<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057148_0001"/>
vol. 55 No. yr<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
:<lb/>
26 September 1978<lb/>
Helicopter service<lb/>
begins in eastern N.C<lb/>
The ECU<lb/>
ool of Medicine<lb/>
I an inauguration<lb/>
ony for the Eastern<lb/>
th Carolina Helicopter<lb/>
am Thursday. Sept.<lb/>
10 a.m. at Pitt County<lb/>
smorial Hospital The<lb/>
led to attend.<lb/>
rr?e program was dev-<lb/>
cooperation with<lb/>
inty and the De-<lb/>
of Human Re-<lb/>
es' Office of Emer-<lb/>
Medical Services,<lb/>
oped an emer-<lb/>
'copter program<lb/>
! eastern portion of<lb/>
state m an effort to<lb/>
? e the quality of<lb/>
? health care del-<lb/>
e region.<lb/>
- tei North Car-<lb/>
copter Program.<lb/>
military air<lb/>
in.ce programs, will<lb/>
counties in the<lb/>
section of the<lb/>
spitals<lb/>
ics.<lb/>
ases that re-<lb/>
? 'reatment.<lb/>
re deliver-<lb/>
ies and severe trauma, may<lb/>
be transported by helicopt-<lb/>
er from anywhere in the<lb/>
region to one of the health<lb/>
care facilities deemed most<lb/>
appropriate to hand'e that<lb/>
specific case.<lb/>
The program has its<lb/>
roots in Dare County where<lb/>
several years ago Sheriff<lb/>
Frank Cahoon developed an<lb/>
emergency air evacuation<lb/>
service for persons in the<lb/>
isolated Outer Banks area.<lb/>
An army surplus UH-IB<lb/>
helicopter, owned by Dare<lb/>
County and commonly<lb/>
known as "Huey will be<lb/>
used for the new program.<lb/>
Dare County will also<lb/>
provide trained pilots, em-<lb/>
ergency medical techni-<lb/>
cians and supplies.<lb/>
The ECU School of<lb/>
Medicine will provide med-<lb/>
coordinaiton for the<lb/>
program under the direct-<lb/>
ion of Dr. Walter J. Pories,<lb/>
chairman of the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Surgery. Pories will<lb/>
act as medical director<lb/>
assigning emergency cases<lb/>
to the hospital which can<lb/>
most effectively meet the<lb/>
patients' needs. He will<lb/>
also direct specialized med-<lb/>
ical training of flight per-<lb/>
sonnel.<lb/>
The state EMS office<lb/>
will aid the program with<lb/>
administrative support and<lb/>
funds for fuel and equip-<lb/>
ment, such as oxygen,<lb/>
ventilators, suction aspira-<lb/>
tors and an incubator.<lb/>
This is a remarkable<lb/>
example of three units -<lb/>
Dare County, the School of<lb/>
Medicine and EMS - work-<lb/>
ing together to provide<lb/>
prompt, adequate access to<lb/>
medical care in the<lb/>
region says Steve Acai,<lb/>
assistant chief of transport-<lb/>
ation for EMS.<lb/>
Historically, time ele-<lb/>
ments and methods of<lb/>
transportation have made it<lb/>
difficult to transport pat-<lb/>
ients in the east says<lb/>
Pories. "This program will<lb/>
be invaluable to local phy-<lb/>
sicians, health facilities and<lb/>
their patients. The program<lb/>
can be considered to be a<lb/>
model for other areas<lb/>
A physician who wishes<lb/>
to transfer a patient to a<lb/>
facility will call Pories at a<lb/>
central number at Pitt<lb/>
County Memorial Hospital<lb/>
in Greenville. After consul-<lb/>
tation with the physician,<lb/>
Pories - or a designated<lb/>
official - will dispatch the<lb/>
helicopter and made ar-<lb/>
rangements at the receiv-<lb/>
ing hospital for the arrival<lb/>
of the patient.<lb/>
A pilot, co-pilot and<lb/>
certified emergency med-<lb/>
ical technician will accom-<lb/>
pany each flight The crew<lb/>
is available 24 hours a day<lb/>
and requires only 12 to 15<lb/>
minutes to become airborne<lb/>
after a call is received.<lb/>
The program will serve<lb/>
Beaufort. Bertie Camden.<lb/>
Carteret. Chowan, Craven.<lb/>
Curntuck. Dare. Gates,<lb/>
Halifax, Hertford, Hyde,<lb/>
Martin, Pamlico. Pasquc-<lb/>
tank, Perquimans, Pitt, Ty-<lb/>
rell and Washington<lb/>
counties.<lb/>
NEW HELICOPTER AMBULANCE, designed to ferry patients to Pitt <lb/>
area<lb/>
Photo by EMS office<lb/>
To aid Joyner Library<lb/>
Organization formed<lb/>
Energy<lb/>
Electric costs high on campus<lb/>
By JULIE EVERETTE<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The Friends of the ECU<lb/>
Library is a newly formed<lb/>
organization in the Green-<lb/>
ville area, open to all<lb/>
persons interested in pro-<lb/>
moting Joyner Library.<lb/>
According to Dr Wilson<lb/>
Luguire, associate director<lb/>
of Joyner Library Services,<lb/>
the primary mission of the<lb/>
organization is to assist in<lb/>
enhancing the library pro-<lb/>
gram and developing its<lb/>
resources.<lb/>
Luguire said the Fri-<lb/>
ends will enhance the stat-<lb/>
ue and reputation of the<lb/>
univensty Library, helping<lb/>
ti braoden its potential and<lb/>
to facilitate rapport with<lb/>
eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
According to Luguire,<lb/>
membership is open to all<lb/>
individuals, organizations,<lb/>
businesses, industries, and<lb/>
institutions interested in<lb/>
aiding in library develop-<lb/>
ment and enrichment.<lb/>
Porposed membership<lb/>
dues are as follows:<lb/>
ER<lb/>
t for<lb/>
a iring<lb/>
ire to<lb/>
costs to<lb/>
ECU campus<lb/>
. to Larry<lb/>
-ngmeer of<lb/>
es de-<lb/>
. a footbal<lb/>
e hours costs<lb/>
said<lb/>
ed that to<lb/>
ace he ECU cam-<lb/>
$86,000 to<lb/>
year<lb/>
conditioning is<lb/>
jst expensive<lb/>
ampus, Snyder<lb/>
?cider you keep<lb/>
?gs the higher the<lb/>
ECU Utilities purchases<lb/>
the electricity used on<lb/>
campus from the Greenville<lb/>
ties<lb/>
ECU utilities buys<lb/>
electricity like a big indus-<lb/>
try would at a bulk rate<lb/>
said Charles Horne, direct-<lb/>
or of Greenville Utilities.<lb/>
The electricity is tran-<lb/>
smitted from a Greenville<lb/>
City transformer to ECU'S<lb/>
utility power plant near<lb/>
Mmges Coliseum which<lb/>
transmits electric power<lb/>
across campus said Horne.<lb/>
Greenville Utilities<lb/>
purchases bulk electric<lb/>
power from Virginia Electr-<lb/>
ic Power Co (Vepco)<lb/>
at wholesale pricesHorne<lb/>
explained<lb/>
Greenville is one in 26<lb/>
cities which have grouped<lb/>
together to purchase bulk<lb/>
electricity. These cities<lb/>
have formed the Electra<lb/>
City Co-op said Keith<lb/>
Mills a staff writer for the<lb/>
Da7y Reflector<lb/>
The purpose for this<lb/>
Electra City organization is<lb/>
to have a board of directors<lb/>
oversee the purchase of<lb/>
electric power for each one<lb/>
of the cities according to<lb/>
Horne.<lb/>
This organization pro-<lb/>
vides a greater amount of<lb/>
leverage when negotiating<lb/>
with Vepco about rate<lb/>
policies explained Horne.<lb/>
The Medical School on<lb/>
the West side of campus<lb/>
will need a considerable<lb/>
amount of electricity, ac-<lb/>
cording to Horne.<lb/>
"Greenville is growing<lb/>
constantly therefore the<lb/>
burden on utilities will be<lb/>
greater said Horne.<lb/>
Supreme Court rules<lb/>
on press freedom, Bakke<lb/>
POr ID, Ore AP<lb/>
journalists<lb/>
sustained recent<lb/>
se'backs m efforts to<lb/>
preserve confidential news<lb/>
sources, the president of<lb/>
the Associated Press Man-<lb/>
aging Editors Association<lb/>
?? e Stanford case, the<lb/>
court ruled that police have<lb/>
the right to search news-<lb/>
paper offices for notes and<lb/>
pictures on a "third party"<lb/>
warrant although no<lb/>
reporter is suspected of any<lb/>
crime<lb/>
It is the public who is<lb/>
being hurt by this and<lb/>
similar secisions<lb/>
Barclay Jameson, man-<lb/>
aging editor of The Santa<lb/>
Fe New Mexican,cited the<lb/>
US Supreme Court's<lb/>
decision earlier this year in<lb/>
a Stanford University<lb/>
student newspaper case as<lb/>
one of the most serious<lb/>
setbacks, "not only for the<lb/>
press, but for the public<lb/>
Jameson said Sunday in<lb/>
an interview on the eve of<lb/>
the association's national<lb/>
convention in Portland.<lb/>
"The First Amendment -<lb/>
guaranteeing freedom of<lb/>
speech, freedom of the<lb/>
press - is a public right not<lb/>
just a press privilege<lb/>
People who know of<lb/>
wrongdoing in public busi-<lb/>
ness can't fight the battle<lb/>
alone he added. "And<lb/>
the press can't fight<lb/>
wrongdoing effectively un-<lb/>
less it can protect the<lb/>
confidentiality of its<lb/>
sources<lb/>
Jameson said the ruling<lb/>
in the Stanford case "could<lb/>
be construed to apply to<lb/>
businessmen, doctors, even<lb/>
lawyers, even private<lb/>
homes<lb/>
He said the case of<lb/>
Myron Farber, a New York<lb/>
Times reporter jailed for<lb/>
refusing to turn over to a<lb/>
New Jersey judge his notes<lb/>
on a murder investigation,<lb/>
is "another indication of<lb/>
the crisis of a sort between<lb/>
the press and the judici-<lb/>
ary<lb/>
"The press is accused<lb/>
of being arrogant some-<lb/>
times - and sometimes it<lb/>
has been arrogant<lb/>
Jameson said. "But is is<lb/>
the New Jersey courts<lb/>
which are being arrogant in<lb/>
this case. They have put<lb/>
themselves above the law<lb/>
and thrown Farber into jail<lb/>
w Hit a hearing<lb/>
DAVIS, Calif. AP<lb/>
Allan Bakke, a 38-year-<lb/>
old engineer whose name<lb/>
has become a symbol of<lb/>
conflict over school ad-<lb/>
missions and raoe, entered<lb/>
the University of California<lb/>
Medical School yesterday.<lb/>
With protesters<lb/>
announcing plans to picket<lb/>
outside, Bakke, who is<lb/>
white, is to begin classes at<lb/>
the university's Davis<lb/>
campus under a U.S.<lb/>
Supreme Court order that<lb/>
struck down the school's<lb/>
preferential admissions<lb/>
program for minorities.<lb/>
The court ruled on a 5-4<lb/>
vote that the program,<lb/>
which reserved 16 places in<lb/>
each class of 100 for<lb/>
low-income minorities, vio-<lb/>
lated Bakke's constitutional<lb/>
rights. He had applied<lb/>
unsuccessfully for admis-<lb/>
sion in 1973 and 1974 to the<lb/>
campus 15 miles west of<lb/>
Sacramento.<lb/>
But the court also ruled<lb/>
on a separate 5-4 vote that<lb/>
raoe could be taken into<lb/>
account to maintain diver-<lb/>
sity in admissions.<lb/>
That portion of the<lb/>
ruling was hailed by many<lb/>
civil rights groups as the<lb/>
preservation of affirmative<lb/>
action program.<lb/>
Student ? $5 ; re-<lb/>
gular member ? $10<lb/>
contributing member ?<lb/>
$25 , Patron ? $50.<lb/>
benefactor ? $500 ; Life<lb/>
member ? $1,000<lb/>
cor interested g-oups.<lb/>
pro ised membership is<lb/>
$25. for a non- profit<lb/>
organization. $50. for<lb/>
business, and $500 for<lb/>
business benefactor<lb/>
According to Luguire.<lb/>
the organization will aid<lb/>
beyond the tax oupported<lb/>
programs of the library to<lb/>
finance programs the li-<lb/>
brary does not presently<lb/>
have<lb/>
Luguire said the organ-<lb/>
ization hopes to raise<lb/>
funds, donate money, han-<lb/>
dle grants, donate books, or<lb/>
give any other needed<lb/>
assistance in the library<lb/>
program.<lb/>
"The library material<lb/>
inflation rate is increa-<lb/>
sing said Luguire. "and<lb/>
is a much greater inflation<lb/>
rate than concerns the<lb/>
general public<lb/>
"We need to compen-<lb/>
sate in library budgets to<lb/>
expand the services we<lb/>
offer<lb/>
The Friends' will have<lb/>
its organizational meeting<lb/>
and its first annual dinner<lb/>
Wednesday, Sept 27. at<lb/>
the Greenville Country<lb/>
Club at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Luguire said ECU cti<lb/>
celor Dr Thomas E<lb/>
will be the featured <lb/>
at the dinner<lb/>
According to L<lb/>
proposed officers<lb/>
organization will be a pres-<lb/>
ident, a President-E<lb/>
and a Secret i<lb/>
and will be elected a: I<lb/>
mee ng .Vednesday<lb/>
Also, the Friends -<lb/>
Laws, as proposed !<lb/>
Steerng Committee <lb/>
be presentee<lb/>
ship approva thai e. e<lb/>
There will be a . ;<lb/>
tunity to join the organ-<lb/>
ization at tKe mee!<lb/>
Mrs Phoebe Ovv<lb/>
served as coordinate I<lb/>
Steering Committee<lb/>
Ane Briley ser- I<lb/>
chairperson of the B. .<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
The steering com<lb/>
ttee. organized in a.<lb/>
1978. was composed<lb/>
library sta'f. university fa-<lb/>
culty, library adminisi<lb/>
tion and outsiders<lb/>
Luyuire said tl a?.<lb/>
organization is a<lb/>
pendant orga<lb/>
signed to assist tHe library<lb/>
and its programs, bul I<lb/>
not a part of the<lb/>
structure<lb/>
Reservations or the<lb/>
dinnt ma re ade by<lb/>
telephoning the library s<lb/>
admmistrativce off ce<lb/>
757-6514<lb/>
Fcudkner studies<lb/>
children 9s books<lb/>
A BLEND OF classical and country music<lb/>
filled Wright Auditorium Saturday night<lb/>
at the first annual Hood Swamp Ball,<lb/>
featuring the Super Grit Cowboy Band<lb/>
and the ECU Symphony Orchestra. This<lb/>
picture, and the ones previewing the ball<lb/>
published in the last edition of FOUNT-<lb/>
AINHEAD, were taken by John H.<lb/>
Grogan. See story, p. 7.<lb/>
What's inside<lb/>
QUNNAR BJORNSTRAND<lb/>
Co-operative Education program is ready<lb/>
and waitingSee story, page 7<lb/>
Bergman's Smiles of a Summer Night is<lb/>
the Wednesday night special filmSee<lb/>
page 8.<lb/>
Football players get new atmosphere for<lb/>
dining roomSee page 10.<lb/>
Pirates' previous sluggishness diminish-<lb/>
es See page 10.<lb/>
New chairman for ECU Department of<lb/>
GeologySee page 3.<lb/>
By KAY WILLIAMS<lb/>
Staff Writer a<lb/>
A new genre in child-<lb/>
ren's literature may be the<lb/>
best birth control method<lb/>
since the pill, according to<lb/>
Janice Faulkner, associate<lb/>
professor of English at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Faulkner read a paper<lb/>
on 20 children's books,<lb/>
which she studied, to a<lb/>
group of 14 at a meeting of<lb/>
Sigma Tau Delta, the Eng-<lb/>
lish Honor Society.<lb/>
Mrs. Faulkner first read<lb/>
the paper, "Affectionate<lb/>
Illusion to the Contrary.<lb/>
Children are not Nice<lb/>
People at the Children's<lb/>
Literature Conference at<lb/>
ECU in April, 1978<lb/>
The danger in the books<lb/>
Mrs. Faulkner studied is<lb/>
their power to diminish<lb/>
children as people.<lb/>
Aooording to Mrs.<lb/>
Faulkner, "If these haras-<lb/>
sed and tormented little<lb/>
persons are typical exam-<lb/>
ples of contemporary child-<lb/>
ren, then I concede an<lb/>
idealistic ignorance of child<lb/>
-hood<lb/>
Reading the books<lb/>
made Faulkner glad she is<lb/>
no longer a child but they<lb/>
also made her . ? :e<lb/>
