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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057157_0001"/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
so<lb/>
Vol. No. 55 NoW<lb/>
26 October 1978<lb/>
Mace completed for<lb/>
Brewer installation<lb/>
dv WILLIAM A. SHIRES<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
For the first time in its<lb/>
71 year history ECU has a<lb/>
mace.<lb/>
Weighing 12 pounds,<lb/>
the mace is 43 inches in<lb/>
length with a shaft of<lb/>
sterling silver crowned with<lb/>
a symbolic head holding an<lb/>
unusual purple crystal of<lb/>
flounte in a golden cage.<lb/>
The silver shaft is of<lb/>
hammered texture and div-<lb/>
ided by a pierced band. A<lb/>
similar design is used at<lb/>
both ends and at the head<lb/>
the large crystal is enclosed<lb/>
by phalanges and capped<lb/>
with a circular band of gold<lb/>
in a touch of contemporary<lb/>
symbolism<lb/>
Designed and crafted by<lb/>
John Satterfield of the ECU<lb/>
School of Art faculty, the<lb/>
mace will be ceremoniously<lb/>
displayed for the first time<lb/>
Oct 28 at the formal<lb/>
installation of chancellor<lb/>
Thomas B Brewer.<lb/>
It will be borne by a<lb/>
costumed ceremonial bear-<lb/>
er at the head of the<lb/>
academic procession.<lb/>
The mace itself is a<lb/>
traditional symbol of high<lb/>
office and authority.<lb/>
In earlier times, the<lb/>
mace was used by medieval<lb/>
knights as a close combat<lb/>
weapon. With a flanged or<lb/>
spiked battlehead which<lb/>
could ripthough chain mail<lb/>
and plate armor, it was<lb/>
considered superior to the<lb/>
sword and spear in hand to<lb/>
hand fighting.<lb/>
During the late Middle<lb/>
Ages, royalty and city and<lb/>
borough officials adopted<lb/>
the mace as an emblem of<lb/>
office, designing it with<lb/>
emphasis upon ornate dec-<lb/>
oration and embellishment<lb/>
of the shaft. A knob or<lb/>
jeweled orb was used in-<lb/>
stead of a battlehead.<lb/>
Today, the mace is a<lb/>
ceremonial symbol for such<lb/>
bodies as the British House<lb/>
of Commons, the U.S.<lb/>
House of Representatives,<lb/>
and by a number of cities<lb/>
and by many colleges and<lb/>
universities.<lb/>
Th idea for an ECU<lb/>
mace was raised during<lb/>
planning for the Installation<lb/>
of the Chancellor following<lb/>
Dr. Brewer's election early<lb/>
this year. Satterfield, an<lb/>
artisan and goldsmith, was<lb/>
commissioned to design<lb/>
and fabricate it.<lb/>
Financing of the mater-<lb/>
ials and workmanship was<lb/>
pledged by members of the<lb/>
board of trustees and form-<lb/>
er trustees at the bequest of<lb/>
Dr. John D. Bridgers Jr. of<lb/>
High Point, a present<lb/>
trustee. It will be known as<lb/>
the Trustees Mace.<lb/>
Satterfield spent weeks<lb/>
researching the history and<lb/>
symbolism of such a peice,<lb/>
and in design and fabrica-<lb/>
tion of the mace. In addi-<lb/>
tion, he conducted a long<lb/>
search for an appropriate<lb/>
crystal.<lb/>
Finally, the baseball-<lb/>
sized flourite crystal was<lb/>
found in a rock and gem<lb/>
shop at Spruce Pine, N.C.<lb/>
Satterfield felt immediately<lb/>
that it was the right stone<lb/>
and acquired it for the focal<lb/>
point of the mace. The<lb/>
crystal emits a soft floure-<lb/>
scent glow.<lb/>
The finished product,<lb/>
Satterfield says, was des-<lb/>
igned carefully to maintain<lb/>
the visual integrity of a<lb/>
traditional mace and at the<lb/>
same time create a contem-<lb/>
porary symbol unique to<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
For example, he says<lb/>
"the phalanges are symbo-<lb/>
lic of a group of individuals<lb/>
- faculty, administrators<lb/>
and trustees - united in<lb/>
achieving the university's<lb/>
goal of constructive prog-<lb/>
ress<lb/>
The purple of the crystal<lb/>
and the gold of the bands<lb/>
that hold it are the ECU<lb/>
colors.<lb/>
A native of Clearwater,<lb/>
Fla Satterfield joined the<lb/>
ECU art faculty in 1967. His<lb/>
work has been exhibited at<lb/>
art and jewelery shows<lb/>
throughouf the United<lb/>
States and he has had a<lb/>
chalice purchased by the<lb/>
Smithsonian Institution.<lb/>
Most recently he was<lb/>
among 41 American gold-<lb/>
smiths selected to show<lb/>
works in the Society of<lb/>
North American<lb/>
Goldsmith's European Ex-<lb/>
hibition which opens next<lb/>
year in Pforzheim,<lb/>
Germany.<lb/>
JOHN SATTERFIELD, ECU Art faculty, and his creation,<lb/>
the Trustees mace which will be used in the formal<lb/>
installation of the Chancellor Oct 28 Photo by George<lb/>
Threewits<lb/>
McGinnis renovations<lb/>
scheduled for early 1979<lb/>
Cartwright to notarize<lb/>
ballots for studentsclubs<lb/>
By JULIE EVERETTE<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Students may get their<lb/>
absentee ballots notarized<lb/>
on campus according to<lb/>
David Cartwright, SGA<lb/>
vice-president and a notary<lb/>
public.<lb/>
Cartwright said stu-<lb/>
dents who wish to get their<lb/>
ballots notarized must not<lb/>
mark their ballots and must<lb/>
have some identification,<lb/>
preferably a driver's li-<lb/>
cense, although a student<lb/>
ID card is acceptable.<lb/>
Cartwright said this is<lb/>
the first year this service<lb/>
has been offered on cam-<lb/>
pus, and it is free of charge<lb/>
to students.<lb/>
Cartwright added that a<lb/>
student getting his ballot<lb/>
notarized in the city would<lb/>
normally be charged $2.<lb/>
Cartwright said stu-<lb/>
dents should come to the<lb/>
SGA office in Mendenhall<lb/>
between 3 and 5 p.m.<lb/>
weekdays.<lb/>
He urges students to<lb/>
call before they come.<lb/>
Cartwright said he also<lb/>
notarizes for clubs and<lb/>
organizations, however the<lb/>
organizations must give<lb/>
some notice before re-<lb/>
questing notarization.<lb/>
Cartwright added that<lb/>
forms for absentee ballots<lb/>
may be obtained in the SGA<lb/>
office from 9 a.m. to5p.m.<lb/>
The forms must be<lb/>
completed and mailed no<lb/>
later than Tuesday Oct. 31,<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Cartwright said if any<lb/>
student is unable to obtain<lb/>
an application for an ab-<lb/>
sentee ballot, a member of<lb/>
their immediate family may<lb/>
request an application from<lb/>
the Board of Elections.<lb/>
"Several students have<lb/>
already taken advantage of<lb/>
this service Cartwright<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"I urge all students to<lb/>
use the service and their<lb/>
right to vote. This is an<lb/>
important election year<lb/>
Cartwright added that<lb/>
freshmen registers may be<lb/>
picked up from 9 a.m5<lb/>
p.m. in the SGA office.<lb/>
Cartwright said any<lb/>
student who does not re-<lb/>
member if they ordered a<lb/>
register, may inquire at the<lb/>
SGA office.<lb/>
"The response has been<lb/>
good, but there are still a<lb/>
lot of registers to be picked<lb/>
up Cartwright said.<lb/>
By MIKE ROGERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium is<lb/>
scheduled for renovation<lb/>
after December and is ex-<lb/>
pected to be completed in<lb/>
early 1980, according to<lb/>
Preston Sisk. general man-<lb/>
ager of the ECU Playhouse.<lb/>
"We've been instructed<lb/>
not to schedule any per-<lb/>
formances in McGinnis<lb/>
Auditorium after Decem-<lb/>
ber Sisk said.<lb/>
According to Sisk, the<lb/>
heating system is unsafe,<lb/>
and the lighting equipment<lb/>
needs replacing. Sisk said<lb/>
the lobby is approximately<lb/>
nine feet by 25 feet, barely<lb/>
larger than a dorm room.<lb/>
The playhouse has five<lb/>
shops, four of which are<lb/>
either converted class-<lb/>
rooms or cafeterias, he<lb/>
said. The last shop is one<lb/>
built by the administration<lb/>
for larger scenery con-<lb/>
struction.<lb/>
"Thisbuilding was built<lb/>
in the 1920's, 30's. or even<lb/>
before as an elementary<lb/>
school Sisk commented.<lb/>
When renovation is<lb/>
completed about the first of<lb/>
1980. we will have a really<lb/>
fine performance space.<lb/>
We're really excited about<lb/>
it<lb/>
Sisk said the auditorium<lb/>
would be renovated in two<lb/>
phases. For phase 1, the<lb/>
university has received $1 9<lb/>
million in renovation funds.<lb/>
"We had to cut a few<lb/>
things that we needed, but<lb/>
we are very pleased with<lb/>
the plans<lb/>
Phase 1 should take<lb/>
approximately one year to<lb/>
complete, according to<lb/>
Sisk.<lb/>
Some changes will in-<lb/>
clude handicapped access,<lb/>
better dressing rooms,<lb/>
bricked windows to prevent<lb/>
unwanted light, scene-<lb/>
shifting machinery, and an<lb/>
orchestra pit.<lb/>
Sisk added, "It will<lb/>
provide reasonable produc-<lb/>
tion facitlities, a somewhat<lb/>
expanded lobby � a much<lb/>
nicer auditorium with ideal<lb/>
sight lines<lb/>
Sisk explained further,<lb/>
�When that phase is com-<lb/>
pleted, assuming that the<lb/>
state does appropriate the<lb/>
balance of the request.<lb/>
Phase 2 will begin<lb/>
Phase 2 will include new<lb/>
shop facilities for scenery<lb/>
construction, renovation of<lb/>
the dance studios, and a<lb/>
long overdue renovation of<lb/>
the classroom facilities,<lb/>
which at the present time<lb/>
are plagued by falling<lb/>
plaster, bad acoustics, and<lb/>
a need for power outlets for<lb/>
visual aid materials and<lb/>
tape recorders<lb/>
Sisk said, "Phase 1 is<lb/>
scheduled to be completed<lb/>
roughly by January of 1980<lb/>
He added, The stage<lb/>
will be greatly enlarged,<lb/>
and we wilt finally be nd of<lb/>
ur antique light system,<lb/>
which will be replaced by<lb/>
an up-to-date minute elec-<lb/>
tronic dimming system We<lb/>
are so glad that the state<lb/>
has finally decided to reno-<lb/>
vate this dilapidated elem-<lb/>
entary school auditorium '<lb/>
Cliff Moore, vice chan-<lb/>
cellorof Business Affairs.<lb/>
remarked that Wright Au-<lb/>
ditorium would be reno-<lb/>
vated, "when the General<lb/>
Assembly decides to reno-<lb/>
vate it � not before, not<lb/>
after<lb/>
He cited some of the<lb/>
problems with Wright Au-<lb/>
ditorium: "It does not have<lb/>
a raised floor. The second<lb/>
and third floors don t have<lb/>
any heating or air condi-<lb/>
tioning He then added.<lb/>
We don t have any money<lb/>
and it will take $1.393.000.<lb/>
Various activities offered<lb/>
'New Horizons' theme<lb/>
for homecoming week<lb/>
DAVID CARTWRIGHT, SQA vice pre-<lb/>
set dent will notarize absentee ballots for<lb/>
studentsPhotoby Kirk Kingsbury<lb/>
Media Board introduces<lb/>
secretary, discusses BUC<lb/>
By<lb/>
JULIE EVERETTE<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
and<lb/>
RICHY SMITH<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The ECU Media Board<lb/>
introduced the new publi-<lb/>
cations' and board's secre-<lb/>
tary, Kathryn Mercer In a<lb/>
Wad. meeting. She has<lb/>
been employed as a aacre-<lb/>
tary for 11 yewa and haa<lb/>
worked on campus before<lb/>
she became the publication<lb/>
secretary.<lb/>
Pete Podeszwa, Head<lb/>
Photographer, requested<lb/>
that the photo lab be moved<lb/>
behind the Fountainhead<lb/>
Office. There, would be<lb/>
minimum renovations re-<lb/>
quired for the move and it<lb/>
would be more convenient<lb/>
since the lab would then be<lb/>
located near the publica-<lb/>
tions. The photo lab is now<lb/>
located in the basement ot<lb/>
Fleming Dorm. The pro-<lb/>
posal will be discussed at<lb/>
the next board meeting.<lb/>
Podeszwa also stated<lb/>
that he had given all the<lb/>
slides that were requested<lb/>
to last year's Buccaneer<lb/>
editor, Susan Rogerson.<lb/>
The Media Board set Nov<lb/>
as the final deadline for the<lb/>
1977-78 Buccaneer to be<lb/>
sent to Hunter Publishing<lb/>
Co. If the deadline is not<lb/>
met by then, the book will<lb/>
not be published.<lb/>
To avoid confusion in<lb/>
the publication offices,<lb/>
payroll checks will be<lb/>
picked up by the owner at<lb/>
the Student Funding Office<lb/>
located in Mendenhall at<lb/>
the end of the month.<lb/>
Other issues discussed<lb/>
concerned advertising and<lb/>
conduct of students. The<lb/>
meeting adjourned with no<lb/>
other business to discuss.<lb/>
ByARAH VENABLE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Pirates' Homecom-<lb/>
ing Parade will be held<lb/>
Nov. 11th, at 10 a.m. Mike<lb/>
Morse, Student Union<lb/>
president said there will be<lb/>
15 floats, the ECU Mar-<lb/>
ching Band, the ECU Drill<lb/>
Team, local area drill<lb/>
teams, and high school<lb/>
bands, plus 10 to 15 horses.<lb/>
The parade's theme is<lb/>
"New Horizons Morse<lb/>
said the Student Union has<lb/>
been working on this par-<lb/>
ade since February 1978.<lb/>
The Student Union is<lb/>
sponsoring various activi-<lb/>
ties during the week of<lb/>
homecoming.<lb/>
Wednesday, Nov. 8,<lb/>
The Balcony, will be shown<lb/>
at Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Theatre at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Pablo Cruise and Liv-<lb/>
ingston Taylor will perform<lb/>
Thursday, Nov. 9, at Min-<lb/>
ges Coliseum at 8 p.m. The<lb/>
tickets are $5 for students<lb/>
and $7 for the public.<lb/>
Tickets will go on sale<lb/>
Monday, Oct. 30.<lb/>
Friday, Nov. 10, the V.<lb/>
Student Union will show<lb/>
the movie, Annie Hall, at 5<lb/>
p.m 7 p.m. and 9 p.m.<lb/>
The Carolina Bluegrass<lb/>
Band will play in the<lb/>
Coffeehouse at 8.30 p.m.<lb/>
The Homecoming Game<lb/>
against William and Mary<lb/>
will start Saturday, Nov.<lb/>
11th, at 1:30 p.m in<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
Starting at 8 p.m. will<lb/>
be a carosel of bands.<lb/>
"Contrast" will play in<lb/>
the multi-purpose room.<lb/>
They specialize in jazz and<lb/>
dance music, said Ken<lb/>
Hammond, program dir-<lb/>
ector for Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center.<lb/>
At 8:30 p.m Carolina<lb/>
Bluegrass Band will play in<lb/>
the snack bar at Men-<lb/>
denhall. "The Monitors<lb/>
will begin playing at 8:30<lb/>
p.m. They will play disco<lb/>
and soul music. There will<lb/>
also be a blues singer in the<lb/>
coffeehouse<lb/>
