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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057158_0001"/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Vol. No. 55 No.<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
2 November 1978<lb/>
Legislature approves<lb/>
SGA attorney general<lb/>
WELL. ALMOST 3 more weeks till Thanksgiving<lb/>
hoto by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
By ANN THARRINGTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The SGA legislature voted their approval Monday of<lb/>
Kieran Shanahan for the position of attorney general.<lb/>
In other business before the legislature, a new review<lb/>
board was approved. Members of the review board are<lb/>
Murray Bullock. Diane Gray, Alonzo Newby, Valerie<lb/>
Chaffin. Liz Hamby, and Howard Newell. Alternate<lb/>
members are Danny Safriet, Pete Meyers, and Edward<lb/>
Walters.<lb/>
The SGA also voted to participate in the Student-Alumni<lb/>
Phone-A-Thon November 21. Students in the legislature<lb/>
will man the phones for three hours to help raise money for<lb/>
the ECU Alumni Association.<lb/>
In other business. SGA President Tommy Joe Payne<lb/>
vetoed a bill calling for $15,000 to be placed in an escrow<lb/>
account for use by student organizations during the spring<lb/>
semester of next year.<lb/>
Payne said that he vetoed the bill because he felt that<lb/>
$15,000 or even $10,000 was too much money to be placed<lb/>
in an escrow account<lb/>
"I approve of the concept but not the sum involved he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Payne said that there was already a lack of funds in the<lb/>
SGA to approve to clubs and programs and that placing a<lb/>
large sum of money in an escrow account would give the<lb/>
Appropriations Committee less money to work with<lb/>
Payne also appealed to the legislators for volunteers to<lb/>
accompany police on Halloween night. The volunteers<lb/>
would only serve as monitors, helping police maintain order<lb/>
in the downtown district.<lb/>
Danny Mumford was sworn in by Attorney General<lb/>
Shanartan to fill the vacant position as Jones Dorm<lb/>
Legislator.<lb/>
Jeff Triplett, Chairman of the Rules and Judiciary<lb/>
Committee, announced the approval of the constitution of<lb/>
the Students for Christ.<lb/>
In other business, speaker Libby Lefler told legislators<lb/>
about her correspondence to FOUNTAINHEAD.<lb/>
axplaining the purpose of the SGA legislature to students<lb/>
ho were unfamiliar with the association and its functions<lb/>
In her letter to the editor, she explains why the SGA is<lb/>
unable to fund all requests by clubs.<lb/>
The SGA has already received requests for $192,000 to<lb/>
be funded to campus clubs and organizations but only has<lb/>
$110,000 to spend, according to Lefler.<lb/>
Legislator Brett Melvin, Chairman of the Appropri-<lb/>
ations Committee read his resolution to the Media Board<lb/>
concerning the funds which were designated to be used for<lb/>
the publishing of last year's BUCCANEER<lb/>
Melvin asserted that all monies not spent of the<lb/>
$49,237.50appropriated to the BUCCANEER should revert<lb/>
back to the SGA General Fund.<lb/>
Greenville campus police<lb/>
offer 'Operation Identification'<lb/>
r<lb/>
What's inside.<lb/>
By MIKE ROGERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Greenville police<lb/>
department is presently<lb/>
employing an identification<lb/>
system Operation Identi-<lb/>
fication, to mark clothes<lb/>
and other valuables and.<lb/>
hopefully, to discourage<lb/>
� � 1 program of en-<lb/>
graving items of value in<lb/>
homes and businesses with<lb/>
an approved number sys-<lb/>
said Doug Jackson,<lb/>
the Community Crime Pre-<lb/>
vention officer for the<lb/>
Greenville police<lb/>
Jackson said the pro-<lb/>
gram has been in effect<lb/>
since May. 1975<lb/>
Jackson added . that<lb/>
three years before that, the<lb/>
Greenville Jaycees bought<lb/>
engravers, and gave them<lb/>
to the police department for<lb/>
citizens to check out, take<lb/>
.home, use. and return.<lb/>
According to Jackson.<lb/>
in those three years, only<lb/>
100 people used the en-<lb/>
gravers. 42 of which were<lb/>
policemen<lb/>
Now. however, since<lb/>
the Greenville police en-<lb/>
grave the clothes them-<lb/>
selves, participation has<lb/>
increased, Jackson said.<lb/>
"In the past three and a<lb/>
half years we've engrmvd<lb/>
approximately 2,000 indivi-<lb/>
dual's items<lb/>
He added that anyone<lb/>
who gets their valuables<lb/>
engraved also receives a<lb/>
sticker with a warning,<lb/>
Notice! We have joined<lb/>
Operation Identification.<lb/>
All items of value on these<lb/>
premises have been<lb/>
marked for ready identi-<lb/>
fication and have been<lb/>
recorded with the Green-<lb/>
ville Police Crime Pre-<lb/>
vention Program<lb/>
Jackson said the best<lb/>
type of number to use is not<lb/>
your social security num-<lb/>
ber, but a driver's license<lb/>
number.<lb/>
"If you don not have a<lb/>
driver's license number, we<lb/>
will give you an approved<lb/>
number said Jackson.<lb/>
He added that Social<lb/>
Security numbers would<lb/>
not work because the Social<lb/>
Security office will not<lb/>
divulge information.<lb/>
"We have recovered<lb/>
items in Greenville by<lb/>
using this system Jack-<lb/>
son said.<lb/>
Any student who wishes<lb/>
to have his valuables<lb/>
marked, should either call<lb/>
Officer Jackson, or go to<lb/>
the campus police depart-<lb/>
ment which also engraves.<lb/>
According to Jackson,<lb/>
the police department uses<lb/>
an electric engraver.<lb/>
"For furs and other<lb/>
items which can't be en-<lb/>
graved, we have a pen that<lb/>
uses a special fluid that<lb/>
only shows up under a<lb/>
black light<lb/>
Jackson said the engra-<lb/>
ving service is fairly pop-<lb/>
ular, and most cities<lb/>
throughout North Carolina<lb/>
are using it.<lb/>
ECU faces Appalachian State at home<lb/>
Satsee p. 8<lb/>
Pablo Cruise &amp; Livingston Taylor will<lb/>
appear at Minges Coliseum for preview<lb/>
see p. 6<lb/>
Greek forumsee p. 3<lb/>
What's new on the hill<lb/>
p. 5<lb/>
This week's free ffick is the academy<lb/>
award winning The Turning Point, tor<lb/>
preview see p. 6<lb/>
Media Board cancels<lb/>
77-78 BUCCANEER<lb/>
Model council<lb/>
to meet here<lb/>
By RICHY SMITH<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The Atlantic Coast Mo-<lb/>
del Security Council<lb/>
meeting will be held at<lb/>
ECU February 23-25, ac-<lb/>
cording to William Barbe,<lb/>
Secretary-General of ECU<lb/>
Model United Nations<lb/>
(Model UN).<lb/>
The Model UN club is<lb/>
sponsoring four Security<lb/>
Councils, The council is ex-<lb/>
pecting delegations from all<lb/>
over eastern United States.<lb/>
The basic rules and pro-<lb/>
cedures of the National<lb/>
Model UN in New York<lb/>
will be followed at this<lb/>
ACMSC meeting.<lb/>
According to Barbe,<lb/>
four security councils will<lb/>
be in simultaneous sessions<lb/>
and fifteen countries will be<lb/>
seated on each council.<lb/>
The council will seat 60<lb/>
delegations within the ide-<lb/>
pendent Security Councils.<lb/>
There are several countries<lb/>
represented, commented<lb/>
Barbe.<lb/>
Those that are available<lb/>
for selection by the differ-<lb/>
ent schools are United<lb/>
States, USSR, China,<lb/>
France, United Kingdom,<lb/>
Nigeria, Kuwait, Gabon,<lb/>
Czechoslavakia and Bolivia.<lb/>
Five other countries will<lb/>
also be represented, ac-<lb/>
cording to Barbe. They are<lb/>
Africa, Asia, Eastern Eur-<lb/>
ope. Latin America, and<lb/>
Western Europe.<lb/>
The ACMSC plans to<lb/>
have a distinguished A-<lb/>
merican speaker on Foreign<lb/>
Affairs. Last year's speaker<lb/>
was Dean Rusk, former se-<lb/>
cretary of state to Pres.<lb/>
John F. Kennedy.<lb/>
There are many impor-<lb/>
tant issues to world peace<lb/>
that require action by the<lb/>
United Nations, Barbe said.<lb/>
The third annual Security<lb/>
Council simulation will be<lb/>
discussing these issues.<lb/>
The advisors for the<lb/>
ACMSC III are Dr. Oral<lb/>
Parks, ECU Political Sci-<lb/>
ence and Fulbright Re-<lb/>
search Scholar, ACMSC 1<lb/>
and 2, Dr. Sandra Wurth-<lb/>
Hough, ECU Political Sci-<lb/>
ence and Advisor to the<lb/>
State Department on Mid-<lb/>
dle East, ACMSC 1 and 2,<lb/>
David Zuckerman, Univer-<lb/>
sity of Pennsylvania, Con-<lb/>
nie Zuckerman, American<lb/>
University, Shelley Fowler,<lb/>
Sec-Gen. ACMSC 1 and<lb/>
Wiley F. Betts, SecGen<lb/>
ACMSC 2.<lb/>
The model security<lb/>
council is funded by the<lb/>
ECU Student Government<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
By MIKE ROGERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Media Board voted<lb/>
unanimously in a Wed-<lb/>
nesday meeting to cancel<lb/>
the 1977-78 BUCCANEER<lb/>
Tommy Joe Payne, Mt<lb/>
dia Board chairman, re-<lb/>
ported that the cover sent<lb/>
in last spring was not back<lb/>
yet. Members of the board<lb/>
discussed drawing up a<lb/>
contract for future editors<lb/>
to sign that would legally<lb/>
force then to produce on<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Having cancelled the<lb/>
BUCCANEER, the Media<lb/>
Board was faced with the<lb/>
1977-78 Buccaneer budget<lb/>
of $42,794 and how to use<lb/>
it.<lb/>
One board member re-<lb/>
marked that the ECU Play-<lb/>
house needed more money<lb/>
than, the SGA could afford<lb/>
to give them, and sug-<lb/>
gested that the board give<lb/>
the money back to the SGA<lb/>
Other members remarked<lb/>
that the SGA gave the f<lb/>
money to the Media Board<lb/>
in the expectation that the<lb/>
BUCCANEER would be<lb/>
published.<lb/>
Several board members<lb/>
said the SGA might con-<lb/>
sider this act a prerequisite<lb/>
to further funding. They<lb/>
added that the board's pri-<lb/>
mary concern was with the<lb/>
media.<lb/>
Still other members<lb/>
commented that the board<lb/>
was too concerned with<lb/>
school politics and should<lb/>
instead concentrate on the<lb/>
good of the students.<lb/>
The board then recog-<lb/>
nized Jim Dale ECU inter-<lb/>
nal auditor Dale reported<lb/>
that certain persons were<lb/>
buying materials with the<lb/>
university s money without<lb/>
filling out the proper forms<lb/>
Dale added that phone bills<lb/>
were also a problem. One<lb/>
member suggested that<lb/>
people were either making<lb/>
illegitimate phone calls<lb/>
h m tv offices of th�<lb/>
9UCCANCCP FOUNTAIN<lb/>
HEAD ���: � ne<lb/>
were immwji �� �<lb/>
phone numbers �od jna-amg<lb/>
the bills to noseof-ce<lb/>
An observing student<lb/>
remarked that in many<lb/>
cases, the staff members<lb/>
made legitimate phone<lb/>
calls and merely forgot to<lb/>
record them.<lb/>
The board discussed<lb/>
putting locks on the<lb/>
phones, using a switch-<lb/>
board system, or running<lb/>
the calls through Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center The<lb/>
board finally decided not to<lb/>
take action until next<lb/>
month.<lb/>
Pi Lambda Phi<lb/>
chapter reorganizes<lb/>
DO YOU THINK anyone will notim me?'<lb/>
Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
By STEVE WILSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Chapter of Pi<lb/>
Lambda Phi Fraternity is to<lb/>
� undergo extensive reor-<lb/>
ganization, according to<lb/>
Ronnie Eaaon, former pre-<lb/>
sident of Pi Lambda Phi.<lb/>
' The house that was<lb/>
formerly occupied by the<lb/>
fraternity is now vacant,<lb/>
but soon, the house will be<lb/>
occupied by another ECU<lb/>
fraternity, the Sigma Tau<lb/>
Gamma.<lb/>
Eason said that a reor-<lb/>
ganization of the fraternity<lb/>
was necessary. He cited<lb/>
disinterest by the fraternity<lb/>
members and some mis-<lb/>
management of funds by<lb/>
his predecessors as causes<lb/>
for the reorganization.<lb/>
Eason said that a suc-<lb/>
cession of events made the<lb/>
reorganization necessary.<lb/>
"Itsanoid houee, with<lb/>
old fixtures, that needed<lb/>
more money than we could<lb/>
afford to put into it. A lot of<lb/>
the brothers lost interest<lb/>
and became Inactive said<lb/>
Eaaon.<lb/>
He also said that poor<lb/>
attendance during rush<lb/>
periods caused the decision<lb/>
to move out of the house.<lb/>
The house will notd ap-<lb/>
proximately 15-20 persons<lb/>
Eaaon also said that<lb/>
some of the remainingaf ve<lb/>
brothers are tentatively<lb/>
planning to hold informal<lb/>
rush part lea soon.<lb/>
He said the parties will<lb/>
probably be held in mem-<lb/>
bers apartments. Eaaon<lb/>
added that this was the way<lb/>
the fraternity started when<lb/>
it was founded on the ECU<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
MM<lb/>
m �0��-it mm ���'<lb/>
y ��� m rt  - .<lb/>
- - � -<lb/>
'�PSmSiAmmM<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057158_0002"/><lb/>
Volleyball<lb/>
Male and female stu-<lb/>
dents, faculty, and staff<lb/>
interested in forming a<lb/>
volleyball club should meet<lb/>
in room 105 of Memorial<lb/>
Gym at 6:30 p m. on Tues<lb/>
November 7. At that time,<lb/>
it is anticipated that a<lb/>
constitution and officers<lb/>
will be determined and that<lb/>
activities for the year will<lb/>
be planned. For further<lb/>
information contact Dr.<lb/>
Sayetta in the Physics<lb/>
Department<lb/>
Macho Man<lb/>
Be sure not to miss the<lb/>
Sigma Tau Gamma Little<lb/>
Rose's "Macho Man" con-<lb/>
test on Tues November 7<lb/>
a! the Elbo Room. A prize<lb/>
will be awarded for the<lb/>
male who best represents a<lb/>
Macho Man Other<lb/>
