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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058051_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity fa over 50 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of 8,500,<lb/>
this issue is 16 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
ON THE IN9DE<lb/>
SCJp. 5<lb/>
Alumni Dayp. 7<lb/>
Edwards reviewp. 8<lb/>
Gamecocks beatenp. 13<lb/>
57<lb/>
Vol. No. 53, Ho-J<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
18 April 1978<lb/>
Sponsored by Bar Assoc. Law Society<lb/>
Law Day schedules Morgan<lb/>
ti<lb/>
By JULIE EVERETTE<lb/>
Assistant NewsEdita<lb/>
Senata Robert Magan,<lb/>
D-N.C, will speak on the topic,<lb/>
"The Law-Your Access to<lb/>
ju i? at a Law Day observance<lb/>
here hi April 21 at 8 p.m.<lb/>
The ECU Law Society and the<lb/>
Pitt County Bar Association are<lb/>
co-sponsaing the program,<lb/>
aooading to Jerry Cox, president<lb/>
of the Law Society.<lb/>
A reoeption will follow Ma-<lb/>
gan's address at the Willis<lb/>
Building on First St.<lb/>
Law Day was set fa May 1 by<lb/>
the American Bar Association,<lb/>
but ECU is holding it early in<lb/>
hopes of greater student partici-<lb/>
pation, aooading to Cox.<lb/>
"Law Day is the day to<lb/>
remember and commemaate the<lb/>
oommoi and statutay law and<lb/>
judicial branch of government<lb/>
said Cox.<lb/>
"Until now, no one in Eastern<lb/>
Nath Carolina has done anything<lb/>
fa Law Day<lb/>
Aooading to Cox, the objective<lb/>
is to make the oommunity aware<lb/>
of the Law Society and the Bar<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
"We want to let them (the<lb/>
public) know that we are interes-<lb/>
ted in them and involving them in<lb/>
it said Cox.<lb/>
"We really want the students<lb/>
to turn out and make a good<lb/>
showing. It should be a very good<lb/>
evening<lb/>
Magan, a Lillington attaney,<lb/>
is fama chairman of the ECU<lb/>
Board of Trustees and an out-<lb/>
standing ECU alumnus.<lb/>
It ??<lb/>
U.S. SENA TOR ROBERT Morgan.<lb/>
Campus police present assaultrape program<lb/>
By RICHY SMITH<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
An "Assault and Rape Prev-<lb/>
ention on Campus" program was<lb/>
presented by the campus police in<lb/>
the lobby of Fleming Hall recent-<lb/>
ly-<lb/>
The slide presentation was<lb/>
shown in two parts.<lb/>
Officer Lynne Singleton pre-<lb/>
sented a program on assault and<lb/>
rape on ECU campus.<lb/>
"We are hoping students can<lb/>
benefit from it aooading to<lb/>
Singleton.<lb/>
The slides depict places on<lb/>
campus that are potential assualt<lb/>
and rape scenes.<lb/>
 There are no part icular areas<lb/>
where assualts and rapes occur<lb/>
Singleton added.<lb/>
One could say that every-<lb/>
where on campus is a potential<lb/>
area fa rape a assualt.<lb/>
Violations of dam rules at-<lb/>
tribute to assualt.<lb/>
"Visitation violations are our<lb/>
greatest ooncern and most dan-<lb/>
gerous states Singleton. What<lb/>
starts out being very harmless<lb/>
like letting saneoie in the back<lb/>
doors after hours may turn into an<lb/>
assualt case.<lb/>
" Nobody gets ooncerned until<lb/>
someone gets raped continued<lb/>
Singleton.<lb/>
"If ever you beoome a victim<lb/>
of rape a assault, repot it she<lb/>
added.<lb/>
Many times students fail to<lb/>
report such an incident fa fear of<lb/>
being embarrassed a fa fear of<lb/>
their private lives being probed<lb/>
into.<lb/>
That i s no longer the case The<lb/>
victim isnolonger placed on trial.<lb/>
The 1977 oeneral Assembly<lb/>
passed the law that a defense<lb/>
attaney cannot bring up the past<lb/>
of a rape victim unless it is<lb/>
pertinent to the case in question.<lb/>
"Be aware of what's going on<lb/>
around you Sngleton conclud-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
The second slide presentatioi<lb/>
on "Crime Prevention" was<lb/>
given by Officer Gary Hastings.<lb/>
Procedures fa getting in<lb/>
touch with the campus police at<lb/>
all hours were explained.<lb/>
"Crime is occuring on camp-<lb/>
us states Hastings.<lb/>
"Careless mistakes lead to<lb/>
burglary he continued.<lb/>
Reducing aime is everyone's<lb/>
responsibility.<lb/>
Bicycle theft is great and it is<lb/>
advisable fa owners to register<lb/>
Professor<lb/>
to predict<lb/>
ByCHRISTINE CAGLE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Dr. Donald R. Hoffman, an<lb/>
ECU pathology professa, has<lb/>
developed a blood test to predict<lb/>
allergic reactions to insect stings.<lb/>
The test waks by obtaining<lb/>
blood from a patient and then<lb/>
testing the IGE antibody from the<lb/>
blood against the bee venom. IGE<lb/>
is Immonoglobulin E; a small type<lb/>
their bikes.<lb/>
"Someone is less likely to<lb/>
steal a bike that is registered by<lb/>
the campus police Hastings<lb/>
added.<lb/>
Campus police can obtain<lb/>
arrest warrants on persons taking<lb/>
persoial property.<lb/>
"But we have no say so on<lb/>
what happens.<lb/>
"That's why it's important<lb/>
you prevent these things Hast-<lb/>
ings oontinued.<lb/>
Students' lives are sometimes<lb/>
endangered by careless mistakes.<lb/>
"It may seem like a mabid<lb/>
subject to talk about, but it can<lb/>
happen he continued.<lb/>
"It'sna worth the risk.<lb/>
"Repot it to the police. That<lb/>
us our primary function, to save<lb/>
the students added Hastings.<lb/>
The program presentation has<lb/>
proved to be voy successful.<lb/>
"This is the second time<lb/>
Fleming has had the foum and it<lb/>
has answered many quest iois of<lb/>
students aooading to Julie<lb/>
Flowers, president of the dam.<lb/>
"The program has had great<lb/>
response in both cases she<lb/>
added.<lb/>
If an oganizatioi o group is<lb/>
intaested in the presentation,<lb/>
they should contact Francis<lb/>
Eddings, chief of campus police,<lb/>
fa further details.<lb/>
develops blood test<lb/>
insect sting reactions<lb/>
of antibody related to allogy<lb/>
found in the blood.<lb/>
Then, the IGE antibody from<lb/>
the blood is tested against a<lb/>
radioactive antibody.<lb/>
Such testing predicts whether<lb/>
the patient is allogic to insect<lb/>
stings.<lb/>
Accading to Hoffman, who<lb/>
teaches at the School of Medicine<lb/>
here, one out of evoy 20,000<lb/>
deaths result from insect stings of<lb/>
which approximately one million<lb/>
posois in the U.S. are allogic.<lb/>
Hoffman said thoe are two<lb/>
reasons why the blood test is<lb/>
offoed free to dodos and<lb/>
hospitals.<lb/>
"We would like to help people<lb/>
and we can use the blood of<lb/>
allogic patients fa Oho<lb/>
research said Hoffman.<lb/>
"The main reason is that the<lb/>
test is patented undo a company:<lb/>
See TEST, p. 6<lb/>
Contracts are binding<lb/>
Dorm contracts will not change<lb/>
WHILE MANY SPEND their time playing softball and tennis,<lb/>
others practice the fine art of skateboarding<lb/>
By STEVE WILSON<lb/>
Staff Writo<lb/>
The current policy regarding<lb/>
housing contracts will remain<lb/>
unchanged fo next year, accad-<lb/>
ing to Dan Wootoi, directo of<lb/>
housing.<lb/>
"The contracts woe initiated<lb/>
with the botefit of the students in<lb/>
mind. In a aowded situation,<lb/>
such as the one we have hoe, the<lb/>
one-yeo contracts allow us to get<lb/>
maximum use from the dams<lb/>
Wootoi said.<lb/>
Wootoi said that realizing<lb/>
maximum use keeps the rent cost<lb/>
low.<lb/>
Accading to Wcoten, stu-<lb/>
dents are sometimes dissatisfied<lb/>
with the tarns of the contract<lb/>
whoi they decide that living off<lb/>
campus would be prefoable.<lb/>
He reminded students to read<lb/>
their housing contracts carefully<lb/>
befoe signing them. Problems<lb/>
occur what students seeking<lb/>
off-campus housing cannot find<lb/>
anything suitable befoe the July<lb/>
1 contract deadline is upon<lb/>
them.<lb/>
In this owe, students are<lb/>
dependent on the available dorm<lb/>
space, and must settle fo anotho<lb/>
yea of living on campus, when<lb/>
they would prefo to live off-<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Wcoten said that the only<lb/>
exceptions to the binding tarns of<lb/>
the contracts are strictly outlined<lb/>
in the contract.<lb/>
Students who have extenua-<lb/>
ting circumstances that would<lb/>
warrent the special considoatioi<lb/>
should contact Dr. James Tucko,<lb/>
dean of student affairs, in 204<lb/>
Whichod Building.<lb/>
See HOUSING, p. 6<lb/>
<pb facs="00058051_0002"/><lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 18 April 1978<lb/>
Chess club Fashion show<lb/>
The Chess Club meets each<lb/>
Tuesday evening at 7:30 p.m. in<lb/>
the Mendenhall Coffeehouse. All<lb/>
persons interested in chess are<lb/>
invited to attend and join in the<lb/>
competition.<lb/>
Low rental<lb/>
Whether you'd like to polish<lb/>
up your game with some steady<lb/>
practice or invite three friends<lb/>
along for some friendly compet-<lb/>
ition, you can rent a bowling lane<lb/>
to use fa one hour and it only<lb/>
costs $2.50.<lb/>
Lane rentals are available at<lb/>
the Mendenhall Bowling Center<lb/>
every Saturday from Noon until 6<lb/>
p.m. Stop by and try it out, it's a<lb/>
great way to spend and hour.<lb/>
Red pin<lb/>
Red Pin Bowling is held<lb/>
every Sunday evening from 7<lb/>
p.m. until 10 p.m. at the Bowling<lb/>
Center at MendenhaJI.<lb/>
If you can make a strike when<lb/>
the red pin is the head pin, you<lb/>
win one free game.<lb/>
It's that simple! Come over<lb/>
and try it out this Sunday. It could<lb/>
be your lucky day!<lb/>
F-G<lb/>
Looking fa Christian fellow-<lb/>
ship?<lb/>
The Faever Generatiai in-<lb/>
vites you to jan us Monday nights<lb/>
fa fellowship and fun.<lb/>
We'll be having a relevant<lb/>
Bible study, good singing and<lb/>
delicious refreshments.<lb/>
Why not plan on being there?<lb/>
That's Monday, April 17art 9 p.m.<lb/>
in Brewster C-304.<lb/>
Luther Hodges<lb/>
Volunteers needed to help<lb/>
work with the Luther Hodges<lb/>
campaign. Hodges, a democrat,<lb/>
is running fa the U.S. Senate. If<lb/>
interested, call 758-4666.<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
King Youth Fellowship on Tues<lb/>
April 18, at 7 p.m. in room 309<lb/>
Flanagan.<lb/>
This will be the final meeting<lb/>
of the year.<lb/>
Elections will be held fa the<lb/>
upcoming year fa all offices. All<lb/>
those conoerned about the future<lb/>
of the KYF are asked to attend.<lb/>
In memayof Ledaiia Wright,<lb/>
a fashioi show entitled, "A<lb/>
Weekend Affair of Fashions<lb/>
will be held on Fri. April 21, at 8<lb/>
p.m. at the West Greenville<lb/>
Reaeation Center.<lb/>
This program will be held to<lb/>
raise money fa the Ledana<lb/>
Wright Memaial Scholarship<lb/>
Fund.<lb/>
The evening will be full of<lb/>
delightful fashions with various<lb/>
styles of attire ranging from<lb/>
casual to famal wear.<lb/>
Also, entertainment will be<lb/>
provided by saaities and frat-<lb/>
ernities-they all perfam by<lb/>
doing a short step, and music will<lb/>
be supplied.<lb/>
The scholarship will be given<lb/>
to an inooming freshman student.<lb/>
Tickets can be obtained from:<lb/>
Shelia Bowe, Dr. Ensley, James<lb/>
Green and Carolina Moss.<lb/>
Tickets are $1.50 in advance<lb/>
fa students, and $2 fa adults; at<lb/>
the doa: $2 fa students and<lb/>
$2.50 adults.<lb/>
Make checks a maiey aders<lb/>
payable to: the Ledonia Wright<lb/>
MemaiaJ Scholarship Fund.<lb/>
Send to: ECU, Business<lb/>
Office, Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
Attn: Mrs. Anne May.<lb/>
Gospel<lb/>
Are you finding life difficult to<lb/>
live on your own strength and<lb/>
wisdom?<lb/>
If you are, you are invited to<lb/>
come hear testimonies of how<lb/>
Jesus Christ gives fellow students<lb/>
peace of mind, strength and<lb/>
wisdom to live a victaious life.<lb/>
The Full Gospel Student Fel-<lb/>
lowship invites everyone to attend<lb/>
this Thursday's meeting in Mend-<lb/>
enhaJI 221 from 730-9.O0.<lb/>
At this meeting we will be<lb/>
sharing about what Jesus Christ<lb/>
is doing in our lives, sing songs of<lb/>
praise, and pray fa everyone's<lb/>
needs.<lb/>
Raquetball<lb/>
There will be a Raquetball<lb/>
Club meeting Thurs April 19 at<lb/>
7 p.m. in 104 Memaial Gym.<lb/>
All who are interested are<lb/>
invited to attend.<lb/>
Pi Sigma Alpha<lb/>
Pi Sigma Aplha, the Political<lb/>
Science Hona Society will hold<lb/>
its annual spring banquet on<lb/>
Mon April 17 at the King and<lb/>
Queen Resturant.<lb/>
Guest speakers will be Walter<lb/>
Jones and Dr. Leo Jenk.ns.<lb/>