effect they are having<lb/>
the nme to thirteen ear .<lb/>
children who are 'eac ng<lb/>
them<lb/>
Most of the authors are<lb/>
genre of children s litera-<lb/>
ture people had better be<lb/>
aware of<lb/>
The books are hie<lb/>
recommended in some lit-<lb/>
erary circles, but Tonia<lb/>
Black. President of Sigma<lb/>
Tau Delta, said a'ter hear-<lb/>
ing about the boo s Now I<lb/>
don't want any kids<lb/>
The children in the<lb/>
books don't seem at all like<lb/>
real children as there are no<lb/>
dolls, games, songs,<lb/>
other innocent fun, accord-<lb/>
ing to Faulkner<lb/>
Bonnie Parnsh, an ECU<lb/>
student, is sad and disgust-<lb/>
ed to think that kids are<lb/>
reading these books<lb/>
All children s books writ-<lb/>
ten today are not included<lb/>
in the group Mrs. Faulkner<lb/>
finds so treacherous, but<lb/>
she said there is still a<lb/>
products of the protest era ?<lb/>
of the 1960s and, accord-<lb/>
ing to Faulkner, the unrest<lb/>
?n the 1960s caused this<lb/>
kiddie porno.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057148_0002"/><lb/>
"??? inaaru. r?i<lb/>
 ??? a J <lb/>
P?9?2 FOUMTAINHEAD 26 SwMmbv 1978<lb/>
Communion<lb/>
A servioe of Holy Com-<lb/>
munion for Episcopal stud-<lb/>
ents will be celebrated by<lb/>
chaplain Rev. Bill Hadden<lb/>
on Tues Sept. 26 at 5 p.m.<lb/>
in the chapel at the Meth-<lb/>
odist Student Center<lb/>
(across Fifth St. from Gar-<lb/>
ret Dorm).<lb/>
Supper and Bible study<lb/>
will be at 1003 E. Fifth St.<lb/>
(Yellow house in front of<lb/>
main gate ECU) at 6:30<lb/>
p.m. Tues Sept. 26.<lb/>
These programs are for<lb/>
all students interested in<lb/>
the liturgy and faith of the<lb/>
church.<lb/>
Honor council<lb/>
There will be a meeting<lb/>
of last year's Honor Council<lb/>
on Tues Sept. 26 at 7 p.m.<lb/>
in Mendenhall, room 248.<lb/>
The Interim Honor Council<lb/>
will be established at this<lb/>
meeting and will serve until<lb/>
the new Honor Council is<lb/>
screened and appointed.<lb/>
Applications are also<lb/>
being accepted in the SGA<lb/>
office for the 1978-79 Honor<lb/>
Council and Review Board.<lb/>
No previous experience is<lb/>
necessary, just a conscien-<lb/>
tious desire to serve the<lb/>
university community. The<lb/>
deadline for applications is<lb/>
Oct. 3.<lb/>
Pro-mod<lb/>
There wlH be a pre-med<lb/>
pre-dent meeting at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in 307 Flanagan.<lb/>
Tonight, Tues Sept.<lb/>
26, our program speaker is<lb/>
Dean Hayek. Ph.D direct-<lb/>
or of admissions, ECU<lb/>
Medical School. All inter-<lb/>
ested students are Wel-<lb/>
come.<lb/>
Crafts<lb/>
ESA<lb/>
Oct. 1 in the Social<lb/>
Room of Fletcher Dorm<lb/>
from 2 p.m. until 4 p.m.<lb/>
All women students at<lb/>
ECU are invited to attend to<lb/>
learn more about Epsilon<lb/>
Sigma Alpha, international<lb/>
sorority. Sponsored by<lb/>
Alpha Omega and Gamma<lb/>
Delta Chapters of ESA.<lb/>
Transportation can be<lb/>
arranged for by called<lb/>
756-4004 or 756-7098.<lb/>
Come join in the fun.<lb/>
Party<lb/>
Hat Contest Tuesday<lb/>
night, Sept. 26 at the<lb/>
El bo Room. $25 cash prize<lb/>
for most original hat. As-<lb/>
sorted door prizes. Your<lb/>
favorite beverages at re-<lb/>
duced prices. Given by the<lb/>
Sigma Nu Little Sisters.<lb/>
Register now for one of<lb/>
the crafts workshops which<lb/>
are being offered by the<lb/>
Crafts Center at Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center. Sign<lb/>
up for Beginning Dark-<lb/>
room, Basic Pottery, Floor<lb/>
Loom Weaving, Woodwork<lb/>
-ing, Quilting, Silkscreen,<lb/>
Beginning Jewelry, Con-<lb/>
temporary Basketry, Mac-<lb/>
rame, Inkle Weaving for<lb/>
Christmas or Handbuilt<lb/>
Christmas Ceramics.<lb/>
All full-time students,<lb/>
staff and faculty are eligible<lb/>
to join the Crafts Cenetr.<lb/>
Upon payment of a $10<lb/>
semester Crafts Center<lb/>
membership fee, an indiv-<lb/>
idual may register for any<lb/>
of the available workshops<lb/>
without additional charges,<lb/>
excluding costs of personal<lb/>
supplies and supplies furn-<lb/>
ished by the Crafts Center.<lb/>
Cratfs Center memb-<lb/>
ership are available during<lb/>
regular operating hours, 3<lb/>
p.m. until 10 p.m Mon.<lb/>
through Frl and 10 a.m.<lb/>
until 3 p.m. Sat. The last<lb/>
day to register for fall<lb/>
semester workshops is Sat<lb/>
Sept. 30 Persons must<lb/>
register at the Crafts Cent-<lb/>
er and class space is<lb/>
limited. Also, no refunds<lb/>
will be made after the<lb/>
workshop registeration<lb/>
deadline.<lb/>
KX-830 Stereo Cassette Deck<lb/>
with Dolby<lb/>
?Doiby is the trademark y Dolby Laboratories Inc<lb/>
$ KENWOOD<lb/>
KR-5030 AMFM-Stereo Receiver<lb/>
60 Watts per Channel Min RMS at 8 ohms,<lb/>
20-20.000 Hz. with no more than 0.1 total harmonic distortion<lb/>
KENWOOD<lb/>
KT-5500 AMFM-Stereo Tuner<lb/>
KA-5700 Integrated Stereo Amplifier<lb/>
40 Watts per Channel Mm RMS into 8 ohms<lb/>
from 20 ? 20 000 H wth no more than 0 04? total harmony distortion<lb/>
9tt4f<lb/>
PAIR ELECTRONICS<lb/>
Whzxz Sevjice. Come,<lb/>
STORE HOURS<lb/>
8:30-5:30 WEEKDAYS 8:30-12:30 SATURDAY<lb/>
ON THE SPOT FINANCING AVAILABLE<lb/>
?<lb/>
$ KENWOOD<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Psi-Chi<lb/>
Applications for .mem-<lb/>
bership for Psi Chi, the<lb/>
national honor society in<lb/>
psychology, are now being<lb/>
accepted till Sept. 27.<lb/>
Requirements are that<lb/>
you must be a psychology<lb/>
major or minor, be in the<lb/>
top 35 percent of your class,<lb/>
and have a minumum of<lb/>
eight semester hours in<lb/>
psychology.<lb/>
Applications can be<lb/>
found in the psychology<lb/>
departmental office, and<lb/>
should be turned in to the<lb/>
Psi Chi mailbox as soon as<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
REBEL show<lb/>
The Fourth Annual<lb/>
REBEL Art Show will be<lb/>
Oct. 22-28 in Mendenhall<lb/>
Gallery. Students interest-<lb/>
ed in entering their work<lb/>
must register by 4 p.m. on<lb/>
Wed Oct. 11.<lb/>
No exceptions will be<lb/>
made to this deadline.<lb/>
Unregistered work cannot<lb/>
be hung in the gallery.<lb/>
Details, rules, and registra-<lb/>
tion sheets are available at<lb/>
the REBEL office in the<lb/>
Publications Center or at<lb/>
the Mendenhall Informa-<lb/>
tion Desk.<lb/>
The show is open to all<lb/>
ECU students.<lb/>
Law society<lb/>
The ECU Law Society<lb/>
will hold its organizational<lb/>
meeting on Tues Sept. 26<lb/>
at 7 p.m. in the Multipur-<lb/>
pose Center. All interested<lb/>
persons are invited to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Ski trips<lb/>
Two more trips avail-<lb/>
able<lb/>
Beech Mountain, Ban-<lb/>
ner Elk, N.C Jan. 1-5,<lb/>
includes four sessions of<lb/>
skiing and instruction with<lb/>
all equipment included:<lb/>
boots, skis, and poles, lift<lb/>
fees, and lodging for four<lb/>
nights on slope.<lb/>
Snow Show, West Vir-<lb/>
ginia, march 4-9, includes<lb/>
skiing and ski instruction<lb/>
with all equipment includ-<lb/>
ed: boots, skis, poles, lift<lb/>
fees, and lodging for five<lb/>
nights on slope.<lb/>
All participants must<lb/>
attemd the meeting on<lb/>
ThursOct. 12at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
in 142-143 Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum.<lb/>
For further information,<lb/>
call Jo Saunders at Mem-<lb/>
orial Gym, 757-6000.<lb/>
Holidays<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
Whether you'd like to<lb/>
polish up your game with<lb/>
some steady practice or<lb/>
invite three friends along<lb/>
for some friendly competi-<lb/>
tion, you can rent a bowling<lb/>
lane to use for one hour and<lb/>
it only costs $3. Lane<lb/>
rentals are available at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Bowling Center every Sat-<lb/>
urday from Noon until 6<lb/>
p.m. Stop by and try it out;<lb/>
it's a great way to spend an<lb/>
hour.<lb/>
Any student, staff, or<lb/>
faculty member needing<lb/>
information or transportat-<lb/>
ion to attend servioes for<lb/>
the upcoming Jewish holi-<lb/>
days (Rosh Hashannah and<lb/>
Yom Kippur) please contact<lb/>
Paul Breitman (757-6611 or<lb/>
756-1054) or Danny Jacob-<lb/>
sen (758-1171 or 756-4121).<lb/>
Discount day<lb/>
Check out 'Discount<lb/>
Day' at the Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center recreation<lb/>
area. Every Monday after-<lb/>
noon from 2 p.m. until 5<lb/>
p.m. bowling, table tennis,<lb/>
and billiard prices are one<lb/>
third off. Bring a friend,<lb/>
catch the savings, and have<lb/>
some fun.<lb/>
Lecture<lb/>
C.W. Kern, Program<lb/>
Officer for Quantum Chem-<lb/>
istry National Science<lb/>
Foundation of Washington<lb/>
D.C will present a sem-<lb/>
inar on "Theoretical Stud-<lb/>
ies of Hydrogen Bonding<lb/>
Between DNA Base Pairs<lb/>
on Sept. 29 at 2 p.m. in Rm.<lb/>
201 of Flanagan Bldg.<lb/>
Refreshments will be<lb/>
served in the conference<lb/>
room.<lb/>
Nillel<lb/>
Fencing<lb/>
IVGF<lb/>
"What is the Christian<lb/>
Student?' Come to Inter-<lb/>
Varsity Christian Fellow-<lb/>
ship Wednesday night at 7<lb/>
p.m. in Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center, room 221, and<lb/>
find out.<lb/>
For those seriously in-<lb/>
terested, the Fencing Club<lb/>
will have its first meeting<lb/>
for this year at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Wed Sept. 27. We will<lb/>
meet in the lobby of<lb/>
Memorial Gym.<lb/>
Phi Alpha<lb/>
Phi Alpha Theta, his-<lb/>
tory honor society will meet<lb/>
Tues Sept. 26, at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in the Richard C. Todd<lb/>
Room in Brewster Bldg.<lb/>
Plans for the fail picnic<lb/>
will be finalized. All mem-<lb/>
bers are strongly urged to<lb/>
attend. All other interested<lb/>
history majors or minors<lb/>
are also invited to attend or<lb/>
you may come by the<lb/>
history office (Brewster A-<lb/>
316) and leave your name if<lb/>
you are considering joining<lb/>
this organization.<lb/>
Attention Jewish stud-<lb/>
ents: Hillel, the Jewish<lb/>
student organization, is<lb/>
starting a new school year<lb/>
with a variety of activities.<lb/>
All those interested please<lb/>
call Dr. Resnik at 756-5640<lb/>
so that we can place you on<lb/>
our mailing list.<lb/>
F6SF<lb/>
Is your life based on<lb/>
something eternally solid:<lb/>
Did you know that the Bible<lb/>
is relevant to your life?<lb/>
Did you know that you<lb/>
can know the Author of the<lb/>
Bible and he will teach you<lb/>
how it applies to you and<lb/>
then you will really be free?<lb/>
Free from what?<lb/>
Jesus offers you free-<lb/>
dom from guilt, shame,<lb/>
loneliness, insecurity,<lb/>
fears, sickness, poverty and<lb/>
eternal damnation. How<lb/>
can you find out about this<lb/>
freedom?<lb/>
Come to a Fuii Gospel<lb/>
Student Fellowship Bible<lb/>
Study, Thurs Sept. 28 in<lb/>
Mendenhall 221, at 7:30<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
' the body shoppe<lb/>
located on the corner of<lb/>
14th St. and Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
for the figure and fitness-minded woman<lb/>
 organized group exercise<lb/>
 individualized conditioning program<lb/>
?? exercise apparel available<lb/>
Manager: Theresa Holley, B.S. Health<lb/>
and P.E. ECU Phone 758-7564<lb/>
Student specials for limited time<lb/>
JVt<lb/>
'tw<lb/>
PJUAD?jrjQU?<lb/>
SLetionof tPCaiUxcviftto Cftoou. fiom<lb/>
JlamA. Voama.<lb/>
CkiUtmoi Qvuunn?s.<lb/>
&amp;towu.<lb/>
cMon. &amp; 4lW ItOO to 8.00,<lb/>
Jum C7Xat. 'DxL iLOO to 6:00 ? UOO to 4.00<lb/>
K8 CW. KXk Sbuzt (ceoAifom th. cMappy Stou.j<lb/>
752-OTti<lb/>
"Jjflam do<lb/>
lean do<lb/>
msuiiii<lb/>
Outward Bound is a<lb/>
high-adventure trip into the<lb/>
wilderness.<lb/>
And a lot more.<lb/>
It's a trip that shows vou what<lb/>
you're made of. For the first time<lb/>
in your life you confront vourself<lb/>
face-to-face. You learn vou can do<lb/>
anything you really want to do.<lb/>
All this takes just three weeks.<lb/>
But the self-confidence vou learn<lb/>
might just last you a lifetime.<lb/>
Send me full information.<lb/>
Name<lb/>
St reel<lb/>
Tournaments<lb/>
The ACU-I 1978 All-<lb/>
Campus Recreational<lb/>
Tournaments sponsored by<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
will be held this semester<lb/>
beginning Oct. 9. Events<lb/>
will include bowling, bil-<lb/>
liards, table tennis, back-<lb/>
gammon, and chess.<lb/>
If participation is suf-<lb/>
ficient, the winner in each<lb/>
division will participate in<lb/>
the Association of College<lb/>
Unions- International face<lb/>
to-face regional tournament<lb/>
in Knoxville. Tennessee or<lb/>
Feb. 8, 9, and 10, with all<lb/>
expenses being paid by<lb/>
Mendenhali Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
All full-time under-<lb/>
graduate or graduate stud-<lb/>
ents of ECU are eligible to<lb/>
participate. Day and dorm<lb/>
student preliminary tour-<lb/>
naments will be held in<lb/>
October to select partici-<lb/>
pants to compete in the<lb/>
All-Campus Tournaments<lb/>
to be held in November.<lb/>
Complete tournament<lb/>
information for each event<lb/>
is available at the Billiards<lb/>
and Bowling Centers at<lb/>
Mendenhall. All partici-<lb/>
pants must register by the<lb/>
deadline established for<lb/>
each tournament.<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
"Red Pin Bowling" is<lb/>
held every Sunday evening<lb/>
from 7 p.m. until 10 p.m. at<lb/>
the Bowling Center at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Cent-<lb/>
er. If you can make a strike<lb/>
when the red pin is the<lb/>
head pin, you win one free<lb/>
game. It's that simple<lb/>
Come over and try it out<lb/>
this Sunday. It could be<lb/>
your lucky day!<lb/>
SU Films<lb/>
This week's Student<lb/>
Union Free Flick is the<lb/>
filmization of Joan Didion's<lb/>
bestseller Play It As It<lb/>
Lays. The film will be<lb/>
shown Friday and Saturday<lb/>
night at 7 and 9 p.m. in the<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre located in<lb/>
the Mpndenhall Student<lb/>
Center. There will be a<lb/>
Films Committee meeting<lb/>
this Thursday at 4 p.m. in<lb/>
the committee office on the<lb/>
second floor of Menden-<lb/>
hall. Films for Homecom-<lb/>
ing will be discussed. All<lb/>
committee members must<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Citv<lb/>
State<lb/>
