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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057150_0001"/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Vol. 55<lb/>
No.<lb/>
3 October 1978<lb/>
Board of Trustees meets<lb/>
By MARCBARNES<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The Board of Trustees<lb/>
met m general session on<lb/>
Saturday afternoon in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Cen-<lb/>
ter. Some of the topics<lb/>
discussed were develop-<lb/>
ments from the Medical<lb/>
School, improvement of<lb/>
parking, and the possibility<lb/>
of inclusion into a future<lb/>
athletic conference. The<lb/>
Board also went into ex-<lb/>
ecutive session<lb/>
The meeting was open-<lb/>
ed bv Chairman Troy Pate<lb/>
Opening remarks by Pate<lb/>
uded discussion of the<lb/>
stee Bv-Laws commit-<lb/>
im Powell, who is<lb/>
"arge of presenting<lb/>
recommendations about the<lb/>
adc. f by laws by the<lb/>
iad been slated to<lb/>
? report about the<lb/>
jsof his research. He<lb/>
?.ever, that he<lb/>
-eport was not yet ready for<lb/>
isentation.<lb/>
Louis Singleton<lb/>
. the need for a<lb/>
ttee system.<lb/>
all items of<lb/>
? ss to appear at a<lb/>
?eeting should come<lb/>
jmmittees. Singleton<lb/>
?.ocated the adoption<lb/>
- and regulations of<lb/>
the board of<lb/>
Aas no old bus-<lb/>
re the board In<lb/>
t isiness, however.<lb/>
Sing asked the board<lb/>
for passage of a proposal to<lb/>
a ietter, thanking, the<lb/>
University of North Caro-<lb/>
a at Chapei Hill for their<lb/>
hospitality during the re-<lb/>
cent ECU-UNC contest.<lb/>
The proposal also called for<lb/>
a request that the athletic<lb/>
contests between the two<lb/>
universities be continued in<lb/>
years to come.<lb/>
The meeting then went<lb/>
into a series of staff re-<lb/>
ports. The first of these<lb/>
reports came from the Vice<lb/>
Chancellor of Academic<lb/>
Affairs, Dr. John Howell.<lb/>
Dr. Howell reported on<lb/>
enrollment fugures which<lb/>
show that the student<lb/>
population at the University<lb/>
continues to climb, and he<lb/>
said that by 1980, a little<lb/>
over 10,800 full time stu-<lb/>
dents would be attending<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Howell commented<lb/>
further that there has been<lb/>
an increase in years past in<lb/>
both transfer and freshmen<lb/>
attendence. and he expects<lb/>
this trend tocontinue.<lb/>
Howell also said that<lb/>
there was a variance in the<lb/>
number of graduate stu-<lb/>
dents enrolled in the uni-<lb/>
versity, but he said that this<lb/>
was normal, and not a<lb/>
cause for alarm.<lb/>
Vice Chancellor for<lb/>
Health Affairs. Dr. Edwin<lb/>
W. Monroe then reported<lb/>
to the board.<lb/>
Dr. Monroe said that a<lb/>
new Neo-Natal center had<lb/>
been opened, a facility to<lb/>
provide care to critically ill<lb/>
newborns. At the present<lb/>
time. Monroe noted, 8-10<lb/>
newborns are receiving<lb/>
care at the center.<lb/>
He commented further<lb/>
that a lot of the patients are<lb/>
from outside the Pitt Coun-<lb/>
ty area. He said that<lb/>
patients from all o er East-<lb/>
ern N.C. are being helped<lb/>
at the center Monroe men-<lb/>
tioned that the center will<lb/>
be formally opened later<lb/>
this month with Governor<lb/>
Jim Hunt present.<lb/>
Dr. Monroe then com-<lb/>
mented on the enrollment<lb/>
m the Medical School.<lb/>
Monroe said that there are<lb/>
presently 65 students en-<lb/>
rolled from 36 counties in<lb/>
N.C. He went on to produce<lb/>
figures which showed that<lb/>
there are 36 females and 8<lb/>
minority students enrolled.<lb/>
He also said there are<lb/>
presently 31 residents in<lb/>
training from the Medical<lb/>
School at Pitt County<lb/>
Memorial Hospital.<lb/>
A Mason committee will<lb/>
come in November to ac-<lb/>
credit the school for third<lb/>
year instruction, according<lb/>
to Monroe.<lb/>
Monroe went on to say<lb/>
that he was pleased with<lb/>
the progress that the de-<lb/>
partment of Health Affairs<lb/>
had made so far with fund<lb/>
raising.<lb/>
Dr Robert Holt, who is<lb/>
the Vice Chancellor for<lb/>
administration then report-<lb/>
ed on student affairs and<lb/>
alumni.<lb/>
Dr. Holt commented<lb/>
that the dorms were 98<lb/>
percent filled. He also said<lb/>
that financial aid this year<lb/>
is assisting some 2,906<lb/>
students to attend school,<lb/>
and that three million dol-<lb/>
lars of financial grants,<lb/>
loans and scholarships for<lb/>
financially needy students<lb/>
is presently in force.<lb/>
Holt then went on to<lb/>
praise the students who<lb/>
work in Greenville to sup-<lb/>
plement their educational<lb/>
funds. He said that a<lb/>
manager of a business in<lb/>
downtown had recently ex-<lb/>
pressed appreciation to him<lb/>
for the job that the students<lb/>
were doing.<lb/>
Holt then turned his<lb/>
attention to the placement<lb/>
office, and he said that<lb/>
most of the alumni who list<lb/>
with the placement office<lb/>
for jobs usually receive<lb/>
them. He also reported on<lb/>
the progress of the instal-<lb/>
lation of a new computer,<lb/>
which is to be made oper-<lb/>
ational at the end of this<lb/>
month.<lb/>
K. Edward Greene<lb/>
asked Dr. Holt if ECU was<lb/>
having any trouble collect-<lb/>
ing money from students<lb/>
who may have defaulted on<lb/>
federally funded loans. Dr.<lb/>
Holt remarked that the<lb/>
university has a collection<lb/>
agency for the loans, and<lb/>
only about 5 percent of the<lb/>
students default on them.<lb/>
Cliff Moore, who is<lb/>
the vice chancellor for<lb/>
business affairs, then re-<lb/>
ported on improvement of<lb/>
both the snack bar and the<lb/>
parking lot facilities on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Two new facilities for<lb/>
parking and dining will be<lb/>
located at Wright Audi-<lb/>
torium. Moore reported<lb/>
that the recent food service<lb/>
this year is much better<lb/>
than it was last year, but<lb/>
that the student's support<lb/>
of the cafeteria had not<lb/>
changed much in the two<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Moore said that the<lb/>
Security office had been<lb/>
upgraded, and that there<lb/>
are now three more people<lb/>
working for the campus<lb/>
police. Moore added that<lb/>
the telephone is now mon-<lb/>
itored twenty-four hours a<lb/>
day.<lb/>
The vice- chairman of<lb/>
the board. Mr. Ashley<lb/>
Futrell asked Moore about<lb/>
the possibility of the con-<lb/>
struction of an overpass at<lb/>
Tenth Street and College<lb/>
Hill Drive. Moore repied<lb/>
that the N.C. Department<lb/>
of Transportation had pro-<lb/>
mised to look into the<lb/>
matter. Chairman Troy<lb/>
Pate commented that a<lb/>
leeter should be written to<lb/>
the Depatment asking that<lb/>
formal consideration of the<lb/>
overpass project be under-<lb/>
taken. Pate said that the<lb/>
Trustees should take an<lb/>
active voice in requesting<lb/>
the overpass. The board<lb/>
unanimously passed the<lb/>
proposal.<lb/>
See TRUSTEES, p. 5<lb/>
BOARD OF TRUSTEES meet in general session. Topics discussed were medical school, parking and possible<lb/>
inclusion into athletic conference.<lb/>
Photo by John H Grogan<lb/>
Education professor wins Civitan<lb/>
award, honored by local chapter<lb/>
By MARCBARNES<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The Board of Trustees<lb/>
voted unanimously at the<lb/>
executive session of their<lb/>
meeting to replace two top<lb/>
administrative posts at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
The posts are that of<lb/>
vice chancellor for admini-<lb/>
stration, presently held by<lb/>
Dr. Robert Holt, and vice<lb/>
chancellor for health affairs<lb/>
presently held by Dr. Ed-<lb/>
win Monroe. The two po-<lb/>
sitions will be replaced by<lb/>
two new positions, vice<lb/>
chancellor for student life<lb/>
and vice chancellor for<lb/>
institutional advancement<lb/>
and planning. The plan,<lb/>
subject to approval by the<lb/>
Board of Governors of the<lb/>
University of North Caro-<lb/>
lina would go into effect<lb/>
next summer.<lb/>
Chancellor brewer com-<lb/>
mented on the reasons for<lb/>
the changes. Brewer said<lb/>
liminates positions<lb/>
that "We felt that we want<lb/>
to carry the university on to<lb/>
higher levels of excellence<lb/>
in the next decade. The<lb/>
institution has already a-<lb/>
chieved a high level of<lb/>
maturity, but there are<lb/>
areas that we felt that we<lb/>
needed additional leader-<lb/>
ship<lb/>
He went on to say that<lb/>
"everything we do is<lb/>
geared to making this a<lb/>
better place Dr. Brewer<lb/>
also said that Dr. Robert<lb/>
Holt had indicated to form-<lb/>
er Chancellor Jenkins and<lb/>
to himself a desire to return<lb/>
to the classroom.<lb/>
The proposed chancel-<lb/>
lor for student life would<lb/>
cover a "myriad of respon-<lb/>
sibilities according to<lb/>
Brewer. Brewer comment-<lb/>
ed further that "a student's<lb/>
life goes well beyond the<lb/>
classroom, and encompas-<lb/>
i<lb/>
:?:?<lb/>
ses the total range of<lb/>
activities of a four year stay<lb/>
at ECU<lb/>
The other position,<lb/>
chancellor of institutional<lb/>
advancement and planning<lb/>
would be a position to<lb/>
coordinate various planning<lb/>
and development phases of<lb/>
the university. Brewer said<lb/>
that "for a university to<lb/>
achieve the mark of real<lb/>
excellence requires the<lb/>
support of all the consti-<lb/>
tuencies of the university<lb/>
including alumni, founda-<lb/>
tions, friends and corpor-<lb/>
ations " Brewer added<lb/>
"this new office will give us<lb/>
maximum effort in that<lb/>
area. It will also enhance<lb/>
the planning efforts of the<lb/>
university<lb/>
The chancellor went on<lb/>
to say that the job de-<lb/>
scription for the two new<lb/>
positions had not yet been<lb/>
completed. Brewer said<lb/>
1<lb/>
What's inside<lb/>
William B Martin of<lb/>
Greenville was the recip-<lb/>
ient of ihe Good Citizenship<lb/>
award for 1978 given by the<lb/>
Greenville Civitan Club at<lb/>
'he club's Fall installation<lb/>
and awards cookout held<lb/>
Thursday.<lb/>
Martin, a professor in th<lb/>
School of Education at ECU<lb/>
received the award in rec-<lb/>
ognition of his contribut-<lb/>
ions to the Greenville com-<lb/>
munity and for his work<lb/>
with programs for retarded<lb/>
persons<lb/>
He is currently serving<lb/>
as a regional vice-president<lb/>
of the National Associaiton<lb/>
for Retarded Citizens, a<lb/>
past-president of the N.C.<lb/>
Association for Retarded<lb/>
Citizens, a member of the<lb/>
board of directors of the<lb/>
Greenville Sheltered Work-<lb/>
shop and chairman of the<lb/>
Aid to Handicapped, North<lb/>
Carolina District East, Civ-<lb/>
itan Club. For the past 11<lb/>
years, he has directed a<lb/>
camp for retarded children<lb/>
at White Lake.<lb/>
CIVITAN OF THE YEAR<lb/>
The Civitan of the Year<lb/>
award was presented to<lb/>
Richard A. Stephenson, the<lb/>
immediate past-president<lb/>
of the Greenville Civitan<lb/>
Club.<lb/>
During his leadership,<lb/>
the club contributed over<lb/>
$4,000 to programs for the<lb/>
mentally retarded, the phy-<lb/>
sically handicapped and to<lb/>
other community service<lb/>
projects. The club has also<lb/>
been designated the Out-<lb/>
standing Club for Area<lb/>
Nine, District East which<lb/>
comprises Greenville, Kin-<lb/>
ston, Havelock, New Bern<lb/>
and Jacksonville.<lb/>
Stephenson is a profes-<lb/>
sor in the Department of<lb/>
Geography at ECU.<lb/>
New officers for the club<lb/>
include: Hugh Wease,<lb/>
president; Harold Jones,<lb/>
president-elect; Richard<lb/>
Murphy, vice president;<lb/>
Ronald Sessoms, treasurer;<lb/>
and Nicholas Radeka, sec-<lb/>
retary.<lb/>
Bill Marley of Golds-<lb/>
boro, Civitan Governor for<lb/>
N.C. District East, conduc-<lb/>
ted the swearing-in cere-<lb/>
mony. Julian Rawls of<lb/>
Greenville, chairman of the<lb/>
awards committee, presen-<lb/>
ted the awards.<lb/>
KEITH BERGER<lb/>
mmm&amp;<lb/>
Chick Corea's new album. Friends is<lb/>
reviewedsee p. 6.<lb/>
Keith Berger, a student under Marcel<lb/>
Marceau, will appear at Hendnx<lb/>
Theatre, Wednesday nightsee p. 8.<lb/>
Pirate's top Movin" Mavssee p. 9.<lb/>
Volleyball teams play UNC tonight in<lb/>
Minges at 7 p.msee p. 10.<lb/>
A six-foot alligator wanders through<lb/>
Wilmingtonsee p. 3.<lb/>
ECU sponsered the Fourth Annual<lb/>
Publications Workshop last weekend<lb/>
see p. 3.<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
n<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
i<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
i<lb/>
that "we will formuhze the<lb/>
job description and criteria<lb/>
before we start a national<lb/>
search He went on to sav<lb/>
that "we will attain the best<lb/>
possible people in the na-<lb/>
tion for these two posi-<lb/>
tions<lb/>
When asked If it was<lb/>
possible that a person who<lb/>
is already in the university<lb/>
community might be ap-<lb/>
pointed to one of the two<lb/>
positions. Brewer reitera-<lb/>
ted his desire to find the<lb/>
most qualified person in the<lb/>
nation and he went on to<lb/>
say that if the person is<lb/>
already in the university,<lb/>
then that person is the one<lb/>
we can use. To do less<lb/>
would be unfair to the<lb/>
constituencies of the uni-<lb/>
versity which expect excel-<lb/>
lance of us<lb/>
When asked his rea-<lb/>
ction to the changes. Holt<lb/>
said that when Dr. Brewer<lb/>
came on board I told him I<lb/>
plan to work is this position<lb/>
only one more year in this<lb/>
period of transition, and<lb/>
then go back to the class-<lb/>
room He went on to say<lb/>
that "I heartily concur in<lb/>
what he is planning for this<lb/>
position, and feel sure that<lb/>
it will bring greater finan-<lb/>
cial support to strengthen<lb/>
our academic programs<lb/>
Monroe reacted in this<lb/>
way. He said that "I<lb/>
recognize that the decision<lb/>
has been made and I will<lb/>
continue to assist the insti-<lb/>
tution in whatever appro-<lb/>
priate role seems feasible "<lb/>
Monroe went on to say that<lb/>
"I intend to evaluate al-<lb/>
ternatives here and else-<lb/>
where during the months<lb/>
ahead When asked about<lb/>
future career plans, he said<lb/>
"no definite answer at this<lb/>
time<lb/>
Dr. Jack W. Peltason<lb/>
Installation speaker announced<lb/>
CHEMISTRY SEMINARS QIFT - Continuing ?pport for a<lb/>
program of seminars and symposia by '  Chemistry<lb/>
department, East Carolina University, is tfir i ,trated by<lb/>
Union Carbide Corporation in the latest . series of<lb/>
contributions. Here David E. Pecot R, Union Carbide's<lb/>
Greenville plant manager, presents a check for $2,500 to<lb/>
ECU Chancellor Thomas Brewer.<lb/>