All majas, minas, interested<lb/>
students, and the public is<lb/>
invited<lb/>
Cost is $7 per person and the<lb/>
meeting will begin at 6:30 p.m.<lb/>
Reservations may be made in the<lb/>
Political Science office.<lb/>
Training class Party<lb/>
CAday<lb/>
Leadership Training Class,<lb/>
sponsaed by Campus Crusade<lb/>
fa Christ, meets on Thursdays at<lb/>
7 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 ahers. 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/>
Pi Sigma Pi<lb/>
Pi Sigma Pi will hold its<lb/>
monthly dinner meeting, Wed<lb/>
April 19, at 6 p.m. at Bonanza.<lb/>
Last one befae Founder's<lb/>
Day. Remember the Heart Fund<lb/>
Project.<lb/>
Gong!<lb/>
Jones and Clement dams<lb/>
jointly present the second annual<lb/>
Gong Show on Thurs April<lb/>
20 at 7 p.m. in the lobby of<lb/>
Clement dam.<lb/>
Everyaie is invited to share in<lb/>
the laughter and fun fa oily 25<lb/>
cents, so come on over!<lb/>
Bike tour<lb/>
Traveling companions wanted<lb/>
fa bicycling tour to South<lb/>
America.<lb/>
Leaving May 17 from<lb/>
Winston-Salem and will be travel-<lb/>
ing back country roads in the U.S.<lb/>
and the Pan-American highway in<lb/>
Central America.<lb/>
Easy pace wih plenty of time<lb/>
fa taking it easy. Not as costly<lb/>
nor as difficult as you may<lb/>
imagine. Fa mae infamatiai<lb/>
call Neil at 752-7065.<lb/>
Comics club<lb/>
The ECU Conic tJook Club,<lb/>
the Nostalgia Newstand, and the<lb/>
Roxy will sponsa a mini oomic<lb/>
book convention at the Roxy, 629<lb/>
Albemarle Ave. on Sat April 22.<lb/>
The convention will be free to<lb/>
all and last from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.<lb/>
Anyone with oomic books,<lb/>
recads, science fiction and fant-<lb/>
asy items to sell a trade are<lb/>
invited to set up booths free of<lb/>
charge.<lb/>
There will be an art show and<lb/>
a costume contest.<lb/>
Fa more infamatiai call the<lb/>
Nostalgia Newstand at 758-6909.<lb/>
Republicans<lb/>
The College Republicans will<lb/>
meet Tuesday night, April 18, at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. in Brewster B-104.<lb/>
This is the final regular<lb/>
meeting of the year. The new<lb/>
constitution will be discussed and<lb/>
vaed on, and plans fa the<lb/>
summer and next year will be<lb/>
discussed.<lb/>
All interested people are<lb/>
invited to attend.<lb/>
The ECU Pan Pom girls are<lb/>
having an "End of School' party<lb/>
at Blimpie's on Wed April 19<lb/>
from 7-10 p.m.<lb/>
Everyone is invited. Your<lb/>
favaite beverage will be there at<lb/>
special prices.<lb/>
Study<lb/>
The extended hours at Joyner<lb/>
Library during spring exams are:<lb/>
Fri. April 28 8 a.m. - 11 p.m.<lb/>
Sat April 29 9 a.m. - 11 p.m.<lb/>
Sun April 30 2 p.m. - 12 p.m.<lb/>
Mon May 1 8 a.m. - 3 a.m.<lb/>
Tues May 2 8 a.m. - 3 am<lb/>
Wed May 3 8 a.m. - 3 a.m.<lb/>
Thurs May 4 8 a.m. - 3 am<lb/>
Fri May 5 8 a.m. - 11 p.m.<lb/>
Sat May 6 9 a.m. - 11 p.m.<lb/>
Sun May 7 2 p.m. - 3 a.m.<lb/>
Mon May 8 8 a.m. - 12 p.m.<lb/>
Family fun<lb/>
'Family Fun Night' is Thurs<lb/>
April 20, at Mendenhall.<lb/>
From 6 p.m. until 10 p.m all<lb/>
children accompanied by a parent<lb/>
may bowl, play billiards a play<lb/>
table tennis fa half price.<lb/>
Only one adult per group must<lb/>
have an ECU ID a Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center Membership<lb/>
Card.<lb/>
Each game of bowling will be<lb/>
hal' price fa the children and<lb/>
billiards and table tennis will be<lb/>
half price fa the entire family<lb/>
You can't beat the prices and<lb/>
the kids will love it, so bring the<lb/>
whole family and have some fun.<lb/>
Pinball<lb/>
Only oie mae week left to<lb/>
find out who is the ECU 'Pinball<lb/>
Wizard<lb/>
To find out who's campus<lb/>
champ, a Spring Pinball Tourn-<lb/>
ament sponsaed by Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center is now being held<lb/>
Monday through Thursday, from<lb/>
9 a.m. until 11 p.m.<lb/>
The tournament will end April<lb/>
20.<lb/>
The amusement games area<lb/>
located on the ground floa of<lb/>
Mendenhall, is the site of the<lb/>
three-week event.<lb/>
There are 13 chances to win<lb/>
with the Grand Prize going to the<lb/>
person who accumulates the most<lb/>
high scores fa the tournament.<lb/>
The first place winner will choose<lb/>
from prizes wath $25 each - a<lb/>
Happy Stae gift certificate, din-<lb/>
ner fa two at the King &amp; Queen,<lb/>
a billiards cue stick with case, a a<lb/>
Brody's gift certificate, plus the<lb/>
ECU pinball Championship Tro-<lb/>
phy.<lb/>
Fa second prize, T-shirts will<lb/>
be awarded to the 12 individual<lb/>
winners.<lb/>
If you're into pinball, get on<lb/>
over to Mendenhall fa the Spring<lb/>
Pinball Tournament. You may be<lb/>
the ECU "Pinball Wizard<lb/>
Tournament rules are avail-<lb/>
able at the Billiards Center in<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
CaTirnunication arts classes<lb/>
will meet with visiting commer-<lb/>
cial art alumni this Friday in<lb/>
Jenkins Art building.<lb/>
Visiting alumni are Debbie<lb/>
Harlee, art directa of Integon<lb/>
Cap, Winston-Salem, N.C; Tun<lb/>
Gilland, graphic designer fa<lb/>
Sonderman Design, Charlotte.<lb/>
N.C; Rich Gnendling, artist-in-<lb/>
residence in Elizabethtown, Ky<lb/>
Harry Hartofelis, graphic design-<lb/>
er fa McKinney, Silver, &amp;<lb/>
Rockett, Raleigh, N.C, and<lb/>
Michael Winslow, art directa of<lb/>
McKinney, Silver &amp; Rockett.<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C.<lb/>
Alumni will talk to phao-<lb/>
graphy. illustration, and graphic<lb/>
design classes on the current job<lb/>
market and possibilities in com-<lb/>
munication arts.<lb/>
A roundtable discussion will<lb/>
be held at 11 a.m. in Room 1325,<lb/>
Jenkins Art Building. The discus-<lb/>
sion is open to the public.<lb/>
A slide presentation will be<lb/>
held in Jenkins Auditaium ai<lb/>
Saturday at 9:30 a.m. The public<lb/>
is invited to attend the presenta-<lb/>
tion which will include current<lb/>
waks by the alumni of their<lb/>
companies and their own personal<lb/>
art work.<lb/>
Sponsaed by the Visual Arts<lb/>
Faum in oonjunaton with the<lb/>
SGA.<lb/>
Jesse Helms<lb/>
There will be an aganizatioi-<lb/>
al meeting of the ECU Student<lb/>
Leaders fa Jesse Helms Thurs<lb/>
April 20 at 7 p.m. in Rawl 130.<lb/>
Two films (one on Senata<lb/>
Helms' general political beliefs<lb/>
and one on national defense) will<lb/>
be shown.<lb/>
Refreshments will be served,<lb/>
and all people interested in<lb/>
waking in the Helms campaign<lb/>
are invited.<lb/>
Visitation<lb/>
The SGA needs your help in<lb/>
waking ai a new visitatioi<lb/>
policy. If you have some good<lb/>
ideas, go to your hall advisa and<lb/>
give them a list of what you think<lb/>
will be a better plan.<lb/>
Be sure and do it befae April<lb/>
21. We appreciate your help!<lb/>
Walk<lb/>
Can you walk 20 kilometers<lb/>
(12V2 miles?).<lb/>
Well the ECU Hunger Coal-<lb/>
ition invites you to try on April 22.<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/>
ooking 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 ma-<lb/>
info a call 752-4646. Please "put<lb/>
a little heart in your soul<lb/>
Thanks.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058051_0003"/><lb/>
????IMH<lb/>
18 April 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
Shakespeare production features sign language<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
The production of Shakes-<lb/>
peare's "A Midsummer Night's<lb/>
Dream which opens this week<lb/>
at the ECU Playhouse, will<lb/>
feature a new 'interpretation' in<lb/>
more ways than one  two<lb/>
performances will be interpreted<lb/>
in sign language for the deaf.<lb/>
The Wednesday afternoon<lb/>
matinee will be attended by 135<lb/>
students from the Eastern N.C.<lb/>
School of the Deaf, and the<lb/>
Thursday evening perfromance is<lb/>
open to the public.<lb/>
Interpretation of two Play-<lb/>
house productions earlier this<lb/>
year was arranged in cooperation<lb/>
with the Program for the Hearing-<lb/>
Impaired, said Playhouse General<lb/>
Manager Preston Sisk.<lb/>
"The project was begun as<lb/>
part of our efforts to eliminate<lb/>
physical barriers which prevent<lb/>
some people from attending our<lb/>
FRISBEES FLY FREELY when the weather warms.<lb/>
shows he said.<lb/>
The interpreters include Mike<lb/>
Ernest, director of the Program<lb/>
for the Hearing-Impaired; two<lb/>
full-time staff membrs of the<lb/>
program, Erras Luke and Ruth<lb/>
Aleskovsky; and two student<lb/>
interpreters, Karen Lewis, and<lb/>
Wendy Gronert.<lb/>
The group has been attending<lb/>
rehearsals of the play for several<lb/>
weeks to hear voioe inflections<lb/>
and see actor movements, so they<lb/>
can realte to one another clearly<lb/>
through manual dialogue.<lb/>
Aleskovsky described the in-<lb/>
terpreters' work as "not conven-<lb/>
tional deaf theatre but support<lb/>
interpretation.<lb/>
"We supplement the per-<lb/>
formance, by giving the stay<lb/>
line. We are not cast membes,<lb/>
but we are theatrically interpret-<lb/>
ing what the cast says through<lb/>
manual communication<lb/>
Director Del Lewis, who has<lb/>
worked dosely with the interpre-<lb/>
CORRECTION<lb/>
In reference to the story last<lb/>
Thursday concerning an ECU<lb/>
student who was reportedly ex-<lb/>
pelled, the student was not<lb/>
expelled for disciplinary reasons<lb/>
but was asked to leave the<lb/>
dormitory for the best concern of<lb/>
the student and the university.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD regrets any<lb/>
inconvience caused by the error.<lb/>
ters during the past several<lb/>
weeks, was enthusiastic about the<lb/>
program.<lb/>
" It'sa new experience for all of<lb/>
us; we feel a little like pioneers.<lb/>
The interpreters have been real<lb/>
gems, picking up on directions<lb/>
I've given the cast and working<lb/>
them right into their interpreta-<lb/>
ims<lb/>
"Becuasethisisa new service<lb/>
in eastern North Carolina, we're<lb/>
hoping that members of the deaf<lb/>
community here wiil come out to<lb/>
see the show<lb/>
Tickets for the production,<lb/>
which runs April 18-22, at 8:15<lb/>
p.m are available from the<lb/>
Playhouse Box Office, phone<lb/>
757-6390.<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
LEADERS<lb/>
.<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
CAMPAIGN<lb/>
MEETING<lb/>
Thursday, April 20 at 7: 00 p.m. in<lb/>
Irooni 130 Rawl<lb/>
Two films will be showni<lb/>
fining City On A Hill<lb/>
And 'National Defense'<lb/>
Refreshments will be served.<lb/>
All students invited to attend.<lb/>
THREE DAYS ONLY<lb/>
SPECIAL PRICE ON MEN'S TRADITIONAL SILADIUM RING<lb/>
Only $59.95<lb/>
Regularly $82.00<lb/>
IRTQ1RVED<lb/>
It's the day you can charge your ArtCarved college<lb/>
jewelry on Master Charge or BankAmericard.<lb/>
place: Student Supply Store Lobby<lb/>
Wed. - Fii April 26 - 28<lb/>
<pb facs="00058051_0004"/><lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 18 April 1978<lb/>
SU handicapped<lb/>
by damaged floor<lb/>
The Student Union cannot hold any more concerts<lb/>
in Minges Coliseum until it pays a deposit to replace<lb/>
the entire floor or buy a floor covering to cover the<lb/>
floor that will meet the administration's approval.<lb/>
The floor was damaged by cigarette burns during<lb/>
the Styx concert, and Cliff Moore, vice-chancel I a for<lb/>
business affairs, has denied the Student Union the<lb/>
use of the coliseum until the Student Union takes<lb/>
measures to repair the damage done to the floor.<lb/>
The Student Union provides a canvas cover which<lb/>
covers the general area of the gym floor, thus<lb/>
protecting it from cigarette burns. However, the<lb/>
administration warts a covering that will not only<lb/>
cover the basketball court, but also the area under<lb/>
the bleachers.<lb/>
It's rather strange that the Student Union must<lb/>
purchase a covering that will also cover the area<lb/>
under the bleachers, but the athletic department<lb/>
does not have to provide a covering fa the same area<lb/>
during basketball games. There is no difference in a<lb/>
person throwing a cigarette butt under the bleachers<lb/>
during a concert than there is during a basketball<lb/>
game. The damage is still the same.<lb/>
Why is the Student Union being penalized for<lb/>
floor damages when the athletic department is guilty<lb/>
of the same? Certainly the athletic department can<lb/>
