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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057140_0001"/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina ? No55 No- lW<lb/>
t 31<lb/>
Chancellor Brewer formally installed<lb/>
ByMARCBARNES<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Dr Thomas B. Brewer was formally installed as<lb/>
chancellor of ECU in ceremonies here Saturday.<lb/>
Dr Brewer. 46. is the former Vice-Chancellor and Dean<lb/>
of Texas Christian University in Fort Worth, Texas.<lb/>
Dr. Brewer was joined on the platform by Governor<lb/>
James B Hunt, Chief Justice Susie Sharp, and Jack W.<lb/>
Peltason. who is the president of the American Council On<lb/>
Education President William C. Friday, of the University<lb/>
of North Carolina, presided over the ceremonies.<lb/>
Governor Hunt greeted the crowd, saying "The people<lb/>
of North Carolina are thrilled to have this great and good<lb/>
man. Thomas Brewer, who has been found by looking<lb/>
throughout America to come here and to lead this<lb/>
university He added that ECU had progressed from a<lb/>
small teachers college to a nationally recognized university<lb/>
because of the state s committment to higher education.<lb/>
?We have, through the past several years consistently<lb/>
ranked within the top tenten in America in terms of per<lb/>
capita support of public higher education Hunt noted.<lb/>
He also said. This university and it's leaders have<lb/>
been the drivingthrobbing heart of the development<lb/>
thrust of eastern North Carolina, an area of vast richness<lb/>
and history<lb/>
Hunt also praised Brewer's predecessor, Dr. Leo<lb/>
Jenkins, saying that Jenkins had been a major influence in<lb/>
the leadership of Eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
The governor said that he was confident that Dr. Brewer<lb/>
would carry the university on to greater academic<lb/>
excellence and thai he would continue to provide leadership<lb/>
to this region of the state.<lb/>
Hunt remarked that "I have the best feelings in the<lb/>
world about what our future will be under his leadership<lb/>
He added. "Dr. Brewer, you have my strongest personal<lb/>
backing, and the very best wishes of the people of North<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Dr Jack Suggs, who is the Dean of the Divinity School<lb/>
at Texas Christian University, started his greeting on a light<lb/>
note saying that he had discovered Brewer to be a<lb/>
"converted Tar Heel He added that he had found a<lb/>
Biblical basis for Brewer's decision to leave Texas Christian<lb/>
and come to ECU.<lb/>
Suggs remarked that he first thought of the story of the<lb/>
prodigal son He added, "You remember, he went off into a<lb/>
foreign country and wasted his substance in riotous living<lb/>
On a more serious note, Suggs remarked that "Tom<lb/>
Brewer has the energy needed for this job and the<lb/>
committment to use that energy in the cause of higher<lb/>
education He added that "He will represent you well to<lb/>
all sorts of constituencies<lb/>
Suggs said that "At the end of policy debate, you will<lb/>
always know that neither numbers nor dollars is his game.<lb/>
For him. education is students and faculty, people engaged<lb/>
in the excitement of learning. That is important<lb/>
CHANCELLORTHOMAS BOWMAN Brewer speaks atjhe ceremony marking his installation as the seventh chief<lb/>
administrator of ECU. Brewer comes to ECU from Texas Christian University where he was vice chancellor ana<lb/>
dean. Photo by John H Grogan)<lb/>
He also said that Brewer's main concern is excellence,<lb/>
and that he has the ability to recognize quality. He added,<lb/>
"Tom Brewer is a man of integritythe word integrity<lb/>
describes him best<lb/>
Tommy Joe Payne, president of the Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Association, expressed appreciation for the large<lb/>
turnout at the inauguration . He added that "Of all the<lb/>
groups represented here today, no group is more concerned<lb/>
about what this university represents than we, the<lb/>
students<lb/>
Payne commented further that "this hour is the time to<lb/>
officially place upon Dr. Brewer's shoulders the<lb/>
responsibility of this university, and that responsibility is<lb/>
primarily to teach, develop, and help the students on this<lb/>
campus to learn and live<lb/>
Payne also thanked Dr. Jenkins for whar he had done,<lb/>
and Dr. Brewer for his "sincere approach to the procedure<lb/>
for administering our university<lb/>
He added that "The future is bright for our school, and<lb/>
we believe that Dr. Brewer will preserve that essential<lb/>
quality, a sincereity that for so long has been the hallmark<lb/>
of East Carolina<lb/>
Greeetingswere then given by Professor Henry Farrell,<lb/>
chairman of the faculty. Farrell said that " In many ways the<lb/>
installation of a chancellor is as much an opportunity to<lb/>
summarize the accomplishments as it is a movement toward<lb/>
the future with hope and confidence for continued<lb/>
excellence<lb/>
He added that ECU has progressed in many ways since<lb/>
it's founding. He likened the slow progress of the university<lb/>
to the search for knowledge, and he added that there is a<lb/>
need for more and more information that needs to be called<lb/>
upon from sources such as libraries and computers.<lb/>
Chairman Troy Pate, of the Board of Trustees,<lb/>
characterized Brewer as "An educator with rare insight and<lb/>
abilities Pate added, "He is a man of dreams, who is also<lb/>
possessed with a magnificent determination and zest,<lb/>
essential totransofrm these dreamstoreality<lb/>
He further commented that "We are firmly assured that<lb/>
the leadership of East Carolina University will rest with one<lb/>
of our nation's most dedicated and able educators<lb/>
He went on to say that Brewer is an innovator, and he is<lb/>
"driven by a vigorous committment tocreativity<lb/>
The chairman of the Board of Governors of the<lb/>
University of North Carolina, William A. Johnson said that<lb/>
"We are gratified indeed when Dr Brewer accepted the<lb/>
challenge put forward to him by the selection committee<lb/>
He added that "This is indeed a happy day. but I think<lb/>
that the happiest day was the day when Dr Brewer said yes<lb/>
to the invitation<lb/>
Johnson commented further that ECU would become<lb/>
even greater under the direction of Chancellor Brewer<lb/>
"You will have my personal suppport in this endeavor as<lb/>
you lead this institution forward, and I can say to you that<lb/>
you will have the support of the entire board of governors.<lb/>
he noted.<lb/>
President Friday thanked those who presented<lb/>
greetings, and he introduced Jack W. Peltason. who is the<lb/>
president of the American Council on Education.<lb/>
Pelatson delivered the keynote address at the<lb/>
installation. He spoke on the sublet "In Honorable<lb/>
Tradition<lb/>
He commented that the installation was "both a high<lb/>
moment in the career of our colleague Tom Brewer. and i1<lb/>
the opening of a new chapter in the book of East Carolina<lb/>
University <lb/>
He went on to say that "It is a privilege to be a college<lb/>
or university chief executive, and honor to be asked, and an<lb/>
opportunity to serve He added. "The caliber of their<lb/>
vision and their integrity can safely be matched against the<lb/>
best this nation produces from any profession.<lb/>
He commented that universities should not restrict<lb/>
access to any economic group, race, religion or any other<lb/>
segment of our society.<lb/>
Peltason also said that higher education should reman<lb/>
independent, and he said that the people of North Carolina<lb/>
should be proud of it's university system. They<lb/>
have accorded it an environment in which faculty and<lb/>
students are free to explore, investigate, and learn without<lb/>
fear of adverse public sanctions he noted.<lb/>
He said that higher education is an almost<lb/>
.mmeasurably rich legacy and he added that e must be<lb/>
careful of what we do now. because the decisions we make<lb/>
now will affect future generations.<lb/>
He added that "colleges and universities provide botr<lb/>
the continuity which helps glue society together and the<lb/>
ordered framework withm with change car, be construc-<lb/>
tively molded<lb/>
Peltason ended hisspeecn by saying "I ask that an o. us<lb/>
labor with him in behalf of those high ideals which have<lb/>
made our system and this University great<lb/>
He added, "In the measure of their light Tom Brewer<lb/>
will succeed, and we shall be able to uphold h.s strong right<lb/>
arm.<lb/>
See INSTALLATION, p 5 <lb/>
Greenpeace organized here<lb/>
ByGLENNTHOMAS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Greenpeace, an organi-<lb/>
zation dedicated to the pro-<lb/>
tection of endangered spe-<lb/>
cies, has come to Green-<lb/>
ville. Jerry Adderton, co-<lb/>
ordinator of the soon to be<lb/>
local chapter, said that he is<lb/>
looking forward to the first<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
Greenpeace was born in<lb/>
1970 when a group of<lb/>
people got together to pro-<lb/>
test the nuclear tests off the<lb/>
coast of Alaska. The protest<lb/>
failed and the test was con-<lb/>
ducted. After the test ani-<lb/>
mal carcasses began to<lb/>
wash ashore and the project<lb/>
was closed one year later.<lb/>
Although Greenpeace is<lb/>
concerned about all en-<lb/>
dangered species, its pri-<lb/>
mary concern is the un-<lb/>
necessary slaugher of<lb/>
whales and dolphin. "The<lb/>
main thing with the whales<lb/>
is that not only are the<lb/>
whales disappearing, you<lb/>
know that most of the spe-<lb/>
cies are in immediate dan-<lb/>
ger of extinction, but its<lb/>
also destroying the food<lb/>
chain said Adderton.<lb/>
"One of the main things I<lb/>
want to do is expose these<lb/>
problems because I really<lb/>
think that people will re-<lb/>
spond to it he added.<lb/>
"What the Japanese<lb/>
did, they took their own<lb/>
Civil Defense Forces'<lb/>
equipment like machine<lb/>
guns, gunoboats, and went<lb/>
out and mass-murdered the<lb/>
dolphin said Adderton.<lb/>
"They even had patrols<lb/>
along the beach, any dol-<lb/>
phins that weren't already<lb/>
dead that washed up in<lb/>
shallow water, they went<lb/>
up and finished them off<lb/>
he added.<lb/>
"I first found out about<lb/>
Greenpeace about three<lb/>
years ago by a TV special<lb/>
said Adderton. "Ever since<lb/>
then I've sort of kept up<lb/>
with Greenpeace in a kind<lb/>
of small way<lb/>
Though not directly af-<lb/>
filiated with Greenpeace,<lb/>
many top entertainment<lb/>
stars have joined the fight<lb/>
against whale, seal, and<lb/>
dolphin slaughter.<lb/>
The two main countries<lb/>
responsible for the majority<lb/>
of the killings are Russia<lb/>
and Japan. Many of the<lb/>
entertainers have gone as<lb/>
far as to cancel entire tours<lb/>
through these countries.<lb/>
The name Greenpeace<lb/>
is constructed of the basic<lb/>
thoughts that the members<lb/>
have about how the world<lb/>
should be; green and<lb/>
peaceful. Though it was<lb/>
started in Vancouver. B.C<lb/>
the American office is run<lb/>
out of California.<lb/>
The group that is to<lb/>
form in Greenville will be<lb/>
the first in North Carolina.<lb/>
Mr. Adderton said that<lb/>
he hopes not only to fight<lb/>
for the whales, but also to<lb/>
fight against the two nu-<lb/>
clear power sites in North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Anyone interested in<lb/>
joining Greenpeace is in-<lb/>
vited to attend their organ-<lb/>
izational meeting Tuesday,<lb/>
October 31, at 6 p.m.<lb/>
Halloween costumes are<lb/>
optional.<lb/>
CHIEF JUSTICE SUSIE Sharp is shown here administering<lb/>
the oath of office to Chancellor Brewer.<lb/>
Photo by John H. Grogan<lb/>
Fill INTAINHEAD members attend<lb/>
r<lb/>
ACP held in Houston<lb/>
By LEIGH COAKLEY<lb/>
Production Manager<lb/>
The 54th Associate Col-<lb/>
legiate Press Convention<lb/>
(ACP) was held in Houston,<lb/>
Texas, Oct. 26-28, at the<lb/>
Shamrock Hilton Hotel.<lb/>
Three FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
staff members attended<lb/>
thi? convention. Doug<lb/>
Wh.te, editor; Robert<lb/>
Swaim, advertising man-<lb/>
ager; and Leigh Coakley,<lb/>
production manager; were<lb/>
representatives fro ECU.<lb/>
Last year's convention<lb/>
was held in New Orleans.<lb/>
Colleagues from student<lb/>
publications all over the<lb/>
country enjoyed sharing<lb/>
and learning from one<lb/>
another. The convention<lb/>
had something for just<lb/>
about everyone, from edit-<lb/>
ors to layout artists, from<lb/>
business managers to<lb/>
photographers. There were<lb/>
70 seminar sessions and<lb/>
short courses.<lb/>
Each session was learn-<lb/>
ing experience and were<lb/>
'?'give-and-take classes<lb/>
Professional journalists,<lb/>
and advisors to award-<lb/>
winning publications were<lb/>
available to help find an-<lb/>
swers to each individual<lb/>
publication pruolem.<lb/>
Robert L. Kerns, visual<lb/>
communications coordina-<lb/>
tor at the University of<lb/>
South Florida, Tampa, con-<lb/>
ducted a short course in<lb/>
photography at the con-<lb/>
vention. He is also the<lb/>
author of several books on<lb/>
the subject of publication<lb/>
photography. He covered<lb/>
topics concerning the ba-<lb/>
sics in photography, ad-<lb/>
vanced photography, and<lb/>
photojournalism. Student<lb/>
photographers brought a-<lb/>
long samples of their work<lb/>
 to be critiqued.<lb/>
Jose Quevedo, advisor<lb/>
to the award-wlimlng FAL-<lb/>
CON TIMES from Miami-<lb/>
Dade Community College,<lb/>
See PAPERSP 9<lb/>
What's inside <lb/>
PROFESSOR CLINTON R Prewett. pictured here, served<lb/>
as the Chief Marshal and Mace Bearer<lb/>
Photo by John H Grogan<lb/>
ECU-Appalachian game<lb/>
Shuttles run<lb/>
ALANOA TLE Y ST A RS n "God Says<lb/>
There Is No Peter Ott<lb/>
Seep. 7. Photoby John H.<lb/>
I Grogan<lb/>
ECU Volleyball team wins invitational<lb/>
See p.10.<lb/>
Hall of Fame inductees announcedSee<lb/>
p.10.<lb/>
God Says There Is No Peter Ott is<lb/>
reviewed. See p. 7.<lb/>
National Health Insurance See p.6<lb/>
The recent "Friends of the Faculty" art<lb/>
exhibition is "The finest in four years<lb/>
See p. 7.<lb/>
Dr. Brewer's profileSee p.3.<lb/>
L<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
A free shuttle bus sys-<lb/>
tem will be put into opera-<lb/>
tion by ECU on Saturday<lb/>
evening. Nov. 4. to trans-<lb/>
port fans to and from<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium for the<lb/>
football game between<lb/>
ECU and Appalachian<lb/>
State.<lb/>
University officials hope<lb/>
that hundreds of fans who<lb/>
would otherwise drive to<lb/>
the stadium area will use<lb/>
the shuttle buses and there-<lb/>
by relieve parking and<lb/>
traffic problems around<lb/>
Ficklen.<lb/>
The bus service will<lb/>
begin at 5 p.m. Saturday<lb/>
from the parking area<lb/>
around the Willis Building<lb/>
at Reade and First Streets.<lb/>
Buses will run at intervals<lb/>
of 15 minutes prior to the 7<lb/>
p.m kickoff.<lb/>
After the game, buses<lb/>
will leave the stadium at 10<lb/>
minute intervals returning<lb/>
fans to the same Reade and<lb/>
First Street location<lb/>
The Willis Building loc-<lb/>
ation is easily accessible<lb/>
and cars may be parked<lb/>
there easily and left until<lb/>
after the game This service<lb/>
will be particularly valuable<lb/>
during inclement weather<lb/>
when much of the stadium<lb/>
parking is closed to protect<lb/>
