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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057089_0001"/>
THIS ISSUE -<lb/>
12 PA GES<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over 50 years<lb/>
CIRCULATION -<lb/>
8,500<lb/>
VOL. 52, NO. 13<lb/>
26 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
MUiimawg i iliwili m<lb/>
IIHI<lb/>
i mum ? p?mi?i<lb/>
ECU experiences big weekend<lb/>
WHILE ECU was battling Carolina<lb/>
Photo by Russ Pogue See related story on oaae 9. <lb/>
Holshouser: Carter could<lb/>
totally change the U.S.<lb/>
By KIM JOHNSON<lb/>
Assistant r,9ws Editor<lb/>
Gov. James Holshouser said<lb/>
Monday he is "afraid of what<lb/>
Jimmy Carter could do to this<lb/>
country' in an address to local<lb/>
Republicans at Pitt County GOP<lb/>
headquarters in Greenville.<lb/>
"Things could totally change<lb/>
in the United States if Carter is<lb/>
elected he said. Holshouser<lb/>
accused Carter, Democratic pres-<lb/>
idential candidate, of leading the<lb/>
United States to Socialism.<lb/>
Holshouser, a staunch con-<lb/>
servative, associated liberalism<lb/>
with Socialism.<lb/>
According to Holshouser,<lb/>
Jimmy Carter is more of a liberal<lb/>
than Sen. George McGovern. I972<lb/>
Demoaaticpresidential nominee.<lb/>
In his informal speech, Hols-<lb/>
houser claimed a "neck and<lb/>
neck" contest between Republi-<lb/>
can President Gerald Ford and<lb/>
Carter pointing out that Carter's<lb/>
lead in the polls has dropped from<lb/>
29 per cent in August to eight per<lb/>
cent in September.<lb/>
In an effort to alleviate any<lb/>
Southern loyalty to Carter, a<lb/>
Southerner, Holshouser accused<lb/>
Carter of not "thinking like a<lb/>
GOVERNOR JAMES HOLSHOUSER<lb/>
m<lb/>
Photo by Russ Pogue<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Southerner.<lb/>
However, he did not define<lb/>
what "thinking like a Southern-<lb/>
er" meant.<lb/>
According to Holshouser. the<lb/>
Ford campaign is doing better in<lb/>
eastern North Carolina than else-<lb/>
where in the state.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD asked<lb/>
Holshouser if he felt President<lb/>
Ford's statement that eastern<lb/>
European countries are not under<lb/>
Soviet Union domination is hurt-<lb/>
ing ord's campaign.<lb/>
"No, I don't think so he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Holshouser said he does not<lb/>
feel Ford's statement was a<lb/>
mistake.<lb/>
"I don't feel President Fad<lb/>
made a mistake in what he said,<lb/>
anyone in his right mind would<lb/>
have realized what the President<lb/>
meant by his statement he<lb/>
added.<lb/>
The Governor accused the<lb/>
press of making too much of<lb/>
Ford's statement.<lb/>
When asked to comment on<lb/>
the charge that Ford has been<lb/>
leading a slur campaign against<lb/>
Carter instead of talking the<lb/>
issues, Holshouser admitted the<lb/>
Ford campaign has had a "nega-<lb/>
tive tone" for the most part.<lb/>
Holshouser told FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD he feels Ford will carry<lb/>
North Carolina in the election but<lb/>
made no predictions about his<lb/>
carrying the rest of the oountry.<lb/>
Holshouser urged the 30 or<lb/>
more Republicans present to<lb/>
stress the right to vote in their<lb/>
efforts.<lb/>
"Those who don't vote will be<lb/>
our biggest problem in the<lb/>
election results he said.<lb/>
??? i unmm mi<lb/>
PRESIDENT FORD was speaking at theN.C. State Fair. Photoby Ed<lb/>
Midgett)<lb/>
GOP candidate<lb/>
addresses ECU<lb/>
By STAN HOLLOW ELL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Joe Ward , 1st district Repub-<lb/>
lican candidate for Congress, last<lb/>
Wednesday night described his<lb/>
style of relating to "less intelli-<lb/>
gent" people to ECU Young<lb/>
Republicans.<lb/>
Ward's comments came while<lb/>
describing a conversation with a<lb/>
janitor in Kinston whom Ward<lb/>
"doubted" could read.<lb/>
Ward told the audience of<lb/>
Young Republicans how he ex-<lb/>
plained to the man how economic<lb/>
conditions were affecting his<lb/>
paycheck, using language that<lb/>
the man could understand.<lb/>
Accordinq to Ward, the man<lb/>
then replied, "Lawsy, captain, I<lb/>
sho' is glad you came my way<lb/>
today<lb/>
Ward then said he asked the<lb/>
man "is you goin' home an' tell<lb/>
your friends about it?"<lb/>
The man then replied "I sho'<lb/>
is according to Ward.<lb/>
"And I talk to em this way, I<lb/>
really do said Ward.<lb/>
"In my practice as a physician<lb/>
I literally vary my role aocording<lb/>
to the people I'm working with<lb/>
because I think they do better that<lb/>
way. A lot of doctors will not do<lb/>
this but I like it<lb/>
Ward told the audience how<lb/>
he talked to  people who are less<lb/>
intelligent than you people but<lb/>
claimed not to be "looking down<lb/>
on these people<lb/>
"You can use this on people<lb/>
who have IQ's down in the 70 to<lb/>
80 range and it just turns them on<lb/>
so great you'd be surprised<lb/>
said Ward.<lb/>
See WARD, page 6.<lb/>
ERROR<lb/>
The picture featured with<lb/>
Thursday's article on the Home-<lb/>
coming subcommittee should<lb/>
have been of Tim Sullivan, not of<lb/>
William Grantmyre as was print-<lb/>
ed. The mistake was due to the<lb/>
printer.<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
?mm<lb/>
mm in i wi<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057089_0002"/><lb/>
2<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 1326 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
The Count Election '76 Freshmen<lb/>
MM<lb/>
Prince<lb/>
MM<lb/>
Concert at Stokes. The SGA<lb/>
will provide a bus on Sunday Oct.<lb/>
31, to stop at Mendenhall and<lb/>
Brewster on the hour to carry<lb/>
students to and from Stokes. The<lb/>
bus starts running at 12:00 noon.<lb/>
Students can pick up their<lb/>
copy of the 1975-76 BUCCANEER<lb/>
by bringing their 10 and activity<lb/>
card to the BUCCANEER offioe<lb/>
located in the Publications Center<lb/>
(across from Joyner Library)<lb/>
between 9-12 and 1-6 Monday-<lb/>
Friday. Freshmen and transfer<lb/>
students are not eligible to<lb/>
receive a copy as these were paid<lb/>
for with last year's fees. Gradua-<lb/>
ting seniors can have someone<lb/>
pick up their book by giving an<lb/>
old ID or activity card to a friend.<lb/>
Rease pick up your oopy as soon<lb/>
as possible as supply is limited.<lb/>
CINERGY<lb/>
On Friday and Saturday Nov.<lb/>
5 &amp; 6 the Films Committee of the<lb/>
Student Union will present Robert<lb/>
Redford and Barbara Streisand in<lb/>
"The Way We Were<lb/>
Shows at 7 &amp; 9 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Theatre.<lb/>
Admission: ID &amp; activity card (or<lb/>
MSC membership)<lb/>
Spend Halloween with "Rose,<lb/>
mary's Baby It will blow your<lb/>
mind. A chilling mcvie of demo-<lb/>
nic possesion and rebirth of the<lb/>
devil as a child. Come see<lb/>
"Rosemary's BabyOd. 31 at 11 30<lb/>
p.m. in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Admission: ID and activity card.<lb/>
Veterans<lb/>
The ECU Veteran's Club<lb/>
needs you desperately. Due to<lb/>
graduation, the club's enrollment<lb/>
has decreased significantly. The<lb/>
continued existence of the club<lb/>
depends upon your willingness to<lb/>
participate.<lb/>
In the past, the dub has held<lb/>
sodal events, helped with hous-<lb/>
ing problems, tutored members,<lb/>
given job counseling, partidpated<lb/>
in intramural sports, and was<lb/>
adive in VA affairs. This is your<lb/>
voice on campus; there is power<lb/>
in numbers. Don't let it die.<lb/>
Call 758-2391 a 758-6662 fa<lb/>
more information. The next meet-<lb/>
ing ison Od. 27 at 730 upstairs in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium. We Care!<lb/>
Michael Murphey, the Fab-<lb/>
ulous fiddler Vassar Clements,<lb/>
and the amazing "Mr. Bojan-<lb/>
gles Jerry Jeff Walker with his<lb/>
Lost Gongo Band will eledrify<lb/>
MingesColiseum on Sun Od. 31<lb/>
at 8 p.m. Get tickets now at the<lb/>
Central Ticket Offioe in Menden-<lb/>
hall!<lb/>
The Count Bassie Orchestra<lb/>
will Fry the Funk off your face in a<lb/>
jazz of all decades blast in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium this Saturday. Get<lb/>
tickets at the Central Ticket<lb/>
Office and dance those creases<lb/>
out of you pants. Don't step on<lb/>
ants!<lb/>
MRC<lb/>
This week at Burger K ing, any<lb/>
body presenting a MRC card and<lb/>
purchasing a whopper gets either<lb/>
another whopper free a french<lb/>
fries and a coke. This is good only<lb/>
after 5 p.m.<lb/>
There will be a Halloween<lb/>
Costume Danoe Fri Od. 29, 8.<lb/>
Music and refreshments, prize for<lb/>
best oostume. Baptist Student<lb/>
Center .75 cents.<lb/>
The Recreation Sodety will<lb/>
have a meeting in Room 221<lb/>
Mendenhall, Thurs. Od. 28 at<lb/>
730. Plans for the Asheville trip<lb/>
will be discussed.<lb/>
Fletcher Hall will be selling<lb/>
large yellow Homecoming Mums<lb/>
for $4.50, Tuesday through<lb/>
Thurs from 10100 a.m1230<lb/>
p.m. and 130 p.m5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Each mum will have a football<lb/>
ornament in the center, purple<lb/>
ribbon with ECU, and individual<lb/>
water vial to keep the flower<lb/>
fresh!<lb/>
Elections<lb/>
On Wed Od. 27th, residents<lb/>
of Belk, Greene, Tyler, Fletcher<lb/>
and Umstead are urged to vote<lb/>
in a spedal one-time-only by-elec-<lb/>
tion to fill dorm positions in the<lb/>
SGA legislature. Voting will take<lb/>
place in the lobbies of these<lb/>
dorms on Wednesday from 10 to<lb/>
4.<lb/>
Model UN<lb/>
The Model United Nations<lb/>
Club will meet Thurs. Od. 28 at 7<lb/>
p.m. in Brewster C-104. All those<lb/>
interested in international rela-<lb/>
tions, foreign affairs, diplomacy<lb/>
and the United Nations itself are<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
Plans oonoerning the Model<lb/>
U.N. Conference to be held at the<lb/>
University of Pennsylvania in<lb/>
Philadelphia November 4-7 will<lb/>
be discussed. The ECU Model<lb/>
U.N. Club will be sending a<lb/>
couple of delegations to this<lb/>
conference. For further informa-<lb/>
tion, call David Mayoat 758-7578.<lb/>
WECU will broadcast live the<lb/>
eledion ooverage Tuesday No-<lb/>
vember 2nd. WECU reporters<lb/>
will be in Raleigh Governing the<lb/>
returns fa the North Carolina<lb/>
University Radio Netwak. The<lb/>
seven minute repots will be<lb/>
broadcast every half hour begin-<lb/>
ning at 653. Listen to WECU 57<lb/>
Tues. Nov. 2nd fa the latest news<lb/>
in Election '76.<lb/>
Eeta Gamma<lb/>
Thae will be a meeting of<lb/>
Eeta Gamma Sigma, hoiaary<lb/>
sodety fa business ai Wed. 27th<lb/>
Od. at 315 p.m. in rcom 130<lb/>
Rawl. All students and faculty<lb/>
members are invited.<lb/>
Silver Fox<lb/>
Charlie Rich will honky tonk<lb/>
his way into your hearts on Fri.<lb/>
Od.29in Minges at 8:00. Charlie<lb/>
Rich started at Sun Recads with<lb/>
Elvis Presley where the "Silver<lb/>
Fox" wrote rockers like "Mohair<lb/>
Sam" and "Wooley Bulley<lb/>
Charlie is also one of Dylans<lb/>
favorite song writers. Tickets at<lb/>
Central Ticket Offioe in Menden-<lb/>
hall.<lb/>
Profile '76<lb/>
Profile '76, a documentary<lb/>
program sponsaed by WECU<lb/>
RADIO AND THE NORTH<lb/>
CAROLINA UNIVERSITY RADIO<lb/>
NETWORK, will be broadcast<lb/>
Monday November 1 at 8 p.m. on<lb/>
WECU radio 57. Profile '76<lb/>
presents a sampling of the sodal,<lb/>
economic, and political oonoern<lb/>
which are common to the people<lb/>
