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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057092_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/>
wmmmrn<lb/>
mmmtm<lb/>
CIRCULATION-<lb/>
8,5UU<lb/>
VOL 52, NO. 16<lb/>
4 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
Pres. vetoes BUCCANEER bill<lb/>
EMPTY is the wad to describe the BUCCANEER<lb/>
office after the staff vacated Tuesday at 4 p. m. The<lb/>
staff resigned Monday night at the SGA Legislature<lb/>
meeting. Photo by Russ Pogue)<lb/>
Major Attractions loses<lb/>
on Homecoming events<lb/>
By LOUIS TA YLOR<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Due to large losses incurred in providing<lb/>
entertainment for Homecoming weekend, the<lb/>
Student Union Major Attractions committee may be<lb/>
limited in its ability to produce quality entertain-<lb/>
ment for the remainder of the year, according to Bob<lb/>
Seraiva, chairperson.<lb/>
In a Major Attractions meeting Tuesday, Seraiva<lb/>
announced the loss for the weekend was approx-<lb/>
imately $27,000<lb/>
The committee lost $8,000 on the Judy Collins<lb/>
show earlier. The balance is about $7,000.<lb/>
With only $7,000 left, the committee must now<lb/>
operate "somewhat conservatively according to<lb/>
Seraiva.<lb/>
Seraiva called the loss incredible but he said<lb/>
Major Attractions "can compensate<lb/>
Seraiva is looking forward to a "big turnout" for<lb/>
the Leon and Mary Russell-Richie Furay show this<lb/>
Sunday, November 7, at 8 p.m.<lb/>
He called Leon Russell a "great talent<lb/>
pointirg out that he has sold out the Spectrum in<lb/>
Philadelphia, which is quite an l accomplishment.<lb/>
Seraiva said that the controversy surrounding<lb/>
the SGA's attempt to provide extra Homecoming<lb/>
entertainment may have been partially responsible<lb/>
for the low attendance at the Student Union<lb/>
sponsored shows.<lb/>
Viewing this as a "strategic attempt at gaining<lb/>
recognition Seraiva said they may have "created a<lb/>
negative atmosphere" around the scheduled shows.<lb/>
Seraiva admitted that though the shows provided<lb/>
were "fine talents in their own right they may<lb/>
have been aimed at an audience that was too<lb/>
diversified for this area.<lb/>
He continued that the saturation of local<lb/>
entertainment in such a short time span may have<lb/>
limited student budgets, thus detracting from the<lb/>
attendance.<lb/>
Though the oommittee has been limited, the<lb/>
B.B.King et. al. show previously scheduled for<lb/>
December will not be affected, according to Ken<lb/>
Hammond, of the Mendenhall program board and<lb/>
advisor to Major Attractions.<lb/>
Task Force looks<lb/>
for alternative<lb/>
By DEBBIE JACKSON<lb/>
Co-News Editor<lb/>
and DA VID NASH<lb/>
SGA Correspondent<lb/>
SGA President Tim Sullivan yesterday vetoed the appropriation bill<lb/>
for ECU'S annual, the BUCCANEER.<lb/>
Greg Pingston, SGA vice-president said that the reasons for the veto<lb/>
were (1) that there was no staff and (2) that the money is needed<lb/>
elsewhere.<lb/>
Pingston also noted that Sullivan heard responses from a number of<lb/>
the BUCCANEER staff Tuesday.<lb/>
"We have chosen an Annual Publications Task Force which I will<lb/>
head said Pingston.<lb/>
"The Task Foroe is designed to evaluate the need of any form of<lb/>
annual publication or to oome up with an alternative to help the student<lb/>
body<lb/>
Pingston said that he had chosen the members who will begin work<lb/>
next week.<lb/>
The Task Force will make recommendations to Pingston who will<lb/>
refer them to Sullivan. The final decision rests with Sullivan.<lb/>
The oommittee which represents a cross-section of the students will<lb/>
report to Sullivan on Nov. 17, according to Pingston.<lb/>
"We are hoping to oome up with some quality publication or<lb/>
publications that will not require such an outrageous amount of the<lb/>
students' money as was called for by the BUCCANEER editor said<lb/>
Pingston.<lb/>
According to Pingston the final budget appropriated by the SGA<lb/>
Legislature cut $4,000 out of the budget proposed by the BUCCANEER.<lb/>
"In my opinion, that amount of cut would not call for the emotional<lb/>
resignation of the entire BUCCANEER staff said pingston.<lb/>
Monika Sutherland, BUCCANEER editor, responded positively to<lb/>
the veto.<lb/>
"I guess it is the best move, because the budget appropriated to us<lb/>
was insufficient. It was the only move that President Sullivan had said<lb/>
Sutherland.<lb/>
"I would still go back if we got the money and if we were wanted<lb/>
Sutherland said that if the staff published an annual with less money<lb/>
than they asked the Appropriations Committee for, it would be smaller<lb/>
than what the students are used to.<lb/>
 I believe that if we put out a book it should be at least equal to, if not<lb/>
better than the '76 BUCCANEER Sutherland added.<lb/>
Sutherland said that she believed $67,000 is "a reasonable amount to<lb/>
put in a book<lb/>
The BUCCANEER staff resigned Monday night and was notified by<lb/>
Sullivan on Tuesday that they were to evacuate their office by 4 p.m<lb/>
according to Sutherland.<lb/>
"We were told to leave all materials and equipment, and if any<lb/>
damages were discovered we would have to go before the Honor<lb/>
Council.<lb/>
"We were also told that the locks on the office doors would be<lb/>
changed said Sutherland.<lb/>
According to Sutherland, photos are still being taken, but she doesn' t<lb/>
know how students will pick up their annuals.<lb/>
Heavy voter turnout favors Jimmy Carter<lb/>
By JACK LAIL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Heavy voter turnout and Jim-<lb/>
my Carter's " southerness" were<lb/>
the deciding factors in Tuesday's<lb/>
election said two ECU professors.<lb/>
"I am very happy with the<lb/>
resultsof the election said Mrs.<lb/>
Janice Faulkner, an English<lb/>
professor active in the Democratic<lb/>
party.<lb/>
"National registration is two<lb/>
to one in favor of the Democrats,<lb/>
so a heavy voter turnout is more<lb/>
likely to help Democrats get<lb/>
votes<lb/>
"I think Carter's southern<lb/>
appeal was sincere and genuine.<lb/>
Carter pulled the South together<lb/>
said Dr. John East, Political<lb/>
Science professor who served as a<lb/>
delegate to the Republican con-<lb/>
vention. "I think the large voter<lb/>
turnout worked to Carter's advan-<lb/>
tage<lb/>
Had Mississippi not come<lb/>
through fa Carter he would not<lb/>
have been elected, commented<lb/>
Faulkner.<lb/>
"I think that a northern<lb/>
Democrat like Hubert Humphrey<lb/>
or Walter Mondale would have<lb/>
m mvmmm i mmmtn<lb/>
made the Republicans more com-<lb/>
petitive in the south and they<lb/>
could have carried several south-<lb/>
ern states said East. "There<lb/>
were a lot of factors affecting the<lb/>
election<lb/>
"There was no turning point<lb/>
in the campaign in N.C. or the<lb/>
south said East.<lb/>
"He is not any different from<lb/>
any other aspirant for the presi-<lb/>
dency said Faulkner. "If<lb/>
Watergate was an issue, it was an<lb/>
unspoken one<lb/>
Carter is indebted to organ-<lb/>
ized labor, big cities, and blacks,<lb/>
nwi ii n vmmmmm0mm<lb/>
according to East.<lb/>
"In order to pay for all the<lb/>
things he's promised, somebody<lb/>
has to pay fa it, which means<lb/>
higha taxes a barowing which<lb/>
will cause inflation said East.<lb/>
"There will be a tremendous<lb/>
push fa financial aid fa labor,<lb/>
big cities, and blacks<lb/>
"As Bob Dole said, 'hang onto<lb/>
your pocketbooks<lb/>
Domestic politics will change<lb/>
but faeign policy will remain<lb/>
about the same, commented East.<lb/>
"Carter got the Democratic<lb/>
nonination by himself and then<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
the party helped him said<lb/>
Faulkna.<lb/>
 President Fad has renoered<lb/>
a service to the country as intaim<lb/>
president said Faulkner. "He<lb/>
served to calm panic and held<lb/>
cyncism down afta Watagate<lb/>
"I couldn't support him be-<lb/>
cause I think he lacked the<lb/>
intellect to run the oountry. He's<lb/>
a very decent man she said.<lb/>
Democrats swept the guber-<lb/>
natorial and lieutenant guber-<lb/>
nataial races and all eight council<lb/>
of state contests by better than 60<lb/>
per cent of the vote.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057092_0002"/><lb/>
2<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 164 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
news<lb/>
Ballet<lb/>
New York<lb/>
Free flick<lb/>
Game Buses Junk festival<lb/>
The oldest ballet company in<lb/>
the U.S the Atlanta Ballet, will<lb/>
perform in MoGinnis Auditorium<lb/>
Nov. 9 and 10 1976. Tickets are<lb/>
available at the Central Ticket<lb/>
Office. The performances are<lb/>
sponsored by the Student Union<lb/>
Theatre Arts Committee, the<lb/>
people that brought you "Don't<lb/>
Bother Me, I Cant Cope Danoe<lb/>
will wake up your life!<lb/>
Car Wash<lb/>
A car wash sponsored by<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi national honor<lb/>
fraternity will be held at Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Exxon Saturday, Nov. 6 starting<lb/>
at 10 a.m.<lb/>
Leon Live<lb/>
Do you like to boogie, or<lb/>
rook-n-roll? Don't miss the new<lb/>
Leon &amp; Mary Russell show with<lb/>
the Richie Furay Band, Sunday<lb/>
Nov. 7. Student tickets are $4.00<lb/>
and public tickets $6.00. An<lb/>
inexpensive investment for four<lb/>
hours of quality music and<lb/>
showmanship.<lb/>
Hockey Tourney<lb/>
ECU Athletics would like to<lb/>
weloome to the campus the 1976<lb/>
Deep South Field Hockey Tour-<lb/>
nament. The Tournament is sche-<lb/>
duled for Nov. 6, 7, 8 behind<lb/>
Allied Health. Tournament time<lb/>
is8:30 a.m. to 4 JO p.m.<lb/>
Eighteen teams from North<lb/>
Carolina, South Carolina and<lb/>
Georgia will be competing for<lb/>
regional playoffs.<lb/>
There will be a daily .25<lb/>
admission fee. Concessions will<lb/>
be available also.<lb/>
Dinner Theatre<lb/>
Coming soon! The first Men-<lb/>
denhall Student Center Dinner<lb/>
Theatre! Stuart Aronson is put-<lb/>
ting together a dynamite show of<lb/>
The Odd Couple plus a dinner<lb/>
that will put your tastebuds in<lb/>
ecstasy. Get tickets now at the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office in Menden-<lb/>
hall for one of four shows,<lb/>
November 11-14. A M.S.C. Pro-<lb/>
duction.<lb/>
Glee club<lb/>
Men interested in singing in<lb/>
the ECU Men's Glee Club, please<lb/>
contact Mr. Naff, School of Music<lb/>
B-205, 757-6982. The group will<lb/>
rehearse from 1-1:50 p.m<lb/>
MTTH, and will carry 1 hour<lb/>
