<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057211_0001"/>
Let us dare<lb/>
to read, think,<lb/>
speak<lb/>
id write<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Telephone<lb/>
Numbers<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
757-6367<lb/>
757-6309<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
JL-L-f. 4,19-71<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Hurricane David<lb/>
headed for Carolinas<lb/>
Rain will he the best uc can hope for with hurrican David headed toward North Carolina.<lb/>
Futrell remembers 'HazeV<lb/>
At 11:00 Monday<lb/>
night, a hurricane watch<lb/>
was issued for an area<lb/>
of the East Coast which<lb/>
extends to Cape Hat-<lb/>
teras, N.C.<lb/>
At that time the<lb/>
hurricane, named Hur-<lb/>
ricane David, was lo-<lb/>
cated slightly northeast<lb/>
of Cape Canaveral, Fl.<lb/>
A hurricane watch is<lb/>
issued when there is a<lb/>
real possibility of hur-<lb/>
ricane conditions affect-<lb/>
ing a specific area. This<lb/>
means the possibility of<lb/>
winds amounting to 75<lb/>
mph or above and<lb/>
severe rain conditi ns,<lb/>
or dangerously high<lb/>
water.<lb/>
-and her wrath<lb/>
j&amp; K KK W ENDT<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
-hlev Futrell, the<lb/>
B iard "I Trustees Vice<lb/>
President remembers<lb/>
when hurricane Hazel<lb/>
came through the area,<lb/>
man) years ago.<lb/>
Imiu<lb/>
It va; a rough<lb/>
m" rmembers Fut-<lb/>
rell.At the time Futrell<lb/>
 a- li ing in Vv a-h-<lb/>
ington, N .C. On ater<lb/>
Street the water was<lb/>
"six leel deep in the<lb/>
store<lb/>
Futre<lb/>
according to<lb/>
Futrell also said ol<lb/>
the "blow" caused<lb/>
thousands of trees to go<lb/>
down and cause a<lb/>
power outage that last-<lb/>
ed about 10 hours.<lb/>
The most dramatic<lb/>
thing that he rem-<lb/>
embers was when he<lb/>
saw a hou.?e "floating<lb/>
upstream, floating<lb/>
w?t. This only hap-<lb/>
pens during Hurricanes<lb/>
"We just weren't pre-<lb/>
pared said Futrell.<lb/>
He doesn't think the<lb/>
same thing could hap-<lb/>
pen today, though.<lb/>
"People have remained<lb/>
more prepared<lb/>
time was a writer lor<lb/>
the Washington Daily<lb/>
News, remembered go-<lb/>
ing around the town in<lb/>
a motorboat with a<lb/>
fellow newspaper em-<lb/>
ployee, to deliver news-<lb/>
papers, and to cover<lb/>
the damage that the<lb/>
storm was inflicting up-<lb/>
on hi town.<lb/>
To deliver the pap-<lb/>
er ihc hauu go up<lb/>
eing children seining for<lb/>
lish in front of the<lb/>
Elementary School.<lb/>
Fifteen minutes after<lb/>
the winds started, the<lb/>
twon's phone lines were<lb/>
down, and soon after<lb/>
the local radio station<lb/>
lost its power so that<lb/>
the area was without<lb/>
contact for quite some<lb/>
time.<lb/>
V" &amp;W<lb/>
to some of tnr nouses<lb/>
in the motorboat, get<lb/>
out, and go into the<lb/>
house to find someplace<lb/>
dry to put the paper.<lb/>
The day alter Hazel<lb/>
hit, he remembers se-<lb/>
Futrell<lb/>
to<lb/>
what<lb/>
said "It<lb/>
nelfeve<lb/>
like, unless<lb/>
All precautions<lb/>
should be taken immed-<lb/>
iately, after a watch has<lb/>
been issued.<lb/>
It has been believed<lb/>
that if the hurricane<lb/>
stayed close to land it<lb/>
would reduce to a<lb/>
severe rainstorm by the<lb/>
time it left Charleston,<lb/>
S.C.<lb/>
According to mete-<lb/>
orologist Craig Weber<lb/>
of television station<lb/>
WCTI in New Bern, the<lb/>
storm might be moving<lb/>
into the Gulf Stream.<lb/>
Weber speculated that<lb/>
if the storm<lb/>
New Bern.<lb/>
Weber explained that<lb/>
many people do not<lb/>
undersand what is<lb/>
meant by a hurricane<lb/>
moving ashore. He ad-<lb/>
ded that people at the<lb/>
eye of the storm are in<lb/>
danger, but people who<lb/>
are up to 150 miles<lb/>
away must also take<lb/>
precautions, since the<lb/>
storm might cause da-<lb/>
mage as far inland as<lb/>
that.<lb/>
Weber noted the<lb/>
tide changes, which he<lb/>
said many people had<lb/>
not considered as part<lb/>
of the hurricane picture.<lb/>
This week, the moon<lb/>
will be full, and that<lb/>
the added tidewater<lb/>
might add to the tor-<lb/>
rential rains to cause<lb/>
severe flooding in low<lb/>
lying areas along the<lb/>
coast.<lb/>
latitude north 17.7,<lb/>
longitude 62.0 west,<lb/>
near the island of<lb/>
Barbados, and about 250<lb/>
miles east of San Juan,<lb/>
which is about 850<lb/>
miles from Miami.<lb/>
Frederic was moving<lb/>
at 10 to 15 mph, with<lb/>
gale winds extending<lb/>
100 mph north of the<lb/>
center.<lb/>
Pam Johnston, dis-<lb/>
aster preparedness co-<lb/>
ordinator for the Virgin<lb/>
Islands, said residents<lb/>
there were "taking Fre-<lb/>
deric more seriously<lb/>
than David<lb/>
"We haven't been<lb/>
through one of these in<lb/>
years, but they may<lb/>
have learned from<lb/>
David she said. There<lb/>
were no David-related<lb/>
casualties reported in<lb/>
the Virgin Islands, but<lb/>
the hurricane washed<lb/>
system is pullingthe<lb/>
other onealong.Frederic<lb/>
might sartfollowing<lb/>
David allthewav,but<lb/>
Fredericisfurther<lb/>
north<lb/>
White-?aid"it isnot<lb/>
unusualforhurricanes<lb/>
to followeachother.But<lb/>
damage was surprisingly<lb/>
We think the hurricane is going to<lb/>
parallel the coast and continue north<lb/>
and be a threat somewhere in the<lb/>
carolinas<lb/>
DrSeilFrankl , director of the<lb/>
Miami hurricane center<lb/>
NSCC cards available<lb/>
B ED WILLIAMS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
There's a niall card<lb/>
on campus that is<lb/>
lugger in impact than it<lb/>
i- in i.e. The card is<lb/>
the National Student<lb/>
Consumer Card and it<lb/>
si 'beneficial to all ECU<lb/>
students and certain<lb/>
Greenv ille merchant<lb/>
Located on the card<lb/>
are fourteen different<lb/>
area merchants. Under<lb/>
each merchant title is<lb/>
an explanation of dis-<lb/>
counts given bv the<lb/>
Vice President<lb/>
Sherrod said,<lb/>
are 13,000 of<lb/>
rds, making one<lb/>
for every-<lb/>
merchant title is an ex-<lb/>
planation of discounts<lb/>
given by the merchant<lb/>
to the bearer of teh<lb/>
card.<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
Charlie<lb/>
"There<lb/>
these care<lb/>
available<lb/>
bod)<lb/>
Sherrod mentioned<lb/>
that he will distribute<lb/>
the cards to the<lb/>
"dorms, snack shop,<lb/>
and Croatan" so that<lb/>
thev can be picked up<lb/>
bv students.<lb/>
The idea was begun<lb/>
b Mark Reid, treasurer<lb/>
of NC State Student<lb/>
Government. He and<lb/>
Sherrod got together<lb/>
and the idea for a<lb/>
National Student Con-<lb/>
sumer Card spread to<lb/>
Greenville, Sherrod said.<lb/>
The idea has re-<lb/>
sulted in advertising for<lb/>
local merchants and<lb/>
discounts for students<lb/>
who have possession of<lb/>
teh card.<lb/>
The discounts range<lb/>
Irorh ten to 25 percent<lb/>
on some items, making<lb/>
this card a valuable one<lb/>
to have. So remember,<lb/>
don't leave your dorm<lb/>
without it.<lb/>
it ' is<lb/>
you see it<lb/>
As for rebuilding,<lb/>
"It took a couple of<lb/>
vears Futrell reflect-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
Quite a few of the<lb/>
houses along the river<lb/>
were blown out to sea,<lb/>
and for a long time<lb/>
afterwards river prop-<lb/>
erty was difficult to<lb/>
sell. "Nowadays, you<lb/>
can't buy it said<lb/>
Futrell.<lb/>
Stream nor<lb/>
will slow down<lb/>
ward progress<lb/>
may<lb/>
Jofeheatward<lb/>
in for-<lb/>
but it<lb/>
tensify in<lb/>
strength of the winds<lb/>
and rains.<lb/>
Weber also specu-<lb/>
lated that if the storm<lb/>
follows the latest pat-<lb/>
terns, which became<lb/>
available late last night,<lb/>
the storm might head<lb/>
ashore at Charleston or<lb/>
Myrtle Beach, S.C. The<lb/>
northeastern quadrant of<lb/>
the storm would then<lb/>
be at Wilmington and<lb/>
-As a<lb/>
weakened Hurricane<lb/>
David sidled along<lb/>
oay, the killer hurri-<lb/>
cane's younger brother,<lb/>
Frederic, drifted slowly<lb/>
along the same path<lb/>
blazed by David last<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Frederic's torrential<lb/>
rains and gale-force<lb/>
winds swept the Lee-<lb/>
ward Islands today, and<lb/>
forecasters expected<lb/>
Frederic to pass just<lb/>
north of the Virgin<lb/>
Islands and Puerto Rico<lb/>
late tonight.<lb/>
At 9 a.m. EDT, Fred-<lb/>
eric's center was near<lb/>
out bridges and sewer<lb/>
lines and caused mas-<lb/>
sive power outages.<lb/>
Forecaster Ron<lb/>
Hurricane Center also<lb/>
would not rule out the<lb/>
possibility Frederic<lb/>
would follow David to<lb/>
the Gold Coast.<lb/>
"It's still too early<lb/>
to say, but Frederic has<lb/>
a chance of going<lb/>
further north up the<lb/>
coast he said. "Fred-<lb/>
eric has a chance of<lb/>
going further north up<lb/>
the coast he said.<lb/>
"Frederic is more or<lb/>
less on the line of least<lb/>
resistance.<lb/>
"One low pressure<lb/>
light and forecasters<lb/>
aid the storm could<lb/>
swing north to threaten<lb/>
the Carolina<lb/>
"We think it going<lb/>
to parallel the coast and<lb/>
continue north and be a<lb/>
threat somewhere in the<lb/>
Carolina- sometime in<lb/>
the next i8 hours<lb/>
said Dr. Neil Frank,<lb/>
director of the National<lb/>
Hurricane Center here.<lb/>
Hurricane-force winds<lb/>
slammed the wealth)<lb/>
play-ground of Palm<lb/>
Beach alter the hurri-<lb/>
cane eve skipped past<lb/>
Miami and Fort Lauder-<lb/>
dale, hovering just oft-<lb/>
shore.<lb/>
"When it get- bj<lb/>
Palm Beach, the coast<lb/>
drops hack Frank<lb/>
-aid. "If it follow- a<lb/>
more northerly course,<lb/>
it'll get farther awa. It<lb/>
could go north or<lb/>
north-northwest. It s<lb/>
going to be moving up<lb/>
the coastline todayI<lb/>
don't have the expertise<lb/>
to ?av how clo-eU.<lb/>
During the night,<lb/>
th? -t"rm appeared<lb/>
hradvti for the den sly<lb/>
populated Miami-Fort<lb/>
Lauderdale area, then<lb/>
shifted course to take a<lb/>
more northerly track.<lb/>
The small shift in<lb/>
direction wouldn't have<lb/>
been significant t.ir out<lb/>
at sea, Frank said. But<lb/>
when you put eight<lb/>
million people in its<lb/>
path, it become- very<lb/>
significant he added.<lb/>
At least five hurri-<lb/>
cane-related deaths were<lb/>
reported in Florida. Two<lb/>
men suffered heart at-<lb/>
Thousands celebrate despite threat<lb/>
Hungry students beware<lb/>
college<lb/>
almost<lb/>
Bv LEIGH COAKLEY<lb/>
Issistaal to the Editor<lb/>
Breakfast consists of<lb/>
a honey-bun and colfee,<lb/>
lunch a Quarter-Pounder<lb/>
and tries, dinner a<lb/>
garbage pia, plus in-<lb/>
numerable soft drinks,<lb/>
beer potato chips, and<lb/>
other assorted snack<lb/>
foods "consumed in<lb/>
ma quantities<lb/>
This menu is a bit<lb/>
exaggerated but one<lb/>
typical of the<lb/>
student at ECU:<lb/>
totally a carbohydrate<lb/>
diet. Il has become<lb/>
easJ t, stop at<lb/>
vending machine,<lb/>
posit some change, and<lb/>
receive a fast meal.<lb/>
Manv of us are keeping<lb/>
the "fast food" places<lb/>
in business at<lb/>
petise of our<lb/>
health.<lb/>
It's no wonder a<lb/>
large percentage of stu-<lb/>
dents spend so much<lb/>
time in the infirmary. A<lb/>
diet of this sort contains<lb/>
empty nutrients and<lb/>
weakens the body's de-<lb/>
lenses to fight off<lb/>
infection. The vitamins<lb/>
so<lb/>
a<lb/>
de-<lb/>
the ex-<lb/>
own<lb/>
and nutrients are not<lb/>
there. Doctors can't<lb/>
help us if we don't try<lb/>
to help ourselves. We<lb/>
have become victimized.<lb/>
Proof is adequate in<lb/>
regard to deficiency di-<lb/>
seases. A well-known<lb/>
disease to women and<lb/>
children, anemia, is<lb/>
caused by an iron defi-<lb/>
ciency. Lack of Vita-<lb/>
minl) causes rickets,<lb/>
and an absence of Vi-<lb/>
tamin C in the diet<lb/>
causes scurvy.<lb/>
Heart disease, the<lb/>
number one killer of<lb/>
Americans has been<lb/>
linked with the use of<lb/>
large quantities of salt,<lb/>
saturated fats and oils,<lb/>
and sugar.<lb/>
Studies now show<lb/>
that 50 of the Ameri-<lb/>
can diet consists of<lb/>
refined sugars and<lb/>
carbohydrates in the<lb/>
forms of candy, ice<lb/>
cream, cookies, soft<lb/>
drinks, pies, and other<lb/>
forms of rich deserts.<lb/>
It is obvious that<lb/>
many will continue this<lb/>
sort of self destruction<lb/>
but for those of us who<lb/>
are aware of the food<lb/>
we eat, there are alter-<lb/>
natives to the "junk<lb/>
food" regime.<lb/>
Fresh and dried<lb/>
fruits, nuts, plain pop-<lb/>
corn, dried seeds, raw<lb/>
vegetables, and yogurt<lb/>
ar excellent suggestions<lb/>
for snack items and<lb/>
energy boosters at min-<lb/>
imum cost. The snack<lb/>
bars on campus carry<lb/>
many of these items.<lb/>
Try substituting seafood<lb/>
and poultry for red,<lb/>
fatty meats. When pos-<lb/>
sible, try to avoid white<lb/>
flours, white, refined<lb/>
sugar, and salt. Salad<lb/>
bars and Chinese re-<lb/>
staurants are favorite<lb/>
spots for the food-<lb/>
conscious individual.<lb/>
It takes alot of di-<lb/>
scipline to alter eating<lb/>
habits and will require<lb/>
some behavorial<lb/>
changes, but the reward<lb/>
is great: Good health.<lb/>
Now is the time for us<lb/>
to start caring and<lb/>
thinking about ourselves<lb/>
more. Let's not become<lb/>
part of the percentage<lb/>
that - typifies Americans<lb/>
as being overweight and<lb/>
in ill health.<lb/>
By PEGGY ANDERSEN<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
Most Americans<lb/>
were celebrating Labor<lb/>
Day 1979 with picnics<lb/>
and fireworks, but some<lb/>
will remember this hol-<lb/>
iday as a singularly<lb/>
unfestive occasion.<lb/>
Thousands of South<lb/>
Florida residents were<lb/>
forced to flee for safety<lb/>
as Hurricane David hur-<lb/>
tled toward the state,<lb/>
bringing with it a his-<lb/>
tory of death and de-<lb/>
vastation.<lb/>
And on the Texas<lb/>
Gulf Coast, the tourist<lb/>
industry suffered with<lb/>
empty hotels as holiday<lb/>
travelers shunned bea-<lb/>
ches recently stained by<lb/>
oil from a runaway<lb/>
Mexican oil well.<lb/>
Elsewhere, labor<lb/>
leaders and politicians<lb/>
spoke of umemployment<lb/>
and inflation as workers<lb/>
set those uncomfortable<lb/>
realities aside for fire-<lb/>
works, barbecues, par-<lb/>
ades and fairs.<lb/>
President Carter was<lb/>
to be the host at an<lb/>
old-fashiopned picnic on<lb/>
the White House lawn,<lb/>
with about 1,000 labor<lb/>
leaders and rank-and-file<lb/>
union members attend-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
in Cincinnati, boat<lb/>
owners on the Ohio<lb/>
River vied for good<lb/>
spots at the docks,<lb/>
where theywatched a 34-<lb/>
mmute fireworks extra-<lb/>
vaganza tonight at the<lb/>
conclusion of a river-<lb/>
front<lb/>
fair.<lb/>
In<lb/>
Day<lb/>
West<lb/>
arts and crafts<lb/>
New York, Labor<lb/>
coincided with<lb/>
Indian Day, and<lb/>
Mayor Edward Koch<lb/>
