<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058054_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity for over 50 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of 8,ouu,<lb/>
this issue is 20 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
ONTHEIN9DE<lb/>
Poetp. 6<lb/>
Col lards p. 7<lb/>
James Tal ley p. 10<lb/>
A wards p. 15<lb/>
WECU goes FM<lb/>
By JEANNIE WILLIAMS<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The Media Board Tuesday<lb/>
gave approval to radio station<lb/>
WECU to convert to FM.<lb/>
John Jeter, WECU chief engi-<lb/>
neer, projected the switchover to<lb/>
take place next November a no<lb/>
later than January a February of<lb/>
next year.<lb/>
"We presented the facts to<lb/>
the Media Board and they like<lb/>
it Jeter said.<lb/>
"A frequency search conduc-<lb/>
ted by Edward Perry of the<lb/>
Educational FM Associates has<lb/>
succeeded in finding five frequen-<lb/>
cy possibilities and has suggested<lb/>
two to us said Jeter.<lb/>
"One is capable of being<lb/>
licensed at 3,000 watts and the<lb/>
other at 50,000 watts Jeter<lb/>
explained.<lb/>
Jeter discussed the upcoming<lb/>
changes at the station.<lb/>
"There will be quite a lot of<lb/>
new equipment. We'll be staying<lb/>
in the same location in Joyner<lb/>
Library but we will rebuild the<lb/>
control room, put in a new console<lb/>
and a new control board he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Jeter said that the format will<lb/>
be basically good music program-<lb/>
ming 24 hours a day, and no<lb/>
advertising except public service<lb/>
announcements.<lb/>
"We want a program or<lb/>
format that is different, one that<lb/>
the ECU mass will enjoy Jeter<lb/>
explained.<lb/>
"We think that album rock<lb/>
and some jazz will provide what<lb/>
the students want.<lb/>
"Any comments on what kind<lb/>
of music a programs students<lb/>
would like to hear next year can<lb/>
be sent to the station at WECU,<lb/>
Joyner Library Jeter added.<lb/>
Jeter reflected on the past<lb/>
quality of the station, which was<lb/>
FMin 1960.<lb/>
"There used to be an FM<lb/>
station WWWS, here in 1960, but<lb/>
a hurricane blew down the tower<lb/>
and by some mistake main-<lb/>
tenance cut up the tower with a<lb/>
blowtorch explained Jeter.<lb/>
"A makeshift tower was used<lb/>
but the station never really got<lb/>
back on the air said Jeter-<lb/>
"In the early or mid-60's the<lb/>
station went carrier current,<lb/>
which is AM" he explained<lb/>
"It was successful at first but<lb/>
the quality of the signal went<lb/>
down after awhile, especially in<lb/>
the dorms<lb/>
"Reception got to be pretty<lb/>
bad and the morale went down.<lb/>
This was evident by the fact<lb/>
that the SGA (Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Association) took-away most<lb/>
of our funds last year Jeter<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"We've been pulling through<lb/>
with a basic core of 12 to 15<lb/>
people whp are really dedicated<lb/>
Jeter said.<lb/>
Jeter commented on the pros-<lb/>
pective licensing of the station.<lb/>
"We will probably be one of<lb/>
the last educational stationstoget<lb/>
licensed sid Jeter.<lb/>
"The FCC is holding hearings<lb/>
in June on educational FM. If<lb/>
they change the rulings, any<lb/>
station not licensed now may not<lb/>
get a license Jeter said.<lb/>
Jeter has been doing research<lb/>
on the conversion since last<lb/>
summer and has been a chief<lb/>
coordinator of the switchover.<lb/>
See WECU, p. 9<lb/>
A BUSY SIDEWALK finds students pausing todiscuss plans for the<lb/>
summer or next fall.<lb/>
See WECU, p. yj p<lb/>
dorm, parking p<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Dorm rent and parking fees<lb/>
were raised fa the upcoming<lb/>
school year at the ECU Board of<lb/>
Trustees meeting Wednesday.<lb/>
Dorn rent was raised to $434<lb/>
a year, a $44 increase.<lb/>
Cliff Moore, vice-chancellor<lb/>
fa business affairs, attributed<lb/>
the increase to the rising cost of<lb/>
utilities, a pa" raise fa state<lb/>
employees, and the funding of a<lb/>
. percent from this time last year<lb/>
campus security full-time night<lb/>
dispatcher. The dispatcher will<lb/>
begin wak during the first<lb/>
sessiai of summer school.<lb/>
Parking fees were doubled to<lb/>
$10 a year. The added revenue<lb/>
will be used to grade and cover<lb/>
with gravel the dirt parking lots<lb/>
on Ninth Street, to prepare the<lb/>
area around the new utilities<lb/>
center across from the campus<lb/>
police station fa parking, and to<lb/>
pave several dirt lots on College<lb/>
Hill.<lb/>
Dr Jack Hane, directa of<lb/>
admissions, reported that fresh-<lb/>
man applications are<lb/>
Dam space fa fall semester has<lb/>
already been filled.<lb/>
The board voted to name<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Theatre after Curtis Hendrix,<lb/>
past president of the Alumni<lb/>
Association and the first person to<lb/>
leave any money to the alumni<lb/>
association in his will.<lb/>
The board also renamed the<lb/>
Afro-American Cultural Center<lb/>
the Ledonia S. Wright Afro-<lb/>
Amaican Cultural Center.<lb/>
Wright was a university employee<lb/>
who oommitted suicide in the<lb/>
early 1970's.<lb/>
She also waked with minai-<lb/>
ties ai campus.<lb/>
Kevin McCourt, sophomae<lb/>
class president, spoke to the<lb/>
board on behalf of the Student<lb/>
Government Association (SGA)<lb/>
Executive Council and called fa<lb/>
the abolition of the Media Board.<lb/>
McCourt argued that the<lb/>
Media Board differed only slight-<lb/>
ly from the old SGA Communica-<lb/>
tiois Board, and that those<lb/>
differences could have been easi-<lb/>
ly solved through amendments<lb/>
and that the student body had<lb/>
vaed three to one against the<lb/>
See MEDIA, p. 8<lb/>
man applications are up j<lb/>
Trustrated' studentscuffles<lb/>
i security director<lb/>
noev tMir, nc � ���' ��  M 5 <lb/>
guy finds it agreeable.<lb/>
By STUART MORGAN<lb/>
Staff Writa<lb/>
A couple of weeks ago, rumas<lb/>
circulated throughout campus<lb/>
concerning a fight between Joe<lb/>
Calder, directa of security, and<lb/>
an ECU student.<lb/>
"I don't want to mention the<lb/>
students name said Calder.<lb/>
"He was just hot-tempered<lb/>
and frustrated beyond his physi-<lb/>
cal endurance-he wasn't drunk.<lb/>
" He was frustrated because of<lb/>
a series of events-not ail of which<lb/>
were connected with this univer-<lb/>
sity-most were connected with<lb/>
his faeign-made vehide he had<lb/>
been having trouble with said<lb/>
Calder.<lb/>
"You know, a car can La a real<lb/>
pain Calder said.<lb/>
Calder added he just hap-<lb/>
pened to be around the student<lb/>
when the student decided to<lb/>
unleash his frustrations.<lb/>
"I was simply an object of his<lb/>
See CALDER, p. 3<lb/>
Fall semester fees due<lb/>
on earlier payment<lb/>
By JULIE EVERETTE<lb/>
Assistant News Edita<lb/>
audent fees fa fall semester<lb/>
will be due August 18, ten days<lb/>
pria to registration day, aocad-<lb/>
ing to Julian Vainright. business<lb/>
manager.<lb/>
audents who do not meet the<lb/>
deadline will be charged a late<lb/>
payment fee of $10.<lb/>
Accading to Vainright,<lb/>
several reasons pronpted the<lb/>
decision to set an earlier payment<lb/>
date.<lb/>
Vainright said the inaeased<lb/>
number of student loans, grants,<lb/>
and financial aid requires more<lb/>
time fa accessing.<lb/>
He also said tfwre was not<lb/>
sufficient room in the Cashier's<lb/>
office and Administration build-<lb/>
ing to aocornodate the students<lb/>
adequately.<lb/>
"The inaease in students<lb/>
I See FEES P- 51<lb/>
<pb facs="00058054_0002"/><lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
Pap 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 27 April 1978<lb/>
Show and sale AED picnic Bahai<lb/>
Coffeehouse Fines<lb/>
This Thursday, Friday, and<lb/>
Saturday, the Student Union<lb/>
Coffeehouse Committee presents<lb/>
three nights of excellent enter-<lb/>
tainment at 9 and 10 p.m room<lb/>
15, Mendenhall.<lb/>
Thursday and Friday nights,<lb/>
enjoy Andy Shapiro, a fine<lb/>
musician and singer.<lb/>
Fo our last show this sem-<lb/>
ester, ECU'S own Ghana Hard-<lb/>
ware Co. will perform their<lb/>
unique brand of oomedy in the<lb/>
style of Monty Python's Flying<lb/>
Circus.<lb/>
The Ghana Hardware Co.<lb/>
performed last year to packed<lb/>
houses in the drama department,<lb/>
and no less is expected this year.<lb/>
As always, admission is only<lb/>
50 oents, and that includes all the<lb/>
free eats you could possibly want.<lb/>
SOULS<lb/>
This Thursday night will be<lb/>
the final S.O.U.L.S. meeting of<lb/>
the year. All new officers will be<lb/>
installed. New officers and mem-<lb/>
bers please be prompt at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Thank you.<lb/>
Thieves<lb/>
Bike thieves are ravaging the<lb/>
campus!<lb/>
If you see any suspicious<lb/>
activity please call ihe campus<lb/>
police immediately!<lb/>
We need your help to catch<lb/>
these thieves. 757-6150.<lb/>
Outing<lb/>
The Outing Club will have its<lb/>
last meeting Thursday night in<lb/>
the basement of Memorial Gym.<lb/>
Since this is the last meeting,<lb/>
everyone isenoouraged to attend.<lb/>
inter-Varsity<lb/>
Inter-ffrsity Chriotian Fel-<lb/>
lowship will meet this Sunday<lb/>
night at the Afro-American Cult-<lb/>
ural Center, at 8 p.m. This will be<lb/>
the last meeting of the school<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Leadership<lb/>
Leadership Training Class,<lb/>
sponsored by Campus Crusade<lb/>
fa Christ, meets on Thursdays at<lb/>
7 p.m. in Brewster C-103.<lb/>
After a time of fellowship,<lb/>
there is an oppatunity to learn<lb/>
mae about how to love God and<lb/>
love others<lb/>
ATTENTION: Do you yearn to<lb/>
be fined?<lb/>
All books are due on the last<lb/>
day of class Fri April 28 in the<lb/>
Health Affairs Library.<lb/>
NASA<lb/>
Phil Thibideau, International<lb/>
Mirairs Division, Washington,<lb/>
D.C. will visit the ECU campus<lb/>
Fri April 28, to interview<lb/>
students fa a job with NASA<lb/>
Headquarters<lb/>
Qualified students should be<lb/>
willing to fill this position fa a<lb/>
minimum of two semesters with<lb/>
at least one semester of school<lb/>
intervening.<lb/>
Interested students should<lb/>
call the Co-op office (757-6979) to<lb/>
make an appointment.<lb/>
Mr. Thibideau will probably<lb/>
look fa students with at least a<lb/>
2.5G.P.A.<lb/>
Apply now<lb/>
Any student who wishes to<lb/>
apply fa edita of FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD, BUCCANEER, REBEL,<lb/>
EBONY HERALD, Head Photo-<lb/>
grapher, a WECU General<lb/>
Manager should go to the Office<lb/>
of the Dean of Student Affairs and<lb/>
fill out an application. Deadline<lb/>
fa filing is Tues May 2.<lb/>
Car wash<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi fraternity will<lb/>
have a car wash ai Sat April 29<lb/>
at the Shell Statioi on 264<lb/>
By-Pass and Arlington Blvd.<lb/>
Chug-a-lug<lb/>
How much Dr. Pepper can you<lb/>
drink in 5 minutes?<lb/>
There will be a Dr. Pepper<lb/>
chugging contest sponsaed by Nu<lb/>
Chi oolony of Alpha Sigma Phi.<lb/>
Celebrate the semester's end<lb/>
from 7-9 p.m. Thurs April 27.<lb/>
The contest begins at 8 p.m. and<lb/>
there is a 50-cent entry fee.<lb/>
First prize is a Dr. Pepper<lb/>
Igloo cooler and t-shirts to top<lb/>
finishers. Be ECU'S No. 1 Pep-<lb/>
oer.<lb/>
Fa mae infamatiai call<lb/>
Alpha Slg at 752-9845 a 756-<lb/>
0893<lb/>
'Nother car wash<lb/>
The Lambda Chi Alpha f rat-<lb/>
ernity will sponsa a car wash this<lb/>
Sat April 29, fron 10 a.m. to 3<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
It will be held at P.O. Boys on<lb/>
Diokenson Ave. and the cost will<lb/>
be $1.50.<lb/>
The Pitt Co. Humane Society<lb/>
is having its second Annual Art<lb/>
Show-Bake Sale which will be<lb/>
held on May 6, at 9 a.m all day<lb/>
on Evans St. Mall, during "Be<lb/>
Kind to Animals Week<lb/>
Free drinks and food will be<lb/>
provided all day fa the participat-<lb/>
ing artists and aaftsmen.<lb/>
Fa infamatiai call day and<lb/>
night 756-6572; nights only 758-<lb/>
0468.<lb/>
Will the artists who have<lb/>
already signed up fa this sale<lb/>
please oontact the Humane Soc-<lb/>
iety at 758-0468 a 756-6572. The<lb/>
aiginal list was misplaoed.<lb/>
Seniors<lb/>
We have a limited supply of<lb/>
announcements on hand in the<lb/>
Student Supply Stae. There are<lb/>
five in a package fa $1.50. Also,<lb/>
remember to pick up your cap and<lb/>
gown if you have not done so.<lb/>
Study<lb/>
The extended hours at Joyner<lb/>
Library during spring exams are:<lb/>
Fri. April 28 8 a.m. -11 p.m.<lb/>
Sat April 29 9 a.m. -11 p.m.<lb/>
Sun April 30 2 p.m. -12 p.m.<lb/>
Mon May 1 8 a.m. - 3 a.m.<lb/>
Tues May 2 8 a.m. - 3 a.m.<lb/>
Wed May 3 8 a.m. - 3 a.m.<lb/>
Thurs May 4 8 a.m. - 3 a.m.<lb/>
Fri May 5 8 a.m. -11 p.m.<lb/>
Sat May 6 9 a.m. -11 p.m.<lb/>
Sun May 7 2 p.m. - 3 a.m.<lb/>
Mon May 8 8 a.m. -12 p.m.<lb/>
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 fa Measur-<lb/>
ing F and Ca Ions in the Blue<lb/>
Crab, Callinectes sapidus<lb/>
Luther Hodges<lb/>
Volunteers needed to help<lb/>
wak with the Luther Hodges<lb/>
campaign. Hodges, a demoaat,<lb/>
is running fa the U.S. Senate. If<lb/>
interested, call 758-4666.<lb/>
Bike tour<lb/>
Traveling companions wanted<lb/>
fa bicycling tour to South<lb/>
America.<lb/>
Leaving May 17 from<lb/>
Winston-Salem and will be travel-<lb/>
ing back country roads in the U S.<lb/>
and the Pan-American highway in<lb/>
Central America.<lb/>
Easy pace wih plenty of time<lb/>
fa taking it easy. Not as costly<lb/>
nor as difficult as you may<lb/>
imagine. Fa mae infamatiai<lb/>
call Neil at 752-7065<lb/>
The AED pre-mea nona<lb/>
society will hold its spring picnic<lb/>
Sat April 22, beginning at 3<lb/>
p.m. at the home of Dr. Ayers. All<lb/>
members and associate members<lb/>
are invited to attend. The final<lb/>
meeting fa this semester will be<lb/>
held at Western Sizzlin Tues<lb/>
April 25, beginning at 5 p.m.<lb/>
Take a study break and try to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
A spiritual solution to wald<lb/>
economic problems, a universal<lb/>
language, abolition or prejudioe-<lb/>
come hear the Bahai viewpoint on<lb/>
these issues Wednesday evening<lb/>
at 7 p.m. in room 242 Menden-<lb/>
hall.<lb/>
Your last oppatunity to learn<lb/>
of this newest of the religions this<lb/>
semester. Everyone is weloome.<lb/>
Questions and answer discussion<lb/>
Installation Full Gospel<lb/>
The installation of new o 'ic-<lb/>
ers and members fa the League<lb/>
of Scholars will be on Thurs<lb/>
April 27 at 7:30 p.m. in room 248<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
All members please attend.<lb/>
Chess club<lb/>
The Chess Club meets each<lb/>
Tuesday evening at 730 p.m. in<lb/>
the Mendenhall Coffeehouse. All<lb/>
persons interested in chess are<lb/>
invited to attend and join in the<lb/>
oonpetition.<lb/>
Pinball champ<lb/>
The ECU Spring Pinball<lb/>
Championship was won by Rick<lb/>
Autry with high scores on three<lb/>
machines.<lb/>
Rick's scores were made on<lb/>
'Amigo 'Champ and Grand<lb/>
Prix<lb/>
Rick was awarded the grand<lb/>
prize of a $25.00 Happy Stae gift<lb/>
certificate and the championship<lb/>
trophy.<lb/>
The second place winners<lb/>
were Cheryl Boehm, James Dail,<lb/>
Gwen Daniel, John Gardner,<lb/>
Robert Kricko, Virgil Leggett,<lb/>
Jan McKeithen, Jeff Rickman,<lb/>
and Robert Rogers.<lb/>
Each winner received a T-shirt<lb/>
as their prize.<lb/>
The three-week competition,<lb/>
which ended last Thursday, invol-<lb/>
ved twelve (12) different pinball<lb/>
machines.<lb/>
The individual with the high-<lb/>
est soores overall won the grand<lb/>
prize with second prize going to<lb/>
individual winners.<lb/>
The event was sponsaed by<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Do you feel bound a insec-<lb/>
ure?<lb/>
Have you been searching in<lb/>
many different places fa answers<lb/>
to life's questions and have found<lb/>
them empty? If so what are you<lb/>
going to do with Jesus<lb/>
Christ?<lb/>
Come and hear fellow stud-<lb/>
ents tell how they searched<lb/>
through many of the wald s<lb/>
attractive alternatives fa the<lb/>
answerstolifesquestionsbut did<lb/>
not find them there.<lb/>
The Full Gospel Student Fel-<lb/>
lowship invites everyone to attend<lb/>
