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<pb facs="00057139_0001"/>
Vol. 55 No. 65<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
jJh<lb/>
1978<lb/>
Brewer dedicates Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
By MARK BARNES<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The new, enlarged Ficklen<lb/>
stadium was formally dedicated<lb/>
before a near capacity crowd of<lb/>
31,000 during halftirne of the<lb/>
ECU-WCU football game.<lb/>
The stadium has an enlarged<lb/>
seating capacity of 35,000, and<lb/>
promises to be a showplace of<lb/>
Pirate athletics.<lb/>
Financed partly by private<lb/>
donations and public funds, the<lb/>
new stadium brings ECU closer<lb/>
to its UNC system sister schools<lb/>
in terms of capacity.<lb/>
It promises to be an im-<lb/>
portrait contribution to the ath-<lb/>
letic program at ECU, and<lb/>
officials here are exuberant over<lb/>
the completion of the structure.<lb/>
During halftirne festivities, a<lb/>
plaque in appreciation of the<lb/>
student body's efforts in fund-<lb/>
raising was presented to Tommy m<lb/>
Joe Payne. The plaque will be<lb/>
on display in the Mendenhall<lb/>
student center in the near<lb/>
future, according to Payne.<lb/>
Dr. Leo Jenkins, who re-<lb/>
cently retired as chancellor<lb/>
here, was at the dedication<lb/>
ceremony. Dr. Jenkins was .the<lb/>
chief administrator at ECU<lb/>
during the planning and con-<lb/>
stuction of the present enlarge-<lb/>
ment. Dr. Jenkins' successor,<lb/>
SU Coffeehouse:<lb/>
music? munchies<lb/>
By LUKE WHISNANT<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The Student Union Coffee-<lb/>
house Committe is gearing up<lb/>
for another big year.<lb/>
The Coffeehouse, located in<lb/>
room 15 Mendenhall, presents<lb/>
fine local and regional talent<lb/>
along with free munchies in a<lb/>
relaxed, informal atmosphere.<lb/>
The food is one of the<lb/>
Coffeehouse's unique features,<lb/>
according to Doug White,<lb/>
committee chairperson.<lb/>
"Where else can you go in<lb/>
Greenville to see a good musical<lb/>
act and stuff your faoe for free at<lb/>
the same time?" White asks.<lb/>
Munchies offered at last<lb/>
year's Coffeehouse included rai-<lb/>
sin bread, peanuts, cookies,<lb/>
potatoe chips, cheeses, coffee,<lb/>
hot tea, and soft drinks.<lb/>
Coffeehouse entertainment<lb/>
focuses primarily on local mu-<lb/>
sical acts, although on occasion<lb/>
they have presented comedians<lb/>
and magicians.<lb/>
"We're tentatively planning<lb/>
to hold auditions on Fri. and<lb/>
Sat Sept. 22 and 23, White<lb/>
said. "Auditions are open to<lb/>
everybody - musicians, singers,<lb/>
dancers, actors, mimes, jugg-<lb/>
lers and dancing bears. All you<lb/>
have to do is sign up in the<lb/>
Student Union Office.<lb/>
"In the past we' ve present-<lb/>
oks micfrt too' hamryvweigtaB as<lb/>
Maria Dawkins, Lightning Mike<lb/>
Wells, and Sally Spring. We<lb/>
hope to book some of these<lb/>
people again<lb/>
There is a 50 cent cover<lb/>
charge at the door, but White<lb/>
emphasized that Coffeehouse<lb/>
'patrons may eat their fill once<lb/>
inside.<lb/>
DOUG WHITE<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
CHAIRMAN of the Student Union Coffeehouse<lb/>
Infirmary serves<lb/>
students full-time<lb/>
By JULIE EvERETTE<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The ECU Infirmary, located beside Joyner<lb/>
Library, is available to all students 24 hours a<lb/>
day. according to Dr. Dan Jordan, assistant<lb/>
director of student health services.<lb/>
Jordan said the infirmary has four full-time<lb/>
physicians available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.<lb/>
everyday, and two part-time physicians.<lb/>
A part-time psychiatrist is also available to<lb/>
counsel students.<lb/>
According to Jordan, the infirmary operates<lb/>
entirely on funds which oome from the students'<lb/>
fees.<lb/>
Jordan said the infirmary no longer gives<lb/>
class excuses for a student who has visited the<lb/>
infirmary.<lb/>
ECU was one of the last schools to stop<lb/>
giving class excuses Jordan said.<lb/>
"A class absence is now strictly between the<lb/>
professor and the student<lb/>
"A professor may call to find out if the<lb/>
student was here, but they will not be told the<lb/>
"The studentsare living in the infirmary until<lb/>
they can find adequate housing Jordan said.<lb/>
Aocording to Jordan, the winter months are<lb/>
the, busiest for the infirmary.<lb/>
Jordan said many students are treated for<lb/>
respiratory infections during those months.<lb/>
reason the student came Jordan said.<lb/>
Although there is no space problem yet,<lb/>
Jordan said some students are living in the<lb/>
infirmary because of lack of dorm rooms on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
He said the infirmary often refers students for<lb/>
specialisrare when needed.<lb/>
Currently the infirmary has 46 beds available<lb/>
fa patients.<lb/>
Students are making use of the infirmary<lb/>
more than they have in the past Jordan said.<lb/>
The infirmary is serving students more as a<lb/>
continuing servioe, not only in emergency cases.<lb/>
"I think the infirmary is giving better servioe<lb/>
than it ever has, especially since the nuisance of<lb/>
giving class excuses was terminated, he said.<lb/>
Dr. Brewer, complimented him<lb/>
on the completion of the stadi-<lb/>
um. He called it one of Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins' many achievements<lb/>
during his tenure at ECU.<lb/>
The stadium was built with<lb/>
approximately three and a half<lb/>
million dollars in both public<lb/>
and private funds.<lb/>
One of the main fund raisers<lb/>
and private contributors, ac-<lb/>
cording to Brewer, was Dr. Ray<lb/>
M inges. M inges was praised by<lb/>
Brewer during his speech.<lb/>
When contacted later, Minges<lb/>
commented, "It was a necess-<lb/>
ary expansion to the athletic<lb/>
complex of ECU and will be a<lb/>
tremendous economic asset to<lb/>
the eastern part of the state <lb/>
(and) congratulations to the<lb/>
student body for it's financial<lb/>
support to the stadium, because<lb/>
without it, there would have<lb/>
been no expansion of the<lb/>
stadium<lb/>
Dr. Brewer, added that<lb/>
"All of us in the university are<lb/>
appreciative of the tremendous<lb/>
generosity of the people of<lb/>
North Carolina - and in parti-<lb/>
cular eastern North Carolina - in<lb/>
providing this university with<lb/>
this fine stadium . and a deep<lb/>
appreciation of the support of a<lb/>
loyal, dedicated student body<lb/>
which provided well over one<lb/>
million dollars (towards) the<lb/>
completion of the stadium<lb/>
Tommy Joe Payne, pres-<lb/>
ident of the SGA, who received<lb/>
the plaque, added that "We<lb/>
accepted the citation of appre-<lb/>
ciation from the Pirate club and<lb/>
the trustees for 1 12 million<lb/>
dollars which came out of<lb/>
student fees of years past. I am<lb/>
sure that everyone is impressed<lb/>
with the stadium - and we all<lb/>
hope to have lots of winning<lb/>
seasons in it <lb/>
Cliff Moore, vioe-chancellor<lb/>
of business affairs made the<lb/>
budget requests and did the<lb/>
bookwork behind the construc-<lb/>
tion of the stadium. He acted as<lb/>
a kind of Mason and figured out<lb/>
how much the state could afford<lb/>
to spend out of the ECU budget<lb/>
DR. THOMAS BREWER, chancellor of ECU,<lb/>
praised students for providing a large part of the<lb/>
funds of the enlargement of Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
This photograph shows the stadium in its<lb/>
completed form, with anen, enlarged capactiy of<lb/>
35,000. Before the enlargement, Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium could hold 20,000 spectators.<lb/>
Working women encouraged<lb/>
to train for non-traditional jobs<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) - Women<lb/>
must be encouraged to train<lb/>
fa and accept non-traditional<lb/>
jobs while low-paying jobs hatd<lb/>
by the bulk, of them must be<lb/>
upgraded, a Carter adminialr<lb/>
tion official says.<lb/>
Alexis Herman, head of the<lb/>
Women's Bureau in the Labor<lb/>
Department, noted that nothing<lb/>
has been more dramatic in the<lb/>
past decade than the huge influx<lb/>
of women into the work foroe.<lb/>
Mae the 47.1 million<lb/>
women held paying jobs as of<lb/>
July, which is a 129 percent<lb/>
increase from a decade earlier,<lb/>
she said, adding that the<lb/>
number of married women who<lb/>
wak is five times that of the<lb/>
1940 figures.<lb/>
Despite this, Ms. Herman<lb/>
N.C. man, woman<lb/>
die of strange disease<lb/>
CHARLOTTE N.C. (AP) - North Carolina health officials<lb/>
have asked the U.S. Center fa Disease Control in Atlanta to<lb/>
investigate the deaths a a Mecklenburg County man and woman<lb/>
from a mysterious and fast-waking disease.<lb/>
Doctas who treated Leonard and Jo Ann Whiteside at<lb/>
Presbyterian Hospital in Charlotte say they believe a potent virus<lb/>
may have been responsible fa the deaths. However, it may be<lb/>
several days befae health officials are sure of the cause.<lb/>
Whiteside, 49, died Friday and his 47 year old wife died<lb/>
Sunday.<lb/>
Dr. Geage Irons, a cardiologist who treated Mrs. Whiteside,<lb/>
said he does not believe the couple had Legionaire's Disease<lb/>
because they did not suffer from respiratay problems namaily<lb/>
associated with it. But Irons said he was not ruling the disease<lb/>
that killed 34 people in Philadelphis in 1976.<lb/>
Bah the Whitesides, described by Irons as healthy adults,<lb/>
suffered headaches, fever, nausea, diarrhea and aher aches after<lb/>
becoming ill early last week and being hospitalized several days<lb/>
later.<lb/>
They had returned home Aug. 21 from a four-day vacation to<lb/>
Myrtle Beach, S.C.<lb/>
Irons said he gave Mrs. Whiteside a broad range of antibiotics<lb/>
but her condition steadily detiaated.<lb/>
"There was no question it was an overwhelming acute<lb/>
infection of some kind he said.<lb/>
The couple's nine year old daughter, Jodi, became ill as the<lb/>
family was returning fron Myrtle Beach and another docta<lb/>
treated her on the presumption she had Rocky Mountain Spated<lb/>
Feva, Ironssaid. Jodi and her twobrtfhers, Brink, 15, and Andy,<lb/>
4, were reported to be in good health Sunday.<lb/>
said in an interview earlier this<lb/>
week, most women remain<lb/>
clustered in clerical, service and<lb/>
sales jobs and their pay is less<lb/>
than 60 percent that ot men.<lb/>
STEREOTYPING<lb/>
"We've got to be just as<lb/>
concerned about the occupation-<lb/>
al stereayping a women into<lb/>
low-paid jobs as we are about<lb/>
getting women into non-tradi-<lb/>
tiatal jobs she said.<lb/>
Ms. Herman helped shape<lb/>
federal regualtions that will<lb/>
open more blue-collar jobs to<lb/>
women.<lb/>
The regulations, issued earl-<lb/>
ier this year, require construc-<lb/>
tion companies with federal<lb/>
contracts to hire at feast three<lb/>
percent women.<lb/>
And apprenticeship pro-<lb/>
grams registered through the<lb/>
Labor Department are required<lb/>
to reauit at least 20 percent<lb/>
women.<lb/>
Because most women wak<lb/>
aly alongside aher women, the<lb/>
move to require "equal pay fa<lb/>
equal work" is a little conaete<lb/>
value to them, Ms. Herman<lb/>
said. She said thae is an urgent<lb/>
need to go beyond the tradition-<lb/>
al equal pay suits with data that<lb/>
will compare "women's wak"<lb/>
with similar jobs charactaized<lb/>
as "men's wak<lb/>
WOMEN PAID LESS<lb/>
SaneLaba Deaprtment<lb/>
studies show that women doing<lb/>
jobs comparable to those done<lb/>
by men are paid dramatically<lb/>
less, indicating women may be<lb/>
paid less simply because they<lb/>
are in "women's jobs Ms.<lb/>
Herman said.<lb/>
The Laba Department re-<lb/>
cently resolved a complaint<lb/>
against the Dallas, Tex school<lb/>
system by finding that women<lb/>
cleaning up the schools were<lb/>
paid far lower than men doing<lb/>
virtually the same wak.<lb/>
The system was redesigned.<lb/>
with persons doing comparable<lb/>
wak being paid the same.<lb/>
Ms. Herman said her de-<lb/>
partment plans to analyze the<lb/>
sexstereayping of federally fi-<lb/>
nanced public service jobs as<lb/>
the next step in attempting to<lb/>
stop sex discrimination in the<lb/>
wak faoe.<lb/>
m<lb/>
?<lb/>
M<lb/>
What's inside<lb/>
I<lb/>
God's wad gives the right to smoke<lb/>
paSeep.7.<lb/>
It's Alive Again but it may as well have stayed :??<lb/>
dead See Whitaon on Film, p.6.<lb/>
The Pirates edged past WCU's Catamounts in<lb/>
the newly-dedicated Ficklen Stadium Saturday<lb/>
NightFa a wrap-up, see p.9.<lb/>
MORE HOGS, p. 6<lb/>
All you ever wanted to know about going -<lb/>
Greek but were scared to ask See p.5.<lb/>
ECU'S new purple and gold computerized S?&amp;<lb/>
scoreboard made its debut Saturday night to rave $"<lb/>
reviewsSeep.9.<lb/>
Wir<lb/>
Chancellor upgrades research<lb/>
DR. THOMAS BREWER, chancellor , has announced that ha is taking immediate stpes to upgrade<lb/>
the level of research activity hare at the university.<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
Chanceila Thomas Brewer<lb/>
has announced he Is taking<lb/>
immediate steps to upgrade the<lb/>
level of research activity at ECU<lb/>
and establaishing an improved<lb/>
teaching awards program.<lb/>
The new ECU chanceila told<lb/>
the traditional opening-of-<lb/>
-school faculty convocation that<lb/>
at least an additional $88,000 in<lb/>
university and ECU Foundation<lb/>
funds will be made available fa<lb/>
faculty research and support in<lb/>
1978-79.<lb/>
This is nearly five times the<lb/>
amount a university-provided<lb/>
money allocated fa research<lb/>
last year.<lb/>
"We are woefully inade-<lb/>
quate in research support<lb/>
Brewer noted.<lb/>
In addition to the research<lb/>
money, Brewer announced allo-<lb/>
cation a $20,000 fa projects<lb/>
designed to improve teaching<lb/>
through an awards program<lb/>
administered by a new faculty<lb/>
development committee, and<lb/>
$10,000 to be used fa attend-<lb/>
ance at seminars and work-<lb/>
shops.<lb/>
This, Brewer said, was a<lb/>
"small beginning" which he<lb/>
hopes will lead to a fully staffed<lb/>
faculty development center at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Further, Brewer announced<lb/>
plans fa a program of aeative<lb/>
activity assignments to al?ow<lb/>
faculty a full semester to pursue<lb/>
teaching irnprovemtnt projects<lb/>
a scholarship, and establishing<lb/>
six summer awards of $2,000<lb/>
each, in lieu of summer teaching<lb/>
fa improvement of teaching a<lb/>
aeative activity.<lb/>
The chanceila also disclosed<lb/>
a "discussion proposer for<lb/>
aganizdtionaJ changes in<lb/>
ECU'S administrative structure<lb/>
is befae the faculty, staff, and<lb/>
trustees. He said there will be<lb/>
full discussion befae any deris-<lb/>
ion is made.<lb/>
He indicated that one direc-<lb/>
tion of the propoeed changes<lb/>
will be toward obtaining greater<lb/>
financial support from private<lb/>
"We must find ways to<lb/>
obtain mucha greater support<lb/>
from our alumni he said.<lb/>
"Support must also oome from<lb/>
foundations, capaattans, and<lb/>
friends.<lb/>
'To make a maximum effot<lb/>
here will require some adminis-<lb/>
trative reaganizatioi he said.<lb/>
Brewer's first convocation<lb/>
speech befae en overflow aud-<lb/>
ience in the 800 seat Menden-<lb/>
hall theatre drew a prolonged<lb/>
standing ovation. He acknow-<lb/>
ledged that such a response was<lb/>
an nona.<lb/>
To encourage greater re-<lb/>
search activity, Brewer<lb/>
announced, -aresearch fund of<lb/>
$60,000 from university monies<lb/>
to be administered on a compet-<lb/>
itive basts by a faculty research<lb/>
ccrnmittee; -an amount of,<lb/>
See BREWER, p. J<lb/>
mwm<lb/>
0ejjte&amp;JLt2j?Jj?jjs.? ?!? ?? <lb/>
? ? - ?"a' mm' ???? ? ?iay"5:? 'mr<lb/>
<pb facs="00057139_0002"/><lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 5 Septarrtbar 1978<lb/>
i<lb/>
Ceramics<lb/>
The Ceramics Department,<lb/>
in cooperation with the Visual<lb/>
Arts Forum and the SGA, is<lb/>
holding a workshop Sept. 7 and<lb/>
8 in the Leo Jenkins Fine Arts<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Kent Follette, teacher at<lb/>
Nichols State in Thibodaux, La<lb/>
will demonstrate from 10 a.m. -<lb/>
Noon and 1 - 4 p.m. both days.<lb/>
He will also give a slide show<lb/>
and talk in the auditorium at 8<lb/>
p.m. Thursday evening.<lb/>
Key club<lb/>
Rick EIridge REBEL<lb/>
Special kids Mixed doubles Recclub<lb/>
Grafts<lb/>
VAF<lb/>
The Visual Arts Forum, the<lb/>
organization representing all<lb/>
Fine Arts students, will hold its<lb/>
fust meeting of the year on<lb/>
Fri Sept. 8 at Noon in Jenkins<lb/>
Auditorium. All interested per-<lb/>
sons are enoouraged to attend.<lb/>
Who's who<lb/>
