<?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="00057212_0001"/>
"Let us dare<lb/>
to read, think,<lb/>
speak<lb/>
and write<lb/>
I<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Telephone<lb/>
Numbers<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
757-6367<lb/>
757-6309<lb/>
Peculation 10,000<lb/>
Vol. 54 No. 4<lb/>
Thursday, September 6, 1979<lb/>
12 pages today<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. <lb/>
David's wrath ending<lb/>
S.C. (AP)?Fires be-<lb/>
lieved started by<lb/>
downed power lines<lb/>
burned at two Grand<lb/>
Strand motels this<lb/>
morning.<lb/>
The first, reported at<lb/>
the Marlena about 6<lb/>
a.m destroyed the<lb/>
mail building and three<lb/>
nearby private cottages.<lb/>
Damage was estimated<lb/>
at $1 million by city<lb/>
police.<lb/>
The flames were<lb/>
contained about 8 a.m.<lb/>
The second fire<lb/>
began about 7:30 at the<lb/>
By the Sea Motel in the<lb/>
Crescent Beach section<lb/>
of North Myrtle Beach<lb/>
and continued to burn<lb/>
two hours later. But a<lb/>
policewoman at head-<lb/>
quarters said the fire<lb/>
was under control.<lb/>
No damage estimate<lb/>
was immediately avail-<lb/>
able.<lb/>
David, which has<lb/>
claimed at least 900<lb/>
lives, struck Savannah<lb/>
in its second slap at the<lb/>
U.S. mainland in two<lb/>
days. Heavy rains, high<lb/>
seas and anxiety<lb/>
spawned by the hur-<lb/>
ricane were blamed for<lb/>
at least seven deaths in<lb/>
Florida, Georgia and<lb/>
South Carolina.<lb/>
Meanwhile, tropical<lb/>
Storm Frederic, packing<lb/>
winds of 50 mph, was<lb/>
southeast of the Domin-<lb/>
ican Republican and<lb/>
moving west.<lb/>
In the wake of one<lb/>
of the century's most<lb/>
destructive storms,<lb/>
about 90 percent of the<lb/>
city of Savannah was<lb/>
without power this<lb/>
morning. Police, hospi-<lb/>
tals and other emer-<lb/>
gency agencies were<lb/>
operating with auxiliary<lb/>
generators.<lb/>
The First estimates<lb/>
show Hurricane David's<lb/>
taunting dash through<lb/>
Florida caused more<lb/>
than $60 million<lb/>
damage.<lb/>
The storm left many<lb/>
Floridians tearful and<lb/>
depressed, but their<lb/>
most often-heard words<lb/>
were: "It could have<lb/>
been worse As they<lb/>
turned to mopping up<lb/>
the remains, state of-<lb/>
ficials began looking for<lb/>
federal disaster aid.<lb/>
At Holden Beach in<lb/>
Brunswick County, a<lb/>
portion of a fishing pier<lb/>
was washed away in<lb/>
Tuesday's heavy rains.<lb/>
Other piers at Ocean<lb/>
Isle, Sunset Beach and<lb/>
Long Beach suffered<lb/>
neavy damage, said<lb/>
Ellis" Stanley, civil pre-<lb/>
paredness coordinator in<lb/>
Bolivia.<lb/>
The western end of<lb/>
Long Beach on Oak<lb/>
Island was eroded<lb/>
severely, with dunes on<lb/>
that portion washed<lb/>
away, Stanley said.<lb/>
Hundreds of<lb/>
residents in Brunswick<lb/>
and Carteret counties<lb/>
evacuated inland Tues-<lb/>
day as heavy rains and<lb/>
high winds in coastal<lb/>
areas signaled David B<lb/>
advance.<lb/>
In Georgia. two<lb/>
students from Frana<lb/>
who were not immed-<lb/>
iately identified, went<lb/>
swimming alter the<lb/>
hurricane passed and<lb/>
were missing today, ap-<lb/>
parentlv dragged out to<lb/>
sea bv strong current<lb/>
More than 900<lb/>
people were killed in<lb/>
the Dominican Republic<lb/>
before Davi'i boun<lb/>
off Florida M nday.<lb/>
Unofficial estim ites put<lb/>
damage- in Flori<lb/>
more than $00 milli<lb/>
Six deal raru<lb/>
from heart atta ks to<lb/>
ear accidents, were<lb/>
blamed on the storm in<lb/>
tha:<lb/>
The Media Board met for their first meeting of the<lb/>
year yetserday.<lb/>
Photo Lab inventory<lb/>
discussed by Media Board<lb/>
o<lb/>
real need at ECU<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The Media Board<lb/>
held an organizational<lb/>
meeting Wednesday,<lb/>
and the Photo Lab was<lb/>
the main item on the<lb/>
agenda.<lb/>
Pete Podeszwa, who<lb/>
had been removed from<lb/>
the post lor academic<lb/>
ineligibility, was re-<lb/>
named to the position<lb/>
of Head Photogranher<lb/>
of teh Photo Lab.<lb/>
The Media Board<lb/>
ordered an inventory<lb/>
this summer, conducted<lb/>
of all the branches of<lb/>
the Media. This in-<lb/>
ventory has been com-<lb/>
pleted.<lb/>
The Buccaneer, East<lb/>
Carolinian, the campus<lb/>
radio station, WECU,<lb/>
and the Photo Lab were<lb/>
all inventoried. There<lb/>
were no shortages re-<lb/>
ported, with the ex-<lb/>
ception of teh Photo<lb/>
Lab, which ahd an esti-<lb/>
mated $4,000 in equip-<lb/>
ment unaccounted lor.<lb/>
The acting head of<lb/>
teh Photo Lab, John<lb/>
Grogan, told members<lb/>
of teh Board that the<lb/>
equipment was being<lb/>
stored in his and<lb/>
Podeszwa's homes while<lb/>
t he renovations to the<lb/>
lab wre being com-<lb/>
pleted.<lb/>
A question arose<lb/>
concerning the timing of<lb/>
the renovations. Acting<lb/>
chairman of the Media<lb/>
Board, Charles Sune,<lb/>
commented, "I have<lb/>
spoken with the internal<lb/>
auditor Sune added,<lb/>
"He (the internal aud-<lb/>
itor) feels the inventory<lb/>
was conducted before<lb/>
the renovations.<lb/>
At the meeting,<lb/>
which is scheduled for<lb/>
September 10, the op-<lb/>
erations manuals for the<lb/>
East Carolinian and<lb/>
WECU will be discus-<lb/>
sed. Also, an auditor<lb/>
will be appointed to the<lb/>
Rebel and a permanent<lb/>
chairperson for the<lb/>
board will be selected.<lb/>
"We have a lot of<lb/>