School<lb/>
Phone<lb/>
Zip<lb/>
? Check ihc nrnmrti that min.M .?u<lb/>
Can.Hnc tWn ,V,H.cllll,in<lb/>
While water W.lcicrn<lb/>
?'?!?? bck,Mk?,c<lb/>
?? Mountauu.nnu<lb/>
Outward liund I) x<lb/>
165 VV 1'ut 11.1111 A<lb/>
CnimuhT06h;U)<lb/>
I'honc toll ire, IK001 243?H.iao<lb/>
?0 c.vprncr.rr UrmtMH<lb/>
"rTj T"1 ? " ?<lb/>
onom u rnd "???? or?W<lb/>
?MMMiifa moifiWc<lb/>
IQutward Bound<lb/>
1 The courar truiTJfrAJdf<lb/>
NEEDED: a responsible<lb/>
female roommate to share a<lb/>
2 bdrm. apt. Coll 758-5794<lb/>
and ask for Polly or Lisa.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE: to<lb/>
share apt. at aaatbrook. $55<lb/>
plus utilities. Call<lb/>
WANTED TO BUY t Fender<lb/>
guitar amp. Also import<lb/>
an bootleg tp'a by<lb/>
Rolling Stories. 752-8132.<lb/>
FOR SALE: AKC register-<lb/>
ad Iriart Setter puppies<lb/>
from champ show and<lb/>
hunting stock. 12 weeks<lb/>
old. Adorable! 758-3326.<lb/>
stock. 1;<lb/>
?bie! 7SC<lb/>
FOR SALE: Hofner<lb/>
"Beatle" baas guitar in<lb/>
perfect shape. Purchased in<lb/>
1962. $400 or will consider<lb/>
offer, call 524-5027 after 4<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
i<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
<lb/>
aWar(KmiWlHiitia?tfTHt.i Mli!?aWiMBi?wr?n Lit yin-wMbi ?.???4<lb/>
personal<lb/>
WANTED: e<lb/>
part-time photographer for<lb/>
too mag?lne Must have<lb/>
??? ?qulpmem ant do top<lb/>
W?ty grn. Raph t<lb/>
Hoittall?gjtffla, p @ <lb/>
?? ntaw Barn MX. 26560<lb/>
WANTCO SURFERS I<lb/>
??? m Tsa-sajjk<lb/>
u???o?iin??M??ii ??????<lb/>
<pb facs="00057148_0003"/><lb/>
28 S?pfmbf 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
Writers needed for NEWS<lb/>
Call 757-6366<lb/>
Li. BRINGS AN end to weekend beach excursions, and forces students to start studying.<lb/>
Dr. Gale Billings<lb/>
Geology chairman named<lb/>
ECU NewsBureau<lb/>
Or Gale Billings,<lb/>
former djr.<lb/>
ector of Continental Oil<lb/>
Company's Environmental<lb/>
and Regulatory Affairs div-<lb/>
ision, had joined the East<lb/>
Carolina University faculty,<lb/>
as professor and chairman<lb/>
of the ECU Department of<lb/>
Geology<lb/>
Dr. Billings' career has<lb/>
also included teaching po-<lb/>
sitions at the University of<lb/>
Calgary. Canada. Louisiana<lb/>
State University and the<lb/>
New Mexico Institute of<lb/>
V ning and Technology.<lb/>
He has been involved in<lb/>
research and administra-<lb/>
tor Shell Research and<lb/>
Development Cc, Sinclair<lb/>
Oil and Gas Co and<lb/>
Science and Engineering<lb/>
Resources. Inc.<lb/>
In addition. Billings has<lb/>
been an associate editor of<lb/>
the journal Chemical Geo-<lb/>
logy and has worked in<lb/>
isory or consultant po-<lb/>
tions with the New Mex-<lb/>
and Louisiana Water<lb/>
Resources Research Insti-<lb/>
tutes, the American Geo-<lb/>
logical Institute, the U.S.<lb/>
Environmental Protection<lb/>
Agency, the Western In-<lb/>
terstate Nuclear Board, and<lb/>
several major industries<lb/>
and municipalities<lb/>
Billings holds degrees<lb/>
from Oklahoma State and<lb/>
Rice Universities and is the<lb/>
author or co-author of more<lb/>
than 85 publications and<lb/>
research reports.<lb/>
As head of the ECU<lb/>
geology department, Bil-<lb/>
lings succeeds Dr. Michael<lb/>
O'Connor, who resigned<lb/>
the departmental chair-<lb/>
manship to return to full-<lb/>
time teaching and research.<lb/>
- . &amp;.<lb/>
<lb/>
ggtchellHair Styling<lb/>
x-v T Pirt Plza Shoppi<lb/>
-TCrecnv.llr Norfl<lb/>
ppmg Center<lb/>
h Carolina 17H14<lb/>
?' h &amp;k 756 2950<lb/>
Permanents<lb/>
regular price $35.00<lb/>
Now only $17.50<lb/>
including uni-perm<lb/>
Offer good each Wednesday through Oct. 254978<lb/>
GET IT ALL<lb/>
WE'VE GOT A LOT OF JBL<lb/>
FOR NOT A LOT OF MONEY.<lb/>
loudspeakers you can buy. need only 10 watts RMS new 140 Its a lot of loud<lb/>
Every sound is clean per channel to drive it. speaker for<lb/>
Clear Accurate And And it has tremendous the money<lb/>
PAIR ELECTRONICS<lb/>
WUxn Se.hjIc?. Corner 9tfcii<lb/>
ON THE SPOT FINANCING AVAILABLE<lb/>
STORE HOURS 8:30-6:30 WEEKDAYS 8:30-12:30 SATURDAY<lb/>
Foil Festival of Hits<lb/>
On Sole September'26 - October 5<lb/>
Greenville's Most Complete Record and Tope Store<lb/>
feotures the following new releoses<lb/>
I&amp;&amp;S<lb/>
HEART<lb/>
DOG 8, BUTTERFLY<lb/>
S' r ? M,g- " ? r . .ir- i re<lb/>
LITTLE RIVER BAND<lb/>
Sleeper Catcher<lb/>
CHANELO'S<lb/>
Pizza SI Spaghetti<lb/>
House<lb/>
Tuesday Night<lb/>
Spaghetti Special<lb/>
Large plate of Spaghetti<lb/>
with Garlic Bread<lb/>
$1.49<lb/>
7587400<lb/>
507 E. 14th Street<lb/>
Greenville, N.e. 27834<lb/>
TARNTY SPENCER BAND<lb/>
THREE'S A CROWD<lb/>
&amp; r<lb/>
$4.99<lb/>
ASHFORD 8. SIMPSON<lb/>
Is It Still Good lb Y?<lb/>
Irx ludes It Sterns To Hrw On<lb/>
Aim It A Shame<lb/>
Get Up And Do Something<lb/>
The Del Is Settled<lb/>
Topes<lb/>
 -<lb/>
THE WHO<lb/>
WHO ARE YOU<lb/>
memoes orocNaiiegiance mro ou<lb/>
wrc Savs a unn Band Can t PUv (ftx'<lb/>
JACKSOM BROWME<lb/>
Rl NNIMI ON 1 MPTY<lb/>
CHUCK MANGIONE<lb/>
Children of Sanchez<lb/>
ALL B?ST S?LL?RS<lb/>
s6.98 List - s3.99<lb/>
s7.98 List - $4.99 <lb/>
$8.49<lb/>
IP &amp; Tope<lb/>
3000 8 Track 61 Cassette Tapes<lb/>
All Corry o One Vcor Tope gugrontcc!<lb/>
UJ? SP?Cim ORDCR<lb/>
Classical Label Sate<lb/>
Columbio Mclstcruuorks &amp; Odyssey a<lb/>
?Pfe RECORDS ft TAPli m ?Mfe<lb/>
Record Bar<lb/>
SOUNDS DELICIOUS<lb/>
Pitt PIqzq<lb/>
t<lb/>
 -<lb/>
? -<lb/>
-<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057148_0004"/><lb/>
c<lb/>
r<lb/>
e<lb/>
c<lb/>
c<lb/>
i<lb/>
c<lb/>
(<lb/>
r<lb/>
r<lb/>
I<lb/>
c<lb/>
t<lb/>
(<lb/>
I<lb/>
'Biased9 editorials<lb/>
Webster's New World Dictionary defines<lb/>
"editorial" as an article in a newspaper, etc<lb/>
explicitly stating opinions of the editor or<lb/>
publisher That's all it is, a statement of<lb/>
opinion. In FOUNTAINHEAD's case, all<lb/>
editorials are written by the editor, and<lb/>
therefore carry no byline. Many students,<lb/>
however, have somehow gotten the impression<lb/>
that editorials should be impartial and<lb/>
objective, and so we are constantly getting<lb/>
letters complaining of "biased" editorials.<lb/>
The fact is, "biased editorial" is a<lb/>
redundant phrase, since any opinion favors<lb/>
one side of a question. An editorial should be<lb/>
fair to both sides of an issue, but it has no<lb/>
obligation to remain nonpartisan.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD editorials always<lb/>
appear in the upper left hand corner of page<lb/>
four, the "Editorials and Opinions" page.<lb/>
They are also printed in a larger type size and<lb/>
a different typeface from other copy in the<lb/>
paper.<lb/>
The type, the page, and the position on the<lb/>
page all serve to clearly identify the editorial<lb/>
as the opinion of the editor.<lb/>
The other articles on the page are<lb/>
identified as opinion because they are on the<lb/>
Editorials and Opinions" page. The opinions<lb/>
of our readers, through letters to the editor,<lb/>
are grouped under the heading "Forum" and<lb/>
each letter is signed by the author. Names are<lb/>
withheld only in cases where the nature of the<lb/>
letter would subject the author to ridicule or<lb/>
ostracization, such as homosexuality or drug<lb/>
abuse, and only when requested by the author.<lb/>
Letters are edited for brevity, libel,<lb/>
obscenity, and journalistic style, not to censor<lb/>
opinion. The free flow of ideas in a public<lb/>
forum is essential in helping our readers form<lb/>
opinions on current issues. As John Milton<lb/>
wrote in Areopagitica, "Let . . . (truth) and<lb/>
falsehood grapple; who ever knew truth put to<lb/>
the worse, in a free and open encounter?"<lb/>
Throughout history, editorials have been<lb/>
the shapers of public opinion, the crusaders<lb/>
for reform. They have made their authors both<lb/>
heroes and scoundrels, and many an editor has<lb/>
found himself swiftly demoted from saint to<lb/>
sinner after printing an unpopular editorial.<lb/>
We do not pretend to wield such influence<lb/>
here at ECU. We merely seek to offer<lb/>
comment, criticism, and suggestion on those<lb/>
issues we feel are in the public interest.<lb/>
Readers should keep that fact in mind, that<lb/>
editorials are one person's opinion, and they<lb/>
should not hesitate to write letters rebutting<lb/>
that opinion. But please, don't complain about<lb/>
a biased editorial. Such letters, like this<lb/>
editorial, state the obvious.<lb/>
Commentary<lb/>
Sexual harassment by teachers is<lb/>
common on many campuses<lb/>
HESTER PETTY<lb/>
Uppity Women of<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
This article will deal<lb/>
only with the sexual har-<lb/>
assment of female students<lb/>
by male teachers as the<lb/>
sexual harassment of male<lb/>
students appears to be a<lb/>
less significant occurence.<lb/>
Material for this article<lb/>
was obtained from a paper<lb/>
about sexual harassment<lb/>
written by the Project on<lb/>
the Status and Education of<lb/>
Women, Association of A<lb/>
mencan Colleges, 1818 R.<lb/>
Street. NW, Washington,<lb/>
D.C. 20009<lb/>
? A Yale undergradu-<lb/>
ate recently charged her<lb/>
political science professor<lb/>
with sexual harassment,<lb/>
alleging that he offered he<lb/>
an "A" in exchange for<lb/>
sexual favors. She refused,<lb/>
received a "C" in the<lb/>
course, and has since filed<lb/>
a lawsuit against the uni-<lb/>
versity.<lb/>
?A senior communi-<lb/>
cations major at a state<lb/>
university in California<lb/>
testified before the Calif-<lb/>
ornia State Legislature in<lb/>
1973 that she knew of "at<lb/>
least 15 professors who<lb/>
offered students 'A's for<lb/>
sex<lb/>
WHATISSEXUAL<lb/>
HARASSMENT?<lb/>
Sexual harassment in<lb/>
the classroom ranges form<lb/>
inappropriately timed sex-<lb/>
ual inuedos to coerced<lb/>
sexual relations. It is dif-<lb/>
ferent that "acceptable"<lb/>
flirting or a "freely cho-<lb/>
sen" relationship between<lb/>
teacher and student al-<lb/>
though considering the<lb/>
power that the teacher has<lb/>
over a student's grades,<lb/>
one has to wonder if a<lb/>
sexual relationship of this<lb/>
kind can ever be"freely<lb/>
chosen<lb/>
Sexual harassment may<lb/>
include verbal harassment<lb/>
or abuse; subtle pressure<lb/>
for sexual activity; sexist<lb/>
remarks about a woman's<lb/>
clothing, body or sexual<lb/>
activities; unnecessary<lb/>
touching, patting or pin-<lb/>
ching ; leering or ogling of a<lb/>
woman's body; constant<lb/>
brushing against a wo-<lb/>
man's body; demanding<lb/>
sexual favors accompanied<lb/>
by implied or overt threats<lb/>
concerning one's grades,<lb/>
letters of recommendation;<lb/>
physical assault, etc.<lb/>
HOW WIDESPREAD<lb/>
ISIT?<lb/>
Recent surveys all in-<lb/>
dicate that sexual harass-<lb/>
ment by teachers is not<lb/>
confined to a few excep-<lb/>
tions but rather that it is a<lb/>
fairly common problem on<lb/>
many campuses.<lb/>
WHY ARE WOMEN<lb/>
RELUCTANT TO TALK<lb/>
ABOUTIT?<lb/>
The most common rea-<lb/>
sons given for not reporting<lb/>
incidents of sexual har-<lb/>
assment are: the woman<lb/>
believed nothing would be<lb/>
done; she believed the<lb/>
incident would be treated<lb/>
lightly or ridiculed; or she<lb/>
tnougnt that she would be<lb/>
blamed or suffer reper-<lb/>
cussions.<lb/>
As with rape, the wo-<lb/>
man is made to feel re-<lb/>
sponsible for the actions of<lb/>
the male aggressor. In a<lb/>
sexual harassment situa-<lb/>
tion, the woman may feel<lb/>
that it was her fault that her<lb/>
outgoing personality was<lb/>
"misinterpreted" by her<lb/>
professor, or her talka-<lb/>
tiveness, or her cuteness,<lb/>
etc.<lb/>
And it generally being a<lb/>
case of her word against<lb/>
his, who would take the<lb/>
word of a young, seductive<lb/>
daughter of Eve The Tem-<lb/>
ptress over that of a kindly,<lb/>
wise and venerable, (pos-<lb/>
sibly even tenured) prof-<lb/>
essor?<lb/>
Most colleges do not<lb/>
have a grievance procedure<lb/>
designed to handle cases of<lb/>
sexual harassment. This<lb/>
leaves a woman isolated,<lb/>
with no real method of<lb/>
recourse, and with no sol-<lb/>
ution to a problem that can<lb/>
not only damage her learn-<lb/>
ing experince in college but<lb/>
the learning experiences of<lb/>
other women as well. For if<lb/>
this problem is allowed to<lb/>
exist unchecked, it will<lb/>
create an atmosphere of<lb/>
suspicion' which will pro-<lb/>
hibit dose studentteacher<lb/>
involvement in the learning<lb/>
process.<lb/>
IS<lb/>
SEXUAL HARASSMENT<lb/>
BY TEACHERS<lb/>
DIFFERENT THAN<lb/>
SEXUAL HARASSMENT<lb/>
BY PEERS?<lb/>
Yes. When a woman is<lb/>
verbally abused or propo-<lb/>
sitioned by a male peer she<lb/>
is free to react in any<lb/>
manner she chooses. Her<lb/>
response will only affect<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over 50 years<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Doug White<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER<lb/>
Leigh Coakley<lb/>
TRENDS EDITOR<lb/>
Steve Bachner<lb/>
NEWS EDITORS<lb/>
Julie Everette<lb/>
Ricki Qliarmis<lb/>
ADVERTISING MANAGER<lb/>
Robert M. Swalm<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
Sam Rogers<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student newspaper of<lb/>
Carolina University sponsored by the Media Board of ECU<lb/>
and is distributed each Tuesday and Thursday (weekly<lb/>
during the summer).<lb/>
Mailing address: Old South Building, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
27034<lb/>
Editorial offices: 757-6306, 757-6367, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10 annually, alumni 16 annually.<lb/>
that particular male's opin-<lb/>
ion of her and nothing else.<lb/>
When she is harassed or<lb/>
propositioned by a male<lb/>
teacher she is conscious of<lb/>
the fact that her response<lb/>
could affect her grades and<lb/>
even her future career. In<lb/>
other words, the teacher<lb/>
has an unfair amount of<lb/>
power over her response.<lb/>
DOES ECU HAVE A<lb/>
SEXUAL HARASSMENT<lb/>
PROBLEM?<lb/>
I don't know. But I think<lb/>
it is important that we find<lb/>
out. Therefore I have writ-<lb/>
ten a questionnaire that I<lb/>
hope will be answered by<lb/>
all those women who come<lb/>
across it, whether they<lb/>
have experienced sexual<lb/>