Hammond said there<lb/>
will be a dance either Oct<lb/>
6th or 10th The date is<lb/>
tentative now, but Ham-<lb/>
mond said they are trying<lb/>
for Nov. 10th<lb/>
On Nov 12th, the Stu-<lb/>
dent Union is presenting a<lb/>
Jack Nicholson Film Festi-<lb/>
val. The movies to be<lb/>
shown are. The Last Detail,<lb/>
Five Easy Pieces, and One .<lb/>
Flew Over the Cuckoo s<lb/>
Nest. The showings will<lb/>
start at 4 p.m.<lb/>
What's inside<lb/>
ECU students will study to Costa<lb/>
Ricasee p.3.<lb/>
P-5.<lb/>
Greek Forum.<lb/>
GEORGE BURNS STARS<lb/>
in this week's Free Flick,<lb/>
"Oh, Godsee p. 6.<lb/>
ECU Volleyball Tournament is Minges<lb/>
this weekend see p .8.<lb/>
George Burns shines in ths weeks free<lb/>
flick, Oh God. For a previewseep.6.<lb/>
Jeff Rollins reviews another book in the<lb/>
"running" genre, the Holistic Runner<lb/>
seep.6.<lb/>
, m � M Mi ta� WK���V�<lb/>
r . �<lb/>
<pb facs="00057157_0002"/><lb/>
Bicycle<lb/>
Recital<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. 29.<lb/>
Interested students<lb/>
should meet at the fountain<lb/>
in front of Wright Audit-<lb/>
orium at 1 p m. The group<lb/>
will leave at 1 .15 p.m. for a<lb/>
10-20 mile hike.<lb/>
The bicycle club inopen<lb/>
to all full-time ECU stu-<lb/>
dents. For more informa-<lb/>
tion, call Tom at 752-9847.<lb/>
Greenpeace<lb/>
The first organizational<lb/>
meeting for Greenpeace<lb/>
will be held Halloween<lb/>
night. Oct. 31. at 6 p.m. in<lb/>
room 248 Mendenhall.<lb/>
Everyone is welcome to<lb/>
attend. For further infor-<lb/>
mation, call Jerry Adderton<lb/>
at 758-6259 after 5 on<lb/>
weekdays.<lb/>
Leadership<lb/>
AH interested people<lb/>
are invited to Leadership<lb/>
Training Class every<lb/>
Thursday night at 7 in<lb/>
Brewster B-103.<lb/>
The classes, designed<lb/>
for growth in Christ are<lb/>
now underway and should<lb/>
be of particular interest to<lb/>
Christian men and women<lb/>
who are concerned with<lb/>
witnessing to others about<lb/>
their faith<lb/>
On Sun Oct. 29, an<lb/>
organ recital will be pre-<lb/>
sented by Jarvis Memorial<lb/>
United Methodist Church<lb/>
organist Mickey Thomas<lb/>
Terry in the sanctuary of<lb/>
the church at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Assisting Mr. Terry will<lb/>
be pianist Lorraine Hale<lb/>
Jacobs of New Bern. In-<lb/>
cluded on the program will<lb/>
be Bach's Prelude and<lb/>
Fugue in d as well as his<lb/>
chorale prelude on the tune<lb/>
Savior of the Heathen<lb/>
Come.<lb/>
Also performed will be<lb/>
three of Louis Vierne's<lb/>
Pieces de Fantasie and the<lb/>
Durufle Toccata. It will be<lb/>
on the state's premiere<lb/>
performace of the Flor<lb/>
Peeters Concerto for Organ<lb/>
and Piano that Jacobs will<lb/>
assist at the piano.<lb/>
Psi-Chi<lb/>
Pablo<lb/>
The Student Union Ma-<lb/>
jor Attractions Committee<lb/>
will present Pablo Cruise<lb/>
with special guest Living-<lb/>
ston Taylor on Thurs. Nov.<lb/>
9, at 8 p.m. in Minges<lb/>
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 Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. In addi-<lb/>
tion, public tickets can be<lb/>
purchased from Apple Re-<lb/>
cords, East Fifth Street:<lb/>
School Kid's Records,<lb/>
Georgetown Shoppes; The<lb/>
Music Shop. Greenville<lb/>
Square Mall.<lb/>
Psi-Chi is having a pig<lb/>
pickin" Sun Oct. 29 at the<lb/>
Cherry Court clubhouse.<lb/>
Festivities begin at 2<lb/>
p.m. and include volleyball,<lb/>
your favorite golden be-<lb/>
verage and all the pig and<lb/>
chicken 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 Psi-<lb/>
Chi members, psychology<lb/>
library, or the main psy-<lb/>
chology office.<lb/>
Prices are $2.50 for Psi-<lb/>
Chi members, $3.50 for<lb/>
non-members and $3 for<lb/>
faculty.<lb/>
Lost-Found<lb/>
In order to provide<lb/>
better lost and found ser-<lb/>
vice, all items found<lb/>
should be turned in to the<lb/>
University Police as quickly<lb/>
as possible.<lb/>
Particular attention<lb/>
should be given to keys.<lb/>
Individuals who have lost<lb/>
their keys usually need<lb/>
them the same day.<lb/>
If keys are found, and it<lb/>
is inconvenient to turn<lb/>
them over to the Police De-<lb/>
partment, please call the<lb/>
University Police Dispat-<lb/>
cher and the keys will be<lb/>
picked up by a University<lb/>
Police Officer. The Univer-<lb/>
sity Police Department is<lb/>
now is a position to provide<lb/>
24 hour a day, seven days a<lb/>
week, lost and found ser-<lb/>
vice.<lb/>
Racquetball<lb/>
Racquetball Club mem-<lb/>
bers are urged to attend the<lb/>
meeting Oct. 25, at 6:30<lb/>
p.m. in 104 Memorial Gym.<lb/>
Mike Vision from Hod-<lb/>
ges Sporting Goods will<lb/>
come to speak with us<lb/>
about the latest in Rac-<lb/>
quetball recquets, shoes,<lb/>
etc. Hodges is willing to<lb/>
offer a discout for equip-<lb/>
ment to the ECU Rac-<lb/>
questball Club members.<lb/>
Art<lb/>
Talent<lb/>
ine ttaHsi Chapter of<lb/>
the Kappa Alpha Psi Fra-<lb/>
ternity is sponsoring an All<lb/>
Campus Talent Presenta-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The event is scheduled<lb/>
on Tuesday, Nov. 14 from 6<lb/>
until 10 p.m. in the Multi-<lb/>
purpose room at Menden-<lb/>
hall.<lb/>
Participants will be re-<lb/>
viewed by a panel of judges<lb/>
on a point system with the<lb/>
performance receiving the<lb/>
highest total points de-<lb/>
clared the winner. Prizes<lb/>
ranging from first, second,<lb/>
and third places will be<lb/>
awarded.<lb/>
A dress rehersal is<lb/>
scheduled for Mon Nov.<lb/>
13 at 6 p.m. in the Multi-<lb/>
purpose room and, if<lb/>
needed, an audition date<lb/>
will be set. Unlike last<lb/>
year's show all perform-<lb/>
ances, will be divided ac-<lb/>
cording tosimilarity.<lb/>
For further information<lb/>
contact either Willie Battle<lb/>
at 332 Slay Dorm (758-8608)<lb/>
Ricky Lowe at 160 Umstead<lb/>
or Zack Smith at the Rear<lb/>
Apt. Aycock Dorm (757-<lb/>
6038).<lb/>
There will be an exhi-<lb/>
bition of student art work in<lb/>
the Wellington B. Gray<lb/>
Gallery until Sun Oct. 29.<lb/>
The art works included<lb/>
in this exhibition are part of<lb/>
an exchange of prints,<lb/>
paintings and drawings be-<lb/>
tween students from the<lb/>
ECU School of Art and<lb/>
students from the Art De-<lb/>
partment at UNC-Wil-<lb/>
mington.<lb/>
This is the first such<lb/>
exchange of student work<lb/>
between our school and<lb/>
another in the UNC system,<lb/>
and it is hopefully not the<lb/>
last of its kind. Sponsors of<lb/>
this first exchange of stu-<lb/>
dent art work are the<lb/>
members of the East Caro-<lb/>
lina Print Group.<lb/>
Students from UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington who have sent<lb/>
works are: Janet Clark,<lb/>
Debra Dennis, Michael<lb/>
Hali, Thomas Jones, Lee<lb/>
McLemor, Christy Naval,<lb/>
Bonnie Rogers, Lillian<lb/>
Sneeden, and John Taylor.<lb/>
Halloween<lb/>
There will be a Hallow-<lb/>
een Party at Blimpies on<lb/>
Oct. 30 from 9 p.m. until<lb/>
closing.<lb/>
Prizes to be given away<lb/>
are: First place costume,<lb/>
$20; Second place, case of<lb/>
beer .Third place, six pack<lb/>
of beer.<lb/>
In the pumpkin carving<lb/>
contest, the winner re-<lb/>
ceives a case of beer.<lb/>
Sponsored by the senior<lb/>
Interior Design Class.<lb/>
Education<lb/>
Last day to register for<lb/>
physical education ski<lb/>
groups, both credit and<lb/>
non-credit, is Oct. 31, room<lb/>
108, Memorial Gym.<lb/>
Beech Mountain Group<lb/>
begins class at 4 p.m. All<lb/>
participants must attend to<lb/>
confirm reservations.<lb/>
Snowshoe Group meets<lb/>
at 5 p.m. This is an<lb/>
informational meeting; all<lb/>
participants must attend to<lb/>
confirm reservations.<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
Mendenhall will be<lb/>
closed Sat, Oct. 28, until 6<lb/>
p.m. due to the activities<lb/>
related to Chancellor<lb/>
Brewer's installation.<lb/>
Democrats<lb/>
The ECU College Foun-<lb/>
dation of Young Democrats<lb/>
will hold a meeting on<lb/>
Mon Oct. 30, at the John<lb/>
Ingram campaign head-<lb/>
quarters.<lb/>
The headquarters is lo-<lb/>
cated at the corner of 14th<lb/>
and Charles streets behind<lb/>
University Seafood Market.<lb/>
Several items of importance<lb/>
will be discussed.<lb/>
All members and inter-<lb/>
ested students and faculty<lb/>
are urged to attend. The<lb/>
meeting will begin at 7<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Minority<lb/>
Health<lb/>
Rush<lb/>
On November 10-11, the<lb/>
fall semester North Caro-<lb/>
lina Black Student Coalition<lb/>
conference will be held at<lb/>
A&amp;T State University in<lb/>
Greensboro, North Carol-<lb/>
ina.<lb/>
Delegates, along with<lb/>
alternates, are chosen for<lb/>
one or two year terms.<lb/>
Its goal is to promote<lb/>
unity among Black students<lb/>
on a statewide basis, to<lb/>
insure progressive im-<lb/>
provements and to sta-<lb/>
balize those areas of inter-<lb/>
est to black students and<lb/>
their communities.<lb/>
If interested in parti-<lb/>
cipating contact Jay Purdie,<lb/>
SGA Secretary of Minority<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
I Center.<lb/>
The Kappa Sigma Fra-<lb/>
ternity have little sister<lb/>
rush Mon Oct. 30 at 8.30<lb/>
p.m. All interested girls are<lb/>
invited to attend.<lb/>
Telethon<lb/>
All groups interested in<lb/>
telephoning for the<lb/>
student-alumni association<lb/>
telethon must contact the<lb/>
Student Government Asso-<lb/>
ciation by 5 p.m. Friday, or<lb/>
call 757-6611.<lb/>
Honor<lb/>
Deborah Thomas, em-<lb/>
ployee development spe-<lb/>
aahst for the National<lb/>
Center for Health Statist.cs<lb/>
will be on campus wed<lb/>
Nov 1 to interview stu-<lb/>
dents for Cooperative Edu-<lb/>
cation placements<lb/>
To qualify. students<lb/>
should be in their soph-<lb/>
omore or junior year, have<lb/>
at least a 2 5 GPA, have<lb/>
background in math, stat-<lb/>
istics andor computer sci-<lb/>
ence, and be willing to work<lb/>
for two alternating sem-<lb/>
esters in the Hyattsv.He.<lb/>
Md. area.<lb/>
Sophomoreswillbepaid<lb/>
at the GS-3 level and<lb/>
juniors and seniors at the<lb/>
GS-4 level. The agency will<lb/>
also pay for the student s<lb/>
tuition and books after the<lb/>
first placement<lb/>
Interested students<lb/>
should come by the Co-op<lb/>
office, Rawl 313, to make<lb/>
an appointment and read<lb/>
the sample job descriptions<lb/>
available. Freshmen and<lb/>
others who may be eligible<lb/>
for placement next year<lb/>
should attend a general<lb/>
information meeting with<lb/>
Thomas at 2 p.m. Nov. 1 in<lb/>
Rawl 313. Qualified minor-<lb/>
ities, women, and handi-<lb/>
capped students are en-<lb/>
couraged to apply<lb/>
All persons initiated in-<lb/>
to Psi-Chi Honor Fraternity<lb/>
on Oct. 10 should pick up<lb/>
their certificates as soon as<lb/>
possible in the main psy-<lb/>
chology office.<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Student Union Major Attractions Committee<lb/>
presents<lb/>
CRUISE<lb/>
Ski<lb/>
There will be a ski club<lb/>
meeting, Nov. 1 in room<lb/>
105 Memorial Gym at 4<lb/>
p.m. Those interested in<lb/>
competing should attend.<lb/>
with special guest Livingston Taylor<lb/>
TICKETS:<lb/>
�ECU Students S5.00<lb/>
Public S7.00<lb/>
Only Public Tickets will<lb/>
be sold at the door.<lb/>
���<lb/>
???��<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Thurs Nov. 9, 1978<lb/>
8 p.m.<lb/>
Minges Coliseum<lb/>
STUDENTS:<lb/>
Buy a Student Ticket<lb/>
Monday, Tuesday, or Wednesday<lb/>
and you'll be eligible to win<lb/>
a FREE Pablo Cruise T-Shirt<lb/>
Winners will be announced in next Thursday's FOUNTAINHEAD.<lb/>
???�?�????????!<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
��<lb/>
TICKETS<lb/>
�<lb/>
ECU Students SS.ooi<lb/>
Public S7.00<lb/>
a<lb/>
Only Public Tickets will :<lb/>
be sold at the door.<lb/>
i�<lb/>
Tickets Go On Sale Mon Oct 30, 1978 (10 a.m.).<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
fcrscfc @<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1 Pioneer SA-<lb/>
8500 stereo amp. (100 watts<lb/>
per channel), one Super<lb/>
Scope AMFM stereo tuner<lb/>
One Panasonic turntable -<lb/>
eight track comb 2 Mar-<lb/>
antz HD-77 speakers. $800<lb/>
for all or will sell each piece<lb/>
separately. Call 756-8571<lb/>
before 8 p.m. or 752-9745<lb/>
after 8 p.m. for more info.<lb/>
FOR SALE. Aria Pro II<lb/>
alec, guitar, pro. model<lb/>
excellent cond. with case.<lb/>
$300. Troy Moore 752-9640.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '74 Vega in<lb/>
good cond. but some rust<lb/>
$400. Call 758-1239 before<lb/>
9 p.m.<lb/>
HALLOWEEN FACES:<lb/>
created for a small fee.<lb/>
Make-up by Michelle<lb/>
Mennett. Call for appoint-<lb/>
ment. 758-8724.<lb/>
WANT TO STEAL? Mast-<lb/>
erwork AMFM receiver,<lb/>
Realistic 117V pre-amp 2<lb/>
6' speakers all for only $60.<lb/>
All in excellent cond. but<lb/>
must sell as moving to<lb/>
California. Call Greg 752-<lb/>
5736 between 9 and 12<lb/>
P.M.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Handwoven<lb/>
hammocks, beautiful colors<lb/>
and natural, $30 - $35. Call<lb/>
758-0495.<lb/>
FOR SALE: White'68 VW.<lb/>
Mechanically sound, rea-<lb/>
sonably priced. Call 758-<lb/>
6833 or 752-8013 ask for<lb/>
Wayne.<lb/>
FREE. 6 wk. old puppies.<lb/>
Mixed breed. Fat, healthy<lb/>
and cute 756-7719.<lb/>
peraorici�<lb/>
TOPLESS DANCERS:<lb/>
needed immediately at<lb/>
Hwy. 33 Club. Full and part<lb/>
time. Very good pay. To<lb/>
apply call 752-9917 for<lb/>
interview. <lb/>
IF CARLA GEORGE<lb/>
this and calls Chaneto' s you<lb/>
will receive a free gift<lb/>
758-7400<lb/>
for pert �<lb/>
NEED ROOMMATE: to<lb/>
share a 2 bdrm. apt. at<lb/>
Langston Park Apts. Call<lb/>
after 5 p.m. for details. Ask<lb/>
for Kathy. 752-1892.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 2 bdrm. house<lb/>
2 blocks from Happy St roe.<lb/>
$110.00 a month, available<lb/>
Nov. 1. Call 758-3701 after<lb/>
4 p.m.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
Situation available for fem-<lb/>
ale interested in private<lb/>
