<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057162_0001"/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina v 55 ?-<lb/>
16 November 1978<lb/>
t<lb/>
Slander charges against Newby dropped<lb/>
By MARC BARNES , J -nnL T <lb/>
By MARC BARNES<lb/>
Assistant 'ews Editor<lb/>
Tommy Joe Payne, Student Government Association<lb/>
president, and Kieran Shanahan, SGA Attorney General<lb/>
dropped formal charges they had lodged against Alonzo<lb/>
Newby, at an emergency session of the Honor Council last<lb/>
night.<lb/>
Newb commented that he appologizes to Shanahan and<lb/>
Payne tor any statements that were taken as personal attacks<lb/>
He added he stood by his right to speak freely on the<lb/>
operations of the SGA.<lb/>
Payne and Shanahan issued a statement at the beginning of<lb/>
the emergency session, saying that in light of the apology that<lb/>
uas made, a prior agreement by both parties was reached to<lb/>
drop the charges. The two representatives of the prosecution<lb/>
added that the case be dismissed, because of the spoken<lb/>
apology<lb/>
The first hearing on the charges was held on Mondav night<lb/>
in a session that 1 sted past midnivht.<lb/>
Pawn- and Shanahan based their charge on Section V<lb/>
sut X ofth SGA judicial handbook. This section states<lb/>
hat a student will refrain from knowingly publishing false<lb/>
information which is damaging to any member of the<lb/>
yersity community.<lb/>
Payne and Shanahan based their argument on comments<lb/>
Newb) made at a SGA Legislature meeting on<lb/>
S member 7. During the course of that meeting, Newbv<lb/>
allegedly called both Payne and Shanahan a "liar" and he<lb/>
reportedly said that Payne had "ramrodded the appointment<lb/>
the new attorney general through an unsuspecting and<lb/>
enenced legislature<lb/>
Newb) also alleged that Payne's action was one of the most<lb/>
rat abuses of power he has ever committed<lb/>
Payne responded during the Questions and Privilages<lb/>
lion of the meeting by saying that he "had been in the<lb/>
slature lor a long time and he added, "I have never seen<lb/>
ett) politics as I am seeing right now<lb/>
ommented further that "Alonzo Newby stood here<lb/>
died me a liar. All I can say is that if you are going to plav<lb/>
?<lb/>
games with me, you'd better come at me full force,<lb/>
ise I've been there before, and I'm going to get you<lb/>
nahan made no comment to the charges.<lb/>
:huck New was appointed Acting Attorney General for the<lb/>
or Council since the case at hand involved the present<lb/>
rney General.<lb/>
New prosecuted the case and Newby appeared alone with<lb/>
-ervice of a court appointed counselor.<lb/>
Acting Chairman Mike Ball asked Newby if he understood<lb/>
his rights. Newby replied that he did and the meeting began.<lb/>
' L? Vf?rof WX C0NTEMPlA TES the outcome of the honor<lb/>
incU. Photo by Pete Podeszwa)<lb/>
?tTYttJ0E PAmESG4 ??? ?njers ?ith Chuck AW,<lb/>
acting attorney general and Shanahan during the course of<lb/>
Newby was formally charged with lying and during his<lb/>
response he protested the presence of FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
photographer Pete Podeszwa. He added that in a "court of<lb/>
law photographers were not allowed.<lb/>
Ball called the first of many recesses to ponder the<lb/>
question. The Board concluded that it was not a court of law<lb/>
and it set certain limitations on Podeszwa's activity.<lb/>
Ball told Podeszwa that he could not move around the<lb/>
room and create a distraction. Podeszwa replied that he<lb/>
already had all of the pictures he needed.<lb/>
Opening arguments included a debate over a registered<lb/>
tetter which was reportedly sent to Newby informing him of<lb/>
the time and place of the Honor Council meeting Newby<lb/>
denied getting the letter. 3<lb/>
Newby was then allowed to read the controversial speech.<lb/>
He made cop.es and distributed them to the Council and to the<lb/>
prosecution. After he read the speech aloud, he cited a<lb/>
Supreme Court ruling, Sullivan is. V. Y. Times.<lb/>
Newby asserted that according to the Supreme Court,<lb/>
public officials cannot bring charges of libel and slander unless<lb/>
actual malice is proven.<lb/>
Shanahan countered with the observation that the Honor<lb/>
Council was not a court of law. He added that both he and<lb/>
Fayne were students and not "public officials<lb/>
Newby said that he was protected by the Bill of Rights<lb/>
which he said was interpreted by the Supreme Court The<lb/>
chairman said that in this case, he didn't see that it had<lb/>
particular meaning. One of the members of the board<lb/>
remarked that the Student Handbook was based on the Bill of<lb/>
Rights.<lb/>
The Chairman then ruled that while use of Supreme Court<lb/>
cases was appropriated in a court of law, it was not appropriate<lb/>
in an Honor Council meeting.<lb/>
Shanahan then stated that he wished for Newby to prove<lb/>
Newbv h r I"6 HarS- THe Chairman remed<lb/>
Newby to be concise. Newby said that a misunderstanding was<lb/>
evident to him, and yielded the floor.<lb/>
Mon. night's honor council. Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
S aPParen"y ref8 '? ? N? - eell<lb/>
. , " Fdri mat the speech wa? a "o<lb/>
harS" a?"ck - T??r J? Pamela ttsffi <lb/>
In the letter, Alexander added .hat " have never witnessed<lb/>
needMob " " "?  Sh?'h? 1T"t ere<lb/>
needs to be a stop put to this kind of thing<lb/>
Shanahan ?id that his repntation had been hurt and he<lb/>
Nla,?1 "hiCh aPPe"red " FOUNTAINHEAD1<lb/>
.he s ? zizr. ?rfir &amp;r ale-He -d ,h"<lb/>
v "Ml ii ; , ,rom r?yne ? I m going to aet<lb/>
you. Newby alleged that Payne was referring to h,m<lb/>
personally. ?<lb/>
Payne denied the charge, saying that he was speaking to<lb/>
the legislature as a whole, Payne added "At no time did I say<lb/>
this to his face. J<lb/>
Ball asked Newby if he thought Payne was in fact speaking<lb/>
t0 "m"6 .legiS,atUre' and not to him Personally. Newby<lb/>
replied No, I did not Shanahan went through the speech<lb/>
pointing out specific examples of where he said Newby had<lb/>
One of the instances involved Newby's alleged statement<lb/>
that Shanahan had received a position on former SGA<lb/>
President Neil Sessoms' cabinet as a favor. Shanahan called<lb/>
former SGA vice-president Reed Warren, as a witness.<lb/>
Warren said that to his knowledge, Sessoms and Shanahan<lb/>
were notacquainted, and that no political favors had been in<lb/>
lorce during the former president's administration.<lb/>
At this time, the chairman had to call for order This<lb/>
prompted a recess, to consider the meeting order It was<lb/>
subsequently decided that every charge had to be presented<lb/>
point by point.<lb/>
Both sides were also afforded an opportunity to summarize<lb/>
their case. A serious proposal was made to table the meeting<lb/>
until the following week, but it failed.<lb/>
in ,?  T81 the Charges that he had " m? were<lb/>
in the speech and he added, "We are prepared to go through<lb/>
each charge of lying ??uKn<lb/>
is berebchT.P?nd,edrby S3ying'  fed m'V Personal ch?er<lb/>
? being challenged. I am ready to answer any charge " He<lb/>
then requested a member of the board to step down He<lb/>
ZT 3t 1 i?,identif tHe member He Rented and said<lb/>
hat he wished Marsha Hamilton to step down, because he<lb/>
a leged that she might be biased in her judgement Hamilton<lb/>
thatT,tewlfKng m0tu?came UP a and Newby charged<lb/>
ema ked T? inlrodud "ew element. Newbv<lb/>
remarked, I Just want t0 go tQ bed , waRt <lb/>
co?le?b ,Clime,d th3t the B'Ue Ribbon Committee - a<lb/>
committee to decide on a new Attorney General never met<lb/>
He went 0n to claim that another committee from the SGA<lb/>
legislature had voted Shanahan down<lb/>
ShanaTb addeVhat a uo"?" -as not present, and that<lb/>
Shanahan could therefore not be considered for the post th.<lb/>
ne now occupies. K<lb/>
In a statement issued Wednesday night, Newbv said "I<lb/>
applaud their decision to drop the charges He added "I<lb/>
consider it a victory for students who attempt to report<lb/>
anything they feel is improper<lb/>
Payne also said in a statement, "I believe our case was very<lb/>
solid and strong. I also believe that the legislature is the proper<lb/>
place to voice opinions concerning legislative actions, but it is<lb/>
not the place for personal attacks, charactor assasinations and<lb/>
v.ndict.ve feelings which I believe the attack Alonzo Newby<lb/>
made on Kieran Shanahan and I was. I hope this is the last of<lb/>
this petty politics from last year<lb/>
sayinhr!TKSherr0d' ' Da echoed ?W's views<lb/>
saving, The integrity of the legislator demands th. 7s<lb/>
pod.um WI , not b used fQr that it s<lb/>
Saber rattling will not be tolerated m the future<lb/>
Shanahan said, "Speaking as Attorney General, I know all<lb/>
those involved in the judicial process know that mv character<lb/>
and conduct is aboce reproach. He added "As for his personal<lb/>
attack against me, I only need to ask you to consider the<lb/>
suurcci<lb/>
To students<lb/>
KEIRE SHANAHAN. ATTOREY general, along uith<lb/>
Tommy Joe Payne, SGA Pres. dr ps charges made against<lb/>
Newky. Photo by Brian St oiler)<lb/>
Legal services available What<lb/>
By ANN THARRINGTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Cl students can receive free legal advice from a iawver<lb/>
?pte,ed bv the SGA, according to Libby Lefler, SGA speaker<lb/>
According to Lefler, the SGA sends out an open letter<lb/>
to a ,he law firms in the Greenville area each year in January<lb/>
1 be letter outlines the services which the firm will be expected<lb/>
to offer and the salary for the position. The law firms then reply<lb/>
VMth their resumesto the Executive Council.<lb/>
From the Executive Council, a committee of three persons<lb/>
i selected to interview the candidates for the position. This<lb/>
-ornrr.ittee narrows the field of candidates to about five. They<lb/>
eturn their recommendations to the Executive Council which<lb/>
then votes on the lawyers. Their selection then goes to the<lb/>
legislature for approval.<lb/>
The contract is for one year only and begins the fiscal ye.r<lb/>
?n March.<lb/>
The law service which is in its fourth ye.r, is offered to .11<lb/>
?tudents who seek advice on appartment leases, traffic court<lb/>
cases, domestic cases, or other legal problems.<lb/>
This year's lawyer is Charles L. McLawhorn, Jr. He<lb/>
graduated from ECU in 1971, and en e.sily relate to problems<lb/>
wncerning ECU students. He was editor-in-chief of the<lb/>
in 1976m? CUy UniversUy Review whi,e attending that school<lb/>
v I977, McLawhorn received his M.ter of Uwsd from New<lb/>
tork University. He was also graduate editor of the Tax Law<lb/>
Keview, publication of the tax law faculty at the university<lb/>
McLawhoro's contract with the SGA states that he is not<lb/>
allowed to represent students outside his office. His purpose is<lb/>
to give legal advice, but he is not permitted to accompany a<lb/>
student to court. 7<lb/>
Appointment, en be made by calling the SGA Scret.ry<lb/>
Mdhe Murphrey .t 757-6611, extension 218, between 8 a.m<lb/>
?na 5 p.m. Mrs. Murphrey will then contact McUwhorn'a<lb/>
oince and set up the con.ult.tion.<lb/>
Mrs. Murphrey said that students seem to be pleased<lb/>
with he service. In fact, she said that there have been no<lb/>
complaints. Students using the service average about ?Tper<lb/>
H,fraWhu?rn fS accefible to th? indents ten hours a week.<lb/>
Wednt? on8 " M?nday 3"5 P-m" Tue8dy 2-5 p.m<lb/>
St h nm-und Thrday 2'5 Pm- However, "he is<lb/>
wiling to be flex.ble with his hours if extenuating<lb/>
circumstances prohibit a student from meeting with him<lb/>
during his regular office hours.<lb/>
His office is located on the third floor of the Minges<lb/>
Building on the Evans Street Mall. g<lb/>
McLawhorn explained that appointments are set up for<lb/>
one-half hour consultations. In the consultation, he determines<lb/>
if he student actually needs a lawyer. If he does, McLawhorn<lb/>
Sudr t0 thC bC9t I,WyCT 8t thC ,Ca8t 00,t t0 thc<lb/>
"I also try to give students helpful hint, on how to<lb/>
f.wve'r or ZTf " Pre8Cm at t0 thei'<lb/>
lawyer or .judge if necessary said McUwhorn.<lb/>
Accordmg to McUwhorn, about one-third of the cases he<lb/>
handles tnvolv.ng ECU students are traffice violations<lb/>
Sir he haa a,8? hand ?? for students involving<lb/>
orobl tenant.d,8pUte8' dru? ? ??uh. domesti?<lb/>
problems, shophft.ng, and public drunkeness.<lb/>
McLawhorn said it is important for students to bring . copy<lb/>
of the le.se a traffic ticket, or other physical evidence when<lb/>
hey come to d.scuss . cse. Students often forget to bring this<lb/>
type of material to the consultation and there is little to di.cuM<lb/>
without this material for reference.<lb/>
LpfW rv hwiwd that the service is totally free to the<lb/>
?tudents. It ,s offered with the hope th.t students who .?<lb/>
generally forced to operate on a limited budget may have the<lb/>
services of a lawyer available to them when they need them.<lb/>
McUwhorn also handles other matter, for the SGA Me<lb/>
handles the collection work for paat-due account. for<lb/>
Chen"10' Md 8tUdent k8' referrcd t0 him b7 ?he<lb/>
He is also available to the legislature to make lectures on<lb/>
topic, such as apartment teaaea, liability for towing, and .the<lb/>
legal matters.<lb/>
PETER FIRTH STARS in<lb/>
"EquusSee p. 7.<lb/>
Student Union Films Committee<lb/>
presents the taut psychological thriller<lb/>
Equus this Fri. and Sat. at the Hendrix<lb/>
TheatreSee p. 7.<lb/>
A new Sexauer exhibition opens in<lb/>
CharlotteSee p. 6.<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina's own Nantucket<lb/>
will perform this Sunday nightSee p. 6.<lb/>
ECU faces Marshall SaturdaySee p. 9.<lb/>
Fearless ForecastSee p. 10.<lb/>
Harlem Globetrotters in Greenville on<lb/>
Nov. 21 at Minges ColiseumSee p. 3.<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
utilities<lb/>
meet<lb/>
By GLENN THOMAS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Greenville Utilities<lb/>
Commission met Tuesday<lb/>
night<lb/>
at<lb/>
7:30 for their<lb/>
Media Board<lb/>
Funds still in question<lb/>
By LEIGH COAKLEY<lb/>
Production Manager<lb/>
A Media Board meeting<lb/>
wa? called Wednesday at 3<lb/>
p.m. Tommy Joe Payne<lb/>
announced the next meeting<lb/>
will be held with Chancellor<lb/>
Thomas Brewer and the<lb/>
Board Thursday at 3 p.m.<lb/>
Rudolph Alexander, dean<lb/>
of student affairs, and Tom-<lb/>
my Joe Payne, chairman of<lb/>
the Media Board and prea:<lb/>