We are now in the process of<lb/>
selecting students from our<lb/>
school to appear in the 1978-79<lb/>
edition of Who's Who Among<lb/>
Students in American Colleges<lb/>
and Universities<lb/>
We are sending out forms to<lb/>
all departments and organizat-<lb/>
ions that we can possible locate.<lb/>
If you wish to make a nominat-<lb/>
ion and do not receive the<lb/>
necessary forms, please contact<lb/>
the dean of student affairs office<lb/>
immediately. All nominations<lb/>
are due by Oct. 13.<lb/>
To all former Key and<lb/>
Keyanette members, also any<lb/>
other interested students who<lb/>
are interested in aiding his or<lb/>
her community: the internation-<lb/>
al Circle K dub of ECU cordially<lb/>
invites you to our second club<lb/>
meeting fa the 1978-79 school<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The meeting will be held on<lb/>
Tues Sept. 5 at 6:30 p.m. at<lb/>
213 Wright annex. This is the<lb/>
same building where the ROTC<lb/>
is stationed.<lb/>
The meeting will be prece-<lb/>
eded by snacks and refresh-<lb/>
ments. All students are invited<lb/>
to join our worthwhile endeavor.<lb/>
C.S.O.<lb/>
The Center Fa Student<lb/>
Opportunities, Divisiai of<lb/>
Health Affairs, offers cost-free<lb/>
tutaial help upoi request to<lb/>
majas and pre-majas in medi-<lb/>
cine, premedicine, nursing, and<lb/>
allied health.<lb/>
CSO also offers to employ as<lb/>
tutas graduate and certain<lb/>
undergraudate students who are<lb/>
able to assist fellow students in<lb/>
chemistry, biology, anatomy,<lb/>
physics, math and other oourses<lb/>
in health professions curricula.<lb/>
Students interested in either<lb/>
aspect of this program should<lb/>
contact the Center Fa Student<lb/>
Opportunities immediately.<lb/>
Visit 208 Ragsdale Hall, a call<lb/>
757-6122, 6075, a 6081.<lb/>
You are invited to come and<lb/>
hear singer, guitarist, and com-<lb/>
poser Rick EIridge this Thurs. at<lb/>
8 - 10 p.m. in Wright Audito-<lb/>
rium.<lb/>
Rick is a young man who<lb/>
used to be in a rook band and<lb/>
now istraveling all over the U.S.<lb/>
singing songs about whatJpsus<lb/>
has done and is doing in his life<lb/>
since he met Him.<lb/>
There is no admission<lb/>
charge and everyone is wel-<lb/>
come. This is being sponsaed<lb/>
by the ECU Full Gospel Student<lb/>
Fellowship chapter.<lb/>
Open house<lb/>
Everyone is invited to an<lb/>
open house that is more than<lb/>
shaking hands at the Baptist<lb/>
Student Union, 511 East 10th St.<lb/>
behind the ECU library, tonight<lb/>
beginning at 5 p.m. Supper is 75<lb/>
cents and you don't have to be<lb/>
baptist.<lb/>
The Baptist Student Union is<lb/>
a place where social, intellectual<lb/>
spiritual, and ethical growth are<lb/>
brought together.<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi will have its<lb/>
first business meeting Wed<lb/>
Sept. 6 at 6 p.m. in Austin room<lb/>
132. All members are urged to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
The REBEL staff is now<lb/>
accepting aiginal poetry,<lb/>
essays, plays, and shat staies<lb/>
fa publication in the 1979 issue<lb/>
of ECU'S literary magazine.<lb/>
Your work should be type-<lb/>
written and can be brought to<lb/>
the REBEL office in the publica-<lb/>
tions building, a mailed to The<lb/>
REBEL, Mendenhall, Greenvil-<lb/>
le N.C. 27834, a call 757-6502.<lb/>
Please keep a copy of your<lb/>
wak and remember to include<lb/>
your name, address, and phone<lb/>
number with each submission.<lb/>
The deadline fa literature is<lb/>
Dec. 15, 1978.<lb/>
All special education, elem-<lb/>
entary education and other<lb/>
interested persons are invited to<lb/>
attend the first meeting of the<lb/>
Student Council fa exceptional<lb/>
children.<lb/>
The meeting will be held<lb/>
Wed Sept. 6 at 5 p.m. in room<lb/>
129, Speight.<lb/>
Refreshments will follow the<lb/>
meeting. All present and future<lb/>
members are strongly urged to<lb/>
attend. Be exceptional and<lb/>
suppat exceptional children!<lb/>
Sign up now fa MSC Mixed<lb/>
Doubles Bowling Leagues. There<lb/>
will be a Monday night and a<lb/>
Tuesday league meeting at 7<lb/>
p.m. each week.<lb/>
The first meetings will be<lb/>
held on Sept. 11 and 12 at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Bowling Center. You must sign<lb/>
your name fa the league of your<lb/>
choice on the poster located on<lb/>
the main bulletin board on the<lb/>
groud floa of the Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Anyone interested in fam-<lb/>
ing a reaeational dub to meet<lb/>
fa weekly competition in bridge<lb/>
chess, a table tennis should<lb/>
sign up now at the Billiards<lb/>
Center in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Dogs<lb/>
Tourney<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
The Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center reaeation area has a lot<lb/>
to offer you. Watch fa these<lb/>
great spedals caning soon.<lb/>
" Rent-A-Lane" - begins<lb/>
Sept. 9, Saturdays from Noon to<lb/>
6 p.m. Fa $3 you can rent a<lb/>
bowling lane fa aie hour.<lb/>
"Red Pin Bowling" begins<lb/>
Sun Sept. 16. Every Sunday<lb/>
from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. you get<lb/>
the chance to win one free game<lb/>
with every game bowled. Make<lb/>
a strike when the head pin is red<lb/>
and you win!<lb/>
"Discount Days" are every<lb/>
Monday from 2 p.m. until 5<lb/>
p.m. Prices in bowling, billiards<lb/>
and table tennis are V3 off<lb/>
beginning Mon Sept. 18.<lb/>
Reaeational tournaments<lb/>
sponsaed by Mendenhall Stud-<lb/>
ent Center will be held this<lb/>
semester beginning Od. 9 to<lb/>
seled representatives to attend<lb/>
the ACU-I regional games tour-<lb/>
nament in Knoxville, Tenn.<lb/>
All full-time students inter-<lb/>
ested in partidpating should<lb/>
pick up necessary infamatioi at<lb/>
the Billiards a Bowling Centers<lb/>
in Mendenhall. The competition<lb/>
will invdve billiards, backgam-<lb/>
mon, table tennis, bowling, and<lb/>
chess.<lb/>
Day and Dam student pre-<lb/>
liminary tournaments will be<lb/>
held in Odober to seled partid-<lb/>
pants to oompete in the All-<lb/>
Campus Tournaments to be held<lb/>
in November. All students must<lb/>
register by the deadline set up<lb/>
fa each tournament.<lb/>
Several AA members of the<lb/>
ECU campus community are<lb/>
aganizing a University AA<lb/>
group. The initial aganizationa!<lb/>
meeting will be held Fri Sept.<lb/>
8, in room 307, Erwin Hall.<lb/>
All interested individuals are<lb/>
oadially invited to attend.<lb/>
Cheer<lb/>
Anyone interested in a male<lb/>
position on the ECU cheer-<lb/>
leading squad, there will be an<lb/>
opening, beginning with the<lb/>
second home game, Sept. 30.<lb/>
Meet at Mingeson Sept. 5 at<lb/>
6 p.m.<lb/>
There will also be tryouts fa<lb/>
a Pirate mascot (male a female).<lb/>
Meet on the same date<lb/>
fa mae infamatioi.<lb/>
Residents of Greenville are<lb/>
reminded that there is a 24 hour<lb/>
leash law in the dty. Further,<lb/>
every dog that is kept in the dty<lb/>
must at all times have a current<lb/>
rabies tag on a collar around<lb/>
their neck.<lb/>
Civitan Club<lb/>
ECU Collegiate Civitan Club<lb/>
will hold its first meeting on<lb/>
Sept. 7, at 7 p.m. in Brewster<lb/>
C-205.<lb/>
All famer Junia Civitans<lb/>
are invited to attend a anyone<lb/>
wishing to become a member of<lb/>
a collegiate service dub.<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
The Student Union Coffee-<lb/>
house Committee needs you!<lb/>
Please apply at the Student<lb/>
Union office, room 234 Men-<lb/>
denhall.<lb/>
Hours for the Crafts Center at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Centa are<lb/>
3 p.m. until 10 p.m Ma<lb/>
through Fri, and 10 a.m. until 3<lb/>
p.m Sat.<lb/>
The Center is composed of a<lb/>
darkroom with three enlargers<lb/>
a ceramics area, a jewelry<lb/>
metals area, a general aafts<lb/>
are, and textiles area with floor<lb/>
looms fa weaving.<lb/>
All full-time ECU students<lb/>
faculty, staff and spouses are<lb/>
eligible to use these facilities. A<lb/>
semester membership fee entit-<lb/>
les the Crafts Center member to<lb/>
use the fadlities, to check out<lb/>
tools and equipment, to oheo<lb/>
out library materials, to enlist<lb/>
the aid of aafts supervisas.<lb/>
and to enroll in introduday<lb/>
level wakshops which are offe-<lb/>
red throughout the year<lb/>
Visit the Crafts Center any<lb/>
time during operating hours a<lb/>
call 757-6611 Ext. 271 fa mae<lb/>
infamatiat.<lb/>
New f rat<lb/>
Men, how would you like to<lb/>
be part of something new at<lb/>
ECU?<lb/>
Alpha Sigma Phi, rjne of the<lb/>
finest fraternities in the nation<lb/>
is beginning at ECU.<lb/>
We, the brahers of<lb/>
Alpha Sig believe in individua-<lb/>
lity and encourage any ideas you<lb/>
might have. If you are interest-<lb/>
ed in adding a new and exdting<lb/>
chapter in your life, call 756-<lb/>
0893 a 758-8514.<lb/>
It pays to advertise in<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
With a circulation of 10,000, FOUNTAINHEAD is distmbut<lb/>
free of charge throughout the university community.<lb/>
Advertising Rates<lb/>
(Effective Aug. 28,1978)<lb/>
National rate per inch $3.64<lb/>
National rate per line $.26<lb/>
Local open rate per inch $2.10<lb/>
;sified Ads<lb/>
Three lines f<lb/>
1st color $50.00<lb/>
2nd color $40.00<lb/>
3rdcolor $30.00<lb/>
Must be in FOUNTAINHEAD office 5 days prior to insertion date<lb/>
(advertiser to pay all shipping charges).<lb/>
1-4 pages $40.00 per thousand<lb/>
5-8 pages $50.00 per thousand<lb/>
8 pages $60.00 per thousand<lb/>
Mechanical Requirements<lb/>
OhSet printing: original art, photograph or iqjroauction proofs.<lb/>
Page size: 8 columns wide and 21 Vi inches deep.<lb/>
Columnsare 11 picas wide, about 1 Va inches.<lb/>
? <lb/>
mm<lb/>
"?'? ? -<lb/>
'mmk ? oMrift<lb/>
<pb facs="00057139_0003"/><lb/>
Girlgets<lb/>
hospital<lb/>
proposal<lb/>
WARWICK, R.I (AP), Charlie<lb/>
Fngondidn't let littleth.ngslike<lb/>
a boating aocdent, a hospital<lb/>
stay and arm surgery keep him<lb/>
from Proposing to his high<lb/>
school sweetheart.<lb/>
Fngon. 19, was injured<lb/>
Thursday when the steering<lb/>
mechanism on his outboard<lb/>
mot or boat apparently broke,<lb/>
throwing himout of the craft into<lb/>
Narragansett Bay.<lb/>
On Saturday, he invited<lb/>
Nancy Leonard, 18, to the<lb/>
hospital She thought he just<lb/>
wanted a visitor but he had<lb/>
more important things on his<lb/>
tever dreamed of a<lb/>
proposal said his new<lb/>
oee.<lb/>
The couple had an engage-<lb/>
ment party in his hospital room<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Fngon expects to be re-<lb/>
leased from the hospital Wed-<lb/>
nesday, and he and Miss<lb/>
i-eonard plan to get married in<lb/>
? :hs<lb/>
Teachers<lb/>
receive<lb/>
awards<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
jmni awards to recognize<lb/>
teaching excellence among the<lb/>
4 ECU were presented<lb/>
Aug 28 to Dr. Alvin<lb/>
professor of hist-<lb/>
Warie Farr. assistant<lb/>
English.<lb/>
? ihrner. who received<lb/>
md Lina Worthing-<lb/>
: received the<lb/>
: in 1972. He has<lb/>
ember of the ECU<lb/>
? faculty a e i960.<lb/>
member of the<lb/>
- ?- since 1973,<lb/>
Robert L. Jones<lb/>
awvar - established to rec-<lb/>
ognize teaching exoeWenoe.<lb/>
The awards were presented<lb/>
. Powell of Greenville.<lb/>
 the ECU Alumni<lb/>
Association, at the annual open-<lb/>
? 'acuity convocation<lb/>
emcon Donald Y.<lb/>
Aiumni director, said<lb/>
 mners would share<lb/>
a SVOOC allocated<lb/>
. the ECU Alumni<lb/>
Asscoa' ' to recognize and<lb/>
emphasize the good teaching<lb/>
? - i ? . :oes on through-<lb/>
jniversity as well as to<lb/>
?nose who have been<lb/>
;eo especially outstanding<lb/>
The award winners are def-<lb/>
ied by an Instructional<lb/>
Survey Committee of the<lb/>
Faculty Senate.<lb/>
Fahrner, native of<lb/>
-etia, W. Va . received his<lb/>
A B degree trom Hampden-<lb/>
Sydeny College and his MA<lb/>
and Ph D from the University<lb/>
of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.<lb/>
He served 1940-47 in the U.S.<lb/>
Navy and won 12 major battles<lb/>
? ns and the Commendation<lb/>
Medal fa service in combat in<lb/>
the Pacific during World War II.<lb/>
In 1971. he completed 31<lb/>
years service in the U.S. Naval<lb/>
Reserve.<lb/>
Farr. a native of Chicago,<lb/>
received her B.S degree from<lb/>
Loyola University of Chicago,<lb/>
her M A from Purdue Univer-<lb/>
sity and holds a certificate of<lb/>
candidacy for the Ph.D. from<lb/>
the University of Washington.<lb/>
In 1966-68 she taught at the<lb/>
University of Seattle and taught<lb/>
in the ECU Division of Contin-<lb/>
uing Education before becoming<lb/>
a member of the English faculty<lb/>
in the College of Arts and<lb/>
Sciences<lb/>
BREWER<lb/>
continued from p. 1)<lb/>
$10,000 from the ECU Founda-<lb/>
tion1 for research support, most-<lb/>
ly small items to be handled<lb/>
administratively; -an additional<lb/>
$18,000 in ytstorl gunfd ptobifrf<lb/>
-an additional $18,000 in travel<lb/>
funds provided fa faculty mem-<lb/>
bers who present papers or<lb/>
participate in scholarly meet-<lb/>
ings.<lb/>
In the area of teachng<lb/>
improvement, Brewer said<lb/>
most universities support<lb/>
scholarship - few support the<lb/>
improvement of teaching, which<lb/>
is the fundamental mission of<lb/>
the university<lb/>
The new teaching improve-<lb/>
ment projects, he said, will be<lb/>
on a competitive basis and be<lb/>
awarded administratively.<lb/>
L<lb/>
Fountainhead staff meeting Wednesday at 5<lb/>
5S?pt?mtiec 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
Anyone interested in writing News,<lb/>
meet in the Fountainhead office,<lb/>
Wednesday at 4:30<lb/>
1st ANNIVERSARY SALE!<lb/>
703 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
IN THE GREENVILLE<lb/>
SQUARE SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is re<lb/>
quired to be readily available for sale<lb/>
at or below the advertised price in<lb/>
each A&amp;P Store, except as specifi<lb/>
cally noted in this ad<lb/>
We're Open All Day<lb/>
PRICES GOOD THROUGH TUES SEPT. 5 AT A&amp;P IN GREENVILLE<lb/>
EIGHT O'CLOCK<lb/>
THE 24 HOUR<lb/>
PRESENTS THE<lb/>
DAY PERSONNIGHT PERSON<lb/>
SWEEPSTAKES<lb/>
YOUR CHOICE OF PRIZES<lb/>
GRAND PRIZE: 8 DAYS OR 8 NIGHTS IN RIO DE JANEIRO, 3RASIL<lb/>
Including Round Trip<lb/>
Air Fare For Two Via<lb/>
VARIG<lb/>
and Accommodations at ? "3 f<lb/>
?-?? Rio-Sheraton<lb/>
Hotel<lb/>
S<lb/>
j?r<lb/>
rDay<lb/>
For Your Shopping Convenience<lb/>
CRATE SJZZLIN SAVINGS<lb/>
FOR A GREAT HOLIDAY WEEKEND<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN-FED BEEF<lb/>
SIRLOIN<lb/>
?8?<lb/>
v.<lb/>
LB.<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY TENDER FULLY COOKED<lb/>
AP QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN-FED BEEF<lb/>
SMOKED<lb/>
TT<lb/>
?Tdq<lb/>
v<lb/>
FIRST PRIZE<lb/>
Daytime or Nighttime Fashion Wardrobe<lb/>
10 SECOND PRIZES<lb/>
Everyday or Evening Brasilian Leather Shoulder Bag<lb/>
100 THIRD PRIZES<lb/>
Brasilian Amethyst Necklace or Bracelet<lb/>
100,000 EARLY BIRD WINNERS<lb/>
Each Receives a Coupon Worth $1 00 Off the Purchase of Any Bag of Eight O Clock Coffee<lb/>
ENTRY BLANKS IN YOUR A&amp;P STORE<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
EIGHT O'CLOCK COFFEE<lb/>
SWEEPSTAKES DISPLAY<lb/>
NO PURCHASE REQUIRED<lb/>
 ft P GRADE "A" 2 LOWFAT<lb/>
SHANK<lb/>
PORTION<lb/>
LB.<lb/>
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH FRYER<lb/>
BOX-O-<lb/>
CHICKEN<lb/>
45 TO 50 LB.<lb/>
AVERAGE<lb/>
?<lb/>
CUT FREE<lb/>
INTO EYE OF<lb/>
ROUND ROAST,<lb/>
AND STEAKS<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY<lb/>
PORK<lb/>
CHOPS<lb/>
ASSORTED<lb/>
PACKAGE<lb/>
10 LBS. OR<lb/>
MORE<lb/>
LB.<lb/>
We pick the best fruits and vegetables<lb/>
y<lb/>
RED TOKAY, RIBIER, SCUPPERNONGS, OR<lb/>
THOMPSON SEEDLESS<lb/>
CRAPES<lb/>
w?<lb/>
CALIFORNIA ICEBERG HEAD<lb/>
LETTUCE<lb/>
3<lb/>
t I<lb/>
LB.<lb/>
LARGE<lb/>
HEADS<lb/>
MILK<lb/>
GALLON<lb/>
JUG<lb/>
Fortified<lb/>
Vitamin<lb/>
A D<lb/>
HALF<lb/>
A SUPERB BLEND, RICH IN BRAZILIAN COFFEES<lb/>
FULL OF JUICE<lb/>
RED RIPE<lb/>
WATERMELONS 88C POTATOES<lb/>
DELICIOUS CANDIED, BAKED, OR FRIED<lb/>
SWEET 3<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
LBS.<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
EIGHT O CLOCK COFFEE<lb/>
$99 $589<lb/>
1-LB.<lb/>
BAG<lb/>
CUSTOM GROUND<lb/>
LIMIT 2 PLEASE. WITH ADDITIONAL 7.50 ORDER<lb/>
ANN PAGE<lb/>
TOMATO<lb/>
KETCHUP<lb/>
A&amp;P picks the best<lb/>
health &amp; beauty aids<lb/>
12c OFF LABEL<lb/>
CLOSE-UP<lb/>
TOOTHPASTE<lb/>
Look For A&amp;P s Economy Corner<lb/>
Where good products and lowest<lb/>
prices come together!<lb/>
Economy Corner is a special section<lb/>
of unbranded Economy Products pricec<lb/>
as much as 30?o below national<lb/>
brands tor sale at A&amp;P.<lb/>
