<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
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<pb facs="00058052_0001"/>
derving the campus com-<lb/>
munity fa ever 50 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of o.bfu.<lb/>
this issue is 16 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Vol. No. 53, No. ?K East Carolina University Greeny He, North Carolina<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
Jenkins honoredp. 3<lb/>
Asian Symposiump. 5<lb/>
Greek forum p. 6<lb/>
Apartment modifyingp. 7<lb/>
Dinner Theatrep. 9<lb/>
Bucs bomb Topsp. 13<lb/>
lot of hard work'<lb/>
By A NNE THA RRING TON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The REBEL, ECU'S literary<lb/>
art magazine will be available to<lb/>
studentsand faculty begining late<lb/>
Friday afternoon, according to<lb/>
editor Luke Whisnant.<lb/>
"Interested persons can pick<lb/>
up a copy at the REBEL office in<lb/>
the publication building or in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
"By Saturday morning, stu-<lb/>
dents should find copies on top of<lb/>
the FOUNTAINHEAD boxes at<lb/>
the library and in some of the<lb/>
dorms Whisnant said.<lb/>
The staff and contributors are<lb/>
staging the First Annual REBEL<lb/>
Heading Monday at 7 p.m. in the<lb/>
Coffeehouse, room 201 in Men-<lb/>
denhall.<lb/>
The public is invited and<lb/>
refreshments will be served.<lb/>
"This is a chance for the<lb/>
publictohear selected poetry and<lb/>
short stories, read as the original<lb/>
writer intended said Whisnant.<lb/>
Participating writers indude<lb/>
Allison Thompson, Jeff Rollins.<lb/>
David Gerrard, Karen Brock,<lb/>
Terry Davis, Dr. Peter Makuck,<lb/>
Ray Harrell, Colleen Flynn, Kim<lb/>
Murph, Whisnant, and others.<lb/>
"We have not yet been billed,<lb/>
but the printing cost should total<lb/>
around $7,800, almost $200 less<lb/>
than last year's total Whisnant t<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The printer, Theo. Davis &amp;<lb/>
Sons of Zebulon was recommen-<lb/>
ded to the REBEL last year by the<lb/>
art department, according to<lb/>
Whisnant.<lb/>
"We were happy with last<lb/>
year's results so we decided to<lb/>
contract them again this year<lb/>
added Whisnant.<lb/>
Whisnant said there was a<lb/>
tremendous response from the<lb/>
university community this year.<lb/>
"Approximately 400 poems<lb/>
and 25 to 30 short stories were<lb/>
submitted fa consideration.<lb/>
" That's a good response when<lb/>
you can only use about seven<lb/>
staies and 30 poems Whisnant<lb/>
said.<lb/>
He added that this year he<lb/>
tried to make selections on the<lb/>
basis of quality and readability.<lb/>
jEmiNONOREDR. Leo Jenkins, who will<lb/>
soon be retiring from his position as chancellor here,<lb/>
received an appreciation award last Wednesday<lb/>
"We tried to stay away from teaches poetry writing<lb/>
pieces that were too obscure in<lb/>
order to make the magazine mae<lb/>
appealing to a larger number of<lb/>
readers Whisnant added.<lb/>
He feelsthe quality of writing<lb/>
here has definitely improved over<lb/>
the past year.<lb/>
"I think that I can attribute<lb/>
this (improvement) to the writing<lb/>
program in the English depart-<lb/>
ment, and especially to Terry<lb/>
Davis and Dr. Peter Makuck<lb/>
Davis teaches fiction and<lb/>
non-fiction writing and Makuck<lb/>
from the campus social fraternities and sororities in<lb/>
recognition of his 31 years of service to ECU.<lb/>
Last year's REBEL was selec-<lb/>
ted fa the Associated Collegiate<lb/>
Press All-American Award which<lb/>
means it was one of the ten best<lb/>
literary art magazines in the<lb/>
United Sates, accading to<lb/>
Whisnant.<lb/>
"We have a lot to live up to.<lb/>
We'll find out how this year's<lb/>
REBEL stacks up in October. I'm<lb/>
a little nervous about thfe<lb/>
Whisnant admitted.<lb/>
"But I'm not too waried. We<lb/>
are the only campus literary art<lb/>
magazine that has 20 pages of full<lb/>
cola art-wak in the state<lb/>
Whisnant said.<lb/>
Only two and a half weeks<lb/>
ago, the final set of carected<lb/>
proofs was sent to the printer, the<lb/>
culmination of nine months pre-<lb/>
paration.<lb/>
"It's been a la of hard wak,<lb/>
but I think it's been wath it. Of<lb/>
course I couldn't have made it<lb/>
without Kay Parks, art director,<lb/>
and Allison Thompson, associate<lb/>
edita Whisnant said.<lb/>
First Lady of the ECU community for nearly 20 years<lb/>
Thurs<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
A reception was given Thurs-<lb/>
day evening to hona Mrs. Lillian<lb/>
J. Jenkins who herself has been a<lb/>
gracious and charming hostess<lb/>
fa literally thousands of recep-<lb/>
tions, dinners, luncheons and<lb/>
aher social events in the ECU<lb/>
Chancel la'shone.<lb/>
Mrs. Jenkins is the wife of<lb/>
retiring East CArolina University<lb/>
Chancel la Leo W. Jenkins and<lb/>
has been "First Lady" of the<lb/>
ECU community fa nearly 20<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Thursday evening's reception<lb/>
was staged in ha hena by<lb/>
sevaal hundred wonen of the<lb/>
tion, faculty and tfaff<lb/>
It was a joint venture of all<lb/>
women of the unviasity commun-<lb/>
ity including present and retired<lb/>
membas of the ECU administra-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
UMBRELLAS OPEN UP all over campus to greet April showers.<lb/>
A highlight was a presentation<lb/>
to Mrs.Jenkins of a certificate of<lb/>
naification of combined contribu-<lb/>
tions of mae than $1,500 fa the<lb/>
previously established Lillian J.<lb/>
Jenkins Scholarhship Fund at<lb/>
ECU, and introduction of two<lb/>
students who will share in the<lb/>
scholarship proceeds in 1978-79.<lb/>
HONORED<lb/>
The Lillian J. Jenkins Scholar-<lb/>
ship Fund was named in ha<lb/>
hona in 1975 and the presenta-<lb/>
tioi was made with hope that this<lb/>
expression of esteem would pro-<lb/>
vide impetus fa furtha contribu-<lb/>
tiais toward popetuation of the<lb/>
Lillian J. Jenkins Scholarships.<lb/>
Also, a plaque citing ha<lb/>
"many years of friendship" was<lb/>
included in the famal presenta-<lb/>
tioi.<lb/>
Mrs. Joikins, the former<lb/>
Lillian Jacobsen of Lavalette,<lb/>
N.J holds the B.S. degree from<lb/>
Trenton State (N.J.) Teachas<lb/>
College.<lb/>
She came to Greenville with<lb/>
ha husband when he became<lb/>
Dean of the Univasity 31 years<lb/>
ago. Dr. Jenkins has served as<lb/>
president and chancella of ECU<lb/>
since 1960.<lb/>
In addition to ha duties as<lb/>
wife of the chancella and motha<lb/>
of six, Mrs. Joikins has been<lb/>
active in numaous community<lb/>
and civic affairs, in garden dubs<lb/>
and litaary drdes, in ha church,<lb/>
as a past Cub and Brownie Scout<lb/>
leada, a chart member and first<lb/>
president of the Aires Book Club<lb/>
which lata became two dubs.<lb/>
She assisted in famatioi of<lb/>
Seira Book Club, Chi Omega, and<lb/>
a helpa in all dvic adivities.<lb/>
She is a frequent visita and<lb/>
helpa at Greenville Villa Nursing<lb/>
Hone.<lb/>
I have neva been a jdno<lb/>
says Mrs. Joikins, modestly.<lb/>
But those honaing ha spoke<lb/>
of "faithful and faceful" po-<lb/>
famance and ha invdvement<lb/>
"with loving and saving people<lb/>
"My hobbies are gardening<lb/>
and grandchildren she said.<lb/>
One grandchild, in particular,<lb/>
Yanna Person, occupies a great<lb/>
deal of Mrs. Jenkins' time. Also<lb/>
she makes use of a green house in<lb/>
the rear of the chancella's<lb/>
mansiai fa the growing and<lb/>
arranging the flowos and plants.<lb/>
The Thursday evening recep-<lb/>
tion was held at the Van<lb/>
Landingham Roan of the ECU<lb/>
School of Home Economics on E.<lb/>
Fifth STreet. Reception guests,<lb/>
friends and admiros of the<lb/>
honaee wre received by Mrs.<lb/>
Jenkins.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058052_0002"/><lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 20 ApriM978<lb/>
Gamma Beta Economics<lb/>
Cflday<lb/>
Poetry reading Inter-Varsity<lb/>
The First Annual Rebel Read-<lb/>
ing will be this coming Monday<lb/>
night at 7.00 in the Mendenhall<lb/>
Coffeehouse.<lb/>
Some of ECU's top writers,<lb/>
including Terry Davis, Peter<lb/>
Makuck, Jeff Rollins, and Allison<lb/>
Thompson will be reading from<lb/>
their poetry and fiction. Copies of<lb/>
the 1978 issue of The Rebel will<lb/>
also be available.<lb/>
The reading is free and the<lb/>
public is invited. That's Monday,<lb/>
April 24 at 7O0 in room 15<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
Fellowship<lb/>
Looking for Christian fellow-<lb/>
ship? The Forever Generation<lb/>
meets every Monday night in<lb/>
Brewster C-304 at 9 p.m.<lb/>
There will be good singing, a<lb/>
relevant Bible study, and delic-<lb/>
ious refreshment.<lb/>
Speaking this week will be J.<lb/>
Michael Bragg of the Peoples<lb/>
Baptist Temple. Why not join us?<lb/>
Writing jobs<lb/>
Students who signed up for<lb/>
English 4890, Writing Practicum,<lb/>
for Fall Semester 1978 are<lb/>
reminded to submit their applica-<lb/>
tions to Dr. Brett by April 25.<lb/>
Those who do not have<lb/>
applications (with summer ad-<lb/>
dresses) in by that date will not be<lb/>
allowed to take the course for<lb/>
credit. Applications may be hand<lb/>
delivered to the English Office,<lb/>
Austin 122.<lb/>
Seminar<lb/>
Frank Arey, a Chemistry<lb/>
grad. student, will present a<lb/>
seminar on April 28, at 2 p.m. in<lb/>
room 201 Flanagan Building on<lb/>
Analytical Methods for Measur-<lb/>
ing F and Ca Ions in the Blue<lb/>
Crab, Callinectes sapidus<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
Lane rentals are available at<lb/>
the Mendenhall Bowling Center<lb/>
every Saturday from Noon until 6<lb/>
p.m. It only costs $2.50 to rent a<lb/>
lane for one hour.<lb/>
Stop by and try it out; you<lb/>
can't afford to miss it.<lb/>
"Red Pin Bowling" is every<lb/>
Sunday evening from 7 p.m. until<lb/>
10 p.m. at the Bowling Center at<lb/>
Mendenhall.<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.<lb/>
Come over and try it out this<lb/>
Sunday. It could be your lucky<lb/>
day!<lb/>
Inter-Varsity Christian Fel-<lb/>
lowship will meet this Sunday<lb/>
night at 8 p.m at the Afro-<lb/>
American Cultural Center.<lb/>
Robert Morgan<lb/>
Senator Bob Morgan will<lb/>
deliver a Law Day address on<lb/>
Fri April 21 at 8 p.m. in the<lb/>
Willis Building on First and<lb/>
Reade Streets.<lb/>
There will be a reception<lb/>
immediately afterwards.<lb/>
This is a joint presentation by<lb/>
the ECU Law Society and the Pitt<lb/>
County Bar Association.<lb/>
The public is invited and<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
Handball<lb/>
ECU Team Handball Exhibit-<lb/>
ion, Thurs April 20 at 8:30 p.m.<lb/>
in Memorial Gym. A 25 cent<lb/>
donation is requested to help fund<lb/>
the team trip to national champ-<lb/>
ionships in Long Island, New<lb/>
York.<lb/>
Jesse Helms<lb/>
There will be an organization-<lb/>
al meeting of the ECU Student<lb/>
Leaders for Jesse Helms Thurs<lb/>
April 20 at 7 p.m. in Rawl 130.<lb/>
Two films (one on Senator<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/>
working in the Helms campaign<lb/>
are invited.<lb/>
The SGA needs your help in<lb/>
working on a new visitation<lb/>
policy. If you have some good<lb/>
ideas, goto your hall advisor and<lb/>
give them a list of what you think<lb/>
will be a better plan.<lb/>
Be sure and do it betas April<lb/>
21. We appreciate your help!<lb/>
Comics dub<lb/>
The ECU Comic Book Club,<lb/>
the Nostalgia Newstand, and the<lb/>
Roxy will sponsor a mini comic<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 D.m.<lb/>
Anyone with comic books,<lb/>
records, science fiction and fant-<lb/>
asy items to sell or 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/>
For more information call the<lb/>
Nostalgia Newstand at 758-6909.<lb/>
The Gamma Beta Phi Society<lb/>
will meet on April 20 in the<lb/>
Biology Bldg rm. 103.<lb/>
The meeting will begin prom-<lb/>
ptly at 7 p.m.<lb/>
All members should plan to<lb/>
attend this last meeting of the<lb/>
year.<lb/>
New members will be induct-<lb/>
ed and new officers will be<lb/>
installed at this meeting.<lb/>
Family fun<lb/>
'Family Fun Night' is Thurs-<lb/>
day, April 20, at Mendenhall<lb/>
from 6 p.m. til 10 p.m all<lb/>
children accompanied by a parent<lb/>
may bowl, play billiards or play<lb/>
table tennis for Vi price.<lb/>
Only one adult per group must<lb/>
have an ECU ID or Mendenhall<lb/>
Membership Card.<lb/>
Each game of bowling will be<lb/>
12 price for the children and<lb/>
billiards and table tennis will be<lb/>
Vz price for 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/>
Crusade<lb/>
Leadership Training Class,<lb/>
sponsored by the Campus Cru-<lb/>
sade for Christ, meets on Thurs-<lb/>
days at 7 p.m. in Brewster C-103.<lb/>
After a time of fellowship,<lb/>
there is an opportunity to learn<lb/>
more about how to love God and<lb/>
love others.<lb/>
The four classes offered are<lb/>
Christian life, dynamics of dis-<lb/>
cipleship, dynamics of ministry,<lb/>
and life of Christ which is open to<lb/>
those interested in investigating<lb/>
ther person of Jesus Christ.<lb/>
Fashion show<lb/>
In memory of Ledonia Wright,<lb/>
a fashion 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/>
Recreation Center.<lb/>
This program will be held to<lb/>
raise money for the Ledonia<lb/>
Wright Memorial Scholarship<lb/>
Fund.<lb/>
The evening will be full of<lb/>
delightful fashions with various<lb/>
styles of attire ranging from<lb/>
casual to formal wear.<lb/>
Also, entertainment will be<lb/>
provided by sororities and frat-<lb/>
ernities-they all perform by<lb/>
doing a short step, and music will<lb/>
be supplied.<lb/>
The scholarship will be given<lb/>
