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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057083_0001"/>
THIS ISSUE -<lb/>
12 PA GES<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
Fcuntainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over 50 years<lb/>
CIRCULA TION -<lb/>
8,500<lb/>
VOL. 52, NO. 7<lb/>
5 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
IWWI<lb/>
mamm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
Price re-elected SGA Speaker<lb/>
By DAVID NASH<lb/>
SGA Correspondent<lb/>
Rickv Price was unanimously<lb/>
elected to his second term as<lb/>
Speaker of the Legislature in the<lb/>
first meeting of the Student<lb/>
Government Legislature Monday<lb/>
:K Y PRICE<lb/>
evening.<lb/>
Price, running unopposed,<lb/>
was elected after minimal debate.<lb/>
Duties of the speaker include<lb/>
serving on various SGA commit-<lb/>
tees, making appointments to<lb/>
oommittees, and presiding over<lb/>
the legislature during session.<lb/>
The speaker also has authority to<lb/>
call emergency legislative meet-<lb/>
ings.<lb/>
Tommy Thomason, SGA<lb/>
Treasurer, gave the present bud-<lb/>
get.<lb/>
Aocording to the budget, the<lb/>
SGA has $17,744.43 in checking,<lb/>
$134,204.73 in savings, and<lb/>
$149,751.81 in appropriations,<lb/>
leaving a sub-total of $2,179.35.<lb/>
Additional revenue is expect-<lb/>
ed to be $161,500.00. This figure<lb/>
does not include revenue from<lb/>
FCUNTAINHEAD a the ECU<lb/>
Playhouse.<lb/>
Thomason urged the legis-<lb/>
lature to budget the money<lb/>
carefully, and beware of large<lb/>
appropriations at the beginning of<lb/>
the year.<lb/>
One bill, the Appropriation to<lb/>
the League of Scholars, passed<lb/>
unanimously after suspension of<lb/>
the rules. The bill grants the<lb/>
League of Scholars $62.85 to print<lb/>
the alma mater of ECU on<lb/>
wallet-sized cards, to be distri-<lb/>
buted to students at home games.<lb/>
Other bills included Appro-<lb/>
priation to the School of Music<lb/>
and Appropriation to the ECU<lb/>
Ceramics School of Art, both<lb/>
passed to the Appropriations<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
Committee appointments will<lb/>
be made the week of Oct. 4 to the<lb/>
following. Rules and Judiciary<lb/>
Committee, Appropriations Con<lb/>
mittee, Screenings and Appoint-<lb/>
ments Committee and the Stu-<lb/>
dent Welfare Committee.<lb/>
Speaker Price also announced<lb/>
an orientation session Monday,<lb/>
Oct. 11 at 400. This is to provide<lb/>
new legislators with the rules of<lb/>
parliamentary procedure and in-<lb/>
struct them in legislative proce-<lb/>
dures.<lb/>
SGA VICE PRESIDENT GREG PINGSTON addresses the first assembly<lb/>
of the new Legislature.<lb/>
Administration reshuffles for accessibility<lb/>
BvDAVID NASH<lb/>
SGA Correspondent<lb/>
Recently proposed changes in<lb/>
the administration 'line-up' of<lb/>
ECU were necessitated by the<lb/>
complexity of reaching proper<lb/>
administrative personnel, ac-<lb/>
cording to Chancel la Leo Jen-<lb/>
kins.<lb/>
"The line of oommand went<lb/>
through too many channels be-<lb/>
fore, said Jenkins.<lb/>
According to the proposed<lb/>
plan, which must still be passed<lb/>
by the Board, Edwin W. Monroe<lb/>
will move to Vice-Chancel lor of<lb/>
Health Affairs; Provost John M.<lb/>
Howell will move to Vice-<lb/>
Chancellor Academic Affairs, and<lb/>
Robert L. Holt will become Vice-<lb/>
Chancellor for Administration<lb/>
and Planning.<lb/>
Jenkins added, however, that<lb/>
faculty members are always wel-<lb/>
come to talk directly to him about<lb/>
any problems they may encount-<lb/>
er. This point is made each year<lb/>
at the faculty meeting held in<lb/>
early September.<lb/>
Jenkins also discussed how<lb/>
his successor will be picked when<lb/>
he decides to retire a resign,<lb/>
whether in the near future or not.<lb/>
Jenkins, ECU Chancellor for<lb/>
16 years, is the Senior Chancellor<lb/>
in the state. A surprising aspect<lb/>
of the job of Chancellor is that he<lb/>
is not on tenure, as many<lb/>
professors and department chair-<lb/>
men are.<lb/>
"I have my job mrough the<lb/>
pleasure of the UNC Board of<lb/>
Trustees said Jenkins. In<lb/>
theory, Jenkins could be, at any<lb/>
time, removed from his office fa<lb/>
any number of reasons, should<lb/>
the Board choose.<lb/>
In choosing Jenkins' succes-<lb/>
sa, whether he ret ires a resigns,<lb/>
(all state employees must retire at<lb/>
age 65), the UNC Board of<lb/>
Trustees will set up a oommittee<lb/>
consisting of students, faculty,<lb/>
alumni and its own membership.<lb/>
This committee will advertise<lb/>
nationally and write requests to<lb/>
various universities in the country<lb/>
fa suggestions on candidates.<lb/>
The committee usually re-<lb/>
ceives 300-400 applications fa<lb/>
one position. These people will, in<lb/>
turn, be screened and two<lb/>
applicants selected by the com-<lb/>
Funeral for Dr. Pignani held Saturday<lb/>
Dept. head dies of heart attack<lb/>
By CINDY BROOME<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Dr. Tullio J. Pignani, chair-<lb/>
man of the department of mathe-<lb/>
matics, died of a heart attack<lb/>
Thursday.<lb/>
Dr. Pignani suffered an attack<lb/>
Wednesday night, and one Thurs-<lb/>
day which was fatal.<lb/>
Dr. Pignani was chairman ol<lb/>
the math department since 1964.<lb/>
He received a bachela's degree<lb/>
at Indiana State College in 1948,<lb/>
mMmmmmmmmmmtrnm<lb/>
master's degree at Bucknell<lb/>
University in 1949, and doctaate<lb/>
degree at UNC in 1955. He began<lb/>
teaching at Loyola University in<lb/>
1954.<lb/>
Dr. Pignani specialized in<lb/>
adinary differential equatiois<lb/>
and also waked with oelestial<lb/>
mechanics.<lb/>
In the early 1960s he was a<lb/>
member of a four-man research<lb/>
team waking fa Natiaial Aero-<lb/>
nautics and Space Administation<lb/>
at Marshall Spaceflight Center in<lb/>
mmmmmmm<lb/>
Alabama where he was aedited<lb/>
with the idea of "patched conic"<lb/>
calculations. This enabled a com-<lb/>
puter aboard the Apoiio space-<lb/>
aaft to plot the course which<lb/>
carried man from Earth to the<lb/>
Moon.<lb/>
Dr. Katye Sowell, mathema-<lb/>
tics professa, said, "I think<lb/>
certainly nat the standards of<lb/>
perfamance on the part of the<lb/>
students have certainly inaeased<lb/>
under his leadership. He will<lb/>
certainly be missed<lb/>
Dr. Sallie E. Pence, famer<lb/>
mathematicsprotessa, said, "He<lb/>
was a man of the utmost integrity.<lb/>
I think that was one of his<lb/>
outstanding characteristics. You<lb/>
could absolutely depend on him<lb/>
A rosary was said Friday night<lb/>
at 7:30 at the Wilkerson Funeral<lb/>
Home. The funeral was held<lb/>
Saturday at 11:00 at St. Peter's<lb/>
Catholic Church.<lb/>
Surviving are Mrs. Hattie M.<lb/>
Pignani of the home and one<lb/>
daughter, Babetta Pignani.<lb/>
mittee fa recommendation to<lb/>
President William Friday. He will<lb/>
select one to present to the Board<lb/>
of Governas fa the position.<lb/>
Having waked in a previous<lb/>
administrative capacity at the<lb/>
particular university will have no<lb/>
bearing on the choice fa Chan-<lb/>
cella.<lb/>
Jenkins has seen ECU grow<lb/>
over the past years from a small<lb/>
teacher's college to a university<lb/>
which includes curriculum in arts,<lb/>
business and education.<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
DR. TULLIO J. PIGNANI<lb/>
<pb facs="00057083_0002"/><lb/>
2<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 75 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
N<lb/>
news<lb/>
FLAS<lb/>
Volunteers<lb/>
ECU Student Volunteer Asso-<lb/>
ciation will meet W�3d Oct. 6, at<lb/>
8 p.m. in the Mendenhall Multi-<lb/>
purpose room. Anyone wanting to<lb/>
do any type of volunteer work is<lb/>
encouraged to attend. Faculty<lb/>
and graduate students are also<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
Rho Epsilon<lb/>
Tuesday Oct. 5, a meeting will<lb/>
be held in Mendenhall Rm. 224<lb/>
members of Rho Epsilon ECU'S<lb/>
professional Real Estate frater-<lb/>
nity. All members should bring<lb/>
$6.50 for the symposium banquet<lb/>
dinner.<lb/>
Honor Society<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi, national<lb/>
honor society, will hold its regular<lb/>
meeting Oct. 7 in Rm. 221,<lb/>
Mendenhall at 7 p.m. All mem-<lb/>
bers are urged to attend and<lb/>
bring $2.00 for fall quarter dues if<lb/>
it has not been paid. The active<lb/>
roll for fall quarter will be made<lb/>
up at this meeting.<lb/>
Veterans<lb/>
The Vet's dubwill meet Wed.<lb/>
night, 7:30 p.m. over Wright<lb/>
Auditorium in the Veteran's club<lb/>
offioe. All veterans are invited to<lb/>
come.<lb/>
Tennis Team<lb/>
Attention ECU tennis team.<lb/>
For those who missed the first<lb/>
meeting, we will meet Thurs<lb/>
Oct. 7 in Rm. 142, Minges.<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
The Coffeehouse Committee<lb/>
is looking for an industrious and<lb/>
creative stuent who would like to<lb/>
maorame, paint, tie die, batik, etc<lb/>
a backdrop for the stage. If you<lb/>
can come up with an interesting<lb/>
idea and approximate cost, drop<lb/>
this information by the Student<lb/>
Union office with your name and<lb/>
local phone number.<lb/>
Science Ed<lb/>
Mr. Owen Kingsbury, glass-<lb/>
blower, will highlight our next<lb/>
Science Education Club meeting,<lb/>
he will demonstrate his expertise<lb/>
while discussing the many as-<lb/>
pects of his profession. At the end<lb/>
of the demonstration, a drawing<lb/>
for his works will be held.<lb/>
We will alsodiscussa possible<lb/>
field trip and the upcoming state<lb/>
science convention. Wed Oct. 6,<lb/>
4,00 p.m. in Flanagan, rm. 303.<lb/>
Come and bring a friend.<lb/>
miiniiw mnMnnmm wm<lb/>
DSA<lb/>
Wed. Oct. 6, Disabled Student<lb/>
Association will hold its next<lb/>
meeting at 7:30 p.m. in room 221<lb/>
Mendenhall. Any and all student<lb/>
staff and faculty members are<lb/>
cordially invited.<lb/>
Rape Forum<lb/>
There will be a Rape Forum<lb/>
held in the lobby of White Hall on<lb/>
October 12 at 7O0 p.m. A variety<lb/>
of speakers will be present to give<lb/>
information about what to do if<lb/>
you are raped, what to expect at<lb/>
the hospital, and what to expect<lb/>
from the authorities. EVERYONE<lb/>
IS INVITED!<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
The East Carolina Delegation<lb/>
of the North Carolina Student<lb/>
Legislature (NCSL) has big plans<lb/>
for the upcoming school year. Be<lb/>
a part of all the action while<lb/>
shaping a part of North Carolina's<lb/>
future.<lb/>
The delegation invites all<lb/>
those interested in the legislature<lb/>
process and how it can work fa<lb/>
you to stop by room 247 Menden-<lb/>
hall 730 p.m. Monday night<lb/>
October the 11th. Its an opportun-<lb/>
ity you'll never forget.<lb/>
Computer Van<lb/>
The computer van from NCSU<lb/>
will visit ECU Tues Oct. 5. The<lb/>
van will park in front of the old<lb/>
CU, between Wright Annex and<lb/>
Rawl. The van will be open from 9<lb/>
a.m5 p.m. This van has several<lb/>
working computers, plus displays<lb/>
including computer technology.<lb/>
Cancelled<lb/>
Due to the Fall oonference, IC<lb/>
will not meet this Sunday night.<lb/>
We will, however, meet next<lb/>
Sunday night at the Afro-Ameri-<lb/>
can Cultural Center.<lb/>
Phi Sigma<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi National Honor<lb/>
