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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057155_0001"/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Voi<lb/>
' 18<lb/>
No. 55 No. ?.<lb/>
Th i4 3,<lb/>
19 October 1978<lb/>
Senator Jesse Helms<lb/>
speaks in Greenville<lb/>
By KAY WILLIAMS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
and<lb/>
RICHY SMITH<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Senator Jesse Helms made a two-day stop Monday in<lb/>
Greenville before continuing his campaign travels<lb/>
throughout North Carolina. Helms talked with people, held<lb/>
a press conference, and campaigned for his re-election to<lb/>
the U.S. Senate<lb/>
Monday evening he was honored guest at a pig-picking<lb/>
in Pactolus at the Davenport Farm. The dinner was<lb/>
sponsored by a group of Pitt County farmers.<lb/>
Before leaving Tuesday. Senator Helms addressed a<lb/>
group of supporters and newsmen at the Pitt-Greenville<lb/>
Airport Helms presented a list of distinguished<lb/>
democratic citizens of Eastern North Carolina, and<lb/>
introduced three of his most loyal supporters and friends.<lb/>
Senator Helms spoke about the campaign of his<lb/>
opponent. John Ingram, before introducing his friends.<lb/>
Helms said the problem with Ingram is that he is out of the<lb/>
democratic mainstream.<lb/>
"Ingram does not represent the majority of the people<lb/>
in N.C said Helms. Ingram is running his campaign on<lb/>
misrepresentation and distortion, he added.<lb/>
Helms compared Ingram to George McGovern saying<lb/>
that the liberalism of the two men is the basis for this<lb/>
comparison.<lb/>
Helmsthen introduced Dr. Lenox Baker. He said he was<lb/>
speaking for the thousands of old line democrats<lb/>
Baker served as Secretary of Human Resources under<lb/>
Gov Robert Scott He has been involved in activities of the<lb/>
Democratic party for a large part of his adult life.<lb/>
Helms has raised over two million dollars for crippled<lb/>
children in N.C according to Baker. "I have said many<lb/>
times that no man in North Carolina has done more for<lb/>
criDDled children than Jesse Helms he commented. A<lb/>
children's hospital in Durham is named after Baker.<lb/>
"John Ingram has been purposely misleading the<lb/>
people of North Carolina stated baker. He pointed out<lb/>
that Helms has gained national recognition for his work in<lb/>
the U.S. Senate to lower taxes, stop inflation, and balance<lb/>
the federal budget.<lb/>
In his closing remarks Baker added, "the North<lb/>
Carolina Legislature knew what a disaster John Ingram was<lb/>
as insurance commissioner for North Carolina Consumers<lb/>
and stripped him of his powers<lb/>
M rs. Joseph M . Hunt, whose husband was a speaker for<lb/>
the N.C. House of Representatives and a cousin of the<lb/>
present governor, James B. Hunt Jr voiced her support<lb/>
for Helms.<lb/>
Mrs. Hunt said her husband was a dear friend of Jesse<lb/>
Helms and they had many of the same principles. She<lb/>
encouraged the group to "vote for a winner - Jesse Helms.<lb/>
Former Senator Alton Lennon also spoke in the behalf of<lb/>
Helms stating he has personally known Helms for 25 years<lb/>
and he has never heard of anyone who has reached a<lb/>
higher level of integrity in the senate. Helms has a stong<lb/>
sense of physical responsibility and more members are<lb/>
needed in national politics, commented Lennon.<lb/>
"We have a moral responsibility to our children to put<lb/>
people we believe in, in office he added.<lb/>
Helms record in the senate exhibits outstanding<lb/>
leadership capabilities. He is the first North Carolinian to<lb/>
receive the Golden Gavel, an award for presiding over the<lb/>
U.S. Senate more than one hundred hours in 1973 and 1974.<lb/>
He has received awards for his contributions to the<lb/>
American people.<lb/>
Helms is a member of the Committee on Agriculture<lb/>
and Forestry, Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs. He is a<lb/>
member of the joint committee on Congressional<lb/>
Operations and also serves on several subcommittees.<lb/>
SENATOR JESSE HELMS center)<lb/>
counterpart, Senator Robert Morgan.<lb/>
with his NC<lb/>
Photo by Neil Sessoms<lb/>
Brewer addresses Faculty<lb/>
Senate in Tues. meeting<lb/>
Helms criticizes Ingram<lb/>
By ANN THARRINGTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Chancellor Thomas B.<lb/>
Brewer addressed the ECU<lb/>
Faculty Senate in their<lb/>
regular meeting on Tues-<lb/>
day afternoon.<lb/>
The meeting, held in<lb/>
Mendenahll at 2:10 p.m<lb/>
was the nst time the newly<lb/>
appointed Chancellor has<lb/>
spoken to faculty members<lb/>
as a group.<lb/>
Brewer expressed his<lb/>
desire for ever-increasing<lb/>
excellence in the univer<lb/>
sity. He said that it is the<lb/>
responsibility of the faculty<lb/>
to make the university<lb/>
improve.<lb/>
Brewer cited three du-<lb/>
ties of faculty members<lb/>
which he sees as important<lb/>
criteria in judging the ex-<lb/>
cellence of a university:<lb/>
teaching, creative activi-<lb/>
ty, and service<lb/>
"First and foremost we<lb/>
must never lose sight in the<lb/>
university that teaching is<lb/>
fundamental to the success<lb/>
of this institution he<lb/>
stressed.<lb/>
Brewer's remarks were<lb/>
followed by a brief question<lb/>
and answer period.<lb/>
Professor Robert Gantt<lb/>
reported from the Calendar<lb/>
Committee. The Senate ap-<lb/>
proved calendar B for fall<lb/>
and spring of the 1979-80<lb/>
school semesters, as am-<lb/>
mended.<lb/>
The calendar does not<lb/>
include a fall break, other<lb/>
than the usual Thanks-<lb/>
giving and Christmas holi-<lb/>
r<lb/>
What's inside. ?<lb/>
NANCY HAUSER,<lb/>
SEE p. 6<lb/>
Society for Collegiate Journalists<lb/>
plansfall inductionsee p.5.<lb/>
N.C. State Fair in Raleigh this<lb/>
weeksee p. 5.<lb/>
Nancy Hauser Dance Companysee<lb/>
P.O.<lb/>
The movie, Who'll Stop The Rain is<lb/>
currently playing in Greenville. For<lb/>
reviewsee p.6.<lb/>
For a close-up look at Pirate linebacker<lb/>
Tommy Summersee p. 9.<lb/>
days.<lb/>
The Faculty Senate ap-<lb/>
proved the proposal for a<lb/>
Student Recruitment and<lb/>
Retention Committee con-<lb/>
sisting of five faculty mem-<lb/>
bers and one student plus<lb/>
the Dean of Admissions<lb/>
which will be an ex-officio<lb/>
member.<lb/>
The committee will re-<lb/>
commend policies gover-<lb/>
ning the recruitment, or-<lb/>
ientation, and retention of<lb/>
students entering ECU. It<lb/>
will also make special re-<lb/>
commendations to the Dean<lb/>
of Admissions, to the Dean<lb/>
of Student Affairs, and to<lb/>
other appropriate agencies<lb/>
regarding these issues.<lb/>
The proposal regarding<lb/>
the Faculty Professional<lb/>
Development Committee<lb/>
was remitted to the Com-<lb/>
mittee on Committees for<lb/>
review.<lb/>
A proposal for a Uni-<lb/>
versity Research Commit-<lb/>
tee was approved as am-<lb/>
ended. It will be composed<lb/>
of twelve faculty members<lb/>
which shall serve staggered<lb/>
three-year terms. Dean of<lb/>
the Graduate School will<lb/>
serve as an ex-officio mem-<lb/>
ber.<lb/>
The membership of the<lb/>
See FACULTY, p. 3)<lb/>
By the<lb/>
ASSOCIATED PRESS<lb/>
Republican U.S. Sen.<lb/>
Jesse Helms Tuesday<lb/>
compared his Democratic<lb/>
challenger John Ingram to<lb/>
unsuccessful presidentail<lb/>
candidate George<lb/>
McGovern and accused<lb/>
Ingram of using his office of<lb/>
state insurance commis-<lb/>
sioner to campaign at tax-<lb/>
payers' expense.<lb/>
In a flying campaign<lb/>
tour of the state beginning<lb/>
in Wilmington, Helms crit-<lb/>
icized Ingram by name and<lb/>
released a list of Democrats<lb/>
he said were backing him<lb/>
over Ingram in the Nov. 7<lb/>
election.<lb/>
Helms who has stressed<lb/>
the need for fiscal respon-<lb/>
sibility in Washington, def-<lb/>
ended under questioning at<lb/>
new conferences the large<lb/>
budget of his own camp-<lb/>
aign - which had raised and<lb/>
spent $6.2 million at the<lb/>
end of September.<lb/>
"I don't see the prob-<lb/>
lem and I don't think there<lb/>
is a problem Helms said<lb/>
about his campaign funds.<lb/>
Ingram has referred to<lb/>
Helms as "the six million<lb/>
dollar man<lb/>
"I think Mr. Ingram's<lb/>
problem is he can't raise<lb/>
the money because he is<lb/>
not in the mainstream of<lb/>
the Democratic Party of<lb/>
Gov Jim Hunt and Sen.<lb/>
Robert Morgan Helms<lb/>
said in Raleigh. "You know<lb/>
if he got those contribu-<lb/>
tions he'd jolly well accept<lb/>
them<lb/>
Helms said Ingram's<lb/>
criticism of his Senate<lb/>
voting record showed<lb/>
"there's not a scintilla of<lb/>
difference in the way John<lb/>
Ingram would have voted<lb/>
and the way George<lb/>
McGovern votec<lb/>
The statewide tour was<lb/>
the first campaigning<lb/>
Helms has done this fall.<lb/>
He was sidelined by back<lb/>
surgery and remained in<lb/>
Washington until Congress<lb/>
adjourned Sunday night.<lb/>
Meanwhile. Ingram<lb/>
spent Tuesday morning in<lb/>
Charlotte speaking to a<lb/>
state broadcasters' meeting<lb/>
and later went to scheduled<lb/>
rallies in Jacksonville and<lb/>
Wilmington.<lb/>
Ingram's campaign<lb/>
manager Charlie Webb res-<lb/>
ponded to Helms state-<lb/>
ments, saying Helms is<lb/>
still using the same cover-<lb/>
up tactics to try to take the<lb/>
people's attention away<lb/>
from the highest priced<lb/>
campaign in the history of<lb/>
the country<lb/>
Speaking to the N.C.<lb/>
Association of Broadcasters<lb/>
in Charlotte, Ingram criti-<lb/>
cized Helms for turning<lb/>
down offers to debate on<lb/>
television and at the broad-<lb/>
casters' meeting.<lb/>
"What are they hiding"7<lb/>
I think the people o' this<lb/>
state neeo" to know why he<lb/>
refused two free television<lb/>
programs, why he refused<lb/>
this program on a debate<lb/>
forum and then cranked our<lb/>
computer letters saying<lb/>
'We need another $108,000<lb/>
for television time.<lb/>
Ingram said<lb/>
Helms said at a nes<lb/>
conference in Ca- :tte lat-<lb/>
er m the day that he did not<lb/>
think the public would gam<lb/>
anything from a debate<lb/>
between the two candid-<lb/>
ates<lb/>
"I'm guided by wat<lb/>
Democratic Party chairman<lb/>
Betty McCain said alter I<lb/>
so-called Ingram-Hidges<lb/>
debates. ' Helms said<lb/>
" She said something to the<lb/>
effect it was a screaming<lb/>
contest<lb/>
REBEL places second in<lb/>
national magazine contest<lb/>
By KAREN BROCK<lb/>
Special toFOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
ECU'S literary maga-<lb/>
zine, the REBEL has been<lb/>
chosen as the second best<lb/>
college publication in the<lb/>
nation, according to the<lb/>
Society for Collegiate Jour-<lb/>
nalists.<lb/>
The first place maga-<lb/>
zine was Harbinger, a<lb/>
publication of Bethany Col-<lb/>
lege in Bethany, West Vir-<lb/>
ginia.<lb/>
The magazine contest<lb/>
included entries from col-<lb/>
leges across the United<lb/>
States.<lb/>
TieREBELwas superior<lb/>
in design and illustration<lb/>
said Bill Click, SCJ national<lb/>
president and judge of the<lb/>
magazine contest.<lb/>
"The content was very<lb/>
good in writing style and<lb/>
quality. A mosi handsome<lb/>
magazine, it used 4-color to<lb/>
attract the reader's atten-<lb/>
tion and interest even fur-<lb/>
ther It is an excellent<lb/>
magazine<lb/>
Last year's staff consi-<lb/>
sted of Luke Whisnant.<lb/>
Editor; Kat Parks. Art<lb/>
Director: and Allison<lb/>
Thompson. Associate Edi-<lb/>
tor.<lb/>
TheREBELis published<lb/>
yearly in the spring. The<lb/>
deadline for literature sub-<lb/>
mission is Dec. 15. and all<lb/>
students are invited to sub-<lb/>
mit work to the magazine.<lb/>
Thefl?B??.Art Show, an<lb/>
annual event held to pro-<lb/>
cure artwork for the publi-<lb/>
cation, will open next week<lb/>
in the Mendenhall Gallery<lb/>
More than 170 works have<lb/>
been registered for the<lb/>
show, with over $500 in<lb/>
prize money to be given<lb/>
away<lb/>
Honor Society announces<lb/>
student writing contest<lb/>
By STEPHEN WILSON e<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A student writing con-<lb/>
teat has been announced by<lb/>
the ECU Division of Aca-<lb/>
demic Affairs and the Phi<lb/>
Kappa Phi Honor Society.<lb/>
The contest Is coordin-<lb/>
ated with the fourth annual<lb/>
Symposium sponsored by<lb/>
these two groups. The topic<lb/>
for this year'a Symposium<lb/>
is "The Crisis of Confi-<lb/>
dence<lb/>
The approach to the<lb/>
topic is interdisciplinary,<lb/>
and a creative approach is<lb/>
stressed. Or. Fred Boad-<lb/>
hurst, faculty member and<lb/>
member of the Symposium<lb/>
Committee, said that "the<lb/>
topic lends itself well to<lb/>
treatmentfrom every disci-<lb/>
pline, for examples Gov-<lb/>
ernment, the News Media,<lb/>
Law, Medicine, and Edu-<lb/>
cation<lb/>
Awards of $100 each<lb/>
will go to the two students<lb/>
whose papers are fudged<lb/>
best on the basis c n ntent<lb/>
and overall quality.<lb/>
Contestants are ssed to<lb/>
first submit a two-to-three<lb/>
page abstract of their Idea.<lb/>
The students who submit<lb/>
the two beat abstracts will<lb/>
be asked to complete their<lb/>
final papers, and will re-<lb/>
ceive the awards.<lb/>
The papers should be in<lb/>
a style suitable for publi-<lb/>
cation. The will be pre-<lb/>
sented by the winners at<lb/>
the Symposium, which is<lb/>
scheduled for Tuesday,<lb/>
February 20. Maximum<lb/>
length for the final paper is<lb/>
15 double-spaced typewrit-<lb/>
ten pages, and presentation<lb/>
of the paper at the Sympo-<lb/>
sium is limited to 50<lb/>
minutes. Deadline for ab-<lb/>
stracts Is December 4.<lb/>
Faculty members will<lb/>
be participating in the<lb/>
Symposium, and several<lb/>
keynote speakers will be<lb/>
featured. Col. Richard<lb/>
Blake, Assistant to the<lb/>
Chancellor, la hopeful of<lb/>
securing former U.S. Sen-<lb/>
ator Sam Ervln as a keynote<lb/>
speaker.<lb/>
ECU Chancellor Thom-<lb/>
as Brewer is also scheduled<lb/>
to speak at the Symposium.<lb/>
Phi Kappa Phi is an<lb/>
honor society that recog-<lb/>
nizes scholastic excellence<lb/>
in all disciplines.<lb/>
The first three Sympo-<lb/>
siums have treated the<lb/>
themes of "World Hun-<lb/>
ger "Influence Sys-<lb/>
tems and "Coping with<lb/>
the Energy Dilemma<lb/>
Abstracts should be<lb/>
sent to: Dr. Oscar Moore,<lb/>
Department of Economics,<lb/>
ECU?Phi Kappa Phi Sym-<lb/>
posium Committee, cam-<lb/>
pus mail.<lb/>
STUDENTS TAKE A break from mid-term exams and<lb/>
,<lb/>
m ?m<lb/>
- ?-?.? 4T ?? ?<lb/>
jMl - ?? ?<lb/>
-?? -<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
mtmmm<lb/>
mum<lb/>
<pb facs="00057155_0002"/><lb/>
-<lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 19 October 1978<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 Leg-<lb/>
islature, in room 230 Men-<lb/>
denhall between 3-5 p.m.<lb/>
weekdays or contact Jeff<lb/>
Triplett. rules and Judi-<lb/>
ciary Committee Chairper-<lb/>
son, at 758-7956.<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/>
Review<lb/>
Review Board screen-<lb/>
ings will be held on Thurs<lb/>
Oct. 19, m room 239 of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
? 5.30 p.m. Please be<lb/>
present or you will be dis-<lb/>
qualified.<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/>
Auditions<lb/>
Auditions for June<lb/>
Havoc's Marathon '33, the<lb/>
second major production in<lb/>
the current season of the<lb/>
ECU Playhouse, will be<lb/>
held at 7:30 p.m. Mon. and<lb/>
Tues Oct. 23 and 24, in<lb/>
room 206 of the Drama<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
Scripts are on reserve in<lb/>
Joyner Library for prior<lb/>
study. It is suggested that<lb/>
peson6 audtiioning read a<lb/>
scene of their choice with<lb/>
someone else who is trying<lb/>
out. but it is not mandatory.<lb/>
Auditions are open to all<lb/>
who wish to try out.<lb/>
Free Flick<lb/>
This week's Free Flick,<lb/>
Friday and Saturday night<lb/>
at 7 and 9 p.m is Which<lb/>
Way is Up? starring Rich-<lb/>
ard Pryor.<lb/>
Pryor cavorts in three<lb/>
roles and, with this film,<lb/>
appears to be on his way to<lb/>
becoming one of our great<lb/>
internationally popular fun-<lb/>
nymen.<lb/>
The film will be shown<lb/>
in Mendenhall's Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre. Admission is by<lb/>
ID and Activity Card.<lb/>