REG. PRICE<lb/>
95c<lb/>
YOU PAY<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
4.6 OZ.<lb/>
TUBE<lb/>
79C<lb/>
REGULAR SCENT<lb/>
BAN ROLL-ON<lb/>
ANTl-PERSPIRANT DEODORANT<lb/>
REG. PRICE<lb/>
$1.19<lb/>
15 OZ.<lb/>
SIZE<lb/>
99C<lb/>
SAYE $300<lb/>
cDominion<lb/>
DISCOUNT<lb/>
COUPONS<lb/>
AT YOUR<lb/>
PARTICIPATING<lb/>
A&amp;P'S<lb/>
NO PURCHASE<lb/>
NECESSARY<lb/>
"?m$ Offered For Sal Not Available To Other Retail Dealers Or Wholesalers<lb/>
Q A&amp;PCOUPON <lb/>
PURE VEGETABLE<lb/>
CRISCOONL<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH THIS<lb/>
COUPON AND ADDITIONAL<lb/>
7.50 ORDER<lb/>
$169<lb/>
48 OZ. I<lb/>
BOTTLE ?<lb/>
AP9<lb/>
LIMIT ONE COUPON<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT, SEPT 9 AT AAP IN GREENVILLE. N.C.<lb/>
675<lb/>
Pillsburys<lb/>
BEST<lb/>
?'?? XXXXV<lb/>
FLOUR<lb/>
A&amp;P COUPON<lb/>
PLAIN &amp; SELF-RISING<lb/>
PILLSBURY FLOUR<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH THIS<lb/>
COUPON AND ADDITIONAL<lb/>
7.50 ORDER<lb/>
AV<lb/>
LIMIT ONE COUPON<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT. SEPT. 9 AT ASP IN<lb/>
t7ft<lb/>
(?<lb/>
t<lb/>
. . . - . - - <lb/>
? ? ? ?? a. ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057139_0004"/><lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 5 September 1978<lb/>
Women score TKO<lb/>
With last Wednesday's settlement of the<lb/>
Title IX grievance against ECU, initiated by a<lb/>
former JV basketball player, Debby Newby,<lb/>
the university has finally taken an overdue but<lb/>
important step towards equalizing male and<lb/>
female athletic opportunities.<lb/>
Women have been discriminated against in<lb/>
many fields throughout history, particularly in<lb/>
intercollegiate athletics. Until recent modifi-<lb/>
cations in the athletic program, the university<lb/>
was clearly in violation of Title IX (requiring<lb/>
equivalent athletic programs for men and<lb/>
women) evidenced by the grossly dispropor-<lb/>
tionate funding of the two programs.<lb/>
According to the department of Institution-<lb/>
al Research. 55 percent of ECU students are<lb/>
female. Last year's athletic budget states<lb/>
that there are approximately 111 female<lb/>
athletes participating in eight sports.<lb/>
Yet, according to Stevie Chepko, former<lb/>
ECU gymnastics coach, only four percent of<lb/>
that budget was devoted to female athletics;<lb/>
the other 96 percent, less administrative costs,<lb/>
went to the men.<lb/>
Last year, there was a total of $287,003<lb/>
available for men's athletic scholarships;<lb/>
women were given $11,718 worth of crumbs.<lb/>
The university now proposes to increase<lb/>
funding of athletic scholarships for women to<lb/>
$40,825, an increase of $28,107, in order to<lb/>
comply with Title IX.<lb/>
This is a major step towards equal<lb/>
scholarship opportunities fa women, but the<lb/>
gap is still too great. Even though Title IX<lb/>
states that  unequal aggregate expenditures<lb/>
for either sex will not constitute non-compli-<lb/>
ance the university should take the initiative<lb/>
and do more than merely meet the minimum<lb/>
requirements.<lb/>
Debby Newby, leader of the five grievants,<lb/>
feels the university is still not in compliance,<lb/>
and will not be until the university supplies the<lb/>
$84,000 she feels is necessary to meet the law.<lb/>
The administration should view the recent<lb/>
settlement not as a final solution of the<lb/>
inequality that exists, but instead should view<lb/>
it as a starting point from which to gradually<lb/>
increase funding until equality, or at least<lb/>
legal equality, is achieved. The university<lb/>
should, however, move as quickly as possible<lb/>
to rectify this situation. Last Wednesday's<lb/>
settlement is a fine step in that direction.<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Commentary<lb/>
Student praises new FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
Birth control pills may<lb/>
have adverse side-effects<lb/>
By HESTER PETTY<lb/>
Uppity Women of Greenville<lb/>
In any heterosexual relation-<lb/>
ship, it is the woman who is<lb/>
ultimately respons4ble for the<lb/>
prevention of unwanted preg-<lb/>
nancy Whether the method of<lb/>
birth control is male-oriented or<lb/>
'emale-onented, a resulting<lb/>
;f eg nancy is always female-ori-<lb/>
ted.<lb/>
Therefore, it is important<lb/>
that a woman be given the<lb/>
chance to make an informed<lb/>
decision on which type of birth<lb/>
control is best suited for her<lb/>
particular situation.<lb/>
In the case of the birth<lb/>
control pill, it is becoming<lb/>
increasingly apparent that<lb/>
women are being denied gener-<lb/>
al access to the facts. Although<lb/>
news reports-periodically sur-<lb/>
face about recently discovered<lb/>
side-effects, ft is important for<lb/>
any woman who "is using the Pill<lb/>
or thinking about using it to<lb/>
know about all the side-effects<lb/>
and their relationship to her<lb/>
individual medical history.<lb/>
There are two basic types of<lb/>
birth control pill available at this<lb/>
time the estrogen - progestin<lb/>
or combination type, and the<lb/>
progestin only, or"Mini-Pill"<lb/>
type.<lb/>
Brand names of the combi-<lb/>
nation type include Demulen,<lb/>
Brevicon, Enovid, Loestrin, Lo<lb/>
Ovral, Modicon, Norinyl, Nor-<lb/>
lestnn, Ortho-Novum, Ovral,<lb/>
Ovulen, and Zorane. Brand<lb/>
names of the "Mini-Pill' type<lb/>
are Micronor. Nor-Q.D. and<lb/>
Ovrette. The combined pills are<lb/>
considered more reliable than<lb/>
the "Mini-Pill<lb/>
The "Mini-Pill" is believed<lb/>
to be less apt to cause blood<lb/>
clotting problems or high blood<lb/>
pressure because it dees not<lb/>
contain estrogen.<lb/>
A brief word about effective-<lb/>
ness The combined pill is<lb/>
theoretically 99.5 percent effect-<lb/>
ive. In actual use it has an<lb/>
effectiveness as low as 94<lb/>
percent. This is due to a<lb/>
percentage of women who for-<lb/>
get to take the Pill every day and<lb/>
become pregnant.<lb/>
POSSIBLE NATURAL. EX-<lb/>
PECTED SIDE-EFFECTS: Re-<lb/>
tention of fluid, gain in weight;<lb/>
"breakthrough" bleeding (spot-<lb/>
ting m middle of menstrual<lb/>
cycle), change in menstrual<lb/>
flow, absence of menstrual flow;<lb/>
i nor eased tendency towards de-<lb/>
velopment of yeast infections.<lb/>
POSSIBLE MILD ADVERSE<lb/>
EFFECTS: Nausea, vomiting;<lb/>
allergic reaction (skin rashes,<lb/>
itching, hives); headache, nerv-<lb/>
ous tension and irritability;<lb/>
breast enlargement, tenderness<lb/>
and secretion; tannish pigmen-<lb/>
tation of the face; reduced<lb/>
tolerance to contact lenses;<lb/>
impaired color vision (blue tinge<lb/>
to objects, blue halo around<lb/>
lights); accentuation of migraine<lb/>
headaches.<lb/>
POSSIBLE SERIOUS AD<lb/>
VERSE EFFECTS: Thrombo-<lb/>
phlebitis (inflammation of a vein<lb/>
with the formation of a blood<lb/>
clot); pulmonary embolism<lb/>
(movement of blood clot to the<lb/>
lung); stroke (blood clot in the<lb/>
brain); rise in bicod pressure;<lb/>
ooronary thrombosis (heart<lb/>
attack); retinal thrombosis<lb/>
(blood dot in eye vessels);<lb/>
hepatitis with jaundice; emo-<lb/>
tional depression (may be se-<lb/>
vere) ; formation of benign tu-<lb/>
mors; gall bladder disease.<lb/>
If you are using the Pill and<lb/>
experience any of the side-eff-<lb/>
ects mentioned in the mild or<lb/>
serious adverse effects groups,<lb/>
notify your physician. It is<lb/>
possible that a change in dosage<lb/>
will solve some problems that<lb/>
you may be having. It is a good<lb/>
idea for all Pill users to be<lb/>
familiar with the symptoms<lb/>
associated with the diseases<lb/>
that are affected by the Pill.<lb/>
At this point it would be<lb/>
valuable to examine some of the<lb/>
major problems of the Pill in<lb/>
more depth.<lb/>
BLOOD CLOTS<lb/>
A minimum of 300-500 oth-<lb/>
erwise healthy women die from<lb/>
pill-associated pulmonary em-<lb/>
bolism each year in the U.S.<lb/>
(this is acknowledged by the<lb/>
Food and Drug Adminsitration).<lb/>
The annual risk of being<lb/>
hospitalized, with a blood dott-<lb/>
ing disorder for non-pill users is<lb/>
five in 100,000 Fa pill users<lb/>
the risk is 45 in 100,000.<lb/>
UVER DISEASE<lb/>
The FDA acknowledges that<lb/>
th2 Pill may cause liver tumors<lb/>
which may result in serious or<lb/>
fatal hemorrhage.<lb/>
CANCER<lb/>
It was known by sdentists in<lb/>
the 1940s that estrogen could<lb/>
speed up the prooess of pre-ex-<lb/>
isting cancer. What is not<lb/>
known at this time is whether<lb/>
the Pill adually causes cancer.<lb/>
VENERAL DISEASE<lb/>
A woman using no protec-<lb/>
tion or birth oontrol method has<lb/>
a one-third chance of oontrad-<lb/>
ing VD if she has sex with a<lb/>
gonorrhea-infected man. A<lb/>
woman using the Pill has a 90<lb/>
percent chance of oontrading<lb/>
gonorrhea from an infected<lb/>
man.<lb/>
OTHER COM PLICA TIONS<lb/>
-Five percent of pill<lb/>
users get high blood pressure.<lb/>
-Thirteen percent of pill<lb/>
users get chemical diabetes.<lb/>
-Thirty percent of pill users<lb/>
get mild to severe depression.<lb/>
-Five peroent of pill users<lb/>
are infertile when they stop<lb/>
Rxintainhead<lb/>
Production Managar<lb/>
Leigh Coakiey<lb/>
fcrowrflftr<lb/>
EditorDoug White<lb/>
News Editors<lb/>
Julie Everette<lb/>
Ricki Gliarmis<lb/>
Advertising Manager<lb/>
n. Swum<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
Sam Rogers<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD Is f?i<lb/>
by<lb/>
using the Pill (sometimes perm-<lb/>
nently).<lb/>
The purpose of presenting<lb/>
this information about the Pill is<lb/>
to inform women of the possible<lb/>
risks isnvolved with using this<lb/>
method of birth oontrol. The Pill<lb/>
is not the universally useful and<lb/>
safe drug that it was onoe<lb/>
believed to be in 1960 when it<lb/>
went on the market.<lb/>
At that time the Pill had<lb/>
been tested on only 132 women<lb/>
who had used it oontinously for<lb/>
a year or more. By 1978,<lb/>
millions of women had been<lb/>
induced in the test and we now<lb/>
have a better understanding of<lb/>
the Pill's effed on women's<lb/>
bodies.<lb/>
For some women, the Pill<lb/>
can be a fairly undamaging<lb/>
choice. For others, it can be<lb/>
damaging and even fatal. The<lb/>
choice should be made with<lb/>
oomplete knowledge of the Pill's<lb/>
side-effeds. Discuss these<lb/>
side-effects with your physidan<lb/>
in relation to your personal and<lb/>
family medical history. Consid-<lb/>
er the alternatives to the Pill.<lb/>
There may be a better birth<lb/>
control method for you.<lb/>
NOTE<lb/>
I am not a dodor. My<lb/>
sources for this artide are listed<lb/>
below. I have made an effort to<lb/>
avoid mentioning some possible<lb/>
Pill side-effeds because they<lb/>
are not recognized as such by<lb/>
the FDA. It is my personal<lb/>
belief that much of the evidence<lb/>
that remains unacknowledged<lb/>
by the FDA and some medical<lb/>
organizations is frighteningly<lb/>
true. It is up to each individual<lb/>
to dedde for herself what risks<lb/>
the Pill carries. It is an<lb/>
important dedsion because the<lb/>
Pill is a drug that will be<lb/>
introduced into the blood-<lb/>
streams of healthy women day<lb/>
after day, week after week, year<lb/>
after year.<lb/>
SOURCES:<lb/>
The Essential Guide to Pre-<lb/>
scription Drugs by James W.<lb/>
Long, M.D (Harper and Row).<lb/>
Women and the Crisis in Sex<lb/>
Hormones by Barbara Seaman<lb/>
and Gideon Seaman, M.D<lb/>
(Bantam Books), paper $2.95.<lb/>
FURTHER READING<lb/>
Physicians Desk Reference<lb/>
(can be found in many libraries).<lb/>
 Our Bodies, Our Selves, by<lb/>
the Boston Women's Health<lb/>
Book Cdledive, (Simon and<lb/>
' Schuster), paper $4.95.<lb/>
The Hidden Malpractice by<lb/>
GenaCorea, (JoveHBJ Books),<lb/>
paper $1.95.<lb/>
Reese send comments, etc,<lb/>
to Uppity Women of Greenville,<lb/>
, P.O. Box 1373, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
27834. Next week's article:<lb/>
Alternatives to the PHI.<lb/>
To FOUNT AINHE AD:<lb/>
I can't tell you guys how<lb/>
pleased I was when I saw the<lb/>
first edition of FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD when I returned to<lb/>
school. I couldn't believe the<lb/>
improvements that were made<lb/>
over those three short months of<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
The new page size makes<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD look a lot<lb/>
more like a newspaper and the<lb/>
individual pages somehow<lb/>
looked better than before. The<lb/>
whole thing was a lot easier to<lb/>
read except where the ads<lb/>
covered up the stories. What<lb/>
happened fdks? The print looks<lb/>
a lot dearer too.<lb/>
I look forward to Tuesdays<lb/>
and Thursdays now so I can read<lb/>
the insightful movie reviews of<lb/>
Steve Bachner and David<lb/>
Whitson, the album reviews of<lb/>
Doug White, Jeff Rollins, and<lb/>
David Whitson, the sports<lb/>
pieces by Sam Rogers, and the<lb/>
editorials. By the way who<lb/>
writes the editorials? They<lb/>
never have a name under them<lb/>
I guess I've heaped enough<lb/>
accolades on y' all already, so I'll<lb/>
finish with a simple "keep up<lb/>
the good work We students<lb/>
sure do enjoy<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
Alain Douglass<lb/>
Reporter defends confidential sources<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Sources.<lb/>
A small word, perhaps, but a<lb/>
very important word to anyone<lb/>
in the news media.<lb/>
Journalism serves the public<lb/>
with the belief that a free and<lb/>
democratic sodety will exist and<lb/>
flourish if and when the public's<lb/>
right to know is guarded.<lb/>
The public's right to know<lb/>
can only be guarded when there<lb/>
is a free flow of information<lb/>
from reliable sources to news-<lb/>
men to the public through a<lb/>
public journal, such as a news-<lb/>
paper or broadcast fad I ity. This<lb/>
flow ol information must oe Kept<lb/>
free and confidential. It is<lb/>
fortunate indeed that the laws of<lb/>
this country cover the confident-<lb/>
iality of sources. No one can<lb/>
make a reporter reveal his<lb/>
source.<lb/>
This reporter believes in this<lb/>
system. I will at no time "give<lb/>
away" the source of anything I<lb/>
ever write in this or any other<lb/>
publication. I recently had the<lb/>
pleasure of doing a story which<lb/>
shall, for the purposes of this<lb/>
letter, remain unnamed.<lb/>
I cannot recall hearing the<lb/>
words "no comment" so often<lb/>
in my life. Everywhere I turned.<lb/>
-r?G69crtbe fcfeoIlleW<lb/>
the people who had the informa-<lb/>
tion I needed to have in order to<lb/>
write a fair, unbiased news<lb/>
story. I felt as though I was<lb/>
running down the football field,<lb/>
and everywhere I turned, some-<lb/>
one placed a tackling dummy in<lb/>
front of me.<lb/>
Early in the 1960s. Mike<lb/>
Wallace of CBS, (now famous<lb/>
for "60 Minutes") had a news<lb/>
show in which he told the<lb/>
viewers, "Please remember<lb/>
that the opinions that are aired<lb/>
and the questions that are asked<lb/>
refled in no way the personal<lb/>
opinions of the reporter, but is<lb/>
merely his way of getting the<lb/>
story<lb/>
only ask the questions that I feer<lb/>
are pertinent to the subject<lb/>
matter at hand, and it the<lb/>
person being interviewed doe<lb/>
not want to answer the question;<lb/>
he can say no comment, or,<lb/>
he can say. "well, off the record<lb/>
. .  That way. he will not be<lb/>
quoted, and he will remain<lb/>
anonymous.<lb/>
What I am talking about<lb/>
basically is 'cooperation. We<lb/>
exist to serve the public, but we<lb/>
can't serve the public unless the<lb/>
public lets us.<lb/>
Marc Barnes<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Crosswinds<lb/>
Greenville summer weather smites<lb/>
the poor citizens in a meteorlogical<lb/>
analogue to the story of Job<lb/>
By JIM BARNES<lb/>
Do you think much about the weather? I didn't used to<lb/>
until I moved to Greenville. But I do now. I'm not sure why,<lb/>
unless it's because weather in this area, especially summer,<lb/>
smites the poor dtizen in a meteorlogical analogue to the story of<lb/>
Job.<lb/>
I single out summer weather in Greenville because I am about<lb/>
to survive my third dose of it, and I feel a measure of pride in that.<lb/>
Some people are sun bunnies and some people are pdar bears;<lb/>
some like it hot, some cold. I am definitely a polar bear. Mention<lb/>
the Sahara Desert to me and I sweat.<lb/>
A new faculty member some years ago, upon living one<lb/>
summer in Greenville, dedded to find out why the months of May<lb/>
through August (and sometimes September) were so oppressively<lb/>
hot and humid. His research showed, as I recall, that Greenville is<lb/>
in a trough between two major wind patterns which haven't<lb/>
