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<pb facs="00057153_0001"/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Vol. 55 No.T '<lb/>
n(-<lb/>
2 October 1978<lb/>
Ingram rallies in Greenville<lb/>
U S SENATORIAL<lb/>
current ssues at the<lb/>
- Grogan<lb/>
CANDIDATE, John Ingram, spoke on<lb/>
Moose Lodge Tuesday night. Photoby<lb/>
By MARC BARNES<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Senate candidate John Ingran formally opened his<lb/>
Greenville headquarters late Tuesday afternoon, and<lb/>
participated in a political rally at a dinner held at the M cose<lb/>
Lodge Tuesday night.<lb/>
After the 5 p.m. ribbon cutting ceremony, in which he<lb/>
praised the efforts of the Greenville rescue squad, he<lb/>
attended the dinner held in his honor.<lb/>
Democrates as well as local dignitaries were present at<lb/>
the dinner.<lb/>
Among those present were Governor Jim Hunt, State<lb/>
Attorney General Rufus Edmisten, and congressman from<lb/>
the first Congressional District Walter B. Jones.<lb/>
The dinner was held at 6 p.m with entertainment<lb/>
provided by Bitter Creek, a bluegrass band.<lb/>
Attorney General Edmisten entertained the crowd with<lb/>
several country music songs.<lb/>
Attendance was estimated at 800 people. After an<lb/>
invocation, by Rev. W.T. Hickman, ECU ChancellorThomas<lb/>
Brewer made welcoming remarks.<lb/>
Brewer spoke of his conversion from Republican to<lb/>
Democrat, and he praised the American system of<lb/>
government.<lb/>
Local Democratic dignitaries were then recognized by<lb/>
Bill Hodges, chairman of the Beaufort County Democratic<lb/>
Party.<lb/>
Mrs. John McCain chairman of the State Democratic<lb/>
Party recognized several members of the council of state,<lb/>
the judiciary and the General Assembly.<lb/>
Representative Jones introduced Governor Hunt.<lb/>
Hunt spoke of past Democratic rallies, saying, "We<lb/>
have paid a high price for electing Republicans"<lb/>
He said that the Democratic party began rebuilding in<lb/>
1976, and he expressed the hope that this could continue in<lb/>
1978.<lb/>
Hunt stated that there has been progress since he had<lb/>
been in office, and listed several areas where he thought<lb/>
progress had been made.<lb/>
Hunt detailed improvements in the state primary<lb/>
reading program, and the high school testing program,<lb/>
which he stated was designed to help high school students<lb/>
attain more proficiency in reading and mathematics.<lb/>
The governor commented on the progress which has<lb/>
reportedly been made in the areas of crime prevention.<lb/>
He said that a new community watch program had been<lb/>
started.<lb/>
He also said that the state's new speedy trials law would<lb/>
enable judges to order that criminal offenders get both<lb/>
prison sentences and make restitution to their victims.<lb/>
Hunt then commented that during his administration, a<lb/>
new utilities commission that "cares about the people" had<lb/>
been established.<lb/>
He said economic growth in the state had been great<lb/>
and new employees on state payrolls had been cut by 50<lb/>
percent during his administration.<lb/>
H unt spoke of the pride he has for the country, saying he<lb/>
was especially proud of the role that President Carter had in<lb/>
the recent Camp David Middle East summit.<lb/>
He said he feels Carter has changed the country in areas<lb/>
of energy and balancing the budget.<lb/>
The Governor then urged support for Ingram, adding if<lb/>
the audience believed in people and the Democratic party,<lb/>
they would support Ingram.<lb/>
Hunt urged full party support for Representative Jones<lb/>
and state legislators.<lb/>
He ended his speech by asking the crowd to "believe<lb/>
and to care to achieve a great Democratic victory on<lb/>
November 7<lb/>
Attorny General Rufus Edmisten then spoke, saying<lb/>
Ingram's family was his greatest asset.<lb/>
He commented that Ingram was an "honest man with<lb/>
courage<lb/>
Edmisten said that the Senatorial candidate had a good<lb/>
record as Insurance Commissioner � he continued that<lb/>
Ingram promised insurance rates would not stifle the<lb/>
people.<lb/>
Senate hopeful Ingram then spoke, saying that the issue<lb/>
in the election is who will represent the people and not the<lb/>
special interests.<lb/>
He said that all of the issues confronting America today<lb/>
would fall into place with a "Peoples Man<lb/>
Ingram then described his record as a state legislator<lb/>
saying that he voted for a balanced budget in 1971.<lb/>
He noted that his department had a balanced budget.<lb/>
and had returned $1 million to the state s general fund.<lb/>
He commented further that he did not believe that<lb/>
"every penny" that is appropriated should be spent "<lb/>
Ingram then commented that under former President<lb/>
Nixon, double digit inflation was present, and he said the<lb/>
cost of living rose.<lb/>
The candidate then spoke of his support for alternate<lb/>
forms of energy. He voiced support for fusion energy,<lb/>
which he said used sea water, and he called it an<lb/>
See INGRAM, p. 3<lb/>
Police arrest 123 in drug raid<lb/>
RALEIGH, N.C (AP) �<lb/>
Raieigh police swept the<lb/>
city early this morning,<lb/>
arresting most o the 145<lb/>
persons charged in "Op-<lb/>
eration Sunshine a major<lb/>
crackdown on drugs and<lb/>
stolen property.<lb/>
Police charger) 123 per-<lb/>
sons with drug violations<lb/>
and seized a variety of<lb/>
drugs, including mari-<lb/>
iuana heroin, cocaine, am-<lb/>
phetimines. LSD and other<lb/>
chemicals.<lb/>
The drugs were valued<lb/>
at $125,000 by police<lb/>
Another $173,000 in<lb/>
stolen property was re-<lb/>
covered, and 22 persons<lb/>
were charged with their<lb/>
sale.<lb/>
Items ranged from ster-<lb/>
eos and televisions to dia-<lb/>
monds, emeralds and even<lb/>
electric ranges and dish-<lb/>
washers.<lb/>
"Our objective was to<lb/>
get the major drug dealers<lb/>
in this area, and we found<lb/>
out a long time ago that tied<lb/>
into drugs were a lot of<lb/>
other criminal activities<lb/>
said Police Chief Robert<lb/>
Goodwin.<lb/>
"These were dealers,<lb/>
not just the friendly sharing<lb/>
of drugs said Captian<lb/>
J.M. Stell.<lb/>
Two vice squad officers<lb/>
worked undercover for four<lb/>
months buying the drugs<lb/>
and property.<lb/>
Steli said some of the<lb/>
dealers were photographed<lb/>
during the sales, and a-<lb/>
gents made at least two<lb/>
purchases from each per-<lb/>
son charged.<lb/>
The operation was<lb/>
named for one of the<lb/>
undercover agents, who<lb/>
was recruited from Florida<lb/>
for the crackdown.<lb/>
Goodwin said about<lb/>
two-thirds of those charged<lb/>
had been arrested by 10<lb/>
a.m and the roundup was<lb/>
continuing.<lb/>
Lt. K.J. Johnson, head<lb/>
of the vice squad, said<lb/>
about 45 percent of the<lb/>
drugs were chemicals, the<lb/>
rest marijuana, heroin and<lb/>
presciption drugs.<lb/>
He said some of those<lb/>
arrested were college stu-<lb/>
dents, but he did not know<lb/>
how many.<lb/>
ECU Blood Drive surpasses goal<lb/>
By RICHARD JORDAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Air Force<lb/>
ROTC program in con-<lb/>
junction with the Pitt<lb/>
County Chapter of the<lb/>
Tideland Red Cross spon-<lb/>
sored last week's blood<lb/>
dirve here, accoring to Lt.<lb/>
Col Carl Tadlock. pro-<lb/>
of<lb/>
Aerospace<lb/>
fessor<lb/>
studies.<lb/>
The drive was held in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium Oct. 4,<lb/>
from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. each<lb/>
day<lb/>
According to Tadlock,<lb/>
352 pints had been col-<lb/>
lected by 5 p.m. Wed-<lb/>
nesday, and by 6 p.m.<lb/>
Thursday, 776 had been<lb/>
collected, surpassing the<lb/>
original goal of 700 pints.<lb/>
Tadlock said AFROTC<lb/>
has been sponsoring blood<lb/>
drives here on campus<lb/>
since 1950.<lb/>
He said the blood drive<lb/>
is engineered to give cadets<lb/>
experience in practical<lb/>
leadership.<lb/>
Tadlock added that the<lb/>
What's inside <lb/>
Seven<lb/>
Beauties<lb/>
SC.E CINEMA, p. 7<lb/>
A contraversial novel about the<lb/>
homosexual love between a track star and<lb/>
his coach. The Front Runner is reviewed<lb/>
Seep. 6.<lb/>
Pirates travel to Hattiesburg, Miss-<lb/>
issippi this Saturday to face the Golden<lb/>
Eagles of Southern M ississippi.See p.9.<lb/>
Representatives are interviewing stu-<lb/>
dents for future jobs See p. 3.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD interviews John<lb/>
IngramSee p. 5.<lb/>
cadets had been working on<lb/>
the project since the be-<lb/>
ginning of the semester.<lb/>
He said the entire pro-<lb/>
ject's administrative and<lb/>
planning work was done by<lb/>
the cadets, and that the<lb/>
entire project would be<lb/>
broken down and analyzed<lb/>
in order to offer sug-<lb/>
gestions to improve the<lb/>
drive in the following years.<lb/>
Tadlock praised his ca-<lb/>
dets as he spoke of the<lb/>
efforts of each individual to<lb/>
make the drive a success.<lb/>
He said also that each<lb/>
cadet would recieve a grade<lb/>
for his or her participation<lb/>
in the drive.<lb/>
According to Beth Kim-<lb/>
ball, a cadet in charge of<lb/>
administrative aspects of<lb/>
the drive, long waiting lines<lb/>
posed a problem.<lb/>
Kimball said the lines<lb/>
were caused because there<lb/>
were not enough nurses to<lb/>
process the students.<lb/>
24 stations were set up<lb/>
and stayed full from open-<lb/>
ng to closing, she said. The<lb/>
proiect was carefully ob-<lb/>
served and records were<lb/>
kept of the slack times, the<lb/>
busy times, and the aver-<lb/>
age times it took to be<lb/>
processed and to donate,<lb/>
according to Kimball.<lb/>
According to Tadlock,<lb/>
the main concern of the<lb/>
students was not in giving<lb/>
the blood but in the long<lb/>
waiting lines.<lb/>
Tadlock said that steps<lb/>
were taken to try to speed<lb/>
up the processing of the<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Tadlock said the Red<lb/>
Cross could not handle the<lb/>
amount of blood that came<lb/>
through causing the drive<lb/>
to be cut down to two days<lb/>
as opposed to three days as<lb/>
it was in previous years.<lb/>
In closing, Kimball<lb/>
added that congratulations<lb/>
should be given to the<lb/>
ROTC Cadets who put an<lb/>
estimated 900 man hours in<lb/>
to the project.<lb/>
She said the professional<lb/>
and nursing students<lb/>
should also receive thanks<lb/>
for their estimated 131<lb/>
working hours.<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS GATHER for a little<lb/>
food for thought.<lb/>
Photo by Steve Romero<lb/>
Writer's guild formed<lb/>
for literary students<lb/>
By RICHY SMITH<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
A writers guild is being<lb/>
organized on campus for all<lb/>
interested persons, accord-<lb/>
ing to Terry Davis. ECU<lb/>
English professor.<lb/>
An informal group met<lb/>
earlier in the week to<lb/>
discuss the basis, purpose,<lb/>
and various ideas of the<lb/>
guild.<lb/>
Davis said a person<lb/>
does not have to be in the<lb/>
writing program to be a<lb/>
part of the writers' guild.<lb/>
"There are serious and<lb/>
dedicated writers around<lb/>
here and not all are in the<lb/>
program Davis stated.<lb/>
They are in other fields<lb/>
and do not have the time to<lb/>
devote to both as major<lb/>
areas of study, he added.<lb/>
"The guild hopefully<lb/>
will do what a good writing<lb/>
program does<lb/>
Davis said this group of<lb/>
writers will share their<lb/>
knowledge with other stud-<lb/>
ents.<lb/>
"Writing can be<lb/>
taught Davis stated. "It<lb/>
takes a joint effort of all<lb/>
that know how Two or<lb/>
three cannot do it alone<lb/>
"We have to start<lb/>
somewhere, maybe this or-<lb/>
ganization is it he said.<lb/>
If the group approves,<lb/>
different committees may<lb/>
be established to keep the<lb/>
group active and in close<lb/>
touch with the administra-<lb/>
tion. Davis commented<lb/>
According to Davis the<lb/>
committee will provide<lb/>
checklists for writers on<lb/>
professional standards and<lb/>
set up film series directed<lb/>
towards writers.<lb/>
Davis said the group<lb/>
may want to create files for<lb/>
writers' use<lb/>
The files would probab-<lb/>
ly contain booklists of diffe-<lb/>
rent writers, biographies,<lb/>
examples of different types<lb/>
of stories, other interests<lb/>
directed towards the writer<lb/>
and writing, added Davis<lb/>
"Id like to see a group<lb/>
here create a magazine<lb/>
Davis said<lb/>
See GUILD, p. 3)<lb/>
Transit system breakdowns<lb/>
inconvenience students<lb/>
By JANE BIDDIX<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU transit system<lb/>
is the only one in the<lb/>
university network that is<lb/>
owned and operated by the<lb/>
students and one of the few<lb/>
in the U.S. according to<lb/>
Transit Manager, Robbey<lb/>
Rogers.<lb/>
Rogers said that since<lb/>
classes began there have<lb/>
been several major break-<lb/>
downs that have resulted In<lb/>
unreliable service.<lb/>
"When a breakdown<lb/>
occurs there is just no way<lb/>
to get to every stop and let<lb/>
the students know<lb/>
Rogers stated.<lb/>
He suggests if the bus<lb/>
doesn't show up within 15 -<lb/>
20 minutesof the scheduled<lb/>
stop, it won't be there at<lb/>
all.<lb/>
When it is known ahead<lb/>
of time that a bus will not<lb/>
be running, signs are post-<lb/>
ed at the bus stops.<lb/>
According to Rogers the<lb/>
possibility of having bus<lb/>
service announcements on<lb/>
the radio is being looked<lb/>
into.<lb/>
He said most break-<lb/>
downs are minor and the<lb/>
buses can be back on<lb/>
schedule within an hour or<lb/>
two.<lb/>
Rogers also stated that<lb/>
the transit system is a<lb/>
major service to students<lb/>
and transports approximat-<lb/>
ely 11,000 eacn week.<lb/>
He asks that students<lb/>
realize the bus is not a taxi<lb/>
and that Individual stops<lb/>
take extra time.<lb/>
"People need to be at<lb/>
the stop five minutes before<lb/>
the time listed on the<lb/>
schedule as it is the depar-<lb/>
ture not arrival time he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Scheduled are to be<lb/>
posted at the stops this<lb/>
week, according to Rogers.<lb/>
"The main concern is<lb/>
regular serivoe to students<lb/>
but buses are available to<lb/>
organizations for charter<lb/>
upon request said<lb/>
Rogers.<lb/>
Rogers said he looks<lb/>
into all complaints and tries<lb/>
to be fair to everyone.<lb/>
The SGA legislature re-<lb/>
cently requested funds for<lb/>
the possible purchase of a<lb/>
new bus to aid in back up.<lb/>
DUE TO MANY breakdowns in the ECU transit system, the<lb/>
SGA legislature has requested funds to an additional bus.<lb/>
Photo by Sfeve Romero)<lb/>
f<lb/>
�<lb/>
 r c <lb/>
<pb facs="00057153_0002"/><lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 12 October 1978<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
The Student Union Cof-<lb/>
feehouse Committee will<lb/>
present John Worthington<lb/>
this Thurs. and Fri Oct. 12<lb/>
and 13. at 8 p.m. in room<lb/>
15. Mendenhall.<lb/>
John is noted for his<lb/>
lightning quick finger pick-<lb/>
ing and his bluegrass rendi-<lb/>
ns In addition to his<lb/>
talents on various musical<lb/>
instruments, he also has a<lb/>
fine voice.<lb/>
As always, the Coffee-<lb/>
house offers a wide selec-<lb/>
tion of snacks and a friendly<lb/>
atmosphere Admission is<lb/>
 50 cents.<lb/>
F6SF<lb/>
Have you been praying<lb/>
for lost loved ones, but for<lb/>
some reason you haven't<lb/>
seen any results? Well this<lb/>
Thurs. night in room 212, in<lb/>
Mendenhall, the Full Gos-<lb/>
pel Student Fellowship will I<lb/>
be discussing the how and !<lb/>
whys of praying for lost .<lb/>
loved ones. Salvation is<lb/>
still a personal experience,<lb/>
but remember; God cares<lb/>
and promises your prayes<lb/>
will be answered! See you<lb/>
there!<lb/>
Billiards<lb/>
Signing<lb/>
Sign Language Club or-<lb/>
ganizational meeting,<lb/>
Wed Oct. 18 at 5 p.m. in<lb/>
the Mendenhall Multi-<lb/>
ose Room.<lb/>
For ECU students who<lb/>
taken sign language<lb/>
iss s or have some know<lb/>
Ige of sign language and<lb/>
ild like to meet with<lb/>
rudents to practice<lb/>
- � � - � skills<lb/>
Phi Alpha<lb/>
ere will be a meeting<lb/>
' - � Alpha Tneta. history<lb/>
or society on Tues<lb/>
Oc 17. at 7:30 p.m. in the<lb/>
Rtcnard C Todd Room in<lb/>
B'ewster Bldg.<lb/>
All members are urged<lb/>
to attend. Also, all history<lb/>
and minors who are<lb/>
"�rested in joining are<lb/>
ted to attend. Refresh-<lb/>
ments will be served.<lb/>
GBP<lb/>
Anv GBP Pledge who<lb/>
I not attend the meeting<lb/>
Tues Oct 10 must be<lb/>
sent at the meeting<lb/>
Oct. 12 in Menden-<lb/>
244 at 7 p.m. All<lb/>
essays and dues must be<lb/>
 by Oct. 24<lb/>
The Day-Student Bil- ;<lb/>
liards Tournament sponso- j<lb/>
red by Mendenhall will be<lb/>
held Mon Oct. 23 at 6<lb/>
p.m. All full-time day-<lb/>
students interested in part-<lb/>
icipating should register at<lb/>
the Billiards Center.<lb/>
The four winner of the<lb/>
double elimination tourna-<lb/>
ment will participate in the<lb/>
All-Campus Billiards Tour-<lb/>
nament scheduled for Nov.<lb/>
13 and 14.<lb/>
The first and second<lb/>
place All-Campus finishers<lb/>
will represent ECU in the<lb/>
Association of College<lb/>
Unions - International reg-<lb/>
ional face-to-face tourna-<lb/>
ments in Knoxville, Tenn.<lb/>
in February. All expenses<lb/>
for the tournament will be<lb/>
paid by Mendenhall.<lb/>
Registration forms and<lb/>
details are available at the<lb/>
Billiards Center and the<lb/>
final day to register is Fri<lb/>
Oct. 20.<lb/>
Study area<lb/>
On the Hill, a quiet and<lb/>
air-conditioned Study Area<lb/>
has been set up in the Scott<lb/>
Hall Basement. Anyone is<lb/>