of Nath Carolina.<lb/>
Tom Chapin<lb/>
If you don't know who TOM<lb/>
CHARN is perhaps you are not<lb/>
with it. TOM CHARN is on the<lb/>
move and going places induding<lb/>
an appearance at ECU on Odober<lb/>
27 at 8 p.m. Just look!<lb/>
ILLUMINA<lb/>
The Joe and Flo Doe Senia<lb/>
Show is here! This show has been<lb/>
described in many ways from the<lb/>
absurd to the absurd. The judges<lb/>
evaluating the show prefer to<lb/>
remain annonymous but the Joe<lb/>
and Flow Doe senia show, in<lb/>
Mendenhall Gallery, is here.<lb/>
Everyone oome because Joe and<lb/>
Flo are leaving. It's about time!<lb/>
Od. 24-31 in Mendenhall. ILLU<lb/>
MINA takes no aedit in knowing<lb/>
that Joe and Flo would adually<lb/>
show up.<lb/>
Remainder of Freshman Re-<lb/>
gistas will be given out with<lb/>
teleohone diredaies in old C.U<lb/>
this week Mon. - Fri.<lb/>
ACT<lb/>
Two nationally-standardized<lb/>
tests will be administered at ECU<lb/>
Nov. 20, the Allied Health<lb/>
Professions Admissions Test and<lb/>
the American College Testing<lb/>
(ACT) Assessment.<lb/>
Applications to take either test<lb/>
are available at the ECU Testing<lb/>
Center, 105-106 Speight Building,<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Applicants for the Allied<lb/>
Health test should complete and<lb/>
mail their applications to the<lb/>
Psychological Cap P.O. Box<lb/>
3540 Grand Central Station, New<lb/>
Yak, N.Y. 10017toarrive by Od.<lb/>
25.<lb/>
Pageant<lb/>
Alpha Kappa Alpha will spon-<lb/>
sor a Student of the Year pageant<lb/>
Od. 27 at 7 p.m. in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center thea-<lb/>
tre.<lb/>
NRC<lb/>
The National Research Coun-<lb/>
dl (NRC) announces the Research<lb/>
Assodateship Programs fa 1977.<lb/>
These programs provide sdent-<lb/>
ists and engineers with oppatun-<lb/>
ities fa postdodaal research on<lb/>
problems in many fields of<lb/>
atmosphaic and earth sdences,<lb/>
chemistry, engineering, environ-<lb/>
mental sdences, life sdences,<lb/>
mathematics, physics, and space<lb/>
sdences.<lb/>
The NRC administers the<lb/>
Research Assodateship Programs<lb/>
on behald of and in cooperation<lb/>
with seleded federal research<lb/>
aganizatiais, which have lab-<lb/>
orataies at about 80 geographic<lb/>
locations in the U.S.<lb/>
Appointments are awarded<lb/>
on a competitive basis. The<lb/>
competition is open to recent<lb/>
redpients of the dodaate and in<lb/>
some cases to senia investigat-<lb/>
ors. Sane programs are open to<lb/>
non-U.S. dtizensalso.<lb/>
Approximately 250 to 300 new<lb/>
awards will be made in 1977.<lb/>
Stipends (subjed to income tax)<lb/>
will range from $15,000 upwards.<lb/>
Grants will be provided fa family<lb/>
relocation and fa professional<lb/>
travel during tenure.<lb/>
Postmark deadline fa appli-<lb/>
cations is January 15, 1977.<lb/>
Awards will be announced in<lb/>
April.<lb/>
Further infamatioi concern-<lb/>
ing application materials and<lb/>
spedficoppatunitiesfa research<lb/>
is available from the Assodate-<lb/>
ship Offioe, JH 606-P, National<lb/>
Research Coundl, 2101 Constitu-<lb/>
tion Avenue, N.W Washington,<lb/>
D.C 20418.<lb/>
"The Student Prince the<lb/>
first produdion of the 1976-77<lb/>
season at the East Carolina<lb/>
Playhouse is currently in rehear-<lb/>
sal under the direction of Edgar<lb/>
R. Loessin.<lb/>
The cast of mae than 50 is<lb/>
oomprised of students from the<lb/>
ECU Department of Drama and<lb/>
Speech and the School of Music.<lb/>
The title role will be perfamed by<lb/>
a guest artist, Bill McDonald of<lb/>
Washington, D.C.<lb/>
The setting of "The Student<lb/>
Prince" is Heidelberg in 1860. A<lb/>
young prince, Karl Franz, has<lb/>
oome to Heidelberg University to<lb/>
spend a year. Karl Franz quickly<lb/>
learns the happiness of student<lb/>
life and falls in love with Kathie, a<lb/>
waitress at the local inn.<lb/>
"The Student Prince" will be<lb/>
presented in MoGinnis Audita-<lb/>
ium at ECU Od. 26-30 at 8:15<lb/>
p.m. Season tickets are still<lb/>
available. Infamatioi may be<lb/>
obtained by calling the Playhouse<lb/>
at 757-6390.<lb/>
Fish Fry<lb/>
Psi Chi will have its first<lb/>
annual fish fry on Sunday, Nov. 7.<lb/>
All psychdogy majas and psy-<lb/>
chology staff members are in-<lb/>
vited. Mark your calendar now<lb/>
and watch the Psi Chi bulletin<lb/>
boards and the FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
fa details. Student tickets will go<lb/>
on sale Tuesday, Od. 26 in the<lb/>
Psi Chi Library.<lb/>
Art Show<lb/>
A seledion of paintings by<lb/>
Samuel Perry Phillips of Car-<lb/>
thage, senia student in the ECU<lb/>
School of Art, will be on display in<lb/>
the gallery of Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center Od. 24-31.<lb/>
The show indudes non-<lb/>
objedive paintings in oils and<lb/>
aaylics.<lb/>
Manuscripts<lb/>
The dosing date fa the<lb/>
submission of manuscripts by<lb/>
College Students is Nov. 5. Any<lb/>
student attending either junia a<lb/>
senia college is eligible to submit<lb/>
his verse. There is no limitation<lb/>
as to fam a theme. Shater<lb/>
waks are preferred because of<lb/>
space limitations.<lb/>
Each poem must be TYPED a<lb/>
PRINTED ai a separate sheet,<lb/>
and must bear the NAME and<lb/>
HOME ADDRESS of the student,<lb/>
and the COLLEGE ADDRESS as<lb/>
well. Manuscripts should be sent<lb/>
to the OFFICE OF THE PRESS.<lb/>
Table Tennis<lb/>
Tuesday, November 2 at 8.00<lb/>
p.m. Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
will be sponsaing a table tennis<lb/>
singles tournament. There<lb/>
will be a $1.00 registration ree.<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057089_0003"/><lb/>
HHHHHHHHHHHM<lb/>
?BHHHBBHH<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 1326 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
3<lb/>
tUMtt?tf?M??<lb/>
SGA survey cont<lb/>
By JIM ELLIOTT<lb/>
Senior Editor<lb/>
Fountainhead, intramurals and the bus system were rated highest<lb/>
among campus services by students responding to the opinion survey.<lb/>
On a scale of zero to four, Fountainhead was given the best overall<lb/>
rating of 3.14, intramurals received a 2.83 and the bus system was rated<lb/>
2.72.<lb/>
This chapter of the Student Opinion Survey also examined the level<lb/>
of student participation in the Student Government Association, mainly<lb/>
through checks on voting regularity and motivations.<lb/>
The survey found that 30.5 per cent of the respondents considered<lb/>
themselves "regular voters 27.5 per cent were ' Occasional s while<lb/>
"Apathetics" comprised 42.0 per cent of those responding.<lb/>
"Regular voting is significantly lower among 17 and 18-year olds and<lb/>
those 22 and older according to the survey. "Voting frequency is<lb/>
lowest among the graduate students, with only 14.8 per cent ranking as<lb/>
Regular voters<lb/>
The survey revealed that most students are motivated to vote<lb/>
because they believe the issues involved (64.5 per cent) are important<lb/>
and because they are concerned about how studenWees are spent (62.6<lb/>
per cent).<lb/>
Table IV-6. How Studeots Learn of SGA Candidates<lb/>
Most Not<lb/>
Important Important Important<lb/>
1. Posters 45.9 37.5 16.7<lb/>
2. Newspaper editorials and articles<lb/>
about candidates<lb/>
3. Handouts, leaflets, etc.<lb/>
4. Paid advertisements in campus<lb/>
media<lb/>
5. Personal contact initiated by<lb/>
candidate<lb/>
6. Personal acquaintance of<lb/>
candidate<lb/>
7. Speeches and debates among<lb/>
candidates<lb/>
8. Fraternal, departmental or<lb/>
organizational endorsement ,<lb/>
m<lb/>
?I w win<lb/>
ft<lb/>
1. Candidate's stand on issues<lb/>
2. Candidate's campaign tactics<lb/>
3. Candidate's personality<lb/>
4. Candidate's appearance<lb/>
5. Personal committment or promise 16.2<lb/>
6. Publicity-candidate's name<lb/>
was most familiar 14.3<lb/>
7. Persuasion by friends or other<lb/>
individuals 7.3<lb/>
42.038.819.1<lb/>
33.439.626.9<lb/>
32.740.526.8<lb/>
23.730.046.4<lb/>
25.821.052.2<lb/>
9.420.869.7<lb/>
8.0 v.26.965.0<lb/>
ident's Choice of Candidates<lb/>
MostNot<lb/>
ImportantImportantImportant<lb/>
82.813.04.0<lb/>
42.345.811.9<lb/>
41.748.010.1<lb/>
16.944.838.1<lb/>
16.226.556.1<lb/>
43.4<lb/>
31.0<lb/>
42.2<lb/>
61.6<lb/>
Table IV-10. Student Ratings of Campus Services and Programs<lb/>
(In order of highest to lowest rated)<lb/>
NO<lb/>
A B C D F EVAL AVE.<lb/>
1.FOUNTAINHEAD35.447.813.53.00.41.13.14<lb/>
2. Intramurals19.351.325.32.21.941.22.83<lb/>
3. Bus system17.949.822.56.63.224.02.72<lb/>
4. Athletic facilities<lb/>
or student use14.845.425.79.015.123.32.55<lb/>
5. WECU10.045.233.27.33.551.32.52<lb/>
6. BUCCANEER12.438.532.112.84.113.42.42<lb/>
7. REBEL17.230.335.211.95.451.12.42<lb/>
8. Dorm conditions3.627.844.718.06.016.22.04<lb/>
9. Infirmary5.325.442.915.510.816.01.98<lb/>
10. Registration4.825.838.215.016.10.41.88<lb/>
11. Popular concerts5.923.333.223.713.85.91.83<lb/>
12. EBONY HERALD 5.614.533.122.624.276.51.54<lb/>
13. Drop-add1.614.134.824.225.45.01.42<lb/>
14. Eating facilities1.011.728.829.429.26.51.26<lb/>
15. Campus parking0.21.715.029.953.22.20.65<lb/>
AVERAGE10.330.130.515.414.122.22.08<lb/>
"Percentages of letter-grades exclude those who said they were unable<lb/>
to evaluate subject because they did not know enough about it. All<lb/>
percentages exclude those who failed to answer the question. These<lb/>
averaged 22.2 per cent per question.<lb/>
 "Average is the median of the letter-grades with A" counting as 4,<lb/>
"B" as 3, "C" as 2, "D" as 1 and "F" asO. Averages exclude those<lb/>
who said they were unable to evaluate subject.<lb/>
(Editor's note: Numbers represent per cent.)<lb/>
ERROR<lb/>
The article dealing with the<lb/>
approval of free bands fa Home-<lb/>
corning weekend in the Oct. 21<lb/>
issue contained an error. The<lb/>
article confused the dates and the<lb/>
tends. The subcommittee actual-<lb/>
ly oroposed scheduling STYX for<lb/>
Oct. 29 and ARTFUL DODGER<lb/>
for Oct. 30.<lb/>
NCASG to<lb/>
meet here<lb/>
By DAVID NASH<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The North Carolina Associa-<lb/>
tion of Student Governments<lb/>
(NCASG) will meet here Nov. 20,<lb/>
according to Tim Sullivan, SGA<lb/>
President.<lb/>
The body of student govern-<lb/>
ment presidents will hold its first<lb/>
meeting at ECU since its incep-<lb/>
tion in the fall of 1974.<lb/>
The association consists of<lb/>
Student Government presidents<lb/>
from the 16 state-supported<lb/>
schools.<lb/>
The body, recently incorpora-<lb/>
ted for tax purposes, represents<lb/>
90,000-100,000 students across<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
The association is most noted<lb/>
for its organization of rallies<lb/>
during the 1975 school year<lb/>
concerning tuition rate hikes.<lb/>
"For the rally, ECU had about<lb/>
3,000 students on the mall, which<lb/>
beat out' all the other schools<lb/>
attendance, including Chapel<lb/>
Hill said Sullivan.<lb/>
The November meeting at<lb/>
ECU is open to the public.<lb/>
Wve got<lb/>
what you want,<lb/>
<lb/>
We've Got Your Solitaire<lb/>
The basic design idea is chosen by more<lb/>
brides than any other. A single diamond,<lb/>
simple and elegant. We have solitares to fit<lb/>
every taste, every budget, in your choice<lb/>
of round, oval, marquise, pear or emerald cut.<lb/>
Whether you spend a hundred dollars,<lb/>
or thousands of dollars, we'll give you<lb/>
unmatched value for every dollar you spend.<lb/>