prizes will be given away<lb/>
throughout the night. Tick-<lb/>
ets are 25 cents presale at<lb/>
Little Rose sand 50centsat<lb/>
the door.<lb/>
SPAN<lb/>
Tri-Sigma<lb/>
SHEA<lb/>
There will be a SPAN<lb/>
(Student Planning Associa-<lb/>
tion) meeting November 6<lb/>
at 4 p.m. in Brewster BD-<lb/>
209. Those interested in<lb/>
urban and regional plan-<lb/>
ning are invited.<lb/>
Dr. Simon Baker will be<lb/>
the guest lecturer. The title<lb/>
of his lecture is "Two New<lb/>
European Towns Along<lb/>
with the lecture Dr. Baker<lb/>
also has an interesting slide<lb/>
presentation. The new<lb/>
towns which will be dis-<lb/>
cussed are Tapiola, Fin-<lb/>
land, and Stevenage, En-<lb/>
gland.<lb/>
Free Flick<lb/>
Due to the home<lb/>
football game this week's<lb/>
free flick will be shown<lb/>
Sat one time only, at 2<lb/>
p m. The film will be<lb/>
screened Fri. night at the<lb/>
usual times of 7 and 9 p m.<lb/>
Admission to the film is<lb/>
by ID and Activity Card for<lb/>
students and Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center Member-<lb/>
ship Card for faculty and<lb/>
staff. All free flicks are<lb/>
shown in Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
Student National Edu-<lb/>
cation Associa'ion will be<lb/>
meeting Thurs November<lb/>
9, 1978 It will be in room<lb/>
. 44  lenhall, at 4 p.m.<lb/>
James. Director of<lb/>
Career Planning and Place-<lb/>
service will be speak-<lb/>
e ear the oppor-<lb/>
S waiting for you'<lb/>
Travel<lb/>
Sign up now for the<lb/>
Student Union Travel Com-<lb/>
mittee trip toSnowshoe, W.<lb/>
Va. Places going fast. En-<lb/>
joy one of the east coasts'<lb/>
finest ski resorts. Sign up<lb/>
now at Mendenhall ticket<lb/>
office.<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
sorority will be having a<lb/>
yard bake sale on Fri Nov.<lb/>
3 beginning at 11 a.m.<lb/>
The sale will take place<lb/>
in front of the Sigma house,<lb/>
which is located at 803 East<lb/>
Fifth St.<lb/>
The proceeds from the<lb/>
sale will go to the Tri-Sig's<lb/>
philanthropy, and the Rob-<lb/>
bie Page Memorial Fund.<lb/>
The money will be sent to<lb/>
the children's ward at Noth<lb/>
Carolina Memorial Hospit-<lb/>
al.<lb/>
Pi Sigma<lb/>
There will be an organ-<lb/>
tional meeting of Pi<lb/>
Sigma Alpha on Wed<lb/>
November 8 at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
Brewster BC-105. All<lb/>
members are asked to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Turkey shoot<lb/>
Win your Thanksgiving<lb/>
dinner at the Mendenhall<lb/>
"Turkey Shoot" on Thurs<lb/>
November 15 between the<lb/>
hoursof 7 p.m. and 11 p.m.<lb/>
The MSC Bowling Cen-<lb/>
ter will be by the site of the<lb/>
old-fashioned turkey shoot.<lb/>
An entry fee of $1.50 will<lb/>
give you the chance to bowl<lb/>
one ball on ten consecutive<lb/>
lanes. If at least eight pins<lb/>
fall on each lane, you win a<lb/>
turkey! Enter as many<lb/>
times as you like. Limit<lb/>
three wins per person.<lb/>
Print Group<lb/>
The Print Group will<lb/>
have cards and note paper<lb/>
with university scenes for<lb/>
sale beginning Mon Nov-<lb/>
ember 6. Contact any print<lb/>
maker in Rm. 1105 Jenkins<lb/>
bldg.<lb/>
Leadership<lb/>
Leadership training<lb/>
class provides good fun and<lb/>
fellowship in addition to<lb/>
helping you learn about the<lb/>
'Christian life. Classes are<lb/>
now going on every Thurs.<lb/>
night at 7 p.m. in Brewster<lb/>
B-103. Come check it out.<lb/>
Sponsored by Campus Cru-<lb/>
sade for Christ.<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Coffeehouse Committee presents<lb/>
f � V<lb/>
Writers<lb/>
Psi-Chi<lb/>
Psi-Chi will have a bake<lb/>
sale WedNovember 8 from<lb/>
9 a.m. until 4 p.m. in front<lb/>
of the student bookstore.<lb/>
All members of Psi-Chi<lb/>
who were initiated in Octo-<lb/>
ber may pick up their<lb/>
membership certificate<lb/>
from Mrs. Nelson in the<lb/>
main Psychology office.<lb/>
Please do this as soon as<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
Gamma Beta<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi will<lb/>
meet Thurs November 2<lb/>
in Mendenhall 244 at 7<lb/>
p.m. All members are<lb/>
urged to attend. Pledges<lb/>
are required to attend this<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
The Writers Guild will<lb/>
hold its forth in a series of<lb/>
meetings on Mon Nov-<lb/>
ember 6 at 3 p.m. in Austin<lb/>
207. All interlucent and er-<lb/>
udite persons welcome.<lb/>
Homecoming<lb/>
Alpha Dappa Alpha<lb/>
Sorority is sponsoring a<lb/>
pre-game Homecoming<lb/>
celebration at the Ramada<lb/>
Inn, 264 By-Pass, Fri<lb/>
November 10, from 10 p.m.<lb/>
until 2a.m.<lb/>
Tickets in advance may<lb/>
be purchased from any Al-<lb/>
pha Kappa Alpha member<lb/>
and are $3 per couple, and<lb/>
$2 per person. Tickets will<lb/>
be $2.50 per person at the<lb/>
door.<lb/>
Buy your tickets now,<lb/>
and enjoy an evening of<lb/>
social elegance.<lb/>
Concert<lb/>
Talent<lb/>
MSC<lb/>
The MSC All-Campus<lb/>
Table Tennis Tournament<lb/>
will be held on Tues<lb/>
November 7 at 7 p.m. in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Multi-Purpose<lb/>
Room. The winners of the<lb/>
Day-Student Tournament<lb/>
and Dorm-Student Tourna-<lb/>
ments will be competing in<lb/>
both the men's and wom-<lb/>
en's divisions. The man<lb/>
and woman who finish first<lb/>
in their divisions will re-<lb/>
present tournaments to be<lb/>
held in Knoxville, Ten-<lb/>
nessee on February 8,9,<lb/>
and 10.<lb/>
The Student Union Ma-<lb/>
jor Attractions Committee<lb/>
will present Pablo Cruise<lb/>
with special guest Living-<lb/>
ston Taylor on Thurs<lb/>
November 9, 1978, at 8<lb/>
p.m. in MingesColiseum.<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; and<lb/>
The M usic Shop, Greenville<lb/>
Square Mall.<lb/>
Only public tickets will<lb/>
be sold at the door.<lb/>
Fellowship<lb/>
Jesus is the door to<lb/>
eternal life. He offers you<lb/>
this and abundant life of<lb/>
righteousness, peace, joy,<lb/>
health, love, and victory. If<lb/>
you reject Him you will not<lb/>
have eternal life nor abun-<lb/>
dant life. You are invited to<lb/>
come to a Full Gospel<lb/>
Student Fellowship Bible<lb/>
study tonight in Menden-<lb/>
hall 212 7:30-9:30. John<lb/>
Crowe will be teaching on<lb/>
how a person becomes a<lb/>
new person in Christ, what<lb/>
happens when he does, and<lb/>
how this is victoriously<lb/>
lived out in practical every-<lb/>
day living.<lb/>
Arts<lb/>
The Eta Psi Chapter of<lb/>
the Kappa Alpha Psi Fra-<lb/>
ternity here at ECU is<lb/>
sponsoring an All Campus<lb/>
Talent Presentation. The<lb/>
event is scheduled to be<lb/>
held on Tues November<lb/>
14 from 6 until 10 p.m. in<lb/>
the Multi-Purpose Auditor-<lb/>
ium at Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. Participants will be<lb/>
reviewed by a panel of<lb/>
judges on a point system<lb/>
with the performance re-<lb/>
ceiving the highest total<lb/>
points declared the winner.<lb/>
If interested, call<lb/>
758-8608.<lb/>
Real Estate<lb/>
"Under all is the Land"<lb/>
is the slogan for Rho Ep-<lb/>
silon, the National Real<lb/>
Estate Fraternity at ECU<lb/>
Rho Epsilon is open to all<lb/>
business majors who are in<lb/>
real estate and majors that<lb/>
are planning to concentrate<lb/>
in real estate.<lb/>
Rho Epsilon helps the<lb/>
student by perpetuating the<lb/>
real estate profession be-<lb/>
yond the classroom. If you<lb/>
are interested in Rho Ep-<lb/>
silon, you are invited to<lb/>
attend their next meeting<lb/>
Thurs November 9, at 4<lb/>
p.m. in Rm 221 Men-<lb/>
denhall.<lb/>
The speaker will be<lb/>
C.B. "Pop" Beasley from<lb/>
New Bern, and the<lb/>
topic will be "Resort De-<lb/>
velopment Current<lb/>
members are also urged to<lb/>
i attend<lb/>
The Student Union Mi-<lb/>
nority Arts Committee pre-<lb/>
sents a Homecoming Dance<lb/>
featuring Anglo Saxon<lb/>
Brown on Mon , November<lb/>
6, at 8 p.m. m Wright<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
Anglo Saxon Brown has<lb/>
toured the U S with Are-<lb/>
thra Franklin and Europe<lb/>
with Elvis Presley<lb/>
Tickets will be S1 for<lb/>
ECU students and $3 tor<lb/>
the public Tickets are<lb/>
available at the Centra<lb/>
Ticket Office m Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center<lb/>
All tickets sold at the<lb/>
door will be S3<lb/>
Percussion<lb/>
The ECU Percussion<lb/>
Ensemble will perform in<lb/>
 concert Thursday. Nov 2 at<lb/>
I 8:15 P-m. in tne A J<lb/>
Fletcher Music Center Re-<lb/>
 atai Hall.<lb/>
The concert, tree and<lb/>
open to the public, will<lb/>
feature "acolorful program<lb/>
that includes a wide variety<lb/>
of timbres and styles<lb/>
Insurance<lb/>
Joe Goodson and<lb/>
Flanagan Insurance Agen-<lb/>
cy, insures the Greenville<lb/>
Art Center He win speaK<lb/>
about the types of insur-<lb/>
ance available for artists<lb/>
and their work on Nov-<lb/>
ember 10 in Jenkins audi-<lb/>
torium.<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Student Union Major Attractions Committee<lb/>
TIT3C3U, - fli<lb/>
Joe Collins<lb/>
Thurs. &amp; Fri Nov. 2&amp;3<lb/>
8:3� &amp; 9:30<lb/>
Room IS<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
Admission<lb/>
50 cents<lb/>
Free<lb/>
snacks<lb/>
With special guest Livingston Taylor<lb/>
Thurs Nov. 9� 1978 Sp.tn<lb/>
Minges Coliseum ����<lb/>
Students<lb/>
S5.0C<lb/>
02<lb/>
10<lb/>
19<lb/>
40<lb/>
74<lb/>
122<lb/>
175<lb/>
176<lb/>
201<lb/>
211<lb/>
299<lb/>
318<lb/>
405<lb/>
420<lb/>
444<lb/>
453<lb/>
482<lb/>
496<lb/>
500<lb/>
532<lb/>
537<lb/>
555<lb/>
573<lb/>
577<lb/>
578<lb/>
613<lb/>
T-Shirt winners must claim their<lb/>
T-Shirts By 5:00 Monday, Nov. 6, 1978.<lb/>
626<lb/>
649<lb/>
670<lb/>
688<lb/>
697<lb/>
703<lb/>
753<lb/>
777<lb/>
779<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
tors �<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1 Pioneer<lb/>
SA-8500 stereo amplifier<lb/>
(100 watts per channel); 1<lb/>
Super Scope AM-FM, FM<lb/>
stereo tuner; 1 Panasonic<lb/>
turntable-eight track com-<lb/>
bination; 2 Marant' HD-77<lb/>
speakers. $600 for all or will<lb/>
sell each piece separately.<lb/>
Call 756-8571 before 8 p.m.<lb/>
or 752-9245 after 8 p.m. for<lb/>
more information.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 2, three<lb/>
way air suspension speak-<lb/>
ers. Cost $200 new, want<lb/>
$100 for pair. Call Frank at<lb/>
758-1186.<lb/>
FOR SALE : Rotel stereo<lb/>
receiver BSR McDonald<lb/>
turntable and two SMG<lb/>
speakers. Receiver has 12<lb/>
watts RM S per channel and<lb/>
all equipment is in ex-<lb/>
cellent condition. $100. Call<lb/>
758-6198.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 66 Mus-<lb/>
tang, Classic, exc. condi-<lb/>
tion, new tires, new clutch,<lb/>
new battery, exceptional<lb/>
interior. $975. Phone<lb/>
756-8242 or 799-0794 (Wil-<lb/>
mington)<lb/>
NEED: A responsible<lb/>
roommate by Nov. 5 to<lb/>
share a 2 bedroom apt.<lb/>
Rent is $63 not including<lb/>
utilities. Call 758-5794.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Ford Pinto.<lb/>
Factory air AM-FM cas-<lb/>
sette deck; good condition.<lb/>
Rear end has been modified<lb/>
to comply with government<lb/>
safety standards. Come by<lb/>
162 Jones after 2:30 p.m.<lb/>
and lets rap.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Wooden<lb/>
clarinet, excellent condition<lb/>
plus accessories. Also<lb/>
folding reeding lamp, per-<lb/>
fect for dorm room. Also,<lb/>
will sell or trade a number<lb/>
of assorted magazines. If<lb/>
Interested, call 752-9852.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Craig Pow-<lb/>
er Play; receiver with 8-<lb/>
track, turntable, 2 speak-<lb/>
ers. Less than a year old.<lb/>
$200 or best offer. Call<lb/>
Sharon at 756-8132.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1972 Honda<lb/>
CB350-4 motorcycle in ex-<lb/>
cellent mechanical condi-<lb/>
tion. New tires, new bat-<lb/>
tery, 29:000 miles, one<lb/>
owner. Call LaRae at<lb/>
758-3386, or Lucy at<lb/>
752-8585. Leave message<lb/>
or keep trying.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1977 Ford<lb/>
Courier Truck, AMFM<lb/>
sliding glaaees, camper<lb/>
shell with carpet, 30 MPG,<lb/>
Red with tan interior. Call<lb/>
756-2380 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
weekdays. Ask for Dexter.<lb/>
FREE PUPPIES: 6<lb/>
weeks old. Good pets on<lb/>
hunting dogs. Call 756-7719<lb/>
jpsisorici�<lb/>
LOST: Gold monogram<lb/>
pin with initials JSC. Re-<lb/>
ward offered. Call Jane at<lb/>
758-6277.<lb/>
LOST: Green Parka with<lb/>
plaid lining, L.L. Bean<lb/>
label, in vicinity of Elm and<lb/>
Tenth streets. Reward.<lb/>
Please leave ins�ags at<lb/>
757-6614.<lb/>
WANTED: Electric gui-<lb/>
tarist needed I or soft rock<lb/>
band. Please contact: Twila<lb/>
Wolfe at 758-2585 as soon<lb/>
as possible.<lb/>
FREELANCE AR-<lb/>
TISTS: needed immediate-<lb/>
ly. Here's a chance to do<lb/>
some work that will be<lb/>
published. It'll look good in<lb/>
your portfolio. And, you'll<lb/>
pick up some good pay.<lb/>
Contact Betty Moeeley, Art<lb/>
Director, Allen and Longino<lb/>
Advertising, Inc. 752-1914.<lb/>
TODAY<lb/>
MID EASTERN DANCE:<lb/>
(Authentic Belly Dancing)<lb/>
taught by Sunshine - exper-<lb/>
ienced teacher and perfor-<lb/>
mer in Ohio, Mexico,<lb/>
Atlanta, and the DC. area.<lb/>
Classes are now forming.<lb/>
Call 756-0736.<lb/>
YOGA: Hatha yoga is now<lb/>
being taught by Sunshine.<lb/>
New classes forming. Relax<lb/>
-ation, realization, weight<lb/>
loss. For more info, call<lb/>