to an incoming 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/>
for students, and $2 for adults; at<lb/>
the door: $2 for students and<lb/>
$2.50 adults.<lb/>
Make checks or money orders<lb/>
payable to: the Ledonia Wright<lb/>
Memorial Scholarship Fund.<lb/>
Send to: ECU, Business<lb/>
Office, Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
Attn: Mrs. Anne May.<lb/>
Omiuom Delta Epsilon, Eco-<lb/>
nomics Honor Society, will hold a<lb/>
meeting ai Home Savings down-<lb/>
town on Tuesday, April 25 at 7<lb/>
p.m. New officers will be elected<lb/>
and refreshments will be served.<lb/>
All members are urgod to attend<lb/>
our last meeting of the semester.<lb/>
Gospel choir<lb/>
The Student Union Minority<lb/>
Arts Committee will present<lb/>
Mary Streeter and the Interdom-<lb/>
inational Gospel Choir,of Farm-<lb/>
ville, on Sun April 23, at 6 p.m.<lb/>
The program will be held in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Theatre and<lb/>
there is no admission fee.<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
The North Carolina Student<lb/>
Legislature will meet to held<lb/>
elections of new officers Thurs<lb/>
April 20 at 4 p.m. in 248<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
All members are urged to<lb/>
attend this important meeting.<lb/>
Keg party<lb/>
For those of you who did not<lb/>
make it to the Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
"Spring Fling" last Friday, you<lb/>
really missed a wild party.<lb/>
And for those who did attend,<lb/>
you sure won't want to miss it<lb/>
next year at the Phi Tau house.<lb/>
A total of 18 free kegs were<lb/>
provided.<lb/>
Congratulations go out to<lb/>
Sammy Hicks, the winner of the<lb/>
all expense paid beach weekend<lb/>
for two.<lb/>
A special thanks goes out for<lb/>
those sponsors who made it all<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
Full Gospel<lb/>
Are you tired of living a life of<lb/>
temporary happiness, shallow<lb/>
relationships, and phoney peace?<lb/>
Then come and here testimon-<lb/>
ies of fellow students who have<lb/>
found real peace and joy through<lb/>
a personal relationship with Jesus<lb/>
Christ.<lb/>
The Full Gospel Student Fel-<lb/>
lowship irvites you to tonight's<lb/>
meeting Apr. 20 in Mendenhall<lb/>
221 from 7:30 to 9 p.m.<lb/>
At this meeting we will be<lb/>
sharing testimonies about what<lb/>
Jesus Christ is doing in our lives,<lb/>
sing songs of praise to Him, and<lb/>
pray fa everyone's needs.<lb/>
Gamma Theta<lb/>
There will be a Gamma Theta<lb/>
Upsilon meeting Wed April 26<lb/>
at 11 a.m. in rm. C-205 of<lb/>
Brewster.<lb/>
The purpose of this meeting is<lb/>
to elect newoffioersfor next year.<lb/>
All members who will be return-<lb/>
ing next year please attend.<lb/>
Communication 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 director ol Integon<lb/>
Corp Winston-Salem, N.C Tim<lb/>
Gilland, graphic designer for<lb/>
Sonderman Design, Charlotte,<lb/>
N.C . Rich Gnendling, artist-m-<lb/>
residence in Elizabethtown, Ky. ;<lb/>
Harry Hartofelis, graphic design-<lb/>
er for McKinney, Slver, &amp;<lb/>
Rockett, Raleigh, N.C; and<lb/>
Michael Winslow, art director of<lb/>
McKinney, Slver &amp; Rockett,<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C.<lb/>
Alumni will talk to photo-<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 Auditorium on<lb/>
Saturday at 9:30 a.m. The public<lb/>
is invited to attend the presenta-<lb/>
tion which will include current<lb/>
works by the alumni of their<lb/>
companies and their own personal<lb/>
art work.<lb/>
Sponsored by the Visual Arts<lb/>
Forum in conjunaton with the<lb/>
SGA.<lb/>
Luther Hodges<lb/>
Volunteers needed to help<lb/>
work with the Luther Hodges<lb/>
campaign. Hodges, a democrat,<lb/>
is running for the U.S. Senate. If<lb/>
interested, call 758-4666.<lb/>
Hypertension<lb/>
The Theta Alpha Chapter of<lb/>
Aplha Kappa Alpha Sorority will<lb/>
conduct their annual Hypertens-<lb/>
ion Clinic Sat April 22 at Harris'<lb/>
Grocery Store from 10 a.m. until 2<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Blood pressure will be taken<lb/>
and pamphlets will be distribut-<lb/>
ed. Take advantage of this free,<lb/>
healthy and helpful opportunity.<lb/>
Homecoming<lb/>
Would the Homecoming Court<lb/>
or any one who could identify the<lb/>
homecoming court please come<lb/>
by the Buc office Mon April 25<lb/>
after 6 p.m.<lb/>
Free flight<lb/>
The Greenville Flight Club<lb/>
will sponsor a control line model<lb/>
airplane contest on Sun. April 23.<lb/>
The contest will beheld on the<lb/>
field adjacent to the Allied Health<lb/>
Building, located at he intersect-<lb/>
ion of Hwy 264 ByPass and NC<lb/>
43.<lb/>
The event will include combat<lb/>
flying (dogfighting) and racing.<lb/>
Flyers from North Caijlina,<lb/>
South Carolina and Virgina will<lb/>
be competing fa trophies.<lb/>
The contest will begin at noon<lb/>
and last most of the afternoon.<lb/>
The public is invited to attend.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058052_0003"/><lb/>
flssjjt Hp?j<lb/>
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Jenkins honored, receives<lb/>
$900 check and<lb/>
By KAY WILLIAMS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Dr. Leo W. Jenkins was<lb/>
honored with an appreciation gift<lb/>
by the Faculty Senate a their<lb/>
meeting Tues April 18.<lb/>
The meeting was held in<lb/>
Mendenhall at 2:10 p.m.<lb/>
Jenkins was presented with a<lb/>
cashier's check for $900 to be<lb/>
used on a trip of his and Mrs.<lb/>
Jenkins' choice.<lb/>
The Faculty Senate also pre-<lb/>
sented Jenkins with luggage to be<lb/>
used on the trip.<lb/>
Dr. John Ellen, a former<lb/>
chairperson of the Senate and a<lb/>
professor in the history depart-<lb/>
ment, lauded Dr. Jenkins' efforts<lb/>
in promoting all phases of ECU,<lb/>
the city of Greenville, an 1 eastern<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
According to Ellen, the most<lb/>
well-known cliche associated with<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins is "What is Leo going<lb/>
to undertake now?<lb/>
Ellen also prasied Jenkins'<lb/>
efforts in increasing the enrol-<lb/>
lment, expanding the degree<lb/>
programs, and promoting indust-<lb/>
rial expansion.<lb/>
Ellen expressed the feelings<lb/>
of many of the Faculty Senate<lb/>
members when he thanked Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins for the 31 years he spent<lb/>
sinoerely striving to make ECU a<lb/>
major university.<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins responded to Dr.<lb/>
Ellen's remarks by thanking the<lb/>
Faculty Senate fa their coopera-<lb/>
tion with him during his 31 years<lb/>
at ECU.<lb/>
Jenkins also<lb/>
ate that he will<lb/>
Atlantic Beach.<lb/>
told the Sen-<lb/>
be moving to<lb/>
Jenkins plans to wak with<lb/>
Gov. James B. Hunt and also<lb/>
plans to host a television prog-<lb/>
ram.<lb/>
Jenkins further states that he<lb/>
does not plan to retire completely<lb/>
fa a few years even though his<lb/>
wife is strongly urging him too.<lb/>
RAIN DIDN'T STOP this student from going to dass although it was tempting.<lb/>
management<lb/>
By KAREN BREAM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The community arts manage-<lb/>
ment students, under the direct-<lb/>
ion of Amanda Loessin of the<lb/>
drama faculty, are conducting a<lb/>
fund drive on campus fa the<lb/>
educational wing of the new N.C.<lb/>
Museum of Art, Mon April 24.<lb/>
The N.C. General Assembly<lb/>
has appropriated $10 million fa<lb/>
the museum, but an additiaial $6<lb/>
millioi is needed fa the educa-<lb/>
tional wing.<lb/>
The proposed wing will house<lb/>
galleries, wakshops, lecture<lb/>
halls, a restaurant-cafeteria and<lb/>
the Mary Duke Biddle Gallery fa<lb/>
the Blind.<lb/>
TheZ. Smith Reynolds Found-<lb/>
ation of Winston-Salem has<lb/>
pledged a $1.5 million challenge<lb/>
grant.<lb/>
The museum is counting on<lb/>
Nath Carolinians to raise the<lb/>
remaining $3.5 million and a<lb/>
grass-roots appeal is being made<lb/>
to all students in Nath Carolina<lb/>
from kindergarden through col-<lb/>
lege fa a ten-cent contribution.<lb/>
Since thae are approximately<lb/>
13,000 students here, the arts<lb/>
management students hope to<lb/>
raise $1,000 on Monday.<lb/>
ECU students will have the<lb/>
opportunity to contribute fron 9<lb/>
a.m. to 3 p.m. at four campus<lb/>
locations.<lb/>
The arts management stud-<lb/>
ents will have booths set up in<lb/>
Mendenhall, on the Mall, at the<lb/>
Croatan and in front of the<lb/>
Student Suppiy Stae.<lb/>
Each year nearly 25,001)<lb/>
students visit the present mus-<lb/>
eum, but there are more than one<lb/>
millioi students in N.C. schools.<lb/>
The ECU Law Society<lb/>
And<lb/>
The Pitt County Bar Association<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
Law Day Address<lb/>
By<lb/>
U.S. Senator Robert Morgan<lb/>
Senator Morgan , A graduate of ECU, formerly chairman of the ECU<lb/>
Board of Trustees, and former N.C. Attorney General, will speak at<lb/>
the Willis buildingon Reade St. down by the river) at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
on Friday, April21.<lb/>
All students are invited j attend and meet Senator Morgan.<lb/>
A reception will follow the lecture.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058052_0004"/><lb/>
- H l m s<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 20 April 1978<lb/>
Yes, Johnny needs<lb/>
a foreign language<lb/>
The study of foreign languages in the United<lb/>
States has declined tremendously during the last<lb/>
decade, but Americans have been forced recently to<lb/>
realize how important the knowledge of foreign<lb/>
languages is in today's society.<lb/>
President Carter's trip to Europe several months<lb/>
ago brought to light just how inferior American<lb/>
citizens are when it comes to speaking a foreign<lb/>
language fluently. Carter's interpreter, Steven<lb/>
Seymour, had Carter saying that he had "abandoned<lb/>
the United States" and had come to understand the<lb/>
Polish people's "lusts" for the future.<lb/>
A group of U.S. Congressmen, led by Illinois Rep.<lb/>
Paul Simon, have protested that the U.S. is failing to<lb/>
meet the obligations under the 1975 Helsinkin<lb/>
agreement by not encouraging foreign studies.<lb/>
The agreement called upon 35 nations to<lb/>
"encourage the study of foreign languages and<lb/>
civilizations as an important means of expanding<lb/>
communication among peoples (Newsweek)<lb/>
Carter has asked the U.S. Office of Education to<lb/>
set up a national commission to examine the reasons<lb/>
which have caused the decline of foreign studies.<lb/>
An effort to improve curriculums by reinstating the<lb/>
study of foreign languages and customs in U.S.<lb/>
schools is long overdue. To assume that the<lb/>
knowledge of a foreign language in today s world is<lb/>
useless is not only absurd, but it's also egotistical.<lb/>
Many students contend that they don't need to<lb/>
study a foreign language in order to get a job. While<lb/>
this may be true fa some, many jobs require people<lb/>
who are able to speak other languages fluently. In<lb/>
many cases, it is essential that businessmen,<lb/>
lawyers, airline pilots, policemen, nurses and others<lb/>
know how to speak other languages fluently.<lb/>
Incredible though it may seem, the U.S. foreign<lb/>
service no longer requires any foreign background<lb/>
before one enters the service. State Department<lb/>
officials have said that they were forced to drop the<lb/>
requirement because so few Americans have studied<lb/>
a foreign language. (The Honolulu Advertiser, Jan.<lb/>
1978).<lb/>
Americans have haughtily assumed that people<lb/>
from other nations should learn to speak English<lb/>
instead of Americans having to learn French,<lb/>
German, Arabic, etc. What accounts for this<lb/>
arrogance of so many American people? Is it the fact<lb/>
that the U.S. is a superpower and is known by many<lb/>
as the most powerful nation in the world? Possibly.<lb/>
But Americans cannot be compared to a Frenchman,<lb/>
for example, in the area of foreign languages.<lb/>
The peoples of European nations are forced to<lb/>
learn other languages because of their geographical<lb/>
locations. It isn't unusual to meet an Italian who can<lb/>
speak four or five European languages fluently.<lb/>
Many Americans claim that they won't need to<lb/>
learn a language, that they won't ever go to Europe.<lb/>
Perhaps they haven't realized that Canada and<lb/>
Mexico are not so far away. They may someday have<lb/>
an opportunity to visit or even work in one of these<lb/>
countries, in which case it would be essential to know<lb/>
French and Spanish fluently.<lb/>
Many people still believe that the U.S. is isolated<lb/>
from Europe; they don't realize how wrong they are.<lb/>
With the mass communications and international<lb/>
transportation that we have today, the world is no<lb/>
longer as large as once believed.<lb/>
If the U.S. wants to continue to be considered a<lb/>
great nation, then it must strive to improve<lb/>
Americans' knowledge of foreign languages and<lb/>
cultures. It has a long way to go to catch up with<lb/>
Europe.<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Reader responds to letter on WRQR<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
It seems fairly evident<lb/>
from Clyde Thomas's letter to<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD that he did not<lb/>
research his topic adequately. He<lb/>
oondemns the large anti-WRQR<lb/>
faction that exists and advises<lb/>
them to support an FM station at<lb/>
ECU instead.<lb/>
He obviously does not under-<lb/>
stand what is involved when<lb/>
you're contemplating a complete-<lb/>
ly new station. A frequency<lb/>
