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<pb facs="00057160_0001"/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North<lb/>
83<lb/>
Vol. 55 Ho.p<lb/>
7 November 1978<lb/>
Newby attacks Payne<lb/>
at recent SGA meeting<lb/>
By LUKE WH SNA NT<lb/>
Staff Write-<lb/>
in a prepared speech to<lb/>
the Student Government<lb/>
?Association Legislature<lb/>
Monday evening. Legisla-<lb/>
tor Alonzo Newby accused<lb/>
SGA President Tommy Joe<lb/>
Payne of "ram-rodding"<lb/>
the appointment of the new<lb/>
attorney general through<lb/>
an unsuspecting and "in-<lb/>
experienced legislature<lb/>
The new attorney gen-<lb/>
eral. Kieran Shanahan. was<lb/>
approved by the SGA at last<lb/>
jveen s meeting.<lb/>
Newby called Payne's<lb/>
action "one of the most<lb/>
blatent abuses of power he<lb/>
has ever committed<lb/>
second only to the Media<lb/>
of<lb/>
last<lb/>
Board tragedy<lb/>
year<lb/>
"He (Payne) has lied<lb/>
repeatedly to this body<lb/>
said Newby.<lb/>
Newby attacked Shana-<lb/>
han as a liar and accused<lb/>
him of "abusing his power<lb/>
of office through harass-<lb/>
ment Newby was refer-<lb/>
mg to a harrassment charge<lb/>
brought against Shanahan<lb/>
last year by an ECU<lb/>
student. The charge was<lb/>
later dropped.<lb/>
Shanahan was also ac-<lb/>
cused of receiving the posi-<lb/>
tion of attorney general last<lb/>
year as a political payoff for<lb/>
working in the Sessoms<lb/>
campaign, and of attempt-<lb/>
ing to increase the attorney<lb/>
general's salary.<lb/>
Tommy Joe Payne re-<lb/>
sponded to the charges<lb/>
during Questions and Pri-<lb/>
viliges. "I just want to say<lb/>
that I've been in this legi-<lb/>
slature for a long time<lb/>
now Payne said, "and I<lb/>
have never seen such petty<lb/>
politics as I'm seeing right<lb/>
now<lb/>
"Alonzo Newby stood<lb/>
up here and called me a<lb/>
liar said Payne. "All I<lb/>
can say is that if you're<lb/>
going to play those games<lb/>
with me. you'd better come<lb/>
at me full force, because<lb/>
I've been there before, and<lb/>
I'm going toget you<lb/>
Shanahan did not com-<lb/>
ment on the charges.<lb/>
Regular business<lb/>
In other business. Ap-<lb/>
propriations Chairman<lb/>
Brett Melvin reported that<lb/>
(<lb/>
What's inside.<lb/>
Henry Doskey. School of Music, recently<lb/>
gave a recital in Carnegie Hall. For a<lb/>
review see p 6<lb/>
Jean Genet s overwhelming play The<lb/>
Balcony is a Special Film Presentation<lb/>
this Wednesday at Hendrix. For a<lb/>
preview see p. 6<lb/>
ECU trounces Appalachian see p. 8.<lb/>
Appalachian beats ECU in soccer see p.<lb/>
8.<lb/>
Fall Special Olympics coming soonsee<lb/>
p. 3.<lb/>
the Consolidation Bill has<lb/>
been tabled pending a<lb/>
decision on the money from<lb/>
last year's BUCCANEER.<lb/>
There is a possibility that<lb/>
the BUC money would<lb/>
revert to the SQA General<lb/>
Fund.<lb/>
Legislator Lenton<lb/>
Brown introduced a motion<lb/>
to ammend the Consol-<lb/>
idation Bill, to allow the<lb/>
SGA the option of passing<lb/>
individual organizations'<lb/>
budgets instead of passing<lb/>
all the budgets in one vote.<lb/>
The amendment passed.<lb/>
An emergency bill was<lb/>
introduced to provide im-<lb/>
mediate funding for the<lb/>
Visual Arts Forum's Cer-<lb/>
amic Workshop, scheduled<lb/>
for Nov. 8-10. After ex-<lb/>
tensive debate, the $400<lb/>
appropriation passed.<lb/>
CORRECTION<lb/>
Several names men-<lb/>
tioned last week in a<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD news<lb/>
story about the Review<lb/>
Board were erroneous. The<lb/>
correct names of the mem-<lb/>
bers and alternates of the<lb/>
Review Board are as fol-<lb/>
lows: Chairman, Howard<lb/>
Newell; Alonzo Newby,<lb/>
Murray Bullock, Valerie<lb/>
Chaffin, Liz Hanby, Ed-<lb/>
ward Walters, and Diane<lb/>
Gray. A Iternatesare Danny<lb/>
Safriet, Telena Lester, and<lb/>
Pete Meyer.<lb/>
Circle K rocks for 39 hours<lb/>
By MARC BARNES<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
A Rock-A-Thon. spon-<lb/>
sored by the campus Circle<lb/>
K club was held last<lb/>
weekend at Pitt Plaza.<lb/>
Members of the club rocked<lb/>
in shifts over a 39 hour<lb/>
period of time.<lb/>
The Rock-A-Thon ended<lb/>
Saturday night after the<lb/>
ECU-Appalachian State<lb/>
football game. The fund<lb/>
raising event was held to<lb/>
raise money for the annual<lb/>
Pit County United Way<lb/>
campaign.<lb/>
According to the pre-<lb/>
sident of the club, David<lb/>
Barber, the group had<lb/>
originally hoped to reoeiv<lb/>
about $2,000 in all, and, as<lb/>
aof the middle of Saturday<lb/>
afternoon, Barber estima-<lb/>
ted that approximately $400<lb/>
had been collected.<lb/>
This is the second year<lb/>
that the club has sponsored<lb/>
the Rock-A-Thon. Last<lb/>
year, the club raised ap-<lb/>
proximately $300, and it<lb/>
has sponsored activities<lb/>
such as a Halloween party<lb/>
for retarded children this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Barber added that if<lb/>
anyone on campus wanted<lb/>
to donate money to United<lb/>
Way, they could get in<lb/>
touch with Paul Breitman,<lb/>
who is the assistant ad-<lb/>
ministrator at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. The group<lb/>
has also helped the local<lb/>
Kiwanis club with various<lb/>
service projects.<lb/>
The group began rock-<lb/>
ing at noon until 3 p.m on<lb/>
Friday in front of the<lb/>
bookstore. From 3 until 8<lb/>
Friday afternoon, they wre<lb/>
rocking in Greenville.<lb/>
They went to Pitt Plaza at 6<lb/>
p.m on Friday, and rocked<lb/>
?until 6 Saturday afternoon.<lb/>
The group then proceeded<lb/>
to Ficklen Stadium, where<lb/>
they rocked in the end zone<lb/>
until the end of the football<lb/>
game.<lb/>
According to Barber,<lb/>
the Appalachian State Uni-<lb/>
versity chapter of the Circle<lb/>
K club also helped with the<lb/>
project, as did the Delta XI<lb/>
sorority.<lb/>
"I was pleased at the<lb/>
response the students gave<lb/>
us while we rocked on<lb/>
campus Barber said.<lb/>
Club member Crystal<lb/>
Hendrix said, "It's a<lb/>
worthwhile cause, and it's<lb/>
good to help out other<lb/>
communities, even though<lb/>
I'm not from this commun-<lb/>
ity. Roseann Turner added,<lb/>
"Circle K is a great ex-<lb/>
perience<lb/>
Meetings for the club<lb/>
are presently held every<lb/>
Tuesday night at 6:30 p.m.<lb/>
The meetings are held in<lb/>
Wright Annex, but the<lb/>
location may soon be<lb/>
changed, because of the<lb/>
lack of access at that<lb/>
facility. Barber commented<lb/>
that the club might move to<lb/>
another building which has<lb/>
ramps to acoomodate<lb/>
wheelchairs.<lb/>
"We would like to see<lb/>
some handicapped students<lb/>
in our club he said.<lb/>
4:10 p.m. kick-off<lb/>
ABC to cover<lb/>
homecoming<lb/>
THIS UCHTENSTEIN IS on display with<lb/>
many other great works in the Wellington B. Gray Gallery<lb/>
of the Jenkins Fine Arts Center. More on p. 6.<lb/>
Photo by John H. Grogan)<lb/>
By MARC BARNES<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
A report released Mon-<lb/>
day said that the ABC<lb/>
Television Network would<lb/>
televise this week's home-<lb/>
coming football game in<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium which pits<lb/>
ECU against William and<lb/>
Mary.<lb/>
The kickoff time is to be<lb/>
moved up. The new kickoff<lb/>
time will be 4:10 p.m.<lb/>
There was no immediate<lb/>
word on whether or not the<lb/>
other homecoming activi-<lb/>
ties would also start at a<lb/>
later time. According to<lb/>
Sports Information Director<lb/>
Walt Atkins, Vern Lunguist<lb/>
will do the play by play for<lb/>
the game, and Terry Han-<lb/>
ratty, who was a star<lb/>
quarterback for Notre<lb/>
Dame and the Pitsburgh<lb/>
Steelers will provide the<lb/>
color commentary.<lb/>
ALONZO NEWBY, LEFT, alleged that Student legislature. Newby charged Payne with being a "liar and<lb/>
Government Association President Tommy Joe Payne, he added that Payne was abusing his powers as sga<lb/>
right, "ramrodded" the appointment of Kieran Shanahan president,<lb/>
as the new attorney general through an "inexperienced"<lb/>
Pre-release and Aftercare<lb/>
Prisoners receive training<lb/>
By RICKI GLIARMIS<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Pre-release and Aftercare, a program designed to aid<lb/>
prisoners in their re-entry into socitey, has recently been<lb/>
established in Greenville.<lb/>
This program is provided for prisoners who are not<lb/>
eligible for parole, usually those who are within a one-year<lb/>
sentence.<lb/>
According to Ann Bennett, training coordinator for the<lb/>
program, an urgency was felt to start Pre-release and<lb/>
Aftercare when 60 of those prisoners holding year<lb/>
sentences were back in prison within a year of their release.<lb/>
Bennett emphasized that many of these prisoners, once<lb/>
released, had nowhere to go. Because of this, many would<lb/>
turn todrinking.<lb/>
Matt Brewington, assistant training coordinator,<lb/>
explained that each inmate which is not eligible for parole is<lb/>
first interviewed by one of the filed counselors within<lb/>
program.<lb/>
This field counselor must then investigate to see that the<lb/>
inmate has a place of residence which he can return to when<lb/>
released. The counsejor observes the prisoner's family, if<lb/>
he has one, and if suitable, the inmate may return. If the<lb/>
surroundings are not suitable or if he has nowhere to go,<lb/>
the counselor will help the inmate find somewhere to live<lb/>
once out of prison.<lb/>
The third preliminary stage involves the job. The inmate<lb/>
is interviewed to determine what job abilities or interests he<lb/>
has. The program stresses the inmates' needs to find jobs<lb/>
after released from prison.<lb/>
After these three steps prior to the Pre-release and<lb/>
Aftercare program, the prisoners who choose to, begin the<lb/>
four-week training period.<lb/>
As outlined by Brewington, the period begins with one<lb/>
week of self-assurance training. This segment deals with<lb/>
the importance of self-worth, dependence on one's self, a<lb/>
building of a stronger self-image, and group involvement.<lb/>
The second week of training involves the family and how<lb/>
it has progressed since the prisoner's absence. Brewington<lb/>
explained that many times the inmate's role in the family<lb/>
has changed since he left.<lb/>
Vocational training is next which involves interview<lb/>
techniques and basic procedures when looking and<lb/>
applying for jobs. During this week of training, resource<lb/>
people from Pitt County are present at the sessions. Also,<lb/>
the inmates take part in role plays involving interviews<lb/>
where they are videotaped. This enables the inmate to view<lb/>
himself during the interview.<lb/>
The final phase of training iscommunity resources. This<lb/>
enables the inmate and his family to become aware of the<lb/>
resources in the community. Also this gives the inmate<lb/>
somewhere to turn to when making his re-entry into society<lb/>
According to Brewington, the community is being very<lb/>
cooperative providing training and volunteers toward the<lb/>
program<lb/>
Following the four week training period, a graduation<lb/>
ceremony is held for the inmates as explained by Bennett<lb/>
and Brewington. The graduation will hopefully be held in<lb/>
volunteering churches in Pitt County. Bennett said that the<lb/>
inmates will be responsible for planning their graduation<lb/>
program and for picking their speakers during the<lb/>
ceremony.<lb/>
Brewington explained that during the sessions there will<lb/>
be no custodial power The reason for no prison protection<lb/>
is that too many of the trainees are near their release date<lb/>
and an attempt to escape would double their remaining<lb/>
sentence.<lb/>
The Greenville chapter of Pre-release and Aftercare has<lb/>
been established since Sept. 1.<lb/>
According to Bennett, in I974, the federal government<lb/>
appropriated money to start an experimental program<lb/>
because of the 28 percent increase of crime in the South As<lb/>
of this year, the N.C. General Assembly voted to fund this<lb/>