intramural grounds, ECU<lb/>
officals said.<lb/>
Area fans are encourag-<lb/>
ed to use the free shuttle<lb/>
bus service for the remain-<lb/>
ing three football games at<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium on Nov. 4,<lb/>
Nov. 11 and Nov. 18.<lb/>
officials said.<lb/>
<lb/>
, jt ?<lb/>
t<lb/>
?-??.?-?. ? l - .?- -?- . -? - v . <lb/>
<pb facs="00057140_0002"/><lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 31 October 1978<lb/>
Pablo<lb/>
The Student Union Ma-<lb/>
jor Attractions Committee<lb/>
will present Pablo Cruise<lb/>
with special guest Livings-<lb/>
ton Taylor on Thurs Nov.<lb/>
9 at 8 p.m. in Minges<lb/>
Coliseium.<lb/>
Tickets will be $5 for<lb/>
ECU students and $7 for<lb/>
the public. All tickets are<lb/>
available from the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. In addit-<lb/>
ion, public tickets can be<lb/>
purchased from: Apple<lb/>
Records. E 5th St School<lb/>
Kid's Records - George-<lb/>
town Shoppes. The Music<lb/>
Shop - Greenville Square<lb/>
Mall.<lb/>
Only public tickets will<lb/>
be sold at the door.<lb/>
Percussion<lb/>
The ECU Percussion<lb/>
Ensemble will perform in<lb/>
concert Thursday, Nov. 2 at<lb/>
8:15 p.m. in the A.J.<lb/>
Fletcher Music Center Re-<lb/>
cital Hall.<lb/>
The concert, free and<lb/>
open to the public, will<lb/>
feature "a colorful program<lb/>
that includes a wide variety<lb/>
of timbres and styles<lb/>
Rho Epsilon<lb/>
Rho Epsilon, the Nat-<lb/>
ional Real Estate Frater-<lb/>
nity, will hold its next<lb/>
meeting Thurs Nov. 9 at 4<lb/>
p.m. in 221 Mendenhall.<lb/>
Guest speaker will be C.B.<lb/>
"Pop" Beasley from New<lb/>
Bern, N.C. and the topic<lb/>
will be Resort Develop-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
All members are urged<lb/>
to attend and anyone inter-<lb/>
ested in becoming a memb-<lb/>
er of Rho Epsilon is wel-<lb/>
comed.<lb/>
Socio-Anth<lb/>
The Sociology-Anthro-<lb/>
pology Club will present a<lb/>
slide and lecture program<lb/>
on anthropological field<lb/>
experiences Mexico.<lb/>
All interested are wel-<lb/>
come and encouraged to<lb/>
attend. Refreshments will<lb/>
be served.<lb/>
Leadership<lb/>
For a time of fun,<lb/>
fellowship, and Bible<lb/>
study. Come to Leadership<lb/>
Training Class. We meet<lb/>
each Thurs. at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
Brewster B-103. Sponsored<lb/>
by Campus Crusade for<lb/>
Christ.<lb/>
Comics<lb/>
The ECU Comic Book<lb/>
Club will meet Wed Nov.<lb/>
1 from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. in<lb/>
room 247, Mendenhall.<lb/>
Topics will include the<lb/>
upcoming Comic Book Con.<lb/>
All interested persons are<lb/>
invited for more info, call<lb/>
758-6909 before 7 p.m.<lb/>
Biology<lb/>
Health<lb/>
Children<lb/>
The Student Council for<lb/>
Exceptional Children will<lb/>
meet Wed Nov 1 at 5 p.m.<lb/>
in room 129 Speight. John<lb/>
Bash will speak on special<lb/>
education classes on scout-<lb/>
ing. All members and in-<lb/>
terested persons are invited<lb/>
toattend. Refreshments wil<lb/>
be served.<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
Check out "Discount<lb/>
Day" at the Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center recreation<lb/>
area. Every Monday after-<lb/>
noon from 2 p.m. until 5<lb/>
p.m bowling, table tennis,<lb/>
and billiard prices are 13<lb/>
off. Bring a friend, catch<lb/>
the savings, and have some<lb/>
fun.<lb/>
An organizational meet-<lb/>
ing of the newly formed<lb/>
Biology Club will be Wed<lb/>
Nov 1 at 7 p.m. in ten<lb/>
Biology Reading Room (2nd<lb/>
floor.)<lb/>
The topic will be,<lb/>
"What can you do with a<lb/>
degree in Biology?"<lb/>
Everyone is invited.<lb/>
Please bring your quest-<lb/>
ions.<lb/>
Lost-Found<lb/>
In order to provide<lb/>
better lost and found ser-<lb/>
vice, all items found<lb/>
should be turned in to the<lb/>
University Police as quickly<lb/>
as possible.<lb/>
Particular attention<lb/>
shojld o<lb/>
h ?'<lb/>
.Vtl<lb/>
given to keys,<lb/>
who have lost<lb/>
jsually need<lb/>
eday.<lb/>
. i found, and it<lb/>
.emont to turn<lb/>
o tne Police De-<lb/>
please call the<lb/>
Police Dispat-<lb/>
cher and the keys will be<lb/>
pir j ! y a University<lb/>
Poh -er The Univer-<lb/>
sity fs  Department is<lb/>
no; s a position to provide<lb/>
24 hour a day, seven days a<lb/>
week, lost and found ser-<lb/>
vice.<lb/>
is<lb/>
then<lb/>
partr<lb/>
Univ<lb/>
Deborah Thomas, em-<lb/>
ployee development spe-<lb/>
cialist for the National<lb/>
Center for Health Statistics<lb/>
will be on campus Wed<lb/>
Nov. 1 to interview stu-<lb/>
dents for Cooperative Edu-<lb/>
cation placements.<lb/>
Sophomores will be paid<lb/>
at the GS-3 level and<lb/>
juniors and seniors at the<lb/>
GS-4 level. The agency will<lb/>
also pay for the student's<lb/>
tuition and books after the<lb/>
first placement.<lb/>
Interested students<lb/>
should come by the Co-op<lb/>
office, Rawl 313, to make<lb/>
an appointment and read<lb/>
the sample job descriptions<lb/>
available. Freshmen and<lb/>
others who may be eligible<lb/>
for placement next year<lb/>
should attend a general<lb/>
information meeting with<lb/>
Thomas at 2 p.m. Nov. 1 in<lb/>
Rawl 313. Qualified minor-<lb/>
ities, women, and handi-<lb/>
capped students are en-<lb/>
couraged to apply.<lb/>
Phi Sigma<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi will hold<lb/>
its monthly meeting Wed<lb/>
Nov. 1 at 6 p.m. in Austin<lb/>
room 132. All members are<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
Greenpeace<lb/>
The first organizational<lb/>
meeting for Greenpeace<lb/>
will be held Halloween<lb/>
night, Oct. 31, at 6 p.m. in<lb/>
room 248 Mendenhall.<lb/>
Everyone is welcome to<lb/>
attend. For further infor-<lb/>
mation, call Jerry Adderton<lb/>
at 758-6259 after 5 on<lb/>
weekdays.<lb/>
Inter -Varsity<lb/>
Inter-Varsity will meet<lb/>
this Wednesday night at 7<lb/>
p.m. in the basement of the<lb/>
Library. The topic will be<lb/>
"How to Grow as a Chrsi-<lb/>
tain<lb/>
Writers<lb/>
Psi-Chi<lb/>
Phi Eta<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma will hold<lb/>
its bimonthly meeting in<lb/>
the Multipurpose room in<lb/>
Mendennali, Wed Nov. 1<lb/>
at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Elections will be held<lb/>
and plans for a Christmas<lb/>
Party will be discussed.<lb/>
All members are urged<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
Management<lb/>
The Society for the<lb/>
Advancement of Manage-<lb/>
ment will meet Wed Nov.<lb/>
1 at 4 p.m. in room 102<lb/>
Rawl. Allen Egard, from<lb/>
Proctor and Gamble will<lb/>
speak. All members and<lb/>
any interested persons are<lb/>
invited to attend.<lb/>
Psi-Chi will have a<lb/>
meeting Wed. night, Nov. 1<lb/>
at 7 p.m. in Speight 129.<lb/>
Graduate school programs<lb/>
in Psyc. at ECU will be<lb/>
discussed by Dr. Lao, from<lb/>
the General Psyc. Dept<lb/>
Dr. Corwin. from the<lb/>
School of Psychology and<lb/>
Dr. Long, from Clinical<lb/>
Psyc.<lb/>
Topics will be req-<lb/>
uirements for entering the<lb/>
graduate programs, curri-<lb/>
culum and general expecta-<lb/>
tions of graduate school.<lb/>
Questions will be answer-<lb/>
ed. All members and all<lb/>
interested persons are in-<lb/>
vited to attend.<lb/>
The constitutionally<lb/>
approved WritersGuild will<lb/>
meet Monday Nov. 6 at 3<lb/>
p.m. in Austin 207.<lb/>
Those desiring to be<lb/>
officers or committee mem-<lb/>
bers should attend<lb/>
Abject and rabid per-<lb/>
sons welcome.<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
.Rent - A - Lane it<lb/>
available every Saturday<lb/>
from Noon until 6 p.m. at<lb/>
the Mendenhall Bowling<lb/>
Center You can rent a<lb/>
bowling lane to use for one<lb/>
hour and it only costs $3<lb/>
Stop by and try it out you<lb/>
can't afford to miss it<lb/>
Travel<lb/>
Ski<lb/>
There will be a ski club<lb/>
meeting, Nov. 1 in. room<lb/>
105 Memorial Gym at 4<lb/>
p.m. Those interested in<lb/>
competing should attend.<lb/>
Student Union Travel<lb/>
Committee's trip to Snow<lb/>
Shoe West Virginia still has<lb/>
spaces open Don't miss<lb/>
this wonderful opportunity<lb/>
to visit one of the East<lb/>
Coasts most exciting ski<lb/>
resorts. The cost is only<lb/>
$169 from Jan 1-5, for<lb/>
more info, and registration<lb/>
at Central Ticket office at<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Union Major Attractions Committee<lb/>
presents<lb/>
PABLO CRUISE<lb/>
with special guest<lb/>
Livingston Taylor<lb/>
Thurs Nov. 9, 1978<lb/>
8 p.m.<lb/>
Minges Coliseum<lb/>
L<lb/>
HEKDRIX THEATRE HWBWT, 1978<lb/>
MENDENHALL STUDENT CENTER 8:00 P.M.<lb/>
Stolzman Is an artist of indescribable genius'<lb/>
- The Washington Post<lb/>
STUDENTS:<lb/>
Buy a Student Ticket<lb/>
Tuesday ot Wednesday and<lb/>
you'll be eligible to win a<lb/>
FREE Pablo Cruise T-Sl<lb/>
t Winners will be announced in t<lb/>
Thursday's FOUNTALNHEAD. J<lb/>
TICKETS:<lb/>
ECU Students 65.00<lb/>
Public $7.00<lb/>
tOnly Public Tickets will:<lb/>
I be sold at the door. ;<lb/>
I'One of the most brilliant performances of a fine season<lb/>
- Miami Herald<lb/>
TICKETS NOW ON SALE!<lb/>
Central Ticket Office hours:<lb/>
10-4 (M-F)<lb/>
TICKET PRICES: E.C.U. Students, 2.00<lb/>
and Public, S5.00.<lb/>
Tickets now available at the Central Ticket Office,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
(only public tickets will be sold at the door)<lb/>
TECHNICIANS NEEDED:<lb/>
Dependable , herd-working penom ere needed in tfte area or oouno ? ugm. an<lb/>
Film Projection. Mart be willing to work night, end weekend. K you're intererted. or for<lb/>
further infonnation contact: Jon Ikker at 757-6611 (Ext 268), Mendenhdl Stedent Cenier.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
forsde<lb/>
@<lb/>
FOR SALE: Speakers - air<lb/>
suspension. $200 ew,<lb/>
asking $100 for pair.<lb/>
Frank at 758-1186.<lb/>
Call<lb/>
FOR SALE: 72 Honda In<lb/>
excellent cond. New tires,<lb/>
new battery, 29,000 mi.<lb/>
One owner. Call 758-3386<lb/>
or 752-8585<lb/>
FOR SALE: Rotel stereo<lb/>
receiver, BSR McDonald<lb/>
turntable and 2 SMQ speak<lb/>
-ers. Receiver has 12 watts<lb/>
per channel and all equip-<lb/>
ment Is in excellent cond.<lb/>
$100 Call 758-6198.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Pioneer Sa-<lb/>
8500 amp. (100 watts.),<lb/>
Super Scope AM FM tuner<lb/>
Panasonic turntable - 8-<lb/>
track comb. 2 Marantz<lb/>
HD-77 speakers. $600 for<lb/>
all or will :sell separately.<lb/>
Call 756-8571 before 8 p.m.<lb/>
or 752-9745 after 8 p.m. for<lb/>
more info.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Wooden<lb/>
Clarinet in excellent cond.<lb/>
Accessories and folding<lb/>
reading lamp. Will sell or<lb/>
trade a number of assorted<lb/>
magazines. If interested<lb/>
call 752-9652.<lb/>
FOR SALE77 Ford Cour-<lb/>
ier truck with AMFM,<lb/>
sliding glass, camper shell<lb/>
with carpet, 30 mpg red<lb/>
with tan interior. 756-2380<lb/>
after 5 p.m. weekdays ask<lb/>
for Dexter.<lb/>
FORRENT:2bdrm.apt. in<lb/>
Langston Park. $210 a<lb/>
month, available Thanks-<lb/>
y?????? munin, ?vanauie nwms-<lb/>
NEEDED: A responsible j PdSUI KMgj<lb/>
NEEDED: A responsible<lb/>
female roommate by Nov<lb/>
5 toshare 2bdrm. apt. Rent<lb/>
is $53 not including utilit-<lb/>
ies. Call 758-5794.<lb/>
THE PORTRAIT Gallery;<lb/>
Would you like to have your<lb/>
portrait taken, senior res-<lb/>
ume pictures, weddings,<lb/>
color, black and white<lb/>
prints. We also photograph<lb/>
art, portfolios. Call us and<lb/>
see. 758-0962 - If the<lb/>
answer service is on please<lb/>
leave your name and phone<lb/>
number.<lb/>
YOGA: Hatha yoga is now<lb/>
being taught by Sunshine.<lb/>
New classes forming. Reiax-<lb/>
-ation, realization, weight<lb/>
loss. For more info, ceil<lb/>
756-0736.<lb/>
MID EASTERN DANCE:<lb/>
(Authentic Belly Dancing)<lb/>
taught by Sunshine - exper-<lb/>
ienced teacher and perfor-<lb/>
mer in Ohio, Mexico,<lb/>
Atlanta, and the D.C. area.<lb/>
Classes are now forming.<lb/>
Call 756-0736.<lb/>
i<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057140_0003"/><lb/>
The chancellor's profile<lb/>
Brewer; pastand present<lb/>
31 Odotof 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD N? 3<lb/>
By RICHY SMITH<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Dr Thomas Bowman<lb/>
Brewer was installed as the<lb/>
seventh chief executive of-<lb/>
ficer of East Carolina Univ-<lb/>
ersity, Saturday on the<lb/>
North Lawn of campus.<lb/>
Immediately following the<lb/>
formal installation cere-<lb/>
mony was a luncheon for<lb/>
the new chancellor and his<lb/>
invited guests. The lunch-<lb/>
eon was held at Menden-<lb/>
hall and consisted of a<lb/>
buffet of assorted meats<lb/>
and vegetables<lb/>
Following the luncheon<lb/>
was a open house of the<lb/>
Brewers' home. Dr Brewer<lb/>
and his lovely wife. Betty,<lb/>
greeted guests as they<lb/>
entered the chancellor's<lb/>
home Dr and Mrs Brewer<lb/>
were also accompanied by<lb/>
their two children. Tom Jr.<lb/>
and Dianne. their mothers<lb/>
and Mrs Brewer's father.<lb/>
There were other relatives<lb/>
present as well as close<lb/>
friends from Texas and<lb/>
distinguished guests from<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
Academic<lb/>
credits<lb/>
ii:<lb/>
Dr Brewer I came to<lb/>
ECU on July 3jqpid succee-<lb/>
ded Leo W Jenkins as<lb/>
tcellor He is a former<lb/>
dean and vice-chancellor at<lb/>
Texas Christam University<lb/>
Hereceived his B A degree<lb/>
m the University of<lb/>
?as-Austm in 1954 in the<lb/>
Liberal Arts Honor Prog-<lb/>
ram. He attended on a<lb/>
Daughters of the Confeder-<lb/>
acv Scholarship and was a<lb/>
member of Phi Alpha<lb/>
Theta. history honorary.<lb/>
Brewer received his<lb/>
M A degree at the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Texas-Austin. 1957.<lb/>
n iiistory He held an<lb/>
asstetantship while working<lb/>
on his thesis entitled, A<lb/>
History of the Department<lb/>
of History at the University<lb/>
of Texas, 1887-1950.<lb/>
While holding another<lb/>
teaching assistantship,<lb/>
Brewer received his Ph.D.<lb/>
at the University of Penn-<lb/>
sylvania in 1962. His major<lb/>
was American History and<lb/>
his dissertation was entitl-<lb/>
ed The Formative Period of<lb/>
140 American Manufactur-<lb/>
ing Firms. 1800-1936.<lb/>
Before assuming his<lb/>
duties at ECU, Brewer<lb/>
taught at Southwest Texas<lb/>
State University, North<lb/>
Texas State University, the<lb/>
University of Kentucky.<lb/>
Iowa State University, and<lb/>
the University of Toledo at<lb/>
TCU<lb/>
(Curriculum<lb/>
planning<lb/>
Brewer has contributed<lb/>
to curriculum planning at<lb/>
several universities. At the<lb/>
University of Toledo he<lb/>
helped develop the curricu-<lb/>
lum for a new Ph.D.<lb/>
program and the total cur-<lb/>
riculum for a department<lb/>
that grew under his chair-<lb/>
manship. As a member of<lb/>
Arts and Sciences Council,<lb/>
he approved revisions in<lb/>
the College curriculum.<lb/>
As dean of Arts and<lb/>
Sciences at Texas Christam<lb/>
University. Brewer served<lb/>
as a member of committee<lb/>
which revised the Univer-<lb/>
sity general education req-<lb/>
uirements and also served<lb/>
on the University Courses<lb/>
of Study Committee.<lb/>
Business<lb/>
history<lb/>
Asan American historian.<lb/>
Brewer s academic concen-<lb/>
tration of study is U.S.<lb/>
business history, particula-<lb/>
rly transportation history.<lb/>
He is currently co-author of<lb/>
a history of the Missouri<lb/>
Pacific Railway for Mac-<lb/>
millan<lb/>
Brewer has also served<lb/>