Fraternity will hold its regular<lb/>
monthly business meeting Wed<lb/>
Oct. 6, in Rm. 205 Austin at 6<lb/>
p.m. All brothers are urged to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Auditions<lb/>
Coffee house auditions for<lb/>
local talent will be held Oct. 15<lb/>
and 16. Those who wish to<lb/>
perform should leave their name<lb/>
and local phone number as well as<lb/>
a short description of their act<lb/>
with Ms. Conway, the Student<lb/>
Union secretary, no later than<lb/>
Oct. 12.<lb/>
�m vmtmu i�iMii i �<lb/>
Inter-Varsity Law Society Bill Hiatt<lb/>
Do not forget that I.V. will<lb/>
meet this Sunday night instead of<lb/>
this Wednesday night.<lb/>
SNEA<lb/>
The SNEA (Student National<lb/>
Education Association)- organiza-<lb/>
tional meeting will be held Wed<lb/>
Oct. 6, at 7:00 p.m. in room 244,<lb/>
Mendenhall. Dues of $8.00inc.<lb/>
local, state, and national) may be<lb/>
paid at this time.<lb/>
Free Flick<lb/>
At 8:00 p.m. Wed. October 6,<lb/>
the Student Union Film Commit-<lb/>
tee presents "The Autobiography<lb/>
of Miss Jane Pittman" in M.S.C.<lb/>
Theatre. Come to the Black Arts<lb/>
Show rec eption at 7;00 p.m. and<lb/>
see a free movie at 8XX) p.m<lb/>
Testing<lb/>
The Allied Health Professions<lb/>
Admission Test will be offered at<lb/>
East Carolina University on Sat-<lb/>
urday, Nov. 20,1976. Application<lb/>
blanks are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to The Psychological Cor-<lb/>
poration, P.O. Box 3540, Grand<lb/>
Central Station, New York, New<lb/>
York 10017 to arrive by October<lb/>
25, 1976. Applications may be<lb/>
obtained from the Testing Center,<lb/>
Rooms 105-106, Speight Building,<lb/>
East Carolina University.<lb/>
Sign-Up<lb/>
HAVE YOU SIGNED UP TO<lb/>
GOT TO EITHER NEW YORK<lb/>
OR WASHINGTON OVER THE<lb/>
THANKSGIVING BREAK? Time<lb/>
is running out on this opportunity<lb/>
of a lifetime. Register by Oct. 15<lb/>
for the trips. New York for only<lb/>
$69 or Washington for only $59.<lb/>
SIGN UP TODAY!<lb/>
APG<lb/>
Alpha Phi Gamma will<lb/>
hold a short meeting Tuesday,<lb/>
Oct. 5 at 7XX) in the BUC-<lb/>
CANEER office. All members<lb/>
are urged to attend.<lb/>
Seminars<lb/>
The oomputer center announ-<lb/>
ces the resumption of its mini-<lb/>
seminar series. The first seminar<lb/>
will be given in three portions on<lb/>
Oct. 4, 6 and 8; and will discuss<lb/>
using the SPSS statistical pack-<lb/>
age. All mini-seminars will be<lb/>
given between 2.00 p.m. and 3XX)<lb/>
p.m. in Austin-201. All interested<lb/>
persons are welcome to attend.<lb/>
The ECU Law Society will<lb/>
meet Tues Oct. 5 at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
Brewster B-102. The meeting will<lb/>
include making plans for Happy<lb/>
House and the picnic. Members<lb/>
should bring $5 dues.<lb/>
Come out and meet the<lb/>
G.O.P. candidate for Lt. Governor<lb/>
-Bill Hiatt at Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center - 300 p.m. Thursday<lb/>
October 7, 1976. The public is<lb/>
cordially invited.<lb/>
Epsilon Delta Table Tennis<lb/>
Alpha Epsilon Delta, honorary<lb/>
pre-medical fraternity, will meet<lb/>
at 7:30 p.m. in Flanagan Chemis-<lb/>
try 201. A short film will be<lb/>
shown. All pre-meddent stu-<lb/>
dents and any interested persons<lb/>
are invited to attend.<lb/>
Buccaneer<lb/>
All campus organizations de-<lb/>
siring to be covered in the 1977<lb/>
BUCCANEER should pick up an<lb/>
organization information sheet in<lb/>
the BUC offioe between 1-4 p.m.<lb/>
this week if they have not already<lb/>
received one through campus<lb/>
mail. For further information, call<lb/>
757-6501 during the above hours.<lb/>
If you enjoy playing table<lb/>
tennis stop by the Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center Table Tennis<lb/>
Roomstonightat8.O0p.m when<lb/>
the ECU Table Tennis Club will<lb/>
hold its first meeting fa fall<lb/>
quarter. All levels of ability are<lb/>
invited to participate.<lb/>
WECU News<lb/>
News programs are now being<lb/>
broadcast over WECU RADIO at<lb/>
10:40, 3:40, and 6:40 Monday-Fri-<lb/>
day. If you are interested in<lb/>
working with the newscasts (re-<lb/>
porting, announcing, re-writing,<lb/>
or just helping out), stop by<lb/>
WECU and sign up.<lb/>
Psyc Briefing ACT<lb/>
Psychology students-help is<lb/>
here The Winter quarter Psy-<lb/>
chology Dept. and Psi Chi brief-<lb/>
ing will be held at 7:30 p.m. on<lb/>
Thurs Oct. 7 in Rm. 129,<lb/>
Speight. MEET THE PRO-<lb/>
FESSORS: Hear courses de-<lb/>
scribed, ask questions, decide on<lb/>
your Winter quarter. Schedule for<lb/>
Psychology. Hear it all Thurs.<lb/>
evening. Psi Chi members will be<lb/>
present to provide the inside<lb/>
scoop. See you there!<lb/>
ILLUMINA<lb/>
Currently displayed in extra-<lb/>
vangantly oomfortable Menden-<lb/>
hall Gallery is this year's Black<lb/>
Arts Exhibition. The show is<lb/>
presented by ILLUMINA, the<lb/>
Student Union Art Exhibition<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
On Wednesday Oct. 6, at 7.00<lb/>
p.m. a reception for the show will<lb/>
enable human beings to eat, see<lb/>
and celebrate together. Come!<lb/>
FG<lb/>
Want to know more about the<lb/>
Christ'an life? Want to have some<lb/>
fellowship and fun? Then why not<lb/>
join us-the Forever Generation-<lb/>
this Friday night? Our meetings<lb/>
include a study or challenge from<lb/>
the Bible, singing, refreshments<lb/>
and warm fellowship.<lb/>
This week we will be meeting<lb/>
in the Biology Auditorium (Bio-<lb/>
logy 103) at 7;30 p.m. Friday. We<lb/>
sincerely invite and encourage<lb/>
you to join us. Hope to see you<lb/>
there!<lb/>
� � i ntii HUMm<lb/>
The ACT Assessment will be<lb/>
offered at East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity on Sat Nov. 20, 1976.<lb/>
Application blanks are to be<lb/>
oompleted and mailed to ACT,<lb/>
P.O. Box 414, Iowa City, Iowa<lb/>
52240 to arrive by Oct. 25, 1976.<lb/>
Applications may be obtained<lb/>
from the Testing Center, Rooms,<lb/>
105-106, Speight Building, East<lb/>
Carolina University.<lb/>
Model UN<lb/>
The Model United Nations<lb/>
club will meet Thurs Oct. 7 at 7<lb/>
p.m. in Brewster C-103. The<lb/>
meeting is open to all interested<lb/>
in the United Nations, Foreign<lb/>
Diplomacy and International Re-<lb/>
lations.<lb/>
Call David Mayo at 758-7578<lb/>
for more information concerning<lb/>
the Model U.N.<lb/>
Chess Club<lb/>
The ECU Chess Club will hold<lb/>
its regular meeting tonight at 7 30<lb/>
p.m. in the Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Coffeehouse. Competition<lb/>
is at all levels and participation is<lb/>
increasing weekly, so drop by and<lb/>
join in.<lb/>
Belta Epsilon<lb/>
Omicron Delta Epsilon will<lb/>
hold its first meeting Thurs. Oct.<lb/>
7, 1976. Room-Rawl 202 at 4:00.<lb/>
Election of officers and the<lb/>
program for the year will be<lb/>
decided at this meeting. All<lb/>
members are urged to attend.<lb/>
MM<lb/>
<pb facs="00057083_0003"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 75 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
3<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
�p�mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Election results<lb/>
Class officers<lb/>
CLASSOFFICERSVOl<lb/>
Freshman presidentDavid Whitson Bill Szostak267 266<lb/>
Fresh. Vice-presidentDonna Hurse David Goodwin350 123<lb/>
Soph, president Soph, vice-pres. Junior president Junior vice-pres.Valerie Chaff in Lynn Hewett Larry Zaky Craig Hales Randy Bailey Clint Cooke429 264 17t 294 219 85<lb/>
Senior presidentLynn Schubert Ron Morrison197 95<lb/>
Wanda Gunter48<lb/>
Senior vice-pres.Kathy Myslinski252<lb/>
Referendums<lb/>
REFERENDUM<lb/>
DECISIONS VOTES FOR<lb/>
On the Student Union<lb/>
president being elected<lb/>
instead of selected as in<lb/>
the past. 1186<lb/>
On the Reserve Funds<lb/>
going to Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium expansion. 1662<lb/>
On the SGA petitioning<lb/>
the N.C. Dept. of<lb/>
Transportation for a<lb/>
pedestrian overpass at<lb/>
the corner of 10th Street<lb/>
and College Hill Drive. 1826<lb/>
On the adoption of the<lb/>
proposed new SGA<lb/>
Constitution 876<lb/>
Day legislators<lb/>
AGAINST<lb/>
913<lb/>
488<lb/>
349<lb/>
1167<lb/>
Teresa Whisenant<lb/>
Ricky Price<lb/>
Jenni Harrison<lb/>
Kirk Edgerton<lb/>
Tommy Joe Payne<lb/>
Kattie Ray<lb/>
Karen Harloe<lb/>
Randy Barley<lb/>
Lynn Hewett<lb/>
Sam Collier<lb/>
Debbie Boyce<lb/>
Dorm legislators<lb/>
Scott-Jerry Cox<lb/>
Scott-Greg Boykin<lb/>
Clement-Donna Hix<lb/>
Clement-Anne Goforth<lb/>
Jones-Jeff Yates<lb/>
Jones-Rick Asheworth<lb/>
Aycock-Bill Reynolds<lb/>
Aycock-Dave McKenzle<lb/>
Fleming-Jane Biddlx<lb/>
Fletcher-Carolyn Blackweil<lb/>
Slay-Bill Mindel<lb/>
Cotten-Libby Lefler<lb/>
Belk-John Bauer<lb/>
Garrett-Tammy DeJaager<lb/>
Jarvis-Tina Padilla<lb/>
White-Ann OBIen<lb/>
White-Denise Violette<lb/>
NOTE: Some dorm legislators'<lb/>
positions to be filled through<lb/>
screening.<lb/>
Karen Yormes<lb/>
Kirby Lashley<lb/>
Ron Morrison<lb/>
David Rippy<lb/>
Dalton Denson<lb/>
Bobby Harrell<lb/>
Phil Barbee<lb/>
Chuck Freedman<lb/>
David Bond<lb/>
Barbara Lirctani<lb/>
ECU to face show-down<lb/>
with Title IX decisions<lb/>
ByMONIKA SUTHERLAND<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU has just completed an<lb/>
in-house study to comply with<lb/>
Title IX according to Dr. David<lb/>
Stevens, compliance officer.<lb/>
The nine month study at the<lb/>
estimated cost of $30,000 was<lb/>
conducted by over 350 people<lb/>
serving on 12 sub-committees.<lb/>
Each of the committees made<lb/>
several recommendations within<lb/>
their particular area to bring ECU<lb/>
into compliance by the July 1976<lb/>
deadline.<lb/>
Over 60 recommendations<lb/>
were made and all but a few have<lb/>
been acted on. A common re-<lb/>
commendation was the re-writing<lb/>
of publications which makes useof<lb/>
genitive pronouns. According to<lb/>
Title IX there can be no discrimi-<lb/>
nation on the basis of sex, so all<lb/>
references must be removed.<lb/>
Dr. Stevens said that all<lb/>
academic programs are in com-<lb/>
pliance with Title IX however,<lb/>
some areas are trying to recruit<lb/>
more members of the opposite<lb/>
sex such as Home Economics.<lb/>
"So many people think Title<lb/>
IX is just for women but the<lb/>
program works in both direct-<lb/>
ions said Stevens. "It elimi-<lb/>
nates discrimination against eith-<lb/>
�r 3sx.<lb/>
Stevens also noted that ad-<lb/>
missions and enrollment gave no<lb/>
indication of sexual discrimin-<lb/>
ation.<lb/>
One area where there was a<lb/>
problem of compliance involved<lb/>
student activities, particularly<lb/>
student organizations.<lb/>
"With the exception of social<lb/>
organizations such as the Greeks,<lb/>
all university supported organi-<lb/>
zations must eliminate single-sex<lb/>
membership requirement before<lb/>
they can be recognized on cam-<lb/>
pus said Stevens.<lb/>
This involved such organi-<lb/>
zations as Phi Sigma Pi honor<lb/>
fraternity, the Married Women's<lb/>
Association and some service<lb/>
organizations.<lb/>
"These organizations must<lb/>
open up membership to all<lb/>
BIGGS DRUG<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
300 EVANS<lb/>
ON THE MALL<lb/>
PHONE: 752-2136<lb/>
!�T FREE PRESCRIPTION<lb/>
fpiaAlfMlfc piCKUP AND DELIVERY<lb/>
Prescription Dept. with medication<lb/>