All Free Flicks are<lb/>
sponsored by the Student<lb/>
Union Films Committee.<lb/>
Bicycle<lb/>
Ping Pong<lb/>
If you enjoy playing<lb/>
table tennis, stop by Mend-<lb/>
enhall Table Tennis Rooms<lb/>
each Tuesday evening at 7<lb/>
p.m. when the Table<lb/>
Tennis Club meets. You<lb/>
will find players of all levels<lb/>
of ability participating. Var-<lb/>
ious activities as ladder<lb/>
tournaments are often<lb/>
scheduled. All ECU stud-<lb/>
ents, faculty and staff are<lb/>
welcome.<lb/>
Thota Alpha<lb/>
The Theta Alpha Chap-<lb/>
ter of Alpha Kappa Alpha<lb/>
Sorority is sponsoring a<lb/>
Pre-Game Homecoming<lb/>
Celebration, Friday, Nov.<lb/>
10th at the Ramada Inn,<lb/>
264 By-Pass Greenville,<lb/>
N.C. from 10p.m. to2a.m.<lb/>
Tickets in advance are $3<lb/>
per couple, and $2 per<lb/>
individual.<lb/>
At the door, admission<lb/>
will be $2.50 per person.<lb/>
Contact any member of<lb/>
Alpha Kappa Alpha for<lb/>
tickets or additional in-<lb/>
formation. The affair is<lb/>
semi-formal.<lb/>
Also Theta Alpha is<lb/>
sponsoring its annual Stu-<lb/>
dent of the Year Pageant.<lb/>
The event will be hosted<lb/>
Wednesday, Nov. 1st at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. Mendenhall Au-<lb/>
ditorium. There will be no<lb/>
admission charge.<lb/>
Gospol<lb/>
Greenpeace<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Minority Arts Committee<lb/>
will present Johnice John-<lb/>
son and the ECU Gospel<lb/>
Ensemble in conoert Sun<lb/>
Oct. 22, at 7 p.m.<lb/>
The concert will be held<lb/>
in the Hendrix Theater and<lb/>
will feature traditional as<lb/>
well as contemporary gos-<lb/>
pel selections.<lb/>
There will be no ad-<lb/>
mission charge and the<lb/>
public is invited to attend.<lb/>
REBEL<lb/>
MRC<lb/>
On Wed Nov. 8. the<lb/>
MRC (Men's Residence<lb/>
Council) and WRC (Wo-<lb/>
men's Residence Council)<lb/>
are presenting a pig pickin"<lb/>
and concert on the hill by<lb/>
the tenniscourts.<lb/>
The meal will be served<lb/>
at 4:45 p.m and the<lb/>
evening will last until 7. All<lb/>
people interested in coming<lb/>
must present their<lb/>
MRCWRC card and may<lb/>
purchase tickets for $3 from<lb/>
their dorm officers.<lb/>
Buses will be available<lb/>
to and from the women's<lb/>
dorms.<lb/>
Anyone interested in an<lb/>
afternoon socializing on two<lb/>
wheels should participate<lb/>
in the Bicycle Club's bike<lb/>
ride Sun Oct. 22.<lb/>
Interested students<lb/>
should meet at the water<lb/>
fountain in front of Wright<lb/>
Auditorium at 1 p.m. The<lb/>
group will leave at 1 :15<lb/>
p.m. for a 10-20 mile hike.<lb/>
The bicycle club is open<lb/>
to all full-time ECU stud-<lb/>
ents. For more info, call<lb/>
Tom. at 752-9847.<lb/>
Chess<lb/>
Dogs<lb/>
The Goldsboro Kennel<lb/>
Club is having an All-Breed<lb/>
and Obedience Fun Match,<lb/>
Sun Nov. 5. It will be held<lb/>
at Berkley Park, Goldsboro,<lb/>
N.C. Entries will be taken<lb/>
from 10 a.m. until Noon.<lb/>
The Parade of Champ-<lb/>
ions will start at 12:30 p.m<lb/>
with Junior Showmanship<lb/>
following. The judging will<lb/>
start at 1 p.m.<lb/>
All persons interested<lb/>
in playing chess are invited<lb/>
to stop by the Mendenhall<lb/>
Coffeehouse each Monday<lb/>
evening at 7 p.m. when the<lb/>
Chess Club holds its weekly<lb/>
meeting. Competition is at<lb/>
all levels and everyone is<lb/>
welcome to attend.<lb/>
Artists are reminded to<lb/>
deliver their work for the<lb/>
Rebel Show to room 221<lb/>
upstairs in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center on Sat<lb/>
Oct. 21st between 12 and 8<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
The $1 entry fee is due<lb/>
at this time. Works not<lb/>
registered by the Oct. 11th<lb/>
cut-off will not be accepted.<lb/>
The Show will be juried<lb/>
by Richard Craven, George<lb/>
Brett, and Tom Haines on<lb/>
Sunday. Artists whose<lb/>
works are juried out must<lb/>
pick up their works on<lb/>
Monday between 9 a.m.<lb/>
and 5 p.m. at the Rebel<lb/>
office in the Publications<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
The entry fee will be<lb/>
refunded at this time. For<lb/>
details, call 757-6502.<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 cor-<lb/>
poration dedicated to the<lb/>
survival of all endangered<lb/>
species (particularly<lb/>
whales, seals, and dol-<lb/>
phins) 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 Ad-<lb/>
derton at 758-6259 (after<lb/>
5:00 p.m. on weekdays).<lb/>
Your help could be more<lb/>
important than you'll ever<lb/>
know. Thank you.<lb/>
Study Skills<lb/>
A non-credit Study<lb/>
Skills class will be con-<lb/>
ducted by Dr. Weigand<lb/>
beginning Oct. 23,1978.<lb/>
There will be two<lb/>
groups. One will meet on<lb/>
Monday and Wednesday at<lb/>
1 :00 p.m. in Room 305<lb/>
Wright Annex and the<lb/>
other group will meet on<lb/>
Tuesday and Thursday at<lb/>
1:00 p.m. in Room 305<lb/>
Wright Annex.<lb/>
The class is available to<lb/>
all students. Attendance is<lb/>
voluntary ? no formal<lb/>
registration is required.<lb/>
Students who are un-<lb/>
able to make these times<lb/>
may come by the Counsel-<lb/>
ing Center and schedule<lb/>
individual appointments.<lb/>
Poaeo Corps IIL0<lb/>
Peace Corps may be the<lb/>
toughest job you'll ever<lb/>
love. For more information,<lb/>
contact Peace Corps Rep-<lb/>
resentative David Jenkins,<lb/>
Room 425, Flanagan Build-<lb/>
ing, or you may call<lb/>
757-6586 for an appoint-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
BUC<lb/>
EtaMu<lb/>
Psi-Chi<lb/>
Billiards<lb/>
Eta Mu Chapter of<lb/>
Sigma Gamma Rho will<lb/>
hold an interest club meet-<lb/>
ing Thursday Oct. 19, at 8<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
The purpose of the<lb/>
meeting is to organize the<lb/>
Gammette Club. The club<lb/>
is open for membership to<lb/>
all undergraduates.<lb/>
Hillel<lb/>
Psi-Chi is having a pig<lb/>
pickin' Sun Oct. 29 at the<lb/>
Cherry court clubhouse.<lb/>
Festivities begin at 2 p.m.<lb/>
and include volleyball, your<lb/>
favorite golden beverage<lb/>
and all the pig and chicken<lb/>
you can eat.<lb/>
All psychology majors,<lb/>
minors, graduate students,<lb/>
faculty and interested per-<lb/>
sons are invited. Tickets<lb/>
may be obtained from any<lb/>
Psi-Chi member, the<lb/>
psychology library or the<lb/>
mam psychology office.<lb/>
Prices are $2.50 for Psi-Chi<lb/>
members, $3.50 for non-<lb/>
members and $3.00 for<lb/>
faculty Come and bring a<lb/>
friend.<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/>
Pablo<lb/>
Travel<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Travel Committee still has<lb/>
places open on it's ski trip<lb/>
to Snowshoe W. Va but<lb/>
places are going fast.<lb/>
Sign up now at the<lb/>
ticket office in Mendenhall.<lb/>
The trip will be during<lb/>
Christmas break (Jan 1-5).<lb/>
Don't miss these days of<lb/>
skiing and nights of social-<lb/>
izing at one of the east<lb/>
coast's most popular ski<lb/>
resorts.<lb/>
The last day to register<lb/>
for the Mendenhall Day-<lb/>
Student Billiards Tourna-<lb/>
ment is Fri Oct. 20<lb/>
Registration forms and<lb/>
tournament details are<lb/>
available at the Billiards<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
The double elimination<lb/>
tournament, to be held<lb/>
Mon Oct. 23 at 6 p.m. at<lb/>
Mendenhall, will decide the<lb/>
four winner who will part-<lb/>
icipate in the All-Campus<lb/>
Billiards Tournament sche-<lb/>
duled for Nov. 13 and 14.<lb/>
The first and second<lb/>
place All-Campus finishers<lb/>
will represent ECU in The<lb/>
Association of College<lb/>
Unions - International<lb/>
regional face-to-face tour-<lb/>
nament in Knoxville, Tenn.<lb/>
in Feb. All expenses for the<lb/>
tournament will be paid by<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
ATTENTION JEWISH<lb/>
STUDENTS Come to<lb/>
Hillel's first get-together<lb/>
Fri Oct. 20 at The Den, on<lb/>
the corner of 9th and James<lb/>
St. behind Mendenhall at<lb/>
7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Volleyball<lb/>
Male and female stud-<lb/>
ents interested in re-<lb/>
activiating the volleyball<lb/>
club should meet in room<lb/>
105 of Memorial Gym at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. on Thurs Oct.<lb/>
2?<lb/>
Club activities include<lb/>
play among members and<lb/>
competition with other un-<lb/>
iversities. Further informa-<lb/>
tion can be obtained from<lb/>
Dr. Sayetta in Physics.<lb/>
Study<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 11:00p.m.<lb/>
Additional hours may<lb/>
be added.<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
Applications for At-<lb/>
torney-General now being<lb/>
taken in the SGA Office ?<lb/>
room 228 thru October<lb/>
25th.<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Major Attraction Commit-<lb/>
tee will present Pablo<lb/>
Cruise on Thurs Nov. 9, at<lb/>
8 p.m. in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Tickets will be $5 for<lb/>
ECU students and $7 for<lb/>
the public. All tickets are<lb/>
available from the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office in Menden-<lb/>
hall. In addition, public<lb/>
tickets can be purchased<lb/>
from Apple Records, E. 5th<lb/>
St 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/>
Insurance<lb/>
At the request of the<lb/>
Business Office, Chamblee<lb/>
Insurance Company has<lb/>
extended the Fall enrol-<lb/>
lment period for Student<lb/>
Acccidents and Sickness<lb/>
Insurance until Fri Oct.<lb/>
20. Additional information<lb/>
may be obtained at the<lb/>
Business Office.<lb/>
Gamma Beta<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi will<lb/>
meet Thurs Oct. 19 at 7<lb/>
p.m. in Biology 103. Ail<lb/>
members are urged to<lb/>
attend. Pledges are re-<lb/>
minded that all essay and<lb/>
dues must be turned in by<lb/>
October 24 in Mendenhall<lb/>
243.<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 Mendenhan<lb/>
Rm. 248 to discuss plans'<lb/>
the Oktoberfest<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
Win a free game<lb/>
bowling every time ,<lb/>
make a strike when the i<lb/>
pin is the head pin. Tr<lb/>
your luck at "Red Pii<lb/>
Bowling" every Sunday<lb/>
evening from 7 to 10 p <lb/>
at the Mendenhall Bowling<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
There will be an impor-<lb/>
tant meeting of all Coffee-<lb/>
house Committee members<lb/>
on Wednesday. Oct. 25 at 3<lb/>
p.m. m the committee<lb/>
meeting room. All mem-<lb/>
bers must attend.<lb/>
NYC<lb/>
i<lb/>
The Student Union s<lb/>
Thanksgiving trip to New<lb/>
York City has added a-<lb/>
nother bus and more spaces<lb/>
are available. The deadline<lb/>
for reservations is Fnda,<lb/>
Oct 20 at 4 p.m.<lb/>
Computer<lb/>
There will be a loca1<lb/>
computer programming<lb/>
contest sponsored by the<lb/>
Association for Compute1,<lb/>
Machinery. The 4 winners<lb/>
will represent ECU in the<lb/>
regional at Clemson You<lb/>
may register at the Matr<lb/>
Dept. Office on Mon . Oct<lb/>
23.<lb/>
The contest will be he d<lb/>
from Oct. 23-27 and the<lb/>
programs must be written<lb/>
in Fortran. For more info<lb/>
see Dr. F. Miiam Johnsor<lb/>
Dr. J. Wirth or Chris<lb/>
Hargett (752-1161).<lb/>
Another exciting concert<lb/>
CRUISE<lb/>
with special gvest Livingston Taylor<lb/>
<lb/>
 TICKETS: Z<lb/>
 ECU Students SS.OO $<lb/>
 Public $7.0 I<lb/>
<lb/>
coming Thurs Nov. 9 1978<lb/>
6 fi.m.<lb/>
Minges Coliseum<lb/>
More FREE T-shirts to be given away<lb/>
EH<lb/>
Tickets Go On Sale Mon Oct. 30, 1978<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
torscte ? <lb/>
Shoes and boots in<lb/>
small sizes(5-6). All new or<lb/>
practically new. Baas,<lb/>
Earth Shoe, and Famolare.<lb/>
Reasonably priced. Call<lb/>
752-3706 if interested.<lb/>
FOR SALE. Old 8 cu. ft. GE<lb/>
Elc. refrig. in excellent<lb/>
oond. If interested call<lb/>
758-3977.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '75 D at sun 710<lb/>
4d, 34,000 mi. new paint,<lb/>
new Micg. radials, looks<lb/>
and acts like a brand new<lb/>
car Asking $2,840. Call<lb/>
Russ at 752-5692 anytime,<lb/>
make sure you leave a<lb/>
FOR SALE: 8-track tapes<lb/>
for $2 and $3. Call Dave<lb/>
752-7727 after 3 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 4ft. x 6ft. wall<lb/>
tapestry for $12. Ladles<lb/>
diamond ring. Call 752-<lb/>
2602 9:30 p.m. - 11 30 p.m.<lb/>
QREQ MOLL: ia doing<lb/>
portraits from photos or<lb/>
sittings. Watercoior<lb/>
sketches 18 x 24' in size.<lb/>
125. Also finished oil paint-<lb/>
ings $100. Good til Nov. 5,<lb/>
call between 6 and 9 p.m.<lb/>
752-5736.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 78 Corvette,<lb/>
white, T-top, 11,000 milea.<lb/>
$9,000. Call 524-5590<lb/>
female roommate to share a<lb/>
2-bdrm. apt. Call 758-5794.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: to<lb/>
share completely firnished<lb/>
2 bdrm. apt. Call or see<lb/>
Brad 103-B East brook<lb/>
Apts. 752-1547.<lb/>
fOf ran<lb/>
WANTED: a responsible NEEDED IMMEDIATELY:<lb/>
Dependable drivers. Must<lb/>
have your own car. Apply in<lb/>
person at Pizza Mikes.<lb/>
Please no phone calls.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: We need<lb/>
a lead vocalist (mala or<lb/>
female) to work on original<lb/>
material for a recording In<lb/>
Atlanta. Not preparing a<lb/>
road bandemiprograsT<lb/>
sive rock. For audition call<lb/>
752-4584<lb/>
YOGA: Hatha Yoga is now<lb/>
being taught by Sunshine.<lb/>
Near dssess forming. Ratax<lb/>
-t?on. vftallzatlon ??<lb/>
teas. mnmJTjJ<lb/>
?o call 788736.<lb/>
MID EASTERN DANCE<lb/>
Authentic Belly dancing i<lb/>
taught by Sunshine. Exper-j<lb/>
ienoed teacher and P"<lb/>
former in Ohio, Mexi<lb/>
Atlanta, and the D C<lb/>
Classes are now for<lb/>
Call 756-0738.<lb/>
" ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057155_0003"/><lb/>
Greek Forum<lb/>
19 October 1978 FOUNTAINHEAO Page 3<lb/>
ByRlCKlGLIARMIS<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The first order of bus-<lb/>
iness in this weeks Greek<lb/>
Forum is on the subject of<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha Field<lb/>
Day.<lb/>
The field day has been<lb/>
changed from Saturday,<lb/>
Oct 28 to Sunday, Oct. 29.<lb/>
Due to Dr. Brewer's in-<lb/>
stallation which is also<lb/>
scheduled for Oct 28, the<lb/>
fraternity felt like Sunday<lb/>
would be a better date in<lb/>
order to insure participa-<lb/>
tion among the Greeks.<lb/>
Because of this open<lb/>
date, all Greeks are en-<lb/>
couraged to attend the<lb/>
installation and offer their<lb/>
support to the new chan-<lb/>
cellor.<lb/>
Panhellenic's Pledges<lb/>
on Parade will be held on<lb/>
Oct 27 at the Greenville<lb/>
Moose Lodge All pledges<lb/>
are encouraged to take part<lb/>
in the event This will be a<lb/>
good time to meet the<lb/>
fraternity and soroity pled-<lb/>
ges and to meet the other<lb/>
members of the groups.<lb/>
Announcements:<lb/>
The Kappa Sigma fra-<lb/>
ternity recently inducted 20<lb/>
new pledges. These pled-<lb/>
gesnowcomprise the Alpha<lb/>
Nu pledge class of the ECU<lb/>
chapter.<lb/>
The brothers of Kappa<lb/>
Sigma have been busy in<lb/>
community activities since<lb/>
school has been in session.<lb/>
The fraternity has parti-<lb/>
cipated in the recent Blood<lb/>
Drive with over 25 mem-<lb/>
bers donating.<lb/>
The Kappa Sigs an-<lb/>
nouce their Mr. ECU con-<lb/>
test on Tuesday, Oct. 24.<lb/>
The prizes will be $25 first<lb/>
prize, $15 second prize, and<lb/>
$10 third prize. Judging<lb/>
will be based on the best<lb/>
male physique. All gentle-<lb/>
men interested in entering<lb/>
the contest may do so by<lb/>
calling the Kappa Sig<lb/>
house, 752-5543.<lb/>
The Kappa Sigmas will<lb/>
be'chartering a bus to Nor-<lb/>
folk, Virginia to support the<lb/>
Pirates as they take on<lb/>
Richmond in the Oyster<lb/>
Bowl.<lb/>
The Kappa Sigs would<lb/>
like to congratulate their<lb/>
newly initiated brother,<lb/>
Robert Cooper and the little<lb/>
sisters who were initiated<lb/>
last week. Plans for Little<lb/>
Sister Rush are being dis-<lb/>
cussed and will be an-<lb/>
nounced in a few weeks.<lb/>
The Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
fraternity has completed a<lb/>
very successful Little Sister<lb/>
Rush and would like to<lb/>
thank all the girls that<lb/>
participated.<lb/>
The Phi Tau intramural<lb/>