search must be done; there is<lb/>
long and complicated legal man-<lb/>
euvering with the FCC, and if<lb/>
FCC approval is given, equip-<lb/>
ment, transmitting, tests, etc<lb/>
must be brought together.<lb/>
Putting a new station on the<lb/>
air these days can take years if<lb/>
and when FCC approval is<lb/>
gained.<lb/>
Issue is taken with WRQR<lb/>
because t is already on the air<lb/>
and, up until May of 1977, was<lb/>
famous for its sane, alternative<lb/>
adult programming.<lb/>
Due to the ownermanage-<lb/>
ment unending desire to earn<lb/>
more and more of the almighty<lb/>
dollar, a switch in formats was<lb/>
made.<lb/>
They have tricked many hon-<lb/>
est and unsuspecting area mer-<lb/>
chants into believing WRQR is<lb/>
now programming more accept-<lb/>
able music and have many, many<lb/>
more listeners than before.<lb/>
The truth of the matter is they<lb/>
have alienated so many former<lb/>
and potential listeners because of<lb/>
their cold, tastless and talentless<lb/>
automated daytime program-<lb/>
ming, and also because of Steve<lb/>
Hardy's attempt to force his own<lb/>
questionable personal tastes in<lb/>
music upon the listeners.<lb/>
Survey seem to indicate<lb/>
WRQR is getting killed in the<lb/>
ratings during the day but are at<lb/>
near the top at night when<lb/>
tasteful, live programming re-<lb/>
turns to WRQR. I personally<lb/>
don't know a single person that'<lb/>
listens to daytime WRQR.<lb/>
I support totally the idea of<lb/>
an FM station at ECU. However,<lb/>
trying to educate the general<lb/>
public about WRQR and hoping<lb/>
they in turn can pressure WRQR<lb/>
to program in the public interest -<lb/>
in a tasteful and adult manner - is<lb/>
much more feasible at this point<lb/>
than an effort to create a totally<lb/>
new station.<lb/>
Jim Blumenthal<lb/>
Dept. wants accreditation<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
After researching the pos-<lb/>
sibility of membership into<lb/>
American Society of Interior<lb/>
Design (ASID), we feel that much<lb/>
action remains to be taken<lb/>
towards curriculum change to<lb/>
receive accreditation from this<lb/>
society.<lb/>
Things that have to be done to<lb/>
qualify the Housing and Manage-<lb/>
ment Department for member-<lb/>
ship in ASID are curriculum<lb/>
changes. This would include<lb/>
bringing in more art oourses -<lb/>
specifically rendering - including<lb/>
accounting, merchandising, con-<lb/>
sumer behavior, and economics.<lb/>
The change would also delete<lb/>
such courses as the basic home<lb/>
economics core oourses. Only two<lb/>
or three oourses outside one's<lb/>
area of concentration would be<lb/>
required in home eoonomics.<lb/>
There is no way that this can<lb/>
go any further without the<lb/>
backing of you students in the<lb/>
Department of Housing and Man-<lb/>
agement concentrating in interior<lb/>
deooration.<lb/>
Debora Brewer<lb/>
April 1 'review' upsets coed<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Of all the NERVE No<lb/>
wonder there was no one listed as<lb/>
the author of that disgusting,<lb/>
repulsive sacreligious piece of<lb/>
junk in the April 1 edtion of<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD. I'd be asham-<lb/>
ed to admit it too!<lb/>
I, along with many others, we<lb/>
in disbelief that anyone would<lb/>
dare to write something of that<lb/>
oontext. Making jokes about<lb/>
individualsand groups on campus<lb/>
is one thing, but a critical review<lb/>
about the Second Coming of<lb/>
Jesus Christcome in now. Isn't<lb/>
that going a bit oo far?!<lb/>
I'm no so-caJlod "Jesus<lb/>
Freak" and I don't attend church<lb/>
every Sunday, but I know when<lb/>
I've gone too far and I think I<lb/>
know when to stop. I think the<lb/>
suthor of that "Second Coining"<lb/>
article needs a few lessons! It was<lb/>
definitely done in POOR taste.<lb/>
Pissed Off<lb/>
LuLane Coates<lb/>
<pb facs="00058052_0005"/><lb/>
 ?<lb/>
?i<lb/>
MOHHH<lb/>
U.S. plays important<lb/>
role in Asian issues<lb/>
20 April 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Pay 5<lb/>
BvRICHYSMITJ-i<lb/>
and GEORGE OLSEN<lb/>
Staff Writers<lb/>
The eleventh annual Asian<lb/>
Symposium was presented Tues-<lb/>
day in Brewster.<lb/>
The theme for the symposium<lb/>
was "Emerging Trends in Asia:<lb/>
Implications fa U.S. Relations<lb/>
Dr. Avatar Singh, coordinator<lb/>
tor the Asian Studies Program<lb/>
and a professor of sociology and<lb/>
anthropology at ECU, opened the<lb/>
all day affair with welcoming<lb/>
remarks.<lb/>
As Dr. Singh spoke on com-<lb/>
munication, he introduced the<lb/>
first speaker.<lb/>
Sh. Ramesh Upadhayay,<lb/>
senior program officer of the<lb/>
Regional Bureau for Asia and<lb/>
Pacific, United Nations, spoke on<lb/>
"Soci-economic Trends in Asia<lb/>
and the U.S<lb/>
"Asia is a picture of wide<lb/>
diversity he began.<lb/>
 It occupies a vast part of the<lb/>
world Upadhayay continued.<lb/>
Upadhayay expressed the sen-<lb/>
timents of Asia in relation to the<lb/>
United States.<lb/>
Despair is expressed at things<lb/>
that are not happening, he added.<lb/>
There is much improvement<lb/>
along the lines of public health<lb/>
and the prevention of disease.<lb/>
"The life span of Asians has<lb/>
expanded from 44.6 years to 48.5<lb/>
years Upadhayay stated.<lb/>
"Emerging are highly trained<lb/>
people he continued.<lb/>
These Asian countries are<lb/>
continuing this descent rate of<lb/>
growth.<lb/>
"But this is only one sid' of<lb/>
the story Upadhayay stated.<lb/>
The rate of unemployment is<lb/>
also great in Asian countries.<lb/>
There are present economic<lb/>
demands and challenges in the<lb/>
social economic development<lb/>
realm, he continued.<lb/>
The role of the United States<lb/>
plays an important part in issues<lb/>
that confront Asian oountries.<lb/>
It takes western democracy<lb/>
and values, to whip the problem<lb/>
of the mass, Upadhahay said<lb/>
Ui. Ralph Braioanti, dJan.es<lb/>
B. Duke Professor of Political<lb/>
Science, Duke University, follow-<lb/>
ed with his topic on "Develop-<lb/>
mental Issues in Pakistan and<lb/>
India<lb/>
Dr. Young-Dan I Song,<lb/>
department of political science,<lb/>
ECU, presided.<lb/>
The afternoon session held<lb/>
two distinguished speakers again<lb/>
speaking on the trends in Asian<lb/>
oountries.<lb/>
Dr. W. Rasaputram, Embassy<lb/>
of Sri Lanka, director to the<lb/>
International Monetary Fund,<lb/>
spoke on "Third World Econo-<lb/>
mies: Implications for U.S. Rela-<lb/>
tions<lb/>
Widening influence and great-<lb/>
er decision making power is<lb/>
crucial if the Third World coun-<lb/>
tries are to develolp, according to<lb/>
Dr. W. Rasaputram.<lb/>
Rasaputram said that the<lb/>
underdeveloped Third World<lb/>
nations are looking for co-opera-<lb/>
tion with the developed nations,<lb/>
not a confrontation.<lb/>
Points in favor for the devel-<lb/>
opment of the Third World are<lb/>
several minerals, including baux-<lb/>
ite and copper, according to<lb/>
Rasaputram.<lb/>
Development is hampered by<lb/>
the youth of the majority of the<lb/>
Third World's population, Rasa-<lb/>
putram said.<lb/>
Another problem, is the pop-<lb/>
ulation growth of the underdevel-<lb/>
oped nations, which isthreetimes<lb/>
that of the developed nations.<lb/>
However, the youth of the<lb/>
Third World take a great interest<lb/>
in developing their nation and<lb/>
want a bigger share of the<lb/>
decision making process, accord-<lb/>
ing to Rasaputram.<lb/>
Dr. Anthony J. Papalas,<lb/>
department of history, ECU,<lb/>
presided.<lb/>
Dr. Wen-hui Tsai, Indiana<lb/>
University, followed and conclu-<lb/>
ded the afternoon with the topic<lb/>
"Power Transformation in Tai-<lb/>
wan Today<lb/>
Professor Luis Acevz, depart-<lb/>
ment of foreign languages and<lb/>
literature, ECU presided.<lb/>
The evening session of the<lb/>
symposium was held at the<lb/>
Woman's Club Building, Park-<lb/>
view Drive, Greenville.<lb/>
Dr. W. Rasaputram, Embassy<lb/>
of Sri Lanka, again opened the<lb/>
evening with the topic "Women<lb/>
in Sri Lanka: Their Role in<lb/>
Society<lb/>
Elizabeth E. Savage, chair-<lb/>
person of the International Affairs<lb/>
Department, Greenville Woman's<lb/>
CLub, presided.<lb/>
Later in the evening an<lb/>
International Talent Show was<lb/>
presented including films on<lb/>
Asia.<lb/>
Dr. Ralph Birohard, depart-<lb/>
ment of geography, ended the<lb/>
evening with concluding remarks.<lb/>
The Asian Studies Symposium<lb/>
was sponsored by the office of<lb/>
International Studies at ECU and<lb/>
the Student Government Associa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The Institute For Self Study presents lectures<lb/>
from<lb/>
"The Psycology of Man's Possible Evolution<lb/>
First lecture is Mon. Apr. 24 in<lb/>
room 136 of the Willis building at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
The public is invited, no admission.<lb/>
SOME RAIN, A comfortable window ledge, and a book<lb/>
I<lb/>
OwUMJxpML<lb/>
mOJAM RESTAURJUfT<lb/>
$1.00 OFF<lb/>
ANY PIZZA WITH COUPON<lb/>
2713 E. 10111 STREET<lb/>
Offers expires Apr! 27, 1978.<lb/>
STOCK REDUCTION SALE<lb/>
We are overstocked in our Ladies' sportswear and we are reducing prices to lower<lb/>
our inventory. 30 off on our best selling styles of tops, blouses , and sportswear.<lb/>
Misses collections in white, blue , and pink:<lb/>
Blazer was $25.88 now $17.46<lb/>
Slacks were $17.88 now $11.00<lb/>
Shorts were $9.88 now $6.86<lb/>
Vest was $10.88 now $746<lb/>
Skirt was $14.88 now $9.86<lb/>
Men's short sleeve dress shirts reg. $12.00 HOW $7.88 to $9.88<lb/>
Good selection of tennis shorts $7.88 tennis shirt8 $6iJ8<lb/>
Men's short sleeve western shirts $6.84 slightly irregular )<lb/>
Blouses $&amp;86to $10.86 were up to $14.88<lb/>
Tops $?86to $5.86 were up to $10.88 ?<lb/>
Sundresses $7.46 were $12.88 <lb/>
Men's short sleeve golf shirts $7JJ8<lb/>
iv&amp; r tactory<lb/>
MASTER CHARGE -?-<lb/>
703 MECIIVILU BLVD. ? MCOtVILLf, ?.?. 27tS?j<lb/>
019) 796-0337<lb/>
and<lb/>
VISA WELCOMED<lb/>
SALE BEGINS THUR THUR. APRIL 20TH<lb/>
ENDS MON. APRD. 24TH<lb/>
monfri. 10-9pm sat. 10-6pm<lb/>
<pb facs="00058052_0006"/><lb/>
BH<lb/>
Page6 FOUNTAINHEAD 20April 1978<lb/>
Greek forum<lb/>
ByRICKIGUARMIS<lb/>
Co-Greek Public Relations<lb/>
Christmas yes Christmas.<lb/>
Let's think about Christmas for a<lb/>
while.<lb/>
Nowadays Christmas decora-<lb/>
tions pop up Thanksgiving if not<lb/>
before.<lb/>
Preparations begin for din-<lb/>
ners, get together, and parties.<lb/>
All the planning that goes into<lb/>
Saads Shoe Shop<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
at<lb/>
College View Cleaners<lb/>
this holiday seems in vain though.<lb/>
After weeks of planning the big<lb/>
day comes only to slip away as<lb/>
quickly as it got here.<lb/>
And just like Christmas comes<lb/>
and goes, so does Greek Week.<lb/>
Fraternities and sororities<lb/>
worked hard last week and fa the<lb/>
past few weeks to make Greek<lb/>
Week, 1978 a suocess.<lb/>
And a success it was!<lb/>
Greeks came together and<lb/>
shared in competitions and good<lb/>
times in a week that they will not<lb/>
soon forget.<lb/>
Participation is the key word<lb/>
during Greek Week.<lb/>
It's a week to take pride in<lb/>
your group and your achieve-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
Looking from a broader point<lb/>
of view, Greek Week serves as a<lb/>
week for taking pride not only in<lb/>
your fraternity and sorority but<lb/>
more important in the entire<lb/>
Greek system and what being a<lb/>
Greek at ECU stands for.<lb/>
Sure, being a Greek stands fa<lb/>
fun and partying, but there's a<lb/>
deeper sense of impatance and<lb/>
commitment in being a Greek.<lb/>
Making lasting friendships,<lb/>
serving the school and commun-<lb/>
ity, and striving fa scholastic<lb/>
achievement are also components<lb/>
of being a Greek.<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENT<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma soror-<lb/>
ity celebrated its Founder's Day<lb/>
Tues April 18, fa all the sisters<lb/>
and alumni.<lb/>
The eightieth birthday of the<lb/>
soraity was toasted with a dinner<lb/>
and singing.<lb/>
The Tri-Sigs will hold their<lb/>
Spring Famal at the Ramada Inn,<lb/>
Fri April 21, fran 8 a.m. to 1<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
The Sigma Phi Epsilon frater-<lb/>
nity is finishing up final plans fa<lb/>
their Beach Weekend April 21,<lb/>
22, and 23 at Atlantic Beach.<lb/>
Sig Ep senia Taiy Burden is<lb/>
presenting his senia art show<lb/>
this week at NCNB downtown.<lb/>
The Phi Tau fraternity is<lb/>
happy to announce that the<lb/>
Spring Fling was a suocess and<lb/>
plan to make this an annual<lb/>
event.<lb/>
Sammy Hicks of Greenville<lb/>
was the winner of the Beach<lb/>
Weekend fa two given by the Phi<lb/>
Taus.<lb/>
Suzanne Lamm was recently<lb/>
selected as the new Phi Kappa<lb/>
Tau sweetheart.<lb/>
The Phi Taus will be traveling<lb/>
to Virginia Beach. A; .121-23 fa<lb/>
their annual Beach V :?kend.<lb/>
Art alum ni to discuss<lb/>
commercial art field<lb/>
ByJEANNIE WILLIAMS<lb/>
Assistant NewsEdita<lb/>
Alumni of the ECU School of<lb/>
Art communications arts program<lb/>
will meet with communication<lb/>
arts classes here Friday to discuss<lb/>
various aspects of the graphic<lb/>
design field and the job market.<lb/>
Visiting alumni are Debbie<lb/>
Harlee, art directa of Integon<lb/>
Cap Winstai-Salem; Tim<lb/>
Gilland, graphic designer fa<lb/>
Saiderman Design, Charlotte;<lb/>
Rich Gnendling, artist-in-<lb/>
residence in Elizabethtown, Ky<lb/>
Harry Hartofelis, garphic design-<lb/>
er fa McKinney, Stiver &amp;<lb/>
Rockett, Raleigh; and Michael<lb/>
Winslow, art directa of<lb/>
McKinney, Sliver &amp; Rockett.<lb/>
All of the visiting alumni<lb/>