this meeting in Mendenhall 221<lb/>
from 730- 9 p.m.<lb/>
This will not be our last<lb/>
meeting fa this year. We will<lb/>
meet during the summer at<lb/>
Windy Ridge Townhouses, num-<lb/>
ber 68 on 14th St. extention East.<lb/>
Fa mae infamatiai call 756-<lb/>
0206.<lb/>
F-G<lb/>
The Faever Generatiai will<lb/>
meet this Maiday night at 9 p.m.<lb/>
in Brewster C-304.<lb/>
Jobs<lb/>
All ECU students who took<lb/>
the Civil Service Summer Em-<lb/>
ployment test and who would be<lb/>
willing to wak in the Washington<lb/>
D.C. area this summer are<lb/>
requested to contact Terry Elks,<lb/>
Karen Frye, Dr. Betsy Harper, a<lb/>
Sandy Green in the Office of<lb/>
Cooper at i ve Educat ion, 313 Rawl,<lb/>
telephone 757-6979 immediately.<lb/>
The Cooperative Education<lb/>
office has infamatiai concerning<lb/>
a number of outstanding jobs fa<lb/>
persons who have received their<lb/>
rating on this test.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD will return<lb/>
May 24 and wUl be published<lb/>
weekly during the summer.<lb/>
A mandatory meeting will be held<lb/>
May 18 at 3 pnu in the<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD office, on the<lb/>
second floor of the Publications<lb/>
Center. If interested in working on<lb/>
the paper this summer, be there!<lb/>
� Be m  Hi<lb/>
-afc <lb/>
�<lb/>
<pb facs="00058054_0003"/><lb/>
�������������I<lb/>
�I<lb/>
Students<lb/>
in9ec-<lb/>
visit<lb/>
Caswell<lb/>
ByARAHVENAQLE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Eighteen ECU psychology and<lb/>
special education majors partici-<lb/>
pated in "Project Inside Out"<lb/>
held April 6, 7, and 8 at Caswell<lb/>
Center in Kinston.<lb/>
"Project Inside Out" is a<lb/>
three-day live-in experience des-<lb/>
igned to introduce pre-<lb/>
professionals to function, organ-<lb/>
ization, and structure of an<lb/>
institution for the retarded.<lb/>
The group lived on the<lb/>
grounds of Caswell Center for the<lb/>
three days, and slept in buildings<lb/>
which once served as staff<lb/>
housina.<lb/>
The students assisted the staff<lb/>
in daily activities.<lb/>
Some students said they ex-<lb/>
pected to find filth and inhumane<lb/>
conditions in the living units.<lb/>
Instead, they said they were<lb/>
delighted to see the opposite.<lb/>
The major deficiencies of the<lb/>
institution, the students said,<lb/>
were inadequate staffing, fund-<lb/>
ing, and programs.<lb/>
Other activities in "Project<lb/>
Inside Out" included a tour of<lb/>
campus and Caswell staff speak-<lb/>
ers on problems and issues in the<lb/>
field of mental retardation.<lb/>
The students were accompan-<lb/>
ied by an ECU faculty addvisor,<lb/>
John Childers, assistant professor<lb/>
of psycho! oqy.<lb/>
The program was co-ordinated<lb/>
by Mary Lingerfelt, student in-<lb/>
tern co-ordinator at Caswell Cen-<lb/>
ter, Zel Gilbert and Brenda<lb/>
Stewart, Volunteer Services Re-<lb/>
resentatives.<lb/>
Participating ECU students<lb/>
were: Betsy Eddins, Kay F.<lb/>
Newsome, Bill Roger son, Joy<lb/>
Black, Annie Madden, Sandra<lb/>
Manning, Deborah Wright,<lb/>
Pamela Faircloth, Jennifer<lb/>
Brandt, Wanda Hill, Matlynn<lb/>
Bryant, Peggy Durham, Beth<lb/>
Fain, Gaylan Hoyle.<lb/>
CALDER<lb/>
Continued from p. 1<lb/>
frustrations-l was a part of the<lb/>
university said Calder.<lb/>
Calder said the fight was the<lb/>
first to occur in his office, except<lb/>
for a "run-in" he had with a<lb/>
professor several years ago.<lb/>
"I could see the guy's stand-<lb/>
point admitted Calder, smiling<lb/>
and leaning back in his office<lb/>
chair. "I saw a whole lot of myself<lb/>
in him-l was very much like him<lb/>
when I was his age.<lb/>
"I'm not a virgin to a rough<lb/>
sorap-l probably enjoyed it a little<lb/>
bit said Calder. "It made me<lb/>
feel young again, but I should<lb/>
have known better<lb/>
Calder said he has grown<lb/>
mellow and wiser with age and<lb/>
added he probably should have<lb/>
reacted differently towards the<lb/>
student.<lb/>
Instead of swinging back,<lb/>
Calder said he should have<lb/>
pushed the student out the door<lb/>
and attempted to avoid the fight.<lb/>
27 April 1978 FOUNTA1NHEAD Pag� 3<lb/>
final day L,<lb/>
the ring sale.<lb/>
$5995<lb/>
save up to 22.c<lb/>
Men's traditional Siladium� rings<lb/>
and selected women's fashion rings<lb/>
are an unusual buy at $59.95.<lb/>
Today is your last chance to get really outstanding savings in this sale.<lb/>
KTCTIRVED<lb/>
REPRESENTATIVE<lb/>
has a large collection of rings. Ask to see them.<lb/>
Dates<lb/>
tfML 28-28<lb/>
Place<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY STORE LOBBY<lb/>
Deposit required. Ask about Master Charge or Visa.<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
Hi ?.&amp;��$ JS- � j -<lb/>
<pb facs="00058054_0004"/><lb/>
n<lb/>
HsVHShBbH<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4 FPU NTAINHEAD 27 April 1978<lb/>
Dr. Leo Jenkins �<lb/>
a dedicated man<lb/>
ECU was a small teacher's college when Dr. Leo<lb/>
Jenkins joined the administration as dean of<lb/>
academics in 1947. Dr. Jenkins became president of<lb/>
East Carolina College in 1960, and chancellor of East<lb/>
Carolina University in 1972.<lb/>
ECU has undergone much expansion under<lb/>
Jenkins' leadership, and perhaps the most important<lb/>
addition to ECU'S facilities is the Medical School,<lb/>
which was accredited last spring. The med school is a<lb/>
long-awaited dream-oome-true which will benefit the<lb/>
entire area of Eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
Another of Dr. Jenkins' projects is the Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium expansion, which is presently undergoing<lb/>
construction. The stadium is being expanded from its<lb/>
current 20,000 seating capacity to 35,000. After<lb/>
completion, Ficklen Stadium will be the fourth<lb/>
largest stadium in North Carolina. The expansion will<lb/>
also include a three-level media facility and a<lb/>
chancellor's box.<lb/>
Many people have accused Dr. Jenkins of placing<lb/>
more emphasis on athletics than other programs, but<lb/>
one can only emphasize one or two projects at a time.<lb/>
In addition to striving for the reality of the medical<lb/>
school, Jenkins has at other times emphasized the<lb/>
music and art programs. The condition of McGinnis<lb/>
Auditorium certainly needs improving, and<lb/>
Jenkins could have put less emphasis on the stadium<lb/>
expansion or the medical school.<lb/>
But, money for the expansion came from<lb/>
donations while money for the renovation of a<lb/>
building would have to come from the N.C.<lb/>
Legislature. And the establishment of the medical<lb/>
school was of utmost importance to the University<lb/>
and the community.<lb/>
Although Dr. Jenkins plans to establish a home at<lb/>
Atlantic Beach, he certainly will not be content to be<lb/>
idle. He has expressed a desire to join Gov. Hunt's<lb/>
administration, although nothing definite has been<lb/>
confirmed.<lb/>
' Whatever activities Dr. Jenkins plans to<lb/>
undertake, members of the ECU community can rest<lb/>
assured that he will pursue them with as much zest<lb/>
as he has for his projects for this university.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
sorting we cm gmh community tor onr firry paws.<lb/>
"Weretttotttorntodedde whether we ahouks hav<lb/>
a government without newepepere or newspapers<lb/>
without government, I ehoutd not heertete e moment to<lb/>
prefer the letter<lb/>
EditorCindy Broome<lb/>
Managing EditorLeigh Coakley<lb/>
Advertising ManagerRobert M. Swaim<lb/>
NewsEdftor Doug White<lb/>
Trends Editor Steve Bachner<lb/>
Sports EditorChrh Hdioman<lb/>
FOUNT AiHHEAD to lha studant mwffir of Eaat Carolina<lb/>
University apunaaad by lha Media Board of ECU and la<lb/>
distributed aaoh Tuaaday and Thuraday, weekly during the<lb/>
aunvnar. <lb/>
Mailing addraaa: Old Soufi Building, QroanviHa, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
EdHorial offteaa: 757-638. 757-6387, 757-6308<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10 annually, alumni $6 annually.<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Budget slights upset women athletes<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Injustice and unfairness is<lb/>
and always will be an ever-<lb/>
existing problem in today's soc-<lb/>
iety, but it is the way one handles<lb/>
this problem that determines just<lb/>
how unjust and unfair the situa-<lb/>
tion really is.<lb/>
Such is the case in respect to<lb/>
the Women's Athletic Budget at<lb/>
ECU. Women athletes work just<lb/>
as hard and have as much pride in<lb/>
their athletic ability as any other<lb/>
athlete. Why should they be<lb/>
subjected to inadequate promo-<lb/>
tion, facilities, traveling, lodging,<lb/>
and food aJlowances?<lb/>
The level of competition in<lb/>
women's sports has greatly in-<lb/>
creased, yet the funds available<lb/>
have not been adeqaute to<lb/>
compensate for this rise. Without<lb/>
an increase in funds, Women's<lb/>
Sports at ECU will never excell to<lb/>
their potential level of achieve-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Improvements in scholar-<lb/>
ships, recruiting, and adminis-<lb/>
tration are necessary before this<lb/>
level can be reached. All of this is<lb/>
impossible to attain with the<lb/>
present budget.<lb/>
The progression of the<lb/>
Women's Athletic Program can<lb/>
only lead to the prosperity of the<lb/>
entire Physical Education and<lb/>
Athletic Department; and in turn,<lb/>
the advancement of ECU as a<lb/>
whole.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Debby Newby<lb/>
Donna Pendley<lb/>
Jill Vaughn<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Revised bill in contempt of Bill of Rights<lb/>
By JOE YAEGER<lb/>
Editorial Writer<lb/>
In 1973 President Nixon ordered the revision of<lb/>
Federal criminal statutes, presumably because they<lb/>
were out of date and had not been revised since 1909.<lb/>
The resulting bill, known as S.1 was killed in<lb/>
Congress because many of its provisions were<lb/>
Gothic in the extreme and seriously curtailed<lb/>
freedom given in the Bill of Rights.<lb/>
A new form of that bill now known as S.1437, has<lb/>
fewer of the repressive provisions of its<lb/>
predecessors, yet remains dangerously in contempt<lb/>
of the Bill of Rights. More alarming is that the<lb/>
media, laijely responsible for S.1's demise, has<lb/>
remained strangely quiet about an issue on which<lb/>
the public knows little.<lb/>
Nixon's intent in codifying the criminal code was<lb/>
to curtail demonstrations and silence critics, but as<lb/>
his proposals for doing that came to light, the bill's<lb/>
opposition grew and ultimately defeated it.<lb/>
Press silence and public ignoranoe could insure<lb/>
passage of the new version unless the people are<lb/>
made aware of the repressive nature of its statutes.<lb/>
But the only press play the issue has been given so<lb/>
far was an editorial in the Los Angeles Times in<lb/>
September '77, and articles in February editions of<lb/>
The Village Voice, a New York City weekly.<lb/>
The press itself faces challenges from this bill.<lb/>
Reporters may be held in criminal court contempt<lb/>
for refusing to disclose confidential sources. A<lb/>
federal obscenity statute will allow for a publisher or<lb/>
distributor to be prosecuted in any uty or town with<lb/>
stronger obscenity criteria than that in the bill.<lb/>
This opens the way for the confusions and<lb/>
possibilities for prosecutorial entrapment contained<lb/>
m the 1973 " Miller" decision of the Supreme Court.<lb/>
That decision permits widely variable community<lb/>
standards for obscenity mnvictmns.<lb/>
The Los Angeles Times is quoted in an editorial<lb/>
last Septemer as saying "this legislation, since its<lb/>
inception in 1973 under Nixon and in its mutations<lb/>
reflects the undemocratic view that the government<lb/>
requires protection from the citizens of the nation<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00058054_0005"/><lb/>
����������mHIM<lb/>
BH<lb/>
�lH<lb/>
27 April 197B FOUNTAiNMEAD Pag 5<lb/>
before this<lb/>
Ml of this is<lb/>
with the<lb/>
of the<lb/>
ogram can<lb/>
srity of the<lb/>
ation and<lb/>
ind in turn,<lb/>
ECU as a<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
bby Newby<lb/>
na Pendley<lb/>
Jill Vaughn<lb/>
ights<lb/>
people are<lb/>
ts statutes,<lb/>
n given so<lb/>
! Times in<lb/>
editions of<lb/>
iy-<lb/>
n this bill,<lb/>
contempt<lb/>
ources. A<lb/>
ublisher or<lb/>
town with<lb/>
lebill<lb/>
sions and<lb/>
contained<lb/>
irne Court,<lb/>
anmunity<lb/>
m editorial<lb/>
i, since its<lb/>
mutations<lb/>
avernment<lb/>
e nation<lb/>
j i���<lb/>
reek forum<lb/>
By RICK I GU ARM IS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Right now, the Greek's atten-<lb/>
tion turns to books and exams<lb/>
instead of games and parties.<lb/>
Fraternities and sororities<lb/>
have wrapped up a year of<lb/>
activities, both fun and of service<lb/>
to the community and the univer-<lb/>
sity.<lb/>
The year has also been an<lb/>
experimental time.<lb/>
Student injured in<lb/>
bicycle accident<lb/>
By JEANNIE WILLIAMS<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
An ECU student was seriously<lb/>
injured in a bicyde-pedestrian<lb/>
accident Tuesday on College Hill<lb/>
Drive.<lb/>
The student was identified as<lb/>
John Crowe, 21, of Rocky Mount.<lb/>
Crowe is listed in stable<lb/>
oondition in the intensive care<lb/>
unit of Pitt County Memorial<lb/>
Hospital.<lb/>
The accident occurred as<lb/>
Crowe was riding his bicycle<lb/>
behind a car on College Hill,<lb/>
according to Francis Eddings,<lb/>
chief of campus police.<lb/>
A pedestrian stepped out<lb/>
behind the car and in front of<lb/>
Crowe, colliding with the handle-<lb/>
bar of the bicycle.<lb/>
The collision flipped the bicy-<lb/>
cle and Crowe onto the ground.<lb/>
Crowe was admitted to Pitt<lb/>
County Memorial Hospital with<lb/>
head injuries.<lb/>
Eddings commented that bi-<lb/>
cycle riders should be careful<lb/>
riding their bicycles about cam-<lb/>
pus.<lb/>
 Bicycle riders are suppose to<lb/>
obey motor vehicle laws, accord-<lb/>
ing to state law said Eddings.<lb/>
"Many riders ride the wrong<lb/>
way and should be more careful of<lb/>
following the flow of traffic and<lb/>
obeying signs Eddings added.<lb/>
"I'veseen some people really<lb/>
come around oorners fast he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
1' People should be more care-<lb/>
ful<lb/>
A campus police officer was<lb/>
assaulted April 22 when he<lb/>
attempted to gain identification of<lb/>
a suspicious black male in the<lb/>
woods near Jones dormitory.<lb/>
The officer was struck in the<lb/>
throat but was not seriously hurt.<lb/>
The male fled and was not<lb/>
apprehended as it was some<lb/>
minutes before the officer could<lb/>
summon help.<lb/>
FEES<lb/>
Continued from p. 1<lb/>
over the years has compounded<lb/>
the problem he said.<lb/>
He said the students' financial<lb/>
records can be posted currently<lb/>
and refunds needed for rent,<lb/>
books, and supplies will be<lb/>
available much sooner.<lb/>
"We've made provisions for<lb/>
studentsto mail their payments in<lb/>
and we will send their schedules<lb/>
back to them Vainright said.<lb/>
A complaint was received<lb/>
from a parent for a 16-year-old<lb/>
runaway that was believed to be<lb/>
on campus.<lb/>
The runaway was found in a<lb/>
men's dormitory.<lb/>
The semester system has been<lb/>
a far ay from being easy; it's<lb/>
been a year of longer, drawn-out<lb/>
courses, harder finals, and long<lb/>
nights in Joyner Library.<lb/>
The semester system has also<lb/>
been three quarters of Greek<lb/>
activities packed into two semes-<lb/>
ters. Perhaps there were some<lb/>
things that could have been<lb/>
planned at a better time but<lb/>
people have benefited from the<lb/>
mistakes.<lb/>
Next year, when school starts<lb/>
again, planning will be smoother<lb/>
and budgeting time will come<lb/>
easier.<lb/>
It's time to turn to books and<lb/>
exams and leave "Greek life"<lb/>
behind for the summer. Come<lb/>
August, school will open again<lb/>
and another year of constant<lb/>
celebration will begin.<lb/>
Have a nioe summer!<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS:<lb/>
The Phi Kappa Tau fraternity<lb/>
and their little asters are having a<lb/>