was expected to turn<lb/>
out in Brooklyn for the<lb/>
annual parade featuring<lb/>
steel-drum bands, infec-<lb/>
tious calypso rhythms<lb/>
and limbo dancers.<lb/>
Manhattan was host to<lb/>
a Labor Day Street Fair<lb/>
near Theatre Row, with<lb/>
mimes, clowns and dis-<lb/>
co music for the city's<lb/>
roller-skaters.<lb/>
The need for fuel<lb/>
economy seemed to<lb/>
?bring back the old-<lb/>
fashioned notion of a<lb/>
holiday at home as<lb/>
some states reported<lb/>
highway traffic was<lb/>
lighter than usual.<lb/>
In California, life-<lb/>
guard Terry Hearst<lb/>
reported a normal crowd<lb/>
at the Santa Monica<lb/>
beach Sunday, but "no<lb/>
more than thatI'm<lb/>
really shocked<lb/>
Local authorities said<lb/>
some travelers may<lb/>
have been scared off by<lb/>
a threatened service<lb/>
station strike that failed<lb/>
to develop.<lb/>
In nearby Las Vegas,<lb/>
the 14th annual Jerry<lb/>
Lewis Labor Day Tele-<lb/>
thon got under wav.<lb/>
offering everything from<lb/>
Sarah Vaughn to the<lb/>
Rolling Stones in an<lb/>
effort to raise money<lb/>
for the fight against<lb/>
muscular distrophy.<lb/>
A watermelon cut will he one of teh activities at Student<lb/>
Wednesday at 3.<lb/>
Life Celebrates' scheduled U<lb/>
fc<lb/>
<pb facs="00057211_0002"/><lb/>
Page 2 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 4 September 1979<lb/>
Registers need response<lb/>
.r<lb/>
KS<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
By ED WILLIAMS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The 1979-80 edition<lb/>
of teh Freshman Reg-<lb/>
ister has seemingly ta-<lb/>
ken students by sur-<lb/>
prise. Only half of the<lb/>
registers have been<lb/>
picked up by freshman<lb/>
subscribers, with $9000<lb/>
worth of registers re-<lb/>
maining to be taken,<lb/>
according to SGA Vice<lb/>
President Charlie Sher-<lb/>
rod.<lb/>
There must be some<lb/>
reasons why so many<lb/>
registers are still lin-<lb/>
gering around. Perhaps<lb/>
its because this is the<lb/>
first year the register<lb/>
has been on time<lb/>
according to Sherrod,<lb/>
who also edited the re-<lb/>
gister. He said the<lb/>
register usually arrives<lb/>
in late spring.<lb/>
"The STudenl Gov-<lb/>
ernment worked hard on<lb/>
the book in the summer<lb/>
to beat the deadline to<lb/>
get the book here on<lb/>
time he stated.<lb/>
Another reason the<lb/>
register hasn't been<lb/>
picked up by students<lb/>
who ordered it is be-<lb/>
cause of it's new look,<lb/>
both hinside and out.<lb/>
The book cover was<lb/>
designed lby a Com-<lb/>
munications At class<lb/>
student, Sherrod said.<lb/>
The color and typw of<lb/>
the cover was changed<lb/>
to orange and canary<lb/>
yellow and broadway<lb/>
type, respectively.<lb/>
Inside, the book<lb/>
contains fall and spring<lb/>
schedules, as well as a<lb/>
football schedule. This<lb/>
year's edition of teh re-<lb/>
gister also contains a<lb/>
theme which is entitled<lb/>
"The East Carolina<lb/>
Way of Life<lb/>
Maybe the biggest<lb/>
reason freshman have<lb/>
failed to acquire their<lb/>
register is because they<lb/>
don't know where to<lb/>
pick it up. According to<lb/>
Sherrod, students can<lb/>
get their registers at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center in room 228.<lb/>
Now there is no<lb/>
reason left for freshmen<lb/>
not to pick up their<lb/>
registers. As Sherrod<lb/>
said, "Students can't<lb/>
enjoy it until they get it i<lb/>
in their hands<lb/>
IF YOU'RE INTO EXERCISE<lb/>
and Good Health<lb/>
Check Out Our<lb/>
Complete Selection<lb/>
of<lb/>
Vitamins and Protein<lb/>
Supplements<lb/>
Nature' Harvest Natural Food<lb/>
Downtown 5th St.<lb/>
752-9336<lb/>
Relaxing on a row boat is a thing of teh past now that classes have started.<lb/>
Hasste-FreeTHp<lb/>
Problems of any kind on your trip abroad<lb/>
can be a big hassle. And who needs it?<lb/>
Traveling abroad is not as simple as it may<lb/>
seem. There's a lot more to it than just buying<lb/>
a ticket, grabbing your passport and taking off<lb/>
to parts unknown. A successful trip requires<lb/>
advance preparation ? send to<lb/>
Correspondence Management Division<lb/>
Bureau of Public Affairs<lb/>
U S Department of State<lb/>
Washington. DC 20520<lb/>
it's Miller time<lb/>
ca .<lb/>
UBM<lb/>
"<lb/>
Please send me a copy of "YOUR TRIP ABROAD"<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Please Print<lb/>
Address<lb/>
City-<lb/>
State<lb/>
Zip.<lb/>
8P?<lb/>
r<lb/>
Lei'<lb/>
I<lb/>
.s<lb/>
?l v<lb/>
yyM<lb/>
&amp;nm<lb/>
Hk.h l.tft Btf r<lb/>
One of the conveniences that<lb/>
we have offered college students<lb/>
over the many years Is a charge<lb/>
account.<lb/>
Brody's will be happy to tailor<lb/>
one to suit your needs. For over<lb/>
a quarter of a century, we have<lb/>
featured college-minded fashions<lb/>
in sportswear, shoes, dresses,<lb/>
and lingerie.<lb/>
You can count on Brody's service<lb/>
of cashing checks, free local<lb/>
telephone use, gift wrapping, and<lb/>
out- of-town mailing. We want to<lb/>
be your friend away from home.<lb/>
May we have the pleasure of<lb/>
adding your name to our many<lb/>
student charge customers?<lb/>
?Downtown<lb/>
Pitt Ptaz;<lb/>
i<lb/>
WOULD YOU LIKE TO<lb/>
BEAT INFLATION ?<lb/>
IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO HAVE SOME HELP WITH RISING INFLATION AND HAVE A<lb/>
GREAT TIME DOING SO, READ ON;<lb/>
FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY THE ELBO ROOM HAS ON SALE SPECIAL SEMESTER<lb/>
MEMBERSHIPS GOOD FOR FREE ADMISSION DURING 1st SEMESTER.<lb/>
HERE IS HOW YOU CAN SAVE ;<lb/>
THE ELBO ROOM WILL BE OPEN 80 NIGHTS DURING 1st SEMESTER<lb/>
IF YOU COME TO THE ELBO 13 OF THOSE NIGHTS THE MEMBERSHIP WILL HAVE<lb/>
PAID FOR ITSELF AND ALL OTHER NIGHTS WILL BE<lb/>
FREE FOR YOU!<lb/>
THESE SPECIAL SEMESTER MEMBERSHIPS ARE ONLY $10.00!<lb/>
AND WILL BE ON SALE WED.FROM 1:00 pm UNTIL 5:00 pm AND NIGHTLY<lb/>
8:00-9:00 pm THRU WED. SEPT. 12th<lb/>
PLUS<lb/>
AN EXTRA ADDED BONUS: THE FIRST 100 PEOPLE TO PURCHASE A MEMBERSHIP<lb/>
WILL RECIEVE AN ELBO ROOM T-SHIRT VALUED AT $4.00<lb/>
FOR ONLY $1.00!<lb/>
ACT NOW AND SAVE!<lb/>
e&amp;?.<lb/>
Ij you a<lb/>
'i<lb/>
Alii<lb/>
le<lb/>
Bx LAKitt ?<lb/>
5<lb/>
Ma<lb/>
 I<lb/>
lention ol m<lb/>
one<lb/>
fields. M -<lb/>
swered qu -<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
hov do I<lb/>
what arc<lb/>
standards<lb/>
Dr. Ronal I I I<lb/>
Dean ol ihe S<lb/>
Allied Health amv<lb/>
these quetr<lb/>
more indepth ones<lb/>
recent inten i<lb/>
Fir - mi<lb/>
information about<lb/>
health. It is a<lb/>
new school in I<lb/>
development<lb/>
December ol I<lb/>
Theile became Deal<lb/>
January ol I972<lb/>
then. Allied H-<lb/>
steadil) grown<lb/>
present size, o I<lb/>
nine department- Fj<lb/>
include Bi<lb/>
Audiolotry. ami Mej<lb/>
Technology I<lb/>
the departnv<lb/>
master? pr g<lb/>
right offer<lb/>
degrees.<lb/>
Admiss<lb/>
are not based - I<lb/>
a fixed GPA.<lb/>
Thiele elabora<lb/>
ever) departemtn<lb/>
required minimum<lb/>
2.5 GPA tor I i<lb/>
to that particular<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
"Admiss ns<lb/>
program- in this<lb/>
i a competitive pn<lb/>
It is not an oped<lb/>
missions. You I<lb/>
appl) to the d( .<lb/>
and meet their<lb/>
ards. There are<lb/>
limitations on the<lb/>
ber of students thai<lb/>
be taken<lb/>
An<lb/>
9ra<lb/>
fin;<lb/>
in<lb/>
sui<lb/>
th<lb/>
Ev<lb/>
mi<lb/>
opi<lb/>
th<lb/>
eli<lb/>
to<lb/>
av<lb/>
federal Bi<lb/>
<pb facs="00057211_0003"/><lb/>
ISE<lb/>
hat<lb/>
Idents<lb/>
large<lb/>
ailor<lb/>
over<lb/>
lave<lb/>
hions<lb/>
les,<lb/>
I<lb/>
ervice<lb/>
, and<lb/>
nt to<lb/>
 1<lb/>
Allied Health teaches<lb/>
programs<lb/>
leading to degrees<lb/>
B LARRY GRAHAM<lb/>
Staff Write?<lb/>
Man) freshmen come<lb/>
to ECL sith ihe in-<lb/>
tention of majoring in<lb/>
one ot tin- Allied Health<lb/>
fields. Mosl have unan-<lb/>
swered questions about<lb/>
the school. For instance,<lb/>
how do I get in and<lb/>
what are the academic<lb/>
tandard ot the school?<lb/>
Dr. Ronald L. Thiele,<lb/>
Dean of the School ot<lb/>
Allied Health answered<lb/>
these questions and<lb/>
more indepth ones in a<lb/>
recent interview.<lb/>
First, some general<lb/>
information about Allied<lb/>
health. It i- a fairly<lb/>
new school m K(.I ; its<lb/>
development began in<lb/>
December ot 1968. Dr.<lb/>
Theile became Dean in<lb/>
Januar) ot 172. Since<lb/>
then. Allied Health ha<lb/>
steadil) grown to it<lb/>
present size, comprising<lb/>
nine departments. These<lb/>
include Biostatistics,<lb/>
Audiology, and Medical<lb/>
Technology. Three ot<lb/>
the departments otter<lb/>
masters programs and<lb/>
eight offer bachelors<lb/>
degrees.<lb/>
Admissions to AH<lb/>
are not based solely on<lb/>
a fixed GPA. DR.<lb/>
Thiele elaborate Most<lb/>
ever) departemtn has a<lb/>
required minimum ot a<lb/>
2.5 GPA for admission<lb/>
to that particular pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
"Admissions to the<lb/>
program in this school<lb/>
is a competitive process.<lb/>
It is not an open ad-<lb/>
mission;?. iu have to<lb/>
appl to the department<lb/>
and meet their stand-<lb/>
ards. There are also<lb/>
limitations on the num-<lb/>
ber of students that can<lb/>
lie taken<lb/>
The competitive ad-<lb/>
missions tend to raise<lb/>
the academic standards<lb/>
of the school. No plans<lb/>
have been made to<lb/>
change the situation;<lb/>
only the best students<lb/>
are accepted. The<lb/>
school itself has to live<lb/>
up to two sets of<lb/>
stringent standards:<lb/>
those of ECL in ad-<lb/>
dition to the standards<lb/>
ot a national accredi-<lb/>
ting agency. Dr Thiele<lb/>
describved the ECU<lb/>
standards a- "a bench<lb/>
mark of quality <lb/>
Allied Health is a<lb/>
quality school, and the<lb/>
training students receive<lb/>
there i- one ot the best<lb/>
in the state. "1 think<lb/>
that our programs con-<lb/>
stantly improve in qual-<lb/>
it states Dr. Thiele.<lb/>
"W e are striving for<lb/>
improvement. I think<lb/>
the best indication of<lb/>
this are our students<lb/>
who are employed in<lb/>
their professions we<lb/>
get excellent feedback<lb/>
concerning the quality<lb/>
of their performance.<lb/>
 i have every indi-<lb/>
cation that thej are<lb/>
doing a good job.<lb/>
Another indication ol<lb/>
the quality of teaching<lb/>
is the employment re-<lb/>
cord ot successful stu-<lb/>
dents. Dr. Thiele esti-<lb/>
mates that about 95<lb/>
of AH studenyts stu-<lb/>
dents are accepted tor<lb/>
work. The exception<lb/>
here is social work and<lb/>
health education, since<lb/>
there may not be many-<lb/>
job openings in those<lb/>
fields in this area.<lb/>
Allied Healtti is<lb/>
steadily growing to<lb/>
meet the demands of<lb/>
increased enrollment.<lb/>
The school is gaining<lb/>
two more staff mem-<lb/>
bers, one in Biostatistics<lb/>
and one in rehabilitation<lb/>
couseling. Plans for a<lb/>
new program are im-<lb/>
pending.<lb/>
"One of the major<lb/>
endeavors we are going<lb/>
through right now is<lb/>
the effort to develop a<lb/>
masters degree program<lb/>
in social work Dr.<lb/>
Thiele went on to say<lb/>
that this is merely a<lb/>
feasibility study at the<lb/>
present time. It will<lb/>
have to be approved by<lb/>
the university and the<lb/>
Board of Governors be-<lb/>
fore any work in this<lb/>
area may begin. It will<lb/>
take several vears. Also<lb/>
planned for the future<lb/>
is the expansion ol Bio-<lb/>
statistics and Epidemi-<lb/>
ology.<lb/>
The School of Med-<lb/>
icine will probably not<lb/>
affect Allied Health<lb/>
much. The two schools<lb/>
much. "We probably<lb/>
need them more than<lb/>
they need us Dr.<lb/>
Thiele joked. "We com-<lb/>
pliment each other we<lb/>
round out the picture<lb/>
No plans have been<lb/>
made to merge the two<lb/>
schools; Dr. Thiele be-<lb/>
lieves that this could be<lb/>
more detrimental than<lb/>
helpful, since the two<lb/>
schools have different<lb/>
aims.<lb/>
A pamphlet entitled<lb/>
"The Allied Health and<lb/>
Social Professions Bul-<lb/>
letin" is available for<lb/>
the student seriously<lb/>
interested in an Allied<lb/>
Health career, an in<lb/>
finding our more about<lb/>
the departmental re-<lb/>
quirements. Te pamph-<lb/>
let can be obtained at<lb/>
the offices of Allied<lb/>
Health in the Belk<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
cont. from page 1<lb/>
HURRICANE<lb/>
tacks as they strained<lb/>
to put up storm pro-<lb/>
tection on their homes<lb/>
and another was elec-<lb/>
trocuted when his car<lb/>
hit a power pole. A<lb/>
driver was killed when<lb/>
his car overturned on a<lb/>
wet road and a woman<lb/>
was killed by a car as<lb/>
she hurried toward an<lb/>
evacuation center. But<lb/>
property damage ap-<lb/>
peared moderate.<lb/>
"A flop said<lb/>
Arthur St. Amand, Civil<lb/>
Defense Director in<lb/>
Broward County, which<lb/>
includes Fort Lauder-<lb/>
dale.<lb/>
David, once a mon-<lb/>
ster that killed at least<lb/>
640 persons in its<lb/>
march through vulner-<lb/>
able island republics of<lb/>
the Caribbean, slipped<lb/>
to a relatively mild 90<lb/>
mph as it neared the<lb/>
Miami shoreline shortly<lb/>
before dawn.<lb/>
The storm's eye and<lb/>
fiercest winds, however,<lb/>
staved just off-shore. At<lb/>
10 a.m. EDT The<lb/>
Storm's eye was<lb/>
just off Palm Beach<lb/>
at latitude 26.5 north<lb/>
and longitude 79.6 west.<lb/>
David's fringe gusts<lb/>
tore down hundreds of<lb/>
transmission lines and<lb/>
Florida Power &amp; Light<lb/>
Co. reported about<lb/>
55,000 people in Dade<lb/>
and Broward counties<lb/>
were temporarily<lb/>
blacked out. In Palm<lb/>
Beach County, high<lb/>
winds downed power<lb/>
lines and motorists were<lb/>
ordered off the high-<lb/>
ways for safety.<lb/>
The Palm Beach<lb/>
County area, with<lb/>
350,000 residents, isn't<lb/>
nearly as populous as<lb/>
Dade and Broward<lb/>
Counties, which have<lb/>
more than 2 million<lb/>
residents.<lb/>
Hurricane warnings<lb/>
were lifted for the<lb/>
Florida Keys, Miami<lb/>
and south of Fort Lau-<lb/>
derdale and residents<lb/>
who evacuated Sunday<lb/>
headed back home. But<lb/>
warnings remained in<lb/>
effect from Fort Lau-<lb/>
derdale north to Day-<lb/>
tona Beach. Gale<lb/>
warnings extended to<lb/>
the Florida-Georgia<lb/>
border.<lb/>
ARMY MEDICAL DEPARTMENT<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM: The U.S.<lb/>
Army Health Professions Scholarship Pro-<lb/>
gram offers a unique opportunity for<lb/>
financial support to a number of students<lb/>
in the health professions. The program is<lb/>
substantial, both in the size and scope of<lb/>
the scholarship and the number offered.<lb/>
Every student or potential student of<lb/>
medicine, osteopathy, veterinary medicine,<lb/>
optometry, psychology is invited to examine<lb/>
the program and submit and application, if<lb/>
eligible.<lb/>
Financial support in the scholarship<lb/>