graduated from ECU with a BFA<lb/>
in commercial art (CA) and have<lb/>
been in their job fields fa a<lb/>
period of two to six years.<lb/>
Melody Harrison, s senia CA<lb/>
maja and vice-president of bus-<lb/>
iness affairs fa Design Associat-<lb/>
es, a VAF-funded aganizatioi,<lb/>
helped coadinate the event.<lb/>
Harrison said that the alumni<lb/>
will meet with different levels of<lb/>
Dhotoaranhv illustration and<lb/>
AAAKE PLANS TO ATTEND<lb/>
" HONOR LEO JENKINS NIGHT<lb/>
99<lb/>
ON TUESDAY APRIL 25TH<lb/>
LIVE DINNER MUSIC. 4:30-6:30 at JONES CAFETERIA<lb/>
PRIME RIB of ROAST TOSSED SALAD<lb/>
MENU: GREEN BEANS ALMONDINE ASSORTED ROLLS<lb/>
BAKED POTATOE STRAWBERRY SHORTCAKE<lb/>
Free for Board Students<lb/>
$3.65 for all other guests<lb/>
graphic design classes Friday<lb/>
morning and talk with them on a<lb/>
level that they can understand<lb/>
about the field of commercial art.<lb/>
The alumni will each take a<lb/>
different level of the classes and<lb/>
talk to them about the current job<lb/>
market and possibilities to give<lb/>
them an idea of what it's really<lb/>
like out there, said Harrison. ,<lb/>
It also gives the students a<lb/>
chance toget professional evalua-<lb/>
tions of their wak she added.<lb/>
A roundtable (question and<lb/>
answer) session will be held in<lb/>
Jenkins Art Building in Room<lb/>
1325 at 11 a.m.<lb/>
The public is invited to attend<lb/>
and to participate in the session.<lb/>
A slide presentation will be<lb/>
held Saturday maning in Jenkins<lb/>
auditaium at 930. The public is<lb/>
invited to attend.<lb/>
The slide show will feature a<lb/>
six-projecta presentation by Tim<lb/>
Gilland of an agency to get an<lb/>
aocount.<lb/>
Slides by Rich Gnendling will<lb/>
show his wak with editaial<lb/>
design and educatiaial TV as well<lb/>
as sane of his own wak in fine<lb/>
arts.<lb/>
Griendling waked with educ-<lb/>
atiaial TV with WAVE-TV in<lb/>
Louisville, Kentucky, an NBC<lb/>
affiliate.<lb/>
Slides will also be shown by<lb/>
Michael Winslow and Harry<lb/>
Hartofelis of their agency's wak.<lb/>
On Friday afternoon the alum-<lb/>
ni will meet with CA serial and<lb/>
aitique senia patfolois<lb/>
Scott Brandt, a seniu t A<lb/>
maja and president of Des?tr.<lb/>
Associates, said that the perse lai<lb/>
interviews and aitiqueswoulc be<lb/>
very helpful.<lb/>
"It gives us a chance to .et a<lb/>
professional evaluation of a job<lb/>
patfolois and an expenenoe vith<lb/>
interviews Brandt said.<lb/>
"The current update provided<lb/>
by the aitique and the class<lb/>
discussions with the alumni vtll<lb/>
let us know where the jobs ae,<lb/>
i. id how to get started, he<lb/>
added<lb/>
<pb facs="00058052_0007"/><lb/>
vHm<lb/>
Tsfvf'v-v w<lb/>
??nBHHV<lb/>
??H<lb/>
Interior design students offer solution<lb/>
2D April 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
How to modify a standard five-room apartment<lb/>
By FRANCEINE PERRY<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
The Problem: How to modify a<lb/>
standard five-room apartment<lb/>
into an attractive and comfortable<lb/>
interior, without major alterations<lb/>
and expenditure.<lb/>
The Solution: Come and see<lb/>
it, at 504 East Ninth Street,<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Twelve interior design seniors<lb/>
in the ECU School of Art are in<lb/>
the process of revitalizing that<lb/>
typical living spacethe two-bed-<lb/>
room apartmentin an old uni-<lb/>
versity owned house just off the<lb/>
main campus.<lb/>
Working from their own<lb/>
designs, and on a limited budget,<lb/>
the students have spent many<lb/>
weeks on the project, wtvch is a<lb/>
kind of "laboratory" requirement<lb/>
for graduation in interior design.<lb/>
"When people move into<lb/>
apartments, they are not allowed<lb/>
to make a lot of changes in their<lb/>
walls or in the actual structure<lb/>
explained student designer Sandy<lb/>
Schlosser of Arendtsville, Pa.<lb/>
"One of our goals in this<lb/>
project is to help the public<lb/>
realize that a good-looking space<lb/>
can be established within these<lb/>
restrictions without costing a<lb/>
great deal<lb/>
The completed project will be<lb/>
open for viewing Sun April 23<lb/>
from 2to6 p.m and during April<lb/>
24-28, from 2 to 9 p.m.<lb/>
Students will be on hand to<lb/>
answer visitors' questions and<lb/>
give advice on redecoration and<lb/>
construction of inexpensive fur-<lb/>
nishings and accessories.<lb/>
Support for the project was<lb/>
provided by several High Point<lb/>
furniture merchants, the Student<lb/>
Government Association and the<lb/>
students themselves.<lb/>
Materials and supplies, as<lb/>
well as funds were donated by<lb/>
Greenville area businesses.<lb/>
The students' work on their<lb/>
"apartment" did not begin until<lb/>
they had sectioned off part of the<lb/>
Job hunting book<lb/>
proves valuable guide<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
A unique magazine, The<lb/>
Graduate, will be given free to all<lb/>
ECU graduating seniors this<lb/>
spring, compliments of the Alum-<lb/>
ni Association and Wachovia.<lb/>
The 120-page Handbook for<lb/>
Leaving School includes informa-<lb/>
tion on careers, job hunting and<lb/>
life styles, as well as numerous<lb/>
other articles designed to prepare<lb/>
seniors for life after college.<lb/>
"The Whole Job-Hunting<lb/>
Handbook" provides a guide to<lb/>
tools, advioe and inspiration for<lb/>
launching a complete job-hunting<lb/>
campaign. "Job Opportunities for<lb/>
the Class of'78" report son hiring<lb/>
trends and long-range job oppor-<lb/>
tunities in a variety of career<lb/>
areas.<lb/>
 A Woman's Guide to Getting<lb/>
Started in the Business and<lb/>
Professional World" will be of<lb/>
interest to both men and women,<lb/>
and "Graduate and Professional<lb/>
SchoolAn Overview" explores<lb/>
post-graduate education oppor-<lb/>
tunities.<lb/>
For future entrepreneurs, The<lb/>
Graduate has three articles ' Be<lb/>
Your Own Boss-The Dream vs.<lb/>
the Reality of Being Self-Employ-<lb/>
ed "Success by 30Profiles of<lb/>
People Who Have Made It'<lb/>
and "Why Would Anyone Go Into<lb/>
(Gasp) Sales?"<lb/>
Post-College life styles are<lb/>
also examined with special fea-<lb/>
tures such as "Values of the<lb/>
Seventies a discussion of some<lb/>
of the important commitments of<lb/>
the under-30 generaton.<lb/>
Other articles in The Graduate<lb/>
are. "The Graduate's Guide to<lb/>
Choosing a Place to Live and<lb/>
Work After College "Ten Great<lb/>
Graduation Trips "What Hap-<lb/>
pens to Friendships after Col-<lb/>
lege?" and "Your First Year Out:<lb/>
What Will It Cost?"<lb/>
Extra copies of The Graduate<lb/>
are available at theAlumni Asod-<lb/>
ation Office in the Mamie Jenkins<lb/>
Alumni Building.<lb/>
Located on<lb/>
E. 10th Street,<lb/>
2 doors down<lb/>
from Kings<lb/>
Sandwich .<lb/>
phone<lb/>
752-6680<lb/>
Bill McDonald<lb/>
"See me for car, home, life, health<lb/>
and business insurance!9<lb/>
Like a Rood neighbor.<lb/>
State Farm is there<lb/>
"r 0" el H'oc ng'or 'io s<lb/>
original house to use as their<lb/>
prototype five-room space. Any-<lb/>
one who has seen the house after<lb/>
previous annual interior design<lb/>
projects will probably be bewil-<lb/>
dered by the changes!<lb/>
Past classes of interior design<lb/>
students have turned the house<lb/>
into several types of dwellings, a<lb/>
suite of offices and even a<lb/>
restaurant.<lb/>
Work on the spring project<lb/>
enables them to put into actual<lb/>
practice the principles and con-<lb/>
cepts learned in classroom study.<lb/>
And sinoe they do all the<lb/>
physical work involved, exoept<lb/>
changes in plumbing and electri-<lb/>
cal wiring, long hours of labor are<lb/>
spent in buliding walls, installing<lb/>
windows and doors, laying tile<lb/>
and carpets, and painting before<lb/>
the "fun" parts?choosing and<lb/>
arranging furnishings and acces-<lb/>
sories.<lb/>
Having created a space which,<lb/>
unfinished, closely resembles the<lb/>
series of nondescript "cubes"<lb/>
typical of the standard-two-bed-<lb/>
room apartment, the students<lb/>
have demonstrated how a good<lb/>
measure of hard work and<lb/>
ingenuity can make an apartment<lb/>
exciting and original.<lb/>
Most of the furnishings were<lb/>
constructed by hand-seating and<lb/>
made of scrap bits of wood.<lb/>
Their imaginative color<lb/>
choices in window and wall<lb/>
coverings, carpets and upholstery<lb/>
fabrics do much to relieve the<lb/>
monotony of the space, which<lb/>
consists of a living-dining com-<lb/>
bination, kitchen wi;h pass-<lb/>
through, bath and bedrooms.<lb/>
ARMYNAVY STORE<lb/>
Seeping bags, camping equip<lb/>
ment, rainwear, Vietnam &amp; corn<lb/>
bat boots, dishes. Military sur<lb/>
plus<lb/>
1501 S. Evans Street<lb/>
Save$18 on<lb/>
this 10 speed<lb/>
racer<lb/>
Sale 71.99<lb/>
Reg. 89.99. Men's or women's 26" 10-speed<lb/>
racer Side pull caliper brakes, racing brakes<lb/>
with extension lever brake system, Skylark<lb/>
derailleur Ice blue finish with dark blue<lb/>
saddle and tape<lb/>
4,99<lb/>
Men's athletic shorts in<lb/>
easyare polycotton<lb/>
with back pocket, v-leg<lb/>
and three contrasting<lb/>
stripes. Sizes S, M, L, XL.<lb/>
This<lb/>
eJCPenney<lb/>
Pitt Plaza, Open 10AAA to 9:30 PAA<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058052_0008"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
PageS F0UNTA1NHEAD 20 April 1978<lb/>
.<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised<lb/>
items is required to be<lb/>
readily available tor sale at<lb/>
or below the advertised price in each A&amp;P<lb/>
Store, except as specifically noted in this ad.<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, APRIL 22 AT AP IN<lb/>
A<lb/>
D<lb/>
LOOK FOR THE ACTION PRICE SIGN - THROUGHOUT YOUR<lb/>
A4P STORE When A&amp;P buyers make a special purchase at a<lb/>
lower price, we pass the savings on to you. That lower price is<lb/>
an action price And these Action Prices are in addition to our<lb/>
money-saving weekly specials.<lb/>
? WISHBONE ITALIAN<lb/>
DRESSING<lb/>
te( LUCKS NAVY GREAT NORTMERI<lb/>
? PINTO BEANS<lb/>
1?OZ<lb/>
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CANS<lb/>
LIBBYS  AwAl<lb/>
VIENNA SAUSAGE 3 tf&amp; $T<lb/>
3 0Z $100<lb/>
CANS<lb/>
Vi 39c<lb/>
$ POTTED MEAT 5<lb/>
, HUNT S PLAIN WITH MEAT OR MUSHROOMS<lb/>
? PRIMA SALSA "fig" "?? 59c<lb/>
tejtt LONG GRAIN<lb/>
$ COMET RICE<lb/>
tej DULANY FROZEN TINY GREEN LIMAS OR<lb/>
9 TINY GREEN PEAS<lb/>
- SALUTO FROZEN<lb/>
 PARTY PIZZA<lb/>
GENERAL MILLS CEREAL<lb/>
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16 07<lb/>
PKG<lb/>
89'<lb/>
13oz $029<lb/>
RKQ. O<lb/>
15 OZ.<lb/>
PKG<lb/>
FAST ACTING<lb/>
BUFFERIN TABLETS<lb/>
3?CT<lb/>
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$ NABISCO FIG NEWTONS 79<lb/>
? DOG CHOW 25 &amp; $477<lb/>
CAT FOOO - ALL VARIETIES<lb/>
WHISKER LICKINS 3 pVo. $100<lb/>
Ta&amp;pisadeu shop)<lb/>
freshly made v?<lb/>
POTATO SALAD lb.<lb/>
sliced<lb/>
BEEF BOLOGNA lb.<lb/>
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MEAT BOLOGNA lb.<lb/>
marshies q q<lb/>
POUNDCAKE i4oz. pkg. .00<lb/>
BUCKET OF DELICIOUS<lb/>
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8 PIECE BUCKET O OQ<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
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PORTERHOUSE OR<lb/>
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RATH BRAND TENDER MILD FULLY COOKED "P NflHHff<lb/>
BONELESS HAM I $5"<lb/>
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A&amp;P Is a poultry shop<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN-FED BEEF<lb/>
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( A&amp;P Is a sausage shop<lb/>
TALMADGE FARM BRAND<lb/>
(A&amp;P Is a country farm pork shop j<lb/>
PORK CHOPS FRANKS<lb/>
OR SLICED<lb/>
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PACKAGE<lb/>
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( A&amp;P picks the best bakery items<lb/>
JANE PARKER WHOLE WHEAT OR<lb/>
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BREAD<lb/>
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SAVE<lb/>
60c<lb/>
16 OZ.<lb/>
LOAVES<lb/>
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ANN RAOE OWNER<lb/>
MACARONI &amp; CHEESE<lb/>
KRAFT LOW CALORIE FRENCH OR LOW CALORIE<lb/>
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HEARTY AND VIGOROUS<lb/>
OUR OWN TEA BAGS SS<lb/>
? GAL<lb/>
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VANITY FAIR fflWI<lb/>
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VANITY FAIR PRRfT<lb/>
BATHROOM TISSUE<lb/>
ALL FLAVORS<lb/>
EXCEPT<lb/>
BUTTER PECAN<lb/>
( AP COUPON <lb/>
A&amp;P GRADE "A" NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
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3 Ml<lb/>
cn<lb/>
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GOOD THRU SAT, APRIL 22 AT AAP IN<lb/>
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We pick the best produce<lb/>
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TIDE DETERGENT<lb/>
w <lb/>
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LIMIT ONE WITH THIS PKG.<lb/>
COUPON ANO AOOITIONAL<lb/>
7 SO OROER<lb/>
LIMIT ONE COUPON<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT. APRIL 22 AT AAP IN<lb/>
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ONLY<lb/>
TENOER?ULL TIPS<lb/>
A&amp;P COUPON<lb/>
KRAFT<lb/>
ORANGE JUICE<lb/>
FULL<lb/>
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CRISP A CRUNCHV<lb/>
FRESH?RED RIPE?PULL Of FLAVOR<lb/>
STRAWBERRIES<lb/>
OREAT FOR SALADS<lb/>
ROMA TOMATOES 3 &amp; $1?? RED RADISHES 3 .? $100<lb/>
FLORIDA GROWN RED OR WHITE ,?? . tiJAA FRESH POTTED QO<lb/>
GRAPEFRUIT 2 5 SS, $100 ROSEBUSHES MoV $3"<lb/>