profiles: your prescription always at<lb/>
oar fingertips, even though you may<lb/>
lose your HL bottle.<lb/>
persons regardless of sex or they<lb/>
will not be supported by the<lb/>
university nor be allowed to meet<lb/>
on university campus Stevens<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The Title IX ruling also<lb/>
prohibits any single-sex contest<lb/>
such as the traditional Homecom-<lb/>
ing Queen which is popular on<lb/>
moot campuses. Fa the first time<lb/>
in the history of ECU, males can<lb/>
run for the title of Homecoming<lb/>
Pirate.<lb/>
Housing has become another<lb/>
area that is undergoing changes<lb/>
to eliminate any sexual dis-<lb/>
crimination. Recommendations<lb/>
by the sub-oommitte on housing<lb/>
regarded the security status,<lb/>
visitation and curfew hours In<lb/>
dorms. Presently women's dorms<lb/>
are locked at night and men's<lb/>
dorms remain unlocked. Visit-<lb/>
ation and curfew regulations were<lb/>
made the same for both sexes<lb/>
beginning in fall quarter of 1976.<lb/>
Sew Fall Merchandise<lb/>
DISCOUNTS UP TO<lb/>
20 ON<lb/>
CERTAIN<lb/>
ITEMS<lb/>
Save low On Great Looking Fall Fashions<lb/>
ASK ABOUT OUR $10 CLUB<lb/>
USE YOUR MASTER CHARGE OR<lb/>
LAYAWAY<lb/>
COUNTRY FLAIR<lb/>
RED OAK SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
SHOP MON-THURS 10-6 PM<lb/>
FRIDAY 10-9 PM AND SATURDAY 10-6PM<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mtmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057083_0004"/><lb/>
����������iHM<lb/>
A<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 75 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmivm<lb/>
m<lb/>
Apathy problem<lb/>
Judging from the turnout fa the SGA election<lb/>
last week, around 20 percent of the eligible voters, it is<lb/>
evident that students on this campus are in generaf<lb/>
unconcerned about the activities of their student<lb/>
government.<lb/>
Mae than three-fourths of the students on this<lb/>
campus do not even take the time to vote. This is the<lb/>
minimum activity it takes fa a democracy to<lb/>
survive-no protesting, letter-writing or banner<lb/>
waving. But 80 per cent of the student population<lb/>
remains complacent, as it has been fa several years<lb/>
under the present coistitutiai.<lb/>
But the problem is not totally one of apathy. Fa<lb/>
the mae than 5,000 day students 21 legislatas are<lb/>
elected at large. It isseldon that the average student<lb/>
will have an oppatunity to speak to his a her<lb/>
representatives, much less try to influence their vote.<lb/>
Most students know neither their representatives'<lb/>
names nor their address a phaie number. The real<lb/>
problem with low voter turnout is that legislatas lack<lb/>
a clear constituency to which they should be<lb/>
accountable.<lb/>
The logical remedy to the constituency dilemma<lb/>
would be to elect representatives with whom students<lb/>
share some degree of commonality. This could be<lb/>
easily accomplished by having legislatas elected by<lb/>
students of a particular school rather than by domicile.<lb/>
Under this scheme students would have a much better<lb/>
chance of coming into contact with their legislatas.<lb/>
They would share oommon political interests that<lb/>
could be expressed through legislation. And, a maja<lb/>
benefit would be that when vacancies occur in the<lb/>
legislature an immediate election could be held. In the<lb/>
current legislature when a seat becomes empty the<lb/>
vacancy is filled by a "volunteer" who faces the<lb/>
Saeening Committee befae being approved by the<lb/>
full body. There is hardly a semblance of democratic<lb/>
representation to a student constituency in such a<lb/>
replacement process.<lb/>
If the framers of the revised constitution, which<lb/>
was rejected as part of last week's SGA ballot, are<lb/>
sincerely committed to implementing a constituion<lb/>
compat ible with the semester system and palatable to<lb/>
the student body, they will authaize a revisioi<lb/>
conmittee brand new. Should the present constitution<lb/>
be left intact, it will be quite evident that those<lb/>
returning SGA officers and legislatas who last Spring<lb/>
directed the revision committee that drew up the<lb/>
Droposed coistitutiai were committeed oily half-<lb/>
neartedly to the best interests of ECU a oily to<lb/>
self-interest.<lb/>
fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community tot war fifty years<lb/>
Senior EditorJim Elliott<lb/>
Production ManagerJimmy Williams<lb/>
Advertising ManagerDennis Leonard<lb/>
Business ManagerTeresa Whisenant<lb/>
News EditorsDebbie Jackson<lb/>
Neil Sessoms<lb/>
Trends Editorpat Coyle<lb/>
Sports EditorSteve Wheeler<lb/>
Fountainhead la the student newspaper of East Carolina<lb/>
University sponsored by the Student Government Association<lb/>
of ECU and appears each Tuesday and Thursday during the<lb/>
acheol year, weekly during the summer.<lb/>
Mailing address: Old South Building, Greenville, N.C<lb/>
27934.<lb/>
Editorial Offices: 757-0 7574X7, 7574309.<lb/>
Subeoriptions:$10.09armusHy far non-studmntt, M.OOfor<lb/>
mtdtdtw<lb/>
TheForum<lb/>
Athletics dominates university<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
We're not quite sure what Dr.<lb/>
Prewett or anyone else here at<lb/>
ECU that advocates expansion of<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium must be think-<lb/>
Election results good, bad<lb/>
ing. How can anyone say ECU has<lb/>
not put enough emphasis on<lb/>
athletics? ECU, or at least the<lb/>
administration controlling ECU,<lb/>
puts emphasis on nothing else!<lb/>
There are other areas of this<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
1.1 think it's fantastic that we<lb/>
have finally awakened &amp; voted to<lb/>
elect the Student Union Presi-<lb/>
dent. The Student Union may well<lb/>
affect more students than any<lb/>
other campus organization and<lb/>
yet every position in the entire<lb/>
union is by appointment - ap-<lb/>
pointment by the students who<lb/>
are already in - which of course<lb/>
makes for a real cozy family.<lb/>
2.1 think it'sa shame the SGA<lb/>
constitution failed. The maja<lb/>
cause for the failure was the<lb/>
"supreme power" dause, which,<lb/>
in my opinion, has every rightto<lb/>
be there. SGA is the only<lb/>
university sponsored organization<lb/>
which is not prejudicial in its<lb/>
membership. WRC and Student<lb/>
Union complain about the clause<lb/>
and yet to be in WRC or MRC you<lb/>
must live in a dorm, to be on<lb/>
Panhellenicand IFC you must be<lb/>
Greek and, as, previously stated,<lb/>
all positions in Student Union are<lb/>
appointed which make it the<lb/>
elitist group of all.<lb/>
Anarchy is the state of society<lb/>
where there is no law or supreme<lb/>
power - a state of confusion or<lb/>
disorder. If you take the supreme<lb/>
power dause from SGA who are<lb/>
you going to give it to to avoid this<lb/>
confusion and disorder.<lb/>
3.1 think the Marching Pirates<lb/>
should be commended on a lot of<lb/>
hard work in manning the polls<lb/>
and tabulating the results. How-<lb/>
ever, I think it's pathetic that the<lb/>
members of the Marching Pirates<lb/>
have to hire themselves out in<lb/>
order to maintain a basic operat-<lb/>
ing budget. The marching band is<lb/>
supposedly financed totally by<lb/>
athletics, yet, if they tried to<lb/>
operate on what funds the athletic<lb/>
department scrapes together for<lb/>
them they wouldn't have a bass<lb/>
drum to stand on. The Marching<lb/>
Pirates are the best band in this<lb/>
state and beyond. Bill Cain and<lb/>
the rest of those football maniacs<lb/>
wouldn't know what a terrific<lb/>
marching band looked like if one<lb/>
was to march up their noses.<lb/>
Respectfully,<lb/>
Elizabeth Weeks<lb/>
Student Union Member<lb/>
Forum Policy<lb/>
Forum letters should be typed<lb/>
or printed and they must be<lb/>
signed and include the miter's<lb/>
address. Names will oe withheld<lb/>
upon request. Letters may be sent<lb/>
to Fountainhead or left at the<lb/>
Information Desk in MendenhaJI<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
mm<lb/>
university that deserve money<lb/>
and attention that have been<lb/>
denied both because of the<lb/>
all-powerful ECU athletics. For<lb/>
example, the ECU "Playhouse"<lb/>
has been denied a very badly<lb/>
needed new theatre for years<lb/>
because of Ficklen Stadium and,<lb/>
recently, because of the med-<lb/>
schcol. McGinnis Auditorium is<lb/>
falling down around our ears; it is<lb/>
absolutely unsafe to work in. Yet<lb/>
there are those who feel a little<lb/>
added space to Ficklen is more<lb/>
important than contributing to<lb/>
one of the fine arts. Afterall, we<lb/>
thought ECU was supposed to be<lb/>
known fa its concentration on at<lb/>
least the liberal arts. Why in hell<lb/>
do we have to try to be like<lb/>
Carolina a State? Is there no<lb/>
value in uniqueness? The "Play-<lb/>
house" is by far not the only<lb/>
aspect of this university in need of<lb/>
finandal assistance. As we see it,<lb/>
the administration here is mae<lb/>
concerned with politics than<lb/>
education. Why else would ath-<lb/>
letics , "games be given so<lb/>
damned much attention over<lb/>
everything else? To our know-<lb/>
ledge, ECU means "liberal arts"<lb/>
to outsiders. Why not capitalize<lb/>
on this and make ECU different<lb/>
from all the other big-sha schools<lb/>
in N.C.? Keep the money in<lb/>
education and out of politics!<lb/>
ChariateS. Cheatham<lb/>
Renee McLaurin<lb/>
huck Giles<lb/>
Shauna Holmes<lb/>
Carolyn Shipman<lb/>
Terry C.Rckard<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057083_0005"/><lb/>
mM spell m<lb/>
nMnaMR<lb/>
�WHWH !��<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 75 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
5<lb/>
rf<lb/>
i<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Action taken to open records<lb/>
By JACK LAIL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU is establishing policy for<lb/>
implementation of the Buckley<lb/>
Amendment of the Family Educa-<lb/>
tional Rights and Privacy Act<lb/>
(FERPA) of 1974, aocording to<lb/>
David B. Sevens, ECU attorney<lb/>
advisor and implementation com-<lb/>
mittee chairperson.<lb/>
"The Buckley Amendment<lb/>
deals with student records and<lb/>
how they are to be maintained<lb/>
said Stevens.<lb/>
The policy is in compliance<lb/>
with Health Education and Wel-<lb/>
fare (HEW) regulations and has<lb/>
been approved by the chancellor.<lb/>
It will take several months to<lb/>
achieve full implementationof the<lb/>
program.<lb/>
Copies of the new policy are<lb/>
being sent to all deans, depart-<lb/>
ment chairpersons, and faculty<lb/>
members.<lb/>
The policy states that present<lb/>
and former students have the<lb/>
right to see their educational<lb/>
records. The University must<lb/>
respond within 45 days.<lb/>
Major Attractions<lb/>
cites budget surplus<lb/>
By LOUIS TAYLOR<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Budget surplus and Home-<lb/>
coming entertainment were the<lb/>
main topics of discussion at the<lb/>
Sept. 30 Major Attraction Com-<lb/>
mittee meeting of the Student<lb/>
Union.<lb/>
Bob Serleva, committee chair-<lb/>
man, opened the meeting by<lb/>
announcing a six per cent surplus<lb/>
in the 1975-76 budget. The<lb/>
surplus was largely due to a .75<lb/>