credit per quarter.<lb/>
There will be an orientation<lb/>
meeting for a Student Union New<lb/>
York City trip participants Mon. 7<lb/>
7:30 Pm in tne Multi-purpose<lb/>
rm Mendenahll. Attendance is<lb/>
required. If there are conf I ids call<lb/>
the Student Union Offioe 757-<lb/>
6611 ext. 210.<lb/>
Piano Duet<lb/>
The Contiguglia Brothers, a<lb/>
masterful piano duo will perform<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Theatre, Wednesday night Nov.<lb/>
10 at 8.00 p.m. Thanks to the,<lb/>
Student Union Artists Series<lb/>
Committee, the follies that<lb/>
brought you the Guarneri String<lb/>
Quartet! Tickets are available at<lb/>
the Central Ticket Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
Animals<lb/>
The animals available for<lb/>
adoption this week include a<lb/>
white kitten, a tabby cat, two<lb/>
brown and white mixed shephard<lb/>
puppies, a tan and white mixed<lb/>
breed, and a brown dog.<lb/>
The people at Animal Control<lb/>
would like to extend an invitation<lb/>
to all interested persons to oome<lb/>
by and visit the Shelter. The<lb/>
shelter is located on 2nd Street,<lb/>
off Cemetery road. They would<lb/>
appreciate it and so would the<lb/>
animals.<lb/>
WRC<lb/>
The Women's Resident Coun-<lb/>
cil held a meeting Tues Nov. 2 at<lb/>
5 p.m. in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. On the agenda<lb/>
were: the proposed budget for teh<lb/>
7677 year, Homecoming publi-<lb/>
city, float and finances and<lb/>
Committee Reports. The execu-<lb/>
tive committee will meet Mon<lb/>
Nov. 8 at 330 p.m. in Dean<lb/>
Smith's offioe. The next WRC<lb/>
meeting will be Tues Nov. 9th at<lb/>
5 p.m. in Mendenhall.<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
The Coffeehouse Ministry be-<lb/>
gins its 76 season on November 5<lb/>
with Local Talent Night. The<lb/>
entertainment for the rest of the<lb/>
month is as follows: Nov. 12th-<lb/>
Faith; Nov. 27th-Sam &amp; Shannon;<lb/>
Dec. 3rd-Mike Coggins in Con-<lb/>
cert.<lb/>
On Oct. 5 &amp; 6 in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Theatre the Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Union Films Committee<lb/>
will present "The Way We<lb/>
Were" starring Robert Redford<lb/>
and Barbra Streisand. Laugh<lb/>
again. Cry Again. Make sure you<lb/>
see this tender love story. A<lb/>
definite must! Admission: ID &amp;<lb/>
activity Card. Shows at 7 and 9<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Crusade<lb/>
Campus crusade for Christ<lb/>
will meet this Thur. night at 7 p.m<lb/>
in Brewster 201-D. Come join us<lb/>
for fun in the Son.<lb/>
SGA buses will leave Menden-<lb/>
hall Saturday Nov. 6, at 7 a.m. fa<lb/>
the Richmond game. The buses<lb/>
will leave directly after the game.<lb/>
PsiChi Fry<lb/>
Psi Chi will have its first<lb/>
annual fish fry on Sunday, Nov. 7.<lb/>
All psychology majors 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/>
for details. Student tickets will go<lb/>
on sale Tuesday, Oct. 26 in the<lb/>
Psi Chi Library.<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phl A,Pha<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi national<lb/>
honor society and service to<lb/>
education organization will meet<lb/>
Thursday Nov. 4, at 7 p.m. in rm.<lb/>
244, Mendenhall, for a very<lb/>
important business meeting. This<lb/>
will be the last regular meeting of<lb/>
the quarter. All members are<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
Phi Alpha Theta honor frater-<lb/>
nity will meet Tues Nov. 9 at<lb/>
730 p.m. in the Richard Todd<lb/>
room, Brewster D-110. New<lb/>
members will be inducted and all<lb/>
unpaid fees should be paid at this<lb/>
time. All members are encour-<lb/>
aged to attend. Plans must be<lb/>
made for the annual Christmas<lb/>
party.<lb/>
Sally Spring Grad exams<lb/>
The amazing Sally Spring will<lb/>
appear 8 &amp; 9 p.m. Nov. 5-6 in<lb/>
MendenhaJI Student Center Prioe<lb/>
is .25. Sponsored by the Student<lb/>
Union Coffeehouse Committee.<lb/>
Home Ec<lb/>
The American Home Econo-<lb/>
mics Association will hold its<lb/>
regular monthly meeting on Mon.<lb/>
Nov. 8 at 7 p.m. in the Home Ec.<lb/>
Social Room. Mrs. Carol Stevens,<lb/>
natural childbirth teacher, will be<lb/>
in charge of the program. All<lb/>
members and home ec majors are<lb/>
invited.<lb/>
Graduate Record Examina-<lb/>
tions will be offered at ECU Sat.<lb/>
Dec. 11. Application blanks are to<lb/>
be completed and mailed to<lb/>
Educational Testing Service, Box<lb/>
966-R, Princeton, NJ 08540 to<lb/>
arrive by Nov. 10. Applications<lb/>
may be obtained from the Testing<lb/>
Center, Rooms 105-106, Speight<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
Yardsale<lb/>
FG<lb/>
YARDSALE! Students who<lb/>
have been in Greenville 6 yrs.<lb/>
wish to sell accumulated wealth:<lb/>
thousands of records, a drafting<lb/>
table, clothes, furniture and more<lb/>
exciting paraphanelia. Sat Nov.<lb/>
6 at 201 S. Library St.<lb/>
Dan Coutcher, Assistant Di-<lb/>
rector of the Forever Generation,<lb/>
will speak at this Friday night's<lb/>
meeting of the Forever Genera-<lb/>
tion, ECU. We enoourage you to<lb/>
join us for an interesting and<lb/>
profitable time of fellowship and<lb/>
Bible study. The meeting will<lb/>
start at 7:30 p.m. in Mendenhall<lb/>
244.<lb/>
ACT<lb/>
Entertainment Sierra Club<lb/>
The Student Union Special<lb/>
Entertainment Committee will<lb/>
meet intheS.U. lounge on Tues<lb/>
Nov. 9, at 4 p.m.<lb/>
The Sierra Club will meet<lb/>
Nov. 8 at the First Presbyterian<lb/>
Church en Elm St. at 800. The<lb/>
meeting is informal. Everybody is<lb/>
weloome!<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 Corp P.O. Box<lb/>
3540 Grand Central Station, New<lb/>
York, N.Y. 10017 toarrive by Oct.<lb/>
25.<lb/>
The Roxy Music Arts and<lb/>
Crafts Center will present the<lb/>
Second Annual Junk Trades<lb/>
Festival this Saturday. There will<lb/>
be food, music, and many "dia-<lb/>
monds in the rough so go to the<lb/>
Roxy, at 629 Albemarle Avenue,<lb/>
and ENJOY!<lb/>
Seminar<lb/>
Walter H. Puterbaugh, pro-<lb/>
fessor of chemistry at UNC-G will<lb/>
present a chemistry seminar on<lb/>
"The Effect of the Metallic Catiou<lb/>
in Certain Organic Reactions<lb/>
Involving Strong Bases Nov. 5,<lb/>
2 p.m. in Flanagan 201. Refresh-<lb/>
ments will be served in the<lb/>
Conference Room at 3 p.m.<lb/>
One-Acts<lb/>
The Theatre Workshop of the<lb/>
ECU Playhouse presents two<lb/>
one-acts by Tennesee Williams,<lb/>
Thursday, Nov. 4-Saturday, Nov.<lb/>
6 at 8.O0p.m.<lb/>
The shows are HELLO<lb/>
FROM BERTHA and THE LADY<lb/>
OF LARKSPUR LOTION, and will<lb/>
be presented in "The Other<lb/>
Theatre opposite Drama 206.<lb/>
Admission is free.<lb/>
Bahai Faith<lb/>
Bahai Faith : "Equality of<lb/>
men and women" Baha'u'llah<lb/>
gave the world this principle 100<lb/>
years ago. If you would like to<lb/>
find out more about these teach-<lb/>
ings come to room 238 in<lb/>
Mendenhall, 8.30 Thurs. night.<lb/>
There will be someone there to<lb/>
talk with you.<lb/>
Manuscripts<lb/>
The dosing date fa the<lb/>
submission of manuscripts by<lb/>
College Students is Nov. 5. Any<lb/>
student attending either junior or<lb/>
senior oollege iseligible to submit<lb/>
his verse. There is no limitation<lb/>
as to form or theme. Shorter<lb/>
works are preferred because of<lb/>
space limitations.<lb/>
Each poem must be TYPED or<lb/>
PRINTED on 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/>
Crafts Center<lb/>
The M SC Crafts Center is now<lb/>
open. Located on the ground<lb/>
floor, the Crafts Center hours are<lb/>
2:00 p.m. until 10.00 p.m.<lb/>
Discover new worlds within!<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
UMlUPI<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057092_0003"/><lb/>
���������HHHIB<lb/>
FOUNTAiNHEADVOL 52, NO. 164 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
3<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
LungAssoc: We mind<lb/>
very much if you smoke<lb/>
By LARRY UEBERMAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The issue of smoking in the<lb/>
classroom is often a heated one. It<lb/>
comes up periodically each year.<lb/>
Just to set the record straight,<lb/>
here is the official ECU policy.<lb/>
"Smoking is prohibited in all<lb/>
classrooms on the campus of<lb/>
ECU according to Rosie Griffin,<lb/>
secretary to the provost.<lb/>
Lorey H. White, of the<lb/>
Eastern Lung Association and a<lb/>
graduate student at ECU is<lb/>
ooncerned about the amount of<lb/>
smoking that goes on in class-<lb/>
rooms.<lb/>
White said that students<lb/>
should not have to put up with<lb/>
second hand smoke, the smoke<lb/>
from the burning end of a<lb/>
cigarette and the exhaled smoke.<lb/>
"Smoking is not socially<lb/>
acceptable anymore said<lb/>
White. "The overall percentage<lb/>
of smokers has dropped<lb/>
"Because the population has<lb/>
increased, so has the number of<lb/>
smokers, but the percentage of<lb/>
male smokers in 1964 was 52.4<lb/>
as oompared to 39 in 1975<lb/>
said White.<lb/>
Most smokers have tried to<lb/>
stop, according to the Lung<lb/>
Association. Six out of ten would<lb/>
stop if they could and another<lb/>
three would if there was an easy<lb/>
way, said White.<lb/>
Second hand smoke has more<lb/>
chemicals in it than inhaled<lb/>
smoke.<lb/>
Some of the most hazardous<lb/>
oompounds in smoke are tar,<lb/>
niootine, carbon monoxide, cad-<lb/>
mium, and nitrogen dioxide,<lb/>
according to the American Lung<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
"Even when a smoker in-<lb/>
hales, researchers have calcula-<lb/>
ted that two-thirds of the smoke<lb/>
from a burning cigarette goes into<lb/>
the environment.<lb/>
"The amount of carbon mon-<lb/>
oxide generated from one cigar is<lb/>
twice as much as three cigarettes<lb/>
smoked simultaneously. The car-<lb/>
bon monoxide robs the blood of<lb/>
oxygen and the niootine narrows<lb/>
the blood vessels.<lb/>
"Inhaling seoond hand smoke<lb/>
makes the heart beat faster, steps<lb/>
up the blood pressure, and raises<lb/>
the level of carbon monoxide in<lb/>
the nonsmoker's blood<lb/>
One study shows that the<lb/>
smoke from nine cigars in half an<lb/>
hour polluted the air as much as<lb/>
the smoke from 42 cigarettes.<lb/>
Both types of pollution raised the<lb/>
level of carbon monoxide above<lb/>
safety limits for workers in<lb/>
industry, according to the Ameri-<lb/>
can Lung Association.<lb/>
White said students are re-<lb/>
quired to sit in a classroom if they<lb/>
want credit but they shouldn't be<lb/>
required to inhale other people's<lb/>
smoke.<lb/>
"People are beginning to be<lb/>
more serious in their objections to<lb/>