Also present for the presentation are H. George<lb/>
Lequear L, Union Carbide manager for Community<lb/>
Relations, and ECU Chemistry chairman Angelo Voipe<lb/>
second from left). ECU Nbws 8(rM( p?ofoJ<lb/>
By WILLIAM SHIRES<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
One of America's most<lb/>
distinguished leaders in<lb/>
higher education will be the<lb/>
speaker for the formal<lb/>
installation of Thomas B.<lb/>
Brewer as chancellor of<lb/>
East Carolina University on<lb/>
Oct. 28.<lb/>
He is Dr. Jack W.<lb/>
Peltason, former chancellor<lb/>
of the University of Illinois<lb/>
at Urbana-Champaign who<lb/>
is now president of the<lb/>
American Council on Ed-<lb/>
ucation.<lb/>
"We are highly pleased<lb/>
and honored to have such<lb/>
an outstanding personage<lb/>
as the speaker for this<lb/>
important occasion said<lb/>
Dr. Henry C. Ferreil Jr<lb/>
chairman of the Committee<lb/>
for the Installation.<lb/>
Other distinguished<lb/>
guests on the program will<lb/>
include Gov. James B.<lb/>
Hunt Jr University of<lb/>
North Carolina president<lb/>
William C. Friday, Jerry<lb/>
W. Powell of Greenville,<lb/>
president of the ECU<lb/>
Alumni Assn Tommy Joe<lb/>
Payne, president of the<lb/>
Student Government<lb/>
Assn ECU trustees chair-<lb/>
man Troy W. Pate of<lb/>
Goldsboro, William A.<lb/>
Johnson of Lillington,<lb/>
chairman of the UNC Board<lb/>
of Governors, and Ferreil,<lb/>
president of the ECU Fa-<lb/>
culty Senate.<lb/>
The Hon. Susie Sharp,<lb/>
chief justice of the Supreme<lb/>
Court of North Carolina,<lb/>
will administer the oath of<lb/>
office to Dr. Brewer.<lb/>
Brewer, formerly vice<lb/>
chancellor and dean of<lb/>
Texas Christian University,<lb/>
became the seventh chief<lb/>
administrative officer of<lb/>
East Carolina on July 1.<lb/>
The formal ceremony of<lb/>
installation of the chan-<lb/>
cellor is the first for ECU<lb/>
since the school attained<lb/>
university status and be-<lb/>
came a constituent of the<lb/>
University of North Caro-<lb/>
lina system.<lb/>
Dr. Peltason served 10<lb/>
years as chancellor at the<lb/>
University of Illinois where<lb/>
he had served some 20<lb/>
years on the faculty and as<lb/>
dean of the College of<lb/>
Liberal Arts and Sciences.<lb/>
He also served during<lb/>
1964-67 as vice chancellor<lb/>
for academic affairs, Uni-<lb/>
versity of California at<lb/>
Irvine.<lb/>
He is a past chairman of<lb/>
the National Association of<lb/>
State Universities and<lb/>
Land-Grant Colleges. He is<lb/>
a member of the board of<lb/>
trustees of the Educational<lb/>
Testing Service, a trustee<lb/>
of the Institute for Amer-<lb/>
ican Universities, Aix-en-<lb/>
Povenoe, France, and a<lb/>
member of the Governing<lb/>
Boa'd.Robert Wood John-<lb/>
son Health Policy Fellow-<lb/>
ship Program of the Na-<lb/>
tional Academy of Scien-<lb/>
ces.<lb/>
In announcing program<lb/>
details for the Installation,<lb/>
Ferreil also extended an<lb/>
invitation on behalf of the<lb/>
ECU trustees, faculty, staff<lb/>
and students for public<lb/>
attendance. Those wishing<lb/>
to attend the ceremony may<lb/>
obtain information and<lb/>
place ticket requests by<lb/>
telephone, at 757-6537,<lb/>
Greenville, Ferreil said. He<lb/>
urged that ticket requests<lb/>
be placed no later than Oct.<lb/>
10.<lb/>
? <lb/>
 <lb/>
<pb facs="00057150_0002"/><lb/>
u<lb/>
II<lb/>
Paga 2 FOUNTAINHEAO 3 Oetobar 1978<lb/>
?MM<lb/>
Services<lb/>
Conregation , Bayt<lb/>
Shalom is pleased to invite<lb/>
you to attend High Holy<lb/>
Days services.<lb/>
They will be held at the<lb/>
First Presbyterian Church,<lb/>
Elm and 14th St Green-<lb/>
ville. The schedule of ser-<lb/>
vices is:<lb/>
ROSH HASHANAH:<lb/>
Sun Oct. 1, 8 p.m. Mon<lb/>
Oct. 2, 10 a.m Mon Oct.<lb/>
2, 6:15 p.m Tues Oct.<lb/>
3, 10 a.m.<lb/>
YOM KIPPUR<lb/>
Kol Nidrei - Tues Oct. 10<lb/>
6:30p.m. Wed Oct. 11, 10<lb/>
a.m. Minchah, Wed Oct.<lb/>
11,4 p.m.<lb/>
A breaking of the fast<lb/>
will be held at the home of<lb/>
Dr. and Mrs. Ed Lieberman<lb/>
311 King George Rd. All in<lb/>
attendance of services are<lb/>
cordially invited.<lb/>
FGSF<lb/>
FSOG<lb/>
John Warencki, a<lb/>
representative with the<lb/>
Department of State, For-<lb/>
eign Service Officer Corps,<lb/>
will be on campus Oct 4<lb/>
anf would like to meet with<lb/>
interested staff, faculty,<lb/>
and students.<lb/>
We have arranged for<lb/>
him tobe in Brewster B-103<lb/>
at 9:15 a.m. to discuss<lb/>
careers and entrance re-<lb/>
quirements with th Foreign<lb/>
Service with faculty and<lb/>
staff At 10:15 a.m. he<lb/>
would like to meet with<lb/>
interested students from<lb/>
your department to answer<lb/>
questions and give them<lb/>
general information about<lb/>
the service.<lb/>
? 2000 years ago, today's<lb/>
society with ail of it's<lb/>
problems were foretold in<lb/>
the book of Revelation and<lb/>
the ultimate outcome, the<lb/>
eminent return of Jesus<lb/>
Christ. The second coming<lb/>
of Jesus Christ will have<lb/>
eternal results for your life.<lb/>
So come Thurs Oct. 5<lb/>
when Steve Jones, Pastor<lb/>
of Faith Assemby of God<lb/>
will speak to the Full<lb/>
Gospel Student Fellowship<lb/>
in Mendenhall 221 at 7:30<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Gamma Beta<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi will<lb/>
meet Thurs Oct. 5 in<lb/>
Mendenhall 244 at 7 p.m.<lb/>
All members are urged to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
G:mma Beta Phi will<lb/>
hold its first annual Rush<lb/>
meeting for Fall Semester<lb/>
Thurs Oct. 5 in Menden-<lb/>
hall 244 at 7 p.m. Any<lb/>
student with a grade point<lb/>
average in the upper 20<lb/>
percent of hisher class is<lb/>
eligible for admission. All<lb/>
interested students are wel-<lb/>
come to attend this meet-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
NTE<lb/>
KYF<lb/>
SCEC<lb/>
The Student Council for<lb/>
Exceptional Children will<lb/>
meet Wed Oct. 4 at 5 p.m.<lb/>
in room 129 Speight. Plans<lb/>
for up-coming activities will<lb/>
be discussed and refresh-<lb/>
ments will be served. All<lb/>
members and interested<lb/>
persons are stronglv urged<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
The National Teacher<lb/>
Examinations NTE) will be<lb/>
given at ECU Nov. 11.<lb/>
Scores from the exam-<lb/>
inations are used by states<lb/>
for certification of teachers,<lb/>
by school systems for selec-<lb/>
tion and identification of<lb/>
leadership qualities, and by<lb/>
colleges as part of their<lb/>
graduation requirements.<lb/>
Educational Testing<lb/>
Service, which prepares<lb/>
and administers the tests,<lb/>
says they are designed to<lb/>
measure knowledge gained<lb/>
from professional and gen-<lb/>
eral education and in 26<lb/>
subject-matter fields.<lb/>
Bulletins describing<lb/>
registration procedures ana<lb/>
containing registration<lb/>
forms may be obtained<lb/>
from the ECU Testing<lb/>
Center, 105 Speight Build-<lb/>
ing, or directly from the<lb/>
National Teachers Exam-<lb/>
inations, Educational Test-<lb/>
ing Service, Box 911,<lb/>
Princeton, NJ 08541.<lb/>
The deadline for regular<lb/>
registration is Oct. 19.<lb/>
On-the-spot registration is<lb/>
not permitted.<lb/>
Bicyclists<lb/>
All full-time students<lb/>
interested in a bicycle club.<lb/>
This year an interested<lb/>
student, in association with<lb/>
the intramurals depart-<lb/>
ment, is trying to form a<lb/>
bicycle club. All interested<lb/>
bicyclist are encouraged to<lb/>
attend the first meeting so<lb/>
an appropriate analyses can<lb/>
be made on the future of<lb/>
such a club. The first<lb/>
meeting will be Tues Oct.<lb/>
10 at 8 p.m. in Memorial<lb/>
Gym room 105.<lb/>
Ping pong<lb/>
The King Youth Fellow-<lb/>
ship will meet Oct. 5 in 305<lb/>
Flanagan at 7 p.m. All<lb/>
persons interested in Bible<lb/>
study and fellowship please<lb/>
come. If you wish to call for<lb/>
information please call Mr.<lb/>
Nicholson's office in Flan-<lb/>
agan 305 or phone 757-6736<lb/>
and 825-7501.<lb/>
Invitation<lb/>
The trustees, faculty,<lb/>
staff, and students of ECU<lb/>
request the honor of your<lb/>
presence at the installation<lb/>
of Thomas Brewer as<lb/>
Chancellor of the Univer-<lb/>
sity on Sat Oct. 28 at 10:30<lb/>
a.m. on the North Lawn of<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
If you wish to attend,<lb/>
please call 757-6537 to<lb/>
request tickets.<lb/>
Concert<lb/>
The Student Union Ma-<lb/>
jor Attractions Committee<lb/>
will present Brothers John-<lb/>
son with special guest<lb/>
Mother's Finest on Sal<lb/>
Oct. 14 at 8 p.m. in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum.<lb/>
Tickets will be $4 for<lb/>
ECU students and $6 for<lb/>
the public. All tickets are<lb/>
available from the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
In addition, public tick-<lb/>
ets can be purchased from:<lb/>
Apple Records - East Fifth<lb/>
Street - School Kids<lb/>
Records - Georgetown<lb/>
Shoppes - The M usic Shop -<lb/>
Greenville Square Mall.<lb/>
Only public tickets will<lb/>
be available at the door.<lb/>
All day-students regis-<lb/>
ter now for the Mendenhall<lb/>
Day-Student Table Tennis<lb/>
Tournament to be held<lb/>
Tues Oct. 17. The tour-<lb/>
nament will be held in the<lb/>
Table Tennis Rooms at<lb/>
Mendenhall at 7 p.m.<lb/>
The four winners in the<lb/>
men's division and wo-<lb/>
men's division will repres-<lb/>
ent the day-students in the<lb/>
All-Campus Table Tennis<lb/>
Tournament to be held<lb/>
Nov. 7.<lb/>
One all-campus winner<lb/>
in each division will repre-<lb/>
sent ECU in the Association<lb/>
of College Unions - Interna-<lb/>
tional regional face-to-face<lb/>
tournaments to be held in<lb/>
Knoxville, Tenn. in Feb.<lb/>
All expenses for the tour-<lb/>
nament will be paid by<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
Registration forms and<lb/>
details are available at the<lb/>
Billiards Center and the<lb/>
final day to register is Fri.<lb/>
Oct. 13.<lb/>
t<lb/>
Lecture<lb/>
Or. George S. Wilson.<lb/>
Chemistry Department of<lb/>
the University of Arizona,<lb/>
Tucson, Arizona, will pre-<lb/>
sent a seminar on Electro-<lb/>
chemical Studies of Thioe-<lb/>
thersas Biological Models"<lb/>
on Oct. 4 at 12 Noon In<lb/>
Room 201, Flanagan.<lb/>
Chess<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
travel committee once<lb/>
again offers its low price<lb/>
trip to New York City, Nov.<lb/>
22 to Nov. 26. The price is<lb/>
only $65. Reservations<lb/>
can be made at Mendenhall<lb/>
ticket office. Don't miss the<lb/>
core of the big apple.<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
Travel<lb/>
Donors<lb/>
The Air Force ROTC<lb/>
will be sponsoring a Blood<lb/>
Drive Oct. 4 and 5 from 11<lb/>
to 5 p.m. located in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium. We are asking<lb/>
everyone to participate in<lb/>
this worthwhile cause in<lb/>
order to reach the goal<lb/>
which has been set for 700<lb/>
pints of blood. Sororities,<lb/>
fraternities, and other or-<lb/>
ganizations are strongly<lb/>
urged to take part in the<lb/>
donation. Trophies will be<lb/>
awarded to the organization<lb/>
with the most donors. Take<lb/>
time out to help, give a pint<lb/>
and save a life.<lb/>
L<lb/>
The deadline fa the<lb/>
Student Union Travel<lb/>
Committee New York trip is<lb/>
Mon Oct. 16. The New<lb/>
York trip is during Thank-<lb/>
sgiving break, Nov. 22-26.<lb/>
The price is $65 and<lb/>
includes bus transportation<lb/>
and group accomodations at<lb/>
the Hotel Taft in midtown<lb/>
Manhattan. There are<lb/>
places for 90 students.<lb/>
Registration is at Central<lb/>
Ticket Office of Mendenhall<lb/>
Last year was one of the<lb/>
most successful seasons on<lb/>
Broadway and this year<lb/>
should be better. Eubie is<lb/>
the seasons favorite, it is a<lb/>
musical about Eubie Blake,<lb/>
the last king of ragtime.<lb/>
Annie, a AChorusUne,<lb/>
Grease and the W iz are still<lb/>
playing. Don't miss New<lb/>
York this year.<lb/>
The All-Campus Chess<lb/>
Tournament, sponsored by<lb/>
Mendenhall, will begin<lb/>
Mon Oct. 9 at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
the Mendenhall Multi-<lb/>
purpose Room. All full-<lb/>
time students are eligible to<lb/>
participate.<lb/>
The tournament will be<lb/>
conducted to determine the<lb/>
one winner who represent<lb/>
ECU in the Association of<lb/>
College Unions - Internat-<lb/>
ional regional face-to-face<lb/>
tournaments to be held in<lb/>
Knoxville, Tenn. on Feb. 8,<lb/>
9, and 10. All expenses for<lb/>
the tournament will be paid<lb/>
by Mendenhall.<lb/>
Registration forms and<lb/>
details are available at the<lb/>
MSC Billiards Center. The<lb/>
final day to register is<lb/>
Thurs Oct. 5.<lb/>
Phi Sigma<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi will hold<lb/>
its monthly business meet-<lb/>
ing Wed Oct. 4 at 6 p.m.<lb/>
The meeting is in Austin<lb/>
room 132 and all members<lb/>
are urged to attend.<lb/>
The Mendenhall<lb/>
Day-Student Bowling Tour-<lb/>
nament will be held Mon<lb/>
Oct. 16 through Fri Oct<lb/>
27. Day-student bowlers<lb/>
will have two weeks to bowl<lb/>
nine games and total pins<lb/>
will decide the top eight<lb/>
winners in the men's div-<lb/>
ision and women's division<lb/>
The sixteen winners will<lb/>
compete in the All-Campus<lb/>
Tournament to be held<lb/>
Nov. 9<lb/>
Two five member teams<lb/>
will represent ECU at the<lb/>
Association of College<lb/>
Unions - International reg-<lb/>
ional face-to-face tour-<lb/>
naments to be held in<lb/>
Knoxville, Tenn. in Feb-<lb/>
ruary. All expenses for the<lb/>
tournament will be paid be<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
Registration forms and<lb/>
details are available at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Bowling and<lb/>
Billiards Centers. The final<lb/>
day to register is Fri Oct<lb/>
13.<lb/>
Phi Eta<lb/>
Skiing<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
travel committee is offering<lb/>
a new trip this year to Snow<lb/>
Shoe West Virginia, Jan. 1<lb/>
to Jan. 5. Reservations can<lb/>
be made at Mendenhall<lb/>
ticket office. The price is<lb/>
only $169.00. Price includes<lb/>
lift tickets, 4 breakfasts and<lb/>
3 evening meals, transport-<lb/>
ation and lodging.<lb/>
All members of Phi Eta<lb/>
Sigma are reminded to<lb/>
meet at Mendenhall on the<lb/>
patio, for our donut sale<lb/>
Wed Oct. 4 at 7 p.m<lb/>
(Rain or shine!)<lb/>
SOCIaNTH<lb/>
The Sociology-<lb/>
Anthropology club will<lb/>
meet Wed Oct. 4 at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in BD-302. All majors,<lb/>
minors, and interested per-<lb/>
sons are invited to attend.<lb/>
-a umvi?ic? y.<lb/>
w<lb/>
IV<lb/>
Brothers Johnson<lb/>
univ?ii? <lb/>