afford a floor covering for the area under the<lb/>
bleachers during the basketball games.<lb/>
The athletic department makes some of its money<lb/>
at the concession stand, regardless of what activity is<lb/>
going on in the gym. Rightfully, if the Student Union<lb/>
hddsaooncert, then it should operate and keep the<lb/>
profits off the concession stand. As it is now,<lb/>
athletics keep all profits, except for $50, which goes<lb/>
to the Student Union.<lb/>
It's a shame for the students that athletics takes<lb/>
so much priority over everything else that the<lb/>
Student Union is penalized for something that<lb/>
athletics gets away with.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over titty 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 Broom<lb/>
Managing EditorLeigh Coakley<lb/>
Advertising ManagerRobert M. Swaim<lb/>
News EditorsDoug White<lb/>
Stuart Morgan<lb/>
Trends EditorSteve Bachner<lb/>
Sports EditorChris Holloman<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 $6 annually.<lb/>
duvM'K ba$kebal<lb/>
cja.v-ney<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Reader laments cancellation of TV show<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
"You dingbat Stifle<lb/>
yourself, little girl<lb/>
You are a oommi-pinko .Guns<lb/>
don't kill people, people kill<lb/>
peopleOh Archie<lb/>
These are some of the words<lb/>
and philosophies which we stud-<lb/>
ents grew up with.<lb/>
These phrases and thousands<lb/>
of other spoke out in stereotypes<lb/>
of what this country is based on.<lb/>
Yes, there is a little of the Bunker<lb/>
Family down deep in our hearts.<lb/>
To view "All in the Family "<lb/>
was like watching a part of<lb/>
ourselves, thinking out loud.<lb/>
The great aspect about this<lb/>
family is that the students could<lb/>
laugh at them,<lb/>
We could laugh at what was<lb/>
said, how it was said, and the<lb/>
physical posture of the actor or<lb/>
actress.<lb/>
We could laugh at the four of<lb/>
thern till tears would swell up in<lb/>
our eyes and to a point of beyond<lb/>
where we could not breathe a bit<lb/>
of air.<lb/>
The Bunker Family appeared<lb/>
before the students' eyes in 1971.<lb/>
The family nearly received a<lb/>
censorship beouase they present-<lb/>
ed ideas against the established<lb/>
morals. They actually jolted the<lb/>
establishment, and many conser-<lb/>
vative views.<lb/>
After eight seasons of giving<lb/>
our laugh lines a good work out,<lb/>
the actors and actresses called it<lb/>
quits. This work did not go<lb/>
unnoticed. Many other producers<lb/>
and script writers patterned<lb/>
themselves after the show " All in<lb/>
the Family<lb/>
Any student should realize<lb/>
this is true. Just turn on your<lb/>
television set from 8 p.m. to 10<lb/>
p.m. (prime time hours). One is<lb/>
bound to find a similar show.<lb/>
TV networks and producers<lb/>
love to imitate what each has<lb/>
succeeded at doing. This is<lb/>
exactly what the networks do. If<lb/>
one network did something which<lb/>
achieved any success, others will<lb/>
soon follow.<lb/>
But is this "copycat" attitude<lb/>
good for the viewer a, on the<lb/>
contrary, are the students tired<lb/>
of the same types of TV shows?<lb/>
Recent statistics show that the<lb/>
average American is watching<lb/>
less TV than a year ago. These<lb/>
statistics have networks deeply<lb/>
worried about next year's prog-<lb/>
ramming.<lb/>
Advertisers are watching<lb/>
these statistics with extreme<lb/>
care. Because of the fewer<lb/>
number of viewers watching a<lb/>
popular TV show, the less it will<lb/>
cost that advertisers per minute.<lb/>
As the minutes ticked by,<lb/>
Archie Bunker became a folk-hero<lb/>
in the American eye. He was the<lb/>
head of the family who always<lb/>
said what was on his mind. And<lb/>
Archie always has his chair!<lb/>
For others the libeial Michael<lb/>
Stivic became a folk-hero, be-<lb/>
cause he loved and opposed<lb/>
Archie.<lb/>
Yet others might consider<lb/>
Gloria and Edith folk-heroines.<lb/>
They both had charm, were<lb/>
understanding and were suppor-<lb/>
tive of their beloved men.<lb/>
But there were times when<lb/>
these strong ladies did speak<lb/>
their views and stood with two<lb/>
feet firmly on the ground.<lb/>
The Bunker Family will never<lb/>
be forgotten. This is true when<lb/>
one hears his fellow students<lb/>
speak about good o'le Archie<lb/>
while drinking a beer.<lb/>
MarcS. Adler<lb/>
Student upset at bike theft,<lb/>
wants better protection<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Last Tuesday I felt as<lb/>
though I had lost my best friend. I<lb/>
arose in the morning all set to ride<lb/>
to class but alas, I found my<lb/>
bicycle has been taken - off the<lb/>
front porch of Slay Dorm, no less.<lb/>
My heart fell the moment I<lb/>
saw my cut chain and lock, there<lb/>
where my bike stood not 12 hours<lb/>
before.<lb/>
Immediately I went to the<lb/>
Traffic Office to report my loss<lb/>
and got very little sympathy. I<lb/>
guess I can understand the lack of<lb/>
it; probably because students<lb/>
come in all the time to report the<lb/>
same type of incident.<lb/>
But this is just the point.<lb/>
Surely there must be a way to<lb/>
discourage this massive theft<lb/>
(bike racket perhaps? which has<lb/>
invaded the Greenville area,<lb/>
especially ECU campus.<lb/>
I'm really surprised and some-<lb/>
what hurt to discover that a small<lb/>
town like Greenville would ave<lb/>
so much of the same kind of crime<lb/>
continuously.<lb/>
If people can't trust one<lb/>
another, just who can they trust?<lb/>
Susan Rosch<lb/>
<pb facs="00058051_0005"/><lb/>
????HBHB<lb/>
Hi<lb/>
; <lb/>
Distinguished guests attend banquet<lb/>
18 April 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
SigTiia Tau Gamma chartered as national fraternity<lb/>
ByRICKIGUARMIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Delta Alpha Chapter of<lb/>
Sigma Tau Gamma was present-<lb/>
ed with its charter as a national<lb/>
fraternity Friday night, April 14.<lb/>
The chartering banquet was<lb/>
held at the Brentwood Lodge in<lb/>
Washington.<lb/>
The chartering of the Sigma<lb/>
Tau Gamma Fraternity was pre-<lb/>
sented by Keith C. Dinsmor J<lb/>
the Baord of Directors of I 8<lb/>
fraternity.<lb/>
Sigma Tau Gamma became a<lb/>
colony at ECU in the fall of 1977,<lb/>
explained Jeff Blumberg, vice-<lb/>
president of education of the<lb/>
fraternity.<lb/>
According to Blumberg, the<lb/>
colony was famed by Mark<lb/>
O'Ravitz through wishes of the<lb/>
regional offioe because of the lack<lb/>
of a chapter in the southeast.<lb/>
0' Ravitz was formally a mem-<lb/>
ber of Sigma Tau Gamma at<lb/>
Shipensberg State in Pennsylvan-<lb/>
ia.<lb/>
He then transferred to ECU<lb/>
and was asked to begin the<lb/>
fraternity on this campus, ex-<lb/>
plained Blumberg.<lb/>
N.C. editor<lb/>
to speak at<lb/>
SCJ meeting<lb/>
The ECU chapter of the<lb/>
Scoiety for Collegiate Journalists<lb/>
(SCJ) will hear a well-known<lb/>
western North Carolina newspap-<lb/>
er editor speak at its open<lb/>
meeting Thurs at 730 p.m. in<lb/>
Brewster B-102, according to<lb/>
Zack Smith, president.<lb/>
A business meeting for<lb/>
membersonly will begin at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Jerry Ausband, editor of the<lb/>
Shelby Star, will arrive on campus<lb/>
Wednesday night and remain<lb/>
until Friday morning as an<lb/>
Editor-in-Residence.<lb/>
His visit is sponsored by the<lb/>
Newspaper Fund, The Shelby<lb/>
Star and ECU.<lb/>
Ausband will speak to a<lb/>
combined reporting and introd-<lb/>
uction to journalism class Thurs-<lb/>
day morning at 9:30 in Austin<lb/>
301.<lb/>
At other times he will be<lb/>
available for conference and<lb/>
consultation in Office 334, Austin.<lb/>
The public lecture Thursday<lb/>
evening will be followed by a<lb/>
question period. A social hour wi"<lb/>
allow persons to meet the speak-<lb/>
er.<lb/>
Members of the society are<lb/>
asked to meet at 730 p.m.<lb/>
minutes before the lecture to elect<lb/>
officers for next year, according<lb/>
to Zack Smith, president.<lb/>
Ausband is a graduate of<lb/>
Clemson University where he was<lb/>
editor of the Clemson Tiger and<lb/>
active in campus affairs. Follow-<lb/>
ing graduation, he was on the<lb/>
staff of the Greenville, S.C. News<lb/>
before joining the staff of the<lb/>
Shelby paper.<lb/>
There were several distin-<lb/>
guished guests at the chartering<lb/>
banquet.<lb/>
Some of the guests included<lb/>
Keith C. Dinsmore, a member of<lb/>
the board of directors for the<lb/>
fraternity; Ron Erikson, regional<lb/>
director; Joe Musselli, expansion<lb/>
director; and Fred Phillips, dis-<lb/>
trict governor.<lb/>
Other guests included mem-<lb/>
bers from the Inter-Fraternity<lb/>
Council and representatives from<lb/>
several fraternities and sororities<lb/>
on campus.<lb/>
Awards and presentations<lb/>
were made during the banquet,<lb/>
explained Blumberg.<lb/>
The Outstanding Brother<lb/>
Award was presented to Mark<lb/>
O' Ravitz, president of Sigma Tau<lb/>
Gamma.<lb/>
The Athletic Achievement A-<lb/>
ward was presented to Greg<lb/>
Schwemley.<lb/>
Other awards presented were<lb/>
the Scholarship Award given to<lb/>
M ike Hiden and the Worst Pledge<lb/>
given to Mark Hoffman. (Inci-<lb/>
dently, the wast pledge is aslo<lb/>
the best pledge.)<lb/>
Debbie Rix, president of the<lb/>
Little Sister program presented<lb/>
an award to Ricky Cannon fa his<lb/>
dedication as the co-adinata of<lb/>
the Little Sisters.<lb/>
The Delta Alpha Chapter of<lb/>
Sigma Tau Gamma is now the<lb/>
ninety-seventh chapter in the<lb/>
U.S. and has grown from nothing<lb/>
to 30 brothers (known as the<lb/>
Founding Fathers) and four pled-<lb/>
ges.<lb/>
ECU'S chapter is also the first<lb/>
chapter in Nath Carolina and in<lb/>
the southeast.<lb/>
As Blumberg explained, most<lb/>
of the chapters are concentrated<lb/>
in Missouri, New Yak, and the<lb/>
midwest.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058051_0006"/><lb/>
?????Mil<lb/>
I<lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 18 April 1978<lb/>
Test reveals patients'<lb/>
allergy to bee stings<lb/>
ECU IS QUICKLY deserted once Friday arrives. Students and faculty head home or to the beach.<lb/>
Continued from p 1<lb/>
you can only use or sell it with the<lb/>
company's permission<lb/>
Hoffman said the test was<lb/>
very expensive and that it is hard<lb/>
to estimate its exact cost.<lb/>
The test at its present stage<lb/>
took four yeas to develop and<lb/>
research.<lb/>
"The type of insects that<lb/>
affect people depends great I y on<lb/>
the area in which you live said<lb/>
Hoffman.<lb/>
In this area, some of the<lb/>
insects people are allergic to are<lb/>
honeybees, yellow jackets, hor-<lb/>
nets, and paper wasps.<lb/>
There is no particular group<lb/>
which suffers allergic reactions<lb/>
more than others, said Hoffman.<lb/>
But, the greatest number of<lb/>
persons who suffer these allergic<lb/>
reactions are the relatives of<lb/>
T here is a cure for the<lb/>
reactions of insect stings but it is<lb/>
an experimental procedure,<lb/>
according to Hoffman.<lb/>
The procedure requires an<lb/>
allergic patient to be injected with<lb/>
a small amount of venom then,<lb/>
the patients receive shots every<lb/>
month for the rest of their lives.<lb/>
There is also an Emergency<lb/>
Treatment to help prevent the<lb/>
allergic patient from dying.<lb/>
"It is an epinephrine syringe<lb/>
kit and it must be used as scon as<lb/>
the insect has stung the patient<lb/>
said Hoffman.<lb/>
Hoffman came to East Caro-<lb/>
lina in June, 1977. He attended<lb/>
Harvard, and is from Boston,<lb/>
Massachusetts.<lb/>
Hoffman recently presented a<lb/>
paper on the new test in a<lb/>
meeting of pathologists in Dallas,<lb/>
Texas.<lb/>
HOUSING<lb/>
Continued from p. 1<lb/>
Wooten also said that dorm<lb/>
space for next year is rapidly<lb/>
being filled, and that students<lb/>
contemplating living off-campus<lb/>
should make their plans soon.<lb/>
The most popular dorms are<lb/>
Soott and Belk for men, and<lb/>
Greene, Tyler, and White fa<lb/>
wtmen.<lb/>
Students interested in seeking<lb/>
off-campus housing should come<lb/>
by his office in 211 Whichard<lb/>
building fa advice and a list of<lb/>
available off-campus housing.<lb/>
He said students should also<lb/>
check EOUNTAINHEAD ana The<lb/>
Daily heriectur fa ads offering<lb/>
off-campus housing.<lb/>
ECU granted<lb/>
$ 81,925<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