idem of the Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Association, attended a<lb/>
meeting with the Chancellor<lb/>
last Friday. Chancellor<lb/>
Brewer requested that Dean<lb/>
Alexander present him with<lb/>
figures that had been taken<lb/>
into the Media Board from<lb/>
the SGA.<lb/>
Dean Alexander discus-<lb/>
sed with the Board that<lb/>
Chancellor Brewer is greatly<lb/>
concerned about very serious<lb/>
short-run problems that now<lb/>
exist with funding in the<lb/>
student government.<lb/>
The Media Board met<lb/>
last Wednesday and voted in<lb/>
favor of keeping the $42,000<lb/>
from the 1977-78 BUCCAN-<lb/>
EER within the media for<lb/>
distribution rather that con-<lb/>
verting the money back to<lb/>
theSCA.<lb/>
The Board discussed the<lb/>
meeting that will he held<lb/>
with the Chancellor, as well<lb/>
as possible solutions to the<lb/>
problems at hand.<lb/>
Member, of the Board<lb/>
expressed their concernabout<lb/>
the situation that the SCA is<lb/>
involved in at present, hut<lb/>
maintained their stand con-<lb/>
cerning this matter. Jerry<lb/>
Wallace, MRC president,<lb/>
said that the fund, should<lb/>
remain within the media.<lb/>
monthly meeting.<lb/>
Among the major topics<lb/>
was a review of a proposed<lb/>
bond program. The bond,<lb/>
which will be approximately<lb/>
24 million dollars, was<lb/>
agreed upon by the com-<lb/>
mission in the amounts of<lb/>
$14 million for improvement<lb/>
of water facilities, $5 million<lb/>
for improvement of sewer<lb/>
facilities, and another $5<lb/>
million for electrical im-<lb/>
provements.<lb/>
The bond, calling for a<lb/>
new sewage treatment plant<lb/>
and a new water treatment<lb/>
plant, could raise the cost of<lb/>
water.<lb/>
A handout given out at<lb/>
the meeting reads, "The unit<lb/>
cost of water could increase<lb/>
from 10 to 30 centa per<lb/>
hundred cubic feet (ccf). The<lb/>
average monthly residential<lb/>
usage is 10 ccf<lb/>
In other business, the<lb/>
commission approved $3$<lb/>
thousand for water man<lb/>
extension, in ?nd around<lb/>
Greenville. The move is part<lb/>
of a pkn directed at keeping<lb/>
up with the growth of<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
 - - -<lb/>
'? ? ?f ? -wm mMt0'<lb/>
? A<lb/>
? ? - -<lb/>
? MMtfani<lb/>
? ? ;<lb/>
<pb facs="00057162_0002"/><lb/>
P??e 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 16 Naimbt 197<lb/>
Writers<lb/>
Pong<lb/>
The Writers Guild will<lb/>
meet on Mon Nov. 20 at 7<lb/>
p.m. in Austin 207.<lb/>
All persons that have<lb/>
attended or are interested<lb/>
please attend.<lb/>
Backgammon<lb/>
The MSC All-Campus<lb/>
Backgammon Tournament<lb/>
will be held Mon Nov, 20 at<lb/>
pm. in the Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center Multi-Pur-<lb/>
pose Room.<lb/>
The tournament will<lb/>
determine the one winner<lb/>
who will represent ECU in<lb/>
the Association of College<lb/>
I Dions - International reg-<lb/>
ional tournaments in Knox-<lb/>
Mlle. Tennessee in February.<lb/>
All expenses for the tourn-<lb/>
ament will be paid by<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
Full-time students may<lb/>
register to participate in the<lb/>
tournament at the Student<lb/>
Center Billiards Center. The<lb/>
registration deadline is<lb/>
Fri. Nov. 17.<lb/>
If you enjoy playing<lb/>
table tennis, stop by the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Table Tennis Rooms each<lb/>
Tuesday evening at 7 p.m<lb/>
when the Table Tennis Club<lb/>
meets. You will find players<lb/>
of all levels of ability<lb/>
participating. Various acti-<lb/>
vities such as ladder tour-<lb/>
naments are often sched-<lb/>
uled. AH ECU students,<lb/>
faculty and staff are wel-<lb/>
come.<lb/>
Journalists I Alpha Sigma<lb/>
Band<lb/>
Anyone interested in<lb/>
trying out for ECU Marching<lb/>
Band Winter Color Guard<lb/>
should report to Susan<lb/>
Market in room A200 of the<lb/>
Music Building at 3 p.m. on<lb/>
Mon Nov. 20.<lb/>
Republicans<lb/>
Bicycle<lb/>
Anyone interested in an<lb/>
"moon -ocializing on two<lb/>
wheels should participate in<lb/>
Bicycle Club's bike ride<lb/>
Sun Nov. 19.<lb/>
Interested persons<lb/>
?uld meet at the fountain<lb/>
in tmnt of Wright Audi-<lb/>
mi at 1 p.m. The group<lb/>
will leave at 1:15 p.m. for a<lb/>
15-25 mile hike<lb/>
The bicycle club invites<lb/>
ail ECl students to join us in<lb/>
this pre-holiday ride. We<lb/>
?o invite people from the<lb/>
in- rmation. call Tom at<lb/>
752-9847.<lb/>
ECU College Republicans<lb/>
have their next meeting on<lb/>
Thurs Nov. 16 at 7 p.m.<lb/>
The meeting will be held in<lb/>
Brewster C-103. All inter-<lb/>
ested persons are invited to<lb/>
attend. Refreshments will be<lb/>
served.<lb/>
Tournament<lb/>
Scheduled for Mon Nov.<lb/>
20 is the All-Campus Back-<lb/>
gammon Tournament to be<lb/>
held in the Multi-Purpose<lb/>
Room at Mendenhall at 7<lb/>
p.m. Introduced at the re-<lb/>
gional tournament for the<lb/>
first time last year it met<lb/>
with such success that the<lb/>
event will be continued. The<lb/>
ticipate in the regional face-<lb/>
to-face tournament.<lb/>
The Society for Collegiate<lb/>
Journalists will meet Tues<lb/>
Nov. 21, at 7 p.m. in front of<lb/>
Austin (across from the day<lb/>
student parking lot). All<lb/>
members and pledges must<lb/>
attend this meeting or con-<lb/>
tact Kay Williams or Ira<lb/>
Baker.<lb/>
Any member who is con-<lb/>
sidering going to Kentucky<lb/>
for the National Convention<lb/>
must get their name on a list<lb/>
at the Nov. 21 meeting.<lb/>
Turkey-shoot<lb/>
Win your Thanksgiving<lb/>
dinner at the Mendenhall<lb/>
"Turkey Shoot Thursday,<lb/>
Nov. 16 between the hours o(<lb/>
7 p.m. and 11 p.m the MSC<lb/>
Bowling Center will be the<lb/>
site of an old-fashioned<lb/>
turkey shoot with a slight<lb/>
difference. An entry fee of<lb/>
11.50 will give you the<lb/>
chance to bowl one ball on<lb/>
ten consecutive lanes.<lb/>
If at least eight pins fall<lb/>
on each lane, you win a<lb/>
turkey! Enter as many times<lb/>
as you like. Limit three<lb/>
wins per person.<lb/>
Alpha Sigma Phi is a new<lb/>
and growing social fraternity<lb/>
on the ECU campus. We are<lb/>
offering a different and<lb/>
exciting way to enhance and<lb/>
complete your academics<lb/>
and activities. We extend an<lb/>
open challenge to get<lb/>
involved and make things<lb/>
happen. Look for our name -<lb/>
Alpha Sigma Phi. If you are<lb/>
interested or have some<lb/>
questions, call Alpha Sig at<lb/>
758-8310; 752-1499; 758-<lb/>
8514; or 756-0893. Alpha<lb/>
Sigma Phi is "something<lb/>
special Call today and find<lb/>
out what's happening.<lb/>
Leadership<lb/>
Come to Leadership<lb/>
Training Class for some fun,<lb/>
fellowship, and practical<lb/>
insights into the exciting<lb/>
Christian life. LTC is every<lb/>
Thurs. nite at 7 p.m. at<lb/>
Brewster B103. Sponsored<lb/>
by Campus Crusade for<lb/>
Christ.<lb/>
Military<lb/>
Red Pin<lb/>
Win a free game of<lb/>
bowling every time you make<lb/>
a strike when the red pin is<lb/>
the head pin. Try your luck at<lb/>
"Red Pin Bowling" every<lb/>
Sunday evening from 7 p.m.<lb/>
until 10 p.m. at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Bowling Center.<lb/>
Alpha Phi<lb/>
Democrats<lb/>
The Young Democrats of<lb/>
ECU will meet Tues Nov.<lb/>
21 at Mendenhall Rm. 248 at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. The speaker will<lb/>
be Ms. Tlehrt Johnson,<lb/>
assistant district attorney.<lb/>
Refreshments will be served.<lb/>
The Alpha Phi Alpha<lb/>
Fraternity, along with the<lb/>
Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority<lb/>
will sponsor its Annual Can<lb/>
Food Drive for the needy on<lb/>
Sat. morning, Nov. 18.<lb/>
We will be going to all<lb/>
dorms and ask that at least<lb/>
one can of food be donated<lb/>
per room. This drive will<lb/>
help area needy families of<lb/>
Greenville enjoy a happv<lb/>
Thanksgiving. All donation's<lb/>
will be appreciated.<lb/>
Gamma Beta<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi will<lb/>
meet Thurs Nov. 16 in<lb/>
B.olopy 103 at 7 p.m. A?<lb/>
members are urged to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
First, take a young per-<lb/>
son in military service,<lb/>
probably away from home<lb/>
during the Christmas season<lb/>
for the first time; mix with<lb/>
some mail. Then add an idea<lb/>
conceived by concerned Am-<lb/>
ericans, and you have a<lb/>
continuing campaign called<lb/>
"Military Overseas Mail"<lb/>
(or M.O.M as sometimes<lb/>
known) - to serve our military<lb/>
personnel not only overseas,<lb/>
but Stateside as well.<lb/>
In the previous Christmas<lb/>
programs, thousands of<lb/>
pieces of mail, primarily<lb/>
Christmas cards with notes<lb/>
and letters of support and<lb/>
encouragement written in-<lb/>
side, have been collected<lb/>
from the public. This mail in<lb/>
turn has been distributed all<lb/>
across the U.S. and around<lb/>
the world, to let our young<lb/>
military people know that we<lb/>
as individual Americans do<lb/>
tare about them. (If you have<lb/>
a friend or relative in military<lb/>
service, who would apprec-<lb/>
iate some extra mail at<lb/>
Christmas, send in the name<lb/>
and address, and M.O.M.<lb/>
will see that some mail is<lb/>
sent to them.)<lb/>
I his is an ideal Christmas<lb/>
project for students and their<lb/>
families, either as indivi-<lb/>
duals or as members of<lb/>
organized clubs or other<lb/>
groups. For information on<lb/>
how you or your group may<lb/>
participate in this very<lb/>
worthwhile event, please<lb/>
end a stamped self-<lb/>
addressed envelope to-<lb/>
MILITARY OVERSEAS<lb/>
MAIL<lb/>
Box 1787<lb/>
Baltimore, Md. 21203<lb/>
Also, please mention how<lb/>
ou learned of M.O.M.<lb/>
PS. This recipe is sure-<lb/>
lire and never fails. It's<lb/>
topped with the warm feeling<lb/>
that you've made a young<lb/>
American serviceman or<lb/>
woman, many places in the<lb/>
Stales and around the world,<lb/>
a little happier at Christmas<lb/>
Car Wash<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi is having a<lb/>
car wash at the Exxon<lb/>
Station at the corner of<lb/>
Charles Street and U.S. 264<lb/>
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
An exhibition of works by<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Crafts Center members is on<lb/>
display in the lower cases of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
The majority of these items<lb/>
were made by new members<lb/>
who have begun if crafts for<lb/>
the first time this semester.<lb/>
The show will be on display<lb/>
until Sun Nov. 19.<lb/>
Banking<lb/>
Chess<lb/>
All persons interested in<lb/>
playing chess are invited to<lb/>
stop by the Mendenhall<lb/>
Coffeehouse each Monday<lb/>
evening at 7 p.m. wheri the<lb/>
Chess Club holds its weekly<lb/>
meeting. Competition is at<lb/>
all levels and everyone is<lb/>
welcome to attend.<lb/>
Burke Barbee, a vice<lb/>
president of Personnel for<lb/>
the Wachovia corporation,<lb/>
will speak on career oppor-<lb/>
tunities in banking this<lb/>
Mon Nov. 20 at 3 p.m. in<lb/>
Rawl 103. Everyone is<lb/>
welcome.<lb/>
A special invitation is<lb/>
extended to prospective<lb/>
members. Membership dues<lb/>
are $7 per year and an<lb/>
initiation banquet is sched-<lb/>
uled for late February.<lb/>
Business<lb/>
Pi Omega Pi, the Nation-<lb/>
al Business Education Tea-<lb/>
cher Honor Society, will<lb/>
meet on Tues Nov. 21, at 5<lb/>
p.m. in Room 304, Rawl<lb/>
Building. All members are<lb/>
expected to be in attendance.<lb/>
The major discussion topic<lb/>
will be the national conven-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Crafts<lb/>
An exhibition of vorks<lb/>
by Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Crafts Center<lb/>
members is on display in<lb/>
the lower bases of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. The majority of<lb/>
these items were made by<lb/>
new members who have<lb/>
begun in crafts for the first<lb/>
time this semester. The<lb/>
show will be on display<lb/>
until Sunday, Nov. 19.<lb/>
Sigma fan<lb/>
Sigma Tau Delta, the<lb/>
English Honor Society, will<lb/>
meet Mon Nov. 20, in the<lb/>
Coffeehouse, at 7 p.m. There<lb/>
will be a guest speaker and<lb/>
refreshments, so please plan<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
ACEI<lb/>
Festival<lb/>
Folk Music Festivle will<lb/>
be held Thurs night from 8<lb/>
till 10 p.m. in the art building<lb/>
Performing will be Carolina<lb/>
Bluegrass Band with the<lb/>
hottest fiddler in North Car-<lb/>
olina; Pinewood Ramblers,<lb/>
East Carolina's own all<lb/>
female bluegrassold-time<lb/>
band; nationally known<lb/>
Creengrass Doggers and the<lb/>
newest square dance team<lb/>
alive. Everyone is welcome,<lb/>
admission is free.<lb/>
rAfE1 (Association of<lb/>
Lnildhood Education Inter-<lb/>
national) will have a bake<lb/>
sale Mon Nov. 20, from 9<lb/>
jm to 2 p.m. in front of the<lb/>
Student Store. Your support<lb/>
WiM be greatly appreciated.<lb/>
Lon,e and get some goodi<lb/>
ties.<lb/>
FCA<lb/>
Th? Student Ualoa Cotfh?? Commlttaa<lb/>
The Family Child Assoc-<lb/>
iation will meet Tues Nov.<lb/>
21 at 5 p.m. in the Home Ec<lb/>
Building, Rm. 143 e wiJ,<lb/>
have Mr. Furney James from<lb/>
the placement office to speak<lb/>
to us about jobs available to<lb/>
Child Dev. Family Rel.<lb/>
majors.<lb/>
'Lightning'<lb/>
presents<lb/>
Mike Wells<lb/>
Thurs. &amp; Fri.<lb/>
Nov.i6 &amp; 17<lb/>
at 8:30 &amp; 9:30<lb/>
Room 15<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
Admission<lb/>
50 cents<lb/>
Free snacks<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
"Rent-a-lane" is avail-<lb/>
able every Saturday from 12<lb/>
noon until 6 p.m. at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Bowling Center.<lb/>
ou can rent a bowling lane to<lb/>
use for one hour and it costs<lb/>
13.00. Stop by and try it out;<lb/>
you can't afford to miss it.<lb/>
Pre-med<lb/>
Alpha Epsilon Delta,<lb/>
premedicai honor society,<lb/>
will hold a meeting Tues<lb/>
Nov. 21, in Flanagan room<lb/>
307 beginning at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
The lecture series of<lb/>
"Problems in Medicine" will<lb/>
be continued with guest<lb/>
speaker, Dr. James L. Smith<lb/>
of the Department of Philo-<lb/>
sophy, speaking on the sub-<lb/>
ject of euthanasia.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
forsde @<lb/>
FOR SALE: DY76 Alvarez<lb/>
Yairi 12-string with herring-<lb/>
bone inlay, only a few<lb/>
months old, including rein-<lb/>
forced piuahlined case, only<lb/>
1500. Call Concepts In Wood<lb/>
during business hours at<lb/>
756-8686.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Labrador Re-<lb/>
triever pups. Excellent<lb/>
bloodline. Born Oct. 9 Ci<lb/>