softball game, Sun April 30.<lb/>
Their summer retreat will be<lb/>
held July 14 and 15.<lb/>
Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority<lb/>
initiated their spring pledges on<lb/>
April 15.<lb/>
The Alpha Kappa Alpha soro-<lb/>
rity entertained the brothers of<lb/>
Alpha Phi Alpha and Kappa<lb/>
Alpha Pa with a social event on<lb/>
Sun April 23 at Tar River<lb/>
Estates to celebrate the end of the<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
sorority lost only two games<lb/>
during the softball season to win<lb/>
the sorority division champion-<lb/>
ship. <lb/>
The Tri-Sigs held their Senior<lb/>
Send-On on Wed April 26, at the<lb/>
home of Virginia Minges, their<lb/>
chapter advisor. The seniors were<lb/>
honored with a banquet.<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi fraternity<lb/>
recently initiated 10 new brothers<lb/>
and are planning a social with the<lb/>
Alpha Phi sorority on April 30.<lb/>
The Pi-Kaps have also scheduled<lb/>
a Parent's Day for April 30.<lb/>
�<lb/>
ardeci.<lb/>
1 GETS YOU 2.<lb/>
At lunch or dinner, your dollar<lb/>
goes far at Hardee's. Far enough<lb/>
to get you two big beautiful<lb/>
Roast Beef Sandwiches. Each<lb/>
sandwich made with slow-<lb/>
cooked beef, sliced thin and<lb/>
piled high. And you get your<lb/>
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So every bite is juicy, beefy,<lb/>
and delicious.<lb/>
Add some of our crisp, tasty fries<lb/>
and a soft drink, and your<lb/>
meal is deliciously complete.<lb/>
The next time you go to<lb/>
Hardee's, take along some-<lb/>
one you like. And take<lb/>
along this coupon. Order<lb/>
two Roast Beef Sandwiches<lb/>
for a dollar. That s some big<lb/>
beautiful savings.<lb/>
A<lb/>
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GET TWO BIG BEAUTIFUL<lb/>
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Good at all participating Hardee's. Please present this coupon before ordering.<lb/>
One coupon per customer, please. Customer must pay any sales tax.<lb/>
This coupon not good in combination with any other offers.<lb/>
Vtafeer<lb/>
Coupon expires<lb/>
51071<lb/>
<pb facs="00058054_0006"/><lb/>
�HHH<lb/>
�����������i<lb/>
6F0UNTAINHEAD 27 April 1978<lb/>
Director of ECU Poetry Forum<lb/>
Vernon Ward<lb/>
7newritmg<lb/>
A BUSY STUDENT pauses to reflect on the spring semester and<lb/>
upcoming exams<lb/>
ByRICKIGLIARMIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Somewhat different in ap-<lb/>
pearance than a conventional<lb/>
poet, Vernon Ward, director of<lb/>
ECU'S Poetry Forum, tilted his<lb/>
almost bald head and began to<lb/>
philosophize and reminisce<lb/>
about his life and work.<lb/>
Ward is retiring after 15 years<lb/>
of service to the university.<lb/>
"I have found teaching quite<lb/>
satisfying, but 15 years was<lb/>
enough snickers Ward.<lb/>
Ward continues by explaining<lb/>
that teaching poetry and helping<lb/>
students to get their work pub-<lb/>
lished are the most rewarding<lb/>
aspects of his career.<lb/>
The son of a doctor, Ward was<lb/>
born in Bethel, and was raised in<lb/>
Robersonville.<lb/>
He attended school at Carn-<lb/>
egie Institute of Technology and<lb/>
the University of North Carolina<lb/>
at Chapel Hill.<lb/>
"I've had a rather complex<lb/>
life Ward commented.<lb/>
"I've done everything from<lb/>
working with the Railway Express<lb/>
in New York to being employed at<lb/>
Writers needed<lb/>
for summer and fall semester<lb/>
GALL 757-6366<lb/>
or leave name, address and phone<lb/>
number at FOUNTAINHEAD office.<lb/>
Western Sizzlin<lb/>
Steak House<lb/>
Hours: Sun. thru Thurs. 11:00 to 10:00<lb/>
Fit �r Sat. 114)0 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 Fries<lb/>
AH for<lb/>
$1.69<lb/>
a dairy in Philadelphia<lb/>
Adding to (he list of jobs.<lb/>
Ward has also been in the<lb/>
meichant marines, owned a vac-<lb/>
at ion resort, and operated a dance<lb/>
hall.<lb/>
"Well in depressions times,<lb/>
people with degrees like myself<lb/>
had to do hard labor expahns<lb/>
Ward.<lb/>
Ward believes being active<lb/>
in the anti-war movement during<lb/>
the Korean War to be one of the<lb/>
most important facets of his life.<lb/>
During this time, Ward pub-<lb/>
lished "Poems for Peace a<lb/>
collection of poems so powerful<lb/>
that several persons lost their<lb/>
jobs fa simply handing the<lb/>
pamphlets out.<lb/>
Other works by Ward include<lb/>
"International Poems" and "Of<lb/>
Dust and Stars<lb/>
Several of his poems have<lb/>
appreared in anthologies such as<lb/>
"The Poets of North Carolina"<lb/>
and "Wad Gathers<lb/>
To hona Ward's wak and<lb/>
service to the university, the<lb/>
English department set up a<lb/>
collection of coitempaary poetry<lb/>
in Ward's name.<lb/>
The presentation was made by<lb/>
renowned poet William Staff ad<lb/>
during his visit to ECU.<lb/>
Ward explains that his<lb/>
poetry deals with various subjects<lb/>
but many are politically aiented.<lb/>
 Several of my poems concern<lb/>
the wald, the government, and<lb/>
the pubiically owned economic<lb/>
Education<lb/>
investment<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
ATLANTIC BEACH-The fact<lb/>
that two-thirds of every tax dollar<lb/>
in North Carolina is allocated to<lb/>
education shows "a great sense<lb/>
of understanding that education<lb/>
is a wathy investment fa our<lb/>
future Dr. Leo Jenkins said<lb/>
today.<lb/>
"We must praect this confi-<lb/>
dence and make the best use<lb/>
possible of our people and other<lb/>
resources the ECU chancella<lb/>
told the N.C. Higher Education<lb/>
Personnel Assn. here.<lb/>
He told the assembled person-<lb/>
nel managers and directas that<lb/>
their wak is "vital" because it<lb/>
deals with "our most important<lb/>
resource - people<lb/>
He ntfexJ that most maja<lb/>
institutiais in Nath Carolina and<lb/>
the nation spend 65 to 70 per cent<lb/>
of their budgets on personnel<lb/>
related needs.<lb/>
"Proper management of our<lb/>
people offers the best oppat unity<lb/>
fa containing future growth in<lb/>
cost serf operating Jenkins said.<lb/>
Jenkins said East Caraina is<lb/>
credited "with the best utilization<lb/>
rate of any four-year college a<lb/>
university - state-suppated a<lb/>
private-in Nath Carolina" and<lb/>
that this "really boils down to<lb/>
what our people do.<lb/>
"We are proud that our recad<lb/>
shows we place top priaity ai<lb/>
being good custodians fa the<lb/>
resources provided by the tax-<lb/>
to retire<lb/>
system, Ward describes.<lb/>
"Anything that'sbugging me,<lb/>
I write about Ward further<lb/>
explains.<lb/>
What does the future have in<lb/>
stae fa Ward after retirement?<lb/>
Being single, Ward grinned<lb/>
and replied that he will coitinue<lb/>
the daily routine of being a<lb/>
housewife.<lb/>
Fa years Ward has been<lb/>
cooking, cleaning house, and<lb/>
doing the laundry.<lb/>
Ward also expressed his inter-<lb/>
est in fiddling with a vegetable<lb/>
garden. He proposes to buy a<lb/>
greenhouse in the near future in<lb/>
ader to expand his hobby.<lb/>
As fa mae exciting adven-<lb/>
tures, Ward expects to reinstate<lb/>
his favaite pastime, which is<lb/>
traveling.<lb/>
Having traveled to Europe<lb/>
five times and around the wald<lb/>
once, Ward feels he will find his<lb/>
excursions familiar but all the<lb/>
mae exciting.<lb/>
And where does writing fit<lb/>
into Ward's future?<lb/>
"I definitely plan to continue<lb/>
writing Ward confirmed.<lb/>
"I have many notes and<lb/>
manuscripts to wak on<lb/>
The end of a teaching career is<lb/>
three weeks from being ova fa<lb/>
Ward.<lb/>
As fa his career as a poet,<lb/>
Ward is na prepared to leave that<lb/>
part of his life behind, yet.<lb/>
is 'worthy<lb/>
of future'<lb/>
payers of Nath Carolina Jen-<lb/>
kins said.<lb/>
The "key resource" in ser-<lb/>
vices and service aganizatiois,<lb/>
such as higha education institu-<lb/>
tions, is "human talent he said.<lb/>
"In our education andgovan-<lb/>
ment professions, we represent a<lb/>
significant element in the Ameri-<lb/>
can laba market-the public<lb/>
service secta" which comprises<lb/>
16 per cent of waking Ameri-<lb/>
cans, he said.<lb/>
In universities and in other<lb/>
state agencies, he said, "we are<lb/>
without the free enterprise mar-<lb/>
ket to determine effectiveness<lb/>
but are measured on how well the<lb/>
mission and goals are met.<lb/>
"We know that we are owned<lb/>
by the people, and their elected<lb/>
officials help establish the job<lb/>
that we are to do. And to a large<lb/>
extent the citizens assess our<lb/>
effectiveness he said.<lb/>
"This is a good process and<lb/>
instills a true uncterstanding of<lb/>
the American process, and it<lb/>
bears on the way we must do our<lb/>
jobs<lb/>
He told the personnel officials<lb/>
that "public affairs is vitally<lb/>
impatant<lb/>
" I f we earn favaable press on<lb/>
what our people have done, and<lb/>
what our programs have contribu-<lb/>
ted, it gives us a feeling of<lb/>
satisfaction and reassures the<lb/>
taxpayas that they are putting<lb/>
their money to good use.<lb/>
See JENKINS P A<lb/>
<pb facs="00058054_0007"/><lb/>
�������IM1<lb/>
��<lb/>
MHnHH<lb/>
Group forms Ayden Drama Workshop<lb/>
27 April 1978 FOUNTAINHEAP P�g 7<lb/>
Community generates involvement through drama<lb/>
ByEMILYKILLETTE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Rita Bosse, Ayden's librarian<lb/>
and last year's Collard Festival<lb/>
chairperson always insisted that a<lb/>
community needs more than<lb/>
football, basketball, and other<lb/>
sports.<lb/>
According to the librarian<lb/>
drama is also an important part of<lb/>
the American culture and Ayden<lb/>
lost that part of their culture when<lb/>
high school teacher Da tas<lb/>
Mitchell left.<lb/>
"He (Mitchell) took histalen�<lb/>
and left, and the drama club<lb/>
which was very strong is gone<lb/>
also sighed Rita Bosse.<lb/>
But now Bosse says Ayden<lb/>
has a chance to bring drama back!<lb/>
"One day a friend, Ann<lb/>
Creech (of Pitt County Board of<lb/>
Education), and the Superintend-<lb/>
ent of Pitt County Schools came<lb/>
to me and asked me what would<lb/>
be needed to generate oommunity<lb/>
involvement in the use of public<lb/>
JENKINS<lb/>
Continued from p. 6<lb/>
"In earning a favorable image<lb/>
by the press, we are able to<lb/>
attract the best prospects as<lb/>
employees; we find it easier to<lb/>
justify new programs-a lot of<lb/>
things that are made easier if the<lb/>
performance of our people at-<lb/>
tracts high praise<lb/>
In all cases, Jenkins said, "we<lb/>
school resources.<lb/>
"I figured right then and<lb/>
there that it was time to act a to<lb/>
get my foot out of my mouth<lb/>
laughed Bosse.<lb/>
So, she reocommended that<lb/>
Ayden begin work on drama and<lb/>
she cultivated a meeting of<lb/>
interested people.<lb/>
At the first meeting there<lb/>
was Joel McLawborn, Louise<lb/>
Moseley, Kim Dale, Ann Creech,<lb/>
and ALice Keen plus Rita Bosse<lb/>
and Sam Jones, who went to<lb/>
generate ideas and encourage<lb/>
action, Mrs. Bosse claims.<lb/>
And the group elected Joel<lb/>
McLawhorn to be their president<lb/>
and Kim Dale as secretary. They<lb/>
asked Rita Bosse and Sam Jones<lb/>
to check about possible use of the<lb/>
stages at the old Ayden High<lb/>
School and the Ayden-Grifton<lb/>
High School. The group also<lb/>
agreed to apply fa a Grass Roots<lb/>
Grant to help fund the drama.<lb/>
The individuals at the meeting<lb/>
were asked to think of ideas fa a<lb/>
drama and a second meeting will<lb/>
be called when news of the grant<lb/>
is received.<lb/>
Accading to Rita Bosse, the<lb/>
group present at the first meeting<lb/>
were famer students of Doug<lb/>
Mitchell and they famed a group<lb/>
called the Ayden Drama Wak-<lb/>
shop which meets in the library.<lb/>
The students of the old Ayden<lb/>
High School drama department<lb/>
waked under Mitchell. They<lb/>
made their own stage props and<lb/>
lighting equipment as well as<lb/>
their own costumes.<lb/>
"They once did the play<lb/>
Camelct said Bosse, "and my<lb/>
mother who is very aitical and<lb/>
very used to Broadway plays had<lb/>
no aitioismsof it<lb/>
"Joel McLawhan was in the<lb/>
play and he is a very talented<lb/>
young man and a fantastic<lb/>
person<lb/>
"All we need is one suooess<lb/>
and then everyone will want to<lb/>
get on the band wagon, so we are<lb/>
open to all kinds of talent of<lb/>
all ages, remarked Bosse.<lb/>
The drama will include people<lb/>
of all ages and if it does not<lb/>
include young people, Mrs.<lb/>
Bosse, a cub scout den maher,<lb/>
says she will have to fight until<lb/>
she gets them involved.<lb/>
But now, the group is consid-<lb/>
ering ideas fa the drama and Rita<lb/>
Bosse thinks they should do some<lb/>
publicizing at the Collard Fest-<lb/>
ival.<lb/>
"I think we should have a<lb/>
one-act play ai the street caner<lb/>
gain some publicity at the<lb/>
Collard Festval.<lb/>
"But one person will have to<lb/>
make the final decision as to what<lb/>
we do fa the drama and I hope<lb/>
they will use some fam of<lb/>
publicity at the Festival Bosse<lb/>
explained.<lb/>
Rita Bosse would like to see<lb/>
the drama become histaical but<lb/>
she says that may take awhile<lb/>
because she wants it get off the<lb/>
ground first<lb/>
must aient our loyalty and work<lb/>
both to our aganizatioi and to<lb/>
the individual-an obligation to<lb/>
commit our resouroes to the<lb/>
overall mission of higher educa-<lb/>
tion in North Carolina. Fulfilling<lb/>
this commitment is, in a sense,<lb/>
loyalty to the aganizatioi and<lb/>
sometimes takes priaity over the<lb/>
individual<lb/>
But he addea mat "we also<lb/>
owe loyalty to the per son one of<lb/>
themaja secrets to our suooess in<lb/>
the university setting<lb/>
Jenkins said he does not<lb/>
subscribe to the theay that a<lb/>
technological society tends to<lb/>
depreciate the need fa a great<lb/>
deal of human element.<lb/>
"There is a strong sense of<lb/>
belonging which possess most all<lb/>
happy and successful people in<lb/>
the profession of education<lb/>
Jenkins said.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058054_0008"/><lb/>
vwyi<lb/>
��������MMIMHHH<lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 27 April 1978<lb/>
Departure' point from the conventional<lb/>
Outdoor instruction includes rappeling<lb/>
Saratoga Springs, N.Y.�You<lb/>
stand braced against the granite<lb/>
edge of the mountain top, hung<lb/>
perilously between heaven and<lb/>
earth.<lb/>
The wind ripples through your<lb/>
clothing, and far below the tree<lb/>
tops sway.<lb/>
A heady mixture of fear and<lb/>
exhileration tingles through your<lb/>
body.<lb/>
You lean into the ropes, and,<lb/>
moving your feet cautiously over<lb/>
the rock, back off the cliff edge<lb/>
into the sky.<lb/>
In a moment you find yourself<lb/>
facing the sheer reck of the cliff,<lb/>
and with a rush of elation, you<lb/>
glide down the ropes earthward.<lb/>
This is one of the many<lb/>
experiences provided by the<lb/>
Adirondack Institute in their<lb/>
summer mountain journeys.<lb/>
Located at Skidmore College<lb/>
in Saratoga Springs, New York,<lb/>
the Institute uses the Colorado<lb/>
Rockies, the Adirondack moun-<lb/>
tains, and the wilds of northern<lb/>
Ontario as departure points from<lb/>
the conventional in education by<lb/>
offering three-credit hour litera-<lb/>
ture courses where all instruction<lb/>
takes place outdoors.<lb/>
Participants complete their<lb/>
reading on their own before<lb/>
gathering at the field sites for ten<lb/>
days of field instruction-which in<lb/>
the mountain oourses includes<lb/>
rock climbing, rappleing, and<lb/>
river fording. .<lb/>
The program has been so<lb/>
successful over the past five years<lb/>
that it has attracted students from<lb/>
over 100 colleges in 25 states.<lb/>
Credit earned in the Institute<lb/>
oourses is usually transferable<lb/>
back to the student's home<lb/>
institution.<lb/>
Professor Jonathan Fair-<lb/>
banks, aeator and director of the<lb/>
Adirondack Institute, explains<lb/>
that "the program is intended to<lb/>
be a variation on the traditional<lb/>
academic courses, and is meant to<lb/>
supplement, not replace them<lb/>
"Most literature oourses<lb/>
taught in the dassroom are<lb/>
essentially an intellectual exer-<lb/>
cise Fairbanks explains.<lb/>
"This program takes litera-<lb/>
ture and tests it against exper-<lb/>
