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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057078_0001"/>
THIS ISSUE<lb/>
20 PA GES<lb/>
iOLINA UNIVl RSITY<lb/>
ENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over fifty years<lb/>
CIRCULATION<lb/>
8,500<lb/>
VOl 52 NO ?<lb/>
16 St PTt MHf H :<lb/>
tmmm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
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Game traffic parking on sod<lb/>
Field unprepared as season nears<lb/>
By JEFFERSON MANN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In the spring of 1976 a private<lb/>
contractor was hired by ECU to<lb/>
repair, level and improve the six<lb/>
intramural fields next to Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium. The work was to be<lb/>
completed by this fall. But it<lb/>
hasn't been.<lb/>
According to Dr. Wayne Ed-<lb/>
wards, of ECU Intramurals<lb/>
the fields will be used in the fall<lb/>
anyway.<lb/>
We have made arrange-<lb/>
ments whereby an agreement has<lb/>
been reached to use the fields in<lb/>
their present condition for fall<lb/>
quarter said Edwards. "The<lb/>
company with the contract will<lb/>
come back in the spring and finish<lb/>
the work to our satisfaction at no<lb/>
additional cost<lb/>
There are other problems<lb/>
though, according to Edwards.<lb/>
Whenever it rains the night<lb/>
before Ficklen Stadium is to be<lb/>
used, since the intramural fields<lb/>
are used for parking, the rain<lb/>
could soften the grass and the<lb/>
niiiH<lb/>
 -<lb/>
, ?<lb/>
. f 111<lb/>
THE INTRAMURAL FIELDS next to Ficklen Stadium be finished by spring quarter The fields are being<lb/>
which were scheduled to be completed this fall should used for parking at football games<lb/>
Handicapped student<lb/>
mugged near Flanagan<lb/>
By LARRY LIEBERMAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Roy Pate, a Junior at ECU and<lb/>
a disabled student, was robbed at<lb/>
11 :30 P. M Wednesday, Septem-<lb/>
8, on campus by three<lb/>
unidentified youths.<lb/>
Pate said he returned from<lb/>
downtown with a friend. When<lb/>
they got on campus they split up.<lb/>
Pate was going toward Slay<lb/>
dorm in his wheelchair when<lb/>
three black youths stopped him<lb/>
between Flanagan Building and<lb/>
the Infirmary, he said.<lb/>
He was not injured but $5 was<lb/>
stolen from him.<lb/>
According to Pate, One of<lb/>
them put his hand over my mouth<lb/>
and they asked where my wallet<lb/>
was I mumbled that it was in my<lb/>
pockel They took the five bucks I<lb/>
had and then they felt guilty<lb/>
about taking it and after arguing<lb/>
among themselves they gave th<lb/>
ma " ' hen the 006 th.it<lb/>
t'?b it asked  the money back I<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
gave him the money and got the<lb/>
hell away from there.<lb/>
Pate then returned to his room<lb/>
and told his friends who called the<lb/>
police. The campus police were at<lb/>
Pates' room in minutes.<lb/>
According to Joseph H. Cal-<lb/>
der, chief of ECU campus police,<lb/>
the three blacks were sought,<lb/>
immediately, but since Pate can-<lb/>
not describe them there is not a<lb/>
lot the police can do.<lb/>
Pate said, "I was pissed off,<lb/>
they took my $5, a chunk of my<lb/>
pride, and what little faith I had<lb/>
left in humanity<lb/>
"I knew society was going<lb/>
downhill-but now I know how bad<lb/>
off it really is. I don't know how in<lb/>
the hell I get in these situations<lb/>
Calder said there is a reward<lb/>
for persons who can help identify<lb/>
and convict all criminals. He said<lb/>
there may be a connection with a<lb/>
robbery that occured the same<lb/>
night on Dickinson Avenue.<lb/>
No parking<lb/>
By LINDA CHERRY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Greenville's City Council voted<lb/>
September 9 to prohibit parking<lb/>
along Overlook Drive from Elm<lb/>
t to Berkeley Rd between the<lb/>
hours of 9 00 a m. to 5.00 p m<lb/>
Residents along Overlook Dr.<lb/>
had oomplamed to the council<lb/>
that parked cars had blocked their<lb/>
driveways and mailboxes. These<lb/>
car-soften remained parked in the<lb/>
same spot days before they were<lb/>
moved, complained residents<lb/>
The "No Parking vote was<lb/>
propi oed by the a unoil on a ti ial<lb/>
basis<lb/>
new turf could be torn up by cars.<lb/>
Such an incident occurred this<lb/>
past week wfien it rained prior to<lb/>
the Rose High School football<lb/>
game on Friday. Parking was not<lb/>
allowed on the fields Friday night<lb/>
but was allowed Saturday for the<lb/>
ECU football game. According to<lb/>
Edwards, the damage was mini-<lb/>
mal.<lb/>
"In the event of rain we have<lb/>
arranged that the fields won't be<lb/>
used for parking fa football<lb/>
;d Edwards,  but in the case of<lb/>
the ECU games that may be hard<lb/>
to do<lb/>
Work on the fields was<lb/>
originally begun through a<lb/>
$38,000 appropriation from the<lb/>
University of North Carolina<lb/>
system fa capital improvements.<lb/>
No student fees were involved in<lb/>
the funding fa the construction.<lb/>
The plan aiginally called fa<lb/>
East Carolina'sown Maintenance<lb/>
staff to do the work, but a private<lb/>
contract a was decided upon at<lb/>
the last manent.<lb/>
Acoading to Edwards, the<lb/>
work hasn't been completed on<lb/>
time.<lb/>
At the present time the<lb/>
fields have not beer' satisfactaily<lb/>
completed. The operation fell<lb/>
behind schedule and the complete<lb/>
project has not been completed.<lb/>
The fields are playable but they<lb/>
are in no better conditiai than<lb/>
befae the wak began<lb/>
While wak was being under<lb/>
taken in the Spring, the men's<lb/>
Softball games were held on the<lb/>
Allied Health athletic fields. In<lb/>
the Fall, this is not possible since<lb/>
the Allied Health area is used by<lb/>
the women's field hockey team<lb/>
fa practice and games.<lb/>
"We are gang to use the<lb/>
fields as they are said Edwards,<lb/>
"but the contracta is obligated<lb/>
by law to oome back later and<lb/>
finish the job to our satisfaction<lb/>
It is not complete yet and we<lb/>
don't intent to pay any more fa<lb/>
the fields<lb/>
Dr. Edwards added the<lb/>
women's fields on College Hill<lb/>
Drive will remain in use fa the<lb/>
women's games and every effat<lb/>
is being made to improve the<lb/>
fields as much as possible befae<lb/>
play starts on Tuesday.<lb/>
The women won't be affected.<lb/>
We wont use their fields<lb/>
unless nothing else is scheduled<lb/>
on those fields and we need the<lb/>
area As fa the men's fields, the<lb/>
contractas will oome in this week<lb/>
and stake out the six fields so w-<lb/>
can begin play on Tuesday "<lb/>
Dr. Edwards said he is<lb/>
expecting at least 75 teams to<lb/>
register to play, which would total<lb/>
almost 900 students<lb/>
Carnegie Report<lb/>
sites med surplus<lb/>
By MONIKA SUTHERLAND<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A recent report released by<lb/>
the Carnegie Commission on<lb/>
Policy of Higher Education stated<lb/>
that North Carolina is one of six<lb/>
states with a surplus of medical<lb/>
school faahties.<lb/>
Medical school officials said in<lb/>
an interview that the report will<lb/>
have no effect on the developing<lb/>
East Carolina Medical School.<lb/>
Aside from the ECU school<lb/>
Nath Carolina has three other<lb/>
medical schools, Bowman Gray,<lb/>
Duke, and the University of North<lb/>
Carolina at Chapel Hill In 1975<lb/>
Nath Carolina was the twelfth<lb/>
largest producer of medical stu-<lb/>
dents in the country.<lb/>
Walter Sheperd. assistant to<lb/>
Dean Laupus of the ECU Medical<lb/>
School, said that the committee of<lb/>
the Carnegie Commission looked<lb/>
at the education and the produc-<lb/>
tion of medical students aaoss<lb/>
the country and not the service<lb/>
? Nath Carolina is the elev-<lb/>
enth most populous state and we<lb/>
produce a large number of<lb/>
medical doctors but we are<lb/>
producing them for other areas.<lb/>
Since 1925 there has been a<lb/>
definite decline in the number of<lb/>
iduates from Nath Carolina<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
medical schools that remain in the<lb/>
state to practice. Only 28 per cent<lb/>
of the doctas in Nath Carolina<lb/>
graduated from North Carolina<lb/>
medical schools. This means 78<lb/>
per cent of our doctors go<lb/>
elsewhere to practice, said<lb/>
Sheperd.<lb/>
The Carnegie report indicated<lb/>
that there could be a surplus of<lb/>
doctas by 1985 According to the<lb/>
report, there is approximately 1<lb/>
docta fa every 600 people and<lb/>
that by 1990 the ratio would be 1<lb/>
docta to every 450 people.<lb/>
"In Nath Carolina last year<lb/>
there was one docta fa every 833<lb/>
people. In eastern North Carolina<lb/>
the ratio was 1 to 1369 which<lb/>
indicates that there is a definite<lb/>
need fa the medical school at<lb/>
East Carolina, said Sheperd.<lb/>
?North Carolina ranks thirty-<lb/>
fifth in the nation on the ratio of<lb/>
doctas to patient care. It appears<lb/>
that the Carnegie Report is a<lb/>
general izatiai and it did not take<lb/>
into account individual production<lb/>
results<lb/>
In 1970 the Carnegie Commis-<lb/>
sion released a report on  Higher<lb/>
Education and American Health<lb/>
which discussed speaficall Med-<lb/>
ical and Dental schools. At that<lb/>
time East Carolina was recogniz-<lb/>
e REPORJ, page 9 <lb/>
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<pb facs="00057078_0002"/><lb/>
2<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 216 SEPTEMBER 1976<lb/>
mm<lb/>
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newSFLASHFLASHFLASHFLASHFLASH FLAS<lb/>
MRC<lb/>
MRC Election Day is Tuesday,<lb/>
Sept. 21, 1976. Filing deadline is<lb/>
noon Monday, Sept. 20,1976. See<lb/>
your dorm oounselor or floor<lb/>
advisor.<lb/>
I<lb/>
JOSH!<lb/>
JOSH! I s it a new restaurant?<lb/>
Is it a new drink? Is it a new night<lb/>
dub? Who knows? Hang in there<lb/>
he's coming.<lb/>
ccc<lb/>
This Thurs. night at 700<lb/>
Campus Crusade for Christ will<lb/>
have its first fellowship meeting<lb/>
of the new school year. Come join<lb/>
us at 1509 E. 5th St. (Across from<lb/>
nursing building) for a time of fun,<lb/>
singing and sharing. Everybody<lb/>
is welcome!<lb/>
Picnic<lb/>
A picnic for all Sigma Tau<lb/>
Delta members will be held on<lb/>
Wednesday, Sept. 22 at 4 p.m. at<lb/>
the home of Mrs. Dorothy Mills<lb/>
(1103 W. Wright Road). All<lb/>
persons attending should contri-<lb/>
bute one item (catsup, mustard,<lb/>
rolls, etc.). See Mrs. Marie Farr<lb/>
in Austin 218 if there are any<lb/>
questions.<lb/>
Workshop<lb/>
Alpha Phi Gamma, the ECU<lb/>
journalism society, with the Divi-<lb/>
sion of Continuing Education will<lb/>
sponsor an all day journalism<lb/>
workshop on Saturday, Sept. 18<lb/>
from 9-4. We are expecting about<lb/>
100 students from across the state<lb/>
and ask that all society members<lb/>
be present. Speakers are pro-<lb/>
fessionals in the journalism field.<lb/>
Any interested ECU journalism or<lb/>
broadcasting students should<lb/>
check with instructors for a list of<lb/>
topics to be discussed.<lb/>
Freshmen<lb/>
FRESHMAN-Pick up your Regis-<lb/>
ters (Annuals at 229 Mendenhall<lb/>
from Vice President Greg<lb/>
Pingston from nowntil Friday<lb/>
the 24th from11:30P?00.<lb/>
))<lb/>
ICF<lb/>
Inter-varsity Christian Fellow-<lb/>
ship will meet this Wednesday<lb/>
night at 730 at the Methodist<lb/>
Student Center, across from<lb/>
Garrett Dorm.<lb/>
Tennis<lb/>
Hockey<lb/>
Women's tennis ooach Ellen<lb/>
Warren is meeting with prospec-<lb/>
tive players at 4 p.m. on the<lb/>
Minges tennis courts Monday<lb/>
through Friday. Anyone interes-<lb/>
ted in playing should see Coach<lb/>
Warren for tryouts.<lb/>
Any women interested in<lb/>
trying out for women's field<lb/>
hockey should report to Coach<lb/>
Laurie Arrantsat 330 p.m. on the<lb/>
practice field behind the Allied<lb/>
Health building.<lb/>
SGA Offices Poop art<lb/>
Elections- File for SGA Legis-<lb/>
lature and class offices at 228<lb/>
Mendenahll between 9-5 P.M.<lb/>
each day until Monday the 20th.<lb/>
All candidates must attend the<lb/>
mandatory meeting at 730 in<lb/>
room 221 Monday the 20th.<lb/>
Grooming<lb/>
A program featuring dog<lb/>
grooming techniques will high-<lb/>
light the September 16 meeting of<lb/>
the Pitt County Humane Society.<lb/>
The meeting has been set for 8<lb/>
p.m. at the downtown Greenville<lb/>
Planters Bank and is open to all<lb/>
interested persons.<lb/>
Guest speaker Barbara Pur-<lb/>
year will discuss and demonstrate<lb/>
basic principles of dog grooming.<lb/>
Ms. Puryear, former owner and<lb/>
oeprator of the Grooming Box in<lb/>
Greenville, currently grooms in<lb/>
the Washington area.<lb/>
Frat Rush<lb/>
The Intra-Fraternity Council<lb/>
would like to announce that the<lb/>
Social Fraternities on campus will<lb/>
hold their annual Fall Rush Sept.<lb/>
13-18. Each fraternity will hold its<lb/>
own recruitment functions during<lb/>
this time. All interested men are<lb/>
urged to participate in Fraternity<lb/>
Rush. Motp detailed information<lb/>
will bed ? buted at a later date.<lb/>
Any inquii js-call the IFC office<lb/>
757-6028.<lb/>
Gamma Beta<lb/>
The Gamma Beta Phi Society<lb/>
will meet on Thursday, Septem-<lb/>
ber 16 at 7XX) P.M. in Menden-<lb/>
hall room 244. This is an<lb/>
organizational meeting for Fall<lb/>
quarter and all members are<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
Entertainer<lb/>
To experience the ultimate in<lb/>
the publication field and learn the<lb/>
know hows of the Student Union<lb/>
(without entering insanity syn-<lb/>
drome), apply fa the Entertainer<lb/>
Committee of the Student Union.<lb/>
We are new and need you to<lb/>
become one of us. Apply at<lb/>
Mendenhall Information Desk.<lb/>
Students who entered work in<lb/>
the Summer Poop Art Show may<lb/>
pick up their work on Sunday,<lb/>
Sept. 19 at 1 p.m. in Mendenhall<lb/>
Gallery.<lb/>
Painting<lb/>
The 1976-77 Student Union<lb/>
Art Exhibition Committee,<lb/>
ILLUMINA, is currently featuring<lb/>
a show of paintings from Paul<lb/>
Harley's summer classes in<lb/>
Mendenhall Gallery. The show<lb/>
features weavings from summer<lb/>
students. Due to popular demand<lb/>
the show will remain in the<lb/>
gallery until Sept. 25. Wake up<lb/>
your senses with a dose of this<lb/>
oolorful exhibition!<lb/>
Hillel<lb/>
ATTENTION: Jewish stu-<lb/>
dents! ECU HILLEL rides again.<lb/>
The first gathering will be Sept.<lb/>
21, 1976, at 7:15 at the DEN,<lb/>
located on the corner of Ninth St.<lb/>
and James behind Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. For information,<lb/>
call Cory Duber at 752-8190or Dr.<lb/>
Resnik at 756-5640.<lb/>
Senior show<lb/>
Art work by Michael Shepherd<lb/>
McNeely of Decatur, Ga senior<lb/>
in the ECU School of Art. is on<lb/>
display on the first floor show-<lb/>
cases of Rawl Building.<lb/>
McNeely's show includes<lb/>
pencil drawings, india ink and<lb/>
wash drawings, an intaglio print<lb/>
and some limestone sculpture.<lb/>
Concerts<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
Special Concerts Committee at 4<lb/>
p.m. Monday in the Student<lb/>
Union lounge in Mendenhall.<lb/>
Rho Epsilon<lb/>
ECU'S professional real estate<lb/>
fraternity Rho Epsilon will hold<lb/>
its first meeting this Tuesday,<lb/>
Sept. 21, 1976. The meeting will<lb/>
be a planning session for the<lb/>
year, including a symposium in<lb/>
October. All members are urged<lb/>
to attend at 3:30 at Mendenhall.<lb/>
Forever<lb/>
The Forever Generation of<lb/>
ECU is a Christ-centered fellow-<lb/>
ship group. We meet every<lb/>
Friday night for a study or<lb/>
challenge from the Bible, singing,<lb/>
refreshments, and warm fellow-<lb/>
ship. Our meetings are supple-<lb/>
mented by ocokouts, get-togeth-<lb/>
ers, weekend retreats, and other<lb/>
good times.<lb/>
Why not join us this Friday<lb/>
night at 730 pm in Mendenhall<lb/>
244?<lb/>
GRE<lb/>
The Graduate Record Exam-<lb/>
ination (GRE) will be administer-<lb/>
ed at ECU Saturday, Oct. 16.<lb/>
Application materials are<lb/>
available from the ECU Testing<lb/>