A taal of $81,925 in outside<lb/>
funding was received by ECU<lb/>
during March.<lb/>
The funds aiginated fron<lb/>
federal and state government<lb/>
agencies.<lb/>
Receiving funds were ECU<lb/>
research and service projects in<lb/>
the departments of biology, phy-<lb/>
sics and sociology and anthropo-<lb/>
logy, and the schools of business<lb/>
and home economics.<lb/>
The largest grant, a total of<lb/>
$29,560, was given Drs. Charles<lb/>
Snow and Nash Love of the school<lb/>
of home economics fa a service<lb/>
program in day care training.<lb/>
ARMYNAVY STORE<lb/>
Sleeping bags, camping equip<lb/>
ment, rainwweu, Vi?tnam &amp; com<lb/>
bat boots, dishes. Military sur<lb/>
plus<lb/>
1501 S. Evans Street<lb/>
4<lb/>
?i<lb/>
'ore<lb/>
"MOCO<lb/>
OPEN<lb/>
24HRS.<lb/>
WTMt<lb/>
EVANS STREETS<lb/>
2.50<lb/>
OUB<lb/>
CMOtCe<lb/>
MOST<lb/>
'800<lb/>
75l.ba.lc.<lb/>
CooUr Cos n lc ?<lb/>
Cooler Coco n lc o7hf5rs '9.50<lb/>
CAse of<lb/>
Budwoitor. . . . ?.?.Z.C.AJ'? . . ?6.99<lb/>
Budwoitor, Schllti, Mlllor<lb/>
Strohi, Kogt$38.00<lb/>
<pb facs="00058051_0007"/><lb/>
??????1<lb/>
??????Hi<lb/>
Luncheon, bus tours planned 1gAr"1978 ?"?nhead py 7<lb/>
Alumni Day set for May 6<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
A luncheon, class reunions, a<lb/>
cocktail party and bus tours of<lb/>
ECU's expanding campus are<lb/>
among the events planned for the<lb/>
1978 ECU Alumni Day, Sat May<lb/>
6.<lb/>
Returning alumni will first<lb/>
gather at Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center between 9:30 and 11 a.m.<lb/>
to register.<lb/>
Guided bus tours of the<lb/>
campus will begin at the center at<lb/>
10 a.m. and 11 a.m.<lb/>
At 12:30 p.m alumni will<lb/>
hear an address by ECU Chancel-<lb/>
lor Leo Jenkins at the annual<lb/>
Alumni Association Luncheon<lb/>
meeirg<lb/>
Tickets fa the buffet luncheon<lb/>
are $7 each.<lb/>
Class reunions will be held in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center from<lb/>
2 20 until 4 p.m. Classes schedul-<lb/>
ed for reunion, and reunion<lb/>
chairpersons are:<lb/>
Class of 1913, Josephine Little<lb/>
Rawlof Greenville; Class of 1918,<lb/>
Mary Elizabeth Evans Savage;<lb/>
Class of 1923, to be announced;<lb/>
Class of 1928, Ethel Spratt<lb/>
Bowden of Faison; 1928 Normal<lb/>
Class, Gladys Jones Haynie of<lb/>
Cramerton;<lb/>
Class of 1933, Katherine<lb/>
Blalock Hughes of Parkton; 1933<lb/>
Normal Class, Margaret Russell<lb/>
Kendall of Elizabethtown; Class<lb/>
of 1938, Lester Ridenhour of<lb/>
Burlington; Class of 1943, Dr.<lb/>
James White of Greenville;<lb/>
Class of 1948, Dr. Amos Clark<lb/>
of Greenville; Class of 1963, Dr.<lb/>
F. Milam Johnson of Greenville;<lb/>
and Class of 1958, Ted Gartman<lb/>
of Greenville.<lb/>
RIGGAN<lb/>
SHOE SHOP<lb/>
REPAIR ALL<lb/>
LEATHER GOODS<lb/>
downtown Greenville<lb/>
111 West 4th Sr 758-02CK<lb/>
BA THED IN SUNLIGH T, this student pauses to reflect as he enjoys<lb/>
a local tree. Photo by Brian Stotler<lb/>
Children's lit conference planned<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
 Books and the Contemporary<lb/>
Child is the theme of ECU's<lb/>
9eoond annual Conference on<lb/>
Children's Literature April 20.<lb/>
The conferenoe, sponsored by<lb/>
the department of English and<lb/>
the Division of Continuing Edu-<lb/>
cation, will feature a presentation<lb/>
by Jane Yolen, award-winning<lb/>
author of more than 30 children's<lb/>
books, including "The Girl Who<lb/>
Cried Flowers "The Moon<lb/>
Ribbon and Other Tales" and<lb/>
"The Wizard Islands<lb/>
Other speakers will include<lb/>
Rose Ann Moore of the University<lb/>
of Tennessee, Joseph Milner of<lb/>
Wake Forest University, Janice<lb/>
Faulkner of ECU and Mary A.<lb/>
Herrera of UNC-Charlotte, all<lb/>
specialists in children's litera-<lb/>
ture, and Greenville storyteller<lb/>
Ann Sullivan.<lb/>
The oonferenoe is designed for<lb/>
adults who are active in the field<lb/>
of children's books: librarians,<lb/>
teachers, authors and professors<lb/>
of children's literature.<lb/>
This year's sessions, focusing<lb/>
on literature available to the<lb/>
contemporary child, will include<lb/>
discussions of the  Little House<lb/>
books, children's folklore, con-<lb/>
temporary life as depicted in<lb/>
children's books, storytelling for<lb/>
young children and problems of<lb/>
oensorship.<lb/>
3"<lb/>
<lb/>
Is<lb/>
T<lb/>
McDonald's<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
6)<lb/>
?<lb/>
FRISBEE DISC PENTATNLON<lb/>
Tuosday , April 25,1978 4:00 P.M. Intramural Fields<lb/>
Come join the ranks of the real pros!<lb/>
Test your skills in: curve throws<lb/>
distance<lb/>
bull's eye<lb/>
hang time<lb/>
accuracy<lb/>
Ifs going to be a GREAT event with GREAT prizes!<lb/>
$50 - 1st prize<lb/>
$25 - 2nd prize<lb/>
$10 - 3rd prize<lb/>
Terrific T-shirts for top 40 finalists !<lb/>
A coupon for FREE trench fries at McDonald's for each contestant!<lb/>
Registration; April 14-21 McDonald's 10th A Cotanoho Sts.<lb/>
"Frisbee is a brand name and a registered trademark<lb/>
of Wham-0 Mfg. Co. for flying discs used in sports games<lb/>
Why<lb/>
The Clothes Horse ?<lb/>
L<lb/>
This is not 1975 and the look on and off campus<lb/>
is different. Youl sti find a great selection of<lb/>
Jeans by MALE, LEvT, and SNAffMERS but that<lb/>
is not our total pants look. We've got great<lb/>
looking Khakis, beautiful MADRAS Shirts,<lb/>
Sportswear by GANT and LaCOSTE and many<lb/>
other things in doming that we think wl<lb/>
particularly appeal to you at ECO.<lb/>
The Clothes Horse<lb/>
218 EWh.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058051_0008"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
??????<lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 18 April 1978<lb/>
Edwards discusses his music; his milestones<lb/>
By DAVID WHITSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
After the first show, Edwards led us upstairs to<lb/>
the Roxy projection room. He seated himself in a<lb/>
straight-backed wooden chair, isolated in the center<lb/>
of the room between antique 35 mm projectors.<lb/>
Wearing a silky white shirt, vest, black velvet<lb/>
pants, and high-top lace-up shoes that looked like<lb/>
they came from the 1908 Sears catalogue, he looked<lb/>
like a cross between a sod buster and a river boat<lb/>
gambler.<lb/>
He had greeted the audience during the show<lb/>
with a hearty "Hello, Greensboro I offered the<lb/>
suggestion:<lb/>
"This show, tell them you're glad to be in<lb/>
Greenville; they might appreciate it<lb/>
"It's a little confusing he replied. "Ready?<lb/>
let's go. It's your interview<lb/>
<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD; You song on the tax man was<lb/>
your only political statement. Do you feel an artist<lb/>
has any political responsiblities?<lb/>
EDWARDS: A musician is a musician. I don't<lb/>
know I don't feel it's the right forum fa the<lb/>
discussion of political phenomena. In other words,<lb/>
when I goto hear a concert, I don't especially want<lb/>
to hear about women's rights or anything else, I just<lb/>
like to go and hear music for a concert.<lb/>
F. How long have you been playing?<lb/>
? I've been playing about 12 years. Professionally<lb/>
about 10, I guess, 9 or 10.<lb/>
F The Jonathan Edwards" album with "Sun-<lb/>
shine" on it-that was your biggest, wasn't it? What<lb/>
did it do on the charts? It hit the top 100 didn't it?<lb/>
?. I think it did; I'm not sure where.<lb/>
F. What happened after that? I've been looking for it<lb/>
lately and you've just disappeared from the face of<lb/>
the earth<lb/>
E I recorded 2 more albums3 more albums, for<lb/>
Atlantic. I was working constantly the whole time.<lb/>
And I kind of took a break because the record<lb/>
company wasn't behind me. They paid fa me to<lb/>
recad them and they promptly fagot them. So I<lb/>
figured, like, if they weren't interested, I wasn't<lb/>
going to be interested.<lb/>
F: Is that because you don't mass produce the kind<lb/>
of sound that they want to hear?<lb/>
E No, it was just that the company was a mess, you<lb/>
know: internally it was joke to try and promote the<lb/>
kind of music I was doing at the time, which was<lb/>
really country. And sol got onto Warner Bros and<lb/>
they did a couple of albums that they thought were<lb/>
what they wanted to hear-not what I wanted to<lb/>
hear Theydidn't do anything with them.<lb/>
F: What do you dowhile you wak ai these<lb/>
albums? Do you have other projects?<lb/>
? Just wntin. writin' and listenin<lb/>
F Do you have anyway of encouraging the Muses<lb/>
when you compose a song?<lb/>
? No, I have no pattern. I just like to kind of get<lb/>
away from everybody and everything. I just take my<lb/>
guitar into the woods and stay fa 3 weeks a a<lb/>
month and then I come back with sane saigs.<lb/>
F What is your musical background9 Where did you<lb/>
receive most of your training?<lb/>
? I listened to bluegrass right at the beginning.<lb/>
That was where I started understanding what it was<lb/>
about music that made people happy. And uhthen<lb/>
I got into Dylan, and the Beatles, and the Byrds.<lb/>
Then I started (saying): 'Hey, I can write too. you<lb/>
know, and I've been writing ever since then, my<lb/>
music has been kind of influenced by all that earlier<lb/>
stuff<lb/>
? How did you first start as a musician? Did you just<lb/>
decide one day that you would be a musician?<lb/>
?. I remember'sitting in a club in Washington, D.C<lb/>
called "The Round Table The band was playing<lb/>
and I had just learned how to play the guitar a little<lb/>
bit I knew 3 a 4 chads-the same 3 a 4 chads I<lb/>
still know-and ur, I just all of a sudden in the<lb/>
middle of a song I thought, I completely understand<lb/>
everything that's going on onstage. I completely dig<lb/>
the whae affair and, uh and I can do that '<lb/>
F If they can do it, I can do itthat sat of thing?<lb/>
? Yeah. So I did I gave it a shot<lb/>
? How's it been gang since then9<lb/>
E: Pretty well, a la of hard wak, a la of hittin' the<lb/>
highway.<lb/>
F This current tour that you're on-this '3 month<lb/>
mini tour - what kind of expectations do you have,<lb/>
what kind of plans do you have fa this (tour)?<lb/>
? I m trying toget thisband together so wecan<lb/>
start recading and wak on the new album.<lb/>
F How far into the tour are you9<lb/>
E: Two weeks.<lb/>
F: Does this band have a separate name?<lb/>
?. No it doesn't. Have any ideas?<lb/>
F. So these guys haven't collaborated on any of your<lb/>
other waks?<lb/>
?. UhKenny White No. Na really. Na yet. Oh,<lb/>
Eric Lilljequist, the guitar player has waked with<lb/>
meaiall 4 of the Atlantic albums, my first 4 albums.<lb/>
F. Do you feel its a hindrance to your playing? If you<lb/>
kept one set ensemble of musicians do you feel yai<lb/>
could progress mae?<lb/>
?. I don't knowI'm kind of shcotin' around, you<lb/>
know. I' ve been into a la of different kinds of music<lb/>
in my life. Every year finds me with a different<lb/>
group of people to tour withevery year.<lb/>
Sometimes every 3 months. And I really like that<lb/>
situation that I have. I hope it stays together cause<lb/>
I think there's a la happening.<lb/>
F: How much time a year do you spend touring?<lb/>
E: Nine months.<lb/>
F:Small halls?<lb/>
?: Yeah. Clubs and colleges, weddings and bar<lb/>
mitzvahs.<lb/>
F: Have you ever opened fa anybody?<lb/>
E.Yeah. We open fa anybody. The best opening act<lb/>
in New Englandright here.<lb/>
F: What do you call home?<lb/>
?. Nova Sootia, I guess. That's where the bills go.<lb/>
F. What is the selection process fa thisband? You<lb/>
have musicians all over the place, how did you come<lb/>
aaoss these people?<lb/>
E: Called them up.<lb/>
Kenny, the piano player, and I have been playing<lb/>
together fa a couple of years. Eric and I have been<lb/>
playing together 8 years a so. Bass and<lb/>
drumthey've been in a band in Boston called The<lb/>
Road Apples; and they recently decided to close<lb/>
things and I snapped them up.<lb/>
F: Has your career, to date, been satisfactay to<lb/>
you? Would you change things?<lb/>
?: Oh yeahyeah. I'd have been mae faceful, I<lb/>
think, about my ideas, and let aher people's ideas<lb/>
wak ai aher people, let my ideas surface a little<lb/>
differently<lb/>
F. When Sunshine' was a hit single, did that come<lb/>
as a surprise to you, a did you write it with that in<lb/>
mind?<lb/>
?.1.1 had no clue that that was going to happen. I<lb/>
