<?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="00058056_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity fa over 50 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of 4,500,<lb/>
this issue is 12 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
ON THE IN3DE . . .<lb/>
$10,000 gift . . .p. 3<lb/>
Gospel Choir . . .p. 5<lb/>
An Unmarried Woman . p. 6<lb/>
Wolfpack preview . . . p.10<lb/>
Vd. No. 53 No 53"<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
31 May 1978<lb/>
Mendenhall theatre<lb/>
named for banker<lb/>
By STUART MORGAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The theatre located in Mend-<lb/>
enhall Student Center was ded-<lb/>
icated and named the J. Curtis<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre during ceremon-<lb/>
ies here Wednesday in honor of<lb/>
James Curtis Hendrix who died<lb/>
October 7, 1977.<lb/>
The dedicatory address was<lb/>
presented by Julian R. Vainright,<lb/>
business manager of ECU.<lb/>
1ENDRIX A "DOER"<lb/>
During recent Alumni Day<lb/>
activities, he was posthumously<lb/>
honored as the recipient of the<lb/>
ECU Alumni Association's Out-<lb/>
standing Alumni Award.<lb/>
In the address, Vainright<lb/>
described Hendrix as a man who<lb/>
was a doer, a man who accom-<lb/>
plished things and simultaneous-<lb/>
ly gained the respect and love of<lb/>
friendsand strangers, young and<lb/>
oia, rich and poor, black and<lb/>
white.<lb/>
And, he added that Hendrix<lb/>
was able to do so because of his<lb/>
love of God, hard work, dedicat-<lb/>
ion, character, loyalty, honesty,<lb/>
and sincerity.<lb/>
"I think members of the<lb/>
Board of Trustees are to be<lb/>
commended for their foresight<lb/>
and wisdom by so appropriately<lb/>
naming the -1 Curtis Hendrix<lb/>
Tl ?trt Vainright said.<lb/>
"His amiiy can always be<lb/>
proud and ever remined that his<lb/>
many and long hours of absence<lb/>
and their generous sacrifices<lb/>
were fruitful and have been duly<lb/>
recognized and recorded for<lb/>
posterity he said.<lb/>
The theatre, located on the<lb/>
west wing of the building, is<lb/>
designed primarily for the view-<lb/>
ing of films, and holding lectures<lb/>
and concerts by small musical<lb/>
ensembles.<lb/>
With a seating capacity of 760<lb/>
persons, it is one of the most<lb/>
heavily used facilities in Menden-<lb/>
hall and since its opening four<lb/>
years ago, more than 280,000<lb/>
persons have attended programs<lb/>
presented there.<lb/>
CAREER<lb/>
Hendrix received a bachelor's<lb/>
degree from ECC in 1959 and a<lb/>
master's degree from Estonia<lb/>
Graduate School of Banking in<lb/>
New Brunswick, N.J. in 1962.<lb/>
He began his professional<lb/>
career with the State Bank of<lb/>
Greenville which later became<lb/>
North Carolina National Bank.<lb/>
During his service with NCNB he<lb/>
advanced to the position of City<lb/>
Executive, in 1974 accepting the<lb/>
position of Vioe President and<lb/>
member of the Board of Directors<lb/>
of First State Bank of Greenville.<lb/>
In 1969 Hendrix was appoint-<lb/>
ed by the North Carolina Com-<lb/>
missioner of I nsurance to serve on<lb/>
the Fireman's Relief Fund Board<lb/>
of Trustees. He was also a<lb/>
member of the American Institute<lb/>
of Banking, and was honored as<lb/>
the Pitt County Key Rankw for<lb/>
the North Carolina Banker's Asso-<lb/>
ciation in 1976.<lb/>
The Greenville Jaycees hon-<lb/>
ored him in 1963 by naming him<lb/>
the recipient of the Distinguished<lb/>
Service Award.<lb/>
Hendrix served with the Unit-<lb/>
ed States Army Signal Corps from<lb/>
1954 to 1956, and in 1977 he was<lb/>
appointed civilian aid to the<lb/>
Secretary of the Army fa Nath<lb/>
Carolina. At his death, he was<lb/>
Vice Chairman of the NCBA Bank<lb/>
Management Committee.<lb/>
Intercessor<lb/>
Have you ever been inconven-<lb/>
ienced by some university policy<lb/>
or official? Do you often find<lb/>
yourself at a loss as to how to<lb/>
tackle the red tape which is<lb/>
involved in so many student-uni-<lb/>
versity inter-actions<lb/>
If so, then you are the typical<lb/>
student, faced with the some-<lb/>
times baffling bureauaacy of<lb/>
ECU. It is fa you that this<lb/>
oolumn, INTERCESSOR was<lb/>
famed<lb/>
The meaning of intacessa'<lb/>
is aie who prays a mediates in<lb/>
behalf of another. And these<lb/>
days, it seems that all of us need<lb/>
intercession of some fam at aie<lb/>
time a another.<lb/>
The purpose of INTERCES-<lb/>
SOR is to faciliate the exchange<lb/>
of infamatiai between ECU<lb/>
students and the university al-<lb/>
leges, departments and adminis-<lb/>
tration with which the students<lb/>
interact daily.<lb/>
If you have any problems,<lb/>
from registration to towed cars to<lb/>
roaches in the dam, drop us a<lb/>
note addressed to "Editor, IN-<lb/>
TERCESSOR" and tell us about<lb/>
the problem, a call 757-6366 and<lb/>
a to speak to the INTERCES-<lb/>
SOR editor. A staff member will<lb/>
research the problem and future<lb/>
oolumns will print both the<lb/>
question and the proper avenue<lb/>
fa satisfactiai of the grievance a<lb/>
question.<lb/>
DEDICA TION OF THE J. Curtis Hendrix Theatre at<lb/>
Mendenhall was attended by Dr. Leo Jenkins, Mrs.<lb/>
Hendrix, Alison C. Hendrix and James C. Hendrix<lb/>
Jr. ECU News Bureau Photo<lb/>
Jeter coordinates WECUFM<lb/>
By JEANNIE WILLIAMS<lb/>
News Edita<lb/>
The Media Board approved<lb/>
John Jeta as general manager<lb/>
fa radio station WECU at its<lb/>
weekly meeting Wednesday.<lb/>
The station was recently ap-<lb/>
proved to convert to FM by the<lb/>
Media Board in late April.<lb/>
Jeter, a junia fran Wilming-<lb/>
tai, N.C is a drama, speech and<lb/>
broadcasting maja who has been<lb/>
a chief proponent of the FM<lb/>
oonversiai.<lb/>
Jeter discussed upcoming<lb/>
changes at the station and his role<lb/>
'n the conversion to FM.<lb/>
"First, we're keeping up with<lb/>
the CM licensing requirements<lb/>
Jeter said.<lb/>
"I've already mailed the<lb/>
application and put a legal ntf ice<lb/>
in the local papa he added.<lb/>
Jeta said that copies a tne<lb/>
application are available at radio<lb/>
station WECU, Dean Tucka's<lb/>
office, and the SGA president's<lb/>
office.<lb/>
"We should begin construct-<lb/>
ion in Octoba. We'll be rebuild-<lb/>
ing the station and we'll be<lb/>
getting a la of new equipment -<lb/>
$18,000 worth he said.<lb/>
Jeta added that the station<lb/>
would be doing their own news and<lb/>
will have the UPI wire installed.<lb/>
Jeta explained that the stat-<lb/>
ion would be off the air and<lb/>
preparing fa the switchova,<lb/>
which he projected to be around<lb/>
Christmas.<lb/>
"We'll be starling at 18.78<lb/>
watts and will go to 50,000 watts<lb/>
eventually he said.<lb/>
"The 45-foot towa that will<lb/>
be built on top of Tyla dam<lb/>
should cova Pitt County with no<lb/>
problem. The sound will be the<lb/>
best in the area because our<lb/>
equipment will be the best<lb/>
Jeta said.<lb/>
"We will be needing people<lb/>
with third-class licenses who are<lb/>
qualified and able to do the job.<lb/>
They must be full-time students<lb/>
a grad students Jeta said.<lb/>
See JETER, p. 3<lb/>
JOHN JETER, general manager of WECU. Photo by John Grogan<lb/>
Media Board approves heads<lb/>
By JEANNIE WILLIAMS<lb/>
News Edita<lb/>
The Media Board approved the<lb/>
1978-79 WECU genaal managa<lb/>
and Ebony Herald edita at its<lb/>
weekly meeting last Wednesday.<lb/>
John Jeta was approved as<lb/>
genaal managa fa WECU. The<lb/>
statiai was given approval by the<lb/>
Media Board last April to convat<lb/>
toFM.<lb/>
Jeta, 20, is a junia fran<lb/>
Wilmington, majaing in<lb/>
drama, speech and broadcasting.<lb/>
Jary Simmais was approved<lb/>
as edita of the EBONY HERALD<lb/>
Simmons is a junia from<lb/>
Fayetteville.<lb/>
Tommy Joe Payne, Student<lb/>
Govanmoit President and mem-<lb/>
ba of the Media Board said that<lb/>
the board will go ova the EBONY<lb/>
HERALDand BUG budgets<lb/>
fa next year at the next board<lb/>
meeting, on Monday.<lb/>
Payne said that an edita fa<lb/>
the BUC has not been<lb/>
detamined yet because the board<lb/>
has received oily aie application<lb/>
and the applicant is not in<lb/>
summer school and cannot be<lb/>
constdaed yet<lb/>
<pb facs="00058056_0002"/><lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 31 May 1978<lb/>
Scuba<lb/>
Lib Sci<lb/>
Runners<lb/>
Speed reading NTE<lb/>
ECU students will have an<lb/>
opportunity to at least double<lb/>
their reading rates while improv-<lb/>
ing comprehension at a speed<lb/>
reading oourse being offered this<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
Class sessions will meet 7:30<lb/>
to 930 p.m. on Monday and<lb/>
Thursday evening of June 5, 8,<lb/>
12, 15, 26, 29, and July 6 and 10.<lb/>