welcome to come to the<lb/>
M RC meeting room on<lb/>
Tuesday, Wednesday, or<lb/>
Thursday Nights between<lb/>
8:00 and 11 :00 p.m.<lb/>
Additional hours may<lb/>
be added.<lb/>
Chi Beta<lb/>
Chi Beta Phi, scientific<lb/>
fraternity meeting, 7.30<lb/>
p.m Thurs Oct. 12, 1978<lb/>
in Biology Reading room<lb/>
(2nd floor).<lb/>
Acitvities will be plan-<lb/>
ned for this school year.<lb/>
All members are urged<lb/>
to attend or contact presi-<lb/>
dent Ken Russell 758-6747.<lb/>
BUCCANEER<lb/>
The BUCCANEER is<lb/>
sending out letters to ser-<lb/>
vice and social organizat-<lb/>
ions. If you have not<lb/>
received one, please send<lb/>
your name and address to<lb/>
the BUCCANEER by Oct.<lb/>
23. If we do not receive an<lb/>
address by then you will not<lb/>
be represented in the year-<lb/>
book. Thank you!<lb/>
ACEI<lb/>
Comics<lb/>
All ACEI (Association<lb/>
for Childhood Education<lb/>
International), members<lb/>
and other interested per-<lb/>
sons are invited to attend<lb/>
the October meeting on<lb/>
Oct. 11 at 7:30 p.m. in<lb/>
Speight Rm. 242.<lb/>
Dr. Ingram, professor of<lb/>
the School of Education will<lb/>
speak on the "Professional<lb/>
File Nominations for club<lb/>
officers will also be taken.<lb/>
Theta Alpha<lb/>
The Theta Alpha Chap-<lb/>
ter of Alpha Kappa Alpha<lb/>
Sorority will sponsor a<lb/>
Pre-Homecoming celebra-<lb/>
tion Fri Nov. 10 from 10<lb/>
p.m. to 2 a.m. at the<lb/>
Ramada Inn 264-By-Pass,<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Advance tickets are $3<lb/>
per couple and $2 per<lb/>
individual and may be<lb/>
obtained mid-October from<lb/>
any Theta Alpha member.<lb/>
Exhibit<lb/>
Gregory Moll has a<lb/>
senior art exhibit of realist-<lb/>
ic port rait ive and a set of<lb/>
water colors of a movie that<lb/>
he has presented to the<lb/>
Beach Boys. Come see this<lb/>
show at Mendenhall.<lb/>
Law Society<lb/>
The Law Society will be<lb/>
having an organizational<lb/>
meeting Wed Oct 18. The<lb/>
meeting will be held at 7<lb/>
p.m. in the M ulti-Purpose<lb/>
room of Mendenhall. If you<lb/>
are interested in laws and<lb/>
or law school please come!<lb/>
Or go by Dr. Dr. Davis<lb/>
Stevens office in room 214<lb/>
Wright Annex and sign up.<lb/>
Bicyclists<lb/>
Artists<lb/>
The ECU Comic Book<lb/>
Club will hold their first<lb/>
meeting Wednesday, Oct-<lb/>
ober 18, at the Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, room 247,<lb/>
from 6:30 to 9:00 p.m.<lb/>
Program includes new<lb/>
elections, the November 12<lb/>
Comic Book Convention.<lb/>
All interested persons are<lb/>
invited. For more Infor-<lb/>
mation call 758-6909 before<lb/>
7:00p.m.<lb/>
Bake sale<lb/>
Announcing the great<lb/>
pumpkin bake sale sponso-<lb/>
red by the fall pledge class<lb/>
of Kappa Delta sorority.<lb/>
Proceeds will go to<lb/>
Kappa Delta's national phi-<lb/>
lanthropy  the cripples<lb/>
hospital in Richmond, Va.<lb/>
Selection of goodies in-<lb/>
clude cupcakes, brownies,<lb/>
cookies, and cakes. Order<lb/>
between now and Fri Oct.<lb/>
27.<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
The last chance tovegis-<lb/>
ter for the MSC Day-<lb/>
Student Bowling Tourna-<lb/>
ment is Fri Oct. 13.<lb/>
Registeration forms and<lb/>
tournament details are av-<lb/>
ailable at the Bowling<lb/>
Centerin Mendenhall.<lb/>
Day-student bowlers<lb/>
will have two weeks to bowl<lb/>
nine games and total pins<lb/>
will decide the top eight<lb/>
winners in the men's divi-<lb/>
sion and women's division.<lb/>
The sixteen winners will<lb/>
compete in the All-Campus<lb/>
Tournament to be held<lb/>
Nov. 9.<lb/>
Two five member teams<lb/>
will represent ECU at the<lb/>
Association of " College<lb/>
Unions - International reg-<lb/>
ional face-to-face tourna-<lb/>
ments to be held in Knox-<lb/>
ville Tenn. in February. All<lb/>
expenses for the tourna-<lb/>
ment will be paid by<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
Now art students can<lb/>
learn what they need to<lb/>
know and where to get<lb/>
answers to business quest-<lb/>
ions before they make<lb/>
costly mistakes. A series of<lb/>
one hour seminars are<lb/>
planned monthly on The<lb/>
Business of Art. Experts in<lb/>
several vital areas have<lb/>
been invited by the ECU<lb/>
Print Group to talk to the<lb/>
art students. Be sure to<lb/>
attend all of these sessions<lb/>
which are free. Each sem-<lb/>
inar will be held on a Friday<lb/>
at 11 a.m. in the jrkins<lb/>
auditorium. The schedule<lb/>
begins this Friday.<lb/>
A list of potential quest-<lb/>
ions is being prepared for<lb/>
each of the seminars now.<lb/>
If you have questions you<lb/>
want answered, address<lb/>
your questions to Laura<lb/>
Jackson. Questions can be<lb/>
delivered to her box in the<lb/>
Art Office.<lb/>
Anybody interested in<lb/>
an afternoon of fun and<lb/>
socializing as a group on<lb/>
two-wheels Sunday after-<lb/>
noon.<lb/>
WHERE: Water fount-<lb/>
ain ECU near Cotten Hall.<lb/>
WHEN: 1 o'clock, P.M.<lb/>
Groug will leave promptly<lb/>
at 1:15.<lb/>
NEED: Bicycle and<lb/>
yourself.<lb/>
Be prepared for bike<lb/>
ride of 10-20 miles, depend-<lb/>
ing on how far anyone can<lb/>
go. Don't be worried we<lb/>
don't plan to kill anyone by<lb/>
making them ride too far.<lb/>
The ride is used as a<lb/>
meeting of the ECU Bicycle<lb/>
Club. Have any questions<lb/>
about about the ride or<lb/>
club call Tom at 752-9847.<lb/>
The bicycle club would like<lb/>
to welcome any and all ECU<lb/>
full-time students at attend<lb/>
our meetings. This club is<lb/>
newly.<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
Build<lb/>
The Student Wfiters'<lb/>
Guild will meet at 3 p.m.<lb/>
Mon Oct. 16 in Austin<lb/>
room 207. Committed and<lb/>
enthusiastic persons are<lb/>
essential.<lb/>
The Mendenhall Day-<lb/>
Student Bowling Tourna-<lb/>
ment will be held Mon<lb/>
Oct. 16 through Fri Oct.<lb/>
27. Day-student bowlers<lb/>
will have two weeks to bowl<lb/>
nine games and total pins<lb/>
will decide the top eigr<lb/>
winners in the men's div.<lb/>
sion and women's division.<lb/>
The sixteen winners will<lb/>
compete in the All-Campus<lb/>
Tournament to be held<lb/>
Nov. 9.<lb/>
Two five member teams<lb/>
will represent ECU at the<lb/>
Association of College<lb/>
Unions - Internation reg-<lb/>
ional face-to-face tourna-<lb/>
ments to be held in Knox-<lb/>
ville, Tenn. in February<lb/>
All expenses for the tour-<lb/>
nament will be paid by<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
Registeration forms and<lb/>
details are available at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Bowling and<lb/>
Billiards Center. The final<lb/>
day to register is Fri Oct.<lb/>
13.<lb/>
Car wash<lb/>
The sweethearts' o1<lb/>
KAY are having a car wash<lb/>
Sat Oct. 14 at the Pitt<lb/>
Plaza Shell station located<lb/>
at the corner of Arlington<lb/>
and Greenville Blvd. Price<lb/>
will be $1.50.<lb/>
Ping pong<lb/>
The final day to register<lb/>
for the Mendenhall Day-<lb/>
Student Table Tennis Tour-<lb/>
nament is Fri Oct. 13.<lb/>
Registeration forms and<lb/>
tournament details are av-<lb/>
ailable at the Billiards<lb/>
Center at Mendenhall.<lb/>
The tournament, to be<lb/>
held Tues Oct. 17 in the<lb/>
Table Tennis Rooms at<lb/>
Mendenhall at 7 p.m will<lb/>
determine the four winners<lb/>
in the men's division and<lb/>
women's division who will<lb/>
represent the day-students<lb/>
in the All-Campus Tourn-<lb/>
ament which will be held<lb/>
Nov. 7.<lb/>
One All-Campus winner<lb/>
in each division will rep-<lb/>
resent ECU in the Associa-<lb/>
tion of College Unions -<lb/>
International regional face-<lb/>
to-face tournaments to be<lb/>
held in Knoxville, Tenn. in<lb/>
February. All expenses for<lb/>
the tournament will be paid<lb/>
by Mendenhall.<lb/>
Gamma Beta<lb/>
The ECU Chapter of the<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi Society<lb/>
will be conducting an ex-<lb/>
tensive house-to-house<lb/>
campaign for the United<lb/>
Cerebral Palsy of No<lb/>
Carolina in Greenville or<lb/>
Oct 12-17. The Gamma<lb/>
Beta Phi Society is an honor<lb/>
and service organization for<lb/>
students m colleges anc<lb/>
universities in the Un <lb/>
States<lb/>
The funds raisedwiii gc<lb/>
to the United Cereb'd<lb/>
Palsy which provides pro-<lb/>
gram services to the more<lb/>
than 18,000 children and<lb/>
adults across our state<lb/>
services include Home<lb/>
Service Consultants, one<lb/>
Adult Enrichment Center<lb/>
and four Development<lb/>
Centers for children One of<lb/>
these Devlopmenta! Cer I<lb/>
ers is located in Greeny<lb/>
and provides services for<lb/>
cerebral palsied childre'<lb/>
our area. Please give your<lb/>
support to Gamma Beta<lb/>
with their campaign<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Concert<lb/>
LTC<lb/>
Too many tests? Roach-<lb/>
es in your room? Not<lb/>
enough pennies in your<lb/>
piggy bank7<lb/>
If you haven't got your<lb/>
act together, LTC at ECU<lb/>
invites you to develop into a<lb/>
man or woman with answ-<lb/>
ers instead of a dorm rat<lb/>
with headaches.<lb/>
Leadership Training<lb/>
Classes, every Thursday.<lb/>
Starting at 7 p.m. tonight in<lb/>
Brewster B-103.<lb/>
The Student JJmo-<lb/>
Major Attractions Com" I<lb/>
tee will prese<lb/>
BROTHERS JOHNSON<lb/>
with special gues?<lb/>
MOTHER'S FINEST<lb/>
Saturday. Oct 14. at 8 p <lb/>
in Mmges Coliseum.<lb/>
Tickets will be $4 � -<lb/>
ECU students and $6 for<lb/>
the public. All tickets are<lb/>
available from the Centra<lb/>
Ticket Office in Mender-<lb/>
Student Center. In ac<lb/>
ion, public tickets can be<lb/>
purchased from<lb/>
Apple Records - East F<lb/>
St Greenville. N C<lb/>
School Kid s Records -<lb/>
Georgetown Shoppes<lb/>
Greenville. N.C The<lb/>
Music Shop - Green-<lb/>
ville Square Mail. Green-<lb/>
ville. N.C.<lb/>
Only public tickets<lb/>
will be available at the<lb/>
door<lb/>
Brothers Johnson<lb/>
With special guest<lb/>
ECU Students $4.00<lb/>
Mother's Finest<lb/>
Saturday, October 14, 1978<lb/>
8p.m.<lb/>
Minges Coliseum PubUc s6-00<lb/>
Central Ticket Office hours:<lb/>
I0-4(M-F)<lb/>
 Friday is the LAST DAY to buy Student tickets<lb/>
 Only Public Tickets will be sold at the door. <lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Itorsde @<lb/>
FOR SALE: '76 Deluxe<lb/>
Motorbecane MOPED for<lb/>
$275. Runs well and is in<lb/>
good shape. Call 752-5238<lb/>
and ask for M ike.<lb/>
FOR SALE. '74 Ford Van<lb/>
by owner that runs and<lb/>
looks Hke e�v With V-8<lb/>
3P- :  ��jfo trans<lb/>
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/>
Call 756-0166.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '75 Pontiac<lb/>
"Astra" st at ion wagon<lb/>
Automatic, power brakes<lb/>
and steering, luggage rack,<lb/>
woodgrain siding, good<lb/>
tires in excellent cond. Call<lb/>
752-9374 after 3 p.m.<lb/>
$1850.00<lb/>
FOR SALE: Shoes and<lb/>
boots in small sizes (5-6) all<lb/>
new or practically new.<lb/>
Bass, Earth Shoe, Famo-<lb/>
lare - reasonable priced.<lb/>
Call 752-3709 if interested.<lb/>
FOR SALE: One pair<lb/>
womens Frye Boots size 7<lb/>
Vz. New heels and soles in<lb/>
good oond. $25. Call Karen<lb/>
758-0962.<lb/>
FOR SALE: New Minolta<lb/>
SRT-MCII 35mm single<lb/>
reflex camera with 1.4<lb/>
lense $200. Call 758-4982.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 76 Covette<lb/>
white T-Top 11,000 miles<lb/>
$9,000. Call 524-5590.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Oil heaters,<lb/>
gas stoves, bow and<lb/>
arrows, 4 ft. handcrafted<lb/>
boat, AKC Great Dane, 2<lb/>
yr. old. Call 758-4617.<lb/>
FOR SALE. Need some<lb/>
clothes to update your fail<lb/>
wardrobe? I will sew wrap-<lb/>
around skirts, shirts, pull-<lb/>
over tops, dresses, skirts or<lb/>
whatever you need.<lb/>
Reasonable prices. Call<lb/>
Maureen at 752-7635.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Two top quality<lb/>
brank name stereos<lb/>
(AMFM, turntables, 8-<lb/>
t racks, good speakers).<lb/>
Very good condition. Also<lb/>
one 10-speed bike in good<lb/>
condition. Assorted albums<lb/>
etc. Call 752-5736 after 6<lb/>
p.m. Qreg or Bill.<lb/>
FOR SALE: A Lloyd's<lb/>
AMFM Multiplex stereo,<lb/>
also has 8-track player, a<lb/>
BSR turntable, and 2 large<lb/>
speakers with 16 oz. mag-<lb/>
nets. Sounds great Excel-<lb/>
lent buy $100 or best offer.<lb/>
Call or see Steve Shelton at<lb/>
430 Ay cock Dorm, 752-<lb/>
4117.<lb/>
ptraond(J)<lb/>
NEEDED: Rock n' Roll<lb/>
band despara.eiy needs<lb/>
practice room. Also needs<lb/>
guitarist or keyboard<lb/>
player. 752-1715, 752-2604.<lb/>
THE PORTRAIT Gallery;<lb/>
Would you like to have your<lb/>
portrait taken, senior res-<lb/>
ume pictures, weddings,<lb/>
color or black &amp; whites<lb/>
print. We also photograph<lb/>
art, portfolios. Call us and<lb/>
see. 758-0962 - If the<lb/>
answer service is on please<lb/>
leave your name and phone<lb/>
number.<lb/>
PART-TIME: Office help<lb/>
wanted; Afternoon hours,<lb/>
must have good typing<lb/>
skills. Call 758-2141 for<lb/>
appointment.<lb/>
tor rat �(<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDEDto<lb/>
share completely furnished<lb/>
2 bdrm. apt. Call or set<lb/>
Brad 103-B Eastbrcx<lb/>
Apts. 752-1547.<lb/>
4<lb/>
f<lb/>
� . , � �, � -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057153_0003"/><lb/>
 I<lb/>
12 October 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
Pag<lb/>
3<lb/>
Recruiting officers interview<lb/>
seniors for future occupations<lb/>
A RECRUITING OFFICER interviews a<lb/>
senior for job opportunities.<lb/>
Photo by Steve Romero<lb/>
By JULIE EVERETTE<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Recruiting officers re-<lb/>
presenting 21 corporations<lb/>
will be on the ECU campus<lb/>
again this year, according<lb/>
to Furney James, director<lb/>
of Career Planning and<lb/>
Placement.<lb/>
James said represent-<lb/>
atives will interview seniors<lb/>
graduating fall or spring<lb/>
semester.<lb/>
A list of companies and<lb/>
their schedules interview<lb/>
dates is available in the<lb/>
Placement office in Jenkins<lb/>
Alumni building.<lb/>
James urged students<lb/>
to register as early as<lb/>
possible before the sched-<lb/>
ules are full.<lb/>
Representatives will<lb/>
select a number of students<lb/>
from the interviews to<lb/>
determine the best qual-<lb/>
ified student for the job.<lb/>
Students who register<lb/>
will receive a copy of the<lb/>
College Placement annual<lb/>
listing companies across<lb/>
the country that employ.<lb/>
Registered students will<lb/>
also receive a monthly<lb/>
bulletin and brochure giv-<lb/>
ing tips on job interviews<lb/>
and resume writing, ac-<lb/>
cording to James.<lb/>
He added that 75 per-<lb/>
cent of the students who<lb/>
register with the placement<lb/>
office usually find jobs.<lb/>
The primary job of the<lb/>
placement office is to en-<lb/>
courage students to think<lb/>
where they will be a year<lb/>
from now James said.<lb/>
He said the Placement<lb/>
office will give students<lb/>
positive steps to take while<lb/>
job hunting.<lb/>
James stressed that a<lb/>
positive attitude toward the<lb/>
job market is very im-<lb/>
portant.<lb/>
The Placement Service<lb/>
is tree to all seniors and<lb/>
graduate students, and to<lb/>
Alumni for one year follow-<lb/>
ing graduation.<lb/>
LanguageArts conference set for Nov. 2-3<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
'Competency Testing<lb/>
m the Secondary Schools.<lb/>
Interpreting Results and<lb/>
Implementing Remediat-<lb/>
ion" is the theme of ECU's<lb/>
seventh annual Language<lb/>
Arts Conference Nov. 2-3.<lb/>
The conference, design-<lb/>
ed as an open forum for<lb/>
education personnel, in-<lb/>
cludes lectures, discussions<lb/>
and workshop activities.<lb/>
This year's event will<lb/>
concern the 1977 compet-<lb/>
ency testing program in<lb/>
North Carolina schools.<lb/>
The impact of test<lb/>
results on teachers' work<lb/>
will be examined and<lb/>
routes to efficient remediat-<lb/>
ion will be suggested,<lb/>
according to Janice Hardi-<lb/>
son Faulkner of the ECU<lb/>
English faculty, conference<lb/>
coordinator.<lb/>
Six main sessions will<lb/>
be featured. Speakers and<lb/>
their topics are:<lb/>
The Fulcher Commis-<lb/>
sion Report: Its Objectives<lb/>
and Its Recommendation<lb/>
State Rep. Malcolm Fulc-<lb/>
her. counselor, West Cart-<lb/>
eret High school;<lb/>
"Remediation in the<lb/>
Language Arts: Some Basic<lb/>
Consideration Dr. Denny<lb/>
Wolfe, director of the N.C.<lb/>
Dept. of Public Instruct-<lb/>
ion's language arts division<lb/>
"Competency Testing<lb/>
in the Richmond City Public<lb/>
Schools: An overview<lb/>
Lois Jones, assistant super-<lb/>
intendent, Richmond, Va.<lb/>
City Public Schools;<lb/>
"What Competency<lb/>
Testing Reveals Dr. Bill<lb/>
Brown, director of the N.C.<lb/>
Dept. of Public Instruct-<lb/>
ion's research division.<lb/>
"The Newspaper in the<lb/>
Classroom Sandy<lb/>
Mathis, education special-<lb/>
ist with the Charlotte Ob-<lb/>
server, and<lb/>
"Folklore and the lang-<lb/>
uage Arts Commission<lb/>
Drs. Karen Baldwin and<lb/>
James Kirkland of the ECU<lb/>
Department of English.<lb/>
Also appearing on the<lb/>
prograrmduringeach of the<lb/>
conference's two days is<lb/>
Dr. Erwin Hester, chair-<lb/>
man of the ECU English<lb/>
department.<lb/>
Opportunities will be<lb/>
provided for conference<lb/>
participants to ask quest-<lb/>
ions of the speakers repard-<lb/>
ing their areas of expertise.<lb/>
"Although it focuses<lb/>
specifically on the work of<lb/>
English teachers, this con-<lb/>
ference is designed to<lb/>
afford participants a sche-<lb/>
dule of discussions and<lb/>
activities tailored to the<lb/>
needs of personnel respon-<lb/>
sible for the entire course of<lb/>
study in secondary<lb/>
schools said Ms.<lb/>
Faulkner.<lb/>
Ingram seeks supvort here<lb/>
continued from p. 1<lb/>
