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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057154_0001"/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina vo. no. 55 no. ?r ,? October 1978<lb/>
Plays want funding<lb/>
By LENA HENSLEY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Under a proposed plan to cut ECU's Playhouse budget,<lb/>
students will now have to pay to see a production.<lb/>
The following statements were included in the<lb/>
statement released by the playhouse management to<lb/>
students when picking up tickets.<lb/>
" Due to the current financial crisis at the ECU Student<lb/>
Government Association, SGA has advised the Playhouse<lb/>
that it will in all likelihood, be unable to subsidize student<lb/>
admissions to the Playhouse to the extent that it has<lb/>
traditionally done " Also, "In order to pay for the current<lb/>
production, it has become necessary for us to institute a<lb/>
charge for student admissions<lb/>
Friday afternoon a meeting was held for those<lb/>
concerned about the welfare of the Playhouse.<lb/>
The discussion was led by Tina Padilla which<lb/>
presented the current standing of the Playhouse. Without<lb/>
most of the requested funds it is possible the Playhouse will<lb/>
have to cancel the rest of the season according to Padilla.<lb/>
She also asked for the support of those present and for them<lb/>
to spread the word to get other student and faculty<lb/>
involved.<lb/>
When asked why SGA was cutting the budget, Padilla<lb/>
had two possible reasons. 1( that SGA really doesn't have<lb/>
the money and is trying to be fair to all organizations or 2)<lb/>
that this is some sort of power play.<lb/>
Playhouse General Manager, Preston Sisk said that<lb/>
$18,000 has already been spent on the current production.<lb/>
He also stated that the budget he proposed and that has<lb/>
been presented to SGA of $33,000 was based on last year's<lb/>
budget with the $3,000 increase just to cover the loss of<lb/>
revenues from the closing of McGuinnis Auditorium after<lb/>
Christmas.<lb/>
Sisk also checked with the Student Fund Accounting<lb/>
Office and found that last year approximately 51 of the<lb/>
money alloted to SGA wnt for Media funding leaving 49<lb/>
to cover all other organizations and this year with the<lb/>
formation of the Media Board, the funds were split equally<lb/>
between the two. So, Sisk concluded that the money is or<lb/>
should be there, but added he didn't know what the<lb/>
problem was.<lb/>
At the meeting, Chairman of the Drama Department<lb/>
and also Artistic Director of the Playhouse, Edgar R.<lb/>
Loessin said he believed the Playhouse would get the<lb/>
money but perhaps not all that was requested.<lb/>
Loessin asked that all interested students go as a group<lb/>
to the next legislature meeting and to all subsequent<lb/>
meetings until the budget is voted on.<lb/>
Sisk added that he feels the legislature wants to support<lb/>
and fund what the student body wnats, so he wants to show<lb/>
SGA that the Playhouse is supported by the students.<lb/>
First non -Italian pontiff chosen<lb/>
VATICAN CITY (AP) -<lb/>
The cardinals of the Roman<lb/>
Catholic Church Monday<lb/>
elected 58-year-old Polish<lb/>
Cardinal Karol Wojtyla as<lb/>
pope, the first non-Italian<lb/>
in 455 years to lead the<lb/>
ancient. 700-million-mem-<lb/>
ber church<lb/>
He took the name John<lb/>
Paul, the same as his pre-<lb/>
decessor<lb/>
Wojtyla. little-known<lb/>
archbishop of Krakow, is<lb/>
the 263rd successor to the<lb/>
Throne of St. Peter. The<lb/>
election of a prelate from a<lb/>
communist nation will<lb/>
doubtlessly have vast re-<lb/>
percussions on relations<lb/>
between Rome and the East<lb/>
bloc.<lb/>
White smoke, the tradi-<lb/>
tional signal that a new<lb/>
pontiff is chosen, billowed<lb/>
into the night from the<lb/>
Sistine Chapel at 6:18 p.m.<lb/>
1 :18EDT. "It isofficial, the<lb/>
pope is elected the Vati-<lb/>
can radio said.<lb/>
The 111 cardinal-<lb/>
electors, meeting for the<lb/>
second time in two months<lb/>
to select a pontiff, made<lb/>
their decision in the second<lb/>
day of voting in their secret<lb/>
Sistine Chapel conclave. It<lb/>
came on what was appar-<lb/>
ently the seventh or eighth<lb/>
ballot.<lb/>
The new pope, born in<lb/>
Wadowice, Poland, on May<lb/>
18. 1920. was elevated to<lb/>
cardinal by Pope Paul VI<lb/>
eleven years ago and is a<lb/>
member of several Vatican<lb/>
congregations ? Sa-<lb/>
craments and Divine Wor-<lb/>
ship, Clergy and Catholic<lb/>
Education.<lb/>
He was born the son of a<lb/>
chemical factory ' worker,<lb/>
and has a good working<lb/>
relationship with the com-<lb/>
munist government of Po-<lb/>
land.<lb/>
EDGAR R. LOESSIN, chairman of the Drama department, urges students to attend SGA meetings until the budget is<lb/>
voted on.<lb/>
Siamese twins' parents<lb/>
never gave up hope<lb/>
Futrell addresses students<lb/>
ByCHARLESCHANDLER<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Washington Daily News<lb/>
Editor-Publisher Ashley<lb/>
Futrell told a group of ECU<lb/>
Journalism students last<lb/>
Tuesday that he felt the<lb/>
efforts of Watergate repor-<lb/>
ters Bob Woodward and<lb/>
Carl Bernstein in the famed<lb/>
scandal has brought light to<lb/>
many young potential jour-<lb/>
nalists.<lb/>
The long time newsman<lb/>
told the goup that Wood-<lb/>
ward and Bernstein showed<lb/>
the youth of America that<lb/>
journalists can have a large<lb/>
influence on everyday<lb/>
American life. He said that<lb/>
the duo exemplified the<lb/>
young reporter, brash and<lb/>
daring.<lb/>
Futrell spoke for some<lb/>
time on his past in the<lb/>
world of journalism. He<lb/>
then entertained questions<lb/>
from the students.<lb/>
One of the students<lb/>
asked Futrell if he would<lb/>
protect a reporter who was<lb/>
being asked to reveal a<lb/>
clandestine source. Futrell<lb/>
replied that he would<lb/>
protect the reporter under<lb/>
any and all circumstances.<lb/>
He noted that once a<lb/>
reporter revealed a source,<lb/>
the source was often lost<lb/>
forever.<lb/>
Futrell also spoke on the<lb/>
issue of women sports<lb/>
reporters in men's locker<lb/>
rooms after an athletic<lb/>
event.<lb/>
Futrell concluded the<lb/>
discussion by inviting any<lb/>
and all of the students to<lb/>
the world of journalism.<lb/>
But he told the students to<lb/>
be successful, they must<lb/>
first be totally devoted to<lb/>
the search for an answer to<lb/>
each and every question<lb/>
that the profession pro-<lb/>
vides.<lb/>
DURHAM, NIC. (AP)<lb/>
? David A. Bain, a 39-<lb/>
year-old state worker, says<lb/>
he had hope until the last<lb/>
minute that at least one of<lb/>
his Siamese twin daughters<lb/>
would survive.<lb/>
"I had hope until the<lb/>
last minute, until the last<lb/>
minute I had hope Bain<lb/>
said Sunday. "Never, ne-<lb/>
ver lose hope, as long as<lb/>
you have a breath in your<lb/>
body, you gotta hope<lb/>
Tonya Bain died at 9:10<lb/>
a.m. Sunday ? less than 24<lb/>
hours after the death of her<lb/>
sister Sonya.<lb/>
"Her weakened heart<lb/>
was never able to supply<lb/>
fully the needs of her body<lb/>
tissues and she died from<lb/>
unremitting cardiac fail-<lb/>
ure Dr. Howard Filston<lb/>
said in a brief statement.<lb/>
The twins, born Oct. 3.<lb/>
were separated Thursday<lb/>
by doctors at Duke Medical<lb/>
Center in a desparate a-<lb/>
ttempt to save their lives.<lb/>
Doctors never offered much<lb/>
hope that either child would<lb/>
survive.<lb/>
"A lot of people have<lb/>
been calling to tell me how<lb/>
sorry they are, that they'll<lb/>
keep praying for me<lb/>
Geralding Bain, 36, mother<lb/>
of the twins, said. "I'm just<lb/>
trying to hold on Mrs.<lb/>
Bain, who has seven other<lb/>
children, said she never<lb/>
saw the twins in person,<lb/>
only in pictures<lb/>
Bain, who lives in<lb/>
Fuquay-Varina. about 15<lb/>
miles south of Raleigh, is a<lb/>
$123-a-week technician in a<lb/>
state agricultural labora-<lb/>
tory.<lb/>
The girls were born by<lb/>
Caesarean section at Wake<lb/>
Medical Center in Raleigh<lb/>
because they were posi-<lb/>
tioned improperly for nor-<lb/>
mal delivery. Doctors said<lb/>
they were not aware the<lb/>
infants were joined until<lb/>
the surgery was under way.<lb/>
Doctors had wantec<lb/>
delay the separation sur-<lb/>
gery for several months to<lb/>
allow the infants time to<lb/>
grow stronger but 'ey<lb/>
went ahead because they<lb/>
said the babies corj I<lb/>
were deteriorating<lb/>
A team of four senior<lb/>
surgeons and five staf<lb/>
physicians performed the<lb/>
five-hour operation. The<lb/>
said following the surgery<lb/>
that the twins faced hor-<lb/>
rendous" odds. The twins<lb/>
were jomed from the chest<lb/>
to the navel and thee<lb/>
hearts and livers were<lb/>
connected<lb/>
Sent to Faculty Senate<lb/>
Fall break resolution proposed<lb/>
By MARC BARNES<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The weekly SGA Legi-<lb/>
slative session was domin-<lb/>
ated by one order of<lb/>
business ? the question of<lb/>
whether or not to appro-<lb/>
priate the sum of 15,000<lb/>
dollars for use in an escrow<lb/>
account.<lb/>
The measure, submit-<lb/>
ted to the full legislature by<lb/>
Lynn Calder calls for the<lb/>
money to be set aside for<lb/>
use by student organiza-<lb/>
tions in the spring of 1979.<lb/>
After a spirited debate,<lb/>
the measure was tabled.<lb/>
In other business, the<lb/>
legislature approved a re-<lb/>
solution which called for a<lb/>
fall break, which would last<lb/>
approximately four days,<lb/>
and an extended drop per-<lb/>
iod.<lb/>
This resolution is slated<lb/>
to be sent to a meeting of<lb/>
the Faculty Senate, which<lb/>
is to be held today.<lb/>
Brent Melvin, chairman<lb/>
of the Appropriations Com-<lb/>
mittee told the legislature<lb/>
that his committee will<lb/>
meet once a week for the<lb/>
next four weeks to consider<lb/>
a new budget.<lb/>
According to Melvin,<lb/>
the Appropriations Com-<lb/>
nvttee will, at the end of<lb/>
th? four week period, have<lb/>
the budget ready for<lb/>
Legislature's approval.<lb/>
the<lb/>
Melvin urged "pa-<lb/>
tience" on the part of the<lb/>
legislators, saying that the<lb/>
task which faced them was<lb/>
not easy.<lb/>
A large crowd, which<lb/>
some estimates placed as<lb/>
high as 150, were present<lb/>
at the meeting. The crowd<lb/>
was made up of Drama,<lb/>
Music, and Art students<lb/>
and they were on hand to<lb/>
protest a plan which would<lb/>
drastically cut the funding<lb/>
for some of their programs.<lb/>
The bill concerned did '<lb/>
not come before the floor<lb/>
for business, however, and<lb/>
the students sat or stood<lb/>
around the perimeters of<lb/>
the floor, and listened to<lb/>
orders of business before<lb/>
the legislature.<lb/>
What's inside <lb/>
JOYCE KENNEDY OF<lb/>
Mothers Finest See p. 5<lb/>
Photo by Chap Gurley)<lb/>
ECU'S winning streak ends see p. 7.<lb/>
ECU Soccer team defeats Pembroke<lb/>
State, 4-2. see p. 7.<lb/>
Brother's Johnson. Mother s F.nest<lb/>
concert reviewed see p 5<lb/>
Jorge Bolet pleases a capacity crowd For<lb/>
reviewsee p. 5.<lb/>
Brewer's installation schedule announced<lb/>
see p. 3.<lb/>
ECU Law Society organized;<lb/>
activities include speakers, trips<lb/>
W H OS GOT IT? ECU Heid hockey team is shown in action against Davidson Saturday morning.<lb/>
Photo by Steve Romero<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
mtmr t &amp; m m' w ??? 4? <lb/>
By KAY WILLIAMS<lb/>
Staff Wrltar<lb/>
Are you interested in<lb/>
attending law school or are<lb/>
you concerned about the<lb/>
changing laws? If so, then<lb/>
the ECU Law Society is the<lb/>
club for you.<lb/>
The Law Society will<lb/>
hold an organizational<lb/>
meeting Wed Oct. 18 at 7<lb/>
p.m. in the multi-purpose<lb/>
room at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. Plans for<lb/>
the 1978-79 school year will<lb/>
be discussed.<lb/>
The only requirements<lb/>
