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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057152_0001"/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Vol. 55 No. JfjW October 1978<lb/>
Parking takeover?<lb/>
By MARC BARNES<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
A proposal to separate faculty and staff parking has<lb/>
caused quite a bit of stir in the university community this<lb/>
past week. According to several anonymous sources, a plan<lb/>
is afoot to separate faculty and staff parking and to give<lb/>
perferred parking to the faculty.<lb/>
Thisisfalse however,according to Dr. Carl Adler, who<lb/>
submitted a proposal to the Faculty Senate recently. Dr.<lb/>
Adler said in an interview that he is not in favor of giving<lb/>
staff members less desirable parking.<lb/>
"I can't speak for the senate for what it had in mind<lb/>
when it adoped it, all I can tell you is what I had in mind<lb/>
when I submitted it Adler said.<lb/>
Adler went on to say. "In point of fact, I would have the<lb/>
parking divide equally on a pro-rata basis ? that means<lb/>
that if staff had sixty percent of the registered cars they<lb/>
should get sixty percent of the parking. Furthermore, " he<lb/>
went on. "in my view they should get sixty percent of the<lb/>
desirable parking<lb/>
Adler went on to point out an example of his parking<lb/>
proposal m the Memorial Gym area. He said "Cars trying<lb/>
to get to and from the parking lot west of Austin create<lb/>
congestion " He went on to point out that if that parking lot<lb/>
was given entirely to the staff, who are here for practically<lb/>
the entire day. there would be almost no congestion. "No<lb/>
faculty would be driving in there looking for a parking space<lb/>
because there wouldn't beany for them Adler said.<lb/>
He added that the interior spaces should be staff and<lb/>
exterior spaces should be faculty. He said, "That way, you<lb/>
not have a lot of traffic congestion that we have<lb/>
now<lb/>
Adler remarked that there was no reason that the<lb/>
ty should look for parking places where staff are<lb/>
ked, because staff cars aren't leaving the campus area.<lb/>
er commented further that "I think it's much more<lb/>
intelligent to separate the two parking spaces In fact,<lb/>
Adler noted, the staff would probably get the better parking<lb/>
ices, because they will be nearer to the buildings on the<lb/>
interior of the campus.<lb/>
Adler said he didfi't know how the rumor got started,<lb/>
but he said that it was probably just suspicion<lb/>
Aciier commented on the fact that several letters, all of<lb/>
i anonymous, have surfaced which have accused him of<lb/>
to take parking.away from staff and give it to the<lb/>
faculty Adler said that "It is not fair that there are<lb/>
anonymous letters, if people are going to say this, they<lb/>
should say what it is, because I don't know how to answer<lb/>
He added that it was not his intention to take<lb/>
parking away from staff.<lb/>
Ader said that he hears faculty members complain that<lb/>
,hPV couldn't find a parking space. He went on to say that<lb/>
3 was readily available at 8 in the morning, but<lb/>
that there are faculty members that teach labs until at night<lb/>
until 11 and it is unfair to expect them to be back at 8<lb/>
the next morning to compete for parking spaces with people<lb/>
that work from 8 to 5.<lb/>
He went on to say that faculty members are highly<lb/>
mobile, sometimes having to commute to Allied Health or<lb/>
elsewhere and back during the day, and staff don't have to<lb/>
do this.<lb/>
Adler said that he would like to talk to anyone that wants<lb/>
to talk about the matter. "I haven't talked to anybody, but I<lb/>
am aware that there are these things going around<lb/>
Adler stressed that he was not speaking for the Faculty<lb/>
Senate, and he went on to say that "All I did was submit<lb/>
that proposal. I've been on faculty parking committees off<lb/>
and on since 1965. This proposal has come up many times,<lb/>
and three years ago it was adopted by the parking<lb/>
committee  and it just disappeared<lb/>
He went on to say that the Facilities and Planning<lb/>
Committee has decided not to look at the problem this year,<lb/>
so Adler took it to the Faculty Senate. He said "I normally<lb/>
would have taken it directly to (Facilities and Planning) but<lb/>
it was my impression that they didn't want anything about<lb/>
parking coming up this year, so I decided to go to the<lb/>
Senate.<lb/>
He added that "It's my feeling that this will help<lb/>
rationalize, somewhat, the parking on this campus He<lb/>
went on to say, "It's not done for an ego trip or anything<lb/>
else<lb/>
Adler explained that if the faculty has to go look for<lb/>
parkmn places, they should look in a lot where there will be<lb/>
a lot ot turnover.<lb/>
In a faculty lot, according to Adler, a lot of cars will be<lb/>
coming and going all day long. In a staff lot, most of the<lb/>
cars will be stationary. According to Adler's proposal, the<lb/>
faculty, which are mobile, would compete for parking<lb/>
spaces with other faculty members, and the staff would<lb/>
compete with other sjaff members.<lb/>
He went on to say ihat "I was certainly astonished about<lb/>
the amount of feelings about it He added that the staff<lb/>
members who are objecting to this should take their<lb/>
objections to the campus Facility and Planning Committee.<lb/>
The Chairman of that committee is Wes Hankins in<lb/>
Geography, and I'm sure the committee would be very<lb/>
receptive and would be glad to hear their complaints, and if<lb/>
they thought they were justified, I'm certain they would<lb/>
bring it back to the Senate, and say this shouldn't be<lb/>
done<lb/>
He went on to say that, "It is ce mly more intelligent<lb/>
(to contact the Facilities and Planning committee) than<lb/>
passing anonymous letters around that can't be answered<lb/>
Adler aiso said that whatever is decided about faculty<lb/>
staff parking should be fair to everyone involved.<lb/>
Efforts to track down the source of the anonymous<lb/>
letters failed.<lb/>
SGA meets; Payne discusses<lb/>
summer budget appropriations<lb/>
flu RClRF fiT kJI CWVWM ???: . . <lb/>
By ROBERT M. SWAIM<lb/>
? ertising Manager<lb/>
"? the Monday night<lb/>
meeting of the SGA legis-<lb/>
jre. committee appoint-<lb/>
ments were announced,<lb/>
SGA President Tommy Joe<lb/>
Payne delivered his first<lb/>
address to the new legisla-<lb/>
ture, and several appropri-<lb/>
ations bills were intro-<lb/>
duced.<lb/>
The following people<lb/>
were appointed committee<lb/>
chairmen: Brett Melvin -<lb/>
appropriations, Jeff<lb/>
Tnpiett - Rules and Judi-<lb/>
ciary, Student Welfare -<lb/>
ChnsCheatham. and Sylvia<lb/>
Honeycutt - Screenings and<lb/>
appointments.<lb/>
In his address to the<lb/>
legislature, President<lb/>
Payne reported on the SGA<lb/>
business that had been<lb/>
transacted during the<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
"We only spent where<lb/>
we felt it was necessary and<lb/>
tried to keep as much<lb/>
money as possible free for<lb/>
the fall legislature to<lb/>
appropriate said Payne.<lb/>
But just because it was<lb/>
Summer didn't mean that<lb/>
everything stopped<lb/>
President Payne said<lb/>
that most of the Summer<lb/>
appropriations were to the<lb/>
transit system.<lb/>
According to Payne, the<lb/>
amount appropriated to the<lb/>
transit system was to keep<lb/>
the buses operating from<lb/>
August through October.<lb/>
Payne also said that<lb/>
$800 was appropriated to<lb/>
SOULS the first time ever<lb/>
that SGA has funded that<lb/>
organization.<lb/>
Other Summer appro-<lb/>
priations were: $264toRho<lb/>
Epsilon and $3,500 to the<lb/>
Homecoming Steering<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
President Payne com-<lb/>
mended SGA Vice-Pres-<lb/>
ident David Cartwright for<lb/>
"an excellent job working<lb/>
on three projects this<lb/>
summer<lb/>
One of the projects<lb/>
Payne spoke of was the<lb/>
ECU student directory<lb/>
which has a section listing<lb/>
day students for the first<lb/>
time.<lb/>
"We tried to get more<lb/>
day student names In the<lb/>
book said Payne. "It<lb/>
doesn't look like a lot of<lb/>
work but it was and we're<lb/>
proud of it<lb/>
Payne stressed to the<lb/>
legislature the need to<lb/>
spend carefully and warned<lb/>
that the veto power would<lb/>
be invoked if necessary.<lb/>
"I do have the veto<lb/>
power and I'm positive that<lb/>
you will see me use it more<lb/>
than once said Payne.<lb/>
"But when I do veto, it will<lb/>
not be out of spite or<lb/>
vengeanoe.lm above that<lb/>
Payne emphasized the<lb/>
hope that the legislature<lb/>
will be cooperative with the<lb/>
executive branch this<lb/>
coming year.<lb/>
"This is a political<lb/>
organization, so I will say<lb/>
just a few words about<lb/>
politics. I have been<lb/>
through a lot in this<lb/>
organization, most of it<lb/>
good and some of it bad.<lb/>
But I don't live in the past.<lb/>
When I was installed last<lb/>
year, I asked the legislature<lb/>
to help me remove some<lb/>
obstacles that stood in the<lb/>
path of progress and I told<lb/>
them I was willing to work<lb/>
with everyone in order to<lb/>
get the job done. I still hold<lb/>
this feeling and I am willing<lb/>
to see it through. It is a lot<lb/>
easier to do work for<lb/>
students when you don't<lb/>
have to fight all the time,<lb/>
but I haven't forgotten how<lb/>
and if the need arises, I can<lb/>
do it again said Payne.<lb/>
NEW YORK MIME Keith Berger answered substained applause with silence.last Wednesday night<lb/>
See story, p 6 <lb/>
Photo by John H. Grogan<lb/>
NTE offered on Nov. 11<lb/>
By KAY WILLIAMS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The National Teachers<lb/>
Examinations (NTE) will be<lb/>
given at ECU on Nov 11 in<lb/>
Speight Building.<lb/>
The deadline to register<lb/>
for the NTE is Oct. 19.<lb/>
Registration forms should<lb/>
be mailed in time to reach<lb/>
the Educational Testing<lb/>
Service in Princeton, N.J.<lb/>
by Oct. 19. A registrat-<lb/>
ion fee of $5 must accom-<lb/>
pany all registration forms<lb/>
received by ETS after Oct.<lb/>
19 and before Oct. 25. No<lb/>
on-the-spot registration is<lb/>
allowed.<lb/>
All registrants take the<lb/>
common examinations and<lb/>
most of the registrants take<lb/>
one of the 26 area examina-<lb/>
tions offered, according to<lb/>
Wanda D. Wiseman, sec-<lb/>
retary to the director of the<lb/>
ECU Testing Center.<lb/>
Registrants taking the<lb/>
common examinations<lb/>
should report to the Testing<lb/>
Center in Speight at 8:30<lb/>
a.m. That test should be<lb/>
over about 12:30 p.m. Area<lb/>
examinations are scheduled<lb/>
to begin at 1:30 p.m. and<lb/>
end at about 4:15 p.m.<lb/>
Registration forms and<lb/>
instructions are available in<lb/>
the ECU Testing Center,<lb/>
Speight building, room 105<lb/>
or directly from the Nation-<lb/>
al Teacher Examinations,<lb/>
ETS, Box 911, Princeton,<lb/>
N.J. 08541.<lb/>
In order to be certified<lb/>
to teach in North Caroffna,<lb/>
all prospective teachers<lb/>
must take the NTE. In<lb/>
1968, the N.C. State Board<lb/>
of Education, selected the<lb/>
cutoff score of 950 for North<lb/>
Carolina teachers.<lb/>
Contrary to rumors, the<lb/>
ECU Testing Center has<lb/>
received no official com-<lb/>
munication that the cutoff<lb/>
score will be raise by the<lb/>
N.C Legislature, according<lb/>
to Mrs. Wiseman.<lb/>
The NTE is given<lb/>
nationwide three times a<lb/>
year. It is given in Febrary.<lb/>
July, and November.<lb/>
Wiseman urgesall stud-<lb/>
ents who plan to take the<lb/>
exam to give themselves<lb/>
plenty of time, it takes<lb/>
approximately four to six<lb/>
weeks for the test scores to<lb/>
come back<lb/>
mmmmk<lb/>
SBK<lb/>
SSS<lb/>
1<lb/>
w<lb/>
What's inside<lb/>
3S8<lb/>
Pirates win third straight game, top VMI.<lb/>
19-6see p. 9<lb/>
V<lb/>
v.<lb/>
ECU wants to continue<lb/>
with UNC.see p. 9<lb/>
football series<lb/>
Liqi<lb/>
Keith Berger performed to a capacity<lb/>
audience last Wednesday night. For<lb/>
review and interview see p. 6<lb/>
World-wide bike rider comes to<lb/>
Greenvillesee p. 3<lb/>
.v.<lb/>
.v.<lb/>
I<lb/>
;?;?:?<lb/>
mmmmmmM<lb/>
uor supporters and opponents<lb/>
confident of referendum victory<lb/>
Rvnnnn auitc w<lb/>
DAVID CARTWRIGHT SGA vice-president<lb/>
TOMMY JOE PA YNE SGA president<lb/>
Photos byPodeszwa<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
Last summer, the N.C. General Assembly approved a<lb/>
bill to aiiow local option liquor by the drink, and several<lb/>
counties and communities have already approved the sale<lb/>
of mixed drinks. Although Pitt Cc. has not called for a<lb/>
referendum,both sides of the issue are confident they will<lb/>
win should one ever be called.<lb/>
According to Rev. Van Dale Hudson, Trinity Free Will<lb/>
Baptist, there is a strong conservative element in the<lb/>
county which would defeat a mixed drink proposal.<lb/>
"I've only been here a year and a half, but I understand<lb/>
that in the statewide referendum on the issue a few years<lb/>
ago the vote was about two to one against in this county,<lb/>
because of the strong conservative element he said.<lb/>
"We're one of the strongest denominations in the area,<lb/>
and I think we could influence the vote in our favor. We<lb/>
certainly would do our part to defeat it should it ever come<lb/>
to a vote<lb/>
Hudson is "convinced" that the liquor and beer<lb/>
industries have a great influence on politicians and that it<lb/>
will be harder to defeat liquor by the drink in Pitt Co. th?n it<lb/>
was 10 years ago.<lb/>
"I'm opposed to liquor by the drink mainly becau- I'm<lb/>
opposed to alcohol. According to a survey by the N; onal<lb/>
Institute on Alcohol Abuse, the public spends $10 f iting<lb/>
the damage done by liquor for every $1 it earns fror quor<lb/>
taxes.<lb/>
Liquor is the basic cause of most problem most<lb/>
major crimes, such as rape, murder, and burlary involve<lb/>
drinking; social drinking is a contributing factor to<lb/>
alcoholism. We've lost more people on the highway<lb/>
because of drinking drivers thatn in all U.S. wars combined<lb/>
Our nation has surpassed France as the moat drunken<lb/>
nation in the world Hudson said.<lb/>
Tony Vigorito, part owner and manager of "The Tree<lb/>
House sees liquor by the drink as a boon to local<lb/>
businesses.<lb/>
"I like liquor by the drink both personally and<lb/>
professionally. I was raised on Long Island in a mixed drink<lb/>