includes approximately $5600 per year. In<lb/>
addition, tuition and certain other expenses<lb/>
required by all students in a particular<lb/>
course of study will also be paid by the<lb/>
governme it.<lb/>
A fact sheet containing information as<lb/>
to eligibility criteria, pay, service obli-<lb/>
gation, and application procedures is<lb/>
available from your nearest Army Medical<lb/>
Department Personnel Counselor.<lb/>
The personnel counselor will also<lb/>
answer questions you may have about his<lb/>
or other programs and will assist you in<lb/>
the completion and submission of your<lb/>
application. Personnel Counselor<lb/>
Major Roy J. Leatherborry, III,<lb/>
federal Building, Suite 310 Post Office Box 27524<lb/>
(919)834-64136414,<lb/>
As a Peace Corps Volunteer, you can help people<lb/>
in developing nations try to meet their basic<lb/>
needs in areas of Food, Energy, Community<lb/>
Development, Health Care, and Education. It's<lb/>
a full-time, 24-hour a day comr?? .ent with<lb/>
built-in frustrations and sacrifices. It could be<lb/>
the toughest job you'll ever love<lb/>
Peace Corps<lb/>
A WORLD OF OPPORTUNITY<lb/>
Peace Corps Coordinator, ECU Dept. of Science<lb/>
Education, Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
(919) 757 6586<lb/>
HHKffS<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Tuesday Night<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
TROUT $2.95<lb/>
PERCH $2.95<lb/>
all you can eat<lb/>
No take-outs please.<lb/>
Meal Includes:<lb/>
French Fries, Cole slaw,<lb/>
Hushpuppies, and Iced tea<lb/>
We are proud to<lb/>
announce that we<lb/>
have added<lb/>
one of the<lb/>
AREAS FINEST<lb/>
SALAD BARS<lb/>
tor your<lb/>
dining pleasure,<lb/>
OPEN FOR LUNCH<lb/>
Dally<lb/>
(except Sat.) 11:30 - 2:30<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
MON ? TMURS.<lb/>
f :00 ? 10:00<lb/>
FRI. &amp; SAT.<lb/>
f tOO ? IOJ30<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is required to<lb/>
be readily available for sale at or below the<lb/>
advertised price in esch AaP Store, except as<lb/>
specifically noted in this ad.<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT SEPT. 8 AT ASP IN<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE FOR RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
c<lb/>
703 GREENVILLE BLV. GREENVILLE<lb/>
WELCOME BACK PIRATES!<lb/>
A&amp;p QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN-FED BEEF<lb/>
J<lb/>
STEAKS<lb/>
LB<lb/>
ASP QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN-FED BEEF<lb/>
T-BONE STEAKS<lb/>
$233<lb/>
OR<lb/>
PORTERHOUSE<lb/>
ASP QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN -FED <lb/>
WHOLE SEMI-BONELESS<lb/>
BEEF ROUND<lb/>
45 TO 55 LB. AVERAGE<lb/>
CUT FREE INTO TOP OR<lb/>
BOTTOM ROUMO STEAK<lb/>
OR ROAST. EYE ROUND<lb/>
STEAK OR ROAST<lb/>
RUMP ROAST ANO ? a<lb/>
GROUND ROUNO -?<lb/>
$78<lb/>
ASP QUALITY<lb/>
ASP QUALITY CORN-FED<lb/>
SMOKED HAM PORK CHOPS<lb/>
SHANK<lb/>
PORTION<lb/>
<lb/>
ASSORTED FAMILY<lb/>
PACKAGE<lb/>
10 LBS OR<lb/>
MORE<lb/>
REGULAR ? DIET<lb/>
SOFT<lb/>
SHOWBOAT<lb/>
SHASTA DRINKS<lb/>
5<lb/>
12-OZ.<lb/>
CANS<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
t II<lb/>
PORK S BEANS<lb/>
5<lb/>
14V-OZ.<lb/>
CANS<lb/>
n<lb/>
t it<lb/>
ANN PAGE<lb/>
 LOOK FIT<lb/>
1?o<lb/>
GRADE<lb/>
! GAL<lb/>
CARTON<lb/>
MILK<lb/>
GREFR FREESTONE<lb/>
PEACHES<lb/>
290Z<lb/>
CAN<lb/>
atiE FARAV<lb/>
THE NATURAL SNACKS<lb/>
THOMPSON SEEDLESS ? REO EMPEROR OR rucr t<lb/>
GRAPES 59c<lb/>
Located On Evans St root<lb/>
Behind Sports Wortd<lb/>
<pb facs="00057211_0004"/><lb/>
Tht1 Kast (aroli<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
&amp; Opinions<lb/>
Tuesday, September A, 1979 Page 4 Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
The right to vote<lb/>
A PROPOSED SOLUTION TO THE<lb/>
10th ST. CROSSING PROBLEM<lb/>
Students who maintain an address<lb/>
for the purposes of attending school<lb/>
in this county are being denied one of<lb/>
the basic American freedoms?the<lb/>
right to vote.<lb/>
To vote in Pitt County, you have<lb/>
to prove that your permanent domicile<lb/>
is here. Establishing a residence is<lb/>
not enough. According to a press<lb/>
release, which is dated April 14,<lb/>
1972, and which Is considered current<lb/>
by the Pitt County Board of Elections,<lb/>
students cannot vote unless they can<lb/>
prove to a registrar that they plan to<lb/>
make the Greenville area their<lb/>
permanent home.<lb/>
According to the same release, a<lb/>
registrar might ask the following<lb/>
questions. The release quickly adds<lb/>
that the questions would be asked in<lb/>
substance, which seems to mean that<lb/>
these direct questions would not be<lb/>
asked, but that a safer, less offensive<lb/>
set might be used.<lb/>
A registrar might ask, for exam-<lb/>
pie, if you left home for the<lb/>
temporary purpose of attending<lb/>
school, or did you leave home to cut<lb/>
the home ties? If you fail at the<lb/>
university, would you return to your<lb/>
parents home? Would you still be<lb/>
living in the university town if the<lb/>
school were not there? For what<lb/>
purposes other than attending school<lb/>
are you in this college town? Where<lb/>
do you maintain church and lodge<lb/>
affiliations?<lb/>
Such questions, short of not being<lb/>
anyone's business, might be construed<lb/>
by some as invasion of privacy. Why<lb/>
does the state need to know where<lb/>
you go to church? Is it the state's<lb/>
business why you are living in<lb/>
Greenville, if it is for purposes other<lb/>
than attending ECU?<lb/>
This doesn't tell us, however, how<lb/>
we are supposed to react when we<lb/>
pay taxes and abide by the same city<lb/>
ordinances as "full time" residents of<lb/>
Greenville, and yet we are denied the<lb/>
opportunity to have a hand in how we<lb/>
are governed.<lb/>
Looking at the population of the<lb/>
school and the population of the city<lb/>
of Greenville gives you some idea of<lb/>
the size of the problem. With a<lb/>
population of 12,000 students, and a<lb/>
city population of approximately<lb/>
35,000, it is easy for the students<lb/>
here to see why the good citizens of<lb/>
Greenville would not want ECU<lb/>
students to vote.<lb/>
It's time for the city to take into<lb/>
account the fact that ECU students<lb/>
are here. We add to the quality of<lb/>
life, we support local merchants and<lb/>
we give freely to the community in<lb/>
service and time,<lb/>
settle down here<lb/>
terms of volunteer<lb/>
Some of us even<lb/>
after we graduate.<lb/>
We should be allowed a say in<lb/>
how the local government governs us.<lb/>
Polls each election year show us<lb/>
declines in the percentage of voters.<lb/>
A good way to teach people to vote<lb/>
wisely would be to let them get<lb/>
involved in local government for the<lb/>
four years they are in college.<lb/>
The first years after we receive<lb/>
the right to vote are the most<lb/>
important times to teach students the<lb/>
responsibilities of being an American.<lb/>
Good voting habits, if taught with the<lb/>
student voter in mind, might make for<lb/>
a more intense realization of what our<lb/>
responsibilities are today and in the<lb/>
future.<lb/>
We can only wonder why the Pitt<lb/>
County Board of Elections does not<lb/>
want students registering to vote.<lb/>
The suspicion we have is fairly<lb/>
obvious. If all ECU students organized<lb/>
themselves into a voting bloc, the<lb/>
political power of this campus would<lb/>
be overwhelming. It is conceivable<lb/>
that an ECU Grad student or<lb/>
professor could be elected to the<lb/>
mayor's office, and to a majority of<lb/>
the city council seats. Even with the<lb/>
vote, student apathy would never<lb/>
allow this to happen.<lb/>
Still, the Pitt County authorities<lb/>
would never let anything like that<lb/>
happen. It is attitudes like this that<lb/>
widen the chasm between town and<lb/>
gown.<lb/>
Uppity women<lb/>
The privilege to wait<lb/>
By G.C. CARTER<lb/>
Uppity Women<lb/>
If you were brought<lb/>
up in the same general<lb/>
geporgraphical location<lb/>
(the southern half of<lb/>
North America) that I<lb/>
was, and msot of the<lb/>
women that I know<lb/>
were then part of your<lb/>
cultural heritage is the<lb/>
belief that because you<lb/>
were borm a woman,<lb/>
the world owes you a<lb/>
living. You, a woman,<lb/>
are "privileged You<lb/>
ahve the "right" to a<lb/>
comfortable abode, to<lb/>
"protection" against<lb/>
strenuous physical acti-<lb/>
vity or over-taxation of<lb/>
mental processes. You<lb/>
"expect" to have doors<lb/>
opened for you (literally<lb/>
and metaphorically),<lb/>
male conversations ' cen-<lb/>
sored in your presence,<lb/>
harsh realities smoothed<lb/>
over.<lb/>
Capitol Letter<lb/>
Sunset commission gears up<lb/>
By<lb/>
WILLIAM M. WELCH<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
RALEIGH, (AP) -<lb/>
The state sunset com-<lb/>
mission, after spending<lb/>
its first year dereg-<lb/>
ulating watch repairs<lb/>
and similar mundane<lb/>
matters, has turned its<lb/>
attention now to con-<lb/>
sumer issues and may<lb/>
take on more powerful<lb/>
interests.<lb/>
The commission's<lb/>
first batch of reports<lb/>
since it battled with the<lb/>
General Assembly over<lb/>
minor concerns came<lb/>
out late last month.<lb/>
And the reports on<lb/>
optometry and opticians<lb/>
may be a signal of the<lb/>
higher visibility the<lb/>
board is to assume.<lb/>
The commission staff<lb/>
recomended the Legis-<lb/>
lature change the<lb/>
state's licensing of op-<lb/>
tometrists and opticians.<lb/>
It said the current<lb/>
regulations are exces-<lb/>
sive and, by driving up<lb/>
the price of eyeglasses<lb/>
and examinations, are<lb/>
costing North Carolina<lb/>
consumers as much as<lb/>
$21 million annually in<lb/>
extra charges.<lb/>
So far, no reaction<lb/>
has been heard , from<lb/>
those professions. But<lb/>
they have proved their<lb/>
lobbying influence in<lb/>
other battles in the<lb/>
General Assembly, such<lb/>
as over a law that now<lb/>
permits optometrist ?<lb/>
who are not medical<lb/>
doctors ? to use drugs<lb/>
in their practice.<lb/>
The staff is now at<lb/>
work on similar studies<lb/>
of state regulation of<lb/>
lawyers and doctors.<lb/>
For the purchase of<lb/>
a pair of eyeglasses,<lb/>
the staff concluded the<lb/>
average price in North<lb/>
Carolina is $58.17, or<lb/>
$12.63 higher than in<lb/>
states without regula-<lb/>
tions. With an esti-<lb/>
mated 880,000 pair sold<lb/>
this year, the staff<lb/>
concluded North Caro-<lb/>
linians with poor vision<lb/>
are being charged $11.1<lb/>
million loo much.<lb/>
The reason for the<lb/>
higher prices, the staff<lb/>
concluded, was that<lb/>
North Carolina's laws<lb/>
have kept down the<lb/>
" number of opticians and<lb/>
encouraged glasses to<lb/>
be dispensed by op-<lb/>
tometrists instead. North<lb/>
Carolina has the second<lb/>
toughest requirements<lb/>
to become an optician<lb/>
of all the states, Jordan<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The sunset commi-<lb/>
ssion, called the gov-<lb/>
ernmental Evaluations<lb/>
Commission, was set up<lb/>
to review 100 state<lb/>
regulatory and licensing<lb/>
agencies. The regulatory<lb/>
laws expire over a<lb/>
six?year period unless<lb/>
renewed or altered by<lb/>
the General Assembly.<lb/>
In its first legislative<lb/>
session, the commission<lb/>
and its director, Paul<lb/>
Jordan, had to fight for<lb/>
its most mundane rec-<lb/>
ommendations ? ex-<lb/>
termination of the state<lb/>
board of watchmaking<lb/>
and repair. They suc-<lb/>
ceeded in killing that<lb/>
board, but not before<lb/>
the fight became a test<lb/>
case for t!?e Legislat-<lb/>
ure's resolve to drop<lb/>
regulations ? particu-<lb/>
larly when the trades<lb/>
are protected by the<lb/>
regulation and want to<lb/>
keep it.<lb/>
Now come the op-<lb/>
tometry recomenda-<lb/>
lions that may set off a<lb/>
battle even before the<lb/>
12?member sunset<lb/>
commission itse'f.<lb/>
The reports cited a<lb/>
1976 study by Uni-<lb/>
versity of North Caro-<lb/>
lina professor James<lb/>
Begun, which found<lb/>
North Carolina had the<lb/>
highest average cost of<lb/>
an eye examination by<lb/>
an optometrist of 33<lb/>
states surveyed, $32.97.<lb/>
With three years of<lb/>
inflation figured in, the<lb/>
commission staff con-<lb/>
cluded the average cost<lb/>
of an exam in North<lb/>
Carolina is $11.54 high-<lb/>
er than in states with-<lb/>
out restrictive regula-<lb/>
tions ? amounting to<lb/>
$10 million in extra<lb/>
costs each year.<lb/>
The recommendation<lb/>
was to maintain the<lb/>
present restrictions on<lb/>
opticians dispensing<lb/>
contact lenses, but to<lb/>
relax them for those<lb/>
selling only eyeglasses.<lb/>
"Opticians themselves<lb/>
are not responsible for<lb/>
the high price of eye-<lb/>
glass sales to be readily<lb/>
available<lb/>
And what is the<lb/>
source from whence all<lb/>
this "privilege" flows?<lb/>
Who's gonna pay the<lb/>
rent and fight the wars<lb/>
and cover the mudholes<lb/>
and open the doors?<lb/>
Traditionally, women<lb/>
have had the "privi-<lb/>
lege" of being provided<lb/>
for by men ? first<lb/>
their fathers, then their<lb/>
husbands. There are<lb/>
plenty of women (and<lb/>
men) who believe that<lb/>
this is the way it<lb/>
should continue to be.<lb/>
It sounds good,<lb/>
doesn't it? All a women<lb/>
really has to do is make<lb/>
sure she's as good-look-<lb/>
ing as she can be, and<lb/>
make sure she stays in<lb/>
her place. If she plays<lb/>
it rights, she can charm<lb/>
her way right into her<lb/>
father husband's heart<lb/>
wallet, and not have to<lb/>
worry about a thing<lb/>
except continuing to<lb/>
play it right.<lb/>
While woman's pri-<lb/>
vilege is emphasized in<lb/>
beliefs and behaviors<lb/>
which are learned early<lb/>
in life and reinforced<lb/>
over the years, the<lb/>
other side ol the coin is<lb/>
rarely mentioned. All<lb/>
privilege has its price,<lb/>
and it is up to each<lb/>
individual woman to de-<lb/>
termine whether the two<lb/>
balance out to some-<lb/>
thing she can live with.<lb/>
To speak in broad<lb/>
categories, woman has<lb/>
traditionally paid her<lb/>
price for privilege in<lb/>
two ways ? by waiting,<lb/>
and by "waiting on"<lb/>
others. Traditional mo-<lb/>
theres taught their<lb/>
daughters to care for<lb/>
and "wait on" their<lb/>
baby dolls, and to wait<lb/>
until someday they<lb/>
could grow up and be<lb/>
real mommies. Daugh-<lb/>
ters were trained to<lb/>
"wait on" th"ir families<lb/>
like mommy does, and<lb/>
wait until someday<lb/>
when they could marry<lb/>
and have their own<lb/>
families to "wait on<lb/>
When daughters<lb/>
grew older, and became<lb/>
interested in the other<lb/>
sex, their traditional<lb/>
mothers instructed them<lb/>
to wait for the boys to<lb/>