M<lb/>
ri<lb/>
With special guest<lb/>
ECU Students $4.00<lb/>
 Only Public Tickets will J<lb/>
be sold at the door, i<lb/>
Mother's Finest<lb/>
Sat Oct. 14, 1978<lb/>
?l<lb/>
.m.<lb/>
Public $6.00<lb/>
ON SALE ROWtt<lb/>
Minges Coliseum<lb/>
 Students: <lb/>
Buy your tickets either Tues or Wed.<lb/>
and ycV automatically eligible to win<lb/>
a free Concert T-Shirt<lb/>
 Winning Ticket Numbers will be in Thursday's FOUNTAINHEAD. <lb/>
ECU Students $4.00<lb/>
seeesseeestssseseeeeeseseseseessses<lb/>
 Only Public Tickets will S<lb/>
 be sold at the door.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Public $6.00<lb/>
?I SALE MOWtl<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1 Derton etereo<lb/>
receiver $29.00; 1 old but<lb/>
working refrtg. $10; 1 kit-<lb/>
chen table $10. Gail Mag at<lb/>
FOR SALE :1yr.oid 8 track<lb/>
Cretg power play with<lb/>
power piay speakers pitta<lb/>
player mount. $125 for ail.<lb/>
Will throw in tape too. '77<lb/>
XL 175 Honda Enduro in<lb/>
excellent oond. $650. or<lb/>
beet offer. Gait at 752-4186<lb/>
after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '75 Muatang<lb/>
Ghta. AC, aunroof, pS,<lb/>
PB, AMFM, and more.<lb/>
Remarkable condition -<lb/>
muat aae. $$460. Call David<lb/>
at 750-6582.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Oil heaters,<lb/>
gas heater, has stove,<lb/>
camping haatar, bow and<lb/>
arrows boat, AKC Great<lb/>
Dana - 2 yra. old. 756-4617.<lb/>
ferwrt 9i<lb/>
NEEDED: A responsible<lb/>
female roommate to share a<lb/>
two bedrm. apt. Cali Liaa or<lb/>
Polly 758-6794.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED:<lb/>
2 bedroom apt. completely<lb/>
furnished. 103-6 Eastbrook<lb/>
apt. Call Brad 752-1547.<lb/>
ROOMATE NEEDED:<lb/>
to share furniehed 2 bed-<lb/>
room houee, rent and utili-<lb/>
ties. Cali 761-0064.<lb/>
LOST: Men's 14K gefd<lb/>
sano. Big reward.<lb/>
YOQA; Hatna yoga la now<lb/>
being taught by Sunshine<lb/>
Mew classes forming. Relax<lb/>
-atton, vitelteetion, weight<lb/>
leas, rateJsatton, For more<lb/>
Info, eaff 766-0766<lb/>
MID EASTERN DANCE:<lb/>
(authentic Sally Dancing)<lb/>
tght by Sunshine - ex-<lb/>
perienced teacher and pe-<lb/>
former in Ohio, Mexico,<lb/>
Atlanta, and the D.C. area.<lb/>
Ciassas are now forming<lb/>
Cali 756-0736.<lb/>
X<lb/>
<pb facs="00057150_0003"/><lb/>
THE GAZEBO ON cmpv. alters a place ,? sluaents ,? meel ?? ? stumPhou by John ? Qrogan<lb/>
Alligator wanders through Wilmington<lb/>
WILMINGTON. N.C.<lb/>
(AP) ? A six-foot alligator<lb/>
who started wandering<lb/>
from home will soon find<lb/>
itself traveling to a com-<lb/>
pletely new abode.<lb/>
The alligator usually<lb/>
stays in a drainage pond in<lb/>
the Pine Valley Country<lb/>
Club. But last Wednesday<lb/>
it decided to wander<lb/>
through the Pine Valley<lb/>
subdivision, attracting a<lb/>
crowd of about 30 people<lb/>
who followed it down the<lb/>
street, through some fron t<lb/>
yards and across a porch.<lb/>
The New Hanover<lb/>
For journalists<lb/>
County Sheriff's Depart-<lb/>
ment finally cleared spec-<lb/>
tators away and the gator<lb/>
made its way back to its<lb/>
watery home near the 12th<lb/>
green of the country club<lb/>
golf course.<lb/>
The alligator didn't<lb/>
cause any property damage<lb/>
or hurt anyone, but its<lb/>
presence caused some con-<lb/>
cern among the area resi-<lb/>
dents.<lb/>
'Thisisonly the second<lb/>
time in about three years<lb/>
that it's roamed around like<lb/>
this said Bobby Neil.<lb/>
"It's gotten too large. It<lb/>
could be dangerous since<lb/>
we have alot of little kids<lb/>
around here. It's gotten to<lb/>
the size now where it's<lb/>
frightening<lb/>
The state Wildlife<lb/>
Commission, notified of the<lb/>
gator's presence, was ex-<lb/>
pected to send in a team to<lb/>
move it to an unspecified<lb/>
location.<lb/>
Russ Knowles, presi-<lb/>
dent of the Pine Valley<lb/>
Country Club, said he has<lb/>
discussed the situation with<lb/>
state wildlife officials sev-<lb/>
eral times. He said the<lb/>
animal has used the woods<lb/>
behind the Pine Valley<lb/>
Elementary School as a<lb/>
hibernation ground during<lb/>
the four years it has lived in<lb/>
the pond.<lb/>
"People would come by<lb/>
and feed it chicken and hot<lb/>
dogs. I guess you could say<lb/>
it was an attraction to the<lb/>
gold course. But now it's<lb/>
just gotten too large for<lb/>
around here<lb/>
"We didn't mind hav-<lb/>
ing it there because it<lb/>
wasn't bothering any-<lb/>
body Knowles said.<lb/>
journalists<lb/>
Workshop held<lb/>
inn.ri Oolmar PnKlichmn<lb/>
Approximately 225 high<lb/>
school students, college<lb/>
students, and advisors at-<lb/>
tened the Fourth Annual<lb/>
Publications Workshop at<lb/>
ECU Sat Sept 30<lb/>
The theme of the work-<lb/>
shop was. "A Changing<lb/>
Press in a Changing<lb/>
Society<lb/>
The workshop was<lb/>
sponsored by the Society<lb/>
For Collegiate Journalists,<lb/>
the Journalism Program,<lb/>
and the Division of Continu<lb/>
-ing Education.<lb/>
A combo from the<lb/>
School of Music provided<lb/>
entertainment during reg-<lb/>
istration<lb/>
Chancellor Thomas B.<lb/>
Brewer extended the Un-<lb/>
iversity welcome to partici-<lb/>
pants. The keynote address<lb/>
was given by Mr. Edmund<lb/>
Welch, legislative assistant<lb/>
to U.S. Rep. Walter B.<lb/>
Jones. Welch spoke on the<lb/>
relationship between polit-<lb/>
icians and journalists.<lb/>
Workshop sessions<lb/>
were held for newspaper,<lb/>
magazine, and yearbook<lb/>
staffs There were approx-<lb/>
imately 25 different ses-<lb/>
sions held during the work-<lb/>
shop.<lb/>
Workshop consultants<lb/>
included representatives<lb/>
from the Greenville Oa7y<lb/>
Reflector. Hunter Publish-<lb/>
ing Uo Delmar Publishing<lb/>
Co FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
REBEL. and the<lb/>
BUCCANEER.<lb/>
The closing session<lb/>
included a performance by<lb/>
Bill Robinson, a prac-<lb/>
ticing magician ,j$ay,<lb/>
Williams, president of SCJ,<lb/>
adjourned the workshop.<lb/>
Many of the workshop<lb/>
participants remained in<lb/>
Greenville for the ECU<lb/>
football game Saturday<lb/>
night. <lb/>
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/>
Offer good only<lb/>
wiih coupon.<lb/>
1 Oth and Charles Streets-Greenville<lb/>
f<lb/>
-??N<lb/>
w:A<lb/>
fcchell's Hair Styling<lb/>
- ff Pitt Plaza Shoppwg Ctntei<lb/>
"T Green v. He North Carolina 37834<lb/>
756 2950<lb/>
Guy's<lb/>
Permanent?<lb/>
regular price $35.00<lb/>
Now only $17.50<lb/>
including uni-perm<lb/>
Offer good each Wednesday through Oct. 254978<lb/>
ncMMf v nut cmut mem<lb/>
Of TESTUTtM WIN Wt Mt-ACDM<lb/>
OFTOMT'S w'<lb/>
&amp; PILOT<lb/>
$T? MOWN M NMTWe -<lb/>
GREAT<lb/>
MEXICAN<lb/>
EATERY<lb/>
512 Green vllle Blvd.<lb/>
Open 11:00 11:00<lb/>
Mon. thru Thur.<lb/>
Fri.?PSat. 11:00-12 0<lb/>
Sun. 12:00 11:00<lb/>
Tuesday Night<lb/>
Nickel Drink Night<lb/>
( with food order )<lb/>
5:00 11:00<lb/>
Dr. Pepper, Beer, Pepsi,<lb/>
Mt. Dew, Tea, Coffee<lb/>
W Gladly 4cc.pt Personal Chocks,<lb/>
Free Taeo Cld Iron -on Patch<lb/>
with $4.00 food order<lb/>
3 Odobf mt FOUNTAINHEAD P?n 3<lb/>
GRAND<lb/>
OPENING<lb/>
Wo Aro Finally Opo At<lb/>
 17 Arlington Blvd Croonvillo, N.C.<lb/>
Stereo Village Wants To Thank Everyone For Making The<lb/>
First Week Of Their Grand Opening Such A Success. They<lb/>
Are Continuing Their Grand Opening For One More Week<lb/>
October 1st-7th <lb/>
JVC<lb/>
?35 Watt Per Channel Receiver With<lb/>
Built In Equalizer<lb/>
?Belt Drive Semi-Automatic Turn-<lb/>
table<lb/>
ModelJR-S201<lb/>
?3 Way Speaker System<lb/>
699<lb/>
ModelJL-A20<lb/>
ISK-700<lb/>
Model JR-S301<lb/>
Model JL-F30<lb/>
Model SK-1000<lb/>
JVC<lb/>
?60 Watt Per Channel Receiver<lb/>
With Built In Equalizer<lb/>
?Belt Drive Fully Automatic Turn-<lb/>
table<lb/>
?3 Way Speaker System<lb/>
$899<lb/>
?Technics SA 300 Receiver<lb/>
With 35 Watts Per Channel<lb/>
?Technic SL220 Semi-Au-<lb/>
tomatic Belt Drive Turntable<lb/>
?3 Way Speaker System<lb/>
675<lb/>
SL-220<lb/>
-?.<lb/>
C9M7<lb/>
Technics<lb/>
Jensen LS-4 USSSH<lb/>
?Fully Automatic<lb/>
?Belt Drive<lb/>
JVC<lb/>
Jensen<lb/>
Triaxial<lb/>
3-VVay<lb/>
? Speakers<lb/>
? 1 ?? 0ur Most Popular<lb/>
JE Car Speaker<lb/>
Model JL-F30<lb/>
MPIONC0T<lb/>
?Pioneer SX 780 Receiver<lb/>
?45 Watts Per Channel<lb/>
?2 Tape Monitors<lb/>
$270<lb/>
Technics<lb/>
?Technics SA 300<lb/>
Receiver<lb/>
?35 Watts Per<lb/>
Channel<lb/>
?"Best Buy"<lb/>
$218<lb/>
?Craig 360H720<lb/>
?AMFM Stereo<lb/>
8-Track PlayerRecorder<lb/>
?Turntable<lb/>
?2 Way Speaker System<lb/>
$149<lb/>
ClMCS M 720<lb/>
Financing Available<lb/>
317 Arlington Blvd<lb/>
Greenvil!e U<lb/>
Telephone 756 9988<lb/>
Open Monday - Friday 10 - o, Saturday 10-6<lb/>
T<lb/>
" ? l .?"? ?? ?? ??? ??? ? , m ? ?? ? ?? ? -? ? - "? "?"? ? ?<lb/>
rlnriltlMlMl<lb/>
<pb facs="00057150_0004"/><lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 3 October 1978<lb/>
Living with roaches<lb/>
The following editorial is reprinted from the<lb/>
July 12 edition of FOUNTAINHEAD.)<lb/>
Roaches and other pests have long been a<lb/>
problem in the dormitories, especially since<lb/>
the Housing Office authorized dorm cooking<lb/>
some years ago. Several spraying efforts have<lb/>
been launched to no apparent avail; the<lb/>
creatures continue to infest the dorms in ever<lb/>
greater numbers.<lb/>
Students have made several attempts in the<lb/>
past to get the university to increase their<lb/>
extermination efforts, but usually have no<lb/>
more success than the pesticide purges against<lb/>
the insects. The university's argument, that<lb/>
they can do little to combat the roaches unless<lb/>
students improve their housekeeping and<lb/>
sanitation habits, although circular, has some<lb/>
merit to it.<lb/>
Usually, there are two or three Oscar<lb/>
Madisonson a hall whose overflowing garbage<lb/>
cans and week old dirty dishes act as a magnet<lb/>
for the neighborhood roaches. As a result,<lb/>
everybody gets to share in the fun of chasing<lb/>
bugs in the night.<lb/>
Probably the most effective solution to the<lb/>
problem would be to ban cooking in dorm<lb/>
rooms, but this .is an unsatisfactory solution,<lb/>
since many students cannot afford to eat out.<lb/>
University spraying efforts must continue, but<lb/>
the only practical method at present is for the<lb/>
residents of each room to fight them as best<lb/>
they know how through cleanliness and poison.<lb/>
Incoming freshmen should receive some<lb/>
instruction either during orientation or as part<lb/>
of one of the countless freshman brochures on<lb/>
how to control and eventually eliminate a roach<lb/>
population which might be sharing the same<lb/>
room.<lb/>
Roaches will remain one of Greenville's<lb/>
perennial problems, like parking and the fall<lb/>
monsoons. However, at least for the<lb/>
forseeable future, the guys in Scott will still be<lb/>
able to watch the beasts get high on Black Flag<lb/>
and the ladies in Fletcher won't have to cancel<lb/>
their Tuesday night roach races. And finally,<lb/>
after all the spraying and poison fog<lb/>
disappears, chances are the roach will still rise<lb/>
victorious, having adapted itself to an insectide<lb/>
laden environment.<lb/>
So it goes.<lb/>
Commentary<lb/>
ERA will benefit all<lb/>
By HESTER PETTY<lb/>
Uppity Women of Greenville<lb/>
Do you know what will<lb/>
happen when the ERA<lb/>
(Equal Rights Amendment)<lb/>
becomes aw? I believe that<lb/>
women would begin to be<lb/>
treated fairly and equally in<lb/>
most aspects of their lives.<lb/>
I'd say that women would<lb/>
? iiy have a legal means<lb/>
to correct unfair and un-<lb/>
equal treatment. I think<lb/>
we'd begin to see an<lb/>
attitude change in both<lb/>
men and women concern-<lb/>
ing the status of women.<lb/>
What does the oppo-<lb/>
sition believe will happen<lb/>
when the ERA becomes<lb/>
;aw? They say that women<lb/>
win enter the Ladies Room<lb/>
and find themselves in the<lb/>
company of a man standing<lb/>
over a urinal.<lb/>
They believe that this<lb/>
amendment will bring a-<lb/>
bout the death of the<lb/>
nuclear family (you know<lb/>
the Nuclear's. Nice family.<lb/>
Always keep their lawn<lb/>
tidy.) The opposition warns<lb/>
of a sudden rash of homo-<lb/>
sexual marriages that will<lb/>
be legalized by the ERA.<lb/>
And they think that<lb/>
many women will lose their<lb/>
jobs because they can't lift<lb/>
100 pounds of machinery<lb/>
and won't the ERA erase<lb/>
protective labor laws for<lb/>
women?<lb/>
What will happen when<lb/>
the ERA becomes law?<lb/>
Some of the answers to this<lb/>
question can be found in<lb/>
Pennsylvania where an E-<lb/>
qual Rights Amendment<lb/>
was written into the state<lb/>
constitution in 1971. Four<lb/>
things that did happen<lb/>
were:<lb/>
?A wife now has the<lb/>
right to sue for "loss of<lb/>
consortium" (affection,<lb/>
companionship, and help<lb/>
with home and children) if<lb/>
her spouse is badly injured<lb/>
or incapacitated in an ac-<lb/>
cident . Huabends have had<lb/>
this right for centuries, as<lb/>
wives were always recog-<lb/>
nized as valuable property.<lb/>
?Parents have equal<lb/>
responsibility (for their<lb/>
children), according to their<lb/>
resources, taking into ac-<lb/>
count nonfinancial contri-<lb/>
butions.<lb/>
? Both a wife's mone-<lb/>
tary and nonmonetary<lb/>
contributions to the house-<lb/>
hold must be recognized<lb/>
when property is divided at<lb/>
divorce. In the past all<lb/>
household property was<lb/>
presumed to belong to the<lb/>
husband, unless the wife<lb/>
could prove otherwise (with<lb/>
canceled checks, for ex-<lb/>
ample).<lb/>
?Pennsylvania is one<lb/>
of four states that has no<lb/>
law granting alimony after<lb/>
divorce. (This was true long<lb/>
before the passage of the<lb/>
ERA). The state does have<lb/>
a provision for temporary<lb/>
alimony during the time<lb/>
that divorce proceedings<lb/>
are in progress, and that<lb/>
right, previously limited to<lb/>
women, is now available to<lb/>
the "economically depen-<lb/>
dent spouse 1<lb/>
Several things did not<lb/>
happen. Ladies' rooms<lb/>
were not replaced by Ladies<lb/>
and Gentlemen rooms. It<lb/>
was decided by the Penn-<lb/>
sylvania attorney general<lb/>
that the constitutional right<lb/>
to privacy insured the right<lb/>
of men and women to have<lb/>
separate toliet facilities.<lb/>
It is improbable that a<lb/>
federal amendment to the<lb/>
constitution would affect<lb/>
this situation in any other<lb/>
way.<lb/>
The legal status of<lb/>
homosexual marriages was<lb/>
not changed by trie Penn-<lb/>
sylvania ERA. They are still<lb/>
illegal. It was decided that<lb/>
the amendment dealt "with<lb/>
laws affecting persons of<lb/>