as editor of The Robber<lb/>
Barons: Saints or Sinner?<lb/>
and has co-edited two vol-<lb/>
umes in the series Views of<lb/>
American Economic<lb/>
Growth. Currently he is the<lb/>
General Editor of the Rail-<lb/>
roads of American Series, a<lb/>
series with a projection of<lb/>
20-25 volumes.<lb/>
Publications<lb/>
The new chancellor has<lb/>
published many articles,<lb/>
book reviews, and scholarly<lb/>
papers Among these in-<lb/>
clude Labor History. South<lb/>
western Histonacla Quart-<lb/>
erly. Southerwestern Social<lb/>
Science Quarterly and eight<lb/>
short biographies for the<lb/>
Encyclopedia of World Bio-<lb/>
graphy.<lb/>
Civic and<lb/>
academic<lb/>
organizations<lb/>
Brewer is a member of<lb/>
the Organization of Amer<lb/>
-ican Historians. Business<lb/>
History Society Trustee.<lb/>
1975. Economic History<lb/>
Associaton and American<lb/>
Association of Higher Ed-<lb/>
ucation.<lb/>
Brewer's wide-ranging<lb/>
civic and community activi-<lb/>
ties in Fort Worth included<lb/>
being a moderator of the<lb/>
American Issues Forum<lb/>
which is a nine-month<lb/>
television series, the Unit-<lb/>
ed Way &amp; the Arthritis<lb/>
Foundation committees.<lb/>
For five years he was<lb/>
chairman of the Texas<lb/>
Committee for the Humani-<lb/>
ties and Public Policy and a<lb/>
member of the Fort Worth<lb/>
Committee for the Human-<lb/>
ities and Public Policy.<lb/>
SENATOR JESSE HELMS is shown here greeting Senate candidate John Ingram. The recent installation ceremonies<lb/>
The Brewer family provided the political foes with an opportunity to take a break from the campaign tra'il Photo by Chap Gurley<lb/>
Brewer is married to his<lb/>
high school sweetheart.<lb/>
They are members of the<lb/>
Disciples of Christ and the<lb/>
parents of three children.<lb/>
Dianne. who recently grad-<lb/>
uated from the University<lb/>
of Texas at Austin; Susan,<lb/>
whodied in a August traffic<lb/>
accident; and Thomas. Jr<lb/>
a sophomore at Rose High<lb/>
School<lb/>
BASF Studio Cassette Sale<lb/>
POLISHED FOR GREATER CLARITY<lb/>
BASF cassettes with high-density, ferric oxide tape give you sound so<lb/>
clear and true, it's like the musicians are right there. BASF (the people<lb/>
who invented audio tape in the first place) literally polishes the tape to get<lb/>
rid of bumps and ridges that can cause background noise.<lb/>
Record Aerosmith " Live " on full-track from 11:15 to 12 mldnite<lb/>
on WRQR Tuesday night<lb/>
Pair Electronics<lb/>
WfUxz ?e.ucz Cdwtz Dint<lb/>
STORE HOURS WEEKDAYS SAT30-5 30 3:30-12:30<lb/>
APPOINTMENTS<lb/>
BEING TAKEN NOW<lb/>
You too<lb/>
?jjp v<lb/>
?&amp; 5S? ?<lb/>
We<lb/>
n!M<lb/>
COME BY OR CALL<lb/>
THE BUC OFFICE<lb/>
AT 757 6501<lb/>
PICTURES WILL BE MADE FROM<lb/>
MONDAY NOV. 6<lb/>
UNTIL<lb/>
TUESDAY NOV. 21<lb/>
FROM 9a.m. TIL 5p.m.<lb/>
could become<lb/>
a collector's item<lb/>
Make your YEARBOOK PORTRAIT<lb/>
appointment NOW at:<lb/>
THIS IS<lb/>
THE ONLY TIME<lb/>
PICTURES<lb/>
WILL BE MADE<lb/>
THIS YEAR!<lb/>
"m '?<lb/>
 ' - -<lb/>
. ? -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057140_0004"/><lb/>
No media aid for SGA<lb/>
There is a clear-cut answer to the proposal<lb/>
outlined in Brett Melvin's letter in today's<lb/>
"Forum When the ECU Board of Trustees<lb/>
created the Media Board in January of this<lb/>
year, the proposal they passed stated plainly in<lb/>
section IV, paragraphs three and four, that<lb/>
"the sum of all appropriated but unspent<lb/>
Student Government Association (SGA) funds<lb/>
to any publication or media as of Jan. 31, 1978,<lb/>
shall automatically and immediately be<lb/>
transferred to the control of the Media Board<lb/>
upon approval of its constitution. No<lb/>
appropriated but unspent SGA funds to any<lb/>
publication as of Jan. 31, 1978, nor any<lb/>
revenues generated by any campus publication<lb/>
or media, shall revert to the SGA.<lb/>
Suggestions that the Media Board make a<lb/>
gift to the SGA are useless, since the Media<lb/>
Board constitution forbids the expenditure of<lb/>
funds for any purpose other than the programs<lb/>
of the board and the operation of the media<lb/>
(Article VI, section 2, part A).<lb/>
Last year, the SGA appropriated 51 percent<lb/>
of its budget to the media. When the Media<lb/>
Board was created, it received only 50 percent<lb/>
of the activity fees originally slated for the<lb/>
SGA. The SGA has just as much money for<lb/>
other organizations as it did in the past.<lb/>
The SGA proved itself incapable of<lb/>
handling campus media during the past few<lb/>
years, culminating in the cancellation of the<lb/>
1977 BUCCANEER. The current BUC mess<lb/>
was inherited from the SGA or was caused by<lb/>
factors beyond their control, not by ineptness<lb/>
on the board's part. The SGA nearly eliminatd<lb/>
THE REBEL one year and would have slowly<lb/>
strangled W ECU to death had they been given<lb/>
enough time.<lb/>
The idea of a campus FM radio station has<lb/>
been discussed for years, yet the SGA never<lb/>
took any action. Within three months of the<lb/>
Media Board's creation, a frequency search<lb/>
was underway, and within six months a license<lb/>
application was filed with the FCC. The station<lb/>
is scheduled to go on the air around Christmas,<lb/>
close to the board's first anniversary.<lb/>
The Media Board has proved itself to be a<lb/>
competent trustee of student funds, and ,<lb/>
contrary to what many politicians would have<lb/>
you believe, it is not administratively controll-<lb/>
ed. The administration has only one vote on<lb/>
the board, as opposed to eight student votes.<lb/>
In addition, the chairperson must be a student.<lb/>
SGA politicians will have to look elsewhere for<lb/>
the solution to their self-imposed money<lb/>
worries.<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Commentary<lb/>
Legislator proposes BUC scheme<lb/>
Questionnaire probes<lb/>
By HESTER PETTY<lb/>
Uppity Women of<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
This is not a test, you<lb/>
don t have to write down<lb/>
any answers You don't<lb/>
have to add up a score.<lb/>
The questionsstate-<lb/>
ments are truefalse,<lb/>
multiple choice, and fill-in-<lb/>
bianks Compare your<lb/>
answers with the answers<lb/>
that follow this article. I<lb/>
hope your comparisons will<lb/>
prove interesting to you.<lb/>
That is the purpose of this<lb/>
article<lb/>
program. 200.000 women<lb/>
received annual breast<lb/>
x-rays for the detection of<lb/>
breast cancer. 2.500 al-<lb/>
leged breast cancers were<lb/>
removed. 53 of the women<lb/>
who underwent ttfetfaV'<lb/>
giving birth is being hung<lb/>
upside-down.<lb/>
24. TRUE or FALSE:<lb/>
The second worst position<lb/>
to be in while giving birth is<lb/>
on one's back.<lb/>
?? 25. 'A'dcbrdihg to a<lb/>
removal operations didn't<lb/>
have breast cancer.<lb/>
13. The birth rate is<lb/>
declining but cesarean<lb/>
sections are on the in-<lb/>
crease. From 1970 to 1976,<lb/>
the number of cesarean<lb/>
recent Harris poll, what<lb/>
percentage of men in the<lb/>
general population believe<lb/>
that it is a man's right to<lb/>
beat his wife: (a.) 50<lb/>
percent (b.) 20 percent (c.)<lb/>
10 percent (d.) five percent<lb/>
Questions<lb/>
1. TRUE or FALSE:<lb/>
More than half of all<lb/>
women are now employed<lb/>
outside of the home.<lb/>
2. In 1967, women's<lb/>
earnings were 62 percent of<lb/>
men's earnings. In 1976,<lb/>
the percentage was: (a.)<lb/>
80 percent (b.)74<lb/>
percent (c.) 56 percent<lb/>
3. One man in 18 lives<lb/>
on an annual income of less<lb/>
than $4,000. With women,<lb/>
this same income is lived on<lb/>
by : (a.) one in four (b.) one<lb/>
in eight (c.) one in 12<lb/>
4.TRUE or FALSE.<lb/>
Women and children com-<lb/>
prise 75 percent of all<lb/>
welfare recipients.<lb/>
5. The percentage of<lb/>
divorced mothers that<lb/>
collect child support regu-<lb/>
larly is: (a.) 87 percent<lb/>
(b.)63 percent (c.) 45<lb/>
percent (d.) 21 percent<lb/>
6. TRUE or FALSE: A<lb/>
single woman is more likely<lb/>
to attempt suicide than a<lb/>
married woman.<lb/>
7. TRUE or FALSE:<lb/>
Violence occurs in 50<lb/>
percent of American fami-<lb/>
lies.<lb/>
8. TRUE or FALSE: It<lb/>
is possible for a husband to<lb/>
sell his wife's car without<lb/>
her permission if she buys<lb/>
it with money out of her<lb/>
own salary.<lb/>
9. The abbreviation Ms.<lb/>
has been around since:<lb/>
(a.)the 1970's (b.) the<lb/>
1960s (c.) the 1950's (d.)<lb/>
the 1940's<lb/>
The first bill for a<lb/>
federal equal rights amend-<lb/>
ment was introduced in<lb/>
Congress In: (a.) 1923 (b.)<lb/>
1948(c) 1964 d.) 1970<lb/>
11. TRUE or FALSE:<lb/>
Studies of boms births<lb/>
show that there are fewer<lb/>
injuries and fewer emer-<lb/>
gencies than among hos-<lb/>
pital births.<lb/>
12. TRUE or FALSE:<lb/>
Under a government health<lb/>
29.TRUE or FALSE.<lb/>
Women are more resistant<lb/>
to disease than men.<lb/>
Answers<lb/>
1. True<lb/>
2. (c.) 56 percent. We<lb/>
now get more unequal pay<lb/>
for equal work than we did<lb/>
nine years ago.<lb/>
3. (a.) one in four<lb/>
4. False. Women and<lb/>
children comprise 90 per-<lb/>
cent of all welfare recipi-<lb/>
ents.<lb/>
(d.) 21 percent<lb/>
False<lb/>
True<lb/>
True, in Louisiana<lb/>
(d.) the 1940's<lb/>
(a.) 1923<lb/>
True<lb/>
True<lb/>
(d.) 100 percent<lb/>
5.<lb/>
6.<lb/>
7.<lb/>
8.<lb/>
9.<lb/>
10.<lb/>
11.<lb/>
12.<lb/>
13.<lb/>
14. False,<lb/>
ranks 17th<lb/>
15. True<lb/>
the U.S.<lb/>
16.<lb/>
17.<lb/>
18.<lb/>
19.<lb/>
20.<lb/>
(a.) 250,000<lb/>
(c.) one in 60<lb/>
True<lb/>
True<lb/>
True<lb/>
"Women were burned alive but<lb/>
men were given the option of<lb/>
being killed before they were<lb/>
burned. The reasoning behind<lb/>
this was that women could<lb/>
endure more pain than men and<lb/>
21. False. Women were<lb/>
thus they Were leSS bothered by burned alive but men were<lb/>
given the option of being<lb/>
killed before they were<lb/>
burned. The reasoning<lb/>
behind this was that women<lb/>
could endure more pain<lb/>
than men and thus they<lb/>
were less bothered by the<lb/>
flames.<lb/>
90 percent<lb/>
True<lb/>
True<lb/>
(b.) 20 percent<lb/>
False<lb/>
True<lb/>
True<lb/>
True<lb/>
ToFOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
There has been much<lb/>
discrepancy this year over<lb/>
the publication of a BUC-<lb/>
CANEER. Rumors abound<lb/>
throughout the East Caro-<lb/>
lina Campus as to the<lb/>
definite possibility of ECU<lb/>
students once again not re-<lb/>
ceiving a yearbook.<lb/>
During the fall elections<lb/>
I ran on the issue of the<lb/>
BUC, which I felt the<lb/>
students wanted and de-<lb/>
served. The students have<lb/>
paid fees for the publication<lb/>
of the BUC, and if the<lb/>
Media Board finds it im-<lb/>
possible to fulfill its prom-<lb/>
ise of a BUCCANEER for<lb/>
fall of 1978, then rightfully<lb/>
the student fees appro-<lb/>
priated from SGA funds for<lb/>
its publication, should re-<lb/>
turn to the SGA.<lb/>
The reversion of this<lb/>
year's funds for the BUC-<lb/>
CANEER would in no way<lb/>
affect the publication of a<lb/>
BUC for fall semester 1979.<lb/>
This would simply revert<lb/>
the funds for the unpub-<lb/>
lished BUCCANEER of this<lb/>
year, if this rumor istrue.<lb/>
As it is becoming more<lb/>
and more obvious with each<lb/>
passing day, Student Gov-<lb/>
ernment does not have the<lb/>
funds this year that it has<lb/>
had in the past. With the<lb/>
SGA's lack of funds this<lb/>
year, there is the distinct<lb/>
possibility that many or-<lb/>
ganizations which have tra-<lb/>
ditionally been funded in<lb/>
the past by SGA will not be<lb/>
funded this year, or shall be<lb/>
forced to operate on such a<lb/>
limited budget that they<lb/>
shall have to fold.<lb/>
Rather than seeing the<lb/>
possibility of these funds<lb/>
sitting in a Media Board<lb/>
account, I feel that the<lb/>
reversion of these funds to<lb/>
SGA will do more to benefit<lb/>
the student body as a<lb/>
whole; in the form of<lb/>
providing adequate funding<lb/>
for campus organizations,<lb/>
such as the ECU Play-<lb/>
house, the School of M usic,<lb/>
the Visual Arts Forum, the<lb/>
Model UN, SOULS the<lb/>
Marching Pirates, etc.<lb/>
These organizations<lb/>
realize that with SGA's<lb/>
current financial crisis,<lb/>
they will not receive the<lb/>
funding they have in the<lb/>
past.<lb/>
I wish I did not have to<lb/>
write this letter, because I<lb/>
feel strongly as do many of<lb/>
the students on this campus<lb/>
?that we should have a<lb/>
BUCCANEER, however, it<lb/>
seems more apparent every<lb/>
day that the Media Board<lb/>
will not deliver this year's<lb/>
BUCCANEER. To me, the<lb/>
only thing worse than not<lb/>
getting a BUC this year is<lb/>
not getting a BUC and<lb/>
seeing valuable student<lb/>
fees unused while good<lb/>
organizations at East Car-<lb/>
olina go without, and pos-<lb/>
sibly fold.<lb/>
If any lesson can be<lb/>
learned from this mess, it<lb/>
may be that, despite our<lb/>
faults, the elected Student<lb/>
Government on this cam-<lb/>
pus can more fairly handle<lb/>
student needs than a non-<lb/>
elected, administratively<lb/>
controlled set-up like the<lb/>
new Media Board.<lb/>
Brett Melvin<lb/>
Day Student Legislator<lb/>
WRQR's Handelman<lb/>
offers album-rock<lb/>
Dr. Dale Rice is<lb/>
1'one of the best'<lb/>
the flames<lb/>
births increased: (a.) 25<lb/>
percent (b.) 50 percent (c.)<lb/>
75 percent (d.) 100 percent<lb/>
14. TRUE or FALSE:<lb/>
The majority of people in<lb/>
the U.S. are in favor of the<lb/>
Equal Rights Amendment.<lb/>
16. There are 56,000<lb/>
reported rapes each year.<lb/>
The estimated total number<lb/>
of rapes is: (a.) 250,000 (b.)<lb/>
125,000 (c.) 75,000 (d.)<lb/>
60,000<lb/>
17. One reported rape in<lb/>
four results in arrest. How<lb/>
many arrests result in<lb/>
convictions? (a.) one in 25<lb/>
(b.) one in 45 (c.) one in 60<lb/>
(d.) one in 100<lb/>
18. TRUE or FALSE:<lb/>
The age of witch-hunting<lb/>
lasted for four centuries.<lb/>
19. TRUE or FALSE:<lb/>
Millions of "witches" were<lb/>
murdered during the witch-<lb/>
hunting age.<lb/>
20. TRUE or FALSE: 85<lb/>
percent of the witches that<lb/>
were murdered were<lb/>
women.<lb/>
21. TRUE or FALSE:<lb/>
Witches, both male and<lb/>
female, were usually<lb/>
burned alive at the stake.<lb/>
22. A Red book maga-<lb/>
zine survey of clerical and<lb/>
professional women in 1976<lb/>
thatpercent had experi-<lb/>
enced sexual harassment<lb/>
on the job.<lb/>
23. TRUE or FALSE:<lb/>
The worst position for<lb/>
26.TRUE or FALSE: There<lb/>
are more wives who kill<lb/>
their husbands than hus-<lb/>
bands who kill their wives.<lb/>
27. TRUE or FALSE:<lb/>
In jogging, a woman's<lb/>
running style is likely to be<lb/>
more economical than a<lb/>
man's.<lb/>
28. TRUE or FALSE: In<lb/>
long distance running, a<lb/>
woman has more endur-<lb/>
ance capacity than an<lb/>
equally-trained man.<lb/>
22.<lb/>
23.<lb/>
24.<lb/>
25.<lb/>
26.<lb/>
27.<lb/>
28.<lb/>
29.<lb/>
Uppity Women of<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
P.O. Box 1373<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
ToFOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Today I was deeply<lb/>
saddened and disappointed<lb/>
to find out that one of the<lb/>
best professors I've ever<lb/>
had at ECU will not be with<lb/>
the school next year.<lb/>
This will not affect me,<lb/>
but there are many stu-<lb/>
dents who may not have the<lb/>
opportunity to have a<lb/>
professor motivate them<lb/>
and help them realize what<lb/>
it takes to be a "good"<lb/>
teacher.<lb/>
Dr. Dale Rice has only?<lb/>