environment, so naturally I favor it. I'm looking forward to<lb/>
it. It'll help Greenville get a lot of stuff that it's missing<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
"There's a lot of energy and creativity here and people<lb/>
want to get out and do things, and liquor by the drink will<lb/>
enable the businessmen to offer these things he added<lb/>
One of the advantages will be increased tips and wages<lb/>
for bartenders and waitresses, according to Vigorito.<lb/>
"I think the moral issue is no longer a valid argument,<lb/>
it's just a matter of control. If theothe side will just listen to<lb/>
common sense, liquor by the drink will provide tighter<lb/>
control. When I first moved here, I couldn't believe the<lb/>
rolling bars people had, people riding around with a<lb/>
bottle Vigorito.<lb/>
Vigorito is confifdent voters would pass liquor by the<lb/>
drink in Pitt Co but feels it would take a good voter<lb/>
turnout.<lb/>
"I warn people who are for it not to sit back and let it<lb/>
happen. You've got to show that this is what you want The<lb/>
determining factor will be the 21-35 age population and<lb/>
older people with enough common sense who'll see that it<lb/>
won't hurt the community he added<lb/>
Tom Haines, part owner and manager of "The Attic<lb/>
feels liquor by the drink will have little effect on the college<lb/>
community.<lb/>
"The Tree House will probably be the only resturant<lb/>
downtown with liquor by the drink, and one club is<lb/>
considering becommg-a private club in order to serve mixed<lb/>
drinks, but I doubt that will come about. College towns are<lb/>
traditionally beer towns, partly because of the 21 year old<lb/>
age restriction on liquor, and partly because beer is more<lb/>
economical Haines said.<lb/>
According to Haines, liquor by the drink usually results<lb/>
in a more adult, sophisticated handling of alcohol.<lb/>
"People have a tendency to finish off a bottle they<lb/>
brown bag. That won't happen with mixed drinks because<lb/>
they will be more expensive. It won't create a 'lets go get<lb/>
smashed' attitude; you've got to be rich to get smashed<lb/>
from cocktails he said.<lb/>
"Nobody knows how it'll be, because it's all new said<lb/>
Sanny Dilda, State Alcohol Enforcement agent, "it'll be trial<lb/>
and error. People are predicting all these things, goodand<lb/>
bad, will happen or won't happen, but nobody knows for<lb/>
sure, it'll all be speculation<lb/>
"Hopefully, the regulations will provide the necessary<lb/>
control. We'll just have to wait and see. The regulations<lb/>
were drafted with the philosophy that they be easy to<lb/>
enforce said Ann Fulton, chief hearing officer, N.C.<lb/>
Board of Alcoholic Control.<lb/>
v<lb/>
-?? r ?? ?<lb/>
 ?? ?r e f -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057152_0002"/><lb/>
Pag 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 10 October 197B<lb/>
Jobs<lb/>
NASTAR<lb/>
CAPSON, the nation-<lb/>
wide central co-op recruit-<lb/>
ment organization for the<lb/>
Navy, is sending recruiter<lb/>
Bill Jackson to talk with<lb/>
eligible ECU students<lb/>
To be eligible, students<lb/>
should file the federal<lb/>
employment form (avail<lb/>
-able in the Co-op office)<lb/>
and the co-op application,<lb/>
and must have completed<lb/>
between 30 and 90 semest-<lb/>
er hours by Jan. 1, 1979.<lb/>
Eligible students should<lb/>
have at least a 2.0 overall<lb/>
average, have a transcript,<lb/>
be recommended by a co-op<lb/>
coordinator, be a citizen of<lb/>
the U.S and be mobile for<lb/>
the Spring semester, since<lb/>
the jobs are located outside<lb/>
the Greenville area.<lb/>
School of Business stud-<lb/>
ents are not eligible. Quali-<lb/>
fied minorities, women and<lb/>
handicapped students are<lb/>
encouraged to apply.<lb/>
Co-op has other career-<lb/>
related job placmement<lb/>
available for spring semes-<lb/>
ter Interested students<lb/>
should come to the Co-op<lb/>
Office. 313 Rawl, for more<lb/>
information. Applications<lb/>
must be completed by Oct.<lb/>
13. to receive priority for<lb/>
spring placements.<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/>
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/>
There will be an organ-<lb/>
izational meeting for ser-<lb/>
ious skiers that will race<lb/>
NASTAR this winter.<lb/>
The meeting Is Wed<lb/>
Oct. 11, at 4 p.m. in room<lb/>
105 Memorial Gym.<lb/>
CCFC<lb/>
Chi Beta<lb/>
Chi Beta Phi scientific<lb/>
fraternity meeting is being<lb/>
help at 7:30 p.m Thurs<lb/>
Oct. 12 in the Biology<lb/>
Reading Room (2nd. floor).<lb/>
Activities will be plan-<lb/>
ned for this school year. All<lb/>
members are urged to<lb/>
attend or contact president<lb/>
Ken Russell at 758-6747<lb/>
Come by the Leadership<lb/>
Training Class for fun,<lb/>
fellowship, and some prac-<lb/>
tical insights into the excit-<lb/>
ing Christian life. Every<lb/>
Thursday night from 7-9<lb/>
p.m. Sponsored by the<lb/>
Campus Crusades for<lb/>
Christ.<lb/>
Phi Eta<lb/>
Pi Kappa<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi's are<lb/>
having little sister rush<lb/>
tonight at 9 p.m. The house<lb/>
is located at 803 Hooker Rd.<lb/>
All sororities and G.D.I's<lb/>
are urged to come out to<lb/>
find out what a good time<lb/>
really is.<lb/>
Lecture<lb/>
What is the uncondit-<lb/>
ional love of God? How doe<lb/>
sit affect the Christian's<lb/>
self-image?<lb/>
Mr. Richard Morri-<lb/>
son from Nashville, N.C.<lb/>
will be speaking about how<lb/>
Paul's letter to the Roman's<lb/>
chapter 5, verse 8, affects<lb/>
his and our lives.<lb/>
Come to Mendenhall,<lb/>
room 221, at 7 p.m. Wed-<lb/>
nesday night and check it<lb/>
out.<lb/>
Wed Oct. 11 at 7 p.m.<lb/>
is the next meeting for all<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma members.<lb/>
The meeting will take<lb/>
place in Mendenhall 244.<lb/>
Nominations for Who's<lb/>
Who and a report on the<lb/>
donut sale will be discus-<lb/>
sed. Come and get involved<lb/>
Gamma Beta<lb/>
All Gamma Beta Phi<lb/>
Pledges must attend either<lb/>
the meeting on Tues Oct.<lb/>
10 at 7 p.m. in Mendenhall<lb/>
221 or the meeting Thurs<lb/>
Oct. 12 at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall 244. Essays<lb/>
and dues must be turned in<lb/>
by Oct. 24 in Mendenhall<lb/>
243.<lb/>
Poetry<lb/>
F6SF<lb/>
There will be a Poetry<lb/>
Forum next Thursday<lb/>
night, Oct. 19, at 8 in, room<lb/>
248 of the Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. All poets<lb/>
attending should bring at<lb/>
least six copies of their<lb/>
poetry.<lb/>
The forum will feature<lb/>
poetry by Tar River Poet<lb/>
Editor Peter Makuck Jeff<lb/>
Rollins and REBEL Editor<lb/>
Luke W hisnant to name but<lb/>
a few.<lb/>
Issues of the Tar River<lb/>
Poet can be purchased at<lb/>
the campus Student Supply<lb/>
Store, Greenville's Central<lb/>
News and Card Shop, The<lb/>
Book Barn, and The Mush-<lb/>
room.<lb/>
Have you ever hit one of<lb/>
those spots where you<lb/>
thought you were the only<lb/>
true Christian around, and<lb/>
you fear that all the people<lb/>
you really care about are<lb/>
lost?<lb/>
Of course you have.<lb/>
There are few Christians<lb/>
around that can boast a full<lb/>
repertoire of saved loved<lb/>
ones.<lb/>
This Thursday night at<lb/>
7:30 in room 221 in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center the Full Gospel<lb/>
Student Fellowship will<lb/>
look into "prayer for lost<lb/>
loved ones<lb/>
We'll also try to answer<lb/>
the age-old question of,<lb/>
"How can I be happy in<lb/>
heaven with lost loved ones<lb/>
on Earth?"<lb/>
Handball<lb/>
The new Intramural sport<lb/>
sensation is ooming soon.<lb/>
Anyone interested in learn-<lb/>
ing more about Team<lb/>
Handball and the special<lb/>
opportunities available<lb/>
within the Sport Club, come<lb/>
to 105 Memorial Gym at 3<lb/>
p.m. Wed Oct. 11 for an<lb/>
informational, or ientational,<lb/>
and organizational<lb/>
meeting. Club members<lb/>
especially are urged to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Law Society<lb/>
The ECU Law Society<lb/>
will be having an organizat-<lb/>
ional meeting Oct. 18.<lb/>
The meeting will take<lb/>
place in Mendenhall at 7<lb/>
.p.m. in the Multi-p.ur.pose.<lb/>
room.<lb/>
AH those interested in<lb/>
law andor law school,<lb/>
please come to the meeting<lb/>
or go by Dr. David Stevens<lb/>
office in 214 Wright Annex<lb/>
and sign up.<lb/>
Legislature<lb/>
There will be a N.C.<lb/>
Student Legislature meet-<lb/>
ing on Oct. 10 at 8:30 p.m.<lb/>
in room 248 Mendenhall.<lb/>
This is an important<lb/>
meeting. Matters to be<lb/>
discussed are? Bill Topics,<lb/>
Resolutions and the Interim<lb/>
-Council at UNC-Wilming-<lb/>
ton.<lb/>
All members are urged<lb/>
to attend. All interested<lb/>
students, Freshman<lb/>
through Senior classes are<lb/>
invited to attend.<lb/>
For further information<lb/>
call Joe Tanahey 758-7968<lb/>
or Marc Adler 758-9523.<lb/>
Don't miss it, this is where<lb/>
the action is<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/>
Phi Beta<lb/>
All students interested<lb/>
in joining Phi Beta Lambda<lb/>
must fill out the application<lb/>
posted outside of Richard<lb/>
Dupree's office in Rawl<lb/>
209.<lb/>
Interested students<lb/>
should bring thier dues at<lb/>
the next meetirfg, Oct. 11 at<lb/>
4:30 in Rm. 130.<lb/>
Theta Alpha<lb/>
The Theta Alpha<lb/>
Chapter of Alpha Kappa<lb/>
Alpha Service Sorority will<lb/>
sponsor a bake sale, Wed,<lb/>
Oct. 11 from 10-4 p.m. in<lb/>
the lobby of the student<lb/>
bookstore.<lb/>
All proceeds benefit the<lb/>
NAACP.<lb/>
Theta Alpha will also<lb/>
sponsor a post-game<lb/>
Homecoming Celebration,<lb/>
Saturday, Nov. 11 from<lb/>
10-2 a.m. at the Ramada<lb/>
Inn.<lb/>
Tickets will be on sale<lb/>
during mid-October.<lb/>
The affair is semi-<lb/>
formal.<lb/>
Scholars<lb/>
There will be a dinner<lb/>
meeting of the League of<lb/>
Scholars, Wed Oct. 11 at 6<lb/>
p.m. at Jasons.<lb/>
All members are urged<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
CCF<lb/>
There is a new organiza<lb/>
tion on campus called the<lb/>
Campus Christian Fellow-<lb/>
ship.<lb/>
It meets every Monday<lb/>
night in the Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Union. The time is<lb/>
6:30, and the room is 238.<lb/>
Everyone is invited to come<lb/>
by for Bible study and<lb/>
singing songs.<lb/>
Ski trips<lb/>
Registration for the<lb/>
Physical Education snow-<lb/>
skiing trips will be held<lb/>
Oct. 12 at 7.30 p.m in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum, .Room<lb/>
142-143. This is a mandat-<lb/>
ory meeting for ail partia-<lb/>
pants.<lb/>
INBT<lb/>
All the hotdogs you can<lb/>
eat That's right The<lb/>
INDT Club is having a<lb/>
cookout at 5 p.m. Oct. 5 at<lb/>
the Gazebo on campus.<lb/>
We want members so<lb/>
everyone is invited.<lb/>
Tickets are on sale for<lb/>
$1.50 in the INDT Dept.<lb/>
office (Basement of Flan-<lb/>
agan Bldg.). Hotdogs,<lb/>
chips, and things, all you<lb/>
can eat<lb/>
Concert<lb/>
Lecture<lb/>
There will be a meeting<lb/>
of Omicron Delta Epsilon,<lb/>
the honor society for<lb/>
Economics, on Wedn Oct.<lb/>
11, 1978, in Rawl 103.<lb/>
Old members are en-<lb/>
couraged to attend.<lb/>
 TTJosf Hlfdentsay join<lb/>
who have a 3-5. overall<lb/>
G.P.A who have a 3.0<lb/>
G.P.A. in Economics, and<lb/>
whohave had at least 10<lb/>
semester hours of Eco-<lb/>
nomics.<lb/>
Brewer<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 1030<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/>
The ECU Student Union<lb/>
Lecture Committee will<lb/>
present on Tues Oct. 10 at<lb/>
8 p.m. in the Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Theatre, Playboy<lb/>
columnist, Arthur Knight,<lb/>
who will present a lecture<lb/>
and 50 minute film pres-<lb/>
entation on the history of<lb/>
Sex in the Cinema. ECU<lb/>
students are admitted free<lb/>
with ID and Activity Card.<lb/>
Car wash<lb/>
The little sisters of the<lb/>
Kappa Sigma fraternity are<lb/>
hav ing a car wash Sat Oct.<lb/>
14, from 10 until.<lb/>
It win be in the Darryi's<lb/>
parking lot beside the<lb/>
Kappa Sigma house on 10th<lb/>
St.<lb/>
Come support the little<lb/>
sisters and get a clean car!<lb/>
The Student Uoion<lb/>
Major Attractions Commit-<lb/>
tee will present Brothers<lb/>
Johnson with special guest<lb/>
Mother's Finest on Sat .<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/>
In addition, public tickets<lb/>
can be purchased from<lb/>
Apple Records - E. 5th St<lb/>
Greenville, School Kid's<lb/>
Records - Georgetown<lb/>
Shoppes, Greenville. The<lb/>
Music Shop - Greenville<lb/>
Square Mall, Greenville.<lb/>
Only public tickets will<lb/>
be available at the door.<lb/>
Raquetball<lb/>
There will be a Raquet-<lb/>
ball Club meeting, Wed .<lb/>
Oct. 11 at 6:30 p.m. at 105<lb/>
Memorial Gym.<lb/>
Nurses<lb/>
<lb/>
There will be a Student<lb/>
Nurse's Association meet-<lb/>
ing tonight at 6:30 p.m. in<lb/>
room 202 of the Nursing<lb/>
Bldg. Topic for discussion<lb/>
will be self-awareness con-<lb/>
cerning nursing as a pro-<lb/>
fession. All nursing majors<lb/>
are invited to attend. Re-<lb/>
freshments will be served.<lb/>
A<lb/>
The Fourth Annual Rebel Art Show<lb/>
Registration deadline:<lb/>
Wed. Oct. 11,4 PM.<lb/>
Prizes to be awarded include the Annual Attic<lb/>
Lward (Best-In-Show$100 and a plaque, an<lb/>
ight $60 prizes for first place in each category,<lb/>
(Prizes provided by the Rebel, the Attic , and Jefferie's Beer and Wine.)<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Iforsote @<lb/>
FOR SALE: By owner. '74<lb/>
Ford Van, looks and runs<lb/>
tike new. V8-302 engine.<lb/>
Automatic transmission,<lb/>
power steering, and brakes<lb/>
air conditioning, radio, car-<lb/>
peted, under coated, and<lb/>
equipped for towing travel<lb/>
trailer :hitch and electric<lb/>
brakes); New tires. $3,595<lb/>
cali 756-0166.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Small white<lb/>
Whirlpool refrig. with 14<lb/>
inch separate freezer com-<lb/>
partment. $150. Call 752-<lb/>
6597 after 7 p.m.<lb/>
LAB COATS: for sale at<lb/>
JA's Uniform Shop located<lb/>
at 710Weat6Th St.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Peevey PA 400<lb/>
plush amp. Fa more info.<lb/>
call 753-4025.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '76 deluxe<lb/>
Motorbecane MOPED<lb/>
$276. Runs well and Is in<lb/>
good shape. Call 752-5236<lb/>
and ask for Mike.<lb/>
FOR SALE 76 Ford Cdbra<lb/>
II. 4 cylinder, 4 speed,<lb/>
great gae mileage, AM FM<lb/>
8-track. Asking $2,600 (owe<lb/>
$2,500). Contact Don Bohn<lb/>
at 749-3791 (Fountain) after<lb/>