the same sex2 It ap-<lb/>
pears (unfortunately) that<lb/>
the ERA will not insure gay<lb/>
people of their human<lb/>
rights.<lb/>
In Pennsylvania "the<lb/>
ERA had not resulted in the<lb/>
repeal of protective labor<lb/>
laws for workers. Most of<lb/>
those protections formerly<lb/>
guaranteed under the<lb/>
Women's Labor Law (which<lb/>
was superseded in 1969,<lb/>
well before the passage of<lb/>
the ERA) have been ex-<lb/>
tended to both men and<lb/>
women through federal<lb/>
legislation and other state<lb/>
laws3 It is doubtful that<lb/>
any other other state would<lb/>
take if ferent approach.<lb/>
it a state did repeal<lb/>
proteste labor laws rather<lb/>
ths end them to both<lb/>
sex ne could assume<lb/>
tha motive was sexist<lb/>
and that the purpose was to<lb/>
push women out of male-<lb/>
prefered jobs. Those legi-<lb/>
slators who favored repeal<lb/>
should be replaced at elec-<lb/>
tion time by men and<lb/>
women who favor extension<lb/>
of coverage to both sexes.<lb/>
Before I discuss the<lb/>
Pennsylvania ERA's affect<lb/>
on the structure of the<lb/>
American family I'd like to<lb/>
talk about who this family is<lb/>
Fojntainhead<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 Gliarmis<lb/>
ADVERTISING MANAGER<lb/>
Robert M. Swalm<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
Sam Rogers<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student newspaper of East<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/>
27834<lb/>
Editorial offices: 757-6366, 757-6367, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10 annually, alumni $6 annually.<lb/>
that the ERA opposition is<lb/>
so concerned about pro-<lb/>
tecting. The nuclear family<lb/>
i generally described as a<lb/>
household consisting of a<lb/>
married (heterosexual)<lb/>
couple with one or more<lb/>
children under the ag&amp;pX<lb/>
18. Of alt the UniiiilinUailB<lb/>
the U.S 34,4 per cent are<lb/>
nuclear families.<lb/>
Will the ERA encourage<lb/>
divorce as some opponents<lb/>
say that it will? In Penn-<lb/>
sylvania the divorce rate<lb/>
has increased (just as it has<lb/>
increased throughout the<lb/>
U.S.) but it still remains<lb/>
below the national average.<lb/>
Will the ERA encourage<lb/>
women to seek work out-<lb/>
side the home and thus<lb/>
disrupt family life? Over<lb/>
half of all nuclear families<lb/>
consist of households with<lb/>
two wage earning parents.<lb/>
Most families simply can't<lb/>
manage on one salary<lb/>
alone.<lb/>
The ERA had not taken<lb/>
mom out of the kitchen.<lb/>
Inflation has. And if mom<lb/>
has to go to work, wouldn't<lb/>
the family be better off if<lb/>
she is able to find a good<lb/>
job that pays well? And if<lb/>
sex discrimination keeps<lb/>
women out of good jobs<lb/>
with good salaries,<lb/>
shouldn't that discimina-<lb/>
tion be unlawful? And isn't<lb/>
that what the ERA is all<lb/>
about?<lb/>
I hope that I have<lb/>
suceeded in dispelling<lb/>
some of the myths about<lb/>
the ERA and what it will<lb/>
and will not do. Perhaps I<lb/>
haven't.<lb/>
If I haven't it is prob-<lb/>
ably because the anti-ERA<lb/>
arguments do not make<lb/>
sense and I have a hard<lb/>
time answering stupid<lb/>
questions.<lb/>
The anti-ERA argu-<lb/>
ments and questions are<lb/>
seldom based on real fact or<lb/>
evidence. They are usually<lb/>
nebulous. And they are<lb/>
often accompanied by "I<lb/>
love being a woman"<lb/>
speeches and "ERA will<lb/>
take away our femininity"<lb/>
fears.<lb/>
I don't believe the ERA<lb/>
opposition's predictions<lb/>
will prove true. I do believe<lb/>
that our status and con-<lb/>
dition as women in this<lb/>
male dominated society will<lb/>
not improve as quickly or<lb/>
smoothly without the ERA.<lb/>
I need the Equal Rights<lb/>
Amendment. All women<lb/>
need It.<lb/>
Note; Alt footnotes come<lb/>
from Ma. Magazine, Sept-<lb/>
ember 1976. See article<lb/>
"Pennsylvania: ERA in<lb/>
Practice on pane 92.<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Parkins proposed is unfair to students<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Even in an easyTgoing<lb/>
atmosphere like our cam-<lb/>
pus, there are some faculty<lb/>
members who feel a need to<lb/>
undermine the student<lb/>
body. As a student, I feel'<lb/>
that it is my duty to report<lb/>
to the day students a plan<lb/>
to take the central campus<lb/>
parking from them for<lb/>
faculty use.<lb/>
In the last meeting of<lb/>
the Faculty Senate, a<lb/>
proposal to take over day<lb/>
student parking was<lb/>
brought up and approved.<lb/>
Who can honestly say that<lb/>
this measure would be fair?<lb/>
The day students out-<lb/>
number faculty, and most<lb/>
of them travel from a more<lb/>
distant point than faculty. If<lb/>
a faculty member has to<lb/>
come to school early, he<lb/>
she can relax in the office<lb/>
with a proverbial cup of<lb/>
coffee until class time.<lb/>
As it is now, I leave<lb/>
home an hour early before<lb/>
my 9 a.m. class, drive the<lb/>
20-minute drive, and still<lb/>
have 30 or 40 minutes to<lb/>
look for a parking space,<lb/>
often with no luck, unfess I<lb/>
choose the most distant<lb/>
lots, located at least 10<lb/>
minutes from my class.<lb/>
If the faculty takes over<lb/>
those centrally located lots,<lb/>
even the more distant ones<lb/>
will be crowded.<lb/>
In this writers opinion,<lb/>
a campus like ECU should<lb/>
be mindful of the needs of<lb/>
the day students. We com-<lb/>
prise a fairly large portion<lb/>
of the student body, which,<lb/>
by the way, faculty mem-<lb/>
bers, is necessary in order<lb/>
for your jobs to be main-<lb/>
tained.<lb/>
I say students should<lb/>
come first, and I will fight<lb/>
the faculty against this<lb/>
proposal in any way that I<lb/>
can. The odd twist to this<lb/>
"proposal is that it was not<lb/>
reported in the paper's last<lb/>
account of the Senate meet-<lb/>
ing. I fear that the Senate<lb/>
hoped to slip this action in<lb/>
without too much student<lb/>
involvement.<lb/>
We day students cannot<lb/>
afford to let that happen.<lb/>
I do not have all of the<lb/>
details, and challenge a<lb/>
Faculty Senate member to<lb/>
speak up for ECU'S primary<lb/>
interest, the student.<lb/>
Jo Ann Smith<lb/>
Rifkin quoted sources out of context<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD.<lb/>
During his stimulating<lb/>
and provocative lecture on<lb/>
Sept. 12, Jeremy Rifkin<lb/>
referred to several well-<lb/>
known scientists as eugeni-<lb/>
cists and read quotations<lb/>
from their writings as<lb/>
representative of their<lb/>
views. I am rather familiar<lb/>
with writings of one of<lb/>
them, Joshua Lederberg,<lb/>
and I suspect that Rifkin<lb/>
was quoting him (and<lb/>
probably the others) out of<lb/>
context.<lb/>
Being a reductionist by<lb/>
training, I attempted to<lb/>
check Rifkin's reference for<lb/>
the quotation from Leder-<lb/>
berg, but I was unable to<lb/>
locate it. Another of his<lb/>
references to Lederberg is<lb/>
an article titled "Biological<lb/>
Innovation and Genetic<lb/>
Intervention" which is in<lb/>
the book, Challenging<lb/>
Biological Problems: Dir-<lb/>
ections Toward Their Solu-<lb/>
tion (1972), edited by John<lb/>
A. Behnke. In the article,<lb/>
Lederberg makes it clear<lb/>
that he does not advocate<lb/>
the remaking of man.<lb/>
I believe that it is very<lb/>
likely that the quotations<lb/>
from Francis Crick, James<lb/>
Bonner, and probably even<lb/>
Linus Pauling, were also<lb/>
out of context.<lb/>
Those who are inter-<lb/>
ested may want to check<lb/>
these references.<lb/>
Rifkin gave the impres-<lb/>
sion of having a concern for<lb/>
the human individual. I<lb/>
would have hoped that his<lb/>
concern would extend to<lb/>
those he chose to quote.<lb/>
Can we not be holistic and<lb/>
reductionist, too?<lb/>
Quoting Rifkin out of<lb/>
context, he promised a<lb/>
member of the audience a<lb/>
left-handed son of average<lb/>
height. Does this mean that<lb/>
he advocates the artificial<lb/>
manipulation of the human<lb/>
genotype? Those who<lb/>
attended the lecture know<lb/>
the answer.<lb/>
Patricia Daugherty<lb/>
Associate Biology Professor<lb/>
'The Gnome of Death: stylish despair9<lb/>
ToFOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
To: Jim Barnes<lb/>
A measure to erode the<lb/>
mysticism surrounding<lb/>
death.<lb/>
The Gnome of Death<lb/>
presides, it's true. We<lb/>
watch from a corner (over-<lb/>
informed and underknow-<lb/>
ledged) while our generals<lb/>
hump the planet and our<lb/>
priests bless them on their<lb/>
way (call it the way of the<lb/>
cross) while greedy kings<lb/>
do a death-grip waltz on the<lb/>
bones of the same dance<lb/>
done before and the tribal<lb/>
legions raise their banners<lb/>
against one another, while<lb/>
the garbage and all the<lb/>
bones collect waist-deep<lb/>
around men who proclaim<lb/>
each absurd war holy.<lb/>
And informed sources<lb/>
said today the God is on our<lb/>
side, although the Lord was<lb/>
not around to comment.<lb/>
Death had this to say:<lb/>
"Kiss my rumpled ass and<lb/>
sing power. There are no<lb/>
fair fights among men and<lb/>
only can I save you from<lb/>
love gone wrong It is<lb/>
stylish to despair.<lb/>
Still, imagination holds<lb/>
out ? for what isn't, and<lb/>
never was, but mught,<lb/>
some say, come to be. It's a<lb/>
fool's vision, perhaps, but<lb/>
they have found it in caves,<lb/>
on ruined walls, and in the<lb/>
notebooks of young, dead<lb/>
poets.<lb/>
Dumb dreams of the<lb/>
'artist depicting a man in<lb/>
love with someone, where<lb/>
the Gnome is silly for a<lb/>
time, and men can tweak<lb/>
his beard and dare to be<lb/>
naked and vulnerable, lov-<lb/>
ing and inefficient, and<lb/>
without the borrowed pow-<lb/>
er of Death over one<lb/>
another.<lb/>
It's true the Gnome has<lb/>
his way over man in the<lb/>
end; the game isn't fair, it<lb/>
just is. Still there is no<lb/>
reason to serve the dark<lb/>
bastard, to run his errands<lb/>
for him, to extend a love-<lb/>
less kingdom while we still<lb/>
have the light.<lb/>
For if Death is a threat,<lb/>
life is our only revenge.<lb/>
Sing: " K iss your own dead<lb/>
ass, Death, there are no<lb/>
real fights among men, and<lb/>
no one needs saving from<lb/>
love<lb/>
David Latham<lb/>
American Journal<lb/>
Jerry Mander fights to abolish TV<lb/>
By DA VID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
Back in 1972, Jerry M ander had a row with a coilegue at<lb/>
the public interest ud agency where they both worked. It<lb/>
was over television and whether people could learn<lb/>
anything useful from the phosphorescent box.<lb/>
Mander insisted they couldn't, but he couldn't muster<lb/>
the evidence to prove it. It was just a gut feeling, an<lb/>
intuition that America's great national pasttime was in<lb/>
truth a alignant social force.<lb/>
The argument, and the frustration it engendered, was<lb/>
to haunt Mander, a renegade from commercial advetising<lb/>
who had often worked with television. Ha began to research<lb/>
TV, digging into its history, its technology, its role in the<lb/>
economy. The result of Mender's six-vr in<lb/>
xrM? - Ess<lb/>
tho boc<lb/>
TV is not only a wasteTin! c<lb/>
terrifying technological intrusion thaTTL ? <lb/>
formaWa. ? j "?-Xit unre-<lb/>
M ander wants to pull the plug and v?<lb/>
grounds that TV screana viawecs From exSLT <lb/>
it is responsible only to tha corpora q?Z? ???<lb/>
its $120,000 a minuta prime tima ? raT ?Horl<lb/>
I<lb/>
"?"?? ?m.intmumami<lb/>
  -?-?????<lb/>
Hsna?'i?n<lb/>
<pb facs="00057150_0005"/><lb/>
American<lb/>
Journal<lb/>
continued from p. 4<lb/>
people physiologiadly, and that only coarse ,<lb/>
imagery can come through the cathode ray tube effective?<lb/>
in KsTr! pXpanded ?" th6Se P0ints in a recent view<lb/>
m n.s San Francisco, apartment. Smoking Gauloises and<lb/>
appmg expresso before a picture window view of The<lb/>
Golden Gate Bridge, he explained : "Whenever somebody<lb/>
hears the ,dea, their first reaction is to laugh or think Irs<lb/>
absurd But that .idea-elimlnating telsL ls he<lb/>
conclusion of hundreds of points. I wouldn't advocate the<lb/>
el.mmat.on of any technology, certainly not television for<lb/>
a r? ?; ?leven ?-of those reasons-lVs ?ywnen <lb/>
add ,t up that you get the big picture, how it is really part of<lb/>
a monohthic technological juggernaut that affects every-<lb/>
tning '<lb/>
Most people assume that technology is neutral, without<lb/>
poht.cs. Mander disagrees. He draws a parallel between TV<lb/>
technology and the technology of nuclear power, by way of<lb/>
? ?lustration.<lb/>
"If you accept nuclear power plants, you also accept a<lb/>
? echno-scientific-industrial-military elite he writes<lb/>
"You and l getting together with a'few friends could<lb/>
TRUSTEES<lb/>
continued from p 1)<lb/>
Trie"<lb/>
notbuild such a plant, nor could we make personal use of<lb/>
its output, nor handle or sore the radioactive waste<lb/>
products (that). In turn, determine that future societies will<lb/>
have to maintain a technological capacity to deal with the<lb/>
problem and the military capacity to protect the wastes<lb/>
So, too, TV. The technology of the small screen, Mander<lb/>
argues, is poorly-suited for conveying peacefulness ro<lb/>
nuance, but perfect for portraying anger, violent action and<lb/>
lifeless forms that are complete in themselves-i.e.<lb/>
commodities. People who try to harness TV technology for<lb/>
humanistic, non-commercial purposes, Mander says,<lb/>
almost invariably fail.<lb/>
You can't get a bunch of traditional Hopi Indians and<lb/>
say, OK, America's watching, make your program on Hopi<lb/>
awareness. Put it through and we'll stop those stripmines<lb/>
They can't put it through. They wouldn't be Indians any<lb/>
more if they did. They'd have to become sophisticated<lb/>
tech no-experts. It's just those that are the most pervasive<lb/>
that are the most sinister<lb/>
TV, by Mander's reckoning, creates humans in its own<lb/>
image: bored, anxious, with a short attention span that<lb/>
affects adults and children alikea combination of<lb/>
aggressiveness and detachment from others that can, in<lb/>
borderline cases, explode into violence. He talks about the<lb/>
recent trial in Florida-itself televised, perhaps the ultimate<lb/>
media event-of a 15-year-old boy who claimed that violent<lb/>
TV shows drove him to kill.<lb/>
"I think the defense was right-on. I don't know if it was<lb/>
right-on in that specific case, but I think you do turn into the<lb/>
images you see. I've watched violence on TV and I don't go<lb/>
out and murder somebody. But you carry that image<lb/>
athletic director,<lb/>