comingled in a millenium a so. Thus, Greenville sits and bakes<lb/>
each summer between these two breeze systems.<lb/>
This may or may not be an accurate description of why<lb/>
Greenville's air is so stale and muggy and hot, but I'd like to think<lb/>
that there is some reason, some justification fa t- ee!her.<lb/>
Prior to the advent of nudear fall-out, humans tew ttle effed<lb/>
on the weather. Well, aside from sabotaging wort jamesr with<lb/>
nudear indiscretions, we still more or less complain about the<lb/>
weather while doing little in the positive sense of Use word. And<lb/>
we complain with good reason - weather has, in times past,<lb/>
played a significant role in world history.<lb/>
Russian winters, fa example, are notoriously adverse to<lb/>
megalomaniacs who wish to add Siberia to their holdings.<lb/>
Napoiean found out the hard way what winter can do to an army<lb/>
without snow mobiles and sled dogs. Hitler also found, thank<lb/>
God, that the combination of a Russian winter and the stalwart<lb/>
nature of the defenders were more than the Third Reich could<lb/>
handle.<lb/>
But weather has been impatant in times other than war.<lb/>
Floods and drought have, in sane cases, influenced the<lb/>
migrations of entire races of people. There are still nonadic tribes<lb/>
in the Middle East; these folks keep on the move, with the next<lb/>
oasis in view.<lb/>
We are learning rrwre about the weahter, if not how to control<lb/>
it. Apparently, humankind has always tried to propitiate the<lb/>
weather through observance of ritual. Where once priest-kings<lb/>
gestured with sticks, we now at glued to a radar weather set on<lb/>
the 150 mile scan.<lb/>
The real difference is slight: each sits waiting to see what the<lb/>
weather will be - one has a stick, the other a radar screen<lb/>
In The New Golden Bough, Gastor's abridgement of Fraser s<lb/>
dassic on the rituals of dvilization, the reader finds many various<lb/>
rituals concerning the weather. Frogs and toads like rain, so the<lb/>
Aymara Indians of Peru and Bolivia make images of frogs and<lb/>
place them on a hill to induce rain. The beat goes on: my father<lb/>
always says that it will rain if he washes his car<lb/>
People have banged drums, scraped sticks together, run nude<lb/>
through villages, sung, danced, and burned incense to draw rain.<lb/>
In the Punjab, drought is thought to be averted by spilling "a pot<lb/>
of filth on the threshold of a notorious old shrew, in ader that the<lb/>
fluent stream of foul language in which she vents her feelings may<lb/>
accelerate the lingering rain<lb/>
Sometimes, the weather charms and rituals don't wak at all<lb/>
When this happens to the Feloupes of Senegambia, they fling<lb/>
j1the oround' ?? them- and drag them through<lb/>
the fields until it rains.<lb/>
So it looks as though we have to put up with the weather fa<lb/>
now, just like all a our faebears had to do. We still try thouoh<lb/>
we Still want to have a say in things Bach in the 1 gee's. hen<lb/>
petrodollars were a relative novelty, the rich people oYd!?<lb/>
Ku,wa,t toyed with the idea a putting ? danTover the.<lb/>
country so as to provide air-conoitiating fa one and all i ZH<lb/>
why they didn't follow through with the tut Tt<lb/>
interesting to contemplate. ??, out it ?es<lb/>
As I draw this to a dose, a slight breeze oominG throunh mv<lb/>
window teases me into beli?winn ?h?. - oam,n0 through my<lb/>
over but 5 daVtlLv t ?JT? " 8Umrner ln GrwwiMt is<lb/>
ww, out, aon t buy it. By the way, if you ?? ? v<lb/>
making hisway down Fifth StreetZLirJTJH<lb/>
?dsnowshoaa.wav? wuh? d0n WW<lb/>
-mwvioea, wave. Who knows - it might snow<lb/>
<pb facs="00057139_0005"/><lb/>
5Saplembai 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
Greek Forum<lb/>
NEW BEGINNINGS<lb/>
bVRlCKIGLlARMlS<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The GreeKForumtaJ.es time<lb/>
? th.s week to answer <lb/>
??ons that ECU students<lb/>
may out fraternities and<lb/>
3ororltles Tne foii?wng material<lb/>
's taken from Volume 1, Number<lb/>
o Lfestyie. a magazine<lb/>
wh.ch deals with Greek Life.<lb/>
"HT CAN I EXPECT FROM<lb/>
GREEK LIFE- You cap expect<lb/>
the satisfaction of be.ng a<lb/>
productive and integral part of a<lb/>
fellowship designed to enhance<lb/>
the college exper.ence.<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP IS GREAT BUT<lb/>
WHAT ABOUT MY INDIVID-<lb/>
UALITY- Greeks do not want<lb/>
anyone to sacrifice his or her<lb/>
own individuality. Rather, they<lb/>
wish to strengthen their system<lb/>
through the combination of<lb/>
various types of personalities.<lb/>
Being yourself is an important<lb/>
part of bang a Greek.<lb/>
ATER PLEDGING A FRA-<lb/>
? 'v OR SORORITY<lb/>
Hi MUCH OF MY TIME<lb/>
MUST I DONATE TO IT?<lb/>
Requirements for membership<lb/>
vary from house to house.<lb/>
However, each Greek organ-<lb/>
ization will request its members<lb/>
and pledges to spend enough<lb/>
"??e at the house necessary to<lb/>
formulate friendships. This time<lb/>
is certainly minimal when com-<lb/>
pared to the many benefits it<lb/>
renders.<lb/>
DO FRATERNITIES AND SO-<lb/>
RORITIES LIMIT THEIR AC-<lb/>
TIVITIES TO SOCIAL GA-<lb/>
THBRINGS- No. Greek mem-<lb/>
bers participate in student go-<lb/>
vernment, honorary organiza-<lb/>
tions, scholastic clubs, athletics,<lb/>
religious organizations, and<lb/>
other extra curricular activities.<lb/>
In fact. Greek organizations<lb/>
compete among themselves for<lb/>
high academic and excellanoe in<lb/>
sporting events.<lb/>
DO GREEKS RESTRICT THEIR<lb/>
FRIENDSHIPS TO THEIR<lb/>
OWN RESPECTIVE HOUSES<lb/>
OR DO THEY GAIN COMPAN-<lb/>
IONS IN OTHER ORGANIZA-<lb/>
TIONS AS WELL? When you<lb/>
pledge a fraternity or soroity,<lb/>
you become a member of the<lb/>
entire Greek system. Conse-<lb/>
quently, you are encouragement<lb/>
build friendships in houses<lb/>
other than you own through<lb/>
friendly competitions and social<lb/>
activities.<lb/>
a<lb/>
ABOUT FRATERNITIES:<lb/>
HOW DOES MEN'S RUSH<lb/>
OPERA TE? Rush is initiated by<lb/>
special invitational parties host-<lb/>
ed by individual fraternities<lb/>
during the spring and summer.<lb/>
Then the fraternities oombine<lb/>
efforts in the fall to participate<lb/>
in an open rush organized by the<lb/>
University's Interfraternity<lb/>
Council.<lb/>
WHAT IF I'M NOT INVITED<lb/>
TO ANY RUSH PARTIES DUR-<lb/>
ING THE SUMMER? Do not<lb/>
worry. It is impossible for a<lb/>
fraternity to invite every rushee<lb/>
to the pre-fall parties. That is<lb/>
why open fall rush is so<lb/>
important - it involves every<lb/>
fraternity and every interested<lb/>
rushee.<lb/>
 WAS OFFERED A BID TO<lb/>
PLEDGE A FRATERNITY<lb/>
DURING THIS SUMMER.<lb/>
SHOULD I TAKE IT OR WAIT<lb/>
TO GO THOUGH OPEN RUSH<lb/>
IN THE FALL? That decision<lb/>
must be yours - just make sure<lb/>
it's the right decision. There is<lb/>
no need to make a hasty cboioe,<lb/>
and you may want to wait until<lb/>
fall in order to visit all the<lb/>
houses. On the other hand, you<lb/>
may be sure that the fraternity<lb/>
extending the invitation is<lb/>
where you seek affiliation. It's<lb/>
up to you!<lb/>
HOW IS FALL RUSH STRUC-<lb/>
TURED- Open fall rush con-<lb/>
sists of three nights of free<lb/>
visitation to all the campus<lb/>
fraternities. It is initiated by an<lb/>
informative and instructional<lb/>
convocation on the first night.<lb/>
are recommendations from<lb/>
A RE RECOM M END A TIONS<lb/>
FROM ALUMNI HELPFUL IN<lb/>
RUSHING A FRATERNITY?<lb/>
Although recommendations are<lb/>
by no means a decisive factor,<lb/>
they can serve as a helpful<lb/>
introduction for you into a<lb/>
particular fraternity house.<lb/>
I'VE BEEN TOLD NOT TO<lb/>
PLEDGE A SMALL FRATER-<lb/>
NITY. ISTHISGOOD ADVICE?<lb/>
It is true that a small fraternity<lb/>
may suffer some minor handi-<lb/>
caps, but it may also present the<lb/>
following advantages: a closer<lb/>
brotherhood, the opportunity to<lb/>
observe the house expand, and<lb/>
the increased emphasis on<lb/>
individual initiative. In a small<lb/>
fraternity, you may experience<lb/>
the rewards in seeing you r<lb/>
efforts pay off as your house<lb/>
membership grows.<lb/>
HOW MUCH MONEY IS<lb/>
NEEDED TO BE A FRATERNI-<lb/>
TY MAN- IS IT EXPENSIVE?<lb/>
Finance is usually a matter<lb/>
worked out within each indivi-<lb/>
dual organization. Roughly, fra-<lb/>
ternity life is twenty dollars<lb/>
more monthly than dorm life.<lb/>
But it must be remembered that<lb/>
dorm life doesn' t offer the social<lb/>
activities of its Greek counter-<lb/>
part.<lb/>
ABOUT SORORITIES:<lb/>
PLEASE EXPLAIN THE ACTI-<lb/>
VITIES OF SORORITY RUSH<lb/>
WEEK - WHAT DO WE<lb/>
REALLY DO? You'll find these<lb/>
exciting days a part of the week:<lb/>
Informal parties: September 6<lb/>
and 7. On these nights each<lb/>
sorority will entertain you with a<lb/>
particualr theme. You will visit<lb/>
four of the eight sorority houses<lb/>
on the first night and four of the<lb/>
houses on the seoond night.<lb/>
Open house: September 11 and<lb/>
12. On these two nights, you will<lb/>
be given a tour of the sorority<lb/>
houses and more than likely will<lb/>
be informed of the finances from<lb/>
each house. On these two nights<lb/>
you will visit three houses on the<lb/>
first night and three houses on<lb/>
the second night.<lb/>
Skit Night: September 14. This<lb/>
part of rush is perhaps the most<lb/>
fun of Rush. Since the parties<lb/>
are a little longer, you and the<lb/>
members of the sorority are<lb/>
given a mutual chance to talk<lb/>
deeper about what a soroity<lb/>
means. During the party, you<lb/>
will be entertained with a<lb/>
decorative skit at each house.<lb/>
Preferential Night: September<lb/>
15. This final night is a very<lb/>
meaningful time, where the<lb/>
rushee can go back to only three<lb/>
houses. Songs, candlelight and<lb/>
talks about sisterhood are what<lb/>
you'll probably find at these<lb/>
parties. This evening is truly<lb/>
beautiful and sacred.<lb/>
HOW DOES SORORITY LIFE<lb/>
CONTRIBUTE TO INVOLVE-<lb/>
MENT ON CAMPUS? By<lb/>
becoming a pledge in an organ-<lb/>
ization which is dedicated to<lb/>
excellence, you will be enoour-<lb/>
aged to develop scholastically,<lb/>
emotionally, physically, and<lb/>
often spiritually. A sorority<lb/>
therefore provides the incentive<lb/>
and the means by which you<lb/>
may achieve that growth. You<lb/>
will share with your sisters the<lb/>
true rewards of campus involve-<lb/>
ment and leadership.<lb/>
WAHT IS "PANHELLENIC"<lb/>
ANYWAY? Panhellenic is a<lb/>
Greek word which means bring-<lb/>
ipg together of the Greek<lb/>
system. Composed of all the<lb/>
sororities on campus, it works to<lb/>
develop and maintain a strong<lb/>
sorority system on campus.<lb/>
Officers and delegates are<lb/>
elected from each house, and<lb/>
these girls have a great time,<lb/>
serving the oommunity, promo-<lb/>
ting scholarships and most of<lb/>
all, getting ready for you to be<lb/>
weloomed to Rush ' 78.<lb/>
DOES SORORITY AND FRAT-<lb/>
ERNITY LIFE INTERFERE<lb/>
WITH SCHOOL? Sororities and<lb/>
fraternities encourage each of<lb/>
their member in their studies<lb/>
through study halls and tutorial<lb/>
programs while competing with<lb/>
other organizations as well as<lb/>
themselves to uphold their high<lb/>
academic standards.<lb/>
?<lb/>
J<lb/>
Deepen your fife through patae and celebration.<lb/>
An open house house is more than yA shaking<lb/>
hands. Sponsored by: Baptist Student Union,<lb/>
511 E. I Oth Street, behind ECU Library.<lb/>
Share the beginning of a new yean<lb/>
meetnew people, eat outdoor supper. (75)<lb/>
A place where social, spiritual and<lb/>
ethical growth are integrated.<lb/>
Ask me about<lb/>
Life Insurance<lb/>
for Students<lb/>
and<lb/>
Young Adults<lb/>
STA1I UIM<lb/>
INtUIANCI<lb/>
The earlier you start it. the<lb/>
lower the premiums And<lb/>
the sooner cash values begin<lb/>
to build for emergencies or<lb/>
business opportunities later<lb/>
on Call me for details<lb/>
State Farm Life Insurance Company<lb/>
??'?oomington Illinois<lb/>
bill McDonald<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
East loth Street<lb/>
Phone 752-66SO<lb/>
l<lb/>
EPISCOPAL c<lb/>
WORSHIP SERVICES<lb/>
Holy Commumon each Wed. at 5:30 p.m. at<lb/>
St Paul's Episcopal Church,<lb/>
comer of 4th and Holly St<lb/>
 Supper at 6:30<lb/>
 Bible Study at 7:30<lb/>
Worship, supper and programs<lb/>
open to ALL students and faculty<lb/>
Episcopal Campus Ministry Office b located at<lb/>
501 E5th St in the Methodist Student Center,<lb/>
the Revaand Bill Hadden, Jr chaplain. Phone 758-2030<lb/>
SCHLITZ and SCHLITZ LIGHT<lb/>
NATURAL PILSNER BEER<lb/>
PICK-EM-UP-CAN-CONTEST<lb/>
Dates ? August 28,1978 to November 21,1978<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057139_0006"/><lb/>
PagaS FOUNTAINHEAD 5 September 1978<lb/>
It's Alive 2: better dead<lb/>
"BURT REYNOLDS AND Sally<lb/>
Field in a scene from<lb/>
'? Hooper "The film's ending<lb/>
is a scene involving about a<lb/>
dozen assorted car wrecks and<lb/>
exploding buildings, climaxing<lb/>
with Reynolds and co-star Jan<lb/>
Michael Vincent piloting a rock-<lb/>
et-powered Pontiac Firebird<lb/>
Trans-Am across a deep gorge,<lb/>
Evel Kneivel style . . . really<lb/>
exciting stuff<lb/>
Baby lives again: too bad<lb/>
By DAVID WHITSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
You know, sometimes I'd<lb/>
rather see a kinda crummy<lb/>
movie than a really good one -<lb/>
you know what I mean?<lb/>
Like when you just feel like<lb/>
getting stoned and goin' out to<lb/>
laugh at something.<lb/>
Well, me a Dave just sorta<lb/>
felt like that, so we went out to<lb/>
laugh at the It's Alive 2 baby,<lb/>
("only now there's three").<lb/>
The one with three claws<lb/>
that rips through little girl's<lb/>
birthday cakes and people's<lb/>
faces and all kinds of stuff. But<lb/>
I'm getting ahead of myself.<lb/>
Movie starts with these<lb/>
decent middle-calss lookin'<lb/>
people havin' a party. Nothin'<lb/>
wild, just your average "Subur-<lb/>
ban Sunday" afternoon type of<lb/>
thing.<lb/>
There's this guy who hangs<lb/>
around after everybody else<lb/>
leaves- real spooky like, 'cause<lb/>
nobody knows who he is or what<lb/>
he represents or anything.<lb/>
Mysterious dude.<lb/>
Says he wants to tell the<lb/>
suburban couple that some<lb/>
government type guys want to<lb/>
get their baby 'cause it's<lb/>
special.<lb/>
Then he tells 'em how it's<lb/>
special. Howit'sall hideous and<lb/>
ugly and will rip out people's<lb/>
throats and stuff - but there I go<lb/>
again.<lb/>
Okay, so the father wants to<lb/>
kill the thing, and pronto. But<lb/>
the mother lady thinks he's just<lb/>
being kinda rash, you know, so<lb/>
they don't. Kill it, that is.<lb/>
Tension mounts. Telephones<lb/>
ring a lot. When they get to the<lb/>
hospital - get this - the WHOLE<lb/>
PLACE is full of a bunch of<lb/>
bondage lookin' oops.<lb/>
Helmets, big sticks, hand-<lb/>
Hooper: Reynolds'latest<lb/>
ByJOHNWEYLER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In Burt Reynolds new flick<lb/>
?Hooper he plays Sonny<lb/>
Hooper, billed as "the greatest<lb/>
stuntman alive<lb/>
This film is about the<lb/>
dangerous lives of professional<lb/>
movie stuntmen. the only<lb/>
actors who. when told to  break<lb/>
a leg before their performance<lb/>
often do.<lb/>
The film opens with<lb/>
Reynolds driving a motorcycle,<lb/>
at high speed, under a moving<lb/>
truck and into a car. upon which<lb/>
he ?hps off the cycle backwards<lb/>
and aashiands on his ass.<lb/>
It's ending is a scene<lb/>
involving about a dozen assort-<lb/>
ed car wrecks and exploding<lb/>
buildings, climaxing with Rey-<lb/>
nolds and co-star Jan-Michael<lb/>
Vincent piloting a rocket-power -<lb/>
ed Pontiac Firebird Trans-Am<lb/>
across a deep gorge. Evel<lb/>
Kneivel style.<lb/>
In between, we get to see<lb/>
some really exating stuff hap-<lb/>
pen.<lb/>
Such as: Reynolds falling<lb/>
from a very high place - on<lb/>
tightrope while holding a small<lb/>
dog. Reynolds driving a truck<lb/>
backward down a busy highway.<lb/>
Jan-Michael Vincent jumping a<lb/>
plane, waiting a hell of long<lb/>
time before opening his para-<lb/>
?<lb/>
.??<lb/>
4m<lb/>
v<lb/>
?y.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
'? f<lb/>
 ft<lb/>
chute, then getting rid of the<lb/>
chute; Reynolds and Vincent<lb/>
driving a car through huge<lb/>
flames. Vincent down the side of<lb/>
a 20-story building using a thin<lb/>
rope, Reynolds and Vincent and<lb/>
several others in multitude of<lb/>
chariotstagecoach<lb/>
racescrashes in a very violent<lb/>
barroom brawl with a S.W.A.T.<lb/>
team, and Reynolds leaping,<lb/>
sans parachute, from a helicopt-<lb/>
er 232 feet up.<lb/>
world's best but also knows he's<lb/>
getting old and that the final,<lb/>