5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 5 cu. ft. refrig.<lb/>
with freezer compartment.<lb/>
Perfect for dorms. Call<lb/>
752-1699.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 77 Celica<lb/>
Toyota GT liftback. AC,<lb/>
AMFM stereo, 5 speed<lb/>
overdrive, ESP system.<lb/>
Excellent oond. Like brand<lb/>
s<lb/>
new) Chocolate color with<lb/>
white pinstrip. Reason for<lb/>
selling: Need the Jack<lb/>
$5,150 Call Kim. 756-8948<lb/>
or come by 819 Greene.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Refrig. in good<lb/>
oond. for $40. Call 73B-<lb/>
8158.<lb/>
FOR SALE: JVC KD-15<lb/>
cassette tape deck. Full<lb/>
warranty. Three months<lb/>
old. Call Jim 758-2811.<lb/>
tor rent ? persona!?<lb/>
FdMALE DESIRES: room-<lb/>
mate for 2 bdrrn. apt. at<lb/>
Eaetbrook. Call 758-4251 or<lb/>
756-5942.<lb/>
LEAD GUITARIST: seek-<lb/>
ing position with establish-<lb/>
ed band. Call days753-5182<lb/>
nights 753-4025. ALSO<lb/>
HORSEBACK- RIDING: at<lb/>
Jarman Stables located on<lb/>
Hwy. 43 West. Call 752-<lb/>
5237.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE: Cheap<lb/>
rates, professional and ef-<lb/>
ficient service. Call 756-<lb/>
3815 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Veteran-<lb/>
student commuting from<lb/>
Washington, N.C. to work<lb/>
in office position 15-20<lb/>
hcure per week. Must be<lb/>
fUHttme student. Ceil Ron<lb/>
?rown at 758-3215 Wthich-<lb/>
ard 206, Mon. or Frl.<lb/>
<lb/>
 ,? <lb/>
 g v: ?r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057152_0003"/><lb/>
10 October 1978 FQUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
World-wide biker in Greenville<lb/>
THIS MAY BE one way to keep security from giving someone a ticket<lb/>
Photo by Richard Green<lb/>
ByED WILLIAMS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Masami "Sammy"<lb/>
Kawano, rode into Green-<lb/>
ville on his Japanese-made<lb/>
Panasonic bicycle two<lb/>
weeks ago while on his<lb/>
world-wide journey which<lb/>
he hopes will end in<lb/>
Bombay, India sometime in<lb/>
1980.<lb/>
Sammy, 28, was born in<lb/>
Oita, Japan and is a<lb/>
Physical Education Instruc-<lb/>
tor.<lb/>
While he was in Japan<lb/>
he decided that he wanted<lb/>
to do something that would<lb/>
leave him with "many good<lb/>
memories of my youth<lb/>
He came up with the idea<lb/>
that he would like to travel<lb/>
around the world on a<lb/>
bicycle. He purchased a<lb/>
one-thousand dollar Pan-<lb/>
asonic bike and began<lb/>
training himself for his long<lb/>
journey by riding up "big,<lb/>
rough, stone roads" in the<lb/>
mountainsof Osaka, Japan.<lb/>
In 1976, he loaded up<lb/>
his bike with a hammock,<lb/>
tent. cooking utensils,<lb/>
clothes, sleeping bag, cam-<lb/>
era, and a diary, from<lb/>
CRAZY TUESDAY Foosball<lb/>
tournament, chugging contest<lb/>
svith lots more prizes and<lb/>
specials<lb/>
Thursday "THE TAMS"<lb/>
Friday- Afternoon Party 3-7<lb/>
Sunday- Ladies Nite<lb/>
STAN<lb/>
TEAGUE<lb/>
YOUR ON-CAMPUS Grjtog REPRESENTATIVE<lb/>
STAN TEAGUE IOX-C SCOTT DORM<lb/>
Photo by John H. Grogan<lb/>
STAN RECENTLY ATTENDED<lb/>
A STROH'S COLLEGE<lb/>
REPRESENTATIVE SEMINAR<lb/>
IN DETROIT, AND HE INVITES<lb/>
YOU TO SEE HIM FOR YOUR<lb/>
MUGS, T-SHIRTS, AND OTHER<lb/>
PARAPHENALIA.<lb/>
which he hopes to publish a<lb/>
book of his travels some-<lb/>
day, and set out from Japan<lb/>
to Australia.<lb/>
His journey has led him<lb/>
from there to America, and<lb/>
consequently to Greenville<lb/>
where he is staying with the<lb/>
Dillinder family at 102<lb/>
North Sylvan Street.<lb/>
Sammy generally rides<lb/>
80 to 100 miles a day and<lb/>
spends his nights in police<lb/>
or fire stations, which wel-<lb/>
come him openly. If neither<lb/>
of these options are avail-<lb/>
able to him, he sets up a<lb/>
tent in which to stay.<lb/>
He tries to keep to the<lb/>
back roads and side streets<lb/>
rather than taking the main<lb/>
highways while riding.<lb/>
He also plans on which<lb/>
time of the year to travel<lb/>
in which country. He tries<lb/>
to ride only in fair weather<lb/>
and therefore plans his<lb/>
schedule accordingly. For<lb/>
example, he stayed away<lb/>
from America when it was<lb/>
winter here and traveled<lb/>
instead in other countries<lb/>
when it was summer Then<lb/>
he came to America when<lb/>
the weather began to turn<lb/>
warmer. Of course, his<lb/>
plans don't always work<lb/>
out. He once slept outside<lb/>
in 20 degree below zero<lb/>
weather in Georgia.<lb/>
He has had other un-<lb/>
usual experiences also.<lb/>
Another incident that oc-<lb/>
cured in Georgia was the<lb/>
time "a man tried to run<lb/>
over Sammy (with his<lb/>
car) stated Mrs. Yoshiko<lb/>
Dillinder.<lb/>
Sammy said that he has<lb/>
also had encounters with<lb/>
bears in Canada and with<lb/>
wolves while in Australia.<lb/>
Sammy has traveled<lb/>
through 27 states in<lb/>
America so far.<lb/>
He plans on going to<lb/>
New York next where he<lb/>
will stay with friends, even<lb/>
though he stated, "I don't<lb/>
like big towns. Too noisy<lb/>
Sammy said that he<lb/>
likes the size of Greenville<lb/>
but he doesn't have any<lb/>
time limit on how long he<lb/>
will stay<lb/>
He stops in some towns<lb/>
and cities long enough to<lb/>
get a part-time job so as to<lb/>
have enough money to fix<lb/>
his bike (although he has<lb/>
only had three flat tires so<lb/>
far), and buy food and other<lb/>
necessities.<lb/>
Sammy says that he<lb/>
would like to publish a book<lb/>
someday about his journey.<lb/>
He said he would have it<lb/>
printed in English because<lb/>
"most people use English<lb/>
as the international lang-<lb/>
uage<lb/>
Before he started his<lb/>
world-wide bicycle ride.<lb/>
Sammythoughtthat the trip<lb/>
would take four years Once<lb/>
he got a good start into his<lb/>
journey, he switched his<lb/>
goal to travel around the<lb/>
world in five years Now he<lb/>
says he says it may take six<lb/>
years<lb/>
If you're ever riding<lb/>
down the road and see<lb/>
a man riding a loaded-down<lb/>
Panasonic bike with a jac-<lb/>
ket proclaiming on the back<lb/>
of it, Around the World<lb/>
Cycling Trip via 70 Coun-<lb/>
tries" with the word<lb/>
"Japan written under-<lb/>
neath it. you'll know you<lb/>
nave passed Masami<lb/>
Sammy" Kawano. a re-<lb/>
markable man with a rem-<lb/>
arkable dream<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 bam or<lb/>
sausage. Our 14 lb. beef<lb/>
burgers are ground from fresh<lb/>
Western Chuck. We have pure<lb/>
soft served ice cream. Also<lb/>
serving ham and cheese,<lb/>
chicken fillets, hot dogs, chili<lb/>
and beans, french fries, apple<lb/>
turnovers, and a variety of soft<lb/>
drinks. Located on the corner<lb/>
of 5th and Reade St. and on<lb/>
Hwy.&amp;04 in Washington.<lb/>
NEW<lb/>
Now Available<lb/>
DACr professional<lb/>
DMOI cassettes<lb/>
vs-y<lb/>
$3.29<lb/>
each<lb/>
Measurably superior sound<lb/>
for your listening enjoyment<lb/>
Record the long awaited YES<lb/>
album "Tormato" on full-track<lb/>
Tuesday night from 11:15 to<lb/>
12 midnite on WRQR.<lb/>
PAIR ELECTRONICS<lb/>
ON THE SPOT FINANCING<lb/>
AVAILABLE<lb/>
STORE HOURS<lb/>
8:30-5:30 WEEKDAYS<lb/>
8:30-12:30 SATURDAY<lb/>
A LOT OF MUSIC<lb/>
FOR NOT A LOT OF MONEY.<lb/>
Why pay retail for stereo equipment<lb/>
when you can get a discount from<lb/>
PAIR ELECTRONICS AUDIO CENTER<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
Technics<lb/>
?T. <lb/>
SL-220<lb/>
Cj ?????"??' C'f "<lb/>
THE TURNTABLE.<lb/>
THE SPEAKERS.<lb/>
JBLs new L40 ,s one of the best 2-way bookshelf<lb/>
loudspeakers you can buy<lb/>
Every sound is clean Clear Accurate And perfectly<lb/>
defined Its an efficient system with tremendous<lb/>
power-handling capability The new L40 Its a lot of<lb/>
loudspeaker for the money<lb/>
Frequency Generator DC servo belt-drive turntable<lb/>
Semi-automatic operation provides tonearm return<lb/>
and turntable shut-off. Individual pitch controls and<lb/>
illuminated stroboscope for accurate speed setting<lb/>
THE RECEIVER.<lb/>
40 watts per Channel mm RMS at 8 ptims.<lb/>
20-20.000 Hz. with no more than 0 1 ?c total harmonic<lb/>
distortion.<lb/>
THE PRKE.<lb/>
ENTIRE SYSTEM<lb/>
Audio Control 520<lb/>
5 band equalizer<lb/>
$749<lb/>
90<lb/>
190<lb/>
l-HLJ<lb/>
'?v<lb/>
M91ED<lb/>
Shure Hi-Track phono cartridge $24?<lb/>
PAIR ELECTRONICS<lb/>
nvhetz S&amp;xuLce, domes Lx?t<lb/>
ON THE SPOT FINANCING AVAILABLE<lb/>
STORE HOURS 8:30-5:30 WEEKDAYS<lb/>
8:30-12:30 SATURDAY<lb/>
'??w wmhh<lb/>
<pb facs="00057152_0004"/><lb/>
J<lb/>
w<lb/>
nr<lb/>
N<lb/>
B<lb/>
e<lb/>
T<lb/>
s<lb/>
?<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 10 October 1978<lb/>
Gun control needed<lb/>
The following editorial is reprinted from the<lb/>
July 26 edition of FOUNTAINHEAD.<lb/>
Mention gun control in the south and<lb/>
you will immediately elicit a number of heated<lb/>
arguments against it. Recently, both of North<lb/>
Carolina's senators, Morgan and Helms, got a<lb/>
chance to have their arguments heard when<lb/>
they voted to deny funding of a proposed<lb/>
change in Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco and<lb/>
Firearms regulations which would allow for a<lb/>
numerical registration system for handguns<lb/>
and a national computer bank storing<lb/>
information of registered guns.<lb/>
While several good arguments were made<lb/>
against the proposed change in the regula-<lb/>
tions, they were mainly of a technical and<lb/>
economical nature, since the registration<lb/>
system is complicated and would cost $4.2<lb/>
million.<lb/>
As the law stands today, almost every adult<lb/>
can own a handgun. Why do we license<lb/>
drivers, automobiles, alcohol, and place strict<lb/>
regulations on the firecracker industry and yet<lb/>
leave firearms untouched?<lb/>
The horror of unregulated handguns is<lb/>
evident in the Son of Sam killings and the San<lb/>
Francisco Zebra murders. A ban on firearms is<lb/>
too extreme, as are undue restrictions on<lb/>
hunting and sport firearms, but handguns,<lb/>
espceially inexpensive Saturday Night Specials<lb/>
and others should be severely restricted and<lb/>
penalties for using them in a crime should be<lb/>
more strict.<lb/>
One of the favorite arguments of the<lb/>
pro-gun lobby is that guns don't kill people,<lb/>
people kill people, which is a little bit like<lb/>
saying leaping off the top of a building doesn't<lb/>
kill people, it's the impact.<lb/>
American society is fascinated with guns.<lb/>
Our children play with toy guns, they see<lb/>
gunfire constantly on television, they eat candy<lb/>
guns, they play cowboys, cops, robbers, spys,<lb/>
all with guns. In most of these games,<lb/>
someone is "killed" and the victor is a hero<lb/>
(rarely a heroine).<lb/>
Americans regard the gun as a macho<lb/>
phallic symbol, the possession of which<lb/>
supposedly increases one's masculinity. Until<lb/>
this basic fallacy of the American psyche is<lb/>
corrected, most any gun control plan will meet<lb/>
with failure.<lb/>
Commentary<lb/>
Uppity Woman's lament<lb/>
HESTER PETTY ?<lb/>
Uppity Women a<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
I (the writer) thought<lb/>
that you (the reader) would<lb/>
be reading an article de-<lb/>
voted to a comparison of<lb/>
racism and sexism this<lb/>
week. But I was wrong. You<lb/>
will not be reading that<lb/>
article because I have not<lb/>
written it. I began to write<lb/>
it but only the title and first<lb/>
two paragraphs were about<lb/>
racism and sexism. The<lb/>
rest of it turned into this.<lb/>
And this is about why that<lb/>
turned into this.<lb/>
I have been writing<lb/>
articles for FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD for the past six<lb/>
weeks under the auspices<lb/>
of Uppity Women of<lb/>
Greenville (about which I<lb/>
w'll reveal an awful secret<lb/>
later in this article.) I wrote<lb/>
them because I have some-<lb/>
thing to say about women<lb/>
and our place in this sexist,<lb/>
male-dominated society. I<lb/>
wrote them because I<lb/>
thought you might be in-<lb/>
terested in what I had to<lb/>
say.<lb/>
I do not know if you are<lb/>
interested in what I have to<lb/>
say, I do not know if you<lb/>
even read the articles.<lb/>
I do know of at least ten<lb/>
people (not including<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD staffers<lb/>
who proof-read and re-type<lb/>
articles) who read my ar-<lb/>
ticles regularly and of about<lb/>
three or four who have read<lb/>
one or more.<lb/>
I do not know if you like<lb/>
or hate them. I do not know<lb/>
if you couldn't care less. I<lb/>
do not know because (ex-<lb/>
cept for five responses) you<lb/>
have not told me. Needless<lb/>
to say I do not have extra-<lb/>
sensory perception.<lb/>
I am not writing these<lb/>
articles for money. I am not<lb/>
writing them to see my<lb/>
name in print. I am not<lb/>
writing them because I like<lb/>
to write, because I am not a<lb/>
writer. I am writing these<lb/>
articles because I have<lb/>
something to tell you and<lb/>
since I don't know you<lb/>
personally this is the eas-<lb/>
iest way.<lb/>
You are a major part of<lb/>
my motivation. Your lack of<lb/>
And I came up with an<lb/>
answer.<lb/>
I keep the group name<lb/>
because starting the group<lb/>
was such a damn good idea<lb/>
that I can't let it go. And<lb/>
because, in a way, these<lb/>
articles - are my weekly<lb/>
group meetings.<lb/>
Now you may be getting<lb/>
the wrong idea. You may be<lb/>
thinking that I am totally on<lb/>
my own. That's not true.<lb/>
You see I am involved in<lb/>
another group (it has no<lb/>
"(Writing) has gotten harder<lb/>
each week. And this week, I<lb/>
said to hell with it<lb/>
response makes it hard for<lb/>
me to write. And it has<lb/>
gotten harder each week.<lb/>
And this week I said to hell<lb/>
with it.<lb/>
This week I said forget<lb/>
the re-writes, the frustra-<lb/>
tion, the worrying about<lb/>
whether I am making my-<lb/>
self clear. This week I<lb/>
decided to tell you that I<lb/>
am-out.<lb/>
You know about my<lb/>
group? Uppity Women of<lb/>
Greenville? Of course you<lb/>
don't. I mean, hell, I don't<lb/>
even know about it. I don't<lb/>
think it even exists.<lb/>
Asa matter of fact (and<lb/>
this is the awful secret I<lb/>
was telling you about ear-<lb/>
lier) I am the only member<lb/>
of Uppity Women of<lb/>
Greenville. This revelation<lb/>
might cause you to wonder<lb/>
why I even bother to use<lb/>
the group name in my arti-<lb/>
cles. I was wondering about<lb/>
that myself just last week.<lb/>
formal name). It is a<lb/>
consciousness ? raising<lb/>
group.<lb/>