to become a member of the<lb/>
Society are to have a 2.0<lb/>
average and an interest in<lb/>
law.<lb/>
President of the ECU<lb/>
Law Society is Chuck<lb/>
Gouge. Dr. David Stevens<lb/>
is the faculty advisor to the<lb/>
group.<lb/>
Meetings are held once<lb/>
or twice a month on Tues-<lb/>
day or Wednesday nights.<lb/>
Keynote speakers, includ-<lb/>
ing lawyers, district attor-<lb/>
neys, and judges, are gen-<lb/>
erally on the agenda for<lb/>
the meetings. A panel<lb/>
discussion of the Law<lb/>
School Admission Test is<lb/>
tentatively planned for one<lb/>
of the spring meetings,<lb/>
according to Treasurer<lb/>
Lynn Calder.<lb/>
Tr e group plans to visit<lb/>
two law schools this year.<lb/>
The purpose of this will be<lb/>
to talk with law students<lb/>
and professors.<lb/>
An annual trip to<lb/>
Washington, D.C is one of<lb/>
the activities of the Society.<lb/>
While in Washington, the<lb/>
group plans to visit Senat-<lb/>
ors from N.C, the Supreme<lb/>
Court Building, and other<lb/>
historical places. A high-<lb/>
light of the Washington trip<lb/>
last year was the privilege<lb/>
to meet with U.S. Supreme<lb/>
Court Associate Justice<lb/>
William H. Rehnquist.<lb/>
The Society is planning<lb/>
a social with several area<lb/>
attorneys in a couple of<lb/>
weeks. These socials give<lb/>
the students a chance to<lb/>
meet informally with area<lb/>
attorneys.<lb/>
The purpose of the Law<lb/>
Society is to increase and<lb/>
enhance students exposure<lb/>
to the legal profession,<lb/>
according to Calder.<lb/>
This years group hopes<lb/>
to equal or excel the<lb/>
accomplishments of last<lb/>
year as last year was every<lb/>
good year for them.<lb/>
Two successful fund<lb/>
drives were held last year<lb/>
A car wash and a donation<lb/>
drive held by the group<lb/>
helped sponsor the trip to<lb/>
Washington.<lb/>
The Law Day Address<lb/>
by Senator Robert Morgan<lb/>
was an activity cosponsored<lb/>
by the group with the Pitt<lb/>
Cunty Bar Associaiton.<lb/>
Calder said one of the<lb/>
reasons the Society was so<lb/>
successful last year was<lb/>
because of the time and<lb/>
efforts of the advisor, Dr.<lb/>
Stevens.<lb/>
Any student who would<lb/>
like to join the ECU Law<lb/>
Society and cannot come to<lb/>
the October meeting should<lb/>
sign up in Dr. Steven's<lb/>
office, 214 Wright Annex.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057154_0002"/><lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 17 October 1978<lb/>
Writers<lb/>
There will be a meeting<lb/>
of the ECU Writers' Guild<lb/>
at 3 p.m. Wed Oct 25 in<lb/>
room 207, Austin.<lb/>
All persons welcome.<lb/>
Study<lb/>
ILO<lb/>
The International Lang-<lb/>
uage Organization is hav-<lb/>
ing an Oktoberfest Fri<lb/>
Oct 20 from 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
until There will be a fun<lb/>
night of dancing, music,<lb/>
German foods, golden bev-<lb/>
erages and. door prizes.<lb/>
Tickets are available at the<lb/>
foreign language dept BA-<lb/>
431 or from any club<lb/>
member<lb/>
The International Lang-<lb/>
uage Organization will be<lb/>
meeting Wed Oct 18 at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. in Mendenhall<lb/>
Rm. 248 to discuss plans for<lb/>
the Oktoberfest.<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/>
MRC 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/>
Signs<lb/>
Sign Language Club or-<lb/>
ganizational meeting,<lb/>
Wed Oct. 18 at 5 p.m. in<lb/>
the Mendenhall Multi-<lb/>
purpose Room.<lb/>
For ECU students who<lb/>
have taken sign language<lb/>
classes or have some know<lb/>
-ledge of sign language and<lb/>
would like to meet with<lb/>
deaf students to practice<lb/>
these skills.<lb/>
Chanelo's is now delivering in a<lb/>
smaller delivery area so we can<lb/>
serve you quicker.<lb/>
TRY US<lb/>
AND SEE<lb/>
(now under new<lb/>
management)<lb/>
For Pizzas<lb/>
or<lb/>
Subs<lb/>
call<lb/>
758-7400<lb/>
for fast free delivery<lb/>
Greenpeace<lb/>
North Carolina's first<lb/>
chapter of Greenpeace is<lb/>
about to be born here in<lb/>
Greenville. The Green-<lb/>
peace Foundation is a non-<lb/>
profit environmental corp-<lb/>
oration dedicated to the<lb/>
survival of all endangered<lb/>
species (particularly<lb/>
whales, seals, and dolp-<lb/>
hins) and their respective<lb/>
environments.<lb/>
This means Greenpeace<lb/>
is opposed to nuclear pow-<lb/>
er, both domestic and mili-<lb/>
tary, and the practice of<lb/>
whaling, which is depleting<lb/>
the already diminished<lb/>
number of surviving<lb/>
whales.<lb/>
If you are interested in<lb/>
sharing your time and<lb/>
effort for Greenpeace,<lb/>
please contact Jerry Adder-<lb/>
ton at 758-6259 (after 5<lb/>
p.m. on weekdays). Your<lb/>
help could be more impor-<lb/>
tant than you'll ever know.<lb/>
Phi Sigma<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi will hold<lb/>
its monthly dinenr meeting<lb/>
Wed Oct. 18 at Villa<lb/>
Roma. The meeting starts<lb/>
at 6 p.m. and all members<lb/>
are urged to attend.<lb/>
Rules<lb/>
Any campus group<lb/>
needing a constitution ap-<lb/>
proved should submit a<lb/>
copy in triplicate to Libby<lb/>
Lefler, speaker of the legi-<lb/>
slature, in room 230 Men-<lb/>
denhall between 3-5 p.m.<lb/>
weekdays or contact Jeff<lb/>
Triplett, Rules and Judi-<lb/>
ciary Committee chair-<lb/>
person, at 758-7956.<lb/>
Pablo<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Major Attractions Commit-<lb/>
tee will present PABLO<lb/>
CRUISE on Thurs Nov. 9,<lb/>
at 8 p.m. in Minges Coli-<lb/>
seum.<lb/>
Tickets will be $5.00 for<lb/>
ECU Students and $7.00 for<lb/>
the Public. All tickets are<lb/>
available from the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office in Mend-<lb/>
enhall Student Center. In<lb/>
addition, public tickets can<lb/>
be purchased from: Apple<lb/>
Records - East Fifth St<lb/>
School Kid's Records -<lb/>
Georgetown Shoppes, The<lb/>
Music Shop - Greenville<lb/>
Square Mall.<lb/>
Only public tickets will<lb/>
be sold at the door.<lb/>
czipLECuxLLzLng<lb/>
in Linufus<lb/>
ift? and<lb/>
JLscozatius<lb/>
c7jaa?.??oxi&amp;<lb/>
?the. (fjlcixebo<lb/>
201 ?a?t $th Slxct.t tcinvilU, aV.C 27834<lb/>
GRAND<lb/>
RE-OPENING<lb/>
Tues. Oct. 17<lb/>
Under New Management<lb/>
Get Blimped at Blimpies.<lb/>
BEvERages:<lb/>
Bucket 7S Regular 4S<lb/>
SO OFF Giant Sub<lb/>
with purchase of Beverage<lb/>
f<lb/>
Expires Nov. SO.<lb/>
<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
?orient ?<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED:<lb/>
To share completely furn-<lb/>
ished 2 bdrm. apt. Cell<lb/>
Brad 103-B East brook<lb/>
Apts. 752-1547.<lb/>
I<lb/>
FOR RENT: Efficiency apt.<lb/>
for rent across from college<lb/>
Utilities included. 758-<lb/>
2585.<lb/>
Itorscte @<lb/>
FOR SALE: "73 Honda<lb/>
Civic, orange hatchback.<lb/>
Manual. Call 752-7227.<lb/>
FOR SALE : Stereo receiver<lb/>
by Harmon Kardon 800<lb/>
with 100 watts RMS. Best<lb/>
offer over $225. Call 758-<lb/>
7019.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1976 Corvette<lb/>
White T-Top, 11,000 miles.<lb/>
$9,000. Call 524-5590.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 6'7" Jacobs<lb/>
surfboard. Real smooth<lb/>
board and is in good cond.<lb/>
$50. Call Bill 758-2254.<lb/>
Socio-Anth<lb/>
The SocioAnthro Club<lb/>
will meet Oct. 18 at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in BD302.<lb/>
Dr. Robert Bunger will<lb/>
present a slide presenta-<lb/>
tion, "The World of the<lb/>
Vikings All members and<lb/>
interested persons are in-<lb/>
vited.<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/>
BUC<lb/>
Anyone interested in<lb/>
working on the 1979 BUC-<lb/>
CANEER is asked to come<lb/>
to the meeting on Wed<lb/>
Oct. 18 at 3 p.m. in the<lb/>
BUC office, second floor.<lb/>
Publications Center.<lb/>
WRC<lb/>
Law<lb/>
WRC (Women's Resi-<lb/>
dence Council) is sponsor-<lb/>
ing a social tonight at the<lb/>
Elbow Room. The good<lb/>
times start at 8 and end at<lb/>
11 with a 50 cents charge at<lb/>
the door.<lb/>
There will be reduced<lb/>
prices on beverages, door<lb/>
prizes, and contests, such<lb/>
as the worm dance, shot-<lb/>
gun race, and licorice eat-<lb/>
ing contest Come out<lb/>
tonight for the fun'<lb/>
Science<lb/>
Oct. 18. meeting of the<lb/>
Science Club will present<lb/>
Owen Kingsbury the<lb/>
glass blower at ECU The<lb/>
objects of glass will be<lb/>
given to the students and<lb/>
faculty present at the meet-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Refreshments will be<lb/>
served at 330 p.m. and the<lb/>
program presentation will<lb/>
begin at 4 p.m. Anyone in<lb/>
allowed to come and join<lb/>
the club.<lb/>
Travel<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Travel Committee still has<lb/>
places open on it's ski trip<lb/>
to Snowshoe W Va<lb/>
places are going fast<lb/>
Sign up now at the<lb/>
ticket office in Mendenha<lb/>
The trip will be during<lb/>
Christmas break (Jan 1-5)<lb/>
Don't miss these days of<lb/>
sknng and nights of soc 1<lb/>
izing at one of the eas?<lb/>
coast s most popular g<lb/>
resorts<lb/>
Lacrosse Hearing<lb/>
The ECU Law Society<lb/>
will have an organizational<lb/>
meeting Wed Oct. 18 at 7<lb/>
p.m. in the Multipurpose<lb/>
Room in Mendenhall.<lb/>
All students interested<lb/>
in law andor law school,<lb/>
please come or go by Dr.<lb/>
David Stevens' office, room<lb/>
214 Wright Annex and sign<lb/>
up.<lb/>
Party<lb/>
Tonight at Chapter X.<lb/>
Alpha Xi Delta will be<lb/>
having a BEACH PARTY!<lb/>
There will also be a Twist<lb/>
Contest. The winning<lb/>
couple gets a prize, so<lb/>
anyone wishing to enter,<lb/>
call 758-2381.<lb/>
There will be a meeting<lb/>
of anyone interested in<lb/>
playing lacrosse (male or<lb/>
female) Wed Oct 18 at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. in room 105.<lb/>
Memorial Gym.<lb/>
If you cannot attend.<lb/>
but wish to participate in<lb/>
either fall or spring sem-<lb/>
ester, call Mike at<lb/>
752-9583. Any student,<lb/>
faculty, or staff member<lb/>
can play<lb/>
Nurse<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/>
10th and Charles Streets-Greenville<lb/>
TICE<lb/>
DRIVE IN-AYDEN HIGHWAY<lb/>
Wednesday - Thursday<lb/>
Shows at 7:30 and 9:15<lb/>
You remember <lb/>
R<lb/>
Starts Friday:<lb/>
DEVIL TIMES FIVE<lb/>
Meadowbrook<lb/>
DRIVE IN-OPPOSITE AIRPORT<lb/>
Wednesday - Thursday<lb/>
Shows at 7:30 and 9 15<lb/>
An experience<lb/>
in terror<lb/>
ond suspense<lb/>
Starts Friday:<lb/>
MAGIC OF LASSIE<lb/>
There will be a student<lb/>
nurse sassocaition meeting<lb/>
on Thurs Oct 19 at 6:30<lb/>
p.m. in room 202 of the<lb/>
nursing building. Guest<lb/>
speaker will be Mrs Sue<lb/>
Pennington who will speak<lb/>
on Death and Dying All<lb/>
SNA members and nursing<lb/>
majors are invited to<lb/>
attend<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Coffeehouse Committee<lb/>
ytfiff meet on Wed Oct 18.<lb/>
at 3 p.m. in the Coffee-<lb/>
house. Committee mem-<lb/>
bers are required to attend,<lb/>
as an act will audition.<lb/>
On Thursday and Friday<lb/>
nights at 8:30 and 9:30 in<lb/>
room 15 Mendenhall. the<lb/>
Coffeehouse will present<lb/>
Deborah Holloway and<lb/>
Charlene Carter m separate<lb/>
performances<lb/>
Holloway sings songs in<lb/>
the Jom Mitchell vein<lb/>
Court and Spark period<lb/>
Carter's music is more<lb/>
blues oriented. Performing<lb/>
on the electric piano, her<lb/>
music is light improvisa-<lb/>
tional and delightfully mel-<lb/>
low.<lb/>
As always the Coffee-<lb/>
house offers a wide array of<lb/>
snacks and hors d'ouevres.<lb/>
all for the paltry sum of 50<lb/>
cents.<lb/>
This Week At The<lb/>
T<lb/>
Tues.<lb/>
WRC FUND RAISING PARTY<lb/>
Wed.<lb/>
"TENTH AVENUE B<lb/>
Thurs. "BILL DEAL<lb/>
AND THE RHONDELLS'<lb/>
1st Appearance this year.<lb/>
Fri. AFTERNOON PARTY 3-7<lb/>
Sun. LADIES MTE<lb/>
FOR SALE : "Aria" double-<lb/>
neck 6-12 string electric<lb/>
guitar. Sounds and looks<lb/>
like rare G id son model.<lb/>