show the first signs of<lb/>
interest. If a young<lb/>
woman wished to mar-<lb/>
ry, she had to wait to<lb/>
be asked.<lb/>
People say that<lb/>
things have changed,<lb/>
but I can't reallv tell.<lb/>
because I can't visit<lb/>
everyone in their<lb/>
homes. For most ot the<lb/>
people I know, thing-<lb/>
are till pretty much as<lb/>
they've always been.<lb/>
Little boys are still<lb/>
raised on dreams ot<lb/>
baseball and pioneering<lb/>
and rocket ships, and<lb/>
little girls are still at<lb/>
home taking care of<lb/>
baby dolls and helping<lb/>
mommy set the table. A<lb/>
-voung woman who takes<lb/>
the initiative in a re-<lb/>
lationship with a young<lb/>
man i assumed to be<lb/>
an easj lay. The mar-<lb/>
ried woman who pur-<lb/>
sues a career will be<lb/>
stuck with the "blame"<lb/>
whether husband is at-<lb/>
tracted to a more tradi-<lb/>
tional woman, because<lb/>
his wife is "emascu-<lb/>
lating" him. A working<lb/>
wife is still expected to<lb/>
do the housework and<lb/>
cook the meals and<lb/>
wash the clothes and<lb/>
take care of the kids.<lb/>
Woman's traditional<lb/>
privileges have usually<lb/>
been bought with the<lb/>
price of "self. Women<lb/>
have been expected to<lb/>
defer to their providers,<lb/>
in all respects, in ex-<lb/>
change for material<lb/>
comforts. For those wo-<lb/>
men who want it that<lb/>
way, it will be no<lb/>
problem, for there are<lb/>
plenty of men looking<lb/>
for women to wait on<lb/>
them and bolster their<lb/>
"masculinity<lb/>
Young women today,<lb/>
however, might be wse<lb/>
to weigh price and pri-<lb/>
vilege carefully. Unlike<lb/>
many women before us,<lb/>
we have grown up with<lb/>
exposure to education<lb/>
and ideas, and we have<lb/>
been made aware of the<lb/>
value of "doing" sbme-<lb/>
thing in society, is<lb/>
opposed to letting<lb/>
other- do everything for<lb/>
us. Main young women<lb/>
have found, to their<lb/>
dismay, that the) re-<lb/>
quire more from life<lb/>
than an expensive house<lb/>
to keep clean, and days<lb/>
filled with screaming<lb/>
children and arpools<lb/>
and suburban gossip.<lb/>
Those women who haw<lb/>
eomc to college to Wil<lb/>
time while "waiting" to<lb/>
earn their "Mrs.<lb/>
gree, would do well to<lb/>
actively pursue studies<lb/>
that will lead to a<lb/>
self-supporting career. It<lb/>
could very well mean<lb/>
the difference between<lb/>
paying the price tor a<lb/>
self-fulfilling lite, or<lb/>
having the "privilege"<lb/>
of waiting our ones<lb/>
davs "waiting on" some<lb/>
one else ? for every-<lb/>
thing.<lb/>
Letters<lb/>
Letters to the editor<lb/>
are welcome, however,<lb/>
they must contain the<lb/>
name, address, and l.D.<lb/>
number. No letter will<lb/>
be printed if they are<lb/>
not signed in ink by the<lb/>
person writing the<lb/>
letter.<lb/>
Letters must be re-<lb/>
ceived by noon. Mon-<lb/>
days and Wednesdays,<lb/>
at the newspaper office<lb/>
on the second floor ot<lb/>
the Publications Build-<lb/>
ing, which is directly<lb/>
across from Joyner Lib-<lb/>
rary.<lb/>
Letters will be edited<lb/>
for brevity, libel or<lb/>
obscenitv.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Steve Bachner<lb/>
Editor Marc Barnes<lb/>
Director of Advertising<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim<lb/>
Production Manager<lb/>
Anita Lancaster<lb/>
I News Editor Karen Wendt<lb/>
Asst. News Editor Lisa Drew<lb/>
Features Editor Bill Jones<lb/>
Asst. Features Editor Richard Green<lb/>
Asst. Director of Advertising Terry Herndon<lb/>
L<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN is the student<lb/>
of Eat Carolina University sponsored by the Media<lb/>
Board ot ECU and is distributed each Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during the academic year (weekly during<lb/>
the summer).<lb/>
Editorial opinions are those of the Editorial Board<lb/>
and do not necessarily reflect the opinions ol the<lb/>
university or the Media Board.<lb/>
Sports Editor Charles Chandler<lb/>
Asst. Sports Editor Jimmy DuPree<lb/>
Copy Editor Barry Clayton<lb/>
Asst. to the Editor Leigh Coakley<lb/>
Ad Tech Super Paul Linke<lb/>
Offices v located on the second floor of the<lb/>
Publications Center (Old South Building). Our<lb/>
mailing address is: Old SOuth Building, ECU,<lb/>
Greenville, NC 2734.<lb/>
The phone numbers are: 7S7-S3M, ?387,<lb/>
Subscriptions are $10 annually, alumni St annually.<lb/>
J<lb/>
<pb facs="00057211_0005"/><lb/>
eenville, N.C,<lb/>
0N TO THE<lb/>
PROBLEM . . .<lb/>
1 ?Tj-e'v<lb/>
wait<lb/>
- L-iety, as<lb/>
letting<lb/>
.thing tor<lb/>
g women<lb/>
I, to their<lb/>
the) re-<lb/>
from life<lb/>
?ive house<lb/>
in, and days<lb/>
-i reaming<lb/>
carpools<lb/>
gi i-ip.<lb/>
n ho have<lb/>
ge to kill<lb/>
? aiting1 to<lb/>
r Mrs de-<lb/>
uld do well to<lb/>
pursue -tudies<lb/>
will lead to a<lb/>
?sup g areer. It<lb/>
id very well mean<lb/>
ference between<lb/>
the price tur a<lb/>
-fulfilling life, or<lb/>
ing the "privilege"<lb/>
.Nailing our ones<lb/>
waiting on some<lb/>
even -<lb/>
Letters<lb/>
Letters to the editor<lb/>
in however,<lb/>
contain the<lb/>
SS, and I.D.<lb/>
etters will<lb/>
!?- printed if thej are<lb/>
not m ink the<lb/>
writing the<lb/>
? r.<lb/>
Letters mu-t be re-<lb/>
noon. Mon-<lb/>
days and Wednesdays,<lb/>
at the newspaper ollice<lb/>
on the second floor of<lb/>
the Publications Build-<lb/>
which i directly<lb/>
a ro? troni Joyner Lib-<lb/>
rar.<lb/>
Letter- will be edited<lb/>
brevity, libel or<lb/>
emt .<lb/>
Manager<lb/>
mcaster<lb/>
Charles Chandler<lb/>
Jimmy DuPree<lb/>
Barry Clayton<lb/>
Leigh Coakley<lb/>
Paul Linke<lb/>
econd floor of th?<lb/>
th Building). Our<lb/>
ith Building. ECU,<lb/>
p-6366. S367, 6309<lb/>
alumni $6 annually.<lb/>
Student's voting rights explained<lb/>
There has been a lot<lb/>
ol debate in the past<lb/>
lew years concerning<lb/>
the voting rights of<lb/>
students in their college<lb/>
towns. Recently in Or-<lb/>
ange County, the laws<lb/>
were challenged, but<lb/>
the tat Board of El-<lb/>
ections has not changed<lb/>
their position on the<lb/>
matter.<lb/>
Arc. ding to Reg-<lb/>
iter, at the Pitt County<lb/>
Board of Elections, the<lb/>
local voter registration<lb/>
offices have been in-<lb/>
structed to go by the<lb/>
guidelines set in 1972.<lb/>
The issue at hand is<lb/>
the right of a student<lb/>
to vote in either their<lb/>
residence or their dom-<lb/>
icile. According to the<lb/>
guideline "residence<lb/>
and domicile are not<lb/>
convertable terms<lb/>
Resdience is defined<lb/>
as "a person's place of<lb/>
abode, whether per-<lb/>
manent or temporary in<lb/>
the courts opinion.<lb/>
Domicile is defined as<lb/>
"one's permanent, esta-<lb/>
blished home as distin-<lb/>
guished from a tem-<lb/>
porary, although actual,<lb/>
place of rsidence La-<lb/>
ter in the instructions it<lb/>
gives two things which<lb/>
must be determined in<lb/>
order lor a place to be<lb/>
Student running<lb/>
for City Council<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Last Carolina may get the chance to have a<lb/>
voting student serve on the Greenville City Council.<lb/>
David Hunt, a senior, will be running for a seat<lb/>
in the upcoming City Countil election, to be held on<lb/>
October 8.<lb/>
"1 think a large portion of the Greenville<lb/>
population consists ol" students said Hunt, and he<lb/>
feels that the students deserve to have a say in the<lb/>
Cilv Council.<lb/>
For the past several years, whoever is holdingthe<lb/>
office of president of the SGA has the right to hold<lb/>
a seat on the City. Council, and speak before the<lb/>
Council, but does not have a vote on the Council.<lb/>
The population of Greenville is estimated at<lb/>
37,500, not including the nearly 12,000 students who<lb/>
are here 8 months out of the year.<lb/>
Hunt was born in Greenville, though he has only<lb/>
returned to the city since attending school at ECU.<lb/>
He plans to live in Greenville after his graduation.<lb/>
Right now the Council is dealing with the 10th<lb/>
Street overpass, which has been an issue for quite<lb/>
some tune now. and the possible construction of<lb/>
new bicycle paths in the downtown and campus<lb/>
areas.<lb/>
With the rising costs of parking, and gasoline, it<lb/>
is thought that bicycles will be in more use, in the<lb/>
very near future. Anyone who has walked or driven<lb/>
down 5th Street has' seen the traffic problems that<lb/>
the cyclist come- in contact with and can cause the<lb/>
automobile traffic.<lb/>
The proposed overpass at the junction of 10th<lb/>
Street and College Hill Drive has been a topic<lb/>
which has been length!) considered, but so far the<lb/>
unlv thing which has been done to attempt to solve<lb/>
the problem is the construction of crossing lights<lb/>
and caution lights near the intersection .<lb/>
Hunt is not sure that an overpass is the answer,<lb/>
being uncertain that if it were constructed it would<lb/>
be used b the hurried students attempting to get<lb/>
to class.<lb/>
II Hunt is elected lo the City Council it is hoped<lb/>
thai he will be able to provide a more active voice<lb/>
lor the students on the Cilv Council.<lb/>
Mopeds unsafe?<lb/>
termed a domicile.<lb/>
"First, residence; se-<lb/>
cond, the intent to<lb/>
make the place of re-<lb/>
sidence a home<lb/>
Another statement<lb/>
contained in the in-<lb/>
structions reads, "The<lb/>
questions whether a<lb/>
student's voting resi-<lb/>
dence is at the location<lb/>
of teh college he is at-<lb/>
tending or where he<lb/>
lived before he entered<lb/>
college, is a question of<lb/>
fact which depends up-<lb/>
on the circumstances of<lb/>
each individual's case.<lb/>
Domicile is a highly<lb/>
personal matter. The<lb/>
fact that one is a<lb/>
student in a unviversity<lb/>
does not entitle him to<lb/>
vote where he is situ-<lb/>
ated, not does it of<lb/>
itself prevent his voting<lb/>
there. He may vote at<lb/>
the seat of teh uni-<lb/>
versity if he has his re-<lb/>
sidence there and is<lb/>
otherwise qualified<lb/>
Later it states<lb/>
"Domicile is a fact<lb/>
which may be proved<lb/>
by direct end circum<lb/>
stantial evidence<lb/>
Some of the criteria<lb/>
which is used to deter-<lb/>
mine whether or not a<lb/>
person is residing in<lb/>
their residence or their<lb/>
domicile, is the way the<lb/>
student supports himself<lb/>
(independently or by his<lb/>
parents), and whether<lb/>
or not he is planning to<lb/>
stay in the city when<lb/>
he has graduated from<lb/>
the school.<lb/>
For students who do<lb/>
not have their domicile<lb/>
in the city of Greenville<lb/>
they must arrange to<lb/>
vote in their home<lb/>
towns by absentee bal-<lb/>
lot.<lb/>
Register termed the<lb/>
voting of students to be<lb/>
a "temporary situation,<lb/>
even though they may<lb/>
be there four years, or<lb/>
six years, or whatever.<lb/>
Students who desire<lb/>
to vote must arrange to<lb/>
have an absentee ballot<lb/>
sent ot them to be tab-<lb/>
ulated in their home-<lb/>
town elections.<lb/>
People, places,<lb/>
and<lb/>
tennis<lb/>
Tryouts for the Wo-<lb/>
men's Tennis Team will<lb/>
be held 4 pm this<lb/>
Thursday, Sept. 6 at<lb/>
the Minges tennis<lb/>
courts. Call Women's<lb/>
Athletic Office for more<lb/>
details.<lb/>
major<lb/>
attractions<lb/>
Student Union Major<lb/>
Attractions Committee<lb/>
members need to turn<lb/>
in their addresses and<lb/>
phone numbers to the<lb/>
STudent Union office<lb/>
immediately.<lb/>
ski<lb/>
Ski Organizational<lb/>
Meeting for Christmas<lb/>
and Spring Trip will be<lb/>
held Spet. 26, at 7<lb/>
p.m Brewster B wing<lb/>
102. For information,<lb/>
contact Jo Saunders,<lb/>
Memorial Gym at 757-<lb/>
6000.<lb/>
rugby<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL, NC<lb/>
(P) Increased in-<lb/>
surance and stricter<lb/>
saletv regulations are<lb/>
needed to halt a rising<lb/>
accident rale lor mo-<lb/>
peds, according to the<lb/>
author of an 580,000<lb/>
University of North<lb/>
Carolina study.<lb/>
"As long as the<lb/>
price of gas continues<lb/>
to rise and the main-<lb/>
tenance of vehicles con-<lb/>
tinues to rise and mo-<lb/>
peds remain a viable<lb/>
mode of transportation,<lb/>
I see sales going up<lb/>
and accidents going<lb/>
up said William W.<lb/>
Hunter of the Highway<lb/>
Safety Research Center<lb/>
in Chapel Hill.<lb/>
In North Carolina,<lb/>
the number of accidents<lb/>
involving mopeds in-<lb/>
creased from 105 in<lb/>
1976 to 212 in 1978,<lb/>
Hunter said. He said 27<lb/>
percent of moped ac-<lb/>
cidents in the state in<lb/>
1978 involved operators<lb/>
who had suspended dri-<lb/>
ver licenses.<lb/>
Hunter said a con-<lb/>
clusion of the study was<lb/>
that head injuries ac-<lb/>
counted for 35 to 55<lb/>
percent of all moped<lb/>
rider injuries and for 75<lb/>
to 80 percent of severe<lb/>
injuries and deaths.<lb/>
The study, funded<lb/>
by the U.S. Department<lb/>
of Transportation's Na-<lb/>
tional Highway Traffic<lb/>
Safety Adminisration,<lb/>
found that 1.2 percent<lb/>
of moped accidents re-<lb/>
sult in death, compared<lb/>
to .2 percent of motor<lb/>
vehicle accidents.<lb/>
Hunter said the<lb/>
number of moped fa-<lb/>
talities could be reduced<lb/>
by regulations requiring<lb/>
helmets and an oper-<lb/>
ator's license.<lb/>
dance<lb/>
Faculty Dance will<lb/>
begin Sept. 11. Can<lb/>
take 25 couples. Contact<lb/>
Jo Saunders, 757-6000,<lb/>
or come by Memorial<lb/>
Gym Room 205.<lb/>
poetry<lb/>
Rugby practices will<lb/>
begin on Tues Sept 4<lb/>
at 4 p.m. Practices will<lb/>
be held at the intra-<lb/>
mural fields behind the<lb/>
Allied Health Building<lb/>
every week on Tues<lb/>
Wed and Thurs. after-<lb/>
noons at 4 p.m. Anyone<lb/>
interested in playing<lb/>
should attend any of<lb/>
these practice sessions.<lb/>
For a little exercise and<lb/>
alot of good times,<lb/>
come on out and play<lb/>
some rugby.<lb/>
gymnastics<lb/>
Registration for<lb/>
Children's Gymnastics<lb/>
will be Wed Sept. 5<lb/>
? Ages 6-10 and<lb/>
Thurs Sept. 6 ? Ages<lb/>
11-16.<lb/>
Registration will be<lb/>
in the gymnastics room,<lb/>
Memorial Gym at 7<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
gamma beta phi<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi will<lb/>
meet Thurs. night at 7<lb/>
p.m. in Room 244,<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
The Poetry Forum<lb/>
will begin its bi-monthly<lb/>
meetings. Thr first me-<lb/>
eting will be Thursday<lb/>
evening at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
248 Mendenhall. It is<lb/>
an informal gathering of<lb/>
people interested in<lb/>
getting feedback. on<lb/>
their poetry. The only<lb/>
requirement is that you<lb/>
bring copies of your<lb/>
peotry to pass around<lb/>
to j the group. The<lb/>
Fdrum will regularly<lb/>
meet on the first and<lb/>
third Thursday in the<lb/>
same place at the same<lb/>
time.<lb/>