Center in 105-106 Speight Build-<lb/>
ing. Persons wishing to take the<lb/>
examination Oct. 16 should com-<lb/>
plete application forms and mail<lb/>
them to Educ ional Testing<lb/>
Service, Box 966-R, Prinoeton,<lb/>
N.J. 08540 by Sept. 20<lb/>
Clockwork<lb/>
The Student Union Films<lb/>
Committee presents A Clockwork<lb/>
Orange, Stanley Kubrick's<lb/>
masterpiece starring Malcolm ff&amp;r<lb/>
MacDowell and his Droogs. The V IUCU<lb/>
shows are at 7 and 9 p.m. on<lb/>
Friday and Saturday. Admission<lb/>
requires I .D. and Activity cards or<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
membership cards. Come fly with<lb/>
us!<lb/>
Law society<lb/>
ECU'S law society will hold a<lb/>
meeting this Monday, Sept. 20 at<lb/>
4 XX) for all its new offioers in Dr.<lb/>
Stevens' office in Wright Annex.<lb/>
Republicans<lb/>
The first meeting of the<lb/>
College Republicans is set for<lb/>
Wednesday, Sept. 22, 1976 at<lb/>
730 in Brewster, Wing B 104.<lb/>
Mr. Herb Lee will be the guest<lb/>
speaker at this meeting. Mr. Lee<lb/>
is the 1 st District Chairman of the<lb/>
Republican Party and a Trustee of<lb/>
ECU. All students who are<lb/>
interested in the political process<lb/>
and the Republican Party are<lb/>
invited to attend.<lb/>
Three faces<lb/>
The Oscar-winning movie,<lb/>
The Three Faces of Eve, will be<lb/>
shown in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Theatre on Sept. 22, at 8<lb/>
p.m. The film stars Joanne<lb/>
Woodward and Lee J. Cobb in<lb/>
this psychological explorationof a<lb/>
schizophrenic. The show is spon-<lb/>
sored by the Student Union Films<lb/>
Committee. (See the Beatles'<lb/>
show afterwards!)<lb/>
Witnesses<lb/>
Anyone who actually saw the<lb/>
bicyclist who was struck by a car<lb/>
at the bottom of College Hill<lb/>
Drive and 264 April 26, 1976<lb/>
please call Jeanie Cox at 758-8300<lb/>
or go by 616 White dorm. The<lb/>
information is pertinent to a<lb/>
pending law suit.<lb/>
This is Video Awareness in<lb/>
Mendenhal1 Student Center. See<lb/>
a different show every day<lb/>
sponsored by the Video Tapes<lb/>
Committee of the Student Union.<lb/>
This is T.V. that won't rot your<lb/>
mind!<lb/>
Chess club<lb/>
The ECU Chess Club will<lb/>
meet Tues. evening, Sept. 21, at<lb/>
730 p.m. in the Coffeehouse in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. All<lb/>
interested persons are invited to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
( oppaaofixo<lb/>
Cm<lb/>
Monday-Saturday<lb/>
9:30-6:00<lb/>
Friday Nite-Open<lb/>
Till 9:00PM<lb/>
Located w In Tan Only<lb/>
Across the Street from WOOW<lb/>
A<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
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m<lb/>
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mmm<lb/>
B<lb/>
L<lb/>
<pb facs="00057078_0003"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 216 SEPTEMBER 1976<lb/>
3<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
??<lb/>
nwmiim?i?<lb/>
A<lb/>
Tired of hitting the hot pavement,<lb/>
dodging mad cars, falling off your bike?<lb/>
Student government runs, with your fees,<lb/>
the SGA Transit: 4 big buses that make 44 stops<lb/>
per hour all over campus and Greenville.<lb/>
SGA Transit is run for students by students.<lb/>
Use it!<lb/>
PURPLEGOLL1<lb/>
PLACEDEPARTPLACEDEPARTS<lb/>
SpeightOn half hour10th &amp; Hill25 after hour<lb/>
East brook25 till hourCollege Hill26 after hour<lb/>
River Bluff22 till hourMingeson half hour<lb/>
Kings Row18till hourAllied Health27 till hour<lb/>
Village Green15tillhourPitt Plaza24 till hour<lb/>
Memorial Gym12 till hourOakmont21 till hour<lb/>
Mendenhall10 till hourMendenhall16 till hour<lb/>
SpeightOn the hour10th &amp; Hill5 till hour<lb/>
East brook5 after hourCoilegeHill4 till hour<lb/>
River Bluff8 after hourMingeson the hour<lb/>
Kings Row12 after hourAllied Health3 after hour<lb/>
Village Green15after hourPitt Plaza6 after hour<lb/>
Memorial Gym17 after hourOakmont9 after hour<lb/>
Mendenhall20 after nourMenoenhall14 after hour<lb/>
BROWN<lb/>
PLACE<lb/>
Speight<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
5th &amp; Elizabeth<lb/>
Avery &amp; Holly<lb/>
WillowWoodl.<lb/>
Elm &amp; Willow<lb/>
Speight<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
5th &amp; Elizabeth<lb/>
Avery &amp; Holly<lb/>
WillowWoodl.<lb/>
Willow &amp; Elm<lb/>
Willow and CV<lb/>
DEPARTS<lb/>
on half hour<lb/>
281<lb/>
261<lb/>
221<lb/>
18t<lb/>
16t<lb/>
15t<lb/>
II hour<lb/>
II hour<lb/>
II hour<lb/>
iihout<lb/>
II hour<lb/>
II hour<lb/>
on the hour<lb/>
2 after hour<lb/>
4 after hour<lb/>
8 after hour<lb/>
12 after hour<lb/>
14 after hour<lb/>
15 after hour<lb/>
17 after hour<lb/>
(For pocket schedules, come by SGA.)<lb/>
And something else:<lb/>
If you want to charter a bus-<lb/>
to a rock concert, gamelike State or Chapel Hill)<lb/>
we're here to help.<lb/>
Call Gary Miller at 752-9121 for more information.<lb/>
SGA Puts Students First!<lb/>
j?v ??i ? iMfii<lb/>
? ??? ?, ?  '????? ?? . '<lb/>
? ? ? . M ?: ? ?' ? ??: :? ?  HI<lb/>
<pb facs="00057078_0004"/><lb/>
4<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 216 SEPTEMBER 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
What's ahead<lb/>
ECU students this year will have the opportunity<lb/>
of observing first hand several events which are erf<lb/>
major significance to the University, now in its tenth<lb/>
year with that status. Students who become involved<lb/>
in their campus' activities will also share in<lb/>
the making of decisions which could attect ECU tor<lb/>
years to oome, as we approach the end of an old tenure<lb/>
and the dawn of a new era.<lb/>
Dr. Leo Jenkins announced at the 68th annual<lb/>
convation last week that his last project as Chancellor<lb/>
of the university would be to expand Fickien Stadium<lb/>
to nearly double its present size and to support a hike<lb/>
in faculty salaries. Jenkins will reach mandatory<lb/>
retirement age of 65 in May, 1978. The first step in<lb/>
choosing a new chancellor will be the selection of a<lb/>
search committee which could begin its task this year.<lb/>
Student participation could be a decisive factor in the<lb/>
selection process.<lb/>
One of the venerate chancellor's most prized<lb/>
accomplishments has been the development of a<lb/>
four-year medical school, a project Jenkins has<lb/>
eagerly pursued for over a decade. Final accreditation<lb/>
of the program is expected sometime this year,<lb/>
despite a recently released study by the Carnegie<lb/>
Council on Policy Studies in Higher Education which<lb/>
claims that ECU'S med school is unneeded.<lb/>
The 1976-77 school year will also mark the end of<lb/>
the quarter system at this university. After being<lb/>
talked about on this campus for many years the<lb/>
semester system will finally become a reality in Fall<lb/>
1977. However, there are still many points in the<lb/>
transition left to be finalized. Fa example, when will<lb/>
classes begin and end and how will the oourse<lb/>
requirements of the quarter system translate into the<lb/>
semester system's curriculum?<lb/>
The Universitys fact-finding arm, Institutional<lb/>
Research, is evaluating the rate of failure for blacks as<lb/>
opposed to whites and males as opposed to females.<lb/>
The results of this study should become public as will<lb/>
undoubtedly an explanation of why from the faculty<lb/>
and administration. Another survey to come out later<lb/>
this year will try to determine the value of a degree<lb/>
from ECU for graduates seeKing careers related to<lb/>
their academic pursuits.<lb/>
And, as many expect, this will be the year ECU will<lb/>
begin its venture into big-time football. Now that the<lb/>
Southern Conference stint was only a phase<lb/>
of the Fighting Pirates, we are faced with the task of<lb/>
proving ourselves worthy of membership in a loftier<lb/>
realm.<lb/>
These are but a very few of the issues and<lb/>
questions which lie ahead. Their impact upon this<lb/>
University and its students will be without a doubt<lb/>
considerable, therefore student interest should be<lb/>
sought, considered and encouraged if we are all to be<lb/>
involved citizen in the ECU community<lb/>
mumm<lb/>
m<lb/>
HF ISA7" THE BOY UNO CRIfD Wfflf J<lb/>
TheForum i<lb/>
Prisoners seek correspondence<lb/>
Rxjntainheod<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community tor war fifty years<lb/>
Senior EditorJim Elliott<lb/>
Business ManagerTeresa Whisenant<lb/>
Advertising ManagerDennis Leonard<lb/>
Production ManagerJimmy Williams<lb/>
News EditorsDebbie Jackson<lb/>
Neil Sessoms<lb/>
Trends Editorpat coye<lb/>
Sports EditorSteve Wheeler<lb/>
Fountainhead is the student newspaper of East Carolina University<lb/>
sponsored by the Student Government Association of ECU and appears<lb/>
each Tuesday and Thursday during the school year, weekly during the<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
Mailing address: Old South Building, Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
Editorial Offices: 757-6366, 757-6367, 757-6309<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10 annual! tor non-students, $6.00 for alumni<lb/>
To Foe. itainhead:<lb/>
What would happen if you<lb/>
took an animal, let's say a dog,<lb/>
and put him in a cage, then<lb/>
everyday throw his food at him,<lb/>
kick that cage, and rattle that<lb/>
cage for a period of a year?? After<lb/>
that said amount of time, release<lb/>
that dog. Most likely, that dog<lb/>
isn't going to oome out and lick<lb/>
your hand, chances are good it'll<lb/>
attack you. Now what happens<lb/>
when you take a human-being<lb/>
and put him in prison where he is<lb/>
constantly locked-up, harrassed<lb/>
and subject to cruel and unusual<lb/>
treatment in an unnatural en-<lb/>
vironment with little or no<lb/>
rehabilitation programs or<lb/>
nothing to prepare himself for the<lb/>
ever-changing outside world? Are<lb/>
you conoerned? Our names are<lb/>
Robert Oides and Blaine Malone.<lb/>
We have seen and are still<lb/>
experiencing such treatment and<lb/>
wish to share our views and<lb/>
experiences with others. We<lb/>
would like to correspond with<lb/>
anyone who wishes to write us.<lb/>
We are very sincere and will<lb/>
answer all letters. We don't have<lb/>
to limit ourselves with just the<lb/>
prison scene, it you would just<lb/>
like to get to know us or even<lb/>
become friends, we would be<lb/>
more than happy to write to you.<lb/>
So if you would like to know more<lb/>
Congratulations<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I would just like to oommend<lb/>
the Marching Pirates on their<lb/>
show last Saturday night. We are<lb/>
always aware of how much time<lb/>
and effort that foes into athletics.<lb/>
Since I live on the hill, I actually<lb/>
hear how many hours that go into<lb/>
the Pirates' practice.<lb/>
Keep up the good work!<lb/>
Dianne Moore<lb/>
Nursing Major<lb/>
Forum Policy<lb/>
Forum letters should be typed<lb/>
or printed and they must be<lb/>
signed and include the writer's<lb/>
address. Names will be withheld<lb/>
upon request. Letters may be sent<lb/>
to Fountainhead or left at the<lb/>
Information Desk in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
vm<lb/>
about our surroundings or if you<lb/>
just dig people, please write to<lb/>
one or both of us at this address.<lb/>
Robert Oides 00675-103<lb/>
Blaine Malone 19243-101<lb/>
P.O. Box 4000<lb/>
Springfield, Mo. 65802<lb/>
Tenants beware<lb/>
To Fountainhead: '<lb/>
I wanted to take this time<lb/>
during the first full week of school<lb/>
to tell those students who are<lb/>
thinking of moving into an<lb/>
apartment or house to please use<lb/>
the Student Government Legal<lb/>
Service to get advioe on the type<lb/>
contrad they will wind up sign-<lb/>
ing. The lawyers have told us that<lb/>
a lot of students are signing<lb/>
contrads they don't fully under-<lb/>
stand.<lb/>
Also, all those students who<lb/>
have received tax notices from<lb/>
Pitt County should see our Legal<lb/>
Service before paying.<lb/>
Call the SGA office at 757-<lb/>
6611 from 9-5, or oome by 228<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
Tim Sullivan<lb/>
Student Body Prez<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057078_0005"/><lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
you<lb/>
e to<lb/>
ress.<lb/>
ire<lb/>
ime<lb/>
h?ool<lb/>
are<lb/>
an<lb/>
use<lb/>
sgal<lb/>
ype<lb/>
ign-<lb/>
that<lb/>
ling<lb/>
jer-<lb/>
who<lb/>
rom<lb/>
ggal<lb/>
757-<lb/>
228<lb/>
ivan<lb/>
Prez<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEDVOL 52, NO. 216 SEPTEMBER 1976<lb/>
5<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
'? mm<lb/>
mumm<lb/>
mum<lb/>
Judge acquits executives in kepone case<lb/>
NEW YORK (LNS)T-Two Al-<lb/>
lied Chemical executives were<lb/>
acquitted September 2 of conspir-<lb/>
ing to conceal from government<lb/>
agencies Allied's polluting of<lb/>
Virginia waterways with the<lb/>
pesticide Kepone.<lb/>
Allied Chemical Co. has al-<lb/>
ready pleaded no contest to<lb/>
nearly 1,000 counts of actual<lb/>
pollution violations stemming from<lb/>
the Kepone dumping, and the<lb/>
corporation's former Kepone sub-<lb/>
contractor, the Life Science Pro-<lb/>
ducts Company, also faces crimi-<lb/>
nal charges as well as civil<lb/>
damage claims by about 80<lb/>
former employees.<lb/>
Kepone is a pesticide of white<lb/>
powder used to kill rats, roaches<lb/>
and potato bugs. It was developed<lb/>
by Allied in 1951 and manu-<lb/>
factured at Life Science in<lb/>
Virginia until the summer of 1975<lb/>
when the plant was closed by<lb/>
State health authorities.<lb/>
Unaware of the danger, many<lb/>
of the Life Science workers didn't<lb/>
bother to wear rubber gloves and<lb/>
others ate their lunches on tables<lb/>
oovered with Kepone dust. "No-<lb/>
body said this stuff was danger-<lb/>
ous said Dale Gilbert, an<lb/>
operations supervisor at the<lb/>
plant. "I was told it was not<lb/>
harmful<lb/>
Gilbert was hospitalized in<lb/>
June of 1975 and has not worked<lb/>
since. He suffers from liver and<lb/>
spleen damage, has become<lb/>
sterile, and there is a possibility<lb/>
that he could develop cancer-all a<lb/>
result of the Kepone poisoning.<lb/>
Last July the state of Virginia<lb/>
closed the James River to com-<lb/>
mercial fishing because of the<lb/>
Kepone contaminated fish.<lb/>
FIRST KEPONE TRIAL<lb/>
The first trial of executives in<lb/>
the federal prosecution of cor-<lb/>
porations accused of the Kepone<lb/>
polluting lasted only two days.<lb/>
During the trial, Walter F. Lee, a<lb/>
regional coordinator of the En-<lb/>
vironmental Protection Agency<lb/>
(EPA), testified that Allied's<lb/>
Trade group to meet<lb/>
Jackson A. Rigney, dean of<lb/>
International Programs at N.C.<lb/>
State University, will address the<lb/>
Coastal Plain World Trade Assn.<lb/>
(CPWTA) at a meeting here<lb/>
Thursday night.<lb/>
Officers of the newly-<lb/>
organized CPWTA are to be<lb/>
installed at the dinner meeting.<lb/>
An initial organizational meeting<lb/>
was held at ECU earlier in the<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
Rigney has been dean for<lb/>
International Programs at N.C.<lb/>
State since 1968 and served for<lb/>
six months in 1975 as interim<lb/>
Acting Chancellor of the Raleigh<lb/>
school. He served as department<lb/>
head of statistics at State fa 13<lb/>
years before becoming involved<lb/>
with international programs.<lb/>
He spent two years as leader<lb/>
of the NCSU Agricultural Mission<lb/>
in Peru and later was campus<lb/>
director of the project fa three<lb/>
years. He has been on shat<lb/>
assignments in Brazil, Ecuada,<lb/>
Costa Rica, Nicaragua, India, the<lb/>
Philippines and Indonesia.<lb/>
In 1963, he aoanized and<lb/>
headed the U.S. agricultural<lb/>
delegation to a United Nations<lb/>
conference in Geneva on the<lb/>
applications of science and tech-<lb/>
nology in less developed nations.<lb/>
He served as Overseas<lb/>
Researcher fa the CIC-AID Re<lb/>
search Project in 19667 while<lb/>
living in India and ocvaing the<lb/>
Near East and South Asia. Later<lb/>
he participated in the final repat<lb/>