fatal crackup could happen at<lb/>
any time.<lb/>
Vincent, is the young, enth-<lb/>
usiastic stuntman who'll some-<lb/>
day take Reynold's palce (stunt-<lb/>
work has a high employee<lb/>
turnover rate).<lb/>
Brian Keith plays an old<lb/>
retired stunter, the man who<lb/>
Reynolds replaced years ago.<lb/>
"This film is about the dangerous<lb/>
lives of movie stuntmen, the only<lb/>
actors who, when told to 'break a<lb/>
leg'before performing, often do.<lb/>
99<lb/>
This feat is supposed to be<lb/>
commemorated in the Guiness<lb/>
Book of World Records.<lb/>
Directed by Hal Needham,<lb/>
who at one time was himself the<lb/>
highest paid stuntman in the<lb/>
business, this movie certainly<lb/>
isn't lacking in thrills.<lb/>
The plot follows the making<lb/>
of what appears to be a highly<lb/>
absurd spy flick, focusing on the<lb/>
stuntwork and the men and<lb/>
women who perform.<lb/>
Reynolds is the stuntman<lb/>
supreme, who knows he's the<lb/>
and the father of Reynold's<lb/>
girlfriend, Sally Field. (Never<lb/>
noticed she had legs like than on<lb/>
The Flying Nun)<lb/>
The acting, storyline direc-<lb/>
tion, dialogue, etc are just<lb/>
adequate, no great shakes, but<lb/>
then they don't have to be.<lb/>
The stunts are important<lb/>
here, and they are pretty great.<lb/>
The question is who did<lb/>
them?<lb/>
Did Burt Reynolds and Jan-<lb/>
Michael Vincent really do all<lb/>
those death-defying deeds?<lb/>
V<lb/>
Vincent, though he's young,<lb/>
muscular, and supposedly does<lb/>
his own stunt surfing in the<lb/>
current Big Wednesday pro-<lb/>
bably had a stunt double here.<lb/>
Reynolds - maybe. Reynolds<lb/>
was in fact a real stuntman in<lb/>
the early days of his career.<lb/>
But now that he's a big<lb/>
superstar, with so much to lose,<lb/>
would he still risk his life the<lb/>
way he had to as a struggling<lb/>
unknown years ago?<lb/>
If not, the following type<lb/>
scenes must have occurred. On<lb/>
screen Adam ("Batman")<lb/>
West, as himself, as the spy<lb/>
flick's star, gets ready to say,<lb/>
jump off a rooftop onto an<lb/>
overhanging rope.<lb/>
He makes like he's about to<lb/>
jump when "Cut yells the<lb/>
director, played by Robert<lb/>
Klein. Reynolds, as Hooper the<lb/>
stuntman comes running up and<lb/>
takes Wests place on the<lb/>
"rooftop. He makes like he's<lb/>
about to jump, when "Cut<lb/>
yells the real director, Hal<lb/>
Needham.<lb/>
Still another person runs up<lb/>
and takes Reynolds' palce, the<lb/>
" stuntman's" stuntman, who<lb/>
finally leaps and gets the thing<lb/>
over with. Filming "Hooper"<lb/>
must have been awfully confus-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
"Hooper" is a movie worth<lb/>
seeing just for the stunts and<lb/>
excitiment and thrills. One just<lb/>
wonders how real the thrills<lb/>
were.<lb/>
'angry'<lb/>
Harlan Ellison:<lb/>
science fiction writer<lb/>
By DARREN BERGSTEIN<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
This review appears in two parts. - Ed.<lb/>
The coinage of the two words 'science fiction'<lb/>
today are as akin to Harlan Ellison as the word<lb/>
pyromania is to Smokie the Bear. Harlan Ellison,<lb/>
one of the most exciting and easily on of the<lb/>
finest writers of modern speculative fiction, is<lb/>
separating himself from the passive sf world and<lb/>
graduating into the finer things in life. Why?<lb/>
Harlan burst (or to be more exact, crept) into<lb/>
the genre with a story entitled "Glowworm"<lb/>
which, according to the late James Blish, could<lb/>
be classified as the worst story written in the<lb/>
history of the medium.<lb/>
As with every starting writer, he built a name<lb/>
for himself with agonizing slowness, selling to<lb/>
every possible market, from The Magazine of<lb/>
Fantasy and Science Fiction to Knight.<lb/>
Harlan bears the exemption of being one of<lb/>
the few writers to establish himself without the<lb/>
aid of novels. His stunning short stories, packed<lb/>
with grim revelation and morbid yet believable<lb/>
characters, have led him to be placed on quite a<lb/>
high pedestal.<lb/>
And that is what he does not want.<lb/>
Harlan Ellison is an angry man. His anger<lb/>
forced him to resign from the Science Fiction<lb/>
Writers of America; led him to breaking the sf<lb/>
authors' taboo by writing screenplays for novels<lb/>
and television; intensified so much for him to<lb/>
lead publishers of his books to drop the<lb/>
abbreviation " sf" or the words science fiction.<lb/>
All of this raises some interesting questions.<lb/>
Science fiction is actually rising beyond the<lb/>
tips of the mountains. It has boomed in sales,<lb/>
increased circulation the world over and given<lb/>
birth to new writers of amazing talents such as<lb/>
John Varley, Vonda N. Mclntyre, Greg Benford,<lb/>
cuffs, black leather Heavy trip.<lb/>
The mother, well, she gets<lb/>
kinda bent, what with all the big<lb/>
deal about her kid. Startes<lb/>
screamin' how they're not<lb/>
gonna take her kid. So they<lb/>
shoot her up with big needles<lb/>
Then - well, to make a long<lb/>
story short - the father and the<lb/>
mysterious dude (who knows<lb/>
what's really gan' on) hijack the<lb/>
whole truck and run away<lb/>
They go to this place whe'e<lb/>
the government already has two<lb/>
"It" babies in cages. Ruggec<lb/>
lookin' types. ST posed to be a<lb/>
new breed that can resist<lb/>
pollution.<lb/>
Finally the place erupts witri<lb/>
"It" - babiesattackm people in<lb/>
bed and in the swimmin' pool a<lb/>
stuff. "It" - babies never<lb/>
forget or forgive. So the<lb/>
take some pistols and blow 'err<lb/>
away.<lb/>
P.J. Plauger, and many others.<lb/>
In 1976 over 890 books were published, more<lb/>
than three quarters of them new books.<lb/>
Much more had happened, but we are<lb/>
straying off the subject. This immeasurable boom<lb/>
hasnot thrown Harlan Ellison into turmoil. What<lb/>
has is the obscure treatment that sf gets from the<lb/>
general public.<lb/>
?FRITZ LEI BER GREATEST OF USALL"<lb/>
Even today, payment is relatively low.<lb/>
Analog, the most prolific of the sf magazines, still<lb/>
pays from three cents to five cents a word,<lb/>
slightly more for novelettes. Novels submitted to<lb/>
book oompaniesare not given more man a $1.000<lb/>
advance, unless exceptionally good. Harlan, in<lb/>
his resignation speech to SFWA, cites an<lb/>
example:<lb/>
" Fritz Leiber is the greatest of us all. Not one<lb/>
of us, there is not one of us who hasn't learned<lb/>
from that man. When he wants to work, he must<lb/>
prop histypewriter on a chair and sit on the edge<lb/>
ofhisbed<lb/>
Tnia writer couldn't agree with him more.<lb/>
Here are masterpieces, a sheer joy to read and<lb/>
suitable enough to store on any classic shelf in<lb/>
any library, and instead they are shoved to the<lb/>
back; Harold Robbins' hopelessly allegorical<lb/>
pieces put gloriously in the front. Total injustice.<lb/>
" IT BABIES NEVER forget.<lb/>
 or forgive. So they take some<lb/>
pistols and blow em away.<lb/>
aiS?<lb/>
Hedgepeth's Hog Book<lb/>
'Loose mixture of fact and fancy'with<lb/>
poetry and page after page of pigs<lb/>
I<lb/>
ByJOHNWEYLER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In last Thursday's edition of<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD the first in-<lb/>
stallment of a review of William<lb/>
Hedgepeth's "The Hog Book"<lb/>
appeared in the Trends section.<lb/>
Below is the conclusion of the<lb/>
review.<lb/>
We're seated in the dining<lb/>
room<lb/>
Enjoying a buffet<lb/>
Of bacon, ham and<lb/>
sausage that<lb/>
The cook prepared today;<lb/>
And the chitterlings and<lb/>
spare ribs<lb/>
Plus pork chops, spam and<lb/>
brain<lb/>
I can' t imagine why my hog<lb/>
Has chosen to refrain<lb/>
Above is an example of The<lb/>
Hog Book's porcine poetry. Au-<lb/>
thor William Hedgepeth's loose<lb/>
mixture of fact and fancy would<lb/>
rock the typical pork merchant.<lb/>
Below is another example:<lb/>
a very rare type of wild<lb/>
hog said to exist on a few islands<lb/>
in the Caribbean is reputed to<lb/>
be extremely retiring, shy and<lb/>
furtive in the presence of other<lb/>
creatures on account of his<lb/>
having developed at some point<lb/>
in the obscure past, pubic hair.<lb/>
Natives allege that they have<lb/>
caught only the most fleeting<lb/>
sight of these hogs dashing<lb/>
shamefacedly from tree to tree,<lb/>
always seeking the proper co-<lb/>
vering and oftentime carrying<lb/>
bits of bush or leafy vines<lb/>
trailing in their mouths in a vain<lb/>
effort to camouflage their hir-<lb/>
sute gentilia<lb/>
Is Hedgepeth putting us on<lb/>
or what? At times he appears to<lb/>
be a serious student of the pig, a<lb/>
straight-faced swine scholar at-<lb/>
tempting to uncover such mys-<lb/>
teries as why the little piggy ran<lb/>
woo woo woo all the way home<lb/>
and why you can't make a silk<lb/>
purse from a sow's ear.<lb/>
His notes section lists such<lb/>
respectable sources as the Lar-<lb/>
cusse Encyclopedia of Animal<lb/>
Life, but at the same time lists<lb/>
as a source the works of Joseph<lb/>
Farqua who supposedly is an<lb/>
authority on everything except<lb/>
what falls within the range of<lb/>
BER-CROG as a result of being<lb/>
shipwrecked during all of WWII<lb/>
with an incomplete set of the<lb/>
Encyclopaedia Britannioa. Is<lb/>
Hedgepeth having fun with us?<lb/>
Who the hell is he anyhow?<lb/>
A brief bio on the book cover<lb/>
discloses nothing but his place<lb/>
of residence (Georgia) and some<lb/>
of his other writings. A small<lb/>
photo accompanying the bio<lb/>
shows a shovel-weilding bear-<lb/>
ded man wearing an eyepatch.<lb/>
By his side is what appears<lb/>
to be a common porker which he<lb/>
But the book is filled with<lb/>
page after page of scientific<lb/>
studies and case histories prov-<lb/>
ing the remarkable intelligence<lb/>
of pigs. (They're much smarter<lb/>
than dogs and horses). Maybe<lb/>
so, you say, but they still can't<lb/>
write books. So? The pig hired<lb/>
someone to type it fa him!<lb/>
I'll leave you with this<lb/>
Some Girls: 'sex and<lb/>
sex and sex and sex'<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
Don't be misled by the hit single "Miss You" or the not quite a hit "Faraway<lb/>
Eyes off Some Grs; the RoJling Stones are alive and fairly well in 1978. despite the<lb/>
oombined attacks of disco, age, and Keith Richards' heroin bust in Toronto. Although<lb/>
the title "the world's greatest rock and roll band" isno longer fully deserved, they still<lb/>
have the potential to be so once again.<lb/>
Mick Jagger hasn't sounded so good since ?x7e on Main Street, and the whole<lb/>
band sounds as if they're fighting fa the championship. Richards' guitar wak is<lb/>
quintessential Stones, while Charlie Wattsand Bill Wyman make up the most versatile<lb/>
and exciting rhythm section in rock.<lb/>
Side one opens with " M iss You a pseudo-disco offering which once again put the<lb/>
Stones at the top of the singles charts. It's a pleasant change of pace from the usual<lb/>
sturm und drang. Most remarkable is the excellent harp wak of Sugar Blue, a New<lb/>
Yak musician who the Stones found playing on a street oaner. His harmonica<lb/>
blends well with Mel Collins' sax toexpressthe bitter loneliness a the singer. Jagger<lb/>
is happy playing the role of a lonely man with a broken heart, "walkin' in Central Park<lb/>
. . .people think I'm aaaaa-zy<lb/>
"When the Whip Comes Down is textbook Stones with a pinch oiSiM. Watts<lb/>
drumming stands out on this track, along with Richards' and Ron Woods' guitar wak<lb/>
The band has managed to breathe new life into the 60"s soul hit "Imagination,<lb/>
rearranging it into a gentle fusion ot rock and reggae.<lb/>
The title track is one of the album's best songs, a rocking parody of women, and<lb/>
Sugar Blue's harp throws the song back 20 years to the M uddy Waters brand a blues<lb/>
which evolved into rock. This song capsulizes two major Stones periods, the early<lb/>
PIGS'EARS<lb/>
anti-anticlimax<lb/>
is either feeding with the shovel? ?  ???? blues aiented period and the late BO'S acid period<lb/>
a facing to kiss the shovel. Is<lb/>
the book's autha this weird<lb/>
one-eyed stranger a could<lb/>
William Hedgepeth actually be<lb/>
the pig?<lb/>
Did he pen this paean to<lb/>
pigdon in ader to surrepitious-<lb/>
ly strike back against auei<lb/>
humanity symbolized by a bru-<lb/>
tal man who faces a helpless<lb/>
animal into bizarre sexual acts<lb/>
with gardening instruments?<lb/>
Is the man's eyepatch a<lb/>
symbol of mankind's inability<lb/>
to see the true potential of the<lb/>
pig? Was the photo only to<lb/>
sneakily show the true autha<lb/>
and to point out the pigs eternal<lb/>
predicament?<lb/>
Was the Hog Book written<lb/>
by a hog?<lb/>
These are thoughts that<lb/>
demand deeper delving into.<lb/>
Fa who else would know as<lb/>
much about pigs as a pig? Who<lb/>
else would write a book called<lb/>
the Hog Book but a hog? That's<lb/>
absurd, you say. Pigs can't<lb/>
write books: their doven hooves<lb/>
canThddapendl!<lb/>
One Saturday night<lb/>
to make an event<lb/>
I bought pigs' ears<lb/>
at the Colonial Store.<lb/>
It would be something<lb/>
to talk about I knew<lb/>
as I asked the Negro woman<lb/>
at the meat counter what<lb/>
I should do with them.<lb/>
Boil them for an hour.<lb/>
Which made the leathery<lb/>
cartilage pink and soft<lb/>
as any young thing's ear<lb/>
on my cannibal plate like<lb/>
a last-minute blind date<lb/>
and deaf.<lb/>
I really had<lb/>
rather eat a silk purse.<lb/>
-Coieman Barks<lb/>
"Faraway Eyes the not quite a hit mentioned in the first paragraph opens ade<lb/>
two. It is a delightful parody ot American radio evangelists and country music in<lb/>
general. Jagger's ridiculously drawled speech is pure camp.<lb/>
The Stones oonfroit the paradox of being both rock and roll stars (i e soaai<lb/>
misfits, angry young men,) and of "being respected in society" in "Respectable<lb/>
Unfortunately, they merely oonfrott the paradox and never answer it The irony of<lb/>
"discussing heroin with the president yes there's a problem sir, but it can be bent "<lb/>
when Keith Richards is a recently refamed addict can either be taken as hypoaitical<lb/>
a as antiestaoJishment. They give us no due as to how it was meant to be taken<lb/>
Richards' "Befae They Make Me Run on which he sings lead It the anonest<lb/>
rSrKZS? 2?t!2- bthte????tofreedom, and he7nows<lb/>
it. Well it s another bust, another frame, I'm gonna walk befae they make me<lb/>
run He feels as if he has already paid any price due fa his heroin a2i (Z<lb/>
gonna find my way to Heaven 'oca I've done my time in Hell " His naaa?Z? Z<lb/>
startling on first hearing, but he sings his lyrice with mae 2mwEi?Zl<lb/>
singers, Jagger induced. This is easily the beat out on the albunT<lb/>
 ?T??"? a beilad faintly reminiscent of "Wild<lb/>
atonement fa his faults. y' I1' 0,r,? ?? if in<lb/>
The album doaas with "Shattered almost a prtf eat soig about Na? Ynrk n?<lb/>
Thadaoadancaa-atxandaaxandsexandsex" endothaL Qty'<lb/>
th. dty and the nger in "tattara Jagger delivar. bisT . m<lb/>
maemuatcaj. He<lb/>
Many ttwtk$ to Doubledmy and<lb/>
CoDolphin Books for the re-<lb/>
view copy of "The Hog Book)<lb/>
????? JWr.iw.hi8yoalC<lb/>
spoken, half sung manner, similar to Lou Read, though a great deal<lb/>
ThisisraQeatSton?album,butitisagood. HopafiJly,trwovTsDSJ<lb/>
the 3tones might still be able to rmain th tii L T " ?w,De  aentaweL<lb/>
Record Bar " " tm they ?"? (??? courfeey <lb/>
"??'?&amp;'?'<lb/>
?aaai<lb/>
<pb facs="00057139_0007"/><lb/>
5 Saptembr 1978 FOUWTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
semi<lb/>
By SUSAN CHESTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
? "wTas?r r at aj F,e ta,<lb/>
?on :s free and thPn,T "  at 8:15 Pm-<lb/>
? this year T Car?lina ? Music<lb/>
?JThpHPnVate P,an? teacher ???s most<lb/>
. ,rrti 19, r00 p,an?whe ??'nfl the<lb/>
requ.red for the Doctor of Musical Arts degree<lb/>
ftSX L PreSently a ?mi-tinalist in the Kennedy<lb/>
Rofeller Foundation Competition fa Excellence m the<lb/>
" n of Amer.can Mus.c. excellence in the<lb/>
?ne of 12 p.an.sts selected from a field of 112<lb/>
competitors. Ms. Coleman w.ll perform on<lb/>
September 11 at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C in the<lb/>
final stages of the competition.<lb/>
Her Wednesday performance at ECU will feature the same<lb/>
works that won her present position as semi-finalist and will<lb/>
comprise her Kennedy Center program<lb/>
Ms Coleman first became interested in 20th century music<lb/>
while an undergraduate student at Indiana University of<lb/>
Pennsylvania.<lb/>
Her interest increased with exposure to new compositions at<lb/>
the University of Michigan, where she earned her Master of Music<lb/>
in piano.<lb/>