people smoking near them said<lb/>
White. "Now they say, yes I mind<lb/>
if you smoke<lb/>
The Lung Association says<lb/>
there are millions of people,<lb/>
children and adults, who are<lb/>
sensitive to tobaooo smoke and<lb/>
suffer smoke-caused asthma at-<lb/>
tacks.<lb/>
Through researoh the Lung<lb/>
Association has found that the<lb/>
human body attracts smoke.<lb/>
Burning tobacco smoke creates a<lb/>
high electrical potential and the<lb/>
body whioh is water-filled has a<lb/>
low one.<lb/>
STUDENTS ignore anti-smoking policy. Photo by Russ Pogue<lb/>
COME SAVE WITH<lb/>
This Week at the Elbo Room<lb/>
Le Roy Brown<lb/>
Remember:<lb/>
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imHiW�nu<lb/>
<pb facs="00057092_0004"/><lb/>
�. ipgas m<lb/>
4<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 52, NO. 164 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
MM<lb/>
An annual farce DON'T CALL US, WEU CRLL YOU<lb/>
The resignation of the BUCCANEER staff in toto<lb/>
Tuesday provides an exoellent opportunity to<lb/>
examine the needs of and purposes for the ECU<lb/>
yearbook.<lb/>
Complete blame fa what happened at last<lb/>
Monday's meeting of the legislature cannot be<lb/>
squarely fixed upon either a parsimonious SGA or a<lb/>
reactionary BUCCANEER staff. Perhaps the real<lb/>
fault lies with the system by which the yearbook is<lb/>
produoed.<lb/>
This year, as in years past, the BUCCANEER<lb/>
covering last year's events came back from the<lb/>
printer and was available to students several weeks<lb/>
before the budget fa the 1976-77 yearbook was<lb/>
considered. At no time during the previous 12<lb/>
months did the SGA have a chance to sautinize the<lb/>
progress and content of the BUCCANEER (unless<lb/>
there had been a budgeting erra last year and the<lb/>
staff needed mae maiey). Unlike FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD, which is published twice weekly and<lb/>
therefae open to periodic aiticism, the BUC-<lb/>
CANEER is a love-it-a ieave-it proposition.<lb/>
The decision by the legislature was superficially<lb/>
motivated by a desire to wisely appropriate student<lb/>
funds. What was conspicuously lacking from the<lb/>
budget-cutting action was an indication of the kind<lb/>
of yearbook that the SGA demands-except, of<lb/>
course, one which has mae coverage of the Student<lb/>
Government.<lb/>
Constructive criticism requires at least a basic<lb/>
knowledge of the way a yearbook is put together.<lb/>
The legislature, now that the Publications Board is<lb/>
defunct, iseven mae responsible fa understanding<lb/>
the nuances of yearbook production in ader to make<lb/>
an appropriation which will buy the kind of yearbook<lb/>
students want and can affad.<lb/>
But the extent of the legislature's dislike fa the<lb/>
last yearbook and its lack of expertise is reflected by<lb/>
their punishing appropriation.<lb/>
Nevertheless, now is the time fa the legislature<lb/>
to obtain fa itself the savoir faire once provided by<lb/>
the Publications Board.<lb/>
Now is the time to saap the idea of an "annual"<lb/>
fa sanething mae modern, perhaps even avant<lb/>
garde.<lb/>
Instead of publishing one book annually as a<lb/>
recad of the year's events, the BUCCANEER could<lb/>
produce two a mae publications per year on a<lb/>
magazine famat. The longevity of the publication<lb/>
would be oomparable to a hard-bound book but<lb/>
thousands of dollars less expensive.<lb/>
Fbunfainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for war 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/>
Fountainnead 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: SIO.vO annually tor non-students, $6.00 for<lb/>
alumni.<lb/>
Budget cuts explained<lb/>
To the Fountainnead:<lb/>
As a member of the Appro-<lb/>
priations Committee, I would like<lb/>
to explain some of the reasons for<lb/>
the outs to the Bug's budget.<lb/>
First, the SGA does not have<lb/>
the surplus money this year as it<lb/>
has had in recent years past. If<lb/>
the Appropriations Committee<lb/>
passed out every bill to the floor<lb/>
of the legislature with no cuts at<lb/>
all, there is little doubt the SGA<lb/>
would be operating in the red by<lb/>
the end of the year.<lb/>
The Buc bill was brought<lb/>
before the legislature the second<lb/>
week it met. It then went to the<lb/>
Appropriations oommittee which<lb/>
met the following Monday. Due to<lb/>
lack of time (the committee met at<lb/>
4.00 and the SGA started at 5 00)<lb/>
the Buc budget was postponed till<lb/>
Thursday On Thursday the<lb/>
oommittee was ready to go over<lb/>
the bill, but no one from the<lb/>
Buccaneer showed up. The print-<lb/>
ing cost at that time was<lb/>
54,500.00. The following Mon-<lb/>
day, Monika Sutherland came<lb/>
before the SGA and said that she<lb/>
needed $4,000 more because of a<lb/>
rise in printing cost from that<lb/>
week alone! This extra money<lb/>
would not have been needed if the<lb/>
Buc staff had been at the<lb/>
Committee meeting on Thursday.<lb/>
Miss Sutherland stated in the<lb/>
SGA meeting, November 1st, that<lb/>
she was "unaware" of the<lb/>
meeting. It seems to me that<lb/>
someone who is asking for<lb/>
66,010.00 of the students money<lb/>
should make it a point to find out<lb/>
when her budget comes before<lb/>
Appropriations.<lb/>
The editor's salary was cut<lb/>
from $1,200 to $1,000 a year.<lb/>
Every executive officer of the<lb/>
SGAhascut their salaries, includ-<lb/>
ing the President's which has<lb/>
been cut $25 a month. The Buc's<lb/>
editor was also cut $25 a month.<lb/>
The Greek Editor was cut and<lb/>
put under the Organizations<lb/>
Editor, which received a raise of<lb/>
$25 a month ($75 a month and<lb/>
$600 a year). The assistant Sports<lb/>
Editor was cut, but the Women's<lb/>
Sports Editor, which was a new<lb/>
position as of last year, was kept.<lb/>
This leaves two Editors for<lb/>
Sports. For staffers, last year the<lb/>
Buc asked for $3,225. This year<lb/>
they ask for $5,640. This included<lb/>
a new assistant editor and $2,200<lb/>
for free lance writing. We cut the<lb/>
assistant editor entirely out (a<lb/>
salary of $800 a year) and $1600<lb/>
out of free lance, leaving $600.<lb/>
The salaries of all staffers run<lb/>
for eight months. In the Greek<lb/>
section for instance, there are 19<lb/>
groups. These groups have their<lb/>
pictures made and they are<lb/>
turned in to the Buc along with a<lb/>
fact sheet listing their doings<lb/>
during the year. The Greek editor<lb/>
transforms this fact sheet into a<lb/>
small paragraph and layouts the<lb/>
pictures. For this he was paid<lb/>
$400. Jamie Austria, former<lb/>
Greek Editor, said himself before<lb/>
the SGA that there were a lot of<lb/>
weeks where the only thing to do<lb/>
was small busy work and the<lb/>
answering of telephones in the<lb/>
WP<lb/>
office. If this is true, then why<lb/>
were there so many organiza-<lb/>
tions, with pictures in the Buc,<lb/>
but no write-up?<lb/>
I know an annual is a very<lb/>
huge task to tackle, but cuts have<lb/>
to be made if the student's SGA is<lb/>
to run in the black instead of the<lb/>
red. The Committee spent three<lb/>
hours going over this budget. The<lb/>
Fountainhead reported it was in<lb/>
closed session. Let me inform the<lb/>
Fountainnead that every organi-<lb/>
zation that comes before Appro-<lb/>
priations is given the right to fully<lb/>
explain its bill before the full<lb/>
oommittee and then is asked to<lb/>
leave the room while debate<lb/>
between the members is taking<lb/>
place. The organization is then<lb/>
asked back into the oommittee<lb/>
where it can witness the vote<lb/>
taken on the bill.<lb/>
The students who you elected<lb/>
to SGA stood behind us in our<lb/>
decisions. I hope there will be a<lb/>
Buc fa this year, because I enjoy<lb/>
it, but let me also remind you that<lb/>
in a recent SGA survey, the Buc<lb/>
placed sixth on a list of impor-<lb/>
tance to the students.<lb/>
Signed,<lb/>
Tommy Joe Payne<lb/>
Day Student Representative<lb/>
Appropriations Committee<lb/>
P.S. If you will notice, all cutsthat<lb/>
'were made were in salaries. From<lb/>
this, one would have to assume<lb/>
that the entire Buc staff quit over<lb/>
the amount of money they were<lb/>
paid.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057092_0005"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 164 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
5<lb/>
MHIWMUI<lb/>
��<lb/>
m<lb/>
TheForum<lb/>
Do you want a yearbook?<lb/>
ToFOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Since I am among those who<lb/>
resigned from the BUCCANEER<lb/>
staff earlier this week, I believe I<lb/>
owe all of you an explanation for<lb/>
my action.<lb/>
As you know, the SGA Appro-<lb/>
priations Committee cut the bud-<lb/>
get of the BUCCANEER<lb/>
$5,786.00 from the previous year,<lb/>
even after hearing that printing<lb/>
costs alone had risen by more<lb/>
than $2,500.00. Not only did the<lb/>
Appropriations Committee cut<lb/>
the BUCCANEER budget finan-<lb/>
cially, they took it upon them-<lb/>
selves to dictate what staff<lb/>
positions the BUCCANEER could<lb/>
not have. The position of Greek<lb/>
Editor was deleted, leaving one<lb/>
person responsible for covering<lb/>
more than 150 organizations, a<lb/>
virtually impossible task. The<lb/>
position of assistant editor was<lb/>
eliminated, leaving the full task of<lb/>
supervising all aspects of pro-<lb/>
duction of the yearbook to the<lb/>
editor. The Appropriations Com-<lb/>
mittee also made other damaging<lb/>
cuts.<lb/>
As for my decision to resign, I<lb/>
must attribute this to my faith in<lb/>
the editor of the BUCCANEER.<lb/>
She has had six years of yearbook<lb/>
experience, three of which were<lb/>
as editor of a yearbook. I would<lb/>
deem her infinitely more capable<lb/>
than the SGA in determining the<lb/>
amount of money necessary to<lb/>
produce a yearbook of which the<lb/>
student body can be proud. Not<lb/>
one of the members of the SGA,<lb/>
to my knowledge, could under-<lb/>
stand all that is necessary to<lb/>
produce a yearbook.<lb/>
So I have chosen to no longer<lb/>
work for the BUCCANEER, not<lb/>
simply because the SGA didn't<lb/>
appropriate the amount of money<lb/>
the BUCCANEER staff asked for,<lb/>
but because I don want to be<lb/>
associated with the poor quality<lb/>
yearbook which will result from<lb/>
the present butchered budget.<lb/>
Certainly we must admire to<lb/>
an extent the thriftiness of the<lb/>
Appropriations Committee. This<lb/>
letter is not meant to undermine<lb/>
their integrity. Too, it must be<lb/>
realized that the SGA has to fund<lb/>