football advanced into the<lb/>
finals while enjoying an<lb/>
undefeated season thus far.<lb/>
The Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
sorority will be entertaining<lb/>
Mrs. Brewer at a tea at<lb/>
their house, Thursday, Oct.<lb/>
19.<lb/>
The Tri-Sigs are very<lb/>
proud of their football team<lb/>
which has advanced into<lb/>
the finals of intramural<lb/>
play. The play-off game<lb/>
against the Tearjerkers will<lb/>
take place Wednesday<lb/>
night, Oct. 18.<lb/>
The Sigmas are busy<lb/>
with several money making<lb/>
projects. The annual pie<lb/>
throw is being planned for<lb/>
November. Also, the soro-<lb/>
ity will have a yard, bake,<lb/>
and craft sale on Nov. 3 in<lb/>
front of the house. The<lb/>
proceeds from the sale will<lb/>
go to the Robbie Page<lb/>
Memorial Fund, the soror-<lb/>
ity's philanthropy.<lb/>
The Chi Omega sorority<lb/>
entertained Dr. and Mrs.<lb/>
Brewer at a cookout at their<lb/>
house.<lb/>
The Kappa Delta soror-<lb/>
ity won the ROTC Blood<lb/>
Drive by contributing more<lb/>
blood than any other soror-<lb/>
ity. They announce their<lb/>
Big Brother Rush on Wed-<lb/>
nesday, Oct. 18.<lb/>
The Kappa Deltas held<lb/>
a tea Tuesday night honor-<lb/>
ing their new house<lb/>
mother, Clara Lewis. Most<lb/>
of the house mothers and<lb/>
presidents from the other<lb/>
sororities were in attend-<lb/>
ance.<lb/>
The Kappa Deltas<lb/>
would like to congratulate<lb/>
one of their pledges, Kristi<lb/>
Minette on her election as<lb/>
Junior Panhellenic Rush<lb/>
Chairman.<lb/>
The Alpha Xi Deltas<lb/>
took a trip to the beach this<lb/>
weekend as a chance to get<lb/>
to know their new pledges<lb/>
better. They reported the<lb/>
weekend to be a success.<lb/>
The sorority would like to<lb/>
thank everyone who sup-<lb/>
ported their Happy Hour.<lb/>
Alpha Delta Pi sorority<lb/>
initiated four new sisters.<lb/>
They are also planning a<lb/>
car wash for Nov. 4.<lb/>
The Alpha Delta Pi's<lb/>
are planning a pig pickin<lb/>
before the game against<lb/>
Marshall University on<lb/>
Nov. 18. The sorority is also<lb/>
getting ready for a social<lb/>
with the Sigma Phi Epsilon<lb/>
fraternity at N.C. State on<lb/>
Nov. 30.<lb/>
Colleges seek state aid<lb/>
from General Assembly<lb/>
RALEIGH. N.C (AP) -<lb/>
Private colleges and uni-<lb/>
versities plan to ask the<lb/>
General Assembly for $35.5<lb/>
million in state aid for the<lb/>
1979-81 biennium. inclu-<lb/>
ding a $100 increase in<lb/>
state tuition grants.<lb/>
The state now provides<lb/>
$400 to every fulltime stu-<lb/>
dent enrolled in an eligible<lb/>
schooi.<lb/>
The funds are designed<lb/>
to help offset the difference<lb/>
m tuition costs between<lb/>
private and public colleges.<lb/>
The state contractural<lb/>
scholarship fund would re-<lb/>
main at the same level<lb/>
under the new request,<lb/>
although the total amount<lb/>
would increase over the<lb/>
two-year period from $4.8<lb/>
million to$5 million.<lb/>
The scholarship fund<lb/>
provides $200 each year to<lb/>
needy undergraduates who<lb/>
want to attend private<lb/>
colleges<lb/>
The total amount of the<lb/>
tuition grant program<lb/>
would increase to $11.5<lb/>
million the first year and<lb/>
$14.1 million the second.<lb/>
According to state law,<lb/>
requests by private insti-<lb/>
tutions for state aid must be<lb/>
reviewed first by the Uni-<lb/>
versity of North Carolina<lb/>
Board of Governors, which<lb/>
makes the recommenda-<lb/>
tions to the leqislature.<lb/>
The university board<lb/>
has already approved a $1.1<lb/>
billion budget for the<lb/>
1979-81 period that in-<lb/>
cludes recommendations<lb/>
that the state's private<lb/>
college programs continue<lb/>
at their present level.<lb/>
The proposal for in-<lb/>
creases were made by Duke<lb/>
University President Terry<lb/>
Sanford who is also chair-<lb/>
man of the board of the<lb/>
North Carolina Association<lb/>
of Independent Colleges<lb/>
and Universities.<lb/>
Sanford's proposal said<lb/>
the programs had helped<lb/>
declining private school<lb/>
enrollment since they were<lb/>
begun three years ago, but<lb/>
more funds were needed<lb/>
from the state to offset<lb/>
rising costs, "which will of<lb/>
necessity be passed along<lb/>
to the students<lb/>
Faculty Senate research<lb/>
committee to award grants<lb/>
continued from p 7<lb/>
Committee will include six<lb/>
persons from the College of<lb/>
Arts and Sciences, and six<lb/>
from the professional<lb/>
schools and other academic<lb/>
units<lb/>
The University Re-<lb/>
search Committee will a-<lb/>
ward research funds and<lb/>
grants based on the merits<lb/>
of the proposals. It will<lb/>
decide on procedures and<lb/>
guidelines governing the<lb/>
use of research funds and<lb/>
annual reporting of creative<lb/>
activity.<lb/>
Proposals will be ac-<lb/>
cepted or rejected by a<lb/>
majority of - the elected<lb/>
faculty members<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
of the<lb/>
Committee of Committees<lb/>
was presented by Professor<lb/>
Rodney Schmidt.<lb/>
The Senate approved an<lb/>
amendment by the Uni-<lb/>
versity Curriculum Com-<lb/>
mittee.<lb/>
The amendments will<lb/>
not become law until they<lb/>
receive Chancellor Brew-<lb/>
The report from the er's approval.<lb/>
News<lb/>
Writers<lb/>
Needed<lb/>
call<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
?, ?&amp;r ?x ?A' ? "&amp; : ?ir ?&amp; - " &amp; te ?At ?"A "A ?A ?A' ?A' ?A' ?A" "A ?A' A' A A A ?A ?A' &amp; A' A ?V i ??? ?l<lb/>
"7? ? ? r r T T"? ? r r ? ?TT " T T r T r "r S v<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
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<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
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<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS<lb/>
THE 4th ANNUAL REBEL ART<lb/>
SHOW WILL BE HELD FROM<lb/>
OCT 22-28 IN<lb/>
9IENDENHALL CENTER<lb/>
This Years Prizes For Art and<lb/>
Literature Will Exceed<lb/>
2C 5C 5C 5C 3? 3<lb/>
?804<lb/>
OO<lb/>
ag aj X" t <lb/>
 l ? ?<lb/>
In Cash And Trophies Donated By:<lb/>
JEFFREY'S BEER AID<lb/>
fUE CO. HOME OF<lb/>
North Carolina's Number 3 Rock Nightclub<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Budweisor<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
x<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
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<lb/>
<lb/>
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<lb/>
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<lb/>
<lb/>
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<lb/>
!j!j!j!cs<lb/>
STEREO VILLAGE MAKES BUYING A HI-FI SYSTEM EASY. WE TAKE<lb/>
THE CONFUSION OUT OF PURCHASING A SYSTEM BY MIXING AND<lb/>
MATCHING WHAT WE BELIEVE TO BE THE BEST COMPONENTS FOR<lb/>
THE MONEY HERE ARE JUST A FEW OF OUR OUTSTANDING BUYS.<lb/>
0?<lb/>
c.c<lb/>
f. c c- ?<lb/>
.X<lb/>
V 8 ??!<lb/>
fiDPIONEEn<lb/>
JENSEN<lb/>
i so i ?Kiitinin<lb/>
?PIONEER SX450 RECEIVER WITH<lb/>
15 WATTS PER CHANNEL<lb/>
?JENSON LS-2 TWO WAY SPEAKERS<lb/>
SYSTEM<lb/>
?QUANTA BELT DRIVE FULLY<lb/>
AUTOMATIC TURNTABLE<lb/>
'<lb/>
ModeUR S301<lb/>
Model QL-A2<lb/>
Model SK 1000<lb/>
JVC<lb/>
?JVC JRS 301 RECEIVER WITH<lb/>
60 WATTSPER CHANNEL AND<lb/>
BUILT IN EQUILIZER<lb/>
?JVC QLA-Z QUARTZ LOCK SEMI-<lb/>
AUTOMATIC DIRECT DRIVE TURN-<lb/>
TABLE<lb/>
?JVC SK-1000 THREE WAY<lb/>
SPEAKER SYSTEM<lb/>
?EMPIRE 666-E CARTRIDGE IN-<lb/>
CLUDED<lb/>
Technics<lb/>
by Panasonic<lb/>
?S(E<lb/>
L<lb/>
K<lb/>
i - -oosaoocte eO<lb/>
C96"<lb/>
Jensen LS-4<lb/>
Technics<lb/>
by Panasonic<lb/>
?TECHNICS SA 400 RECEIVER<lb/>
WITH45 WATTS PER CHANNEL<lb/>
AND POWER METERS<lb/>
?JENSON LS-4 THTEE WAY<lb/>
SPEAKER SYSTEM<lb/>
?TECHNICS SL220 BELT DRIVE<lb/>
SEMI-AUTOMATIC TURNTABLE<lb/>
WITH VARIABLE SPEED<lb/>
669<lb/>
?TECHNICS SA 500 RECEIVER<lb/>
?55 watts per channel<lb/>
?POWER METERS<lb/>
$369<lb/>
A<lb/>
O C M O ccff O<lb/>
(Technics<lb/>
 IJ by Panasonic<lb/>
4D PIONEER<lb/>
?PIONEER PROJECT 60<lb/>
SPEAKERS<lb/>
?TWO WAY SYSTEM<lb/>
?8 INCH WOOFER<lb/>
?2 INCH TWEETER<lb/>
$44<lb/>
?PIONEER SX 550 RECEIVER<lb/>
?20 WATTS PER CHANNEL<lb/>
?TWO TUNING METERS<lb/>
$174<lb/>
CD PIONEER<lb/>
X v.<lb/>
. v:<lb/>
?PIONEER CTF 500 CASSETTE DECK<lb/>
?DOLBY NOISE REDUCTION<lb/>
?FRONT LOAD<lb/>
?TWO "V.U- METERS<lb/>
00 PIONEER<lb/>
EACH<lb/>
EACH<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057155_0004"/><lb/>
 -? ?? w<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAO 19 October 1978<lb/>
Reefer madness<lb/>
Since 1975, the Mexican government, with<lb/>
aid from the U.S. government has been<lb/>
spraying marijuana fields with the deadly<lb/>
herbicide paraquat.<lb/>
Apparently unable to convince its citizens<lb/>
that marijuana is dangerous, the United States<lb/>
government has embarked on a reckless<lb/>
campaign of poisoning a substance regularly<lb/>
used by approximately 15-20 million people in<lb/>
this country.<lb/>
Although there is disagreement in scientific<lb/>
circles as to just how toxic paraquat is when<lb/>
consumed through various methods (such as<lb/>
inhaling, ingesting, or burning), HEW Secre-<lb/>
tary Joseph Califano warned in March that<lb/>
contaminated marijuana could lead to irrever-<lb/>
sible lung damage for regular and heavy users,<lb/>
and, conceivably, for other users as well.<lb/>
The maximum level of paraquat contamina-<lb/>
tion allowed by the Environmental Protection<lb/>
Agency (EPA) is 0.05 parts per million.<lb/>
Reports compiled by the National Institute on<lb/>
Drug Abuse (NIDA) show that some paraquat<lb/>
residues on Mexican marijuana were above<lb/>
2.200 parts per million. That figure is 40.000<lb/>
times the EPA tolerance level.<lb/>
Secretary Califano stated in his warning<lb/>
that approximately 21 percent of the marijuana<lb/>
coming into the country from Mexico was<lb/>
contaminated with paraquat.<lb/>
In July, Sen. Charles Percy (R-lll.)<lb/>
introduced an amendment to the International<lb/>
Security Assistance Act of 1978 to withhold<lb/>
money from any programs directly or indirectly<lb/>
connected with the spraying of herbicides to<lb/>
eradicate marijuana, "if such herbicides are<lb/>
likely to cause serious harm to the health of<lb/>
persons who may use or consume the sprayed<lb/>
marijuana<lb/>
According to one of Sen. Percy's aides, that<lb/>
amendment passed.<lb/>
"In the absence of action by the State<lb/>
Department and White House officials,<lb/>
significant strides were made by the Congress<lb/>
to deal with this potentially serious health<lb/>
hazard Percy said in a news release.<lb/>
At last a government offical has taken<lb/>
positive steps to end thesenseless poisoning of<lb/>
a large segment of the populace. It is hoped<lb/>
that other members of Congress will follow<lb/>
Percy's initiative and move to further protect<lb/>
the health of its citizens by eliminating the<lb/>
poisons they can and not further destroy the<lb/>
environment by adding toxins.<lb/>
Communique<lb/>
Squirrel killing causes torment<lb/>
By LUKE WHISNANT<lb/>
My roommate st uck<lb/>
his head in the door You<lb/>
want to give me a hand for<lb/>
a minute7'<lb/>
I got up and followed<lb/>
? to the front porch. The<lb/>
sun was out and there was a<lb/>
October breeze clat-<lb/>
. 'hrough the bamboo<lb/>
Tachimes "Look at<lb/>
Tom said, pointing.<lb/>
He s been there for the<lb/>
ast hour<lb/>
There was a squirrel<lb/>
g on his back at the<lb/>
edge of the yard, just off<lb/>
the porch. His paws jerked<lb/>
spasmodically and every<lb/>
now and then he gave a few<lb/>
pathetic cheeps.<lb/>
"What's wrong with<lb/>
him?" I asked<lb/>
I don't know Tom<lb/>
said "I think he fell out of<lb/>
a tree but I've never seen a<lb/>
squirrel faH hard enough to<lb/>
break his back. That<lb/>
wouldn't be very squirrel-<lb/>
like<lb/>
I agreed<lb/>
What do you think we<lb/>
should do?"<lb/>
"He can't move or<lb/>
anything7"<lb/>
No. he's just been<lb/>
laying there for almost an<lb/>
hour now<lb/>
We stepped off the<lb/>
porch and bent over the<lb/>
squirrel for a closer look.<lb/>
White fluid leaked from his<lb/>
eye and gnats swarmed<lb/>
around the wound. Behind<lb/>
his neck a spot of blood<lb/>
clotted and marked his<lb/>
silver-gray coat. When we<lb/>
touched him the squirrel<lb/>
pawed the air frantically<lb/>
and chattered.<lb/>
The next-door-<lb/>
neighbor's cat made up our<lb/>
minds for us. Simba had<lb/>
been watching the squirrel<lb/>
with her hard, green cat-<lb/>
eyes, and stalking around<lb/>
behind the trees and shrubs<lb/>
on her pads<lb/>
Tom flung a piece of<lb/>
brick a' Simba and she<lb/>
disappeared. "Welt. That<lb/>
settles that he said. "We<lb/>
can't leave him out here for<lb/>
the cat to chew on<lb/>
He went inside and<lb/>
the three-legged puppy,<lb/>
Clarence the crosseyed lion<lb/>
? and the natural order of<lb/>
things demanded hisdeath.<lb/>
If you believe in some sort<lb/>
of Order in the world, you<lb/>
realize that a certain num-<lb/>
ber of squirrels are fated to<lb/>
bite the dust prematurely.<lb/>
And Tom and I had distur-<lb/>
bed that order by taking the<lb/>
squirrel in It's all I can do<lb/>
now not to hear my<lb/>
"This is where the nightmare<lb/>
starts. The squirrel didn yt die.<lb/>
He kicked and fluttered around<lb/>
in the bag and made horrible<lb/>
meeping sounds<lb/>
came back with a cardboard<lb/>
box. We didn't want to be<lb/>
bitten, so Tom held the box<lb/>
and I used a branch to push<lb/>
the squirrel in. Then we<lb/>
carried him inside.<lb/>
It ended up being a long<lb/>
afternoon - one of those<lb/>
lazy Greenville autumn<lb/>
Sundays that just seems to<lb/>
dragon and on. We left the<lb/>
squirrel in our bathroom<lb/>
with a jar lid of water and a<lb/>
supply of peanuts, hoping<lb/>
he would gam a little<lb/>
strength by lying quiet for a<lb/>
while<lb/>
He didn't recover Look-<lb/>
ing back on it now, I can see<lb/>
that we should have left<lb/>
him for Simba and the<lb/>
gnats to fight over His<lb/>
number was up He was<lb/>
one the unlucky ones - the<lb/>
piglet eaten by the sow,<lb/>
mother's voice: When are<lb/>
you going to learn to leave<lb/>
things alone0<lb/>
I can hear your object-<lb/>
ions. Some of you don't<lb/>
believe in fate. Some of you<lb/>
refuse to leave things<lb/>
alone Some of you will tell<lb/>
me it would have been cruel<lb/>
to leave the squirrel, but<lb/>
you haven't read the rest of<lb/>
the story.<lb/>
Tom and I looked in on<lb/>
the squirrel just before<lb/>
dinner. His breathing was<lb/>
ragged and his occasional<lb/>
chattenngs sounded more<lb/>
like whimpers. Tom's girl-<lb/>
friend Sarah was horrified.<lb/>
"He's obviously in a lot of<lb/>
pain and he hasn't gotten<lb/>
any better. You can't let<lb/>
him keep suffering like<lb/>
this. You've got to put him<lb/>
FcAjnfainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over 50 years<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Doug White<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER<lb/>
Leigh Coakley<lb/>
TRENDS EDITOR<lb/>
Steve Bachner<lb/>
NEWSEDITORS<lb/>
Julie Everette<lb/>
tticki Qliarmis<lb/>
ADVERTISING MANAGER<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
Sam Rogers<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina University sponsored by the Media Board of ECU<lb/>
and is distributed each Tuesday and Thursday (weekly<lb/>
during the summer).<lb/>
Mailing address: Old South Building, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
27834<lb/>
Editorial offices: 757-6366, 757-6367, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10 annually, alumni $6 annually.<lb/>
out of his misery<lb/>
I hope there is no villian<lb/>
in this piece. There is<lb/>
certainly an uncommitted<lb/>
and indecisive narrator. I<lb/>
admit that what I should<lb/>
have done at that moment<lb/>
was put on some heavy<lb/>
gloves, pick the squirrel up<lb/>
carefully with both hands,<lb/>
and very gently break his<lb/>
neck. Then it would have<lb/>
been over. That's not what<lb/>
happened, though. Sarah<lb/>
got us a gun.<lb/>
It was a .22 pistol and<lb/>
Sarah's friend Bill brought<lb/>
it over. He took a long look<lb/>
at the squirrel and then<lb/>
showed Tom how to load<lb/>
the gun. Tom and I scooped<lb/>
the squirrel up into a plastic<lb/>
trash can liner and carried<lb/>