harassment at ECU or not.<lb/>
If sexual harassment exists<lb/>
here, it should be exposed<lb/>
so that it can be dealt<lb/>
with.<lb/>
SEXUA L HA RASSMENT<lb/>
IN THE<lb/>
ECU CLASSROOM:<lb/>
A Questionnaire For<lb/>
Women Students<lb/>
Instructions: Put an X or<lb/>
in the slot that follows the<lb/>
appropriate answer. If<lb/>
parts of a question don't<lb/>
apply, leave that answer<lb/>
blank. Some questions call<lb/>
for a written response<lb/>
These questions are mar-<lb/>
ked with a and space has<lb/>
been provided for that<lb/>
response.<lb/>
1a. Have you ever had a<lb/>
male ECU teacher who<lb/>
made lewd andor sexist<lb/>
jokes or remarks during<lb/>
class? YES D NO D<lb/>
b. How often did he do<lb/>
this? ONCE D A FEW<lb/>
TIMES D FREQUENTLY<lb/>
D<lb/>
c. Did these remarks<lb/>
make you fael uncomfor-<lb/>
table or angry? YES D NO<lb/>
n<lb/>
d. Have you ever drop-<lb/>
ped a couse because of a<lb/>
teacher's lewd andor sex-<lb/>
ist remarks?<lb/>
YES D NO D<lb/>
e. Did you complain<lb/>
about this behavior to any-<lb/>
one who was in the position<lb/>
to correct the teacher's<lb/>
behavior (a Dean or other<lb/>
ECU official)? YES D NO<lb/>
D<lb/>
f. If you did complain to<lb/>
higher-ups, do you feel that<lb/>
your complaint wee acted<lb/>
upon? YESNOD<lb/>
2a. Have you ever had a<lb/>
male ECU teacher touch,<lb/>
See SEX p. 9<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
'Yes, we give a damn about our annuaV<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
In reply to the article<lb/>
"The BUC: who cares?" :<lb/>
Who in the hell do you<lb/>
think cares? Obviously no<lb/>
one, as your article pointed<lb/>
out. Just becasue you<lb/>
haven't received any letters<lb/>
from concerned students<lb/>
pertaining to the BUC; do<lb/>
you think you are justified<lb/>
to assume that no one<lb/>
cares?<lb/>
Students pay fees to go<lb/>
to school and receive free<lb/>
medical service, free adm-<lb/>
ssion to athletic events and<lb/>
other university functions. I<lb/>
believe they have a right to<lb/>
expect a BUC in with the<lb/>
deal.<lb/>
But for the past two<lb/>
years there has been no<lb/>
BUC. Don't bother to ex-<lb/>
plain to me why, I've heard<lb/>
it a thousand times and I'm<lb/>
sick and tired of hearing<lb/>
explanations! Why don't I<lb/>
see any action?<lb/>
There's nothing the av-<lb/>
erage college student can<lb/>
do but sit back and hope<lb/>
some people get their shit<lb/>
together so I may at least<lb/>
receive on BUC before I<lb/>
graduate.<lb/>
Is that asking too much?<lb/>
I don't think so!<lb/>
This is a large univer-<lb/>
sity and there's no reason<lb/>
whysufficient funds cannot<lb/>
by appropriated to the<lb/>
BUC. They've done it in the<lb/>
past, right?<lb/>
I don't want to hear<lb/>
anymore about students not<lb/>
caring about the BUC.<lb/>
W hat do you want us to do -<lb/>
go on the streets and raise<lb/>
money for it ourselves;<lb/>
when it's rightfullyous in<lb/>
the first place?<lb/>
So if you ask yourself<lb/>
whether or not the student<lb/>
body as a whole really<lb/>
gives a damn about the<lb/>
annual - here's your<lb/>
answer.<lb/>
Yes, we give a damn<lb/>
about our annual; but who<lb/>
screwed up the production<lb/>
of it in the first place!<lb/>
Concerned Students<lb/>
Rebecca M assey<lb/>
Pam L. Beck<lb/>
Lorene Roberson<lb/>
Tina Jones<lb/>
Lisa Bennett<lb/>
Cindy Rouse<lb/>
Susie Knox<lb/>
Rebecca Ash<lb/>
Betsy Johnson<lb/>
Lisa Williams<lb/>
Patty Brown<lb/>
Congratulations<lb/>
ToFOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
To John Monds:<lb/>
I hope this note will<lb/>
express my appreciation to<lb/>
you for your balanced and<lb/>
accurate article on the liab-<lb/>
ilities of police initiated tow<lb/>
services. Please let us know<lb/>
if we can help you in the<lb/>
future.<lb/>
Hugh Cox<lb/>
Police Attorney<lb/>
Crosswinds<lb/>
'Death, the final frontier'<lb/>
By JIM BARNES<lb/>
"Death-the final frontierto go where no person has<lb/>
dared to go before. This is the 12 week mission of<lb/>
"Thanatos the new television program designed to<lb/>
explore death in all of its manifestations and symbolic<lb/>
content for the living<lb/>
The start of a new television show this fall? If it were,<lb/>
would you watch it? Or would it be in (God forbid) "bad<lb/>
taste" or even downright "kinky"? Not to sound a<lb/>
too-cheerful note, but our society is badly in need of some<lb/>
measure to erode the mysticism surrounding death - the<lb/>
one taboo which has a strangehold on our American society.<lb/>
Our attitude toward death is, for lack of a better word,<lb/>
unhealthy. That is to say that the way we view death (as<lb/>
seldom and cosmetically as possible) strongly affects the<lb/>
way we look at life (each day spent 'cheating the reaper' or<lb/>
worse, spent languishing in the naive assumption that 'I<lb/>
won't die' or 'I've got till 70 or 75').<lb/>
It is frankly quite repulsive for some people to consider<lb/>
death, whether their own or that of someone else. I<lb/>
remember the case of a sportscaster who was very popular<lb/>
in North Carolina prior to his moving to Pittsburgh some<lb/>
years back. It seemed that when Sports Illustrated did a<lb/>
story on him, the magazine ran a photo of the announcer in<lb/>
repose in a coffin. The picture hangs over the announcer's<lb/>
desk to remind him, as it was toid, of the way of all ends up.<lb/>
It was in bad taste, many averred to have had such a<lb/>
picture of oneself in a coffin. Why? I should think such a<lb/>
straightforward attitude concerning physical death<lb/>
ie purveyed under the protective umbrella of faith. All we<lb/>
know for certain about death is that the physical body<lb/>
ceases to function.<lb/>
But we can no longer proceed with the above as a<lb/>
definition of death. What about the human vegetables<lb/>
looked up to machines, an existence which is neither<lb/>
hopeful nor dignified? Does life stop with oessation of brain<lb/>
or cardiac activity?<lb/>
I have no answer to these and other weighty questions<lb/>
concerning death, or at least not why I would care to push<lb/>
off on anyone else, i feel that death shouldbe considered<lb/>
existentially by each individual; what is important,<lb/>
however, is that death is beginning to see the light of day ae<lb/>
a topic worthy of our concern aa the living. There lies the<lb/>
hope.<lb/>
Some of us have the attitude of 'beat the reaper and<lb/>
would gladly aide with Ethan Allen who, at his deathbed<lb/>
when toid by his doctor that the angels ware watting said:<lb/>
"Waiting, are they? Waiting, are thay? Weil, goddam am<lb/>
let 'em wait A healthy attitude toward death is<lb/>
necessary for the proper persepctive on life. What if we<lb/>
didn't die? What happens, in the cryogenic future when<lb/>
people live to be two or three hundred years? God what a<lb/>
bore that would be.<lb/>
The fact is. death defines life. It sets the bounds and<lb/>
perspective for a limited organic existence for a given<lb/>
number of years. Without death, life would be virtually<lb/>
meaningless, for it is the ever-present spectre of death<lb/>
looming before each of us which makes valuable this<lb/>
nrMTH T? dCny d6ath' then' is to a?"??nish<lb/>
nfatLYH h ?SaWare'in a hea,th "? ?"? ones<lb/>
hfe could end at any moment, then perhaps this individual's<lb/>
melninr8 " ? ? - <lb/>
Henry Ward Beecher, the 19th century Preabvtenan<lb/>
clergyman, said on his deathbed Now come- Z<lb/>
mystery. This is another terrifying aspect of SeX he<lb/>
no rair .We WOU'd UKe to kno ? "? <lb/>
not, as a culture, understand death then we ?h.ii<lb/>
myth-make about it all for there ???!?' .<lb/>
even if it i? it ??1TV must ? something to say.<lb/>
Dr. Elizabth Kubler-Ro in k- ?<lb/>
and Dying QueTJsZ Deat 1 Z" ?"W<lb/>
much to lift the veil of Z?m?T" ?Jf has ???<lb/>
The Denial of Death, by lestILckfr T? " "?<lb/>
treatise on the subject moTtf!E?; 1  <lb/>
Kubler-Ross. The reading of theTbos ? ?, <lb/>
is becoming . requirenLt ? moSJT " "<lb/>
schools. mor " "we medical<lb/>
Traditionally, physicians have bean loath to or??w<lb/>
death in any terms other than as aTJ!li consider<lb/>
failure. The physician shoutd be J2SJL? <lb/>
concept of death in term ?f ?. comfortable with the<lb/>
are ill-trained in ZZof7.Jirry -<lb/>
-gn that the medical commity soL W??m?<lb/>
the quality of death as a viable ZJS ??ncern ????<lb/>
But rfy cannot rrrtt<lb/>
community. Each individual must oral ZL . m,icrt<lb/>
tne haze and shroud covermo 1?ZL1 ,rom "???<lb/>
be discussed opsniy SSST2? " ?? ?"?<lb/>
voice our fear, .J enJl?? ?? ?ree to<lb/>
more our society JSRSS <lb/>
Hfe, the more value lite will have JfTHH?1? <lb/>
must face M oonfront a?? ?<lb/>
 M" ? more ffHtfST <lb/>
<pb facs="00057148_0005"/><lb/>
Possible sexual harassment at ECU<lb/>
surveyed; is there a problem?<lb/>
continued trn, ? i ??<lb/>
26 Septfnbf 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Pmm S<lb/>
(conrrnued rrom p<lb/>
n PinCh ?u un-<lb/>
necessarily? YES. NO<lb/>
b How often did he do<lb/>
th's7 ONCE a<lb/>
TIMES<lb/>
? OVERT<lb/>
FEW<lb/>
FREQUENTLY<lb/>
D,d this unnecessary<lb/>
ouchmg make you uncom-<lb/>
fortable or angry? YES<lb/>
d Have you ever drop-<lb/>
ped a course because of a<lb/>
teacher s unnecessary<lb/>
touching-? YES NO<lb/>
e How did you react<lb/>
teacher touched,<lb/>
'nched you?<lb/>
lf you rebuked him for<lb/>
"?is behavior, did you sub-<lb/>
sequently notice a change.n<lb/>
?s attitude toward you7<lb/>
VES NO<lb/>
S How did this change<lb/>
manifest itself? GRADE<lb/>
A AS LOWERED HE<lb/>
??vOULDN'T RECOGNIZE<lb/>
ME IN CLASS WHEN I<lb/>
RAISED MY HAND HE<lb/>
RIDICULED ME MY AN-<lb/>
SWERS IN CLASS HE<lb/>
CALLED ON ME EXCES-<lb/>
SIVELY v HEN I HADN'T<lb/>
RAISED MY HAND . HE<lb/>
-F.ASED IE A-<lb/>
MC Nl OF UNNECES-<lb/>
TOUCHING<lb/>
. -ER<lb/>
Did you<lb/>
ab<lb/>
- A h C vS -<lb/>
e ? ne<lb/>
EC<lb/>
complain<lb/>
or to any-<lb/>
e position<lb/>
teacher s<lb/>
Dean or other<lb/>
YES NO<lb/>
ou feel that<lb/>
:omplaint was acted<lb/>
-ES NO<lb/>
Have ever had a<lb/>
ECU teacher suggest<lb/>
jemand that you engage<lb/>
?ercourse with<lb/>
? ES NO<lb/>
v as ;H is suggestion<lb/>
J accompanied by<lb/>
- d or overt threat<lb/>
? our grades,<lb/>
' re dation.<lb/>
? ES NO<lb/>
IMPLIED<lb/>
OVERTQ<lb/>
c. How often did he<lb/>
suggest or demand sexual<lb/>
intercourse? ONCE I A<lb/>
FEW TlMESa<lb/>
FREQUENTLY ?<lb/>
d. Did this suggestion<lb/>
or demand make you feel<lb/>
uncomfortable or angry?<lb/>
YES NO<lb/>
e. Have you ever drop-<lb/>
ped a course because of a<lb/>
teacher's sexual suggest-<lb/>
ions or demands? YES<lb/>
NO<lb/>
f. How did you react<lb/>
when the teacher made this<lb/>
suggestion or demand?<lb/>
g If you rebuked him<lb/>
for his behavior, did you<lb/>
subsequently notice a<lb/>
cnange in his attitude tow-<lb/>
ard you? YES<lb/>
YES NO<lb/>
h. How did this change<lb/>
manifest itself? GRADE<lb/>
WAS LOWERED HE<lb/>
WOULDN'T RECOGNIZE<lb/>
ME IN CLASS<lb/>
HE CALLED ON ME<lb/>
EXCESSIVELY WHEN I<lb/>
HADN'T RAISED MY<lb/>
HAND HE RIDICULED<lb/>
ME'MY ANSWERS IN<lb/>
CLASS HE CALLED ON<lb/>
ME EXCESSIVELY WHEN<lb/>
I HADN'T RAISED MY<lb/>
HAND HE BECAME<lb/>
MORE INSISTENT WITH<lb/>
HIS SEXUAL DEMANDS<lb/>
OTHER<lb/>
i Did you ever complain<lb/>
about his behavior to any-<lb/>
one who was in the posi-<lb/>
tion to correct his behavior?<lb/>
YES NO<lb/>
j. If so, do you feel that<lb/>
your complaint was acted<lb/>
upon7 YES J NO<lb/>
4a Have you ever had a<lb/>
male ECU teacher phy-<lb/>
sically force you to engage<lb/>
in sexual intercourse with<lb/>
himYES NO<lb/>
b Was this accompan-<lb/>
ied by an implied or overt<lb/>
threat concerning your<lb/>
grades, letters of recom-<lb/>
Patronize<lb/>
Fountain head advertisers<lb/>
Mexico i most famous ua? is Asaerica ?<lb/>
Pcmcho Villa Cequila<lb/>
Nhcmo<lb/>
?O Proof Imiwnsd m4 Witl?? by<lb/>
?M ??ncf?o Vlli? Campmr<lb/>
South mn PrwtlMa C <lb/>
far ? To?jaU? Saarts<lb/>
GREAT<lb/>
MEXICAN<lb/>
EATERY<lb/>
512 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Open 11:00 11:00<lb/>
M on. thru Thur<lb/>
Fri.Sat. 11:00 12 0<lb/>
Sun-12:00 11:00<lb/>
Tuesday Night<lb/>
Nickel Brink Night<lb/>
( with food order )<lb/>
5:00 11:00<lb/>
 Dr. Pepper, Beer, Pepsi,<lb/>
Mt-Dew, Tea, Coffee<lb/>
Free Taeo Cid Iron on Patch<lb/>
with S4.00 food order<lb/>
mendation, etc. YES I I NO<lb/>
?<lb/>
c. How often did he<lb/>
force you to engage in<lb/>
sexual intercourse? ONCE<lb/>
A FEW TIMES<lb/>
FREQUENTLY<lb/>
d. Have you ever drop-<lb/>
ped a course because of<lb/>
this? YES NO<lb/>
e. If you remained in his<lb/>
class, did his attitude to-<lb/>
wards you change and in<lb/>
what way?<lb/>
f. Did you complain<lb/>
about this behavior to any-<lb/>
one in the position to<lb/>
correct it (a Dean, ECU<lb/>
official, the police)? YES I<lb/>
NO<lb/>
g If so, do you feel that<lb/>
your complaint was acted<lb/>
upon? YES : NO<lb/>
5. If you have any<lb/>
additional comments to<lb/>
make about one of your<lb/>
answers, something that<lb/>
was not covered in the<lb/>
questions, or the question-<lb/>
naire in general please do<lb/>
so here.<lb/>
This questionnaire<lb/>
was prepared by Uppity<lb/>
Women of Greenville.<lb/>
Please cut it out and send it<lb/>
no return address or name<lb/>
needed to Hester Petty,<lb/>
P.O. Box 1373, Greenville,<lb/>
N.C , 27834. Your response<lb/>
is important.<lb/>
STUDENTSSKILLFULLY DODGE cars and bicycles as they hurry to class<lb/>
?ooo<lb/>
IN CASH PRIZES!<lb/>
io WAYS<lb/>
L TO WIN! A<lb/>
PRIZE<lb/>
WINNERS X<lb/>
YOU CAN WIN<lb/>
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12 WAYS TO MATCH &amp; WIN AT A&amp;P!<lb/>
PLUS AND ?5 INSTANT<lb/>
WINNERS CASH TICKET PRIZES!<lb/>
$275,000<lb/>
IN CASH<lb/>
PRIZES<lb/>
WINS1 ANDS5INSTANTLYWITHAS1 000 CASH CARDS TICKET OBWiwtm<lb/>
CARDS00GAOmV1,000 WTH Y0UR C0LLE0R CARDVl'aP . SOoS CA$SH<lb/>
r-rnhn- P. W ?i fh' 132 " S'0res loca,ed ,n Nor1h Carolina South<lb/>
J" "f?;? Cly. Georg,a and Washington Cly Va Th,s promot.on ,<lb/>
scheduled to end on Dec 9 1978<lb/>
?E?ZZJ'J!2 ?Pn '? emP'?'ee? ?' P H ? subsidiaries, manufacturer of<lb/>
mis game their adertnmg agencies and (am,lies of the foregoing<lb/>
'ODDS CHART EFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER 10<lb/>