other campus organizations and<lb/>
that its finances are limited. But<lb/>
the budget requested by the<lb/>
BUCCANEER staff is a cut-to-<lb/>
the-bone amount. Anything less<lb/>
than that would, in one way or<lb/>
another, diminish the quality of<lb/>
the book. Do you deserve a<lb/>
aibstandard book after having<lb/>
How 'bout compromising?<lb/>
I'm writing to try and get a<lb/>
compromise between SGA legis-<lb/>
lature and the ECU yearbook<lb/>
BUCCANEER over the BUC-<lb/>
CANEER'S budget.<lb/>
I have been speaking with<lb/>
SGA officials and the yearbook<lb/>
staff trying to find some middle<lb/>
ground for a compromise.<lb/>
The BUCCANEER staff is<lb/>
willing to return to work if they<lb/>
can add $4,000 to printing, $600<lb/>
assistant editor, $400 freelance<lb/>
photography and writers, $200 for<lb/>
Greek editor, $320 layout persons<lb/>
which totals $5,520 that would<lb/>
give a total new proposed budget<lb/>
of $66,710. The editor and<lb/>
assistant have both taken a pay<lb/>
cut of $25 a month to keep this<lb/>
budget to the bare minimum and<lb/>
put out a quality yearbook out for<lb/>
ECU students. They (ECU<lb/>
students) deserve it. All I ask<lb/>
now is that the SGA legislature<lb/>
take a look and give a little -<lb/>
please!<lb/>
Scott Bright<lb/>
Quality is not cheap<lb/>
ToFOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
It is our belief that the SGA<lb/>
has too much authority. Who<lb/>
gives them the right to decide<lb/>
without prior knowledge as to<lb/>
what activities and procedures<lb/>
should go on within the BUC-<lb/>
CANEER office and positions<lb/>
are necessary? It has often been<lb/>
said that one is not known to be<lb/>
ignorant until he opens his mouth<lb/>
and removes that doubt, by<lb/>
taking this action of slashing the<lb/>
BUCCANEER funds.<lb/>
We feel that the students<lb/>
should be made aware that they<lb/>
have already paid $10.00 (TEN<lb/>
DOLLARS) for the BUCCANEER<lb/>
of 1977. It seems they have paid<lb/>
for something they may never<lb/>
receive. If you want your year-<lb/>
book, let it be known to the SGA.<lb/>
Ask for a refund of your $10.00<lb/>
(TEN DOLLARS) or your BUC-<lb/>
CANEER of 1977. Quality does<lb/>
not come cheap. The cheapest is<lb/>
mcst frequently the worst.<lb/>
Former Buc staff members<lb/>
Maria Rice<lb/>
Ricky Lee<lb/>
Deloris Roberson<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/>
paid your activity fees?<lb/>
I would like to think that our<lb/>
legislators are open to recom-<lb/>
mendations from their constit-<lb/>
uencies. I urge each of you<lb/>
students to suggest to your<lb/>
legislators that our proposed<lb/>
budget be reinstated. The SGA<lb/>
cannot deny your desires.<lb/>
I'm sure that I speak fa all of<lb/>
the former staff members when I<lb/>
say that we wanted to produce a<lb/>
yearbook of which you and we<lb/>
oould be proud. To do this,<lb/>
though, you must make the SGA<lb/>
aware that you, the students,<lb/>
want such ayearbook; and that the<lb/>
BUCCANEER budget must first<lb/>
be approved. Your support is<lb/>
absolutely necessary.<lb/>
Thank you,<lb/>
RobBenton<lb/>
SAAD'S<lb/>
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Now you can enjoy ail of the excitement<lb/>
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and they'r yotrfs today for just $49.95 Use<lb/>
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mmmmmmmmmmmwmm mmwmmmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057092_0006"/><lb/>
6<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO 164 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
mmmvwm<lb/>
an mmu i m�<lb/>
Your Student Govcn<lb/>
SGA EXECUTIVE COUNCIL<lb/>
Tim Sullivan, President758-5963<lb/>
Greg Pingston, Vice President756-2509<lb/>
Tommy Thomason, Treasurer758-4290<lb/>
David Whitson<lb/>
Freshman President<lb/>
Valerie Chaffin<lb/>
Sophomore President758-3386<lb/>
Craig Hales<lb/>
Junior President758-7640<lb/>
Lynn Schubert<lb/>
Senior President752-5035<lb/>
SGA CABINET<lb/>
John Jones<lb/>
Attorney General758-8592<lb/>
Tim McLeod<lb/>
Sec. of Academic Affairs752-5325<lb/>
Kim Taylor<lb/>
Sec. of Public Relations758-3386<lb/>
Marshall McAden<lb/>
Sec. of Minority Affairs<lb/>
Beverly Barnes<lb/>
Sec. of Information758-4290<lb/>
Ray Hudson<lb/>
Sec. of Student Welfare<lb/>
Gary Miller<lb/>
Transit Manager752-9121<lb/>
Charles Garland<lb/>
Public Defender752-9148<lb/>
Stephen Reed Warren<lb/>
Public Defender752-8982<lb/>
RULESANDJUDICIARY<lb/>
Karen Harloe,Day758-0780<lb/>
Chairperson<lb/>
Jenni Harrison,Day758-4265<lb/>
Vice-Chairperson<lb/>
Libby LeflerCotten752-8879<lb/>
Kirk EdgertonDay758-7541<lb/>
David Whitson<lb/>
Dalton Denson752-5543<lb/>
Dave McKenzieAy cock758-8891<lb/>
Gregg BoykinScott<lb/>
Jane BiddixFleming752-9257<lb/>
SGA in action<lb/>
OTHER LEGISLATORS<lb/>
Donna Cox Clement<lb/>
AnneGoforth<lb/>
Rick Asheworth<lb/>
Carolyn Blackwell<lb/>
Bill Mirdel<lb/>
David Eason<lb/>
John Bauer<lb/>
Clement<lb/>
Jones<lb/>
Fletcher<lb/>
SJay<lb/>
Belk<lb/>
Belk<lb/>
vjmi<lb/>
SGASTl :ntL<lb/>
APPROI m0N<lb/>
CraHales, Cr f90n<lb/>
Vale rie Chaffin<lb/>
Katie Ray<lb/>
Ron Morrison<lb/>
Karen Harloe<lb/>
Debby Boyoe<lb/>
TinaPadilla<lb/>
Tommy J. Payne<lb/>
Anne O'Brien<lb/>
Randy Bailey<lb/>
Jerry Cox<lb/>
'&amp;<lb/>
emu<lb/>
H a GA BUSES began serving tt<lb/>
� fii<lb/>
campus this quartet<lb/>
I rntainhead file photo<lb/>
 1 � wh<lb/>
g Pin<lb/>
easun<lb/>
)tO<lb/>
SPEAKEfFTHEL<lb/>
Ricky Price<lb/>
Cindi Whitakei<lb/>
PA<lb/>
Karen Harloe<lb/>
CRETA<lb/>
AMEN<lb/>
SAF:ANT.j<lb/>
Jane Biddix<lb/>
�W��I<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
W<lb/>
<pb facs="00057092_0007"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO 164 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
�ii W<lb/>
wmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
i�nment Association<lb/>
MMWMP<lb/>
1<lb/>
7<lb/>
M<lb/>
ASTl iNT LEGISLATURE<lb/>
PPROI vTIONSCOMMITTEE<lb/>
SCREENINGS AND APPOINTMENTS<lb/>
ales, O ,rsonDay758-7640Denise VioJetteWhite752-4879<lb/>
Chaffin758-3386Chairperson<lb/>
ayDay752-5550Barbara Luciani758-3386<lb/>
758-7803Lynn Schubert752-5035<lb/>
rnson756-1467Robert Harrell752-5543<lb/>
iarloeDay758-0780Tammy De JaggerGarrett752-7391<lb/>
toyceDay758-4769David Bond752-5543<lb/>
jillaJarvis752-9153Lynne Hewett<lb/>
J. PayneDay752-4379Lynne<lb/>
BrienWhite758-0710Lynne HewettDay752-5035<lb/>
iaileyDay758-7640Kirby Lashley752-4379<lb/>
)XScott752-9172<lb/>
 1 fary Tim<lb/>
SuiHvan ' . )reg pjngston yce President<lb/>
 ' easurei I oun tain head I �<lb/>
photo<lb/>
'EAKEFpjHE LEGISLATURE<lb/>
Dr'Ce iy 757-6611,ext.214<lb/>
758-7640<lb/>
CRETARY<lb/>
yhitakei 757-661 l,ext. 214<lb/>
PA AMENTARIAN<lb/>
Harl�<lb/>
SGAHONORCOUNCIL<lb/>
Jack Jenkins<lb/>
Wayne Stephenson<lb/>
Edward Bean<lb/>
Grace Maynard<lb/>
Wade Dickens<lb/>
Lawrence Young<lb/>
Mark Snyder<lb/>
STUDENT WELFARE<lb/>
Sammy Collier, Day<lb/>
Chairperson<lb/>
Teresa Whisenant,<lb/>
Vice-Chairperson<lb/>
David Rippy<lb/>
Billy Reynolds Aycock<lb/>
Phil Barbee<lb/>
Jeff Yates Jones<lb/>
Chuck Freedman<lb/>
752-0501<lb/>
Day 752-9404<lb/>
752-4379<lb/>
758-7086<lb/>
752-5325<lb/>
758-8227<lb/>
752-5543<lb/>
RICK Y PRICE<lb/>
SGA REVIEW BOARD<lb/>
Larry Lakey<lb/>
Laura Morrison<lb/>
Gail Howard<lb/>
David Dubin<lb/>
Ginger Crews<lb/>
Hal Shape<lb/>
Robert Hartley<lb/>
ATTORNEYGENERAL<lb/>
John Jones<lb/>
SAVANT AT ARMS<lb/>
iddix<lb/>
Tim McLeod-SGA Secretary of Academic Affairs<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD file photo<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmmmmmmm<lb/>
mm mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057092_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, N O. 164 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
� mm imi mm<lb/>
tumittfl ll MWIIMPI<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Charfie Rich plays to small house<lb/>
Country star shows versatility<lb/>
By CHRIS FARREN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Clad in a grey sequined suit,<lb/>
with his silver hair slicked back<lb/>
and in place, Charlie Rich<lb/>
brought his country-western show<lb/>
to Minges Coliseum on Friday<lb/>
night of ECU's 1976 Homecoming<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
Playing to a house that was<lb/>
only a third filled, and an<lb/>
audience composed almost entire-<lb/>
ly of non-students, Rich and his<lb/>
nine piece band proceeded to<lb/>
prove why he is one of the top<lb/>
performers in his field.<lb/>
The show, however, got off to<lb/>
an extremely slow start when it<lb/>
began with a stand-up comedian<lb/>
who called himself Billie Holli-<lb/>
day. Billie hails from Louisiana,<lb/>
and this particular Friday night<lb/>
he not only left his heart but also<lb/>
his humor there. His act was<lb/>
sloppy, insulting and just gener-<lb/>
ally unprofessional, along with<lb/>
the fact that it contained very<lb/>
little humor at all. While he did<lb/>
manage to create a few laughs<lb/>
throughout his show, it lasted too<lb/>
long, and any fans he might have<lb/>
made in the beginning, he had<lb/>
lost by the end of his thirty<lb/>
minute act.<lb/>
After fifteen more minutes of<lb/>
waiting, the crowd was finally<lb/>
greeted by the man they came to<lb/>
see, the "Silver Fox Charlie<lb/>
Rich is a man who has paid his<lb/>
dues, and one can almost sense<lb/>
that his road to the top has not<lb/>
ing with "The Most Beautiful Girl<lb/>
in the World he moved along<lb/>
mixing up slow oountry ballads,<lb/>
with some up-tempo strong beat<lb/>
tunes. He spent most of his time<lb/>
at the piano and surprised just<lb/>
been an easy one. His manner is<lb/>
slow and easy and his rapport<lb/>
with the crowd quickly creates a<lb/>
very relaxed atmosphere. Open-<lb/>
about everyone with his adroit-<lb/>
ness on that instrument. While<lb/>
his songs might be simple, his<lb/>
piano playing is professional and<lb/>
very outstanding. The band,<lb/>
comprised of drums, bass, guitar,<lb/>
organ, pedal steel, and three<lb/>
female vocalists, also proved to<lb/>
be exceptionally good and made<lb/>
the act very tight and polished. If<lb/>
the sound was lacking in part, it<lb/>
was not the fault of the musicians,<lb/>
but because the acoustics in<lb/>
Minges were so horrid. Not only<lb/>
were the vocals inaudible at<lb/>
times, but even when Rich was<lb/>
talking, one oould barely under-<lb/>
stand.<lb/>
Moving steadily through an<lb/>
act which included all his big hits,<lb/>
Rich gave a good show to a very<lb/>
5 unappreciative and unenthus-<lb/>
iastic audience. As hard as he<lb/>
 tried to generate excitement, the<lb/>
 crowd would not respont. Hits<lb/>