Use our Custom Charge Plan, BankAmericard,<lb/>
Master Charge or Layaway.<lb/>
Jewel Box<lb/>
? diamond spioauS's ro? ov?? vj ?i??s<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
On the Mall<lb/>
Attention<lb/>
Students and Patrons<lb/>
The Greenville Nightclub Association is making plans for the upooming Homecoming<lb/>
and Halloween weekend the last of this month. We have decided voluntarily that we wish to<lb/>
close Sunday night in order to promote and support what we believe to be a really exciting<lb/>
event being planned near Stokes-10 miles from Greenville. The First Annual Halloween<lb/>
Music Festival will start at noon on Sunday and run until midnight. Six non-stop, great bands<lb/>
and a $250 first prize for the best-or-worst Halloween costume-should make for a terrific<lb/>
last day of the Homecoming weekend.<lb/>
The club owners have asked the City to work with them to insure a fun and safe weekend<lb/>
for students, guests and residents of Greenville. It's really a matter of trust and oommon<lb/>
sense for all of us. Just think about it and help us help you.<lb/>
Saturday night we will be open until our regular hours, but we have decided to stop our<lb/>
refreshment salesat midnight. The City has agreed to block off to traffic Fifth and Cotanche<lb/>
Streets between Fourth Street and Reade Circle and Evans and Reade. Each club manager<lb/>
and four of his employees will be outside to help you have a safe and enjoyable evening.<lb/>
You' II recognize them because of the distinctive arm bands tney' II be wearing. They' II expect<lb/>
you to conduct yourself as ladies and gentlemen.<lb/>
We are doing all this out of concern for you. It's your Homecoming and we want to show<lb/>
the City, people of Greenville and ourselves that we can have a really nice weekend and a<lb/>
really good time.<lb/>
We're serious about it though and have given it a lot of thought. Please think about it too<lb/>
and help us and yourself.<lb/>
See you Homecoming.<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Nightclub<lb/>
Association<lb/>
mnmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
ft<lb/>
?u m ? Kill'HH?W<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 1326 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
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Right to low wages<lb/>
The race for N.C. Commissioner of Labor seems<lb/>
lackluster even in the shadow of the presidential<lb/>
elections. But the outcome of the balloting for this post<lb/>
next Tuesday could have ongoing implications for<lb/>
North Carolina's 743,000 production workers.<lb/>
The issue involves a mislabeled statute known as<lb/>
the-right-to-work law. Essentially, this law prohibits a<lb/>
labor union from requiring all workers of a particular<lb/>
shop to join the union. In some of the industrialized<lb/>
states the law saw brief usage during the early days of<lb/>
unionization.<lb/>
But in the South today the law remains and has<lb/>
been instrumental in keeping workers' wages at low<lb/>
tide. Figures released last week show this state's<lb/>
production workers receiving average weekly earnings<lb/>
of $150.15 in Augustthe national average was<lb/>
$207.48.<lb/>
Incumbent Labor Commissioner T. Avery Nye<lb/>
favors the right-to-work law. Nye's position has fit the<lb/>
corporate attitude in the state concerning who should<lb/>
reap the lion's share of industrialization's benefits.<lb/>
North Carolina has one of the most liberal standards in<lb/>
the nation for chartering corporations; corporate taxes<lb/>
in this state also rank well below the national average.<lb/>
John Brooks, Nye's Democratic opponent, is<lb/>
taking an apparently objective attitude about the law.<lb/>
Brooks has stated, "The right-to-work law is not a<lb/>
concern of the Department of Labor. The only thing is<lb/>
the department related to unionization is the<lb/>
arbitration service. The law is a legislative issue and is<lb/>
enforced bv the judicial branch of government<lb/>
Nye espouses the right-to-work law as the savior<lb/>
of jobs. But tne primary benefactors of this archaic<lb/>
statute are manufacturers who use it to crush unions'<lb/>
organizing efforts thereby stalling the improvement of<lb/>
wages and working conditions in this state.<lb/>
Brook's position is neither pro- or anti-union and<lb/>
the more palatable to those ooncerned with equitable<lb/>
distribution of industry's rewards in North Carolina.<lb/>
No class Saturday<lb/>
The Pirates' defeat Saturday at the hands of<lb/>
Carolina's Tar Heels is hard enough to swallow, but<lb/>
the attitude of many East Carolina fans after the game<lb/>
is absolutely intolerable.<lb/>
Before this college can call itself big-time, ECU<lb/>
fans will have to learn to act accordingly. Judging<lb/>
from their attitude after the game Saturday,<lb/>
Carolina's people certainly are worthy of the title.<lb/>
Fbuntainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over titty years<lb/>
Senior EditorJim Elliott<lb/>
Production ManagerJimmy Williams<lb/>
Advertising ManagerDennis Leonard<lb/>
News EditorsDebbie Jackson<lb/>
Neil Sessoms<lb/>
Trends EditorPat Coyle<lb/>
Sports EditorSteve Wheeler<lb/>
Fountainhead is 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/>
school year, weekly during the summer.<lb/>
Mailing address: Old South Building, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
27834.<lb/>
Editorial Offices: 757-6366, 757-6367, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually for non-students, $6.00 for<lb/>
alumni.<lb/>
HOU) L0Nf5UPS W FRANK, SID He jo($ GOiNGT TO<lb/>
STAT pOrVTOLON ?? r CftrV'T SlT HSRE FORGVB.<lb/>
TheForum<lb/>
Vegetarians seek support<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
We are looking for fellow<lb/>
vegetarian workers. If you are or<lb/>
would like to be involved in some<lb/>
sort of vegetarian action on your<lb/>
campus would you let us know.<lb/>
Congratulations<lb/>
Alphi Phi Omega<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
On behalf of the East Carolina<lb/>
United Fund campaign, I would<lb/>
like to thank Dave Ross, Alpha<lb/>
Phi Omega, and all the sorority<lb/>
pledge classes who helped make<lb/>
this year's Rock-A-Thon so suc-<lb/>
cessful.<lb/>
The campus goal this year for<lb/>
the United Fund is $17,000 and<lb/>
the $3,012.22 collected by the<lb/>
APO's will contribute greatly in<lb/>
helping us obtain this goal.<lb/>
Thanks again for an outstand-<lb/>
ing Rock-A-Thon!<lb/>
T.R. Pierce, Chairman<lb/>
ECU Division of the United Fund<lb/>
This fall there wHI be a<lb/>
network of UNTURKEY or vege-<lb/>
tarian Thanksgiving public din-<lb/>
ners aroung the oountry. Vegetar-<lb/>
ian Thanksgivings save grain for<lb/>
some of the 50 million hungry,<lb/>
save animals from going terror-<lb/>
ized to an unjust death, save<lb/>
humans from the food poisoning,<lb/>
intestinal cancer, kidney disease,<lb/>
and other hazards of animal flesh.<lb/>
The laboratories on your cam-<lb/>
pus, if it is a typical one, are<lb/>
involved in some of the kinds of<lb/>
research which have happened<lb/>
Forum Policy<lb/>
Forum letters should be<lb/>
typed or printed and they must<lb/>
be signed and include the<lb/>
writer's address. Names will<lb/>
be withheld upon request.<lb/>
Letters may be sent to Foun-<lb/>
tainhead or left at the Informa-<lb/>
tion Desk in Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center.<lb/>
elsewhere (e.g at the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Calif, at San Diego,<lb/>
pigs are forced to run a<lb/>
treadmill till they drop of exhaus-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
At Harvard several years ago,<lb/>
pigs were dropped alive into 800<lb/>
degr.ee boiling oil for eventual<lb/>
compilation as research in The<lb/>
Symposium on Burns. At the<lb/>
University ot Rochester, at<lb/>
Wayne State dogs were<lb/>
strapped into Blalock Presses and<lb/>
into crash cars, to see how much<lb/>
pressure oould be taken before<lb/>
bones broke and skulls were<lb/>
crushed.<lb/>
We are animal liberationists,<lb/>
world hunger activists, and di-<lb/>
sease fighters. All can be accom-<lb/>
plished through vegetarian work,<lb/>
either on campus or with us. We<lb/>
work for $5 a week and room and<lb/>
board. Come on aboard.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Don Wilson,<lb/>
Nellie Shriver,<lb/>
Billy Mick<lb/>
Emma Wood<lb/>
tmam<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 52, NO. 1326 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
?<lb/>
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?W?K<lb/>
0<lb/>
<lb/>
Wilmington 10 eyewitness<lb/>
admits making up testimony<lb/>
(LNS)Four years after ten<lb/>
civil rights activists in North<lb/>
Carolina were convicted on<lb/>
charges of arson and conspiracy,<lb/>
the state's sole eyewitness, Allen<lb/>
Hall, has admitted that he was<lb/>
coerced by the state prosecution<lb/>
and a federal law enforcement<lb/>
agent into fabricating his entire<lb/>
testimony.<lb/>
The Wilmington 10, as the<lb/>
convicted activists are known,<lb/>
include Rev. Ben Chavis, a<lb/>
well-known civil rights leader;<lb/>
eight other black men, most of<lb/>
them high school students when<lb/>
they were arrested; and Ann<lb/>
Shepard, a white woman who was<lb/>
a Vista volunteer.<lb/>
In response to Hall's recanted<lb/>
testimony, defense lawyers for<lb/>
the Wilmington 10 filed a motion<lb/>
in court on October 13 demanding<lb/>
dismissal of charges against them<lb/>
or a retrial. All ten are in jail now<lb/>
and have demanded to be releas-<lb/>
ed on bail. They were imprisoned<lb/>
in February of 1976 after bail for<lb/>
further appeals was denied.<lb/>
The civil rights demonstra-<lb/>
tions that lead to their arrests<lb/>
began as a non-violent protest in<lb/>
early 1971, demanding that a<lb/>
memorial service for Martin<lb/>
Luther King be allowed at a<lb/>
Wilmington, North Carolina high<lb/>
school.<lb/>
Violence broke out after polioe<lb/>
and members of the Ku Klux<lb/>
K Ian attacked protesters who had<lb/>
rallied at a church. In the<lb/>
following weeks, two black teen-<lb/>
agers and a member of the Ku<lb/>
Klux Klan were killed by gunfire,<lb/>
and several homes and stores<lb/>
were burned.<lb/>
Shortly afterwards, Chavis,<lb/>
who had been a highly visible<lb/>
leader of the protests, and nine<lb/>
others were arrested and subse-<lb/>
quently convicted. Chavis was<lb/>
sentenced to 34 years in prison;<lb/>
three others got 31 years each;<lb/>
and five got 29 years each.<lb/>
Shepard was convicted on an<lb/>
accessory charge and given ten<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Notre Dame grad speaks<lb/>
on world-wide hunger<lb/>
ByLYNNCAVERLY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Al Sondej, in his crusade<lb/>
against world-wide hunger, visit-<lb/>
ed ECU and the Greenville area<lb/>
on Oct. 19.<lb/>
ECU was one of forty oollege<lb/>
campuses Sondej is touring in an<lb/>
attempt to establish an awareness<lb/>
of world-wide hunger.<lb/>
A 1974 graduate of Notre<lb/>
Dame, Sondej has already man-<lb/>
aged to institutionalize this<lb/>
awarness at Notre Dame. Twice a<lb/>
day, at meal times, students<lb/>
stand outside the dining hall<lb/>
collecting money and petitioning<lb/>
signatures.<lb/>
"The problem has to be<lb/>
overcome from both the economic<lb/>
and political ends said Sondej.<lb/>
The money is distributed<lb/>
world-wide through four agen-<lb/>
