 a 2 male room-<lb/>
mates fa both summer sessions<lb/>
and next year to live at Kingsrow<lb/>
Apt. Call 752-8444.<lb/>
NEEDED: 1 a 2 people to sublet<lb/>
a 1 bdrm. apt. iooated on E. 6th<lb/>
St. Apt. oomes furnished, rent is<lb/>
$125 plus utilities. Call Debbie<lb/>
758-7821.<lb/>
ROOMMATES NEEDED: to sub-<lb/>
lease 2 bdrm 1V2 bath, fully<lb/>
carpeted, AC, luxury townhouse<lb/>
apt. next to campus. Open May<lb/>
15 till end of August. Ask fa<lb/>
Debbie a Betsy. 758-7786.<lb/>
NEEDED: Grad student needs 1<lb/>
bdrm. apt Single occupancy<lb/>
beginning in the fall. Please<lb/>
contact Dale 758-8201.<lb/>
for sate<lb/>
FOR SALE: Light blue Burton golf<lb/>
bag. Lighweight ana perfect fa<lb/>
long rounds. Matching cover<lb/>
included. $30.00 Call 758-3497.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Magnavox 8-track<lb/>
AMFM stereo system in excel-<lb/>
lent cond. 752-8676.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '67 Poitiac Tempest<lb/>
in good cond. $400.00 Negotiable.<lb/>
Call Charlotte 758-7821. Keep<lb/>
trying.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Ladies 10-speed<lb/>
Murray bike, hardly ridden. $50.<lb/>
Call 756-7684 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Speakers Heil<lb/>
Tempest 2-way pated set-hand-<lb/>
les 40 watts rms channel. Contin-<lb/>
uous a 100 watts in. peaks.<lb/>
260.00 new but will sell both fa<lb/>
150.00 752-0034.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Dam size refrig.<lb/>
with stand. $75.00 in good cond.<lb/>
Call 758-8122.<lb/>
FOR SALE: FM converter by<lb/>
Audiovox in excellent cond. Sells<lb/>
fa $20 but will take $12.50. Also<lb/>
Scalding Smasher tennis racket,<lb/>
aluminum, sells fa $42 but will<lb/>
take $30 used one summer. Call<lb/>
752-6870.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Female clothes size<lb/>
7-9; two single bed mattresses<lb/>
and boxsprings; plants, coffee<lb/>
table, couch, headboards and<lb/>
bedframes; mirra; toaster oven.<lb/>
Will take best offer.758-7786.<lb/>
personaKg)<lb/>
WANTED: Group needs exper-<lb/>
ienced drummer 'or weekend and<lb/>
summer wak. Ca Jell i-8776.<lb/>
WANTED: Peugot a Raleigh<lb/>
used bike. Call Ton 752-8676.<lb/>
ALTERATIONS: Summer things<lb/>
too long? Too big? Call Kathy<lb/>
752-8444 a 752-8642.<lb/>
lost<lb/>
2<lb/>
LOST: Large maaame pocket-<lb/>
book Mon. night at Chanelos.<lb/>
Reward offered. Call Dawn at<lb/>
752-8817 a take to lost &amp; found<lb/>
at Mendenhall. No questions<lb/>
asked. HELP.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058048_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>