<?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="00058004_0001"/>
<lb/>
Pirates sweep half of<lb/>
DUKE'S DEFENSE TRIES to put<lb/>
a stop on East Carolina's Gerald<lb/>
Hall 77 in last weekend's 17-16<lb/>
win over the Blue Devils The<lb/>
week before, East Carolina de-<lb/>
feated the Wolfpack of N. C. State<lb/>
28-23 to sweep half of the "Big<lb/>
Four" this season.<lb/>
The win over Duke marked the<lb/>
fifth win in six tries for the Pirates<lb/>
against A.C.C. teams. It also<lb/>
meant that East Carolina has now<lb/>
defeated all of the "Big Four"<lb/>
schools.<lb/>
The first win came over Wake<lb/>
Forest 20-10 in 1963, the second<lb/>
overN.C. State31-15in 1971, the<lb/>
third was over UNC-CH 38-17 and<lb/>
the fourth over Duke this past<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
  ,?<lb/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity fa over 50 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of 8,500<lb/>
this issue is 20 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Vd. 53, Ho. A East Carolina University Greenville, North Carolina 13 September 1977<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
Bucstaffp. 3<lb/>
SU Surveyp. 7<lb/>
After Life?p. 10<lb/>
ECU over ACCp. 15<lb/>
Chuck New named as election chairperson<lb/>
By ROBERT SWAIM<lb/>
Advertising Manager<lb/>
SGA President Neil Sessoms<lb/>
announced last Monday the ap-<lb/>
pointment of Chuck New as<lb/>
election chairperson for the up-<lb/>
coming SGA elections.<lb/>
New is a pre-med student, and<lb/>
former SGA public defender.<lb/>
Sessoms said he feels that<lb/>
New will be an innovative elect- class officer positions has been tended to get sidetracked from last SGA election.<lb/>
ions chairperson, initiating<lb/>
several ways to assure fair and<lb/>
impartial balloting.<lb/>
" He, New, seems to be<lb/>
dependable, capable and an intel-<lb/>
ligent person said Sessoms.<lb/>
Sessoms said he believes New<lb/>
will be an objective chairperson.<lb/>
According to Sessomsi the<lb/>
deadline to file foe legislative and<lb/>
extended from Sept, 7 to Sept.<lb/>
15.<lb/>
"We have extended the dead-<lb/>
line to assure that there will be<lb/>
plenty of candidates for each<lb/>
position said Sessoms.<lb/>
Sessoms said he would like to<lb/>
see an objective and oonscientous<lb/>
legislature this year.<lb/>
"The legislature last year<lb/>
serving the students and dabbled<lb/>
more in petty politics said<lb/>
Sessoms<lb/>
Sessoms added he would like<lb/>
to see some experienced legis-<lb/>
lators run fa offioe this year.<lb/>
Sessoms expressed hope that<lb/>
the new elections chairperson will<lb/>
be able to avoid the intense<lb/>
controversy that surrounded the<lb/>
'I want to make sure this<lb/>
election is cut and dry unap-<lb/>
proachably clear as to who the<lb/>
winners are and as to the<lb/>
objectivity of the balloting itself<lb/>
said Sessoms.<lb/>
"I want the new elections<lb/>
chairperson's impartiality to be<lb/>
unquestionable<lb/>
Homecoming steering committee plans festivities<lb/>
By JO ANN SMITH<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Homecoming Steering<lb/>
Committee met at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center September 1 to<lb/>
discuss plans and problems of<lb/>
this year's festival.<lb/>
Various campus aganizations<lb/>
were represented by a member of<lb/>
their executive councils, ECU<lb/>
faculty was represented by advis-<lb/>
ors, including Associate Dean of<lb/>
Student Affairs Rudolph<lb/>
Alexander and Dean of Men<lb/>
James Mallay.<lb/>
Committee co-chairpersons<lb/>
Dr. Charles Brown, Dean of<lb/>
Institutional Development, and<lb/>
Dennis Ramsey, Student Union<lb/>
president, introduced a tentative<lb/>
scheduleof events: Tuesday, Oct.<lb/>
4, free concert on the mall<lb/>
featuring  Razz Ma Tazz Wed-<lb/>
nesday, Oct. 5, Jimmy Buffet, 8<lb/>
p.m. Minges (ticket prices will be<lb/>
announced), Friday, Oct. 7,<lb/>
Student Union film, "Silent Mov-<lb/>
ie" ; Saturday, Oct. 8. oarade<lb/>
game, and Carousel of Bands;<lb/>
and Sunday, Oct. 9, James Bond<lb/>
film festival.<lb/>
The parade, scheduled fa 10<lb/>
a.m. will include floats and<lb/>
visiting bands. Any aganizatiai<lb/>
wishing infamatiat about floats<lb/>
a resident decaatiais should<lb/>
oontact Dean James Malirv.<lb/>
The Carousel of Banas is a<lb/>
special free concert at<lb/>
Mendenhall from 8 p.m. til 12<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Four different bands, playing<lb/>
simultaneously in different areas<lb/>
of Mendenhall, will present disco-<lb/>
soul, folk, bluegrass, and big<lb/>
band sounds.<lb/>
The theme, "Milestones of<lb/>
ECU: A Tribute to Dr. Leo<lb/>
Jenkins" will be used fa the<lb/>
parade reiterated with a half-time<lb/>
acknowledgement of Dr. Jenkins'<lb/>
oontributiois to the school and<lb/>
ECU'S past achievements.<lb/>
Total budget fa the event is<lb/>
4,115.52, 3,675 of this amount is<lb/>
from SGA funds.<lb/>
Warren: all-night<lb/>
study hours needed<lb/>
ECU achieves high enrollment<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU as of the dose of Fall semester students in the histay of the<lb/>
ECU has achieved an all-time<lb/>
recad enrollment both on the<lb/>
main campus and in its extension<lb/>
centers fa the 1977 Fall sem-<lb/>
ester, Chancella Leo W. Jenkins<lb/>
announced yesterday.<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins announced a total<lb/>
on campus registration of 11,971<lb/>
registration last week. This com-<lb/>
pares with 11,514 fa the Fall<lb/>
quarter 1976, and surpasses the<lb/>
previous recad, the Fall of 1975,<lb/>
when ECU on-campus enroll-<lb/>
ment was 11,597.<lb/>
"I am proud that ECU Is<lb/>
providing educational opportun-<lb/>
ities fa the largest number of<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD did not<lb/>
appear Thursday due to a<lb/>
mechanical failure. The staff<lb/>
apologizes for any<lb/>
inconvenience.<lb/>
institution Jenkins said.<lb/>
"At the same time, I am<lb/>
extremely disappointed that<lb/>
many qualified students could not<lb/>
be admitted because we could not<lb/>
aocomodate them.<lb/>
"With the help of our many<lb/>
friends throughout the state, we<lb/>
will continue our efforts to<lb/>
provide a quality education to the<lb/>
inaeasing numbers of students<lb/>
seeking admission here Jenkins<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The main campus enroilmemt<lb/>
includes both the new ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine - with an<lb/>
opening class of 28 drawn from<lb/>
more than 350 applicants - and<lb/>
the ECU program in Costa Rica.<lb/>
The Evening College, also in-<lb/>
cluded in on-campus figures, has<lb/>
211 enrolled.<lb/>
By CINDY BROOME<lb/>
News Edita<lb/>
SGA Vice-President Reed<lb/>
Warren is beginning a project to<lb/>
have an all-night study hall in the<lb/>
library during exams.<lb/>
n all-night study hall was<lb/>
needed in the past, but we need<lb/>
one even more now that we're on<lb/>
the semester system said<lb/>
Warren.<lb/>
Students with comprehensive<lb/>
exams would greatly benefit from<lb/>
an all-night study hall, according<lb/>
to Warren.<lb/>
Warren plans to confer with<lb/>
Vice-Chancel la of Academic<lb/>
affairs John Howefi about the<lb/>
project.<lb/>
"Many schools have their<lb/>
libraries open all night said<lb/>
Warren.<lb/>
"I think a smalla work aew<lb/>
could be used said Warm.<lb/>
Warren discussed all-night<lb/>
liaary hours with student gov-<lb/>
ernment officials at N.C. State<lb/>
and UNC Chapel Hill this<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
"I think it's mandatay that<lb/>
we have it said Warren. "The<lb/>
benefits would be wath it<lb/>
financially<lb/>
Warren said at least one floor<lb/>
of the library would be helpful,<lb/>
although it would be better to use<lb/>
entire library so students could<lb/>
have access to the reference<lb/>
room.<lb/>
Warren said that if the library<lb/>
cannot be used, he will try to find<lb/>
a wing of a building.<lb/>
"I've talked to people who<lb/>
said they would definitely benefit<lb/>
from the ail-night study hours<lb/>
said Warren.<lb/>
"If shard to study in dams a<lb/>
apartments when a roomate does<lb/>
na want to study said Warren.<lb/>
This way, students would have a<lb/>
quiet place to study without<lb/>
interruption, accading to<lb/>
Warren.<lb/>
"With the addition o the<lb/>
medical school, we definitely<lb/>
should have this said Warren.<lb/>
It's hard to be in the middle of<lb/>
writing a paper and be faced to<lb/>
leave in the middle of it, said<lb/>
Warren.<lb/>
"I'm very determined to find<lb/>
a quiet place fa students to study<lb/>
fa exams<lb/>
<pb facs="00058004_0002"/><lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD September 1,1977<lb/>
Rebel<lb/>
The Rebel, ECU's literary-<lb/>
arts magazine, is now accepting<lb/>
submissions in poetry, fiction,<lb/>
essays, art work, and photo-<lb/>
graphy. Submit your material to<lb/>
the Rebel offioe or mail it to the<lb/>
Rebel, Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Please make sure to keep<lb/>
a copy of each work of literature<lb/>
for yourself, and include your<lb/>
name, address, and phone num-<lb/>
ber on all work.<lb/>
New Year<lb/>
Attraction Jewish students:<lb/>
Anyone wishing a ride to the<lb/>
Temple for Rosh Hashanah (New<lb/>
Year) may contact Corey Duber-<lb/>
756-1518 or Dr. B. Resnick-<lb/>
756-5640.<lb/>
Films<lb/>
Interested in becoming a<lb/>
member of the Films Committee?<lb/>
There are two openings for<lb/>
membership. Apply today by<lb/>
contacting the Student Union<lb/>
Offioe in Mendenhall, 757-6611,<lb/>
ext. 210.<lb/>
Cinema<lb/>
All subscriptions for the<lb/>
Cinema Society of Greenville<lb/>
must be purchased by Sept. 15. A<lb/>
minimal subscription fee of only<lb/>
$5.00 entitles one to view five<lb/>
quality films to be screened this<lb/>
fall, including The Go-Between,<lb/>
and Je T'Aime, Je T'Aime. Film<lb/>
subscriptions may be obtained by<lb/>
sending a check payable to the<lb/>
Cinema Society of Greenville to<lb/>
either William Stephenson or<lb/>
Peter Makuck in care of the<lb/>
English Dept. in Austin here at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Flying<lb/>
INTERESTED IN FLYING?<lb/>
Are you a pilot? Do you want to<lb/>
be? Tuesday evening, Sept 13, at<lb/>
8p.m in Mendenhall, room 248,<lb/>
we will explore the possibilities of<lb/>
a flying dub. If you need a ride,<lb/>
or more information, call Mr.<lb/>
Naff, 757-6982.<lb/>
Elections<lb/>
There will be a mandatory<lb/>
candidates meeting at 7 p.m. on<lb/>
Sept. 15 in the Multi-purpose<lb/>
Room of Mendenhall.<lb/>
Elections will be held Sept.<lb/>
26.<lb/>
WECU<lb/>
WECU presents LP EXPO<lb/>
with Mac McKee each night at 11<lb/>
p.m. This week's featured albums<lb/>
are as follows. Tuesday; Boats<lb/>
Against the Current, Eric Car-<lb/>
man; Wednesday Lake, Lake;<lb/>
Thursday, Shiver in The Night,<lb/>
Andy Pratt. LP EXPO is heard<lb/>
exdustvely on 57 Music Radio,<lb/>
WECU.<lb/>
Hearing<lb/>
Program for Hearing Impaired<lb/>
Students is offering Sign Lan-<lb/>
guage dasseson the ECU campus<lb/>
for all interested persons. Sche-<lb/>
dules of dasses as of now:<lb/>
Tuesday and Thursday-3-4<lb/>
p.m. Joyner Library (2nd floor<lb/>
Smoking Lounge) Beginning<lb/>
and Intermediate dasses<lb/>
Tuesday and Thursday-4-5<lb/>
p.m. Allied Health Building<lb/>
Room 216 combined Begin-<lb/>
ning and Intermediate dass<lb/>
Tuesday and Tursday-7-8 30<lb/>
p.m. Joyner Library (2nd floor<lb/>
Smoking Lounges) Beginning<lb/>
and Intermediate dasses<lb/>
Classes started Tuesday, Aug.<lb/>
30. Those interested can still join<lb/>
the dasses. Non-tuition and non-<lb/>
credit. Text is available in the<lb/>
Student Supply Store-A BASIC<lb/>
COURSE IN MANUAL COM-<lb/>
MUNICATION edited by Ter-<lb/>
rance J. O'Rourke. Students,<lb/>
staff, faculty and citizens are<lb/>
invited. No registration neces-<lb/>
sary.<lb/>
Gamma Beta<lb/>
The ECU Chapter of the<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi Society will<lb/>
meet Thurs. Sept. 15. The<lb/>
meeting will be held in room 244<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
and will start at 7 p.m. All<lb/>
members should plan to attend.<lb/>
Gats<lb/>
Interested in learning<lb/>
about different cat breeds, health<lb/>
care, nutrition, grooming, show-<lb/>
ing? Coastal Carolina Cat Fan-<lb/>
ciers is meeting to promote<lb/>
interest and humane treatrcient of<lb/>
cats in this area.<lb/>
Monthly meetings are the<lb/>
second Wednesday of the month<lb/>
at 730 p.m. Call 758-0147 or<lb/>
756-0974 for further information<lb/>
and a ride to the meeting.<lb/>
Painting<lb/>
REWARD: 50.00 or will nego-<lb/>
tiate. Missing: An 18x20 Painting<lb/>
unframed- "Butterfly Cosmosis"<lb/>
unsigned-most I y red and black.<lb/>
Left outside Jenkins Fine Arts<lb/>
building near Garrett Dorm<lb/>
Friday, Aug. 26. Please oontad<lb/>
Brent Funderburk at 758-5481.<lb/>
Sigma Nu<lb/>
Sigma Nu fraternity is con-<lb/>
tinuing its rush activities through-<lb/>
out the week, one week longer<lb/>
than most other fraternities. One<lb/>
evening this week will indude<lb/>
dinner at Parker's restaurant,<lb/>
along with plenty of parties all<lb/>
week long.<lb/>
There'll be lots of beer and<lb/>
young ladies, so drop by! Sigma<lb/>
Nu is located at the corner of 13th<lb/>
and Cotanche streets, behind the<lb/>
Crow's Nest restaurant. Rides<lb/>
can be arranged by calling<lb/>
758-7640.<lb/>
Ski trip<lb/>
Coffeehouse Alpha Beta<lb/>
The Ski Club is planning,<lb/>
among others, a trip to Snowshoe,<lb/>
West Virginia over Thanksgiving<lb/>
break. The Christmas trip for<lb/>
aedit or non-credit will take place<lb/>
again this year also. All those<lb/>
interested in snowskiing this<lb/>
winter at lower prices please<lb/>
attend the dub meeting Thur<lb/>
Sept. 22 at 4 p.m. downstairs in<lb/>
Memorial Gym room 109.<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
The North Carolina Student<lb/>
Legislature (NCSL) will meet<lb/>
Sept. 14, at 8 p.m. in room 244,<lb/>
Mendenhall. All members need<lb/>
to attend. Plans fa the Septem-<lb/>
ber Interim Coundl will be made.<lb/>
Keg party<lb/>
The Mendenhall Student Cen-<lb/>
ter staff is holding a receptioi and<lb/>
keg party fa all aganizatiois,<lb/>
presidents, and spoisas. This<lb/>
includes social, service, and<lb/>
honaaryaganizatiois. The pres-<lb/>
ident a leader of each student<lb/>
aganizatioi is asked to oome by<lb/>
the Infamatioi Center, in Men-<lb/>
denhall between 8:30 a.m. and 5<lb/>
p.m. befae Sept. 16 to be sure<lb/>
that his aganizatioi is oi the<lb/>
invitatioi list.<lb/>
Chi Beta Phi<lb/>
The sdenoe hona sodety, Chi<lb/>
Beta Phi, will hold its first<lb/>
meeting of the year Wed Sept.<lb/>
14, at 730 p.m. in the Biology<lb/>
Department reading room<lb/>
(second floor). Members and<lb/>
interested science majors are<lb/>
urged to attend. Call Bob Dough<lb/>
at 756-5128 a see faculty advisas<lb/>
Dr. Wendall Allen (Biology) a<lb/>
Dr. Tan Sayetta (Physics) fa<lb/>
mae infamatioi.<lb/>
Found<lb/>
A considerable amount of<lb/>
money in a container has been<lb/>
turned in to the Lost and Found<lb/>
Department in Mendenhall. Will<lb/>
the rightful owno please oome by<lb/>
and give a desaiption of the<lb/>
oontainer and the amount of its<lb/>
oontents. If money is na daimed<lb/>
by September 23, it will be given<lb/>
to the finder.<lb/>
Geography<lb/>
There will be an infomal<lb/>
meeting of all undergraduate<lb/>
Geography majas, minas and<lb/>
aher interested students Wed-<lb/>
nesday, Sept. 14 at 12 nooi in<lb/>
Room 203 Brewster C wing. The<lb/>
