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<pb facs="00058018_0001"/>
Serving the campus com-<lb/>
munity fa over 50 years.<lb/>
With a circulation of 8,500,<lb/>
this issue is 16 pages.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Vd. 53 No. 18<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
1 November 1977<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
Oil Spill Grantp.5<lb/>
Career Workshopp.5<lb/>
Opera Theatrep.7<lb/>
Pirates Losep.10<lb/>
CLIFF MOORE VCE Chancellor for Business Affairs<lb/>
REAL to assist<lb/>
'battered wives'<lb/>
By DOUG WHITE<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Real Crisis Intervention Inc. is<lb/>
laying the groundwork for a<lb/>
program to help battered wives<lb/>
which should begin in approx-<lb/>
imately one year, aooording to<lb/>
Mary Larew, program coordina-<lb/>
tor.<lb/>
"At present, there is really no<lb/>
place for a battered wife to go for<lb/>
help. The polioe can't get involv-<lb/>
ed until the wife swears out a<lb/>
warrant to have her husband<lb/>
arrested, and since the husband<lb/>
can usually make bond in about<lb/>
four hours, the wife is simply<lb/>
asking for. a beating when her<lb/>
husband gets out of jail said<lb/>
Larew.<lb/>
The local Department of Social<lb/>
Services has no program for<lb/>
battered wives, and the Mental<lb/>
Health Center usually counsels<lb/>
married couples. It is during this<lb/>
counseling that incidences of wife<lb/>
beating often come out, according<lb/>
to Larew.<lb/>
"The battered wife has no place<lb/>
to go. Friends and relatives<lb/>
sometimes don't like to get<lb/>
involved out of fear for what the<lb/>
husband might do. We hope to be<lb/>
able to provide a shelter where<lb/>
these victims can find refuge<lb/>
said Larew.<lb/>
Most women don't leave their<lb/>
abusive husbands because they<lb/>
are financially dependent and<lb/>
have no place to go. This shelter<lb/>
would give battered wives a place<lb/>
to stay until they were able to get<lb/>
back on their feet again.<lb/>
Women who choose to enter<lb/>
the shelter must sign an affadavit<lb/>
promising not to reveal the<lb/>
whereabouts of the shelter, in<lb/>
order to prevent any retaliatory<lb/>
moves by the husband against the<lb/>
wife. Possibly, a guard may be<lb/>
posted inside the house to protect<lb/>
the occupants, according to<lb/>
Larew.<lb/>
"For the moment, all Real can<lb/>
do for a battered wife is treat her<lb/>
like any other person who comes<lb/>
to us with no place to stay said<lb/>
Larew.<lb/>
Representatives of Real<lb/>
attended a seminar Oct. 13 in<lb/>
Greensboro where various<lb/>
methods of dealing with the<lb/>
problem of battered wives were<lb/>
discussed.<lb/>
The seminar consisted of a<lb/>
panel discussion which included<lb/>
an emergency room physician a<lb/>
polioe officer, a lawyer, and a<lb/>
sociology professor from UNC-G.<lb/>
Approximately 150 people<lb/>
throughout the state attended the<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
� We learned a lot of things we<lb/>
didn't know such as the fact that<lb/>
approximately 28 per cent of<lb/>
wives in the United States have<lb/>
been beaten at some time. In<lb/>
North Carolina, physical abuse is<lb/>
not a grounds for divorce.<lb/>
"We don't have any figures<lb/>
for Pitt County right now since<lb/>
the police only have reoords on<lb/>
instances of assault on a female<lb/>
where a deadly weapon is not<lb/>
involved, but the Police Depart-<lb/>
ment isocoperating with us to go<lb/>
through the list of assault on a<lb/>
female charges and find out how<lb/>
many might have been cases of<lb/>
wife beating said Larew.<lb/>
The wife-beating husband<lb/>
often was a witness to scenes of<lb/>
abuse as a child, and learned that<lb/>
type of behavior from his father,<lb/>
according to Larew.<lb/>
"We really need to get the<lb/>
whole community behind us in<lb/>
order to get this thing off the<lb/>
ground said Larew.<lb/>
Stadium pledge total<lb/>
surpasses $1 million mark<lb/>
By BILL HARRINGTON<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Pledges totaling $1,175,000<lb/>
have been received so far in the<lb/>
proposed $2.5 million Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium expansion drive, aooord-<lb/>
ing to Cliff Moore, Vioa Chancel-<lb/>
lor for Business Affairs.<lb/>
Moore said he was pleasant-<lb/>
ly surprised with the progress of<lb/>
the fund drive up to the present,<lb/>
and said that they re going to take<lb/>
contract bids Wednesday fa the<lb/>
planned construction.<lb/>
The North Carolina State<lb/>
Legislature authaized $1,000,000<lb/>
in revenue bonds to be used as<lb/>
collateral in backing the pledges,<lb/>
accading to Moae.<lb/>
Moae said the only previous<lb/>
University experience with fund-<lb/>
ing a project from pledges had<lb/>
been in the construction of the<lb/>
press box side of the stadium in<lb/>
the early 1960s.<lb/>
"Over 90 per cent of those<lb/>
pledges were good Moae said.<lb/>
Moae said the pledges fa the<lb/>
new expansion  are payable over<lb/>
a five year period<lb/>
Accading to Moae, when<lb/>
construction is canpleted Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium will seat a minimum of<lb/>
35,000.<lb/>
"It's going to approximately<lb/>
double in size<lb/>
The new stadium would en-<lb/>
able ECU to classify as a NCAA<lb/>
Divison I A school if proposed<lb/>
NCAA legislation is passed in<lb/>
January, said Moae.<lb/>
Divison I A schools must have<lb/>
stadiums with seating capacities<lb/>
of at least 30,000, sponsa eight<lb/>
inter-collegiate sports, and play<lb/>
an as yet unspecified percentage<lb/>
(approximately 50 to 60 per cent)<lb/>
of fellow Division I A teams,<lb/>
accading to Moae.<lb/>
"People in I A will be getting<lb/>
a lion's share of TV money said<lb/>
Moae. "TV money is one thing,<lb/>
but exposure fa recruitment -<lb/>
and I'm not talking just about<lb/>
athletics, but student recruitment<lb/>
also - will be a terrific asset to the<lb/>
school.<lb/>
Moae said his personal view<lb/>
is that athletics attract students.<lb/>
"At least a good athletic<lb/>
program does�certainly a bad<lb/>
one doesn't<lb/>
Athletic Director Bill Cain<lb/>
agreed with this theay of expo-<lb/>
sure and its positive effects.<lb/>
"If East Carolina's name is in<lb/>
print and it's good, it helps your<lb/>
diploma and my diploma he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Citing the "woeful condition<lb/>
of our press box Moae said the<lb/>
stadium expansion plans call fa<lb/>
enlarging the press box and<lb/>
adding an eievata as a means of<lb/>
access.<lb/>
"If we have a first cjass press<lb/>
box he said, "we should get<lb/>
some of the better known sports<lb/>
writers, and here again, better<lb/>
exposure.<lb/>
Legislature debates<lb/>
issues, funds groups<lb/>
By STEVE WILSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
and<lb/>
CINDY BROOME<lb/>
News Edita<lb/>
The SGA appropriated the Art<lb/>
School Visual Arts Faum $17,303<lb/>
approximately $10,000 less than<lb/>
its requested budget. The Visual<lb/>
Arts Faum was appropriated<lb/>
approximately $1400 last year.<lb/>
The VAF bill was debated in<lb/>
the appropriations oommittee fa<lb/>
two consecutive nights, one<lb/>
debate lasting eight hours, the<lb/>
longest a bill has ever been<lb/>
considered.<lb/>
Each line item of the bill was<lb/>
considered separately, and after<lb/>
much debate during three ses-<lb/>
sions, the bill passed.<lb/>
A motion was made to rescind<lb/>
the amendment passes in last<lb/>
week's legislative session which<lb/>
eliminated the $2 pick-up fee fa<lb/>
the BUCCANEER, aiginally pro-<lb/>
posed by the staff.<lb/>
The SGA will have $10,000<lb/>
mae than previously thought.<lb/>
Students will have to pay $2 fa a<lb/>
yearbook.<lb/>
Students have already paid $8<lb/>
fa the yearbook accading to<lb/>
Legislata David Cartwright, ano<lb/>
should na have to pay an extra<lb/>
$2.<lb/>
 I doi' t think if s fair fa them<lb/>
to pay their annual twice said<lb/>
Cartwright. "It says in the<lb/>
student handbook that it's free<lb/>
and I think the student's paying<lb/>
fa it through SGA activity fees is<lb/>
enough<lb/>
It was pointed out that other<lb/>
UNC university students pay fa<lb/>
their yearbooks, some who pay<lb/>
much mae than $2.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD was ap-<lb/>
propriated a little over $34,000.<lb/>
See LEGISLATURE, page 3.<lb/>
MR. AND MRS Ted Bankston are presented with<lb/>
the game ball from this year's N.C. State game in<lb/>
memory of their son Assistant Coach Rick Bankston<lb/>
who was killed in a tragic explosion at his home this<lb/>
summer. Harold Randolph made the presentation<lb/>
during half time Saturday on behalf of the team's 15<lb/>
seniors.<lb/>
Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
<pb facs="00058018_0002"/><lb/>
Flashes<lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 1 November 1977<lb/>
Concert<lb/>
Tickets are now on sale for the<lb/>
FIRE FALL concert in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. Ticket prices are:<lb/>
$3 for students and $5 for the<lb/>
public. The concert will be Sun<lb/>
Nov 6th at 8 p.m. in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum. FIREFALL is another<lb/>
in a series of concerts brought to<lb/>
you by the Popular Entertainment<lb/>
Committee of the Student Union.<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
Red Pin Bowling is back! At<lb/>
the Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Bowling Center you can have a<lb/>
chance to win one (1) free game<lb/>
with every game bowled. If the<lb/>
red pin is the head pin and you<lb/>
make a strike, you win. Every<lb/>
Thursday evening, from 8 p.m.<lb/>
until 11 p.m could be your lucky<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Rebel<lb/>
The Rebel, ECU'S literary-arts<lb/>
magazine, is now accepting sub-<lb/>
missions in poetry, fiction, es-<lb/>
says, art work, and photography.<lb/>
Submit your material to the Rebel<lb/>
office or mail it to the Rebel,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Please make sure to keep a copy<lb/>
of each work of literature for<lb/>
yourself, and include your name,<lb/>
address, and phone number on all<lb/>
work.<lb/>
Crusade<lb/>
Campus Crusade for Christ<lb/>
invites all students to "Leader-<lb/>
ship Training Class" fa practical<lb/>
Biblical insights as well as Fun<lb/>
and Fellowship. Christians and<lb/>
skeptics alike will find the mes-<lb/>
sages intellectually stimulating<lb/>
every Thursday at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
Brewster D-202.<lb/>
Faculty<lb/>
All faculty-staff members are<lb/>
invited to participate in the<lb/>
faculty fitness program which is<lb/>
being held Monday, Wednesday,<lb/>
and Friday at 12.00-1 00 p.m. in<lb/>
Memaial Gym. All thrjse interes-<lb/>
ted in jogging, exercising, basket-<lb/>
ball, swimming, etc. should re-<lb/>
port to the gymnastics room on<lb/>
the first floa of Memaial Gym<lb/>
any Monday, Wednesday, or<lb/>
Friday at 12 00.<lb/>
Karate<lb/>
NTE<lb/>
A Japanese Karate Club (JKA<lb/>
style) isbeing famed. Those who<lb/>
have trained JKA previously a<lb/>
those who are interested in this<lb/>
style call 756-3767 and leave<lb/>
name and number.<lb/>
Bridge<lb/>
The Bridge Club meets each<lb/>
Thursday evening at 730 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. All<lb/>
persons interested in playing<lb/>
bridge are invited to attend<lb/>
Prospective teachers who plan<lb/>
to take the National Teachers<lb/>
Examinations Nov. 12,1977 at<lb/>
ECU are reminded that they have<lb/>
less than two weeks to register<lb/>
with Educational Testing Service<lb/>
(ETS) of Prinoeton, NJ. Those<lb/>
taking the Common Examinations<lb/>
will report at 8 JO a.m. and finish<lb/>
at about 1230 p.m. Area Exam-<lb/>
inations are scheduled from 1:30<lb/>
p.m. to about 4:15 p.m.<lb/>
Happy Hour<lb/>
Don't miss "HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
at Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Prices are v3off on billiards, table<lb/>
tennis, and bowling. The time is 3<lb/>
p.m. until 6 p.m. every Monday.<lb/>
Don't miss it!<lb/>
Beta lota<lb/>
The Beta lota chapter of<lb/>
Gamma Theta Upsilon, the<lb/>
National Geography Honor<lb/>
Society, is looking fa members to<lb/>
join during the '77-78 school<lb/>
year. There are two categaies of<lb/>
membership: Associate, which<lb/>
requires a minimum of one course<lb/>
in Geography, and regular, which<lb/>
requires a minimum of three<lb/>
Geography oourses with an over-<lb/>
all B average in all Geography<lb/>
courses.<lb/>
Several activities are being<lb/>
planned, including trips to Geo-<lb/>
graphy conventions. Anyone who<lb/>
has ideas to share and would like<lb/>
to apply fa membership should<lb/>
see Dr. Birchard, Brewster A-232<lb/>