Instructor will be Mr. Homer<lb/>
Yearick, Associate Professor in<lb/>
the Department of SociaJ Work<lb/>
and Correctional Services, School<lb/>
of Allied Health and Social<lb/>
Professions.<lb/>
More information can be<lb/>
obtained by writing: Non-Credit<lb/>
Programs, Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education. ECU, Greenville. N.C.<lb/>
27834 or by calling 757-614a.<lb/>
Registration must be received<lb/>
no later than June 2.<lb/>
The National Teachers Exam-<lb/>
inations (NTE) will be given at<lb/>
ECU on July 15, 1978.<lb/>
Bulletins describing registra-<lb/>
tion procedures and containing<lb/>
registration forms may be obtain-<lb/>
ed from the ECU Testing Center,<lb/>
Speight Bldg 105, Mr. John<lb/>
Childers, Director, or directly<lb/>
from the National Teachers<lb/>
Examinations, Educational Test-<lb/>
ing Service, Box 911, Pronceton,<lb/>
NJ 08541.<lb/>
Apply!<lb/>
Applications fa Summer<lb/>
School Honor Council are being<lb/>
accepted now in the Student<lb/>
Government Association office,<lb/>
Mendenhall. until May 30.<lb/>
A basic scuba certification<lb/>
oourse will be offered beginning<lb/>
in July to ECU students.<lb/>
The oourse will be offered July<lb/>
through Aug. 1 from 7 to 10 p.m<lb/>
and will be taught at Minges<lb/>
Coliseum, Room 145.<lb/>
Fee is $45 per person with a<lb/>
maximum of 20 students to be<lb/>
admitted.<lb/>
Each student must have his<lb/>
own flippers, mask and snorkel.<lb/>
The remainder of the equipment,<lb/>
including the air may be<lb/>
obtained from the instructor for<lb/>
$32.50 for the oourse duration.<lb/>
Instructor will be Mr. Robert<lb/>
Eastep, who is recognized as one<lb/>
of the outstanding scuba instruct-<lb/>
ors in the Southeast. He has<lb/>
taught the Los Angeles County<lb/>
Certification Program for several<lb/>
years.<lb/>
For more inofrmation contact:<lb/>
Non-Credit Programs, Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education, ECU,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
Registration must be received<lb/>
no later than July 5.<lb/>
Welcome E.C.U. Students!<lb/>
OVERTOILS<lb/>
SUPERMARKET<lb/>
Located 2 blocks from E.C.U- at the<lb/>
corner of 3rd ? Jarvis. We have<lb/>
everyday low prices that are more than<lb/>
competitive with any other store, large<lb/>
or small. A free cart service is available<lb/>
to push your groceries home. We accept<lb/>
Master Charge and Visa.<lb/>
We are your hometown food store away from<lb/>
home. We appreciate your business and strive to<lb/>
please in every way possible. Thank you for<lb/>
shopping Overton's.<lb/>
The home of Greenville's best meats!<lb/>
The ECU Department of Lib-<lb/>
rary Scienoe Alumni Association<lb/>
is sponsoring a one day workshop<lb/>
in cooperation with Lenoir Com-<lb/>
munity College on June 20.<lb/>
The summer workshop will<lb/>
concentrate on library commu-<lb/>
nity relations and is called,<lb/>
"Operation Inform: Working<lb/>
With The Library Community<lb/>
The program begins at 9:00<lb/>
a.m. in the Student Union Build-<lb/>
ing on the Lenoir Community<lb/>
College campus, Kinston, N.C.<lb/>
People attending the work-<lb/>
shop may receive Vfc ECU credit if<lb/>
approved by their local schools.<lb/>
There will be a small registration<lb/>
fee for participants desiring<lb/>
credit.<lb/>
Pre-registration forms fa the<lb/>
workshop should be mailed by<lb/>
June 15 and may be requested by<lb/>
writing Ms. Millie Matthis,<lb/>
Learning Resources Center<lb/>
Lenoir Community College, P.O.<lb/>
Box 188, Kinston, NC 28501 a<lb/>
the Department of Library<lb/>
Scienoe, ECU, Greenville, NC.<lb/>
Sign language<lb/>
The ECU Program" or Hearing<lb/>
Impaired Students will present<lb/>
non-credit sign language classes<lb/>
for interested students, staff, and<lb/>
faculty this summer session.<lb/>
There will be no charge for the<lb/>
sign language classes. Classes<lb/>
will be limited to 25 persons.<lb/>
Classes began on Thurs May<lb/>
25. The last day of registration is<lb/>
Thurs June 1st.<lb/>
One class (3-4 pm) will be<lb/>
team-taught by Ruth Aleskovsky<lb/>
and Mike Ernest Monday through<lb/>
Thurs. each week.<lb/>
This will be an intensive class<lb/>
for the beginning sign language<lb/>
st udent.<lb/>
Less intensive beginning and<lb/>
intermediate classes will also be<lb/>
offered. A Basic Course In<lb/>
Manual Communication will be<lb/>
used as the text for all classes.<lb/>
It is available at the Student<lb/>
Supply Store. Sign language class<lb/>
schedules are as follows: Begin-<lb/>
ning Class 11 30-1230 TTh Brew-<lb/>
ster B-104. Beginning Class 3:00-<lb/>
4:00 MTWTh Brewster B-203.<lb/>
I ntermediate Class 4 00-5:00 TTh<lb/>
Brewster B-203.<lb/>
The following changes have<lb/>
been made in the 13 miles<lb/>
marathon sponsored by the<lb/>
Washington Jayoees' fa June 11,<lb/>
in Washington, N.C.<lb/>
The race is still scheduled fa<lb/>
Sun June 11, at 5:30 p.m. and<lb/>
will run fa 10,000 meters (6.2<lb/>
miles). The starting point will be<lb/>
Havens Gardens and a fee of $3<lb/>
will be charged each contestant.<lb/>
This gives each runner a number-<lb/>
ed souvenia bib to wear during<lb/>
the race.<lb/>
Three trophies will be given to<lb/>
the first, seoond and third place<lb/>
runner in each age bracket.<lb/>
The age brackets are 25 and<lb/>
under, 26 to 35, and 36 and over.<lb/>
Fa more infamatiai write:<lb/>
Mayhew Cox, P.O. Box 521,<lb/>
Washington, N.C.27889.<lb/>
REAL Crisis<lb/>
REAL will be starting another<lb/>
course in crisis intervention be-<lb/>
ginning June 12 at 6 p.m. Those<lb/>
who are not familiar with the<lb/>
oourse, REAL teaches the dyn-<lb/>
amics of Crias Intervention<lb/>
concentrating effats in many<lb/>
different problem areas such m<lb/>
drugs suicide, rape, alcohol, etc.<lb/>
and teaching shat term counsel<lb/>
skills. REAL wilt be offering a<lb/>
shat course this summer lasting<lb/>
only 5 weeks instead of the usual<lb/>
12 week session.<lb/>
Dance classes<lb/>
Several non-aedit programs<lb/>
in ballet and jazz dance will be<lb/>
offered to ECU students this<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
They are: Beginning ballet<lb/>
June 5-28, Mon. and Wed 2-3<lb/>
p.m. Intermediate ballet June<lb/>
1-27, Tues. and Thurs 8-9 p.m.<lb/>
Beg,nrvng jazz dance exercise,<lb/>
June 1-27. Tues and Thurs 7-8<lb/>
p.m. intermediate jazz dance<lb/>
exercise June 5-28. Mon and<lb/>
Wed.<lb/>
Tuition of each dass is $18.<lb/>
Registration is limited and pre-<lb/>
registration required on a pria<lb/>
to the day befae the class is<lb/>
scheduled to begin. ,<lb/>
Fa more infamatiai contact:<lb/>
Non-Credit Programs, Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education, ECU,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834 a call<lb/>
757-6143.<lb/>
Member of the Greenville<lb/>
Multiple Listing Service "Vj<lb/>
ami the Greenville Board JH<lb/>
t?f Realt??r.<lb/>
WHITLEVS<lb/>
rsTTajiu.vi<lb/>
 all WHITLEYS<lb/>
750-0050.<lb/>
Moving? Thinking about selling your home?<lb/>
Call us for appraisal without obligation.<lb/>
We are residential real estate specialists.<lb/>
Contact one of our brokers:<lb/>
Hen VVomack (on campus representative) 758-1489 llcth Moriu 750-447<lb/>
Dees Whitlcy 758-O8I0 Sharon White hurst 7M-0&amp;90<lb/>
fau y xjioA tfmf ' Worm<lb/>
<pb facs="00058056_0003"/><lb/>
??????(??I<lb/>
m <lb/>
Federal grants awarded<lb/>
31 May 1978 FOUNTAIN HEAD Pag 3<lb/>
Alumni presents $10,000 gift<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Sperry-Rand, a multi-national<lb/>
oorpaation, has made an unres-<lb/>
tricted gift of $10,000 to East<lb/>
Carolina University to enooutage<lb/>
development "in any way the<lb/>
university feels is most benefic-<lb/>
ial<lb/>
Two officials of Sperry-Univac<lb/>
a subsidiary, pteaenieu ;he funds<lb/>
to ECU Chancellor Leo W.<lb/>
Jenkins. Jenkins said the money<lb/>
will be put to "good use" through<lb/>
the ECU Foundation<lb/>
A.C. Greene of Atlanta, reg-<lb/>
ional director for Sperry-Univac in<lb/>
the 10-state Southeast region,<lb/>
and Ray Richardson of Raleigh,<lb/>
state manager, met with Jenkins<lb/>
to present the gift. Greene, a<lb/>
native of Maxton, N.C and 1961<lb/>
graduate of ECU, said it is the<lb/>
policy of Sperry Rand to make<lb/>
financial contributions to assist<lb/>
development of quality programs<lb/>
by institutions of higher learning.<lb/>
"We are very happy to have<lb/>
chosen ECU, my alma mater, as a<lb/>
recipient of this contribution<lb/>
Summer school enrollment<lb/>
equals last year s total<lb/>
By CANDIS HARRINGTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
First session summer school<lb/>
enrollment is expected to equal<lb/>
last year's record of 4,448 stud-<lb/>