$250. Call Bill 758-2254.<lb/>
WANT TO BUY: Waterbed<lb/>
and or heater. See Bob or<lb/>
Jim 338 Slay.<lb/>
personal (J)<lb/>
LOST: Tan, cocker spaniel<lb/>
puppy male ? 2 months old.<lb/>
Call 758-8996 or return to<lb/>
102-B Meade St. Offering<lb/>
REWARD<lb/>
HELP WANTED: We need<lb/>
a lead vocalist (Male or<lb/>
female) to work on original<lb/>
material for a recording in<lb/>
Atlanta. Not preparing a<lb/>
road band Semi-progres-<lb/>
750. Fw aua?(on MH<lb/>
ECUandthe Prograr<lb/>
Hearing-Impaired Stude<lb/>
will sponsor a Sign Lai<lb/>
uage Club for studenl<lb/>
members of the Greenville<lb/>
community who wou<lb/>
to meet and practice " ?<lb/>
communication skills Th?<lb/>
organizational meeting a<lb/>
be held Wed Oct 18 a1<lb/>
p.m. in the Mendea<lb/>
M ulti-Purpose Room on I<lb/>
ECU campus<lb/>
The club is open ?<lb/>
anyone who has taken Sign<lb/>
Language classes or has<lb/>
some knowledge of s<lb/>
langauge Meetings will be<lb/>
open to deaf students a<lb/>
deaf adults from the Green-<lb/>
ville area This is a<lb/>
opportunity for those mter-<lb/>
ested in sign language to<lb/>
? eet with deaf people and<lb/>
 th sign langauge stud-<lb/>
's m order to practice<lb/>
their manual communicat-<lb/>
ion skills.<lb/>
Gospel<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
M morty Arts Committee<lb/>
will present Jor<lb/>
Johnson and the ECU Gos-<lb/>
pel Ensemble in conce"<lb/>
Sun . Oct 22. at 7 p.m The<lb/>
concert which will be held<lb/>
m theHendnx Theatre a<lb/>
feature traditional as we<lb/>
as contemporary gospel se-<lb/>
lections There will be no<lb/>
admission charge and the<lb/>
public is invited to atte-v<lb/>
MRC<lb/>
On Wed Nov 8.<lb/>
M RC (Men s Reside<lb/>
Council) and WRC<lb/>
-en's Residence Counc<lb/>
are presenting a pig : ;?<lb/>
and concert on the hill r.<lb/>
the tennis courts<lb/>
The meal will be se- ?<lb/>
at 4 45 p m . and the<lb/>
evening will last until 7 A<lb/>
people interested m com<lb/>
must present<lb/>
MRC WRC card and ra.<lb/>
purchase tickets for $3 from<lb/>
their dorm officers<lb/>
Buses will be avanab i<lb/>
to and from the wome- -<lb/>
dorms<lb/>
Anthro<lb/>
On Wed . Oct 18. Lam-<lb/>
bda Alpha, the Anthropol-<lb/>
ogy Honor Society, will<lb/>
sponsor an informal coffee<lb/>
and conversation hour in<lb/>
Brewster. B302 (the Soci-<lb/>
ology Anthropology Stu-<lb/>
dent Lounge)<lb/>
All those interested in<lb/>
Anthropology. including<lb/>
majors, minors, and non-<lb/>
majors, are urged to attend<lb/>
between 11 am and 1 p.m.<lb/>
Refreshments will pe<lb/>
served.<lb/>
GREG MOLL: i. <lb/>
portraits from photos or<lb/>
att'nga. Watercolor<lb/>
sketches 18x24 in size. $25<lb/>
Finished oil painting $100<lb/>
?? ? Nov- 5. C,<lb/>
between 6 and 9 p m<lb/>
752-5736. P<lb/>
momm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057154_0003"/><lb/>
Health careers<lb/>
 scheduled<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Re-<lb/>
s' itatives from hospit-<lb/>
s and other health<lb/>
? will visit East<lb/>
!na University Nov 1<lb/>
ECU s annual Health<lb/>
? s Da<lb/>
h? event, sponsored<lb/>
I eer Plan-<lb/>
et Service<lb/>
with the<lb/>
' Nursing<lb/>
h and<lb/>
s is de-<lb/>
.dents<lb/>
ted in<lb/>
fields<lb/>
neet with<lb/>
tor<lb/>
and<lb/>
ai ECU. said<lb/>
veil as<lb/>
seniors are<lb/>
ate in<lb/>
? to dis-<lb/>
nploy-<lb/>
-<lb/>
i ? sopho-<lb/>
ng a nur-<lb/>
major<lb/>
attend<lb/>
!ne represen-<lb/>
nore about<lb/>
? para-<lb/>
ireas I em-<lb/>
sented<lb/>
? sical and<lb/>
? ? ? -ed-<lb/>
sociai and<lb/>
ces. med-<lb/>
iae, diete-<lb/>
:e and aud-<lb/>
. ? -ommunity<lb/>
- lopment<lb/>
it ons. reha-<lb/>
envi-<lb/>
psych-<lb/>
I special<lb/>
be<lb/>
U s Men-<lb/>
Center<lb/>
?: p.m.<lb/>
. sh-<lb/>
are<lb/>
not required to make prior<lb/>
reservation<lb/>
Evelyn Perry, dean of<lb/>
the ECU Schol of Nursing,<lb/>
commented that the event<lb/>
is "a fine opportunity for<lb/>
students to talk with a large<lb/>
variety of potential em-<lb/>
ployers and make early<lb/>
choices of their employ-<lb/>
ment locations<lb/>
Dr Ronald Thiele, dean<lb/>
of the School of Allied<lb/>
Health and Social Profes-<lb/>
sions noted that each year<lb/>
many employers of health<lb/>
professionals come to the<lb/>
ECU campus actively<lb/>
seeking students as po-<lb/>
tential employees.<lb/>
"Job opportunities in<lb/>
the health-related fields are<lb/>
ample, and we encourage<lb/>
any student preparing for<lb/>
work in the the health-re-<lb/>
lated professions to attend<lb/>
Health Careers Day and<lb/>
sample the job market<lb/>
Thiele said.<lb/>
Agencies and employ-<lb/>
ers to be represented in-<lb/>
clude hospitals and clinics.<lb/>
nursing homes, social ser-<lb/>
vice agencies. mental<lb/>
health centers, rehabilita-<lb/>
tion institutions and food<lb/>
service departments<lb/>
CORRECTION<lb/>
In the Oct 12 edition of<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD the<lb/>
next meeting of the ECU<lb/>
Science Club at which a<lb/>
glass bower will demon-<lb/>
strate his art was incor-<lb/>
rectly reported as Nov.1.<lb/>
The meeting and de-<lb/>
monstration are scheduled<lb/>
for Wed Oct 18. in<lb/>
Flanagan building FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD regrets the<lb/>
error.<lb/>
Breakfast<lb/>
from 7 a.m.<lb/>
to 1 1 a.m.<lb/>
specializing<lb/>
in large<lb/>
country hamorsansage<lb/>
biscuit. Hot cakes. Scrambled<lb/>
eggs with country ham or<lb/>
sausage. Our 14 lb. beef<lb/>
burgers are ground from fresh<lb/>
Hestern Chuck. We have pure<lb/>
soft served ice cream. Also<lb/>
serving ham and cheese,<lb/>
chicken fillets, hot dogs, chill<lb/>
and beans, f rench fries, apple<lb/>
turnovers, and a variety of soft<lb/>
drinks. located on the corner<lb/>
off 5th and Reade St. and on<lb/>
II y. 264 in Washington.<lb/>
GREAT<lb/>
MEXICAN<lb/>
EATERY<lb/>
512 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Open 11:00 11:00<lb/>
Mon. thru Thur.<lb/>
Fri.?PSat. 11:00 12:0<lb/>
Sun. 12:00 11:00<lb/>
Tuesday Night<lb/>
Nickel Drink Night<lb/>
( with food order )<lb/>
5:00 11:00<lb/>
Dr. Pepper, Beer, Pepai,<lb/>
ML Dew, Tea, Coffee<lb/>
wa Gladly Accept Personal Checka.<lb/>
Free Taeo CId Iron -on Patch<lb/>
w ith $4.00 food order<lb/>
Installation schedule planned<lb/>
17 October 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Dramatic productions,<lb/>
open house receptions, art<lb/>
exhibits and concerts have<lb/>
been scheduled at ECU<lb/>
Oct. 26-28, to coincide with<lb/>
the Sat Oct. 28 installation<lb/>
of ECU's seventh chief<lb/>
administrator, Chancellor<lb/>
Thomas Bowman Brewer<lb/>
The installation cere-<lb/>
mony will begin at 10.15<lb/>
a.m. in the campus' North<lb/>
Lawn, with an academic<lb/>
procession Luncheon will<lb/>
be served afetrwards in<lb/>
ECU'S Mendenhall Studnet<lb/>
Center to invited guests,<lb/>
and the day's acitvities will<lb/>
conclude with an open<lb/>
house in the Chancellors<lb/>
Residence from 2 to 4 p.m<lb/>
Admission to the instal-<lb/>
lation ceremony is free to<lb/>
any ticketholder, as well as<lb/>
by special invitation. Ticket<lb/>
orders may be placed by<lb/>
telephone at 757-6537 The<lb/>
Chancellor's Open House is<lb/>
free and open to the public.<lb/>
Two special art exhibits,<lb/>
Friends of the Faculty<lb/>
and "Nature Abstractions"<lb/>
will be on view at the Gray<lb/>
Gallery in the Leo Jenkins<lb/>
Fine Arts Center from 9<lb/>
a.m. to 4 p,m. Oct. 26 and<lb/>
27, and from noon to 4 p.m<lb/>
Oct. 28. The gallery is open<lb/>
to the public.<lb/>
A dinner theatre prod-<lb/>
uction, God Says There<lb/>
Is No Peter Ott . will run<lb/>
on each of the three even-<lb/>
ings at 6:30 p.m. in Mend-<lb/>
enhall Student Center Tic-<lb/>
kets are available at the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office<lb/>
An ECU Playhouse pro-<lb/>
duction of the Broadway hit<lb/>
musical PIPPIN is schedul-<lb/>
ed for 8:15 p.m Thursday<lb/>
and Friday evening in<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium. Tic-<lb/>
kets are on sale at the<lb/>
Playhouse Box Office<lb/>
ECU'S recently-<lb/>
expanded Joyner Library<lb/>
will host the public at an<lb/>
open house from 3 to5 p.m.<lb/>
Fri Oct. 27. On view will<lb/>
be several major acquisit-<lb/>
ions in the library facilities,<lb/>
including electronic book<lb/>
detection and door security<lb/>
systems, a commercial bib-<lb/>
liographic searching sys-<lb/>
tem and an automatic cat-<lb/>
aloging system.<lb/>
m&amp;m<lb/>
WEAVING<lb/>
rk?5!LCf l0" 8 CLRtc STREETS<lb/>
wrtc alJZ?3 HA?0CK BUILDING<lb/>
WEEHARDTOr,Nn Bur well wcrtm n<lb/>
PLAY<lb/>
WIN u? to $1000<lb/>
ill<lb/>
SIOOO CASH I VRL<lb/>
0000<lb/>
lOQQQDQDB<lb/>
.1B? ?!???!<lb/>
CASH CARDS<lb/>
12 WAYS TO MATCH<lb/>
AND WIN AT A&amp;P!<lb/>
<lb/>
$259,055<lb/>
IN CASH<lb/>
PRIZES!<lb/>
Cash Card Prizes of N<lb/>
$10. $20. $100 and $1000 5127,551<lb/>
PLUS $1 and $5 Instant PRIZE<lb/>
Cash Ticket Prizes' WINNERS<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is re<lb/>
quired to be readily available for sale<lb/>
at or below the advertised price in<lb/>
each A&amp;P Store except as specifi<lb/>
cally noted in this ad<lb/>
pRiceTeFFiclTvE tmru"satT6cT21 at a?p in GREENVILLE N C<lb/>
TEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS<lb/>
OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
WIN Si AND S5 INSTANTLY WITH A $1 000 CASH CARDS TICKET nRWViWtin <lb/>
CA0?DS0GAOMVa,?r ?.LiECT0R "SSVp s SOoTca'sh<lb/>
Carohn?f!nn r? ?r ' 3? P S,?re 'OCa,ed ,n Nor,fl Carohn South <lb/>
. k f ann,n C,V Georgia and Washington Cty Va Th.s promotion IS<lb/>
scheduled lo end on Dec 9 1978<lb/>
Thia offer ? not open to employee, of A4.P ,t i .ub.tdiane. manufacturer o?-<lb/>
this game their advertising agencies and families of the foregoing<lb/>
AAP QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
CHUCK<lb/>
ROAST<lb/>
BLADE CUT<lb/>
BONE-IN<lb/>
N<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
TICKETS<lb/>
AND <lb/>
COLLECTORS<lb/>
? CARDS f<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRa EE<lb/>
WHOLE BONELESS<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
X LB 99q<lb/>
U S D A INSPECTED FRESH FRYER<lb/>
A4P QUALITY<lb/>
HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN-FED BEEF<lb/>
B0X-0-CHICKEN I GROUND CHUCK<lb/>
5 LB. PKG<lb/>
OR<lb/>
MORE<lb/>
"Sorrento" Beautifully<lb/>
Decorated Cookware From<lb/>
Italy?At Fantastic Savings!<lb/>
No? You Can Own SORRENTO<lb/>
COOKWARE by MONETA of Milan Italy<lb/>
THIS WEEK'S<lb/>
FEATURED ITEM<lb/>
WEEK 3<lb/>
QUARTER PORK LOIN<lb/>
PORK CHOPS SLCED L. 1M CUBED STEAK<lb/>
AP FULLV-C0OKED SHANKLESS RK0UR ST?R<lb/>
CANNED HAM 5 &amp; HOT DOGS<lb/>
CHUCH<lb/>
MOLLY 0 0Of BR?MC<lb/>
?J 07<lb/>
S1" SLICED BACON<lb/>
rt- ??? '??S- HOI OB m L0<lb/>
89? PORK SAUSAGE<lb/>
You II Do Better With A&amp;P S<lb/>
GROCERY SPECIALS<lb/>
r<lb/>
GREEN GIANT<lb/>
CREAM STYLE OR WHOLE KERNEL<lb/>
A4P SWEETMILK OR<lb/>
BUTTERMILK<lb/>
GOLDEN CORN BISCUITS<lb/>
7 oz rm ? ! 8 OZ BB<lb/>
:ans ? J CANS r<lb/>
1000 ISLAND ? 79? ??.G.V1A qoc<lb/>
OR 12 OZ<lb/>
NIBLETS<lb/>
CORN<lb/>
KRAFT DRESSING<lb/>
ECONOMY<lb/>
cat am-<lb/>
PEANUT BUTTER<lb/>
NAPKINS<lb/>
KETCHUP<lb/>
79<lb/>
31<lb/>
47<lb/>
KRAFT<lb/>
MACARONI &amp;<lb/>
CHEESE DINNER<lb/>
TV. OZ<lb/>
PHQS<lb/>
7QC VERT YOUNG SMALL<lb/>
' LESUEURPEAS<lb/>
rtVr SC0TT COLORS? D?C -ARTS A FLOWERS<lb/>
89? PAPER TOWELS OT 59?<lb/>
IJ 07<lb/>
CAN<lb/>
31aqt. Dutch Oven<lb/>
WITH COVER<lb/>
s9<lb/>
99<lb/>
NO OTMtR<lb/>
PURCHASE<lb/>
HEOUIPED<lb/>
No? ,Ou can niv? m? coo??r?fe de?,goed to r?ip YOu<lb/>
pr?p?' more H?vo"ui more nutritious meals and<lb/>
?t t o?co'?teo to enr?nce you' micne ra provide<lb/>
y??r? ot beiutitui le'vice Created Dy Moneia ot M'lar-<lb/>
IU you H KJy? the criarm.ng tangerine and O'own<lb/>
Sor-anio partarn ?ritt a stoneware im.sn What s<lb/>
mo?e this porc?an enamel cookware comes wth air<lb/>
iNjnt plastic Iks tor convenient -etge-aio' sto-age<lb/>