mexhaustable supply of energy.<lb/>
Ingram criticized his Republican opponent, saying that<lb/>
the constituency should not depend on the "$5 million<lb/>
dollar man' to vote with the people.<lb/>
He charged that his opponent had voted against the<lb/>
farm bill, and in doing so. "voted against everyfarmer<lb/>
and cigarette factory in North Carolina<lb/>
He also charged that his opponent had voted against the<lb/>
Hazardous Substance Act. and he related his charge to the<lb/>
recent dumping of PCB's on North Carolina highways.<lb/>
Ingram then voiced support for anti-trust refrom.<lb/>
Saying that North Carolina has a great system of public<lb/>
education<lb/>
He then quoted President Kennedy, who said that "No<lb/>
one man can change things, but a great party can<lb/>
Ingram promised to formulate a National Health<lb/>
Insurance plan, and he said that he had introduced the<lb/>
18-year old voting rights bill in 1971.<lb/>
He said that North Carolinawas one of the 34 states<lb/>
necessary to ratify the amendment to the Constitution.<lb/>
The candidate commented further that he has a record<lb/>
in election Jaw reform, and he remarked that he believed in<lb/>
getting things done.<lb/>
He said because he has this record of action, he doesn't<lb/>
need $5 million dollars to get elected.<lb/>
Ingram ended his speech by calling for the party to "go<lb/>
forth to lead this great nation and he remarked further<lb/>
that "God's work must truly be our own<lb/>
GUILD<lb/>
continued from p. 1<lb/>
The magazine would be<lb/>
composed of Eastern and<lb/>
Southern profiles, he said.<lb/>
He praised the Rebel as<lb/>
a literary art magazine<lb/>
saying, "it's like a jewel<lb/>
that the university wears<lb/>
Davis said the guild<lb/>
hopes to establish a pro-<lb/>
gram to have guest writers<lb/>
and speakers at ECU.<lb/>
Which would not only<lb/>
broaden the organization,<lb/>
but also the writing pro-<lb/>
gram as well.<lb/>
"The group will learn<lb/>
from each other and deve-<lb/>
lop each other's talents as<lb/>
writers he said.<lb/>
Thursday Family Night<lb/>
ALL YOU<lb/>
CAN EAT<lb/>
trout  $1.95<lb/>
shrimp $3.95<lb/>
OYSTERS $425<lb/>
FLOUNDER ���������� $3.95<lb/>
Dinner meal Includes Golden Crisp<lb/>
French Fires, Cole Slaw, Tartar Sauce and<lb/>
the world's best hushpupples.<lb/>
mom<lb/>
IMOft Sunthra Thur� 430-9:00<lb/>
CPAffaAfl Fri &amp; Sat 430-10:00<lb/>
Friday's Seafood<lb/>
2311S. Evans St.<lb/>
Budweisei:<lb/>
V" U U � � sX' nX &amp; �? 4 X� kL � X" 1 X sL A" L !� L� L 1 x� A u u u &amp; &amp; k k g 4f 42. tt. <lb/>
 V r T F Y V T V T F" F F F Y F F F F F F F F V F T F V F V " v T F F F <lb/>
7v<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
SUPERMARKET<lb/>
�r<lb/>
Sw<lb/>
Win a Trip to<lb/>
Florida and More<lb/>
LOCAL, STATE,<lb/>
REGIONAL AND<lb/>
NATIONAL<lb/>
COMPETITION<lb/>
 Competition begins at the<lb/>
� local level right on your<lb/>
�. cam pas. Win the local<lb/>
 competition and you'll go<lb/>
 to the State competition.<lb/>
Win State and you'll compete<lb/>
 in the Regional. Win the<lb/>
Regionals and we'll send<lb/>
' you to Florida during<lb/>
"Spring Break" to compete<lb/>
� for the NATIONAL<lb/>
� Budweiser College Super<lb/>
�. Sports title.<lb/>
 If you win your local competitions<lb/>
 and move into State, Regional or<lb/>
� National competition, all travel,<lb/>
 food and lodging expenses will be<lb/>
paid by your local Budweiser<lb/>
rholesaler and Anheuser-Busch.<lb/>
Plus , some really great trophies<lb/>
and prises will be awarded<lb/>
I au levels of competition<lb/>
The Games<lb/>
1. Volleyball<lb/>
2. 880 Relay<lb/>
3. 6 Pack pitch in<lb/>
4. Obstacle Course<lb/>
5. Frisbee Relay<lb/>
6. Tug-of -War<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Registration <lb/>
Intramural office room 204 �<lb/>
Memorial Gym. Registration &amp;<lb/>
ends Oct. 35. Rules meeting<lb/>
Oct. 26 st 6pm in 105 <lb/>
Memorisl. Date of Competition<lb/>
Oet.28 st Sooth Side Intramural<lb/>
Field. <lb/>
<lb/>
ft<lb/>
ft<lb/>
<lb/>
ft<lb/>
ft<lb/>
ft<lb/>
Ground Beef Patties<lb/>
$l.39lb. In 3 lb. lots or more<lb/>
Cheerios 68<lb/>
is oz. box reg $1.19<lb/>
Kellogg's Corn Flakes58'<lb/>
is oz. box reg. 83'<lb/>
Total Cereal68'<lb/>
ix os. box reg. $1.09<lb/>
Wise Potato Chips79<lb/>
7 12 os. bag<lb/>
Bananas<lb/>
S lbs.Sl.OO<lb/>
Western Lettuce38'head<lb/>
FREE CART SERVICE<lb/>
AVAILABLE FOR STUDENTS<lb/>
VISA<lb/>
1000 123 ISb 1W<lb/>
master charge<lb/>
THE INTERBANK CARD<lb/>
<lb/>
UMHMMftMl<lb/>
<pb facs="00057153_0004"/><lb/>
Out of the closet<lb/>
There is an item on the upcoming California<lb/>
ballot known as Proposition Six, a proposal to<lb/>
ban homosexual teachers from public schools.<lb/>
This question is the most recent in the national<lb/>
backlash against gay rights. Voters are under<lb/>
the impression that when they approve such<lb/>
anti-gay ordinances they are voting agaisnt<lb/>
homosexuality; instead they are saying that<lb/>
any minority's civil rights can be revoked with<lb/>
the pull of a lever.<lb/>
In 1973, the American Psychiatric Associat-<lb/>
ion stopped classifying homosexuality as an<lb/>
abnormality to the extent of being a psychosis<lb/>
or neurosis. It is now classed as a disturbance,<lb/>
as being deviant from the norm, but not to the<lb/>
extent that it is abnormal.<lb/>
Anita Bryant's fanatical, at times maniacal,<lb/>
crusade to "save the children" is, unfortunate-<lb/>
ly, spreading with the growing conservative<lb/>
trend in politics. Her argurment of homosexual<lb/>
recruting" (as if there were some under-<lb/>
ground organization of gays offering life<lb/>
enslavement) in the schools is unfounded, and<lb/>
her claim some years ago that the drought then<lb/>
plaguing California was God's punishment to<lb/>
California for passing pro-gay legislation is<lb/>
ridiculous.<lb/>
Throughout history, gays have contributed<lb/>
to the advancement of western civilization,<lb/>
most notably in the lively arts, but also in<lb/>
science and athletics.<lb/>
Government has no right to legislate<lb/>
morality. The activities between consenting<lb/>
adults is of no concern to a Government.<lb/>
Attempts to enforce such laws involve<lb/>
frightening invasions of privacy and<lb/>
Orwellian surveillance.<lb/>
Gays always have and always will be with<lb/>
us. Many societies learn to accept it, such as<lb/>
ancient Greece, where it was common. It is<lb/>
time the American public realized that fact and<lb/>
learned to accept homosexuals as individuals,<lb/>
not as a threatening "Them"<lb/>
American Journal<lb/>
Asbestos can be deadly<lb/>
By DA VID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
VALLEJO. CA � Dominador Guerrero sits in his<lb/>
wheelchair in the shadow of the union hall, just out of reach<lb/>
of the summer sun. With him his Joel Koch, a young<lb/>
therapist at the hospital where Guerrero is a heart patient.<lb/>
Guerrero is 71, a Filipino immigrant who came to<lb/>
America years ago to find work. He found it, and it may now<lb/>
be klUng him.<lb/>
"I was a mechanic at the Hunters Point shipyard in San<lb/>
Francisco from 1948 to 1966 he says in softly accented<lb/>
English. 'There was lotsof asbestos in the air there, i knew<lb/>
it was there, but I didn't know it could hurt you. I only found<lb/>
out a few years ago. after I quit, that it could make you<lb/>
Sick<lb/>
He pulls on a cigarette, and Dominador Guerrero<lb/>
smiles. His eyes drift across the parking lot to the mobile<lb/>
government van where, in a few minutes, he will be tested<lb/>
for asbestosis. lung cancer, and mesthelioma, a rare cancer<lb/>
of the chest and stomach lining unheard of 20 years ago.<lb/>
Only people who have been heavily exposed to asbestos<lb/>
are known to get mesothelioma. It is always fatal.<lb/>
Guerrero is one of 2,000 past and present shipyard<lb/>
workers being tested at several sites around the San<lb/>
Francisco Bay Area, where upwards of 250,000 workers<lb/>
have been exposed in the shipyards on the docks since<lb/>
World War II.<lb/>
Today the clinic is in Vallejo, a small industrial city<lb/>
northeast of San Francisco. Vallejo is near by the Mare<lb/>
Island Navy Yard, where 5,000 people work with asbestos<lb/>
and where, last year, 59 percent of a small group of workers<lb/>
were found to have highly abnormal chest X-rays.<lb/>
The free screening clinic is the brainchind of Dr. Phil<lb/>
Polokoff. a 32-year-old specialist in occupational health at<lb/>
Herrick Hospital in nearby Berkeley.<lb/>
This is the first study of its kind in the country<lb/>
Polokoff says. "Others have been done at particular<lb/>
workplaces, but this one was open to any worker with a<lb/>
minimum of 10 years' exposure to asbestos who called us.<lb/>
People called from all over northern California. One guy<lb/>
called in from South Carolina. See that guy in the camper?"<lb/>
Polokoff queries, tossing his arm at a Winnebago<lb/>
lumbering across the lot. "He camped herelastnight. These<lb/>
people are scared<lb/>
What s scaring them is an announcement by Health,<lb/>
Education and Welfare Secretary JosephCalifano last<lb/>
spring that as many as half of the 11 million Americans<lb/>
exposed to large amounts of asbestos in the workplace may<lb/>
eventually die from their exposure.<lb/>
The first of them are men and women of Dominador<lb/>
Guerro's generation � workers exposed during and<lb/>
immediately after World War II, who are just now<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over 50 years<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Doug White<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER<lb/>
Leigh Coakley NEWSEDITOrS<lb/>
TRENDS EDITOR<lb/>
Steve Bachner<lb/>
Julie Everette<lb/>
Aicki Gliarmis<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/>
beginning to sicken and die after the 10-to-40 year<lb/>
incubation period that is normal for these diseases.<lb/>
Asbestos is everywhere in our society: in automobile<lb/>
brake lining, in heat-resistent potholders, in ceiling<lb/>
insulation and pipes, in cement � in some 3,000 products,<lb/>
all told. Valued for its resistance to heat and acidity, it is the<lb/>
basis of a billion dollar industry that employs 90,000 people.<lb/>
Asbestos is a mineral found in rock. In its commercial<lb/>
torm, it isa white, fiberous substance.<lb/>
These fibers, microscopic in size, are easily inhaled,<lb/>
whence they lodge in the lungs. Scar tissue forms around<lb/>
the embedded fibers, making it difficult to breathe. This<lb/>
can weaken the heart, as well as the lungs, resulting in a<lb/>
slow, silent death by suffocation, or sudden death from a<lb/>
heart attack.<lb/>
Asbestos workers develop lung cancer eight times as<lb/>
often as the general population, and asbestosis � also<lb/>
known as "white lung" � more often than that.<lb/>
Asbestosis results in shortness of breath, chest pains, a<lb/>
nagging cough. It is untreatable and incurable, and is often<lb/>
fatal.<lb/>
These statistics are all the more appalling when one<lb/>
realizes that they are avoidable. While government and<lb/>
industry have only recently acknowledged the lethal<lb/>
qualities of asbestos, medical researchers have known<lb/>
about them for decades.<lb/>
According to reseaarch cited by Bob Fowler, an<lb/>
associate of Polokoff s at the Berkeley-based Western<lb/>
Institute for Occupational Environmental Sciences<lb/>
(WIOES). "In 1918, 12 years before the relationship<lb/>
between asbestos exposure and asbestosis was confirmed,<lb/>
American and Canadian insurance companies stopped<lb/>
insuring asbestos workers. In 1935, research in the U.S.<lb/>
and England indicated a link between asbestos exposure<lb/>
and lung cancer. This link was confirmed in 1955<lb/>
"There has been a coverup Fowler asserts. "People<lb/>
just weren't told of the risks. Even now, things are bad.<lb/>
California, for example, passed a law last year � the first of<lb/>
its kind in the country � requiring employers who use<lb/>
cancer-causing agents to give their employees regular<lb/>
physical exams. But the law isn't worth a damn, because<lb/>
it's not adequately enforced.<lb/>
"On the federal level, OSHA (Occupational Safety and<lb/>
Health Administration) doesn't have enough inspectors and<lb/>
punitive powers to be effective. Besides, OSHA doesn't<lb/>
have authority over federal installations, like Mare Island<lb/>
WIOES, formed only five months ago, can do little about<lb/>
that. But this screening program is the first step towards<lb/>
diagnosing the problem and letting affected workers know<lb/>
where they stand. The Institute plans to tour the country<lb/>
next spring with an educational program on the dangers of<lb/>
asbestos.<lb/>
Already, however, it is running a deficit. A federal grant<lb/>
of $150,000, some $60,000 from organized labor, and<lb/>
'v additional private funds<lb/>
(including Polokoff s own)<lb/>
leaves WIOES thousands<lb/>
short of paying for the<lb/>
screening program. Private<lb/>
industry has been solicited<lb/>
for funds, but none have<lb/>
been forthcoming.<lb/>
Still, Polokoff, Fowler,<lb/>
and friends, private cru-<lb/>
saders with a very public<lb/>
cause, are determined to<lb/>
see it through.<lb/>
"Asbestos affects all of<lb/>
us Polkoff says. "There's<lb/>
going to be an epidemic of<lb/>
asbestos-related disease in<lb/>
this country in the next<lb/>
decade. We've only seen<lb/>
the tip of the iceberg<lb/>
ADVERTISING MANAGER<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
Sam Rogers<lb/>
A small flotilla of new<lb/>
cars pulls into the parking<lb/>
lot behind the union hall, as<lb/>
Joel Kocj helps Dominador<lb/>
Guerrero up the stairs to<lb/>
the government van and<lb/>
the waiting X-ray machine.<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
WRC defends campus security<lb/>
ToFOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Dear Students:<lb/>
This letter is being<lb/>
written to show Women's<lb/>
Residence Council's sup-<lb/>
port of a much maligned<lb/>
group on our campus � the<lb/>
campus security force. It is<lb/>
also being written to es-<lb/>
tablish some of the facts<lb/>
and fallacies associated<lb/>
with thisgroup.<lb/>
The most important fact<lb/>
to remember about our<lb/>
police force is that it's<lb/>
officers are here to protect<lb/>
not to censor. The security<lb/>
force is composed of 19<lb/>
officers, two of which are<lb/>
women.<lb/>
They are given a train-<lb/>
ing period before being<lb/>
certified to carry a weapon,<lb/>
and no matter what we are<lb/>
told at freshman orien-<lb/>
tation, they do have the<lb/>
power to arrest.<lb/>
They are in effect, a<lb/>
mini-police force patroiing<lb/>
a mini-city, our campus.<lb/>
Campus security, like<lb/>
many other police forces<lb/>
inspire many different<lb/>
emotions in our students.<lb/>
Most of us immediately<lb/>
resent their presence on<lb/>
campus and develop nega-<lb/>
tive attitudes.<lb/>
Others feel they have a<lb/>
basis for their resentment<lb/>
because of an expensive<lb/>
parking ticket or towing<lb/>
fee. But remember stu-<lb/>
dents, our police do not<lb/>
make the policies, they<lb/>
merely enforce them.<lb/>
The major complaints<lb/>
about our police force<lb/>
seems to center around the<lb/>
night shift. Common com-<lb/>
plaints are that the stu-<lb/>
dents have to wait for the<lb/>
officers to open the door<lb/>
after 1 a.m.<lb/>
The important thing to<lb/>
remember about these<lb/>
complaints is the fact that<lb/>
our police officers are hu-<lb/>
mans too! Imagine what<lb/>
you would feel like after<lb/>
walking for four hours in 20<lb/>
degree weather or suffering<lb/>
through Greenville's fa-<lb/>
mous monsoon seasons.<lb/>
Also please examine<lb/>
what your attitude was at<lb/>
the time. As for the com-<lb/>
plaint of the officers open-<lb/>
ing the door late, these<lb/>
people do sometimes have<lb/>
the responsibility of patrol-<lb/>
ling two or three dorms at<lb/>
the same time.<lb/>
They simply cannot be<lb/>
two places at once! The<lb/>
officers also open the doors<lb/>
on a first come, first serve<lb/>
basis � the only fair way<lb/>
For every sullen, in-<lb/>
efficient officer on the<lb/>
security foroe we can name<lb/>
three who genuine<lb/>
Their mam failing $e<lb/>
be that they are hun<lb/>
beings fighting agai�s'<lb/>
age old stereotype an I<lb/>
limited budget some s<lb/>
ply get tired of f i g r t mg<lb/>
Give them a cha<lb/>
students, treat our off.<lb/>
with respect and ?he a<lb/>
respond with kindness<lb/>
Women's Residerce Co<lb/>
Towing editorial's<lb/>
'vision falls short'<lb/>
Kales Who Are You<lb/>
album review refuted<lb/>
ToFOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
After reading<lb/>
Edward Kale's review of<lb/>
the new Who album, we<lb/>
couldn't let it go without<lb/>
stating an opposing opin-<lb/>
ion. Mr. Kale seems to<lb/>
have totally misunderstood<lb/>
Townshend's direction at<lb/>
this time. He also seems to<lb/>
possess a misconstrued pic-<lb/>
ture of the Who.<lb/>
. The record, as far as we<lb/>
can see, is a reply to those<lb/>
who have written about the<lb/>
Who and have kept expec-<lb/>
tinq Townshend to be the<lb/>
rock'n'roll punk of the<lb/>
19fc0 s all his life. Towns-<lb/>
hor,j s lyrics on "New<lb/>
Song" and "Who Are you"<lb/>
deal specifically with his<lb/>
struggle with his role as the<lb/>
� grajnddaddy of punk rock.<lb/>
Townshend has come to<lb/>
a point of confidence as an<lb/>
artist once more and ex-<lb/>
presses himself with the<lb/>
same inger and joyful<lb/>
exhilaration that has per-<lb/>
meated the music of the<lb/>
Who.<lb/>
Mr. Kale made the<lb/>
statement that the lyrics<lb/>
seem to be written simply<lb/>
to fill space. We don't see<lb/>
how he has arrived at that<lb/>
conclusion. We have a<lb/>