him outside. Sarah was on<lb/>
the phone to the police<lb/>
department, explaining<lb/>
that there would shortly be<lb/>
a gunshot in our neighbor-<lb/>
hood and that nobody had<lb/>
killed anyone else, we were<lb/>
just shooting a sick<lb/>
squirrel.<lb/>
Tom looked at me for a<lb/>
long moment before he shot<lb/>
the squirrel. "You know, I<lb/>
really don't want to do<lb/>
this Then he put the<lb/>
barrel against the bag and<lb/>
pulled the trigger.<lb/>
This is where the night-<lb/>
mare starts. The squirrel<lb/>
didn't die. He kicked and<lb/>
fluttered around in the bag<lb/>
and made some horrible<lb/>
meeping sounds. "I can't<lb/>
believe this Tom said<lb/>
almost in a whisper. "I shot<lb/>
him right behind the ear<lb/>
Tom shot him again and<lb/>
the squirrel screamed. You<lb/>
might not believe that, but<lb/>
you weren't there and I<lb/>
was. He screamed. Bill took<lb/>
his gun back inside.<lb/>
We were relieved. Tom<lb/>
sighed. I picked the bag up<lb/>
to toss into the trash can<lb/>
and the bag kicked to life in<lb/>
my hands. "Jesus! It's still<lb/>
alive<lb/>
I'm not going to tell you<lb/>
how we finally killed the<lb/>
squirrel. It wasn't very<lb/>
pleasant for any of ua.<lb/>
When it was over and we'd<lb/>
thrown the bag into the<lb/>
trash, Tom turned to me<lb/>
and said, "I'm going to<lb/>
have nightmares about this<lb/>
all night<lb/>
All night wasn't long<lb/>
enough for me. This whole<lb/>
thing happened almost a<lb/>
year ago and I still dream<lb/>
about It. I can't sort it out -<lb/>
can't justify my actions and<lb/>
I'm still not sure what I<lb/>
"should have done and it<lb/>
probably wouldn't make<lb/>
any difference anyway. I<lb/>
would still dream about it.<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Impolite players mar tennis game<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
On Oct. 9,1 went to the<lb/>
tennis court beside Minges<lb/>
Coliseum to play tennis<lb/>
with my old buddy. At the<lb/>
final stage of the first set<lb/>
(5-5, see how competitive<lb/>
we were), outside the court<lb/>
had gathered a group of<lb/>
young talented athletes,<lb/>
each with one or more<lb/>
tennis rackets in their poss-<lb/>
ession.<lb/>
They came on the court<lb/>
and at that time, my old<lb/>
buddy was serving his<lb/>
critical serve; some mem-<lb/>
bers of the group walked<lb/>
across the court between<lb/>
my partner's serves with-<lb/>
out saying anything. (We<lb/>
were playing on the very<lb/>
first court). When my turn<lb/>
to serve came (at this point,<lb/>
the score was 6-5, I was<lb/>
winning!), two young play-<lb/>
ers patiently waited at the<lb/>
side of the net.<lb/>
After I nervously served<lb/>
a double-fault, they smiled<lb/>
and rushed across the<lb/>
court. After that set,<lb/>
because there was too<lb/>
much traffic on my court<lb/>
and also too much noise<lb/>
(they yelled from the court<lb/>
to others standing outside<lb/>
the fence. Young spirit!),<lb/>
we moved our battlefield to<lb/>
the court behind the<lb/>
practicing wall, but before<lb/>
we could finish the set, we<lb/>
were chased out of the<lb/>
court completely.<lb/>
Chivalry is<lb/>
alive and<lb/>
well at ECU<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I would like to re-<lb/>
spond to the letter which<lb/>
appeared in the Oct. 10<lb/>
edition of FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAO concerning chivalry<lb/>
at ECU.<lb/>
I am sorry you girls feel<lb/>
the way you do, but I think<lb/>
you are unjust in judging all<lb/>
males at ECU by a few<lb/>
inconsiderate ones. As<lb/>
proof that chivalry is not<lb/>
dead at ECU, I quote part<lb/>
of a letter which appeared<lb/>
recently in The Daily fle-<lb/>
fecfor's "Hotline" col-<lb/>
umn:<lb/>
"Friday ?f tar noon . . .<lb/>
our oar broke down in the<lb/>
busiest part of Tenth Street<lb/>
 a young man offered<lb/>
assistance Me got a email<lb/>
kit from hia oar and literally<lb/>
got up instde the motor . . .<lb/>
and got the oar going<lb/>
Thai young man is a<lb/>
student at ECU and I'm<lb/>
sure there are many others<lb/>
who would have done the<lb/>
same thing. So you see,<lb/>
chivalry ia not deed after<lb/>
ait.<lb/>
Name withheld by request<lb/>
I was so frustrated that I<lb/>
started to complain, be-<lb/>
cause we had not played for<lb/>
a whole week and we were<lb/>
eager to kill each other on<lb/>
that Saturday before we put<lb/>
our rackets away in the<lb/>
closet for the winter (and<lb/>
fall?). So here we were, we<lb/>
did not even finish three<lb/>
sets (not to mention Wim-<lb/>
bledon's five sets style). I<lb/>
said that they could have<lb/>
put up a sign to announce<lb/>
that the courts would be<lb/>
reserved for the tennis<lb/>
team to practice at a certain<lb/>
time of day, because I<lb/>
remember last summer<lb/>
during the Greenville City<lb/>
Tennis Tournament they<lb/>
put up such a sign, and<lb/>
upon seeing it, my partner<lb/>
and I went to the Evan's<lb/>
Park to play.<lb/>
My old pal laughed at<lb/>
me, saying that though I<lb/>
was with the university for<lb/>
four years, I behaved like a<lb/>
little country boy new in<lb/>
town, knowing nothing<lb/>
about ECU and their great<lb/>
football program (he must<lb/>
have lost his mind talking<lb/>
about football while we<lb/>
were on the tennis court).<lb/>
He continued to say that<lb/>
the court is ECU'S prop-<lb/>
erty, the ECU tennis team<lb/>
can take over any time they<lb/>
want without any notice,<lb/>
just as you don't have to<lb/>
ask your neighbor's per-<lb/>
mission to walk on your<lb/>
own backyard.<lb/>
ECU'S tennis team does<lb/>
not have to put up any sign<lb/>
for using the court, after<lb/>
all. that is their court. He<lb/>
shut me up for awhile.<lb/>
Then within no time, he<lb/>
started to complain. He<lb/>
said those young fine<lb/>
athletes should not walk<lb/>
across the court under any<lb/>
circumstances. It was my<lb/>
turn to give him a lecture.<lb/>
I said although he has a<lb/>
Ph.D. in Pharmacy, it<lb/>
seems he is lacking<lb/>
common sense, since he did<lb/>
not even know that the<lb/>
shortest distance between<lb/>
two points isa straight line.<lb/>
I f one wants to cross a court<lb/>
from one side to the other<lb/>
side, of course, the shortest<lb/>
and fastest way is to go<lb/>
across the court instead of<lb/>
going around it. (However,<lb/>
there were three not-so<lb/>
clever players going around<lb/>
the court, what a pityi)<lb/>
About that noise, I<lb/>
asked my pal how did he<lb/>
expect a group of energetic<lb/>
athletes to behave on court<lb/>
with such nice weather<lb/>
Should they be as quiet as if<lb/>
in a library9 After all. they<lb/>
did not smoke or drink, or<lb/>
did they? This time he<lb/>
seemed very convinced by<lb/>
me.<lb/>
Charles Cheng<lb/>
PS. Before I left the<lb/>
court. I asked a young,<lb/>
spirited student what team<lb/>
they were playing with and<lb/>
he said just local people.<lb/>
But being just "local<lb/>
people" myself for four<lb/>
years and not invited to<lb/>
play, and having to leave in<lb/>
the middle of the play. I<lb/>
was not satisfied with the<lb/>
answer So I asked another<lb/>
handsome short-haired guy<lb/>
the same question, and his<lb/>
answer was the Greenville<lb/>
Tennis Club. Oh. forgive<lb/>
me please. You see how<lb/>
ignorant I was to ask such a<lb/>
question<lb/>
Intramurals story biased<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
We are writing this<lb/>
in regard to what I imagine<lb/>
was supposed to be the<lb/>
intramural section of Tues-<lb/>
day's FOUNTAINHEAD.<lb/>
It seems to us that<lb/>
this particular piece of<lb/>
writing is totally opposite of<lb/>
the "unbiased" view that<lb/>
good newspaper reporting<lb/>
is all about. Mr. Evans<lb/>
seems to have a fetish for<lb/>
one particular team. He<lb/>
devoted four and one half<lb/>
columns to this team's<lb/>
game (not to mention the<lb/>
entire heading of his arti-<lb/>
cle).<lb/>
Ohio inmate<lb/>
wants letters<lb/>
fmm ECU<lb/>
ToFOUNXAINHEAD:<lb/>
I am an inmate at<lb/>
the Ohio State prison and I<lb/>
feel thet correspondence<lb/>
with college and university<lb/>
students would be a very<lb/>
worthwhile and learning<lb/>
experience for the student<lb/>
and also myself.<lb/>
I would appreciate it if<lb/>
you'd place an ad in your<lb/>
college newspaper for me<lb/>
to thia effect.<lb/>
Michael Ledger<lb/>
152-W<lb/>
P.O. Box 511<lb/>
Columbus, Oh. 43216<lb/>
Meanwhile, the other<lb/>
four games in the playoffs<lb/>
(two men's and two wom-<lb/>
en's) combined could only<lb/>
muster two paragraphs<lb/>
from Mr Evans. He was so<lb/>
involved in writing his play<lb/>
by play description of this<lb/>
game that he totally neg-<lb/>
lected giving the score of<lb/>
one game and somehow<lb/>
even forgot to tell who<lb/>
played against the women's<lb/>
team from Tyler.<lb/>
Now if this is not<lb/>
showing bias, state troop-<lb/>
ers don't write tickets. Bias<lb/>
is acceptable in an editori-<lb/>
al, but not in a sports<lb/>
article. All of these teams<lb/>
worked hard to get in the<lb/>
playoffs and I believe the<lb/>
other four games deserved<lb/>
equal coverage (at least<lb/>
more than one sentence a<lb/>
piece). I have felt that<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD has on<lb/>
most occasions been a fair<lb/>
and informative paper, but<lb/>
this article was far from<lb/>
being either fair or informa-<lb/>
tive. This was by far one of<lb/>
the worst examples of<lb/>
sports coverage I have ever<lb/>
witnessed<lb/>
In the future. I hope Mr<lb/>
Evans will be more profess-<lb/>
ional in his articles and that<lb/>
the management of<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD will see<lb/>
to this. After all. fair and<lb/>
unbiased writing makes a<lb/>
newspaper worth reading<lb/>
to everyone, not just a<lb/>
favored few<lb/>
Kirby Lashley<lb/>
Tommy Joe Payne<lb/>
Frank Pruette<lb/>
Kevin Cameron<lb/>
Steve Curry<lb/>
Forum policy<lb/>
Forum letters must contain the name, address phone<lb/>
number, and signature of theauthor(s) and should be typed<lb/>
or neatly printed. <lb/>
Letters are subject to editing for brevity, obscen.ty, and<lb/>
libel.<lb/>
No more than three letters on any subject will be printed<lb/>
in one issue. ? yuma<lb/>
Letters should be limited to three typewritten<lb/>
double-spaced pages. typewritten,<lb/>
Letters must be received by noon on u-<lb/>
Wednesdays either at the FOUNTAeTd <lb/>
"Forum" is the primary axenua of atutet <lb/>
-???.<lb/>
??. ? ?m.  ??? Limn .ait.iM.ua<lb/>
lii mi Him i m<lb/>
.???,  ni Hill .in .in, ? u mi immrmm&amp;to<lb/>
I<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057155_0005"/><lb/>
'<lb/>
?;?? i '? -? ?<lb/>
To cfose Saturday<lb/>
19 Ootabf 178 FOUMTAINHEAD Papa 5<lb/>
Love a state fair<lb/>
the STUDENT STORE waits for the crowds of students to assemble once more as they did for fall semester.<lb/>
SC J to hold fall induction<lb/>
By RICHY SMITH<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The Society tor Colleg-<lb/>
ate Journalists is making<lb/>
ins for the fall induction<lb/>
of members into the frater-<lb/>
according to Kay<lb/>
Williams, president of the<lb/>
:anization.<lb/>
The induction will be<lb/>
formal and ritualistic with<lb/>
the present members part-<lb/>
Dating in the ceremony.<lb/>
The Society for Colleg-<lb/>
iate Journalists is a merger<lb/>
of Alpha Phi Gamma and Pi<lb/>
Delta Epsilon, national un-<lb/>
dergraduate journalism<lb/>
societies. SCJ has more<lb/>
than 170 chapters through-<lb/>
out the U.S. according to<lb/>
Williams.<lb/>
Members are selected<lb/>
on the basis of academic<lb/>
achievement in journalism<lb/>
studies and participation in<lb/>
camDus Dublications.<lb/>
It is also recognition for<lb/>
those students who have<lb/>
made accomplishments in<lb/>
communications outside of<lb/>
campus publication.<lb/>
"Editorsfrom the various<lb/>
campus publications are<lb/>
submitting eligible stud-<lb/>
ents to be inducted in the<lb/>
chapterWilliams stated.<lb/>
"Bids will be sent out<lb/>
and it is imperative that the<lb/>
pledges acknowledge them<lb/>
by Oct. 25 she added.<lb/>
The bids must be ret-<lb/>
urned to Austin building to<lb/>
Ira Baker, advisor of the<lb/>
fraternity and professor of<lb/>
journalism at ECU.<lb/>
"We must know who is<lb/>
planning to be a part of the<lb/>
organization, so we can<lb/>
notify the national chapt-<lb/>
er Williams added.<lb/>
The induction will be<lb/>
Nov. 21 in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
RALEIGH, N.C.(AP)-<lb/>
For people who want to eat<lb/>
everything from cotton<lb/>
candy to Polish sausage,<lb/>
get a few thrills and spend<lb/>
money, the North Carolina<lb/>
State Fair here fills the bill.<lb/>
WEATHER<lb/>
Fair workers say the<lb/>
crisp, clear fall weather is<lb/>
helping draw record crowds<lb/>
this year, with 60,000 to<lb/>
65,000 attending the fair<lb/>
Sunday. The fair opened<lb/>
Friday and runs through<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
RIDES<lb/>
For those who want<lb/>
their thrills fast, the fair's<lb/>
myriad of rides is just the<lb/>
ticket.<lb/>
Frieda Nettles of<lb/>
Knightsdale, peering an-<lb/>
xiously at the spinning Tilt-<lb/>
A-Whirl Sunday, said she<lb/>
had a husband on the wildly<lb/>
turning ride.<lb/>
? don't ride anything<lb/>
Mrs. Nettles said. "But he<lb/>
rides them all<lb/>
Even the slower ridea<lb/>
provide chills for some fair-<lb/>
goers.<lb/>
The chair lift is one of<lb/>
the midway's tamest rides<lb/>
but "it was scary for me<lb/>
said Jessica Smith of<lb/>
Southern Pines. She said<lb/>
she and a friend has been at<lb/>
the fair for four hours<lb/>
Sunday "mostly walking<lb/>
our feet off<lb/>
GAMES<lb/>
But most sight-seers at<lb/>
the fair over the weekend<lb/>
TO MH<lb/>
BILL DEAL<lb/>
? THE<lb/>
RHONDEIXS<lb/>
seemed drawn to the doz-<lb/>
ens of games of chance set<lb/>
up around the fairgrounds.<lb/>
Eager players tossing rings<lb/>
at bottles, trying to smash<lb/>
dishes with softballs and<lb/>
throwing darts at balloons<lb/>
all had one goal in mind ?<lb/>
winning one of the huge<lb/>
stuffed animals dangling<lb/>
from the game booth. And<lb/>
lucky winners with their<lb/>
prizes clutched in their<lb/>
arms inspired almost every<lb/>
adult and child to take at<lb/>
least one crack at the<lb/>
games.<lb/>
Attractions at the fair in<lb/>
addition to the rides, games<lb/>
and food include agricul-<lb/>
tural exhibits and arts and<lb/>
crafts displays.<lb/>
AT Till<lb/>
Is it sack<lb/>
to love<lb/>
apeir<lb/>
HospitalsClinics to visit ECU<lb/>
for Health Careers Day Nov. 1<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Representatives from<lb/>
?pitals. clinics and other<lb/>
health care agencies will<lb/>
visit ECU Nov. 1 for ECU'S<lb/>
annual Health Careers Day.<lb/>
The event, sponsored<lb/>
by the ECU Career Plan-<lb/>
ning and Placement Service<lb/>
in cooperation with the<lb/>
ECU Schools of Nursing<lb/>
and Alhed Health and<lb/>
Social Professions, is des-<lb/>
igned to provide ECU stud-<lb/>
ents and alumni interested<lb/>
in careers in the health<lb/>
fields opportunities to meet<lb/>
with potential employers.<lb/>
Furney James, director<lb/>
of Career Planning and<lb/>
Placement at ECU. said<lb/>
 x 5( 5v f f 5p? r? r? r<lb/>
<lb/>
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<lb/>
ECU graduates as well as<lb/>
juniors and seniors are<lb/>
invited to participate in<lb/>
Health Careers Day to<lb/>
discuss details about em-<lb/>
ployment possibilities.<lb/>
Freshmen and sopho-<lb/>
mores considering a nurs-<lb/>
ing or allied health major<lb/>
are also invited to attend<lb/>
and meet the representat-<lb/>
ive to learn more about<lb/>
careers in health and para-<lb/>
medical fields.<lb/>
Among areas of employ-<lb/>
ment to be represented are<lb/>
nursing, physical and occu-<lb/>
pational therapy, medical<lb/>
technology, social and cor-<lb/>
rectional services, medical<lb/>
record science, dietetics,<lb/>
music therapy, speech,<lb/>
language and auditory<lb/>
pathology. community<lb/>
health, child development<lb/>
and family relations, rehab-<lb/>
ilitation counseling, envir-<lb/>
onmental health, psycho-<lb/>
logy, sociology and special<lb/>
education.<lb/>
Representatives will be<lb/>
available in ECU'S Mend-<lb/>