been with the ECU science<lb/>
education department a<lb/>
short time. Long enough<lb/>
though, to be admired by<lb/>
all of his students. He is<lb/>
young, energetic, interest-<lb/>
ing, easy to talk to, and<lb/>
???-<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over 50 years<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Doug White<lb/>
ADVERTISING MANAGER<lb/>
Leigh Coakley N?W s EDIT0RS Robert M' S"alm<lb/>
Julie Everette<lb/>
Kicki Gllarmis<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER<lb/>
TRENDS EDITOR<lb/>
Steve Bachner<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
Sam Rogers<lb/>
of East<lb/>
I<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the udent ?&amp;V<lb/>
Carolina University tlwadtoy ?f <lb/>
and is distrlbytad eaoh Tuesday and Thursday (weekly<lb/>
during the summer).<lb/>
Mailing address: Old Sooth Building, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
27834<lb/>
Editorial offices: 757-6366, 757-6367, 7576309.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10 annually, alumni $6 annually.<lb/>
most of all he cares about<lb/>
his students.<lb/>
Dr. Rice is a very active<lb/>
person in his field. Not only<lb/>
does he teach science<lb/>
methods, but is also doing<lb/>
research in his field. One<lb/>
can find articles he has<lb/>
written in many of the<lb/>
science education maga-<lb/>
zines.<lb/>
Many more educators<lb/>
like him are needed to<lb/>
teach upcoming teachers. It<lb/>
will be a great loss for the<lb/>
school to lose someone who<lb/>
has put forth his best<lb/>
efforts, and then more.<lb/>
I would like to thank<lb/>
1 you, Dr. Rice, for teaching<lb/>
me so much about science<lb/>
and the teaching process.<lb/>
Karen Shipp<lb/>
Helms<lb/>
editorial<lb/>
slings mud<lb/>
ToFOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
In response to your<lb/>
editorial "Senator No must<lb/>
go<lb/>
It seems to me your<lb/>
criticism of Jesse Helms<lb/>
has about as much basis as<lb/>
his religious beliefs have<lb/>
bearing in the campaign.<lb/>
Surely you can find some<lb/>
better way of "endorsing"<lb/>
Ingram than criticizing<lb/>
Helms' campaign tactics.<lb/>
As for the "Mud-<lb/>
slinging it seems you<lb/>
have joined right in.<lb/>
Lyman Black<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
To the many people whc<lb/>
enjoy album-rock music<lb/>
and Allan Handelman's<lb/>
nighttime show on WRQR,<lb/>
prepare yourself for a<lb/>
surprise As the area's only<lb/>
source of adult rock music<lb/>
for over one and a half<lb/>
years, Handelman has<lb/>
achieved a great amount of<lb/>
notariety and listener<lb/>
appeal.<lb/>
His uncanny ability to<lb/>
sense the audience's musi-<lb/>
cal tastes and needs,<lb/>
coupled with his truly pro-<lb/>
fessional apprach to FM<lb/>
radio has made him without<lb/>
question the best person-<lb/>
ality to ever by heard on<lb/>
radio in eastern North<lb/>
Carolina. Now for the<lb/>
surprise.<lb/>
He no longer does<lb/>
nighttime album rock on<lb/>
WRQR. Effective Oct. 23,<lb/>
he has moved to daytime<lb/>
and is now on from 3-6 p.m.<lb/>
daily.<lb/>
As the many adult rock<lb/>
listeners begin to listen to<lb/>
Allan during his new hours,<lb/>
they may be surprised at<lb/>
what they hear. If an<lb/>
occasional top 40 or disco<lb/>
song is played, don't<lb/>
assume Handelman is<lb/>
copping out and has<lb/>
abandoned rock fans.<lb/>
This is simply not the<lb/>
case, according to sources<lb/>
close to Handelman. He<lb/>
has no desire to play top 40<lb/>
or disco. That type of music<lb/>
does not particularly suit<lb/>
his tastes personally and he<lb/>
truly appreciates the fact<lb/>
that the typical WRQR<lb/>
listener wants album-rock.<lb/>
So, why is he pitying<lb/>
questionable music now?<lb/>
An excellent question.<lb/>
A former WRQR employee<lb/>
indicated the station's<lb/>
initial plunge into auto-<lb/>
mated, top 40, disco end<lb/>
beech music format and its<lb/>
almost overnightanti-album<lb/>
rock tendency (except at<lb/>
night) was due to internal<lb/>
pressure by station em-<lb/>
ployee Steve Hardee The<lb/>
former employee from<lb/>
Rocky Mount also feels the<lb/>
station's ratings have been<lb/>
so low during the day<lb/>
(probably attributable to a<lb/>
combination of overplayed<lb/>
top 40 music and imper-<lb/>
sonal automation) that<lb/>
Handelman has been per-<lb/>
suaded to help bad out the<lb/>
daytime ratings with his<lb/>
obvious radio abilities<lb/>
It is hoped, another<lb/>
former WRQR employee<lb/>
from Kinston states, that<lb/>
he will be able to recapture<lb/>
the vast afternoon audience<lb/>
WRQR once had prior to<lb/>
questionalbe format<lb/>
changes and automation<lb/>
Handelman must now face<lb/>
the reality of broadcasting<lb/>
in a time slot that has given<lb/>
us an automated, top 40<lb/>
sound for one and a half<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Common sense dictates<lb/>
that a careful and orderly<lb/>
transition coour between<lb/>
this automation and Han-<lb/>
delman' s more suitable<lb/>
album-rock format Hope-<lb/>
fully, all rock listeners will<lb/>
find Handelman's new<lb/>
show more acceptable after<lb/>
the transition.<lb/>
As you turn on to<lb/>
Handelman from 3-6 p.m.<lb/>
daily, recall what he stands<lb/>
for and what he's done for<lb/>
album-rock in North Caro-<lb/>
lina. He needs our support<lb/>
as he attempts to ease<lb/>
daytime WRQR into a more<lb/>
acceptable musical situa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Listen to him, do<lb/>
business with his show's<lb/>
sponsors, and tell them you<lb/>
enjoy "the beet rock in<lb/>
North Carolina" and Allen<lb/>
Handelman!<lb/>
Phil<lb/>
<pb facs="00057140_0005"/><lb/>
Brewer addresses guests<lb/>
31 October 1978 FPU NT A INIH E A 0 Pag? B<lb/>
continued from pi)<lb/>
'resident Friday then introduced members of Chan-<lb/>
cellor Brewers family, including his wife, Betty, his<lb/>
daughter Diane, who is a senior at the University of Texas,<lb/>
usson, Thomas, Jr who is a sophomore at Rose High<lb/>
School Friday then introduced Brewer's mother, Mrs. Earl<lb/>
Brewer, and Mrs Brewers parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lesley<lb/>
Smith, all of Fort Worth, Texas.<lb/>
Friday then recognized the chancellors brother and his<lb/>
 'e. Dr and Mrs EarlJ. Brewer.<lb/>
'day recognized several other dignitaries as well.<lb/>
mong them were Chancellor Emeritus Leo Jenkins,<lb/>
Senator Robert Morgan, and Senator Jessee Helms Senate<lb/>
candidate John Ingram, was also present as was Lieutenant<lb/>
Governor Jimmy Green, and Congressman L.H. Fountain.<lb/>
Members of the General Assembly were also present.<lb/>
Oath of off ice administered<lb/>
rne oath of office was then administered by Chief<lb/>
Justice Susie Sharp<lb/>
Mter the oath was administered, President Friday said<lb/>
l now have the privilege of investing Thomas<lb/>
Bowman Brewer with the authority and responsibility of the<lb/>
of chancellor. Thomas Bowman Brewer, by my<lb/>
as President of the University of North Carolina,<lb/>
? rtue of your election by it's Board of Governors,<lb/>
the oath by which you have pledged yourself. I do<lb/>
are you Chancellor of East Carolina University.<lb/>
an ou a full realization of the responsibilities laid<lb/>
this office, to the necessisity for courageous<lb/>
1 ? uctive thought in their fulfillment and to the duty<lb/>
an ege of seeking out the intellectual and educational<lb/>
needs of the people, in order to achieve that high destiny<lb/>
.as the vision and purpose of the founders<lb/>
ly added. I count it our good fortune that I may<lb/>
install you, Thomas Brewer as Chancellor of<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
1825 and an elementary school system in 1839. He added<lb/>
that the state-sup ported system of higher education was the<lb/>
first of its kind in the nation, and "Historians give high<lb/>
grades to the leadership responsible for this original step in<lb/>
education<lb/>
He added that "The seal of our university carried the<lb/>
inscription, To serve and neither power nor principality<lb/>
will be permitted to tarnish this inscription<lb/>
Brewer praises ECU<lb/>
Chancellor Brewer said, "East Carolina has always<lb/>
been close to its people, and its people have always been<lb/>
close to East Carolina He added that the constituency<lb/>
includes people from the working class as well as people<lb/>
from the middle class. "Our people historically have been<lb/>
in harmony with the ideology of workingmen with respect to<lb/>
education he noted.<lb/>
A lnew urgency' in education<lb/>
Brewer emphasized that a "new urgency" was upon us<lb/>
- that urgency being the ava.labl.ty of an education for all<lb/>
American youth, not just the exceptionally able. Brewer<lb/>
quoted President Kennedy, saying that "The human mind<lb/>
is our fundamental resource and he added that the<lb/>
legislature had the "right to allocate means and list<lb/>
exceptions in termsof thtsgreat truism<lb/>
Brewer repeated his pledge for excellence at ECU. Me<lb/>
added that "Allow us to have education and we shall not<lb/>
only survive; we will prevail<lb/>
On this last note . he quoted Martin Luther King as<lb/>
saying We must work unceasingly to lift this nation that<lb/>
e love to a higher destiny, to a new plateau of<lb/>
i<lb/>
l<lb/>
GOVERNOR JAMES B. Hunt greeted the crowd at the mstallation with a renewed pledge to w,den US 264<lb/>
Photo by John H Grogan<lb/>
He went on to say Excellance today means that we<lb/>
must go beyond the narrow historical parameters of good<lb/>
traditional schooling<lb/>
He commented further that services to the community,<lb/>
teaching insightfully, and concern with the goals of human<lb/>
fulfillment were important in an academic setting.<lb/>
Brewer accepts challenge<lb/>
Brewer then accepted the charge from President Friday,<lb/>
and he pledged faithfully to "attend to the duties of the<lb/>
Chancellorship of East Carolina University<lb/>
The benediction was led by Rabbi Levi A. Olan, who is<lb/>
the Rabbi Emeritus.<lb/>
After the recessional, the guests and visiting dignitaries<lb/>
attended a luncheon at Mendenhall Student Center. There<lb/>
was an Open House held at the Chancellor" s residence.<lb/>
compassion, to a<lb/>
more noble expression of humaness.<lb/>
Brewer speaks<lb/>
"er applause subsided. Chancellor Brewer spoke. He<lb/>
? anked the keynote speaker. The Board of Trustees,<lb/>
lent Friday, and the faculty, staff, and student body of<lb/>
ECU He added We note with great appreciation the<lb/>
:valty. and support that have come from alumni,<lb/>
5 and former members of the ECU faculty and<lb/>
' .it or S<lb/>
Brewer referred specifically to former Chancellor<lb/>
- ns and former President John Messick. saying<lb/>
Jnder their gifted and bold leadership the welfare of<lb/>
East Carolina University has been nobly advanced<lb/>
also thanked his family for their support. Brewer<lb/>
saul that the university would try to remain faithful to it's<lb/>
harge, which was made in 1907<lb/>
A cording to Brewer. North Carolina has had a priority<lb/>
on e ' n, because of the creation of a school ?und in<lb/>
News<lb/>
writers<lb/>
needed<lb/>
Call<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
Factory<lb/>
Outlet!<lb/>
L<lb/>
758061<lb/>
CORKIER Of ICT &amp; CLARK STREETS<lb/>
IN HATTERAS HAMMOCK BUILDING<lb/>
(WE'RE HARDTOriNO BUT WELL WORTM IT.1<lb/>
i<lb/>
GREAT<lb/>
MEXICAN<lb/>
EATERY<lb/>
512 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Open 11:00 11:00<lb/>
Mon. thru Thur.<lb/>
iFrUPSat. 11:00 12:0<lb/>
Sun. 12:00 11:00<lb/>
Tuesday Mght<lb/>
Nickel Drink ight<lb/>
( with food order )<lb/>
5:00 11:00<lb/>
Dr. Pepper, Beer, Pepsi,<lb/>
Mt. Dew, Tea, Coffee<lb/>
We Gladly Accept Personal Checks<lb/>
Free Taeo Cid Iron on Pateh<lb/>
with $4.00 food order<lb/>
GO PIRATES?STOMP<lb/>
ANY<lb/>
NUMBER<lb/>
OF<lb/>
PIECES.<lb/>
APPALACHIAN<lb/>
TAILGATE<lb/>
BEFORE THE<lb/>
GAME?LET<lb/>
ROY DO THE<lb/>
COOKIN<lb/>
B.Y.O.B<lb/>
300 E. TENTH STREET<lb/>
CALL NOW! RESERVE IT.wmo<lb/>
NUMBER OF PIECES, TIME YOU'EE PICK IT UP, &amp; N AME<lb/>
BRINKS ARE ON ROT WITH<lb/>
PIRATE VICTORY?AFTER GAME.<lb/>
 ? - ? ? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?mmmmmmm-ammmmmmmatm<lb/>
mum<lb/>
?mmm<lb/>
im<lb/>
<pb facs="00057140_0006"/><lb/>
ige6 FOUNTAINHEAD 31 October 1978<lb/>
?tm<lb/>
hOWN HERE in front of the student store<lb/>
 aJ?9 ?"??.<lb/>
hurry to make it to class on time. Photo by Steve Romero)<lb/>
GREENVILLE and NAGS HEAD NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
Wed. is<lb/>
Dollar Day at<lb/>
Newby's<lb/>
V Sub for Sl.OO<lb/>
with purchase<lb/>
of a soft drink.<lb/>
All day Wed. Every Wed.<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY STORE<lb/>
1501 S Evans<lb/>
B-15, bomber, field,<lb/>
deck, flight, snorkel jackets<lb/>
Back Packs<lb/>
SAADS SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
113 GRANDE AVE.<lb/>
at<lb/>
COLLEGE VIEW<lb/>
CLEANERS<lb/>
jK3K3KX3SX3tXSaC?363006SC<lb/>
NfO TO RELAX AFTER<lb/>
A DAY IN CLASSES?<lb/>
3S3C<lb/>
THESUNSET<lb/>
119 E.Sth STREET<lb/>
MMMH8?MMMBMHBMMP i<lb/>
TICE<lb/>
DRIVE IN AYDEN HIGHWAY<lb/>
Wednesday &amp; Thursday<lb/>
Meadowbrook<lb/>
DRIVE IN-OPPOSITE AIHPOHT<lb/>
Wednesday &amp; Thursday<lb/>
jAn Erotic Fairy Talej<lb/>
The New Adventures of<lb/>
cfhtiha<lb/>
rtcffa?<lb/>
United Artists<lb/>
Open 6 30 Shows 7 &amp; 9:45<lb/>
Open 6:30 Shows 7 &amp; 8:45<lb/>
Soon Adult Late Show<lb/>
We've Got the Hits<lb/>
Now Featured<lb/>
II<lb/>
Linda Ron&amp;tadl<lb/>
LIVING IN THE USA<lb/>
BOSTON<lb/>
DON T LOOK BACK<lb/>
$4.99<lb/>
FREFLL<lb/>
iJan<lb/>
LPs &amp; Tapes<lb/>
STRANGERS IN DARK CORNERS<lb/>
I M WAITING ON LOVE<lb/>
Liino vannelli<lb/>
NEIL YOUNG<lb/>
Comes A Tune<lb/>
Includes Airt advLH<lb/>
Look Out Foi Mvl owe<lb/>
I Four Shone Winds<lb/>
"DOUBLE VISION"<lb/>
HOT BLOODED<lb/>
YES "TORMATO"<lb/>
DON T KILL THE WHALE<lb/>
RELEASE RELEASE<lb/>
Check out the Record Bar's everyday low prices on<lb/>
best-seller and new release albums<lb/>
$7.98 list?$4.99<lb/>
CLASSICAL SALE:<lb/>
This week?all Philips and Deutsche Grammophon<lb/>
Record Bar<lb/>
SOUNDS DELICIOUS!<lb/>
?-tr rif11ail!11- ? II ?-???'<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Consumer watch<lb/>
By LOUISE COOK<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
While politicians argue about national health insurance,<lb/>
consumers are left the seek their own protection and<lb/>
individuals can find that thousands of dollars depend on<lb/>
their making the right decision.<lb/>
A report issued last week by the Department of Health,<lb/>
Education and Welfare said 57 percent of all medical bills<lb/>
were paid by third parties, including governement and<lb/>
private insuranoers, in 1975. By the year 2000, third parties<lb/>
are expected to pay 75 percent of the bills.<lb/>
An estimated 80 percent of the population is covered by<lb/>
some type of health insurance; Americans pay over $20<lb/>
billion a year in premiums.<lb/>
A new government publication, "How to Shop for<lb/>
Health Insurance issued by HEW's Public Health<lb/>
Service, offers some help for consumers. It is available, at<lb/>
no charge, from Consumer Information Center, Dept. 582G,<lb/>
Pueblo, Colo 81009.<lb/>
Most health insurance is sold to groups - of employees,<lb/>
association members, etc. Group coverage is usually<lb/>
cheaper than individual protection and is often more<lb/>
comprehensive.<lb/>
The disadvantage of group insurance is that when you<lb/>