756-0736.<lb/>
torrent<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT<lb/>
Males only. 402 Student<lb/>
street. Call 752-4814<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEED-<lb/>
ED: Situation available for<lb/>
female interested �n pnvafe<lb/>
room in attractive house<lb/>
with ail conveniences, loca-<lb/>
ted 2 blocks from campus.<lb/>
Owner is mature, profes-<lb/>
sional gentleman interested<lb/>
�n sharing expenses. For<lb/>
'��rview, call 75S-3016<lb/>
after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 2 bedroom<lb/>
Apt sublet in Langaton<lb/>
Park. $210 a month. Avail-<lb/>
able Thanksgiving. Caf,<lb/>
);ig�C � " w'<lb/>
 mm- m m-M. -to-sfp V m m- ����<lb/>
.�(� ��� � jmm,� rv�<lb/>
<pb facs="00057158_0003"/><lb/>
2 Nwwibw 197S FOUNTAINHEAD Pags3<lb/>
Greek Forum<lb/>
STUDENTS PUT AWAY<lb/>
Tuesday night to celebrate Halloween.<lb/>
Gurley<lb/>
their books<lb/>
Photo by Chap<lb/>
ByRICKIGUARMIS<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The Phi Kappa Taus<lb/>
held a work day Saturday<lb/>
which was devoted to the<lb/>
planning of Homecoming.<lb/>
The Phi Taus are building a<lb/>
float for the parade and<lb/>
have mailed out a newslet-<lb/>
ter to all alumni inviting<lb/>
them to Homecoming and<lb/>
to the festivities which are<lb/>
being planned during the<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
During the Saturday<lb/>
planning session, the little<lb/>
sisters treated the brothers<lb/>
and pledges to lunch.<lb/>
The Phi Taus would like<lb/>
to congratulate John Jeter<lb/>
for an excellent perfor-<lb/>
mance in Pippin, and Robert<lb/>
Swaim, advertising mana-<lb/>
ger of FOUNTAINHEAD,<lb/>
who along with two other<lb/>
members of the paper<lb/>
represented ECU at the<lb/>
national convention in<lb/>
Houston, Texas, last week.<lb/>
Monday night, the Phi<lb/>
Taus inducted ten new little<lb/>
sisters and are looking<lb/>
forward to working with the<lb/>
new girls.<lb/>
This weekend before<lb/>
the football game, Phi Tau<lb/>
will have a cocktail party<lb/>
and following the game, the<lb/>
fraternity will stage a<lb/>
mixer<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha Field<lb/>
Day was a big success this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The Beta Theta Pi's, a<lb/>
Men's Residence Council<lb/>
prepares for homecoming<lb/>
The Men's Residence<lb/>
Council met Monday night<lb/>
in the basement of Scott<lb/>
Dorm to select their<lb/>
nominee for homecoming<lb/>
queen<lb/>
Each dorm had selected<lb/>
their own nominee indivi-<lb/>
dually prior to the meeting<lb/>
Monday and the nominees<lb/>
attended the general coun-<lb/>
cil meeting.<lb/>
Kathy Dreyer was<lb/>
selected from the group to<lb/>
represent the M RC in the<lb/>
homecoming court as well<lb/>
as the m the parade,<lb/>
according to Gerry Wal-<lb/>
lace. MRC President<lb/>
The MRC is also<lb/>
wording on their entry for<lb/>
r i ade.<lb/>
Some dorms are staging<lb/>
contests of the best banner<lb/>
or other type of decorations<lb/>
depicting the homecoming<lb/>
theme with cash awards as<lb/>
the incentives<lb/>
Other activities on the<lb/>
hill include a pig-pickin'<lb/>
and a bluegrass concert,<lb/>
jointly sponsored by the<lb/>
MRC and the Women's<lb/>
Residence Council. The<lb/>
pig-pickin' will be held on<lb/>
Nov 8, from 4:45-7:00 p.m.<lb/>
The intended site is the<lb/>
field beside the tennis<lb/>
courts on the hill.<lb/>
Many of the men's<lb/>
dorms have been sponsor-<lb/>
ing socials with the womens<lb/>
dorms. The latest trend was<lb/>
the Kiss-A-Treat social.<lb/>
This type of social has been<lb/>
popular during the Hallo-<lb/>
ween week-end and drew a<lb/>
good response.<lb/>
The MRC sponsors a<lb/>
supervised study hall in the<lb/>
basement of Scott dorm.<lb/>
Members are encouraged<lb/>
to take advantage of this<lb/>
facility. It is a good place to<lb/>
get away from the noise for<lb/>
a little quiet contemplation.<lb/>
Student Union Films<lb/>
Committee presents<lb/>
The Turning Point<lb/>
Friday night 7 and 9 p.m<lb/>
Saturday at p.m.<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
new fraternity on campus,<lb/>
and the Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Sigmas won top honors<lb/>
during the day of competi-<lb/>
tion. This marks the Beta's<lb/>
first victory during the field<lb/>
day the the Tri-Sigs' fourth<lb/>
consecutive victory.<lb/>
The Sigmas are very<lb/>
pleased over their fourth<lb/>
consecutive victory, during<lb/>
Lambda Chi field day.<lb/>
The Tri-Sigs are plan-<lb/>
ning their annual pie throw<lb/>
on Nov. 21. Further details<lb/>
will be forthcoming next<lb/>
week. This Friday, Nov. 3,<lb/>
the sorority will be having a<lb/>
yard-bake sale from 11 a.m.<lb/>
until, in front of the Sigma<lb/>
house at 803 E. Fifth St.<lb/>
Proceeds will go to N.C.<lb/>
Memorial Hospital for the<lb/>
children's wing.<lb/>
The Sigmas also took<lb/>
top honors during team<lb/>
tennis as all-campus cham-<lb/>
pions.<lb/>
The Sigma Tau Gam-<lb/>
mas have come a long way<lb/>
since chartering last<lb/>
spring. To emphasize the<lb/>
growth of the chapter here<lb/>
at ECU, a dream has<lb/>
become a reality. As of<lb/>
Nov. 1, thj Sig Taus have<lb/>
moved into their new house<lb/>
at 410 Elizabeth St.<lb/>
To celebrate this occa-<lb/>
sion, the Sig Taus will be<lb/>
having its all campus<lb/>
pregame BUCK FEST at the<lb/>
house this Saturday, Nov<lb/>
4, from 11 am until 4 p.m.<lb/>
Music will be provided by<lb/>
the. Nite-Bite Band and<lb/>
admission will be $2.<lb/>
GREAT<lb/>
MEXICAN<lb/>
EATERY<lb/>
513 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Open 11:00 11:00<lb/>
Mon. thru Thur.<lb/>
Fri.�PSat. 11:00 12:0"<lb/>
Sun. 12:00 11:00<lb/>
Tuesday Night<lb/>
Nickel Drink Night<lb/>
( with food order )<lb/>
5:00-11:00<lb/>
Dr. Pepper, Beer, Pepsi,<lb/>
, Mt. Dew, Tea, Coffee<lb/>
we Gladly Accept Personal Checks.<lb/>
Free Taco Cid Iron -on Patch<lb/>
with $4.00 food order<lb/>
Get your hands on a<lb/>
Hot 'n Juicy Hamburger<lb/>
i-<lb/>
P32<lb/>
P 29 ONE SINGLE HAMBURGER AND ONE ORDER OF FRI<lb/>
TWO SINGLE<lb/>
HAMBURGERS<lb/>
for $1.26<lb/>
(plus tan)<lb/>
Tomato . . . 10c extra<lb/>
Cheese 12 e extra<lb/>
Good now thru<lb/>
November 30. 1978<lb/>
only at Wendy r'f at<lb/>
264 Bv Pas &amp; Ivans Street<lb/>
Greenville NC<lb/>
TWO SINGLE HAMBURGERS PER COUPON<lb/>
MIStNt COu�ON 8�'0� CXC�Nl,<lb/>
A SINGLE<lb/>
HAMBURGER<lb/>
and French Fries<lb/>
for 99<lb/>
(plus tan)<lb/>
Tomato 10c extra<lb/>
Cheese 12c extra<lb/>
Good now thru<lb/>
November 30. 1978<lb/>
only a! Wendy's at<lb/>
264 Bv Pass &amp; Evans Street<lb/>
Greenville. NC<lb/>
RCOUPON<lb/>
Our special coupon offers<lb/>
make it more tempting than ever<lb/>
to get your hands on a<lb/>
Hot 'n Juicy Hamburger.<lb/>
Just clip these coupons and<lb/>
enjoy Hot 'n Juicy<lb/>
Hamburgers at<lb/>
special savings!<lb/>
L"C�, H -f �OI �"wJ<lb/>
A SINGLE<lb/>
HAMBURGER<lb/>
and French Fries<lb/>
for 99C<lb/>
� plus tax I<lb/>
Tomato 10c extra<lb/>
Cheese 12c extra<lb/>
( i xid rww ihru<lb/>
N member 30. 19 B<lb/>
oniv at Wench s at<lb/>
?4 B P.i-s &amp; Evans Street<lb/>
Gteenv. -lie NC<lb/>
ONE SINGLE HAMBURGER AND ONE ORDER OF FRIES PER COuPON<lb/>
jotsf cou�oafo�t oo<lb/>
TWO SINGLE<lb/>
HAMBURGERS<lb/>
for $1.26<lb/>
� plus fa,i<lb/>
Tomato 10c extra<lb/>
Cheese 12c extra<lb/>
C.� d rx� ftn -<lb/>
N.KemtH- � WTb<lb/>
imly at vWnck - a'<lb/>
64 B�. Pass &amp; Evans Street<lb/>
Greet If NC<lb/>
TWO SINGLE HAMBURGERS PER COUPON<lb/>
P� 2<lb/>
<lb/>
P� 32<lb/>
HLE FASHIONED<lb/>
Wendy's Old Fashioned Hamburgers<lb/>
264 By-Pass &amp; Evans Street<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
Ho�'�" '�'� 3� ��� v "�-����'�� . � �� �� �<lb/>
m w " �� "�<lb/>
"<lb/>
 - - -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057158_0004"/><lb/>
The'77BUC: R.LE<lb/>
The Media Board is to be applauded for<lb/>
cancelling the 1977-78 edition of the ill-fated<lb/>
BUCCANEER. It was a noble effort to try to<lb/>
salvage the book that was unceremoniously<lb/>
dumped in the board's lap, but it would be<lb/>
foolish to throw good money after bad in order<lb/>
to put out a slipshod book pieced together at<lb/>
the last minute.<lb/>
We are, needless to say, unhappy that the<lb/>
long-awaited '7778 BUC will not be printed,<lb/>
but we are happy that the Media Board will<lb/>
have an additional $42,000 with which to fund<lb/>
WECU-FM and to provide the media with the<lb/>
equipment and renovations which were<lb/>
neglected for so many years under the Student<lb/>
Government Association (SGA).<lb/>
We have expressed our feelings on<lb/>
proposed grants from the Media Board to the<lb/>
SGA in earlier editorials, and our position<lb/>
remains unchanged. It would set a dangerous<lb/>
precedent for one major organization to, in<lb/>
effect, bail out another. How will any<lb/>
organization handle its finances if it knows it<lb/>
can get a handout from another body should<lb/>
they carelessly overspend their alloted funds?<lb/>
The Media Board was created to handle<lb/>
the media and the media alone. The proposal<lb/>
to create the board stated explicitly that no<lb/>
money already appropriated by the SGA would<lb/>
revert back, as was provided for in the original<lb/>
SGA appropriations bill. FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
reverted $20,000 to the Media Board when our<lb/>
budget expired last June, and there was no<lb/>
question as to whether or not it should go to the<lb/>
Media Board or the SGA.<lb/>
Similarly, the Media Board should build its<lb/>
savings in order to both improve, expand, and<lb/>
offer a buffer to the media. Through wise<lb/>
financial management, the REBEL could<lb/>
conceivably publish once a semester; FOUNT-<lb/>
AINHEAD could hit the streets three times a<lb/>
week or even more often. Professional<lb/>
consultants could be called in to educate media<lb/>
personnel in their chosen fields, further<lb/>
improving the media and the university's<lb/>
reputation.<lb/>
It is unfortunate that the 1977-78 BUCCA-<lb/>
NEER died a slow and painful death, but it can<lb/>
be turned into a blessing. This windfall profit<lb/>
should be used as seed money to update and<lb/>
renovate all campus media. In this capacity, it<lb/>
will be worth far more than $42,000.<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Communique<lb/>
Speaker explains SGA purpose<lb/>
witchcraft<lb/>
By LUKE WHISNANT<lb/>
Everything seemed<lb/>
preuy normal. was jusl<lb/>
another Halloween: kids<lb/>
throwing eggs and rolling<lb/>
yards; parents siicing open<lb/>
apples to check for razor<lb/>
blades, thousands of<lb/>
church-group haunted hou-<lb/>
ses raking in the money and<lb/>
thousands of high school<lb/>
carnivals burning life-sized<lb/>
papier-mache witches un-<lb/>
der the almost full moon.<lb/>
There may have been a<lb/>
few hgitimate witches<lb/>
standing around those<lb/>
bonfires Tuesday night,<lb/>
watching their symbolic<lb/>
aiter-egos transmute into<lb/>
ashes, but more than likely<lb/>
they were busy with their<lb/>
own celebrations- after all,<lb/>
Halloween is the holiest<lb/>
night of the year to some<lb/>
people.<lb/>
We're familiar with it<lb/>
by now-the Black Mass<lb/>
with all its darkest rituals<lb/>
appears at least twice<lb/>
monthly on TV, usually in<lb/>
one of those made-for-tele-<lb/>
vision movies like The<lb/>
Devil'I Cheerleaders or<lb/>
Satan's Daughter.<lb/>
Some of the more exotic<lb/>
and explicit sexual cere-<lb/>
monies are only hinted at<lb/>
during prime-time�you<lb/>
have to check out the orgys<lb/>
at your local paperback<lb/>
bookshelf. Something<lb/>
about TV exposure,<lb/>
though, makes the whole<lb/>
rigamarole of Satanism<lb/>
seem silly and a little<lb/>
pathetic, and I'm not quite<lb/>
sure that's the way we<lb/>
should feel about it. There<lb/>
are more people seriously<lb/>
into Satanism than we<lb/>
realize.<lb/>
One blistering August<lb/>
day l was sitting around a<lb/>
pond at the edge of a<lb/>
cornfield with three friends<lb/>
of mine. The corn had been<lb/>
scorched to death weeks<lb/>
ago, and even the crickets<lb/>
were too heat-exhausted to<lb/>
move, and when we finally<lb/>
remembered that fish will<lb/>
not bite in the hot part of<lb/>
the day, we reeled in our<lb/>
lines and began looking for<lb/>
something else to do.<lb/>
After a minute, Tim<lb/>
propped himself up on one<lb/>
elbow and asked, "Did I<lb/>
ever tell ya'll about the<lb/>
pyramid I found out here<lb/>
one time?"<lb/>
"Tell us about it said<lb/>
Jeff.<lb/>
"I was hunting out here<lb/>
one time, and the dogs had<lb/>
jumped a rabbit about a<lb/>
mile down the road, so I<lb/>
lust started walking around<lb/>
until they could run him<lb/>
back to me. AH of a sudden<lb/>
 cam to a clearing In the<lb/>
woods and there's this<lb/>
huge pyramid-purple, too.<lb/>
with a plexiglass eye on<lb/>
top<lb/>
'You were stoned,<lb/>
right?" asked David.<lb/>
'Hell no He saw that<lb/>
none of us believed him.<lb/>
("Come on-get your stuff,<lb/>
let's go. I'll take you<lb/>
there<lb/>
black hexagrams painted<lb/>
over it. "Don't you know<lb/>
what these are?" Jeff<lb/>
exclaimed. "These are<lb/>
witches' symbols<lb/>
"Yal'll go on in if you<lb/>
want to said Tim, "BUT<lb/>
I'm staying out here<lb/>
David and I went in.<lb/>
Dead center of the dirt floor<lb/>
was a well which Tim swore<lb/>
hadn't been there before.<lb/>
We dropped a rock down<lb/>
the shaft and counted two<lb/>