strong feeling that he spent<lb/>
little time really listening<lb/>
and assessing what Towns-<lb/>
hend s trying to convey in<lb/>
mai oe songs.<lb/>
Juut a superficial look at<lb/>
"Guitar and pen" and<lb/>
"Sister Disco" (Towns-<lb/>
hend s statement about<lb/>
disco) show more than<lb/>
space filler. Along with his<lb/>
misunderstanding of the<lb/>
lyrics is his misconception<lb/>
of bassist John Entwhistle.<lb/>
Why aren't his songs Who<lb/>
songs? If "Had Enough"<lb/>
isn't a Who song, we don't<lb/>
know what is.<lb/>
As to the statement<lb/>
concerning the use of<lb/>
itrings or "non-rock in-<lb/>
struments we would like<lb/>
to remind Mr. Kale of the<lb/>
W ho's usage of arps (string<lb/>
synthesizers) on previous<lb/>
Who albums Quadrophenia<lb/>
and Tommy.<lb/>
Mr. Kale needs to<lb/>
realize that change and<lb/>
growth are only natural and<lb/>
that to resist them is<lb/>
ridiculous. As long as the<lb/>
Who continue to grow as<lb/>
creatively as they did on<lb/>
this album, we will find no<lb/>
fault. The music must<lb/>
change, as Townshend puts<lb/>
it, and people must change<lb/>
also.<lb/>
For the Who to produce<lb/>
a record of solid rock'n'roll<lb/>
tailored to meet the expec-<lb/>
tations of those that want<lb/>
yesterday's music today<lb/>
would be a waste, and the<lb/>
music and lyrics would then<lb/>
tru.y be tired and lacking In<lb/>
energy.<lb/>
Dan Butler<lb/>
Jim Black<lb/>
ToFOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
This letter is in re-<lb/>
sponse to an unsigned<lb/>
editorial appearing in the<lb/>
Oct. 5, 1978 edition of the<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD calling<lb/>
for a feasibility study of an<lb/>
SGA owned and operated<lb/>
towing service.<lb/>
The innovative intent<lb/>
expressed by the article is<lb/>
applauded. Not often does<lb/>
the public hear from<lb/>
bureaucrats seeking to re-<lb/>
duoe the cost of govern-<lb/>
ment (in this case the<lb/>
government body con-<lb/>
cerned istheSGA).<lb/>
However, the vision of<lb/>
the author falls short in<lb/>
developing the full scope of<lb/>
potential benefits to be<lb/>
derived from such an idea<lb/>
Imagine the possible cost<lb/>
reductions accruing to gov-<lb/>
ernment from an SGA<lb/>
operated McDonalds fran-<lb/>
chise, U.S. Army potatoe<lb/>
farms and paperclip fac-<lb/>
tories, or a congressional ly<lb/>
owned and operated real<lb/>
estate firm.<lb/>
The record of private<lb/>
enterprise is not good. Nine<lb/>
out of 10 new ventures fail<lb/>
However, the efficiency of<lb/>
'Let them<lb/>
change their<lb/>
own tires'<lb/>
ToFOUNTAINHEAD.<lb/>
In response to the edi-<lb/>
torial "Chivalry is dead at<lb/>
ECU what do women<lb/>
really want? If its tires they<lb/>
want changed, then what<lb/>
about their rights? If its<lb/>
rights they want changed,<lb/>
then let them change their<lb/>
own tires.<lb/>
Doug Groome<lb/>
Bobby Christiansen<lb/>
Bill Bonney<lb/>
Editor'9 noto: "Chvary ,s<lb/>
�ltECU'WasaForum<lb/>
ftfrr, not an editorial)<lb/>
government projects is<lb/>
any better<lb/>
Lacking is the n<lb/>
vation and efficiency<lb/>
Suiting from having c<lb/>
personal assets mves-<lb/>
Given the reliance on rr<lb/>
opoly power in the to<lb/>
proposal, the project n<lb/>
prove profitable if view-<lb/>
with myopia<lb/>
Forgotten is the I<lb/>
that profits of private <lb/>
mg operations are taxe<lb/>
part for the support<lb/>
ECU Also forgotten is a<lb/>
tradition in which gove'<lb/>
ment does not disp<lb/>
private enterprise in p<lb/>
viding non-essential -<lb/>
vices<lb/>
The good intentions<lb/>
the author of the tow<lb/>
proposal are not que-<lb/>
stioned Bureaucratic e'<lb/>
of Greenville s towing ser-<lb/>
vice operators must, how-<lb/>
ever, be treated with sus-<lb/>
picion<lb/>
Everyor e s best inter-<lb/>
ests would be served r:<lb/>
putting the clamps on the<lb/>
towing propose re'ore<lb/>
such a potentia �<lb/>
sive precedent is estat<lb/>
� ished<lb/>
Charles k<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
policy<lb/>
Forumietters must con-<lb/>
tain the name, address,<lb/>
phone number, and signa-<lb/>
ture of the author and<lb/>
should be typed or neatly<lb/>
printed<lb/>
Letters are subject to edit-<lb/>
ing for brevity, obscenity,<lb/>
and libel.<lb/>
No more than three letters<lb/>
on any subject will be<lb/>
printed in one issue.<lb/>
Letters should be limited to<lb/>
three typewritten, double-<lb/>
spaced pages.<lb/>
Letters must be received by<lb/>
noon on Mondays and<lb/>
Wednesdays either at the<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD office or<lb/>
at the information desk in<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
(a<lb/>
<pb facs="00057153_0005"/><lb/>
� I<lb/>
W T- - 12 Octobf 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Paq<lb/>
� Senate candidate John Ingram speaks on issues<lb/>
8y MARC BARNES<lb/>
ana RICHV SMITH<lb/>
A ssitant News Editors<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD. When<lb/>
you get to Washington if<lb/>
you w.n the election, what<lb/>
do you hope to change once<lb/>
you get there?<lb/>
iNGRAM Well i<lb/>
�ve actions<lb/>
"d to be taken by this<lb/>
ntrV to curve inflation<lb/>
and ' don't believe in<lb/>
talking about problems I<lb/>
believe ,n doing something<lb/>
about them, and last year<lb/>
the lobbyists were able to<lb/>
Get a law changed which<lb/>
turned the insurance com-<lb/>
mision loose to set their<lb/>
own rates.<lb/>
That was a bad law and<lb/>
1 want to go to the United<lb/>
States Senate to change the<lb/>
'aw on the lobbyists so that<lb/>
we'll put more competition<lb/>
in the system and take<lb/>
away this special privilege<lb/>
that insurance companies<lb/>
have and make them sub-<lb/>
ject to our anti-trust laws.<lb/>
Make the free enterprise<lb/>
system work.<lb/>
Of couse I have a record<lb/>
of fighting working for<lb/>
young people all my poli-<lb/>
tical life, I introduced that<lb/>
18 year old vote bill in 1971.<lb/>
You might ask the $5<lb/>
million-dollar-man where<lb/>
he stood on that issue.<lb/>
Have you gone back and<lb/>
looked at his editorials in<lb/>
1971? See if he furnished a<lb/>
list of all his editorials to<lb/>
you.<lb/>
In addition to that,<lb/>
because of our work, we<lb/>
were able to get a young<lb/>
man's car insurance rates<lb/>
reduced and based on his<lb/>
record and not on his age or<lb/>
sex and our Republican<lb/>
opponent is tied and con-<lb/>
nected to the casualty in-<lb/>
surance lobbyist who for<lb/>
over 5 years lobbied against<lb/>
our efforts to get that law<lb/>
changed, so young people,<lb/>
don't need to look at him to<lb/>
help them in their pocket-<lb/>
books. If there ever was a<lb/>
man that has stood against<lb/>
the old people and the<lb/>
young people, it is our<lb/>
Republican opponentbecause<lb/>
he's tied and connected to<lb/>
the special interest political<lb/>
lobbyist out-of-state and<lb/>
in-state.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: What<lb/>
do you think about the<lb/>
proposed tax credit for<lb/>
students instead of the<lb/>
federal loan program?<lb/>
INGRAM : I took a position<lb/>
on the tax credits. I favored<lb/>
that. That was back in the<lb/>
primary a long time ago.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: Would<lb/>
Greek Forum<lb/>
By RICKIGLIARMIS<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
c<lb/>
Everything iS oasicaliy<lb/>
juiel on the Greek scene<lb/>
s week. The word that<lb/>
I'd best describe frater-<lb/>
nities and sorortties at this<lb/>
� is preparation.<lb/>
There are several things<lb/>
that are being prepared for<lb/>
the future For instance,<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha Field<lb/>
Day would not be a success<lb/>
' weren't for hard work<lb/>
and preparation.<lb/>
Neither would home-<lb/>
coming be successful.<lb/>
Every house is busy now<lb/>
determining how they will<lb/>
be decorating their house<lb/>
s year, who they will<lb/>
select as a homecoming<lb/>
sponsor, and who will head<lb/>
up what committee. There<lb/>
are lunches and brunches,<lb/>
shopping sprees and floats,<lb/>
invitations to be mailed and<lb/>
house clean ups to be<lb/>
organized<lb/>
The list could goon and<lb/>
on. Sound like alot of work?<lb/>
"Ya darm tootin" it's alot<lb/>
of word, but it's also alot of<lb/>
fun and juslanother way to<lb/>
bring all the Greeks on<lb/>
campus together.<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS:<lb/>
The Lambda Chi<lb/>
Alpha's will be sending the<lb/>
rules for the field day out to<lb/>
each house this week.<lb/>
The Lambda Chi's won<lb/>
the ROTC Blood Drive<lb/>
trophy for the fraternity<lb/>
which gave the most blood.<lb/>
The fraternity had 21 bro-<lb/>
thers fo donate.<lb/>
The Lambda Chi's in-<lb/>
ducted 12 new associate<lb/>
members last week.<lb/>
The Sigma Tau Gamma<lb/>
pledges will be having a car.<lb/>
wash this Saturday from 11<lb/>
a.m. until 5 p.m. at Briley's<lb/>
Exxon on South Memorial<lb/>
Drive. The cost will be $2 a<lb/>
car.<lb/>
The Sig Taus are also<lb/>
planning an all-campus<lb/>
"pre-game Buc-fest" on<lb/>
Nov. 4 from 11 a.m. until 4<lb/>
p.m. before the Appala-<lb/>
chian game. Further details<lb/>
will be forthcoming in the<lb/>
next few weeks.<lb/>
The Chi Omega's have<lb/>
finished their flag football<lb/>
season. They came in third<lb/>
place.<lb/>
The Alpha Xi Delta's<lb/>
won the women's division<lb/>
of the All-Campus Track<lb/>
Meet held last week. The<lb/>
Alpha Xi's are also in the<lb/>
play-offs for intramural<lb/>
ECU alumnus speaks at<lb/>
science club meeting<lb/>
Bv KA Y WILLIAMS<lb/>
Staff Writer <lb/>
e ECU Science Club<lb/>
st meeting of the<lb/>
vear Mon . Oct 2 at<lb/>
4:00 p. m in room 402.<lb/>
nagan Building.<lb/>
Jerry Everhart, an<lb/>
ECU graduate and an em-<lb/>
ployee of the N.C. Zoo in<lb/>
Asheboro. presented a<lb/>
show on the zoo. its current<lb/>
projects. and proposed<lb/>
projects. 1<lb/>
Everhart also showed<lb/>
the group teacher's aid<lb/>
materials made by teachers<lb/>
in Randolph County and the<lb/>
N.C. Zoo Research and<lb/>
Development Department.<lb/>
According to Everhart,<lb/>
the materials should pro-<lb/>
vide children with a more<lb/>
interesting way of learning<lb/>
about animals.<lb/>
The. club is not restric-<lb/>
ted to science majors but is<lb/>
open to anyone, according<lb/>
to President Vickie Suggs.<lb/>
Dale Rice serves as<lb/>
faculty advisor to the club.<lb/>
The next meeting will<lb/>
be held Nov 1.<lb/>
A glass blower at ECU<lb/>
will present the program.<lb/>
All interested persons<lb/>
are invited to attend.<lb/>
BKI<lb/>
-�?�<lb/>
-�Buy one 12 pound<lb/>
"V T-bone at $4.99 and<lb/>
get 2nd FREE. Dinner<lb/>
includes choice of potato<lb/>
Texas Toast and salad from<lb/>
our FREE all-you-can eat<lb/>
Salad Bar.<lb/>
 11 Jl1 Mil<lb/>
Child's Plate FREE<lb/>
Includes Hamburger,<lb/>
French Fries and Lollipop<lb/>
with FREE drink.<lb/>
520 North Greenville Blvd<lb/>
(264 By Pass) Greenville<lb/>
New Hours<lb/>
SunThurs. 11 a.m9 p.m.<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat. 11 a.m10 p.m.<lb/>
football.<lb/>
The Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
sororitv has been asked<lb/>
again this year to work as<lb/>
hostesses at the annual<lb/>
Greenville Tobacco Show.<lb/>
The Tri-Sigs are also<lb/>
beginning to plan for their<lb/>
annual Tri-Sig Pie Throw.<lb/>
Details will be forthcoming<lb/>
soon.<lb/>
This week, the Kappa<lb/>
Delta's have been busy<lb/>
planning their Founder's<lb/>
This week, the Kappa<lb/>
Deltas have been busy<lb/>
planning their Founder's<lb/>
Day activities and their<lb/>
house mother's tea.<lb/>
The Kappa Deltas are<lb/>
working hard collecting<lb/>
clothes for the Lambda Chi<lb/>
clothes drive.<lb/>
you advocate building up<lb/>
the basic grant program or<lb/>
would you advocate using<lb/>
the grant program from the<lb/>
federal standpoint, and if<lb/>
so, would you increase the<lb/>
funding for it?<lb/>
INGRAM : Alright, I'd have<lb/>
to look at that. I'd have to<lb/>
look at that because I don't<lb/>
know if I'm totally familiar<lb/>
with specifically what<lb/>
you're talking about. I'd<lb/>
like to see what the situ-<lb/>
ation is exactly now and<lb/>
what any proposals are.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: A lot of<lb/>
people have talked about<lb/>
the bigness of the federal<lb/>
government and balancing<lb/>
the budget. How can this<lb/>
be done?<lb/>
INGRAM : I've said the<lb/>
budget should balance just<lb/>
as soon as possible. The<lb/>
minimum goal should be<lb/>
set of 3 a year and in<lb/>
three to four years the<lb/>
budget can be balanced. I<lb/>
have a record of voting for a<lb/>
balanced budget as a legi-<lb/>
slator in 1971 before there<lb/>
was constitutional require-<lb/>
ment for balancing the<lb/>
budget in North Carolina.<lb/>
Also as Insurance Com-<lb/>
missioner, I've returned<lb/>
monies to the state general<lb/>
funds that were appro-<lb/>
priated to my department<lb/>
for its use, saving tax<lb/>
payers' money and then<lb/>
five years I returned over<lb/>
one million dollars. That's<lb/>
in addition to saving mil-<lb/>
lions and millions of dol-<lb/>
lars.<lb/>
Something like approx-<lb/>
imately 200 million dollars<lb/>
I've saved North Caro-<lb/>
linians and disapproval of<lb/>
unjustified rate increases<lb/>
and in reducing rates in<lb/>
many areas such as mobile<lb/>
tobacco barns and tobacco<lb/>
sale warehouses which I cut<lb/>
in half and a third for the<lb/>
tobacco sale warehouses.<lb/>
Also, in our consumer<lb/>
division, I reorganized the<lb/>
commissioner's office. Our<lb/>
consumer division which I<lb/>
established in 1973 has<lb/>
helped over a hundred-<lb/>
�<lb/>
thousand North Carolinians<lb/>
to the tune of 17 million<lb/>
dollars and our Republican<lb/>
opponent has criticized us<lb/>
for having that consumer<lb/>
number in our political<lb/>
literature.<lb/>
Everyday I'm out we<lb/>
talk to people. My people<lb/>
who work out on the roads<lb/>
who are not even in the<lb/>
consumer division pick up<lb/>
consumer complaints.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD: How do<lb/>
you think the tide of rising<lb/>
unemployment can be su-<lb/>
pressed especially among<lb/>
the young?<lb/>
INGRAM : I have said that<lb/>
we need to develop a<lb/>
system of tax incentives to<lb/>
private enterprise so that<lb/>
we can put our unemployed<lb/>
people to work in the<lb/>
regular course of business.<lb/>
a normal situation rather<lb/>
creating make-work overn-<lb/>
ment jobs. I believe that<lb/>
this is the kind of program<lb/>
that can work in this<lb/>
country.<lb/>
HAVE A "BOTTOMLESS" CUP OF<lb/>
PEPSI FREE<lb/>
ENJOY A FREE<lb/>
PEPSI WITH THE<lb/>
PURCHASE OF<lb/>
ANY PLATTER,<lb/>
QUARTER<lb/>
CHICKEN OR<lb/>
SANDWICH.<lb/>
Offer good only<lb/>
with coupon.<lb/>
1 Oth and Charles Streets-Greenville<lb/>
33 ClUB<lb/>
" CieeriYille's Crly "<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057153_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHfcAU 12 October 1978<lb/>
Ken Miller directs ECU's production of Pippin<lb/>
By SUE ELLEN MCLEOD<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Drama Department<lb/>
of ECU has added a new<lb/>
member to its dance fa-<lb/>
culty, Ken Miller.<lb/>
Miller comes to ECU<lb/>
from New York where he<lb/>
spent the past 15 months in<lb/>
the Broadway cast of<lb/>
Pippin.<lb/>
Although New York is<lb/>
now his home, Miller is<lb/>
originally from Florida<lb/>
where he completed his<lb/>
education at Florida State<lb/>
University.<lb/>
Miller feels that his<lb/>
work is his main force and<lb/>
tries to vary the media in<lb/>
which he performs. Sixty<lb/>
percent of his experience is<lb/>
in choreography; however,<lb/>
he also has previous ex-<lb/>
perience in teaching and<lb/>
directing.<lb/>
He was Head of the<lb/>
Dance Department at Mer-<lb/>
cyhurst College in Erie,<lb/>
Penn. and has performed<lb/>
on National tours in Irene<lb/>
and Good News, as well as<lb/>
his recent work on Broad-<lb/>
way. Miller has also dir-<lb/>
ected West Side Story and<lb/>
Pippin in summer stock<lb/>
packages.<lb/>
Miller claims that the<lb/>
fine reputation fo ECU'S<lb/>
Drama Department, as well<lb/>
as that of its chairman,<lb/>
Edgar Loessin, was the<lb/>
force which attracted him to<lb/>
�CU.<lb/>
Mitier's appointment at<lb/>
ECU is for one semester<lb/>
only, during which he will<lb/>
direct the department's<lb/>
first major production,<lb/>
Pippin, and offer classes in<lb/>
Advanced, Intermediate,<lb/>
and Point Ballet.<lb/>
Although he feels the<lb/>
technical facilities of the<lb/>
department are very poor<lb/>
(scon to be improved by the<lb/>
planned renovations to<lb/>
The Front Runner<lb/>
Gay love story is 'contrived'<lb/>
By DAVID W. TREVINO<lb/>
Staff Wrier<lb/>
Homosexuals exist. It's a fact of life. And they're not all<lb/>
transvestitesor fluttering effeminate types.<lb/>
They're your classmates, your professors, the guys who<lb/>
put gas in your car, your friends, maybe even your fathers<lb/>
and brothers. Homosexuals are just people. And people are<lb/>
everywhere you go, even if you go to ECU.<lb/>
A friend of mine once recommended The Front Runner<lb/>
to me as a way to understand the reasons a mutal friend was<lb/>
gay It seemed like a good recommendation. I love to run<lb/>
and when the novel first appeared in hardback in 1974 with<lb/>
its $20,000 advertising budget it was deemed by some<lb/>
critics to be potentially the first significant and popular gay<lb/>
love story.<lb/>
Since then it has undergone at least three paperback<lb/>
printing, so someone is reading it. It's even been a required<lb/>
text m some freshman honors seminars here at the Harvard<lb/>
on the Tar.<lb/>