just wrae it in about 5 minutes. I was waking in a<lb/>
factay and I came home and wrae it down. I didn't<lb/>
have a due?we weren't even going to put it on the<lb/>
album until real late in the game.<lb/>
F: It made the top 40 in singles didn't it?<lb/>
?. Yeah, it was a gold recad. It ga up to 3, I guess<lb/>
you'd say in the recad wald. Or something.<lb/>
F: Wha do you see as your direction from here?<lb/>
?: Oh. we're going to go Nath.<lb/>
Econanically? What do you mean?<lb/>
F: There's a conflid bet ween econonics and the<lb/>
freedom of expression. How do you feel you will deal<lb/>
with this from now on? You' ve been, mae a less, a<lb/>
maverick musically, without making any concessions<lb/>
to the mass market. Do you feel you an going to<lb/>
keep dang this?<lb/>
?. Oh yeah, I can't go 'round going hey<lb/>
F: 'Disco Duck<lb/>
?. Really. Disco Sunshine you know. I could make<lb/>
a hit out of Shandy' if I wanted to. You know, that<lb/>
song But I don't want to If somebody else would,<lb/>
I'd love that, but I do a la mae than that; I'm a la<lb/>
mae into music than that song denaes. So even<lb/>
though people love it and go, Hey - get high<lb/>
there's mae than me to that, so I don't want it to be<lb/>
what I'm known fa. I'm real proud of 'Sunshine' on<lb/>
the other hand SunshineI'm real prajd that it<lb/>
wasahit-it has a la to say still. I don't know if any<lb/>
people are listening out there. ENOUGH!<lb/>
"PERFORMING A WIDE range of his songs, Edwards captivated<lb/>
the three-guarters full house Photo by Kirk Kinasbury<lb/>
Trends<lb/>
Edwards' Roxy<lb/>
concert 'superb'<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
NewsEdita<lb/>
Despite an obvious dissatis-<lb/>
fadioi with the auditaium and<lb/>
equipment Jonathan Edwards<lb/>
managed to put on a show Sunday<lb/>
night at the Roxy that can only be<lb/>
desaibed as superb.<lb/>
This performance with the<lb/>
possible exception of last Feb-<lb/>
ruary's ArloGuthrie concert, was<lb/>
easily the finest Greenville has<lb/>
seen in the past year and half.<lb/>
The excellent acoustics of the<lb/>
Roxy, coupled with Edwards<lb/>
sound system, provided an un-<lb/>
usually aisp, well-defined sound.<lb/>
The concert opened with<lb/>
Maria Dawkmsand Steven Kale,<lb/>
two fine local musicians who have<lb/>
perfamed at a number of local<lb/>
coffeehouses. They represent a<lb/>
growing coffeehouse community<lb/>
in Greenville and eastern Nath<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Their original songs were<lb/>
equal in quality and talent to any<lb/>
artist's recading in the coffee-<lb/>
house genre.<lb/>
Dawkins' light, airy soprano<lb/>
blended well with Kale's tena to<lb/>
produaj a tound remarkably like<lb/>
the early days of Lindsay Buck-<lb/>
ingham and Stevie Nicks.<lb/>
Likewise, Kale's sinewy elec<lb/>
trie guitar was a perfect comple-<lb/>
ment to Maria's delicate picking<lb/>
style.<lb/>
Finally, Edwards took the<lb/>
stage at 10 p.m to an enthusias-<lb/>
tic audience.<lb/>
Performing a wide range of<lb/>
his songs, plus material from<lb/>
Jesse Colin Young, Edwards<lb/>
captivated the three-quarters full<lb/>
house.<lb/>
Edwards' band, (Mike Walsh,<lb/>
bass; Eric Lilljequist, electric<lb/>
guitar: Jean Do. drums, and<lb/>
Kenny White, keyboards), wak-<lb/>
ed well as a unit and provided a<lb/>
fine backdrop fa his poetic<lb/>
ballads and love songs.<lb/>
Although he was primarily a<lb/>
country artist in his early career,<lb/>
Edwards' music has progressed<lb/>
and matured to the pant that it<lb/>
defies categorization.<lb/>
To label it rock is to ignae the<lb/>
prominent bluegrass and folk<lb/>
influence. Conversely, to label it<lb/>
country is to ignae the contnbu-<lb/>
tiais provided by the Byrds and<lb/>
Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young.<lb/>
Edwards, however, was<lb/>
apparently na as elated over<lb/>
playing in Greenville as the<lb/>
audience was. First he greeted<lb/>
Greensboro, then Greensville. He<lb/>
never did get it quite right.<lb/>
Then he didn't like the lights.<lb/>
Someone in the audience remark-<lb/>
ed "fa $4 (the price of a ticket)<lb/>
he can at least know where he<lb/>
Edwards acted as if he was<lb/>
anxious to leave Greenville and<lb/>
the bad memories it held.<lb/>
Still, you can't deny the man<lb/>
has talent, and he displayed his<lb/>
virtuosity both lyrically and musi-<lb/>
cally, to its fullest. Edwards may<lb/>
na look forward to his return to<lb/>
Greenville, but I do.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058051_0009"/><lb/>
HH1<lb/>
Dracula revival mounts three new plays<lb/>
18 April 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Paged<lb/>
I<lb/>
BELALUGOSI as Dracula<lb/>
Vlad III on the gothic comeback trail<lb/>
ByJOHNWEYLER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Count Dracula, created by<lb/>
Bram Stoker a cent ury ago, seems<lb/>
to be more popular than ever<lb/>
these days. While he hasn't been<lb/>
quite as merchandised as "Star<lb/>
Wars or sold as many posters as<lb/>
Far rah, there does seem to be a<lb/>
sort of Dracula craze.<lb/>
Three stage versions of Dracu-<lb/>
la are now running in New York<lb/>
The Passion of Dracula, Count<lb/>
Dracula, and Dracula.<lb/>
The latter is a new version of<lb/>
the 1927 Hamilton Deane-John<lb/>
Balderston play that was also the<lb/>
basis fa the 1931 Bela Lugosi<lb/>
film. (And which, incidentally,<lb/>
was produced by the ECU drama<lb/>
department in '74.<lb/>
The Public Broadcasting Sys-<lb/>
tem recently televised an adapta-<lb/>
tion of Stoker's story, supposedly<lb/>
the only faithful-to-the-book a<lb/>
daption ever done.<lb/>
Scholarly books on Dracula<lb/>
are proliferating. The Dracula<lb/>
Book, by Donald Glut, is an<lb/>
overview of the Dracula legends<lb/>
and the media they have appear-<lb/>
ed in.<lb/>
A Dream of Dracula, by<lb/>
Leonard Wolf, is an analysis of<lb/>
Draculfi and its symbolic signifi-<lb/>
cance I The Annotated Dracula,<lb/>
by the same author is reviewed in<lb/>
the accompanying article.) The<lb/>
Truth About Dracula; by Gabriel<lb/>
Ronay, and In Search of Dracula<lb/>
and Dracula: A Biography of Vlad<lb/>
the Impaler by Radu Florescu and<lb/>
Raymond McNally are about the<lb/>
real, historical Dracula,<lb/>
<lb/>
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The real Dracula was Prince<lb/>
Vlad III, ruler of what is now<lb/>
Romania (including Transylvania)<lb/>
in the 15th century. He was<lb/>
nicknamed Dracula, which means<lb/>
"son of the devil (or dragon)" for<lb/>
his infamous cruelty. He wasn't a<lb/>
vampire, however: rather than<lb/>
having a stake driven through his<lb/>
heart, he went around staking<lb/>
other people.<lb/>
Impaling people on huge<lb/>
stakes was his hobby. He is said<lb/>
to have impaled 10,000 in six<lb/>
years.<lb/>
A lot of other things have been<lb/>
said about Vlad; none of them<lb/>
nice.<lb/>
It is said that when some<lb/>
messengers to his court wouldn't<lb/>
remove their hats in his presence,<lb/>
he had their hats nailed to their<lb/>
heads.<lb/>
It is said he tried to solve his<lb/>
country's poverty problem by<lb/>
inviting the poor to a banquet,<lb/>
then burning the banquet hall<lb/>
down once they were inside.<lb/>
It is said he was also fond of<lb/>
making people eat each other,<lb/>
breaking them on the wheel,<lb/>
shooting them full of arrows, and<lb/>
skinning, burying, and boiling<lb/>
them alive. What Bram Stoker did<lb/>
was just take Vlad's already<lb/>
horrible reputation a bit further<lb/>
and turn him into a vampire.<lb/>
Dracula's popularity is un-<lb/>
questioned. He is one of those<lb/>
mythical characters, like Super-<lb/>
manor counterpart Frankenstein,<lb/>
who have imposed themselves on<lb/>
our collective consciousness.<lb/>
Like them, his image is found<lb/>
everywhere. But because he is so<lb/>
common, and because he's so<lb/>
often found in such places as<lb/>
cartoons, comic books, and even<lb/>
kid's cereals, we don't notice him<lb/>
or take him seriously<lb/>
In order to be known by<lb/>
many people, he must have some<lb/>
hidden, eternal significance.<lb/>
What is the secret of Dracula9<lb/>
TimParati. who portrayed the<lb/>
Count in a recent production of<lb/>
the current Broadway Dracula<lb/>
said. Theresa little bit of evil<lb/>
and satanic pride in everybody A<lb/>
little part of us wants to be like<lb/>
him.<lb/>
See DRACULA, p. 10<lb/>
Ask one<lb/>
of our<lb/>
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 I mOB?OAOW ' '0018<lb/>
<pb facs="00058051_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 18 April 1978<lb/>
Annotated Dracula: 'quality edition of novel'<lb/>
ByJOHNWEYLER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"As we burst into the room,<lb/>
the Count turned his face, and the<lb/>
hellish look that I had heard<lb/>
described seemed to leap into it.<lb/>
His eyes flamed red with devilish<lb/>
passjon, the great nostrils of the<lb/>
white aquiline nose opened wide<lb/>
and quivered at the edge; and the<lb/>
white sharp teeth, behind the full<lb/>
lips of the blood dripping mouth,<lb/>
chomped together like those of a<lb/>
wild beast. With a wrench, which<lb/>
threw his victim back upon the<lb/>
bed as though hurled from a<lb/>
height, he turned and sprang at<lb/>
us<lb/>
Bram Stoker's Dracula has<lb/>
existed in one form or another<lb/>
since it was printed in 1897; as<lb/>
book, comic, TV show, movie.<lb/>
The Annotated Dracula is one of<lb/>
Saads Shoe Shop<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
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the best forms it has ever<lb/>
appeared in.<lb/>
The Annotated Dracula is a<lb/>
deluxe, high-quality edition of<lb/>
Stoker's novel. It is full of<lb/>
suprises, special features, and<lb/>
extras.<lb/>
Any book would be honored to<lb/>
be represented in such a loving,<lb/>
lavish way.<lb/>
In addition to the original<lb/>
story itself, photographically re-<lb/>
produced from the second print-<lb/>
ing of the very first printing, are<lb/>
such special contents as detailed<lb/>
maps of Transylvania (Dracula's<lb/>
homeland) Europe, England, -<lb/>
London, Whitby (where much of<lb/>
the story's action takes place) and<lb/>
the London Zoological Gardens<lb/>
(where Dracula makes friends<lb/>
with a huge wolf); a calendar that<lb/>
shows the events of the tale<lb/>
together with the current moon<lb/>
phases and times of sunrise and<lb/>
sunset, so important to a vam-<lb/>
pire; a list of the Count's<lb/>
appearances in the story, from<lb/>
which we learn that he appears on<lb/>
only 59 pages out of a total of 330;<lb/>
r t  ' -f<lb/>
THE REAL DRACULA was Prince Vlad III, ruler of what is now<lb/>
Romania including Transylvania in the 15th century Impaling<lb/>
people on huge stakes was his hobby.<lb/>
ft<lb/>
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a selected filmography of impor-<lb/>
tant Dracula movies (this edition<lb/>
is dedicated to Bela Lugosi, by<lb/>
the way), including the classic<lb/>
"Billy the Kid vs. Dracula a<lb/>
listing of both english-language<lb/>
and foreign editions in which the<lb/>
book has been published; and 17<lb/>
eerie and beautiful illustrations<lb/>
by Satty.<lb/>
Even the bibliography is done<lb/>
in a special way: all the books it<lb/>
lists which pertain to Dracula or<lb/>
vampires are marked for the<lb/>
DRACULA<lb/>
Continued from p. 9<lb/>
Leonard Wolf, in the introduc-<lb/>
tion to The Annotated Dracula<lb/>
said, "Dracula, the book you are<lb/>
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research-minded reader.<lb/>
This book is part of a series:<lb/>
The Annotated Wizard of Oz. The<lb/>
Annotated Alice in Wonderland,<lb/>
The Annotated Sherlock Holmes.<lb/>
Here, margined alongside the<lb/>
text, are notations on just about<lb/>
everything mentioned in the<lb/>
novel.<lb/>
Noted are dozens of geogra-<lb/>
phical details and place names<lb/>
visited in the course of the plot;<lb/>
typographical errors of the first<lb/>
edition; the sexual symbolism and<lb/>
Christian allegory to the story,<lb/>
and seemingly thousands of<lb/>
things from Stoker's (and Dra-<lb/>
cula's) Victorian world.<lb/>
Even recipes for favorite<lb/>
Transylvanian dishes are given.<lb/>
The annotations are helpful:<lb/>
languages and dialects are trans-<lb/>
lated; quotations from poetry,<lb/>
Shakespeare and the Bible are<lb/>
identified and occasionally amu-<lb/>