seconds before it hit<lb/>
bottom.<lb/>
We lifted our gear,<lb/>
hiked out through the<lb/>
cornfield, piled into David's<lb/>
car. We drove a few miles<lb/>
down the main highway<lb/>
and then Tim took us down<lb/>
a bumpy dirt road which<lb/>
grew less and less navi-<lb/>
gable and eventually<lb/>
turned into two deep sun-<lb/>
baked mud ruts.<lb/>
We got out and walked.<lb/>
Walked past an orange<lb/>
mailbox with the word<lb/>
Home painted on its side,<lb/>
up a little hill into a wall of<lb/>
pines which hid the<lb/>
pyramid from sight.<lb/>
It was purple. It stood<lb/>
about 20 feet tall, and it<lb/>
was big enough inside to<lb/>
parallel park two Cadillacs<lb/>
on the dirt floor.<lb/>
We were swearing and<lb/>
scratching our heads and<lb/>
asking Tim to forgive us for<lb/>
not believing his story.<lb/>
This next part you<lb/>
might have trouble visuali-<lb/>
zing : the top two feet of the<lb/>
pyramid consisted of a clear<lb/>
plexiglass cap that rose to a<lb/>
perfect point. A big yellow<lb/>
�ye had been painted on all<lb/>
four sides of the plexiglass.<lb/>
(If you still can't picture<lb/>
this, look on the back<lb/>
left-hand side of a dollar<lb/>
bill-it's a perfect likeness.)<lb/>
There was no door on<lb/>
the pyramid, just an<lb/>
entranceway with large<lb/>
"Let's see-32 feet per<lb/>
second squared David<lb/>
whistled. "Man, that<lb/>
thing's more than 90 feet<lb/>
deep<lb/>
"How in hell do you<lb/>
suppose they dug that?"<lb/>
The sides were perfectly<lb/>
smooth. "No way they<lb/>
could have gotten well-dig-<lb/>
ging equipment in here<lb/>
In the corner stood a<lb/>
make-shift spice rack and<lb/>
an old iron kettle. The<lb/>
spices were stored in baby-<lb/>
food jars. At first we<lb/>
thought wertadJfcuijd,�<lb/>
someone's stsah, but on<lb/>
closer inspection we were<lb/>
unable to identify any of the<lb/>
herbs.<lb/>
Outside, Jeff had dis-<lb/>
covered a campfire pit<lb/>
made of bricks. Around the<lb/>
pit were dozens of charred<lb/>
bones. I was quietly<lb/>
freaking out until Tim<lb/>
informed us that they were<lb/>
cow bones. Standing a little<lb/>
way off from the firepit was<lb/>
a marble sundial with these<lb/>
words inscribed on the<lb/>
face. "Before Light Comes<lb/>
Darkness<lb/>
Jeff kicked the sundial<lb/>
over. "I know what this is<lb/>
now he hollered. "These<lb/>
people are devil-worship-<lb/>
pers<lb/>
Tim politely told Jeff to<lb/>
shut up and stop destroying<lb/>
other people's property.<lb/>
I spent this past<lb/>
Tuesday night in a barren<lb/>
room here in Greenville,<lb/>
just as I have spent the two<lb/>
previous Halloweens.<lb/>
Trick-or-treaters kept ban-<lb/>
ging on the door and after<lb/>
we'd run out of apples, I<lb/>
turned off the lights and<lb/>
locked up, hoping they'd<lb/>
leave us alone.<lb/>
Then it got very quiet.<lb/>
Maybe I should have gone<lb/>
downtown or hit a couple of<lb/>
parties.<lb/>
Instead, I sat around<lb/>
and thought about what<lb/>
might be happening 200<lb/>
miles away at the purple<lb/>
pyramid. Part of me was<lb/>
glad I was here, safe and<lb/>
warm and unterrified.<lb/>
My dark side wanted to<lb/>
be there.<lb/>
ToFOUNTAiNHEAD<lb/>
Most of you have heard<lb/>
of SGA in one way or<lb/>
another, but probably very<lb/>
few of you know exactly<lb/>
what SGA is or does. This is<lb/>
my third consecutive year<lb/>
in the Student Government<lb/>
Association, having served<lb/>
in the legislative and exe-<lb/>
cutive branches.<lb/>
� iBhorefore. I feel, as the<lb/>
newtyutected Speaker, it is<lb/>
no only my duty by my<lb/>
obligation to keep the stu-<lb/>
dents informed as the the<lb/>
happenings of their student<lb/>
government.<lb/>
First, a little back-<lb/>
ground about the SGA.<lb/>
SGA's main purpose is to<lb/>
safeguard and protect the<lb/>
interests of the students.<lb/>
The legislature is composed<lb/>
of 53 full-time students<lb/>
elected by their peers.<lb/>
These legislators do not<lb/>
represent a particular fac-<lb/>
tion of the school. As a<lb/>
matter of fact, very few<lb/>
legislators come from a<lb/>
department requesting<lb/>
money from SGA. The<lb/>
simple facts are that these<lb/>
students are willing to<lb/>
spend endless unpaid hours<lb/>
working for the benefit of<lb/>
their classmates.<lb/>
In deciding upon bills,<lb/>
the 1978-79 legislators try<lb/>
to look at the overall need<lb/>
of the club, how long it<lb/>
has been at ECU, how it<lb/>
has been funded in the past<lb/>
how many students it af-<lb/>
fects, and in what way it<lb/>
will benefit the students.<lb/>
This is by no means an<lb/>
easy job. But then these 53<lb/>
students didn't ask for an<lb/>
eacy job when they applied<lb/>
for SGA. -Howeve, -one<lb/>
thing these students did not<lb/>
bargain for was constant<lb/>
criticism from their friends.<lb/>
If you know a legislator<lb/>
don't ask him why he<lb/>
doesn't want to fund a<lb/>
certain organization. The<lb/>
Legislators would like to<lb/>
give all organizations all of<lb/>
their requested funds. But<lb/>
facts are facts.<lb/>
Thus far this year,<lb/>
organizations have asked<lb/>
for over $192,000 in funds.<lb/>
SGA has $110,000 to spend.<lb/>
So you see it's not a matter<lb/>
of wanting to cut an organi-<lb/>
zation's bill, it's a matter of<lb/>
having to.<lb/>
Basically, I ask the<lb/>
students of this campus to<lb/>
be patient and cooperative<lb/>
with their SGA representa-<lb/>
tives. Out of the 53 mem-<lb/>
bers only six have ever<lb/>
served before. So the in-<lb/>
terest is there, it is only a<lb/>
matter of time.<lb/>
I do urge you to get<lb/>
involved in two ways<lb/>
though. First, attend an<lb/>
SGA meeting to find out<lb/>
exactly what is happening<lb/>
SGA meets every Monday<lb/>
at 5 p.m. in Mendenhall<lb/>
221. Everyone is more than<lb/>
welcome to attend.<lb/>
Second, talk to your<lb/>
legislalprHMMVjjrt" theW<lb/>
how you feel. They don't<lb/>
know unless you tell them<lb/>
We are in the process of<lb/>
trying to pian talk sessions<lb/>
in the dorms and offcampus<lb/>
but until then get a list of<lb/>
the legislators who are<lb/>
representing you and talk<lb/>
to them on a one to one<lb/>
who<lb/>
legi-<lb/>
basis.<lb/>
For those of you<lb/>
don't know who the<lb/>
slators are, I will be more<lb/>
than happy to supply you<lb/>
with the information I am<lb/>
in Mendenhall 230 Monday<lb/>
thru Thursday from 3-5<lb/>
p.m. or call me at home.<lb/>
One last thing, this is<lb/>
our SGA. The effectiveness<lb/>
of it depends largely on the<lb/>
amount of interest and<lb/>
support given to the or-<lb/>
ganization by the student<lb/>
body. Anyone who has any<lb/>
questions about anything<lb/>
relating to SGA please feel<lb/>
free to contact me and I will<lb/>
be more than glad to help<lb/>
Libby Letter<lb/>
SGA Speaker<lb/>
Sen. No editorial<lb/>
'misses the point'<lb/>
'Dr. Rice, we're<lb/>
going to miss you<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Last week was sad for<lb/>
many education majors due<lb/>
to the news of the loss of a<lb/>
professor in the Science<lb/>
Education Department. Dr.<lb/>
Dale Rice will not be with<lb/>
the East Carolina faculty as<lb/>
of May, 1979.<lb/>
Dr. Rice teaches Sci-<lb/>
FounJainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over 50 years<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Doug White<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER<lb/>
Leigh Coakiey<lb/>
TRENDS EDITOR<lb/>
Steve Bachner<lb/>
NEWS EDITORS<lb/>
Julie Everette<lb/>
Hicki Gliarmis<lb/>
ADVERTISING MANAGER<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
Sam Rogers<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina University sponsored by the Media Board of ECU<lb/>
and is distributed each Tuesday and Thursday (weekly<lb/>
during the summer).<lb/>
Mailing address: Old Sooth Building, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
27834<lb/>
Editorial offices: 757-6366, 757-6367, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10 annually, alumni $6 annually.<lb/>
ence Methods, which is a<lb/>
required course for all<lb/>
education (early childhood,<lb/>
special ed. and intermed-<lb/>
' iate) majors. Thanks to him<lb/>
I have learned more from<lb/>
his class than most other<lb/>
science courses. He is<lb/>
a young, energetic profes-<lb/>
sor that makes learning<lb/>
fun.<lb/>
Not only is he one of the<lb/>
best professors I have had<lb/>
as far as motivating his<lb/>
students to learn, he also<lb/>
cares about us. Dr. Rice is<lb/>
always willing to listen to<lb/>
our problems and seems to<lb/>
have an answer.<lb/>
East Carolina is about to<lb/>
lose a very talented man.<lb/>
He has and is contributing<lb/>
much to the field of science.<lb/>
He has published articles<lb/>
and grants to do research.<lb/>
East Carolina will miss<lb/>
him but especially the<lb/>
education majors will miss<lb/>
such a good teacher.<lb/>
I am glad I had the<lb/>
chance to have him as an<lb/>
n struct or before he leaves.<lb/>
Thank you, Dr. Rice.<lb/>
We're going to miss you.<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
The Oct. 24 editorial<lb/>
entitled "Senator No Must<lb/>
Go" completely misses the<lb/>
point. No mention is made<lb/>
of the principles either<lb/>
candidate stands for.<lb/>
Rather, the editorial<lb/>
dwells on issues of secon-<lb/>
dary importance�such as<lb/>
how much money each<lb/>
candidate has raised.<lb/>
The critical question at<lb/>
election time is to deter-<lb/>
mine how each candidate<lb/>
lines up with the principles<lb/>
set forth in the Constitu-<lb/>
tion. I believe Senator<lb/>
Helms had adhered to<lb/>
those principles.<lb/>
In his book When Free<lb/>
Men Shall Stand, Senator<lb/>
Helms has written: "The<lb/>
great principle that the<lb/>
founders of our republic<lb/>
sought to establish.is that<lb/>
progress consists in re-<lb/>
straining the state. In<lb/>
devising the Constitution,<lb/>
they made every effort to<lb/>
see that political power was<lb/>
divided and circumscribed<lb/>
and that the rights of the<lb/>
individual were exphcity<lb/>
declared<lb/>
In the final analysis<lb/>
issues must subordinate<lb/>
themselves to principles If<lb/>
standing on principle is<lb/>
"reactionary and objec-<lb/>
tionable then so be it<lb/>
Our supertaxmg, super-<lb/>
spending, superbureauca-<lb/>
tic federal government was<lb/>
built by Senators and<lb/>
Representatives who were<lb/>
not "reactionary and<lb/>
"objectionable enough to<lb/>
say no to more and more<lb/>
government<lb/>
On Nov 7. am going to<lb/>
vote for the candidate who<lb/>
has the guts to say no and<lb/>
to stand on principle-<lb/>
Senator Jesse Helms.<lb/>
Lyle Barlow<lb/>
Forum policy<lb/>
Forum letters must contain the name, address, phone<lb/>
number, and signature of theauthor(s) and should be typed<lb/>
or neatly printed<lb/>
Lettersare subject to editing for brevity, obscenity, and<lb/>
limited to three typewritten,<lb/>
Michelle Edwards<lb/>
libel<lb/>
No more than three letters on any subject will be printed<lb/>
in one issue.<lb/>
Letters should be<lb/>
double-spaced pages.<lb/>
Letters must be received by noon on Mondays and<lb/>
Wednesdays either at the FOUNTAINHEAD office, second<lb/>
floor, Pulbications Center, or at the information desk in<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
Authors' names will be withheld only when inclusion of<lb/>
the name will embarrass or subject o ridicule the author<lb/>
(such as letters discussing homosexuality, drug, abuse<lb/>
etc.).<lb/>
"Forum" is the primary avenue of student opinion and<lb/>
the moat direct way of getting a<lb/>
be.<lb/>
to the powers that<lb/>
 i0:<lb/>
.<lb/>
��Mnwpwmwi' wi �m� ��'�i �'�w��w<lb/>
<pb facs="00057158_0005"/><lb/>
2 November 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
ECU sponsors citizens'conference<lb/>
DV FOR the Appalachian<lb/>
game, students pose with a Stroh's<lb/>
Photo by Chap Gurley<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
"Citizen Participation<lb/>
in Community Planning<lb/>
and Neighborhood Devel-<lb/>
opment" is the theme of a<lb/>
Nov. 3-4 conference for<lb/>
citizens, government offi-<lb/>
cials and professional plan-<lb/>
ners co-sponsored by ECU<lb/>
Topics of the event<lb/>
include the roles of ethics,<lb/>
law and politics in plan-<lb/>
ning; formulation of the<lb/>
�public interest" from cit-<lb/>
izen values, priorities and<lb/>
goals; the nature and<lb/>
transitional role of the<lb/>
neighborhood and housing;<lb/>
and preservation of historic<lb/>
structures and districts.<lb/>
The conference is spon-<lb/>
sored by the GreenvillePitt<lb/>
County League of Women<lb/>
Voters and the ECU Urban<lb/>
and Regional Planning<lb/>
Crafts �air scheduled<lb/>
Program, in cooperation<lb/>
with the ECU Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education<lb/>
Support for the confer-<lb/>
ence is partially provided<lb/>
by a grant from the N C<lb/>
Humanities Committee All<lb/>
interested persons are in-<lb/>
vited to attend without<lb/>
charge Conference ses-<lb/>
sions and workshops will be<lb/>
held in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
The conference will<lb/>
open Friday at 1 15 p.m<lb/>
with a welcome by Green-<lb/>
ville Mayor Percy Cx.to be<lb/>
followed by two sessions<lb/>
Community Planning<lb/>
and Citizen Participation<lb/>
An Overview. Dr David<lb/>
Godscalk of the UNC-<lb/>
Chapel Hill planning fac-<lb/>
ulty, speaker, with respon-<lb/>
ses by Grahm Pervier.<lb/>
Beaufort County manager.<lb/>