ents, according to Diana Morris<lb/>
of the University Department of<lb/>
Institutional Research.<lb/>
Although enrollment is ex-<lb/>
pected to be the same as last,<lb/>
year's, there is a chance that the<lb/>
change from quarter to semester<lb/>
system will cause enrollment to<lb/>
be lower fa first session, Maris<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Many teachers usually attend-<lb/>
summer school, accading to<lb/>
Maris. This year, many area<lb/>
schools are still insession so some<lb/>
teachers are unable to attend the<lb/>
first session.<lb/>
"Last summer mae students<lb/>
attended the first session than the<lb/>
second but we may have a<lb/>
conplete switchover Maris<lb/>
explained.<lb/>
It will be at least two weeks<lb/>
befae actual enrollment figures<lb/>
can Decompiled, Maris said.<lb/>
Greene said. "We are confident it<lb/>
will be put to good use, in any<lb/>
way the university feels is most<lb/>
beneficial<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins naed that<lb/>
Greene, a regional executive of<lb/>
the company fa 10 years, was<lb/>
among the first graduates of East<lb/>
Carolina after Jenkins became<lb/>
president in 1960.<lb/>
Sperry Univac specializes in<lb/>
data processing systems.<lb/>
A total of $132,875 in federal<lb/>
grants was awarded to ECU<lb/>
during April to support four<lb/>
research projects.<lb/>
The largest grants were<lb/>
awarded two projects in the ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine. Dr. Edward<lb/>
Lieberman received $74,879 from<lb/>
the National Science Foundation<lb/>
fa his study of the influence of<lb/>
sodium potassium transpat ai<lb/>
membrane potential.<lb/>
Dr. Jo Tingelstad received<lb/>
$54,946 from the National Instit-<lb/>
ute of Heath to suppat a study<lb/>
of components of milk given to<lb/>
infants.<lb/>
The National Oceanic and<lb/>
Atmospheric Administration<lb/>
awarded $1,650 to Dr. Charles<lb/>
O' Rear of the biology faculty and<lb/>
$1,400 to Dr. Michael O'Connor<lb/>
of the geology faculty fa their<lb/>
coastal-related scientific studies.<lb/>
JETER<lb/>
Continued from p. 1)<lb/>
"Although we won't be able<lb/>
to pay the operatas, that is in the<lb/>
budget fa next year Jeter<lb/>
added.<lb/>
Jeter explained that the oily<lb/>
paid positions would be the<lb/>
executives, which are the general<lb/>
manager, chief engineer, assist-<lb/>
ant manager, program directa,<lb/>
news and public service directa,<lb/>
business manager and the coun-<lb/>
seling engineer.<lb/>
STA TION BELONGS<lb/>
TO STUDENTS<lb/>
Jeter stressed that the station<lb/>
belongs to the students and that<lb/>
all oomments and suggestions<lb/>
would be weloome.<lb/>
"This station belongs to the<lb/>
students Jeter said.<lb/>
"We'll be playing what the<lb/>
students want to hear. Basically,<lb/>
our famat will be good music<lb/>
programming 24 hours a day, and<lb/>
no advertisino except 'a public<lb/>
service announcements. We'll be<lb/>
playing a lormat ot album rock<lb/>
and ooitempaary jazz Jeter<lb/>
said.<lb/>
DEFINITELY WORTH IT<lb/>
get approve fa the statiai to<lb/>
convert to FM<lb/>
"I've been waking sinoe last<lb/>
summer dang reseatch. I ve put<lb/>
in a la of time and I'vesacraficed<lb/>
a la, inlcuding some grades he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"If it hadn't been fa the<lb/>
Media Board, it probably<lb/>
wouldn't have happened. The<lb/>
SGA took away most of our funds<lb/>
last year and we just saaped<lb/>
along the best we could Jeter<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"It was definitely a la of hard<lb/>
wak and time, but definitely<lb/>
wath it<lb/>
Jeter said that he begai.<lb/>
waking in radio when he was<lb/>
about 14 and has been constantly<lb/>
For Sale<lb/>
one slightly wrecked 1970 Ford Galaxy 500. "?w from<lb/>
quater paneling is completely smashed. Engine is fine, it is not<lb/>
damaged. Car iril ran (if the battery is charged). H wi roll.<lb/>
2 door hardtop, power disc brakes, power steering, automatic<lb/>
transmission, air conditioning. Call 758-7724 between 5 p. .n.<lb/>
and 8 p. m.<lb/>
MEMORIAL DAY WORK schedules confused many, especially this<lb/>
regular of a local snack bar.<lb/>
Summer is 'quiet time'<lb/>
for campus police<lb/>
thefts within the girls' dams<lb/>
Calder said.<lb/>
By PAMELA DAVIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Though the regular academic<lb/>
year may bring much car towing,<lb/>
bump ups and occasional mass<lb/>
confusion, "summertime is a very<lb/>
quiet time accading to Joe<lb/>
Calder, Chief of Police at ECU.<lb/>
The most prominent incid-<lb/>
ent during the summer, accading<lb/>
to Calder is stealing.<lb/>
"There are many bicycles<lb/>
stolen and also a great number of<lb/>
With summertime free fa<lb/>
high school students, many are<lb/>
found trespassing and there is a<lb/>
problem with students wandering<lb/>
through the damitay halls,<lb/>
accading to Calder.<lb/>
Calder urges that anyone<lb/>
seeing someone suspicious in the<lb/>
dams to oontact the campus<lb/>
security.<lb/>
involved since. He built and<lb/>
operated station WBHS at his<lb/>
famer high school in Raleigh,<lb/>
T.S. Brought on.<lb/>
Jeter was a chief engineer at<lb/>
WECU last year.<lb/>
Art &amp; Camera Shop<lb/>
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PLAZA CAMERA<lb/>
<pb facs="00058056_0004"/><lb/>
.  X<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 31 May 1978<lb/>
Liquor by the drink,<lb/>
liquor by the gallon<lb/>
Next month the North Carolina Assembly will<lb/>
be given the chance to move one step further into the<lb/>
twentieth century when they decide on whether or<lb/>
not to legalize liquor by the drink on a local option<lb/>
basis.<lb/>
The bill passed the Senate last year, and since<lb/>
next month's session is technically a continuation of<lb/>
last year's, the bill only has to face the House before,<lb/>
hopefully, it is voted into law.<lb/>
To date, the House seems evenly divided, and<lb/>
both the wets and the drys claim to have the<lb/>
necessary votes to swing the bill in their favor.<lb/>
North Carolina is the only state without some<lb/>
form of liquor by the drink, discounting Oklahoma,<lb/>
where the practice flourishes despite unenforoed<lb/>
laws against it. Passage of this bill will surely<lb/>
improve the tourist and convention trades in the<lb/>
state, aside from enhancing the image so many of our<lb/>
officials keep mouthing off about. And does anyone<lb/>
seriously believe the streets of our cities will be<lb/>
littered with careening drunks, as so much of the dry<lb/>
propaganda implies?<lb/>
Under the present brown-bagging arrangement,<lb/>
the state of North Carolina forces oonsumers to buy<lb/>
at least a pint of liquor when all they wanted was one<lb/>
and a half ounces. Once purchased the consumer is<lb/>
encouraged to drink the entire pint since it is illegal<lb/>
to carry a liquor bottle with an open seal in the<lb/>
passenger compartment of an automobile.<lb/>
Mixed drinks could also improve the restaurant<lb/>
industry in the state. Many restaurants outside North<lb/>
Carolina are able to stay in business only because of<lb/>
the profit made on mixed drinks.<lb/>
As one brown-bagging critic once said, "This<lb/>
state doesn't have liquor by the drink; It's got liqua<lb/>
by the gallon<lb/>
Governmental attempts to legislate morality have<lb/>
al ways failed and will oontinue to do so. Prohibition is<lb/>
perhaps the best such example. If anything, such<lb/>
attempts serve only to unwittingly encourage that<lb/>
which is legally immoral.<lb/>
North Carolina can no longer cherish the ideal of a<lb/>
state free from the evils of "demon rum An<lb/>
abstaining North Carolina may be a fine fundamen-<lb/>
talist philosophy; it is also a Utopian one.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community tor over fifty years.<lb/>
"Waraitlaft to me to deade whether we should nave<lb/>
a government without newspapers or newspapers<lb/>
without government, I should not hesitate a moment to<lb/>
prefer the latter<lb/>
Thomas Jefferson<lb/>
EditorDoug White<lb/>
Managing EditorLeigh Coakley<lb/>
Advertising ManagerRobert M. Swaim<lb/>
NewsEditorsJeannie Williams<lb/>
Jim Barnes<lb/>
Trends EditorSteve Bachner<lb/>
Sports EditorChris Hoiloman<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student newspaper of East Carolina<lb/>
University sponeored by the Media Board of ECU and is<lb/>
distributed each Tuesday and Thursday, weakly during the<lb/>
rimer <lb/>
Mailing addrees: Old South Building, Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
Editorial offices: 757-6386, 757-6387, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions $10 annually, alumni $6 annually.<lb/>