ience<lb/>
A former Outward Bound<lb/>
instructor in Colorado and in<lb/>
England, Fairbanks wilderness<lb/>
experience ranges from climbing<lb/>
in the New Zealand Alps to<lb/>
canoeing white water in the<lb/>
United States and Canada.<lb/>
The Adirondack course in-<lb/>
cludes writings by Hemingway,<lb/>
Faulkner, London, and Frost,<lb/>
while titles such as "Tough Trip<lb/>
Through Paradise ' The Big<lb/>
Sky and "The Comanches"<lb/>
sprinkle the Colorado reading list.<lb/>
The Canadian course emphasizes<lb/>
exploration literature.<lb/>
The groups are oo-ed and are<lb/>
comprised of 12 students and two<lb/>
instructors.<lb/>
The program is open to all<lb/>
undergraduates and other inter-<lb/>
ested adults, and welcomes non-<lb/>
credit applicants as well as those<lb/>
seeking credit.<lb/>
Further information can be<lb/>
obtained by writing Adirondack<lb/>
Institute, Dana Hall, Skidmore<lb/>
College, Saratoga Springs, New<lb/>
York 12866.<lb/>
$ CASH $<lb/>
FOR TEXTS AT<lb/>
THE UBE<lb/>
NOW Is The Best TVne To Sell<lb/>
We have<lb/>
FaB information and are<lb/>
paying top doftars for<lb/>
U.S. z<lb/>
m<lb/>
University Book Exchange<lb/>
528 S. Cotanche St.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
SUSPENDED BETWEEN HEA VEN<lb/>
periously over the granite edge.<lb/>
MEDIA<lb/>
Continued from p. 1<lb/>
Media Board in the referendum<lb/>
held last February.<lb/>
The board praised McCourt<lb/>
and his colleagues for pursuing a<lb/>
cause they believed in and took no<lb/>
action on the Media Board.<lb/>
The roster of the 1978 grauda-<lb/>
ting class was approved, subject<lb/>
to the students' completion of the<lb/>
necessary requirements for gra-<lb/>
duation.<lb/>
A resolution was passed ex-<lb/>
pressing the board's sympathy<lb/>
for the family of Clarissa Blakely<lb/>
McElmon, an ECU senior who<lb/>
and earth, a rappeler plunges<lb/>
was killed in an auto accident last<lb/>
October, and also the board's<lb/>
apprecaition of Ms. Elmon's<lb/>
contributions to the university.<lb/>
Wednesday's meeting was<lb/>
Chancellor Leo Jenkins' 107th<lb/>
board meeting and his last before<lb/>
retiring.<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins received a plaque<lb/>
"in appreciation of 31 years of<lb/>
unprecedented service and lea-<lb/>
dership to ECU and eastern North<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
This was also the first time<lb/>
newly elected SGA president<lb/>
Tommy Joe Payne sat with the<lb/>
board. Vice-Chanceilor Robert<lb/>
Holt delivered the oath of office<lb/>
prior to the meeting.<lb/>
TRAMPS<lb/>
DISCOTEQUE AND<lb/>
BACKGAMMOM CLUB<lb/>
Hwy. 17 Windy Hill Section<lb/>
N- Myrtle Beach, S.C.<lb/>
Tramping Grounds<lb/>
�� Atlantic<lb/>
The most exciting dhcoZ'toZn'<lb/>
invites you to spend your Easter<lb/>
and summer vacations with us.<lb/>
Find out why everyone on the<lb/>
East Coast is talking about<lb/>
Tramps <lb/>
1<lb/>
j�S HlJBgajttSJ<lb/>
<pb facs="00058054_0009"/><lb/>
����IOBK1MWBH<lb/>
�<lb/>
r plunges<lb/>
accident last<lb/>
the board's<lb/>
s. Elmon's<lb/>
jniversity.<lb/>
eeting was<lb/>
ikins' 107th<lb/>
s last before<lb/>
'ed a plaque<lb/>
31 years of<lb/>
x and lea-<lb/>
istern North<lb/>
e first time<lb/>
president<lb/>
� with the<lb/>
lor Robert<lb/>
ith of office<lb/>
vn<lb/>
?r<lb/>
he<lb/>
Child-snatching<lb/>
not unusual case<lb/>
By FRANCEINE PERRY<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
When "Mr. X custodial<lb/>
father of two girls, saw his<lb/>
daughters off to school in Delaware<lb/>
one March morning, he hardly<lb/>
suspected he would have to go<lb/>
hundreds of miles to bring them<lb/>
home again.<lb/>
But during the day, his<lb/>
ex-wife took the girls out of school<lb/>
and set off with them to her new<lb/>
residence in Florida.<lb/>
An unusual case?<lb/>
Hardly, according to ECU<lb/>
social work professor Ken Lewis.<lb/>
About 300.(XX) similar �child-<lb/>
snatching" incidents occurred<lb/>
during 1977<lb/>
Dr. Lewis, an associate pro-<lb/>
fessor at ECU, was one of the<lb/>
North Carolina representatives<lb/>
invited to speak in Atlanta at the<lb/>
recent Southeast Regional Hear-<lb/>
ings sponsored by the National<lb/>
Commission for Children in Need<lb/>
of Parents.<lb/>
"The child-snatching pheno-<lb/>
menon is not limited to any social<lb/>
class or racial group, but cuts<lb/>
across all strata of society he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Perhaps the most well-<lb/>
Known such incident is the 1975<lb/>
Mellon case - a Pittsburgh<lb/>
billionaire's two daughters, sent<lb/>
to visit their mother in North<lb/>
Carolina, were taken by the<lb/>
mother to New York, where she<lb/>
sued for legal custody.<lb/>
"Since the father had legal<lb/>
custody of the children only in<lb/>
Dennsylvania, he was unable to<lb/>
recover them through the courts.<lb/>
Ultimately he hired several men<lb/>
to bring the children back to<lb/>
Pennsylvania<lb/>
Recently, 22 states have pass-<lb/>
ed the Uniform Child Custody<lb/>
Jurisdiction Act (UCCJA) in an<lb/>
attempt to curb child-snatching.<lb/>
The act provides that a state<lb/>
honor custody decrees in other<lb/>
states, thus avoiding interstate<lb/>
jurisdictional disputes between<lb/>
parents.<lb/>
Of the southeastern states,<lb/>
only Florida has yet passed the<lb/>
UCCJA, Lewis noted.<lb/>
"A child who is snatched by a<lb/>
separated parent and brought to<lb/>
Florida may be returned to the<lb/>
custodial parent with minimal<lb/>
time delays and therefore signifi-<lb/>
cantly fewer psychological<lb/>
soars he said.<lb/>
Since the act had been passed<lb/>
in Florida before Mr. X's children<lb/>
were taken there, his story has a<lb/>
happy ending.<lb/>
"A oopy of the Delaware<lb/>
custody decree was presented to<lb/>
the sheriff of that Florida oounty<lb/>
where the children were staying,<lb/>
so they flew home with their<lb/>
father that night Lewis ex-<lb/>
plained.<lb/>
 But when a state is under no<lb/>
legislative obligation to honor a<lb/>
previous decree in another state,<lb/>
a father and a mother can have<lb/>
two separate but equally legal<lb/>
custody orders<lb/>
Reports indicate that parents<lb/>
who "snatch" their children are<lb/>
about evenly divided between<lb/>
mothers and fathers.<lb/>
Now that more courts are<lb/>
awarding custody of minor chil-<lb/>
dren to fathers who seek it, the<lb/>
number of mothers unwilling to<lb/>
abide by the decrees is growing.<lb/>
"Passage of the UCCJA in<lb/>
every state will not guarantee an<lb/>
end to child-snatching, but is a<lb/>
move in the right direction to<lb/>
reduce this psychological crime<lb/>
against our children Lewissaid.<lb/>
The National Commission for<lb/>
Children in Need of Parents is<lb/>
empowered by Congress to study<lb/>
and make recommendations on<lb/>
adoption, foster care, legal and<lb/>
legislative issues, and social work<lb/>
problems regarding children.<lb/>
Its southeastern hearings<lb/>
were held in the Georgia State<lb/>
Capitol, with eight southeastern<lb/>
states represented.<lb/>
North Carolina's delegation<lb/>
was chaired by Ruth McCracken,<lb/>
executive director of the Chil-<lb/>
dren's Home Society of N.C and<lb/>
Robin Peacock, supervisor of<lb/>
adoption services for the N.C.<lb/>
Department of Human Resour-<lb/>
ces.<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<lb/>
I.ike a good neighbor.<lb/>
State Farm is there.<lb/>
27 April 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Pmg� 9<lb/>
THIS STUDENT soaked up some sun last week while rain soaked the state most of this week<lb/>
WECU<lb/>
Continued from p. 1<lb/>
"FM isdefinite. It is going to<lb/>
happen-it's here Jeter said<lb/>
proudly.<lb/>
"It will be a tremendous<lb/>
service to ECU he emphasized.<lb/>
People don't realize how<lb/>
powerful radio is, what it can<lb/>
do<lb/>
"There's no excuse a univer-<lb/>
sity of our size and quality not<lb/>
being on the air<lb/>
 It took a lot of hard work and<lb/>
time. I'm really happy Jeter<lb/>
said. "If it's the last thing I do<lb/>
befae I leave school, I want to<lb/>
see that the FM station gets on<lb/>
the air<lb/>
If ith a 10 inch pizza, get one free drink.<lb/>
With a 14 inch pizza, get two free drinks.<lb/>
With a 17 inch pizza, get 3 free drinks.<lb/>
This offer is good on Delivery<lb/>
as well as Dine-in and carry-out.<lb/>
Good luck with exams from Chanelos.<lb/>
Fast, free delivery with hot boxes.<lb/>
lwjnj&amp;bs<lb/>
ri&amp;q<lb/>
�<lb/>
DIAL 758-7400<lb/>
507 EAST 14th STREET<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
Nothinf baits Pun ham CHAHELO'S<lb/>
<pb facs="00058054_0010"/><lb/>
�����Hl<lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 27 April 1978<lb/>
Talley headlines Singer-Songwriter Festival<lb/>
By DAVID WHITSON<lb/>
9taff Writer<lb/>
The Grass Roots Ptogram of<lb/>
The North Carolina Arts Council<lb/>
is sponsoring the first annual<lb/>
(many of the same also played on<lb/>
the next two albums), which<lb/>
helped make the record the<lb/>
impressive debut it is.<lb/>
But it was really the songs<lb/>
which brought the album home.<lb/>
Trends<lb/>
Singer-Songwriter Festival fea-<lb/>
turing Capitol recording artist<lb/>
James Talley. The festival, also<lb/>
featuring local talent, will be held<lb/>
at the Roxy Theatre here in<lb/>
Greenville on April 29.<lb/>
Talley will conduct a workshop<lb/>
for local composers at 2 p.m. and<lb/>
perform in concert at 9 p.m.<lb/>
His music has been called<lb/>
everything from revolutionary to<lb/>
reactionary, but where it all goes<lb/>
is back to the roots of American<lb/>
folk music, incorporating the<lb/>
blues, country-and-western, and<lb/>
swing, as well as traditional folk.<lb/>
James Talley is a working-<lb/>
class hero, trading his carpentry<lb/>
skills fa studio time, producing<lb/>
his own records, even to the point<lb/>
of promoting and distributing his<lb/>
first album a few years ago.<lb/>
He's been likened to Jimmy<lb/>
Rodgers and reviews of his<lb/>
albums make it sound like Talley<lb/>
is Rodgers, Bob Wills, and Hank<lb/>
Williams all rolled into one.<lb/>
It'sail very apparent, though,<lb/>
from listening to Talley's albums<lb/>
or from watching the man in<lb/>
concert, that he is a very different<lb/>
musician for the 1970's.<lb/>
When other c &amp; w musicians<lb/>
are powering up their acts and<lb/>
music with the beat and electric<lb/>
leads borrowed from rock 'n roll,<lb/>
Talley keeps his sound plain and<lb/>
simple.<lb/>
Sure, the instruments were<lb/>
amplified at his recent Main Point<lb/>
gig, but Talley is still very bound<lb/>
to basics-Talley on acoustic<lb/>
guitar accompanied by lead gui-<lb/>
tar, bass, drums, and fiddle.<lb/>
Lots of fancy playing, but no<lb/>
gimmicks.<lb/>
After moving from Oklahoma<lb/>
to the Nashville area nine years<lb/>
ago, James Talley worked on a rat<lb/>
control project and then got a job<lb/>
as a carpenter, using his spare<lb/>
time to get some songs together.<lb/>
He managed to make a deal<lb/>
with the owner of a studio which<lb/>
he was remodeling to take his<lb/>
payment in recording time.<lb/>
The fruits of his labor are<lb/>
heard on Got No Bread, No Milk,<lb/>
No Money, But We Sure Got A<lb/>
Lot of Love, an album which he<lb/>
originally released on his own<lb/>
small Torreon label.<lb/>
Talley mailed out his own<lb/>
promotional copies to radio sta-<lb/>
tions, but Capitol Records even-<lb/>
tually became interested enough<lb/>
to put the album out with the<lb/>
nationwide distribution it de-<lb/>
served.<lb/>
A number of top-notch studio<lb/>
men heard about Talley's versa-<lb/>
tile digital dexterity when he was<lb/>
literally m the construction phase<lb/>
of his project, and their services<lb/>
were donated on that first album<lb/>
A rewrite of "Red River<lb/>
Memory a western swing thing<lb/>
called "W. Lee O'Daniel And The<lb/>
Light Crust Dough Boys and<lb/>
the poor man's optimism embo-<lb/>
died in the title track typify his<lb/>
variety of musical moods.<lb/>
The covers of h i s records show<lb/>
working-class folks right at work.<lb/>
"You Know I've Got to Love<lb/>
Her<lb/>
Talley's story lines cut across<lb/>
generations in "Migrant Jesse<lb/>
Sawyer" and "Mississippi River<lb/>
Whistle Town<lb/>
And, of course, there's the<lb/>
music, including Johnny Gim-<lb/>
ble's fiddle work on "When The<lb/>
Fiddler Packs His Case" and B.B.<lb/>
King's guitar on "Bluesman<lb/>
The songs and arrangements<lb/>
for the individual cuts are vir-<lb/>
tually definitive, a aedit to all<lb/>
concerned and especially to Tal-<lb/>
ley himself fa developing his<lb/>
talents from writing to perfam-<lb/>
ing to producing.<lb/>
The turnout at Talley's recent<lb/>
Main Point gig was disappoint-<lb/>
ingly small, but Talley and<lb/>
Talley may have no fatune a<lb/>
have no fame. But he's sure got a<lb/>
lot of talent.<lb/>
Pop and rock aitics hae<lb/>
responded to Tal ley's music and<lb/>
the stack of favaable reviews<lb/>
should be enough to cause some<lb/>
Nashville powers to reconsider<lb/>
Tal ley's potential.<lb/>
After all, the recent (overdue)<lb/>
emergence of Willie Nelson-<lb/>
thanks in great part to pop and<lb/>
rook support-ought to have been<lb/>
enough of a warning to Nashville<lb/>
that times have changed.<lb/>
Significantly, Talley has arri-<lb/>
ved at a time when few country<lb/>
artists are dealing aeatively with<lb/>
the wakingman theme.<lb/>
Even Cash and Haggard have<lb/>
drifted from it.<lb/>
He's been likened to Jimmy Rodgers<lb/>
reviews of his albums make it sound like<lb/>
Talley is Rodgers, Rob Wills, and Hank<lb/>
Williams all rolled into one<lb/>
The second Ip, Tryin' Like The<lb/>
Devil, extended Talley's roots<lb/>
even further, musically and topi-<lb/>
cally, with themes like "Faty<lb/>
Hours" and "Are They Gonna<lb/>
Make Us Outlaws Again? but in<lb/>
addition to those tunes written in<lb/>
defense of the oommon man,<lb/>
Talley soaed with several fine<lb/>
love ballads.<lb/>
There is a good bit of overlap<lb/>
between the music of Willie<lb/>
Nelson and that of James Talley.<lb/>
But while both mine the same<lb/>
musical style and both have<lb/>
strong individual vocal capabili-<lb/>
ties, each has his own sound.<lb/>
Talley hasn't attracted large<lb/>
numbers of followers yet, but<lb/>
among those who listen to him are<lb/>
the Carter Family, whose farmers<lb/>
from Geagia who now live in<lb/>
Washington.<lb/>
Chip Carter told Talley that<lb/>
Rosalynn Carter said she wasn't<lb/>
going to the Inaugural if James<lb/>
Talley wasn't perfaming.<lb/>
Talley obliged and Mrs. Car-<lb/>
ter attended. Although Talley<lb/>
received much favaabie publicity<lb/>
from the showing, he has yet to<lb/>
build a legion of listeners.<lb/>
Things should turn around<lb/>
soon, though, fa hislp, Blackjack<lb/>
Choir, has ten memaable pieces,<lb/>
which again run through every-<lb/>
thing from folk to country to blues<lb/>
to western swing.<lb/>
The songs this time around<lb/>
are far rrore consistent than ever<lb/>
befae.<lb/>
The single off the album,<lb/>
"Alabama Summertime" is just<lb/>
one of several light-textured<lb/>
ballads, which would be very<lb/>
effective on MOR radio stations<lb/>
as well as those swan to c &amp; w.<lb/>
But Talley's universality in<lb/>
song is what finally sets him apart<lb/>
from ahers of his meddle.<lb/>
It wouldn't be a surprise at all<lb/>
to see other artists cover that<lb/>
single, Up From Geagia a<lb/>
company did a little longer set<lb/>
than they had to, pulling plenty<lb/>
from all three records.<lb/>
Just as country music is<lb/>
becoming a mae impatant part<lb/>
of the American pop mentality,<lb/>
James Talley adds a new stimula-<lb/>
ting intelligent element to the<lb/>
changes.<lb/>
Though Cash oontinues to<lb/>
identify with the underdog in<lb/>
much of his music, the new<lb/>
reoadings generally lack the bite<lb/>
and artistry of his peak "Folsom<lb/>
Prison" period.<lb/>
On the surface James Talley's<lb/>
country and western career<lb/>
sounds like an Haatio Alger<lb/>
stay.<lb/>
After years of little success in<lb/>
Nashville, Talley decided to make<lb/>
a record on his own in 1974.<lb/>
In exchange fa helping build<lb/>
a studio, he received free recad-<lb/>
ing time.<lb/>
Employing some of the best<lb/>
back-up musicians in Nashville,<lb/>
he made Got No Bread, No Milk,<lb/>
No Money, But We Sure Got a Lot<lb/>
of Love, pressed a thousand<lb/>