We share our ideas on<lb/>
lots of things. We talk<lb/>
about our experiences and<lb/>
ourselves. Andv my exper-<lb/>
iences in this group are part<lb/>
of the motivation to write<lb/>
these articles.<lb/>
But let me get back to<lb/>
talking about Uppity Wo-<lb/>
men of Greenville. One of<lb/>
you asked me what my<lb/>
group was all about. Since<lb/>
there isn't much to it except<lb/>
these articles, let me tell<lb/>
you how it got started.<lb/>
This past summer I<lb/>
began to really feel isolated<lb/>
from the women's move-<lb/>
ment. Oh sure, I was<lb/>
reading a lot of feminist<lb/>
literature, but I didn't have<lb/>
many women friends to talk<lb/>
to and I didn't feel that I<lb/>
was contributing much to<lb/>
the movement. So I ran an<lb/>
ad in Tru Da7y Reflector<lb/>
FbunJainhead<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. Swaim<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/>
Forum<lb/>
Cops arrive quickly; search poorly<lb/>
and over the air-waves of<lb/>
WRQR inviting women to<lb/>
call if they were interested<lb/>
in being involved in a<lb/>
feminist group.<lb/>
I got some responses,<lb/>
spread the word to my<lb/>
friends, and called for our<lb/>
first meeting. Several<lb/>
meetings iater it became<lb/>
clear that everyone was<lb/>
interested in conscious-<lb/>
ness-raising, but not in<lb/>
political action. So our<lb/>
awareness group was born<lb/>
and Uppity Women of<lb/>
Greenville labored on.<lb/>
It will probably labor<lb/>
right into the Guinness<lb/>
Book of World Records. But<lb/>
that's cool because the<lb/>
consciousness - raising<lb/>
group is great and it has<lb/>
helped alleviate that feeling<lb/>
of isolation. And my arti-<lb/>
cles are my contribution to<lb/>
the movement.<lb/>
But I still have this need<lb/>
to know if you are reading<lb/>
this column. And I'd like to<lb/>
know what you think about<lb/>
it if you do read it. And<lb/>
since I'm writing these<lb/>
articles for you, how about<lb/>
letting me know what you'd<lb/>
like to read about? Do you<lb/>
have any questions that I<lb/>
might be able to answer in<lb/>
some way? The lines are<lb/>
open.<lb/>
M aybe one question you<lb/>
might have is who is Hester<lb/>
Petty. I can answer that one<lb/>
right now.<lb/>
Hester is a 26 year old<lb/>
woman with nice teeth (not<lb/>
all of them are real) who<lb/>
graduated from ECU a year<lb/>
and a half ago with a BA in<lb/>
Art. She is a minimumwage<lb/>
peasant in food service and<lb/>
she only has two long-<lb/>
sleeved winter shirts be-<lb/>
cause she spends all her<lb/>
extra (non-foodshelter)<lb/>
bucks on books.<lb/>
She is legally married.<lb/>
She has two cats and a car<lb/>
with a gas tank that ex-<lb/>
plodes upon impact. Her<lb/>
astrological sign is Cancer.<lb/>
She knows how to make<lb/>
sandwiches and fry eggs,<lb/>
but is otherwise confused in<lb/>
kitchens.<lb/>
She is at this moment<lb/>
harboring a virus in her<lb/>
body that will turn into a<lb/>
horrendous cold or flu by<lb/>
Tuesday. She hopes to<lb/>
finish her article on the<lb/>
comparison of racism and<lb/>
sexism in next week's<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD. She<lb/>
enjoyed writing this article.<lb/>
Uppity Women of Qraan-<lb/>
ville, P.O. Box 1373,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834 is<lb/>
awaiting ?a$t quantities of<lb/>
mail.<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD;<lb/>
To begin with, we would<lb/>
like to commend the cam-<lb/>
pus security on their<lb/>
handling of the problem at<lb/>
Jarvis Hall on the night of<lb/>
Sept. 28 around 10:45 p.m.<lb/>
They were very efficient<lb/>
and careful in removing the<lb/>
men from the ladies'<lb/>
restroom.<lb/>
However, we do have<lb/>
one legitimate oomplaint:<lb/>
The second trip could have<lb/>
been avoided.<lb/>
The campus police came<lb/>
to the dorm around 10:40<lb/>
on a report of two men on<lb/>
the balcony on second floor<lb/>
east. Security looked down<lb/>
the halls and didn't see the<lb/>
men.<lb/>
The officers were told<lb/>
that the door to the<lb/>
suncourt was open as was<lb/>
the gate leading outside.<lb/>
They asked the one who<lb/>
reported this if she had<lb/>
looked around.<lb/>
Upon her negative<lb/>
reply, the officers shone a<lb/>
flashlight from a second<lb/>
story window onto the<lb/>
sunoourt. Seeing no one,<lb/>
the offioers left with advice<lb/>
to call again if any trouble<lb/>
arose. The men supposedly<lb/>
were gone.<lb/>
The men were not gone.<lb/>
The campus police had<lb/>
failed to look in one of the<lb/>
more obvious places - the<lb/>
ladies' restroom. The two<lb/>
men were in the second<lb/>
floor west restroom and<lb/>
apparently had been there<lb/>
the entire time the officers<lb/>
were there the first time.<lb/>
The campus police were<lb/>
extremely quick to respond<lb/>
a second time - something<lb/>
we highly praise them for.<lb/>
We are just saying that had<lb/>
the restrooms been checked<lb/>
the first time, much<lb/>
excitement, anxiety, and<lb/>
fear could have been<lb/>
avoided.<lb/>
Respectfully.<lb/>
Daisy V. Jones, president.<lb/>
Jarvis Hall<lb/>
Kathryn L. Adams<lb/>
Elizabeth Littleton<lb/>
Patty Chin<lb/>
Sandy Goodwin<lb/>
Kim Moore<lb/>
Alice Lynn King<lb/>
If at first you don't succeed, then<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Perhaps Patricia Knight<lb/>
should consider several<lb/>
facts before viciously criti-<lb/>
cizing a newspaper repor-<lb/>
ter, as she did in the Sept.<lb/>
28 edition of FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD.<lb/>
The story written by M s.<lb/>
Arah Venable could have<lb/>
been written better, true,<lb/>
but instead of attacking<lb/>
Ms. Venable as you did,<lb/>
Ms. Knight, you should<lb/>
have laid part of the blame<lb/>
on the desk editors, if you<lb/>
were going to place it<lb/>
anywhere.<lb/>
It is the desk editors'<lb/>
responsibility to edit all<lb/>
copy coming totheir desks.<lb/>
While Venable could have<lb/>
written a better story, the<lb/>
desk editors oould have,<lb/>
and should have, edited her<lb/>
story more carefully.<lb/>
I have a question: what<lb/>
does being an English<lb/>
major have to do with<lb/>
writing for a newspaper?<lb/>
The English majors I know<lb/>
spend more of their time<lb/>
studying literature instead<lb/>
of the basics of writing.<lb/>
For your information,<lb/>
Ms. Knight, Doug White,<lb/>
editor of FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD, is a history major. I<lb/>
was editor spring semester<lb/>
and I'm a French major.<lb/>
The editor before me was a<lb/>
history major, and the one<lb/>
before her was a political<lb/>
science major. Certainly<lb/>
our grammar is not always<lb/>
perfect, but one doesn't<lb/>
need to major in English in<lb/>
order to write for a news-<lb/>
paper.<lb/>
When one is learning<lb/>
the basics of a business, he<lb/>
cannot be expected to pro-<lb/>
duce perfect work while<lb/>
beginning. I feel sure, Ms.<lb/>
Knight, that you did not<lb/>
produce great works of art<lb/>
when you first began.<lb/>
Ms. Venable was<lb/>
pressed for time to get her<lb/>
story to the news desk. Part<lb/>
of writing for a newspaper<lb/>
is learning to write well<lb/>
under pressure, but in<lb/>
order to do so, you must<lb/>
practice. Give Venable time<lb/>
and she will produce well.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD reporter defended<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I have reserved com-<lb/>
ment on the letter written<lb/>
in this space until now. I<lb/>
feel that I should respond to<lb/>
the young lady who<lb/>
launched a vicious attack on<lb/>
Arah Venable. In the first<lb/>
place, Arah Venable is a<lb/>
girl. In the second place,<lb/>
Arah is not illiterate, and to<lb/>
say otherwise is unfair, no<lb/>
matter whose syllogism you<lb/>
use, false or otherwise.<lb/>
English majors are not<lb/>
the only ones who write for<lb/>
this newspaper, and it is<lb/>
inaccurate to assume that<lb/>
all journalists are. Fred<lb/>
Graham is a reporter for<lb/>
CBS; he has a degree in<lb/>
law. As for the author of<lb/>
this letter's ability to type, i<lb/>
cannot see what this has to<lb/>
do with anything at all.<lb/>
The author, a Ms.<lb/>
Patricia Knight, says in her<lb/>
article that Arah Venable<lb/>
should not frustrate herself<lb/>
by attempting to write<lb/>
newspaper articles. Arah<lb/>
Venable's story of that day<lb/>
about security would not<lb/>
win Pulitzer by any stretch<lb/>
of the imagination. The<lb/>
important thing about the<lb/>
story was that (A) informa-<lb/>
tion was given out to the<lb/>
public and (B) Ms. Venable<lb/>
was willing to try to write<lb/>
the story.<lb/>
You see, Ms. Knight, I<lb/>
feel that that was an<lb/>
important part of that story.<lb/>
The reason is that I know<lb/>
from bitter experience that<lb/>
it is next to impossible to<lb/>
find people who are willing<lb/>
to try on this campus.<lb/>
It is hard to find people<lb/>
who want to write for the<lb/>
news section. Student<lb/>
apathy at this campus is at<lb/>
an all-time high. One need<lb/>
only look at the low voter<lb/>
turnout at the recent SGA<lb/>
election to see that this fact<lb/>
is true. I certainly hope that<lb/>
through the collective<lb/>
efforts of all the people at<lb/>
this university that this tide<lb/>
of do-nothing mentality can<lb/>
be stemmed.<lb/>
Arah is willing to try<lb/>
and I think that this is an<lb/>
important attribute for any-<lb/>
one to have. This university<lb/>
certainly needs more Arah<lb/>
Venables, not less.<lb/>
The story came in , the<lb/>
editors edited it, and it<lb/>
didn-t turn out wall.<lb/>
Conclusion: we blew it. But<lb/>
since wa are humans, and<lb/>
not androids, wa are<lb/>
entitled to a few mistakes in<lb/>
this life. Also, please bear<lb/>
in mind, Ma. Knight, tnat<lb/>
you are not dealing with the<lb/>
editorial staff of the Raleigh<lb/>
News and Observe, you<lb/>
are dealing with a student<lb/>
newspaper at ECU.<lb/>
I wouldn't want to infer<lb/>
that people should not<lb/>
criticize the newspaper;<lb/>
they should. Newspapers<lb/>
are like that. If any student<lb/>
has an opinion about this<lb/>
newspaper, then they<lb/>
should voice their opinions<lb/>
openly. This is, after all, a<lb/>
public forum which exists<lb/>
for the purpose of the<lb/>
exchange of ideas as well as<lb/>
a dispenser of information.<lb/>
We welcome letters of<lb/>
dissent, and we prim all<lb/>
letters which are submitted<lb/>
to us, as long as the letters<lb/>
are not Mbelous.<lb/>
So it goes, Ms. Knight.<lb/>
I hope that you - and others<lb/>
like you - will continue to<lb/>
write to this newspaper. I<lb/>
also hope that you will not<lb/>
blast someone without<lb/>
knowing the facts. We are<lb/>
concerned here with find-<lb/>
ing people who can report<lb/>
facts accurately.<lb/>
We are also concerned<lb/>
with finding people that ere<lb/>
dependable - people who<lb/>
can take a can-do attitude<lb/>
about the things thai they<lb/>
do outside of the classroom<lb/>
Someone like Arah<lb/>
Venable.<lb/>
Merc Barnea<lb/>
As for your suggestion<lb/>
that she no longer frustrate<lb/>
herself by trying to write<lb/>
newi articles, tell me. who<lb/>
are you to suggest to<lb/>
anyone I give up some-<lb/>
thing9 A- : ho are you to<lb/>
declare that one is or is not<lb/>
literate7<lb/>
Perhaps you have re-<lb/>
marked to your 'nends tha:<lb/>
you wish to Decome a-<lb/>
artist. Arah Venable wishes<lb/>
to become a journalist<lb/>
Cindy Broome<lb/>
Chivalry is<lb/>
dead at<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
On the evening of<lb/>
Oct. 5. at 7 p.m my<lb/>
roommate and I decided to<lb/>
go out Her car was parked<lb/>
at the corner of Greene<lb/>
Dorm parking lot<lb/>
When we arrived at the<lb/>
car. we discovered a flat<lb/>
tire We proceeded to<lb/>
change the tire While<lb/>
changing the tire, about<lb/>
five carloads of presumed<lb/>
ECU males (not gentlemen)<lb/>
drove by!<lb/>
Not even one stopped to<lb/>
offer help The worst part<lb/>
of the whole deal was that a<lb/>
female security cop<lb/>
watched us change the tire,<lb/>
but she was watching from<lb/>
Fletcher Dorm. A short<lb/>
time later she walked by us<lb/>
(distance of about one and a<lb/>
half feet) and kept on<lb/>
walking.<lb/>
She did not offer to call<lb/>
someone to assist us nor<lb/>
did she check to see if<lb/>
everything was okay. I<lb/>
think it is down right low of<lb/>
people in this dsy and age<lb/>
who cannot spare a few<lb/>
minutes to help someone<lb/>
out.<lb/>
Thank goodness my<lb/>
father had taught me how<lb/>
to change e tire. That day I<lb/>
laerned, that if ever in a<lb/>
iam on ECU campus oon't<lb/>
expect help from the ECU<lb/>
Mf ?"? especially from<lb/>
the female security cops<lb/>
Michele Parish<lb/>
Ksthy George<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057152_0005"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
10 October 1978 FOUNTAtNHEAD Psqs 5<lb/>
Speakers and field trips planned<lb/>
ECU' s geology club reorganized<lb/>
ByARAH VENABLE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A geology club has been<lb/>
reorganized on campus.<lb/>
The club will include host-<lb/>
ing guest speakers and<lb/>
taking vanousfield trips.<lb/>
Allen Gtundy. an officer<lb/>
of the club. said. "It's a<lb/>
way for students to learn<lb/>
geology in a different man-<lb/>
ner<lb/>
Tne club is very in-<lb/>
formal, adds Bob Eaton, a<lb/>
member of the club. Eaton<lb/>
said the club is for the<lb/>
advancement of geology,<lb/>
and to help students be-<lb/>
come more involved in this<lb/>
field of study.<lb/>
In past years, the club<lb/>
has taken filed trips to the<lb/>
mountain region, piedmont<lb/>
plateau, and coastal plain<lb/>
in N.C<lb/>
Grundy said the club<lb/>
meets at least once a<lb/>
month, and twice if another<lb/>
meeting is necessary The<lb/>
meetings usually consist of<lb/>
a speaker or slide show on a<lb/>
present topic being re-<lb/>
searched.<lb/>
The next meeting is<lb/>
Mori , Oct. 16. Stanley<lb/>
Riggs is the guest speaker<lb/>
Riggs will talk about his<lb/>
trip to Australia and show<lb/>
slides of phosphate dep-<lb/>
osites which he has stud-<lb/>
ied.<lb/>
Eaton said the club<lb/>
members want to get<lb/>
people to speak to the club<lb/>
on a variety of subjects.<lb/>
Grundy replied that<lb/>
through some of the talks,<lb/>
students may become quite<lb/>
interested in geology.<lb/>
The club consists of<lb/>
tribunal officers with equal<lb/>
rank, undergraduate, and<lb/>
graduate students. The of-<lb/>
ficers are Allen Grundy,<lb/>
Don Lewis, and Ernie Holt-<lb/>