Of 1<lb/>
GAME PR(S VISIT<lb/>
in 43" 500<lb/>
VISITS VI<lb/>
1 in 33 654 n<lb/>
100<lb/>
?0<lb/>
10<lb/>
5<lb/>
250<lb/>
1 500<lb/>
3 OOC<lb/>
5 000<lb/>
;<lb/>
oral<lb/>
number o'i<lb/>
pwes . ?<lb/>
1 m 70 000<lb/>
. n<lb/>
I - 5 833<lb/>
3 500<lb/>
1 m 5 384<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
44<lb/>
There are lots of reasons<lb/>
why You'll do better at A&amp;P<lb/>
SWIFTS HOSTESS<lb/>
HAM<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is re<lb/>
quired to be readily available for sale<lb/>
at or below the advertised price in<lb/>
each A&amp;P Store except as specif,<lb/>
cally noted in this ad<lb/>
Limit one with<lb/>
additional 7.50 order<lb/>
4LB. CAN<lb/>
$7.98<lb/>
U.S.D.A.INSPECTED<lb/>
FRESH<lb/>
FRYERS<lb/>
BOX-O-CHICKEN<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY SEPT 30 AT A4P IN<lb/>
ECONOMY<lb/>
JUST ARRIVED!<lb/>
TWO ALL NEW<lb/>
UNBRANDED<lb/>
PRODUCTS'<lb/>
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DOG FOOD V.V 1<lb/>
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18'jOZ<lb/>
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h ' MEDIUM EGGS<lb/>
LIMIT TWO DOZEN WtTM ADDITIONAL 7 SO ORDER<lb/>
A&amp;P picks the best fruits &amp; vegetables <lb/>
GOLDEN YELLOW<lb/>
BANANAS<lb/>
I INOURDELIDFPT I<lb/>
BUCKET OF DELICIOUS<lb/>
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LOOK FOR THE ACTION PRICE SIGNS<lb/>
THROUGHOUT YOUR A4P STORE When AP<lb/>
buyers make ? special purchase at a lower<lb/>
 price, we paes the saving on to you. That lower<lb/>
I ? C&amp;J? aB ?etton P"6 Anfl ?"?? ACTION<lb/>
PRICES are In addition to our money saving<lb/>
v weekly specials<lb/>
ALL FLAVORS<lb/>
HAWAIIAN PUNCH V? 59?<lb/>
FRANCO-AMERICAN<lb/>
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KILLOOOS SENECA<lb/>
CORN FLAKES'? 89 APPLE JUICE.u 99<lb/>
WELCH S SCOTT ARTS t FLOWERS OR COLORS<lb/>
GRAPE JELLY '? 99 TOWELS jroVl? 65e<lb/>
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PEANUT. CREAMY not<lb/>
BUTTER CRuncMv JAm<lb/>
EXTRA STRENGTH<lb/>
109 TYLENOL<lb/>
TABLETS<lb/>
1SSCT $059<lb/>
?Tt ?.<lb/>
KEN L-RATION - DOG FOOD<lb/>
TENDER CHUNKS 20,<lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA GROWN US FANCY GOLDEN OR<lb/>
-??uao?i!i88c<lb/>
$2.69<lb/>
Hygrade boiled or<lb/>
BAKED HAM (sl,ced to order<lb/>
Sandwich cut<lb/>
LS$2.49<lb/>
(sliced to order)<lb/>
SWISS CHEESE<lb/>
$1.99<lb/>
Meat or<lb/>
(sliced to order)<lb/>
BEEF BOLOGNA lb $1.29<lb/>
APPLES<lb/>
FULL OF FLAVOR<lb/>
RED RIPE<lb/>
TOMATOES lb<lb/>
Thompson Sweet<lb/>
SEEDLESS<lb/>
GRAPES LB<lb/>
PLUMP JUICY - FULL OF FLAVOR<lb/>
CRAPES<lb/>
49c<lb/>
39'<lb/>
59C<lb/>
OREER FREESTONE<lb/>
I PEACH HALVES<lb/>
T CAMPBELLS SOUP<lb/>
Chicken<lb/>
Noodtc<lb/>
2 2SOZ Si 00<lb/>
CANS I<lb/>
CHICKEN NOODLE 5-aff 'I00<lb/>
AAP COUPON<lb/>
AAP GRANULATED<lb/>
SSI SUGAR<lb/>
5<lb/>
LIMfT ONE WITH<lb/>
68?<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
!???-W1"r?? Greenville<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057148_0006"/><lb/>
Pag 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 26 S?pfmbf 1978<lb/>
(<lb/>
PAIR ELECTRONICS<lb/>
(vvn?.X?. curies<lb/>
ON THE SPOT<lb/>
FINANCING AVAILABLE<lb/>
STORE HOURS<lb/>
8:30-5:30 WEEKDAYS<lb/>
8:30-12:30 SATURDAY<lb/>
SANSUI MODEL AU-517 DC INTEGRATED STEREO AMPLIFIER<lb/>
SANSUI MODEL SC-2100 "DIRECT-O MATIC' STEREO CASSETTE DECK<lb/>
THE ECU CLASS of 1990 walks through campus, apparently unaware of the studying which lies ahead<lb/>
ECU, Latin scientists conduct<lb/>
study on nervous system cells<lb/>
By GEORGETTE HEDRICK<lb/>
ECU Medical Writer<lb/>
A dis-<lb/>
cussion at a professional<lb/>
meeting two years ago<lb/>
resulted in a meeting this<lb/>
summer between an ECU<lb/>
physiologist and a Latin<lb/>
American biophysicist who<lb/>
together studied fo the<lb/>
first time a fundamentally<lb/>
important cell of the ner-<lb/>
vous system and proved it<lb/>
was possible to examine the<lb/>
cell in other animals.<lb/>
Dr. Edward M. Liber-<lb/>
man, a professor at the<lb/>
ECU School of Medicine,<lb/>
spent three months at the<lb/>
Venezuelan Institute for<lb/>
Scientific Research colla-<lb/>
borating with Dr. Jorge<lb/>
Villegas, a professor of<lb/>
biophysics who had done<lb/>
extensive studies on var-<lb/>
ious ceils of the nervous<lb/>
system.<lb/>
For several years Lie-<lb/>
berman has been studying<lb/>
the delicate balance of<lb/>
sodium and potassium in<lb/>
nerve cells, a ration that<lb/>
must be maintained if<lb/>
nerves are to perform pro-<lb/>
perly. Villegas, on the other<lb/>
hand, has been concen-<lb/>
trating on Schwann cells<lb/>
that surround the nerve<lb/>
and are particularly sen-<lb/>
sitive to neurotransmitters.<lb/>
researchers have known<lb/>
about the existence of<lb/>
Schwannells, but Villegas'<lb/>
lab is the only one in the<lb/>
world to have studied and<lb/>
recorded the electrical ac-<lb/>
tivity of the cell, which is a<lb/>
mere one fifty-thousandth<lb/>
of an inch thick.<lb/>
Villegas, whose work<lb/>
had been done with tropical<lb/>
squid, believed the results<lb/>
of his experiments could be<lb/>
duplicated with cells from<lb/>
other animals. Lieberman<lb/>
agreed and suggested the<lb/>
use of his laboratory model,<lb/>
the crayfish.<lb/>
Using the same soph-<lb/>
isticated techniques that<lb/>
Villegas had used on squid,<lb/>
the two were able to repeat<lb/>
for the first time Villegas'<lb/>
experiments on Schwann<lb/>
cellsof the crayfish.<lb/>
Schwann cells are im-<lb/>
portant because of their<lb/>
role in maintaining the<lb/>
proper environment for<lb/>
nerve cells, the vital com-<lb/>
munication line in the body.<lb/>
Many diseases of the ner-<lb/>
vous system are associated<lb/>
with abnormal functions of<lb/>
the Schwann cells, and they<lb/>
are essential in triggering<lb/>
repairs to damaged nerves.<lb/>
Lieberman is currently<lb/>
preparing his lab to con-<lb/>
tinue the studies started<lb/>
this summer. His work will<lb/>
be funded in part by a<lb/>
two-year. $74,000 grant<lb/>
from the National Science<lb/>
Foundation.<lb/>
He and Villegas will<lb/>
continue to collaborate on<lb/>
the interactions between<lb/>
the various types of cells in<lb/>
the nervous system. And<lb/>
they plan to meet again this<lb/>
winter back where they<lb/>
started ? at a professional<lb/>
meeting where they will<lb/>
present the results of this<lb/>
summer's work to the sci-<lb/>
entific community.<lb/>
Breakfast<lb/>
front 7 a.m.<lb/>
to 11a.m.<lb/>
specializing<lb/>
in large<lb/>
country ham or sausage<lb/>
biscuits. Hot cakes. Scrambled<lb/>
eggs with country ham or<lb/>
sausage. Our 14 lb. beef<lb/>
burgers are ground from fresh<lb/>
Western Chuck. We have pure<lb/>
soft served Ice cream. Also<lb/>
serving ham and cheese,<lb/>
chicken fillets, hot dogs, chili<lb/>
and beans, french fries, apple<lb/>
turnovers, and a variety of soft<lb/>
drinks. Located on the corner<lb/>
of 5th and Reade St. and on<lb/>
Hwy. ?64 in Washington.<lb/>
V<lb/>
V<lb/>
<pb facs="00057148_0007"/><lb/>
1 L!<lb/>
W W f K,<lb/>
Art A<lb/>
26 September 1978 rOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
iood Swamp<lb/>
5all: a most<lb/>
i<lb/>
Music<lb/>
Unusual one<lb/>
word titles<lb/>
enhance sf<lb/>
Books<lb/>
'?' ? the first annual Hood Swamt<lb/>
-op Program "ready and waiting' to provide jobs<lb/>
f a ND peter Donviiie prepare<lb/>
V -e b-t department<lb/>
? of<lb/>
education whicf ?? . ??? classroom<lb/>
study with planned an ed work<lb/>
experience m va<lb/>
?<lb/>
?? led expi ? <lb/>
- erative Ed<lb/>
ffic<lb/>
- erative Ed<lb/>
' . . ? , u <lb/>
teg r at <lb/>
??-? an<lb/>
- ? nk<lb/>
S It IS<lb/>
it . - ? ? ? icat<lb/>
i ? l( . ?<lb/>
of<lb/>
i n bin<lb/>
n a tota ?? I icat<lb/>
igram<lb/>
The a<lb/>
coop can be ?<lb/>
explorat e or a<lb/>
exDei ei ?<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
? ne ? ? ?. ?<lb/>
il<lb/>
ir if teat ? .i e<lb/>
- ? ' i f f i r -<lb/>
ned ? ? are<lb/>
while otI<lb/>
ege w111 ompIe ffei<lb/>
ils in it<lb/>
. a<lb/>
??- ? the oper a 11 v Ed<lb/>
?<lb/>
i ariety I work-study<lb/>
binal<lb/>
1  ? .ement Office<lb/>
tei ship<lb/>
m state government in an<lb/>
ittempt to involve students<lb/>
in public service, to ?<lb/>
courage students to enter<lb/>
puhhc service careers, and<lb/>
to make postsecondary cur<lb/>
more meaningful<lb/>
" ampus serv ice<lb/>
learning opportunity<lb/>
As part of the N( V10.<lb/>
? , Huffman used his<lb/>
math omj liter . ?noe<lb/>
background . ung a<lb/>
computer . ? n for tl<lb/>
utilization and update of<lb/>
, a e<lb/>
gained at s<lb/>
5ee v - Of f -<lb/>
r'M - ? ? item for the<lb/>
tate Musi f Natura HiStorV<lb/>
prepares artwork for the e? hoepa"<lb/>
me<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057148_0008"/><lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 26 September 1978<lb/>
Bergman classic will be<lb/>
shown Wednesday night<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Films Committee will<lb/>
present Ingmar Bergman's<lb/>
Smiles of a Summer Night<lb/>
as a special film presenta-<lb/>
tion this Wednesday night<lb/>
at 8 p.m.<lb/>
This rollicking comedy<lb/>
is a classical exercise in the<lb/>
spicy sport of partner<lb/>
switching. At the beginning<lb/>
the men have their proud<lb/>
illusions, but before mys-<lb/>
terious midsummer's night<lb/>
is over, the women have<lb/>
their men. Bergman s<lb/>
brilliant style and structure<lb/>
here lie halfway between<lb/>
Shakespeare and the Marx<lb/>
Brothers.<lb/>
Fredrlk is a lustful<lb/>
lawyer living a platonic<lb/>
marriage with a virginal<lb/>
wife, Anne. Henrik, his son<lb/>
by his previous marriage, is<lb/>
after Petra, the family<lb/>
maid. Fredrik's old mis-<lb/>
tress, an actress Desiree, is<lb/>
in town, and he goes to see<lb/>
her. But now she has a new<lb/>
lover, the fierce Count<lb/>
Malcolm, who in turn has a<lb/>
fierce wife, Charlotte.<lb/>
SEDUCTION SCENE<lb/>
HIGHLIGHTSFILM<lb/>
All are invited to<lb/>
Desiree's mother's estate<lb/>
for a weekend party. After<lb/>
flirting here and there<lb/>
Petra ends up in a hay stack<lb/>
with Frid, the groom.<lb/>
Charlotte tries to seduce<lb/>
Fredrik, hoping to get him<lb/>
back from Desiree. Anne,<lb/>
ALL YOU<lb/>
CAN EAT<lb/>
for $2.39<lb/>
Fish<lb/>
Fry<lb/>
miMirs<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Dinner<lb/>
Meal includes<lb/>
Golden Crisp<lb/>
French Fries.<lb/>
Cole Slaw, Tartar<lb/>
Sauce and the<lb/>
wor Id's best<lb/>
hushpuppies.<lb/>
Fredrik's wife, discovers a<lb/>
strong attraction for<lb/>
Henrik.<lb/>
Einar Lauritzen, of<lb/>
SWEDISH FILMS, says of<lb/>
Smiles of a Summer<lb/>
Night  This is something<lb/>
rare in Swedish films<lb/>
productionan erotic<lb/>
comedy. Bergman has<lb/>
chosen the period at the<lb/>
end of the last century. By<lb/>
doing so he may have<lb/>
added to the piquancy of<lb/>
his tale and avoided the<lb/>
danger of being dated<lb/>
which always threatens a<lb/>
comedy. "Smiles of a<lb/>
Summer Night" is a very<lb/>
cleverly constructed film<lb/>
and the complicated in-<lb/>
trigue, involving many<lb/>
people, has been clearly<lb/>
presented<lb/>
Films are open to ECU<lb/>
students, faculty and staff<lb/>
and their guests. Admis-<lb/>
sion is by ID and Activity<lb/>
cards or Mendenhall Cen-<lb/>
ter Membership Card. All<lb/>
films are shown in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Theatre.<lb/>
Co-op works with students<lb/>
continued from p. 7<lb/>
Ices Administration, and<lb/>
others.<lb/>
Some placements are<lb/>
parallel, which involve<lb/>
working and attending<lb/>
school simultaneously.<lb/>
Other placements are for<lb/>
the summer.<lb/>
Co-op encourages stud-<lb/>
ents to consider alternating<lb/>
periods of study and work,<lb/>
however, which involves a<lb/>
decision to postpone grad-<lb/>
uation. The ideal situation<lb/>
might includea semester of<lb/>
work followed by a semest-<lb/>
er of school, with this<lb/>
sequence followed for two<lb/>
years.<lb/>
After graduation the<lb/>
student, if successful in the<lb/>
program, would be assured<lb/>
of a job at the place of his<lb/>
internship.<lb/>
Allen Daniel and Keith<lb/>
Rhodes, both Computer<lb/>
Science majors, followed a<lb/>
similar sequence and had<lb/>
two separate placements in<lb/>
the Supply Department of<lb/>
the Marine Corps Air Stat-<lb/>
ion at Cherry Point. Allen<lb/>
and Keith are now eligible<lb/>
to return after graduation<lb/>
for non-competitive job<lb/>
placements.<lb/>
Marilyn Turner em-<lb/>
phasizes cooperation with<lb/>
businesses as one of the<lb/>
main reasons for co-op<lb/>
success. "Margie White<lb/>
from the Galleon Esplanade<lb/>
in Nag's Head comes up<lb/>
and spends hours inter-<lb/>
viewing students to work.<lb/>
She lets communication<lb/>
arts students completely<lb/>
redesign her displays, as<lb/>
well as doing retail selling.<lb/>
She's terrific about giving<lb/>
them the full run of the<lb/>
place<lb/>
Business Education ma-<lb/>
jor Dana Spear enjoyed her<lb/>
Co-op experience in Nag's<lb/>
Head.<lb/>
"Working at the Gal-<lb/>
leon Esplanade, I became a<lb/>
part of theories and exper-<lb/>
iences which I had prev-<lb/>
iously only read about or<lb/>
performed in a classroom<lb/>
environment. Performing<lb/>
my duties at work helped<lb/>
me to realize the full<lb/>
importance of my school<lb/>
curriculum.<lb/>
"Now that I have seen<lb/>
my studies being used in<lb/>
real life situations, I feel<lb/>
that I am better prepared<lb/>
to become a teacher and<lb/>
pass on the things I have<lb/>
learned to my students<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
The variety of academic<lb/>
fields covered by Co-op is<lb/>
too great to discuss<lb/>
thoroughly in this aride.<lb/>
Psychology majors have<lb/>
been placed at Ca swell<lb/>
Center, nursing majors at<lb/>
Pitt Memorial Hospital, ed-<lb/>
ucation majors in child care<lb/>
centers, and social work<lb/>
majors in the Department<lb/>
of Corrections.<lb/>
Several students were<lb/>
employed in summer<lb/>
campuses around the<lb/>
country. One co-op partici-<lb/>
pant was placed as Parks<lb/>
and Recreation Conservat-<lb/>
ion Director for the town of<lb/>
Robersonville. A journal-<lb/>
ism student worked in a<lb/>
radio station. A student<lb/>