ike "Lonely Weekend" and<lb/>
"Mohair Sam" passed by virtual-<lb/>
j ly unnoticed, but Charlie plodded<lb/>
'on. In desperate need of some<lb/>
tielp, Rich emptied his bag, a<lb/>
ct little earlier than most might have<lb/>
2) expected, and played his award<lb/>
 winning song, "Behind Closed<lb/>
Doors Anyone who had missed<lb/>
the boat on the previous hits,<lb/>
finally woke up on this one, and<lb/>
the crowd came to life. Many<lb/>
more songs followed, including a<lb/>
rendition of Hank Williams'<lb/>
"When Will I Be Loved" a-la<lb/>
Linda Ronstadt, with Charlie's<lb/>
female counterparts, the "Little<lb/>
Foxes<lb/>
While Rich's concert had<lb/>
many flaws, none of them can<lb/>
actually be attributed to him or<lb/>
his band. There is a problem that<lb/>
arises with all country-Western<lb/>
music. The simplicity of the music<lb/>
tends to make all of the songs<lb/>
sound alike, and even the most<lb/>
avid country-western fan can not<lb/>
help but become a little bored<lb/>
after an hour and a half. Even so,<lb/>
Rich gave it his best.<lb/>
Charlie ended up his show<lb/>
with "Going Home a very full<lb/>
sounding, slow, country ballad.<lb/>
"He did himself proud" on this<lb/>
finishing song, for it was played<lb/>
with feeling and sincerity as if the<lb/>
audience had really appreciated<lb/>
his efforts. It was very evident,<lb/>
however, that this crowd didn't,<lb/>
for they failed to attempt to bring<lb/>
him back for an encore. They<lb/>
were also out the door before Rich<lb/>
was off the stage. Despite having<lb/>
the cards stacked against him,<lb/>
Charlie Rich is a first rate<lb/>
performer and did his very best to<lb/>
give a good concert, under<lb/>
third-rate conditions. All in all it<lb/>
made for an enjoyable evening of<lb/>
music, for Charlie Rich gave a<lb/>
silver performance.<lb/>
Here come Leon andMary!<lb/>
The ECU Student Union Ma-<lb/>
jor Attractions Committee will<lb/>
present the LEON &amp; MARY<lb/>
RUSSELL Show on Sunday,Nov. 7<lb/>
at 8:00 P.M. in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Also featured on this show will be<lb/>
RICHIE FURAY, formerly of<lb/>
POCO and of SOUTHERN HILL-<lb/>
MAN, FURAY BAND.<lb/>
LEON RUSSELL has long<lb/>
been one of the contemporary<lb/>
rock's more commanding figures.<lb/>
A triple or even quadruple threat,<lb/>
he has repeatedly demonstrated<lb/>
his abilities - writing songs,<lb/>
arranging and producing, per-<lb/>
forming as an accomplished ses-<lb/>
sion musician - on some of the<lb/>
best records in the history of pop.<lb/>
Russell's music saga began at<lb/>
th� tender aoe of 14 in his<lb/>
hometown of Lawton, Oklahoma,<lb/>
when he put down classical piano<lb/>
and picked up a trumpet. While<lb/>
he was later to make his mark as a<lb/>
superior pianist, it was playing<lb/>
trumpet in local clubs and lying<lb/>
about his age that kept the<lb/>
teenage Russell in business. By<lb/>
1959 he had formed his own rock<lb/>
band, jammed with RONNIE'<lb/>
HAWKINS, and had been offered<lb/>
a touring gig with JERRY LEE<lb/>
LEWIS.<lb/>
With the Spring of 1976<lb/>
Russell found a new record label,<lb/>
married, and released one of his<lb/>
most inspired collections to date:<lb/>
THE WEDDING ALBUM by<lb/>
LEON &amp; MARY RUSSELL. Rus-<lb/>
sell's new partner is no newcomer<lb/>
to the vocal sootliaht. As Marv<lb/>
m<lb/>
RICHIE FURAY (File photo)<lb/>
mmmmmwmmmmmm<lb/>
MoCreary, she had sung with the<lb/>
best of them: as part of LITTLE<lb/>
SISTER, she recorded two SLY<lb/>
STONE produced hits, "Some-<lb/>
body's Watching You and<lb/>
"You're the One Her vocals<lb/>
distinguished albums by Russell,<lb/>
Streisand and others as well as<lb/>
two of her own solo sets.<lb/>
RICHIE FURAY is no stranger<lb/>
to the world of pop music. His<lb/>
career first got off the ground<lb/>
when he teamed up with STEP-<lb/>
HEN STILLS and formed a folk<lb/>
group. When this group split up,<lb/>
Furay teamed with NEIL<lb/>
YOUNG, DEWEY MARTIN and<lb/>
BRUCE PALMER to form BUF-<lb/>
FALO SPRINGFIELD. This group<lb/>
lasted long enough to reoord<lb/>
three albums and one hit single.<lb/>
Furay teamed with JIM MES-<lb/>
SINA and RUSTY YOUNG to<lb/>
form POCO. Richie remained<lb/>
with this band as chief writer and<lb/>
stage leader for five years.<lb/>
In 1973 Furay's interest shift-<lb/>
ed directions and he began a solo<lb/>
career. This career was short<lb/>
lived as Furay teamed with JOHN<lb/>
DAVID SOUTHERN and CHRIS<lb/>
HILLMAN to form SOUTHERN<lb/>
HILLMAN, FURAY BAND. Now<lb/>
Richie has formed his own band<lb/>
which has met with tremendous<lb/>
suocess.<lb/>
Tickets for the concert are<lb/>
available from the Central Ticket<lb/>
Office and are priced at $4.00 for<lb/>
ECU students and $6.00 fa the<lb/>
public. All tickets sold at the door<lb/>
will be $6.00. Public tickets may<lb/>
also be purchased at the Record<lb/>
Bar located at Pitt Plaza.<lb/>
Ensemble concert<lb/>
set for Sunday<lb/>
m<lb/>
immmtm<lb/>
m<lb/>
A variety of traditional and<lb/>
contemporary music will be per-<lb/>
formed by the ECU Symphonic<lb/>
Wind Ensemble at its fall concert<lb/>
Sunday, Nov. 7, at 8.15 p.m. in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Conducted by Herbert L.<lb/>
Carter, the Wind Ensemble will<lb/>
begin its program with the<lb/>
Fanfare from "La Peri" by Paul<lb/>
Dukas, featuring a complete<lb/>
brass choir; a four-section ar-<lb/>
rangement of Russian Christmas<lb/>
music by Alfrxl Reed, which<lb/>
includes a harp solo by ECU harp<lb/>
student Paula Scarangella of<lb/>
Norfolk, Va. ;and a Henk Badings<lb/>
setting of "Greensleeves<lb/>
Vincent Persichetti's "Sym-<lb/>
phony for Band a work the<lb/>
composer conducted at ECU<lb/>
several years ago, will again be<lb/>
performed by the Wind Ensemble<lb/>
at its Sunday ooncert.<lb/>
Its performance of "The Soli-<lb/>
tary Dancer" by Warren Benson<lb/>
will be highlighted by a ballet<lb/>
danced by ECU students Terri<lb/>
Leggette of Rocky Mount and<lb/>
Daniel Nichols of Greensboro.<lb/>
mmrmmm<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Patricia Pertalion of the ECU<lb/>
dance faculty choreographed the<lb/>
dance.<lb/>
The program will conclude<lb/>
with the humorous "Grand Sere-<lb/>
nade for an Awful Lot of Winds<lb/>
and Percussion by "P.D.Q.<lb/>
Bach the imaginary Bach fam-<lb/>
ily composer created by Peter<lb/>
Schickele, noted music satirist.<lb/>
The P.D.Q. Bach "Grand<lb/>
Serenade" was commissioned by<lb/>
one "Prince Fred of Wein-am-<lb/>
Rhein said Schickele.<lb/>
"P.D.Q. had originally want-<lb/>
ed to write a really big work of 35<lb/>
or 40 minutes duration, but he<lb/>
agreed to make it only a third as<lb/>
long when Prince Fred offered to<lb/>
triple the fee He notes that the<lb/>
work was lost fa some years after<lb/>
one of the Prince's servants used<lb/>
the pages of the musical scae to<lb/>
wrap "six large sausages<lb/>
"P.D.Q. Bach" compositions<lb/>
were last heard in Greenville<lb/>
when Schickele appeared on the<lb/>
ECU Artists Series two years ago.<lb/>
The Wind Ensemble concert is<lb/>
free and open to the public.<lb/>
���<lb/>
H I - ' ;�. ;s. fag 88<lb/>
J � fts  �  m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057092_0009"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 52, NO. 164 NOVEMBER 197t<lb/>
9<lb/>
Atlanta Ballet in residence next week<lb/>
mi win<lb/>
ilWX<lb/>
mmwm<lb/>
niiinfcni��iii<lb/>
Traveling dance group brings culture<lb/>
Founded in 1929 by Dorothy<lb/>
Alexander, THE ATLANTA<lb/>
BALLET is today the oldest ballet<lb/>
company in the United 9tates,<lb/>
and since 1970 is one of the only<lb/>
four out of over 400 in the country<lb/>
to be named a Major Company<lb/>
by the National Association of<lb/>
Regional Ballet. In February of<lb/>
"�973, Governc J'my Carter<lb/>
signed a proclamation initiated by<lb/>
the Georgia State Legislature<lb/>
naming THE ATLANTA BALLET<lb/>
"THE STATE BALLET COM-<lb/>
PANY OF GEORGIA Having<lb/>
performed in thirty states and<lb/>
abroad, with numerous symphony<lb/>
orchestras in the Southeast, the<lb/>
company is a lively force in local<lb/>
as well as regional cultural life,<lb/>
presenting over eighty perform-<lb/>
ances per season.<lb/>
THE ATLANTA BALLET will<lb/>
perform twice at ECU. The first<lb/>
will be an evening performance at<lb/>
800 P.M Tuesday, Nov. 9,1976<lb/>
and the second, a matinee at 1 30<lb/>
P.M Wednesday, Nov. 10,1976.<lb/>
Both perfamances will be held in<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium.<lb/>
Advance ticket prices are as<lb/>
follows:<lb/>
Evening performance - Nov.<lb/>
9, 1976: ECU students - $2.00,<lb/>
faculty and staff - $3.00, public -<lb/>
$4.00 and non-ECU students -<lb/>
$3.00.<lb/>
Matinee performance - Nov.<lb/>
10, 1976: ECU students - $1.00,<lb/>
faculty and staff - $2.00, public -<lb/>
$3.00, and non-ECU students -<lb/>
$2.00.<lb/>
Also available are special<lb/>
group-rate tickets which are<lb/>
priced as follows:<lb/>
Evening performance - Nov.<lb/>
9,1976: non-ECU students, facul-<lb/>
ty and staff - $1.50 per ticket in<lb/>
groups of 20 or more.<lb/>
Matinee performance - Nov.<lb/>
10, 1976 - non-ECU students,<lb/>
faculty and staff - $1.50 per ticket<lb/>
in groups of 20 a more.<lb/>
Group tickets are to be<lb/>
purchased by one individual who<lb/>
will pay fa all the tickets at one<lb/>
time and be responsible for<lb/>
'Odd Couple' opens Theatre<lb/>
For the first time ever, ECU'S<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center is<lb/>
offering the rich experience of<lb/>
combining a delicious meal and<lb/>
an outstanding theatre production<lb/>
in the form of its premiere Dinner<lb/>
Theatre. The event, which has<lb/>
been eagerly awaited by many,<lb/>
takes place November 11-14,1976<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Auditorium 244. With a menu<lb/>
that reads like a fantasy feast, the<lb/>
"Dinner" side of the evening<lb/>
promises to please even those<lb/>
with the most peculiar tastes:<lb/>
Carved Round Beef wAu Jus<lb/>
Turkey Divan<lb/>
Brown Pecan Rice<lb/>
Mushroom Stuffed Baked<lb/>
Tomatoes<lb/>
Spanish Green Beans<lb/>
Fresh Fruit Cup<lb/>
Tossed Green Salad<lb/>
Rolls &amp; Oleo<lb/>
Coffee or Tea<lb/>
On the "Theatre" side, the<lb/>
renowned producer Stuart Aron-<lb/>
son has put together a tremend-<lb/>
ous cast for the Neil Simon,<lb/>
Broadway hit play "THE ODD<lb/>
COUPLE His spirited group of<lb/>
players include:<lb/>
Oscar Madison Stuart Aronson<lb/>
Felix Ungar Charlie Jennette<lb/>
Speed Bob McCutcheon<lb/>
Murray Terry Davis<lb/>
Roy Ed Nowak<lb/>
Vennie David Werdal<lb/>
Gwendolyn Pigeon CheraHill<lb/>
Cecily Pigeon Lynn Maladoqitz<lb/>