752-0406.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Anyone inter-<lb/>
ested in buying a New York<lb/>
City trip ticket, call Keith at<lb/>
752-8129 tonight. Must be<lb/>
male to be acceptable.<lb/>
FOR SALE: White Magic<lb/>
Chef refrigerator. Excellent<lb/>
condition. Need to sell im-<lb/>
mediately. Only $100. Great<lb/>
for apt. or trailer. Call<lb/>
757-6407.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1973 Honda<lb/>
Civic Hatchback. Manual. In<lb/>
excellent condition. Call<lb/>
752-7227 weekends and after<lb/>
5 on weekdays.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Two ladies<lb/>
smoky topaz rings. 10K<lb/>
yellow gold setting. Perfect<lb/>
shape. Never been sized.<lb/>
Call 758-7429. $25 each.<lb/>
f&amp;-SALE: Suuj P9 1100<lb/>
table with new Pickering<lb/>
jaaed dtist covftv<lb/>
Only $40. Call 752-81;<lb/>
tor tut<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT: Spa-<lb/>
cious room to rent to non-<lb/>
smoking female needing a<lb/>
quiet place to study across<lb/>
from campus. Available Dec.<lb/>
1st. $75 monthly. Call<lb/>
752-5528.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE: Wan-<lb/>
ted to share 3 bedroom house<lb/>
close to campus. Rent $60<lb/>
plus utilities. Call 758.6903<lb/>
peisonolg)<lb/>
FOUND: Bracelet found on<lb/>
intramural field behind Fick-<lb/>
len Stadium. Call to identify<lb/>
752-6388. 7<lb/>
TUTOR NEEDED: Intro-<lb/>
duction to Physics (1250).<lb/>
Prefer student now enrolled<lb/>
in this class. Call 756-7234<lb/>
MID EASTERN DANCE:<lb/>
(Authentic Belly Dancing)<lb/>
taught by Sunshine - ex-<lb/>
perienced teacher and per-<lb/>
former in Ohio, Mexico,<lb/>
Atlanta, and in the D.C.<lb/>
?rea. Classes are now form-<lb/>
ing. Call 756-0736.<lb/>
INSTRUCTION: P?ao ,nd<lb/>
guitar lessons by Richard J<lb/>
Knapp. Call 756-2563.<lb/>
YOGA: Hatha yoga is now<lb/>
being taught by Sunshine.<lb/>
1dasses torming. RehT<lb/>
lor'Froermat,?n'rWeight<lb/>
756-0736 m?re ,nf?r- ??<lb/>
?? for Whit tnd<lb/>
Portrait taken qV01"<lb/>
re??, .Ken. Senior<lb/>
resume pictures w<lb/>
?" portfolio? W<lb/>
c?lor or black . j do<lb/>
Uck ?d white<lb/>
T" -I lank heft1<lb/>
Chnstma. pre.en,?.11<lb/>
758-02. If r<lb/>
y??r name and ?klet<lb/>
rae ?d phone bo.<lb/>
-I<lb/>
f<lb/>
?i til mi in in<lb/>
-<lb/>
- <lb/>
 ? ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057162_0003"/><lb/>
f I '<lb/>
 r f t<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
receives<lb/>
16 November 1978 FQUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
research funds oooreSi?miRT)ooooo5<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
IURIFS, GLOBETROTERS 1AK Ores, Aurtv, Sm,ies<lb/>
?hl<lb/>
all in front of record crouds ever)<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
ECU received a total of<lb/>
$1,150,295 in outside fund-<lb/>
ing during October. The<lb/>
funds will support 13<lb/>
research and service projects<lb/>
at ECU.<lb/>
Most of the funds origi-<lb/>
nate from state and federal<lb/>
government agencies and<lb/>
are intended tor programs in<lb/>
the health fields.<lb/>
An award of $40,000 from<lb/>
the N.C. Dept. of Human<lb/>
Resources went to the School<lb/>
ot Allied Health and Social<lb/>
Professions lor its south-<lb/>
eastern N.C. Family Devel-<lb/>
opment Center planning<lb/>
project.<lb/>
The ECU Division 0f<lb/>
Health Affairs recent.i<lb/>
?360,277 from the Eastern<lb/>
Area Health Education<lb/>
Center tor a subcontract<lb/>
ai rangement, and a contract<lb/>
between ECU and the N.C.<lb/>
Dept. of Human Resources<lb/>
will be supported b a grant<lb/>
of 9428,492.<lb/>
The IS Public Health<lb/>
Service awarded $88,965 to<lb/>
the School of Medicine and<lb/>
$71,984 to the School of<lb/>
Nursing for capitation grant<lb/>
programs.<lb/>
The School of Nursing<lb/>
also received other grants for<lb/>
its training programs, from<lb/>
UNCChapel Hill, the Craven<lb/>
County Health Department<lb/>
and the Public Health<lb/>
Sen ice.<lb/>
Other projects receiving<lb/>
funding are to he directed bj<lb/>
faculty members in the ECU<lb/>
Department of Sociology and<lb/>
Anthropology, the Depart-<lb/>
ment (if Science Education,<lb/>
the School of Business, the<lb/>
Division of Continuing Edu-<lb/>
i ation and the Institute for<lb/>
Coastal and Marine Resour-<lb/>
ces.<lb/>
Globetrotters at<lb/>
Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Globetrot-<lb/>
g to<lb/>
? game onh<lb/>
M<lb/>
irt. s<lb/>
re than<lb/>
? rts and<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
the<lb/>
. m<lb/>
a ?<lb/>
nerlin<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
-n.<lb/>
? ; :? see<lb/>
m. With<lb/>
the<lb/>
??? the<lb/>
the<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
But<lb/>
lo It,<lb/>
- As the<lb/>
try unfolds,<lb/>
? ubt, the<lb/>
- will st-t<lb/>
? n in<lb/>
rts<lb/>
le who<lb/>
? irtg, 'larlem<lb/>
i Geese<lb/>
? I have<lb/>
can come<lb/>
?! take it<lb/>
in awhile<lb/>
- Court<lb/>
.  "1 can't<lb/>
HAMLET<lb/>
before<lb/>
. tes always the right<lb/>
Anen you need<lb/>
?andmg literature<lb/>
educators Easy to<lb/>
uSe T ? as a.a.iarjie now cover<lb/>
ove- 200 'reouentiy assigned<lb/>
plays and novels<lb/>
Available<lb/>
At: <lb/>
USE<lb/>
09U Book E.chan<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
' Acrow Cotanche<lb/>
from GirU Dorms<lb/>
allow myself that luxury<lb/>
Ausbie notes that there is<lb/>
a tremendous difference<lb/>
between seeing a Globe-<lb/>
trotter game and seeing an<lb/>
 H game.<lb/>
'It you go to a pro<lb/>
sketball game, you want to<lb/>
the best. If the gam. is<lb/>
lousy with a lot of turnovers.<lb/>
st likely you'll forgel it<lb/>
I wait tor the next name.<lb/>
it can't be like that for<lb/>
Globetrotters says<lb/>
Geese. "People come to see<lb/>
from miles around. It may<lb/>
their only chance that<lb/>
" to see us. We jusl can't<lb/>
them down with a had<lb/>
performance<lb/>
Ausbie is proud of the<lb/>
fact that he is jusl as popular<lb/>
Sydney, Australia or<lb/>
Paris, France as m Seattle.<lb/>
Washington or Portland.<lb/>
gon.<lb/>
Even though we 'lav<lb/>
every night, and for us it's<lb/>
just another game in another<lb/>
 ity, 1 keep reminding myself<lb/>
that for the fans, it's<lb/>
nething special ty see<lb/>
i millions of fans<lb/>
around the world know just<lb/>
special Geese Ausbie<lb/>
reallv is<lb/>
it sic<lb/>
a pen<lb/>
irk( ???? ?? . <lb/>
ml <lb/>
Not if I mart ???<lb/>
' i ?'<lb/>
" - ?;?. . <lb/>
i  two. tc hav<lb/>
it youi . - k ston<lb/>
M<lb/>
fineHne marker pens<lb/>
 -?? ?;  46 fob<lb/>
Two complete<lb/>
Queen T-Bone<lb/>
Dinners for $4.99<lb/>
Dinner includes choice<lb/>
of potato, Texas Toast<lb/>
and salad from our<lb/>
FREE all-you-can-eat<lb/>
Salad Bar<lb/>
s<lb/>
520 North Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
( 264- by- passGreenville<lb/>
New Hours<lb/>
Sun Thurs. 11 a.m 9p.m.<lb/>
Frl.P Sat. 11a.m. 10p.m.<lb/>
i<lb/>
uoooooooooooooooooooooor Xi<lb/>
J Stereo Village is continuing to give you the best possible 0?s<lb/>
components-for the best possible price w<lb/>
?JVC ORS 61 W Receiver with 18<lb/>
watts per channel<lb/>
?Jensen LS 2 two speaker system<lb/>
?Garrard 730 M fully automatic turn-<lb/>
table with magnetic cartridge.<lb/>
<lb/>
ten<lb/>
Garrard<lb/>
?Pioneer SX 780 Receiver with 45<lb/>
watts per channel<lb/>
?Pioneer HPM 60 3 way speaker<lb/>
system<lb/>
?Technics SL 220 Semi-automatic<lb/>
belt drive turntable with strobe and<lb/>
variable speed.<lb/>
?Empire 66 E 3 cartridge<lb/>
oomorvjeen<lb/>
QRiorsjeere<lb/>
? v"f<lb/>
Technics<lb/>
by Panasonic<lb/>
JENSEN<lb/>
Technics<lb/>
byl<lb/>
?Technics SA 600 Receiver with 70<lb/>
watts per channel<lb/>
?Jensen LS-6 3 way 4 speaker system<lb/>
?Technics SL 230 fully-automatic<lb/>
turntable with strobe and variable<lb/>
speed.<lb/>
Technics<lb/>
t?y Panasonic<lb/>
Pioneer Project 60 Speakers<lb/>
?2 way system<lb/>
?8 inch woofer<lb/>
?2 inch tweeter<lb/>
MPI<lb/>
Reg.<lb/>
$88.00<lb/>
each<lb/>
TDK SA 90<lb/>
?90 minutes<lb/>
Reg. $4.79<lb/>
JVC<lb/>
Technics Technic SA 80<lb/>
p.?- Receiver<lb/>
?18 watts per channel<lb/>
?Can handle 2 sets of speakers<lb/>
?Tape monitor<lb/>
Reg. ?<lb/>
$179.95 ?<lb/>
TDK<lb/>
AD-C 90<lb/>
?90 minutes<lb/>
Reg. $3.99<lb/>
JVC<lb/>
JVC TRS 301 Recer<lb/>
?60 watts per channel<lb/>
?Built in equilizer<lb/>
?Two tuning meters<lb/>
$487<lb/>
JVC-LK12<lb/>
Stereo Rack with adjustable shelves<lb/>
Reg. $99.95<lb/>
j<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057162_0004"/><lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 16 November 1978<lb/>
Insolence mars trial<lb/>
This week's Honor Council trial of Alonzo<lb/>
Newby should never have taken place,<lb/>
becauese Libby Lefler, Student Government<lb/>
Association (SGA) speaker, should not have<lb/>
allowed the speaker's podium to be used for<lb/>
personal attacks.<lb/>
It is standard practice for a Speaker to ask<lb/>
anyone wishing to speak during Questions and<lb/>
Privileges the nature of their speech, and<lb/>
informed sources say that Lefler requires the<lb/>
text of a speech before she allows anyone to<lb/>
use the podium. If this is true, then she has<lb/>
behaved even more disgracefully. Allowing<lb/>
Newby to speak, when she had full knowledge<lb/>
of what he would say, is a travesty of<lb/>
parliamentary procedure and should not be<lb/>
tolerated by the legislature.<lb/>
Newby's speech was a farcical example of<lb/>
political grandstanding. He had nothing to<lb/>
say. but felt the need to say it before a public<lb/>
body where he was sure to get the attention he<lb/>
craved. On an ominous note, few people<lb/>
realize that Newby is a member of the Review<lb/>
Board, the body charged with hearing appeals<lb/>
from the Honor Council. This board is<lb/>
supposedly non-partisan, but if Newby is an<lb/>
example of the make-up of the board, then<lb/>
there can be no question as to the board's<lb/>
political preferences.<lb/>
Newby at least had the decency to<lb/>
apologize for his tirade, even though the<lb/>
damage to Payne's and Shanahan's reputa-<lb/>
tions has been done. Newby's vague and<lb/>
unfounded charges, and their subsuquent<lb/>
(justified) prosecution, did little more than<lb/>
create a brief stir and waste the time of all<lb/>
parties concerned.<lb/>
Newby should step down from his position<lb/>
on the Review Board, since his impartiality is,<lb/>
to put it mildly, questionable. Lefler should be<lb/>
chastised for allowing a mockery to be made of<lb/>
the speaker's podium and should screen future<lb/>
speakers more carefully, limiting the use of the<lb/>
podium to those who have valid statements on<lb/>
current issues, and denying it to petty politicos<lb/>
whose only purpose is to draw attention to<lb/>
themselves.<lb/>
f hociouI L?r'i see oe<lb/>
"rVt,rrVt6 Pbttoipinfi pf?r-<lb/>
f We fiMf TUte ?fcrvs<lb/>
JWP f TBRTYl -PKP6R<lb/>
PUS.<lb/>
TSJL '<lb/>
rYorf4<lb/>
SHdW?V&amp;i V<lb/>
vk fra j<lb/>
?nu.<lb/>
rAi<lb/>
31<lb/>
<lb/>
American Journal<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Compromise urged in media issue<lb/>
To KOI NTAINHEAD:<lb/>
r rom ihe time 1 transferr-<lb/>
EC1 tin- -ummer, the<lb/>
Media Board<lb/>
a? l?tfi?-?i i?. T first I<lb/>
.signed it as a board of<lb/>
inaging editors attempting<lb/>
? ? quality of the<lb/>
n campus<lb/>
Much to my dismay, I<lb/>
discovered that its function is<lb/>
to allocate funds to the<lb/>
anous media from about 50<lb/>
percent of student funds.<lb/>
Even more distressing was<lb/>
the fact that the chairman of<lb/>
the board was also the<lb/>
Studenl Government Associ-<lb/>
ation (SGA) president.<lb/>
According to FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD. the Media<lb/>
Board wa created to end the<lb/>
media's tear of a "vengeful<lb/>
legislature and enable the<lb/>
SGA to enjoy a free press.<lb/>
I detect a note ot reverse<lb/>
revenge when 1 venture to<lb/>
think of the controversy over<lb/>
the fate of the $42,000 BUC<lb/>
appropriation.<lb/>
Board ha- sel<lb/>
attitude<lb/>
The Media<lb/>
fishly adopted<lb/>
an attitude of "We've got<lb/>
the money, and you can't<lb/>
have it<lb/>
And all of the media<lb/>
heads are jumping on the<lb/>
bandwagon. It seems ironic<lb/>
that complaining at one time<lb/>
of having to grovel at the feet<lb/>
of the "vengeful legislature"<lb/>
the media heads are now<lb/>
groveling at the feet of the<lb/>
Media Board. But now their<lb/>
possible benefactor is on<lb/>
their side, even though the<lb/>
board is unwisely hoardin<lb/>
hoarding student funds.<lb/>
(And then I flash on<lb/>
Tommy Joe Payne's threat to<lb/>
Alonzo Newby for attacking<lb/>
Payne's integrity: "I'm<lb/>
going to get you)<lb/>
Revenge is not the issue<lb/>
here, and it is upsetting to<lb/>
see grown people being so<lb/>
uncompromising and selfish,<lb/>
and equally ignorant of the<lb/>
student body's wishes. Is<lb/>
there no room tor compro-<lb/>
mise in the power-plays of<lb/>
these student organizations?<lb/>
Students enjoy the pro-<lb/>
ductions of the ECU Play-<lb/>
house, and it is certain that<lb/>
the various media could use<lb/>
some improvements. So why<lb/>
not reach some sort of<lb/>
compromise?<lb/>
After all, if the BUC had<lb/>
materialized, the other med-<lb/>
ia would have gotten along<lb/>
without the $42,000 some- <lb/>
how. There is no reason why<lb/>
they need all of that money,<lb/>
or that they should give it<lb/>
back to the SGA.<lb/>
Surely the M?di : Board<lb/>
could give a judicious sum<lb/>
back to the SGA (for speci-<lb/>
fied use, of course) without<lb/>
establishing a precedent of<lb/>
bailing out other organiza-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
But if the board keeps all<lb/>
of the money, as it now<lb/>
seems to be doing, it is<lb/>
setting a precedent of self-<lb/>
ishness and disregard for<lb/>
total student welfare.<lb/>
Richard Green<lb/>
BUC demise is no surprise<lb/>
Fa<lb/>
n<lb/>
ma<lb/>
il<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I wish to express appre-<lb/>
ciation and commend you on<lb/>
the article concerning Char-<lb/>
lotte Marshburn, an ECU<lb/>
graduate in Peace Corps.<lb/>
It is only through the<lb/>
media such as FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD that Peact Corps is<lb/>
alive and well and that the<lb/>
dedication, service, and sac-<lb/>
rifices of one idividual may<lb/>
be broadcast.<lb/>
Again on behalf of Peace<lb/>
Corps and this office, thanks.<lb/>
David B. Jenkins<lb/>
Coordinator<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I am writing in reference<lb/>
to your front page article and<lb/>
editorial concerning the<lb/>
$42,000 left over from last<lb/>
year's BUCCANEER.<lb/>