fa that waldwide study.<lb/>
Officers and directas nomi-<lb/>
nated and scheduled fa install-<lb/>
atioi include John Howard of<lb/>
Greenville Tobacco Co Green-<lb/>
ville president; J. Edgar Kirk,<lb/>
Weyerhauser Cap New Bern,<lb/>
vice president; Graham Flanaga,<lb/>
North American Fiberglass<lb/>
Cap Greenville, treasurer; Ms.<lb/>
Mary Campbell, Barbour Boats<lb/>
Waks, New Bern, seaetary; and<lb/>
Louis M. Wallace, Southern<lb/>
Overseas Corp Wilmington,<lb/>
Robert P. Michaels, A.C. Monk<lb/>
Co Farmville, R.D. Whedbee,<lb/>
WindsaattaneyandC.R. Blake,<lb/>
assistant to the chancella, ECU,<lb/>
Greenville, as directas.<lb/>
aiginal application fa waste-<lb/>
water discharge permits ?<lb/>
required under federal law - had<lb/>
given no indication that the<lb/>
oompany was then dumping up to<lb/>
15 gallons a minute of water<lb/>
laden with Kepone into a tribu-<lb/>
tary of the James Riva.<lb/>
The prosecution had sought to<lb/>
prove that the two Allied execu-<lb/>
tives, Frank Piguet and Gerald<lb/>
Williams, had knowingly<lb/>
schemed with the prosecution's<lb/>
key witness, a famer Allied plant<lb/>
manager, to withhold the pol-<lb/>
lution date from the EPA.<lb/>
The manager, Virgil Hund-<lb/>
tofte, turned state's evidence<lb/>
befae the trial, but when it came<lb/>
to the oourtroom, he said he was<lb/>
not alleging oonspirataial con-<lb/>
versations and that he was na<lb/>
even aware of a conspiracy in<lb/>
1971 and 1972 when the<lb/>
defendants were preparing the<lb/>
incomplete federal water-<lb/>
discharge applications.<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SEPT 19th IN<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NC<lb/>
from<lb/>
your<lb/>
WELCH'S<lb/>
GRAPE<lb/>
JELLY<lb/>
2lb. JAR<lb/>
89<lb/>
?<lb/>
ANN PAGE<lb/>
HAMBURGER<lb/>
DINNER MIXES<lb/>
Chili Tomato, Cheeseburger<lb/>
Macaroni, Beef noodle, Potato<lb/>
Stroganoff, Tash 8cz. PKGS.<lb/>
21<lb/>
oo<lb/>
PARTY TIME<lb/>
COOKIES<lb/>
Coconut Dainties, Oatmeal,<lb/>
Lemon Thins, Orange Thins,<lb/>
VanillaWafers 15oz. PKGS.<lb/>
21<lb/>
oo<lb/>
ARRIO<lb/>
ROLL-ON<lb/>
DEODORANT<lb/>
1 Oz. CAN<lb/>
I<lb/>
99<lb/>
$<lb/>
COCA<lb/>
COLA<lb/>
64 OZ. BTLS.<lb/>
69<lb/>
?<lb/>
SUNSHINE<lb/>
SHAMPOO<lb/>
8 OZ. BTL.<lb/>
1<lb/>
19<lb/>
2808 East 10th STREET<lb/>
tm<lb/>
m<lb/>
?HUHMHHHHHn<lb/>
<pb facs="00057078_0006"/><lb/>
WmmwmMm,<lb/>
6<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 52, NO. 216 SEPTEMBER 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
NMWMM<lb/>
mmnm<lb/>
m<lb/>
GREENVILLE AREA TRANSIT WELCOMES THE ECU STUDENT BODY<lb/>
great<lb/>
TAKE YOU FOR A RIDE!<lb/>
ROUTE ONE<lb/>
4lh EvansPitt4th Evofit1 5 MmWillow OakElm KthPitt PttUflElm KjthOak willow84th EM<lb/>
<lb/>
7I27 17721724733740743747732<lb/>
756?048I2817?2I824833?40843847832<lb/>
8969 049I2917921924933940?4S9479 52<lb/>
9561004I0I210171021102410330-40KMS10471032<lb/>
?56II04111211171121112411331140114311471132<lb/>
II 56120412 1212 171221122412431240124312471252<lb/>
1256I 041121-17121124t33140143147132<lb/>
I 562042-122172212 242332 402432472 52<lb/>
2 563043123173 213 24333340343347332<lb/>
356404412?J4214244334404 434474 521<lb/>
456504512947 521324533?J343547M2<lb/>
TWO<lb/>
EvonsJorvit 4th5th Chart Sotondii (4hPitt PtsioBrMlty Pitt rtkmd HowsllsndHospitalRooss-V?4t FfcSSSna.3 Evans<lb/>
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6556 58700703710713719729737747752<lb/>
735758BOO803810813819829837847852<lb/>
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95595810 00100310'101013101910 291037104710 52<lb/>
10551038110011031110II 13II 1911291137II 471152<lb/>
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ROUTE<lb/>
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101510 2510 35IO 4210 4910 551100110511091113<lb/>
II 15II 25II 351142II 491155120012 0312 091213<lb/>
121512 2512 3512 4212 491255lOOI05109113<lb/>
1151251351421491552002 052 09213<lb/>
2152 252 352 422492553003 0!309313<lb/>
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5 155?5 355 425495 55 6 006096 09M3<lb/>
i' FOR TRANSIT INFORMATION<lb/>
CALL 752-4137, ASK FOR GREAT.<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
LJ<lb/>
SCHEDULES AVAILABLE AT<lb/>
THE STUDENT UNION AND<lb/>
JOYNER LIBRARY.<lb/>
WHERE ELSE CAN YOU BE<lb/>
CHAUFFERED IN AN AIR-<lb/>
CONDITIONED MERCEDES-BENZ FOR<lb/>
A QUARTER?<lb/>
i<lb/>
n<lb/>
<lb/>
ed<lb/>
rei<lb/>
00<lb/>
la;<lb/>
St<lb/>
Inl<lb/>
th<lb/>
ci?<lb/>
Cs<lb/>
IF WE EVER FAIL TO LIVE UP TO OUR NAME, PLEASE BRING IT TO OUR ATTENTION<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmnm<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057078_0007"/><lb/>
?I sVrJHsl<lb/>
???? -?<lb/>
IHHHHHHHHHHHHBH<lb/>
vW' M&amp;im.<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 216 SEPTEMBER 1976<lb/>
7<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
irtt'WfU. i<lb/>
mi aim<lb/>
7"S RAINING in Greenville. Ho what else Is new?<lb/>
Concert cancellation<lb/>
settlement reached<lb/>
ByBECKYBRADSHAW<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A settlement has been reach-<lb/>
ed with Ike and Tina Turner in<lb/>
regard to the cancellation of their<lb/>
concert on Homecoming weekend<lb/>
last year.<lb/>
According to Barry Robinson,<lb/>
Student Union president, the<lb/>
International Executive Board of<lb/>
the American Federation of Musi-<lb/>
cians of the United States and<lb/>
Canada awarded the sum of<lb/>
$2,287.83 to be paid by members<lb/>
of the Ike and Tina Turner Revue<lb/>
and Dennis Rubenstein, their<lb/>
manager, to the ECU Student<lb/>
Union.<lb/>
Failure to pay will result in the<lb/>
removal of Ike and Tina Turner<lb/>
from the Federation of Musicians.<lb/>
The settlement is for money<lb/>
owed for publicity and ticket<lb/>
expenses incurred before the<lb/>
cancellation of the concert, accor-<lb/>
ding to Robinson.<lb/>
Robinson also said the Aver-<lb/>
age White Band cancelled the last<lb/>
three days of their tour because of<lb/>
total exhaustion.<lb/>
He said the band never<lb/>
notified the school of the cancella-<lb/>
tion and the Student Union<lb/>
learned of it through a promoter<lb/>
in Norfolk who was also affected<lb/>
by the cancellation.<lb/>
Robinson plans to file a<lb/>
oomplaint against AWB with the<lb/>
National Entertainment Confer-<lb/>
ence of which the Student Union<lb/>
is a member.<lb/>
"Unity Star Natural Foods"<lb/>
10 SALE NOW THROUGH SATURDAY<lb/>
V itiman &amp; Mineral Supplements Whole Grain Breads<lb/>
Natural Cosmetics Yogurt-Raw Milk Cheeses<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
Located<lb/>
EAST 10th STREET<lb/>
Colonial Heights Shopping Center CALL 752-9336<lb/>
ONE DOLLAR<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
ANY NOW ?SALE ALBUM OR TAPE<lb/>
AT<lb/>
ROCK N SOUL<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
OFFER GOOD THUR SATURDAY SEPT. 18<lb/>
Tadlock named<lb/>
ROTC commander<lb/>
Lt. Col. Carl E. Tadlock has<lb/>
been named commander of the<lb/>
ECU Air Foroe ROTC detach-<lb/>
ment, replacing Lt. Col. Ronald<lb/>
F. Henderson, who has been<lb/>
assigned to Norton Air Face<lb/>
Base, California<lb/>
During his three-year term<lb/>
here, Tadlock will serve as<lb/>
professor of Aerospace Studies as<lb/>
well as chief administrator of the<lb/>
ECU AFROTC program.<lb/>
An alumnus of ECU, Tadlock<lb/>
received the MA denrp in<lb/>
Education from ECU in 1967 and<lb/>
the Ed. S. degree from Troy State<lb/>
University in Alabama in 1975.<lb/>
His military career has in-<lb/>
cluded an appointment to the<lb/>
faculty of the Air Force's<lb/>
Academic Instruct a Course at<lb/>
Maxwell Air Force Base, Ala, an<lb/>
assignment as air staff officer<lb/>
with the Pentagon's Policel<lb/>
Project Branch and a previous<lb/>
faculty position with the AFROTC<lb/>
at ECU.<lb/>
Tadlock is a native of Pine-<lb/>
tops. He and his wife, the former<lb/>
Susie Spivey, are the parents of<lb/>
three daughters.<lb/>
? AJR HHWUttA<lb/>
- IMMLU - HIU - BtANk -CHILI CUM CARNI<lb/>
s<lb/>
5<lb/>
AUTHENTIC TEXAS-STYLE<lb/>
MEXICAN<lb/>
mrr1 i<lb/>
GREENVILLE'S<lb/>
GREAT NEW<lb/>
TASTE TREAT<lb/>
ECONOMICAL<lb/>
SUFFICIENT<lb/>
VARIETY<lb/>
TO SUIT EVERYONE.<lb/>
INCLUDING VEGETARIANS<lb/>
HOUSE<lb/>
US 264 BY-PASS (ADJACENT PEPPI'S PIZZA)<lb/>
11 30-9 30 Weekdays<lb/>
I - 3ih - rwirjp NOP mto - nrwrmvn - mnimi -<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
a<lb/>
DINE IN<lb/>
TAKE OUT<lb/>
5 TIPPY'S<lb/>
o<lb/>
I<lb/>
This week at the<lb/>
ELBO ROOM<lb/>
THURS "SMACK DAB"<lb/>
FRI<lb/>
SAT 10th AVENUE<lb/>
SUN<lb/>
EVERY SUNDAY IS LADIES NITE<lb/>
BEAT STATE<lb/>
Welcome, Students<lb/>
Come In This Week and<lb/>
REGISTER<lb/>
FOR FREE BRAS, BY<lb/>
? Bali<lb/>
? Warner's<lb/>
? Lily of France<lb/>
DRAWING WILL BE<lb/>
HELD SEPT. 25TH<lb/>
you don't have to be present<lb/>
to win!<lb/>
j<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
PITT PLAZA<lb/>
? im u i urn<lb/>
a<lb/>
MM<lb/>
<pb facs="00057078_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 52, NO. 216 SEPTEMBER 1976<lb/>
M<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
Homecoming proposal defeated<lb/>
By KIM JOHNSON<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The Homecoming Steering<lb/>
Committee Tuesday defeated for<lb/>
the second time a proposal for<lb/>
additional entertainment for<lb/>
Saturday, Oct. 30 of Homecoming<lb/>
Weekend.<lb/>
SGA President Tim Sullivan<lb/>
made the proposal which called<lb/>
for "one a two' on-campus<lb/>
concerts to be held simultaneous-<lb/>
ly with the scheduled Count Basie<lb/>
Dance and Show.<lb/>
According to Sullivan, the<lb/>
SGA was willing to contribute up<lb/>
to $5,000 fa free-admission con-<lb/>
certs in hopes of curbing antici-<lb/>
pated crowds in the downtown<lb/>
Greenville area Saturday night.<lb/>
Sullivan said he felt the<lb/>
scheduled agenda fa Oct. 30 is<lb/>
weak and will not attract enough<lb/>
of the student body to avoid an<lb/>
occurrance such as the 1975<lb/>
Halloween weekend.<lb/>
The committee voted nine to<lb/>
four in seaet ballot defeating the<lb/>
proposal.<lb/>
Barry Robinson, Student<lb/>
Union president, gave his reasons<lb/>
fa the defeat of the proposal, "I<lb/>
feel that those concerts might<lb/>
cause the same type trouble<lb/>
anticipated downtown on campus.<lb/>
Also, I think the Count Basie<lb/>
Dance &amp; Show plus the Greek<lb/>
function planned fa Oct. 30 will<lb/>
be sufficient to draw students<lb/>
away from the downtown area<lb/>
Rudolph Alexander, Associate<lb/>
Dean of Student Affairs for<lb/>
Activities and Directa of Men-<lb/>
denhall Student Center com-<lb/>
mented on possible profit loss the<lb/>
Student Union might face if the<lb/>
free concerts were allowed to take<lb/>
place.<lb/>
Greenville Maya Percy Cox, a<lb/>
regular member of the Steering<lb/>
Committee and Jim Caldwell,<lb/>
Greenville City Manager, were<lb/>
present at the Tuesday meeting.<lb/>
What actions the city will take<lb/>
to prevent trouble in downtown<lb/>
Greenville Halloween weekend<lb/>
depended on whether a not<lb/>
Sullivan's proposal was accepted<lb/>
by the committee, accading to<lb/>
Cox and Caldwell. Both men<lb/>
supported the proposal and<lb/>
voiced disappointment at its<lb/>
defeat regardless of the belief<lb/>
that the Count Basie Dance and<lb/>
Show and Greek functions sche-<lb/>
duled fa Oct. 30 will sufficiently<lb/>
draw aowds away from down-<lb/>
town.<lb/>
"I feel Sullivan's proposal<lb/>
would have taken the edge off the<lb/>
large aowds anticiapted fa that<lb/>
night said Cox.<lb/>
Accading to City Manager<lb/>
Caldwell, no definite plans as to<lb/>
how the city will handle the<lb/>
expected aowds downtown have<lb/>
been finalized. Howeva, he did<lb/>
say the city will be well prepared<lb/>
especially now that Sullivan's<lb/>
proposal is defeated.<lb/>
In a later interview, Sullivan<lb/>
mentioned alternatives fa deal-<lb/>
ing with the aowds Halloween<lb/>
weekend being discussed in City<lb/>
Council meetings. These alterna-<lb/>
tives include a city curfew and<lb/>
mmmmmmmmm ? ii<lb/>
closing the downtown bars Sai r-<lb/>
day night.<lb/>
Robinson said he had no<lb/>
previous knowledge of the<lb/>
"alternatives" the city might use<lb/>
befae the Tuesday vote was<lb/>
taken.<lb/>
Marshal McAden, Seaetary<lb/>
of Minaity Affairs, present at the<lb/>
meeting voioed suppat of Sulli-<lb/>
van's proposal with the stipu-<lb/>
lation that one of the proposed<lb/>
bands be directed towards the<lb/>
black students' musical tastes.<lb/>
McAden was also disappoint-<lb/>
ed at the outcome of the vae and<lb/>
said it could have done much to<lb/>
"at least draw the black students<lb/>
away from downtown Green-<lb/>
ville<lb/>
After this second defeat of his<lb/>
proposal, Sullivan said he was not<lb/>
waking fa the citizens of Green-<lb/>
ville in making this proposal but<lb/>
fa the students: "All we (SGA)<lb/>
wanted to do was help take the<lb/>
edge off the aowds downtown<lb/>
that night and give those students<lb/>
who wanted to avoid the area a<lb/>
place to go.<lb/>
"I'll fight to see that the bars<lb/>
downtown are not closed Satur-<lb/>
day night but the troublemakers<lb/>
there that night can easily pull<lb/>
students back into a firey<lb/>
atmosphere<lb/>
Sullivan predicted "plenty of<lb/>
trouble downtown" if the city<lb/>
does decide to close the bars the<lb/>
night of Oct. 30.<lb/>
The concern over Saturday,<lb/>
Oct. 30 stems from the fact that<lb/>
the downtown bars will be dosed<lb/>
all day Sunday. This is being done<lb/>
"voluntarily and unanimously"<lb/>
by the bar owners, according to<lb/>
Caldwell.<lb/>
In other business, Jim Mai<lb/>
lay, Dean of Men, reported a<lb/>
treasury of $4,702, $4,625 of<lb/>
which is being spent on Home-<lb/>
coming activities.<lb/>
The committee also passed a<lb/>
motion fa seven to eight bands to<lb/>
participate in the Homecoming<lb/>
Parade, each band receiving $100<lb/>
instead of $70 as last year.<lb/>
Bill Cain, Directa of Athle-<lb/>
tics, repated to have one ECU<lb/>
"Hall of Famer" to appear at<lb/>
half-time of the Homecoming<lb/>
football game.<lb/>
The committee also passed a<lb/>
motion for purchasing 5,000<lb/>
pompoms at $850 fa students to<lb/>
use at the Honecoming game.<lb/>
The committee is still seeking<lb/>
any non-commercial entry into<lb/>
the Homecoming Parade, accad-<lb/>
ing to Charles Brown, Directa of<lb/>
Institutional Development and<lb/>
co-chairperson of the oommittee.<lb/>
Robinson, also co-chairper-<lb/>
son, rumaed that Charlie Rich<lb/>
will be one of the maja at-<lb/>
tractions fa Honecoming Week.<lb/>
The total agenda of Home-<lb/>
coming activities will be publish-<lb/>
ed at a later date.<lb/>
10 MINUTES<lb/>
OF YOUR TIME<lb/>
COULD SAVE<lb/>
A FRIEND'S LIFE<lb/>
4<lb/>
In the time it takes to drive<lb/>
your friend home, you could save<lb/>
his life.<lb/>
If your friend's been drinking<lb/>
too much, he shouldn't be driving.<lb/>
The automobile crash is the<lb/>
number one cause of death of people<lb/>
your age. And the ironic thing is<lb/>
that the drunk drivers responsible<lb/>
for killing young people are most<lb/>
often other young people.<lb/>
Take ten minutes. Or twenty.<lb/>
Or an hour. Drive your friend<lb/>
home. That's all. If you can't do<lb/>
that, call a cab. Or let him sleep<lb/>
on your couch.<lb/>
We're not asking vou to be<lb/>
a doctor or a cop. Just a friend.<lb/>
rr<lb/>
DRUNK DRIVER, DEPT. Y<lb/>
BOX 2345<lb/>
ROCKVILLE, MARYLAND 20852<lb/>
I want to save a friend's life.<lb/>
Tell me what else I can do.<lb/>
My name is<lb/>
Address<lb/>
CityStateZip<lb/>
1<lb/>
?YOn H HIGHWAY SAI-M V ADVISORY I OMMII ' H<lb/>
IF YOU LET A FRIEND DRIVE DRUNK, YOU'RE NO FRIEND. 0<lb/>
I S III I'AMIWI SI Ml IKASM'OKIAIIOS ? SA 1(1 ISM IIK.IIW IHAI Ml SAI I- I Y AIIMINIS I HA I KIN<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
l?WM ? I I<lb/>
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??? ? w ????:<lb/>
Pt d: ?: $'<lb/>
7rT&amp;g3&amp;r&amp;ffllSli,<lb/>
 IsPp<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 216 SEPTEMBER 1976<lb/>
9<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