pressing things Sune<lb/>
noted.<lb/>
For many years now<lb/>
students in Jones, Ay-<lb/>
cock, Scott, Belk, and<lb/>
Tyler dorms have been<lb/>
aggravated by the ped-<lb/>
estrian crossing at the<lb/>
10th street and college<lb/>
Hill Drive intersection.<lb/>
Bobby Robertson, an<lb/>
employee at the Green-<lb/>
ville City Planning De-<lb/>
partment, stated that<lb/>
the 10th Street overpass<lb/>
is not the direct re-<lb/>
sponsibility of the City.<lb/>
Robertson added that<lb/>
if the citizens of Green-<lb/>
ville expressed enough<lb/>
concern, and if ECU<lb/>
helped to pay for the<lb/>
cost, it might be feas-<lb/>
ible for the City Plan-<lb/>
ning Department to<lb/>
build an overpass for<lb/>
the students, but that<lb/>
the direct responsibility<lb/>
lor the overDass lay<lb/>
with the N.C. Depart-<lb/>
ment of Transportation.<lb/>
Blake commented<lb/>
that the department<lb/>
seemed very concerned<lb/>
and understandin<lb/>
However, William F.<lb/>
Caddell, Chief of High-<lb/>
way Planning, said Fri-<lb/>
day that due to inflation<lb/>
and a tight budget it<lb/>
was doubtful that ECU<lb/>
would get an<lb/>
S . until<lb/>
finally ta-<lb/>
will have<lb/>
chance- and<lb/>
street as<lb/>
-<lb/>
si -<lb/>
take their<lb/>
in.<lb/>
Fees rapidly increasing<lb/>
By SUSAN FERNALD<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The cost of a college<lb/>
education in North<lb/>
Carolina's three largest<lb/>
public universities is<lb/>
expected to go up<lb/>
between 3.2 and 5.7<lb/>
percent next year.<lb/>
At East Carolina<lb/>
University costs will go<lb/>
up 5.7 percent from<lb/>
$2,725 to 82,880. Tui-<lb/>
tion and fees will re-<lb/>
main the same.<lb/>
The University of<lb/>
North Carolina at<lb/>
Chapel Hill costs for<lb/>
full-time, resident, stu-<lb/>
dents will rise 3.2<lb/>
percent from $2,954 to<lb/>
$3,050 with no increases<lb/>
in tuition and fees.<lb/>
North Carolina State<lb/>
University predicts total<lb/>
costs will go up 5.5<lb/>
percent next year from<lb/>
$2,703 to $2,852 with a<lb/>
slight fee increase.<lb/>
The nedw budgets<lb/>
lor UNC, N.C. State<lb/>
and ECU are based<lb/>
upon the resources of<lb/>
the students and their<lb/>
families in general,<lb/>
assuming that each stu-<lb/>
dent would contribute<lb/>
around $1,000 to the<lb/>
university each year at-<lb/>
tended.<lb/>
According to ECU's<lb/>
Financial Aid Director,<lb/>
Robert Boudreaux, the<lb/>
price raise was made to<lb/>
deal with the rising cost<lb/>
of living and was neces-<lb/>
sary because, "every<lb/>
institution has to esta-<lb/>
blish a reasonable bud-<lb/>
get<lb/>
At East Carolina the<lb/>
increases have already<lb/>
taken place in the<lb/>
voluntary meal plan and<lb/>
in dorm room pric. The<lb/>
meal plan price has<lb/>
increased $150 from last<lb/>
year's yeariy plan price<lb/>
of $1,000 and semester<lb/>
see FEES page 3<lb/>
y<lb/>
??<lb/>
J<lb/>
"?M<lb/>
-???<lb/>
The parking lot at the base of College Hill Drive<lb/>
was flooded due to the rains that David brought to<lb/>
(Photo by Pete Podeszwa)<lb/>
Green ville.<lb/>
Newspaper work- as seen from the inside out<lb/>
By MARC BARNES<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
Maybe you are walk-<lb/>
ing across campus, and<lb/>
you stop in at the<lb/>
Croatan-or maybe you<lb/>
walk down the hall of<lb/>
your dorm on the hill<lb/>
and pick it up out of<lb/>
the bright red box that<lb/>
still reads FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD on the outside.<lb/>
Either way, this news-<lb/>
paper just appears<lb/>
every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday by magic, it<lb/>
seems.<lb/>
It ain't magic-it's a<lb/>
helluva lot of hard<lb/>
work, and the purpose<lb/>
of this piece is to<lb/>
explain a little bit of<lb/>
how its doen.<lb/>
First, we start with<lb/>
you, the reader. Maybe<lb/>
you have run a touch-<lb/>
down in the last few<lb/>
days, or maybe you are<lb/>
teaching a seminar, or<lb/>
maybe you are involved<lb/>
in student government.<lb/>
Either way, in whatever<lb/>
circumstance you find<lb/>
yourself, we decide that<lb/>
you are newsworthy,<lb/>
and we decide to do a<lb/>
story on you.<lb/>
We look for subjects<lb/>
that we feel the stu-<lb/>
dents here at ECU<lb/>
would like to read<lb/>
about. That's one of the<lb/>
reasons for the addi-<lb/>
tions of the Features<lb/>
section of the paper, a<lb/>
section which should be<lb/>
much stronger than in<lb/>
the past, as will all the<lb/>
sections of the paper<lb/>
very soon. The difficulty<lb/>
with the paper right<lb/>
now lies in the fact that<lb/>
students are hard to<lb/>
reach because phones<lb/>
haven't been hooked<lb/>
up, some schedules are<lb/>
not yet finalized, and<lb/>
we are hard at work<lb/>
with some leftover re-<lb/>
modeling, as well as<lb/>
trying to build up a<lb/>
good staff.<lb/>
But back to you,<lb/>
the reader. A reporter<lb/>
will get in touch with<lb/>
you, or maybe you will<lb/>
be interviewed by a<lb/>
news desk editor or<lb/>
assistant. After the<lb/>
interview, the writer<lb/>
will return to the news-<lb/>
paper office, type the<lb/>
story up, and leave it<lb/>
here for the copy desk<lb/>
editor to read over and<lb/>
correct.<lb/>
Other inputs to the<lb/>
copy desk editor besides<lb/>
the copy which is writ-<lb/>
ten by reporters in-<lb/>
cludes state<lb/>
and national news from<lb/>
the wires of the Asso-<lb/>
ciated Press, and news<lb/>
releases from the ECU<lb/>