cies, Catholic Relief Services,<lb/>
Care, UNICEF, and Church<lb/>
World Services<lb/>
Signatures are sent to Con-<lb/>
Frat council<lb/>
elects<lb/>
president<lb/>
Johnny H. Edwards was re-<lb/>
cently elected President of the<lb/>
North Carolina-West Virginia<lb/>
Council of Gamma Beta Phi<lb/>
Society.<lb/>
The state convention was held<lb/>
at Shaw University. Kim Simp-<lb/>
son, a senior majoring in Physical<lb/>
Therapy served as the recording<lb/>
secretary at the convention. She<lb/>
also served as Vice-president of<lb/>
the ECU chapter of the Society.<lb/>
The Gamma Beta Phi Society<lb/>
is an honor society and service<lb/>
organization for oolleje students.<lb/>
Its purposes are to encourage and<lb/>
reward academic merit, to stand<lb/>
for and promote worthy character<lb/>
and high ideals, and improve<lb/>
education through appropriate<lb/>
service projects. A member must<lb/>
rank in the top 20 percent of his<lb/>
class academically.<lb/>
gressmen in Washington asking<lb/>
them to increase and reohannel<lb/>
developmental assistance to the<lb/>
hungry on this planet, according<lb/>
to Sondej.<lb/>
In two years the Notre Dame<lb/>
students have raised $25 thou-<lb/>
sand.<lb/>
"We are all equally children<lb/>
of God. And we should try to give<lb/>
each individual an equal oppor-<lb/>
tunity to live on this planet. In<lb/>
order to make this planet more<lb/>
livable we will have to oonserve<lb/>
and share our natural resources<lb/>
with the poor so that they can<lb/>
help themselves said Sondej.<lb/>
Sondej talked to interested<lb/>
students involved in various<lb/>
religious organizations on cam-<lb/>
pus. One of the interested<lb/>
students, Tom Frandsen, would<lb/>
like to establish a program similar<lb/>
to the one at Notre Dame but cites<lb/>
"There are administrative chan-<lb/>
nels we must go through concern-<lb/>
ing solicitation violations before<lb/>
we can begin<lb/>
This past summer Sondej<lb/>
worked with the Overseas Devel-<lb/>
opment Council as a research<lb/>
assistant involved with food prob-<lb/>
lems and program implementa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Honor Council<lb/>
suspends two Frosh<lb/>
Two ECU freshmen who had<lb/>
pleaded guilty to recent vanda-<lb/>
lism charges received "suspen-<lb/>
ded" suspensions from the Honor<lb/>
Council last Thursday night in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
After short deliberation, the<lb/>
Council gave both students sus-<lb/>
pended suspensions on the condi-<lb/>
tion that the two students pay for<lb/>
all damages caused.<lb/>
The vandalism incident occur-<lb/>
red on Fri. night, Oct. 15, and<lb/>
involved a car parked on College<lb/>
Hill Drive.<lb/>
A suspended suspension,<lb/>
according to the 1975-76 Student<lb/>
Handbook, is "the period of time<lb/>
during which the defendant may<lb/>
not be found guilty of any<lb/>
violation for which suspension<lb/>
may be imposed without automa-<lb/>
tic suspension<lb/>
The suspended suspensions<lb/>
will be imposed on both students<lb/>
until the beginning of Winter<lb/>
Quarter.<lb/>
COME SAVE WITH<lb/>
GIANT<lb/>
DISCOUNT<lb/>
HEALTH &amp;<lb/>
BEAUTY AIDS<lb/>
429 evans mall<lb/>
downtown ;rf:enville<lb/>
EAT FOR JUST<lb/>
W plus tax MonThurs.<lb/>
Crabeakes, slaw, french fries plirs<lb/>
hushpuppies.<lb/>
V pound hamburger steak, slaw,<lb/>
french fries and rolls.<lb/>
Fish, slaw, french fries, hushpuppies.<lb/>
CLIFF'S<lb/>
Seafood House ana Oyster Bar<lb/>
Open 4:30-9:00 MonSat. 752-3172<lb/>
2 miles east on highway 264<lb/>
(out 10th St.)<lb/>
riM i<lb/>
'? " ?'?'?' -OLBROOk<lb/>
N and BOB<lb/>
Produced DvW- . ?<lb/>
AW . . .<lb/>
A Rooen Redtord Aian j Pat<lb/>
PGi<lb/>
tMCWoTXSScM<lb/>
TtOwcaOB ? From WarfWf Brt<lb/>
 Warnrr Communications Company<lb/>
O<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mrnrn<lb/>
NOW AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU.<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057089_0006"/><lb/>
6<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 52, NO. 1326 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINA AND PITT COUNTY<lb/>
YOUNG DEMOCRATS CORDIALLY INVITE ALL<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS AND FACULTY TO A RECEP-<lb/>
TION HONORING LT. GOV. JIM HUNT. THE<lb/>
RECEPTION WILL BE HELD ON SATURDAY,<lb/>
OCTOBER 30,1976 FROM 11:00 - 12:30, AT<lb/>
THE WILLIS BUILDING. JIM IS LOOKING<lb/>
FORWARD TO SEEING ALL OF HIS ECU<lb/>
FRIENDS ON THIS HOMECOMING WEEKEND.<lb/>
News and Observers<lb/>
reported missingThurs.<lb/>
If you have any questions, contact<lb/>
Pam Marks at 756-3689.<lb/>
Approximately 400 News and<lb/>
Observers were reported missing<lb/>
from their pick-up location next to<lb/>
a local restaurant Thursday mor-<lb/>
ning.<lb/>
Dorsit Ward, an ECU student<lb/>
and local distributor for the<lb/>
Raleigh newspaper, said that<lb/>
when he went to pick up the 450<lb/>
papers allocated fa the ECU<lb/>
campus, he found only about 50.<lb/>
"The newspapers were deliv-<lb/>
ered by the News and Observer<lb/>
carrier at about 2:00 a.m<lb/>
aocording to a News and Observer<lb/>
spokesman.<lb/>
Ward said that the papers<lb/>
were at the pick-up site at 2:30,<lb/>
and that he went home to get<lb/>
some sleep. When he returned<lb/>
early Thursday morning, most of<lb/>
the papers were missing.<lb/>
"Evidently they were stolen<lb/>
said the spokesman.<lb/>
Ward said that this was not<lb/>
the first time the newspapers had<lb/>
been missing.<lb/>
"If it happens again we will<lb/>
have to set up a new drop<lb/>
location said the News and<lb/>
Observer spokesman.<lb/>
Mattress<lb/>
WARD<lb/>
Continued from page 1.<lb/>
"lam ooncerned with what is<lb/>
happening to paychecks. You<lb/>
notice I didn't say excessive<lb/>
spending and deficits and that<lb/>
kind of thing. For the ordinary<lb/>
worker who is getting a paycheck<lb/>
and living sorta' hand and mouth,<lb/>
by the week, he doesn't like to<lb/>
hear you talk about high taxes or<lb/>
deficit spending.<lb/>
"It means more to him when<lb/>
you say look, you made $175 and<lb/>
when they got through taking<lb/>
(deductions) out what do you<lb/>
have? And so I say they're taking<lb/>
too much out of vou paycheck. I<lb/>
didn' t say your i axes are too high<lb/>
and he understands this very<lb/>
well.<lb/>
"When you talk to those<lb/>
fellows what you see is what this<lb/>
fellow, (the janitor in Kinston)<lb/>
did. His face lit up. I gave him a<lb/>
little brochure, and I didn't think<lb/>
he could have read it. Anyhow, he<lb/>
liked the pretty pictures<lb/>
Ward also said that Democra-<lb/>
tic candidate Jimmy Carter, is "in<lb/>
close" with drugs and people<lb/>
involved with drugs.<lb/>
"He has somewhat tied him-<lb/>
self very closely in regards to<lb/>
some people who've been fairly<lb/>
involved in drugs said Ward.<lb/>
"I don't know how many of<lb/>
you all know about the story about<lb/>
how the Allman Band (The<lb/>
Allman Brothers Band) has raised<lb/>
something like $500,000 for the<lb/>
Carter campaign, or anything<lb/>
about Capricorn Records ex-<lb/>
plained Ward. "But I have seen<lb/>
pictures of him wearing an<lb/>
Allman Band shirt and a Capri-<lb/>
corn Records shirt both, and he is<lb/>
in close with those people<lb/>
Ward lives in Greenville,<lb/>
N.C and has practiced family<lb/>
medicine in Ayden. He is making<lb/>
his first attempt to win a political<lb/>
office.<lb/>
ablaze<lb/>
A mattress which caught fire<lb/>
in the dorm room (408B Belk) of<lb/>
ECU student Bruce Beasley last<lb/>
Friday, was extinguished by two<lb/>
campus policemen who were in<lb/>
the area at the time of the blaze.<lb/>
According to Francis Eddings,<lb/>
ECU assistant director of secur-<lb/>
ity. Officers Suggs and Nicholson<lb/>
observed smoke ooming from the<lb/>
fourth floor of Belk dormitory at<lb/>
about 4:50 a.m. on Oct. 22.<lb/>
"They found the mattress<lb/>
hanging on a rail on the 4th floor<lb/>
of Belk smoldering with fire. They<lb/>
extinguished it Eddings said.<lb/>
According to Eddings, Beas-<lb/>
ley said that he had been smoking<lb/>
in ad which had apparently<lb/>
caused the blaze. He had carried<lb/>
the mattress to the outside<lb/>
baloony, laid it across the rail and<lb/>
was trying to extinguish the blaze<lb/>
when the two off icers came along.<lb/>
There were no charges filed.<lb/>
1st Annual Outdoor HALLOWEEN<lb/>
Music Festival<lb/>
Located at Stokes, IM.C-<lb/>
(approx. 10 miles N.E. of Greenville)<lb/>
Oct. 31? From 12:00-12:00 mid.<lb/>
6 Bands: 1 Delias High Band<lb/>
2-Loafer's Glory<lb/>
3-Larriat Sam<lb/>
4-Tumbleweed<lb/>
5-Super Grit Cowboy Band<lb/>
6-Sutter's Gold Streak<lb/>
$250.00 CASH PRIZE to the best Halloween Costume<lb/>
Tickets available at<lb/>
Rathskeller<lb/>
Elbo Room<lb/>
Tickets are $5.00 in advance<lb/>
$6.00 at gate<lb/>
Chapter X<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Rock N Soul<lb/>
Tree House<lb/>
Jolly Roger<lb/>
Newby's Subs<lb/>
ATTIC SUNSET<lb/>
nnmmmmmmkmmmmmm<lb/>
mmmtmmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057089_0007"/><lb/>
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mms<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 52, NO. 1326 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
7<lb/>
Piiwmni .i mtMiMtmi<lb/>
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Major A ttractions 1 ECU 0<lb/>
Collins shines for quality crowd<lb/>
By MICHAELFUTCH<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
Judy Collins' mystique en-<lb/>
thralled a Minges Coliseum<lb/>
audience of about 1200 persons<lb/>
last Thursday night. The program<lb/>
was of a quality rarely seen at<lb/>
ECU. The slack student atten-<lb/>
dance merely proves my precon-<lb/>
oeived notion of the type of<lb/>
programming that the majority of<lb/>
this campus wants. Major Attrac-<lb/>
tions offered a quality oonoert on<lb/>
a tasteless campus.<lb/>
Collins relied more on recent<lb/>
material for her classy perfor-<lb/>
mance. Her 1975 release,<lb/>
JUDITH, and last spring's<lb/>
BREAD AND ROSES provided<lb/>
the bulk of the two hour program.<lb/>
Collins displayed her superb gift<lb/>
for interpretation of other writer's<lb/>
music. The performance consis-<lb/>
ted of about 20 songs and poems,<lb/>
two of those featuring the talents<lb/>
of her touring band while she<lb/>
stepped to the side of the stage.<lb/>
The band consisted of Tony<lb/>
Levin, bass and tuba; Michael<lb/>
Ready, percussion and drums;<lb/>
John Pluttania and Lon Volpe,<lb/>
lead guitars; Richard Bell, key-<lb/>
boards; and Kenty Show, key-<lb/>
boards and musical direction.<lb/>
The program began with<lb/>
Collins at the piano. Having had<lb/>
11 years of classical piano, she<lb/>
proved to be exceptional on this<lb/>
instrument. Collins appeared to<lb/>
be more at ease, however, with<lb/>
her acoustic guitar strapped<lb/>
around her shoulder.<lb/>
Collins virtuoso interpretation<lb/>
proved to be favorable on an<lb/>
uptempo version of Steve Good-<lb/>
man's "City of New Orleans a<lb/>
song which is linked with Arlo<lb/>
Guthrie. Her voice was very<lb/>
distinct as she flowed from one<lb/>
pitch to another.<lb/>
After stating that she hadn't<lb/>
"done a college tour in many<lb/>
years Collins performed a<lb/>
Randy Newman tune. There was<lb/>
satiricfl humor concerning the<lb/>
U.S. when Collins offered "New-<lb/>
man's solution to all the problems<lb/>
in Africa and South America"<lb/>
?the conclusion was to  drop the<lb/>