interested in Library<lb/>
Science worked in the N.C.<lb/>
State Library system.<lb/>
Marilyn Turner em-<lb/>
phasizes that "Co-op works<lb/>
with students of virtually all<lb/>
majors, depending on de-<lb/>
partment cooperation<lb/>
Students are selected on<lb/>
the basis of both personal<lb/>
and academic accomplish-<lb/>
ments. Qualified men, wo-<lb/>
men, and handicapped<lb/>
students are encouraged to<lb/>
apply-<lb/>
Any student interested<lb/>
in joining the Cooperative<lb/>
Education program should<lb/>
contact their department<lb/>
head or come by the main<lb/>
office in room 313, Rawl, to<lb/>
make an appointment with<lb/>
one of the three coordinat-<lb/>
ors, Karen Frye, Sandy<lb/>
Green. or Dr. Barry<lb/>
Davidson.<lb/>
Students who apply be-<lb/>
fore Oct. 14 will receive<lb/>
priority for spring place-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
Sun. thru Thun. 4:30-9:00<lb/>
Frl. &amp; Sat. 4:30-10:00<lb/>
Potters create 'beautiful artwork9<lb/>
fj<lb/>
Friday's Seafood<lb/>
23X1S. Evans St,<lb/>
People come from as<lb/>
nearby as Whynot and as<lb/>
far away as England. They<lb/>
come to see the potteries of<lb/>
Moore County and Sea-<lb/>
grove, - Cole, Jug-<lb/>
town, M.L. Owens, Sea-<lb/>
grove Teague, and West-<lb/>
more.<lb/>
Here potters create<lb/>
beautiful and utilitarian ob-<lb/>
jects using methods passed<lb/>
from generation to genera-<lb/>
tion and materials found<lb/>
around them.<lb/>
The "Raised in the<lb/>
Mud" Pottery Celebration<lb/>
to be held Oct 19-21 in<lb/>
Robbins, is an attempt<lb/>
to allow young craftsman<lb/>
an opportunity to learn<lb/>
from the hands and voices<lb/>
of experience.<lb/>
Speakers and workshop<lb/>
leaders are coming togeth-<lb/>
er with local potters to talk<lb/>
about pottery for 3 days.<lb/>
One of the most inter-<lb/>
esting aspects of the Cele-<lb/>
bration will be a panel<lb/>
discussion of potters -<lb/>
Dorothy Auman, Wayne<lb/>
Cole, Charlie Craven, Joe<lb/>
Owen, M.L. Owen, Vernon<lb/>
Owen, Walter Owen and<lb/>
Duck Teague. The panel<lb/>
will be moderated by Ralph<lb/>
Rinzler, Director of Folklife<lb/>
Programs, Smithsonian In-<lb/>
stitute.<lb/>
Other events planned<lb/>
are discussion on "The<lb/>
Potter's Family a slide<lb/>
show on "Traditional<lb/>
Shapes and Glazes" and a<lb/>
"History of Moore County<lb/>
Pottery" Ten workshops<lb/>
will be conducted by pot-<lb/>
ters from Jugtown, Teague,<lb/>
and Westmore Potteries<lb/>
and others.<lb/>
SPECIA L RA TE OFFERED<lb/>
Registration for the 3<lb/>
day event ?? S32. which<lb/>
includesa.lunch, barbecue,<lb/>
and square dance on Friday,<lb/>
printed materials, proceed-<lb/>
ings, etc.<lb/>
Residents of Anson,<lb/>
Chatham, Hoke, Leem<lb/>
Montgomery, Moore, Ran-<lb/>
dolph, and Richmond coun-<lb/>
ties may pay a special rate<lb/>
of $22.<lb/>
Daily registration is av-<lb/>
ailable at the door for $3<lb/>
with the exception of the<lb/>
workshops which must be<lb/>
pre-registered.<lb/>
Brady paintings on<lb/>
display in MSC gallery<lb/>
1<lb/>
HAIR IDENTITY<lb/>
SOB N. Sylvan Drive<lb/>
Off Hooker Road<lb/>
For Men and Women<lb/>
Haircuts for ?5.00<lb/>
Shampoo &amp; Set JMJ.OO<lb/>
00 off for perntanents j<lb/>
76-471 or 7St-97SS<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Paintings and drawings<lb/>
by M ichael Brady of Fayet-<lb/>
teville, senior student in<lb/>
the ECU School of Art, will<lb/>
be on display Sept. 24-30 in<lb/>
the gallery of Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
The show will include<lb/>
five paintings in oil and five<lb/>
drawings in pencil on geos-<lb/>
sed paper.<lb/>
Brady is a candidate for<lb/>
the Bachelor of Fine Arts<lb/>
degree with a major in<lb/>
painting, and a member of<lb/>
Phi Kappa Phi honor<lb/>
society.<lb/>
SUPERMARKET<lb/>
?W<lb/>
s<lb/>
Gwalt ney Franks 12 oz. package<lb/>
$ .89<lb/>
Frosted Flakes is oz. box<lb/>
78 (reg. $1.09)<lb/>
TOTAL iz oz. box<lb/>
68 (reg. $Oo)<lb/>
Shasta 2 litre bottle<lb/>
68<lb/>
Hi-C (orange flavor only) 46 oz. can<lb/>
 2$l.OO<lb/>
Welch's Grape Jelly 3 lb. jar<lb/>
$1.28<lb/>
Jell-O 3 oz. packages<lb/>
 5Sl.OO<lb/>
Wiener King<lb/>
F00TLONG<lb/>
AND FANCY.<lb/>
WOO 129 15b 1OT<lb/>
master charge<lb/>
TMr INTERBtNK CtPH<lb/>
FREE cart service<lb/>
available for students.<lb/>
The Wiener King footlong Frankfooter is a fancy hot dog.<lb/>
It's a full 12 inches long with a frankly delicious taste that<lb/>
really measures up to size. Each Frankfooter is topped<lb/>
just right with mustard,freshly-chopped onions, and extra<lb/>
meaty chili. And when you buy one at your<lb/>
Wiener King? restaurant you'll get the second one free<lb/>
with this coupon. So come to Wiener King, and bring along<lb/>
a friend for a footlong and fancy Frankfooter. FREE!<lb/>
twVfVa?kf"ooters"are<lb/>
better than one.<lb/>
ESPECIALLY WHEN ONE IS FREE!<lb/>
Buy one frankly delicious footlong<lb/>
Frankfooter and get a second one free.<lb/>
Please present this coupon before ordering. Limit one coupon<lb/>
per customer. vbid where prohibited by law. Coupon good<lb/>
through jpt jq<lb/>
1011 Charles St.<lb/>
He has also been art<lb/>
director for the Tar Heel<lb/>
Magazine, which is pub-<lb/>
lished In Greenville.<lb/>
His parents are Mr. and<lb/>
M rs. James E. Brady of 695<lb/>
Wiltshire Drive, Fayet-<lb/>
teville.<lb/>
EVENING COURSE IN<lb/>
WATERCOLOR<lb/>
A non-credit evening<lb/>
course in watercolor paint-<lb/>
ing will be offered this fall<lb/>
by ECU.<lb/>
Since the course is<lb/>
designed to cover the basic<lb/>
fundamentals of the water-<lb/>
color medium, no previous<lb/>
art instruction is necessary<lb/>
to enroll.<lb/>
The class will meet on<lb/>
Tuesdays, Oct. 4 - Dec. 5,<lb/>
and will be instructed by<lb/>
artist Warren Chamberlain,<lb/>
retired faculty member of<lb/>
the Scool of Art.<lb/>
Participants will be in-<lb/>
volved in learning the tools<lb/>
and equipment of watercol-<lb/>
or painting, experimentat-<lb/>
ion with various techni-<lb/>
ques, the actual painting of<lb/>
still lifes in class and,<lb/>
possibly, some outside<lb/>
painting.<lb/>
The course is of benefit<lb/>
to beginners or experienced<lb/>
painters, and its object is to<lb/>
encourage students to ex-<lb/>
press themselves and their<lb/>
ideas for pleasure.<lb/>
Information about the<lb/>
course and about art sup-<lb/>
plies needed is available<lb/>
from the Office of Non-<lb/>
Credit Programs, Division<lb/>
of Continuing Education<lb/>
757-6143.<lb/>
M Riggan Shoe<lb/>
 ?P??r Shop <lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
111 W. 4th Street<lb/>
NKDTOttlAXAFTHl<lb/>
A DAY IN CLASSES?<lb/>
THE SUNSET<lb/>
"t5iST!IKT<lb/>
? 4<lb/>
rittllBf' ft ???<lb/>
stereo<lb/>
<lb/>
MhMHMu!) ? I '??(? rilMHHI<lb/>
? fl?GP-4.ri<lb/>
mwin<lb/>
<pb facs="00057148_0009"/><lb/>
26 September 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
continued from p. 71<lb/>
!nTaflbnnnralleX,tr.a0rdlnna,re wh,ch ,s ?lf ? quality<lb/>
east t'nA9lalofhiorks.ln (oft , he lets no one down<lb/>
easy, if he lets anyone down at all that is.<lb/>
is nnt?rJ?HeXFaln UbikWhat tne word actualy ??ns<lb/>
"?not totally discovered until the closing chapters of the<lb/>
oook, and even with a tight explanation, still leaves the<lb/>
reader mystified.<lb/>
A man by the name of Glen Runciter could be a good<lb/>
starting point. Mr. Runciter is head of Runciter Associates,<lb/>
an agency specializing in the training and leasing out of<lb/>
telepaths.<lb/>
One of his top preoogs (precognitionists) is seemingly<lb/>
lost and he decides to consult his dead wife about it. This is<lb/>
achieved via an example of one of Dick's profound abilities<lb/>
to stimulate the reader's imagination.<lb/>
Runciter's dead wife is stored in a kind of suspended<lb/>
animation called cold-pac; she is clinically dead, but able to<lb/>
i<lb/>
communicate with Runciter through the systems built in to<lb/>
the cold-pac coffin.<lb/>
Runciter has never fully understood the processes<lb/>
involved but enjoys and appreciates the contact he makes<lb/>
with his wife through this method.<lb/>
And while he doesn't understand how It works, little<lb/>
does he know what goes on in cold-pac. Think it's just a<lb/>
talkin coffin, huh?<lb/>
Enter Joe Chip. He examines the abilities of preoogs<lb/>
before they enter into the firm.<lb/>
A young woman named Pat is to be scanned by Chip,<lb/>
who finds out that she is not an ordinary precog: she can go<lb/>
back in time and alter parts of the present. After Chip<lb/>
makes his examination of her, he writes two underlined<lb/>
crosses under her credits.<lb/>
The meaning, of the symbols: Hazard. Dangerous. And<lb/>
the plot thickens.<lb/>
Chip, Runciter, Pat, and some other employees go to<lb/>
Luna where there is an accident and Runciter Is killed.<lb/>
Something strange seems to be happening now.<lb/>
Pat regresses time and they are mysteriously back on<lb/>
Earth, and then, and then<lb/>
What is Ubik?<lb/>
Ubik is everything. It made the suns, the worlds. It<lb/>
created life. It is forever, undying. It is Ubik and it shall<lb/>
always beI think<lb/>
Dick had written a truly monumental novel. It has so<lb/>
many plot changes, sub-plots (which all tie in to the original<lb/>
plot) characters disappearing and reappearing, that it must<lb/>
be read, for it cannot be told. Read thoroughly.<lb/>
Now, what next? There'3 plenty, a varied and diverse<lb/>
selection of interesting titles to choose from: Gateway ,<lb/>
by Frederik Pohl; 334 by Thomas M. Disch; Stan by<lb/>
A.E. Van Vogt; DorsaiP. by Gordon R. Dickson;<lb/>
Norstrilia by Cordwainer Smith and more and more<lb/>
And all you gotta do is read. Simple.<lb/>
Who Are You 'captures the turmoil of youth<lb/>
and relevancy in powerful, violent music'<lb/>
By EDWARD KALE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Who has been a<lb/>
name synonymous with<lb/>
rock and roll for over a<lb/>
decade. Pete Townshend,<lb/>
spokeman for the Who,<lb/>
rallied the banners of teen-<lb/>
age rebellion behind him<lb/>
with My Generation in<lb/>
1965. and through the<lb/>
album The Who By Num-<lb/>
bers captured the turmoil of<lb/>
youth and relevancy in his<lb/>
powerful and violent music.<lb/>
Never more than rud-<lb/>
imentary musicians except<lb/>
maybe Entwhistle, the Who<lb/>
were always a "live" band.<lb/>
It was the intensity of<lb/>
their visual performance,<lb/>
along with their "power-<lb/>
chord rock crescendos<lb/>
that moved audiences'<lb/>
souls<lb/>
Having witnessed this<lb/>
spectacle, who could ever<lb/>
forget Daltrey's michro<lb/>
phone-twtrling strut,<lb/>
Moon's wild, wild wailing,<lb/>
Entwhistle's classic stoic-<lb/>
ism, and Townshend's in-<lb/>
sane leaping.<lb/>
It was just a fraction of<lb/>
this unharnessed energy<lb/>
that carried over onto their<lb/>
albums and made their<lb/>
recording successful.<lb/>
As is often the case in<lb/>
rock music, however, the<lb/>
Who are faced with the<lb/>
difficulty of approaching<lb/>
middle-age and direction. If<lb/>
their way of dealing with<lb/>
that difficulty is their<lb/>
latest album Who Are You,<lb/>
then I'm afraid they<lb/>
haven't found an answer; or<lb/>
maybe the answer is that all<lb/>
that previously expended<lb/>
energy has left them tired.<lb/>
That is certainly the<lb/>
feeling you get after listen-<lb/>
ing to Who Are You. The<lb/>
songs, indeed the whole<lb/>
album is tired, not offen-<lb/>
sive, but very tired.<lb/>
LYRICS SEEM TO HAVE<lb/>
BEEN WRITTENSIMPLY<lb/>
TO FILL SPACE<lb/>
The lyrics seem to have<lb/>
been written simply to fill<lb/>
space. Gone are the hard<lb/>
hitting, soul searching dec-<lb/>
larations that Towshend<lb/>
was once bubbling.<lb/>
The music itself lacks<lb/>
energy, enthusiasm,<lb/>
power. The use of non-rock<lb/>
instrumentation (the string<lb/>
arrangements in particular)<lb/>
is a cop-out and definitely<lb/>
disappointing from some-<lb/>
one with the rock and roll<lb/>
roots of the Who. Three of<lb/>
the compositions, Had<lb/>
Enough, 905 and<lb/>
Trick Of The Light are<lb/>
John Entwhistle's. They<lb/>
are passable tunes, but just<lb/>
aren't the Who and really<lb/>
don't belong on the album.<lb/>
On only one cut does the<lb/>
Who come close to captur-<lb/>
ing their past glory. This is<lb/>
the title track - Who Are<lb/>
You. The old Townshend<lb/>
speaks:<lb/>
"I woke up in a Soho<lb/>
doorway, a<lb/>
policeman knew my name<lb/>
He said you can go io sleep<lb/>
at home tonight<lb/>
if you can get up and walk<lb/>
away<lb/>
I staggered back to the<lb/>
underground and<lb/>
the breeze blew back my<lb/>
hair<lb/>
I remember throwing<lb/>
punches around<lb/>
and preaching from my<lb/>
chair"<lb/>
Alright! There's the old<lb/>
Who!<lb/>
HAT'S ON!<lb/>
TONITETHE ZN LITTLE 818 PRESENT<lb/>
A MOST UNUSUAL HAT CONTEST<lb/>
AND FUND RAISING PARTY.<lb/>
ALLNITEAT THE<lb/>
ANDTHUR.NITE ONLY THE MOST<lb/>
HIGH POWERED ROCK N ROLL<lb/>
SHOW ON THE EAST COAST.<lb/>
RAZZMATAZZ<lb/>
Fri.Endof Week Party 43 7 Sun. Ladies Nlte<lb/>
It is unfortunate that a<lb/>
group as great as the Who,<lb/>
not having toured in over<lb/>
three years, and lacking the<lb/>
freshness that playing be-<lb/>
fore live audiences gives<lb/>
you, keeps on releasing<lb/>
records (and the Who was<lb/>
born playing live). This<lb/>
album is an example of that<lb/>
kind of sterility.<lb/>
And with the tragic<lb/>
death of drummer Keith<lb/>
Moon it is doubtful that the<lb/>
Who will have a chance to<lb/>
redeem themselves. I doubt<lb/>
seriously whether, in their<lb/>
present state of stateness,<lb/>
the Who will be able to<lb/>
overcome the loss of some-<lb/>
one who's been an integral<lb/>
part of the band for 13<lb/>
years. (The album cover is<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057148_0010"/><lb/>
vw<lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 26 September 1978<lb/>
ECU smashes Cajuns, 38-9<lb/>
Green, Collins pace Pirates<lb/>
Hall eludes taehler<lb/>
iERALD Hall eludes a USL defender in<lb/>
 game in Lafayette La Hall returned four<lb/>
ds against the Caiuns as the Pirates posted<lb/>
ve 38-9 victory Photo by John H. Grogan<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
LAFAYETTE, LA. - ECU head coach Pat Dye figured it<lb/>
was simply a matter of time before the Pirates' sluggish<lb/>
