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<pb facs="00057145_0001"/>
Vol. 55 No.<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
wuw.<lb/>
14 September 1978<lb/>
Chancellor Brewer describes<lb/>
ECU in the'Next Few Years'<lb/>
By MARCBARNES<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Dr. Thomas Brewer,<lb/>
chancellor of ECU. addres-<lb/>
sed a breakfast meeting of<lb/>
the Greenville Chamber of<lb/>
Commerce Tuesday on the<lb/>
subject" ECU In The Next<lb/>
Few Years<lb/>
Beginning on a humor-<lb/>
our note. Brewer comment-<lb/>
ed that he should begin his<lb/>
talk by 'Talking about ECU<lb/>
in the Next Few Weeks<lb/>
commenting further that<lb/>
what ECU needed was<lb/>
healthy backfield for it's<lb/>
upcoming football game<lb/>
with UNC-Chapel Hill.<lb/>
Brewer then comment-<lb/>
ed on the overall excellence<lb/>
of ECU. and he praised his<lb/>
predecessor. Dr. Leo<lb/>
Jenkins, former chancellor.<lb/>
He expressed the hope<lb/>
that ECU would get even<lb/>
better in the years ahead.<lb/>
According to Brewer,<lb/>
the years of rapid growth<lb/>
and expansion are over.<lb/>
and m the years ahead,<lb/>
there will be an increase<lb/>
emphasis on overall excel-<lb/>
lence within the university.<lb/>
Brewer expressed the<lb/>
hope that an increase in<lb/>
overall excellence would<lb/>
result m students receiving<lb/>
a ? ner education and there-<lb/>
bring credit to this<lb/>
region of the state.<lb/>
Brewer listed three<lb/>
areas of top priority for the<lb/>
university in the years<lb/>
ahead.<lb/>
Fine-tuning the admin-<lb/>
istration - Brewer outlined<lb/>
the plans for the eliminat-<lb/>
ion of two existing positions<lb/>
in the administrative hier-<lb/>
archy and the creation of<lb/>
two new ones to take their<lb/>
place.<lb/>
Enlargement and dev-<lb/>
elopment of outside sup-<lb/>
port. He outlined plans to<lb/>
build up alumni chapters,<lb/>
and he set a goal of<lb/>
receiving a contribution of<lb/>
$10.00 from each alumnus<lb/>
auunally.<lb/>
This would add approx-<lb/>
imately $350,000 to the<lb/>
university's coffers.<lb/>
Brewer also cited the<lb/>
need to work with foundat-<lb/>
ions and others for endow-<lb/>
ed chairs, professorships,<lb/>
and scholarships.<lb/>
Brewer said that while<lb/>
the legislature is very im-<lb/>
portant, we need to also<lb/>
emphasize cultivating<lb/>
funds from private sources.<lb/>
A concentration on dev-<lb/>
eloping doctoral programs<lb/>
here at the University -<lb/>
Brewer noted that ECU<lb/>
would move into a higher<lb/>
category in the UNC system<lb/>
if it could initiate a program<lb/>
of doctoral studies here.<lb/>
Brewer said that the<lb/>
program might be initiated<lb/>
as early as fall 1979.<lb/>
Describing the Medical<lb/>
School as the "focal point<lb/>
of health care in eastern<lb/>
North Carolina Brewer<lb/>
commented that programs<lb/>
at the school would be<lb/>
expanded.<lb/>
He said there is a<lb/>
possibility of a gifted child<lb/>
center at the Medical<lb/>
School facility.<lb/>
Brewer expressed an<lb/>
interest in the implementa-<lb/>
tion of cross-department<lb/>
research projects.<lb/>
He said he thought it<lb/>
was good that a faculty<lb/>
member from the Medical<lb/>
School and a faculty mem-<lb/>
ber from the Geology de-<lb/>
partment were engaged<lb/>
jointly in research.<lb/>
Brewer then expressed<lb/>
a desire to carry on re-<lb/>
search in the field of<lb/>
oceanography.<lb/>
Brewer added that the<lb/>
way to implement these<lb/>
new programs was to build<lb/>
a "star" system into the<lb/>
faculty.<lb/>
He said that the way to<lb/>
do this was to include ine<lb/>
each department a person<lb/>
of national prominence in<lb/>
that field.<lb/>
He said that emphasis<lb/>
should be placed on faculty<lb/>
development.<lb/>
He then turned to stud-<lb/>
ent life on the campus, and<lb/>
he noted that there are<lb/>
needed improvements to be<lb/>
made to the campus.<lb/>
Brewer vowed to make<lb/>
ECU the Drettiest campus<lb/>
in the country, and he<lb/>
expressed an interest in a<lb/>
beautification campaign for<lb/>
Greenville and the Pitt<lb/>
County area.<lb/>
Brewer spoke of the<lb/>
need to renovate Wright<lb/>
Audotorium, or to build a<lb/>
new one. He also noted that<lb/>
Memorial Gymnasium<lb/>
needs renovation, and he<lb/>
proposed a new classroom<lb/>
building and new admini-<lb/>
stration building.<lb/>
According to Brewer,<lb/>
ECU needs a new dorm-<lb/>
itory, and a new, upgraded,<lb/>
food service facility. He<lb/>
proposed a long range<lb/>
study to meet these needs.<lb/>
Brewer said that ECU<lb/>
needs to recruit disadvan-<lb/>
taged students, and he said<lb/>
that he thought the best<lb/>
way to achieve this would<lb/>
be have the Admissions<lb/>
Office place a new empha-<lb/>
sis on this.<lb/>
Brewer re-emphasized<lb/>
the need for support from<lb/>
private sources, and he said<lb/>
that he was depending on<lb/>
local businesses and individ<lb/>
-uals to contribute to the<lb/>
growth of ECU.<lb/>
He added that he expec-<lb/>
ted - and welcomed - public<lb/>
scrutiny of the university.<lb/>
According to Brewer,<lb/>
there is an increasing need<lb/>
for intramural facilities<lb/>
here. He said adding tennis<lb/>
courts,completing the base-<lb/>
ball field and constructing a<lb/>
new intramural gym and<lb/>
raquetball courts are pos-<lb/>
sible solutions to the cur-<lb/>
rent shortage of space.<lb/>
He added that we need<lb/>
to continue progress on<lb/>
Title IX - a measure to<lb/>
upgrade facilities for<lb/>
women.<lb/>
Brewer said he would<lb/>
like to build a new field-<lb/>
house - coliseum with a<lb/>
seating capacity of 10 to<lb/>
15,000 in the Greenville<lb/>
area, a venture that could<lb/>
possibly be undertaken by a<lb/>
combination of ECU,<lb/>
Greenville and Pitt County<lb/>
monies.<lb/>
He also cited the need<lb/>
to improve parking facili-<lb/>
ties here.<lb/>
Finally, he expressed<lb/>
the need for ECU to<lb/>
become involved in joining<lb/>
a present athletic confer-<lb/>
ence, or participating in the<lb/>
formation of a new one.<lb/>
He expressed the hope<lb/>
that this could be done<lb/>
soon.<lb/>
An estimated crowd of<lb/>
150 attended the meeting.<lb/>
On drinking in public<lb/>
Crackdown in Chapel Hill<lb/>
By MARCBARNES<lb/>
Assitant News Editor<lb/>
Students who plan to<lb/>
drink beer on the streets of<lb/>
Chape! Hill this weekend<lb/>
after the UNC-ECU football<lb/>
game had better reconsider<lb/>
- the Chapel Hill police<lb/>
department has cracked<lb/>
down on public consumpt-<lb/>
ion of alcoholic beverages.<lb/>
According to Tom<lb/>
K rkpatrick, owner of<lb/>
Kirkpatnck's bar. police<lb/>
began the crackdown Sept-<lb/>
ember 1.<lb/>
Kirkpatnck was con-<lb/>
cerned about the number of<lb/>
ECU students who will be<lb/>
in Chapel Hill this weekend<lb/>
and he expressed the hope<lb/>
that the students would be<lb/>
mindful of the new policy of<lb/>
the police department.<lb/>
According to Kirkpat-<lb/>
rick. the police department<lb/>
will run double shifts on<lb/>
Thursday. Friday, and Sat-<lb/>
urday night because of the<lb/>
expected increase in crowd<lb/>
size over the football week-<lb/>
end.<lb/>
Ben Callahan, an ad-<lb/>
minstrative assistant for<lb/>
the Chapel Hill police de-<lb/>
partment said that the fine<lb/>
for such offense is usually<lb/>
about $10.00<lb/>
He said the bail will<lb/>
usually run about $50.00.<lb/>
This can be in the form<lb/>
of a bond issued by a bail<lb/>
bondsman, or it may be an<lb/>
unsecured bond ? a prom-<lb/>
ise made by the student to<lb/>
appear in court, or to pay<lb/>
the bail money.<lb/>
The student might also<lb/>
be released on a personal<lb/>
recognizance bond.<lb/>
According to Callahan,<lb/>
a special unit of six police<lb/>
officers has been formed to<lb/>
enforce the town ordin-<lb/>
ances and state laws con-<lb/>
cerning the public consum-<lb/>
ption of alcoholic beverages<lb/>
littering, vandalism, harras<lb/>
-sment, assaults and thefts<lb/>
from autos.<lb/>
Callahan said that most<lb/>
of these problems in the<lb/>
downtown business district<lb/>
are alcohol related.<lb/>
Citizen and merchant<lb/>
complaints prompted the<lb/>
formation of the special<lb/>
unit, noted Callahan.<lb/>
"Some of the bars (in<lb/>
particular) have been com-<lb/>
plaining about assaults and<lb/>
disorderly conduct he<lb/>
added.<lb/>
Callahan had some ad-<lb/>
vice for out of town<lb/>
students.<lb/>
"Don't drink in public.<lb/>
If you are standing on the<lb/>
grounds of a bar drinking,<lb/>
the police will not arrest<lb/>
you. But, if you step out<lb/>
onto a public sidewalk,<lb/>
street or parking lot, and<lb/>
drink, the police will arrest<lb/>
you<lb/>
Callahan emphasized<lb/>
that the ordinance only<lb/>
covers public consumption,<lb/>
and not public display, of<lb/>
alcoholic beverages.<lb/>
"You can carry alcoho-<lb/>
lic beverages anywhere in<lb/>
town - out in the open - as<lb/>
long as you don't drink it<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
He cited one instance<lb/>
this past weeknd in which<lb/>
a police officer saw a<lb/>
student drinking a beer.<lb/>
The student was arrested<lb/>
on the spot.<lb/>
Callahan also said that<lb/>
the police are cracking<lb/>
down on underage drinking<lb/>
in Chapel Hill. "If a person<lb/>
is caught drinking under-<lb/>
age in Chapel Hill - and<lb/>
that person is between the<lb/>
ages of 16 and 17, that<lb/>
person - and the person<lb/>
that sold him the alcoholic<lb/>
beverage, will be prosecut-<lb/>
ed<lb/>
Callahan also cited the<lb/>
crowd problems in Chapel<lb/>
Hill.<lb/>
"We have had crowd<lb/>
and traffic problems in<lb/>
Chapel Hill. "In fact, the<lb/>
other night someone was<lb/>
hit by a car as he stood in<lb/>
the street he said. Cal-<lb/>
lahan said the police de-<lb/>
partment has to keep the<lb/>
streets cleared, for both<lb/>
pedestrians and motorists<lb/>
alike.<lb/>
According to him, the<lb/>
noise ordinance will also<lb/>
be more stringently enforc-<lb/>
ed in the future.<lb/>
He said that if the noise<lb/>
levels from a planned street<lb/>
dance become too loud, the<lb/>
police would close it down.<lb/>
Callahan wanted to<lb/>
make it clear that the polcie<lb/>
were not singling out stud-<lb/>
ents for prosecution.<lb/>
"We are not picking on<lb/>
the students  we want<lb/>
them to have a good time -<lb/>
as long as they do it legally,<lb/>
and in line with city ordin-<lb/>
ances as well as state law<lb/>
ECU'S CHANCELLOR DR.<lb/>
Thomas Brewer addressed a Greenville<lb/>
Area Chamber of Commerce meeting<lb/>
Tuesday on the future of ECU. Brewer<lb/>
emphasized improvements in faculty<lb/>
development, ecology awareness, and<lb/>
campus buildings.<lb/>
To BUCCANEER budget<lb/>
Media Board says yes<lb/>
By JULIE EVERETTE<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The media board ap-<lb/>
proved the $41,000 budget<lb/>
for the 1978-79 Buccaneer<lb/>
in a meeting Tuesday.<lb/>
Speaking of the newly<lb/>
approved budget, Craig<lb/>
Sahli, Buccaneer Editor<lb/>
said, "I am satisfied with<lb/>
it. It isadequate<lb/>
The board also discus-<lb/>
sed plans to have students<lb/>
pre-register for the year-<lb/>
book so that the Buccaneer<lb/>
staff can estimate the<lb/>
number of copies to be<lb/>
printed; therefor money<lb/>
will not be wasted by<lb/>
printing extra books.<lb/>
On the issue of last<lb/>
years Buccaneer, Tommy<lb/>
Joe Payne, media board<lb/>
chairman, said that former<lb/>
Buccaneer editor, Susan<lb/>
Rogerson had contacted the<lb/>
media board and promised<lb/>
to return to ECU Septem-<lb/>
ber 20 to complete the<lb/>
1978-79 book.<lb/>
Payne said Rogerson<lb/>
plans to send the finished<lb/>
book to Hunter Publishing<lb/>
Company to be printed and<lb/>
the students may receive<lb/>
the Buccaneer by Decem-<lb/>
ber.<lb/>
In other business, Doug<lb/>
White, FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
editor, requested a van for<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD use to<lb/>
transport newspaper to ano<lb/>
from Washinqton. N.C<lb/>
White said the cost to<lb/>
rent a van twice a week was<lb/>
high, and a better solution<lb/>
might be to buy one.<lb/>
The media board toid<lb/>
White to negotiate for a<lb/>
contract with the truck<lb/>
rental company. Until a<lb/>
contract can be worked out.<lb/>
Payne said FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD must continue<lb/>
rentng the van.<lb/>
The next media board<lb/>
meeting is scheduled for<lb/>
Tuesday at 3 p.m.<lb/>
What's inside<lb/>
m<lb/>
:?:?:<lb/>
1<lb/>
The last night for sorority rush parties<lb/>
is this Friday. For details and a rousing<lb/>
description of frat rush, see p.7.<lb/>
Neil Simon's Goodbye Girl, starring<lb/>
Richarc Dreytuss Marsha Mason, and<lb/>
Quinn Cummmgs is this week's free flick.<lb/>
See p.9.<lb/>
The Pirates face Chapel Hill this<lb/>
weekend in Kenan Stadium. For a<lb/>
preview and a replay of the 1973<lb/>
ECU-UNCgame, seep. 12.<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
RICHARD DREYFUSS<lb/>
-iiseST<lb/>
SAMURAI CYCLE STRIKES again . . . or<lb/>
is this student merely recuperating from<lb/>
a hard day of classes?<lb/>
Floor cover purchased<lb/>
m<lb/>
aw<lb/>
:?:?:??:?<lb/>
mmmmmmmm<lb/>
88<lb/>
Minges re-opens for concerts<lb/>
By JANE BIDDIX<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Last spring following<lb/>
the March 1 STYX con-<lb/>
cert, the Student Union was<lb/>
informed that no more<lb/>
concerts could be held in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum until<lb/>
something was done to<lb/>
protect the floor from dam-<lb/>
age.<lb/>
Charles Sune, chairper-<lb/>
son of the Major Attrac-<lb/>
tions Committee, said that<lb/>
alternatives were then re-<lb/>
searched.<lb/>
Student Union Financial<lb/>
Advisor, Paul Brietman, a<lb/>
former ECU student, re-<lb/>
searched alternatives to<lb/>
meet the request for floor<lb/>
protection.<lb/>
Brietman, along with<lb/>
the Purchasing Office came<lb/>
up with a solution: a floor<lb/>
covering that will extend<lb/>
over the entire floor area of<lb/>
M inges.<lb/>
This covering is fire<lb/>
retardant and identical (ex-<lb/>
cept in color) to one pur-<lb/>
chased by UNC-Chapel<lb/>
Hill.<lb/>
The covering is expect-<lb/>
ed to arrive within the next<lb/>
week and was obtained<lb/>
through the Purchasing Of-<lb/>
fice for $10,700.<lb/>
It is owned solely by the<lb/>
Student Union but Sune<lb/>
feels it will be available to<lb/>
other campus organiza-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
When the cover arrives,<lb/>
Sune feels that the Student<lb/>
Union will again be allowed<lb/>
to have concerts in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum.<lb/>
The Major Attractions<lb/>
Committee is responsible<lb/>
for planning, promoting,<lb/>
and presenting contemp-<lb/>
orary entertainment to<lb/>
meet the interest of the<lb/>
students for major concert<lb/>
programming.<lb/>
Last year, the commit-<lb/>
tee brought groups such as<lb/>
JIMMY BUFFET, ARLO<lb/>
GUTHRIE and STYX.<lb/>
As chairperson for the<lb/>
second year, Sune says the<lb/>
commute plans to have<lb/>
more rounded and different<lb/>
types of concerts this year<lb/>
with the possibility of in-<lb/>
cluding some appeal es-<lb/>
pecially to individual mi-<lb/>
nority groups.<lb/>
The first concert is<lb/>
scheduled for mid-October<lb/>
and the committee is pre-<lb/>
sently making entertain-<lb/>
ment plans for Homecom-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
The 6 committee mem-<lb/>
bers are Charles Sune,<lb/>
chairperson; Robin Ham-<lb/>
mond, secretary; Mike Ar-<lb/>
nold; Many Harwell; Jeff<lb/>
Parker; Pete Podeszwa and<lb/>
TomZiefinski.<lb/>
Along with Sune, half of<lb/>
the members are returning<lb/>
for their second term,<lb/>
which Sune feels will aid in<lb/>
the effectiveness of the<lb/>
committee.<lb/>
As with all Student<lb/>
Union committees, the<lb/>
chairperson and members<lb/>
are all volunteers.<lb/>
Ken Hammond, a for-<lb/>
mer ECU student who has<lb/>
been in the program office<lb/>
for the past 5 years serves<lb/>
as program director. As<lb/>
direct adisor of the commi-<lb/>
ttee Hammond handles<lb/>
technical details and nego-<lb/>
tiates contracts.<lb/>
The committee is re-<lb/>
sponsible for promotion of<lb/>
See MINGES. d.5<lb/>
<lb/>
S<lb/>
j <lb/>
 ?m?W mmfmmna'i'm . . wjrsftjrtjKirA<lb/>
r S<lb/>
.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057145_0002"/><lb/>
<lb/>
N<lb/>
<lb/>
Gospel<lb/>
During the last week of<lb/>
classes this April a fellow<lb/>
student was in a bicycle<lb/>
accident on College Hill St.<lb/>
His skull was fractured,<lb/>
brain bruised, left ear drum<lb/>
ruptured, and the doctors<lb/>
did not expect him to live to<lb/>
the next day. Over 80<lb/>
Christians in many parts of<lb/>
the country started praying<lb/>
for him and the next day he<lb/>
was alive! Not only was he<lb/>
alive but he was talking<lb/>
with people, there was no<lb/>
more brain damage, and<lb/>
his vital signs were on the<lb/>
go. He left the hospital in 8<lb/>
days, strong and very alert.<lb/>
Since Jesus healed him, he<lb/>
attended N.C. Weslyan this<lb/>
summer, has been active in<lb/>
sports again, and is back at<lb/>
ECU this fall taking 14 hrs.<lb/>
of work. Come and hear<lb/>
John M. Crowe tell how<lb/>
Jesus has brought him from<lb/>
death to life This meeting<lb/>
will be tonight. Thurs<lb/>
Sept. 14 m Mendenhall 221<lb/>
at 7:30 p.m. This will be the<lb/>
first meeting of the new<lb/>
year of the ECU Full Gospel<lb/>
Student Fellowship Chap-<lb/>
ter<lb/>
We will sing songs of<lb/>
praise, share what God is<lb/>
doing in our lives, and pray<lb/>
for your needs, believing<lb/>
that God will meet those<lb/>
needs. Everyone is invited<lb/>
and welcomed to come to<lb/>
any or all of these meet-<lb/>
ings.<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
The Student Union Cof-<lb/>
feehouse Committee will<lb/>
Fri Sept. 15 at 3<lb/>
m room 238 Menden-<lb/>
hall All members must<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Chess<lb/>
All persons interested<lb/>
m forming a Chess Club to<lb/>
meet for weekly competit-<lb/>
ion are invited to attend an<lb/>
organizational meeting<lb/>
Mon Sept. 18 at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
the Mendenhall Multi-<lb/>
purpose Room.<lb/>
Alpha<lb/>
There will be an organ-<lb/>
izational meeting of Phi<lb/>
Alpha Theta. national his-<lb/>
tory honor society, on<lb/>
Tues. Sept. 19, at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in the Richard C. Todd<lb/>
Room in Brewster Bldg.<lb/>
This will be a very import-<lb/>
ant meeting in which plans<lb/>
for the upcoming year will<lb/>
be discussed. All members<lb/>
are strongly urged to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
SOCI-AHTH<lb/>
The Sociology Anthro-<lb/>
pology Club will hold its<lb/>
second meeting Wed<lb/>
Sept. 20 at 7:30 p.m. in<lb/>
BD-302.<lb/>
All majors, minors, and<lb/>
interested persons are in-<lb/>
vited to attend. Plans for<lb/>
the year will be discussed<lb/>
and preparations for the<lb/>
retreat will be finalized.<lb/>
Pool party<lb/>
Sign up today to partici-<lb/>
pate in the "Billiards Lad-<lb/>
der Tournament" to begin<lb/>
on Wed Sept. 20, at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Billiards Cent-<lb/>
er. The tournament will run<lb/>
for eight weeks and prizes<lb/>
will be awarded.<lb/>
Exams<lb/>
Those planning to take<lb/>
one or more of the admis-<lb/>
sion tests required by<lb/>
graduate and professional<lb/>
schools are advised to<lb/>
register for the tests imme-<lb/>
diately. A disruption In<lb/>
mail service could prevent<lb/>
those who delay from being<lb/>
registered for the early fall<lb/>
administrations. Regular<lb/>
registration deadlines for<lb/>
the examinations are:<lb/>
Medical College Admis-<lb/>
sion Test (M CAT)-Sept. 1.<lb/>
Dental Admission Test<lb/>
(DAT)-Sept. 11.<lb/>
Law School Admission<lb/>
Test (LSAT)-Sept. 14.<lb/>
Graduate Management<lb/>
Admission Test (GMAT) -<lb/>
Sept. 21.<lb/>
Graduate Record Examin-<lb/>
ation (GRE)-Sept. 28.<lb/>
Late Registration Dead-<lb/>
lines generally are one<lb/>
week later than the regular<lb/>
registration deadlines.<lb/>
Ski trip<lb/>
Student Union Travel<lb/>
Committee is offering a ski<lb/>
trip to Snowshoe, West<lb/>
Virginia, Jan. 1 - Jan. 5.<lb/>
Applications taken at Cent-<lb/>
ral Ticket Office in Mend-<lb/>
enhall. Be sure not to miss<lb/>
the great skiina oonortunity<lb/>
at one of the east coast's<lb/>
best ski resortc<lb/>
Softball<lb/>
There will be a mand-<lb/>
atory softball organization-<lb/>
al meeting for newcomers<lb/>
and returnees for all who<lb/>
wish to try out for women's<lb/>
intercollegiate team. It will<lb/>
be held on Wed Sept. 20<lb/>
at 7 p.m. in Room 143<lb/>
M inges. If unable to attend<lb/>
please contactOotnh DNtan<lb/>
at 164 M inges or call<lb/>
757-6161 between 10 and 12<lb/>
a.m. daily.<lb/>
Designers<lb/>
Everyone invited M<lb/>
Young Home Designers<lb/>
League. Attention especial-<lb/>
ly to freshmen and senior<lb/>