big one now Levin's tuba work<lb/>
on this number was only fitting as<lb/>
Collins displayed a vaudeville<lb/>
side.<lb/>
JUDY COLLINS Photo by Russ Pogue)<lb/>
Halloween concert in Minges<lb/>
to include Murphey, Walker<lb/>
The Student Union Major<lb/>
Attractions Committee will pre-<lb/>
sent three outstanding acts to<lb/>
conclude the homecoming festi-<lb/>
vities. MICHAEL MURPHEY,<lb/>
JERRY JEFF WALKER AND<lb/>
THE LONG GONZO BAND, anti<lb/>
the VASSAR CLEMENTS BAND<lb/>
will be featured in oonoert on<lb/>
Sunday, October 31 at 800 P.M.<lb/>
in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
In the middle of 1973, things<lb/>
really began to happen for<lb/>
MICHAEL MURPHEY. He sign-<lb/>
ed an exclusive recording contract<lb/>
with Epic Records. With this<lb/>
came the release of his first Epic<lb/>
Album, simply entitled<lb/>
MICHAEL MURPHEY. The al-<lb/>
bum was received exceptionally<lb/>
well by critics all across the<lb/>
country. After a year of extensive<lb/>
touring around the United Stat <lb/>
M urphey once again turned to the<lb/>
studio, and his fourth album,<lb/>
BLUE SKY THUNDER, was<lb/>
released in March 1975. This<lb/>
album contained Michael's hot-<lb/>
test single to date, "Wildfire a<lb/>
song whose popularity indicated<lb/>
that Murphey had finally broken<lb/>
through to audiences in areas<lb/>
outside the southwest.<lb/>
JERRY JEFF WALKER is a<lb/>
rambler, a street-wise story teller<lb/>
who sings about what he sees and<lb/>
lives just about the way he sings;<lb/>
natural and easy. He did his<lb/>
growing somewhere in upstate<lb/>
New York and came out of the<lb/>
Catskills at 16 to go on the road,<lb/>
conscience and instinct drawing<lb/>
him into that proud tradition of<lb/>
iminstrels and troubadours, poets<lb/>
and pickers whose odyssey has no<lb/>
beginning and seeks no end.<lb/>
Backed up by the LOST GONZO<lb/>
BAND, Walker's most recent<lb/>
MCA album,IT'S A GOOD<lb/>
NIGHT FOR SINGING, was re-<lb/>
corded entirely in Nashville.<lb/>
Entering the studio with a surplus<lb/>
of tunes, the whole album was<lb/>
completed in several weeks. A<lb/>
good time was had writing the<lb/>
songs and recording the album,<lb/>
and even better time wjll be had<lb/>
in listening to JERRY oEFF<lb/>
WALKER and the LOST GONZO<lb/>
BAND.<lb/>
VASSAR CLEMENTS is no<lb/>
stranger to ECU having appeared<lb/>
here in 1974 with MARSHALL<lb/>
TUCKER and DICKY BETTS.<lb/>
Pipe-smoking, gum-chewing, in-<lb/>
variably dresses in Banlon pull-<lb/>
overs and casual slacks, Vassar is<lb/>
the clean-cut country boy in the<lb/>
midst of a bearded and blue-jean<lb/>
industry. Even the briefest list of<lb/>
the groups Vassar has played<lb/>
with reads like a Who's Who -<lb/>
THE EARL SCRUGGS REVUE,<lb/>
NITTY GRITTY DIRT BAND,<lb/>
DOC WATSON, ROY ACUFF,<lb/>
MOTHER MAYBELLE CARTER,<lb/>
JOHN HARTFORD, LINDA<lb/>
RONSTADT, THE ALLMAN<lb/>
BROTHERS, THE GRATEFUL<lb/>
DEAD, LIGHTFOOT, and even<lb/>
the BOSTON POPS.<lb/>
Tickets for the concert are<lb/>
priced at $2.00 for ECU students<lb/>
and $4.00 for the public. All<lb/>
tickets sold at the door will be<lb/>
$4.00. Tickets are available from<lb/>
the ECU Central Ticket Office.<lb/>
Public tickets may also be pur-<lb/>
chased from the Record Bar at<lb/>
Pitt Plaza.<lb/>
Technical problems evolved as<lb/>
the left amp blew in the middle of<lb/>
Paul Simon's "Something So<lb/>
Right" This failed to hinder the<lb/>
show as Collins' voice remained<lb/>
as effective and crystal dear as<lb/>
before. The problem luckily was<lb/>
repaired for the next song, an<lb/>
ecology piece on whales. It began<lb/>
with oceanwhale sound effects<lb/>
which Collins later delivered<lb/>
over. The number proved to be<lb/>
haunting when it dissolved into<lb/>
an organ bridge that was vocally<lb/>
entered by Collins. It proved to be<lb/>
very beautiful and received an<lb/>
overwhelming reaction from the<lb/>
sparse crowd.<lb/>
Collins stepped aside while<lb/>
her band performed solo on a jazz<lb/>
composition, A Prayer for To-<lb/>
morrow's Weather" and Solar<lb/>
Dance The guitar and bass<lb/>
work were outstanding on this<lb/>
piece.<lb/>
Collins returned to say a<lb/>
prayer for the workingman, dedi-<lb/>
cated to those who were killed<lb/>
during the Chilean military junta<lb/>
that overthrew Allende from<lb/>
office. Collins remains politically<lb/>
and socially involved in the 70's<lb/>
and reflects it during her per-<lb/>
formance. She spoke of the<lb/>
continuing U.S. money which is<lb/>
being sent to Chile and placed a<lb/>
great deal of the blame on Henry<lb/>
Kissinger. She also spoke of<lb/>
Victor Jara, a singer who was<lb/>
killed during the two day seizure.<lb/>
The prayer was followed by a<lb/>
short Spanish rendition.<lb/>
After a 15-minute intermis-<lb/>
sion, Collins re-emerged onstage<lb/>
and seemed to be more at ease.<lb/>
Her "Song for Duke" was<lb/>
incredibly done with only Collins<lb/>
and bass player Levin.<lb/>
The set moved fast with<lb/>
numbers like "Someday Soon"<lb/>
and "Deliver Me Pat Garvey's<lb/>
"The Lovin' erf the Game" was<lb/>
described by Collins as her<lb/>
"philosophical point of view for<lb/>
life This fast number broke the<lb/>
overall passive mood of the<lb/>
second half.<lb/>
The audienoe was captivated<lb/>
by keyboard player Show as he<lb/>
performed two original waltzes.<lb/>
The audienoe proved its dass as<lb/>
quiet was only broken by the<lb/>
piano.<lb/>
' Bread and Roses , a poem<lb/>
on the feminist movement, allow-<lb/>
ed Collins to shine. She was<lb/>
accompanied by her own vocals,<lb/>
taped in advance.<lb/>
Leonard Cohen's "Bird On<lb/>
the Wire" was performed in a<lb/>
slow bluesy manner. This oould<lb/>
have been one of the highlights of<lb/>
the evening; it however, proved<lb/>
to be lacking in vocal authen-<lb/>
ticism. There was an impression<lb/>
of an overworking of this popular<lb/>
song, it's a pity that Collins<lb/>
ended trie second half on a bad<lb/>
note; she did make it up with her<lb/>
one song enoore. Collins perfor-<lb/>
med her 1975 comeback single<lb/>
from the Broadway production A<lb/>
LITTLE NIGHT MUSIC. "Send In<lb/>
the Clowns Aocompanied only<lb/>
by piano and organ, Collins<lb/>
overwhelmed the crowd with this<lb/>
mood-setting number.<lb/>
Judy Collins proved to be an<lb/>
exceptional performer in oonoert.<lb/>
If there were any faults, it was her<lb/>
inclination to perform recent<lb/>
material. Missing were her folk<lb/>
protest songs of the early '60s<lb/>
and her more popular numbers:<lb/>
Joni Mitchell's "Both Sides<lb/>
Now Leonard Cohen's Su-<lb/>
zanne and the traditionals,<lb/>
"Maid of Constant Sorrow" and<lb/>
Amazing Grace' . The evening,<lb/>
however, was a delight. It goes to<lb/>
show that ECU doesn't always<lb/>
have to be screwed over with<lb/>
choosy musidans concerning oon-<lb/>
oert location, most of who in a few<lb/>
years will be unable to be<lb/>
"picky<lb/>
Judy Collins was sponsored by<lb/>
Major Attradions of the Student<lb/>
Union.<lb/>
TOM CHAPIN, star of Make a Wish<lb/>
Wednesday, in Mendenhall Student Theater<lb/>
will perform at 8ti0<lb/>
File photo<lb/>
<pb facs="00057089_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 1326 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
?<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
?p<lb/>
Trends follows actor from audition to opening<lb/>
By DAVID NASH<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Many people often wonder<lb/>
(and never get the chance to ask),<lb/>
what really goes on behind the<lb/>
scenes when a play (be it musical<lb/>
or drama) is put on the stage.<lb/>
To answer this question,<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD decided to<lb/>
pick an actor - Martin Thompson,<lb/>
and a show - THE STUDENT<lb/>
PRINCE, and follow both from<lb/>
the first audition to opening<lb/>
night.<lb/>
The actor we chose, Martin<lb/>
Thompson, has been involved in<lb/>
numerous drama productions in<lb/>
warn ????<lb/>
his "career" at ECU ("career<lb/>
because he's been here off and on<lb/>
since 1971).<lb/>
Thompson has been associ-<lb/>
ated with such Playhouse pro-<lb/>
ductions as, THE BOYFRIEND,<lb/>
INDIANS, DRACULA, and A<lb/>
SCENT OF FLOWERS.<lb/>
With his first major acting role<lb/>
in MUCH ADO ABOUT NO-<lb/>
THING, Thompson soon became<lb/>
one of those rare talents that is<lb/>
constantly sought for shows.<lb/>
In THE STUDENT PRINCE,<lb/>
Thompson portrays Lutz, the<lb/>
Prince's valet, a demeaning posi-<lb/>
tion for most, but not to Lutz ("I<lb/>
hold the prince in the palm of my<lb/>
Li<lb/>
A R 77 N TH OM PSON as valet in  The Student Prince  Photo by<lb/>
Mick Godwin<lb/>
hand").<lb/>
For the part, Thompson "just<lb/>
went in and sang a songand<lb/>
wound up with a non-singing<lb/>
role<lb/>
Rehearsals began for THE<lb/>
STUDENT PRINCE in late<lb/>
September, and continued every<lb/>
night (and sometimes during the<lb/>
day( right up until tonight's<lb/>
opening.<lb/>
According to Thompson, re-<lb/>
hearsals begin with a read-<lb/>
through of the script to let<lb/>
everyone get acquainted with the<lb/>
plot and their character. Then<lb/>
begins the hard task of the director<lb/>
to "block" or place everyone in<lb/>
the place he wants them, and<lb/>
instructs them how they got<lb/>
there.<lb/>
" This is one of the things he is<lb/>
really great at said Thompson,<lb/>
speaking of Edgar R. Leossin,<lb/>
directa of the play.<lb/>
"Edgar is really good at<lb/>
moving large groups of people on<lb/>
stage, and making everyone look<lb/>
good, as witnessed by the many<lb/>
Summer Theatre musicals he has<lb/>
done here included Thompson.<lb/>
In rehearsals, it is the job of<lb/>
the actor and director to find<lb/>
"bits" and pieces of business for<lb/>
a character Lutz.<lb/>
"The lines are really not all<lb/>
that funny, so you have to find<lb/>
mannerisms for this "vaudeville<lb/>
type character said Thompson.<lb/>
When an actor reaches final<lb/>
dress rehearsal, the show is<lb/>
finished except for final touches<lb/>
to enhance his character and or<lb/>
situation.<lb/>
At the final dress, the director<lb/>
gives notes or suggestions on<lb/>
what an actor may do to enliven<lb/>
his character.<lb/>
At that final rehearsal before<lb/>
opening, there is usually an<lb/>
invited audience to help the actor<lb/>
in timing and presentation of<lb/>
lines.<lb/>
Thompson, having just re-<lb/>
turned from working with the<lb/>
N.C. Arts Council will graduate<lb/>
from ECU the end of winter<lb/>
quarter.<lb/>
Already an Actor's Equity<lb/>
Union member, and with such<lb/>
talent, and enthusiasm, Thomp-<lb/>
son should have no problem in the<lb/>
thing we all fear upon graduation<lb/>
finding employment.<lb/>
String Quartet<lb/>
fills Mendenhall<lb/>
BySUSYCHESTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The world-renowned Guarneri<lb/>
String Quartet performed for a<lb/>
sold-out audience at Mendenhall<lb/>
Theatre last Wednesday night.<lb/>
The Guarneri Quartet is cre-<lb/>
oognized as one of the best<lb/>
chamber ensembles in the world,<lb/>
and their technical excellence and<lb/>
musical insight last Wednesday<lb/>
showed why their reputation is<lb/>
virtually unsurpassed.<lb/>
The ensemble proved their<lb/>
versatility by mastering the re-<lb/>
fined classical form of a late<lb/>
Haydn quartet and capturing the<lb/>
melodic richness of Bartok' s First<lb/>
Quartet and the lyric beauty of<lb/>
Grieg's Quartet in G minor.<lb/>