News Bureau.<lb/>
People<lb/>
Also, organizations<lb/>
on campus send us<lb/>
news releases which we<lb/>
incorporate into a<lb/>
column called 'People<lb/>
a column which we<lb/>
hope to expand as soon<lb/>
as our typesetting capa-<lb/>
bilities expand.<lb/>
Production<lb/>
After the copy desk<lb/>
editor completes his<lb/>
work, the copy is sent<lb/>
to the typesetter, who<lb/>
sets the type into long<lb/>
strips of photographic<lb/>
paper. These strips rep-<lb/>
resent one-column or<lb/>
two column widths,<lb/>
depending on what the<lb/>
desk editor wanted.<lb/>
Once these strips are<lb/>
typeset, they are sent<lb/>
back to the desk edi-<lb/>
tors. The editors mea-<lb/>
sure the length of the<lb/>
strips of copy, and they<lb/>
use this information to<lb/>
make up rough sketches<lb/>
of what they want their<lb/>
pages to look like.<lb/>
They send the strips,<lb/>
and the sketches (which<lb/>
are called 'dummy<lb/>
sheets') to the layout<lb/>
room, where the layout<lb/>
workers coat one side of<lb/>
the copy with wax, and<lb/>
affix them to longer,<lb/>
more complex layout<lb/>
sheets called 'mechan-<lb/>
icals<lb/>
For photographs,<lb/>
which are provided by<lb/>
the Photo Lab, the desk<lb/>
editor indicates on a<lb/>
small photo tag the size<lb/>
of the picture desired,<lb/>
and the production<lb/>
manager or one of her<lb/>
assistants figures up the<lb/>
percentage of how much<lb/>
the photo must be<lb/>
enlarged or reduced by<lb/>
the printer. After this,<lb/>
she pastes a red win-<lb/>
dow in the spot on the<lb/>
mechanical where the<lb/>
photo must go, to let<lb/>
the printer know exactly<lb/>
what he is to do.<lb/>
After all this is<lb/>
done, the mechanicals<lb/>
are placed in a 'flat'<lb/>
box, and the circulation<lb/>
manager comes in the<lb/>
middle of the night to<lb/>
take them to a printer,<lb/>
which is located this<lb/>
week in Ahoskie, some<lb/>
80 miles from here. The<lb/>
reason that we make<lb/>
mention of who our<lb/>
printer is this week is<lb/>
that there is a severe<lb/>
.paper shortage right<lb/>
now, and live weeks<lb/>
into the school year, we<lb/>
will have been printed<lb/>
by four different print-<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
Newspaper publish-<lb/>
ers, who normally court<lb/>
our business, are afraid<lb/>
that they will run out of<lb/>
paper for their own<lb/>
publications, and they<lb/>
re understandably con-<lb/>
cerned about taking on<lb/>
any extra printing work<lb/>
just now.<lb/>
The circulation man-<lb/>
ager waits around the<lb/>
printing house until the<lb/>
paper is completed, ana<lb/>
then he brings the<lb/>
completed papers-all<lb/>
10,000 of them-back to<lb/>
Greenville for distribu-<lb/>
tion. After he is<lb/>
through with distribution<lb/>
of the paper, he does<lb/>
the mailings for the<lb/>
subscription trade.<lb/>
Before any of this<lb/>
can be done, the adver-<lb/>
tising department must<lb/>
sell a lot of ads to<lb/>
support the other arms<lb/>
of the newspaper. We<lb/>
have an ad rate struc-<lb/>
ture which is compar-<lb/>
able to the daily paper<lb/>
here, and this is a good<lb/>
selling point for the ad<lb/>
salesmen who go out<lb/>
into the surrounding<lb/>
'areas and sell space to<lb/>
local businesses.<lb/>
The salesmen report<lb/>
back to the office every<lb/>
day, witb the require-<lb/>
ments of their advertise-<lb/>
ments ready for the ad<lb/>
artists, who arrange the<lb/>
ads in a style which is<lb/>
designed to help the<lb/>
local businessman sell<lb/>
his merchandise to the<lb/>
students and faculty of<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Plans are in the<lb/>
works to perhaps have<lb/>
several special editions<lb/>
during the course of the<lb/>
year. These editions,<lb/>
which would hold more<lb/>
advertising than regular<lb/>
issues of the paper,<lb/>
would free up space in<lb/>
regular editions for<lb/>
more news coverage.<lb/>
Edmund Arnold, who is<lb/>
the foremost authority<lb/>
on American newspaper<lb/>
design, recommends a<lb/>
60 percent advertising-<lb/>
40 percent news ratio in<lb/>
each newspaper. These<lb/>
special editions may<lb/>
help us reach this goal.<lb/>
Incidently, this news-<lb/>
paper is in touch with<lb/>
Mr. Arnold, to invite<lb/>
him to help critique our<lb/>
paper. Arnold is noted<lb/>
for the redesign of the<lb/>
Christian Science Moni-<lb/>
tor, and the U.S News<lb/>
and World Report,<lb/>
among other leading<lb/>
American newspapers.<lb/>
Many of the stu-<lb/>
dents here have the<lb/>
constant complaint that<lb/>
this newspaper should<lb/>
meet the needs of the<lb/>
students, since it is<lb/>
supported by student<lb/>
fees. We agree that<lb/>
meeting the needs of<lb/>
our readership is our<lb/>
highest priority, but it<lb/>
is a priority that we<lb/>
have chosen for our-<lb/>
selvesnot one that is<lb/>
dictated by student fee<lb/>
money.<lb/>
The fact is -this<lb/>
year, for the first time<lb/>
in many years, we are<lb/>
75 percent self support-<lb/>
ing. Only 25 percent of<lb/>
our operating budget<lb/>
comes from student<lb/>
fees, and next year, we<lb/>
hope to be 100 percent<lb/>
self supportingwith not<lb/>
one cent coming from<lb/>
student fee accounts.<lb/>
Later this year, we<lb/>
are adding a VDT<lb/>
typesetting system, a<lb/>
state of the art compu-<lb/>
ter which should allow<lb/>
us to put together a<lb/>
newspaper in one quar-<lb/>
ter thf amount of time<lb/>