Till Then" -Gestures II, fa piano and electronic tape, is a<lb/>
parody of Richard Strauss' symphonic poem "Till Eulenspiegels<lb/>
lustige Streiche<lb/>
Till Then" isan unpublished wak by David Bates, oieof the<lb/>
Michigan University composers whose waks intrigues Ms.<lb/>
Pot smoker obeys 'the word'<lb/>
Coleman into explaing oontempaary music.<lb/>
Another unpublished piece from the Michigan School of<lb/>
Gregay Ballard's "Piano Music 2" (1975), a virtuostic wak by<lb/>
the 24-year-old composer.<lb/>
The first half of the program also features Salvatae<lb/>
Martirano's "Cocktail Music" (1962) and the "Piano Variations"<lb/>
(1930) of one of America's most distinguished composers, Aaron<lb/>
Copland.<lb/>
The only traditional piece on the program is the "Sonata in<lb/>
A-flat Opus 110 (1821) of Ludwig van Beethoven.<lb/>
While at Eastman, Ms. Coleman began study of Charles Ives'<lb/>
"First Sonata fa Piano" (1902-10). This massive 40-minute wak<lb/>
will canplete the Wednesday program.<lb/>
Jazz licks and Cuban rumba rhythms, quotations of hymn<lb/>
tunes such as "Bringing in the Sheaves" and "What a Friend We<lb/>
SeeMS. COLEMAN, p. 8<lb/>
College Bowl begins<lb/>
The game that made eggheads as popular as football heroes is<lb/>
back fa its third year at ECU With the possible ultimate goal of<lb/>
over $3,500.00 in prize money fa each player, College Bowl<lb/>
competition is about to begin.<lb/>
Registration begins Monday, August 28, 1978 at 830 am and<lb/>
last until Thursday, Sept 21, 1978, the day of the team aientatioi<lb/>
meeting. Conpetitioi is open to all full-time students, whether<lb/>
graduate a undergraduate<lb/>
Each team must have four players, one alternate, and a coach<lb/>
Competition will be limited to the first sixteen teams registered<lb/>
Intramural oompetitioi begins Thurs Sept. 28 in Mendenhall<lb/>
Auditaium 244.<lb/>
ECU will send a team to the regional tournament and, if they are<lb/>
successful there, on to national competition. Mendenhall, which<lb/>
See COLLEGE, p.8<lb/>
V<lb/>
AP) - Herb<lb/>
? s wad in<lb/>
29 gave him the right<lb/>
? -? C JuKje Ear1 Jones<lb/>
ottf strict Court<lb/>
said Overton<lb/>
' a higher<lb/>
? 31, of Olathe. was<lb/>
possession of<lb/>
marijuana.<lb/>
After a lengthy search fa a<lb/>
Bible coitaining the Old Test-<lb/>
ament - one was finally found in<lb/>
the county jail - the judge read<lb/>
the bibical verse: "And God<lb/>
said. Behold. I have given you<lb/>
every herb bearing seed, which<lb/>
is upon the face of all the earth.<lb/>
and every tree yielding seed, to<lb/>
you it shall be fa meat<lb/>
The judge told Overton, "As<lb/>
a mere matal, I am going to<lb/>
find you guilty of possession of<lb/>
marijuana. If you want to appeal<lb/>
to a higher authaity, that's fine<lb/>
with me<lb/>
Sentencing was scheduled<lb/>
fa Oct. 19.<lb/>
METHODIST STUDENT<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
501E. 5th St.corner of 5th &amp;<lb/>
Holly opposite Garrett Dorm )<lb/>
Welcomes you to an<lb/>
Open House<lb/>
Tonight Tuesday, Sept. 5<lb/>
7-10 p.m.<lb/>
BISSfTTCS<lb/>
DISCOUNT CENTER<lb/>
416 Evans ON THE MALL<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
Open Daily (except Sun.)<lb/>
8a.m. "til 6 pan. sale ends sat.<lb/>
55-asS<lb/>
;?y n?<lb/>
while rffey lAsr<lb/>
FRIDAY'S<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
FRIDAY'S<lb/>
Wants You!<lb/>
to visit our<lb/>
new Restaurant-<lb/>
We think you<lb/>
will love our<lb/>
atmosphere and our food &amp;<lb/>
prices are just for you.<lb/>
Come out today for lunch or<lb/>
dinner-We will give you a<lb/>
golden beverage of your<lb/>
choice, just show your ID.<lb/>
Friday's 1890 Seafood<lb/>
2311S. Evans St.<lb/>
Lunch 1130-2 Dinner 5-10<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat. 5-11<lb/>
Fifth St.<lb/>
4th St.<lb/>
3rd St.<lb/>
Overton'<lb/>
V<lb/>
INC<lb/>
SUPERMARKET<lb/>
"?N$<lb/>
&amp;V<lb/>
CfECUK<lb/>
A free T shirt<lb/>
to the first 1,000 students<lb/>
with a $20.00 food order,<lb/>
also free desk blotters.<lb/>
Overtones welcomes all ECUstudents and faculty.<lb/>
Located just 2 Mocks from ECU at the corner of 3rd &amp; Jarvis. We have everyday<lb/>
low prices that are more than competitive with any other store, large or small, A free cart<lb/>
service is availahle to push your groceries home. We accept Master Charge and Visa. We<lb/>
are your hometown food store away from home. We appreciate your husiness strive to<lb/>
please in every way possible.<lb/>
Thank you for shopping at Overton's.<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
 <lb/>
Overtones<lb/>
the home of Greenville's<lb/>
best meats, just ask anyone<lb/>
Overtones is Greenville's headquarters for ground<lb/>
no order too large or small.<lb/>
<lb/>
: At<lb/>
 '<lb/>
<lb/>
i ,<lb/>
<pb facs="00057139_0008"/><lb/>
Pagefl FOUNTAINHEAD 5 September 1978<lb/>
Carlene Carter, daughter of the country<lb/>
music Carter's, is a 'blue-eyed and<lb/>
sweet singing' new star<lb/>
By PETER J. BOYER<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AP) - You can't<lb/>
be born royal in thiscountry, but<lb/>
you can be born lucky. If your<lb/>
daddy's the porcelain king of<lb/>
Toledo, you know you can<lb/>
always go into tubs and toilets if<lb/>
vour great American novel<lb/>
doesn't sell.<lb/>
If ever anyone was born into<lb/>
success, it was blue-eyed,<lb/>
sweet singing Carlene Carter.<lb/>
The name alone meant stardom.<lb/>
No, no kin to Jimmy. Better<lb/>
than that. The Carter family,<lb/>
from nashville.<lb/>
Carlene's grandmother is<lb/>
Mother Maybelle Carter, the<lb/>
matriarch of country music.<lb/>
Mama is June Carter Cash.<lb/>
Country folk singer Carl Smith<lb/>
sner father. Johnny Cash is her<lb/>
step-daddy.<lb/>
With that pedigree, all Carl-<lb/>
ene had to do to become a<lb/>
oountry star was learn to stand<lb/>
in front of a microphone and<lb/>
avoid committing any heinous<lb/>
crimes. When it turned out she<lb/>
could sing, everyone knew<lb/>
Nashville would one day be<lb/>
hers.<lb/>
She turned it down.<lb/>
Carlene Carter wanted rock<lb/>
n' roll. She played lead guitar<lb/>
with a rock band when she was<lb/>
11. The Electric Kumquats<lb/>
didn't go far. but the experience<lb/>
hardened Carlene's wish to be a<lb/>
pop star.<lb/>
"It would nave been really<lb/>
easy for me to kinda ride off that<lb/>
name and just play oountry<lb/>
music she says in a Tennessee<lb/>
twang that oould bend nails.<lb/>
"And I might be a lot more<lb/>
secure about my future and<lb/>
everything if I did that, but<lb/>
that's not what I want to do.<lb/>
"I'd rather know that I did it<lb/>
myself, and I'd rather be doing<lb/>
what I wanted to do instead of<lb/>
dang what I was expected to do<lb/>
just because of tradition<lb/>
So now she's running the<lb/>
rounds of a pop singer - playing<lb/>
the pop nightclubs, indulging<lb/>
the rock n' roll press, touting<lb/>
her debut album.<lb/>
The LP, "Carlene Carter<lb/>
is good, clean pop music, and<lb/>
allows Carlene to show off some<lb/>
powerful vocals.<lb/>
It's interesting that in a time<lb/>
when everybody is claiming a<lb/>
few ounces of Southrn blood,<lb/>
infusing a few obligatory licks of<lb/>
pedal steel and dobro into pop,<lb/>
some of the purest pop around<lb/>
oomes from a qirl who cut her<lb/>
teeth on the curtain weights at<lb/>
the Grand Ole Opry.<lb/>
Carlene is almost obsessive<lb/>
in her avoidance of anything<lb/>
oountry. Every recording studio<lb/>
in Nashville was awaiting her<lb/>
pleasure, but she flew to London<lb/>
to record the album.<lb/>
"I went to England mainly<lb/>
becasue I wanted to be sure I<lb/>
was being myself when I<lb/>
recorded the album she says.<lb/>
College Bowl offers<lb/>
diverse experience<lb/>
continued from p. 7<lb/>
sponsors ECU College Bowl, pays all the teams expenses.<lb/>
College Bowl contestants have been very diverse; they range<lb/>
from rugby players to nursing majors to philosophy students to the<lb/>
Baptist Student Union and the Newman Club.<lb/>
Teams have been organized by departments, fraternities, honor<lb/>
societies, clubs, and groups of friertds. Players have been of every<lb/>
classification from freshman to graduate students.<lb/>
College Bowl is almost as much fun to watch as to play. Many<lb/>
teams, especially History and English, had enthusiastic supporters<lb/>
for all their matches.<lb/>
ECU College Bowl is the same game that was televised a few<lb/>
years ago.Television rights to the game have again been purchased<lb/>
and the show is being revived.<lb/>
For further information oonoerning any aspect of College Bowl,<lb/>
contact Wanda Yuhasin the Program Off ioe in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center at 757-6611 extension 213.<lb/>
COLEMAN<lb/>
continued from p. 7<lb/>
Have in Jesus and achestraJ.y conceived sounds combine to<lb/>
make the Ives a challenge and a ?P"?-<lb/>
hear arTrned wcrks as the .ves. F- m<lb/>
exposed to the new language of exprese.cn created by 20th<lb/>
century American composers. ?mw? tn<lb/>
This whole new vocabulary of sounds and a ler? attempts to<lb/>
reach out and communicate feelings and ideas that the composer<lb/>
wants desperately to express.<lb/>
Performances have the potential intimacy of a jazz nKJhtdub<lb/>
where "something is going out and something is coming back.<lb/>
Too often, however, no one gets the chance to hear what the<lb/>
composer is saying. Performances of traditional music will always<lb/>
have their place, but the new, unfamiliar forms of express can<lb/>
be an exciting and meaningful communication.<lb/>
This Wednesday night will be the introduction of the<lb/>
26-year-old pianist to the ECU faculty and students In any reatal<lb/>
the performer is saying "look, this is meand MsCoiemanw.il<lb/>
be saying that through the language of 20th oentury Amer.can<lb/>
music in a very personal way.<lb/>
CUFF'S<lb/>
WEEKLY JPECIdU<lb/>
Cliff's Monday Nite Special<lb/>
Fillet Whole Baby Flounder99<lb/>
Served with french fries, slaw,&amp; hushpuppies.<lb/>
"Cliff's Tuesday Night Special<lb/>
Crab Cakes (2)99<lb/>
Served with french fries, slaw ,&amp; hushpuppies.<lb/>
Monday-Th u rsday<lb/>
i<lb/>
Crab Cakes (2)2.25<lb/>
Fillet Whole Baby Flounder2.25<lb/>
Hamburger Steak?2.25<lb/>
Fried Chicken2.25<lb/>
Served with french fries and All You Want Salad Bar<lb/>
MAKE THE CAMPUS<lb/>
phone before Friday, !WfoICTIiy<lb/>
September 1 st,you IJI 11 iDLl 1 VLJl !?<lb/>
can save yourself a trip.??m m m ata w<lb/>
Now thru Friday, Carolina Telephone representatives will be taking<lb/>
your orders at three campus locations: the Book Store, Clement Dorm<lb/>
Lobby and Tyler Dorm Lobby.<lb/>
In addition, by ordering your phone now, you'll beat<lb/>
the crowd and get early installation.<lb/>
And finally, your early order ensures that<lb/>
??<lb/>
M<lb/>
your number will be in-<lb/>
cluded in the ECU<lb/>
Telephone Directory<lb/>
for 78-79.<lb/>
So make the<lb/>
connection. Or-<lb/>
der your phone<lb/>
today.<lb/>
LUQE3 Carolina Telephone<lb/>
UNITED TELEPHONE SYSTEM<lb/>
?<lb/>
PATRONIZE<lb/>
FOUNT AINHEAD<lb/>
ADVERTISERS<lb/>
The Tree House<lb/>
"A Place For Friends"<lb/>
PROUDLY PRESENTS<lb/>
SEPTEMBER<lb/>
1978<lb/>
ART &amp; CAMERA<lb/>
526 S. Cotanche St.<lb/>
Down Town<lb/>
COUPON EXPIRES<lb/>
.LIMITED TIME OFFER<lb/>
12 Exp. Color Rim<lb/>
Developed and Printed<lb/>
? Kodacolor<lb/>
? OAF<lb/>
? Fuql<lb/>
(ForwQn Film<lb/>
Not Included<lb/>
$29<lb/>
VALUABLE COUPON<lb/>
28 MON DAVID LEWIS<lb/>
29 TUE ?CHRIS FARREN<lb/>
30 WED FARM &amp; HOME BLUE GRASS BAND<lb/>
31 ?uTHE BUBBA WILUS jam<lb/>
I<lb/>
1 FRI MIKE LIGHTNING" WELLS<lb/>
2 SAT TOMMY G. - MIKE HAMER - THE<lb/>
WIZARD<lb/>
3 SUN ROCK TREE JAM AND BOOGIE<lb/>
4 MON PIZZA SPECIAL (5-8 P M )<lb/>
 S TUE CHRI8 FARREN<lb/>
6 WED FARM &amp; HOME BLUE GRASS BAND<lb/>
8 FRI RABBIT &amp; KEN<lb/>
9 SAT RABBIT &amp; KEN<lb/>
10 SUN Special Guest (EDNA WILLIAMS)<lb/>
11 MON PIZZA SPECIAL (5-8 P.M.)<lb/>
?12 TUECHRIST FARREN<lb/>
13 WED KURT FORTMEYER<lb/>
14 THUR ALAN OATLEY<lb/>
15 ?PAT DANNY<lb/>
16 SAT TOMMY G. - MIKE HAMER - THE<lb/>
WIZARD<lb/>
17 SUNSPECIAL GUEST<lb/>
18 MON PIZZA SPECIAL (5-8 P.M.)<lb/>
?19 TUECHRIS FARREN<lb/>
20 WED FARM &amp; HOM.E BLUE GRASS BAND<lb/>
21 THUTHE BUBBA WILUS JAM<lb/>
22 FRIDAVID LEWIS<lb/>
23 SAT DAVID LEWIS (MANAGERS BIRTHDAY)<lb/>
24 SUN SPECIAL GUEST (EDNA WILLIAMS)<lb/>
25 MON PIZZA SPECIAL (5-8 P.M.)<lb/>
?29 TUECHRIS FARREN<lb/>
28 THUMITCH BOWEN<lb/>
29 FRIMITCH BOWEN<lb/>
30 SAT TOMMY G. - MIKE HAMER - THE<lb/>
WIZARD<lb/>
?Every Tuesday night is "Ladies Nite with<lb/>
reAiced beverage prices tor ladies from (8 PM<lb/>
10 P.M.)<lb/>
THE TREE HOUSE RESTAURANT<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
The Classic<lb/>
Capezio<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
TO ALL ECU.<lb/>
DANCE STUDENTS:<lb/>
Brody's now<lb/>
carries a lijji<lb/>
Ijne of LEOTARDS,<lb/>
BALLET SHOES, TAPSHOES;<lb/>
AND jAZZ SHOES,<lb/>
for .aU,<lb/>
dance<lb/>
students!<lb/>
Try Shoes<lb/>
$17.00<lb/>
Ballet Shoes<lb/>
$9.00<lb/>
Tap Shoes<lb/>
'11.50<lb/>
Leotards and Footwear<lb/>
For Dancers<lb/>
Regular Leotards<lb/>
$6.75-to$16X?<lb/>
Also Dancewear<lb/>
For Children at<lb/>
our Pitt Plaza Store<lb/>
 Capezio's<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
?<lb/>
???r?t-<lb/>
'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057139_0009"/><lb/>
5 September 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
Hicks, Green star<lb/>
Pirates edge WCU, 14-6<lb/>
Hicks turns the corner<lb/>
J HALFBACK EDDIE H,cks shifts d.rectos as he manuevers<lb/>
oast several Western Carolina defenders in Saturday nights 14-6<lb/>
?m over the Catamounts and scored the seasons first touchdown<lb/>
Zf, YT mn 'ate in the fourth quarter &amp; y Greenville<lb/>
Reflector photographer Tommy Forrest<lb/>
'Comedy of errors Dye<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
" a record crowd of<lb/>
31.261 looking on in newly<lb/>
enlarged Ficklen Stadium, a<lb/>
brand new pressoox. and a<lb/>
Sjpiffy new computerized score-<lb/>
board, this was certainly one<lb/>
season opener ECU could ill<lb/>
afford to lose.<lb/>
And despite a variety of<lb/>
miscues which ECU head coach<lb/>
Pat Dye called a "comedy of<lb/>
errors the Pirates came<lb/>
through with a hard earned 14-6<lb/>
victory over a gutsy Western<lb/>
Carolina team. But just barely.<lb/>
I don't feel embarrassed<lb/>
about the game. Dye said ,<lb/>
but I know we've got an awful<lb/>
lot of work to do. We just<lb/>
weren t a very polished team on<lb/>
offense tonight.<lb/>
"But the same thing has<lb/>
happended before. It looked like<lb/>
we were gang to run it right out<lb/>
of the end zone, but we just<lb/>
didn t have that killer instinct "<lb/>
Indeed it did. Halfback<lb/>
Anthony Collins took the open-<lb/>
ing kickoff, cut through a big<lb/>
gap on the right side and went<lb/>
down the sidelines for a big 58<lb/>
yard return before he was<lb/>
bumped out of bounds. But after<lb/>
that electrifying play most of the<lb/>
Pirate fans had very little to<lb/>
cheer about the rest of the<lb/>
evening.<lb/>
"Our concentration wasn't<lb/>
good at all said quarterback<lb/>
Leander Green. "Western<lb/>
Carolina didn't do anything we<lb/>
hadn't seen before, they just<lb/>
played a great game on defense.<lb/>
Our game plan was to run<lb/>
straight at them, but we should<lb/>
have moved the bait a k<lb/>
better<lb/>
Green, who played almost<lb/>
the entire game, carried the ball<lb/>
13 times for 43 yards, but was<lb/>
dropped behind the line of<lb/>
scrimmage for losses totaling 34<lb/>
yards. However, the former<lb/>
Jacksonville High School star<lb/>
had his moments.<lb/>
Green completed six of 15<lb/>
passes fa 96 yards including<lb/>
the game's winning touchdown<lb/>
play, a 60 yard scoring strike to<lb/>
his old high school teammate<lb/>
Bill Ray Washington early in the<lb/>
?ourth quarter.<lb/>
yes. I guess it was kind of like<lb/>
the old days when Bill Ray<lb/>
grabbed that one admitted<lb/>
the dimunutive signal caller.<lb/>
He was the third receiver on<lb/>
that play, but I looked fa him<lb/>
coming across the middle and<lb/>
he was there.<lb/>
"I was not real happy with<lb/>
the rest of my passing game,<lb/>
however noted Green. "I<lb/>
wasn't getting out there quick<lb/>
enough on my sprint out pat-<lb/>
terns and I couldn't read the<lb/>
defense real well.<lb/>
Split end Terry Gallaher was<lb/>
on the receiving end of three of<lb/>
Green s passes fa 22 yards, but<lb/>
the Warner Robbins. Ga. native<lb/>
admitted he was also disappoin-<lb/>
ted with his team's inability to<lb/>
move the ball against the<lb/>
Catamounts defense.<lb/>
't realty don't Know what<lb/>
was wrong out there tonight<lb/>
said Gallaher who was granted<lb/>
an extra year of eligibility by the<lb/>
NCAA this season. "Before the<lb/>