worth. The club is sup-<lb/>
ported financially from<lb/>
dues paid by the members.<lb/>
Dr. Billings, chairman<lb/>
of the geology department,<lb/>
is the faculty advisor for the<lb/>
club, but Eaton adds, the<lb/>
entire geology faculty will<lb/>
act as advisors<lb/>
Lewis said, "The club<lb/>
has been dormant in years<lb/>
past He said the organ-<lb/>
izational structure may<lb/>
change with incoming<lb/>
money. The club's mem-<lb/>
bership should be larger<lb/>
including more participa-<lb/>
tion and field trips.<lb/>
Any student interested<lb/>
in joining the club nan ask<lb/>
about it in Grahm 210.<lb/>
Lewis said to be a member<lb/>
one has to come to the<lb/>
meetings regularly and pay<lb/>
dues<lb/>
Grundy said one doesn't<lb/>
have to be a member to<lb/>
come to the meetings or go<lb/>
on field trips. He en-<lb/>
courages anyone interested<lb/>
to participate<lb/>
,<lb/>
Ssf<lb/>
t<lb/>
THEIR time till the<lb/>
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OOOOTOsSatScT 14 AT ASP IN GREENVILLE. N.C. 42<lb/>
<pb facs="00057152_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 10 October 1978<lb/>
MIME ARTIST KEITH Berger enacts a tug of war with an<lb/>
nce participant<lb/>
Photo by Pete Podeszwa.<lb/>
Berger's 'superb sense of timing'<lb/>
satisfied a near capacity crowd<lb/>
UKE WHISNANT<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
New York mime Keith<lb/>
answered sustained<lb/>
appiause with silence last<lb/>
Wednesday night, and a<lb/>
near capacity Mendenhall<lb/>
crowd loved it.<lb/>
e art of pantomime is<lb/>
traditionally performed u-<lb/>
smg only the body; the<lb/>
mime creates his characters<lb/>
a 'hout props or spoken<lb/>
sound A good mime can<lb/>
make you see almost any-<lb/>
thing imaginable simply by<lb/>
letting you see his reaction<lb/>
toit.<lb/>
Keith Berger is better<lb/>
than good.<lb/>
Berger who has been<lb/>
lauded as Americas<lb/>
premier mime opened<lb/>
his ECU appearance with a<lb/>
piece called Mechanical<lb/>
Awakening Two students<lb/>
carried a rigid Berger down<lb/>
the theatre aisle, up the<lb/>
steps, and stood him cen-<lb/>
terstage, where the mime<lb/>
swayed gently as if in a soft<lb/>
breeze. After a few false<lb/>
starts ? falling into the<lb/>
students' arms and having<lb/>
to be re-balanced ? Ber-<lb/>
ger came to life.<lb/>
His quick, jerky move-<lb/>
ments conveyed a weird,<lb/>
robot-like android, remini-<lb/>
sent of Star Wars C3p0.<lb/>
Berger's absolute lack of<lb/>
human' expression caused<lb/>
audible gasps from the<lb/>
audience ? it was that<lb/>
eerie.<lb/>
Berger dragged several<lb/>
people onstage with him<lb/>
during the show, including<lb/>
a co-ed to whom he ex-<lb/>
pressed his love by<lb/>
"reaching into his chest<lb/>
and withdrawing his heart.<lb/>
He then presented the<lb/>
still-beating organ to the<lb/>
young lady, who didn't<lb/>
show much enthusiasm.<lb/>
The next piece was a<lb/>
pantomime classic: "The<lb/>
Flame One of the most<lb/>
difficult selections in any-<lb/>
one's repetoire, "The<lb/>
Flame" requires lightning-<lb/>
quick movements and great<lb/>
control of the arms and<lb/>
upper tody, as the mime<lb/>
simulates a burning fire<lb/>
from its ignition to its<lb/>
eventual death. Performed<lb/>
under a red spotlight, Ber-<lb/>
ger's rendition of this clas-<lb/>
sic showed emotion and a<lb/>
superb sense of timing. The<lb/>
audience could actually see<lb/>
theflame.<lb/>
Other highlights of the<lb/>
show included Berger ori-<lb/>
ginals "Le Cirque Biz-<lb/>
arre a long presentation<lb/>
of a circus of misfits, and<lb/>
"Nightmare described as<lb/>
"a dream of time, an<lb/>
attempt to bury and escape<lb/>
it "Nightmare" was per-<lb/>
formed in a surrealistic,<lb/>
Charlie Chaplinesque fren-<lb/>
zy, complete with Berger's<lb/>
tape recorded narration and<lb/>
alarm clock sound effects.<lb/>
"Instant Replay" was a<lb/>
humorous collection of<lb/>
video-type football mon-<lb/>
tages, in which Berger<lb/>
handed off, caught passes,<lb/>
and announced the game in<lb/>
forward, reverse, and slow<lb/>
motion.<lb/>
Berger's "Head Piece"<lb/>
was explained on the pro-<lb/>
gram as "I simply take off<lb/>
my head and go inside<lb/>
This was one of the more<lb/>
abstract pieces, and some<lb/>
members of the audience<lb/>
grew restless trying to<lb/>
follow the mime's explor-<lb/>
ation of his own skull.<lb/>
But the total perform-<lb/>
ance bordered on the flaw-<lb/>
less, and each piece con-<lb/>
tained individual images<lb/>
that stayed with the aud-<lb/>
ience. No one there could<lb/>
forget Keith Berger's cir-<lb/>
cus acrobat skipping rope<lb/>
with his own intestines;<lb/>
Berger's tug of war played<lb/>
with a little boy from the<lb/>
audience and an invisible<lb/>
rope; or Berger's hanging<lb/>
suicide, neck stretched<lb/>
grotesquely to one side and<lb/>
one foot dangling off the<lb/>
floor. In a night of pan-<lb/>
tomime brilliance, these<lb/>
were moments of genius.<lb/>
JORGE BOLET<lb/>
ECU Artists Series<lb/>
presents Jorge Bolet<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Solo instrumentalists,<lb/>
chamber ensembles and a<lb/>
choral group will be featur-<lb/>
ed during the 78-79 sea-<lb/>
son, of ECU'S Artist Series.<lb/>
The series includes<lb/>
pianist Jorge Bolet (Oct.<lb/>
11), TASHI (Nov. i, the<lb/>
Gregg Smith Singers (Nov.<lb/>
15). violinist Eugene Fodor<lb/>
(Jan 30). classical guitarist<lb/>
Chirstopher Parkening<lb/>
(Feb. 20) and the Piedmont<lb/>
Chamber Orchestra (April<lb/>
5)<lb/>
All events are evening<lb/>
performances, scheduled<lb/>
for 8 p.m. in the Curtis<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre. Season<lb/>
tickets for the series are<lb/>
available at the ECU Cent-<lb/>
ral Ticket Office (telephone<lb/>
757-6611, ext. 266) at $20<lb/>
each for the general public.<lb/>
Jorge Bolet, a leading<lb/>
keyboard figure of world<lb/>
reknown, has won critical<lb/>
acclaim for his solo recitals<lb/>
and his appearances with<lb/>
major orchestras. "His<lb/>
Liszt playing is without<lb/>
peer in the world today<lb/>
noted Harold Schonberg.<lb/>
TASHI (Tibetan for<lb/>
"good fortune") inlcludes<lb/>
See TASHI, p. 8<lb/>
'Our society has become<lb/>
visually oriented ?Berger<lb/>
By STEVE BACNHER<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
and<lb/>
DOUG WHITE<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
Most performers, when they think of playing in large<lb/>
spaces, feel they need to enlarge their show: add more<lb/>
sound, more lights, more performers, television monitors,<lb/>
and soon. But Keith Berger, the mime who usually works<lb/>
alone, just thinks of more audience.<lb/>
His impact seems to grow to fill the required space. His<lb/>
rule is: if he can be seen by everyone, he can get to<lb/>
everyone. He uses the same technique to fix the attention of<lb/>
a vast audience as engineers woufd use to hold the whole<lb/>
place together - a balanced tension.<lb/>
Out of doors, Keith looks for the highest point on the<lb/>
landscape and soon has everyone watching him. One Spring<lb/>
Sunday in New York City's Central Park, 300,000 people<lb/>
crowded the Mall to "Eat a Bit of the Big Apple" - a feast<lb/>
sponsored by many leading restaurants. Keith drew so<lb/>
much attention that his manager's telephone was jammed<lb/>
most of Monday with calls for Keith to perform and to<lb/>
model.<lb/>
Berger discovered his power to rivet people's attention<lb/>
several years ago. He once performed in the Los Angeles<lb/>
Sports Arena. To his surprise, he was able to control a vast<lb/>
audience waiting to hear a rock star.<lb/>
On another occasion, in the Jackson, Miss.<lb/>
Coliseum - on a program with Doc Severison, Charlie Pride,<lb/>
and Dorothy Kirsten - Berger drew the entire audience into<lb/>
his world of silence. And Keith once offered to perform for<lb/>
an all-night peace vigil in New York City's Catheoral of St.<lb/>
John the Divine - the second largest church in the world.<lb/>
In that vast, gothic space, under a ceiling 120 feet high,<lb/>
as one of the clergymen put it, "Keith Berger's<lb/>
performance created a powerful stillness. It is a rare<lb/>
experience that a single figure in a building as immense as<lb/>
the Cathedral can hold and move an audience so<lb/>
intensely<lb/>
Keith Berger first caught the attention of the public as a<lb/>
performer for the New York Parks Department on the<lb/>
streets of Manhattan. Some of his favorite performing<lb/>
spaces were around the Pulitzer Fountain in front of the<lb/>
Plaza Hotel, on the lions in front of the New York Public<lb/>
Library, and on sidewalks in front of the Museum of<lb/>
Modern Art, St. Thomas Church, and the Metropolitan<lb/>
Museum of Art.<lb/>
He has met movie producers and directors on the street,<lb/>
as well as the people who became his managers. He even<lb/>
met his girlfriend, a dancer, while he was performing on<lb/>
Fifth Avenue.<lb/>
Once, on a SoHo street while "pulling" cars and<lb/>
"directing" traffic, Keith "built" a wall in front of a man's<lb/>
car, then opened a "door" so the car could go through. The<lb/>
man turned out to be a former executive of Genera! Motors,<lb/>
and was so fascinated by Keith's ability to create illusions<lb/>
with cars, he told Keith to have his managers get in touch<lb/>
with the General Motors advertising agencies.<lb/>
Chevrolet's ad agency (Campbell-Ewald) was inter-<lb/>
ested, but not yet convinced, when they invited Keith<lb/>
Berger to Detroit to perform for their creative staff. Keith<lb/>
did, and shortly after was chosen to advertise 1977<lb/>
Chevrolets in a 30-second pre-introduction commercial that<lb/>
would appear on network television to promote the new<lb/>
model year.<lb/>
The commercial was filmed in a California wheat field<lb/>
under a hot sun. Keith worried about his white makeup<lb/>
running, but not about the car. There was none. He created<lb/>
the illusion of a beautiful, shiny, new car that he petted and<lb/>
admired: the soon-to-be-released 1977 model Chevrolet.<lb/>
Keith Berger has also worked for advertisers in media<lb/>
other than television. Each August The New York Times<lb/>
Magazine features back-to-school clothing articles with<lb/>
photographs. Keith was chosen as the feature in a colorful,<lb/>
seven-page spread on "Kid's Clothes<lb/>
For several days he posed with 10 small, very<lb/>
well-dressed children in Central Park, near the museums<lb/>
and churches, and around the streets of New York. Within<lb/>
days he posed again for a Trevira (fabric) ad in the same<lb/>
Sunday magazine - this time with a beautiful female model.<lb/>
Keith Berger has also appeared in a Time front-cover<lb/>
articie on Bloomingdale's, the chic New York department<lb/>
store where Keith introduced a new line of French<lb/>
wristwathcesto an early morning press conference. Several<lb/>
months ago, he made a public service safety ad for<lb/>
television sponsored by Consolidated Edison.<lb/>
With all the words and all the music television has to<lb/>
offer, Keith Berger has created some of its most eloquent<lb/>
moments with silence. For all the color available in print,<lb/>
I this small, lithe mime, in black leotard and white face, often<lb/>
catches the attention first.<lb/>
Whether moving or still, Keith Berger expresses the<lb/>
emotions of joy, surprise, fear, and wonder. Whether<lb/>
Mechanical Man, gorilla in a cage, or hard-shooting<lb/>
cowboy, Keith Berger has every eye on him.<lb/>
The following interview was conducted during the<lb/>
intermission of his performance last Wednesday night in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. The performance was<lb/>
sponsored by the Student Union Theatre Arts Committee.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: To what extent has Maroeau<lb/>
influenced your art?<lb/>
Berger: I was very inspired by what he does and some of<lb/>
the same conventions we both do.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: Was it Maroeau that inspired you<lb/>
most?<lb/>
Berger: No. Actually , it was a Frenchman by the name<lb/>
of Jean Marie Barreau. He was in a movie by the name of<lb/>
The Children of Paradise and you can see that movie<lb/>
I'd say I got seriously interested in mime sometime in my<lb/>
early teens.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: When did you first start performing<lb/>
professionally?<lb/>
Berger: When I was about 19 years old I started<lb/>
performing on the streets in New York City early on.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: How many years did you study<lb/>
mime?<lb/>
Berger: I studied for about four or five years before I<lb/>
really began my career.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: Many performers studied mime<lb/>
before going into their respective specializations. For<lb/>
instance how does Harpo Marx rank as a mime?<lb/>
Berger: Oh I think he's excellent. He's an excellent<lb/>
mime.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: David Bowie also began as a mime<lb/>
Berger: That's correct. Bowie studied under a man by<lb/>
the name of Lindsay Kemp. David is a very versatile<lb/>
performer and I respect him. As a mime I think he is quite<lb/>
good.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: Is mime primarily a form of acting<lb/>
or is it more a form of dance?<lb/>
Berger: It's a cohesion of both. I can't really say it's<lb/>
more one than the other. I think in a way it's more akin to<lb/>
acting, believe it or not. It's a form of acting without words.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: Do you prefer pure mime, which is<lb/>
the style that you use, or do you prefer interspersing mime<lb/>
witn other areas of performance like Marx. Bowie, et. al<lb/>
Berger: I like the pure mime as it can be used for<lb/>
many areas of performance: motion pictures, television,<lb/>
stage.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAQ: You concentrate a great deal on the<lb/>
internal self in your pieces. Stance,<lb/>
tonight you jumped rope with your intestines; went into<lb/>
your head on several occasions. Would you comment?<lb/>
Berger: It's just a phase I'm goin' through.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: Mime is an ancient art Did it<lb/>
originate in a single place like the commedia del arte in Italy<lb/>
or did it evolve as a universal art?<lb/>
Berger: I'd say that the best mime is done in Japan or<lb/>
either the Balinese theatre. The No theatre and the Kabuki<lb/>
do the best mime.<lb/>