room in attractive house<lb/>
with all conveniences, loca-<lb/>
ted 2 blocks from campus.<lb/>
Owner is mature, profes-<lb/>
sional gentleman interested<lb/>
in sharing expenses. For<lb/>
interview, call 758-3016<lb/>
after 5 p.m.<lb/>
r<lb/>
- � - r �<lb/>
<lb/>
im'wm'w<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057157_0003"/><lb/>
26 October 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
Students to study in Costa Rica<lb/>
THE LAST BITE is always the sweetest<lb/>
Photo by Steve Romero<lb/>
teams<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Seventeen ECU stud-<lb/>
ents are preparing for a<lb/>
semester of study in Costa<lb/>
Rica early next year, under<lb/>
a cooperative arrangement<lb/>
with Costa Rica's Univesi-<lb/>
dad Nacional and the ECU<lb/>
Department of Geography<lb/>
cipate<lb/>
The Costa Rican camp-<lb/>
us is located near Heredia,<lb/>
a suburb of the capital city,<lb/>
San Jose Students will live<lb/>
with native Costa Rican<lb/>
families and attend classes<lb/>
on campus, taught by Costa<lb/>
Rican and ECU professors<lb/>
Among the course offer-<lb/>
ings for the spring semest-<lb/>
er, which begins Jan 8 and<lb/>
ends April 27, are Spanish<lb/>
language, tropical biology,<lb/>
Central American history,<lb/>
Central American geo-<lb/>
gra)hy, field studies, and<lb/>
social welfare systems of<lb/>
Costa Rica.<lb/>
Students will have op-<lb/>
portunities to pursue indep-<lb/>
endent research in their<lb/>
main areas of interest<lb/>
According to Dr Robert<lb/>
Cramer of the ECU geo-<lb/>
graphy faculty, director of<lb/>
the Costa Rica-ECU pro-<lb/>
gram, the 17 students will<lb/>
meet with Jorge Arturo<lb/>
Saenz. Universidad Nac-<lb/>
ional administrator when<lb/>
Saenz visits Greenville in<lb/>
early November.<lb/>
The student partici-<lb/>
pants include residents of<lb/>
seven North Carolina coun-<lb/>
ties and six other states.<lb/>
The seventeen students<lb/>
attending are<lb/>
Janet Bailey, Juliet Cas-<lb/>
tor, Lisa Snyder, Donna<lb/>
Wilkie. Howard Johnson.<lb/>
Jean Vasicek David Barn-<lb/>
ette, Amanda Harwell<lb/>
Scott Whitlock. Cheryl<lb/>
Boehm. Mike Monahan.<lb/>
M ike Greco. Virginia John-<lb/>
stone, Deborah Scudder<lb/>
Christine Martin, Richard<lb/>
Green and Beverly Jen-<lb/>
nings<lb/>
in annual College Bowl<lb/>
  . .  .  , . . . J'At.� I<lb/>
8v ARAH VENABLE<lb/>
Staff Reporter<lb/>
ECU will participate in<lb/>
the College Bowl competi-<lb/>
tion again this year, accor-<lb/>
ding to Wanda Yuhas,<lb/>
assistant program director<lb/>
for Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center<lb/>
The college bowl was<lb/>
v recently revived and it<lb/>
is sponsored by the student<lb/>
union ECU participated in<lb/>
the college bowl when it<lb/>
appeared on television.<lb/>
said Yuhas TV rights<lb/>
een purhcased This<lb/>
rd year that ECU<lb/>
irticipated<lb/>
The college bowl is a<lb/>
form of academic compe-<lb/>
;n stated Yuhas. It is<lb/>
somewhat like a sport, she<lb/>
added<lb/>
college bowl compe-<lb/>
tition, there are two types<lb/>
of questions: a toss-up and<lb/>
a bonus. Each has a valued<lb/>
number of points. Anyone<lb/>
may answer the toss-up<lb/>
question. If answered cor-<lb/>
rectly, the team has the<lb/>
chance to answer the<lb/>
bonus. The obiect is to<lb/>
answer as many questions<lb/>
as possible. "It's a team<lb/>
sport, but it is an individual<lb/>
sport too. stated Yuhas.<lb/>
"It's a matter of knowing<lb/>
the correct answer she<lb/>
added.<lb/>
Eleven teams are parti-<lb/>
cipating from ECU The<lb/>
teams compete in intra-<lb/>
mural, regional, and na-<lb/>
tional contests The win-<lb/>
ners of last year's intra-<lb/>
murals were sent to the<lb/>
regional competition. This<lb/>
year they hope to have an<lb/>
all star team taking part in<lb/>
the regionals, commented<lb/>
Yuhas.<lb/>
Several departments<lb/>
and organizations are re-<lb/>
presented with teams. They<lb/>
include departments of En-<lb/>
glish, History. Sociology-<lb/>
Anthropology, Philosophy<lb/>
and Political Science. Phi<lb/>
Sigma Pi, the Medical<lb/>
School, the Baptist Student<lb/>
Union, Newman Club,<lb/>
ROTC, and the Student<lb/>
Union<lb/>
At the finals, a member<lb/>
of a team is eligible to will<lb/>
$3500<lb/>
A scholarship fund for<lb/>
the StudentUnioms set up if<lb/>
a team wins<lb/>
"We're suppose tooffer<lb/>
an academic compliment<lb/>
Yuhas stated, as she re-<lb/>
ferred to the Student Un-<lb/>
ion. The Student Union will<lb/>
provide the entertainment<lb/>
You don't have to be a<lb/>
genius to play college<lb/>
bowl said Yuhas. It takes<lb/>
five people and a coach to<lb/>
be a team. I'm suspicious<lb/>
that there are a lot of<lb/>
people that would like to<lb/>
play, but just don't know<lb/>
any of the other team<lb/>
mebers commented Yu<lb/>
has.<lb/>
TICE<lb/>
DRIVE IN-AYDEN HIGHWAY<lb/>
Friday-Sunday<lb/>
WILLIAM<lb/>
HOLDEN<lb/>
LEE<lb/>
GRANT<lb/>
Shows at<lb/>
7 :30 &amp; 9.30<lb/>
LVMEN<lb/>
0MENH<lb/>
The first time<lb/>
was only a warning.<lb/>
Soon� THE DRIVER (R)<lb/>
Meadowbrook<lb/>
DRIVE IN-OPPOSITE AIRPORT<lb/>
Friday-Sunday<lb/>
IMAGINE YOUR LIFE<lb/>
HANGSBY A THREAD<lb/>
Shows at 7:30 &amp; 9:30<lb/>
PG<lb/>
R<lb/>
Next�<lb/>
COMING HOME (R)<lb/>
Mikes9 Bicycle<lb/>
Shop<lb/>
<lb/>
University Arcade<lb/>
Complete line of tools &amp;<lb/>
accessories. Years of<lb/>
experience fixing<lb/>
Greenville's bikes.<lb/>
Guaranteed Service.<lb/>
752-5291<lb/>
TOMTE AT THE<lb/>
e�o Rpear<lb/>
Early Bird Special 1 2 price adm.<lb/>
til 9:30.10 Customer appreciation<lb/>
til 10:00 Friday Afternoon Party<lb/>
3-7 Sunday Ladies Nite<lb/>
HAVE A'<lb/>
BOTTOMLESS" CUP OF<lb/>
PEPSI FREE<lb/>
ENJOY A FREE<lb/>
PEPSI WITH THE<lb/>
PURCHASE OF<lb/>
ANY PLATTER,<lb/>
QUARTER<lb/>
CHICKEN OR<lb/>
SANDWICH.<lb/>
Offer good only<lb/>
with coupon.<lb/>
1 Oth and Charles Streets-Greenville<lb/>
factory<lb/>
Outlet<lb/>
Ski<lb/>
160.00<lb/>
50oo<lb/>
6000<lb/>
Tenni<lb/>
MACR AME.<lb/>
 FT St<lb/>
WEAVING<lb/>
w758 YARN S<lb/>
CORNER Of Ow &amp; ClARK STREETS<lb/>
IN HATTERAS HAMMOCK BUILDING<lb/>
WtRE HARDTOPiMD BUT WELL W0RTM T '<lb/>
Ski Packages while they last <lb/>
Kestle Skis<lb/>
Salomon 202 Bindings<lb/>
A&amp;T Poles<lb/>
Caber Boots<lb/>
Total normal price 27995<lb/>
Now ONLY S16900 plus tax<lb/>
Tennis Balls all brands $195 per can no limit<lb/>
All Tennis Socks Vi off.<lb/>
All Foot-Joy Tennis Shoes 40 off.<lb/>
All Golf Balls 10" dozen.Includes Titleist , Top Flight,<lb/>
Pro Staff, Hogan, Dunlop plus many more.<lb/>
All Mens and Ladies Golf Shoes 20 off.<lb/>
 NOTE - We still have a few openings on our<lb/>
two ski trips to snowshoe, West V a.<lb/>
See Gordon at the Shop at Greenville Country Club.<lb/>
(jt)rdon D. Fulp<lb/>
Golf Professional<lb/>
Greenville Country Club<lb/>
�� � �<lb/>
Phone 7560504<lb/>
Open. 7 days a vee<lb/>
NEW STUDENT FINANCING<lb/>
Everybody knows that students have a hard time trying to establish<lb/>
credit due to the lack of . , jobs, cash, and previously<lb/>
established credit. gg Harmony House understands<lb/>
"H -L would like to introduce<lb/>
payments and establish- ing yourselves a sound credit<lb/>
reference. At Harmony House, we believe it's worth our<lb/>
time and your time to come by and talk to Jim, Dave, or Bronson<lb/>
and get the HHH scoop on our in-store<lb/>
financing foraiUH ECU students.<lb/>
these problems. We<lb/>
a new and exciting way<lb/>
of buying on monthly<lb/>
fT<lb/>
V<lb/>
E�w U<lb/>
Bronson<lb/>
r<lb/>
QrQr<lb/>
t<lb/>
c<lb/>
<lb/>
0.<lb/>
c<lb/>
6<lb/>
,<lb/>
f<lb/>
rrrr<lb/>
Dave<lb/>
iltee:<lb/>
HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH<lb/>
On the Mall � Downtown Greenville � 752-3651<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057157_0004"/><lb/>
Voting is painless<lb/>
Voting is a privilege too many Americans<lb/>
take for granted. The "my vote doesn't count"<lb/>
attitude is merely an excuse for people who are<lb/>
too lazy to take the time to register and vote<lb/>
and too lazy too think about the issues and<lb/>
make a decision. These same people, however,<lb/>
are not at all hesitant to complain about the<lb/>
government.<lb/>
The vote is perhaps the most powerful<lb/>
weapon ever entrusted to the public. With it,<lb/>
officials can be elected or removed; laws can be<lb/>
enacted or repealed, and taxes can be raised or<lb/>
lowered. It is the foundation of the American<lb/>
system of government, but without the active<lb/>
participation of eligible voters, it is a useless<lb/>
item buried in political science texts.<lb/>
In order for government to work, there<lb/>
must be a steady flow of public opinion to<lb/>
elected officails. Voters must acitvely study<lb/>
issues in order to make a wise decision, and<lb/>
then communicate their decision either<lb/>
through correspondence with elected officials<lb/>
ex through the ballot.<lb/>
We really don't realize how lucky we areo<lb/>
have such a tool. Few nations in the world<lb/>
allow their citizens to dictate who shall govern<lb/>
and how they snail govern.<lb/>
And yet, the vast majority of eligible<lb/>
American refuse to vote. They forget to<lb/>
register (something they wouldn't have to do if<lb/>
they voted regularly); or they are too busy on<lb/>
election day.<lb/>
Sadly, college age voters are no better that<lb/>
the rest. Our predecessors fought a hard uphill<lb/>
battle for passage of the constitutional<lb/>
amendment allowing 18 year olds to vote, and<lb/>
today most people could care less. Instead, this<lb/>
age group has one of the poorest voting<lb/>
records<lb/>
It doesn't take much for students to get an<lb/>
absentee ballot, or, better yet, vote in<lb/>
Greenville. Registered voters can go to the<lb/>
board of elections in their home county on or<lb/>
before Nov. 7 and vote in person, they can have<lb/>
a parent or close relative pick up a ballot,<lb/>
send it to them, have it notorized, and return it<lb/>
to the home elections board, or send in a<lb/>
request for an application for a ballot to their<lb/>
home elections board. After the application is<lb/>
received, the voter must fill it out and return it.<lb/>
The ballot will then be sent to the voter, who<lb/>
must then vote, notorize it, and return it.<lb/>
Voting is simple and painless. It only takes<lb/>
a little mental and physical effort, and it makes<lb/>
the difference between a vital and a poor<lb/>
government.<lb/>
American Journal<lb/>
- Smokers' 'rights' threatened<lb/>
Communique<lb/>
Mhood memories rediscovered<lb/>
ByDINOHARRELL<lb/>
I had a desk once. It<lb/>
was a really nifty desk, and<lb/>
! was proud of it.<lb/>
My parents had bought<lb/>
it at an auction somewhere,<lb/>
second hand, when I was<lb/>
still a httle boy. It was<lb/>
missing some veneer on<lb/>
top. but it didn't really<lb/>
matter. The top wasn't<lb/>
always on top, so no one<lb/>
ever noticed.<lb/>
You see, the desk was<lb/>
designed in a really unusu-<lb/>
al way It was fixed so that<lb/>
atypewritercouid be bolted<lb/>
to it, and when it wasn't<lb/>
being used, it could be<lb/>
folded away, down inside<lb/>
the desk, out of sight.<lb/>
When the typewriter was<lb/>
folded away, the desk<lb/>
looked pretty much like a<lb/>
normal one.<lb/>
There was a place to<lb/>
pull up a chair, and a shelf<lb/>
to put your feet on when<lb/>
you sat in front of it. There<lb/>
wasadrawer on the right, a<lb/>
big one that went almost all<lb/>
the way to the back of the<lb/>
desk. The drawer was<lb/>
fastened to the overhang-<lb/>
ing top, no legs to its right.<lb/>
It was made that way so<lb/>
that a filing cabinet could<lb/>
be kept under it. And there<lb/>
was a handle on the front<lb/>
edge of the top that, when<lb/>
pulled up, angled the top to<lb/>
a position parallel to the<lb/>
back of the desk<lb/>
When this happened,<lb/>
another top folded out.<lb/>
When the transformation<lb/>
was completed, there stood<lb/>
a desk, the middle part<lb/>
lower than the rest, with a<lb/>
typewriter sitting on it,<lb/>
ready for action<lb/>
Except that I didn't<lb/>
have a typewriter. But<lb/>
there were holes in the top<lb/>
where bolts had once held<lb/>
one.<lb/>
I remember the holes<lb/>
well. I used to forget them,<lb/>
and when I was writing<lb/>
something, my pencil<lb/>
would mash a hole through<lb/>
my paper.<lb/>
I spent some of the best<lb/>
hours of my life at that<lb/>
kTve forgotten<lb/>
many things<lb/>
about the little<lb/>
boy who sat at<lb/>
the desk, . . .<lb/>
the kind of<lb/>
things he<lb/>
thought<lb/>
desk. I read books there,<lb/>
built models of rockets and<lb/>
rubberband powered air-<lb/>
planes, collected stamps<lb/>
and coins ? it, and a<lb/>
thousand other things. I<lb/>
kept secret messages in the<lb/>
drawer, always at the back,<lb/>
and under the piece of<lb/>
panelling I had found that<lb/>
just barely fit, which creat-<lb/>
ed a perfect false bottom.<lb/>
It was perfect for secret<lb/>
messages.<lb/>
When I started collect-<lb/>
ing coins, and needed a<lb/>
safe place to keep them, I<lb/>
put a lock on the drawer. I<lb/>
kept other things in it then,<lb/>
a diary, scrapbook, more<lb/>
secret messages, special<lb/>
rocks, bolts I had found,<lb/>
magnets, etc.<lb/>
The list of things was<lb/>
almost endless. Anything a<lb/>
little boy puts into his<lb/>
pockets went into the<lb/>
drawer, locked safely away.<lb/>
I even put firecrackers and<lb/>
matches and things in it<lb/>
when I got older, the kinds<lb/>
of things mothers shouldn't<lb/>
see.<lb/>
It's been so long since<lb/>
the desk was moved out of<lb/>
my room that I really don't<lb/>
remember why it had to go.<lb/>
It must have been moved<lb/>
to make room for new<lb/>
furniture, or something. I<lb/>
probably put up a fight, or<lb/>
cried, or just felt a loss the<lb/>
day it was taken away, I<lb/>
really don't remember.<lb/>
I've forgotten so much<lb/>
since then. I've forgotten<lb/>
many things about the little<lb/>
boy who sat at the desk, the<lb/>
kinds of things he used to<lb/>