meeting will be the Geog. Club's<lb/>
2nd oganizatioial meeting. All<lb/>
Geographers are urged to attend.<lb/>
Scholars<lb/>
ECU League of Scholars will<lb/>
hold its first meeting Tues Sept.<lb/>
13, at 7 p.m. in Mendenhall, room<lb/>
221. All members are urged to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
East Carolina Student Union<lb/>
Coffeehouse Committee will hold<lb/>
its semiannual audition, a talent<lb/>
hunt. This event will be held<lb/>
Thurs. &amp; Fri Sept. 15&amp; 16, from<lb/>
7-10&amp; 7-11. If interested, o have<lb/>
a talent, such as singing, dan-<lb/>
dng, playing guitar a just B.S<lb/>
sign up in roan 233 Student<lb/>
Union offioe.<lb/>
Fa nai-partidpantsthere will<lb/>
be a 50 osnts charge, this covers<lb/>
all the free refreshments you<lb/>
want.<lb/>
Auditions<lb/>
The Student Union Coffee-<lb/>
house Committee will hold its Fall<lb/>
semester auditions Thursday,<lb/>
Sept. 15, from 7-10 p.m. and<lb/>
Friday, Sept. 16, from 7-11. Any<lb/>
group a individual with a musical<lb/>
theatrical o any talent which he<lb/>
o she wishes to share is strongly<lb/>
urged to audition! Sign up at the<lb/>
Student Union Offioe a room 233<lb/>
Mendenhall. The public is invited<lb/>
to attend auditions - .50 charge.<lb/>
Free refreshments fo all, so be<lb/>
there!<lb/>
Bepublicans<lb/>
Watch fo the ECU College<lb/>
Republican Club Membership<lb/>
table in front of the Student Stae<lb/>
this Wednesday and Thursday<lb/>
between 10 a.m1 p.m.<lb/>
FG speaker<lb/>
Does history support the<lb/>
Resurredton account? Did Jesus<lb/>
really rise from the dead? We<lb/>
challenge you to examine the<lb/>
fads fo yourself. The Faever<lb/>
Generation is sponsoring the<lb/>
seminar "The Resurredion: Fad<lb/>
a Fidiai?" Thurs Sept. 22 at 7<lb/>
p.m. in MSC 244. Guest ledurer<lb/>
will be FG staff Evangelist Rich<lb/>
Kerns, a dynamic speaker. This is<lb/>
a thought-provoking seminar that<lb/>
no honest, thinking person will<lb/>
want to miss. Plan now on being<lb/>
there!<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
The filing deadline fa SGA<lb/>
day and dam legislative and<lb/>
dass officer positions has been<lb/>
extended to Sept. 15. The mandi-<lb/>
toy candidates meeting will be<lb/>
held in the Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Multipurpose room at 7<lb/>
p.m. Sept. 15. Eledions will be<lb/>
held Sept. 26.<lb/>
FS<lb/>
Anyone interested in foming<lb/>
a Film Sodety to make films<lb/>
generally na seen in this area a<lb/>
available to the public, contad<lb/>
Charles Lawrence at 752-6389<lb/>
after 7 or write to Box 27<lb/>
Falkland, N.C. 27827.<lb/>
Phi Beta<lb/>
Alpha Beta Alpha library<lb/>
sdence hona society will meet<lb/>
Sept. 13 at 5 p.m. in the student<lb/>
lounge. All members and inter-<lb/>
ested people are invited to attend.<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda will hold its<lb/>
First meeting Tuesday, Sept. 13<lb/>
in room 130 Rawl at 4 p.m.<lb/>
ACU-I<lb/>
Day students, register now to<lb/>
partidpate in the ACU-I qualifing<lb/>
tournaments to be oonduded in<lb/>
bowling, billards and table<lb/>
tennis. Winners of these tour-<lb/>
naments will advance to the<lb/>
All-Campus Tournaments which<lb/>
begin October 25. Final winners<lb/>
will represent ECU in the regional<lb/>
tournaments in Blacksburg,<lb/>
Virginia. All tournaments are<lb/>
sponsored by Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center and detailed<lb/>
infamatioi is available at the<lb/>
Billiards and Bowling Centers at<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
AVA<lb/>
The American Vocational Asso-<lb/>
ciation is a professional agan-<lb/>
izatioi fo those in the fields of<lb/>
Business, Industrial Technology<lb/>
and Hone Eoonomics. AVA mem-<lb/>
bership drive will be held Sept.<lb/>
1-9 memberships will beoolleded<lb/>
from those interested in each of<lb/>
the above departments. Monthly<lb/>
meetings will be held on the third<lb/>
Monday night of the month. The<lb/>
first meeting will take place on<lb/>
Sept. 19. The meeting place will<lb/>
be announced later. Fa mae<lb/>
information call Kathy Poole<lb/>
752-2528.<lb/>
Computers<lb/>
There will be an ?fcganiza-<lb/>
tional meeting of all interested<lb/>
persons in Hobby Computers in<lb/>
Flanagan-201 Thur Sept. 15, at<lb/>
730.<lb/>
Anyone, regardless of back-<lb/>
ground, is invited to attend.<lb/>
Survey<lb/>
The Films Committee is res-<lb/>
ponsible fo the film program-<lb/>
ming fo the ECU students and<lb/>
faculty. It would like your sugges-<lb/>
tions fa the spring and summer<lb/>
schedule. There are three aspeds<lb/>
of film programming to oonsider.<lb/>
These are the Friday and Satur-<lb/>
day night popular film series<lb/>
designed to present contem-<lb/>
porary films, a Wednesday night<lb/>
series whichshould present avant<lb/>
garde, dassical, and international<lb/>
film, and film festivals. Please<lb/>
place your completed survey in<lb/>
oie of the several boxes provided<lb/>
in convenient locations (ad CU,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, Joy-<lb/>
ner Library, Allied Health Library<lb/>
and Croatan). Survey boxes will<lb/>
be provided through Fri Sept.<lb/>
16.<lb/>
SCJ<lb/>
The Society for Collegiate<lb/>
Journalists (SCJ) will hold its first<lb/>
meeting tonight at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
Austin 301. Plans fo the wok-<lb/>
shop will be discussed. All<lb/>
members must attend.<lb/>
???????1<lb/>
?MHBmMHMBHHiHHmi<lb/>
<pb facs="00058004_0003"/><lb/>
:<lb/>
Rogerson appoints editors<lb/>
Stptambr 13, 1977 FOUWTAINHEAD Pagt 3<lb/>
i<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Buccaneer Editor Susan<lb/>
Rogerson has appointed six new<lb/>
editors to the 1977-78 staff last<lb/>
Wednesday.<lb/>
Terry Brown is the Classes<lb/>
Editor, Cindy Artis is the Organ-<lb/>
izational Editor, Kay Williams is<lb/>
the Layout Artist, and Ricky Lee<lb/>
as Sports Editor, with Copy<lb/>
Editor, Bob Bass and Beth<lb/>
Winslow as the Activities Editor.<lb/>
Diane Pearce will continue to be<lb/>
the Business Editor, according to<lb/>
Rogerson.<lb/>
"I intend to make this year's<lb/>
Buccaneer the best I can said<lb/>
Rogersu, "m very pleased that<lb/>
we had a staff organized so<lb/>
quickly this year. Diane Pearce<lb/>
and I have worked during the<lb/>
summer on the yearbook and<lb/>
we're much farther along on the<lb/>
book than last year<lb/>
The Buccaneer, ECU's year-<lb/>
book, was not published last year.<lb/>
The entire Buccaneer staff resign-<lb/>
ed last October after the SGA and<lb/>
the Appropriations Committee<lb/>
severly cut the 1976-77 operating<lb/>
budget.<lb/>
Rogerson was appointed the<lb/>
new editor of the Buccaneer in<lb/>
January and attempted to put<lb/>
together the yearbook in less than<lb/>
five months.<lb/>
Delays caused by a robbery in<lb/>
the SGA photography lab last<lb/>
spring and numerous other fin-<lb/>
ancial difficulties caused<lb/>
Rogerson to finally cancel the<lb/>
yearbook.<lb/>
When Rogerson assumed<lb/>
duties as the Buccaneer editor in<lb/>
January, there was one month's<lb/>
operating expenses and only ten<lb/>
salaried positions. All other ex-<lb/>
penses had to be financed<lb/>
through subscriptions and ad<lb/>
revenues.<lb/>
"I think one of the main<lb/>
reasons the yearbook was cancel-<lb/>
ed was because of the student<lb/>
subscriptions we were forced to<lb/>
sell said Rogerson.<lb/>
"The students feel they have<lb/>
already paid fa the book, pi us the<lb/>
Steam center to be built<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The old power plant site across<lb/>
from the campus police station wil<lb/>
remain vacant indefinitely, al-<lb/>
though a small steam and elect-<lb/>
rical distribution center will be<lb/>
built adjacent to the existing<lb/>
structure, according to James J.<lb/>
Lowry, Director of Operations.<lb/>
"The small distribution center<lb/>
will serve some of the older<lb/>
buildings on campus said<lb/>
Lowry.<lb/>
Lowry said the Student Supply<lb/>
Store renovation was nearly com-<lb/>
plete and that the med school's<lb/>
animal lab in the courtyard of<lb/>
Ragsdale building is about half-<lb/>
way complete.<lb/>
A branch of the med school<lb/>
will be constructed adjacent to<lb/>
Pitt County Memorial Hospital,<lb/>
but that project is "still mostly on<lb/>
the drawing board said Lowry.<lb/>
"Right now, the land is being<lb/>
graded and prepared for con-<lb/>
struction said Lowry.<lb/>
fact we had trouble soliciting ads<lb/>
from Greenville merchants<lb/>
The Buccaneer is currently<lb/>
operating on a budget approved<lb/>
by the SGA. The budget will last<lb/>
until October. The SGA will then<lb/>
vote on another budget which will<lb/>
extend to the remainder of the<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Rogerson said the 1977-78<lb/>
yearbook will try to include a<lb/>
secti- on highlights during the<lb/>
1976-77 academic year. A section<lb/>
with pictures of seniors will also<lb/>
try to be included.<lb/>
"I will make every move to<lb/>
compromise with the SGA this<lb/>
year said Rogerson. "I think<lb/>
everyone realizes how important<lb/>
it is to have a yearbook<lb/>
SUSAN ROGERSON, BUCCANEER editor.<lb/>
 EAST CAROLINA LAW SOCIETY: <lb/>
WILL HOLD ITS ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING AT 7:30 P.M<lb/>
WED. SEPT. 14th IN 221 MENDENHALL<lb/>
(ASSEMBLY ROOM, SECOND FLOOR).<lb/>
ALL STUDENT ARE INVITED TO JOIN,<lb/>
FRESHMEN ARE ESPECIALLY INVITED.<lb/>
LAW SOCIETY IS FOR ANY STUDENT INTERESTED<lb/>
IN THE PRACTICE OF LAW OR GOING TO LAW SCHOOL .<lb/>
EVERYONE WELCOME, PLEASE ATTEND IF INTERESTED.<lb/>
PS. PLANS WILL BE MADE FOR THE FIRST PARTY!<lb/>
BIGGS DRUG STORE<lb/>
300 EVANS- ON- THE-MALL<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
PHONE: 752-2136<lb/>
FREE PRESCRIPTION PICKUP<lb/>
AND DELIVERY<lb/>
OLD FASHION SODA FOUNTAIN<lb/>
DRINKS MADE THE WAY YOU<lb/>
LIKE THEM: FRESHLY SQUEEZED<lb/>
LEMONADES AND ORANGEADES-<lb/>
MILKSHAKES MADE WITH ICE CREAM!<lb/>
PRESCRIPTION DEPT WITH MEDICA TION<lb/>
PROFILES: YOUR PRESCRIPTION ALWAYS<lb/>
A T OUR FINGERTIPS, EVEN THOUGH YOU<lb/>
MAY LOSE YOUR Rx BOTTLE.<lb/>
?COSMETICS-<lb/>
SUNDRIES<lb/>
TOILETRIES-<lb/>
DELIVERED TO<lb/>
YOUR DOOR<lb/>
GREETING CARDS-<lb/>
SCHOOL SUPPLIES<lb/>
TIMEX WATCHES<lb/>
COSTUME JEWELRY<lb/>
ATHLETIC SUPPORTS,<lb/>
CONVALESCENT SUPPLIES,<lb/>
FIRST-AID SUPPLIES<lb/>
SUNGLASSES BY FOSTER<lb/>
GRANT AND COOL RA Y<lb/>
<pb facs="00058004_0004"/><lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD September 13 1977<lb/>
Beer and bucks:<lb/>
the college dream<lb/>
A recent survey of American college and<lb/>
universities shows that college students today see<lb/>
higher education as a means to two ends: jobs and<lb/>
money, with the"excitement of college life" (i.e<lb/>
sports and parties) running a dose third. It seems<lb/>
these days a diploma means nothing more than beer<lb/>
and bucks. And this is pathetic.<lb/>
At one time ,in our history, to be known as<lb/>
"educated" meant something. It meant intelligence,<lb/>
refinement, and that was the goal, the demarcation<lb/>
of aristocracy. Now it's nothing more than a better<lb/>
chance for money and four years of good partying.<lb/>
The beauty of mere learning is a thing of the past.<lb/>
The status of university education is paling beside<lb/>
trade school enrollment. Students have squandered<lb/>
their thirst for knowledge for the growling hunger for<lb/>
dollars.<lb/>
The beginning of this trend was in the '60s when<lb/>
students protested having to take courses outside<lb/>
their particular fields. Then in the late '60s, the<lb/>
grade point requirements fa entrance into colleges<lb/>
and universities began dropping, as well as<lb/>
requirements for A's and B's. Professors began<lb/>
handing out A's like, before, they handed out C's.<lb/>
Teachers have certainly played their role in<lb/>
reducing students to classroom zombies and money<lb/>
mongers. "There is so much asinine reliance on<lb/>
'teaching skills said Alfred Kazin, Esquire<lb/>
magazine, "(when there is not enough content on<lb/>
which toexercise these skills), that the gap is filled in<lb/>
with 'teaching tools 'teaching machines and<lb/>
lessons by television The idea is to make educating<lb/>
as easy as possible fa the educatas, and to make an<lb/>
'education" painless and unexacting for the<lb/>
students so they can get out and rake in the currency<lb/>
as quickly as possible.<lb/>
A FOUNTAINHEAD survey two years ago quoted<lb/>
numerous students as saying a college education is<lb/>
wathless. "Itwai't insure a job anymae they<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Students doi't want to think anymae. They want<lb/>
jobs and money and if four years of inaeased<lb/>
knowledge won't get it, then those four years have<lb/>
been a waste. Au contrairel<lb/>
I n an age when modern technology seems to come<lb/>
from thin air and the populace feels it and the wald<lb/>
are indestructable, it's no wonder this sentiment<lb/>
prevails. What university students and teachers are<lb/>
fagetting is that it takes human intelligence and<lb/>
fluid thinking to keep this shrinking wald close to<lb/>
indestructable. This sat of intelligence and thinking<lb/>
does not come from sitting placidly in a classroom<lb/>
desk, whether at the front a in the mass, and<lb/>
patiently enduring the time between damitaies and<lb/>
dollars. A piece of nicely etched paper, framed and<lb/>
hung on a wall, does not alleviate the problems of<lb/>
society a make our lives mae secure. Na dees it<lb/>
make us anywhere near the level of educated men and<lb/>
women of years past who wrote masterpieces as<lb/>
Walden and found the cures fa deadly diseases.<lb/>
These near miracles came fran thinkers, people who<lb/>
valued mae than moiey and a quart of Heinikin.<lb/>
A complete reassessment of values must occur<lb/>
befae a college education is wath anything any<lb/>
mae, beginning with the educatas then seeping<lb/>
down to the educatees. If this reassessment does not<lb/>
come, the wald, a at least the United States, is<lb/>
going to end up with a population of stupid guzzlers<lb/>
CTOwding the country like rich robots.<lb/>
IS THIS FREDS TflXlDOTIST COULD I<lb/>
G-&amp;T VQUR ?STIP1ftTE QN fl BLUE DEVIL?<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Reader seeks rowdy Jan'for assault<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
Even though I have known<lb/>
for at least five years that the EC<lb/>
football fans are notoriously ill-<lb/>
mannered as a whole, I attended<lb/>
the season opener at Carter<lb/>
Stadium with my husband and<lb/>
f two friends. We sat on the grassy<lb/>
end zone section during the<lb/>
second half of the game.<lb/>
During the final plays a verbal<lb/>
fight broke out between several<lb/>
drunken ECU "fans" sitting<lb/>
mid-way up the hill and several<lb/>
kids (elementary and Junior High<lb/>
age) at the oonom or tne hill.<lb/>
To make a long and disgusting<lb/>
story shorter, an ECU "fan" (red<lb/>
hair, red beard, light complexion,<lb/>
medium build, male in blue jeans<lb/>
and a rugby shirt) thought the<lb/>
best way to quell the disturbance<lb/>
was to throw a few liquor bottles<lb/>
at the kids. As we were getting up<lb/>
to flee this battle zone, my<lb/>
husband caught this drunk's<lb/>
liquor bottle in the head.<lb/>
His wound required several<lb/>
sutures and three valuable days<lb/>
in bed.<lb/>
Short but sweet<lb/>
to WRQR<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD.<lb/>
To the advertisers of night-<lb/>
time WRQR- I thank you for<lb/>
supporting album-FM radio for<lb/>
adults.<lb/>