that it takes us now.<lb/>
This will allow us to<lb/>
spend more of our time<lb/>
concentrating on content<lb/>
and style of be paper,<lb/>
and the paper will-look<lb/>
a lot better than it ever<lb/>
has.<lb/>
All non-adverl -<lb/>
pages will be chang<lb/>
irom the present eight-<lb/>
column format to a new<lb/>
six-column format. I<lb/>
get an idea of wl<lb/>
six-column layout<lb/>
like, look at the fr<lb/>
page of the Rat<lb/>
News and Observer. It s<lb/>
a cleaner style, and it<lb/>
will be easier to read.<lb/>
We are also retyi-<lb/>
ing the body ty<lb/>
which are defined a<lb/>
the words you are<lb/>
reading right now. The<lb/>
display type -the head-<lb/>
lines-will match ll<lb/>
body type, and both ot<lb/>
these type styles were<lb/>
picked for their readi-<lb/>
bility.<lb/>
Maybe you don't<lb/>
understand the technical<lb/>
jargon, and maybe vou<lb/>
don't have any idea of<lb/>
what we are talking<lb/>
about. Suffice it to say.<lb/>
that we will be looking<lb/>
a lot better in the<lb/>
weeks and month:<lb/>
ahead. What we dc<lb/>
Isn't magic, but we<lb/>
have the training and<lb/>
the know-how to bring<lb/>
you a good looking<lb/>
paper. Between the<lb/>
classes and the bad<lb/>
meals, and the constant<lb/>
headaches, that's<lb/>
exactly what we intend<lb/>
<pb facs="00057212_0002"/><lb/>
'age 2 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 6 September 1979<lb/>
Sorority Rush has been a tradition at ECU for many<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Rush week planned<lb/>
B) JANE BIDD1X<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
This year Sororit<lb/>
Rush is the most excit-<lb/>
ing ever stated Pan-<lb/>
hetlenic President Eva<lb/>
Pitt mail. The girls have<lb/>
It.en winking hard in<lb/>
preparation with rush<lb/>
onl a week long in<lb/>
order lor that week to<lb/>
he the best, most tun<lb/>
filled rush week ever,<lb/>
according iman.<lb/>
?n g. .g on . .<lb/>
an jl week and will<lb/>
conclude Thursday night<lb/>
at 7:00 p.m. with the<lb/>
Convocation ceremony in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
The ceremony is a type<lb/>
of orientation U let<lb/>
girls know a little about<lb/>
what to expect from<lb/>
Creek Life according to<lb/>
Diane Gray. Panhellenic<lb/>
Membership Chairman.<lb/>
Gray invites any<lb/>
girls not signed up for<lb/>
rush to attend the<lb/>
Convocation ceremony to<lb/>
see if they would like<lb/>
to become a part of this<lb/>
action packed week<lb/>
from Sept. 9 through<lb/>
Sept. 14.<lb/>
The ceremony will<lb/>
include comments from<lb/>
Dean Fulghum on Greek<lb/>
i.itt- and a welcome from<lb/>
Panhellenic President<lb/>
Eva Pittman. A slide<lb/>
show will be presenle'd<lb/>
to show some of the<lb/>
many facets of sorority<lb/>
life along with displays<lb/>
from all the sororities<lb/>
showing a little about<lb/>
their activities and<lb/>
special interests.<lb/>
Gray says the pro-<lb/>
gram will last a little<lb/>
over an hour and that<lb/>
refreshments will be<lb/>
served.<lb/>
The week itself pro-<lb/>
mises to add excitement<lb/>
to the lives of all<lb/>
involved. Beginning<lb/>
Sunday night the girls<lb/>
will travel to all eight<lb/>
houses in two nights in<lb/>
order to get aquainted<lb/>
with each sorority. On<lb/>
Tuesday night a tour of<lb/>
the houses will be given<lb/>
with displays of the<lb/>
individual activities each<lb/>
sorority is involved in.<lb/>
Wednesday night is a<lb/>
break and a chance for<lb/>
the girls going through<lb/>
rush to think about<lb/>
I heir resj active choices.<lb/>
A skit depicting<lb/>
some facet of the soror-<lb/>
,ity is given on Thursday<lb/>
night wit' the most<lb/>
exciting and beautiful<lb/>
night Being Friday,<lb/>
known as Preferential.<lb/>
This is the night girls<lb/>
choose . which sororitv<lb/>
they wish to become a<lb/>
member of and the<lb/>
night concludes with a<lb/>
beautiful candlelight<lb/>
cereme on the mall<lb/>
?vith all the sororities<lb/>
"gether with their new<lb/>
members.<lb/>
"Come be a part of<lb/>
the Greek community,<lb/>
its an experience vou<lb/>
must try in order to<lb/>
understand the many<lb/>
rewarding aspects it<lb/>
offers invites Pittman.<lb/>
Buckley believes in Reagan<lb/>
GREENSBORO iNC AP<lb/>
Political columnist<lb/>
William F. Buckley Jr.<lb/>
says he believes former<lb/>
California Gov. Ronald<lb/>
Reagan will win the<lb/>
1980 presidential elec-<lb/>
tion, defeating Sen.<lb/>
Edward Kennedy,<lb/>
D-Mass.<lb/>
"My personal feeling<lb/>
is that Sen. Kennedy is<lb/>
going to run and that<lb/>
he will be beaten<lb/>
Buckley told an aud-<lb/>
ience 'of 2,500 at the<lb/>
University of North<lb/>
Carolina at Greensboro<lb/>
Tuesday. "On the other<lb/>
hand, I am always the<lb/>
eternal optimist.<lb/>
"Quite apart from<lb/>
the fact that I happen<lb/>
to be very fond of Mr.<lb/>
Reagan personally, it is<lb/>
not easy for me to say<lb/>
anything in opposition<lb/>
to someone who says he<lb/>
became a conservative<lb/>
as a result of reading<lb/>
one of my books<lb/>
Bucklev said.<lb/>
classified<lb/>
?r<lb/>
@<lb/>
FOR SALE: 2 Acoustic<lb/>
.guitars. Conn 6-string,<lb/>
like new, $150.00 with<lb/>
case. Ventura 12-string,<lb/>
like new, 8150.00 with<lb/>
case. Call 752-3426.<lb/>
YARD SALE: Books,<lb/>
etc Political Science,<lb/>
German, others; Plenty<lb/>
of material for term<lb/>
papers! Sat Sept. 8<lb/>
and 15, 9 a.ml p.m.<lb/>