leave the group, you lose the coverage. You probably can<lb/>
convert your policy to an individual one, but you are likely<lb/>
to pay more for less protection. There are two basic types of<lb/>
coverage: hospital and medical-surgical.<lb/>
Serve aboard cruise ships<lb/>
nrotection against hospital bills<lb/>
Basic hospital covers; P ,ab0ratcxy tests, drugs<lb/>
for such items as room, rooa. plans pf0V(de<lb/>
and use of operating ese plans cover the full<lb/>
what are called mrm?" number of days<lb/>
cost of hospital expenses for ? ated<lb/>
Other plans offer indemn.ty benefits, y<lb/>
amount or percentage ofthe.a <lb/>
Basic edical-surg.cal coverage w<lb/>
doctors" bmsyoumcrwheh operates<lb/>
of the amounts allowed for different types<lb/>
S150 for an appendectomy, for examp <lb/>
The allowance may ?-may not <lb/>
actual bill; it depends on you' a;dJve es - oover<lb/>
-edicas.rgiclpo.aes- th ??Tc or ? hlSOr her<lb/>
the costs of a doctor s services in yuu<lb/>
CTirri -end. to -nsure you<lb/>
o e whTre basic coverage stops and provides benes of<lb/>
$25,000 to $50,000 or more for expenses both ,n and out of<lb/>
theMZ,amed,ca. polices do not necessarily covet,h.ifuH<lb/>
cost of injury or illness; they usually pay on.y 75 to 80<lb/>
percent of the Mile. M a,or medical polices - like automobile<lb/>
ponces-also have deduct.bles, making you responsible for<lb/>
the f.rst several hundred dollars; your basic policy probably<lb/>
will cover the deductible.<lb/>
Two ECUgrads are sanitarians<lb/>
Tim Neweli and Debbie<lb/>
Hawkins are the first san-<lb/>
itarians to serve aboard<lb/>
passenger cruise ships.<lb/>
They joined the Holland-<lb/>
American Lines, Inc. as two<lb/>
of five sanitarians that the<lb/>
company hired to promote<lb/>
the health and prevent<lb/>
disease of passengers and<lb/>
crew aboard the cruise<lb/>
ships.<lb/>
Hawkins, from Ashe-<lb/>
boro, N.C was the first<lb/>
graduate of the ECU Envir-<lb/>
onmental Health program<lb/>
in march, 1974, and Newell<lb/>
from Rocky Mount, N.C.<lb/>
graduated with a B.S. in<lb/>
Environmental Health in<lb/>
June, 1976. He completed<lb/>
graduate studies for M.S.<lb/>
in Administrative Services<lb/>
in June of this year.<lb/>
The work will take them<lb/>
on Caribbean, Alaskan, and<lb/>
around-the-world cruises<lb/>
They will maintain surveil-<lb/>
lance and quality of food,<lb/>
water, and general envir-<lb/>
onments aboard ship.<lb/>
Several fringe benefits<lb/>
of the job are reported to be<lb/>
one-month paid vacation<lb/>
per year, tax-<lb/>
free income because they<lb/>
will be out of the country<lb/>
for ten consecutive months,<lb/>
and they receive food,<lb/>
lodging and clothing in<lb/>
addition to salary.<lb/>
The Chairman of the<lb/>
Department, Dr Trenton<lb/>
Davis, stated that, while all<lb/>
graduates in the program<lb/>
could probably not find<lb/>
such a job. there were<lb/>
many opportunities avail-<lb/>
able He added that any<lb/>
student interested in pursu<lb/>
ing a career in environmen-<lb/>
tal health should contact<lb/>
the department<lb/>
College papers yearbooks,graded<lb/>
continued from p. 1<lb/>
North Florida, conducted a<lb/>
short course in newspaper<lb/>
design and discussed de-<lb/>
sign rules and techniques.<lb/>
The presentation of<lb/>
Pacemaker awards were<lb/>
given Thursday night by<lb/>
the managing editor of the<lb/>
Sample copies of stu-<lb/>
dent publications were a-<lb/>
vailable for all interested.<lb/>
Exhibitors from yearbook<lb/>
companies, photography<lb/>
studios, and other business<lb/>
publications conducted raf-<lb/>
fles and were available for<lb/>
consultation.<lb/>
The seminars proved to<lb/>
be motivating and instilled<lb/>
enthusiasm to all attend-<lb/>
ing. Next year's convention<lb/>
is scheduled to be hefd in<lb/>
San Francisco, California.<lb/>
A disco dance was held<lb/>
on Friday night from 9 p.m.<lb/>
until midnight with atten-<lb/>
dance of about 700.<lb/>
Also attending the con-<lb/>
ference were members of<lb/>
the National Council of<lb/>
College Publications Advi-<lb/>
sors (NCCPA). They are<lb/>
professionals that assist<lb/>
college publications and<lb/>
they operate a placement<lb/>
bureau, and publish a<lb/>
newsletter and magazine<lb/>
 <lb/>
<pb facs="00057140_0007"/><lb/>
31 October 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
Good direction sparks 'successful<lb/>
Dinner Theatre production<lb/>
a  i- ,lo;in4 I<lb/>
LLEN MCLEOD<lb/>
M Writer<lb/>
There Is No<lb/>
presented as part<lb/>
Student<lb/>
Theatre.<lb/>
edy<lb/>
?<lb/>
? Bill Hare.<lb/>
a tten.<lb/>
 on tor<lb/>
serious<lb/>
for-<lb/>
the<lb/>
it lish-<lb/>
he play.<lb/>
to a<lb/>
ling in-<lb/>
? een<lb/>
s began<lb/>
tion of<lb/>
N a the<lb/>
very<lb/>
closely together, present-<lb/>
ing continuity and believ-<lb/>
ability. Most notable was<lb/>
the connection between<lb/>
Avis Phelps (Rosalie<lb/>
Hutchens) and Peter Ott<lb/>
(Alan Oately).<lb/>
These characters are<lb/>
a fine performance as Avis<lb/>
Phelps. She displayed<lb/>
strength of character as<lb/>
well as the resilency nec-<lb/>
essary to reflect the cour-<lb/>
ageous woman Avis is.<lb/>
As Peter Ott, Alan<lb/>
Oately was also very ef-<lb/>
Drama<lb/>
drawn to each other<lb/>
throughout the play Al-<lb/>
though barely surfacing at<lb/>
their first meeting, the<lb/>
undercurrent linking them<lb/>
exists from the first and<lb/>
grows subtly with each<lb/>
successive meeting<lb/>
Rosalie Hutchens gave<lb/>
fective The ease and art-<lb/>
fullness with which he<lb/>
makes the transaction from<lb/>
a nervous, careful man to a<lb/>
calm; loose, liar is not only<lb/>
effective but very enjoy-<lb/>
able.<lb/>
Cindy Lyle. as Mary<lb/>
Phelps, seemed uncertain<lb/>
in the delivery of her lines,<lb/>
yet at the same time pre-<lb/>
sented a very viable stage<lb/>
presence. While her ac-<lb/>
tions were believable and<lb/>
motivated, her lines<lb/>
seemed to stem from a<lb/>
different source of motiva-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Michael Lee and Suzie<lb/>
Martin, as Harold and<lb/>
Marsha Phelps, were hil-<lb/>
ariousas Mary's parents. A<lb/>
delightful contrast devel-<lb/>
oped between the straight-<lb/>
laced parents and the lib-<lb/>
eral attitudes of the other<lb/>
characters. Lee was es-<lb/>
pecially successful in pre-<lb/>
senting the comic features<lb/>
inherent in Harold Phelps<lb/>
while playing the role<lb/>
straight<lb/>
The set, designed by<lb/>
Dana M ills, was beautifully<lb/>
detailed Largely workable,<lb/>
it was hampered by visibly<lb/>
shaking walls in response<lb/>
to closed doors. Mills also<lb/>
designed the lighting which<lb/>
was particularly effective.<lb/>
A specific fade-out, end-<lb/>
ing the act, was perfectly<lb/>
coordinated. The actor was<lb/>
wrestling with emotional<lb/>
indecision as the light<lb/>
dimmed until he was totally<lb/>
eclipsed by darkness and<lb/>
confusion.<lb/>
With strong characters<lb/>
easily adaptable to comedy,<lb/>
and the benefit of special<lb/>
effects with lighting and<lb/>
sound, God Says There Is<lb/>
No Peter Ott is an in-<lb/>
triguing and happy play<lb/>
which has provided a suc-<lb/>
cessful beginning for 1978<lb/>
Dinner Theatre<lb/>
CINDY LYLE IN a scene from -God Says There Is No Peter Ott<lb/>
<lb/>
 avafian of Tashi -The group has toured throughout Europe and the United States-<lb/>
Artists Series Committee<lb/>
presents Tashi Wednesday<lb/>
Since its New York debut in 1973, TASHI (Tibetan for<lb/>
good fortune) has been hailed for its unusual programs and<lb/>
joyous performances throughout North and South America.<lb/>
Europe, and the Far East. The Student Union Artists Series<lb/>
Committee presents this fine ensemble on Nov. 1. 1978 at 8<lb/>
p.m. in the Hendrix Theatre in Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
In their programs for clarinet and string quartet this<lb/>
season, three TASHI members - clarinetist Richard<lb/>
Stoltzman, violinist Ida Kavafian, and cellist Fred Sherry -<lb/>
will be joined by guest artists Theodore Arm. violin, and<lb/>
Ik-Hwan Bae. viola. Critic James Ross captured the<lb/>
enthusiasm of the audience to the group s first appearance<lb/>
??to hear such a remarkable performance comes under<lb/>
the heading of things worth treasuring<lb/>
In addition to the major quintets for clarinet and strings.<lb/>
their usually varied program also include duos, string trios,<lb/>
and string quartets. One of the most recent and most<lb/>
acclaimed performances, the Mozart-Clarinet Quintet, was<lb/>
released by RCA Records in August. 1978. Many of the<lb/>
tours of the 1978-79 season are already sold out.<lb/>
Group is multi-national<lb/>
Not only isTASHI remarkable as a group; each member<lb/>
is outstanding on an individual basis. Clarinetist Richard<lb/>
Stoltzman has been especially acclaimed recently He is<lb/>
ranked with Rampal, Andre, and Tuckwell. He most<lb/>
recently appeared with "Isaac Stern and Friends" at<lb/>
Carnegie Hall and the Kennedy Center<lb/>
Violinist Ida Kavafian was born in Instanbul, Turkey<lb/>
and is of American descent. She is a graduate of Julliard<lb/>
School where she earned a Master of Music degree. Cellist<lb/>
Fred Sherry is also a graduate of the Julliard School He is a<lb/>
founding member of both TASHI and Speculum Musicae<lb/>
On this particular tour, the standard TASHI configura-<lb/>
tion is joined by guest artists Theodore Arm and Ik-Hwan<lb/>
Bae Theodore Arm holds his doctorate from the Julliard<lb/>
School and is an associate professor at the University of<lb/>
Connecticut. He has been violin soloist with the National<lb/>
Symphony of Washington. DC Ik-Hwan E<lb/>
made his debut at age 12 with the Seoul Pt<lb/>
has been concertmaster of both the Juiiiaro C<lb/>
the National Orchestra Association<lb/>
Tashi: Tibetan for good fortune<lb/>
Since its New York debut in 1973. TA ??<lb/>
good fortune) has become one of today s<lb/>
ensembles, and has been hailed for its unusi.<lb/>
and joyous performances on tours throughou N<lb/>
South America. Europe, and the Far East<lb/>
original configuration, and with gues' artists<lb/>
In its programs for clarinet a I<lb/>
season, trhree TASHI members - clarini<lb/>
Stoltzman. violinist Ida Kavafian and ce<lb/>
will be joined by guest artists Theodore Arm .<lb/>
Ik-Hwan Bae. viola<lb/>
Critic JamesRoss. is reviewig ne<lb/>
appearances, captured the enthusiasr?<lb/>
" to hear three such remarkable performan. ?<lb/>
under the heading of things worth treasuring '<lb/>
In addition to the maior qumte's for cUi-<lb/>
their unusually varied programs cenera .<lb/>
string trios, and string quartets.<lb/>
Miss Kavaan and Sherry said the N<lb/>
had tones and used phrasing which were hauni<lb/>
and peculiarly sensitive to the music's style a<lb/>
One of TASHI s most acclaimed perfoi<lb/>
Mozart Clarinet Quintet - was released bv RCA<lb/>
August. 1978.<lb/>
The 1978-79 season includes soid-out tour<lb/>
Coast. Mid-West. South, and West Coast<lb/>
These five excellent artists combine tali<lb/>
concert which is truly good fortune<lb/>
TASHI concert are now on sale at the Cen1<lb/>
m Mendenhall Student Center Prices<lb/>
students and $5 for the public For furl<lb/>
757-6611. extension 266<lb/>
Friends of Faculty' exhibition 'finest in four years'<lb/>
DAVID W<lb/>
By<lb/>
TREVINOandMARK WILKINSON<lb/>
Staff Writers<lb/>
Saturday s canonization of a new head bureaucrat<lb/>
.ed-the beginning of a new era for all those who ,? to<lb/>
m for guidance in life and an end to the finest<lb/>
onof art on this campus in the past 'our y?<lb/>
ly was the final day "Friends of the Faculty and<lb/>
Nat .res Abstractions" were d.splayed In the Wellington<lb/>
B Gray Gallery m the ienk.ns Art Center.<lb/>
Natures Abstractions" consisted of twenty-three<lb/>
rosoop.c photographs of mineral inclusions.n musoovrte<lb/>
m the Spruce Fine District of North Carolina taken by :<lb/>
I. Dayvault of the ECU Department of Geology faculty.<lb/>
e photographs, taken on a petrograph.c microscope,<lb/>
show spaaa. arrangements that are cryslal.ograph.cally<lb/>
consistent with the mineral they include.<lb/>
Dayvaulf s work is a collection of thought provoking<lb/>
,mages that provide a unique perception of the world<lb/>
around us Although the two dimens.onal geometries of the<lb/>
Tneral inclusions are design onented, the startling colors<lb/>
impiy motion as well as Expressionist traces.<lb/>
Friends of the Faculty" was an impress.ve show<lb/>
omhrac.no a wide variety of mediums. Gallery d.rector<lb/>
ATarp asked members of the Schcx. of Art faculty to<lb/>
mv? their friends to submit pfeces of their work which<lb/>
woTd enhance the gallery's instructive aspect. The show<lb/>
Thtt resulted was truly national In scope and reflected the<lb/>
natlcoa. rather than regional, character of the School of Art<lb/>
'oJer two dozen artists from all parts of the United<lb/>
State! submitted over one hundred pieces. The show<lb/>
S?i "are opportunity for Pjopom ?.ural.y starved<lb/>
eastern North Carolina to view art on that level.<lb/>
Perhaps the most engrossing work is the show was a<lb/>
haunting intaglio print by Peter M ilton of Francistown, New<lb/>
Hampshire entitled "October Piece Although it initially<lb/>
appears to be a collage of photographs, "October Piece"<lb/>
was etched by hand on a steel plate.<lb/>
Milton harnesses several disconcordant images into a<lb/>
harmonious unity that captivates the viewer with a<lb/>
mysteriously realistic fantasy of townhouses, trees, people,<lb/>
a statue, a field of fallen leaves and a locomotive. The<lb/>
gentle softness of his images testified to Milton's position<lb/>
as one of the premier prmtmakers in America today. M ilton<lb/>
is color blind. It seems like a small price to pay for the<lb/>
beauty of his vision.<lb/>
Art<lb/>
M yra Sexauer of Greenville reflects a different vision in<lb/>
her pheasant feather, mica and natural fiber wall hanging.<lb/>
This delicate, whispy piece is a fragile balance of hard and<lb/>
soft as well as warm and cold The piece seemed to have<lb/>
sprung complete from the heart of the forest to the walls of<lb/>
the Gray Gallery. Mrs. Sexauer captured the harmony of<lb/>
tranquil nature.<lb/>
Ann Sturgis Tickner of Beimar, New Jersey submitted<lb/>
three works in leather. Two were hanging webs of leather<lb/>
and plastic tubing which played on space and shadows. The<lb/>
most interesting was a piece entitled "Brown Relief wh.ch<lb/>
experimented with leather out of its natural presentation<lb/>
?Brown Relief is a series of sewn leather layers and<lb/>
wrapped plastic tubing on a wooden frame.<lb/>
The varying levels are effectively united in a series of<lb/>
active geometric forms. By hanging "Brown Relief" on the<lb/>
wall like a painting Tickner has asked the viewer to expand<lb/>
his perception of the expressive capabiltiy of leather<lb/>
Bruce Bobicks "Grandmother Mendel's Quilt made for<lb/>
Little Gregor" was a pleasing total composition done in<lb/>
watercolor. Bobick unites separate elements, the sectional<lb/>
pieces of the quilt and the natural forms of bean pods, in a<lb/>
soothing blending of subdued colors.<lb/>
Of the three oil paintings Ron Taylor submitted to the<lb/>
show, only "Gun Fighter" seemed representative of his<lb/>
talent. "Gun Fighter" is an impressionistic portrait<lb/>
surreally held within an oil as well as wooden frame. The<lb/>
piece is optically challenging and rich in its use of color<lb/>
E. Jessie Shefrin presents a view into the urban world<lb/>