The demise of the BUC<lb/>
surprised me in no way. I've<lb/>
yet to see one in the two<lb/>
years since I've transferred<lb/>
here. The way the money will<lb/>
be used does shock me.<lb/>
I'm sure it will do every<lb/>
student's heart good to find<lb/>
that campus media organi-<lb/>
zations will have renovations<lb/>
done on their offices and will<lb/>
get new lighting. I shake to<lb/>
think ol what would happen<lb/>
if the typesetter broke down.<lb/>
No FOUNTAINHEAD?<lb/>
Horrors!<lb/>
 hile you are having<lb/>
you offices made more<lb/>
conto die, your new<lb/>
phoni installed, your new<lb/>
carpel- put down, think for a<lb/>
moment of the ECU Play-<lb/>
house. There will probably<lb/>
be no more productions for<lb/>
lack of funds.<lb/>
If there are no more, the<lb/>
drama majors will be<lb/>
affected. Some of their<lb/>
classes (set design, lighting,<lb/>
etc.) depend on the produc-<lb/>
Where is the BUC?<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Thev get "on-thejob"<lb/>
training. Let's not worry<lb/>
about that, it's only a class.<lb/>
We wouldn't want anyone to<lb/>
be uncomfortable just to<lb/>
make sure someone gets an<lb/>
education.<lb/>
Of course, what the<lb/>
general population of stud-<lb/>
enis thinks doesn't matter.<lb/>
After all, it's only our fees<lb/>
that support he media (and<lb/>
that.are the leftover BUC<lb/>
funds).<lb/>
It doesn't matter that the<lb/>
students voted overwhelm-<lb/>
ingly against the Media<lb/>
Board in the first place.<lb/>
What matters is comfort.<lb/>
Enjoy your new environ-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Ann Dorffeld<lb/>
Midwifery re-emerges<lb/>
in America only<lb/>
years ago. Today,<lb/>
By DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
Women in recent years have fought for the right to decide if<lb/>
and when they will bear children. To those struggles may soon<lb/>
be added another over where and how children are born.<lb/>
Almost unnoticed among the causes and counter-causes of<lb/>
the late 70's has emerged a new and potentially significant<lb/>
trend towards home birth. With that trend ha? come the<lb/>
rebirth of midwifery.<lb/>
Women immersed in the traditional body of knowledge<lb/>
? ? L1 prcgnaawy?and childbirth, midwives were driven<lb/>
to the edge of ex- w.<lb/>
tinction<lb/>
several<lb/>
they are growing in number,<lb/>
education and influence ?<lb/>
even as they remain illegal or<lb/>
severely restricted in most<lb/>
states.<lb/>
At the turn of the cen-<lb/>
tury, more than half of the<lb/>
babies born in the United<lb/>
States were delivered by<lb/>
midwives. Eighty percent of<lb/>
the world's children still are.<lb/>
By the 1930's, however, a<lb/>
massive public relations<lb/>
campaign by mostly male<lb/>
doctors aimed at persuading<lb/>
women to have their babies<lb/>
in hospitals portrayed mid-<lb/>
wives as unclean, ignorant<lb/>
crones only a step removed<lb/>
from witches.<lb/>
Over time, the campaign<lb/>
was devastatingly success-<lb/>
ful. By 1970, there were only<lb/>
23,000 home births ? many<lb/>
of them attended by phy-<lb/>
sicians ? recorded in the<lb/>
U.S five percent as many as<lb/>
in 1950. Pockets of midwifery<lb/>
survived here and<lb/>
theremostly in rural areas poorly served by doctors and in the<lb/>
south and southwest where tradtional cultures placed high<lb/>
value on midwifery; but most of the remaining midwives were<lb/>
aging and unwanted. The future looked bleak for this ancient<lb/>
helping profession.<lb/>
Midwifery was revived in the early 1970s with the surge of<lb/>
interest in feminism and natural lifestyles. Today its popularity<lb/>
appears to be spreading to non-radical women, as well.<lb/>
According to Suzanne Anns, the author of Immaculate<lb/>
Deception, a slashing critique of hospital birth practices, there<lb/>
were 30,000 home births attended by midwives last year, "and<lb/>
the number is doubling every year. In the next five to 10<lb/>
yearsArms said in a telephone interview, "as many as 10<lb/>
percent of the babies in America may be born at home<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Our initial reaction ,to the<lb/>
latest half page ad con-<lb/>
cerning portraits for the<lb/>
BUCCANEER was one of<lb/>
both humor and disgust<lb/>
Forum policy<lb/>
Forum letters must contain the name, address, phone<lb/>
number, and signature of the author(s) and should be typed or<lb/>
neatly printed.<lb/>
Letters are subject to editing for brevity, obscenity, and<lb/>
libel.<lb/>
No more than three letters on any subject will be printed in<lb/>
one issue.<lb/>
Letters should be limited to three typewritten,<lb/>
double-spaced pages.<lb/>
Letters must be received by noon on Mondays and<lb/>
Wednesdays either at the FOUNTAINHEAD office, second<lb/>
floor, Publications Center, or at the information desk in<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
Author' names will be withheld only when inclusion of the<lb/>
name will embarrass or subject to ridicule the author (such as<lb/>
 letters discussing homosexuality, drug abuse, etc.).<lb/>
Looking back aper the pas<lb/>
few years (but only through<lb/>
our memories for we have no<lb/>
yearbook) we have seen the<lb/>
production of just oru? JUJC.<lb/>
Perhaps the ? yearbook<lb/>
should be .renamed "The<lb/>
Flying Dutdnman" for it,<lb/>
too, has apparently disap-<lb/>
peared into an oblivian. Or<lb/>
perhaps we are caught in<lb/>
ECU's own Bermuda Tri.<lb/>
angle; the money roes in but<lb/>
nothing comes out.<lb/>
Our rn&amp;uhf question is<lb/>
"Why have IheW been no<lb/>
yearbooks?" We would hate<lb/>
to suggest that this is due to<lb/>
the incompetency of the<lb/>
?BUCCANEER staff; how-<lb/>
ever, viewing "their past<lb/>
record, it appears that they<lb/>
really "don't give a buc<lb/>
Richard Walters<lb/>
Kent Love<lb/>
Eddie Astin<lb/>
Mark Wheeler<lb/>
Fbuntainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community lor over 50 years<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Doug White<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER ADVERTISING MANAGER<lb/>
Leigh Coakley KpWSEDITOrS ??berl M. Swaim<lb/>
Ailie Everette<lb/>
Ridci Gliarmis ???<lb/>
 SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
Sam Rogers<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD ie the student newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina University sponsored by the Media Soard of ECU<lb/>
and Is distributed each Tuesday and Thursday (weekly<lb/>
during the summer).<lb/>
ggjj1 ??? OW Sopth Sulldlng, Greenville. N.C.<lb/>
Editorial offices: 757-6SM, 767-637, 7S7-M0S.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10 annually, alumni 8 actually.<lb/>
TRENDS EDITOR<lb/>
Steve Bachner<lb/>
By Arms' count, there are approximately 2,000 licensed<lb/>
nurse-midwives, who work mainly in hospitals under the<lb/>
supervision of physicians, and several thousand more lay<lb/>
(unlicensed) midwives, who work mostly in their clients'<lb/>
homes. They are concentrated on the west coast, in the south<lb/>
and northwest and in New England, though isolated midwives<lb/>
also practice elsewhere.<lb/>
Home births often imply the presence of lay midwives.<lb/>
Many doctors will not perform home deliveries since they are<lb/>
usually not insured. Many women, seeking alternatives to the<lb/>
soaring cosmfMavy niediealMn anaUmperaonality of<lb/>
hospital delivery rooms, feel<lb/>
more comfortable giving<lb/>
birth in familiar surround-<lb/>
ings in the company of<lb/>
women trained for the task.<lb/>
Unlike obstetrician-gyn-<lb/>
ecologists, who routinely o-<lb/>
versee a number of hospital<lb/>
births simultaneously, mid-<lb/>
wives work with one woman<lb/>
at a time, and they generally<lb/>
stay with her longer ? be-<lb/>
fore, during and after labor.<lb/>
And unlike hospital births,<lb/>
which can cost up to $3,000,<lb/>
home deliveries with mid-<lb/>
wives in attendance are re-<lb/>
latively cheap, seldom going<lb/>
over $300-400.<lb/>
The response of the med-<lb/>
ical profession to the rebirth<lb/>
of midwifery has been gen-<lb/>
erally hostile. Even certified<lb/>
nurse-midwives often en-<lb/>
counter opposition from doi<lb/>
tors, who view midwives as a<lb/>
challenge to their authority<lb/>
and a threat to their profits<lb/>
American obstetricians make<lb/>
anywhere from $50,000 to<lb/>
$200,000 a vear<lb/>
The law has also come down hard on lay midwiferv In San<lb/>
Luis Obispo, California recently, Marianne Doshi ? ,v<lb/>
m.dw.fe, was charged with second degree murder when a babv<lb/>
she delivered m ,ts parents' home died of complication, five<lb/>
days after being rushed to a hospital.<lb/>
r.f.Ugh thC !?fmS' ParCn,S Pr,i8ed Doshl's forts and<lb/>
refused to press charges, authorities prosecuted the midw.fe<lb/>
ZhUn?C?8eihr??ed national attention On<lb/>
Oct 20, a judge dismissed the charges, handing the alternative<lb/>
woln"rirtV0Crm "V victory .A J??T<lb/>
SokeeLi WhCr nrd h?W 8he Wi b,rth.<lb/>
r? 3hc nation from home birth becoming,<lb/>
??? 5ZE' hV.el0PeneA"h?' ?"ey call "Biath.ng rooms<lb/>
b?mThl08P r??mS ?redew??l " ook like home<lb/>
standard Z Tl HT9 more P?' - ??<lb/>
o?e?he? l?dVr9- Ther ' bby ?" ?"???? ?? -<lb/>
ogether and hosp.tal stays are shorter. The tab ia lower<lb/>
too-though no, a. low  with home births. The quality of ??<lb/>
is what Arms describes as onlv ? .? quality ot care<lb/>
that riven .? hrJ.il I . ?PProm?e facsimile" of<lb/>
.? ! home by empathetic midwives.<lb/>
midwife???.8remmoWre "El  her"lf J<lb/>
texts, tTST S<lb/>
doctors when do?ors will lk ta?ur ??i?e, quu<lb/>
b.ck-uP at the first ??.1!f 2f.  " "?<lb/>
bras Jttrs r rnt of ?"<lb/>
h.ve o?,midwi?rrrort?,?" ?? ,h? ?"?? ?" ??<lb/>
bint wi,ho?, Z?U .tT" f??P T "?" hor<lb/>
?uae people were having home<lb/>
and go<lb/>
'fthe door, of 8h0tt,d<lb/>
?rytilklgtneykllow, lu ?" .nd teach the midwives<lb/>
-W !LI?3JP h??,fto deiop their skill.<lb/>
observations and com. TT  " ? "ade m7<lb/>
P that are noT ,l?der????uifa about the awtb<lb/>
Pctice, auapj. bJlJT " ???? "?<lb/>
because they woT ???. Uken ??? ????? ?<lb/>
 ?!??'<lb/>
mmmmmt" - ?? s<lb/>
<pb facs="00057162_0005"/><lb/>
Greek Forum<lb/>
16 November 1978 FQUNTAINHi<lb/>
ByRlCKlGUARMlS<lb/>
Mews Editor<lb/>
hecomingstalugrd aynng<lb/>
. M?y of the houses were<lb/>
ed the parade ?<lb/>
?Cs F USeVecral Greek<lb/>
"???. Ficklen Stadium was<lb/>
 -J Greek banner"<lb/>
lhe h?niecoming cour<lb/>
r "Presented the fraternities<lb/>
sororities well.<lb/>
U the largest minority<lb/>
7 campus, the Greeks<lb/>
"?ECU ,his past week-<lb/>
1 Wh?l involvement was<lb/>
?bom Congratualt.ons to<lb/>
'raterrut.es and sororities<lb/>
ln??r excellent partici-<lb/>
on.<lb/>
Announcements:<lb/>
The Aplha Xi Deltas held<lb/>
their annual Thankagivin<lb/>
houn8r tm sday nht ? ?2<lb/>
memL lumni ?<lb/>
"ember, were present for<lb/>
this festive occasion<lb/>
The Aplh. Xi pledges has<lb/>
a successful happy hour<lb/>
Monday n.ght at the Chapter<lb/>
the cTS thC happy hour-<lb/>
witt.a Dolly Parton contest.<lb/>
The Alpha Xi pledges are<lb/>
busy this week preparing for<lb/>
the.r philanthropic project.<lb/>
The P,ed8 will go ,o the<lb/>
I0?' I and Uke -nady<lb/>
and cookies.<lb/>
The Chi Omegas would<lb/>
Ike t0 ngratulate Suzanne<lb/>
?m? for being named<lb/>
Homecoming Pirate.<lb/>
The Kappa Deltas were<lb/>
represented in the home-<lb/>
commg parade whh a float<lb/>
After the game Saturday<lb/>
n?ght, the sisters had a party<lb/>
for their alumni who at-<lb/>
tended homecoming.<lb/>
During the homecoming<lb/>
festivities, the Kappa Deltas<lb/>
entertained their big bro-<lb/>
thers at a cookout Friday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
Wednesday night, the<lb/>
Kappa Deltas presented the<lb/>
Sigma Tau Gammas with a<lb/>
door plaque. The Kappa<lb/>
Deltas sang to the Sig Taus<lb/>
while presenting the plaque<lb/>
congratualting the fraternity<lb/>
on their new house.<lb/>
The Alpha Phi's won the<lb/>
award for the best banner<lb/>
during the game Saturday<lb/>
night. The banner was dis-<lb/>
played at Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
AUTO SERVICE SPECIALS<lb/>
dQJN<lb/>
(I<lb/>
?W<lb/>
Starting Nov. 13<lb/>
monM Tuei &amp; W?d.<lb/>
8-11 4oe<lb/>
Starting Nov. 30&amp;31<lb/>
Thnrs.&amp; FrI.<lb/>
3f ? 4-7 3f ?<lb/>
All canned BEvERag<lb/>
Come see as, Relax and<lb/>
enjoy the bast music<lb/>
in Town.<lb/>
THERVCTS:<lb/>
1 HUNDREDS OF<lb/>
THOUSANDS OF WOMEN<lb/>
USE ENCARE OVAL.<lb/>
Encare Oval' was introduced to Ameri-<lb/>
can doctors in November 1977. Almost<lb/>
immediately, it attracted widespread phy-<lb/>
sician and patient attention<lb/>
Today Encare Ova! is being used by<lb/>
hundreds of thousands of women, and<lb/>
users surveyed report overwhelming sat-<lb/>
isfaction Women using Encare Oval say<lb/>
they find it an answer to their problems<lb/>
with the pill, lUD's, diaphragms, and aero-<lb/>
.sol foams<lb/>
EFFECTIVENESS<lb/>
ESTABLISHED IN<lb/>
CUNICAL TESTS.<lb/>
Encare Oval" was subjected to one of the<lb/>
most rigorous tests ever conducted for a<lb/>
vaginal contraceptive Results were<lb/>
excellent?showing that Encare Oval<lb/>
provides consistent and extremely high<lb/>
sperm-killing protection This recent U.S.<lb/>
report supports earlier studies in Euro-<lb/>
pean laboratories and clinics.<lb/>
Each Encare Oval insert contains a pre-<lb/>
cise premeasured dose of the potent,<lb/>
sperm-killing agent nonoxynol 9 Once<lb/>
properly inserted, Encare Oval melts and<lb/>
gently effervesces dispersing the sperm-<lb/>
kiHing agent within the vagina<lb/>
The success of any contraceptive<lb/>
method depends on consistent and<lb/>
accurate use Encare Oval is so conve-<lb/>
nient you wont be tempted to forget it.<lb/>
And so simple to insert, it's hard to make<lb/>
a mistake<lb/>
If pregnancy poses a special risk for you,<lb/>
your contraceptive method should be se-<lb/>
lected after consultation with your doctor.<lb/>
The Alpha Phi's would<lb/>
like to congratulate their Big<lb/>
Brothers on their football<lb/>
victory over the Alpha Delta<lb/>
Pi big Brothers by a score of<lb/>
30-14. The Big Brothers won<lb/>
a keg and are planning a<lb/>
party with the sisters.<lb/>
The Alpha Phi's are<lb/>
planning a cocktail party for<lb/>
Christmas.<lb/>
The Sigma Sigma Sigmas<lb/>
would like to congratulate<lb/>
Sarah Floyd for being on the<lb/>
homecoming court.<lb/>
The Sigmas are planning<lb/>
their pledge formal for<lb/>
December 2 at the Brent-<lb/>
wood Country Club in Wash-<lb/>
ington, N.C.<lb/>
. fhfJSLgma Pie Throw will<lb/>
be held Tuesday, Nov. 21<lb/>
from 4 p.m. until 7 p.m. at'<lb/>
he Chapter X. Advance<lb/>