law<lb/>
The ECU Law So-<lb/>
ceity will ahve an or-<lb/>
ganizational meeting<lb/>
Wednesday, SEpt. 12th<lb/>
at 7:30 p.m. in room<lb/>
221 of Mendenhall.<lb/>
Anyone interested in<lb/>
law school andor the<lb/>
legal profession is wel-<lb/>
come. Great new things<lb/>
are being planned so<lb/>
please come!<lb/>
Wanted<lb/>
Waitresses<lb/>
Now taking<lb/>
applications<lb/>
pply in person<lb/>
2-4 Monday<lb/>
at the<lb/>
REE HOUSE<lb/>
PART-TIME<lb/>
JOB<lb/>
Looking for a part-time<lb/>
j ,b with flexible hours<lb/>
J real business<lb/>
? Northwest<lb/>
aii<lb/>
experience<lb/>
Mutual Life Ins. Co.<lb/>
has opening for college<lb/>
? Call b. fore noo'<lb/>
ii?r appoinlH'<lb/>
7BS-4080<lb/>
Part-time, flexible schedule: Sales<lb/>
Marketing position for enterprising student<lb/>
Includes opportunity to attend a 3 1 2 day<lb/>
seminar in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.<lb/>
Send return to CO. Tankard Co Inc. P.O. Box<lb/>
1025. Washington, N.C. 27888. Includa nama.<lb/>
address, phone number, sge, yesr in school,<lb/>
previous employment, Interests and future plans.<lb/>
Needed<lb/>
We are still taking applications for several positions on the<lb/>
East Carolinian Staff. If you are interested in joining us here at<lb/>
the paper come by andfdl out an application.<lb/>
Our office is open from 8 til 5 Monday through Friday, and<lb/>
most Monday and Wednesday evenings.<lb/>
Our office is in the Old South building, across from the library.<lb/>
on the second floor.<lb/>
Well see you soon.<lb/>
Makethecampusconnection.<lb/>
If you want to be listed in the ECU Telephone Directory<lb/>
for 79-80, you need to order your phone now.<lb/>
The deadline is September 7.<lb/>
You can place your order at the Carolina Telephone Phone<lb/>
ShopBusiness Office at 1530 Hooker Rd.<lb/>
So get in on the connection, and order your phone today.<lb/>
LTDE3 Carolina Telephone<lb/>
UNITED TELEPHONE SYSTEM<lb/>
WET T-SHIRT<lb/>
CONTEST<lb/>
WED. SEPT 18<lb/>
$100.00 1st PRIZE<lb/>
Now Accepting Entries<lb/>
758-3943<lb/>
STEEL DRIVIN<lb/>
BAND<lb/>
Plus<lb/>
PLUM<lb/>
HOLLOW<lb/>
Ladies $1.00<lb/>
CORRECTION<lb/>
TUMBLEWEED<lb/>
IS SCHEDULED FOR THE<lb/>
20th OF 8EPT.NOT THE 19th<lb/>
<pb facs="00057211_0006"/><lb/>
OPEN SUNDA YS<lb/>
9:00 to 9:00<lb/>
SHOP BIG STAR<lb/>
FOR LOW STAR<lb/>
- SA VER PRICES<lb/>
PRICES<lb/>
GOOD AT<lb/>
PITT PLAZ<lb/>
SHOPPING<lb/>
&amp; FARMVILLE<lb/>
SQUARE<lb/>
BIG STARS<lb/>
FOODS<lb/>
'RICES GOOD THRU<lb/>
SAT SEPT1, 1979<lb/>
QUANITY RIGHTS RESERVED<lb/>
NONE SOLD TO DEALERS OR RESTAURANT?<lb/>
CONVENIENTLY LOCATED IN<lb/>
ITT PLAZA SHOPPING CENTERl<lb/>
714 GREENVILLE BLVD. IN GREENVILE<lb/>
(OPEN MONthruSAT.8a.mtil10<lb/>
'QUALITY CONTROLLED'<lb/>
FRESHLY<lb/>
GROUND<lb/>
Gwaltney Franks<lb/>
12 oz. PKG<lb/>
<lb/>
b.1 ? 29<lb/>
CALIFORNIA<lb/>
GRAPES<lb/>
RED, BLACK OR<lb/>
WHITE SEEDLESS<lb/>
,x.<lb/>
SPAGHETTI<lb/>
FRANCO AMERICAN<lb/>
14.7 oz.<lb/>
CANS<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
GARNER'S<lb/>
"TEXAS PETE"<lb/>
HOT DOG<lb/>
Macaroni &amp; Cheese<lb/>
OUR<lb/>
PRIDE<lb/>
7.2 oz<lb/>
PKGS.<lb/>
CHILI SAt<lb/>
OT DOGS ??<lb/>
10.5 oz.<lb/>
CANS<lb/>
CHILI<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
NEW CROP!<lb/>
RED or<lb/>
GOLDEN DELICIOUS<lb/>
A PPLES 39<lb/>
lb<lb/>
PORK &amp; BEAAJS<lb/>
PHILLIP'S<lb/>
4 16oz. CANS 1.00<lb/>
SAVE ON ALL<lb/>
FLAVORS<lb/>
SEALTEST<lb/>
ICE<lb/>
CREAM<lb/>
HALF<lb/>
GALLON<lb/>
$1.49<lb/>
except buffer pecan<lb/>
16 oz. Ret. bottle<lb/>
plue<lb/>
deposit<lb/>
BOHEMIAN STYLE<lb/>
BEER<lb/>
CARTON OF SIX<lb/>
12 oz. CANS<lb/>
$1.59<lb/>
Th?- VM<lb/>
V<lb/>
De<lb/>
M7<lb/>
EC I :<lb/>
reputal<lb/>
deter mi<lb/>
Bu <lb/>
Kepley, Jil<lb/>
who l) . <lb/>
defennv t-<lb/>
The 19<lb/>
ranking<lb/>
Divis<lb/>
bj plaj<lb/>
Rej<lb/>
order<lb/>
D.T. J<lb/>
Chavi a<lb/>
of the<lb/>
tradition<lb/>
With<lb/>
question ml<lb/>
W<lb/>
The ni<lb/>
anxiou- stj<lb/>
to acquire!<lb/>
N.C S<lb/>
S me<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
seats po?<lb/>
for their i<lb/>
S UK-<lb/>
place to<lb/>
said one<lb/>
aked thej<lb/>
early. Ttv<lb/>
bouse<lb/>
Th?-<lb/>
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shift vn  i<lb/>
ground to<lb/>
The m<lb/>
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from ;<lb/>
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there was<lb/>
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key to i<lb/>
all to ht<lb/>
sunbathe<lb/>
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in the -t<lb/>
would ha<lb/>
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must ha<lb/>
showed u<lb/>
While<lb/>
left hght<lb/>
slay at <lb/>
ail one ?t<lb/>
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happens<lb/>
student.<lb/>
One<lb/>
nearb) I<lb/>
often<lb/>
Well.<lb/>
anyway.<lb/>
THE<lb/>
total of<lb/>
thrashing!<lb/>
Fullback<lb/>
Anthony<lb/>
Marvin C<lb/>
si;tt(<lb/>
in the gi<lb/>
he tallied<lb/>
NEITI<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057211_0007"/><lb/>
I he Easl Carolinian<lb/>
tiaii <lb/>
sports<lb/>
Tuesday, September 4,1979, page 7<lb/>
Greenville,NC.<lb/>
Anthonv Collins looks for hole<lb/>
"They (ECU) just overpowered<lb/>
us all over the field. They<lb/>
jumped on us early and we<lb/>
could never get in the game<lb/>
Bob Waters,<lb/>
WCU coach<lb/>
Defense answers some questions<lb/>
while others must still wait<lb/>
By JIMMY DUPREE<lb/>
Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
ECU football has gained through the years a<lb/>
reputation of being a defensive power with<lb/>
determination and esprit de corps as catalysts.<lb/>
But gone are the days of standout leaders Danny<lb/>
Kepley, Jim Bolding, Harold Randolph and others<lb/>
who typified the spirit which lived in the Pirate<lb/>
defensive rank.<lb/>
The 1978 unit gained national attention with a<lb/>
ranking of second in total defense among NCAA<lb/>
Division I schools. But even that unit was hard hit<lb/>
by player- terminating their eligibility.<lb/>
Replacing six talented starters would be a tall<lb/>
order for the Pirate coaching staff. Gerald Hall,<lb/>
D.T. Joyner, Oliver Felton, Tommy Summer, Fred<lb/>
Chaw and Zack Valentine (now an official member<lb/>
the Pittsburg Steelers) had developed that<lb/>
tradition to its peek.<lb/>
With those strongholds departed, a giant<lb/>
question mark traveled with the Pirate defense.<lb/>
Would ail-American candidate Mike Brewington<lb/>
The lines were long and hot yesterday as<lb/>
anxious students waited in line at Minges Coliseum<lb/>
to acquire tickets to upcoming Pirate games with<lb/>
N.C. State and North CArolina.<lb/>
Some of the studen .s were in line as early as<lb/>
Sunday night in anticipation of getting the best<lb/>
seats possible for the two biggest games of the year<lb/>
lor their dear, beloved Pirates.<lb/>
"Some guys from Western Carolina needed a<lb/>
place to stay Saturday night and we provided one<lb/>
said one ECU student. "So come Sunday night, we<lb/>
asked them to do us a favor; stand in the lines<lb/>
early. They did and we have the best seats in the<lb/>
house<lb/>
This is just one example of the lengths that<lb/>
students went to to get tickets to these games.<lb/>
Most of the students came in groups and took<lb/>
shifts waiting in line. Towels were laid on the<lb/>
ground to secure their spots in line.<lb/>
The mid-day hours were hot, miserably hot for<lb/>
the waiters. Many simply stayed on their towels and<lb/>
sunbathed while others got up and threw anything<lb/>
from frisbees to footballs to beer cans.<lb/>
"We had a great time out there said one<lb/>
student after the long wait was over. "Heck, it was<lb/>
like being beside a pool or something, except that<lb/>
there was not cool water to jump into<lb/>
Many red, lobster-like creatures departed from<lb/>
the lines outside of Minges after purchasing their<lb/>
keys to two big Saturday afternoons. "I'm burned<lb/>
all to heck said one of those who chose to<lb/>
sunbathe all day.<lb/>
"I wouldn't take anything for this chance to be<lb/>
in the sun said one ravishing young lady. "I<lb/>
would have been in the sun anyway so I told my<lb/>
boyfriend that I would wait in line for him. He<lb/>
must have trusted me here alone because he<lb/>
showed up an how<lb/>
While some left the lines sun-b urned, others<lb/>
left slightlv more relaxed than when they began to<lb/>
stay at Minges. "A little too much to drink was<lb/>
all one stumbling student could say as he lett the<lb/>
lines.  , , .i ?<lb/>
"I had a great time but I'm sure glad this<lb/>
happens only once a year stated a tired female<lb/>
student. ?<lb/>
One look at her and a young man standing<lb/>
nearby said, "Boy, 1 wish we could do this more<lb/>
f '<lb/>
WeB, they say the guys are the aggressors<lb/>
anyway. On to Raleigh and Chapel Hill.<lb/>
?????<lb/>
THE PIRATE BACKFIELD gained a handsome<lb/>
iota of 368 yards rushing in East CArolina s 31-o<lb/>
L h?n?Tf Western CArolina last Saturday night,<lb/>
thrashing ot western v.? .110 ?j halfhark<lb/>
Fullback Theodore Sutton gained 112 and halfback<lb/>
Anthony Collins totaled 95 in the victory. Reserve<lb/>
MasUTTC0ONb bTtHWAY, scored two touchdowns<lb/>
i. the game. This number is twice the fifrire that<lb/>
he tallied in his previous two seasons.<lb/>
NEITHER ECU OR NC bTA? "he,<lb/>
. Coinrdav are currently ranaea in mc?<lb/>
opponent sext Saturday, are c 7 <lb/>
Associated Press lop iwneiy. ?u<lb/>
! tmm a vicotry fo' either could mean a<lb/>
received votes. A vicoiry ??<lb/>
spot in the elite rankings the following week.<lb/>
be able to answer the pre-season pressure?<lb/>
Would Jeffrey Warren, Noah Clark, and John<lb/>
Hallow fill vacancies adequately? If not, who would?<lb/>
Saturday's contest with Western Carolina<lb/>
revealed some very bright spots to the ECU<lb/>
mentors, but it also revealed several short-comings.<lb/>
While the Pirate's allowed the Catamounts to<lb/>
amass 180 yards passing, WCU netted only eight on<lb/>
the ground with 26 carries.<lb/>
The Catamounts, though unable to penetrate<lb/>
ECU territory but three times during the contest,<lb/>
again plagued the Bucs with their aerial assault<lb/>
directed by senior quarterbacks Mike Pusey and<lb/>
Kent Briggs.<lb/>
THe pair connected on 12 out 24 passes, while<lb/>
throwing but one interception to Brewington in the<lb/>
second quarter.<lb/>
While statistics from the clash show Brewington<lb/>
with only one solo tackle and four other first hits,<lb/>
defensive head Coach Frank Orgel maintains the<lb/>
optomistic point of view.<lb/>
"Mike Brewington had a good game overall<lb/>
Orgel stated. "Western Carolina did not run the<lb/>
ball very much; we didn't expect them to.<lb/>
"He had that big interception for us near the<lb/>
end of the first half to end a drive and he knocked<lb/>
down a key pass in the end zone he added.<lb/>
Orgel added, however, that there is plenty of<lb/>
room for improvement. "We had way too many<lb/>
penalties on defense said the six year Pirate<lb/>
assistant. "They hurt us with some of their curl<lb/>
patterns. We missed some assignments that we<lb/>
shouldn't have.<lb/>
"They weren't a running footbali team Orgel<lb/>
offered. "Our game plan was to make them run by<lb/>
cutting off their passing attackwe just never made<lb/>
them run<lb/>
The only drive that produced any points for the<lb/>
Cats came late in the fourth quarter as the reserve<lb/>
defense took over.<lb/>
An outstanding first game performance was<lb/>
displayed by freshman defensive back Freddie Jones<lb/>
who made two solo tackles on the defensive<lb/>
specialty teams covering kickoffs and punts.<lb/>
Covering a second quarter Rodney Allen punt,<lb/>
Jones speared ECU wide receiver Jeff Dean just as<lb/>
the ball arrived for a no-gain effort.<lb/>
Sophomore tackle Matt Jones made one of the<lb/>
glowing plays of the reserve unit when he sacked<lb/>
Briggs at the Western three yard line for a loss of<lb/>
16.<lb/>
With 'the Western Carolina game as history,<lb/>
Orgel must now prepare the troups for a visit to<lb/>
Carter Stadium and the Wolfpack of N.C. State.<lb/>
"It's always a very physical game when we play<lb/>
State he noted. "We're just going to have to<lb/>
force the big plays<lb/>
Leander Green escapes grasp of Catamount defender<lb/>
Photo v Pete Podeszua<lb/>
Sutton gains 112<lb/>
Pirates down WCU<lb/>
ECUoffem<lb/>
impressive<lb/>
By JIMMY DUPREE<lb/>
Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
"They just overpow-<lb/>
ered us all over the<lb/>
field said Western<lb/>
Carolina Coach Bob<lb/>
Waters following a 31-6<lb/>
victory by the East<lb/>
Carolina University Pir-<lb/>
ates in the season<lb/>
opener.<lb/>
"They jumped on us<lb/>
early and we could<lb/>
never get in the<lb/>
game<lb/>
An appropriate anal-<lb/>
ysis considering the Pi-<lb/>
rates surprisingly sud-<lb/>
den march into the end<lb/>
zone only 2:23 into the<lb/>
contest.<lb/>
Leander Green op-<lb/>
ened the Buca' blitz-<lb/>
kreig with an 11-yard<lb/>
pass to split end Vern<lb/>
Davenport.<lb/>
Green continued to<lb/>
pass throughout the<lb/>
night with the consis-<lb/>
tency the team . has<lb/>
lacked for years.<lb/>
King of teh Gridiron<lb/>
Scholarship honoree<lb/>
Theodore Sutton rushed<lb/>
for two touchdowns<lb/>
while amassing a game<lb/>
high 112 yards on the<lb/>
ground.<lb/>
The pair of TD's<lb/>
doubled Sutton's career<lb/>
total.<lb/>
Sutton's first came<lb/>
with 2:01 remaining in<lb/>
the first half on a one<lb/>
yard blast up the mid-<lb/>
dle. The second Sutton<lb/>
gallup was from 13<lb/>
yards out.<lb/>
Kicker Bill Lamm<lb/>
completed the night in<lb/>
perfect fashion, con-<lb/>
necting on all four point<lb/>
after attempts and ad-<lb/>
ding a 24 yard field<lb/>
goal, rounding out the<lb/>
Pirate scoring.<lb/>
Running back An-<lb/>
thony Collins added 95<lb/>
yards rushing to the<lb/>
Pirates' impressive 368<lb/>
yard total. Reserve<lb/>
Marvin Cobb added 51<lb/>
coming off the bench.<lb/>
Green connected on<lb/>
six of 14 passes, while<lb/>
reserve Henry Trevathon<lb/>
(See OFFENSIVE page 8)<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
East Carolina fullback Theodore Sutton gained<lb/>
112 yards and scored two touchdowns, one more<lb/>
than he had in the previous two seasons, last<lb/>
Saturday before a Ficklen Stadium crown of 25,500<lb/>
to lead the Pirates to a 31-6 vicotry in-state rival<lb/>
Western CArolina.<lb/>
Sutton spearheaded a Pirate offense that<lb/>
amassed an astounding total of 514 yards. "We<lb/>
seemed to take advantage of opportunities real<lb/>
well said East CArolina head coach Pat Dye.<lb/>
While the offense was running over the<lb/>
Catamount defense, the Pirate defense held Western<lb/>
CArolina to a mere 8 yards rushing and only 188 in<lb/>