housing and management<lb/>
majors. Meets 3rd Tues.<lb/>
every month in Vanland-<lb/>
ingham room (Home Econ-<lb/>
omics bldg.) at 5 p.m. First<lb/>
meeting is Tues. Sept. 19,<lb/>
at 5 p.m. Be There!<lb/>
Journalism<lb/>
The Society for Colleg-<lb/>
iate Journalists will meet<lb/>
on Tues Sept. 19,<lb/>
at 7 p.m. All<lb/>
members must attend and<lb/>
join in the final planning<lb/>
stages of that big event <lb/>
The Journalism Workshop!<lb/>
Please join the officers at<lb/>
Austin building, near the<lb/>
journalism wing, for further<lb/>
instruction. Looking for-<lb/>
ward to our first official<lb/>
meeting of the semester,<lb/>
Wehope you will come.<lb/>
LSAT<lb/>
The Law School Admis-<lb/>
sion Test will be offered at<lb/>
ECU on Sat Oct. 14.<lb/>
Application blanks are<lb/>
to be completed and mailed<lb/>
to Educational Testing Ser-<lb/>
vice, Box 966-R, Princeton,<lb/>
NJ 08540 to arrive by Sept.<lb/>
14. Applications are avail-<lb/>
able at the Testing Center,<lb/>
room 106, Speight Build-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
I<lb/>
Alpha Sis<lb/>
Greek rush begins soon.<lb/>
The fraternity way is a<lb/>
great mode of life and<lb/>
offers many new and excit-<lb/>
ing experiences for the<lb/>
young man. You should<lb/>
check out all the different<lb/>
fraternities before you<lb/>
make that crucial first step.<lb/>
Just remembr, that Alpha<lb/>
Sigma Phi - the newest<lb/>
fraternity on campus - has<lb/>
many unexplored horizons<lb/>
for the persevering young<lb/>
man who wishes to add a<lb/>
new dimension to his col-<lb/>
lege experience.<lb/>
We, the brothers of<lb/>
Alpha Sig, ask you to think<lb/>
about it. Call 756-0893 or<lb/>
758-8514 or 758-8310.<lb/>
Sterieal?<lb/>
The ECU Chemistry<lb/>
Seminar will present<lb/>
Gurdial Singh senior re-<lb/>
search chemist with<lb/>
DuPont of Kinston, who<lb/>
will present a seminar on<lb/>
"Stereochemical conseq-<lb/>
uences of sterically-hinder-<lb/>
ed phosphorus comp-<lb/>
ounds" Sept. 15 at 2 p.m.<lb/>
in room 201 Flanagan Bldg.<lb/>
Refreshments will be<lb/>
served in the conference<lb/>
room.<lb/>
Potluck<lb/>
College-age religious<lb/>
liberals the Unitarian-<lb/>
Universalist Fellowship<lb/>
meets this Sunday at 10:30<lb/>
a.m. in the Planters Com-<lb/>
munity room, Third and<lb/>
Washington Streets. Op-<lb/>
tional potluck afterwards.<lb/>
Oldtimers and curious all<lb/>
invited.<lb/>
I<lb/>
The Graduate Record<lb/>
Examination will be offered<lb/>
at ECU on Sat Oct. 21.<lb/>
Application blanks are<lb/>
to be completed and mailed<lb/>
to Educational Testing Ser-<lb/>
vice, Box 966-R, Princeton,<lb/>
NJ 08540 to arrive by Sept.<lb/>
25. Applications may be<lb/>
obtained from the Testing<lb/>
Center, room 105, Speight<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
FCA<lb/>
The Family-Child As-<lb/>
sociation will meet Sept.<lb/>
19, at 5 p.m. in Room 143 in<lb/>
the Home Economics Bldg.<lb/>
The FCA is open to any<lb/>
Child Development major<lb/>
or minor.<lb/>
SOULS<lb/>
The first S.O.U.L.S.<lb/>
meeting will be held Thurs.<lb/>
Sept. 14 at the Ledonia<lb/>
Wright Afro-American Cul-<lb/>
tural Center. The time is 8<lb/>
p.m. Please plan to attend.<lb/>
Ping pong<lb/>
A Table Tennis Club<lb/>
organizational meeting will<lb/>
be held on Tues Sept. 19<lb/>
at 7 p.m. in the Billiards<lb/>
Center at Mendenhall. All<lb/>
persons interested in play-<lb/>
ing table tennis are invited<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
Scholars<lb/>
There will be a meeting<lb/>
of the League of Scholars,<lb/>
Mon Sept. 18, in Mend-<lb/>
enhall, Room 248, at 7 p.m.<lb/>
All members are urged to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAO 14 September 1978<lb/>
SOCW-CQRS<lb/>
Students who wish to<lb/>
apply for admission to the<lb/>
department of Social Work<lb/>
and Correctional services<lb/>
should submit an applicat-<lb/>
ion and have two interviews<lb/>
no later than Sept. 20.<lb/>
A 2.5 quality point<lb/>
average is required. Ad-<lb/>
mission is open to students<lb/>
who are within 10 hours of<lb/>
completion of General Col-<lb/>
lege Requirements and who<lb/>
are second semester sop-<lb/>
homores or first semester<lb/>
juniors.<lb/>
For additional informat-<lb/>
ion concerning admission<lb/>
requirements and proced-<lb/>
ures contact: Dr. John R.<lb/>
Ball, chairperson, Social<lb/>
Work &amp; Correctional Serv-<lb/>
ices, 314 Allied Health<lb/>
(Carol Belk) Building,<lb/>
Phone 757-6961.<lb/>
Crafts<lb/>
ROTC<lb/>
The Air Force ROTC<lb/>
corps will be kicking off this<lb/>
academic year with a corps<lb/>
picnic. This will be held at<lb/>
field 1, behind the Allied<lb/>
Health building.<lb/>
The corps would like to<lb/>
welcome some new staff<lb/>
members to our depart-<lb/>
ment. Our new FIP and<lb/>
sophomore instructor is<lb/>
Major Billy Tudor. Our new<lb/>
COC and senior instructor<lb/>
is Captain Steven Bien-<lb/>
stock. Our new NCOIC is<lb/>
Master Sergent Jim<lb/>
Daniels. Our new adminis-<lb/>
tration NCO is Staff Ser-<lb/>
geant Bruce Barry. WEL-<lb/>
COME ABOARD!<lb/>
GMAT<lb/>
The Graduate Manag-<lb/>
ement Admission Test will<lb/>
be offered at ECU on Sat<lb/>
Oct. 28.<lb/>
Application blanks are<lb/>
to be completed and mailed<lb/>
to Educational Testing Ser-<lb/>
vice, Box 966-R, Princeton,<lb/>
NJ 08540 to arrive by Oct.<lb/>
6. Applications are also<lb/>
available at the Testing<lb/>
Center, Speight Building,<lb/>
room 105.<lb/>
Need a place with the<lb/>
space, tools and equipment<lb/>
to work on your hobby or<lb/>
latest project?<lb/>
Visit the Crafts Center<lb/>
at Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center and discover what it<lb/>
has to offer you. Hours are<lb/>
3 p.m. until 10 p.m<lb/>
Monday through Friday,<lb/>
and from 10 a.m. until 3<lb/>
p.m Saturday.<lb/>
The center is composed<lb/>
of a darkroom with three<lb/>
enlargers, a ceramics area,<lb/>
a jewelry metals area, a<lb/>
general crafts area, and a<lb/>
textiles area with floor<lb/>
looms for weaving.<lb/>
Peace Corps<lb/>
Peace Corps may be the<lb/>
toughest job you'll ever<lb/>
love. For more information,<lb/>
contact Peace Corps Rep-<lb/>
resentative, David Jenkins,<lb/>
Room 425, Flanagan Bldg<lb/>
or you may call 757-6586 for<lb/>
an appointment.<lb/>
All ex-Peace Corps Vol-<lb/>
unteers please contact<lb/>
Peace Corps Representat-<lb/>
ive David Jenkins, room<lb/>
425, Flanagan Bldg phone<lb/>
757-6586.<lb/>
Lacrosse<lb/>
The ECU Lacrosse Club<lb/>
is looking for a few good<lb/>
men.<lb/>
If you have played be-<lb/>
fore, are willing to learn or<lb/>
just damn mean, call 742-<lb/>
9516.<lb/>
All equipment (except<lb/>
sticks) will be provided, call<lb/>
now<lb/>
Beta Kappa<lb/>
Beta Kappa Alpha, pro-<lb/>
fessional banking fraternity<lb/>
will hold its first meeting<lb/>
Wed Sept. 20 in Room 103<lb/>
at 3 p.m. All members and<lb/>
interested School of Bus-<lb/>
iness students and faculty<lb/>
are urged to attend.<lb/>
Tutors<lb/>
The Center for Student<lb/>
Opportunities has immed-<lb/>
iate openings for graduate<lb/>
and certain undergraduate<lb/>
tutors to assist Health<lb/>
Affiars students in micro-<lb/>
biology, mathematics, phy-<lb/>
sics, biology and chemistry.<lb/>
Prospective tutors in<lb/>
these and other health-<lb/>
related areas are encourag-<lb/>
ed to contact Dr. Hensel,<lb/>
Tutorial Coordinator, now.<lb/>
Visit 208 Ragsdale Hall, or<lb/>
call the Center, 757-6122,<lb/>
6081, or 6075.<lb/>
ILO<lb/>
The International Lang-<lb/>
uage Organization will<lb/>
meet on Tues Sept. 19, in<lb/>
room 221 Mendenhall at 7<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
New York<lb/>
Student Union Travel<lb/>
Committee once again of-<lb/>
fers it's low-priced New<lb/>
York trip. Applications are<lb/>
being taken at the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office in Mendenhall<lb/>
The trip is Nov. 22 - 26.<lb/>
Come and see the core of<lb/>
the Big Apple.<lb/>
Faculty fit<lb/>
The department of<lb/>
Health, Physical Educat-<lb/>
ion, Recreation and Safety<lb/>
will once again sponsor a<lb/>
Faculty and Staff Fitness<lb/>
Program. All who have<lb/>
been active in this program<lb/>
in the past are urged to<lb/>
continue. All newcomers<lb/>
are cordially invited to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Sessions will be held in<lb/>
Memorial Gymnasium at<lb/>
Noon on Mon Wed and<lb/>
Fri. A variety of activities<lb/>
(i.e. conditioning exercises,<lb/>
jogging, swimming, volley-<lb/>
ball, badminton, etc.) will<lb/>
be offered.<lb/>
Individual needs and<lb/>
interests will be consider-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
Minority<lb/>
Fall 1978-79 orientation<lb/>
program for incoming min-<lb/>
ority students: Schedule of<lb/>
Events: Sept. 12, through<lb/>
Sept 15:<lb/>
Sunday: worship ser-<lb/>
vices will be held at 11 a.m.<lb/>
at Cedar Grove M issionary<lb/>
Baptist Church with Rev.<lb/>
Ken Hammond. Bus pickup<lb/>
will be 10:15 a.m. at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
and at 1020 a.m. Tyler<lb/>
Dorm.<lb/>
' Monday: Welcome and<lb/>
Open Rap Session at 7 p.m.<lb/>
at the Ledonia Wright<lb/>
Afro-American Cultural<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Tuesday: Academic Af-<lb/>
fairs ? a "rap" with<lb/>
professors, at 7 p.m. at the<lb/>
Ledonia Wright Afro-<lb/>
American Cultural Center.<lb/>
Wednesday: Pool Party<lb/>
to be held at M emorial Gym<lb/>
from 7-9 p.m.<lb/>
Thursday: S.O.U.L.S.<lb/>
and Black Organizational<lb/>
meeting at 8 p.m. at the<lb/>
Ledonia Wright Afro-<lb/>
American Cultural Center.<lb/>
Friday: Greek Day: a<lb/>
block show at 5 p.m a<lb/>
"jam" from 10 until 2 p.m.<lb/>
at the Ledonia Wright<lb/>
Afro-American Cultural<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Grad school<lb/>
Those planning to take<lb/>
one or more of the admis-<lb/>
sion tests required by grad-<lb/>
uate and professional<lb/>
schools are advised to<lb/>
register for the tests im-<lb/>
mediately. ZA disruption in<lb/>
mail service could prevent<lb/>
tiose who delay from being<lb/>
registered for the early fall<lb/>
administrations.<lb/>
Party<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau Little<lb/>
Sisters are sponsoring a<lb/>
Rush kick off party at Jolly<lb/>
Roger on Sunday, Sept 17<lb/>
beginning at 8:30.<lb/>
Start off Fraternity<lb/>
Rush Week on Sunday<lb/>
night. All your favorite<lb/>
beverages!<lb/>
Crafts<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
Don't miss "Red Pin<lb/>
Bowling" on Sundays from<lb/>
7 p.m. until 10 p.m. at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Bowling Cent-<lb/>
er. With every game bowl-<lb/>
ed you get the chance to<lb/>
win one free game. Just<lb/>
make a strike and the head<lb/>
pin is red and you win.<lb/>
Rent-A-Lane is now av-<lb/>
ailable at the Bowling Cen-<lb/>
ter. Each Saturday from<lb/>
Noon until 6 p.m. you can<lb/>
rent a bowling lane for one<lb/>
hour for just $3.<lb/>
Monday is "Discount<lb/>
Day" at MAndenhall.<lb/>
Prices are Vi off bowl-<lb/>
ing, billiards, and table<lb/>
tennis every Mon. after-<lb/>
noon from 2 p.m. until 5<lb/>
p.m. Don't forget<lb/>
"Discount Day" because<lb/>
you can't afford to miss it!<lb/>
All full-time students,<lb/>
faculty, staff, and spouses<lb/>
are eligible to use the<lb/>
facilities. A semester mem-<lb/>
bership fee of $10 entitles<lb/>
the Crafts Center member<lb/>
to use the facilities, to<lb/>
check out tools and equip-<lb/>
ment, to check out library<lb/>
materials, to enlist the aid<lb/>
of crafts supervisors, and to<lb/>
enroll in introductory level<lb/>
workshops which are offer-<lb/>
ed throughout the year.<lb/>
Visit the Crafts Center<lb/>
any time during operating<lb/>
hours or call 757-6611 Ext.<lb/>
271 for more information.<lb/>
INDT<lb/>
Join the INDT Club and<lb/>
get involved. The next<lb/>
meeting is Sept. 21 at 5<lb/>
p.m. This club is open to<lb/>
anyone, so come on, this is<lb/>
your chance to participate.<lb/>
Geology<lb/>
There will bean import-<lb/>
ant meeting of all Geology<lb/>
majors and prospective<lb/>
majors, graduate students<lb/>
and faculty on Mon Sept<lb/>
18, at 7 p.m. in Room 301<lb/>
Graham.<lb/>
Ann<lb/>
ouncing<lb/>
The Fourth Annual<lb/>
REBEL ART SHOW<lb/>
Details &amp; rules forthcoming<lb/>
Open to all ECU students<lb/>
Prizes to be awarded<lb/>
Mendenhall Gallery OcL 22 thru 28<lb/>
"<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
'72 MG MIDGET: red paint<lb/>
job that is NEW New top,<lb/>
good tires, excellent run-<lb/>
ning cond. 758-9285<lb/>
and see beside<lb/>
Kappa Sig house.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '69 Rambler in<lb/>
good cond. AC tool! Calf<lb/>
after 6 p.m. 753-3435.<lb/>
FOR SALE74 Capri 2800<lb/>
cc, 4-speed, good cond.<lb/>
good mileage. Must sell<lb/>
best offer Call Chris 752-<lb/>
4379.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sanyo refrlg. 4<lb/>
cu. ft. in excellent cond,<lb/>
plus excellent price Call<lb/>
756-7147 after 3 p.m.<lb/>
FREE KITTENS: 6 weeks<lb/>
old and 3 cats (2 females, 1<lb/>
male) to be given away, and<lb/>
110 lb. German Shepard<lb/>
and Khishom Husky to be<lb/>
sold for $50 each Call<lb/>
756-3054.<lb/>
FREE 3 CATS - 7 kittens to<lb/>
good homes, Also Khishom<lb/>
Husky for sale for $50 Call<lb/>
756-3054.<lb/>
FREE: mixed setter pup-<lb/>
pies. Weaned and deworm-<lb/>
ed. Call 746-3948 after 8<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
personal?<lb/>
WANTED:<lb/>
Topieee<lb/>
Dancer's. Apply at 33 Club<lb/>
between 430 to 630 p.m.<lb/>
Pay ia $5.50 hr Call<lb/>
752-1993.<lb/>
NEED EXTRA CASH?<lb/>
Cnaneto's need part-time<lb/>
kitchen help and part-time<lb/>
delivery help 758-7400 be-<lb/>
??" 2 p.m. and 4 p.m.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE: Peat<lb/>
professional work at re<lb/>
?onatte retee. IBM mex.<lb/>
ine with carbon ribbon<lb/>
Pfcone Mra. Julia Blooa.<lb/>
worth 758-7874. <lb/>
EMALE ROOMIiirT"<lb/>
wmn9o to share 2 bdrm<lb/>
MIer on pfm <lb/>
??? Greeny. ct<lb/>
J<lb/>
<pb facs="00057145_0003"/><lb/>
14 S?pttnbf 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Pao? 3<lb/>
:<lb/>
:<lb/>
-<lb/>
SHOP BIG STAR CONVENIENTLY<lb/>
LOCATED IN Pin PLAZA sr AT<lb/>
714 GREENVILLE BLVD<lb/>
?;t ?<lb/>
QUALITY CONTROLLED FRESHLY<lb/>
GROUND BEEF<lb/>
3-LB. PKG.<lb/>
LB.<lb/>
P4 fo<lb/>
arms<lb/>
The one to pick to be sure.<lb/>
FRYER THIGHS<lb/>
FAMILY D ?<lb/>
pm LB. A<lb/>
vnuiETy<lb/>
FROZEN<lb/>
? ? I<lb/>
BAKED<lb/>
POODS<lb/>
f-ARm<lb/>
ChARm<lb/>
DAIRy<lb/>
? i<lb/>
Srt<lb/>
DGDGD<lb/>
GUARANTEE<lb/>
QUALITY<lb/>
Enjoy<lb/>
em<lb/>
Trade mark (r)<lb/>
32 -02. RETURNABLE BOTTLE<lb/>
SIX 01- 79<lb/>
PACK<lb/>
PUS DEPOSIT<lb/>
BLUE<lb/>
RIBBON pack<lb/>
BEER 12?z<lb/>
?n CANS<lb/>
ki<lb/>
BIG i JESSE JONES<lb/>
 JESSE<lb/>
"BIG JESSE"<lb/>
Esnws<lb/>
w<lb/>
<lb/>
FRANKS<lb/>
l-LB.PKG.4.48<lb/>
FEE! ?-?Z.JESSE JONES CNIUWITN<lb/>
EACH 1 -Li. PK. BIG JESSE HUMS<lb/>
FARM CHARM<lb/>
MILK<lb/>
HOMOGENIZED<lb/>
GALLON<lb/>
.40<lb/>
ALL RATURAL"<lb/>
RED?GOLDEN v f<lb/>
DELICIOUS v<lb/>
APPLES 33e<lb/>
SOFT-WEVE<lb/>
BATH TISSUE<lb/>
2-R0LL<lb/>
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED - NONE SOLD TO<lb/>
OTHER DEALERS OR RESTAURANTS.<lb/>
PAK 39<lb/>
c<lb/>
ASST.<lb/>
FLAVORS<lb/>
BOUHTY<lb/>
PAPER<lb/>
TOWELS<lb/>
ASST. COLORS<lb/>
AID HURTS<lb/>
?Ml<lb/>
c<lb/>
OVEN CRISP<lb/>
PUCE PACK<lb/>
ASST. FLAVORS<lb/>
COOKIES<lb/>
STAR-KIST<lb/>
CHUNK LIGHT TUNA<lb/>
.48<lb/>
HALF<lb/>
(12-OZ.<lb/>
PRICES GOOD THRU SEPT. 16, 1978<lb/>
J<lb/>
- m - .<lb/>
hHJfcflirwNmfiiriHr?iifc im in- im imi -<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057145_0004"/><lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 14 Septembei 1978<lb/>
Liquor by the drink<lb/>
Voters in Mecklenburg and Orange Coun-<lb/>
ties and the resort town of Southern Pines<lb/>
seized the opportunity to push North Carolina<lb/>
one step further into the twentieth century<lb/>
when they overwhelmingly approved liquor by<lb/>
the drink in those areas this week.<lb/>
Unfortunately, voters in Black Mountain were<lb/>
unable or unwilling to see the advantages of<lb/>
liquor by the drink and defeated a local option<lb/>
referendum there. Referendums are scheduled<lb/>
next week in Dare County, Louisburg, and<lb/>
San.ord. Wake County will vote on the issue in<lb/>
the near future. It is hoped that voters in these<lb/>
localities will vote with the majority of the state<lb/>
thus far.<lb/>
North Carolina and Oklahoma are the only<lb/>
states without some form of liquor by the<lb/>
drink. Passage of these local referendums will<lb/>
surely improve the tourist and convention<lb/>
trades in these areas, aside from modernizing<lb/>
the state's image, bringing it up from the dark<lb/>
ages of Prohibition into the present.<lb/>
Dry forces have claimed that every<lb/>
conceivable calamity will plague our state,<lb/>
maladies ranging from increased alcoholism to<lb/>
the wrath of God raining down upon we poor<lb/>
sinners. Does anyone actually believe the<lb/>
streets of our cities will be littered with<lb/>
careening drunks once liquor by the drink<lb/>
becomes common practice, as so much of the<lb/>
dry propaganda implies?<lb/>
Under the present brown-bagging arrange-<lb/>
ment, common in most of the state, the state of<lb/>
North Carolina forces consumers to buy at least<lb/>
a pint of liquor when all they wanted was one<lb/>
and a half ounces. Once purchased, the<lb/>
consumer is encouraged to drink the entire<lb/>
pint at one sitting, since it is illegal to carry a<lb/>
liquor bottle with an open seal in the passenger<lb/>
compartment of an automobile.<lb/>
As one brown-bagging critic once said,<lb/>
"This state doesn't have liquor by the drink;<lb/>
it's got liquor by the gallon<lb/>
Mixed drinks could also improve the<lb/>
restaurant industry in the state. Many<lb/>
restaurants in other states are able to stay in<lb/>
business only because of the profit made on<lb/>
mixed drinks.<lb/>
As yet, Pitt County has made no moves<lb/>
toward holding a referendum, and probably<lb/>
will not until a group of citizens or<lb/>
restauranteurs petition the county to do so. At<lb/>
the earliest, a referendum could not be held<lb/>
until early 1979.<lb/>
Governmental attempts to legislate moral-<lb/>
ity have always failed and will continue to do<lb/>
so. Prohibition is perhaps the best such<lb/>
example. If anything, such attempts serve<lb/>
only to unwittingly encourage that which is<lb/>
legally immoral.<lb/>
North Carolina can no longer cling to the<lb/>
ideal of a state free from "demon rum An<lb/>
abstaining North Carolina may be a fine<lb/>
fundamentalist philosophy; it is also a Utopian<lb/>
one.<lb/>
Communique<lb/>
?k<lb/>
Knocking on wood<lb/>
By LUKE WHISNANT<lb/>
When I was a kid I<lb/>
never stepped on cracks.<lb/>
There was a whole world<lb/>
out there that you could<lb/>
control if you did every-<lb/>
thing right. Luck existed.<lb/>
You could read the signs if<lb/>
you were careful, change<lb/>
your luck if you knew the<lb/>
right techniques.<lb/>
On New Year s day you<lb/>
ate cabbage, cornbread.<lb/>
and blackeyed peas. The<lb/>
cabbage was supposed to<lb/>
bring you lots of folding<lb/>
cash, peas brought pen-<lb/>
nies, nickels and dimes,<lb/>
and the cornbread brought<lb/>
luck. (I can see now that<lb/>
I've never eaten enough<lb/>
cabbage.) If you said a good<lb/>
thing it wouldn't come true.<lb/>
Sometimes you could avoid<lb/>
bad luck by knocking on<lb/>
wood.<lb/>
From reading Mark<lb/>
Twain at an early age I<lb/>
learned that it was bad luck<lb/>
to kill spiders, find a dead<lb/>
cat, or turn over the salt<lb/>
shaker.<lb/>
My mother taught me<lb/>
not to step on cracks, not to<lb/>
open umbrellas in the<lb/>
house, not to break mirrors.<lb/>
The umbrella carried a<lb/>
sentence of "seven years<lb/>
bad luck" ; the mirror gave<lb/>
you 13.<lb/>
Once my best friend<lb/>
Andy decided to test it out<lb/>
by opening and closing an<lb/>
umbrella in his bedroom<lb/>
and then smashing his<lb/>
dressing mirror with a<lb/>
hammer The bad luck<lb/>
caught up about 6 p.m.<lb/>
when his father got home.<lb/>
Andy got a spanking<lb/>
and had his allowance<lb/>
docked for a month.<lb/>
He was so superstitious<lb/>
that he would never strike<lb/>
the last match in a pack.<lb/>
His desk drawers were full<lb/>
??<lb/>
m<lb/>
m.<lb/>
?, <lb/>
 ? "<lb/>
When I was a kid . .<lb/>
luck existed. You could<lb/>
read the signs if you were<lb/>
careful, change your luck<lb/>
if you knew the right<lb/>
techniques.<lb/>
ii<lb/>
Superstition is not a<lb/>
children's affliction . Our<lb/>
next-door-neighbor, a wo-<lb/>
man of about 45, never<lb/>
walks under a ladder and<lb/>
turns white at the sight of a<lb/>
black cat. She never tells<lb/>
bad dreams before break-<lb/>
fast either.<lb/>
A 21-year old recently<lb/>
explained to me that of you<lb/>
find a penny lying with th<lb/>
head up, it's good luck, but<lb/>
if the penny is tails up, let it<lb/>
lie. One year I had a<lb/>
roommate who always had<lb/>
to go out the same door<lb/>