"ets are 25 cents and<lb/>
tickets at the door will be 50<lb/>
cents. Buying a ticket will be<lb/>
a chance to win the raffle<lb/>
"h.ch will also be hdd<lb/>
during the Pie Throw.<lb/>
The Phi Kappa Taus were<lb/>
very busy during homecom-<lb/>
ing weekend.<lb/>
Sunday morning, ,he<lb/>
Pledges cooked breakfast for<lb/>
the brothers and alumni.<lb/>
After breakfast the alumni<lb/>
nad a meeting.<lb/>
AS FOOTBALL SEASON comes to a close, some lovers<lb/>
of the sport never glle it up. Phote hy Stev(, Romero<lb/>
and<lb/>
52 ? -COUPON : tc??"???<lb/>
HEAVY OUJY<lb/>
SHOCKS <lb/>
Hy 01?? Amc.n .pSS ?<lb/>
Icoupon-<lb/>
TUNJE-<lb/>
995<lb/>
. . rlntt I<lb/>
<lb/>
All size<lb/>
tires<lb/>
available.<lb/>
OFFICIAL NORTH CAROLINA STATE INSPECTION STATION<lb/>
WE SERVICE NATIONAL ACCOUNTS<lb/>
?TOoodrieh CoqqinsC<lb/>
TIRE CENTER<lb/>
KM MMfll.<lb/>
UL?M M<lb/>
756-5244<lb/>
321 Wist firmrfllf Mfi.<lb/>
SMtNT<lb/>
mi kM.m i?j<lb/>
Thursday Family Night<lb/>
ALL YOU<lb/>
CAN EAT<lb/>
TROUT$,<lb/>
SHRIMP$<lb/>
OYSTERSs<lb/>
FLOUNDER$ j <lb/>
Dinner m1 lnci?das o.ld.n Crl.?<lb/>
m.h Fir c.l. Sl.w, T?.r s.uc. .??<lb/>
th? world best huahpnppl<lb/>
FRIDAYS<lb/>
1800 Sunthru Thup- 430-9:00<lb/>
??df00d Frl'&amp; Sat 4:30IO:o?<lb/>
P' Friday'sSealood<lb/>
' 2311S. Evans St.<lb/>
?<lb/>
&amp;?<lb/>
of cases however, burning or irritation<lb/>
has been experienced by either or both<lb/>
partners. If this occurs, use should be<lb/>
discontinued.<lb/>
'EASIER TO INSERT<lb/>
THAN A TAMPON.<lb/>
The Encare Oval" is smooth and small, so<lb/>
rt inserts quickly and easily?without an<lb/>
applicator Theres none ofthe bother of<lb/>
aerosol foams and diaphragms. No<lb/>
device inside you No pill to remember<lb/>
every day Simply use as directed when<lb/>
you need protection<lb/>
You can buy Encare Oval whenever you<lb/>
need it it's available without a prescrip-<lb/>
tion And each Encare Oval is individ-<lb/>
ually wrapped to fit discreetly into your<lb/>
pocket or purse<lb/>
BECAUSE ENCARE OVAL<lb/>
IS INSERTED IN ADVANCE,<lb/>
IT WONT INTERRUPT<lb/>
LOVEMAKING.<lb/>
Since there's no mess or bother, Encare<lb/>
Oval gives you a measure of freedom<lb/>
many contraceptives can't match.<lb/>
The hormone-free Encare Oval. Safer for<lb/>
your system than the pill or IUD Neater<lb/>
and simpler than traditional vaginal con-<lb/>
traceptives So effective and easy to use<lb/>
that hundreds of thousands have already<lb/>
found it?quite simply?the preferred<lb/>
contraceptive.<lb/>
c 1978 Eaton-Merz Laboratories, Inc.<lb/>
Norwich, New York 13815 ea 1617<lb/>
NANTUCKET<lb/>
Debut Album<lb/>
NANTUCKET<lb/>
including:<lb/>
Heartbreakerlt's Getting HarderSpring Fever<lb/>
What's The Matter With Loving You<lb/>
Girl,You Blew A Good Thing<lb/>
code G<lb/>
List $7.98<lb/>
?X<lb/>
V?tr?w.J conlrAt.fipU<lb/>
Encare Oval<lb/>
NO HORMONAL<lb/>
SIDE EFFECTS.<lb/>
Encare Oval is free of hormones, so it<lb/>
cannot create hormone-related health<lb/>
problems?like strokes and heart<lb/>
attacks?that have been linked to the pill.<lb/>
And. there is no hormonal disruption of<lb/>
your menstrual cycle<lb/>
Most people find Encare<lb/>
Oval completely satisfac-<lb/>
tory In a limited number<lb/>
Oval<lb/>
Vaginal contraceptive<lb/>
tor prevention of pregnancy<lb/>
n??w?<lb/>
emn<lb/>
12 INSERTS<lb/>
JE 35253 Nantucket's remarkable<lb/>
debut album is distinguished by<lb/>
consistently excellent songwriting<lb/>
powerful singing, expert musician-<lb/>
ship and a driving, rock &amp; roll spirit.<lb/>
COLUMBIA RECORDS<lb/>
Sale Runs<lb/>
Nov. 16-22nd<lb/>
The most talked<lb/>
about contraceptive<lb/>
since the pill.<lb/>
NICHOLS<lb/>
Hwy. 264 By-Pass<lb/>
(illiUUXTEKII<lb/>
UHYKST I'HICK<lb/>
!<lb/>
Mi M<lb/>
n<lb/>
<pb facs="00057162_0006"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
Sexauer show opens<lb/>
(CHARLOTTE, N.C<lb/>
Printmaker Donald Sexauer<lb/>
will unveil hi?, latent portfolio<lb/>
during a one-artist exhibition<lb/>
here Nov. I 3 through Dec. 1.<lb/>
The new portfolio of<lb/>
intaglio prints is entitled<lb/>
Charlotte: A Celebration It<lb/>
was commissioned jointly by<lb/>
North Carolina National<lb/>
Bank and McDonald Art<lb/>
Gallery of Charlotte.<lb/>
The portfolio will consist<lb/>
of six drawings of old<lb/>
Charlotte neighborhoods<lb/>
that are important in the<lb/>
current movement toward<lb/>
restoration and preservation<lb/>
in the city.<lb/>
The neighborhoods<lb/>
featured by Sexauer in the<lb/>
IF <lb/>
ECl PR1NTMAKER DONALD Sexauer<lb/>
latest portfolio for a<lb/>
one artist exhibition in Charlotte that will<lb/>
run through Dec. 1.<lb/>
portfolio are Fourth Ward,<lb/>
downtown, Dilworth, Eliz-<lb/>
abeth and Myers Park.<lb/>
The portfolios and indiv-<lb/>
idual prints will be offered<lb/>
for sale beginning in mid<lb/>
November. Edition size for<lb/>
the portfolio will be 150.<lb/>
NCNB's Permanent Col-<lb/>
lection of Art consists of<lb/>
2,100 works, including 59 by<lb/>
Sexauer. This sampling of<lb/>
his life's work will be the<lb/>
basis of the Sexauer ex-<lb/>
hibition in the lobby of<lb/>
NCNB's headquarters build-<lb/>
ing at Trade and Tryon<lb/>
Streets in Charlotte-<lb/>
Three other Sexauer<lb/>
portfolios from the bank's<lb/>
collection will be featured in<lb/>
the exhibition, including<lb/>
'Mecklenburg: A Bicen-<lb/>
tennial Portfolio It was<lb/>
commissioned in 1975 by<lb/>
NCNB and Carter and as-<lb/>
sociates, co-developers of<lb/>
NCNB Plaza here and illus-<lb/>
trated a book by Danny<lb/>
Romine.<lb/>
Sexauer undertook ex-<lb/>
tensive research into the<lb/>
history of Charlotte's early<lb/>
residential neighborhoods in<lb/>
the preparation of his new<lb/>
portfolio, reading in depth<lb/>
from local archives and in-<lb/>
terviewing several local<lb/>
historians.<lb/>
Knox sex study shows dissention<lb/>
throughout socio-racial strata<lb/>
ByFRANCEINE PERRY<lb/>
t(. I News Bureau<lb/>
Whi,e quality between marriage partners is more<lb/>
- ted b) today's high school students than<lb/>
a decade or two ago, students who are white,<lb/>
r f middle class are "more equalitarian" in their<lb/>
naritai role expectations than those-ho are black, male and of<lb/>
rking lass background, sa two East Carolina Unviersity<lb/>
gists.<lb/>
The conclusions are based on research by former<lb/>
raduate student Kathy Moore and Dr. David Knox of the ECU<lb/>
ilty.<lb/>
Moore-Knox study involved 252 high school students<lb/>
th urban and rural North Carolina schools<lb/>
the subjects reponded to various situations, either<lb/>
ng or disagreeing, and their responses indicated an<lb/>
lalitarian" (both spouses as equals) or "traditional"<lb/>
(husband a breadwinner wife as homemaker) outlook.<lb/>
Replies were examined according to the sex, race and<lb/>
ioeconomic status of the respondents, in seven areas auth-<lb/>
-nt. homemaking, child rare, personal characteristics, social<lb/>
participation, education and emplovment.<lb/>
In general, both sexes tended toward equalitarian views of<lb/>
marriage roles, although female students showed more liberal<lb/>
expectations than males.<lb/>
"Forty-seven percent of the boys agreed that the husband<lb/>
should be 'boss' in a marriage, but only 23 percent of the girls<lb/>
agreed noted Ms. Moore.<lb/>
Both -exes indicated that homemaking should be shared,<lb/>
but a gender bias was observed: 90 percent of the girls agreed,<lb/>
ipposed to 70 percent of the boys.<lb/>
Students of both sexes said responsibility for child care<lb/>
should be divided, but about 70 percent of the boys noted that<lb/>
the husband's major responsibility to his children is "to make<lb/>
a good living while less than half of the girls agreed with<lb/>
this.<lb/>
The male's provider role was again emphasized in the<lb/>
are of personal characteristics said Dr. Knox.<lb/>
"Both sexes affirmed that any marriage partner should be<lb/>
congenial and interesting, but 48 percent of the boys felt that<lb/>
'if the husband is a good worker, respectable and faithful to his<lb/>
farnilv other qualities are less important, but only 34 percent<lb/>
of the girls agreed vnth this<lb/>
students valued education for each spouse as important<lb/>
for "Successful Family Living"but in the areaof employment<lb/>
boys again displayed a tendency to believe in the traditional<lb/>
male breadwinner role) percent said they would have to<lb/>
earn a good living of they expected "love and respect from the<lb/>
family. Only 36 percent of female respondentsagreed.<lb/>
When the students' replies werre analyzed by race, Knox<lb/>
and Moore discovered a trend toward more traditional<lb/>
viewpoints among the black students.<lb/>
For instance, only 5,1 percent of the white students through<lb/>
"the wife should fit her life to her husband's in contrat to 80<lb/>
percent of the blacks.<lb/>
Black sutdents also expected a traditional division of labor<lb/>
within the home, 53 percent saying that cooking and cleaning<lb/>
were "exclusively the wife's duty as opposed to 21 percent<lb/>
of whites<lb/>
The male breadwinner role was found to be more firmlv<lb/>
entrenched in the expectations of black respondents, with 85<lb/>
percent agreeing that a husband's major responsibility was to<lb/>
provide a good living.<lb/>
Fifty-eight percent of the blacks also said it is more<lb/>
important for a husband to be "ambitious" and "a good<lb/>
provider" than to be kind and understanding. Only 16 percent<lb/>
of the whites agreed.<lb/>
"Significant differences in role expectations were observed<lb/>
between the middle class and the working class said Knox.<lb/>
"Again the majority of respondents from both classes<lb/>
tended to have equalitarian views of marriage roles, but<lb/>
middle class students were more equalitarian than those of the<lb/>
working class<lb/>
Moore and Knox undertook their study to update and<lb/>
expand an earlier survey done by sociologist Marie Dunn in<lb/>
1960. "Our study suggests, as did Dunn's, that marriage<lb/>
expectations are becoming increasingly equalitarian Ms.<lb/>
i<lb/>
Moore said.<lb/>
"However, the family is one of the most conservative social<lb/>
institutions, in that there is still a fairly sharp division of labor<lb/>
by sex within the family<lb/>
Dr. Knox added that the "greatest shift" towarraTTelteftTr<lb/>
equality between the sexes is in the area of employment.<lb/>
"Increased concern about the female's being educated and<lb/>
pursuing a career is, no doubt, related to the women's<lb/>
movement, smaller families and inflation<lb/>
Results of the study are reported in an article which<lb/>
appears in a recent issue of the journal Family<lb/>
Perspective.<lb/>
Researchers Knox and Moore believe their findings have<lb/>
value to marriage counselors, parents of high school-aged<lb/>
children, and especially to school guidance counselors.<lb/>
The fact that most repondents placed importance on<lb/>
women's education and careers should be considered by<lb/>
educators and counselors who ere in a position to provide<lb/>
"encouragement and opportunity" to female students to enter<lb/>
previously all-male fields, they advised.<lb/>
Kathy Moore is at present a lecturer in social science at<lb/>
Sampson Technical Institute. David Knox, an associate<lb/>
professor at ECU, is an active researcher and author of<lb/>
numerous articles on aspects of marriage and farnilv relations<lb/>
Miket UnJ, Tommy Redd, Kenny Soule, Eddie Blair and Mark Downing of Nantucket<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina's own Nantucket will appear in concert this Sun. Not. 19 at 8 p.m. in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
'Miserable goings-on' earmark<lb/>
J ft<lb/>
i<lb/>
genuine drive-in schlock film'<lb/>
By DARREN BERGSTEIN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Practically any simple soul can tell from the television<lb/>
previews that Blackout is a genuine drive-in schlock film.<lb/>
Obviously made on a small budget and not offering the<lb/>
greatest cast in the world, Blackout appears to be the kind of<lb/>
film that would be worth a quarter, or maybe 50 cents ?<lb/>
possibly a buck-fifty ? but in no way would anybody with any<lb/>
common sense shell out an outrageous three bucks for it.<lb/>
Perhaps if one is a bit, let's say stoned, then maybe he or<lb/>
she could blow the money and just sit in and laugh. That's the<lb/>
kind of film Blackout is. It's better if you go in an unstable<lb/>
frame of mind, because that way you couldn't take the<lb/>
miserable goings-on seriously.<lb/>
I didn't expect an Academy Award winner. Actually, I<lb/>
didn't expect an even half-way decent picture. What I got was<lb/>
a film depicting the animosities that go on during a major<lb/>
power failure that was semi-realistic, using personalities that<lb/>
were not generally spoken in the same breath as Brandon<lb/>
Pacino, orRedford.<lb/>
Blackout, naturally, concerns the plight of Nev York when<lb/>
Con-Edison blows a rather big fuse. Many subplots are tied in<lb/>
with the major theme, and all are eventually tied together to<lb/>
form what the producers hoped was a coherent, intelligent<lb/>
whole.<lb/>
We follow the misgivings of four wanton criminals on their<lb/>
way to the nearby penitentiary; a pregnant woman on the brink<lb/>
of birth; a joyous Italian festivity abhm with wine and gaud)<lb/>
See BLACKOL T. p, 8<lb/>
No 'chop-socky-hocky' in Lee's Dragon<lb/>
A CHINESE MOVIE poster depicting a<lb/>
scene from Bruce Lee's "Enter the<lb/>
Dragon  "Warner Brothers has decided<lb/>
to redistribute 'Enter' at this time in<lb/>
order to test the marketability of "Game<lb/>
of Death the last Bruce Lee film and<lb/>
one that has been locked away in cold<lb/>
storage since the time of his death. "<lb/>
By DAVID MILLER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
As long as there are<lb/>
action films, Bruce Lee's<lb/>
performane in "Enter the<lb/>
Dragon" will be considered a<lb/>
classic. The film will be<lb/>
playing on a double bill with<lb/>
"Five Fingers of Death"<lb/>
through this Friday at the<lb/>
Park Theatre in downtown<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
As is apparent from the<lb/>
title, "Enter a 1973 re-<lb/>
lease, is the vehicle that was<lb/>
designed to introduce Lee to<lb/>
American audiences and<lb/>
make him an international<lb/>
star.<lb/>
The film has grossed over<lb/>
one hundred million dollars<lb/>
at the box-office, making it<lb/>
one of the top forty leading<lb/>
money-makers of all time.<lb/>
Even though it is over<lb/>
five years old, Warner<lb/>
Brothers has decided to<lb/>
redistribute "Enter" at this<lb/>
time in order to test the<lb/>
marketability of "Game of<lb/>