The four men played with<lb/>
remarkable intensity throughout<lb/>
the performance. The continuous<lb/>
surging motion of Bartok, the<lb/>
subtlety of attacks and brilliant<lb/>
use of dynamic contrast in the<lb/>
Haydn, and the intimacy and<lb/>
rhythmic vigor of the Grieg<lb/>
created a feeling of perpetual<lb/>
motion that didn't relax until the<lb/>
final note of the conoert.<lb/>
What really made the concert<lb/>
exciting was the intensity coupled<lb/>
with the wonderful intimacy and<lb/>
the Quartet has developed in their<lb/>
twelve years of playing together.<lb/>
Beyond a basic sensitivity to each<lb/>
other, the Guarneri Quartet has<lb/>
achieved a unity in tonal color and<lb/>
a delicate balance that makes the<lb/>
ensemble concept supreme, and<lb/>
yet allows each musician to shine<lb/>
in his own right.<lb/>
ECU should be proud to have<lb/>
had such excellent musicians<lb/>
perform here. Congratulations to<lb/>
the Artist Series Committee fa<lb/>
bringing such superb entertain-<lb/>
ment to East Carolina.<lb/>
Joh<lb/>
?1<lb/>
MBM<lb/>
?V: i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057089_0009"/><lb/>
raEBiiggg g jlffl v<lb/>
 ??;?:???: ???'???<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 1326 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
9<lb/>
M<lb/>
?W?<lb/>
<lb/>
st re-<lb/>
th the<lb/>
aduate<lb/>
winter<lb/>
Equity<lb/>
such<lb/>
homp-<lb/>
inthe<lb/>
uation<lb/>
I<lb/>
illiant<lb/>
i the<lb/>
and<lb/>
3rieg<lb/>
?etual<lb/>
il the<lb/>
ncert<lb/>
jpled<lb/>
' and<lb/>
their<lb/>
ther.<lb/>
each<lb/>
has<lb/>
and<lb/>
s the<lb/>
and<lb/>
ftine<lb/>
have<lb/>
ians<lb/>
is to<lb/>
i for<lb/>
tain-<lb/>
? WiMUPfU<lb/>
Bill Keyes<lb/>
Don't look back<lb/>
John next door is a good old guy with whom I've enjoyed playing<lb/>
Sunday morning quarterback through the first half of this football<lb/>
season. But this past Sunday was no joy, for instead of talking about the<lb/>
big pass completions, broken tackles and quarterback sacs for old EC,<lb/>
we were brooding over fumble recoveries, pass interceptions, and field<lb/>
goals that helped the cause of the opponents.<lb/>
Old John and I agreed that one football game doth not a season<lb/>
make, and one defeat doth not a season break. East Carolina fans feel<lb/>
tragedy in the Pirates' loss to Carolina, it's true. But when we looked at<lb/>
it realistically, the loss to Carolina isn't all that bad. (We knew Carolina<lb/>
had a fine football team.) The real tragedy would be for the Pirates to<lb/>
lose one of the games which remain to be plaved.<lb/>
When we said our farewell's for that morning, Old John scratched his<lb/>
beard, looked at me with his bloodshot eyes, and told me to tell y'all to<lb/>
remember that ten wins against only one loss is a respectable record in<lb/>
any league.<lb/>
Anyway, the ECU-UNC game is history. Let us turn our attention to<lb/>
er aspects of oollege athletics.<lb/>
nnyvvay, uic uw vnvyw<lb/>
other aspects of oollege athlet<lb/>
ACADEMIC RIGHTSOF ATHLETES<lb/>
During the short time I've been at ECU I have oome to admire<lb/>
Chancellor Leo W. Jenkins for three reasons associated with athletics.<lb/>
One, realizing the positive effect that a strong athletic program has on a<lb/>
university, he is extremely interested in doing everything necessary to<lb/>
improve that program. And he makes no apology for his zeal. Two, Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins does not just say he wants a quality program, but actually works<lb/>
along with Athletic Director Bill Cain and Faculty Chairman Cliff Moore<lb/>
to affect positive changes. And number three Leo Jenkins is not<lb/>
interested only in the oollective program as many in his position are, but<lb/>
he is concerned about the individuals involved. This last point is the one<lb/>
which we shall focus on here.<lb/>
On Tuesday, October 19, Dr. Jenkins addressed the Greenville<lb/>
Sports Club at their weekly luncheon and expressed conoern for the<lb/>
student athlete. But as usual, he didn't leave it at that; he offered a<lb/>
suggestion as to how the plight of the student-athlete oould be improved.<lb/>
This suggestion was outrageously radical, especially when you consider<lb/>
on one hand that all of the actions by the National Collegiate Athletic<lb/>
Association (NCAA) have been taken to avoid what Dr. Jenkins suggests<lb/>
and oonsider on the other hand that one would guess that Dr. Jenkins,<lb/>
especially since he is senior chancellor in the state's university system,<lb/>
would think along the same lines as the NCAA. But not so.<lb/>
His suggestion is based on his premise that universities should<lb/>
guarantee for athletes a first-rate education which would prepare him<lb/>
fa the career of his choice. ECU should tell the football team, for<lb/>
instance, "We want to beat Chapel Hill, but not on your back<lb/>
According to Jenkins, athletes should be allowed scheduling breaks.<lb/>
They would be allowed to work out class schedules convenient to<lb/>
themselves and the professional staffs.<lb/>
Jenkins contradicts the NCAA when he says athletes should be<lb/>
allowed to carry a one-third or one-half oourse load during the season<lb/>
and make up fa any loss aedits during the summer, if they so choose.<lb/>
Why not? Present standards are unfair. Jenkins used the baseball team<lb/>
fa example. Each spring they take a tour through the New England<lb/>
states, and when they return they are required to oompete on the namal<lb/>
curve with the aha members of their classes who have listened to the<lb/>
lectures, visited the library, and oone the assignments.<lb/>
Jenkins points out that athletes are not semi-employees.<lb/>
Adjustments should be made in scheduling ratha than have anybody<lb/>
embarassed when someoie goes to a professa and asks fa a break fa<lb/>
athletes. That puts the professas ai the spot professionally while we<lb/>
should be encouraging them to set the same standards fa all.<lb/>
The NCAA is concerned that unda these circumstances athletes<lb/>
would in fact be professional. But this writa does na share this fear As<lb/>
long as athletes were required to accumulate a set numba of semesta<lb/>
a quarter hours in a twelve month period, they would still be legitimate<lb/>
student-athletes just as if any of the otha students on a univasity's<lb/>
campus decided to carry a lowa-than-usual oourse load a oouple of<lb/>
quarters so they oould work to suppat themselves and make up the<lb/>
deficiencies during summer sessions. We should realize that oollege<lb/>
athletes are na maons, but individuals who are as oonoern J about<lb/>
receiving an education which prepares a qualifies them fa a job as any<lb/>
aher student. It is oommendable that our chancella, Dr. Leo W.<lb/>
Jenkins realizes this.<lb/>
But just as impatantly, Dr. Jenkins should be applauded fa having<lb/>
the guts to suggest something as radical as this out of oonoern fa the<lb/>
athletes' welfare.<lb/>
Heels top Pirates<lb/>
on late FG, 12-10<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Spats Edita<lb/>
Nath Carolina turned three<lb/>
East Carolina turnovers into field<lb/>
goals, but needed a 71 yard, ten<lb/>
play drive and a defensive stand<lb/>
to upset East Carolina's national<lb/>
ranked Pirates, 12-10, in a fieroe<lb/>
dual played in Chapel Hill's<lb/>
Kenan Stadium on Saturday.<lb/>
The Tar Heels repeatedly<lb/>
came up with the big defensive<lb/>
play to keep the Pirates out of the<lb/>
end zone until the fourth period<lb/>
and turned Pirate miscues into<lb/>
field goals three times.<lb/>
However, on the first play of<lb/>
the final quarter, Bucquarterback<lb/>
Mike Weaver went right on an<lb/>
option play from the UNC 15 yard<lb/>
line. Afta faking a pitch to Willie<lb/>
Hawkins, Weaver turned upfield<lb/>
and found good blocking to hit<lb/>
paydirt standing up. Pete Con-<lb/>
aty's conversion made the soae<lb/>
UNC-9, ECU-7.<lb/>
The 5,700 Pirate suppatas<lb/>
out of the 49,000 throng went wild<lb/>
as this started the ECU comeback<lb/>
that would eventually give the<lb/>
Pirates the lead.<lb/>
Afta stopping the Tar Heels<lb/>
midway through the final paiod,<lb/>
East Carolina took ova on their<lb/>
17 line yard following a 52 yard<lb/>
punt by the Heels' Johnny Elam.<lb/>
On the first play, Weava<lb/>
faked to fullback Raymond Jones<lb/>
up the middle and handed off to<lb/>
Eddie Hicks on the tackle dive<lb/>
play. Getting good blocking from<lb/>
the left side of the line, Hicks<lb/>
broke away from a host of<lb/>
defendas. But Carolina safety<lb/>
Russ Conley ran the usual<lb/>
fleet-footed Hicks at the UNC<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
eight yard line. Hicks has had<lb/>
problems with a pulled groin<lb/>
muscle of late and it seemed to<lb/>
keep him from soaing.<lb/>
After Jones gained one up the<lb/>
middle, Weava ran an option to<lb/>
the right side. After turning<lb/>
upfield and finding what seemed<lb/>
to be an alley of blocking, Weava<lb/>
was confronted by Carolina de-<lb/>
fensive tackle Dee Hardison at<lb/>
the five.<lb/>
A third down dive off left<lb/>
tackle by Hicks netted just two<lb/>
yards and Conaty came on to try a<lb/>
19 yard field goal. Conaty con-<lb/>
nected to give the Pirates their<lb/>
first lead of the game with just<lb/>
6:14 left to play.<lb/>
The Heels would na give up,<lb/>
however, and came back to have<lb/>
their best drive of the game to<lb/>
pick up the win. Afta taking ova<lb/>
on their 29 yard line, Carolina<lb/>
tailback Mike Voight gained one<lb/>
on first down. But Pirate defen-<lb/>
sive end Cary Godette was called<lb/>
fa pulling Voight's face mask to<lb/>
give the Tar Heels a first down at<lb/>
their 45.<lb/>
Afta Wayne Tucka lost two<lb/>
yards on a flanker reverse,<lb/>
quartaback Matt Kupec went to<lb/>
the air. He found Tucka on the<lb/>
left sidelines fa 29 yards down to<lb/>
the Pirate 28.<lb/>
Afta Voight hit up the middle<lb/>
fa aie, UNC was penalized five<lb/>
yards for off sides. Kupec's<lb/>
second down pass fell inoompiae.<lb/>
On third-and-14 from the 32,<lb/>
Kupec again went back to throw.<lb/>
Just as Godette hit the freshman<lb/>
quartaback he tossed the ball.<lb/>
Split reoeiva Walka Lee made a<lb/>
miraculous catch at the Pirate<lb/>
eight to give the Heels a first and<lb/>
goal situation.<lb/>
Two bursts into the line by<lb/>
Voight gave Carolina seven<lb/>
yards, leaving a third-and-one<lb/>
situation. Voight hit off right<lb/>
guard, but reserve Pirate line-<lb/>
backa Tanmy Summer stopped<lb/>
him inside the one.<lb/>
Tar Heel coach Bill Dooley<lb/>
decided to go fa the three-point-<lb/>
a on fourth down instead of<lb/>
trying to move the Pirates' brick-<lb/>
wall. Dick Biddle, who had kicked<lb/>
two of the three earlia field<lb/>
goals, came on to attempt a 17<lb/>
yarder. Biddle hit togive Carolina<lb/>
their margin of victay.<lb/>
Thae was still 217 left on the<lb/>
See FOOTBALL, page 10.<lb/>
DEFENSE was the name of the game as UNC and<lb/>
ECU met Saturday in Kenan Stadium in Chapel Hill.<lb/>
The Tar Heels won 12-10 when Matt Kupec directed<lb/>
a 71 yard drive that culminate! in a 17 yard field goal<lb/>
by Dick Biodle. Photo by Russ Rogue)<lb/>
<lb/>
SCORING SUMMARY:<lb/>
FINAL TEAM STATS<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
First Downs14<lb/>
Rushes-Yards58-249<lb/>
Passing Yards72<lb/>
Return Yards0<lb/>
Passes (A-C-l)12-7-1<lb/>
Punts-Avg.5-33<lb/>
Fumbles-Lost3-3<lb/>