oopies and sent it to recad<lb/>
companies and readio stations.<lb/>
Capitol Recads picked the<lb/>
album up and, though its sales<lb/>
were only moderate, it received<lb/>
rave reviews.<lb/>
Talley most recently played at<lb/>
Jimmy Carter's inauguration at<lb/>
the request of the First Lady, wtio<lb/>
oounts him as one of ha favaite<lb/>
musicians.<lb/>
As if on cue, his album,<lb/>
"Blackjack Choir includes a<lb/>
paean to Jimmy's state, "Up<lb/>
From Geagia<lb/>
One aitic said, "People have<lb/>
been waiting a long time fa<lb/>
saneaie like Talley If desaip-<lb/>
tion of him and his music appeals<lb/>
to you, you maybe one of them.<lb/>
And if there is any justice left<lb/>
in the music industry, the others<lb/>
should na be far behind.<lb/>
Admission to the wakshop is<lb/>
50- .Tents. Seats fa the concert are<lb/>
$2.00 and $2.50. Fa mae<lb/>
infamatiai ai eitha the concert<lb/>
a the wakshop call 752-8949 a<lb/>
752-7483.<lb/>
"JAMES TALLEY IS a working-class hero, trading<lb/>
his carpentry skills for studio time, producing his<lb/>
own records, even to the point of producing and<lb/>
distributing his first album a few years ago<lb/>
<pb facs="00058054_0011"/><lb/>
mwHin<lb/>
27 April 1978 FOUhfTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
ral<lb/>
��<lb/>
AfiC succeeds with 'The Champagne Complex'<lb/>
By CHRISFARREN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
tie success in<lb/>
cided to makeThe Mendenhall Student Cen-<lb/>
in 1974.ter completed its second season of<lb/>
helping builddinner theaters this past weekend<lb/>
d free reoord-with the 'Champagne Complex<lb/>
The show, Mendenhall's sixth<lb/>
over the past 2 years was directed<lb/>
j of the bestby Wanda Edwards and Dana<lb/>
in Nashville,Mills, and catered by the East<lb/>
wd, No Milk,Carolina Home Eoonomics<lb/>
Sure Got a LotDepartment.<lb/>
a thousandRunning Thursday through<lb/>
t to recordSunday, the dinner theater wad<lb/>
io stations.sold out Friday and Saturday<lb/>
nights, and well received every<lb/>
picked the jgh its sales<lb/>
<lb/>
, it received<lb/>
itly played at<lb/>
mguration at<lb/>
rst Lady, urtioV Ar�jji<lb/>
f her favoritetk 1 �! wLA<lb/>
his album,�sr w �t�<lb/>
includes aW<lb/>
state, "Upi<lb/>
People have��L �<lb/>
ng time for<lb/>
" If descrip-<lb/>
lusic appeals<lb/>
one of them.<lb/>
ly justice left<lb/>
y, the others 9hind.<lb/>
<lb/>
workshop is' ' ' Vjg<lb/>
e concert are:<lb/>
For more<lb/>
r the concert- i1 ��<lb/>
752-6949 or� - �<lb/>
night, according to Ken Ham-<lb/>
mond, program director at Men-<lb/>
enhall.<lb/>
Dinner was first and the food,<lb/>
served buffet style, was very well<lb/>
prepared and nicely served, lack-<lb/>
ing if anything in imagination.<lb/>
The show itself was equally as<lb/>
well prepared with special<lb/>
emphasis on the truly outstanding<lb/>
set, which according to Ken<lb/>
Hammond was designed and<lb/>
constructed soiey by Dana Mills.<lb/>
Other standouts in the produc-<lb/>
tion included Bob McCutcheon's<lb/>
superb portrayal of Helms Fell<lb/>
'A<lb/>
s X-<lb/>
JERRY ADDERTON, MASTER Technician for MSC Dinner Theatre<lb/>
 The Champagne Complex<lb/>
Pi Kappa Lambda<lb/>
honors retiring teachers<lb/>
xJuoing and<lb/>
ago<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
Three faculty members of the<lb/>
ECU School of Music who are<lb/>
retiring or have recently retired,<lb/>
will be honored Thurs April 27,<lb/>
at a dinner.<lb/>
Hosts for the event are<lb/>
members of Pi Kappa Lambda<lb/>
honor society in music.<lb/>
Attending will be members of<lb/>
the ECU music faculty and other<lb/>
guests.<lb/>
New frnembers of Pi Kappa<lb/>
Lambda Will be inducted during<lb/>
the evening, and the society plans<lb/>
to perform a special induction<lb/>
ceremony for their newty-elected<lb/>
honorary member, Norman<lb/>
Luboff, who is scheduled to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
The retiring honorees include<lb/>
Elizabeth Drake and Eleanor<lb/>
Ethridge Toll of the keyboard<lb/>
faculty, and Dr. Catherine<lb/>
Murphy of the Music education<lb/>
faculty.<lb/>
Miss Drake retired last<lb/>
spring, and Dr. Murphy retired in<lb/>
December.<lb/>
Mrs. Toll plans to retire at the<lb/>
end of the current semester.<lb/>
A member of the ECU music<lb/>
faculty since 1946, Elizabeth<lb/>
Drake studied at UNC-Greens-<lb/>
boro, the Julliard School of<lb/>
Music, Columbia University and<lb/>
the Eastman School of Music.<lb/>
She also did graduate study at<lb/>
Miami University and participa-<lb/>
ted in programs at the Aspen<lb/>
Institute of Music and the Cha-<lb/>
tauqua, N.Y School.<lb/>
Her memberships include<lb/>
Delta Kappa Gamma honor<lb/>
society and the Music Teachers<lb/>
National Association.<lb/>
Before joining the ECU music<lb/>
faculty in 1966, Dr. Murphy was<lb/>
director of the Florida State<lb/>
University piano pedagogy pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
She did graduate study at<lb/>
Florida State, the Eastman School<lb/>
of Music and the Union Theologi-<lb/>
cal Seminary School of Sacred<lb/>
Music, and received her BFA<lb/>
degree in voioe performance from<lb/>
A &amp; M College, Oklahoma.<lb/>
In addition to teaching, she<lb/>
has been active in church music in<lb/>
Oklahoma City and Stillwater,<lb/>
Okla.i Thomasville, Ga Talla-<lb/>
hassee, Fla. and Greenville.<lb/>
Harper, an aspiring young, cor-<lb/>
porate executive, and also the<lb/>
overall enthusiasm of the actors<lb/>
and their well timed direction.<lb/>
The play's shortcomings are<lb/>
those evident in nearly any show<lb/>
which takes place in one room<lb/>
among three actors; loss of<lb/>
attention, and it was the enthu-<lb/>
siasm on stage which kept this at<lb/>
a minimum.<lb/>
Said McCutcheon, "I was very<lb/>
pleased with the result" and<lb/>
thought the play ran relatively<lb/>
smooth and seemed to meet with<lb/>
good response all four nights.<lb/>
Credit goes to the entire staff<lb/>
for offering a unique and pleasant<lb/>
entertainment alternative to the<lb/>
area.<lb/>
With the success of the past<lb/>
year, already three more dinner<lb/>
theaters have been scheduled for<lb/>
next year, in November, Feb-<lb/>
ruary, and April, according to<lb/>
Hammond.<lb/>
Ticket prices have been $8.50<lb/>
for the public and $6.00 for<lb/>
students and should remain the<lb/>
same through next year.<lb/>
The shows are subsidized by<lb/>
Mendenhall, and the ticket sales<lb/>
go only to oover the balance of<lb/>
expenses.<lb/>
With an increasing amount of<lb/>
student attendance, and the<lb/>
already heavy community traffic,<lb/>
I��<lb/>
response has steadily been grow-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Only 100 seats are available<lb/>
per night, and future dinner<lb/>
theaters look forward to being<lb/>
sold out all four nights.<lb/>
3UM<lb/>
mcL<lb/>
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$1.00 OFF<lb/>
ANY PIZZA WITH COUPON<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058054_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 27 April 1978<lb/>
SU Free Flicks abound during final weeks<lb/>
By STEVE BACHNER<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
Two Student Union Free<lb/>
Flicks and one special movie<lb/>
esentation remain on the Stu-<lb/>
dent Center slate for this semes-<lb/>
ter. Royal Flash will be shown<lb/>
'His Friday and Saturday night;<lb/>
Carnal Knowledge will be shown<lb/>
ed. May 3, and Fantastic<lb/>
vage will be shown Friday and<lb/>
Saturday night May 5 and 6.<lb/>
ROYAL FLASH AT 7p.m. and 9<lb/>
o m.<lb/>
 There is more than enough<lb/>
jrity in the cockeyed adven-<lb/>
es of Captain Flashman to<lb/>
satisfy devotees ot this sort of<lb/>
effervescent nonsense. Lester fol-<lb/>
ows his Musketeer comedies<lb/>
.vi th sufficient honor Florinda<lb/>
Bolkan is an earthy knockout as<lb/>
tie sexy, demanding Lola Mon-<lb/>
tex. wno finds a hairbrush useful<lb/>
er bedroom bouts. Icy Bntt<lb/>
Ekland amuses as the duchess<lb/>
married to Flashman in a fraudu-<lb/>
lent arrangement<lb/>
William Wolf<lb/>
Adventure comedy distin-<lb/>
guished by its visual sumptuous-<lb/>
JACK NICHOLSON AS he<lb/>
appears in "Carnal Know-<lb/>
ledge.<lb/>
Wielkqzpi�S)St0re<lb/>
ATA<lb/>
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plus<lb/>
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downtown Greenville<lb/>
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ness, constant comic inventive-<lb/>
ness and Malcolm McDowell's<lb/>
tongue-in-cheek-swashbuckling<lb/>
performance.<lb/>
The story follows the irrever-<lb/>
ent and ribald Captain Harry<lb/>
Paget Flashman, of the 11th<lb/>
Hussars, as he deflowers both<lb/>
royalty and peasantry alike,<lb/>
indulges his passion for inordi-<lb/>
nate gambling and runs for cover<lb/>
at the first sign of swordplay.<lb/>
Like the recent Musketeer<lb/>
movies, it manages to be by turns<lb/>
delightfully witty, ridiculously<lb/>
absure and maliciously satirical.<lb/>
FANTASTIC VOYAGE AT 7pm.<lb/>
and 9 p.m.<lb/>
Fantastic Voyage is all that<lb/>
amusing and exciting, and the<lb/>
interior decorations have a bubb-<lb/>
ly, fantastic quality you won t find<lb/>
this side of Disneyland<lb/>
Bosley Crowther<lb/>
In the year 1995. a valuable<lb/>
Czech scientist escaping from<lb/>
behind the Iron Curtain is attack-<lb/>
ed by enemy agents.<lb/>
His brain is severely injured,<lb/>
and the injury is inoperable by<lb/>
traditional techniques.<lb/>
A team of scientists is placed<lb/>
aboard an atomic-powered sub-<lb/>
marine, reduced to the size of<lb/>
bacteria, and injected into the<lb/>
scientist's bloodstream.<lb/>
Objective. Reach the brain<lb/>
and repair the injury.<lb/>
First, however, they must<lb/>
battle such complications as a<lb/>
60-minute time limit, an attack by<lb/>
antibodies in the bloodstream,<lb/>
PREPARING<lb/>
FOR EXAMS?<lb/>
Rely on the most extensively used review book<lb/>
in professional nursing<lb/>
Mosby's<lb/>
COMPREHENSIVE<lb/>
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610 pages incorporating the latest knowledge,<lb/>
newest trends and current practices<lb/>
New (1977) 9th Edition Now Available at the Bookstore<lb/>
or call toll-free (800) 325-4177 to Order Direct.<lb/>
MOSBY<lb/>
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imjamy i ir'ui wf mi iNf iNniirmAi nrtisf r;r i timr. Missouri 63141 A8Q610<lb/>
turbulent sound vibrations, and<lb/>
an attempt to sabotage their<lb/>
mission.<lb/>
CARNAL KNOWLEDGE AT 8<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Here we have three episodes<lb/>
that span over two decades and<lb/>
involve two friends who graphi-<lb/>
cally discuss and compare their<lb/>
sexual pasts.<lb/>
Jack Nicholson and Art Gar-<lb/>
funkel are the friends, and both<lb/>
have grown from sex-starved<lb/>
college students into sexually<lb/>
bewildered adults.<lb/>
Nicholson is a playboy who<lb/>
marries a playgirl and divorces<lb/>
her, turning to a prostitute to<lb/>
bolster his waning virility.<lb/>
Garfunkel, who has become a<lb/>
doctor, likewise marries and<lb/>
divoroes.then turns to a "spiri-<lb/>
tual" arrangement with a naive<lb/>
hippie.<lb/>
The film becomes, then, an<lb/>
exploration of the lives of these<lb/>
two men. their totally different<lb/>
personalities, but their similari-<lb/>
ties in sexual frsutrations.<lb/>
MALCOLM MCDOWELL GIVES a tongue-in-cheek-swashbuckling<lb/>
performance in "Royal Flash<lb/>
Two man boat<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058054_0013"/><lb/>
ks<lb/>
ilayboy who<lb/>
nd divorces<lb/>
irostitute to<lb/>
nlity.<lb/>
as become a<lb/>
larnes and<lb/>
to a "spiri-<lb/>
ith a naive<lb/>
s. then, an<lb/>
es of these<lb/>
ly different<lb/>
sir similari-<lb/>
ions.<lb/>
buckling<lb/>
it<lb/>
"3,<lb/>
0"<lb/>
27 ApriM978 FQUNTAIIMHEAD Page 13<lb/>
MICHAEL RUTHERFORD AND Phil Collins of<lb/>
"Genesis "Lay your body down upon the<lb/>
midnight snow, feel the cold of winter in your hair .<lb/>
Here in a world of your own. in a casting that's<lb/>
grown, to a children's delight That arrived<lb/>
overnight. And here they come to play their magic<lb/>
gamesCarving names upon your frozen hand.<lb/>
Here in a world of your own, like a sleeper whose<lb/>
eyesSees the pain with surpriseAs it smothers<lb/>
your cries They'll never never know<lb/>
Vinyl Review<lb/>
By DAVID WHITSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
GENESIS<lb/>
.AND THEN THERE<lb/>
WERE THREE<lb/>
I don't want to beat around<lb/>
the bush but none of us are<lb/>
getting any younger. There's<lb/>
people out there who could take<lb/>
your place. A more commercial<lb/>
view 1 A fresher face'<lb/>
" Down And Out")<lb/>
A<lb/>
Well, at least we know where<lb/>
you're coming from, guys-the<lb/>
Atlantic record execs back in the<lb/>
States are screaming for another<lb/>
album, so, fearing for your niche<lb/>
in the immortal grooves of vinyl,<lb/>
you crank out another disc.<lb/>
ASSAULT ON AMERICAN<lb/>
WEST MYTH<lb/>
Passion, importance, even<lb/>
meaning are all missing from this<lb/>
album. An assault on the Ameri-<lb/>
can West myth occupies some<lb/>
scattered cuts on the album: the<lb/>
tale of Big Jim Cooiey on his<lb/>
cattle drive, in "Ballad of Big<lb/>
coming from a British classical<lb/>
rock band, sounds as meaningless<lb/>
as the Eagles singing "Street-<lb/>
fighting Man "Deep in the<lb/>
Motherlode" delivers the mes-<lb/>
sage that glory and the search for<lb/>
gold isn't for everyone (isn't that<lb/>
what the dO's were all about?);<lb/>
while "Snowtxxjnd" alludes to<lb/>
the Donner Party (I think).<lb/>
BAND IS'DOWNAND OUT"<lb/>
"Down And Out" from which<lb/>
the lyrics above are Quoted,<lb/>
seems to sum up the n jod of the<lb/>
band at this point in time.<lb/>
The gist of the album is that<lb/>
nothing matters�not gold, nor<lb/>
glory, nor conquest of women<lb/>
nor this album, for that matter.<lb/>
Lyrics copywright 1978 Gel-<lb/>
ring Ltd. I Ram It Music, Inc.<lb/>
�<lb/>
BOB WELCH: FRENCH KISS<lb/>
A fine, easy to listen to<lb/>
collection of shallow love songs<lb/>
that all sound alike.<lb/>
All of the songs (except for<lb/>
"Outskirts") land the simple<lb/>
pleasures of hedonism-fall in<lb/>
love, catch a quick thrill.<lb/>
Perhaps, as in "Hot Love<lb/>
Cold World break your little<lb/>
heart.<lb/>
Welch's one departure from<lb/>
the love song theme, "Out-<lb/>
skirts is a trivial exploration of<lb/>
the life of a half-assed outlaw who<lb/>
is trying to impress us with his<lb/>
toughness.<lb/>
While Welch doubtlessly<lb/>
meant this to be a serious song, it<lb/>
crumbles into self-parody.<lb/>
As Fleetwood Mac fans<lb/>
already know, "Sentimental<lb/>
Lady" involves the combined<lb/>
efforts of Mick Fleetwood, Chris-<lb/>
tine McVie, and Lindsay Bucking-<lb/>
ham along with Welch.<lb/>
The other cuts were created<lb/>
by the talents of Welch (guitars,<lb/>
bass and vocals) and Alvin Taylor<lb/>
on drums. Such a dual effort is<lb/>
commendable, but no excuse.<lb/>
SU books current<lb/>
films for next year<lb/>
ByMARCADLER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Saturday Night Fever. Annie<lb/>
Hall, and Looking for Mr Good-<lb/>
bar are a few of the flicks which<lb/>
are being considered for next<lb/>
year, said the new chairperson<lb/>
of the Films Committee. Linda<lb/>
Taylor.<lb/>
"These movies are among<lb/>
about 27 others which the commi-<lb/>
ttee is discussing but nothing is<lb/>
scheduled at this time said<lb/>
Taylor, who is a rising junior.<lb/>
The flicks which will be shown<lb/>
are newer releases due to the film<lb/>
distibutors new policy, said Tay-<lb/>
lor.<lb/>
This new policy is being<lb/>
able to rent movies which are just<lb/>
12 months old instead of renting<lb/>
only movies which are 18 months<lb/>
old stated Taylor<lb/>
"Before. ECU couldn't get<lb/>
films that soon But now it is<lb/>
possible to get top rate movies<lb/>
which are current said<lb/>
Taylor.<lb/>
According to Taylor the Films<lb/>
Committee might show some<lb/>
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movies which have not been south<lb/>
yet<lb/>
Also before the main show<lb/>
there will e cartoons or show<lb/>
films (which are no-animated<lb/>
short films)<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058054_0014"/><lb/>
Page 14 FOUNTAINHfcAD 27 April 1978<lb/>
Anita Bryant: she's still<lb/>