per cent increase in attendance at<lb/>
major attractions. Serieva added<lb/>
that this is the first time the<lb/>
committee has been self-sustain-<lb/>
ing to his knowledge.<lb/>
The oommittee unanimously<lb/>
approved the Count Basie Or-<lb/>
chestra for Saturday entertain-<lb/>
ment during Homecoming week-<lb/>
end (Oct. 29-31). Due to a recent<lb/>
heart attack, the Count will not<lb/>
appear with the orchestra. How-<lb/>
ever, the Willard Alexander<lb/>
Agency, who books the band,<lb/>
promised to provide a "top-name<lb/>
band leader" to replace Basie,<lb/>
according to Ken Hammond ,<lb/>
advisor to the oommittee.<lb/>
Other Homecoming entertain-<lb/>
ment affirmed were Charlie Rich,<lb/>
"The Silver Fox for Fri Oct.<lb/>
29 and the Michael Murphy-<lb/>
Cheech and Chong show for<lb/>
Sunday, Oct. 31.<lb/>
Serieva also announced Major<lb/>
Attractions had been awarded<lb/>
$2,287 by the executive board of<lb/>
the American Federation of M usi-<lb/>
cians to by paid by the Ike and<lb/>
Tina Turner Show fa last year's<lb/>
Homecoming cancellation. That<lb/>
amount includes expenses for<lb/>
publicity, technicians, etc.<lb/>
Among other entertainment,<lb/>
Judy Collins has been affirmed<lb/>
fa Oct. 21, and Beach Club<lb/>
Productions is sending a contract<lb/>
fa Leon &amp; Mary Russell and J.J.<lb/>
Caleoi Nov. 7.<lb/>
SAAD'S<lb/>
SHOE SHOP<lb/>
Material and.<lb/>
Workmanship<lb/>
Guaranteed<lb/>
Prompt Service<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
THE<lb/>
EARL SCRUGGS REVIEW<lb/>
starring EARL SCRUGGS<lb/>
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1976<lb/>
GATES OPEN AT 8 a.m.<lb/>
FORMAL PROGRAM- I p.m.<lb/>
Directions: 5 miles south of War-<lb/>
renton, N.C. on Highway 401.<lb/>
45 miles north of Raleigh on High-<lb/>
way 401.<lb/>
ADMISSION $5.00<lb/>
NO RAIN DATE<lb/>
Concessions by Warren County Jaycees<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
The registrar maintains a<lb/>
schedule of fees and official<lb/>
custodians of student records.<lb/>
Any student desiring to see<lb/>
their records should make a<lb/>
request to theoffidal responsible<lb/>
fa maintaining their records.<lb/>
Students have the right to<lb/>
obtain a copy of their educational<lb/>
transcript at a reasonable cost.<lb/>
The University will not dis-<lb/>
close personally indentifiable in-<lb/>
famatioi fron student recads<lb/>
without pria written consent,<lb/>
except in the cases noted below.<lb/>
(1) Disclosure to aher school<lb/>
officials who have a legitimate<lb/>
educational need fa the informa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
(2) State and federal officials<lb/>
and state educational authaities<lb/>
as designated in the Privacy Act.<lb/>
(3) Infamatioi in connection<lb/>
with financial aid applications.<lb/>
(4) To state and local off iciais<lb/>
to whom infamatioi may be<lb/>
furnished by law.<lb/>
(5) To federal and state, local<lb/>
and independent organizations<lb/>
conducting studies regarding the<lb/>
validity a administering of pre-<lb/>
dictive tests.<lb/>
(6) To parents who claim<lb/>
students as tax dependents.<lb/>
(7) To comply with court order<lb/>
a subpoena.<lb/>
(8) To appropriate authaities<lb/>
in the event of a health a safety<lb/>
emergency.<lb/>
(9)Directay information on<lb/>
currently enrolled students unless<lb/>
students notify the registrar office<lb/>
within seven days after registra-<lb/>
tion that no information be<lb/>
released.<lb/>
The University will infam<lb/>
students yearly of their privacy<lb/>
rights.<lb/>
Students may waive their<lb/>
right to see confidential letters,<lb/>
recommendations, a statements<lb/>
concerning admission to the<lb/>
University.<lb/>
Students may challenge the<lb/>
accuracy of their recads.<lb/>
The University will destroy<lb/>
records periodically when the<lb/>
University feels recads are no<lb/>
longer needed.<lb/>
The University will transfa<lb/>
student recads to other educa-<lb/>
tional institutions which a student<lb/>
intends to enroll only upon<lb/>
written request.<lb/>
Any student who believes that<lb/>
their rights have been violated<lb/>
under the FERPA may file a<lb/>
complaint directly with the<lb/>
FERPA Office, Department of<lb/>
HEW, 330 Independence Avenue<lb/>
S.W Washington, D.C. 20201.<lb/>
Students are asked to discuss<lb/>
grievances with the University<lb/>
FERPA coadinata, 214 Wright<lb/>
Annex, Ph. 757-6940 pria to<lb/>
filing a complaint with HEW.<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Kennels<lb/>
Will be sponsoring<lb/>
in Basic Obedience Training.<lb/>
starts Oct 7th.<lb/>
Cost 30.00<lb/>
Call Ed Perry 752-9654<lb/>
fa more infamation<lb/>
Rt. 7 Box 128 Greenville, "N.C.<lb/>
a<lb/>
CESSNA PILOT CENTER<lb/>
Instruction<lb/>
V.A. and F.A.A. Approved<lb/>
Give yourself that extra edge you need to succeed in<lb/>
today's competitive job market.<lb/>
For more information call 758-2000<lb/>
ISO AERO SERVICE, INC.<lb/>
jt If you haven't been down to<lb/>
Al the Tree House lately, now<lb/>
� is a good time. We have<lb/>
the finest pizza and salads<lb/>
in town.<lb/>
The Tree people also want<lb/>
you to try their fine salads.<lb/>
(Salads are V? price every<lb/>
Wednesday from 12 - 4 P.M.)<lb/>
Coffee house music every<lb/>
night - no cover.<lb/>
The Tree House -<lb/>
An Alternative Restaurant and Nightclub<lb/>
Corner of Fifth and Cotanche<lb/>
krtfcui1'<lb/>
m<lb/>
n'Hmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057083_0006"/><lb/>
6<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 75 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mnmmmmmmn<lb/>
Robinson doubts students' understanding<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Union president questions Referendum 7<lb/>
By DEBBIE JACKSON<lb/>
Co-News Editor<lb/>
Barry Robinson, Student Un-<lb/>
ion president, Friday said that he<lb/>
felt many ECU students did not<lb/>
fully understand the Student<lb/>
Government Association (SGA)<lb/>
referendums as stated on the<lb/>
election ballots.<lb/>
dp this coupon<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
And get three games for only $1.25. <lb/>
Bring three friends along. We'll let r<lb/>
them in on the deal, too.<lb/>
WASHINGTON HWY<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C<lb/>
Expires Oct. 31, 1976<lb/>
"I was particularly concerned<lb/>
with the approval of Referendum<lb/>
1, " said Robinson.<lb/>
According to Referendum 1,<lb/>
the Student Union president<lb/>
would be elected by the students<lb/>
and not appointed by the Student<lb/>
Union Board of Directors as has<lb/>
been the practice.<lb/>
"From what I understand, the<lb/>
referendum passed by a narrow<lb/>
margin. I think it shows that a<lb/>
great number of students still have<lb/>
some reservations about the<lb/>
election of the Student Union<lb/>
president said Robinson.<lb/>
The referendum passed 1186<lb/>
votes to 913 votes.<lb/>
"Most students believed that<lb/>
if they voted 'yes' the president<lb/>
would automatically be elected.<lb/>
However, the Student Union<lb/>
Board of Directors decides on any<lb/>
Student Union Constitution chan-<lb/>
ges said Robinson.<lb/>
The Board of Directors con-<lb/>
sists of eight voting members and<lb/>
two non-voting ex officio mem-<lb/>
bers, according to Robinson.<lb/>
Voting members are Toni<lb/>
Britt, Women's Residence Coun-<lb/>
cil (WRC) president; Steven<lb/>
Price, Men's Residence Council<lb/>
(MRC) president; Nancy Moore,<lb/>
Panhellenic president; Tim Sulli-<lb/>
van, SGA president; Tommy<lb/>
Thomason, SGA treasurer; the<lb/>
speaker of the SGA Legislature;<lb/>
Ray Elmore, Faculty-Senate rep-<lb/>
resentative; and Dr. James Tuc-<lb/>
ker, appointee of Dr. Jenkins.<lb/>
"I serve as an ex officio<lb/>
member along with Dean Ru-<lb/>
dolph Alexander, who is the<lb/>
Student Union advisor said<lb/>
Robinson.<lb/>
According to Robinson, a<lb/>
board meeting was scheduled fa<lb/>
the second week of school but<lb/>
only three voting members were<lb/>
present, and the acting chair-per-<lb/>
son was not.<lb/>
Robinson said that he was<lb/>
against the Student Union pres-<lb/>
ident being elected because of the<lb/>
"problem of getting someone<lb/>
inexperienced in the office<lb/>
"As with aiy election, the<lb/>
person who publicizes his name<lb/>
well and who has the better<lb/>
position on the ballot is the one<lb/>
that students will vote for said<lb/>
Robinson.<lb/>
According to Robinson, a<lb/>
common argument for the elec-<lb/>
tion of the president was that<lb/>
there would be more student<lb/>
input to the president.<lb/>
"Students already have that<lb/>
input. There are probably more<lb/>
students involved in the Union<lb/>
than the SGA as it is now. The<lb/>
president does not have supreme<lb/>
right to book programs on his<lb/>
own, rather students whD make<lb/>
up committees select the pro-<lb/>
grams said Robinson.<lb/>
"Let me reiterate that politics<lb/>
does not work in programming<lb/>
SGA transit system<lb/>
running overcrowded<lb/>
By BECKY BRA DSH AW<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The SGA Transit system has<lb/>
experienced overcrowding on its<lb/>
Purple route which serves the<lb/>
apartments, according to Gary<lb/>
Miller, transit manager.<lb/>
Miller said, "the overcrowd-<lb/>
ing only occurs between 9 and 10<lb/>
a.m.<lb/>
 By the time the bus picks up<lb/>
passengers at Kings Row, it is<lb/>
completely full with no room to<lb/>
pick up passengers at Village<lb/>
Green said Miller.<lb/>
In order to remedy the situa-<lb/>
tion, Miller now sends the Brown<lb/>
schedule bus out a few minutes<lb/>
early in the mornings and it stops<lb/>
at VillageGreen twice between 9<lb/>
and 10 a.m.<lb/>
The system has received<lb/>
excellent response this year,<lb/>
according to Miller.<lb/>
He estimates that twice as<lb/>
many persons are using the Gold<lb/>
schedule bus as did last year.<lb/>
The Gold route serves Minges<lb/>
and Allied Health.<lb/>
Miller said there have been a<lb/>
few problems getting the new<lb/>
buses broken in, but he hopes to<lb/>
have some minor repair work<lb/>
done on them as soon as possible.<lb/>
"I hope to have everything<lb/>
squared away within the week<lb/>
said Miller.<lb/>
Miller said service on the<lb/>
Brown route had been inconsis-<lb/>
tent due to repair work being<lb/>
done on the backup bus, but<lb/>
service on that route should begin<lb/>
to run smoothly by the end of the<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Miller said the new buses are<lb/>
far superior to the old ones and<lb/>
they should give the students<lb/>
better service.<lb/>
He feels the system will be a<lb/>
success this year.<lb/>
OLDE TOWNE INN<lb/>
117 E. 5TH ST. 758-1991<lb/>
Eat a home cooked family style dinner with us.<lb/>
One entree (choose from three) and all the vegetables<lb/>
you can eat - served family style (tea or coffee included)<lb/>
ONLY 22B (PLUS TAX)<lb/>
SUNDAY-THURSDAY<lb/>
4:30-7:30 P.M. REAR DINING ROOM<lb/>
ARTISTS AND WRITERS<lb/>
The East Carolina University Literary and Art Magazine<lb/>
is now accepting submissions. The magazine is<lb/>
interested in poetry, prose fiction, plays, and all genres<lb/>
of the visual arts. Submissions can be turned in at the<lb/>
Rebel office in the publications center (old east cafeteria)<lb/>
across from Joyner library. All works accepted for<lb/>