Tom Richter, regional dir-<lb/>
ector of the Dept of Nat-<lb/>
ural Resources and Com-<lb/>
munity Development, and<lb/>
Ruth Trevatham. former<lb/>
member of the Greenville<lb/>
Planning Board. and<lb/>
The Laymen and N C<lb/>
Planning Law Michae'<lb/>
Brough, Carrboro city at-<lb/>
torney, and Phil Green,<lb/>
assistant director of the<lb/>
UNC-Chapei Hill Institute<lb/>
of Government speakers,<lb/>
and respondents Dick Fen-<lb/>
der. Wilmington-New<lb/>
Hanover planning director<lb/>
Ed Howeii of the Greenville<lb/>
City-County Planning and<lb/>
Zoning Commission, and<lb/>
Mary Alice Yarprough of<lb/>
the Greenville Board of<lb/>
Adjustments<lb/>
ed-<lb/>
be<lb/>
Pr iday,<lb/>
u .lay.<lb/>
3. at<lb/>
in<lb/>
N.C 10 -<lb/>
Fi lay and<lb/>
on<lb/>
�tsmen,<lb/>
' mging<lb/>
to the<lb/>
I :  i the<lb/>
n-<lb/>
Crafts-<lb/>
� and<lb/>
on-<lb/>
nal<lb/>
ances<lb/>
�<lb/>
ihem-<lb/>
md<lb/>
Piedn<lb/>
ince and<lb/>
" .siasm<lb/>
. � se ' s ex-<lb/>
1978 Fail<lb/>
tnoe<lb/>
� crafts<lb/>
. jp �� These<lb/>
include pottery, weaving,<lb/>
glass, wood, jewelry, en-<lb/>
ameling, photographs,<lb/>
prints, batik, iron work,<lb/>
leather, stitchery, and quil-<lb/>
ting<lb/>
In addition to the<lb/>
craftsmen's exhibits, there<lb/>
will be live entertainment,<lb/>
a sidewalk cafe, demon-<lb/>
strations by master crafts-<lb/>
men, and education exhi-<lb/>
bits<lb/>
Within walking distance<lb/>
is a Holiday Inn Motel with<lb/>
a restaurant, as well as<lb/>
several other eating places.<lb/>
Other motel and hotel ac-<lb/>
the center of the city as wei'<lb/>
as on the outskirts.<lb/>
PRESENTS A<lb/>
"THANK GOD "STEVE<lb/>
IT'S FRIDAY" HARDY'S<lb/>
PARTY with BEACH<lb/>
Live on WRQR PARTY"<lb/>
3-7 PM Friday Nov.3<lb/>
Friday Night-<lb/>
The<lb/>
beginning<lb/>
of the<lb/>
and don't<lb/>
forget,<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
Nov.6<lb/>
"MISS<lb/>
CHAPTER X<lb/>
CONTEST"<lb/>
CHAPTER X<lb/>
presents<lb/>
"JANICE<lb/>
J f<lb/>
3TACEY STUART<lb/>
tKTWMUUKBtFiOAT<lb/>
ACaOSSTHfMfifMEU&amp;ANT<lb/>
�mmm na-uxf stwxes'<lb/>
V'<lb/>
MARVEl AS H Mil UMUKamHCS<lb/>
�U THE GMCf Of TOO UKXT M�<lb/>
OF YESTBIYEM WfTW THE �K-ACTHt<lb/>
OF TOWT'S<lb/>
MAKER<lb/>
PENS!<lb/>
�?�<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
�?;<lb/>
Liner<lb/>
LP TMfPftOTBAUtlMIR:AWAO�mCIIIT<lb/>
 STEP BACKWARD IN WRITING as<lb/>
ho ApftAftm ATwtjteooK smt<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 includes Golden Crisp<lb/>
French Fires, Cole Slaw, Tartar Sauce and<lb/>
the world's best hushpuppies.<lb/>
FRIDAYS<lb/>
1HQ0 Sun. thru Thurs. 4:30-0:00<lb/>
Seafood ������<lb/>
u-rSf: Friday's Seafood<lb/>
-I 2311 S.Evans St.<lb/>
J7<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
You too<lb/>
tt<lb/>
'&amp;SffHF<lb/>
7 could become<lb/>
a collector's item<lb/>
Make your YEARBOOK PORTRAIT<lb/>
appointment NOW at:<lb/>
APPOINTMENTS<lb/>
BEING TAKEN NOW<lb/>
COME BY<lb/>
OR<lb/>
CALL THE BUC OFFICE<lb/>
AT 757 6501<lb/>
PICTURES WILL BE MADE<lb/>
FROM<lb/>
MONDAY, NOV. 6<lb/>
UNTIL<lb/>
TUESDAY, NOV. 21<lb/>
FROM 9 a.m. TIL 5 p.m.<lb/>
THIS IS<lb/>
THE ONLY TIME<lb/>
PICTURES<lb/>
WILL BE MADE<lb/>
THIS YEAR!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057158_0006"/><lb/>
Major Attractions<lb/>
presents Pablo Cruise<lb/>
Je � ����� nt fre<lb/>
ByCHRlSFARREN<lb/>
Staff Reporter<lb/>
and<lb/>
JEFF ROLLINS<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
Coming to Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum on Thurs . Novem-<lb/>
ber 9. A &amp; M recording<lb/>
artists, Pablo Cruise, will<lb/>
be performing their own<lb/>
brand of island-flavored<lb/>
music as a part of the<lb/>
festivities for East Caro-<lb/>
lina's Homecoming Week.<lb/>
For years basically a<lb/>
West Coast oriented group<lb/>
with a small but avid fol-<lb/>
lowing, .elsewhere. Pablo<lb/>
Cruise came into national<lb/>
prominence during the<lb/>
summer of 77 with the<lb/>
release of A Place In The<lb/>
Sun. their vigorous, free-<lb/>
flowing third album, which<lb/>
enjoyed a solid gold success<lb/>
and contained their smash<lb/>
single 'Whatcha Gonna<lb/>
Do" which had a long<lb/>
summer sojourn m the Top<lb/>
10.<lb/>
However, while most<lb/>
. VI RE<lb/>
3 ARTISTS Pablo Cru.se will appear in concert in Minges Coliseum Nov 9.<lb/>
in top form<lb/>
DARREN BERGSTEIN<lb/>
� rrends Editor<lb/>
to the good old-fashioned vampire<lb/>
� the horror film vehicle<lb/>
Has th -1 personnage<lb/>
. . jhed from movie<lb/>
- .ars since an kind<lb/>
� �� . rcuit Perhaps the<lb/>
 finally driven the<lb/>
rror ftln afficionado like myself do<lb/>
� tie Count Dracula and his<lb/>
grimace and chor'le in<lb/>
� horror or otherwise bear �-<lb/>
sed the previews they show scantily on TV<lb/>
.hat tace. that ot Christopher Lee as Count<lb/>
uhii anothei popped up at me, that ot OraouVa's<lb/>
. an Helsing. the interminable Peter<lb/>
lefinitely that this flick of the<lb/>
 is no piece of trash . it was the seventh<lb/>
-e Hammer Dracula series originally<lb/>
�f Dracula<lb/>
Cinema<lb/>
. rid .as the title changed9 The Satanic<lb/>
acula is infinitely better and pertains more to the<lb/>
 e it up to some mane advertiser to think up a title<lb/>
Dracula and his Vampire Bride, which is a name<lb/>
� � only for drive-in marquees and sleazy<lb/>
mill moviehouses<lb/>
jon't let the poster fool you. The quote proclaims<lb/>
King of the Undead married the Queen of the<lb/>
es Oh gawd' A quote like that comes straight out of<lb/>
- s made on two dollar budgets. For people who<lb/>
-now what this film really is. a quote like that could<lb/>
the number of box office receipts,<lb/>
�heless. the film is terrific. It is a welcome sight to<lb/>
oe it was made well over two years ago So when I<lb/>
e TV previews and recognized the film for what<lb/>
�s anxious and eager to see it.<lb/>
� mbs no? a disappointment Christopher Lee is in top<lb/>
is the sanguiary Count. King of the Undead. Prince of<lb/>
Darkness Lee is Dracula. his whole body emitting an aura<lb/>
and awesomeness that is his trademark and that<lb/>
e character what it is. Peter Cushing. as the living<lb/>
� � � Van Helsing. Lornmer Van Helsing, is<lb/>
:able enemy, the only man who knows what<lb/>
and the only man who knows how to contend<lb/>
- im.<lb/>
sa shame that the series bowed out Christopher Lee<lb/>
resigned from pursuing the part any longer because of what<lb/>
�� is present film involves that of bringing Dracula to<lb/>
idem day. 20th Century London<lb/>
iee feit that doing that, the whole mystique and power<lb/>
g Dracula was no longer present, and that<lb/>
bringing him up to present day civilization reduced any<lb/>
semblance of a supernatural being. When<lb/>
s and computers replaced castles and crypts, Lee<lb/>
The opening of the film is very confusing. An<lb/>
ominous-looking house is shown and inside what appears to<lb/>
be a prisoner is guarded carefully Below, the living room,<lb/>
something definitely eerie is taking place, however. A<lb/>
sacrifice is being prepared, as a rooster's neck is slashed<lb/>
and the blood is allowed to flow onto a young, naked girl.<lb/>
The satanists each dip a finger into the blood and mark and<lb/>
inverted crucifix onto their foreheads. The Priestess of<lb/>
Ceremonies conveys that they all are the Devil's Disciples<lb/>
now. and she makes her point clear when she thrusts a<lb/>
dagger intothe girl'schest.<lb/>
Meanwhile, the prisoner has escaped, and is brought<lb/>
into the hands of Scotland Yard, where Inspector Murrat,<lb/>
portrayed heroically by Michael Coles, interrogates him,<lb/>
and learns of a bizarre cult<lb/>
They enlist the aid of a man who is the expert in<lb/>
dealing with the occult: Lorrimer Van Helsing. Peter<lb/>
Cush.ng is his own refreshing, straight-forward self as the<lb/>
vampire killer, who lectures to Murray and another aide on<lb/>
the aspects of vampirism.<lb/>
Van Helsing talks with one of the scientists who is<lb/>
suspected of being one of theS tanists at Pelham House.<lb/>
The man appears hysterical, and mentally unbalanced;<lb/>
Van Helsing has further proof of this when the<lb/>
bacteriologist shows him a virus he has been breeding that<lb/>
is a more devastating form of bubonic plague.<lb/>
Van Helsing finally learns that Dracula has been<lb/>
resurrected and is living under the name of a DO. Denham,<lb/>
a maior industrialist. The hunter of the undead uncovers a<lb/>
plan masterminded by the Count; the K ing of the Vampires<lb/>
plans to annihilate every living soul on earth through the<lb/>
use of the deadly strain, thus acheivmg his ultimate<lb/>
revenge<lb/>
It is evident why Lee chose to leave the role of Dracula<lb/>
after this film Most of it takes place ms.de anticept.c,<lb/>
modern labs and buildings, leaning almost more to the<lb/>
science fiction side than to the supernatural. Only when<lb/>
Murray and Van Hels.ng's daughter discover a lair<lb/>
underneath the House where Dracula's minions lay does<lb/>
the film show any evidence of the old remnants of castles<lb/>
and dungeons.<lb/>
Still, the film is suspenseful and offers fine special<lb/>
effects, acting, and brings back the team of Lee and<lb/>
Cushing, the duo of the modern horror film.<lb/>
With the last ot the Dracula films, they have'jUen<lb/>
brought full cycle. Generations metamorphose from the<lb/>
original Van Helsing in the Transylvanian settings, to the<lb/>
Van Helsing of the revolver, and the laboratory Dracula is<lb/>
the only one who remains the same, his omnipresent, evil<lb/>
'cloak spreading over whoever he encounters and bending<lb/>
them until they're under his domination.<lb/>
But isthe last film as good asthe first?<lb/>
Horror of Dracula (known simply as Dracula in Great<lb/>
Britain where it was made in 1958) was the first in the<lb/>
Hammer odyssey. Christopher Lee. a tall and powerful<lb/>
personality who has been cast just a year before, in 1957, as<lb/>
the creation of Baron Frankenstein, in The Curse of<lb/>
Frankenstein, was cast, and director Terence Fisher from<lb/>
then on out brought out the true evil of the vampire. Lee<lb/>
was superb, and the film was a box office success,<lb/>
outgrossing Curse of Frankenstein<lb/>
It was not until 1965 that Hammer decided to bring back<lb/>
the Count, and under the skilled supervision once more of<lb/>
Terence Fisher as director, Lee once again starred in in<lb/>
Dracula, Prince of Darkness. Though the Count is not given<lb/>
as much footage as in the preceeding film, it is still<lb/>
a suspenseful venture into the Carpathian Mountains,<lb/>
where the King of the Undead again runs rampant due to<lb/>
the efforts of his obedient manservant K love. At the finale,<lb/>
Dracula dies a novel and thrilling death; trapped on the<lb/>
frozen ice of the moat that surrounds his castle, a chunk is<lb/>
split by thegunshotsof his pursuersand he falls slowly into<lb/>
the water, for running water is one of the enemies of the<lb/>
vampire.<lb/>
Lee returned in 1968 for Dracula Has Risen from the<lb/>
Grave, this time directed by Freddie Francis. Here Lee is<lb/>
resurrected by a priest who unwittingly falls on the block of<lb/>
ice that contains the Count's frozen form � blood from a<lb/>
cut on the priests' head seeps through the water and the<lb/>
vampire King islet loose upon the world.<lb/>
Lee moves Dracula and sets the pace for the character's<lb/>
development, though again not given much footage. As in<lb/>
the film before it, Peter Cushing is absent as Van Helsing.<lb/>
Dracula is dispatched at the finale when he is knocked off a<lb/>
cliff and impaled upon a huge cross.<lb/>
Tasfe the Blood of Dracula, the next in the series, was<lb/>
gauntily directed by Peter Sasdy, in 1970. Lee is again<lb/>
given little to do, but his magnetism is felt when he enters<lb/>
the scene and is brought forth into the world by three fools<lb/>
venturing into his lair. Here he dies a chilling and confusing<lb/>
death; plummeting to the ground and disintegrating into<lb/>
dust when religious symbols flash amidst him<lb/>
Sasdy again directed in The Scars of Dracula, made also<lb/>
in 1970. Lee dies a more chilling death in this one; a metal<lb/>
rod he is holding is struck by lightning and he is<lb/>
incinerated.<lb/>
LIVINGSTON TAYLOR WILL appear m concert Nov 9<lb/>
Turning Point brint<lb/>
ballet to Hendrix<lb/>
The Student Union Films Committee presentsthe highly<lb/>
acclaimed film The Turning Point this weekend at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center's Hendrix Theatre It will be<lb/>
shown this Friday night at 7 and 9 The film will be shown at<lb/>
2 p.m.Saturday due to this week's home football game<lb/>
The Turning Point is one of the best films of this era.<lb/>
It's that rare example of synergy in which every key<lb/>
element is excellent and the ensemble is an absolute<lb/>
triumph.<lb/>
Anne Bancroft and Shirley MacLaine. starring as<lb/>
long-time friends with unresolved problems, are magnifi-<lb/>
cent; Arthur Laurents' screenplay is literate, mature, and<lb/>
compelling; Herbert Ross' direction is sensational; the<lb/>
production is superb.<lb/>
The intricate plotting introduces Bancroft as a ballet star<lb/>
just reaching that uneasy Margo Channmg age where a lot<lb/>
of Eve Harringtons (male and female) are beginning to<lb/>
See MACLAINE. p. 7<lb/>
people think of Pablo<lb/>
Cruise as a relatively new<lb/>
band, they have in reality<lb/>
been around for quite<lb/>