crazy after all these years<lb/>
By JOHN WEyLth<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Until last year, Anita Bryant<lb/>
was a successful popular enter-<lb/>
tainer: as singer, showgirl,<lb/>
author, and television orange<lb/>
juice huckster.<lb/>
But since January '77, when<lb/>
she began her anti-gay campaign,<lb/>
she has become a controversial<lb/>
figure and national target at the<lb/>
center of a storm of hot discus-<lb/>
sion, argument, personal ridicule,<lb/>
and hatred.<lb/>
Why has she choseg to wage<lb/>
this battle and take so much upon<lb/>
herself?<lb/>
The reason is religion.<lb/>
In her book Amazing Grace<lb/>
she describes her religious feel-<lb/>
ings and convictions.<lb/>
Though the book was publish-<lb/>
ed six years before her campaign<lb/>
began, it explores the deep faith<lb/>
that compels her to champion that<lb/>
cause.<lb/>
PLEDGED TO GOD &amp; JESUS<lb/>
Anita Bryant is deeply and<lb/>
devotedly Christian. Her life,<lb/>
family and personal, and career<lb/>
are pledged to God and Jesus.<lb/>
In Amazing Grace she re-<lb/>
counts her many experiences with<lb/>
the spirit of God and the many<lb/>
people she hs brought to Chris-<lb/>
tianity though both personal<lb/>
effort and her religion oriented<lb/>
singing career.<lb/>
Much of the book describes<lb/>
six weeks in her life in which she<lb/>
converts or is greatly responsible<lb/>
for the re-birth' � of several dose<lb/>
friends.<lb/>
By the end of the novel she<lb/>
has converted some ten indivi-<lb/>
duals.<lb/>
Amazing Grace is written in<lb/>
informal, conversational first-<lb/>
person style. The following pass-<lb/>
age is typical:<lb/>
How lovingly He had appear-<lb/>
ed to comfort and empower me<lb/>
Without Him I would have felt<lb/>
indescribably alone-a mere dot<lb/>
stationed high above a wide sea of<lb/>
people.<lb/>
Anita's grace with God seems<lb/>
to be truly heartfelt and genuine.<lb/>
Exactly why this makes her want<lb/>
to launch a campaign agaainst<lb/>
homosexuality is not dear.<lb/>
At one point in the book she<lb/>
states, "God's amazing grace.<lb/>
Who could pretend to compre-<lb/>
hend it? The same may be said<lb/>
for Anita's<lb/>
ANITA BRYANT: "HOW lovingly He had appeareo to comrori tutu<lb/>
empower me.<lb/>
Will replace the Dance Tlieatre of Harlem<lb/>
Zulu Theatre Company makes U. S. debut at Spoleto<lb/>
The Phe Zulu Theatre Com-<lb/>
pany from South Africa will make<lb/>
its American premiere at the May<lb/>
25-June 11 Spoleto Festival<lb/>
U.S.A. 1978.<lb/>
Christine L Reed, the Festi-<lb/>
val's general manager, announ-<lb/>
ced today that the Zulu company<lb/>
will replace the Dance Theatre of<lb/>
Harlem (which had previously<lb/>
been scheduled to appear at the<lb/>
Festival) in 5 performances of<lb/>
�,tt ucor <lb/>
RI8-Q �.5&amp; (pC.<lb/>
Umabatha.<lb/>
Umabatha is the Zulu version<lb/>
of Macbeth.<lb/>
The Phe Zulu company per-<lb/>
formed at the 1975 Spoleto<lb/>
Festival in Italy and was ao-<lb/>
daimed as one of the Festival's<lb/>
highlights.<lb/>
"We're extremely fortunate<lb/>
to be able to premiere this dance<lb/>
company in the 1978 Spoleto<lb/>
Festival U.S.A. in Charleston<lb/>
said Ms. Reed.<lb/>
"The Phe Zulu Theatre Com-<lb/>
pany is one of the most exdting<lb/>
groups ever to partidpate in the<lb/>
Festival<lb/>
Tickets for The Phe Zulu<lb/>
Theatre Company are available<lb/>
now by mail from Spoleto Festival<lb/>
Tickets, P.O. Box 704, Charles-<lb/>
ton, S.C. 29402.<lb/>
The Spoleto Festival Box<lb/>
Office opens on May 1 at the<lb/>
Gaillard Munidpal Auditorium.<lb/>
Ticket holders for the pre-<lb/>
viously-scheduled Dance Theatre<lb/>
of Harlem will be notified directly<lb/>
of the change.<lb/>
They may use their tickets for<lb/>
the performances of The Phe Zulu<lb/>
Theatre Company, or they may<lb/>
exchange their tickets fa tickets<lb/>
to other Spoleto Festival events.<lb/>
If they choose neither to<lb/>
attend The Zulu dance company<lb/>
nor other Festival events, they<lb/>
may return their Dance Theatre of<lb/>
Harlem tickets fa a refund.<lb/>
GERALDINEPAGE TO STAR IN<lb/>
"CREVECOEUR"<lb/>
Ms. Reed announced that<lb/>
popular Broadway adress Geral-<lb/>
dine Page will star in the wald<lb/>
premiae of Tennessee Williams'<lb/>
play "Creve Coeur" at Spoleto<lb/>
Festival U.S.A.<lb/>
Geraldine Page, who became<lb/>
an instant star with ha New Yak<lb/>
appearance in Williams' "Sum-<lb/>
mer and Smoke has pafamed<lb/>
frequently ai Broadway, televi-<lb/>
sion and movies.<lb/>
She is a graduate of the<lb/>
Mail to; POS� Ltd.<lb/>
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OR DO YOU JUST WANT TO LOOK LIKE ONE? WE CAN SHOW YOU HOW.<lb/>
This fall your opportunity is coming.<lb/>
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Goodman Theatre School and a<lb/>
memba of Ada's Studio.<lb/>
�CREVE COEUR"<lb/>
TICKETS AVAILABLE<lb/>
Thanks to the return of<lb/>
"Creve Coeur" tickets which<lb/>
were consigned to a group, some<lb/>
tickets are now available fa the<lb/>
evening pafamances on June 5<lb/>
and June 7, as well as fa matinee<lb/>
pafamances on June 6, 8, 9, and<lb/>
11.<lb/>
"Creve Coeur" will be pafa-<lb/>
med at Charleston's histaic Dock<lb/>
Street Theatre.<lb/>
Joining Gaaldine Page in the<lb/>
cast are Shirley Knight, Ruth<lb/>
Fad and Barbara Tar buck.<lb/>
KIAWAH ISLAND COMPANY<lb/>
The Spoleto Festival U.S.A.<lb/>
production of Tennessee Wil-<lb/>
liams' "Creve Coeur" will be<lb/>
sponsaed by the Kiawah Island<lb/>
Conpany and the First National<lb/>
Bank of South Carolina.<lb/>
"We are extremely grateful<lb/>
fa the genaosity of Kiawah and<lb/>
the First National Bank said<lb/>
Ms. Reed. "They are demonstra-<lb/>
ting a maja commitment to the<lb/>
Festival.<lb/>
"The only way in which we will<lb/>
be able to provide Festival<lb/>
audiences with outstanding pro-<lb/>
ductions at reasonable ticket<lb/>
prices is through contributiois of<lb/>
this kind.<lb/>
"We need mae suppat like<lb/>
this, and I hope that the signifi-<lb/>
cant genaosity of the Kiawah<lb/>
Island Company and the First<lb/>
National Bank will be emulated<lb/>
by many othas<lb/>
Kiawah Island is a 10,000 acre<lb/>
seaside resat community near<lb/>
Charleston.<lb/>
In addition to a numba of<lb/>
private homes, the Island has the<lb/>
Kiawah Island Inn, the Straw<lb/>
Market, tennisoourts, golf and 10<lb/>
miles of Atlantic Ocean beach.<lb/>
I I<lb/>
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Mack, Freeman FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
Athletes of the Year<lb/>
27 April 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
Apr<lb/>
Page15<lb/>
ByCHRISHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Sports Edita<lb/>
As has been the tradition in the past several years,<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD has selected an" Athlete" and "Coach of the Year"<lb/>
fa its last yearly publicatioi.<lb/>
This year's Athlete, a should I say, "Athletes of the Year" are<lb/>
Debbie Freeman and Oliver Mack.<lb/>
Our "Coach of the Year" is women's basketball coach Catherine<lb/>
Bdton.<lb/>
DEBBIE FREEMAN<lb/>
For the first time in FOUNTAINHEAD histay an athlete has won<lb/>
 Athlete of the Year twice. But then again Debbie Freeman deserves<lb/>
the rewards and respect that ECU has to give her.<lb/>
Debbie was outstanding in not just one, but three separate spats.<lb/>
In the fall, Debbie played volleyball. She was selected All-date fa<lb/>
that spat this past year and played on the State's Volleyball All-Star<lb/>
Team which she considers her greatest hota.<lb/>
See FREEMAN, p. 17<lb/>
OLIVER MACK<lb/>
Our other FOUNTAINHEAD Athlete of the Year' i sbasket ball star<lb/>
Oliver Mack.<lb/>
Coming to ECU from Queens NY. via San Janito Junia College in<lb/>
Texas, Mack went on a recad breaking spree that broke virtually every<lb/>
ECU basketball seasonal reoad in histay.<lb/>
Oliver a "O" as he is called by his teammates and fans finished<lb/>
fourth in soaring in the naitai last season with a 28.0 average. He<lb/>
ranked second on the Pirate team in assists and tied fa first ai the<lb/>
team in steals.<lb/>
Oliver was the third leading rebounder on the team even though he<lb/>
played at the guard position.<lb/>
He was named "Most Valuable Player" in the First Union<lb/>
Invitational in Charlrtte, despite the fact that ECU lost both games.<lb/>
During February Mack was named the Greenstoro Daily News<lb/>
"Athlete of the Week (Feb. 4-11).<lb/>
See MACK, p. 17<lb/>
CATHERINE BOLTON<lb/>
Catherine Baton is this year sFOUNTAINHEAD "Coach of the<lb/>
Year<lb/>
Bolton, who has been at ECU since 1969, had an outstanding year<lb/>
as coach of the Women's basketball team.<lb/>
Under her guidance this years Lady Pirates finished second in the<lb/>
state playoffs and went to the Division I Regional Tournament in<lb/>
Chapel Hill, N.C.<lb/>
Last year's 20-11 mark was the most wins ever by an ECU women<lb/>
team and contrasted with last year 6-16 recad when injuries to key<lb/>
players hampered the team.<lb/>
Bolton, who resigned as head coach this past season to concentrate<lb/>
oi teaching, surpassed the 100 mark this year in wins. She finishes ha<lb/>
career with an outstanding 113 wins and 54 losses ovaall.<lb/>
In 1973 ha Lady Pirate basketball team won both the state and<lb/>
regional championship.<lb/>
See BOLTON, p. 17<lb/>
Coach<lb/>
Bolton<lb/>
honored<lb/>
CATHERINE BOLTON<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD COACH<lb/>
OF THE YEAR<lb/>
HONORABLE MENTION<lb/>
ATHLETE OF THE YEAR<lb/>
D.T. Joyna<lb/>
Harold Randolph<lb/>
HamanMclntyre<lb/>
Zack Valentine<lb/>
Rose Thompson<lb/>
Eddie Gates<lb/>
Gerald Hall<lb/>
Calvin Alston<lb/>
Wayne Bolt<lb/>
Jimmy Southaland<lb/>
HONORABLE MENTION<lb/>
COACH OF THE YEAR<lb/>
Pat Dye<lb/>
Monte Little<lb/>
Bill Carson<lb/>
Laurie Arrants<lb/>
RayScharf<lb/>
MacMcLendon<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
SPORTS IN REVIEW<lb/>
By Steve Byers<lb/>
DEBBIE FREEMAN AND Oliver Mack both<lb/>
excelled particularly in basketball. The two are<lb/>
shown here with the ball Mack used to score a ached<lb/>
record 47 points vs. USC-Aiken.<lb/>
(Photo by Pete Pcdeszwa)<lb/>
Tyson picks ECU over Marquette,<lb/>
Notre Dame , NCSU, UNC<lb/>
Al Tyson, East Carolina basketball's first signee of this recruiting<lb/>
year has a very mature philosophy conoaning college basketball and<lb/>
national exposure.<lb/>
"If you are really good the pros are gonna knew said Tyson<lb/>
whose oared height is6'10V2" tall.<lb/>
Tysoi shunned away reauitas from Notre Dame, North Carolina<lb/>
State, Maryland, idarquette, Clemson, and the Univasity of North<lb/>
Carolina at Chapel Hill, just to name a few and plans to attend East<lb/>
Carolina as a Physical Education maja.<lb/>
"Some of the reauitas talked about last year hae and said I<lb/>
wouldn't get any exposure said Tyson. "But they can't tell me what<lb/>
to do. Iknow what's best fa me<lb/>
As most students already know D.H. Conely is not even ten miles<lb/>
from the univasity campus, and Tyson admits his pleasure of being<lb/>
close to home.<lb/>
Asked if he was effected by the Bucsdissapointing past season, he<lb/>
said. "I wanted to go somewhae that I'mneected feel they just need<lb/>
someone toaash the boards and a little mae defense he oontinued.<lb/>
"If you can play 'D' you're going to win; I think I can help<lb/>
Tyson avaagoJ almost 19 points a game and nearly 15 rebounds as<lb/>
a centa and he hopes to play enough to keep up his average.<lb/>
Al was quick to say his parents liked him attending ECU, and it'sa<lb/>
cinch Buc fans will have the same reaction.<lb/>
UNDERWOOD FOUR MORE YEARS<lb/>
Speaking of signee s, it is intaesiing to note that transfa David<lb/>
Uncterwcod still has four years of eligibility left unda NCAA ruies.<lb/>
Undawood, aiginally signed by Frank McGuire at the Univasity of<lb/>
South Carolina, departed befae the season began and thaefae will be<lb/>
in purple and gold attire through the 1981-82 basketball season.<lb/>
GILLM AN ROBS SMITH AND SLOAN<lb/>
Undawood and Tyson were both heavily reauited by "other"<lb/>
schools in the state and even the most ardent Gillman antagonists have<lb/>
to admit to the invasion of the Dean Smith and Nam Soan stomping<lb/>
grounds.<lb/>
One state papa has rumaed anotha surprising signing by the<lb/>
Pirate menta and the star reauita is sure to land mae.<lb/>
POWERS RE A DY TO PLAY<lb/>
Though the Bucs seem to be adding heavily in the front court, one<lb/>
playa who will not surrenda his fair share of playing time is Kyle<lb/>
Powers. The 6 5 faward has been a diffaoit man in pickup games at<lb/>
Minges the last weeks.<lb/>
Seeing playas put so much into aftanoon games that the coaches<lb/>
never see makes me wish the season started tommarow.<lb/>
MOSELEYIN THE ��BIG APPLE"<lb/>
Walter Mosely, the freshman point guard from Queens, New Yak<lb/>
is talking about playing some summer pickup games with some pros in<lb/>
the "Big Apple He was careful to add that he'll only hang around<lb/>
during the day. "You can get hurt in Central Park at night<lb/>
Moeeley, who shared point duties with graduating senia Dai<lb/>
Whitaka, looks faward to possible competitioi fron entaing<lb/>
freshman and transfas. "That's the way its supposed to be<lb/>
Moseley who emaged from his usually "oca" state of being to<lb/>
bombast rne fa not mentiaiing his name in Tuesday's column, should<lb/>
be the starta in pre-seasai depth charts.<lb/>
�ON THE ROAD WITH LARRY GILLMAN<lb/>
Coach Gillman, who has spent mae time ai the road than Charles<lb/>
Kuralt, has become a mystical being known only from phone calls to<lb/>
assistant coach Dillon'soffioe. He is supposed to be back in Greenville<lb/>
early next week to announoe signings, and the official schedule should<lb/>
follow in about a month.<lb/>
The schedule should be one of the toughest in the south; but this<lb/>
year Gillman should have the talent and mae diffaently than last<lb/>
year, experience to deal with it.<lb/>
This ta looks faward to South Bend, Durham, Raleigh, College<lb/>
Park, anu Greenville, with a particular zeal.<lb/>
A8oneTV announoa said early last season, "If they're gonna beat<lb/>
ECU, they betta do it this year Well boys, this year is over!<lb/>
<pb facs="00058054_0016"/><lb/>
Hm 16 FOUNTAINHEAD 27 April 1978<lb/>
Pirates destroy Methodist 23-1 , win 25th<lb/>
By ANDY STEWART<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The East Carolina Pirates<lb/>
demolished Methodist College by<lb/>
a score oi ?3-1 in seven innings.<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
The game started off as it was<lb/>
going to be a close game, being<lb/>
decided by a couple of runs. The<lb/>
Pirates were able to get their<lb/>
scoring attack together. Bobby<lb/>
Supel reached first by means of a<lb/>
by JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Last of the year<lb/>
This is the last edition of this<lb/>
column for this year and we would like to draw it all to a close by<lb/>
making note of a few special things and persons that have taken place<lb/>
this school year, while wishing others well.<lb/>
The results fa the Men's Intramural Chancellor's Cup point<lb/>
standings are in and the school year winners have been determined.<lb/>
walk. Jerry Carraway then<lb/>
Doubled to send Supel home to<lb/>
make the score 1-0 in favor of the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
In the third the bottom fell out<lb/>
on the Methodist defense as the<lb/>
Pirates scored 14 runs off of 10<lb/>
hits and 5 errors. The inning was<lb/>
a complete disaster fa the<lb/>
Methodist and a field day fa the<lb/>
Pirates as Maoon Moye and Scott<lb/>
Layden both slapped three run<lb/>
The Chanoella's Cup signifies the intramural championship fa all<lb/>
spots In the damitay diviston, the top damitay was Scott Dam,<lb/>
winning the Trophy fa the third straight year and retiring the trophy to<lb/>
the Damitay trophy case by winning three straight years.<lb/>
The club division champion was Phi Epsilon Kappa, also fa the<lb/>
third year in a row-retiring that trophy.<lb/>
The fraternity division was the closest race of all. This year's<lb/>
winning fraternity was the Kappa Sigma fraternity. The Kappa Sigs<lb/>
narrowly nosed out the Tekes fa first place. The Tekes (Tau Kappa<lb/>
Epsilon) won the trophy last season. In the last four years, the<lb/>