publication will be financially supplemented<lb/>
All student submissions will automatically be entered in<lb/>
the Annual Attic Art and Literary Awards contest.<lb/>
This contest is made possible by a large donation from<lb/>
the Attic.<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057083_0007"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 75 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
�<lb/>
m <lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Logan's Run<lb/>
By DA VID R. BOSNICK<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
This week in Greenville is the type that gives movie critics the idea<lb/>
that they would have been better off being a shoe salesman with ugly<lb/>
children. Of the four films playing in Greenville, only one remotely<lb/>
attempts to justify the immense expense of its creations. The others, to<lb/>
be mentioned briefly at the close of the column, indicate that it is a great<lb/>
week for T.V.<lb/>
Sauls David's production Logan's Run is a much publicized attempt<lb/>
at classic science fiction. It is decidedly minor-league, and the city of the<lb/>
future resembles a precocious child's Lego-bloc creation.<lb/>
Science fiction has gone beyond short-skirted women and vacuum<lb/>
tube travel. There must now be technological rationales fa the devices<lb/>
and concepts man is supposedly going to create. There are none of these<lb/>
rationales in the film. The only alternative that sci-f' has then, in the<lb/>
cinema genre, is to dazzle one with the ingenuity of their special effects.<lb/>
One looks nect to see the possible change of morality in this "world<lb/>
of the future" and we are left with little more than a domed singles bar.<lb/>
In this work the effectsare not poorly done, they are badly oonceived and<lb/>
connected. They range from a mediocre scene where those to be<lb/>
� renewed" rise to explode, to an attack by "Boxx who is a<lb/>
silver-glazed filing cabinet with a penchant for Cryogenics.<lb/>
Michael York is "Logan-5" and it his job as a "Sandman" to<lb/>
terminate all those who don't agree to be renewed at age thirty. His<lb/>
 run is to freedom, and a non-existent sanctuary in the outside world.<lb/>
He is helped and eventually loved in his efforts by Jessica (Jennifer<lb/>
Agutter), who does an excellent job of convincing me she has wandered<lb/>
onto the wrong set. She is dazed throughout much of the picture and<lb/>
since it keeps her from speaking, that is a benefit.<lb/>
The work is not bad, for it is technically excellent. The soundtrack<lb/>
and photography are good and there are legitimate attempts made at<lb/>
symbolism. It is far too heavy handed to be effective, but the attempt is<lb/>
made. The film's major flaw is that it is monumentally weak. The why of<lb/>
this culture is never explained, or even broached. A society based on<lb/>
youth, and ethical suicide simply does not evolve. There is no mention<lb/>
made of the technocracy that must have existed to have given rise to this<lb/>
society.<lb/>
The low point of the film is the embarrassing role of Peter Ustinov as<lb/>
the old man. Ustinov is a fine actor and if he has come to playing the role<lb/>
of a survivor who speaks only to cats, then he and I can open that shoe<lb/>
store together.<lb/>
A minor work with a hefty budget, I give "Logan's Run" one star,<lb/>
because it was in English.<lb/>
OTHER THEA TERS<lb/>
PARK: Three the Hard Way Bruce Lee - The Dragon.<lb/>
The first is a film where three macho black guys wipe out several<lb/>
thousand whites for various reasons. Not to be prejudiced, Bruce Lee<lb/>
does virtually the same to several races. Don't bother. 11A star because<lb/>
the film broke and I got to leave early.<lb/>
PLAZA TWO: Slumber Party '57<lb/>
An attempt to cash in on the success of American Graffiti. A few<lb/>
humorous moments but that weren' t we a bunch of just crazy kids bit<lb/>
is wearing thin. One star.<lb/>
PITT: Aloha Bobby and Rose<lb/>
A good soundtrack by Elton John and other name preformers. It's a<lb/>
take me to Honolulu if you love me' type, and he does, so he does, but<lb/>
he can't afford it. An older film (1971). This is the worst oopy of any film<lb/>
I have ever seen in Greenville. If you have a great deal of trouble with<lb/>
the viewing, as I did, demand your money back.<lb/>
Student Union Theatre Arts<lb/>
presents Broadway play<lb/>
Broadway comes to ECU in<lb/>
the form of the hit musical revue,<lb/>
"DON'T BOTHER ME, I CAN'T<lb/>
COPE" on October 7,1976 at 8 �<lb/>
P.M. in Wright Auditorium. As<lb/>
T.E. Kalem expressed it in Time<lb/>
Magazine, "All heaven breaks<lb/>
loose on stage. This cast is so<lb/>
agile that it defies gravity, and<lb/>
the singers have such richly<lb/>
reasonant voices that they could<lb/>
bring down the walls of Jericho.<lb/>
This is the kind of show at which<lb/>
you want to blow kisses<lb/>
"DON'T BOTHER ME, I<lb/>
CAN'T COPE" is recently com-<lb/>
pleting a three year stay on<lb/>
Broadway with companies in<lb/>
Chicago and on the West Coast<lb/>
for a year each. "DON'T BOTH-<lb/>
ER ME, I CAN'T COPE" won<lb/>
four Tony Nominations, two Obie<lb/>
Awards, two New York Drama<lb/>
Desk Awards, two Outer Circle<lb/>
Critics Awards, four Los Angeles<lb/>
Drama Critics Awards, and the<lb/>
Grammy Award for Best Broad-<lb/>
way Cast album.<lb/>
"DON'T BOTHER ME, I<lb/>
CAN'T COPE" is lively and<lb/>
infectious entertainment. It has<lb/>
nifty tunes and lyrics which are<lb/>
performed in brassy, roof raising<lb/>
style. The spirit of this show is in<lb/>
its songs and dances which create<lb/>
as much energy per square inch<lb/>
on the stage as any show you have<lb/>
'Tr seen.<lb/>
"DON'T BOTHER ME, I<lb/>
CAN'T COPE" is part of the ECU<lb/>
Student Union Theatre Arts<lb/>
Series fa 1976-77. Also appear-<lb/>
ing in this series is THE<lb/>
NATIONAL THEATRE OF THE<lb/>
DEAF on March 15, THE AT-<lb/>
LANTA BALLET on November 9<lb/>
and 10, and THE RED ROGERS<lb/>
DANCE COMPANY on March 9<lb/>
and 10. Season tickets are avail-<lb/>
able fa all series at the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office located in Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center. The spark of<lb/>
life wants to light you up!<lb/>
Tickets priced fa "DON'T<lb/>
BOTHER ME, I CAN'T COPE"<lb/>
are as follows: ECU Students -<lb/>
$2.00, ECU Faculty and Staff -<lb/>
$3.00, and Public - $5.00. All<lb/>
tickets at the door will be priced<lb/>
at $5.00. Tickets purchased in<lb/>
blocks of 20 a mae will be priced<lb/>
at $3.00 each. All tickets are<lb/>
available at the Central Ticket<lb/>
Office in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center, which is open weekdays<lb/>
from 10fl0 A.M. to4flOP.M.<lb/>
DON'T BOTHER ME, I CAN'T COPE, a long-running Broadway srtow<lb/>
will bring its lively cast to Wright for one performance.<lb/>
Pinder shines on new LP<lb/>
By MARK LOCK WOOD<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
There is little doubt that the<lb/>
Moody Blues played an integral<lb/>
part in the tarnation and pro-<lb/>
gress of British rock in the 60 s<lb/>
and early 70" s.<lb/>
From the years 1965 to 1973,<lb/>
the group produced hits ranging<lb/>
from the Penny Laine penned,<lb/>
"Go Now to the single from<lb/>
their last album SEVENTH SO-<lb/>
JOURN entitled, "I'm Just a<lb/>
Singer in a Rock it Roil Band<lb/>
Such long lived prominence is<lb/>
remarkable by a group of such<lb/>
diverse talents.<lb/>
Michael Pinder was a distinct-<lb/>
ive member of the Moody Blues<lb/>
from 1965 until"the break up" in<lb/>
1973. Since then he has remained<lb/>
productive in oonceiving a new<lb/>
solo album entitled THE PRO-<lb/>
MISE. This is a concept album<lb/>
that Pinder has wanted to pro-<lb/>
duce "fa nine years<lb/>
"Free As a Dove" begins side<lb/>
one with some good guitar by<lb/>
Steve Beckmeier, who plays in a<lb/>
style very reminiscent of farrter<lb/>
Moody Blues member, Justin<lb/>
Hayward. This first cut is fast-<lb/>
paced and features some good<lb/>
vocals by Michael Pinder. Sur-<lb/>
prisingly enough, Pinder plays<lb/>
little keyboard (his forte) but<lb/>
relies mainly on 12-string guitar,<lb/>
something he did little of with the<lb/>
Moody Blues. The only drawback<lb/>
is an overabundance of female<lb/>
background, which distracts from<lb/>
Pincter' s aystal dear vocals.<lb/>
"You'll Make It Through"<lb/>
follows in a mellow manna.<lb/>
Again, the song contains sane<lb/>
rather needless female back-<lb/>
ground, but remains pleasant<lb/>
throughout. It features some good<lb/>
piano and arp by Pinder.<lb/>
"I Only Want to Love You" is<lb/>
a poignant romantic interlude,<lb/>
reminiscent of "Lost in a Lost<lb/>
Wald fran the Moody Blues'<lb/>
SEVENTH SOJOURN album.<lb/>
Basically an acoustic piece, this<lb/>
song also features some beautiful<lb/>
harp playing by Susan McDonald<lb/>
and good meilotron background<lb/>
by Pinder. One notes a Spanish<lb/>
flair to this song.<lb/>
The next song, "Someone To<lb/>
Believe In is a bluesy, John<lb/>
Mayallish tune. Joel Dibarteilo<lb/>
excel Is on both tena sax and flute<lb/>
in this song. The upright bass by<lb/>
Bill Bag fits in pafectly, and<lb/>
Pinder's vocals are excellent. He<lb/>
projects an emotive quality that<lb/>
only the blues can convey.<lb/>
"Carry On" features some<lb/>
mae bearable female backup<lb/>
vocals, and Pinder comes through<lb/>
with some good, solid vocals on<lb/>
this fast-moving number; Smitty<lb/>
Smith adds some good agan<lb/>
runs. Once again, Pinder a-<lb/>
bandons the keyboards and plays<lb/>
(MWMMMMMHI<lb/>
acoustic guitar.<lb/>
The following tune, entitled<lb/>
"Air is a vay engaging instru-<lb/>
mental piece composed by Pind-<lb/>
er It features some good acoustic<lb/>
guitar work by Jim Pillon and<lb/>
excellent flute work by Dean<lb/>
01 ch. This cut also features<lb/>
veteran session man, Bobby<lb/>
Keyes, on saxophone.<lb/>
"Message" features a di vase<lb/>
keyboard accompaniment by<lb/>
Pinder (piano, RMI, Arp) and<lb/>
some vay, vay tender vocals.<lb/>
Jim Dillon presents some inta-<lb/>
esting sitar playing on this<lb/>
numba which obviously emages<lb/>
as one of the stronga cuts of the<lb/>
album.<lb/>
"The Seed anotha moving<lb/>
piece by Pirida, is a poem put to<lb/>
music, vay reminiscent of some<lb/>
earlier Moody Blues' work. Dean<lb/>
Olch plays shakkukach and Susan<lb/>
McDonald accompanies with<lb/>
some good background on harp.<lb/>
The strongest cut on the<lb/>
album is the title song of the<lb/>
album, "The Promise The<lb/>
penetrating emotion of Pinder's<lb/>
lyrics really comes through in this<lb/>
song. Jim Dillon exoeils on both<lb/>
acoustic and electric guitar. Pind-<lb/>
er sparkles with some good<lb/>
meilotron.<lb/>
THE PROMISE by Michael<lb/>
Pinda is definitely an album fa<lb/>
anyone with sophisticated musi-<lb/>
cal preferences.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057083_0008"/><lb/>
JHHnHHWB<lb/>
8<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 75 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
wmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
Ex-Peace Corps workers laud Foster Parents Plan<lb/>
By BARBARA LEWIS<lb/>
"The Peace Corps is a dying<lb/>
organisation according to one<lb/>
young couple who formerly<lb/>
served with it.<lb/>
For the past couple of years,<lb/>
Lloyd and Rita Feinberg have<lb/>