"Uh, mom, Ijost asked for A DRINK <lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
Crosswinds<lb/>
U.S. Nazis: whither Hitler?<lb/>
By JIM BARNES<lb/>
CROSSWINDS, a column which will appear from<lb/>
time to time in these pages, is a random<lb/>
commentary on issues of the day. The opinions<lb/>
expressed are those of the writer and do not<lb/>
necessarily reflect the opinion of FOUNTAINHEAD.<lb/>
Adolph Hitler is in the news again. In June,<lb/>
Nazis plan to parade in the predominantly Jewish<lb/>
suburb of Skokie, Illinois. In the midst of the conflict<lb/>
aroused by the march permits for Skokie, NBC<lb/>
recently aired its miniseries Holocaust over several<lb/>
nights of prime time television. Looming largely<lb/>
behind all of this is the mystique and peronality of<lb/>
Adolph Hitler and the genocidal nightmare which<lb/>
was Eastern Europe under his reign of terra.<lb/>
I do not plan to go to Skokie, nor did I view<lb/>
Holocaust, but like almost everyone else, I have an<lb/>
interest in the historical facts ooncerning Hitler and<lb/>
the society which allowed his ascent to power. This<lb/>
seems especially relevant to the current times,<lb/>
where in the Middle East, irrationality and<lb/>
nationalism all tooften mask as religious dedication.<lb/>
Basic to the entire debate is, it seems, the<lb/>
existence of the nation of Israel. It is absolutely<lb/>
essential to the survival of Israel that the world never<lb/>
forgets the fate of the Jews inWbrld War 11. And for<lb/>
this, there seems to be one man the Jews and I srael<lb/>
must never forget: Adolph Hitler.<lb/>
So long as Israel can keep vivid the ever-present<lb/>
danger of a modern day version of the holocaust, her<lb/>
citizens will keep the vigilance necessary to survive<lb/>
autonomously in the Middle East.<lb/>
To others, whose emotional involvement in the<lb/>
Middle East is minimal or peripheral, Adolph Hitler<lb/>
possesses a detached, almost clinical allure. What is<lb/>
it in us, as human society, that not only fosters<lb/>
Hitlerian consciousness but actually in some cases<lb/>
accepts willingly such behavior as beneficial to some<lb/>
external object or goal?<lb/>
There are those who view Hitler and his effect on<lb/>
the German people as some psycho-social aberra-<lb/>
tion, a mutation of the body politic. Against this<lb/>
self-assured, "it-will-never-happen-to-us" attitude<lb/>
stands the daily vigilance of the nation of Israel, that<lb/>
attitude which some choose to see as paranoiac.<lb/>
Depth psychology seems to lean toward the<lb/>
argument of the Israelis: Hitler was not an isolated<lb/>
psyche, alone in the splendor of his megalomania.<lb/>
He was a member of a society; and as such he no<lb/>
doubt drew from and contributed to the general<lb/>
consciousness of that society.<lb/>
Writing in Escape From Freedom, psychotherap-<lb/>
ist Erich Fromm reasons that so far as Germany<lb/>
under Hitler was concerned, the German people to a<lb/>
degree had to weloome the advent of the strongly<lb/>
paternalistic Nazism. The disaster of the Wiemar<lb/>
Republic left unfulfilled in Germany the desire fa a<lb/>
collective social identity, a national unity.<lb/>
Hitler provided that unity. It was he around<lb/>
whom the Germans could rally to hear of the<lb/>
greatness of their society and, finally, of the<lb/>
supremacy of their race.<lb/>
Jung writes in an essay entitled "The Relations<lb/>
Between the Ego and the Unconscious" that tne<lb/>
building up of prestige is always a product of<lb/>
collective compromise: not only must there be one<lb/>
who wants prestige, there must also be a public<lb/>
seeking somebody on whom to oonfer prestige<lb/>
I am not a psychologist, nor am I unaware of the<lb/>
dangers inherent to lay inte , etationsof psychoan-<lb/>
alytic theay. But, even with these qualifications, it<lb/>
is not far-fetched to presume a connection between<lb/>
the ideas of psychology and the theay that Hitler<lb/>
was not a unique mutant, but a type of personality<lb/>
which, when properly aligned with vulnerable<lb/>
social-political oonditiais and collective approval,<lb/>
can bring about what is know as "holocaust<lb/>
Therefae, it would seem the proper question not<lb/>
to ask "Could there be another Hitler?" but "Will<lb/>
we allow another Hitler?"<lb/>
The fura over the proposed Nazi march through<lb/>
the Jewish community of Skokie indicates that the<lb/>
feaiful and, fa a few, appealing connotations of<lb/>
Nazism are still with our society. This purposeful<lb/>
See CROSSWINDS, p. b<lb/>
<pb facs="00058056_0005"/><lb/>
wa<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
extends<lb/>
search<lb/>
ByJEANNIE WILLIAMS<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The Search Committee for the<lb/>
new dean of the ECU School of<lb/>
Art has voted to extend the search<lb/>
for an additional year, according<lb/>
to Frances Daugherty, chairman<lb/>
of the committee.<lb/>
"The committee decided to<lb/>
extend the search because two of<lb/>
of the four final candidates<lb/>
withdrew their applications due to<lb/>
unforeseeable circumstances<lb/>
Daugherty said.<lb/>
She explained that the re-<lb/>
maining two candidates were<lb/>
acceptable, but it was necessary<lb/>
for the faculty to submit two<lb/>
candidates to the chancellor for<lb/>
approval.<lb/>
"The faculty had no choice<lb/>
but to extend the search<lb/>
Daugherty said.<lb/>
She said that the faculty<lb/>
wanted to have a larger field to<lb/>
make the choice from and not feel<lb/>
that they were pushed to make a<lb/>
decision.<lb/>
"The position is currently<lb/>
being filled by Tran Gordley. He<lb/>
is very capable as the acting<lb/>
dean Daugherty added.<lb/>
ECU Gospel Ensemble<lb/>
THE FAMIIY PRACTICE Center will hold open house on Sun June 4.<lb/>
CROSSWENDS<lb/>
Continued from p. 4<lb/>
attack on the human sanctity of the residents of<lb/>
Skokie has even some hard-line constitutionalists<lb/>
advising a denial of permit fa the march.<lb/>
Is, then, Hitler played out? What are the roots of<lb/>
the morbid fascination with a single man who<lb/>
engineered the murder of millions of people and<lb/>
propelled the modern world into one of its darkest<lb/>
moments?<lb/>
We now know more, intellectually, about the<lb/>
human psyche than did our ancestors. What we<lb/>
choose to accept about ourselves, personally and<lb/>
socially, will determine whether in the public mind<lb/>
Hitler will remain as a psychological anomaly a as a<lb/>
reminder of an active, darker side of the human and<lb/>
collective psyche.<lb/>
Skokie and the production Holocaust brings<lb/>
these questions before us again; fa a moment we<lb/>
remember mae vividly. And perhaps that is the<lb/>
goal of Israel-to remember. Or, to paraphrase<lb/>
Santayana, those who do not learn from the mistake<lb/>
that was Nazi Germany will be condemned to repeat<lb/>
it.<lb/>
Choir fills transitional needs<lb/>
31 May 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
Family Practice<lb/>
Center holds<lb/>
open house<lb/>
ECU Med School<lb/>
The Eastern Carolina Family<lb/>
Practice Center and the Eastern<lb/>
Area Heai'h Education Center<lb/>
will hold open house on Sun<lb/>
June 4. The public is invited to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
The buildings are located<lb/>
adjacent to Pitt County Memaial<lb/>
Hospital.<lb/>
The Family Practice Center, a<lb/>
$1.8 million facility designed to<lb/>
provide primary health care, is<lb/>
operated by the ECU Department<lb/>
of Family Medicine under con-<lb/>
tract with Eastern AHEC.<lb/>
In addition to offering patient<lb/>
services, the center also serves as<lb/>
the educational facility fa the<lb/>
ECU medical school's family<lb/>
practice residency program.<lb/>
The facility was constructed<lb/>
with funds provided by Eastern<lb/>
AHEC, an agency which provides<lb/>
continuing education to health<lb/>
professionals in 23 counties in<lb/>
eastern North Carolina. Eastern<lb/>
AHEC also coadinates field<lb/>
placement fa students in the<lb/>
health disciplines.<lb/>
Participating in the 2 p.m.<lb/>
ribbon-cutting will be Dr. Leo<lb/>
Jenkins, ECU Chancel la and<lb/>
various members of the ECU Med<lb/>
School, School of Nursing, School<lb/>
of Allied Health, AHEC and<lb/>
PCMH.<lb/>
By DENISE DUPREE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Transition from high school to<lb/>
college can be very difficult fa<lb/>
some students. They do not have<lb/>
the old, familiar environment to<lb/>
cling to, and there is usually a<lb/>
tremendous void in their lives.<lb/>
Some students learn to live with<lb/>
the void in their lives, while<lb/>
others try to fill the void.<lb/>
One student who decided to<lb/>