all.<lb/>
"It's hard for me to evaluate our defense said<lb/>
Dye. "While we did well against their running<lb/>
attack, our pass coverage fell apart a couple of<lb/>
times. On several occasions they gained big chunks<lb/>
of yardage<lb/>
The Pirates wasted very little time getting on<lb/>
the scoreboard. After Western kicker Ted Dunn<lb/>
slipped on the opening kickoff ECU linemen Wayne<lb/>
Inman recovered on the Pirate 40 to give ECU great<lb/>
field position.<lb/>
Two passes from Leander Green to Vern<lb/>
Davenport went for 32 yards before Green rolled<lb/>
right and ran 25 yards to put the Pirates on the<lb/>
board for the first time with only 2:33 gone in the<lb/>
contest.<lb/>
The Pirates did not score again until the 9:30<lb/>
mark of the second quarter when halfback Sam<lb/>
Han-ell's one-yard plunge capped an 83 yard drive.<lb/>
The drive included runs of 14 yards by Anthony<lb/>
Collins and 19 yards by Mike Hawkins. A Green to<lb/>
Davenport pass set up the score. Bill Lamm's kick<lb/>
increased the Pirate lead to 14-0.<lb/>
The Pirates' next scoring drive featured a<lb/>
spectacular 70-yard pass play from Green to Billy<lb/>
Ray Washington. Washington made a super catch as<lb/>
Green's toss was slightly underthrown. The pass left<lb/>
the ball on the Western 5-yard line.<lb/>
Two plays later Sutton crashed through the<lb/>
middle of the Pirate offensive line for one yard and<lb/>
the third ECU touchdown at the 12:01 mark of the<lb/>
first half. Bill Lamm's third extra point kick of the<lb/>
game gave the Pirates a 21-0 advantage at the half.<lb/>
Of the Green to Washington pass play, Dye<lb/>
simply asked, "Wasn't that something? The run<lb/>
after the catch was something too<lb/>
On thier first drive, of teh second half the<lb/>
Pirates drove from their own 28-yard line to the<lb/>
Catamount 34 before being stopped on fourth and<lb/>
one by the Western defense.<lb/>
Green and company picked up hwere they left<lb/>
off on the next possesion, driving 72 yards in 10<lb/>
plays for a touchdown. Theordore Sutton's 15-yard<lb/>
burst up the middle gave the Pirates a 27-0 lead<lb/>
that was increased by a point with the addition of a<lb/>
Lamm kick. Sutton ran for 33 yards in 3 carries on<lb/>
this drive alone.<lb/>
The Pirates scored on their very next possesion.<lb/>
A Henry Trevathan to Gerald Sykes pass that<lb/>
covered 14 yards and runs of 12 and 13 yards by<lb/>
Marvin Cobb set up a 24-yard Bill Lamm field goal<lb/>
put the Pirates comfortably on top at 31-0. The field<lb/>
goal came at the 12:08 mark4of the fourth period<lb/>
and completed a good night's work for Lamm, who<lb/>
was successful on each kick attempted during the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Lamm's success, along ' with that of punter<lb/>
Rodney Allen prompted Dye to comment on the<lb/>
Pirate kickers. "Our kicking game was good<lb/>
tonight he said. "Also, our kick coverage seemed<lb/>
to get better and better as the night wore on.<lb/>
Western got on the scoreboard on the drive<lb/>
immediately following Lamm's field goal, quickly<lb/>
driving 76 yards in 7 plays. The drive featured the<lb/>
passing of Cat quarterback Kent Briggs, who was<lb/>
subbing for starter Mike Pusey at the time.<lb/>
Briggs, facing a defense of mostly ECU reserves,<lb/>
began the drive with a 47-yard pass to split end<lb/>
Dwayne Norman that put the ball on the Pirate<lb/>
29-yard line. A 16-yard toss from Briggs to Jeff<lb/>
Dean moved Western even closer to paydirt.<lb/>
Two plays later, with third and two situation at<lb/>
hand and the ball on the ECU six-yard line, Briggs<lb/>
attempted a pass that was deflected by Pirate<lb/>
linebacker Mike Brewington. BLt a pass interference<lb/>
call on the East Carolina secondary nullified the<lb/>
play and put the ball on the Pirate one and gave<lb/>
the Cats a first down.<lb/>
One play later Western tailb'ack Leonard<lb/>
Williams swept around right end for the Catamounts<lb/>
only score of the game. Western attempted a<lb/>
two-point conversion that failed and seasled the final<lb/>
score at 31-6.<lb/>
Though the Pirate offense accumulated massive<lb/>
chunks of yardage all evening, Dye appeared<lb/>
concerned about one aspect of the game.<lb/>
"I was very disappointed in the number of<lb/>
penalties called against us he said, referring to<lb/>
the 110 yards assessed against the Pirates.<lb/>
"We went through the first 13 practices without<lb/>
any offside or holding calls on our first offensive<lb/>
unit. I just didn't expect to see us make this many-<lb/>
mistakes. We found that we have a problem in this<lb/>
area and must coreect it before next week<lb/>
"Next week" is when the Pirates face the<lb/>
Wolfpack of North Carolina State in what is always<lb/>
a big, big game for the Pirates and their fans.<lb/>
As for the game next week, Dye would only say,<lb/>
"We've got a chance Western Coach Bob Waters<lb/>
must feel the same way.<lb/>
Pirate-Catamount stats<lb/>
WCU 0 0 0 6-6<lb/>
ECU 7 14 7 3-31<lb/>
ECU?Green 25 run (Lamm kick)<lb/>
ECU?Harrell 1 run (Lamm kick)<lb/>
ECU?Sutton 1 run (Lamm kick)<lb/>
ECU?Sutton 15 run (Lamm kick)<lb/>
ECU?Lamm 24 field goal<lb/>
WCU?Williams 1 run (run failed)<lb/>
A-25,500<lb/>
INDIVIDUAL STATS<lb/>
Rushing<lb/>
ECU?Sutton 12-112, Collins 16-95, Green 5-7,<lb/>
Hawkins 5-23, Harrell 5-47, Cobb 10-51, Freeman<lb/>
1-2, sykes 1-10, Nelson 7-26, Blue 3-(7). Team<lb/>
totals: 66-368.<lb/>
WCU?Pusey 3-1, Cunningham 2-10, Brown<lb/>
11-18, Williams 6-18, Briggs 4-(-39). Team totals:<lb/>
26-8. Passing<lb/>
ECU?Green 6-14-0, 132 yards, Trevathan 1-1-0,<lb/>
14; Nelson 0-1-0, 0. Team totals: 7-16-0, 146 yards. <lb/>
WCU?Pusey 5-10-1, 64 yards, Briggs 7-14-0<lb/>
116. Team totals: 12-24-1, 180.<lb/>
Pass receiving<lb/>
ECU?Davenport 3-49, Washington, 2-84, Harrell<lb/>
1-0, Sykes 1-14.<lb/>
'wcu8dean 5-67, McGill 3-23, Brown 1-9, Norman<lb/>
3-81.<lb/>
4<lb/>
u<lb/>
<pb facs="00057211_0008"/><lb/>
Page 8 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 4 September 1979<lb/>
Stojzs,<lb/>
Unique Gifts<lb/>
and<lb/>
Accessories<lb/>
Dfie. gazebo<lb/>
201 ?. 5tfi Stxe.e.t<lb/>
faxttnvdU.cN.C. 752-9384<lb/>
Willie Holley nabs WCU back Leonard Williams<lb/>
Offensive team<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
hit on his nl attmept<lb/>
ami freshman Carlton<lb/>
Nelson missed hi sole<lb/>
?rt.<lb/>
Nelson, a speedster<lb/>
li .in Portsmouth, ir-<lb/>
a, has impressed the<lb/>
Pirate coaches with his<lb/>
rapid adaptation to the<lb/>
wishb ne attack, having<lb/>
played under a different<lb/>
offense while earning<lb/>
Portsmouth ami all-<lb/>
Region honors.<lb/>
"W c didn't make<lb/>
mistakes offensively<lb/>
thai we did last year<lb/>
. d ECl roach Pat<lb/>
De. "When we got the<lb/>
opportunity to score on<lb/>
offense, we took advan-<lb/>
tage of it<lb/>
The Catamounts re-<lb/>
mained scoreless until<lb/>
the reserve defensive<lb/>
unit was installed in the<lb/>
fourth quarter.<lb/>
With 9:06 remaining<lb/>
in the contest, Leonard<lb/>
Williams put WCU on<lb/>
the board with a dive<lb/>
from one yard out. A<lb/>
run attempt by Williams<lb/>
for the extra point fell<lb/>
short.<lb/>
"I'm proud of our<lb/>
offense said Dye.<lb/>
"We didn't have a<lb/>
turnover.<lb/>
"I'm very, very dis-<lb/>
appointed in our num-<lb/>
ber of penalties,<lb/>
though. The penalties<lb/>
took us out of some<lb/>
situations that could<lb/>
ahve become scoring<lb/>
situations.<lb/>
"I feel like Leander<lb/>
Green can throw the<lb/>
ball well and threw it<lb/>
well. I think the backs<lb/>
on the first unit blocked<lb/>
well he added.<lb/>
? ECU FOOTBALL HOSTESSES<lb/>
Got in on the action, support the<lb/>
1979 Pirate Football Team! If you<lb/>
are interested In becoming a<lb/>
football hostess, a meeting is<lb/>
scheduled for Thursday, Sept. 6,<lb/>
at the Scales Fleldhouse; 7:30pm.<lb/>
In case of a conflict, call:<lb/>
757-6330,<lb/>
ask for Coach Wallace.<lb/>
FOR INSURANCE CALL:<lb/>
Bill McDonald<lb/>
Phone: 752-6680<lb/>
Located on ?. 10th St.<lb/>
(next to King's Sandwich Shop)<lb/>
STATE FARM INSURANCE COMPANIES<lb/>
HOME OFFICES: BLOOMING TON, ILLINOIS<lb/>
r-c:<lb/>
NCAA football set<lb/>
to get underway<lb/>
IMF. ASSOCIATED<lb/>
PRESS<lb/>
rhe preliminaries<lb/>
over and the stage<lb/>
is i tor<lb/>
e<lb/>
son to<lb/>
action.<lb/>
With I<lb/>
the stars of<lb/>
football sea-<lb/>
swing into<lb/>
Collegia t<lb/>
sociation'<lb/>
ittle fanfare,<lb/>
he National<lb/>
Athletic As-<lb/>
Division I-A<lb/>
teams ? none of them in<lb/>
Associated Press<lb/>
Top Twenty?got the<lb/>
season under way Sat-<lb/>
urday. Next weekend,<lb/>
the teams with numbers<lb/>
before their names take<lb/>
T.<lb/>
No. 1-ranked South-<lb/>
ern California, the pre-<lb/>
season choice to capture<lb/>
the national champion-<lb/>
ship, opens at Texas<lb/>
Tech while runnerup<lb/>
Alabama, the defending<lb/>
national champion, trav-<lb/>
- to Georgia Tech to<lb/>
kick off ABC's 1979<lb/>
television package.<lb/>
Oklahoma, Texas,<lb/>
Penn State, Nebraska<lb/>
and Notre Dame, the<lb/>
pre-season 3-4-5-8-9<lb/>
teams, arc idle while<lb/>
sixth-ranked Purdue en-<lb/>
tertains Wiscounsin, No.<lb/>
7 Michigan hosts<lb/>
Northwestern and No.<lb/>
10 Michigan State is at<lb/>
home against Illinois.<lb/>
In the Second Ten,<lb/>
No. U Georgia, No. 17<lb/>
Pitt and No. 20 Arkan-<lb/>
sas aren't scheduled but<lb/>
No. 12 Missouri enter-<lb/>
tains San Diego State,<lb/>
No. 13 Stanford is at<lb/>
Tulane, No. 14 Texas<lb/>
A&amp;M meets Brigham<lb/>
Young in Houston,<lb/>
Wyoming is at No. 15<lb/>
 ashington, No. 16<lb/>
Houston at UCLA Cal-<lb/>
ifornia at No. 18<lb/>
Arizona State Southern<lb/>
Mississippi at No. 19<lb/>
Florida State.<lb/>
On the small-scale<lb/>
opening weekend the<lb/>
spotlight belonged to<lb/>
Hubert Oliver, who<lb/>
rushed for 196 yards on<lb/>
25 carries as Arizona<lb/>
whipped Colorado State<lb/>
33-17. Richard Hersey<lb/>
added 120 yards on 15<lb/>
rushes while Jim Krohn<lb/>
ran for two touchdowns<lb/>
and passed to Oliver for<lb/>
one. ?<lb/>
To get things off on<lb/>
the right foot there<lb/>
were even a couple of<lb/>
upsets. Tulsa bowed to<lb/>
McNeese State 6-3 on<lb/>
second-half field goals<lb/>
of 47 and 40 yards by<lb/>
Don Stump while West<lb/>
Texas State blanked<lb/>
Southern Illinois 14-0 in<lb/>
a Missouri Valley Con-<lb/>
ference game as half-<lb/>
back-quarterback Clint<lb/>
Plant scampered 85<lb/>
yards for one touchdown<lb/>
and engineered a 67-<lb/>
ard drive for the other.<lb/>
The MVC was the<lb/>
onlv conference with<lb/>
4<lb/>
league games. New<lb/>
Mexico State trimmed<lb/>
Wichita State 23-13 as<lb/>
Howard Greathouse<lb/>
rushed for 134 yards<lb/>
and Ray Locklin added<lb/>
115 and Indiana State<lb/>
downed Drake 19-12<lb/>
despite Mark Menden-<lb/>
h all's MVC-record four<lb/>
field goals.<lb/>
Del Rodgers galloped<lb/>
60 yards for a first-<lb/>
period score and Mark<lb/>
Anderson returned an<lb/>
interception for a 20yard<lb/>
touchdown 44 seconds<lb/>
later as Utah whipped<lb/>
Long Beach State 34-10.<lb/>
Brad Wright completed<lb/>
16 of 22 passes for 171<lb/>
yards to lead New-<lb/>
Mexico past Louisiana<lb/>
Tech 34-0.<lb/>
Two of the nation's<lb/>
winningest independent<lb/>
teams were easy victors.<lb/>
Bernard Jackson scored<lb/>
on runs of 13 and 18<lb/>
yards and rushed for<lb/>
127 over-all as North<lb/>
Texas State pounded<lb/>
Texas-El Paso 35-0 and<lb/>
Theodore Sutton gained<lb/>
112 yards on just 12<lb/>
carries, two of them for<lb/>
touchdowns, to pace<lb/>
East Carolina over<lb/>
Western Carolina 31-6.<lb/>
Hal King passed 19<lb/>
yards to Kevin Sigue<lb/>
with just over a minute<lb/>
remaining to lift South-<lb/>
western Louisiana past<lb/>
North-east Louisiana 17-<lb/>
13. Eastern Michigan<lb/>
was the only other<lb/>
Division I-A team in<lb/>
action. The Hurons de-<lb/>
feated Division II<lb/>
Northern Michigan 21-7.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057211_0009"/><lb/>
4 September 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN F?je 9<lb/>
wcu<lb/>
Lady Pirate<lb/>
practice starts<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
P<lb/>
In. c<lb/>
Marvin Cobbruns for some of his 51 yards in 31-6 Pirate win<lb/>
Mike Hawkins "flips out"<lb/>
WCU receiver goes down<lb/>
Photos by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
By JIMMY DUPREE<lb/>
Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
Although the Lady<lb/>
Pirate basketball season<lb/>
is still over two months<lb/>
away, preparations for<lb/>
season opener began<lb/>
today.<lb/>
Head coach Cathy<lb/>
Andruzzi announced<lb/>
Monday that open try-<lb/>
outs will be conducted<lb/>
during the next week<lb/>
and that any interested<lb/>
student should contact<lb/>
her in Minges Coli-<lb/>
seum, or call 757-6384.<lb/>
While only two<lb/>
players were lost from<lb/>
last season's team (Gale<lb/>
Kerbaugh and April<lb/>
ROss), Andruzzi states,<lb/>
"There are positions on<lb/>
the squad for twelve<lb/>
girls. Whoever wants to<lb/>
play and hustle the<lb/>
most will make the<lb/>
squad<lb/>
Starters Rosie Thom-<lb/>
pson, Lynn Emerson,<lb/>
Marcia Girven and<lb/>
Lydia Rountree return<lb/>
from the 1978-79 squad<lb/>
which possessed speed<lb/>
but lacked the depth<lb/>
needed in a champion-<lb/>
ship team.<lb/>
In an effort to al-<lb/>
eviate the problem,<lb/>
Andruzzi and assistant<lb/>
Marcia Richards re-<lb/>
cruited a host of tal-<lb/>
ented high school<lb/>
players and tranfers to<lb/>
add needed experience<lb/>
and freshmen to build<lb/>
for the future.<lb/>
Junior Guard Laurie<lb/>
Sikes joins the Lady<lb/>
Pirates via Peace Col-<lb/>
lege, Raleigh. Sikes<lb/>
possesses the quick<lb/>
hands and alert vision<lb/>
that should earn the 5-6<lb/>
newcomer a spot near<lb/>
the top of the roster.<lb/>
Other tranfer ath-<lb/>
letes include Kathy<lb/>
Reilley, a 5-9 forward<lb/>
from Middle Tennessee<lb/>
College where she was<lb/>
the ninth leading scorer<lb/>
in AIAW Region II.<lb/>
Heidi Owen, a 5-8<lb/>
forward, joins the Lady<lb/>
Pirates through Wagner<lb/>
College.<lb/>
Freshmen talent<lb/>
brought in this season<lb/>
includes scholarship<lb/>
players Donna Moody,<lb/>
Mary Denkler and<lb/>
Donna Brayboy, as well<lb/>
as talented walk-on<lb/>
Fran Hooks from nearby<lb/>
Goldsboro.<lb/>
Sikes, Moody, Den-<lb/>
kler and Hooks partic-<lb/>
ipated in the Pat Ken-<lb/>
nedy Invitational Bas-<lb/>
ketball Camps held this<lb/>
summer in Ohio, Mas-<lb/>
sachusetts and Atlanta,<lb/>
Georgia.<lb/>
"We're anxious to<lb/>
get the girls in the<lb/>
gym said Andruzzi.<lb/>
"We at least have a<lb/>
little more depth than<lb/>
we had last year.<lb/>
"What we really<lb/>
want to do right now is<lb/>
start getting the girls<lb/>
into a routine<lb/>