been working with Foster Parents<lb/>
Plan, which they believe has both<lb/>
the organization and the f inandal<lb/>
resources that the Peace Corps<lb/>
lacks.<lb/>
"When the Peace Corps be-<lb/>
gan it attracted a certain type of<lb/>
individual who had a great deal of<lb/>
idealism and really wanted to do<lb/>
something Rita said. "But<lb/>
today's volunteer is more in-<lb/>
terested in getting away from<lb/>
home and having a good time .<lb/>
Rita, who came back to the<lb/>
United States to give birth to her<lb/>
son, Joshua, now two months old,<lb/>
admitted that her statement was<lb/>
"prejudidal But she daimed<lb/>
she has seen both types of Peace<lb/>
Caps wakers in her travels and<lb/>
has seen "much more of today's<lb/>
type of volunteer<lb/>
Since 1974, the Feinbergs<lb/>
have travelled to the poverty-<lb/>
stricken Third World nations<lb/>
where Foster Parents Ran aid not<lb/>
only children, but entire com-<lb/>
munities.<lb/>
They've been assigned to an<lb/>
area so remote that the women<lb/>
have to walk two hours down the<lb/>
side of a mountain to fetch their<lb/>
EAT FOR JUST<lb/>
VVCplus tax MonThurs.<lb/>
Crabeakes, slaw, french fries plus<lb/>
hushpuppies.<lb/>
1 4 pound hamburger steak, slaw,<lb/>
french fries and rolls.<lb/>
Fish, slaw french fries, hushpuppies.<lb/>
CLIFF'S<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
Open 4:30-9:00 MonSat. 752-3172<lb/>
2 miles east on highway 264<lb/>
(out 10th St.)<lb/>
water supply and so backward<lb/>
that the men don't think they<lb/>
have a water problem.<lb/>
They've seen medical fadli-<lb/>
ties that consist of a ramshackle<lb/>
building with a small bottle of<lb/>
merourachrome and a maternity<lb/>
room with an oil-doth delivery<lb/>
table covered with flies.<lb/>
"In ader to help a child, Ran<lb/>
helps its family and oommunity<lb/>
said Rita.<lb/>
"Sometimes the most import-<lb/>
ant thing we can do for a<lb/>
youngster is assure it of dean<lb/>
water she oontinued. "So we<lb/>
help dig a well<lb/>
Thay also help communities<lb/>
develop youth centers, con-<lb/>
sumers' cooperative stores, vo-<lb/>
cational training schools, housing<lb/>
and improved farming methods.<lb/>
Whatever the prqjed, the com-<lb/>
munity always supplies its own<lb/>
labor so that there is a personal<lb/>
involvement.<lb/>
"It becomes an investment fa<lb/>
them she added. "And we just<lb/>
doi't go in and impose what we<lb/>
think a particular area needs. The<lb/>
community determines the pria-<lb/>
ities and we assist with the<lb/>
finances and technical skills<lb/>
Rita and Lloyd have been<lb/>
living and waking in faeign<lb/>
countries ever since they gradu-<lb/>
ated from oollege. She's from<lb/>
Yak, Pa he's fron Providence,<lb/>
R.I. Befae they met, Rita taught<lb/>
at a small school in the Himalayas<lb/>
fa two years and Lloyd taught<lb/>
primitive tribes in the Philippines<lb/>
as a Peace Caps volunteer fa 2<lb/>
and a half year a<lb/>
And in lieu of a honeymoon<lb/>
after their wedding in 1973, the<lb/>
couple dedded to continue their<lb/>
education at the Experiment in<lb/>
International Living in Vermont<lb/>
where they attended graduate<lb/>
school.<lb/>
When Lloyd was appointed<lb/>
directa of Fosta Parents Plan in<lb/>
Ethiopia the following year, Rita<lb/>
joined him as a social waker. She<lb/>
would have given birth to Joshua<lb/>
there had it not been fa the dvil<lb/>
wars that raged after the over-<lb/>
throw of Haile Selassi.<lb/>
The couple was headquarter-<lb/>
ed at a tiny mountain top village<lb/>
when a band of insurgents began<lb/>
attacking the area. Lloyd was<lb/>
away at the time and Rita took<lb/>
refuge in a small tourist hotel<lb/>
with other staff members. When<lb/>
the soldiers finally entered the<lb/>
hotel, the leader politely apolo-<lb/>
gized and invited Rita to take tea<lb/>
with him.<lb/>
"We didn't know from one<lb/>
day to the next which town would<lb/>
be invaded by which insurgent<lb/>
group, so Plan dedded to relocate<lb/>
us in Ecuada and I came back to<lb/>
have Joshua she explained.<lb/>
Waking in the capital dty of<lb/>
Ecuada revealed to hem the<lb/>
typical problem of the under-<lb/>
developed country. "The poa<lb/>
rural people flock to the dty<lb/>
because they have nothing. They<lb/>
go without money a relatives to<lb/>
the city because they have<lb/>
nothing. They go without money<lb/>
a relatives to stay with and the<lb/>
little hope they bring with them is<lb/>
soon dispelled by the lack of<lb/>
employment a housing.<lb/>
"They ultimately develop the<lb/>
most inaedible slums you've ever<lb/>
seen she added.<lb/>
The Feinbergs are convinoed<lb/>
that it's in the rural areas where<lb/>
change must take place and<lb/>
Plan's operations are now heavily<lb/>
concentrated in the rural com-<lb/>
munities of Latin America and the<lb/>
Far East. <lb/>
Trends meeting<lb/>
Every Tuesday - 4:00<lb/>
Publications building<lb/>
New writers welcome<lb/>
mm �. � ���<lb/>
�Hi<lb/>
<pb facs="00057083_0009"/><lb/>
MKHHIMHi<lb/>
Bpgpq Hff! I<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 75 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
9<lb/>
M<lb/>
��<lb/>
IMW<lb/>
�<lb/>
Pirate defenders smother 'Dogs<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
East Carolina faced probably<lb/>
the best defensive team they will<lb/>
see this year Saturday night in<lb/>
The Citadel and came away with<lb/>
ar, impressive 22-3 win over the<lb/>
Bulldogs in front of 18,250 fans in<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
"The Citadel has a fine<lb/>
football team an elated Pirate<lb/>
mentor Pat Dye said following the<lb/>
game. "Defensively, they are the<lb/>
best we've played by far this<lb/>
year. They get a lot of aedit for<lb/>
the way they play defense and<lb/>
they deserve it. But, I also want to<lb/>
give out kids a lot of aedit on<lb/>
defense because they deserve it. I<lb/>
think the best defensivve team<lb/>
tonight was on our side of the<lb/>
field<lb/>
After spotting the Bulldogs to<lb/>
a 3-0 lead the very first series of<lb/>
downs, the Pirate defense stiffen-<lb/>
ed to allow the visitors past the 50<lb/>
just twice during the rest of the<lb/>
game, once on a turnover by the<lb/>
offense.<lb/>
The Pirates used the talented<lb/>
toe of Pete Conaty to take a 9-3<lb/>
lead into the locker room at<lb/>
halftime. The senior from Annan-<lb/>
dale, Va. kicked field goals of 22,<lb/>
28, and 18 yards in the first half to<lb/>
take ECU to the six-point lead.<lb/>
Conaty has now set a new<lb/>
single-season record for field<lb/>
goals in just four games with ten.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
He has not missed.<lb/>
Quarterback Mike Weaver led<lb/>
the Pirate offense with 103 yards<lb/>
rushing in 26 carries while<lb/>
passing for 48 yards on five of<lb/>
nine passes. Fullback Raymond<lb/>
Jones picked up another 52 yards<lb/>
in 16 carries.<lb/>
The Citadel's defense virtual-<lb/>
ly cut off the wide pitch to Pirate<lb/>
running backs Eddie Hicks and<lb/>
Willie Hawkins with good lateral<lb/>
movement. Hicks had just 24<lb/>
yards rushing while Hawkins<lb/>
picked up 17.<lb/>
The game started off with a<lb/>
bang as the Pirates kicked off to<lb/>
the Bulldogs. Tyrone Roper field-<lb/>
ed the Pete Conaty kick at the five<lb/>
yard line and bolted through an<lb/>
alley on the right side to the<lb/>
SeeFOOTBALL, page 10.<lb/>
<lb/>
First Downs<lb/>
Rushes-Yards<lb/>
Passing Yards<lb/>
Return Yards<lb/>
Passes (A-C-l)<lb/>
Punts-Avg.<lb/>
Fumbles-Lost<lb/>
Penalties-Yards<lb/>
Final Team Stats<lb/>
Citadel<lb/>
10<lb/>
40-96<lb/>
54<lb/>
17<lb/>
21-7-6<lb/>
8-44<lb/>
4-0<lb/>
6-30<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
19<lb/>
70-239<lb/>
48<lb/>
196<lb/>
10-5-1<lb/>
7-35<lb/>
2-2<lb/>
5-55<lb/>
<lb/>
Pete Conaty selected<lb/>
Athlete-of-the-Month<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Editor s note: The A thlete-of-the-Month will be a<lb/>
monthly feature in FOUNTAINHEAD in which one<lb/>
athlete will be selected for hisfher excellence in East<lb/>
Carolina athletics during the month by a panel<lb/>
consisting of sports staff of FOUNTAINHEAD and<lb/>
the staff of the Sports Information Office.<lb/>
Pete Conaty is sure getting a big kick out of life.<lb/>
The senior place-kicker and reserve quarterback for<lb/>
the ECU football team has kicked ten field goals and<lb/>
has been selected FOUNTAINHEAD's Athlete-of-<lb/>
the-Month.<lb/>
Going into Saturday night's game with The<lb/>
Citadel, the senior has seven three-pointers in three<lb/>
games to lead the NCAA with an average of 2.33 per<lb/>
game. He helped his cause against the Bulldogs<lb/>
with throe field goals.<lb/>
The amazing thing about Conaty is that he has<lb/>
been perfect through four games. The Annandale,<lb/>
Va. native is ten for ten in field goals and 11 of 11 in<lb/>
extra point attempts.<lb/>
He has 41 points in four games for a 10.25 per<lb/>
game average and leads ail kickers in scoring. He<lb/>
stands about seventh among all scorers.<lb/>
The ten three-pointers Conaty has through four<lb/>
games is a new school record, the old being nine by<lb/>
Ricky McLester in 1972. He is closing in on the<lb/>
career mark of 14 by Jim Woody. He has 12 field<lb/>
goals in his career.<lb/>
Conaty won in the balloting over seven other<lb/>
nominees. They were Cathy Zwigard of field hockey;<lb/>
Cathy Port wood of women's tennis; Harold<lb/>
Randolph. Zack Valentine, Raymond Jones, Mike<lb/>
jUlUW.HillllWliffl '�It<lb/>
Weaver, and Gerald Hall, all of football.<lb/>
"Pete Conaty is a real good kicker stated head<lb/>
football coach Pat Dye. "He's won two ball games<lb/>
this year with his booting. Pete'sal so a good quarter<lb/>
back. Heck, he's a good all-round athlete. He<lb/>
pitches on the baseball team<lb/>
By winning, Conaty is automatically a nominee<lb/>
fa Athlete-of-the-Year to be voted on in the last<lb/>
month of the school year.<lb/>
PETE CONATY<lb/>
TWO UNIDENTIFIED PIRA TE defenders bring down Bulldog runner<lb/>
as Tommy Summer 64 looks on.<lb/>
Bill Keyes<lb/>
Adulation of a coach<lb/>
In the preiaoe to BEAR: The Hard Life and Good Times of Alabama's<lb/>
Coach Bryant, oo-autha John Underwood quotes one-time Bryant<lb/>
assistant O.A. (Bun) Phillips:<lb/>
"We used to have those conferences befae practice at (Texas)<lb/>
A&amp;M. Coach Bryant would stick his head in, and in the middle of a<lb/>
sentence everybody would stop and look at him. Total quiet. He'd walk<lb/>
in, real slow. Sit down. Take out a cigarette. Tap it on his fingernail, and<lb/>
light it. And as often as not, he'd smoke the whole damn cigarette<lb/>
without anybody saying a word. We'd just sit there and wait.<lb/>
"Some of these guys had played fa him fa four years, and ooached<lb/>
with him I don't know how long. I don't mean they were scared of him,<lb/>
but they respected him, like I did. If he was going to say something they<lb/>
damn sure wanted to hear it. He never had to say, 'Let me have your<lb/>
attention He already had it.<lb/>
"I remember one time walking out of his office, shutting the doa<lb/>
behind me, and John David Crow was standing there. I said, 'What do<lb/>
you need, John?'<lb/>
"He said, 'Just want to see The Man Everybody called Bryant 'The<lb/>
Man<lb/>
"I said, 'Whyn't you just goon in. There'snobody with him. He'll be<lb/>
glad to see you<lb/>