program making North Carolina the only state to do so<lb/>
Pre-release and Aftercare is under the State Depart-<lb/>
ment of Corrections within the Division of Probation and<lb/>
Parole. '<lb/>
Greenville is the sixth city in North Carolina to begin a<lb/>
program such as Pre-release and Aftercare.<lb/>
The first four-week training session will begin on Jan<lb/>
10, 1979. Anyone interested in volunteering may call<lb/>
758-6040 or 758-6041.<lb/>
At press time, a source<lb/>
for ABC Sports said that no<lb/>
final decision had been<lb/>
made.<lb/>
Bob Perry, who is the<lb/>
Executive News Producer<lb/>
at WCTI the local ABC<lb/>
affiliate in New Bern, said<lb/>
that Channel 12 would<lb/>
definitely carry the game.<lb/>
The game will be regionally<lb/>
televised, and it is thus<lb/>
immune to the blackout<lb/>
rule.<lb/>
The last time that ECU<lb/>
football was featured on<lb/>
regional television was on<lb/>
Thanksgiving night in 1976,<lb/>
when ECU was pitted a-<lb/>
gainst Appalachian Slate<lb/>
University.<lb/>
If schedules for any of<lb/>
the other activities are<lb/>
changed, it will be reported<lb/>
in the next issue of FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD, which will be<lb/>
available Tureday night,<lb/>
Nov 9.<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY students beck the Pirates<lb/>
at the last televised football game, which was held at the<lb/>
University of South Carolina at Columbia last year. USC<lb/>
won the dose yame, but the Pirates will hopefully win big<lb/>
on this Homecoming weekend with the TV cameras<lb/>
present. Photo by Pete Podezwe<lb/>
i- w ??<lb/>
N<lb/>
 -<lb/>
- -<lb/>
"? ??- - -????.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057160_0002"/><lb/>
78 FQUNTA1NHEAD Pag? 3<lb/>
Fall Special Olympics scheduled<lb/>
-?? e ?L anvnnft interested t<lb/>
the<lb/>
be<lb/>
. 8<lb/>
RICKIGLIARMIS<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The fall phase of<lb/>
Special Olympics will<lb/>
held in Greenville on Nov<lb/>
and 10<lb/>
The two sports involved<lb/>
,n the tall Olympics are<lb/>
basketball and a new<lb/>
category, bowling.<lb/>
According to Marcia<lb/>
Goughnour. volunteer co-<lb/>
ordinator for the Special<lb/>
Olympics, she is expecting<lb/>
over 100 participants for<lb/>
this year's games.<lb/>
Basketball will take<lb/>
place on Nov 8 This year<lb/>
the basketball competition<lb/>
will be played at the West<lb/>
TICE<lb/>
DRIVE IN-AYDfcN HIGHWAY<lb/>
Wednesday &amp; Thursday<lb/>
In 1917, in the red-light<lb/>
district of Xew Orleans<lb/>
they called her<lb/>
Pretty Bubv.<lb/>
S FRIDAY<lb/>
? Reno-Ids<lb/>
HOOPER (PG)<lb/>
 EEK ?<lb/>
v ester<lb/>
Stallone s Newest<lb/>
p I S T (R)<lb/>
rt Renolds<lb/>
 TE SHOW<lb/>
Friday &amp;<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Meadowbrook<lb/>
DRlVfc-IN-OPPOSITE AIRPORT<lb/>
Greenville Gym on Fourth<lb/>
Street. The competition will<lb/>
begin at 9 a.m. and will end<lb/>
at 2 p.m.<lb/>
On Nov. 7, there will be<lb/>
a meeting at the Elm Street<lb/>
Center in order to orient the<lb/>
volunteers as to their<lb/>
responsibilities during the<lb/>
Olympics.<lb/>
Bowling will be held in<lb/>
the Hillcrest Bowling<lb/>
Lanes. This event will be<lb/>
held on Nov. 10 from 9 a.m.<lb/>
until 12 noon. On Nov. 9,<lb/>
there will be another<lb/>
orientation meeting for the<lb/>
volunteers which will also<lb/>
be held at the Elm Street<lb/>
Center at 4 p.m.<lb/>
Bowling is a new phase<lb/>
of competition according to<lb/>
Goughnour. The bowling<lb/>
program has been in effect<lb/>
in other areas which<lb/>
sponsor the Special Olym-<lb/>
pics but this will be the first<lb/>
time the event is sponsored<lb/>
in Greenville.<lb/>
Goughnour explained<lb/>
that during the spring<lb/>
Special Olympics, the age<lb/>
of the participants vary<lb/>
from eight through adults.<lb/>
Goughnour believes that<lb/>
during fall Special Olym-<lb/>
pics, there will be more<lb/>
school age participants.<lb/>
Goughnour believes that<lb/>
the age category during<lb/>
this week's Olympics will<lb/>
include those from age 8<lb/>
through 18.<lb/>
The winners from<lb/>
Greenville's Special Olym-<lb/>
pics will advance to the<lb/>
state competition. In turn,<lb/>
the winners from the state<lb/>
division of the Olympics will<lb/>
be selected to attend the<lb/>
international games which<lb/>
are held every four years.<lb/>
Goughnour said that the<lb/>
games are scheduled to be<lb/>
held in 1979 and plans are<lb/>
being made to hold the<lb/>
international games in New<lb/>
York City.<lb/>
Goughnour said that<lb/>
many people supported the<lb/>
spring Special Olympics<lb/>
last year when she also<lb/>
served as volunteer coordi-<lb/>
nator. She expressed the<lb/>
need for volunteers for this<lb/>
fall's games and urges<lb/>
10 Discount to all ECU Students - Greenville Store Only<lb/>
Excluding Contact Lenses and Oscar Specials<lb/>
OPTICIANS<lb/>
opticians<lb/>
. association<lb/>
of amenca<lb/>
YOUR DOCTORS PRESCRIPTION<lb/>
ACCURATELY FILLED<lb/>
COMPLETE EYEGLASS SERVICE<lb/>
? CONTACT LENSES HARD &amp; SOFT<lb/>
? PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED<lb/>
? BROKEN LENSES DUPLICATED<lb/>
? PRESCRIPTION SUN GLASSES<lb/>
? FRAMES REPAIRED &amp; REPLACED<lb/>
? CHEMICAL HARDENED LENSES<lb/>
? SELECTION OF OVER 1000 FRAMES<lb/>
? ARTIFICIAL EYES<lb/>
? OSHA APPROVED INDUSTRIAL GLASSES<lb/>
Contact Lenses<lb/>
by<lb/>
Bausch &amp; Lomb or Soflens<lb/>
Milton Roy Nature Vue<lb/>
Soft Lens$200<lb/>
Semi Soft Lenss130<lb/>
Hard Lens115<lb/>
LET US CALL THE DOCTOR OF YOUR CHOICE FOR YOUR EYE EXAMINATION<lb/>
Ultra-Vue Plastic Lenses<lb/>
tint of choice in<lb/>
Oscar De La Renta<lb/>
Frame<lb/>
Ladies and Men<lb/>
95<lb/>
Complete<lb/>
Single Vision<lb/>
 Photo Gray<lb/>
26<lb/>
50<lb/>
Oscar De La Renta<lb/>
With Single Vision Plastic Lenses<lb/>
Ladies 10 Complete<lb/>
s58<lb/>
Any Prescription<lb/>
Choice Of Tints<lb/>
Men<lb/>
Complete<lb/>
Bifocal<lb/>
Photo Gray<lb/>
38<lb/>
50<lb/>
CLEAR VUE OPTICIANS<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
PHYSICIANS QUADRANGLE<lb/>
752-1446<lb/>
BUILDING A<lb/>
1705W.6THST.<lb/>
anyone interested to parti-<lb/>
cipate. Goughnour hopes to<lb/>
set up a one-to-one rela-<lb/>
tionship between the vol-<lb/>
unteer and participant.<lb/>
Goughnour explained<lb/>
that the volunteers will be<lb/>
responsible for watching<lb/>
after the participants. They<lb/>
will have to have the<lb/>
participants at their event<lb/>
at the right time, help<lb/>
them fill out their score<lb/>
cards, and do other odd<lb/>
jobs for the participants<lb/>
and the referees.<lb/>
Anyone interested in<lb/>
volunteering for the fall<lb/>
Special Olympics should<lb/>
call Marcia Goughnour at<lb/>
758-7788 as soon as<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
IT'S A DOG'S life, 'tis true, but along<lb/>
with the extra sleep, the lack of work, and<lb/>
the freedom to do as one pleases, you<lb/>
have to put up with fleas, ticks and cats<lb/>
4<lb/>
Berkley Man<lb/>
Goldsboro<lb/>
OFFICE HOURS<lb/>
9AM -530PM<lb/>
MON TUES THURS FRI<lb/>
1 P M<lb/>
114 E. Walnut<lb/>
Downtown Goldsboro<lb/>
9AM<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
MsL ?Penin<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
We're<lb/>
About to NovJ0<lb/>
Bloom! at l0t0? am<lb/>
Almost read) to blossom is your newest fun<lb/>
store featuring a full line of colorful Hallmark<lb/>
products?greeting cards, partyware, writing<lb/>
papers, albums, books, gift wrap. Almost<lb/>
everything a thoughtful person needs. Get<lb/>
ready tor a blooming<lb/>
experience.<lb/>
Ellen's<lb/>
Hallmark<lb/>
Shop<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Shopping<lb/>
Center<lb/>
7569430<lb/>
10:00am-9:00 pm<lb/>
Mon. Sat. <lb/>
Rim Kilpatrick<lb/>
-Manager<lb/>
c 1978 HaHmarti Cards Irvc<lb/>
The Tree House Restaurant<lb/>
I'M Meet You At The Tree'<lb/>
NOVEMBER<lb/>
????<lb/>
n TUE-MAWA DAWMHS<lb/>
WED BLUE GRASS WITH THE PEJROE FAMILY<lb/>
ROW ANOERSOR<lb/>
. JKM ANDERSON<lb/>
11 SATTHE BUBBA WILLIS JAM<lb/>
12 SUNCHAMPAGNE" BIRTHOAY JAM<lb/>
13 MONED COLLEVECCHIO<lb/>
14 TUECHRIS FARREN<lb/>
15 WEDALANOATLEY<lb/>
U THUTOMMY G. - MMCE HAMER - THE WIZARD<lb/>
17FRJ ME" AND "E-<lb/>
18 SATME" AND "E"<lb/>
19 SUN DAVID LEWIS<lb/>
20 MONDAVTO LEWIS<lb/>
?21 TUEBUBBA WILLIS<lb/>
22 WEDTOO WET TO PLOW STWNG BAND"<lb/>
23 THUMITCH BOWEN (OPEN 7:00 PM.)<lb/>
24 FRIMITCH BOWEN<lb/>
25 SATMIKE "LIGHTING WELLS<lb/>
26 SUNDAVID LEWIS<lb/>
27 MONED COLLEVECCHIO<lb/>
28 TUECHRIS FARREN<lb/>
29 WEDALANOATLEY<lb/>
30 THUTHE BUBBA WILLIS JAM<lb/>
31 FRIMIKE "LIGHTING WELLS<lb/>
'Every Tu?day ? 'Ladws Nit? with reduced<lb/>
beverage pncee tor ladies from (8 P M -10 P M.)<lb/>
"A Special ?GenBeman s Nile<lb/>
THE TREE HOUSE RESTAURANT<lb/>
123 EM FWti Street<lb/>
N.C278M<lb/>
You too<lb/>
rtfifc.<lb/>
mil<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/>
-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057160_0003"/><lb/>
Pag. 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 7 November 1978<lb/>
ILO<lb/>
The International Lan-<lb/>
guage Organization will be<lb/>
meeting in Mendenhall, rm<lb/>
248 on Thurs. November 9,<lb/>
at 6 p.m. We will discuss<lb/>
the international Christmas<lb/>
party, among other pro-<lb/>
tects<lb/>
Insurance<lb/>
Joe Goodson and<lb/>
tgan Insurance Agen-<lb/>
tsures the Greenville<lb/>
Center. He will speak<lb/>
about the types of msur-<lb/>
available for artists<lb/>
eir work on Nov<lb/>
er 10 in Jenkins audi-<lb/>
Lim.<lb/>
Lecture<lb/>
M es Cartrette. a stu-<lb/>
.vas searching for<lb/>
ace of mind through<lb/>
gs found Jesus Christ<lb/>
He wants to share<lb/>
- xpenences with you<lb/>
S Thurs from 7:30-9:30<lb/>
in Rm. 212 in Men-<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
Real Estate<lb/>
The next meeting of<lb/>
Rho Epsilon is Thursday<lb/>
the 9th at 4:00 p.m. in 22I<lb/>
Mendenhall. Anyone plan-<lb/>
ning to major in Real Estate<lb/>
and not yet a member of<lb/>
Rho Epsilon is invited to<lb/>
attend. CD. "Pop" Beas-<lb/>
ley from New Bern, N.C.<lb/>
will be speaking on Resort<lb/>
Development. Present<lb/>
members are urged to<lb/>
attend. Members are also<lb/>
reminded to begin making<lb/>
plans for the Fall Banquet<lb/>
to be held this month. The<lb/>
dinner banquet will be at<lb/>
the Greenville Country<lb/>
Club on November 30th at<lb/>
7.30 p.m. The cost will be<lb/>
$7.75 per person and<lb/>
$15.50 per couple. Mem-<lb/>
bers can obtain more infor-<lb/>
mation by attending the<lb/>
meeting on Thursday.<lb/>
Computer<lb/>
There will be an Asso-<lb/>
ciation for Computer Ma-<lb/>
chinery meeting at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. Wed November 8th<lb/>
in Austin-202<lb/>
The program will be on<lb/>
the regional programming<lb/>
contest that was held last<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
The MSC All-Campus<lb/>
Bowling Tournament sche-<lb/>
duled for Thurs Nov. 9<lb/>
has been re-scheduled for<lb/>
Thurs Nov. 30. The wo-<lb/>
men's competition will be-<lb/>
gin at 6 p.m. and the men's<lb/>
competition will begin at 8<lb/>
p.m. at the Mendenhall<lb/>
Bowling Center.<lb/>
Ski<lb/>
Beech Mt. Ski Group<lb/>
must pay their fees on<lb/>
Thurs November 9 at 4<lb/>
p.m. in Memorial Gym, rm<lb/>
108.<lb/>
Printing<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/>
Greenpeace<lb/>
The second organiza-<lb/>
tional meeting for GREEN-<lb/>
PEACE will be held Thurs<lb/>
November 9th, at 6 p.m. in<lb/>
room 221 in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. Anyone is<lb/>
welcome. For more infor-<lb/>
mation, call Jerry Adderton<lb/>
at 758-6259 after 5 p.m. on<lb/>
weekdays.<lb/>
Turkey shoot<lb/>
Win your Thanksgiving<lb/>
dinner at the Mendenhall<lb/>
"Turkey Shoot" Thurs<lb/>
Nov. 16 between the hours<lb/>
of 7 p.m. and 11 p.m the<lb/>
MSC Bowling Center will<lb/>
by the site of an old-<lb/>
fashioned turkey shoot with<lb/>
a slight difference. An<lb/>
entry fee of $1.25 will give<lb/>
you the chance to bowl one<lb/>
ball on 10 consecutive<lb/>
lanes. If at least eight<lb/>
pins fall on each lane, you<lb/>
win a turkey! Enter as<lb/>