fill the void rather than live with it<lb/>
is Johnice Johnson, founder<lb/>
directa of the ECU Gospel<lb/>
Ensemble.<lb/>
"Many students were involv-<lb/>
ed in churches at home, and when<lb/>
they oome to school, they miss the<lb/>
experience of praising the Lad<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
Ms. Johnson, a Music maja<lb/>
fran Gddsbao, N.C. said the<lb/>
Gospel Ensemble consisted of<lb/>
approximately twenty students.<lb/>
"We strive fa unity, dedicat-<lb/>
ion and peace, and there is a bond<lb/>
of love between us she related.<lb/>
The Gospel Ensemble, a cont-<lb/>
empaary gospel group, has<lb/>
perfamed in various churches<lb/>
in the area.<lb/>
The group was famed Feb-<lb/>
ruary 1978 and was invited to<lb/>
participate in the Spring Gospel<lb/>
Concert at Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. The group tentatively<lb/>
plans to give ooncerts at Nath<lb/>
Carolina State, and University of<lb/>
Nath Carolina and Goldsbao.<lb/>
The Gospel Ensemble is con-<lb/>
ducted and co-directed by Lawler<lb/>
Crawfad, who feels that the<lb/>
group provides students with a<lb/>
form of musical self-expression.<lb/>
The Gospel Ensemble in-<lb/>
cludes such musicians as Willie<lb/>
Maris, saxophone; Harvey<lb/>
Stokes on electric bass; Ray<lb/>
Everett on piano and agan;<lb/>
Samuel Johnson on drums; and<lb/>
directa Johnice Johnson; piano.<lb/>
While the Gospel Ensemble is<lb/>
basically a contempaary group,<lb/>
Ms. Johnson believes that the<lb/>
group will broaden its haizois<lb/>
next year.<lb/>
"We plan to do some tradit-<lb/>
ional gospel pieces next year and<lb/>
to do some wak with men's<lb/>
quartets and trios she said.<lb/>
This year the group perfamed<lb/>
waks by James Cleveland,<lb/>
Andrea Crouch, The New Yak<lb/>
Canmunity Choir and The Gospel<lb/>
Wakshop, along with the rther<lb/>
oomposers.<lb/>
The Gospel Ensemble is open<lb/>
fa membership, Ms, Johnsai<lb/>
stated. An audition is desired,<lb/>
and previous gospel group exper-<lb/>
ience is helpful.<lb/>
The BOOKTRADER<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058056_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 31 May 1978<lb/>
Clayburgh excells in An Unmarried Woman<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
By JEFF ROLLINS<lb/>
Assistant Trends Edita<lb/>
What does the mother of a<lb/>
teen-age daughter and wife of<lb/>
seventeen years do when her<lb/>
husband suddenly tearfully con-<lb/>
fesses that he has fallen in love<lb/>
with a woman only slightly older<lb/>
than his daughter? Well, first of<lb/>
all she throws-up, and then she<lb/>
painstakingly begins to construct<lb/>
a new life.<lb/>
An Unmarried Woman is the<lb/>
story of a contemporary woman in<lb/>
New Yak who because of circum-<lb/>
stances and her own sensitivity<lb/>
realizes that she cannot be happy<lb/>
in the traditional role of wife.<lb/>
But Erica (Jill Claybugh) is no<lb/>
tough-minded man-hater, she<lb/>
only knows that she must find a<lb/>
man who will not try to dominate<lb/>
her, and who will not assume that<lb/>
she automatically take the sub-<lb/>
ordinate position in the relation-<lb/>
ship.<lb/>
Erica's world is the New York<lb/>
of today. She lives and works in<lb/>
the artists' section, Soho, and is<lb/>
surrounded by abstract expres-<lb/>
sionist painters and sculpters.<lb/>
The sparkling presence of the<lb/>
city all around Erica gives the film<lb/>
a sense of comtemporaneity with-<lb/>
out making it trendy.<lb/>
Erica's friends are sophisticat-<lb/>
ed city women. Their importance<lb/>
to her is underlined in the film<lb/>
several times.<lb/>
She talks with them sitting at<lb/>
a bar, having lunch in a restaurant<lb/>
and lounging around her own<lb/>
apartment about what course her<lb/>
life should take. Her friends with<lb/>
their divergent opinions, repres-<lb/>
ent the play of thoughts that is in<lb/>
Erica's own mind.<lb/>
Patti (Lisa Lucas), Erica's<lb/>
daughter, is a young version of<lb/>
her mother with a younger sense<lb/>
of what is going on. She tells her<lb/>
Mother candidly, without being<lb/>
asked, that she is still a virgin<lb/>
even though most of her class-<lb/>
mates aren't.<lb/>
IT'S A NEW day for Erica Jill Clayburgh) when she learns to live<lb/>
without her husband.<lb/>
Play or movie?<lb/>
'Unimaginative presentation<lb/>
'Equus is little more than a<lb/>
hollow, self-effacing imitation'<lb/>
By STEVE BACHNER<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
On October 24, 1974, Equus,<lb/>
the play, opened on Broadway<lb/>
with Anthony Hopkins as the<lb/>
psychiatrist, Martin Dysart, and<lb/>
with Peter Firth re-creating his<lb/>
original role.<lb/>
Not sinoe the now-historic<lb/>
openings of the early Arthur<lb/>
Miller and Tennessee Williams<lb/>
masterpieces has a play received<lb/>
such an ecstatic reception.<lb/>
It has already played more<lb/>
than 1,100 performances, making<lb/>
it one of the longest running<lb/>
non-musical plays in the history<lb/>
of the Broadway stage.<lb/>
Equus also won more than a<lb/>
half dozen of the major theatrical<lb/>
awards for the 1974-75 season,<lb/>
including the New Yak Drama<lb/>
Critics Circle Award fa Best Play<lb/>
of the Season.<lb/>
So, with virtually no change<lb/>
in the dialogue and certainly no<lb/>
alteration a compromise with its<lb/>
aiginal premise and oontent,<lb/>
playwright Peter Shaffer has<lb/>
attempted to move his play from<lb/>
the theatrical confines of a<lb/>
proscenium stage to the visual<lb/>
advantages of film.<lb/>
Equus was shot on location in<lb/>
the vicinity of Ontario, Canada,<lb/>
meadows, homes, stables, hos-<lb/>
pital sand other sites which in the<lb/>
theatre are evoked entirely by<lb/>
Jescriptive dialogue.<lb/>
Unfortunately the pretty locat<lb/>
ion footage does little to justify<lb/>
this very incinematic translation<lb/>
as film. Directa Sidney Lumet<lb/>
never really made up his mind<lb/>
whether to shoot a play a a<lb/>
movie.<lb/>
The perfamances throughout<lb/>
the film are solid, especially<lb/>
young Peter Firth's as Alan<lb/>
Strang, a confused boy caught in<lb/>
the turmoil of "mental illness<lb/>
who raises unanswerable quest-<lb/>
ions about the oonventional<lb/>
meaning of "namal<lb/>
But screenwriter Shaffer re-<lb/>
fuses to give an inch and Lumet<lb/>
seems content to let Richard<lb/>
Burton soliloquize at length dir-<lb/>
ectly into a stationary camera.<lb/>
Gone also is the gut wrench-<lb/>
ing pace of the play that gave it<lb/>
the feel of a detective stay as we<lb/>
ached to unravel the mystery of<lb/>
Strang's harible aime, the<lb/>
blinding of six hases.<lb/>
Shaffer was certainly less<lb/>
involved in the scripting of a film<lb/>
than in the rewriting of his play.<lb/>
Our traditionally literary cin-<lb/>
ema usually has a fairly rigid<lb/>
division of creative roles seperat-<lb/>
ing the directas (usually reauit-<lb/>
ed from stage a, mae recently,<lb/>
television) and the scriptwriters,<lb/>
whose first commitment remains<lb/>
to literature - in this case, to the<lb/>
theatre.<lb/>
The whole problem of relating<lb/>
experimental work in other media<lb/>
to the cinema is exemplified by<lb/>
the wak done here fa Equus.<lb/>
Shaffer's play ranks amoig the<lb/>
most brilliantly conceived in the<lb/>
modern theatre. It breaks totally<lb/>
with the oonventional notions of<lb/>
action, character and presenta-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
But in the cinema he has been<lb/>
limited to turning the play into an<lb/>
unsuccessful film without a basic<lb/>
naturalistic fam.<lb/>
NOT REALIZED IN<lb/>
EMOTIONAL AND<lb/>
DRAMATICTERMS<lb/>
Shaffer's screenplay offers a<lb/>
deliberate dedramatazation and<lb/>
the attitudes of the characters are<lb/>
simply stated, not realized in<lb/>
emotional and dramatic terms.<lb/>
As a sad result there is a gap<lb/>
between what the film represent<lb/>
fa its maker and what is actually<lb/>
conveyed to the audience - a gap<lb/>
that directa Lumet conveyed<lb/>
without any problem whatsoever<lb/>
in Serpioo, Murder on the Orient<lb/>
Express, Dog Day A fternoon, and<lb/>
Network, na all of which were<lb/>
filmed with the idea of using<lb/>
aiginal screen material.<lb/>
As a play, Equus is powerful<lb/>
and expertly inconclusive. Equus,<lb/>
the movie, is little mae than a<lb/>
hollow, self-effacing imitation of<lb/>
itself and na even the phao-<lb/>
graphy can save it from its<lb/>
unimaginative presentation.<lb/>
What we have hae are the<lb/>
bare bones of the aiginal.<lb/>
JILL CLA VBURGH AND Alan Bates co-star in An Unmarried Woman.<lb/>
Also she pertly opines to Erica<lb/>
and her friends that the dominate<lb/>
sexual model developing today is<lb/>
the bi-sexual one, although she<lb/>