"Crow said, Oh, I'll just wait<lb/>
" Crow was a senia then and had played out his eligibility. I couldn't<lb/>
talk him into going in. He just leaned against the wall. It must have been<lb/>
twenty minutes befae the doa opened and Coach Bryant came out. He<lb/>
said, What the hell you doing out here, Crow?'<lb/>
"Crow said, Well, I just wanted to talk to you<lb/>
"Why didn't you come in then?'<lb/>
"I thought you were busy a you wouldn't have had the doa dosed<lb/>
"And all John Crow had done was make All-America two years in a<lb/>
row and win the Heisman Trophy. That's the kind of respect Bryant gets<lb/>
from people<lb/>
It seems strange to oompare Pat Dye to the legendary Bear Bryant.<lb/>
But he does indeed receive the same respect from his staff and players<lb/>
at ECU that Bryant receives at Alabama. Players speak of the way Coach<lb/>
Dye walks into a meeting and the room becomes completely silent, fa<lb/>
example. And with admiration they mimic Coach Dye:<lb/>
"You've gotta remember that when the going gets tough the tough<lb/>
get going. You've gotta reach down inside and get something your<lb/>
mama and daddy gave ya.<lb/>
"I wanna see ya with a bounce in your walk and a gleem in your<lb/>
eye<lb/>
Along with all the adulation, some team members take time to recall<lb/>
humaousoocuranoes. Offensice tackle Ricky Bennett says Pat Dye does<lb/>
aazy things to loosen the team up. A few days befae the season opener<lb/>
against Southern Miss, Dye walked into a meeting wearing a blond wig<lb/>
and said, "I've gotta be able to communicate with my blond, long-haired<lb/>
QB's Later in the meeting, he garnished an Afro wig and said, "Gotta<lb/>
be able to tap with my' brothers' "On those two notes the team roared.<lb/>
Aooading to tamer Bryant player and Oakland Raider piacekicker<lb/>
and quarterback Geage Blanda, when The Man walks into a room, you<lb/>
wanted to stand up and applaud. Ladies and gentlemen, Pat Dye.<lb/>
i imiinni mi<lb/>
<lb/>
KM<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057083_0010"/><lb/>
io<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 75 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
h nMmt<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
by John Evans<lb/>
Scott's Time-Out's continue to lead the way in the men's touch<lb/>
football standings while three teams from Tyler Dorm lead the women's<lb/>
football competition.<lb/>
The Time-Outs rolled to a pair of wins last week, including a 90-8 rout<lb/>
over the Jones Klampits. The Time-Outs were to play Charlie division<lb/>
rival Umstead TD' s Monday in a key game. The TD' s were 4-0 and have<lb/>
been averaging 45 points a game. Scott's Time-Out was averaging 68<lb/>
points a game.<lb/>
Belk's Assasins have won three straight games after losing the<lb/>
opening game by forfeit.<lb/>
In the fraternity league. Kappa Alpha "A" oontinues to win over its<lb/>
top rivals. TheKA'stopped previously unbeaten Phi KappaTau 15-14 in<lb/>
sudden death last week. Pi Kappa Phi, Tau Kappa Epsilon and Sigma<lb/>
Nu remained unbeaten with 4-0 records. The TKE's and Pi Kapps play<lb/>
each other this week, meaning one team will not continue its unbeaten<lb/>
ways.<lb/>
In club play Phi Epsilon Kappa holds a slim one-game edge over both<lb/>
the Rugby Ruggers and the P.E. Majors. Phi Epsilon Kappa has beaten<lb/>
both teams, which have yet to face each other.<lb/>
In the Independent league the Pack are pulling away from the league<lb/>
and stand 4-0.<lb/>
With the playoffs approaching in two weeks, it has been announced<lb/>
that the top four teams and ties will qualify from each division for the<lb/>
playoffs.<lb/>
In women's play only three teams remain unbeaten and they all hail<lb/>
from Tyler Dorm. The three teams together have won 12 games without<lb/>
a loss. In the Punt division Tyler II holds a slim one game edge over the<lb/>
Fleming Floozies, who have a 3-1 record. In the Pass division Tyler I and<lb/>
Tyler III are tied with 4-0 records.<lb/>
FOOTBALL RANKINGS<lb/>
Independent<lb/>
1. The Pack 2. Last Chance<lb/>
Club<lb/>
1. Phi Epsilon Kappa 2. Rugby Ruggers 3. P.E. Majors<lb/>
Dormitory<lb/>
1. Scott Time-Outs 2. Umstead TD's 3. Schlitz Blitz 4. Yellow Jackets<lb/>
5. Belk Assasins<lb/>
Fraternity<lb/>
1. Kappa Alpha (A( 2. Tau Kappa Epsilon 3. Phi Kappa Tau 4. Pi<lb/>
Kappa Phi 5. Sigma Nu<lb/>
Worijen<lb/>
I.Tyler II 2. Tyler I 3. Tyler III �?. Fleming Floozies<lb/>
TENNIS RESULTS<lb/>
Thirteen contestants remain in women's singles play. In this week's<lb/>
matches Janet Bunch meets Christy Williams, Cathy Cox meets Janet<lb/>
McVeigh, Debbie Williams meets Janet Hoeppel, Claire Lingenfelser<lb/>
playsCathryn Deal, Elizabeth Wallace squares off against Mary Sawyer<lb/>
and Debra Skut meets Nancy Moore. Mary Leisy draws a bye as three<lb/>
first-round matches ended in doublr ' -felts.<lb/>
Our picks to advance are William kx, Hoeppel, Deal, Sawyer and<lb/>
Moore.<lb/>
In team tennis the Aycock Dueces and Belk Bombers hold narrow<lb/>
leads in their divisions, while Pi Kappa Phi, Tau Kappa Epsilon and Phi<lb/>
Kappa Tau vie fa the lead in one Frat-Club-lnd. league and the Kappa<lb/>
Alphas head the other league.<lb/>
Nineteen teams have signed up for co-rec mixed doubles which begin<lb/>
this week. We pick the team of Keith Gray and Cynthia Averett as the<lb/>
pre-tournament favorite.<lb/>
TRACK MEET WON BY AYCOCK<lb/>
An awesome assembly from Aycock Dorm swept past the Plundering<lb/>
Peaheads and took the Intramural Track Meet held Wednesday.<lb/>
Winning the women's meet was Fleming Dormitory.<lb/>
Aycock scored in every event and finished with 93 points to the<lb/>
Peaheads' 83 points. Kappa Alpha was third with 62 points and Kappa<lb/>
Sigma was fourth with 53 points.<lb/>
Five intramural records were set. Jeff Siler of Delta Sigma Phi set<lb/>
records in both the 880-yard and mile runs, Aycock's Jeff Mitchell set<lb/>
the two-mile record, Bucky Moser of the Peaheads set a record in the<lb/>
high jump an the Aycock Mile Relay team set a record fa that event.<lb/>
Ivey Peacock repeated as champion fa the third time in the shot put and<lb/>
discus events.<lb/>
INNERTUBEWATERBASEKTBALL<lb/>
Registration fa Innertube Wata Basketball runs through<lb/>
Thursday. Volleyball registration fa wanen runs through Wednesday<lb/>
with a captain's meeting scheduled fa Thursday at 6 p.m.<lb/>
�mmlimning iimnmiin i' ��m �� � w ii mm i urn<lb/>
"Almost Anything Goes'<lb/>
coming next week<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
This year's Intramural Almost<lb/>
Anything Spats Carnival will be<lb/>
held oi Wednesday, October 13<lb/>
on the ECU Mall.<lb/>
Registration fa the event runs<lb/>
through Monday, October 11. A<lb/>
team must have three men and<lb/>
three women.<lb/>
Fa those who have watched<lb/>
television's "Almost Anything<lb/>
Goes show this intramural<lb/>
spectacular will be familiar be-<lb/>
cause the famat and scheduled<lb/>
events will follow along the lines<lb/>
of the television show.<lb/>
This year the competitiai has<lb/>
been expanded to include five<lb/>
events, plus two surprise final<lb/>
events to decide the winning<lb/>
team.<lb/>
Entered teams will be divided<lb/>
into groups fa competitiai and<lb/>
will proceed from event to event<lb/>
except fa the final two events<lb/>
when the division champions will<lb/>
meet in the final two champion-<lb/>
ship events.<lb/>
The semifinal events will be<lb/>
the egg toss, the human inner-<lb/>
tube, the innertube shuffle, blind<lb/>
football and skin-the-snake. The<lb/>
two surprise events will not be<lb/>
announced until the finals.<lb/>
Points will be awarded in each<lb/>
event with 25 points fa first-<lb/>
place, 20 points fa second-place,<lb/>
15 points for third-place, 10<lb/>
points fa fourth-place and five<lb/>
points awarded fa fifth-place.<lb/>
The teams receiving the most<lb/>
points in their division will meet<lb/>
in the finals fa the overall title.<lb/>
Some of the events will<lb/>
require that all the groups<lb/>
participate at the same time.<lb/>
More detailed information<lb/>
concerning each event can be<lb/>
obtained at the Intramural office<lb/>
in Memaial Gym. Those in-<lb/>
terested in playing but who don't<lb/>
have a team to play with may<lb/>
sign-up on Monday, October 11 at<lb/>
8 A.M. on the bulletin board<lb/>
outside the Intramural office.<lb/>
Television coverage fa the<lb/>
carnival will beprovided by<lb/>
WNCT-TV, Channel 9, in Green-<lb/>
ville. Prizes for the overall<lb/>
winners and the winners in each<lb/>
event have been provided by<lb/>
Greenville restaurants and mer-<lb/>
chants.<lb/>
FOOTBALL<lb/>
Continued fom page 9.<lb/>
Pirate 26 yard line. It was Conaty,<lb/>
the last ECUdefenda fa Roper to<lb/>
go by, who faced the speedster<lb/>
out of bounds.<lb/>
After failing to pick up a first<lb/>
down, the Bulldogs called on Paul<lb/>
Tanguay to attempt a 37 yard<lb/>
field goal. The sidewinder split<lb/>
the uprights and put The Citadel<lb/>
out in front with just a minute and<lb/>
a half gone in the contest.<lb/>
Afta a couple of exchanges of<lb/>
punts, the Pirates took ova on<lb/>
their 42 yard line. It took Weaver<lb/>
just ten plays to take the Bucs<lb/>
down to the five yard line of the<lb/>
Bulldogs where Conaty came on<lb/>
to boot a 22 yard field goal to knot<lb/>
the game at 3-3.<lb/>
Conaty then kicked off to the<lb/>
Bulldogs who could generate no<lb/>
offense and had to punt. Kenny<lb/>
Caldwell got off a boomer that<lb/>
was fielded by Gerald Hall at the<lb/>
Pirate 21. The lithe strong safety<lb/>
then weaved his way through<lb/>
Citadel defenders and returned<lb/>
the punt 59 yards to the Bulldog<lb/>
20 yard line.<lb/>
Three plays netted nine yards<lb/>
fa the Pirates but left them with<lb/>
a fourth-and-one situation Dye<lb/>
again called on his consistent<lb/>
place-kicker Conaty and he split<lb/>
the goal posts from 28 yards out,<lb/>
giving the Bucs a 6-3 edge.<lb/>
Hall set up another Conaty<lb/>
field goal in the second quarter<lb/>
with an intaception of a Joe<lb/>
Sumrall pass. Catching the ball<lb/>
on the Pirate 41, Hall returned<lb/>
the ball to The Citadel's 41. ECU<lb/>
took 11 plays to get down to the<lb/>
Bulldog two yard line, where<lb/>
Conaty again came on to do his<lb/>
specia. . Again being pafect,<lb/>
Conaty booted his tenth three-<lb/>
potnter of the season to set a new<lb/>
East Carolina reoord.<lb/>
The half ended with the<lb/>
Pirates up 9-3 and the game was<lb/>
far fron being cva.<lb/>
The Pirates took the second<lb/>
half kickoff and Weava coughed<lb/>
up the ball on the third play from<lb/>
scrimmage and all-Amaica line-<lb/>
backa Brian Ruff recovaed fa<lb/>
the Bulldogs.<lb/>
Fate then switched to the<lb/>
Pirates as Hall picked off yet<lb/>
anaha Sumrall aerial at the ECU<lb/>
39 and returned it to the Bulldog<lb/>
ten.<lb/>
From thae it took Weava just<lb/>
two five yard bursts to get into the<lb/>
end zone. Conaty added the point<lb/>
afta to put the Pirates up 16-3.<lb/>
Defense dominated the rest<lb/>
of the quarta, Sumrall again<lb/>
threw an arant pass which was<lb/>
intacepted by Harold Randolph<lb/>
at the Bulldog 23 yard line,<lb/>
setting up the final scae of the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Weava did all the wak ai this<lb/>
touchdown by carrying 14 yards<lb/>