with her three untitled compositions of folded xerox cards<lb/>
The works are polarizing layers of shapes and openings. It<lb/>
is the art of the city, the world where most Americans now<lb/>
live.<lb/>
Robert Peppers of Athens, Ohio provided a more<lb/>
graphic glimpse of city life with his linoleum print,<lb/>
'Hooker It is a hard-edged graphic study of the tragedy<lb/>
of prostitution. Radial, contour lines follow the shape of<lb/>
breasts, arms and a hand with money to create a powerfully<lb/>
evocative piece.<lb/>
Richard Craven also evoked emotion with his dadaistic<lb/>
collages of mass produced commercial products arranged to<lb/>
express his thoughts. His visual puns exceed the level of<lb/>
artistic achievement defined by the graffitti found in the<lb/>
first floor men's room in Rawl Building. If you've never<lb/>
shed a tear there, those business majors are as dull as they<lb/>
look. But there is humor in work and laughter is worth<lb/>
something.<lb/>
George Brett isn't even funny. His cellophane tape on<lb/>
rag paper pieces are experiments in geometric shapes and<lb/>
designs They were hung, mistakenly I believe<lb/>
entrance to the gallery so everyone could see then<lb/>
appropriate place to display this work would have i<lb/>
the door, past the Art School offices and in I<lb/>
unnal found in the restroom by the stairs when si<lb/>
could weep over it<lb/>
Anyone who missed the Friends of the - <lb/>
exhibition should weep It was on the whole ?<lb/>
show Rather than bask in your pain at having mis!<lb/>
sure and take in the next two shows to be dis<lb/>
Gray Gallery.<lb/>
Women on Paper from the oollecl he<lb/>
Weatherspoon Gallery and Ten Centuries of One- ta A I<lb/>
from the private collection of a member of the ECU M e<lb/>
School faculty will open with a reception on c? I iy<lb/>
November 5 at three o clock and remain u<lb/>
twenty-second<lb/>
"Ten Centuries o Oriental Art" is a show drawn from<lb/>
the collection of East Asian art owned by a membe- e<lb/>
medical school faculty who wished to remain anew<lb/>
will be an exhibition of furniture, porceim and scrolls<lb/>
collected over the years<lb/>
?Women on Paper" from the well-known Weather-<lb/>
spoon Gallery the University of North Carolina at<lb/>
Greensboro is a collection of various artists impressions of<lb/>
women.<lb/>
Among the artists whose works will be exhibited are<lb/>
Palbo Picasso. Roy Lichtenstem. Henri Matisse. Jacques<lb/>
Villon. Andy Warhol. Richard Under. WHhelm deKconing.<lb/>
Robert deNiro. James McNeill Whistler and Tom<lb/>
Wesselmann.<lb/>
The Wellington B gray Gallery is open Monday through<lb/>
Friday from nine until five Admission is absolutely free<lb/>
and the art is stimulating at any price.<lb/>
??-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057140_0008"/><lb/>
Pag<lb/>
? 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 31 October 1978<lb/>
Convoy: Peckinpah plays<lb/>
cowboys and Indians again<lb/>
By STEVE BACHNER<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
Sam Peckinpah's heavy-handed direction is just the<lb/>
touch needed to bring the hodgepodge of stars, extras,<lb/>
mammoth eighteen-wheeled mechanical monsters and old<lb/>
film genres together to form some semblance of order and<lb/>
eventually the film Convoy.<lb/>
But where do I go from there?<lb/>
The lead in Convoy required macho appeal. Enter Kris<lb/>
Kristofferson Sex and snobbery? Ali MacGraw. A spirited<lb/>
heavy? Ernest Borgnine. The casting is par excellent.<lb/>
But let me point out one thing. Nobody is going to win<lb/>
an academy award by doing a Peckinah film. The director is<lb/>
far more interested in his action sequences and message-<lb/>
filled material than in tour-de-force fodder for any one<lb/>
player.<lb/>
Gosh golly! There's messages in his movies. Well<lb/>
Convoy's big message is what finally brings the entire<lb/>
eighteen-wheeled mess to a grinding halt.<lb/>
Convoy is tightly based on C.W. McCall's ballad about<lb/>
a maior (50 trucks or more) convoy that keeps on truckin'<lb/>
despite the unbelievable odds stacked against it.<lb/>
From this premise Peckinpah elicits a protest march<lb/>
composed of an innumerable assemblage of trucks replete<lb/>
with operators from every imaginable walk of life. Just<lb/>
about every trucker has a legitimate beef. One driver is<lb/>
discontent with our boys in Washington; another<lb/>
disgruntled about the fifty-five mile-an-hour speed limit.<lb/>
The protagonists, Kristofferson and his little troupe, are<lb/>
on the lamfrom the law, from themselves, and, of course,<lb/>
from society.<lb/>
PIAF LIVES<lb/>
Tripe on an epic scale! Fortunately, the banality of the<lb/>
material is surpassed by Peckinpah's ingenious allusions to<lb/>
one of the cinema's foregone genres ? the western.<lb/>
Peckinpah is obsessed with the lifestyle of the old West<lb/>
Cinema<lb/>
and its eye-for-an-eye code of ethics. He aptly depicts this<lb/>
violent existence, as he does in many of his films, in what is<lb/>
probably his best work, The Wild Bunch. Peckinpah fulfills<lb/>
his promise of a Ride in the High Country in what may be<lb/>
classified as one of the most important records of the mood<lb/>
of our times and one of the most important American films<lb/>
of the era.<lb/>
In his attempt repeat the feat under a different guise,<lb/>
Peckinpah has managed to muster some fine moments for<lb/>
us to revel in.<lb/>
Audiences have, it seems, always been reassured by<lb/>
some elements of continutiy between a specific film by a<lb/>
director and that director's ensuing efforts. Hence, and this<lb/>
is especially true for Peckinpah, stars are almost by<lb/>
definition players who never vary from film to film and for a<lb/>
star to play a part that fell outside his customary range was<lb/>
always condidered a risky undertaking.<lb/>
In the same way, if the film itself can be made to fit into<lb/>
a certain category, so that the audience knows what to<lb/>
expect in general terms but is intrigued as to how the<lb/>
well-known ingrediants will be served up this time, them a<lb/>
certain level of success can almost be guaranteed.<lb/>
Audiences like to know what is in store for them and a<lb/>
successful film is one which can be clearly and accurately<lb/>
labelled.<lb/>
KRIS KRISTOFFERSON AND Ali<lb/>
MacGraw: "Peckinpah is unsure about<lb/>
the staging of the main action in a<lb/>
scene, except where seedy debauchery or<lb/>
sudden flare-ups of violence are concer-<lb/>
ned. The dialogue rides high in<lb/>
"Convoy" as well as wide?from the<lb/>
awful to the quite acceptable. But even<lb/>
the hip C.B. slang employed inevitably<lb/>
leads us to believe that Peckinpah is<lb/>
playing cowboys and Indians again<lb/>
To an even greater degree, Convoy is like the<lb/>
contemporary Peckinpah westerns of the director's earlier<lb/>
days. It is a story of adventurous open-air life that can take<lb/>
you out of your everyday life, away from the monotony of<lb/>
your job or textbook.<lb/>
It is a clear and gripping development that moves to a<lb/>
satisfying climax when everything is settled in a blaze of<lb/>
guns.<lb/>
But the automatic response evoked by Peckinpah,<lb/>
resulting from a certain sameness not only inherent in his<lb/>
films but in the "western style itself, is so strong in<lb/>
Convoy that it drowns his message.<lb/>
But for the filmmaker who wants to talk directly to his<lb/>
audience about moral values, or about themes such as male<lb/>
friendship or patriotism, the western can offer unequalled<lb/>
freedom.<lb/>
Westerns tend to be about a certain period of American<lb/>
history and to show the building-up of an organization<lb/>
united in a common good cause, but the best of them have<lb/>
an attraction that is internat.ona I. The '??<lb/>
Peckinpah's guise is the mam reason for loss of hat feehng<lb/>
of universality and in a sense what we are left w.th ,s<lb/>
poor man's Nashville. ? of<lb/>
There is no doubt that Peckinpah has a n.ce sense of<lb/>
time and place; that h.s locations and groupmgs. as wen as<lb/>
the faces and peripheral activit.es that fill a g.ven shot have<lb/>
the right look and feel about them.<lb/>
But he is much less sure about the staging of the mam<lb/>
action in a scene, except where seedy debauchery or<lb/>
sudden flare-ups of violence are concerned. The dia ogue<lb/>
rides high in Convoy as well as w.de - from the awful to<lb/>
the quite acceptable. But even the hip C.B. slang employed<lb/>
inevitably leads us to believe that Peckinpah is playing<lb/>
cowboys and Indians again.<lb/>
Peckinpah is half Indian, and that may have induced our<lb/>
guilt feelings to turn him into a prodigy before his time; it<lb/>
may also give him a keener understanding of his subject<lb/>
matter.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057140_0009"/><lb/>
31 nnhiir 1978 FOUNTAINHEAP<lb/>
78 In Shade: 'mass produced mediocrity'<lb/>
By JEFF ROLLINS<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
The Small Faoes new<lb/>
album, 78 In The Shade, is<lb/>
a perfectly boring album of<lb/>
old-fashined rock and roll.<lb/>
These rock retardates do<lb/>
not do anything creative at<lb/>
all, but compose their<lb/>
uous, woody slide guitar<lb/>
that gives those albums<lb/>
life. The Small Faces did<lb/>
nothing that a group of high<lb/>
school musicians couldn't<lb/>
have done, and probably<lb/>
have done better.<lb/>
It didn't take Stewart and<lb/>
Wood long to abandon this<lb/>
bunch of dolts. While Stew-<lb/>
Music<lb/>
ROCK GROUP SMALL Faces 'Were it not for the<lb/>
"sipidly designed album cover, one might well imagine<lb/>
? ? the group were trying to cultivate an audience of the<lb/>
songs of stale techniques<lb/>
and trite ideas.<lb/>
The music lover who<lb/>
possesses a knowledge of<lb/>
dreary rock and roll trivia<lb/>
might remember that the<lb/>
Small Faces appeared on<lb/>
the music scene as Rod<lb/>
Stewart's back-up band<lb/>
The albums-A Nod is as<lb/>
Good as a Wink to a Blind<lb/>
Horse, Every Picture Tell A<lb/>
Story, and Gasoline Alley<lb/>
that they recorded with<lb/>
Stewart and Ron Wood are<lb/>
not bad at all. But it is<lb/>
Stewart's inimitable person-<lb/>
ality and voice and Ron<lb/>
Wood's delectable, sen-<lb/>
art went on to solo stardom<lb/>
and Wood became a Rolling<lb/>
Stone, the Samll Faces<lb/>
remained in deservable ob-<lb/>
scurity. Except, that is, to<lb/>
inflict the music listening<lb/>
public with an occasional<lb/>
travesty in order to play out<lb/>
the contract they signed<lb/>
with Atlantic.<lb/>
Were it not for the<lb/>
insipidly designed album<lb/>
cover, one might well im-<lb/>
agine that the Small Faces<lb/>
were trying to cultivate an<lb/>
audience of the deaf. Their<lb/>
songs fill you with the<lb/>
intense desire to change<lb/>
records.<lb/>
Of course, it is possible<lb/>
that the entire album is well<lb/>
conceived parody of itself.<lb/>
M aybe it si supposed to be<lb/>
bad, in order to satirize all<lb/>
that is vacuous, hackneyed<lb/>
and uncreative in rock and<lb/>
roll. If so, fine job gentle-<lb/>
men, for the album is truly<lb/>
execrable.<lb/>
There is nothing at all to<lb/>
distinguish Steve Mar-<lb/>
riott's voice or his perform-<lb/>
ance with it. He reminds<lb/>
one of a tired, Holiday Inn<lb/>
musician who is grinding<lb/>
out for the umpteenth time<lb/>
"House of the Rising Sun<lb/>
How can he expect his<lb/>
audience to be excited<lb/>
about his performance if he<lb/>
is not?<lb/>
Equally lackluster are<lb/>
Ian McLagan's keyboards.<lb/>
They are, well, adolescent<lb/>
if not puerile. McLagan is<lb/>
neither technically adept<lb/>
nor compositionally crea-<lb/>
tive. In this respect, he<lb/>
resembles the otehr band<lb/>
members.<lb/>
Rick Wills' bass is best<lb/>
when it is not hears. And<lb/>
Kenny Jones has every-<lb/>
thing it takes to be a fine<lb/>
drummer except a sense of<lb/>
rhythm. As such, Wills and<lb/>
Jones are exemplary mem-<lb/>
bers of the Small Faces.<lb/>
New ideas are what one<lb/>
looks for in music, and new<lb/>
combinations of ideas al-<lb/>
ready used. Also, the worth<lb/>
of music in increased pro-<lb/>
portionally to the emotive<lb/>
capability of the musicians,<lb/>
to the depth of the feelings<lb/>
that the man can arouse in<lb/>
us with his instrument.<lb/>
By these criteria, the<lb/>
Small Faces' new album, 78<lb/>
In The Shade, can only be<lb/>
called "music" if we use<lb/>
the word's broader defin-<lb/>
ition: "any controlled<lb/>
sound of interval of si-<lb/>
lence On listening to the<lb/>
album, one gets a good<lb/>
sense of the ad absurdum<lb/>
of the academic definition.<lb/>
If you have a parti-<lb/>
cualrly cruel streak in you,<lb/>
you might recommend this<lb/>
album to someone you<lb/>
don't like, otherwise you<lb/>
will only lose friends by<lb/>
possessing this album. If<lb/>
people hear you play it,<lb/>
they will think less of you.<lb/>
78 In The Shade is a<lb/>
tribute to mass produced<lb/>
mediocrity and as such<lb/>
represents the nadir of the<lb/>
never interesting Small<lb/>
Faces.<lb/>
BASF<lb/>
POLISHED FOR GREATER CLARITY<lb/>
Performance<lb/>
Reel-to-Reel Sale<lb/>
Things I Meant To Say is 'sugary<lb/>
product aimed at teen market'<lb/>
By EDWARD KALE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
While sitting at my<lb/>
desk, listening to a first<lb/>
album by the newcomer<lb/>
musician. Marcus Joseph, I<lb/>
was musing about how re-<lb/>
freshing it would be to find<lb/>
something tine and inno-<lb/>
vative by some talented<lb/>
new performer.<lb/>
Every once in a great<lb/>
while there comes an album<lb/>
that stands out from that<lb/>
mass of sugary ineptness<lb/>
that is being produced<lb/>
today m the name of music.<lb/>
it is exciting to find an<lb/>
artist who has pointed and<lb/>
illuminating things to say<lb/>
about himself and the world<lb/>
about him. and who is able<lb/>
to express this insight mu-<lb/>
sically m such a way as to<lb/>
be pleasing and cummuni-<lb/>
catively effective.<lb/>
Unfortunately, Marcus<lb/>
Joseph's newalbum,Things<lb/>
I Meant To Say, doesn't fall<lb/>
into this category of a few.<lb/>
This album takes its place,<lb/>
rather, among the multi-<lb/>
tudinous other albums that<lb/>
are being produced to<lb/>
appeal to the "Budding<lb/>
love" emotions of people<lb/>
who are junior high school<lb/>
age or younger.<lb/>
Nine of the ten songs on<lb/>
the album are love songs<lb/>
with such titles as "I Don't<lb/>
Want To Get Over You<lb/>
"Things I Meant To Say<lb/>
and "I've Got You Where I<lb/>
Want You<lb/>
A sample of the lyrics:<lb/>
I'm not the kind of guy<lb/>
who wants to meet just<lb/>
anyone<lb/>
But when I saw you<lb/>
standing there I knew<lb/>
that you're the one.<lb/>
or<lb/>
Oohwee baby I can't<lb/>
stand it, I can't take it<lb/>
when you walkaway<lb/>
Come on, sugar, such a<lb/>
bad girl, say you're<lb/>
leaving when you want<lb/>
to stay.<lb/>
Add background<lb/>
strings, some backup vo-<lb/>
cals, keyboards, guitars,<lb/>
and drums, all doing elem-<lb/>
entary rythmical work, and<lb/>
you have Things I Meant To<lb/>
Say.<lb/>
This is not to say that<lb/>
the album is technically<lb/>
bad. It is mixed well and<lb/>
sounds fine technically.<lb/>
The musicians appear ing<lb/>
on this album are pro-<lb/>
ficient, and might even be<lb/>
very talented. However,<lb/>
with what is called for on<lb/>
this album, they hardly<lb/>
have a chance to show that<lb/>
they know but a few chords.<lb/>
One of the few re-<lb/>
deeming points of the al-<lb/>