fa an application fam.<lb/>
SociAnth<lb/>
The Sociology-Anthropology<lb/>
Club will hold a very impatant<lb/>
meeting Nov. 2 to discuss the up<lb/>
and coming program featuring a<lb/>
guest speaker. All members are<lb/>
urged to attend this meeting.<lb/>
Bring along your friends too! The<lb/>
meeting will be held in Brewster<lb/>
D-302 at 7 30 p.m. Wed Nov. 2<lb/>
Fun Time<lb/>
The ECU Pom Pom girls will<lb/>
be having a "fun time" at<lb/>
Blimpie'sThurs Nov. 3 from 7 to<lb/>
11 p.m. Everyone come on down<lb/>
and drink your blues away.<lb/>
Workshop<lb/>
A School and Community<lb/>
Health Majas wakshop on job<lb/>
oppatunities will be held Nov. 7<lb/>
from 7-9 p.m. in room 206 Allied<lb/>
Health. All members COHE<lb/>
majas and interested persois are<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
SNA<lb/>
For all interested nursing<lb/>
students, there will be a SNA<lb/>
meeting Wed Nov. 2at 7p.m. in<lb/>
room 101 of the Nursing Bldg.<lb/>
Please come out and find what it<lb/>
is all about<lb/>
Sigma Tau<lb/>
Sigma Tau Gamma, the new<lb/>
national fraternity at ECU is<lb/>
planning many fund raising pro-<lb/>
jects in the future. The first of<lb/>
these projects will be a gasoline<lb/>
raffle to be held this week. Some<lb/>
2500 tickets will be sold fa $1<lb/>
each. The prizes include a first<lb/>
place prize of 50 gallons of gas.<lb/>
There will be two second place<lb/>
prizes of 25 gallons of gas each.<lb/>
A party is also being planned<lb/>
fa this Friday at Pantana Bob's<lb/>
located downtown. Anybody in-<lb/>
terested in Sigma Tau Gamma<lb/>
prospective brothers or little<lb/>
sisters are invited to oome on<lb/>
down fa a good time at Pantana<lb/>
Bob's. Also, any girls interested<lb/>
in becoming little sisters fa Sig<lb/>
Tau can contact Mar O'Ravitz at<lb/>
752-8657 a Greg Schwemley at<lb/>
752-6635. Further information<lb/>
about Sig Tau will follow in future<lb/>
editions of the Fountainhead.<lb/>
Society SCEC<lb/>
All persons interested in<lb/>
joining the Eastern Carolina Film<lb/>
Society, an aganizatioi designed<lb/>
to allow members to choose the<lb/>
motion pictures they wish to see,<lb/>
please call 758-5253, if there is no<lb/>
answer, phone 752-6389 a write<lb/>
Box 27 Falkland, N.C. 27827.<lb/>
Craftsmen<lb/>
Craftsmen East will meet<lb/>
TuesNov. 1 at 4 p.m. in room<lb/>
223 Jenkins. All members are<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
BUC<lb/>
The BUC needs two advertis-<lb/>
ing salespersons to wak fa five<lb/>
months beginning Nov. 1. Pay<lb/>
will be $75 per month. If you are<lb/>
interested, call 757-6501, 6502 a<lb/>
stop by the Buc office.<lb/>
Aerospace Coffeehouse<lb/>
The Department of Aerospace<lb/>
Studies will administer the Air<lb/>
Force Officer Qualifying Test<lb/>
(AFOOT) on the dates listed<lb/>
below. See Captain Lane in room<lb/>
204 a Captain Tinkham in room<lb/>
209 of Wright Annex a call<lb/>
757-6597 to make an appointment<lb/>
fa the test. This test must be<lb/>
completed if you wish to apply fa<lb/>
the two year AFROTC program.<lb/>
Nov. 1<lb/>
Nov. 16<lb/>
Nov. 19<lb/>
A remarkable young blues<lb/>
guitarist, Mike Wells will perfam<lb/>
at ECU Coffeehouse Nov. 3 and 4<lb/>
at 9 p.m. Admission is only .50.<lb/>
Free refreshments. Rm. 15<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
4-H Club<lb/>
The ECU Collegiate 4-H Club<lb/>
will meet Thurs Nov. 3at 6 p.m.<lb/>
They will meet at Peppi's Pizza on<lb/>
264 by-pass. Come and join us!<lb/>
Ski Trip<lb/>
Careers<lb/>
Vacation Ski Trip to Beech<lb/>
Mountain Jan. 2-6. You may still<lb/>
sign up to go: PHYE 1000, PHYE<lb/>
1105, or Non-Credit. Call Jo<lb/>
Saunders, 757-6000 Memorial<lb/>
Gym. First meeting is Nov. 1 in<lb/>
room 108 at 4 p.m.<lb/>
Exhibit<lb/>
An exhibit entitled "The<lb/>
French Press in Perspective" will<lb/>
be on display in Joyner Library,<lb/>
room 104, from Nov. 1 through<lb/>
Nov. 14. The exhibit will be open<lb/>
Nov. 1 from 7 to9 p.m and Nov.<lb/>
2 through 14 from 6 to 8 p.m.<lb/>
Over 300 newspapers and mag-<lb/>
azines depicting French attitudes<lb/>
and opinions will be featured. The<lb/>
exhibit is sponsored by the<lb/>
Department of Foreign Lang-<lb/>
uages and Literatures.<lb/>
Car Clinic<lb/>
Free! A car emission clinic<lb/>
Sat Nov. 5 from 10 a.m. to 4<lb/>
p.m. at the Pitt Plaza Shopping<lb/>
Center. This is a service of ECU<lb/>
Student National Enviromental<lb/>
Health Association. It only takes<lb/>
three minutes, so drive on<lb/>
through.<lb/>
Outing Club<lb/>
The ECU Outing Club will<lb/>
meet Nov. 1, 7:30 p.m. in<lb/>
Brewster B-102 Auditaium. A<lb/>
shat general meeting and a<lb/>
program on backpacking equip-<lb/>
ment and selection will be the<lb/>
agenda. We need enthusiastic<lb/>
people.<lb/>
Is there anyone who isn't<lb/>
interested in finding out rrxxe<lb/>
about careers, job infamatioi, a<lb/>
your future? If you are interested,<lb/>
then oome to Clement Dam<lb/>
tomarow at 7 30. Furney James<lb/>
from the Placement Office will be<lb/>
sharing infamatioi that you can<lb/>
use.<lb/>
Fellowship<lb/>
The Christian Fellowship will<lb/>
meet every Wed. night at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Please come out and praise the<lb/>
Lad with us. Brewster B-203.<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi will hold a<lb/>
business meeting Wed Nov. 2 at<lb/>
6 p.m. in Austin room 132.<lb/>
Mandatory meeting for all<lb/>
pledges.<lb/>
C0AS2125<lb/>
COAS 2125 was left off of the<lb/>
preregistration list of courses to<lb/>
be offered during the spring<lb/>
semester of 1978. Although it is<lb/>
now too late to preregister fa<lb/>
COAS 2125, this course will be<lb/>
offered and interested students<lb/>
can enroll during the scheduled<lb/>
registration period in January<lb/>
1978.<lb/>
The first class meeting will be<lb/>
at 12 noon, Wed Jan. 11,1978 in<lb/>
the Institute for Coastal and<lb/>
Marine Resources' office located<lb/>
in Wright Auditaium, Room 102.<lb/>
At this time, a mutually satisfao<lb/>
tory time will be arranged fa<lb/>
class meetings.<lb/>
Help is a desperate wad<lb/>
Intended fa desperate people<lb/>
But few are able to use this<lb/>
plea<lb/>
And the pain mounts to an<lb/>
awful degree<lb/>
"HELP when screamed<lb/>
draws a chill through every bone<lb/>
But how many people will<lb/>
answer a silent scream?<lb/>
They know something is<lb/>
wrong<lb/>
But there's nothing they can<lb/>
do, it seems.<lb/>
YOU CAN HELP. There is an<lb/>
organization on campus, the<lb/>
Student Council Fa Exceptional<lb/>
Children, (SCEC), that recognizes<lb/>
this plea fa help fran retarded<lb/>
children. Our goals are to suppat<lb/>
and initiate programs and activi-<lb/>
ties fa retarded citizens. All<lb/>
students are invited to our<lb/>
meetings the first Wednesday of<lb/>
every month in Speight 129 at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. Please show that you<lb/>
care. Be an exceptional person;<lb/>
support exceptional children!<lb/>
Surf Club<lb/>
There will be a meeting fa the<lb/>
"Surf Club" Wednesday night at<lb/>
700o'clock in Rm. 105 Memaial<lb/>
Gym. All interested persons are<lb/>
invited to attend. You don't have<lb/>
to surf to be in this dub just<lb/>
enjoy the beach.<lb/>
Schedules<lb/>
The ECU Intramurais Depart-<lb/>
ment would like to familiarize<lb/>
everyone with the schedules fa<lb/>
freeplay, equipment checkout and<lb/>
recreational swimming. The free-<lb/>
play at Minges is from 8-10<lb/>
Monday through Friday, 10-9<lb/>
Saturday and 2-9 Sunday. At<lb/>
Memaial Gym, Monday through<lb/>
Friday, freeplay is from 4-10,<lb/>
closed all day Saturday and open<lb/>
2-9 Sunday. The pool at M inges is<lb/>
open from 8-10 Monday through<lb/>
Friday and 3-9 Saturday and<lb/>
Sunday. The pool at Memaial is<lb/>
open from 4-6 Monday through<lb/>
Friday and also on Monday,<lb/>
Wednesday and Friday 12 noon<lb/>
until 1 p.m. The equipment room<lb/>
in Minges and Memaial are on<lb/>
the same schedule. Monday<lb/>
through Friday they are open<lb/>
from 7:45 until 10:15, closed all<lb/>
Saturday and open from 2 until 9<lb/>
Sunday. Keep these schedules fa<lb/>
future references and use these<lb/>
facilities to the best of your<lb/>
advantage.<lb/>
THANKS<lb/>
The Lambda Chi's would like<lb/>
to thank all those who participat-<lb/>
ed in Sunday's Field Day which<lb/>
resulted in a fantastic time fa all<lb/>
Congratulations are in ader fa<lb/>
the Tri-Sigs and the Phi Taus fa<lb/>
being the first place winners in<lb/>
the saaity and fraternity div<lb/>
isions respectively, and fa the<lb/>
Kappa Delta saaity who won the<lb/>
Lambda Chi Needy Family Cothes<lb/>
drive. With over 200 chapters<lb/>
across the nation, these are just<lb/>
two of the many projects that<lb/>
Lambda Chis aaoss the nation,<lb/>
and especially here at ECU, that<lb/>
contribute to both the growth of<lb/>
community and the campus.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058018_0003"/><lb/>
1 November 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
Page 3<lb/>
Beta Nu Chapter members attend D.C. convention<lb/>
Beta Nu Chapter of the Sigma<lb/>
Theta Tau nursing honorary<lb/>
society of ECU sent two delegates<lb/>
to the National Biennial Conven-<lb/>
tion held in Washington, DC.<lb/>
last month.<lb/>
Charlotte Martin , Beta Nu<lb/>
Chapter president, and Cindy<lb/>
Jones, a senior nursing member<lb/>
attended.<lb/>
The convention, entitled<lb/>
Leadership in Action included<lb/>
speakers Martha Keys and Rose-<lb/>
mary Donely.<lb/>
LEGISLATURE<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
Last years FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
budget was approximately<lb/>
$51,000 However, advertising<lb/>
revenue this year will revert back<lb/>
to the FOUNTAINHEAD budget<lb/>
instead of reverting to the SGA<lb/>
general fund, as it has in the<lb/>
past.<lb/>
Senior Editor Kim Devins<lb/>
proposed cutting out funds fa<lb/>
conventions before the bill went<lb/>
to the appropriations committee<lb/>
the first time. The bill was<lb/>
debated in the committee twice,<lb/>
amended, and passed in the<lb/>
Legislature last night.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD, with an<lb/>
approximate budget of $34,000,<lb/>
will have to make $18,000 in ad<lb/>
revenue this year in order to<lb/>
reach the amount of last year's<lb/>
budget.<lb/>
The amount of money made<lb/>
by advertising up to $23,000 will<lb/>
go to FOUNTAINHEAD, and<lb/>
money made totaling over<lb/>
$23,000 will revert back to the<lb/>
SGA.<lb/>
The School of M usic request-<lb/>
ed $15,795. A motion to cut $650<lb/>
fa Renaissance instruments pas-<lb/>
sed, and the School of Music was<lb/>
appropriated $15,145.<lb/>
Model United Nations<lb/>
requested a suspension of the<lb/>
rules so the legislature could<lb/>
consider its budget without hav-<lb/>
ing to go befae the appropna-<lb/>
tionsoommittee. The request was<lb/>
made in ader to plan specifically<lb/>
to have famer Seaetary of State<lb/>
Dean Rusk as a speaker this<lb/>
spring. The motion to suspend the<lb/>
rules was defeated.<lb/>
Keys, a Caigresswoman fron<lb/>
Kansas, spoke on "Update of<lb/>
Federal Health Legislation<lb/>
Donley, president of the Sigma<lb/>
Theta Tau Society, presented a<lb/>
film entitled "Beyond Alpha"<lb/>
which was a histaical look at the<lb/>
student nurses in the 1920's and<lb/>
the birth of the nursing hona<lb/>
society.<lb/>
The first chapter was begun in<lb/>
the 1920's by six student nurses,<lb/>
of whom five attended the<lb/>
convention and were interviewed<lb/>
in the film.<lb/>
Attending members met in<lb/>
the House of Delegates and voted<lb/>
on the by-laws, elected new<lb/>
officers and inducted 18 new<lb/>
chapters.<lb/>
Various other lectures, pro-<lb/>
grams, banquets and receptions<lb/>
Iron Horse Trading Co.<lb/>
Merchants and Craftsmen<lb/>
In Fine Gold and Silver Jewelry<lb/>
Crystal Jewelry<lb/>
from Austria<lb/>
10 OFF<lb/>
Located: 301 S. Evans Mall<lb/>
First State Bank Building<lb/>
Boors: MonThurs. 10-6<lb/>
Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-6<lb/>
were held during the three days<lb/>
where Martin and Jones had the<lb/>
oppatunity to meet some of the<lb/>
guests.<lb/>
Dr. Janet Campbell will be the<lb/>
guest speaker at the next Beta Nu<lb/>
Chapter meeting. She is an ANA<lb/>
certified psychiatric mental<lb/>
health nurse and consultant in<lb/>
counseling and training at Rex<lb/>
Hospital in Raleigh, N.C.<lb/>
The meeting will be Mon<lb/>
Nov. 14, 1977 at 7 p.m. in room<lb/>
101 of the Nursing Building.<lb/>
She will lecture on "The Role of<lb/>
the Nurse in Private P-actice<lb/>
The general public and all<lb/>
nursing students are invited to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
CLIFF'S<lb/>
Seafood House<lb/>
and Oyeter Bar<lb/>
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MON. - THURS.<lb/>
FISH  .99<lb/>