game I felt like we were a little<lb/>
bit better prepared, but I'm just<lb/>
at kind of a loss to explain what<lb/>
happened. Maybe I can tell after<lb/>
looking at the films. It's probab-<lb/>
ly more a matter of the first<lb/>
game jitters<lb/>
At times Eddie Hicks re-<lb/>
sembles the same Eddie Hicks<lb/>
who rushed fa yards and<lb/>
touchdowns during the 1976<lb/>
season. Hicks carried the ball 15<lb/>
times fa 59 yards and one<lb/>
touchdown against Western<lb/>
Carolina, but like the rest of the<lb/>
ECU backfield had problems<lb/>
holding on to the ball.<lb/>
"I ran the ball fairly well,<lb/>
but I think I can run a little but<lb/>
better said the Henderson,<lb/>
N.C. native. "We didn't exe-<lb/>
cute on offense like we're<lb/>
capable of doing. We weren't<lb/>
coming off the ball very well<lb/>
either. They didn't do anything<lb/>
we hadn't seen, but they sure<lb/>
hit pretty hard<lb/>
And with Western Carolina<lb/>
out of the way, ECU now faces<lb/>
two crucial road games against<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Conference foes<lb/>
N.C. State and North Carolina.<lb/>
But Dye, along with the rest<lb/>
of his Pirates, admits it will take<lb/>
a far superior effort il ECU<lb/>
expects to upend N.C. Slate<lb/>
next week. The Pirates have<lb/>
won their last two oontests over<lb/>
Bo Rein and his Wolfpack.<lb/>
"We cant ask anymore of<lb/>
our defense noted Hicks.<lb/>
"Next week we've just got to<lb/>
hold on to the ball. We're<lb/>
certainly capable of doing it, but<lb/>
we're going to have to play<lb/>
much better. I'm sure glad we<lb/>
played like this against Western<lb/>
Carolina instead of N.C. State. I<lb/>
think we'll be ready<lb/>
Green, who took his first<lb/>
varsity snap from center and ran<lb/>
82 yards for a touchdown<lb/>
against N.C. State last season,<lb/>
also feels the Pirates are a<lb/>
capable team, but must iron out<lb/>
the kinks in practice this week.<lb/>
"A missed block here and a<lb/>
missed block there, there are<lb/>
things you just have to work on<lb/>
more in practice explained<lb/>
Green. "I don't think we will<lb/>
add anything special for the<lb/>
State game. But I imagine our<lb/>
execution better be a whole lot<lb/>
better or we'll be in trouble<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
ECU's season opener<lb/>
against Western Carolina was<lb/>
billed as an offensive extrav-<lb/>
aganza: The Pirates' powerful<lb/>
wishbone attact against the<lb/>
Catamounts productive passing<lb/>
game led by quarterback Mike<lb/>
Pusey.<lb/>
But with a total of seven<lb/>
turnovers in the second half,<lb/>
four by the Pirates and three by<lb/>
WCU, the offensive show never<lb/>
materialized as ECU was foroed<lb/>
to scratch and claw its way to a<lb/>
narrow 14-6 victory over the<lb/>
determined Catamounts.<lb/>
Although a reoord crowd of<lb/>
31,251 turned out fa the contest<lb/>
in newly expanded Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium, the Pirates were ob-<lb/>
viously not a polished offensive<lb/>
unit and ECU head coach Pat<lb/>
Dye was the first to admit as<lb/>
much.<lb/>
"You didn't have to be an<lb/>
Einstein to see what was wrong<lb/>
out there tonight said Dye,<lb/>
now in his fifth season at ECU.<lb/>
"It was obviously a very poor<lb/>
coaching job. Offensively, some<lb/>
of the decisions made tonight<lb/>
were absolutely ridiculous. We<lb/>
should have had between 21 and<lb/>
28 points on the scoreboard<lb/>
before the end of the first half.<lb/>
"I don't want to take away<lb/>
anything from Western<lb/>
Carolina oontinued Dye.<lb/>
"Bob Waters does an excellent<lb/>
job of preparing them everytime<lb/>
they come down here to play us.<lb/>
We just had very little concent-<lb/>
ration on offense. I'm just real<lb/>
happy to win<lb/>
Even though the offense<lb/>
amassed 302 yards, efforts of<lb/>
a stingy Pirate defense<lb/>
overshadowed any offense per-<lb/>
formers.<lb/>
The ECU secondary picked<lb/>
off four Catamount passes and<lb/>
allowed only 10 completions fa<lb/>
131 yards as heralded quarter-<lb/>
back Mike Pusey was held well<lb/>
below his average from last<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Up front, the defensive line<lb/>
and linebacking caps faced<lb/>
five fumbles as WCU running<lb/>
backs managed oily 178 yards<lb/>
on the ground.<lb/>
Def ensi vel y, we played<lb/>
very well Dye said. "They<lb/>
were never able to establish<lb/>
their passing game. I don't feel<lb/>
embarassed about the way we<lb/>
played tonight. All I know is that<lb/>
we have a lot of work to do this<lb/>
week befae we're ready fa<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Halfback Anthoiy Collins<lb/>
took the opening kickoff 58<lb/>
yards down the right sidelines<lb/>
and almost went all the way<lb/>
befae he was bumped out of<lb/>
bounds at the WCU 42.<lb/>
But it was not until the<lb/>
Pirates' fourth possession of the<lb/>
game befae ECU oould push<lb/>
over a touchdown. Nate Wigfall<lb/>
recovered a M itchell Ray fumble<lb/>
on the WCU 24 and four plays<lb/>
later halfback Eddie Hicks broke<lb/>
right over the middle from four<lb/>
yards out fa the Pirates' first<lb/>
touchdown of the '78 season.<lb/>
Bill Lamm's PAT pushed ECU<lb/>
ahead 7-0 with 231 remaining<lb/>
in the first period.<lb/>
The Catamounts fumbled<lb/>
the ensuing kickoff and ECU<lb/>
was in business again with the<lb/>
ball on the WCU 16 yard line.<lb/>
But, oi fourth and goal from the<lb/>
one, WCU's Thonas Gunn<lb/>
threw halfback Sam Harrell fa a<lb/>
five yard loss which thwarted<lb/>
anaher serious scaing threat<lb/>
by the Pirates.<lb/>
Strong safety Ruffin McNeill<lb/>
picked off the first of three<lb/>
Pusey passes and gave the<lb/>
Pirates another excellent 'sca-<lb/>
ing oppatunity with possession<lb/>
at the WCU 26<lb/>
Once again Lamm's field<lb/>
goal attempt from 27 yards out<lb/>
was blocked by Willie Wells.<lb/>
Defensive end John Maris<lb/>
stopped one Catamount scaing<lb/>
threat early in the second half<lb/>
when he recovered a Pusey<lb/>
fumble on the ECU eight.<lb/>
But the Catamounts came<lb/>
right back when Cunningham<lb/>
recovered an ECU fumble on the<lb/>
two yard line. Mitchell Ray went<lb/>
around the left side fa the<lb/>
Catamounts first and only<lb/>
touchdown of the evening.<lb/>
A bad snap from center cost<lb/>
WCU the PAT and the scae<lb/>
remained 7-6 with 435 left in<lb/>
the third quarter.<lb/>
The Pirates ga their win-<lb/>
ning touchdown on the second<lb/>
play of the fourth quarter when<lb/>
old Jacksonville high school<lb/>
teammates Leander Green and<lb/>
Billy Ray Washington hooked<lb/>
up on a 60 yard touchdown pass.<lb/>
Lamm's seoond conversion put<lb/>
the Pirates ahead 14-6 which<lb/>
was the way it finally ended.<lb/>
The remainder of the game<lb/>
was an endless series of erras<lb/>
by bah teams. The Pirates<lb/>
coughed up the ball twice on<lb/>
fumbles in the fourth quarter<lb/>
while Gerald Hall and Charlie<lb/>
Carter each picked off a WCU<lb/>
pass.<lb/>
"It was a comedy of erras<lb/>
out there tonight explained<lb/>
Dye about his team's seven<lb/>
fumbles in the game. " At times<lb/>
it looked like we didn't know<lb/>
what we were doing. I don't<lb/>
think we were looking ahead to<lb/>
next week, but we weren't a<lb/>
very polished team tonight.<lb/>
"We were real frustrated at<lb/>
times because we had some<lb/>
excellent scaing opportunities,<lb/>
but we just couldn't score.<lb/>
ackled Dye. "We were very<lb/>
fatunate to overcome some of<lb/>
our mistakes and still win. The<lb/>
same thing has happended to us<lb/>
befae.<lb/>
Defensive tackle D.T. Joyner<lb/>
received the R.W. Mcore Award<lb/>
which goes to the outstanding<lb/>
ECU player in the game. Joyner<lb/>
had nine tackles and stopped<lb/>
Catamount runners four times<lb/>
losses.<lb/>
Scae by Quarters<lb/>
WCU 0 0 6 0 -6<lb/>
ECU 7 0 0 7 -14<lb/>
ECU - Hicks 4 run (Lamm kick)<lb/>
WCU - Ray 1 run (run failed)<lb/>
ECU - Washington 60 pass from<lb/>
Green (Lamm kick)<lb/>
Meanderin' Leander<lb/>
ECU QUARTERBACK LEANDER Green loses another jersey<lb/>
as he eludes a would be tackier. Green completed six of 15 passes<lb/>
for 96 yards Saturday night against Western Carolina University.<lb/>
His 60 yard touchdown pass the fourth quarter to old high school<lb/>
teammate Billy Ray Washington was the games winning score<lb/>
The Pirates return to action this Saturday when ECU faces N C<lb/>
State in Carter stadium.<lb/>
Fans rave at scoreboard<lb/>
ECU'S NEW $160,000 computerizedscoreboard.<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Spats Edita<lb/>
Almost as impressive as the<lb/>
new seating additions in Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium Saturday night along<lb/>
with new three level pressbox<lb/>
was ECU's new computerized<lb/>
scaeboard.<lb/>
"Beautiful, simply beauti-<lb/>
ful said mae than one Pirate<lb/>
fanas they walked by the 18 fort<lb/>
structure located at the east end<lb/>
of the field.<lb/>
The purple and gold scae-<lb/>
board was built by the American<lb/>
. Sign and Indicata Company<lb/>
fron Spokane, Wash. Total cost<lb/>
of the structure was $160,000 an<lb/>
the university paid another<lb/>
$10,000 fa its installation.<lb/>
Cost of the scoreboard also<lb/>
includes another computerized<lb/>
message center which will be<lb/>
built on the corner of Charles<lb/>
Blvd. and the 264 Bypass later<lb/>
this month.<lb/>
The message center on the<lb/>
264 Bypass will flash ECU<lb/>
athletic schedules and infama-<lb/>
tioi about upcoming spats<lb/>
events, aocading to Spats<lb/>
Pranrtiat Directa Wayne<lb/>
Newnam.<lb/>
"The message center oi the<lb/>
bypass can also flash drawings<lb/>
on the screen explained New-<lb/>
nam. "It will also have two light<lb/>
banks instead of just one like the<lb/>
stadium scaeboard. It's a great<lb/>
pronrtiai item fa the athletic<lb/>
department and it will infam<lb/>
everyone what's going on in<lb/>
Pirate athletics from day-to-<lb/>
day<lb/>
The scaeboard in the stad-<lb/>
ium and the message center was<lb/>
not part of the Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
expansion. Five local businesses<lb/>
in Greenville raised the money<lb/>
and donated the scaeboard as a<lb/>
gift to the athletic department.<lb/>
The five sponsas who paid<lb/>
fa the scoreboard were the<lb/>
Jeanette Cox Agency of Green-<lb/>
ville, The Beef Barn, First<lb/>
Federal Savings and Loan of Pitt<lb/>
County, Pepsi Cola Bottling<lb/>
Company and Hardee's.<lb/>
"The athletic department<lb/>
had not planned to buy a new<lb/>
scaeboard this season said<lb/>
Newnam. "The oost of a new<lb/>
scaeboard wasn't covered in<lb/>
the expansion of the stadium<lb/>
and a new one was simply too<lb/>
expensive<lb/>
A sales representative from<lb/>
the American Sign and Indicata<lb/>
Company came in and present-<lb/>
ed the idea to the athletic<lb/>
department oontinued New-<lb/>
nam. "He went out and ap-<lb/>
proached several local busines-<lb/>
ses and they agreed to give the<lb/>
scaeboard as a gift to the<lb/>
athletic department<lb/>
The five local businesses<lb/>
have permanent advertising dis-<lb/>
plays on the scaeboard and also<lb/>
have top advertising priaity<lb/>
during ECU football games.<lb/>
Newman said advertising<lb/>
will be said by the athletic<lb/>
department fa the message<lb/>
center located on the 263<lb/>
Bypass.<lb/>
"The new scaeboard cert-<lb/>
ainly gives the stadium a<lb/>
different look said Newnam.<lb/>
"It gives Ficklen Stadium that<lb/>
"big-time" image now.<lb/>
Defense stops Pusey<lb/>
By CHA RLES CHA NDLER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Most football coaches claim<lb/>
that a good defense is the key<lb/>
ingredient to a winning team.<lb/>
This was certainly true in<lb/>
Saturday night's ECU-Western<lb/>
Carolina contest. With the Pir-<lb/>
ate offense held at bay most all<lb/>
night, the ECU defense was<lb/>
faced with constant pressure.<lb/>
And the defense was nothing<lb/>
less than spectacular, facing<lb/>
eight Western Carolina turnov-<lb/>
ers, and contributing several<lb/>
goal stands to the 14-6 Pirate<lb/>
vicrtry.<lb/>
"I was very proud of the way<lb/>
our defense played said ECU<lb/>
coach, Pat Dye. "The defense<lb/>
carried out our game plan well.<lb/>
Western was never able to<lb/>
establish a passing game<lb/>
Stopping the Catamount<lb/>
passing game was the Pirate's<lb/>
main oortosm entering the<lb/>
game. WCU quarterback, Mike<lb/>
Pusey was ranked among the<lb/>
nation's top passers a year ago.<lb/>
The Pirate defense frustrat-<lb/>
ed Pussy all night long, inter-<lb/>
cepting three of his passes.<lb/>
Pusey, who passed fa over 900<lb/>
yards in less than afull<lb/>
last year, was held to 131<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
Each time Pusey dropped<lb/>
back to pass, he was greeted by<lb/>
a fieroe Pirate rush. One of the<lb/>
enfacers of the r ush was<lb/>
defensive end Zack Valentine.<lb/>
"We were well prepared<lb/>
said defensive end Zack Valen-<lb/>
tine, "Our defensive scheme<lb/>
waked great "Last year we<lb/>
didn't have a good rush. We had<lb/>
to have one tonight. Rushing the<lb/>
passer is 90 percent just want-<lb/>
ing to get there anyway. We<lb/>
went 100 percent tonight<lb/>
Even when Valentine, Oliver<lb/>
Felton, D.T. Joyner, a the<lb/>
members of the Pirate front<lb/>
weren't chasing him, Pusey<lb/>
rarely could find any of his<lb/>
receivers open. "ECU'S sec-<lb/>
ondary deserves a great deal of<lb/>
aedit said WCU head coach<lb/>
Bob Waters, "They are probab-<lb/>
ly as good as we have ever<lb/>
faced<lb/>
Pusey was not the only<lb/>
Catamount quarterback victimi-<lb/>
zed by the Pirate secondary.<lb/>
Dee Walsh also had one of his<lb/>
passes intercepted. The second-<lb/>
ary also came up with the key<lb/>
defensive play of the game,<lb/>
halfway through the fourth<lb/>
quarter, with the game still in<lb/>
doubt and ECU leading 14-6,<lb/>
Western Carolina found them-<lb/>
seivesat the Pirate 16 yard line.<lb/>
Pusey's seoond attempt in the<lb/>
series was picked off by Pirate<lb/>
free safety Gerlad Hall, insuring<lb/>
the Pirate victay. "We were<lb/>
playing ate oi oie coverage<lb/>
said Hall, "They ran an inside<lb/>
post pattern. I just got a good<lb/>
break<lb/>
The Pirate defense got<lb/>
"good breaks" all night. Each<lb/>
time the Catamounts got a drive<lb/>
started, the Pirate defense came<lb/>
up with big play. "We had to<lb/>
keep getting the ball back to the<lb/>
offense Pirate linebacker<lb/>
Mike Brewirtgton said, "We<lb/>
couldn't let up. We knew<lb/>
Western was going to be<lb/>
tough "But I knew we were<lb/>
going to win. We had a good<lb/>
plan. We felt wc could stop<lb/>
anything they ran<lb/>
As fa next week's game<lb/>
with N.C. State, "We've beaten<lb/>
them befae said Brewington,<lb/>
"They've got to respect ua<lb/>
Mike Pusey sure does.<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057139_0010"/><lb/>
'<lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAP 5 September 1978<lb/>
ECU opens in Mayor's Tourney<lb/>
Pirates' Martin a 'team player'<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
As he walks off the practice<lb/>
field, ECU soocer star Phil<lb/>
Martin stops and looks back at<lb/>
his teammates. A determined<lb/>
look comes over his face. Phil<lb/>
Martin is ready fa the 1978<lb/>
season, and he's going to do<lb/>
everything he can to make it a<lb/>
successful-one for himself and<lb/>
the Pirates.<lb/>
Phil Martin isateamman.<lb/>
Disappointing 2-10 record.<lb/>
Though Martin lead the team in<lb/>
scoring last year - 9 goals and 3<lb/>
assists - he'd like to push the<lb/>
whole year aside<lb/>
But didn't Phil make honor-<lb/>
able mention All-State and and<lb/>
wasn't he selected to the<lb/>
sectional Olympic tryouts that<lb/>
same year? Exactly, but Phil has<lb/>
higher team than individual<lb/>
ambitions.<lb/>
"Sure I like to score goals<lb/>
like anyone else but if we<lb/>
don't win, I can't feel that good<lb/>
about what I might have done<lb/>
"He is a compelte player<lb/>
and a team player said ECU<lb/>
soccer coach Brad Smith. "He's<lb/>
a very hard worker. I know of no<lb/>
one in all the sports here who<lb/>
works harder than Phil<lb/>
Like any devoted athlete,<lb/>
Phil spent the off-season work-<lb/>
ing on the fine points of his<lb/>
game. Smith said Phil spent at<lb/>
least an hour to an hour and a<lb/>
half each day practicing soocer<lb/>
during summer school.<lb/>
Phil doesn't stop practicing<lb/>
when he goes to his home in<lb/>
Greensboro, either. He even has<lb/>
a soccer goal in his back yard.<lb/>
But why does Martin work so<lb/>
hard?<lb/>
" I've been lucky to win some<lb/>
awards. Each time I win an<lb/>
award, it makes me want to<lb/>
work that much harder to<lb/>
improve myself<lb/>