? up this wae s laatureo piece and save no<lb/>
We-k<lb/>
5 10 Opam Sallkat<lb/>
6 3'it Sauctpan<lb/>
1 ? ojl CKrtch Ov?m<lb/>
Once on sale. It remains on sale<lb/>
IMS<lb/>
1 1st<lb/>
2 rOpsntkHM<lb/>
3 Jajt .OsMkOsn<lb/>
4 I'AfJ.lawaatn<lb/>
Th?a? 5 Items are on sale at all times<lb/>
6H qt Stock Pol with cover M2 99<lb/>
3 quart Whistling Teaenie ' 11 99<lb/>
12-mch Oval AuGratin Pan '8 99<lb/>
Warmer Server ?5 99<lb/>
6men Open Skillet '4 99<lb/>
no other purchase required<lb/>
? WITH '10 00 MINIMUM ?URCM?S<lb/>
AAP Garden Fresh Produce For A<lb/>
FALL FESTIVAL<lb/>
CRISP ICEBERG<lb/>
HEAD<lb/>
LETTUCE<lb/>
EACH<lb/>
LARGE<lb/>
HEAD<lb/>
39<lb/>
U.S. 1?EASTERN GROWN<lb/>
WHITE<lb/>
POTATOES<lb/>
0ft?<lb/>
JANE PARKER<lb/>
FRESHLY BAKED<lb/>
PUMPKIN PIE<lb/>
or Sweet Potato Pie<lb/>
99 22oz. pkg.<lb/>
FRESH CRISP<lb/>
MILD TENOCR?MEDIUM YELLOW<lb/>
CARROTSu;33c ONIONS 3 69<lb/>
FIRST OF THE SEASON M<lb/>
oyce JUICY aar T aoo<lb/>
 25r GRAPEFRUIT H00<lb/>
N C GROWN?FRESH<lb/>
SWEET<lb/>
POTATOES<lb/>
CRISP?TASTY JONATHAN<lb/>
APPLES<lb/>
RED?RIPE<lb/>
TOMATOES<lb/>
EXTRA LARGE<lb/>
SLICERS<lb/>
LB<lb/>
39C<lb/>
A4P COUPON<lb/>
PLAIN &amp; SELF RISING<lb/>
A&amp;P FLOUR<lb/>
SAVE 41 c<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH<lb/>
COUPON AN0<lb/>
AOO'TIONAL<lb/>
S7 50 ORDER<lb/>
5<lb/>
LB<lb/>
BAG<lb/>
LIMIT ONE COUPON<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT OCT M ?T at p s<lb/>
38<lb/>
AAP COUPON<lb/>
COLORS OR DECORATED<lb/>
. SOFT N PRETTY<lb/>
'aVWV BATHROOM TISSUE<lb/>
<lb/>
J SAVE ?0c<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH<lb/>
COUPON AND<lb/>
ADDITIONAL<lb/>
17 SO OSOER<lb/>
4<lb/>
j<lb/>
ROLL<lb/>
PKG<lb/>
LIMIT ONE COUPON<lb/>
L?WGOO0 THRU SAT OCT 71 AT A? P M<lb/>
69<lb/>
?6?6<lb/>
<pb facs="00057154_0004"/><lb/>
"<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 17 October 1978<lb/>
Longer drop needed<lb/>
The Student Governemnt Association Countless students find themselves trap-<lb/>
(SGA) passed a resolution for a four day fall<lb/>
semester break between Labor Day and<lb/>
Thanksgiving. This resolution must now be<lb/>
passed by the Faculty Senate before becoming<lb/>
an official holiday. ECU has long needed a<lb/>
break during that long stretch between<lb/>
holidays for students to rest up, catch up, and<lb/>
take stock of their academic progress.<lb/>
Many students fall behind during the two<lb/>
and a half months between holidays and find<lb/>
themselves swamped under with seemingly<lb/>
impossible assignments, usually all due at the<lb/>
same time. A break around mid-term would<lb/>
give students and faculty both a chance to get<lb/>
caught up, prepare for mid-term exams or<lb/>
recover from them. The four days<lb/>
could be easily made up by tacking on an extra<lb/>
two days at the beginning and end of the school<lb/>
year<lb/>
If the drop period were extended past this<lb/>
holiday or at least past mid-terms, students<lb/>
could either use the holiday to evaluate their<lb/>
progress or determine how well they are doing<lb/>
in a course by the score on the mid-term.<lb/>
ped with impossible schedules after the drop<lb/>
period and can either suffer through the<lb/>
semester and risk a series of failures or try to<lb/>
cajole an incomplete out of a sympathetic<lb/>
professor.<lb/>
Often professors haven't even tested their<lb/>
classes before the drop period, so students<lb/>
have no idea how well they are doing in class<lb/>
until it is too late. Many professors give tests<lb/>
prior to the drop deadline, but fail to return the<lb/>
results to the students until after that deadline<lb/>
has passed.<lb/>
It is unfair both to the students and the<lb/>
university to lock students in courses from<lb/>
which there is no escape, without any<lb/>
knowledge as to their standing in class. A<lb/>
college education is hard enough as it is. The<lb/>
university should not make it any more difficult<lb/>
by imposing drop deadlines with little or no<lb/>
regard for students. The deadline should either<lb/>
be extended (the plan we favor) or professors<lb/>
should be required to test students and return<lb/>
the results at least a week in advance of the<lb/>
deadline.<lb/>
DORn LIFE ON THE HILL<lb/>
Commentary<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Footbinding a barbarous custom<lb/>
Student proposes student-run cafeteria<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I guess this is the<lb/>
first Forum letter I've writ-<lb/>
ten which deals with neit-<lb/>
her politics nor with gripes.<lb/>
Surprise!<lb/>
I've come up with an<lb/>
idea which could be of<lb/>
three-fold benefit to stud-<lb/>
ents and could possibly<lb/>
save ECU some money.<lb/>
The big problem is that I<lb/>
don't really know where to<lb/>
present this idea. So here I<lb/>
am<lb/>
This year, even after the<lb/>
redecoration of Jones Cafe-<lb/>
teria and the revamping of<lb/>
its food service, there is<lb/>
little if any increase in<lb/>
students who frequent our<lb/>
campus cafeteria. I still<lb/>
hear occassional (although<lb/>
far fewer) complaints about<lb/>
food and service from those<lb/>
who do eat at Jones. And. I<lb/>
notice that many students<lb/>
would rather spend $2.75 at<lb/>
the Crow's Nest or at<lb/>
Jason's than at Serv-O-<lb/>
M at ion.<lb/>
In other words, it seems<lb/>
that students generally dis-<lb/>
likea cafeteria atmosphere.<lb/>
At the last ECU Board<lb/>
of Trustees meeting there<lb/>
was mentioned the possibi-<lb/>
lity of opening a new<lb/>
cafeteria on campus. Why?<lb/>
There is a lovely and<lb/>
much-forgotten building,<lb/>
behind our new Art Build-<lb/>
ing, which is being used for<lb/>
storage. (In places.) Much<lb/>
of its floor space is not used<lb/>
at all. i'm talking about the<lb/>
East Cafeteria Building,<lb/>
which is now the campus<lb/>
catch-all and holds a few<lb/>
Archaeology classes in one<lb/>
section.<lb/>
Turn this building into a<lb/>
student-decorated, student<lb/>
-operated, and student-<lb/>
staffed resturant. I mean a<lb/>
real resturant with menus<lb/>
and waiters and waitresses,<lb/>
the whole bit.<lb/>
I mentioned three bene-<lb/>
fits. One: Students would<lb/>
have an on-campus place to<lb/>
dine on food other than<lb/>
sandwiches. Two: Students<lb/>
would have a place to meet.<lb/>
Maybe we could even take<lb/>
McDonald's idea and hang<lb/>
student and faculty art<lb/>
there.<lb/>
Save the campus<lb/>
money, I said? Of course!<lb/>
There'd be no need to<lb/>
build!<lb/>
Maybe someone out<lb/>
there could give me some<lb/>
feedback, some reasons<lb/>
this would or would not<lb/>
word. Or maybe someone<lb/>
could tell me who could<lb/>
help launch an idea like<lb/>
this.<lb/>
Thanks for all this<lb/>
space, FOUNTAINHEAD.<lb/>
Ellen Fishburne<lb/>
Police lambasted<lb/>
4Call me if that ti<lb/>
goes flat again'<lb/>
ToFOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
In reply to the letter<lb/>
"Chivalry is dead at ECU"<lb/>
by Michele Parish and<lb/>
Kathy George. Asan "ECU<lb/>
male" I feel that these two<lb/>
women are generalizing the<lb/>
way all males are by the<lb/>
actions of a few.<lb/>
The guys that drove by<lb/>
without offering to assist<lb/>
these girls to change a tire<lb/>
either were in a hurry,<lb/>
didn't notice, or were just<lb/>
shy Even if they were<lb/>
ignorant, not everyone on<lb/>
campus is this way.<lb/>
Apparently these wo-<lb/>
men are either freshmen or<lb/>
new on campus, otherwise<lb/>
they may have called a<lb/>
male friend to help. It<lb/>
would have even been<lb/>
acceptable to ask a male<lb/>
passerby for help.<lb/>
I drove by these two<lb/>
while they were changing<lb/>
the tire and turned around<lb/>
to offer my assistance, buyt<lb/>
by the time I got back to<lb/>
their car they had finished.<lb/>
I would have been on the<lb/>
scene earlier, but I was<lb/>
helping another stranger<lb/>
get his girlfriend's car<lb/>
started in the Mendenhall<lb/>
parking lot!<lb/>
So give the guys a<lb/>
break, and call me if that<lb/>
tire goes flat again.<lb/>
ToFOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
This is in response<lb/>
to the three young men (?)<lb/>
who had a letter in<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD, Oct. 12<lb/>
concerning chivalry.<lb/>
I am all for equal rights,<lb/>
but, like anyone else, I'm<lb/>
only human.<lb/>
I don't know what has<lb/>
gotten into some people<lb/>
since ERA and equal rights<lb/>
has become so widespread.<lb/>
People have been using<lb/>
these for excuses of laz-<lb/>
iness and inconsideration<lb/>
too long. I refer to both men<lb/>
and women alike.<lb/>
It is a pity that even the<lb/>
campus cop wouldn't at<lb/>
least offer the girls chan-<lb/>
ging the tire some ass-<lb/>
istant<lb/>
Last Sunday I got back<lb/>
to the dorm late. I was<lb/>
driving a different car with<lb/>
no sticker on it. Being used<lb/>
ChrisWidener to my own car, I hadn't<lb/>
Fburtainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over 50 years<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER<lb/>
Leigh Coakley<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Doug White<lb/>
TRENDS EDITOR<lb/>
Steve Bachner<lb/>
NEWS EDITORS<lb/>
Julie Everette<lb/>
fticki Gliarmis<lb/>
ADVERTISING MANAGER<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
Sam Rogers<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student newspaper off 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/>
"ailing 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/>
even thought about the new<lb/>
car not having a sticker on<lb/>
it and parked in dorm<lb/>
parking.<lb/>
When I went to the<lb/>
campus police to find out<lb/>
where my car was Monday<lb/>
morning, I discovered that<lb/>
the time my car was towed<lb/>
was not even 15 minutes<lb/>
after I'd left it. That wasn't<lb/>
even enough time for me to<lb/>
get to my room.<lb/>
I find that absolutely<lb/>
amazing considering the<lb/>
fact that it took me nearly<lb/>
30 minutes to get my car<lb/>
squeezed between a<lb/>
crookedly parked car and a<lb/>
tree. To this day I still can't<lb/>
figure out how they got my<lb/>
car out.<lb/>
I don't know about<lb/>
anyone else but I'm getting<lb/>
sick and tired of hearing<lb/>
excuses for the campus<lb/>
cops. I honestly don't feel<lb/>
they're doing the job they<lb/>
are paid to do.<lb/>
They aren't paid to act<lb/>
put out when they have to<lb/>
let one of us girls in the<lb/>
dorm, they're just sup-<lb/>
posed to do it ? it's their<lb/>
job.<lb/>
The way I look at it, the<lb/>
campus police are more<lb/>
than willing to do some-<lb/>
thing if money is involved.<lb/>
I'm not talking about bri-<lb/>
bery. I'm talking avout how<lb/>
quickly they manage to<lb/>
write tickets and tow cars.<lb/>
I'm not the only student<lb/>
who feels this way and I'd<lb/>
like to know how others<lb/>
feel. Maybe some changes<lb/>
can be made.<lb/>
There are too many<lb/>
things involved here that<lb/>
the students don't know<lb/>
about and I'd like to see<lb/>
them out in the open for a<lb/>
change.<lb/>
Cheryl Boehm<lb/>
By HESTER PETTY<lb/>
Uppity Women of Greenville<lb/>
Much of the history of women (herstory) has been<lb/>
unrecorded (by histroians who considered women's<lb/>
achievements unimportant and who saw the oooression of<lb/>
women as insignificant) or destroyed (by the Ch. stians who<lb/>
burned the written documents of the Goddess-worshippers<lb/>
and who later burned the women who kept herstory alive<lb/>
through oral communications).<lb/>
That herstory which has survived into the 20th century<lb/>
has been largely ignored. It is a story that includes tales of<lb/>
9lJPIaj?'V .tenure, degradation and gynocide Chinese<lb/>
footbinding is part of that story.<lb/>
I thought that it had occurred hundreds of years ago and<lb/>
that it was probably like wearing tight socks (every woman<lb/>
a size five). I was horrified when I read about its herstory.<lb/>
The story begins sometimes between the ninth and<lb/>