French Fries, Slaw and Hush puppies<lb/>
14 LB. HAMBURGER99<lb/>
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CRAB CAKES1.50<lb/>
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Now Salad Bar<lb/>
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MM<lb/>
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Make your YEARBOOK PORTRAIT<lb/>
lintment NOW at:<lb/>
in<lb/>
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Pictures will<lb/>
be taken<lb/>
Nov. 7th<lb/>
- 18th.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058018_0004"/><lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 1 November 1977<lb/>
Forget<lb/>
� �<lb/>
Dr. John Maiolo, chairperson of the Sociology-<lb/>
Anthropology Dept. and the Graduate Council are up<lb/>
in arms because the president of the SGA, Neil<lb/>
Sessoms, recommended the Legislature cut all<lb/>
funding fa trips and speaker programs. They want<lb/>
future bills for these to be debated in the Legislature.<lb/>
First of all, the individual bills will be debated in<lb/>
the Legislature asall bills are. But as for getting the<lb/>
money this semester: it simply is not there.<lb/>
Maiolo should have known how the Legislature<lb/>
handles bills for appropriations before getting so<lb/>
upset about whether or not they will be debated.<lb/>
When a bill is introduced it automatically goes to the<lb/>
Appropriations Committee-another point Maiolo<lb/>
recommended-then the oommittee reports back to the<lb/>
Legislature the following Monday with its amend-<lb/>
ments and approval or disapproval. The speaker of<lb/>
the Legislature then calls for positive and negative<lb/>
debate on the bill as amended. If the members of the<lb/>
Appropriations Committee want the Legislature to<lb/>
consider the points deleted by the majority of the<lb/>
Committee, they can file a "minority Report" and<lb/>
the Legislature must vote on whether or not to re-add<lb/>
the deleted points to the bill before debating it as a<lb/>
whole.<lb/>
Consequently, the decision will not be made "by<lb/>
one person" as Maiolo said. Of course the president<lb/>
of the SGA has ten days afterwards to veto, but even<lb/>
if he does, the Legislature can override his veto by a<lb/>
two-thirds vote. So Maiolo and the Council can relax<lb/>
on that point.<lb/>
The major issue however, is not whether the bills<lb/>
will be debated by the Legislature, but the asking for<lb/>
money for these trips to begin with.<lb/>
According to SGA treasurer Craig Hales, after the<lb/>
major organizations of ECU are funded, even with<lb/>
cuts, there will be less that $2,000 left for Fall<lb/>
Semester in the SGA budget.<lb/>
These departments on campus cannot ask the<lb/>
SGA to go in the red. The ECU SGA is presently the<lb/>
second most powerful SGA in the nation, second to<lb/>
the University of California in Los Angeles. It is this<lb/>
powerful only because the ECU administration allows<lb/>
it and gives it this much money. If the SGA<lb/>
appropriates more money than it has, the<lb/>
administration, especially the new chancellor next<lb/>
year, can consider the Legislature irresponsible and<lb/>
take away this power.<lb/>
More money will be coming to the SGA Spring<lb/>
Semester and first sesson Summer School. But this<lb/>
is, nevertheless, hoped for money. The Legislature<lb/>
cannot be certain it will have even the same amount<lb/>
to appropriate that it had this semester, so it should<lb/>
not appropriate on speculated money.<lb/>
Maioloar j the Graduate Council should just wait<lb/>
until Spring Semester before asking for these funds.<lb/>
David Cartwright, Appropriations Committee chair-<lb/>
person, has said he will be the first to advocate<lb/>
appropriating money for trips when and if the money<lb/>
is there.<lb/>
Perhaps Maiolo and the Council want the SGA to<lb/>
hatchet the major organizations on campus. Perhaps<lb/>
they would like to aee the Transit System, the Art<lb/>
Dept Publications or the Executive Council, all<lb/>
serving the whole student body, scratched out of<lb/>
SGA funding so a handful of people from different<lb/>
departments, who serve only those in the depart-<lb/>
men  can spend a nice weekend at the beach<lb/>
chatting.<lb/>
The major organizations have already cut their<lb/>
budgets drastically to help the SGA stay above water.<lb/>
Maiolo said his department will have a retreat<lb/>
even if he has to pay for it. Fine. Maybe he has the<lb/>
money. But the SGA does not.<lb/>
ut trips<lb/>
RETI?ATS GIVE US THAT ESSENTIAL STUDENT-<lb/>
PROfESSOR RELATIONSHIP WE N��D !<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Get your picture in the BUCCANEER<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
The 1977-78 BUCCANEER<lb/>
staff is hard at work to assure that<lb/>
this year there will be a yearbook.<lb/>
Our focus in the book will be on<lb/>
thingsthat make ECU distinctive-<lb/>
Homecomfng<lb/>
Queen-farce?<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
In response to "Miss<lb/>
Reese's letter, I would like to<lb/>
retort in defense of the new<lb/>
homecoming Queen and the<lb/>
nominees of that position.<lb/>
Too bad she had to stereotype<lb/>
the winner. Any girl with enough<lb/>
confidence to run for the title is<lb/>
probably not the typical "dumb<lb/>
blonde" that is usually associated<lb/>
with these types of contests. Jan<lb/>
Master, in m, opinion is more<lb/>
than qualified for the honor of<lb/>
Homeooming Queen. She is intel-<lb/>
ligent, outgoing, kind and attrac-<lb/>
tive. It's obvious that many<lb/>
students here appreciate her<lb/>
qualifications.<lb/>
Sure a good looking girl gets a<lb/>
lot of attention, but wtt topper<lb/>
when i girl looks at a guy? I<lb/>
hardly think the first thing she<lb/>
thinks of is his grade point<lb/>
average, or his church atten-<lb/>
dance. Farce? Lets just call it<lb/>
human nature.<lb/>
Mitch Klimek<lb/>
ly ECU: the things with which<lb/>
our fine school has become<lb/>
associated. YOU are a part of this<lb/>
institution, and as such should be<lb/>
pictured in the '78 BUC.<lb/>
Stevens Studios, an outstan-<lb/>
ding company from Bangor,<lb/>
Maine, has been contracted to<lb/>
photograph ECU students FREE I<lb/>
There will be NO SITTING FEE.<lb/>
It takes only five to ten minutes of<lb/>
your time to stop by and have<lb/>
your picture taken. A few weeks<lb/>
later, you will receive 4-8 cola<lb/>
proofs to choose from. You are<lb/>
automatically pictured in the '78<lb/>
BUC. Any portrait purchase you<lb/>
wish to make is up to you. All we<lb/>
ask is that your photography be<lb/>
included in the yearbook.<lb/>
Two photographers will be at<lb/>
ECU from Monday, Nov. 7th-Fri.<lb/>
Nov. 18th. There will be a<lb/>
photographer in Wright Annex<lb/>
Room 212 and one in the lobby of<lb/>
Fletcher Hall weekdays from 9-5.<lb/>
CALL 757-6501, -6502 FOR AN<lb/>
APPOINTMENT. This way we<lb/>
can assure you that yGur wait will<lb/>
be minimal.<lb/>
If you need any further<lb/>
information, call us a stop by the<lb/>
BUC office.<lb/>
Please let us hear from you<lb/>
soon!<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Susan L. Rogerson, Editor<lb/>
78 BUCCANEER<lb/>
ir<lb/>
PLEASE NOTE:<lb/>
Letters must comply with Forum<lb/>
policy as posted outside<lb/>
fountamhead office, and appear-<lb/>
ing here usually, or they WILL<lb/>
NO T be pnptecf.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community tor over fifty years.<lb/>
Senior EditorKim J Devins<lb/>
Production ManagerBob Glover<lb/>
Advertising Manager � .Robert Swaim<lb/>
N Mtor  Ondy Broome<lb/>
Trends EditorDavid W. Trevlno<lb/>
SP�rts Edjt0rChris Holloman<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student newspaper of East Carolina<lb/>
University sponsored by the Student Government Association of<lb/>
ECU and is distributed each Wednesday during the summer,<lb/>
and twice weekly during the school year.<lb/>
Mailing address: Old South Building, Greenville, N.C 27834<lb/>
Editorial offices: 757-6366, 757-6367, 757-6309.<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058018_0005"/><lb/>
1 November 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
DECA club sponsors career orientation program<lb/>
By CINDY BROOME<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The ECU Collegiate DECA<lb/>
Club sponsored a career orienta-<lb/>
tion workshop for high school<lb/>
students here last Thurs. Approx-<lb/>
mately 450 students attended.<lb/>
The workshop included sev-<lb/>
eral speakers and four workshop<lb/>
sessions - apparel and acces-<lb/>
sories, petroleum industries, food<lb/>
services and food marketing.<lb/>
"We're not just studying<lb/>
books said Dr. Leo Jenkins.<lb/>
"We're trying to pull the two<lb/>
areas together. We give students<lb/>
practical experience along with<lb/>
his academics.<lb/>
"One out of five people on<lb/>
campus here are pursuing careers<lb/>
in business<lb/>
Furner James, Director of the<lb/>
Placement Office, said there were<lb/>
more job opportunities than<lb/>
students realized, and that it is<lb/>
taken fa granted there are no<lb/>
jobs.<lb/>
There are plenty of opportun-<lb/>
ities for work said James. "You<lb/>
have to decide that you can make<lb/>
it despite the limitations<lb/>
James spoke of a blind ECU<lb/>
student who said, "I know I have<lb/>
some disadvantages, but all I<lb/>
want is an opportunity<lb/>
"When you make up your<lb/>
mind that you can't do some-<lb/>
thing, you can't do it said<lb/>
James.<lb/>
James spoke of the fact that<lb/>
few people want to be sales-<lb/>
people.<lb/>
"Selling is a matter of atti-<lb/>
tude he said. "That's where<lb/>
the opportunities are<lb/>
James also said that while<lb/>
some students' grades fall if they<lb/>
take a part-time job, other<lb/>
students' grades rise because<lb/>
they have taken a job.<lb/>
Some students organize<lb/>
their time better when they have<lb/>
a job and know they have only so<lb/>
much time to study said James.<lb/>
ECU sociologists<lb/>
receive grant to<lb/>
study oil spill effect<lb/>
Two ECU sociologists have<lb/>
received a grant of $11,498 from<lb/>
the National Oceanic and<lb/>
Atmospheric Administration to<lb/>
study the socio-economic impact<lb/>
of the Argo Merchant oil spill off<lb/>
the coast of Massachusetts.<lb/>
The spill occurred in Dec-<lb/>
ember, 1976, when the Liberian<lb/>
registered tanker, loaded with<lb/>
27,000 tons of fuel oil, ran<lb/>
aground and finally broke to<lb/>
pieces.<lb/>
The oil, however, never wash-<lb/>
ed ashore but many days, coastal<lb/>
New Englanders were fearful that<lb/>
their resort beaches would be<lb/>
polluted.<lb/>
The study, headed by Dr.<lb/>
Peter Fricke and Dr. John Maioio,<lb/>
will include a survey of residents<lb/>
in the towns of Nantucket,<lb/>
Edgartown, Chatham and<lb/>
Falmouth as well as the collection<lb/>
of data covering fisheries, tour-<lb/>
ism and recreation in the area.<lb/>
The object of the study,<lb/>
according to Dr. Fricke, is to<lb/>
identify any divergence of pop-<lb/>
ular beliefs concerning the socio-<lb/>
economic impact of oil spills and<lb/>
the real impact the spill would<lb/>
have in a community.<lb/>
"We want to find out what<lb/>
people know about oil spills and<lb/>
what they think would happen.<lb/>
Did fewer people come to the<lb/>
Cape this year because of it? Has<lb/>
it affected such things as fishing<lb/>
patterns, recreation and property<lb/>
ownership?<lb/>
The study fieldwork will be<lb/>
conducted from a research base in<lb/>
Falmouth. It istobeoompletedby<lb/>
mid-November and the report<lb/>
submitted to the NOAA in<lb/>
December.<lb/>
Dr. Fricke is a visiting assoc-<lb/>
iate professor of sociology at ECU<lb/>
and a senior scientist in the ECU<lb/>
Institute for Coastal and Marine<lb/>
Resources. From 1975 to 1977, he<lb/>
was a research associate at<lb/>
Woods Hole Oceanographic<lb/>
Institution.<lb/>
ALTHOUGH THE PIRATES lost, the crowd seemed toenoy themselves.<lb/>
Photo by Jeff Robb<lb/>
The Student Welfare<lb/>
Committee has placed Ballot<lb/>
boxes in each dorm lobby for<lb/>
suggestions of the revision of <lb/>
ECU's visitation policy.<lb/>
The boxes will remain<lb/>
in the lobbies through Friday<lb/>
Nov. 4th.<lb/>
l1 44<lb/>
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Tuesday Nigh is Tuesday Nite<lb/>
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Open daily at 4:00<lb/>
DELIVERY<lb/>
758-6500<lb/>
215 East 4th St.<lb/>
Use This Coupon<lb/>
2 FREE 16 Cokes<lb/>
oz.<lb/>
When You Order Any Size<lb/>
Pizza Pickup or Delivery<lb/>
BIGGS DRUG STORE<lb/>
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PHONE: 752-213$<lb/>
FREE PRESCRIPTION PICKUP<lb/>
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CONVALESCENT SUPPLIES.<lb/>
FIRST-AID SUPPLIES<lb/>
SUNGLASSES BY POSTER<lb/>
GRANT AND COOL RAY<lb/>
TIMEX WATCHES<lb/>
COSTUME JEWELRY<lb/>