Penal ties-Yards1-15<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
10-10<lb/>
3-12<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
13<lb/>
56-149<lb/>
110<lb/>
13<lb/>
13-5-0<lb/>
6-43<lb/>
4-2<lb/>
6-41<lb/>
UNC-Biddle FG 31<lb/>
UNC-Biddle FG 25<lb/>
UNC-Arnold FG 49<lb/>
ECU-Weava 15 run-Conaty kick<lb/>
ECU-Coiaty FG 19<lb/>
UNC-Biddle FG 17<lb/>
A-49,000<lb/>
??WW<lb/>
90m<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mnunn<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
M<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057089_0010"/><lb/>
io<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 52, NO. 1326 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
i<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
FOOTBALL<lb/>
Continued from page 9.<lb/>
clock when Willie Hawkins re-<lb/>
turned Biddle's kickoff to the 14<lb/>
yard line. After Weaver pitched<lb/>
out to Hawkins on first down for<lb/>
no gain, he threw 13 yards to<lb/>
Terry Gallaher over the middle<lb/>
for a first down at the 27.<lb/>
After two plays netted just a<lb/>
yard. Weaver again threw to<lb/>
Gallaher, this time for 25 yards<lb/>
down the left sideline. Gallaher<lb/>
was injured on the play and this<lb/>
seemed to take the life out of the<lb/>
Pirates' passing game.<lb/>
Raymond Jones gained three<lb/>
yards on first down to give the<lb/>
Pirates a second-and-seven at the<lb/>
UNC 44 yard line. Two passes by<lb/>
Weaver fell harmlessly to the<lb/>
ground putting the Bucs in a<lb/>
fourth down situation. Weaver<lb/>
again went back to pass but his<lb/>
throw was batted up into the air<lb/>
by UNC lineman Bunn Rhames.<lb/>
Weaver caught the pass but was<lb/>
dropped for a four loss, giving the<lb/>
ball back to Carolina with just 57<lb/>
seconds to go.<lb/>
Carolina got the first score<lb/>
with just 1:15 left in the half on<lb/>
Biddies 31 yard field goal. This<lb/>
followed a fumble recovery by<lb/>
middle guard Dave Simmons at<lb/>
the ECU 44 yard line.<lb/>
Biddle then kicked the ball out<lb/>
of the end zone on the kiokoff and<lb/>
ECU started on their 20. After<lb/>
two plays netted six yards,<lb/>
Weaver had a bad pitchout to<lb/>
Willie Hawkins and defensive end<lb/>
Ken Sheets recovered at the 17<lb/>
yard line.<lb/>
Three plays put the Tar Heels<lb/>
on the eight line where Biddle<lb/>
came on to hit on a 25 yard field<lb/>
goal to give UNC a 6-0 lead<lb/>
Midway in the third period,<lb/>
Carolina got to the ECU 32 yard<lb/>
line after a turnover but had a<lb/>
fourth-and-four situation staring<lb/>
them in the face. They brought on<lb/>
freohman Jeff Arnold, a soccer-<lb/>
style kicker, to try from 49 yards<lb/>
out. Arnold kicked a line shot that<lb/>
kept rising and made it over the<lb/>
cross bar to give the Heels a 9-0<lb/>
lead.<lb/>
Hicks was the game's leading<lb/>
rusher with 129 yards in 17<lb/>
carries, while Weaver picked up<lb/>
48 for the Bucs in 17 rushes.<lb/>
Voight led the Heels with 112<lb/>
yards in 31 attempts while 6-1,<lb/>
245 pound fullback Billy Johnson<lb/>
bulled his way for 36 in eight<lb/>
carries.<lb/>
Even in a losing effort, Pirate<lb/>
coach Pat Dye was proud of his<lb/>
troops.<lb/>
"We got beat by a fine<lb/>
football team Dye said follow-<lb/>
ing the game Coach Dcdey and<lb/>
his staff deserve a lot of credit.<lb/>
They were well prepared to play.<lb/>
We'll be back to fight another<lb/>
day.<lb/>
"They (UNC) had a chance to<lb/>
fold when we came back and went<lb/>
ahead, but they didn't. We<lb/>
moved the ball well, but not<lb/>
consistent enough. I'm proud of<lb/>
our people. We've oome a long<lb/>
way to be able to play UNC here.<lb/>
We did not back off. We<lb/>
challenged them all the way<lb/>
Carolina coach Bill Dcdey was<lb/>
also proud of the way his team<lb/>
came back to get the win.<lb/>
"We beat a good football<lb/>
team today, make no mistake<lb/>
about that said Dooley. "East<lb/>
Carolina has nothing to be<lb/>
ashamed of. They came back after<lb/>
being down 9-0 and that's the<lb/>
mark of a good team. But, we<lb/>
showed a lot of determination too,<lb/>
coming back after falling behind.<lb/>
The Pirates must now regroup<lb/>
for Saturday afternoon's Home-<lb/>
coming match-up against West-<lb/>
ern Carolina, now 5-3 on the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Cone makes fabrics people live in.<lb/>
CONE MILLS I 1440 BROADWAY NEW YORK N Y 10018<lb/>
?urtim nitf ii mut mi ii uiiij, m m ?? i hwm iinn i mwmi i m Mm iminu mmmnn u<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
by John Evans<lb/>
Six champions will be decided sometime this week in Intramural<lb/>
competition.<lb/>
Team play in the men's and women's touch football competition,<lb/>
co-rec tennis mixed doubles and team tennis all will have champions by<lb/>
the end of the week. Individual champions in horseshoes, women's<lb/>
tennis singles and one-on-one basketball will also be decided.<lb/>
Two championships were to be decided on Monday. Robert Guy and<lb/>
Gary Kerr were to meet in the final of the 6-1 and under one-on-one<lb/>
division and Janet Hoeppel and Janic McVeigh were to meet in the finals<lb/>
of the women's tennis singles.<lb/>
The individual horseshoe champion should be decided later in the<lb/>
week, as will be the men's and women's touch football champions and<lb/>
the oo-rec mixed doubles champion.<lb/>
At the same time competition in three other sports, men's and<lb/>
women's volleyball and water basketball will continue. Team tennis<lb/>
champions will be decided on Wednesday.<lb/>
In touch football several upsets occured as eight teams reached the<lb/>
divisional finals.<lb/>
The biggest upsets came in the fraternity and dub divisions where Pi<lb/>
Kappa Phi and Phi Epsilon Kappa were dropped by weaker opponents.<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi was beaten 6-0 by a defensively-minded Sigma Nu<lb/>
team. Sigma Nu scored on its first possession and stopped the Pi Kapps<lb/>
on two drives inside their 15-yard line.<lb/>
Phi Epsilon Kappa had breezed through the Club division all year<lb/>
and went into the finals after a three-week lay-off with a 7-0 record. Phi<lb/>
Sigma Pi caught the leaders off guard, though, and took a 20-16 win to<lb/>
advance to the divisional finals against the Rugby Ruggers. With Phi<lb/>
Epsilon Kappa out of the way the Ruggers, 7-1 after a 30-0 win over the<lb/>
P.E. Majors, are heavy favorites for the club championship.<lb/>
The Dorm championship will match the strong and remarkable Scott<lb/>
Time Outsagainst the Belk Schlitz Blitz. The Time Outshad little trouble<lb/>
reaching the finals in their division, winning by scores of 76-6, 40-12 and<lb/>
46-6 in the playoffs. The Schlitz Blitz advanced with a 20-14 win over the<lb/>
Yellow Jackets and a 14-10 win over the Assassins.<lb/>
The Fraternity final matched Tau Kappa Epsilon and Kappa Alpha<lb/>
while the independent championship game will find the Pack squaring<lb/>
off against Last Chance. Both title games promised to be real<lb/>
donnybrooks.<lb/>
The four divisional winners were scheduled to begin the All-Campus<lb/>
championship today, with the finals to be played on Thursday at 4 p.m.<lb/>
The women's football playoffs find Tyler I and Tyler II favored in<lb/>
their matches against Tyler III and the Fleming Floozies. The title game<lb/>
in that competition is scheduled fa Wednesday at 4;30.<lb/>
In her semifinal win over Mary Sawyer, Janet Hoeppel came within<lb/>
one point of losing the match. Sawyer took a 6-3 win over Hoeppel in the<lb/>
first set and was ahead early in the second set. Hoeppel, however,<lb/>
fought back from behind to tie the second set at 6-6 and foroe a<lb/>
nine-point tiebreaker. In the tiebreaker the two women played to the<lb/>
final point before Hoeppel won the set.<lb/>
In the final and deciding set Hoeppel returned to form and won 6-1.<lb/>
Janice McVeigh had little trouble defeating Delores Ryan in two sets,<lb/>
6-4, 6-3, to make the finals. Watch the FOUNTAINHEAD later in the<lb/>
week fa an acount of their championship match.<lb/>
Men'sand women's volleyball is into its third week 24 teams remain<lb/>
unbeaten, nine in the women's division and 15 in the men's division.<lb/>
In the men's competition Pi Kappa Phi started off with three wins to<lb/>
go after a defense of its Campus championship. The Volley Follies, the<lb/>
BSU Bullets, Kappa Alpha and Evury Mother's Sons seem to present<lb/>
the biggest challange to the Pi Kapps.<lb/>
In the women's competition Alpha Phi swept to three runaway wins<lb/>
to take the early lead. Fielding good teams that could challange the<lb/>
Alpha Phis are Chi Omega, Hypertension, Fletcher BigSubsand Greene<lb/>
I.<lb/>
Water Basketball was hampered by several fafeits which gave wins<lb/>
to several of the weaker teams in the league. Leading the league are<lb/>
Rooky's Best, the Neaomakers and the Moikberry Moon Delight. All<lb/>
have 3-0 recads. Tied fa fourth were Don't Tell Me Your Problems and<lb/>
the Intramural Staff at 1-1. In sixth place was Afternoon Delight at 1-2<lb/>
and the Dolphins were last with an 0-4 recad.<lb/>
The leading scaers after the first two weeks of play were Gwen<lb/>
Trevasso with a 23.0 point average and Jean Evans with a 21.0 point pef<lb/>
game average. The strongest team so far seems to be the Monkberry<lb/>
Moon Delight, who have won by scaes of 64-16, 82-20 and 24-16.<lb/>
Registration fa wanen's racquetball singles and oo-rec twoon-two<lb/>
basketball runs through Thursday so oome by the Intramural office in<lb/>
Room 204 Memaial Gym and sign up.<lb/>
There will be a mandatay Intramural Council meeting this afternoon<lb/>
at 4 p.m. in Room 104 of Memaial Gym. There must be a representative<lb/>
fron each aganizatioi present.<lb/>
<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057089_0011"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 1326 OCTOBER 1976<lb/>
11<lb/>
?tf<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
tmm<lb/>
tramural<lb/>
ipetition,<lb/>
pions by<lb/>
women's<lb/>
t Guy and<lb/>
ne-on-one<lb/>
the finals<lb/>
tter in the<lb/>
ipions and<lb/>
nen's and<lb/>
am tennis<lb/>
cached the<lb/>
s where Pi<lb/>
opponents.<lb/>
Sigma Nu<lb/>
3 Pi Kapps<lb/>
xi all year<lb/>
eoord. Phi<lb/>
)-l6 win to<lb/>
With Phi<lb/>
in over the<lb/>
able Scott<lb/>
ttle trouble<lb/>
, 40-12 and<lb/>
in over the<lb/>
ippa Alpha<lb/>
k squaring<lb/>
0 be real<lb/>
kll-Campus<lb/>
1 at 4 p.m.<lb/>
favored in<lb/>
title game<lb/>
ame within<lb/>
sppel in the<lb/>
, however,<lb/>
id foroe a<lb/>
lyed to the<lb/>
d won 6-1.<lb/>
n two sets,<lb/>
later in the<lb/>
ams remain<lb/>
s division,<lb/>
iree wins to<lb/>
Follies, the<lb/>
to present<lb/>
naway wiru<lb/>
allange the<lb/>
and Greene<lb/>
t gave wins<lb/>
league are<lb/>
Delight. All<lb/>
oblems anc<lb/>
slight at 1-<lb/>
were Gwer<lb/>
.0 point<lb/>
Monkberrj<lb/>
24-16.<lb/>
; two-on-two<lb/>
iral office in<lb/>
lis afternoon<lb/>
present at ive<lb/>
Big win<lb/>
Netters top Duke JV's<lb/>
ByKURTHICKMAN<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
ECU'S women's tennis team<lb/>
had its biggest win of the year last<lb/>
week by defeating the Duke JV's,<lb/>
5-4, here Thursday.<lb/>
Aooording to ECU ooach Ellen<lb/>
Warren, the Duke JV squad may<lb/>
be the strongest team the Lady<lb/>
Pirates have seen this season.<lb/>
ECU had to make a strong<lb/>
comeback against the Blue Devils<lb/>