herself isna bi-sexual.<lb/>
She does eventually meet a<lb/>
suocessful and sensual man<lb/>
There is a love without posses-<lb/>
sion. Saul, admirably played by<lb/>
A1 an Bates, must go to Vermont<lb/>
fa the summer to paint, the only<lb/>
place he can wak.<lb/>
abandaied by her husband.<lb/>
These scenes required an<lb/>
intelligent control who survives a<lb/>
cauterizing divace is taally<lb/>
upsparing in it's self-examina-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
?HONESTLY FELT ANGER<lb/>
AND PAIN"<lb/>
Paul Mazursky, the writer-<lb/>
di recta of Unmarried Woman,<lb/>
has an excpetional sense of how<lb/>
Trends<lb/>
But Erica realizes that her life<lb/>
is in the city. "Why don't you and<lb/>
Patti oome visit me fa a few<lb/>
months? he asks. "Why don't you<lb/>
come visit us?" she answers.<lb/>
Jill Qayburgh's perfamance<lb/>
of a woman wno suddenly finds<lb/>
that she must build a new life fa<lb/>
herself is sensitive and very<lb/>
believable. The mae difficult<lb/>
moments fa her to ad came in<lb/>
getting aaoss on the screen the<lb/>
subtle, meaningful changes that<lb/>
take place in her after she is<lb/>
to illustrate his character's inter-<lb/>
ia life through dialogue and<lb/>
cinematically. Under his guid-<lb/>
ance, Jill Clayburgh strips away<lb/>
the poses and pretenses that<lb/>
mask honestly-felt anga and<lb/>
pain.<lb/>
The result is that An Unmarri-<lb/>
ed Woman isna so much a male<lb/>
view of today's woman as it is a<lb/>
full-length, fully dimensional pa-<lb/>
trait in which a woman's indiv-<lb/>
iduality evolves on screen in all its<lb/>
shading and complexities.<lb/>
??<lb/>
RICHARD BURTON COMFORTS Peter Firth in a scene from EQUUS.<lb/>
"Shaffer was certainly less involved in the scripting of a film than in<lb/>
the re-writing of his play. Our traditionally literary cinema usually has<lb/>
a fairly rigid division of creative roles separating the directors (usually<lb/>
recruited from the stage or, more itcently, television) and the<lb/>
scriptwriters, whose first commitment remains to literature-in this<lb/>
case, to the theatre. The whole problem of relating experimental work<lb/>
in other media to the cinema is exemplified by the work done here for<lb/>
EQUUS<lb/>
<pb facs="00058056_0007"/><lb/>
????M<lb/>
m J :<lb/>
HI<lb/>
'Fantasia Suite for Two Guitars' is album's highlight.<lb/>
31 May 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
Al Di Meola is master of the guitar on Casino<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
Al Di Meola is an undisputed<lb/>
master of the guitar.<lb/>
Ever since his formative days<lb/>
with Return to Forever, Di Meola<lb/>
has matured as a musicain<lb/>
perfecting his individual style.<lb/>
That style reached fruition<lb/>
with his latest release Casino and<lb/>
last year's Elegant Gypsy. Al-<lb/>
though by no means a perfect<lb/>
album, Elegunt Gypsy was super-<lb/>
ior to his latest venture.<lb/>
Di Meola's forte is his rapid<lb/>
attack and sinewy melodic prog-<lb/>
ressions, coupled with a keen<lb/>
rhythmic sense. These elements<lb/>
combine to create the soaring<lb/>
solos which characterize his play-<lb/>
ing. He has been responsible fa<lb/>
some of the most invigorating<lb/>
guitar solos in jazz.<lb/>
Sadly, such cannot be said fa<lb/>
his skills as a composer.<lb/>
Di Meola appears unable to<lb/>
grasp the concept of underlying<lb/>
musical themes in his composit-<lb/>
ions. Instead of delcicately honed<lb/>
musical structures, Di Meola is<lb/>
content to merely establish a<lb/>
rhythm ova which to display his<lb/>
virtuosity.<lb/>
These rhythms, albeit com-<lb/>
plex and engaging, are no<lb/>
substitute fa the absence of a<lb/>
CASINO ISAI Di Meola's latest album. Ever sinoe his formative days<lb/>
with RETURN TO FOREVER Di Meola has matured as a musician<lb/>
sounds as though it's being<lb/>
played at the wrong speed. Much<lb/>
of Di Meola's playing haeaeems<lb/>
more egotistical than artistic.<lb/>
"Chasin' the Voodoo" follows<lb/>
in the same mold, only with more<lb/>
achestratioi. Here, also, the<lb/>
rhythm is somewhat simpla than<lb/>
its predecessa.<lb/>
"Dark Eye Tango" breaks<lb/>
from the pattern established by<lb/>
the first two tracks on this side<lb/>
with its smoothly sensuous latino<lb/>
rhythm. This is the type song that<lb/>
fAl Di Meola (is) one of<lb/>
the foremost flamenco<lb/>
guitarists currently re-<lb/>
cording in the jazz idiom<lb/>
definite theme.<lb/>
Side oie opens with "Egypt-<lb/>
ian Danza a vaguely extfic<lb/>
piece which sounds like belly<lb/>
dance music from grade B desert<lb/>
movie. Ba.y Miles' keyboards<lb/>
sound altanately like a rolla rink<lb/>
agan a a band of uandaing<lb/>
Arab musicians from Damascus.<lb/>
The song progresses from a<lb/>
supposedly mysterious opening,<lb/>
gradually building tempo until it<lb/>
best displays Di Meola s skill on<lb/>
electric guitar, from the lucid<lb/>
staccato notes to the uplifting<lb/>
uppa register spinal vibratos.<lb/>
Side two starts with a compos-<lb/>
ition by Di Meola' sformer menta<lb/>
Chick Caea, "Sena Mouse<lb/>
This rendition makes the leap<lb/>
from keyboard based piece, as it<lb/>
was aiginally written , to one<lb/>
centered around a guitar, with<lb/>
relative ease, although that god-<lb/>
Danskin<lb/>
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awful rolla rink agan aops up<lb/>
again.<lb/>
The album's highlight, how-<lb/>
eva is the "Fantasia Suite fa<lb/>
Two Guitars written and pa-<lb/>
famed by Di Meola. He seems<lb/>
most at ease hae, both in his<lb/>
composition and his playing.<lb/>
The listena can imagine Di<lb/>
Meola's fingers rippling ova the<lb/>
strings of his acoustic guitar. The<lb/>
influence of flamenco guitarists<lb/>
such as Paco DeLucia, and othas,<lb/>
is clearly evident hae.<lb/>
Ratha than mere imitation,<lb/>
his pafamance hae is a genuine<lb/>
tribute to the artists who inspired<lb/>
him.<lb/>
The title track doses the<lb/>
album, and, regrettably, Di<lb/>
Meola falls back into his vice of<lb/>
soloing ova a basic percussive<lb/>
pattan. Although he avoids the<lb/>
showy pyrotechnicsof some of his<lb/>
solos earlia ai the album, he is<lb/>
still unable to enliven this work.<lb/>
Di Meola has surrounded<lb/>
himself with some of the best<lb/>
session musicians available,<lb/>
waking with a basic ensemble<lb/>
oomposed of Steve Gadd on<lb/>
drums, Anthony Jackson on bass,<lb/>
Barry Miles on keyboards, and<lb/>
Mingo Lewis on percussion.<lb/>
Eddie Colon makes a brief<lb/>
appearance on "Casino playing<lb/>
timbales and rtf o toms.<lb/>
Di Meola has succeeded in<lb/>
perfecting his individual style.<lb/>
establishing himself as one of the<lb/>
faemost flamenco guitarists cur-<lb/>
rently recading in the jazz idoim.<lb/>
, He would be well advised to<lb/>
continue in this direction and use<lb/>
his electric guitar sparingly.<lb/>
Seeds Shoe Shop<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
at<lb/>
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Tliiir. Concert Xitc at the<lb/>
THE DRIFTERS<lb/>
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The Ilct in Itcach ICiitcrtaiiiinciit<lb/>
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?<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058056_0008"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 31 May 1978<lb/>
Wolfpack returns 12 starters for 78<lb/>
ByCHRlSHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
This is the second of a series<lb/>
of scouting reports on ECU'S 1978<lb/>
football opponents. Next week we<lb/>
will scout the Catamounts of<lb/>
Western Carolina.<lb/>
Last years NC State football<lb/>
team was certainly a reversal<lb/>
from the previous team in 1976.<lb/>
In 76 the Wolfpack was<lb/>
expected to have a banner year<lb/>
and ended up with a 3-7-1 mark<lb/>
for the year. In comparision, last<lb/>
year the Pack finished with a 8-4<lb/>
mark and a Peach Bowl thrashing<lb/>
of Iowa State.<lb/>
The only losses suffered by<lb/>
the Wolfpack last year were at the<lb/>
handsof ECU, Qemson, UNC-Ch<lb/>
and Penn State.<lb/>
This voar NC State returns 12<lb/>
starters from last year's team,<lb/>
seven on offense and five on<lb/>
defense.<lb/>
When you speak of the State<lb/>
offense the first name that usually<lb/>
comes to mind is their explosive<lb/>
runningback, Ted Brown. Last<lb/>
year Brown gained 1,251 yards<lb/>
and pushed his carrier total to<lb/>
3,252 yards for a 5.7 average per<lb/>
carry. Brown is being tabbed by<lb/>
State as a legitimate Heisman<lb/>
Trophy candidate.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Also back in the State back-<lb/>
field along with Brown are his<lb/>
running mates Ricky Adams and<lb/>
Billy Ray Vickers.<lb/>