Death the last Bruce Lee<lb/>
film and one that has been<lb/>
locked away in cold storage<lb/>
since the time of his death.<lb/>
"Game" is to feature<lb/>
fight sequences betwee<lb/>
5f7" Lee and 72" Kareem<lb/>
Abdul Jabbar, as well as<lb/>
with Danny Inosanto. who<lb/>
was Bruce's chief pupil.<lb/>
'Game of Death" should be<lb/>
released sometime in De-<lb/>
cember.<lb/>
"Enter the Dragon" re-<lb/>
ceived surprisingly good re-<lb/>
views for a film of this genre.<lb/>
The New York Times in an<lb/>
August 18, 1973 article said<lb/>
that "Enteris expertly<lb/>
made and well-meshed ? it<lb/>
moves like lightning and<lb/>
brims with color<lb/>
Something that the 77mes<lb/>
did not realize when cred-<lb/>
iting "the pounding pulse of<lb/>
Robert Clouse's direction"<lb/>
and script- writer Michael<lb/>
Allin's "crisp dialog" how-<lb/>
ever, is that if one were to<lb/>
remove Bruce Lee and his<lb/>
influences from the film,<lb/>
"Enter the Dragon" would<lb/>
be no better than any other<lb/>
chop-socky-hocky fare.<lb/>
In addition to Lee's damn<lb/>
near unbelievable fighting<lb/>
abilities (which at times are<lb/>
so effortlessly poetic that<lb/>
they could make Nureyev<lb/>
appear to have all the grace<lb/>
of a jackhammer operator)<lb/>
and charismatic aura, he<lb/>
wrote nearly all of his own<lb/>
linea. In an early scene while<lb/>
instructing a young male<lb/>
student, Lee wants to be sure<lb/>
that the youthful martial<lb/>
practitioner understands the<lb/>
true vaiue of his teachings<lb/>
 'It is fik? ? fitjfcr<lb/>
pointing away to the moon.<lb/>
Do not concentrate on the<lb/>
finger (as he cuffs the<lb/>
wayward pupil for<lb/>
improperly focusing his at-<lb/>
tention on the protruding<lb/>
digit), or you will miss a the<lb/>
heavenly glorv He also<lb/>
directed, designed, con<lb/>
structed and choreographed<lb/>
all the action sequent es<lb/>
Even the title, "Enter the<lb/>
Dragon vas ?s<lb/>
The details of the plot are<lb/>
of no importance. Something<lb/>
is murmured about an island<lb/>
fortress, a renegade fiend<lb/>
(this lime a Shaolin priest<lb/>
turned bad), and a martial<lb/>
arts tournament he holds<lb/>
once every five years<lb/>
It is basically the sarm<lb/>
old James Bond.an splri.?<lb/>
with a few elbow-wrenching<lb/>
twists applicable to ,n<lb/>
fighting format. Yet. dew<lb/>
? so-called "slick" HolK<lb/>
wood script that ? indeed<lb/>
only slack. "Enter the Dra<lb/>
gon, since i, j. Bruce Lee's<lb/>
Best showcase to date U<lb/>
brain-suzlingexpenencn<lb/>
e nnssed<lb/>
It is impossible to M.<lb/>
trough this film for the fir<lb/>
??mew,thou, drawing ea<lb/>
 audible breaths '<lb/>
amazement.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057162_0007"/><lb/>
Crafts<lb/>
Fair<lb/>
slated<lb/>
rhe Carolina Designer<lb/>
Craftsmen, a non-profit<lb/>
ftsmen's guild will hold<lb/>
ir 9th Annual Crafts Fair<lb/>
the Scotl Building on the<lb/>
t?nh Carolina State Fair<lb/>
?nda in Raleigh 0?<lb/>
rhanksgiving Weekend,<lb/>
v- vember24 26<lb/>
Crafts Fair will be<lb/>
Friday, N. 24<lb/>
10 P  ? on Sat'<lb/>
25, from It) am. t g<lb/>
and on Sunday, Nn . 26<lb/>
n t t) p.m.<lb/>
dail) admission<lb/>
 adults, $1 for<lb/>
'i handicapped<lb/>
 and children<lb/>
?' admitted<lb/>
: ' ompanied b)<lb/>
group rates are<lb/>
' e,I in this juried<lb/>
? r including<lb/>
dolls, en-<lb/>
' ibric<lb/>
-<lb/>
"?ign.<lb/>
jewelrj.<lb/>
ither, metal,<lb/>
? 'rcelain,<lb/>
tied glass,<lb/>
'dworki<lb/>
es include<lb/>
music and<lb/>
? ? -?" gift<lb/>
?url through-<lb/>
Designer<lb/>
- one i ihe<lb/>
crafts-<lb/>
in 1970 b) a<lb/>
in the Tri-<lb/>
 ? Carolina<lb/>
it<lb/>
all<lb/>
I irohrid<lb/>
I arolina,<lb/>
IVnnessee<lb/>
ark is rig<lb/>
"? quality in<lb/>
lisciplii<lb/>
ad pur-<lb/>
toui<lb/>
- opei<lb/>
ipportii<lb/>
.<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
'wt h in<lb/>
crafts.<lb/>
,ni lude na-<lb/>
regi mal awards,<lb/>
I merit<lb/>
u Is, pur-<lb/>
nent<lb/>
- in res-<lb/>
sts,<lb/>
shows.<lb/>
EQUUS<lb/>
Fri. and Sat.<lb/>
?m<lb/>
CLYDE GOBBLE. WINSTONSale<lb/>
throws a pot in preparation for the 9th<lb/>
Annual Craft, Fair sponsored by the<lb/>
(arolina Designer Craftsmen. The fair<lb/>
will be held in the Scott Building on the<lb/>
North Carolina State Fairgrounds in<lb/>
Raleigh on Thanksginng Weekend,<lb/>
November 24-26.<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
BURGER<lb/>
AND<lb/>
FRIES!<lb/>
<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
GIFTS!<lb/>
"V<lb/>
y<lb/>
4<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
? A<lb/>
v<lb/>
B<lb/>
Night<lb/>
r;<lb/>
We thought it was time kids had their<lb/>
' . liicN sPecial n'Kht. And that's why we've made<lb/>
? Thursday night Kids' Night.<lb/>
; Jj We'll give each child (12 or under) a free<lb/>
burger and fries for every meal an adult<lb/>
buys.<lb/>
Jack the Clown will be there to entertain<lb/>
And hell have a Treasure Chest "grab<lb/>
bag" so the kids get a little surprise, too.<lb/>
r y Thursday Night. Kids' Night at Jacks.<lb/>
Cf ; W hat could be nicer than good food and<lb/>
good fun?<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
JACKS<lb/>
STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
Phones 756 5788<lb/>
264 By Pass<lb/>
Tonite at the<lb/>
BOO RMM<lb/>
TENTH A VE.<lb/>
Fri. Beat Marshall<lb/>
Pep Rally<lb/>
Sun. - Ladies nite.<lb/>
40 off on WnlUura<lb/>
iKcLidiing CkiUtma LtM.m.i.f<lb/>
cMon.&amp;WU. 12-6<lb/>
Oum.l. Ofiux DxL tl-6<lb/>
752-076 toS OrV. iotk ?t.<lb/>
jaexoi fxom. tLt cHM$ ?toxJ<lb/>
ycwr<lb/>
GREAT<lb/>
MEXICAN<lb/>
EATERY<lb/>
512 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Open 11:00 11:00<lb/>
Mon. thru Thur.<lb/>
Fri.Sat. 11:00 12:0<lb/>
Sun. 12:00 11:00<lb/>
WEEKDAY<lb/>
LUNCHEON SPECIAL<lb/>
$1.59<lb/>
MON. thru FRI. H-2 &amp; 5.3<lb/>
Dr. Pepper, Beer, Pepsi.<lb/>
Mt. Dew, Tea, Coffee<lb/>
W? Gladly Accept Personal Checfct.<lb/>
Free Taeo Cld Iron -on Patch<lb/>
with $4.00 food order<lb/>
16 Ncmbtr 197? FOUNTAINHEAD ?rQT 7<lb/>
proudly presents<lb/>
EQUUS<lb/>
" The success of 'Equus' cannot be ?<lb/>
questioned. A gripping movie.<lb/>
Powerfully-acted, deeply-memorable<lb/>
-David Sterritt. The Christian Science Monitor<lb/>
tUJOTT KASTNlft ?t LISTER PtRSKV preset<lb/>
RICHARD BURTON<lb/>
(sj?? "EQUUS"<lb/>
JSwiHoC2LIN BLAKELY-JOAN PLOWRIGHT<lb/>
Owcudb, SIDNEY IUMET<lb/>
tutmurm<lb/>
S??gaaapg V United Artists<lb/>
Fri. at 7 and 9 p.m. and Sat. at 2 p.m. only ln the HendrIx <lb/>
BIMBO'S LOUNGE I<lb/>
Disco Every Wednesday Night<lb/>
Membership<lb/>
??????????$1.00 (for one year)<lb/>
Cover Charge<lb/>
??????????$1?00 Admission Special<lb/>
Draft 30 all night<lb/>
Brown bagging Permitted<lb/>
Live Entertainment on<lb/>
Fri. fip Sat. Nights<lb/>
Located on Pactolns Highway<lb/>
Just off N. Greene St.<lb/>
WE ARE PAYING<lb/>
CASH<lb/>
, f0R CLASS RINGS<lb/>
(REGARDLESS OF CONDITION)<lb/>
OTHER GOLD RINGS<lb/>
(REGARDLESS OF CONDITION)<lb/>
ANY GOLD OR SILVER OF<lb/>
? ANY K,ND AND<lb/>
TOP CASH PRICE PAID FOR<lb/>
SILVER AND GOLD COINS<lb/>
COIN COLLECTIONS<lb/>
BRING TO "COIN MAN"<lb/>
HARMONY HOUSE<lb/>
SOUTH<lb/>
ON THE MALL<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
STUFFY'S<lb/>
Good Stuff<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
25 t off<lb/>
PURCHASE OF ANY ONE OF<lb/>
STUFFY'S FAMOUS SUBS<lb/>
offer good Nov. 16 23 ,1978<lb/>
with coupon only<lb/>
We deliver on campus<lb/>
Georgetowne Shoppes<lb/>
7526130<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
 ?. ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057162_0008"/><lb/>
f<lb/>
PW 8 FOUWTAiNHEAD 16 Novmbr 1978<lb/>
California Suite<lb/>
comes to Stewart<lb/>
Theatre this SaL<lb/>
?m<lb/>
Carolyn Jones and James<lb/>
Drury star in Tom Mallow's<lb/>
new National touring pro-<lb/>
duction of Ne,J Simon's hit<lb/>
comedy, California Suile,<lb/>
which comes to Raleigh's<lb/>
Stewart Theatre on Sat<lb/>
Nov. 18, tor performances at<lb/>
3 and 8 p.m.<lb/>
Neil Simon' California<lb/>
Suite concerns different<lb/>
people occupying suites of<lb/>
'fie Beverlj Hills Hotel at<lb/>
different times for different<lb/>
purposes.<lb/>
The hit comedy bj<lb/>
merica's foremost play-<lb/>
wright ran tor 445 per-<lb/>
formances on Broadway. Re<lb/>
Heed of the New york Daily<lb/>
" s called it the best of<lb/>
Neil Simon NBC- Gene<lb/>
Shalit found it "a big hit.<lb/>
Suite is a er.<lb/>
very, verj funny play. You'll<lb/>
??' cardiac arrest from<lb/>
ighter<lb/>
( arolyn jones is most<lb/>
widely recognized for her<lb/>
rtrayal of Morticia on the<lb/>
g unning television ser-<lb/>
s Family. She<lb/>
eived an Vademv Award<lb/>
mination tor her perfor-<lb/>
mance in the film. Bachelor<lb/>
and won wide acclaim<lb/>
the star of the National<lb/>
' Harol Pinter's The<lb/>
ig.<lb/>
James Drury portrayed<lb/>
man of the<lb/>
' ' ? in The Vi,<lb/>
SA<lb/>
REPAIR<lb/>
jRANDEA V E<lb/>
at<lb/>
COLLEGE VtEW<lb/>
Cleaners<lb/>
ginian on television for nine<lb/>
years. He began his career in<lb/>
stock and off-Broad a v<lb/>
before heading for Holly<lb/>
wood where he made his film<lb/>
debut in The Blackboard<lb/>
JungU- followed b) The last<lb/>
V agon. Love Me fender and<lb/>
others.<lb/>
California Suite is the<lb/>
second National touring<lb/>
production of the season for<lb/>
Tom Mallow's American<lb/>
Theatre Productions. Cur-<lb/>
rent!) touring Nationall) is<lb/>
his smash success and<lb/>
record-breaking production<lb/>
"f The Whiz. Following<lb/>
California Suite, he will tour<lb/>
Vinnette Carroll's Your<lb/>
Arms Too Short To Box With<lb/>
Cod.<lb/>
Ticket- are now on sale<lb/>
lor the 3 p.m. Matinee at the<lb/>
Stewart Theatre box office in<lb/>
the North Carolina State<lb/>
I niversti) Student Center.<lb/>
For reservations, call 737<lb/>
3105.<lb/>
Now Playing At<lb/>
264<lb/>
Playhouse<lb/>
264 Bfv Pass<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
DUSTY<lb/>
IS BACK AND SHE'S<lb/>
GONE DISCO!<lb/>
Grade B' Blackout wastes competent cast<lb/>
continued from p. 6<lb/>
people; an average run-of-the-mill city cop who happens to<lb/>
come upon the carnage that follows; a rich couple who have<lb/>
various quabbi.ngs and whose main concern is the fate of an<lb/>
irreplaceable Picasso; a man and a woman trapped in a stalled<lb/>
elevator; and finally, a woman taking care of her sick husband<lb/>
machine " C?meS ' " artif'C,al hg<lb/>
These people are all more or less brought together and<lb/>
united, the blackout being the catalyst ,n the sdiemfofthin "<lb/>
The begmning of the film introduces these people and their<lb/>
- uat.ons and ends up taking place in a mode high-rLe<lb/>
where the four criminals have escaped their crashed van, and<lb/>
taken refuge in the apartment building.<lb/>
killing? lH'by S ubdUmg ' emranCe gUafd' and eventually<lb/>
wing hlra. Then thev proceed upgtairg int J<lb/>
botmg b) an attractive young woman (portrayed by Belinda<lb/>
Montgomery), who captures the sights of one of the bad guy.<lb/>
who also happens to be a convicted rapist. He attacks her and'<lb/>
"h<lb/>
M is 'a'eVS?Ted b' ,He C?P' P?rtraed by Chris<lb/>
M H hum (who doesn't have much to say but "Halt "Hands<lb/>
behind your head or "Freeze"). '<lb/>
She then makes a rather quick adjustment and proceeds to<lb/>
accompany him. (Hmm. I've always concluded that rape w s<lb/>
- Human act that when perpetrated, leaves the victim in a<lb/>
tate ot mental and physical distress. Miss Montgomery<lb/>
recovered as fast as ,f she had fallen and skinned her knee 1<lb/>
UkS<lb/>
U.S.A.<lb/>
 ALL MEW <lb/>
SHE'S GOT THE<lb/>
HOTTEST FEVER YET!<lb/>
24 Hours a day<lb/>
Large homemade biscuits with<lb/>
HamSausage-Steak<lb/>
ChkJcen??heese-Butter<lb/>
Also Combinations<lb/>
-Dinners-<lb/>
Fried Chicken Tubs and Buckets<lb/>
also Drive thru window<lb/>
For take out call 500N.GreeneSt<lb/>
758-7607<lb/>
maybe he didn't rape her, after all).<lb/>
From then on the film takes a headlong dive and drowns in<lb/>
ts a tempt t b rescued. Surprisingly, Robert Carradine, as<lb/>
he leader of the convicts, turns a not-bad performance,<lb/>
spmmg curses here and there, throwing in a bit of aristocracv,<lb/>
and wield.ng his gun with the skill of a true criminal<lb/>
Cinema<lb/>
Carradine seems to have landed roles that offer him little<lb/>
exploration. His characters are introverted and menu v<lb/>
erratic (as in Coming Home). mentally<lb/>
Carradine also comes from a distinguished family of<lb/>
well-known performers. His brother David had a rathe<lb/>
?mpromptu TV series (Kung Fu), a number of films in the 'B'<lb/>
category (Death Race 200, Deathsport); his older brother<lb/>
Keith, has starred in Robert Altman's Nashville and one of the<lb/>
mostcroversia, fllms of the decade e<lb/>
her John ,s a veteran of the old Universal horror films, and ,<lb/>
fU lUctive as an actor today, having appeared in over 450<lb/>
Chris Mitchum is the son of Robert Mitchum, a respected<lb/>
actor in his own right. Unfortunately, Mitchum, Jr. has landed<lb/>
in Blackout, a role which may hamper him from securing better<lb/>
more interesting characters.<lb/>
Oh, another familiar face was in the lineup: Ray Miliand.<lb/>
and why he took part in this farce is an unaswerable question<lb/>
He hasn't been blessed with the best films lately, and this<lb/>
certainly isn't one of them. I doubt seriously that he needs the<lb/>
money that badly.<lb/>
Nevertheless, he is the best one in the whole scenario,<lb/>
though his eccentric wealthy character has been done to death<lb/>
However, he manages to add a little depth to his portrayal; by<lb/>
facing the criminals sternly and oot giving in to their demand<lb/>
Clap a bit for Mr. Miliand please. (It saddens me that he ha-<lb/>
stoop so low as to accept this role. The man is one of the few<lb/>
genuine Old Masters that we have, and his acting ability<lb/>
enables him to do his very best, despite who he has to portrav)<lb/>
Strike what I said. Give Mr. Miliand some applause.<lb/>
Adding a bit more injury to injury, the ?hots of New York'<lb/>
skyscrapers turned dark, at the opening of the filmlook like<lb/>
film that was taken during the actual blackout not too long ago<lb/>
St,ock foot age? In this day and age? Sure. Schlock film<lb/>
specialize, as a matter of fact, revel in it.<lb/>
One of the true ironies about a film like Blackout is that it<lb/>
will probably do fairly well at the box-office. Maybe when th-<lb/>
lights go out in the theatre, during the run of Blackout, th- him<lb/>
will break. Funny that particular thing happens to th' g<lb/>
films.<lb/>
Con-Edison signing out.<lb/>
FOR PIZZAS AND<lb/>
SUBS AFTER THE<lb/>
GAME CALL OR COME<lb/>
BYCHANELO'S<lb/>
758-7400<lb/>
You too<lb/>