GREETING CARDS-<lb/>
SCHOOL SUPPLIES<lb/>
OLD FASHION SODA FOUNTAIN<lb/>
DRINKS MADE THM WAY YOU<lb/>
LIKE THEM: FLESHLY SQUEEZED<lb/>
LEMONADES AND ORANGEADES -<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058018_0006"/><lb/>
�������o<lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 1 November 1977<lb/>
First father in U.S. to win custody of children<lb/>
Social work orof soeal<lb/>
By WILLIAM DELQACH<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Dr. Ken Lewis, a social work<lb/>
professor of the School of Allied<lb/>
Health and Social Professions, is<lb/>
the first father in the United<lb/>
States ever to win custody of his<lb/>
children following a divorce.<lb/>
Lewis, who spoke to the<lb/>
National Organization for Women<lb/>
(NOW) last Thursday, said his<lb/>
case came up in February of 1973<lb/>
when he was a college professor<lb/>
in Nebraska.<lb/>
Lewis said his case seemed<lb/>
rather hopeless because he had a<lb/>
big statute against him. The<lb/>
Tender Years Doctrine states that<lb/>
in the case where both parents<lb/>
were declared fit parents the<lb/>
mother always got custody if the<lb/>
children were very young.<lb/>
Without a statute in his favor,<lb/>
Lewis had to invent an argument.<lb/>
He based his argument on the<lb/>
assumption that the term<lb/>
' mother was a verb, and not a<lb/>
noun. Hiscase went all the way to<lb/>
the Nebraska State Supreme<lb/>
Court.<lb/>
Four months after Lewis'<lb/>
much publicized case, the Tender<lb/>
Years Doctrine was denounoed as<lb/>
unconstitutional and in January of<lb/>
1974 was killed in that state.<lb/>
Twenty other states followed<lb/>
suit, induding North Carolina<lb/>
which ratified Cathy Sebo's Bill<lb/>
on July 17, 1977 to end the<lb/>
Tender Years Doctrine.<lb/>
Lewis said that in 1975 there<lb/>
were 4,40X),000 single mothers<lb/>
and 500,000 single fathers in<lb/>
America.<lb/>
He said 10 million children<lb/>
lived with their mother and 1<lb/>
million children lived with their<lb/>
father.<lb/>
to NOW group<lb/>
One out of six children in the<lb/>
U.S. live in single parent families,<lb/>
said Lewis. Eleven per cent of all<lb/>
white children and 41 per cent of<lb/>
all black children live in single<lb/>
parent families. Ninety-two per<lb/>
cent of all these children live<lb/>
without a father.<lb/>
Lewis is a senior editor for<lb/>
"Single Parent's News He is<lb/>
also a consultant for MEN (Men's<lb/>
Equality Now) and Men's Inter-<lb/>
national, Inc. which has 82,000<lb/>
members from four countries.<lb/>
When asked why he came to<lb/>
ECU, Lewis said, "I have grand-<lb/>
parents who live nearby, I get<lb/>
afternoons of f so I can take care of<lb/>
my two little girls, and there are<lb/>
many single parent families in<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
THIS SIX PACK temporarily rests in its searcn tot an oversized refrigerator<lb/>
Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
The Pro Shop<lb/>
Of GreenvHle, Inc.<lb/>
(Adjacent to King &amp; Queen Restaurant)<lb/>
� WARM-UP SUITS<lb/>
Complete Shipment of Beautiful<lb/>
White Stag Has Just Arrived<lb/>
For Men, Ladies, &amp; Children<lb/>
COME IN AND SEE THEM!<lb/>
(Open Till 8:00pm Mon Fri.<lb/>
Till 6:00 on Sat.)<lb/>
 752-1526<lb/>
SGA offers<lb/>
legal aid<lb/>
By SCOTT BARNES<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
For any ECU student who<lb/>
needs legal advice, there is a free<lb/>
legal aid service offered by the<lb/>
SGA, according to Neil Sessoms,<lb/>
SGA president.<lb/>
The service will cover any<lb/>
student's questions and aid in<lb/>
some legal disputes. The legal<lb/>
aid, however, will not represent a<lb/>
student in oourt.<lb/>
The most frequent cases that<lb/>
are involved are tax violation,<lb/>
landlord disputes, contract dis-<lb/>
putes and drug related problems,<lb/>
said Sessoms.<lb/>
To see a lawyer, call the<lb/>
SGA at 757-6611 to set up<lb/>
an appointment. The times sche-<lb/>
duled for counseling are8 a.m10<lb/>
a.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays,<lb/>
and 2 p.m5 p.m. Mondays and<lb/>
Wednesdays.<lb/>
The Blount and Crisp partner-<lb/>
ship gives legal aid to students.<lb/>
THE PERFECT GIFT!<lb/>
Start with one bead on a chain<lb/>
Add a bead for other gift occasions.<lb/>
Now you can build a necklace of everlasting<lb/>
beauty, increasing in sentiment and value<lb/>
inexpensivelyone gold bead at a time.<lb/>
Phone: 750-2452<lb/>
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Downtown Greenville<lb/>
an the mail<lb/>
I<lb/>
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Z m m<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058018_0007"/><lb/>
�wWBiBIMi<lb/>
Trombone Choir and Jazz Ensemble performing too<lb/>
Opera Theatre to play Frid<lb/>
TRENDS STAFF REPORT<lb/>
Activities planned by the East<lb/>
Carolina University School of<lb/>
Music include a scenes program<lb/>
to be presented by the Opera<lb/>
Theatre on Friday and Saturday<lb/>
(Nov. 4 &amp; 5) nights at 8 XX) p.m. in<lb/>
the A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall as<lb/>
well as perfamances by the ECU<lb/>
Concert Choir, Trombone Choir<lb/>
and Jazz Ensemble at the Nath<lb/>
Carolina Music Educatas Assoc-<lb/>
iation Convention in Winston-<lb/>
Salem. The convention will run<lb/>
from Sunday, November 6 to<lb/>
Tuesday, November 8.<lb/>
The scenes from the Opera<lb/>
Theatre production will include<lb/>
excerpts from some relatively<lb/>
unusual waks. These include<lb/>
scenes from Richards Strauss's<lb/>
Schweigsame Frau The Silent<lb/>
Woman, Chaikovsky's Pikovaia<lb/>
Dama Queen of Spades, and<lb/>
Moussagsky's Boris Godunov as<lb/>
well as a scene from the familiar<lb/>
La Boheme by Puccini.<lb/>
Another feature will be two<lb/>
shat excerpts from Scott Joplin's<lb/>
Treemonisha which will be ac-<lb/>
companied by a small instrument-<lb/>
al ensemble.<lb/>
All of the scenes will be sung<lb/>
in English and directed by Dr.<lb/>
Clyde Hiss of the School of Music<lb/>
faculty.<lb/>
Admission to the program is<lb/>
by ticket only. Tickets may be<lb/>
obtained in the main office of the<lb/>
A. J. Fletcher Music Building a<lb/>
fran any Opera Theatre student.<lb/>
ECU students can receive their<lb/>
tickets free with an ID and activity<lb/>
card. Public price per ticket is<lb/>
$1.00.<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
Concert Choir, conducted by<lb/>
Brett Watson, will perfam at the<lb/>
Nath Carolina Music Educatas<lb/>
Association's annual oonventioi<lb/>
in Winstoi-Salem oi Monday,<lb/>
November 7.<lb/>
The ECU chaal group is one<lb/>
of several outstanding school and<lb/>
college choirs invited to appear at<lb/>
the event, and is scheduled to<lb/>
perfam at 215 p.m. in the First<lb/>
Baptist Church of Winston-<lb/>
Sal em.<lb/>
Among the waks included in<lb/>
the Concert Choir's program are a<lb/>
Palestrina motet, , "Dies<lb/>
sanctificatus the Heinrich<lb/>
Schutz setting of the 100th Psalm;<lb/>
J.S. Bach's "Der Geist hilft<lb/>
unsrer Schwachheit auf four<lb/>
Brahms songs; two Christmas<lb/>
carols and two spirituals.<lb/>
The Schultz and Bach select-<lb/>
ions are arranged fa two choirs,<lb/>
and will be per famed by two<lb/>
divisions of the Concert Choir,<lb/>
from the opposing balconies of<lb/>
the church.<lb/>
Also invited to perfam at the<lb/>
Nath Carolina Music Educatas<lb/>
Association Convention are the<lb/>
student members of the East<lb/>
Carolina University Jazz Ensem-<lb/>
ble and the East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity Tromboie Choir, both direct-<lb/>
ed by Geage Broussard of the<lb/>
School of Music faculty.<lb/>
The 20-member Jazz Ensem-<lb/>
ble will perfam with recading<lb/>
artist George Roberts, whose<lb/>
musical career includes several<lb/>
years with the Stan Kenton<lb/>
Orchestra and many recadings<lb/>
fa motiai pictures, radio and<lb/>
television.<lb/>
� In addition to his pafaming,<lb/>
1 November 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
d Saturday<lb/>
OPERA THEATRE STUDENTS rehearse under direction of Dr. Clyde Hiss fa weekend pafam-<lb/>
3006 Photo by Kirk Kingsbury<lb/>
Roberts has assisted in the design<lb/>
of new bass trombones and is<lb/>
autha of a methos book on bass<lb/>
trombone playing.<lb/>
Eight members of the Trom-<lb/>
bone Choir will join other per-<lb/>
famers in a combined Trombone<lb/>
Ensemble from six North Carolina<lb/>
campuses to be directed by<lb/>
Donald Knaub, professa of trom-<lb/>
bone at the University of Texas at<lb/>
Austin and co-aganizer of the<lb/>
Eastman Brass Quintet.<lb/>
The eight East Carolina trom-<lb/>
bonists and four-member rhythm<lb/>
section will perfam with jazz<lb/>
artist Kai Winding, a maja<lb/>
founder of the modern style of<lb/>
jazz trombone playing. Winding<lb/>
has waked with Stan Kenton,<lb/>
Benny Goodman, Woody<lb/>
Herman, Dizzy Gillespie, Gerry<lb/>
M ulligan and aher renowned jazz<lb/>
artists and band leaders.<lb/>
New Film Society Formed<lb/>
By LYNN HUGHES<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Craft Center<lb/>
Offers Courses<lb/>
The Mendenhall Student Center Crafts Center is offering'three new<lb/>
wakshops especially fa the Christmas Season. Whether you'd like to<lb/>
make your own gifts a decaate your room with unique anaments,<lb/>
these wakshops offer something fa everyone.<lb/>
The wakshop schedules are as follows:<lb/>
Handbuilt Christmas Ceramics<lb/>
limit 10 people<lb/>
6.00 pm until 9.00 pm Tuesday, Nov. 8 &amp; Wednesday, Nov. 16<lb/>
Make beautiful as well as useful gifts fa your friends and family-<lb/>
mirra frames, tree anaments, mobiles, toothbrush holders, napkin<lb/>
rings, jewelry boxes, and more. All materials are provided.<lb/>
Christmas Candles<lb/>
limit 12 people<lb/>
6.00 pm until 900 pm Tuesdays Nov. 8 &amp; 15<lb/>
Make ice cream candles that look good enough to eat and your own<lb/>
Christmas candles to decaate your room a apartment. Learn the<lb/>
simple techniques in the aaft of candlemaking.<lb/>
Good news fa the movie fans!<lb/>
An aganizatioi called the East-<lb/>
ern Carolina Film Society has<lb/>
been famed and is in the process<lb/>
of becoming a waking body! The<lb/>
purpose? To give interested parti-<lb/>
cipants a chance to choose the<lb/>
films they would like to see.<lb/>
The club will operate through<lb/>
suggestions of prospective mem-<lb/>
bers of movies they would like<lb/>
shown. These suggestions can be<lb/>
taken by phone, mail, a at public<lb/>
meetings and can consist of<lb/>
specific film titles, topical cate-<lb/>
gories such as comedies or<lb/>
westerns, a those movies with<lb/>
specified directasa perfamers.<lb/>
The outcome of this infamal<lb/>
survey determines that films will<lb/>
be shown.<lb/>
After a tentative schedule of<lb/>
the most popular choices has<lb/>
been drawn up, membership<lb/>
would be sold to the dub at a set<lb/>
rate. Members would be admitted<lb/>
to all shows free, but the public<lb/>
would also be admitted at a set<lb/>
rate per show. In this way, a<lb/>
constant recruitment of new<lb/>
members would be achieved and<lb/>
the outside revenue will make it<lb/>
possible fa the film soaety to<lb/>
offer additional shows to its<lb/>
members at now extra cost.<lb/>
Charles Lawrenoe, an aigina-<lb/>
ta of the society, expressed an<lb/>
interest oi bringing thisaganiza-<lb/>
tion to the campus, but no<lb/>
progress can be made without the<lb/>
support and interest of the<lb/>
student body. Approximately 150<lb/>
members would be required<lb/>
befae the society can function,<lb/>
but once this number is reached,<lb/>
the shows could begin, he said.<lb/>
The Eastern Carolina Film<lb/>
Society is an effort to keep movies<lb/>
at the Roxy alive. Susan Whalen,<lb/>
one of the ooadinatas of the<lb/>
ROXY expressed conoern over<lb/>
recent nonpartidpation.<lb/>
Although prices of member-<lb/>
ship and public admission has not<lb/>
yet been determined, Whalen<lb/>
suggested that movie-goers pay<lb/>
at the doa first and then buy<lb/>
their season tickets. "This brings<lb/>
in trust she said.<lb/>
A public meeting will be held<lb/>
on Nov. 3 at 7.00 p.m. fa<lb/>
suggestion as to the Society. The<lb/>
meeting will be held at the Roxy<lb/>
on Albemarle a. Until then, all<lb/>
persons interested in partidpa-<lb/>
ting in the soaety are encouraged<lb/>
to do so by calling 758-5253 (if no<lb/>
answer dial 752-6389) or by<lb/>
writing Box 27, Falkland, N.C.<lb/>
27827.<lb/>
Trends<lb/>
Macrame for Christmas<lb/>
limit 12 people<lb/>
600 pm until 9.O0 pm Mondays Nov. 7 &amp; 14<lb/>
Decaate fa Christmas with maaame anaments Its easy and fun<lb/>
to make holly wreaths, candle rings, and tree anaments, not to<lb/>
mention the many possibilities fa gift giving.<lb/>
Sign up today at the Crafts Center to partidpate in a Christmas<lb/>