2111 Southview Drive.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1974 Ford<lb/>
Mustang II Ghia. V-6,<lb/>
automatic, air, AMFM<lb/>
tape player stereo.<lb/>
$2395. 756-3870.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1973 Mus-<lb/>
tang Mach I, excellent<lb/>
condition, good gas<lb/>
mileage. Sporty green<lb/>
color. A bargain at<lb/>
11900. Call 758-9322.<lb/>
Mkt. -Sat. Sept. 8,<lb/>
Evans Mali-Hohl Down-<lb/>
town Greenville Assoc<lb/>
Info. 752-3456.<lb/>
FLEA MKT: Greenville<lb/>
Collectors Club 8th<lb/>
Annual Antique Flea<lb/>
MktSat. Sept.<lb/>
FOR SALE: TSyota<lb/>
Corolla 1979. New tires,<lb/>
new battery, very good<lb/>
condition. Asking $2500.<lb/>
756-7873 6-8 p.m. or<lb/>
room N-305 Science.<lb/>
pereond?<lb/>
EMPLOYMENT: Oppor-<lb/>
tunity. Hargetts Drug<lb/>
Store will be accepting<lb/>
applications for employ-<lb/>
ment on Thurs. Sept. 6.<lb/>
Flexible hours!<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE: Call<lb/>
Cynthia any time after<lb/>
5 p.m. at 758-4693IBM<lb/>
typing and low rates.<lb/>
WANTED: A mature,<lb/>
responsible roommate to<lb/>
share 3 bedroom atp in<lb/>
Winterville. Rent rea-<lb/>
sonable. Prefer seniors<lb/>
or grad student. Phone<lb/>
 756-8091 or 756-7022<lb/>
(between 3 &amp; 11).<lb/>
NEED: A roommate and<lb/>
some furniture; Call<lb/>
Brian 752-3343.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 12 k 65<lb/>
iiiobih home, 2 bed-<lb/>
t.MMn I 150.00 mnth.<lb/>
50.0'l deposit. Call<lb/>
52-617<lb/>
BABYSITTER: Faculty<lb/>
member needs mature<lb/>
reliable babysitter for 5<lb/>
year old for some eve-<lb/>
nings during the week,<lb/>
weekends and occas-<lb/>
sional business trips.<lb/>
Mut have own trans-<lb/>
portation. Call 752-0578<lb/>
after 5.<lb/>
LOST: 1979 Men's ECU<lb/>
class ring. Fire blue<lb/>
stoneinitia!s WPH.<lb/>
Reward offered. Call<lb/>
Phil at 758-5375.<lb/>
Policy explained for column<lb/>
By RICKI GLIARMIS<lb/>
The Greek Forum<lb/>
will take on a new<lb/>
identity this year. In-<lb/>
stead of a column each<lb/>
week, a story will<lb/>
appear in its place.<lb/>
Along with the main<lb/>
story of the week will<lb/>
be listed upcoming<lb/>
events for sororities and<lb/>
fraternities.<lb/>
Instead of "Greek<lb/>
Foium keep an eye<lb/>
out for "Greek News<lb/>
In order to make<lb/>
thi work, full cooper-<lb/>
ation is needed from<lb/>
eu? h house on campus.<lb/>
W if 11 nish coming up, a<lb/>
lot I icvvs will need to<lb/>
be .tied.<lb/>
?rii i us begins<lb/>
Sm  ept. at 6<lb/>
I Riishees should<lb/>
it i to Mendenhall<lb/>
, ving lot where they<lb/>
be driven to the<lb/>
Milt houses for<lb/>
tin - heduleu parties.<lb/>
Informal parties will<lb/>
be held on Sun. and<lb/>
Mon. Open house will<lb/>
be held on Tues Sept.<lb/>
11. On wed sept. 12,<lb/>
sororities and rushees<lb/>
will have a rest and<lb/>
start back on thurs.<lb/>
with skit nights. On<lb/>
F Sept. 14, Pref<lb/>
nights will be held all<lb/>
over campus.<lb/>
'Student<lb/>
Life<lb/>
Celebrates9<lb/>
has been<lb/>
postponed until<lb/>
Wed. Sept. 12<lb/>
HI-WAY 264<lb/>
PLAYHOUSE<lb/>
6 MILES WEST<lb/>
OF GREENVILLE<lb/>
ON 264 WEST<lb/>
DOUBLE<lb/>
FEATURE<lb/>
3-D WITH<lb/>
JOHN HOLMES<lb/>
WIDCSCftCCM<lb/>
3-DIMEMS10N<lb/>
jM<lb/>
LOLLIPOP<lb/>
ThsyYcLtekin'Oood!<lb/>
.JOHN'JohnnyWldd'NOLI<lb/>
IN k<lb/>
COL<lb/>
; m<lb/>
Rush registration<lb/>
ends Thurs. so hurry<lb/>
and sign up. Rush is a<lb/>
good experience for<lb/>
girls interested in<lb/>
pledging a sorority or<lb/>
for those who simply<lb/>
want to meet new<lb/>
people and see new<lb/>
faces.<lb/>
Greek Forum wh'I be<lb/>
printed in each Tues.<lb/>
edition of the EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN. In order<lb/>
. to meet deadlines, art-<lb/>
icles from various<lb/>
houses should be placed<lb/>
in the Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Sigma box in Dean<lb/>
Fulghum's office, on<lb/>
second floor, Whichard<lb/>
Bldg.<lb/>
Articles must be in<lb/>
by 9 a.m. on Mon. or<lb/>
they will not be printed.<lb/>
Articles are not to be<lb/>
turned in at the EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN office, nor<lb/>
are they to be turned in<lb/>
to the Sigma house. If<lb/>
they do not appear in<lb/>
the box, they will not<lb/>
be printed.<lb/>
All articles should be<lb/>
typed. If this is not<lb/>
possible, they should be<lb/>
neatly printed. When<lb/>
names appear, please<lb/>
print them clearly. Dur-<lb/>
ing rush, sororities and<lb/>
fraternities will be re-<lb/>
Leather Belts<lb/>
$6 to $19<lb/>
Leather Handbags<lb/>
$10 to $25 1<lb/>
?Shoes Repaired To Look<lb/>
Like New<lb/>
Riggon Shoe Repair<lb/>
ft Leather Shop<lb/>
111 WEST 4TH ST.<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
7564204<lb/>
Parking in Front<lb/>
and Rear.<lb/>
ceiving many pledges. It<lb/>
will be impossible to<lb/>
print each pledge's<lb/>
name in Greek News.<lb/>
However, you may send<lb/>
in the number of<lb/>
pledges you received.<lb/>
Any type of news<lb/>
that your house is<lb/>
participating in is good<lb/>
news: fund-raising, ser-<lb/>
vice projects (campus or<lb/>
community), house re-<lb/>
modeling, out-of-town<lb/>
socials, pledge projects,<lb/>
or dinners.<lb/>
Don't forget to send <lb/>
announcements in by 9;<lb/>
a.m Mon. mornings, <lb/>
in Whichard in the'<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
box. Let's show campus<lb/>
what we can do!<lb/>
, by Nature's Way<lb/>
specializing in<lb/>