do, the kinds of things he<lb/>
thought. I had even<lb/>
forgotten the desk, or at<lb/>
� least not thought about it<lb/>
for a long time until the<lb/>
other day.<lb/>
I was home for Thanks-<lb/>
giving, taking a little time<lb/>
out from school, and having<lb/>
nothing better to do, I<lb/>
stepped outside and took a<lb/>
walk. I didn't have any-<lb/>
thing special in mind, but<lb/>
the fall air was pregnant<lb/>
with the smell of colored<lb/>
leaves, and the weather<lb/>
was the kind that is peculiar<lb/>
to a beautiful autumn day.<lb/>
My steps carried me<lb/>
into the big pine forest that<lb/>
guards our home from the<lb/>
city and its noises, and lead<lb/>
me into the past. I walked<lb/>
around for awhile, sat<lb/>
against a big pine tree,<lb/>
watched some squirrels<lb/>
playing high above me, and<lb/>
just unwound. I came back<lb/>
through the woods, off the<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over 50 years<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Doug White<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER ADVER�.?S?2�E�ER<lb/>
Leigh Coekley news EDITORS Robert M' <lb/>
Julie Everette<lb/>
TRENDS ED.TOR " G"armiS pE�"<lb/>
Steve Beehner S"m H�Br?<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD it the �uden� EfffiKLrf ECU<lb/>
Carolina University sponsored by the MedleBoerd of ECU<lb/>
and is distributed each Tuesday and Thursday (weekly<lb/>
during the summer).<lb/>
Mailing addrees: Old Sopth Building, Greenville, N.C<lb/>
27834<lb/>
Editorial offices: 757-6366, 757-6367, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10 annually, alumni $6 annually.<lb/>
path, tromped through bri-<lb/>
ars, crawled through thick-<lb/>
ets, and got good and tired.<lb/>
Just before I got home, I<lb/>
crawled Wrcfh vine <lb/>
choked tangle of bushes, a<lb/>
stood up, putted "the half<lb/>
out of my eyes and looked<lb/>
toward the hous.<lb/>
There in front of me,<lb/>
hidden from sight to any<lb/>
who stood at the house, was<lb/>
the desk. I stood, thrilled,<lb/>
and a hundred memories<lb/>
flashed through my mind.<lb/>
One of those memories<lb/>
made me look at the desk<lb/>
handle for a moment. I<lb/>
turned and ran to the<lb/>
house.<lb/>
I was back in minutes,<lb/>
breathless, a small screw-<lb/>
driver in my hand. I bent<lb/>
over the desk, my knees<lb/>
knocking off veneer that<lb/>
was cracked and buckled<lb/>
from years of standing in<lb/>
the rain.<lb/>
I unscrewed the big,<lb/>
hollow brass handle from<lb/>
the desk and turned it over.<lb/>
Nothing. I felt a twinge of<lb/>
sadness.<lb/>
I had remembered that I<lb/>
used to write things on<lb/>
small pieces of paper and<lb/>
put them behind the cover<lb/>
plates of light switches,<lb/>
where they would wait to be<lb/>
found someday. I seemed<lb/>
to remember hiding a<lb/>
message in the desk han-<lb/>
dle, years ago.<lb/>
I could see the little boy<lb/>
again, carefully folding a<lb/>
piece of paper with a<lb/>
message on it, and sliding<lb/>
it into the handle, andthen<lb/>
refastening the handle to<lb/>
the desk, hoping but not<lb/>
really believing that some-<lb/>
one would find it someday.<lb/>
I tore a small twig off a<lb/>
bush and sat down, leaning<lb/>
against the desk. I pushed<lb/>
the twig into the handle. It<lb/>
went in, farther and farth-<lb/>
Ier, and out the other end,<lb/>
pushing in front of It a<lb/>
small roll of paper.<lb/>
I picked the piece of<lb/>
paper from my lap, where it<lb/>
had fallen. My hands<lb/>
shook as I unrolled it,<lb/>
turned it over and read it.<lb/>
I sat still a long time<lb/>
after I read it; tears welled<lb/>
up in my eyes and rolled<lb/>
down my cheeks, dropping<lb/>
off onto the paper. They<lb/>
I were tears of something<lb/>
infinitely greater than<lb/>
happiness or Joy.<lb/>
The note, written In the<lb/>
scrawl of a small boy,<lb/>
holding a big fat pencil m a<lb/>
hand small by comparison,<lb/>
said simply, "Remember<lb/>
me?"<lb/>
By DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
Last June, California's Proposition 13 slashed property<lb/>
taxesand touched off a nationwide "taxpayers revolt On<lb/>
Nov. 7, the state's voters will decide the fate of Proposition<lb/>
5, a broad no-smokiog initiative that, if it passes, could<lb/>
galvanize anti-smoking sentiment across the country.<lb/>
If it passes. The success of Prop. 5 is by no means<lb/>
assured, thanks to a lavishly financed effort to snuff out the<lb/>
measure that has scored impressive gains in the final weeks<lb/>
of the campaign.<lb/>
Opponents of Prop. 5 � mainly the tobacco industry and<lb/>
its public relations advisors � are spending.up to $5 million<lb/>
tlstop passageofthe initiative. That is at leasMO times the<lb/>
amount available to the<lb/>
Campaign for Clean Indoor .mm����<lb/>
studies that suggest that "sidestream smoke" � unfiltered<lb/>
smoke from the burning end of someone else's cigarette,<lb/>
cigar or pipe � can be a significiant health hazard for<lb/>
non-smokers. Infants and persons with heart and<lb/>
respiratory diseases are especially vulnerable.<lb/>
Sidestream smoka, has twice as much tar and nicotine,<lb/>
three times as much benopyrene (a powerful carcinogen);<lb/>
five times as much carbon monoxide, and 50 times the<lb/>
concentration of nitrosamines (more carcinogens) than the<lb/>
often-filtered smoke inhaled by smokers. �<lb/>
Smokers, of course, are more thoroughly exposed to the<lb/>
hazards of tobacco than are non-smoking bystanders they<lb/>
inhale more smoke, more often. But non-smokers in<lb/>
enclosed places like offices where co-workers puff away<lb/>
may as well be i.oKing,<lb/>
Air, the sponsor of Prop. 5.<lb/>
Most of the opposition<lb/>
money is going into a media<lb/>
blitz deriding the proposed<lb/>
law as illogical, unworkable<lb/>
and an attack on individual<lb/>
rights.<lb/>
Prop. 5's adversaries<lb/>
call themselves Caliform-<lb/>
ans for Common Sense,<lb/>
although little of their<lb/>
financing comes from Cali-<lb/>
fornia. The R.J. Reynolds<lb/>
Tobacco Co. alone has<lb/>
given $1,169,786 to the<lb/>
no-on-5 war chest. Rey-<lb/>
nolds is based in Winston-<lb/>
-Salem, N.C.<lb/>
All told, five tobacco<lb/>
industry giants, similarly<lb/>
removed from California,<lb/>
have supplied over 90 per-<lb/>
cent of the anti-5 funds.<lb/>
As a result of this<lb/>
formidable outlay of capi-<lb/>
tal, Prop. 5, which led by as<lb/>
much as 20 percent in<lb/>
public opinion polls in early<lb/>
September, was running<lb/>
dead even in October.<lb/>
Known officially as the<lb/>
Clean Indoor Air Act, Prop.<lb/>
5 would ban tobacco smok-<lb/>
ing in most enclosed public<lb/>
places and workplaces,<lb/>
schools, and hospitals and<lb/>
clinics (except for private<lb/>
rooms). It would also<lb/>
require non-smoking sec-<lb/>
tions in restaurants, lobbies<lb/>
and waiting rooms. Excep-<lb/>
tions would be made for<lb/>
bars, retail tobacco shops,<lb/>
hotel and motel rooms,<lb/>
�halls hired for private<lb/>
parties and some public<lb/>
gatherings, like rock con-<lb/>
Restrictive smoking laws are already on the books in 33<lb/>
states and the District of Columbia, as well as in hundreds<lb/>
of municipalities. The proposed California law would be the<lb/>
toughest in the nation. In addition to its broad range. Prop.<lb/>
5 would proscribe citations and $50 fines tor violations.<lb/>
In taking on the tobacco interests, pro-5 forces are going<lb/>
up against one of the oldest and most prosperous industries<lb/>
in America, one whose roots reach back to colonial times,<lb/>
when gentleman planters comprised a landed aristocracy.<lb/>
Today, tobacco is a $17 billion a year industry supplying<lb/>
weed to the 53 million Americans who smoke.<lb/>
The percentage of adult smokers has dropped since<lb/>
smoking was linked with cancer in the early 1960s, but<lb/>
because of population growth, more cigarettes are sold than<lb/>
ever before some 600 billion of them last year.<lb/>
Prop. 5 is not Prohibition. It would not snatch the<lb/>
burning stubs from the hands of smokers in their homes,<lb/>
but it would prevent therrtfrom exposing others to the<lb/>
possible hazards of their habit in public. Opponents of the<lb/>
measure say that government has no business regulating<lb/>
the pereonal preferences of individuals.<lb/>
Proponents counter that a preference that harms others<lb/>
Is no longer merely personal.<lb/>
Much of the argument for Prop. 5 relies on recent<lb/>
too. It is these s.tuations<lb/>
that Prop. 5 woulo curtail<lb/>
Prop. 5's critics prefer<lb/>
to sidestep medical quest-<lb/>
ions, invoking instead the<lb/>
dreaded image of Big Brot-<lb/>
her in vaguely worded,<lb/>
emotional appeals.<lb/>
One popular billboard<lb/>
opposing the initiative<lb/>
reads simply: "They're at it<lb/>
again Vote No on Prop<lb/>
5 "They" are not identi-<lb/>
fied, but presumably<lb/>
they're the fuzzv-thmkmg<lb/>
do-gooders and bureaucrats<lb/>
who would order our lives<lb/>
with little regard 'or what<lb/>
"we" think.<lb/>
Peter Hanauer. co-<lb/>
author of Prop 5 and the<lb/>
treasurer of the Campaign<lb/>
for Clean Indoor Air. den-<lb/>
ounced the no-on-5 camp-<lb/>
aign in a telephone inter-<lb/>
view, charging it is rooted<lb/>
"in ignornaoe and fear<lb/>
Hanauer compares the<lb/>
non-smoking initiative to<lb/>
Prop. 13 "in the sense that<lb/>
it arose from popular dis-<lb/>
content. Prop. 13 may not<lb/>
have been the best way to<lb/>
cut property taxes, but it<lb/>
happened because govern-<lb/>
ment wouldn't take action<lb/>
We tried o get no-smoking<lb/>
bills through the state<lb/>
legislature, but the tobacco<lb/>
lobby succeeded in getting<lb/>
them killed "<lb/>
Replying to critics who<lb/>
say the proosed law would<lb/>
be unenforceable. Hanuuer<lb/>
says We think it will be<lb/>
largely self-enforcing. This<lb/>
has been the case in the<lb/>
past year in Berkley,<lb/>
where a municipal ordinance upon which Prop. 5<lb/>
is based has been shown to work mostly by peer pressure.<lb/>
It's an educational process as well as a law. We don't<lb/>
expect or even want a lot of police action<lb/>
According to Hanauer, the pro-5 forces will net<lb/>
$300,000 to $500,000 some of which is being held to buy ads<lb/>
in the crucial final days before the election, " whan most<lb/>
people make up their minds Moat of the money has come<lb/>
in small individual donations. The largest donor is the<lb/>
American Cancer Society, which gave $25,000the first<lb/>
time they've ever endorsed a political act ion. according to<lb/>
Hanauer. <lb/>
Hanauer adds that similar anti-smoking lobbies exist in<lb/>
a number of states, including Florida, Arizona and<lb/>
Massachusetts. "Anti-smoking feeling is particularly keen<lb/>
m places where the environmental movement is strong<lb/>
where there are a lot of elderly retired people There <lb/>
petitions circulating In Florida for a measure almost exactly<lb/>
like ours.<lb/>
"CaliforeW he aays, "ia a beilweether I can't -v<lb/>
exectly whtt wil, fpp�, t JST!<lb/>
are groups in pretty near all parts of the country<lb/>
.<lb/>
I<lb/>
�a�<lb/>
 Meat<lb/>
. - - �<lb/>
<pb facs="00057157_0005"/><lb/>
9 1 I<lb/>
t �<lb/>
26 October 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
Greek Forum<lb/>
COULD THIS BE Thursday Night Fever?<lb/>
 Photo by Chap Our ley)<lb/>
Child Development<lb/>
gets training grant<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
A grant of $97,824 has<lb/>
been awarded the ECU<lb/>
Department of Child De-<lb/>
velopment and Family Re-<lb/>
lations by the N.C. Dept. of<lb/>
Human Resources to pro-<lb/>
vide training services to<lb/>
eastern N.C. day care per-<lb/>
sonnel.<lb/>
Involved in the program<lb/>
will be employees of-feder-<lb/>
ally certified day care fac-<lb/>
ilities in Bertie, Edge-<lb/>
combe, Pitt, Wayne, Wil-<lb/>
son. Tyrrell. Nash, Lenior.<lb/>
Washington, Craven,<lb/>
Beaufort. Greene. Jones.<lb/>
Martin. Pamlico, Hyde and<lb/>
Carteret Counties.<lb/>
Basic goal of the pro-<lb/>
gram is to improve the<lb/>
quality of day care services<lb/>
to children by helping<lb/>
service personnel become<lb/>
more effective in their jobs.<lb/>
Administrators of the<lb/>
project are Drs. Charles<lb/>
Snow and Nash Love of the<lb/>
ECU School of Home Econ-<lb/>
omics faculty. Project<lb/>
trainers are child devel-<lb/>
opment specialists Sandra<lb/>
Houston and Patricia<lb/>
McMahon.<lb/>
Training activities will<lb/>
include short-term work-<lb/>
shops and visits to day care<lb/>
facilities by the project staff<lb/>
for consultation and on-<lb/>
the-job assistance, and vis-<lb/>
its by day care employees<lb/>
to select demonstration<lb/>
centers for study and ob-<lb/>
servation.<lb/>
Some day care teachers<lb/>
receiving training will be<lb/>
working toward the Child<lb/>
Development Associate<lb/>
credential, a nationally re-<lb/>
cognized qualification<lb/>
which recognizes profes-<lb/>
sional worth among those<lb/>
who work with young child-<lb/>
ren in day care and class-<lb/>
room settings.<lb/>
ByRlCKIQLIARMIS<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The Lambda Chi's have<lb/>
been working hard this past<lb/>
month in an attempt to<lb/>
make this year's field day<lb/>
one of the best. Everyone Is<lb/>
urged to attend Lambda<lb/>
Chi Field Day and show<lb/>
their support to the Lambda<lb/>
Chi's.<lb/>
PanheMenic's Pledges<lb/>
on Parade is Friday night,<lb/>
Oct. 27. A lot of planning<lb/>
has gone into this activity In<lb/>
hopes that they will get a<lb/>
big crowd at the Greenville<lb/>
Moose Lodge this weekend.<lb/>
Fraternities and sorori-<lb/>
ties are again reminded of<lb/>
Dr. Thomas Brewer's in-<lb/>
stallation which is being<lb/>
held Saturday. This is a<lb/>
special time for the Brewer<lb/>
family and for the uni-<lb/>
versity. Because Greeks are<lb/>
the largest minority on the<lb/>
ECU campus, they should<lb/>
be well represented at the<lb/>
ceremonies on Saturday.<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS:<lb/>