wakshop. All students, faculty and staff are eligible to partidpate. A<lb/>
$10.00 semester Crafts Center membership fee is required and there is<lb/>
no charge fa the wakshop, except the nominal cost of personal<lb/>
supplies.<lb/>
The Crafts Center, located on the ground floa of Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, isopen from 3.00 pm until 10.00 pm, Monday through<lb/>
Fnday, and 10O0 am until 3.O0 pm, Saturday. The deadline fa<lb/>
wakshop registration is Saturday, November 5 and dass size is<lb/>
.limited.<lb/>
THE SCENT of burning leaves fills ECU campus during fall.<lb/>
'04jbLj� . Iir,<lb/>
wmumaum<lb/>
<pb facs="00058018_0008"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD 1 November 1977<lb/>
LOCAL DOG ENJOYS fruit turnover<lb/>
on the border of starvation.<lb/>
overseas exist<lb/>
Uorkslnops<lb/>
ristmas<lb/>
JrwAubWu JJUiLCLo75?r3tOl<lb/>
We Care<lb/>
520 W. Greenville Blvd 264 By Pass<lb/>
Mon-Fri 11:00 am �3pm chopnteak $1.49<lb/>
all day Tues Ribeye 81.79<lb/>
Fri Sat Sun 8oz . T-Bone 82.79<lb/>
with this coupon, you can get a<lb/>
Rib-eye dinner with texas toast,<lb/>
large baked potato<lb/>
can eat from our SUPER salad bar<lb/>
and to top it off, a FREE dessert<lb/>
of your choice.<lb/>
$2.35<lb/>
CAMPUS FATTIES FEED faces while foreigners fast.<lb/>
CARE Crusade Begins<lb/>
TRENDS STAFF REPORT<lb/>
Tomorrow will mark the start<lb/>
of CARE'S annual Food Crusade.<lb/>
This year the goal is to raise<lb/>
$6,500,000 to help provide better<lb/>
health and hope fa more than<lb/>
25,000,000 people, most of them<lb/>
children in developing countries<lb/>
around the globe.<lb/>
In many cases, the relief<lb/>
CARE brings means a simple<lb/>
survival. Frank L. Goffio, Execut-<lb/>
ive Director of CARE explains<lb/>
that "Such foods as bulgur<lb/>
wheat, soya and wheat flour, milk<lb/>
powder, oorn-soya blend, rice and<lb/>
oooking oil supply desperately<lb/>
needed nutritional building<lb/>
blocks to the poorest of the poor.<lb/>
The food is served as a nourishing<lb/>
drink or porridge a combined<lb/>
with local ingredients in soups or<lb/>
stews<lb/>
The international aid and<lb/>
development agency has regular-<lb/>
ly scheduled feeding programs in<lb/>
pre-schco! and nutrition centers<lb/>
and primary schools, many of<lb/>
which CARE helped to build.<lb/>
Emergency rations are rushed<lb/>
to victims of such disasters as<lb/>
earthquakes, hurricanes, floods<lb/>
or droughts. And many of<lb/>
CARE's self-help development<lb/>
programs, including agricultural<lb/>
production and community im-<lb/>
provement, are based on food-fa-<lb/>
work projects.<lb/>
"Thirty-one years of exper-<lb/>
ience has taught us a great deal<lb/>
about wald problems, the remed-<lb/>
ies available to us and the<lb/>
solutions that work Mr. Goffio<lb/>
continued to say. "Combining<lb/>
food distribution with nutrition<lb/>
and sanitary education, health<lb/>
care and agricultural develop-<lb/>
ment gives us an edge in the<lb/>
battle against hunger �and mal-<lb/>
nutrition<lb/>
He went on to explain how<lb/>
CARE stretches prices, donations<lb/>
of food purchased in large<lb/>
quantities at special prices, don-<lb/>
ations of United States Govern-<lb/>
ment commodities and local gov-<lb/>
ernment contributions to operat-<lb/>
ing costs last year enabled CARE<lb/>
to provide $9.25 in aid fa every<lb/>
daia dollar. Contributions may<lb/>
be sent to CARE Food Crusade,<lb/>
P.O. Box 13043, Atlanta, Ga.<lb/>
30324.<lb/>
3o<lb/>
I UOMl<lb/>
wfatiei wexldina<lb/>
ANNIES 5DIDE6<lb/>
5EAUTIFUL<lb/>
LU. .<lb/>
109 E. Arlington Blvd.<lb/>
754-1744<lb/>
MM<lb/>
Thurs. Nov. 3 AT 9:00<lb/>
Bluegrass with Bitter Creek<lb/>
Ladies Night Also<lb/>
Overall, CARE has feeding<lb/>
and community i development<lb/>
programs in mae than thirty<lb/>
developing countries of Africa,<lb/>
Asia, Latin America and the<lb/>
Middle East.<lb/>
Feeding programs operate in<lb/>
the Arab Republic of Egypt,<lb/>
Bangladesh, Bloivia, Chad, Chile,<lb/>
Colombia, Costa Rica, the<lb/>
Dominican Republic, Ecuador,<lb/>
Gaza, Sri Lanks, Tunisia,<lb/>
Guatamala, Haiti, Honduras,<lb/>
India, Jadan, Macau, Pakistan,<lb/>
Panama and the Phillippines. As<lb/>
needs arise and resources permit,<lb/>
CARE sends food to supplement<lb/>
rther programs in Afganistan,<lb/>
Belize, Cameroon, Hong Kong,<lb/>
Indonesia, Israel, Kenya,<lb/>
Lesotho, Liberia, Mali,<lb/>
Nicaragua, Niger, Peru, Sierra<lb/>
Leone. South Kaea and Turkey.<lb/>
The hours<lb/>
are long,<lb/>
but that's<lb/>
O.K<lb/>
the pay is<lb/>
lousy.<lb/>
But as a volunteer<lb/>
you'U get to help Amenca<lb/>
stand a little taller. And you'll<lb/>
stand a little taller yourself.<lb/>
America needs your help or<lb/>
we wouldn't be asking. Your<lb/>
community needs your help.<lb/>
People 18 or 80: we don't care<lb/>
as long as you do. VISTA is<lb/>
coming alive again. Come alive<lb/>
with us. VISTA. Call toll free:<lb/>
800-424-8580. tfliAjA<lb/>
AHjbfcSerwced<lb/>
T� Newswpsr �<lb/>
f he Adtwrtnng CoutkJ<lb/>
ARMYNAVY<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
Pea coats field flights, bomber<lb/>
snorkel tanker lackets Rainwear<lb/>
parkas, omooots. work ciofff<lb/>
dishes 1501 S Evans Street Oo<lb/>
11 30 5:30 UP<lb/>
<pb facs="00058018_0009"/><lb/>
HnHMHHMKBHHMHHHBQIIH<lb/>
1 Noverrfcer 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 9<lb/>
Sunday, November 6<lb/>
Firefall gives Major Attractions concert<lb/>
ByEDCOLLEVECCHIO<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
This Sunday, November 6, at<lb/>
8:00 p.m. the Student Union<lb/>
Major Attractions Committee will<lb/>
present Firefall in ooncert. The<lb/>
concert will be held at Minges<lb/>
Coliseum Tickets are $3.00 for<lb/>
East Carolina students, and $5.00<lb/>
for general public.<lb/>
Although the band is most<lb/>
exciting instrumentally, vocals<lb/>
are worthy of praise and song<lb/>
lyrics are crisp and aware. In all<lb/>
aspects, they are disciplined<lb/>
musicians, and perform with<lb/>
intricate precision. Their debut<lb/>
album, called simply, Firefall,<lb/>
was responsible for three Top-40<lb/>
songs: "You Are The Woman<lb/>
"Livin' Ain't Livin and "Cin-<lb/>
derella Their latest, Luna Sea,<lb/>
has already produced a top hit,<lb/>
"Just Remember I love You<lb/>
and shows promise with two more<lb/>
tunes, "So Long and "Sold On<lb/>
You<lb/>
Firefall is a relatively young<lb/>
band whose members have devel-<lb/>
oped a unique and distinctive<lb/>
brand of music. With an effective<lb/>
blend of aggressiveness and<lb/>
gentle melodies, it is no wonder<lb/>
why, that in its short existence,<lb/>
Firefall has already produced<lb/>
several impressive hit singles and<lb/>
two well produoed albums.<lb/>
Much of the bands success<lb/>
can be attributed to the leader-<lb/>
ship of writer, vocalist, guitarist,<lb/>
Rick Roberts. Roberts and drum-<lb/>
mer Michael Clarke are ex-mem-<lb/>
bers of the Flying Burrito Broth-<lb/>
ers although Robert's songs bear<lb/>
little or no resemblance to this<lb/>
early band. The other four<lb/>
members of the band are: Mark<lb/>
Andes (formerly of Spirit and Jo<lb/>
Jo Gunne) who plays bass, lead<lb/>
guitarist Jock Bartley (formerly of<lb/>
Zephyr), writervocalistguitarist<lb/>
Larry Burnett, and David Muse,<lb/>
keyboards and horns.<lb/>
Students tickets are available<lb/>
at the Central Ticket Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. Only<lb/>
public tickets will be on sale<lb/>
Sunday at Minges.<lb/>
Roy Ayers' Ubiquity to perform in Raleigh<lb/>
rlnr fnr hn�h the 7 anrl tho Q 'Y) "<lb/>
TRENDS STAFF REPORT<lb/>
Roy Ayers Ubiquity, a unique<lb/>
taste of progressive jazzrhythm<lb/>
and blues with the soft touch,<lb/>
comes to Raleigh's Stewart Thea-<lb/>
tre for two performances on<lb/>
Wednesday, November 9. This is<lb/>
the second event in the 1977<lb/>
Jazz Series at Stewart Theatre,<lb/>
which is located on the second<lb/>
floor of North Carolina State<lb/>
University's Student Center.<lb/>
The variety and sophistication<lb/>
of Roy's musical viewpoint are<lb/>
very much the product of his<lb/>
background. In fact, music's been<lb/>
the mam part of his life since<lb/>
early childhood. "My mother<lb/>
says Roy, "was the single most<lb/>
important inspiration to begin<lb/>
and continue my career in music.<lb/>
She was a piano teacher, and I<lb/>
was tinkling on the piano as soon<lb/>
as I could reach the keys<lb/>
Roy played steel guitar in public<lb/>
school and on into high school,<lb/>
but found his true vocation at 17.<lb/>
That's when he heard the exotic<lb/>
latin-jazz of Cal Tjader and the<lb/>
soft ethereal sound of the MJQ's<lb/>
Milt Jackson. From then on it was<lb/>
the vibraharp (to the everlasting<lb/>
joy of his avid following.)<lb/>
Roy's big break came in 1966.<lb/>
He sat in with Herbie Mann at the<lb/>
Lighthouse and, in time-honored<lb/>
show business fashion, was hired<lb/>
on the spot. He remainedwith the<lb/>
group fa over three years as a<lb/>
featured artist, gaming valuable<lb/>
experience and. in due course,<lb/>
international acclaim. In 1967.<lb/>
Roy was voted Top New Star on<lb/>
vibes in Down Beat and has<lb/>
continued to register well in their<lb/>
Established Talent category<lb/>
But Roy s skills are known to<lb/>
than an elite coterie of<lb/>
ies-and extend far be-<lb/>
yond mere manual dexterity<lb/>
Attuned to the best elements of a<lb/>
variety of music, from jazz to<lb/>
oul to latin and rock, he has<lb/>
gathered around him a crew of<lb/>
musicians who share his tastes<lb/>
and talents. Live and on record,<lb/>
their work is consistently exci-<lb/>
ting, soulful and dynamic�and<lb/>
increasngty popular m both pop<lb/>
and jarz drdes. Altogether the<lb/>
Roy Ayers Ubiquity is one of the<lb/>
brightest aggregations m con-<lb/>
temporary music.<lb/>
It hasn't taken long for Roy to<lb/>
solidify his standing among the<lb/>
top practitioners of the vibes. As<lb/>
KM. O<lb/>
SHOE SHOP<lb/>
REPAIR ALL<lb/>
LEATHER GOODS<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
111 WesLfth 9t<lb/>
WeaMth<lb/>
r5frO204<lb/>
one reviewer said of a set at New<lb/>
York's Village Vanguard, "Roy<lb/>
Ayers brings a controlled fire to<lb/>
his performance. He runs up and<lb/>
down the keys of his vibes with<lb/>
deft aaftmanship. He can stire<lb/>
himself to a driving tempo a he<lb/>
can just groove. Either way he<lb/>
has complete control of himself<lb/>
and his instrument<lb/>
Of the same engagement,<lb/>
anaher aitic observed that "the<lb/>
audience said almost as much<lb/>
about the music as the music<lb/>
itself. I was probably the only one<lb/>
that wasn't a famous musician,<lb/>
mainstream a avant-garde. That<lb/>
means that Roy Ayers is being<lb/>
listened to by his peersper-<lb/>
haps the ultimate aocolade.<lb/>
Ultimately, Roy famed his<lb/>
own group; the talented aew took<lb/>
on the title Roy Ayers Ubiquity-<lb/>
an apt desaiption fa music that<lb/>
is indeed "in all places at the<lb/>
same time<lb/>
 There are so many variations<lb/>
and degrees in the music of<lb/>
Ubiquity says Roy, "that it is<lb/>
difficult to put it into one<lb/>
category Jazz, rock, latin,<lb/>
soul-ail have a place in the<lb/>
Ubiquitous scheme of things. And<lb/>
as Down Beat pointed out,<lb/>
"Ayers' group is capable of<lb/>
playing it alland most impor-<lb/>
tant, all of it rings true<lb/>
Tickets will be on sale at the<lb/>
doa fa both the 7 and the 9:30<lb/>
p.m perfamanoes. The Box Of-<lb/>
fioeisopen from8:30 a.m. to4:30<lb/>
p.m. weekdays. Fa mae infa-<lb/>
matiai, please call the Stewart<lb/>
Theatre at 737-3105.<lb/>
Running out of ideas?<lb/>
wine racks<lb/>
wall shelves<lb/>
pictures 10 off<lb/>
napkin holder $1.75<lb/>
placemats 60<lb/>
ceramics<lb/>
hanging lamps<lb/>
baskets<lb/>
Why not visit the Wicker<lb/>
Shop for a look at a unique<lb/>
selection of gifts for the<lb/>
entire family.<lb/>
THE WICKER SHOP<lb/>
218-c Arlington Blvd. Behind Bond's<lb/>
Sporting Goods<lb/>
Roy Rogers<lb/>
is Now Open<lb/>
For Breakfast<lb/>
630 am-1030 am Mon. Sat-<lb/>
25� OFF<lb/>
ON AHV WUAMArr ITW tltTtO MIOM<lb/>
tlurry Va�a Scramble Iff� �� ������� <lb/>
WaNU and Sausage Crammai Ckleeaa' �<lb/>
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05���Z<lb/>
8wMm(Hm�<lb/>
limit owe nn curroaw<lb/>
?JCiaYifll ��a�<lb/>
25<lb/>
Angry Young Men<lb/>
Needed<lb/>
for Trends Section<lb/>
757 6366<lb/>
ART &amp; CAMERA PLAZA CAMERA<lb/>
526 S. Cotanche St. Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Down Town Shopping Center<lb/>
 "iSJW<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
EXPIRES 11-7-77<lb/>
12 Exp. Color Film<lb/>
Developed and Printed<lb/>
$- 99<lb/>
� Kodacolor<lb/>
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(Foreign Film<lb/>
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VALUABLE COUPON<lb/>
I MUTT ACCOMPANY OHOft<lb/>
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EXPIRES 11-7-77<lb/>