natural hair cuts for men &amp; women<lb/>
The Complete Redken Salon<lb/>
APPOINTMENTS ONLY 758-7841<lb/>
Downtown Mall Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Where the Loft was located.<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
Panhellenic Association<lb/>
Cordially invites you to<lb/>
participate in<lb/>
SORORITY RUSH!<lb/>
Convocation:<lb/>
(if going through rush,<lb/>
attendence required)<lb/>
September 6, 7 p.m.<lb/>
Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Rush Week: September 9?14<lb/>
AKA Rush: September 19<lb/>
7:30 Mendenhall<lb/>
HOPING TO SEE YOU SOON!<lb/>
STARMNO JOHN<lb/>
SE1ENA HOtMIS<lb/>
usuil<lb/>
Some<lb/>
than<lb/>
a suim i<lb/>
FEES<lb/>
rooms<lb/>
from $476<lb/>
Tuition and<lb/>
ECU install<lb/>
will remain<lb/>
costs for m<lb/>
risen from $62<lb/>
The cost f<lb/>
win ne use<lb/>
utilities, hall<lb/>
administrat<lb/>
study pr<lb/>
and various<lb/>
penst -<lb/>
The effei<lb/>
increase on<lb/>
dents has arj<lb/>
ding to one s<lb/>
facts weren't<lb/>
to her. but<lb/>
in? what waj<lb/>
Pe<lb/>
in<lb/>
Start th?<lb/>
right by me<lb/>
tians and lei<lb/>
About )uur<lb/>
with Christ.<lb/>
the First C<lb/>
sade for Ch<lb/>
ing this Tl<lb/>
7:00-9:G0p.m.<lb/>
ter B-102.<lb/>
there!<lb/>
13 M<lb/>
The I<lb/>
Society will<lb/>
o. ganizationj<lb/>
Wednesday.<lb/>
at 7:30 p.mj<lb/>
221 of M<lb/>
Anyone intj<lb/>
law school<lb/>
legal profess<lb/>
come. Great<lb/>
are being<lb/>
please come<lb/>
 <lb/>
al<lb/>
Bn<lb/>
clothii<lb/>
In<lb/>
<pb facs="00057212_0003"/><lb/>
forget to send <lb/>
lents in by 9;<lb/>
mornings, <lb/>
iard in the<lb/>
ima Sigma<lb/>
how campus<lb/>
i do!<lb/>
Way<lb/>
vomen<lb/>
Ion<lb/>
?, p.<lb/>
r?- ,<lb/>
Ex Miss N.C. unhappy<lb/>
Some students enjoyed the torrent rains more<lb/>
than others. These students decided U was Ume for<lb/>
a swim (Photo by Pete Podeszwa)<lb/>
FEES<lb/>
cont.from page 1<lb/>
rooms has also gone up<lb/>
from $476 to $522.<lb/>
Tuition and fees for<lb/>
ECU's instate, students<lb/>
will remain the same<lb/>
costs for meals have'<lb/>
risen from $625 to $675. '<lb/>
The cost for dorm '<lb/>
will De usea io pay<lb/>
utilities, hall advisors,<lb/>
administrators, work<lb/>
study program students<lb/>
and various other ex-<lb/>
penses.<lb/>
The effect of the<lb/>
increase on ECU stu-<lb/>
dents has varied. Accor-<lb/>
ding to one student, the<lb/>
facts weren't very clear<lb/>
to her, but upon hear-<lb/>
ing what was involved<lb/>
replied, "I thought<lb/>
everything was going to<lb/>
go up and it made me<lb/>
think twice about com-<lb/>
ing back to school, but<lb/>
now 1 don't htink its<lb/>
wrogn because of food<lb/>
prices and everything<lb/>
going up<lb/>
Further cost increas-<lb/>
es have not yet been<lb/>
decided; however, any<lb/>
additional raises will be<lb/>
made in view of addi-<lb/>
tional expenses of the<lb/>
schools, changes in the<lb/>
economy, and the norm<lb/>
of what each college<lb/>
student and their family<lb/>
can reasonably handle.<lb/>
RALEIGH, NC (AP)-<lb/>
Debbie Shook, who was<lb/>
stripped of her crown<lb/>
as Miss North Carolina<lb/>
following a dispute with<lb/>
several Jaycee organiz-<lb/>
ations, will file suit<lb/>
today seeking restora-<lb/>
tion of her title and<lb/>
more than $85,000 in<lb/>
damages, her attorney<lb/>
said Tuesday.<lb/>
The suit will be filed<lb/>
in Wake Superior Court<lb/>
and will nMKZ<lb/>
three state Jaycee or-<lb/>
ganizations: the Winston<lb/>
-Salem Jaycees, the<lb/>
Raleigh Jaycees and the<lb/>
North CArolina Jaycees,<lb/>
according to attorney<lb/>
William Potter Jr.<lb/>
Two business man-<lb/>
agers who were ap-<lb/>
pointed by the Jaycees<lb/>
for Miss Shook during<lb/>
her reign, Ray Snider of<lb/>
Winston-Salem and Judy<lb/>
Cross of Elizabethtown,<lb/>
are also named in the<lb/>
suit, her lawyer said.<lb/>
Miss Shok, who is<lb/>
from Spruce Pine, was<lb/>
crowned iMisp North<lb/>
Carolina last year when<lb/>
the pageant was run by<lb/>
the Winston-Salem Jay-<lb/>
cees. She was stripped<lb/>
of her crown one day<lb/>
before she wa? to crown<lb/>
a new Miss North<lb/>
Carolina in May at the<lb/>
state pageant, this year<lb/>
run by the Raleigh<lb/>
Jaycees.<lb/>
Jaycee officials de-<lb/>
posed Miss Shook after<lb/>
she complained to<lb/>
newspaper reporters<lb/>
that she had not re-<lb/>
ceived all the prizes<lb/>
promised hfr when she<lb/>
won the title<lb/>
The suit seeks $75<lb/>
000 in damages for<lb/>
Miss Shook's "wrongful<lb/>
dismissal Potter said,<lb/>
as well as $7,000 to<lb/>
$10,000 in full prizes,<lb/>
including a $5,000<lb/>
wardrobe which was<lb/>
promised but never re-<lb/>
ceived.<lb/>
In addition, the suit<lb/>
seeks approximately<lb/>
$5,000 for "wrongful<lb/>
handling of financial<lb/>
transactions" on behalf<lb/>
of Miss Shook during<lb/>
her reign, Potter said.<lb/>
The suit asks the<lb/>
court to order that Miss<lb/>
Shook's 'title be re-<lb/>
stored, returning her to<lb/>
full status as a former<lb/>
Miss North Carolina, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
PART<lb/>
TIME<lb/>
JOB<lb/>
.ooking for a part-time<lb/>
job with flexible hours<lb/>
ind real business<lb/>
ixperience? Northwes<lb/>
kiutuai Life Ins. Co<lb/>
las openings for college<lb/>
igents. Call before noon<lb/>
for appointments!<lb/>
752-4080<lb/>
September 1979 THE EAST CAROLINA AN Page 3<lb/>
SOUTH SEAS<lb/>
PET SHOP<lb/>
GREENVILLE SQUARE<lb/>
Your compute Pet<lb/>
Supply Headquarters.<lb/>