many times as you like.<lb/>
L.mit three wins per<lb/>
person.<lb/>
Pablo<lb/>
The Student Union Ma-<lb/>
jor Attractions Committee<lb/>
will present Pablo Cruise<lb/>
with special guest Living-<lb/>
ston Taylor on Turs. Nov. 9,<lb/>
at 8 p.m. in Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum.<lb/>
Tickets will be $5 for<lb/>
ECU students ant $7 for the<lb/>
public. All tickets are avail-<lb/>
able from the Central Tick-<lb/>
et Office in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. In addi-<lb/>
tion, public tickets can be<lb/>
purchased from Apple Re-<lb/>
cords, School Kid's Re-<lb/>
cords, and the Music Shop.<lb/>
Only public tickets will be<lb/>
sold at the door.<lb/>
Economics<lb/>
The student section of<lb/>
the American Home<lb/>
Economics Association will<lb/>
meet Mon November 13<lb/>
at 7 p.m. in the Van-<lb/>
Landingham room of the<lb/>
Home Economics Building.<lb/>
An interesting program<lb/>
on today's fashions will be<lb/>
presented. All home econ-<lb/>
omics majors and any other<lb/>
interested persons are<lb/>
urged toattend.<lb/>
Leadership<lb/>
Leadership training<lb/>
class is a good Thurs. night<lb/>
place to be when you're<lb/>
looking for answers to life<lb/>
and living. LTC will help<lb/>
you understand what it<lb/>
means to be a Christian and<lb/>
will help you learn about<lb/>
growing spiritually in the<lb/>
Christian way of life.<lb/>
Good fun, good teach-<lb/>
ing and it doesn't cost a<lb/>
dime. Check it out this<lb/>
Thurs 7p.m. in Brewster<lb/>
B-103. Sponsored by Cam-<lb/>
pus Crusade for Christ.<lb/>
Ceramics<lb/>
A workshop will be held<lb/>
in the Ceramics Depart-<lb/>
ment of the Jenkins Fine<lb/>
Ats Building on Thurs. and<lb/>
Fri Nov. 9 and 10 from 9<lb/>
a.m. to 3 p.m. Mr. Richard<lb/>
St. John will be giving<lb/>
demonstrations both days<lb/>
and a slide presentation<lb/>
Thurs. night at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
Jenkins Auditorium. Mr.<lb/>
St. John is currently teach-<lb/>
ing ceramics at Wichita<lb/>
State University, Wichita.<lb/>
Kansas<lb/>
Bake Sale<lb/>
Psi-Chi is having a bake<lb/>
sale Wed Nov 8 from 9<lb/>
a.m. until 4 p.m.<lb/>
good.es will be on sale<lb/>
infront of the student book-<lb/>
store.<lb/>
All Psi-Chi members<lb/>
who were initiated In Oct<lb/>
should come by the mam<lb/>
Psychology office to pick up<lb/>
your membership certifi-<lb/>
cates.<lb/>
Homecoming<lb/>
Alpha Kappa Alpha<lb/>
Sorority will sponsor a bake<lb/>
sale, Nov. 8 from 10 am.<lb/>
until 3 p.m. in the lobby of<lb/>
the Student Bookstore.<lb/>
Tickets for the Pre-<lb/>
Homecoming Game Cele-<lb/>
bration at the Ramada Inn,<lb/>
264-By Pass will be sold in<lb/>
the lobby of the Bookstore<lb/>
Wed Nov. 8 and Fri Nov.<lb/>
10. In advance, couple<lb/>
tickets are $3, singles $2.<lb/>
At the door, all admission<lb/>
will be $2.50.<lb/>
The celebration will be-<lb/>
gin 10 p.m Fri Nov. 10<lb/>
and last until 2 am The<lb/>
affair is semi-formal.<lb/>
Ping Pong<lb/>
The MSC All-Campus<lb/>
Table Tennis Tournament<lb/>
will be held on Tues , Nov<lb/>
7 at 7 p.m. m the Menden-<lb/>
ahll Multi-Purpose Room<lb/>
The winners of the Day-<lb/>
Student Tournament I<lb/>
Dorm-Student Tour-a<lb/>
ments will be competing m<lb/>
both the men's and wo-<lb/>
men's divisions The n<lb/>
and woman who finsin I<lb/>
in their divisions will re-<lb/>
present tournaments to be<lb/>
held m Knoxville. Tenne-<lb/>
ssee on Feb 8.9. and 10<lb/>
Free Flicks<lb/>
There will be a Sped a<lb/>
Film presentation of Jear<lb/>
Genet's The Balcony "<lb/>
Wednesday night at 8 p n<lb/>
in the Hendnx Theatre<lb/>
The Free Flick t<lb/>
Friday night only win<lb/>
Woody Allen's Annie Hall<lb/>
The film will be shown a<lb/>
7 and 9 p m m the He- I<lb/>
Theatre<lb/>
There will be a spec a<lb/>
double feature this Satur-<lb/>
day night at times to be<lb/>
announced<lb/>
The Student Union Coffeehouse Committee presents ?<lb/>
Carolina Bluegrass<lb/>
along with<lb/>
Frank Hunter<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat. Nov. lO &amp; 11<lb/>
at 8:30 &amp; 9:30 p.m.<lb/>
Room 15 Mendenhall<lb/>
On Sat. night, Carolina Blnegrass will perform In the snack bar while Frank Hnnter<lb/>
the Coffeehouse. <lb/>
FREE<lb/>
performs in<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Student Union Major Attractions Committee<lb/>
presents<lb/>
With special guest Livingston Taylor<lb/>
Thurs Nov. 9, 1978 8 p.m<lb/>
Minges Coliseum<lb/>
<lb/>
 Tickets: <lb/>
ECU Students $S.OO(ln advance)<lb/>
t Public $7.00 <lb/>
<lb/>
ONLY TWO DAYS<lb/>
LEFT<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057160_0004"/><lb/>
L) A<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 7 November 1978<lb/>
Media, SGA at it again<lb/>
When the Media Board was created last<lb/>
January, it was hoped that the long standing<lb/>
feud between the media and the Student<lb/>
Government Association (SGA) would at last<lb/>
die a quiet death. After years of neglect and<lb/>
hostility, it was hoped that both sides would<lb/>
end up more or less satisfied. The media<lb/>
would no longer live and work in fear of being<lb/>
annihilated by a vengeful legislature, and the<lb/>
SGA would enjoy a fair press. Such, however,<lb/>
was not to be the case. The feud continues.<lb/>
The most bitter contest at the moment is<lb/>
the $42,000 originally appropriated for the<lb/>
BUC and who will get a chance to benefit from<lb/>
it. Many legislators would like to see this<lb/>
money given to SGA, to do with as they please,<lb/>
while more responsible students realize how<lb/>
wrong it would be for one major campus<lb/>
organization to bail out another.<lb/>
Since prices will continue to rise and<lb/>
enrollment will soon peak and begin to decline,<lb/>
the SGA will have no more money next year<lb/>
than this year, perhaps even less. Will they<lb/>
expect another $42,000 gift then? Should such<lb/>
an awful precedent as what is being discussed<lb/>
ever come about, there would be no end to the<lb/>
requests.<lb/>
The SGA is the only major student<lb/>
organizations with no savings to speak of.<lb/>
Legislatures in the past have made it a point to<lb/>
spend every penny alloted them and the future<lb/>
be damned. Consequently, many small<lb/>
organizations receive a disproportionate share<lb/>
of student fees.<lb/>
When the Student Union Major Attractions<lb/>
Committee bankrupted two years ago, the<lb/>
Student Union had accumulated enough<lb/>
savings (more than enough, in fact) to fund one<lb/>
more year for the committee, a "make or<lb/>
break" year.<lb/>
The new floor covering for Minges,<lb/>
the purchase of which removed a major<lb/>
obstacle in the path of having concerts was<lb/>
paid for out of the Student Union savings.<lb/>
If the SGA will ever realize that the Media<lb/>
Board is here to stay and that SGA can spend<lb/>
only the money it is allotted, then perhaps they<lb/>
may learn to handle their finances in a more<lb/>
responsible manner and not have to go<lb/>
begging to other organizations with equally<lb/>
pressing needs. The legislature needs to be<lb/>
more far-sighted in its decision making and<lb/>
abandon the "spend, spend, spend" philoso-<lb/>
phy which has dominated in the past.<lb/>
Commentary<lb/>
mag<lb/>
HESTER PETTY<lb/>
Uppity Women of<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
The premiere issue of<lb/>
Male Chauvinist magazine<lb/>
(October 1978 became<lb/>
available' to the general<lb/>
public m September 1978.<lb/>
The cover art is a photo-<lb/>
graph of two women kissing<lb/>
the feet of a man seated in a<lb/>
throne-like chair.<lb/>
The articles include<lb/>
advice on "How to Cheat<lb/>
on Your Wife" and "Ten<lb/>
Ways to Keep a Woman in<lb/>
Her Place<lb/>
I did not find Male<lb/>
Chauvinist half-hidden be-<lb/>
hind the plywood screens<lb/>
on the pornography racks. I<lb/>
found it in the general<lb/>
reading section. I bought it<lb/>
and read it because its<lb/>
existence illustrates several<lb/>
points I'd like to make<lb/>
about sexism in our culture.<lb/>
It is my hope that this<lb/>
article will dissuade you<lb/>
from feeding the misogyny<lb/>
industry through a pur-<lb/>
chase of Male Chauvinist<lb/>
magazine.<lb/>
I cannot proceed with-<lb/>
out addressing the notion<lb/>
that perhaps Male Chauv-<lb/>
inist is not meant to be<lb/>
serious, that it is satire. If it<lb/>
was ever meant to be<lb/>
satire, that intent has been<lb/>
well-disguised by extreme-<lb/>
ly poor writing.<lb/>
The writers do not<lb/>
express contempt or ridi-<lb/>
cule for the sexist material<lb/>
in their articles. Their<lb/>
writing ranges in tone from<lb/>
"take my wifeplease" to<lb/>
"a slap tn the face, that's<lb/>
the only language a woman<lb/>
understands "<lb/>
If Male Chauvinist was<lb/>
meant to be a joke, it has<lb/>
failed miserably to come off<lb/>
as such. Some of the<lb/>
material is too close to the<lb/>
prevailing sexist attitudes<lb/>
of this society to be<lb/>
considered a joke. An<lb/>
example of one  joke that<lb/>
was written by a masculist<lb/>
woman in this magazine is<lb/>
"Women just sit back<lb/>
getting lazier, dumber and<lb/>
more demanding - and at<lb/>
the same time richer<lb/>
So what is Male<lb/>
Chauvinist if it is not satire,<lb/>
it te a serious (albeit<lb/>
disguised) attempt at<lb/>
?lengthening the mlsoyn-<lb/>
r.iat and atxist attitudes<lb/>
that people have about<lb/>
women.<lb/>
But this can be said<lb/>
about pornographic publi-<lb/>
cations such aa Hustler and<lb/>
Playboy (and don't tell me<lb/>
you buy it for the articles<lb/>
because that't the biggest<lb/>
line of crap I've ever<lb/>
heard.) So what makes<lb/>
Male Chauvinist different9<lb/>
The difference is that<lb/>
the non-pornographic na-<lb/>
ture Male Chauvinist gives<lb/>
it a respectable Image that<lb/>
most porn magazines don t<lb/>
have. You are not subject to<lb/>
the feeling of guilt that<lb/>
grips you when, while<lb/>
flipping through the nude<lb/>
photos in Penthouse in the<lb/>
local bookstore, a 60 year<lb/>
old woman or a mother and<lb/>
her kids walk by.<lb/>
Buy maybe you don't<lb/>
recognize the misogyny in<lb/>
the above-mentioned pub-<lb/>
lications. Maybe you do not<lb/>
consider yourself a woman-<lb/>
hater or sexist just because<lb/>
you purchase (or look<lb/>
through) these magazines.<lb/>
Then let me ask you this.<lb/>
Would you purchase a<lb/>
magazine called White<lb/>
Racist? Would you read<lb/>
and chuckle through an<lb/>
article about "Ten Ways to<lb/>
Keep a Negro in His Place"<lb/>
or laugh at a statement<lb/>
such as Negroes just sit<lb/>
back getting lazier, dumber<lb/>
and more demanding - and<lb/>
at the same time richer"? If<lb/>
you find these ideas funny,<lb/>
you are racist. If you find<lb/>
Male Chauvinist tunny, you<lb/>
are sexist.<lb/>
The lack of human<lb/>
rights, the lack of equality,<lb/>
the rape and the explitation<lb/>
of one group of people by<lb/>
another group of people is<lb/>
not funny. It should not be<lb/>
a sexual turn-on.<lb/>
Male Chauvinist does<lb/>
not attempt to present<lb/>
much information that is<lb/>
based on fact (all things<lb/>
considered, the reader<lb/>
should be thankful for small<lb/>
favors). In one instance, a<lb/>
writer did include some<lb/>
statistics from the Kinsey<lb/>
reports on sexual behavior<lb/>
but it was used incorrectly<lb/>
to prove that it is natural<lb/>
and expected for men to<lb/>
have affairs outside of an<lb/>
established and monoga-<lb/>
mous relationship.<lb/>
In another article,<lb/>
"Women ARE Ruled by<lb/>
Their Emotions the<lb/>
writer tells us that a<lb/>
woman's feelings reactions<lb/>
ate. are completely con-<lb/>
trolled by her hormones<lb/>
and the moon. Quite a lot of<lb/>
space is devoted to a<lb/>
description of the hormonal<lb/>
changes during the men-<lb/>
strual cycle. The descrip-<lb/>
tion is accurate.<lb/>
It can be found in<lb/>
almost any book that<lb/>
contains information on<lb/>
female physiology. The<lb/>
conclusions drawn from<lb/>
this information are anoth-<lb/>
er matter. Serveral studies<lb/>
are cited but not by name or<lb/>
date Which studies?<lb/>
Whose studies? When?<lb/>