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GOOD THRU SAT. APRIL 17 AT AAP IN Glil?1lvllll!M0<lb/>
<pb facs="00058052_0009"/><lb/>
BMBHMnBBBMH<lb/>
??H<lb/>
20 April 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
'Champagne Complex' is MSC Dinner Theatre<lb/>
Ecdysisism: an uncontrollable<lb/>
urge to cast off the outer<lb/>
garments.<lb/>
What would you do if you not<lb/>
only knew, but were engaged to,<lb/>
an ecdysisist? The very rich, very<lb/>
proper Helms Fell Harper is in<lb/>
exactly that position.<lb/>
Whenever his fiancee Allyn<lb/>
Macy drinks champagne, she is<lb/>
ing for the role, Charlotte was the<lb/>
only one who was sure she oould<lb/>
remove her clothes on stage.<lb/>
She won't undress complete-<lb/>
ly, but even getting down to<lb/>
"polkadot next-to-nothings" can<lb/>
be quite difficult. Charlotte<lb/>
makes quite an acting accomp-<lb/>
lishment - changing from magaz-<lb/>
ine researcher with an I.Q. of 143<lb/>
Trends<lb/>
seized with the unrestrainable<lb/>
desire to take off her clothes.<lb/>
Since Helms is the youngest<lb/>
corporate vioe-president in the<lb/>
United States, he feels he must<lb/>
either find a cure for Allyn or<lb/>
break the engagement. So begins<lb/>
the next MSC Dinner Theatre.<lb/>
Allyn, intelligent and attract-<lb/>
ive, is quite willing to be cured,<lb/>
but finds herself falling fa the<lb/>
doctor. At forty, Dr. Bowen is<lb/>
wordly and mature, always cool<lb/>
and at ease - until he find's he's<lb/>
beginning to return Allyn's<lb/>
affection.<lb/>
The doctor-patient-fiancee<lb/>
triangle iscomplicated by the fact<lb/>
that Helms is the doctor's nephew<lb/>
and by the possibility that this<lb/>
isn't love at all, but just transfer-<lb/>
ence - projecting emotions onto<lb/>
one's doctor.<lb/>
DYING TO TAKE OFF HE Ft<lb/>
CLOTHES<lb/>
Allyn Macy is played by<lb/>
Charlotte Cheatam, an. ECU<lb/>
drama major. Of those audit ion-<lb/>
toa silly drunk who can't keep her<lb/>
clothes on.<lb/>
Bob McCutcheon is a member<lb/>
of the English faculty at ECU. He<lb/>
hasappeared in other dinner<lb/>
theatre productions, but this is<lb/>
his first romantic role.<lb/>
?BUMBLING BOOBY"<lb/>
TO MACHO MALE<lb/>
Bob obviously enjoys his<lb/>
Helms Fell Harper role and plays<lb/>
with great style the youngest<lb/>
corporate vice-president in the<lb/>
United States. Bob, like Charlot-<lb/>
te, has to make some quick<lb/>
changes in character.<lb/>
He must be able to switch<lb/>
from "bumbling booby as he<lb/>
calls it, to the macho male.<lb/>
While the other characters are<lb/>
having continual emotional out-<lb/>
bursts, Dr. Bowen, played by<lb/>
Gene Hollar, remains absolutely<lb/>
calm. Gene never raises his voice<lb/>
above a conversational level.<lb/>
He makes Dr. Bowen seem<lb/>
above all the confusion and<lb/>
turmoil the others experience.<lb/>
CO-DIRECTOR WANDA Edwards supervises a scene from<lb/>
Champagne Complex<lb/>
The<lb/>
His Dr. Bowen is the sophisticat-<lb/>
ed, unruffled psychiatrist who<lb/>
always remains objective - nearly<lb/>
always.<lb/>
Gene has never appeared in a<lb/>
dinner theatre production, but<lb/>
does have quite a bit ot<lb/>
performance experience. He per-<lb/>
forms three times a week as a<lb/>
freshman composition instructor<lb/>
TWO FORMER ECU<lb/>
STUDENTS DIRECT THE<lb/>
SHOW<lb/>
Two former ECU students,<lb/>
now ECU staff members, are<lb/>
directing the show. They are<lb/>
Dana Mills and Wanda Edwards.<lb/>
Though both have extensive<lb/>
theatre experienoe, including dir-<lb/>
ecting, this is their first effort fa<lb/>
the Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Dinna Theatre productions.<lb/>
CHICKEN MARENGO,<lb/>
SCALLOPED POT A TOES<lb/>
AND GREEN BEANS<lb/>
Dinner patrons will be offered<lb/>
sliced top round with haseradish<lb/>
sauoe, Chicken Marengo, scal-<lb/>
loped potatoes, green beans<lb/>
panache, glazed carrrts, salad,<lb/>
individual loaves of French bread,<lb/>
and cherry cheesecake.<lb/>
Coffee, ioed tea, and hot tea<lb/>
are available during the meal and<lb/>
at intermission. Serving will<lb/>
begin at 630 p.m. and the play at<lb/>
8 p.m except on Sunday, when<lb/>
serving time is 430 p.m. and<lb/>
curtain time is 6 p.m.<lb/>
Public tickets are $8.50 each<lb/>
and tickets fa ECU students are<lb/>
$6.00 each. Tickets may be<lb/>
reserved by phcne, but they must<lb/>
be paid fa within 24 hours befae<lb/>
the perfamance.<lb/>
Refunds will not be given less<lb/>
than 36 hours befae the perfam-<lb/>
ance. All tickets must be pur-<lb/>
chased at least 24 hours in<lb/>
advance.<lb/>
Only 100 places are available<lb/>
fa each perfamance, so early<lb/>
?W vat ton is advised.<lb/>
Refreshingly contemporary approach to Shakespeare<lb/>
Midsummer Night's Dream 'mystical, timeless9<lb/>
By ANITA LANCASTER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
McGinnis Auditaium under-<lb/>
went a magical transfamatioi<lb/>
the night of April 18. The reason<lb/>
fa this transfamatioi was A<lb/>
Midsummer Night's Dream.<lb/>
Innovative directing and sta-<lb/>
ging techniques used by directa<lb/>
Del Lewis, combined with<lb/>
memaable pafamances by most<lb/>
of the players, made this Shakes-<lb/>
pearean oomedy well wath see-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
The production of A Midsum-<lb/>
mer Night's Dream was contem-<lb/>
porary, to say the least. The<lb/>
directa's goal was to emphasize<lb/>
that the real wald (society) and<lb/>
the fantasy wald (dreamland)<lb/>
ojrrelate.<lb/>
In the real wald, people must<lb/>
succumb to the rules laid down by<lb/>
society.<lb/>
Fa example, in the play,<lb/>
Hermia wants to marry Lysander,<lb/>
but her father will not let her<lb/>
because he wants her to marry<lb/>
Demetrius.<lb/>
When this case is brought to<lb/>
King Thesus, he tells Hermia that<lb/>
she must obey her father a die.<lb/>
Those are the laws society has<lb/>
made, so she must obey.<lb/>
However, in the fantasy wald<lb/>
situatiais change. When we<lb/>
dream, we enter into a realm<lb/>
where we can reloase our inner-<lb/>
most inhibitionsand oontrol situa-<lb/>
tions so that the outcome will be<lb/>
favaable.<lb/>
This emphasis oi the corela-<lb/>
tioi between the fantasy wald<lb/>
and the real wald is shown in<lb/>
several ways.<lb/>
First, there is the double-<lb/>
casting of ThesusOberon and<lb/>
HippdytaTitania-the king and<lb/>
queen of the real wald and the<lb/>
fantasy wald, respectively;<lb/>
PhilostratePuck; and, the atten-<lb/>
dantsfairies.<lb/>
In ader to show the charctei s'<lb/>
transition from the real wald to<lb/>
the fantasy wald thae was just a<lb/>
mere shedding of what looked to<lb/>
be an outer costume and a change<lb/>
in the charactas' movement.<lb/>
In the real wald, these<lb/>
attendants were very stiff in their<lb/>
movement and wore an outa<lb/>
ell of dothing. But as they<lb/>
made the transition to the fantasy<lb/>
wald, they shed their outer<lb/>
clothing and thus shed the<lb/>
inhibitions of their waking state<lb/>
and allowed their true psyche to<lb/>
emerge.<lb/>
Another production-plus was<lb/>
the seemingly inherent characta<lb/>
movement. Nrt a moment passed<lb/>
when there was no physical<lb/>
movement on the stage.<lb/>
One memaable scene gave us<lb/>
a sleeping Titania in the fae-<lb/>
ground; in the background, the<lb/>
fairies are frenetic. When the four<lb/>
lovers were sleeping, Puck, a<lb/>
fairy, was swinging from a rope,<lb/>
and so on. The physical move-<lb/>
ment on the stage added greatly<lb/>
to the rhythm of the play. Without<lb/>
this oonstant gesticulation, the<lb/>
audience would have lost much of<lb/>
its intaest after the first five<lb/>
minutes.<lb/>
The stage and technicals also<lb/>
added greatly to the overall<lb/>
effectiveness of A Midsummer<lb/>
Night's Dream. The set, designed<lb/>
by Edward Hanes, was a non-<lb/>
localized unit set. It did not<lb/>
designate any particular time a<lb/>
place. Instead, it aeated a<lb/>
mystical, magical effect fa the<lb/>
viewer to admire.<lb/>
The unique combination of<lb/>
music, lighting, and costumes<lb/>
aided the viewer in seeing the<lb/>
transfamatioi fron the wold of<lb/>
reality to the wold of fantasy.<lb/>
A trans! uscent backdrop<lb/>
("back projection") was used to<lb/>
change the "cola" of the soene<lb/>
when the fantasy wold was to<lb/>
appear.<lb/>
At the same time, music,<lb/>
which had a mystical tone, was<lb/>
played.<lb/>
The oostumes won by the<lb/>
fairies were extraodinary. The<lb/>
wearables were made of a silver<lb/>
material and covered only the<lb/>
gentilia.<lb/>
With respect to almost all the<lb/>
perfamances I have nothing but<lb/>
supalatives. The "oaftsmen"<lb/>
were superb. The group, consist-<lb/>
ing of Christopher Kara-Eneff,<lb/>
Steve Willifad, Paul Maltsby,<lb/>
Join Denny Jeta, Kim Shipley,<lb/>
and Butch White.provided a most<lb/>
entertaining and maniacal comic<lb/>
melange. Kara-Eneff s perfam-<lb/>
ance was especially refined. He<lb/>
managed to capture the essence<lb/>
of the characta in voioe and<lb/>
figure.<lb/>
A memaable example of his<lb/>
tour de faoe was the metamo-<lb/>
phosis of his characta into an<lb/>
ass; a nasty turn caused by one<lb/>
of Puck's pranks.<lb/>
The pafamanoe by Holly<lb/>
Jaeme was also on the mark.<lb/>
Her charactaization of the love-<lb/>
sick, loveian Helena was beauti-<lb/>
fully developed. The oombination<lb/>
of ha vocal and physical ex-<lb/>
pression aeated a haunting u-<lb/>
niqueness about ha characta.<lb/>
Sally Qodfelta' s pafamanos<lb/>
as Hamia was equally well done<lb/>
save fa ha ova-animated facial<lb/>
expressions. She's hopelessly<lb/>
melodramatic.<lb/>
Denny Wright gives us a<lb/>
middle-of-the-road rendition of<lb/>
Puck. Denny looked like the<lb/>
Cupid fugure he was to represent,<lb/>
but he did no come off as being<lb/>
the mischievous pranksta he was<lb/>
to become. The enthusiasm of<lb/>
Puck was somewhat lost in the<lb/>
translation.<lb/>
Sara Jo Baman, who played<lb/>
HipploJytaTitania, was graceful<lb/>
and poised. Ha stature was<lb/>
commendable. Ha evay move<lb/>
was replete with subtle physical<lb/>
nuances. She possesses the<lb/>
agility of a Baryshnikov.<lb/>
Tony E. Medlin's highly "re-<lb/>
presentative" intapretatioi of<lb/>
Theseus was well-oonosived <lb/>
he seldom gave the irnprc. <lb/>
that he knew whae he was going<lb/>
with the role. His argument with<lb/>
Titania was as obscure in inten-<lb/>
tion as it was complex.<lb/>
But fo the big picture, A<lb/>
Midsummer Nighfs Dream com-<lb/>
bined the timeless quality inha-<lb/>
ait in all of Shakespeare's woks,<lb/>
with a refreshingly coitempoary<lb/>
approach.<lb/>
The play runs until this<lb/>
Saturday, with curtain time being<lb/>
815 p.m. nightly.<lb/>
Admission to the production is<lb/>
$2.50, with ECU students admit-<lb/>
ted free oi the Student Activity<lb/>
Card.<lb/>
Reservations may be made by<lb/>
calling the Playhouse Box Office,<lb/>
757-6390, between 10 a.m. and 4<lb/>
p.m. through tomorow.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058052_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 20 April 1978<lb/>
Conflict of choices key to The Turning Point<lb/>
By DAVID WHITSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
At some time in our lives, all<lb/>
of us are faced with making a<lb/>
decision which will drastically<lb/>
alter the course of the remainder<lb/>
of our lives.<lb/>
"The Turning Point" deals<lb/>
with the importance of making<lb/>
such choices, and accepting the<lb/>
responsibility for the choices<lb/>
which are made.<lb/>
The dramatic conflict of the<lb/>
film grows out of the frustration<lb/>
felt by Shirley MacLaine, as<lb/>
Deedee, who forsook her promis-<lb/>
ing career as a prima ballerina in<lb/>
order to marry and raise a family.<lb/>
Returning to New York with<lb/>
her daughter, who is now devel-<lb/>
oping into a promising dancer,<lb/>
Deedee is confronted by her old<lb/>
friend Emma, played by Anne<lb/>
ANNE BANCROFT<lb/>
SHIRLEY MacLAINE<lb/>
The First Annual Rebel Reading<lb/>
PUBLIC INVITED<lb/>
Karen Brock<lb/>
Terry Davis<lb/>
Colleen Flynn<lb/>
David Gerrard<lb/>
Ray Harrell<lb/>
Robert Jones<lb/>
featuring<lb/>
Peter Makuck<lb/>
Jeff Rollins<lb/>
Allison Thompson<lb/>
Luke WTiisnant<lb/>
Doug White<lb/>
Tim Wright<lb/>
reading from their work<lb/>
7:00 Monday, April 24<lb/>
in the Coffeehouse, room 15 Mendenhall<lb/>
Bancroft, who refused to give up<lb/>
her dancing fa the security of<lb/>
marriage.<lb/>
Deedee, haunted by the ques-<lb/>
tion of whether she oould have<lb/>
equalled Emma as a dancer, had<lb/>
she continued dancing, scon finds<lb/>
that she is overoome by jealous<lb/>
rage. The screen is electrically<lb/>
charged as Deedee lets out the<lb/>
accumulated "skeletons" of two<lb/>
decades of self-doubt, as she<lb/>
lambasts Emma for ruining her<lb/>
dancing career.<lb/>
Produoer-director Herbert<lb/>
Ross doesn't let the plot's con-<lb/>
flicts end there, however.<lb/>
Deedee's daughter, played by<lb/>
Leslie Browne in her film debut,<lb/>
must face the same choice that<lb/>
her mother was foroed to make a<lb/>
generation ear I iera choice which<lb/>
will have far-reaching effects on<lb/>
her life.<lb/>
For the sensitive artist, the<lb/>
choice to pursue his art as a<lb/>
career often means a lifetime of<lb/>
segregation from society.<lb/>
In order to truly develop to the<lb/>
peak of artistic expression, the<lb/>
artist must assume a lifestyle of<lb/>
self-obsolescense.<lb/>
Emma, as a prima ballerina,<lb/>
performs for the pleasure of<lb/>
TWENTIETH CENTURY-FOX s "The Turning Point introduces<lb/>
Mikhail Baryshnikov and Leslie Browne<lb/>
thousands of art-starved patrons.<lb/>
Yet her career will end soon,<lb/>
leaving her too old to bear<lb/>
children, too old to pursue any<lb/>