sing.<lb/>
One passage is given over to<lb/>
discussing the hair on Dracula's<lb/>
palms and comparing his appear-<lb/>
ance with the nineteenth-century<lb/>
image of the habital masturbator,<lb/>
noting the latter's "long, cada-<lb/>
verious-looking countenance<lb/>
The annotations are illustrat-<lb/>
ed too, with period artwork and<lb/>
photographs.<lb/>
The annotations and the fine<lb/>
introduction are by Leonard Wolf.<lb/>
Dracula scholar and professor at<lb/>
San Francisco State University,<lb/>
whet a he teaches courses on<lb/>
vampirism and the study of<lb/>
monsters.<lb/>
He is also author of A Dream<lb/>
of Dracula, an in-depth analysis<lb/>
of the Dracula myths and what<lb/>
their secret symbolism means.<lb/>
Of oourse, none of these<lb/>
special features are necessary to<lb/>
enjoy Stoker's novel.<lb/>
Dracula still stands by itself as<lb/>
a unique book. But the extra<lb/>
oontentsof The Annotated Dracu-<lb/>
la make a good thing better.<lb/>
about to read, or reread, is one of<lb/>
the most terrifying in the world.<lb/>
"It is also, as a literary<lb/>
experience, one of the strangest<lb/>
since it gives wildly contradictory<lb/>
signals about what kind of a work<lb/>
it is.<lb/>
"Certainly it is a horror tale in<lb/>
which there is plenty of that<lb/>
fearful, grisly, wonderful, and<lb/>
sometimes silly stuff that we<lb/>
count on finding in our blood-and-<lb/>
gore late-bedtime reading.<lb/>
"On the other hand, from its<lb/>
pages there rise images so<lb/>
dreamlike and yet so imperative<lb/>
that we experience them as<lb/>
ancient allegories.<lb/>
 Everywhere one looks, there<lb/>
flicker the shadows of primordial<lb/>
struggles: the perpetual tension<lb/>
between the dark and the light,<lb/>
the wrestling match between<lb/>
Christ and Satan; and finally, the<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
complex allegories of sex: sex in<lb/>
all its unimaginable innocence, or<lb/>
sex reeking with the full perfume<lb/>
of the swamp.<lb/>
"And all these urgencies are<lb/>
seen or sensed through a hot<lb/>
wash of blood which, deny it<lb/>
though we will, fascinates us very<lb/>
nearly to the point of shame<lb/>
This book, this Dracula has,<lb/>
since 1897 when it was written,<lb/>
managed to interject into the<lb/>
culture of the West the image of a<lb/>
creature of such symbolic force<lb/>
that he has become something<lb/>
like a culture hero whom our first<lb/>
duty it is to hate even while we<lb/>
have fa him a certain weird<lb/>
admiration. What an elegant<lb/>
monster he is! How strong, how<lb/>
graceful, how lonely, how wise.<lb/>
And above all-and here is his<lb/>
central mystery-how deadly . . .<lb/>
and erotic.<lb/>
Buy 2 pizzas of the same price,<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058051_0011"/><lb/>
? ?????????i;V <lb/>
???"?????i<lb/>
-saw<lb/>
?? ?-?" I<lb/>
Final production for '77- '78 season<lb/>
18 April 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
Playhouse stages Midsummer Night's Dream<lb/>
By ANITA LANCASTER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The stage of McGinnis Audi-<lb/>
torium is undergoing a magical<lb/>
transformation as the East Caro-<lb/>
lina Playhouse prepares its final<lb/>
production of the '77-78 season,<lb/>
William Shakespeares A Mid-<lb/>
Summer Night's Dream, to run<lb/>
April 18-22 at 815 p.m.<lb/>
The actors, the scenery, and<lb/>
even the costumes leap back and<lb/>
forth between the real world of<lb/>
Ancient Athens and the fantastic<lb/>
world of the fairies where any-<lb/>
thing can happen.<lb/>
In the comedy, dreams of love<lb/>
spure two naive young oouples to<lb/>
elope into a woods near Athens.<lb/>
As night approaches, the<lb/>
forest becomes a fanciful fairy<lb/>
kingdom ruled by the jealous and<lb/>
bickering king and queen of the<lb/>
fairies.<lb/>
The pranks of Puck, mischie-<lb/>
vous servant to the fairy king,<lb/>
Oberon, entagle - including<lb/>
even, a band of rustic craftsmen<lb/>
who stumble onto the scene in a<lb/>
seriesof romantic mishaps, weav-<lb/>
ing a web which only the genuis<lb/>
of Shakespeare could untangle.<lb/>
Usually when one thinks of a<lb/>
Shakespearean play, one en-<lb/>
visions women in Victorian dress,<lb/>
men in plumed hats, and a lot of<lb/>
Old English jargon, which<lb/>
accounts fa much misunderstan-<lb/>
ding if one has not learned to<lb/>
appreciate this form of drama.<lb/>
However, director Del Lewis<lb/>
has decided to use some new<lb/>
directing techniques in this<lb/>
Shakespearean comedy, "We are<lb/>
trying to open the play up to 1978<lb/>
Greenville, ECU consciousness<lb/>
said Del Lewis in a recent<lb/>
interview, "The approach I am<lb/>
using is a spinoff of some of the<lb/>
experiments of Polish director<lb/>
Jerry Grotowski, in which the<lb/>
actor transforms himself before<lb/>
the audience's eyes onto an<lb/>
embodiment of the essence of the<lb/>
character<lb/>
The play<lb/>
universal.<lb/>
is timeless and<lb/>
Keith Berger provided audience<lb/>
with 'magical night of mime'<lb/>
By ANITA LANCASTER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The house lights grew dim<lb/>
fa sevaal minutes the audience<lb/>
waited with inaeased anticipa-<lb/>
tionsuddenly, all eyes focused<lb/>
on the back of the auditaium<lb/>
where a still figure, clothed in<lb/>
black with a face of white, was<lb/>
being carried in by two attend-<lb/>
ants.<lb/>
It was the beginning of a<lb/>
magical night of mime - with<lb/>
Keith Berger as the star.<lb/>
Keith Berger stimulated the<lb/>
imagination of the audience with<lb/>
several representations of moods,<lb/>
characterization, and actions,<lb/>
which became so believable that<lb/>
the audience beamemae deeply<lb/>
involved with every move that<lb/>
Berger made.<lb/>
Another unique facta in<lb/>
Berger's perfamance was his<lb/>
involvement with the audience.<lb/>
Berger came off the stage and<lb/>
became an intriguing part of the<lb/>
us.<lb/>
He paraded through the aisles<lb/>
and rows, sitting on several<lb/>
unsuspecting laps, imitating sur-<lb/>
prised reactions, and even bring-<lb/>
ing people up onto the stage to<lb/>
"mime" along with him.<lb/>
The overall audience reaction<lb/>
was ecstatic. Berger amazed the<lb/>
audience as a mechanical man, a<lb/>
burning flame, a hard-shooting<lb/>
cowboy, and by doing various<lb/>
characters in a " Bizarre Circus.<lb/>
But one of the most exciting<lb/>
features of Baga's perfamance<lb/>
was his way of depicting a haning<lb/>
man. This optical illusion of<lb/>
suspension in mid-air caused the<lb/>
audience to almost swear that<lb/>
there were strings attached to<lb/>
him actually "lifting" him off the<lb/>
ground.<lb/>
Berga's perfamance ended<lb/>
with a standing ovation from the<lb/>
audience, and an encae perfam-<lb/>
ance. It is amazing that one man,<lb/>
alone, can keep the complete<lb/>
attention of a vast audience fa<lb/>
mae than two hours.<lb/>
"HE PARADED THROUGH the aisles and rows, sitting on several<lb/>
unsuspecting laps, imitating surprised reactions, and even bringing<lb/>
people up onto the stage to 'mime' along with him<lb/>
ATTIC fiff?11  ATTIC<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
SUTTERSGOLD WSUNDMCE<lb/>
FREE FROLIC FESTIVAL<lb/>
4-7 WBRICE STREET<lb/>
AERSAL WS100<lb/>
APRIL SHOWERS<lb/>
WET T-SHIRT COWTEST<lb/>
?'MT' BRICE STREET!<lb/>
The costumes, the language,<lb/>
and the scenery give no hint as to<lb/>
which time period the play is set.<lb/>
This timeless effect is charac-<lb/>
teristic of A Midsummer Night's<lb/>
Dream, and the result is a unique<lb/>
production in itself.<lb/>
Admission to the production is<lb/>
$2.50, with ECU students admit-<lb/>
ted free on the Student Activity<lb/>
Card.<lb/>
Reservations may be made by<lb/>
calling the Playhouse Box Offioe,<lb/>
757-6390, between 10 a.m. and 4<lb/>
p.m. Monday through Friday.<lb/>
The cast features Tony Medlin<lb/>
of Greenville in the role of<lb/>
ThesusOberon; Sara oo Berman<lb/>
of Jacksonville, Florida as<lb/>
HippolytaTitania; and Denny<lb/>
Wright of Jacksonville, N.C as<lb/>
PhilostratePuck.<lb/>
Bill Vann of Ahoskie plays<lb/>
Egeus and Cobweb, Dan Nichols,<lb/>
of Greensboro is Lysander<lb/>
Aubrey Thomas Simpson of Ruf-<lb/>
fin plays Demetrius; Sally Nei.<lb/>
Clodfelter of Chapel Hill i:<lb/>
Hermia: ana Holly oereme fror"<lb/>
Johnson City, Tennessee, is<lb/>
Helena.<lb/>
Walter uaham. fran Falk-<lb/>
land, plays Moth and an atten-<lb/>
dant in the Duke's court; James<lb/>
R. Gaham, also from Falkland,<lb/>
plays Mustardseed and an atten-<lb/>
dant ; Myroi Carta fran Kinstai<lb/>
is Peaseblossom.<lb/>
Steven Willifad fran Wind-<lb/>
sa plays Peta Quince; Christo-<lb/>
pher Kara-Eneff of Wilmington,<lb/>
Delaware, is Nick Bottom; Paul<lb/>
Maltsby of Garner is Francis<lb/>
Flute; John Denny Jeter of<lb/>
Wilmington, N.C. is Tom Snout;<lb/>
Kim Shipley from Charlotte plays<lb/>
Robin Starveling; and Butch<lb/>
White of Raleigh plays Snug.<lb/>
Roffler of Greenville<lb/>
Hair Designers<lb/>
formerly HERMANS,<lb/>
IS NOW OPEN.<lb/>
Located across from Uinstead Dorm<lb/>
at 602 E. 10th Street, Suite A<lb/>
By appointment 758-0880<lb/>
owners- Tim Mills and Herman Hines<lb/>
<pb facs="00058051_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 18 April 1978<lb/>
School of Music performs Dvorak, Beethoven<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
Trios by Dvorak and Beetho-<lb/>
ven will be performed at a special<lb/>
rerital program sponsored by the<lb/>
ECU School of Music Thurs<lb/>
April 20, at 9 p.m. in the A.J.<lb/>
Fletcher Recital Hall.<lb/>
Performers are pianist Henry<lb/>
Doskey and cellist Daniel Mella-<lb/>
o, members of the ECU School<lb/>
of Music faculty, and violinist<lb/>
Fairya Mellado.<lb/>
Their program will consist of<lb/>
Dvorak's Trio in F Minor, Opus<lb/>
65, which exhibits the composer's<lb/>
Slavic influence with an abun-<lb/>
dance of dance rhythms, and<lb/>
Beethoven's Trio in E flat Major,<lb/>
Opusl, No. 1, the composer's<lb/>
first published work.<lb/>
This ooncert, the first public<lb/>
OkU&amp;fi<lb/>
cmcL<lb/>
$1.00 OFF<lb/>
ANY PIZZA WITH COUPON<lb/>
2713 E. 10TH STREET<lb/>
Offers expires April 25th.<lb/>
OVERTONS<lb/>
Located on Jarvis Street,<lb/>
2 blocks from ECU.<lb/>
We now accept<lb/>
Mastercharge and Visa.<lb/>
Free cart service available<lb/>
to students.<lb/>
211 Jarvis Street<lb/>
752-5025<lb/>
OVERTONS<lb/>
SUPERMARKET<lb/>
TRIOS BY DVORAK and Beethoven will be<lb/>
performed at a special recital program sponsored by<lb/>
the East Carolina University School of Music April<lb/>
20.<lb/>
performance of the three musi-<lb/>
cians as a trio, is free and open to<lb/>
the public.<lb/>
Henry Doskey, a reoent win-<lb/>
ner of the Allied Arts Piano<lb/>
Award, has been a member of the<lb/>
ECU keyboard faculty for two<lb/>
years.<lb/>
He has performed in several<lb/>
southern and midwestern cities<lb/>
and is at present a doctoral<lb/>
candidate at Indiana University.<lb/>
Doskey has been a student of<lb/>
Menahem Pressler, who appear-<lb/>
ed in Greenville March 30 as a<lb/>
member of the Beaux Arts Trio.<lb/>
Daniel Mellado has appeared<lb/>
in numerous School of Music<lb/>
programs since he joined the ECU<lb/>
strings faculty last fall.<lb/>
A 1973 recipient of a Ford<lb/>
Foundation Fellowship for Ad-<lb/>
vanced study, he is now a doctoral<lb/>
candidate at<lb/>
University.<lb/>
Michigan State<lb/>
Fairya Mellado received the<lb/>
Master of Music degree from<lb/>
Michigan State University and is<lb/>
a former concertmaster of the<lb/>
Lansing Symphony.<lb/>
During the past months of her<lb/>
residence in Greenville, she has<lb/>
performed in several campus and<lb/>
community musical programs.<lb/>
Disco-mania hits Greenville<lb/>
ByCINDYNOKES<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
Been downtown lately? If you<lb/>
have, you have notioed the<lb/>
increased interest in dancing and<lb/>
the disco scene.<lb/>
Pulsating lights, throbbing<lb/>
music, stylish clothes, and lots of<lb/>
people create a total atmosphere<lb/>
which enhances dancing and<lb/>
socializing.<lb/>
This steady rise in disco<lb/>
provided the movie industry with<lb/>
another concept of entertainment<lb/>
in the form of the film "Saturday<lb/>
Night Fever and the fever is<lb/>
spreading.<lb/>
Clubs all over the United<lb/>
States have experienced this<lb/>
disco-mania in such forms as<lb/>
dance contests and disco fashion<lb/>
shows.<lb/>