Afternoon workouts<lb/>
in Minges Coliseum ac-<lb/>
companied by three<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057211_0010"/><lb/>
Page<lb/>
,0 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 4 September 1979<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
features<lb/>
Page 10 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 4 September 1979<lb/>
Woodstock revisited<lb/>
By JAY STONE<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
1 am standing in line with what I would estimate<lb/>
to br 300 people varying in cultural backgrounds,<lb/>
from college students to counter culture reprobates<lb/>
resplendent in suspenders and bandanas. The crowd<lb/>
i- talking in a muted, bordering on reverant,<lb/>
hesitant murmer. Two guys in front of me are<lb/>
comparing notes on their experiences at orientation.<lb/>
Finally, the theater doors open and the crowd<lb/>
begins to filter in and assume seats. The<lb/>
management, however is intent upon delaying the<lb/>
film until everyone can be seated which inevitably<lb/>
becomes a rather tedious, drawn out process.<lb/>
Having reached the limits of its patience, the<lb/>
audience begins to chant "Woodstock Woodstock<lb/>
Woodstock It begins sporatically at first, but soon<lb/>
the entire theater is contributing to the refrain.<lb/>
"Woodstock Woodstock<lb/>
A spirit of unification quickly envelopes the<lb/>
audience. Inevitably, perhaps prompted by our<lb/>
chant, the film documentary of the "Woodstock<lb/>
Aquarian Music and Art Fair" (as it was originally<lb/>
christened) opens to a full house and a raucous<lb/>
round of applause.<lb/>
The tact that Woodstock has been preserved on<lb/>
film lor our generation is a tribute to the foresight<lb/>
of Michael Lang, the man who is generally<lb/>
acknowledged to have been responsible for<lb/>
envisioning, planning, and promoting Woodstock.<lb/>
Mike Lang, proprietor of a head shop in the<lb/>
Coconut Grove section of Miami, went on to<lb/>
promote several concerts in the Miami area and<lb/>
eventually produced the Miami Pop Festival which<lb/>
featured Jimi Hendrix, The Mothers of Invention,<lb/>
The Blues Image, Blue Cheer, John Lee Hooker,<lb/>
Chuck Berry, and Arther Brown.<lb/>
Janis Joplin<lb/>
Shortly after the Miami Pop Festival, Lang<lb/>
moved to Woodstock, N.Y. where he met Artie<lb/>
Kornfeld, vice president of A&amp;R records.With the<lb/>
assistance of Kornfeld, Lang conceived of a<lb/>
Woodstock festival and began working to bring his<lb/>
vision to cognition.<lb/>
Alter consulting an attorney, Lang was steered<lb/>
to John Roberts and Joel Rosenmann who ultimately<lb/>
agreed to finance the festival for an initial<lb/>
investment of $500,000. Subsequently, a corporation<lb/>
was formed with Lang, Kornfeld, Roberts, and<lb/>
Rosenmann acting as its principals, although Roberts<lb/>
and Rosenmann were both opposed to admitting<lb/>
kornfeld who had very little invested in the<lb/>
venture.<lb/>
Alter attempting to secure several sites for the<lb/>
festival, the promoters eventually settled on Wallkill,<lb/>
N.Y. A scant four weeks before Woodstock was<lb/>
scheduled to premiere, however, a hostile town<lb/>
board refused to grant the necessary permits to<lb/>
hold the event. Miraculously, the same Friday that<lb/>
Wallkill refused to grant vital permits, Lang spotted<lb/>
Max Yasgur's 600 acre dairy farm. Between Friday<lb/>
and Saturday morning Max Yasgur and Mike Lang<lb/>
had reached an agreement on the farm for $50,000.<lb/>
Work began on the land immediately since time<lb/>
now bore a very high premium.<lb/>
Yasgur was one of the wealthiest people in<lb/>
White Lake, N.Y. and until the show was over he<lb/>
was virtually alienated by the rest of the<lb/>
community. He was a very noble and courageous<lb/>
man. Although hippies and rock music were outside<lb/>
of his experience and probably frightened him, he<lb/>
transcended his inhibitions and prejudices.<lb/>
Later in the festival when there was word out<lb/>
that the residents of White Lake were selling water<lb/>
to the kids, Max put up a big "Free Water" sign<lb/>
on his barn. By the end of the event he had<lb/>
become indoctrinated into the "Woodstock Nation<lb/>
He called a press conference on his lawn and gave<lb/>
a twenty-eight-page testimonial to the festival.<lb/>
Woodstock itself has been romanticized to some<lb/>
extent. Things were ripped off, two out of the three<lb/>
days were marred by rain, and many of the arts<lb/>
anil crafts exhibits had to be cancelled due to the<lb/>
change in sites and lack of preparation. For all<lb/>
practical purposes, though, it went down exactly the<lb/>
wa it has been told and retold; one generation to<lb/>
another.<lb/>
It is difficult to conceive of a pre-Woodstock<lb/>
America. Most of my own recollections are vague,<lb/>
but there was a time when kids were expelled from<lb/>
school simply for wearing their hair long or dressing<lb/>
in clothing identifiable with counter-culture values.<lb/>
The styles in clothing and hair in the 1960's<lb/>
were the antithesis of the Paris and New York<lb/>
fashion world. Clothing was created out of the<lb/>
culture and people made a social-political statement<lb/>
 l . ?? n American. Photo bv Michael Lee<lb/>
The 'Woodstock Nation" was defiant and unconventional but not an American v<lb/>
by the clothing they wore. Dressing with the same such as yoga, and ?f-? ?? ?<lb/>
?'1t was an insult to solid red blooded Americans through ?ugs n<lb/>
a defiant infringement on their territory. The ln drug culture b<lb/>
conventions of patriotic dress were challenged: The more critically than any other ?? <lb/>
stars and stripes were transmogrified into shorts, counter-culture. Consequently drugs beciffl<lb/>
at i"ts, bs, and headband This was a new unifying factor in the ?? A noraRy<lb/>
r ,rw?.i-m wbirh tn the rest of America puritanical establishment simply tailed to compre<lb/>
rrraDa :?h er s;mb?,5 a?d if  ?-?-? r&amp; ess<lb/>
decals of flowers were signs of identification with enlightenment through drug Their onlj "Per'e"ce<lb/>
2 peace movement or drug movement or both. had been with alcohol, nuot.ne.<lb/>
vour<lb/>
car stopped and searched<lb/>
These could get<lb/>
anytime.<lb/>
In the ears preceding the festival the country<lb/>
had undergone tremendous turmoil: John F.<lb/>
Kennedy, Martin Luther King, and Robert Kennedy<lb/>
were as'sasinated. We were engaged in a war that,<lb/>
by and large, did not have the support of the<lb/>
people who were being asked to fight it. There<lb/>
were student riots at Berkle) and Columbia. The<lb/>
Chicago Democratic Convention was a fiasco of<lb/>
colossal scope. (In retrospect Richard Daley's<lb/>
reactionary stance in regard to the youth movement<lb/>
was predictable considering that he posted a<lb/>
twenty-lour hour guard on all of Chicago's water<lb/>
and or perscription drugs such as val.ums<lb/>
qualudes, amphetamines, etc theretore drugs had<lb/>
always been associatd with stupefication or<lb/>
schizophrenia and the unpleasant side-effects oi<lb/>
frayed nerves and hangovers. Ultimately, the) were<lb/>
believed to promote violence.<lb/>
Drugs played a large role at Woodstock.<lb/>
Whether or not they actually helped to promote<lb/>
harmonj and tranquility is anybody's guess, but the<lb/>
fact remains that there were no injuries resulting<lb/>
from violence treated by festival physicians.<lb/>
Michael Lang took great pleasure in discouraging<lb/>
the sale of alcohol, the drug of the establishment<lb/>
which discouraged the sale of marijuana. Although<lb/>
SSSr 'wSSr The hip7ZZL2r drugs were a par, of Woodstoc, j ??-??<lb/>
dose the City's drinking water w.th LSD during the even, that requtred a degree ol mobthtv and a<lb/>
convention.) . .<lb/>
By the time of Woodstock, oriental philosophies see page twelve please<lb/>
Costa Rica trip<lb/>
gave new insight<lb/>
BY RICHARD GREEN<lb/>
Assistant Features Editor<lb/>
s I slipped the tape box onto the shelf, my<lb/>
tars were still aching from wearing those<lb/>
cumbersome headpones for three hours.<lb/>
1 was leaving the language lab when I saw a<lb/>
notice, "Costa Rica Trip on the bulletin board.<lb/>
That turned out to be the best notice I ever read.<lb/>
The poster said to see Dr. Robert Cramer in the<lb/>
Brewster Building, room A-222, so I decided to drop<lb/>
bj on my way to Spanish class to check this thing<lb/>
out.<lb/>
Dr. Cramer is an interesting and friendly man<lb/>
with alot of first-hand knowledge of Latin America.<lb/>
He and his wife have traveled extensively and have<lb/>
been the faculty advisors for the Costa Rica<lb/>
program for seven years.<lb/>
Being an avid photographer "Doc" showed me<lb/>
some beautiful slides of Costa Rica, and I<lb/>
immediately knew that I had to visit this tropical<lb/>
wonderland.<lb/>
But what about the cost of this exotic<lb/>
excursion. And what classes are offered? And I<lb/>
don't even speak Spanish!<lb/>
He explained that the cost was the same as one<lb/>
semester at ECU, a program fee of $425, plus a<lb/>
plane ticket, necessary visas and spending money.<lb/>
Each of the fifteen students in the program<lb/>
would live with a Costa Rican family at a cost of<lb/>
$100.00 per month, which includes room and board,<lb/>
and laundry done usually once a day.<lb/>
I wish I could live in Greenville that cheaply.<lb/>
The courses offered this year include Tropical<lb/>
Biology, Geography of Middle America, Spanish<lb/>
Conversation, Spanish Culture, Field Studies and a<lb/>
new course in folk dancing.<lb/>
One of the following courses will be offered,<lb/>
depending on student interest Economic Develop-<lb/>
ment of Central America, International Relations of<lb/>
Central America or Social Institutions of Costa Rica.<lb/>
All courses are taught in English (except<lb/>
Spanish, of coarse!)<lb/>
So the pressure lo know Spanish was off, as<lb/>
lur as classes were concerned, but what about the<lb/>
rest of the time?<lb/>
You cannot begin lo imagine what it is like to<lb/>
be dropped off at a strange home, in a strange<lb/>
country, where nobody speaks English. It was the<lb/>
mosi difficult, yet exciting experience of my life.<lb/>
Luckily, my Costa Rican brother, Juan, was there<lb/>
to greel me in good English, and to help translate<lb/>
. to tlie rest of my family.<lb/>
Pops in Kinston<lb/>
Jeanie Vasicek gets a shower, Puerto<lb/>
Vargas style, from Lotto, a park service<lb/>
But that only lasted for the first day. He is<lb/>
married to an American girl from Elizabeth City,<lb/>
N.C whom he met when she lived there during<lb/>
the second Costa Rica Program. They live a few<lb/>
blocks away.<lb/>
I had taken Spanish 1001 so I didn't have too<lb/>
many problems. Other students had members of the<lb/>
household who spoke English, which turned out to<lb/>
be a disadvantage. They didnt have to speak<lb/>
Spanish and tney didn't learn.<lb/>
4You cannot imagine what it is<lb/>
like to be dropped a off at a<lb/>
strange home, in a country,<lb/>
where nobody speaks English<lb/>
Universad Nacional in Heredia, Costa Rica, was<lb/>
our home base for most of our classes, and was<lb/>
within walking distance of most of our homes.<lb/>
Three students lived in an outlying city, San<lb/>
Pablo, and had to ride the bus to school.<lb/>
But the Field Studies course took us all over the<lb/>
country for anywhere from one-to four-day trips.<lb/>
Before I left I had been to more parts of the<lb/>
worker. Lotto has been on two voyages<lb/>
with Jacques Cousteau. Photo by Richard Green<lb/>
country than anyone in my family (my Costa Rican<lb/>
family, that is )<lb/>
In this small country located between Nicaragua<lb/>
ana Panama, the climate varies from cool,<lb/>
mountaineous regions to tropical rain forests to arrid<lb/>
fiatlands to beautiful beaches. And we saw it all.<lb/>
While we were in Costa Rica the conflict in<lb/>
Nicaragua was boiling, and I imagined stepping off<lb/>
the plane in San Jose, the capital of Costa Rica,<lb/>
and being picked off by a sniper. But we probably<lb/>
heard less about the situation than the people in<lb/>
the States.<lb/>
The only real crisis that any of us had to face<lb/>
was "culture shock The Cramers were always<lb/>
there to help us work out whatever problem might<lb/>
arise.<lb/>
We also had an indispensible friend, Jorge<lb/>
Saenz, who works at the universidad and places us<lb/>
in families, to help iron out differences with Mama<lb/>
and Papa.<lb/>
It was a great experience and it gave everyone a<lb/>
chance for a new perspective on the good ol'<lb/>
U.S. of  You dont realize how good we have it!<lb/>
And if you are interested in learning Spanish,<lb/>
the third largest spoken language of the world, this<lb/>
is your chance.<lb/>
We met an American man in Cost Rica who<lb/>
thought he had mastered the language. He ordered<lb/>
a drink in a restaurant and the waiter cringed,<lb/>
hurried away, and soon returned with the manager.<lb/>
The man had ordered cattle laxative.<lb/>
A Pops Concert by<lb/>
the North Carolina<lb/>
Symphony is scheduled<lb/>
for Tuesday, September<lb/>
18th in Kinston.<lb/>
The concert will be<lb/>
held at Northwest Ele-<lb/>
mentary School Auditor-<lb/>
ium in Kinston at 8:15<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Associate Conductor<lb/>
James Ogle will lead<lb/>
the orchestra for this<lb/>
performance.<lb/>
Associate Conductor<lb/>
James Ogle is now in<lb/>
iiis sixth season with<lb/>
the North Carolina<lb/>
Symphony. He joined<lb/>
the Symphony after<lb/>
winning the Symphony's<lb/>
first Young Conductors<lb/>
Competition in 1974, the<lb/>
same year he won the<lb/>
Malko International<lb/>
Conducting Competition<lb/>
in Denmark.<lb/>
Formerly the Assist-<lb/>
ant Conductor of the<lb/>
University of Michigan<lb/>
Orchestra and Arts<lb/>
Chorale, Mr. Ogle has<lb/>
studied at the National<lb/>
Conservatory of Music<lb/>
in Paris and with Igor<lb/>
Markevitch in France.<lb/>
The N&amp;rth Carolina<lb/>
Symphony is the only<lb/>
major orchestra between<lb/>
Atlanta and Washing-<lb/>
ton, D.C having won<lb/>
acclaim from critics in<lb/>
New York, Washington<lb/>
D.C Chicago and<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Performing concerts<lb/>
to adult audiences and<lb/>
educational matinees for<lb/>
N.C. school children,<lb/>
the orchestra and its<lb/>
ensembles travel more<lb/>
than 19,000 miles each<lb/>
year and play to aud-<lb/>
iences totalling more<lb/>
than 280,000 people.<lb/>
Single tickets will<lb/>
be $6 for adults and $3<lb/>
for students, senior cit-<lb/>
izens and Symphony<lb/>
society members.<lb/>
West breaks vow<lb/>
NEW YORK AP?<lb/>
Mae West is making<lb/>
her debut next week as<lb/>
a huckster in a radio<lb/>
commercial, or, as she<lb/>