career other than a dance instruc-<lb/>
tor.<lb/>
Deedee, on the other hand,<lb/>
has raised a family, and has<lb/>
known the satisfaction of a warm<lb/>
family life.<lb/>
Her life has only affected a<lb/>
handful of people, compared to<lb/>
Emma's, yet it has influenced<lb/>
them deeply.<lb/>
In the utopic societies<lb/>
envisioned by Marx Engels,<lb/>
Thorean, or Skinner, the indivi-<lb/>
dual has no choioe of developing<lb/>
into an artist (to the exclusion of<lb/>
other responsibilities); in our<lb/>
society, on the other hand, the<lb/>
choioe fundamentally alters the<lb/>
life of thousands.<lb/>
The conflict of choices can<lb/>
only be resolved through the<lb/>
acceptance of responsibility. The<lb/>
individual must know his own<lb/>
goals, and act to achieve self-<lb/>
realization.<lb/>
As Emma remarks, "You<lb/>
can't look backyou can't be<lb/>
sorry<lb/>
Animation hits its maturity in<lb/>
Ralph BakshVs Fritz the Cat<lb/>
"Wickedly funny, brilliantly<lb/>
pointed and superbly executed<lb/>
The animation is uni'ormly excel-<lb/>
lent. <lb/>
-Judith Crist,<lb/>
NEW YORK MAGAZINE<lb/>
Western Sizzlin<lb/>
Steak House<lb/>
Hours: Sun. thru Thurs. 11 KM to 10:00<lb/>
Fri. Cr Sat. 11:00 to 11.00<lb/>
Thursday Lunch and Dinner Special<lb/>
No. 12 Chopped Sirloin Steak<lb/>
with or without Mushroom Gravy<lb/>
Texas Toast with Baked Potato and melted<lb/>
butter or French Friesr<lb/>
Ralph Bakshi's X-rated car-<lb/>
toon Fritz the Cat will be shown<lb/>
this Friday and Saturday night at<lb/>
7 p.m. and 9 p.m. in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Theatre as this week's Student<lb/>
Union Free Film.<lb/>
HILARIOUS CHARACTERS<lb/>
Fritz is joined in the hilarious<lb/>
satirical action by cartoon animals<lb/>
playing teenyboppers, hard hats,<lb/>
hippies, Black Panthers and<lb/>
revolutionaries.<lb/>
It's that long-hair, poetry-<lb/>
loving, white-haired, oollege<lb/>
dropout cat and his action-packed<lb/>
misadventures.<lb/>
With sexy situations, salty<lb/>
language and a realistic Manhat-<lb/>
tan backdrop, Fritz the Cat proves<lb/>
that animation has truly matured.<lb/>
MAJOR CARTOON<lb/>
BREAKTHROUGH<lb/>
Of Fritz the Cat, THE<lb/>
INDEPENDENT FILM JOURNAL<lb/>
writes, "some of the most<lb/>
beautiful, creative animation to<lb/>
be seen in a long whilepointed-<lb/>
ly and brilliantly funny and it<lb/>
always remains beautiful to look<lb/>
ata major breakthrough car-<lb/>
toon<lb/>
Admission to the film is by<lb/>
ECU ID and Activity Cards for<lb/>
students. Faculty and staff may<lb/>
use their Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Membership Cards.<lb/>
MIDNIGHT<lb/>
Tm<lb/>
All for<lb/>
$1.69<lb/>
?<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
<lb/>
fy<lb/>
ti<lb/>
H<lb/>
<lb/>
4fc<lb/>
w<lb/>
AN ADVENTURE IN EATING<lb/>
TutsSat. 11:30 p.m1:30 a.m.<lb/>
AII Subs for $1.00 with purchase off soft drink<lb/>
(not valid on dolivorios) 752-1828<lb/>
708 Evans St.<lb/>
opon MonSat. at 11:00, Sun. 12:00<lb/>
<pb facs="00058052_0011"/><lb/>
PPJ<lb/>
20 April 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
11<lb/>
'Donald DuckVPopoVSwar and Spike'<lb/>
Comics-an entertaining way to learn history<lb/>
By ROBERT L. JONES<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
There is a mild-mannered<lb/>
man in Greenville who is super-<lb/>
enthusiastic about Comics,<lb/>
Science Fiction. Fantasy, Fan-<lb/>
zines, and Fandom.<lb/>
He is Charles Lawrence,<lb/>
president of the ECU Comic Book<lb/>
Club, and owner of the Nostalgia<lb/>
Newstand.<lb/>
"I was interested in comics<lb/>
sinoe I was little, even before I<lb/>
could read Lawrenoe explains.<lb/>
"I grew out of them for a while.<lb/>
Then in 1970 I began serious<lb/>
collecting<lb/>
His personal favorites are the<lb/>
Marvel and D.C. Super Heroes,<lb/>
Donald Duck "Pogo<lb/>
"Sugar and Spike Philip Jose<lb/>
Farmer, and Richard Corben.<lb/>
When asked if comics should<lb/>
betaken seriously, Lawrence said<lb/>
yes. "Although it's considered<lb/>
throw away culture, you can study<lb/>
how it reflects the past. You can<lb/>
study the treatment of blacks, war<lb/>
propaganda, and fashion styles.<lb/>
Its a fun way to learn history<lb/>
Other than providing learning<lb/>
and pleasure benefits, comics<lb/>
have social and artistic value.<lb/>
Lawrenoe said, "It is a way of<lb/>
doing something through read-<lb/>
ing, something mentally, that you<lb/>
cant do physically. Comic strip<lb/>
panels were used as the basis for<lb/>
the Pop Art of Roy Lichtenstein.<lb/>
Painters such as Frazeta and<lb/>
Kaluta are now being highly<lb/>
acclaimed. In Europe comics and<lb/>
fantasy art have even found a<lb/>
place in the Louvre<lb/>
"We're in a boom right now<lb/>
said Lawrenoe. "TV shows and<lb/>
Movies such as "Wonder Woman<lb/>
and "Star Wars" have expanded<lb/>
a popular audience. That is one<lb/>
reason for the Mini-oonvention,<lb/>
the dub, and the store<lb/>
Larenoe opened the Nostalgia<lb/>
Newstand three months ago with<lb/>
the prodding of his business<lb/>
-poetry<lb/>
The poem which appeared in the April 11 edition of FOUNT AINHEAD<lb/>
appears below in its ENTIRETY.<lb/>
SELF-SATISFACTION<lb/>
By Jim Bellows<lb/>
A love affair is:<lb/>
A relationship a man wi'l work on<lb/>
For months to gain<lb/>
A I a s t i n g unity<lb/>
And in whi a woman can end in one ??t hour .<lb/>
If the heart could have<lb/>
Just one small assurance<lb/>
That he excelled in one small act,<lb/>
thought,<lb/>
moment,<lb/>
a touch;<lb/>
That in her mind<lb/>
Could not be surpassed<lb/>
By any other person-THAT<lb/>
Would be enough self-satisfaction<lb/>
To ease some of the heart-ache<lb/>
of losing.<lb/>
Self-satisfaction is not a lot<lb/>
But to someone who has lost<lb/>
Their first-love; it is their only smile<lb/>
In what seems a world of frowns.<lb/>
Jim Bellows is a junior from Greensboro majoring in Education.<lb/>
umvnicv?<lb/>
The<lb/>
i STUDENT UNION<lb/>
5<lb/>
presents<lb/>
SYMBOL 8<lb/>
Tues April 25<lb/>
8 PM ? On the Mall ?<lb/>
? In case of rain the<lb/>
concert will be in WrightucL<lb/>
?'r JBF mmt<lb/>
ThARLES LAWRENCE, PRESIDENT of the ECU Comic BooH Club<lb/>
partner, Mary Atkinson, owner of<lb/>
The Book Trader.<lb/>
"Charles is providing a ser-<lb/>
vice you can't get anywhere east<lb/>
of Charlotte said Atkinson.<lb/>
In Greenville there is a sizable<lb/>
student response to comics and<lb/>
fantasy, according to Lawrence.<lb/>
"Tolkein, Larry Niven,<lb/>
Micahel Mooroock, Philip Jose<lb/>
Farmer are popular authors<lb/>
?Howard De Duck Spider<lb/>
Man the Super Heroes, and<lb/>
'Star Log' are popular maga-<lb/>
zines Lawrenoe said.<lb/>
When asked to explain fan-<lb/>
dom, Lawrenoe said it's like an<lb/>
addiction. "Once you're involved<lb/>
you can't keep away from it.<lb/>
"It's also a unique means of<lb/>
communication. Whether you<lb/>
buy, sell, o. trade, it's always<lb/>
Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
great to get to know people who<lb/>
share similar interests<lb/>
On Sat April 22, at theRoxy<lb/>
the mini-convention will begin at<lb/>
10 a.m.<lb/>
Lawrenoe, and others who<lb/>
share his enthusiasm, will be<lb/>
there.<lb/>
Charles Lawrenoe maiored in<lb/>
history at ECU, and graduated in<lb/>
1977. He is from Falkland N.C<lb/>
<pb facs="00058052_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 20 April 1978<lb/>
ECU Symphony presents annual spring concert<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Works by Bach, Beethoven,<lb/>
Schubert, Barber and Stanvinsky<lb/>
will appear on the program when<lb/>
the ECU Symphony Orchestra<lb/>
presents its spring concert,<lb/>
Tues April 25, at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Under the baton of conductor<lb/>
Robert Hause, the orchestra will<lb/>
perform the Beethoven "Egmont<lb/>
Overture Opus 84, Schubert s<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
3:30-7:00<lb/>
FRI.<lb/>
FREE FRIDAY<lb/>
FROLIC FESTIVAL<lb/>
BRICE STREET<lb/>
Symphony No. 8 in B minor, D.<lb/>
759; Hause's orchestration of the<lb/>
J.S. Bach Toccata in G Major,<lb/>
BWV 916; and Igor Stanvinsky's<lb/>
"Suite from 'the Firebird<lb/>
The orchestra will accompany<lb/>
soprano soloist Belinda Bryant in<lb/>
her rendition of two arias from<lb/>
Samuel Barber's "Vanessa<lb/>
the Winter Come So<lb/>
and "Do Not Utter a<lb/>
"Must<lb/>
Soon"<lb/>
Word<lb/>
Ms.<lb/>
student<lb/>
recent<lb/>
Braynt, a graduate voioe<lb/>
, is the winner of the<lb/>
"oonoerto auditions" of<lb/>
the ECU School of Music.<lb/>
The "Egmont Overture" is<lb/>
part of the incidental music<lb/>
composed by Beethoven for<lb/>
Goethe's drama about the life of<lb/>
the Count of Egmont, which<lb/>
celeb, ates the count as a symbol<lb/>
of oourage in the struggle for<lb/>
Netherlands freedom.<lb/>
The overture's three parts<lb/>
represent the essential character<lb/>
WHtfq&amp;fa<lb/>
RIGGAN<lb/>
SHOE SHOP<lb/>
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Rick's Guitar Shop<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE ANNOUNCES<lb/>
ANNUAL SPRING SALE !<lb/>
TREMENDOUS SAVINGS STOREWIDE<lb/>
it HERNANDIS AND GARCIA GUITARS<lb/>
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it ALVAREZ GUITARS ? 40 off<lb/>
it MANY USED GUITARS ? 12 PRICE<lb/>
it GHS STRINGS ? 12 PRICE<lb/>
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it ELECTRIC GUITARS AND AMPS<lb/>
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LIVE BLUEGRASS MUSIC<lb/>
? FRI. NITE<lb/>
FRIDAY APRIL 21st ? 10:00 am<lb/>
 10:00 pm<lb/>
SATURDAY APRIL 22nd 10:00am<lb/>
207 F EAST 5th STREET<lb/>
GREENVILLE N.C. 752-2509 " 6:00 Pm<lb/>
of the hero, the emotional cur-<lb/>
rents of the drama and its final<lb/>
triumph.<lb/>
The Schubert Symphony No.<lb/>
8, with its two movements,<lb/>
"Allergo moderato" and "And-<lb/>
ante oon moto is popularly<lb/>
known as his "Unfinished and<lb/>
is one of the most frequently<lb/>
performed orchestral works.<lb/>
In his orchestra of the Bach<lb/>
Toccata, originally written for the<lb/>
harpsichord, Robert Huse has<lb/>
omitted the third part, a conclud-<lb/>
ing fugue, but repeats the<lb/>
opening "Allegro so that the<lb/>
work remains tripartitie.<lb/>
Hause began his adaptation<lb/>
during the summer of 1977 and<lb/>
oompleted it last December.<lb/>
The oonoert concludes with<lb/>
the "Firebird Suite which<lb/>
features dance music from Strav-<lb/>
insky's lengthy ballet.<lb/>
In a 1974 performance, the<lb/>
ECU Orchestra presented excer-<lb/>
pts from "Petrouchka another<lb/>
well-known Stanvinsky composit-<lb/>
ion fa the dance theatre.<lb/>
THE ECU SYMPHONY Orchestra will present its annual spring concert this Tuesday at 8.W. Robert<lb/>
Hause will conduct the orchestra.<lb/>
Stamp directs ECU Concert Band<lb/>
JACK STAMP<lb/>
By RENEE DIXON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Concert Band will<lb/>
perform in Wright Auditorium on<lb/>
Sunday April 23 at 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
The band is directed by Mr.<lb/>
Jack Stamp, a graudaie assistant<lb/>
in the ECU School of Music.<lb/>
The program includes "Spec-<lb/>
trum" for pre-recorded tape and<lb/>
band, and two classics of band<lb/>
literature, "Suite in F" by Gustav<lb/>
Hoist, and "Incantation and<lb/>
Dance" by John Barnes Chance.<lb/>
A highlight of the oonoert will<lb/>
be "Celebrations" fa Chaus<lb/>
and Wind Ensemble by Vinoent<lb/>
Persichetti.<lb/>
The University Chaale and<lb/>
Men's Glee Club will assist the<lb/>
band oi this selection.<lb/>
The program also features the<lb/>
premiere ECU perfamanoe of<lb/>
"Rondo Pequeno" written in<lb/>
1956 by Dr. Otto Henry, a<lb/>
professa in the ECU School of<lb/>
Music.<lb/>
The concert is free and cjen to<lb/>
the public.<lb/>
hJ<lb/>
TONITE<lb/>
s, THE EMBERS<lb/>
BEST IN BEACH AND TOP 40<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
?<lb/>
FRI. ? 3-7 END OF WEEK PARTY<lb/>
SAT. FINAL WEEK OF REGULAR COMPETITION<lb/>
IN SAT NITE FEVER DANCE?A?THON DONT MISS IT<lb/>
SEMI?FINALS SAT APRIL 29th<lb/>
FINALS SAT MAY 6,h<lb/>
Sun. Ladies INite<lb/>
<pb facs="00058052_0013"/><lb/>
???????B<lb/>
WM<lb/>
ft<lb/>
with<lb/>
vhich<lb/>
Strav-<lb/>
the<lb/>
xcer-<lb/>
3ther<lb/>
KJSlt-<lb/>
r<lb/>
id<lb/>
will<lb/>
or us<lb/>
icent<lb/>
and<lb/>
the<lb/>
Jthe<lb/>
3 of<lb/>
in<lb/>
, a<lb/>
i of<lb/>
?n to<lb/>
Pirates smack Maryland 9-7<lb/>
eywoysrEWAflr<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Monday night at Harrington<lb/>
Field, the East Carolina baseball<lb/>
team held off several surges by<lb/>
the Maryland Terrapins to win<lb/>
their 21st game.<lb/>
The game started off with<lb/>
both sides being retired easily in<lb/>
the first. The Pirates were ?ble to<lb/>
still control the Terpsir, tlv opof<lb/>
the second, but the Terps were<lb/>
unable to hold off the Pirates any<lb/>
longer.<lb/>
Bobby Supel started the<lb/>
inning off with a triple. Raymie<lb/>
Styons followed with a long<lb/>
sacrifice fly enabling Supel to<lb/>
score. Maoon Moye and Robert<lb/>
Brinkley then followed with two<lb/>
walks. Eddie Gates then rapped a<lb/>
single to score Moye. Billy Best,<lb/>
the next man in the line up, was<lb/>
then hit by a wild pitched ball to<lb/>
load the bases up.<lb/>
Pete Paradossi then received a<lb/>
walk enabling Brinkley to take an<lb/>
easy trot home scoring the third<lb/>
and final run of the inning.<lb/>
In the third, the Bucs were<lb/>
again able to hold Maryland off<lb/>
for the first half of the inning. In<lb/>
the bottom half of the inning<lb/>
Bobby Supel started the inning<lb/>
off by blasting the ban over the<lb/>
left field fenoe fa his seventh-<lb/>
home run of the season. This gave<lb/>
East Carolina a 4-0 lead early in<lb/>
the game.<lb/>
Maryland was able to score in<lb/>