he'd come in. He was from<lb/>
the Appalachian mountains<lb/>
and to him luck was a<lb/>
visible, causal force  an<lb/>
attribute you wooed and<lb/>
never crossed.<lb/>
of dozens of match books<lb/>
with only one match inside.<lb/>
If you're in love you<lb/>
might ought to brush up a<lb/>
little:<lb/>
Never stand with your<lb/>
lover in front of a mirror. (I<lb/>
know this brings bad luck<lb/>
because I've dona it with<lb/>
every lover I've ever had<lb/>
and not a single one of<lb/>
them is still with me.)<lb/>
Never sit with your<lb/>
lover on stairs. This will<lb/>
bring bad luck in the form<lb/>
of an argument.<lb/>
Always wear btwe on<lb/>
your first date.<lb/>
A friend passed these<lb/>
on to me from her grand-<lb/>
mother. Another word of<lb/>
advice from the same<lb/>
Founfainhead<lb/>
EditorDoug White<lb/>
Production Manager Advertising Manager<lb/>
Leigh Coakley Robert M. SnJri<lb/>
 News Editors<lb/>
Julie Everette<lb/>
Ricki Gliarmis<lb/>
TrenosEdHoi<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD Is tM Student i<lb/>
ey e?<lb/>
Sam Rogers<lb/>
source: it is bad luck to put<lb/>
your hat on a bed.<lb/>
Gamblers have whole<lb/>
set of superstitions, as do<lb/>
athletes. Pat Dye has his<lb/>
hat. When he was with<lb/>
Green Bay, Jerry Kramer<lb/>
had to be taped before each<lb/>
game with a virgin roll of<lb/>
tape and any leftover had to<lb/>
be thrown away. Arnold<lb/>
Palmer's wife kisses his<lb/>
golf balls. Mark Fidrych<lb/>
talks to baseballs.<lb/>
As a group, actors and<lb/>
directors are probably the<lb/>
most superstitious people<lb/>
anywhere. Otto Premming-<lb/>
er never directs without his<lb/>
monogramed handkerchief<lb/>
and his left breast pocket.<lb/>
John Barrymore's mother<lb/>
always sent him an apple<lb/>
before every opening night.<lb/>
When I was an actor<lb/>
back in high school, it was<lb/>
bad luck to have a good<lb/>
dress rehearsal and good<lb/>
luck to say "break a leg"<lb/>
before each show. You<lb/>
never wished anyone good<lb/>
luck because that would be<lb/>
bad luck.<lb/>
I was convinced that it<lb/>
was unlucky to eat before a<lb/>
show; a friend drank<lb/>
orange soda right before<lb/>
curtain because it was good<lb/>
luck.<lb/>
And now I'm one of the<lb/>
many thousands of writers<lb/>
who are convinced that it's<lb/>
unlucky to talk about what-<lb/>
ever I'm working on at the<lb/>
moment. Some of us bel-<lb/>
ieve that we can't change<lb/>
pencils in the middle of the<lb/>
story; other won't write on<lb/>
wrinkled paper. Heming-<lb/>
way carried a rabbit's foot<lb/>
for years and his work is<lb/>
full of characters who court<lb/>
and live by luck  gamblers<lb/>
soldiers, artists, bums.<lb/>
Even we lowly news-<lb/>
paper people have our own<lb/>
delusions about luck. One<lb/>
of the movie reviewers will<lb/>
not watch a film with<lb/>
someone sitting in front of<lb/>
him. Proofreaders are con-<lb/>
tinually knocking on wood.<lb/>
The typist told me that<lb/>
certain types of sneezes<lb/>
bring luck. The editor<lb/>
keeps lucky pennies. And I<lb/>
was hoping that we'd get<lb/>
this paper laid out on time<lb/>
for a change, but I just<lb/>
heard one of the News<lb/>
Editors say, "Hey, we're<lb/>
almost done - we'll get<lb/>
outta here early tonight<lb/>
and I know that's the most<lb/>
unlucky thing you could<lb/>
possibly say. Now we'll be<lb/>
here all night.<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Student analyses BUC situation<lb/>
ToFOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
The issue of respon-<lb/>
sibility for the BUCCA-<lb/>
NEER disaster at this late<lb/>
date is just gossip and<lb/>
hogwash, since it hasn't<lb/>
improved the situation in<lb/>
the slightest. Aside from<lb/>
having placed our faith -<lb/>
and money - in people who<lb/>
put their own paychecks<lb/>
and reference files above<lb/>
the students, there are<lb/>
three clear points'? see:<lb/>
1) Money is not the<lb/>
problem. For the past two<lb/>
years that we have gone<lb/>
without a BUC (and, unfor-<lb/>
tunately, I'm including this<lb/>
year), the SGA has appro-<lb/>
priated the entire printing<lb/>
budget asked for by the<lb/>
staff. Only salaries and<lb/>
extras have ever been<lb/>
deleted. But, for the past<lb/>
two years, no BUC.<lb/>
The current situation<lb/>
has shown that the new,<lb/>
"independent" Media<lb/>
Board has not been able to<lb/>
keep its one big promise:<lb/>
an annual for the students.<lb/>
This Board's creators in-<lb/>
clude the current SGA<lb/>
President, who also sits as<lb/>
the Board's chairman.<lb/>
2) If money is not the<lb/>
problem, staff membership<lb/>
is. Undoubtedly, most of<lb/>
the BUC staff care about<lb/>
the work and are honest<lb/>
individuals. But under our<lb/>
new Media Board the ap-<lb/>
pointed editor selects the<lb/>
staff.<lb/>
The reason for no BUC<lb/>
this year is because of the<lb/>
editor, not the staff. The<lb/>
editor's power and respon-<lb/>
sibility over the BUC<lb/>
should be spread out so<lb/>
that the success - or failure<lb/>
- doesn't depend on one<lb/>
person alone.<lb/>
3) Though the student<lb/>
body voted over 3-1 last<lb/>
spring against taking the<lb/>
BUC from under the elect-<lb/>
ed SGA Legislature and<lb/>
placing it under the Media<lb/>
Board, little can be done<lb/>
now. If some of our "stu-<lb/>
dent leaders' want to<lb/>
ignore campus votes and<lb/>
listen to administrators who<lb/>
favor the Media Board<lb/>
plan, so be it. But I, as a<lb/>
Senior, am tired of seeing<lb/>
my last year at ECU<lb/>
spoiled.<lb/>
Next fall I want to be<lb/>
able to pick up my last<lb/>
BUC. Since the Media<lb/>
Board is an ? elite (and<lb/>
includes administration<lb/>
membership), the present<lb/>
hassle over the annual<lb/>
teaches us one thing: Don't<lb/>
trust the Media Board. At<lb/>
least in the past when the<lb/>
BUC was under SGA a<lb/>
student could do something<lb/>
with his anger: impeach.<lb/>
With the Media Board we<lb/>
don't have any democratic<lb/>
option, or a way to remove<lb/>
incompetent or reference-<lb/>
seeking members.<lb/>
Under state law their<lb/>
meetings must be open to<lb/>
the public, since the Board<lb/>
uses our student fees.<lb/>
Every student who cares<lb/>
about the future of ECU'S<lb/>
annual - especially we<lb/>
seniors - should see how<lb/>
the BUC issue is handled<lb/>
this year. We've sat back<lb/>
too long.<lb/>
Brett Melvin<lb/>
Please write<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I'm an inmate at he<lb/>
Ohio State Prison and I feel<lb/>
that correspondence with<lb/>
cortege and university stu-<lb/>
dents would be a very<lb/>
worthwhile and learning<lb/>
experience, for the student<lb/>
and myself.<lb/>
I would appreciate it if<lb/>
you'd place an ad in your<lb/>
college newspaper for me<lb/>
to this effect.<lb/>
Tftanks for your time.<lb/>
David L Edgell<lb/>
152-438<lb/>
P.O. Box 511<lb/>
Columbus. Ohio 43216<lb/>
SUfilms lauded;<lb/>
safety committee<lb/>
is suggested<lb/>
ToFOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
I'm writing this letter<lb/>
because I feel that the ECU<lb/>
Student Union Film Com-<lb/>
mittee deserves some re-<lb/>
cognition for the outstand-<lb/>
ing line-up of films for fall<lb/>
semester. They have<lb/>
brought to ECU some of the<lb/>
best films of the past<lb/>
season. "They done good<lb/>
Wouldn't it be nice if<lb/>
there was Student Union<lb/>
Safety Committee willing to<lb/>
work toward student safety.<lb/>
Nothing has been done<lb/>
about the student crossing<lb/>
at Tenth Street or at<lb/>
Cotanche Street over to<lb/>
Georgetown Square.<lb/>
I would infer that no-<lb/>
thing is expected to be done<lb/>
by those who are supposed<lb/>
to be concerned with stu-<lb/>
dent safety. Somehow I<lb/>
can't believe that these<lb/>
measures are unaffordabel.<lb/>
when so much can be spent<lb/>
so that some sportscasters<lb/>
who only attend ECU on<lb/>
home-game Saturday s<lb/>
don't have to walk on the<lb/>
top of Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
Jonathan Smith<lb/>
Viewpoint<lb/>
Terrorism: an 'affront to civilization"<lb/>
By SUSAN AMBROSE<lb/>
Indiana University of<lb/>
Pennsylvania<lb/>
Indiana, Penn.<lb/>
The modern age has not<lb/>
only given us the benefits<lb/>
of technology; it has also<lb/>
plagued us with a wave of<lb/>
international terrorism. As<lb/>
Henry Kissinger, former<lb/>
Secretary of State, put it,<lb/>
"The international com-<lb/>
munity cannot ignore these<lb/>
affronts to civilization; it<lb/>
must not allow them to<lb/>
spread their poison; it has a<lb/>
duty to act vigorously to<lb/>
combat them But, can<lb/>
the actors within the inter-<lb/>
national community deter-<lb/>
mine a common course of<lb/>
action to combat these<lb/>
affronts to civilization?<lb/>
For the past 12 years<lb/>
the delegations to the U-<lb/>
nited Nations have been<lb/>
unable to agree on a<lb/>
common definition of inter-<lb/>
national terrorism. One<lb/>
man's terrorist is often<lb/>
another's "freedom fight-<lb/>
er<lb/>
It is for this reason that<lb/>
countries have been frus-<lb/>
trated in various efforts to<lb/>
achieve comprehensive<lb/>
multilateral agreement on<lb/>
effective international pro-<lb/>
scription of terrorist acts,<lb/>
and appropriate sanctions.<lb/>
In the past 12 years, a<lb/>
total of seven international<lb/>
conventions have been a-<lb/>
dopted that deal with some<lb/>
aspect of the terrorism<lb/>
problem.<lb/>
The six conventions<lb/>
preceding Bonn (July 1978)<lb/>
- the Tokyo, the Hague, the<lb/>
Montreal, the OAS, the<lb/>
European Convention on<lb/>
the Suppression of Terror-<lb/>
ism, and the UN Con-<lb/>
vention Against the Taking<lb/>
of Hostages - all reflect<lb/>
international concern and<lb/>
at least a siim majority con-<lb/>
sensus that something<lb/>
must be done. They do not,<lb/>
however, constitute much<lb/>
of an effective constraint on<lb/>
terrorism.<lb/>
First, many states, in-<lb/>
cluding a high percentage<lb/>
of theose particularly active<lb/>
in supporting "revolution-<lb/>
ary" or "national libera-<lb/>
tion" groups are not yet<lb/>
parties to the conventions.<lb/>
Secondly, the conven-<lb/>
tions lack teeth. Alt make<lb/>
the extradition! or prose-<lb/>
cution of terrorists subject<lb/>
to discretionary escape<lb/>
clauses, and none provide<lb/>
for punitive sanctions a-<lb/>
gainst states that simply<lb/>
refuse to comply at all.<lb/>
Other obstacles which<lb/>
have blocked more effective<lb/>
international action are for-<lb/>
midable. They include con-<lb/>
troversy over "justifiable<lb/>
vs. 'illegal- political vio-<lb/>
lence, and widespread re-<lb/>
sistance to such infringe-<lb/>
ment of national sovereign-<lb/>
ty as would by implied in<lb/>
any inflexible curtailment<lb/>
of the right to grant pol-<lb/>
itical asylum.<lb/>
Equally important,<lb/>
however, they have also<lb/>
included an understandable<lb/>
reluctance on the part of<lb/>
many nations otherwise ill-<lb/>
disposed toward terrorist<lb/>
activity to commit them-<lb/>
selves to any course of<lb/>
action that might either<lb/>
invite direct terrorist retri-<lb/>
bution or provoke the appli-<lb/>
cation of sanctions by state<lb/>
that happen to be sympa-<lb/>
thetic to the terrorists'<lb/>
cause.<lb/>
Sm TERRORISM, p. ?1<lb/>
)<lb/>
<pb facs="00057145_0005"/><lb/>
14 3?pfmbf fgm FOUNTAINHEAD fm 5<lb/>
215-member ECU Marching Pirates<lb/>
perform at home and on the road<lb/>
ECU'S MARCHING PIRA TES are con<lb/>
stdered one of the finest marching bands<lb/>
$30,965 awarded<lb/>
in the southeast. Photoby Tim Chalmers<lb/>
By KAY WILLIAMS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
<lb/>
The ECU football team<lb/>
Is not the only group<lb/>
playing in Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
this fall. The approximately<lb/>
215 memers of the ECU<lb/>
Marching Pirates are also<lb/>
performing at the home<lb/>
games and at two away<lb/>
games.<lb/>
Dennis Reaser, the new<lb/>
band director, is very<lb/>
pleased with the perform-<lb/>
ance of the band, consider-<lb/>
ing the short time they have<lb/>
had to adjust to him.<lb/>
Reaser arrived at ECU<lb/>
only two weeks before band<lb/>
practice started.<lb/>
The band practiced<lb/>
every day during registrat-<lb/>
ion week and practiced on<lb/>
Monday, Wednesday, and<lb/>
Friday from 3 p.m. until<lb/>
4:30 p.m.<lb/>
Band members receive<lb/>
one hour credit for playing<lb/>
in the band. The course is<lb/>
required of all freshman<lb/>
and sophomore instrumen-<lb/>
tal music majors.<lb/>
According to Reaser,<lb/>
some of the non-music<lb/>
majors become the best<lb/>
band members.<lb/>
Most of the members of<lb/>
the Marching Pirates also<lb/>
participated in high school<lb/>
bands.<lb/>
The Athletic Depart-<lb/>
ment and the Student Gov-<lb/>
ernment Association sup-<lb/>
ply funds for the upkeep of<lb/>
the band. Many of the band<lb/>
members supply their own<lb/>
instruments, according to<lb/>
Reaser.<lb/>
A high school band<lb/>
festival is being tentatively<lb/>
planned for November. An<lb/>
alternative site for the<lb/>
festival is being sought in<lb/>
case of bad weather.<lb/>
Musical programs play-<lb/>
ed by the band are arrang-<lb/>
ed by Reaser and other<lb/>
faculty members in the<lb/>
School of Music.<lb/>
Drum Majors for the<lb/>
Marching Pirates this year<lb/>
are Mark Ford and Lindsey<lb/>
Moore. Benny Ferguson is<lb/>
a graduate assistant to the<lb/>
band director. According to<lb/>
Reaser there are still a few<lb/>
openings in the band.<lb/>
"There are people out<lb/>
there who play and I want<lb/>
them in the band said<lb/>
Reaser.<lb/>
Work receives HEW<lb/>
PHI<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
A teaching grant of<lb/>
$30,965 has been awarded<lb/>
the ECU Department of<lb/>
Social Work and Correct-<lb/>
ional Services by the Child-<lb/>
ren's Bureau of the U.S.<lb/>
Dept. of Health. Education<lb/>
and Welfare<lb/>
The Secton 426 training<lb/>
grant of the Social Security<lb/>
Act. administered by the<lb/>
Bureau's Office of Human<lb/>
Development Services, was<lb/>
awarded ECU for the dev-<lb/>
elopment, expansion and<lb/>
improvement of education-<lb/>
al programs and resources<lb/>
for work in the field of child<lb/>
and fam.ly welfare.<lb/>
A priority goal of the<lb/>
Children's Bureau in the<lb/>
use of Section 426 training<lb/>
grants is to increase the<lb/>
pool of trained workers and<lb/>
resources specific to the<lb/>
needs of the child welfare<lb/>
services program.<lb/>
The grant will enable<lb/>
ECU to effect a needs<lb/>
assessment study among<lb/>
child welfare workers in 33<lb/>
eastern N.C. counties to<lb/>
consider the modificaiton of<lb/>
some courses or to develop<lb/>
and integrate a special cur-<lb/>
riculum unit that deal with<lb/>
key service delivery prob<lb/>
-lems.<lb/>
It will also enable the<lb/>
ECU Department of Social<lb/>
Work and Correctional Ser-<lb/>
vices to work more closely<lb/>
with the health care teams<lb/>
structured jointly by the<lb/>
School of Allied Health and<lb/>
Social Professions and the<lb/>
new medical school.<lb/>
In addition, the grant<lb/>
will provide opportunities<lb/>
to explore and experiment<lb/>
with new methods of aca-<lb/>
demic social work edu-<lb/>
cation to better prepare the<lb/>
child welfare worker and<lb/>
enable ECU to expand its<lb/>
consulting role with child<lb/>
welfare service delivery a-<lb/>
gencies in the university<lb/>
area.<lb/>
The department is cur-<lb/>
rently in the process of<lb/>
employing a new faculty<lb/>
member who will direct this<lb/>
new effort.<lb/>
Democracy key to end of terrorism<lb/>
continued from p. 4<lb/>
The development and<lb/>
implementation of more<lb/>
effective measures to deter<lb/>
international terrorism has<lb/>
and will continue to be<lb/>
impeded by differing moral<lb/>
perspectives, a resistance<lb/>
to infringement of a<lb/>
nation's sovereignty, and<lb/>
the reluctance of states to<lb/>
commit themselves to any<lb/>
action that may invite retr-<lb/>
i bution.<lb/>
The unexpected agree-<lb/>
ment on anti-terrorism<lb/>
reached at the recent Bonn<lb/>
Summit Meeting is a begin-<lb/>
ning. The seven partici-<lb/>
pating democracies - Bri-<lb/>
tain, Canada, France, West<lb/>
germany, Italy, Japan and<lb/>
the United States - agreed<lb/>
to cut off commercial airline<lb/>
service to or from any<lb/>
country which harbors air-<lb/>
plane hijackers.<lb/>
This course of action, if<lb/>
it works, would go well<lb/>
beyond the various UN<lb/>
conventions which con-<lb/>
demn but carry no penal-<lb/>
ties.<lb/>
From this nucleus of<lb/>
seven, other democracies<lb/>
around the world could join<lb/>
this union and truly have an<lb/>
impact on terrorist crimes.<lb/>
Only through a union of<lb/>
the democratic peoples,<lb/>
who can ccme to agree-<lb/>
ments and take actions<lb/>
together, wll the world be<lb/>
rid of the heinous acts of<lb/>
terrorism which plagued us<lb/>
today.<lb/>
Minges to hold concerts<lb/>
KAPPA<lb/>
TAU<lb/>
Little Sister Party<lb/>
at The Jolly Roger<lb/>
 Discount<lb/>
Beverages<lb/>
? Door<lb/>
Prizes<lb/>
continued from, p.1<lb/>
the concerts and has some<lb/>
new ideas for this year's<lb/>
promotional campaign, in-<lb/>
cluding the HOTLINE -<lb/>
757-6004 and giveaways<lb/>
such as T-shirts and tickets.<lb/>
Sune hopes students<lb/>
realize that the committee<lb/>
tries to get concerts every-<lb/>
one will enjoy.<lb/>
SUGGESTONS<lb/>
Any suggestions are<lb/>
welcome and can be<lb/>
phoned in to the Student<lb/>
Union office at 757-6611<lb/>
ext. 227 or students can<lb/>
attend the committee's<lb/>
meetings held weekly that<lb/>
are announced through the<lb/>
Flashes in FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
H?AD, <lb/>
IITRA-FRATERIITY COUNCIL<lb/>
The Beat Carolina<lb/>
Keg Party<lb/>
Everyone's invited to<lb/>
Support the Pirates<lb/>
Fri. from 3:00 - 6:00<lb/>
The Gothes Horse<lb/>
'Classic Collegiate Clothing<lb/>
Hallow Distributing Co.<lb/>
Strohs,Pabst Pearl<lb/>
Bissette's Discount Center<lb/>
"Good rwmecookmg<lb/>
and affordable prices on the malL"<lb/>
M;k?? Bicyde Shop<lb/>
Rides with the Pirates<lb/>
218F University Arcade<lb/>
Grand Opening September 20th<lb/>
Wiener King<lb/>
 A dog a day keeps the Tarheek away.1<lb/>
Hardee's<lb/>
Featuring the new look for 1978.<lb/>
Harmony House South<lb/>
"The Student Stereo Center"<lb/>
on the mall<lb/>
Roy Rogers<lb/>
Pipeline<lb/>
Mingies Building<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
 ? ?? ? ?? ?? "? ?<lb/>
? ??<lb/>
mmmmmmm<lb/>
i?lMW<lb/>
fei<lb/>
<pb facs="00057145_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 14 September 1978<lb/>
Fourth Annual REBEL Art Show to be<lb/>
held next month in Mendenhall gallery<lb/>
The Fourth Annual<lb/>
REBEL Art Show will be<lb/>
held in Mendenhall Gallery<lb/>
Oct. 22-28. according to<lb/>
REBEL Associate Editor<lb/>
Robert Jones.<lb/>
The show is sponsored<lb/>
by the REBEL and is open<lb/>
all ECU students. "We<lb/>
want to provide a showcase<lb/>
for quality art that is<lb/>
representative of ECU stu-<lb/>
said Jones.<lb/>
Art appearing in the<lb/>
Gallery section of the<lb/>
REBEL is selected from the<lb/>
show each vear<lb/>
All pieces in the show<lb/>
will have an equal oppor-<lb/>
tunity to be selected for<lb/>
publication in the maga-<lb/>
zine<lb/>
The REBEL has been<lb/>
called "the best literary-art<lb/>
magazine in the state" by a<lb/>
prominent Charlotte pub-<lb/>
lisher, and according to<lb/>
Editor Luke Whisnant, the<lb/>
artwork is one of the major<lb/>
reasons for the magazine's<lb/>
success.<lb/>
"Everybody knows that<lb/>
our art department is one of<lb/>
the best in the Southeast<lb/>
Whisnantsaid. "We try to<lb/>
use the gallery section of<lb/>
the REBEL as a portfolio of<lb/>
the best work going on<lb/>
here<lb/>
"Of course, the work in<lb/>
the Gallery is only as good<lb/>
as the work in the show<lb/>
The show is set up as a<lb/>
competition, with prizes<lb/>
provided by local busines-<lb/>
ses and from the $1 entry<lb/>
fee. An artist may enter a<lb/>
of two pieces,<lb/>
one entry per<lb/>
maximum<lb/>
with only<lb/>
category.<lb/>
"We've set this show<lb/>
up following the same kind<lb/>
of rules the lllumina and<lb/>
Delta Phi Delta shows<lb/>
use said Whisnant.<lb/>
"The entry fee was<lb/>
suggested after last year's<lb/>
show to supplement the<lb/>
cash prizes, and we've<lb/>
limited the number of en-<lb/>
tries in order to keep the<lb/>
show down to a reasonable<lb/>
size<lb/>
Work will be registered<lb/>
and judged In eight sep-<lb/>
arate categories: painting,<lb/>
drawing, sculpture, print-<lb/>
making, ceramics, photo-<lb/>
graphy, mixed-media, and<lb/>
design (metals, fibers, and<lb/>
wood).<lb/>
For insurance purposes,<lb/>
all work must be registered<lb/>
by 4 p.m. Wed Oct. 11.<lb/>
Unregistered work cannot<lb/>
be hung in the Mendenhall<lb/>
Gallery.<lb/>
Details on prize money<lb/>
and judges will be announ-<lb/>
ced within the next few<lb/>
weeks, according to Whis-<lb/>
nant.<lb/>
Artists interested in the<lb/>
show may come by the<lb/>