William Cam, then<lb/>
presented his report before<lb/>
the board. Cain com-<lb/>
mented that Title IX griev-<lb/>
ances were being completed<lb/>
with, and that there is<lb/>
increased scholarship aid in<lb/>
women's basketball, as<lb/>
we as other sports.<lb/>
In other sports related<lb/>
developments, Cain an-<lb/>
nounced the formation of<lb/>
the Independent Associa-<lb/>
tion for Athletic Officials.<lb/>
Members of the Associa-<lb/>
tion include ECU, Pitt,<lb/>
Penn State, West Virginia,<lb/>
and South Carolina.<lb/>
Cain went on the say that<lb/>
we may in the future be<lb/>
able to schedule the other<lb/>
teams in the association.<lb/>
Cam envisioned a time<lb/>
when the teams who are<lb/>
now getting together for<lb/>
the purpose of officials may<lb/>
form a new athletic con-<lb/>
ference. Cam commented<lb/>
that ECU would be in "high<lb/>
cotton if it were competing<lb/>
against the likes of Penn<lb/>
State and Pitt.<lb/>
Dr. Angelo Volpe. who<lb/>
s chairman of the chem-<lb/>
stry department, then pre-<lb/>
sented a technical study<lb/>
?hat his department has<lb/>
e on plymers and plas-<lb/>
tics.<lb/>
Some practical uses for<lb/>
the research that Dr. Volpe<lb/>
has been doing include<lb/>
Teflon coating for cook-<lb/>
ware, thermo plastics, and<lb/>
polyester cloth used for<lb/>
clothing.<lb/>
Dr. Volpe gave the<lb/>
same report to the Chem-<lb/>
ical Society of America and<lb/>
will appear in the Soviet<lb/>
Union later on this year to<lb/>
speak on the same subject.<lb/>
Dr. J. Earl Daniely<lb/>
thanked Dr. Volpe for his<lb/>
speech and he said that we<lb/>
all need this kind of re-<lb/>
search, and that it is<lb/>
important and significant.<lb/>
The meeting then ad-<lb/>
journed, and the board<lb/>
went into executive ses-<lb/>
sion, where they looked<lb/>
over personnel matters.<lb/>
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tha?s Mander'8 f,nd,n0S ?"? ?" direct conflict with<lb/>
those of Marshall McLuhan, the medial guru who described<lb/>
TV a decade ago as a "participatory, tactile" medium<lb/>
urawng on recent physiological research, Mander<lb/>
describes TV s fluorescent flicker as a hypnotic deadener of<lb/>
the critical functions of the left hemisphere of the brain.<lb/>
"Watching television he concludes, "is participatory<lb/>
only ,n the way the assembly line or a hypnotist's blinking<lb/>
flashlight is it is also addictive.<lb/>
"Saying 'the medium is the message' was a<lb/>
tremendously important statement Mander allows<lb/>
referring to McLuhan's famous equation. "But McLuhan<lb/>
oidn t have a political stance, and so I think in the end he<lb/>
created more flash around television and turned into<lb/>
another television character<lb/>
M ander's book is itself more tactile than anything one is<lb/>
likely to find on TV. It's infused with a rich texture of<lb/>
animism and natural magic that Mander contrasts with the<lb/>
flat, monochromatic style of TV, and loaded with sensory<lb/>
depth charges that reverberate in the mind long after the<lb/>
reader has put the book away. It is also a work that invites<lb/>
the reader's col labor at ion, with a series of mental exercises<lb/>
designed to break the spell of TV by breaking down the<lb/>
technical trickery of the programmers.<lb/>
As for Mander, he's steering clear of it. Oh, he logs a<lb/>
few hours of tube time now and then "to keep my hand in "<lb/>
But he'll do no TV talk shows to promote the book, feeling<lb/>
1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Paoe S<lb/>
that to do so would contradict what he's written As for<lb/>
ITZXVL" MyS h ?? no dentil"<lb/>
Diueprint. But he s ready for work to begin.<lb/>
"I got a letter a week after the book came out from a<lb/>
woman in Oregon who's ready for a movement. I think one<lb/>
will emerge, but I don't know where or how or who will be<lb/>
m it or what political perspective it will have" In the<lb/>
meantime, "I just think people should disconnect<lb/>
themselves torn that medium as much as they can "<lb/>
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 C m t ??! ?' t . . ? r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057150_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAO 3 October 1978<lb/>
Bishop one of pop<lb/>
music's 'best writers'<lb/>
By CHRiSFARREN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Some two years in the<lb/>
making. Stephen Bishop's<lb/>
second album Bish is<lb/>
a solidly created album by<lb/>
one of pop music's freshest<lb/>
writers. However.<lb/>
'oliowup to<lb/>
e of the most commer-<lb/>
cia infusing albums<lb/>
ev e<lb/>
Bisphop's first<lb/>
aibum. Careless he had<lb/>
smash singles with<lb/>
"On and On" and "Save It<lb/>
a Rainy Day each<lb/>
ng over a million units,<lb/>
ih le the album itself<lb/>
ggied to sell only a few<lb/>
dred thousand copies.<lb/>
Still, while the album<lb/>
s somewhat overlooked.<lb/>
:oce Bishop's<lb/>
um format formula: an<lb/>
even mixture of slow and<lb/>
fast tunes with stylized<lb/>
hooks and choruses, and<lb/>
utilizing some of the best<lb/>
studio musicians around.<lb/>
This format holds true<lb/>
in Bish with a few new<lb/>
twists added Once again<lb/>
we find Bishop in the<lb/>
company of such contem-<lb/>
porary standouts as Tom<lb/>
Scott. Natalie Cole, Lee<lb/>
Sklar, Chaka Kahn, and<lb/>
M ichael McDonald.<lb/>
Once again the songs<lb/>
are clever with ingraving<lb/>
like hooks and choruses,<lb/>
and bouncy rhythms. The<lb/>
difference is that this time<lb/>
around Bishop is more<lb/>
experienced, aware, and<lb/>
sure of himself.<lb/>
Unlike Careless .Bis-<lb/>
hop produced this album,<lb/>
and you get the feeling that<lb/>
the songs sound exactly the<lb/>
way Bishop himself wanted<lb/>
them to sound.<lb/>
His initial effort at pro-<lb/>
ducing is effective. The<lb/>
songs are tastefully full<lb/>
sounding, yet not overdone<lb/>
The harmonies are espec-<lb/>
ially crisp and creative.<lb/>
The rhythm charts on<lb/>
"Everybody Needs Love"<lb/>
are particularly energetic<lb/>
while the vocals and sax<lb/>
lines on Never Known a<lb/>
Night Like This" are im-<lb/>
mediately appealing. Look<lb/>
for either one of these tunes<lb/>
as a single.<lb/>
If there are weaknesses<lb/>
in the Bishop formula, in<lb/>
the past as well as now,<lb/>
they would have to be in his<lb/>
saccarine voice and his<lb/>
obsession with love, ersatz<lb/>
Paul Simon.<lb/>
His romantic approach<lb/>
is overwhelming at times,<lb/>
with the tone and outcome<lb/>
generally repetitive.<lb/>
While his songwriting<lb/>
style is versatile enough to<lb/>
go from a quiet solo guitar<lb/>
tune to a full sounding<lb/>
up-tempo number, his<lb/>
voice sometimes lacks the<lb/>
forcefullness to really make<lb/>
it click.<lb/>
In the end, Stephen<lb/>
Bishop has created a new<lb/>
album which is equally as<lb/>
solid as his first album in<lb/>
most aspects, and even<lb/>
better in the others.<lb/>
The music is thoughtful<lb/>
and genuinely first class.<lb/>
Certainly Bishop, with over<lb/>
600 songs to his<lb/>
credit, has established<lb/>
himself as one of today's<lb/>
most prolific writers, if not<lb/>
one of the best.<lb/>
f<lb/>
v:?-<lb/>
xy-<lb/>
,v. j<lb/>
ECU Playhouse opens with Pippin;<lb/>
slates an 6A11 American' season<lb/>
?<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
ECU Play-<lb/>
iouse will salute American<lb/>
anAII-<lb/>
an season this<lb/>
bill of fare, the<lb/>
sented before<lb/>
Ginnis Auditor-<lb/>
: ies extensive<lb/>
feature<lb/>
; ? Auctions of<lb/>
? ???' authors.<lb/>
e season will also<lb/>
Je two studio" pro-<lb/>
? i play by an<lb/>
lywright and<lb/>
; nai dance<lb/>
-ican chor-<lb/>
eason v oe<lb/>
" ? re ent Broad-<lb/>
based<lb/>
loosely on the life of the<lb/>
medieval emperor Charle-<lb/>
magne's eldest son. Pippin.<lb/>
the idealist.<lb/>
This light-hearted and<lb/>
marvelously entertaining<lb/>
musical will be directed by<lb/>
Ken Miller, a new member<lb/>
of the ECU drama faculty<lb/>
who danced for a year and a<lb/>
half in the Broadway pro-<lb/>
duction The play will run<lb/>
Oct.20-22. 26-27 at 8:15 in<lb/>
M cG inn is Auditorium.<lb/>
The second major pro-<lb/>
duction on the bill will be<lb/>
Marathon 33. a stage<lb/>
memoir of entertainer June<lb/>
Havoc which captures the<lb/>
noise, frenzy, tawdnness<lb/>
and desparation of almost<lb/>
3.000 hours of marathon<lb/>
dancing.<lb/>
The atmosphere of this<lb/>
garish phenomenon of the<lb/>
1930s is deftly depicted in<lb/>
Miss Havoc's own thea-<lb/>
trical and touching story, as<lb/>
the youthful entertainer is<lb/>
engaged by a callous porter<lb/>
to compete in the dance<lb/>
marathon. Her reward:<lb/>
$5 and a meal.<lb/>
Often strident, some-<lb/>
times amusing and pro-<lb/>
foundly sad. this touching<lb/>
glimpse of the American<lb/>
will- to survive against<lb/>
insurmountable odds will<lb/>
be directed by Edgar R.<lb/>
Loessin, Playhouse artistic<lb/>
director and chairman of<lb/>
the ECU Department of<lb/>
Drama and Speech. Mara-<lb/>
thon 33 will run Dec. 5-9 at<lb/>
8.15 p.m. in McGinnis<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
The Playhouse will wel-<lb/>
come 1979 with a new play<lb/>
for the new year. Emily, a<lb/>
haunting and tender por-<lb/>
trait of the human side of<lb/>
one of America's greatest<lb/>
poets, explores the delicate<lb/>
borders of love and loss<lb/>
between Emily Dickinson<lb/>
and her brother.<lb/>
Written by North Caro-<lb/>
linian Thomas Patterson,<lb/>
the play has uncovered a<lb/>
fascinating, heretofore un-<lb/>
spoken explanation of the<lb/>
mysteries and enigmas of<lb/>
Miss Dickinson's life and<lb/>
work, and brought it to the<lb/>
stage in a searing and<lb/>
passionate evening of<lb/>
drama.<lb/>
See PLAYHOUSE, p. 8<lb/>
fc<lb/>
STEPHEN BISHOP 'ONE cf music's freshest songwriters<lb/>
Professor of ethnomusicology to<lb/>
perform recital of electronic music<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Dr Otto Henry, profes-<lb/>
sor of ethnomusicology and<lb/>
electronicmusic in the ECU<lb/>
School of Music, will per-<lb/>
form some of his own works<lb/>
at a recital of electronic<lb/>
music Sun . Oct. 8. at 8:15<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
His program will<lb/>
include "Music for 'A<lb/>
Midsummer Night's<lb/>
Dream written earlier<lb/>
this year for an ECU<lb/>
Playhouse production of the<lb/>
Shakespeare comedy; "The<lb/>
Pure Land written in<lb/>
1977 for Moog synthensizer<lb/>
and painted slides: his<lb/>
electronic realization of<lb/>
three Eric Satie "Gymno-<lb/>
pedes featuring chore-<lb/>
graphy and dance by Sara<lb/>
Berman: Four Landscapes<lb/>
from H.G. Wells a com-<lb/>
position which uses voices<lb/>
quoting from four of We s<lb/>
science fiction works and<lb/>
an electronic realization of<lb/>
Wagner's The Ride of the<lb/>
Valkyries '<lb/>
Dr Henry ,as as<lb/>
year's winner of the H-<lb/>
Honigman Gold Cup. a<lb/>
statewide award<lb/>
Corea's fluent piano highlights his new album, Friends<lb/>
? FF ROLLINS<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
Me would im-<lb/>
Corea's new<lb/>
ends, is a warm.<lb/>
int album of quartet<lb/>
jazz Of course, all the<lb/>
songs are composed by<lb/>
e ' i !d on this<lb/>
? seems like he's<lb/>
ither conservative<lb/>
his music.<lb/>
Not that the album is<lb/>
boring or predictable. On<lb/>
the contrary, this album is<lb/>
quite a delightful surprise.<lb/>
But there are no harsh-<lb/>
sounding, staccato, semi-<lb/>
ahtract passages that<lb/>
charactenzedso much of his<lb/>
work before now<lb/>
Corea plays Fender<lb/>
Rhodes Piano and Stemway<lb/>
Acoustic Grand Piano on<lb/>
Fnends His pianistic style<lb/>
is tess brittle now and more<lb/>
' ienl in expression, es-<lb/>
pecially m expression of<lb/>
the gentler sentiments.<lb/>
Joe Farre11 plays reeds<lb/>
and flute. On the song<lb/>
'Waltse for Dave which<lb/>
is dedicated to Dave Bru-<lb/>
beck, Farrell givesa<lb/>
good idea of his<lb/>
ability to make his<lb/>
instrumentsexciting<lb/>
members of a jazz<lb/>
quartet.<lb/>
Steve Gadd is the per-<lb/>
cussionist of the group and<lb/>
he plays rums with agility<lb/>
and fine ,e His -hythms<lb/>
are intricate and stirring<lb/>
and his be bs are right in<lb/>
there.<lb/>
Eddie C iez plays an<lb/>
acoustic oass and he is one<lb/>
of the most entertaining<lb/>
members of this very tal-<lb/>
ented group f friends. In<lb/>
his sense of jazz-espirit he<lb/>
is of the same mind as<lb/>
Corea. Gomez's sound is<lb/>
uniquely modern and com-<lb/>
pelling.<lb/>
The title cut. the song<lb/>
Friends" well describes<lb/>
the feeling of the album<lb/>
The song is based on a<lb/>
warm bearing melody<lb/>
and ? eds to become<lb/>
first-rate jazz. Corea on<lb/>
Fender Rhodes piano does<lb/>
it multo expressivo with a<lb/>
child-like delight in the love<lb/>
and companionship of<lb/>
friends.<lb/>
"Sicily is an up-beat<lb/>
number in which each<lb/>
musician handles his al-<lb/>
lot ed 20 -measure solo<lb/>
with panache, especially<lb/>
Joe Farrell on the reeds.<lb/>
There are two "Chil-<lb/>
dren's Songs" on the al-<lb/>
bum, "Children'sSong 5"<lb/>
and "Children's Song<lb/>
15" Apparently, Corea has<lb/>
a whole series of children's<lb/>
songs These are short,<lb/>
ostensibly simple pieces<lb/>
that possess an innocence<lb/>
and ease of expression that<lb/>
belie the sophisticated tal-<lb/>
ent necessary to compose<lb/>
and perform them.<lb/>
It is easy to foresee a<lb/>
whole album of these chil-<lb/>
dren's songs. They are<lb/>
supposedly for children.<lb/>
but like so many other<lb/>
works f ? idren. i<lb/>
instance Prokofiev's Peter<lb/>
and the Won their content<lb/>
can best be appreciated by<lb/>
adults.<lb/>
The band really proves<lb/>
its merit on Cappucino<lb/>
Here are some of the best<lb/>
jazz passages on the album.<lb/>
Each musician plays con<lb/>
brio, not 'he least Corea<lb/>
himself, .vho s work on the<lb/>
piano is nothing short of<lb/>
classic.<lb/>
Of course, Corea's<lb/>
whole oeuvre has a definite<lb/>
Latinsavor, but on this song<lb/>
it becomes even more, if<lb/>
still :btl, it parent. Cor-<lb/>
ea Latin young man who<lb/>
tak. , . nms in his<lb/>
biood and attenuates them<lb/>
into the finest, moving jazz.<lb/>
"The One Step" is a<lb/>
laid-back piece that one<lb/>
.vould play on a sleepy<lb/>
Sunday morning in. Corea<lb/>
is back on Fender<lb/>
Rhodes and coaxes from<lb/>
it a crystalline<lb/>
sound.<lb/>
"Waltz for Dave"<lb/>
is a beautiful,<lb/>
.mellow, sunny<lb/>
song. Joe Farrell's<lb/>
flute is effervescent<lb/>
against the background<lb/>
of Steve Gadd's<lb/>
isitive snares<lb/>
and cymbals. Chick Corea<lb/>
outdoes himself on the<lb/>