Their music is often program-<lb/>
med with a definite flow to take<lb/>
its dancers from their own free<lb/>
style movements to fast hustles<lb/>
and difficult routines.<lb/>
Greenville holds its own<lb/>
Saturday Night Fever dance<lb/>
contest in a local club downtown.<lb/>
The contest is sponsored by a<lb/>
local radio station, the merchants<lb/>
and 2,000 dollars in prizes, gifts,<lb/>
or scholarships.<lb/>
When disco began, its future<lb/>
seemed limited but its popularity<lb/>
has proven the disco scene is here<lb/>
to stay.<lb/>
Comic Book Club holds<lb/>
mini-convention Saturday<lb/>
By ROBERT L JONES<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Comic Book Club<lb/>
along with Nostalgia Newstand<lb/>
will conduct a mini-convention at<lb/>
the Roxy Theatre, Sat April 22,<lb/>
starting from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m.<lb/>
According to Charles Law-<lb/>
rence, this is the first convention<lb/>
of its kind in Greenville. "The<lb/>
fare of the day will include mixing<lb/>
with people trading, and selling<lb/>
said Lawrence.<lb/>
The Roxy will provide refresh-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
Admission is free.<lb/>
At 3 p.m. there will be<lb/>
costume contest. Also, there will<lb/>
be displays of art work by<lb/>
students, original magazine<lb/>
pages, and fanzines.<lb/>
"Anyone interested in<lb/>
Comics, Science Fiction, Fantasy,<lb/>
Horror, or other cdlectables, said<lb/>
Lawrence, is invited to come and<lb/>
participate<lb/>
An informal, open house is<lb/>
expected, Lawrence said.<lb/>
Thur. Ntte Only Hie EMBERS at the<lb/>
NO<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Final regular week of Sat. Nite Fever<lb/>
Fri 3-7 End of Week Party<lb/>
Sun Ladies Kite<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
COVER LTiJ<lb/>
NO<lb/>
i. COVER<lb/>
We<lb/>
? 752 -7303 Thl<lb/>
B'gammon tourn. Pool lourn.<lb/>
Located behind the Attic .<lb/>
Watch for Brice Street Festival Fri. &amp; Sat.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058051_0013"/><lb/>
nRnmnnn<lb/>
fBH<lb/>
18 April 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 13<lb/>
Pirates whip 'Cocks for 20th win of the season<lb/>
By STEVE BYERS<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
East Carolina's baseball<lb/>
Pirates zapped the nationally<lb/>
ranked Gamecocks of South Caro-<lb/>
lina 9-7 Sunday afternoon at<lb/>
Harrington field.<lb/>
Pete Paradossi started the<lb/>
hitting barrage with a home run<lb/>
in the first inning that stunned<lb/>
last year's NCAA runner-ups. It<lb/>
was Paradossi's fifth homer of the<lb/>
year and the first of 15 hits for the<lb/>
Bucs in the afternoon.<lb/>
In the second inning Jerry<lb/>
Carraway hit a line shot into the<lb/>
left field scoreboard for a three<lb/>
run homer. Tim Hardison and<lb/>
Raymie Steyons got on base<lb/>
before Carraway unleashed his<lb/>
first roundtripper as a Pirate.<lb/>
The 13th ranked Gamecocks<lb/>
answered in the top of the third<lb/>
with three runs before the Bucs<lb/>
could regroup in the fifth.<lb/>
3rd baseman Bobby Supel<lb/>
drew a walk, Raymie Steyons<lb/>
reached base to start the inning.<lb/>
Chip Gianettino did the pinch<lb/>
running for Steyons and Tim<lb/>
Hardison singled to score Supel.<lb/>
Carraway came to bat and singled<lb/>
in Gianettino to raise the Pirate<lb/>
lead to 6-3.<lb/>
Butch Davis started a Buc<lb/>
offensive with two out in the<lb/>
sixth. The Purple designated<lb/>
hitter who was 4 for 5 fa the day<lb/>
then stole second base. Supel<lb/>
then walked to set up Raymie<lb/>
Steyons 3 run blast over the<lb/>
centerfield wall that strengthened<lb/>
the lead to 9-3.<lb/>
PETE PARADOSSI SMASHED a solo homer in the victory over<lb/>
It was his fifth of the season.<lb/>
use<lb/>
The Gamecocks put a scare<lb/>
intothePiratespullingto within 3<lb/>
in the 7th and adding another in<lb/>
the ninth; however, East Carolina<lb/>
was not to be denied one of the<lb/>
biggest wins of the year.<lb/>
JERRY CA RRA WAY HIT a three run homer and had 4 HOI s in the<lb/>
U.S.C. win.<lb/>
Mickey Britt recorded his 8th<lb/>
victory in 10 decisions receiving<lb/>
relief from freshman Rick Ramey<lb/>
who earned a save.<lb/>
ECU hosts Atlantic Christian<lb/>
tonight at 730.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Greeks bolster Pirates Club as involvement increases<lb/>
ByCHRISHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
For the second year in a row<lb/>
the Greek organizations on cam-<lb/>
pus have raised $1000 for the East<lb/>
Carolina Educational Foundation<lb/>
(Pirate's Club).<lb/>
The money is used fa the sole<lb/>
purpose of paying fa athletic<lb/>
scholarships fa the Pirates<lb/>
athletes.<lb/>
Pirate Club directa Gus An-<lb/>
drews was elated with the gift and<lb/>
felt this showed that the students<lb/>
of ECU wanted "big time"<lb/>
athletics.<lb/>
"This is the second vear that<lb/>
A CHECK FOR $1000 dollars is presented to the<lb/>
ECU Educational Foundation Pirates Club) from<lb/>
left to right Joe Hallow, Gus Andrews, EricLassiter,<lb/>
Anne Thompson, Kirk Edgerton.<lb/>
 Photo by Pete Podeszwa)<lb/>
the Greeks here have raised<lb/>
money through special projects to<lb/>
contribute to the ECU scholarship<lb/>
foundation Andrews said.<lb/>
 The whole idea started about<lb/>
two years ago. Joe Hallow met<lb/>
with the Chi Omega saaity and<lb/>
found that they were interested in<lb/>
doing something fa the athletic<lb/>
program. From that first meeting<lb/>
derived the $1000 gift that year<lb/>
and the additional $1000 gift this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
?' I think this is outstanding on<lb/>
the part of the students<lb/>
Andrews continued.<lb/>
"I've been around oollege<lb/>
athletics fa the past 10 years and<lb/>
I've never heard of students<lb/>
going over and beyond in such a<lb/>
manner as this<lb/>
Mr. Andrews then gave a<lb/>
summary of the ECU Educational<lb/>
Foundation, its purpose and<lb/>
immediate goals.<lb/>
"In a state suppated institu-<lb/>
tion the athletic program is<lb/>
unable to attain state a federal<lb/>
funds and therefae it has to raise<lb/>
all its funds through a project<lb/>
such the Pirates Club<lb/>
Andrews said.<lb/>
"Our three primary souroesof<lb/>
income are the gate receipts,<lb/>
which consst of concessions,<lb/>
ticket sales and athletic guaran-<lb/>
tees from aher schools. These<lb/>
guarantees are money paid to us<lb/>
by other institutions to play<lb/>
them<lb/>
"A second souroe of inoome is<lb/>
the Student Activity Fee.<lb/>
"The third area of revenue is<lb/>
the Educational Foundation<lb/>
"In ader to sustain a 'big<lb/>
time' athletic program the Educa-<lb/>
tional Foundation (Pirate Club)<lb/>
has to get in a position where it<lb/>
raises enough money to totally<lb/>
pay all the scholarship costs in the<lb/>
program. By doing this other<lb/>
monies can be used in the<lb/>
upgrading of the total program<lb/>
primarily in the area of facili-<lb/>
ties<lb/>
Andrews also commented on<lb/>
what has been done in the last<lb/>
year to boost inoome to the ECU<lb/>
Educational Foundation.<lb/>
"Last year the Pirates Club<lb/>
raised and turned over to the<lb/>
See GREEKS , p. 15<lb/>
<pb facs="00058051_0014"/><lb/>
Page 14 FOUNTAINHEAD 18 April 1978<lb/>
ECU Sports Medicine conference to be held next week<lb/>
Athletic training on the high<lb/>
school and college level is no<lb/>
longer just taping ankles before<lb/>
the game. It's now a complex,<lb/>
fulltime job. In fact, it's referred<lb/>
to in most circles today as sports<lb/>
medicine; not athletic training.<lb/>
When one considers the topics<lb/>
to be discussed during the eighth<lb/>
annual East Carolina University<lb/>
Sports Medicine Athletic Trainers<lb/>
and Coaches Conference May 5-6,<lb/>
the complexity of the field is more<lb/>
obvious. Topics like knee injuries,<lb/>
dental injuries, blood pressure,<lb/>
heat stress, urinary problems,<lb/>
prevention and immediate treat-<lb/>
ment of injuries, and whether<lb/>
athletic trainers are a luxury or a<lb/>
necessity.<lb/>
The field of sports medicine,<lb/>
both on the college and high<lb/>
school level, has surged in the<lb/>
last five years. Stronger programs<lb/>
on college campuses, develop-<lb/>
ment of curriculum studies for<lb/>
credit in college and a big push by<lb/>
the state of North Carolina have<lb/>
all aided this surge.<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Sports Medicine Director Rod<lb/>
Compton has been one of the<lb/>
leaders in this state in promoting<lb/>
and working with potential sports<lb/>
medicine personnel, both on the<lb/>
college and high school level.<lb/>
In 1970, Compton's first year<lb/>
at East Carolina, the Sports<lb/>
Medicine Athletic Trainers and<lb/>
Coaches Conference was esta-<lb/>
blished. Registration was only 19.<lb/>
But from the idea that started<lb/>
small, the conference has grown<lb/>
to a 100-plus registration affair<lb/>
that finds a cutoff in registration<lb/>
BE SOMEBODY AT<lb/>
PAMTANA BOB'S<lb/>
THE n-ont. ar rtRfECnOK<lb/>
DAILY AT<lb/>
400 P.M.<lb/>
Diamond Suppliers you Can trust<lb/>
Wb Buy Diamonds<lb/>
and BM GoM.<lb/>
407 EVANS MALL<lb/>
GREENVILLE. N C 27834<lb/>
Eastern n C s largest Seiko and Timex watch dfalers<lb/>
Bus (919) 7582452<lb/>
HJYD 6. ROUNS0N<lb/>
Beef n Shakes Breakfast<lb/>
Special Breakfast 7 am till 11 am for .99<lb/>
two scrambled eggs, sausage,<lb/>
hash browns, english muffin, jelly<lb/>
Our quarter pound Beefburgers<lb/>
are from fresh ground chuck daily.<lb/>
Downtown 5th St.<lb/>
only open 7 am till 2am Daily.<lb/>
Bill McDonald<lb/>
Located on<lb/>
E. 10th Street,<lb/>
2 doors down<lb/>
from Kings<lb/>
Sandwich .<lb/>
phone<lb/>
752-6680<lb/>
"See me for car, home, life, health<lb/>
and business insurance<lb/>
Like a good neighbor,<lb/>
State Farm is there<lb/>
I<lb/>
due to the large numbers interes-<lb/>
ted.<lb/>
Designed fa athletic coaches,<lb/>
student trainers and team physi-<lb/>
cians, the conference is sponsor-<lb/>
ed by- the ECU Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education, the ECU<lb/>
Sports Medicine Division and the<lb/>
School of Allied Health Profes-<lb/>
sion at East Carolina.<lb/>
This year's conference is<lb/>
scheduled for Friday and Satur-<lb/>
day, May 5S, at the Carol G. Belk<lb/>
(Allied Health) Building on the<lb/>
ECU campus. Registration cutoff<lb/>
is May 1.<lb/>
Participation in the conference<lb/>
has been approved for continuing<lb/>
education unites. The annual<lb/>
event is sanctioned by the N.C<lb/>
Dept. of Public Instruction's<lb/>
Sports Medicine Division.<lb/>
Instructional staff members<lb/>
include ECU head football coach<lb/>
Pat Dye; Frank Harper, athletic<lb/>
trainerphysical therapist; Al<lb/>
Proctor of the N.C. Dept. of<lb/>
Public Instruction; Rod Compton;<lb/>
Liz White and Jim Keating,<lb/>
assistant athletic trainers at ECU;<lb/>
Dr. James Bowman, orthopedic<lb/>
surgeon; Dr. Richard Evans,<lb/>
dentist; Dr. Emmett Walsh,<lb/>
urologist; and Dr. Wayne Ken-<lb/>
drick, internal medicine.<lb/>
For the first time the confer-<lb/>
ence will be dedicated to some-<lb/>
one. This year, in recognition of<lb/>
his contributions to the entire<lb/>
program at East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity, the conference is being<lb/>
dedicated to retiring chancellor,<lb/>
Dr. Leo W. Jenkins.<lb/>
Further information andor<lb/>
registration information may be<lb/>
had by contacting either the<lb/>
Sports Medicine Division of East<lb/>
Carolina or the Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education of East<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Lady Pirate track team makes<lb/>
impressive showing at Delaware<lb/>
DEBBIE FREEMAN HEA VES the shot put.<lb/>
LADY PIRATES OVERTAKE South Carolina and Towson State<lb/>
during relay.<lb/>
Clip this coupon!<lb/>
And get three games for only $1.25.<lb/>
( Per Person Rate )<lb/>
LOCATED BESIDE RIVER BLUFF APTf<lb/>
Phone 758-1820<lb/>
The ECU Ladies Track team<lb/>
made an impressive showing in<lb/>
Saturday's Delaware, State Col-<lb/>
lege Women's Track meet.<lb/>
Head Coach Laurie Arrants<lb/>
summed the meet up well with<lb/>
her post meet comments.<lb/>
 WEA THER RESTRICTING"<lb/>
"The weather was very cold<lb/>
fa this time of year with low 50's<lb/>
and winds between 10 and 15<lb/>
mph Arrants said.<lb/>
"Some of the girls seem to be<lb/>
in a bit of a slump right now such<lb/>