offense began to jell.<lb/>
And Saturday night against Southwestern Louisiana,<lb/>
ECU's rushing and passing attack was near perfect as the<lb/>
Pirates exploded for 35 first half points to destroy the Ragin<lb/>
Cajun' 38-9.<lb/>
What happened in the first half tonight was what I've<lb/>
been expecting since the first game this year said Dye<lb/>
after the game. "I'm real proud of our offense. They were<lb/>
impressive this week during practice and they went out<lb/>
there and worked hard tonight "<lb/>
The Pirates sent most of the 14,603 fans in Cajun<lb/>
Stadium packing after the first half with a 35 point outburst<lb/>
which gave ECU an insurmountable 35-3 bulge at the<lb/>
break<lb/>
With Leander Green at the controls, the Pirates<lb/>
amassed 371 total yards in the first half including 15 first<lb/>
downs.<lb/>
"Leander threw the ball real well praised Dye. "He<lb/>
was near perfect. Anthony Collins also ran well and the<lb/>
entire offensive line came off the ball well. You have to do<lb/>
those type things well to get 38 points against a team which<lb/>
had given up only 20 points in four halves of play<lb/>
John Roveto put the Cajuns on the scoreboard first with<lb/>
a 29 yard field goal which came with 11 :55 remaining in the<lb/>
first quarter<lb/>
James Freer set up ECU'S initial touchdown when he<lb/>
recovered a fumbled punt on the USL 39 yard line. From<lb/>
there. Green engineered a nifty five play drive capped when<lb/>
halfback Eddie Hicks went around the left side 15 yards for<lb/>
ECU's first touchdown. Bill Lamm added the first of five<lb/>
conversions and the Pirates moved ahead 7-3 with 4:30.<lb/>
Gerald Hall returned a punt 27 yards on ECU's next<lb/>
possession and the Pirates were knocking on the Cajuns<lb/>
door again. This time, Steve Greer moved ECU 54 yards in<lb/>
severla plays and pitched to Mike Hawkins who scooted<lb/>
around the right side 14 yards for the touchdown. The Bucs<lb/>
led 14-3 and the real fireworks were yet to come.<lb/>
Although Bill Lamm missed field goal attempts from 42<lb/>
and 36 yards early in the second quarter, Green ignited the<lb/>
Pirates passing attack with two straight touchdown passes<lb/>
to split end Terry Gallaher.<lb/>
The first one came with 6:55 to play when Gallaher<lb/>
made a diving catch near the left sidelines and fell into the<lb/>
end zone. The Pirates came right back on their next<lb/>
possession and Green found the shifty Gallaher wide open<lb/>
over the middle on a post pattern. The two touchdown<lb/>
receptions, which covered 27 and 26 yards, were Gallaher's<lb/>
12th and 13th career scoring catches at ECU and the Pirates<lb/>
opened up a 28-3 lead.<lb/>
Then with seven seconds remaining ECU's Cliff<lb/>
Williams recovered a Southwestern Louisiana fumble by<lb/>
quarterback Ken Matthews and the Pirates had time for<lb/>
one more play.<lb/>
Green dropped back and found Billy Ray Washington<lb/>
over the middle for a 38 yard scoring play and the Cajuns<lb/>
were all but finished.<lb/>
Southwestern Louisiana's John Roveto added field goals<lb/>
of 49 and 44 yards in the second half while Bill Lamm<lb/>
accounted for ECU's only second half points when he<lb/>
connected on a 25 yarder late in the third quarter.<lb/>
"We looked like the old ECU out there tonight said<lb/>
Dye. "We can take this game and build on it and certainly<lb/>
develop the team we're capable of having<lb/>
Anthony Collins was ECU's topgroundgainer picking up<lb/>
112 yards on 13 carries while fullback Theodore Sutton<lb/>
added 86 yards on 15 carries. Green finished the night with<lb/>
seven of ten passes for 169 yards and carried five times for<lb/>
another 16 yards.<lb/>
Summer hunts Cajun<lb/>
LINEBACKER TOMMY SUMMER drops back to help<lb/>
secondary with pass coverage against the Ragm Cau<lb/>
Photo by John H Grog<lb/>
rreen Gallaher ignite Pirates9powder keg<lb/>
eW ROGERS<lb/>
? tor<lb/>
A<lb/>
oach Pat Dye<lb/>
eek, the<lb/>
Mas just<lb/>
.aiting<lb/>
3me along<lb/>
ise<lb/>
?rback<lb/>
een provided<lb/>
? iy night<lb/>
ffense ex-<lb/>
touted<lb/>
se.<lb/>
icksonv e native<lb/>
eat 39 yard<lb/>
e ' rst quarter.<lb/>
three more<lb/>
the second<lb/>
e Pirates cruis-<lb/>
. ctory over<lb/>
tern Louisiana at<lb/>
in Stadium.<lb/>
played well in the<lb/>
nd half of the North<lb/>
game and it gave<lb/>
offense a start ex-<lb/>
ed Green. We're fin-<lb/>
getting things rolling<lb/>
k after tonight<lb/>
keep rolling<lb/>
It was a flawless per-<lb/>
formance b Green and<lb/>
certainly his finest effort of<lb/>
the season. He completed 7<lb/>
of 10 passes for 169 yards,<lb/>
carried five times for 16<lb/>
yards and accounted for 185<lb/>
total yards.<lb/>
"They left the seams<lb/>
and the post and gave our<lb/>
receivers the advantage<lb/>
a th their one-on-one cov-<lb/>
erage, observed Green.<lb/>
The offensive line came<lb/>
off the ball well and gave<lb/>
me good protection They<lb/>
really got the job done<lb/>
tonight<lb/>
Like Green, split end<lb/>
Terry Gallaher also had his<lb/>
share of problems in the<lb/>
first three games, but his<lb/>
two touchdown recpetions<lb/>
against the Cajuns clearly<lb/>
overshadowed his previous<lb/>
performances this season.<lb/>
"Everything was just<lb/>
clicking tonight said<lb/>
Gallaher "We threw a lot<lb/>
more in practice this week.<lb/>
We've known all along<lb/>
we're capable of having a<lb/>
game like this. It's just<lb/>
been one or two little things<lb/>
that have stopped our ex-<lb/>
ecution<lb/>
Gallaher s first touch-<lb/>
down broke the ECU record<lb/>
for the most number of<lb/>
career TD catches. And his<lb/>
second touchdown grab<lb/>
gave the Warner Robbins,<lb/>
Ga. native 13 career scores.<lb/>
"Leander threw the ball<lb/>
well noted Gallaher. "I<lb/>
don't think he threw the<lb/>
ball poorly in our other<lb/>
games, it was just our<lb/>
timing was better tonight.<lb/>
He seemed more confident<lb/>
out there<lb/>
Pirate halfback Anthony<lb/>
Collins also turned in his<lb/>
top performance of the<lb/>
season He ran over and<lb/>
around Cajun defenders for<lb/>
112 yards on 13 carries and<lb/>
also grabbed two passes for<lb/>
another 12 yards.<lb/>
"We had a good pract-<lb/>
ice this week and every-<lb/>
one's concentration seemd<lb/>
much better tonight said<lb/>
Collins who's longest run of<lb/>
the game was a 39 yarder<lb/>
Leander Green<lb/>
which came early in the<lb/>
second qaurter "After<lb/>
those two losses to North<lb/>
Carolina and N.C. State we<lb/>
felt like this was a must<lb/>
game for us. We really<lb/>
needed to have this one<lb/>
Collins along with his run-<lb/>
ning mates Theodore Sut-<lb/>
ton and Eddie Hicks ripped<lb/>
off huge chunks of yardage<lb/>
against the Southwestern<lb/>
Louisiana defense which<lb/>
had allowed only 20 points<lb/>
in its first two games of the<lb/>
season. Sutton picked up 86<lb/>
yards on 15 tries while<lb/>
Hicks added 23 yards on<lb/>
five carries including a 15<lb/>
yard touchdown run.<lb/>
"The offensive line was<lb/>
really blowing them off the<lb/>
field said Collins. "You<lb/>
couldn't ask for any finer<lb/>
effort from them It helps<lb/>
the whole team's confid-<lb/>
ence to have a game like<lb/>
this, but from now on we've<lb/>
jist to play games like this if<lb/>
we expect to win<lb/>
Even Pat Dye was<lb/>
pleased with the offensive<lb/>
line and admitted the<lb/>
Pirates looked more like<lb/>
ECU teams he remembered<lb/>
from previous years<lb/>
"We were a lot more<lb/>
aggressive offensively<lb/>
said Dye. The backs ran<lb/>
well and the line came off<lb/>
the ball well. We hadn't<lb/>
had our old personality and<lb/>
we weren't knocking people<lb/>
down coming off the ball<lb/>
But tonight we looked like<lb/>
th old ECU to me. We came<lb/>
and did what we had to<lb/>
do<lb/>
ECU-USL Stats<lb/>
ECU 14 21 3 0 -38<lb/>
USL 3 0 3 3-9<lb/>
ECU-Hicks 15 run (Lamm<lb/>
kick1<lb/>
ECU-Hawkins 14 run<lb/>
(Lamm kick)<lb/>
ECU-Gallaher 27 pass from<lb/>
Green (Lamm kick)<lb/>
ECU-Gallaher 26 pass from<lb/>
Green (Lamm kick)<lb/>
ECU-Washington 38 pass<lb/>
from Green (Lamm kick)<lb/>
RUSHiNG<lb/>
ECU-Sutton 15-86. Collins<lb/>
13-112. Green 5-16. Hicks<lb/>
6-23. Greer 6-12 - iwkins<lb/>
3-16. Harreli 2-14. Cobb<lb/>
4-18. Wiley 4-17. Wash<lb/>
ton 1-12. Bently 1-0. Treva-<lb/>
than l-(-1). USL-Pmkston<lb/>
10-40. Pnce 8-19. Durant<lb/>
7-16<lb/>
PASSING<lb/>
ECU -Green 7-10-1-169,<lb/>
Trevathan 1-2-0-2. USL-<lb/>
Matthews 3-15-1-43, P ?<lb/>
ston 3-4-0-22. Guidry 0-2-0-<lb/>
0<lb/>
RECEIVING<lb/>
ECU-Washingt 4-1<lb/>
Gallaher 2-53. Collins 2<lb/>
USL-Smith 4-31. Reia<lb/>
1-27. Grav 1-7<lb/>
Simon new food manager<lb/>
Pirates praise dining room<lb/>
1<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
rootbali players seem to have the reputation of having<lb/>
? . arge appetites. The ECU Pirates are no<lb/>
And the players are displaying that more this<lb/>
than ever before.<lb/>
he Coaches Corner, or training room, has long been<lb/>
the dming room for all Pirate meals. But the training room<lb/>
has taken on a completely new look this year Head coach<lb/>
Pat Dye and Sports Promotions Director Wayne Newman<lb/>
designed plans to revise the room last year.<lb/>
Located in the basement of Jones Dormitory, the room<lb/>
was transformed this summer from what linebacker Tommy<lb/>
Summer called "just plain sloppy" to what is now a very<lb/>
nice, comfortable place to eat The walls are trimmed<lb/>
around the room with a purple and gold stripe. The room,<lb/>
that once brought horror to the minds of some players, now<lb/>
gives them a special feeling.<lb/>
"I don't feel like I'm eating in a hole anymore said<lb/>
split end Terry Gallaher "I feel like I'm working for<lb/>
something now. When I leave practice, this is a rewarding<lb/>
place to come<lb/>
The room is not all that has changed added<lb/>
Gallaher. "The food is much much better. They<lb/>
(Servomation Food Corporation) seem to take more care in<lb/>
preparing our meals. Last year the situation was obvious.<lb/>
The food was really not good<lb/>
It was almost unbearable quipped quarterback<lb/>
Leander Green. "I'm very impressed with the room and the<lb/>
food<lb/>
With everyone complaining, Servomation, which<lb/>
prepares meals for students at Jones Cafeteria and several<lb/>
other locations on campus, decided to make some changes<lb/>
after last year Servomation brought In an entirely new<lb/>
staff, headed by meal coordinate a Simon.<lb/>
"Servomation has really done a tremendous job noted<lb/>
Dye. The effort they have put forth is really great<lb/>
Dye's players are equally impressed. "There is a lot<lb/>
more variety said Green. "I had no idea we would be so<lb/>
much better off this year than we were before<lb/>
Several players had praise for meal coordinator Ira<lb/>
Simon. "Ira really cares about what we eat said Summer.<lb/>
Summer's counterpart at linebacker, Mike Brewington,<lb/>
also praised Simon. "He is the main reason things are<lb/>
better this year<lb/>
Pirate assistant coach Wayne Hall, who is in charge of<lb/>
the players at the meals, also felt Simon had exceeded all<lb/>
expectations. Before we never saw the manager. I got the<lb/>
impression that he didn't care. But Ira is out here everyday.<lb/>
He wants to know what we think. He seems to put a<lb/>
personal touch in everything he does<lb/>
Simon says he makes himself available to theiplayers<lb/>
because he wants to do the best job he can. "Successful<lb/>
business depends upon the happiness of the client said<lb/>
Simon. "These players and the students are my clients. I<lb/>
try to put forth a personal effort to talk to them all. I try to<lb/>
be responsive to all their suggestions, ideas, and<lb/>
complaints. I want to make everything as right as<lb/>
possible<lb/>
Simon said that Servamation was also purchasing better<lb/>
food than last year. "We try to buy the very best food we<lb/>
can on our budget. The students and the players felt we<lb/>
weren't doing this before. Now we're working with them<lb/>
and hopefully they are more satisfied.<lb/>
Even though the room and the meals have changed<lb/>
Tommy Summer says he likes another item which was<lb/>
added to the training room. "I love that ice cream bar. It's<lb/>
all you can eat. It's popular with all the players.<lb/>
Surely all the players like the new Coaches Corner. It's<lb/>
just another one of many steps towards the big time.<lb/>
UNC-Charlotte downs ECU<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
"We had four or five<lb/>
golden opportunities we<lb/>
just didn't cash in on<lb/>
This was the assess-<lb/>
ment of ECU soccer coach<lb/>
Brad Smith after the Pir-<lb/>
ates suffered a 3-2 overtime<lb/>
loss at the hands of UNC-<lb/>
Charlotte last Sunday.<lb/>
"The game was very close<lb/>
throughout said Smith.<lb/>
"We played pretty good,<lb/>
but we still have not come<lb/>
together yet<lb/>
The Pirates were led by<lb/>
goalie Kevin Tyus, who was<lb/>
highly praised by Smith for<lb/>
several excellent saves, a-<lb/>
long with Duane Bailey.<lb/>
"Duane played a strong,<lb/>
aggressive game said<lb/>
Smith. "I couldn't have<lb/>
asked much more from<lb/>
him<lb/>
The match was very<lb/>
intense throughtout. By the<lb/>
end of the contest, both<lb/>
teams were playing minus<lb/>
one player, as each team<lb/>
suffered an ejection.<lb/>
Jimmy Kautsacalis o-<lb/>
pened the scoring for UNC-<lb/>
Charlotte with 14:02 gone<lb/>
in the first half. Phil Martin<lb/>
scored half, Steve Shack-<lb/>
leford scored for the 49ers<lb/>
and<lb/>
Jimmy Kautsacalis o-<lb/>
pened the scoring for UNC-<lb/>
Charlotte with 14:02 gone<lb/>
in the fiorst half. Phil<lb/>
Martin scored for the Pir-<lb/>
ates at 41:35 to even the<lb/>
score 1-1 at halftime.<lb/>
In the second half,<lb/>
Steve Shackleford scored<lb/>
for the 49ers and Jeff<lb/>
Karpovich countered for<lb/>
the Pirates, ending all<lb/>
regulation time scoring.<lb/>
The two teams agreed<lb/>
to play two ten minute<lb/>
overtime periods when time<lb/>
expired and with the score<lb/>
still tied at 2-2. Ahmen<lb/>
Fashola scored for the<lb/>
49ers with only 4 24 gone in<lb/>
the first overtime period to<lb/>
give the 49ers a 3-2 lead.<lb/>
The two teams then went<lb/>
scoreless for the final 15:36<lb/>
of the match.<lb/>