No mention is made of<lb/>
male hormonal cycles.<lb/>
There is no comparison of<lb/>
women and men based on<lb/>
the effects of our respective<lb/>
cycles. The information is<lb/>
shallow, inconclusive and<lb/>
slanted Can we believe<lb/>
what the author says about<lb/>
women when a statement<lb/>
menopausal women such as<lb/>
"Women can become<lb/>
intolerant (when aren't<lb/>
they)" is juxtaposed with a<lb/>
statistic from a (unnamed)<lb/>
studey?<lb/>
Unfortunately, the fact<lb/>
that this material is in print<lb/>
in a slick-looking magazine<lb/>
is enough credence for<lb/>
many people. It sounds<lb/>
goodhe always wanted to<lb/>
believe it therefore it's<lb/>
true.<lb/>
If you have seen a copy<lb/>
of Male Chauvinist and you<lb/>
found it inoffensive, you<lb/>
may accuse me of having no<lb/>
sense of humor. It is one<lb/>
accusation that is leveled at<lb/>
most feminists (that and<lb/>
the accusation that we're<lb/>
all dykes).<lb/>
Actually I do have a<lb/>
sense of humor. A pretty<lb/>
good one I might add. But<lb/>
there are some "jokes" I<lb/>
don't find very funny at all.<lb/>
Like the one about the<lb/>
woman who walked into the<lb/>
police station and told the<lb/>
officer on duty that she'd<lb/>
been raped to which the<lb/>
officer replied "Who would<lb/>
want to rape you?"<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
English prof rebuts exam story<lb/>
10 joke<lb/>
Or the one about the<lb/>
public official who, when<lb/>
discussing the question of a<lb/>
need for a house for<lb/>
battered women, said "If<lb/>
the county takes in a<lb/>
woman who is abused, then<lb/>
what are we going to do<lb/>
when some farmer calls in<lb/>
who can't tame his wild<lb/>
horse? Are we going to<lb/>
tame it for him?"<lb/>
And of course you've<lb/>
heard the one about the<lb/>
married man who, after his<lb/>
extramarital affair ended,<lb/>
was worried about his lost<lb/>
loving until he was re-<lb/>
minded that "After all, you<lb/>
can aiways jump back in the<lb/>
sack with your wife. That's<lb/>
what wives are for "<lb/>
Male Chauvinist maga-<lb/>
zine is not a joke. Its<lb/>
existence reinforces the<lb/>
misogynist stereotypes that<lb/>
run rampant throughout<lb/>
the mass media.<lb/>
If this was not the<lb/>
original intention of the<lb/>
publisher, I suggest that he<lb/>
close down his offices and<lb/>
leave the magazine pub-<lb/>
lishing business because he<lb/>
does not have the judge-<lb/>
ment or ability to work in<lb/>
that profession.<lb/>
A true story docu-<lb/>
mented in Against Our<lb/>
Will: Men, Women and<lb/>
Rape by Susan Brownmiller<lb/>
(1975)<lb/>
A true story docu-<lb/>
mented in Ms. (August<lb/>
1978)<lb/>
?"Sexist garbage from<lb/>
Male Chauvinist (October<lb/>
1978)<lb/>
Send any comments<lb/>
suggestions to Uppity<lb/>
Women of Greenville, P.O.<lb/>
Box 1373, Greenville, NC<lb/>
27834<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
In the Oct. 24 issue,<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD ran a<lb/>
front page story on the<lb/>
English Department Exit<lb/>
Exam. I cannot comment on<lb/>
the accuracy with which the<lb/>
writer, Ricki Gliarmis,<lb/>
reconstructs her discussion<lb/>
with the two members of<lb/>
the Computer Center staff,<lb/>
Mr. Little and Mr. Bolonde,<lb/>
but I feel that many of my<lb/>
own comments, as well as<lb/>
the facts concerning the<lb/>
exam, were reported inac-<lb/>
curately.<lb/>
It is true that there were<lb/>
several problems on the<lb/>
last Exit Exam (I really<lb/>
wonder, though, why a<lb/>
story that was old news two<lb/>
weeks ago was run as the<lb/>
lead article under a screa-<lb/>
mer-style headline, espec-<lb/>
ially in view of the fact that<lb/>
the faculty and students<lb/>
involved with the test were<lb/>
notified of these problems<lb/>
as soon as they were<lb/>
discovered and scores were<lb/>
adjusted accordingly.).<lb/>
It is also true that I<lb/>
attributed these problems<lb/>
to a combination of circum-<lb/>
stances, including time<lb/>
pressures, crowded work<lb/>
areas, and the great volume<lb/>
of material that had to be<lb/>
typed, duplicated, circu-<lb/>
lated, and evaluated. In<lb/>
other respects, however,<lb/>
the article conveys serious<lb/>
misconceptions which can-<lb/>
not be allowed to go<lb/>
unchallenged.<lb/>
First of all, the sensa-<lb/>
tionalism of the headline,<lb/>
the implication that a<lb/>
massive number of com-<lb/>
puter errors occurred and<lb/>
the juxtaposition of my<lb/>
words with those of Mr.<lb/>
Little aril Mr. Bolonde all<lb/>
create tfje impression that<lb/>
the English Department<lb/>
and the Computer Center<lb/>
are pitted against on<lb/>
another in a continuing<lb/>
controversy over who is to<lb/>
blame for mishaps on the<lb/>
last Exit Exam. In actuality,<lb/>
Fajntainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community tar over 50 years<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER<lb/>
Leigh Coakley<lb/>
TRENDS EDITOR<lb/>
Steve Bachner<lb/>
I<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Doug White ?<lb/>
ADVERTISING MANAGER<lb/>
NEWS EDITORS Robrt M' 9"lm<lb/>
Julie Everette<lb/>
Hscki Gliarmis SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
Sam Rogers<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD Is the student now apse sr of East<lb/>
Carolina University sponsored fcy the Media Board of ECU<lb/>
and is distributed seen t mi ad it and Thursday (weekly<lb/>
during the summer).<lb/>
Msiting address: Old Sooth Building, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
27634 <lb/>
Editorial offices: 757-636, 757-6367, 757-6306.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10 annually, alumni 66 annually. <lb/>
no such controversy exists<lb/>
except perhaps in the mind<lb/>
of the writer.<lb/>
Although I do not know<lb/>
Mr. Bolonde. I have worked<lb/>
with Bill Little on previous<lb/>
exams and have always<lb/>
found him to be extremely<lb/>
cooperative. Thus, if I felt<lb/>
that a complaint was<lb/>
warranted. I would have<lb/>
arranged a meeting with<lb/>
him at that time and<lb/>
discussed the situation with<lb/>
him personally.<lb/>
As I explained to Ms.<lb/>
Gliarmis. two of the errors<lb/>
on the computerized print-<lb/>
outs were the resolt of<lb/>
mistakes that occurred<lb/>
when test answers were<lb/>
marked on the standardized<lb/>
answer keys - before the<lb/>
keys and tests were sent to<lb/>
the Computer Center<lb/>
Obviously, these errors<lb/>
were not the fault of the<lb/>
Center, and to the best of<lb/>
my knowledge, no one in<lb/>
the English Department<lb/>
has made such an accusa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Unfortunately, these<lb/>
facts were not mentioned in<lb/>
the article. The "extra work<lb/>
load for professors by the<lb/>
way, amounted to about 5<lb/>
or 10 minutes - the time<lb/>
required for rechecking<lb/>
two questions on the<lb/>
answer sheets of the<lb/>
relatively small number of<lb/>
students who were within<lb/>
two points of a passing<lb/>
score.<lb/>
Equally misleading is<lb/>
the statement (erroneously<lb/>
ascribed to me) that links<lb/>
these grade adjustments<lb/>
with the isolated case of<lb/>
one section print-out wh'Ch<lb/>
recorded the 20 extra<lb/>
answer grids at the end of<lb/>
the answer sheet as<lb/>
omissions. No students<lb/>
were affected by this error<lb/>
because a passing score is<lb/>
determined by the number<lb/>
of correct responses. Fur-<lb/>
thermore, not a single<lb/>
print-out contained the<lb/>
combination of errors<lb/>
mentioned in another<lb/>
misquotation, which reads:<lb/>
" On a few tests the scanner<lb/>
neglected to score some of<lb/>
the questions Instead, the<lb/>
computer added questions<lb/>
that did not exist<lb/>
Another error that was<lb/>
mentioned prominently in<lb/>
the story but actually<lb/>
affected only a small<lb/>
number of students occ-<lb/>
urred on the print-outs for<lb/>
three sections. In these<lb/>
sections, the scores re-<lb/>
corded for some students<lb/>
did not match those which<lb/>
were obtained when the<lb/>
test were hand-graded by<lb/>
the instructors.<lb/>
The corrected totals<lb/>
used, of course, to deter-<lb/>
mine whether those stu-<lb/>
dents passed the exam.<lb/>
These were the tests that I<lb/>
was referring to when I told<lb/>
the interviewer that a few<lb/>
sections might have been<lb/>
misfiled and thus scored by<lb/>
the wrong key.<lb/>
For these reasons, then,<lb/>
I do not feel that the picture<lb/>
of mass confusion and<lb/>
animosity painted by the<lb/>
writer is an accurate<lb/>
reflection of reality.<lb/>
I was also disturbed to<lb/>
find that many of my<lb/>
comments about the back-<lb/>
ground and purpose of the<lb/>
grammar exam were either<lb/>
misquoted or taken out of<lb/>
context. There is a great<lb/>
deal of difference, for<lb/>
example, between the<lb/>
unqualified generalization<lb/>
in the sentence "Kirkland<lb/>
explained that high<lb/>
school seniors were not<lb/>
getting the attention they<lb/>
needed' and what I<lb/>
actually said: that some<lb/>
high school students had<lb/>
weak backgrounds m basic<lb/>
language arts skeils<lb/>
The writer's phrasing is<lb/>
equally imprecise and<lb/>
misleading in the state-<lb/>
ment. "The students are<lb/>
also allowed to stay in the<lb/>
English 1100 class if they<lb/>
wish " The implication<lb/>
seems to be that the<lb/>
English Department would<lb/>
like to get rid of all the<lb/>
students who failed the<lb/>
test. On the contrary, the<lb/>
departmental policy is to<lb/>
encourage students to<lb/>
remain in the class so that<lb/>
they can continue working<lb/>
on grammar and punctua-<lb/>
tion while developing other<lb/>
essential skills m compo-<lb/>
sition.<lb/>
I would also like to<lb/>
emphasize that even<lb/>
though an individual tea-<lb/>
cher might use exam<lb/>
results m determining<lb/>
border'ne grades, the test<lb/>
is not intended for that<lb/>
purpose it is designed to<lb/>
measure competence in the<lb/>
editing skills that aiiwnters<lb/>
need in order to evaluate<lb/>
and revise their own work<lb/>
Thus I do not feel that<lb/>
gramma and composition<lb/>
are mutually exclusive<lb/>
concerns as the writer<lb/>
implies m her conclusion<lb/>
My intent in writing this<lb/>
letter is not to gloss over<lb/>
the problems that occurred<lb/>
on the last Exit Exa<lb/>
There were several mis-<lb/>
takes, and l apologize tc a<lb/>
. no were affected by them<lb/>
But I do hope that the next<lb/>
time FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
does such an article the<lb/>
reporter covers the story<lb/>
when it happens, gets the<lb/>
facts straight, and reports<lb/>
them responsibly and<lb/>
accurately At the very<lb/>
least, anyone who writes<lb/>
about the Grammar Exar-<lb/>
should learn how to spell<lb/>
James K irkland<lb/>
Director of Fresh<lb/>
Com posit i or<lb/>
NCSL seeks ECU<lb/>
student support<lb/>
ToFOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Help Me I need the<lb/>
ECU student's support<lb/>
Why, I am old enough to be<lb/>
your father.<lb/>
Who am I? I am the<lb/>
NCSL. That is the North<lb/>
Carolina Student Legi-<lb/>
slature. I am 43 years old.<lb/>
But I am the oldest and<lb/>
most prestigious organiza-<lb/>
tion in the entire United<lb/>
States.<lb/>
The students involved<lb/>
in my student legislature<lb/>
can possibly mature to<lb/>
become North Carolina<lb/>
State Legislators. I have<lb/>
fathers students to become<lb/>
leaders in the state of North<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Off the top of my head I<lb/>
can think of the following<lb/>
leaders who have been<lb/>
involved in the North Caro-<lb/>
lina Student Legislature.<lb/>
They are: Gov. Hunt, Sen.<lb/>
Morgan, and Mayor Ken<lb/>
Harris of Charlotte.<lb/>
ECU students may<lb/>
wonder what do I do? i<lb/>
teach students about the<lb/>
legislative processes of<lb/>
government. This is done<lb/>
by showing these students<lb/>
how the rules of procedure<lb/>
are used. 1 also show them<lb/>
how to debate and apeak in<lb/>
front of 200 other students<lb/>
Furthermore. I teach<lb/>
them how to write itqai<lb/>