enhall Student Center from<lb/>
1 30 to 4:30 p.m. Students<lb/>
and alumni wishing to meet<lb/>
with them are not required<lb/>
to make prior reservation.<lb/>
Evelyn Perry, dean of<lb/>
the ECU School of Nursing,<lb/>
commented that the event<lb/>
is "a fine opportunity for<lb/>
students to talk with a large<lb/>
variety of potential employ-<lb/>
ers" and make early<lb/>
choices of their<lb/>
ment locations.<lb/>
employ-<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 pot-<lb/>
ential employees.<lb/>
"Job opportunities in<lb/>
the health-related fieJds are<lb/>
ample, and .we enooufage<lb/>
any student preparing for<lb/>
work in the health-related<lb/>
professions to attend<lb/>
Health Careers Day and<lb/>
sample the job market<lb/>
Thiele said.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057155_0006"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 19 October 1978<lb/>
Theatre Arts books<lb/>
Hauser Company<lb/>
BvSTEVE BACHNER<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Theatre Arts Committee is<lb/>
pleased to present The<lb/>
Nancy Hauser Dance Com-<lb/>
v .i professional mod-<lb/>
ern dance company based<lb/>
the Guild of Performing<lb/>
Arts in M mneapolis, M inn.<lb/>
The company will be in<lb/>
residence at ECU from Oct.<lb/>
)ct. 25.<lb/>
The residency wil cul-<lb/>
minate m a matinee per-<lb/>
n Oct. 24 and an<lb/>
g performance on<lb/>
25 This project is<lb/>
? v supported by a grant<lb/>
?m the North Carolina<lb/>
Arts Council and the Nat-<lb/>
Endowment for the<lb/>
.Washington. DC.<lb/>
a federal agency.<lb/>
The Nancv Ha user<lb/>
Dance Company brings to<lb/>
an audience a refreshing<lb/>
sense of energy, humor.<lb/>
ima. and lyricism. The<lb/>
company is one of the<lb/>
country's most innovative<lb/>
and dynamic troupes.<lb/>
Everything they do reflects<lb/>
professional pride and<lb/>
pol i sh.<lb/>
The dancers are like<lb/>
musical notes, moving in<lb/>
independent melodies, but<lb/>
blending with each other to<lb/>
produce a harmony of mot-<lb/>
ion. They are a rare comb-<lb/>
ination of individual expert-<lb/>
ise and fineness as an<lb/>
ensemble.<lb/>
Nancy Hauser herself<lb/>
has been influential in the<lb/>
development of modern<lb/>
dance as a creative art form<lb/>
of exceptional quality. Her<lb/>
philosophy has always been<lb/>
that dance should not only<lb/>
reflect perfection through<lb/>
training but just as import-<lb/>
antly, should be an expres-<lb/>
sion of imagination<lb/>
She instills in each<lb/>
member of her company<lb/>
the importance of com-<lb/>
manding the art from con-<lb/>
ception to execution, and to<lb/>
instill the essense of creat-<lb/>
ivity in others<lb/>
The compan s visit will<lb/>
include workshops for<lb/>
dance students and two<lb/>
performances, a matinee at<lb/>
1 p m. Oct. 24 and an<lb/>
evening performance at 8<lb/>
p.m. Oct 25. Both appear-<lb/>
ances will be held in ECU'S<lb/>
McGinms Auditorium.<lb/>
Each member of her<lb/>
company is a choreograph-<lb/>
er as well as a skilled and<lb/>
creative dancer, and their<lb/>
repertoire includes their<lb/>
own works as well as works<lb/>
by such noted choreogra-<lb/>
phers as Murray Louis,<lb/>
Viola Farber and James<lb/>
Cunningham.<lb/>
Nancy Hauser is<lb/>
noted for her brilliant<lb/>
choreography. Hauser del-<lb/>
ves into all aspects of life to<lb/>
reate stimulating, intrig-<lb/>
'umg pieces. The energy<lb/>
and sense of spatial excit-<lb/>
ement is unparalleled by<lb/>
any company.<lb/>
The Nancy Hauser<lb/>
Dance Company was ori-<lb/>
ginally established in 1961<lb/>
as the Dance Guild Theatre<lb/>
in St Paul, Minn.<lb/>
In addition to their<lb/>
seasons at Macalester Col-<lb/>
lege, where Nancy Hauser<lb/>
was a faculty member, they<lb/>
performed ? often for ex-<lb/>
THE NANCY HAUSER Dance Company<lb/>
performs 'Recherche 1976 choreo-<lb/>
graphed by Nancy Hauser "Her<lb/>
philosophy has always been that dance<lb/>
should not only reflect perfection through<lb/>
training, but, just as importantly, should<lb/>
be an expression of imagination "<lb/>
penses ? in the colleges of<lb/>
Wisconsin, Minnesota, and<lb/>
the Walker Arts Center in<lb/>
Brookings, S.D.<lb/>
They also performed at<lb/>
the Hanya Holm 25th anni-<lb/>
versary celebration in 1965<lb/>
in Colorado Springs, Col<lb/>
and at the Guthrie Theatre<lb/>
in Minneapolis with Don<lb/>
Redlich as guest artist.<lb/>
After several metamor-<lb/>
phases, the company began<lb/>
looking for a permanent<lb/>
home. In collaboration with<lb/>
other artists lacking ade-<lb/>
quate space, the Guild of<lb/>
Performing Arts was<lb/>
founded in an old knitting<lb/>
mill on the west bank of the<lb/>
Mississippi River in Minn-<lb/>
eapolis.<lb/>
The name of the com-<lb/>
pany was changed to the<lb/>
Nancy Hauser Dance Com-<lb/>
pany, and a dance school<lb/>
was established.<lb/>
At that time, the dan-<lb/>
cers were rehersing twice a<lb/>
week for no pay, and were<lb/>
performing sporadically,<lb/>
presenting their seasons in<lb/>
the one hundred seat Guild<lb/>
Theatre, and tours were<lb/>
one night stands when ex-<lb/>
penses could be met.<lb/>
During the early years<lb/>
the Company performed in<lb/>
Minneapolis perhaps three<lb/>
times a year. In 1974-75 the<lb/>
company will give approx-<lb/>
imately sixty performances<lb/>
and tour a total of 15<lb/>
weeks, performing concerts<lb/>
and residencies and serving<lb/>
asastists within the schools<lb/>
of 25 communities<lb/>
throughout the United<lb/>
States.<lb/>
Tours this year include<lb/>
the states of Illinois, Michi-<lb/>
gan, Ohio, New Hampshire<lb/>
and Missouri, as well as<lb/>
performing in every region<lb/>
of M innesota.<lb/>
A company of nine<lb/>
dancers is now employed<lb/>
full time for a 40 week<lb/>
season, with a professional<lb/>
menagement and technical<lb/>
staff of four. The steady<lb/>
growth of the Company as<lb/>
an artistic entity indicates<lb/>
the vitality of the Company<lb/>
and the support it has<lb/>
earned in the community.<lb/>
Nancy Hauser's philo-<lb/>
sophy of dance, and the<lb/>
thoroughness of the train-<lb/>
ing of the dancers, is the<lb/>
key to the success of the<lb/>
Company. She sees three<lb/>
elements in the training of<lb/>
her charges; choreography<lb/>
? making dances; tech-<lb/>
nique ? making dancers;<lb/>
and pedagogy ? making<lb/>
THE NANCY HAUSER Dance Company performs<lb/>
Dreams. " choreographed by Nancy Hauser "She instills<lb/>
in each member of her company the importance of<lb/>
commanding the art from conception to execution and<lb/>
instill the essence of creativity m others<lb/>
teachers.<lb/>
The company in-<lb/>
cludes Murray<lb/>
Louis, Viola Farber. and<lb/>
James Cunningham. In ad-<lb/>
dition, each dancer in the<lb/>
company is a choreograph-<lb/>
er .<lb/>
The active expression of<lb/>
creative concepts is the hub<lb/>
of the Company's work.<lb/>
Each member is encour-<lb/>
aged to choreograph, and<lb/>
when work s are deemed<lb/>
The Company has long<lb/>
since outgrown the one<lb/>
hundred seat Guild Theatre<lb/>
and seasons are presented<lb/>
in larger houses throughout<lb/>
the Twin Cities. It now<lb/>
tours under the auspices of<lb/>
the National Endowment<lb/>
for the Arts Dance Touring<lb/>
Program and the Artists in<lb/>
the Schools Program.<lb/>
The company has been<lb/>
honored and assisted by<lb/>
production, management,<lb/>
and technical assistance<lb/>
Dance<lb/>
worthy, they are produced<lb/>
and included in the re-<lb/>
pertoire, as are the works of<lb/>
guest choreographers.<lb/>
The process toward this<lb/>
end is one of constant<lb/>
exploration through tech-<lb/>
nique, improvisation and<lb/>
teaching. Each dancer is<lb/>
involved in discovering who<lb/>
they are, knowing their own<lb/>
identity and learning to<lb/>
become autonomous indi-<lb/>
viduals capable of making,<lb/>
through this knowledge,<lb/>
their own artistic decisions.<lb/>
Former members of the<lb/>
Company and students of<lb/>
Nancy Hauser include<lb/>
Loyce Houlton. Artistic Di-<lb/>
rector of the Minnesota<lb/>
Dance Theatre, and mem-<lb/>
bers of the companies of<lb/>
Murray Louis, Alwin Nik-<lb/>
olais, Merce Cunningham,<lb/>
Martha Grahm, Paul Tay-<lb/>
lor, Meredith Mink and<lb/>
Eric Hawkins.<lb/>
grants from the National<lb/>
Endowment and the Min-<lb/>
nesota State Arts Council<lb/>
and Foundations.<lb/>
Members of the Com-<lb/>
pany and Nancy Hauser<lb/>
have received chore-<lb/>
ography fellowships from<lb/>
the Minnesota States Arts<lb/>
Council and the National<lb/>
Endowment for theaters to<lb/>
mount dances on the Com-<lb/>
pany and to develop solo<lb/>
works.<lb/>
Gifts have been made to<lb/>
bring in guest chore-<lb/>
ographers by both Federal<lb/>
and State Arts agencies.<lb/>
The Nancy Hauser<lb/>
Dance Company has been<lb/>
instrumental in dance aud-<lb/>
ience development in this<lb/>
region and in the training of<lb/>
dancers. They now form the<lb/>
teaching nucleus of a pro-<lb/>
fessional school training<lb/>
some eight hundred stu-<lb/>
dents per year, many of<lb/>
these scholarship students.<lb/>
They have participated<lb/>
in the Minneapolis Public<lb/>
Schools' Urban Arts Pro-<lb/>
gram since its inception<lb/>
four years ago, a program<lb/>
that brings junior and sen-<lb/>
ior high students into the<lb/>
studio for daily technique<lb/>
classes throughout the<lb/>
school year<lb/>
The Company has de-<lb/>
signed a program, now in<lb/>
its second year of fundmq<lb/>
by the Bush Foundation, to<lb/>
incorporate dance m the<lb/>
curriculum of rural Min-<lb/>
nesota schools, in twelve<lb/>
communities.<lb/>
Because of this grant.<lb/>
the first Bush Foundation<lb/>
grant made to dance, thou-<lb/>
sands of students and their<lb/>
teachers are directly in-<lb/>
volved in movement and<lb/>
dance classes. Community<lb/>
classes, lecture-demon-<lb/>
strations and full concerts<lb/>
are presented under the<lb/>
grant during each of three<lb/>
years in communities that<lb/>
could ordinarily never af-<lb/>
ford the residency services<lb/>
of a professional dance<lb/>
company.<lb/>
At the end of the three<lb/>
year period, teachers in<lb/>
those communities will<lb/>
have been trained to carry<lb/>
on with the teaching of<lb/>
dance and the use of move-<lb/>
ment as an educational<lb/>
tool, and the development<lb/>
of the kinesthetic sense in<lb/>
their students<lb/>
The communities will<lb/>
have the knowledge, ex-<lb/>
pertise and local support to<lb/>
sponsor residencies on<lb/>
their own<lb/>
It is a tremendous<lb/>
dertaking that typifies I<lb/>
spirit of the Nancy Hauser<lb/>
Dance Company its<lb/>
est in pubhc education a<lb/>
the dedication of Na<lb/>
Hauser and company<lb/>
members to the deve<lb/>
ment of the Arts, as ???<lb/>
their own arts?<lb/>
4 a refreshing<lb/>
sense of energy,<lb/>
humor, drama,<lb/>
and lyricism<lb/>
Besides tme dan.<lb/>
graphv. T,e N I . H - .er<lb/>
Dance Compa s<lb/>
? - !ts exoe - '<lb/>
fhe oomapny de i<lb/>
ket: .  <lb/>
ages and degrees<lb/>
pr of iciency<lb/>
The Na<lb/>
Dance Cc<lb/>
form a n<lb/>
eve- :<lb/>
TICKETS<lb/>
Ticket<lb/>
are $2 for fac<lb/>
$3 for the public I 1 $2 1<lb/>
groups of 20 we<lb/>
Tickets ?or the ev<lb/>
performance are S3<lb/>
faculty and staff S4 ?<lb/>
public, a 5 11<lb/>
20 or more<lb/>
Stude ' tickets<lb/>
$1 50 for both matmee and<lb/>
evening performance A<lb/>
perfromances are<lb/>
M cGinms Auditor<lb/>
Nolte nabs top billing in Who'll Stop The Rain<lb/>
L<lb/>
By BARflY CLAYTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Stop anyone you might normally pass by on the street<lb/>
and ask him what makes a good film and the chances are he<lb/>
will answer sex and violence From what you see on<lb/>
television and in films today, those are the obvious<lb/>
ingredientsof popular entertainment.<lb/>
But recently you might get a third catagory<lb/>
Nick Nolte.<lb/>
Who'll Stop The Rin, based on the novel Dog Soldiers,<lb/>
by Robert Stone, hashe other two in abundance (if what<lb/>
you want is sex and Nolte, check out The Deep when it<lb/>
makes the roundsagain).<lb/>
Nolte denies that Rain was ever intended to be a Nick<lb/>
Nolte film but it is, from any way you care to look at it.<lb/>
Tuesday Weld (who plays the part of Marge Converse) has<lb/>
filed a $25 million damages suit against United Artists<lb/>
because of the minor billing she has received in connection<lb/>
with thefilm.<lb/>
Michael Moriarty (who portrays John Converse, and<lb/>
who leads us through the first crucial 15 minutes of Rain)<lb/>
might have every bit as strong a case for unfair billing, but<lb/>
apparently hasn't yet decided to sue.<lb/>
They probably have good reason for being upset. Both<lb/>
are accomplished in their field. Both are certainly better<lb/>
known than Nolte.<lb/>
Yet Nolte is given preferential billing. His name appears<lb/>
on the cinema posters in bold, three-inch letters, while the<lb/>
names of Moriarty and Weld are crowded, almost as an<lb/>
afterthought, into the inconspicuous print at the bottom<lb/>
alongside the "Music and Screenplay by The pressbcok<lb/>
releases deal almost singularly with Nolte, as do most of the<lb/>
critics' reviews.<lb/>
Why<lb/>
Nick Nolte is somewhat of a phenomenon, that's why.<lb/>
And, perhaps, a phenomenon whose time has come.<lb/>
Nolte is a powerful actor, at once intense and believable,<lb/>
with the penchant to generate a personal presence that<lb/>
permeates and dominates the film from the moment of his<lb/>
appearance to the closing credits (imagine Robert Redford<lb/>
in Three Days of the Condor, but wielding an M-16 rather<lb/>
than a .45 automatic, who is less civilized than Redford and<lb/>
mad as hell at a society that sanctions a government agency<lb/>
such as the CIA which hunts down and murders its own<lb/>
employees).<lb/>
Blue-eyed, square-jawed, blond hair plastered straight<lb/>
back (again the Redford image, this time as Gatsby), Nolte<lb/>
appears to embody the ideal of macho self-sufficiency, and<lb/>
it's an image he carries effortlessly in his role as Ray Hicks.<lb/>
Ray Hicks, ex-marine, reader of Nietzche, and marital<lb/>
artist is approcu.led by his old service buddy John<lb/>
Converse, now a photojournalist on assignment in Vietnam<lb/>
where the story opens. After much protest, he agrees to<lb/>
smuggle two kilos of uncut heroin into the states and deliver<lb/>
them to Converse's wife (Tuesday Weld).<lb/>
John is scheduled to return home in a few days but lacks<lb/>
the nerve and imagination to carry it himself. Angry, Hicks<lb/>
declares that the plan "sucks" and warns John,<lb/>
"Self-preservation isan art I've cultivated The rest of the<lb/>
film attests to the accuracy of his words.<lb/>
With a raging paranoia held tightly in check, and many<lb/>
a cautious glance over his shoulder. Hicks makes delivery to<lb/>
Marge Converse, but soon finds he has been followed and<lb/>
proceeds to display some of the self-preserving art he has<lb/>
cultivated by subduing two blatantly psycho ex-cons sent to<lb/>
intercept the dope for their high-placed Washington<lb/>
employers.<lb/>
Hicks, realizing that John and Marge are a "couple of<lb/>
fuck-ups" and no match for the merciless Washington<lb/>
baddies who would kill the three of them even if they did<lb/>
surrender the heroin, gathers Marge and the two kilos of<lb/>
smack and heads for his sucluded hideaway in the hills<lb/>
outside Los Angeles. There he changes vehicles, digs up a<lb/>
disassembled M-16 and a couple of grenades he had<lb/>
stashed tor just such a time, and makes plans to "move'<lb/>
the dope.<lb/>
Meanwhile John has returned home from Vietnam early<lb/>
and is immediately picked up and tortured for information<lb/>
by the same psychotic hoods who has tangled less<lb/>
successfully with Hicks.<lb/>
He is met at his home later by Anton, a federal narcotics<lb/>
offioer on the take (portrayed by Anthony Zerbe) who is also<lb/>
working for the Washington interests. Anton decides to<lb/>
offer Converse's life in exchange for the heroin.<lb/>
After a bizarre and unsuccessful attempt to sell their<lb/>
dangerous cargo, Ray Hicks and Marge (who has managed<lb/>
to go from a pill-popping habit to a full-blown heroin<lb/>
addiction in just three days) once again move, this time to<lb/>
El Ojo Grande"The Big Eye"), a deserted Jesuit retreat in<lb/>