So. dnven by a guilty liberal's conscience and a simple<lb/>
desire to understand something that I found myself facing<lb/>
daily m college. I read the book. Unfortunately, The Front<lb/>
Runner proved to be little more than a contrived and<lb/>
sentimental gay love story with a few beautiful1 passages<lb/>
about running.<lb/>
The Front Runner is about the romance between<lb/>
O.ympic distance runner Billy Sive and his coach, Harlan<lb/>
Brown. They met as refugees from the straight world at<lb/>
Prascou CoHege �n Pennsylvania, the private plaything of a<lb/>
wealthy eastern liberal.<lb/>
Harlan was a rising, young track coach at Penn State<lb/>
with a wife and two sons when a rumor that he had shown<lb/>
sexual interest in one of his runners shattered his existence<lb/>
there Although the rumor was false it still caused Harlan to<lb/>
lose both his job and his family.<lb/>
This divorce from pretense allowed Harlan to live openly<lb/>
Author's note-David.W. Trevino is an independent liberal<lb/>
whose views in no way reflect the concensus of<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD staff.<lb/>
as a homosexual prostitute in the gay ghetto of New York.<lb/>
He stayed in the city and suffered through a series of cold,<lb/>
harsh experiences until he was rescued by Joe Prescott to<lb/>
coach track at his tiny college in Pennsylvania.<lb/>
Billy doesn't appear on the scene there for four years. In<lb/>
1974 he and two other international class runners who are<lb/>
alsogay transfer from the University of Oregon, "the<lb/>
Jerusalem of U.S. track to Prescott because their athletic<lb/>
scholarships have been cancelled because of their<lb/>
homosexuality.<lb/>
The three come toPrescott in the hopes that they will be<lb/>
understood there or at least left alone to run. Eventually,<lb/>
Billy and Harlan fall in love, play out a courtship and get<lb/>
married.<lb/>
Billy dreams of pulling a Lasse Viren and winning both<lb/>
the 5,000 and 10,000 meter races at the Montreal Olympic<lb/>
Games. H is quest is pedictably made more difficult by the<lb/>
ire his unabashed homosexuality arises among the track<lb/>
and field establishment. Obviously, the idea of a faggot<lb/>
representing the land of the free and the home of the brave<lb/>
in the Olympics had its inflammatory effects on the less<lb/>
liberal followers of track in this country, too. Billy and his<lb/>
two friends are harrassed by the AAU, pilloried in the press<lb/>
and taunted at meets.<lb/>
This conflict is really the heart of The Front Runner.<lb/>
Billy wants to be accepted as a runner, not a gay runner,<lb/>
just a runner. He doesn't demand to be accepted as a<lb/>
homosexual anything. Billy wants to be judged only on his<lb/>
athletic skill and not his sexual preference.<lb/>
Unfortunately, the way things are today a homosexual<lb/>
has to overcome preconbeptions and p7e)udToe"amongRf"r<lb/>
countrymen just like blacks, women, Mexicans,<lb/>
Vietnamese, the handicapped and whoever else doesn't fit<lb/>
the John WayneDavy Crockett mold. It seems our national<lb/>
heritage is to attempt to violently reshape the world in our<lb/>
own image. Unfortunately, the world sometimes suffers<lb/>
when we make it better.<lb/>
Only Billy survives the anti-gay storm and makes it to<lb/>
Montreal. His teammates elect him flag bearer for the<lb/>
opening oeremonies in recognition of his courage. He wins<lb/>
the 10,000 and is but a few strides from the tape in the 5,000<lb/>
when a beserk latent homosexual, driven bv societal<lb/>
See HOMOSEXUAL, p. 8<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium),<lb/>
Miller praises ECU stu-<lb/>
dents highly. He feels they<lb/>
are very well-rounded as<lb/>
well as motivated. He<lb/>
states that he is happy to<lb/>
find actors who can move,<lb/>
and dancers who can also<lb/>
sing.<lb/>
Miller's porduction fo<lb/>
Pippin will follow the New<lb/>
York production closely.<lb/>
The technical facilities will<lb/>
certainly limit the produc-<lb/>
tion, but Miller feels that<lb/>
the show can be done<lb/>
effectively in McGinnis<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
To prepare his cast for<lb/>
the show, Miller is using<lb/>
original rehersal tech-<lb/>
niques which he prefers<lb/>
remain within the cast.<lb/>
Pippin is the story of<lb/>
Charlemagne's son, Pip-<lb/>
pin, and his search for<lb/>
himself. Miller's cast in-<lb/>
cludes students from the<lb/>
Music Department as well<lb/>
as Drama students.<lb/>
He has brought in a<lb/>
professional actor from<lb/>
New York, Tony Boyd, to<lb/>
perform the role of Char-<lb/>
lemagne. M iller states that<lb/>
the problem was not lack of<lb/>
students with talent equal<lb/>
to the role, but none old<lb/>
enough to portray an elder-<lb/>
ly man. The play will also<lb/>
employ live animals as<lb/>
primary characters.<lb/>
The show itself does not<lb/>
contain specific scenes but<lb/>
flows from one action to<lb/>
another, similar to God-<lb/>
spell, which was written by<lb/>
the same lyricist.<lb/>
For those skeptical of<lb/>
musicals, Miller has this<lb/>
comment:  Pippin is the<lb/>
sort of show for people who<lb/>
gannot stand musicals �<lb/>
love Very rarely does<lb/>
someone break into a song<lb/>
about how beautiful the<lb/>
hillsare<lb/>
Pippin will run Oct. 20,<lb/>
21, 22, 26, and 27 in<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium.<lb/>
Curtain is at 8:15 p.m. and<lb/>
tickets are available in<lb/>
McGinnis box office. Ad-<lb/>
mission is free to ECU<lb/>
students with I.D. and<lb/>
Activity Card.<lb/>
<lb/>
KEN MILLER DIRECTS ECU'S production of Pippin.<lb/>
Coffeehouse slates Worthington<lb/>
The Student Union Coffeehouse Com-<lb/>
mittee will present John Worthington this<lb/>
Thurs. and FriT Oct 12 and 13, at 8<lb/>
and 9 p.m. in room 15, MendenhaH.<lb/>
Worthington has performed in the<lb/>
Coffeehouse on several occasions in the<lb/>
past, both solo and with various partners.<lb/>
Each visit has been met with an<lb/>
enthusiastic audience and an equally<lb/>
charged perfromanoe.<lb/>
Worthington is noted for his rapid<lb/>
finger picking on guitar, banjo, and<lb/>
mandolin. His music is primarily folk and<lb/>
bluegrass, with a heavy dose of down<lb/>
home blues added in. His outstanding<lb/>
musical abilities are matched only by his<lb/>
strong voice, perfectly suited to his<lb/>
material<lb/>
The Coffeehouse Committee also<lb/>
sponsors the weekly patio jams each<lb/>
Tuesday afternoon at 3 on the patio of<lb/>
MendenhaH. These jams will continue as<lb/>
long as weather permits.<lb/>
The Coffeehouse offers a wide variety<lb/>
of snacks in addition to fine entertain-<lb/>
ment, including cheeses, nuts, cookies.<lb/>
teas, coffee, soft drinks, and their famous<lb/>
raisin bread<lb/>
Admission to the weekend shows is 50<lb/>
cents, and that price includes all the<lb/>
snacks you can eat.<lb/>
THE SILVER SURFER streaks into comics.<lb/>
The Silver Surfer is a 'completely original' comic character<lb/>
just released by writer Stan Lee and artist Jack Kirby<lb/>
ByJOHNWEYLER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Another one of Stan Lee's comic book-books is out now,<lb/>
entitled The Silver Surfer. This differs from the rest of the<lb/>
series in that it is an all-new, original work.<lb/>
It also differs from the rest in that it Is not as good.<lb/>
Lee's other books, which include Origins of Marvel<lb/>
Comics, Son of Origins of Marvel Comics, Bring on the Bad<lb/>
Guys, Superhero Women, The Incredible Hulk, and<lb/>
Greatest Battles of Marvel Superheros, are collections of<lb/>
reprinted Marvel comic classics from yesteryear.<lb/>
The Silver Surfer is a completely new comics collection<lb/>
by Lee and artist Jack K irby.<lb/>
It's not as good as the old classics partially due to its<lb/>
tremendous (for a comic) length: 100 pages. Lee simply<lb/>
couldn't think of enough to fill that amount of space, so the<lb/>
book suffers from a too-thin plot.<lb/>
The plot is as follows: Galactus, the super-power<lb/>
galactic giant whom the Surfer serves, wants to eat the<lb/>
earth. The Surfer, who for some reason likes human beings,<lb/>
objects and rebels against his master.<lb/>
Galactus creates a temptress to entrap the surfer: a<lb/>
bizarre beauty named Ardina (with golden skin to contrast<lb/>
with the Surfer's silvery hide). Galactus' creations fall in<lb/>
love, and both turn aginst him.<lb/>
The giant wins in the end, however. Though Earth goes<lb/>
uneaten, the Surfer's brief attempt at rebellion fails and he<lb/>
becomes Galactus' slave forever.<lb/>
As this simple storyline is insufficient to last 100 pages,<lb/>
The Greeting is an 'innovative'album<lb/>
By JEFF ROLLINS<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
McCoy Tyner in San<lb/>
Francisco. A jazz man in a<lb/>
jazz town The Greeting is<lb/>
the recording of The McCoy<lb/>
Tyner Sextet in perfor-<lb/>
mance at the Great Amer-<lb/>
ican Music Hall. What we<lb/>
have here is an album of<lb/>
good music in hip city.<lb/>
McCoy Tyner's latest<lb/>
album, The Greeting, is a<lb/>
disc-full of stirring jazz.<lb/>
Tyner is one of the major<lb/>
forces in contemporary<lb/>
jazz. He is a composer who<lb/>
admits his debts to precur-<lb/>
sers like John Coitraine.<lb/>
The album offers a<lb/>
varied program of accous-<lb/>
tic, instrun ental pieces.<lb/>
Two of the numbers were<lb/>
previously recorded in<lb/>
settings: the well-remem-<lb/>
bered "Fly with the Wind"<lb/>
appears on this album<lb/>
dramatically condensed in<lb/>
siz ��? not in sound from its<lb/>
original orchestral-strings<lb/>
arrangement, and "The<lb/>
Greeting" appears ex-<lb/>
panded from its original<lb/>
trio format.<lb/>
McCoy Tyner's musical<lb/>
ideas are original and excit-<lb/>
ing. For instance, "Hand in<lb/>
hand" is a compelling jazz<lb/>
composition that utilizes<lb/>
such unusual instruments<lb/>
as the berimbau and or-<lb/>
chestra bells.<lb/>
way stands alongside other<lb/>
classics like Gershwin's<lb/>
American in Paris. It is a<lb/>
rhythmically intense com-<lb/>
position that oontinues to<lb/>
build suspense while con-<lb/>
tinually returning to the<lb/>
lyrically effective main<lb/>
theme.<lb/>
The sextet of piano,<lb/>
flute, soprano and tenor<lb/>
sax, alto sax, bass, drums,<lb/>
and congas makes a full.<lb/>
Music<lb/>
As its title would imply,<lb/>
"Hand in Hand" possesses<lb/>
a feeling of universal love<lb/>
and acceptance. The music<lb/>
is basic and friendly, with<lb/>
fascinating flute, sax and<lb/>
percussive digressions.<lb/>
"Fly with the Wind" is<lb/>
a Jazz classic that in its own<lb/>
rich sound. The band cooks<lb/>
on "Fly with the Wind<lb/>
George Adams distin-<lb/>
guishes himself with some<lb/>
death-defying alto tax play-<lb/>
ing on "Fly with the<lb/>
Wind" and Sonship<lb/>
(Woody Theus) prove<lb/>
himself to be a master of<lb/>
the skins and snares and<lb/>
beat.<lb/>
Tyner is of course bril-<lb/>
liant on the piano. His style<lb/>
of playing is bright, ebul-<lb/>
lient, young and full of<lb/>
energy. There is strength<lb/>
which can be felt in even<lb/>
his most pianissimo pas-<lb/>
sages.<lb/>
"Pictures" is a totally<lb/>
new work by Tyner. It<lb/>
possesses some of the moat<lb/>
avant-gard passages on the<lb/>
album and they always jive<lb/>
with the cool jazz that<lb/>
surrounds them.<lb/>
The song is a cohesive<lb/>
piece of writing that<lb/>
reflects the newest influ-<lb/>
ences as well as the<lb/>
brilliant creative powers of<lb/>
its composer.<lb/>
George Adams and Joe<lb/>
Ford, each on flute and sax,<lb/>
give avant-gard perfor-<lb/>
mances that will set land-<lb/>
marks in aoioa of that kind.<lb/>
Tyner's group It surely<lb/>
one of the most progressive<lb/>
around that you would still<lb/>
want to play at a party.<lb/>
"Naima" is Tyner's tri-<lb/>
bute to its composer, John<lb/>
Coitrane. John Coltrane is a<lb/>
performer and composer<lb/>
who shaped much of<lb/>
modern jazz. Tyner plays<lb/>
"Naima" with a rubato<lb/>
dreaminess and a nobility<lb/>
of sentiment.<lb/>
It is a modern piece,<lb/>
unmistakably, especially<lb/>
the way Tyner interprets it,<lb/>
yet it is far from being dryly<lb/>
abstract. Tyner approaches<lb/>
the piece with confidence<lb/>
and with pure, unsimplif ied<lb/>
artistic notions in mind.<lb/>
"The Greeting" is the<lb/>
title cut of the album. It<lb/>
begins with a semi-tradi-<lb/>
ditional, semi-abstract<lb/>
piano Introduction and then<lb/>
each instrument enters<lb/>
with a short solo of Its own.<lb/>
Some of the beat drum-<lb/>
work on the album is dona<lb/>
on "The Greeting Both<lb/>
Woody Theus on drums<lb/>
and George Adams on<lb/>
tenor distinguish them-<lb/>
selves with excellently well-<lb/>
executed solos.<lb/>
Tyner himself is dash-<lb/>
ingly brilliant, an artist who<lb/>
performs and composes<lb/>
with panache and aston-<lb/>
ishing technical facility. On<lb/>
his solo piece, "Naima" as<lb/>
well as on "The Greeting"<lb/>
Tyner establishes himself<lb/>
as a piano player of prodi-<lb/>
gious talent.<lb/>
McCoy Tyner, although<lb/>
not a big name on the<lb/>
popular market, has long<lb/>
been a name associated<lb/>
with the most innovative<lb/>
ideas in jazz. His latest<lb/>
endeavor, The Greeting,<lb/>
proves that the ideas are<lb/>
still coming, and so, the<lb/>
good music.<lb/>
(Record provided courtesy<lb/>
of Record Bar.<lb/>
the story is padded with side-tracks and sub-plots. One<lb/>
sub-plot involving a young earth couple the Surfer and<lb/>
Ardina run into begins promisingly, but leads nowhere,<lb/>
becoming just more filler.<lb/>
This is the book's major flaw � the story line is too<lb/>
stretched out, and becomes boring rather quickly.<lb/>
The rest of the gap is filled up with Stan Lees stilted<lb/>
verbiage. His familiar style, leaning heavily on psuedo-<lb/>
Shakespeare on one side and the Marx Brothers on the<lb/>
other, was used to its best advantage in his old scripts<lb/>
Here it becomes so grandiose, overblown and<lb/>
top-heavy it overwhelms the entire comic. Having little to<lb/>
say with so simple a premise, he say what he can over and<lb/>
over again.<lb/>
Stan Lees style is too wordy: � Behold! The hand of<lb/>
Galactus! Behold! The hand of him who is like unto a god'<lb/>
Behold! The dutch of harnessed power - about to b<lb/>
released<lb/>
Lee's style gets ridiculous: "Yet, for the eagle to feast<lb/>
the rabbit must fall! For the, fox to survive, the ch.ckmn<lb/>
must die �"cen<lb/>
And he repeats himself endlessly: " am the then' I am<lb/>
the now! I am the yet to be<lb/>
Lee and Kirby deserve credit for trying Creatino an<lb/>
all-new, original 100-page comic to be published in book<lb/>
form, based on one of their most intriguing character  .<lb/>
noble undertaking. "racters- ,s �<lb/>
It is nice seeing Lee writing again, even if not very well<lb/>
especially in conjunction with his old partner Jack KirtJ<lb/>
One just wishes they'd pulled it off better y<lb/>
Kirby's vigorous, dynamic style of comic illuatration is<lb/>
probably the greatest influence on today's Marvel stvta <lb/>
drawing. Kirby is justifiably called the "kino" fcThi.<lb/>
influence and artistic expertise.<lb/>
However, here, like Lee, he is not up to his former<lb/>
heights of glory. Though still t.r better than mmSZ<lb/>
artists can muster, his artwork hare is a trifle tired i-S<lb/>
rushed. � �na<lb/>
Whatever happened to the famous Marvel continuity?<lb/>
Marvel comics are known for the aaaortad Zlil<lb/>
supposedly occur together as in real life �n�ce<lb/>
This book tells of the Siryer Surfer's first and aeami<lb/>
everyone knows he first came to this sonar. uTS?? <lb/>
1905 iseua of Fanteat Four, M laZZLSl"<lb/>
since. How can this be explained?<lb/>
The Silver Surfer la an intereatina an u.<lb/>
chiefly for baing MarvTs flrj' �ic � ��.<lb/>
bringing Lea and Kirby together aaeT aT �<lb/>
manyflawa,iti.daatinedtobacoma7ZL,Wpn� �<lb/>
its own merits aa a comic it doaan't -?? 0-c �<lb/>
luck next time, Quya. Ina "�o wall.<lb/>
r<lb/>
. � � V , , . v � �<lb/>
��-<lb/>
mmammmm nmi irfinw; n� aftiattMei<lb/>
<pb facs="00057153_0007"/><lb/>
Cinema<lb/>
Film festival<lb/>
this weekend<lb/>
This week-end's Free Flick is Slap Shot. The movie will<lb/>
shown at 7 and 9 on Friday and Saturday nights at the<lb/>
Mendru Theatre, Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Slap Shot is an irreverent and outrageously funny look<lb/>
the world of professional ice hockey. Unlike the<lb/>
nventional Hollywood sports story which chronicles the<lb/>
rials and triumphs of athlete-heroes, Slap Shot is an<lb/>
nginal and unique mix of comedy and drama which<lb/>
documents the lives of players on a third rate, minor league<lb/>
hockey team<lb/>
3layer coach Reggie Dunlop (Paul Newman) and the<lb/>
oung 'orward Ned Braden (Michael Ontkean) are the only<lb/>
members of the Charlestown Chiefs who consistently play<lb/>
Due to the Chiefs' inept performance, attendance is<lb/>
down and franchise is on the brink of financial ruin.<lb/>
Abruptly three new players are signed by management<lb/>
) provide the Chiefs with some new blood. When the<lb/>
booking, strangely behaved Hansons - surely the most<lb/>
irre screen trio since the Marx Brothers - are finally<lb/>
ned loose by their desperate Coach, the new blood<lb/>
proved to be mostly that of the Chiefs' opponents.<lb/>
The Hansons are nothing less than the Wild Bunch on<lb/>
ice, as they literally attack and demolish the opposition, to<lb/>
:he delight and cheers of a steadily increasing throng of<lb/>
tans.<lb/>
Tension builds between Reggie, who is elated at the<lb/>
success and popularity of the murderous new style of the<lb/>
efs, and his best player Ned, who is determined to play<lb/>
Old time hockey a game of skill rather than a show of<lb/>