REBEL office in the Pub-<lb/>
lications Building or call<lb/>
757-6502 MonThur. after-<lb/>
noons.<lb/>
A limited number of<lb/>
copies of last year's REBEL<lb/>
are still available to ECU<lb/>
students.<lb/>
? a<lb/>
<lb/>
THE DOWNTOWN<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
ASSOCIATION'S<lb/>
ECU STUDENT<lb/>
APPRECIATION<lb/>
WEEK<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 11<lb/>
THROUGH SEPTEMBER 16<lb/>
All ECU Students<lb/>
Are Invited!<lb/>
Come celebrate with us and get<lb/>
specially priced merchandise<lb/>
and special discounts all week long<lb/>
We've got 4em on everything you need!<lb/>
SHOP WERE YOU SEE<lb/>
THE WINDOW BANNERS<lb/>
Student ID cards required<lb/>
College cheerleader paralyzed<lb/>
REBEL EDITOR LUKE Whisnant Photoby Kip S'oan)<lb/>
trampolines as unsaft<lb/>
'<lb/>
DURHAM, N.C. (AP) -<lb/>
Use of mini-trampolines in<lb/>
cheerleading routines is<lb/>
under scutination by col-<lb/>
lege and university officails<lb/>
after an accident Saturday<lb/>
which left a Georgia Tech<lb/>
cheerleader paralyzed.<lb/>
Duke University presi-<lb/>
dent Terry Sanford has<lb/>
ordered Duke cheerleaders<lb/>
to drop the mini-trampo-<lb/>
lines from their routines<lb/>
and others are considering<lb/>
it.<lb/>
Dwayne Sanders, 19,<lb/>
who fractured a neck verte-<lb/>
bra while warming up on a<lb/>
mini-trampoline for the<lb/>
Duke-Tech game, remained<lb/>
hospitalized Tuesday with<lb/>
much of his body paralized.<lb/>
He was reported in<lb/>
stable condition in an in-<lb/>
tensive care unit at Duke<lb/>
Hospital.<lb/>
Sanders struck his head<lb/>
on a track curb made of<lb/>
concrete white doing a flip<lb/>
from the trampoline<lb/>
He fractured a vertebra<lb/>
in his neck and bruised his<lb/>
spinal cord, according to<lb/>
Dr. Robert Wilkins.<lb/>
Wilkins said Sanders,<lb/>
who was preparing as a<lb/>
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INCORPORATED<lb/>
5604<lb/>
cheerleader, was paralyzed<lb/>
from the neck down but did<lb/>
have some use of his arms.<lb/>
He said it was too early<lb/>
to say whether he would<lb/>
recover fully from the par-<lb/>
alysis.<lb/>
At the University of<lb/>
North Carolina at Chapel<lb/>
Hill, officials had already<lb/>
ruled out use of tram-<lb/>
polines because of the<lb/>
danger.<lb/>
Tuesday, Dr. Larry<lb/>
Bostian, assistant athletic<lb/>
director at Chapel Hill,<lb/>
praised that decision.<lb/>
N.C. State University<lb/>
may consider dropping the<lb/>
use of the trampoline,<lb/>
faculty cheerleading advi-<lb/>
sor Vince Foote said Tues-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
It hadn't been used<lb/>
much this year anyway,<lb/>
according to oo-captian<lb/>
Michael Splawn, because<lb/>
it's broken, but there were<lb/>
plans to get it fixed for use<lb/>
later In the season.<lb/>
Wake Forest Univer-<lb/>
sity's squad has used its<lb/>
mini-tramp for about five<lb/>
years, according to Anne<lb/>
Tornow, cheerleading ad-<lb/>
visor, and there has never<lb/>
been an accident. "We only<lb/>
use it on grass or on mats<lb/>
she said<lb/>
She said cheerleaders<lb/>
and school officials will<lb/>
meet soon to talk about<lb/>
whether to continue using it<lb/>
The trampolines at the<lb/>
Univeristy of North Caro-<lb/>
lina at Cahrlotte are used<lb/>
only occassionaily although<lb/>
there has never been an<lb/>
accident.<lb/>
Over 18,000 trampoline<lb/>
accidents that required<lb/>
hospital treatment were<lb/>
reported in 1977, according<lb/>
to the federal Consumer<lb/>
Product Safety Commis-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
The number of mini-<lb/>
tramps involved in the<lb/>
accidents was not known.<lb/>
A University of South<lb/>
Carolina cheerleader died<lb/>
last year following an ac-<lb/>
cident on a large tramp-<lb/>
oline during a practice<lb/>
session.<lb/>
A school spokesman<lb/>
siadsaid the squad discon-<lb/>
tinued the use of mini-<lb/>
tramps<lb/>
ECU administrator dies<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
Garlan F. Bailey, long-<lb/>
time assistant dean of<lb/>
Continuing Education, a<lb/>
veteran public school ad-<lb/>
ministrator and one of<lb/>
ECU'S best loved people,<lb/>
died late Tuesday at his<lb/>
home in Kinston. He was<lb/>
58.<lb/>
Bailey was believed re-<lb/>
covering from open-heart<lb/>
surgery performed two<lb/>
weeks earlier at Duke<lb/>
Medical Center.<lb/>
His progress had been<lb/>
satisfactory and he was<lb/>
returning home last Sat-<lb/>
urday. His death was un-<lb/>
expected.<lb/>
Edwards Funeral Home<lb/>
, Kinston, was in charge of<lb/>
arrangements. ?<lb/>
Bailey joined the ex-<lb/>
tention division, now Di-<lb/>
vision of Continuing Edu-<lb/>
GARLAN F. BAILEY<lb/>
cation, at East Carolina as<lb/>
assistant director in 1965.<lb/>
Last month his promotion<lb/>
to full professor became<lb/>
effective.<lb/>
He received his bache-<lb/>
lor's degree (1947) and MA<lb/>
(1948) from East Carolina,<lb/>
and had done graduate<lb/>
work at New York Univers-<lb/>
ity, the Univeristy of North<lb/>
Carolina and jax Duke<lb/>
University.<lb/>
He was named to Who's<lb/>
Who in American Colleges<lb/>
and Universities in 1947:<lb/>
was a graduate assistant in<lb/>
the Physical Education De-<lb/>
partment, 1948; editor of<lb/>
the student newspaper at<lb/>
East Carolina in 1946. and<lb/>
served as sports editor in<lb/>
1947. He was a member of<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi.<lb/>
He is survived by his<lb/>
wife, Frances Sutton Bail-<lb/>
. ey? of Kinston. and three<lb/>
children. Celia Ann, Becky<lb/>
and Randy.<lb/>
His parents, the late<lb/>
Lee and Ella Bailey, were of<lb/>
Thomasville. He was<lb/>
born Dec. 1, 1919. in<lb/>
Thomasville.<lb/>
He was captain in the<lb/>
National Guard, serving as<lb/>
Liason Officer, 4th How-<lb/>
itzer Battalion, 113th Artil-<lb/>
lery, with headquarters in<lb/>
Washington,<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057145_0007"/><lb/>
Greek Forum<lb/>
14 Stpfrmbf 178 FOUNTAINHEAD P?Q? 7<lb/>
ByRlCKtGUARMis<lb/>
News Editor ?<lb/>
Fraternity and sorority<lb/>
rush are in full swing now<lb/>
and soon the time will come<lb/>
when all rushees will have<lb/>
to decide where they would<lb/>
I'ke to piedge.<lb/>
Sororities are in their<lb/>
last week of rush. Friday<lb/>
n"ght, the rushees will go<lb/>
to the three houses of their<lb/>
choice. This preferential<lb/>
nght is a special night, and<lb/>
a party different from all<lb/>
others during rush.<lb/>
After attending the par-<lb/>
ties Firday night, the girls<lb/>
will sign a bid sheet stating<lb/>
their preference. On mid-<lb/>
night, Friday night, all<lb/>
eight sororities will assem-<lb/>
ble on the mall.<lb/>
Upon receiving a bid<lb/>
from a sorority, the new<lb/>
pledge rushes to find her<lb/>
new sorority.<lb/>
Each sorority usually<lb/>
ECU geologist predicts. . .<lb/>
entertains the new pledge<lb/>
as she finds her new<lb/>
sorority.<lb/>
Each sorority usually<lb/>
entertains the pledges as<lb/>
they group together with a<lb/>
fraternity for a midnight<lb/>
social.<lb/>
Fraternity rush begins<lb/>
Sept. 18. Fraternity rush is<lb/>
more informal. Each<lb/>
house has open house<lb/>
during the week. All of the<lb/>
parties are open to anyone<lb/>
on campus.<lb/>
According to Chris<lb/>
Judy, a member of Phi<lb/>
Kappa Tau fraternity, there<lb/>
will be an added extra to<lb/>
rush this year.<lb/>
Judy said that during<lb/>
rush parties next week, Dr.<lb/>
Brewer and Dean Mallory<lb/>
will be touring the frater-<lb/>
nity houses. Judy explained<lb/>
that Brewer and Mallory<lb/>
will be out to support the<lb/>
fraternities and to meet<lb/>
rushees and members.<lb/>
On a national average,<lb/>
Greek life is on the up-<lb/>
swing. According to re-<lb/>
ports, during the 1960s,<lb/>
membership declined con-<lb/>
siderably, but as of 1977,<lb/>
fraternity and sorority en-<lb/>
rollment increased dec-<lb/>
isively.<lb/>
To provide a break<lb/>
between fraternity and sor-<lb/>
ority rush, the Intra-<lb/>
Fraternity Council is spon-<lb/>
soring a "Beat Carolina"<lb/>
pep rally. The pep rally will<lb/>
be held at the Phi Kappa<lb/>
Tau house on Fri Sept. 15.<lb/>
The rally will last from 3<lb/>
p.m. until 6 p.m. with 26<lb/>
free kegs and disco music<lb/>
for entertainment.<lb/>
The East Caroline<lb/>
cheerleaders will be pres<lb/>
ent to lead the pep rally.<lb/>
Everyone on campus is<lb/>
invited to attend. The Phi<lb/>
Kappa Tau fraternity house<lb/>
is located on the corner of<lb/>
Fifth and Elizabeth Streets.<lb/>
Elizabeth Gty to be underwater by 2978<lb/>
By the ASSOCIATED<lb/>
PRESS<lb/>
An ECU<lb/>
geologist says North<lb/>
Carolina s northeastern<lb/>
coastal area is sinking, and<lb/>
the year 2978 Elizabeth<lb/>
City could be under water<lb/>
"It s like a big sag in<lb/>
the earth said Dr. Stan<lb/>
Riggs.<lb/>
This is a geologically<lb/>
eak part of the crust, and<lb/>
has been sinking for<lb/>
miihonsof years<lb/>
In contrast, he pointed<lb/>
out the Cape Fear area is<lb/>
ng.<lb/>
According to the evi-<lb/>
dence, the rate of sag in the<lb/>
north east is only a few<lb/>
millimeters a year.<lb/>
But that all adds up in<lb/>
100 years, particularly for<lb/>
an area that's only a few<lb/>
feet above sea level, Riggs<lb/>
said.<lb/>
In Sir Walter Raleigh's<lb/>
time, he noted, "Roanoke<lb/>
Island was a hell of a lot<lb/>
bigger<lb/>
Riggs says the sea level<lb/>
is rising in the northeastern<lb/>
area, the land is sinking,<lb/>
and sediment is pouring<lb/>
down the rivers and into the<lb/>
sounds.<lb/>
This is resulting in an<lb/>
enlargment of the big flat<lb/>
shallow sounds.<lb/>
The whole process is<lb/>
called erosion.<lb/>
According to Riggs,<lb/>
there are spots in Dare and<lb/>
Hyde counties where the<lb/>
shoreline is eroding 30 to<lb/>
50 feet in a year.<lb/>
Riggs figures the aver-<lb/>
age erosion rate is 2.3 feet a<lb/>
year for shoreline along<lb/>
estuaries, but for any one<lb/>
year the erosion may vary,<lb/>
depending upon the type of<lb/>
shoreline.<lb/>
For the Northern Outer<lb/>
Banks. Riggs figures the<lb/>
average rate of shoreline<lb/>
recession is five to 10<lb/>
feet per year.<lb/>
"The barrier is sort of<lb/>
marching up and over<lb/>
itself he says.<lb/>
In some areas, the<lb/>
water is washing over; in<lb/>
others it cuts through.<lb/>
Asa result of drilling at<lb/>
offshore sites, Riggs and<lb/>
other scientists have learn-<lb/>
ed where the Outer Banks<lb/>
used to be. They have<lb/>
found old oyster beds and<lb/>
mud deposits in the ocean<lb/>
which had to have been<lb/>
formed behind barrier is-<lb/>
lands.<lb/>
Riggs figures that<lb/>
10,000 years ago, the Outer<lb/>
Banks could have been five<lb/>
to 15 miles off the present<lb/>
shore.<lb/>
Whether the present<lb/>
trend will continue, Riggs<lb/>
doesn't know. If glaciers<lb/>
begin to grow, the sea level<lb/>
would begin to drop, and<lb/>
the trend could reverse.<lb/>
A STRANGE SORT of tunnel vision? This is the creek<lb/>
under College Hill Drive.<lb/>
Artist Series Committee presents<lb/>
fine arts concerts for students<lb/>
By ED WILLIAMS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
i<lb/>
The Artist Series Com-<lb/>
mittee is underway this<lb/>
ear with plans to bring<lb/>
professional performers to<lb/>
the ECU campus<lb/>
"The Committee is res-<lb/>
ponsible for selecting and<lb/>
presenting a series of fine<lb/>
arts concerts geared for<lb/>
selecting and presenting a<lb/>
series of fine arts concerts<lb/>
geared for the benefit of the<lb/>
students at ECU and the<lb/>
surrounding community<lb/>
said Jay Downe, committee<lb/>
chairperson.<lb/>
Dowie said the commit-<lb/>
fee would only choose<lb/>
artists who are professional<lb/>
m character and serious<lb/>
performers, whether they<lb/>
are a group or an individual<lb/>
artist<lb/>
According to Downie<lb/>
the artist must be national-<lb/>
??<lb/>
ly known if possible, or at<lb/>
least known in hisher own<lb/>
medium.<lb/>
The artist's program<lb/>
itself is considered and the<lb/>
number of people that<lb/>
program would appeal to<lb/>
without hindering the pro-<lb/>
fessional quality of the fine<lb/>
art series.<lb/>
Downie believes that<lb/>
trying to get a varied<lb/>
program is important be-<lb/>
cause not everyone is inter-<lb/>
ested in the same type of<lb/>
music.<lb/>
Downie stated that the<lb/>
entire committee votes on<lb/>
who will perform.<lb/>
Brochures, sent in from<lb/>
different agencies describ-<lb/>
ing different performers,<lb/>
are studied.<lb/>
The brochures contain<lb/>
information such as when<lb/>
the artist will be touring,<lb/>
the availability of the artist,<lb/>
reviews of the artist's past<lb/>
performances and prior<lb/>
engagements the artist has.<lb/>
Since the Artists Series<lb/>
Committee s concerned<lb/>
with musical me arts, the<lb/>
committee members talk<lb/>
with faculty members in the<lb/>
music building and music<lb/>
majors about the possibility<lb/>
of getting the best artists to<lb/>
come and perform at ECU.<lb/>
Receptions are given for<lb/>
individual performers and<lb/>
small chamber groups after<lb/>
their performance.<lb/>
Anyone that attends the<lb/>
concert is invited, Downie<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The series of artists are<lb/>
selected in the preceding<lb/>
school year to determine<lb/>
how much money will be<lb/>
needed from the Student<lb/>
Unior subsidy to pay for the<lb/>
artist performing here.<lb/>
Choosing next year's<lb/>
series will be done in late<lb/>
October and November of<lb/>
this school year, Downie<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Season tickets for the<lb/>
Artists Series are $7.50 for<lb/>
students, $15 for staff<lb/>
and faculty members and<lb/>
$20 for the public.<lb/>
Downie said there are<lb/>
still committee openings.<lb/>
Anyone interestedin beinga<lb/>
committee member should<lb/>
apply at the Student Union<lb/>
office in Mendenhall.<lb/>
5?i CLIFF'S -H!<lb/>
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FOR THE REST OF YOUR<lb/>
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 If you are interested m math, phisics or engine the Navy has a program you<lb/>
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I is short for Nuclear Propulsion Officer Canidate) and if you qualify it can pay as t<lb/>
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: education that would cost thousands in a civilian school, but in the Navy we pay you. :<lb/>
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I It isn't easy. Only one of every six applicants will be selected, and there are fewer than J<lb/>
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GOOD STUFF<lb/>
STUFFY'S SUBS<lb/>
521 Cotanche<lb/>
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We deliver on campus<lb/>
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Regular Roast Beef<lb/>
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<lb/>
<pb facs="00057145_0008"/><lb/>
ttfnbtr 1978<lb/>
Scholar doubts discovery of Noah's Ark<lb/>
SUMMER HEAT PROVES too much for some students,<lb/>
- as this napping young woman.<lb/>
Coalition for Quality Education<lb/>
By GEORGE CORNELL<lb/>
AP Religion Writer<lb/>
Accounts in the popular<lb/>
media lately have implied<lb/>
that remains of Noah's Ark<lb/>
have been found on Mount<lb/>
Ararat in Turkey.<lb/>
But it's not likely, says<lb/>
an Old Testament scholar<lb/>
who had surveyed the<lb/>
evidence.<lb/>
The Rev. Dr.Lloyd R.<lb/>
Bailey of Duke University<lb/>
Divinity School concludes<lb/>
that the implications cir-<lb/>
culated in recent filmed and<lb/>
written accounts are based<lb/>
on heresay evidence and<lb/>
invalid scientific tests.<lb/>
Others, including sci-<lb/>
entists at the Univerity of<lb/>
California and the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Miami, also have<lb/>
challenged claims that<lb/>
wood from the ancient ark<lb/>
has been found on high on<lb/>
the snow-sheathed moun-<lb/>
tain.<lb/>
Bailey gives a full-scale<lb/>
airing to the issue in a<lb/>
book, Where is Noah's Ark,<lb/>
being published by Ab-<lb/>
ngdon Press. He parti-<lb/>
cularly takes issue with an<lb/>
NBC-TV movie, In Search<lb/>
of Noah's Ark.<lb/>
"When I saw the movie,<lb/>
I determined it was high<lb/>
time someone established<lb/>
in the field of biblical<lb/>
scholarship should have his<lb/>
say' in the matter, also<lb/>
he says.<lb/>
"This seemed particu-<lb/>
larly appropriate in order<lb/>
for ministers, pastor and<lb/>
teachers in university re-<lb/>
ligion departments to be<lb/>
able to evaluate for them-<lb/>
selves the claims the movie<lb/>
and recent popular books<lb/>
have made for the ark's<lb/>
survival<lb/>
Group says teacher tests unfair<lb/>
;iGH, N.C (AP) - The<lb/>
" '?? Quality Ed-<lb/>
iaid Tuesday that<lb/>
sal for more com-<lb/>
jsts for teachers<lb/>
e state to<lb/>
e the number of a-<lb/>
ers from poor<lb/>
?. Dackgrounds.<lb/>
i tion has been<lb/>
: the competency<lb/>
e required<lb/>
;hool graduation<lb/>
Examination<lb/>
requirement<lb/>
is mounting<lb/>
? I ; -oposal last<lb/>
University<lb/>
a Board of<lb/>
; to require te-<lb/>
sted before<lb/>
lucational<lb/>
- p n<lb/>
eir ed-<lb/>
again<lb/>
he job.<lb/>
sed tests<lb/>
ed in ad-<lb/>
National<lb/>
Teachers<lb/>
which is<lb/>
now<lb/>
"At the same time that<lb/>
classes are too big and<lb/>
teachers' loads are so<lb/>
heavy that they do not have<lb/>
time to give adequate at-<lb/>
tention to individual stu-<lb/>
dents, thousands of teach-<lb/>
ers are unemployed, what<lb/>
does the state do?<lb/>
Rather than hire more<lb/>
teachers, it employs more<lb/>
competency tests to cut<lb/>
down the number of tea-<lb/>
chers available. Students<lb/>
suffer, teachers suffer from<lb/>
what is in effect a<lb/>
cutback the Rev. Leon<lb/>
White said.<lb/>
White is a co-found of<lb/>
the coalition.<lb/>
"Placing a test at the<lb/>
beginning of a teacher<lb/>
training reveals that the<lb/>
state is not interested in<lb/>
finding those most quali-<lb/>
fied to teach he said.<lb/>
State briefs<lb/>
? I drinks<lb/>
lay by<lb/>
Drange County<lb/>
? Southern<lb/>
efei endum<lb/>
- a es was<lb/>
B i - Moun-<lb/>
The de-<lb/>
? cted to begin<lb/>
-mentation today when<lb/>
ackmg trial of Sam<lb/>
Dawkins Jr of Wilmington<lb/>
U S. District<lb/>
-OTTE .ap. state<lb/>
mce Commissioner<lb/>
ngram says his cam-<lb/>
paign for the US Senate is<lb/>
not cutting into the time he<lb/>
devotes to his state job. A<lb/>
mer activist group<lb/>
?agrees, but only mildly.<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) Wilmington<lb/>
10 leader Ben Chavis<lb/>
stands little chance of<lb/>
being allowed to travel to<lb/>
Washington to accept a<lb/>
human rights award from<lb/>
the Institute for Political<lb/>
Studies, but he is expected<lb/>
to know for sure today, a<lb/>
Correction Department<lb/>
spokesman says.<lb/>
LOUISBURG (AP) -Only a<lb/>
light vote is expected when<lb/>
Louisburg decides on liquor<lb/>
by the drink Sept. 20, Town<lb/>
Administrator Tony Ro-<lb/>
bertson says.<lb/>
SPENCER (AP) The historic<lb/>
Spencer Shops have pur-<lb/>
chased a 1926 Baldwin<lb/>
locomotive at a bargain<lb/>
price of $60,000 - with<lb/>
deisel thrown in for good<lb/>
measure.<lb/>
Dr Mykola Plakhotnyuk<lb/>
,s suffering involuntary<lb/>
PSYCHIATRIC<lb/>
CONFINEMENT<lb/>
in the Soviet Union. His "crime<lb/>
Distributing a human rights<lb/>
journal.<lb/>
Mykola Plakhotnyuk and half a<lb/>
million other "prisoners of<lb/>
conscience" are in jails around<lb/>
the world, not for anything<lb/>
they've done, but for what they<lb/>
believe. Help us help them.<lb/>
Write?<lb/>
AMNESTY<lb/>
INTERNATIONAL<lb/>
2112 Broadway NY, NY 10023 ? 212-787-8906<lb/>
Those who take this test<lb/>
have never been exposed to<lb/>
educational curriculum,<lb/>
and there is no way of<lb/>
saying that those who fail<lb/>
these tests would make<lb/>
t<lb/>
poorer teachers those those<lb/>
who pass.<lb/>
White predicted that<lb/>
the highest numbers of<lb/>
teaching students who fail<lb/>
all the porposed tests,<lb/>
especially the 'entrance<lb/>
exam will be those from<lb/>
black, white working class<lb/>
and Indian families.<lb/>
ALL YOU<lb/>
CAN EAT<lb/>
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Lunch 11:30-2:30<lb/>
Sun. thru Fri.<lb/>
Dinner S-lO<lb/>
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He says most scholars<lb/>
"have not wanted to dig-<lb/>
nify the claims about the<lb/>
discovery of the ark by<lb/>
disputing them with the<lb/>
result that there has been<lb/>
no source where people<lb/>
could get an "informed,<lb/>
calm, not-controversial"<lb/>
assessment of the popular<lb/>
claims.<lb/>
Noting that possible ex-<lb/>
istence of the ark has been<lb/>
a subject of speculation for<lb/>
centuries, he says reports<lb/>
of the ark being visible high<lb/>
in the "mountains of<lb/>
Ararat" is the key phrase<lb/>
used in Genesis 8:4 in<lb/>
refernce to the ark's resting<lb/>
place after the flood.<lb/>
While popular assump-<lb/>
tions have been that the<lb/>