grand piano, playing with<lb/>
confidence and competence<lb/>
at the height of his powers.<lb/>
Waltse for Dave" is a<lb/>
work of love for a respected<lb/>
mentor and compositionally<lb/>
it shows that Corea had<lb/>
been an ? traordinary<lb/>
pupil<lb/>
Possibi. never so rich<lb/>
ped up m the worries and<lb/>
problems of myself and the<lb/>
world around -re 11 a<lb/>
looked ver. I i<lb/>
"I looked a- a<lb/>
material obiects that<lb/>
owned and sudden . ?<lb/>
ied that the.<lb/>
little meaning . ??<lb/>
comfort, safeness and joy I<lb/>
the friendships I -   ?-<lb/>
" ? 'nends<lb/>
'Friends' is not a concept album<lb/>
per se but it w strongly based on<lb/>
the feelings that good friends<lb/>
inspire in us. This ? the way<lb/>
Corea himself introduces the<lb/>
album<lb/>
and full a<lb/>
me from a q<lb/>
? ch is he 1<lb/>
Song Th<lb/>
oiece de res,<lb/>
has ever<lb/>
as that<lb/>
Samba<lb/>
album's<lb/>
ir.ee.<lb/>
I thought of my friends<lb/>
and h0 much our com-<lb/>
panionship and love meant<lb/>
to me and I felt very rich in<lb/>
the actual treasures of life<lb/>
Life no longer looked dim<lb/>
but very Dright and the<lb/>
th'ngs that were problems<lb/>
now 'ooked i,ke so many<lb/>
small imperfections which<lb/>
stmpiy needed (end an(j<lb/>
repair "<lb/>
"Id like toded.cate this<lb/>
album to all our fnends '<lb/>
'f you're not one al-<lb/>
a?bala,ter,isten-Qtoth,s<lb/>
a'bum you  become one of<lb/>
Chick Corea'sapprecators.<lb/>
A you'll know someth.na<lb/>
about the good feelings t<lb/>
oan come from FnenSs<lb/>
Thanksagain R9COfd <lb/>
COREA AND FRlFunsH. ? <lb/>
taw. (W,m.?an?eZlT1 "CWM' ?'?<lb/>
Corea trips the light<lb/>
fantastic on the piano and<lb/>
the rest of the group runs<lb/>
just as fast There is a<lb/>
rhythmic section m the<lb/>
song where Corea on p,anC<lb/>
and Gadd on drums per-<lb/>
form an astonishingly able,<lb/>
intense duet<lb/>
nds is not a concept<lb/>
album per se but it iS<lb/>
t? rigly based on the feel-<lb/>
?ngs that good friends<lb/>
inspire us. This is the way<lb/>
Corea himself introduces<lb/>
the album.<lb/>
"One night I sat wrap-<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057150_0007"/><lb/>
JSgSSjMy. FOUNT -M -<lb/>
CB<lb/>
ers<lb/>
fyEVANSWlTT<lb/>
Associated Press Writer"<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) - As Carl<lb/>
Njo-iof Seattle l.stLeS to<lb/>
 band radio one day he<lb/>
ered.fhecou.ddeveli<lb/>
xpens-ve way to keep others<lb/>
rom eavesdropping on CB<lb/>
XTf0ns and Vbe even<lb/>
on telephone conversations.<lb/>
w'th the help o, th<lb/>
 NlO0lai dld deve<lb/>
chadev,oe.Butnowthefcx;<lb/>
-ventors are squared off agam-<lb/>
 the most secret governemnt<lb/>
teihgenoe agency over whet-<lb/>
her the device poses a threat to<lb/>
national security.<lb/>
re U.S. Patent Off.ce has<lb/>
sued a seaecy order against<lb/>
Nicola, and the others which<lb/>
?ns they can , talk about the<lb/>
'nvent.onm any deta.l whatever<lb/>
'thout nskmg a ,a,l term.<lb/>
rhe four are fighting the<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
' the meantime, they are<lb/>
caught in a financial squeeze.<lb/>
' until the legal quest-<lb/>
answered, no one can<lb/>
jfacture the device they<lb/>
I thousands of hours and<lb/>
thousands of dollars to develop.<lb/>
? re ruining us Nidai<lb/>
The secrecy order, issued at<lb/>
equest of the super secret<lb/>
anal Security Agency, is of<lb/>
type usually used to protect<lb/>
ms developed under<lb/>
lent personnel from for-<lb/>
?enigence agencies.<lb/>
But that is not the case for<lb/>
enl .<lb/>
- ? ?"? strange about<lb/>
the law. It is extremely strange<lb/>
for it to be a crime for inventing<lb/>
somethingthis is totally priv-<lb/>
ately funded - that means you<lb/>
lose your freedom of speech<lb/>
said Nicolai in a telephone<lb/>
interview.<lb/>
As is it's practice, the NSA,<lb/>
the little-known agency charged<lb/>
with codes, code-breaking and<lb/>
eavesdropping on foreign gov-<lb/>
ernments, had no comment.<lb/>
The sketchy information<lb/>
available suggets the device<lb/>
apparently usesanew technique)<lb/>
to scramble or encode voioe<lb/>
communications, so that an<lb/>
eavesdropper would hear noth-<lb/>
mg but garble.<lb/>
The intended recipient of the<lb/>
message, however, would have<lb/>
one of the devices which would<lb/>
make the voioe intelligible.<lb/>
The device would cost less<lb/>
than $100 and would work easily<lb/>
with currently available radios.<lb/>
And it could be adapted to<lb/>
work with telephone conversat-<lb/>
"ons. the inventors say.<lb/>
The inventors disagree with<lb/>
the NSA findings. "I cannot<lb/>
imagine any legitimate threat to<lb/>
national security from our dev-<lb/>
ices said one of them. William<lb/>
Raike of Monterey. Calif.<lb/>
Voice scrambles now avail-<lb/>
able are quite expensive and<lb/>
have not been adapted for uses<lb/>
such as CB radio.<lb/>
Qffi<lb/>
Last March, six months after<lb/>
their patent application was<lb/>
filed, the four inventors receiv-<lb/>
ed the secrecy order. "Your<lb/>
applicationhas been found to<lb/>
contain subject matter, the<lb/>
unauthorized disclosure of<lb/>
which might be detrimental to<lb/>
national security the Patent<lb/>
Office wrote.<lb/>
The inventors disagree with<lb/>
the NSA finding. "I cannot<lb/>
imagine any legitimate threat to<lb/>
national security from our dev-<lb/>
ices said one of them, William<lb/>
Raike of Monterey, Calif in a<lb/>
telephone interview.<lb/>
"In fact, it was designed so<lb/>
as to not threaten national<lb/>
security.<lb/>
Raike and Niclai, Carl Quale<lb/>
and David Miller, all of the<lb/>
Seattle area, "specifically in-<lb/>
vented this for non-military,<lb/>
non-government applications<lb/>
"It appears a part of a<lb/>
general plan by the NSA to limit<lb/>
the privacy of the American<lb/>
people.<lb/>
They've been bugging<lb/>
people's telephones for years ad<lb/>
now someone oomes along with<lb/>
a device that makes this a little<lb/>
harder to do, and they oppose it<lb/>
under the guise of national<lb/>
security.<lb/>
Breach of contract suit<lb/>
filed against Redd Foxx<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AP) - ABC,<lb/>
which outfoxed NBC three years<lb/>
ago to lure away Redd Foxx, has<lb/>
filed a $5 million breach-of-<lb/>
contrad suit against the veter-<lb/>
an oomedian.<lb/>
ABC said the suit, filed<lb/>
Wednesday in Superior Court<lb/>
also seeks a permanent injunct-<lb/>
ion to keep Foxx "from render-<lb/>
ing his aervioes to any person or<lb/>
entity other than ABC<lb/>
The network said the suit<lb/>
alleges that Foxx and three<lb/>
production oompanies he owns<lb/>
breached an October 1975 con-<lb/>
tract to make a pilot for a TV<lb/>
series that would have starred<lb/>
the oomedian.<lb/>
In addition to $5 million in<lb/>
general damages, the network<lb/>
also seeks a judgement for<lb/>
$350,000 it says it advanced to<lb/>
Foxx who starred in NBC's<lb/>
"Sanford and Son" before<lb/>
leaving it to sign with ABC<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057150_0008"/><lb/>
- U ' !?<lb/>
 '<lb/>
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Pag S FOUNTAINHEAD 3 Octobf tWl<lb/>
Mime artts JSCeitft<lb/>
Berger featured in<lb/>
return engagement<lb/>
218 East Fifth Street<lb/>
What do crop cool evenings, colorful<lb/>
autumn leaves, and Pirate Football<lb/>
have in common? They're all a part of<lb/>
fall semester at E.C.U. For those cool<lb/>
evenings we have a fine selection of<lb/>
fall clothing. This Shetland<lb/>
Cable Knit by GANT is<lb/>
only one of the many great<lb/>
looking things we have.<lb/>
Please drop by<lb/>
and have a look.<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
After conducting one of<lb/>
the most outstanding work-<lb/>
shops of the Theatre Arts<lb/>
Series last year, mime<lb/>
artist Keith Berger is to be<lb/>
featured in a return en-<lb/>
gagement Oct. 4.<lb/>
The performance will<lb/>
begin at 8 p.m. in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Cen-<lb/>
ter's Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
Berger has studied the<lb/>
classic French mime of<lb/>
Marcel Marceau and an-<lb/>
cient oriental methods of<lb/>
movement, and his own<lb/>
style is heavily influenced<lb/>
by the techniques of Paul<lb/>
Curtis, director of the Am-<lb/>
erican M ime Theatre.<lb/>
His appearances have<lb/>
included performances at<lb/>
the Kennedy Center, Lin-<lb/>
coln Center and many<lb/>
campuses<lb/>
Berger is only 24, but he<lb/>
has been called "the best"<lb/>
by the best - Marcel<lb/>
Marceau.<lb/>
Keith Berger works<lb/>
completely alone. He, the<lb/>
audience and the stage are<lb/>
his only properties.<lb/>
His performing credits<lb/>
range from television com-<lb/>
mercials to the New<lb/>
Orleans Superdome.<lb/>
Berger first caught the<lb/>
attention of the public as a<lb/>
performer for the New York<lb/>
Parks Department.<lb/>
There he met movie<lb/>
producers, advertising ex-<lb/>
ecutives, his manager, and<lb/>
his girlfriend. During one<lb/>
of his performances, he met<lb/>
a General Motors executive<lb/>
who helped him get a real<lb/>
start.<lb/>
The executive took<lb/>
Berger to the General<lb/>
"BERQER HAS STUDIED the classic<lb/>
French mime of Marcel Marceau and<lb/>
ancient Oriental methods of movement,<lb/>
and nis own style is heavily Influftcad by<lb/>
the techniques of Paul, director of the<lb/>
American Mime Theatre.<lb/>
Motors advertising agency,<lb/>
which was interested but<lb/>
not convinced.<lb/>
The agency decided to<lb/>
try Berger, and after his<lb/>
performance, even the<lb/>
cameramen swore he could<lb/>
see the sleek impala whose<lb/>
illusion Keith Berger cre-<lb/>
ated.<lb/>
After many other ads<lb/>
for Time magazine,<lb/>
Bloomingdales Department<lb/>
store, and the New York<lb/>
it.<lb/>
W-Mi.<lb/>
7<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
N<lb/>
STAMP OUT NAKED WALLS<lb/>
imiHIitimTni-rrnrnninipififiiMTHiitiijji tili<lb/>
FRAME-IT<lb/>
YOURSELF SHOPPE<lb/>
Times Magazine, Berger<lb/>
turned to television specials<lb/>
and college campuses.<lb/>
With all the words and<lb/>
music television has to<lb/>
offer, Keith Berger has<lb/>
created some of its most<lb/>
eloquent moments with<lb/>
silence. For all the colors<lb/>
available in print, this<lb/>
small, lithe mime, in black<lb/>
leotard and white face,<lb/>
often catches attention<lb/>
first.<lb/>
Whether moving or<lb/>
still, Keith Berger express-<lb/>
es the emotions of joy,<lb/>
surprise, fear and wonder.<lb/>
Whether Mechanical<lb/>
Man, gorilla in a cage, or<lb/>
hard-shooting cowboy,<lb/>
Keith Berger has every eye<lb/>
on him. Attention never<lb/>
w vers.<lb/>
Tickets for Berger's<lb/>
ECU performances are a-<lb/>
vailable at $3 each for the<lb/>
general public, with dis-<lb/>
counts for persons in<lb/>
groups of 20 or more.<lb/>
They may be purchased<lb/>
at the ECU Central Ticket<lb/>
Office in Mendenhall<lb/>
&amp; o)<lb/>
106 Trade St.<lb/>
756-7454<lb/>
Hours<lb/>
Mon.&amp;Wed. 10AM-9PM<lb/>
TuesSat. 10AM- 5PM<lb/>
Bank Cards Welcomed<lb/>
ecu<lb/>
Big year planned<lb/>
for ECU Playhouse<lb/>
continued from p. 6<lb/>
Also directed by Loes-<lb/>
sin, Em7y will be per-<lb/>
formed Feb. 7-10 and 12-17<lb/>
at 8:15 p.m. in the ECU<lb/>
Studio Theatre.<lb/>
Rounding out the roster<lb/>
of major productions at the<lb/>
Playhouse this spring is A<lb/>
Cry of Players.<lb/>
This rousing and pro-<lb/>
vacative work by William<lb/>
Gibson ? author of The<lb/>
Miracle Worker and Two<lb/>
For The Seesaw ? is a<lb/>
poignant portrait of the<lb/>
youthful William Shakes-<lb/>
peare.<lb/>
Based on conjecture and<lb/>
published folk-tradition a-<lb/>
bout the early life of the<lb/>
greatest poet of our Ian-<lb/>
i<lb/>
1<lb/>
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ASS0OATHJDRU6BSTS<lb/>
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PRICES<lb/>
OCTOBER Utf<lb/>
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1000<lb/>
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Ph. 752-2136<lb/>
Hargett' Drug Store<lb/>
2500 S.ChaH?s St. feet.<lb/>
Ph. 756-3344<lb/>
guage. tms exquisitely<lb/>
wrought work is far more<lb/>
than a colorful biography of<lb/>
a playwright.<lb/>
Directed by ECU drama<lb/>
faculty member Del Lewis,<lb/>
the play will run April 4-7<lb/>
and 9-14 at 8:15 in the<lb/>
Studio Theatre.<lb/>
In addition to the four<lb/>
major productions, the<lb/>
Playhouse will offer two<lb/>
studio' productions:<lb/>
works-in progress running<lb/>
for limited engagements.<lb/>
The fall production will be<lb/>
Lanford Wilson's recent<lb/>
Broadway success The Hot<lb/>
L Baltimore.<lb/>
The satiric comedy will<lb/>
be directed by Del Lewis,<lb/>
and will run Nov. 2,3 and 4<lb/>
at 8:15 in the Studio .<lb/>
Theatre. In the spring, the<lb/>
Studio will teature an or-<lb/>
iginal choreographic work<lb/>
by members of the ECU<lb/>
dance faculty, running Feb.<lb/>
22-24 at 8:15 in the Studio<lb/>
Theatre.<lb/>
All Playhouse produc-<lb/>
tions are open to the public.<lb/>
Season tickets, which en-<lb/>
title patrons to see all six<lb/>
shows. are available<lb/>
through the Playhouse Box<lb/>
Office for $8.50. telephone<lb/>
757-6390.<lb/>
The East Carolina Play-<lb/>
house is the producing<lb/>
agency of ECU'S<lb/>
Department of<lb/>
Drama and Speech Found<lb/>
ed during the early 1960s<lb/>
by Edgar R. Loessin, the<lb/>
department has a faculty of<lb/>
20 professionals who offer<lb/>
pre-professional training to<lb/>
ECUs undergraduate stu-<lb/>
dents within the liberal arts<lb/>
concept.<lb/>
Last year's Playhouse<lb/>
season drew more than<lb/>
15,000 with seven produc-<lb/>
tions. This year. said<lb/>
Playhouse General Man-<lb/>
ager Preston &amp;sk. were<lb/>
going to top that mark We<lb/>
hope to move into our<lb/>
newly- renovated facility<lb/>
next year with a dedicated<lb/>
audience<lb/>
more<lb/>
 20,000 or<lb/>
SEErn<lb/>
H<lb/>
<pb facs="00057150_0009"/><lb/>
3 October 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
ECU quarterbacks operate against Movin' Mais<lb/>
GREER left and Leander Green right are shown<lb/>
irough the stingy Texas-Arlington defense<lb/>
Green completed four passes for 62 yards<lb/>
before leaving the game after the first quarter with an<lb/>
injury. Gree played most of the second half, left photo<lb/>
by Steve Romero and right photo by Chap Gurley<lb/>
Dye, Pirates impressed<lb/>
with abilities ofMav QB<lb/>
HANDLER<lb/>
?-Editor<lb/>
ber 17 is a<lb/>
?nd anyone<lb/>
game<lb/>
that He's sorre-<lb/>
absoiutely some-<lb/>
-?re the words<lb/>
ed ECU head<lb/>
Dye used to<lb/>
- mgton<lb/>
Roy Dewalt<lb/>
ites' 23-17<lb/>
. over the Mavs Sat-<lb/>