sometime.<lb/>
Beginning in 1974. the<lb/>
band's first album was<lb/>
simply entitled Pablo<lb/>
Cruise, a smooth and very<lb/>
creative effort that went<lb/>
virtually unnoticed.<lb/>
This album did include<lb/>
'Ocean Breeze a ram-<lb/>
bling and at times stunning<lb/>
piece that was marked by<lb/>
Cory Lenos' liquid piano<lb/>
lines, and David Jenkins'<lb/>
intense guitar playing<lb/>
Even now this song re-<lb/>
mains as one of their best<lb/>
and is especially impressive<lb/>
live.<lb/>
Their second album.<lb/>
Lifeline, fell into much the<lb/>
same category as the first<lb/>
The music was refreshing<lb/>
and alive. When critics<lb/>
dubbed Pablo Cruise's ro-<lb/>
bust, rhythmic blend<lb/>
'Sports rock" it was more<lb/>
than a clever editorial de-<lb/>
scription<lb/>
A downhill racer on<lb/>
ABC s Wide World of<lb/>
Sports skied tc the accom-<lb/>
paniment of "Zero to Sixty<lb/>
In Five" from the Lifeline<lb/>
album and many of their<lb/>
other high-velocity ins"<lb/>
mentals have been adopted<lb/>
as trademarks for a variety<lb/>
of athletic events<lb/>
A Place In The Sun was<lb/>
the culmination of lots o<lb/>
hard work and dues for the<lb/>
band, and rightfully so. The<lb/>
album was somewhat of a<lb/>
crossover, mixing the Pablo<lb/>
Cruise freshness with a<lb/>
new. more marketable<lb/>
style The public approved<lb/>
Still riding the crest of<lb/>
critical acclaim and pop-<lb/>
ularity. A Place In The Sun<lb/>
is swiftly approaching plat-<lb/>
inum status, and the former<lb/>
opening act. whose taste-<lb/>
ful, exhilerating perform-<lb/>
ances have literally stolen<lb/>
the show from a variety of<lb/>
top-billed bands, has itself<lb/>
been elevated to headlining<lb/>
status.<lb/>
� a ncp of freed<lb/>
convey a senbc w<lb/>
in motion<lb/>
Pablo Cruise <lb/>
appear.ng at M.nges '<lb/>
,seum for one show<lb/>
Thurs . November 9 at 6<lb/>
pm Tickets are $5 for E<lb/>
students and $7 for I<lb/>
public Only public tickets<lb/>
will be sold at the door<lb/>
Appearing Pa-<lb/>
CrulSe will be L �<lb/>
Ta, � )ther of Jan<lb/>
Tayloi "ho nas rece-<lb/>
begun a strong con<lb/>
the recordi-g ��<lb/>
performing field<lb/>
a-other one in a seru<lb/>
of concerts brou .<lb/>
campus by the Maj i <lb/>
  on s Co<lb/>
Thurs iy night<lb/>
ance promises to be<lb/>
hfe and refreshing sounds<lb/>
Livingston Taylor<lb/>
n g s:<lb/>
gom i<lb/>
� I irsday<lb/>
it 8 <lb/>
�  L � ���<lb/>
en  ' l<lb/>
N<lb/>
v<lb/>
���<lb/>
r<lb/>
Be<lb/>
�'�"�'<lb/>
i n d r <lb/>
ii<lb/>
�. - act<lb/>
�<lb/>
� n '<lb/>
h C :<lb/>
imes ai<lb/>
�<lb/>
I<lb/>
se<lb/>
L r.<lb/>
few ears ac<lb/>
� jethei "<lb/>
Tav<lb/>
-<lb/>
Now with the release of<lb/>
their fourth A &amp; M album.<lb/>
Worlds Away, the high<lb/>
level of achievement that's<lb/>
become their trademark<lb/>
continues and offers def-<lb/>
initive auditory evidence<lb/>
that sunshine and sophi-<lb/>
stication are not mutually<lb/>
exclusive.<lb/>
� � i �<lb/>
���<lb/>
a Car na - a-<lb/>
a�e.<lb/>
After a five<lb/>
absence from th ia<lb/>
scene he has ust re eased<lb/>
the� a bum<lb/>
Mirror which s d ; we<lb/>
on tl<lb/>
Taylor keeps h � I<lb/>
ence . �<lb/>
mind a- 1 e doesn � . <lb/>
dov " He say<lb/>
know a t" ai � . audu<lb/>
wars and they're :<lb/>
get it<lb/>
Playmg livi  .<lb/>
make a :&amp;ee' � : eer<lb/>
playing to audiences t r th<lb/>
last few(ftve) ,ea<lb/>
See TAYLOc p 7<lb/>
Dracula AD 1972, marked two things; one the first<lb/>
attempt to bring Count Dracula into modern day London of<lb/>
1972, and two, bringing back his old rival, the formidable<lb/>
Van Helsing, once again in the suitable guise of Peter<lb/>
Cushing.<lb/>
Count Dracula and His Vampire Bride brings the series<lb/>
around full circle apparently ends it permanently, but as<lb/>
before (through the wonders of cinematic magic and<lb/>
money), the Count could be brought back and let loose upon<lb/>
an unsuspecting world However, Lee's unhappiness about<lb/>
the setting of the character will have him refusing to play<lb/>
the part<lb/>
W hiter Dracula? Yes, in the film's eye to come. But the<lb/>
movies in the past will be available to enjoy again and<lb/>
again. Hammer produced, and tried in vain to maintain, a<lb/>
figure that is prominent in folklore, but kept the series<lb/>
toned down to the degree that it will remain a classical<lb/>
set of records in the annals of horror.<lb/>
And nemesis Cushing will always be there with the<lb/>
Count, wooden stake in hand, ready to put an end to his<lb/>
existence.<lb/>
The series, as well as the character, are immortal.<lb/>
THE NORTH CAROLINA Symphony Orchestra will present<lb/>
a concert Monday, Nov. 6at 8p.m. at the Farmville Central<lb/>
High School, sponsored by the Farmville Community Arts<lb/>
Council. The Chamber Orchestra is made up of about half ot<lb/>
the 73-member full Symphony, and performs a program<lb/>
especially suited tor the smaller group ot musicians. James<lb/>
Orgle, associate conductor tor the Symphony, will conduct<lb/>
served as<lb/>
M ichigan<lb/>
the orchestra for the Farmville concert Oroie has<lb/>
assistant conductor tor the University of<lb/>
Orchestra and its Arts Chorale and recent,<lb/>
conductor for the Winston-Salem SS!i I <lb/>
session. Tickets are available from Z, r <lb/>
Center and Apple Records. Z sTst'Tn OrZlT "<lb/>
- - �� - .<lb/>
<pb facs="00057158_0007"/><lb/>
Soprano Antonia Dalapas gives<lb/>
voice recital Sunday at Fletcher<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Soprano Antonia Dal-<lb/>
apas, a member of the ECU<lb/>
School of Music voice<lb/>
Acuity, will perform in<lb/>
recital Sunday, Nov. 5, at<lb/>
8 15 p.m. in the A.J<lb/>
Fletcher Recital Hall.<lb/>
The recital is free and<lb/>
open to the public.<lb/>
Mtss Dalapas will be<lb/>
"pamed by pianist<lb/>
Everett Pittman, dean of<lb/>
te ECU School of Music,<lb/>
and assisted by cellist<lb/>
Mellado and vio-<lb/>
airya Mellado.<lb/>
Her program will in-<lb/>
clude an ana from Buxte-<lb/>
s Cantata No 1 ;<lb/>
Guridi's "No Quiero Tus<lb/>
ellanas" ; two songs by<lb/>
Obradors. Del Cabello<lb/>
MasSutil and "Chiquitita<lb/>
�a Novia Kalomiris'<lb/>
Two Greek Folksongs<lb/>
three songs by Wolf, "Das<lb/>
Verlassene Magdlein<lb/>
England Conservatory of<lb/>
Music. She has performed<lb/>
in Oregon, New York and<lb/>
Washington in addition to<lb/>
Music<lb/>
"Heb auf dein Blondes<lb/>
Haupt" and "Mignon,<lb/>
Kennst Du das Land?<lb/>
two Chausson love songs;<lb/>
Duparcs "Au Pays On Se<lb/>
Fait la Guerre "Sere-<lb/>
nade" and "Le Manoir de<lb/>
Rosemonde" and several<lb/>
songs from the American<lb/>
musical theatre.<lb/>
An assistant professor<lb/>
at ECU, Antonia Dalapas<lb/>
has degrees from the New<lb/>
TAYLOR<lb/>
Continued from p 6<lb/>
� way they can be<lb/>
ioited is with quality<lb/>
and good taste "<lb/>
There's no 'New and<lb/>
. roved Livingston Tay-<lb/>
ve always been good.<lb/>
And. above all else, I'm an<lb/>
�tamer<lb/>
Livingston is also a fine<lb/>
g-writer, as any of his<lb/>
s would be sure to insist,<lb/>
feel a record should be a<lb/>
' xjraph-a slice of<lb/>
time "3-Way Mirror, Liv-<lb/>
ingston's first album for<lb/>
Epic Records, is a concise<lb/>
ten-song collection of<lb/>
Taylor's wit, emotion and<lb/>
imagination.<lb/>
3-Way Mirror oreserves<lb/>
the artist's penchant for<lb/>
intimacy while presenting<lb/>
him in a rousing, rocking,<lb/>
pop setting.<lb/>
Tickets for the Living-<lb/>
ston Taylor-Pable Cruise<lb/>
concert may be obtained<lb/>
from the Central Ticket<lb/>
Office in Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center Admission is<lb/>
$5.00 for students and<lb/>
$7.00 for the public.<lb/>
M ACLAINE<lb/>
Continued from p 6<lb/>
Tiove p M acLaine, her best friend, long ago abandoned a<lb/>
iimilar career to marry Tom Skerritt and now their teenage<lb/>
daughter Lesshe Browne, shows real promise as a dancer<lb/>
This is the incident which triggers an explosion of new<lb/>
and old conflicts, all handled in first-rate writing, acting,<lb/>
and direction<lb/>
he background setting could have been the business<lb/>
rid, the campus, anything. As is, the choice of an All<lb/>
�ut Eve environs  transposed and refocussed m many<lb/>
stantial ways  is a brilliant writing strategy.<lb/>
Admission to the film is by ID and Activity Card for ECU<lb/>
;sand Mendenhall Student Center membership card<lb/>
faculty and staff. All Free Flicks are shown in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center's Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
BURGER<lb/>
AND<lb/>
FRIES!<lb/>
the New England area, and<lb/>
was featured with the ECU<lb/>
Symphony in performances<lb/>
of Strauss's "Four Last<lb/>
Songs" and the Beethoven<lb/>
Ninth Symphony.<lb/>
ECU Symphony<lb/>
The ECU Symphony<lb/>
Orchestra will perform at<lb/>
Washington High School,<lb/>
Norfolk. Wednesday, Nov.<lb/>
8 at 8 p.m.<lb/>
The concert will be<lb/>
broadcast live on WGH-FM .<lb/>
Works to be featured<lb/>
are the Overture to "The<lb/>
Merry Wives of Windsor<lb/>
by Otto Nicolai, the J.S.<lb/>
Bach Concerto for Two<lb/>
Violins and Orchestra, and<lb/>
Dvorak's Symphony No. 8<lb/>
in G Major, Opus 88.<lb/>
Haus conducts<lb/>
The orchestra is con-<lb/>
ducted by Robert Haus of<lb/>
the ECU School of Music<lb/>
faculty and its membership<lb/>
primarily consists of ad-<lb/>
vanced student instrumen-<lb/>
talists, including many<lb/>
from the Tidewater area.<lb/>
One of the soloists in<lb/>
the Bach Double Concerto<lb/>
is a Norfolk resident, Glenn<lb/>
Davis.<lb/>
A past member of the<lb/>
Norfolk Symphony and<lb/>
former concertmaster of the<lb/>
Tidewater Youth Symphony<lb/>
Davis is a senior at ECU.<lb/>
He is the son of Mr. and<lb/>
Mrs. Eugene Davis of 1346<lb/>
Bolton St. and a graduate of<lb/>
Washington High School.<lb/>
PRESENT THIS COUPON<lb/>
FOR 12 PRICE ADMISSION<lb/>
ON FRIDAY NOV. 3<lb/>
NOVEMBER<lb/>
1978<lb/>
1 WED<lb/>
2 THURS<lb/>
FRI<lb/>
SAT<lb/>
SUN<lb/>
MON<lb/>
TUES<lb/>
8 WED<lb/>
9 THURS<lb/>
10 FRI<lb/>
11 SAT<lb/>
12 SUN<lb/>
13 MON<lb/>
14 TUES<lb/>
15 WED<lb/>
16 THURS<lb/>
17 FRI<lb/>
18 SAT<lb/>
19 SUN<lb/>
20 MON<lb/>
21 TUES B<lb/>
22 WED<lb/>
23 THURS<lb/>
24 FRI<lb/>
25 SAT<lb/>
26 SUN<lb/>
27 MON<lb/>
30 THURS<lb/>
NOVEMBER<lb/>
1978<lb/>
John Moore "Amtncnn Dream"<lb/>
Customer App Party Mm Chapter X<lb/>
Steve Hardy i Beach Party<lb/>
Fr� &amp; Soro Ntjjht<lb/>
Chapter X present! JANICE Ladies Night<lb/>
John Moore "Americian Dream"<lb/>
Quarter Fmials Miss Chapter X Steve Hardy<lb/>
Homecomming Victory with Tommy Gardner<lb/>
KA Beat The Clock<lb/>
AZD Pledge Party<lb/>
John Moore "Americian Dream"<lb/>
Semi Fimals Miss Chapter X<lb/>
Steve Hardy's Beach Party<lb/>
Frat ft Soro Night<lb/>
Lacrosse Club 2nd. annual Ugly Contest<lb/>
eta of ECU Cust App Party,Pi Sig Pie Throw<lb/>
Thankijiving IS.aht Party with John Moor<lb/>
Sup�r Cult Aop fmrty TO IF Party<lb/>
Steve Hardy's Beach Party<lb/>
Ka Beat The Clock<lb/>
Ladies Night<lb/>
John Moore "Americian Dream"<lb/>
COMING DEC 2 Fimals of Mm Chapter X contest<lb/>
 Open for Party or Social call David Waters or Don<lb/>
Cailtcutt<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
GIFTS!<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Night is<lb/>
Kids7<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/>
 y 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 766 5788<lb/>
264 By Pa<lb/>
2 November 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
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CRAIG T609<lb/>
� AM FMSTEREO<lb/>
�CASSETTE PLAYER<lb/>
�IN DASH<lb/>
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REG. 199.95<lb/>
Technics<lb/>
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r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057158_0008"/><lb/>
�<lb/>
Pirates face explosive<lb/>
Appalachian State squad<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
ECU head coach Pat Dye has talked all season long<lb/>
about the potential explosiveness of his Pirate offense. Yet,<lb/>
with just three games remaining on the schedule Dye, as<lb/>
well as the rest of the Pirate fans, are still patiently awaiting<lb/>
that complete game<lb/>
"I still haven't given up on this team one bit said Dye<lb/>
Wednesday at his weekly press luncheon. "We have the<lb/>
potential to be explosive offensively.<lb/>
"But. warned Dye about ECU'S upcoming contest<lb/>
against Appalachian State thisSaturday, "Thiscould be the<lb/>
week <lb/>
The Pirates were idle last week, and a short layoff was<lb/>
just what the Buc's, now 5-3 overall, needed, according to<lb/>
Dye "I think all of our players have enjoyed the time off<lb/>
said Dye. "Having to get up mentally and physically each<lb/>
week gets tinng. I've been real pleased with our attitude on<lb/>
the practice field this week. I'll know more about how ready<lb/>
we are when we get on the field Saturday<lb/>
Jim Brakefield's Appalachian State Mountaineers also<lb/>
brjng a 5-3 record into the game and have put 260 points on<lb/>
the scoreboard in its eight contests this season.<lb/>
The Mountaineers are nationally ranked in four<lb/>
offensive categories and have four individual standouts who<lb/>
are also ranked in national statistics. The Apps are ranked<lb/>
fifth in the nation in total offense and quarterback Steve<lb/>
Brown ranks 11th in the country in total yards a game with<lb/>
an impressive 200.9 average.<lb/>
Appalachian State presents more problems offensively<lb/>