20 Exp. Color Film<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058018_0010"/><lb/>
Pag� 10 FOUNTAINHEAP 1 Novembf 1977<lb/>
Defensive contest won by USL<lb/>
ByCHRlSHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
In a game that was the<lb/>
defensive struggle of the year fa<lb/>
both teams, East Carolina lost its<lb/>
second game of the season to<lb/>
Southwestern Louisiana 7-3.<lb/>
Although the Pirates defense did<lb/>
an effective job against USL's Roy<lb/>
Henry, it was the ECU offense<lb/>
that oould not get on the right<lb/>
track. In all the Pirates lost a total<lb/>
of four fumbles, one which could<lb/>
have given the Pirates a last<lb/>
chance to win. The game has<lb/>
probably destroyed any bowl<lb/>
hopes the Pirates might have had.<lb/>
The game itself was a total<lb/>
frustration for both teams offense<lb/>
in the first half as ECU and USL<lb/>
blew scoring chances. The excite-<lb/>
ment was there fa people who<lb/>
like big defensive plays. During<lb/>
the hair there were three missed<lb/>
field goals, a blocked punt, two<lb/>
fumbles, and an interception. The<lb/>
oily time it looked like there<lb/>
would be a scae is when late in<lb/>
the first half, Gerald Hall picked<lb/>
off a Roy Henry pass and ran it<lb/>
back to the Pirate 12.<lb/>
The Pirates then mounted a<lb/>
drive from their 12 to Cajun 222<lb/>
where Junia Creech attempted<lb/>
and failed a 43 yarder.<lb/>
The Cajuns marched all the<lb/>
way down to the East Carolina 10<lb/>
yard line. Henry tried to pass into<lb/>
the endzone three times but was<lb/>
unable to hit his receiver. USL's<lb/>
John Roverto was wide to the<lb/>
right on a 27 yard field goal try.<lb/>
After a few punt exchanges<lb/>
the Cajuns recovered a<lb/>
Southerland fumble at the ECU 9<lb/>
yard line. The Cajuns were called<lb/>
fa clipping ai the first down<lb/>
however and that moved the ball<lb/>
back to the 23. Then in a super<lb/>
defensive play by the Pirate<lb/>
defense, Henry was sacked by<lb/>
John Maris and fumbled the<lb/>
ball. The ball bounced down to<lb/>
the 47, where Wayne Poole fell on<lb/>
it.<lb/>
The Pirates were na able to<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA DEFENSIVE tackle Wayne Poole 99 in foreground stops Southwestern<lb/>
Louisiana tailback from making a first down. Photo by Brian Stotter<lb/>
��<lb/>
USL NOSEGUARD Keith Walker 99 and defensive end Ken Chenler 96- sack ECU quarterback Jimmy<lb/>
Southerland. Walker recovered two Pirate fumbles to lead the Cajun defense. Photo by Pete Podeszwa)<lb/>
Tennis team wins three<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Pria to last week, ECU'S<lb/>
womens tennis team was floun-<lb/>
dering in the midst of anaher<lb/>
somewhat poa season with a 2-7<lb/>
overall recad.<lb/>
But the Pirates seemed to<lb/>
have caught fire at midseason as<lb/>
they reeled off three straight<lb/>
victaies last week, including a<lb/>
6-3 win over nationally ranked<lb/>
Peace College.<lb/>
East Carolina also topped Old<lb/>
Dominioi 6-3 and St. Mary's<lb/>
College fa the second time this<lb/>
season 6-3 to improve its overall<lb/>
recad to 5-7 this season.<lb/>
The Pirates victay over Peace<lb/>
College, who was ranked third in<lb/>
the nation in junior college<lb/>
rankings, was astounding.<lb/>
It was Peace College's first<lb/>
loss of the season and avenged an<lb/>
earlier season loss which came in<lb/>
Raleigh Peace is currently the<lb/>
third ranked junia college team<lb/>
in the nation.<lb/>
"The key to our match against<lb/>
Peace was the play of Dacas<lb/>
Sunkel said head coach Cynthia<lb/>
Averett She was playing with<lb/>
an injured ankle and split sets<lb/>
against Ellen Easter. But she<lb/>
seemed to ignae the ankle and<lb/>
went ai to win in the third set 6-2.<lb/>
This was bv far our biggest win of<lb/>
Baker came through with auaal<lb/>
victaies in the number five and<lb/>
six singles, as the Pirates rolled<lb/>
past Old Dominion. Diane<lb/>
Keough went three sets against<lb/>
ODUs Jane Clifton befae finally<lb/>
winning.<lb/>
Louise Synder and Keough<lb/>
bah won their singles matches<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
the season<lb/>
Sunkel, who has played in the<lb/>
number three singles position fa<lb/>
the Pirates most of the season,<lb/>
now has an impressive 9-3 overall<lb/>
recad this season. She is 7-2 in<lb/>
dual matches.<lb/>
Sunkel also defeated Princey<lb/>
Dicksonof St. Mary's6-1, 6-1 and<lb/>
Mary Beth Clarkson of Old<lb/>
Dominion in three sets 6-1, 3-6,<lb/>
6-3.<lb/>
Susan Helmer and Claire<lb/>
against St. Mary's and teamed<lb/>
together to win the number one<lb/>
doubles match in ECU'S victay<lb/>
over St. Mary's.<lb/>
Top ranked Duke oomes to<lb/>
Greenville today to play the<lb/>
Pirates. The match will start at<lb/>
230 at Minges.<lb/>
The Pirates are hqpi�g that<lb/>
the momentum generated by the<lb/>
three straight victaies will mark<lb/>
a turn around fa the tennis team<lb/>
RESULTS<lb/>
East Carolina6 Old Dominioi 3<lb/>
Singles: Shaulis (OD) def. Sny-<lb/>
der, 6-1,6-0; Spinazzda (EC) def<lb/>
Magan, 6-0, 6-1; Sunkel (EC)<lb/>
def. Clarkson, 6-1, 3-6, 6-3;<lb/>
Keough (EC) def. Clifton 5-7, 7-6,<lb/>
6-4; Helmer (EC) def. Hatcher<lb/>
6-3, 6-3; Baker (EC) def. Stepp,<lb/>
6-2, 6-3; Doubles: Spinazzda,<lb/>
Sunkel (EC) def. Shaulis, Clifton,<lb/>
8-6; Magan, Clarkson (OD) def.<lb/>
Keough, Snyder, 8-4; Hatcher,<lb/>
Stepp (OD) def. Helmer, Gainey,<lb/>
6-1, 5-7, 6-3.<lb/>
EastCardina6 Peace3<lb/>
Singles: Snyder (EC) def. Lamm,<lb/>
6-0, 6-3; Spinazzda (EC) def.<lb/>
Ottes, 2-6, 6-4, 6-1; SUnkel (EC)<lb/>
def. Easter, 4-6,6-4,6-2; Walston<lb/>
(P) def. Keough, 6-1,6-0; Helmer<lb/>
(P) def. Peacock, 6-4, 6-3; Jacobs<lb/>
(P) def. Baker, 6-2, 6-1. Doubles:<lb/>
Lamm, Oattes (P) def. Spianz-<lb/>
zola, Sunkel, injury, default<lb/>
move anywhere as the big USL<lb/>
defense stopped them odd. On an<lb/>
attempted punt.RodneyAllen was<lb/>
blocked by Cajun Jeff Tanguis<lb/>
and USL recovered at the ECU 38.<lb/>
USL then moved down to the<lb/>
Pirate 26 where on third down<lb/>
Roy Henry attempted to pass into<lb/>
the endzone. The pass was inter-<lb/>
cepted by Gerald Hall and<lb/>
returned to the 12 yard line. From<lb/>
here the Pirates marched down to<lb/>
the Cajun 15. On second down<lb/>
from the 15, Southerland was hit<lb/>
fa a nine yard loss and the<lb/>
Creech kick was no good. This left<lb/>
the scae at half time ECU 0, USL<lb/>
0.<lb/>
In the second half the ECU<lb/>
offense received the ball and then<lb/>
fumbled it on the Pirate 24. The<lb/>
ECU defense stopped the drive<lb/>
however, as Charlie Carter inter-<lb/>
cepted andher Henry pass in the<lb/>
endzone.<lb/>
Southwestern held the Pirates<lb/>
and then burned the Pirate<lb/>
secondary on a Roy Henry to<lb/>
a David Gray pass fa 54 yards.<lb/>
This put the Cjuns ai the Pirate<lb/>
12 where Roverto hit his field goal<lb/>
attempt making the scae USL 3,<lb/>
ECU0.<lb/>
Fa the second time in the<lb/>
game the Pirates gd their dfense<lb/>
on the right track. Leander<lb/>
Green, trapped by the Cajun<lb/>
defenders, reversed himself and<lb/>
ran from the 15 all the way to the<lb/>
40. Green picked up 12 more<lb/>
yards two plays later, and in two<lb/>
mae, the Pirates gd andher first<lb/>
down at the USL 36. After two<lb/>
plays netted only three yards,<lb/>
Green faked to the fullback cut<lb/>
back into the line and ran fa a 33<lb/>
yard touchdown. The Creech kick<lb/>
was good and the Pirates had a 7<lb/>
to 3 lead.<lb/>
The Pirates had andher shd<lb/>
at putting some pdnts on the<lb/>
board but were unable to move<lb/>
anywhere. The Pirates backed up<lb/>
to their eleven yard line and<lb/>
punted. Allen's punt was fa 50<lb/>
yards, but it still put the Cajuns in<lb/>
great field position.<lb/>
A Roy Henry to Strambler<lb/>
pass gd ten yards and a second to<lb/>
Dennis Reidmiller added seven<lb/>
mae. Then ai a fourth and one<lb/>
try, Henry gd the first down at<lb/>
the Pirate 29. Strambler then ran<lb/>
fa an additiaial 15 yards. A pitch<lb/>
to Gray gd a first down at the two<lb/>
and the Cajuns appeared ready to<lb/>
scae.<lb/>
Once again the Pirate defense<lb/>
rose to the occasion and threw the<lb/>
Cajuns back to the five. Roverto<lb/>
then kicked a 22 yard field goal to<lb/>
put the Cajuns behind by only oie<lb/>
at 7-6.<lb/>
On the first play after the<lb/>
kickoff, ECU fullback Theooore<lb/>
Sutton fumbled the ball and<lb/>
Walker recovered fa the Cajuns.<lb/>
The fumble wa; Walkers second<lb/>
recovery of the night and put the<lb/>
Cajuns at the Pirate seven. A<lb/>
penalty pushed the Cajuns back<lb/>
to the 26 but in two plays they<lb/>
were back down to the six. From<lb/>
there Roverto kicked the winning<lb/>
fieldgoal that put USL ahead fa<lb/>
good at 9-7.<lb/>
The next game fa the Pirates<lb/>
will be at Boone as they renew an<lb/>
dd rivalry with the Mountaineers<lb/>
of Appalachian State.<lb/>
The tickets fa the game can<lb/>
still be bought in Boone.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058018_0011"/><lb/>
�<lb/>
BRnmpmnEMBnmancsiflnH<lb/>
HHHNHMi<lb/>
1 No�emb8f1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
Noah Clark Pirate defensive standout<lb/>
By STEVE BYERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Noah Clark is not your ave-<lb/>
rage mammoth defensive line-<lb/>
man.<lb/>
The soft spoken sophomore<lb/>
from Robersonville would seem to<lb/>
make an ideal babysitter; that is,<lb/>
until the day of the game when he<lb/>
lullsthe opposition to sleep with<lb/>
his powerful foreman. "I'd rather<lb/>
just lay back, listen to music, and:<lb/>
shoot pool<lb/>
Noah redeved all-conference<lb/>
honors his junta and senior years<lb/>
at Robersonville (now Roanoke),<lb/>
and was selected to play in the<lb/>
East-West all-star game his<lb/>
senior year. Still, with such high<lb/>
credentials, Noah was considered<lb/>
too small by most college recruit-<lb/>
ers. At 6'2" 225 Clark relies a lot<lb/>
on his upper body strength.<lb/>
� That's where the first contact is,<lb/>
so you've got to stick 'em<lb/>
Clark started three games his<lb/>
freshman year, and is one of the<lb/>
leading tacklers on this years<lb/>
squad. Woodrow Stevenson,<lb/>
another Pirate tackle, had kind<lb/>
wads fa Clark He helped me a<lb/>
lot with my weightlifting<lb/>
Stevenson, another sophomae,<lb/>
earned a starting position when<lb/>
Wayne Poole was injured earlier<lb/>
in the year. Noah recognized<lb/>
fellow players Zack Valentine,<lb/>
Fred Chavis, and especially<lb/>
Oliver "Brute" Felton. "Heplays<lb/>
noseguard like nobody else can<lb/>
A man with high team aspir-<lb/>
ations, Noah was particularly<lb/>
upset with the passing away of<lb/>
defensive line coach Rick<lb/>
Bankston. "He helped me a lot<lb/>
personally, he looked at you as<lb/>
maethan just a football player<lb/>
said Clark. "Befae the seasai,<lb/>
the defensive line grt together<lb/>
and dedicated the season to<lb/>
to him this year however<lb/>
the line has flourished under the<lb/>
direction of coach Troupe, a<lb/>
converted offensive perfamer.<lb/>
Flat foot, as he is called by<lb/>
teammates, would like nothing<lb/>
better than to play professional<lb/>
football after graduation but fears<lb/>
lack of size might be detrimental.<lb/>
However, recommendations from<lb/>
opposing players might awake<lb/>
professional scouts as East<lb/>
Carolina's own Noah Oark con-<lb/>
tinues on as the silent giant 93<lb/>
Duke drops Pirates<lb/>
Noah Clark<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"We have our brilliant spots<lb/>
and then all of a sudden we go<lb/>
into these bad slumps explain-<lb/>
ed Alita Dillon about the up and<lb/>
down perfamance of her volley-<lb/>
ball team last week.<lb/>
The Pirates hit a harendous<lb/>
slump last week losing to Duke<lb/>
3-1 Tuesday and then dropped<lb/>
three straight matches in the<lb/>
Appalachian State Invitational<lb/>
Tournament over the weekend.<lb/>
The four losses last week<lb/>
dropped East Carolina's overall<lb/>
reoad to 13-11 this season. The<lb/>
Pirates return to action Tuesday<lb/>
night in a home match against<lb/>
him It seems to have waked as<lb/>
Chowan Uollege and play Peace<lb/>
College Thursday at home.<lb/>
"I've put up a sign in our<lb/>
dressing room which says Meet<lb/>
Your Opponents, Not Their Rep-<lb/>
utations said Dillon. "I don't<lb/>
know whether it's going to wak,<lb/>
but we've ga to start playing<lb/>
better if we're going to get<lb/>
anywhere in the state tour-<lb/>
nament<lb/>
The Pirates lost the first game<lb/>
j' ;r,v Amm Twrnirr:t<lb/>
to Conoad 2-1. Conoad won the<lb/>
first game 15-10, but ECU took<lb/>
the second game 15-5 to even the<lb/>
match at one game a piece.<lb/>
Conoad then wai the third game<lb/>
with a narrow 15-13 decision.<lb/>
It was basically the same stay<lb/>