the hills of New Mexico<lb/>
A good case might be made for seeking refuge in the<lb/>
anonymity of a big city's human traffic, but it is perhaps<lb/>
typical of Hicks' self-reliant nature that he would seek out a<lb/>
high, lonely place to make his stand.<lb/>
Indeed, the hours on the mountain is the only time we<lb/>
see Hicks as anything dose to being at peace.<lb/>
Unfortunately, it is short-lived peace.<lb/>
Availing himself of the go-<lb/>
vernment agencies at his<lb/>
disposal. Anton manages to<lb/>
track the couple to<lb/>
their sanctuary<lb/>
and there<lb/>
confronts<lb/>
them with<lb/>
a chojce:<lb/>
to hand<lb/>
over the<lb/>
heroin or<lb/>
watch John<lb/>
Converse<lb/>
die<lb/>
NOLTE<lb/>
P<lb/>
7<lb/>
&amp;tim<lb/>
<pb facs="00057155_0007"/><lb/>
, - - <lb/>
Comic book conventions offer<lb/>
fans a chance to buy rare issues<lb/>
19 October 197S FOUNTAINHEAD Pay 7<lb/>
BV CAROL STRICKLAND<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The first time I attended<lb/>
a mini-con, I wasn't aware<lb/>
of the proper approach. I<lb/>
didn't know that first you<lb/>
quickly survey the convent-<lb/>
ion dealers' tables, search-<lb/>
ing the five-for-$l boxes for<lb/>
those old copies of Super-<lb/>
man you missed way back<lb/>
when. Then come the 25<lb/>
cent boxes for the siightly<lb/>
harder-to-find issues of<lb/>
Sgt Fury and His Howling<lb/>
Commandos.<lb/>
Moving to the individ-<lb/>
ually-pncxd plastic-bagged<lb/>
issue boxes, you search for<lb/>
the every-fleeting sugar<lb/>
and Spikes But when you<lb/>
notice that the comic bags<lb/>
no longer have prices on<lb/>
them, and that the dealer<lb/>
reaches for his copy of the<lb/>
1978 Comic Book Price<lb/>
Guide, you must realize<lb/>
that's the time to run for<lb/>
the hills, unless you really<lb/>
don't mind paying $20 for<lb/>
the recent Howard the<lb/>
Duck M, mint condition.<lb/>
By now I've got the<lb/>
convention memorized. I<lb/>
also realize that cons aren't<lb/>
just for the buying and<lb/>
trading of comics.<lb/>
Comic book fans can<lb/>
relax at a comic con, where<lb/>
at last they find themselves<lb/>
among "normal" people,<lb/>
those who are intrigued by<lb/>
the important things in life:<lb/>
whether Mary Jane will<lb/>
accept Spider-Man's mar-<lb/>
riage proposal; if the Bat-<lb/>
man's death will wreck his<lb/>
daughter, the Huntress<lb/>
career; whether John Byrne<lb/>
will surpass himself on this<lb/>
month's X-Men art.<lb/>
These people know<lb/>
comics and the artists that<lb/>
go with them, for better or<lb/>
worse: Gerry Conway, Don<lb/>
Heck, Neal Adams, Denny<lb/>
O'Neil, Jim Shooter, Terry<lb/>
Austin. That list alone is<lb/>
enough to send a small<lb/>
group of comics "fen" into<lb/>
a howling, day-long argu-<lb/>
ment. It's just the thing a<lb/>
mini-con was made for.<lb/>
Such an occasion is<lb/>
Greenville Mini-Con 3, to<lb/>
be held Sun Nov. 12, at<lb/>
the Roxy Theatre. Its or-<lb/>
ganizers, the members of<lb/>
the ECU Comic Book Club,<lb/>
agree that the con has been<lb/>
improving each time it has<lb/>
been held.<lb/>
The dub will meet this<lb/>
Wed Oct. 18 at 6:30 in<lb/>
Mendenhall. The club con-<lb/>
sists of only a few people<lb/>
who gather to gossip, dis-<lb/>
cuss, and glory in the<lb/>
fantasies comics inspire.<lb/>
Because of their inten-<lb/>
sity they are closely knit,<lb/>
yet ever searching for more<lb/>
of their elusive kind who<lb/>
rarely "come out of the<lb/>
closet" for fear of ridicule<lb/>
by people who consider<lb/>
comics, perish the though,<lb/>
"kids' stuff Most would<lb/>
never let a child near their<lb/>
carefully-stored treasures!<lb/>
These people are exam-<lb/>
ples of the famour comic<lb/>
fan saying, "Fandom is a<lb/>
Way of Life" (FIAWOL).<lb/>
One Comic Club member<lb/>
has his apartment planned<lb/>
so that he can fit every<lb/>
one of his over-10,000-book<lb/>
collection into it - with a<lb/>
corner left over that is just<lb/>
big enough to sleep in.<lb/>
Another member<lb/>
publishes a fanzine (a<lb/>
magazine published by and<lb/>
for comics fans) that spec-<lb/>
ializes in Wonder Woman<lb/>
trivia. She regularly writes<lb/>
and draws for other<lb/>
"zines" published all over<lb/>
the world.<lb/>
The club members<lb/>
aren't ashamed of their<lb/>
enthusiasm. Instead, they<lb/>
revel in the adventures of<lb/>
their favorite heroes, in the<lb/>
escapism that comics bring,<lb/>
in their own fannish<lb/>
energy.<lb/>
FIAWOL.<lb/>
Nolte shines in Who'll Stop Rain<lb/>
Continued from p. 6<lb/>
Buying time and hoping to win the lives of himself and<lb/>
nis comrades. Hicks sends Marge down from the immediate<lb/>
safety of their mountain stronghold with a five-pound bag of<lb/>
sugar wrapped to resemble the two kilos of smack.<lb/>
Meanwhile, Hicksgirdshimself for battle with an M-16,<lb/>
grenades taped to his thighs, and fatigue vest, and then<lb/>
exits, m the finest tradition of Errol Flynn, through a<lb/>
window to work his own way down the mountain and meet<lb/>
Anton in a final, electrifying confrontation.<lb/>
The performances in Who Will Stop The Rain are<lb/>
nothing less than dazzling. Each character shines,<lb/>
complete and wholly believable, with an honesty and<lb/>
naturalness of manner that forces a chuckle at several<lb/>
points in the film.<lb/>
This applies especially to Masur and Sharkey who bring<lb/>
to vivid life the roles of the two ne'er do well thugs.<lb/>
Anthony Zerbe (who is experienced at portraying the<lb/>
fall-guy) displays the brilliance typical of his considerable<lb/>
talents.<lb/>
But the real performances are from Nolte and Moriarty.<lb/>
To play the role of Ray Hicks, Nolte wore a surgical<lb/>
brace to force his body into the harsh militaristic posture<lb/>
affected by H icks. To get his voice down to H icks" perilous,<lb/>
gravelly speech, Nolte had to learn to deliver dialogue<lb/>
convincingly a fulloctave below his normal range.<lb/>
Yet, even with these obstacles, Nolte manages to bring<lb/>
it off in a high-powered, supercharged performance that<lb/>
might have been too much for another actor to handle with<lb/>
creedence<lb/>
Moriarty, too, shows his professionalism with his<lb/>
portrayal of John Converse. Converse is a nihilist deep in<lb/>
the shadowed world of depression whose attempt to ellicit<lb/>
responses from the world leads the cast to the film's<lb/>
disturbing conclusion.<lb/>
ft is a subtle role that speaks all the more loudly of his<lb/>
acting skills for his ability to make the subdued and<lb/>
internalised character of John Converse provide the<lb/>
necessary antithesis for the powerful and domineering<lb/>
persona of Ray Hicks.<lb/>
For those moviegoers who look for sound plot, social<lb/>
commentary, and lush cinematography in their enter-<lb/>
tainment, Rain has plenty of each.<lb/>
But the acting isthis film's real asset.<lb/>
ECU Gospel Ensemble to give<lb/>
concert Oct. 22 at Mendenhall<lb/>
By DEMISE DUPREE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Self-expression comes<lb/>
natural to some folks. And<lb/>
it seems their creative spirit<lb/>
and enthusiasm is almost<lb/>
catching.<lb/>
Such is the case of the<lb/>
ECU Gospel Ensemble<lb/>
founded and directed by<lb/>
Johnice Johnson.<lb/>
Ms. Johnson, a Golds-<lb/>
boro native, feels the Gos-<lb/>
pel Ensemble gives its 25<lb/>
members a chance to ex-<lb/>
press a feeling of rea-<lb/>
ssurance and hope through<lb/>
Christ.<lb/>
"A lot of students miss<lb/>
their involvement in their<lb/>
home churches. The Gospel<lb/>
Choir acts as a linkage<lb/>
between that involvement<lb/>
and the sometimes im-<lb/>
personal atmosphere of<lb/>
school she says.<lb/>
Ms. Johnson feels this<lb/>
gives the choir members a<lb/>
sense of identity.<lb/>
Ms. Johnson hopes that<lb/>
by doing various styles of<lb/>
gospel music, especially<lb/>
contemporary music, the<lb/>
ensemble will reach that<lb/>
special group that wouldn't<lb/>
ordinarily be reached.<lb/>
Assistant director Law-<lb/>
yer Crawford, echoes Ms.<lb/>
Johnson when discussing<lb/>
the group's goals: "We<lb/>
strive to express our feel-<lb/>
ings through music since<lb/>
music is understood by<lb/>
everyone he said.<lb/>
The Gospel Ensemble,<lb/>
founded Spring semester<lb/>
1978, will give their first<lb/>
Fall concert October 22 at<lb/>
Mendenhall and October 29<lb/>
they will sing at Cedar<lb/>
Grove's morning service.<lb/>
The Ensemble will ten-<lb/>
tatively perform at N.C.<lb/>
State, Hampton Institute,<lb/>
Goldsboro and churches in<lb/>
surrounding areas.<lb/>
Musicians for the group<lb/>
include Ronald Maxwell<lb/>
and Rex Everett, piano and<lb/>
organ; Harvery Stokes,<lb/>
bass; Samuel Johnson,<lb/>
drums; Willie Morris, sax;<lb/>
and Johnice Johnson on<lb/>
piano.<lb/>
The Gospel Ensemble<lb/>
plans to perform contem-<lb/>
porary and traditional<lb/>
works by James Cleveland,<lb/>
N.Y. Community Choir,<lb/>
Kings Temple Choir. Gos-<lb/>
pel Workshop, Andrae<lb/>
Crouch. Mattie Massclark<lb/>
and M ichigan State Choir.<lb/>
The Gospel Ensemble<lb/>
doesn't just perform gos-<lb/>
pel, but they represent the<lb/>
free and lively spirit of<lb/>
gospel. Ms. Johnson says<lb/>
this feeling comes from the<lb/>
love that bonds the group.<lb/>
Maybe that's why<lb/>
member Florence Goode<lb/>
says, "It (Gospel Ensem-<lb/>
ble) means being able to<lb/>
publicly express my feel-<lb/>
ings of happiness, faith and<lb/>
gratitude to the Lord for<lb/>
having blessed me with all<lb/>
the things that I need, want<lb/>
and love she said.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057155_0008"/><lb/>
Page 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 19 Octobar 1978<lb/>
ECU music majors in the Swing Kings<lb/>
treat nightclubs to the 'big band sound'<lb/>
By SUSAN CHESTON<lb/>
Staff Reporter<lb/>
The big band sound of<lb/>
Glen Miller and Tommy<lb/>
Oorsey has hit the Green-<lb/>
ville area in the form of the<lb/>
Swing Kings.<lb/>
The Swing Kings is a<lb/>
semi-pro band composed of<lb/>
ECU Music Majors. The<lb/>
13-piece band includes<lb/>
three trumpets, three<lb/>
?mbones, a quartet of<lb/>
.ives and a three-piece<lb/>
rhythm combo<lb/>
M ike Ragan, a senior in<lb/>
Music Education, is the<lb/>
Swing Kings leader and<lb/>
pianist. Before he came to<lb/>
ECU, Ragan played in the<lb/>
Kings of Swing, a Norfolk-<lb/>
based group.<lb/>
In September, 1977,<lb/>
Ragan formed the Swing<lb/>
ever since then its reputat-<lb/>
ion has kept it busy gigging<lb/>
throughout the area.<lb/>
Most Swing Kings gigs<lb/>
are in country clubs in<lb/>
nearby towns such as Gold-<lb/>
Music<lb/>
Kings, Greenville based<lb/>
but independent of the<lb/>
university The band kicked<lb/>
off its career with an ECU<lb/>
Halloween concert, and<lb/>
sboro and<lb/>
Kings are<lb/>
performers<lb/>
club in<lb/>
Tarboro. The<lb/>
also favorite<lb/>
at a country<lb/>
Robersonville.<lb/>
where they have three<lb/>
engagements already sche-<lb/>
duled for this year<lb/>
A favorite Swing Kings<lb/>
story dates back to the first<lb/>
Robersonville 9Q An old-<lb/>
er man and his wife were so<lb/>
excited about dancing toge-<lb/>
ther again to the old swing<lb/>
music that they bought<lb/>
wine for all the band<lb/>
members and kept them<lb/>
supplied throuhout the<lb/>
evening.<lb/>
That enthusiasm is typ-<lb/>
ical of the reactions Swing<lb/>
Kings usually draw when<lb/>
they play. "People tell their<lb/>
friends nothing but good<lb/>
stuff about us according<lb/>
to Swing Kings trumpeter<lb/>
Dave Hill.<lb/>
That is also one of the<lb/>
reasons why, despite the<lb/>
band's low publicity pro-<lb/>
file, it is heavily booked for<lb/>
the next several months.<lb/>
"We've discussed<lb/>
going on the road, going<lb/>
completely professional<lb/>
said Hill. 'People really<lb/>
like us, and there's a real<lb/>
demand for the old nostal-<lb/>
gic music these days<lb/>
Despite the revived<lb/>
popularity of swing music.<lb/>
Hill reports that there are<lb/>
not many groups like Swing<lb/>
Kmgsaround. Maybe three<lb/>
or four on the east coast<lb/>
Most clubs cannot affort<lb/>
to pay for a large band.<lb/>
Considering that draw-<lb/>
back, the Swing K mgs have<lb/>
done quite well financially.<lb/>
having earned enough<lb/>
money to pay for a band<lb/>
PA system, stand lights<lb/>
and music books holding<lb/>
about 120 charts each<lb/>
Band members are also<lb/>
paid individually<lb/>
At country club gigs,<lb/>
the Swing Kings play as a<lb/>
formal dance band, comp-<lb/>
lete with tuxes and Ragan<lb/>
serving as emcee<lb/>
Up to half of the music<lb/>
is by Glen Miller, but the<lb/>
bandalso plays the music<lb/>
Tommy Dorsey, Duke El-<lb/>
lington, Count Basie and<lb/>
Benny Goodman<lb/>
"Much of the music is<lb/>
difficult to find, or even out<lb/>
of print Ragan said. "We<lb/>
were lucky to be able to get<lb/>
ahold of it<lb/>
The Swing Kincjs are<lb/>
not limited to playing clubs.<lb/>
A recent gig at the harvest<lb/>
days festival m Freemont<lb/>
was well received, and after<lb/>
playing for the Kappa Sig<lb/>
Homecoming Dance last<lb/>
year, the Swing K mgs have<lb/>
been booked for this year as<lb/>
well.<lb/>
The band has made a<lb/>
demo tape and is planning<lb/>
to make a studio tape, with<lb/>
hopes of promoting their<lb/>
unique style and sound<lb/>
Their next ECU appear-<lb/>
ance will be sometime in<lb/>
November, when the Swing<lb/>
Kings will treat ECU stud-<lb/>
ents to a free concert Until<lb/>
then, the Swing Kings will<lb/>
keep busy resorting to<lb/>
eastern North Carolina<lb/>
SIX ECU SCHOOL of Music performers<lb/>
will present a concert of chamber music<lb/>
Wednesday. Oct 25. at 8 15 pm in A J<lb/>
Fletcher Music Center Recital Hall The<lb/>
program will include Mozart s Sinfoma<lb/>
Concertante in E-Flat. K 297b and<lb/>
Hindemith s Quartet for Wind Instru-<lb/>
ments Lett to right are George Knight<lb/>
clarinet. Fred McLean bassocr<lb/>
Nagode piano vicotna lannotta<lb/>
David Hawkins oboe, and James Pa<lb/>
French horn The concert is<lb/>
to the public<lb/>
? <lb/>
Faculty and students attend<lb/>
Sigma Alpha Iota State Day<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Seven faculty and student musicians<lb/>
from ECU appeared on the program at<lb/>
the recent annual Sigma Alpha lota State<lb/>
Day Program in Chapel Hill<lb/>
They were Drs Ruth Boxberger and<lb/>
Rosalie Haritun of the ECU School of<lb/>
Music faculty, alumni SAI members, and<lb/>
the following student members of ECU s<lb/>
Beta Psi chapter:<lb/>
Anita Bowman of Washington. DC<lb/>
Elizabeth Braxton of Winterville. Susan<lb/>
Beck of Wilmington. Lisa Sass of<lb/>
Knoxville. Tenn anc Andrea Smith of<lb/>
Hartford Conn<lb/>
MAC<lb/>
Dr Boxberger spoke<lb/>
opportunities in the field<lb/>
therapy, and Dr H <lb/>
graduate procars a-<lb/>
ized training<lb/>
The ECU i Alpha<lb/>
received the 1977-78 State <lb/>
Award Ms B wn ir an orga<lb/>
Ms Braxton a pianist a<lb/>
special SAI Musicaie. and ECl<lb/>
Beck. Sass ar ; Sm th too<lb/>
forma seremof .<lb/>
Aisc represented al the eveni <lb/>
campus chapters '? arr .<lb/>
University and Meredith Cc ege<lb/>
for the gathering .as the<lb/>
chapter of UNC-O  ? -<lb/>
Outlet;<lb/>
mw <lb/>
WEAVING<lb/>
CORMER OF Cr &amp; CLARK STREETS<lb/>
IN HATTERAS HAMMOCK BUILDING<lb/>
WrRE HARD TO PiNO BUT WELL WRTM r<lb/>
r<lb/>
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Thursday<lb/>
Night is<lb/>
Kids'<lb/>
Night<lb/>
We thought it was time kids had their<lb/>
special night. And that's why we've made<lb/>
Thursday night Kids' Night.<lb/>
We'll give each child 112 or under) a free<lb/>
burger and fries for every meal an adult<lb/>
buys.<lb/>
Jack the Clown will be there to entertain.<lb/>
And he'll have a Treasure Chest "grab<lb/>
bag" so the kids get a little surprise, too.<lb/>
Thursday Night. Kids' Night at Jack's.<lb/>
What could be nicer than good food and<lb/>
good fun?<lb/>
TICE Meadowbrook<lb/>
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Shows 7.30 and 9:15<lb/>
? Next Week ?<lb/>
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with purchase of Beverage<lb/>
Expires Not. 30.<lb/>
RATED XXXXX<lb/>
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Shows 7:30and 9:15<lb/>
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with luscious<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057155_0009"/><lb/>