than any team we've faced all season noted Dye. "They<lb/>
run the option extremely well and do a good job of throwing<lb/>
the ball They've got a great quarterback in Steve Brown.<lb/>
Appalachian has always executed against us and I'm sure<lb/>
they' H be ready for us this week<lb/>
Even though the Mountaineers have ranked among the<lb/>
nations leaders offensively every week, the defense is<lb/>
LaVonda Duncan<lb/>
Pirates end fall<lb/>
golf schedule<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
The ECU golf team<lb/>
concludes its fall schedule<lb/>
this weekend when the<lb/>
Pirates travel to Greens-<lb/>
boro to compete in the<lb/>
Guilford College invita-<lb/>
tional Tournament.<lb/>
The 54-hol event<lb/>
begins Friday on the<lb/>
Cardinal Country Club with<lb/>
15 teams competing the<lb/>
tournament. Other teams<lb/>
entered in the three-day<lb/>
event are Richmond, UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington, host Guilford<lb/>
who will have two teams,<lb/>
Shorter College, Campbell,<lb/>
and Atlantic Christian.<lb/>
North Carolina's no-<lb/>
tionally ranked squad along<lb/>
with Virginia Tech, High<lb/>
Point, UNC-Charlotte,<lb/>
Davidson, Duke and Gard-<lb/>
ner-Webb will also be<lb/>
playing.<lb/>
Although the Pirate<lb/>
golfers haven't finished<lb/>
higher than seventh in a<lb/>
tournament this fall, head<lb/>
coach Bob Helmick has<lb/>
spent most of the season<lb/>
experimenting with several<lb/>
different lineups.<lb/>
"We really haven't<lb/>
established a set lineup<lb/>
yet said Helmick who<lb/>
replaced M ac M cLendon as<lb/>
the head coach in Septem-<lb/>
ber. "We've tried to play<lb/>
everyone on the squad in at<lb/>
least two tournaments and<lb/>
evaluate their performance<lb/>
in tournament competition.<lb/>
"We really haven't<lb/>
played that well in our<lb/>
tournaments because we<lb/>
haven't used the same<lb/>
players in any one event.<lb/>
We've been doing a lot of<lb/>
experimenting<lb/>
ECU took seventh place<lb/>
in the 25 team Methodist<lb/>
College Invitational and<lb/>
placed eighth in the<lb/>
Campbell College-Atlantic<lb/>
Christian Invitational.<lb/>
Sophomore Steve Jones<lb/>
and David Brogan were the<lb/>
Pirates low individuals in<lb/>
the Methodist tournament<lb/>
with identical 74-75-149<lb/>
totals.<lb/>
Senior Kenny Powell<lb/>
captured individual honors<lb/>
for the Bucs' in the<lb/>
Campbell College-ACC<lb/>
event with rounds of 76-77-<lb/>
153.<lb/>
 No one has really been<lb/>
playing well this fall and no<lb/>
one is real happy with their<lb/>
game noted Helmick.<lb/>
"By the time our spring<lb/>
season rolls around I hope<lb/>
we will have a set lineup<lb/>
and I think all of our players<lb/>
will be playing much<lb/>
better<lb/>
Sophomores Carl Baa-<lb/>
man, Joey Hines and Stan<lb/>
Stewart along with Powell,<lb/>
junior Bobby White and<lb/>
freshman Sidney Davis will<lb/>
be in the Pirates lineup this<lb/>
weekend in the Guilford<lb/>
Cg Invitational.<lb/>
giving up just as many points.<lb/>
Consider a few of Appalachian's losses. Furman 52,<lb/>
Appalachian 34, UT-Chatanooga 72, Appalachian 14, East<lb/>
Tennessee State 35, Appalachian 34.<lb/>
"They've given up alot of points, but there's never been<lb/>
a time when they've quit on the field explined Dye.<lb/>
"They work hard on the field all the time and they're the<lb/>
kind of team that can gain momentum at the end and beat<lb/>
you<lb/>
"Another problem with their defense is that they've<lb/>
settled with very few starters in their lineup. They don't<lb/>
have much team speed and they've rotated a lot of people in<lb/>
their secondary<lb/>
Brown, a 6-0, 178 ib. sophomore from Goldsboro was<lb/>
injured on the next to the last play of the game against East<lb/>
Tennessee State and is still a questionable starter Saturday.<lb/>
Brown has completed 92-164 passes for 1315 yards and<lb/>
eight touchdowns and has rushed 97 times for 291 yards<lb/>
and six touchdowns. He will pitch to speedy halfback Scott<lb/>
McConnell who ranks 11th in the nation in scoring and will<lb/>
throw to split end Rick Beasley who ranks third nationally in<lb/>
receptions with six a game.<lb/>
"I know all our players are looking forward to playing<lb/>
our last three games at home said Dye. "It could be a<lb/>
wild game<lb/>
NOTESAppalachian State has given up 28 turnovers in<lb/>
eight games this seasonthe Apps have lost 23 fumbles<lb/>
coupled with five pass interceptionsECU has lost 24<lb/>
fumbles this season along with 10 interceptions for a total of<lb/>
34 turnovers Gerald Hall is ranked eighth nationally inpunt<lb/>
returns with a 12.9 yard averagethe Pirates are fifth in<lb/>
the country In total defense allowing only 224.4 yards and<lb/>
are allowing only 92 yards per game passing which ranks<lb/>
sixth in the nationAppalachian State has given up 3340<lb/>
total yards in eight games and opponents have scored 241<lb/>
points against the Apps.<lb/>
Bugs' Duncan<lb/>
adds new spark<lb/>
to ECUattaek<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU'S girl's volleyball program has enjoyed a<lb/>
successful season thus far with a record of 26-10. One of the<lb/>
most pleasant surprises of this season has been the<lb/>
emergence of a new team leader, junior LaVonda Duncan.<lb/>
Duncan's interest in volleyball goes back to her high<lb/>
school days when she was named Raleigh Sanderson's<lb/>
MVP and also All-State when her team captured the state<lb/>
championship.<lb/>
Duncan began her college career at Louisburg Junior<lb/>
College, where her interest in volleyball was intensified.<lb/>
"In high school, I learned the most basic fundamentals of<lb/>
the game. My coach at Louisburg the first year really built<lb/>
my interest in volleyball. He decided I could do my best as a<lb/>
setter. College coaches are able to provide a more tacticle<lb/>
approach to offense said Duncan.<lb/>
While at Louisburg, Duncan led the team to the state<lb/>
junior college title and fifth in the national tournament.<lb/>
"We had a new coach my sophomore year and it just wasn't<lb/>
as much fun to play as it was the first year remembered<lb/>
Duncan.<lb/>
Since transferring to ECU, Duncan has made many<lb/>
significant contributions to the squad. "We've used<lb/>
LaVonda as our offensive coordinator this year explained<lb/>
head coach Anita Dillon. "Everyone on the team is not<lb/>
allowed to argue with the referee during a match. We chose<lb/>
LaVonda as our floor captain which means she must<lb/>
confront the referee over disagreements<lb/>
"LaVonda has proved to be a good spokesman for the<lb/>
team praised assistant coach Debbie Tyson, "I would say<lb/>
she is also our best all-around player<lb/>
The former high school homecoming queen was<lb/>
impressed with the program at ECU from the outset. "I like<lb/>
playing here said Duncan. "I have an important role<lb/>
since the offensive allignment we use only calls for one<lb/>
setter. I know I have a lot of room for improvement<lb/>
Duncan expressed concern over her conditioning in the<lb/>
off-season. "I've always had trouble staying in shape after<lb/>
the season is over. We're planning to have a USVBA team<lb/>
(United States Volleyball Association) here during spring<lb/>
semester which should remedy that problem. I also plan to<lb/>
work hard on my ball handling during the summer<lb/>
Duncan was chosen by her teammates prior to the<lb/>
season to serve as a co-captain. "We've come a long way<lb/>
since the first of the season. We improve all the time.<lb/>
We've learned to understand one another's individual<lb/>
problems and help each other. We don't have any<lb/>
personality conflicts on the team<lb/>
With preparation for the upcoming state tournament<lb/>
nearing a close, Duncan is optimistic about the Pirates<lb/>
chances of taking first place. "We have the talent to win it.<lb/>
I really think we can win it, if I didn't I wouldn't be of much<lb/>
value to the team. We have our ups and downs, but all<lb/>
teams have to cooe with that<lb/>
Duncan knows ECU will be hard-pressed with such<lb/>
tough competition. "We lost to State three times during the<lb/>
season, but we have the talent to beat them. I really think<lb/>
Carolina will be our toughest competition. We beat them<lb/>
once during the season, but they recruit a lot of talent and<lb/>
they will be looking for revenge<lb/>
' LaVonda Duncan's moat recent honor waa selection to<lb/>
the All-Tournament team in last weekend's Invitational.<lb/>
W 1th the determination and talent she has shown thus far in<lb/>
her brief career with ECU, her coaches both agree that ahe<lb/>
would be one of the most difficult players to have to replace.<lb/>
Slip slidin' away in Boone<lb/>
THE PIRATES ARE shown here in last season's 45-14 astro-turf surface. Appalachian and ECU will square oft<lb/>
victory over Appalachian State in Boone, N.C. It rained Saturday night in Ficklen Stadium The game will start at<lb/>
throughout most of the day and most of the players spent all 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
afternoon slipping and sliding around on the Mountaineers<lb/>
l-i<lb/>
�<lb/>
�?<lb/>
 c<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
? f -<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
: rf iic.il '<lb/>
Appalachian State QB<lb/>
returns to haunt Pirates?<lb/>
By CHA RLES CHA NDLER<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Often in the world of<lb/>
sports, old acquaintances<lb/>
seem to find ways to come<lb/>
back from adverse situa-<lb/>
tions to haunt each other.<lb/>
Such an incident will<lb/>
occur this Saturday night<lb/>
when ECU hosts the<lb/>
Mountaineers from Appa-<lb/>
lachian State in Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium.<lb/>
Mountaineer quarter-<lb/>
back, Steve Brown, and<lb/>
Pirate head coach Pat Dye<lb/>
had a series of discussions<lb/>
a few years ago, when<lb/>
Brown was a senior at<lb/>
Goldsboro High School.<lb/>
Brown wanted to attend<lb/>
ECU, but wasn't highly<lb/>
recruited by the Pirates.<lb/>
Dye and the ECU staff<lb/>
doubted Brown's running<lb/>
ability, especially in the<lb/>
Pirate wishbone attack.<lb/>
So Brown was off to Ap-<lb/>
palachian State. The 6-0<lb/>
sophomore currently ranks<lb/>
11th in the nation in total<lb/>
offense with 200.9 yards<lb/>
per game. The Mountain-<lb/>
eers are averaging 451.6<lb/>
yards per game.<lb/>
All these statistics<lb/>
haunt Pat Dye. "We realty<lb/>
made a mistake not re-<lb/>
cruiting him any harder<lb/>
said Dye. "You know, he's<lb/>
ranked high nationally in<lb/>
totally offense. I'm sure<lb/>
he'd like to come to Ficklen<lb/>
and really show us what<lb/>
kind of mistake we made. I<lb/>
just hope he doesn't burn<lb/>
us<lb/>
Yet, Brown says he isn't<lb/>
going out Saturday night<lb/>
with such intentions. "I'm<lb/>
anxious to get back to the<lb/>
east said Brown. "But<lb/>
that doesn't mean that I<lb/>
have any animosity against<lb/>
Coach Dye and East Caro-<lb/>
lina<lb/>
"I know Coach Dye<lb/>
didn't think I could play<lb/>
college ball. But proving it<lb/>
on the field to him in<lb/>
particular is not a big thing<lb/>
tome<lb/>
Brown says the main<lb/>
reason he was not offered a<lb/>
scholarship from the Pirate<lb/>
staff was because he ran<lb/>
very little in high school.<lb/>
"He (Dye) told me that I<lb/>
never ran the ball. I told<lb/>
him that I could. Other<lb/>
people told him so also. But<lb/>
maybe he just needed to be<lb/>
more sure<lb/>
But Dye is definitely<lb/>
sure of Brown's ability<lb/>
now. "Brown is a good<lb/>
quarterback and is a better<lb/>
player because of all the<lb/>
talent around him. Their<lb/>
offense has all the tools<lb/>
The Mountaineers na-<lb/>
tional rankings certainly<lb/>
verify this assertion. The<lb/>
"tools" Dye is speaking of<lb/>
include split end Rick<lb/>
Beasley. Only a sopho-<lb/>
more, Beasley has been<lb/>
Brown's favorite target,<lb/>
averaging six catches per<lb/>
game, which ranks third<lb/>
nationally.<lb/>
Halfback Scott McCon-<lb/>
v<lb/>
Mountaineer coach Jim Brakefield<lb/>
nell has also been a big<lb/>
weapon for the Mountain-<lb/>
eers. He is the nation's<lb/>
11th leading scorer.<lb/>
Though the Appala-<lb/>
chian offensive figured are<lb/>
impressive, their defense<lb/>
performances have left a lot<lb/>
to be desired. Big plays<lb/>
have hindered the defense<lb/>
all season long.<lb/>
The fact that his Moun-<lb/>
taineers are giving up over<lb/>
30 points a game ia not very<lb/>
pleasing to Appalachian<lb/>
head coach Jim Brakefield<lb/>
"We just haven't bean<lb/>
consistent enough he<lb/>
��W. "I've been very die-<lb/>
appointed In our defense "<lb/>
However, Brakefield ia<lb/>
proud of Brown and the<lb/>
offense. "Steve has played<lb/>
real well this year. He's<lb/>
been an excellent leader<lb/>
Is it possible that Brown<lb/>
will lead the Mountaineers<lb/>
to victory Saturday, and<lb/>
therefore prove once and<lb/>
for all to Dye that he has<lb/>
excellent ability?<lb/>
"He doesn't have to<lb/>
prove anything to me "<lb/>
�ya Dye. "I already know<lb/>
that i was wrong. Believe<lb/>
"�� I know<lb/>
After Saturday night<lb/>
�hher Dye or Brown will<lb/>
�ome out on top in a ctasaic<lb/>
confrontation between two<lb/>
�d acquaintance, Each<lb/>
would love to win.<lb/>
I<lb/>
�.fc,�i� <lb/>
<pb facs="00057158_0009"/><lb/>
r f<lb/>
f f r �<lb/>
t t r <lb/>
1 t r f r<lb/>
r t f r f '<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD's Fearless Forecast<lb/>