The Chi Omegas spent<lb/>
this week preparing cos-<lb/>
tumes for their Halloween<lb/>
social. They are also pre-<lb/>
paring to attend Dr. Brew-<lb/>
er's installation as a group<lb/>
and are working hard pre-<lb/>
paring for Lambda Chi<lb/>
Field Day.<lb/>
The Chi O's would like<lb/>
to announce the election of<lb/>
LisaHerrasJr. Panhellenic<lb/>
president.<lb/>
On Wednesday the Al-<lb/>
pha Xi Delta's had a<lb/>
Halloween party for their<lb/>
WE ARE PAYING<lb/>
CASH<lb/>
FOR CLASS RINGS<lb/>
(REGARDLESS OF CONDITION)<lb/>
OTHER GOLD RINGS<lb/>
(REGARDLESS OF CONDITION)<lb/>
ANY GOLD OR SILVER OF<lb/>
ANY KIND AND<lb/>
TOP CASH PRICE PAID FOR<lb/>
SILVER AND GOLD COINS<lb/>
COIN COLLECTIONS<lb/>
BRING TO "COIN MAN"<lb/>
HARMONY HOUSE<lb/>
SOUTH<lb/>
ON THE MALL<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
Every Tuesday night is "Ladies Nite"<lb/>
with reduced beverage prices for<lb/>
ladies from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m.<lb/>
Featuring Chris Farren<lb/>
Every Wednesday<lb/>
is Blue Grass Night<lb/>
ART<lb/>
526 S. Cotanc<lb/>
Down Town<lb/>
COU!OM MMHtS-<lb/>
; LIMITED TMEOffn<lb/>
12 Exp. Cplor Rim<lb/>
Devel-ped .and Printed<lb/>
$249<lb/>
� OAF<lb/>
Piedmont<lb/>
has discount fores<lb/>
worth flying "<lb/>
COUPOM EXPIRES<lb/>
It I Jill'<lb/>
20 Exp. Color FHm<lb/>
Developed and Printed<lb/>
'jEniSsS<lb/>
Or just about anywhere else you d like to go For<lb/>
Usance our Round Thrift-3 Fsrs saves yo 30<lb/>
oundmp When you return no earher than h .third<lb/>
daySwfngVur or,g.nal date of departr  P�ed-<lb/>
XTnt c wnnitond Excursion Fere means a o<lb/>
SrSdSSunTSu leave Saturday a I return<lb/>
Saturday sSX or Monday through the first ava.l-<lb/>
ap!Smaomh�)fiU other d.scount fares to<lb/>
hnSf rom too For complete information, call your<lb/>
SlJenToXdEont Airlines Major credit cards<lb/>
acPtecf All d.scount fares subject to change<lb/>
without notice<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
JMrTEO TE<lb/>
MOVIE OR SUl<lb/>
1�W.<lb/>
pledgee.<lb/>
On Halloween night the<lb/>
Alpha Xi's will visit the<lb/>
children's ward of the Pitt<lb/>
Memorial Hospital and will<lb/>
also visit the Greenville<lb/>
Nursing Home to present<lb/>
cards and songs as part of<lb/>
their local philanthropy.<lb/>
The Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
sorority is having their bake<lb/>
and yard sale as planned on<lb/>
November 3, in front of the<lb/>
house at 803 E. Fifth St.<lb/>
The Sigmas are trav-<lb/>
eling to State, Nov. 2 for a<lb/>
social with the Sigma Chi's.<lb/>
The Atlantic Christian Col-<lb/>
lege Sigmas from Wilson<lb/>
will also be traveling to the<lb/>
social.<lb/>
Last Thursday, the Tri-<lb/>
Sigs entertained Mrs.<lb/>
Thomas Brewer at a tea at<lb/>
the sorority house. All of<lb/>
the sisters and pledges<lb/>
were along with several<lb/>
alumnae.<lb/>
The Sigma Tau Gamma<lb/>
"Lil Roses" will be having<lb/>
a Macho King Contest at<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY STORE<lb/>
1501 S. Evans<lb/>
B-15, bomber, field,<lb/>
deck, flight, snorkel jackets<lb/>
Back Packs<lb/>
the Elbo Room Tuesday<lb/>
night Nov. 7. Tickets are<lb/>
being sold by the little<lb/>
sisters.<lb/>
The Sig Taus are also<lb/>
having a Halloween Blow-<lb/>
out on Monday, Oct. 30 at<lb/>
the Attic. There will be<lb/>
prizes and contests plus<lb/>
reduced prices on your<lb/>
favorite beverage.<lb/>
The Sigma Nu Little<lb/>
Sisters gave the brothers<lb/>
and pledges a champagne<lb/>
breakfast at the house this<lb/>
past weekend. The new<lb/>
little sisters will be inducted<lb/>
on Nov. 5.<lb/>
Sigma Nu is planning a<lb/>
float and house decorations<lb/>
for homecoming. After the<lb/>
game, they are having a<lb/>
private party at the Lemon<lb/>
Tree Inn in Chocowi.iitv.<lb/>
The Kappa Sigma Fra-<lb/>
ternity traveled to Norfolk<lb/>
this past weekend to the<lb/>
Pirates' football aame.<lb/>
Kappa Sigma is having<lb/>
their Little Sister Rush on<lb/>
Monday night, Oct. 30<lb/>
starting at 9 p.m. All<lb/>
interested young ladies are<lb/>
invited to attend.<lb/>
SAAD'S SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
113 GRANDE AVE.<lb/>
COLLEGE VIEW<lb/>
CLEANERS<lb/>
�TVVVV�CK<lb/>
TOMLAXAFTSt<lb/>
A0AYMOAOBT<lb/>
THE SUNSET<lb/>
net. SihSniEfT<lb/>
HI<lb/>
temKi:t�fri$�fo33bjfciwjjj<lb/>
Thursday Family Night<lb/>
ALL YOU<lb/>
CAN EAT<lb/>
TROUT $1.95<lb/>
shrimp  $3.95<lb/>
OYSTERS  $4.25<lb/>
FLOUNDER� $3.95<lb/>
Dinner meal Include Golden Crisp<lb/>
French Fires, Cole Slaw, Tartar Sauce and<lb/>
the world's best hushpupples.<lb/>
mm<lb/>
i Q A A Sun. thru Thurs. 4:30-9:00<lb/>
Seafood �����"�<lb/>
IT <lb/>
Friday's Seafood<lb/>
v 2311S. Evans St.<lb/>
STUFFY'S<lb/>
Good Stuff<lb/>
ROAST BEEF<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
Regular Roast Beef Sub<lb/>
aud small drink<lb/>
$1.50 (normally S1.85)<lb/>
Offer good Oct. 26 30<lb/>
Offer Good With Coupon Only<lb/>
Free Delivery on Campus<lb/>
6:00 p.m. -12:00 midnlte<lb/>
i<lb/>
768-6130<lb/>
581 CoUnehe<lb/>
�<lb/>
<pb facs="00057157_0006"/><lb/>
Page6 FOUNTAINHEAD 26 October 1978<lb/>
Vannelli is 'macho'<lb/>
ByCHRlSFARREN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
GmoVannelliis an innovator. His singing, appearance,<lb/>
and style are totally unparalleled by any other musician to<lb/>
date For years his thunderous voice and orchestra like<lb/>
sounding keyboards have intrigued listeners.<lb/>
For years his hairy chest, wavy hair, and overall macho<lb/>
image has simutaneously excited and disgusted females.<lb/>
For years his tru ly sensitive and at times profound lyrics<lb/>
have boggled critics with their apparent contradiction to his<lb/>
outward image.<lb/>
The sound of his music has always been intense and<lb/>
ex � full sounding, and until now most people either<lb/>
k � hated his music - there really was no neutral<lb/>
positioi<lb/>
Over the past five vears his music has constantly been<lb/>
changing in its style, but has remained fairly consistent in<lb/>
its approach (i.e. big vocals, heavy keyboards).<lb/>
. rful People. Vannelli's first album to really gain<lb/>
any critical attention, was basically filled with silky smooth<lb/>
banads and worked well at introducing his style to the<lb/>
without scaring off too many would-be fans<lb/>
ess.<lb/>
Storm At Sunup, his next album, was a step towards a<lb/>
much more jazz influenced sound. Some of the songs were<lb/>
very long with extended sax, guitar and piano solos running<lb/>
throughout.<lb/>
The lyrics stopped talking about people and concen-<lb/>
trated more on ideas. The music was jazz (for lack of a<lb/>
better word) but it was a different kind of jazz than anyone<lb/>
at that time had ever experienced.<lb/>
Almost predictably. Gist of Gemini was a step in yet<lb/>
another direction. While the sound continued to be<lb/>
"The sound of his music has<lb/>
always been intense and full<lb/>
sounding . . . (itI has a<lb/>
sureness and stability<lb/>
� � Eves of Laura of Laura Mars'<lb/>
Dunaway stars<lb/>
in Laura Mars<lb/>
By DARREN BERGSTEIN<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
Eyes of Laura Mars happens to be a very interesting<lb/>
� s a psychological thriller that achieves what it is<lb/>
� � -hat is. to titillate, and frighten.<lb/>
�ye Dunaway handles herself skillfully, portraying the<lb/>
e of a photographer Her specialty is fashion<lb/>
er of the kinky kind, her models sometimes<lb/>
ng in unusual and quite strange ways.<lb/>
ss Mars becomes alarmed when she learns that a<lb/>
- is loose and that she can see through his eyes. And<lb/>
this is the mam flaw of the film ; this psychic phenomena is<lb/>
never fully explained The audience must assume that it is a<lb/>
. Mars arbitrarily has.<lb/>
Tommy Lee Jonec comes into view when t show is staged<lb/>
that displays Miss Mars' various works. In this film Jones<lb/>
a much more fitting role for himself than the role he<lb/>
H,<lb/>
recognizable as that of Gino Vannelli. the music was almost<lb/>
in a synthesized rock vein.<lb/>
This semi-concept album was a disappointment to many<lb/>
who thought Gino was trying too hard to find his prescribed<lb/>
place in the scheme of contemporary music.<lb/>
Pauper In Paradise marked a return to the innocence<lb/>
and calmness of Powerful People in some respects, however<lb/>
the album was recorded live in the studio with a full<lb/>
orchestra accompaniment. On many of the tunes this was<lb/>
extremely effective, but on an equal amount of other songs<lb/>
it was overdone.<lb/>
With all of this behind him (and me) Gino Vanneli's<lb/>
latest release is called Brofner to Brother, and is a solid<lb/>
culmination of all his previous efforts. Vannelli seems to<lb/>
have found himself in this release, for the music has<lb/>
a sureness and stability that his other albums sometimes<lb/>
lacked.<lb/>
Thisalbum still contains a variety of different songs, but<lb/>
each one is treated separately and setting it apart from the<lb/>
rest.<lb/>
Unlike previousalbums, Gino has learned how to use his<lb/>
voice mixing the quiet intensity of "I Just Wanna Stop"<lb/>
with the raw power needed in "The Evil Eye<lb/>
The production too is more appropriate. Where before<lb/>
the synthesized keyboards and fullness were added with<lb/>
abandon to nearly every tune, in Brother to Brother is is<lb/>
used more sparingly and more effectively.<lb/>
Gmo Vannelli wrote all but two of the songs on the<lb/>
album, all of which are consistently solid both musically and<lb/>
lyrically The lyrics on this album follow no real pattern but<lb/>
have something to say about a lot of things with a special<lb/>
openness and awareness.<lb/>
GINO VANNELLI HE writes all but two of the songs on his ne<lb/>
The other two cuts on the album were written by brother<lb/>
Ross Vannelh.one of which is the already popular "I Just<lb/>
Wanna Stop Keeping it in the family, the album is<lb/>
produced and arranged by Gino, Joe, and Ross Vannelli<lb/>
The Vannelli sound in Brother to Brother has shed some<lb/>
of over intensity problems of previous albums, and as a<lb/>
result the album is more enjoyable to listen to.<lb/>
rW<lb/>
The<lb/>
w album Brother to Brother<lb/>
The trendy, danceable and smooth production of<lb/>
River Must Run" is especially notible in thisrespe<lb/>
Thisalbum once again marks a change 'or Gino Va �<lb/>
but hopefully it isachanaehat will stay Brother to Brother<lb/>
is a truely good record and succeeds in weeding out the<lb/>
flaws and combining the atributes of previous albums Dy<lb/>
this totally unique performer.<lb/>
Free Flick is Oh, God!<lb/>
The Betsy - that of an over sexed race car driver<lb/>
, a New York police detective assigned to Miss<lb/>
xilar case.<lb/>
'�- riot intensifies when the killer begins to murder<lb/>
v ;yees and business associates. Jones appears to<lb/>
� "le help and she retreats even farther into the<lb/>
te � .� shell he has built - retreating into her<lb/>
itograpf .<lb/>
i. is shocking and has a surprising twist.<lb/>
One may asl if this is the role for Dunaway. Looking<lb/>
the average hapless heroine of fifties' horror films,<lb/>
-aggled. and scared witless, she tries to grab the<lb/>
audience's pity with well-placed screams and fits of fright.<lb/>
This week's Free Flick is the Carl Reiner comedy Oh,<lb/>
God1 The film will be shown this Friday and Saturday night<lb/>
at 7 and 9 p.m. in Mendenhall Student Center's Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre.<lb/>
Oh, God1 is a celebration of the marvelous things that<lb/>
could happen to the Everyman (embodied by singer turned<lb/>
actor John Denver in his first movie role) were God to<lb/>
return to Earth in human form.<lb/>
In the film, God returns in work clothes to prove He is<lb/>
alive and well, and to promote His original values through<lb/>
the reluctant auspices of a young supermarket employee<lb/>
(John Denver).<lb/>
Book covers Zen and Yoga techniques<lb/>
Oh, God' is George Burns' first film since he won an<lb/>
Academy Award for his performance in his 80th year in The<lb/>
Sunshine Boys in 1975. and it is John Denver's first film<lb/>
ever<lb/>
It was produced by Jerry Weintraub. is a Warner Bros,<lb/>
release, and was directed by Carl Reiner, the soft-spoken<lb/>
wit of the 70s<lb/>
Films are open to ECU students, faculty and staff and<lb/>
their guests. Admission is by ID and Activity Card or<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Membership Card. All films<lb/>
are shown in the Mendenhall Student Center Theatre.<lb/>
i<lb/>
GEORGE BURNS AS he appears in Oh God<lb/>
unning<lb/>
Cinema<lb/>
4<lb/>
She does look frightened, but Dunaway appears to be a<lb/>
steadfast actress, apt to pursuing parts containing more<lb/>
strength and longevity In this film, she isn't asked to do<lb/>
much but scream like a seventies Faye Wray<lb/>
Nevertheless. Dunaway also seems to be the ideal<lb/>
fashion photographer. She handles the camera quite well,<lb/>
while taking hints on the side by Rene Auberjonois. When<lb/>
Rene is murdered before her very "eyes" . she is almost on<lb/>
the verge of collapse and despair, thinking she could be<lb/>
next victim.<lb/>
Tommy Lee Jones, though looking understandably<lb/>
better off from The Betsy could have pursued his part with a<lb/>
bit more zest .<lb/>
He appears to be, at first, skeptical of both Dunaway s<lb/>
sanity and her story, then begins taking a supreme liking to<lb/>
Dunaway s character. This is after he openly pans her<lb/>
work as garbage at the show where they originally met<lb/>
(though Jones at the time did not know Dunaway was<lb/>
responsible for the "garbage")<lb/>
The film moves along at a steady pace, especially the<lb/>
scenes where Dunaway is aware of the killer's intentions<lb/>
and makes vain attempts to halt the ghastly events that<lb/>
follow.<lb/>
The film also uses fine music, the most prominent<lb/>
example is the theme, titled "Prisoner" and sung mightily<lb/>