'The problem with television is,<lb/>
once they see some of your<lb/>
material, it's very hard to<lb/>
repeat it, it gets stale fast on<lb/>
TV. So a young performer<lb/>
must be careful, and there<lb/>
aren ft a lot of writers for mime<lb/>
that can write it very welL<lb/>
You have to be very careful<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD : When did mime first become popular in<lb/>
the western culture ?<lb/>
Berger: With the commedia, and that came up from<lb/>
Italy. The French adopted it and took the clowns out of it<lb/>
and certain types of clowns were silent. They were known<lb/>
as mime or mimie or mimes and they developed and the<lb/>
head guy of the mimes was a guy by the name of<lb/>
Debarreau. He started as a street performer and then later<lb/>
was a hit attraction with a circus Phenombeau in Paris and<lb/>
many mimes patterned themselves after Debarreau,<lb/>
including Maroeau.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: You did a lot of the same pieces in<lb/>
tonight's show as in your appearance here last year<lb/>
How many different programs do you do?<lb/>
Berger: Let's see. I don't remember what program I did<lb/>
last year? Was it this one?<lb/>
I do about three different programs. Sometimes I do ihe<lb/>
same program but with a few pieces changed<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: Do you prefer doing the routines<lb/>
that you choreograph or write yourself or do you prefer<lb/>
doing audience participation? For example, you did some<lb/>
teasers today.<lb/>
Berger: I like them both the same.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: How do you choose your victims?<lb/>
Berger: Weil, I have to look at them very closely,<lb/>
because if l choose one who would be psychologically<lb/>
damaged by it, it's not a good thing.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: How many shows do you normally<lb/>
do in a year?<lb/>
Berger: About 75 or 80.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: Where do you like to perform?<lb/>
Berger: Colleges, universities, and especially theatres<lb/>
I've also made a few commercials, a little more television<lb/>
nowadays.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: Do you have<lb/>
branch out into other areas?<lb/>
Berger: I'd like to go into film. I've got a new show that<lb/>
perhaps will be out next fall about a space man. This will be<lb/>
a whole show about one character, and it'll be kind of<lb/>
production.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAQ. Shields and Yarnall had their own<lb/>
show and they used mime as a springboard rather than the<lb/>
focal point. Why do you think their show failed?<lb/>
any ambitions to<lb/>
a<lb/>
Berger: I really cant say. I think they're good and thev<lb/>
e alot of energy, it's a different style and I thinkT.<lb/>
usually at an artist's series or something like that. He plays more slapstick. They're good at it I guess it i at<lb/>
a mime in that film and I saw it at around 11 or 12 and I me too much of Maroeau for me to watch it t?I rftm,nd8<lb/>
said, "Hey, that's what I'd like to do really like todoa show of mv own I'm ?.? ? ,d<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: When did you first get seriously<lb/>
interested in mime?<lb/>
Berger: Well,l think when I was a kid I used to do it and<lb/>
just not know it. Then later on I just sort of developed it. So<lb/>
my own. 'm nid<lb/>
their own show. It made a lot of people awar m m <lb/>
Y but I b?, ywy w-i bJum th<lb/>
is?? ecROER, p. 7)<lb/>
Berger:<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057152_0007"/><lb/>
Tit<lb/>
"? ? 1 T<lb/>
- - 1<lb/>
Berger<lb/>
10 Odobr 1976 FOUNTAINHEAD Pap 7<lb/>
'He's become a central figure in the arts'<lb/>
Le Cirque Bizarre" was the longest<lb/>
piece Berger performed, "a long present-<lb/>
ation of a circus of misfits.<lb/>
Pete Podeszwa)<lb/>
Photo by<lb/>
Recording artist Crystal<lb/>
Gayle comes to Raleigh<lb/>
United Artists recording<lb/>
star Crystal Gayle will<lb/>
appear at Dorton Arena<lb/>
at the North Carolina State<lb/>
Fair in Raleigh on Oct. 18.<lb/>
Gayle will per-<lb/>
form material from her<lb/>
current United Artists LP<lb/>
entitled When I Dream ,<lb/>
which is the follow jp<lb/>
album to her platinum We<lb/>
Must Beiieve In Magic<lb/>
United Artists considers<lb/>
When I Dream to be<lb/>
Crystal's best album to<lb/>
wide variety of music in-<lb/>
cluding, among others,<lb/>
great songs like, "Cry Me<lb/>
A River "Wayward<lb/>
Wind "Someday Soon<lb/>
and her current his single,<lb/>
"Talking in Your Sleep<lb/>
GRAMMY WINNER<lb/>
Gayle talked about<lb/>
the album during a recent<lb/>
interview - "I'm really<lb/>
.excited about this album.<lb/>
My producer, Allen<lb/>
Reynolds, did a fantastic<lb/>
job, and I feel it's by far the<lb/>
The past year has been<lb/>
a banner one for Crystal in<lb/>
that she not only achieved<lb/>
an R.I.A.A. gold award for<lb/>
her smash hit, "Don't It<lb/>
Make My Brown Eyes<lb/>
Blue but also, a platinum<lb/>
award for her We Musi<lb/>
Believe In Magic album.<lb/>
Add to that, a Grammy<lb/>
and outstanding vocalist<lb/>
awards from both the<lb/>
Academy of Country Music<lb/>
and the Country Music<lb/>
Association and you've got<lb/>
the hottest female singer in<lb/>
continued from p. 6<lb/>
problem with television is,<lb/>
once they see some of your<lb/>
material, it's very hard to<lb/>
repeat it, it gets stale very<lb/>
fast on TV, so a young<lb/>
performer must be very<lb/>
careful, and there aren't a<lb/>
lot of writers for mime that<lb/>
can write it very well. You<lb/>
have to be very careful.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: Do<lb/>
you choreograph most of<lb/>
your material?<lb/>
Berger: Yes. Now, I've<lb/>
written a film that might be<lb/>
done on television, or it<lb/>
might just be done as a<lb/>
regular film and I think that<lb/>
would be good, it would be<lb/>
just one story and not one<lb/>
each week. It would be like<lb/>
a special.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: Is<lb/>
most mime today per-<lb/>
formed in theatres and<lb/>
auditoriums, or is it still on<lb/>
the streets?<lb/>
Berger: I think most of<lb/>
it's done in theatres, but<lb/>
there is some on the<lb/>
streets, there just isn't<lb/>
enough of it, that's all.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: Do<lb/>
you see mime increasing in<lb/>
popularity?<lb/>
Berger: Oh, yes, hope-<lb/>
fully. I think it will, I think<lb/>
because our society has<lb/>
become more visually<lb/>
oriented and less prone to<lb/>
words. Even in television,<lb/>
it's so visual, the words<lb/>
must be the most simple<lb/>
and banal. They don't want<lb/>
to confuse anyone, so they<lb/>
rely very heavily on action<lb/>
and image and I think we' re<lb/>
an image oriented society<lb/>
now, so mime in that type<lb/>
of society plays a very big<lb/>
role.<lb/>
EPILOGUE<lb/>
Berger, 24, lives in New<lb/>
York City's SoHo district<lb/>
and has studied mime in<lb/>
France and New York. He<lb/>
is a small, soft spoken man<lb/>
who speaks in a smooth<lb/>
accent evenly mixed<lb/>
between Paris and<lb/>
Brooklyn.<lb/>
At one time he sup-<lb/>
ported himself as a<lb/>
"busker" on the streets of<lb/>
Washington, D.C. and New<lb/>
York City-performing for<lb/>
anyone who would watch.<lb/>
Only a few years?and<lb/>
many engagements?later,<lb/>
his "Mime Over Matter"<lb/>
series of three shows at<lb/>
Lincoln Center's Tully Hall<lb/>
attracted national critical<lb/>
acclaim; and he was invited<lb/>
to the Capitol to perform<lb/>
and introduce 16 other<lb/>
attractions appearing in the<lb/>
nation's premier center for<lb/>
the performing arts to<lb/>
celebrate President<lb/>
Carter's Inauguration.<lb/>
Dr. Walter Anderson,<lb/>
chairman of the National<lb/>
Endowment for the Arts'<lb/>
Music Division, and Head<lb/>
of the 1977 Inaugural<lb/>
Concert Series, invited<lb/>
Keith Berger to Washing-<lb/>
ton to be the "symbol" of<lb/>
the performing arts at<lb/>
Kennedy Center, where<lb/>
many of the more than 200<lb/>
cultural events were sched-<lb/>
uled to celebrate the<lb/>
change of administrations.<lb/>
Appearing before the<lb/>
largest crowd ever to<lb/>
assemble in Kennedy<lb/>
Center-more than 5,000<lb/>
people-Keith Berger sil-<lb/>
ently introduced classical,<lb/>
gospel, dance, and jazz<lb/>
artists appearing in<lb/>
Kennedy Center's massive<lb/>
Grand Foyer. He led<lb/>
audiences from one end of<lb/>
the hall (more than a city<lb/>
block long and six stories<lb/>
highto the other, drawing<lb/>
them across the massive<lb/>
red carpet, entertaining,<lb/>
diverting, and acquainting<lb/>
them with the technical<lb/>
perfection of his art that<lb/>
has made him the most<lb/>
respected young mime in<lb/>
the world. His frequent<lb/>
appearances before so<lb/>
many people from through-<lb/>
out the country won him<lb/>
many more enthusiastic<lb/>
fans.<lb/>
Once an aspiring artist<lb/>
on the outside looking in,<lb/>
Keith Berger has become a<lb/>
central figure in the<lb/>
principal performing arts<lb/>
establishments of America.<lb/>
!2o JSontztklng<lb/>
JOUX?Si<lb/>
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The Fourth Annual REBEL ART Art Show <lb/>
Registration deadline: WED. Oct. 11 <lb/>
Unregistered work will not appear in the show. <lb/>
Show Dates: Oct. 22?28<lb/>
Prize announcement on p. 2.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057152_0008"/><lb/>
Page's FOUNTAINHEAD 10 October 1978<lb/>
Coming Home combines talents<lb/>
By DA RREN BERGSTEIN<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
Rarely does a film nowadays achieve the purpose it is<lb/>
made for. Nor do most contemporary films offer such<lb/>
brilliant acting, directing and overall marksmanship as<lb/>
does Coming Home a tale focusing on the tragedies and<lb/>
reconciled hopes of three people as a direct result of the<lb/>
Viet Nam War.<lb/>
Director Hal Ashby here conceives a story of excellent<lb/>
taste, yet does it in such a way as not to offend the viewer;<lb/>
as a matter of fact, he makes the audience think twice,<lb/>
forcing them to recall what the war did to many thousands<lb/>
. es<lb/>
One of the characters he brings out is the role of the<lb/>
less cripple Jon Voight portrays Lucas Martin, an<lb/>
embittered war veteran who seems to make little effort to<lb/>
concentrate on what he has left. Instead, he mopes and<lb/>
even does this on a borderline basis, grumbling about on<lb/>
s bed pushed along by canes, the only willpower he feels<lb/>
he has left Once a fine high school quarterback, he blames<lb/>
:he government for his current predicament, finding plenty<lb/>
self-pity and remorse in the VA hospital he is stuck in.<lb/>
Another character that Ashby brings out is the man who<lb/>
$ N?K TO RELAX AFTER 5<lb/>
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home<lb/>
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Finally, there is the woman who comes between both of<lb/>
these radically different men. Jane Fonda portrays Sally<lb/>
Hyde, who, despite her seemingly positive attitudes about<lb/>
her husband's morale, displays below the surface a<lb/>
confused and frightened outlook?mainly for her husband's<lb/>
safety.<lb/>
Fonda decides to prove herself when she goes into<lb/>
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who she remembers was the high school quarterback. She<lb/>
questions him about how he came to be crippled, but he is<lb/>
cynical and depressed and doesn't want to talk.<lb/>
Gradually however, M artin begins to feel for Fonda, and<lb/>
eventually the two fall in love, despite Fonda's protests that<lb/>
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The performances are excellent all around. Fonda surely<lb/>
gives one of the best of her career having to be<lb/>
two-faced?living up to the consequences with her<lb/>
husband, and holding back Voight at the same time.<lb/>
Bruce Dern, looking much better after his maniacal role<lb/>
Cinema<lb/>
in Black Sunday, is rash, arrogant, and even a bit selfish,<lb/>
especially when he explodes with barrage after barrage of<lb/>
profanity in the last half hour of the picture.<lb/>
Jon Voight gives one of his finest performances,<lb/>
showing pathos, and wanting pity from all who come into<lb/>
contact with him. Of course, he finds it in Jane Fonda, and<lb/>
fortunately for him, she lets him show his true feelings<lb/>
towards her.<lb/>
This film is one of the few that treads on the subject of<lb/>
the Viet Nam War and exposes it for what it truly was.<lb/>
Never was there such a waste of lives, a shattering of<lb/>
futures, culminating in the Viet Nam tragedy. Here, Ashby<lb/>
explores all this through his three pivotal characters.<lb/>
They are normal, everyday people who are suddenly<lb/>
thrust into harassing, frightening situations, and each<lb/>
learns to cope with it in his own way. Ashby is in full<lb/>
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ON LEAVE FROM the Marines, Bruce Dern enjoys the<lb/>
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His choices for the three leads were skillfully chosen<lb/>
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gifted his captaincy could be is one of general happiness<lb/>
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following a gun shot wound that he inflicted on himself) and<lb/>
becomes involved in the fighting, and the bloodshed and<lb/>
the agony. He questions this once he is back homr but finds<lb/>
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at the same time, and probably a trifle frightened.<lb/>
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superficial differences resolved, what's underneath still<lb/>
exudes tragedy and despair. It is these last two resolves<lb/>
that make Dern reach the decision that Fonda should have<lb/>
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cripple who is perhaps more human than Dern is.<lb/>
So the title. Coming Home, signifies a number of things<lb/>
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back there on an Asian battleground.<lb/>
Secondly, as one isaway, so life must go on. Be it for the<lb/>
good or for the better. Little did these three people know<lb/>
that due to that there would be definite, however tragic,<lb/>
changes.<lb/>
In short, a modern work of art that should establish<lb/>
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continued from p. 6<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057152_0009"/><lb/>