To the advertisers of day time<lb/>
WRQR: I don't know who you are<lb/>
because I do not listen to that<lb/>
garbage.<lb/>
Jeff Hauser<lb/>
THE POINT:<lb/>
My friends and I can identify<lb/>
this student and his date through<lb/>
ECU identification photos or a<lb/>
yearbook, and I intend to report<lb/>
this incident to the authorities if I<lb/>
do no first hear from this drunken<lb/>
"fan" within five days of the date<lb/>
of this newspaper. You and your<lb/>
friend (s) know who you are, so<lb/>
take care of your responsibilities<lb/>
and call a write the following as<lb/>
soon as possible.<lb/>
David R. Powell<lb/>
M.M.Powell<lb/>
2918 Bar mettler Street<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C 27607<lb/>
91932-2284<lb/>
M.M.Powell<lb/>
Tennis courts unplayable<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
The subject of this article<lb/>
concerns the unplayable condition<lb/>
of the tennis courts located at<lb/>
Mlnges Coliseum.<lb/>
The present state of the courts<lb/>
make them both unattractive as<lb/>
well as unsafe. The top surface<lb/>
has worn away, to where the<lb/>
surface course layer is showing in<lb/>
some places. There are numerous<lb/>
cracks, where grass and other<lb/>
See COURTS, P 6<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
S??ng the East Carolina community to, ore, titty years.<lb/>
Seni0rEdltorKimJ.Devins<lb/>
Production ManagerBob Glover<lb/>
Advertising Managerr gm<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
Sports Editor.<lb/>
Cindy Broome<lb/>
Michael Futch<lb/>
Anne Hogge<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the nrf? ?.<lb/>
University sponsored by ? tuIZ 7" Card,na<lb/>
ECU and lTSsS2 ZZSSSZ "?" <lb/>
and twice weekly ouringT" " ,he ?"?.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually <lb/>
?MMMHBH<lb/>
<pb facs="00058004_0005"/><lb/>
<lb/>
September 13, 1977 R<lb/>
NOW AVAILABLE!<lb/>
The Best of ELVIS ? 34 of the<lb/>
King's Memorable Songs ? A<lb/>
Collector's Item Available For A<lb/>
Limited Time Only.<lb/>
NOT AVAILABLE IN STORES<lb/>
)1111ft?<lb/>
KJJt<lb/>
STIIIO<lb/>
3 album collection of<lb/>
His Greatest Hits<lb/>
? ? INCLUDES <lb/>
If I Can Dream Love Me Tender Suspicious Minds Love Letters<lb/>
Heartbreak Hotel Don't Be Cruel Jailhouse Rock In The Ghetto<lb/>
Blue Suede Shoes Don't Cry Daddy Crying In The Chapel Hound Dog<lb/>
Kentucky Rain Dixieland Rock Separate Ways I'm All Shook Up<lb/>
Devil In Disguise Fool Such As I Kissin' Cousins Memories<lb/>
I've Lost You Burning Love Hi-Heel Sneakers AND MORE<lb/>
Rush your check or money order today for or $10.98 and<lb/>
also receive an 8 x 10 " glossy photo of Elvis.<lb/>
 ADDRESS<lb/>
STATEZIP<lb/>
K &amp; M ENTERPRISES P. O. Box 22<lb/>
Morrisville, N. C. 27650<lb/>
Please allow two to four weeks for delivery<lb/>
Iks tor delivery<lb/>
<pb facs="00058004_0006"/><lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD September 13 1977<lb/>
COURTS<lb/>
Continued from p. 4<lb/>
vegetation is beginning to take<lb/>
over. Since the top surface is<lb/>
about worn away, and the lines<lb/>
faded, shoes wear out faster and<lb/>
balls do not last as long.<lb/>
It is a known fact that<lb/>
beautiful tennis courts attract<lb/>
greater usuage. It is also known<lb/>
that to insure proper mainte-<lb/>
nance, Laykod courts need to be<lb/>
resurfaced every five years. It has<lb/>
been over six years. The Chevron<lb/>
Asphalt Company has commen-<lb/>
ted that , "When play drops off,<lb/>
when grit and loose materials<lb/>
start to damage balls, shoes, and<lb/>
equipment, and when players<lb/>
complain of loose footing, the<lb/>
time has arrived to consider<lb/>
resurfacing. Courts in varying<lb/>
states of disrepair mean a wasting<lb/>
of a vaulable investment The<lb/>
preceding statements describe<lb/>
the Minges tennis courts.<lb/>
Why resurface? Because of<lb/>
usage! Presently, there are 18<lb/>
sections of tennis classes with an<lb/>
average of 25 per section for a<lb/>
courts each week. Both the men's<lb/>
total of 450 students using the<lb/>
and women's tennis teams use<lb/>
the courts for practice every day.<lb/>
After all this, there are still a vast<lb/>
number of students, staff and<lb/>
faculty that make use of the<lb/>
courts every day. Now that the<lb/>
facts have been presented,<lb/>
doesn't it seem plausible that the<lb/>
administration should consider<lb/>
taking some immediate action?<lb/>
Name withheld on request<lb/>
Grad student irked by equipment policy, Ficklen construction<lb/>
ToFOUNTAINHEAD. ,<lb/>
I would like to criticize a<lb/>
policy of the intramural depart-<lb/>
ment. I enjoy playing the game of<lb/>
racquetball. In order to reserve a<lb/>
court at Minges I must go to the<lb/>
equipment room in Memorial<lb/>
Gym between 8:30 until 10:30<lb/>
a.m at all other times the courts<lb/>
are available on a first come, first<lb/>
serve basis. My classes are at<lb/>
night and I work during the day.<lb/>
The only time when I could<lb/>
reserve a court would be during<lb/>
the lunch hour. There are two<lb/>
people working at the equipment<lb/>
room, but I am told that it would<lb/>
be an inconvenience to them to<lb/>
reserve the courts at any other<lb/>
time. I have paid my student fees,<lb/>
ostensibly to use the University's<lb/>
facilities; but, the one facility I<lb/>
would most like to use, I am, in a<lb/>
sense, precluded.<lb/>
With football season upon us<lb/>
it is probably not a good time fa<lb/>
my other criticism. However, it is<lb/>
hard for me to comprehend why<lb/>
this school will commit huge sums<lb/>
of money for the enlargement of<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium and yet not feel<lb/>
any urgency to construct a<lb/>
walkway over Tenth Street. It<lb/>
would seem to me that the latter<lb/>
effort would be of greater benefit<lb/>
The Great Haircut Look<lb/>
For men and women at<lb/>
SUPER EGO HAIR SALON<lb/>
222E. 5th Street<lb/>
Precision styling by Jennis , Jeanne, Lola, Olivia<lb/>
Located over the College Shop<lb/>
PH.7582455<lb/>
Redken Hair Products available<lb/>
Pitt County Shrine Club<lb/>
Annual Fish Fry<lb/>
To Benefit<lb/>
Crippled Childrens Hospital<lb/>
Wed Sept. 21,1977<lb/>
11 a.m. til 7 p.m.<lb/>
Fish will be Cooked and Served<lb/>
at these locations:<lb/>
Harris Super Market, N. Greene St.<lb/>
Elm St. Park<lb/>
College View Cleaners<lb/>
Pitt Plaza Shopping Center<lb/>
Harris Super Market, S. Memorial Drive<lb/>
Harris Super Market, Bethel<lb/>
$2.00 per plate<lb/>
to the general welfare of students<lb/>
and others at ECU. At another<lb/>
school I attended it was necessary<lb/>
for an injury of a personal friend<lb/>
to occur before the institution<lb/>
reacted and saw to it that a<lb/>
walkway was built over a similar -<lb/>
ily busy crossing area. He wasn't<lb/>
killed. Perhaps the first game<lb/>
played in the new stadium can be<lb/>
in memory to a pedestrian<lb/>
accident on Tenth Street.<lb/>
So it goes,<lb/>
Jonathan Smith<lb/>
Graduate Student<lb/>
WRQR change criticizedagain<lb/>
ToFOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
A decision was made and<lb/>
implemented in late May, 1977<lb/>
that has and is influencing all<lb/>
adults who appreciate album<lb/>
oriented radio. The decision of<lb/>
Gene Gray to abort WRQR and<lb/>
transform it into an impersonal<lb/>
boring, respective collection of<lb/>
disco and pre-teenage greatest<lb/>
hits is illogical to say the least.<lb/>
Changing WRQR to a top 40 FM<lb/>
station becomes even more<lb/>
questionable when one realizes<lb/>
the large number of stations<lb/>
identical to the "new" WRQR<lb/>
that already clutter the FM band<lb/>
in eastern N.C.<lb/>
So, Mr. Gray saw fit, fa<lb/>
whatever reason, to destroy one<lb/>
of the better stations in this state,<lb/>
including "Forum which was<lb/>
far and above the most profes-<lb/>
sional thing ever done in N.C.<lb/>
The only bright spot in this<lb/>
continuing saga is the intelligent<lb/>
decision of Mr. Gray to allow AI<lb/>
Handleman to continue his fine<lb/>
show at night from 8 p.m. til 1<lb/>
a.m. There is no better 5 hours of<lb/>
adult music, news, and public<lb/>
service available anywhere. Why<lb/>
can't Gene Gray simply use<lb/>
Handleman's example and pro-<lb/>
gram all day in that matter?<lb/>
If my fellow students do enjoy<lb/>
nandleman and WRQR at night,<lb/>
and would like a speedy return to<lb/>
full-time album-oriented pro-<lb/>
gramming on WRQR, PLEASE<lb/>
CALL Mr. Gene Gray at 753-4110<lb/>
or 753-4122 and let your fellings<lb/>
be known.<lb/>
WRQR is a public trustee- to<lb/>
be operated in the public interest.<lb/>
It presently is not being operated<lb/>
in the public interest. With<lb/>
enough response from ECU<lb/>
students and other concerned<lb/>
adults, Mr. Gay will have to<lb/>
realize we all want the return of<lb/>
OUR radio station, "WRQR.The<lb/>
top of the Rock<lb/>
Jim Strickland<lb/>
Class of 78<lb/>
Our Program<lb/>
helps yoj look and feel your best<lb/>
United Figure Salon<lb/>
Exclusively for women<lb/>
When you visit United Figure Salon<lb/>
a consultant will discuss with you<lb/>
the kind of shape you want .<lb/>
We work out a personalized plan<lb/>
of diet and exercise.<lb/>
hours 10:00 am to 9.00 pm<lb/>
Red oaks She , Center 264 By-pass<lb/>
756-2820<lb/>
$5.00 discount coupon for 4 months<lb/>
name<lb/>
tele.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058004_0007"/><lb/>
?WV IBBMB IPWHHIiV<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
Films Committee<lb/>
wants answers<lb/>
September 13, 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Hm 7<lb/>
The Films Committee is re-<lb/>
sponsible for the film program-<lb/>
ming of the ECU students and<lb/>
faculty. It would like your sugges-<lb/>
tions for the spring and summer<lb/>
schedule. There are three aspects<lb/>
of film programming to consider.<lb/>
These are the Friday and Satur-<lb/>
day night popular film series<lb/>
designed to present contempor-<lb/>
ary films, a Wednesday night<lb/>
series which should present avant<lb/>
garde, classical, and international<lb/>
film, and film festivals. Please<lb/>
place your oompleted survey in<lb/>
one of the several boxes provided<lb/>
in convenient locations (Old CU,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, Joy-<lb/>
ner Library, Allied Health Library<lb/>
and Croatan). Survey boxes will<lb/>
be provided through Fri Sept.<lb/>
16.<lb/>
Friday and Saturday-Popular Films<lb/>
?The Producers<lb/>
?Man Friday<lb/>
?Candy<lb/>
?Camelot<lb/>
?All This World War II<lb/>
?The Rooky Horror Picture Show<lb/>
?On A Gear Day You Can See<lb/>
Forever<lb/>
?All The President's Men<lb/>
?The Last Picture Show<lb/>
?7 Solution<lb/>
?Jaggernaut<lb/>
?Black Bird<lb/>
?Greased Lightening<lb/>
?The Duchess and The Dirt water<lb/>
Fox<lb/>
?Lady Sing The Blues<lb/>
?Annie Hall<lb/>
?BenHur<lb/>
?Cleopatra<lb/>
?Sink the Bismark<lb/>
?Cinderella Liberty<lb/>
?The Sting<lb/>
Others<lb/>
?Shelia Levine Is Dead And<lb/>
Living in New York<lb/>
?The Lost Honor of Katherine<lb/>
Blum<lb/>
?Fritz the Cat<lb/>
?Silver Streak<lb/>
?Deliverance<lb/>
?Barry Lyndon<lb/>
?Robin &amp; Marion<lb/>
?Dog Day Afternoon<lb/>
?Marathon Man<lb/>
?The Gambler<lb/>
?Save the Tiger<lb/>
?Hitler-The Last Ten Days<lb/>
?Steppenwdf<lb/>
?Odessa File<lb/>
?Daughter, Daughter<lb/>
?Hello Ddly<lb/>
?Harold-Maude<lb/>
?The Mad Adventures of Rabbi<lb/>
Jacob<lb/>
?9944100 Dead<lb/>
?Black Sunday<lb/>
WednesdayA vant garde,<lb/>
?The Grapes of Wrath<lb/>
?Cries &amp; Whispers<lb/>
?Day for Night<lb/>
?Monika<lb/>
?Small Change<lb/>
?Citizen Kane<lb/>
?Wild One<lb/>
?La Dolce Vita<lb/>
?Giant Rebel Without A Cause<lb/>
?Amaroord<lb/>
?Siddhartha<lb/>
Ot her s<lb/>
Classical, &amp; International Films<lb/>
?Casablanca<lb/>
?812<lb/>
?Wild Strawberries<lb/>
?The Bible<lb/>
?Virgin Spring<lb/>
?Through a Glass Darkly<lb/>
?Freaks<lb/>
?Carnal Knowledge<lb/>
?The Baloony<lb/>
?La bete Hurmaine<lb/>
Summerlin: Three bus<lb/>
routes running smoothly<lb/>
ByKENTYNDALL<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The SGA's transit system is<lb/>
running well this year with three<lb/>
regular routes, the purple, gold,<lb/>
and brown, according to transit<lb/>
manager Gene Summer I in.<lb/>
Another bus is on stand-by in<lb/>
case of mechanical failure of one<lb/>
of the other three buses.<lb/>
No major changes have been<lb/>
made this year, said Summerlin.<lb/>
However, a new stop has been<lb/>
added to the gold schedule at<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping<lb/>
Center. Summerlin believes that<lb/>
the new stop will prevent<lb/>
students from having to cross<lb/>
Greenville Boulevard from Pitt<lb/>
Plaza, another regular stop.<lb/>
Also, a new night route has<lb/>
been added to the transit system<lb/>
this year. The night route runs<lb/>
Monday through Thursday from 6<lb/>
p.m. to 10 p.m.<lb/>
"It seems to be picking up<lb/>
Summerlin said of the night<lb/>
route. Students are becoming<lb/>
aware of the advantages of the<lb/>
night route and using it, accord-<lb/>
ing to Summerlin.<lb/>
Summerlin said that there are<lb/>
enough schedules for every<lb/>
student to have one, and wants to<lb/>
see every student get one so he<lb/>
will know when and where the<lb/>
buses are running.<lb/>
Only a few minor breakdowns<lb/>
have occurred this year, accord-<lb/>
ing to Summerlin. Flat tires seem<lb/>
to be the biggest problem so far.<lb/>
"I am very pleased with the<lb/>
transit system's performance<lb/>
said Sessoms. I think Gene<lb/>
Summerlin has done an outstand-<lb/>
ing job. I think it's one of our<lb/>
most successful services.<lb/>
This year the SGA is charter-<lb/>
ing busses for the away football<lb/>
g. lines.<lb/>
Sessoms, Summerlin, and<lb/>
S( Vioe President Reed Warren<lb/>
all relieve that students should<lb/>
taf e advantage of this free service<lb/>
fa safety purposes.<lb/>
The chartered buses will help<lb/>
ease traffic flow, parking prob-<lb/>
blems at the games, and the<lb/>
number of intoxicated drivers.<lb/>
Students are reminded by<lb/>
Summerlin that the colors of the<lb/>
buses are printed in the windows.<lb/>
This is to insure that students get<lb/>
on the right bus.<lb/>
A special handicapped van is<lb/>
due to arrive Sept. 12, according<lb/>
to Summerlin. However, it must<lb/>
be sent away to be prepared for<lb/>
use.<lb/>
Equipment in the van will<lb/>
include tie-downs for the wheel<lb/>
chairs, a mechanical lift, a bubbfe<lb/>
roof, and a C.B. radio.<lb/>
Summerlin expects the van to<lb/>
be in use by the handicapped<lb/>
students by the first of October.<lb/>
According to SGA President<lb/>
Neil Sessoms, research will be<lb/>
done to determine at what time<lb/>
and where the handicapped<lb/>
students are located at certain<lb/>
times.The information gathered<lb/>
from this study will determine the<lb/>
handicapped bus route.<lb/>
Film Festivals<lb/>
?Marx Brothers<lb/>
?Alfred Hitchkock<lb/>
?Walter Matthau<lb/>
?Goldie Hawn<lb/>
?Jack Lemmon<lb/>
?Henry Fonda<lb/>
Others<lb/>
-Woody Allen<lb/>
-Jerry Lewis<lb/>
-I ngrid Bergman<lb/>
-Humphrey Bogart<lb/>
-Greta Garbo<lb/>
Other oomments and suggestions:<lb/>
The Bicycle Shop<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
For All Your Cycling Needs<lb/>
THE NEW GUYS IN TOWN<lb/>
207 E. 5th St. Downtown<lb/>
Ph. 7521640<lb/>
<pb facs="00058004_0008"/><lb/>
?lux<lb/>
.??(<lb/>
<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
f<lb/>
m<lb/>
'MMW 0<lb/>
n<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
mil<lb/>
?.<lb/>
fc m<lb/>
,?<lb/>
?<lb/>
jVki<lb/>
i<lb/>
8?oolef<lb/>
T<lb/>
V<lb/>
.th<lb/>
A Retrospective Exhibition<lb/>
1966 through 1977<lb/>