legislation I know ha:<lb/>
sounds like a mou'hfulbu' n<lb/>
simple termsail this is, isto<lb/>
write resolutions and bills<lb/>
Forty percent of my bills<lb/>
have been enacted into<lb/>
North Carolina State Law<lb/>
It is true that students in<lb/>
this state do have a say on<lb/>
how laws are made.<lb/>
Do you know that to<lb/>
have me on your campus<lb/>
adds prestige to the degree<lb/>
which you will receive when<lb/>
you graduate? Chancellors<lb/>
of colleges look for acti-<lb/>
vities such as this to de-<lb/>
termine the quality of each<lb/>
school.<lb/>
Admissions boards to<lb/>
law schools. graduate<lb/>
schools, and other pro-<lb/>
fessional schools look kind-<lb/>
ly on extra-curricular acti-<lb/>
vities such as this.<lb/>
All an ECU student<lb/>
needs to have is an interest<lb/>
in state government. Also<lb/>
each student needs to have<lb/>
? G.P.A. of a 2.0 or belter<lb/>
to join. That is alt an ECU<lb/>
student needs to join me.<lb/>
I hope to see you on<lb/>
Nov. 7 at 7 p.m. at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Cen-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
MarcAdler<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057160_0005"/><lb/>
7 Nobr 1978 fqunta,nhead Pftffft s<lb/>
According to physuxd therapists<lb/>
Nautilis equipment superior<lb/>
8v MARK ADLER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Nautilis, one of Green-<lb/>
s'S health clubs is open<lb/>
anyone including ECU<lb/>
students mtetested in im-<lb/>
proving their own health<lb/>
and physical condition, ac-<lb/>
) Don Wheat ley<lb/>
? the club<lb/>
MHEPA<lb/>
president<lb/>
elected<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
as-<lb/>
Bowman<lb/>
i of the ECU<lb/>
of Personnel.<lb/>
? president of the<lb/>
Higher Education<lb/>
? Association<lb/>
He was elected at the<lb/>
innual fall NCHEPA<lb/>
n Boone The<lb/>
irew 40 represen-<lb/>
ts from public and<lb/>
campuses fth<lb/>
a. all of whom hold<lb/>
sonnel-re-<lb/>
taff ? ' ns<lb/>
ECU ??? SO repre-<lb/>
I I<lb/>
s. director<lb/>
J Office of Equal<lb/>
-ograms, and<lb/>
assistant<lb/>
director<lb/>
? meeting featured<lb/>
address by Frank Men-<lb/>
executive director of<lb/>
the i1 nai CoHege and<lb/>
 rsity Personnel Ass-<lb/>
ociation<lb/>
-lected of-<lb/>
ficers are Roy S. Jones.<lb/>
assistant director of per-<lb/>
sonnel services at Appala-<lb/>
chian State University, vice<lb/>
president for programs.<lb/>
W- a Galloway, director<lb/>
of ersonnel at N.C.<lb/>
State University, vice-pre-<lb/>
sident for publicity: and<lb/>
Wiiwam L. Clement, per-<lb/>
sonnel director at Fayette-<lb/>
? State University, se-<lb/>
cretary-treasurer<lb/>
Bowman joined the<lb/>
ECU staff in 1973. after<lb/>
eviously serving as a<lb/>
personnel officer for the<lb/>
Duke University Medical<lb/>
Center and the N.C. De-<lb/>
partment of Community<lb/>
Colleges. He is an alumnus<lb/>
of Campbell College<lb/>
Nautilus, located at<lb/>
1002 Evans St. opened<lb/>
June 15. 1976 Wheatley<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Since the opening over<lb/>
1.259 members have re-<lb/>
gistered of which 450 fe-<lb/>
males have joined, he said<lb/>
At this time in the year<lb/>
estimate there are 200<lb/>
active memberswheatley<lb/>
said<lb/>
Nautilus equipment is<lb/>
used by professional ath-<lb/>
letes and seems to be "the<lb/>
test thing" for body<lb/>
conditioning according to<lb/>
Sports Illustrated in the<lb/>
il 21. 1975 issue.<lb/>
Not only are profes-<lb/>
sional athletes using this<lb/>
equipment but so are many<lb/>
er people.<lb/>
Wheat I y added, "We<lb/>
are always looking for<lb/>
males and females willing<lb/>
to compete in weightlifting<lb/>
competition<lb/>
Throughout the year<lb/>
there is various competition<lb/>
in the state and the south-<lb/>
east region.<lb/>
According to Sports Il-<lb/>
lustrated the Natilus Com-<lb/>
pany is rapidly growing in<lb/>
popularity for two reasons.<lb/>
The Natilus weightlifting<lb/>
equipment is safer to use<lb/>
than regular barbells, and<lb/>
the complete muscle is ex-<lb/>
ercised by a person and not<lb/>
just part of the muscle.<lb/>
The result is minimal<lb/>
excercise time and max-<lb/>
imum muscle growth with<lb/>
strength gain according<lb/>
to Sports Illustrated<lb/>
According to Wheatley<lb/>
the Nautilus in Greenville<lb/>
offers 12 exercise ma-<lb/>
chines<lb/>
Wheatley said the ma-<lb/>
chines cost approximately<lb/>
$26,000 when purchased in<lb/>
1976.<lb/>
"Since that time these<lb/>
machines have consider-<lb/>
ably increased in value<lb/>
added Wheatley.<lb/>
Wheatley stated the<lb/>
Nautilus Club offers the<lb/>
following services: A whirl-<lb/>
pool, four showers, a<lb/>
sauna, a lounge area and<lb/>
refreshments.<lb/>
The nine month mem-<lb/>
bership is $120 for male<lb/>
students and $75 for female<lb/>
students.<lb/>
"Female membership<lb/>
rate is lower because they<lb/>
have fewer hours to work<lb/>
out than do the male<lb/>
student members said<lb/>
Wheatley.<lb/>
According to Sports Il-<lb/>
lustrated, surgeons and<lb/>
physical therapists find<lb/>
Nautilus machines superior<lb/>
tools for rehabilitation<lb/>
work<lb/>
ROSIE THOMPSON AND Lydia Roundtree take advantage<lb/>
of the services that Nautilus offers. The local health club is<lb/>
equipped with weightlifting apparatus, a whirlpool and<lb/>
sauna, showers, and a refreshment area. It is recommended<lb/>
by physical therapists as a way of keeping physically fit.<lb/>
A3S303?VVVVVWS3t3??W3W3?<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
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THE TREE HOUSE<lb/>
PROUDLY PRESENTS<lb/>
MARIA D AWKINS<lb/>
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7TH,<lb/>
AT 9:00 PM<lb/>
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BOOKS<lb/>
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PAPERBACKS, HARD-<lb/>
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We deal in special orders<lb/>
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ANY GOLD OR SILVER OF<lb/>
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COIN COLLECTIONS<lb/>
BRING TO "COIN MAN"<lb/>
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STEVE KHAN<lb/>
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at<lb/>
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Sii Pack Caa.<lb/>
BUD uo, S1.97 $7.$S<lb/>
SCHLITZ iioi $197 $7 M<lb/>
MILLER LITE 12 oz $1.99 $7.96<lb/>
STROHS . ?o? $1.97 $7 68<lb/>
MILLER 12oz $1.79 $7 16<lb/>
PIELS12 0Z $1.49 $5.96<lb/>
Taytor La?. Country Rod " Qotd<lb/>
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top Sirloin<lb/>
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Dinner includes choice<lb/>
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and salad from our<lb/>
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Pink And Cold Duck  $2.20<lb/>
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KEG RESERVATIONS $34.00<lb/>
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Fri.fiP Sat. 11a.m. 10p.m.<lb/>
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Record Bar<lb/>
$?.v.<lb/>
DELICIOUS<lb/>
Pitt Plozo<lb/>
<pb facs="00057160_0006"/><lb/>
Chamber ensemble<lb/>
Tashi 'playedas one'<lb/>
Clarinetist Richard Stoltzman of the acclaimed chamber ensemble TasM<lb/>
-<lb/>
t.een making news internationally as the new ways to exploit the potential of his instrument, the<lb/>
? the clarinet, the performer who has found acknowledged clarinetist supreme<lb/>
Doskey 'flawless' in N.Y.<lb/>
By SUSAN CHESTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The acclaimed chamber<lb/>
ensemble Tashi performed<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Theatre last Wednesday<lb/>
night. Tashi presented a<lb/>
program for clarinet and<lb/>
string quartet as part of the<lb/>
Student Union Artist Series<lb/>
of recitals.<lb/>
Two years ago Tashi<lb/>
appeared through the<lb/>
Artist Series in a memora-<lb/>
ble performance of Mess-<lb/>
aien's"Quartet for the End<lb/>
of Time The Messaien<lb/>
piece features the unusual<lb/>
combination of violin, cello,<lb/>
clarinet and piano. Tashi,<lb/>
Tibetan for good fortune,<lb/>
was originally created with<lb/>
this work in mind.<lb/>
This year Tashi pre-<lb/>
sented a more traditional<lb/>
program, featuring Stra-<lb/>
vinsky, Beethoven, and<lb/>
Brahms. Although none of<lb/>
their selections allowed the<lb/>
same unabashed fervor that<lb/>
made the Messaien an<lb/>
unforgettably thrilling per-<lb/>
formance two years ago.<lb/>
Tashi traded dramatic<lb/>
effect for impeccable mus-<lb/>
ical taste in their program<lb/>
last Wednesday.<lb/>
The recital opened with<lb/>
the Stravinsky "Concertino<lb/>
for String Quartet" (1920).<lb/>
In this piece, noted for its<lb/>
primitive rhythms and<lb/>
ruthless power, Tashi<lb/>
played with intensity and a<lb/>
perfection of ensemble<lb/>
playing rarely heard. Des-<lb/>
pite some intonation prob-<lb/>
lems that, unfortunately,<lb/>
recurred throughout the<lb/>
program, particularly in the<lb/>
The Beethoven "Sere-<lb/>
nade in D Major for String<lb/>
Trio, Opus 8" featured<lb/>
violinist Theodore Arm.<lb/>
violinist Ik-Hwan Bae, and<lb/>
cellist Fred Sherry. The five<lb/>
movement work was arti-<lb/>
culate and well balanced, if<lb/>
a bit restrained.<lb/>
The sweet tone quality<lb/>
of Arms Amati violin was<lb/>
lovely in the graceful<lb/>
Music<lb/>
cello, the Stravinsky was<lb/>
effectively fiery and power-<lb/>
ful.<lb/>
'Without pomp'<lb/>
One advantage of string<lb/>
instruments is that so much<lb/>
of the playing is visible,<lb/>
and the visual presence of<lb/>
four intense musicians<lb/>
added to the overall<lb/>
experience. Throughout the<lb/>
program Tashi, in relatively<lb/>
casual dress and without<lb/>
the affectations common on<lb/>
stage, presented them-<lb/>
selves without pomp, but<lb/>
with an air of serious<lb/>
musicianship that well<lb/>
suited their music.<lb/>
Menuetto. The Allegretto<lb/>
all polacca was playful,<lb/>
teasing and downright<lb/>
amusing at times. The<lb/>
entire Beethoven was<lb/>
characterized by lightness<lb/>
and precision and good<lb/>
taste.<lb/>
Stoltzman<lb/>
After intermission, cla-<lb/>
rinetist Richard Stoltzman<lb/>
and violinist Ida Kavafian<lb/>
joined the trio for the<lb/>
Brahms "Quintet in B<lb/>
minor for Clarinet and<lb/>
Strings. Opus 115<lb/>
Stoltzman has been<lb/>
making news internation-<lb/>
ally as the popularizer of<lb/>
the clarinet, the performer<lb/>
who has found new ways to<lb/>
exploit the potential of his<lb/>
instrument, the acknow-<lb/>
ledged clarinetist supreme<lb/>
With his performance of<lb/>
the Messaien two years<lb/>
ago. there is httle doubt<lb/>
that he deserves his fame<lb/>
His performance of the<lb/>
Brahms, however, is more<lb/>
controversial One of the<lb/>
beauties o the Clarinet<lb/>
Quintet ?s the contrast of<lb/>
the lush strings with the<lb/>
darker, mellow sound of the<lb/>
clarinet Stoltzman's inter-<lb/>
pretation featured a com-<lb/>
mendable variety of tone<lb/>
colors. However, his use of<lb/>
vibrato was inappropriate<lb/>
In the Messaien two<lb/>
years ago. Stoltzman's<lb/>
vibrato was startlingly<lb/>
effective. In the Brahms, it<lb/>
interfered with the musical<lb/>
performance<lb/>
Otherwise. Stoltzman's<lb/>
extraodmary control was a<lb/>
real asset to the Brahms<lb/>
The ensemble played as<lb/>
one and. with the exception<lb/>
of intonation problems, did<lb/>
justice to the classical<lb/>
Romantic beauty of the<lb/>
quintet<lb/>
Tashi s performance,<lb/>
while not as electrifying as<lb/>
their earlier appearance,<lb/>
was tasteful and well wcrth<lb/>
hearing.<lb/>
By'5R. CHARLES BATH<lb/>
Special to<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
Henry Doskey. faculty<lb/>
th the ECU School<lb/>
? v presented a pro-<lb/>
gram of piano music in the<lb/>
Carnegie Recital Hall on<lb/>
Thi ? evening. October<lb/>
12.<lb/>
It was an exciting oc-<lb/>
casion foi the performer as<lb/>
well as for numerous North<lb/>
Carolina friends who tra-<lb/>
veled to New York to hear<lb/>
the recital<lb/>
Three sonatas com-<lb/>
e evening's pro-<lb/>