as our sprintas. I think that will<lb/>
change with our two upcoming<lb/>
meets at South Carolina in<lb/>
Columbia this coming weekend<lb/>
and then our state Championship<lb/>
here at ECU on Friday, April<lb/>
28th<lb/>
??WIND AIDS THROWERS'1<lb/>
"The wind actually helped our<lb/>
discus throwers Arrants noted.<lb/>
"When you have five people<lb/>
throwing in the 120's and better<lb/>
at a meet not known fa its field<lb/>
events, then you know something<lb/>
was right. That's not taking<lb/>
anything away from Debbie<lb/>
Freeman and Elaine Davis. They<lb/>
both had good fam in their<lb/>
throws and I think they would<lb/>
have thrown in the low 120s but<lb/>
that wind gave them an extra<lb/>
boost<lb/>
"MASON PLACES 1st"<lb/>
"Linda Mason gave us our<lb/>
only 1st place with a good run of<lb/>
69.3 which is slow fa her but a<lb/>
good run with the weather<lb/>
conditions being what they<lb/>
were said Arrants.<lb/>
"I'm glad we're heading<lb/>
south this ooming weekend. Las'<lb/>
year it rained oi us there but we<lb/>
still woi the meet. We plan a<lb/>
repeat oi the win but hopefully<lb/>
will have nicer weather<lb/>
<pb facs="00058051_0015"/><lb/>
18 April 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 15<lb/>
Former ECU star Hodges resigns at Lenoir-Rhyne<lb/>
Robert F. Hodges has resign-<lb/>
ed his position as head basketball<lb/>
coach and assistant professor of<lb/>
health and physical education at<lb/>
Lenoir-Rhyne College effective<lb/>
July 1.<lb/>
GREEKS<lb/>
Continued from p. 13<lb/>
athletic department $186,000<lb/>
Andrews' stated. "This<lb/>
amount only paid about half of<lb/>
our total scholarship costs<lb/>
"This year we set up a<lb/>
campaign known as the Purple<lb/>
Push and we have organized our<lb/>
organizations outside of Pitt<lb/>
County and established goals that<lb/>
will enable us to raise as much<lb/>
money outside of Pitt County as<lb/>
we have raised as a total<lb/>
including Pitt County<lb/>
"Combining that with the<lb/>
effort in Pitt County we are<lb/>
striving to raise $500,000 this<lb/>
year. This would really put the<lb/>
Pi rates Club on a solid foundation<lb/>
to maintain a strong athletic<lb/>
program<lb/>
"Our foundation membership<lb/>
last year was 1,200. This year it<lb/>
2,500 and still rowing. In fact<lb/>
since January's Purple Push we<lb/>
have added 350 to 400 new<lb/>
members. The result of all this<lb/>
will be the ability to furnish ECU<lb/>
fansand alumni and the people of<lb/>
Eastern N.C. with the finest in<lb/>
Intercollegiate athletics<lb/>
"In summing up I would just<lb/>
like to thank the Greeks on<lb/>
campus and everyone involved in<lb/>
making this gift possible<lb/>
In summing up his remarks<lb/>
Andrew was appreciative of the<lb/>
Greeks support and other student<lb/>
support of the Pirate Club and<lb/>
hoped it would continue to<lb/>
expand.<lb/>
According to an announce-<lb/>
ment today by Lenoir-Rhyne<lb/>
president Dr. Albert B.<lb/>
Anderson, the seven-year Bear<lb/>
head coach was. asked to relin-<lb/>
quish his basketball duties but<lb/>
maintain his faculty position and<lb/>
assume new responsibilities as<lb/>
director of an expanding intram-<lb/>
ural program.<lb/>
Hodges declined that offer<lb/>
and submitted his resignation.His<lb/>
future plans are presently, indef-<lb/>
inite.<lb/>
 Bob has done good work at<lb/>
Lenoir-Rhyne and has been dedi-<lb/>
icated to our program said Dr.<lb/>
Anderson, "but in my judgement<lb/>
it was time to make a change. It<lb/>
was a difficult decision but one<lb/>
that we felt necessary because of<lb/>
lack of confidence in Bob's super-<lb/>
vision of Lenior-Rhyne basketball.<lb/>
"Unfortunately continued<lb/>
the preseident, "Bob feels it<lb/>
would be impossible to oontinue.<lb/>
Hodges came tc Lenoir-Ryhne<lb/>
in 1970 and has coached Lenoir-<lb/>
Rhyne basketball teams to a<lb/>
129-95 record during the last<lb/>
seven seasons. His squads won<lb/>
one tournament and two regular<lb/>
season championships as a mem-<lb/>
ber of the Carolinas Conference<lb/>
and qualified as an independent<lb/>
this year for an NAIA District 26<lb/>
playoff berth.<lb/>
Hodges is a graduate of ECU,<lb/>
where he earned bachelor's and<lb/>
master's degrees. He was an<lb/>
outstanding athlete at ECU and is<lb/>
a member of the university's<lb/>
Sports Hall of Fame.<lb/>
The ECU standout excelled in<lb/>
both football and basketball and<lb/>
was drafted by professional teams<lb/>
in both sports following his<lb/>
graduation.<lb/>
Dr. Anderson made no an-<lb/>
nouncement concerning the<lb/>
search fa a new head basketball<lb/>
coach.<lb/>
DELA WARE ST A TE COLLEGE WOMEN'S TRACK RESULTS<lb/>
3000 METER<lb/>
NAME<lb/>
SCHOOL<lb/>
6 Anna Bailey East Carolina<lb/>
400 METER HURDLES<lb/>
TIME<lb/>
(no Time)<lb/>
3 East Carolina<lb/>
152.9<lb/>
MILE RELAY EVENT COLLEGE)<lb/>
East Card.<lb/>
4.20.6<lb/>
COLLEGES TEAM SCORING<lb/>
3 East Carol. Univ. 82 Vi<lb/>
LONG JUMP<lb/>
4 M. M. Gudjohnsen East Carol.<lb/>
5C. McPhatter East Carol.<lb/>
177 12"<lb/>
176 V2<lb/>
JA VELIN<lb/>
4 D. Freeman<lb/>
5 Knight<lb/>
HIGH JUMP<lb/>
3C. McPhatter<lb/>
5 S. Sampson<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
108'8"<lb/>
103'10"<lb/>
5'0"<lb/>
4' 10" (Tied for 5th)<lb/>
1 Linda MasonEast Carolina1.09.3400 METER RELAYCOLLEGE<lb/>
SHOT PUT4 East CarolinaUniv.49.1<lb/>
2 D. Freeman 5E. DavisEast Carolina East Carolina38' 4V4" 35'1014"DISCUS<lb/>
800 METER RE LA Y COLLEGE2 D. Freeman 3E. Davis 800 METEREast Carolina East Carolina1301" 1267<lb/>
5 Joy Forbes East Carolina 226.8<lb/>
SPRINT MEDLEY EVENT COLLEGE)<lb/>
3 East Carolina State 1 58.5<lb/>
1500 METER COLLEGE<lb/>
4 Ann Holmes East Carol. 533.0<lb/>
5 Ann Bailey East Carol. 535.7<lb/>
400 METER COLLEGE<lb/>
5 Cookie M cPhatter East Carol. 59.5<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
for rent ?<lb/>
HOUSEMATES WANTED: to<lb/>
share furnished 5 bdrm. house,<lb/>
complete with carpet fireplaces<lb/>
and 2 baths. Located on 4th St.<lb/>
one block from downtown and<lb/>
campus. One, two, or possibly 3<lb/>
people needed for both summer<lb/>
sessions and next year. Private<lb/>
room $75 month, with roommates<lb/>
$35. Call 758-8126.<lb/>
FEMALE DESIRES: female<lb/>
roommates. Working person pre-<lb/>
ferred or college student who<lb/>
plans to remain in area for 1 to<lb/>
1 Vi years. Two brdm. apt. Split<lb/>
expenses. No pets! Available<lb/>
May 1. Contact Lisa 752-1739 a<lb/>
757-6640.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: needed<lb/>
May 15th thru summer. Possibly<lb/>
next year. Furnished 2 bdrm. apt.<lb/>
with 2 other girls on ECU bus<lb/>
route. Call Lee 758-9721 or Mari<lb/>
758-9802.<lb/>
NEEDED: 2 female housemates<lb/>
for summer in nice furnished<lb/>
house 1 block from campus. Rent<lb/>
58.33 plus '3 utilities. Call<lb/>
758-3688 keep trying.<lb/>
FEMALE: senior in special ed. is<lb/>
looking for a place to live next<lb/>
fall. Contact Nancy. 758-9481.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 2 corm. duplex to be<lb/>
sublet over the summer. Located<lb/>
in Greenville. $130.00 month.<lb/>
Call 758-0852.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 2 bdrm. fully furnish-<lb/>
ed apt. at Eastbrook fa one, two,<lb/>
a possibly three people, (fa the<lb/>
summer). Please call 752-6068<lb/>
anytime.<lb/>
ROOMMATES NEEDED: 2 to 3<lb/>
females needed to share 2 bdrm.<lb/>
apt at Eastbrook fa summer.<lb/>
Interested in serious students.<lb/>
Call 752-0354.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Sublease fa summer<lb/>
apt. with 2 bdrms partially<lb/>
furnished, air oond. located on<lb/>
3rd St. about 1 mile from campus.<lb/>
Call Charlie 752-9311.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Furnished apt. Vi<lb/>
mi. from campus. Prefer mature<lb/>
females $110.00 mo. Summer<lb/>
only. 758-0295 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
ROOM MATES NEEDED: to sub-<lb/>
lease 2 bdrm 112 bath, fully<lb/>
carpeted, AC luxury townhouse<lb/>
apt. next to campus; open from<lb/>
May 15 till end of August. Call<lb/>
Betsy a Debbie 758-7786.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATES: wanted to<lb/>
share apt. fa summer near<lb/>
campus. Seperate bdrms. $35 mo.<lb/>
plus utilities. Prefer reasonably<lb/>
quiet and dean person. Call<lb/>
752-4043 befae9a.m. and after 9<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
BEAT THE HEAT: Be cod in an<lb/>
apt. Roommates needed fa sum-<lb/>
mer and fall. Ideal location on 4th<lb/>
St. Call Pam 758-S641.<lb/>
for sale<lb/>
FOR SALE: Davis tennis racket<lb/>
$35 value will sell fa $10. Plus<lb/>
$60 set of curtains, brown flower-<lb/>
ed with rods and hooks. Sell fa<lb/>
$15. Also light green couch in<lb/>
good oond. $15 will sell. Call<lb/>
758-7675 leave name and number<lb/>
if nd there.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Petri 35mm SLR with<lb/>
Petri 55mm f1.8 lens. Excellent<lb/>
oond. Case inducted. $165. Also<lb/>
Takumar 135mm f2.8 saew<lb/>
mount lens. $50 Call 758-8126.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Pr. a Audioanalyst<lb/>
stereo speakas, 10 to 100 watts<lb/>
rating, equalization switch; 10"<lb/>
woofer, 3V2" tweeter; first $125.<lb/>
Call 752-8506.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 73 TS 125 Suzuki.<lb/>
Orange, 3800 mi. Call 758-2300<lb/>
days, 752-3480 nights.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '69 Dodge Caoiet<lb/>
slant 6 cylinder engine. Standard<lb/>
shift. Great oond. call 758-7434.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 74 Austin Marina,<lb/>
23,000 mi AMFM, Michdins,<lb/>
Amber with black intaia. Excel-<lb/>
lent service recad $1650.00 call<lb/>
752-8256.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Cardina due Burton<lb/>
lightweight gdf bag. Ideal fa<lb/>
long rounds. Matching headoover<lb/>
inducted. 30.00 Call 758-3497.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '73 Honda Civic with<lb/>
Michel in radial s, new brakes,<lb/>
new battery, excdlent cond.<lb/>
Clean. Best otier. Call 752-7227.<lb/>
FOR SALE 71 Vega Hatchback 3<lb/>
speed, 4 cylinder with radial tires.<lb/>
$450.00 Contad Nancy 758-9481.<lb/>
a Bob 758-3833.<lb/>
pcTsonaKD<lb/>
DANCE LESSONS: Learn the<lb/>
beautiful art of Middle Eastern<lb/>
dance. Retone, reshape, revital-<lb/>
iza, re-energize, it's spring. Call<lb/>
Sunshine 752-5214 as often as you<lb/>
need to.<lb/>
COLLEGE REP: National sales<lb/>
00. expanding in Greenville.<lb/>
Complete 00. taming, bonuses,<lb/>
and car program. No travel, no<lb/>
fee. This is a career position with<lb/>
exceptional income and benefits.<lb/>
Send resume to G.W. Hasenfus,<lb/>
550 Exec. Ctr. Dr. Suite 213,<lb/>
Charldte, N.C. 28212.<lb/>
WANTED: Someone to build me<lb/>
a fairly large bird cage. Call<lb/>
752-5214.<lb/>
WANTED: Soneone to dean a<lb/>
one bdrm. apt. at $5 pa room.<lb/>
Call 752-5214.<lb/>
HELP: ride needed. Can leave<lb/>
anytime, any day, as long as I'm<lb/>
in Charldte by April 23. If nd<lb/>
Charldte then Chapel Hill a any<lb/>
pdnt between Ashville and State-<lb/>
ville fa same weekend. Also need<lb/>
ride to Chapel Hill the weekend d<lb/>
April 29-30 Can leave any time,<lb/>
and day. Will pay all gas,<lb/>
expenses, dc. John Weyla, 458<lb/>
Aycock, 752-8525.<lb/>
ALTERATIONS: Sumrrwr things<lb/>
too long, too big? Call Kathy<lb/>
752-8444 a 752-8642.<lb/>
NEED A SUMMER: job at the<lb/>
beach? Established real estate<lb/>
firm in Emerald Isle needs<lb/>
dependaole home repair pason.<lb/>
Pipe-sdctering, wood repair,<lb/>
plumbing - and general mainten-<lb/>
ance on rental property. Call<lb/>
JoAnn at 746-4623, a Singleton<lb/>
Realty at 326-5333.<lb/>
RESUMES: Will compose, design<lb/>
and type. Call 752-4955 day and<lb/>
752-9199 afta 5.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058051_0016"/><lb/>
Page 16 FOUNTAINHEAC 18 April 1978<lb/>
SECOND<lb/>
CHANCE<lb/>
WAREHOUSE SALE<lb/>
PRICES SLASHED<lb/>
We have bought a large supply of<lb/>
Demo &amp; New Equipment from a Nor-<lb/>
thern dealer who needed money!<lb/>
HIS LOSS IS YOUR GAIN!<lb/>
SONYCHAIGTEACNl F<lb/>
PIONEERYAMAHAAKAI<lb/>
SANSUIDYNATECHNIC<lb/>
KENWOODBOSEPANASONICFINANCING<lb/>
ONKYOEMPIREOPTONICATRADES<lb/>
MARMTTZBEAT INFLATION NOWB&amp;OSERVICE<lb/>
IINVEST YOUR TAX CHECK<lb/>
HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH<lb/>
752-3661<lb/>
<pb facs="00058051_0017"/>
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