eleventh centuries A.D. when (according to one Chinese<lb/>
myth) the Emperor Li Yu ordered Lovely Maiden, one of his<lb/>
favorite dancers, to bind her feet so that they looked like<lb/>
crescent moons.<lb/>
This individual innovation soon became the unanimous<lb/>
custom among the Chinese aristocracy. And before long<lb/>
foot-binding was accepted practice among all social classes.<lb/>
The first binding of the foot took place when a girl was<lb/>
very young. It usually took about two years of training to get<lb/>
the toes to curl under the foot in the proper position.<lb/>
After that, the bindings had to remain in place for the<lb/>
rest of the girl's life in order to insure the proper shape. The<lb/>
following is a description of the footbinding procedure:<lb/>
"The success or failure of footbinding depended on<lb/>
skillful application of a bandage around each foot. The<lb/>
bandage, about two inches wide and 10 feet long, was<lb/>
wrapped in the following way. One end was placed on the<lb/>
inside of the instep, and from there it was carried over the<lb/>
small toes so as to force the toes in and towards the sole.<lb/>
The large toe was left unbound.<lb/>
The bandage was then wrapped around the heel so<lb/>
forcefully that the heel and toes were drawn closer<lb/>
together. The process was then repeated from the<lb/>
beginning until the entire bandage had been applied.<lb/>
"The foot of the young child was subjected to a coercive<lb/>
and unremitting pressure, for the object was not merely to<lb/>
confine the foot but to make the toes bend under and into<lb/>
the sole and bring the heel and sole as close together as<lb/>
physically possible<lb/>
The proper length for a woman's foot was three to four<lb/>
inches. Longer feet were considered ugly. Among the<lb/>
aristocracy and upper classes, the the threeto four inch foot<lb/>
was customary.<lb/>
Of course, these women seldom left the house and when<lb/>
they did go out walking they needed support from a cane or<lb/>
servant. Lower class women seldom had feet under four<lb/>
inches because they had to work and it is difficult to work<lb/>
(especially in the fields) if one is constantly falling down.<lb/>
The barbarism of footbinding is seen clearly in the<lb/>
following story which was told in the 1930s by an elderly<lb/>
Chinese woman who remembers her own experience as a<lb/>
little girl in the late 1800s:<lb/>
"I was inflicted with the pain of footbinding when I was<lb/>
seven years old. I was an active child who liked to jump<lb/>
about, but from then on my free and optimistic nature<lb/>
vanishedShe (mother) washed and placed alum on my<lb/>
feet and cut my toenails.<lb/>
"She then bent my toes toward the plantar with a<lb/>
binding cloth 10 feet long and two inches wide, doing the<lb/>
rightfoot first and then the left. She finished binding and<lb/>
ordered me to walk, but when I did the pain proved<lb/>
unbearable.<lb/>
"That night mother wouldn't let me remove my shoes<lb/>
My feet felt on fire and I couldn't sleep; Mother struck me<lb/>
for cyring. On the following days, I tried to hide but was<lb/>
forced to walk on my feet<lb/>
"Beating and curses were my lot for covertly loosening<lb/>
the wrappings. The feet were washed and rebound after<lb/>
three ot four days, with alum added. After several months<lb/>
all toes but the big one were pressed against the inner<lb/>
surface.<lb/>
"Whenever I ate fish or freshly killed meat, my feet<lb/>
would swell and the pus would drip. Mother criticized me<lb/>
for placing pressure on my heel in walking, saying that my<lb/>
feet would never assume a pretty shape. Mother would<lb/>
remove the bindings and wipe the blood and pus which<lb/>
dripped from my feet.<lb/>
"She told me that only with the removal of the flesh<lb/>
could me feet become sJender If ! mistakenly punct?<lb/>
sore, the blood gushed like a stream. My somewhat flesri.<lb/>
big toes were bound with small pieces of cloth and for<lb/>
upwards, to assume a new moon shape<lb/>
"Every two weeks, I changes to new shoes Each ne<lb/>
pair was one - to two-tenths of an inch smaller th<lb/>
previous oneAfter changing more than 10 pairs of shoes<lb/>
my feet were reduced to a little over four inches<lb/>
'I had been in binding for a month when my younger<lb/>
sister started; when no one was around, we would weer<lb/>
together. In summer, my feet smeiied offensive becaus<lb/>
blood and pus; in winter, my feet felt cold because of lao<lb/>
circulationFour of the toes were curled in like so ma<lb/>
dead caterpillars; no outsider would ever have believed I<lb/>
they belonged to a human being<lb/>
'It took two years to achieve the three-inch model M .<lb/>
toenails pressed against the flesh like thin paper <lb/>
heavily-creased plantar couldn't be scratched wne- I<lb/>
itched or soothed when it ached My shanks were tri<lb/>
feet became humped, ugly, and odifenous: how I em ?<lb/>
natural-footed<lb/>
To understand why millions of footbound mother<lb/>
the feet of millions of daughters we must look at<lb/>
'whys' of footbinding: why did this pract.ce ga.r<lb/>
popularity Why did it continue for so long? Why<lb/>
millions of women subfected to the pain and mutilal<lb/>
footbinding?<lb/>
According to the myth. Lovely Maiden's feet we-e I<lb/>
for some aesthetic purposes and the crescent moon st<lb/>
was probably of some religios significance Her bouna N<lb/>
became the aesthet.c standard among the Emperor's a<lb/>
and consequently the standard for those moving Up I<lb/>
social ladder.<lb/>
Footbound brides were soon ,n demand by the ma e<lb/>
social-cl.mbersconformers and since mamage was the<lb/>
mlyhWayKa.W?man Survived (other than P'ost.tu'<lb/>
mothers had no cho.ce but to make the.r daughters<lb/>
marriageable. y<lb/>
It wasn't long before the bound foot became an absolute<lb/>
necessity for marr.age. I, waseven sa.d that a woman's feet<lb/>
were the first thing examined by the groom and h.s family<lb/>
China became a country with a foot fetish A woman's<lb/>
sexual attractiveness was dependent on the shape and size<lb/>
of her feet. Her shoes were her most important form of<lb/>
fashion adornment. M.lhons of men were turned on at the<lb/>
sight of a woman's bound foot.<lb/>
What can I say about a soc.ety that defined a woman's<lb/>
worth by the mutilated shape of her feet? What 71<lb/>
about the men who sexual response was in part derm nc<lb/>
iez:zebound feet- d"? Set s<lb/>
severely restricted a woman's freedom of movement eet<lb/>
that were in pain when in use, feet that bled and .Taked ots<lb/>
because of poor circu.at.on and unc.ean.ness? "<lb/>
and shsTt;aesnthely T " " the ?"9<lb/>
-nu snoes. it was the bound foot they were so fond m<lb/>
The practice of footbindmg lasted for i ifTwi ?<lb/>
created and allowed to cont.nue " "? r.TtZ1 " "<lb/>
because women were not valued mem? T<lb/>
pa.n and suffering did not ma , y The,r<lb/>
considered them worthless and Tnfenor ,h?<lb/>
wascr:e?peofn rrry ? F?<lb/>
breast fetish in America th,?'09' but ,s the<lb/>
allowed hundreds oen to rl"?7 '?' ,hat<lb/>
that later resulted IZVllnTT' '<lb/>
breasts of many of them? d d,9ease of tne<lb/>
rzTi n?hre rdards ? - ?<lb/>
different from pa mZJH Chmese ??<lb/>
same ?nQL7sZZ??TT the<lb/>
must change our appearance "Jtl bt,?B t(d that "e<lb/>
attractive. We are still being toion 0rd6r to <lb/>
Pretty enough, never quite staged 1 T"  QUe<lb/>
skinny enough, never quite right enouQh ? ' ? QU'te<lb/>
The result of this criticism is insect ?<lb/>
polish, cover up and take away dieTiJ " Paint and<lb/>
ts never enough, we're still L?tt !? noae ?<lb/>
insecure. n qu,te n0ht and we're still<lb/>
it is time to stop all this craziness it i. ?<lb/>
??king ourselves for what we arJ, T T t,me t0 ??"<lb/>
right enough. Don let anyone lf v " J5 " <lb/>
Sources: Woman HatinTLl  diff?<lb/>
- y E.P. Outton in 11? P"W<lb/>
Custom by Howard S Levy w o?ry 0uriOtn "<lb/>
PP25-26. LeVy' W ???, New York, 1!<lb/>
Ibid . PP. 26-28.<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057154_0005"/><lb/>
17 October 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
Mother's marvelous,<lb/>
Broth<lb/>
ers lacking<lb/>
i race, you leave exhausted, but<lb/>
M thei l acti ? the title track<lb/>
Ji iy e Kennedy electrified<lb/>
repertoire of shrieks and<lb/>
I by her singing partner Glen<lb/>
'??' the pair resembles a heavy metal<lb/>
Sirn; Mur dock's strong tenor, a<lb/>
?'rfectly complemented by<lb/>
avily influenced by Chaka<lb/>
noods from funky to sexy,<lb/>
lies on one emotion:<lb/>
M has but one purpose for<lb/>
- - ?ut the jams, raise<lb/>
nent in its most<lb/>
erl e ;uliar form of musical<lb/>
into submiss-<lb/>
ling ' the band Not a single<lb/>
it the ba e unorphous unit.<lb/>
f dest ? in this case, of<lb/>
ements from Rufus.<lb/>
metal and art rock<lb/>
into a unique<lb/>
i' Guitarist Gary "Mo"<lb/>
a night listening and<lb/>
Hi : t all jms, just as bassist Jerry The<lb/>
?THE BROTHERS JOHNSON definitely did not give us the<lb/>
thunder of the gods what they gave us was more of a belch.<lb/>
Wizard - . has spent hours listening to Led Zeppelin.<lb/>
The" ? ? tually unparalleled Kennedy<lb/>
and Murdock are in perpetual motion, dancing, leaping,<lb/>
swinging n - stands, and m general driving the audience<lb/>
into an singly intense frenzy. Every musician is a<lb/>
showmai esp ? " ennedy. M urdock. Seay. and Moore.<lb/>
Each s choreographed without looking<lb/>
?reas the Brothers Johnson offered<lb/>
a chorus ?  ,s Finest gave us modern dance<lb/>
their perl ? nance was calculated to<lb/>
entertain, b ? . of the act is that it all seemed so<lb/>
natural Every mov every costume, every ornament.<lb/>
came ac . isand original Gary Moore looks<lb/>
' " ? st a eave Haight-Ashbury: The<lb/>
v- - ??? ??' -?? ' ? welry imoresothan the<lb/>
' ' ? ' ind ai a ional turban, drummer<lb/>
ke every Ei ; sh drummer you' ve ever<lb/>
while keyl I V - ? - ? a conservative version<lb/>
of Th  .  ?? equined beret<lb/>
Mot he<lb/>
deser<lb/>
Sad I y ich wa<lb/>
Johns- ?n<lb/>
? ??? ?: in outstanding and we!<lb/>
?ice screaming for more<lb/>
a ? a ? the iackluster Brothers<lb/>
' Then the angel filled the censer with fire from the altar<lb/>
and threw it down upon 'he earth and thunder crashed and<lb/>
rumbled flashed ind there was a terrible<lb/>
earthci. ? ? ' ? ? n. S 5<lb/>
 <lb/>
ai inpleas<lb/>
?? . did not give us the<lb/>
.?. - they gave us was more of a belch.<lb/>
i a Jerful meal.<lb/>
? <lb/>
ched round the walls of Jericho<lb/>
? .<lb/>
jl ? -nan band, they failed to<lb/>
either ??? ?? ? ? tertam the au 4. nce. many of whom<lb/>
left befon th et wa hall ?? They would never have<lb/>
; ??? ailed back I e ore if their<lb/>
announcer I kepi screan Brothers Johnson'<lb/>
Brothers Johnson vet the PA system<lb/>
The only music u ind I use the term loosely in<lb/>
an unpleasant conclusion to<lb/>
Chap Gurley<lb/>
reference to the other ?<lb/>
Johnson Never mmd that<lb/>
Graham and quotes Star<lb/>
measure, he is still a-<lb/>
mastered his instrumei I ii<lb/>
does not know that he is unar<lb/>
on his instrument<lb/>
Aside from the outstd<lb/>
Johnson, the r- n undi<lb/>
eight performers on stag-<lb/>
to do " i - inee arour<lb/>
Ro<lb/>
horn ?-??<lb/>
smging ba -<lb/>
Johnson ??? ? ther hall ft<lb/>
By the way d'C  .<lb/>
that of the rhytf<lb/>
m. or they were s<lb/>
suspect th<lb/>
For a the si . ei I ?.<lb/>
the audiencei d' 1 every<lb/>
Marie Show the Br<lb/>
audience the   M tf ?-<lb/>
and virtually ? ? efl<lb/>
question of ta ent . s sf a<lb/>
Brothers Jot<lb/>
- ??? a mildly <lb/>
Funk Out Ma Face th t<lb/>
drone of der .?:?.? ? . - . ??<lb/>
tempo for<lb/>
tobe rorrid I contem;<lb/>
boring<lb/>
W ith a comp- ?? nt ba<lb/>
Johnson, especu .<lb/>
powerful force in modi<lb/>
term you like music  ?" "<lb/>
they will do nothing but n ?<lb/>
1939's Reefer Madness highlights double fe<lb/>
4<lb/>