ce.<lb/>
Slap Shot is fundamentally a comedy of violence, and<lb/>
he hockey sequences-reminiscent of the football games in<lb/>
M -SH and The Longest Yard�offer a freewheeling mixture<lb/>
apstick humor and grisly physical violence.<lb/>
GIANCARLO<lb/>
GIANNINI<lb/>
12 Octobf 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Pay 7<lb/>
Family night at Minges: Brothers<lb/>
Johnson and Mother's Finest to appear<lb/>
Students will be admitted free of charge with ID and<lb/>
activity cards. Shows begin at 7 and 9 at the Curtis Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre.<lb/>
Lina Wertmuller's 1976 classic Seven Beauties is the<lb/>
first offering of the International Film Festival at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center this Sunday. The film will be<lb/>
shown at four o'clock in the Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
Giancarlo Glannini plays the "hero" of this Italian<lb/>
comedy. Pasqualino. He is an "imitation bandit" whose<lb/>
macho cole is reminiscent of an absurd Bogart. This film Is<lb/>
considered by many to be the most important film that<lb/>
Wertmuller ever made. An "indelible film" by the "Most<lb/>
important film director since Bergman" is certainly worthy<lb/>
of some consideration by any film goer, serious or casual.<lb/>
Pasqualino is a great loser, an imitation bandit,<lb/>
breadwinner, lover, soldier, whose only grip on selfhood Is<lb/>
hismachocode, itself a grotesque imitation of the codes of<lb/>
civilization.<lb/>
But Pasqualino has real feeling, especially for women,<lb/>
and Wertmuller uses this to achieve some of the most<lb/>
astonishing and profound comedy since the blackest<lb/>
absurdities in Dostoevski.<lb/>
The Man Who Loved Women, Francois Truffaut"s most<lb/>
recent film will be shown in the Curtis Hendrix Theatre this<lb/>
Sunday at six o'clock. The film has been called Truffaut's<lb/>
love letter to womankind by no less a critic than Judith<lb/>
Crist. Bertrand Morane, the film's protagonist is an<lb/>
intelligent and sensitive man who adore women, all women.<lb/>
The subject of the film is his memoirs, wherein he<lb/>
remembers sll of the women that he has ever loved.<lb/>
See CINEMA, p. 8<lb/>
By CHRIS FARRN<lb/>
Staff Reporter<lb/>
This Saturday at 8 p.m.<lb/>
the Student Union Major<lb/>
Attractions Committee will<lb/>
present their first concert of<lb/>
this school year featuring<lb/>
the Brothers Johnson and<lb/>
Mother's Finest.<lb/>
The Brothers Johnson<lb/>
are a group that has gained<lb/>
widespread success in the<lb/>
past few years and at<lb/>
present their latest release,<lb/>
Blam is rated in the top 10<lb/>
on the soul charts. While<lb/>
their sound is basically soul<lb/>
centered, some of their<lb/>
tunes show a real jazz<lb/>
influence, and past album<lb/>
credits include such jazz<lb/>
stalwarts as M ichael<lb/>
Brecker, Larry Carlton, and<lb/>
their producer Quincy<lb/>
Jones.<lb/>
Chamber concerts to<lb/>
be on agenda soon<lb/>
ECU News Bureau <lb/>
The first in a series of<lb/>
four faculty chamber con-<lb/>
certs has been scheduled at<lb/>
the ECU School of Music<lb/>
for Sun Oct. 15, at 4:15<lb/>
p.m. In the A.J. Fletcher<lb/>
Recital Hall.<lb/>
Performers include fa-<lb/>
culty and advanced student<lb/>
musicians at ECU. Other<lb/>
concerts will be held in<lb/>
December, February and<lb/>
April.<lb/>
All concerts in the ser-<lb/>
ies will feature diverse<lb/>
performance groups of var-<lb/>
ious instrumentation.<lb/>
Works to be performed<lb/>
at the Oct. 15 chamber<lb/>
music concert are the<lb/>
Georg Wagenseil Concerto<lb/>
for Trombone, with trom-<lb/>
bonists George Broussard<lb/>
who will be accompanied by<lb/>
pianist Ellen Nagode, and<lb/>
the Dvorak Serenade in D<lb/>
minor, Opus44.<lb/>
On the other hand,<lb/>
Mother's Finest is a rock<lb/>
oriented group whose fol-<lb/>
lowing is particularly<lb/>
strong in this area. They<lb/>
too have a recently released<lb/>
album called Mother Factor<lb/>
which is selling reasonably<lb/>
well.<lb/>
According to Charles<lb/>
Sune, chairman of the<lb/>
Student Union Attractions<lb/>
Committee, ECU is pretty<lb/>
lucky to get these acts<lb/>
because their present tour<lb/>
has had them playing at<lb/>
much larger places than<lb/>
Minges Colliseum, namely<lb/>
the Capital Center and in<lb/>
Greensboro last Friday.<lb/>
Tickets for this concert<lb/>
are $4 for ECU students<lb/>
and $6 for the public. Only<lb/>
public tickets will be sold at<lb/>
the door, and the last<lb/>
chance to buy a student<lb/>
ticket will be 4 p.m. Friday<lb/>
at the Central Ticket Office.<lb/>
The Major Attractions<lb/>
Committee, who for the<lb/>
past few years has not had<lb/>
a particularly impressive<lb/>
track record, were left<lb/>
deeply in debt two years<lb/>
ago, deserves credit for<lb/>
continuing to bring national<lb/>
acts to this campus during a<lb/>
time of rebuilding and<lb/>
revamping.<lb/>
According to Sune, the<lb/>
Committee receives no<lb/>
subsidies from the Uni-<lb/>
versity and debts must be<lb/>
paid off from concert<lb/>
profits; still, the ticket<lb/>
prices remain very reason-<lb/>
able (this same concert is<lb/>
going for $7 and S8 in<lb/>
Raleigh).<lb/>
The committee is pre-<lb/>
sently working on an act for<lb/>
Homecoming week, but<lb/>
nothing has been confirmed<lb/>
as of now.<lb/>
'Octubafest '78' to feature the music<lb/>
of tubas this Friday in Fletcher Hall<lb/>
ECU News Bureau �<lb/>
,sic lovers who think<lb/>
big brass tuba isn't<lb/>
'or anything but to<lb/>
vide the deep "oom-<lb/>
pah-pah" beat for band,<lb/>
should attend ECU'S "Oct-<lb/>
ubafest '78 Fn Oct. 13<lb/>
The concert, sponsored<lb/>
the ECU School of<lb/>
M .sic. is scheduled for<lb/>
in the A.J.<lb/>
�� Recital Hall. Fea-<lb/>
oe tuba solos and<lb/>
tuba quartets as well as a<lb/>
que arrangement of J.S<lb/>
Bach's "Come, Sweet<lb/>
Death" for five tuba play-<lb/>
ers and five euphonium<lb/>
players.<lb/>
"Octubafest'78 isfree<lb/>
and open to the public.<lb/>
Student performers m-<lb/>
clude Bill Chamberlain,<lb/>
graduate teaching assistant<lb/>
in the School of Music and<lb/>
coordinator of the "Oct-<lb/>
ubafest Joe Alexander,<lb/>
John Jones, Ricky Spencer<lb/>
and Tom Vines, tuba; and<lb/>
Joe Rosemond, Pete Ward,<lb/>
Joe Kasmark. Jay Downie<lb/>
and Gary Blizzard, eupho-<lb/>
nium.<lb/>
Solo works to be per-<lb/>
formed are Leo Sowerby's<lb/>
"Chaconne featuring Al-<lb/>
exander with Rhem Bell as<lb/>
piano accompanist; an Eric<lb/>
Bell transcription of Schu-<lb/>
mann's "The Jolly Farm-<lb/>
er" performed by Cham-<lb/>
berlain; and Alec Wilder's<lb/>
"Effie Suite Nos. 4,5,<lb/>
and 6, performed by John<lb/>
Jones.<lb/>
A Morris arrangement<lb/>
of Sousa's "El Capitan<lb/>
Eric Bell's Quartet for<lb/>
Tubas and Bill Chamber-<lb/>
lain's own tuba quartet will<lb/>
be performed by Jones,<lb/>
Chamberlain, Kasmark and<lb/>
Downie.<lb/>
All 10 performers will<lb/>
play the Bach "Come.<lb/>
Sweet Death<lb/>
According to Chamberlain,<lb/>
the "Octubafest" concept<lb/>
is "something of a national<lb/>
phenomenon" on U.S.<lb/>
campuses, and several uni-<lb/>
versity marching bands are<lb/>
now including as many as a<lb/>
hundred tubas.<lb/>
Piedmont<lb/>
has discount fares<lb/>
worth flying home<lb/>
about<lb/>
Or just about anywhere else you a like to g<lb/>
nstance our Round Thrift�3 Fare saves ,<lb/>
roundtrip when you return no eaer tna-<lb/>
day following your original date of depaiure -<lb/>
mont s Weekend Excursion Fare means a 25<lb/>
roundtrip discount if you leave Saturday ar j return<lb/>
Saturday Sunday or Monday througr the first ava<lb/>
able flight after noon<lb/>
Piedmont has five other discount fares to<lb/>
choose from too For complete information ca our<lb/>
travel agent or Piedmont Airlines Major credit cards<lb/>
accepted All discount fares subject to change<lb/>
 thoul notice<lb/>
78 NP<lb/>
The ECU Percussion Ensemble will perform<lb/>
this Monday night at A.J. Fletcher Hall<lb/>
By SUSAN CHESTON<lb/>
Staff Reporter<lb/>
The ECU Percussion<lb/>
Ensemble will perform at<lb/>
5 p.m. on Mon Oct. 16,<lb/>
A J Fletcher Recital<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
The nine ensemble<lb/>
members will include Mel-<lb/>
ame Aman. Mike August,<lb/>
Rick Brazelle. Jim Hoyle,<lb/>
Tony Mallard. Kyle Mc-<lb/>
Bnde. Eric Okamoto, Jim-<lb/>
my Roberts, and Steve<lb/>
Williams.<lb/>
The program will fea-<lb/>
ture works that demon-<lb/>
strate the special tech-<lb/>
niques and effects idio-<lb/>
matic to percussion instru-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
Can tile No. 1 by Lou<lb/>
Harrison is an example of<lb/>
one of the first pieces that<lb/>
made innovative use of the<lb/>
percussion ensemble.<lb/>
Neal Hubbel's Mosaics<lb/>
will feature the mallet<lb/>
instruments. Other works<lb/>
include Goerge Frock's<lb/>
Two Asiatic Dances, John<lb/>
Beck's Jazz Variants, and<lb/>
Mitchell Peters' Piece tor<lb/>
Percussion.<lb/>
The percussion ensem-<lb/>
ble has great potential for<lb/>
powerful, energetic per-<lb/>
formances when rhythms,<lb/>
timbres, and melody are<lb/>
combined.<lb/>
STUFFY'S<lb/>
Good Staff<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
LARGE<lb/>
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WITH<lb/>
PURCHASE<lb/>
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�J<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057153_0008"/><lb/>
Amity ville 'will scare the hell out of you'<lb/>
By EDWARD KALE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Ever since I was a<lb/>
youngster, I have enjoyed<lb/>
horror shows and ghost<lb/>
stories. I can fondly recall<lb/>
the excitement with which I<lb/>
awaited being scared silly<lb/>
by the late show horror<lb/>
flicks that my parents let<lb/>
me stay up and watch on<lb/>
of unqualified, terrific ter-<lb/>
ror were the ones that I<lb/>
liked the most. 9<lb/>
I'm sure that this could<lb/>
be analyzed by some as<lb/>
mosochistic tendencies, but<lb/>
this seems to be the<lb/>
standard modus operandi<lb/>
for all buffs. The main<lb/>
qualification for a good<lb/>
horror story or movie is its<lb/>
ability to fulfill the request.<lb/>
Books<lb/>
Saturday nights.<lb/>
As I recall the ones that<lb/>
scared me the most, the<lb/>
ones that caused the most<lb/>
skm crawling, light-headed<lb/>
rushes of pure panicky fear<lb/>
were the ones that seemed<lb/>
the most plausible; the<lb/>
ones that seemed or claim-<lb/>
ed to have some basis in<lb/>
actuality.<lb/>
And those movies or<lb/>
stories that produced the<lb/>
most and longest moments<lb/>
OpnM Hour<lb/>
Iff Evan Strw�t<lb/>
Oiiwrii'Only Party<lb/>
Iwwp Mm<lb/>
BUD not$1.17 S7.M<lb/>
SCMLITZ not$1.17 S7JI<lb/>
MILLER UTE ii ot S1.M S7.M<lb/>
STROM'S . "Oi . $1.17 17 Jt<lb/>
TAYLOR?KM<lb/>
PERKEO � S3.39<lb/>
MILK �4.S1.7I<lb/>
58 LB. ICE$2.75<lb/>
KEQ RESERVATIONS $34.00<lb/>
PHONE 7B-<lb/>
"Oh pleae scare me<lb/>
This desire for fright<lb/>
has evidently carried over<lb/>
to the present, for there are<lb/>
still few things that I enjoy<lb/>
more than a good horror<lb/>
story. It has been disap-<lb/>
pointing though, that these<lb/>
moments of dread have<lb/>
occurred less and less often<lb/>
over the past years.<lb/>
Part of this disparity has<lb/>
been my growing older,<lb/>
knowing more about the<lb/>
world, and consequently<lb/>
being less apt to frighten.<lb/>
Also, being a true "horror"<lb/>
addict and craving fright in<lb/>
as much quantity as much<lb/>
of the time as I can get it,<lb/>
I'm affected like any true<lb/>
addict, I've built up a<lb/>
tolerance to horror so that it<lb/>
now takes a purer, a fcetter<lb/>
product to get me off.<lb/>
Anyway, a really origin-<lb/>
al and well thought out<lb/>
horror story is what's need-<lb/>
ed to produce any kind of<lb/>
palipitations at all these<lb/>
days.<lb/>
To add to my sad plight,<lb/>
there just don't seem to be<lb/>
any good scary stories<lb/>
around anymore. Unfort-<lb/>
unately, writers and direc-<lb/>
tors seem to rely on viol-<lb/>
ence and shock rather than<lb/>
good story, genuine sus-<lb/>
pense, and original ideas.<lb/>
From such classics as<lb/>
Invasion of the Body<lb/>
Snatchers, The Thing From<lb/>
Mars, and The Haunting.<lb/>
we have gone, sadly, to<lb/>
postExorcits" dribblers<lb/>
as The Omen, Carrie, etc.<lb/>
There are still some<lb/>
good stories cominig out<lb/>
that genuinely fulfill that<lb/>
desire for firght (although<lb/>
they are few and far<lb/>
between) and Jay Anson's<lb/>
The Amityville Horror: A<lb/>
True Story is an incredibly<lb/>
fast moving book, each<lb/>
chapter filled with bizzare,<lb/>
hair raising events, presen-<lb/>
ted in suhc a manner as to<lb/>
satiate even the most hard-<lb/>
core horror freak.<lb/>
There are several rea-<lb/>
sons the book succeeds so<lb/>
well. The first is that it's<lb/>
supposed to be a true story<lb/>
(i do have my doubts.)<lb/>
Whether you believe in<lb/>
poltergeist, demonis pos-<lb/>
session, and just out and<lb/>
out bizzare supernatural<lb/>
happenings or not, this<lb/>
gool makes them seem real.<lb/>
The preface of the book<lb/>
(written by a minister, yet)<lb/>
is his statement of belief in<lb/>
the supernatural and auth-<lb/>
enticity of the book. Just<lb/>
the fact that it's supposed<lb/>
to be true is what brings it<lb/>
so close to home and<lb/>
increases its spine chilling<lb/>
affect ten-fold.<lb/>
The style in which the<lb/>
book is written also lends to<lb/>
it's horrifying effect. Jay<lb/>
Anson simply reports in<lb/>
short, concise sentences<lb/>
events and actions as told<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Many Party<lb/>
I<lb/>
Thar. Brice Street<lb/>
Fri. and Sat 747<lb/>
Son. Aquilla<lb/>
Mon. Monday<lb/>
Night Football<lb/>
SAAD'S SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
113 GRANDE AVE<lb/>
COLLEGE VIEW<lb/>
CLEANERS<lb/>
BBaoBBBHBBBWBB<lb/>
NEEOTO RELAX AFTER<lb/>
A DAY IN CLASSES?<lb/>
THE SUNSET<lb/>
II9E. 5th STREET<lb/>
qOBSSg�$306�S3gB$aBB<lb/>
LI<lb/>
The Student<lb/>
Union Films<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
presents<lb/>
SLAPSHOT<lb/>
This week's<lb/>
Free Flick<lb/>
fri. &amp; Sat.<lb/>
GWC<lb/>
A NO HWer IT FtLLEoFfeie WITH PfeW<lb/>
LOCATED<lb/>
AT<lb/>
TENTH<lb/>
CWACUES<lb/>
STrccTs<lb/>
luff�<lb/>
fbaeuAstt a<lb/>
teftgematwort,<lb/>
cfctmcoM turn<lb/>
ANOVlMLDEMtKlS<lb/>
3b"fT6M (JESS.<lb/>
to him by the family<lb/>
Involved. This simple re-<lb/>
porting gives it the air of a<lb/>
documentary, without any<lb/>
obtruse colorings by the<lb/>
larger than they thought<lb/>
they could afford, It had a<lb/>
gar age-boat house, it was<lb/>
in a very nice neighbor-<lb/>
hood, and they got it for a<lb/>
"To add to my sad plight, there<lb/>
just don't seem to be any good<lb/>
scarey stories around anymore.<lb/>
Unfortunately, writers and<lb/>
directors seem to rely on<lb/>
violence and shock rather than<lb/>
a good storyline<lb/>
author, and does wonders<lb/>
for its credibility.<lb/>
The A mityville Horror is<lb/>
a story about a young,<lb/>
enthusiastic, ail-American<lb/>
family of five (the Lutzs)<lb/>
who move into a "dream<lb/>
house" in Amityville, Long<lb/>
Island, in 1975. The house<lb/>
was perfect: it was much<lb/>
cut-rate price.<lb/>
The only discordant<lb/>
note was that it had been<lb/>
the scene of a mass murd-<lb/>
er. In 1974 Ronald DeFeo<lb/>
had methodically shot to<lb/>
death his parents, his two<lb/>
brothers, and his two sist-<lb/>
ers with a high-powered<lb/>
rifle. But the Lutz's weren't<lb/>
superstitious<lb/>
With the stage so nicely<lb/>
set, Anson goes on to<lb/>
recount the chilling events<lb/>
of the next month. Each<lb/>
chapter is a day spent in the<lb/>
house, there tying 28, after<lb/>
which the Lutzs flee, leav-<lb/>
ing all their possessions,<lb/>
never to return.<lb/>
The events build slowly,<lb/>
becoming more and more<lb/>
bizarre with each chapter.<lb/>
This slow build-up sucks<lb/>
the reader in nicely and<lb/>
keeps you on theedge of<lb/>
your seat, hardly able to<lb/>
wait to turn the page and<lb/>
see what other wierd stuff s<lb/>
going to happen.<lb/>
Anson starts with such<lb/>
subtitles as whisperings, an<lb/>
all-pervading chill in the<lb/>
house, black stains appear-<lb/>
ing in the toilets, a re-<lb/>
appearing swarm of flies in<lb/>
one room, strange and<lb/>
obnoxious odors, and pesky<lb/>
windows that just won't<lb/>
stay shut.<lb/>
From there he moves on<lb/>
to visions of a giant pig with<lb/>
red, glowing eyes, that<lb/>
walks upright, and tells the<lb/>
children he's an angel, a<lb/>
secret room painted red<lb/>
and stinking of raw blood<lb/>
and human excrement, and<lb/>
green slime oozing out of<lb/>
the wallsand that s not<lb/>
nearly the worst of it<lb/>
I find the credibility<lb/>
questionable when some of<lb/>
tne more obvious events<lb/>
occur and they attribute<lb/>
them to natural causes-like<lb/>
a two hundred and fifty<lb/>
pound door being ripped off<lb/>
its hinges (among others)<lb/>
If it was me. I would have<lb/>
looked like a blurr leaving<lb/>
that house<lb/>
The mistake I made<lb/>
reading the book was.<lb/>
determined to give it as<lb/>
much help as I could. I<lb/>
started it about midnight,<lb/>
reading by the light of an<lb/>
oil lamp The book doesn t<lb/>
need any help! After the<lb/>
first few chapters. I wished<lb/>
heartily taht I had left the<lb/>
hall light on so I could see<lb/>
as I raced to bed and dived<lb/>
under the covers The<lb/>
Amityville Horror is a I<lb/>
rate horror story, one that<lb/>
will terrify even the most<lb/>
stout-hearted It will jus<lb/>
plain scare the hell out of<lb/>
you!<lb/>
CINEMA<lb/>
continued from p. 7<lb/>
La Viste Merveilleuse (The Marvelous Visit) is a film by<lb/>
French director Marcel Carne. Carne offers that rare<lb/>