g&amp;&amp;t.<lb/>
liuuji<lb/>
n<lb/>
i could become<lb/>
a collector's item<lb/>
Make par YEARBOOK PORTRAIT<lb/>
appointment NOW at:<lb/>
APPOINTMENTS<lb/>
BEING TAKEN NOW<lb/>
COME BY<lb/>
OR<lb/>
CAL ??? BUC 0FFICE<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/>
?? THI8 IS<lb/>
? ONL Y TIME<lb/>
PICTURES<lb/>
WJJ? BE MADE<lb/>
THIS YEA R!<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057162_0009"/><lb/>
16 November 1978 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
These cats ain't bad'?Dy<lb/>
By CHARLES THAMni pd ?<lb/>
Gerald Hall<lb/>
illir Holler<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
tssistant Sports Editor<lb/>
reached ??J?d Mary Saturday, ECU head coach Pat Dve<lb/>
'??ked il rand I Ca,rUPwithanI,14Pictu.He<lb/>
f??<lb/>
,h n-tion iS Dass ' LCU f fense wh.ch ranks second in<lb/>
I- d,  four indude GeraJd<lb/>
"eart?.Ruffin McNeill, and Willie Hollev.<lb/>
fwrf T?;da" fT? -e, says Dye, is the<lb/>
, , , ' dM k hose fell?meinatthe<lb/>
e.s?? tT   a11 Work?ard in the<lb/>
i. 4 hi L7' dd,w,th, reaj enthusiasm- Tha-<lb/>
savs'DTh7vSaaSpecifi, coseness among them<lb/>
otht,r- lh al1 "?ve a great deal of confidence in each<lb/>
KZhZ"V:Zt0theECl ?' ?  .ha, all<lb/>
zzri-zr-and -7?<lb/>
pat .as- Hall rh i m"S' ever.vthi"g down<lb/>
5?nk -? ? ?? ?h- up. "Right now 1<lb/>
find ,?vl I ursome ,n the nation You fust couldn't<lb/>
T ' "?? to Pl? with than those otherthree guys<lb/>
7Z;k:T T,? M,LauriI,an(i<lb/>
' ' ' ?  contribute alot.<lb/>
Ell wood out<lb/>
of the graveyard<lb/>
Hoy.whocomesfromthesamehiehschoolasHall, says thai<lb/>
he has a great deal more confidence this year than ever before<lb/>
I feel a lot better about everything this year he said "We<lb/>
(the secondary) are a close knit group. We're all friends We<lb/>
set some earl) season goals, one of which was to lead the<lb/>
nation m pass defense. 1 guess we're doing okay "<lb/>
Currently the ECU defense is allowing only 80 vards<lb/>
passing per game, second only to the 74.1 yards allowed by<lb/>
Jop-r.nk.ng Boston College. The Pirate secondary has<lb/>
mtercepted 14 opponent's passes. Charlie Carter heads the<lb/>
group with a total of five. Hall. Holley, and Perry all have three<lb/>
each. Ruffin McNeill has also picked off a pass<lb/>
Carter also attributes the Pirates' success in the secondary<lb/>
to (he closeness the tour feel among each other. "We're really<lb/>
good friends We do a lot of things together on and off the<lb/>
field Everywhere we go. we always seem to end up together.<lb/>
rootballjusi becomes second nature when you're that close "<lb/>
M. Will sat across the table from Ins roommate Carter<lb/>
listening intently to his words. "You know, that's right " said<lb/>
????? Juniorsafety. "J always know I can count on them, i know<lb/>
hal thej II do in all situations. I know Charlie and Willie will<lb/>
be coming Hani from their corners and that Gerald will be<lb/>
roaming and doing In- best<lb/>
"I think we reailv got things together in the secondary in<lb/>
last winter s conditioning said Carter<lb/>
Yeah followed McNeill, "We'd run in groups and get<lb/>
,0ge;her 3nd hLaVe l1" Pep talks. Through all that<lb/>
conditioning, we kind of jelled into a reailv close group "<lb/>
McNeill's specialty. He can be found<lb/>
?<lb/>
a<lb/>
Man<lb/>
 Western<lb/>
-? ason<lb/>
? iss<lb/>
on-<lb/>
I i<lb/>
i <lb/>
 <lb/>
irt<lb/>
vears<lb/>
? ,<lb/>
? m't<lb/>
sked to<lb/>
?ire<lb/>
?<lb/>
barters<lb/>
? ? 'A I<lb/>
ii k<lb/>
?<lb/>
son the<lb/>
 sees<lb/>
Marshall<lb/>
I'he<lb/>
 te quarter-<lb/>
ere were two<lb/>
w h v t he<lb/>
g Herd has tailed<lb/>
over the lat tour<lb/>
One, inability to<lb/>
lit the va it is<lb/>
essary to build a prigram<lb/>
? two, the team's losing<lb/>
in.<lb/>
 e re not Incited in a<lb/>
ipulated area and<lb/>
irts recruiting said<lb/>
 i there's also<lb/>
ill a persuasive<lb/>
ng Mar-hall<lb/>
tba All v ou hav e I<lb/>
h ti the record<lb/>
? -<lb/>
Marshall has not had a<lb/>
reason -nice the<lb/>
season and the<lb/>
 Herd ha- failed<lb/>
 a Southern Confer-<lb/>
I 1 attempts.<lb/>
not gouigiouke then, for granted " Mmhu tt - re<lb/>
A bowl i. mi-thino .? all haic .l<lb/>
now ?nai s our main objective<lb/>
read, ,? extend a? ????,?? ,? ,? pV  B?wl ??<lb/>
??bowl representatives lootingelsewh? <lb/>
rhts is the last Saturday's standards McNeill will ? ,<lb/>
Welj be correct. The defense g,?e u? ,?V ?'<lb/>
Passing in ? game. ?? J J f"ds<lb/>
also attnbntes a grea, deal of ,he sue, ,JZ -t <lb/>
secondary back there "  ?? got thai gn.?<lb/>
ntSPretx.r.Kestis,hTrd,r Hr<lb/>
other, of his own version of Z'&amp;ZZZZZ??<lb/>
Hi ?<lb/>
It<lb/>
Ruffin McNeil<lb/>
Charlie (barter<lb/>
ECU swimmers<lb/>
ready to splash<lb/>
' ' ' ??'?' ? mpts 'o it), off the<lb/>
Field goal frenzy<lb/>
fierce Indian rush a, Lamm connects on the 28 yard<lb/>
b Ste e Romero<lb/>
try. Phot<lb/>
Pirates face unknown<lb/>
Any Thunder left for Herd?<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
??ersit) football team dangerous?<lb/>
 ne would  hardpressed to explain how a 1-9 team<lb/>
?' - t,nal amt'  'he season on the road could be<lb/>
-n-idered dangerous. However, with the announcement<lb/>
Mar-hall head coach Frank Kllw and his stafl would be<lb/>
tired at the end ol th? season, the complexion of Saturday's<lb/>
contest between the Thundering Herd and ECl has changed<lb/>
drastically<lb/>
"Frankly, I'm a little scared about this team -aid Pirate<lb/>
' Pa Dye Wednesda) at In- final regular season<lb/>
press ronference. I he announcement has probabl) had a<lb/>
mendous effect on the team. I expect a wild-eved hunch of<lb/>
kl V  u" hn' feeling guilty because ol the firing<lb/>
I m surethev would like to go oul and win one for their<lb/>
- It they play hard with that in mind, the, could reallj<lb/>
P've u,s ? problems. I reailv don't know how to prepare for<lb/>
them. '<lb/>
And despite Marshall's dismal record, the Pirates can ill<lb/>
afford to look past the Thundering Herd, not with a shot at the<lb/>
Independence Bowl looming directlj ahead.<lb/>
Dick Oliver, the Chairman of' the Independence Bowl<lb/>
ect,on committee said Monday ECl  ,? "serious<lb/>
sideration" for one ol the remaining team- which will face<lb/>
Southland Conference champion Louisiana Tech Dec 16 in<lb/>
Shreveport, La. The Pirates have already defeated Southland<lb/>
Conference team- Southwestern Louisiana and Texas-<lb/>
Arlington this season and would be an excellent draw for the<lb/>
game which will be played in 51,000 State Fair Stadium<lb/>
All 1 can sav at thi noint it tk u<lb/>
ims point is that where ever we go. we 1<lb/>
Vf1 f??tbf Lteam -a,d D- "We'll line up against<lb/>
anybody because 1 think we've got some excellent talent both<lb/>
offensively and defensively. And we'll sell tickets a well a-<lb/>
any body, too.<lb/>
The Pirates, now 7-3 overall. paed what Dve described as<lb/>
our finest game ol the year" last week in the Buc 0-3<lb/>
victory over William and Mary. Quarterback Leander Green<lb/>
completed s? of 11 passes for 92 vards and a touchdown<lb/>
rush fur 64 vards.<lb/>
Offensively there was no question we moved the ball well<lb/>
against a very fine defensive team praised Dve "We've<lb/>
played much more consistently the last three weeks and the big<lb/>
reason has been the play of Leander Green at quarterback<lb/>
He s finally gotten healthy again and he make, a tremendous<lb/>
ditterence<lb/>
Defensively, the Pirates have played brilliantly all season<lb/>
long and Saturday's game against William and Marv was no<lb/>
exception. The Buc, limited heralded Indian quarterback Tom<lb/>
Kozantz to just four completions for 11 vards and only 26 yards<lb/>
rushing Wayne Perry and Willie Holley both intercepted<lb/>
Passes while w illiam and Mary managed only 139 total yards<lb/>
hLL  now ranked third in the nation in total defense<lb/>
allowing only 213.4 yards a game while the pass defense is<lb/>
second nationally limiting opponents to just 80 vards per game<lb/>
Uur en?re defensive scheme worked well against William<lb/>
and Mary noted Dye. "But 1 reailv had no idea we would<lb/>
dominate them like we did. We reailv took them out of their<lb/>
offense which forced them to do a lot of things they didn't want<lb/>
to. Kozantz ,s a great quarterback but he was totally frustrated<lb/>
and spent most of the game running for his life<lb/>
Bv JIMMY DLPKEr<lb/>
StafJ 9  -<lb/>
(,ne ol the most suc-<lb/>
cessful programs in ECl -<lb/>
athletii department ha- vr-dr<lb/>
in and year out been the<lb/>
swimming team- A en-<lb/>
tering his 12th<lb/>
head i -   pjra<lb/>
Rav Scharf ha- compiled<lb/>
rail record of 73-43<lb/>
The women Sq .<lb/>
which in it- first seas i<lb/>
year i omprized a dismal<lb/>
mark, has a egun<lb/>
along the trail to a su essfu<lb/>
season The Lady B<lb/>
2-0 rei ord with u tones . ? -<lb/>
CNC-C 86-45,<lb/>
Mary's College 77-52.<lb/>
I'm with their<lb/>
progress this ' says<lb/>
Scharf! "The<lb/>
thi time are compar il<lb/>
hotter that they were at the<lb/>
end 'it last seasoi We are in<lb/>
a building process and it just<lb/>
takes a little time. The girl's<lb/>
attitude, are very g<lb/>
"?e had 14 or 15 girls<lb/>
come nut but now we're :? w.i<lb/>
to -even The girls train v<lb/>
the men team, so they l I<lb/>
a tougher workout that it'<lb/>
thev were on their own<lb/>
The men quad begin,<lb/>
action this Saturdav with its<lb/>
toughest opponent of the<lb/>
season, Alabama. "Alabama<lb/>
i- strong at every position<lb/>
-aid Scharf. "Thev are sev-<lb/>
enth nationally this vear and<lb/>
en -?<lb/>
<lb/>
a<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
lersl :<lb/>
- harl X<lb/>
si f the seas<lb/>
11 11 11<lb/>
h a i ? - "<lb/>
"Fortl<lb/>
r b u d ge t. w <lb/>
' th besi ?? an -<lb/>
? "up - Caroln<lb/>
ast year a<lb/>
- r-even '<lb/>
size il our<lb/>
After week i I -<lb/>
matchup with the i ,<lb/>
Tide, the m m - Hi<lb/>
until D<lb/>
thev compete<lb/>
: ? ?<lb/>
-quad i- intil De<lb/>
1 -2 Thev v <lb/>
the NCAIAVl Chan : i<lb/>
hip- in Wilmingt n. N.C<lb/>
1978-79 Pirate schedule<lb/>
Nov. 18<lb/>
Dec. 1-2<lb/>
Dec 6<lb/>
Dec. 8-9<lb/>
Dec. 16<lb/>
Jan 13<lb/>
Jan 20<lb/>
Jan. 27<lb/>
Jan. 30<lb/>
Feb. 3<lb/>
Feb. 22-2<lb/>
Mar. 1-3<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Pen- State Relav,<lb/>
N rth Carolina<lb/>
South Carolina Invita:<lb/>
Old Dominion<lb/>
Maine<lb/>
Richmond<lb/>
I L- w ilmington<lb/>
N C State<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
V ilmington Invitational<lb/>
Eastern Intercollegiate<lb/>
Championships<lb/>
H<lb/>
H ??<lb/>
H<lb/>
?<lb/>
H n ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
Retirement finally sets in on No. 81<lb/>
Terry Gallaher<lb/>
Fifth year senior<lb/>
Bv SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Saturday afternoon Terry Gallaher will slip on his jersey<lb/>
number 81 tor his final home game in F.cklen Stadium. Unless,<lb/>
of course, he finds another loophole in the NCAA's endless list<lb/>
of eligibility rules<lb/>
But even Gallaher himself admits a sixth vear of eligibility<lb/>
is simply out of the question. "Yep, I think this will be it said<lb/>
the Warner Robbins, Ga native Wednesday as he put'on his<lb/>
practice tog, for vet another practice session. And the fifth<lb/>
year senior had seen quite a lew me he arrived on the ECU<lb/>
football scene in 174<lb/>
"Heck, Terry getting near the retirement age kidded<lb/>
Tottie Robbins who was dressing across the locker room.<lb/>
"He's had more interviews that the entire team put together<lb/>
Indeed, Gallaher has managed his fair share of interviews,<lb/>
pas, receptions and records during his five year career. In fact<lb/>
with just one regular season game remaining this Saturday<lb/>
night against Marshall, Gallaher can still grab yet another<lb/>
career record. He already has the career touchdown and<lb/>
yardage records and can surpass Dick Corrada's record with<lb/>
nine receptions against Marshall.<lb/>
"1 haven't thought about any of the records I've set since<lb/>
I've been here explained Gallaher. "You don't really<lb/>
appreciate them until after you're gone, but they're nice to<lb/>
have and they're something you can always look back upon.<lb/>
"I'm just glad I could contribute something to the team<lb/>
while I was here. Everybody knows you don't pass much with a<lb/>
wishbone offense, but I've always understood that<lb/>
Gallaher has seen virtually every side of the collegiate<lb/>
football scene. During his freshman season, he was a member<lb/>
of the scout squad and saw no action the entire year. But with<lb/>
no wide receivers returning the following year, Gallaher broke<lb/>
into the starting lineup and has been there ever since.<lb/>
"I've seen every side of the program since I've been here,<lb/>
and believe me I've seen a lot of coaches and plavers come and<lb/>
go admitted Gallaher. "But even after by freshman year I<lb/>
always thought I was making steady improvement. AH I<lb/>
needed was a chance to prove to people what I could do<lb/>
Gallaher drew his first starting assignment against N.C<lb/>
State in 1975 before 49,000 fans at Raleigh's Carter Stadium.<lb/>
Although the Pirates dropped its season opener to the<lb/>
Wolfpack, Gallaher came right back against Appalachian State<lb/>
the following week to set a record which can still be found in<lb/>
the NCAA books.<lb/>
He caught touchdown passes tor 82. 59, and 72 vards even<lb/>
though the Pirate, lost the game 41-25 From that point on. the<lb/>
speedy split end has been regarded as one of the nation to,<lb/>
deep threat, and ha, drawn more than his share of double<lb/>
coverage.<lb/>
"That game really has to ?and out a, most memorable<lb/>
one. said Gallaher. 'Those were the first three Pas,e l" I<lb/>
caught and they all went tor touchdowns. 1 figured right then<lb/>
mavbe I was going places <lb/>
.nd011. fThed tKe SeaS?n Wfth Seven 'hdown grab,<lb/>
and hauled ,n four more dunng his next two vears He now<lb/>
owns the career touchdown reception record w ,th a total of 13<lb/>
lerry s been a great player tor four vears and he's done<lb/>
ervthing we ve asked of him praised ECU head coach P"<lb/>
I've. He s a tremendous competitor<lb/>
And Gallaher also insists his fondest memorv w,l be<lb/>
playing under Dye for five years. "Coach Dve will alwavs be<lb/>
the biggest thing I'll remember. He's .mproved th.ngs here<lb/>
Sir" S rtaml ?ne ?f thP -achesn the<lb/>
"I'm just real proud to say I was a part of the football<lb/>
prrmhere and I know  w keep hLd.ng ,n thright<lb/>
<pb facs="00057162_0010"/><lb/>
I 1<lb/>
Pag? 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 18 November 1978<lb/>