nng of<lb/>
lOrama of<lb/>
 i hot. M i<lb/>
per<lb/>
I<lb/>
elative<lb/>
ommentary by<lb/>
ioger Pryow.<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Mattacl<lb/>
. I md the<lb/>
"ers<lb/>
Pi' ' " -xessfully<lb/>
Aeaves the various ele-<lb/>
cts of Dynamite Chicken<lb/>
nto a tight cohesive while<lb/>
lly overwhelms<lb/>
the unsuspecting audience<lb/>
th its uniqueness and<lb/>
humor<lb/>
Reefer Madness, a film<lb/>
n ide in 1939. is the second<lb/>
" e double feature<lb/>
"? ' ig, and it stars Dave<lb/>
O'Brien. Dorothy Short,<lb/>
and Carleton Young<lb/>
In the 30's. one of the<lb/>
favorite subjects of poverty<lb/>
row' exploitation films was<lb/>
the evils of "the devil's<lb/>
weed marijuana<lb/>
Pure campy melodrama<lb/>
all the way. completely<lb/>
hilarious by standards<lb/>
today, such a film as Reefer<lb/>
Madness was considered<lb/>
tight drama under the guise<lb/>
of warning the audience of<lb/>
how marijuana was destroy<lb/>
mg the lives of young<lb/>
people m that time.<lb/>
The plot of Reefer<lb/>
Madness is no different.<lb/>
with a young man's life<lb/>
soon becoming a night-<lb/>
mare, pure high camp'<lb/>
that must be seen to be<lb/>
believed<lb/>
Films are open to ECU<lb/>
students, Faculty, and Staff<lb/>
and their guests Admis-<lb/>
sion is by ID and Activ ii.<lb/>
Cards or Mendenhail Stu-<lb/>
dent Center Membership<lb/>
Card. All fiimsare shown in<lb/>
the Mendenhail Student<lb/>
Center Theatre<lb/>
This special film presen<lb/>
tation is sponsored by the<lb/>
Student Union Films Cv<lb/>
mittee<lb/>
The next Wednesday<lb/>
special film, Lost Weekend.<lb/>
a<lb/>
Jorge Bolet: 'worked a master's magic on<lb/>
the piano'for music lovers last Wednesday<lb/>
the<lb/>
;en-<lb/>
irns<lb/>
-<lb/>
- ??"<lb/>
tuos tic piai<lb/>
Boiet's sty'e is perfe I .<lb/>
su,tedpieces played<lb/>
on Wednesday night<lb/>
He brings a full, rich<lb/>
sound out of the piano His<lb/>
stye is aggressive, bold.<lb/>
.scuime. and he opts for<lb/>
strongiy stated rather<lb/>
in the preciously lyrical<lb/>
sp.an.st technique<lb/>
The first set by Bolet<lb/>
jch as m<lb/>
s intentions w?<lb/>
' ? andante Intei<lb/>
in A minor was<lb/>
a dreamy, legato piece that<lb/>
ed to illustrate Boiet's<lb/>
odic gifts<lb/>
ceo m G minor<lb/>
egro passionatoi was<lb/>
the most technically dem-<lb/>
anding composition Bolet<lb/>
played by Brahms It is a<lb/>
stirring. German- ??- - -<lb/>
evocative of Brahm's pre-<lb/>
decessor Beethoven<lb/>
Bolet included the fa-<lb/>
mous Wanderer Fantasy<lb/>
by Schubert as his second<lb/>
set From the commanding<lb/>
first chords, which stri-<lb/>
dently introduce the Fan-<lb/>
tasy to the fugue-hke al-<lb/>
legro which ervOs the piece,<lb/>
Bolet captured the audi-<lb/>
 th his mterpreta-<lb/>
he Presto gave Bolet<lb/>
"unity to exhibit<lb/>
awesome virtuosity at<lb/>
? n ind<lb/>
After the intermission<lb/>
Bolet returned to play<lb/>
Godowsky's "Studies on<lb/>
Chopin's Etudes These<lb/>
des on the etudes are<lb/>
less interesting thema-<lb/>
ally than they are tech-<lb/>
ally Of course. Chopin<lb/>
Arote his brilliant etudes<lb/>
the advanced student of<lb/>
the piano to practice certain<lb/>
ects of playing But<lb/>
what makes the etudes<lb/>
great is that not only are<lb/>
they arcane studies in<lb/>
piamstic technique but are<lb/>
stirring, moving pieces of<lb/>
music as well<lb/>
The composer Godow-<lb/>
sky. though, was interested<lb/>
in only the formal aspects<lb/>
'he Etudes His Studies<lb/>
on the Etudes accordingly<lb/>
were remarkable for their<lb/>
showcasing of dazzling vir-<lb/>
tuosity Two of them (Bolet<lb/>
played six m all) were for<lb/>
the left hand alone<lb/>
Those familiar with the<lb/>
Etudes would recognize<lb/>
that Godowsky's version of<lb/>
Chopin' No 12 exceeded<lb/>
even the Pole's in its<lb/>
demands upon the player<lb/>
Also, the Chopmist would<lb/>
have recognized the ex-<lb/>
tremely lyrical No. 13,<lb/>
which Godowsky trans-<lb/>
cribes for the left hand<lb/>
only<lb/>
Bolet ended the pro-<lb/>
grammed part of his per-<lb/>
formance with a selection<lb/>
from Liszt's "Annees de<lb/>
Pelennage Book II. Liszt<lb/>
wrote his "Travel Jour-<lb/>
nals while gadding about<lb/>
Europe stealing wives as<lb/>
well as waves of acclam-<lb/>
ation for his great compo-<lb/>
sitional and performing<lb/>
gifts<lb/>
The Liszt, as might be<lb/>
expected, was astounding<lb/>
Lisztomamacs can imagine<lb/>
the ability required to<lb/>
master his compositions<lb/>
Throughout .Bolet was al-<lb/>
ways in control never losing<lb/>
a drop of pure musicahty im<lb/>
all the very difficult pass-<lb/>
ages<lb/>
As a delightful contre-<lb/>
tempts to the rousing Ro-<lb/>
mantic program, Bolet<lb/>
treated the audience who<lb/>
gave him a standing ova-<lb/>
tion to a delicate, lovely<lb/>
piece as encore Confirm-<lb/>
ing what all music lovers<lb/>
know, that no matter what<lb/>
pianicstic pyrotechniques<lb/>
are involved, the tune's the<lb/>
thing.<lb/>
Bolet works a master's<lb/>
magic on the piano, and it<lb/>
is a magical experience to<lb/>
hear him<lb/>
PIANIST JORGE BOLET "The musta-<lb/>
chioed gentleman with gray sideburns<lb/>
proceeded to treat the audience to a<lb/>
program of virtuoso Rom<lb/>
Boiet's style was perfect ,<lb/>
pieces played on Wednesday ??<lb/>
Photi<lb/>
t<lb/>
!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057154_0006"/><lb/>
Knight left audience 'disappointed'<lb/>
PLAYBOY FILM CRITIC Arthur Knight<lb/>
Photo by John H. Grogan<lb/>
By STEVE BACHNER<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
Film is the great popul-<lb/>
ar medium, with an aud-<lb/>
ience of incredible size, a<lb/>
commercial vigor which,<lb/>
though somewhat dimin-<lb/>
ished from the pre-televls-<lb/>
ion days, is still staggering.<lb/>
Film has an artistic potent-<lb/>
iality that realizes Itself<lb/>
with some frequency in<lb/>
works of undeniable excel-<lb/>
lence.<lb/>
There are more good<lb/>
movies in any given year<lb/>
than there are good plays or<lb/>
novels. Reviewing films<lb/>
then, or criticizing films, Is<lb/>
like reviewing or criticizing<lb/>
a blizzard or a war.<lb/>
The critic is laughably<lb/>
impotent, has no influence<lb/>
either with the film-makers<lb/>
or with the film audiences,<lb/>
has no suitable or adequate<lb/>
vocabulary with which to<lb/>
discuss the films for his<lb/>
reader. The critic has no<lb/>
position on which to stand,<lb/>
from which to formulate a<lb/>
general theory of what he is<lb/>
trying to do or wants to say,<lb/>
and no way of rationalizing<lb/>
his intellectual career.<lb/>
Still, the critic, and in<lb/>
this instance it's critic-cum-<lb/>
hlstorian, writes about film;<lb/>
teaches film literature, and<lb/>
makes an occasional buck<lb/>
on the side by lecturing<lb/>
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about film. He does all of<lb/>
this, makes his livelihood<lb/>
doing it, because he is<lb/>
driven be an unquenchable<lb/>
thirst for film; his love for<lb/>
the art sends him to the<lb/>
moviehouse, to the library,<lb/>
back to the moviehouse and<lb/>
eventually to the typewriter<lb/>
or classroom or lecture hall.<lb/>
All of this brings us<lb/>
back to square one to<lb/>
Arthur Knight, a noted film<lb/>
critic and movie historian<lb/>
who strings for Playboy<lb/>
magazine and the Saturday<lb/>
Review. Knight lectured on<lb/>
the topic of Sex in the<lb/>
Cinema last Tuesday, to a<lb/>
group of students the maj-<lb/>
ority of whom hoped to at<lb/>
least catch a clip from the<lb/>
granddaddy of porno films,<lb/>
Deep Throat. If this was<lb/>
their only motivation for<lb/>
attending the lecture, they<lb/>
left a disappointed bunch.<lb/>
Mr. Knight's audio visual<lb/>
aid concluded with a simp-<lb/>
er, not a bang.<lb/>
As for the lot that<lb/>
dropped in for an invigorat-<lb/>
ing, informative lecture,<lb/>
they too left a disappointed<lb/>
bunch.<lb/>
Knight seems content to<lb/>
prostitute his knowledge as<lb/>
well as the artform by<lb/>
lecturing on what will prob-<lb/>
ably always be a "hot"<lb/>
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with enrolling in Air Force ROTC, may lead to<lb/>
your becoming an Air Force officer.<lb/>
Contact:<lb/>
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ECU Wright Annex - Room 206<lb/>
or call 757-6597<lb/>
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Gotewoy to o great way of life.<lb/>
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topic<lb/>
After spending some<lb/>
eight hours with Knight, I<lb/>
came away with only one<lb/>
revelation (a minor one at<lb/>
that). Probably the most<lb/>
erotic clip in Knight's rep-<lb/>
ertoire was one that showed<lb/>
very little skin and con-<lb/>
cerned itself mostly with<lb/>
reaction shots of Heddy<lb/>
Lamarr and her male coun-<lb/>
terpart during their love-<lb/>
making<lb/>
ROCK-DORIS<lb/>
For whatever reason. I<lb/>
couldn't help but run those<lb/>
old Rock Hudson-Doris<lb/>
Day movies through my<lb/>
head Watching a Huds-<lb/>
Day movie, one feels hurl<lb/>
and ashamed that ie is<lb/>
seeing something he should<lb/>
not, that he has been forced<lb/>
to look into the bathroorr I<lb/>
the American imagination.<lb/>
But in the skin flicks the,<lb/>
have real bathrooms into<lb/>
which the camera litwa<lb/>
peepsand. watching, one is<lb/>
not embarrased. but wise<lb/>
He feels that Rock and<lb/>
Dons have adequately pre-<lb/>
pared him Here is the<lb/>
bathroom all right,<lb/>
there are no prescription<lb/>
or patent medicines, no<lb/>
asprin. no toilet paper<lb/>
toilet), no used razor<lb/>
blades, no hot water bot-<lb/>
tles, no frazzled tooth<lb/>
brushes<lb/>
On the other side of the<lb/>
com, there is much soap<lb/>
there is a naked girl<lb/>
The clips inspired<lb/>
another minor insight In<lb/>
one sense, the single most<lb/>
salient element of si- ri<lb/>
flicks is poverty of the<lb/>
imagination In a great<lb/>
many skin fheks there is<lb/>
absolutely no way to U<lb/>
what image will be throve<lb/>
on the screen next. One<lb/>
emerges from the theatre<lb/>
exhausted and exasperat-<lb/>
ed, not because of the<lb/>
pictures of simple bodies<lb/>
but because of uncontrolled<lb/>
tension. Knight's lecture<lb/>
provided a curious paradox<lb/>
Apart from pulling film<lb/>
history out of context, amid<lb/>
frequent factual errors anc<lb/>
an illustrative reel that<lb/>
appeared to have been<lb/>
spliced together with Silly<lb/>
Putty. Knight managed<lb/>
inadvetantly. to raise num-<lb/>
erous questions about the<lb/>
viability of film criticism <lb/>
discussed with much diffi-<lb/>
culty earlier in this review<lb/>
As a youngster. Knight<lb/>
was probably a bright and<lb/>
intellectual prodigy all hot<lb/>
to write great film criticism<lb/>
But the movie men have<lb/>
learned that, given a little<lb/>
time, such a bright young<lb/>
man is more than likely to<lb/>
corrupt himself<lb/>
<lb/>
f v<lb/>
!<lb/>
v<lb/>
<pb facs="00057154_0007"/><lb/>
17 October 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
ivin streak ends<lb/>
Pirates bow to Golden Eagles 17-16<lb/>
BVCHARLESCHANDLER<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
HATTlESBURG. Miss - Southern m<lb/>
eJasownrtn . southern Mississippi sur-<lb/>
? d second quarter ra y bv thp cm d .<lb/>
?andy BovettP th,rn n ! ? U P,ra,es and rode<lb/>
r Doyette s third quarter field aoal to a 17 1c ?<lb/>
here Saturday n.ght 6 v,ctory<lb/>
lheAG2LaC?2nfl M unanswered PO'nts m the first period<lb/>
e uolden Eagles watched ECU explode for 1? J<lb/>
quarter pomts expiode for 16 second<lb/>
e second half the Eagles vaunted defense.<lb/>
as the Nasty Bunch held the Pirates in check<lb/>
Bovene s t,pt , T  aS aW6S?me all?n3 ?nlV<lb/>
joa. The field goal dnve however, wa<lb/>
vards penalty against the Bucs<lb/>
" Eagles took their first possession 65 yards in 16<lb/>
- a t Dwn USM <lb/>
P"atesat w?i Halfback T.co Bea. gamed just over half<lb/>