MM<lb/>
m<lb/>
f<lb/>
ling<lb/>
id a<lb/>
000<lb/>
s to<lb/>
king<lb/>
into<lb/>
ord-<lb/>
x of<lb/>
and<lb/>
tee.<lb/>
)er-<lb/>
ich<lb/>
at-<lb/>
lek.<lb/>
me-<lb/>
ish-<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
DORMITORY NOW CONVERTED to Mod school offices.<lb/>
REPORT<lb/>
Continued from page 1.<lb/>
ed as a developing medical<lb/>
facility.<lb/>
The 1976 report on Higher<lb/>
Education by the Carnegie Com-<lb/>
mission is about 90 pages long<lb/>
and deals with all aspects of<lb/>
education on the college level.<lb/>
The report also stated that there<lb/>
is already a surplus in teachers, in<lb/>
Ph.D programs and a potential<lb/>
surplus in law schools and health<lb/>
science programs, all of which<lb/>
North Carolina schools are invol-<lb/>
ved with.<lb/>
LEARN TO<lb/>
Belly Dance<lb/>
i<lb/>
call sunshine<lb/>
for more info<lb/>
752-5214<lb/>
?<lb/>
SayHeltoto<lb/>
our Hot Diggety Dog Sale.<lb/>
BUYONE<lb/>
HOT DOG.<lb/>
GET ONE<lb/>
FREE AT<lb/>
Offer good at all Greenville,<lb/>
N.C Hardee's Restaurants<lb/>
until September 30, 1976. Limit<lb/>
of 10 free Hot Dogs per<lb/>
customer.<lb/>
Hardeer<lb/>
Chartxoil Burgers<lb/>
GNCOA plans action<lb/>
By LOUIS TA YLOR<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In an effort to solve the<lb/>
perennial Halloween night ten-<lb/>
sion in "downtown" Greenville,<lb/>
city officials and members of the<lb/>
Greenville Nightclub Owners<lb/>
Association (GNCOA) have met<lb/>
seveieu in lies over trie pas year.<lb/>
ECU upperdassmen no doubt<lb/>
remember Halloween 1975 when<lb/>
riot-equipped police used tear gas<lb/>
to clear bars and disperse about<lb/>
2,000 angry young people. As a<lb/>
result, 56 persons-many of them<lb/>
students-were arrested.<lb/>
Greenville Police Chief Glenn<lb/>
Cannon said city officials have<lb/>
been "discussing the situation<lb/>
with the (nightclub) owners in<lb/>
order to come up with the best<lb/>
possible solution<lb/>
Elbo Room owner Dan Bercini<lb/>
said that present plans are<lb/>
tentative, but something concrete<lb/>
should be forthcoming.<lb/>
Bercini added that the preva-<lb/>
lent feeling among GNCOA<lb/>
memoers is one or general<lb/>
concern for public safety and<lb/>
personal property. The GNCOA<lb/>
fear that some individuals may<lb/>
feel that Halloween confront-<lb/>
ations have become an annual<lb/>
institution in Greenville.<lb/>
According to Bercini, any<lb/>
GNCOA plan approved will be<lb/>
one which creates a "festival<lb/>
atmosphere" so that everyone<lb/>
can have a good time.<lb/>
Chief Cannon added that any<lb/>
definite action will be taken at the<lb/>
discretion of the dub owners in<lb/>
conjunction with dty regulations.<lb/>
Of the 56 arrests during the<lb/>
1975 inddent, 47 were dismissed<lb/>
in open court.<lb/>
As a result of police adion in<lb/>
1975, the ECU Organization of<lb/>
Students' Rights retained Dur-<lb/>
ham attorney Jerry Paul to<lb/>
initiate legal action against<lb/>
Greenville. A dassadion suit was<lb/>
filed in federal court on behalf of<lb/>
the OSR. Legal adion in the dass<lb/>
is still pending.<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Kennels<lb/>
Will be sponsoring dasses<lb/>
in Basic Obedience Training.<lb/>
Class starts Od 7th.<lb/>
Cost 30.00<lb/>
Call Ed Perry 752-9854<lb/>
for more information<lb/>
Rt. 7 Box 128 Greenville, "N.C.<lb/>
DOWNTOWU<lb/>
PITT PLAZA<lb/>
Brody's Has Sport<lb/>
Shoes By<lb/>
? ADIDAS<lb/>
? TRETORN<lb/>
? KEDS<lb/>
Come See Them All!<lb/>
bar oiil <lb/>
TIRED OF BREAD &amp; LETTUCE SANDWICHES?<lb/>
coMETObaroni's<lb/>
AND GET MEAT ON YOUR BUNSI!<lb/>
Open Everyday 11 - till 1 752-8351<lb/>
free delivery: campus, fraternity, &amp; downtown area<lb/>
Fulltime student desiring<lb/>
parttime work selling life<lb/>
insurance for 7th largest in<lb/>
nation.<lb/>
Career upon graduation.<lb/>
Call B. L. Hunt, CLU, for<lb/>
appointment. 752-4080<lb/>
BILL L. HUNT, CLU, District Agent<lb/>
I O. Rox 206, Contanclic Streel<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
Phones: Ofi'irr 752-4080, Residence 752-3015<lb/>
NOKTHWISlf KN<lb/>
MUTUA1 MM ?<lb/>
MILWAUKEI<lb/>
NML<lb/>
m<lb/>
tm m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057078_0010"/><lb/>
TO<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 216 SEPTEMBER 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
SGA balloting scheduled<lb/>
ByROGERWHITSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Elections for Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Association (SGA) students<lb/>
legislators and class officers will<lb/>
be held Tuesday and Wednesday,<lb/>
Sept. 28 and 29.<lb/>
With a total budget of<lb/>
$250,000 to $300,000 a year, the<lb/>
SGA is responsible for the<lb/>
funding of such campus services<lb/>
as the transit system, various<lb/>
publications, student loans, re-<lb/>
frigerator rentals, free legal aid,<lb/>
and student body representation<lb/>
on the Greenville City Council.<lb/>
The elections include balloting<lb/>
for approximately 50 student<lb/>
representative positions, about<lb/>
half of which will be fa dam<lb/>
students. Each dam will select<lb/>
two a mae representatives.<lb/>
Filing fa these posts will be<lb/>
Sept. 14-Sept. 20 in Room 228<lb/>
Mendenhall. A mandatay candi-<lb/>
date meeting is scheduled in<lb/>
Room 221 Mendenhall on Sept. 20<lb/>
at 7:30. The following week will<lb/>
be devoted to campaigning.<lb/>
Coupled with the voting fa<lb/>
legislatas will be a refrendurr. oi<lb/>
the current and proposed SGA<lb/>
budget, oovering such expendi-<lb/>
tures fa Fountainhead, transit<lb/>
system, Buccaneer and fine arts<lb/>
programs.<lb/>
Since this referendum will<lb/>
directly influence the SGA's<lb/>
budgeting plans, SGA President<lb/>
Tim Sullivan stated, "Thoseclubs<lb/>
and aganizatiois which depend<lb/>
co student government suppat<lb/>
need to be active in this election;<lb/>
quite a lot will depend on it<lb/>
The ballot also includes op-<lb/>
pat unity fa students to accept a<lb/>
reject the proposed SGA Consti-<lb/>
tution.<lb/>
SGA ELECTIONS - Sept. 28 and<lb/>
29.<lb/>
SR-56<lb/>
The super slide rule<lb/>
programmable powerhouse<lb/>
with 10 memories and 100 program steps.<lb/>
$<lb/>
109<lb/>
95<lb/>
The SR-56 is a tremen-<lb/>
dously powerful slide rule<lb/>
calculator. Yet you can pro-<lb/>
gram it whenever you're<lb/>
ready.<lb/>
There are 74 prepro-<lb/>
grammed functions and op-<lb/>
e rations. You can do<lb/>
arithmetic within all 10<lb/>
memories It has AOS - a<lb/>
unique algebraic operating<lb/>
system that lets you handle<lb/>
problems with up to 9 levels<lb/>
of parentheses. There's also<lb/>
polar to rectangular con-<lb/>
version?built in. Mean.<lb/>
Standard deviation. De-<lb/>
grees, Indians, grads. And,<lb/>
it works with TI's new<lb/>
printer - the PC-100.<lb/>
Chances are, you'll be pro-<lb/>
W T ?<lb/>
gramming. That's what pro-<lb/>
fessionals in your field are<lb/>
doing?right now. And with<lb/>
an SR-56 you're ready. It<lb/>
has 100-merged prefix pro-<lb/>
gram steps. 6 logical deci-<lb/>
sion functions. 4 levels of<lb/>
subroutines. You can decre-<lb/>
ment and skip on zero to<lb/>
iterate a loop as many times<lb/>
as you specify. There are 4<lb/>
levels of subroutine to let<lb/>
you use your program steps<lb/>
to maximum advantage.<lb/>
And, you can even compare<lb/>
a test register with the dis-<lb/>
play to make a conditional<lb/>
branch. So you can check an<lb/>
intermediate result jc<lb/>
for convergence, or a Sm)<lb/>
maximum. J<lb/>
The edge you need. Now. And in your career.<lb/>
Texas Instruments will rebate $10.00 of your original<lb/>
SR-56 purchase price when you return this coupon<lb/>
and your SR-56 customer information card post-<lb/>
marked no later than October 31,1976. To apply:<lb/>
1. Fill out this coupon<lb/>
2. Fill out special serialized customer information<lb/>
card inside SR-56 box<lb/>
3. Return completed coupon and information card to:<lb/>
Special Campus Offer<lb/>
P.O. Box 1210<lb/>
Richardson, Texas 75080<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address<lb/>
City<lb/>
University<lb/>
Name of SR-56 Retailer<lb/>
SR 56<lb/>
State<lb/>
Zip<lb/>
Serial No (from back of calculator)<lb/>
Please allow 30 days lor rebate<lb/>
' Suggested retail price<lb/>
HI with the T register<lb/>
 1976 Teas Instruments Incorporated<lb/>
Texas Instruments<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
INCORPORATED<lb/>
m<lb/>
( 19<lb/>
.VV<lb/>
<pb facs="00057078_0011"/><lb/>
?HgrfpNB8?gj?<lb/>
? ? ?? ? ?"??-??'J'hy.1<lb/>
??<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 216 SEPTEMBER 1976<lb/>
11<lb/>
M?Mtf<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
?Mtf<lb/>
?d<lb/>
vi-<lb/>
Would you believe<lb/>
Helpful hints<lb/>
for EZU<lb/>
newcomers<lb/>
ByPATCOYLE<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
Would you believe it's already September, and a new school year is<lb/>
upon us? I know you'11 all agree it's really great to be back in Greenville,<lb/>
back with the same old roommate, haunting the same old party places,<lb/>
standing in the same old lines. What? There are people out there for<lb/>
whom this is a new experience, people who aren't embracing and being<lb/>
embraced by those old flames from last year?<lb/>
Some of you new faces are transfer students, right? There isn't much<lb/>
I can tell you, exoept to congratulate you fa having the good taste to<lb/>
leave crummy Chapel Hill, slimy State, a some other second rate hall of<lb/>
learning. What? Some second-rate hall of learning kicked you out? Well,<lb/>
uh, try not to say it too loud, okay?<lb/>
The rest of you newcomers are the ones who real ly need the advice of<lb/>
someone with infinite wisdom, someone who has fully grasped the EZU<lb/>
experience, someone like, ahem, ME.<lb/>
To start out, let me tell you a few things about EZU.<lb/>
First, in spite of what your Aunt Mildred told your nervous parents,<lb/>
ECU is NOT a party school. Just because Health 12 includes an entire<lb/>
chapter on curing hangovers, that doesn't mean we're students at a<lb/>
party school.Just because we take joy in a little friendly Halloween<lb/>
triok-or-brickbatting, that doesn't mean we're a bunch of rowdies. Just<lb/>
listening to the liberal references to Our Creator in normal conversations<lb/>
on campus is a sure indication that we are as straight as they come.<lb/>
This isn't to say that the student body at this noble institution doesn't<lb/>
enjoy social activities. To the contrary, many of us enjoy nothing more<lb/>
than a trip to one of the local nightspots for a little friendly socializing.<lb/>
Just go downtown on any given night and you're sure to see couples<lb/>
"socializing" in corners, in alleys, in parked cars; the list gees on and<lb/>
on. So does the socializing.<lb/>
You may have questions about the morality of the average student.<lb/>
You have, perhaps, heard those nasty rumors about how the infirmary<lb/>
doles out the Pill like M &amp; M's. That's utterly ridiculous. The infirmary<lb/>
does not give out M &amp; M's. If that isn't enough proof for you, ask any<lb/>
girl on campus about the state of her virtue and she'll tell you she's pure<lb/>
as the driven snow. (What? The driven snow back in your hometown is<lb/>
not very pure? Well)<lb/>
A major part of campus life revolves around the Greeks. No, I don't<lb/>
mean a bunch of foreign exchange students; the term  Greek refers to<lb/>
the sororities and fraternities, so-named because their name consist of<lb/>
letters in the Greek alphabet. You ask "Why the Greek alphabet?" I ask<lb/>
you, would YOU join a sorority or fraternity called "G-W-F'?<lb/>
Anyway, the Greeks are an integral part of the campus community,<lb/>
serving the public in any way possible. Their generosity is well-known,<lb/>
especially among the beer distributors, motel owners, and torture-tool<lb/>
salesmen.<lb/>
In naming the most important people on campus, we could never<lb/>
leave out the athletes, ESPECIALLY with football season around the<lb/>
corner. When you goto your first EZU game, you' II know the players by<lb/>
the vicious looks on their faoes, the wild manner in which they run<lb/>
around, the manner in which they hurl a brown object back and forth.<lb/>
What? That description fits the seven guys sitting in the row behind you<lb/>
at the game? That's not a football they're throwing, dummy. It's an<lb/>
empty Seagram's Seven bottle.<lb/>
Some of you may wonder why I've gone through all of these<lb/>
paragraphs without mentioning academics; classes. Well, we do have<lb/>
classes at EZU, a at least I heard we do. Seriously, you attend classes<lb/>
regularly, whatever your conoept of regularly is.<lb/>
There is one more vital part of EZU life I haven't mentioned. I<lb/>
wanted to save the best for last. Every Tuesday and Thursday,<lb/>
something great is delivered to the dorms. No, not money from home,<lb/>
you turkeys The great item is none other than Fountainhead, ECU'S<lb/>
great emblem of truth and integrity. Although I want you to get the most<lb/>
out of every section of this wonderful example of ace journalism, I must<lb/>
advise yc. to turn to this, the TRENDS section first. I head that dogs that<lb/>
are being traned have "cast their vote" two to one, on the TRENDS<lb/>
section, and ?jveryone knows that discriminating dogs don't just "drop<lb/>
their praise" everywhere.<lb/>
Kilpatrick to lecture here<lb/>
James J. Kilpatrick, one of<lb/>
America's most respected news-<lb/>
papermen, will speak at Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center on Tuesday,<lb/>
September 21 at 8?X) P.M. The<lb/>
appearance is being sponsored<lb/>
by the Student Union<lb/>
Lecture Committee.<lb/>
Mr. Kilpatrick has identified<lb/>
himself in a term once used by<lb/>
H.L. Mencken: He is a critic of<lb/>
ideas. In that capacity, he serves<lb/>
as columnist, commentator,<lb/>
author, editor, and observer of<lb/>
our times. He is a conservative,<lb/>
but not a knee-jerk conservative.<lb/>
He is a Southerner, but not a<lb/>
professional Southerner. Kil-<lb/>
patrick is known among his<lb/>
oolleagues as a craftsman and a<lb/>
stylist who writes with humor and<lb/>
understanding of the world<lb/>
around us.<lb/>
Kilpatrick was born in Okla-<lb/>
homa City in 1920. He was<lb/>
graduated in 1941 from the<lb/>
University of Missouri. He began<lb/>
his newspaper career as a report-<lb/>
er on the Richmond News Reader,<lb/>
specializing in politics and court<lb/>
coverage In 1964, while still in<lb/>
Richmond, he began writing his<lb/>
three-a-week syndicated column,<lb/>
"A Conservative View<lb/>
Today Kilpatrick works from<lb/>
his home office in the Blue Ridge<lb/>
Mountains, 80 miles west of<lb/>
Washington. Here he has origi-<lb/>
nated some of his most popular<lb/>
oolumns under the dateline of<lb/>
"Scrabble, Virginia Hisoolumn<lb/>
now appears in over 320 news-<lb/>
papers. Kilpatrick also serves as a<lb/>
regular oommentator for CBS and<lb/>
for its Washington television<lb/>
affiliates. He travels widely in the<lb/>
United States and abroad. He is a<lb/>
contributing editor of National<lb/>
Review and a regular essayist for<lb/>
Nation's Business.<lb/>
Tickets for the lecture are<lb/>
priced at $3.00 fa the public.<lb/>
Admission fa EC students will be<lb/>
by ID and Activity Card and ECU<lb/>
faculty and staff by Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center Membership<lb/>
Card.<lb/>
JAMES J. KILPATRICK<lb/>
Buddy Rich drums Thursday<lb/>
BUDDY RICH, recognized as the<lb/>
"Wald's Greatest Drummer<lb/>
will appear in concert with his<lb/>
Killer Face Orchestra en Thurs-<lb/>
day, September 23 at 8 flO P. M. i n<lb/>
Wright Auditaium.<lb/>
It could be said that Buddy<lb/>
Rich came into the wald swing-<lb/>
ing. Hisparentswereavaudeville<lb/>
team playing the best national<lb/>
circuits and in the tradition of true<lb/>
showmanship, they introduced<lb/>
Buddy to audiences having him<lb/>
play the drums on "STARS AND<lb/>
STRIPES FOREVER at eigh-<lb/>
teen months old. When he<lb/>
reached the ripe old age of three,<lb/>
he became a permanent part of<lb/>