Of course the kind of offen-<lb/>
sive fireworks State created last<lb/>
year could not have been done<lb/>
without a solid offensive line and<lb/>
most of that line oomes back this<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The interior line returns cen-<lb/>
ter Jim Ritcher, tackles Frank<lb/>
Hitt and Chris Dieterich and one<lb/>
guard Tim Gillespie. Check Stone<lb/>
is expected to take over for the<lb/>
departed Ed Callaway at the other<lb/>
guard slot.<lb/>
In the tight end department,<lb/>
Lin Dawson, who had nine<lb/>
catches fa 21.9 yards last season<lb/>
will likely get the starting nod. If<lb/>
he doesn't however, Fred Sherril<lb/>
BILLY RA Y WASHINGTON runs this pass reception<lb/>
in for a touchdown in last year's victory over NC<lb/>
State.<lb/>
a walkon can certainly get the job won out in a three to four man<lb/>
done, battle fa the spot.<lb/>
Wide receiver Randy Hall<lb/>
returns to the State lineup this<lb/>
year, so a proven tight end will be<lb/>
on hand.<lb/>
One of State's offensive prob-<lb/>
lems is replacing tiid Mar shall,<lb/>
who accounted fa 418 yards last<lb/>
year. The replacements include<lb/>
Lee Jukes and Buster Ray who<lb/>
was famerly a runningback.<lb/>
Probably the biggest problem<lb/>
on offense is trying to replace<lb/>
Johnny Evans. Last year Evans<lb/>
accounted fa 1,541 yards in total<lb/>
offense and either passed a ran<lb/>
fa 10 touchdowns.<lb/>
His replacement will very<lb/>
likely be Scott Smith a 6-1 180<lb/>
pound 4.7 sprinter. As far as<lb/>
experience goes, Scott has virt-<lb/>
ually none but in spring drills he<lb/>
Quarterback then loans as the<lb/>
weakest part of the Wolfpack<lb/>
offense.<lb/>
As far as placekicking is<lb/>
concerned, the replacement of<lb/>
Jay Sherrill (nine of 16 attempts<lb/>
and 28 PATS) will be tough. Also<lb/>
the replacement of Johnny Evans<lb/>
as a punter (42.2 yards on 58<lb/>
punts) will be even tougher.<lb/>
Nathan Ritter is expected to<lb/>
takeover the placekicking duties<lb/>
and Brian O'Doherty is a possibi-<lb/>
lity at punter.<lb/>
The NC State defense, unlike<lb/>
the offense, has some big holes to<lb/>
fill on the line and in the<lb/>
secondary. The line returns nose-<lb/>
guard Joe Hannah, and tackle,<lb/>
Simon Gupton. Replacements<lb/>
See GREEN p. 12<lb/>
Probable NC State lineup<lb/>
East Carolina vs. NC State September 9, 1978 at 7:30 p.m. Game<lb/>
series: 4-5 in f'or of State. Location of game; Carter Stadium Raleigh,<lb/>
N.C. Last year's scae:East Carolina 28-NC State 23.<lb/>
Randy Hall SE 6-0 179 Senia<lb/>
Chris Deiterich LT 6-3 244 Junia<lb/>
Tim Gillespie LG 6-3 236 Junia<lb/>
Chuck Stone RG 6-2 255 Junia<lb/>
Frank Hitt RT fr4 248 Senia of rfJWli<lb/>
Lin Dawson TE 6-3 212 Sophomore WM-C UJ-JLC;iJ.O<lb/>
Scott Smith QB 6-1 180 Junia<lb/>
Billy Ray Vickers FB 6-0 201 Junia<lb/>
Ted Brown RB 5-10 188 Senia<lb/>
Buster Ray FLK 5-9 177 Senia<lb/>
Nathan Ritter PLK 5-10 160 Sophomae<lb/>
Jon Hall RE 6-3 211 Senia<lb/>
Brian O'Doherty RT 6-2 238 Junia<lb/>
Joe Hannah NG 6-2 223 Junia<lb/>
Simon Guptai LT 6-1 254 Junia<lb/>
James Butler LE 6-0 219 Junia<lb/>
Kyle Wescoe LB 6-0 225 Senia<lb/>
Bill Cowher LB (A) 216 Senia<lb/>
Rainie Lee CB 5-10 175 Sophomae<lb/>
Dainie LeGrande CB 5-10 175 Sophomae<lb/>
Woodrow Wilson FS 5-9 181 Junia<lb/>
Mike Nail SS6-1 170 Senia<lb/>
Brian O'Doherty P 6-2 238 Junia<lb/>
State defense<lb/>
RUFFIN McNEIL' 44, makes the game saving<lb/>
tackle against State last year.<lb/>
ROBERT DO REIN looks towards next season, his third at State<lb/>
<pb facs="00058056_0009"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
iBMHIHim<lb/>
'?'f0ym' ESEjp<lb/>
Simply Sports<lb/>
31 May 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Wake Forest coach<lb/>
interested in Lee<lb/>
FORMER ECU ASSISTANT COACH BILLY LEE, isoneof three<lb/>
candidates who has been inteviewed for an assistant position at Wake<lb/>
Forest University. Lee, who resignec after a frustrating season with<lb/>
Pirate head coach Larry Gillman, is considered one of the brightest<lb/>
young coaches in the business today. He has also been mentioned as a<lb/>
possible candidate fa the head coaching job at Pembroke State and<lb/>
Garder-Webb College.<lb/>
WILLIE PATRICK, a former student assistant in the ECU<lb/>
Sports Information Offioe, has resigned after two years as the Sports<lb/>
Information Director at the Univesity of Tennessee-Chattanooga.<lb/>
Patrick was one of several candidates interviewed for the vacant Pirate<lb/>
SID job. His 1976 ECU Swimming Press Guide was voted best in the<lb/>
nation by (COS!DA) College Sports Information Directors of America.<lb/>
Patrick isexpected to take a position as the assistant sports information<lb/>
director at West Virginia within the next month.<lb/>
THE PIRATE ATHLETIC DEPARMENT has lost a host of<lb/>
sports information directors over the past years. Eight different sports<lb/>
publicists have left ECU during the last 14 years. Ken Smith, who<lb/>
resigned last month to enter private business in Greensboro stayed<lb/>
four years which was longer than any previous SID. Franc White,a<lb/>
former sports information director at ECU, is now the host of the<lb/>
Southern Sportsman a popular outdoors television show which<lb/>
appears weekly on Channel 9.<lb/>
ECU WRboTLERS Butch Revilsand Vic Northrup have recently<lb/>
been named to the Amateur Wrestling News All-Freshmen team.<lb/>
Revils a Norfolk, Va. product, was named to the first team while<lb/>
Northrup recieved honorable mention. Revils finished the season with<lb/>
an 18 5-1 record and won two tournament titles. Northrup compiled an<lb/>
18-9 record and competed in the NCAA Championships held in College<lb/>
Park, Md.<lb/>
ECU WRESTLING COACH BILL HILL has now signed three prep<lb/>
standouts to grant-in-aids fa the 1978-79 season. All three wrestlers<lb/>
Hill has signed will compete in the lower weight classes where they will<lb/>
be desperately needed next season. Mark Twigg from Sayre, Pa. will<lb/>
probably replace Paul Osman at 134, while Thomas Robinson, a native<lb/>
of Apalachm, N.Y. will be at 126. Hill's most recent signee, Steven<lb/>
Milanese, will wrestle at 118 a 126.<lb/>
ALTHOUGH THE 1978-79 BASKETBALL schedule has not been<lb/>
released yet ECU already has four very impressive home games<lb/>
scheduled next season. Detroit, South Carolina, and Virginia<lb/>
Commonwelath, who all played in the NIT last season, will appear in<lb/>
Minges Colesium along with new Atlantic Coast Conference member<lb/>
Geagia Tech Once again, the Pirates face a treacherous road schedule<lb/>
which includes games with Maryland, N.C. State, Notre Dame, and<lb/>
Tennessee.<lb/>
CATHY ANDRUZZI, the new women's basketball coach, is<lb/>
expected to name Dee C ee Mayes sometime within the next week as<lb/>
her assistant coach fa next season. Mayes, a graduate of Ithica<lb/>
College and a native of New Hampshire, has assisted Andruzzi with<lb/>
her summer camps at Wagner College fa the past few year<lb/>
CipthiscoMpon!<lb/>
And get three games for only $1.25.<lb/>
( Per Person Rate )<lb/>
LOCATED BESIDE RIVER RUFF APTS<lb/>
Phone 758-1820<lb/>
New SID to be named today<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Assistant Spats Edita<lb/>
Walt Atkins, the assistant<lb/>
spats infamatiai directa at<lb/>
N.C. State fa the last six years,<lb/>
was expected to be named the<lb/>
new spats infamatiai directa at<lb/>
ECU in a press ooiference held<lb/>
this maning.<lb/>
Atkins succeeds Ken Smith<lb/>
who resigned last month to enter<lb/>
private business in Greensbao.<lb/>
Smith served as the sports<lb/>
infamatiai directa at ECU fa<lb/>
four years befae resigning.<lb/>
A native of Atlanta, Ga<lb/>
Atkins received his B.S. in<lb/>
Journalism from the University of<lb/>
Maryland in 1972. He also waked<lb/>
as a student assistant fa four<lb/>
years in the Maryland sports<lb/>
infamatiai offioe.<lb/>
Britt and Gates honored<lb/>
Two ECU baseball palyers were named in the All-South<lb/>
Independent baseball team Monday.<lb/>
Pirate pitcher Mickey Britt was named to the second team and<lb/>
Eddie Gates received Honaable Mentioi.<lb/>
Other area players named oi the team were Robet Sutton of<lb/>
UNCW, oohn Maruardt of USC, Dennis Duff of Virginia Tech, and<lb/>
Campbell College's Mo Turner.<lb/>
The teams were chosen by the southern independent spats<lb/>
infamatiai directas in the southeast.<lb/>
P<lb/>
MICKEY BRITT<lb/>
Pirate football<lb/>
ticket sales<lb/>
booming<lb/>
The ECU Business Offioe repats<lb/>
seasai tickets aders are pouring<lb/>
in at a recad pace.<lb/>
Anyone who wishes to ader<lb/>
season tickets to all Pirates home<lb/>
games next fall should mail their<lb/>