by Barbara Striesand. The song sets the mood for the film<lb/>
and is heard against a background of Dunaway's haunting<lb/>
eyes.<lb/>
So, Eyes of Laura Mars proves itself to be one of tne<lb/>
most suspenseful films of the year. Chock full of shock<lb/>
sequences, it may also earn the title of sleeper of the year.<lb/>
By JEFF ROLLINS<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
Holistic Running, by<lb/>
Joel Henning, discusses<lb/>
running as a spiritual and<lb/>
physical discipline which<lb/>
can lead one to a trans-<lb/>
cendant awareness of his<lb/>
place in the universe.<lb/>
This new runner's man-<lb/>
ual has the added charm of<lb/>
being written by a very<lb/>
literate fitness expert who<lb/>
quotes as easiiy from the<lb/>
Bahadvaged Gita as from<lb/>
John Fowles Daniel Martin.<lb/>
With the increasing<lb/>
popularity of jogging there<lb/>
has developed what might<lb/>
be termed the "fitness<lb/>
genre" in trade literature.<lb/>
These books are generally<lb/>
written by respected old<lb/>
MD's or by jocular college<lb/>
PE instructors wr "�<lb/>
discovered that they can<lb/>
make money by telling the<lb/>
sedentary bourgeoisie how<lb/>
to be happier by being<lb/>
fitter.<lb/>
Joel Henning, though,<lb/>
is a literate intellectual who<lb/>
applies Zen and Yoga tech-<lb/>
niques to running long<lb/>
distances. His book, Hol-<lb/>
istic Running, is not written<lb/>
to the 'round the block<lb/>
jogging neophyte but to the<lb/>
serious runner who puts in<lb/>
thirty to forty miles a week<lb/>
and up.<lb/>
The object is to achieve<lb/>
a profound feeling of or-<lb/>
ganic unity with the uni-<lb/>
verse by emphasizing the<lb/>
mind's connection to the<lb/>
body. The holistic runner<lb/>
(from the Greek "holos"<lb/>
meaning "whole" or "one-<lb/>
ness") uses Zen and Yoga<lb/>
techniques in order to know<lb/>
his body well and develop it<lb/>
to its maximum potential.<lb/>
Henning says, "The<lb/>
final stages of long-<lb/>
distance running, when it<lb/>
becomes holistic, may<lb/>
bring levels of insight and<lb/>
selfawareness that seem to<lb/>
be attained by only a small<lb/>
portion of the human spe-<lb/>
cies � those who are<lb/>
willing to pay the price, like<lb/>
serious students of Zen adn<lb/>
Yoga, as well as long-<lb/>
distance runners<lb/>
Prana: spirit<lb/>
In running as in, med-<lb/>
itation the breath is the<lb/>
thing. The yoga term<lb/>
"prana" refers to the life<lb/>
spirit, air, which enters us<lb/>
with each breath. The long<lb/>
distance runner's body<lb/>
might demand as much as<lb/>
sixty percent more oxygen<lb/>
during a hard workout,<lb/>
therefore he needs to utilize<lb/>
such breath enhancing<lb/>
techniques as diaphrag-<lb/>
matic breathing and re-<lb/>
laxing the jaw muscles by<lb/>
imagining the point right at<lb/>
the front of the jaw and<lb/>
keeping it loosely moving<lb/>
up and down.<lb/>
Henning quotes the<lb/>
master in Zen in the Art of<lb/>
Archery, concentrate<lb/>
entirely on your breathing,<lb/>
as if you had nothing else to<lb/>
do. Through this breathing,<lb/>
you will not only discover<lb/>
the source of all spiritual<lb/>
strength, but will also<lb/>
cause this source to flow<lb/>
more abundantly, and to<lb/>
pour more easily through<lb/>
your limbs Obviously,<lb/>
pulled by a rope atteched to<lb/>
your belly. This will allow<lb/>
your body, neck and head<lb/>
to stay erect. Remember to<lb/>
stay relaxed.<lb/>
Your breathing will be<lb/>
much easier if you maintain<lb/>
this posture, and your leg<lb/>
muscles will be able to<lb/>
carry you much further,<lb/>
advises Henning.<lb/>
Henning describes the<lb/>
beginnings of an increased<lb/>
awareness achieved by<lb/>
Books<lb/>
the benefits to be had from<lb/>
holistic running are not<lb/>
oniy physical.<lb/>
It is of course important<lb/>
to run as efficiently as<lb/>
possible. One should land<lb/>
on his heels and take off<lb/>
from his toes, rolling heel-<lb/>
toe, heel-toe.<lb/>
Imagine a line drawn<lb/>
down the center of the foot<lb/>
from the heel to the toe. Try<lb/>
to strike the ground levelly.<lb/>
Henning says to try to<lb/>
keep your head relaxed but<lb/>
erect. It helps to focus on a<lb/>
point off in the distance<lb/>
directly In front of you.<lb/>
Pretend that the top of<lb/>
your head is attached to a<lb/>
skyhook directly above you<lb/>
and that you are being<lb/>
running long distances.<lb/>
�You have passed the<lb/>
ten mile mark. You sense<lb/>
that the things around you<lb/>
were not just created by<lb/>
God but continue to contain<lb/>
God, and that you are<lb/>
connected to them.<lb/>
"You feel the center of<lb/>
energy in yourself; you are<lb/>
identified with the energy<lb/>
of which external nature is<lb/>
the image. You are not an<lb/>
island alone, but an embyo<lb/>
supported by all of nature<lb/>
around you<lb/>
"You have begun, as<lb/>
�merson put it, to 'Unlock<lb/>
your human doors and<lb/>
achieve a communion with<lb/>
transcendant forces<lb/>
Henning reviews a<lb/>
passage from Plotinus. The<lb/>
philosopher maintains,<lb/>
"You can only apprehend<lb/>
the infinite by a faculty<lb/>
supenoe to reason by en-<lb/>
tering into a state in which<lb/>
you are your finite self no<lb/>
longerThis is ecstasy It<lb/>
is the liberation of your<lb/>
mind from the finite con-<lb/>
sciousnesswhen you thus<lb/>
cease to be finite, you<lb/>
become one with the in-<lb/>
finite '<lb/>
The Zen master. Su-<lb/>
zuki, in his Introduction to<lb/>
Zen in the Art of Archery,<lb/>
describes Plotinus' "ec-<lb/>
stasy" in his own Oriental<lb/>
terms. He emphasizes the<lb/>
importance of leacing the<lb/>
self, forgetting it.<lb/>
"When the self-forget-<lb/>
fulness is attained, man<lb/>
thinks yet he does not<lb/>
think. He thinks like the<lb/>
showers coming down from<lb/>
the sky, he thinks like the<lb/>
waves rolling on the ocean,<lb/>
he thinks like the stars illu-<lb/>
minating the nightly hea-<lb/>
vens; he thinks like the<lb/>
green foliage shooting forth<lb/>
in the relaxing spring<lb/>
breeze. Indeed, he is the<lb/>
showers, the ocean, the<lb/>
stars, the foliage<lb/>
Western yogas<lb/>
Sophisticated Western<lb/>
biofsedback techniques<lb/>
have begun to prove that<lb/>
Westerners can do what<lb/>
only studious yogas has<lb/>
dons bsfors. That is to<lb/>
control by will involuntary<lb/>
muscles like the eart and<lb/>
the endoctmai svsten- the<lb/>
responsiveness the in! te<lb/>
relation of mmd to b<lb/>
must always be apprecia'<lb/>
for itscomple I<lb/>
By taking regular, ex-<lb/>
tensive runs one will be-<lb/>
come more in tune with the<lb/>
relation of his mmd to h s<lb/>
body, and hence to the<lb/>
universe When one eats<lb/>
and breathes he is taking<lb/>
part in the eternal ex-<lb/>
change of energy The<lb/>
runner will slowly has an<lb/>
increasing conception of his<lb/>
rightful place in the organic<lb/>
universe, asserts Henning<lb/>
The author that Holi-<lb/>
stic runners' will begin to<lb/>
sound like EM Forster s<lb/>
Harold as he literally rows<lb/>
his heart out agmst the tide<lb/>
in the short story. "The<lb/>
Point of It "<lb/>
"He made himself all<lb/>
will and muscle He began<lb/>
not to know where he was<lb/>
The thrill of the stretcher<lb/>
against hts feet, and of the<lb/>
tide up his arms, merged<lb/>
with his friend's voice<lb/>
towards one nameless sen-<lb/>
sation ; he was approaching<lb/>
the mystic state that was<lb/>
the athlete's true though<lb/>
unacknowledged goal; he<lb/>
was beginning to be<lb/>
(Review copy of Holistic<lb/>
Hunnmg provided by cour-<lb/>
ts Central News)<lb/>
<pb facs="00057157_0007"/><lb/>
Installation Concert, brass and opera featured<lb/>
26 Octob 1978 FOUNT AIMHCADPagjT<lb/>
School of Music schedules full slate<lb/>
By SUSAN CHESTON<lb/>
Staff Reporter<lb/>
The ECU Symphony<lb/>
Orchestra will perform a<lb/>
special Installation Concert<lb/>
on Saturday, October 28, at<lb/>
8:15 p.m. in Wright Aud-<lb/>
itorium. The concert will be<lb/>
the final event of the series<lb/>
of activities celebrating the<lb/>
installation of Dr. Thomas<lb/>
Brewer as the new Chan-<lb/>
cellor.<lb/>
Robert Hause will con-<lb/>
duct the orchestra and two<lb/>
student soloists, Linda<lb/>
Hanson and Glenn Davis,<lb/>
will be featured.<lb/>
The program will open<lb/>
with Otto Nicolai's Over-<lb/>
ture to "The Merry Wives<lb/>
of Windsor The "Con-<lb/>
to for Two Violins and<lb/>
Orchestra' of J.S. Bach<lb/>
will follow. The three-<lb/>
movement work is a con-<lb/>
certo grosso of Bach's<lb/>
ethen period in which<lb/>
two violins form the con-<lb/>
certino in contrast with the<lb/>
f-pteno L.med by the<lb/>
mg orchestra.<lb/>
Seniors Hanson and<lb/>
Davis will solo as violinists<lb/>
for the Bach. Both are stu-<lb/>
dents of Dr. Paul Topper of<lb/>
the ECU School of Music<lb/>
faculty.<lb/>
Hanson has perform-<lb/>
ance experience as a mem-<lb/>
ber of the Fairfax Sym-<lb/>
phony and the American<lb/>
 outh Performs orchestra.<lb/>
American Youth Performs<lb/>
is an honor group for ex-<lb/>
ptional high school musl-<lb/>
ins Hanson, a native of<lb/>
rfax. Va . is a Music<lb/>
vlucation major.<lb/>
Davis, of Norfolk, Va<lb/>
s pei formed as a member<lb/>
� the Norfolk Symphony<lb/>
�d as concertmaster of the<lb/>
Tidewater Youth Symph-<lb/>
v He is a recipient of the<lb/>
A J. Fletcher Scholarship.<lb/>
Davis is also a major in<lb/>
M usic Education.<lb/>
The orchestra's final<lb/>
selection will be the "Sym-<lb/>
t hony No. 8 in G Major,<lb/>
Opus 88" of Antonin Dvor-<lb/>
ak. The four-movement<lb/>
work is known as one of<lb/>
Dvorak's most light-<lb/>
hearted, rhapsodic and<lb/>
folk- inspired works. The<lb/>
use of rich cello timbres to<lb/>
introduce several themes<lb/>
has identified this major<lb/>
symphony as the "Cello<lb/>
Symphony<lb/>
Following the October<lb/>
28 performance, the ECU<lb/>
Symphony Orchestra will<lb/>
present the same program<lb/>
on tour in Bayboro (Nov-<lb/>
ember 6) and in Norfolk<lb/>
(November 8).<lb/>
A unique feature of the<lb/>
Installation Concert will be<lb/>
the cover design of the<lb/>
program. Specially de-<lb/>
signed to honor the Chan-<lb/>
cellor's Installation, the<lb/>
cover will feature a repro-<lb/>
ductio of the silver mace<lb/>
created by John Satterfield<lb/>
for the ceremonies. Zane<lb/>
Leake, and ECU ARt major,<lb/>
created the program cover.<lb/>
The Saturday night per-<lb/>
formance is free and the<lb/>
public is invited to attend.<lb/>
Opera Theatre<lb/>
Scenes from operas by<lb/>
Humperdinck, Beethoven,<lb/>
Verdi, Mascagni, Meyer-<lb/>
beer, Rossini, Bizet, Pro-<lb/>
kofief and Donizetti will be<lb/>
performed by the ECU<lb/>
Opera Theatre Oct. 27-28.<lb/>
Each performance is<lb/>
scheduled for 8 p.m. in the<lb/>
A.J. Fletcher Recital Hall.<lb/>
Tickets, which are $1.50<lb/>
each, may be purchased at<lb/>
the door or reserved in<lb/>
advance, by telephoning<lb/>
757-6331.<lb/>
The "scenes" produc-<lb/>
tion is directed by Dr.<lb/>
Clyde Hiss of the ECU<lb/>
School of M usic faculty and<lb/>
includes the following:<lb/>
Hansel und Gretel<lb/>
(Scene from Act I): Gretel,<lb/>
Alysa Smith of Wendell and<lb/>
Hansel, Valerie Seagraves<lb/>
of Jacksonville.<lb/>
Fidelio (Scene from Act<lb/>
I): Jacquino, Ira Jacobs of<lb/>
Wilmington; Marzelline,<lb/>
Margaret Brooks of Wil-<lb/>
mington; Rocco, H. Elliot<lb/>
Stone of Martinsville, Va<lb/>
and Leonora, Sheila Brooks<lb/>
of Wilmington.<lb/>
 Trovatore (Scene from<lb/>
Act II): Manrico, Steve<lb/>
Walence of Marshal I berg<lb/>
and Azucena, Dianne Har-<lb/>
ris Picket of Charlotte.<lb/>
Cavalier ia Rusticana:<lb/>
Santuzza, Teresa Leggett of<lb/>
Greenville and Alfio, Don-<lb/>
ald Greene Jr. of Hamlet.<lb/>
Les Huguenots (Scene<lb/>
from Act II): Marguerite de<lb/>
Valois, Belinda Bryant of<lb/>
Dalton, Ga Valentine,<lb/>
Tree Guion of Virginia<lb/>
Beach, Va Urbain, Emily<lb/>
Bennett of Whiteville; and<lb/>
Stephanie, Carolyn Greene<lb/>
of MoreheadCity.<lb/>
La Cenerentola (Scene<lb/>
from Act II): Dandini, Ger-<lb/>
ald Murphy Jr. of China<lb/>
Grove; Don Magnifico,<lb/>
Donald Greene Jr. of Ham-<lb/>
let ; Prince Ramiro, Douglas<lb/>
Newell of Roxboro; Clor-<lb/>
inda, Margeret Brooks of<lb/>
Wilmington; Tisbe, Eliza-<lb/>
beth Auman of Fayette-<lb/>
ville; and Cinderella, Anne<lb/>
Gunn of Durham.<lb/>
Carmen (Scene from<lb/>
Act III): Frasquita, Julia<lb/>
Moore of Canton; Merce-<lb/>
des, Teresa Leggett of<lb/>
Greenville; and Carmen,<lb/>
Carolyn Greene of More-<lb/>
head City.<lb/>
Voina I Mir (Scene from<lb/>
Act I): Natasha Rostova,<lb/>
Belinda Bryant of Dalton,<lb/>
Ga Prince Andrei Bol-<lb/>
konsky, Gerald Murphy Jr.<lb/>
of China Grove; and Sonia,<lb/>
Shelia Brooks of Wilming-<lb/>
ton.<lb/>
L'Elisir D'A more<lb/>
(Scene from Act II): Gian-<lb/>
netta, Venessa Malloy of<lb/>
Wilmington; Nemorino,<lb/>
Steve Walence of Marshal-<lb/>
Iberg) Adina, Julia Moore<lb/>
of Canton; and Dr. Dul-<lb/>
camara, H. Elliott Stone of<lb/>
Martinsville, Va.<lb/>
-M<lb/>
J�Q<lb/>
KJ.SJK.<lb/>
24Houisaday<lb/>
Large homemade biscuits with<lb/>
Ham-Sausage-Steak<lb/>
Chicken-Cheese-Butto:<lb/>
AtoCcmbmalia<lb/>
-Dinners-<lb/>
FriedQucken Tube and Buckets<lb/>
also Drive thru window<lb/>
For take out call 500N.GreeneSt<lb/>
758-7607<lb/>
Jk Pxtleubx PCucs<lb/>
Private Gay Club<lb/>
Memberships Now Being Accepted<lb/>
Brown Bagging<lb/>
and<lb/>
Your Favorite Beer<lb/>
Open WedSun.<lb/>
9:00- until<lb/>
Disco and All<lb/>
New Light Show<lb/>
Costumes for the pro-<lb/>
duction were designed by<lb/>
Patricia Hiss. Piano accom-<lb/>
panists are Susan Bell of<lb/>
Blacksburg, Va. and Teresa<lb/>
Watkinsof Kannapolis.<lb/>
Installation<lb/>
Brass fanfares and<lb/>
suites from four centuries<lb/>
of music will herald ECU'S<lb/>
installation as its seventh<lb/>
chief administrator, Chan-<lb/>
cellor Thomas Bowman<lb/>
Brewer, Oct. 28.<lb/>
Taped renditions of<lb/>
rousing brass music by<lb/>
Lassus, Susato, des Pres,<lb/>
Kugelmann, Gabrieli,<lb/>
Lully, Purcell, Corrette and<lb/>
Beethoven will be played<lb/>