the act and by the time he was<lb/>
seven he was a single, touring<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
B<lb/>
'The World's Greatest Drummer<lb/>
ECU Wednesday.<lb/>
Rich, will bring his beat to<lb/>
m<lb/>
with the Vaudeville circuits.<lb/>
After a tour with the U.S.<lb/>
Marines, Buddy joined the Tom-<lb/>
my Dasey Orchestra. It was<lb/>
during this period that Rich<lb/>
earned the title "The Wald's<lb/>
Greatest Drummer While with<lb/>
the Dasey Band, Buddy roomed<lb/>
with Frank Snatra and although<lb/>
their feuds sometimes made front<lb/>
page news, it was Frank who<lb/>
booked Buddy's first band after<lb/>
they brth left Tommy Dasey.<lb/>
Rich is a showman, a oonsumate<lb/>
and dedicated art i st, a young man<lb/>
of music whose music is fa the<lb/>
young. Buddy does na compro-<lb/>
mise and he has come into this<lb/>
age of youth domination with a<lb/>
free swinging spirit. He plays the<lb/>
music of today distinctively Rich<lb/>
with no bending in any direction,<lb/>
whether toward a complete youth<lb/>
audience a to the keepers of the<lb/>
past. Buddy Rich is a contempa-<lb/>
ary music maker, aiginal, with<lb/>
no label.<lb/>
Tickets fa the concert are<lb/>
available from the ECU Central<lb/>
Ticket Office and are priced at<lb/>
$1.50 fa ECU students, $2.00 fa<lb/>
groups of 20 a more and $3.00 'or<lb/>
the public. The concert is being<lb/>
spoisaed by the Student Uniai<lb/>
Special Entertainment Commit-<lb/>
tee.<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
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. ? ???? -?.?A&amp;<lb/>
<pb facs="00057078_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 52, NO. 216 SEPTEMBER 1976<lb/>
MIMM<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Dylan succeeds, in spite of visual problems<lb/>
By MICHAELFUTCH<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
The Bob Dylan "Hard Rain"<lb/>
concert presented on NBC Tues-<lb/>
day night has to be praised<lb/>
because of the visual similarity to<lb/>
his studio work. Dylan is known<lb/>
for recording an album in a very<lb/>
short span of time, trying to<lb/>
achieve a raw and primitive but<lb/>
concrete tone on his efforts. This<lb/>
concert, taped last May at<lb/>
Colorado State University in Fat<lb/>
Collins, appeared to visually<lb/>
attempt this same mood.<lb/>
The live oonoert, plagued by<lb/>
poor camera work in many places,<lb/>
clicked in others. There were<lb/>
some fantastic shots focusing on<lb/>
Dylan's back with the audience in<lb/>
full view - thishasalways been an<lb/>
intimidating angle with his lyrical<lb/>
genius. The sound was quite good<lb/>
fa television recalling ABC's In<lb/>
Concert, Don Kirsohner's Rock<lb/>
Concert as terrible examples of<lb/>
TV sound reproduction.<lb/>
Dylan, perfaming with old<lb/>
friend Joan Baez, and backed by<lb/>
The Rolling Thunder Revue,<lb/>
looked somewhat healthy and<lb/>
energetic. The Charlie Chaplin<lb/>
mannerisms were there from the<lb/>
beginning; humaous, sardonic<lb/>
and somewhat biting. He said<lb/>
only four wads during the show -<lb/>
"Joan Baez" and "Thank you" -<lb/>
and failed to play his usual<lb/>
acoompaniment, the harmatica.<lb/>
To my delight, it was all music<lb/>
and to Craig stereo's expense,<lb/>
there were only three ad breaks.<lb/>
This was Dylan's third tele-<lb/>
vision appearance; appearing on<lb/>
the old Johnny Cash Show and<lb/>
last year's PBS tribute to<lb/>
Columbia Recads executive John<lb/>
Hammond Se.<lb/>
"Hard Rain" was not aigi-<lb/>
nally planned fa televisiai view-<lb/>
ing by NBC. Dylan, however,<lb/>
displeased with the aiginal plan,<lb/>
offered this concert in its place.<lb/>
Needless to say, NBC grabbed it.<lb/>
The special opened with two<lb/>
of Dylan'sold protest songs: "It's<lb/>
a Hard Rain Going to Fall" and<lb/>
"Blowing in the Wind The<lb/>
revivalist vocal tone used on the<lb/>
Before the Flood was missing<lb/>
here, but it still remained hard-<lb/>
hitting.<lb/>
Dylan surrounded himself<lb/>
with some fantastic people fa his<lb/>
recent tour and they were seen on<lb/>
the opening number: Joan Baez,<lb/>
oger MoGuinn, Mick Ronsoi,<lb/>
Scarlet Rivera and many mae.<lb/>
The poor camera work was<lb/>
initiated here and there was a<lb/>
great deal of reliance on close-ups<lb/>
(Dylan's chops are about as bad<lb/>
as Keith Richards used to be).<lb/>
After the first commercial<lb/>
break, Dylan and Baez joined fa<lb/>
a shat acoustic set. After giving<lb/>
"Blowing in the Wind" an<lb/>
unusual sporadic vocal treatment,<lb/>
they harmonized further on<lb/>
"Railroad Boy" and "De-<lb/>
portees I felt it was ironic that<lb/>
Channel 7 flashed a run-off<lb/>
election result wire over the onoe<lb/>
hero of political radicals. Baez<lb/>
Beatles tribute<lb/>
Away With Wads is the wald's largest traveling multi-media<lb/>
production. This unique production is not a rrovie and is not a rook-n-roll<lb/>
show, it is most nearly classed with productions such as"Godspell" and<lb/>
Jesus Christ Superstar "Away With Wads" has played mae than<lb/>
800 individual perfamanoas, and has without incident drawn mae than<lb/>
600,000 people, breaking 36 all time house recads. The show utilized 32<lb/>
slide projectas, 3 film projectas and 360 degree sound, that aeates a<lb/>
panaamic voyage of sound and sight.<lb/>
Come to Wright Auditaium fa two unfagettable perfamances of<lb/>
the most beautiful Beatle tribute ever presented, on:<lb/>
Wed. Sept. 22,1976<lb/>
8.00<lb/>
10OO<lb/>
Advance t icket s are:<lb/>
Students $2.00<lb/>
Public $2.50<lb/>
Tickets at the dcor will be:<lb/>
Students $2.50<lb/>
Public $3.00<lb/>
Advance tickets are on sale at the Central Ticket Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center and The Recad Bar. This evening of "mind<lb/>
boggling" entertainment is sponsaed by the Student Uniai Special<lb/>
Entertainment Conmittee. Roll up fa this Magical Mystery Tour. Step<lb/>
right this way!<lb/>
stood out on the last number with<lb/>
vocal s as beaut i ful as she has ever<lb/>
delivered. Again, however, shaky<lb/>
camera wak plagued the num-<lb/>
ber.<lb/>
The Rolling Thunder Revue<lb/>
reemerged fa aie of the high-<lb/>
lights of the Dylan special, "I Pity<lb/>
the Poa Immigrant definitely<lb/>
electric Dylan at his best with a<lb/>
bit of funk. Baez accompanied<lb/>
with Caracas while Dylan display-<lb/>
ed evident influence.<lb/>
Another high point was<lb/>
"Shelter from the Stam Dylan<lb/>
tempaarily replaced his Fender<lb/>
fa a Guild, playing some slide<lb/>
with conviction, although not<lb/>
authaity. He was seen aloie in<lb/>
froit and playing like electric<lb/>
Dylan can; not brilliant but<lb/>
moving. He sang solo on this<lb/>
number, with eyes closed.<lb/>
Mick Ftonson, David Bowie's<lb/>
ex-guitarist, added some Chuck<lb/>
Berry licks on "Maggie's Farm<lb/>
The way that Dylan looked<lb/>
humaously lost on this one can<lb/>
only be justified by his hanging<lb/>
around Clapton too much. It was<lb/>
done in a joking manner with his<lb/>
band of misfits plugging along<lb/>
behind their leader in comic form.<lb/>
Mae out of focus camera<lb/>
wak presented "One Tco Many<lb/>
Manings" but was balanced by<lb/>
some great angles. Dylan's fiddle<lb/>
player on Desire, Scarlet Rivera,<lb/>
was featured co this tune as well<lb/>
as the next, "Mozambique<lb/>
This cut, off of Dylan's last<lb/>
LP, was given-the full treatment<lb/>
and was a great reproduction of<lb/>
studio wak.<lb/>
Dylan delivered his "Messiah<lb/>
Will Cone Again" vocal energy<lb/>
on "Idiot Wind The guy has<lb/>
been around a long time and his<lb/>
sheer vocal strength was never<lb/>
mae apparent. The camera re-<lb/>
mained in a primitive position fa<lb/>
the first half of the song; close up<lb/>
of Dylan's face. He's not getting<lb/>
any younger as lines showed<lb/>
around his eyes. He did show an<lb/>
unusual amount of physical<lb/>
energy on this tune as he pranced<lb/>
around the stage.<lb/>
For some stupid reason,<lb/>
WITN-TV broke into "Knocking<lb/>
on Heaven's Doa with a spitfire<lb/>
of commercials. McGuinn was<lb/>
sounding very good on backup<lb/>
vocals and it could have been the<lb/>
high of the night.<lb/>
Overall, "Hard Rain" was<lb/>
good, not great but enough.<lb/>
Although at times visually poa,<lb/>
the sound was solid. It was<lb/>
enjoyable if only fa Dylan's<lb/>
presence, a mystique as sane<lb/>
call it.<lb/>
Fun parks change with times<lb/>
ByBARBAFIA LEWIS<lb/>
A generation ago, amusement<lb/>
parks oonsisted of not much mae<lb/>
than a roller coaster and a milk<lb/>
bottle toss. And no one really<lb/>
expected much mae.<lb/>
But, amusement parks have<lb/>
evolved into multimillion dollar<lb/>
playgrounds, offering almost<lb/>
every type of entertainment<lb/>
imaginable. And during this<lb/>
summer of the Bicentennial year,<lb/>
turnstiles are twirling at these<lb/>
parks at the recad pace.<lb/>
Still, although parks ranging<lb/>
from Sea Wald in San Diego to<lb/>
Busch Gardens in Williamsburg,<lb/>
Va. are enjoying enamous suc-<lb/>
cess, some have nevertheless<lb/>
discovered that their elaborate<lb/>
famats are not enough to lure<lb/>
everyone-particularly young<lb/>
people in large numbers.<lb/>
?"Most theme parks have a<lb/>
terrible time attracting the 18 to<lb/>
25 visita admits David De<lb/>
Motte, president of Sea Wald,<lb/>
which has parks in San Diege,<lb/>
Orlando and Auraa, Ohio, 30<lb/>
miles from Cleveland.<lb/>
"Our experience is that<lb/>
teenagers like parks with rides<lb/>
and active participation, like<lb/>
Disneyland. But they aren't near-<lb/>
ly as interested in a park which<lb/>
requires them to sit and watch a<lb/>
whale a a group of dolphins<lb/>
perfam fa them<lb/>
Of oourse, the marine shows<lb/>
featured at Sea World have<lb/>
tremendous appeal, even to those<lb/>
young adults, who attend. Sea<lb/>
Wald's biggest market is fami-<lb/>
lies with children up to age 13.<lb/>
And they have made it possible<lb/>
fa Sea Wald to grow into a $7<lb/>
million a year enterprise in<lb/>
slightly mae than a decade.<lb/>
Still, amusement parks are<lb/>
well aware of the immense<lb/>
market that the 18 to 25 age group<lb/>
encompasses. Some, like Great<lb/>
Adventure in Jackson, N.J have<lb/>
the types of rides that already<lb/>
attract these young people. But<lb/>
other parks are just now making<lb/>
attempts to lure the youth mar-<lb/>
ket. Sea Wald in San Diego and<lb/>
Orlando have added a few rides in<lb/>
keeping with the park's theme.<lb/>
Several, for instance, are<lb/>
booking pop music acts into their<lb/>
outdoor amphitheatres, ranging<lb/>
from The Miracles to Three Dog<lb/>
Night. Others, like Opryland in<lb/>
Nashville, have date nights,<lb/>
during which a section of the park<lb/>
is roped off frr dancing to lock<lb/>
music. Disney Wald recently<lb/>
added River Country, a water<lb/>
reaeation complex specifically<lb/>
designed to attract the 18-25 set.<lb/>
Some parks have added dar-<lb/>
ing rides to attract young people.<lb/>
The Texas Chute Oou ride has<lb/>
gained almost instant popularity<lb/>
among the young at Six Flags<lb/>
Over Texas in Dal.as. On the ride,<lb/>
patrons are raised at the top of a<lb/>
235-foot tower, from which they<lb/>
are dropped 30 feet in just three<lb/>
seconds. At that point, a para-<lb/>
chute opens, and thpy drift gently<lb/>
to the ground.<lb/>
At the new Enchanted Village<lb/>
in Buena Park, Calif which<lb/>
features 32 acres of natural<lb/>
tropical setting and hundreds of<lb/>
animals, visitas may ride oi a<lb/>
live elephant a a live Arabian<lb/>
camel a pet a wandering llama.<lb/>
Among the nation's most<lb/>
successful parks are those that<lb/>
combine both rides and animals.<lb/>
Great Adventure has adopted this<lb/>
concept, merging a drive-thrajgh<lb/>
animal preserve where lions and<lb/>
tigers roam at will with a series of<lb/>
trained animal acts and rides,<lb/>
including the popular log flume<lb/>
ride. The park also features date<lb/>
nights on the weekends (two<lb/>
admission fa the pnoe of one), as<lb/>
well as live oonoerts featuring<lb/>
maja rock ads.<lb/>
Interestingly enough, al-<lb/>
though some parks do not have<lb/>
mass appeal among the youth<lb/>
market, many of their executives<lb/>
are quite young.<lb/>
John Baltes, general manager<lb/>
of Sea Wald of Ohio, is 29 years<lb/>
old, and began waking fa the<lb/>
Sea Wald parks nearly 11 years<lb/>
ago when he was hired as a<lb/>
sweeper. He eventually was<lb/>
promoted to operations manager,<lb/>
then assistant general manager,<lb/>
and finally two years ago to<lb/>
general manager of the Ohio<lb/>
park.<lb/>
"Sea Wald has offered career<lb/>
oppatunities to a lot of people<lb/>
who started out at the low rung of<lb/>
the ladder explained Baltes.<lb/>
"And we're a big souroe of<lb/>
summer jobs fa young people.<lb/>
There are 800 students waking at<lb/>
Sea Wald of Ohio this summer,<lb/>
ranging from ticket takers to<lb/>
animal keepers<lb/>
Bruce Stevens, the training<lb/>
manager at Sea Wald of Ohio, is<lb/>
also 29 and initially began<lb/>
waking at the park overseeing<lb/>
the music fa the marine mammal<lb/>
shows. Not long thereafter, he<lb/>
asked to be transferred from the<lb/>
park's production staff to the<lb/>
training department, and he has<lb/>
been there ever since.<lb/>
"Most trainers get into the<lb/>
training business by accident<lb/>
remarks Stevens. "They have to<lb/>
show ability as not only trainers,<lb/>
but as showmen as well. And it's<lb/>
difficult to find someone good at<lb/>
both. To be a good trainer, a<lb/>
person must be patient and<lb/>
steady. To be a good showman,<lb/>
he has to be an extrovert and an<lb/>
excitable-type individual. Those<lb/>
qualities aren't often found in the<lb/>
?-line person<lb/>
HKHW<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 216 SEPTEMBER 1976<lb/>
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Sold exclusively by Pair Electronics.<lb/>
Located at 107 Trade St. (Next to Tarheel Toyota)<lb/>
TELEDfNE<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 216 SEPTEMBER 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
John Payne Band to play jazz-rock on mall<lb/>
The John Payne Band will be<lb/>
featured in concert on September<lb/>
16 at 8.00 P.M. The ooncert is<lb/>
scheduled for the ECU Mall and<lb/>
is under the sponsorship of the<lb/>
Student Union Special Entertain-<lb/>
ment Committee.<lb/>
The John Payne Band is based<lb/>
in Boston. Led by their multi-<lb/>
instrumented horn player John<lb/>
Payne, the group handles a wide<lb/>
variety of ambitiously structured<lb/>
music which ranges from light<lb/>
pieces dominated by acoustic<lb/>
piano and flute, to funky "jazz-<lb/>
rock to highly improvisational<lb/>
works. John Payne has recorded<lb/>
with such notables as Van Morri-<lb/>
son, Bonnie Raitt, and David<lb/>
Bromberg.<lb/>
John Payne's new album<lb/>
called Bedtime Stories is remark-<lb/>
able, not only for its high musical<lb/>
quality, but because Payne pro-<lb/>
duced it himself on his own label.<lb/>
It features Payne's new quintet, a<lb/>
tight, exciting group with lots of<lb/>
energy which can play some very<lb/>
danceable funk as well as more<lb/>
cerebral works.<lb/>
As an improviser, Payne is the<lb/>
analytical type. He will play the<lb/>
theme, then begin to restate its<lb/>
intervals in funky little phrases.<lb/>
Within a chorus or two he is<lb/>
usually experimenting on the<lb/>
individual notes, bending, vibrat-<lb/>
ing and reshaping them. It is a<lb/>
style that dramatizes the<lb/>
musicians' use of the word<lb/>
"chops to mean technique,<lb/>
because Payne is usually right on<lb/>
the beat, literally chopping out<lb/>
pieces of soto music.<lb/>
If you are into the sounds of<lb/>
Weather Report, Return to For-<lb/>
ever, or the Mahavishnu Orches-<lb/>
tra, you will not want to miss the<lb/>
John Payne Band.<lb/>
Trends needs:<lb/>
Reviews writers<lb/>
Feature writers ANY writers<lb/>
Meeting: Tuesday, Sept. 21,<lb/>
4:00<lb/>
Publications Building<lb/>
H.D. LEE<lb/>
Jeans and Cords<lb/>
SHIRTS and<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