bum is iV-rcus Joseph's<lb/>
voice. It is -mooth and<lb/>
rather pleasing, it is unfor-<lb/>
tunate, though, that he<lb/>
hasn't the artistic insight to<lb/>
strive for something a little<lb/>
less flat than this, his first.<lb/>
Seemingly, what has<lb/>
happened is that the record<lb/>
company found a young<lb/>
man who had a cute voice,<lb/>
put him with a couple of<lb/>
sets of studio musicians<lb/>
(this album was recorded in<lb/>
two different places) and<lb/>
came up with a product<lb/>
aimed at the young teen<lb/>
market.<lb/>
A cute album that takes<lb/>
its place among the large<lb/>
body of music that is<lb/>
lacking in depth and mean-<lb/>
ing. Things t Meant To.$ay<lb/>
is not really an album that<lb/>
someone of college age<lb/>
would be interested in. I am<lb/>
content to let M arcusJoseph<lb/>
remain a face in the crowd.<lb/>
$5.03 ea.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057140_0010"/><lb/>
In eight team field<lb/>
ECU wins invitational<lb/>
,? ?<lb/>
Warmups?<lb/>
L PL A YER appears slumped on the floor<lb/>
' actually she is performing some warmup<lb/>
?e a match in this weekends ECU<lb/>
Steve Romero<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The first annual ECU<lb/>
Invitational Volleyball<lb/>
Tournament was held this<lb/>
weekend in Minges Coli-<lb/>
seum and the Pirate part-<lb/>
isans were not disappointed<lb/>
with the outcome. ECU<lb/>
captured first place with an<lb/>
easy 15-9, 15-4 victory over<lb/>
Louisburg College.<lb/>
In the round-robin<lb/>
action which set the pair-<lb/>
ings for the playoffs, the<lb/>
Pirates were able to with-<lb/>
stand all pressure and<lb/>
finished the only undefeat-<lb/>
ed team with a 10-0 mark.<lb/>
Second seed was a three-<lb/>
way tie between Louisburg,<lb/>
Longwood College, and<lb/>
Concord College, each with<lb/>
identical 5-5 records.<lb/>
ECU opened the tour-<lb/>
nament Friday against<lb/>
Longwood with a 15-11,<lb/>
15-9 win. Later in the<lb/>
evening the Pirates faced<lb/>
Louisburg and captured a<lb/>
hard fought 16-14, 15-5<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
We were behind to<lb/>
Louisburg said coach<lb/>
Alita Dillon, "but we show-<lb/>
ed that we can come from<lb/>
behind when we have to. I<lb/>
think that must be our<lb/>
biggest improvement dur-<lb/>
ing this tournament<lb/>
The Pirates closed the<lb/>
Friday evening session with<lb/>
a victory over Concord<lb/>
College. 15-11. 15-0.<lb/>
In Saturday round-robin<lb/>
action, ECU defeated Peace<lb/>
College from Raleigh, 15-9,<lb/>
15-7 and also Virginia Tech,<lb/>
15-5, 15-4.<lb/>
Virginia Tech and Peace<lb/>
failed to qualify for the<lb/>
playoffs, with 4-6 and 1-9<lb/>
records which were the<lb/>
poorest marks in the tour-<lb/>
nament.<lb/>
"Virginia Tech played<lb/>
below the level which we<lb/>
were expecting said<lb/>
Dillon. I though that they<lb/>
would place much higher<lb/>
than fifth. Peace was ham-<lb/>
perred by injuries, which<lb/>
was just as I had heard<lb/>
prior to the tournament.<lb/>
They finished in sixth<lb/>
place<lb/>
Since three of the teams<lb/>
were tied for second seed,<lb/>
there was a draw to decide<lb/>
the pairings of the playoffs.<lb/>
ECU was paired with Long-<lb/>
wood and Concord was left<lb/>
to challenge Louisburg for a<lb/>
shot at the finals.<lb/>
The Pirates won a three<lb/>
game match with Long-<lb/>
wood, 11-15. 15-10, 15-7<lb/>
"We lost one game to<lb/>
Longwood Dillon said.<lb/>
"Our goal was to go to the<lb/>
entire Tournament without<lb/>
losing a single game<lb/>
Louisburg edges Con-<lb/>
cord 15-8, 15-7, which set<lb/>
up the championship show-<lb/>
down with ECU.<lb/>
Longwood took home<lb/>
the third place trophy with<lb/>
a decisive victory over Con-<lb/>
cord in the consolation<lb/>
match.<lb/>
ECU and Louisburg<lb/>
each placed two players on<lb/>
the All-Tournament team.<lb/>
Juniors Becky Beauchamp<lb/>
and LaVonda Duncan were<lb/>
the Pirates selected to that<lb/>
honor. "LaVonda is the<lb/>
quarterback of the team;<lb/>
she did an excellent job for<lb/>
us all weekend stated<lb/>
Dillon. "Becky had an<lb/>
outstanding weeknd offen-<lb/>
sively, especially with her<lb/>
spiking<lb/>
Louisburg placed<lb/>
Loretta Holden and Sharon<lb/>
Perry on the squad of the<lb/>
tournaments best players.<lb/>
Longwood's Linda Eagle<lb/>
and Concord's Jean Zelt-<lb/>
man rounded out the six<lb/>
member team.<lb/>
Dillon also praised sen-<lb/>
ior Rosie Thompson for her<lb/>
team leadership. She also<lb/>
cited junior Joy Forbes for<lb/>
her defensive play and<lb/>
serving and junior Ginny<lb/>
Rodgers for her all around<lb/>
hustle during the Tour-<lb/>
nament.<lb/>
"Everyone saw action<lb/>
at one time or another this<lb/>
weekend. It truely was a<lb/>
group effort with everyone<lb/>
making a contribution<lb/>
said Dillon.<lb/>
"We hope to have a<lb/>
bigger tournament next<lb/>
year with more teams. I<lb/>
also hope we can get a<lb/>
weekend when there are<lb/>
less other activities going<lb/>
on campus which kept<lb/>
many students from attend-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
The Pirates now own a<lb/>
26-20 overall record with a<lb/>
6-4 record against in-state<lb/>
Division I schools. The<lb/>
in-state record is what<lb/>
decides the seeding for the<lb/>
state tournament which will<lb/>
be held at ECU November<lb/>
10-11.<lb/>
ECU closes out its regu-<lb/>
lar season schedule Wed-<lb/>
nesday in Greensboro with<lb/>
matches with UNC-G and<lb/>
Appalachian State.<lb/>
Duncan sets<lb/>
LA VONDA DUNCA N PREPA RES to set up a teammate <lb/>
this weekend's ECU Invitational held in Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Duncan along with Becky Beauchamp were Doth named<lb/>
the All-Tournament team ECU captured the inaugura<lb/>
event m the eight team field Photo by Steve Romero)<lb/>
Simply Sports<lb/>
Sam Rogers<lb/>
ICC fanaticism<lb/>
. were born and raised around Atlantic Coast<lb/>
ike most of the students here at ECU<lb/>
s s.mply a matter of life and death you receive a<lb/>
ACC reading<lb/>
?60s and the early 1970's newspaper<lb/>
magaizine features in Sports<lb/>
? ACC fans But now that's fans.<lb/>
atics.<lb/>
your local newstand today and you<lb/>
bombarded by publications about ACC<lb/>
Ketbal And what's funny is these ACC<lb/>
even more<lb/>
g these magazine publications is<lb/>
is ACC Basketball Handbook which is now<lb/>
Circulation. And just this year. Nick Pond.<lb/>
? ports Development for the Capitol Sports<lb/>
together the first magazine on Atlantic Coast<lb/>
e football Pond followed his football publication<lb/>
basketball edition similar to Mothershead ACC<lb/>
tl I's not enough three businessmen from<lb/>
Matt and Chris Thomas along with Jack Newman<lb/>
shed another magazine known as ACC Sports<lb/>
be on the newstand monthly through the<lb/>
of the year.<lb/>
-hese magazines are a result of immense interest<lb/>
the people who follow the ACC every year explained<lb/>
? Chansky. the Sports Editor of the Durham Morning<lb/>
erald an. former Sports Editor of the Daily Tar Heel at<lb/>
UNC Most people just cant get enough information from<lb/>
their local papers and that's why these magazines have<lb/>
become so popular.<lb/>
When there's a market for something as interesting as<lb/>
e ACC. people are going to make an attempt to make<lb/>
some money out of the situtation noted Chansky "But<lb/>
some of these publications have a tendency to overlap each<lb/>
d consequently you're going to read the same thing<lb/>
in a lot of them<lb/>
AL TYSON<lb/>
Freshman center rarin' to go<lb/>
; x -<lb/>
Al Tyson<lb/>
L<lb/>
Photo by Chap Gurley<lb/>
byCHARLESCHANDLER<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
M At 6'11 215 pounds, highly-touted freshman center Al<lb/>
V. Tyson finds himself at the crossroads of his life. He is now<lb/>
preparing what could very possibly be a very outstanding<lb/>
college basketball career. This year he must face athletes of<lb/>
comparable size and abiltiy to his own.<lb/>
Yet ECU head coach Larry Gillman feels his prized<lb/>
recuit is ready for the transition. "A! has unlimited<lb/>
potential said Gillman. "He just must get physically<lb/>
stronger. He's already put on tenpounds since the end of<lb/>
last season After he gets a little experience, hell beo.k<lb/>
Can Tyson be a factor for the Pirates this season<lb/>
Gillman sure hopes so. "It depends on how fast Al<lb/>
progresses as to how much playing time he'll get this<lb/>
season said the Pirate mentor. "We certainly hope that<lb/>
hell make a big contribution this year. It just depends on<lb/>
how fast he matures<lb/>
Tyson says he feels he can help the Pirates immediately.<lb/>
?Tm going to do my best said the freshman from<lb/>
Wintervillelknowitwillbetough.Butall I can do is give<lb/>
it all I have<lb/>
All-American candidate, Oliver Mack will provide<lb/>
encouragement and leadership for Tyson. "Mack will<lb/>
help Al says Gillman. "Anytime a young player can play<lb/>
with an athlete like a Mack, a Phil Ford, a Butch Lee, or a<lb/>
John Lucas, he can't help but benefit from the experience<lb/>
? Mack makes me feel like I can do the job sid Tyson.<lb/>
"Playing with him makes me play harder. It seems to give<lb/>
me confidence<lb/>
A look at Tyson's high school record credentials shows<lb/>
why the freshman was recruited by teams from all ove- the<lb/>
Atlantic Coast and Southern Conference area<lb/>
"Big Al" averaged 18.6 points and 14.5 rebounds<lb/>
during his senior season Tyson made severa- 50'<lb/>
lists of high school stars He was listed in Street and<lb/>
Smith's basketball yearbook as one of the top 20 p a?ers in<lb/>
the south last season<lb/>
So. with all these credentials, why dd Tyson decide<lb/>
come to ECU9 "I like the situation here, said Tyson<lb/>
real dose to home I didn't want to go that far away A ong<lb/>
with ECU. I thought about going to Ciemson. Memphis<lb/>
State, and Virginia Tech East Carolina just seemec ?<lb/>
place that I should play<lb/>
Tyson's decision brought much controversy to the Prate<lb/>
program According to Tyson, it was all unwarranted C ?<lb/>
the summer, the ECU coaching staff was allegedly charged<lb/>
by the University of M tssissippi with recruiting violations n<lb/>
the intense battle to land Tyson<lb/>
"They tried toclaim that ECU wasgivmg me things that<lb/>
were illegal said Tyson "But there was no truth to any of<lb/>
it. The NCAA investigated the situation and everything<lb/>
checked out ok<lb/>
"Even though I knew it was all false. I couldn't help bu1<lb/>
worry. I thought it might mess up my career. I'm glad<lb/>
over<lb/>
So. in a sense. Al Tyson has already climbed the first<lb/>
mountain in his ECU career Gillman feeis Big Al <lb/>
climb many more in the next four years "Al is a hard<lb/>
worker noted Gillman. "He has the talent and he loves<lb/>
basketball<lb/>
Mallory named<lb/>
to Hall of Fame<lb/>
Wuycik's Poop Sheet<lb/>
The ACC Basketball Handbook, ACC Football and ACC<lb/>
Baseball are filled with everything one could imagine.<lb/>
Preview stories written by local sports writers, pictures,<lb/>
recruiting notes, stats and schedules can all be found in any<lb/>
of these three publications.<lb/>
The ACC M agazme is a feature oriented publicattonwith<lb/>
stories on the individual coaches and players themselves.<lb/>
It's also written by contributing writers from around the<lb/>
ACC area.<lb/>
Perhaps the most interesting inside info about the<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Conference is a small newletter published in<lb/>
Chapel Hill known as the Poop Sheet Dennis Wuycik, a<lb/>
former basketball All-America from North Carolina is the<lb/>
publisher and it's the only newsletter of its kind in the<lb/>
country<lb/>
The Poop Sheet is filled with rumors and gossip about<lb/>
the ACC and the area, including a detailed look at<lb/>
recruiting written by Brick Otteinger.<lb/>
The Poop Sheet has gotten great response from people<lb/>
all over the country said Wuycik. "The weekly update on<lb/>
games and the recruiting information is something no other<lb/>
publication in the country has.<lb/>
"People love to hear inside information and try to find<lb/>
out just a little bit more about what goes on in the ACC. It's<lb/>
also an excellent item for people who live a long way from<lb/>
the area and like to keep up with ACC sports<lb/>
If you're totally confused by now with all these titles I II<lb/>
go over them again and even slip the price in there as well.<lb/>
There's the ACC Basketball Handbook ($2.50) ACC<lb/>
Football ($3.00) ACC Basketball ($3.00) and ACC Sports<lb/>
($1 50) A year's subscription to the Poop Sheet is ($20.00).<lb/>
As for me, the hell with all this trash. I'm still satisfied<lb/>
with reading my old hometown newspaper, the Durham<lb/>
Morning Herald.<lb/>
Three former ECU<lb/>
athletesand a former coach,<lb/>
the schools current Dean<lb/>
of Men, will be installed in<lb/>
the ECU Sports hall of<lb/>
Fame during ceremonies at<lb/>
the Pirates' Nov. 11 home-<lb/>
coming football game<lb/>
against William and Mary.<lb/>
Jim Mallory. who coac-<lb/>
hed the Pirates to the 1961<lb/>
national championship in<lb/>
baseball. Jim Johnson,<lb/>
winner of 16 letters and<lb/>
coach of four sports, full-<lb/>
back Tom Michel, the first<lb/>
man to score a touchdown<lb/>
in Ficklen Stadium, and<lb/>
Richard Narron, baseball<lb/>
all-America, will be honor-<lb/>
ed in the fifth year of the<lb/>
Hall of Fame.<lb/>
The induction of these<lb/>
four brings to 23 the total<lb/>
enshrined since the Hall<lb/>
was begun with 10 persons<lb/>
in 1974. Former Athletics<lb/>
Director Clarence Stasavich<lb/>
was inducted alone in 1976,<lb/>
with four being honored the<lb/>
other two years.<lb/>
Mallory, a native of<lb/>
Lawrenceville, Va and cur-<lb/>
rently the Dean of Men,<lb/>
coached the Pirate baseball<lb/>
team from 1954 through<lb/>
1962, winning numerous<lb/>
championships including<lb/>
the 1961 NAIA crown. His<lb/>
teams won 161 games and<lb/>
lost only 60. He captained<lb/>
the baseball team at North<lb/>
Carolina as an undergrad-<lb/>
uate, was named the top<lb/>
amateur baseball player in<lb/>
America one year, and<lb/>
played in the first major<lb/>
league game he ever saw,<lb/>
that with the Washington<lb/>
Senators. He became the<lb/>
Dean of Men in 1959 and is<lb/>
now also the Associate<lb/>
Dean of Students.<lb/>
Johnson, a football,<lb/>
basketball, and baseball<lb/>
star for the Pirates as an<lb/>
undergraduate, also, is the<lb/>
only alumnus to have been<lb/>
the head football coach at<lb/>
ECU. He served as captain<lb/>
for each team twice, boxed<lb/>
as a amateur, and coached<lb/>
the first ECU boxing team<lb/>
in 1938, the same year he<lb/>
received his degree. He<lb/>
served as Athletics Director<lb/>
following the war, coached<lb/>
three sports, and helped<lb/>
establish the ECU Educat-<lb/>
ional Foundation as a<lb/>
scholarship fund. He cur-<lb/>
rently resides in Virginia<lb/>
Beach, Va.<lb/>
See HALL on p 12<lb/>
Indians defeat<lb/>
ECU booters3-0<lb/>
Kevin Tyus<lb/>
THE ECU QOALIE turned in another superb performance<lb/>
agaisnt William and Mary despite the Pirates 3-0 setback.<lb/>
Tyus was credited with 18 saves against the Indians. Photo<lb/>
by John H. Grogan)<lb/>
By DAVID MAREADY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Indians of William<lb/>
and Mary tacked another<lb/>
win onto their five game<lb/>
winning streak by defeating<lb/>
the Pirates 3-0, Sunday, on<lb/>
Minges Soccer Field.<lb/>