Ray any Bowl and get<lb/>
Goldfish FREE.<lb/>
offer good while<lb/>
supply lasts<lb/>
Mon-Fri. 12-9 Sat. 11-6<lb/>
Elections soon<lb/>
By JANE BIDD'X<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"Student govern-<lb/>
ment elections will be<lb/>
held Sept. 26 for all<lb/>
class officers and legis-<lb/>
lators for both day<lb/>
students and dorm stu-<lb/>
dents according to<lb/>
Elections Committee<lb/>
Chairperson Tim Mertz.<lb/>
Mertz also stated that<lb/>
the filing dates are<lb/>
from Thurs Aug. 6 to<lb/>
Tues Aug. 18 at 5<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Mertz was appointed<lb/>
chairperson last week<lb/>
by the summer Legis-<lb/>
lature his freshman year<lb/>
on the Rules and Judi-<lb/>
ciary Committee and on<lb/>
a special committee 1&amp;<lb/>
rewrite election rules.<lb/>
As a third year<lb/>
student, Mertz has been<lb/>
inactive in SGA for the<lb/>
past year and is not<lb/>
Pec)lefplacesfar(i.<lb/>
ciu?cicle<lb/>
Start the year off<lb/>
right by meeting Chris-<lb/>
tians and learning more<lb/>
about your relationship<lb/>
with Christ. Come to<lb/>
the First Campus Cru-<lb/>
sade for Christ gather-<lb/>
ing this Thursday at<lb/>
7:00-9:00p.m. in Brews-<lb/>
ter B-102. See you<lb/>
there!<lb/>
law ?ccietT<lb/>
The ECU Law<lb/>
Society will have an<lb/>
organizational 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/>
nJ skills<lb/>
A new program for<lb/>
Increasing Learning Effi-<lb/>
ciency will be offered<lb/>
by Dr. George Weigand<lb/>
beginning September 5,<lb/>
1979. There will be two<lb/>
groups. One will meet<lb/>
on Monday and Wed-<lb/>
nesday at 1:00 p.m. and<lb/>
the other group will<lb/>
meet on Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday at 1:00 p.m.<lb/>
in Room 305 Wright<lb/>
Annex. The class is<lb/>
available to all students.<lb/>
Attendance is voluntary-<lb/>
no formal registration is<lb/>
required.<lb/>
legislature<lb/>
North Carolina Stu-<lb/>
dent Legislature meets<lb/>
Wed Sept. 12, 1979.<lb/>
The meeting will be<lb/>
held at 7:30 p.m. at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center, room 248. Inter-<lb/>
ested students are en-<lb/>
couraged to attend. For<lb/>
information concerning<lb/>
NCSL contact Chair-<lb/>
person Anne Northing-<lb/>
ton -758-6358 or Vice<lb/>
Chairperson Larry<lb/>
Zicherman-756-4004.<lb/>
ccrceit<lb/>
The ECU Student<lb/>
Union Special Attrac-<lb/>
tions Committee will<lb/>
present Gene Cotten in<lb/>
concert Sept. 25, at 8<lb/>
p.m. in Wright Aud.<lb/>
Tickets are $1.50 for<lb/>
students and $3.00 for<lb/>
the public.<lb/>
eaieeit<lb/>
A series of work-<lb/>
shops will be conducted<lb/>
by the Career Planning<lb/>
&amp; Placement Center in<lb/>
the areas of interview-<lb/>
ing techniques and the<lb/>
preparation of the re-<lb/>
sume. "Interviewing<lb/>
Techniques" will be<lb/>
held each Tuesday in<lb/>
September beginning<lb/>
September 11. "Resume<lb/>
Preparation" will be<lb/>
covered each Thursday<lb/>
in September beginning<lb/>
September 13. There<lb/>
will be two sessions<lb/>
each day-one at 2:00<lb/>
p.m. and another at<lb/>
4:00 p.m. in Rawl 130.<lb/>
Every senior is invited<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
Because your life should<lb/>
always have a casual side<lb/>
nnd clothes to match.<lb/>
Brody's is more than just a<lb/>
clothing store, it's a way of life.<lb/>
Where else can you<lb/>
find everything<lb/>
you need to dress<lb/>
for your casual<lb/>
lifestyle and at<lb/>
prices to make you<lb/>
smile.<lb/>
For women, there are dresses.<lb/>
Skirts. Blouses. Shorts. Pants.<lb/>
Jeans. Everything<lb/>
for easy living.<lb/>
we've got<lb/>
traditional chinos.<lb/>
Fashion jeans. Oxford<lb/>
cloth shirts. Cotton<lb/>
knit tops. Gym shorts.<lb/>
And more.<lb/>
And Brody's<lb/>
has shoes too<lb/>
from loafers to<lb/>
running shoes.<lb/>
High heels to clogs. Not to<lb/>
mention women's accessories<lb/>
galore.<lb/>
r So come in and make<lb/>
Brody's a part of your life.<lb/>
Downtown, Pitt Plaza<lb/>
planning to run foi a<lb/>
position in this election,<lb/>
thus fulfilling the non-<lb/>
partisan requirement for<lb/>
the elections chairper-<lb/>
son. SGA Secretary<lb/>
Lynn Calder has also<lb/>
been appointed to serve<lb/>
on the committee as a<lb/>
representative from<lb/>
SGA.<lb/>
This year more ad-<lb/>
vertising is planned in<lb/>
hopes of increasing<lb/>
( turn out to a<lb/>
p ble 30 per cent,<lb/>
i rl - said, and added<lb/>
thatwae hopes students<lb/>
will get out and vote<lb/>
for the use of their<lb/>
money.<lb/>
"Rules will be<lb/>
strictly enforced this<lb/>
year and any violation<lb/>
of not taking down<lb/>
campaigning materials<lb/>
will result in the candi-<lb/>
date losing his or her<lb/>
$10 registration, fee<lb/>
Mertz stated.<lb/>
Poll workers will be<lb/>
provided by the March-<lb/>
ing Pirates this fall.<lb/>
The band plans to use<lb/>
the proceeds to cover<lb/>
expenses and needed<lb/>
equipment.<lb/>
Piling takes place in<lb/>
the; SGA Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall. For further<lb/>
information contact Jim<lb/>
Mertz at 757-6611 Ext.<lb/>
214 or 758-3903 after 5<lb/>
p.mi<lb/>
WRQR $r A<lb/>
FOOTBALLWEEKEND<lb/>
WE'VE GOT<lb/>
A WINNER<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS RANDY CATES<lb/>
from<lb/>
WRQRHALLOW<lb/>
DIST.CO.<lb/>
WE HOPE YOU ENJOY THE<lb/>
ECUN.C. STATE<lb/>
game<lb/>
GO PIRATES!<lb/>