19 October 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
Consistent Summer motivates Pirates<lb/>
Tommy Summer<lb/>
R LINEBACKER from Cherryville. N C hunts<lb/>
in the Pirates earlier contest against<lb/>
ouisiana. Summer is the team's third<lb/>
with 55 hits this season including 35 solo<lb/>
r John H Grogan<lb/>
ByCHARLESCHANDLER<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
This man has no fancy nicknames. He can tell no<lb/>
glorious stories of how he has transformed himself from a<lb/>
walk-on into a star. In fact, he has been overshadowed by<lb/>
others at his position throughout his career Yet ECU star<lb/>
linebacker Tommy Summer has always been consistent<lb/>
because he always gives 100.<lb/>
"Tommy has been a good player since he's been here<lb/>
says ECU head coach Pat Dye. "He is everthing you could<lb/>
want in a football player He's a hard worker, a good<lb/>
student, and more than anything else, a leader. And he<lb/>
always gives us 100 on and off the field<lb/>
Summer, a 6'1 215 pound senior from Cherryville.<lb/>
N.C began his career as a Pirate on a sour note. He missed<lb/>
his entire first year due to a bout with hepatitis. Yet.<lb/>
through hard work. Summer overcame the illness and has<lb/>
become one in a line of many excellent Pirate linebackers.<lb/>
A high school Ail-American his senior year, Summer<lb/>
was recruited by all of the ACC and Southern Conference<lb/>
schools. Yet upon seeing ECU. he knew where he would<lb/>
fulfill his life-long dream of being a college football player.<lb/>
"When I visited East Carolina, all the people here were<lb/>
very nice to me. I knew then that this was my kind of<lb/>
place<lb/>
Always bubbling with motivation. Summer credits his<lb/>
family and his high school coach with giving him the<lb/>
type of backing that has led to his enthusiastic approach to<lb/>
football. It all goes back to my family said Summer.<lb/>
"My parents have always done all they could for me. So<lb/>
now I'm trying to do something for them<lb/>
A pep talk from his coach during his sophomore year<lb/>
back in high school has helped motivate the Pirate<lb/>
linebacker. " My coach was very dedicated. He told me some<lb/>
real nice compliments once that I'll never forget. It made<lb/>
me feel good that someone who knew that much about<lb/>
football would praise me. It gave me the confidence that I<lb/>
needed, and I haven't ever lost it<lb/>
After seven games this season, Summer was the Pirates<lb/>
thnd leading tackier, with 30 unassisted tackles and 25<lb/>
assists. He has also intercepted a pass, had two sacks,<lb/>
caused two fumbles, and has generally given opposing<lb/>
backs alot to worry about.<lb/>
A Dallas Cowboys scout at the Pirates' game with<lb/>
Southern Miss.ast Saturday praised the Cherryville native.<lb/>
That number 64 is really hustling out there. He's quite a<lb/>
football player. By the way, what's his name?"<lb/>
This particular scout wasn't aware of Summer's name<lb/>
because he came to watch, in particular, only two Pirates.<lb/>
defensive end Zack Valentine and Summer's cohort at<lb/>
linebacker, Mike Brewington.<lb/>
Such has been the case throughout Summer's career at<lb/>
ECU For three years, he played under the shadow of Pirate<lb/>
Ail-American linebacker Harold Randolph. "It was quite an<lb/>
experience playing under a guy like Harold said Summer.<lb/>
Playing under someone that good made me work harder,<lb/>
yet. at times, it was depressing knowing I couldn't play all<lb/>
the time "<lb/>
Bu when Summer has played, he has played well. The<lb/>
first time he was called upon to start came in his sophomore<lb/>
year against UNC-Chapel Hill Summer says that this game<lb/>
provided him with his most rewarding moment in his ECU<lb/>
career "We were leading 10-9, said Summer Carolina<lb/>
had a first and goal on the three yard line and we held them<lb/>
I was in on all three tackles. Even though we lost the game<lb/>
that series meant a lot to me<lb/>
Summer says it means alot to him each time he makes a<lb/>
tackle, or sacks a quarterback. "When I make a big piay.<lb/>
noted Summer, "it'sthe greatest feeling m the world I can<lb/>
compare it only tomakmg 100 on a test When I make a big<lb/>
play. I feel like I have done the very best that I can<lb/>
Summer, forever shunning praise, credits his tea"<lb/>
mates with much of his success "You have to give credit to<lb/>
our defensive line said Summer If they didn't do thei'<lb/>
job, it would be impossible for a linebacker to do his The<lb/>
secondary helps out alot too<lb/>
Summer says that he feels he must give one hunc<lb/>
per cent on each and every play. "I know that I have a job t<lb/>
do explained Summer. "I am responsible for 1 11 of our<lb/>
defense I feel that if I don't do my job. then everyone v<lb/>
be hurt by it. The machine must work as a whoie<lb/>
And according to Dye, Summer does his part to<lb/>
the ECU machine go. "Tommy does more for us thai<lb/>
anyone knows. He doesn't make any mistakes that will<lb/>
you. He's just so consistent and intelligent<lb/>
What Tommy lacks in ability, he makes up with desire<lb/>
and hustle. You can always count on him to do his job<lb/>
short. Tommy Summer is a rea winner<lb/>
Simply Sports<lb/>
Sam Rogers<lb/>
Tait to get the axe ?<lb/>
DESPREAD SPECULATION around the Richmond<lb/>
partment has it Spider head coach Jim Tait will<lb/>
be released at the end of the season. Tait has<lb/>
a 19-31 record during his first four years at<lb/>
rd Even though the Spiders captured the Southern<lb/>
e Championship in 1975. which was their last<lb/>
"ference. Richmond has never finished better<lb/>
500 under Tait The Spiders were 5-5 in 75. 5-6 in'76<lb/>
ed to 3-8 last year Last week's 23-6 loss to VMI<lb/>
asf- he Soiders of their third straight losing season.<lb/>
? overall but particularly frustrating for the<lb/>
- must be their five losses which have come by a<lb/>
tou ' ess<lb/>
?OUT THIS TIME every season is when school<lb/>
and alumni begin circulating rumors about<lb/>
ng changes One of the first reports concerning a<lb/>
coaching shakeup has come from West Virginia<lb/>
?. nere head coach Frank Cignetti appears under<lb/>
The Mountaineers have now lost five straight<lb/>
-ar and Cignetti's first two teams finished with<lb/>
? ecords. West Virginia president Gene Budig<lb/>
er tn.sweek he is disappointed" and "confused"<lb/>
ab rrent state of the football program Athletic<lb/>
irector Leiand Byrd also admitted he is concerned about<lb/>
:he M -eers football team. "I am hearing the same<lb/>
?erybody else is hearing The team hasn't been<lb/>
It is most discouraging. Byrd is apparently<lb/>
esitant to axe any member of his athletic staff. He<lb/>
ketball coach Joedy Gardner earlier in the year for<lb/>
: described as a negative" attitude<lb/>
SOUTHERN MISSISSIPPI was East Carolina's last<lb/>
Darner to what may have been a 9-2 season for the Pirates<lb/>
and a possible bowl bid But after the close 17-16 loss, it<lb/>
appears the Bucs will once again be sitting at home during<lb/>
? a season Although the Pirates will probably win<lb/>
j final four games and finish with an 8-3 record, the lack<lb/>
- name' schools on the current schedule will hurt ECU'S<lb/>
sibilities. We're five pomtsaway from being a6-i<lb/>
tean Pat Dye said at his press conference Wednesday.<lb/>
Bu' Ahen you set your goals high, there's no way you can<lb/>
help but be disappointed with the tough losses we've had<lb/>
this year<lb/>
GERALD HALL is certainly one of the top free safety's<lb/>
the country this year, but this week's opponent<lb/>
Richmond has another free safety standout in Jeff Nixon,<lb/>
a 6-4, 195 pound senior has pro scouts drooling. He<lb/>
made third team All-America in 1976 and was honorable<lb/>
me ast season Nixon has 19 career interceptions at<lb/>
Ri n- ond and returned one this season for a touchdown.<lb/>
BASKETBALL PRACTICE began Sunday for East<lb/>
Carolina and the season opener against UNC-Asheville is<lb/>
just a httle more than a month away. After a disappointing<lb/>
9-17 record during his first year, head coach Larry Gillman<lb/>
is making absolutely no predictions about this year's team.<lb/>
A e had a lot of adverse publicity last year, but our team<lb/>
seemed to have its best stretch of the season during all the<lb/>
controversey near the end of the year " And Oliver Mack?<lb/>
Last year nobody knew about Oliver I had to go out and<lb/>
tell them about him But at least I was right about one<lb/>
thing. '<lb/>
MACK RETURNS this season as the NCAA's second<lb/>
leading scorer behind Indiana State's Larry Bird The 6-3<lb/>
guard from Queens finished last season with a 28.0 average<lb/>
and set a school scoring record with 47 points against USC-<lb/>
Aiken But Mack says this year he's more concerned with<lb/>
winning and concentrating on his defensive play. "All the<lb/>
pressure was on me last year said Mack. "Sure, I scored<lb/>
a lot of points but we didn't win. There are a lot of things I<lb/>
need to work on to become a more complete player<lb/>
INCIDENTALLY, MACK and Larry ?ird will square off<lb/>
against each other in the first round of the Hatter Classic<lb/>
Dec. 8 in' Deland, Fla. The Pirates will be matched up<lb/>
against Indiana State in the first round while Cleveland<lb/>
State and Stetson wwll also be participate in the two day<lb/>
tournament. "I haven't really thought about that matchup<lb/>
much said Mack recently. "I think my role is going to be<lb/>
a little different this year, so I really don't think it will be a<lb/>
matter of seeing how many points I can score against<lb/>
them<lb/>
ECU field hockey team<lb/>
loses twoJJNC upcoming<lb/>
Slap shot<lb/>
against an expert enced North Carolina<lb/>
team<lb/>
ECU'S SUE JONES slaps a shot pasta<lb/>
defender in a recent field hockey game<lb/>
The Pirates dropped two matches last<lb/>
weekend but hope to rebound this week<lb/>
Team attitude concerns Dye<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU girls field<lb/>
hockey team finishes its<lb/>
home scheduled ths past<lb/>
weekend with two disap-<lb/>
pointng losses. On Friday.<lb/>
the Pirates played Virginia<lb/>
Tech and were handed a<lb/>
5-0 defeat.<lb/>
Coach Laurie Arrants<lb/>
says "our problem is still<lb/>
mental. We must get more<lb/>
concentration from the girls<lb/>
if they want to win. We<lb/>
played well Friday We had<lb/>
seven shots miss the goal<lb/>
about an inch or less Our<lb/>
defense broke down for<lb/>
about fifteen minutes and<lb/>
tech scored three times<lb/>
Saturday the Pirates<lb/>
faced Davidson and lost a<lb/>
close 3-1 decision. We<lb/>
played better Friday<lb/>
against Virginia Tech, even<lb/>
though the score was more<lb/>
lopsided said Arrants.<lb/>
We let up for short periods<lb/>
of time and that's when<lb/>
we were scored upon<lb/>
Arrants praised Sue<lb/>
Jones for her offensive play<lb/>
during the weekend series<lb/>
She also heralded goalie<lb/>
Sumner and fullback<lb/>
Debbie Harrison for their<lb/>
defensive efforts Arrants<lb/>
commented that they<lb/>
'have played some good<lb/>
hockey for us all season. Its<lb/>
just a matter of putting it all<lb/>
together and winning<lb/>
"We are changing our<lb/>
defensive and defensive<lb/>
alignment. said Arrants<lb/>
We were using a 4-3-3<lb/>
set-up; now we will go with<lb/>
a 5-3-2 This will hopefully<lb/>
give us added offensive<lb/>
punch and strengthen our<lb/>
defense<lb/>
The Pirates travel to<lb/>
Chapel Hill on Firday to<lb/>
face the Tar Heels of UNC<lb/>
"UNC has good overall<lb/>
speed A"a's sa<lb/>
"They do a lot f recruM<lb/>
and get ma- .<lb/>
talented players ava at ?<lb/>
They are the nu<lb/>
Xearr n me state<lb/>
Saturday ECL<lb/>
High Poinl - ,K n<lb/>
and the Nort Car<lb/>
Club Team<lb/>
noon. We should be evei<lb/>
matched aga<lb/>
Pomt. explains Ai<lb/>
They are hav . I<lb/>
with tneir ce'ese and a<lb/>
with scoring o'enS .6 ?<lb/>
We are a<lb/>
players and they : ? -<lb/>
a tough ga"e<lb/>
games <lb/>
at ion ? the tM<lb/>
ments Ae . :e n<lb/>
ECU will com: et<lb/>
AI AW Sta<lb/>
Boone. N C Oct 27-29 <lb/>
also in the Deej S<lb/>
Tourname '?<lb/>
Greev e S C<lb/>
ECU faces Richmond in Oyster Bowl<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
EQU head coach Pat Dye had little pra.se for his<lb/>
Pirates Wednesday at his weekly press conference and<lb/>
admit? ? is very 'concerned" about the 'Bucs'<lb/>
uocomm. contest this week against Richmond in'the<lb/>
I annual Oyster Bowl Classic. <lb/>
1 esday practice was the worst I've ever seen, Dye<lb/>
said. "We were like a bunch of whipped dogs out there<lb/>
running around with our tails between their legs. We<lb/>
showed no enthusiasm and there wasn't much of anything<lb/>
that looked like a football team on the field<lb/>
Last week's narrow 17-16 loss to Southern Mississippi<lb/>
stopped a three game winning streak and all but ended the<lb/>
Pirates bowl hopes. After ECU fell behind 14-0, the Pirates<lb/>
came back to take a 16-14 halftime lead over the Golden<lb/>
Eagles. But a third quarter field goal was all Southern M iss<lb/>
needed to upend the favored Pirates.<lb/>
"There were a lot of if's and but's in that game<lb/>
explained Dye. " M ost games that are close are always that<lb/>
way. It was undoubtedly one of the most physical games<lb/>
we've played in all season.<lb/>
"We made a great comeback in the second quarter and<lb/>
really had the momentum going into the dressing room<lb/>
continued Dye.  But we failed to sustain that momentum in<lb/>
the second half. It was a very disappointing loss for us<lb/>
Dye said earlier the Southern Miss game was probbly<lb/>
the Pirates' final barrier to a 9-2 season and a possible bowl<lb/>
bid But now it will take four "perfect" games by ECU to<lb/>
even be considered by bowl scouts, according to Dye.<lb/>
" I f we can play four perfect games the rest of the season<lb/>
we might just have a chance Dye said. "If we play that<lb/>
well we deserve that chance, but if we don't then we won't<lb/>
get that opportunity<lb/>
While the Bucs defense limited Southern M ississippi to<lb/>
just one field goal in the entire second half, the offense<lb/>
lacked consistency and failed to mount any scoring threats<lb/>
in the final two quarters.<lb/>
"It's the same old story Dye said. "There's nothing<lb/>
consistent about our offense. I'm at a loss of what to do<lb/>
now. The only thing I know we can do is to keep working<lb/>
harder All of our problems aren't going to be solved with<lb/>
personnel changes<lb/>
Richmond, who like the Pirates dropped out of the<lb/>
Southern Conference to seek greener pastures, has won<lb/>
only one game this season and are now 1-6 overall. Jim<lb/>
Tait's Spiders defeated Cincinnati 51-28 for their only<lb/>
victory. However, Richmond has lost five games this season<lb/>
by a touchdown or less.<lb/>
"I'm probably a lot higher on them than any of our fans<lb/>
are noted Dye. "I know they're experiencing a<lb/>
frustrating and disappointing season, but they've bee-<lb/>
every game they've played except for last week's loss I<lb/>
VMI<lb/>
Richmond'sdefense is as good as anybody's we ve see-<lb/>
this year, and they have a great safety m Jeff Nixon<lb/>
They're technique and defensive schemes are excellent anc<lb/>
they will certainly present us with some problems<lb/>
NOTES There will be several changes m the defei<lb/>
lineup for the Pirates this week against Richmond Nate<lb/>
Wigfall will start in front of Vance Tingier we s njured<lb/>
while Noah Clark will replace D.T. Joyner at tacke De-<lb/>
fensive end John Morris is out for the remainder of the ear<lb/>
with a knee injury Dye said quarterback Aaror Stewart<lb/>
has been very impressive in practice this week Stewa" a<lb/>
freshman walkon, played at Western Guilford last yea'<lb/>
led his team to the state championship Richmond leads<lb/>
the overall series between the two schools 11-8 The<lb/>
Spiders last victory came in 1975 when Richmond deteatec<lb/>
ECU 17-14 in Ficklen Stadium. Richmond Aii-Amenca<lb/>
candidate Jeff Nixon has intercepted three passes this<lb/>
season and returned one for a touchdown Spider aiumn<lb/>
are howling for Jim Tait s job at Richmond and officials say<lb/>