Chancella'sTrophy has been won by four different aganizations, with<lb/>
Kappa Alpha and Pi Kappa Phi winning the trophy the two previous<lb/>
years<lb/>
The ECU Team Handball Club will be leaving Thursday, May 4 fa<lb/>
Long Island, New Yak whae they will play in the Natiaiai Team<lb/>
Handball Champioiships at Hofstra College.<lb/>
Sixteen teams will be entered fa the natiaiai championships and<lb/>
the ECU club will be competing in both the oollege and open divisions.<lb/>
It is the first time an ECU team has oompeted fa the natiaiai<lb/>
championship in this spat. Also oompeting will be teams from UCLA,<lb/>
Navy, Air Face, the Military Academy, Ohio State, Notre Dame and<lb/>
the U.S. Army, among othas. The goalie fa the U.S. Army team<lb/>
played on the 1976 United States Olympic team and the coach from the<lb/>
1980 Olympic Handball team will be on hand to watch the<lb/>
championships.<lb/>
One of the ECU team members, Jim Chastain, has already been<lb/>
invited to try out fa the 1980 team this summer in Colaado Springs and<lb/>
it is hoped that other members of the ECU team may be invited.<lb/>
The ECU team will play its first game on Friday night and three<lb/>
rrxxe games on Saturday and Sunday, befae returning home on<lb/>
Monday, May 8. The field will be divided into divisions in both the<lb/>
open and oollege classification and the divisional leaders will be<lb/>
decided by Round Robin play. The top two teams from each division<lb/>
will then meet fa the overall title in single elimination play, while the<lb/>
other teams will play in consolation games.<lb/>
While the ECU team does not expect to win the overall tournament<lb/>
title, Team Coach and ECU Intramural Directa Wayne Edwards is<lb/>
looking fa the team to get some valuable experkxice and perhaps win a<lb/>
few games.<lb/>
"Wedon't know yet who we will be playing said Edwards. "They<lb/>
decide that by random drawing on the first night, but we'll be playing<lb/>
in both classifications so we will be playing a lot of games. We are<lb/>
mainly going up there fa the experience.<lb/>
"None of the guys on our team have ever played handball befae<lb/>
except against themselves in scrimmages and in practice, so we'll be a<lb/>
See INTRAMURALS, p. 18)<lb/>
N0W-FORY0UI<lb/>
6 0A'<lb/>
A.<lb/>
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9<lb/>
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� ALL JEANS,CORDS, KHAKIS fy<lb/>
�25"?. OFF ALL Su EATERS, SELECTED SHIFTS<lb/>
�ISy. OFF ALL GOLF TENNIS SHOES<lb/>
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TOP- SiDERS ml .TENNIS OUTFITS<lb/>
PROSHOP.nc<lb/>
homers. The Pirates sent seven-<lb/>
teen men to the plate during the<lb/>
third inning.<lb/>
In the fourth inning the<lb/>
Pirates were able to together four<lb/>
more runs.<lb/>
In the sixth the Pirates were<lb/>
able to produce duel homers<lb/>
again. Maoon Moye slapped his<lb/>
second of the night with Butch<lb/>
Davis aboard. This made the<lb/>
fourth horrwr of the year fa<lb/>
Moye. Jary Carraway also slam-<lb/>
med a homer with Sage on base.<lb/>
This was Carraway's third on the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
In the seventh inning, the<lb/>
final inning of the game, Billy<lb/>
Williams relieved pitcher Bill<lb/>
Davis Davis gave up four hits<lb/>
and one run to up his record to<lb/>
2-1. In relieving Williams made<lb/>
his first appearance of the year<lb/>
and did it in perfect stride. He<lb/>
blew the ball past the only three<lb/>
batters he faced<lb/>
The leading hitta fa the<lb/>
Pirates was Maoon Moye who<lb/>
went 4-5, with two bomeruns and<lb/>
7 RBI's, Jerry Carraway who<lb/>
went 3-5 with one homerun and<lb/>
three RBI's, Scott Layden who<lb/>
went 2-4 with one homerun and<lb/>
three RBI's; and Butch Davis who<lb/>
went 3-4.<lb/>
Thinclads<lb/>
attend<lb/>
Penn<lb/>
relays<lb/>
By STEVE BYERS<lb/>
Assistant Spats Edita<lb/>
The East Carolina men's track<lb/>
team travels to Pennsylvanai<lb/>
tommarow fa the Penn Relays.<lb/>
Some of trv strongest athletic<lb/>
competitas in the country are<lb/>
expected to be on hand fa the<lb/>
annual event.<lb/>
Pirate coach Bill Carson cited<lb/>
the 400 meter relay as the<lb/>
highlight of the meet. "Three of<lb/>
the top teams in the country will<lb/>
be there in Villanova, Tennessee<lb/>
and us he stated.<lb/>
Several Pirates will be striving<lb/>
fa nation qualification times fa<lb/>
the final NCAA meet later in the<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Calvin Alston, Otis Melvin<lb/>
and Herman Mclntyre will lead<lb/>
the Pirate entrouge.<lb/>
The INCAIAW<lb/>
Division 1<lb/>
Tournament for<lb/>
women's Softball<lb/>
will be held April<lb/>
28-29 at Graham NC<lb/>
Support the Pirates!<lb/>
<pb facs="00058054_0017"/><lb/>
�'�<lb/>
MB<lb/>
�MBBIBBBB<lb/>
sent seven-<lb/>
3 during the<lb/>
inning the<lb/>
ogether four<lb/>
Crates were<lb/>
uel homers<lb/>
slapped his<lb/>
with Butch<lb/>
made the<lb/>
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third on the<lb/>
inning, the<lb/>
game, Billy<lb/>
)itcher Bill<lb/>
p four hits<lb/>
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Hams made<lb/>
of the year<lb/>
stride. He<lb/>
i only three<lb/>
er for the<lb/>
Moye who<lb/>
meruns and<lb/>
raway who<lb/>
merun and<lb/>
ayden who<lb/>
merun and<lb/>
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ids<lb/>
1<lb/>
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Editor<lb/>
men's track<lb/>
ennsylvanai<lb/>
tnn Relays,<lb/>
jest athletic<lb/>
xxintry are<lb/>
and for the<lb/>
�arson cited<lb/>
ay as the<lb/>
"Three of<lb/>
xxjntry will<lb/>
Tennessee<lb/>
be striving<lb/>
t times for<lb/>
later in the<lb/>
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3 will lead<lb/>
AW<lb/>
1<lb/>
it for<lb/>
ftball<lb/>
April<lb/>
am INC<lb/>
i rates!<lb/>
27 April 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Pay 17<lb/>
leading home run<lb/>
This week the<lb/>
By DAVID MERRIAM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
'Athlete of the Week" award is presented to<lb/>
FREEMAN<lb/>
Continued from p. 15<lb/>
During the winter Debbie played basketball. Although she would<lb/>
like to have played guard, the 58" senior from Jacksonville, N.C.<lb/>
played at forward where she could use her rebounding ability.<lb/>
In her three seasons on the basketball team, Debbie was on the<lb/>
All-Division I team fa three years straight and the Greensboro Daily<lb/>
News All-State team for three years.<lb/>
This past year Debbie also made the All-Tournament team in this<lb/>
year's N.C.A.I.A.W. Division I tournament. She set school records fa<lb/>
career rebounding and carried scaing this past season.<lb/>
In the spring Debbie was oi the women's track team. She threw<lb/>
the javelin, the discus and sha-put.<lb/>
The best way to sum up Debbie's three outstanding years fa ECU is<lb/>
with a comment from her basketball ooach Catherine Baton.<lb/>
 Debbie is without a doubt the most outstanding 'emale athlete in<lb/>
ECU histay Baton said. "In the nine years we've had a women's<lb/>
spats program here at ECU I've never seen such a fine athlete as<lb/>
Debbie has been. She has done a lot fa wanen's spats at ECU<lb/>
MACK. Continued from p. 15<lb/>
During the year Mack scaed over 30 points 13 times, over 40 points<lb/>
twice and over 20 points 21 times.<lb/>
Oliver Mack also became ECU'S first "Honaable Mentioi"<lb/>
Ail-American basketball player in histay. He was also named<lb/>
All-District.<lb/>
The best way to sum up'O's" ability is to let the coaches he played<lb/>
against do the talking.<lb/>
South Carolina's Frank McGuire- "Mack is a very good basketball<lb/>
player. We knew him in New Yak-he's fran Queens�so his ability<lb/>
was no surprise to us<lb/>
N.C. State's Nam Sloan Mack is a fine athlete. We've known about<lb/>
him fa a loig time. I was impressed by him when he was in the eighth<lb/>
grade. I doit think he hogged the ball a took bad shas<lb/>
UNC Chariate's Lee RoseHe'sa fine player. It's a oompliment to<lb/>
him that the press vaed him MVP (in First Union Invitational<lb/>
Tournament won by UNG-Q"<lb/>
LaSalle's Paul West headMack was just unstoppable. He was an<lb/>
even better shcoter than we thought. He'sga a pure jumper<lb/>
Boston College's Dr. Tom Davis- "He gets points from so many places<lb/>
it makes him so effective. He's a beautiful player. We tried tooontain<lb/>
him in our defense and thought we were doing a respectable job, but<lb/>
then we were shocked to see he had 23 points at halftime. I think he<lb/>
would be tough to handle with a special defense<lb/>
St. Peter's Bob KeHyOliver Mack is the finest college basketball<lb/>
player I ve ever seen<lb/>
William and Mary's Bruce ParkhillWary about diva Mack in the<lb/>
final minutes of play? We had to wary about Mack the entire 40<lb/>
minutes of the game because he's such a tremendous shooter from<lb/>
anywhae oi the court<lb/>
USC-Aiken'sLew Pakins (Following school reoad 47 points)Oliva<lb/>
was just outstanding. We did everything possible to stop him and<lb/>
couldn't. I think tonight was just one of those special nights. I don't<lb/>
care if Jo Jo White was covaing him tonight, he couldn't have stopped<lb/>
him. His physical strength surprised me some. We knew he was a<lb/>
super shcota, but he got a lot of three-point plays. He's by far the best<lb/>
we've played against this year<lb/>
Reoads Broken This Season:<lb/>
Single season scaing reoad: famaly 662 points, set 25 years ago,<lb/>
1952-53(694) (667)<lb/>
Single season scaing avaage: famaly 26.5, set 25 years ago,<lb/>
1952-53 (currently is 28.0)<lb/>
Sngle game scaing reoad: 47 vs USC-Aiken-famaly 42 set in<lb/>
1969-70<lb/>
Single game most field goals: 19 vs USC-Aiken-famaly 18 set 25<lb/>
years ago, 1952-53<lb/>
Single game field goals attempted: 36 vs Marylana -famaly 29 set in<lb/>
1967-68<lb/>
Single seasai most field goals: famaly 218 set in 1959 (currently has<lb/>
277)<lb/>
Single season most field goals attempted: famaly 421 set in 1959-60<lb/>
BOLTON Continued from p. 15<lb/>
She is the only ooach in Nath Carolina since the aeation of the<lb/>
Al AW to qualify a team fa the national tournaments. ECU is still the<lb/>
only N.C. team eva to advanoe to the AIAW finals. That year the<lb/>
Pirates finished with a 15-0 mark, defeated Madison College,<lb/>
Tennessee Tech and South Carolina, and lost two of three in the<lb/>
National Tournament.<lb/>
Catha.ne Baton's reoad this year certainly makes ha vay<lb/>
desaving of this year's honaa<lb/>
Gates selected<lb/>
athlete<lb/>
of the week<lb/>
EDDIE GATES, EAST Caro-<lb/>
lina's all time seasonal home-<lb/>
run hitter, Athlete of the<lb/>
Week.<lb/>
baseball standout Eddie Gates.<lb/>
Transferring fran the College of Albamarie, Eddie has made many<lb/>
significant contributions to the program hae. This past week, he broke<lb/>
the season homaun mark by hitting his ninth of the season, and<lb/>
thirteenth carea. The old homaun reoad was set in 1968, by Jim<lb/>
Snyda, who hit 8 homauns in one season.<lb/>
 Eddie is one of the most complete ballplayas on the team said<lb/>
head ooach Monte Little. "I am vay pleased and have enjoyed these<lb/>
past two seasons with Eddie<lb/>
Howeva, the season is not quite ova, with nine games remaining<lb/>
on the schedule.<lb/>
"I hope Eddie can knock a few more out befae the season ends<lb/>
continued Little. "He has just learned how to really stroke the ball.<lb/>
Eddie has got tremendous fae-arm strength and he oonoentrates all<lb/>
the time<lb/>
But thae is a paradox in this situation.<lb/>
Eddie is the lead off batta in the rosta, even though he leads the<lb/>
team in homauns.<lb/>
Next, ooach Little claims that Eddie has the best speed on the team.<lb/>
So, a decision has to be made, eitha put Eddie Iowa in the ada,<lb/>
and get more runs batted in, a have Eddie lead off and get on base.<lb/>
"We decided to put Eddie first in the lineup. He has tremendous<lb/>
speed and if he gets on base, he can steal a will somehow advance<lb/>
said Little.<lb/>
So it goes, Eddie Gates, lead off batta, leading honaun hitta,<lb/>
and leading base steala, will dose out his season of Pirate baseball<lb/>
afta leaving his mark in the ECU recad book.<lb/>
"Eddie isafine citizen. I'll miss his mental and physical aspectsof<lb/>
the game concluded Little.<lb/>
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waistband, built-in belt with<lb/>
wraparound take up tabs,<lb/>
full ball pockets; American<lb/>
cut individually packed<lb/>
in cello bags<lb/>
Clssslc0009 100<lb/>
combed cotton Boastitch<lb/>
knit, tailored to fit after<lb/>
shrinkage; long tail;<lb/>
3-button placket, short<lb/>
classic collar and crew<lb/>
sleeves; American cut,<lb/>
individually cello packed<lb/>
Sport 0070<lb/>
60 cotton40 polyester<lb/>
lightweight soft )ersey<lb/>
knit, wash and wear fabric,<lb/>
completely double-<lb/>
stitched, pointed sport<lb/>
collar with 3-button placket<lb/>
and open sport sleeves,<lb/>
American cut; individually<lb/>
cello packed<lb/>
H.L.H0DGES<lb/>
AND COMPANY, INC.<lb/>
210 E. 5th St. Phono 752-4156<lb/>
We would Re to thai al the LC4J. students of 1977-1978<lb/>
for shopping with us this year. It lias been a pleasure<lb/>
to servo yon and nope to see you al again in our ttoro toon!<lb/>
<pb facs="00058054_0018"/><lb/>
Page 18 FOUNTAINHEAD 27 April 1978<lb/>
Ken Smith resigns Sports Information post<lb/>
The resignation of Ken Smith<lb/>
as sports information director at<lb/>
East Carolina University was<lb/>
announoed today by athletic<lb/>
director Bill Cain. The resignation<lb/>
is effective the end of May.<lb/>
Smith served four years as<lb/>
sports information director for the<lb/>
Pirate athletic teams and three<lb/>
years as coordinator of the<lb/>
school's Pirate Sports Network,<lb/>
the radio network for football and<lb/>
ENTRAMURALS<lb/>
Continued from p. 16<lb/>
little behind at the start. I think we'll have worked our way intohowto<lb/>
play, though, by the last three games. It will be a physical field and<lb/>
we'll have to adjust. I know our guys are ready to play and in shape,<lb/>
though, so we are looking to have a good time. I think we can win some<lb/>
games, too<lb/>
The money for the team to travel to the Championships was raised<lb/>
through the SGA. through team fund raising and with a little help of<lb/>
the Intramural department. Half the money was raised through efforts<lb/>
by the team members themselves.<lb/>
"This is a big chance fa us and East Carolina to get some national<lb/>
recognition added Edwards. "It will be good publicity for both our<lb/>
school and our intramural department to fiJd a team<lb/>
Rain has delayed the men'sail-campus championships three times<lb/>
this week and the four teams vying fa the title will try again tonight.<lb/>
In the first-round of the double elimination tournament, the Scott<lb/>
Time-Outs will face last year's champion, Tau Kappa Epsilon and the<lb/>
Belk Castaways will meet the Lumber and Lightning.<lb/>
basketball.<lb/>
"I leave East Carolina with<lb/>
mixed emotions said Smith, but<lb/>
I have accepted a very enhancing<lb/>
management position with a<lb/>
growing firm in Greensbao. One<lb/>
must oonsider future directions<lb/>
and advancement possibilities,<lb/>
and I feel this decision is best fa<lb/>
my future interests.<lb/>
"My four years with the<lb/>
Pirate athletic department has<lb/>
been very rewarding to me, and I<lb/>
hope to the school as well<lb/>
Smith came to East Carolina<lb/>
in the fall of 1974 after previously<lb/>
serving as spats directa fa a<lb/>
radio station in High Point.<lb/>
A native of Rookingham,<lb/>
Smith graduated from Ragsdale<lb/>
High School in Jamestown in 1967<lb/>
and received his B.A. degree<lb/>
from the University of Nath<lb/>
Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1971,<lb/>
with a double maja in journalism<lb/>
and radioTVmrtion pictures.<lb/>
While at East Carolina, three<lb/>
spats brochures compiled by the<lb/>
staff under Smith won national<lb/>
recognition. In 1972, Smith was<lb/>
named an Outstanding Young<lb/>
Man of America.<lb/>
East Carolina will be losing its Assistant Intramural Directa at the<lb/>
end of the summer, Rose Mary Adkins.<lb/>
Rose Mary will be leaving ECU at the end of second sessioi<lb/>