landing was on Mount Ar-<lb/>
arat, located in Armenia<lb/>
near the Turkish border<lb/>
with the Soviet Union and<lb/>
Iran, the Bible does not say<lb/>
that.<lb/>
The ancient land of<lb/>
Ararat contained several<lb/>
mountain ranges, Bailey<lb/>
says, wKh various cultures<lb/>
picking various ranges and<lb/>
mountains as the spot.<lb/>
Bu the recent spate of<lb/>
presentations about the ark<lb/>
have centered on Mount<lb/>
Ararat, called "Agri Dagi"<lb/>
in Turkish, relying mainly<lb/>
on these four points of "ev-<lb/>
idence namely:<lb/>
- Ancient reports of the<lb/>
ark's sighting.<lb/>
- Current eye-witness<lb/>
accounts of an "intact<lb/>
wooden structure" with the<lb/>
general dimensions of the<lb/>
ark given in the Bible being<lb/>
found on the 13,500-foot<lb/>
snow line on Mount Ararat.<lb/>
- Air and ground photos<lb/>
showing a boat-shaped<lb/>
structure.<lb/>
- Hand-hewn beams<lb/>
said to have been recovered<lb/>
from galcial ice on Mount<lb/>
Ararat, reportedly dated by<lb/>
testing laboratories at "an<lb/>
age of 5,000 years" The<lb/>
ark supposedly was built<lb/>
about 2500 B.C<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057145_0009"/><lb/>
14 September 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
Goodbye Girl is SU Free Flick<lb/>
MARSHA MASON AND Richard<lb/>
Drey fuss star in Neil Simon's "The<lb/>
Goodbye Girl' Clockwise from top<lb/>
right Mason hoofing it in dance number;<lb/>
Mason and Drey fuss snuggling on steps;<lb/>
Drey fuss doing Bogey; dining on the roof;<lb/>
posing for posterity.<lb/>
BySTEVEBACHNER<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Films Committee will pre-<lb/>
sent Neil Simon's The<lb/>
Goodbye Girl this Friday<lb/>
and Saturday at 7 and 9<lb/>
p.m. at the Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center Theatre.<lb/>
The film netted an<lb/>
Academy Award nomina-<lb/>
tion for Best Picture; 00-<lb/>
-star Richard Dreyfuss<lb/>
walked away with an Oscar<lb/>
for Best Actor.<lb/>
The Goodbye Girl is<lb/>
Dreyfuss' first romantic<lb/>
lead  in it, he is head over<lb/>
heels in love with actress<lb/>
Marsha Mason (wife of<lb/>
screenwriter playwright<lb/>
Simon).<lb/>
"Actually, it's the first<lb/>
role in which I loved<lb/>
someone other than my-<lb/>
self said Dreyfuss.<lb/>
The object of his affec-<lb/>
tions, Mason, plays an<lb/>
ex-Broadway dancer<lb/>
struggling to raise a 10 year<lb/>
old child without the bene-<lb/>
fit of a husband. She has<lb/>
been emotionally buffeted<lb/>
about by two actors before<lb/>
Dreyfuss moves into view.<lb/>
He portrays another aspir-<lb/>
ing actor who is glib but<lb/>
affectionate.<lb/>
The interaction between<lb/>
the two when they are<lb/>
forced to share a cramped<lb/>
New York apartment pro-<lb/>
vides the movie's best<lb/>
moments. To say that<lb/>
Dreyfuss and Mason work<lb/>
as well together as Rooney<lb/>
and Garland or Hepburn<lb/>
and Tracey would be over<lb/>
doing it, but there is a<lb/>
Cinema Society of Greenville slate includes<lb/>
the Best Foreign Language Film of 1976<lb/>
By JEFF ROLLINS<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
Are those long trips to<lb/>
DC or New York to see the<lb/>
latest Bergman. Fellini or<lb/>
Truffaut getting tiresome<lb/>
and expensive? Well, you<lb/>
might consider joining tne<lb/>
Cinema Society of Green-<lb/>
ville<lb/>
The Cinema Society of<lb/>
Greenville offers area stu-<lb/>
dents, faculty and other<lb/>
residents the opportunity to<lb/>
view international films of<lb/>
high quality, which would<lb/>
not normally appear at the<lb/>
downtown theatres or on.<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Six films will be shown<lb/>
this semester for a very<lb/>
reasonable subscription<lb/>
price of $6 per person. At a<lb/>
dollar a piece, the art-film<lb/>
lover should not miss these<lb/>
modern masterpieces by<lb/>
the world's finest directors.<lb/>
All subscriptions must<lb/>
be purchased by Sept. 20.<lb/>
No individual tickets will be<lb/>
sold, and one must buy the<lb/>
entire membership for $6.<lb/>
Make your checks payable<lb/>
to the Cinema Society of<lb/>
Greenville, and send them<lb/>
to either Bill Stephenson or<lb/>
Peter Makuck in care of the<lb/>
English Department at<lb/>
ECU. You will receive your<lb/>
subscription ticket on Sept.<lb/>
24 at the door.<lb/>
The films will be shown<lb/>
on Sunday evenings at 8 in<lb/>
violinist unknowingly be-<lb/>
comes the decoy in a<lb/>
cut-throat battle between<lb/>
political spies. They turn<lb/>
his life into total mayhem,<lb/>
but through it all the tall<lb/>
blonde man remains a<lb/>
naive and lovable modern-<lb/>
-day Buster Keaton, nar-<lb/>
rowly escaping peril at<lb/>
every turn. The Los<lb/>
Angeles Times called this<lb/>
Cinema<lb/>
the theatre of Jenkins Art<lb/>
Center. A coffee hour will<lb/>
precede each film, and the<lb/>
Wellington Gray Art Gal-<lb/>
lery will be open at that<lb/>
time.<lb/>
The first film of the<lb/>
season will be The Tall<lb/>
Blond Man with One Black<lb/>
Shoe (French), to be shown<lb/>
on Sept. 24. A young<lb/>
movie "one of the funniest<lb/>
movies within recent mem-<lb/>
ory<lb/>
On Oct. 8, Cousin<lb/>
Angelica (Spanish) will be<lb/>
viewed. This bittersweet<lb/>
film of great tenderness by<lb/>
Carlos Saura is the first film<lb/>
ever made in Spain about<lb/>
the Civil War from the<lb/>
viewpoint of those who lost<lb/>
it.<lb/>
The Lost Honor of<lb/>
Katharina Blum (German),<lb/>
shown on Oct. 22, is based<lb/>
on the novel by Heinrich<lb/>
Boll, an indictment of the<lb/>
abusive power of the state<lb/>
and the unrelenting press-<lb/>
ure of "yellow" exploitive<lb/>
journalism. In this film, a<lb/>
young woman's chance af-<lb/>
fair with a fugitive terroist<lb/>
results in a reign of terror<lb/>
that victimizes and destroys<lb/>
the heroine.<lb/>
Lacombe, Lucien<lb/>
(French) is an intense de-<lb/>
piction of a peasant boy's<lb/>
"period of adoiesenoe -Hn "<lb/>
German-occupied France.<lb/>
Rejected by the Resistance,<lb/>
"Lucien the Rake" joins<lb/>
the Gestapo in search of<lb/>
acceptance and excitement<lb/>
just four months before the<lb/>
Allied liberation of France.<lb/>
This film, to be shown<lb/>
Nov. 5, won the British<lb/>
Academy Award of Best<lb/>
Picture of the Year.<lb/>
On Nov. 19, an<lb/>
Jeremy Rifkin lecture raises many questions9<lb/>
This is the turning point for life9<lb/>
By RICHY SMITH<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
This is the turning point for history of all life<lb/>
stated Jeremy Rifkin, co-author of Who Should Play God?<lb/>
Tuesday night at M endenhall Student Theatre.<lb/>
He was speaking of life as a natural process and life as<lb/>
an architectural design of mass production.<lb/>
What seemed science fiction is now, in our life-times,<lb/>
science fact, Rifkin stated as he began his lecture on genetic<lb/>
engineering and those moral, political and social aspects of<lb/>
dealing with life in the laboratory.<lb/>
?Now virtually overnight scientists have unlocked<lb/>
doors to architectual design, artificially induced and mass<lb/>
produced life added Rifkin.<lb/>
Scientists have discovered a great deal about DNA. It is<lb/>
the substance in the cell that determines our hair, eye color<lb/>
and heredity characteristics. Scientists cannot keep up with<lb/>
all the research. It's rapid growth is astonishing.<lb/>
They have broke the DNA code. Scientists can<lb/>
synthesize a cell. They can transmit messages to the cell<lb/>
and they can map genes. This is a great deal of work<lb/>
accomplished in the field of genetic engineering and<lb/>
cloning. And there is more.<lb/>
Cloning is an engineering problem. Time is a factor,<lb/>
according to Rifkin. Microbiologists have "Cloned" frogs<lb/>
and mices. Scientists say it is only a matter of time before<lb/>
this research is extended to humans.<lb/>
It will be quite possible then for a woman to have a baby<lb/>
without even meeting or touching her mate, stated Rifkin.<lb/>
The cloning process in a human involves the egg from a<lb/>
woman. It is placed in a glass. Another nucleus is destroyed<lb/>
leaving only the shell. Another nucleus from another person<lb/>
is placed in the shell. The egg is then replaced back in<lb/>
the womans womb to gestate. The baby produced would be<lb/>
an exact copy of the person who gave the cell.<lb/>
It would take the surprise out of having babies added<lb/>
Rifkin. "For the first time we have eliminated spontenaeity<lb/>
of natural reproduction and replaced it with designed life<lb/>
he continued.<lb/>
The question would then arise, if clones would be<lb/>
considered human. Would they have a soul or would society<lb/>
regard clonism a racism? Rifkin stated that some scientists<lb/>
had suggested clone banks. An exact copy of ourselves<lb/>
would be stored away until we needed something from it,<lb/>
perhaps an arm, or leg or some vital organs<lb/>
These may seem exaggerations, but they are real<lb/>
suggestions made by reputable scientists and government<lb/>
officials.<lb/>
Genetic engineering of people is moving at a fast rate<lb/>
accoring to Rifkin.<lb/>
Louise Brown, the f'rst test tube baby, is now a reality,<lb/>
not just an ideas in the process.<lb/>
Now women with blocked fallopian tubes have hopes<lb/>
that they can have children.<lb/>
Rifkin went on to say that people accepted things when<lb/>
benefits were involved. Everyone want to reap the benefits<lb/>
and engineering can provide such.<lb/>
The philosophical wing of genetics is eugenetics. "You<lb/>
cannot separate eugenetics and genetics stated Rifkin. It<lb/>
could be used as a genetic manipulation to create a better<lb/>
species or race. Perhaps it sounds like something out of<lb/>
H itler' s day, but it is a true possibility.<lb/>
Rifkin also elaborated on the concept of social biology. It<lb/>
is a new field of research stating that one's behavior is more<lb/>
genetically determined thatn environmentally determined.<lb/>
Someday it may be possible for a person to take an<lb/>
injection to cure everything, to remain completely happy, or<lb/>
to stay calm throughout life. How many people would jump<lb/>
at the chance to have the injection?, asked Rifkin.<lb/>
Scientists are developing ways to change people to the<lb/>
economy instead of changing the economy to the people. It<lb/>
doesn't cost as much money to do it that way, commented<lb/>
Rifkin.<lb/>
Those that cannot afford food at it's high prices may<lb/>
someday be able to have their digestive systems arranged<lb/>
so they can consume hay. These drastic measures are<lb/>
geared to the middle class, the poor and the blue collar<lb/>
workers. "We can't afford to feed the peole, so we turn<lb/>
them into cattle added Rifkin.<lb/>
Genetic engineering and cloning could help find cures to<lb/>
mongenetic disorders. But we must keep in mind that if we<lb/>
destroy all the "bad" genes, we could also destroy the<lb/>
vitality of the whole, he stated.<lb/>
Who are we going to let decide which genes are<lb/>
important? Who will be the judge of perfectability in<lb/>
people? It is a great trust that we will place in someone's<lb/>
hand.<lb/>
"Who will decide which is a bad gene and which is a<lb/>
good gene?" aked Rifkin.<lb/>
"If you cannot find anyone that you can trust with that<lb/>
responsibility, then you must come out in opposition to<lb/>
genetic engineering he stated.<lb/>
Because it is naive and foolish, its off court, to believe<lb/>
that it will only, first of all that this research will, be used<lb/>
strictly for medical practice Rifkin added.<lb/>
"We are at the end of the age of science. We are at the<lb/>
end of the age of technology he commented.<lb/>
Our discoveries could change civilization as ws know it,<lb/>
Rifkin said.<lb/>
Rifkin concluded with questions that wars raised from<lb/>
the audience. It was an informative and "question-raising"<lb/>
evening.<lb/>
Antonioni film, starring<lb/>
Jack Nicholson, The Pass-<lb/>
enger will be screened.<lb/>
This movie is a suspenseful<lb/>
and haunting adventure<lb/>
that is the portrait of a<lb/>
drained journalist whose<lb/>
deliverance is an identity<lb/>
exchange with a dead man.<lb/>
Accompanied by Maria<lb/>
Schneider, the journalist<lb/>
embarks on a treacherous<lb/>
journey through Africa,<lb/>
Germany, England, and<lb/>
Spain. The Village Voice<lb/>
called The Passenger<lb/>
"This year's must-see pic-<lb/>
ture<lb/>
The last Cinema Society<lb/>
Film for fall semester will<lb/>
be the French film, Black<lb/>
and White in Color, shown<lb/>
on Dec. 3. This ironic<lb/>
fable, set in colonial West<lb/>
Africa during World War I<lb/>
tells of the mini-war fought<lb/>
by French colonials against<lb/>
German colonials, with<lb/>
each side using the local<lb/>
black tribesmen as soldiers.<lb/>
The effect of the Armistice<lb/>
on this situation is both<lb/>
comic and shattering.<lb/>
This film won the Acad-<lb/>
emy Award: Best Foreign-<lb/>
Language Film of 1976.<lb/>
definite chemistry here and<lb/>
Simon was wise to give<lb/>
Dreyfuss the ball and let<lb/>
him run with it.<lb/>
The dialogue is crisp<lb/>
and Dreyfuss so at home<lb/>
with the role that you<lb/>
probably won't notice that<lb/>
glossed-over look in<lb/>
Mason's eyes or even the<lb/>
uncertainty with which she<lb/>
delivers most of her<lb/>
straight lines.<lb/>
"This is the kind of<lb/>
movie that as a kid I used to<lb/>
say, 'That's what I want to<lb/>
make when I grow up The<lb/>
actor I play is a nice guy,<lb/>
serious about his work. H is<lb/>
outstanding characteristic<lb/>
is that he's incredibly de-<lb/>
cent said Dreyfuss.<lb/>
He unqualifiedly calls<lb/>
The Goodbye Girl the happ-<lb/>
iest work experience of his<lb/>
life: "Making the film was<lb/>
what I thought acting would<lb/>
be like when I used to<lb/>
envision the days of the<lb/>
stars of the 30's and 40's<lb/>
he explained. "You went<lb/>
to work and liked what you<lb/>
did and liked the people<lb/>
you worked with and felt<lb/>
creative. You had fun and<lb/>
then you drifted off home<lb/>
and to sleep with a smile on<lb/>
your face. I literally felt at<lb/>
times that I could do the<lb/>
movie as a permanent job<lb/>
for the rest of my adult life.<lb/>
I could report to work every<lb/>
morning, then someday get<lb/>
a gold watch and retire<lb/>
The outspoken<lb/>
Dreyfuss, formerly one of<lb/>
the heroes of Jaws and<lb/>
more recently the star of<lb/>
Steve Speilberg's science<lb/>
fiction extravanganza Close<lb/>
Encounters of the Third<lb/>
Kind, has a special enthusi-<lb/>
asm for the Neil Simon role:<lb/>
"Believe me, when you<lb/>
love a part, it's easy to do<lb/>
no matter how long or<lb/>
difficult it is<lb/>
Marsha Mason was just<lb/>
as excited about her role.<lb/>
When an actress marries a<lb/>
playwright, a cynic might<lb/>
observe that, among other<lb/>
things, she doesn't have to<lb/>
worry about where her next<lb/>
part is coming from.<lb/>
Without the fringe bene-<lb/>
fits, it might be a lot harder<lb/>
for the one-dimensional<lb/>
actress to find work.<lb/>
Still, it is the first film<lb/>
on which the pair have<lb/>
collaborated. Miss Mason<lb/>
seem diligent about tailor-<lb/>
ing her career to fit her<lb/>
personal life. We can<lb/>
assume that had she not<lb/>
married Simon, her pug<lb/>
nose and overall cuteness<lb/>
would probably have kept<lb/>
her even more active pro-<lb/>
fessionaly than she already<lb/>
is.<lb/>
The consensus seems to<lb/>
be that, after only a handful<lb/>
of films, she is one of<lb/>
today's most gifted screen<lb/>
actresses.<lb/>
"I was and am serious<lb/>
about my career she<lb/>
says, "but I have other<lb/>
things to consider besides<lb/>
acting. I need more time at<lb/>
home for my family be-<lb/>
tween jobs, and I .won't<lb/>
 His<lb/>
outstanding<lb/>
characteristic<lb/>
is that he's<lb/>
incredibly-<lb/>
decent.9 "<lb/>
take any roles that mean an<lb/>
extended absence from<lb/>
Neil<lb/>
"First of all, of course,<lb/>
it was fun working togeth-<lb/>
er. And then the role itself<lb/>
was a delight. I play an<lb/>
ex-broadway hoofer who<lb/>
has been jilted by two<lb/>
actors, one of them my<lb/>
husband. I'm left with no<lb/>
career and a 10 year old<lb/>
daughter to support. Then<lb/>
another aspiring actor<lb/>
comes into my life. The<lb/>
wonderful thing about the<lb/>
character is that she turns<lb/>
out to be a winner after<lb/>
all<lb/>
Happy endings seem to<lb/>
be in vogue in contempor-<lb/>
ary films and Simon's neat<lb/>
little package conclusion is<lb/>
one of the key reasons for<lb/>
The Goodbye Girl's success<lb/>
at the box-office. A Holly-<lb/>
wood wrap-up means mon-<lb/>
ey in the bank these days.<lb/>
But, as a reference<lb/>
point, the film seems to<lb/>
support the view of Neil<lb/>
Simon as a happy man. He<lb/>
has no right to be anything<lb/>
else but.<lb/>
"Actually, I find this<lb/>
story more difficult to de-<lb/>
scribe than anything else<lb/>
I've written says Simon,<lb/>
who has written more hits<lb/>
than any other living play-<lb/>
wright. "It's about grow-<lb/>
ing up and you grow up<lb/>
when you stop making<lb/>
mistakes<lb/>
"It's about being<lb/>
caught in a situation where<lb/>
the actors are very much<lb/>
against being there; and in<lb/>
trying to extricate them-<lb/>
selves, they end up very<lb/>
close to one another. It is<lb/>
not a screwball comedy. It<lb/>
is romantic<lb/>
Simon is the author of<lb/>
such films as The Odd<lb/>
Couple, The Sunshine<lb/>
Boys, Murder by Death,<lb/>
and, most recently, The<lb/>
Cheap Detective, and The<lb/>
Goodbye Girl.<lb/>
He is now at work on the<lb/>
screen version of his Broad-<lb/>
way hit, California Suite,<lb/>
and he has written another<lb/>
play, Chapter Two, which<lb/>
recently opened in Los<lb/>
Angeles before beginning a<lb/>
Broadway run. The play<lb/>
received mixed reviews.<lb/>
Originally a New York<lb/>
based writer, Simon is now<lb/>
a California transplant and<lb/>
his output in the new<lb/>
surroundings has been pro-<lb/>
digious. In record time, he<lb/>
completed three screen-<lb/>
playsfor Murder, Detect-<lb/>
ive, and The Goodbye Girl.<lb/>
"I had lived the bulk of<lb/>
my life in New York said<lb/>
Simon, "and had gotten all<lb/>
t could trom that environ-<lb/>
ment. Besides, so many of<lb/>
my friends had moved to<lb/>
California that it was al-<lb/>
most like a homecoming. I<lb/>
feel healthier in California.<lb/>
I get to play tennis. I do a<lb/>
lot of things I couldn't do in<lb/>
New York. And since I feel<lb/>
better, I think I write<lb/>
better<lb/>
The Goodbye Girl open-<lb/>
ed across the country in<lb/>
1977. Below is a critical<lb/>
look at the film by this<lb/>
reviewer, previously pub-<lb/>
lished in FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
upon the film's commercial<lb/>
release here in Greenville:<lb/>
See DREYFUSS, p. 11<lb/>
The Super Grit Cowboy Band<lb/>
Hood<lb/>
Swamp<lb/>
Symphony<lb/>
scheduled<lb/>
BySUSANCHESTON<lb/>
Staff Reporter<lb/>
Be on the lookout for<lb/>
posters, handbills, and rad-<lb/>
io and TV spots on the<lb/>
upcoming First Annual<lb/>
Hood Swamp Symphony<lb/>
Ball.<lb/>
Promoter Buzz Led ford<lb/>
has peppered the eastern<lb/>
part of the state with<lb/>
publicity in an attempt to<lb/>
make this event the first in<lb/>
a long line of Hood Swamp<lb/>
Balls.<lb/>
The concept is as un-<lb/>
ique as its name. The Ball<lb/>
will feature the Super Grit<lb/>
Cowboy Band in concert<lb/>
with none other than East<lb/>
Carolina's own Symphony<lb/>
Orchestra.<lb/>
Wright Auditorium will<lb/>
be the scene of this mar-<lb/>
riage of progressive coun-<lb/>
try rock n' roll with tradi-<lb/>
tional symphony orchestra.<lb/>
Miks Kenssy of Super<lb/>
Grit and Robert Hause of<lb/>
the ECU orchestra hope to<lb/>
sell out Wright Auditorium<lb/>
in the benefit performance.<lb/>
The First Annual will be<lb/>
held on Saturday night,<lb/>
September 23. Tickets will<lb/>
ssll for $3 to benefit the<lb/>
ECU Symphony Orchestra.<lb/>
More details in Tues-<lb/>
day's FOUNTAINHEAD.<lb/>
?<lb/>
f<lb/>
?N<lb/>
 ? ? ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057145_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 14 S?pf mbf 1978<lb/>
Frazier will<lb/>
-f<lb/>
al Friday<lb/>
By SUSAN CHESTON<lb/>
Staff Reporter<lb/>
William Preston Frazier<lb/>
will perform his senior<lb/>
recital at A.J. Fletcher<lb/>
Recital Hall this Friday,<lb/>
September 15, at 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
The full recital is entit-<lb/>
led "Theme and Variat-<lb/>
ions" for Cornet and Trum-<lb/>
pet.<lb/>
Bill is an ECU trumpet<lb/>
major working towards a<lb/>
double degree in Music<lb/>
education and Trumpet<lb/>
Performance. A native of<lb/>
Raleigh, he has had exten-<lb/>
sive performance exper-<lb/>
ience, both at ECU and<lb/>
throughout the state.<lb/>
While at ECU. Bill has<lb/>
played for a year in the<lb/>
Contemporary Ensemble,<lb/>
and four years in the top<lb/>
performance groups of the<lb/>
School of Music, the Wind<lb/>
Ensemble. Orchestra, and<lb/>