t<lb/>
CHARLES CHASm.FR ' ?0 ' ?<lb/>
MARSHALL AT ECU<lb/>
CLEMSON AT MARYLAND<lb/>
DUKE AT N.C. STATE<lb/>
VIRGINIA AT UNC<lb/>
WAKE FOREST AT SOUTH CAROLINA<lb/>
IOWA STATE AT COLORADO<lb/>
MISSOURI AT NEBRASKA<lb/>
OKLAHOMA ST. AT OKLAHOMA<lb/>
GEORGIA AT AUBURN<lb/>
PI HDUE AT MICHIGAN<lb/>
SOITHERNCALATUCLA<lb/>
TEXAS A&amp;M AT ARKANSAS<lb/>
CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
(94-35-1)<lb/>
ECU 27-7<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
South Carolina<lb/>
Iowa State<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Southern Cal<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
TERRY HERN DON<lb/>
(90-39-1)<lb/>
ECU 27-0<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
South Carolina<lb/>
Colorado<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Southern Cal<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
SAM ROGERS<lb/>
(86-43-1)<lb/>
ECU 28-14<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Colorado<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Southern Cal<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
DAVID MAREADY<lb/>
(61-23)<lb/>
ECU 21-3<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
UNC <lb/>
South Carolina<lb/>
Iowa State<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Southern Cal<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
ARTCHANSKY<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Durham Morning Herald<lb/>
ECU 24-7<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
South Carolina<lb/>
Colorado<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Hall of Fame hono?Wi?<lb/>
Simpson, Tarkenton, Giles<lb/>
Bv CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
tssistant Sports Editor<lb/>
r a mo<lb/>
Oh<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Brow n,<lb/>
Baugh,<lb/>
i al<lb/>
the Hal<lb/>
' Fro Football Hall ol<lb/>
is located in Canton,<lb/>
ad honors the greatest<lb/>
to ever play the<lb/>
Greats such as Jim<lb/>
Jim Taylor, Sammy<lb/>
and Otto Graham<lb/>
I been enshrined into<lb/>
I. Little do viewers of<lb/>
present da football realize<lb/>
? some of the players they<lb/>
watch each Sunday will<lb/>
neda join Brown. Taylor,<lb/>
d compam in the presti-<lb/>
ius Hal! of Fame.<lb/>
Foremost on the list, of<lb/>
i- O.J. Simpson. The<lb/>
Francisco haifbaek is<lb/>
leed a spot as he<lb/>
stan Is second onh to Brown<lb/>
time rushing list.<lb/>
" also hold- the re-<lb/>
- yards gained in<lb/>
n, a record he set in<lb/>
n he gained an<lb/>
2003 yards.<lb/>
be considered<lb/>
B i Griese, Miami<lb/>
k; Fran Tarken-<lb/>
"i. Minnesota quarterback;<lb/>
B' - ich, Dalla<lb/>
Is nearl) every<lb/>
? Mitoman<lb/>
I Staubach<lb/>
' careers, and<lb/>
d !n teams<lb/>
Super Bhn victories.<lb/>
iungsUTs such as Bert<lb/>
ind K-ri Anderson are<lb/>
?mpiling<lb/>
Px" statistical careers.<lb/>
Bu ' r the) will have a<lb/>
' i Hal will not be<lb/>
until the) get a few<lb/>
sons under their<lb/>
Ba ks other thatn Simp-<lb/>
?" will warrant con-<lb/>
lude Larry<lb/>
Csonka, New York Giants;<lb/>
Franco Ham Pittsburgh;<lb/>
Walter Payton, Chicago;<lb/>
Lawrence McCutcheon, Los<lb/>
Angeles; Chuck Foreman,<lb/>
Minnesota; and Lydell Mit-<lb/>
II, San Di. go. Csonka had<lb/>
somegreal sears with Miami<lb/>
when the Dolphins built<lb/>
mini-dynasty. Harris has<lb/>
been the most consistant<lb/>
back in the NFL for the last<lb/>
-even years. His yearly<lb/>
average is over the 1000<lb/>
yard mark. Payton appears<lb/>
to have to tools to be one of<lb/>
the best all-time. He should<lb/>
become one of the Top 20<lb/>
rushers in this, only his<lb/>
fourth pro season. The<lb/>
others mentioned could be<lb/>
weeded out, but appear to be<lb/>
on the way to Hall of Fame<lb/>
status.<lb/>
Young backs who have<lb/>
yet to have time to prove<lb/>
their consistancy who may<lb/>
someday enter the Hall<lb/>
include Tony Dorsett, Dallas;<lb/>
Earl Campbell, Houston; and<lb/>
Delvin Williams, Miami.<lb/>
A look at the receivers,<lb/>
offensive lineman, and de-<lb/>
fensive players who have<lb/>
Hall of Fame potential will<lb/>
be discussed in this column<lb/>
next week. Below are the<lb/>
predictions for this week's<lb/>
NFL games:<lb/>
OAKLAND 28<lb/>
DETROIT 17<lb/>
The Raiders are rounding<lb/>
into playoff form, at least so<lb/>
says coach John Madden.<lb/>
The Lions have played ev-<lb/>
eryone tough for the last<lb/>
month or so. Ted Hendricks<lb/>
and the Raider defense<lb/>
should have young Lion<lb/>
quarterback Gary Danielson<lb/>
guessing all day.<lb/>
DALLAS 23<lb/>
NEW ORLEANS 14<lb/>
The Saints are much<lb/>
improved this year under<lb/>
new coach Dick Nolan. Yet<lb/>
they have not improved to<lb/>
the point where they can<lb/>
compete with the World<lb/>
Champion Cowboys, that is,<lb/>
if Dalla- is at their best. Tom<lb/>
Landry's club has been very<lb/>
consistent all year long. Yet,<lb/>
they were at their best in last<lb/>
week's 42-7 victory over<lb/>
Wolfpack wins<lb/>
state tourney<lb/>
B JIMMY DLPREE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
With the 1978 NCAIAW<lb/>
 championship on the<lb/>
line, it all boiled down to an<lb/>
all too familiar confrontation<lb/>
ol perrennial ACC rivals<lb/>
North Carolina and N.C.<lb/>
I he outcome of the<lb/>
matchup turned out to be<lb/>
1 lassie The Wolfpack de-<lb/>
 'iJ 'he fierj Tar Heels in<lb/>
the final match 15-1, 15-9,<lb/>
15-10, hut not before<lb/>
Carolina gave them a scare.<lb/>
State only easy round of<lb/>
the tournament was the first,<lb/>
where they received a bye.<lb/>
The Pack met with the highly<lb/>
strung Pirates of ECU in<lb/>
second round action, emer-<lb/>
ging a narrow 4-15, 15-13,<lb/>
15-13 v ictor.<lb/>
"The State match was a<lb/>
battle of mental toughness,<lb/>
and we lost said assistant<lb/>
roach Debbie Tyson. "We<lb/>
are a very inexperienced<lb/>
team and tournament play<lb/>
requires experience as well<lb/>
a fundamental ability<lb/>
State met with the Tar<lb/>
Heels for the first time of the<lb/>
tournment in the semifinals<lb/>
and defeated the Heels 12-<lb/>
15, 15-9, 15-11. Carolina<lb/>
moved into the consolation<lb/>
bracket where they easily<lb/>
defeated eventual third place<lb/>
Wake Forest 15-12, 17-15.<lb/>
That set the scene for the<lb/>
second confrontation of the<lb/>
two inter-state-powers.<lb/>
If the Wolfpack beat UNC<lb/>
in this match, the tourna-<lb/>
ment would be over. If thev<lb/>
lost it would mean one last<lb/>
match for all the marbles.<lb/>
Carolina came from behind<lb/>
to stun the unsuspecting<lb/>
Pack 10-15, 15-4, 17-15.<lb/>
With the momentum in<lb/>
Carolina's favor, it was not<lb/>
until midway in the second<lb/>
game of the decisive match<lb/>
that the bewildered Wolf-<lb/>
pack began to show why they<lb/>
were seeded first in the<lb/>
Tournament's Division I<lb/>
standings.<lb/>
In Division II. the only<lb/>
surprise in the top three<lb/>
finishers was runner-up<lb/>
Lenior-Rhyne. Top seeded<lb/>
High Point cruised through<lb/>
the Tournament losing only a<lb/>
single game in the finals<lb/>
615, 15-2, 15-3. Lenior-<lb/>
Rhyne and Cuilford finished<lb/>
second and third, respec-<lb/>
tively.<lb/>
For the host Pirates, it<lb/>
was a disappointing con-<lb/>
clusion to an otherwise<lb/>
successful season. The Lady<lb/>
Bucs consolation round loss<lb/>
came at the hands of the<lb/>
Demon Deacons of Wake<lb/>
Forest, 15-13, 15-6.<lb/>
"When we played Wake,<lb/>
we weren't over the loss to<lb/>
State analyzed Tyson.<lb/>
"Fundamentally we are<lb/>
better than Wake, we just<lb/>
weren't ready. We had a lack<lb/>
of mental and physical<lb/>
leadership in that no one<lb/>
stood up and took charge to<lb/>
try to turn things around<lb/>
"We eijd on a sad note<lb/>
added h?d coach Alita<lb/>
Dillon, "bui ue had a good<lb/>
season overall (29-13). We<lb/>
lose Rosie Thompson as a<lb/>
graduating senior.<lb/>
i<lb/>
(<lb/>
Green Bay. That game was<lb/>
possibly the turning point in<lb/>
their season. They played<lb/>
like champions again, and<lb/>
should also this week.<lb/>
DENVER 17<lb/>
GREEN BAY 14<lb/>
The Packers soared early<lb/>
as their schedule rarely<lb/>
provided them with a for-<lb/>
midable foe. But the last two<lb/>
weeks, the Pack has lost to<lb/>
powerhouses Minnesota and<lb/>
Dallas. This week things get<lb/>
no easier.<lb/>
WASHINGTON 24<lb/>
ST. LOUIS 21<lb/>
The rejuvinated Cardin-<lb/>
als should give Jack Pardee's<lb/>
Redskins a real tough time.<lb/>
Since Card quarterback Jim<lb/>
Hart returned to health, St.<lb/>
Louis has played verv well.<lb/>
Meanwhile, the Redskins<lb/>
have struggled, losing three<lb/>
of their last five games. Yet<lb/>
the 'Skins should win as they<lb/>
have the home filed ad-<lb/>
vantage, and the better<lb/>
team.<lb/>
MINNESOTA 20<lb/>
SAN DIEGO 14<lb/>
The Vikings are now tied<lb/>
for the lead in the NFC<lb/>
Central Division. Only a few<lb/>
weeks ago. they were as<lb/>
many as three games behind<lb/>
the Green Bay Packers.<lb/>
Then, Fran Tarkenton began<lb/>
working some of his old<lb/>
magic. The Chargers have a<lb/>
good young club, led by<lb/>
Lydell Mitchell, but will find<lb/>
the cold of Minnesota and<lb/>
the expertise of Tarkenton a<lb/>
bit too much to handle here<lb/>
LOS ANGELES 21<lb/>
SAN FRANCISCO 3<lb/>
One has to pity the poor<lb/>
49ers. Their record is only<lb/>
1-9, they've had two coaches<lb/>
this year, they have lost their<lb/>
only real star, O.J. Simpson<lb/>
to injury, and they have no<lb/>
efficient quarterback. Also,<lb/>
they must play the Rams this<lb/>
week.<lb/>
SEATTLE 21<lb/>
KANSAS CITY 10<lb/>
The Seahawks are only in<lb/>
their third year of existence,<lb/>
but are at least three times<lb/>
better than the hapless<lb/>
Chiefs.<lb/>
MIAMI 24<lb/>
HOUSTON 21<lb/>
This is the game of the<lb/>
week. Plainly speaking, both<lb/>
"I these clubs should be in<lb/>
the playoffs at years eand.<lb/>
The Oilers defeated New<lb/>
England 26-23 last week with<lb/>
a super second half come-<lb/>
back. They have proven their<lb/>
worth, and the worth of<lb/>
super rookie back Earl<lb/>
Campbell. The Dolphins lost<lb/>
to New England earlier this<lb/>
eyar when quarterback Bob<lb/>
Gnese was still recuperating<lb/>
from early season injuries.<lb/>
Griese is about the best in<lb/>
the business at his position.<lb/>
and is fully recovered now.<lb/>
He should pull his, team<lb/>
through in a real thriller.<lb/>
PHILADELPHIA 17<lb/>
NEW YORK GIANTS 10<lb/>
The Eagles are a team on<lb/>
the rise. Coach Dick Vermeil<lb/>
is building a real contender.<lb/>
The Giants, on the other<lb/>
hand, lack enough offense to<lb/>
be a contender. The Eagles<lb/>
will outclass them.<lb/>
CHICAGO 13<lb/>
ATLANTA 10<lb/>
This is the upset pick of<lb/>
the week. The Bears have<lb/>
lost eight in a row. They are<lb/>
long overdue.<lb/>
NEW ENGLAND 28<lb/>
NEW YORK JETS 21<lb/>
The Jets certainly re-<lb/>
member the 55-21 beating<lb/>
they took at the hands of the<lb/>
Patriots a few weeks ago.<lb/>
They will be much more<lb/>
ready this time. Yet they<lb/>
should once again come out<lb/>
on the short end against a<lb/>
much superior team.<lb/>
BALTIMORE 21<lb/>
CLEVELAND 20<lb/>
The Colts are playing de-<lb/>
cent football again now that<lb/>
quarterback Bert Jones has<lb/>
returned after injury pro-<lb/>
blems.<lb/>
TAMPA BAY 17<lb/>
BUFFALO 13<lb/>
The Bucs have come a<lb/>
long way. The Bills have<lb/>
very long way to go.<lb/>
from your neighborhood ASSOgiAItU ORUGGISIS<lb/>
r-<lb/>
 . TYLENOL<lb/>
!? - TABLETS<lb/>
v . ? i. -3<lb/>
&amp;'?<lb/>
0ESIT1N SKIN<lb/>
f CARE LOTION<lb/>
w $<lb/>
IMIHM<lb/>
KOTEX<lb/>
 UGHTDAYS<lb/>
OVAL PADS<lb/>
M i u s n<lb/>
$1.39<lb/>
? ? NOVAHISTINE<lb/>
?- ELIXIR LIQUID<lb/>
" COUGH MEDICINE<lb/>
parnpmn<lb/>
PAMPRIN<lb/>
$<lb/>
' S' V)<lb/>
November 15 21,1978<lb/>
CEPACOL<lb/>
MOUTHWASH<lb/>
'2 tu<lb/>
v ; im I1 ss Op<lb/>
$.99<lb/>
FLEX BALSAM<lb/>
CONDITIONER<lb/>
CKJ<lb/>
FLEX NET<lb/>
N0NAER0S0L .<lb/>
HAIR SPRAY<lb/>
?uii Ham 13 u<lb/>
"C L? S 60 &amp;i<lb/>
$ -<lb/>
BAN<lb/>
ROLL-ON<lb/>
?? UtfSI 3<lb/>
$<lb/>
BAND AID<lb/>
BRAND<lb/>
BANDAGES<lb/>
M9 I V ?<lb/>
VITALIS LIQUID<lb/>
HAIR TONIC<lb/>
M'g ii'SJij<lb/>
WILLIAMS<lb/>
LECTRIC <lb/>
SHAVE fight<lb/>
?AMP00 "SELTZER PLUS Bfflft  ??U?ENTrSSi2? ?<lb/>
C?.Y W' " ' i. ? r BwSl I ? ER DENTURE<lb/>
'S ???-? ? Li fS cleanser<lb/>
???? W-&amp;UNBLU<lb/>
g DANDRUFF SHAMPOO<lb/>
300EvonC3nth.Mall JZZ??9.<lb/>
(opposite the courthouse) " S-Chorl? St. Extjj<lb/>
I Ph. 752-2136<lb/>
Ph. 756-3344<lb/>
?<lb/>
Patronize<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
Advertisers<lb/>
Herald's<lb/>
Chansky<lb/>
is guest<lb/>
This week's celebrity Ui<lb/>
the Fearless Forecast is Ar:<lb/>
Chansky, the Sports Editor<lb/>
of the Durham Morning<lb/>
Herald.<lb/>
Chansky has followH th?-<lb/>
Pirates closely over the f,d?.<lb/>
few years and i a vett-ru<lb/>
the Atlantic Coast Cd<lb/>
ence sports beat. Last wt ,<lb/>
guest forecaster Jim Ma<lb/>
finished with an imprest<lb/>
8-4 record.<lb/>
Assistant Sport- i-<lb/>
Charles Chandler still<lb/>
main- on top of tin<lb/>
while Terr Herndon<lb/>
ind pla ??<lb/>
(wttrdtm I). Fulp<lb/>
Golf Professional<lb/>
Greenville Country Club<lb/>
o Memorial Dr<lb/>
Phone 754 0504<lb/>
Open 7 days a wee unt j  -<lb/>
also have LAY AWAY<lb/>
All Snow Ski?-25 OFF thru Dec. I<lb/>
K2' Fisher, Head, Ka?tle, Dynaster. Spalding.<lb/>
We have , big SAL? Qn ? <lb/>
All Short Sleeve bod shirts-regularly $20.00 NOW ONLY $14.00.<lb/>
(100 cotton &amp; polyester cotton)<lb/>
All Children, hod long and short sleeve shirt, reduced.<lb/>
JUST ARRIVED Ben Hogan Ca.hmere V-neck Sweater<lb/>
All sweaters 20 off.<lb/>
One large rack of ladies slacks , suits, veloura tops, and sweaters<lb/>
a ? , 40 off?<lb/>
Ail men s lined jackets 25 off.<lb/>
All tennis shoes Vi price mens &amp; ladies Foot-Joy, Head &amp; Fred Perry.<lb/>
Ltonic KM Streetfighters-jogging shoes for men and women 15 off.<lb/>
AH mens Double Cushion Golf &amp; Tennis socks<lb/>
All UA- . ? r. , ' buy ?ne &amp; et one fr.<lb/>
All ladies tennis &amp; gotf Peds &amp; sork - Kv ? <lb/>
? u i cu3 oc socks buy one &amp; get one free.<lb/>
See Gordon Fulp at Greenville Country Club<lb/>
BOIVAJVZA<lb/>
FOR PIRATES ONLY<lb/>
Bonanza is proud to present<lb/>
the return of our fabulous<lb/>
PIRATE SPECIAL!<lb/>
Bakei Potato aT5?Z S?loln S?.<lb/>
from ou FRFF ?ii Toa8t Sa,ad<lb/>
rrom our REE, all ,VOu can eat Salad IW<lb/>
and your choiee of Beverage<lb/>
( except milk, and Dessert.<lb/>
All for $2.89<lb/>
c'2<lb/>
X:<lb/>
fv<lb/>
and ECUS<lb/>
? <lb/>
??.?<lb/>
T?7- ? fc<lb/>
<pb facs="00057162_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>