10 October 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
Pirates win third straight game<lb/>
MM ?<lb/>
?w" <lb/>
Defense carries ECU past Keydets<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
LEXINGTON, VA. - VMI'stiny Alumni Memorial Field<lb/>
has never been an easy place to play, for ECU teams and<lb/>
Pirate head coach Pat Dye was obviously relieved to escape<lb/>
with a narrow 19-6 victory here Saturday afternoon.<lb/>
I was scared to death, and I always am when we come<lb/>
here to play admitted Dye. "But the game turned out<lb/>
about like I expected it to. Coach Thalman did a good job of<lb/>
getting his boys ready for the game. He always does<lb/>
Once again, the Pirates were forced to rely on a superb<lb/>
defensive perfornmance hile a battered and bruised offense<lb/>
managed just enough points to win.<lb/>
ECU safety Gerald Hall had his finest performance of<lb/>
the season and almost single handedly stopped the fired up<lb/>
Keydets. Hall scored ECU'S first touchdown on a<lb/>
spectacular 74 yard punt return and set up a first half field<lb/>
goal with another 30 yard return. Hall finished the<lb/>
atternoonwkthfour for 121 yards and also picked off two VMI<lb/>
passes and returned them for 14 yards.<lb/>
Gerald's returns certainly gave us a big lift today<lb/>
noted Dye. "I felt like we could run a punt back on them for<lb/>
a touchdown. We worked hard on punt returns in practice<lb/>
iast week and I knew if we executed we could probably<lb/>
break one<lb/>
After the Pirates failed to score on its first three<lb/>
possessions of the game, Hall gathered in a short Lou<lb/>
Darden punt near the right sidelines, sidestepped about<lb/>
five VMI defenders and outraced the rest of the Keydets<lb/>
into the end zone.<lb/>
And again early in the second quarter, Hall grabbed<lb/>
another punt and went to his right, this time for 30 yards<lb/>
before he was run out of bounds at the VMI 38.<lb/>
Quarterback Steve Greer and halfback Eddie Hicks<lb/>
eeieo off big gains of 18 and 12 yards in the following<lb/>
series, but the Keydets stopped ECU short on third down at<lb/>
the two yard line and the Pirates opted for a field goal.<lb/>
Bill Lamm connected from 19 yards and the Pirates<lb/>
moved ahead 9-0 which was the way the score remained at<lb/>
halftime.<lb/>
The ECU defense held VMI to just four first downs and<lb/>
minus 13 yards rushing in the first half. However, the<lb/>
Pirates quickly put themselves in trouble early in the<lb/>
second half with two costly fumbles. Fullback, Theodore<lb/>
Sutton fumbled on the first play of the second half and<lb/>
VMI's Rick Gilbert recovered on ECU'S 21 yard line.<lb/>
But the Pirates' defense stiffened and All-America<lb/>
placekicker Craig Jones connected from 43 yards and VMI<lb/>
trailed 9-3.<lb/>
Midway through the third quarter, Leander Green's<lb/>
errant pitch actually hit an official, and VMI's Tony<lb/>
Hamilton recovered at the ECU 36. However the Keydets<lb/>
advanced nowhere, and once again Jones added another<lb/>
field goal, this time from 49 yards out.<lb/>
ECU came right back on its next possession and moved<lb/>
all the way to the VMI seven yard line before the offense<lb/>
bogged down again. Lamm added his second field goal from<lb/>
24 yards out with just 22 seconds left in the third quarter.<lb/>
Although the Pirates had numerous scoring opport-<lb/>
unities in the second half, ECU'S score came on its<lb/>
final possession when the Bucsmarched 54 yards for a<lb/>
touchdown.<lb/>
Sutton got the big play in the drive with a 38 yard dash<lb/>
around the right side on third which moved the ball to<lb/>
VMI's 14 yard line. Four plays later, halfback Sam Harrell<lb/>
went around the left side for three yards and the<lb/>
touchdown. Lamm's conversion made the final score 19-6.<lb/>
I was disapppointed that we got the ball into scoring<lb/>
position so many times and didn't score said Dye. "Of<lb/>
course the VMI defense had a lot to do with that. But I<lb/>
don't worry about the score. I'm just happy to win. I just<lb/>
hope we can keep playing this well on defense and improve<lb/>
our offense.<lb/>
"Fumbles hurt us again, but we haven't turned the ball<lb/>
over but four times in the last two games so we're<lb/>
improving there<lb/>
Although Green didn't start the game, he completed<lb/>
two passes for 42 yards while Greer rushed 13 times for 54<lb/>
yards and directed the Pirates final scoring drive late in the<lb/>
fourth quarter. Sutton was the Bucs top ground gainer with<lb/>
25 carries for 115 yards. Hicks added 36 yards on ten<lb/>
carries.<lb/>
"I don't want to make any excuses about our offense<lb/>
said Dye. "But Leander got no work in practice last week.<lb/>
We've got to do something on offense. We can't change<lb/>
anymore people, we've just got to start executing<lb/>
ECU 6 3 3 7-19<lb/>
VMI 0060-6<lb/>
ECU-Hall 74 punt return (kick failed)<lb/>
ECU-Lamm 19FG<lb/>
VMI-Jones 43 FG<lb/>
VMI-Jones49 FG<lb/>
ECU-Lamm 24 FG<lb/>
ECU-Harrell 3 run (Lamm kick)<lb/>
A-6900<lb/>
RUSHING<lb/>
ECU-Sutton 25-115, Hicks 10-36, Collins4-13, Greer 13-54<lb/>
Green 3-(-13), Harrell 3-5, VMI-Hostetter 20-47, Woolwine<lb/>
-4 Clark 2H-44), Washington 4-8, Allen 1-4, Hupertz<lb/>
1-(-18)<lb/>
PASSING<lb/>
ECU-Greer 1-2-0-10, Green 2-9-1-42, VMI-Clark 4-17-3-71,<lb/>
Hupertz 1-2-0-6<lb/>
RECEIVING<lb/>
ECU Gallaher 2-13, Washington 1-39, VMI Savage 2-47,<lb/>
Weaver 1-15, Hostetter 2-15.<lb/>
A streaking Hall<lb/>
ECU SAFETY GERALD Hall streaks down the sidelines<lb/>
with another punt return. Hall returned four punts for 121<lb/>
yards and a touchdown against VMI Saturday. He also<lb/>
intercepted two passes in the Pirates 19-6 victory over the<lb/>
Keydets. ECU Sports Information photo<lb/>
Intercepts two passes<lb/>
Hall's heroics pace Pirates<lb/>
Pirate defense makes another big stop<lb/>
ONCE AGAIN THE Pirate defense came<lb/>
up with a. superb performance against<lb/>
VMI m Saturday's 19-6 victory. ECU<lb/>
yards. Here. Wayne Perry makes a stop<lb/>
on an unidentified Texas-Arlington<lb/>
running back in last week's game.<lb/>
sacked VMI quarterbacks 13 times for 62 Photo by Chap Gurley<lb/>
Determined Stewart is<lb/>
ECU's top tennis threat<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
LEXINGTON, VA. ?<lb/>
With just four minutes<lb/>
remaining in the ECU-VMI<lb/>
game Saturday afternoon,<lb/>
Keydet quarterback Robby<lb/>
Clark picked himself up off<lb/>
the ground for the last time<lb/>
and slowly limped towards<lb/>
the sidelines.<lb/>
The sparse homecoming<lb/>
crowd of 6900 at Alumni<lb/>
Memorial Field gave Clark<lb/>
a standing ovation and it<lb/>
wascertainlywell deserved.<lb/>
By the end of the<lb/>
contest, Clark had been<lb/>
dumped behind the line of<lb/>
scrimmage 12 times for a<lb/>
whopping 44 yards. Even<lb/>
his back-up Larry Hupertz<lb/>
was sacked once for a big<lb/>
18 yard loss.<lb/>
"Our pass rush really<lb/>
surprised me today said<lb/>
ECU head coach Pat Dye<lb/>
after the Pirates had taken<lb/>
a close 19-6 victory over the<lb/>
underdog Keydets. "I felt<lb/>
we had to come on and put<lb/>
the pressure on the pass. I<lb/>
was concerned with con-<lb/>
taining Robby Clark and<lb/>
keeping VMI from con-<lb/>
trolling the football'<lb/>
Almost every member<lb/>
of the Pirates' defense got a<lb/>
piece of Clark or Hupertz.<lb/>
Defensive end Zack Val-<lb/>
entine got to Clark three<lb/>
times while Fred Chavis,<lb/>
Oliver Felton, Tommy<lb/>
Summer and cornerback<lb/>
Ruffin McNeil were in on<lb/>
two sacks.<lb/>
Linebacker Mike Brew-<lb/>
ington and tackle D.T.<lb/>
Joyner added one sack<lb/>
apiece. Joyner also made<lb/>
five tackles and recovered a<lb/>
fumble.<lb/>
"We were all psyched<lb/>
up for this one admitted<lb/>
Joyner. "All week long the<lb/>
coaches said Clark could<lb/>
scramble, but we worked<lb/>
hard on containment and<lb/>
today I think it really paid<lb/>
off.<lb/>
"They started double<lb/>
teaming me for a while<lb/>
which kept me from getting<lb/>
to the quarterback, but<lb/>
pretty soon I was back to<lb/>
one-on-one and I was doing<lb/>
a pretty good job of pres-<lb/>
suring Clark as well as<lb/>
stopping the run<lb/>
The Pirates limited VMI<lb/>
to just 78 total yards in the<lb/>
game. At the half, the<lb/>
Keydets had minus 13<lb/>
yards rushing and finished<lb/>
the game with only one net<lb/>
yard on the ground.<lb/>
"This could have been<lb/>
our best defensive game of<lb/>
the year said Dye. "It<lb/>
was a combination of blitz-<lb/>
es and stunts that gave<lb/>
them a lot of problems<lb/>
And even when Clark<lb/>
managed to elude the Pi-<lb/>
rates' fierce rush, he could<lb/>
complete only four of 17<lb/>
passes for 71 yards while<lb/>
three of his aerials were<lb/>
intercepted.<lb/>
Gerald Hall picked off<lb/>
two of Clark's passes while<lb/>
linebacker Tommy Summer<lb/>
intercepted one and re-<lb/>
turned it 14 yards. Hall's<lb/>
final interception stopped<lb/>
VMI's last serious scoring<lb/>
threat.<lb/>
"Clark was watching<lb/>
his tight end the whole time<lb/>
on my second intercep-<lb/>
tion explained Hall. "I<lb/>
saw the tight end coming<lb/>
out and I got a good break<lb/>
on the ball and cut right in<lb/>
front of him. What really<lb/>
helped us today in the<lb/>
secondary was the trem-<lb/>
endous pass rush our line-<lb/>
men put on them. It makes<lb/>
our job alot easier back<lb/>
there<lb/>
Hall, a 5-11, 185 pound<lb/>
safety from Edenton,<lb/>
scored ECU'S first touch-<lb/>
down on a brilliant 74 yard<lb/>
punt return and also set up<lb/>
a first half field goal with<lb/>
another 30 yard return.<lb/>
"We worked all week<lb/>
on setting up returns to the<lb/>
right side said Hall who<lb/>
tied a school record for<lb/>
return yardage in a single<lb/>
game with 121 yards. "It<lb/>
really paid off. but the<lb/>
blocking on a return is<lb/>
always the key. Today, the<lb/>
holdup seemed to be pretty<lb/>
good which is a real .credit<lb/>
to the blocking. I'll trust my<lb/>
blocking any day rather<lb/>
than try to get outside and<lb/>
do it on my own<lb/>
Next week the Pirates<lb/>
travel to Hattiesburg, M iss.<lb/>
to face Southern M ississ-<lb/>
ippi who upset Mississippi<lb/>
State 24-22 Saturday. ECU<lb/>
destroyed the Golden<lb/>
Eagles 49-0 in the Pirates<lb/>
opener in 1976.<lb/>
"There's no question<lb/>
what a great game our<lb/>
defense played today<lb/>
said Dye. "But offensively,<lb/>
we just don't seem to be<lb/>
having any fun out there.<lb/>
We've been very fortunate<lb/>
to win the last two weeks<lb/>
By JIMMY DUPREE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The 1978 ECU girl's<lb/>
tennis team is character-<lb/>
ized by good overall depth<lb/>
and talent. "We only re-<lb/>
quire the players in flights<lb/>
four through six to play<lb/>
consistantly and do their<lb/>
best to make good place-<lb/>
ment on all their shots<lb/>
said head coach Barbara<lb/>
Olscher. "We expect the<lb/>
top three seeds to be more<lb/>
aggressive and attack their<lb/>
opponents more<lb/>
The player who best<lb/>
exemplifies those qualities<lb/>
is junior Pat Stewart.<lb/>
Stewart is a transfer<lb/>
student from Hofstra Uni-<lb/>
versity in New York. Al-<lb/>
though classified as a junior<lb/>
this will probably be her<lb/>
only year of eligibility at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Stewart explains that at<lb/>
Hofstra they play a spit<lb/>
season, some of the<lb/>
matches are held in the fall<lb/>
and the rest in the spring.<lb/>
"My first year I only<lb/>
played the spring sched-<lb/>
ule said Stewart. "I<lb/>
played both seasons my<lb/>
second year and the fall<lb/>
season the third year.<lb/>
That's being counted as<lb/>
three full years of eli-<lb/>
gibility The matter will<lb/>
be appealed to the AIAW<lb/>
for a ruling.<lb/>
Stewart admits that she<lb/>
was unhappy at Hofstra but<lb/>
adds that "I am very satis-<lb/>
fied here at East Carolina. I<lb/>
played number one at Hof-<lb/>
stra, but they are not at the<lb/>
same level as this program.<lb/>
The competition ECU faces<lb/>
is much better<lb/>
Olscher analyses Stew-<lb/>
art as, "a consistent player<lb/>
who never argues with line<lb/>
calls. She has an excellent<lb/>
temperment for the game<lb/>
of tennis and never tries to<lb/>
cover her mistakes with<lb/>
excuses. Pat had good<lb/>
ground strokes and is not<lb/>
afraid of using the serve and<lb/>
volley technique<lb/>
During the summer,<lb/>
Stewart practiced daily with<lb/>
a teaching professional, but<lb/>
she feels that she is not<lb/>
playing as well now as she<lb/>
was at home in St. Peters-<lb/>
burg, Florida. "I haven't<lb/>
played well thus far. My<lb/>
overhead is consistent and<lb/>
my serving has been fair. I<lb/>
think my problem lately has<lb/>
been my concentration<lb/>
Pat won the second<lb/>
flight of the Methodist<lb/>
Tournament held earlier<lb/>
this season, but was unable<lb/>
to defeat her most recent<lb/>
opponent, Susan Lawless of<lb/>
Old Dominion University,<lb/>
losing 6-4, 0-6, 2-6. The<lb/>
team, however, was vic-<lb/>
torious by the score of 5-4.<lb/>
"If I could have been a<lb/>
little more patient, I prob-<lb/>
ably could have beaten<lb/>
Susan. I let a bad call in the<lb/>
first set upset me and I<lb/>
never really got my con-<lb/>
centration going again<lb/>
"I had trouble with my<lb/>
knees while I was at Hof-<lb/>
stra, but I worked hard over<lb/>
the summer on building up<lb/>
strength in them. I also<lb/>
worked on losing weight,<lb/>
which will eventually im-<lb/>
prove my speed ex-<lb/>
plained Stewart, who was<lb/>
elected co-captain by her<lb/>
teammates.<lb/>
The team has matches<lb/>
still remaining with the<lb/>
UNC Junior Varsity, St.<lb/>
Mary's, Duke, and the<lb/>
UNC Varsity. Stewart feels<lb/>
that "we should do better<lb/>
playing Carolina and Duke<lb/>
this late in the season than<lb/>
if we had played them in<lb/>
September. We are more<lb/>
prepared for them than we<lb/>
were for State and Duke<lb/>
Gamecocks<lb/>
defeat ECU<lb/>
ECU'S soccer team tra-<lb/>
veled to Columbia, South<lb/>
Carolina Friday, and were<lb/>
soundly defeated by a<lb/>
superior South Carolina<lb/>
squad 7-0.<lb/>
The Pirates will battle<lb/>
N.C. Wesleyan College to-<lb/>
day at 3XX) p.m. in the first<lb/>
of three consecutive home<lb/>
games.<lb/>
ECU wants UNC series continued<lb/>
BILL CAIN<lb/>
ByCHARLESCHANDLER<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
The ECU Board of Trustees has joined the school's<lb/>
athletic department in an effort to continue the annual<lb/>
football series between the Pirates and the North Carolina<lb/>