ECU Brass Quintet. He has<lb/>
also performed in various<lb/>
shows and operas on camp-<lb/>
HASPLAYED<lb/>
PROFESSIONALLY<lb/>
Bill has played profes-<lb/>
sionally with the North<lb/>
Carolma Symphony in their<lb/>
Summer Opera and with<lb/>
the Warren Covington Or-<lb/>
chestra from New York.<lb/>
He presently has a job<lb/>
with Oakmont Baptist<lb/>
Church as their Minister of<lb/>
Music.<lb/>
Bill's teaching experi-<lb/>
ence includes giving priv-<lb/>
ate trumpet lessons to local<lb/>
junior high and high school<lb/>
students and serving as<lb/>
Trumpet Instructor on the<lb/>
faculty of the ECU Band<lb/>
Camp.<lb/>
In a few weeks he will<lb/>
be student teaching in New<lb/>
Bern for the fall semester.<lb/>
The recital program will<lb/>
include works for trumpet<lb/>
and concert by Handel.<lb/>
Arban, Bitsch, and Worm-<lb/>
ser.<lb/>
ASSISTED BY<lb/>
SCOTT CARTER<lb/>
Bill will be assisted by<lb/>
Scott Carter and Richard<lb/>
Duncan on trumpet for one<lb/>
of his selections. His ac-<lb/>
companist will be pianist<lb/>
George Stone, an ECU<lb/>
graduate student in Per-<lb/>
formance.<lb/>
The Friday night recital<lb/>
is free and open to the<lb/>
public.<lb/>
Downie granted Presser<lb/>
ECU SENIOR JOHN F. Downie has been awarded the<lb/>
Theodore Presser Scholarship for excellence in music,<lb/>
academics and service to the school.<lb/>
Photo by John H. Grogan<lb/>
By SUSAN CHESTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU Senior John F.<lb/>
Downie has been awarded<lb/>
the Theodore Presser scho-<lb/>
larship for excellence in<lb/>
music, academics and ser-<lb/>
vice to the school.<lb/>
The Presser scholarship<lb/>
is a $1000 award given by<lb/>
the Presser Foundation and<lb/>
the ECU School of M usic to<lb/>
a deserving music student.<lb/>
East Carolina competed<lb/>
with other music schools<lb/>
throughout the country to<lb/>
earn the right to name one<lb/>
of their students "Presser<lb/>
Scholar<lb/>
This is the first year the<lb/>
award has been given here<lb/>
in this form.<lb/>
Jay Downie is a eupho-<lb/>
nium major working to-<lb/>
wards a degree in Music<lb/>
Education. His perform-<lb/>
ance experience includes<lb/>
three years as first chair<lb/>
euphonium in the East<lb/>
Carolina Wind Ensemble, a<lb/>
summer playing in the<lb/>
Clown Band at King's<lb/>
of student teaching in the<lb/>
spring, Jay plans to return<lb/>
?o King's Dominion as an<lb/>
administrator In the Live<lb/>
Entertaimner Division.<lb/>
Ihe job involves re-<lb/>
cruitment of talent, adap-<lb/>
tion of shows to the park,<lb/>
and arranging music.<lb/>
While at ECU, Jay has<lb/>
in<lb/>
Music<lb/>
Dominion, and two sum-<lb/>
mers playing in the German<lb/>
Band (Bavarian Bozos) at<lb/>
Busch Gardens.<lb/>
Following his semester<lb/>
been a member of the<lb/>
Student Union Artist Series<lb/>
Committee, serving since<lb/>
the spring of all Artist<lb/>
Series events for the com-<lb/>
ing year.<lb/>
Jay is also active<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha frater-<lb/>
nity. Last year he was<lb/>
Lambda Chi vice-president,<lb/>
and is now Social<lb/>
Chairman.<lb/>
He also serves as Sec<lb/>
retaryofthelnter-Fratemity<lb/>
Council to promote Greek<lb/>
relations<lb/>
His experiences in<lb/>
Lambda Chi, the Student<lb/>
Union and music have<lb/>
enabled a broad base of<lb/>
interests that will be in-<lb/>
valuable in his role as<lb/>
"Presser Scholar<lb/>
Jay also holds an A.J<lb/>
Fletcher Music scholarship<lb/>
He is from Roanoke. Vir-<lb/>
ginia.<lb/>
Fogelberg and Weisberg<lb/>
Twin Sons<lb/>
iy CHHIS FARREN<lb/>
btaff Writer<lb/>
When I saw Dan<lb/>
Fogelberg appear live well<lb/>
over a year ago at the<lb/>
Mernweather Post Pavilion<lb/>
in Columbia. Md he<lb/>
mentioned the fact that he<lb/>
was in the process of<lb/>
recording an album with<lb/>
long-time flute standout<lb/>
Tim Weisberg.<lb/>
He even went so far as<lb/>
to play one of the songs that<lb/>
would be on the album<lb/>
("Lahaina Luna") using his<lb/>
WESTERN SIZZLE?<lb/>
STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
Welcomes Back<lb/>
ECU Students<lb/>
Lunch &amp; Dinner Special<lb/>
All day Thursday Sept. 1<lb/>
lfc Chopped Sirloin Steak<lb/>
?r without gravy, King Baked<lb/>
ito or French Fries &amp; Texas<lb/>
Toast, all for 01.79<lb/>
Also featuring all new Sa<lb/>
Open:<lb/>
SnnThurs. ll-10p.i<lb/>
Frl.&amp;Sat. 1L11<lb/>
kJUaxk-<lb/>
OPTICIANS<lb/>
rx'5<lb/>
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opticians<lb/>
anoaation<lb/>
of arteries<lb/>
YOUR DOCTORS PRESCRIPTION<lb/>
ACCURATELY FILLED<lb/>
COMPLETE EYEGLASS SERVICE<lb/>
' CONTACT LENSES HARD 0 SOFT)<lb/>
' PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED<lb/>
' BROKEN LENSES DUPLICATED<lb/>
' PRESCRIPTION SUN GLASSES<lb/>
? FRAMES REPAIRED 6- REPLACED<lb/>
? CHEMICAL HARDENED LENSES<lb/>
? SELECTION OF OVER 1000 FRAMES<lb/>
? ARTIFICIAL EYES<lb/>
? OSHA APPROVED INDUSTRIAL GLASSES<lb/>
LET US CALL THE DOCTOR OF YOUR<lb/>
Ultra-Vue Plastic Lenses<lb/>
J<lb/>
tint of choice in<lb/>
Oscar De La Renta<lb/>
Frame<lb/>
Ladies and Men<lb/>
h Single Vision<lb/>
Photo Gray<lb/>
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Contact Lenses<lb/>
by<lb/>
Bausch &amp; Lomb or Soflens<lb/>
Milton Roy Nature Vue<lb/>
Soft Lens?200<lb/>
Semi Soft Lens130<lb/>
Hard Lens$115<lb/>
CHOICE FOR YOUR EYE EXAMINATION<lb/>
Oscar De La Renta<lb/>
With Single Vision Plastic Lenses<lb/>
Ladies HO Complete<lb/>
Any Prescription<lb/>
Choice Of Tints<lb/>
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CLEAR VUE OPTICIAN<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C. 752-1446<lb/>
PHYSICIANS QUADRANGLE<lb/>
Berkley Mall<lb/>
Goldsboro<lb/>
OFFICE HOURS<lb/>
9 A.M. -5:30 P.M.<lb/>
MON.TUES THURS FRI.<lb/>
BUILDING A<lb/>
1705W.6THST.<lb/>
-1 P.M<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
114 E. Walnut<lb/>
Downtown Goldsboro I<lb/>
voice to sing the flute part<lb/>
and accompanying himself<lb/>
on the classical guitar. The<lb/>
idea sounded strange then,<lb/>
but the album sounds great<lb/>
now.<lb/>
To those familiar with<lb/>
both musicians individual<lb/>
styles, the match-up<lb/>
doesn't sound exactly<lb/>
compatible Weisberg has<lb/>
for the past decade ueen<lb/>
continuously putting out<lb/>
jazz flute albums with a pop<lb/>
flavoring that were well-<lb/>
received to a small but avid<lb/>
following, while earning<lb/>
respect in studio circles as<lb/>
one of the best professional<lb/>
flutists around<lb/>
On the other hand,<lb/>
Fogelberg has always been<lb/>
associated with the sou-<lb/>
thern California music of<lb/>
Jackson Browne and the<lb/>
Eagles, although in his<lb/>
more recent albums one<lb/>
could sense a drifting from<lb/>
his country roots to a more<lb/>
jazz oriented sound.<lb/>
Anyhow, whatever the<lb/>
circumstances, the result-<lb/>
ing album is superb.<lb/>
Playing much like a solo<lb/>
Fogleberg album, with Dan<lb/>
doing most all of the<lb/>
writing, playing, and sing-<lb/>
ing, Weisberg's flute adds<lb/>
just the right edge to a<lb/>
Fogelberg sound which at<lb/>
times walks the fine line<lb/>
between melodrama and<lb/>
banality.<lb/>
As usual, Fogelberg<lb/>
plays almost all of the<lb/>
instruments and does<lb/>
nearly all of the vocals,<lb/>
except for a cameo appear-<lb/>
ance by Don Henley, while<lb/>
also on this album trying<lb/>
his hand at producing and<lb/>
arranging. As a result, as<lb/>
might well be expected, the<lb/>
album is very full-sounding<lb/>
with a thousand ringing<lb/>
acoustic guitars and five<lb/>
"While the<lb/>
majority of the<lb/>
tunes sound<lb/>
typically like<lb/>
Fogelberg, there<lb/>
are a few tunes<lb/>
that are<lb/>
traditionally<lb/>
non-Fogelberg.n<lb/>
 <lb/>
 <lb/>
The U. S. Navy Officer<lb/>
? Information Team will be 1<lb/>
on campus<lb/>
2? -22 September, 1978 j<lb/>
j aval Officers will be on<lb/>
j hand to talk to interested <lb/>
 persons concerning Officer I<lb/>
j Positions in Nuclear Power, I<lb/>
Aviation, Supply Corps<lb/>
( business management),<lb/>
I Line, &amp; several scholarship <lb/>
I programs, Drop by and see <lb/>
if the "Itfew flfavy" is for you. <lb/>
4MA$<lb/>
PRESENTS<lb/>
it's last annual<lb/>
TOGA party<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
Sept. 17th at 9:00p.m.<lb/>
Wear a toga and receive<lb/>
a special discount.<lb/>
part overdubbed harmonies<lb/>
on many of the cuts.<lb/>
While the majority of<lb/>
the tunes sound typically<lb/>
like Fogelberg, there are a<lb/>
few tunes that are tradition-<lb/>
ally non-Fogelberg. Most<lb/>
notable in this case would<lb/>
be the island flavored<lb/>
instrumental "Lanaina<lb/>
Luna" and the silky<lb/>
"Guitar Etude 3<lb/>
It is this diversity which<lb/>
allows the two artists to<lb/>
really stretch out and prove<lb/>
their individual versatility<lb/>
and adeptness with their<lb/>
instruments.<lb/>
Fogelberg's voice has<lb/>
never sounded better, with<lb/>
him equally at ease with the<lb/>
gentle "Since You've<lb/>
Asked" or the intense<lb/>
"Power of Gold The<lb/>
lightness of his vocals,<lb/>
which on many of his songs<lb/>
is so appropriate is<lb/>
converted to a powerful<lb/>
instrument in the final<lb/>
chorus of "Tell Me To My<lb/>
Face again showing a<lb/>
side of Fogelberg that we<lb/>
are not use to seeing.<lb/>
Weisberg's flute play-<lb/>
ing is nearly flawless and<lb/>
especially impressive in the<lb/>
moving "Intimidation<lb/>
While his flute is not<lb/>
always the featured instru-<lb/>
ment, he has a subtle way<lb/>
of using and controlling it<lb/>
to set the overall mood of<lb/>
the song<lb/>
The album is clean.<lb/>
Fogelberg proves himself<lb/>
to be truly talented guitar<lb/>
i st, and both men are<lb/>
musicians to be recognized<lb/>
Together they have suc-<lb/>
ceeded in producing one of<lb/>
the best and most inter-<lb/>
esting albums of 1978<lb/>
Clyde Hiss recital<lb/>
to feature Strauss<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
Works by J.S. Bach,<lb/>
Mozart, Hugo Wolf and<lb/>
Richard Strauss will be<lb/>
featured at a Sun Sept. 17<lb/>
recital by baritone Clyde<lb/>
Hiss, a member of the ECU<lb/>
School of Music voice fac-<lb/>
ulty.<lb/>
The program, schedul-<lb/>
ed for 8:15 p.m. in the A.J.<lb/>
Fletcher Music Center Rec-<lb/>
ital Hall, is free and open to<lb/>
the public.<lb/>
Dr. Hiss will be accom-<lb/>
panied by pianist-organist<lb/>
Ellen Reithmaier Nagode<lb/>
and assisted by an eight-<lb/>
member chamber ensemble<lb/>
and a 16-voice chorus of<lb/>
ECU voice students cond-<lb/>
ucted by Robert Irwin.<lb/>
Since joining the ECU<lb/>
music faculty in 1965. Dr.<lb/>
Hiss has been active as a<lb/>
solo performer in the cam-<lb/>
pus musical productions.<lb/>
He is also director of ECU's<lb/>
Opera Theatre.<lb/>
Dr. Hiss holds degree<lb/>
from the University of<lb/>
Illinois and Baldwin-<lb/>
Wallace Conservatory, and<lb/>
has appeared in solo recit-<lb/>
als and with symphony<lb/>
orchestras throrhout the<lb/>
Midwest and East<lb/>
5?S<lb/>
JJ4S<lb/>
U.S. A.<lb/>
24Hoursaday<lb/>
Large homemade biscuits with<lb/>
HamnSausage-Steak<lb/>
Qickcn-Oieese-Butter<lb/>
Abo CombinatiorK<lb/>
-Dinners-<lb/>
FriedQicken Tubs and Buckets<lb/>
also Drive thru window<lb/>
For take out call 5(X)N. Greene St<lb/>
758-7607<lb/>
"V<lb/>
(&amp;QQP&amp;<lb/>
wpportsECUPuBttt<lb/>
agaimt UNC with hosphdity how at<lb/>
the Holiday hm in Chapd Bll after<lb/>
the game. Food and drink provided<lb/>
t<lb/>
-<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057145_0011"/><lb/>
?? i ??-???. t n, .v,<lb/>
' ? r f<lb/>
r I r ,<lb/>
Book burglar beaters appear<lb/>
14 September 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
New anti-theft devices draw comments<lb/>
Scholars enjoy the contemplative life<lb/>
hese students are preparing to get into a "philosophical"<lb/>
mood, like so many others at East Carolina.<lb/>
Photo by Steve Romero<lb/>
By SUSAN CHESTON<lb/>
Staff Reporter<lb/>
If you haven't been in<lb/>
one of the campus libraries<lb/>
recently, you really ought<lb/>
to check one out.<lb/>
I did the other day, and<lb/>
it was a real experience.<lb/>
ECU is always trying to<lb/>
improve the appearance of<lb/>
the campus, but this time I<lb/>
think they've really out-<lb/>
done themselves.<lb/>
I walked into the music<lb/>
library and was stunned to<lb/>
see a new sculpture stand-<lb/>
ing in the entrance. The<lb/>
wooden structure occupies<lb/>
space about 6 feet high, 4<lb/>
feet wide and 6 feet deep. It<lb/>
is lacy network of walnut-<lb/>
stained wood.<lb/>
I can't be sure, but it<lb/>
probably makes an abstract<lb/>
statement about present-<lb/>
day society. Although I'm<lb/>
no art critic, I believe I can<lb/>
identify the influence of the<lb/>
Functionalism school of ar-<lb/>
chitecture.<lb/>
Because of its well-<lb/>
ordered lines and limited<lb/>
originality; beacuse it was<lb/>
assembled from a kit that<lb/>
came in 2 huge cardboard<lb/>
boxes, and because it has<lb/>
an identical twin in Joyner,<lb/>
there has been speculation<lb/>
that this addition to the<lb/>
Music Library is not really<lb/>
art at all.<lb/>
In fact, an underground<lb/>
rumor has it that ECU'S<lb/>
latest attempt at cultural<lb/>
enrichment is actually, bel-<lb/>
ieve it or not, a system for<lb/>
the detection of unchecked<lb/>
out library books.<lb/>
One point supporting<lb/>
this rumor is that the chairs<lb/>
and railings by the con-<lb/>
struction force all visitors to<lb/>
exit through the sculpture<lb/>
itself.<lb/>
While some feel this<lb/>
means the library is check-<lb/>
ing for thieves, I prefer to<lb/>
believe that they want<lb/>
everybody to experience<lb/>
the full impact of the<lb/>
Modern Module.<lb/>
One person expressed<lb/>
the opinion that the<lb/>
Mystery Mold is actually a<lb/>
model of the airport system<lb/>
for weapon detection.<lb/>
This could have symbo-<lb/>
lic significance, as in the<lb/>
idea of books sending us off<lb/>
into "flights of fantasy<lb/>
Or, "airing out" the cob-<lb/>
webs of our brains. Or,<lb/>
"reading a book  see the<lb/>
world Or, "I'm James<lb/>
Joyce  fly me<lb/>
Another person exper-<lb/>
ienced the structure as a<lb/>
jail cell with wooden bars, a<lb/>
sort of prefabricated pri-<lb/>
son. This should only be a<lb/>
serious problem for those<lb/>
with guilty consciences.<lb/>
One distinction between<lb/>
the famed frameworks in<lb/>
Joyner and in the Music<lb/>
Library is that the one in<lb/>
the Music Library whistles<lb/>
softly as you exit. While<lb/>
some have expressed an-<lb/>
noyance and the opinion<lb/>
that the system needs<lb/>
adjustment, I prefer to take<lb/>
Price of bread is rising in France<lb/>
ByMARCUSELIASON<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
pARlS (AP - Bread is a word<lb/>
:an make the French heart<lb/>
a beat. After all. Mane<lb/>
nette' s supposed comment<lb/>
? the hungry - "Let them eat<lb/>
- tnggered a revolution.<lb/>
Now. the price of bread is<lb/>
.  and France is again in<lb/>
Tie is storming the<lb/>
BasMie this time, but the<lb/>
? editorial comment,<lb/>
show time and official state-<lb/>
's being devoted to the<lb/>
underlines how much<lb/>
a symbol to France.<lb/>
"ne price rise, which a-<lb/>
to two or three cents a<lb/>
Aas part of the newly<lb/>
ected French government's<lb/>
ex program to streamline<lb/>
oonomy by getting rid of<lb/>
subsidies<lb/>
The price of bread had been<lb/>
d by the state since 1791,<lb/>
en the Revolution's leaders,<lb/>
?eheadg Marie Antoi-<lb/>
-esolveo that the Staff of<lb/>
uld never again be out of<lb/>
the poor.<lb/>
few Frenchmen thought<lb/>
? e Minister Rene Memory<lb/>
verstating the case when<lb/>
?eguiated the price 187<lb/>
ater and called his move<lb/>
evolution" fa France.<lb/>
? st newspaper condemn-<lb/>
? action and played up an<lb/>
. group's bread protest -<lb/>
i , organized street action<lb/>
?jrted. The paper Liberation<lb/>
sarcastically predicted a black<lb/>
market in white bread and said<lb/>
the rich might now put their<lb/>
bread in Swiss banks.<lb/>
Snapped Memory: "The<lb/>
French economy has been a<lb/>
hybrid fa too long, with the<lb/>
chiefs of business calling fa<lb/>
public help at the slightest<lb/>
pretext You can't build a good<lb/>
economy on handouts<lb/>
Under controls, the famed<lb/>
baguette, the long, sausage-<lb/>
shaped French loaf, oost 1.25<lb/>
francs.<lb/>
In the two weeks sinoe prices<lb/>
were freed, it has aept up to<lb/>
1.30 and even 1.40 in fashion-<lb/>
able neighbahoods.<lb/>
A franc is wath 22 cents at<lb/>
current exchange rates.<lb/>
With inflation at 11 percent a<lb/>
year, the pnoe will probably go<lb/>
on rising.<lb/>
And even today there are<lb/>
some who harba faint misgiv-<lb/>
ings about tampering with an<lb/>
issue that has caused so much<lb/>
upheaval in Franoe.<lb/>
In pre-Revolutionary days, a<lb/>
laborer spent 50 percent of his<lb/>
wages on bread.<lb/>
French rulers, always aware<lb/>
of the dangers of a bread<lb/>
shatage. set up elebaate sup-<lb/>
ply systems but these depended<lb/>
oi the weather. So the price<lb/>
could double over night.<lb/>
Bread riots oome almost<lb/>
yearly, and the victims were<lb/>
invariably the bakers, who were<lb/>
beaten, trampled and lynched.<lb/>
It'sna surprising, thus, that<lb/>
French bakers have a patron<lb/>
DREYFUSS<lb/>
continued from p. 9<lb/>
There is hardly any<lb/>
activity, any enterprise,<lb/>
which is started with such<lb/>
tremendous hopes and ex-<lb/>
pectations, and yet which<lb/>
fails so regularly as love. "<lb/>
Erich Fromm.<lb/>
The Art of Loving<lb/>
7956<lb/>
Vulnerability is always<lb/>
at the heart of love. "<lb/>
Leo Buscaglia .<lb/>
Love<lb/>
So it seems that this is<lb/>
Paula McFadden's(Marsha<lb/>
Mason) lot in life in Neil<lb/>
Simon's The Goodbye Girl.<lb/>
It is only natural that<lb/>
after receiving a "Dear<lb/>
Paula" letter from her<lb/>
current boyfriend who has<lb/>
left their love nest to make<lb/>
a movie in Italy that she be<lb/>
a little cautiouswith her<lb/>
love life.<lb/>
"I don't want to get<lb/>
dumped on again she<lb/>
tells Dreyfuss in one scene.<lb/>
Romantic comedies are<lb/>
in vogue this season but<lb/>
unlike Woody Allen's<lb/>
Annie hall, which turned its<lb/>
focus to real life, The<lb/>
Goodbye Girl concerns it-<lb/>
jeif almost too heavily with<lb/>
the pomp and circumstance<lb/>
of one-liners and romantic<lb/>
resolutions.<lb/>
Paula McFadden does<lb/>
liod happiness and this<lb/>
maumfte viewer feel good,<lb/>
?t i8 much easier,<lb/>
Pettily so, to identify<lb/>
with the Woody Allen char-<lb/>
acter that he so heart-<lb/>
breakingly portrays in An-<lb/>
nie Hall. One reason might<lb/>
be that the role is quite<lb/>
obviously autobiographical.<lb/>
But Simon's idealism<lb/>
makes for good escapist<lb/>
fare and this film was<lb/>
destined to be a runaway<lb/>
hit from the moment the<lb/>
first literary chord was<lb/>
struck on the typewriter.<lb/>
Casting makes this<lb/>
"Best Picture" nominee a<lb/>
must. In his first romantic<lb/>
role, Dreyfuss is incapable<lb/>
of a false note. He turns<lb/>
the film's many one-liners<lb/>
into pure poetry with his<lb/>
perfect comic timing and a<lb/>
dedication to his craft that<lb/>
soaks right through the<lb/>
screen. His rendition of a<lb/>
gay Richard III would<lb/>
please even Shakespeare.<lb/>
Quinn Cummings, a<lb/>
ten-year old bitch goddess,<lb/>
plays the wordly daughter<lb/>
who helps draw M ason and<lb/>
Dreyfuss, who happen to be<lb/>
living together anyway, to-<lb/>
gether.<lb/>
No longer the energetic<lb/>
adolescent, Dreyfuss has<lb/>
the priceless ingrediants of<lb/>
surge and charm necessary<lb/>
to be believable in a part<lb/>
like this. He seems to love<lb/>
the work at hand and the<lb/>
world in general .<lb/>
The Goodbye Girl has<lb/>
given birth to a major star.<lb/>
Al! films are open to<lb/>
ECU students, faculty, and<lb/>
staff and their guests.<lb/>
Admission is by ID and<lb/>
Activity Card or Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center Mem-<lb/>
bership Card. All films are<lb/>
shown in the Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center Theatre.<lb/>
saint, St. Honae, who is said to<lb/>
have heard the call of God while<lb/>
watching his mother bake<lb/>
bread.<lb/>
In one incident, the lieute-<lb/>
nant governa of St. Denis, near<lb/>
Paris, was chased up a church<lb/>
steeple and stabbed to death fa<lb/>
pompously infaming a aowd<lb/>
that "one does not sell bread to<lb/>
rabble fa two sous a loaf<lb/>
Reprisals fa the riots were<lb/>
swift. Onoe. 50 people were<lb/>
summarily hanged.<lb/>
The revolutionaries who<lb/>
froze the price could not keep it<lb/>
down any mae easily than the<lb/>
royalists they ousted.<lb/>
In 1795, fa instanoe, inflat-<lb/>
ion pushed the prioe up 1,000<lb/>
percent in a month.<lb/>
But many bakers oppose<lb/>
deregulation. Some fear a price<lb/>
war; others wary about being<lb/>
put out of business by large<lb/>
bakeries that buy ingredients by<lb/>
volume - and mae cheaply.<lb/>
Bread still is political matter.<lb/>