through the loudspeakers<lb/>
of ECU'S electronic carillon<lb/>
system during the hour<lb/>
before the North Lawn<lb/>
ceremony formally begins<lb/>
at 1015 a.m.<lb/>
The fanfares, selected<lb/>
and recorded by James<lb/>
Rees, director of radio<lb/>
services at ECU, include<lb/>
musical compositions used<lb/>
in various celebrations and<lb/>
ceremonies during the<lb/>
Renaissance, baroque and<lb/>
classical eras.<lb/>
The ECU Symphony<lb/>
Orchestra, conducted by<lb/>
Robert Hause, will accom-<lb/>
pany the procession of<lb/>
ceremony participants onto<lb/>
the lawn with three selec-<lb/>
tions: the "Cortege" from<lb/>
Rimsky-Korsakov's<lb/>
"Mlada the Elgar<lb/>
"Pomp and Circumstance"<lb/>
March No. 4 and "Orb and<lb/>
Sceptre composed by<lb/>
William Walton for the<lb/>
1953 coronation of Queen<lb/>
Elizabeth II.<lb/>
SOLOIST JAMES FORGER: Classical and contemporary<lb/>
works will appear on the program when the ECU<lb/>
Symphonic Wind Ensemble presents its fall concert Sunday<lb/>
Oct. 29, at 8:15 p.m. in Wright Auditorium The concert is<lb/>
free and open to the public. The ensemble will perform the<lb/>
Charles Simon Catel Overture in C, Percy Grainger :<lb/>
'Spoon River the Ingolf Dahl Concerto for Alto Sax and<lb/>
Wind Orchestra, and H Owen Reeds La Fiesta<lb/>
Mexicana Featured soloist in the Dahl concerto is James<lb/>
Forger<lb/>
CHANELO'S PIZZA<lb/>
IS NOW UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT AND IS<lb/>
DELIVERING IN A SMALLER DELIVERY AREA<lb/>
SO WE CAN SERVE YOU QUICKER.<lb/>
TRY US AND SEE<lb/>
(THE NEW DELIVERY AREA IS SOUTH OF THE<lb/>
RIVER AND EAST OF EVANS STREET)<lb/>
DIAL 758-7400 FOR FASTER FREE DELIVERY<lb/>
PIZZA SUBS LASAGNE SPAGHETTI<lb/>
WE MIX OUR OWN CRUST AND<lb/>
BAKE BREAD EVERY DAY.<lb/>
TASTE THE DIFFERENCE!<lb/>
WFOR THE WEEK<lb/>
OF OCT.26-NOV.2<lb/>
DORM RESIDENTS ON THE<lb/>
HILL WILL RECEIVE 10 OFF<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
BURGER<lb/>
AND<lb/>
FRIES!<lb/>
THE<lb/>
PADDOCK<lb/>
CLUB<lb/>
1008B Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
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 12 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/>
JACK'S<lb/>
STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
Phones 756 5788<lb/>
264 By Pass<lb/>
<pb facs="00057157_0008"/><lb/>
Pag 8 FOUNTAINHEAD 26 October 1978<lb/>
Lady Pirates must rely<lb/>
on quickness, strength<lb/>
ByCHARLESCHANDLER<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Speed and strength are the name of the game. So says<lb/>
ECU women's basketball coach Cathy Andruzzi as she<lb/>
begins her first season as the new Lady Pirate head coach.<lb/>
�We have a very short team said Andruzzi. we M<lb/>
have to make up for this by outrunning and out-muscling<lb/>
our opponents<lb/>
The Queen's College graduate said she is pleased the<lb/>
Pirates have worked hard before practice began in<lb/>
creparat.on for the upcoming season, which presents<lb/>
probably the toughest schedule in the school's history.<lb/>
The girls have worked very hard on their weight<lb/>
training " said Andruzzi. "They realized that we have a<lb/>
challenging schedule coming up and saw the opportunity to<lb/>
make a real commitment. I'm very pleased with the efforts<lb/>
that they have put forth .D Andruzzi said she plans to<lb/>
reward each girl for the effort put forth in pre-season<lb/>
pract.ee. "Weplanon using 12 people as often as possible.<lb/>
I will definitely use eight extensively<lb/>
Among the top eight players is last season's leading<lb/>
scorer Rosie Thompson. Thompson, a junior from Blounts<lb/>
Simply Sports<lb/>
Sam Rogers<lb/>
ECU's O still the show<lb/>
Before Oliver Mack had even set foot on the ECU<lb/>
campus Pirate head coach Larry Gillman was comparing<lb/>
the high scoring guard with Ail-Americans Butch Lee of<lb/>
Marquette and North Carolina's Phil Ford.<lb/>
The loquacious Gillman also confidently predicted his<lb/>
Pirates would win 20 games and appear in a post-season<lb/>
tournament. . .<lb/>
Unfortunately, Gillman's brash pre-season quickly fell<lb/>
by the ways.de and the end of the year the Bucs were<lb/>
saddled with a disappointing 9-17 record.<lb/>
Last year nobody knew about the basketball program<lb/>
here " sa.d Gillman at the Pirates annual media day two<lb/>
weeks ago. "I had to go out and tell them about it<lb/>
But ' winked Gillman as he watched Mack sink a nifty<lb/>
25 foot jump shot. "At least I was right about one thing<lb/>
Mack the articulate 6-3 native of New York City, was<lb/>
everything Gillman promised and maybe even a little more.<lb/>
W ithout the talented scorer last year, if s a safe bet M mges<lb/>
Coliseum would have been all but empty by the end of the<lb/>
season<lb/>
Ol.ver was certainly the show last year, but Gillman says<lb/>
P,rate fans will see a more complete player this season<lb/>
when the Bucs open at homeNov25againstUNC-Ashev.ne.<lb/>
I would be surprised to see Oliver score 28 points a<lb/>
game th.s year noted Gillman. "I'd still like to see him<lb/>
shoot as much, but Oliver has worked more on his ball<lb/>
handling and his defensive play during the off-season.<lb/>
� But what's more important to Oliver than anything is<lb/>
winning " continued Gillman.<lb/>
He wants to have a successful season just like the rest<lb/>
of the team and fans<lb/>
M ack' s individual plaudits are endless. Since he arrived<lb/>
from San Jacinto Junior College, he has quickly become the<lb/>
most h.ghly publicized basketball player in ECU history.<lb/>
Mak broke the single game scoring record with 47<lb/>
points against USC-Aiken and set another school record<lb/>
with his lofty 28.0 season scoring average. He was also<lb/>
named the most valuable player in the First Union<lb/>
Invitational Tournament last season and returns this year as<lb/>
the nation's second leading scorer behind Indiana State's<lb/>
Larry Bird.<lb/>
Teams attitude improved<lb/>
� � Sure I scored a lot of points last year and the individual<lb/>
honors are real nice, but we didn't win said Mack. "This<lb/>
year I'm going out there with the attitude we're going to<lb/>
win and we're going to do it as a team<lb/>
� All we've discussed before the season is doing things<lb/>
as a team If one person didn't show up for a scrimmage<lb/>
game we didn't play. If one person didn't show up for a<lb/>
meeting we didn't have it. Whatever we do this year we're<lb/>
going to do it together. Last year, that togetherness just<lb/>
wasn't there. Th.s year I've already been able to see that<lb/>
With the pre-season build-up last year, Mack was under<lb/>
incredible pressure to produce from the outset of the<lb/>
season But with a talented recruiting classon hand, and all<lb/>
five starters returning, Mack admits most of the pressure<lb/>
has subsided.<lb/>
�' really think that most of the pressure was on me last<lb/>
year " admitted Mack who led the team in scoring 21 times<lb/>
and set six other school records. "With the team depending<lb/>
a lot on my scoring, I really wasn't able to concentrate on<lb/>
my defense and ball handling. But I want to become a more<lb/>
complete player and I've worked a lot harder on<lb/>
And despite the widespread criticism directed at<lb/>
Gillman both during and after the season, Mack isconf.dent<lb/>
the Pirates will be an improved team this year<lb/>
�I like the attitude on the team this year smiled Mack.<lb/>
�The new players like Frank Hobson, George Maynor and<lb/>
Al Tyson should all contribute a lot to the team and l<lb/>
certainly think we'II be a much better team<lb/>
Deep South event opens<lb/>
Creek led the Lady Pirates with a 20.8 scoring average. She<lb/>
was also the top rebounder with 9.9 grabs a game.<lb/>
-Rosie is definitely our leader noted Andruzzi.<lb/>
"She's a great scorer. I'm very happy to have her on our<lb/>
team. She is invaluable to us<lb/>
Andruzzi also mentioned several other Pirates whom<lb/>
she feels will make valuable contributions to the teamGall<lb/>
Kerbaugh, April Ross, and Lynn Emerson are all very hard<lb/>
workers They are improving each day. We're expecting<lb/>
really great things from them<lb/>
"Marcia Girven returns from last year as out top<lb/>
center" saidn Andruzzi. "She can be a force in the<lb/>
middle Girven led the Pirates with 100 blocked shots last<lb/>
season as a freshman.<lb/>
Andruzzi also mentioned that the ball-handling ability of<lb/>
sophomore guard Lydia Roundtree would be a big asset to<lb/>
the Pirates. Andruzzi noted that Roundtree s dribbling<lb/>
expertise would be a great help to the Pirate trans.t,on<lb/>
Sherry Sealey, a 5'6" transfer guard from Peace<lb/>
College, should also add speed and experience to the<lb/>
backcourt said Andruzzi. ftin<lb/>
Andruzzi noted that the Pirate schedule this season<lb/>
included such powers as N.C. State, Ohio State Od<lb/>
Dominion, Montclair State. East Tennessee, and North<lb/>
Carolina.  � ,�<lb/>
��Our schedule has improved considerable over the last<lb/>
several seasons said Andruzzi. "It hasreally helped us to<lb/>
prepare for this season emotionally. Hoepfully the students<lb/>
and the residents of Greenville will support us since we<lb/>
offer such an attractive schedule<lb/>
The Lady Pirates, 20-11 last season, begin play on Nov.<lb/>
28 at Campbell College. Two days later they must take on<lb/>
nationally ranked N.C State in Raleigh.<lb/>
Andruzzi sa.d the test would tell much about the 1978<lb/>
version of the ECU squad. "Wed rather play a team like<lb/>
State a little later on. But we'll do the best we can. I think<lb/>
they play two games before that game. This could prove to<lb/>
 anceECU has only two players on the team taller than<lb/>
5-10" the Pirates must be aggressive. "This is where the<lb/>
pre-season weight training will come in handy explained<lb/>
Andruzzi. "We should be a strong ball club. Our speed w.l<lb/>
be a plus also. I just hope we can overcome the height<lb/>
disadvantage<lb/>
Lydia Rountree R�8e 1fh��Pntfl, P.rates ,n<lb/>
THE UTTLE SPARKPLUG trom nearhy Elm City finished THE JON.OB �� 172 �. a J910 S<lb/>
l.tl Assists an. a. CO steals from her �w� -�� ��.��'�J� ItouTdTrhTmpson 3 ��" �'<lb/>
last season- Roundtree finished with 256 points last year points per me ana 9.SeD� Emerson or<lb/>
!Z me third highest point tota, on the team- Only a one forward IteZel, season No, 28<lb/>
sophomore, Roundtree rans aa one o, the guides, guards J� CJ<lb/>
in the state . -g<lb/>
ECU Invitational opens<lb/>
�" -Troohies will be f.<lb/>
  .a w nnorr �, i vajq h�H hru-��ri to Farrrwille v.rainia ana<lb/>
Lady Pirate Roster<lb/>
1<lb/>
NAME<lb/>
Rosie Thompson<lb/>
Lynne Emerson<lb/>
Sherry Sealey<lb/>
Gale Kerbaugh<lb/>
Laury Young<lb/>
Marcia Girven<lb/>
Lydia Rountree<lb/>
Lillion Barnes<lb/>
Patty Howell<lb/>
April Ross<lb/>
Robin Insley<lb/>
Kim Versprille<lb/>
CLASS<lb/>
Jr.<lb/>
So.<lb/>
Sr.<lb/>
Sr.<lb/>
Fr.<lb/>
So.<lb/>
So.<lb/>
Fr.<lb/>
Jr.<lb/>
Sr.<lb/>
Fr.<lb/>
So.<lb/>
HOMETOWN<lb/>
Blounts Creek<lb/>
Newtown Square, Pa.<lb/>
Smithfield<lb/>
Raleigh<lb/>
Raleigh<lb/>
Woodbridge, Va.<lb/>
Elm City<lb/>
Wilson<lb/>
Lynnbrook, N.Y.<lb/>
Bath<lb/>
Poquoson, Va.<lb/>
Norfolk, Va.<lb/>
ECU is likely to be the<lb/>
seventh-seeded team<lb/>
heading into this week-<lb/>
end' s North Carolina Al AW<lb/>
field hockey tournament at<lb/>
Appalachian State.<lb/>
The Pirates, now 1-8.<lb/>
will participate in round<lb/>
robin play which opens<lb/>
Friday and concludes Sat-<lb/>
urday. The top two teams<lb/>
from each of two pools of<lb/>
four will advance to tour-<lb/>
nament play later on Satur<lb/>
day. The title game Is set<lb/>
for Sunday.<lb/>
Top players for the<lb/>
Pirates elude left inner<lb/>
Sue Jones, a aophomore<lb/>
from Virginia Beach, Va<lb/>
and right halfback Debbie<lb/>
Harrison, a sophomore<lb/>
from Hatteraa. Both have<lb/>
demonstrated consistently<lb/>
fine play throughout the<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Minges Coliseum will<lb/>
be location of the first<lb/>
annual ECU Invitational<lb/>
Volleyball Tournament.<lb/>
The first of the three<lb/>
sessions begins at 4 p.m.<lb/>
Friday afternoon, followed<lb/>
by matches at 6 and 8 p.m.<lb/>
The first two sessions of<lb/>
the tournament will consist<lb/>
of round robin play to dec-<lb/>
ide the seedings for the<lb/>
single elimination champ-<lb/>
ionship playoff. The four<lb/>
teams with the best record<lb/>
in the round-robin action<lb/>
will advance to the semi-<lb/>
finals which will begin at<lb/>
2:00 p.m. on Saturday.<lb/>
The losers in the semi-<lb/>
finals will meet to decide<lb/>
third place at 5:00 Satur-<lb/>
day. The championship will<lb/>
begin at aproximately<lb/>
6.30.<lb/>
Pirate coach Alita Dillon<lb/>
sees ECU and Virginia<lb/>
Tech as the favorites in the<lb/>
tournament. "We should<lb/>
win it said Dillon. "This<lb/>
isour first invitational and I<lb/>
think we're well prepared<lb/>
for it. We had hoped to<lb/>
have a twelve team tour-<lb/>
ney, but because of other<lb/>
commitments some of the<lb/>
teams we invited were<lb/>
unable to attend. It takes a<lb/>
few years to establish a<lb/>
tournament<lb/>
The Pirates enter the<lb/>
Tournament with a 17-10<lb/>
overall record, including<lb/>
victories over two of the<lb/>
other teams in the field.<lb/>
Earlier in the season, ECU<lb/>
defeated Louisburg College<lb/>
in Minges. Dillon noted<lb/>
 Louisburg has played very<lb/>
well. They made it to the<lb/>
semifinals in the Appa-<lb/>
lachian State Tournament<lb/>
last weekend, which was<lb/>
further than we got<lb/>
The other victim of the<lb/>
Pirates that will be here<lb/>
this weekend is Concord<lb/>
College from Athens, West<lb/>
Virginia. ECU beat Con-<lb/>
cord in the Appalachian<lb/>
State Tournament in what<lb/>
would have to be con-<lb/>
sidered a hard fought vic-<lb/>
tory ;15-11,15-9.<lb/>
Rounding out the field<lb/>
of the six team festival is<lb/>
Longwood College from<lb/>
Farmville. Virginia and<lb/>