tagles yards on the drive, rushing for 33 yards<lb/>
uartPTn"38 by an Opt,on pitch ,rom Junior<lb/>
?rterback Dane McDamel to Chuck Cook, who ran S,x<lb/>
-?s untouched into the end zone.<lb/>
e second Eagle score came after a fumble by Pirate<lb/>
? Leander Green At the time, the Pirates were<lb/>
Pirates ponder<lb/>
possibilities<lb/>
after USM loss<lb/>
HA -LESCHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
ESBURG. Miss<lb/>
-ad coach Bobbv<lb/>
?d his Southern<lb/>
ssippi Golden Eagles<lb/>
' 'V- deserved .<lb/>
the Plates their<lb/>
3ss to the Eagles can<lb/>
? by 'he<lb/>
rea ? the team after<lb/>
? . hat mig<lb/>
 robably<lb/>
it should have been.<lb/>
ate p'acekicker Bill<lb/>
probably should<lb/>
have been successful on his<lb/>
extra pomt attempt after<lb/>
the Pirates' first touch-<lb/>
dow<lb/>
Cornerback Willie Hol-<lb/>
jbably should have<lb/>
?ercepted the pass from<lb/>
Eagle quarterback Jeff<lb/>
Hammond that he dropped<lb/>
efore the Eagles<lb/>
kicked the game's winning<lb/>
Dye probably should<lb/>
. e called for a two-point<lb/>
conversion attempt rather<lb/>
the one point kick that<lb/>
gave the Pirates a 16-14<lb/>
: a'ter the Pirates' sec-<lb/>
ond touchdown<lb/>
Dye himself felt that he<lb/>
was m error on this parti-<lb/>
cuiar occasion Obviously<lb/>
I just made a poor decision<lb/>
to kick the second extra<lb/>
point But there's no way to<lb/>
 if we would have<lb/>
made the two points<lb/>
? er<lb/>
Yet through all the<lb/>
second guessing and mis-<lb/>
givings. Dye did find a few<lb/>
optimistic aspects of the<lb/>
loss. "I'm proud of the<lb/>
way our football team came<lb/>
bac- said Dye We<lb/>
made a football game out of<lb/>
Dye was referring to<lb/>
the Pirates 16 pomt ex-<lb/>
plosion in the second quar-<lb/>
ter after the Eagles had<lb/>
taken a 14-0 lead in the first<lb/>
oenod<lb/>
Dye also noted that he<lb/>
felt his team .? rough<lb/>
their roughest game of the<lb/>
season against the Eagles.<lb/>
It certa ? was a hard<lb/>
,ht game on both<lb/>
sides said Dye "I think it<lb/>
was the most physical game<lb/>
we have played all year "<lb/>
The fifth year Pirate<lb/>
coach praised the Eagle<lb/>
defense Southern Miss-<lb/>
issippi has a fine defensive<lb/>
football team, noted Dye<lb/>
They're as good as we've<lb/>
taced in somo time. We<lb/>
moved on the' a in the<lb/>
second quart it they<lb/>
came out and ot<lb/>
harder in the se; . half<lb/>
Southern Miss head<lb/>
coach Bobby Collins ap-<lb/>
peared worn and exhausted<lb/>
after the tight contest He<lb/>
had only a slight word of<lb/>
respect to say about the<lb/>
Pirates But actions speak<lb/>
louder than words in this<lb/>
case Collins shook his head<lb/>
in awe. saying. "We beat<lb/>
one good football team<lb/>
tonight; one real good<lb/>
football team<lb/>
Yet m the ECU locker<lb/>
room, all Dye and his<lb/>
troops could say was. "We<lb/>
could have, and probably<lb/>
should have beaten one<lb/>
good football team to-<lb/>
night<lb/>
Crafty Karpovich<lb/>
,cce KARPOVICH slips past a PeybroKe State<lb/>
eCUsJE - J1 Pirates 4-2 victory over the Braves<lb/>
Photo by Chap Qurley<lb/>
on the move at the Eagle 35 yard line. But as would be the<lb/>
case again later in the game, the Golden Eagles took full<lb/>
advantage of an ECU turnover<lb/>
It took USM only four plays to score their second<lb/>
touchdown of the night. But, in the process, McDaniel<lb/>
suffered a shoulder separation, and was lost to the Eagles<lb/>
for the evening. McDaniel's replacement, Jeff Hammond<lb/>
threw a 51 yard scoring pass to tight end Marving Harvey<lb/>
on the very next play from scrimmage. Boyette's extra point<lb/>
gave the Eagles a 14-0 edge at the end of the first period<lb/>
The two touchdown deficit did not phase the Pirates,<lb/>
though, as they scored on their first possession of the<lb/>
second quarter. The 44 yard drive was capped by a 10 yard<lb/>
touchdown from Leander Green to Eddie Hicks. Bill<lb/>
Lamm's extra point attempt, which was wide left, would<lb/>
later prove fatal to the Pirates.<lb/>
Steve Greer's 37 yard run and a 40 yard pass from Green<lb/>
to Billy Ray Washington set up the next Pirate score. Lamm<lb/>
capped a stalled Pirate drive with a 37 yard field goal<lb/>
Pirate cornerback Willie Holley intercepted a Hammond<lb/>
pass with 1 :52 left in the half to give Green and the offense<lb/>
the ball once again.<lb/>
Three big plays gave the Pirates the halftime lead.<lb/>
Green hit split end Terry Gallaher on a 42 yard pass play.<lb/>
Fullback Theodore Sutton then ran around right end for 24<lb/>
more yards. Halfback Sam Harrell capped the drive with an<lb/>
18 yard touchdown run. Lamm's extra point gave the<lb/>
Pirates a 16-14 lead at halftime<lb/>
The second half was an entirely different story for the<lb/>
Pirate offense. The "Nasty Bunch" held ECU to only four<lb/>
first downs and 71 total yards after intermission.<lb/>
Meanwhile, the Pirate defense thwarted the USM attack,<lb/>
holding the Eagles to less than 100 total yards.<lb/>
Except for Lamm's missed extra point, the cruicial play<lb/>
of the game came with 6:45 left in the third quarter. The<lb/>
Eagles were driving for the first and only time of the second<lb/>
half.a third down pass from Hammond to split end John<lb/>
Cannon was nearly intercepted by Holley<lb/>
Seeing an open field and six points in front of him,<lb/>
Holley did as so many defensive backs and receivers do,<lb/>
drop the ball. On the very next play, Boyette kicked what<lb/>
was eventually the winning field goal, giving the Eagles a<lb/>
17-16 lead.<lb/>
ECU head coach Pat Dye said that he felt both sides<lb/>
played well enough to win "It was certainly hard fought on<lb/>
both sides noted Dye "It was the most physical game we<lb/>
have played in all year<lb/>
Mack heads returnees<lb/>
<lb/>
0<lb/>
Sam Harrell<lb/>
THE ECU TAILBACK scored the Pirates last touchdown on<lb/>
an 18 yard aunt in the second quarter of Saturday's game<lb/>
at Southern Mississippi.<lb/>
Pirates open practice<lb/>
A distressed Dye<lb/>
ECU HEAD COACH Pat Dye ponders a troublesome<lb/>
situation The fifth year Pirate mento met head-on with<lb/>
such a situation after the Pirates 17-16 loss to Southern<lb/>
Miss last Saturday Photo by John H. Grogan<lb/>
ECU-USM Stats<lb/>
ECU 0 16 0 0- 16<lb/>
USM 14 0 3 0-17<lb/>
S M iss ? Cook 6 run<lb/>
(Boyette kick)<lb/>
S Miss ? Harvey 51<lb/>
pass from Hammond (Boy-<lb/>
ette kick)<lb/>
ECU ? Hicks 10 run<lb/>
(kick failed)<lb/>
ECU ? FG Lamm 37<lb/>
ECU ? Harrell 18 run<lb/>
(Lamm kick)<lb/>
S Miss ? FG Boyette<lb/>
35<lb/>
Rushing: ECU ? Sutton<lb/>
12-86, Greer 4-44. Green<lb/>
10-22. Harrell 2-22, Collins<lb/>
5-17. Hicks 6-15. Hawkins<lb/>
1-4. Gallaher 1-1. USM ?<lb/>
Beal 24-70. Winder 14-38.<lb/>
McDaniel 5-36. Floyd 1-10.<lb/>
Passing: ECU ? Green<lb/>
7-20-2. 87 yds. USM ?<lb/>
McDaniel 1-1-0, 79 yds.<lb/>
Hammond 3-81. 79 yds<lb/>
Receiving ECU ?<lb/>
Hicks 3-22, Gallaher 2-25,<lb/>
Washington 1-40, Collins<lb/>
1-10. USM ? Cannon 2-17,<lb/>
Harvey 1-51. Brown 1-19.<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
With its season opener against UNC-Asheville just over<lb/>
a month away, the ECU basketball team began practice<lb/>
Sunday with a lengthy three hour workout.<lb/>
The Pirates, who finished with a disappointing 9-17<lb/>
record last year under new head coach Larry Gillman.<lb/>
return all five starters this season including the nation's<lb/>
leading scorer Oliver Mack<lb/>
6-11 center Al Tyson, from nearby D H Conley High<lb/>
School, heads a talented list of newcomers which includes<lb/>
two junior college transfers who should provide immediate<lb/>
help<lb/>
"With all our starters returning from last year I'd like to<lb/>
think we' II be a much improved unit from last season, said<lb/>
GiMman last Thursday at the team's annual media day<lb/>
"We won five of our last eight games at the end of last year<lb/>
and we seemed to be playing with a lot more maturity<lb/>
during that period.<lb/>
"Considering everything the team went through on and<lb/>
off the fioor during the end of last season, that streak was<lb/>
really amazing noted Gillman, "But that's all behind us<lb/>
and I'm really encouraged with some of our new players<lb/>
Despite endless rumors and speculation Gillman would<lb/>
be fired after last season, the former San Francisco<lb/>
assistant returns for his second year at the helm of the<lb/>
Pirate program.<lb/>
The NCAA investigation of the ECU porgream has also<lb/>
subsided and Gillman feels it's simply a matter of blending<lb/>
the old with the new for a successful season.<lb/>
"We has a lot of adverse publicity last year explained<lb/>
Gillman "But even through most of the controversy our<lb/>
team played fairly well. We've got a lot of returning<lb/>
veterans and a lot of newcomers. It will be just a matter of<lb/>
how soon they can play as a cohesive unit<lb/>
All-Amencan candidate Oliver M ack returns for his final<lb/>
year and it certainly promises to be another bright one. The<lb/>
6-3 guard from Queens. NY finished fourth in the nation<lb/>
last year in scoring with a lofty 28.0 average and is<lb/>
undoubtedly the finest player to ever wear a Pirate uniform.<lb/>
Mack received the MVP award in last year's First Union<lb/>
Invitational Tournament and also broke a school scoring<lb/>
record with 47 points against USC-Aiken.<lb/>
"Inch for inch, pound for pound, you're going to find a<lb/>
better basketball player in the college game today said<lb/>
Gillman. "He just loves basketball. It's no chore for him, he<lb/>
just likes to play. But last season we didn't win and that's<lb/>
what he wanted more than anything<lb/>
Mack will have an experienced supporting cast this<lb/>
season which will ease the scoring burden and allow him to<lb/>
concentrate more on defense.<lb/>
Forwards Herb Gray and Herb Krusen and K e Powers<lb/>
all return along with center Greg Cornelius arc; gd-<lb/>
Walter Moseley<lb/>
Gray was the team's second leading scorer behind <lb/>
with a 14 2 average and was also the second leading<lb/>
rebounderon the squad with 7 9 grabs a<lb/>
finished the season with a 13.5 average .<lb/>
Cornelius was the leading rebounder at 8 1<lb/>
Tyson, a highly recruited prep star from  nterv<lb/>
could start at center while freshman Clarence M es I<lb/>
Burimgton will probably see a lot of playing time " . -<lb/>
and M iiesboth played m the N C East-West Alt-Star game<lb/>
this summer<lb/>
Other newcomers include transfer David UnOe<lb/>
who will become eligible after ECU s first seve<lb/>
Mark McLaurm. a 6-6 forward, from Springfield Ma<lb/>
and junior college transfers Frank Hobson and Ge<lb/>
Maynor<lb/>
Hobson is a 6-8 forward from Cadiz. Ky whiie Ma.<lb/>
is a 6-2 guard who came to ECU from Louisburg Junior<lb/>
College<lb/>
"To have a successful season we re going to havi<lb/>
improve our rebounding and defensive play. " said G man<lb/>
"We have just as difficult a schedule on the road and a<lb/>
much tougher schedule at home<lb/>
1971-79PirateRoster<lb/>
fGreg CorneliusC-F6-9New Albanv<lb/>
ttHerbGrayF-G6-8Sea? Pieasa "?' I<lb/>
Frank HobsonF6-8Cad<lb/>
TtHerb KrusenF-G6-5Si .e' Srr<lb/>
tOhver MackG6-3QLjee N -<lb/>
George MaynorG6-2Rai<lb/>
M ark M cLaunnF6-6Scr ' ass<lb/>
Clarence M ilesG6-4<lb/>
tWaiter MoseleyG6-2Quee"  ?<lb/>
tKyle PowersG-F6-5?<lb/>
Alton TysonC6-11 nterv<lb/>
David UnderwoodF6-6Queens N ?<lb/>
TLetters won?2l<lb/>
1It<lb/>
Pirates dump Pembroke<lb/>
defender ?<lb/>
Saturday afternoon<lb/>
By DAVID MAREADY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Several ECU freshmen<lb/>
turned in solid perform-<lb/>
ances as the Pirate Soccer<lb/>
Team defeated a weak<lb/>
Pembroke State University<lb/>
squad 4-2, Saturday, on<lb/>
Minges Field.<lb/>
A fired up ECU club<lb/>
took the field at the be-<lb/>
ginning of the first half and<lb/>
clearly dominated the a-<lb/>
ction. However, the Braves<lb/>