gram The opening work,<lb/>
the Sonata in C minor, No.<lb/>
33(UE). by Joseph Haydn.<lb/>
was written in 1771.<lb/>
This sonata is one of the<lb/>
mposer's more dramatic<lb/>
and expressive works of<lb/>
this period, and it stands<lb/>
apart from similar works of<lb/>
an earlier year when the<lb/>
"galant" style was more<lb/>
inherent.<lb/>
Most refreshing was<lb/>
Doskey's treatment of the<lb/>
modern piano in a delicate,<lb/>
though always expressive,<lb/>
manner that at the same<lb/>
time reflected the character<lb/>
of the eighteenth century<lb/>
instrument. The work was<lb/>
played flawlessly.<lb/>
The attention to detail,<lb/>
however, never took pre-<lb/>
cedence over the musical<lb/>
aspects of the performance<lb/>
as Doskey was always<lb/>
sensitive to the musical line<lb/>
and direction of phrase.<lb/>
The ornamentation, so<lb/>
prevalent in the first two<lb/>
movements, was executed<lb/>
clearly and blended into the<lb/>
context of the musical line.<lb/>
The final movement was<lb/>
played in a spirited manner<lb/>
with the performer reveal-<lb/>
ing digital dexterity envied<lb/>
by many a pianist.<lb/>
Virtuosity, though, ne-<lb/>
ver took over, and the<lb/>
sonata ended in a solemn,<lb/>
dramatic manner reflecting<lb/>
once more the character of<lb/>
the preceeding movements.<lb/>
The Sonata in B minor<lb/>
by Franz Liszt was next on<lb/>
the program This work,<lb/>
published in 1854. stands<lb/>
unique in the sonata reper-<lb/>
toire in its lengthly, one-<lb/>
movement structure as well<lb/>
as in its enormous diffi-<lb/>
culty. Doskey's poetic and<lb/>
grand, bravura style of<lb/>
playing captured the true<lb/>
romantic spirit of nine-<lb/>
teenth century pianism.<lb/>
This sonata is a test of<lb/>
any pianist as it abounds in<lb/>
octaves, chords, and ar-<lb/>
peggiated figures that en-<lb/>
compasses the entire key-<lb/>
board and that must be<lb/>
executed with swiftness<lb/>
and a certain amount of<lb/>
daring.<lb/>
Such pianistic displays<lb/>
are reserved for a select<lb/>
few. and one never que-<lb/>
stions Doskey's ability to<lb/>
keep all this in control.<lb/>
The majestic and<lb/>
grandoise D Major theme<lb/>
and its many poetic trans-<lb/>
formations were played<lb/>
with fine awareness of<lb/>
tone, line and phrase.<lb/>
The fiendishly difficult<lb/>
fugue was well-executed,<lb/>
and from there to the end<lb/>
Dorskey seemed to have an<lb/>
unending source of energy<lb/>
and stamina.<lb/>
The performer held this<lb/>
lengthy work together,<lb/>
never strayingfrom its true<lb/>
musical course.<lb/>
The program concluded<lb/>
with the Sonata in F minor<lb/>
by Johannes Brahms. This<lb/>
early work, Opus 5, was<lb/>
Balcony is<lb/>
Special Film<lb/>
The Student Union Films Committee is presenting Jean<lb/>
Genet's The Balcony, directed by Joseph Strick. The movie<lb/>
will be shown Wednesday, at 8 p.m. in the Hendrix<lb/>
auditorium.<lb/>
Shelley Winters, Peter Falk, Leonard Nimoy, Lee Grant,<lb/>
Ruby Dee, Kent Smith, Jeff Corey all highlight this<lb/>
surrealist movie. Jean Genet's acclaimed play is the basis<lb/>
for this critically acclaimed production, recipient of a<lb/>
special screening at the Annes Film Festival.<lb/>
In a nameless, revolution-torn country, business goes on<lb/>
as usual at Madame Irma's bordello - a unique "house"<lb/>
that dispenses fantasy within the confines of the television<lb/>
studio it occupies.<lb/>
Among those coming to escape reality by acting out<lb/>
their dreams are the leaders of the revolution, a milkman<lb/>
who becomes a general, and the chief of police who is out to<lb/>
stop the revolution.<lb/>
"An extremely funny, abrasive and outrageous work <lb/>
The New YorkerRecommended without reservation as<lb/>
hardhitting cinematic art  according to The New York<lb/>
Post. The music is by Igor Stravinsky.<lb/>
LEONARD NIMOY STARS in this Wednesday's Special<lb/>
Film presentation of Jean Genet's "The Balcony<lb/>
DEKOONING IS NOW in the Wellington<lb/>
B Gray Gallery of the Jenkins Fine Arts<lb/>
Center. Along with works by other artists<lb/>
such as Picasso, Matisse, Lichtenstein<lb/>
and Villon deKooning's charcoal on<lb/>
vellum, "Composition is part of a loan<lb/>
exhibition, "Images: Women on Paper<lb/>
from the Weatherspoon Gallery Perma-<lb/>
nent Collection which Is now on display in<lb/>
conjunction with "Ten Centuries of East<lb/>
Asian Art This welcome opportunity to<lb/>
view Oriental art was made possible by a<lb/>
generous member of the Medical School<lb/>
faculty. The shows opened with a<lb/>
reception Sunday and will continue up<lb/>
until November 22. More pictures and a<lb/>
review in Thursday's FOUNTAINHEAD.<lb/>
Photo by John H. Grogan)<lb/>
one of the three sonatas<lb/>
written by the composer.<lb/>
The performer once again<lb/>
had enormous demands<lb/>
placed upon him, this time<lb/>
by the very symphonic<lb/>
concept of the work.<lb/>
The sonata, unusual in<lb/>
the fact that it have five<lb/>
movements, is a "tour de<lb/>
force" in terms of endur-<lb/>
ance and strength, and<lb/>
Doskey once more met the<lb/>
occasion in no uncertain<lb/>
terms.<lb/>
The first movement be-<lb/>
gins with full, sonorous<lb/>
chords that require great<lb/>
accuracy of execution and<lb/>
facilitation from extreme<lb/>
registers of the keyboard.<lb/>
Doskey balanced this thun-<lb/>
derous opening well with<lb/>
the following lyric section<lb/>
and tossed off with ap-<lb/>
parent ease some extreme-<lb/>
ly difficult, if not downright<lb/>
awkward, writing in this as<lb/>
well as the last movement.<lb/>
The second movement,<lb/>
an Andante, with spacious-<lb/>
ness and lyricism through-<lb/>
out, reached a magnificent<lb/>
climax in the D-flat coda,<lb/>
and perhaps in this move-<lb/>
ment Doskey came forth In<lb/>
his most eloquent and<lb/>
poetic manner.<lb/>
The third movement,<lb/>
marked "Scherzo was<lb/>
played in an athletic and<lb/>
rhythmic manner. The<lb/>
fourth movement, subtitled<lb/>
See DOSKEY p. 7<lb/>
Grover Washington, Jr. 's Reed<lb/>
Seed sports 'excellent renditions'<lb/>
By JEFF ROLLINS<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
Grover Washington, Jr.<lb/>
plays a laid back type of<lb/>
jazz. His saxophones and<lb/>
flute are expressive and of<lb/>
course expertly handled.<lb/>
Washington does rather<lb/>
conventional arrangements<lb/>
of conventional songs. But<lb/>
what one enjoys about<lb/>
Washington is not his mu-<lb/>
sical innovations (for there<lb/>
aren't any on this latest<lb/>
album) but rather his easy<lb/>
going, supremely pleasant<lb/>
style.<lb/>
His latest album. Reed<lb/>
Seed, is a case in point. The<lb/>
album is full of small-group<lb/>
(seven at the most) basi-<lb/>
cally acoustic jazz. There's<lb/>
not a hint of avant-gardism<lb/>
on Reed Seed, but that's<lb/>
not to say he's old-<lb/>
fashioned.<lb/>
"Santa Cruzin" gives<lb/>
Washington a chance to<lb/>
show off a double-tracked<lb/>
soprano and alto sax chorus<lb/>
which really grabs you. The<lb/>
beat is from the late 1950s<lb/>
but then, Washington isn't<lb/>
one for compositional sur-<lb/>
prises. He makes up in<lb/>
song for what he lacks in<lb/>
music.<lb/>
Equally surprising and<lb/>
equally pleasant is the good<lb/>
Billy Joel number, "Just<lb/>
The Way You Are Of<lb/>
course, Billy Joel composes<lb/>
so well that his music<lb/>
doesn't want too much<lb/>
innovation. It's enough in<lb/>
this case that Washington<lb/>
plays the melody expres-<lb/>
sisimo, which he does, and<lb/>
the song in his hands<lb/>
realizes great musical pos-<lb/>
sibilities.<lb/>
 Loran' s Dance is one<lb/>
of the three Washington<lb/>
originals on a seven-song<lb/>
album. The song contains<lb/>
some moderately interest-<lb/>
ing passages as well as<lb/>
some downright boring<lb/>
ones. All too often Wash-<lb/>
ington sells out, filling the<lb/>
grooves with repetitious<lb/>
and mundane bars of mu-<lb/>
sical padding. Too bad, but<lb/>
at least it'snot disco, which<lb/>
would put Washington a<lb/>
cut above Maynard Fer-<lb/>
guson and M lies Davis if he<lb/>
didn't lack theirdynamicism<lb/>
in performance.<lb/>
Washington and Co. get<lb/>
down with some funky on<lb/>
"Do Dat This song<lb/>
boasts some good jazz<lb/>
disco vocals which gave the<lb/>
song exuberance and an<lb/>
open, loose quality which is<lb/>
most appealing.<lb/>
Sensitivity in<lb/>
composition<lb/>
"Step N Thru" is<lb/>
composed by a member of<lb/>
the group, R.L. Streacher.<lb/>
His name isn't very big in<lb/>
the jazz world so far but his<lb/>
talent wilt surely win him<lb/>
eventual acclaim. The song<lb/>
is the "jazziest" on the<lb/>
album, and for that reason<lb/>
one of the most delightful.<lb/>
On "Step 'N' Thru"<lb/>
John Bisks, Jr. on electric<lb/>
violin, Tyron Brown on<lb/>
acoustic bass, Leonard<lb/>
Gibbs, Jr. on erectric gui-<lb/>
tar, and MHiard Vinson on<lb/>
drums stl deserve mention<lb/>
for their superb ensemble<lb/>
and solo playing.<lb/>
The title cut of the<lb/>
album. Reed Seed, s the<lb/>
best of Washington s latest<lb/>
batch of matenat It has the<lb/>
most intriguing and sophi-<lb/>
sticated melody of anything<lb/>
on the disque Indeed<lb/>
where most of the other<lb/>
songs are merely craft.<lb/>
"Reed Seed can be called<lb/>
art in that it makes us feel<lb/>
something we have never<lb/>
realized that we have felt<lb/>
before<lb/>
"Maracus Beach has<lb/>
much the same sensitivity<lb/>
in composition and perfor-<lb/>
mance as Reed Seed<lb/>
with a little latin charm<lb/>
added The song is by J<lb/>
Simons who should write<lb/>
more, or be recorded more<lb/>
The rhythm and reeds are<lb/>
sunny, sandy and very<lb/>
south of the border.<lb/>
Grover Washington Jr's<lb/>
new si bum. Reed Seed, is<lb/>
comprised of excellent ren-<lb/>
ditions of songs new snd<lb/>
slmost new. These songs<lb/>
sre well-played snd fun but<lb/>
neither amazing nor brli-<lb/>
??nt. But than, fun is, sfter<lb/>
sil, so fun.<lb/>
f<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057160_0007"/><lb/>
ftftfitr<lb/>
t r r f ?<lb/>
? t<lb/>
NTAINHEAD P?n 7<lb/>
ECU's Doskey gets<lb/>
standing ovation<lb/>
at Carnegie Hall<lb/>
continued from p. 6<lb/>
Ruckblick is actually an .<lb/>
Intermezzo in B-flat minor<lb/>
that holds a thematic re-<lb/>
lationship with the second<lb/>
movement.<lb/>
The tender quality of<lb/>
this movement readies both<lb/>
performer and audience for<lb/>
the sweeping finale, pos-<lb/>
sibly one of Brahms' most<lb/>
difficult movements.<lb/>
The whirlwind perform-<lb/>
ance of the coda brought<lb/>
the audience to its feet, and<lb/>
after continued applause<lb/>
Doskey returned to the<lb/>
The<lb/>
Balcony<lb/>
This<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
night at<lb/>
8 p.m. in<lb/>
the<lb/>
Hcodrli<lb/>
Theatre<lb/>
piano to perform as an<lb/>
encore "L'isle joyeuse" of<lb/>
Claude Debussy.<lb/>
The only unfortunate<lb/>
part of the entire occasion<lb/>
was the absence of pub-<lb/>
lished reviews of the con-<lb/>
cert as a result of the New<lb/>
York newspaper strike.<lb/>
It is the opinion of this<lb/>
writer that the formidable<lb/>
task of a New York per-<lb/>
formance was well met by<lb/>
Doskey, and the enthu-<lb/>
siasm shown by the aud-<lb/>
ience left no doubt that this<lb/>
pianist is one of enormous<lb/>
talent, ability, and accom-<lb/>
HIANIST HENRY DOSKEY performing<lb/>
in a trio last April with violinist Fairy a<lb/>
plishment.<lb/>
ECU can be proud to<lb/>
have Henry Doskey on its<lb/>
music faculty.<lb/>
2$?2?&amp;,<lb/>
0ift<lb/>
TOX CLLL<lb/>
(L)ccu?ion?<lb/>
Mellado and (cellist Daniel Mellado.<lb/>
Doskey recent h. performed at Carnegie.<lb/>
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ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Intaglio prints by ECU faculty<lb/>
printmaker Donald Sexauer are on<lb/>
display in Marinsville, Va and<lb/>
Framingham, Mass. this month.<lb/>
Forty black and white and color<lb/>
intaglio prints by Sexauer are on display<lb/>
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munity Arts Center through Nov. 21<lb/>
The show is sponsored by the<lb/>
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Sexauer was invited to exhibit eight of<lb/>