combination of the very obvious and very delightful. Based<lb/>
on an H.G. Wells novel, the story is a simple (and<lb/>
sometimes simplistic) allegory concerning the visit of an<lb/>
angel to earth.<lb/>
The film tells what everyone knows�that perfect<lb/>
are misunderstood and out of place on this imperfect<lb/>
planet. The angel must learn to wear clothes, to be<lb/>
deceitful, and not to release animals from their pens. In<lb/>
short, he must learn to be human, not superhuman, if he<lb/>
cannot, he is doomed.<lb/>
The film comments on religion, sexual and non-sexua;<lb/>
love, charity, kindness, humor, nearly every human foible.<lb/>
One sees oneself and, hopefully, is not found lacking In<lb/>
spite of the indictment of man-and-womankmd. the viewer<lb/>
is left with a feeling of inspiration Intelligence is never<lb/>
insulted; as Jean Rochereau states in Le Journal de la<lb/>
Crois, "It is a work in which classicism, the constant<lb/>
respect for the audience, and the eloquent brevity are that<lb/>
of a master Simplicity is never stupidity.<lb/>
The joy of the film is not only in the theme and story of<lb/>
the film, but also in its sheer physical beauty. Its setting in<lb/>
the wild, mysterious . astline of Brittany provides<lb/>
gorgeous photography. The physical beauty of some of the<lb/>
characters, especially the angel, is equally astounding The<lb/>
film begins at 8:45 p.m.<lb/>
HOMOSEXUALS<lb/>
continued from p. 6<lb/>
pressure, shoots him down from the stands. Billy dies on<lb/>
the track. All the other athletes go home in disgust and the<lb/>
Games end prematurely.<lb/>
Harlan is crushed at first, but he goes on to find another<lb/>
runner for a lover as well as winning the 1978 AAU Indoors<lb/>
Masters M ile in the final chapter. There is enough sugar in<lb/>
this ending to do away with a dozen diabetics.<lb/>
Other than the fact that their relationship takes place on<lb/>
the stage of international track there isn't anything<lb/>
particularly unique about the romance between Billy and<lb/>
Harlan. They're just a couple of guys who most, share some<lb/>
dreams and try to make a go of it in a rough world.<lb/>
That story has been told too many times to<lb/>
heterosexuals and a homosexual slant isn't enough to make<lb/>
it significant in Warren's second novel. What is significant<lb/>
is that the story is told about people both ways.<lb/>
But The Front Runner is about homosexuals and not<lb/>
straights. The sexual nature of Harlan and Bilfy's<lb/>
itra<lb/>
The Tree House<lb/>
"Aa�mI twdiT "ftnmt rt�ln-L'<lb/>
"Good Psopte"<lb/>
1t7t<lb/>
1SUN.<lb/>
2MON<lb/>
TTOT<lb/>
DAVID LEWIS<lb/>
DAVID LEWIS<lb/>
awn�<lb/>
4 WEDBLUE GRASS NIGHT (T.BA)<lb/>
TThCT<lb/>
6 FRI.<lb/>
.RON ANDERSON<lb/>
.RON ANDERSON<lb/>
7 SAT<lb/>
8 SUN<lb/>
9 MON<lb/>
�10 TUE<lb/>
11 WED<lb/>
MIKE LIGHTING" WELLS<lb/>
ED COLLEVECCHIO<lb/>
SPECIAL GUESTS<lb/>
CHRIS FARREN<lb/>
WILLIS &amp; COLLEVECCHIO<lb/>
12THU.<lb/>
13 FRI<lb/>
THE BUNK-HOUSE BOYS<lb/>
.THE BUNK-HOUSE BOYS<lb/>
14 SAT.<lb/>
15 SUN<lb/>
16MON<lb/>
�17 TUE<lb/>
18WED<lb/>
19THU<lb/>
20 FRI<lb/>
21 SAT<lb/>
22 SUN<lb/>
23 MON<lb/>
�24 TUE<lb/>
25 WED<lb/>
26THU<lb/>
THE EASTERLING BROTHERS<lb/>
DAVID LEWIS<lb/>
DAVID LEWIS<lb/>
CHRIS FARREN<lb/>
BLUE GRASS NIGHT (T.A )<lb/>
THE BUBBA WILLIS JAM<lb/>
MIKE LIGHTNING WELLS<lb/>
THE WIZARD<lb/>
MITCH BOWEN<lb/>
MfTCH BOWEN<lb/>
CHRIS FARREN<lb/>
DAVID LEWIS<lb/>
THE BUBBA WILLIS JAM<lb/>
27 FRI<lb/>
28 SAT.<lb/>
R ABSfT A KEN<lb/>
RABBIT i KEN<lb/>
29 SUN<lb/>
30 MON<lb/>
11 TUE<lb/>
MITCH BOWEN<lb/>
MITCH BOWEN<lb/>
relationship is presented clearly, but Warren does much<lb/>
more than offer a voyeuristic peek at "what they do She<lb/>
presents human beings with the same feelings and needs as<lb/>
heterosexuals but different sexual tastes<lb/>
You may agree with one critic who found the<lb/>
descriptions of gay lovemaking gross but it happens<lb/>
However you feel about it, it's real life and it's found in The<lb/>
Front Runner. It shouldn't be that hard for a mature person<lb/>
to look at lite as it sometimes is.<lb/>
The passages dealing with the tranquil agony of running<lb/>
long distances are beautifully wrought. Warren, a runner<lb/>
herself, seems much more at home writing about running<lb/>
than male homosexuality. Whatever the case, she touches<lb/>
the truth about running several times<lb/>
The idea of a runner desiring another runner as a lover<lb/>
is one such truth. At a certain level, tunning becomes a<lb/>
sublime spiritual experience in addition to an invigorating<lb/>
physical exercise. It's a sensation runners love ana ache<lb/>
share. I've often dreamt of a lithe , doe-like woman with sun<lb/>
flecked hair to glide over forest trails with me and<lb/>
whatever.<lb/>
I was visiting an old running buddy who plays soccer at<lb/>
High Point College and he introduced me to a rather plain<lb/>
looking girl he was dating. When I later commented on the<lb/>
differences between her and Miss November my friend<lb/>
answered, "Well, she's the only girl I know who can stay up<lb/>
on a ten mile run It made me smile I understood and<lb/>
Patricia Warren would have, too<lb/>
She may or may not understand homosexuality She<lb/>
didn't make it understandable to me. The Front Runner<lb/>
says that homosexuals are people, but not why some people<lb/>
are homosexuals. And the suggestion that societal<lb/>
inflexibility alone is responsible for the reason that tragedy<lb/>
seems inalterably interwoven with gay life just isn't<lb/>
satisfactory. There has to be something more. Whatever it<lb/>
is, It isn't here.<lb/>
The Front Runner may provide all the answers to your<lb/>
questions about homosexuality. I doubt that it will, but it's<lb/>
not a bad place to start looking for them<lb/>
No matter how you deal with the homosexual nature of<lb/>
the novel, if you have ever worn out a pair of Tigers making<lb/>
, the world spin a little faster under your feet, The Front<lb/>
Runner will touch your runner's soul.<lb/>
fjJ3<lb/>
U.&amp;A.<lb/>
'Every Tuesday night is<lb/>
reduced beverage prices lor<lb/>
10 P.M.)<lb/>
THE TREE HOUSf<lb/>
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from 8:00pm-8:00pTW.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057153_0009"/><lb/>
f f �<lb/>
12 October 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
jjplden Eagles seek revenge<lb/>
Pirates face Southern Mississippi<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
(A) Embarassing (B) Humiliated (C) Annihilated (D)<lb/>
M assacred<lb/>
Southern Mississippi's case, it was E. all of the<lb/>
above, two years ago when ECU administered a 48-0<lb/>
thrashing upon the Golden Eagles in Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
By the end of the first quarter, the Pirates were ahead<lb/>
0 and at the half. ECU increased the margin to 27-0. And<lb/>
before it was all over even Southern Miss coach Bobby<lb/>
ns admitted it was one of the most embarrassing<lb/>
setbacks in his career<lb/>
owever. tms go-around, the Pirates travel .to<lb/>
' esburg. Miss, and it's not likely any members of the<lb/>
i Mississippi team back in 1976 have forgotten<lb/>
about that 48-0 slaughter.<lb/>
All I'm expecting to play down there is wildeyed group<lb/>
"Q for revenge said ECU head coach Pat Dye<lb/>
Wednesday at his weekly press luncheon "I'm sure thefr<lb/>
coaching staff and players are going to ready for this one.<lb/>
hat game we won 48-0 two years ago was no indication of<lb/>
oe of team they had that year. We just hit<lb/>
with some big plays early and really took it out of<lb/>
the<lb/>
Although the Golden Eagles went on to finish 2-9 in<lb/>
Southern Mississippi has established themselves as<lb/>
he top southern independents over the last two<lb/>
'ears Last season. Southern Miss upset Auburn.<lb/>
M ssissippt, and Mississippi State and just last week the<lb/>
Golden Eagles shocked Southeastern Conference foe<lb/>
Mississippi State 24-22 for the second consecutive year.<lb/>
They're good at every phase of the game praised<lb/>
Dye. "Other than N C. State they're the best team we've<lb/>
faced this year. Southern Miss is a ballcontrol team and<lb/>
they run a conservative offense, but they don t make many<lb/>
mistakes.<lb/>
"And playing them in Hattiesburg doesn't make things<lb/>
any easier for us. They're a school a lot like us. They've<lb/>
beaten some pretty big teams We're going to have to<lb/>
execute much better on offense of we expect to beat<lb/>
them<lb/>
The Pirates captured their third straight victory last<lb/>
week against VMI and now boast a 4-2 record. Once again,<lb/>
the Bucs defense was impressive limiting VMI to just 78<lb/>
total yards and only one net yard on the ground ECU<lb/>
sacked Keydet quarterbacks Robby Clark andLarry Hupertz<lb/>
13 times for 62 yards in losses.<lb/>
"Defensively, we had another great game noted Dye.<lb/>
"We played 20 players on defense and they all graded<lb/>
winners. Gerald Hall had a great afternoon with his pass<lb/>
interceptions and his punt returns. He's getting better each<lb/>
week. Charlie Carter and the rest of the secondary all<lb/>
played well<lb/>
Hall tied a school record with 121 yards in punt returns<lb/>
and scored on a 74 yard jaunt in the first quarter. The free<lb/>
safety from Edenton also picked off two passes and now<lb/>
ranks seventh in the nation in punt returns with a nifty 16.6<lb/>
average<lb/>
Offensively, ECU had its problems against the Keydets.<lb/>
Hall does it all,<lb/>
ranked 7th in<lb/>
punt returns<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
EC ty Gerald Hall probably remembers the Pirates<lb/>
� -ars ago agmst Southern M ississippi as well as<lb/>
�<lb/>
�hen an jntested defensive back, had drawn his<lb/>
first starting assignment against the Golden Eagles who<lb/>
were slight favorites to win the game<lb/>
a as sort of nervous coming into that game because I<lb/>
was st - " Jim Boidmg. Ernest Madison and Reggie<lb/>
ho were all seniors remembered Hall At the<lb/>
. were supposed to have the best team in their<lb/>
hist And from films, we knew how good they were<lb/>
supposed to be<lb/>
One problem though Southern Mississippi had no idea<lb/>
� �d Gerald Hall was and the speedy Endenton native<lb/>
showed the Golden Eagles who could really fly.<lb/>
H i : a punt on his own 30 yard line late in<lb/>
.arter and streaked 70 yards down the sidelines<lb/>
a touchdown The score gave ECU a 17-0 lead and<lb/>
Sou � � M iss never recovered from losma 48-0.<lb/>
xna! was just a great game for everybody said Hall<lb/>
who finished his sophomore season ranked 12th in the<lb/>
: unt returns. Everything seemed to go right<lb/>
However, this Saturday, ECU has theunenviable ask of<lb/>
g to Hattiesburg. for a return match against the<lb/>
Golden Eagles. Southern Miss, upset Southeastern<lb/>
�ence foe Mississippi State 24-22 last week and Hall<lb/>
admits the game could be "very physical<lb/>
� s going to be rough down there said Hall. "I'm<lb/>
pretty sure that 48-0 game is still on their minds. They<lb/>
probably want to beat us worst than anybody. Our work will<lb/>
be cut out for us<lb/>
Since Hall's flashy debut against Southern Miss his<lb/>
sophomore year, he has established himself as one of the<lb/>
st dangerous punt returners in the nation as well as a<lb/>
sistent performer, in the secondary As a soph, Hall<lb/>
shed the season with six interceptions which tied him<lb/>
a �� Peggie Pinkney for the Southern Conference title.<lb/>
Last year Hall picked off four more passes and returned<lb/>
a punt 80 yards for a touchdown against Richmond which<lb/>
set a school record,<lb/>
And last week. Hall enjoyed his finest hour in a Pirate<lb/>
uniform against the unsuspecting VMI Keydets. He<lb/>
slithered and dodged his way 74 yardson a punt return for a<lb/>
touchdown and also intercepted two passes His second<lb/>
interception against the Keydets ended a late fourth<lb/>
quarter scoring threat<lb/>
AH my credit for the punt returns has to go to the great<lb/>
blocking I get explained Hall, who tied a school record<lb/>
against VMI with four returns for 121 yards "If I get that<lb/>
holdup at the line of scrimmage, I'm confident I can return<lb/>
just about anything for a big gain.<lb/>
A lot also depends on what type of kick I get. I can<lb/>
usually tell whether the defense is coming down fast before<lb/>
the kick But that blocking, that's what really counts<lb/>
Not only did Hall return a punt for a touchdown and<lb/>
intercepted two passes against the Keydets, he made five<lb/>
tackles and broke up another pass<lb/>
He played a super game praised ECU head coach<lb/>
Pat Dye "The wall was there on the punt return, but he<lb/>
really scored on hisown. He snaked in and out and then just<lb/>
outran everybody to the end zone.<lb/>
Southern Miss, will undoubtedly do anything to keep<lb/>
Hall from touching the ball Saturday Golden Eagle coach<lb/>
Bobby Collins has already seen Hall dash into the end zone<lb/>
once and has had problems all season long with punt<lb/>
returns<lb/>
It doesn't really bother me when they start kicking<lb/>
away from me said Hall, who now ranks seventh in the<lb/>
nation in punt returns with a 16.6 average. "I figure if they<lb/>
start concentrating on doing that, the punter will hit some<lb/>
bad kicks which will give our offense some breaks.<lb/>
And some "big breaks" like another long punt return<lb/>
will probably be just what the Pirates need Saturday to<lb/>
upend Southern Miss.<lb/>
Speedy Hall<lb/>
ECU SAFETY GERALD Hall now ranks seventh in the<lb/>
nation in punt returns with a 16.6 average. Hall has also<lb/>
intercepted three passes this season Photo by Chap<lb/>
Gurley<lb/>
Pirates at home<lb/>
for two matches<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"Field hockey is a very<lb/>
mental game; so far we are<lb/>
not getting a full game of<lb/>
concentration from our<lb/>
players That is the asses-<lb/>
sment of ECU'S girl's field<lb/>
hockey team as descirbed<lb/>
by coach Laurie Arrants<lb/>
"We have been playing<lb/>
very inconsistant and have<lb/>
not had as much hustle as<lb/>
we would like to see '<lb/>
The Pirates most recent<lb/>
matchup was a disappoint-<lb/>
ing 5-1 loss to Pfeiffer<lb/>
College. "In the first half<lb/>
we were aggressive and<lb/>
challenged them all the<lb/>
way said freshman center<lb/>
fullback Drew Kennedy.<lb/>
"In the second half we let<lb/>
them dictate the plays and<lb/>
set the pace. We know our<lb/>
individual positions well,<lb/>
it's just a matter of putting<lb/>
it all together and playing<lb/>
as a unit Sophomore<lb/>
goalie Leigh Sumner said<lb/>
that Pfeiffer "played better<lb/>
than he expected. As far as<lb/>
talent is concerned, we<lb/>
should have won. We have<lb/>
the individual talent to do<lb/>
well as a team, we just<lb/>
haven't learned<lb/>
our abilities.<lb/>
The Pirates conclude<lb/>
the<lb/>
and Saturday against Vir-<lb/>
ginia Tech and Davidson<lb/>
College, respectively.<lb/>
"Virginia Tech has an<lb/>
excellent team and they<lb/>
could possibly be in the<lb/>
National Championships<lb/>
said Arrants. "They beat<lb/>
Carolina 2-1 They are fast,<lb/>
experienced, and well dis-<lb/>
ciplined. We could pull off<lb/>
an upset, but we are still to<lb/>
be considered the under-<lb/>
dogs. Davidson is not to be<lb/>
considered one of the<lb/>
stronger teams in the state.<lb/>
We are more evenly match-<lb/>
ed to them and it should<lb/>
be a more interesting con-<lb/>
test<lb/>
One Optimistic member<lb/>
of the squad is senior<lb/>
co-captain Sally Birch.<lb/>
"We've never played Vir-<lb/>
ginia Tech before, but we<lb/>
have the talent to make a<lb/>
good game out of it We<lb/>
play well in sports. We beat<lb/>
Davidson last year, but we<lb/>
know we will have to play<lb/>
hard and concentrate more<lb/>
if we expect to win this<lb/>
year Some early injuries<lb/>
hurt us, but eveyone should<lb/>
be healthy by this week-<lb/>
end's games<lb/>
"mes are played<lb/>
field<lb/>
Charles Street, adjacent to<lb/>
The Pirates had numerous scoring opportunities against<lb/>
VMI, but failed to captialize on most of them. Injuries have<lb/>
continued to plague the Pirates, but Dye still had praise for<lb/>
several offensive performers.<lb/>
"Eddie Hicks has played well during the last three<lb/>
games and Theodore Sutton ran the ball well against VMI<lb/>
said Dye. "I think we may have tried to do too much against<lb/>
VMI and it hurt our execution With all the injuries we've<lb/>
had its certainly hurt our execution.<lb/>
"In practice we've been a little too cautious and it's<lb/>
probably carried over into the games. We weren't very<lb/>
effective throwing the ball and we had people open all day<lb/>
long. But we've always had problems against VMI<lb/>
Dye said Leander Green will start at quarterback against<lb/>
Southern Miss, but reserve QB Steve Greer will still see<lb/>
plenty of action.<lb/>
NOTES ECU safety Gerald Hall is now ranked<lb/>
seventh in the nation in punt returns for touchdowns. His<lb/>
first came against this week's opponent Southern<lb/>
Mississippi during his sophomore year and he scored on a<lb/>
80 yard return against Richmond last year. Hall also has 13<lb/>
pass interceptions for 213 yards in his career ullback<lb/>
Theodore Sutton is the team's leading rusher with 83<lb/>
carries for 354 yards and a 4.3 averageAnthony Collins<lb/>
has 272 yardson 50 carries while Eddie Hicks has rushed 53<lb/>
times for 236 yardsBilly Ray Washington leads the team<lb/>
in pass receptions with 12 catches for 345 yards and three<lb/>
touchdowns. Terry Gallaher is right behind with ten<lb/>
passes for 114 yards and two touchdowns Bill Lamm is the<lb/>
team's leading scorer with 33 points on 12 PAT's and seven<lb/>