of Pembroke drew first<lb/>
blood with only 6:10 gone in<lb/>
the first half on a goal<lb/>
scored by fullback, Mike<lb/>
McPhail.<lb/>
Twenty minutes elapsed<lb/>
before Eric Tucker coun-<lb/>
tered for the Pirates with<lb/>
26:15 expired in the first<lb/>
half to even the score at one<lb/>
apiece. David Radford was<lb/>
credited with the assist.<lb/>
The remaining twenty<lb/>
minutes of the first half<lb/>
went scoreless and the half<lb/>
ended with the score dead-<lb/>
locked at 1-1.<lb/>
Although the score<lb/>
r<lb/>
showed the teams even at<lb/>
halftime, the statistics re-<lb/>
flected the true dominance<lb/>
by the Pirates. The Braves<lb/>
could only manage four<lb/>
attempts at the ECU goal<lb/>
while the Pirates had at-<lb/>
tempted a whoppmgsixteen<lb/>
at the Pembroke goal.<lb/>
The first twenty min-<lb/>
utes of the second half were<lb/>
a nightmare for Coach Dan<lb/>
Kenney's Braves. They<lb/>
simply fell apart during a<lb/>
five minute stretch as the<lb/>
Pirates scored three conse-<lb/>
cutive goals.<lb/>
The first of the three<lb/>
goals was scored by fresh-<lb/>
man, Brad Winchell off<lb/>
David Radford's second<lb/>
assist of the day with<lb/>
eleven minutes gone in the<lb/>
second half.<lb/>
Lightning struck one<lb/>
minute later in the form of<lb/>
Jeff Karpovich. Karpovich<lb/>
slammed a Dennis Elwell<lb/>
assist into the Brave's goal<lb/>
to make the score 3-1; but<lb/>
the scoring wasn't over.<lb/>
Three minutes after Kar-<lb/>
povich's goal, freshman<lb/>
Shawn Berry connected on<lb/>
an unassisted goal to boost<lb/>
the Pirates into a com-<lb/>
manding 4-1 lead.<lb/>
ECU then encountered<lb/>
a long dry spell in scoring<lb/>
mainly because of offensive<lb/>
miscues and numerous<lb/>
penalties.<lb/>
With 35:25 gone in the<lb/>
half, Braves' halfback<lb/>
Chuck Perry scored the<lb/>
final goal of the day to<lb/>
reduce the Pirate lead to<lb/>
4-2. The Braves attempted<lb/>
a gallant comeback in the<lb/>
final stages of the contest,<lb/>
however, it was smothered<lb/>
by sound defensive play led<lb/>
by ECU'S Jeff Kluger and<lb/>
goalies, Kevin Tyus and<lb/>
Kerry Lovitt. The game<lb/>
ended with ECU on top 4-2.<lb/>
Brad Smith cited sev-<lb/>
eral freshmen for their out-<lb/>
standing play including,<lb/>
Andy Roman, Shawn Ber-<lb/>
ry, Brad Winchell, and Eric<lb/>
Tucker<lb/>
"Eric's goal was very<lb/>
important said Smith,<lb/>
"because it gave us a tie<lb/>
game going into the half<lb/>
and it kept us from having<lb/>
to play catch-up ball in the<lb/>
second half<lb/>
Statistically, the Pirates<lb/>
scalped the Braves on shots<lb/>
at goal with thirty, while<lb/>
the Braves could manage<lb/>
only a mere eight shots at<lb/>
the well defended Pirate<lb/>
goal.<lb/>
"Although we did not<lb/>
play very glamorous ob-<lb/>
served Smith, "we did,<lb/>
control most of the action<lb/>
throughout the game<lb/>
The Pirates, who are<lb/>
one goal away from a school<lb/>
record in goals scored in a<lb/>
single season, upped their<lb/>
record to 3-6-1, while the<lb/>
Braves fell to a dismal 1-12<lb/>
on the season.<lb/>
ECU soccer action re-<lb/>
sumes Tueday, at home<lb/>
when the Pirates' battle a<lb/>
strong UNC-Wilmington,<lb/>
The Seahawks are currently<lb/>
ranked 10th in the South.<lb/>
Fancy foottvork<lb/>
DUANE BAILEY MANUEVERS past a Pembroke Sate<lb/>
defender Saturday afternoon in soccer action on the Minges<lb/>
Field<lb/>
Photoby Chap Gurley)<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057154_0008"/><lb/>
 <lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 17 October 1978<lb/>
Time Outs win, reach campus playoffs<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The intramural flag<lb/>
football divisional champ-<lb/>
ionships were decided<lb/>
Tuesday afternoon and the<lb/>
all-camous finals will be<lb/>
played Wednesday at 7<lb/>
p.m next to Ficklen Sta-<lb/>
dium<lb/>
Most of the intramural<lb/>
football titles were decided<lb/>
by less than a touchdown,<lb/>
except in the dormitory<lb/>
division where the Scott<lb/>
Time Outs rolled to a 42-22<lb/>
win over Aycock's Top of<lb/>
the Roost<lb/>
The Time Outs never<lb/>
trailed in rolling to their<lb/>
20th straight win and<lb/>
reached the all-campus<lb/>
playoffs for the third con-<lb/>
secutive season. In three<lb/>
seasons as dormitory<lb/>
champions the Time Outs<lb/>
have won 31 of 32 games,<lb/>
losing only in the all-campus<lb/>
final in 1976<lb/>
The Time Outs opened<lb/>
up a 14-0 lead early in the<lb/>
game on their way to a<lb/>
22-14 halftime lead The<lb/>
Time Outs defense held the<lb/>
Roost without a gain on the<lb/>
first possessions and then<lb/>
scored touchdowns on each<lb/>
drive following their de-<lb/>
fensive stands. The first<lb/>
score came on a three-yard<lb/>
pass froi.i Bill 5ass to<lb/>
Keven Thomas and Thomas<lb/>
added the points after for<lb/>
an 8-0 lead. After holding<lb/>
Top of the Roost for the<lb/>
second series, the Time<lb/>
Outs drove down the field<lb/>
again and scored on a<lb/>
fourth down. 50-yard swing<lb/>
pass from Bass to Dan<lb/>
M cCombs.<lb/>
Nathan Muliam got the<lb/>
Roost on the scoreboard on<lb/>
ALL YOU<lb/>
CAN EAT<lb/>
for $1.95<lb/>
Fish<lb/>
Fry<lb/>
FRIDAY'S<lb/>
Dinner<lb/>
Meal includes<lb/>
Golden Crisp<lb/>
French Fries,<lb/>
Cole Slaw, Tartar<lb/>
Sauce and the<lb/>
world's best<lb/>
hushpuppies.<lb/>
their next possession when<lb/>
he took a pitch from<lb/>
quarterback Eddie Owens<lb/>
and lofted a 35-yard touch-<lb/>
down pass to Tom Cody,<lb/>
making it 14-6.<lb/>
Each team got another<lb/>
score before the half as<lb/>
Bass hit Terry Campbell on<lb/>
an 18-yard scoring pass and<lb/>
McCombs for the conver-<lb/>
sion to make it 22-6 Then<lb/>
the Roost followed with an<lb/>
18-yard score on a run by<lb/>
Owens, and a conversion by<lb/>
Muliem, to make it 22-1<lb/>
just before the half.<lb/>
The second half became<lb/>
a physical display of force<lb/>
between the two teams with<lb/>
a total of four players being<lb/>
ejected from the game for<lb/>
unsportsmanlike conduct<lb/>
and dangerous play.<lb/>
The Time Outs scored<lb/>
two quick touchdowns for a<lb/>
34-14 lead that just about<lb/>
clinched it. After that<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
San.thru Thuri. 430-900<lb/>
Fri.&amp;Sat. 4:30-10:00<lb/>
there was more fighting<lb/>
than scoring as the tempers<lb/>
began to flare on both<lb/>
sides. One of the Time Outs<lb/>
second half scores came on<lb/>
an interception-lateral re-<lb/>
turn when Jimmy Wilkins<lb/>
intercepted a pass, ran 20<lb/>
yards, and then latereled<lb/>
the ball to Chris Seagraves<lb/>
to complete the 60-yard<lb/>
score, which made it 34-14<lb/>
and clinched the Time<lb/>
Outs' third straight dormi-<lb/>
tory championship.<lb/>
In other men's playoff<lb/>
games, the Sadaharu Ohs<lb/>
pulled the only upset in the<lb/>
five championship games<lb/>
with a 16-12 win over the<lb/>
the SociologyAnthropolo-<lb/>
gy club. In the fraternity<lb/>
playoff. Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
defeated Lambda Chi al-<lb/>
pha<lb/>
In the sorority cham-<lb/>
pionship. Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Siama took a narrow win<lb/>
over Alpha Xi Delta. 8-6<lb/>
and they will meet the<lb/>
dormitory champions from<lb/>
Tyler. The Tyler team, the<lb/>
Tearjerkers, made an early<lb/>
score by Minnie McPhatter<lb/>
stand up for an 8-0 win<lb/>
In Tuesday's semifinals<lb/>
of the men's all-campus<lb/>
championships. Sadaharu<lb/>
Oh meets Aycock Top ofthe<lb/>
Roost and Ph. Kappa Tau<lb/>
takes on the Time Outs<lb/>
Both games will be played<lb/>
at 4 p m<lb/>
On Wedne;<lb/>
the Tyier Tearje-<lb/>
theSigmas win n ?<lb/>
ali-campus Sf<lb/>
ion ship<lb/>
Rose Bowl dream game<lb/>
spoiled by dual upset<lb/>
By<lb/>
HERSCHEL NISSENSON<lb/>
AP Sports Writer<lb/>
A funny thing happened<lb/>
over the weekend to that<lb/>
dream Rose Bowl game<lb/>
between Southern Califor-<lb/>
nia and M ichigan<lb/>
Of course, the happen-<lb/>
ings weren't funny to se-<lb/>
cond-ranked Southern Cal.<lb/>
fifth-ranked Michigan or<lb/>
the Rose Bowl people But<lb/>
you'll have to excuse the<lb/>
folks at Arizona State and<lb/>
Michigan State ? and<lb/>
perhaps the Cotton. Orange<lb/>
and Sugar Bow! commi-<lb/>
ttees, as well ? if tney<lb/>
chuckle just a little<lb/>
On a weekend that vir-<lb/>
tually destroyed the na-<lb/>
tion's Top twenty teams,<lb/>
previously unbeaten<lb/>
Southen Cal and Michiga-<lb/>
203 South Evans St.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
Phone: 752-3980 Monday-Friday<lb/>
Other hours by appointment<lb/>
Friday's Seafood<lb/>
SUPER POU- GRIP<lb/>
DENTURE ??o<lb/>
ru chip<lb/>
axv,0S1.99<lb/>
ASEPTO<lb/>
THERMOMETER<lb/>
L sg<lb/>
BARNES-HIND<lb/>
WETTING Z7,<lb/>
SOLUTION<lb/>
ST JOSEPH<lb/>
ASPIRIN FOR<lb/>
CHILDREN<lb/>
P ST JOSEPH<lb/>
ASPIRIN <lb/>
?- $.37<lb/>
4-WAY NASAL M<lb/>
SPRAY <lb/>
to L FUNTSTONES<lb/>
? VITAMINS<lb/>
M.97<lb/>
177<lb/>
PURSETTES<lb/>
 TAMPONS<lb/>
$1.39<lb/>
EXCEDRIN V?<lb/>
TABLETS j<lb/>
?'Lp<lb/>
1.24<lb/>
ii<lb/>
ii<lb/>
CONTAC COLD<lb/>
CAPSULES Fi<lb/>
11.09<lb/>
OBTAC<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
NYQUILCOLD ?? ?<lb/>
MEDICINE<lb/>
V'j i I. M<lb/>
ALKA<lb/>
SELTZER<lb/>
(KMOT 7 '<lb/>
Biggs Drug Store<lb/>
300 Evans - On the Mall<lb/>
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Ph. 752-2136<lb/>
Hargett's Drug Store<lb/>
2500 S. Charles St. Ext.<lb/>
Ph. 756-3344<lb/>
ART &amp; CAMERA<lb/>
526 S. Cotanche St.<lb/>
Down Town<lb/>
COUPON EXPIRES<lb/>
LIMITED TIME OFFER<lb/>
12 Exp. Cplor Film<lb/>
Developed and Printed<lb/>
? Kodacotor<lb/>
? OAF<lb/>
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VALUABLE COUPON<lb/>
I MUST ACCOMPANY ORPCR<lb/>
COUPON EXPIRES<lb/>
1LIMITED TIME OFFER<lb/>
20 Exp. Color Film<lb/>
Developed and Printed<lb/>
? 'Kodacolor<lb/>
: ? $Q49<lb/>
(Foreign FMm W<lb/>
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VALUABLE COUPON<lb/>
i MUST ACCOMPANY ORDCR<lb/>
COUPON EXPIRES<lb/>
LIMITED TIME OFFER<lb/>
MOVIE OR SLIDE<lb/>
Ektachrome or Kodectirome Processing<lb/>
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along <lb/>
Texas AAM ah<lb/>
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 estet Atl<lb/>
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halftime<lb/>
A <lb/>
barrasv- ; I<lb/>
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no fewei tr -<lb/>
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Beside rexa<lb/>
.<lb/>
tea" ? se<lb/>
rained tea-<lb/>
Iowa State a<lb/>
No 19 M issc Lit 2?<lb/>
FOR FAST FREE DELIVERY DIAL<lb/>
758-7400 CHANELOS IS NOW<lb/>
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SERVE YOU QUICKER.<lb/>
TRY US<lb/>
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VALUABLE COUPON,<lb/>
MUST ACCOMPANY ORDCR'<lb/>
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Tuesday<lb/>
FOR:<lb/>
PIZZA LASAGNE<lb/>
SUBS SPAGHETTI<lb/>
CALL OR COME BY<lb/>
CHANELO'S PIZZANO SPAGHETTI HOUSE<lb/>
507 E. 14TH ST.<lb/>
NEW DELIVERY AREA IS FROM EVANS<lb/>
STREET EAST AND SOUTH OF THE RIVER.<lb/>
(now under new management)<lb/>
TAKE A BREAK DINE IN<lb/>
LUNCHEON SPECIAL<lb/>
MONDAY THRU FRIDAV<lb/>
SHORT SANDWICH<lb/>
C OUR CHOICE'<lb/>
Nightl<lb/>
 SPECIAL NY STRIP STEAK<lb/>
or<lb/>
 RIB EYE STEAK DINNER<lb/>
or<lb/>
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Just<lb/>
"WM9<lb/>
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I Reg. I p To $2,991<lb/>
Dinner include large baked potato,<lb/>
roll and butter and free, all you-can<lb/>
eat salad bar.<lb/>
INCLUDES FREE<lb/>
SALAD BAR<lb/>
MlShsl? Styling<lb/>
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Phone: 756 5788<lb/>
264 By Pass<lb/>
 WW&amp; 756 2050<lb/>
regular price $35.00<lb/>
Now only $17.50<lb/>
Including uni-perm<lb/>
Ofre,?oode"h ?? ???. Oct. 85J978<lb/>
<pb facs="00057154_0009"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>