Since he began playing<lb/>
organized soocer at age 15,<lb/>
Phil's awards have multiplied<lb/>
yearly. In high school, he<lb/>
starred fa Page High of Green-<lb/>
sboro and was selected the<lb/>
team's most valuable player his<lb/>
senia year.<lb/>
In addition to his all-state<lb/>
and Olympic tryout honors last<lb/>
year, Phil was named to the<lb/>
Campbell Soocer Classic All-<lb/>
Tournament Team. He was also<lb/>
selected as the Pirate's most<lb/>
valuable player last season. Phil<lb/>
is the "building block" fa the<lb/>
ECU soccer program. As many<lb/>
as six a seven freshmen will<lb/>
start fa the Pirates this year.<lb/>
Smith feels that Phil is just the<lb/>
man to have around to help<lb/>
these freshmen adjust.<lb/>
Phil is high on these fresh-<lb/>
men, often choosing to talk of<lb/>
them, rather than himself. "We<lb/>
have brought in some players<lb/>
with a lot of experience. This<lb/>
should make a difference. There<lb/>
are several good goal scorers in<lb/>
the group<lb/>
Smith says the offensive<lb/>
help from the freshmen should<lb/>
wak to Phil' 8 advantage Now<lb/>
we can give him sons relief. He<lb/>
won't have to do it all. Our<lb/>
opponents can no longer con-<lb/>
centrate on just Phil<lb/>
Phil's outlook on the coming<lb/>
season? "We should be better<lb/>
offensively. The defense will<lb/>
need to be bsttsr than last year.<lb/>
We gave up about 39 goals. But<lb/>
I'm expecting better things this<lb/>
year<lb/>
AN ECY SOOCER player manuevers the ball<lb/>
past an opponent during a game last season. The<lb/>
Pirates open their 1978 season this Saturday<lb/>
when ECU oompetes in the first Mayor's Cup<lb/>
Tournament in Raleigh, N.C. Other teams<lb/>
competing in the two-day event are Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference teams Duke, N.C. State and<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
There's a new face in<lb/>
downtown Greenville<lb/>
(ringing you Quality printinj<lb/>
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Intramural flag football season underway<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A brand new intramural<lb/>
football season begins this<lb/>
afternoon on the Ficklen Sta-<lb/>
dium intramural fields as a<lb/>
record number of teams will vie<lb/>
fa the all-campus title.<lb/>
Last year's men's title was<lb/>
won by the Soott Time-Outs,<lb/>
while the women's title was<lb/>
oopped by the Cotton Bunnies .<lb/>
Both teams will be back to<lb/>
defend their title. During the<lb/>
first week, though, most of the<lb/>
teams will test out their strenths<lb/>
and weaknesses in preparation<lb/>
fa the first Intramural top ten.<lb/>
That will debut next week.<lb/>
Once again this season,<lb/>
intramural flag football will be<lb/>
played under the lights next to<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium and on new<lb/>
fields out by Allied Health. The<lb/>
women will also play on College<lb/>
Hill Drive at the bottom of the<lb/>
hill.<lb/>
But while football will be<lb/>
taking the limelight this week,<lb/>
several other intramural events<lb/>
will begin their registration<lb/>
periods soon. Team tennis, golf<lb/>
and tennis mixed doubles are<lb/>
only a week off, with the<lb/>
registration dates beginning<lb/>
next Monday. The Almost Any-<lb/>
thing Goes carnival will be held<lb/>
next Tuesday, September 11 on<lb/>
the ECU Mall.<lb/>
The Almost Anything Goes<lb/>
carnival is namally the most<lb/>
interesting event held on the<lb/>
campus, though the carnival<lb/>
is patterned aner the Almost<lb/>
Anything Goes television show<lb/>
of several years back, and<lb/>
features athletic events in any-<lb/>
thing from balloon toss to the<lb/>
football throw. Each team is<lb/>
composed of four men and four<lb/>
women.<lb/>
Another oo-reaeationaJ e-<lb/>
vent, co-ed softball, began this<lb/>
week and is in full swing,<lb/>
although some teams haven't<lb/>
played their first game. Co-rec<lb/>
team softball was offered fa the<lb/>
first time last season and met<lb/>
with a good response, so it was<lb/>
offered again this year.<lb/>
The intramural equipement<lb/>
rooms and both gyms open<lb/>
today fa student use and will be<lb/>
open seven days a week. The<lb/>
swimming pools in Minges and<lb/>
Memaial gyms also open this<lb/>
evening fa student use.<lb/>
Gymnasium hours in Mem-<lb/>
aial Gym run fron 5 pm to 10<lb/>
pm on Monday through Thurs-<lb/>
day, 5 pm through 8 pm on<lb/>
Friday, from 12 noon to 8 pm on<lb/>
Saturday and from 2 pm to 8 pm<lb/>
on Sunday. Equipment room<lb/>
hours in Memaial gym will run<lb/>
from 7:45 am to 10 pm on<lb/>
weeknights, including Friday;<lb/>
from 12 - 8 pm on Saturday;<lb/>
from 2 pm - 8 pm on Sunday.<lb/>
Memaial pool hours will run<lb/>
from 4 pm to 6 pm Monday<lb/>
through Friday; from 2 to 5 pm<lb/>
on Saturday and from 12-1 pm<lb/>
on Monday, Wednesday and<lb/>
Friday.<lb/>
Minges Coliseum will be<lb/>
open from 6:45 pm to 10:00 pm<lb/>
Monday through Friday fa Free<lb/>
Play hours; from 10 am to 6 pm<lb/>
on most Saturday afternoons<lb/>
and from 3 to 8 pm on Sunday.<lb/>
The Minges equipment room<lb/>
will be open from 7:45 am to 10<lb/>
pm on weekdays, from 10 am to<lb/>
6 pm on most Saturdays, and<lb/>
from 2 to 8 pm on Sundays. The<lb/>
Minges swimming pool is open<lb/>
every day except Saturday,<lb/>
when only the Memaial pool is<lb/>
open.<lb/>
Hours fa swimming at<lb/>
Minges pool will run from 12-1<lb/>
pm Monday, Wednesday and<lb/>
Friday fa special noontime<lb/>
swims; from 8-10 pm fa even-<lb/>
ing swims, Monday through<lb/>
Friday; and from 2-8 pm on<lb/>
Sundays.<lb/>
The annual ECU Fnsbee<lb/>
tournament, which is co-spon-<lb/>
saed by McDonalds, is sched-<lb/>
uled fa September 20. Reg-<lb/>
istratiai is now taking place at<lb/>
the McDonalds on Tenth and<lb/>
Cotanche Sts.<lb/>
Waters unimpressed with Cats'<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
While ECU'S Pat Dye was<lb/>
muttering comments about "a<lb/>
comedy of errors In regards to<lb/>
the way his team played in<lb/>
Saturday night's 14-6 ueaaon<lb/>
opening win, Western Carolina<lb/>
head coach Bob Waters wasn't<lb/>
too happy with his team's play<lb/>
either.<lb/>
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"I hope we can eliminate all<lb/>
the mistakes we made tonight<lb/>
said a falan Waters in the<lb/>
Catamount dressing room after<lb/>
Saturday's game. "I am sure we<lb/>
are going to be a much better<lb/>
football team when we eliminate<lb/>
all those offensive mistakes we<lb/>
made tonight. You can get by<lb/>
with a few mistakes, but not<lb/>
against a team like East Caro-<lb/>
lina<lb/>
Waters' squad suffered from<lb/>
the same oomedy of errors<lb/>
that Dye talked about, losing<lb/>
four fumbles and suffering four<lb/>
mteroept ions, for a total of eight<lb/>
turnovas. When one oonsiders<lb/>
that the Cats' had the ball fa<lb/>
oily 58 plays during the game,<lb/>
that isn't a very productive<lb/>
percentage.<lb/>
And the Cats' didn't move<lb/>
the ball very well when they did<lb/>
hang onto it. They finished the<lb/>
game with a total offensive<lb/>
effat of 178 yards, gaining only<lb/>
51 yards against the Pirates in<lb/>
the first half. The only real<lb/>
display of offense showed by the<lb/>
Catamounts during the night<lb/>
was a 58-yard pass from Mike<lb/>
Pusey to Fred Meadows in the<lb/>
third period. That oompletioi<lb/>
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set the Cats up with sane fine<lb/>
field positiai at the ECU 20, but<lb/>
a fumble at the eight oost the<lb/>
Cats a shot at scoring.<lb/>
That was the only time the<lb/>
Catamounts moved the ball in<lb/>
the game, as they got aaoss the<lb/>
midfieid stripe only three times<lb/>
in the game.<lb/>
"Our passing game and<lb/>
running game didn't go as well<lb/>
as we had planned fa it to<lb/>
remarked Waters. "We need a<lb/>
great deal of wak in both areas<lb/>
befae we become a good<lb/>
football team.<lb/>
"Mike (Pusey) did not have<lb/>
a good night by his standards<lb/>
added WatersBut I can't find<lb/>
fault with him fa that. It was<lb/>
our gameplan that was respon-<lb/>
sible fa the poa showing as<lb/>
much as anything else. Then,<lb/>
ECU'S secondary also deserves<lb/>
alrt of aedit. They are as good<lb/>
as we have ever faced<lb/>
Pusey came into the game<lb/>
against ECU as the ninth-best<lb/>
passer in the nation returning<lb/>
from 1977. But against the<lb/>
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Pirates, he completed only<lb/>
10of-23 passes fa 131 yards and<lb/>
the tour interceptions were the<lb/>
most off a WCU quarterback<lb/>
sinoe ECU picked atf seven<lb/>
against the Cats back in 1975.<lb/>
Only one Catamount ball-<lb/>
carrier had a successful night<lb/>
lugging the football. That was<lb/>
Mitchell Ray. Ray scored the<lb/>
Cats' only touchdown of the<lb/>
game on one-yard run in the<lb/>
third period and picked up a<lb/>
total of 46 yards on 15 carries<lb/>
On the night, the entire Cata-<lb/>
mount running game managed<lb/>
just 47 yards rushing on 33<lb/>
carries.<lb/>
Obviously the ECU defense<lb/>
dominated the Cats on the line<lb/>
of scrimmage, as well as in the<lb/>
secondary, even if the ECU<lb/>
offense was slowed down by its<lb/>
own mistakes.<lb/>
Waters was pleased with the<lb/>
way Western played on defense<lb/>
too, dting the fact that they<lb/>
made only one major mistake<lb/>
the entire evening. That came<lb/>
on a 60-yard touchdown pass<lb/>
from Leander Green to Billy Ray<lb/>
Washington. That aerial by the<lb/>
Jacksonville duo put the clamps<lb/>
on any hopes of winning that<lb/>
WCU may have had.<lb/>
Ironically, the goat on the<lb/>
pass, Willie Wells, was the<lb/>
same player who had broken<lb/>
through and blocked two first<lb/>
half ECU field goal attempts by<lb/>
Bill Lamm.<lb/>
"Willie Wells played a real<lb/>
fine game, but made one<lb/>
mistake when he gambled on<lb/>
that post pattern to Washing-<lb/>
ton pointed out Waters. "He<lb/>
lost that chance, he thought he<lb/>
could catch it.<lb/>
"For the most Dart added<lb/>
Waters, "our defense did a<lb/>
great job agains: Lost Carolina,<lb/>
both against the pass and<lb/>
against the run. They only hurt<lb/>
us on that long pass and a<lb/>
couple of options outside. We<lb/>
played as tough as I can<lb/>
remember them playing. I can't<lb/>
fault the offense for its effort<lb/>
either, they just made too many<lb/>
mistakes<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057139_0011"/><lb/>
ECU players recognized<lb/>
Anthony Collins, Joe Uod-<lb/>
?te, D.T. Joyner,Ruffin McNeil,<lb/>
freshman Glen Morris were<lb/>
"arrwd the players oj the week<lb/>
by the ECU coaching staff for<lb/>
their efforts in the Pirate 14-6<lb/>
victory over Western Carolina<lb/>
Saturday night.<lb/>
Collins, who carried the ball<lb/>
17 times for 84 yards against<lb/>
JOE GODETTE<lb/>
WCU was named the top<lb/>
offensive backfield performer.<lb/>
He also returned the opening<lb/>
kickoff 58 yards.<lb/>
Godette, a native of Green-<lb/>
ville, was cited as the top<lb/>
offensive lineman.<lb/>
The top performer in the<lb/>
defensive line was D.T. Joyner<lb/>
who made nine tackles including<lb/>
three sacks. Joyner also receiv-<lb/>
ed the R.W. Moore Award for<lb/>
the outstanding ECU player in<lb/>
the game.<lb/>
Strong safety Ruffin McNeill<lb/>
was the top defensive back. He<lb/>
made four tackles and intercep-<lb/>
ted a pass against highly touted<lb/>
Catamount quarterback Mike<lb/>
Pusey.<lb/>
Glen Morris, a native of<lb/>
Greensboro, N.C. was the top<lb/>
player on the specialty teams.<lb/>
The former Western Guilford<lb/>
prep star made three tackles<lb/>
against the Catamounts.<lb/>
Other ECU players who<lb/>
received special recognition<lb/>
from the coaching staff on<lb/>
offense were Mitchell Smith,<lb/>
Wayne Inman, Perry Allred and<lb/>
Terry Gallaher.<lb/>
Top defensive performers<lb/>
were linebackers Tommy<lb/>
Summer, Mike Brewington and<lb/>
Jeffery Warren along with John<lb/>
Morris, Zack Valentine, Fred<lb/>
Chavis, Cliff Williams, Oliver<lb/>
Felton, Nate Wigfall, Vance<lb/>
Tingler and Noah Clark. Top<lb/>
players in the secondary were<lb/>
Gerald Hall, Wayne Perry and<lb/>
Charlie Carter.<lb/>
1978 FOUNTAINMEAD<lb/>
Sportswriters Needed<lb/>
Call FOUNT AIINHEAD at 757-6366<lb/>
and leave your name and number<lb/>
GERALD HALL<lb/>
jmJs<lb/>
zbal?.<lb/>
Canvas bugs,<lb/>
rlrreafxUce? offewULXu<lb/>
Section ofmzxduindiie. lzbxx<lb/>
JhjE. gazebo -<lb/>
downtown xeenmJIe,<lb/>
Clip this coupon!<lb/>
GLEN MORRIS<lb/>
RUFFIN McNEILL<lb/>
D.T. JOYNER<lb/>
????????????????<lb/>
And get three games for only $1.25.<lb/>
( Per Person Rate )<lb/>
LOOTED BESIDE RIVER BLUFF ACTS<lb/>
Phone 758-1820<lb/>
WED PRISM &amp; Fragile ATTIP<lb/>
THUR &amp;Fragil<lb/>
SA<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
FRI<lb/>
Thorpe Music Co.<lb/>
201 E.9thSteet GreenviIfe,N.G<lb/>
For all your party needs<lb/>
 juke box rentals <lb/>
 pinball and foosball <lb/>
Welcome Back Students<lb/>
752-4606<lb/>
r<lb/>
Breakfast<lb/>
from 7 a.m.<lb/>
to 11a.m.<lb/>
specializing<lb/>
in large<lb/>
country ham or sausage<lb/>
biscuits. Hot cakes. Scrambled<lb/>
eggs with country ham or<lb/>
sausage. Our 14 lb. beef<lb/>
burgers are ground from fresh<lb/>
Western Chuck. We have pure<lb/>
soft served ice cream. Also<lb/>
serving ham and cheese,<lb/>
chicken fillets, hot dogs, chill<lb/>
and beans, french fries, apple<lb/>
turnovers, and a variety of soft<lb/>
drinks. Located on the corner<lb/>
of 5th and Reade St. and on<lb/>
Hwy. 264 In Washington.<lb/>
DISCOUNT FURNITURE<lb/>
at<lb/>
AZALEA MOBILE HOMES<lb/>
Dinette $40 and up<lb/>
Bed Frames $10 and up<lb/>
Refrigerators $75 and up<lb/>
Couches $50 and up<lb/>
Couch and chair $75 and up<lb/>
Lamps $7.50 and up<lb/>
Chest $95 and up<lb/>
See Tommy Williams at<lb/>
AZALEA MOBILE HOMES<lb/>
864 by-pass<lb/>
KORE-O-MAT<lb/>
Attention ECU men on the the hill:<lb/>
If you want to know where the<lb/>
girls do their wash, then come to<lb/>
KORE-O-Mat on E. 14th Street<lb/>
(bottom of the hill across from<lb/>
Chanelo's) You 11 be glad you did!<lb/>
In addition to girls we offer the<lb/>
following:<lb/>
fluff and fold service drinks and snacks<lb/>
decolor TV attendant<lb/>
 professional dry-cleaning pick-up station<lb/>
 pinball<lb/>
SAT ?u?y cStaxx fiP the Grey Band<lb/>
SUN Sidewinder<lb/>
Why,<lb/>
THE CLOTHES HORSE?<lb/>
1????1<lb/>
Bring this coupon in for<lb/>
one free wash Sam-4pm daily!<lb/>
I 1<lb/>
offer good thru Sept 30,197 I<lb/>
<lb/>
SW<lb/>
The primary answer to this question is it is 1978.<lb/>
The clothing needs of a young man today are dif-<lb/>
ferent than they were three to five years ago.<lb/>
Yes, we are still carrying a great selection of<lb/>
MALE and LEVI jeans, but we have also added an<lb/>
extensive collection of other trousers. We also<lb/>
have some great looks in suits and sport coats<lb/>
and lightweight jackets. We have dress and sport<lb/>
shirts by Gant and LaCoste Knit shirts. You'll also<lb/>
find Sparry Topsiders and many other pieces of<lb/>
clothing styled especially for the young man.<lb/>
Please drop by and have a look.<lb/>
The Clothes Horse<lb/>
218 East Fifth Street<lb/>
<pb facs="00057139_0012"/><lb/>
STATEMENT OF ETHICS-<lb/>
In today's competitive market we feet it is important to offer<lb/>
quality at a fair profit, and with professional service. We do not<lb/>
advertise one thing to get you in the store so we can sail you<lb/>
something else. We give legitimate discounts. Our salesmen offer<lb/>
knowledgeable courteous help and appreciate your business. We<lb/>
have been here a long time and have never offered the kind of<lb/>
exagerated promises made by several dealers that are no longer<lb/>
here to honor the promises. If any of our sales men knock another<lb/>
dealer a a product we do not sell, he will be discharged. We are<lb/>
proud of our stereo, our serivce, and our staff. We sincerely<lb/>
your business.<lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 5 September 1978<lb/>
eu. v?e mv<lb/>
erely solicit Wk iam<lb/>
0<lb/>
cqV?<lb/>
:lupt?<lb/>
C?<lb/>
Every system professionally<lb/>
matched for performance<lb/>
and price I<lb/>
z<lb/>
 ? ? ??? ? ?<lb/>
mutmtHuM.<lb/>
with our &amp;odb@?<lb/>
WN service departmen<lb/>
in the store!<lb/>
SONY<lb/>
TRADE- INS ENCOURAGED<lb/>
(We need your used equipment.)<lb/>
Meet The Specialists<lb/>
Askabout<lb/>
Student Hnancingl<lb/>
Free Delivery<lb/>
Hook- Up Assistance<lb/>
Jim - Sales<lb/>
Bronson - Sales<lb/>
Janet - Bookeeping<lb/>
13<lb/>
George - Technician<lb/>
HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH<lb/>
On the Mall- Downtown Greenville<lb/>
? - ??<lb/>
- -<lb/>
?? 4<lb/>
<pb facs="00057139_0013"/><lb/>
<pb facs="00057139_0014"/>
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