fa the Pirates in the second game<lb/>
of the tournament against<lb/>
Louisburg College, a team ECU<lb/>
had already beaten earlier in the<lb/>
year. Louisburg won the first<lb/>
See VOLLEYBALL page 2.<lb/>
Globetrotters here Thurs.<lb/>
The Harlem Globetrotters will<lb/>
show once again why they are the<lb/>
World's Greatest Family Enter-<lb/>
tainment" when they come to<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. on Thursday,<lb/>
Nov. 3.<lb/>
Accompanying the Trotters<lb/>
will be an all-star variety show<lb/>
featuring Lilly Yokoi. bicyclist<lb/>
and Dick Franco, juggler. Now in<lb/>
their second half century, the<lb/>
Trotters continue to amaze fans<lb/>
with their superb basketball<lb/>
skills. Long-time fans will marvel<lb/>
at new dimensions of basketball<lb/>
wizarui y now part of the Globe-<lb/>
trotters show. New fans will<lb/>
simply marvel.<lb/>
The fans make it happen<lb/>
says Trotter president Stan<lb/>
Greeson. "They supply the<lb/>
energy which makes the Trotters<lb/>
tick<lb/>
The Globetrotters have been<lb/>
9een by mae than 82 millioi fans<lb/>
around the wald.<lb/>
Throughout mae than fifty<lb/>
years of Globetraters successes,<lb/>
ot which there have been many,<lb/>
the fans have always played a<lb/>
maja role. Globetrotter fans are<lb/>
unique, fa geographically they<lb/>
have no bounds. They are found<lb/>
throughout the wald. Wherever<lb/>
they play, the famed Magicians of<lb/>
Basketball are hailed as the<lb/>
home" team. It is a distinction<lb/>
other teams only dream about.<lb/>
Each time the Trotters step<lb/>
onto the court, spats histay is<lb/>
made. In mae than fifty years of<lb/>
spats and entertainment magic,<lb/>
the harleqiuns of the hardwood<lb/>
have been seen by mae than 82<lb/>
millioi fans around the wald.<lb/>
The Harlem Globetrotters,<lb/>
unquestionably the most popular<lb/>
spats team this side of the moon,<lb/>
have played mae games befae<lb/>
mae people than any team in<lb/>
histay.<lb/>
Attendance recads are stag-<lb/>
gering. The outdoa basketball<lb/>
attendance reoad which to this<lb/>
day has na been approached,<lb/>
was achieved in 1951 when the<lb/>
Trotters played before over<lb/>
75,000 fans in Berlin.<lb/>
The Traters hold the indoa<lb/>
pro-basketball attendance reoad,<lb/>
too. A mark set when mae than<lb/>
30,000 cheering fans viewed the<lb/>
Magicians of Basketball in the<lb/>
Louisiana Superdome<lb/>
Wed. Tenth Ave.<lb/>
Thurs. "The Drifters"<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
EM<lb/>
ROOftT<lb/>
Don't Forget Fri 3-7 Sun is Ladies Night<lb/>
Tues. "Table Magic"<lb/>
Wed.<lb/>
Backgammon Tourn<lb/>
BYOL<lb/>
ACCOUNTING AND<lb/>
FINANCE MAJORS<lb/>
LET US HELP YOU TO<lb/>
BECOME A CPA<lb/>
D<lb/>
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REVIEW<lb/>
704375-3051<lb/>
COURSES BEGIN MAY 22 8. NOV 21<lb/>
13 or USA<lb/>
SKI TRIPS<lb/>
Anyone Interested in Ski Trips This Winter<lb/>
Beech Mountain, N.C.<lb/>
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Organizing Groups Now at Discount Rates - Ski Rentals<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058018_0012"/><lb/>
�<lb/>
Page 10 FOUNTAINHEAD 1 Ncwembf 1977<lb/>
Defensive contest won by USL<lb/>
ByCHRISHOLLOMAN<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
In a game that was the<lb/>
defensive struggle of the year for<lb/>
both teams, East Carolina lost its<lb/>
second game of the season to<lb/>
Southwestern Louisiana 7-3.<lb/>
Although the Pirates defense did<lb/>
an effective job against USL's Floy<lb/>
Henry, it was the ECU offense<lb/>
that could not get on the right<lb/>
track. In all the Pirates lost a total<lb/>
of four fumbles, one which could<lb/>
have given the Pirates a last<lb/>
chance to win. The game has<lb/>
probably destroyed any bowl<lb/>
hopes the Pirates might have had.<lb/>
The game itself was a total<lb/>
frustration fa both teams offense<lb/>
in the first half as ECU and USL<lb/>
blew scoring chances. The excite-<lb/>
ment was there fa people who<lb/>
like big defensive plays. During<lb/>
the half there were three missed<lb/>
field goals, a blocked punt, two<lb/>
fumbles, and an interception. The<lb/>
only time it looked like there<lb/>
would be a soore is when late in<lb/>
the first half, Gerald Hall picked<lb/>
off a Roy Henry pass and ran it<lb/>
back to the Pirate 12.<lb/>
The Pirates then mounted a<lb/>
drive from their 12 to Cajun 222<lb/>
where Junia Creech attempted<lb/>
and failed a 43 yarder.<lb/>
The Cajuns marched all the<lb/>
way down to the East Carolina 10<lb/>
yard line. Henry tried to pass into<lb/>
the endzone three times but was<lb/>
unable to hit his receiver. USL's<lb/>
John Roverto was wide to the<lb/>
right on a 27 yard field goal try.<lb/>
After a few punt exchanges<lb/>
the Cajuns recovered a<lb/>
Southerland fumble at the ECU 9<lb/>
yard line. The Cajuns were called<lb/>
fa clipping on the first down<lb/>
however and that moved the ball<lb/>
back to the 23. Then in a super<lb/>
defensive play by the Pirate<lb/>
defense, Henry was sacked by<lb/>
John Maris and fumbled the<lb/>
ball. The ball bounced down to<lb/>
the 47, where Wayne Poole fell on<lb/>
it.<lb/>
The Pirates were na able to<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA DEFENSIVE tackle Wayne Poole 99 m foreground stops Southwestern<lb/>
Louisiana tailback from making a first down. Photo by Brian Stotter)<lb/>
H�" c<lb/>
USL NOSEGUARD Keith Walker 99 and defensive end Ken Chenler 96, sack ECU quarterback Jimmy<lb/>
Southerland. Walker recovered two Pirate fumbles to lead the Cajun defense. Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
Tennis team wins three<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Pria to last week, ECU'S<lb/>
womens tennis team was floun-<lb/>
dering in the midst of anaher<lb/>
somewhat poa seasai with a 2-7<lb/>
overall recad.<lb/>
But the Pirates seemed to<lb/>
have caught fire at midseason as<lb/>
they reeled off three straight<lb/>
victaies last week, including a<lb/>
6-3 win ever nationally ranked<lb/>
Peace College.<lb/>
East Carolina also topped Old<lb/>
Dominion 6-3 and St. Mary's<lb/>
College fa the second time this<lb/>
season 6-3 to improve its overall<lb/>
recad to 5-7 this season.<lb/>
The Pirates victay over Peace<lb/>
College, who was ranked third in<lb/>
the nation in junior college<lb/>
rankings, was astounding.<lb/>
It was Peace College's first<lb/>
loss of the season and avenged an<lb/>
earlier seasai loss which came in<lb/>
Raleigh. Peace is currently the<lb/>
third ranked junia college team<lb/>
in the nation.<lb/>
 The key to our match against<lb/>
Peace was the play of Dacas<lb/>
Sunkel said head coach Cynthia<lb/>
Averett. "She was playing with<lb/>
an injured ankle and split sets<lb/>
against Ellen Easter. But she<lb/>
seemed to ignae the ankle and<lb/>
went oi to win in the third set 6-2.<lb/>
This was bv far our biggest win of<lb/>
Baker came through with aucial<lb/>
victaies in the number five and<lb/>
six singles, as the Pirates rolled<lb/>
past Old Dominion. Diane<lb/>
Keough went three sets against<lb/>
ODU' s Jane Clifton befae finally<lb/>
winning.<lb/>
Louise Synder and Keough<lb/>
both won their singles matches<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
the season<lb/>
Sunkel, who has played in the<lb/>
number three singles position fa<lb/>
the Pirates most of the season,<lb/>
now has an impressive 9-3 overall<lb/>
recad this season. She is 7-2 in<lb/>
dual matches.<lb/>
Sunkel �lso defeated Princey<lb/>
Dicksono' j�. Mary's6-1, 6-1 and<lb/>
Mary Beth Clarkson of Old<lb/>
DominiO) in three sets 6-1, 3-6,<lb/>
6-3.<lb/>
Susan Helmer and Claire<lb/>
against St. Mary's and teamed<lb/>
together to win the number one<lb/>
doubles match in ECU'S victay<lb/>
over St. Mary's.<lb/>
Top ranked Duke comes to<lb/>
Greenville today to play the<lb/>
Pirates. The match will start at<lb/>
230 at Minges.<lb/>
The Pirates are hoping that<lb/>
the momentum generated by the<lb/>
three straight victaies will mark<lb/>
a turn around fa the tennis team<lb/>
RESULTS<lb/>
East Carolina 6 Old Dominioi 3<lb/>
Singles: Shaulis (OD) def. Sny-<lb/>
der, 6-1,6-0; Spinazzola (EC) def.<lb/>
Magan, 6-0, 6-1; Sunkel (EC)<lb/>
def. Clarkson, 6-1, 3-6, 6-3;<lb/>
Keough (EC) def. Clifton 5-7, 7-6,<lb/>
6-4; Helmer (EC) def. Hatcher<lb/>
6-3, 6-3; Baker (EC) def. Stepp,<lb/>
6-2, 6-3; Doubles: Spinazzola,<lb/>
Sunkel (EC) def. Shaulis, Clifton,<lb/>
8-6; Magan, Clarksoi (OD) def.<lb/>
Keough, Snyder, 8-4; Hatcher,<lb/>
Stepp (OD) def. Helmer, Gainey,<lb/>
6-1, 5-7, 6-3.<lb/>
East Carolina6 Peace 3<lb/>
Singles: Snyder (EC) def. Lamm,<lb/>
6-0, 6-3; Spinazzola (EC) def.<lb/>
Ottes, 2-6, 6-4, 6-1; SUnkel (EC)<lb/>
def. Easter, 4-6,6-4,6-2; Walston<lb/>
(P) def. Keough, 6-1, 6-0; Helmer<lb/>
(P) def. Peacock, 6-4, 6-3; Jacobs<lb/>
(P) def. Baker, 6-2, 6-1. Doubles:<lb/>
Lamm, Oattes (P) def. Spianz-<lb/>
zola, Sunkel, injury, default<lb/>
move anywhere as the big USL<lb/>
defense stopped them cold. On an<lb/>
attempted punt, Rodney Allen was<lb/>
blocked by Cajun Jeff Tanguis<lb/>
and USL recovered at the ECU 38.<lb/>
USL then moved down to the<lb/>
Pirate 26 where on third down<lb/>
Roy Henry attempted to pass into<lb/>
the endzone. The pass was inter-<lb/>
cepted by Gerald Hall and<lb/>
returned to the 12 yard line. From<lb/>
here the Pirates marched down to<lb/>
the Cajun 15. On second down<lb/>
from the 15. Southerland was hit<lb/>
fa a nine yard loss and the<lb/>
Creech kick was no good. This left<lb/>
the scae at halftime ECU 0, USL<lb/>
0.<lb/>
In the seooid half the ECU<lb/>
offense received the ball and then<lb/>
fumbled it on the Pirate 24. The<lb/>
ECU defense stopped the drive<lb/>
however, as Charlie Carter inter-<lb/>
cepted anaher Henry pass in the<lb/>
endzone.<lb/>
Southwestern held the Pirates<lb/>
and then burned the Pirate<lb/>
secondary on a Roy Henry to<lb/>
a David Gray pass fa 54 yards.<lb/>
This put the Cjuns on the Pirate<lb/>
12 where Roverto hit his field goal<lb/>
attempt making the scae USL 3,<lb/>
ECU0.<lb/>
Fa the second time in the<lb/>
game the Pirates ga their offense<lb/>
on the right track. Leander<lb/>
Green, trapped by the Cajun<lb/>
defenders, reversed himself and<lb/>
ran from the 15 all the way to the<lb/>
40. Green picked up 12 mae<lb/>
yards two plays later, and in two<lb/>
mae, the Pirates got anaher first<lb/>
down at the USL 36. After two<lb/>
plays netted only three yards,<lb/>
Green faked to the fullback cut<lb/>
back into the line and ran fa a 33<lb/>
yard touchdown. The Creech kick<lb/>
was good and the Pirates had a 7<lb/>
to 3 lead.<lb/>
The Pirates had anaher sha<lb/>
at putting some points on the<lb/>
board but were unable to move<lb/>
anywhere. The Pirates backed up<lb/>
to their eleven yard line and<lb/>
punted. Allen's punt was fa 50<lb/>
yards, but it still put the Cajuns in<lb/>
great field position.<lb/>
A Roy Henry to Strambler<lb/>
pass ga ten yards and a second to<lb/>
Dennis Reidmiller added seven<lb/>
mae. Then on a fourth and one<lb/>
try, Henry ga the first down at<lb/>
the Pirate 29. Strambler then ran<lb/>
fa an additioial 15 yards. A pitch<lb/>
to Gray ga a first down at the two<lb/>
and the Cajuns appeared ready to<lb/>
scae.<lb/>
Once again the Pirate defense<lb/>
rose to the occasion and threw the<lb/>
Cajuns back to the five. Roverto<lb/>
then kicked a 22 yard field goal to<lb/>
put the Cajuns behind by only one<lb/>
at 7-6.<lb/>
On the first play after the<lb/>
kickoff, ECU fullback Theodae<lb/>
Sutton fumbled the ball and<lb/>
Walker recovered fa the Cajuns.<lb/>
The fumble was Walkers second<lb/>
recovery of the night and put the<lb/>
Cajuns at the Pirate seven. A<lb/>
penalty pushed the Cajuns back<lb/>
to the 26 but in two plays they<lb/>
were back down to the six. From<lb/>
there Roverto kicked the winning<lb/>
fieldgoal that put USL ahead fa<lb/>
good at 9-7.<lb/>
The next game fa the Pirates<lb/>
will be at Boone as they renew an<lb/>
old rivalry with the Mountaineers<lb/>
of Appalachian State.<lb/>
The tickets fa the game can<lb/>
still be bought in Boone.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058018_0013"/><lb/>
�<lb/>
JwBBBBBiBHMmHHHHMMHBnBHHHHHHHinnHIHHHHnHHHHBHHnHHMi<lb/>
1 November 1977 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 11<lb/>
Noah Clark Pirate defensive standout<lb/>
By STEVE BYERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Noah Clark is not your ave-<lb/>
rage mammoth defensive line-<lb/>
man.<lb/>
The soft spoken sophomore<lb/>
from Robersonville would seem to<lb/>
make an ideal babysitter; that is,<lb/>
until the day of the game when he<lb/>
lulls the opposition to sleep with<lb/>
hispowerful foreman. "I'd rather<lb/>
just lay back, listen to music, and:<lb/>
shoot pool<lb/>
Noah recieved all-conference<lb/>
honors his junior and senior years<lb/>
at Robersonville (now Roanoke),<lb/>