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Sisterhood of Framingham, Mass.<lb/>
The exhibit, which includes the works<lb/>
of artists from all major geographic areas<lb/>
of the nation, opens Nov. 5.<lb/>
Sexauer, chairman of the ECU School<lb/>
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galleries throughout the U.S. He is<lb/>
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private permanent art collections.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057160_0008"/><lb/>
7 ttawifrt 197? FmnjT.mur ri() ,<lb/>
Navy loses first<lb/>
Penn St. tops Maryland<lb/>
By<lb/>
HERSCHELNISSENSON<lb/>
APSportsWriter<lb/>
There can be no more<lb/>
battles of college football<lb/>
unbeatens unless No 1-<lb/>
ranked Oklahoma and run-<lb/>
ner-up Penn State continue<lb/>
on their collision course to a<lb/>
national championship<lb/>
showdown in the Orange<lb/>
Bowl<lb/>
The last shootout be-<lb/>
tween teams with perfect<lb/>
records took place Saturday<lb/>
when Penn State trimmed<lb/>
tifth-ranked Maryland 27-3.<lb/>
But there are plenty of<lb/>
games on tap in the re-<lb/>
maining four weeks<lb/>
And two of the biggest<lb/>
take place next weekend ?<lb/>
Oklahoma at fourth-ranked<lb/>
Nebraska, with the Big<lb/>
Eight crown and a berth in<lb/>
?he Orange Bowl at stake<lb/>
and No 10 Houston at No.<lb/>
y Texas for the lead in the<lb/>
Southwest conference.<lb/>
Besides Maryland, one<lb/>
'er unbeaten team fell by<lb/>
the wayside over the week-<lb/>
end when 11th-ranked<lb/>
Navy had its Cinderella<lb/>
saga ended by No. 15 Notre<lb/>
Dame 27-7. That leaves<lb/>
Oklahoma, a 28-7 winner<lb/>
ober Colorado, and Penn<lb/>
State sitting pretty with 9-0<lb/>
records.<lb/>
Oklahoma must still<lb/>
face Nebraska and Okla-<lb/>
homa State while Penn<lb/>
State has North Carolina<lb/>
State and Pittsburgh sche-<lb/>
duled.<lb/>
The two leaders in The<lb/>
Associated Press ratings<lb/>
had to share the weekend's<lb/>
headlines with seven run-<lb/>
ners who cracked the 200-<lb/>
yard barrier, led by Theotis<lb/>
Brown of UCLA, who<lb/>
gained 274 yards on 26<lb/>
carries, including scoring<lb/>
bursts of 74 and 68 yards,<lb/>
as the ninth-ranked Bruins<lb/>
nipped Oregon 23-21.<lb/>
Meanwhile, third-<lb/>
ranked Alabama overcame<lb/>
a record 429-yard passing<lb/>
blitz by Dave Marler to de-<lb/>
feat Mississippi State 35-14<lb/>
while Nebraska set a school<lb/>
record of 799 yards and<lb/>
walloped Kansas 63-21 as<lb/>
Tom Sorley threw three TD<lb/>
passes and sub Craig John-<lb/>
son scored on runs of 64<lb/>
and 60 yards.<lb/>
Southern California's<lb/>
Charles White was one of<lb/>
those 200-yard runners. He<lb/>
actually rushed for 201,<lb/>
including a 1-yard run for<lb/>
Southern Cal's only touch-<lb/>
down.<lb/>
Frank Jordan added two<lb/>
field goals as the sixth-<lb/>
ranked Trojans turned back<lb/>
Stanford 13-7.<lb/>
Texas has the weekend<lb/>
off while eighth-ranked<lb/>
Michigan blanked Iowa<lb/>
34-0 as Rick Leach threw<lb/>
two touchdown passes and<lb/>
Danny Davis and John<lb/>
Newhouse each scored<lb/>
twice to lead Houston to a<lb/>
63-6 rout of Texas Chri-<lb/>
stian.<lb/>
In the Second Ten, No.<lb/>
12 Louisiana State drubbed<lb/>
Mississippi 30-8 behind<lb/>
Charles Alexander's 147<lb/>
rushing yards and three<lb/>
touchdowns; Willie Mc-<lb/>
Clendon became 13th-<lb/>
ranked Georgia's single-<lb/>
season rushing leader with<lb/>
1,115 yards when he gained<lb/>
149 in a 41-3 rout of VMI;<lb/>
No. 14 Purdue kayoed<lb/>
Northwestern 31-0 with<lb/>
Mark Herrmann passing<lb/>
for three scored and Steve<lb/>
Fuller passed for two TD's<lb/>
and ran for one to lead No.<lb/>
16 Clem son past Wake<lb/>
Forest 51-6.<lb/>
Ron Calcagni passed for<lb/>
three scores and tallied one<lb/>
as No. 17 Arkansas ended a<lb/>
two-game losing streak by<lb/>
crushing Rice 37-7; Al<lb/>
Middleton's three touch-<lb/>
downs led No. 18 M ichigan<lb/>
State over Illinois 59-19;<lb/>
Mark Shubert's 29-yard<lb/>
filed goal with 3:09 left<lb/>
lifted No. 19 Pitt Dast<lb/>
Syracuse 18-17 and No. 20<lb/>
Washington defeated Ari-<lb/>
zona 31-21 with Tom Porras<lb/>
scoring on a 10-yard run<lb/>
and catching a 29-yard TD<lb/>
Patronize<lb/>
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Homecoming Week at the<lb/>
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Wed. Delta Zeta Dating<lb/>
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in concert.<lb/>
Fri. Afternoon party 3-7.<lb/>
Beat Wm. &amp; Mary pep rally<lb/>
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I Sun. Ladies nite.<lb/>
208 l. 5th St<lb/>
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Buy any album in the<lb/>
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r! , ,<lb/>
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pafle 10 FOUMTAINHEAD 7 Novembr 1976<lb/>
In overtime thriller<lb/>
Rogues upset Students 3-1<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The first major upset of<lb/>
the intramural soccer sea-<lb/>
son took place last week<lb/>
when the Scott Rogues de-<lb/>
feated the International<lb/>
Students in overtime. The<lb/>
game was stalemated at 0-0<lb/>
after regulation and the<lb/>
overtime period went<lb/>
scoreless, so the match was<lb/>
decided on penalty kicks,<lb/>
with the Rogues winning<lb/>
3-1.<lb/>
That upset highlighted<lb/>
a week of matches that was<lb/>
shortened by a day of rain<lb/>
on Monday and Halloween<lb/>
festivities on Tuesday. The<lb/>
win left the Belk Golas as<lb/>
only one of two undefeated<lb/>
teams left in the men's<lb/>
rankings. The other team is<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi, which leads<lb/>
the fraternity division of the<lb/>
men's soccerleague. The Pi<lb/>
Kapps are 2-0 on the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
In women's league play,<lb/>
three teams, Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Sigma, Cotten Dorm and<lb/>
Fleming Dorm, are still un-<lb/>
beaten with 2-0 marks.<lb/>
In other intramural soc-<lb/>
cer action last week, the<lb/>
Belk Golas topped the<lb/>
Jones Cosmos, 2-0. on two<lb/>
first period goals, one by<lb/>
Kris Solt and the other by<lb/>
Chris O'Neill, and Alpi<lb/>
dumped the Jones Blazars,<lb/>
3-2, after leading by 3-0 at<lb/>
halftime.<lb/>
In intramural action<lb/>
elsewhere, the co-rec vol-<lb/>
leyball playoffs begin on<lb/>
Tuesday with the top two<lb/>
teams from each league<lb/>
participating for the even-<lb/>
tual all-campus champion-<lb/>
ship. Monday was the final<lb/>
week of the regular season<lb/>
Top teams going into the<lb/>
playoffs were Kappa Sig-<lb/>
ma, the Ultimates. the P.E.<lb/>
Majors and the Village<lb/>
People.<lb/>
Team Handball begins<lb/>
November 14 and registra-<lb/>
tion will be held this week<lb/>
through Thursday. There<lb/>
will be an officials' clinic on<lb/>
Wednesday from 7:30 to<lb/>
8 30 p.m and a Team<lb/>
Handball exhibition im-<lb/>
mediately following that<lb/>
meeting at 9 p.m<lb/>
Memorial Gym The lea-<lb/>
captains' meeting wit! be<lb/>
held in Room 205 of M<lb/>
oriai Gym. Signups<lb/>
Team Handball Boa g<lb/>
and the Sports Trivia con-<lb/>
test are being tak?<lb/>
Room 205 of Me-<lb/>
Gym<lb/>
Majorette prepares for homecoming<lb/>
R? TTE prepares for this<lb/>
ig homecoming contest<lb/>
id Mary. The Pirates<lb/>
e Indians will be televised<lb/>
starting at 4:10 p.m The game was<lb/>
originally scheduled to begin at 1:30.<lb/>
Photo by John H. Grogan<lb/>
710 Nut rh (ireene SiI<lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
Phone' ' ' 7 V :<lb/>
Mitchell's Hair Styling<lb/>
J P.rt Plaza Shopping Lcntfi<lb/>
Crccnvillc North Carolina 2<lb/>
7.6-2r0<lb/>
74<lb/>
Special curly perms<lb/>
forguy's &amp; gal's, only $17.50<lb/>
with ECU student I.D.<lb/>
On Wednesday Nov. 8<lb/>
and Nov. 1 5 ONLY.<lb/>
NOW FEATURING<lb/>
LUNCH 11 a.m. 2 p.m.<lb/>
Choice of meat ,<lb/>
2 vegetables,<lb/>
Coffee or Tea.<lb/>
$2.00<lb/>
DINNER 4:30 7 p.m.<lb/>
Choice of meat,<lb/>
3 vegetables,<lb/>
Coffee or Tea.<lb/>
?$2.25-<lb/>
? HOMEMADE DESSERTS AVAILABLE <lb/>
Hours: Sunday Thursday open until 8:00 p.m,<lb/>
Friday and Saturday open until 9:00 p.m<lb/>
?We also are serving from our regular menu.<lb/>
?We have a catering service for private parties.<lb/>
For information call 752 2624.<lb/>
GO PIRATES?STOMP<lb/>
ANY<lb/>
NUMBER<lb/>
OF<lb/>
PIECES.<lb/>
WILLIAM AND MARY<lb/>
TAIEGATE<lb/>
BEFORE THE<lb/>
GAME?LET<lb/>
ROY DO THE<lb/>
COOKIN'<lb/>
B.Y.O.B<lb/>
TENTH STREET<lb/>
CALL NOW! RESERVE TKj<lb/>
NUMBER OF PIECES, TIME YOU'EE PICK IT EP, &amp; NAME<lb/>
DRINKS ARE ON ROT WITH<lb/>
PIRATE VICTORY?AFTER GAME.<lb/>
t<lb/>
 <lb/>
<pb facs="00057160_0010"/><lb/>
Hicks paces Pirates past Appalachian 33-8<lb/>
f<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Saturday'scontest between ECU and Appalachian State<lb/>
was bmedV as an offensive show with Mountaineer<lb/>
quarterback Steve Brown at center stage.<lb/>
w"h BIU on the Cannes ,he ? ?M<lb/>
w?h a bady bruised Knee. the Pira.es had ? Z<lb/>
the Apps.coast.ng to an easy 33-8 v.ctory be.o-e a wet<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium crowd of 19.726<lb/>
Mte; building a comfortable 17-8 lead at the half, the<lb/>
Bucs struck for two quick scores in the third period and<lb/>
opened up a 27-8 advantage which all but ended the game<lb/>
?P6The victory over Appalachian State was ECUsecond<lb/>
straight and .mproved the Pirates overall record to 6-3 for<lb/>
the year wh,ie the Mountaineers fell to 5-4 overall.<lb/>
Not having Steve Brown out there at quarterback<lb/>
really hurt them offensively said ECU head coach Pat<lb/>
Dye I thought we did a pretty good job of controlling the<lb/>
line of scrimmage, but were still not a polished football<lb/>
team like we really should be.<lb/>
We weren't as ragged offensively as we have been<lb/>
during some of our games this season. But other than a few<lb/>
m.nor breakdowns. I was mighty proud - ? -Hnri<lb/>
tonight " . -<lb/>
Dye was also mighty proud of<lb/>
Eddie Hicks The senior from Henderson rushed 16 times<lb/>
for 114 yards and scored three touchdowns including a nifty<lb/>
25yardrunforECU'sfirstTD.nthegame.<lb/>
Edd.e Hicks. Anthony Collins and all of our backs ran<lb/>
e?l tonight. ' praised Dye. 'The key to our runn.ng game<lb/>
was the offensively. They came off the ball real well.<lb/>
, also have tog.ve a lot of credit to Leander Green. He<lb/>
really makes us go. We really did a good job of mixing our<lb/>
sand Leander executed well<lb/>
A week's rest certainly d,dn t hurt the P.rates either.<lb/>
V. th Hicks. Collins and Sutton running at will around the<lb/>
ends the Pirates rolled up a whopping 373 yards on the<lb/>
ground Sutton added 68 yards on eight attempts while<lb/>
Comns ran seven times 1 . 57 ,ards and also caught two<lb/>
nasses lor another 21 yards.<lb/>
N doubt aoout it, the layoff really helped us.<lb/>
sa.d Dye We had an excellent game plan and we also had a<lb/>
?me t0 !o ms and prepare for Appalachian<lb/>
Aere also com.ng off a real disappointing loss to East<lb/>
Tennessee State last week '<lb/>
he Pirate get on the scoreboard quickly in the first<lb/>
quarter After a shanked punt by Appalachian's David<lb/>
Abernathy which traveled only 19 yards.<lb/>
of our effort<lb/>
halfback<lb/>
ECU moved to the Apps 19 yard line before the drive<lb/>
stalled and Bill Lamm came in to kick the first of two field<lb/>
qoals, this one from 36 yards.<lb/>
Late in the first period. Gerald Hall fielded a line drive<lb/>
punt and scampered 22 yards to the ASU to give the Pirates<lb/>
excellent field position at the Mountaineer 26.<lb/>
Green found Collins open for 16 yards, but two penalties<lb/>
pushed the ball back to the 25. However that was no<lb/>
problem for Hicks. He took a pitch from Green around he<lb/>
left side and tip-toed down the sidelines 25 yards for ECU 8<lb/>
first touchdown. Lamm"sconversion was wide and ECU led<lb/>
9-0 with 10:56 in the first quarter.<lb/>
Midway through the second period, Appalach.an faked<lb/>
a punt and up man Larry Lawson ran for a first down on the<lb/>