the top r4 the fourth when Billy<lb/>
Owens sii lied to drive Mark<lb/>
Poehlman &amp;toss the plate to<lb/>
make the score 4-1.<lb/>
I he Terrapins put three hits<lb/>
together in the fifth to score<lb/>
another run to close within 4-2.<lb/>
In the sixth, with the bases<lb/>
loaded.M auire singled fa Mary-<lb/>
land to drive Kerley and Jackson<lb/>
in to kna the score at four all.<lb/>
Oswald then soaed on a wild<lb/>
pitch to put Maryland up by one.<lb/>
In the baton half of the sixth<lb/>
the Pirates refused to fold. With<lb/>
one man on, Eddie Gates hit his<lb/>
eighth home run of the year to put<lb/>
the Bucs back in the lead. That<lb/>
home run tied Eddie Gates with<lb/>
Jim Snyder (1968) fa the most<lb/>
home runs hit in one season. He<lb/>
has twelve mae regular season<lb/>
games to aeak the recad.<lb/>
In the eighth Maryland was<lb/>
again able to tie the scae when<lb/>
Kerley homered with nobody on<lb/>
base.<lb/>
In the baton of the ninth with<lb/>
the scae tied the Pirates were<lb/>
able to put the game away.<lb/>
Raymie Styons drove Butch Davis<lb/>
in fa the winning run, to make<lb/>
the final scae 7-6.<lb/>
Pete Oonaty was the winning<lb/>
pitcher raising his recad to 5-4.<lb/>
Soott Venturelli was the losing<lb/>
pitcho fa Maryland making his<lb/>
recad 2-2.<lb/>
The leading hitters fa the<lb/>
Pirates were, Bobby Supel who<lb/>
went 2-4 with a triple and a home<lb/>
run, Raymie Styons who went 2-4<lb/>
and drove in the winning run, and<lb/>
Eddie Gates who went 2-5 with<lb/>
one home run.<lb/>
TOM DURFEE ?CO-Athlete of the Week<lb/>
LINDA MASON "CO-Athlete of the Week<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
Co-Athletes<lb/>
of the week<lb/>
By DAVID MERRIAM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
This week, the "Athlete of the Week award goes to two very<lb/>
deserving people, Linda Masai and Ton Durfee.<lb/>
" Fo the first time this year, the award will be split between two<lb/>
athletes. Not only is the award being split between two people, but it is<lb/>
also between male and female athlete.<lb/>
Linda Mason receives oo Athlete of the Week" fo her fine track<lb/>
perfomances this past weekend at the Delaware State track<lb/>
Invitational held in Delaware. Linda was the only girl to win fa East<lb/>
Carolina and competed against many excellent teams.<lb/>
?I was very pleased fo Linda this past weekend stated coach<lb/>
Laurie Arrants "Linda ran very well and practiced very hard fa th.s<lb/>
meet It was nice that she won<lb/>
Aside from this past weekend, Linda has won three of the four<lb/>
meets entered. Ho only loss came at the W. Va. f ??J<lb/>
earlier this year. She has broken the school recad fo the 400 m<lb/>
hurdles, which by the way, was her own recad set last year.<lb/>
The sharer of Co Athlete of the Week is Tom Durfee.<lb/>
As a senio, Ton has been playing tennis here at ECU all four<lb/>
years From his freshmen to iunio years he was playing in the number<lb/>
one position. Na until this y. r nashe been moved to the number two<lb/>
slot. That move however, haK hindered Tom from playing his best<lb/>
at all times.<lb/>
Last week, Tom was the only member of the Pirate tennis team to<lb/>
win against in-state rival N.C. State. He also proved instrumental in<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
20 April 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 13<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
by JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Handball team<lb/>
stages exhibitions<lb/>
The East Carolina University Team Handball Club will put on an<lb/>
exhibition on Thursday, April 20 at 830 p.m. in Memoial Gym.<lb/>
The team is currently preparing to play in the National Team<lb/>
Handball championships at Hofstra University in Long Island, New<lb/>
Yak.<lb/>
Sane members of the ECU Team Handball competitive team are<lb/>
being considered fo invitatioisto try out fa the United States Olympic<lb/>
team this summer.<lb/>
The ECU team will be competing amoig 16 teams in the natioial<lb/>
champioiships which will be held on May 4-6.<lb/>
PLAYOFFSBEGIN<lb/>
Playoffs in both men's and women s soft ball competition were<lb/>
supposed to begin this week and rain has caused a great deal of havoc<lb/>
with this week's schedule so far facing postponement of several<lb/>
games.<lb/>
As it is, though, the divisional finals and all-campus championships<lb/>
are set to be played during the first part of next week.<lb/>
This week's pre-tournament women's top ten showed few real<lb/>
changes as most of the top team oontinued to win handily, especially<lb/>
the top-ranked Tyler Going-Fa-Two team, which took 19-5 and 20-0<lb/>
victoies. The second-ranked Tyler Clowns won 13-3 as bah teams<lb/>
finished the regular season at 7-0. Tuf-E-Nuf won their last game, too,<lb/>
to wind up at 6-0. The Oaten Bunnies, at 6-0, were the only Oher<lb/>
unbeaten team.<lb/>
This week's pre-tourney top ten:<lb/>
1. Tyler's Going Fo Two<lb/>
2. Tyler's Clowns<lb/>
3. Tuf-E-Nuf<lb/>
4. P. E. Majors<lb/>
5. Ootten Bunnies<lb/>
6. Alpha Phi 1<lb/>
7. Hypertension Last Chanoe<lb/>
8. Fletcher Soft-N-Pretty<lb/>
9. Fleming Floozies<lb/>
10. Alpha Xi Delta<lb/>
In men's play, the standings pretty much stayea the same,<lb/>
although the Umstead Orioles and Jones Jailers bah lost.<lb/>
Marty was out-of-town this weekend and didn't give me his top ten<lb/>
befae he left, so you'll just have to settle fo my pre-tourney top ten<lb/>
1. Soott TimeOuts 6. Belk2nd Floo SSFarm<lb/>
2. Lumber and Lightning 7. Belk Sensations<lb/>
3 Phi Kappa Tau 8. Twin Baggers<lb/>
4 Heartaeak Kids 9. Soott Pickups<lb/>
5. Jones Bones 10. Phi Epsilon Kappa<lb/>
VOLLEYBALL PLA YOFFSBEGIN<lb/>
Co-Recreational Volleyball playoffstook place earlier this week, but<lb/>
we didn't get the winners fa publication.<lb/>
The teams finished undefeated during the regular season, the<lb/>
Bumpers and the Ultimates.<lb/>
They received first round byes fo the playoffs.<lb/>
Other teams which made the playoffs were the Teke Sky Kings,<lb/>
Thrown Together, Who Knows and Kappa Sigma.<lb/>
MEANSJOHNS TAKE BADMINTON<lb/>
In Badminton Mixed Doubles action, Larry Means teamed with<lb/>
Josephine Johns fa the title. They defeated Richard Haugg and Donna<lb/>
Daggs in the finals.<lb/>
DELIGHT STILL REIGNSSUPREME<lb/>
The Monkberry Moon Delight oontinued to dominate the action in<lb/>
Co-Rec Innertube Wato Basketball play last week with a couple of<lb/>
lopsided victoies.<lb/>
The Delights sank the UnsinkaWes, 43-16, on Tuesday, then<lb/>
defeated the Sammers on Thursday, 60-14.<lb/>
The Catfish fell from the ranks of the unbeatens last week as they<lb/>
came up a player short in each of their games &amp; likewise, wound up on<lb/>
the shot end of the scae. They lost 42-30 to the Waterbugs and 30-14<lb/>
to Delta Sigma Phi.<lb/>
In one of the most exciting games of the season so far, the Aqua<lb/>
Kings topped the Splashers, 34-32.<lb/>
what head ooach Randy<lb/>
the win over St. Augustine's.<lb/>
In the Sate match, Durfee played<lb/>
Randolph called "his best game ever<lb/>
Tom beat Tom Cspikay, one of the top ranked tennis players in the<lb/>
country said Randolph. "I was very excited watching Tom in his<lb/>
victay over Cspikay.<lb/>
Holding an 11-5 recad, Tom has the best recad on the dub.<lb/>
Mow as Tom and Linda start tc peak in their success as athletes,<lb/>
they deserve the Co Athlete of the Week" award.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058052_0014"/><lb/>
Page 14 FOUNTAINHEAD 20 AprJI1978<lb/>
Karate Club brings national attention to ECU<lb/>
AL FIORE-LEADING point fighter in the Southeast ft nt kick as instructor MacDonald looks on.<lb/>
KARATE CLUB GOES through drills before upcoming tournament.<lb/>
ATTIC mm rcsTOAL week ATiTIC<lb/>
li coacart<lb/>
SUTTERSW<lb/>
THURS. M Slnmtn<lb/>
WET T-SMT CONTEST<lb/>
W<lb/>
Fw Fit Froie Festival<lb/>
from3?0-7?0 W<lb/>
MICE STREET<lb/>
raw<lb/>
MICE STREET<lb/>
SUN. MmM- FULL CMCtjrT<lb/>
2nd Aim. Bfct Raott<lb/>
EvtHMg-Itt U 6rl Foofefcaft Towna.<lb/>
ou<lb/>
?Ood<lb/>
a<lb/>
?<lb/>
Ttt<lb/>
o?<lb/>
UW 0 Co 9?t f<lb/>
Buy A Sub &amp; Get Another of the Same For<lb/>
2 Price<lb/>
Offers expires April 30th.<lb/>
Phone m ordar (a p-up or delivery ? Hwne 72-6130 521 CotenaheSt Georgetown Shoppee<lb/>
INot valid on deliveries.<lb/>
By GEORGEFRANKE<lb/>
Special to FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
Although the ECU Karate<lb/>
Club is not widely-known on<lb/>
campus, its reputation has spread<lb/>
throughout the nation as a result<lb/>
of its continued success at<lb/>
southeastern karate tournaments.<lb/>
The club has not had a losing<lb/>
season since its beginning in<lb/>
1963. This past season the club<lb/>
won tournaments in Charlotte,<lb/>
Atlanta, and Columbia, earning<lb/>
the East Coast Championship, the<lb/>
Southeast Championship, and the<lb/>
Southern States Championship.<lb/>
The Karate Club is under the<lb/>
IntramuraJs Dept which prov-<lb/>
ides the funds for several tour-<lb/>
naments each year. Competitors<lb/>
are usually from the upper ranks<lb/>
(green, brown, and black belts)<lb/>
but some students start compet-<lb/>
ing in their first year, as white<lb/>
belts. Head Instructor Bill<lb/>
McDonald, a Go-Dan, a fifth-<lb/>
degree black belt, teaches the<lb/>
advanced students. Many of<lb/>
these students are on the compet-<lb/>
ition team. Others enjoy being in<lb/>
the club without competing. The<lb/>
club operates as a team. Other<lb/>
schools have commented on the<lb/>
support the club gives to its<lb/>
members at tournaments. This<lb/>
teamwork pays off in victories: 14<lb/>
members went to the Atlanta<lb/>
Pro-Am in January, and came<lb/>
back with 14 trophies, the most of<lb/>
any club of any size there.<lb/>
Sense, or instructor, Bill<lb/>
McDonald gave praise to the<lb/>
entire club fa its successes at<lb/>
tournaments this year. However,<lb/>
one member deserves special<lb/>
recognition. Black belt Al Foire<lb/>
won five first-place trophies in<lb/>
fighting this year and, won the<lb/>
South-East Karate ssociation<lb/>
Competitor of the Year Award.<lb/>
While the competitive aspect<lb/>
of Karate is responsible for the<lb/>
ECU Karate Club's national<lb/>
recognition, there are other as-<lb/>
pects that are just as important to<lb/>
the karateist. The ECU Karate<lb/>
Club Consitiution states that <lb/>
martial arts will develop the<lb/>
dedicated student in body, mind,<lb/>
and spirit as well as providing<lb/>
him or her with an effective<lb/>
means of self-defense Many<lb/>
people join the dub for the<lb/>
physical fitness and confidence<lb/>
karate can provide.<lb/>
Several years ago beginning<lb/>
female students on two occasions<lb/>
were able to snare off an attacker<lb/>
by simply knowing how to handle<lb/>
themselves. Karate also helps<lb/>
develop self-control. A student<lb/>
once took karate here to work off<lb/>
his aggressions, at the recom-<lb/>
mendation of a psychologist. A<lb/>
The philosophy of karate is<lb/>
"based on the ancient Buddhist<lb/>
belief that the ideal state of<lb/>
existence is possible on earth by<lb/>
right living, thinking, and believ-<lb/>
ing; it promotes the idea that<lb/>
mental strength is more impor-<lb/>
tant than physical strength, even<lb/>
in the art of self-defense<lb/>
The benefits of karate are<lb/>
available to anyone who will work<lb/>
to gain them. New members are<lb/>
welcome at the beginning of each<lb/>
school year, and receive instruct-<lb/>
ion twice a week from advanced<lb/>
members of the dub. Over 360<lb/>
people started taking karate at<lb/>
ECU this school year.<lb/>
Several students have started<lb/>
here as white belts and graduates<lb/>
as black belts. Some have even<lb/>
gone on to teach Karate as a<lb/>
career. Every year, a few people<lb/>
enroll at ECU after talking with<lb/>
Karate Club members at tourn-<lb/>
aments. Karate can provide fin-<lb/>
ancial benefits as well as physical<lb/>
and spiritual benefits. Some ECU<lb/>
graduates now teach Karate for a<lb/>
living from knowledge gained<lb/>
through this i 'ub - and a former<lb/>
president of the Karate Club has<lb/>
had art ides published in national<lb/>
karate magazines<lb/>
There will be a belt test for<lb/>
students on April 27. Students<lb/>
who pass will be able to take pride<lb/>
in their accomplishment, because<lb/>
the test calls fa much knowledge<lb/>
and physical ability. On the 29th,<lb/>
the dub will get together fa its<lb/>
annual picnic. With luck, the dub<lb/>
will be able to celebrate another<lb/>
victay at the last tournament of<lb/>
the school year, which will be in<lb/>
Nafolk on April 23. With every-<lb/>
body in spedal shape fa the belt<lb/>
test the following week, the dub<lb/>
should win quite a few trophies<lb/>
and possibility add another<lb/>
championship to its string.<lb/>
Mr. McDonald gives spedal<lb/>
thanks to Dr. Wayne Edwards<lb/>
and Marty Martinez of the<lb/>
Intramural Dept. fa their suppat<lb/>
of the Karate Club. This suppat<lb/>
has enabled the dub to attend<lb/>
several tournaments this year,<lb/>
bringing further national acdaim<lb/>
to the dub and to ECU.<lb/>
STUDENTS PRACTICE SELF-defense and self realization.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058052_0015"/><lb/>
??H<lb/>
m pH <lb/>
????????????H<lb/>
?;? ??-???:?:??<lb/>
20 April 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Pcqe 15<lb/>
Late season batting surge paces Pirates, 21-13<lb/>
April 1 is sometimes known as<lb/>
April Fools' Day, and at the<lb/>
conclusion of a doubleheader<lb/>
against Old Dominion on that<lb/>
recent Saturday, that is exactly<lb/>
how the East Carolina baseball<lb/>
team felt.<lb/>
The Pirates had just dropped<lb/>