W.B. Gray Art Gallery<lb/>
Leo W. Jenkins Art Center<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
September 6-29,1977<lb/>
IMAGES ABOUT MAN by DONALD SEXAUER<lb/>
<pb facs="00058004_0009"/><lb/>
September 13. 1977 FQUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
Dog owners must obey law<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
ByJlJilt t VERt 1 U<lb/>
aafl Wi<lb/>
Al ? ??? ? i<lb/>
ville city limits musl abide by the<lb/>
24-hour<lb/>
ahi ? . -<lb/>
Alton Warren. City buil<lb/>
"It is important tl<lb/>
have a leash, char i ome type<lb/>
of physical control W;i<lb/>
Dogs must also have a<lb/>
licenseta tag. costing one dollar,<lb/>
and a rabies vaccinat <lb/>
"Every rrxith we pick up 25<lb/>
to 50 dogs, Warren said Fifty<lb/>
percent have no tags<lb/>
After three days, the dog is<lb/>
put up for adoption The oost is $5<lb/>
to adopt a dog<lb/>
i<lb/>
iwa w<lb/>
Ai<lb/>
ha -2i whe<lb/>
I -<lb/>
?<lb/>
- i<lb/>
Ea<lb/>
??? ire patrollii<lb/>
t y f a st<lb/>
We do havf-<lb/>
takethi logs and put then the<lb/>
animal shelt.<lb/>
' We keep a dog fa three days<lb/>
while trying to locate the owner.<lb/>
Warren said.<lb/>
The law concerns all Green-<lb/>
e residents, but ECU students<lb/>
? -<lb/>
i<lb/>
cause the most problems when<lb/>
 own<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
ig habi'<lb/>
hboi<lb/>
i<lb/>
anr<lb/>
;jay off a<lb/>
?<lb/>
of the courthouse, according to<lb/>
War<lb/>
We like to warn students.<lb/>
Warren said<lb/>
The Animal Control Shelter is<lb/>
located on Cemetery Road behind<lb/>
the cemetery at the end of East<lb/>
5th Street<lb/>
MSC offers many activities<lb/>
jUd<lb/>
ot '<lb/>
- H&amp;,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
offers a full range of recreational<lb/>
and leisure-time activities to meet<lb/>
the needs and desires of the<lb/>
University community with activ-<lb/>
ities ranging from those which<lb/>
allow fa group participation to<lb/>
those which are tailored to<lb/>
individual enjoyment.<lb/>
Fa those who enjoy bowling,<lb/>
Mendenhall has an eight-lane,<lb/>
fully equipped Brunswick Bowl-<lb/>
ing Alley. Sanctioned fa comp-<lb/>
etition by the American Bowling<lb/>
Coigress, the bowling alley has<lb/>
championship quality lanes.<lb/>
A wide range of programs is<lb/>
offered at the bowling lanes,<lb/>
including lane rental, red pin<lb/>
bowling, happy hour discounts,<lb/>
and bowling leagues.<lb/>
The Crafts Center enables<lb/>
users to engage in several base<lb/>
crafts areas. Facilities and equip-<lb/>
ment are available fa ceramics,<lb/>
jewelry, metalwak. textiles, and<lb/>
phaography. Experience is not<lb/>
necessary, as workshops are<lb/>
conducted periodically<lb/>
The billards room is the finest<lb/>
of its type in town Equipped with<lb/>
twelve championship slate-top<lb/>
Sanunier-Wilhem tables, the bil-<lb/>
lards room also offers the best in<lb/>
pool cues.<lb/>
Table tennis rooms are located<lb/>
in the billards area, and table<lb/>
games may be checked out at the<lb/>
Billards Control Center Counter.<lb/>
The Mendenhall Arcade is<lb/>
stocked with the most recent<lb/>
computerized and electronic pin-<lb/>
ball games. Also located in the<lb/>
Arcade is a television Viewing<lb/>
lounge<lb/>
Beige Suedes Women's Moc<lb/>
Sizes 5-9 Priced at25.00<lb/>
?W<lb/>
masir cnargc<lb/>
THIS POOCHIE JUMPtU into the tountain tor a cooling swim<lb/>
Army-Navy Surplus<lb/>
1501 S. Evans<lb/>
Military Surplus<lb/>
Camping and backpacking<lb/>
equipment Peacoats and Jeans.<lb/>
11 ;30-5:30<lb/>
307 EVANS ST .GREENVILLE, N C SANKAMERICMO<lb/>
OPEN DAILY 10 A M UNTIL6PM<lb/>
Charles Haraee Owner and Operator<lb/>
ACADEMIC<lb/>
RESEARCH<lb/>
ALL SUBJECTS<lb/>
Fast professional, and proven<lb/>
quality Choose from our library of<lb/>
7 000 topics Send $1 00 for the<lb/>
current edition of OU' 220 page<lb/>
mail order catalog<lb/>
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE<lb/>
1132? IDAHO AVE , No 206-E<lb/>
LOS ANGELES. CALIF 90025<lb/>
(213) 477-8474<lb/>
Ou' resean h papers are sold for<lb/>
eseari I purposes only<lb/>
4<lb/>
This Week At The<lb/>
ELBO ROOM<lb/>
Tonight:<lb/>
MAINSTREAM<lb/>
<lb/>
Featuring<lb/>
Please rush my cat<lb/>
Enclosed is $i<lb/>
-<lb/>
A1"<lb/>
State ' I<lb/>
F I<lb/>
J<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Thurs<lb/>
SPONTANES<lb/>
HARLEY HOG &amp; THE ROCKERS<lb/>
50 REVIEW<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat<lb/>
MAINSTREAM<lb/>
DON'T FORGET FRI. 3-7<lb/>
The Music Listening Center is<lb/>
located on the top floor of<lb/>
Mendenhall. Four individual<lb/>
rooms are available fa the use of<lb/>
top-quality stereo equipment.<lb/>
The music library has over 1500<lb/>
selections, and listeners may also<lb/>
bring their personal selections<lb/>
and have them played<lb/>
Located in the Music Listen-<lb/>
ing Center is the Reading Room<lb/>
This area provides a quiet<lb/>
relaxed atmosphere fa study and<lb/>
leisure reading More than<lb/>
twenty magazine titles are avail-<lb/>
able.<lb/>
203 E. 5th St.<lb/>
Announces<lb/>
NEW PRICES'<lb/>
ALL 6.98 list LP s<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
ALL 7.98 list LPs<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058004_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD September 13, 1977<lb/>
films<lb/>
by David IV. Trevino<lb/>
LIFE AFTER LIFE<lb/>
Ruby<lb/>
Since William Friedken's The Exorcist first appeared a few years<lb/>
ago demonic possession has become either a popular movie subject or<lb/>
an addiction If Ruby cannot help to put an end to any lingering desires<lb/>
to wrestle Pazuzu, the only alternative is methadone.<lb/>
Of course Ruby is not exactly like The Exorast. It has red titles in<lb/>
the beginning, but the spirit chauffeur is from Burnt Offering.<lb/>
Although half the plot oomes from Exorcist V- VIII the other half is<lb/>
drawn from The Reincarnation of Peter Proud. And all the dances were<lb/>
previously choreographed in West Side Story.<lb/>
Ruby (Piper Laurie) is a red-haired caricature of a Mae West figure.<lb/>
She runs a drive-in movie theater so members of an old gambling<lb/>
syndicate can find honest work after sentences in prison. (Don't forget!<lb/>
Hire the con.). Fifteen years earlier Ruby had been a torch singer<lb/>
involved with the gang and was used to seduce men the gang leader,<lb/>
Jake, wished disposed of in their ensuing distraction. Until Jake<lb/>
became jealous and had the father of her unborn child shot to death on<lb/>
an old set from Gentle Ben, Ruby seemed to have few problems. But<lb/>
her departed lover felt their relationship had an unsatisfactory ending<lb/>
and years later, through his mute daughter, Leslie (Janit Baldwin) he<lb/>
oomes back to shake the bed and cause trouble for everyone concerned<lb/>
(Not me), because religion is an explosive topic, a psychologist is called<lb/>
in rather than a priest or a rabbi. The old boyfriend killsoff all of Jake's<lb/>
cronies and Jake before he finishes off Ruby. As her only friend and the<lb/>
psychologist watch in somewhat dilluted horror ("It's what she<lb/>
wants), Ruby goes down to the swamp where her recycled flame<lb/>
leads her into the crystal water and the skeleton of Jaws strangles her.<lb/>
If the stay seemsa little weak tocarry a full length film, the special<lb/>
effects could not retain the attention of any of the larger rodents. All<lb/>
the action takes plaoe in staged sets or a drive-in movie theater. The<lb/>
way to tell if Leslie isgetting possessed or not is to check and see if she<lb/>
has black under her eyes or not. Black eyes mean evil and dear eyes do<lb/>
not. The actual spirit of Ruby'slover is nothing more than a fan bowing<lb/>
dust and leaves and the theme song The Adams Family played<lb/>
backwards. Don't goto Ruby if you expect pea soup and Tubular Bells.<lb/>
While all this spiritual turmoil is being resolved, night after night<lb/>
the same people are at the drive-in watching The Attack of the Fifty<lb/>
Foot Woman. Thisold, black and white "B" picture from the Fifties is<lb/>
nothing more than a low budget horror movie with cheap effects about<lb/>
an enourmous woman who wrecks havoc in the name of love.<lb/>
Whenever Ruby falters you get a flash of a tinker toy power line getting<lb/>
ripped up or Tonka truck being heaved. Actually, these sequences are<lb/>
better by far than the scene when the speakers come to life and attack<lb/>
the theater manager.<lb/>
Ruby is little more than a Monarch Notes approach to recent horror<lb/>
movies. If Linda Blair didn't make it clear fa you either time, you may<lb/>
need maethan this film has to offer youand rrwre than you can get<lb/>
without a prescription.<lb/>
BREAKING TRAINING (Pitt) The Bad News Bears ride again in this<lb/>
sappy sequel without the aiginai's star cast. Attending these movies<lb/>
only encourages their producers to make mae and rrwre. Skip it One<lb/>
star.<lb/>
GRANK THEFT AUTO (Buccaneer Movies Two) Opie grows up and<lb/>
plagerizes from Vanishing Point and the Ohio State Patrol Driver's<lb/>
Education Series. Ron Howard mimes a lichen on a large, inert stone in<lb/>
this jevenile absurdity.<lb/>
THE GREATEST (Park) hardly. Ali gives up fighting unknowns and<lb/>
charges fa a movie about what he used to be. This absurd film is little<lb/>
mae than a racist Rocky. One star.<lb/>
NEW YORK, NEW YORK (Plaza One) Liza Minelli is trite and Robert<lb/>
DeNiro excellent in this meaningless sham nostalgia. A singer and<lb/>
saxaphone player fall in love and struggle their separate ways to the<lb/>
top. This has been done a hundred times befae and a hundred times<lb/>
better. Two stars.<lb/>
ROLLERCOASTER (Buccaneer Movies One) Even without the<lb/>
throbbing headache produced by the unique effect of Sensurround, this<lb/>
film is a disaster. Timmothy Bottoms Aalks around looking amused out<lb/>
of context while Geage Segal looks oonfused as he teams with old,<lb/>
flaking Richard Widmark to find out who the mad rollerooaster bomber<lb/>
is and stop him befae, Oh, no he strikes aice again. Segal and<lb/>
Brttoms together fa a single, dim star.<lb/>
RUBY (PLAZA TWO( Reviewed above.<lb/>
Trends<lb/>
Afterlife explored in book<lb/>
By JEFF ROLLINS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Death and the Hereafter are<lb/>
subjects that have mystified man<lb/>
since his beginning and they are<lb/>
sure to sell a book. Famer East<lb/>
Carolina philosophy professa<lb/>
Raymaid A. Moody, Jr has<lb/>
published an uncanny book in<lb/>
which he collates interviews of<lb/>
one hundred and fifty persons<lb/>
who had been either clinically<lb/>
dead fa a shat time a who had<lb/>
had near-death experiences.<lb/>
Moody finds that their exper-<lb/>
iences during the time that they<lb/>
were "dead" were weirdly simi-<lb/>
lar. Moodv makes no claims at all<lb/>
to have practiced valid scientific<lb/>
method in his research, which,<lb/>
considering the subject matter, it<lb/>
would have been impossible to do<lb/>
anyway. But the novelty of his<lb/>
area of research, that of the<lb/>
Afterlife, makes up fa the book's<lb/>
shaky scientific underpinnings.<lb/>
A composite death-experience<lb/>
goes something like this. Will is<lb/>
dying and as he reaches the point<lb/>
of greatest physical distress he<lb/>
hears himself pronounced dead<lb/>
by the docta. He begins to hear a<lb/>
loud ringing a buzzing and at the<lb/>
same time feels himself moving<lb/>
quickly through a dark tunnel.<lb/>
Onoe out of hte tunnel, Will finds<lb/>
that he is art of his hnriv<lb/>
JIMMY BUFFETT IS scheduled to appear at ECU on Oct. 5. Tickets<lb/>
will go on sale Wednesday.<lb/>
generally floating around the top<lb/>
of the room, and can see his own<lb/>
earthly body and the doctas<lb/>
waking around him.<lb/>
After a while, Will becomes<lb/>
accustomed to his condition,<lb/>
begins to feel very secure and<lb/>
happy, and even tries to stop the<lb/>
doctas from reviving him. How-<lb/>
ever, his hands pass right<lb/>
through the docta's and Will<lb/>
realizes that his new, spiritual<lb/>
body is vastly different from the<lb/>
one he had befae. Soon others<lb/>
cane to meet and help him. He<lb/>
descries friends and relatives<lb/>
already oead and begins to feel<lb/>
the presence of a loving, warm<lb/>
"being of light<lb/>
This being nonverbal Iy asks<lb/>
him to evaluate his life and Will<lb/>
sees a rapid-play synopsis of his<lb/>
life. Soon he approaches a border<lb/>
or limit, apparently the line<lb/>
between this wald and the next,<lb/>
but finds that hecannaaossit. It<lb/>
is not yet time to die but the<lb/>
peach and content exuded by the<lb/>
being of light makes him want to<lb/>
stay. In spite of these feelings<lb/>
though, Will's body is resusci-<lb/>
tated and he finds himself back<lb/>
inside it.<lb/>
The maja part of the book<lb/>
elucidates upon the above com-<lb/>
posite and illustrates each ele-<lb/>
ment of the sketch with testi-<lb/>
monies from patients.<lb/>
Moody takes time to present<lb/>
two arguments which might be<lb/>
used against the validity of<lb/>
interviewing persons who claim to<lb/>
have "died First of all, couldn't<lb/>
these people be suffering from<lb/>
the effects of long hours of<lb/>
immobility and isolation?<lb/>
See MOODY, p. 11<lb/>
ECU Marching Program<lb/>
builds quality reputation<lb/>
By RENEE DIXON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The East Carolina Marching<lb/>
Pirates began the 1977 season<lb/>
with an impressive halftime show<lb/>
Saturday September 3, in Carter<lb/>
Stadium.<lb/>
The over-whelming impact of<lb/>
over 250 marchers was high-<lb/>
lighted in he opening number,<lb/>
"I'veGot Rythym in a company<lb/>
front famatioi toward the N.C.<lb/>
State fans. Next, the percussion<lb/>
section was featured in a present-<lb/>
tat ion of the infamous "da-dut-<lb/>
dut<lb/>
Then, "Mountain Dew<lb/>
'eaturing the pom-pom squad in<lb/>
pigtails, midriffs, and cut-offs,<lb/>
drew a standing ovation from the<lb/>
ECU stands. The show ooncluded<lb/>
with a larger than ever famatioi<lb/>
of the letters, "ECU while the<lb/>
band played the fight song.<lb/>
Under the direction of Geage<lb/>
Naff, of the ECU School of Music,<lb/>
the ECU Marching Program has<lb/>
built a quality reputation in the<lb/>
last few years. Thanks to the<lb/>
enthusiasm and dedication of<lb/>
Naff as well as many talented<lb/>
assistants and marching pirate<lb/>
suppaters, East Carolina has the<lb/>
proud Marching Pirate name,<lb/>
well-known to the southeastern<lb/>
United States.<lb/>
Presently, the ECU Marching<lb/>
Pirates consists of the marching<lb/>
wind and percussion sections , a<lb/>
flag and rifle oola guard, and a<lb/>
majaette and pom-pom squad.<lb/>
Naff is assisted in the general<lb/>
organization of the marching<lb/>
band by Tim Hodgin, a graduate<lb/>
assistant in the ECU School of<lb/>
Music, and the band managers,<lb/>
Willie Bell and Sue "Doobie"<lb/>
Johnson. Willie Bell is also<lb/>
Publicity Directa and Computer<lb/>
Operations Directa. The student<lb/>
leaders within the band are the<lb/>
section captains: Eddie "Wrist"<lb/>
Asten, percussion; Chuck Booth,<lb/>
brass; Jerry Walters, upper<lb/>
reeds; and Richard Walters,<lb/>
lower reeds. The 1977 Drum<lb/>
Majas are Jay Williams and<lb/>
Julee Gilbert.<lb/>
Ms. Gilbert was vtfed Out-<lb/>
standing Marching Pirate for<lb/>
1976 by WRC. She was also drum<lb/>
maja of the Crossmen Drum and<lb/>
Bugle Caps of Philadelphia. The<lb/>
Cassmen placed 11th at Drum<lb/>
Caps International this summer<lb/>
and also won the American<lb/>
Legion National title.<lb/>
The Marching Percussion<lb/>