THUR WEDNESDAY<lb/>
DOWNTOWN ON EVANS STREET MALL<lb/>
L<lb/>
WRANGLER<lb/>
helps you warm up to<lb/>
the semester with jeans<lb/>
and a jacket of Cone<lb/>
indigo denim. A casual<lb/>
favorite, this all-cotton<lb/>
denim has enough comfort<lb/>
and style to keep you<lb/>
looking good in school and<lb/>
out. Jeans 27-42; pile-lined<lb/>
jacket 34-46 regular,<lb/>
48-50 long. Ask for Wrangler<lb/>
jeans and jackets at your<lb/>
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CONE MILLS I mOBROAOWAr NEW YORK 'NY 1001<lb/>
<pb facs="00057078_0015"/><lb/>
of<lb/>
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ie<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 52, NO. 216 SEPTEMBER 1976<lb/>
15<lb/>
MM<lb/>
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?<lb/>
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M<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Sideline Chat<lb/>
with Steve Wheeler<lb/>
East Carolina enters another athletic year, the last of which the<lb/>
Pirates will be competing in the Southern Conference. Many people have<lb/>
mixed emotions about the proposed stadium expansion and the Pirates<lb/>
leaving the conference. But, in the end it will be to ECU's advantage to<lb/>
leave the 'dying' Southern.<lb/>
The biggest advantage will be in football, of oourse. East Carolina is<lb/>
playing before aowds of less than 10,000 people when playing SC teams<lb/>
and this yields a very small return when playing on the road. On the<lb/>
road, teams get a percentage of the gate or a set sum and when you play<lb/>
before 10,000 spectators or less the return is minimal at best.<lb/>
Also, East Carolina has a fine all-around program and it does not<lb/>
help prestigiously to play VMI, Furman, a The Citadel. This makes the<lb/>
job of getting class teams on the schedule much harder. In the last five<lb/>
years, East Carolina has had the 18th best record among major colleges<lb/>
and universities and has cracked the top twenty rarely and has not gone<lb/>
to a bowl game.<lb/>
During the ECU press day in August, Head Coach Pat Dye described<lb/>
the importance of schedule. "When we can get major independents like<lb/>
South Carolina and Georgia Tech on the schedule, we can bring money<lb/>
into our athletic program<lb/>
Having strong teams on the schedule with large stadiums can move<lb/>
the Pirate program up. "Raying teams like The Citadel and VMI do<lb/>
nothing for our program added Dye.<lb/>
With teams such as ASU, VMI, Southern Illinois, and The Citadel on<lb/>
the schedule last season, the Pirates averaged just over 20,000 in<lb/>
attendance, with 47,000 at State and 42,000 at Carolina helping the<lb/>
average.<lb/>
With the stadium enlargement that is planned, exiting the Southern<lb/>
Conference, and putting bonafide Division I NCAA members on the<lb/>
schedule, East Carolina can very easily average doee to 35,000 fans a<lb/>
game.<lb/>
The stadium question has been a somewhat controversial one in the<lb/>
last year, with critics asking the question, If you cannot fill up the 20,000<lb/>
seat stadium, how can you expect to fill up a 35,000 seat facility?<lb/>
The answer is not simple, but is understandable. When our athletic<lb/>
director goes to some big name school with a scheduling proposal, that<lb/>
school isgoina to want the game at their stadium. ECU has played State<lb/>
six times, all in Carter Stadium, while playing Carolina three times at<lb/>
Kenan Stadium. With a larger stadium, these schoolsoould come here to<lb/>
Greenville. But with a 20,000 seat facility they will never think of it.<lb/>
Playing these kind of teams week-in and week-out would net the ECU<lb/>
program a significant increase in financial resources, which in turn,<lb/>
would aid the entire program. The more money athletic department<lb/>
makes, the more they have to spread around to all sports, not just<lb/>
football. And with big-name teams ooming into Greenville to play the<lb/>
stadium-expansion will not go to waste.<lb/>
Most of the minor sports will be unhurt by the exodus of the<lb/>
Southern. All the women's sports programs are in the North Carolina<lb/>
Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (NCAIAW) and they<lb/>
will not be affected by the change to independent.<lb/>
As for swimming and wrestling, they have never needed to schedule<lb/>
SC teams. They are continually routing their conference competition.<lb/>
With scheduling strong independents, the wrestling and swimming<lb/>
programs would aet strong competition throughout the season instead of<lb/>
just at the end (in regional and national championships.)<lb/>
The track team depends on qualifying times to get its athletes to the<lb/>
nationals and does not even schedule a meet with other conference<lb/>
members except in the conference meet.<lb/>
Basketball, baseball and tennis are the main sports hurt by the<lb/>
withdrawal because they depend on their championships in the<lb/>
conference as stepping-stones to national championship tourneys.<lb/>
PIRA TES A TTEMPT TO REGAIN CUP<lb/>
East Carolina failed last year to defend their Commissioner's Cup,<lb/>
which they picked up the previous two yers. The Commissioner's Cup is<lb/>
presented to the school each year in the SC that shows the best overall<lb/>
athletic program.<lb/>
Losinq by three points to William and Mar'in the Cup standinqs, th?<lb/>
See SIDELINE CHAT, page 16.<lb/>
Pirates roll past<lb/>
Southern Miss.<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Working like a well-oiled<lb/>
machine, East Carolina executed<lb/>
near-perfect I y on offense and<lb/>
swarmed on defense to romp over<lb/>
the favored Golden Eagles of<lb/>
Southern Mississippi in the<lb/>
season-opener fa both teams,<lb/>
48-0.<lb/>
The Pirate offense, with<lb/>
senia Mike Weaver at the helm,<lb/>
used the wishbone offense to<lb/>
perfeaion, repeatedly churning<lb/>
out gains of ten a more yards.<lb/>
When Weaver wasn't turning<lb/>
upfield oi the option fa big<lb/>
yardage, the lithe quarterback<lb/>
was pitching the ball out to<lb/>
speedy backfield combo of Willie<lb/>
Hawkins and Eddie Hicks fa<lb/>
sizeable gains.<lb/>
Weaver was so efficient at<lb/>
quarterbacking the wishbone at-<lb/>
tack that the Bucs scaed on all<lb/>
six possessions he fiuided, soa-<lb/>
ing four times on touchdowns and<lb/>
twice on field goals.<lb/>
"Mike Weaver was just un-<lb/>
believable tonight commented<lb/>
Head Coach Pat Dye on his field<lb/>
general's feats on the gridiron.<lb/>
Mike is a tremendous individual<lb/>
and there's na a better wishbone<lb/>
quarterback around. And when<lb/>
he pitched the ball to Eddie and<lb/>
Willie they ran the ball just as I<lb/>
had anticipated<lb/>
East Carolina's veteran de-<lb/>
fense, led by Zack Valentine,<lb/>
Harold Randolph, Oliva Felton,<lb/>
Cary Godette, Wayne Poole, and<lb/>
Jake Dove, repeatedly gang-<lb/>
tackled the Golden Eagles fa<lb/>
losses and quarterback sacks.<lb/>
"Our defense was really super<lb/>
tonight said Dye. "Especially<lb/>
Zack Valentine and Harold Ran-<lb/>
dolph. And newcomers Wayne<lb/>
Poole and Gerald Hall were great<lb/>
too<lb/>
The kicking game was big also<lb/>
fa the Pirates. A punt return fa<lb/>
a touchdown and a blocked punt<lb/>
setting up another were the<lb/>
bright spots along with Pete<lb/>
Conaty's perfect night of place-<lb/>
kicking.<lb/>
"Our kicking game gained us<lb/>
two TD's in the ball game Dye<lb/>
stated. "And Conaty sure looked<lb/>
good with his place-kicking. And<lb/>
he (Conaty) sure was making<lb/>
them start out on the 20 (yard-<lb/>
line) a la with his long kickoffs<lb/>
The Pirates did ail this in front<lb/>
of a new opening-day reoad<lb/>
aowd of 17,400. The aowd was<lb/>
up roaring most of the time giving<lb/>
Dye "our proverbial 12th man on<lb/>
the field<lb/>
The fans in attendance had<lb/>
hardly gaten the seats warm<lb/>
when the Bucs took the opening<lb/>
kickoff and drove from their 13 to<lb/>
the Southern M iss eight when the<lb/>
drive fizzled out. Pete Conaty<lb/>
came on to convert a 25 yard field<lb/>
goal. Fullback Raymond Jones<lb/>
and Weaver did the bulk of the<lb/>
ball carrying in the possession<lb/>
getting 30 and 25 yards, respect-<lb/>
ively.<lb/>
The Pirate defense stiffened<lb/>
after the kickoff and faced the<lb/>
Golden Eagles to punt. After<lb/>
Jones gained three yards up the<lb/>
middle to the 21, Weaver went<lb/>
right on an option play. After<lb/>
picking up15 yards and seemingly<lb/>
down, Weaver pitched the ball to<lb/>
Willie Hawkins on the sidelines.<lb/>
The junia running back finished<lb/>
the 79 yard scoring play by<lb/>
tight-roping the sidelines and<lb/>
eluding a couple defenders.<lb/>
Conaty added the point after to<lb/>
take the Pirates to a 10-0 lead.<lb/>
Lightening struck again fa<lb/>
East Carolina afta the defense<lb/>
again stopped the Golden Eagles.<lb/>
Punter Mike Wright ga off a<lb/>
beautiful punt fa Southern Miss,<lb/>
a 51-yarder. But he outkicked his<lb/>
coverage and Gerald Hall, taking<lb/>
the punt on his 30, weaved his<lb/>
way through defenders and pick-<lb/>
ed up some key blocks and went<lb/>
the distance. Harold Randolph<lb/>
took the last Southern M iss player<lb/>
off his feet at the 25 to spring<lb/>
Hall. Conaty was again perfect<lb/>
with the extra point.<lb/>
On the vay next series, the<lb/>
ECU defense again came up with<lb/>
the big play. Afta allowing the<lb/>
Golden Eagles two first downs,<lb/>
the Pirate defensive line hit<lb/>
quarterback Kenny Alderman as<lb/>
he crossed the 50 and Zack<lb/>
Valentine recovaed on the ECU<lb/>
45-yard line.<lb/>
Weava then engineaed a<lb/>
drive down to the eight-yard line<lb/>
of Southern Miss. Afta failing to<lb/>
get a first down, Conaty came on<lb/>
to kick his second 25 yard field<lb/>
goal. This put the Pirates up by 20<lb/>
with ten minutes left in the half.<lb/>
East Carolina added another<lb/>
touchdown befae the half as<lb/>
Weava took them on a 76-yard<lb/>
drive in the last two minutes of<lb/>
the paiod without throwing a<lb/>
pass. Eddie Hicks went the final<lb/>
14 yards and the Rrates had<lb/>
staked out a 27-0 halftime lead<lb/>
with Conaty'soonvasion.<lb/>
Fa all intents and purposes<lb/>
the game was in the bag, but<lb/>
nobody tad the Rrates because<lb/>
they did na let up one bit in the<lb/>
second half.<lb/>
The Golden Eagles took the<lb/>
second half kickoff and the Pirate<lb/>
See FOOTBALL, page 16.)<lb/>
<lb/>
First Dowms<lb/>
Rushes-Yards<lb/>
Passing Yardage<lb/>
Passes A-C-l<lb/>
Return Yardage<lb/>
Punts-Avg.<lb/>
Fumbles-Lost<lb/>
Penalties-Yards<lb/>
Southern Mississippi<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
USMECU<lb/>
1121<lb/>
44-6155-416<lb/>
11256<lb/>
18-11-16-3-0<lb/>
10101<lb/>
9-38340<lb/>
3-14-1<lb/>
8-522-20<lb/>
0000-0<lb/>
1710147-48<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
wmmmmmmmw<lb/>
ECU'S JIM BOLDING hits Chris Pieper 30 after a Golden Eagle pass completion<lb/>
im i m mmwmmwmmmimmmmimmmmm<lb/>
? ?? Hfl<lb/>
Wtf&amp;k&amp;mMlB<lb/>
<pb facs="00057078_0016"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 216 SEPTEMBER 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mi<lb/>
i ? m m<lb/>
Bill Keyes raps with John Evans<lb/>
Editor's Note: Each week,<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD assistant<lb/>
sports editor, Bill Keyes, will<lb/>
interview a prominent sports<lb/>
figure or one with valuable sports<lb/>
knowlede. His first interview is<lb/>
with last year's sports editor,<lb/>
John vans. Evans is presently<lb/>
employed as assistant sports<lb/>
editor of the Kinston Free Press<lb/>
One of his chief possibilities at<lb/>
Kinston is covering ECU<lb/>
athletics.<lb/>
By BILL KEYES<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: In the two<lb/>
years that you worked as sports<lb/>
editor for Fountainhead you<lb/>
learned alot about our athletic<lb/>
program, and about the teams we<lb/>
play against as well. What kind of<lb/>
year do you expect at ECU<lb/>
athletically speaking?<lb/>
EVANS: I expect this to be<lb/>
another fine year for ECU in<lb/>
terms of athletic excellence. The<lb/>
football team should be improved<lb/>
and the track, swimming, wrest-<lb/>
ling and baseball teams should do<lb/>
as well as last year, even though<lb/>
the baseball team loses alot of key<lb/>
players. Athletically speaking it<lb/>
should be a very good year.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: Does the<lb/>
Southern Conference award a<lb/>
Commissioner's Cup each year<lb/>
like many of the other con-<lb/>
ferences do?<lb/>
EVANS: Yes it does. The Cup,<lb/>
much like the ACC's Carmichael<lb/>
KAip, stands for athletic excel-<lb/>
lence in the overall sports pro-<lb/>
gram based on competition in<lb/>
every varsity sport sanctioned by<lb/>
the Southern.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: Who won the<lb/>
Cup last year?<lb/>
EVANS: Ironically no one in the<lb/>
Southern Conference has ever<lb/>
won the Cup but ECU and<lb/>
William and Mary. The Indians<lb/>
won the cup last year and ECU<lb/>
won it in '74 and '75. I believe<lb/>
ECU finished just behind William<lb/>
and Mary and ahead of Ap-<lb/>
palachian State. I think there was<lb/>
a three or four point difference.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: Now looking<lb/>
at our program, what do you think<lb/>
the chances are of us winning the<lb/>
Commissioner's Cup in our last<lb/>
year in the Southern?<lb/>
EVANS: Of course I think that is<lb/>
what the fellow? jver in the<lb/>
athletic department are looking<lb/>
for, especially Bill Cain and Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins. Overall, ECU'S program<lb/>
should be improved, but sports<lb/>
like cross country, tennis and<lb/>
riflery can only go up. Alot will<lb/>
depend on the basketball team's<lb/>
improvement since it is always a<lb/>
tough race between ECU and<lb/>
William and Mary. Last year the<lb/>
basketball team finished ninth.<lb/>
Swimming, wrestling and football<lb/>
can be looked upon as almost<lb/>
definite championships and track,<lb/>
golf and baseball will always stay<lb/>
on a conference level. Basketball<lb/>
and soccer were disappointing<lb/>
last season but both teams should<lb/>
improve. The others will not do<lb/>
anything but help because they<lb/>
mmmmmmmmm<lb/>
can only do better.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: What is the<lb/>
effect of winning championships<lb/>
in the various sports on the total<lb/>
program?<lb/>
EVANS: I'm not sure I know what<lb/>
you mean by that question. To<lb/>
win a championship obviously<lb/>
brings prestige to the program<lb/>
and pride to the individual<lb/>
coaches and athletes, but what<lb/>
other rewards result vary. In<lb/>
soccer, baseball and basketball,<lb/>
winning the conference<lb/>
championship qualifies the team<lb/>
for the NCAA playoffs. The<lb/>
wrestling champions in each<lb/>
weight class also qualify for the<lb/>
NCAA's. Track and swimming<lb/>
are determined by times to<lb/>
qualify for the NCAA. Not<lb/>
speaking for the coaches, but<lb/>
speculating, I 'dhave to say that a<lb/>
conference title is the first goal all<lb/>
the coaches aim for and across<lb/>
these is the intra-conference<lb/>
rivalry that always exists for<lb/>
being number one. With swim-<lb/>
ming and wrestling, tradition is<lb/>
involved since these sports are<lb/>
perennial conference champs. In<lb/>
golf and track, rivalries with<lb/>
Fur man in golf and William and<lb/>
Mary in track make a conference<lb/>
championship a worthwhile goal<lb/>
to shoot for. The same should<lb/>
hold true with football, I would<lb/>
believe.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: Is the pur-<lb/>
pose of the addition to Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium primarily to enhance the<lb/>
chances of scheduling on a<lb/>
home-and-home basis teams<lb/>
which will be big attractions at<lb/>
the gate, or primarily a selling<lb/>
point fa the University in their<lb/>
bid to join either an already<lb/>
established a a newly-famed<lb/>
conference?<lb/>
EVANS: You could go on for<lb/>