summer school and will be getting married in August and moving to<lb/>
Greensbao. Fa the past two years she has served as Dr. Edwards'<lb/>
assistant and been in charge of the women's program, the oo-rec<lb/>
intramural program and the reaeational swim program. In addition,<lb/>
she has been responsible fa starting an intramural program fa<lb/>
handicapped students, which will be put into full gear next fall.<lb/>
Not only will Rose Mary'soompetent wak be missed, but mae so<lb/>
her sense of huma, charm and friendship will be missed by her friends<lb/>
and all who knew her. We all wish Rose Mary the very best.<lb/>
KEN SMITH<lb/>
Under Smith's ooadinatioi,<lb/>
the Pirate Spats Netwak grew<lb/>
fran oily ten radio stations fa<lb/>
football in 1975 to 25 stations last<lb/>
year. Also, basketball tripled in<lb/>
stations on the netwak during<lb/>
that same period.<lb/>
Smith has held memberships<lb/>
in the College Spats Infamatiai<lb/>
Directas Association of America,<lb/>
National Association of Spats<lb/>
Writers and Spatscasters, Sigma<lb/>
Delta Chi, United States Basket-<lb/>
ball Writers Association, Caro-<lb/>
Imas Golf Repaters Association<lb/>
and the Nath Carolina Associa-<lb/>
tion of Spats Broadcasters.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
torrent "W<lb/>
FOH HENT: Fully furnished 2<lb/>
bdrm. apt. available fa sublease<lb/>
beginning June 28 fa as loig as<lb/>
Aug. 20. Located at Langston<lb/>
Park Apts. within walking dis-<lb/>
tance to campus (bus service<lb/>
also). Call 758-3555 if interested.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 1 bdrm. apt. to<lb/>
sublease fa the summer with the<lb/>
option to lease in the fall. $155 a<lb/>
month including heat and air.<lb/>
Close to campus. Call 758-6175 a<lb/>
cane by 206 N. Summit St. Apt.<lb/>
19, River Front Apts.<lb/>
PRIVATE ROOM: fa rent close<lb/>
to campus with air oond. Prefer<lb/>
male student. Call 752-4006 1<lb/>
p.m. to 10 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SUBLEASE: Two bdrm. apt.<lb/>
partially furnished located less<lb/>
than mile from campus. Air oond.<lb/>
Call Charlie 752-9311 .<lb/>
WANTED: Two a Three female<lb/>
roomates fa summer,to share<lb/>
townhouse apt. on Willow St.<lb/>
Rent is around $50 per month and<lb/>
share utilities. Two bdrm IV2<lb/>
baths, AC, and close to campus.<lb/>
Call Carol a Suzy at 752-9972.<lb/>
ROOMMATES. Grad. student<lb/>
doing internship in New Bern<lb/>
needs roommates fa summer.<lb/>
Call Jonathan at 752-4804.<lb/>
APT. FOR RENT: fa summer<lb/>
school. Available all summer Vz<lb/>
of $195. Three blocks from<lb/>
campus. Air too. 752-7497.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Three bdrm. furn-<lb/>
ished house in Oakdale fa<lb/>
sublease. Summer oily. Rent<lb/>
$225. Call 756-4536<lb/>
WANTED: Responsible female<lb/>
roommate to share Vi expenses of<lb/>
2 bdrm. apt. at Riverbluff fa both<lb/>
summer sessions. Call Audrey or<lb/>
Patty at 758-9871.<lb/>
TWO ROOMMATES: needed im-<lb/>
mediately fa a 3-Ufem. .apt. at<lb/>
Eastbrook. Rent is $120 monthly<lb/>
and utilities are reasonable. Five<lb/>
min. from campus and a bus<lb/>
comes every 30 min. 752-8127.<lb/>
FEMALE NEEDED: to share a<lb/>
room fa the summer at Green-<lb/>
way Apts. Rent is $58.00 plus<lb/>
utilities. Call Carol after 5 p.m.<lb/>
756-6273.<lb/>
FEMALE HOUSEMATE: needed<lb/>
to share a two bdrm. apt. 3 blocks<lb/>
from campus. $62.50 Call Barbara<lb/>
758-5594 a 752-4400.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Private room, winter<lb/>
a summer, close to campus.<lb/>
Male. Call 752-4006 1 p.m. to 10<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
WANTED: Male roommate to<lb/>
share 2 bdrm. apt. at The Lakes in<lb/>
Raleigh. Call 756-5645 after 3<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
MALE STUDENT:desiresa place<lb/>
to live fa summer, a through the<lb/>
school year. 1 a 2 bdrm. with<lb/>
kitchen; close to campus. Call<lb/>
David 752-9489.<lb/>
SENIOR in Special Ed. looking fa<lb/>
place to live next fall. Call Nancy<lb/>
758-9481.<lb/>
for sole<lb/>
FOR SALE: Dam size refirg.<lb/>
Romex Delux model, used 8 mos.<lb/>
Snow skiing equip, prioed to<lb/>
move Sanyo cassetie deck with<lb/>
ddby system. About 30 cassettes<lb/>
ever recorded on system. Last but<lb/>
not least, '69 V.W. Van with<lb/>
16,000 miles on re-built engine.<lb/>
Set up as camper. Call 752-0352.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 2 Jensen Model 4<lb/>
stereo speakers in good cond.<lb/>
Midrange and tweeter oontrdson<lb/>
back $190. Call 752-8862 ask fa<lb/>
Brian.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Box spring and<lb/>
mattress in excellent cond. Must<lb/>
sell. Call 758-4390.<lb/>
FORSALE:Refrigeratas5cu. ft.<lb/>
used 1 men. $90. 2.5 cu. ft. $40.<lb/>
Call Rob 752-1593.<lb/>
FOR SAl6. Pander twin-reverb<lb/>
amp. and Shure microphone with<lb/>
stand-all fa $225. Call Rob<lb/>
752-1593.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '71 Vega hatchback,<lb/>
3-speed, 4 cylinder. $450. Call<lb/>
Nancy 758-9481 a Bob 758-3833<lb/>
FOR SALE: GMC Van '64. Stock<lb/>
ready to customize $650.00 Call<lb/>
752-9489.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Honda 350 in good<lb/>
cond. Only 4,500 miles. Helmet<lb/>
included $300.00 Call 758-7675.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '69 Dodge Caoiet<lb/>
slant six engine with standard<lb/>
shift. Excellent economy. Call<lb/>
758-7434.<lb/>
FURNITURE FOR SALE: Leaving<lb/>
Greenville &amp; must sell double<lb/>
bed, rugs, lamps, large bookcase,<lb/>
2 desks, chairs, stools, couch.<lb/>
Come by 820 College View Apts.<lb/>
off 10th St. Go down College View<lb/>
Road &amp; take first left, last apt. on<lb/>
right. 6 to 7 JO evenings. Ask fa<lb/>
Kirk.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Dam size refrig.<lb/>
with stand in good oond. $75.00<lb/>
Come by rm. 244 Umstead if<lb/>
FOR SALE: One Midland FM<lb/>
oonverter that is 2 mos. old $12.<lb/>
Also 1 Audiovox FM antenna<lb/>
booster fa autos. Inaeases FM<lb/>
reception 2-3 times. One month<lb/>
old. $9. Call 752-8050.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Realistic STA-65C<lb/>
rebever, AMFM stereo, filters,<lb/>
2 realistic 60 watt speakers. Two<lb/>
turntables, one BSR, one Gar-<lb/>
rard, plus oak cabinet all fa $125.<lb/>
Must sell. Call Steve 758-8491<lb/>
early a late.<lb/>
FOR SALE: SVT Ampeg Amp.<lb/>
plus 2 SVT cabinets which contain<lb/>
8-10" speakers. Will sell all fa<lb/>
$950, a will sell seperately.<lb/>
736-1866 after 4 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Romex refrig. in good<lb/>
oond. Resonable price. 752-8428<lb/>
a oome by 308D Belk Dam.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Piaieer SX-650 rec-<lb/>
eiver, 35 watts $215. Sanyo<lb/>
STD-1510 stereo cassette deck<lb/>
with dolby $110, Realistic stereo<lb/>
frequency equalizer $60. Craig<lb/>
FM stereo cassette deck $60. Call<lb/>
Ed 758-2363.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 75 Vega Hatchback<lb/>
with low miles. Excellent cond.<lb/>
Yellow with balck interior $1750.<lb/>
22,400 actual miles. Call 756-<lb/>
6747.<lb/>
FOR SALE : Household furniture.<lb/>
Call Jim at 756-6797.<lb/>
pOR SALE: One genuine Framus<lb/>
guitar with built-in fuzz pickup<lb/>
and carrying case. Needs neck<lb/>
adjusted, aehrwise excellent<lb/>
cond. $75 a best offer. 752-8600<lb/>
after 6 p.m. a visit 132-Ayoock.<lb/>
FOR SALE: L60-14 inch tires<lb/>
mounted on Keystone rims, 36<lb/>
miles on tires. No scratches. $150<lb/>
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 with 243 miles. Great<lb/>
oond. with 2 helmets. $900 fa<lb/>
whole deal. 752-9908.<lb/>
FOR SALEM Michelin ZX radial<lb/>
tire, Size 18570 Sr14. Great oond.<lb/>
Only 1200 miles on tire. $40.00<lb/>
752-9908.<lb/>
Everything must go; Grad stud-<lb/>
ent leaving Greenville. Furniture<lb/>
fa bdrm living room, dining<lb/>
room, rugs. Kitchen appliances<lb/>
and accessaies. Various assated<lb/>
junk. Everything reasonable. Sale<lb/>
begins Sat. man. a call Mike<lb/>
758-0534 anytime befae June 1.<lb/>
309 Student St.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Waterbed. brand<lb/>
new, never unaated. Inflates to<lb/>
fit any queen size bed. Fa info.<lb/>
call 752-4461.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Raminez classical<lb/>
guitar with hardshell case fa<lb/>
$400. Also fiberfili sleeping bag<lb/>
almost new fa $35. Call Jeff<lb/>
750345.<lb/>
personal�<lb/>
SUMMER SCHOOL: students<lb/>
Hanemaker desires help with<lb/>
1, usecleaning duties 1 day per<lb/>
week, within walking distance of<lb/>
camuus 752-2077<lb/>
HELP! need ride to and fran<lb/>
Chapel Hill this weekend and to<lb/>
Asheville the weekend after that.<lb/>
Can leave just about any day, any<lb/>
time. Will pay fa gas, expenses,<lb/>
etc. Join Weyler. 458 Aycock<lb/>
752-8525.<lb/>
WANTED: Keyboard player fa<lb/>
top 40 funky band this summer.<lb/>
Good money. Call Steve early a<lb/>
late 758-8491.<lb/>
WANTED: Happy Stae wants to<lb/>
buy used a old taps. Contact Al<lb/>
at 752-6303 after 3 p.m.<lb/>
HELP! Need ride to and from<lb/>
Chapel Hill this weekend, and to<lb/>
Asheville next weekend. Can<lb/>
leave just about any time, any<lb/>
day. Will pay fa gas, expenses<lb/>
etc. John Weyler, 458 Aycock,<lb/>
752-8525.<lb/>
TYPIST: Excellent service, low<lb/>
rates. IBM typewriter used. Call<lb/>
756-3815 anytime after 5:15 p.m.<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED: to upstate New<lb/>
Yak (a that general area), to<lb/>
leave after May 3. Will share<lb/>
driving and expenses. Return fa<lb/>
summer school if possible Call<lb/>
Michelle 758724.<lb/>
BIRTHRIGHT: an aganizatiot of<lb/>
trained volunteers, offers help to<lb/>
pregnant women. Free, complete-<lb/>
ly confidential. Phone<lb/>
758-L-O-V-E.<lb/>
lost<lb/>
(2)<lb/>
FOUND: German Shepard puppy<lb/>
in Chestnut St. area. 752-9489.<lb/>
LOST: Two blankets at the Brice<lb/>
St. concert. One is green with<lb/>
black stripe and aher is baby<lb/>
blue. Please return. Reward<lb/>
7529080.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058054_0019"/><lb/>
���Hin<lb/>
LM<lb/>
��������bI<lb/>
27 April 1978 FOUNTAINHfcAD Paga 19<lb/>
coordination,<lb/>
letwork grew<lb/>
 stations for<lb/>
j stations last<lb/>
all tripled in<lb/>
work during<lb/>
Tiember ships<lb/>
5 Information<lb/>
t of America,<lb/>
n of Sports<lb/>
isters, Sigma<lb/>
tates Basket-<lb/>
at ion, Caro<lb/>
 Association<lb/>
lina Associa-<lb/>
sasters.<lb/>
i help with<lb/>
s 1 day per<lb/>
1 distance of<lb/>
o and from<lb/>
kend and to<lb/>
d after that,<lb/>
any day, any<lb/>
s, expenses,<lb/>
458 Ayoock<lb/>
i player fa<lb/>
iis summer,<lb/>
eve early or<lb/>
xe wants to<lb/>
Contact Al<lb/>
m.<lb/>
) and from<lb/>
end, and to<lb/>
ikend. Can<lb/>
' time, any<lb/>
s, expenses<lb/>
58 Aycock,<lb/>
ervice, low<lb/>
' used. Call<lb/>
ir 5:15 p.m.<lb/>
pstate New<lb/>
il area), to<lb/>
Will share<lb/>
Return fa<lb/>
ssibJe Call<lb/>
anization of<lb/>
ers help to<lb/>
i, oomplete-<lb/>
Phone<lb/>
2<lb/>
ard puppy<lb/>
'52-9489.<lb/>
t the Bnoe<lb/>
jreen with<lb/>
r is baby<lb/>
Reward<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised <lb/>
items Is required to be <lb/>
readily available for sale at <lb/>
or below the advertised price in each A&amp;P <lb/>
Store, except as specifically noted in this ad. <lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY. APRIL W AT ASP IN<lb/>
LOOK FOR THt ACTION PRICE SIGN - THROUGHOUT<lb/>
YOUR A4P STORE When AAP buyers make a special pur-<lb/>
chase at a lower price, we pass the savings on to you Thai<lb/>
lower price is an action price And these Action Prices are in<lb/>
addition to our money-saving weekly specials<lb/>
.79'<lb/>
ROLLS OO<lb/>
tS WISHBONE ITALIAN. 1000 ISLANO. OR DELUXE<lb/>
7 FRENCH DRESSING<lb/>
,a HI-ORI<lb/>
$ PAPER TOWELS 2 SK<lb/>
U VAN CAMP �-��<lb/>
? BEANEE WEENEES 3?aS100<lb/>
?MRS PAULS FROZEN<lb/>
ONION RINGS p2 63c<lb/>
tvl LONO ORAIN �<lb/>
$ MAHATMA RICE 3 &amp; 99c<lb/>
� MTTV CROCKER MEF NOODLE S LASAQNA<lb/>
7 HAMBURGER HELPER ISl 69c<lb/>
? B-8Q SAUCE 2 bo.t.e M"<lb/>
 WHIPPED<lb/>
$ CHIFFON MARGARINE aX73c<lb/>
�. WILCMS<lb/>
Tjf GRAPE JAM<lb/>
. SKIN CARS LOTION<lb/>
f ROSE MILK<lb/>
tg MOUTWWASH<lb/>
7 LISTERMINT<lb/>
� ALL VARKTICS-CAT FOOO<lb/>
7 WHISKER LICKINS 3<lb/>
� CANNED DOG FOOO BLUE 1 ABEL<lb/>
7 KEN-L-RATION<lb/>
55'<lb/>
REOULAR<lb/>
JNSCENTED<lb/>
S1<lb/>
io $139<lb/>
�TL<lb/>
12 OZ $H<lb/>
BTL<lb/>
� oz- $100<lb/>
rxGS I<lb/>
; tivi oz $1<lb/>
I CANS I<lb/>
29<lb/>
BUDWEISER<lb/>
BEER<lb/>
On. of 12 oz. �-<lb/>
Cans in a �<lb/>
g Ctn.<lb/>
good only in Greenville<lb/>
( A&amp;P is aDe�i Shop J<lb/>
WHOLE KUCKMIS<lb/>
B-BQ CHIKENEACH $249<lb/>
White, Yellow American9 toad<lb/>
CHEESE LB. BEEF LB. �<lb/>
Freshly MadeFresh<lb/>
0011 fiAe SUW LB. osrmm a or 7k MILS 0 only 7ST<lb/>
AAP QUALITY TENDER FULLY COOKED<lb/>
SMOKED HAMS<lb/>
� WHOLE OR <lb/>
BUTT PORTION LB 88<lb/>
� CENTER M<lb/>
SLICES LB. 148<lb/>
SHANK<lb/>
PORTION<lb/>
( AAP Is a butcher shop )<lb/>
AAP QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN-FED BEEF<lb/>
ROAST<lb/>
A&amp;P quality heavy western Grain fed beef<lb/>
WHOLE RIB EYES<lb/>
$969<lb/>
BLADE CUT<lb/>
CHUCK<lb/>
9 to 13 ib. avg. wt.<lb/>
LB.<lb/>
AAP is � country farm pork shop<lb/>
PORK CHOPS<lb/>
ASSORTED<lb/>
PKG.<lb/>
Freshly<lb/>
3 lbs.<lb/>
or more<lb/>
1"<lb/>
AAP QUAUTY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN-FED BEEF<lb/>
RIB STEAKS<lb/>
( AAP l � sti�9 ��op <lb/>
MARVEL BRAND<lb/>
SLICED BACON<lb/>
L<lb/>
LB.<lb/>
LB.<lb/>
ITEMS OFFER D FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS ANO WHOLESALERS<lb/>
STOKELY SPRING VEGETABLE SALE<lb/>
AAP picks the best frozen foods<lb/>
SEALTEST LIGHT N'UVELY<lb/>
ICE MILK<lb/>
V: GALLON<lb/>
CARTON<lb/>
A&amp;Pooupon<lb/>
CRISGO SHORTENING<lb/>
BONUS RACK M OZ � � OZ FREEI<lb/>
HEINZ KETCHUP<lb/>
ANN PAOt MAIN OR WITH ONION<lb/>
w 79c<lb/>
BARBECUE SAUCE 2ft�f100<lb/>
ASP QUALITY Cfr<lb/>
LUNCHEON MEAT Vi 89c<lb/>
JANE PARKER WHEAT ANO WHITE OR<lb/>
Limit one with this coupon and<lb/>
additional 7.50 order<lb/>
32.M29<lb/>
CRACKED<lb/>
WHEAT<lb/>
BREAD<lb/>
24 OZ.<lb/>
LOAF<lb/>
c<lb/>
We pick the best produce<lb/>
RED RIPE-TOP QUAUTY<lb/>
U.S. 1 BURBANK<lb/>
STRAWBERRIES RUSSET POTATOES<lb/>
GIN<lb/>
Limit one coupon good thru<lb/>
Sat April 29 at A&amp;P in Greenville<lb/>
AAP<lb/>
GRADE A<lb/>
DOOM<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
I LSBtT TWO CTNS WITH<lb/>
I COUPON ANO AOOmONAL<lb/>
i rssonocR<lb/>
LNHT ONE COUPON<lb/>
OOOO THNU SAT. APNM. IS AT ASP IN Greenville<lb/>
� �<lb/>
FULL<lb/>
QUART<lb/>
00<lb/>
LBS<lb/>
�ourCRHP , s�<lb/>
GREEN CABBAGE 5<lb/>
ENDIVE OR ESCAROLEl. 39c<lb/>
POPS MTI pUSSTO pW�<lb/>
POPCORN<lb/>
MtAOf TO POT<lb/>
� oz<lb/>
49'<lb/>
10 LB.<lb/>
BAG<lb/>
SAVE SB PCN LBTENOM<lb/>
YELLOW SQUASH<lb/>
SUO S KOOSSFWtM POTTED tAgn<lb/>
ROSE BUSHES .a 3"<lb/>
FNOM A"� (mWIISWV CONNS fr .U SO<lb/>
POTTING SOIL 99� 169<lb/>
�-c<lb/>
ASP COUPON<lb/>
ZD-<lb/>
WHITE OR ASSORTED<lb/>
CHARMIN<lb/>
BATHROOM<lb/>
TISSUE<lb/>
NOLL<lb/>
ma.<lb/>
. LWIT ONI WITH THIS<lb/>
I COUPON ANO<lb/>
� ADDITIONAL r M ONOER<lb/>
LBAIT ONE COUPON<lb/>
oooo thnu sat ApNH n at asp in Cjreenville<lb/>
<pb facs="00058054_0020"/><lb/>
,<lb/>
JCSSWBmir�i�SSr!iei ���� is the sum. the<lb/>
 Qvnont for cases of extreme thirst or a leaiuiis<lb/>
3S3SS.rihs<lb/>
glass, siypuig 10 ui�, xxxv iT -<lb/>
sustained mountaineering. I Next<lb/>
lugging<lb/>
��(��"<lb/>
the proper posi-<lb/>
tion. Some<lb/>
swear by sit-<lb/>
SSS'sSSe tttow that the most successful<lb/>
runtfineers are flexible, so you 11 find.<lb/>
both sitters and standers.<lb/>
(Except on New Year s Eve<lb/>
when it's almost impossible<lb/>
to find a sitter.) � Which<lb/>
brings us to additives. Occa-<lb/>
sionally a neophyte will<lb/>
sprinkle salt in his Busch;<lb/>
others mix in tomato juice;<lb/>
and a few on the radical<lb/>
fringe will even add egg.<lb/>
While these manipulations<lb/>
Sum?ShWt of B�Sr�<lb/>
glass be used. But bad P vqU should minimize<lb/>
KStiffly(3 Fig- 4). Happy MounUmeermg!<lb/>
Don't just reach for a beer.<lb/>
BUSCH<lb/>
c Anheuser-Busch. Inc St Louis Mo<lb/>
Head for the mountains.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058054_0021"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>