ECU 26. Even from there, it took the sluggish<lb/>
M ountaineers eight plays to score.<lb/>
On fourth down from the one. quarterback Paul<lb/>
Hamilton faked twice into the line and went around the<lb/>
riqht side for the touchdown. And on the conversion M .chad<lb/>
fumbled the snap but threw to Andy Kilday for the two<lb/>
point conversion and the Apps only trailed 9-8 with<lb/>
6 42 remaining in the half.<lb/>
ECU came right back on its next series moving 55 yards<lb/>
in 10 plays for the touchdown. Collins returned the k.ckoff<lb/>
38 yards to the Appalachian 45 and on first down Green ran<lb/>
15 yards totheApps 40.<lb/>
Hicks scored his second touchdown of the evening on a<lb/>
one yard plunge and with Lamm's conversion the Pirate led<lb/>
17-8 at the half<lb/>
Lamm added his second field goal early in the third<lb/>
period on a 43 yard boot with 10.49 which gave ECU a 20-8<lb/>
lead . .<lb/>
And the Pirates came back with another scoring drive<lb/>
in the third quarter moving 64 yards in 12 plays to move<lb/>
out front 27-8. Hicks went over from the four yard for the<lb/>
touchdown line and Lamm's conversion was good.<lb/>
ECU'S final score came after linebacker Tommy<lb/>
Summer intercepted a Hamilton pass and returned it 12<lb/>
yards to the Appalachian 30.<lb/>
Collins capped the 30 yard drive with a 10 yard<lb/>
touchdown run which concluded the scoring. Lamms final<lb/>
conversion was wide.<lb/>
?Defensively, we got a lot more people around the ball<lb/>
in the second half said Dye. -They had a fine offensive<lb/>
scheme, but they never really stopped us in the entire<lb/>
game. We stopped ourselves with several mistakes. We II<lb/>
have to play a much more disciplined game against W illiam<lb/>
and Mary next week.<lb/>
Hicks moves outside<lb/>
ECU HALFBACK EDDIE H.cks skirts around the left s,de running oacks rushed for 37:<lb/>
for a bg gain. H-cks rushed 16 times for 114 yards and<lb/>
three touchdowns m the Pirates 33-8 victory over<lb/>
Appalachian State Saturday night in Ficklen Stadium ECU<lb/>
carries. The Pirates are now 6-3 overall with William am<lb/>
Mary next on the schedule<lb/>
Apps win 7-0<lb/>
ECU backs steamroll Apps<lb/>
ASU stops ECU hooters<lb/>
.?? ?nn?n n!o, arc c<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
ECU s around attack looked mgre like the explosive<lb/>
rushing game head coach Pat Dye has promised l season<lb/>
long in the Pirates 33-8 victory over Appalachiar State<lb/>
Saturday n gl n fickien Stadium.<lb/>
Quarterback Leander Green and the Bucs fleet of<lb/>
runn.ng backs ran over and around the hapless Appalachian<lb/>
State defense all even.ng The Pirates totalled 373 yards<lb/>
rusnmg on just 60 carries.<lb/>
We just executed a lot better tonight said halfback<lb/>
Eddie Hicks who rushed for 114 yards and scored three<lb/>
touchdowns "We've been fumbling the ball so much this<lb/>
year )t s really been hard to get the offense going<lb/>
?But heck, with 'heir defensive ends we were running<lb/>
the sweeps real effectively. They were just slow which ?<lb/>
allowed us to get outside and really get some running<lb/>
room<lb/>
Hicks took a pitch from Green and sped 25 yards down<lb/>
the sidelines for ECU'S first touchdown. The swift<lb/>
Henderson native also scored on one and four yards runs<lb/>
later in the game and was given the R.W. Moore<lb/>
Scholarship award after the game for his efforts.<lb/>
?The way our offensive line was blocking there was no<lb/>
reason m the world we shouldn't have had a good game.<lb/>
They were knocking down people on the corners and they<lb/>
were also opening up gome big holes in the middle<lb/>
Indeed When Hicks and Collins weren't rambling<lb/>
around the ends. Theodore Sutton found plenty of running<lb/>
room over the middle The husky fullback.rushed for 68<lb/>
yards on just eight carries including a big 22 yard gallop in<lb/>
the Pirates first third quarter scoring drive.<lb/>
Allot our backs ran well paised Dye. "The offensive<lb/>
line came off the ball well. Leander did a good job of getting<lb/>
the ball to the backs on the option.<lb/>
"I think we should have gotten more out of our passing<lb/>
game continued Dye. "We were trying to go deep too<lb/>
much and if we had just looked more for our backs we could<lb/>
have completed more passes<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
With the season quickly<lb/>
winding to a halt and an<lb/>
all-important NCAA tour-<lb/>
nament bid close at hand, it<lb/>
wasn't hard to understand<lb/>
why Appalachian State<lb/>
soccer coach Hank Stein-<lb/>
brecher was concerned a-<lb/>
bout Saturday's contest a-<lb/>
gamst East Carolina<lb/>
? I almost had to yell at<lb/>
those guys on the trip up<lb/>
here. explained Stein-<lb/>
brecher 'All they've got<lb/>
on their minds is the NCAA<lb/>
tournament bid. We<lb/>
weren't concentrating on<lb/>
East Carolina and I hon-<lb/>
estly didn't think we were<lb/>
mentally ready for this<lb/>
one<lb/>
But by halftime. any<lb/>
remote possibility of a<lb/>
Pirate upset was elimin-<lb/>
ated. The talented Apps<lb/>
scored three goals in the<lb/>
first half, tacked on four<lb/>
more in the second period<lb/>
and coasted to an easy 7-0<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
The Mountaineers im-<lb/>
proved their overall record<lb/>
to 9-0-2 this season and still<lb/>
remain in contention for<lb/>
one of four NCAA berths in<lb/>
the southeast regionals.<lb/>
The loss dropped ECU to<lb/>
3-10-2 overall with one<lb/>
game remaining this Wed-<lb/>
nesday at home against<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
?Obviously, they were a<lb/>
far superior team Pirate<lb/>
head coach Brad Smith<lb/>
after the game. "We<lb/>
played very poorly defen-<lb/>
sively. Our players were<lb/>
just not picking up their<lb/>
men and consequently they<lb/>
were getting loose for some<lb/>
easy shots. We did a very<lb/>
poor job of containing<lb/>
them<lb/>
The Mountaineers were<lb/>
in control from the outset<lb/>
and allowed ECU only ten<lb/>
shots on goal in the game<lb/>
while Appalachian State<lb/>
had a whopping 35 at-<lb/>
tempts.<lb/>
Sophomore Thompson<lb/>
Usiyan, Appalachian's<lb/>
leading scorer opened the<lb/>
Moutnaineer sooting bar-<lb/>
rage with an unassisted<lb/>
goal only 4:1 into the game.<lb/>
Soon after, halfback<lb/>
Mike Somnazu pushed the<lb/>
Apps ahead 2-0 on an assist<lb/>
from Keith Layne with<lb/>
12:31 gone in the half.<lb/>
Somnazu added his second<lb/>
goal of the contest just<lb/>
before the half on another<lb/>
assist rom Layne and the<lb/>
M ountaineers led 3-0.<lb/>
?That 3-0 lead m the<lb/>
first half eased a lot of<lb/>
pressure said Stem-<lb/>
brecher. "It was really hard<lb/>
to get them motivated in<lb/>
the second half, but I<lb/>
thought we played real well<lb/>
during several stretches<lb/>
Usiyan. one of four Ap-<lb/>
palachian players from Ni-<lb/>
geria, scored all four<lb/>
Mountaineer goals in the<lb/>
second half. Somnazu and<lb/>
James Wilde were credited<lb/>
with assists on two of<lb/>
Usiyan's second half<lb/>
scores. Usiyan's five goals<lb/>
now gives the speedy half-<lb/>
back 27 goals this season.<lb/>
The five goals also tied an<lb/>
Appalachian record for<lb/>
most number of goals in a<lb/>
single game.<lb/>
"Appalachian is cer-<lb/>
tainly the class of the<lb/>
state acknowledged<lb/>
Smith. "They're bigger.<lb/>
stronger and quicker than<lb/>
we are, but then again,<lb/>
their program is much<lb/>
farther along than ours<lb/>
"They've got some<lb/>
great offensive players.<lb/>
pecially Usiyan The ? h I<lb/>
some really nice<lb/>
although their las-<lb/>
goals came whe<lb/>
really got sloppy<lb/>
The Moun?a'neers<lb/>
ranked 18th nationally 8<lb/>
fifth m the sout have<lb/>
game remaining ana St<lb/>
brecher was optimistic a-<lb/>
bout the Apps<lb/>
hopes<lb/>
They said we a<lb/>
have to go undefeateo a tf"<lb/>
the type schedule we<lb/>
played and we ve jusl at<lb/>
accomplished that a<lb/>
though we do have<lb/>
ties noted Stembreche-<lb/>
Right now I would I<lb/>
say out chances are<lb/>
about 50-50<lb/>
ECU'S opponent W<lb/>
nesday North Carolina<lb/>
also shooting for a .<lb/>
berth and once again the<lb/>
Bucs will be decided<lb/>
underdogs<lb/>
"It would certainly be a<lb/>
Dig boost for us ?o enc<lb/>
vear with a ictoi<lb/>
North Carola a I<lb/>
Smith "But we ve go I<lb/>
start playing more r,<lb/>
sistentlv on both enc-<lb/>
the field '<lb/>
Leander Green<lb/>
Green found halfback Anthony Collins open twice for 27<lb/>
yards and the Penn Yan, NY. native also picked up another<lb/>
57 yards on seven attempts.<lb/>
"We knew they were slow around the ends and we were<lb/>
confident we could run the ball outside explained Collins.<lb/>
"But the offensive line had by far its most consistent<lb/>
performance. You couldn't have asked for anything more.<lb/>
They were really coming off the ball well<lb/>
Although the Mountaineers were ranked fifth nationally<lb/>
In total offense, the Apps defense was allowing almost as<lb/>
many yards, as well as points. And with quarterback Steve<lb/>
Brown sidelined with a knee bruise, Appalachian never<lb/>
moved the ball consistently all evening. In fact, the Apps<lb/>
had just 168 yards, far below their season's average of 450.<lb/>
"They got away with some things in the first half, but in<lb/>
the second half we were really gang tackling and getting<lb/>
people around the ball noted defensive end Zack<lb/>
Valentine. "The week's layoff helped and the coaches<lb/>
games plan was excellent<lb/>
Linebacker Tommy Summer intercepted a Paul<lb/>
Hamilton pass which set up the Pirates final touchdown in<lb/>
the fourth period. Summer was also credited with three solo<lb/>
tackles and one assist.<lb/>
"The way Appalachim has been moving the ball this<lb/>
year we knew they had alot of strong tendencies said<lb/>
Summer. "Without Brown in there they were not the same<lb/>
team offensively, but we had a few problems with<lb/>
containment In the first half, but we straightened<lb/>
everything out in the second half<lb/>
Bucs earn tourney honors<lb/>
? iiUiivnoocc mnsistRri of both colleae were tapped for member- With 18 teams trymq to ae'<lb/>
Anthony Collins<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The field hockey team<lb/>
concluded its season this<lb/>
weekend with action in the<lb/>
Deep South Tournament in<lb/>
Greenville, SC. The Deep<lb/>
South is not a tournament<lb/>
where teams compete for<lb/>
trophies. All players in the<lb/>
tournament are in quest of<lb/>
membership on the all-star<lb/>
teams which are chosen at<lb/>
the end of the tournament.<lb/>
There were four all-star<lb/>
teams chosen. The Deep<lb/>
South All-Star Team was<lb/>
comprised of club team<lb/>
members only. Club teams<lb/>
consist of former collegiate<lb/>
field hockey players who<lb/>
wish to continue to compete<lb/>
beyond their college days.<lb/>
The Deep South All-Star<lb/>
Team included only active<lb/>
collegiate players. ECU had<lb/>
no members elected to<lb/>
Team I. Teams II and III<lb/>
consisted of both college<lb/>
and club team members.<lb/>
Sophomore goalie Leigh<lb/>
Sumner qualified for Team<lb/>
II status, which was the<lb/>
highest berth given to a<lb/>
Pirate.<lb/>
Senior halfback Sally<lb/>
Birch, junior right inner<lb/>
Kathy Zwigard, and sopho-<lb/>
more left inner Sue Jones<lb/>
were tapped for<lb/>
ship on Team III.<lb/>
"I thought our girls who<lb/>
were on the III team should<lb/>
have been higher said<lb/>
coach Laurie Arrants. "I<lb/>
hated to see Drew Kennedy<lb/>
not get on an All-Star<lb/>
team. She's played so<lb/>
consistently for us lately.<lb/>
W ith 18 teams trying to get<lb/>
people on teams, there just<lb/>
isn't room for everyone you<lb/>
think should be there<lb/>
The Pirates had the best<lb/>
team record, as they tied<lb/>
UNC-G. 0-0, beat the<lb/>
UNC-CH Jayvees 2-1 and<lb/>
Furman University 2-1<lb/>
over North Carolina<lb/>
ECUvs<lb/>
William &amp; Mary<lb/>
ABC Regional Television-Saturday<lb/>
m<lb/>
Mi4fM<lb/>
<pb facs="00057160_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>