hours about Ficklen Stadium and<lb/>
its importance to the program,<lb/>
and the reasons and plans for its<lb/>
expansion. A better person to talk<lb/>
to would be Athletic Director<lb/>
Bill Cain, Dr. Oitf Moore or those<lb/>
connected with the stadium ex-<lb/>
pansion program. I ?assume some<lb/>
sort of announcement will be<lb/>
made soon about it. Surely, in<lb/>
order to attract larger and more<lb/>
prestigious football teams to<lb/>
Greenville a larger stadium is<lb/>
needed. The reason for this is<lb/>
primarily financial since a team is<lb/>
more interested in the guaranteed<lb/>
gate it is to receive when it goes<lb/>
to a school.<lb/>
Money talks, it seems The<lb/>
games at State and Carolina are<lb/>
big draws up there because there<lb/>
is a rivalry that exists that will fill<lb/>
a 40,000 seat stadium. Why play<lb/>
in Greenville where you can draw<lb/>
only 20,000 at the present.<lb/>
From my under star ding, the<lb/>
stadium size has long been an<lb/>
excuse for the larger schools not<lb/>
to comehere and certainly in most<lb/>
cases it wvild be a legitimate<lb/>
excuse. A lot of people have<lb/>
argued that enlargement of the<lb/>
stadium is a silly idea because we<lb/>
can't fill the stadium now. But I<lb/>
think if State, Carolina, VPI and<lb/>
schools like that came to Green-<lb/>
ville the need for a 35,000 seat<lb/>
stadium would be supported by<lb/>
the crowds It's an ambitious<lb/>
idea and certainly one geared<lb/>
towards building ECU into a<lb/>
football power. So far as the<lb/>
larger stadium being an enticing<lb/>
inducement to admittance to a<lb/>
new conference - of course it is<lb/>
Again, any conference looks for<lb/>
the advantage it will receive from<lb/>
admitting a school to its member-<lb/>
ship. Certainly a 35,000 seat seat<lb/>
stadium is more enticing than a<lb/>
20,000 seat stadium.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: When it was<lb/>
first suggested that ECU might<lb/>
pull out of the Southern Con-<lb/>
ference, everybody went wild<lb/>
dreaming the possibility of us in<lb/>
the ACC, but the ACC made it<lb/>
clear, and fa understandable<lb/>
reasons. The ACC has four<lb/>
members in Nath Carolina within<lb/>
about a hundred mile area with<lb/>
Maryland and Virginia to the<lb/>
nath and Clemsoi all down to the<lb/>
South. In basketball season, fa<lb/>
example, Maryland doesn't like<lb/>
the idea of playing four games<lb/>
plus Clemson down here already,<lb/>
so you know they won't go fa the<lb/>
idea of ooming down here again,<lb/>
and I can't blame them.<lb/>
EVANS: One of the biggest<lb/>
reasons the ACC has given<lb/>
everybody for not Allowing new<lb/>
members is the financial gain<lb/>
from leaving the loop as a seven<lb/>
team league. At present, gate<lb/>
receipts from home and tourna-<lb/>
ment games are split seven ways.<lb/>
So why add an eighth school and<lb/>
cut down on the revenue you<lb/>
bring in. The ACC schools seem<lb/>
happy as they are.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: What kind of<lb/>
conference will ECU end up in,<lb/>
John?<lb/>
EVANS: I ca 't answer that one<lb/>
without a crystal ball. They've<lb/>
talked to other schools about a<lb/>
mid-Atlantic based or Southern<lb/>
based conference consisting of<lb/>
current Southern Conference<lb/>
teams and independents. As to<lb/>
how far these talks have gone, I<lb/>
really don't know. It leaves<lb/>
interesting possibilities and spec-<lb/>
ulating open, though, doesn't it?<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: I thinkthe<lb/>
latest reports had us talking with<lb/>
Virginia Tech, Richmond, South<lb/>
Carolina, West Virginia, William<lb/>
and Mary, VMI, and some others<lb/>
about the possibilities of faming<lb/>
a new conference. Would that<lb/>
arrangement provide the rivalries<lb/>
that are so vital to interconference<lb/>
play - rivalries like Ohio State and<lb/>
Michigan, Oklahoma and<lb/>
Nebraska, State and Carolina<lb/>
though? We don't really have that<lb/>
in the Southern anyway, do we?<lb/>
EVANS: What essentially you are<lb/>
looking at there, with the ex-<lb/>
ception of South Carolina, is an<lb/>
updated version of the old<lb/>
Southern Conference made up of<lb/>
either those schools who have<lb/>
dropped out in the case of VPI,<lb/>
West Virginia and Richmc 1d, er<lb/>
those that have at last decided to<lb/>
drop out like ECU, VMI, and<lb/>
William and Mary. In such a<lb/>
conference there will be the old<lb/>
rivalries between ECU and Wil-<lb/>
liam and Mary and Richmond<lb/>
which do already exist in the<lb/>
Southern Conference. A rivalry of<lb/>
sorts exists already between VPI<lb/>
and Richmond and West Virginia<lb/>
and the other Virginia schools. It<lb/>
obviously would be a Virginia<lb/>
based conference if these schools<lb/>
named all joined, which would<lb/>
afford quite a few rivalries. But<lb/>
date the larger crowds. The<lb/>
present stadiums at Richmond,<lb/>
VMI, ECU and WillUunand Mary<lb/>
just aren't big enoug right now.<lb/>
ECU's biggest rivalrit right now<lb/>
are State and Carol77 ?. don't<lb/>
think anyone would dilute that.<lb/>
A rivalry of sorts has developed<lb/>
with Appalachian State over the<lb/>
last few years and it could be a<lb/>
good one if the game between the<lb/>
two could be played in a central<lb/>
location in the state where both<lb/>
ASU and ECU fans could attend.<lb/>
That's about the biggest inner-<lb/>
conference rivalry ECU has now<lb/>
that Richmond has left.<lb/>
Field hockey<lb/>
Anyone interested in playing<lb/>
women's field hockey should<lb/>
meet at 3:30 on the practice field<lb/>
behind Allied Health with coach<lb/>
Laurie Arrants.<lb/>
Women's tennis<lb/>
Anyone interested in playing<lb/>
women's tennis should meet any<lb/>
afternoon at 4XX) p.m. on the<lb/>
Minges tennis oourts with coach<lb/>
Ellen Warren.<lb/>
Women's golf<lb/>
Anyone interested in playing<lb/>
women'sgoii should meet tonight<lb/>
(Thursday) at 7 p.m. in Room 142<lb/>
with Coach Mac McLendon.<lb/>
then again, you have the absence<lb/>
of the larger capacity stadiums<lb/>
that would be able to accommo-<lb/>
SIDELINE CHAT<lb/>
Continued from page 15.<lb/>
Pirates' main failings were in basketball and baseball. Both were<lb/>
expected to do well in oonferenoe competition but each finished fourth. If<lb/>
both had finished second, the Cup would have once again been in<lb/>
Greenville. Football, tying fa second, was also expected to finish first. If<lb/>
each of the maja spats had moved up one notch ECU would have tied<lb/>
William and Mary. The Pirates won firsts in swimming, track, and<lb/>
wrestling.<lb/>
PIRA TES HIGH IN NCAA STA TS<lb/>
East Carolina, with its big 48-0 win over Southern Missisippi last<lb/>
week, has six individuals in the NCAA statistics leaders and six in team<lb/>
catagaies.<lb/>
Eddie Hicks and Willie Hawkins rank 14th and 16th in the individual<lb/>
rushing catagay, averaging 133 and 128 yards per game, respectively.<lb/>
Hicks and place-kicka Pete Co?aty are tied fa eighth in the nation with<lb/>
12 points apiece, Hicks coming on two touchdowns and Conaty's on two<lb/>
field goals and six extra points. Conaty is also ed fa sixth in field goals<lb/>
Punt-returner Gerald Hall seventh in his spe alty with 15.3 avaage.<lb/>
In the team catagaies, the Pirares rank third in rushing and scaing,<lb/>
eighth in total offense, tenth in total defense, eighth in rushing defense,<lb/>
and first in scaing defense.<lb/>
FOOTBALL<lb/>
Continued from page 15.<lb/>
defense again stiffened. East<lb/>
Carolina took over on their 46 and<lb/>
after three plays and a first down<lb/>
at the Southern Miss 44, Weaver<lb/>
caught the Eagle defense nap-<lb/>
ping. After faking up the middle<lb/>
to fullback Vince Kolanko,<lb/>
Weaver faded back to pass. He<lb/>
picked split receiver Terry Gal-<lb/>
laher up 15 yards behind the<lb/>
secondary and hit him fa a 44<lb/>
yard touchdown. After the point<lb/>
after, the scae stood 34-0.<lb/>
On the next series the Pirates<lb/>
had the ball, Jimmy Southerland<lb/>
came in to take over as quarter-<lb/>
back. Starting on the ECU ten,<lb/>
Southerland moved the Pirates up<lb/>
to the 35 in three plays. On third<lb/>
and one, Southerland handed off<lb/>
to Hicks up the middle. After<lb/>
getting through a huge hole made<lb/>
by the line, Hicks was off to the<lb/>
races fa a 65 yard touchdown.<lb/>
When Conaty added the point the<lb/>
Pirates led 41-0.<lb/>
The Bucs got on the board<lb/>
once more in the fourth quarter<lb/>
after reserve defensive end John<lb/>
Maris blocked a Mike Wright<lb/>
punt and recovered on the<lb/>
Southern Miss seven. On third<lb/>
and goal at the seven, Souther-<lb/>
land hooked up with third-string<lb/>
tight end Eric Walker fa the TD.<lb/>
Individually, the Pirates were<lb/>
led by Hicks and Hawkins. Hicks<lb/>
ended up with 133 yards rushing<lb/>
on just eight carries fa a 16-6<lb/>
average per run. Hawkins carried<lb/>
11 times fa 128 yards while<lb/>
Weaver had ten carries fa 55<lb/>
yards.<lb/>
Leading the Pirate defense<lb/>
was Zack Valentine, Harold Ran-<lb/>
dolph. Oliver Felton, Tommy<lb/>
Summer and Mike Brewington.<lb/>
Valentine had 12 tackles, one<lb/>
fumble recovery, and a pass<lb/>
interception. He also caused a<lb/>
fumble, had a quarterback sack<lb/>
and two tackles fa losses.<lb/>
Randolph picked up 11 tackles<lb/>
and a sack of Kenny Alderman,<lb/>
while Felton had eight stops, two<lb/>
being fa losses. Reserve line-<lb/>
backers Summer and Brewington<lb/>
each had eight tackles in less than<lb/>
two quarters of play, one of<lb/>
Brewington's being a quarterback<lb/>
sack.<lb/>
The big win fa the Pirates<lb/>
should give them plenty of<lb/>
momentum going into Saturday<lb/>
night's battle at Carter Stadium<lb/>
against arch-rival State, a team<lb/>
the Bucs have beaten only once.<lb/>
The Wdfpack is 0-2 fa the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
m<lb/>
mtmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057078_0017"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 216 SEPTEMBER 1976<lb/>
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Sale price in effect through October 2, 1976 Aak about Sear Credit Plans<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057078_0018"/><lb/>
18<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 216 SEPTEMBER 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
? ??M<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
Pirates face Winless Wolf pack<lb/>
By BILL K EYES<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Due to East Carolina's 48-0<lb/>
victory over SoutheinMississippi<lb/>
the season opener and N.C.<lb/>
State's successive losses to Fur-<lb/>
man and Wake Forest, many are<lb/>
favoring the Pirates to leave<lb/>
Raleigh Saturday night having<lb/>
successfully avenged their four<lb/>
straight losses to the Woifpack<lb/>
since 1972, including last year's<lb/>
26-3 setback.<lb/>
All 44,000 seats at Carter<lb/>
Stadium as well as the grassy hill<lb/>
at the scoreboard end of the<lb/>
stadium field will be filled as the<lb/>
Pirates and Woifpack square off<lb/>
to do battle. Here is the scouting<lb/>
report for that game, as told to<lb/>
Fountainhead by Wright Ander-<lb/>
son, offensive backfield coach.<lb/>
Offense<lb/>
State, running from their twin<lb/>
veer offense formation, is one of<lb/>
the most outstanding offensive<lb/>
teams around, as they have<lb/>
displayed by rolling up consider-<lb/>
able yardage against both Fur-<lb/>
man and Wake Forest in spite of<lb/>
numerous fumbles.<lb/>
They have outstanding per-<lb/>
sonnel, especially at the skilled<lb/>
positions. Ralph Stringer, who<lb/>
was moved from defensive back<lb/>
to running back last spring, is out<lb/>
for the season due to a shoulder<lb/>
injury. But the State backfield is<lb/>
well-manned by 6-1, 200 pound<lb/>
Ricky Adams and 5-10,190 pound<lb/>
Ted Brown, last year's ACC<lb/>
Rookie of the Year. Reserve<lb/>
running backs Timmy Johnson<lb/>
and Scott Wade will also play.<lb/>
Quarterback Johnny Evans is<lb/>
respected for his ability to read<lb/>
defenses as he executes the triple<lb/>
option, for his strength and ability<lb/>
as a runner, and for his ability to<lb/>
launch aerials to tight end Ricky<lb/>
Knowles, flanker Mike Crabtree<lb/>
and Elijah Marshall, who many<lb/>
consider one of the finest wide<lb/>
receivers in the country. Though<lb/>
unexpected at this point, fresh-<lb/>
man Kevin Scanlon will play if<lb/>
Evans is still bothered by the sore<lb/>
shoulder which kept him from<lb/>
starting the Wake Forest game<lb/>
last week.<lb/>
The offensive line was a big<lb/>
question mark during the pre-sea-<lb/>
son as only Bill Druschell and<lb/>
Mike Fagan returned, but the line<lb/>
has performed adequately in the<lb/>
first two contests.<lb/>
These players are coached by<lb/>
first-year man Bo Rein, at age 31<lb/>
the youngest head coach of a<lb/>
major college football team in the<lb/>
nation. Rein and his staff know<lb/>
the split veer offense as well as<lb/>
anybody in the country. Accor-<lb/>
ding to Wright Anderson, people<lb/>
go to Rein and staff when they<lb/>
want to know anything about the<lb/>
veer.<lb/>
Defense<lb/>
This offense will be up against<lb/>
a Pirate defense which against<lb/>
Southern Mississippi made<lb/>
Blackboard look like a VISTA<lb/>
volunteer. The starting assign-<lb/>
ments are the same: Cary Godette<lb/>
and Zaok Valentine at the ends,<lb/>
Jake Dove and Wayne Poole at<lb/>
the tackles, and Oliver (Brut)<lb/>
Felton at nose guard. Nick<lb/>
Bullock will also play nose guard.<lb/>
The two Harold's - Randolph and<lb/>
Fort - are at linebacker with the<lb/>
deep secondary consisting of<lb/>
Reggie Pinkney and Ernie Madi-<lb/>
son on the corners and Gerald<lb/>
Hall and All-America Jim Bolding<lb/>
at the safeties.<lb/>
JOHNNY EVANS<lb/>
m<lb/>
ZACK VALENTINE<lb/>
A few personnel changes were<lb/>
made in the Woifpack defense<lb/>
following their season-opening<lb/>
loss to Furman. In the line, John<lb/>
Hall replaced returning starter<lb/>
Jeff Easter as the strong side end.<lb/>
Tom Prongay was moved to right<lb/>
tackle and 6-5, 272 pound fresh-<lb/>
man Bubba Green was moved to<lb/>
left tackle. Coach Wright Ander-<lb/>
son calls Green a fantastic athlete<lb/>
whose quickness and speed are<lb/>
amazing for a man his size. The<lb/>
Pirate ooach expects the mam-<lb/>
moth tackle to give the ECU<lb/>
offense some problems during the<lb/>
course of the game.<lb/>
In the secondary, Mike Noll<lb/>
replaced senior Richard Wheeler,<lb/>
and Tommy London has replaced<lb/>
Alan Blaltras at one cornerback.<lb/>
Highly regarded freshman Wood-<lb/>
row Wilson may see reserve<lb/>
action at free safety.<lb/>
This defense, which Anderson<lb/>
termed "very enthusiastic and<lb/>
extremely aggressive will do<lb/>
everything in their power to slow<lb/>
down ECU'S highly productive<lb/>
wishbone offense.<lb/>
Everytime a defensive player<lb/>
changes his alk iment, blocking<lb/>
assignments change for the offen-<lb/>
sive team. The State defense will<lb/>
show several different looks to<lb/>
oonfuse Pirate blocking assign-<lb/>
ments. But basically, they will<lb/>
run from a 5-2 defense which is<lb/>
similar to the Pirate defense on<lb/>
paper.<lb/>
That Woifpack defense will<lb/>
have to play to the best of its<lb/>
M?WHil??!? Mil !?!???<lb/>
ability, plus some, if the Pirate<lb/>
offense is to be stopped. Center<lb/>
Tim Hightower, guards Randy<lb/>
Parrish and Wayne Bolt, and<lb/>
tackles Ricky Bennett and Matt<lb/>
Mulhoiland, along with tight end<lb/>
Clay Burnett will hope to blow<lb/>
holes through the defensive line<lb/>
of N.C. State as they did against<lb/>
Southern Mississippi last week to<lb/>
allow the Pirate backfield ?o<lb/>
operate with the same effective-<lb/>
ness. Mike Weaver, who execu-<lb/>
ted the triple option as well as and<lb/>
maybe better than- any other<lb/>
quarterback in the nation last<lb/>
week will again have fullback<lb/>
Raymond Jones and halfbacks<lb/>
Willie Hawkins and Eddie Hicks<lb/>
working with him. Hawkins and<lb/>
Hicks both rushed for over 100<lb/>