his contract will not be renewed at the end of the year<lb/>
Wilmington defeats Pirates 3-1<lb/>
Soaring past a Seahawk<lb/>
AN ECU SOCCER player dribbles the ball past a<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington defender in Tuesday afternoon's contest<lb/>
against the Seahawks. Photo by John H Grogan)<lb/>
By DAVE MAREADY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Seahawks of UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington rode two early<lb/>
goals to a 3-1 soccer<lb/>
victory, Tuesday, over the<lb/>
East Carolina Pirates on<lb/>
Minges Soccer Field.<lb/>
The chilly, windswept<lb/>
day set the stage early for<lb/>
the Pirates as they began<lb/>
cold on defense. The Sea-<lb/>
hawks, however, were ex-<lb/>
tremely hot as they connec-<lb/>
ted on their first goal with<lb/>
only 1 48 gone in the first<lb/>
half. Eddie Brock was the<lb/>
unassisted, Seahawk offen-<lb/>
der. Less than one minute<lb/>
later, Brock's teammate,<lb/>
Gil Castilla, booted the<lb/>
Seahawks into a surprising<lb/>
2-0 lead with less than<lb/>
three minutes expires In<lb/>
the first half, and the half<lb/>
ended 2-0 in favor of<lb/>
UNC-W<lb/>
After a ten minute<lb/>
intermission, the second<lb/>
half of the game began.<lb/>
The Pirates generated sev-<lb/>
eral offensive drives, and<lb/>
they executed well on def-<lb/>
ense in the opening minu-<lb/>
tes, yet the Seahawks pro-<lb/>
duced another goal with<lb/>
5:51 gone in the second half<lb/>
on Gil Castilla's second<lb/>
unassisted goal of the day.<lb/>
Jeff Karpovich scored<lb/>
the Pirates first and only<lb/>
goal of the day on an assist<lb/>
by teammate. Brad<lb/>
W inched with ten minutes<lb/>
to play in the match.<lb/>
Karpovich'sgoal spark-<lb/>
ed a rally by the Pirates,<lb/>
nevertheless, several "con-<lb/>
troversial" calls by the<lb/>
referees coupled with ex-<lb/>
cellent defensive manuve-<lb/>
rments by the Seahawks<lb/>
supressed the unpnsiag and<lb/>
the Seahawks went on to<lb/>
win the game 3-1.<lb/>
Although Brad Smith,<lb/>
ECU head coach, was dis-<lb/>
appointed with his team's<lb/>
overall performance, tie<lb/>
was even more displeased<lb/>
with the "external forces<lb/>
(referees)<lb/>
The loss dropped the<lb/>
Pirates to 3-7-1. while the<lb/>
Seahawks aovanced their<lb/>
record to 9-3 on the season<lb/>
The Pirate squad res-<lb/>
umes soccer action next<lb/>
Mon Oct 23. at M.C.<lb/>
State. Garnetime is sche-<lb/>
duled for 3:30 p m<lb/>
J<lb/>
?W <lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057155_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 19 October 1978<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD's Fearless Forecast<lb/>
ECU AT RICHMOND<lb/>
N.C. STATE AT UNC<lb/>
WAKE FOREST AT MARYLAND<lb/>
DUKE AT CLEMSON<lb/>
VIRGINIA TECH AT VIRGINIA<lb/>
ARKANSAS AT TEXAS<lb/>
NEBRASKA AT CLORADO<lb/>
OKLAHOMA AT IOWA STATE<lb/>
LSU AT KENTUCKY<lb/>
M ISSISSIPPI AT SOUTH CAROLINA<lb/>
BAYLOR AT TEXASA&amp;M<lb/>
UCLA AT CALIFORNIA<lb/>
CHA RLES CHA NDLER<lb/>
(59-22-1)<lb/>
ECU 27-7<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Virginia<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
LSU<lb/>
South Carolina<lb/>
Texas A&amp;M<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
TERRY HERNDON<lb/>
(56-25-1)<lb/>
ECU 20-8<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Virginia Tech<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
LSU<lb/>
South Carolina<lb/>
Texas A&amp;M<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
SAM ROGERS<lb/>
(54-27-1)<lb/>
ECU 34-7<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Virginia Tech<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
LSU<lb/>
Mississippi<lb/>
Texas A&amp;M<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
DAVID MAREADY<lb/>
(26-10)<lb/>
ECU 18-6<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Virginia<lb/>
Texas<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Kentucky<lb/>
South Carolina<lb/>
Texas A&amp;M<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
JIM WOODS<lb/>
"Voice of the Pirates'<lb/>
ECU 24-10<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Virginia Tech<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
LSU<lb/>
South Carolina<lb/>
Texas A&amp;M<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
Eagles, Giants in playoffs ?<lb/>
ByCHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Who would be in the<lb/>
National Football League<lb/>
playoffs if the season ended<lb/>
today7 This is a question<lb/>
that NFL Commisioner Pete<lb/>
Rozelle must answer every<lb/>
week of the regular season.<lb/>
Maybe it's not a bad<lb/>
question.<lb/>
If the season did end<lb/>
today, the AFC represen-<lb/>
tatives would be Miami,<lb/>
New England, Pittsburgh,<lb/>
Oakland, and Denver.<lb/>
There would be five teams<lb/>
due to a new rule giving<lb/>
each conference two wild<lb/>
card teams instead of one.<lb/>
The AFC fivesome should<lb/>
surprise no one, as these<lb/>
teams were considered the<lb/>
top teams in their con-<lb/>
ference before the season<lb/>
began anyway.<lb/>
But. in the NFC, there<lb/>
lies a completely different<lb/>
story. The playoff teams<lb/>
there would be Dallas,<lb/>
Washington, Los Angeles,<lb/>
Green Bay. and either<lb/>
?Philadelphia ot the New<lb/>
York Giants Both the Gi-<lb/>
ants and the Eagles have<lb/>
4-4 records.<lb/>
No one. even in their<lb/>
wildest dreams would have<lb/>
??seen before the season.<lb/>
:Kat Green Bay would be<lb/>
5-1 now. or that the Eagles<lb/>
and Giants would be in the<lb/>
race at this time. More<lb/>
likely was the possibility<lb/>
that the Minnesota Vikings<lb/>
and Chicago Bears would<lb/>
be in good position at this<lb/>
point. But such is not the<lb/>
case Both are saddled with<lb/>
3-4 records.<lb/>
But. fans, have no fear.<lb/>
The playoffs do NOT start<lb/>
today In fact, they are ten<lb/>
weeks away. So much for<lb/>
the nonsense, here's a look<lb/>
at this week s games:<lb/>
CHICAG021<lb/>
TAMPA BAY 17<lb/>
The Bears have lost four<lb/>
in a row. Head Coach Neill<lb/>
Armstrong feels that his<lb/>
club is much better than<lb/>
that, and that they must<lb/>
win this one. Walter Payton<lb/>
and company make their<lb/>
coach happy this week.<lb/>
DALLAS 24<lb/>
PHILADELPHIA 10<lb/>
The Eagles upset the<lb/>
Redskins last week. The<lb/>
World Champion Cowboys<lb/>
wont let them make it two<lb/>
in a row.<lb/>
CLEVELAND 24<lb/>
KANSASCITY 13<lb/>
The Browns have a very<lb/>
respectable squad. Their<lb/>
only real loss came last<lb/>
week at the hands of the<lb/>
unbeaten Pittsburgh Steel-<lb/>
ers. Sam Rutigliano' club<lb/>
has lost tow games that<lb/>
they could have just as<lb/>
easily won. This game<lb/>
should be "easily won<lb/>
DENVER 16<lb/>
BALTIMORE 14<lb/>
The Broncos are in for a<lb/>
tough one this week. Their<lb/>
top quarterback, Norris<lb/>
Weese. was injured in last<lb/>
week's victory over Chi-<lb/>
cago. The Baltimore de-<lb/>
fensive line could make it<lb/>
difficult for aging Bronco<lb/>
quarterback Craig Morton<lb/>
to operate. Yet the Colt<lb/>
offense may again be with-<lb/>
out the services of Bert<lb/>
Jones. Denver gets the<lb/>
edge.<lb/>
MINNESOTA 20<lb/>
GREENBAY 17<lb/>
This game represents<lb/>
the season for the Vikings.<lb/>
A loss would drop them<lb/>
four games behind the<lb/>
surprising young Packers.<lb/>
The hunch is that Bud<lb/>
Grant's club will pull out a<lb/>
close one.<lb/>
LOSANGELES27<lb/>
NEW ORLEANS 14<lb/>
The Saints go marhcing<lb/>
into the Los Angeles Col-<lb/>
iseum this week. And they<lb/>
soulg march out just like<lb/>
they marched in, with only<lb/>
two vicotries.<lb/>
PITTSBURGH 17<lb/>
HOUSTON 13<lb/>
Houston is good, but so<lb/>
far this year the Steelers<lb/>
look like the best in the<lb/>
NFL.<lb/>
WASHINGTON21<lb/>
NEW YORK GIANTS 17<lb/>
The Redskins must<lb/>
bounce back from their loss<lb/>
to Philadelphia against a<lb/>
much improved Giant club.<lb/>
Yet Jack Pardee's club<lb/>
should be up to it.<lb/>
SAN DIEGO 20<lb/>
DETROIT 10<lb/>
The Chargers are a very<lb/>
talented team, but have<lb/>
struggled in '78. The Lions<lb/>
lack talent and are strug-<lb/>
gling. The Chargers go to<lb/>
3-5.<lb/>
OA K LA ND 28<lb/>
SEA TTLE16<lb/>
The Raiders finally got<lb/>
things in order last week.<lb/>
Meanwhile, the young Sea-<lb/>
hawks were routed by<lb/>
Green Pay. Seattle takes it<lb/>
on the cheek again.<lb/>
ATLANTA 14<lb/>
SA N FRA NCISCO 13<lb/>
The Falcons and 49ers<lb/>
are both disappointments<lb/>
this year. Neither team has<lb/>
displayed much offense.<lb/>
Look for the Falcons to pull<lb/>
out a win in a game fea-<lb/>
turing mediocre clubs.<lb/>
CINCINNATI 21<lb/>
BUFFALO 20<lb/>
The Bengals should get<lb/>
their first win of the season<lb/>
here. Ex-UNC athletic dir-<lb/>
ector and new Bengal coach<lb/>
Homer Rice sure hopes so.<lb/>
Otherwise, he may be<lb/>
looking for work in Chapel<lb/>
Hill soon.<lb/>
NEW YORK JETS27<lb/>
ST. LOUIS21<lb/>
The CArds may have<lb/>
found themselves in the<lb/>
last half of last week's ?<lb/>
game with Dallas. Even<lb/>
though they lost, Bud Wil-<lb/>
kinson's club played well.<lb/>
But the Jets are a very good<lb/>
young team. Quarterback<lb/>
Matt Robinson has filled in<lb/>
very well for injured Rich-<lb/>
ard Todd. Sorry Bud, the<lb/>
Cards go to 0-8.<lb/>
MIAMI 24<lb/>
NEW ENGLANS21<lb/>
With Bob Griese back,<lb/>
the Dolphins may be the<lb/>
best team in the AFC. This<lb/>
game will have a lot to say<lb/>
about that.<lb/>
That incomparable Jackson swing<lb/>
NEW YORK YANKEE star outfielder-<lb/>
designated hitter Reggie Jackson dis-<lb/>
plays the swing that helped carry his<lb/>
team to possibly the most remarkable<lb/>
comeback in the history of baseball The<lb/>
Yanks overcame a 14 game Boston Red<lb/>
Sox lead to make the A.L. playoffs<lb/>
Eventually the Yanks won their second<lb/>
consecutive world championship, defeat'<lb/>
mg the Los A ngeles Dodgers in the Worli<lb/>
Series.<lb/>
Broadcaster<lb/>
is guest<lb/>
forecaster<lb/>
By TERRY HERNDON<lb/>
Assistant Advertising<lb/>
Manager<lb/>
This week's guest<lb/>
picker in FOUNTAIN.<lb/>
HEAD'S Fearless Forecast<lb/>
Jim Woods, is hardly an<lb/>
unfamiliar figure to East<lb/>
Carolina sports fans. He is<lb/>
in his fifth year as the<lb/>
play-by-play announcer for<lb/>
the Pirate Sports Network<lb/>
and has been dubbed the<lb/>
voice of the Pirates by the<lb/>
local media. Jim is cur-<lb/>
rently is his 28th year -<lb/>
broadcasting and serves as<lb/>
Sports Director at WNCT<lb/>
TV, Greenville He is ?<lb/>
host of "The Pat Dye<lb/>
Show<lb/>
As the season prog-ess-<lb/>
es, picking the winners<lb/>
becomes an exoeec<lb/>
difficult task Impo'<lb/>
conference games usua .<lb/>
occur near the end c<lb/>
season, and lonQ-Standing<lb/>
rivalries often supc m<lb/>
won-lost records in de'e<lb/>
mining the outcome<lb/>
many games<lb/>
Texas-Arkansas, Neb<lb/>
aska-Oklahoma, Midi ()a<lb/>
Ohio State. USC-UC ?<lb/>
and Alabama-Auburn afe<lb/>
prime examples of s<lb/>
'ivalries.<lb/>
This week's UNC<lb/>
State game is anothe-<lb/>
example of a rival'y that<lb/>
contains emotions whic<lb/>
far de?pei :ndhold more<lb/>
significance than a<lb/>
won-lost record State as a<lb/>
better record than UNC<lb/>
and has played bette-<lb/>
football than the Tar Hee $<lb/>
this year, but this goes ol<lb/>
the window when these <lb/>
teams clash Last year the<lb/>
Tar Heels routed a favored<lb/>
Wolfpack team, and tn 76<lb/>
the Wolfpack soundiy<lb/>
defeated a favored UNC<lb/>
team<lb/>
In a Southwest Con-<lb/>
ference matchup, third<lb/>
ranked Arkansas travels to<lb/>
the Cotton Bowl to face<lb/>
eighth ranked Texas<lb/>
Yanks end storybook season with Series win<lb/>
By CHA RLES CHA NDLER<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
The 1978 version of the<lb/>
New York Yankees can be<lb/>
described with only one<lb/>
word: remarkable. The '78<lb/>
Yanks have done the<lb/>
impossible so many times<lb/>
this year that their statisti-<lb/>
cians have lost count.<lb/>
All these Yankees have<lb/>
done is the impossible. The<lb/>
Yanks did things that have<lb/>
never been done before.<lb/>
First, they made up a 14<lb/>
game deficit in two months.<lb/>
In the middle of July, the<lb/>
Yanks were just that many<lb/>
games behind the seem-<lb/>
ingly unbeatable Boston<lb/>
Red Sox. But, with the help<lb/>
of new manager Bob<lb/>
Lemon and a timely come-<lb/>
back performance by star<lb/>
pitcher Catfish Hunter, the<lb/>
Yanks caught and passed<lb/>
the Sox by the end of<lb/>
September. The Yanks lead<lb/>
went to as much as 3 12<lb/>
games. A strong finish by<lb/>
Boston forced a season<lb/>
ending playoff game to<lb/>
decide the American<lb/>
League East Division<lb/>
championship.<lb/>
Here again, the Yanks<lb/>
came through in the clutch,<lb/>
winning a 5-4 thriller<lb/>
Thursday Family Night<lb/>
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behind Ron Guidry's pitch-<lb/>
ing and Bucky Dent's<lb/>
hitting.<lb/>
So, even before the<lb/>
playoffs began, the Yank-<lb/>
ees had made history. They<lb/>
were the first team to ever<lb/>
come from 14 games back<lb/>
to win their division. They<lb/>
played in, and won, the<lb/>
first one game playoff in<lb/>
more than 30 years of<lb/>
baseball.<lb/>
The Yanks then dis-<lb/>
posed of the Kansas City<lb/>
Royals in four games in the<lb/>
A.L. Championships, mark-<lb/>
ing the third straight year<lb/>
that New York has dumped<lb/>
Whitey Herzog and com-<lb/>
pany in the playoffs.<lb/>
Then it was on to the<lb/>
World Series and a rematcn<lb/>
of fast year's confrontation<lb/>
with the Los Angeles<lb/>
Dodgers Here, the Yank-<lb/>
ees did the impossible<lb/>
again.<lb/>
With the death of<lb/>
former Dodger coach Jim<lb/>
Gilliam fresh on their<lb/>
minds. L.A. seemed deter-<lb/>
mined to win this series for<lb/>
"old number 19 They<lb/>
appeared ready to do so<lb/>
also, taking the first two<lb/>
games of the series in<lb/>
Dodger Stadium.<lb/>
But Graig Nettles and<lb/>
the Yankees would have<lb/>
something to say about<lb/>
that. Nettles gave Guidry<lb/>
some great infield support<lb/>
in Game 3 as the Yankees<lb/>
trimmed the Dodgers lead<lb/>
in games to 2-1.<lb/>
Nettles' fielding in<lb/>
Game 3. and the entire<lb/>
series, was reminiscent of<lb/>
the type of fielding series<lb/>
that Baltimore's Brooks<lb/>
Robinson had in 1970.<lb/>
A controversial play,<lb/>
involving none other than<lb/>
the incomparable Reggie<lb/>
Jackson, aided the Yankees<lb/>
in their victory in Game 4.<lb/>
Game 5 set the stage for<lb/>
what was to come in the<lb/>
following matchup. The<lb/>
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Yankees did the impossible<lb/>
again in Game 5, as they<lb/>
set a Series record of 16<lb/>
singles in one game, in<lb/>
route to a big 12-2 win.<lb/>
Game 6 was supposed<lb/>
to be the game in which the<lb/>
Dodgers paid the Yankees<lb/>
back for the humiliation<lb/>
their Dodger Blue experi-<lb/>
enced in Game 5. But this<lb/>
was not to be. Catfish<lb/>
Hunter pitched marvelous-<lb/>
ly. Reggie Jackson got his<lb/>
usual last game home run,<lb/>
and Brian Doyle and Bucky<lb/>
Dent go three hits a piece<lb/>
as the Yanks won the game<lb/>
and the series.<lb/>
Therefore, the Yanks<lb/>
did the impossible again.<lb/>
They became the first team<lb/>
in the 75 year history of the<lb/>
World Series to lose the<lb/>
first two games of the<lb/>
October affair, and then<lb/>
win the next four consecu-<lb/>
tively.<lb/>
Perhaps Reggie Jacksor<lb/>
put it best. 'All year long<lb/>
we've been underdogs We<lb/>
go way behind and no one<lb/>
thought we could catch<lb/>
Boston. We came here and<lb/>
were underdogs Then we<lb/>
got behind two games, and<lb/>
were real underdogs. Well,<lb/>
we were the defending<lb/>
champs and it hurt our<lb/>
pride to be called under-<lb/>
dogs So we showed ther<lb/>
all what we could do We<lb/>
are truly champions<lb/>
As always, nobody can<lb/>
say it better than Reggie<lb/>
The Yanks did indeed put<lb/>
on a clinic of how true<lb/>
champions should act. For<lb/>
these Yankees did not know<lb/>
what the word "quit<lb/>
meant. The 78 New York<lb/>
Yankees were truly remar-<lb/>
kable<lb/>
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