This three act play, called by<lb/>
one critic, "The richest comedy<lb/>
Simon has written and the purest<lb/>
gold for any theatre goer is the<lb/>
classic story of the hilarious<lb/>
situation that arises when the<lb/>
compulsive neat fellow, suddenly<lb/>
facing divorce, accepts an offer to<lb/>
share an eight-room apartment<lb/>
with his best friend who is ex-<lb/>
tremely sloppy. Their attempts to<lb/>
adjust to each other's way of life<lb/>
provide many comic moments<lb/>
that make "THE ODD COUPLE"<lb/>
one of the funniest plays written<lb/>
in the last twenty years<lb/>
The scrumptious meal and the<lb/>
vivacious play oome together for<lb/>
you to enjoy the first Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center Dinner Theatre; a<lb/>
bright night to be remembered.<lb/>
Four big performances: Nov.<lb/>
11 through 14, 1976.<lb/>
ECU students - $5.00, public -<lb/>
$7.50 (advance tickets only),<lb/>
Thursday through Saturday -<lb/>
Dinner at 7 00 P. M Show at 8 00<lb/>
P.M Sunday - Dinner at 5O0<lb/>
P.M Show at 6O0 P.M.<lb/>
Seating is limited to 100<lb/>
persons per performance so<lb/>
tickets should be ordered early.<lb/>
Reserved tickets must be paid for<lb/>
before 400 p.m. on November 5,<lb/>
1976. Tickets are available at the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office which is<lb/>
open from 10O0 A.M. to 4O0<lb/>
P.M Monday through Friday.<lb/>
Tickets for Thursday and Friday<lb/>
Dinner Theatre must be pur-<lb/>
chased at least 24 hours before<lb/>
each performance. Saturday and<lb/>
Sunday Dinner Theatre tickets<lb/>
must be purchased on or before<lb/>
Kriday, November 12, 1976, by<lb/>
4O0 P.M. Please direct all mail<lb/>
orders to: The Central Ticket<lb/>
Office, Mendenhall Student Cent-<lb/>
er, East Carolina University,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834 (919)<lb/>
757-6611, ext. 266.<lb/>
The Dinner Theatres are a<lb/>
MSC Production.<lb/>
distributing the tickets to the<lb/>
members in the group. All tickets<lb/>
purchased at the door will be<lb/>
$4.00 fa the evening and $3.00<lb/>
fa the matinee perfamanoe. All<lb/>
tickets are available at the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office, Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Centa, which is open from<lb/>
10O0 A.M. to 400 P.M. week-<lb/>
days. Mail ader requests fa<lb/>
tickets must include a self-<lb/>
addressed, stamped envelope and<lb/>
be sent to: Central Ticket Office,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, East<lb/>
Carolina University, Greenville,<lb/>
N.C. 27834 (919) 757-6611, ext.<lb/>
40D.<lb/>
THE ATLANTA BALLET will<lb/>
grace the ECU campus fa two<lb/>
beautiful perfamances, thanks to<lb/>
the Student Union Theatre Arts<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
THE ATLANTA BALLET re-<lb/>
sidency is made possible with the<lb/>
suppat of the National Endow-<lb/>
ment fa the Arts in Washingtai,<lb/>
D.C a federal agency, and the<lb/>
North Carolina Arts Council.<lb/>
'Way We Were' plays<lb/>
Fa those who love Streisand,<lb/>
The Way We Were presents her<lb/>
at her very best. Fa those who<lb/>
don't, it's still the best flick in<lb/>
town.<lb/>
The Way We Were is without<lb/>
a doubt a love stay in all its<lb/>
glay. Fa those who want to shed<lb/>
a tear it really has no peer.<lb/>
Without using any more bad<lb/>
rhymes, it must be stressed that<lb/>
this is the flick to which you take<lb/>
the girl whom you've dated but<lb/>
never really reached home base<lb/>
It's guaranteed to get her in tears<lb/>
and sobbing on your shoulder.<lb/>
The perfect chance to find out if<lb/>
you're really a manone who<lb/>
neva aies at movies no matter<lb/>
how sad), a if you're kidding<lb/>
yourself. You girls watch their<lb/>
eyes closely. Don't let one sneak<lb/>
out undetected. Fa whateva<lb/>
reason, cone to The Way We<lb/>
Were; it's a good 'un! Almost<lb/>
faga! You girls take nae. It also<lb/>
stars Robert Redfad.<lb/>
G-gT AeQUATKTEVlTlllIs!<lb/>
sfeftk 30<lb/>
C�f Sku<lb/>
��ft tV<lb/>
13 � f �<lb/>
 <lb/>
 Ml<lb/>
fefrf s<lb/>
 Ml<lb/>
. ML fM '<lb/>
IAIUOC1JLN3IAI313 IAIOMJ SSOU3V IS 3HONV�OD<lb/>
3hoiai 'Atnaywar uviaiAidinoa avail<lb/>
66 siAinsw xsn &amp;69<lb/>
mnmm�0m0mmmmm<lb/>
saacoBa<lb/>
zzvr zzvy<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
tm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057092_0010"/><lb/>
Sideline Chat<lb/>
with Steve Wheeler<lb/>
East Carol i rid s root ball team has played in front of seven milestone<lb/>
crowds in their eight games and is headed fa a record season<lb/>
attendance mark.<lb/>
Through eight games, the Pirates have played in front of 193,256<lb/>
people for an average of 24,157 per game. The Bucs need to average only<lb/>
11,705 fans in their final three games to break the mark set in 1975 of<lb/>
20,761 per game. This should be no problem as well over 20,000 are<lb/>
expected fa the Appalachian game on Nov. 20 in Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
In Ficklen Stadium, the Pirates have played befae the first, fourth,<lb/>
and seventh largest single game aowds in histay this year already.<lb/>
73,356 people have seen the Bucs win all four home games to date fa an<lb/>
average of 18,339. They need only 10,996 in the stands fa the game with<lb/>
the Mountaineers to break the season Ficklen mark.<lb/>
As fa road games, East Carolina has played befae their two largest<lb/>
aowds ever this year at N.C. State and NathCarolina and has averaged<lb/>
29,975 people fa four games. They need only to average 15,394 at<lb/>
Richmond and Furman to break the old road average of 25,115 set last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
East Carolina drew 17,400 against Southern Mississippi to set anew<lb/>
recad fa a hone-opener aowd. The old mark was against Wake Faest<lb/>
in the dedication of Ficklen in 1963.<lb/>
In the second gamethe Pirates and N.C. State played befae 49,700<lb/>
in Carter Stadium. This was the third largest aowd ever in Carter and<lb/>
the largest night aowd in the state ever and the largest ever between the<lb/>
two teams.<lb/>
Against William and Mary, the Pirates played befae 13,500 at<lb/>
Williamsburg. This does not represent a real large aowd but was the<lb/>
Indians' largest at home in a couple of years.<lb/>
When The Citadel invaded Ficklen Stadium, 18,250 people saw the<lb/>
game. At the time this was the third largest aowd ever in Ficklen, but<lb/>
is now the fourth largest.<lb/>
After drawing 16,200 fa Southern Illinois, the Pirates traveled to<lb/>
Lexington, Va. to play VMI. The Keydets had been drawing about 3,000<lb/>
fans per game at home until then, but with East Carolina ooming in, a<lb/>
aowd of 7,700 saw the game, easily the largest of the year at home fa<lb/>
the Keydets.<lb/>
The Pirates then traveled to Chapel Hill and a throng of 49,000<lb/>
people showed up. This was the most fa any ECU-UNC game by 7,000<lb/>
people and the seoond largest of the season at Chapel Hill, beat out only<lb/>
by Carolina's rivalry with State (50,000).<lb/>
This past week's Homecoming game with Western drew 21,506 in<lb/>
Ficklen for the largest ever in the 13-year old facility.<lb/>
This year's attendance recads add much validity to the Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium expansion fund drive. The Pirates are drawing 21,506 fa<lb/>
Western Carolina. What could they draw fa South Carolina?<lb/>
SEASONS DRA WING TO CLOSE<lb/>
With women's tennis, women's golf, and soccer seasons about over<lb/>
and two mae women's seasons ending this weekend, just football<lb/>
and women's swimming will be left to oontinue during November.<lb/>
ECU'S field hockey and volleyball teams will be competing in<lb/>
championships this weekend.<lb/>
The Deep South Conferenoe in field hockey will be having their<lb/>
tournament this weekend on ECU'S campus behind the Allied Health<lb/>
building.<lb/>
Duke University will host the NCAIAW volleyball tournament in<lb/>
Durham this weekend. East Carolina will be competing.<lb/>
Teams that will be here fa the field hockey tourney include:<lb/>
Appalachian State, Catawba, Coker, Converse, Davidson, Duke, East<lb/>
Carolina, Furman, UNC-Chapel Hill, UNC-Greensboro, Pfeiffer,<lb/>
Tennessee, Wake Faest, University of the South, Winthrop, Durham<lb/>
Club, North Carolina Club, and South Carolina Club.<lb/>
OTHER TEA MS TO STA RT<lb/>
Wrestling, men's swimming, men's and women's basketball, and<lb/>
indoa track, ail winter quarter sports, will be practicing during<lb/>
November, with men's swimming and basketball starting their<lb/>
schedules.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Pirates face Richmond<lb/>
in key football clash<lb/>
By BILL KEYES<lb/>
Spats Features Carespondant<lb/>
Caning into Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
and defeating East Carolina was a<lb/>
big stepping stone fa the Rich-<lb/>
mond Spiders capturing the<lb/>
Southern Conference football<lb/>
aown last season, as the Pirates<lb/>
are well aware of.<lb/>
The Pirates are also oonscious<lb/>
of the fact that Richmond is better<lb/>
than their 3-5 recad. They lest<lb/>
their first two games of the<lb/>
season to Tulsa, who leads the<lb/>
Missouri Valley Conferenoe, and<lb/>
Maryland, presently ranked num-<lb/>
ber six in the nation. They<lb/>
walloped VMI 43-0, and then lost<lb/>
to West Virginia 9-6 in a game<lb/>
which could have gone either<lb/>
way. In game five, they defeated<lb/>
Villanova 24-7, but lost to the<lb/>
Citadel 20-7 the following Satur-<lb/>
day. Two weeks ago they beat<lb/>
problem-ridden Furman 13-9.<lb/>
Then last Saturday the Spiders<lb/>
lost to Tennessee-Chattanooga at<lb/>
home in a game they should have<lb/>
won.<lb/>
If they had beaten Chattanoo-<lb/>
ga and won that dose game<lb/>
against West Virginia, their re-<lb/>
cad would be a more respectable<lb/>
five and three.<lb/>
But no matter what Rich-<lb/>
mond's reoad reads, the Pirates<lb/>
know they will have their hands<lb/>
full this Saturday afternoon at<lb/>
Richmond's City Stadium.<lb/>
UR OFFENSE<lb/>
The Spiders have an exper-<lb/>
ienced offensive team, with nine<lb/>
of eleven of last year's starters<lb/>
returning. Only the fullback and<lb/>
one tackle are new. But as ECU<lb/>
assistant coach Dick Kupec points<lb/>
out, "They're all experienced<lb/>
after eight games<lb/>
One of the big guns fa the<lb/>
Richmond offense is 6-1, 190<lb/>
pound senia tailback Ed Kreilis<lb/>
who lines up behind tough-block-<lb/>
ing fullback Milton Ruffin in the<lb/>
Pro-I formation. As with all<lb/>
l-famatioi teams, they will give<lb/>
the ball to the tailback a great<lb/>