on the first play and nine fa the<lb/>
scae. The Pirates failed in their<lb/>
attempt fa a two-point oonva-<lb/>
GOOD BLOCKING and tough defense were the name of the game<lb/>
86 ECU beat The Citadel 22-3 Saturday night.<lb/>
si on.<lb/>
Gerald Hall was a tara fa<lb/>
the Bulldogs on defense as strong<lb/>
safety and on the specialty teams<lb/>
as a punt returna.<lb/>
The sophomae fran Edenton<lb/>
intercepted two passes, one of<lb/>
which he returned fa 59 yards,<lb/>
and ran back two punts fa a total<lb/>
of 68 yards. Going into this game,<lb/>
Hall led the nation in total yards<lb/>
returning punts at 166. The 68<lb/>
yards against The Citadel gave<lb/>
Hall 234 yards on the season,<lb/>
surely tops in the NCAA.<lb/>
"Gerald Hall is a helluva<lb/>
football playa Dye said. "He<lb/>
plays safety almost pafectly and<lb/>
is a tremendous punt returna<lb/>
Hall was not the only Pirate<lb/>
intacepting passes off the hands<lb/>
of Bulldog quartabacks. Ernest<lb/>
Madison picked off two whiie<lb/>
Harold Randolph and Harold Fort<lb/>
got one apiece.<lb/>
"I thought our defense made<lb/>
amends fa their play at Williams-<lb/>
burg last week Dye added.<lb/>
"They intaoepted six passes,<lb/>
and we had a good pass rush all<lb/>
night. Fred Chavis caught my eye<lb/>
playing defensive end in place of<lb/>
(Cary) Godette<lb/>
The Pirates gave up just 150<lb/>
yards to the Bulldogs while<lb/>
gaining 287 fa themselves. The<lb/>
1974 Southan Confaence Playa<lb/>
of the Year Andaew JOinson<lb/>
picked up only 36 yards on nine<lb/>
carrias fa the Bulldogs.<lb/>
The Pirates will face Southan<lb/>
IIIiniois Saturday in Ficklen Stad-<lb/>
ium. The Salukis come to Green-<lb/>
ville with a 3-1 mark fa the<lb/>
seasai. The Pirates defeated SIU<lb/>
last year 41-7 when the Salukis<lb/>
finished with a 1-9-1 recad.<lb/>
SCORING SUM MARY:<lb/>
TheCitadel 3 0 0.0 - 3<lb/>
East Carolina 6 3 7 6 - 22<lb/>
QT-Tanguay 37 FG<lb/>
ECU-Conaty 22 FG<lb/>
ECU-Coiaty 28 FG<lb/>
ECU-Gonaty 18 FG<lb/>
ECU-Weava 5 run (Cawrty kick)<lb/>
ECU-Weava 9 run (try fa two<lb/>
failed)<lb/>
Attendance-18,250<lb/>
r<lb/>
HI<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
w<lb/>
�&amp;M<lb/>
WmWm<lb/>
SMWEK- , . - �. teal<lb/>
<pb facs="00057083_0011"/><lb/>
HHHHHMHH<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 75 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
11<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
���!�<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
Tennis team third in Methodist tourney<lb/>
ECU's women's tennis team<lb/>
placed third in a field of eight in<lb/>
the Methodist Invitational last<lb/>
weekend in Fayetteville.<lb/>
Methodist, the host school,<lb/>
won with 41 points, while High<lb/>
Point College placed second with<lb/>
32, and ECU third with 27. The<lb/>
Pirates were followed by Camp-<lb/>
bell with 26, Guilford 21, Atlantic-<lb/>
Christian 16, Pembroke State 15,<lb/>
and UNC-Wilmington.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates had no<lb/>
champions in the six singles<lb/>
flights or in the three doubles<lb/>
divisions, but copped four second<lb/>
place trophies and one third. Four<lb/>
Pirate performers lost first round<lb/>
matches.<lb/>
Playing at number four sin-<lb/>
gles, Susan Helmer won her first<lb/>
two matches before bowing in the<lb/>
finals. Helmer showed her best<lb/>
strength in the first two matches,<lb/>
winning 6-2, 6-2 and 6-1, 6-0.<lb/>
Women's<lb/>
Hockey<lb/>
takes one,<lb/>
ties one<lb/>
ECU's Women's field hockey<lb/>
team won one and tied one in the<lb/>
Duke Invitational field hockey<lb/>
tourney Saturday.<lb/>
In the opener, the Lady<lb/>
Pirates downed High Point Col-<lb/>
lege 3-1. ECU had 13 shots on<lb/>
goal to just seven for High Point.<lb/>
Cathy Zwigard again led ECU<lb/>
with two goals, bringing her<lb/>
season total to give. Gail Betton<lb/>
scored the other point for the<lb/>
Pirates wile Patty Wooten picked<lb/>
up High Point's.<lb/>
In the afternoon contest,<lb/>
Durham Club tied the Bucs 1-1.<lb/>
Betton scored the Pirates' goal<lb/>
while Holly Swartz scored for<lb/>
Durham.<lb/>
ECU led ten shots on goal<lb/>
while Durham had just six, but<lb/>
the dub's goalie had nine saves.<lb/>
The field hockey squad will be<lb/>
traveling to Chapel Hill today to<lb/>
face UNC.<lb/>
Helmer ran out of steam in the<lb/>
finals, losing 6-4, 6-2. That was<lb/>
Helmer's first loss of the season.<lb/>
Vicky Loose, in number six<lb/>
singles, won her opener 6-2, 6-2<lb/>
and semi-final match 6-2, 6-1,<lb/>
losing the final 6-4, 7-5.<lb/>
Helmer and Loose were team-<lb/>
ed at number two doubles and<lb/>
won their first two matches to<lb/>
reach the finals, but bowed in the<lb/>
finale 6-4, 7-5.<lb/>
In the third flight of doubles,<lb/>
Karen Clark and Leigh Jefferson<lb/>
worked hard to reach the finals<lb/>
but lost 6-0, 6-2.<lb/>
All the Lady Pirates that<lb/>
reached the finals lost to Metho-<lb/>
dist performers.<lb/>
Leigh Jefferson, playing at<lb/>
number three singles, won her<lb/>
first round match but lost in the<lb/>
semis.<lb/>
Dorcas Sunkel, Cathy Port-<lb/>
wood, and Maria Stewart lost first<lb/>
Women's volleyball<lb/>
loses three matches<lb/>
ECU's volleyball team opened<lb/>
its season last Thursday at<lb/>
Appalachian State, but bowed to<lb/>
the Mountaineers both games,<lb/>
15-12, 15-11.<lb/>
Saturday, the Lady Pirates<lb/>
lost two matches at Durham,<lb/>
bowing to High Point College<lb/>
15-11, 15-4 in the opener. Duke<lb/>
then beat the Bucs 15-7, 15-9.<lb/>
No details were available at<lb/>
press time on any of the matches.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates played host<lb/>
to N.C. State and Wake Forest<lb/>
yesterday at Memorial Gym but<lb/>
no scores are available.<lb/>
ECU will travel to Murfrees-<lb/>
boro Wednesday to face Chowan<lb/>
College. The Lady Pirates are<lb/>
now 0-3 on the season.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
needs<lb/>
sports writers<lb/>
call 757-6366<lb/>
Lm$<lb/>
DINGO BOOTS<lb/>
Men's and Women's<lb/>
5.00 OFF<lb/>
with this coupon<lb/>
Downtown on the Mall<lb/>
PHONE 752- 2188<lb/>
301 SOUTH EVANS STREET. CHERRY BLDG.<lb/>
On the premises Custom<lb/>
Silversmithing by LES. Contem-<lb/>
porary and traditioal jewlery by<lb/>
artisans from throughout the U.S.<lb/>
and Mexico.<lb/>
Top of the Mall-Downtown Greenville<lb/>
round matches in singles compe-<lb/>
tition while the number one<lb/>
doubles team of Portwood and<lb/>
Sunkel also lost first round<lb/>
matches.<lb/>
The team, now 2-1 on the<lb/>
season, play host to State today at<lb/>
2 p.m. at the Minges Courts.<lb/>
ECU Bootes whip<lb/>
Appalachian State<lb/>
ECU's soccer team posted its<lb/>
first victory of the season Satur-<lb/>
day, beating highly-ranked Appa-<lb/>
lachian State, 2-1, in the Pirate<lb/>
home-opener.<lb/>
The Mountaineers have been<lb/>
ranked as high as fourth in the<lb/>
nation this year and are the<lb/>
defending Southern Conference<lb/>
champs.<lb/>
The Pirates, now 1-6 overall<lb/>
and 1-0 in the league, beat ASU<lb/>
even though the Apps had 37<lb/>
shots or goal to just 14 for ECU.<lb/>
Goalie John Keener had 19 saves<lb/>
for the Pirates.<lb/>
Jeff Karpovich scored the first<lb/>
goal for the Pirates on an assist by<lb/>
Tim Harrison, while Phil Martin<lb/>
scored the other goal unassisted.<lb/>
Willie Hanson scored for the<lb/>
Apps, now 3-3.<lb/>
Thursday, the Pirates journey-<lb/>
ed to Durham to meet Duke and<lb/>
was shot out 2-0.<lb/>
Edwin Agypong scored both<lb/>
goals for the Blue Devils as Duke<lb/>
had 23 shots a goals to 14 for the<lb/>
Bucs.<lb/>
The Pirates will play host to<lb/>
the University of North Carolina<lb/>
today. The Tar Heels are one of<lb/>
top teams in the South.<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
MENWOMEN!<lb/>
JOBS ON SHIPS! American.<lb/>
Foreign. No experience required.<lb/>
Excellent pay. Worldwide travel.<lb/>
Summer job or career. Send $3.00<lb/>
for information SEAFAX, Dept.<lb/>
Boc 2049, Port Angeles, Was-<lb/>
hington 98362.<lb/>
If you have something to buy<lb/>
or sell come to the Red Oak Show<lb/>
and Sell; We sell on consignment<lb/>
anything of value, excluding<lb/>
clothing. Open Mon. - Sat.<lb/>
11.00-6 O0 Sun. 2-6, closed Thurs.<lb/>
Located 3 miles west of<lb/>
Greenville at the intersection of<lb/>
264 and Farmville Highway in the<lb/>
old Red Oak church building.<lb/>
HELP WANTED. Income de-<lb/>
pendent upon initiative. Set your<lb/>
own hours. For informatior call<lb/>
752-2095, Thurs Sept. 30, V6<lb/>
from 800-9:30 p.m. only!<lb/>
WANTED: Ladies size 7 ice<lb/>
skates. Will pay well. 752-1058.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Mustang-loaded with<lb/>
value. Power steering and power<lb/>
disc brakes, factory air, radio,<lb/>
automatic floor shift, mint con-<lb/>
dition. Owner will accept best<lb/>
offer. Phone days 757-6961 or<lb/>
after 6 p.m. 756-6552.<lb/>
WANTED: Keyboard player for<lb/>
weekend band, top 40 and<lb/>
pop-country. Bookings through<lb/>
Jan. Days call 758-3378, nights<lb/>
call 752-6566.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1970 Honda CL-175,<lb/>
very good oondition; asking $300,<lb/>
includes two helmets. Call<lb/>
758-9322.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Washington<lb/>
Yacht &amp; Country Club, we need<lb/>
waiters or waitresses, come for<lb/>
interview Wed Fri Sat after<lb/>
4. 752-9680<lb/>
FOR SALE: Realistic stereo com-<lb/>
ponent. Best offer. Call Jack<lb/>
752-7596.<lb/>
PIANO AND GUITAR lessons.<lb/>
Daily and evenings. Richard J.<lb/>
Knapp, B.A. 756-3908.<lb/>
NEEDED: Female roommate to<lb/>
share 3-bedroom trailer. Rent $60<lb/>
plus utilites. Call 758-9577 after<lb/>
3.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1972 1245 Fiat<lb/>
Convertible. Whiteblack top, 5<lb/>
speed. Low mileage. Must sell.<lb/>
Call 7528179.<lb/>
For Sale: 65 MGB Good<lb/>
Condition. Call 758-0984.<lb/>
Yard sale, October 1 &amp; 2 All types<lb/>
of junk. 1310 Cotten Drive,<lb/>
Greenville, 758-1530.<lb/>
Do you have problems? Do<lb/>
you need a caring listener? Call<lb/>
758-2047.<lb/>
For Sale- 72 Vega, 4 speed,<lb/>
20,000 miles. Call Allan after 4<lb/>
o'clock. 746-4990.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1972 Cutlass<lb/>
Supreme. Green beige vinyl top.<lb/>
Air, tape deck, bucket seats.<lb/>
Great condition. Must sell. Call<lb/>
752-8179.<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057083_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 52, NO. 75 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
tawi liim mm ii Him mm<lb/>
mmrn<lb/>
wwnw<lb/>
"SPIRIT"<lb/>
NEW MUSIC FROM<lb/>
EARTH,<lb/>
WIND&amp;<lb/>
FIRE<lb/>
6.98 - ONLY 3"<lb/>
"SONGS IN THE<lb/>
KEY OF LIFE"<lb/>
NEW MUSIC FROM<lb/>
STEVIE<lb/>
WONDER<lb/>
13.98 - ONLY 8"<lb/>
PLUS NEW MUSIC BY STILLS &amp; YOUNG, BOSTON, BYLAN,<lb/>
STEVIE WINWOOB, AMERICAN FLYER IS NOW IN STOCK.<lb/>
RECORDS<lb/>
IN THE 6E0R6ET0WNE SHOPPES, COTANCHE ft READE STREETS<lb/>
ACROSS FROM CLEMENT DORM<lb/>
�MM�W<lb/>
fcLLt.it LIST LPt MILT �4.WC0T OUTS '2.49 t OF.<lb/>
EASTERN CAROLINA'S REST JAZZ SELECTION 2.90 I OF.<lb/>
SILVERSMITH JEWELRY DY APACHE<lb/>
FLOS A FOLL LINE OF NEAD EQOIFMENT-FAFERS-30'<lb/>
WWWWWII IIIIMIUHi � W<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057083_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>