APPALACHIANS AT ECU<lb/>
MARYLAND AT PENN STATE<lb/>
UNC AT RICHMOND<lb/>
SOUTH CAROLINA AT N.C. STATE<lb/>
CLEMSON AT WAKE FOREST<lb/>
DUKE AT TENNESSEE<lb/>
OKLAHOMA AT COLORADO<lb/>
MISSOURI AT OKLAHOMA ST.<lb/>
NAVY AT NOTRE DAME<lb/>
SOUTHERN CAL AT STANFORD<lb/>
MISSISSIPPI AT LSU<lb/>
CALIFORNIA AT ARIZONA ST.<lb/>
CHARLESCHANDLERTERRYHERNDON<lb/>
(75-30-1)(73-32-1)<lb/>
ECU 30-17ECU 35-12<lb/>
Penn StateMaryland<lb/>
UNCUNC<lb/>
N.C. StateN.C. State<lb/>
ClensonClemson<lb/>
TennesseeDuke<lb/>
OklahomaOklahoma<lb/>
MissouriMissouri<lb/>
Notre DameNotre Dame<lb/>
Southern CalSouthern Cal<lb/>
LSULSU<lb/>
Arizona St.Arizona St.<lb/>
SAM ROGERS<lb/>
(70-35-1)<lb/>
ECU 27-14<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Tennessee<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Missouri<lb/>
Navy<lb/>
Southern Cal<lb/>
Mississippi<lb/>
Arizona St.<lb/>
DAVID MAREADY<lb/>
(42-18)<lb/>
ECU 36-6<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Tennessee<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Missouri<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Southern Cal<lb/>
LSU<lb/>
Arizona St.<lb/>
LARRY GILLMAN<lb/>
ECU Head Basketball<lb/>
Coach<lb/>
ECU 28-14<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Tennessee<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Missouri<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Southern Cal<lb/>
LSU<lb/>
Arizona St.<lb/>
Struggling Raiders big question mark<lb/>
Gillman<lb/>
joins<lb/>
forecasters<lb/>
Larry Gillman, East<lb/>
Carolina's controversial<lb/>
basketball coach, is this<lb/>
week's guest forecaster<lb/>
Gillman served as an<lb/>
assistant coach at San<lb/>
Francisco, Minnesota, and<lb/>
Houston before taking the<lb/>
head coaching )Ob at ECU.<lb/>
The top game this week<lb/>
is definitely the Maryland<lb/>
at Penn State clasn This<lb/>
matchup includes two of<lb/>
the four remaining un-<lb/>
beaten teams in the<lb/>
country Penn State,<lb/>
ranked second in both wire<lb/>
service polls, has not lost to<lb/>
Maryland since 1961<lb/>
By CHARLESCHANDLER<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
ahead<lb/>
What's wrong with the<lb/>
Oakland Raiders9 Someone<lb/>
somewhere should find out.<lb/>
Everyone concerned with<lb/>
the National Football<lb/>
League sure wants to know.<lb/>
The Raiders have not<lb/>
performed up to the stan-<lb/>
dards they have set for the<lb/>
last decade or so The<lb/>
Super Bowl Champs in 1976<lb/>
after a 13-1 regular season<lb/>
record. Oakland went 11-3<lb/>
last year and just missed<lb/>
another shot at the Super<lb/>
Bowl when they lost to the<lb/>
Denver Broncos in the AFC<lb/>
Championship Game.<lb/>
Coming into this sea-<lb/>
son, many prognosticators<lb/>
foresaw a Dallas-Oakland<lb/>
matchup m this season's<lb/>
Super Bowl. But a funny<lb/>
thing has happened on the<lb/>
way to this big shootout.<lb/>
The Raiders record now<lb/>
stands at a shocking 5-4.<lb/>
The losses have come to<lb/>
Denver. New England. Se-<lb/>
attle, and San Diego. Only<lb/>
the Patriots have played<lb/>
-e championship material<lb/>
from among that group<lb/>
e Raiders only big<lb/>
victories have come over<lb/>
Green Bay and Houston.<lb/>
The once-vaulted Rai-<lb/>
der offensive line has al-<lb/>
lowed quarterback Ken<lb/>
Stabler to be sacked 21<lb/>
times m the nine games.<lb/>
The total reached only 16<lb/>
last year for the entire<lb/>
season<lb/>
Also representative of<lb/>
the lack of line support are<lb/>
Stabler s 20 interceptions.<lb/>
by far the most in the NFL<lb/>
this season But the often-<lb/>
s.ve line cannot take full<lb/>
blame from the Snake's<lb/>
lask of accuracy. Stabler.<lb/>
Hke another Alabama grad-<lb/>
uate named Namath exper-<lb/>
,enced a few years ago.<lb/>
may be on the downswing<lb/>
of his career<lb/>
But one should not<lb/>
count the Raiders out just<lb/>
yet even if the defense has<lb/>
g,ven up 27 points in each<lb/>
of the last two games.<lb/>
Veteran running back Pete<lb/>
Banaszak has vowed that<lb/>
his team will be at the top<lb/>
at the end of the season. If<lb/>
so Oakland must get to-<lb/>
gether an act that has<lb/>
caned for much less than an<lb/>
encore thus far. Coach John<lb/>
Madden has his hands full.<lb/>
He has never been in this<lb/>
situation before He'd like<lb/>
tor it to end as soon as<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
The only way to rid of<lb/>
the situation is to win<lb/>
Raider teams from the past<lb/>
always did this. They<lb/>
should again this season.<lb/>
But, isn't that what every-<lb/>
one said at the beginning of<lb/>
the season?<lb/>
Here's a look at the<lb/>
games in the NFL this<lb/>
week.<lb/>
OAKLAND 24,<lb/>
KANSAS16<lb/>
The Raiders should win<lb/>
this week, if not impres-<lb/>
sively The Chiefs win<lb/>
simply need a near perfect<lb/>
game to win. That is, if the<lb/>
Raiders come back like they<lb/>
should. Many questions<lb/>
will be answered as a result<lb/>
of this game. The season is<lb/>
on the line for Oakland.<lb/>
SANDiEG0 21<lb/>
CINCINNAT117<lb/>
The Bengals erupted<lb/>
last week with a big win<lb/>
over the Oilers. The<lb/>
Chargers gained a big win<lb/>
.lac defeating Oaklano.<lb/>
SS for Dan Foots and<lb/>
py to come out<lb/>
HOUSTON 20<lb/>
CLEVELAND 17<lb/>
These two teams are<lb/>
involved in an intense<lb/>
battle for a possible wild<lb/>
card spot in the playoffs.<lb/>
The Oilers played as bad as<lb/>
they can last week against<lb/>
the lowly Bengals. Pasto-<lb/>
nni. Campbell, and the<lb/>
gang prevent an oil slick<lb/>
with this victory.<lb/>
DALLAS 27<lb/>
MIAMI 21<lb/>
This is the game to<lb/>
watch this week. When the<lb/>
play their best, these two<lb/>
clubs may be the best in<lb/>
their respective divisions.<lb/>
The Cowboy defense is<lb/>
much stronger than the<lb/>
Dolphins There,nhes the<lb/>
difference in this game.<lb/>
MINNESOTA 17<lb/>
DETROIT 16<lb/>
The Lions have played<lb/>
extremely well the last two<lb/>
weeks. Its a shame they<lb/>
must play the Vikings this<lb/>
week But don't look for a<lb/>
runaway The Vikes will<lb/>
win. but not without<lb/>
listening to some roars<lb/>
from those pesky Lions<lb/>
GREEN BAY 14<lb/>
PHILADELPHIA 10<lb/>
The Pack is back, right?<lb/>
Well, no one is quite sure<lb/>
yet. The Green Bay<lb/>
'schedule has not exactly<lb/>
included world beaters thus<lb/>
far this season. The Eagles<lb/>
should provide them with a<lb/>
very tough test this week.<lb/>
Upset could be the word<lb/>
here, but something in the<lb/>
skies believes the Pack is<lb/>
really back.<lb/>
NEW ENGLAND 31<lb/>
BUFFAL07<lb/>
The Patriot express rolls<lb/>
into Buffalo this week. The<lb/>
Pats are playing as well as<lb/>
anyone in the League at<lb/>
this point. Coach Chuck<lb/>
Fairbanks is not about to let<lb/>
the Bills stop his machine.<lb/>
Neither are his players.<lb/>
PITTSBURGH24<lb/>
NEW ORLEANS10<lb/>
Finally the Saints have a<lb/>
respectable team. After<lb/>
years of losers, Coach Dick<lb/>
Nolan has brought a<lb/>
contender to New Orleans.<lb/>
The Saints now stand 5-4,<lb/>
but the Steelers should<lb/>
even things out a little.<lb/>
DENVER 21<lb/>
NEW YORK JETS13<lb/>
The Jets were humili-<lb/>
ated 55-21 by the Patriots<lb/>
last week. New England<lb/>
put 41 points on the board<lb/>
in the first half alone. But,<lb/>
this is not last week, and<lb/>
the Broncos are not the<lb/>
Patriots. But the Jets are<lb/>
the Jets. And that spells<lb/>
out one thing against the<lb/>
�Orange Crush a loss.<lb/>
ATLANTA 14<lb/>
SAN FRANCISCO 13<lb/>
The 49ers played a<lb/>
horrible game against the<lb/>
Redskins last week. The<lb/>
Falcon defense causes a<lb/>
repeat performance.<lb/>
ST. LOUIS21<lb/>
N.Y.GIANTS20<lb/>
The Cards got their first<lb/>
win of the season last week<lb/>
upon the return of quarter-<lb/>
back Jim Hart. Coach Bud<lb/>
Wilkinson would like to see<lb/>
his team make it two in a<lb/>
row. With a little luck, his<lb/>
wish will be fulfilled.<lb/>
SEATTLE 24<lb/>
CHICAGO 21<lb/>
The Seahawks are for<lb/>
real. They are one of the<lb/>
respectable teams in the<lb/>
NFL. They may be a few<lb/>
steps from the playoffs yet,<lb/>
but they should hand the<lb/>
disappointing Bears their<lb/>
seventh straight loss.<lb/>
LOS ANGELES 21<lb/>
TAMPA BAY 13<lb/>
The Rams have lost two<lb/>
in a row. The Bucs would<lb/>
love to extend the streak.<lb/>
But look for Pat Haden and<lb/>
the Ram offense to get<lb/>
things going again.<lb/>
WASHINGTON 24<lb/>
BALTIMORE 14<lb/>
Redskin quarterback<lb/>
Billy Kilmer rejuvinated his<lb/>
team last week. The offense<lb/>
looked better than it had in<lb/>
several games.<lb/>
itchell's Hair Styling<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057158_0010"/><lb/>
 <lb/>
Pagt 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 2 Novmber1978<lb/>
Valentine, Brewington,<lb/>
Hall head Pirate defense<lb/>
tOMAS BREWER. ECU Chancellor, presents<lb/>
aptains of the divisional flag football<lb/>
teams Lett to right are: Debby Newby.<lb/>
Steve Staley. Sada Hara Ohs. Dr. Brewer. Dan<lb/>
McCombs. Scott Dorm: Sarah<lb/>
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� Don't Forget<lb/>
Homecoming is just a few<lb/>
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and official Pat's hat. Also<lb/>
we have fraternity, sorority,<lb/>
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and sweatshirts.<lb/>
H.L.HODGES<lb/>
Floyd, Sigma Sigma Sigma:<lb/>
Tau. ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Patronize<lb/>
ECU Sports Information<lb/>
Offensive wizardry can<lb/>
often be accomplished with<lb/>
sleight of hand, but as<lb/>
three East Carolina de-<lb/>
fenders have proven this<lb/>
fall, the only way to have<lb/>
the nation's fifth-ranked<lb/>
defense is with hard-nosed<lb/>
football.<lb/>
For Zack Valentine,<lb/>
linebacker Mike Brewing-<lb/>
ton and safety Gerald Hall,<lb/>
along with their Pirate<lb/>
teammates, limiting the<lb/>
opposition to only 228.4<lb/>
yards per game has not<lb/>
come easy, and the task<lb/>
appears toughest this<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
Appalachian State, now<lb/>
5-3, brings its wishbone to<lb/>
Fickten Stadium ranked<lb/>
fifth in the nation in total<lb/>
offense, averaging 451.6<lb/>
yards per outing, to battle<lb/>
East Carolina, also a 5-3<lb/>
squad, but accustomed to<lb/>
yielding only half that total.<lb/>
Kickoff is set for 7 p.m.<lb/>
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tonite at the<lb/>
The trio, all solid<lb/>
candidates for the-Southem<lb/>
Independent team, has<lb/>
consistently been among<lb/>
the teams top performers<lb/>
and helped continue the<lb/>
tradition of tough Pirate<lb/>
defenses. Their accom-<lb/>
plishments this fall have<lb/>
come with plenty of ability<lb/>
and a fierce desire to<lb/>
improve each week.<lb/>
The late Vince Lom-<lb/>
bard! had a football<lb/>
philosophy which included<lb/>
the idea that defense was<lb/>
the instinctive side of<lb/>
football.<lb/>
�If a man is running<lb/>
down the street with<lb/>
everything you own the<lb/>
great coach once said.<lb/>
"You don't let him get<lb/>
away That's tackling.<lb/>
Defense is more instinctive<lb/>
than offense<lb/>
The instincts that this<lb/>
terrific threesome has<lb/>
employed have helped<lb/>
Valentine be one of the top<lb/>
ends in the South, Brew-<lb/>
ington lead the team in<lb/>
tackles, and Hall came<lb/>
away with three pass<lb/>
interceptions and rank<lb/>
eighth in the nation in punt<lb/>
returns.<lb/>
"I wouldn't trade this<lb/>
group for any three at<lb/>
another school said<lb/>
Pirate coach Pat Dye.<lb/>
"What they mean to usas a<lb/>
defense and as a team<lb/>
couldn't be replaced<lb/>
"Zack has given us both<lb/>
steady and great play for<lb/>
four years as has Gerald.<lb/>
We have always had a<lb/>
standout at linebacker and<lb/>
this year it's Mike. Sure,<lb/>
we gear the defense for the<lb/>
linebackers to make the<lb/>
tackles, but he does have to<lb/>
make the hits to be great<lb/>
While Brewington, a<lb/>
Greenviil native, leads the<lb/>
Pirates in tackles with 117<lb/>
through the first eight<lb/>
games, Valentine tops the<lb/>
club with seven sacks<lb/>
among his 41 tackles, and<lb/>
Hall is the top put returner<lb/>
witha 12.9 average as well<lb/>
as the top tackier among<lb/>
defensive backs with 50<lb/>
stops.<lb/>
Valentine and Hall,<lb/>
seniors from Edenton, were<lb/>
chose to the pre-season<lb/>
all-Southern Independent<lb/>
team and are demonstra-<lb/>
ting why tne 14 coaches of<lb/>
the group chose them for<lb/>
the honor, while Brewing-<lb/>
ton, just a junior, is<lb/>
pushing hard to join the<lb/>
group<lb/>
MAC<lb/>
Outlet<lb/>
WEAVING<lb/>
m<lb/>
YARNS<lb/>
COR.MER OF 0� &amp; CLARK STREETS<lb/>
IN HATTERAS HAMMOCK BUILDING<lb/>
WtRE HARD TO PMD BUT WELL wORTM IT<lb/>
&amp; Ar<lb/>
-r<lb/>
Two<lb/>
top Sirloin<lb/>
dinners<lb/>
for $3.99.<lb/>
� o'iii'mii<lb/>
Dinner includes choice<lb/>
of potato, Texas Toast<lb/>
and salad from our<lb/>
FREE all-you-can-eat<lb/>
Salad Bar<lb/>
530 North Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
( 264- by- passGreenville<lb/>
New Hours<lb/>
Snn Thurs 11 a.m. 9p.m.<lb/>
FrltfSat ! la.m. 10p.m.<lb/>
I.<lb/>
k'J<lb/>
Brewington<lb/>
Hall<lb/>
��"� 11101<lb/>
 ���<lb/>
'<lb/>
Zack Valentine<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/>
�� �<lb/>
<pb facs="00057158_0011"/>
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