Instructor is zbill Schutters.<lb/>
Schutters has been the Drum<lb/>
Instructo (and a member) of the<lb/>
Troopers Drum and Bugle Cops<lb/>
of Casper, Wyoming. Schutters is<lb/>
natioially known fa his drum<lb/>
oops instruction and is involved<lb/>
in the Cops Style Band Froit<lb/>
Clinic entoprise.<lb/>
The Colo Guard Instructo,<lb/>
Barbara Newberry, was Colo<lb/>
Guard Captain while attending<lb/>
West Chester State (Pa.), and is<lb/>
also a member of the Crossmen<lb/>
Drum and Bugle Cops flagline.<lb/>
Ms. Newberry also woks as an<lb/>
instructo fo Caps Style Band<lb/>
Front Clinics. Captains of the<lb/>
flagline are Brenda Petersen and<lb/>
Barbara McPherson.<lb/>
The captain of the rifle team is<lb/>
Susan Marked, the 1976 National<lb/>
Individual Champion. Ms.<lb/>
Marked is also a member of the<lb/>
Garfield Cadets of New Jersey<lb/>
who placed in the top 12 at Drum<lb/>
Cop Internatioial oonpetition.<lb/>
Three members of the ECU rifle<lb/>
team are here on rifle scholar-<lb/>
ships; Susan Marked, Martha<lb/>
Larkin, and Annie Madden.<lb/>
The Majaette and Pan-Pan<lb/>
Instructo is Regina Bullock. Ms.<lb/>
Bullock is assisted by pom-pom<lb/>
Captain, Ellen Fox. The<lb/>
majaette squad has three feature<lb/>
twirlers; Lynn Willifad, Janet<lb/>
Swain, and Kathy Dryer. Ms.<lb/>
Willifad is Majaette Queen of<lb/>
America 1978, and Ms. Swain<lb/>
placed 2nd runner up.<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00058004_0011"/><lb/>
Society offers<lb/>
quality films<lb/>
September 13, 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
The Cinema Society of Green-<lb/>
ville plans to screen five films<lb/>
during fall semester. To join the<lb/>
society and be able to see the<lb/>
films, a subscription fee of $5.OX)<lb/>
is required.<lb/>
No individual tickets will be<lb/>
made available. Admission is by<lb/>
subscription membership only.<lb/>
To receive a subscription<lb/>
ticket at the door of the first film<lb/>
in the Jenkins Memorial Art<lb/>
Center Theater, September 25 at<lb/>
8 p.m forward a check made<lb/>
payable to the Cinema Society of<lb/>
Greenville to either William Ste-<lb/>
phenson or Peter Macuck in care<lb/>
of the ECU English Department.<lb/>
The following films will<lb/>
appear this fall:<lb/>
The Go-Between (director,<lb/>
Joseph Losey) Julie Christie and<lb/>
Alan Bates star as the tragic<lb/>
lovers in a story of sumptuous,<lb/>
class-conscious Edwardnn life in<lb/>
England. Their "go-between" is<lb/>
an innocent boy whose life is<lb/>
profoundly affected by the affair.<lb/>
A Grand Prize winner at the<lb/>
Cannes Film Festival.<lb/>
Je T'Aime, Je T'Aime (direc-<lb/>
tor, Alain Resnais) A would-be<lb/>
suicide agrees to take part in a<lb/>
scientific experiment which will<lb/>
return him to a moment in his<lb/>
past, where he will be once again<lb/>
with the woman he loved But<lb/>
after he is in the time-machine,<lb/>
the unexpected occurs. Within<lb/>
this science-fiction framework.<lb/>
Resnais effects one of his most<lb/>
brilliant and poetic explorations<lb/>
of time and memory. (In French,<lb/>
subtitles in English)<lb/>
Summer Wishes, Winter<lb/>
Dreams (director, Gilbert Cates)<lb/>
Joanne Woodward and Martin<lb/>
Balsom as a married couple<lb/>
facing the middle-years crisis of<lb/>
unfulfilled expectations from life,<lb/>
including two children whose<lb/>
lives fit none of their parents'<lb/>
hopes for them. A haunting<lb/>
American film, reminiscent of<lb/>
Ingmar Bergman. Sylvia Sidney<lb/>
won an Academy Award for her<lb/>
performance as the grandmother.<lb/>
Love is a Funny Thing (direc-<lb/>
ta, Claude Lelouch) A French<lb/>
film shot on location in the United<lb/>
States. Shows the love affair of a<lb/>
French couple unfolding and<lb/>
responding to, tourist sights from<lb/>
Las Vegas to New Orleans.<lb/>
Jean-Paul Belmondo and Annie<lb/>
Girardot are the stars of this<lb/>
bittersweet oomedy. (In French<lb/>
and English, subtitles in English)<lb/>
A Brief Vacation (director,<lb/>
Vittorio DeSica) DeSica's last<lb/>
masterpiece tells of a Milanese<lb/>
factory worker who is a slave to<lb/>
her job and her family, until<lb/>
illness and a prepaid health plan<lb/>
send her to an Alpine sanitarium.<lb/>
In the idyllic mountain setting,<lb/>
she becomes aware of herself for<lb/>
the first time, and is roman-<lb/>
tically attracted to a handsome<lb/>
young male patient. (In Italian,<lb/>
subtitles in English)<lb/>
Goings On<lb/>
TUESDAY:<lb/>
TNT Powerhouse on the University Mall, 8 p.m.<lb/>
.The Roxy presents Nicholas Roeg's "Performance" with Mick<lb/>
Jagger, 8 p.m. Adm. $1.00.<lb/>
WEDNESDAY:<lb/>
Student Union film, "The Harrad Experiment to be shown in<lb/>
Mendenhall, 8 p.m. Adm. ECU ID and Activity Card.<lb/>
THURSDAY:<lb/>
Last chance to purchase subscriptions to the five films<lb/>
presented by the Cinema Society of Greenville. See William<lb/>
Stephenson or Peter Makuck in Austin Building.<lb/>
FRIDAY:<lb/>
Student Union film, "Carrie" with Sissy Spaoek, to be shown in<lb/>
Mendenhall, 7 and 9 p.m. Adm. ECU ID and Activity Card.<lb/>
SATURDAY:<lb/>
Student Union film, "Carrie to be shown in Mendenhall, 7<lb/>
and 9 p.m. Adm. ECU ID and Activity Card.<lb/>
ECU-vs-University of Toledo, 730 p.m Toledo, Ohio.<lb/>
SUNDAY:<lb/>
Last chance to register for Journalism Workshop. See Rich<lb/>
Morin in the Division of Continuing Education Dept in the Erwin<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
MOODY<lb/>
Continued from p. 10<lb/>
Moody insists that the results<lb/>
of isolation (hallucinations, time-<lb/>
sense distortion, and seeing<lb/>
flashbacks of one's life) do not<lb/>
adequately explain the exper-<lb/>
iences of his interviewees. Well,<lb/>
couldn't these people have been<lb/>
having side-effects from all the<lb/>
medicine they had had to take?<lb/>
Moody responds that the great<lb/>
similarity in content and progres-<lb/>
sion of the subjects' experiences,<lb/>
despite the fact that those exper-<lb/>
iences are not what is oommonly<lb/>
imagined to happen upon death,<lb/>
tend to weigh against the argu-<lb/>
ments for drug-induoed deliria.<lb/>
In short, the book is an<lb/>
afternoon's interesting diversion,<lb/>
and we laud Moody less for the<lb/>
scientific value of his results than<lb/>
fa the aiginality of his research.<lb/>
Life After Life will probably not<lb/>
cause you to change your meta-<lb/>
physics but it will make you think<lb/>
about them, and that, after all, is<lb/>
our fate.<lb/>
CHEERS<lb/>
FOR THE<lb/>
PIRATES!<lb/>
and<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
SAVON'S<lb/>
LOW<lb/>
PRICES!<lb/>
OPEN<lb/>
7 a.m. til midnight<lb/>
Mon. - Sat.<lb/>
9 a.m. til 8 p.m. Sunday<lb/>
$6<lb/>
99<lb/>
1200<lb/>
TEXAS<lb/>
INSTRUMENTS<lb/>
CALCULATOR<lb/>
MM<lb/>
'?<lb/>
66<lb/>
RECTANGULAR<lb/>
VINYL<lb/>
WASTE<lb/>
BASKETS<lb/>
89<lb/>
11 oz.<lb/>
STYLE<lb/>
HAIR SPRAY<lb/>
3 PAIR PKG<lb/>
KNEE HI CO C<lb/>
HOSE<lb/>
FOLDING<lb/>
aim 2,or$1TTvr$2<lb/>
TOOTHPASTE TRAYS<lb/>
39<lb/>
f ft "A WHOLE LOT MORE<lb/>
l&amp;oqer aon THAN JU?"Z<lb/>
J fooddibjg store<lb/>
<pb facs="00058004_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD September 13. 1977<lb/>
(At the request of the university administration FOUNTAINHEAD is<lb/>
running the university visitation policy so that all students can familiarize themselves with it. )<lb/>
RESTATEMENT OF VISITATION POLICY<lb/>
When the requeat for visitation privileges was presented to the Board of<lb/>
Trustees, the security of the woren residents was a major concern, and they<lb/>
approved the request only with specific guidelines and responsibilities for both<lb/>
the students and Administration. They stated that visitation would be allowed only<lb/>
so long as the guidelines were upheld and supervision provided by the students and<lb/>
that adequate security was maintained. They further instructed the Administration<lb/>
to insure that the guidelines were upheld.<lb/>
Through residence hall meetings and publications, the University provides<lb/>
the students with the information on the visitation program. However, it has<lb/>
become apparent that the rules are not being observed and the responsibility of<lb/>
supervision placed on the students ie not being carried out. Thus, security is a<lb/>
major concern.<lb/>
Since the Fall Semester began, several unfortunate incidents have occurred and<lb/>
as the University has an obligation to provide proper security measures for the<lb/>
residence halls, the following policy will become effective as of Friday,<lb/>
September 9, 1977, and will be strictly enforced<lb/>
VISITATION POLICY<lb/>
hen's and Iomen's Residence Halls<lb/>
Subject to the following provisions and limitations, individual student rooms<lb/>
in all undergraduate residence halls may be used for informal social activities<lb/>
and study dates in which members of the opposite sex are entertained by residents.<lb/>
Members of each residence hall, cooperately and individually, must agree to<lb/>
conduct themselves in a manner publicly defensible for members of the University<lb/>
community and residents of University housing and to be responsible for assuming<lb/>
that such conduct prevails in the residence halls.<lb/>
A. Visitation hours for both men's and women's residence halls are 12:CC Noon<lb/>
until 1;00 a.m.<lb/>
B. Individual residence halls may vote on the hours of visitation if they so<lb/>
desire. Hours will then be in accord with the majority vote. Respective<lb/>
House Councils are responsible for providing supervision during the hours<lb/>
of visitation.<lb/>
C. Ho student is allowed to have a guest of the opposite sex in hisher room<lb/>
over the objection of the roommate. No male or female under the age of<lb/>
eighteen is allowed to participate in the visitation program.<lb/>
D. Doors will remain open and lights will stay on.<lb/>
E. In the women's residence halls, each male guest, student or non-student, will<lb/>
enter and leave by the FRONT DOOR ONLY and be accompanied by a resident of<lb/>
that building.<lb/>
F. If there are instances of violations by a section, floor, or entire residence<lb/>
hall, the offending parties may be penalized by suspension of visitation<lb/>
privileges for a period of time decided upon by the residence hall council and<lb/>
approved by the Associate Bean of Students.<lb/>
G. At any time, for due cause, the program in any residence hall, or any part<lb/>
thereof, may be terminated by the Board of Trustees or the Board's Executive<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
H. All unescorted males found in the women's residence halls ill be arrested and<lb/>
charged with trespassing'1. This does not include the lobby during the hours<lb/>
between 3;00 a.m. and 1:00 a.m.<lb/>
I. All women found loitering unescorted inside or on balconies of the men's<lb/>
residence halls will be arrested and charged with trespassing This does<lb/>
not include any lounge or recreational area located in the basements during<lb/>
the hours between 8:00 a.m. and 1:00 a.m.<lb/>
J. Any male found in the residence hall room of a female between the hours of<lb/>
l.OG a.m. and 12:00 Noon will be subject to arrest for "trespassing and the<lb/>
fenale subject to arrest for 'aiding and abetting .<lb/>
K. Any female found in the residence hall room of a male between the hours of<lb/>
10C a.m. and 12:00 Noon will be subject to arrest for trespassing and the<lb/>
male subject to 'aiding and abetting<lb/>
?????????IBHMH<lb/>
<pb facs="00058004_0013"/><lb/>
September 13, 1977 FQUNTAINHEAD Page 13<lb/>
Impressive new band Hawk<lb/>
Downtown band combines old and new<lb/>
ByEDCOLLEVECHIO<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
If you ventured downtown this<lb/>
past weekend in Greenville, you<lb/>
may have been one of the many<lb/>
people who enjoyed the music of<lb/>
Hawk. This exciting. ?w band,<lb/>
with its impressive new material,<lb/>
is well worth watching.<lb/>
The opening of Hawk's show<lb/>
included many familiar songs<lb/>
professionally performed. The<lb/>
material, ranging from Fleetwood<lb/>
Mac to Bad Company, was<lb/>
instrumentally and vocally of<lb/>
recording studio quality.<lb/>
Harmonies were well bal-<lb/>
anced and song selections were<lb/>
varied enough so that each<lb/>
member of the five man band had<lb/>
the opportunity to sing lead at<lb/>
least once during their perform-<lb/>
ance.<lb/>
A smattering of unknown, as<lb/>
well as unintreduced, songs were<lb/>
played throughout the first set,<lb/>
but the strength and enthusiasm<lb/>
demonstrated in their perform-<lb/>
ance made me feel that I should<lb/>
have recognized them. Suddenly,<lb/>
my album collection seemed to be<lb/>
in need of updating.<lb/>
A oonverstaion with members<lb/>
of the band during one of their<lb/>
breaks provided me with the<lb/>
answer to the "mystery tunes<lb/>
The members of Hawk informed<lb/>
me that these previously unheard<lb/>
melodies were original comp-<lb/>
ositions and their appearances in<lb/>
the show were carefully planned<lb/>
for maximum effectiveness.<lb/>
Mixed unannounced with the<lb/>
familiar commercial rock and roll,<lb/>
Hawk's original songs generated<lb/>
a pleasant curiosity among the<lb/>
audience. Early in the evening<lb/>
guitarist Martin Wayne intro-<lb/>
duced a release from the new<lb/>
Crosby, Stills and Nash album<lb/>
which was followed without pause<lb/>
by another aooustic tune of a very<lb/>
similar nature. Until I later<lb/>
learned the song was a Hawk<lb/>
original, I was sure it was from<lb/>
the Crosby, Stills and Nash<lb/>
album, and that I had somehow<lb/>
missed it before.<lb/>
This almost scientific ap-<lb/>
1977-78 Theatre Arts Series<lb/>
Broadway comes to ECU<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
If you can't make it to a<lb/>
Broadway show, East Carolina<lb/>
University's Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center will bring Broadway to<lb/>
you. First offering of its 1977-78<lb/>
Theatre Arts Series are<lb/>
"Cabaret" and "Grease<lb/>
One of the most exciting<lb/>
musicals ever performed on<lb/>
Broadway, "Cabaret" has drawn<lb/>
TRENDS<lb/>
Meeting<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
at 3:00.<lb/>
Interested<lb/>
writers<lb/>
should<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Monogram Pint Of<lb/>
flPV BuHont for National<lb/>
?d? $????' Collagiata So-<lb/>
 rorttiat and Fratarni-<lb/>
?? $4.00<lb/>
Come in ?nd tee our complete line<lb/>
of Fraternity ? Sorority Jewelry.<lb/>
crowds in various stage product-<lb/>
ions. The ECU performance date<lb/>
is Oct. 18.<lb/>
Another musical show,<lb/>
"Grease a comedy about the<lb/>
1950's in America, has been<lb/>
scheduled here for Nov. 16.<lb/>
Public tickets fa each play are<lb/>
$5 each, with special rates of $3<lb/>
each if purchased for groups of 20<lb/>
persons or more. Both musicals<lb/>
will be performed in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
The Theatre Arts Series also<lb/>
includes two other distinctive<lb/>
theatrical acts: William Windom<lb/>
as humorist James Thurber in a<lb/>
special one-man performance<lb/>
March 2, and an appearnace by<lb/>
Keith Berger April 10.<lb/>
Windom was featured in the<lb/>
role of Thurber in the television<lb/>
show My World and Weloome to<lb/>
It  His stage creation of the role<lb/>
has been ranked with Hal<lb/>
Holbrook's Mark Twain. Public<lb/>
tickets fa the Windom show are<lb/>
$4 each, with group rates of $2.50<lb/>
each.<lb/>
Keith Berger, a student of<lb/>
Marcel Marceau, appears without<lb/>
props, music a otha suppats, to<lb/>
aeate a variety of effects through<lb/>
the medium of pantomine. Indiv-<lb/>