hoth ends of a doubleheader to<lb/>
the Monarchs, both by one run.<lb/>
I ne twin bill loss gave ECU a five<lb/>
game losing streak, and dipped<lb/>
the season record to 10-11.<lb/>
From that time forward,<lb/>
though, East Carolina has be-<lb/>
xxne i different team. Following<lb/>
the tCU-ODU games, the Pirates<lb/>
were batting a lowly .245 as a<lb/>
team. Suddenly, the big bats<lb/>
came alive. East Carolina has won<lb/>
II of 13 contests since then,<lb/>
including wins over nationally<lb/>
ranked North Carolina, Virginia<lb/>
Tech and South Carolina. In each<lb/>
triumph, the Pirates' bats were<lb/>
the difference. ECU scored 12<lb/>
runs against the Tar Heels, nine<lb/>
against the Hokies. and nine<lb/>
against the Gamecocks. In fact,<lb/>
before being stopped last week by<lb/>
N.C. State in the first game of a<lb/>
twin bill, ECU had scored 107<lb/>
runs in the nine previous games,<lb/>
collecting 122 hits in the process.<lb/>
The team batting average has<lb/>
jumped to a strong .290. The 1978<lb/>
Pi rates have set school records for<lb/>
most home runs (38 in 33 games),<lb/>
runs scored (229), hits (319) and<lb/>
RBI's (193). With 12 games<lb/>
remaining to be played, the totals<lb/>
will increase. Every regular in the<lb/>
lineup has hit at least one home<lb/>
run, and nine players have double<lb/>
figure RBI totals.<lb/>
All of this has second year<lb/>
ECU head coach Monte Little<lb/>
smiling broadly these days.<lb/>
"I'm thrilled with the way<lb/>
we're hitting the ball now he<lb/>
said, "especially against the<lb/>
stronger teams. We've played<lb/>
some of the top teams in the<lb/>
oountry, and have shown that we<lb/>
can beat them.<lb/>
"It's satisfying to see the<lb/>
change that has come over this<lb/>
team in the last couple of weeks<lb/>
he continued. Our people are<lb/>
beginning to play the kind of<lb/>
baseball we knew they could all<lb/>
along. They are playing relaxed,<lb/>
and are having fun. They are fun<lb/>
to coach and fun to watch<lb/>
That last statement can be<lb/>
backed up by East Carolina fans,<lb/>
who are coming out in record<lb/>
numbers to watch their team.<lb/>
Harrington Field, the Pirates'<lb/>
home park, seats 1500. When<lb/>
Clemson came to town earlier in<lb/>
the year, a crowd of close to 2000<lb/>
was on hand. The East Carolina-<lb/>
North Carolina game brought<lb/>
around 2500 to the field. Against<lb/>
the University of South Carolina,<lb/>
another over-capacity crowd was<lb/>
on hand.<lb/>
"The support of our fans has<lb/>
meant as much to our success as<lb/>
anything Little stated. "With<lb/>
them behind us, it is a pleasure to<lb/>
play. It gives you something extra<lb/>
to work fa<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
for rent Off)<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATES: needed<lb/>
May 12 thru summer and possibly<lb/>
next year. Furnished 2 bdrm.<lb/>
townhouse on SGA bus route. $58<lb/>
mo plus '3 utilities. Call Lee<lb/>
758-9721 or Mary 758-9802.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOM MATES: needed<lb/>
for a 3 bdrm. apt. at Eastbrook.<lb/>
Call Cindy 752-8405.<lb/>
TWO ROOMMATES: needed to<lb/>
live in house on 9th St. fa the<lb/>
summer. Located adjacent to<lb/>
campus, behind library. $50<lb/>
month plus utilities. 758-5151<lb/>
anytime.<lb/>
MATURE FEMALE: roommate<lb/>
desired fa summer fa an apt. 3<lb/>
blocks from campus, low rent,<lb/>
unfurnished, and has two bdrms.<lb/>
752-8336.<lb/>
NEEDED: Male roommate fa<lb/>
summer to share 2 bdrm. apt.<lb/>
with AC and pool. Rent $62 mo<lb/>
plus utilities. Call 752-2492.<lb/>
ROOMMATES NEEDED: Fe-<lb/>
male needed fa summer to share<lb/>
rent and utilities fa 2 bdrm.<lb/>
townhouse apt. on Willow St.<lb/>
Close to campus, AC, 1 Vi baths.<lb/>
Call Suzy a Card at 752-9972.<lb/>
ROOMMATES WANTED. 1 a 2<lb/>
people to share 2 bdrm. apt at<lb/>
Langston Park Apts. fa summe<lb/>
and a next year. Call David after<lb/>
11 :30 p.m.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: needed<lb/>
fa summer at Greenway apts<lb/>
rent is $58 plus utilities. Call<lb/>
Carol after 5 p.m. 756-6273.<lb/>
FOR SUBLET: 2 bdrm. apt. fa<lb/>
summer. 758-0126 Tar River<lb/>
Estates.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATES: Need-<lb/>
ed fa a 3 bdrm. apt. at<lb/>
Eastbrook. Call Cindy, 752-8405.<lb/>
ROOM MATES WANTED :1 a 2<lb/>
people to share 2 bdrm. apt. at<lb/>
Langston Park Apts. fa summer<lb/>
anda next year. Call David after<lb/>
11:30 p.m.<lb/>
NEEDED: Someone to sublease<lb/>
apt. in summer. Private on ECU<lb/>
Bus route. Close to campus. 45 ft<lb/>
living room. Perfect fa Art<lb/>
majas. Fenced in back yard. One<lb/>
bdrm. $75 mo. Steve 758-6009<lb/>
after 6 p.m.<lb/>
FEMALE STUDENT: needs a<lb/>
place to live this summer thru<lb/>
next year. Prefer to have cheap<lb/>
house a apt fairly close to<lb/>
campus. Call 758-1361, ask fa<lb/>
Mel. Leave number.<lb/>
ONE OR TWO roommates need-<lb/>
ed beginning in May fa summer<lb/>
and next year at Kings Row Apt.<lb/>
one mile from campus and on<lb/>
SGA bus route. Call Burlon at<lb/>
752-1929.<lb/>
TO SUBLET: 2 bdrm. apt. at Tar<lb/>
River Estates fa summer and<lb/>
available fa next year. 752-3573.<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT: Private en-<lb/>
trance. Located across from univ-<lb/>
ersity. Call 758-2585.<lb/>
What lies ahead in the re-<lb/>
mainder of the season fa the<lb/>
Pirates?<lb/>
"We've got 12 games left on<lb/>
the schedule said Little, "and<lb/>
each one of them is as important<lb/>
as the next. The kids know what it<lb/>
takes to win now, so I' m confident<lb/>
they'll do well. After that, we'll<lb/>
just have to wait and see, but this<lb/>
is an awfully exciting team.<lb/>
We're definitely wath watch-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
1978 BASEBALL STATIST<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERS<lb/>
Baseball naes:Here are some of<lb/>
the recads broken a tied to<lb/>
date<lb/>
Most runs scored: ECU has<lb/>
scaed 229 runs in 34 games. The<lb/>
old record was 216 set last year.<lb/>
Most triples: ECU has hit 15<lb/>
to date, the old reoad being 12 in<lb/>
1967.<lb/>
Most home runs (team): ECU<lb/>
has 38, the old reoad was 27 in<lb/>
1968.<lb/>
Most total bases (team): ECU<lb/>
ICS OVERALL RECORD:<lb/>
TTY<lb/>
HITTING<lb/>
has 500, aeaking the previous<lb/>
mark of 461 set last year.<lb/>
Most home runs (individual):<lb/>
Eddie Gates has tied Jim Sny-<lb/>
der's 1968 mark with eight.<lb/>
Most triples (individual):<lb/>
Bobby Supel has four, breaking<lb/>
the reoad of three held by nine<lb/>
ahers.<lb/>
Most career runs scaed: Pete<lb/>
Paradossi has scaed 76, surpas-<lb/>
sing the reoad of 71 held<lb/>
previously by Geoff Beast on<lb/>
21-13<lb/>
HOME: 16-3<lb/>
ROAD: 4-9<lb/>
NEUTRAL: 1-1<lb/>
NAME G AB R H 2B<lb/>
Butch Davis 27 95 25<lb/>
Robert Brinkley 31 81 16<lb/>
Billy Beat 34 119 23<lb/>
Raymie Styona 33 106 8<lb/>
Eddie Gatea 34 119 36<lb/>
Pete Paradossi 34 126 27<lb/>
Bobby Supel 34 112 33<lb/>
Jerry Carraway 34 115 15<lb/>
Macon Moye 26 72 7<lb/>
Tim Hardison 22 45 12<lb/>
Max Raynor 22 49 9<lb/>
Mite Sage 15 31 6<lb/>
Scott Layden 10 18 0<lb/>
Larry Anderaon 3 5 2<lb/>
Chip Giannettino 9 2 10<lb/>
Tommy Warrick 4 7 1<lb/>
Othera 2 0 0<lb/>
Pitcher8 Fielding<lb/>
32<lb/>
26<lb/>
36<lb/>
32<lb/>
36<lb/>
33<lb/>
30<lb/>
29<lb/>
15<lb/>
16<lb/>
15<lb/>
7<lb/>
6<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
7<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
5<lb/>
2<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
1<lb/>
3<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
3B HR TB<lb/>
2 4 55<lb/>
1 32<lb/>
1 46<lb/>
6 53<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
4<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
8 67<lb/>
5<lb/>
7<lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
50<lb/>
62<lb/>
37<lb/>
26<lb/>
22<lb/>
25<lb/>
10<lb/>
6<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
RBI<lb/>
19<lb/>
10<lb/>
16<lb/>
23<lb/>
21<lb/>
24<lb/>
23<lb/>
18<lb/>
11<lb/>
9<lb/>
8<lb/>
2<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
BB SO<lb/>
7 8<lb/>
6 12<lb/>
13 5<lb/>
11 12<lb/>
35 21<lb/>
21 6<lb/>
25 26<lb/>
12 12<lb/>
5 8<lb/>
2<lb/>
12<lb/>
7<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
5<lb/>
5<lb/>
9<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
AVC<lb/>
.337<lb/>
.321<lb/>
.303<lb/>
.302<lb/>
.303<lb/>
.262<lb/>
.268<lb/>
.252<lb/>
.208<lb/>
.356<lb/>
.306<lb/>
.226<lb/>
.333<lb/>
.400<lb/>
.500<lb/>
.286<lb/>
.000<lb/>
ECU TOTALS 34<lb/>
0PP TOTALS 34<lb/>
 No longer on team<lb/>
1102 229 319 37<lb/>
1076 145 265 40<lb/>
15 38 500 193 157 133 .290<lb/>
3 15 356 120 96 27 .246<lb/>
for sale<lb/>
FOR SALE: A 4.3 cu. ft.<lb/>
refrigerata. Great fa use in a<lb/>
dam. 758-5794 after 530 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: L60-14 inch tires<lb/>
mounted on Keystone rims. 36<lb/>
miles on tirer No saatches on<lb/>
rims. $150.00 752-9908.<lb/>
FOR SALE: VW engine parts.<lb/>
everything in good oond. 752-<lb/>
9908.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '77 Yamaha 360CC<lb/>
street bike. 243 miles. Great<lb/>
oond. Two helmets included.<lb/>
$900.00 fa whole deal. 752-9908.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1 Michelin ZX radial<lb/>
tire. Siza 18570 Sr14. Great oond.<lb/>
Only 1200 miles on tire. $40.00<lb/>
752-9908.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Realistic 4 channel<lb/>
8-track tape player, never been<lb/>
used. Sells fa $73 will take $60.<lb/>
Also Scalding Smasher tennis<lb/>
racket, sells fa $42 will take $25<lb/>
excellent cond. 4x6 wall tapestry<lb/>
fa $25 Buck hunting knife with<lb/>
case $15. Albums fa $3. 752-<lb/>
6870.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sears elec. port,<lb/>
typewriter Pica type. Excellent<lb/>
cond. Like new. $80. 758-9322<lb/>
after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Mens 26" 3 speed<lb/>
bike. Like new. Includes light<lb/>
generata and lock and chain.<lb/>
Carry bag and move. $45.00 Call<lb/>
Chris at 758-6198.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Realistic STA-65C<lb/>
stereo AMFM receiver, 2 realist-<lb/>
ic "optimus" 2-B air suspension<lb/>
speakers, plus turntable, sells<lb/>
new fa $400 plus, will deal at<lb/>
$125. Call Steve early a late<lb/>
758-8491.<lb/>
FOR SALE : 70 Hoida CL-175 in<lb/>
good cond. Only $250. Must sell<lb/>
immediately 758-9200.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Magnavox 8-track<lb/>
AMFM stereo system in excel-<lb/>
lent oond. $85 call 752-8676.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Books from education<lb/>
professional file. Low prices. Call<lb/>
Jan 752-9633 a come by 712<lb/>
Tyler.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Handmade jewelry<lb/>
fa guys and girls, turquoise,<lb/>
tigereye, jade, ivay, oaal,<lb/>
rrother of pearl, and more. Good<lb/>
quality stuff. Call Jeff 752-5070.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 69 Dodge Caoiet<lb/>
slant six engine with standard<lb/>
shift. Gun blue with white top.<lb/>
Great economy. Call 758-7434.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sanyo 8-track 4<lb/>
channel car tape player plus 2 air<lb/>
suspension speakers with 20 oz.<lb/>
magnets in good oond. A steal at<lb/>
$45. Contact Wes at 758-3413.<lb/>
YARD SALE: Sat. April 22 at<lb/>
1406 Broad St. 752-0034. Stereo<lb/>
equip camera, ciahes, books,<lb/>
mag wheels, etc. Begins at 9 a.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Double bed, book-<lb/>
case, plant stand, 4 framed<lb/>
pictures. Call a see at 200<lb/>
Geagetown apts. 758-4395.<lb/>
FOR SALE Stereo speaker. Heil<lb/>
Tempest 2-way fa $150 pair. Also<lb/>
Utah 3-way set.best offer. 752-<lb/>
0034.<lb/>
personal?<lb/>
SPEEDO TYPIST: will type<lb/>
thesis, manuscripts, term papers,<lb/>
etc. Reasonable rates. Call after 6<lb/>
p.m. 758-8241 Susan Cassidy<lb/>
TYPING: Prompt, high quality<lb/>
work at reasonable rates. 756-<lb/>
7874.<lb/>
lost<lb/>
LOST AT MOSERS FARM : keys<lb/>
left in red Budweiser cooler,<lb/>
whoevery ga the cooler has the<lb/>
keys. You can have the cooler<lb/>
with my blessings but I have a<lb/>
few one-of-a-kind keys on the<lb/>
ring. It's just a 3-inch piece of<lb/>
leather with about twelve keys on<lb/>
it. Please leave at<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD office. Reward<lb/>
can be arranged. 752-5692.<lb/>
LOST: A yellow gold aoss pencil<lb/>
engraved ML. Dickens - has<lb/>
sentimental value. Rev;ard. 758-<lb/>
6277 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
LOST: Sean Elec. slide rule<lb/>
calculata in room 205 Physic<lb/>
bldg. call 752-5636. Reward.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058052_0016"/><lb/>
Page 16 FOUNTAINHEAD 20 April 1978<lb/>
noimtaiiieertng!<lb/>
roNMMENTALSQF<lb/>
?TtoUi'SSSitoeerEg aU about? 1 snouia<lb/>
B just topn to te an aeWrfes<lb/>
Yet anyone flK(S master it Simply study-<lb/>
a<lb/>
AV3<lb/>
. ? <lb/>
.? ?? ?-?-? ?-?.liT<lb/>
. ? ?.????. v???!<lb/>
Sdft<lb/>
I<lb/>
 appropri- '3<lb/>
-ately enough,<lb/>
'starts by select-<lb/>
, ing the correct site.<lb/>
?? To do so, pick up<lb/>
. a bottle of Busch<lb/>
This is commonly<lb/>
called heading for the<lb/>
mountains.<lb/>
SB<lb/>
i'Sli<lb/>
m<lb/>
SsESfS<lb/>
y, here's<lb/>
,j where the fun be-<lb/>
gins. Hold the mountain<lb/>
' firmly in your left hand,<lb/>
grasp the mountain<lb/>
top with your right<lb/>
hand and twist<lb/>
the little fella off.<lb/>
There you go.<lb/>
"W<lb/>
itf<lb/>
3 Now for the<lb/>
t tricky part.<lb/>
Neophytes, listen<lb/>
up: the proper pour<lb/>
is straight down<lb/>
the center of the<lb/>
glass. Only in<lb/>
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