Tar Heels. The series is contracted throughout the 1981<lb/>
season.<lb/>
After 1981, however, the continuation of the series<lb/>
appears doubtful. The UNC athletic department has stated<lb/>
that they will no longer schedule games with teams inside<lb/>
the state of North Carolina, excluding Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Conference games.<lb/>
The ECU Board of Trustees recently made a proposal<lb/>
to draft a letter thanking UNC for their hospitality displayed<lb/>
in this season's Pirate-Tar Heel contest. The letter also was<lb/>
to include a request that the series be extended beyond the<lb/>
1981 season.<lb/>
ECU Chancellor Thomas Brewer says ECU will continue<lb/>
to negotiate with UNC, hoping that there will be some sort<lb/>
of breakthrough. "We will definately continue to talk<lb/>
said Brewer. "We feel the series is beneficial to both<lb/>
schools. All we can do is negotiate and hope for the best<lb/>
The view held by UNC at the present time seems to<lb/>
mean that the efforts by ECU are in vain. Yet, UNC Athletic<lb/>
Director Bill Cobey says ECU'S efforts are still hopeful.<lb/>
We're not saying there's absolutely no way noted Cobey.<lb/>
"We're just saying that the chances are very slim for the<lb/>
continuation of the series. The reason we feel this way has<lb/>
nothing at all to do with ECU"<lb/>
"I have the highest regard for Bill Cain (ECU Athletic<lb/>
Director) and Pat Dye (Pirate heed football coach). They<lb/>
have a first class organization<lb/>
Cobey said that the refusal of UNC to continue the series<lb/>
was being done in the best interest of the university and the<lb/>
athletic program. "We have to look at things on a practical<lb/>
basis said Cobey. "We now have seven conference<lb/>
members that we have to play, since Georgia Tech joined<lb/>
us. That leaves us only four more games to schedule. And<lb/>
we'd like to be able to play six games in Kenan Stadium.<lb/>
We actually can schedule only three games, because we<lb/>
play South Carolina each year<lb/>
"We need to use the remaining games to promote our<lb/>
program said Cobey. "We simply need to travel. The<lb/>
game with Pittsburgh this year, for example, shows how<lb/>
beneficial traveling can be to us. Games like that help our<lb/>
reputation and national exposure to grow. There is also the<lb/>
possibility that our recruiting can be bolstered by playing<lb/>
teams from other parts of the country<lb/>
ECU Athletic Director Bill Cain feels the ECU-UNC<lb/>
series has a place on the Tar Heels schedule. "We're very<lb/>
happy with the series said Cain. "We certainly would like<lb/>
to see it continue. I think the game is good for all<lb/>
concerned. The fans in North Carolina really seem to enjoy<lb/>
the game<lb/>
"This year's game, for example, was just super. The<lb/>
game was dose to the very end. Both sides had fans giving<lb/>
their all. You just cant beat that sort of atmosphere. It was<lb/>
really exciting, and that's what college football'is all<lb/>
about<lb/>
Cain noted that he could see some of UNC's reasoning<lb/>
in their decision. "Sure, we need them more than they need<lb/>
us. I just hope that they'll see fit to continue the series, on<lb/>
the basis that the game is good for both parties<lb/>
Cain said that he felt much the same way about UNC<lb/>
that Cobey feels about ECU. "They have a super<lb/>
organization said Cain. "They always treat us with the<lb/>
utmost courtesy when we play them. And I want it known<lb/>
that we really appreciate the fact that they've played us as<lb/>
much as they have. It's meant a lot to our program<lb/>
Cobey continually mentioned his respect of the ECU<lb/>
program. "As I said, our decision, has nothing to do with<lb/>
personalities noted Cobey. "A similar situation always<lb/>
evolves concerning our basketball schedule. The University<lb/>
of North Carolina at Charlotte continually requests that<lb/>
they be added to our schedule. But the same rule about<lb/>
in-state teams applies there also<lb/>
" And the U NC-C athletic director is one of my very best<lb/>
friends. I'd love to help him out, as I would ECU in football,<lb/>
but we must do what we feel is in the best interest of our<lb/>
program. That comes first<lb/>
Cain is also thinking of his university's program. "We<lb/>
are certainly better off if we can continue the series said<lb/>
Cain. "But, right now we're just waiting on them. I just<lb/>
hope they'll take another look at us<lb/>
' ' ' ' '<lb/>
aj  ? ? <lb/>
' ' f ' -??. ? ? ?r -r w<lb/>
X 4C ? 4 ????<lb/>
I<lb/>
?mi<lb/>
?wwwmiiwm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057152_0010"/><lb/>
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In intramural action<lb/>
On Your Back wins tourney<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The co-rec Softball<lb/>
championships and intra-<lb/>
mural track and field<lb/>
championships highlighted<lb/>
last week's intramural<lb/>
action. This week, the<lb/>
divisional playoffs begin in<lb/>
men's flag football play.<lb/>
Registration takes place<lb/>
this week for Putt-Putt<lb/>
co-rec play and soccer.<lb/>
Registration for those two<lb/>
events runs through this<lb/>
Thursday, October ,12.<lb/>
Co-rec Archery registration<lb/>
will run through the 18th<lb/>
and two-on-two basketball<lb/>
will be helf from Oct. 16-19<lb/>
for registration.<lb/>
The co-rec softball<lb/>
championship was won by<lb/>
On Your Back, which had to<lb/>
down the Time-Outs in two<lb/>
consecutive contests on the<lb/>
same day to win. The<lb/>
Time-Outs were favored<lb/>
going into the finals, but<lb/>
the On Your Back team<lb/>
made the finals with a 10-1<lb/>
win over the Peppers, then<lb/>
survived the first champ-<lb/>
ionship game with a narrow<lb/>
2-1 win.<lb/>
In the all-or-nothing at<lb/>
all title game, On Your<lb/>
Back prevailed by a 13-12<lb/>
score when Eddie Rhodes<lb/>
singled to score Stan<lb/>
Chambers with the winning<lb/>
run in a two-run seventh<lb/>
inning. The Time-Outs; led<lb/>
by Debbie Freeman, Billy<lb/>
Bass, Roger Horton and<lb/>
Dennis Bellamy, had led by<lb/>
as much as 12-5 in the<lb/>
championship game.<lb/>
The winners, however,<lb/>
came back and scored eight<lb/>
runs in the seventh when<lb/>
the Time-Outs intentionally<lb/>
walked three guys to pitch<lb/>
to the girls, but ended up<lb/>
walking six other players<lb/>
for nine walks which forced<lb/>
in six runs and made it<lb/>
12-11.<lb/>
That set the stage for<lb/>
the late heroics. Jeannie<lb/>
Tyler beat out an infield hit<lb/>
to score M aybell Jones with<lb/>
the tying run and then<lb/>
Rhodes delivered his game-<lb/>
winning hit to score<lb/>
Chanbers and beat the<lb/>
impending darkness.<lb/>
The Time Outs had<lb/>
grabbed their big lead with<lb/>
eight runs in the fifth<lb/>
inning. That outbreak<lb/>
brought them a 10-3 lead,<lb/>
which went to 12-5 in the<lb/>
top of the seventh, before<lb/>
the roof caved in to the tune<lb/>
of eight runs.<lb/>
In earlier games, On<lb/>
Your Back scored nine runs<lb/>
in the fifth inning of their<lb/>
game with the Peppers for<lb/>
a 10-1 lead and scored two<lb/>
runs in the fourth inning to<lb/>
overcome a 1-0 deficit<lb/>
against the Time-Outs.<lb/>
Chambers smacked a grand<lb/>
slam in the 10-1 win and<lb/>
batted in one of the two<lb/>
runs in the second game<lb/>
Jill Little batted in the<lb/>
winning run in that game.<lb/>
The men's intramural<lb/>
track and field meet was<lb/>
won by Aycock's A team,<lb/>
with four firsts in the track<lb/>
events and 110 points The<lb/>
Star Trekkers did well in<lb/>
the field events, winning<lb/>
three events, and came in<lb/>
second with 79 points<lb/>
Scott's P and L finished<lb/>
third with 58 points, edging<lb/>
jones Blazers, who had 56<lb/>
and the Independents, whc<lb/>
had 54<lb/>
Sigma Nu led all the<lb/>
fraternities with 51 points<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau and Pi<lb/>
Kappa Phi followed among<lb/>
fraternities with 45 points<lb/>
each<lb/>
Oklahoma defeats Longhorns<lb/>
By<lb/>
HERSCHEL NISSENSON<lb/>
A P Sports Writer<lb/>
The Texas Longhorns<lb/>
art convinced ? for now ?<lb/>
that Oklahoma is the na-<lb/>
tion's No. 1 college football<lb/>
team, but they're not sure<lb/>
how they'd feel if they<lb/>
played the Sooners again<lb/>
next week.<lb/>
"Oklahoma certainly is<lb/>
the No. 1 team in the nation<lb/>
 they were today Texas<lb/>
linebacker Lance Taylor<lb/>
said Saturday after the top-<lb/>
ranked Sooners rolled to a<lb/>
31-10 victory over the No. 6<lb/>
Longhorns.<lb/>
But, he added: "This is<lb/>
a game I'd like to be able to<lb/>
play again next week. We'd<lb/>
just like to go back and start<lb/>
this game over again<lb/>
That's because Okla-<lb/>
homa stormed 77 yards in<lb/>
just five plays on its first<lb/>
possession, with Billy Sims<lb/>
scoring from 18 yards out<lb/>
after a 55-yard dash by<lb/>
Kenny King. Sims, who<lb/>
carried 25 times for 131<lb/>
yards, tallied again on a<lb/>
1-yard plunge in the sec-<lb/>
ond period and the outcome<lb/>
never really was in doubt<lb/>
thereafter.<lb/>
Southern California,<lb/>
runner-up in The Associ-<lb/>
ated Press ratings, had the<lb/>
weekend off but Michigan,<lb/>
Arkansas and Penn State.<lb/>
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the 3-4-5 teams, kept pace<lb/>
with Oklahoma.<lb/>
Michigan, however, al-<lb/>
most stumbled just one<lb/>
week after Coach Bo<lb/>
Schembechler promised the<lb/>
Wolverines would be psy-<lb/>
ched up for every game.<lb/>
They fell behind Arizona<lb/>
17-7 in the first half but<lb/>
rallied to grind out a 21-17<lb/>
triumph when Russell Da-<lb/>
vis plunged across from a<lb/>
yard out with 512 minutes<lb/>
remaining ? on fourth<lb/>
down, no less.<lb/>
"We made colassal<lb/>
mistakes and we were lucky<lb/>
to win Schembechler<lb/>
said, "but maybe this will<lb/>
help us in the long run. You<lb/>
don't drop punts, you can't<lb/>
drop passes in the open and<lb/>
you can't have passes in-<lb/>
tercepted in the end zone.<lb/>
And, besides, our defense<lb/>
didn't play all that well<lb/>
Jerry Eckwood and Mi-<lb/>
chael Forrest each scored<lb/>
twice in leading Arkansas<lb/>
to a 42-3 romp over South-<lb/>
west Conference rival Tex-<lb/>
as Christian while Ron Cal-<lb/>
cagni threw a touchdown<lb/>
pass to Robert Farrell and<lb/>
directed the fourth-ranked<lb/>
Razorbacks to three other<lb/>
scores.<lb/>
TCU Coach FA. Dry<lb/>
was asked to compare<lb/>
Arkansas with Penn State,<lb/>
which crushed the Horned<lb/>
Frogs 58-0 a week ago.<lb/>
"They're not as strong<lb/>
as Penn State he said.<lb/>
"They're quicker, but not<lb/>
as physically strong. I don't<lb/>
know who would win be-<lb/>
tween them<lb/>
Arkansas Coach Lou<lb/>
Holtz said the Razorbacks<lb/>
"looked more like a com-<lb/>
plete team then what we<lb/>
had. We blocked and ex-<lb/>
ecuted pretty well on of-<lb/>
fense. We still have an<lb/>
awful lot of 15-yard pen-<lb/>
alties, and you just can't<lb/>
keep going in that vein and<lb/>
hope to be successful a-<lb/>
gainst the kind of people<lb/>
we have to play on down<lb/>
the line<lb/>
Fifth-ranked Penn State<lb/>
extended the nation's, long-<lb/>
est major college winning<lb/>
streak to 15 games and<lb/>
avenged last season's only<lb/>
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setback by blasting Ken-<lb/>
tucky 30-0.Chuck Fusma<lb/>
threw two passes to Scott<lb/>
Fitzkee to set up a short<lb/>
plunge by Matt Suhey and<lb/>
then hit Fitzkee for an<lb/>
18-yard touchdown as the<lb/>
Nittany Lions took a 14-0<lb/>
first-period lead.<lb/>
"I don't know whether<lb/>
we were a test for them or<lb/>
not. but if we were, they<lb/>
certainly passed. said<lb/>
Kentucky Coach Fran Cur-<lb/>
ci. "They beat us in every<lb/>
department. It was 30-0<lb/>
and they were still socking<lb/>
it to us.<lb/>
"As I said earlier. !<lb/>
think they're one of the two<lb/>
or three great teams in the<lb/>
country. They can do it a<lb/>
Fusina is definitely a Heis-<lb/>
man Trophy winner. And I<lb/>
think their two defensive<lb/>
tackles (Bruce Clark and<lb/>
Matt Millen) are super. We<lb/>
couldn't handle either one<lb/>
of them<lb/>
Penn State's Joe Pat-<lb/>
erno didn't sound too far<lb/>
away from claiming great<lb/>
things for his squad.<lb/>
"I thought at the start<lb/>
of the season that this could<lb/>
possibly be our best team.<lb/>
hesaid. "We're not there<lb/>
yet, but we're getting a<lb/>
little better each week "<lb/>
Rounding out the Top<lb/>
Ten:<lb/>
Seventh ranked Texas<lb/>
A&amp;M spotted Texas Tech<lb/>
an early 6-0 lead and then<lb/>
roared back to trample the<lb/>
Red Raiders 38-9 in an<lb/>
SWC game as Curtis<lb/>
Dickey carried 20 times for<lb/>
161 yards, his fourth con-<lb/>
secutive 100-yard effort of<lb/>
the season. Dickey scored<lb/>
on a 15-yard run while<lb/>
David Brothers tallied twice<lb/>
and Mike Mosley contri-<lb/>
buted a 64-yeard scoring<lb/>
gallop.<lb/>
?Alabama, the No. 8<lb/>
team, got the go-ahead<lb/>
touchdown on Tony Na-<lb/>
than's third-period plunge<lb/>
and a 36-yards pass from<lb/>
Jeff Rutledge to Rick Neal<lb/>
in the fourth quarter pro-<lb/>
vided the clincher as the<lb/>
Crimson Tide held off Wa-<lb/>
shington 20-17<lb/>
"This is the first time<lb/>
our team has looked like an<lb/>
Alabama team since the<lb/>
Nebraska game beamed<lb/>
Bear Bryant.<lb/>
? Ninth-ranked Pitt<lb/>
Dreezed past Boston Col-<lb/>
lege 32-15 as Rooster Jones<lb/>
scored twice while Rick<lb/>
Trocano tallied one touch-<lb/>
down and passed 29 yards<lb/>
to Gordon Jones for a-<lb/>
n other.<lb/>
?Tom Sorley scored<lb/>
one TD and threw for one in<lb/>
leading No. 10 Nebraska to<lb/>
a 23-0 Big Eight rout of<lb/>
No.15 Iowa State. The<lb/>
losers got into Nebraska<lb/>
territory only four times<lb/>
and managed just 50 yards<lb/>
on the ground.<lb/>
Louisiana State's,Char-<lb/>
les Alexander gained 156<lb/>
yards on 40 carries and<lb/>
scored once as the nth-<lb/>
ranked Tigers whipped<lb/>
Florida 34-21 in South-<lb/>
eastern Conference action.<lb/>
Steve Atkins' 98-yard<lb/>
kickoff return in the third<lb/>
period and Steve Trimble's<lb/>
end zone fumble recovery<lb/>
cxi the ensuing kickoff<lb/>
helped No 12 Maryland de-<lb/>
feat No. 20 North Carolina<lb/>
State in an Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Conferenoe clash.<lb/>
Auburn was the on?y<lb/>
member of the Top Twenty<lb/>
to bow to an unranked<lb/>
team.<lb/>
r<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057152_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>