as Duke had a commanding 4-2<lb/>
lead going into the doubles<lb/>
matches.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates fell behind<lb/>
as only Dorcas Sunkel and Susan<lb/>
Helmer could pull off ECU wins in<lb/>
the singles competition.<lb/>
Sunkel beat Ann Tyrrell, 6-2,<lb/>
6-2, while Helmer topped Anna<lb/>
Neal Blanchard, 6-3. 6-3.<lb/>
Duke took the lead as Bet<lb/>
Wannamaker defeated Cathy<lb/>
Portwood, 6-4, 6-4, Jan Gittleman<lb/>
took Leigh Jefferson, 6-2, &amp;0,<lb/>
Janie Short subdued Marie Ste-<lb/>
wart, 6-2, 6-4,and Kathie Johnson<lb/>
overcame Vicky Loose, 4-6, 6-2,<lb/>
6-1.<lb/>
Booters<lb/>
defeated<lb/>
ByANNEHOGGE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU'S soocer team lost Satur-<lb/>
day to VMI, 4-2.<lb/>
The Pirates had 16 shots on<lb/>
goal toVMI'sH. VMI had eight<lb/>
saves to seven for ECU.<lb/>
All the Pirate scoring came<lb/>
from halfback Pete Angus and<lb/>
wing Phil Martin.<lb/>
Angus and wing Jeff Karpo-<lb/>
vich were each credited with an<lb/>
assist.<lb/>
Coach Curtis Frye was disap-<lb/>
pointed with his team's play.<lb/>
"They had Carolina Football<lb/>
instead of Pirate soccer on their<lb/>
minds said Frye.<lb/>
The Pirates, now 3-9-1 overall<lb/>
and 2-3-1 in conference play, <lb/>
UNC-W here Wednesday at 3:30-<lb/>
Clubbers<lb/>
unbeaten<lb/>
ECU's undefeated dub foot-<lb/>
ball team defeated UNC Friday in<lb/>
Chapel Hill, 19-12.<lb/>
Quarterback Terence Tully<lb/>
directed all the Pirates' scoring<lb/>
drives.<lb/>
ECU touchdowns were scored<lb/>
by Lee Hawaii, Cam Cameron,<lb/>
and Steve Doabler.<lb/>
Tight end Alvin Frazier was<lb/>
the Bucs' leading receiver with<lb/>
four receptions.<lb/>
UNC s veer attack was held to<lb/>
150 yards total offense.<lb/>
The club team plays again<lb/>
Sunday here against Duke on the<lb/>
football practice field.<lb/>
mm i in hi Willie ?ipiaiwiirtiiin mp<lb/>
ECU rebounded impressively<lb/>
as they swept the doubles match-<lb/>
es.<lb/>
Sunkel and Portwood beat<lb/>
Gittleman and Short, 6-3, 5-7,<lb/>
6-2, Helmer and Loose routed<lb/>
Tyrrell and Wannamaker, 6-2,<lb/>
6-2, while Patty Collins and Kathy<lb/>
Harry defeated Johnson and<lb/>
Blanchard, 6-4, 2-6, 6-5.<lb/>
? ECU is now 7-2 on the season<lb/>
with two matches left to play.<lb/>
? Their next match is Thursday<lb/>
as they travel to UNC-Wilming-<lb/>
ton.<lb/>
Tankers top<lb/>
UNC-G again<lb/>
By DAVID ROBEY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU's women's swim team<lb/>
swam to victory again as they<lb/>
overwhelmed UNC-G, 77-74,<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
Ellen Bond, Lynn Uteguard,<lb/>
Cindy Sailer and Sharon Burns<lb/>
combined a time of 206.5 to win<lb/>
the medley relay.<lb/>
In other events, ECU won<lb/>
both the first and second spots in<lb/>
the 100 butterfly. Cindy Sailer<lb/>
took first with a time of 1 08.6,<lb/>
while Katherine Wade took the<lb/>
number two position in 1:11.6.<lb/>
In the 100 backstroke, UNC-G<lb/>
took first and third while ECU's<lb/>
Janette Inman won the number<lb/>
two spot with a 1:14.9 clocking.<lb/>
Anne Miller of UNC-G came<lb/>
in first in the 100 backstroke with<lb/>
a time of 6:35.0.<lb/>
ECU'S Katherine Chandler<lb/>
won first place in the 100<lb/>
breaststroke in 1 23.5.<lb/>
Cathy Callahan won the diving<lb/>
as she oombined a score of 152.45<lb/>
on the one meter board.<lb/>
In the 50 yard breaststroke<lb/>
Ellen Bond, with a time of 36.1,<lb/>
took first place and Katherine<lb/>
Chandler took second in 39.1.<lb/>
Cindy Sailer grabbed first and<lb/>
Katherine Wade took second in<lb/>
the 50 yard butterfly with times of<lb/>
29.3 and 32.3.<lb/>
"We did well and I'm<lb/>
pleased commented coach<lb/>
Stevie Chepko. "The times were<lb/>
not that good but I feel we can<lb/>
improve them. The pool was slow<lb/>
due to its depth which accounts<lb/>
tor our times<lb/>
The lady Pirates will go<lb/>
against some stiff competition<lb/>
today when they face St. Mary's<lb/>
here at 7 O0.<lb/>
Rugby team loses<lb/>
By BOB DAVIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
iECU' s Rugby Team journeyed<lb/>
north this past weekend to battle<lb/>
Hampden Sydney College. Play-<lb/>
ing with conditions that were far<lb/>
from desirable with over an inch<lb/>
of rain falling the night before,<lb/>
this greatly hampered ECU'S<lb/>
outside speed and the Ruggers<lb/>
lost 9-3.<lb/>
ECU lost the toss and kicked<lb/>
to Hampden-Sydney. The game<lb/>
remained scoreless through the<lb/>
first 15 minutes of the first half<lb/>
due to ECU's tough defense.<lb/>
Hampden-Sydney was first to<lb/>
score on a 15 yard penalty kick<lb/>
and led 3-0 with less than 10<lb/>
minutes left in the half Hampden-<lb/>
Syndey scored on a 10 yard run,<lb/>
to make the score 7-0. On the<lb/>
extra point kick, ECU'S Bob Davis<lb/>
blocked it but was called for<lb/>
obstructing the kicker, one of<lb/>
many penalties that marred<lb/>
ECU'S play in the first half. The<lb/>
kick was attempted again and<lb/>
made; the score was 9-0.<lb/>
In the second half ECU took it<lb/>
from Hampden, but the ball was<lb/>
never in EC's end of the field fa<lb/>
more than a minute. ECU got a<lb/>
lone 3 pointer on a penalty kick by<lb/>
Pat McKinney from 25 yards ou<lb/>
but Sydney still led 9-3. ECU was<lb/>
within 5 yards of goal several<lb/>
times but was unable to take it<lb/>
over. With 15 minutes left in the<lb/>
game McKinney tried a 15 yard<lb/>
penalty kick but it was wide to the<lb/>
right. ECU did not give up<lb/>
however and oontinued to try to<lb/>
score but to no avail; the goal line<lb/>
oould not be crossed. ECU was<lb/>
unable to score in the remainder<lb/>
of the game and the final score<lb/>
was Hampden-Sydney-9 ECU-3.<lb/>
SAAD'S<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
Across from<lb/>
Sherwin-Williams<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
REMEMBER<lb/>
Ring<lb/>
Day<lb/>
Today<lb/>
and<lb/>
Tomorrow<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
MENI-WOMEN!<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 O0-6 OO 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/>
LOST: Gold Hamilton watch,<lb/>
inscribed Minnie Allison. $100.00<lb/>
reward. Call 757-6012 or 752-4490<lb/>
and ask for Dora Howell.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Md. Parway W<lb/>
diving wetsuit. 752-9461.<lb/>
NEEDED: Female roommate.<lb/>
Call 756-7375 after 8O0.<lb/>
FOUND: Man's watch at club<lb/>
football game Sunday, Oct. 10. on<lb/>
intramural field. Call 752-8825.<lb/>
Do you have problems? Do<lb/>
you need a caring listener? Call<lb/>
758-2047.<lb/>
FOR SALE. Custom made water<lb/>
bed frame, heater &amp; thermostat.<lb/>
Price negotiable. Exoellent oond.<lb/>
Call Woody, 756-1540 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1970 Honda CL-175,<lb/>
very good condition; asking $300,<lb/>
includes two helmets. Cal<lb/>
758-9322.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Girls bike, 10-speed<lb/>
Raleigh Record. White 1975<lb/>
model like new, in very good<lb/>
oondition. Call Jane 746-4990.<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/>
STUDENTS serving students!<lb/>
Order corsages now. Done by<lb/>
professional floral designers for<lb/>
you at $4.50. Call 758-0022 before<lb/>
Wednesday. Buddy and Steve.<lb/>
FOR SALE:1974 Yamaha<lb/>
DT125A. Only 1600 miles. Used<lb/>
as oommuter, never in dirt. Call<lb/>
756-7275.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Mustang-loaded with<lb/>
value. Power steering and power<lb/>
disc brakes, factory air, radio,<lb/>
automatic floor shift, mint oon-<lb/>
dition. Owner will accept best<lb/>
offer. Phone days 757-6961 or<lb/>
after 6 p.m. 756-6552.<lb/>
For Sale: 65 MGB Good<lb/>
Condition. Call 758-0984.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Matching sofa and<lb/>
chair, green. Excellent condition.<lb/>
Call 752-0896.<lb/>
FOR SALE: AR2AX loud speak-<lb/>
ers. $220.00. Excellent condition.<lb/>
Serious inquiries only. 758-5150.<lb/>
NEED SPENDING MONEY: Stu-<lb/>
dents desiring part-time work,<lb/>
hours 5 p.m10 p.m Mon. -<lb/>
Thurs. No experience needed.<lb/>
Finishing fiberglass boats. Call<lb/>
today, 758-9901.<lb/>
LOST: Checkbook with dark<lb/>
brown textured cover, Biff a<lb/>
Karen Brean, on Oct. 20 in the<lb/>
vicinity of Austin. 758-4126.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Private room across<lb/>
from ECU at 410 B Student St.<lb/>
752-7032. Prefer senior or grad-<lb/>
uate student.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 240 2, 1972, self-<lb/>
cared fa, fog lights, dual mag<lb/>
wheels, CD, air, AM-FM, 756-<lb/>
0417.<lb/>
PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle.<lb/>
752-4272.<lb/>
SUPER DEAL: Sony HST-110<lb/>
Receiver, BSR 8 track player,<lb/>
recorder, deck, Garrard X-10<lb/>
turntable, 2 Woodstock air-<lb/>
suspension speakers. Exoellent<lb/>
oondition. $225.00. Matt<lb/>
758-3763.<lb/>
SMALL SCALE masonry, brick,<lb/>
block, concrete repair or original<lb/>
work. Rex Bost 758-7569.<lb/>
WANTED: Twin a bunk beds<lb/>
and dresser. Call 756-2459.<lb/>
NEED TYPING? Call Gail Joyner<lb/>
at 756-1062 for professional typ-<lb/>
ing and related services. All work<lb/>
guaranteed!<lb/>
REWARD-$20.00for return of<lb/>
class ring lost in stands at<lb/>
ECU-Citadel game, Oct. 2. Silver,<lb/>
blue stone, East Forsyth Senior<lb/>
High. Contact Ronnie A. Lennon<lb/>
426 Aycock 752-1068.<lb/>
WANTED: Inflatable rubber ddl<lb/>
for Oct. 30 &amp; 31st. Plase contact<lb/>
David Winstead at 752-4673.<lb/>
Need for stage production.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1959 Fad pickup.<lb/>
Come to see my old green truck<lb/>
parked across from 510 E.<lb/>
Twelfth St. on the caner of<lb/>
Lawrence and Twelfth. Call Joe<lb/>
Bennett at 752-7798 afta 6 and<lb/>
weekends.<lb/>
WANTED: To rent small apt. Call<lb/>
758-0870.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1970 Fad Fairlane<lb/>
500, 5 new tires, new starter, new<lb/>
Cobra CB just put in, others.<lb/>
$700.00. Call Larry at 758-8524.<lb/>
Plus 2 new CB (never used)<lb/>
converters - reg. price $16 each -<lb/>
NEEDED: Female roommate fa<lb/>
large condominum. $50.00<lb/>
month. Freedom of house in<lb/>
exchange fa light housekeeping<lb/>
duties. Pool, tennis oourts and<lb/>
sauna available. Board not in-<lb/>
cluded. 756-5423.<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
utmtthht<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
h mmMmm<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057089_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVQL. 52.NO. 1326 OCTORFF, 1976<lb/>
Eastern Carolina's Newest Sports Shoo<lb/>
BOND'SSPORT.NGGOODSopensupanewworldofsportinaooodsin JT<lb/>
BOND'S SPORT.NG GOODS opens up a new world of sporting goods in<lb/>
EASTERN CAROLINA.<lb/>
Summerisgoneandit'stimetolookaheodtofollandwinter. ,fyou like<lb/>
to hunt, fish, play tennis, golf, basketball football, outdoor activities then<lb/>
you need to pay us a visit. We have all the sports equipment you'll need to<lb/>
completeyouractivities. Here at BOND'S we say, The name of our game is<lb/>
service, 'and thats what wemean. Make shopping a sporting adventure at the<lb/>
all new BOND'S SPORTING GOODS.<lb/>
"The Name Of Our Game Is Service<lb/>
PLENTY FREE PARKING <lb/>
OPEN MONDAY Thru SAT 9-6PM AND FRIDAY TIL 9PM<lb/>
218ARLINGTON BLVD. GREENVILLE N.C. PHONE756-6001<lb/>
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