percentage of the time on sweeps<lb/>
and power leads off tackle. ECU'S<lb/>
Kupec likens Kreilis to UNC's<lb/>
Mike Voight - a strong, aggres-<lb/>
sive runner with good speed.<lb/>
The quarterback is Larry<lb/>
Shaw, a good passer who will<lb/>
throw to two outstanding wide<lb/>
receivers. The number one re-<lb/>
ceiver, spl it end Job Call has good<lb/>
speed, good hands and an<lb/>
uncanny ability to get open in the<lb/>
secondary. The flanker is Rickey<lb/>
Brown. Both are 200 pound<lb/>
senias.<lb/>
Aooading to Kupec, the UR<lb/>
line may be the best ECU has<lb/>
faced to date. All of the 1975<lb/>
starters return except one tackle.<lb/>
CARYGODETTE<lb/>
 leads defense<lb/>
UR DEFENSE<lb/>
The Spiders' defense is not<lb/>
quite as big as their offense, but<lb/>
they are strong, physical, and<lb/>
aggressive with good technique,<lb/>
and capable of being intimidat-<lb/>
ing. Seven of eleven starters<lb/>
return.<lb/>
In the secondary, sophomae<lb/>
oanerbacks Ricky Crawfad and<lb/>
Dave Haynie are new. But senia<lb/>
straig safety Mike Andrus and<lb/>
free safety Jeff Nixon are re-<lb/>
turnees.<lb/>
In the line, Dickie Childress<lb/>
and Gary Edwards, both 220<lb/>
pound senias, have swapped<lb/>
positions from last year. Child-<lb/>
ress is now middle guard as<lb/>
Edwards is a tackle. The other<lb/>
tackle is 250 pound sophomae<lb/>
Bill Cheshire, the oily newoomer,<lb/>
but biggest member of the line.<lb/>
The front is oompleted by ends<lb/>
Mike Copley and Ray Chase.<lb/>
Though Copley only weighs 215,<lb/>
Kupecreferstohimasoneof the<lb/>
best ends ECU will face this<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Or I and us Branch was injured<lb/>
when the Spiders came to ECU<lb/>
last season, but the 6-3, 230<lb/>
pound linebacker is completely<lb/>
healthy and ready to play against<lb/>
the Pirates. The other linebacker<lb/>
is 200 pound sophomae Ray<lb/>
Kelly.<lb/>
The Pirates are approaching<lb/>
this game as the beginning of the<lb/>
second half of their season. They<lb/>
haven't beaten Richmond nor<lb/>
Appalachian State in the past two<lb/>
seasons, and Furman is capable<lb/>
of giving the Piratesa tough time.<lb/>
See the Pirates begin the second<lb/>
half of the season at Richmond<lb/>
this Saturday. Kickoff is at 1:30<lb/>
P.M.<lb/>
Deep South tourney<lb/>
Field hockey teams<lb/>
converge on ECU<lb/>
mm m i niffii<lb/>
ByANNEHOGGE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
This weekend, ECU'S Fieid<lb/>
hockey team will play host to the<lb/>
Deep South Field Hockey Tourna-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
A total of 18 teams will oome<lb/>
from Geagia, Nath Carolina,<lb/>
South Carolina, and Tennesse to<lb/>
play in the tourney. All teams<lb/>
involved are members of the<lb/>
Deep South Field Hockey Asso-<lb/>
ciation.<lb/>
The purpose of the tourna-<lb/>
ment is not to produce a<lb/>
conferenoe champion. Instead, a<lb/>
panel of judges watches the<lb/>
games and choses a number one<lb/>
and number two team. These two<lb/>
teams play in the regional tour-<lb/>
nament. At the end of this<lb/>
tournament, the judges select a<lb/>
South East team, which goes into<lb/>
li mail mm win i<lb/>
the national tournament.<lb/>
The matches will begin at 9:00<lb/>
a.m. on Friday and 830 a.m. on<lb/>
Saturday and last until 530 p.m.<lb/>
on both days. There will be<lb/>
continuous play on both days.<lb/>
The games will be played on<lb/>
the field behind the Allied Health<lb/>
building and on the baseball<lb/>
practice field. They are free to<lb/>
students and .25 to those with no<lb/>
college I.D.<lb/>
ECU field hockey coach Lau-<lb/>
rie Arrants is looking faward to<lb/>
the tournament. "We are a young<lb/>
team, but should win at least<lb/>
three of our four matches The<lb/>
team now has a 4-6-1 recad.<lb/>
On Friday at 10:00 ECU plays<lb/>
Coker College of S.C. and at 3.00<lb/>
faces UNC-G, whom Arrants feels<lb/>
"will be our strongest competi-<lb/>
tion Both qames will be played<lb/>
IKmi i mm i<lb/>
on the Allied Health Field.<lb/>
On Saturday, ECU faces Con-<lb/>
verse College. This game will be<lb/>
played at 1050 on the baseball<lb/>
practice field. The Pirates final<lb/>
game will be at 330 against<lb/>
Davidson on the Allied Health<lb/>
Field.<lb/>
Sizing up the teams involved<lb/>
Arrants said, "I think Appala-<lb/>
chian and UNC will be the teams<lb/>
to watch. They are strong oompe-<lb/>
titas<lb/>
The Pirates will be led by Gail<lb/>
Betton and Moira Devlin, the<lb/>
team's two Senia ocaptains,<lb/>
and Linda Christian on offense.<lb/>
Defense will be headed up by<lb/>
Montine Swain, Sharon Lauden-<lb/>
slager and goalie Diana Mil lick.<lb/>
Coach Arrants hopes everyone<lb/>
will oome out and enjoy the<lb/>
tournament.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057092_0011"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOU. 52, NO. 164 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
11<lb/>
NMM<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
Bolton: Kerbaugh our<lb/>
best all round player<lb/>
By DAVID ROBEY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
" Gale Kerbaugh is our best all<lb/>
round player. She is a smart<lb/>
player, who works hard to im-<lb/>
prove herself and to help the<lb/>
team. She is consistent in all<lb/>
aspects of the game and does<lb/>
everything well That is Coach<lb/>
Catherine Bolton's opinion of<lb/>
Lady Volleyball player Gale Ker-<lb/>
baugh.<lb/>
Kerbaugh, a native of Ra-<lb/>
leigh, has started her second year<lb/>
of school here at ECU. Last year<lb/>
she played on the women's<lb/>
volleyball and basketball teams<lb/>
and she plans to continue her<lb/>
sports life for her duration here.<lb/>
She is hoping to play softball if a<lb/>
team can be gotten together.<lb/>
A P.E. major, Kerbaugh likes<lb/>
all aspects of athletics but prefers<lb/>
team competition. She prefers to<lb/>
be a part of a team because she<lb/>
enjoys working with others and<lb/>
feels sportsmanship is important.<lb/>
She would also like a double<lb/>
major in music but the times<lb/>
conflict so she can't play sports.<lb/>
Kerbaugh still plans on taking<lb/>
music courses though, because<lb/>
music isa part of ner life she wants<lb/>
to perform.<lb/>
-Tennis-<lb/>
finishes<lb/>
winning<lb/>
ByKURTHICKMAN<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
East Carolina's women's ten-<lb/>
nis team dosed out its season<lb/>
Tuesday in Raleigh with a 6-3<lb/>
victory over Meredith College.<lb/>
It was the sixth straight win<lb/>
for ECU and left the Lady Pirates<lb/>
with a 10-3 record for the season.<lb/>
For ECU, Dorcas Sunkel,<lb/>
Cathy Portwood, Susan Helmer,<lb/>
and Leigh Jefferson gathered<lb/>
wins in singles play.<lb/>
Sunkel beat Meg Rendle, 6-4,<lb/>
3-6, 6-1, Portwood defeated Leigh<lb/>
Welborn, 6-1, 6-2, Helmer was a<lb/>
6-2, 6-4 winner over Linda Ix, and<lb/>
Jefferson topped Julia Breedlove,<lb/>
3-6, 6-1, 6-2.<lb/>
Meredith's victors in the<lb/>
singles were Linda Whitley and<lb/>
Rene Holoomb.<lb/>
Whitley defeated Patty Col-<lb/>
lins, 6-1, 6-3, and Holoomb took<lb/>
Karen Clark, 6-1, 6-3.<lb/>
In the doubles competition,<lb/>
ECU won two of three matches as<lb/>
Sunkel and Portwood beat Rendle<lb/>
and Welborn, 9-7, and Helmer<lb/>
and Jefferson won over Holoomb<lb/>
and Brooks, 9-7.<lb/>
Meredith's lone doubles<lb/>
victory came as Summers and<lb/>
Hooper defeated Collins and<lb/>
Ginny Gainey, 8-3.<lb/>
As far as sports go, she wants<lb/>
also to be a coach.<lb/>
Her interest in sports stem<lb/>
from her high school years. While<lb/>
attending high school she played<lb/>
volleyball, basketball and soft-<lb/>
ball. She played on the basketball<lb/>
team that won the women's state<lb/>
championship for two years. She<lb/>
developed her mechanics of vol-<lb/>
leyball in high school and is now<lb/>
trying to perfect them.<lb/>
"The high school experience I<lb/>
got really helps me now because<lb/>
we really had a good coach<lb/>
"commented Kerbaugh. "I'm<lb/>
glad to be playing volleyball now<lb/>
for it really is fun and it's good to<lb/>
have Coach Bolton to help me<lb/>
improve. I really enjoy the game<lb/>
and I got a real thrill in spiking<lb/>
the ball.<lb/>
"Concerning the team, we<lb/>
have a lot of talent and potential<lb/>
and I feel if we can put it all<lb/>
together, we should do well at the<lb/>
state championships We travel to<lb/>
Duke to take on State this Friday<lb/>
and I really would like us to put<lb/>
everything together and beat<lb/>
them. I think we stand 8-12 now<lb/>
but I feel we can do good against<lb/>
State<lb/>
With the vigor and enthu-<lb/>
siasm Gale Kerbaugh has, she is<lb/>
sure to be of great aid to the<lb/>
team when they take on State.<lb/>
And there is the future to think<lb/>
about, for Kerbaugh will be here<lb/>
two more years and should be a<lb/>
great boost to the volleyball team<lb/>
in the future years.<lb/>
GALE KERBAUGH<lb/>
NCAIAWnext<lb/>
V- ball team<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
ECU'S volleyball team played<lb/>
Chowan fa the second time this<lb/>
year and .defeated them. The<lb/>
team record now stands 8-12<lb/>
going into this weekend's<lb/>
NCAI AW Championships.<lb/>
The varsity team won the first<lb/>
game 15-9, dropped the second<lb/>
14-16 and put it together to win<lb/>
the third game 15-10.<lb/>
The J.V. team then won two<lb/>
games in a row against Chowan<lb/>
15-5, 15-11.<lb/>
"I don't feel we played<lb/>
seriously enough against Cho-<lb/>
wan said Coach Catherine<lb/>
Bolton. "I feel we should really<lb/>
buckl3 down fa our next match<lb/>
which is against State<lb/>
The team travels to Duke to<lb/>
compete against State in the<lb/>
championship matches. The<lb/>
winner of that game will play<lb/>
Duke and then play against the<lb/>
winner of Division II which<lb/>
consists of Carolina, UNC-G and<lb/>
Appalachian.<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
MENI-WOMEN!<lb/>
JOBS ON SHIPS! American.<lb/>
Faeign. No experience required.<lb/>
Excellent pay. Waldwide travel.<lb/>
Summer job a career. Send $3.00<lb/>
fa infamatiai SEAFAX, Dept.<lb/>
Boc 2049, Pat Angeles, Was-<lb/>
hington 96362.<lb/>
If you have something to buy<lb/>
a sell come to the Red Oak Show<lb/>
and Sell; We sell on consignment<lb/>
anything of value, excluding<lb/>
clothing. Open Mon. - Sat.<lb/>
11.00-6 00 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 buildina.<lb/>
LOST: Gold Hamilton watch,<lb/>
inscribed Minnie Allison. $100.00<lb/>
reward. Call 757-6012 a 752-4490<lb/>
and ask fa Daa Howell.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1975 Yamaha 500,<lb/>
sissy bar, crash bar, luggage<lb/>