idual tickets fa his perfamance<lb/>
are $3 each, and $2 at he group<lb/>
rate.<lb/>
Seasoi tickets fa all four<lb/>
Theatre Arts events are available<lb/>
at $10 each at the ECU Central<lb/>
Ticket Office in Mendenhall. Mail<lb/>
aders fa tickets should be sent<lb/>
with a stamped, addressed en-<lb/>
velope.<lb/>
Instruments<lb/>
electronic calculators,<lb/>
SR-40 S2<lb/>
ISR-5I II 49<lb/>
TI-57 69.<lb/>
TI-58 ?<lb/>
Tl-59 254.<lb/>
PC-I00AI64A<lb/>
4u wit smua n milmum<lb/>
SHIPPED FREE<lb/>
s C msrntrm ?r was m mi co<lb/>
custaKM m ?? ru srw ntcus o<lb/>
C 00 ? 50 i 0 P fff<lb/>
Surutyort Supply Company<lb/>
P 0 BOX HN 10-1 CHATHAM STREET<lb/>
APEX NORTH CAROLINA 750<lb/>
(9W JbJ 7000<lb/>
THIS HD IS SELDOM RUN PLEASE<lb/>
CLIP FOR FUTURE REFERENCE<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
Formerly of Downtown Greenville<lb/>
has moved to its new location.<lb/>
We Feature;<lb/>
GIBSON FENDER<lb/>
MARTIN AMPEG<lb/>
GUITARS &amp; AMPS.<lb/>
Plus all the other, musical instruments.<lb/>
The Music Shop<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
Next to k-mart)<lb/>
(Thurs. &amp; Fri. nights until 9 p.m.)<lb/>
proach to perfaming can best be<lb/>
explained by the intellectual<lb/>
nature of the band. Lead guitarist<lb/>
John "JT" Tanous graduated<lb/>
from UNC-Chapel Hill with a<lb/>
degree in philosophy. Bass player<lb/>
Steve Davis and Keyboardist Bill<lb/>
Joyner are both ECU alumni.<lb/>
Although Davis eventually re-<lb/>
ceived his degree in psychology,<lb/>
he began his studies as a voice<lb/>
maja and subsequently he han-<lb/>
dles most of the vocal arrange-<lb/>
ments. Joyner studied political<lb/>
science.<lb/>
Percussionist Oliver Downes<lb/>
and guitarist Martin Wayne add a<lb/>
sophistication to Hawk ban out of<lb/>
their extensive musical exper-<lb/>
ience.<lb/>
Presently Hawk is waking out<lb/>
of a small ranch in St. Paul, N.C.<lb/>
Although the members of the<lb/>
group have known each other fa<lb/>
a loig time through music circles<lb/>
they have been together only<lb/>
three months. Their main oonoern<lb/>
is their own aiginal music with<lb/>
an emphasis on tight vocal<lb/>
harmonies and danceable<lb/>
rhythms which do na stray into<lb/>
"disco " Managed by the same<lb/>
agent as Nantucket, the group is<lb/>
hoping for a well deserved<lb/>
oontract sometime next year.<lb/>
The sounds of Hawk are<lb/>
professional, entertaining, and<lb/>
aiginal.<lb/>
Learn to<lb/>
Prepare<lb/>
Income Taxes<lb/>
? Like to meet the public?<lb/>
? Want to earn extra money?<lb/>
? Work accurately with figures?<lb/>
Enroll in the H &amp; R Block Income Tax Course beginning soon<lb/>
in your area and learn to prepare income taxes for yourself,<lb/>
your friends and as a source of income<lb/>
Job interviews available for best students Send for free<lb/>
information and class schedules today<lb/>
Classes begin:<lb/>
Sept. 14.<lb/>
H&amp;R BLOCK<lb/>
316 S. Evans a.<lb/>
Greenvllie, N.C<lb/>
Phone 752-4907<lb/>
AA IMPORTS<lb/>
The Only Of Its Kind In Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina Specializing In<lb/>
Handcrafted IMPORTS From<lb/>
Asia And Europe.<lb/>
Hand madelewetry. for men also<lb/>
.Embroidered shirts<lb/>
.And many mae hand crafted<lb/>
items at prices you can afford<lb/>
.We are still giving away free<lb/>
gifts to lucky numbers already<lb/>
marked on the sales receipts,<lb/>
maybe you are the winner.<lb/>
M IMPORTS<lb/>
The international Emporium for Home<lb/>
Decoraftvev Personal and Gift Needs<lb/>
.FTrmillr'MeMn vh?ePwtl '?"??'<lb/>
<pb facs="00058004_0014"/><lb/>
Page 14 FQUNTAINHEAD September 13. 1977<lb/>
The welfare reform program<lb/>
Another Carter campaign promise<lb/>
fades<lb/>
(LNS)Arfrs. Lee Williams,<lb/>
Milwaukee County welfare<lb/>
mother, quoted in "Welfare<lb/>
Mothers Speak Out<lb/>
Not too long ago presidential<lb/>
aspirant Jimmy Carter was camp-<lb/>
aigning as a champion of the<lb/>
poor, promising "A JOB FOR<lb/>
EVERY AMERICAN WHO<lb/>
WANTS ONE and fiscal relief<lb/>
for cities (and states) severly<lb/>
overburdended with welfare<lb/>
costs. Now barely a year later,<lb/>
Jimmy Carter has become Pres-<lb/>
ident Carter, and with that trans-<lb/>
formation, one capmaign promise<lb/>
after another has faded away.<lb/>
The long-heralded welfare re-<lb/>
form program unveiled by Carter<lb/>
in early August does not guaran-<lb/>
tee an income equal even to the<lb/>
official poverty level, and does<lb/>
not follow through with the<lb/>
promised federalization of wel-<lb/>
SCHOOL KIDS<lb/>
RECORDS<lb/>
is<lb/>
HERE AND ESTABLISHED<lb/>
 Always, all $6.98 List LP s<lb/>
are ONLY $3.99. Specializing<lb/>
in Rock, Jazz, Country, and Soul.<lb/>
These Priees Are Here To Stay.<lb/>
Located at 218 E. Fifth St. in the<lb/>
University Arcade<lb/>
Phone 752-0647<lb/>
Other Locations<lb/>
Raleigh<lb/>
Chapel Hill<lb/>
Greensboro<lb/>
fare costs.<lb/>
In fact, although the pro-<lb/>
gram' s name has been changed to<lb/>
a "program for better jobs and<lb/>
income" -an effort to avoid the<lb/>
word "welfare" and create the<lb/>
impression of a radical departure<lb/>
from the old system-the program<lb/>
does not really measure up to<lb/>
anything all that new. The econo-<lb/>
mist, a respected London wekly,<lb/>
noted immediately that the much<lb/>
touted work-requirement in the<lb/>
program resembles "welfare re-<lb/>
forms" unsuccessfully pushed by<lb/>
the Nixon Administration in the<lb/>
early seventies.<lb/>
"Administration officials<lb/>
aren't eager to disclose that their<lb/>
proposal decreases benefits fa<lb/>
substantial numbers of current<lb/>
welfare recipients, affecting<lb/>
about 3 million people or IOV2<lb/>
the Journal revealed. "Most of<lb/>
these are on the Aid to Families<lb/>
with Dependent Children (AFDC)<lb/>
and food stamp programs<lb/>
Both AFDC and the food<lb/>
stamp program would be scrap-<lb/>
ped under Carter's plan and<lb/>
replaced by a combined program<lb/>
of cash assistance and jobs, with a<lb/>
strict work requirement for all<lb/>
"Able-bodied" recipients. The<lb/>
cash allotments are so low that it<lb/>
is essential tor recipients to work<lb/>
if they are to reoeive an income<lb/>
even approaching the official<lb/>
LIVE MUSICAL ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
AT MCDONALD'S?<lb/>
Yes, you can believe your ears!<lb/>
As a special addition to our<lb/>
weekly candlelight dinner, we<lb/>
have in store for you the<lb/>
mellow musical sounds of our<lb/>
own Rick Cornfield.<lb/>
So come and dine by candlelight<lb/>
while you listen to one of the<lb/>
finest musicians in the area.<lb/>
Wed. Sept. 14th<lb/>
6-9:00 pm<lb/>
y<lb/>
y<lb/>
<lb/>
rt<lb/>
ft<lb/>
McDonald's<lb/>
10th ?r Cotanche Sts<lb/>
Greenville, IM.C.<lb/>
iN?S<lb/>
e<lb/>
doW<lb/>
tflot<lb/>
o?<lb/>
poverty level.<lb/>
Sinoe proposed benefits would<lb/>
actually be lower than those<lb/>
currently offered in 39 states, it is<lb/>
expected that many states will<lb/>
decide to supplement the benefits<lb/>
to bring them up to current levels.<lb/>
Many of these details, as well as<lb/>
other aspects of the bill, still have<lb/>
to be worked out.<lb/>
"Required Work"<lb/>
Under the Administration's<lb/>
plan, all recipients who are not<lb/>
aged, blind or disables, and who<lb/>
are not single parents of children<lb/>
younger than 7, are classified as<lb/>
"expected to work and are<lb/>
required to undergo an intensive<lb/>
job search during which time they<lb/>
reoeive a lower level of benefits.<lb/>
A single parent with a child<lb/>
between the ages of 7 and 14 will<lb/>
be expected to work part-time if<lb/>
child care is not available, and<lb/>
full-time if it is. Single parents<lb/>
with children 14 and over will be<lb/>
expected to work regardless of<lb/>
whether after-school care is avail-<lb/>
able.<lb/>
"From everything we can<lb/>
gather so far, it's going to be<lb/>
disastrous for people said<lb/>
Theresa Fumicella of the Welfare<lb/>
Advocacy Center in New York<lb/>
City.<lb/>
She explained that two levels<lb/>
of cash assistance have been<lb/>
designated for all those in the<lb/>
"expected to work" category.<lb/>
Everyone enters at the lower<lb/>
level, where, for example, a<lb/>
family of four is allotted $2300 a<lb/>
yeara figure that is only 36Vi of<lb/>
the 1976 poverty guideline of<lb/>
$5780. (Official poverty levels are<lb/>
considered far below what is<lb/>
needed to live adequately.)<lb/>
If the "employable person"<lb/>
cannot fins a job after a five-week<lb/>
job search by the individual, and<lb/>
then a three-week search by<lb/>
government agencies, shehe will<lb/>
then be eligible fa one of the 1.4<lb/>
million public service job slots the<lb/>
government has said it will<lb/>
create. These jobs would pay the<lb/>
minimum wage of $2.30 an<lb/>
hour-4012 less than the present<lb/>
average wage for federally-<lb/>
created public service jobs. How-<lb/>
ever, there is already consider-<lb/>
able doubt that the government<lb/>
will be able to create these jobs.<lb/>
If placement in one of these<lb/>
temporary job slots is not pos-<lb/>
sible, the recipient is auto-<lb/>
matically placed in a higher<lb/>
benefit level, where, for example<lb/>
a family of four would reoeive<lb/>
$4200 a year-66V2 of the 1976<lb/>
poverty level. If for any reason<lb/>
someone refuses JOB PLACE-<lb/>
MENT she a he would<lb/>
remain at the lower benefit level<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
ECU Students<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
every Wed. night till 10:30<lb/>
when noted on our calendar<lb/>
Wed. Sept 14 Good Humor<lb/>
Wed. Sept. 21 Sugarcaine<lb/>
This weekend May son<lb/>
dr CLIFF'S<lb/>
Seafood House<lb/>
and Oyster Bar<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
MON - TUES - WEI)<lb/>
S<lb/>
FISH<lb/>
French Fries, Slaw and Hushpuppies<lb/>
 LB. HAMBURGER<lb/>
French Fries, Slaw and Rolls<lb/>
CRAB CAKES<lb/>
French Fries, Slaw and Hushpuppies<lb/>
WASHINGTON HIGHWAY (N (; 33<lb/>
IE EN VI LI<lb/>
PHONf '<lb/>
.99<lb/>
.99<lb/>
1.50<lb/>
<pb facs="00058004_0015"/><lb/>
September 13, 1977 FOUNTAINHEAP Page 15<lb/>
Pirates triumph over ACC teams<lb/>
Pirates hold Pack, 28-23<lb/>
ECU PIRA TES REJOICEfter blocking State's last scoring attempt. ECU won 28-23.<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
There could have been no more<lb/>
excitement in a college football game than<lb/>
there was Saturday night, September 3rd,<lb/>
in Raleigh at Carter Stadium, as East<lb/>
Carolina beat N.C. State, 28-23.<lb/>
With 49,200 people watching, State's<lb/>
Ricky Adams gathered in a Johnny Evans<lb/>
pass at the five yard line and bulled toward<lb/>
thePirates' goal line. East Carolina's<lb/>
Ruffin McNeil, a sophomore safety forced<lb/>
to start because of an injury to all-star<lb/>
Gerald Hall, hit Adams at the two-yard line<lb/>
and stopped the Pack's last ditch effort an<lb/>
preserve the Pirates' second consecutive<lb/>
win over State.<lb/>
"That was a football game said a<lb/>
drained Pat Dye following the game. "I'm<lb/>
not sure we beat them. They did not act<lb/>
like a beat football team. Coach Rein and<lb/>
his players played hard against us. Either<lb/>
team could have won. We were fortunate to<lb/>
win<lb/>
The game was not close all the way, but<lb/>
rather a game in which the Pirates jumped<lb/>
out to several safe' leads only to see State<lb/>
come back on the arm of Evans. Evans<lb/>
finished the game with 301 yards passing,<lb/>
just five off the Wolfpack record.<lb/>
 We gave up a lot of yards through the<lb/>
air Dye said. "But all the blame cannot<lb/>
go to the secondary (four rookie starters).<lb/>
We did not have a good rush or Evans, nor<lb/>
did our linebackers cover good over the<lb/>
middle. With three rookie coaches and<lb/>
several new players, play was bound to be<lb/>
a little sioppy on defense<lb/>
The Pirates had to rely on big plays for<lb/>
their touchdowns, as the Pack defense<lb/>
would not bend, but often broke. As a<lb/>
matter of fact, all Pirate scaes were either<lb/>
scored on big plays a set up by them.<lb/>
The Pirates alternated between Jimmy<lb/>
Souther land and Leander Green at quarter-<lb/>
back and both came up with big plays.<lb/>
On the Pirates third possession, Green<lb/>
saw his first action. On the very first play,<lb/>
Green went left on a counter option and<lb/>
found a hole to go 82 yards for the game's<lb/>
first score. Downfield blocks by Barry<lb/>
Johnson and Theodore Sutton on Ralph<lb/>
Stringer gavt Green the room needed to<lb/>
get into the end zone. Junior Creech's<lb/>
extra point gave the Pirates a 7-0 lead.<lb/>
On the ensuing series, Evans went back<lb/>
and attempted a screen pass to Ted Brown<lb/>
behind the line of scrimmage. However,<lb/>
Zack Valentine picked the pass off and<lb/>
went 60 yards untouched for the score.<lb/>
There was some controversy on the play, as<lb/>
the official called pass interference on the<lb/>
Pirates. But a new rule this season allows<lb/>
contact behind the line of scrimmage on<lb/>
screen plays and the referee allowed the<lb/>
play to stand. Creech's point after gave the<lb/>
Pirates a 14-0 advantage with 3:46 left in<lb/>
the first quarter.<lb/>
On the kickoff, the Pirates had a golden<lb/>
opportunity when Ralph Stringer fumbled<lb/>
the ball on the 13-yard line. A host of<lb/>
Pirates were in the area, but Stringer<lb/>
recovered.<lb/>
The Pirates had two more opportunities<lb/>
before the half ended, bu Creech's<lb/>
attempted field goals missed both times.<lb/>
State got the ball back with 2108 left in<lb/>
the half and Evans went to work through<lb/>
the airways. He completed five oasses,<lb/>
three to Elijah Marshall including a 20<lb/>
yarder for the score, to bring the Pack back<lb/>
into the game with just three seconds left<lb/>
in the half.<lb/>
With momentum on their side, State<lb/>
came out with the second-half kickoff and<lb/>
drove down the field for a field goal. Ted<lb/>
Brown scored an apparant touchdown from<lb/>
the 12, but was called back because of a<lb/>
procedure penalty. This set up the 34-yard<lb/>
field goal by Jay Sherrill.<lb/>
Not to be kept down, the Pirates came<lb/>
back after the kickoff to lengthen their<lb/>
margin once again. After three plays<lb/>
netted the Pirates 14 yards to the 38,<lb/>
Southerland went back to pass and hit tight<lb/>
end Billy Ray Washington wide open over<lb/>
the middle and Washington outraopd two<lb/>
State defenders for the touchdown.<lb/>
Creech's conversion put the Pirates back<lb/>
on top by 11, 21-10.<lb/>
Midway in the fourth quarter, Evans hit<lb/>
a wide open Randy Hall on the sidelines<lb/>
and Hall covered the 80 yards to bring the<lb/>
Wolfpack back into the game. Sherrills<lb/>
extra point made it ECU 21, N.C. State 17.<lb/>
But the Pirates came right back after<lb/>
Willie Hawkins returned the kickoff to the<lb/>
32-yard line. Theodore Sutton, who was the<lb/>
game's leading rusher with 127 yards in 15<lb/>
carries, rushed for five and 39 yards on the<lb/>
first two plays to put the Pirates on the<lb/>
State 23. Southerland went left on the same<lb/>
counter option play Green had scored on<lb/>
earlier to score.<lb/>
State came right back to score following<lb/>
a 52 yard kickoff return by Stringer to the<lb/>
Pirate 36. It took State five plays, with<lb/>
Brown going over from the 12. A try for the<lb/>
two-point conversion failed and the Pirates<lb/>
led, 28-23.<lb/>
This set up the last ditch effort by<lb/>
Adams as time ran out.<lb/>
Green finished as the games second<lb/>
leading rusher with 122 yards in nine<lb/>
carries, while Brown led State with 102 in<lb/>
22 rushes.<lb/>