check a maiey ader to the ECU<lb/>
Athletic Deparment as soon as<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
ECU has five home games in<lb/>
Ficklin Stadium. The Pirate's<lb/>
home opener is Sept. 2 against<lb/>
Western Carolina University.<lb/>
?m<lb/>
Atkins has waked with 16<lb/>
NCAA championship teams in<lb/>
five diffaent spats while at<lb/>
Maryland and N.C. State. He has<lb/>
also waked five bowl awards<lb/>
during his six years at N.C. State.<lb/>
He has received two awards<lb/>
fa his swimming press guides at<lb/>
N.C. Sate from COS DA (College<lb/>
Spats Infamatiai Directas of<lb/>
America) and also received nat-<lb/>
ional recognition fa aie of his<lb/>
wrestling press guides while at<lb/>
Maryland.<lb/>
Atkins is a member of the<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Conference Sports-<lb/>
writers Association and also holds<lb/>
membership in COS1DA.<lb/>
ECU athletic directa Bill Cain<lb/>
said mae than 25 applications<lb/>
were received fa the posit iai<lb/>
although it was reported only six<lb/>
candidates were actually inter-<lb/>
viewed fa the job.<lb/>
Sources inside the athletic<lb/>
department said Atkins and<lb/>
Jimmy Wilder, the spats infa-<lb/>
matiai directa at The Citadel<lb/>
were the final two candidates fa<lb/>
the position.<lb/>
Willie Patrick, the famer<lb/>
spats infamatiai directa at the<lb/>
University of Tennessee-<lb/>
Chattanooga, Bruce Herman, the<lb/>
SID at Wake Faest and BoBo<lb/>
Champion, the famer 3D at<lb/>
Mississippi were also interview-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
Atkins is expected to begin<lb/>
wak at ECU June 15.<lb/>
1<lb/>
R0fFl?R<lb/>
 Mmim<lb/>
I til I ? ?t(T?l?<lb/>
?i If Ml HHiss-<lb/>
I ill I M II M fl? I I I I I I 4 if<lb/>
I I. I Ml Mill tlt? 4.<lb/>
I l 4 il ll 41 I ?S- NS ).<lb/>
I vi i is- Hi HHU ii I I ll ii I h i .<lb/>
o<lb/>
:<lb/>
4Mm VJk C-? t3mk I<lb/>
Buy A Sub &amp; Get Another of die Same For<lb/>
4<lb/>
P<lb/>
 I2 Price <lb/>
<lb/>
Offer Expires June 17th.<lb/>
Phone in ader fa piox-up Phone 752130 521 Cotanche a. Geagetown Shoppee<lb/>
? -MBjB?aai8EWSIff!Bil?HlM?WM-<lb/>
<pb facs="00058056_0010"/><lb/>
Pag 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 31 May 1978<lb/>
Averett leaves ECU to take tennis post at Rice<lb/>
Cynthia Averett, the women's<lb/>
tennis coach at East Carolina<lb/>
University for the past two years,<lb/>
has been named to a similar<lb/>
position at Rice University in<lb/>
Houston effective August 1.<lb/>
The 24-year-old Greenville<lb/>
native is a 1975 graduate of East<lb/>
Carolina with a B.S. degree in<lb/>
biology. She will receive her M.A.<lb/>
degree in physical education from<lb/>
ECU this year.<lb/>
During her collegiate career at<lb/>
ECU, Averett was the number<lb/>
one singles player durina. her<lb/>
senior year. As a coach, Averett<lb/>
offered the first two women's<lb/>
sports schoalrships outside of<lb/>
basketball.<lb/>
"The opportunity Rice Un-<lb/>
iversity is offering me is just too<lb/>
much to turn dowm said<lb/>
Averett. "It is their goal to be<lb/>
nationally ranked within three to<lb/>
four years. I'll have the tools and<lb/>
money thereto let me develop the<lb/>
type of program I want. Here at<lb/>
ECU, one just doesn't have the<lb/>
tods or money to work with<lb/>
Averett will be competing in<lb/>
the Southwest Conference where<lb/>
three memebrs of the league<lb/>
played in the national women's<lb/>
tournament thiu year, Trinity<lb/>
College, Texas A&amp;M and Bayloy.<lb/>
Averett is ranked 18th in<lb/>
singles in North Carolina and is<lb/>
ranked second in doubles with<lb/>
Suzanne Belk of Rocky Mount.<lb/>
She is the daughter of Mr. and<lb/>
Mrs. J. Arnold Averett of 2004<lb/>
Brook Road. She attended Rose<lb/>
High and played two years of<lb/>
tennis there at the number two<lb/>
singles position.<lb/>
CYNTHIA AVERETT<lb/>
Green's return could aid Wolfpack defense<lb/>
JiMM Y SOUTHERLA ND TURNS the corner against State.<lb/>
Photo by Pete Podeszwa)<lb/>
Welcome back students.<lb/>
Remember Coggins for your car service needs<lb/>
B.F.Goodrich<lb/>
Car Care Service<lb/>
4 POINT BRAKE CHECK<lb/>
I. Pull Front Wheel, impact Linings and Drum<lb/>
I. Check Grease Seels. Wheel Cylinders for Leakage.<lb/>
3. Clean, inspect and Repack Front Wheel Bearings.<lb/>
4. Adjust Brakes on All Four Wheels for Full Pedal<lb/>
Rraklng.<lb/>
Beg. Price t.JO - With Cart. Service Only U.?<lb/>
Moat U.S. Cars. Toyota &amp; Datsuns<lb/>
call for appointment<lb/>
Mastrr Charge BankAmericard American Express.<lb/>
OHM , .is shown at B F Goodrich stores Competitively priced at B F Qoodrlch dealers<lb/>
jFQogdrteh Coggins Car Care<lb/>
SeTIRE CENTER<lb/>
Phone 7U-SU4<lb/>
DO W HWY. 34 BY PASS<lb/>
??aWMVILLC. t.C<lb/>
Continued from p. 10<lb/>
The strength of the State<lb/>
defense will probably be in the<lb/>
linebacking department. There<lb/>
the Pack returns three year<lb/>
letterman Bill Cowher and Kyle<lb/>
Wescoe.<lb/>
The replacements on the line<lb/>
if Green does not return will be<lb/>
Joe Hall at one end, Brian<lb/>
O'Doherty at tackle and James<lb/>
Butler at the other end.<lb/>
The weakest area of the State<lb/>
defense appears to be the sec-<lb/>
ondary where three of the four<lb/>
starters were lost. The likes of<lb/>
Richard Carter, Tommy London<lb/>
and Ralph Stringer will be hard to<lb/>
replace but Coach Rein does have<lb/>
some experienced letterman to<lb/>
work with. They are Larry Eber-<lb/>
heart, Donnie LeGrande, and<lb/>
Mike Nail. The lone returnee is<lb/>
Woodrow Wilson.<lb/>
In summing up this years<lb/>
chances for the NC State Wdf-<lb/>
pack a lot of what happens to this<lb/>
team will depend on some new<lb/>
and unproven performers. The<lb/>
must be found at the ends and the<lb/>
other tackle. One of the tackle<lb/>
spots could be taken care of if<lb/>
Bubba Green a, 6'5. 275 pound<lb/>
:wNtei30S<lb/>
gpr<lb/>
Buy 2 short subs<lb/>
and get 1 free<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
MONDAY thru THURSDAY11:30 a.m. til 1:00 a.m.<lb/>
FRIDAY and SATURDAY11:30 a.m. til 2:00 a.m.<lb/>
SUNDAY11:30 a.m. til 12:00 p.m.<lb/>
I??<lb/>
BOYD'S BARBER<lb/>
AND HAIRSTYUNG<lb/>
1008 S. Evans St<lb/>
Phone 758-4056<lb/>
Mekin H. Boyd<lb/>
Mdvin H. Boyd Jr.<lb/>
Fraiiklin C Tripp<lb/>
4 ? SAVS' it<lb/>
STUDENT I&amp;CA&amp;D<lb/>
(EXPIRES SPPT I, I97R<lb/>
FREE 0Tr??L?sswM<lb/>
WITM TH? PURCHASE OPAUY<lb/>
PLATTC. SHOU) CASHiefi.<lb/>
IIMIDC ?OU - aA&amp;D 2.?0<lb/>
HUUKo "TMufcs- sat mo<lb/>
monster was healthy enough to<lb/>
return. Green was a starter in '76<lb/>
and thus a Droven player,<lb/>
real weakness of this team is at<lb/>
quarterback but the solid back-<lb/>
field may help to offset some of<lb/>
the lack of experience there. The<lb/>
defense while not weak certainly<lb/>
doesn't look as solid as Coach<lb/>
Rein would like.<lb/>
As far as the schedule is<lb/>
concerned State will have their<lb/>
first three games in Carter<lb/>
Stadium but none of the teams<lb/>
(ECU, West Virginia, and<lb/>
Syracuse) can be overlooked by<lb/>
the Wolfpack.<lb/>
What it all boils down to is<lb/>
that State will be as good as the<lb/>
quick development of its young<lb/>
quarteback, defensive line and<lb/>
secondary.<lb/>
Bill Hill<lb/>
signs new<lb/>
prospect<lb/>
ByJONVERNER<lb/>
Special to FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
East Carolina wrestling coach<lb/>
Bill Hill announced the signing of<lb/>
Steven Milanese to a grant-in-aid<lb/>
for the 1978-79 season.<lb/>
Milanese, a native of Cinnam-<lb/>
inson, New Jersey wrestled for<lb/>
four years at Cinnaminson High<lb/>
School,compiling an overall mark<lb/>
of 67-19. The 67 wins were the<lb/>
most ever in the school's history.<lb/>
Milanese finished his senior<lb/>
season with a 24-1 record. He<lb/>
captured first place in the High-<lb/>
land Invitational Christmas tour-<lb/>
nament and was named the<lb/>
tourney's Most Outstanding<lb/>
Wrestler. He also won his district<lb/>
championship and took third in<lb/>
the regionals.<lb/>
Milanese was named to the<lb/>
coaches all star divisional team<lb/>
second team all-country, and<lb/>
third team all-South Jersey.<lb/>
Milanese was voted the school's<lb/>
Outstanding Wrestler this<lb/>
season.<lb/>
M ilanese was also a four year<lb/>
letterman at Cinnaminson wrest-<lb/>
ling in the 101-115, and 124<lb/>
pound weight classes. During the<lb/>
spring, he has wrestled in three<lb/>
tournaments winning the Edge-<lb/>
wood tournament and the U.S.<lb/>
Region iFcjr Championship.<lb/>
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.<lb/>
Alexander Milanese of Cinnamin-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
-<lb/>
<pb facs="00058056_0011"/>
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