field goals.<lb/>
Eddie Hicks<lb/>
THE FLASHY SPEEDSTER from Hendersc<lb/>
for a touchdown two years ago against Southern<lb/>
in the Pirates 48-0 victory.<lb/>
M tssisi<lb/>
Collins, Eagles recall<lb/>
48-0 slaughter in 1976<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
The Southern Mississ-<lb/>
ippi Golden Eagles must<lb/>
surely feel that they have a<lb/>
matter to settle with the<lb/>
ECU Pirates when the two<lb/>
squads meet this Saturday<lb/>
night in Hattiesburg, Miss.<lb/>
In 1976, the Pirates humil-<lb/>
iated Coach Bobby Collins<lb/>
and his Eagles 48-0 in<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
Collins now has little to<lb/>
say of that game. But he<lb/>
does recall a certain mem-<lb/>
ber of that Pirate team that<lb/>
just so happens to be a<lb/>
member of the one he must<lb/>
meet Saturday.<lb/>
"Certainly we know<lb/>
Eddie Hicks from the last<lb/>
time we played them said<lb/>
Collins. "I lemember his<lb/>
two touchdowns and I know<lb/>
he ran for more than 130<lb/>
yards against us<lb/>
Collins remarked that<lb/>
he felt that this year's<lb/>
Pirate backfield was su-<lb/>
perior to the one that he<lb/>
saw in 1976. "I believe that<lb/>
with Sutton (Theodore) and<lb/>
Collins (Anthony). they<lb/>
have an even stronger<lb/>
backfield than last time<lb/>
noted the Golden Eagle<lb/>
mentor.<lb/>
Collins also had praise<lb/>
for the Pirate offensive line<lb/>
They have a super of-<lb/>
fensive line to go with those<lb/>
backs noted Collins.<lb/>
"We've been very im-<lb/>
pressed with the way they<lb/>
get off the ball' on every<lb/>
play<lb/>
Collins also spoke<lb/>
highly of the Pirate de-<lb/>
fense. "Defensively, they<lb/>
have excellent speed and<lb/>
quickness said the Eagle<lb/>
coach. "They will give you<lb/>
a lot of different looks.<lb/>
They also have a lot of<lb/>
stars, including Valentine<lb/>
(Zack), Summer (Tommy),<lb/>
and Hall (Gerald), just to<lb/>
mention a few '<lb/>
Of major concern to<lb/>
Collins coming into the<lb/>
contest was his own team's<lb/>
kicking game and return<lb/>
coverage. "Then said<lb/>
Collins, "here they come<lb/>
a th a hat has to be the best<lb/>
kicking game we've faced,<lb/>
what with Collins running<lb/>
back kickoffs and H<lb/>
returning punts I heard<lb/>
that Hail ranks fifth or sixth<lb/>
in the country<lb/>
Actually Hall ranks<lb/>
seventh Still, Collins has<lb/>
certainly found a lot of<lb/>
roadblocks in the way of<lb/>
what he and the Eagles<lb/>
hope will be a game ending<lb/>
in "sweet revenge<lb/>
NOTING THE EAGLES<lb/>
Offensively, the Eagles<lb/>
are led at quarterback by<lb/>
what Collins calls his "two<lb/>
first string quarterbacks,<lb/>
junior Dane McDane.1 a<lb/>
senior Je'f Hammond<lb/>
Hammond. injured in the<lb/>
season's first game returns<lb/>
to full time action this<lb/>
week other injured Eagles<lb/>
include defensive end M ike<lb/>
McKmzie and center David<lb/>
Parnsh. both shouid see<lb/>
limited time this week<lb/>
junior linebacker Clump<lb/>
Taylor was chosen last<lb/>
week's Associated Press<lb/>
Southeas<lb/>
Week Ta.<lb/>
e defense .��<lb/>
�<lb/>
only blemishes<lb/>
Eagles 3-2 record<lb/>
losses to Cine v<lb/>
highly respectable M<lb/>
ippi tackle<lb/>
was select<lb/>
season A Jouthi<lb/>
pendent team -<lb/>
year tailback " -<lb/>
leads the Eagies<lb/>
 " :� 14 yai "<lb/>
and 1 tou<lb/>
Chuck Brow" and<lb/>
Marvin<lb/>
'ear. n : i<lb/>
rec '<lb/>
ieads<lb/>
e -<lb/>
s � �.<lb/>
eads this - I<lb/>
.�. � � 1969 14-<lb/>
. heac coach Bobby<lb/>
has a 2C<lb/>
Southei<lb/>
rese<lb/>
team the Eagles ha<lb/>
thisea-<lb/>
ECU now 3-6-1 overall<lb/>
Wesleyan defeats Pirates 3-2<lb/>
By DAVID MAREADY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A rallying effort to<lb/>
score in the closing seconds<lb/>
of the game by ECU'S<lb/>
soccer team fell short as<lb/>
they were defeated by<lb/>
North Carolina Wesleyan<lb/>
College 3-2 on Minges<lb/>
Soccer Field, Tuesday<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
Brad Smith, ECU<lb/>
Soccer Coach, was upset, to<lb/>
say the least, with his<lb/>
teams lackadaisical per-<lb/>
formance.<lb/>
"We were pathetic, our<lb/>
use of the fundamentals of<lb/>
soccer were poor, and as a<lb/>
result, we played a terrible<lb/>
game<lb/>
The first half of play<lb/>
was marred by numerous<lb/>
defensive mistakes by both<lb/>
clubs. The Pirate's lacklus-<lb/>
ter offense was characteriz-<lb/>
ed by inconsistent passing<lb/>
and an inability to keep the<lb/>
ball away from their goal.<lb/>
� Nevertheless, the action<lb/>
was fast paced as ECU<lb/>
narrowly missed on shots.<lb/>
The Pirates just missed on<lb/>
shots that were just inches<lb/>
from the scoring goals.<lb/>
<lb/>
H i<lb/>
V<lb/>
Wesleyan's first goal of<lb/>
the afternoon came with<lb/>
only fifty seconds remain-<lb/>
ing in the first half. A well<lb/>
placed corner kick from<lb/>
Wesleyan wing, Ken<lb/>
Jordan, was driven off the<lb/>
hands of ECU goalie,<lb/>
Kevin Tyus, by Vince<lb/>
Liverman of NCWC to give<lb/>
Wesleyan a 1-0 lead.<lb/>
Strangely enough,<lb/>
Liverman's goal seemed to<lb/>
awaken the Pirate offense<lb/>
considerably. But, the<lb/>
spark was short lived as the<lb/>
half ended with NC Wes-<lb/>
leyan ahead 1-0.<lb/>
 The Pirate's enthusiasm<lb/>
carried over to the opening<lb/>
minutes of the second half<lb/>
and peaked with ECU fresh<lb/>
man Brad Winchell's score<lb/>
on an assist by teammate<lb/>
Phil Martin. Winchell's<lb/>
goal came with 5:14 gone in<lb/>
the second half and evened<lb/>
the tally at one apiece.<lb/>
The rest of the second<lb/>
half was plagued with<lb/>
penalties, both on Wesle-<lb/>
yan and ECU. ECU even<lb/>
had one penalty called on<lb/>
one of its trainers for<lb/>
unsportsmanlike conduct.<lb/>
Both teams had players to<lb/>
receive yellow card warn-<lb/>
ings for their "foul play<lb/>
James Lipscombe scor-<lb/>
ed Wesleyan's go-ahead<lb/>
goal with 17:04 gone in the<lb/>
second half. Lipscombe<lb/>
booted his second consecut-<lb/>
ive goal of the day minutes<lb/>
later to catapult Wesleyan<lb/>
into a 3-1 lead with twenty<lb/>
minutes left to play in the<lb/>
game<lb/>
Wesleyan then began to<lb/>
run a stall offense They<lb/>
held the ball as much as<lb/>
possible, waiting for the<lb/>
clock to run out<lb/>
ECU's hopes of a come-<lb/>
back all but vanished, until<lb/>
Brad Winchell rallied his<lb/>
team with his second con-<lb/>
secutive goal on an assist<lb/>
by Jeff Karpovich. how-<lb/>
ever, only three minutes<lb/>
remained in regulation<lb/>
play<lb/>
As the last two minutes<lb/>
ran off the clock, the<lb/>
Pirates resorted to one<lb/>
shot, desperation attempts,<lb/>
all of which ended in<lb/>
failure. Wesieyan patiently<lb/>
held onto the ball until the<lb/>
clock expired with ECU on<lb/>
the short end of the 3-2<lb/>
decision.<lb/>
Final statistics of the<lb/>
game saw Wesleyan with a<lb/>
slight advantage in shots at<lb/>
goal with twenty-two. The<lb/>
Pirates attempted fifteen<lb/>
shots at the Wesleyan goal,<lb/>
eleven of those coming in<lb/>
.Cftftk<lb/>
Brad Smith<lb/>
the second half Each<lb/>
team's goalie was credited<lb/>
with ten saves for the<lb/>
match Freshman Brad<lb/>
Winchell's double goal tally<lb/>
boosted his season total to<lb/>
six, while the team total<lb/>
was raised to seventeen<lb/>
Coach Rick Helm's<lb/>
Wesleyan soccer team now<lb/>
sports a mediocre 4-5<lb/>
record on the season East<lb/>
Carolina's record dropped<lb/>
to 3-6-1<lb/>
The Pirate s resume ac-<lb/>
tion on October 14 against<lb/>
Pembroke State University<lb/>
Gametime is 2 p m<lb/>
Minges Soccer Field<lb/>
st<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057153_0010"/><lb/>
� t<lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 12 Octobr 1978<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD's Fearless Forecast<lb/>
ECU AT SOUTHERN MISSISSIPPI<lb/>
UNCAT WAKE FOREST<lb/>
CLEMSON AT VIRGINIA<lb/>
DUKEATNAVY<lb/>
MARYLAND AT SYRACUSE<lb/>
PITTSBURGH AT NOTRE DAME<lb/>
IOWA STATE AT MISSOURI<lb/>
GEORGIA AT LSU<lb/>
MICHIGAN ST AT MICHIGAN<lb/>
KENTUCKY AT MISSISSIPPI<lb/>
OKLAHOMA ST AT COLORADO<lb/>
WASHINGTON AT STANFORD<lb/>
CHARLESCHANDLERTERRYHERNDON<lb/>
(53-16-1)(50-19-1)<lb/>
ECU 28-13ECU 16-14<lb/>
UNCUNC<lb/>
ClemsonClemson<lb/>
NavyDuke<lb/>
MarylandMaryland<lb/>
Notre DamePittsburgh<lb/>
MissouriMissouri<lb/>
LSULSU<lb/>
MichiganMichigan<lb/>
MississippiKentucky<lb/>
ColoradoColorado<lb/>
StanfordWashington<lb/>
SAM ROGERS<lb/>
(47-22-1)<lb/>
ECU 28-24<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Navy<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Missouri<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Mississippi<lb/>
Oklahoma St.<lb/>
Stanford<lb/>
DAVID MAREADYBILL CAIN<lb/>
(18-6)ECU Director of Athletics<lb/>
ECU 28-21ECU 24-9<lb/>
UNCWake Forest<lb/>
ClemsonClemson<lb/>
NavyNavy<lb/>
MarylandMaryland<lb/>
Notre DameNotre Dame<lb/>
MissouriMissouri<lb/>
LSUGeorgia<lb/>
MichiganM ichigan<lb/>
KentuckyKentucky<lb/>
ColoradoColorado<lb/>
WashingtonStanford<lb/>
Forecast<lb/>
race has<lb/>
new leader<lb/>
Charles Chandler<lb/>
moved into sole possession<lb/>
of first place in the Fearless<lb/>
Forecast race by posting his<lb/>
second consecutive 11-1<lb/>
record last week Sam<lb/>
Rogers, who was tied for<lb/>
first place prior to last<lb/>
week's games, fell to third<lb/>
place following a dismal 5-7<lb/>
showing. Terry Herndon<lb/>
eased into second place but<lb/>
dropped to three games<lb/>
behind Chandler after<lb/>
9-3 mark<lb/>
Young Packers get 'fresh start with Bart'<lb/>
By CHARLESCHANDLER<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
It's easy to remember<lb/>
the days when the Green<lb/>
Bay Packers were rulers of<lb/>
the National Football<lb/>
League, and when Coach<lb/>
Vince Lombardi was king of<lb/>
the hill Lombardi and the<lb/>
Packers ruled the NFL like<lb/>
ithaoneverbeenruiedbefore.<lb/>
Then Lombardi left, and so<lb/>
did the Packer dynasty.<lb/>
After Lombardi's re-<lb/>
tirement, the Packers went<lb/>
through many coaches,<lb/>
none of which could touch<lb/>
Lombardi's achievements.<lb/>
Finally, in 1975, the Packer<lb/>
front office decided to turn<lb/>
the head coaching job over<lb/>
to a pupil of Lombardi. This<lb/>
man had spearheaded the<lb/>
awesome Packer offense,<lb/>
and is called by some, the<lb/>
greatest quarterback in the<lb/>
history of of the NFL. This<lb/>
man. of course, is Bart<lb/>
Starr.<lb/>
For three long years,<lb/>
Packer fans maintained<lb/>
faith in Starr. But the team<lb/>
won only 13 games those<lb/>
first three years. Things<lb/>
were as bad as ever.<lb/>
When this season be-<lb/>
gan, pressure was placed<lb/>
on Starr to win, NOW. It<lb/>
seemed an impossible task<lb/>
for any man, even Lom-<lb/>
bardi. Yet Starr has taken<lb/>
the young Packers and led<lb/>
them to a 5-1 record. The<lb/>
biggest win came last week<lb/>
over Chicago. The Pack is<lb/>
now firmly entrenched in<lb/>
first place in the NFC<lb/>
central Division.<lb/>
Why? Starr has dis-<lb/>
covered that his young<lb/>
players can really play.<lb/>
Youngsters like quarter-<lb/>
back David Whitehurst,<lb/>
running back Terdel<lb/>
M iddleton, and rookie wide<lb/>
receiver James Lofton have<lb/>
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Ski Binding Dealer<lb/>
brought explosiveness back<lb/>
to the offense. The defense<lb/>
has shown flashes of true<lb/>
respectability also.<lb/>
Whether or not Starr<lb/>
and the Packers can con-<lb/>
tinue to win is unknown,<lb/>
but, at least for a while,<lb/>
fans in W isconsin can boast<lb/>
of their beloved Packers<lb/>
again. This year has truly<lb/>
represented a "fresh start<lb/>
with Bart<lb/>
Here's a "fresh" look at<lb/>
thisweek'sgames:<lb/>
GREEN BAY 27<lb/>
SEATTLE 21<lb/>
The Pack has a form-<lb/>
idable foe this week. Sea-<lb/>
hawk quarterback Jim Zorn<lb/>
is one of the most under-<lb/>
rated QB's in the League.<lb/>
He rates as one of the best<lb/>
around. Seattle is 3-3, and<lb/>
are no fluke. They have a<lb/>
good coach in Jack Patera<lb/>
and will cause Green Bay<lb/>
many problems. But Bart<lb/>
Starr has the Packers rol-<lb/>
ling, so look for Green Bay<lb/>
to win a squeaker.<lb/>
HOUSTON 21<lb/>
BUFFALO 10<lb/>
The Bills were slaugh-<lb/>
tered by the Jets last week.<lb/>
Guess what will happen<lb/>
against Earl Campbell and<lb/>
the Oilers.<lb/>
DALLAS28<lb/>
ST. LOUIS17<lb/>
The Cardinals will win<lb/>
eventually; but not this<lb/>
week. The Cowboys looked<lb/>
super in last week's game<lb/>
with the Giants. The<lb/>
"Doomsday Defense" has<lb/>
not given up a touchdown<lb/>
in three games. That streak<lb/>
should end but the Cards<lb/>
losing streak should not.<lb/>
ATLANTA 14<lb/>
DETROIT 10<lb/>
Detroit gave Washing-<lb/>
ton all they wanted last<lb/>
week in a 29-19 loss.<lb/>
Atlanta is coming off a loss<lb/>
to the Browns. Both clubs<lb/>
lask vital winning ingre-<lb/>
dients. However, the Fal-<lb/>
cons should win on the<lb/>
passing Steve Bartkowski<lb/>
and the performance of a<lb/>
potentially stingy defense.<lb/>
NEW YORK GIANTS17<lb/>
TAMPA BAY 14<lb/>
This game should prove<lb/>
most interesting. Both<lb/>
clubs are on the rise. The<lb/>
two coaches, Giant mentor<lb/>
John McVay and Buc head<lb/>
man John McKay, know<lb/>
what coaching is all about.<lb/>
They also know what the<lb/>
home field advantage can<lb/>
meanThis one's in New<lb/>
York.<lb/>
MINNESOTA 17<lb/>
LOSANGELES13<lb/>
Here's this week's up-<lb/>
set pick. The Rams have<lb/>
looked great, going 6-0<lb/>
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we weld bikes, frailer hitehea,<lb/>
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wc make unusual Items<lb/>
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1204 8. Washington<lb/>
752 7742<lb/>
F<lb/>
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CORKIER Of lO� 3 CLARK STREETS<lb/>
IN HATTERAS HAMMOCK BUILDING<lb/>
WtRE HARD TO FiO BUT WELL WORTH IT<lb/>
mm,m-<lb/>
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Give her an opal and diamond pendant<lb/>
for a birthday she'll always remember!<lb/>
a $85 b. $125<lb/>
Both available in 14 karat gold.<lb/>
vka � St l  ��.� �r<lb/>
Zales and Friends make wishes come true!<lb/>
ZALES<lb/>
The Diamond Store<lb/>
Located at PITT PLAZA ��������<lb/>
VbRK PRODUCTS<lb/>
110 lb. sets with solid 5' bar and dumbeils.<lb/>
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� E-Z Curl bars, &amp; solid barbells<lb/>
in 5 and 6 ft. lengths .<lb/>
Other Fitness Needs: �Weight lifting belts<lb/>
� Slimmer waist trimmers �Slimmer thigh trimmers<lb/>
� Conditioning suits � Everlast boxing supplies<lb/>
-T<lb/>
H.L.H0DGES<lb/>
AND COMPANY, INC.<lb/>
210 E. 5tll St. Phon 752-4156<lb/>
A Short Walk From Campus<lb/>
�COUPON�<lb/>
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OFFICIAL NORTH CAROLINA STATE INSPECTION STATION<lb/>
WE SERVICE NATIONAL ACCOUNTS<lb/>
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�aWtTn.<lb/>
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tU.4�fM<lb/>
under new coach Ray Mal-<lb/>
vesi. But the Vikes are all<lb/>
set to turn down the ther-<lb/>
mostat up in Bloomington<lb/>
That's right, the Rams from<lb/>
sunny California must tra-<lb/>
vel to the NFL's version of<lb/>
the North Pole. Minnesota<lb/>
coach Bud Grant could have<lb/>
some rather "cold" sur-<lb/>
prises for LA also.<lb/>
DENVER 20<lb/>
CHICAGO 17<lb/>
The Bears have lost<lb/>
three in a row. But the<lb/>
Broncos were humiliated<lb/>
23-0 by San Diego last<lb/>
week. This game is to be<lb/>
played in Mile High Sta-<lb/>
dium in Denver. Sorry.<lb/>
Chicago, Broncomania rea-<lb/>
sserts itself.<lb/>
NEW ENGLAND 24<lb/>
CINCINNATI 13<lb/>
The Patriots are one of<lb/>
the fine teams in the NFL<lb/>
Bad breaks have prevented<lb/>
them from being 6-0 now.<lb/>
The blemishes on their 4-2<lb/>
record have come in close<lb/>
games with Washington<lb/>
and Baltimore. The Ben-<lb/>
gals are 0-6no, make<lb/>
that 0-7.<lb/>
CLEVELAND 21<lb/>
PITTSBURGH 20<lb/>
In somewhat of an up-<lb/>
set, the Browns should get<lb/>
revenge for their overtime<lb/>
loss to the Steelers earlier<lb/>
this year. Pittsburgh is un-<lb/>
defeated, but the Browns<lb/>
are well-drilled.<lb/>
prepared, and proroa-<lb/>
winners this week<lb/>
WASHINGTON 24<lb/>
PHILADELPHIA 21<lb/>
With this contest sel<lb/>
be played in Philly<lb/>
thing could happen<lb/>
Eagles may very we<lb/>
the undefeated Skins B <lb/>
more likely is the poss t<lb/>
that Joe Theismai<lb/>
give the Redskms thai M<lb/>
extra that is neeaec I<lb/>
out a close one<lb/>
BALTIMORE 24<lb/>
NEW YORK JETS2C<lb/>
The Colt nightmare n<lb/>
be over All-Pro quari<lb/>
back Bert Jones is slate: I<lb/>
see action in this co'es?<lb/>
Even if he does" I - a.<lb/>
well, his presence a<lb/>
should carry the Cots I<lb/>
victory<lb/>
NEW ORLEANS24<lb/>
SAN FRANCISCO 17<lb/>
General Manac-<lb/>
Thcmas is m a rebui<lb/>
stage in San Francisco Hi<lb/>
is starting from the .er.<lb/>
bottom and builds .<lb/>
And that's where the 49<lb/>
are. the very bottom �<lb/>
even lower than the Sa '<lb/>
Other game ;<lb/>
MIAMI 17<lb/>
SAN DiEGO 16<lb/>
OAKLAND27<lb/>
KANSASCITY 14<lb/>
Mikes' Bicycle<lb/>
Shop<lb/>
,<lb/>
University Arcade<lb/>
Complete line of tools &amp;<lb/>
accessories. Years of<lb/>
experience fixing<lb/>
Greenville's bikes.<lb/>
Guaranteed Service.<lb/>
752-5291<lb/>
BOYD'S BARBER<lb/>
and HAIRSTYLING<lb/>
1006 S. Evans St<lb/>
Phone 758-4056<lb/>
By Appomtment Only<lb/>
MehanRBoyd<lb/>
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. - � � -�<lb/>
 - - � m <lb/>
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a �-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057153_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>