Duke loses to ECU, 17-16<lb/>
ByCHRISHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
As was the case a week ago, East<lb/>
Carolina needed a big defensive play near<lb/>
the goal line to win the game. Once again<lb/>
the Pirates got just that and went on to<lb/>
defeat Duke University, 17-16.<lb/>
By winning the Duke game, coach Dye<lb/>
was very pleased and felt the win should be<lb/>
shared by more than just the team and<lb/>
himself.<lb/>
"This is a great day for East Carolina<lb/>
Dye said. "I don't want to take credit for<lb/>
this. Coach Stasovich, Coach Randle and<lb/>
Coach McGee all had a part in it. I hope<lb/>
we've grown to where we're receded as a<lb/>
school as well as a football team<lb/>
During the game a crowd of 38,200, the<lb/>
largest crowd in Duke history fa an<lb/>
opening game in Wallace Wade Stadium,<lb/>
was treated to the best of both worlds as<lb/>
the offenses and defenses of both teams<lb/>
made the big plays that kept the game<lb/>
exciting until the end.<lb/>
East Carolina won the coin toss,<lb/>
electing to receive. The Pirates ran only<lb/>
five plays before the Duke defense halted<lb/>
the drive as the ECU 39. An illegal motion<lb/>
penalty hurt the drive.<lb/>
After the punt, Duke took over at their<lb/>
30. From there, Duke quarterback Mike<lb/>
Dunn mixed his passing and running<lb/>
equally as the Blue Devils drove down to<lb/>
the ECU 8 yard line. Duke was then called<lb/>
for a delay of game penalty which put them<lb/>
back to teh ECU 13. With third and goal,<lb/>
Mike Dunn went back to pass only to be<lb/>
sacked by Harold Randolph and Oliver<lb/>
Felton. Duke then elected totry a field goal<lb/>
which was no good.<lb/>
On East Carolina's next series, quarter-<lb/>
back Leander Green opened with a 13-yard<lb/>
pass to Terry Gallaher. Quarterback Jimmy<lb/>
Southerland was then sent into the game<lb/>
and drove the Pirates down to the Duke 17<lb/>
yard line. On fourth andl, ECU elected to<lb/>
try a field goal of 34 yards, which was wide.<lb/>
In the second quarter, Duke got its<lb/>
offense on track and drove from their 20 to<lb/>
the East Carolina 2. Mike Dunn then<lb/>
pitched out to tailback Mike Barney fa a<lb/>
touchdown. A penalty fa an illegal lateral<lb/>
nullified the touchdown, however, and<lb/>
Duke was pushed back to the ECU 17.<lb/>
Dunn then threw a screen pass to Barney<lb/>
fa 14 yards Harold Randolph and Willie<lb/>
Hoi ley caught Barney befae he got into<lb/>
the end zone. Duke, facing a fourth and<lb/>
goal at the ECU 3, went fa the field goal<lb/>
which was good, the game's first scae.<lb/>
After the kick, ECU took over at their<lb/>
28. Willie Hawkins returned the kick fa 20<lb/>
JV.<lb/>
yards. Fran there Leander Green got lose<lb/>
on a keep fa 14 yards. Fullback Tneo<lb/>
Sutton got 6 mae running off tackle. After<lb/>
a few plays on a third and 10 situation,<lb/>
Green hit Gallaher fa 22 yards. Duke<lb/>
received a late hit penalty oi the play and<lb/>
the ball was moved to the Duke 8 yard line:<lb/>
After keeping fa two mae yards Green<lb/>
kept left fa a touchdown. The PAT was<lb/>
good, making the scae ECU 7-Duke 3.<lb/>
Duke's Mike Barney fumbled the<lb/>
secaid half kickoff, which was recovered<lb/>
by East Carolina linebacker Larry Paul on<lb/>
the Duke 20. From there, ECU moved<lb/>
down to the Duke 14 yard line befae the<lb/>
drive ended. A Creech field goal attempt<lb/>
from 36 yards was good, making the scae<lb/>
ECU 10-Duke 3.<lb/>
In the third quarter Duke quarterback<lb/>
Mike Dunn drove the Blue Devils down to<lb/>
the ECU 48. Facing a third and 6 situation,<lb/>
Dunn went back to pass only to be met by<lb/>
Gerald Hall, who sacked him fa a loss of 8<lb/>
yards. Duke then punted the ball and ECU<lb/>
took over at their 20. The Pirates could<lb/>
move the ball only 18 yards and had to<lb/>
punt.<lb/>
Duke and East Carolina could do<lb/>
. nothing fa the last six minutes of the third<lb/>
quarter, as defenses dominated the play.<lb/>
In the fourth quarter, with Duke in<lb/>
possession of the ball at their own 49, Mike<lb/>
Dunn rolled right to pass and, after being<lb/>
tripped up by Randolph, defensive end<lb/>
Zack Valentine intercepted the pass at the<lb/>
Duke 45.<lb/>
Penalties and broken plays halted the<lb/>
Pirates drive facing them to punt.<lb/>
Duke took over first and 10 at their 20.<lb/>
Aided by a pass interference call against<lb/>
Tom MCLaurin, the Blue Devils moved to<lb/>
their 41. Mike Dunn then unleashed a<lb/>
bomb to Comer down the sidelines. Comer<lb/>
outran the ECU secondary fa Duke's first<lb/>
touchdown of the game. The PAT was<lb/>
good, making the scae ECU 10 Duke 10.<lb/>
Frar here East Carolina took over at<lb/>
their 29 afta a 9 yard return by freshman<lb/>
running back Anthony Collins. The Pirates<lb/>
moved all the way to Duke's 17 yard line<lb/>
where, facing a fourth and 7 situation, the<lb/>
Pirates elected totry fa a field goal. Once<lb/>
again the field goal was no good and Duke<lb/>
took over.<lb/>
Duke was na able to move anywhere on<lb/>
it's next possession as the East Carolina<lb/>
defense rose up and halted the Blue Devils<lb/>
in their tracks.<lb/>
East Carolina took over the ball at it's<lb/>
own 40. From there the Pirates started<lb/>
what turned out to be their winning drive.<lb/>
Sutton went up the middle fa 4 yards on<lb/>
See DUKE, p. 17<lb/>
THE PIRATES 2nd ACC victim was Duke.<lb/>
ECU again pulled it out, winning 17-16.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058004_0016"/><lb/>
ge 16 FOUNTAINHEAD September 13, 1977<lb/>
m<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
i<lb/>
This is the semester to get your<lb/>
programmable.<lb/>
The TI-57.<lb/>
Its self-teaching<lb/>
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programming<lb/>
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mokjnTrodu<lb/>
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Tl Programmable 57. The powerful<lb/>
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amples. Quickly learn the value of making re-<lb/>
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Recall entire instruction sequences. Display<lb/>
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Singlestep. Backstep Insert or delete at<lb/>
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79<lb/>
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The TI-58 and TI-59 combine three major inno-<lb/>
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1 Extraordinarily powerful-at remarkable low prices.<lb/>
2. Revolutionary plug-in modules put complex formulas to work<lb/>
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3 Step-by-step learning guide that takes you from the basics of<lb/>
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Tl Programmable 58. up to 480 program<lb/>
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Tl Programmable 59. More powerful than the TI-58. Up to<lb/>
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Both use<lb/>
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When you buy a Tl Programmable 58<lb/>
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date handicap from latest round s score Bridge. Computes<lb/>
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Rankings. Wins, losses, draws Codebreaker. 3 024 possi<lb/>
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Computes correct lens f-stop in strong ambient light Use<lb/>
it with a PC-100A and have even more fun Computer Art<lb/>
Hangman. Put in a word second player guesses or hangs<lb/>
Memo Pad. Write enter messages Print and record them<lb/>
on 59 s mag card Use the card to replay the message<lb/>
Biorythm. Plots all three cycles<lb/>
Imur library<lb/>
Leisure Library comes<lb/>
with Plug-m module<lb/>
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reference guide . abei<lb/>
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r<lb/>
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Name<lb/>
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Tl 58 or 59 Serial Number<lb/>
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Texas Instruments reserves the right to substitute software libraries of equal value based on avartaMity<lb/>
Please allow 30 days lor delivery Offer void where prohibited Dy law Good in continental U S only<lb/>
-I<lb/>
'Suggested r?ail price<lb/>
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INCORPORATED<lb/>
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- .  <lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058004_0017"/><lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
September 13, 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 17<lb/>
by John Evans<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Although the turnout was<lb/>
poor, the competition was as<lb/>
much fun as ever in the Go-Rec<lb/>
Almost Anything Goes competi-<lb/>
tion held last week on the Mall.<lb/>
Only eight teams competed, but<lb/>
everyone who participated seem-<lb/>
ed to enjoy themselves.<lb/>
The winning team was "Who<lb/>
Knows" and the members of that<lb/>
team were; Doug Carroll, Shay<lb/>
Cole, Gary Hollar, Lisa Hinton,<lb/>
Joey Jones and Betty Morgan.<lb/>
They won the Almost Anything<lb/>
Goes title by compiling the most<lb/>
points in a series of goof-ball<lb/>
events which included Skin the<lb/>
Snake, Blind Football, Egg Toss,<lb/>
Shiskabob, Human Innertube.a<lb/>
and balloon toss.<lb/>
Several area merchants and<lb/>
restaurants donated prizes to the<lb/>
winning teams and wo would like<lb/>
to thank them for their coopera-<lb/>
iton and interest.<lb/>
There has been a poor turnout<lb/>
for registration for the first fall<lb/>
sports for the intramural season.<lb/>
We aren't sure why, but we are<lb/>
extending the registration dates<lb/>
for co-rec Softball, women's flag<lb/>
football, and both singles and<lb/>
doubles tennis in the men's and<lb/>
women's ranks.<lb/>
In the women's football dorm<lb/>
teams have been extremely slow<lb/>
in signing up for the events and<lb/>
hopefully the extra week given to<lb/>
the women to sign up will help<lb/>
encourage competition. Because<lb/>
of the extended registration<lb/>
dates, which end today, play in<lb/>
each of these activities won't<lb/>
begin until next week. Flag<lb/>
football began last night, Mon-<lb/>
day, September 12, with a special<lb/>
game between two teams to<lb/>
christen the new lighted intramu-<lb/>
ral fields. Tennis will begin on<lb/>
Tuesday in all four areas of play.<lb/>
Co-Rec Softball is presently sche-<lb/>
duled to start next Tuesday.<lb/>
Check the Intramural Bulletin<lb/>
Board for scheduled games and<lb/>
times.<lb/>
Monday was scheduled to be<lb/>
the big day with the first night<lb/>
intramural football games to be<lb/>
played on the newly installed<lb/>
lighted intramural fields next to<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
The lights were scheduled to<lb/>
be turned on fa the first time by<lb/>
Physical Education Department<lb/>
Chairman Dr. Edgar Hooks, with<lb/>
the lighting ceremony scheduled<lb/>
to be followed by a men's and<lb/>
women's inaguaral game be-<lb/>
tween two men's teams and two<lb/>
women's teams. How's that for<lb/>
non-di scr i mi not ion ?<lb/>
The new lights will allow fa<lb/>
two games to be played each<lb/>
night during the football season<lb/>
and two softoall games to be<lb/>
played each night during spring<lb/>
semester. They have been in the<lb/>
planning stages fa a long time,<lb/>
and became a reality this summer<lb/>
through the efforts of Dr. Hooks<lb/>
and Intramural Directa Wayne<lb/>
Edwards. These lights should<lb/>
allow fa mae games to be played<lb/>
during the regular season, which<lb/>
will allow fa mae teams to play<lb/>
in the playoffs because there will<lb/>
be mae time to play the playoff<lb/>
games. In addition, it will provide<lb/>
the competitas with the added<lb/>
thrill of playing uncter the lights.<lb/>
Registration fa two more<lb/>
sports will be taking place in the<lb/>
next two weeks, so we will bring<lb/>
those sports to your attention.<lb/>
Volleyball registration fa both<lb/>
men and wonen will begin oi<lb/>
Septemba 19 and run throucjh<lb/>
September 22, while registration<lb/>
fa men's and women's one-on-<lb/>
one basketball will start on<lb/>
Septemba 12 and run through<lb/>
the 15. Watch fa these dates and<lb/>
be sure to participate.<lb/>
The East Carolina Department<lb/>
of Intramurals has a new full-time<lb/>
staff memba in Marty Martinez.<lb/>
See INTRAMURALS, p. 18<lb/>
DUKE<lb/>
Continued from p. 75<lb/>
the fullback handoff. Vinos Ko-<lb/>
lanko and Willie Hawkins then<lb/>
combined fa 11 yards which<lb/>
moved the ball down to the Duke<lb/>
45.<lb/>
From thae the Pirates, alter-<lb/>
nating quarterbacks Southerland<lb/>
and Green, drove down to the<lb/>
Duke 28 yard line. Southerland<lb/>
then soared on a quartaback<lb/>
keep. The PAT was good and the<lb/>
soae was ECU 17 Duke 10, with<lb/>
1 52 remaining in the game.<lb/>
In a last ditch effort, Duke<lb/>
received the kickoff and returned<lb/>
it fa 58 yards. Hoskins almost<lb/>
took it all the way in but was<lb/>
stopped at the last second. From<lb/>
the ECU 39, M ike Dunn rolled left<lb/>
and hit Hall fa 30 yards down to<lb/>
the ECU 9. Dunn then hit Hall<lb/>
again fa 5 mae befae he was<lb/>
run out of bounds by Tom<lb/>
MoLaurin. Dunn then completely<lb/>
fooled the Pirate defense, which<lb/>
had been tough near the goal line<lb/>
all day. Dunn faked the handoff<lb/>
and then bootlegged around left<lb/>
end fa the touchdown.<lb/>
With 1102 left showing on the<lb/>
dock, Duke elected to go fa the<lb/>
two point oonvasion. Dunn faked<lb/>
up the middle again but this time<lb/>
he was met by Tom MoLaurin and<lb/>
Wayne Poole at the 2 yard line,<lb/>
halting a blue Devil.<lb/>
Duke's on-side attempt was<lb/>
smothered by Haywood at the<lb/>
Duke 50. The Pirates decided to<lb/>
fall on the ball and run out the<lb/>
dock.<lb/>
Fa East Carolina's offense,<lb/>
quarterbacks Leander Green and<lb/>
Jimmy Southerland once again<lb/>
Blue Grass Festival<lb/>
5 mi. South of Warrenton<lb/>
Sept. 17-18<lb/>
$1,ooo in Cash Prizes<lb/>
Ph. 2572160<lb/>
 fiafteteUr.<lb/>
Cmemwille, N. C.<lb/>
Happy Times at the Rathskeller<lb/>
Weds. 5-7 pm<lb/>
Thurs. ladies night 9-11 pm<lb/>
Fri. 4-6 pm<lb/>
Discount Beverage<lb/>
air condition comfort<lb/>
played like they had been starting<lb/>
fa four years instead of just two<lb/>
games. Southerland gained 34<lb/>
yards on 12 attempts soaing aie<lb/>
touchdown and was 4 of 6 in<lb/>
passing for 80 yards. Green<lb/>
rushed 10 times fa 55 yards and<lb/>
one touchdown. He was 1 of 4 in<lb/>
passing fa 22 yards.<lb/>
Theo Sutton had 14 attempts<lb/>
fa 55 yards and Eddie Hicks had<lb/>
7 attempts fa 22 yards. Willie<lb/>
Hawkins lead all the Pirates in<lb/>
rushing with 12 attempts fa 60<lb/>
yards. Freshman Anthoiy Collins<lb/>
had 2 attempts fa 30 yards,<lb/>
including a 21-yard run. In<lb/>
pass-receiving Terry Gallaher<lb/>
caught two passes fa 33 yards,<lb/>
Barry Johnson caught two fa 50<lb/>
yards and Willie Hawkins caught<lb/>
cne fa 18 yards.<lb/>
Fa the Pirate defense, two<lb/>
Greenville natives, Harold Ran-<lb/>
dolph and Mike Brewington, lead<lb/>
the way with 13 and 10 ttfal<lb/>
tackles and assists, respectively.<lb/>
Zack Valentine had 7 tackles and<lb/>
a pass intaception. Mike Brew-<lb/>
ington, Gaald Hall and D.T.<lb/>
Joyner all had a quartaback sack<lb/>
each. The East Carolina defense<lb/>
held Duke to 170 yards rushing.<lb/>
Fa Duke, quartaback Mike<lb/>
Dunn and tailback Mike Barney<lb/>
lead the way with 65 yards<lb/>