straps, semi-knobby tire, low<lb/>
mileage. Excellent condition, 756-<lb/>
1857 any afternoon a night.<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. Excellent oond.<lb/>
Call Woody, 756540 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Fastback Mustang,<lb/>
302 V-8, automatic, AM radio &amp;<lb/>
tape, Mags. $1000.00. 756-1857<lb/>
any afternoon a night.<lb/>
FOR SALL: AR2AX loud speak-<lb/>
ers. $220.00. Excellent condition.<lb/>
Serious inquiries only. 758-5150.<lb/>
LOST: Checkbook with dark<lb/>
brown textured cover, Biff a<lb/>
Karen Brean, oi Oct. 20 in the<lb/>
vicinity of Austin. 758-4126.<lb/>
FOR SALE: BSR Auto-Manual<lb/>
turntable equipped with cueing,<lb/>
anti-skate, new stylus. I35.00.<lb/>
409 B-Belk.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Private room aaoss<lb/>
from ECU at 410 B Student St.<lb/>
752-7032. Prefer senia a grad-<lb/>
uate student.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 240 Z, 1972, self-<lb/>
cared fa, fog lights, dual mag<lb/>
wheels, CD, air, AM-FM, 756-<lb/>
0417.<lb/>
SMALL SCALE masonry, brick,<lb/>
block, concrete repair a aiginal<lb/>
work. Rex Bost 758-7569.<lb/>
FOR SALE: FG 200 Yamaha<lb/>
guitar - 6 string acoustic, soft-<lb/>
shell case, leather strap and new<lb/>
Schoder perasion machine heads.<lb/>
Other accessaies available. In-<lb/>
stitution books and 2 Beatle song<lb/>
books included. 1135.00. Call<lb/>
758-7690.<lb/>
LOST: Contact Lenses in a green<lb/>
case. Between Brewster atd<lb/>
Rawl. Reward, Albert McMicken,<lb/>
758-5074.<lb/>
NEED A PAPER TYPED? Call<lb/>
Alice, 757-6366 or 758-0497.<lb/>
Eight years of experience. I need<lb/>
the money. Only 50 cents a page.<lb/>
USED 8 track tapes, variety of<lb/>
rock by Bob Dylan, Elton John,<lb/>
Led Zeppelin and others. $2.50<lb/>
each a lot of 45 fa I85.00.<lb/>
758-1314 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sony 6046 A 20 watt<lb/>
receiver. 6 mo. old $190.00.<lb/>
758-7884.<lb/>
PIANO AND GUITAR lessons.<lb/>
Daily and evenings. Richard J.<lb/>
Knapp, B.A. 756-3908.<lb/>
LOST: At ECU-WCU game on<lb/>
WCU side - Men's "Levi" Navy<lb/>
Caduroy ooat wpile lining and<lb/>
collar. REWARD! Call Bob at<lb/>
752-9963.<lb/>
FOR SALE :1974 Yamaha<lb/>
DT125A. Only 1600 miles. Used<lb/>
as commuter, never in dirt. Call<lb/>
756-7275.<lb/>
NEEDED: Female student with<lb/>
auto2hrs. daily from 1 30 to330<lb/>
to pick up 2 boys at Wahl-Coats<lb/>
and sit with them until 330. Gas<lb/>
will be furnished and pay will be<lb/>
discussed. Call 758-9467 between<lb/>
12 and 1 M-F only.<lb/>
RENT: Private and semi-private<lb/>
rooms with kitchen privileges-<lb/>
available Winter-Spring terms.<lb/>
756-2459.<lb/>
YARD SALE: Saturday Nov 6,<lb/>
1976. 2101 E. 5th St. 8O0-2.00<lb/>
Great bargains!<lb/>
NEED TYPING? Call Gail Joyner<lb/>
at 756-1062 fa professional typ-<lb/>
ing and related services. All wak<lb/>
guaranteed!<lb/>
FOR RENT: Efficiency apartment<lb/>
fa 2 - utilities furnished aaoss<lb/>
from college, 758-2585. Com-<lb/>
pletely furnished with air cond-<lb/>
itioning.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Stereo - Pioneer<lb/>
SX-1250 -100 watts per channel.<lb/>
620 Bose 901s. Sony TC-580<lb/>
remote Servo Reel to Reel. Call<lb/>
752-1235.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1959 Fad pickup.<lb/>
Cane 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 after 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/>
fin <lb/>
NEEDED: Female roommate fa<lb/>
large oondominum. $50.00<lb/>
month. Freedom of house in<lb/>
exchange fa light housekeeping<lb/>
duties. Pool, tennis courts and<lb/>
sauna available. Board not in-<lb/>
cluded. 756-5423.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057092_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 52, NO. 164 NOVEMBER 1976<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
Senior co-captain<lb/>
Betton enters last field hockey games<lb/>
By ANNE HOGGE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"When I say I play hockey,<lb/>
the first thing people think of is<lb/>
ice hockey. It's taking the South a<lb/>
while to become accustomed to<lb/>
field hockey<lb/>
This is the most common<lb/>
misconception Gail Betton, a<lb/>
co-captain of this year's field<lb/>
hockey team, runs into.<lb/>
Betton is a 21-year-old senior<lb/>
from Millsboro, Del. She majors<lb/>
in music therapy and has a 3.0<lb/>
average. She enjoys all sports,<lb/>
camping, concerts and playing<lb/>
the piano, and has been involved<lb/>
in the Campus Crusade for<lb/>
Christ.<lb/>
Betton began playing field<lb/>
hockey in the eight grade, making<lb/>
the varsity team. She continued<lb/>
playing field hockey through high<lb/>
school, along with basketball and<lb/>
tennis. She was captain of both<lb/>
her field hockey and tennis<lb/>
teams.<lb/>
At her high school, Sussex<lb/>
Central in Delaware, she was<lb/>
selected all-conferenoe in both<lb/>
field hockey and basketball for<lb/>
three years<lb/>
Betton came to ECU after<lb/>
hearing about its music therapy<lb/>
program. During her freshman<lb/>
year she again began playing<lb/>
field hockey, basketball and<lb/>
tennis. But because her major<lb/>
took up so much of her time, she<lb/>
eventually had to drop tennis and<lb/>
basketball.<lb/>
This being her last season,<lb/>
Betton feels "we could've done<lb/>
better. I hope we'll do well in the<lb/>
tournament this weekend, that<lb/>
way we'll go out a winner. We<lb/>
have a small team, so there's<lb/>
little room fa substitution, which<lb/>
isn't good since field hockey is a<lb/>
continuous running game.<lb/>
"So many people associate<lb/>
field hockey with ice hockey. They<lb/>
Talking Sports <lb/>
with Kurt Hickman<lb/>
ECU, following a 24-17 victory over Western Carolina, oould be in for<lb/>
its toughest test to date this Saturday as the Pirates face last year's<lb/>
Southern Conference champion, the Richmond Spiders.<lb/>
Coach Jim Tait's teams have always given the Bucs a hard time.<lb/>
They have won the last two games, winning in 1974, 28-20, and 17-14 in<lb/>
'75. Last year's loss to UR broke ECU'S 18 game home winning streak<lb/>
which dated back to 1971. That year the last home loss fa the Pirates<lb/>
was also to the Virginia School.<lb/>
The Spiders will get a good scouting report on ECU. One of Tait's<lb/>
assistants, Laurin Collins, is the brother of Bobby Collins, head coach at<lb/>
Southern Mississippi. The latter saw the Pirates at their best in ECU's<lb/>
48-0 season opening win over the Golden Eagles in September.The<lb/>
Richmond assistant will no doubt be in touch with his brother this week<lb/>
and the topic of conversation will be Pat Dye's Pirates.<lb/>
HELMERLEADSTENNIS<lb/>
The mina spats program at ECU has always been a source of pride<lb/>
fa the Pirates. Susan Helmer of the women's tennis team is a leading<lb/>
candidate fa Athlete-of-the-Month awards as she had an 11-1 reoad fa<lb/>
the maith of October.<lb/>
NBA SEASON BEGINS<lb/>
Although the National Basketball Association season has just<lb/>
started, the league's favaed teams have faged to the top of their<lb/>
divisions with the exoeption of Golden State and Washington.<lb/>
Boston and Denver may be the best teams in the NBA this year and<lb/>
bothshouldwin their divisions. The Nuggets are in a weak division and<lb/>
their road to the playoffs appears to be easy. Boston will have problems<lb/>
with the revamped Philadelphia 76ers but their experienoe should pay<lb/>
off.<lb/>
Golden State will be heard from but Phoenix and Patland are quality<lb/>
teams and the Warrias will have to earn the Pacific title. Phoenix has<lb/>
shown that they can play and Patland is expecting an outstanding<lb/>
season fron Bill Waltoi.<lb/>
Washingtai, the NBAs most talented team, has had attitude<lb/>
problems. The Bullets made coaching change and obtained Dick Motta,<lb/>
a strict diciplinarian. It will be interesting to see how well Motta can<lb/>
handle this moody bunch.<lb/>
Washington has started slow and this they can not affad to do<lb/>
because the Cleveland Cavaliers are in the same division and they are a<lb/>
first class ball club. If coach Bill Fitch'sfeuds with owner Nick Miletti do<lb/>
not carry over to the players the Cavsare going to be a very tough foe fa<lb/>
anyone.<lb/>
This season should be a most interesting one since the NBA becomes<lb/>
more balanced every year. The Boston Celtics will be well equipped to<lb/>
defend their 1975-76 title, but all the other clubs are capable of capturing<lb/>
the championship.<lb/>
expect to see us fighting and all<lb/>
that. But this isn't the case. It's a<lb/>
fast-moving game which is physi-<lb/>
cally demanding<lb/>
Betton said her four years at<lb/>
ECU "have been good ones. It's<lb/>
difficult to combine music and<lb/>
spats because both take up a lot<lb/>
of time. But it's been wath it<lb/>
Rugby teams loses to State<lb/>
By BOB DA VIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Rugby team traveled<lb/>
to Raleigh Sunday to pLy the<lb/>
N.C. State Club Rugby team and<lb/>
onoe again came out on the shat<lb/>
end of the scae, 25-4.<lb/>
N.C. State was first to scae<lb/>
with just little over 5 minutes<lb/>
gone in the game on a 5 yard<lb/>
plunge by Pete Johnson, Jim<lb/>
Kellenbergs' extra point kick was<lb/>
no good, and State led 4-0.<lb/>
With about 15 minutes gone in<lb/>
the half State added 3 mae points<lb/>
on a 20 yard penalty kick by<lb/>
Kellenberg to go ahead 7-0 with<lb/>
10 minutes to go in the half. State<lb/>
scaed another tri on a 20 yard<lb/>
run by Kellenberg, who also<lb/>
made good on the extra point to<lb/>
put State ahead 13-0.<lb/>
In the second half it was na<lb/>
much different as State scaed<lb/>
three mae tris ai runs of 15<lb/>
yards, 25 yards and 20 yards. All<lb/>
the extra point attempts were no<lb/>
good, and State was able to ooast<lb/>
to a 25-4 victay.<lb/>
ECU's next match will be<lb/>
away at Duke, Sunday, Nov. 7 at<lb/>
2O0P.M.<lb/>
obc) southeastern 7Zauu<lb/>
PITT<lb/>
Starts FRIDAY!<lb/>
SHOWS<lb/>
in the middle of a robbery-<lb/>
Mama comes to help<lb/>
An obscene phone call. �.<lb/>
Pizza for everyone<lb/>
Weird things can happen on a<lb/>
DOC DRY RFTERNOON<lb/>
THE GREAT ABC LATE SHOW<lb/>
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY 11:30 PM<lb/>
1 st RUN IN GREENVILLE EVER<lb/>
MARLON BRANDO<lb/>
LAST TANGO IN PARIS<lb/>
Don't miss this great celebration.<lb/>
Help Greenville finally<lb/>
welcome this GREAT CLASSIC TO TOWN<lb/>
SHOW STARTS 11:30 PM<lb/>
�<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057092_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>