?<lb/>
every-<lb/>
? en Stadium<lb/>
-1 Dewalt<lb/>
awesome display<lb/>
ng that<lb/>
? : the Mavs<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
s statistics<lb/>
ed by a tough<lb/>
se. Dewalt still<lb/>
? mght. He<lb/>
ards rushing on<lb/>
14 carries His official total<lb/>
yards were trimmed to only<lb/>
21 because of several sacks<lb/>
by the Pirate defense.<lb/>
Dewalt displayed a rifle<lb/>
arm when throwing the<lb/>
ball. Although several of<lb/>
his passes were dropped,<lb/>
he still completed 11 of 22<lb/>
passes for 154 yajrds and a<lb/>
touchdown<lb/>
The touchdown pass<lb/>
covered 56 yards and went<lb/>
to Mav split end Scott Burt.<lb/>
Burt's scapegoat on the<lb/>
play was Pirate defensive<lb/>
back Charlie Carter. Carter<lb/>
came back later to vindicate<lb/>
himself, though, intercept-<lb/>
ing two of Dewalt's bullets<lb/>
in critical situations. Carter<lb/>
was impressed with the<lb/>
UTA quarterback. "Dewalt<lb/>
is quite a quarterback<lb/>
exclaimed Carter. We knew<lb/>
he was good, but we had<lb/>
not anticipated that his arm<lb/>
was so strong. He's a super<lb/>
runner, no question. 'Burt<lb/>
his passing came as some-<lb/>
what of a shock <lb/>
Carter said that Dewalt<lb/>
had the combination of<lb/>
tools rarely found in a<lb/>
quarterback. "He can do it<lb/>
all said the Fayetteville<lb/>
native. "He has the arm of<lb/>
Hog Henry (All-American<lb/>
at Southwestern Louisiana<lb/>
last year) and the running<lb/>
ability of Mike Dunn (All-<lb/>
Conference from Duke).<lb/>
He's the only guy I've<lb/>
ever faced that really show-<lb/>
ed me that much more than<lb/>
I expected. I'd have to say<lb/>
he is the best quarterback<lb/>
I've ever faced here, and<lb/>
that includes Mike Dunn<lb/>
Carter was backed up<lb/>
by Pirate defensive tackle<lb/>
Noah Clark. "I was very<lb/>
impressed said Clark.<lb/>
"He's the best I've ever<lb/>
faced in my three years<lb/>
here. He can hurt you in so<lb/>
many ways, running and<lb/>
passing. He can really read<lb/>
a defense also. The thing<lb/>
that relly impressed me<lb/>
though was his poise. He<lb/>
just ?"?"??rln't qet skaken<lb/>
up Other metes, includ-<lb/>
ing quarterback Leander<lb/>
Green and split end Terry<lb/>
Gallaher. heaped praise<lb/>
upon Dewalt. "All I can say<lb/>
is that he is just real, real<lb/>
good exclaimed Gallaher.<lb/>
Green felt that Dewalt<lb/>
was blessed in every phase<lb/>
of the game. "He's got it<lb/>
all said the Pirate quart-<lb/>
erback. With the natural<lb/>
ability Dewalt displayed<lb/>
Saturday, one could find it<lb/>
hard to believe that he was<lb/>
a walk-on in 1975.<lb/>
It can be taken for<lb/>
granted that Roy Dewalt<lb/>
needn't worry about college<lb/>
expenses any longer. UTA<lb/>
head coach Bud Elliott has<lb/>
surely taken care of that.<lb/>
First shutout of the season<lb/>
ECU defeats Campbell 2-0<lb/>
By DA VID MAREADY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU'S soccer team rec-<lb/>
oreded its first shutout<lb/>
victory of the season here,<lb/>
Saturday, in a 2-0 defeat of<lb/>
the Campbell College<lb/>
els on Mtnges Soccer<lb/>
F leld<lb/>
The Camels kept the<lb/>
ball in Pirate territory for<lb/>
most of the opening ten<lb/>
munites of the game.<lb/>
Campbell had numerous<lb/>
scoring opportunities dur-<lb/>
ing this time, but they<lb/>
failed to score because of<lb/>
lack of support near the<lb/>
goal<lb/>
The Tide turned with<lb/>
21 :05 gone in the game<lb/>
with Jeff Karpovick's goal<lb/>
on an assist by Mike<lb/>
Hitchcock.<lb/>
Eleven more shots were<lb/>
attempted on the Camel<lb/>
goal by the Pirates in the<lb/>
first half with Karpovick<lb/>
the only one to hit paydirt.<lb/>
ECU goalie, Kevin Tyus,<lb/>
has an energetic, first half<lb/>
ECU soccer action<lb/>
PhOtO hV ft M ntrnn"1<lb/>
workout with eight saves.<lb/>
The remainer of the first<lb/>
half went without incident,<lb/>
and the score remained<lb/>
ECU 1, Campbell 0.<lb/>
ECU soccer coach Brad<lb/>
Smith, was pleased with his<lb/>
club's performance in the<lb/>
first half. "We played them<lb/>
tough around our goals,<lb/>
said Smith. "Although our<lb/>
transition was slow, ourboys<lb/>
hung in there and kept up<lb/>
the pace<lb/>
The Camels gained<lb/>
momentum in the opening<lb/>
minutes of the second half,<lb/>
but failed to score because<lb/>
of the excellent defensive<lb/>
play by the Pirates.<lb/>
Campbell's assistant<lb/>
soccer coach was ejected<lb/>
from the game early in the<lb/>
seond half after he called a<lb/>
controversial decision by<lb/>
the referee "stupid<lb/>
Norris Baker and Lee Web-<lb/>
ster, Camel players, were<lb/>
given warnings by the<lb/>
referees in the second half<lb/>
for their unsportsmanlike<lb/>
behavior.<lb/>
Shawn Beryy iced the<lb/>
win for the Pirates with an<lb/>
insurance goal late in the<lb/>
game. Stan Griff was credi-<lb/>
ted with the assist.<lb/>
"Shawn really helped<lb/>
the team's morale with his<lb/>
goal said Smith, "We<lb/>
started to get sloppy offen-<lb/>
sively at the beginning of<lb/>
the second half, and that<lb/>
goal gave the whole team a<lb/>
boost<lb/>
TYUSHAS17SAVES<lb/>
From that point on, it<lb/>
was just a matter of letting<lb/>
the clock run out. The<lb/>
Camels tried to speed up<lb/>
their offense late in the<lb/>
half, but they could not<lb/>
score because of superb<lb/>
defensive efforts by goalie,<lb/>
Kevin Tyus, and fullback,<lb/>
Jeff Kluger. Tyus ended<lb/>
the day with seventeen<lb/>
saves. According to Smith,<lb/>
this was the first time ECU<lb/>
has beaten Campbell<lb/>
College on the soccer field.<lb/>
BERRY'SSCORE<lb/>
CLINCHER<lb/>
"Overall said Smith,<lb/>
"we played a super game,<lb/>
i'm very proud of my team<lb/>
because they stuck together<lb/>
and played as a unit. We<lb/>
got the lead in the first half,<lb/>
controlled the later stages<lb/>
of the second half after<lb/>
Shawn's goal, and that's<lb/>
what it took to win the<lb/>
game<lb/>
PIRATES NOW 2-4-1<lb/>
The win upped the<lb/>
Pirate soccer team's record<lb/>
to 2-4-1 while the Camels<lb/>
dropped to 1-3-1 on the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Pirates stop Movin' Mavs,<lb/>
FG'sgive ECU 23-17 victory<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
ECU'S narrow 23-17 victory over Texas-Arlington<lb/>
Saturday night was nothing impressive, but as head coach<lb/>
Pat Dye said after the game you've got to win some games<lb/>
like this every year.<lb/>
"If you're going to be a good football team and have a<lb/>
good record winning comes in a lot of different ways<lb/>
observed Dye. "And sometimes you win when you're not<lb/>
supposed to.<lb/>
"But I was proud of our team and I'm happy we won<lb/>
Each year you just have to win some games like this.<lb/>
Texas-Arlington was certainly a much better team that<lb/>
Southwestern Louisiana<lb/>
Once again, when the Pirates offense bogged down in<lb/>
the second half after quarterback Leander Green was<lb/>
injured, it was the Bucs' defense and the toe of Bill Lamm<lb/>
which provided the victory. Lamm's second half field goals<lb/>
from 40 and 29 yards out gave the Pirates their only second<lb/>
half points as well as ECU'S final victory margin.<lb/>
And after Texas-Arlington's Roy Dewalt completed nine<lb/>
passes for 134 yards in the first half, the ECU secondary<lb/>
limited the talented Mav quarterback to just two<lb/>
completions for 20 yards in the second half. Charlie Carter<lb/>
intercepted two of Dewalt's passes and returned them for<lb/>
34 yards.<lb/>
"I don't think there was any question that our defense<lb/>
came up with an awful lot of big plays, particularly in the<lb/>
four down zones said Dye. "We were able to make some<lb/>
adjustments at the half that worked pretty well. We took<lb/>
away about everything in the second half except the<lb/>
handoff inside<lb/>
On paper the Movin Mavs certainly did some movin.<lb/>
totaling 343 yards to the Pirates 209. The Mavs outrushed<lb/>
ECU 224 to 185 and had 154 yards in the air compared to 62<lb/>
for the Pirates. But five Texas-Arlington turnovers proved<lb/>
disastrous as the M avs dropped their fifth straight game of<lb/>
the season. The victory was ECU'S second in a row and the<lb/>
Bucs are now 3-2 for the year.<lb/>
They were obviously a fine offensive football team and<lb/>
I think a fine defensive team noted Dye. "They gave us<lb/>
problems moving the ball and they were certainly a physical<lb/>
team But I think th.s was typical of the games they have<lb/>
played this year The game began much like last week's<lb/>
35 point first half explosion against Southwestern<lb/>
Louisiana. ECU'S Dennis Mulholland jarred the ball loose<lb/>
from John Johnson on the opening kickoff and Fred Chav.s<lb/>
recovered on Texas-Arlington's 15 yard line.<lb/>
Four plays later, halfback Anthony Collins swept around<lb/>
the right side from two yards out for the touchdown Bill<lb/>
Lamm s conversion put the Pirates ahead 7-0 with 13 339 in<lb/>
the first quarter.<lb/>
ECU came right back on its next possession moving 58<lb/>
yards in just nine plays for another touchdown Leander<lb/>
Green capped the drive with a three yard YD run and the<lb/>
Pirates moved out front 14-0 with 8:44 still rema-mng ,n the<lb/>
first period<lb/>
Big plays in the drive were Green's pass to halfback<lb/>
Eddie H.cks for 13 yards and another Green aenal to split<lb/>
end Billy Ray Washington for 27 yards on a third and 11<lb/>
situaiton.<lb/>
But the Movin' Mavs refused to wilt before the partisan<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium crowd and got two quick field goals from<lb/>
Tom Skoruppa to close with.n eight points at 14-6<lb/>
Skoruppa's first field goal came from 35 yards out in the<lb/>
first quarter and his second one was a 27 yarder<lb/>
Dewalt caught the Pirate secondary napping midway<lb/>
through the second quarter when split end Scott Burt<lb/>
hauled in a 56 bomb for a touchdown.<lb/>
Dewalt's run for the conversion was good and suddenly<lb/>
Texas-Arlington had tried the score at 14-14 with 4v<lb/>
remaining in the half.<lb/>
Lamm, who tied a school record with his three goals<lb/>
gave the Pirates the lead for good when he sent a 33 yarder<lb/>
through the uprights which also gave ECU a 17-14 lead at<lb/>
the break.<lb/>
Texas-Arlington's lone score in the second half came<lb/>
midway through the fourth quarter when Skoruppa booted a<lb/>
33 yard field goal.<lb/>
"I didn't think we were flat. " said Dye. But we<lb/>
weren't quite as ready as we were last week. But we've got<lb/>
to mo'e physical if we expect to continue to win on down the<lb/>
line<lb/>
Hicks was ECU'S top ground gamer with 66 yards on 10<lb/>
carries Collins added 22 yards on nine attempts while Sam<lb/>
Harrell gained 21 yards on six rushes.<lb/>
Leander Green directs the ECU offense<lb/>
ECU QUARTERBACK LEANDER Green prepares to hand<lb/>
the ball off to a running back in action Saturday night<lb/>
against Texas-Arlington. Pirate halfbacks, Anthony Collins.<lb/>
and fullback Theodore Sutton along with Matt Mulholland<lb/>
head the blocking<lb/>
 Photo by Steve Romero<lb/>
UTA impressive despite loss<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor ?<lb/>
ECU head coach Pat<lb/>
Dye and rest of his Pirate<lb/>
knew before the game<lb/>
Texas-Arlington was cer-<lb/>
tainly no pushover despite<lb/>
its somewhat misleading<lb/>
0-4 record. And one glance<lb/>
at the stat sheet after<lb/>
ECU'S narrow 23-17 victory<lb/>
over the M avs proved again<lb/>
Texas-Arlington is just a<lb/>
few turnovers away from<lb/>
being a 5-0 ballclub.<lb/>
"I don't know what it<lb/>
looked like from up there in<lb/>
the stands, but we obvious-<lb/>
ly played a fine offensive<lb/>
football team tonight said<lb/>
Dye. "We knew offensively<lb/>
they were a fine football<lb/>
team, but they also played<lb/>
well on defense.<lb/>
The Movin'Mavstotalled<lb/>
343 yards as compared to<lb/>
just 209 for ECU while<lb/>
Texas-Arlington ground out<lb/>
19 first downs while the<lb/>
Bucs could manage only<lb/>
ten. But seven turnovers,<lb/>
four which came in the<lb/>
second half, proved oostly<lb/>
for the Mavs.<lb/>
"It wasn't the<lb/>
fumbles explained<lb/>
Texas-Arlington head<lb/>
coach Bud Elliott. "We just<lb/>
lost<lb/>
Pirate quarterback<lb/>
Leander Green was forced<lb/>
to miss the entire second<lb/>
hald after suffering a hip<lb/>
pointer on his three yard<lb/>
touchdown run in the first<lb/>
quarter.<lb/>
"I saw an inside open-<lb/>
ing on the touchdown run<lb/>
and took it said Green. "I<lb/>
was hit hard on the hip. But<lb/>
it's funny I didn't feel it<lb/>
right and I didn't even<lb/>
notice it until the next<lb/>
series.<lb/>
"But then it really<lb/>
began to bother me. M y hip<lb/>
felt better when I took it<lb/>
slow, but when I took it<lb/>
slow, but when I sped up it<lb/>
really hurt. It shouldn't be<lb/>
any problem though. I'll be<lb/>
ready next week<lb/>
Reserve quarterbacks<lb/>
Steve Green and Henry<lb/>
Trevathan played the re-<lb/>
mainder of the game, but<lb/>
both players had plenty of<lb/>
problems directing the<lb/>
Pirates' offense. After<lb/>
Green completed four pas-<lb/>
ses for 62 yards in the first<lb/>
half, the Bucs could not<lb/>
manage one pass reoeption<lb/>
in the second half.<lb/>
"We knew we all had to<lb/>
work just a little bit harder<lb/>
after Leander went out<lb/>
siad guard Wayne Inman.<lb/>
"We had to help Steve.<lb/>
He's a good quarterback,<lb/>
but he was put into a<lb/>
difficult situaiton tonight.<lb/>
Pirate split end Terry<lb/>
Gallaher was also impres-<lb/>
sed with the Mavs offense<lb/>
and admitted they were<lb/>
certainly no 0-5 team.<lb/>
"They wouldn't quit <lb/>
said Gallaher who caught<lb/>
one pass for 14 yards. "We<lb/>
really passed a true test of<lb/>
character. We could have<lb/>
laid down and died, but<lb/>
when you're in a situation<lb/>
like us, with no conference<lb/>
to play in every game is the<lb/>
biggest game of the year<lb/>
Their record is no<lb/>
indication of what type of<lb/>
team they have. They really<lb/>
played with a lot of charac-<lb/>
ter out there tonight.<lb/>
ECU-UTA<lb/>
Stat?<lb/>
UTA 31 03?17<lb/>
ECU 14 3 6 0?23<lb/>
ECU-Collms 2 run (Lamm<lb/>
kick)<lb/>
ECU-Green 3 run (Lamm<lb/>
kick)<lb/>
UTA-Skoruppa35 FG<lb/>
UTA-Skoruppa27 FG<lb/>
UTA-Burt 56 pass from<lb/>
Dewalt (Dewalt run)<lb/>
ECU-Lamm33FG<lb/>
ECU-Lamm40FG<lb/>
ECU-Lamm 29 FG<lb/>
UTA-Skoruppa33FG<lb/>
Attendance ? 25,986<lb/>
RUSHING<lb/>
ECU-Hicks 12-66. Collins<lb/>
9-22, Harrell 6-21; UTA-<lb/>
Williams 15-66, Dewalt 14-<lb/>
20, Jessie 4-24.<lb/>
PASSING<lb/>
ECU-Green 4-4-0-62, UTA-<lb/>
Dewalt 11-22-2-154.<lb/>
RECEIVING<lb/>