Some complain that the bereted,<lb/>
mustashioed baker peddling<lb/>
loaves from a pushcar is disap-<lb/>
pearing.<lb/>
And last February, bakers<lb/>
stopped making quality crois-<lb/>
sants in protest against a<lb/>
governemnt prioe ceiling, touch-<lb/>
ing off a heated issue in a<lb/>
national election. "The crois-<lb/>
sant war it was called.<lb/>
Whatever St. Honroe might<lb/>
think of Monory's new move,<lb/>
one thing is sure: There's no<lb/>
point in again telling French-<lb/>
men to eat cake. It was<lb/>
deregulated along with bread.<lb/>
SANDWICHES<lb/>
6ROWN<lb/>
SAGGING<lb/>
WELCOME!<lb/>
OMELETTES<lb/>
CREPES<lb/>
NOW FEATURING THE<lb/>
"CANDLEWICK I1SN"<lb/>
MENU DAILY FROM<lb/>
:?? - It:? P.M.<lb/>
RESERVATIONS APPRECIATED<lb/>
301 EVANS MALL<lb/>
BASEMENT ? MINGES BLDG.<lb/>
Pitt County Shrine Club<lb/>
AJsnsruAL<lb/>
FISH FRY<lb/>
Wed Sept. ?, 1978-11 am Til 7 put<lb/>
Fish will be cooked and<lb/>
served at these<lb/>
locations:<lb/>
Harris Super Market,<lb/>
 ?T. Greene St.<lb/>
Elm St. Park<lb/>
Pitt plaza Shopping Centei<lb/>
Harris Super Market<lb/>
S. Memorial Dr.<lb/>
Harris Super Market,<lb/>
Bethel<lb/>
?vou<lb/>
Donation<lb/>
the whistle as a compli-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Besides, what could be<lb/>
more appropriate in the<lb/>
Music Building than a<lb/>
sculpture that makes music<lb/>
as well?<lb/>
The whistling can be<lb/>
troubling, however. In fact,<lb/>
yesterday I witnessed the<lb/>
disturbing scene when a<lb/>
senior faculty member tried<lb/>
to walk through the appara-<lb/>
tus without, horror of hor-<lb/>
rors, checking out her<lb/>
books.<lb/>
The exit gate locked,<lb/>
the whistle increased in<lb/>
intensity, the professor<lb/>
jumped back in surrender,<lb/>
and the entire population of<lb/>
the library turned in ac-<lb/>
cusation. Quite a dramatic<lb/>
feat for a mere sculpture.<lb/>
One student speculated<lb/>
that the whistle indicated<lb/>
radioactivity within the art-<lb/>
work. In that case, it could<lb/>
conceivably cause cancer.<lb/>
Without being an alarm<lb/>
-ist, it is easy to see that the<lb/>
threat of cancer might<lb/>
cause students to avoid<lb/>
walking through the thing,<lb/>
which in turn might drive<lb/>
them away from the library,<lb/>
It follows that since they<lb/>
would therefore be checking<lb/>
out fewer books, they<lb/>
would probably also be<lb/>
reading fewer books.<lb/>
Since books are a source<lb/>
of knowledge, this might<lb/>
lead to dumber ECU stud-<lb/>
ents. This may sound far-<lb/>
fetched, but ignorance is no<lb/>
laughing matter. Can we<lb/>
afford to take that risk?<lb/>
NEWSFLASH<lb/>
A high library<lb/>
source has just confirmed<lb/>
that the deceptive mechan-<lb/>
ism is indeed a book<lb/>
detection system.<lb/>
Reliable sources report<lb/>
that the substantial losses<lb/>
suffered by the library<lb/>
system have necessitated<lb/>
this stern stand against<lb/>
ECU crime.<lb/>
Well, so it's not a<lb/>
sculpture after all But<lb/>
maybe I wasn't so far<lb/>
wrong when I said that it<lb/>
was a statement about<lb/>
society today.<lb/>
Obviously, there is an .<lb/>
important moral to this<lb/>
story. If anyone figures it<lb/>
out, let me know.<lb/>
Riggan Shoe<lb/>
t Repair Shop "f<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
111 W. 4th Street<lb/>
CATALOG of COLLEGIATE RESEARCH<lb/>
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Send NOW for this FREE catalog.<lb/>
(offer expires Dec 31.1978)<lb/>
Send to: COLLEGIATE RESEARCH<lb/>
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SPORTS WORLD is having a<lb/>
college night every Thursday night<lb/>
from 6:30 pm to 10:00 pm. All<lb/>
co-eds admitted free with ID. Men admitted<lb/>
for $1.00 with ID. This includes skate rentals.<lb/>
104 EL Redbanks( behind Shoney's)<lb/>
756-6000<lb/>
Featuring the new,<lb/>
modern roller skating<lb/>
game room, pro shop,<lb/>
snack bar.<lb/>
For a spectacular steak<lb/>
special<lb/>
Buy one get one free<lb/>
Our 8 oz. T-bone dinner<lb/>
includes choice of potato<lb/>
Texas Toast and salad from<lb/>
our FREE all-you-can eat<lb/>
? ii'iii'mii<lb/>
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Child's Plate FREE<lb/>
Includes Hamburger,<lb/>
French Fries and Lollipop<lb/>
with FREE drink<lb/>
520 North Greenville Blvd<lb/>
(264 By Pass) Greenville<lb/>
New Hours<lb/>
Sun -Thurs. 11 a.m9 p.m.<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat. 11 a.m10p.m.<lb/>
<lb/>
MmmmmmCA<lb/>
<pb facs="00057145_0012"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
ECU faces North Carolina<lb/>
Sam Harrell<lb/>
THE HARRELLSVILLE NATIVE scored ECU'S first<lb/>
touchdown against N.C. State on a spectacular 71 yard run<lb/>
down the right side fines. '<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Despite last week's dis-<lb/>
appointing 29-13 loss to<lb/>
N.C. State ECU head coach<lb/>
Pat Dye hasn't given up on<lb/>
his Pirates yet.<lb/>
But with an overflow<lb/>
crowd of more than 50,000<lb/>
expected in Kenan Stadium<lb/>
Saturday for the ECU-UNC<lb/>
contest, Dye admits his<lb/>
Pirates are experiencing a<lb/>
crisis of sorts.<lb/>
"I'd like to say we've<lb/>
got everything in order and<lb/>
we're ready to go Satur-<lb/>
day said Dye Wednesday<lb/>
afternoon at his weekly<lb/>
press luncheon. "But it's<lb/>
just not the truth. If we play<lb/>
as hard as we can and<lb/>
execute well we could win,<lb/>
but anything less than that<lb/>
could be embarrassing.<lb/>
"Right now we're in<lb/>
sort of a crisis, but some-<lb/>
times something will sur-<lb/>
face you didn't know you<lb/>
had<lb/>
One thing hasn't sur-<lb/>
faced during the past two<lb/>
weeks : an effective of-<lb/>
fense which produced<lb/>
yardage and touchdowns at<lb/>
a rapid pace last season.<lb/>
The Pirates have scored<lb/>
only four touchdowns in<lb/>
two games and have made<lb/>
11 costly turnovers.<lb/>
"We've got to eliminate<lb/>
our mistakes on offense<lb/>
explained Dye "And we<lb/>
need to make things hap-<lb/>
pen on defense. It may take<lb/>
us the rest of the year to get<lb/>
this football team where we<lb/>
want it, but I don't want to<lb/>
have to wait until the end of<lb/>
the season before that<lb/>
happens<lb/>
Although ECU and<lb/>
North Carolina did not play<lb/>
last year, the Tar Heels<lb/>
topped the Pirates 12-10 in<lb/>
1976. North Carolina, now<lb/>
under new head coach Dick<lb/>
Crum, returns a veteran<lb/>
offensive backfield and one<lb/>
of the finest running backs<lb/>
in the country in Amos<lb/>
Lawrence.<lb/>
Personnel wise they' re<lb/>
an excellent team praised<lb/>
Dye. "Amos Lawrence is<lb/>
certainly one of the finest<lb/>
running backs in the coun-<lb/>
try and they have a fine<lb/>
quarterback in Matt Kupec<lb/>
who comes up with the big<lb/>
plays when they need<lb/>
them. Their offensive<lb/>
and defensive lines are big,<lb/>
quick and strong. It's cer-<lb/>
tainly another big game for<lb/>
us<lb/>
With its unimpressive<lb/>
opening win against West-<lb/>
ern Carolina, and last<lb/>
weeks loss to N.C. State,<lb/>
the Pirates now find them-<lb/>
selves decided underdogs<lb/>
in this crucial in-state con-<lb/>
test.<lb/>
"The chemistry on this<lb/>
team isjust not right said<lb/>
Dye. "We've probably got<lb/>
the finest coaching staff<lb/>
we've ever had and our<lb/>
scheme offense and de-<lb/>
fense is good. We've got<lb/>
more ability on this team<lb/>
than any other one I've<lb/>
seen.<lb/>
"But we're just not<lb/>
scratching and fighting out<lb/>
there like we used to do<lb/>
continued Dye. "Ecu has<lb/>
built its reputation on hav-<lb/>
ing an aggressive team<lb/>
that puts f,rth tremendous<lb/>
effort ano executes well on<lb/>
both sides of the field. But<lb/>
right now the effort just<lb/>
hasn't been there<lb/>
Injuries to key perform-<lb/>
ers in the offensive back-<lb/>
field crippled the Pirates<lb/>
wishbone attack last week.<lb/>
Halfbacks Eddie Hicks and<lb/>
Anthony Collins both mis-<lb/>
sed the entire N.C. State<lb/>
contest while quarterback<lb/>
Leander Green was injured<lb/>
at the end of the first half<lb/>
and did not return for the<lb/>
rest of the game.<lb/>
Hicks will be back in the<lb/>
starting lineup against<lb/>
North Carolina while Col-<lb/>
lins will see action, al-<lb/>
though he will not start.<lb/>
Green, who suffered<lb/>
bruised kidneys against the<lb/>
Wolfpack, will also be back<lb/>
in the starting lineup. Tight<lb/>
end Joe Godette is nursing<lb/>
a badly sprained ankle and<lb/>
will probably miss the UNC<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Noting the PiratesSam<lb/>
Harrell, who raced 71 yards<lb/>
for ECU'S first touchdown<lb/>
against N.C. State last<lb/>
week will start in the Pirate<lb/>
backfield against North<lb/>
Carolina. Anthony Collins<lb/>
may play, but is still<lb/>
nursing a sprained ankle<lb/>
"I'm sure North Carolina is<lb/>
thrilled to play us because<lb/>
we seem to bring out the<lb/>
best in our opponents<lb/>
placekickers quipped<lb/>
Dye at his press conference<lb/>
yesterday. N.C. State's<lb/>
Nathan Ritter booted a<lb/>
record five field goals a-<lb/>
gainst ECU last week. Last<lb/>
year, South Carolina's Britt<lb/>
Parrish kicked four field<lb/>
goals when the Gamecocks<lb/>
defeated ECU 19-16 in<lb/>
Columbia, S.CNorth<lb/>
Carolina leads the series<lb/>
3-1  The Pirates lone<lb/>
victory came in 1975 when<lb/>
ECU topped the Tar Heels<lb/>
38-17 the day after former<lb/>
athletic director Clarence<lb/>
Stasavich died.<lb/>
iMMI '<lb/>
Eddie Hicks<lb/>
AFTER MISSING LAST weeks contest against N.C State<lb/>
Eddie Hicks returnes to the Pirates' starting Imeup Hicks<lb/>
suffered a collapsed lung against Western Carol ma<lb/>
- oiasavicn died. ? ???"?? " ?ir<lb/>
Crum, Tar Heels set for season opener aeainst ECII<lb/>
ByCHARLESCHANDLER football. Crum and com- Pirates are now. u. a ??? ?"? O ? VJ 1J<lb/>
HARLESCHANDLER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
We have some talent,<lb/>
but I won't know how much<lb/>
Saturday This was<lb/>
the assessment of new<lb/>
North Carolina head foot-<lb/>
ball coach Dick Crum of his<lb/>
Tar Heels.<lb/>
Crum is in his first<lb/>
season at North Carolina.<lb/>
Last year, he ended a<lb/>
successful career at the<lb/>
University of Miami, Ohio<lb/>
when Bill Dooley left for<lb/>
Virginia Tech.<lb/>
With him, Crum<lb/>
brought his entire Miami<lb/>
coaching staff. They, in<lb/>
turn have brought a new<lb/>
offensive era to Tar Heel<lb/>
football. Crum and com-<lb/>
pany will operate under the<lb/>
veer this year. Dooley ran<lb/>
the Heels out of the stand-<lb/>
ard I formation.<lb/>
'The offensive adjust-<lb/>
ment here has been good<lb/>
said Crum. "Of course<lb/>
many of our players ran the<lb/>
veer in high school. I'm not<lb/>
sure how effective we are<lb/>
yet. We're somewhat tired<lb/>
of running it against our-<lb/>
selves<lb/>
"We have a good group<lb/>
of guys continued Crum.<lb/>
"They have gotten along<lb/>
well and have handled the<lb/>
offensive adjustments just<lb/>
as well<lb/>
Crum said he felt ECU<lb/>
head coach Pat Dye and the<lb/>
Pirates are now in a situat<lb/>
ion similar to the one he<lb/>
faced at Miami.<lb/>
"We were in the sha-<lb/>
dow of the Big 10 teams<lb/>
and Notre Dame. It's the<lb/>
same at East Carolina.<lb/>
They're somewhat in the<lb/>
shadow of the ACC. But<lb/>
you take Pat's team and put<lb/>
them on the west coast with4<lb/>
a new name. Thewriters out<lb/>
there would say, Wow,<lb/>
look at these guys "<lb/>
"Although they don't get a<lb/>
great deal of publicity, we<lb/>
know ECU is a major<lb/>
college football team. We<lb/>
will treat them with the<lb/>
utmost respect<lb/>
Crum has made some<lb/>
personnel changes in his<lb/>
short stay at North<lb/>
Carolina in addition to his<lb/>
offensive overhaul. He has<lb/>
moved former quarterback<lb/>
PJ. Gay to split end, and<lb/>
has moved ex-fullback Bob<lb/>
Loomis to tight end. Loomis<lb/>
is expected to start Satur-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
The Tar Fifty, qiarter-<lb/>
back situation 'is still a'<lb/>
question mark for the<lb/>
Heels Clyde Christianson<lb/>
and '77 starter Matt Kupec<lb/>
are in a battle for the<lb/>
starting job that may not be<lb/>
settled until after<lb/>
Saturday's game.<lb/>
"They'll both see plenty<lb/>
of action noted Crum.<lb/>
"Matt is as good as ever<lb/>
but Clyde has just simply<lb/>
closed the gap. Clyde is<lb/>
also helped by the fact that<lb/>
he was a veer quarterback<lb/>
in high school<lb/>
No matter who quarter-<lb/>
back's the Tar Heels, they<lb/>
will have wealth of backs to<lb/>
hand off to. First and<lb/>
foremost is All-America<lb/>
candidate "Famous" Amos<lb/>
Lawrence, who finished<lb/>
eighth in the nation in<lb/>
rushing as a freshmen last<lb/>
season. Starting alongside<lb/>
Lawrence could be anyone<lb/>
of three players. Ken Mack,<lb/>
Doug Paschal and Billy<lb/>
Johnson are still fighting it<lb/>
out for that position, ac-<lb/>
cording to Crum.<lb/>
Defensively, Crum feels<lb/>
his Tar Heels will fare well.<lb/>
"We have good range<lb/>
says Crum. "But, it's hard<lb/>
to judge how quick we are<lb/>
until we get a game under<lb/>
our belts<lb/>
At defensive end Crum<lb/>
will start AII-ACC perform-<lb/>
er Ken Sheets along with<lb/>
T.K. McDaniels. Bun<lb/>
Rhames and John Brugas<lb/>
will line up at defensive<lb/>
tackle. David Simmons will<lb/>
start at middle guard.<lb/>
Buddy Curry returns at<lb/>
linebacker alongside Law-<lb/>
rence Taylor.<lb/>
The defensive backfield<lb/>
will consist of Ricky Barden<lb/>
and Bobby Cale at corner-<lb/>
back, and Bernie Menapace<lb/>
and Francis Winters at<lb/>
safety.<lb/>
Offensively Crum will<lb/>
start Loomis at tight end,<lb/>
and Bobby Huckle and<lb/>
Steve Junkman at tackle.<lb/>
All-America candidate<lb/>
Mike Salzano and Lowell<lb/>
Aiken are slated to start at<lb/>
guard. Jimmy Robinson<lb/>
will open at split end, while<lb/>
Wayne Tucker will start at<lb/>
the flanker position Either<lb/>
Christianson or Kupec will<lb/>
open at quarterback. Law-<lb/>
rence and one of the trio of<lb/>
fullbacks will open at run-<lb/>
ning back.<lb/>
Jeff Hayes, a freshman,<lb/>
will handle both the punt-<lb/>
ing and place kicking<lb/>
chores for the Tar Heels.<lb/>
DICK CRUM<lb/>
HEAD COACH<lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
The most incredible game in Pirate football history<lb/>
BySAMROGERS aaaeaaB? ?mm.w&amp; ?, VJFJK ?<lb/>
Snort e Frlitrv I B. ,jm. ? e<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL, Oct 1973- it was another beautiful fall<lb/>
afternoon m Kenan Stadium on the University of North<lb/>
Carolina campus. More than 41,000 fans had gathered to<lb/>
watch the highly favored North Carolina Tar Heels square<lb/>
off against the underdog ECU Pirates.<lb/>
Sonny Randle was then head coach at ECU and Bill<lb/>
Dooley guided the Tar Heels. Players like Carl Summerell<lb/>
Carlester Crumpier, Danny Kepley, Don Schink, and<lb/>
K enny Strayhorn were familiar figures on the Pirate roster<lb/>
After a 57-8 thrashing at the hands of N.C. State in its<lb/>
opener, the Pirates had bounced back to take their next six<lb/>
games and brought an impressive 6-1 record into this bitter<lb/>
m-state contest.<lb/>
It was a pivotal game for the Pirates for a number of<lb/>
reasons Even though ECU had finished 9-2 the previous<lb/>
season and won the Southern Conference Championship it<lb/>
Jh ,Vn ?on'y tW? 9ameS t0 At,antic ?? Conference<lb/>
schools N.C. State and North Carolina. Most observers still<lb/>
considered ECU another Southern Conference patsy<lb/>
Oddsmakers had the Tar Heels as much as three<lb/>
touchdown favorite and certainly not one North Carolina fan<lb/>
was convinced .efore the game the Pirates could stay in the<lb/>
same ball park with UNC who had appeared in the Sun Bowl<lb/>
the previous year.<lb/>
We just wanted to go down there and prove we could<lb/>
Play against an ACC school remembered halfback<lb/>
Carlester Crumpier. "We all knew we were a better team<lb/>
than we had shown against N.C. State. We just had to get<lb/>
out there and prove it<lb/>
It was a chance to prove ourselves after we opened<lb/>
what that horrible game against N.C. State said safetv<lb/>
Jim Bolding. 7<lb/>
"We had won six games in a row coming into the North<lb/>
Carolina game and we had some momentum going for us<lb/>
Before the afternoon was over, not one person left their<lb/>
seat until the final gun as the Tar Heels came from 14 points<lb/>
behind in the second half to capture a 28-27 thriller.<lb/>
Many Pirate football observers still call the 1973<lb/>
ECU-UNC game the greatest game In Pirate history. The<lb/>
game was filled with plenty of offensive fireworks and<lb/>
ended with one of the moat controversial calls of the season.<lb/>
More importantly, however, ECU finally gained<lb/>
respectability among Atlantic Coast Conference coaching<lb/>
circles and proved the Pirates ware quickly building one of<lb/>
the top football programs in the country.<lb/>
North Carolina received the kickoff and quickly moved<lb/>
the length of the field on its first possession for a<lb/>
touchdown. Tailback Sammy Johnson want three yards for<lb/>
the touchdown, Alexander added the extra point and the<lb/>
Heels led 7-0 just Ilka that. North Carolina fans sat back in<lb/>
their seats eagerly awaiting the expected onslaught. After<lb/>
Pass interference?<lb/>
aZ frorn ZVLBnCK "W Plnkr? batS " ?<lb/>
Plates 28 J , ,? L"? ChaNeS Wadde" in "??<lb/>
Pirates 28-27 loss to the Tar Heels in 1973. The officials<lb/>
putting the Heels deep in a hole on a long Jonathan<lb/>
Demm.ng punt UNC quarterback Bj(y Pasca fumbed <lb/>
ball m his own end zone and was tackled by ECU linebacker<lb/>
Danny Kepley for a safety.<lb/>
The Pirates struck again when Jim Woody sent a 43 yard<lb/>
field goal through the uprights. And Woody came on to add<lb/>
a 21 yard field goal early in the second period to give the<lb/>
Pirates a narrow 8-7 lead.<lb/>
S?U creased the margin to 14-7 with 2:25 remaining<lb/>
in the half when Carlester Crumpier capped a long drive<lb/>
with athree yard run for the touchdown.  ?"? "? "??? "?" ana w? rwi one we<lb/>
Jim Bolding picked off aPaschalipass on the Heels next ??U,d  the ?ame of we cou,d ?et a " in M<lb/>
series and returned it 20 yards to give the Pirates excellent Seconj ha,f The Pirates received the second half kickoff<lb/>
ruled Pinkney interferedwith Waddelt and UNC scored th<lb/>
s7:Z7ntZ?Z tW? ,Ster Pink-V TZa<lb/>
starter in the Detroit Lions secondary.<lb/>
ECU ahead 21-7 at the break.<lb/>
"I don't think they were looking past us said<lb/>
Crumpier, "but I know they were probably kind of worried<lb/>
after we jumped out ahead of them by 14 points at the half<lb/>
But we were capable of beating them"<lb/>
 Our game plan in the second half was to come right out<lb/>
and dr.ve down for a touchdown quickly said halfback<lb/>
Kenny Strayhorn now a sports commentator for WITN-TV<lb/>
in Washingto-i I don't think they ever expected us to<lb/>
jump on them like we did in the first half and we felt Ilka we<lb/>
field position inside the UNC 50. From there, Carl<lb/>
Summerell directed another one of his patented drives<lb/>
moving the Pirates half the length of the field for a<lb/>
touchdown with just seven seconds remaining ,n the half<lb/>
Summerell went over from the four yard line mmself to put<lb/>
and once again moved downf ield against the Tar Heals with<lb/>
relative ease. But Summerell fumbled the ball at the UNC<lb/>
19 and the Heels turned the game around after that.<lb/>
"After that fumble when we were moving the ball so<lb/>
well it took a lot out of ua observed Strayhorn. "I didn't<lb/>
think we ever really picked it up after that North Carolina<lb/>
came back with two more touchdowns to t,e the score at<lb/>
21-21, but the P.rates weren't finished yet ECU regained<lb/>
possession with just under six minutes and scored the<lb/>
go-ahead touchdown with 3:45 on Crumpier sneyd<lb/>
Plunge. But UNC's Bill Cowan blocked Jim WoodsexTra<lb/>
point attempt and the Pirates led onyl 27-21<lb/>
North Carolina took the ball and pushed forward<lb/>
SstuNC09 P?f With E 4?<lb/>
omcnesby UNC receievrs. And on 2nd and 8 from me Fr<lb/>
21, the can which has been argued over, ime andme aoam<lb/>
by Pirate fane occured inside the ten yard line 9<lb/>
Tbeave Nw,b Carohna the MTJEZZ<lb/>
Waddell said Bolding  WaT. 1! "th<lb/>
the official, and certain' a tough one 'K T <lb/>
theba.1 down. Hedid not interfere w?th the wT<lb/>
the ball is in the air both players can go afteTr 1 "<lb/>
didn't think Reggie should have be?n J?ed ,or h! <lb/>
Like the rest of the ECU fans a" XlTrs ?n "T<lb/>
couldn't believe the call, which incden a?waJT6<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Conference official. by an<lb/>
"Our man was goina for th? haii ?? ?<lb/>
.ft.Mh.oame. ?Anybody inVmtrLows' ha? R"n"e<lb/>
pass interference. that ft was not<lb/>
Two plays later, Pascall threw to Dickie Oliver f<lb/>