and was selected to play in the<lb/>
East-West all-star game his<lb/>
senior year. Still, with such high<lb/>
credentials, Noah was considered<lb/>
too small by most college recruit-<lb/>
ers. At 6'2" 225 Clark relies a lot<lb/>
on his upper body strength.<lb/>
"That's where the first contact is,<lb/>
so you've got to stick em<lb/>
Clark started three games his<lb/>
freshman year, and is one of the<lb/>
leading taoklers on this years<lb/>
squad. Woodrow Stevenson,<lb/>
another Pirate tackle, had kind<lb/>
wads fa Clark, "He helped me a<lb/>
lot with my weightlifting<lb/>
Stevenson, another sophomae,<lb/>
earned a starting position when<lb/>
Wayne Poole was injured earlier<lb/>
in the year. Noah recognized<lb/>
fellow players Zaok Valentine,<lb/>
F-red Chavis, and especially<lb/>
Oliver "Brute" Felton. "He plays<lb/>
noseguard like nobody else can<lb/>
A man with high team aspir-<lb/>
ations, Noah was particularly<lb/>
upset with the passing away of<lb/>
defensive line coach Rick<lb/>
Bankston. "He helped me a la<lb/>
personally, he looked at you as<lb/>
mae than just a football player<lb/>
said Clark. 'Before the season,<lb/>
the defensive line got together<lb/>
and dedicated the season to<lb/>
to him this year however<lb/>
the line has flourished under the<lb/>
direction of coach Troupe, a<lb/>
converted offensive perfamer.<lb/>
Flatfoot, as he is called by<lb/>
teammates, would like nothing<lb/>
better than to play professional<lb/>
football after graduation but fears<lb/>
lack of size might be detrimental.<lb/>
However, recommendations from<lb/>
opposing players might awake<lb/>
professional scouts as East<lb/>
Carolina's own Noah Clark con-<lb/>
tinues on as the silent giant93.<lb/>
Duke drops Pirates<lb/>
Noah Clark<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"We have our brilliant spots<lb/>
and then all of a sudden we go<lb/>
into these bad slumps explain-<lb/>
ed Alita Dillon about the up and<lb/>
down perfamanoe of her volley-<lb/>
ball team last week.<lb/>
The Pirates hit a harendous<lb/>
slump last week losing to Duke<lb/>
3-1 Tuesday and then dropped<lb/>
three straight matches in the<lb/>
Appalachian State Invitational<lb/>
Tournament over the weekend.<lb/>
The four losses last week<lb/>
dropped East Carolina's overall<lb/>
recad to 13-11 this season. The<lb/>
Pirates return to action Tuesday<lb/>
night in a home match against<lb/>
him It seems to have waked as<lb/>
Chowan College and play Peace<lb/>
College Thursday at home.<lb/>
"I've put up a sign in our<lb/>
dressing room which says, "Meet<lb/>
Your Opponents, Not Their Rep-<lb/>
utations said Dillon. "I don't<lb/>
know whether it's going to wak,<lb/>
but we've got to start playing<lb/>
better if we're going to get<lb/>
anywhere in the state tour-<lb/>
nament<lb/>
The Pirates lost the first game<lb/>
in theADDalachiarToumament<lb/>
to Concad 2-1. Concad wai the<lb/>
first game 15-10, but ECU took<lb/>
the second game 15-5 to even the<lb/>
match at one game a piece.<lb/>
Concad then wai the third game<lb/>
with a narrow 15-13 decision.<lb/>
It was basically the same stay<lb/>
fa the Pirates in the second game<lb/>
of the tournament against<lb/>
Louisburg College, a team ECU<lb/>
had already beaten earlier in the<lb/>
year. Louisburg won the first<lb/>
See VOLLEYBALL page 2.<lb/>
Globetrotters here Thurs.<lb/>
The Harlem Globetrotters will<lb/>
show once again why they are the<lb/>
World's Greatest Family Enter-<lb/>
tainment" when they cone to<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. on Thursday,<lb/>
Nov. 3.<lb/>
Accompanying the Trotters<lb/>
will be an all-star variety show<lb/>
featuring Lilly Yoka, bicyclist<lb/>
and Dick Franco, juggler. Now in<lb/>
their second half oentury, the<lb/>
Trotters continue to amaze fans<lb/>
with their superb basketball<lb/>
skills. Long-time fans will marvel<lb/>
at new dimensions of basketball<lb/>
wizardry now part of the Globe-<lb/>
trotters show. New fans will<lb/>
simply marvel.<lb/>
The fans make it happen<lb/>
says Trotter president Stan<lb/>
Greeson. "They supply the<lb/>
energy which makes the Trotters<lb/>
tick<lb/>
The Globetrotters have been<lb/>
seen by mae than 82 millioi fans<lb/>
around the wald.<lb/>
Throughout mae than fifty<lb/>
years of Globetrotters successes,<lb/>
of which there have been many,<lb/>
the fans have always played a<lb/>
rnaja role. Globetrater fans are<lb/>
unique, fa geographically they<lb/>
have no bounds. They are found<lb/>
throughtout the wald. Wherever<lb/>
they play, the famed Magicians of<lb/>
Basketball are hailed as the<lb/>
home' team. It is a distinction<lb/>
other teams only dream about.<lb/>
Each tinv the Trotters step<lb/>
onto the court, spats histay is<lb/>
made. In mae than fifty years of<lb/>
spats and entertainment magic,<lb/>
the harleqiuns of the hardwood<lb/>
have been seen by mae than 82<lb/>
millioi fans around the wald.<lb/>
The Harlem Globetrotters,<lb/>
unquestionably the most popular<lb/>
spatsteam this side of the moon,<lb/>
have played mae games befae<lb/>
mae people than any team in<lb/>
histay.<lb/>
Attendance recads are stag-<lb/>
gering. The outdoa basketball<lb/>
attendance recad which to this<lb/>
day has na been approached,<lb/>
was achieved in 1951 when the<lb/>
Trotters played before over<lb/>
75,000 fans in Berlin.<lb/>
The Traters hold the indcor<lb/>
pro-basketball attendance recad,<lb/>
tco. A mark set when mae than<lb/>
30,000 cheering fans viewed the<lb/>
Magicians of Basketball in the<lb/>
Louisiana Super dome<lb/>
Wed. Tenth Ave.<lb/>
Thurs. "The Drifters"<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
ROOM<lb/>
Don't Forget Fri 3-7 Sun is Ladies Night<lb/>
SKI TRIPS<lb/>
Gne<lb/>
lues. "Table Magics"<lb/>
Wed.<lb/>
Backgammon Tourn<lb/>
BYOL<lb/>
ACCOUNTING AND<lb/>
FINANCE MAJORS<lb/>
LET US HELP YOU TO<lb/>
BECOME ACPA<lb/>
55<lb/>
Anyone Interested in Ski Trips This Winter<lb/>
Beech Mountain, N.C.<lb/>
Winter Green, VA<lb/>
Snow Shore, W. VA.<lb/>
Steam Boat, Colorado<lb/>
Come By or Call at 756-0504<lb/>
Organizing Groups Now at Discount Rates - Ski Rentals<lb/>
available this winterpoles, boots bindings )<lb/>
Contact Head Pro-Gordon Fulp<lb/>
Professional ski, golf,tennis,shop<lb/>
with repair service included for all merchandise<lb/>
D<lb/>
CPA<lb/>
REVIEW<lb/>
704375-3051<lb/>
COURSES BEGIN MAY 22 8. NOV 21<lb/>
13 " USA<lb/>
WEEKLY SPECIAL<lb/>
golf balls- all brands $12.00 per doz.<lb/>
tennis balls- Wilson, Dunlop<lb/>
$2.75 per can (limit 2 cans)<lb/>
End of season close out on all Izod<lb/>
short sleeve shirts<lb/>
<lb/>
v.<lb/>
'hfr&amp;<lb/>
Jf4<lb/>
<pb facs="00058018_0014"/><lb/>
Page 12 FOUNTAINHEAD 1 Nwember 1977<lb/>
Soccer<lb/>
ByANNEHOGGE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina's soccer team<lb/>
ended its season last week,<lb/>
splitting its last pair of matches.<lb/>
The Pirates beat Pembroke 5-2,<lb/>
while losing to William and Mary<lb/>
6-0. The ECU booters finished<lb/>
their season with a 3-10 overall<lb/>
mark.<lb/>
The Pirates bombarded<lb/>
Pembroke in the first half of the<lb/>
Wednesday match, holding a 4-1<lb/>
halftime lead. Ric Browning<lb/>
scored twice, with assists from<lb/>
Phil Martin and Mike Fetchko.<lb/>
Martin scored one unassisted<lb/>
point, and Mike Hitchcock scored<lb/>
on a penalty kick. Martin scored<lb/>
the Pirates' final goal of the<lb/>
season in the second half, with an<lb/>
assist from Tim Harrison.<lb/>
Smith was disappointed in<lb/>
losing the season's final match<lb/>
Friday to William and Mary.<lb/>
"They scored on some cheap<lb/>
goals said Smith. "I think<lb/>
Eddings and Harrison played<lb/>
exceptionally well<lb/>
Naturally, Smith was dis-<lb/>
appointed that his first coaching<lb/>
season was a losing one. "I'm<lb/>
disappointed, but I think both<lb/>
myself and the players learned<lb/>
aiot said Smith. "But I think<lb/>
we've improved the program. We<lb/>
will continue to work out during<lb/>
the off-season. I think we've<lb/>
impressed the athletic depart-<lb/>
ment enough that we will be back<lb/>
next year<lb/>
����<lb/>
VOLLEYBALL<lb/>
Continued from Page 11<lb/>
9 $<lb/>
es 1-1 for week<lb/>
ECU-ASU<lb/>
tickets can be purchased<lb/>
with ID andAcivity card<lb/>
in Boone for '3.50<lb/>
Phil Martin<lb/>
Photo by Brian Stotler)<lb/>
Oyster Bowl tickets for the<lb/>
ECU vsW&amp;M Game<lb/>
must be purchased by Wed<lb/>
Nov. 11th. The tickets are '7.00<lb/>
game 15-12 and took the match in<lb/>
the third game with another 15-13<lb/>
decision. East Carolina won the<lb/>
second game 15-12.<lb/>
The Pirates were eliminated<lb/>
from the tournament in the third<lb/>
match against Winthrop losing<lb/>
again by a 2-1 score. This time<lb/>
ECU jumped out in front in the<lb/>
first game with an impressive<lb/>
15-6 decision, but lost the next<lb/>
two games 15-10 and 15-8.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Writers<lb/>
Needed<lb/>
Call<lb/>
758-6367<lb/>
MJOHN ROVETO KICKSthe winning field goal in a9-7 defeat of the East Carolina P.raies. Hoveto, iiadhu<lb/>
two others earlier in the game and scored all of USL's nine points. Photo by Jeff Hod <lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
s<lb/>
FOR SALE: '68 Squareback<lb/>
fast back owners: replacement<lb/>
parts for your car at low cost.<lb/>
Have 68 Fstbck breaking for<lb/>
parts. Lights, fuses, seats, trans-<lb/>
axleclutch parts, fenders, tires<lb/>
and wheels. You need it? I<lb/>
probably got it. Call Mike 756-<lb/>
6674ext. 6360.<lb/>
FOR SALE: AKC Great Dane<lb/>
pups - 5 weeks old - 3 fawn 1 blk.<lb/>
Call after 6 p.m. 826-5100.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 73 Honda 500 four,<lb/>
7200 miles, excellent cond. $950<lb/>
see next to Pollards Grocery<lb/>
(Bells Fork 3 miles out 43 south).<lb/>
FOR SALE: '73 350 Honda $350<lb/>
758-0693<lb/>
FOR SALE: Texas Instruments<lb/>
SR-52, 224 step programable.<lb/>
Also card programable. Complete<lb/>
with math, Stat games and basic<lb/>
libraries. Cost 300 plus new, 5<lb/>
mos. old. Contact Tony Bennett at<lb/>
401 Jones.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 2 Frazier speakers; 3<lb/>
inch tweeter, 10 inch woofer;<lb/>
good sound. $90. 752-3739 after 9<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sears self cleaning<lb/>
toaster-broiler oven. Used once<lb/>
cost $44 sell $30 excellent for<lb/>
home or dorm. 752-5499.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '71 Super Beetle.<lb/>
Good Cond. Good gas mi. $900 or<lb/>
best offer. 758-7866.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Epiphone accoustic<lb/>
guitar. Best offer. Call Mike<lb/>
758-1693.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 4.3 cubic foot refrig.<lb/>
Perfect for dorm use. $115. If<lb/>
interested call 756-6951 after 5<lb/>
p.m. M-F.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sony reel to reel tape<lb/>
deck; good cond comes with 2<lb/>
mikes. $150 752-3739 after 9 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 8 clubs, goU bag, golf<lb/>
cart. Call 753-3624 after 6 D.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Waltham 5-function<lb/>
LCD Quartz digital. Regular $175<lb/>
will sell fa $80 a trade for good<lb/>
used bike. Call Lou after 5 p.m.<lb/>
758-2887.<lb/>
WANTED TO RENT: 3-bdrm<lb/>
house in country within 10 miles<lb/>
of Greenville. Reward upon<lb/>
rental. Call 752-0982.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: needed<lb/>
$65 plus 1 3 utilities, 2 story, 2<lb/>
bedroom, 2 bath. 758-6617.<lb/>
personal�<lb/>
torrent �<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: needed<lb/>
pay Vi of rent and utilities.<lb/>
Greenway Apts. Call 756-7888.<lb/>
FILM SOCIETY: All persons<lb/>
interested in joining Eastern<lb/>
Carolina Film Society call at<lb/>
758-5253. If no answer phone<lb/>
752-6389 or write Box 27<lb/>
Falkland, N.C. 27827.<lb/>
TO BUY: FM Signal generator<lb/>
(used) must have 140-170 MgHz<lb/>
bandwidth capacity. Call 752-<lb/>
0982.<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED: to Boone, N.C.<lb/>
for ASU - ECU game. Wants to<lb/>
leave Fri. and return Sun. even-<lb/>
ing or early Mon. morning.<lb/>
Please call 758-1636.<lb/>
NEED TYPING? For efficient,<lb/>
fast service Call 756-3815 after<lb/>
5:15 p.m. Reasonable rates IBM<lb/>
Carbon type used.<lb/>
MUSICIANS: Newly faming soul<lb/>
band looking fa singers, lead<lb/>
guitarist, and' keyboard player.<lb/>
Call L.B. 758-8310.<lb/>
ALTERATIONS: Fall things too<lb/>
big, too long? Call Kathy.<lb/>
752-8444 a 752-8642.<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED: to Miami<lb/>
anytime after Dec. 13, 1977. Call<lb/>
Marie-Noelle Connil 758-9229.<lb/>
FOUND: Rings. Ccntact Depart-<lb/>
ment of Psychology 757-6800.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058018_0015"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>