ECU-Washington 2-36,<lb/>
Gallaher 1-14, Hicks 1-13!<lb/>
UTA-Burt 4-96, Woodard<lb/>
3-23.<lb/>
t<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057150_0010"/><lb/>
Pag 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 3 Octobf 1978<lb/>
Pirates defeat Appalachian, lose to UNC<lb/>
flu iilivnionrr<lb/>
By JIMMY DUPREE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A little known aspect of<lb/>
ECU'S athletic program is<lb/>
its girl's volleyball team.<lb/>
This year's squad has fas-<lb/>
hioned an overall record of<lb/>
5-4, a record many skeptics<lb/>
would call mediocre. Last<lb/>
week ECU traved to Chapel<lb/>
Hill where they took on the<lb/>
Tar Heels of UNC and also<lb/>
Appalachian State Univer-<lb/>
sity. In the opening match<lb/>
of the evening, the Pirates<lb/>
scored an impressive vic-<lb/>
tory over Appalachian State<lb/>
15-9 and 15-12.<lb/>
However, against the<lb/>
Tar Heels the Pirates did<lb/>
not fair so well. They<lb/>
succumbed to Carolina to<lb/>
the tune of 5-15 and 12-15.<lb/>
"We have beaten the<lb/>
teams we are supposed to,<lb/>
but not upset the teams we<lb/>
are capable of beating<lb/>
said Alita Dillon. "Our<lb/>
offense is not flowing<lb/>
smoothly. Our serving has<lb/>
been consistant, but our<lb/>
defensive coverage has not<lb/>
advanced to the point we<lb/>
would like to see The<lb/>
Pirates traveled to Raleigh<lb/>
Friday to meet Virginia<lb/>
Cmmonwealth University<lb/>
and North Carolina State.<lb/>
ECU opened the season<lb/>
with Virginia Common-<lb/>
wealth and suffered a dis-<lb/>
appointing loss of 15-7,<lb/>
14-16, and 8-15. "Against<lb/>
VCU we played our usual<lb/>
game, except that at the<lb/>
end we kind of fell apart<lb/>
explained DillonThe girls<lb/>
had a meeting while State<lb/>
and VCU played and did<lb/>
aom? soul searching. We<lb/>
pulled right together<lb/>
against State<lb/>
The Pirates, howeverm<lb/>
?ost to NCSU 15-9, 11-15<lb/>
and 8-15.<lb/>
"It may not look to<lb/>
good on paper because we<lb/>
lost the match, but it's the<lb/>
first time we have played as<lb/>
a unit added Dillon. "We<lb/>
realize that things are<lb/>
going to go up from here on<lb/>
out<lb/>
Junior setter LaVonda<lb/>
BASF<lb/>
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Record Jethro Tull Live on full-track Tuesday night<lb/>
from 11:15 to 12 midnite on WRQR<lb/>
Pair Electronics<lb/>
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Store Hours 8:30-5:30 Weekdays 8:30-12:30 Saturday<lb/>
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"I think the students<lb/>
would be surprised at the<lb/>
caliber of volleyball we<lb/>
play said Dillon. If they<lb/>
enjoy volleyball at all on<lb/>
television, I think they<lb/>
would be pleasantly sur-<lb/>
prised with our level of<lb/>
com petition<lb/>
Admission is free to<lb/>
ECU students with a valid<lb/>
ID. The ECU colleyball<lb/>
team hosts the State Tour-<lb/>
nament Nov. 10 and 11 in<lb/>
Minges. Coliseum.<lb/>
Tommorpw night the<lb/>
Pirates travel to Chowan<lb/>
College for a 7 p.m.<lb/>
matchup. This weekend the<lb/>
Lady Pirates travel to Col-<lb/>
umbia, S.C. to participate<lb/>
in the University of South<lb/>
Carolina Invitational Tour-<lb/>
nament.<lb/>
Later this month, the<lb/>
Pirates must face Wake<lb/>
Forest, Elon College, N.C.<lb/>
State, and Duke.<lb/>
Duncan has been constant-<lb/>
ly improving in the Pirates<lb/>
early matches. The setter<lb/>
serves as the quarterback<lb/>
of the team who directs the<lb/>
offense. Dillon also men-<lb/>
tioned that freshman<lb/>
Yvette Lewis broke into the<lb/>
starting lineup quickly and<lb/>
has been a very pleasant<lb/>
surprise to the staff. She<lb/>
also noted this year's trans-<lb/>
fers have added depth and<lb/>
experience to the squad.<lb/>
The Pirates compete in the<lb/>
North Carolina Association<lb/>
of Intercollegiate Athletes<lb/>
for women and are current-<lb/>
ly in fourth place behind<lb/>
undefeated UNC, Duke,<lb/>
and State. "The seond half<lb/>
of the season's matches will<lb/>
decide the seedings for the<lb/>
state tournament said<lb/>
Dillon. "I feel that we will<lb/>
do better in the second<lb/>
half<lb/>
The Pirates face North<lb/>
Carolina tonight at 7 p.m.<lb/>
in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Breakfast<lb/>
from 7 a.m.<lb/>
to 11a.m.<lb/>
specializing<lb/>
in large<lb/>
country ham or sausage<lb/>
biscuits. Hot cakes. Scrambled<lb/>
eggs with country ham or<lb/>
sausage. Our 14 lb. beef<lb/>
burgers are ground from fresh<lb/>
Western Chuck. We have<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/>
flwy.t64bi Washington<lb/>
Women's volleyball action lPhto by Kip Sloan<lb/>
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COME EARL Y FOR BEST SELECTIOV<lb/>
GET YOUR FAVORITES AT<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057150_0011"/><lb/>
3 October 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
Timeouts continue to blister opposition<lb/>
A tough game<lb/>
ost exciting intramural sports on<lb/>
ta rhese young ECU co-eds<lb/>
? - lves Photo by Chap Gurley<lb/>
Who Done It wins<lb/>
Almost Anything<lb/>
Goes carnival<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
If anyone questioned<lb/>
the scoring power of the<lb/>
Scott Time Outs, the de-<lb/>
fending champs set out to<lb/>
prove themselves last week<lb/>
as they embarrassed two<lb/>
overmatched opponents.<lb/>
As defending campus<lb/>
champions, the Time Outs<lb/>
scored an intramural record<lb/>
of 104 points in one game<lb/>
last week and scored a total<lb/>
of 170 points for the week<lb/>
as they ran their record to<lb/>
6-0 on the season and<lb/>
continued their three-year<lb/>
unbeaten streak to 20<lb/>
games. The Time Outs held<lb/>
the old intramural record of,<lb/>
90 points, set last year.<lb/>
The victim in the Time<lb/>
Outs record-setting per-<lb/>
formance were the Jones<lb/>
No Names The final score<lb/>
was 104-46 as the Time<lb/>
Outs led by only 40 points<lb/>
at the half.<lb/>
The hero in the win was<lb/>
Billy Bass. Bass passed for<lb/>
a record ten touchdowns in<lb/>
the win and ran for another.<lb/>
Kevin Thomas scored five<lb/>
times and Dennis Bellamy<lb/>
had three scores. Terry<lb/>
Campbell and Chuck Pope<lb/>
both scored twice. The<lb/>
Time Outs also came up<lb/>
with seven interceptions.<lb/>
In a slightly less awe-<lb/>
some display of their scor-<lb/>
ing power, the Time Outs<lb/>
topped Aycock Dorm 66-22.<lb/>
Bass threw for six scores in<lb/>
WELDING &amp; STEEL<lb/>
FABRICATING<lb/>
that game, three each to<lb/>
Bellamy and Thomas. Ro-<lb/>
ger Horton and Jimmy<lb/>
Wilkins added scores off of<lb/>
pass interceptions.<lb/>
Tnere were a number of<lb/>
other exciting games in last<lb/>
week's men's football play.<lb/>
The Village People ran<lb/>
their seasonal mark to only<lb/>
2-4 as they downed the<lb/>
Rugby Leathernecks,<lb/>
40-34, in an exciting game<lb/>
filled with long touchdown<lb/>
passes and a stron second<lb/>
half comeback. Lambda Chi<lb/>
kept alive its hopes for a<lb/>
fraternity playoff berth with<lb/>
a merciless 54-0 wim over<lb/>
Delta Sigma Phi. The Jones<lb/>
Running Rougues kept a-<lb/>
live their slim hopes for a<lb/>
playoff berth, too, with a<lb/>
44-26 win over the Belk<lb/>
Raiders.<lb/>
The loss dropped the<lb/>
Raiders' record to 2-4. The<lb/>
Scott Stooges also kept<lb/>
alive playoff hopes with a<lb/>
46-20 win over the Aycock<lb/>
Kamikazes as Rodney Os-<lb/>
borne passed for four<lb/>
touchdowns. Glenn Ellis<lb/>
highlighted the win.<lb/>
though, with a 75-yard punt<lb/>
return for a touchdown.<lb/>
This is the last week of<lb/>
the regular season for the<lb/>
men, who begin divisional<lb/>
playoffs on Monday, Oct-<lb/>
ober 9 The top four<lb/>
fraternity teams, and ties,<lb/>
will play in that divisional<lb/>
playoff In the dormitory<lb/>
and cluindependent play-<lb/>
offs, the top two teams and<lb/>
ties in each division will<lb/>
compete. The all-campus<lb/>
we weld bikes, trailers hitches,<lb/>
ears, wood stoves, motorcycles<lb/>
trailers, ete.<lb/>
we make unusual items<lb/>
NtOO-5iOO Monday thru Friday<lb/>
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Team members on the<lb/>
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soms. Lonme Smith, Ther-<lb/>
esa Bemis. Lynn Mobely.<lb/>
Doug Shanker. James Dai-<lb/>
Mark Beanne and<lb/>
Dennis Weaver.<lb/>
playoff will begin on Tues-<lb/>
day. October 17 and the<lb/>
championship game is ten-<lb/>
tatively scheduled for the<lb/>
nect day. October 17<lb/>
There are only six teams<lb/>
that remained unbeaten in<lb/>
men's play. In addition to<lb/>
the Time Outs they are the<lb/>
Scott Meames. Aycock Top<lb/>
of the Roost. Phi Kappa<lb/>
Tau. the SoooJo<lb/>
Anthropology club team,<lb/>
and the Sdaharu Ohs. who<lb/>
beat On Your Back in a<lb/>
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CrabCakes (2)2 25<lb/>
Fillet Whole Baby Flounder2.25<lb/>
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Admission Til 10:00 EARLY!<lb/>
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who invented audio tape in the first place) literally polishes the tape to get<lb/>
rid of bumps and ridges that can cause background noise.<lb/>
Record Jethro Tull Live on full-track Tuesday niaht<lb/>
from 11:15 to 12 midnite on WRQR.<lb/>
Pair Electronics<lb/>
(WfUxz ?&amp;xjui?. Corner ?tt??<lb/>
Store Hours 8:30- 5:30 Weekdays 8:30-12:30 Saturdays<lb/>
On The Spot Financing Available<lb/>
<pb facs="00057150_0012"/><lb/>
I U l<lb/>
t -<lb/>
 T t ?? 1 1 f<lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 3 October 1978<lb/>
Collins scores for Pirates<lb/>
 Photo by Steve Romero<lb/>
?Jean 'd tsnofagwaAAw<lb/>
203 South Evans St.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
Phone: 752-3980 Monday-Friday<lb/>
Other hours by appointment<lb/>
<lb/>
??<lb/>
? 1. -? q? C j ? ?<lb/>
i I. ?TT?wryj?<lb/>
<lb/>
Gnan Op??.S. Oct 30<lb/>
8" Decwv? i?m?<lb/>
Arkansas ranked second<lb/>
Sooners atop NCAA poll<lb/>
NORMAN, OK LA. (AP)<lb/>
? As far as M issourl coach<lb/>
Warren Powers is con-<lb/>
cerned, Oklahoma, which<lb/>
currently sits atop the<lb/>
college football rankings, is<lb/>
a better team than Ala-<lb/>
bama, ruler of the nation's<lb/>
gridirons earlier in the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
"They are much more<lb/>
explosive offensively than-<lb/>
Alabama and overall a<lb/>
much stronger team said<lb/>
Powers, who's 14th ranked<lb/>
Tigers were blown out<lb/>
45-23 by Oklahoma Satur-<lb/>
day. They lost to Alabama<lb/>
38-20 two weeks earlier<lb/>
after leading 20-17 at half-<lb/>
time.<lb/>
This time, it was no<lb/>
contest. The Sooners had<lb/>
28 points before Missouri<lb/>
scored with Billy Sims<lb/>
scoring three of his four<lb/>
touchdowns in the first<lb/>
half. Sims rushed for 166<lb/>
yards on 14 carries while<lb/>
David Overstreet added 153<lb/>
yards on ten carries.<lb/>
"I think our perform-<lb/>
ance should enhance our<lb/>
position in the polls said<lb/>
coach Barry Switzer, who's<lb/>
Sooners reeled off 484<lb/>
yards on the ground. "We<lb/>
felt like we could go out in<lb/>
the first half and score<lb/>
every time we had the ball,<lb/>
and we almost did<lb/>
Meanwhile, runnerup<lb/>
Arkansas trailed Tulsa 7-0<lb/>
at halftime, but pulled out a<lb/>
21 -13 victory as Ben Cow ins<lb/>
scored on runs of 24 and 3<lb/>
yards in the third quarter.<lb/>
Tulsa coach John Coop-<lb/>
er cast his vote for the<lb/>
Razorbacks as the nation's<lb/>
number one team after they<lb/>
held the Golden Hurricane<lb/>
to 148 yards total offense.<lb/>
 I think they' re the best<lb/>
team in the oountry he<lb/>
said. "We just got beat.<lb/>
We played about as good a<lb/>
game as we oould. Ark-<lb/>
ansas has everything a<lb/>
college team could want?<lb/>
t good players, good<lb/>
coaches, good facilities and<lb/>
super fans<lb/>
But Arkansas' Lou Holz<lb/>
begged to differ with Coop-<lb/>
er on one point.<lb/>
"I'm not sure we're the<lb/>
best team in the country<lb/>
he said. "But I am sure we<lb/>
have the best fans in the<lb/>
country<lb/>
Besides Oklahoma and<lb/>
Arkansas the next seven<lb/>
teams in the Associated<lb/>
Press ratings posted vic-<lb/>
tories, but 10th ranked<lb/>
Florida State lost to Hou-<lb/>
ston 27-21.<lb/>
Southern California, the<lb/>
nation's number three<lb/>
team, trounced Michigan<lb/>
State 30-9 Friday night,<lb/>
touching off a high scoring<lb/>
weekend. Harland Huck-<lb/>
leby scored on two short<lb/>
plunges as fourth ranked<lb/>
M ichigan buried Duke<lb/>
52-0. Booker Moore tallied<lb/>
three times and Chuck<lb/>
Fusina passed for a pair of<lb/>
touchdowns as number five<lb/>
Penn State routed Texas<lb/>
Christian 58-0.<lb/>
Sixth ranked Texas<lb/>
turned back Texas-Tech<lb/>
24-7 with Johnny "Ham"<lb/>
Jones rushing for a career<lb/>
high 128 yards, including<lb/>
touchdowns of 14 and 16<lb/>
yards.<lb/>
Seventh ranked Ala-<lb/>
bama, bounced from the<lb/>
top spot by last week's loss<lb/>
to Southern Cal, trailed<lb/>
lowly Vanderbilt 21-16 until<lb/>
Tony Nathan galloped 63<lb/>
LtifiNPHg) S<lb/>
Pizza &amp; Spaghetti<lb/>
House<lb/>
FAST FREE<lb/>
DINE IN<lb/>
DELIVERY<lb/>
CARRY OUT<lb/>
TAKE A BREAK - DINE IN<lb/>
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MONDAY THRU FRIDAY<lb/>
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?FRESH TOSSED SALAD<lb/>
CHOICE OF DRESSING<lb/>
? LARGE ICED TEA<lb/>
&amp; Chanclo's<lb/>
Hour 11 30 A.M. Till 2:30 P.M. OflKj ? Q<lb/>
lhm!t<lb/>
CALL<lb/>
758-7400<lb/>
NEW STUDENT<lb/>
yards in the third period,<lb/>
sparking the Crimson Tide<lb/>
to a 51-28 victory.<lb/>
"When wh got ahead, I<lb/>
knew we had better do<lb/>
something quick Nathan<lb/>
said, fearing the wrath of<lb/>
coach Bear Bryant, who<lb/>
growled "We seldom look-<lb/>
ed like a football team and<lb/>
we never looked like one<lb/>
that had any coaching<lb/>
Curtis Dickey sprinted<lb/>
65 yards for a touchdown on<lb/>
Texas A &amp; M' s f irst play and<lb/>
the 8th ranked Aggies went<lb/>
on to crush Memphis State<lb/>
58-0. Dickey, who gained<lb/>
167 yards in 11 carries,<lb/>
added a 31 yards score in<lb/>
the first period.<lb/>
itronize .<lb/>
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Everybody knows that students<lb/>
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At Harmony House, we<lb/>
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Harmony House understands if<lb/>
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On the Mall Downtown Greenville ? 752-3651<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057150_0013"/>
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