yard touchdown and Alexander's aSr. 2LT 8 <lb/>
difference. Fin score North Carolina ? EcC ,? "<lb/>
Although the Pirates took the kicUf and m<lb/>
scoring position again, Woody's 53 JaTrt ? Z mov?d mt0<lb/>
short on the final play of mTgarnt "   ?<lb/>
"If they hadn't gotten that pass interfor<lb/>
we would have held them and wl the ' "<lb/>
Bolding. ?it wascertainly the key to me gameT" 2?<lb/>
out there that day gave 110 percent Car Everyty<lb/>
out they had to play against uWTh? wn " fHind<lb/>
respect after that thmk we ?a,ned a lot of<lb/>
?.???? real,y whooped in that last quarter ? <lb/>
ECU assistant coach Cary Godette Th? , ' Emitted<lb/>
end. ?w. ran out of gaJf'CZEX" <lb/>
that call really broke our backs But Tau? QUarter' b<lb/>
bad call wa got that afternoon -  WMnt ? first<lb/>
After the loas to North Carolina th. d<lb/>
???'our games of tne'73as:?aa t-on ?<lb/>
coneecotrve Southern Conference chamo?2, " <lb/>
with the naartbreeRlng lots to NoVth cT P' But ???"<lb/>
finally earned the raapect it dasarTw ??T' E has<lb/>
the Pirates captured its first win eve, !?i !? ' er<lb/>
with a 38-17 win. the Tar Heeia<lb/>
(<lb/>
-?"vewiev<lb/>
?9W-<lb/>
?i -<lb/>
T?, <lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057145_0013"/><lb/>
14 Sqrttnbf 1978 FQUNTAINHEAD Page 13<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
ECU at UNC<lb/>
SYRACUSE at N.C. STATE<lb/>
dcm?AMA at MSSOUR<lb/>
PENN STATE at OHIO STATE<lb/>
'RTG'N'A at OKLAHOMA<lb/>
LOU.SV.LLE at MARYLAND<lb/>
UCLA at TENNESSEE<lb/>
BAYLOR at GEORGIA<lb/>
KENTUCKY at SOUTH CAROLINA<lb/>
CALIFORNIA at GEORGIA TECH<lb/>
SAW ROGERS77-5<lb/>
UNC 21-10<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Navy<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Tennessee<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
Kentucky<lb/>
Georgia Tech<lb/>
TERRY HERNDONI16-6 CHARLESCHANDLER15-7l BETSY HcDAV,D 14-8<lb/>
ECU 21-19<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Ohio State<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Navy<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
Kentucky<lb/>
California<lb/>
UNC 17-13<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Ohio State<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Navy<lb/>
M aryland<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
Kentucky<lb/>
California<lb/>
Clo<lb/>
UNC 20-14<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Ohio State<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Navy<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
Kentucky<lb/>
California<lb/>
CHIP ALEXANDER<lb/>
Raleigh News and Observer<lb/>
ECU 17-16<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Ohio State<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Navy<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
Kentucky<lb/>
California<lb/>
ByC?ARLESCHANPLER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
After two weeks of<lb/>
Regular season piay, the<lb/>
National Football league<lb/>
seems prepped for a season<lb/>
full of surprises. Upsets<lb/>
have appeared in almost<lb/>
every other game.<lb/>
Winning teams are los-<lb/>
mg and losing teams are<lb/>
winning. Who would have<lb/>
thought the Baltimore Colts<lb/>
would have been shut out<lb/>
two weeks in a row? And<lb/>
who would have guessed<lb/>
that the Green Bay Packers<lb/>
and New York Jets would<lb/>
be among the league's<lb/>
undefeated after two<lb/>
week?<lb/>
The season has also<lb/>
already had a crazy, cont-<lb/>
roversial call. The<lb/>
"fumble" that won the<lb/>
Oakland Raiders a victory<lb/>
ames<lb/>
over San Diego last week<lb/>
certainly qualifies.<lb/>
If should be another one<lb/>
of those seasons. Here's a<lb/>
look at this week's contests:<lb/>
MIAMI 28 BUFFALO 10<lb/>
Don Strock has it going<lb/>
now and that Miami def-<lb/>
ense should be able to<lb/>
handle the feeble Bill of-<lb/>
fense with no problems.<lb/>
CHICAGO 17 DETROIT 13<lb/>
The game is being<lb/>
played in Detroit, but the<lb/>
Lions have lost their roar.<lb/>
Payton and the Bears in a<lb/>
close one.<lb/>
OAKLAND 24<lb/>
GREEN BAY 17<lb/>
Oakland got by on sheer<lb/>
luck last week. Look for the<lb/>
undefeated Packers to<lb/>
make the Raiders play their<lb/>
best.<lb/>
NEW ENGLAND 27<lb/>
BALTIMORE 10<lb/>
Things aren't looking<lb/>
very good in the land of the<lb/>
Colts. Even Bert Jones<lb/>
couldn't pull this one out,<lb/>
though.<lb/>
NEW YORK JETS 21<lb/>
SEATTLE 20<lb/>
The Jets stay undefeat-<lb/>
ed, but just barely against<lb/>
an up and coming Seahawk<lb/>
club. The Richard Todd to<lb/>
Wesley Walker combo<lb/>
should pull this one out for<lb/>
the New Yorkers.<lb/>
MINNESOTA 17<lb/>
TAMPA BAY 13<lb/>
The Vikings pulled off a<lb/>
shocker Monday against<lb/>
Denver. The Bucs are as<lb/>
usual, without a win. Fran<lb/>
Tarkenton is too smart to<lb/>
allow them to get their first<lb/>
at his expense.<lb/>
WASHINGTON 27<lb/>
ST. LOUIS 20<lb/>
Joe Theissman has the<lb/>
Redskin offense on fire.<lb/>
Bud Wilkinson will have to<lb/>
wait another week for his<lb/>
first NFL coaching victory.<lb/>
ATLANTA 13<lb/>
CLEVELAND 10<lb/>
After their overtime vic-<lb/>
tory over Cincinnati last<lb/>
week, the Browns will be a<lb/>
little down. Too bad, that<lb/>
Atlanta defense is tough.<lb/>
PHILADELPHIA 24<lb/>
NEW ORLEANS 21<lb/>
The Eagles have lost<lb/>
close ones to Los Angeles<lb/>
and Washington. The time<lb/>
has come for Dick Vermeil<lb/>
and company to put on in<lb/>
the win column.<lb/>
Rodgers, Beauchamp add spark<lb/>
to Lady Pirate volleyball squad<lb/>
V BETSY Mr.DA win cQn,)(i  . . -?-<lb/>
By BETSY McDAVID<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
c<lb/>
Rebecca Beauchamp<lb/>
and Virginia Rodgers could<lb/>
make trouble for ECU<lb/>
opponents in volleyball this<lb/>
sseason The two jtmor<lb/>
college transfers are from<lb/>
Anne Arundel Community<lb/>
College in Maryland.<lb/>
Both Beauchamp and<lb/>
Rodgers are gradually com-<lb/>
ing back into full form after<lb/>
the long summer. And full<lb/>
form for these veterans<lb/>
means first place for their<lb/>
teams m the state and fifth<lb/>
in the nation. They will add<lb/>
quite a spark to the Lady<lb/>
Pirate's season.<lb/>
Virginia Rodgers hails<lb/>
from Annapolis, Md<lb/>
where her father is retired<lb/>
navy man. Rodger's acad-<lb/>
emic plans include a B.S. in<lb/>
nursing. "As for my athlet-<lb/>
ic ambitions she said, "I<lb/>
hope to continually improve<lb/>
my skills in volleyball and<lb/>
piay an all-round good<lb/>
game "<lb/>
Her game in the past<lb/>
was good enough to net her<lb/>
a first team position in the<lb/>
all-conference, all-region,<lb/>
and all-tournament games.<lb/>
ECU volleyball coach,<lb/>
Alita Dillon is pleased with<lb/>
Rodger s progress. "Jenny<lb/>
does well at the net, but she<lb/>
also has great strenght as a<lb/>
server and on the entire<lb/>
back line, she'll be playing<lb/>
all the way around<lb/>
Rodgers feels she has<lb/>
made aof of progress since<lb/>
practice began. After a<lb/>
virtually volleyball-free<lb/>
summer, she said she was<lb/>
"rusty, a little frustrated<lb/>
with my spiking Now she<lb/>
feels much more confident.<lb/>
"I'm really getting bet-<lb/>
ter in setting. My spiking<lb/>
is up to par again, too. I<lb/>
think I'll be able trhelp the<lb/>
team both offensively and<lb/>
defensively to see a lot of<lb/>
victories she said.<lb/>
From Arnold, Md<lb/>
Rebecca Beauchamp is a<lb/>
long-time teammate of<lb/>
Rodger's. They shared all<lb/>
team honors in 1976-77 and<lb/>
77-78, but Beauchamp in-<lb/>
dividually made second<lb/>
team all-conference and<lb/>
first all-tournament in<lb/>
1978. She plans to become<lb/>
a part of the world of<lb/>
business administration<lb/>
upon graduation.<lb/>
Dillon praised Beau-<lb/>
champ for her hitting and<lb/>
blocking strength. "Spik-<lb/>
ing definitely is the best<lb/>
part of my game. New to<lb/>
me here at ECU is the<lb/>
center hit (spike from the<lb/>
center position) that I am<lb/>
really working on now<lb/>
Beauchamp said.<lb/>
"Becky works well at<lb/>
the personal level said<lb/>
Dillon. "She has a lot of<lb/>
team spirit. I expect both<lb/>
her and Rodgers to provide<lb/>
leadership<lb/>
Beauchamp agrees that<lb/>
since participating in the<lb/>
nationals, "we have seen<lb/>
some of what the other girls<lb/>
haven't. Maybe we will be<lb/>
able to help them in this<lb/>
respect<lb/>
Both transfers played<lb/>
for the AA team of the<lb/>
United State Volleyball<lb/>
Association. "That's the<lb/>
one the Olympic team is<lb/>
picked from said Beau-<lb/>
champ. "The team is really<lb/>
pulling together, and I'm<lb/>
getting fired up for a good<lb/>
year Rodgers said.<lb/>
Rodgers and Beau-<lb/>
champ will lead the Pirates<lb/>
when they begin their<lb/>
season Sept. 19 with a<lb/>
tri-match against Louisburg<lb/>
and UNC-Wilmington.<lb/>
The Pirates begin their<lb/>
season Sept. 19 with a<lb/>
tri-match against Louisburg<lb/>
and UNC-Wilmington.<lb/>
Boaid your hone at<lb/>
Fewest Acres Stables<lb/>
Excellent care and andmens<lb/>
$85amonth 3niilesfrom town call 752-1823<lb/>
HOLLOWELL'S<lb/>
SNACK BAR<lb/>
Orangeade and Lemonade<lb/>
25 and 35<lb/>
made from fresh oranges and lemons,<lb/>
no imitation flavoring added.<lb/>
Hot Dogs 45?<lb/>
Ice Cream, all flavors 15'dttp<lb/>
Banana Splits 86<lb/>
Hot Fudge Sundae 70<lb/>
41"  ? AAnior?a4 Drtat<lb/>
8 a.ia-10 pjk<lb/>
DENVER 16<lb/>
SAN DIEGO 14<lb/>
The big difference in<lb/>
the game is the fact that the<lb/>
game is being played in<lb/>
Denver. This one should go<lb/>
right down to the wire, with<lb/>
the Chargers coming out on<lb/>
the short end, again.<lb/>
HOUSTON 20<lb/>
SAN FRANCISCO 13<lb/>
O.J. meet Earl<lb/>
Campbell. He should make<lb/>
the 49er afternoon a long<lb/>
one. The Hiesman Trophy<lb/>
winner might just break all<lb/>
NFL rookie ruahing records<lb/>
this year; and take Houston<lb/>
to the playoffs in addition.<lb/>
The Oiler defense has<lb/>
very few leaks for the<lb/>
"Juice" to leak through.<lb/>
The people of 'Frisco don't<lb/>
have a great deal to cheer<lb/>
about this week.<lb/>
PITTSBURGH 17<lb/>
CINCINNAT113<lb/>
In a big AFC Central<lb/>
Division clash, the Bengals<lb/>
will find themselves up<lb/>
against a revived Steeler<lb/>
defense. The loss would<lb/>
drop the Bengals to 0-3.<lb/>
That's hard to believe, but<lb/>
try.<lb/>
KANSAS CITY 20<lb/>
NEW YORK GIANTS 17<lb/>
Mary Levy unveils his<lb/>
bag full of tricks on the<lb/>
Giants in a real squeeker.<lb/>
DALLAS 24<lb/>
LOS ANGELES 17<lb/>
In a very big game, the<lb/>
Rams will find out what<lb/>
everybody else knows; the<lb/>
Cowboys have too much for<lb/>
anybody. The rams could<lb/>
win if their pass rush is<lb/>
super-successful. This is<lb/>
very unlikely, though, The<lb/>
Cowboys could well have<lb/>
the best team the League<lb/>
has seen since the days of<lb/>
Vince Lombardi and the<lb/>
Packers.<lb/>
Alexander is<lb/>
guest picker<lb/>
This week s guest <lb/>
er in the FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD' s Fearless Foreca<lb/>
Chip Alexander. Alexan<lb/>
is a sports writer for the<lb/>
Raleigh News and 0<lb/>
ver. This season he<lb/>
assigned to cover the E<lb/>
football team. Last y<lb/>
Alexander compiled<lb/>
part story on ECU<lb/>
basketball coach Lari ,<lb/>
Iman that received<lb/>
wide acclaim.<lb/>
Last week s ql<lb/>
Wayne Newnam<lb/>
an 8-4 record.<lb/>
Games to watel<lb/>
week include the<lb/>
State-Ohio State conl<lb/>
and the Alabama I!<lb/>
game. Penn State an j<lb/>
State are ranked number 5<lb/>
and 6 in the natia<lb/>
spectively. Alabama<lb/>
top ranked tea-<lb/>
nation while Missou<lb/>
ranked 11th after<lb/>
defending nati<lb/>
Notre Dame last weeken<lb/>
The FOUNTS<lb/>
pickers find then<lb/>
close battle for<lb/>
rights. The prese'<lb/>
Sam Rogers<lb/>
games ahead of it<lb/>
place picker Betsy Mc<lb/>
vid. This week<lb/>
should prove a<lb/>
drive for superi<lb/>
It's Coming! <lb/>
It's Coming<lb/>
Stereo<lb/>
Village<lb/>
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Ask me about<lb/>
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The earlier you start it. the<lb/>
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business opportunities later<lb/>
on. Call me for details<lb/>
INtVIAMCI<lb/>
State Farm Life Insurance Company<lb/>
Home Office Bloommqton. Illinois<lb/>
bill McDonald<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
East lOth Street<lb/>
Phone 752-66SO<lb/>
SUMMER SALE<lb/>
ADFoot-Joy&amp;C Joy Golf Shoes 25 off.<lb/>
? 1 Rick of Ufct Shorn, &amp; Topi SmaUuzapfte<lb/>
? All Golf Bags Men's &amp; Ladies 25 off.<lb/>
? AD Golf Balls Now $10.99 per dozen your choice.<lb/>
? All Double Cushion Golf Sack 1 2 off Men's &amp; Ladies.<lb/>
? All Used Golf Chibs 12 price.<lb/>
? Afl New Clubs Cost plus 10 AD Brands Now until Oct 1st<lb/>
iop<lb/>
? End of summer Sale onaD hod La Costa shim for men, boys, and girk<lb/>
Snes ranfe from 2-20. Children and smaD to XX Large.<lb/>
? Powerbik Driver Sale RE Reg. $47.50 Now only $26.00.<lb/>
WehaveRigm&amp;ihaiiWmoatt<lb/>
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? Len?CMJfGUes.Bliy2getoM &amp;Ladies<lb/>
Also cadet sizes (for small fingersas weD as Gbves fee lhand Golfers.<lb/>
? Shag BaDs 20 each. ? Bag Boy puD cam Reg. 38.00 Now 28.00.<lb/>
? Buy 2 or more fcl sweaters Men's or Ladies Get 20 off.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057145_0014"/><lb/>
Page 14 FOUNTAINHEAD 14 September 1978<lb/>
Pirates' Valentine ready for Tar Heels<lb/>
ECU SPORTS<lb/>
INFORMATION<lb/>
ECU defensive end<lb/>
Zack Valentine is a sweet-<lb/>
heart to Pirate fans, but he<lb/>
never delivers flowers or<lb/>
candy to opponents on<lb/>
Saturdays.<lb/>
The agile, 6-3 212<lb/>
pound wrecker from En-<lb/>
denton says he enjoys<lb/>
football because it's a game<lb/>
of excitement, an element<lb/>
which typifies his play.<lb/>
Getting a sack on the<lb/>
quarterback, or stopping a<lb/>
big play Zack explains,<lb/>
"lifts the whole defense<lb/>
and the team. It'sagameof<lb/>
excitement and we can<lb/>
create a lot of it on defense<lb/>
for the entire team<lb/>
Defense has long been a<lb/>
trademark of Pirate teams<lb/>
and the one which Valen-<lb/>
tine accompanies to Chapel<lb/>
Hill for Saturday's 1:30<lb/>
p.m. game with North<lb/>
Carolina is no exception.<lb/>
Already this fall the<lb/>
Pirates, 1-1, have held<lb/>
Western Carolina to 47<lb/>
yards rushing in one game<lb/>
and limited N.C. State to<lb/>
just three first downs in the<lb/>
second half of another<lb/>
while trying to give the<lb/>
Pirate offense the oppor-<lb/>
tunity to score more points.<lb/>
Valentine has been<lb/>
graded on film with a<lb/>
winning performance each<lb/>
week, not to the surprise of<lb/>
ECU coach Pat Dye, who<lb/>
sees his senior end as a<lb/>
solid all-America candidate<lb/>
this fall.<lb/>
"There's no question in<lb/>
my mind that he is an<lb/>
all-America player Dye<lb/>
said. "He's smart and he's<lb/>
an all-out player on every<lb/>
down. He plays sound<lb/>
defense, is a sure tackier<lb/>
with plenty of punch and is<lb/>
also a big play man when<lb/>
we need that, too. He's a<lb/>
coach's dream to coach on<lb/>
top of that<lb/>
While Dye and Pirate<lb/>
fans are doubtlessly happy<lb/>
with his performances, this<lb/>
year and throughout his<lb/>
career, Zack, a pre-season<lb/>
all-Southern Independent<lb/>
team choice, may be the<lb/>
hardest one to please.<lb/>
"I'm just anxious to get<lb/>
back on the practice field<lb/>
this week he said after<lb/>
the East Carolina season<lb/>
record leveled with a win<lb/>
and a loss.<lb/>
"We have to get better<lb/>
every week. We have to<lb/>
bounce back strong in the<lb/>
next nine games so that we<lb/>
can become the team that<lb/>
we know we can be<lb/>
Valentine recognizes his<lb/>
role will be to offer much of<lb/>
the leadership this fall that<lb/>
will help the Pirates reach<lb/>
their potential. He also<lb/>
knows his own individual<lb/>
abilities and responsibil-<lb/>
ities well.<lb/>
"My quickness is better<lb/>
than most of the people I<lb/>
line up against Zack<lb/>
continued. "I like to use it<lb/>
to get to the football on<lb/>
every play. It's a thrill to<lb/>
get into the backfield and<lb/>
stop a play cold and it's also<lb/>
exciting to see 11 men<lb/>
around the football at the<lb/>
end of each play. Both of<lb/>
those things really give the<lb/>
team a lift<lb/>
For Valentine, all as-<lb/>
pects of the game are<lb/>
important - passing, run-<lb/>
ning and kicking, that is.<lb/>
But, one phase is ail<lb/>
important - winning or<lb/>
losing.<lb/>
ECU DEFENSIVE END<lb/>
ZACK VALENTINE<lb/>
Bronsoo Matney<lb/>
"Coin Man"<lb/>
!<lb/>
Market<lb/>
j' i a ii" re<lb/>
For<lb/>
HALVES, QUARTERS, DIMES<lb/>
1964 OR OLDER<lb/>
n<lb/>
SILVER COINS<lb/>
CLAD HALF DOLLARS w-M<lb/>
COINS<lb/>
SILVER DOLLARS (193s 1 older)<lb/>
-v<lb/>
mra?<lb/>
PENNIES<lb/>
1909 i OLDER<lb/>
??.??"eeie9 Maio Nlcke,? Llnco,n Pennies at this time)<lb/>
 CLASS RINGS<lb/>
?REGARDLESS OF CONDITION<lb/>
?GOLD &amp; SILVER RINGS AND JEWELRY<lb/>
ANY KIND (REGARDLESS OF CONDITION)<lb/>
?STERLING SILVER FLATWARE<lb/>
(NO SILVERPLATE)<lb/>
? ANTIQUE POCKET WATCHES<lb/>
?<lb/>
HARMONY HOUSE SOI<lb/>
ON THE MALL DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
752-3651<lb/>
ECU hooters<lb/>
at home<lb/>
against<lb/>
Catawba<lb/>
By TERRY YEaGoan<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The East Carolina soc-<lb/>
cer team took to the prac-<lb/>
tice field this week with an<lb/>
attitude no less than enthu-<lb/>
siastic. The Pirates, still<lb/>
looking for their first, in<lb/>
their 1978 home opener win<lb/>
will meet Catawba College<lb/>
on Sat. Sept. 16<lb/>
at 2 p.m.<lb/>
"The team will be men-<lb/>
tally ready this week" said<lb/>
ECU Head Coach Brad<lb/>
Smith. "The squad just<lb/>
wasn't mentally ready for<lb/>
opponents N.C. State and<lb/>
Duke last weekend Coach<lb/>
Smith is referring to the<lb/>
recent Mayor's Cup Tourn-<lb/>
ament in Raleigh in which<lb/>
East Carolina finished last<lb/>
A.C.C. teams North Caro-<lb/>
lina State and Duke defeat-<lb/>
ed the Pirates 4-0 and 5-0<lb/>
respectively. UNC captured<lb/>
the first place seat and the<lb/>
tournament trophy.<lb/>
ECU co-captain Jef<lb/>
Kluger had a similar anal-<lb/>
ysis of the Pirate effort in<lb/>
the tournament. "We<lb/>
didn't have the mental<lb/>
attitude needed for winning<lb/>
either game in the tourn-<lb/>
ament" said Kluger.<lb/>
Pirate freshman Brad<lb/>
Winchell, who was named<lb/>
to the Mayor s Cup<lb/>
ALL-Tournament Team,<lb/>
had mixed feelings. "I was<lb/>
happy with the honor yet<lb/>
unhappy that we lost" said<lb/>
Winchell. "The team win-<lb/>
ning was the most impor-<lb/>
tant thing on my mind.<lb/>
The Pirates undoubt-<lb/>
edly will be going into<lb/>
Saturdays game with an<lb/>
excellent mental attitude,<lb/>
but physically the booters<lb/>
won't be at 100. "Two of<lb/>
our three goalies are in-<lb/>
jured" said Smith. "Senior<lb/>
Kevin Tyus has bruised<lb/>
ribs and sophomore Mike<lb/>
Lawrence has a sprained<lb/>
thumb<lb/>
Coach Smith finished<lb/>
his first season as head<lb/>
coach at East Carolina 1st<lb/>
year with a 2-10 mark. So<lb/>
far this season Smith's<lb/>
record stands at 0-2. and<lb/>
yet he remains optimistic.<lb/>
"We lost to two real good<lb/>
teams last weekend" said<lb/>
Smith. "There also were<lb/>
some strategic errors on my<lb/>
part<lb/>
When questioned on his<lb/>
personal assessment of the<lb/>
team's performance up to<lb/>
now. Coach Smith replied.<lb/>
"We have a lot of work to<lb/>
be done to be winners and<lb/>
it will take time and sup-<lb/>
port said Smith. "Hereat<lb/>
East Carolina we get alot of<lb/>
support from our athletic<lb/>
department and the sports<lb/>
medicine program<lb/>
Frisbee<lb/>
contest<lb/>
begins<lb/>
Again this year, the<lb/>
ECU Department of Intra-<lb/>
murals and the McDonald<lb/>
fast food chain will sponsor<lb/>
a Frisbee Disc Pentathlon<lb/>
for ECU students.<lb/>
Held for the first time<lb/>
last year, this year's event<lb/>
will be held on Wednesday,<lb/>
September 20 on the Cc<lb/>
lege Hill intramural fields<lb/>
at the bottom o College<lb/>
Hill Drive. The pentathlon<lb/>
will begin at 4 p.m. and will<lb/>
consist of five different<lb/>
events.<lb/>
Contestants will be<lb/>
tested on their frisbee<lb/>
throwing accuracy and dis-<lb/>
tance, their frisbee hand<lb/>
time, their ability to throw a<lb/>
frisbee in a curved path,<lb/>
and their ability to throw a<lb/>
Frisbee at a Bulls-eye,<lb/>
another test of Frisbee<lb/>
throwing prowess<lb/>
Registration for the<lb/>
Frisbee pentathlon will run<lb/>
right up to the 4 p.m<lb/>
throw-off, but theintra mural<lb/>
department would like as<lb/>
many advanced registants<lb/>
as possible. Students may<lb/>
register in the Intramural<lb/>
office or at the McDonalds<lb/>
on Tenth and Cotanche<lb/>
Streets.<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057145_0015"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>