Peace College in Raleigh.<lb/>
Dillon mentioned that<lb/>
Peace has had a lot of<lb/>
injuries to key players<lb/>
which has limited severely<lb/>
their ability tooompete<lb/>
'Trophies will be pre-<lb/>
sented to the first, secon<lb/>
and third piace teams<lb/>
There will also be a six<lb/>
member All-Tournament<lb/>
team selected by the otl<lb/>
coaches.<lb/>
ECU volleyball action<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
ECU has seen very little<lb/>
of its newly expanded Fick-<lb/>
len Stadium this season.<lb/>
With six of its first eight<lb/>
games on the road, it's not<lb/>
hard to understand why<lb/>
head coach Pat Dye wel-<lb/>
comes an open date this<lb/>
week before the Bucs<lb/>
conclude their seasonwith<lb/>
three home games.<lb/>
"Its good to have a<lb/>
week off admitted Dye.<lb/>
"It gives our coaches a<lb/>
chance to get on the road<lb/>
and do some recruiting. It<lb/>
also gives our players a<lb/>
chance to get away from<lb/>
football for a weekend. I<lb/>
just wish we had an open<lb/>
date earlier in the season<lb/>
After dropping a close<lb/>
17-16 decision to Southern<lb/>
Mississippi two weeks ago,<lb/>
the Pirates bounced back to<lb/>
take a 21-14 victory over a<lb/>
determined Richmond team<lb/>
last week in the annual<lb/>
Oyster Bowl classic in<lb/>
Norfolk.<lb/>
ECU quarterback Lean-<lb/>
der Green directed the<lb/>
Bucs on all three scoring<lb/>
ECU DEFENSIVE TACKLE Noah Clark grabs Richmond dfjve8 m6 W8d the win-<lb/>
auartarback Qrag Qragory from bahind and toroaa a fumbla nmg loucMwn himself<lb/>
Tat. in tha fourth quartar. with lust 1 a��1<lb/>
the final quarter. The JeoX-<lb/>
Chavis forces fumble<lb/>
sonville native carried the<lb/>
ball 23 times for 102 yards<lb/>
and hit split end Billy Ray<lb/>
Wahington with a key 39<lb/>
yard pass which set up<lb/>
ECU'S Green's final touch-<lb/>
down.<lb/>
"Leander had his finest<lb/>
game of the season<lb/>
praised Dye. "He hasn't<lb/>
been challenging people<lb/>
running the ball like he did<lb/>
against Richmond. And<lb/>
only in the last few games<lb/>
has he been healthy<lb/>
Even though the offense<lb/>
moved the ball consistently<lb/>
in the final quarter, the<lb/>
Pirates spent most of the<lb/>
first three periods in their<lb/>
own territory and fumbling<lb/>
the ball in cruicial situ-<lb/>
ations.<lb/>
Sam Harrell lost a pitch<lb/>
in the first quarter which<lb/>
Richmond safety Jeff Nixon<lb/>
recovered on the ECU 2.<lb/>
Two plays later the Spiders<lb/>
scored on Demltri Korn-<lb/>
egay' s one yard run.<lb/>
And on the next series,<lb/>
Steve Greer fumbled a snap<lb/>
from center on fourth down<lb/>
which ended another Pirate<lb/>
scoring drive. By the end of<lb/>
the game, ECU had fum-<lb/>
bled 11 times and lost four.<lb/>
"In our offense we<lb/>
expect to tumble anywhere<lb/>
from four to five times and<lb/>
lose two or three a game<lb/>
said Dye. "But 11 times is<lb/>
just too many. Most of our<lb/>
fumbles Saturday were on<lb/>
exchanges from the center<lb/>
There's not much we can do<lb/>
but keep playing and hope<lb/>
you can correct that part of<lb/>
the game<lb/>
Both Leander<lb/>
and Steve Greer had prob-<lb/>
lems against Richmond"<lb/>
Dye praised the entire<lb/>
offensive unit for their play<lb/>
against Richmond and sin-<lb/>
gled out split ends Billy Ray<lb/>
Washington and Terry Gal-<lb/>
laher for their clutch pass<lb/>
catching.<lb/>
Gallaher grabbed a key<lb/>
15 yard pass on the third<lb/>
down on the Pirate first<lb/>
score in the fourth quarter<lb/>
and Washington's 39 yard<lb/>
reception setup ECU's win-<lb/>
ning touchdown.<lb/>
"Our offense seemed to<lb/>
make some progress<lb/>
against Richmond said<lb/>
Dye. "There's no question<lb/>
we played our best game<lb/>
offensively. However, I still<lb/>
don't think we've played<lb/>
the way we're capable of<lb/>
playing yet<lb/>
The Pirates will face old<lb/>
Southern Conference rival<lb/>
Appalachian State next<lb/>
Saturday before meeting<lb/>
William and Mary the<lb/>
following weak in the<lb/>
homecoming game<lb/>
ECU will conclude its<lb/>
regular season the follow-<lb/>
ing week against Marshal.<lb/>
another member of the<lb/>
Southern Conference<lb/>
NOTES Three former<lb/>
ECU athletes and a orn-e-<lb/>
coach will bC'ductec in the<lb/>
school's HaH of Fame du<lb/>
ing halttime ceremonies o<lb/>
the William and Ma-<lb/>
game. Jim MaMory, Jim<lb/>
Johnson. Tom Michel, and<lb/>
Richard Narron are tour<lb/>
inductees the four mem-<lb/>
bers now bring the total to<lb/>
23 who have been en-<lb/>
shrined since the Hall of<lb/>
Fame was begun in<lb/>
1974. Jim Johnson was the<lb/>
same fan who came off the<lb/>
sidelines last year against<lb/>
William and Mary and<lb/>
tackled quarterback Tom<lb/>
Rozantz as he went into the<lb/>
end zone for the winning<lb/>
touchdown  Richmond<lb/>
safety Jeff Nixon had an-<lb/>
other outstanding game<lb/>
against the Pirates last<lb/>
week and is a cinch to grab<lb/>
Ail-American honors again<lb/>
this yearNixon intercep-<lb/>
ted two paaees and re-<lb/>
covered a tumble on ECU's<lb/>
two yard tine which set up<lb/>
the Spiders first touch-<lb/>
downNixon now has 21<lb/>
interceptions<lb/>
� �<lb/>
, - �<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057157_0009"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD's Fearless Forecast<lb/>
CLEMSON AT N.C. STATE<lb/>
MARYLAND AT DUKE<lb/>
UNC AT SOUTH CAROLINA<lb/>
WAKE FOREST AT AUBURN<lb/>
FLORIDA AT GEORGIA TECH<lb/>
ARKANSAS AT HOUSTON<lb/>
GEORGIA AT KENTUCKY<lb/>
OKLAHOMA ST AT NEBRASKA<lb/>
MISSISSIPPI ST AT TENNESSEE<lb/>
PITTSBURGATNAVY<lb/>
CALIFORNIA AT SOUTHERN CAL.<lb/>
ARIZONA ST. AT WASHINGTON<lb/>
CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
(68-25-1)<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
South Carolina<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Georgia Tech<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Tennessee<lb/>
Pittsburgh<lb/>
Southern Cal.<lb/>
Arizona St.<lb/>
TERRV HERNDON<lb/>
(65-28-1)<lb/>
N.C State<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
South Carolina<lb/>
auburn<lb/>
Georgia Tech<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Mississippi St.<lb/>
Pittsburgh<lb/>
Southern Cal.<lb/>
Washington<lb/>
SAM ROGERS<lb/>
(62-31-1)<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
South Carolina<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Georgia Tech<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Tennessee<lb/>
Navy<lb/>
Southern Cal.<lb/>
Washington<lb/>
DAVID MAREADY<lb/>
(35-13)<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
South Carolina<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
GoergiaTech<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Tennessee<lb/>
Pittsburgh<lb/>
Southern Cal.<lb/>
Washington<lb/>
DICK JONES<lb/>
Sports Director, WITN-TV<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
South Carolina<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Georgia Tech<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
Oklahoma St.<lb/>
Mississippi St.<lb/>
Navy<lb/>
Southern Cal.<lb/>
Arizona St.<lb/>
26 October 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page �<lb/>
Jones joins<lb/>
forecasters<lb/>
WITN Sports Director<lb/>
Dick Jones is this week's<lb/>
guest picker in FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD's Fearless<lb/>
Forecast<lb/>
Jones along with former<lb/>
ECU football player Kenny<lb/>
Strayhorn, had served as<lb/>
the play-by-play commen-<lb/>
tator on the ECU Football<lb/>
Highlights this season<lb/>
which are seen every Sun-<lb/>
day on WITN.<lb/>
Last weeks guest<lb/>
picker Jim Woods, the<lb/>
Voice of the Pirate Sports<lb/>
Network, finished with an<lb/>
impressive 9-3 record<lb/>
Upsets highlight NFL's 'Week of the lightning Bolt<lb/>
-�- V- MEW ENGLAND 34 ATI ANT<lb/>
ByCHARLESCHANDLER<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
When the dust settles<lb/>
on the 1978 football season<lb/>
and a world champion is<lb/>
crowned, fans will look<lb/>
back to the "Week of the<lb/>
Lightning Bolt<lb/>
They will recall the<lb/>
games of this past week-<lb/>
end For there may. have<lb/>
been aprecedent set just<lb/>
last week.<lb/>
Upsets appeared on<lb/>
television screens as Sun-<lb/>
day afternoon wore on more<lb/>
frequently than do Ken<lb/>
Stabler interceptions to op-<lb/>
posing defensive backs. No<lb/>
less than nine upsets ap-<lb/>
peared in Monday morning<lb/>
newspapers. One cannot be<lb/>
sure if this is a record, but<lb/>
one thing is for sure, the<lb/>
1978 National Football<lb/>
League season was en-<lb/>
hanced by upsets<lb/>
The biggest of the sur-<lb/>
prises occured at the King-<lb/>
dome m Seattle. It was<lb/>
there that the expansion<lb/>
Seahawks defeated the<lb/>
mighty Oakland Raiders<lb/>
27-7 Other stadiums a-<lb/>
round the League housed<lb/>
similar shockers. The<lb/>
hopeless' Detroit Lions<lb/>
scored 31 first half points,<lb/>
nearly half of their TOTAL<lb/>
for the previous seven<lb/>
games, and dumped San<lb/>
Diego 34-14 Kansas City<lb/>
surprised the Cleveland<lb/>
Browns. Minnessotta<lb/>
"froze" Green Bay's march<lb/>
toward the NFC Central<lb/>
Division title. Baltimore,<lb/>
without Bert Jones, de-<lb/>
feated the defending AFC<lb/>
champion Denver Broncos<lb/>
7-6 The New York Giants<lb/>
handed Washington Red-<lb/>
skins their second consec-<lb/>
utive loss. Tampa Bay<lb/>
shocked Walter Payton and<lb/>
the Chicago Bears, holding<lb/>
the league's premier run-<lb/>
ner to under 40 yards<lb/>
rushing en route to a<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
The story on and on.<lb/>
And, by the way, there<lb/>
are no longer any unbeaten<lb/>
teams in the NFL, thanks to<lb/>
the "Week of the Lightning<lb/>
Bolt New Orleans<lb/>
marched out of the LA<lb/>
Coliseum with a victory<lb/>
over the previously un-<lb/>
beaten Rams. On Monday<lb/>
night, Dan Pastorini and<lb/>
Earl Campbell carried<lb/>
Houston to a 24-17 victory<lb/>
over Pittsburgh, handing<lb/>
the Steelers their first loss<lb/>
of the season.<lb/>
Well, there they are,<lb/>
the games that shook the<lb/>
NEL. Also shook were<lb/>
forecasters all around the<lb/>
country. Jimmy the Greek<lb/>
and others were left<lb/>
speechless after seeing<lb/>
their percentages for the<lb/>
season drop drastically.<lb/>
This forecaster is included.<lb/>
But, it's not so bad. The<lb/>
�Week of the Lightning<lb/>
Bolt" may be in a history<lb/>
book some day.<lb/>
With fingers crossed,<lb/>
here's a look at this weeks<lb/>
games.<lb/>
DALLAS 24<lb/>
MINNESOTA 17<lb/>
The Vikings has to win<lb/>
over Green Bay last week<lb/>
for a number of reasons.<lb/>
One was this sure loss to<lb/>
the World Champions. Yet,<lb/>
the Vikes should make<lb/>
things interesting<lb/>
national television<lb/>
ienoe. <lb/>
CHICAGO 16<lb/>
DETROIT 13<lb/>
MIAMI 21<lb/>
BALTIMORE 14<lb/>
The Colts have had it<lb/>
rough this season. It's too<lb/>
bad the Dolphins don't<lb/>
have any pity on them.<lb/>
CLEVELAND 17<lb/>
BUFFALO 14<lb/>
The<lb/>
in<lb/>
The Bills defeated Cin-<lb/>
cinnati 5-0 last week. But<lb/>
everyone knows that a<lb/>
pitcher can throw only<lb/>
every fourth game.<lb/>
Browns are a "hit<lb/>
Cleveland again.<lb/>
DENVER 21<lb/>
SEATTLE 20<lb/>
If the Seahawks win this<lb/>
once, the NFL had better<lb/>
beware. After last week's<lb/>
win over Oakland this one<lb/>
seems out of reach. But<lb/>
never count out Jack Pat-<lb/>
era's club. This game will<lb/>
be most exciting.<lb/>
HOUSTON 21<lb/>
CINCINNATI 13<lb/>
Many pre-season fore-<lb/>
casts picked the Bengals to<lb/>
win the AFC Central Div-<lb/>
ision this season. But with<lb/>
an 0-8 record, this seems<lb/>
impossible. So does their<lb/>
chances in this contest.<lb/>
PITTSBURGH 28<lb/>
KANSASCITY14<lb/>
WASHINGTON 24<lb/>
SANFRANCISCO.10<lb/>
The Redskin defense<lb/>
meets OJ. Simpson in an<lb/>
attempt to rebound from<lb/>
two consecutive losses. The<lb/>
Juice is not what he used to<lb/>
be.<lb/>
NEW ORLEANS13<lb/>
NEW YORKGIANTS10<lb/>
The Giants are just<lb/>
playing too well. They are<lb/>
due for a thrashing. Even<lb/>
though this score does not<lb/>
qualify as a beating, the<lb/>
Saints should sneak up on<lb/>
their opponent again this<lb/>
week.<lb/>
GREEN BAY 20<lb/>
TAMPA BAY 17<lb/>
The Packers need a win<lb/>
this week. A loss would<lb/>
badly damage the con-<lb/>
fidence of Bart Starr's<lb/>
young club. The Pack<lb/>
should prevail over the<lb/>
vastly improved Buccan-<lb/>
eers.<lb/>
PHILADELPHIA 17<lb/>
ST. LOUIS 16<lb/>
The Cards have a better<lb/>
chance to win this game<lb/>
than any they have played<lb/>
all year. Yet the home field<lb/>
advantage gives the edge to<lb/>
the Eagles. This could be<lb/>
Bud Wilkinson's last game<lb/>
as a coach if the Cards lose.<lb/>
NEW ENGLAND 34<lb/>
NEW YORK JETS24<lb/>
In a battle for the AFC<lb/>
East lead, the Pats claim<lb/>
supremeacy.<lb/>
LOSANGELES26<lb/>
ATLANTA 10<lb/>
It seems that this is the<lb/>
week of revenge and come-<lb/>
back. The mighty Rams get<lb/>
in on the ad also<lb/>
V<lb/>
URal� aft R<lb/>
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OAKLAND 27<lb/>
SAN DIEGO 17<lb/>
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With great savings on golf, Service<lb/>
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Sale ends Oct. 28th.<lb/>
Beautiful Apparel and Equipment For<lb/>
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New Hours<lb/>
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Make your YEARBOOK PORTRAIT<lb/>
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APPOINTMENTS BEING TAKEN NOW<lb/>
COME BY OR CALE THE BUC OFFICE<lb/>
AT 757 6501<lb/>
PICTURES WILL BE MADE FROM<lb/>
MONDAY, NOV. 6<lb/>
UNTIL TUESDAY, NOV. 21,<lb/>
FROM 9:00 AM TILL 5:00 PM<lb/>
THIS IS THE ONLY TIME<lb/>
PICTURES WILL BE MADE THIS YEAR!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057157_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>