yards last week. Weaver's wide<lb/>
receiver is Terry Gallaher.<lb/>
Specialty teams<lb/>
In a close oontest, the special-<lb/>
ity teams may be the biggest<lb/>
factor in determining victory as<lb/>
they can either gain or prevent<lb/>
good field position. State has an<lb/>
outstanding punter in Johnny<lb/>
Evans. He was ranked fifth in the<lb/>
country last year with a 44.6 yard<lb/>
average. Evans is dangerous from<lb/>
punt formation because he could<lb/>
catch the opposition off guard and<lb/>
run or pass for a first down.<lb/>
Jay Sherill almost always<lb/>
kicks off into the end zone and is a<lb/>
consistent field goal kicker.<lb/>
State's top return men are<lb/>
Woodrow Wilson on punts and<lb/>
Rickey Adams on kickoffs. After<lb/>
two games, Adams is sixth in the<lb/>
nation in kickoff returns, with a 28<lb/>
yard average.<lb/>
At least half of Pete Conaty's<lb/>
kickoffs went into the end zone<lb/>
and all had good hang time. He<lb/>
was six for six on PAT's, and two<lb/>
for two on field goals, both of<lb/>
which were from 25 yards out.<lb/>
Tom Daub punted three times<lb/>
for an average of 40 yards.<lb/>
The Pirates' punt return man<lb/>
is Gerald Hall, who against<lb/>
Southern Miss, returned six for<lb/>
92 yards and a 15.3 yard average<lb/>
which earned him a ranking of<lb/>
seventh in the nation. Willie<lb/>
Hawkins is the middle deep<lb/>
receiver and will handle the<lb/>
kickoff returns.<lb/>
shut off State's running game and<lb/>
oontain quarterback Evans, keep-<lb/>
ing him from scrambling on<lb/>
passing downs. Offensively, the<lb/>
Pirates need to score points. But<lb/>
just as importantly, they need to<lb/>
control the ball. Sustained drives<lb/>
are needed to give the defense<lb/>
adequate rest.<lb/>
Now the pre-game story has<lb/>
been writen, read, and can be<lb/>
thrown away. Just remember that<lb/>
both squads see this game as<lb/>
more than just another football<lb/>
game. Pride and bragging rights<lb/>
are on the line, and you can bet<lb/>
the 44,000-plus people in Carter<lb/>
Stadium will see more than their<lb/>
money's worth when the Wolf-<lb/>
pack and the Pirates tangle.<lb/>
Golf meeting<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
by John Evans<lb/>
'Welcome back to East Carolina University fa another year of fun and<lb/>
excitement with the Intramural Program. Since the spring there have<lb/>
been many changes in the program with the hope of making intramural<lb/>
activities meaningful to more students.<lb/>
NEW PROGRAMS, NEW FACES<lb/>
This year there will be a number of new programs in the intramural<lb/>
scene. Added have been touch football in place of speedball for the<lb/>
women and soccer for the men. Men's and women's track and field have<lb/>
been switched to the fall.<lb/>
A new face in the intramural department will be Rose Mary Adkins,<lb/>
the new assistant Intramural Director. Ms. Adkins will be in charge of<lb/>
the recreational swim program, lifeguards, women's intramurals and the<lb/>
co-recreational program.<lb/>
In addition there are six Graduate Assistants working with<lb/>
Intramural Director Dr. Wayne Edwards to help organize the program.<lb/>
We also hope to make this oolumn a little different this year -<lb/>
bringing the students up to date every Tuesday with what is going on in<lb/>
the program, in addition to reporting the action over in Minges and<lb/>
Memorial on the intramural fields. From time to time there will be<lb/>
features concerning the intramural program on topics which concern the<lb/>
student.<lb/>
GETTING UP-TO DATE<lb/>
Summary<lb/>
New happenings in the office concern the club sports, which will now<lb/>
be under the auspices of the Intramural Office. The office will not only<lb/>
establish laws and rules for the clubs to follow, but it will also supply the<lb/>
dubs with limited funding.<lb/>
The intramural fields by Ficklen Stadium have not been completed<lb/>
yet, but they will be used fa football this year nonetheless. Under an<lb/>
agreement with the contracta, the fields will be used in their present<lb/>
state in the fall fa men'stouch football. In the spring the oontractas will<lb/>
complete the wak at no additional cost. The women's fields on College<lb/>
Hill Drive have not been affected and will remain open fa women's play.<lb/>
Raoquetball courts must now be reserved through the office in<lb/>
MemaiaJ Gym on a day-by-day basis. Those wishing to reserve a court<lb/>
??must cone by in person and sign up with Debbie Moss, the intramural<lb/>
secretary.<lb/>
Sociological and geographical<lb/>
factas contribute to the State-<lb/>
ECU rivalry. But the biggest<lb/>
inoentive fa victay is pride.<lb/>
After State has wen the last four<lb/>
games against ECU, they do not<lb/>
want to end that string now, and<lb/>
fa the same reason, the Pirates<lb/>
do not want to come back to<lb/>
Greenville without the victay<lb/>
unda their belts.<lb/>
After losing to Furman of the<lb/>
Southern Conference and then to<lb/>
Wake Faest fa the second year<lb/>
in a row, State is extremely<lb/>
embarrassed; too embarrassed,<lb/>
they think, to lose their third<lb/>
game of the season, especially to<lb/>
ECU. But the Pirates see it this<lb/>
way: If Furman beat em, we<lb/>
oughta beat em.<lb/>
The ECU coaching staff hopes<lb/>
the Pirate defensive front can<lb/>
FALL SIGN-UPS CLOSING SOON<lb/>
Final registration dates fa several fall spats are fast approaching.<lb/>
Asa matter of fact thisaftanoon will be the last day to sign up fa men's<lb/>
and women's touch football and men'steam tennis.<lb/>
In the next week registration fa Haseshoe singles and doubles,<lb/>
one-on-one basketball and men's and women's track and field will take<lb/>
place through Sept. 27. Women's tennis singles registration dates are<lb/>
through Sept. 23, and women's track and field from Sept. 20-24.<lb/>
Play will begin in team tennis Monday, Sept. 20, and men's and<lb/>
women's touch football will begin on Sept. 21.<lb/>
OFFICIALS NEEDED<lb/>
Officials are needed to help officiate several of the intramural events<lb/>
during the year. Offiuals fa touch football have already been chosen but<lb/>
officials fa volleyball are still needed. To be eligible one must attend the<lb/>
official's clinic fa volleyball, to be held on Oct. 4 in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Graduate Assistant Sonny Gundlacj is in charge of the program.<lb/>
Well that's about it fa now We'll be back Tuesday where we will<lb/>
appear fa the rest of the year. Hope this year is a good one fa you and<lb/>
an active one in intramurals.<lb/>
J<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
???" &amp; i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057078_0019"/><lb/>
K<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 216 SEPTEMBER 1976<lb/>
19<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
wmn<lb/>
Booters begin season in<lb/>
Campbell Tournament<lb/>
ByANNEHOGGE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Coach Curtis Frye sees his<lb/>
team as finishing "no worse than<lb/>
third place, possible in first" in<lb/>
Southern Conference soccer<lb/>
standings. It is with this deter-<lb/>
mination that East Carolina soc-<lb/>
cer opens its 13th season, hoping<lb/>
to improve its 3-6-2 record of last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Frye, a 1974 graduate of ECU,<lb/>
beginshisthirdyearasooach, the<lb/>
fifth person to hold the position.<lb/>
Due to the high turnover of<lb/>
coaches, he is in the process of<lb/>
rebuilding his team, but still<lb/>
predicts "a winning season He<lb/>
coaches the European style of<lb/>
soccer but feels a combination of<lb/>
both European and South Ameri-<lb/>
can styles is ideal.<lb/>
This year's team is a mixture<lb/>
of old and new talent. Offense<lb/>
and defense are built around two<lb/>
returning seniors, Pete Angus<lb/>
and Tom Long. Coach Frye claims<lb/>
that Angus, last season's leading<lb/>
scorer, is "the best ever to play<lb/>
soccer at ECU A versatile<lb/>
halfback who has been playing<lb/>
the game since the 8th grade, his<lb/>
the nucleus of the team's offense<lb/>
and only injury will stand in his<lb/>
way of having an outstanding<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Fullback Tom Long, Angus'<lb/>
counterpart on defense, has only<lb/>
five years' experience but played<lb/>
well enough last year to become<lb/>
an All-South honorable mention<lb/>
and chosen for the All-Southern<lb/>
Conference's second team.<lb/>
Two sophomores, forward Jeff<lb/>
Karpovich and fullback Jeff Klu-<lb/>
ger, are expected to play well at<lb/>
SOCCER SCHEDULE<lb/>
Sept. 16-1?Campbell College Tournament at Bute's Creek, N.C.<lb/>
Sept. 21atN.C. State 4 OO<lb/>
Sept. 24-25Old Dominion Tournament 4.00 &amp; 6XX) at Norfolk, Va.<lb/>
Sept. 30at Duke 4.00<lb/>
Oct. 2Appalachian St. 12.00<lb/>
Oct. 5North Carolina 4.00<lb/>
Oct. 9at Furman 2.00<lb/>
Oct. 11at Davidson 4.00<lb/>
Oct. 14Pembroke St. 3.00<lb/>
Oct. 16at The Citadel 00<lb/>
Oct. 23V.M.I. 9:30<lb/>
Oct. 27UNC-W 3:30<lb/>
Oct 30William and Mary 11.00<lb/>
ROSTER<lb/>
PLAYERPOSITIONHOMETOWNCLASS<lb/>
Pete AngusHalfbackDenville, N.J.Senior<lb/>
Soott BalasFullbackChatham, N.J.Senior<lb/>
Wayne BarrowGoalieRaleigh, N.C.Junior<lb/>
MikeFetcokoForwardOrange, N.J.Senior<lb/>
Charlie HardyFullbackKinston, N.C.Junior<lb/>
Jay HighForwardChapel Hill, N.C Senior<lb/>
John JonesHalfbackWaocamaw, N.C. Freshman<lb/>
Jeff KarpovichForwardRamsey, N.J.Sophomore<lb/>
John KeenerGoalieRaleigh, N.C.Sophomore<lb/>
Jeff KlugerFullbackEngield, N.C.Sophomore<lb/>
Tom LongFullbackHampton, Va.Senior<lb/>
Phil MartinWingbackGreensboro, N. C. Freshman<lb/>
Paul SearsHalfbackAome-Deloo,N.C. Freshman<lb/>
Dave WasolekFullbackChambersb Pa.Junior .<lb/>
Curt WinbornWingbackWilson, N.C.Sophomore<lb/>
Promising newcomers-Tim Harrison, Halfback; Billy Hamme, Forward;<lb/>
Ken Askley, Halfback; Mike Bullock, Goalie; Mike Darnell, Fullback;<lb/>
Kehinda Tokuta, Forward.<lb/>
Head Coach-Curtis Frye.<lb/>
Introducing Th?<lb/>
Greenville Dating Service<lb/>
For more Information and descriptive question-<lb/>
naire send $1.00, name and address to:<lb/>
Greenville Dating Service<lb/>
P.O. Box 2541<lb/>
Greenville. N.C. 27834<lb/>
All correspondence is strictly confidential<lb/>
"Give us a chance to help you"<lb/>
m<lb/>
their positions. Soot Balas, a<lb/>
senior fullback, is a mobile player<lb/>
with nine years experience. He is<lb/>
smart on the field and in the<lb/>
classroom, which Frye feels is a<lb/>
winning combination.<lb/>
Freshman Phil Martin is the<lb/>
only team member who uses a<lb/>
foreign touch and, at his wing<lb/>
position, is skillful and has good<lb/>
speed and oontrol.<lb/>
The starting goalie has not yet<lb/>
been chosen, but the job will go to<lb/>
either Wayne Barrow or John<lb/>
Keener. Keener was last year's<lb/>
starter but Barrow has shown<lb/>
much improvement during<lb/>
practice. Frye has confidenoe in<lb/>
whoever he selectd.<lb/>
talents made him an All-South<lb/>
pick, the first ECU player to ever<lb/>
do so, along with being selected<lb/>
All-Southern Conference. He is<lb/>
A tough schedule is in store<lb/>
for the Pirate booters as they face<lb/>
many regionally and nationally<lb/>
ranked teams. Appalachian and<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington, who has lost<lb/>
only three matches in two years,<lb/>
are strong opponents. William<lb/>
and Mary is termed by Frye as<lb/>
"an outstanding team<lb/>
ECU opens its season today in<lb/>
the Campbell College Invitational<lb/>
Tournament, with Campbell host-<lb/>
ing Florida Tech, William and<lb/>
Mary and ECU. Frye predicts a<lb/>
first round victory against Camp-<lb/>
bell.<lb/>
The success of Pirate soccer<lb/>
depends on the players and<lb/>
coach, but also on the students. A<lb/>
lack of student support can end<lb/>
the soocer program. The matches<lb/>
are free and are played at the<lb/>
Minges soccer field when at<lb/>
home. Coach Frye urges student<lb/>
support and participation in the<lb/>
soocer program.<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
Antique Show &amp; Plea Mkt.<lb/>
Greenville Collectgrs Club's 5th<lb/>
Annual - Sun Sept. 19,12-6 p.m.<lb/>
at Antiek Curiosa, 4 112 miles E.<lb/>
towards Grimesland. Info call<lb/>
752-3456.<lb/>
Can you help a foreigner with<lb/>
grammar and conversation? Call<lb/>
after 6 pm 752-3176.<lb/>
For Sale<lb/>
2.5 cu. ft. refrigerator $50. 4.5 cu.<lb/>
ft. refrigerator $120. Call 758-<lb/>
7098<lb/>
FOUND-LadiesTimex Electric<lb/>
Watch found in Allied Health<lb/>
Parking lot-Call 752-9641.<lb/>
Male Help Wanted<lb/>
Short-order cook, must be 18<lb/>
years old, and available to work<lb/>
some weekends, apply in person.<lb/>
Sam&amp; Dave's Snack bar. (located<lb/>
in Darwin Water's Service Sta-<lb/>
tion.)<lb/>
For Sale<lb/>
1 blue rug, 12" x 12 $10. Call<lb/>
752-4013.<lb/>
Wanted: Keyboard player for<lb/>
weekend band - top 40 and<lb/>
pop-country - Bookings through<lb/>
January - Days call 758-3378,<lb/>
nights call 752-6566.<lb/>
House Fa Sale<lb/>
9 rooms; Wall to wall carpet in<lb/>
Living-room and dining room;<lb/>
Drapes; new inlaid in kitchen and<lb/>
den; spacious back yard with<lb/>
shrubbery. For further informa-<lb/>
tion, call Hooker &amp; Buchanan -<lb/>
752-6186.<lb/>
Room in attractive Greenville<lb/>
suburb for rent to young lady.<lb/>
Full house privileges. $79month.<lb/>
Call 756-0698 or write P.O. Box<lb/>
6065.<lb/>
'75 Corvette, low mileage, white,<lb/>
all accessories. 758-8883 (bus.)<lb/>
756-5465 (home).<lb/>
Lost Instamatic 110 Camera at<lb/>
Game, Saturday. Reward offered<lb/>
Need the pictures taken. Phone<lb/>
756-6376.<lb/>
dp this coupon!<lb/>
And get three games for only $1.25.<lb/>
Bring three friends along. Well let<lb/>
them in on the deal, too.<lb/>
WASHINGTON HWY<lb/>
GREENVILI E, N.C<lb/>
Expires Oct. 31, 1976<lb/>
ATTENTION ALL ECU STUDENTS<lb/>
AFTER THE GAME DROP BY<lb/>
CHARLIE GOODNIGHTS<lb/>
861 WEST MORGAN ST RALEIGH 832- 7021<lb/>
Near State Campus off Hillsborough Street<lb/>
FRIandSAT FEATURING<lb/>
EPIC RECORDING ARTISTS<lb/>
MOTHER'S FINEST<lb/>
ONE OF THE HOTTEST ACTS<lb/>
IN THE SOUTHEAST<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057078_0020"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 52, NO. 216 SEPTEMBER 1976<lb/>
THE FIRST REAL<lb/>
STEREO SALE<lb/>
IT'S USUALLY JUNK THAT YOU GET "GOOD BUYS ON.<lb/>
YOU DON'T SEE FERRARIS ON SALE THAT OFTEN BUT<lb/>
NANCY, FRANK, STEVE, BUZ, AND SOUNDS IMPRESSIVE<lb/>
WANT YOU IN THEIR STORE, SO THEY'VE PUT THE<lb/>
"GOOD STUFF" ON SALE-A REAL SALE TO WELCOME<lb/>
YOU BACK TO ECU<lb/>
SPEAKERSTURNTABLESi<lb/>
RegSaleRegSale<lb/>
Used Bose 301 96.00ea7500eaDemo Dual 1226169.5010900<lb/>
Used Interaudio 3000 249.80pr19900prDemo Dual 1228199.5013900<lb/>
Used Interaudio 4000 397.80pr20900prUsed Dual 1218189.509900<lb/>
Used E SS AMT 5 378.00pr134??prDemo Dual 601355.0027000<lb/>
Used E SS AMT 1 600.00pr39900prNew Garrard 440M114.857900<lb/>
Used JBC L-26 336.00pr27600prNew Garrard 770M159.959900<lb/>
Demo JBC L-65 924.00pr74900prNew Garrard 990M259.9519900<lb/>
Demo Infinity 3000 216.00ea15900eaNew Sony PS-1100100008900<lb/>
Demo Infinity 1001A 155.00ea13200eaNew Sony PS-55201900013900<lb/>
Demo Avid 102 65.00ea 5400ea<lb/>
Demo Avid 103 139.00ea 12400ea<lb/>
RECEIVER - AMPLIFIERS<lb/>
Reg Sale<lb/>
TAPE DECKS<lb/>
New Sony 7015 220.00<lb/>
New Sony 5800 500.00<lb/>
New Sony 6800 600.00<lb/>
Demo Sherwood S9400 300.00<lb/>
Demo Yamaha CA-400 270.00<lb/>
Demo Sony TA-3650 300.00<lb/>
19500<lb/>
44900<lb/>
53900<lb/>
24800<lb/>
21000<lb/>
2 7 300<lb/>
Reg<lb/>
Demo Teac A 170 239.50<lb/>
Demo Teac A 360S 389.50<lb/>
Demo Teac A 2300SD 739.50<lb/>
Demo Yamaha TC 800GL 390.00<lb/>
Used Sony TC-131SD 270.00<lb/>
Demo Concord CD 10000 379.50<lb/>
New Sankyo STD-1410 199.00<lb/>
Demo Philys'a GA427 100.00<lb/>
Demo Philys's GA209 300.00<lb/>
Demo Yamaha YD YP-701 220.00<lb/>
SOUNDS<lb/>
IMPRESSIVE<lb/>
409 Evans Street on the Mall 919752-9100<lb/>
Charlotte-Green ville-Knoxville<lb/>
<pb facs="00057078_0021"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>