rushing each. Dunn was 14 of 22<lb/>
fa 190 yards in passing and 1<lb/>
intaception. In receiving Hall<lb/>
caught 7 passes fa 73 yards.<lb/>
The Duke defense was lead by<lb/>
Mashore and McGee with 15 and<lb/>
13 tackles each.<lb/>
This Saturday East Carolina is<lb/>
on the road again as the Pirates<lb/>
face the Univasity of Toledo, a<lb/>
team the Pirates last faced in<lb/>
1971.<lb/>
LINE<lb/>
Wed.<lb/>
'Norton Young'<lb/>
Thurs. ?r Fri.<lb/>
'Passion"<lb/>
Sat.<lb/>
Saturday Night<lb/>
Live BYOL<lb/>
Snow Skier Cut<lb/>
Ski equipment is arriving daily<lb/>
Skis by Head, Fischer, K2 &amp; Spalding<lb/>
Soloman<lb/>
certified professional technician to fit and install bindings<lb/>
Boots by Spalding, Caber; and Apre ski boots<lb/>
Accesories, gloves, goggles, poles<lb/>
Skis, Poles, &amp; accessories available for rental<lb/>
Largest ski equipment &amp; apparell shop in<lb/>
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expert ski repair service available<lb/>
Gordon D. Fulp<lb/>
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Located At<lb/>
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Phone 56-0604, Greenville, N C<lb/>
Open I days a week until dark<lb/>
<pb facs="00058004_0018"/><lb/>
Page 18 FOUNTAINHEAD September 13, 1977<lb/>
Freshmen and lettermen spark tennis team<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Cynthia Averett, ECU'S<lb/>
women tennis coach, simply<lb/>
bubbles with excitement wnen<lb/>
she begins talking about her 1977<lb/>
tennis team. She spits out names,<lb/>
statistics, and adjectives describ-<lb/>
ing her players faster than even<lb/>
Pat Dye could possibly manage on<lb/>
his weekly television show.<lb/>
And it's little wonder why<lb/>
Miss Averett is so excited about<lb/>
her upcoming season. The Pirate<lb/>
netters have five returning letter-<lb/>
men back fom last year's team,<lb/>
which finished 11-3, along with<lb/>
two brilliant freshmen prospects<lb/>
and two talented transfers.<lb/>
"Everyone on the team is<lb/>
really excited about this season<lb/>
said Averett, now entering her<lb/>
second season as head coach.<lb/>
"There's a brand new type<lb/>
enthusiasom out there on the<lb/>
practice courts. Our schedule is<lb/>
going to be a lot tougher, but<lb/>
yesterday a couple of the girls<lb/>
infamed me they're ready after<lb/>
only two weeks of practice<lb/>
With less than two weeks<lb/>
remaining before the Pirates<lb/>
opening match against Methodist<lb/>
College, Miss Averett is still<lb/>
working on her singles lineup and<lb/>
doing a lot of experimenting with<lb/>
her doubles teams.<lb/>
The Pirates have an over-<lb/>
abundance of talent in the singles<lb/>
with freshman Debbie<lb/>
Spinnazzola battling sophomore<lb/>
transfer Louise Synder for the<lb/>
number one singles position.<lb/>
Miss Spinnazzola, a native of<lb/>
Altonna, Pa. is currently ranked<lb/>
number three in the Central<lb/>
Pennsylvanis 18 and under divi-<lb/>
sion. She posted a 47-4 record<lb/>
during her prep career and was<lb/>
named to the High School All-<lb/>
America team.<lb/>
"We're very fortunate to<lb/>
have landed such a talented<lb/>
player as Debbie said Averett.<lb/>
"She's a tremendous competitor<lb/>
and she's going to be some kind<lb/>
of player before she leaves here<lb/>
Synder is a transfer from<lb/>
Broward Community College in<lb/>
Fort Lauderdale. She had Trem-<lb/>
endous tournament experience as<lb/>
a junior playing in the National<lb/>
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Dorcas Sunkel, a junior, who<lb/>
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returns along with Susan Helmer<lb/>
who played in the number two<lb/>
position last year. Sunkel finished<lb/>
the season with a 7-6 record while<lb/>
Helmer posted an impressive 13-1<lb/>
slate.<lb/>
Jinny Gainey, a senior from<lb/>
Raleigh also returns and will<lb/>
probably be in the number six<lb/>
position, Gainey played doubles<lb/>
most of last year but has<lb/>
improved tremendously and<lb/>
should help out in the singles and<lb/>
doubles.<lb/>
Claire Baker, another talented<lb/>
freshman prospect from<lb/>
Wilmington could break into the<lb/>
singles lineup before the end of<lb/>
the year. While Hoggard High<lb/>
School, she finished her senior<lb/>
year with a 17-0 record and was<lb/>
named to the all-conference team.<lb/>
Another top transfer Averett<lb/>
will be counting on is Diane<lb/>
Keogh who comes from Chowan<lb/>
College where she posted a 10-2<lb/>
record last year.Keogh was also<lb/>
the number one player on her<lb/>
high school team for three years.<lb/>
Marie Stewart, who finished<lb/>
7-4 last season playing in the<lb/>
number five position, returns for<lb/>
her senior year.<lb/>
Sarah Casey and Ddoras Ryan<lb/>
will also add depth to the squad.<lb/>
The Pirate netters will open<lb/>
their season at home September<lb/>
22nd against Methodist College.<lb/>
CYNTHIA AVERETT<lb/>
1977 Women's Tennis Schedule<lb/>
Sept. 22<lb/>
Sept. 27<lb/>
Sept. 29-Oct. 1<lb/>
Oct.4<lb/>
Oct.6<lb/>
Oct. 7<lb/>
Oct. 11<lb/>
Oct. 17<lb/>
Oct. 18<lb/>
Oct. 20<lb/>
Oct. 25<lb/>
Oct. 27<lb/>
Nov. 3<lb/>
Nov. 11<lb/>
To be Arranged<lb/>
Methodist Coll.<lb/>
N.C.S.U.<lb/>
Methodist Invi.<lb/>
St. Mary'sCol.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 230p.m.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 230p.m.<lb/>
FayetteviJIe, NC All Day.<lb/>
Both Days<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 230 p.m.<lb/>
Peace Junior Col. Raleigh, N.C. 230p.m.<lb/>
Mary Baldwin C. Staunton, VA 2.00 p.m.<lb/>
U NC-W i I mi ngton Greenville, N.C. 230p.m.<lb/>
CarolinaJ.Vs Greenville, N.C. 230p.m.<lb/>
Old Dominion U. Norfolk, VA 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
WakeForestU. Greenville, N.C. 230p.m.<lb/>
Peace Junior Col. Greenville, N.C. 230p.ra.<lb/>
St. Mary'sCol. Raleigh, N.C. 230p.ra.<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill Chapel HiM, N.C. 200 p.m.<lb/>
UNC-WilmingtonWilmington, NC 230p.ra.<lb/>
Duke Greenville, N.C. 230 p.m.<lb/>
INTRAMURALS<lb/>
Continued from p. 17<lb/>
In addition to handling such<lb/>
major sports as football and<lb/>
basketball, Martinez will be in<lb/>
charge of the Intramural dub<lb/>
sports program this year.<lb/>
The department hopes to<lb/>
upgrade the Club program by<lb/>
offering a variety of club activities<lb/>
for those interested in competing<lb/>
in areas not presently covered by<lb/>
varsity programs. If you are<lb/>
interested injeemganew club<lb/>
That's about it fa this week<lb/>
and remember that the pools and<lb/>
gyms in both Memorial Gym and<lb/>
Minges Coliseum are open for<lb/>
your use during the week. M inges<lb/>
pool will be open from 8-10 p.m.<lb/>
during the week and from 3 to 9<lb/>
p.m. on the weekends and free<lb/>
play in Minges Coliseum will be<lb/>
from 8-11 on Monday through<lb/>
Thursday, 8-10 p.m. on Friday, 10<lb/>
a.m. to 9 p.m. on Saturday and<lb/>
2-9 p.m. on Sunday.<lb/>
In Memorial the pool hours<lb/>
are 12-1 on Monday, Wednesday,<lb/>
and Friday and 4-6 p.m. on week<lb/>
nights The gym is open for free<lb/>
play from 4-10 p.m. during the<lb/>
week and 2-9 p.m. on Sunday.<lb/>
Memorial Gym will closed to play<lb/>
on Saturdays.<lb/>
Kenney made assistant at Pembroke<lb/>
Dan Kenney, who was a graduate assistant under Dave Patton fa<lb/>
the ECU basketball team season, has been named assistant basketball<lb/>
coach at Pembroke State University.<lb/>
Kenney, a native of Maristown, N.J was primarily responsible<lb/>
fa East Carolina's out of state basketball reauiting this past season.<lb/>
He is a 1975 graduate of ECU, and recently completed wakoi his MA<lb/>
Ed degree from ECU.<lb/>
DANKENNEY<lb/>
Specializing In Unique Gifts<lb/>
For All Occasions<lb/>
Corner o? 5th &amp; Cotanche<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
J0JHIW.<lb/>
Good Things<lb/>
For Gentle People<lb/>
313 Evans St. Mail<lb/>
752-3815<lb/>
J<lb/>
<pb facs="00058004_0019"/><lb/>
m<lb/>
September 13, 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Pagt 19<lb/>
Gillman plans new strategy for Buc cagers<lb/>
By STEVE WHEELER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
New head basketball ooach at<lb/>
East Carolina University Larry<lb/>
Gillman has made an "open-<lb/>
door" policy for students who<lb/>
want to know about the Pirate<lb/>
cage team.<lb/>
"I want it to be known that<lb/>
any student at this university can<lb/>
talk to me anytime he or she<lb/>
wishes to said the fast-talking<lb/>
New York native. "We want the<lb/>
students to be involved with our<lb/>
program<lb/>
The 29-year old sparkplug<lb/>
who came to Greenville via the<lb/>
University of San Francisco (one<lb/>
of top teams in nation last season)<lb/>
plans to use an up-tempo game on<lb/>
offense and full-oourt defense to<lb/>
bring an exciting style of play to<lb/>
East Carolina.<lb/>
"You'll never see us walk the<lb/>
ball up the court again Gillman<lb/>
said. "We want to play the style<lb/>
of ball that will win and entertain<lb/>
the fans<lb/>
One of the big additions to the<lb/>
Pirates' 1977-78 team will be<lb/>
all-America candidate Oliver<lb/>
Mack. Mack was a two-time<lb/>
junior oollege all-America at San<lb/>
Jaanto Junior College in Pasa-<lb/>
dena, Tex.<lb/>
But Mack is not the only top<lb/>
addition. Walter Moseley, a<lb/>
Queens, N.Y native, started at<lb/>
point guard and led the U.S.<lb/>
Junior AAU team in a tour of<lb/>
Russia earlier this month. Ber-<lb/>
nard Hill of Spring Valley, N.Y.<lb/>
was an all-state selection. Roger<lb/>
Carr of Garland, N.C. and Dan<lb/>
Roberts of Nashville, Ind. roun-<lb/>
ded out a quality group of recruits<lb/>
that averaged 129 points cumula-<lb/>
tively last year.<lb/>
Herb Gray, Jim Ramsey and<lb/>
Greg Cornelius are the top<lb/>
returnees from last year's squad.<lb/>
Gray averaged 18 points and nine<lb/>
rebounds over the last ten games,<lb/>
last season. Ramsey was the third<lb/>
leading scorer with over 11 points<lb/>
per game, while Cornelius was<lb/>
the second leading rebounder.<lb/>
Wade Henkel, a part-time<lb/>
starter two years ago who sat out<lb/>
last year with a broken finger, will<lb/>
return to add strength to the<lb/>
frontcourt. Herb Krusen, known<lb/>
fa his good shooting eye, and<lb/>
Kyle Powers, both part-time<lb/>
starters last season, also return<lb/>
this year. Don Whitaker and Dean<lb/>
Hartley round out the team.<lb/>
The Pirates face a demanding<lb/>
schedule that includes opening at<lb/>
Indiana, 1976 NCAA champions,<lb/>
as well as N.C. State, Duke and<lb/>
Maryland from the Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Conference. Other top teams to<lb/>
be faced include UNC-Charlotte,<lb/>
and NCAA finalist last season,<lb/>
CSp this coupon!<lb/>
And get three games for only $1.25,<lb/>
Bring three friends along. We'll let<lb/>
them in on the deal, too. ??<lb/>
grXGili e. hj<lb/>
f? I<lb/>
Expires Oct. 1,1977 Phone758-1820<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Virginia Tech, Old Dominion and<lb/>
Tennessee-Chattanooga NCAA<lb/>
Division II national champ last<lb/>
season.<lb/>
"Whether we play, Indiana,<lb/>
State or UNG-Asheville Gill-<lb/>
man said, "we will be ready.<lb/>
We'll prepare the same for<lb/>
fwh game, taking them one at a<lb/>
time.<lb/>
for sale<lb/>
RUGS FOR SALE: 3 X 4 celery<lb/>
green (new) 6.00, 22 x16 12<lb/>
celery green (new) 10.00, 8x11<lb/>
brown braided 15.00, 8x12 aqua<lb/>
(used 5 months) 30.00 Call<lb/>
756-4380 after 7 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1968 Volks convert-<lb/>
able, excellent cond. Top in good<lb/>
shape too! 752-9567 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
900.00.<lb/>
BEDROOM SUITE: French style<lb/>
wooden with large dresser and<lb/>
mirror. Large headboard and<lb/>
bedside table. Mattresses includ-<lb/>
ed. Excellent cond. 300.00 Call<lb/>
758-6645 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
ACOUSTIC GUITAR: excellent<lb/>
fa beginner. 50.00 Call 758-6645<lb/>
after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1975 Kawasaki<lb/>
H1500. Over 700.00 invested in<lb/>
recent performance, handling,<lb/>
and appearance modifications,<lb/>
including a freah bue on engine.<lb/>
This is one very quick, good-<lb/>
handling motorcycle. Offers<lb/>
please. Steve. 758-4039.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Beautiful wooden<lb/>
free-standing bookcase T 8"x7<lb/>
with 16 adjustable shelves and 2<lb/>
others. Easy to assemble or nke<lb/>
apart. 125,00. Air Conditioner<lb/>
24,000 BTU's 175.00. Avocado<lb/>
Kelvinator Stove 65.00 Call<lb/>
758-5392.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1 three-man inflat-<lb/>
able canoe with break-apart pad-<lb/>
dle and foot bellows: 65.00. Also<lb/>
10-speed bike for 70.00. Both<lb/>
items are in excellent cond. Call<lb/>
Neil at 752-7065 or come by<lb/>
112-A Avery St.<lb/>
12 VOLT BATTERY for sale:<lb/>
40.00 new, asking 25.00. Used<lb/>
only two weeks . Call 758-6645<lb/>
after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE1 three-man inflat-<lb/>
able canoe with break-apart pad-<lb/>
dle and foot bellows: 65.00. Also a<lb/>
10)<lb/>
FOR SALE: Must Sell-1 Yamaha<lb/>
Trombone, used but in good<lb/>
oond. 100.00, 1 Ventura 12-string<lb/>
guitar excellent oond. 200.00, Call<lb/>
Ada at 752-1820 or leave<lb/>
message.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Female Great Dane<lb/>
Brindle. 10 months old. Has<lb/>
papers Great Disposition. Call<lb/>
756269.<lb/>
FEA MARKET:Located on<lb/>
Pactolus Hwy 33 off Greene St. on<lb/>
right East 112 mile. Open every-<lb/>
day 11 til 5, Sunday 1 til 6.<lb/>
Delivery can be arranged.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Kitchen table and 4<lb/>
chairs Good Cond. Call if inter-<lb/>
ested. 758-3326.<lb/>
tor lent @<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMATE needed to<lb/>
share apartment. Graduate stud-<lb/>
ent or professional student pre-<lb/>
ferred. Call: 758-0719 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
WANTED: 1 bedroom duplex,<lb/>
flat, house, or apartment for 3<lb/>
folks. 150.00 or less. Call<lb/>
752-5499.<lb/>
personal ($)<lb/>
TYPING service. Call ,758-5948.<lb/>
FOUND: A ring full of keys.<lb/>
Found at Mendenhall bus stop.<lb/>
Call 756-8349 Ask for Alice.<lb/>
NEED TYPING? Professional<lb/>
service foe term papers, thesis,<lb/>
etc. Call 756-3815 after 530 p.m.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058004_0020"/><lb/>
Paoe 20 FOUNTAINHEAD September 13, 1977<lb/>
University Book Exchange<lb/>
528 S. Cotanche St.<lb/>
'THANK YOU" SALE!<lb/>
- in appreciation of your buying your<lb/>
textbooks and school supplies from us -<lb/>
!$1OFF 1 T-SHIRT Reg. $2.95$1!<lb/>
j$1$l<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
1 JERSEY<lb/>
Reg. $5.95<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
1 H90DED<lb/>
ZIPPERED<lb/>
SWEATSHIRT<lb/>
Reg. $9.95<lb/>
$2 $2<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
1 HOODED<lb/>
PULLOVER<lb/>
Reg. $7.95<lb/>
r<lb/>
$1 $1<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
1 SWEATSHIRT<lb/>
Reg. $5.95<lb/>
75 75<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
1 PAIR<lb/>
SWEATPANTS<lb/>
Reg. $4.50<lb/>
75 75<lb/>
,$1OFF 1 ZIPPERED PULLOVER SWEATSHIRT Reg. $6.95$1<lb/>
Iff$1<lb/>
50 50<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
1 HAT<lb/>
(your choice)<lb/>
Reg. $2.294.95<lb/>
j50OFF 1 PAIR50 j<lb/>
! GYM SHORTS<lb/>
PLAIN<lb/>
OR IMPRINTED<lb/>
i Reg.$2.95 &amp; $3.50<lb/>
:5050;<lb/>
Bring your coupons and come see us.<lb/>
Sale ends Saturday, Sept. 17th<lb/>
<pb facs="00058004_0021"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>