"We controlled the en-<lb/>
tire second overtime per-<lb/>
iod said Smith. In the last<lb/>
two or three minutes, we<lb/>
missed out on at least three<lb/>
opportunities<lb/>
Smith says the reason<lb/>
the Pirates failed to score at<lb/>
the end of the match was<lb/>
because they are still un-<lb/>
familiar with each other.<lb/>
"We have about ten fresh-<lb/>
men that get a great deal of<lb/>
playing time said Smith.<lb/>
"The college game is an all<lb/>
Pirate soccer action<lb/>
new experience for the<lb/>
And our older guys aren't<lb/>
used to having so many<lb/>
mobile people to pass off<lb/>
to.<lb/>
"We're creating the<lb/>
opportunities; we're just<lb/>
not taking advantage of<lb/>
them continued Smith<lb/>
"But things will get better<lb/>
as we go along. see<lb/>
improvement every game.<lb/>
Later in the year we'll pick<lb/>
these things up<lb/>
<pb facs="00057148_0011"/><lb/>
f t<lb/>
T f<lb/>
fflHaUctivities continue<lb/>
Smith captures golf title<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Trailing by two strokes<lb/>
at the halfway point, Mark<lb/>
Smith fired the best round<lb/>
of the tournament on Fri-<lb/>
day and won the intramural<lb/>
golf championship with a<lb/>
36-hole total of 151, seven<lb/>
over par.<lb/>
Smith had been tied for<lb/>
second after firing a five<lb/>
over-par 77 In his first<lb/>
round, but passed first<lb/>
round leader Chris Joseph<lb/>
and edged Joseph by one<lb/>
stroke. Joseph fired a sec-<lb/>
ond round 77 to go with his<lb/>
opening round of 77, to<lb/>
finish at right over par 152.<lb/>
Smith and Joseph ran<lb/>
away with the tournament<lb/>
as four strokes separated<lb/>
Intramural football action<lb/>
College<lb/>
Graduates<lb/>
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Joseph and the third-place<lb/>
finisher, Lee Fuicher. Ful-<lb/>
cher shot a pair of 78s for a<lb/>
156 total for the tourn-<lb/>
ament. In fourth place was<lb/>
Cam Dudley at 158. In fifth<lb/>
place finished Bill Bugbee<lb/>
at 159.<lb/>
Bill Greene finished<lb/>
sixth at 160, but only after<lb/>
firing a second round, he<lb/>
ballooned to an 84 and all<lb/>
but eliminated himself from<lb/>
a crack at the individual<lb/>
title. There was a four-way<lb/>
tie for seventh place at 161;<lb/>
with Kevin Cameron, Ed<lb/>
Clark, Phil Hunt and Barry<lb/>
McCarthy finishing in the<lb/>
tie.<lb/>
The team championship<lb/>
was won by Tau Kappa<lb/>
Epsilon fraternity with a<lb/>
team total of 654 strokes.<lb/>
The Tekes were three<lb/>
strokes back after the first<lb/>
round, but fired a final<lb/>
round team score of 312 to<lb/>
run away with the title. Phi<lb/>
Kappa Tau, at 668, finished<lb/>
in second place. The Phi<lb/>
Taus led after the first<lb/>
round with a 339 total and<lb/>
had a team total of 329 for<lb/>
the second round. Kappa<lb/>
Sigma was third at 678 and<lb/>
Kappa Alpha finished in<lb/>
fourth with a 687 team<lb/>
total. Only nine teams had<lb/>
four players qualify and<lb/>
were eligible for the team<lb/>
title.<lb/>
Awards were also pre-<lb/>
sented to golfers with the<lb/>
low net, longest drive and<lb/>
closest to the pin.<lb/>
Lee Fuicher won low net<lb/>
with a 142 total.<lb/>
The closest to the pin<lb/>
contest was won by Kevin<lb/>
Cameron with a shot that<lb/>
finished 12 feet from the<lb/>
pin on the ninth hole. Cralg<lb/>
Coleman had the longest<lb/>
drive on the second hole,<lb/>
whopping his drive 298<lb/>
yards.<lb/>
The winning Teke team<lb/>
was made up of Joseph,<lb/>
Don Troutman, who fired<lb/>
163 for 36 holes; Mike<lb/>
Acrbe, with 166; and Mike<lb/>
Mohr, with 173.<lb/>
Last Wednesday's Fris-<lb/>
bee contest was won by<lb/>
John Beavins of Jones<lb/>
dormitory. Paul Bulluck of<lb/>
Scott finished second, in-<lb/>
dependent Paul Cassidy<lb/>
finished third and Scott<lb/>
participant Bobby Moore<lb/>
was fourth.<lb/>
Beavins won only one<lb/>
of the five individual cat-<lb/>
egories, winning the dist-<lb/>
ance throw with a throw of<lb/>
201 feet. He finished sec-<lb/>
ond in the competition for<lb/>
the hang time with a time of<lb/>
7.61 seconds.<lb/>
Other winners of the<lb/>
individual events were<lb/>
Randy Stallings (Curve<lb/>
Throw), Doug Myers (Bui-<lb/>
Iseye Throw), Robert Barn-<lb/>
hill (Hula Hoop), and<lb/>
Charles Winker (Hang<lb/>
Time).<lb/>
A total of 79 students<lb/>
participated in the Frisbee<lb/>
tournament.<lb/>
In co-rec softball action,<lb/>
the H.D. Studs, the Pep-<lb/>
pers and the Time Outs all<lb/>
stand undefeated with 3-0<lb/>
marks after three weeks of<lb/>
action. <lb/>
ECU uomen98 volleyball team in action<lb/>
Lady Bucs defeated UlNC-Greensboro 3-1<lb/>
State women<lb/>
top Pirates<lb/>
in tennis<lb/>
N.C. State's women's<lb/>
tennis team rolled over<lb/>
EastCaroiina last Thursday<lb/>
for a 9-0 victory.<lb/>
The Lady Wolfpack won<lb/>
every set, most by a sub-<lb/>
stantial margin. The match<lb/>
was ECU'S first of the<lb/>
season, while State is 1-1.<lb/>
The Lady Buc's next<lb/>
match is this Friday at the<lb/>
Methodist Invitational in<lb/>
Fayetteviile.<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
is Family Night at<lb/>
Special NY Strip Steak Dinner<lb/>
Just<lb/>
(Reg 12.99)<lb/>
Includes steak, large baked potato, roll, and<lb/>
all-you-can-eat free salad bar. Rib-eye steak and<lb/>
chopped beef dinners also available for SI .99.<lb/>
INCLUDES FREE SALAD BAR<lb/>
Phone: 756-5788<lb/>
264 By Pass<lb/>
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LC Digital Quartz Alarm<lb/>
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readout in hours, minutes,<lb/>
seconds and day of week<lb/>
At the push of a button<lb/>
month, day and date<lb/>
appear Alarm rings daily<lb/>
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time Yellow topstain-<lb/>
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frame. Also available in<lb/>
stainless?$195 00<lb/>
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LC Digital Quartz Alarm<lb/>
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At the push of a button.<lb/>
month, day and date<lb/>
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time Stainless steel.<lb/>
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Also available in yellow ?<lb/>
$250 00<lb/>
Here's a Seiko Quartz watch that gives you the convenience of<lb/>
a 12-hour alarm, digital readout, the famous Seiko accuracy?and<lb/>
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Drop by for<lb/>
a look today.<lb/>
You appreciate classic,<lb/>
casual, comfortable,<lb/>
clothes. What could<lb/>
be more classic than plaids?<lb/>
At the CLOTHES HORSE, we are<lb/>
into" plaids. We have clan plaids in<lb/>
sportshirts and ties by Gant<lb/>
and Pendleton, and great<lb/>
looking plaid pants by<lb/>
Berle of Charleston<lb/>
All new books. History, Art,<lb/>
Cookbooks And other snbjeets.<lb/>
Up to 70 Savings<lb/>
Skop Early For Best Seleetlons<lb/>
m istf - h.jrqr<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
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Mon. - Fri. 8:30-500<lb/>
Sat. 9:00- 12.00<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057148_0012"/><lb/>
Peqo 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 26 September 1978<lb/>
Upsets highlight NCAA action<lb/>
Tide, Irish, Bruins fall<lb/>
By<lb/>
HERSCHEL NISSENSON<lb/>
A P Sports Writer<lb/>
The luck of the Irish<lb/>
appears to be changing <lb/>
for the worse.<lb/>
For the first time in 15<lb/>
years, the Fighting Irish of<lb/>
Notre Dame have a two-<lb/>
game losing streak. They<lb/>
suffered a 28-14 loss to<lb/>
fifth-ranked Michigan Sat-<lb/>
urday after a 3-0 set back to<lb/>
Missouri in their own<lb/>
opener.<lb/>
There also is the possi-<lb/>
bility of Notre Dame falling<lb/>
out of the Top Twenty in<lb/>
the next Associated Press<lb/>
college football poll and<lb/>
little chance of the Irish<lb/>
defending last year's na-<lb/>
tional championship.<lb/>
And with Purdue, Mi-<lb/>
chigan State and Pitt as the<lb/>
next three opponents, an<lb/>
0-5 record isn't that far-<lb/>
fetched.<lb/>
In the first meeting<lb/>
between the two Midwest-<lb/>
ern powers In 35 years,<lb/>
Notre Dame took a 14-7<lb/>
halftime lead against Mi-<lb/>
chigan on a 6-yard touch-<lb/>
down pass from Joe Mon-<lb/>
tana to Dennis Grindinger<lb/>
and Vagas Ferguson's 4-<lb/>
yard TD run. But Rick<lb/>
Leach, who scored Mi-<lb/>
chigan's first touchdown,<lb/>
fired second-half touch-<lb/>
down passes of 5 and 17<lb/>
yards to Doug Marsh and a<lb/>
40-yarder to Ralph Clayton.<lb/>
"The story of the game<lb/>
was the second half said<lb/>
Michigan Coach Bo Schem-<lb/>
bechler. "Rick was a little<lb/>
tight in the first half 3 of 14<lb/>
for 21 yards and I told him,<lb/>
'Loosen up; we'll keep<lb/>
coming to you<lb/>
Leach's first touchdown<lb/>
pass followed a Notre Dame<lb/>
fumble and the other two<lb/>
came after interceptions.<lb/>
Notre Dame was ac-<lb/>
companied to the loser's<lb/>
circle by Alabama, which<lb/>
finished second to the Irish<lb/>
last season in the ratings<lb/>
and had been ranked No. 1<lb/>
this year. The Crimson Tide<lb/>
were beaten by seventh-<lb/>
ranked Southern California<lb/>
24-14 as Charles White<lb/>
rushed for 199 yards ? a<lb/>
record against Bear Bryant<lb/>
at Alabama ? and one<lb/>
touchdown and Paul Mc-<lb/>
Donald threw two scoring<lb/>
passes to K evin W illiams.<lb/>
The five teams directly<lb/>
behind Alabama in last<lb/>
weeks ratings ? Arkan-<lb/>
sas, Oklahoma, Penn State,<lb/>
Michigan and Texas ? all<lb/>
won, but only Oklahoma<lb/>
had an easy time.<lb/>
The Sooners, tied for<lb/>
third with Penn State,<lb/>
rambled for 560 yards on<lb/>
the ground and crushed<lb/>
Rice 66-7 as Thomas Lott<lb/>
and J.O. Watts each scored<lb/>
twice.<lb/>
Meanwhile, runner-up<lb/>
Arkansas needed second-<lb/>
half touchdown runs by Ben<lb/>
Cowinsand Ron Calcagni to<lb/>
shake off stubborn Okla-<lb/>
homa State 19-7, Penn<lb/>
State made up a 9-point<lb/>
third-period deficit on<lb/>
Chuck Fusina's 16-yard<lb/>
scoring pass to Scott Fizt-<lb/>
kee and Matt Suhey's<lb/>
3-yard TD run and downed<lb/>
Southern Methodist 26-21,<lb/>
and No. 6 Texas held off<lb/>
Wyoming 17-3 despite an<lb/>
offense that managed just<lb/>
187 yards.<lb/>
Rounding out the Top<lb/>
Ten Kansas upset eighth-<lb/>
ranked UCLA 23-24. No. 9<lb/>
Texas A&amp;M hammered<lb/>
Boston College 37-2, and<lb/>
No. 10 Louisiana State<lb/>
edged big underdog Wake<lb/>
Forest 13-11.<lb/>
In the Second Ten,<lb/>
11th-ranked Pitt rallied to<lb/>
beat Temple 20-12, No. 13<lb/>
Florida State trimmed Mi-<lb/>
ami, Fla. 31-21, Indiana<lb/>
upset No. 15 Washington<lb/>
14-7, No. 16 Ohio State<lb/>
trounced Minnesota 27-10,<lb/>
No. 17 Missouri drubbed<lb/>
Mississippi 45-14,<lb/>
Anthony Collins heads downfield for big gain<lb/>
CHANELO'S<lb/>
Pizza &amp; Spaghetti<lb/>
House<lb/>
Fast Free Delivery<lb/>
11:30 a.m.<lb/>
until closing<lb/>
758-7400<lb/>
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CATALOG of COLLEGIATE RESEARCH<lb/>
Over 10.000 listings! All subjects.<lb/>
Send NOW for this FREE catalog.<lb/>
(offer expires Dec 31. 1978)<lb/>
Send to: COLLEGIATE RESEARCH<lb/>
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HAVE A "BOTTOMLESS" CUP OF<lb/>
PEPSI FREE<lb/>
ENJOY A FREE<lb/>
PEPSI WITH THE<lb/>
PURCHASE OF<lb/>
ANY PLATTER,<lb/>
QUARTER<lb/>
CHICKEN OR<lb/>
SANDWICH.<lb/>
10th and Charles Streets-Greenville<lb/>
BOB THALMAN<lb/>
Thalman<lb/>
suffers<lb/>
chest pains<lb/>
LEXINGTON. Va. AP<lb/>
After a three-day ab-<lb/>
sence due to chest pains,<lb/>
feisty Bob Thalman expects<lb/>
to be back on the field<lb/>
Tuesday in his job as<lb/>
football coach at Virginia<lb/>
M ihtary Institute.<lb/>
The 54-year-old Thal-<lb/>
ma, m his eighth season as<lb/>
coach of the Keydets. was<lb/>
hospitalized about 1 .30<lb/>
a.m. Saturday m Charle-<lb/>
ston, S.C<lb/>
Thalman was forced to<lb/>
listen to the radio Saturda,<lb/>
night as VMI dropped a<lb/>
14-3 Southern Conference<lb/>
decision to The Citadel tl<lb/>
offensive coordinator Joe<lb/>
Bush in charge of the team<lb/>
But a VMI spokesman<lb/>
said all results were neg-<lb/>
ative when Thalman was<lb/>
put through a series of 'ests<lb/>
as Roper Hospital in Char-<lb/>
leston. and he was allowed<lb/>
to fly home late Sunday<lb/>
Imagine a world<lb/>
without<lb/>
WHALES<lb/>
6 LASBT I1I??K JtL ??<lb/>
Only GREENPEACE<lb/>
Hands between<lb/>
the what and<lb/>
the harpoonerfs cannon.<lb/>
Entire whale species<lb/>
are threatened<lb/>
with extinction, but<lb/>
we cent save them.<lb/>
Send your contribution<lb/>
to:<lb/>
Greenpeace Foundation<lb/>
240 Fort Mason<lb/>
San Francisco, CA<lb/>
94123<lb/>
Imagine a world without<lb/>
GREENPEACE<lb/>
SALE ENDS SATURDAY SEPT. 30th.<lb/>
UBE - DOWNTOWN IN GREENVILLE<lb/>
UBE THANK YOU SALE<lb/>
The UBE appreciates the business of all ECU Students.<lb/>
You've made this our most successful fall ever! To show our<lb/>
appreciation to you, we're slashing the prices of all our sports-<lb/>
wear. Bring in these coupons and save<lb/>
sioif sioff<lb/>
ECU Sportsh irt<lb/>
$2 Off $2 Off<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Zipper Hooded<lb/>
Sweatshirt<lb/>
Reg. 9.9S now 7.9s<lb/>
$???ECU$20ff<lb/>
Hooded Pullover<lb/>
Sweatshirt<lb/>
Reg 7.95 now $.95<lb/>
$2 Off<lb/>
$2 off! $2 off<lb/>
$2 offi $2 off<lb/>
$2 off $2 Off<lb/>
ECU Regular<lb/>
Sweatshirt<lb/>
Reg. 7.95 &amp; 5.95<lb/>
now 5.95 &amp; 3.95<lb/>
Reg. 9.95 &amp; 8.95<lb/>
now 7.95 &amp; 6.95<lb/>
$2 off: $2 off<lb/>
$2 off<lb/>
$l off Si off<lb/>
ECU Jersey<lb/>
Reg. 5.95 now 495<lb/>
$1 Off $1 Off<lb/>
ECU T-Shirt<lb/>
Reg. 2.95 now 1.95<lb/>
Si off $1 off<lb/>
Sweatpants<lb/>
Reg. s.f O now 4.50<lb/>
$1 off $1 of f I<lb/>
ECU Hats<lb/>
Reg. sum &amp; Up<lb/>
$1 of f Si off j $1 off<lb/>
LfO off .SO off i $5"off<lb/>
$1 off! Si off$1 of f I $1 off $1 off<lb/>
$5 of f i $3 of f ?$i of f S SI off<lb/>
Gymshorts<lb/>
Reg. 3.99 -5.49<lb/>
Warm up Suits<lb/>
Reg. 19.95 now 14.95<lb/>
Lined Jackets<lb/>
Reg. 14.95 &amp; Up<lb/>
?Off<lb/>
o off! $5 off<lb/>
$5 off I S3 off<lb/>
Sloff<lb/>
Tennis Shorts<lb/>
Reg. 6.95 ?7.95<lb/>
now 5.95 &amp; 6.9s<lb/>
S3 Off I SI Off $1 offl<lb/>
<pb facs="00057148_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>