William and Mary took<lb/>
the initiative early as they<lb/>
cranked out numerous<lb/>
shots at the Pirate goal<lb/>
before they finally hit pay-<lb/>
dirt with 15:53 gone in the<lb/>
first half. The goal, which<lb/>
came after a penalty<lb/>
against the Pirates, was<lb/>
booted by Indian Rob<lb/>
Olson.<lb/>
Several minutes later,<lb/>
with 19.40 gone in the half,<lb/>
the Indians added another<lb/>
goal to boost their lead to<lb/>
2-0. William and Mary's<lb/>
Kevin Park was credited<lb/>
with the tally.<lb/>
The remainder of the<lb/>
half was scoreless and the<lb/>
half ended in favor of the<lb/>
Indians, 2-0.<lb/>
The stats for the first<lb/>
half saw William and Mary<lb/>
way out front with twenty-<lb/>
three shots at the Pirate<lb/>
goal, while the Pirates<lb/>
could muster only four<lb/>
shots at the we!l-def?<lb/>
Indian goal<lb/>
William and Mary res<lb/>
umed second half action<lb/>
fght where they left of the<lb/>
first half. The Indians ton<lb/>
ahawked a wean P ?<lb/>
defense for their third<lb/>
consecutive goal off the toe<lb/>
of Kip Germame with 9 18<lb/>
gone in the half B<lb/>
Watson was credited with<lb/>
the assist<lb/>
Both clubs seemed to<lb/>
tire in the latter stages of<lb/>
the contest as neither the<lb/>
Pirates, nor the Indians<lb/>
could generate an effective<lb/>
offense Fleeting hopes of a<lb/>
Pirate comeback were das-<lb/>
hed as they were beset by<lb/>
several penalties The dock<lb/>
finally ran out on the<lb/>
Pirates with score in favor<lb/>
of the Indians 3-0<lb/>
Despite a weak showing<lb/>
offensively as a team, sev-<lb/>
eral Pirates played excel-<lb/>
lent games including, Phil<lb/>
Martin, Brad Winchefl and<lb/>
Stan Griff.<lb/>
Statistically. William<lb/>
and Mary dominated with<lb/>
thirty-six total shots at the<lb/>
Pirate goal, while ECU<lb/>
could only manage eight<lb/>
shots at the Indian goal<lb/>
t<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057140_0011"/><lb/>
f ?<lb/>
f t f f<lb/>
t S<lb/>
ffrffffrfl<lb/>
Thompson boosts<lb/>
Pirat<lb/>
e cause<lb/>
By DAVID MAREADY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Agile, strong, friendly.<lb/>
These are just a few of the<lb/>
characteristics describing<lb/>
ECU'S sports star, Rosie<lb/>
Thompson.<lb/>
The 21-year-old native<lb/>
of Blounts Creek, N.C. has<lb/>
earned varsity letters on<lb/>
both the Lady Pirate volley-<lb/>
ball and basketball teams.<lb/>
As a sophomore starter<lb/>
on last year's basketball<lb/>
team, Thompson scored<lb/>
645 total points while aver-<lb/>
aging a blistering 20.8<lb/>
points in each of her<lb/>
thrity-one games.<lb/>
Her average ranks her<lb/>
among the top three women<lb/>
basketball players in the<lb/>
State Thompson also led<lb/>
the squad in rebounds with<lb/>
a season total of 307 at an<lb/>
average of 9.9 per game.<lb/>
This total seems remark-<lb/>
able considering she's only<lb/>
five feet nine inches tall.<lb/>
"I think I can compen-<lb/>
sate tor my heigth by being<lb/>
a littel quicker than my<lb/>
opponents and by being in<lb/>
the right place at the right<lb/>
time said Thompson.<lb/>
Thompson was certainly<lb/>
in the right place at the<lb/>
right time last year. She<lb/>
was credited with 69 steals,<lb/>
and 14 blocked shots, sec-<lb/>
ond only to teammate,<lb/>
Marcia Girven. She was<lb/>
also tops on the team in<lb/>
free throws with a solid<lb/>
779 average in 199<lb/>
attempts.<lb/>
Thompson says the pot-<lb/>
ential on this year's squad<lb/>
is unlimited. "We're all<lb/>
very hopeful, especially<lb/>
since we have most of our<lb/>
team returning noted<lb/>
Thompson.<lb/>
She did admit, however,<lb/>
that her team will have a<lb/>
handicap defensively.<lb/>
"Our height does leave<lb/>
us with a disadvantage in<lb/>
the rebounding depart-<lb/>
ment, but I think with a<lb/>
little work we can overcome<lb/>
that<lb/>
Thompson is also aware<lb/>
that her squad faces per-<lb/>
haps one of the toughest<lb/>
schedules, both at home<lb/>
and away, as any team in<lb/>
the state. The Lady Pirates<lb/>
will face such powerhouses<lb/>
as N.C. State, UNC, Old<lb/>
Dominion, and Ohio State.<lb/>
"Our schedule is pretty<lb/>
tough said Thompson,<lb/>
"but I think our team is<lb/>
capable of beating any one<lb/>
of them. We're experienc-<lb/>
ed and that should prove to<lb/>
be a decisive factor in most<lb/>
of the contests<lb/>
Miss Thompson admits<lb/>
she along with the rest of<lb/>
her teammates must rely on<lb/>
their quickness and<lb/>
strength in order to im-<lb/>
prove on last year's out-<lb/>
standing 20-11 record.<lb/>
31 October 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
Middleton leads Belk Golas<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The International Stu-<lb/>
dents Association hasn't<lb/>
played a game yet in<lb/>
intramural soccer, but they<lb/>
have already proved a<lb/>
formidable foe as two<lb/>
teams have forfeited to<lb/>
them during the first week<lb/>
of soccer action. Both Phi<lb/>
Kappa Tau "B" and Phi<lb/>
Epsilon Kappa forfeited to<lb/>
the ISA.<lb/>
The strongest team that<lb/>
has played so far seems to<lb/>
be the Belk Gola, which<lb/>
downed the Aycock Alpi,<lb/>
1-0, and the Scott Rogues,<lb/>
6-0, last week. In the game<lb/>
against Scott, the Golas<lb/>
were led by Brad Middle-<lb/>
ton's three goals ans Kris<lb/>
Solt'stwoqoals. Stu Fields<lb/>
also contributed many fine<lb/>
saves as the Gola goal-<lb/>
keeper. And it was the<lb/>
Gola's John Ryan who<lb/>
scored the first goal of the<lb/>
intramural soccer season<lb/>
with the one and only goal<lb/>
in the Aycock game.<lb/>
Three-ln-A-Row, which has<lb/>
several members from last<lb/>
year's intramural soccer<lb/>
championship team, got off<lb/>
to a big start with a 2-1 win<lb/>
over the Aycock Alps. The<lb/>
score was 0-0 at the half but<lb/>
scored two goals in the<lb/>
second half to win. The<lb/>
winning goal was scored by<lb/>
Jack Simonneau. Robert<lb/>
Barnhill had the other goal<lb/>
for the winners. Three-<lb/>
In-A-Row lost their other<lb/>
game during the week,<lb/>
losing to the Jones Cosmos<lb/>
in a 2-1 upset. The Cosmos<lb/>
went 2-0 during the week<lb/>
with a 4-2 win over On Your<lb/>
Back.<lb/>
In fraternity play, Pi<lb/>
Kappa Phi and Tau Kappa<lb/>
Epsilon have emerged as<lb/>
the teams to beat. The Pi<lb/>
Kapps got their season off<lb/>
on the right foot with a pair<lb/>
of wins over Sigma Nu (2-0)<lb/>
and Sigma Phi Epsilon<lb/>
(2-1). Clay Edmonds has a<lb/>
goal in each game for the Pi<lb/>
Kappas. He also had one<lb/>
assist. Tau Kappa Epsilon<lb/>
downed Kappa Sigma 1-0<lb/>
and Lambda Chi Alpha 4-0<lb/>
for two wins in the first<lb/>
week of play. Kappa Alpha<lb/>
is also undefeated with a<lb/>
2-1 win over Delta Sigma<lb/>
Phi. The most exciting frat<lb/>
game of the week, though,<lb/>
came in the game between<lb/>
the Phi Kappa Taus and<lb/>
Sigma Nus when the Sigma<lb/>
Nu team won on penalty<lb/>
kicks after a 1 -1 tie between<lb/>
the two teams.<lb/>
In women's league play,<lb/>
the Spirit of Fleming<lb/>
mauled Alpha Phi, 8-0, in<lb/>
their first game of the<lb/>
season as eight different<lb/>
women scored. Only two<lb/>
other games were played<lb/>
due to a large number of<lb/>
forfeits. In those games,<lb/>
Cotten beat Alpha Xi Delta<lb/>
4-0 and Alpha Xi Delta beat<lb/>
Greene Dorm 1-0.<lb/>
The women's team ten-<lb/>
nis finals were played on<lb/>
Wednesday and Tri Sigma<lb/>
defeated Fleming Dorm,<lb/>
10-0, 10-0, and 10-0. In<lb/>
men's play, the Aycock<lb/>
Aces and the Undefeated<lb/>
met for the men's champ-<lb/>
ionship, with the Unde-<lb/>
feated winning 3-0.<lb/>
in the match went 10-4.<lb/>
10-6 and 10-4. In the<lb/>
number one match a pair of<lb/>
teammates from last year's<lb/>
team tennis champions<lb/>
met, with Bill Dixon top-<lb/>
ping Michael Lupton, 10-4.<lb/>
In another match, Michael<lb/>
Joyner beat Mike Sawicki.<lb/>
10-4, but not until after<lb/>
Sawicki had fought back<lb/>
from a 5-0 deficit to close it<lb/>
to 5-4. John Irby won the<lb/>
other match for the Un-<lb/>
defeated, topping Rick Ad-<lb/>
ams, 10-6.<lb/>
Rosie Thompson<lb/>
THE TWO SPORT ECU star displays the form that allowed<lb/>
her to lead the Lady Pirate basketball team in scoring last<lb/>
season. She will be counted on again this season to carry a<lb/>
large load for the Pirates.<lb/>
-NEW-<lb/>
Now Available<lb/>
BASF<lb/>
W<lb/>
professional<lb/>
cassettes<lb/>
Trivia contest begins<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
How many persons out<lb/>
there think they know their<lb/>
baseball?<lb/>
Well, there's more to<lb/>
baseball than knowing<lb/>
Reggie Jackson's batting<lb/>
average or Pete Rose's<lb/>
salary.<lb/>
For example, who was<lb/>
the pitcher that gave up the<lb/>
pitch that Hank Aaron hit<lb/>
for his 715th major league<lb/>
home run that broke Babe<lb/>
Ruth's record? Or, how<lb/>
about the infielder who<lb/>
holds the record for least<lb/>
errors committed in a 162-<lb/>
game season? Or for that<lb/>
matter, how about a<lb/>
toughie like who were the<lb/>
three catchers on the 1964<lb/>
New York Yankees baseball<lb/>
team? <lb/>
If you know the three<lb/>
above questions, then you<lb/>
are pretty good. But, even<lb/>
if you didn't and you think<lb/>
you're a pretty good base-<lb/>
ball fan, you ought to sign<lb/>
up to participate in the<lb/>
Intramural Department's<lb/>
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coming up November 20.<lb/>
Registration begins on<lb/>
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that should give you all you<lb/>
amateur Howard Cosells<lb/>
out there a chance to brush<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057140_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 31 October 1978<lb/>
hist week in NCAA action<lb/>
Maryland,<lb/>
NSON<lb/>
5 sur -<lb/>
978 ?<lb/>
Navy,<lb/>
?<lb/>
weeki<lb/>
se nay be<lb/>
ind.<lb/>
one Of the foui remaining<lb/>
major teams with perfect<lb/>
records, blanked Duke 27-0<lb/>
but the Terrapins are from<lb/>
from home free. They have<lb/>
a major non-league show<lb/>
down with second-ranked<lb/>
Penn State on tap next<lb/>
Saturday, plus an Atlantic-<lb/>
Coast Conference shootout<lb/>
with Clemson on Nov 18<lb/>
Houston. No 11 in last<lb/>
week's Associated Press<lb/>
ratings, probably will crack<lb/>
the Top Ten in the next one<lb/>
a come-from-<lb/>
behind 20-9 victory over<lb/>
ninth i Arkansas<lb/>
No 18 Navy remained<lb/>
I the unbeatens ?<lb/>
Oklahoma and<lb/>
merup Penn State are<lb/>
by knocking<lb/>
oft No 15 Pitt 21-11 while<lb/>
No. 11  came from<lb/>
1t iown to nip<lb/>
Kentucky 17-16 and No 17<lb/>
Purdue whipped Iowa 34-7<lb/>
The weekend's results<lb/>
left Houston and Texas tied<lb/>
for the Southwest Con-<lb/>
ference lead. Georgia and<lb/>
Alabama among the non-<lb/>
losers in Southeastern<lb/>
Conference play ? so is<lb/>
Auburn ? and Purdue in<lb/>
the driver's seat for the Big<lb/>
Ten title and the P<lb/>
Bowl<lb/>
Meanwhile, Oklahoma<lb/>
and Penn State kept rolling<lb/>
toward a possible national<lb/>
championship showdown in<lb/>
the Orange Bowl if they<lb/>
finish the regular season<lb/>
1-2 Both teams have 8-0<lb/>
records Oklah'<lb/>
trounced Kansas State<lb/>
56-19 and Penn Stale trim-<lb/>
med West Virginia 49-21 -<lb/>
with three regular-season<lb/>
contests remaining Okla-<lb/>
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homa must face Colorado,<lb/>
Nebraska and Oklahoma<lb/>
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State and Pitt left<lb/>
One team had its per-<lb/>
fect record ended when<lb/>
unranked Holy Cross<lb/>
bowed 31-25 to Brown as<lb/>
Mark Whippie passed for<lb/>
two touchdowns and scored<lb/>
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Elsewhere, Keith Pugh<lb/>
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of them sensational grabs<lb/>
? for 148 yards, including<lb/>
a 45-yard touchdown toss<lb/>
m Jeff Rutiedge. to lead<lb/>
third-ranked Alabama past<lb/>
Virginia Tech 35-0 Rut-<lb/>
ledge also fired a 27yarder<lb/>
? 3ruce Bolton<lb/>
Fourth-ranked Nebra-<lb/>
i preppmg for its Nov.<lb/>
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? ned back Oklahoma<lb/>
ite 22-14 as Tom Sorley<lb/>
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. irds to Rick Berns for<lb/>
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Paul McDonald threw<lb/>
ee touchdown passes to<lb/>
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Vic Rakhsham while<lb/>
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ne ground to lead<lb/>
?tl ra ked Southern Cai<lb/>
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Olympian Jot<lb/>
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a th a kickoff return as No<lb/>
? is defeated SouU<lb/>
V list 22-3 The Long-<lb/>
? e : V -?- Ford to 10<lb/>
mpletion; i V oasses<lb/>
v :h i-<lb/>
t year s<lb/>
?  ? nesota ? ? ???' ???<lb/>
 ? Jophers 42-10 as<lb/>
v for tl<lb/>
? ?  ?? ' ' ??<lb/>
?. ?? ra -ed UClA<lb/>
?-sated Ariz na 24-14 on<lb/>
??.? e on Sat -<lb/>
12 Arizona S'ate<lb/>
ubbed -? by<lb/>
Washington as Toussaint<lb/>
r . ei scored tw x i 1 T -<lb/>
j one TD and<lb/>
, ? M ss ii squan-<lb/>
a 27-7 iead in the<lb/>
a 20 minutes and lost to<lb/>
? 28-27 when E I<lb/>
?ed on 'u"s<lb/>
and 1<lb/>
added a 12-<lb/>
Louisiana State. No 14<lb/>
was idle but Vagas Fer-<lb/>
guson scored twice as No<lb/>
19 Notre Dame blanked<lb/>
M.ami of Florida 20-0 and<lb/>
Clemson s Lester Brown<lb/>
outrushed North Carolina<lb/>
States Ted Brown 117<lb/>
yards to 70 as the 20th-<lb/>
ranked Tigers downed the<lb/>
Wolfpack 33-10<lb/>
Arkansas took a 9-0<lb/>
second-period lead over<lb/>
Houston on three field<lb/>
goals but the Cougars<lb/>
rallied on two touchdown<lb/>
runs by Randy Love while<lb/>
the defense turned back<lb/>
numerous Arkansas threats<lb/>
and limited Ben Cowms to<lb/>
40 yards on 11 carries<lb/>
Navy s No 1-ranked<lb/>
defense threw punchless<lb/>
Pitt for a minus 28 yards<lb/>
rushing offense and scored<lb/>
when Phil McConkey re-<lb/>
covered a teammate's fum-<lb/>
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Larry Kiawmski's 3-yard<lb/>
run and on Bob Lesz-<lb/>
czynski's 4-yard toss to<lb/>
Curt Gamer<lb/>
Georgia fen be<lb/>
Kentucky 16-0 in the third<lb/>
period but rallied on Willie<lb/>
McClendon s 4-yard run.<lb/>
Jefl Pyburn's 6-yard pass<lb/>
to Ulysses Norns and Rex<lb/>
Robinson's 29-yard field<lb/>
goa .v th eight seconds<lb/>
The BuHdogs don t<lb/>
? Alabama and can go<lb/>
the Sugar Bowl I .<lb/>
be 3? la an 1 A .Dur"<lb/>
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what Bama does<lb/>
Ma" Herrn ann<lb/>
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touchd mt passes a<lb/>
ago. settled for "wo th<lb/>
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You-g and ii to Ba"<lb/>
Burre" ? as P re-<lb/>
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State in the B 3<lb/>
The B- ikers<lb/>
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State and M higan State<lb/>
but jst race Michigan on<lb/>
Nov 18<lb/>
Bi"y Sims, who rushed<lb/>
for 23"1 vards a week ago<lb/>
added 202 on 25 carries a" J<lb/>
red 'a ce to ead O a-<lb/>
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homa past Kansas Si i<lb/>
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in the first four minuh<lb/>
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How the Tot ?<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057140_0013"/>
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