puts it, "breaking my<lb/>
vow of commercial<lb/>
chastitv<lb/>
The wise-cracking<lb/>
stage and screen actress<lb/>
has signed for several<lb/>
30-second commercials<lb/>
for Poland Spring<lb/>
Water, premiering in<lb/>
California, it was an-<lb/>
nounced Wednesday.<lb/>
Miss West claims to<lb/>
be 86 years old?one<lb/>
the rare occasions when<lb/>
she will discuss her<lb/>
age. In her first com-<lb/>
mercial scheduled for<lb/>
showing Tuesday, she<lb/>
kids herself on the<lb/>
subject of age by say-<lb/>
ing:<lb/>
"I've been drinking<lb/>
Poland Spring Water for<lb/>
about?hmm?20 years.<lb/>
Started when 1 was<lb/>
four.<lb/>
"I'm just crazy a-<lb/>
bout i she says of<lb/>
the product. I in-<lb/>
vited the boys<lb/>
from Poland Spring to<lb/>
come up and see me<lb/>
some time?and they<lb/>
did. The rest, as they<lb/>
say, is history<lb/>
.MMa<lb/>
iliillllllllliiH1t?<lb/>
 ?' 4teT 4i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057211_0011"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
Pag? 11 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 4 September 1979<lb/>
Albums spotlighted<lb/>
The spirit of a game sometimes carries over into the crowd,<lb/>
Widow arrested for stealing food<lb/>
SAN VNT0N10,<lb/>
X! AP?When she<lb/>
irrested for shop-<lb/>
eries lat<lb/>
ar-old Mat-<lb/>
. . was dest-<lb/>
. and alone.<lb/>
then, contri-<lb/>
- from across the<lb/>
- have bai-<lb/>
rn ? than<lb/>
I Mrs. Sen-<lb/>
se overnight<lb/>
: ? a national<lb/>
-  - she now<lb/>
: it is<lb/>
s a ? alth<lb/>
: loo<lb/>
iev she said<lb/>
"I think<lb/>
l -hurt<lb/>
' She ' ol<lb/>
donated<lb/>
in jail<lb/>
lor trying to steal $15<lb/>
worth t sausages, ham<lb/>
and butter from a<lb/>
supermarket on July 24.<lb/>
Most of the donated<lb/>
money has been put in<lb/>
a special fund by a<lb/>
five-man committee.<lb/>
Bob Pugh, a member ol<lb/>
the panel set up to<lb/>
administer the contribu-<lb/>
tions, said the commit-<lb/>
tee decided not to give<lb/>
Mr Sehultz the $25<lb/>
000 in a lump sum but<lb/>
to seek a court order<lb/>
establishing a guardian-<lb/>
-hip for her.<lb/>
Hugh, 73. is pres-<lb/>
ident of the local chap-<lb/>
ter of the Texas Senior<lb/>
Citizens Association,<lb/>
which received some of<lb/>
the contributions on<lb/>
Mr Schultz's behalf.<lb/>
He explained she<lb/>
was conned out ol her<lb/>
life savings of $5,000 in<lb/>
1973 and that "if she<lb/>
had all the money right<lb/>
awaj she'd be easj<lb/>
pre) for every Tom,<lb/>
Dick and Harry<lb/>
Pugh said money<lb/>
"came from all over<lb/>
America" alter a mag-<lb/>
istrate decision to<lb/>
dare the woman in jail<lb/>
was criticized. the<lb/>
charges were dropped,<lb/>
and the mayor ordered<lb/>
an investigation ol the<lb/>
confinement.<lb/>
"Fve never seen<lb/>
anything like it aid<lb/>
Pugh. "It proves Amer-<lb/>
ica still has a heart<lb/>
The elderly widow<lb/>
was released two weeks<lb/>
ago from ? a hospital<lb/>
where she was treated<lb/>
tor heart and stomach<lb/>
ailments. But she said<lb/>
she doesn't feel any<lb/>
better.<lb/>
"I'm just tired. I'm<lb/>
wore completely out,<lb/>
said Mr Sehultz, who<lb/>
worked a- a hotel maid<lb/>
to help support herself<lb/>
and her husband alter<lb/>
he suffered a stroke.<lb/>
Her husband was an<lb/>
invalid for 21 years<lb/>
before his death 18<lb/>
years ago Sunday.<lb/>
Mr Sehultz said<lb/>
new- of the donations<lb/>
cheered her up.<lb/>
"1 thank all of them,<lb/>
and God bless them<lb/>
all she said.<lb/>
Bui she added, "I'm<lb/>
tired of life. I've got<lb/>
uobody. 1 don't know<lb/>
nobody. I've lived here<lb/>
56 years and 1 don't<lb/>
know a dozen people.<lb/>
4 By SISSY HANKSHAW<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
A while back, a few talented individuals got<lb/>
together to perform in the Greek Theatre at Cal.<lb/>
Berkley. Ramblin Jack Elliot, Arlo, Pete Seeger,<lb/>
Joan Baez, Jackson Brown, Terry Garthwaite, Richie<lb/>
Havens, Dan Hicks, David Lyndley, Country Joe,<lb/>
Maria Muldaur, Tom Paxton, Buffy Ste. Marie, and<lb/>
Jesse Colin Young. They were there for a<lb/>
performance at the Bread and Roses Festival of<lb/>
Acoustic Music. Fantasy Records recorded the whole<lb/>
show and released an album entitled Bread and<lb/>
Roses. It is one of the most dynamic assemblages of<lb/>
musicians to come along in ten years. It is a lot of<lb/>
beautiful music, and not much noise.<lb/>
If you're into noise, with direction and perhaps<lb/>
a melodic attraction, there is a lot of good new rock<lb/>
and roll. A sparkling new group, Mistress, has<lb/>
released their first album entitled Mistress. This is<lb/>
a fine debut album and features ia lot of good<lb/>
tunes, especially "China Lake" and Neil Young's<lb/>
"Cinnamon Girl<lb/>
Jimmy Buffett and Peter Tosh have released new<lb/>
albums. Bufett's new album, lolcano, is better than<lb/>
his last, but that's a small claim to distinction. The<lb/>
Bush Doctor's new album, Mystic Man, is<lb/>
frightening. Tosh's music is certainly the tightest<lb/>
Reggae ever produced, but the lyrics rumble of a<lb/>
revolution that could bring the world to the feet of<lb/>
the Third World, so buyer beware. Praise be to<lb/>
Jah!<lb/>
A couple of aging monoliths have new additions,<lb/>
being RockU and Take It Home, by Chuck Berry<lb/>
and B.B. King, respectively. Chuck Berry, recently<lb/>
imprisoned for tax evasion, proves that he is an<lb/>
ageless wonder. B.B.King's album is completely<lb/>
commercial, but with the Crusaders backing him<lb/>
and Lucille supporting him, how can he go wrong.<lb/>
Another guitarist of note, David Bromberg, has<lb/>
released a new recording of folk and ballads. My<lb/>
Own House secures Bromberg's claim to cult<lb/>
superstar -tatu<lb/>
On the progressive jazz scene, where the<lb/>
emphasis is on high caliber and not high capital,<lb/>
there are, many good selections. New Chataqua, by<lb/>
Pat Metheny is only surpassed by last year's Pat<lb/>
Metheny group album, which has been on the<lb/>
charts for sixty weeks.<lb/>
Joni Mitchell left word that she was getting<lb/>
ready to tour with thett Metheny Group and Jaco<lb/>
Pastorius. She was very pleased with her last<lb/>
album, a tribute to Charles Mingus, and she should<lb/>
well be. Her next album should be the highlight of<lb/>
her folk-jazz career. Remember, you heard it here<lb/>
first. But if you like to hear Mingus, why not the<lb/>
original with Mingus's last album, Passions of a<lb/>
Man.<lb/>
On the Funk front, the masters are holding their<lb/>
own against a plethora of newcomers. Con Funk<lb/>
Shun has just about their hottest album, Candy, and<lb/>
their single "Chase Me Bootsy's Rubber Band<lb/>
still holds their own with their album This Boot<lb/>
Was Made for Funk, and putting that boot on the<lb/>
heads of the recording industry. George Clinton is a<lb/>
genius and perhaps the key figure in Black music.<lb/>
If Clinton is the king, then Rich James is the crown<lb/>
Prince. Certainly James is the "king of punk-funk"<lb/>
and he is "Bustin' out of L Seven" to boogie your<lb/>
sneakers away.<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO 12TH<lb/>
WEEK OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
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free number 800-221-2568i between<lb/>
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Organization<lb/>
917 West Morgan St.<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C. 27603<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057211_0012"/><lb/>
 t ?? ? <lb/>
HH nHMpi<lb/>
Page 12 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 4 September 1979<lb/>
MAXI CARE FOB MINI PATIENT<lb/>
Woodstock<lb/>
Jimi Hendrix' America the Beautiful<lb/>
became the anthm of the new pioneers.<lb/>
Photo by Barry Z. Levino<lb/>
capacity for experience. Hard drug use was<lb/>
discouraged by the environment itself. Marijuana,<lb/>
Hashish, and LSD were popular drugs with many<lb/>
people. Passing out free joints and even donating<lb/>
free kilos of marijuana to promote the cause was<lb/>
not uncommon. In fact, these were the factors that<lb/>
contributed to the feeling of affinity and common<lb/>
purpose at the festival.<lb/>
The music was a veritable compendium of rock.<lb/>
Ravi Shankar, at the height of his popularity,<lb/>
symbolized, to some extent, the religious and Indian<lb/>
influences; Richie Havens, Joan Baez, and Arlo<lb/>
Guthrie represented the protest and folk aspects of<lb/>
the culture; and Tim Hardin was part of the<lb/>
folk-rock movement.<lb/>
Country music had come into the major rock<lb/>
scene simultaneously with the back-to-the-land<lb/>
movement (Dylan had just made Nashville Skyline).<lb/>
The Paul Butterfield Blues Band and Joe Cocker<lb/>
were there to fill the blues abyss. Psychedelic and<lb/>
hard-rock superstars like The Who (Tommy had just<lb/>
sold over two million copies) and Jimi Hendrix were<lb/>
featured.<lb/>
In short, the music covered the spectrum of<lb/>
tastes prevelant among the youth culture yet it<lb/>
never really compromized its message.<lb/>
Richie Havens opened the festival with his<lb/>
compelling paean to an embattled people,<lb/>
"Feedom and Hendrix closed it with a sizzling<lb/>
"America The Beautiful" that would become the<lb/>
anthem of the new pioneers.<lb/>
Editor's Note: This is the first of a two part article<lb/>
dealing with Woodstock?an event which symbolized<lb/>
the post World War two generation. Part two will<lb/>
be carried in the Thursday, September 6 edition of<lb/>
The East Carolinian.<lb/>
N. C. gas prices<lb/>
lower than most<lb/>
Fifth Ayden Collard Festival<lb/>
The Fifth Annual Ayden<lb/>
Collard Festival will be<lb/>
staged September 3-9,<lb/>
1979. in Ayden, North<lb/>
Carolina. This small<lb/>
town of 4000 people will<lb/>
host about 18,000 col-<lb/>
lard-lovers on the main<lb/>
day of the festival,<lb/>
Saturday, September 8.<lb/>
During the week,<lb/>
manv events will be<lb/>
taking place, such as<lb/>
softbali tournaments,<lb/>
rides and games, a<lb/>
beauty pageant in which<lb/>
Miss Collard will be<lb/>
crowned, a square-danc-<lb/>
ing demonstration, and<lb/>
a talent contest.<lb/>
Saturday, September<lb/>
8 will feature arts and<lb/>
crafts displays, the<lb/>
largest parade in Ay-<lb/>
den's history, a collard-<lb/>
cooking contest, pet<lb/>
shows, karate demon-<lb/>
strations, a skateboard<lb/>
contest, horseshoe pit-<lb/>
ching contest, and the<lb/>
famous collard-eating<lb/>
contest. (The record for<lb/>
the collard-eating con-<lb/>
test was set two years<lb/>
ago when a gentleman<lb/>
consumed six (6)<lb/>
pounds of that leafy<lb/>
vegetable in 30 min-<lb/>
utes.)<lb/>
To bring an end to<lb/>
Saturday's activities, the<lb/>
EMBERS will perform<lb/>
at a street dance in<lb/>
downtown Ayden from<lb/>
8:00 p.m. until mid<lb/>
night. There is no<lb/>
admission charge foir<lb/>
any of Saturday's activ-<lb/>
ities.<lb/>
Sunday, September 9<lb/>
will complete the week<lb/>
of fun with a horse<lb/>
show presented by the<lb/>
Pitt County 4-H Club<lb/>
Horse Fanciers. AUo,<lb/>
cross-country racing will<lb/>
attract joggers from all<lb/>
over the state, and a<lb/>
gospel singing event<lb/>
will be held at the<lb/>
Ayden Grammar School<lb/>
at 2:00 p.m.<lb/>
JAMKS B HUNT. JR<lb/>
(iOVHRNOR<lb/>
WHEREAS, Ayden is the Collard Capital of North Carolina,<lb/>
and<lb/>
WHEREAS, the town of Ayden is holding its Fifth Annual<lb/>
Collard Festival September 3-9, 1979, and<lb/>
WHEREAS, the combination of collards and-cornbread is<lb/>
a gastronomic delight enjoyed by any true Southerner, and<lb/>
WHEREAS, collards helped produce many generations of<lb/>
healthy North Carolinians,<lb/>
THEREFORE, I, James B. Hunt, Jr Governor of the<lb/>
State of North Carolina, and a collard-lover at heart, do<lb/>
hereby proclaim September 3-9, 1979 as<lb/>
COLLARD WEEK IN NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
and commend this observance to our citizens.<lb/>
x?? -<lb/>
lames B. Hunt, Jr<lb/>
Bernstein is putting up his baton<lb/>
SA1ZBURG, Austria<lb/>
AP?Conductor Leonard<lb/>
Bernstein says he's<lb/>
putting up his baton?at<lb/>
least for a year?to<lb/>
concentrate on com-<lb/>
posing.<lb/>
"I've promised my-<lb/>
self, no I've even<lb/>
sworn, that I won't lift<lb/>
my baton for the entire<lb/>
year 1980 Bernstein,<lb/>
the former music direc-<lb/>
tor of the New York<lb/>
Philharmonic, told re-<lb/>
porters Tuesday evening<lb/>
during a break in the<lb/>
Salzburg Festival, where<lb/>
Support<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
he is conducting both<lb/>
the Israel Philharmonic<lb/>
and the Vienna Philhar-<lb/>
monic orchestras.<lb/>
He said he needs a<lb/>
whole year free from<lb/>
conducting to think<lb/>
clearly about composing<lb/>
his own music.<lb/>
VWWG' OWNERS<lb/>
L<lb/>
Advertisers<lb/>
NOW<lb/>
OPEN!<lb/>
By<lb/>
The Associated Press<lb/>
If you're crying over<lb/>
gas prices in North<lb/>
Carolina, don't expect<lb/>
to find sympathy from<lb/>
gas buyers elsewhere in<lb/>
the nation, because<lb/>
prices in the Carolinas<lb/>
are lower than just<lb/>
about anywhere else.<lb/>
The American Auto-<lb/>
mobile Association said,<lb/>
in its weekly national<lb/>
survey, that regular gas<lb/>
is cheaper in North<lb/>
Carolina than in any<lb/>
other state except<lb/>
Texas, which tradi-<lb/>
tionally has the lowest<lb/>
fuel prices in the<lb/>
nation.<lb/>
South Carolina fol-<lb/>
lows right behind North<lb/>
Carolina in all gasoline-<lb/>
price categories.<lb/>
South Carolina fol-<lb/>
lows right behind North<lb/>
Carolina in all gasoline-<lb/>
price categories. But<lb/>
state officials can't<lb/>
understand why prices<lb/>
are lower. Hank Dow-<lb/>
ney of the AAA<lb/>
couldn't explain the<lb/>
survey. "We simply re-<lb/>
port the figures. We<lb/>
don't try to interpret<lb/>
them he said.<lb/>
Max Pegram of<lb/>
Greensboro, president of<lb/>
the N.C. Service Station<lb/>
Association said, "I just<lb/>
don't know why that<lb/>
would be<lb/>
Energy officials in<lb/>
the Carolinas said there<lb/>
is no obvious reason<lb/>
why prices here are<lb/>
lower. Both states<lb/>
charge a state tax of 9<lb/>
cents a gallon, about<lb/>
the same as other<lb/>
states.<lb/>
Delivery costs<lb/>
vary by less than 1 cent<lb/>
a gallon.<lb/>
North Carolina en-<lb/>
ergy chief Brian Flattery<lb/>
and Gene Maples, al-<lb/>
location director in the<lb/>
South Carolina Energy<lb/>
Resources Office, said<lb/>
they believe their hand-<lb/>
ling of sparce gasoline<lb/>
supplies prevented sum-<lb/>
mer shortages and kept<lb/>
enough gasoline on the<lb/>
market to maintain<lb/>
competitive prices.<lb/>
Parking inFron<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057211_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>