Thanks for listening to WRQR<lb/>
WESTERN<lb/>
SIZZLIN<lb/>
STEAKHOtTSE<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
No. 16 8oz. Ribeye $3.39 with ECU D Includes<lb/>
Baked Potato with margarine,<lb/>
Offer Good Thru Sun. Sept 9<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
No. 1 8oz. Sirloin $1.00 OFF with ECU D<lb/>
Includes Idaho King Baked Potato with margarine,<lb/>
V<lb/>
Texas Toast<lb/>
Offer good Moo. Sept 10- Wed. Sept 12<lb/>
<pb facs="00057212_0004"/><lb/>
The Kast laroli<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
&amp; Opinions<lb/>
Thursday, September 6, 1979 Page 4 Greenville, N.C<lb/>
The K<lb/>
ft.<lb/>
Johnny can H read<lb/>
The American system of public<lb/>
education is clearly in trouble, as is<lb/>
readily seen by professors who teach<lb/>
incoming freshmen here at ECU.<lb/>
According to a report in the U.S.<lb/>
News and World Report, there is a<lb/>
widespread dissatisfaction with school<lb/>
systems in both the primary and<lb/>
secondary levels. Parents are begin-<lb/>
ning to demand rapid improvements,<lb/>
including chages in tests and text-<lb/>
books, as well as more discipline to<lb/>
counteract behavioral difficulties both<lb/>
in and out of the classroom. As we<lb/>
see almost anytime we pick up the<lb/>
newspaper or watch the nightly news,<lb/>
violence and vandalism are occurring<lb/>
with alarming rapidity throughout the<lb/>
nation's public school systems.<lb/>
Students in the public schools are<lb/>
faced with a dilemma-often, the<lb/>
learning atmosphere is nonexistent,<lb/>
and often, they are being taught<lb/>
courses which have little to do with,<lb/>
survival skills they will need in the<lb/>
world outside.<lb/>
Another problem which is surfacing<lb/>
in the school systems is a lack of<lb/>
money. Budgets have skyrocketed to<lb/>
132 percent, while at the same time,<lb/>
pupil enrollment has declined by 9<lb/>
percent. The resluts of these increases<lb/>
in educational costs have pushed the<lb/>
average per pupil cost from $816 in<lb/>
1969-70 to a projected $2,070 in<lb/>
1979-80, which is an increase of 154<lb/>
percent.<lb/>
Teachers, too, are feeling the<lb/>
pinch. Many professional teachers are<lb/>
experiencing what is being called<lb/>
"teacher burnout and they are<lb/>
leaving their jobs as a result of it.<lb/>
Increases in violence, threats, and<lb/>
vandalism are cited as leading causes<lb/>
for teachers to search for other ways<lb/>
of earning a living.<lb/>
One of the more disheartening<lb/>
factors is that it is the students who<lb/>
will be hurt the most by the current<lb/>
problems in American schools. Test<lb/>
scores on nationwide tests used to<lb/>
determine college entrance are down<lb/>
by 11 percent, and some high school<lb/>
textbook publishers are gearing their<lb/>
texts down to a sixth-grade compre-<lb/>
hension level. In fact, the U.S. News<lb/>
and World Report estimates that 13<lb/>
percent of all high school graduates<lb/>
are functionally illiterate.<lb/>
Also, United Press International<lb/>
reports that a survey of parents are<lb/>
worried about drugs in the schools,<lb/>
discipline, poor educational standards<lb/>
and the search for good teachers. For<lb/>
the first time as well, according to<lb/>
the UPl, teachers strikes were listed<lb/>
as an impediment to quality educa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Parents also have their problems.<lb/>
Often, they do not know the cost per<lb/>
student (which is contributed by<lb/>
government for educational purposes),<lb/>
and only one third knew the local<lb/>
school superintendants name.<lb/>
Solution to these complex problems<lb/>
will be as complex as the problems<lb/>
themselves-however, some progress is<lb/>
being made. As of July, higher scores<lb/>
on the national Teachers Examination<lb/>
are being required, and a new<lb/>
program called "Quality Assurance for<lb/>
Professional Personnel" program is<lb/>
being started.<lb/>
The new program is intended to<lb/>
do two things; first, it will screen<lb/>
new teacher training applicants, so<lb/>
that people who lack subject know-<lb/>
ledge don't waste their time learning<lb/>
to teach what they don't know, and<lb/>
improve the design of education<lb/>
curricula for those who will benefit<lb/>
from training. It is yet to be seen<lb/>
whether school systems will cooperate<lb/>
with these new efforts.<lb/>
Whether or not the educational<lb/>
community can clean up the mess<lb/>
that is now public education is yet to<lb/>
be seen. The blame is hard to<lb/>
pinpoint, and the problem is even<lb/>
harder than that to solve.<lb/>
One thing is for certain, however.<lb/>
It is not the job of college instructors<lb/>
to scream at students "for being<lb/>
ignorant, when they haven't had a<lb/>
chance at a quality education before<lb/>
they get here. The problem is back<lb/>
there, back at Hometown High, and<lb/>
until you can solve that, or at least<lb/>
make an effort here to make up for<lb/>
lost time, there will still be Johnny s<lb/>
who can't read<lb/>
"EIGHT O'CLOCK CLfSS?S MlTHOvr tEPK&amp;CrJTATIG<lb/>
IS TY?Wy '<lb/>
American Journal<lb/>
Pro-nukes fight back<lb/>
Business mirror<lb/>
Standard of living decreases<lb/>
By JOHN CUNNIFF<lb/>
AP Business Analyst<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) - A<lb/>
remarkable test of wills,<lb/>
like that in a poker<lb/>
game, is taking place<lb/>
between lenders and<lb/>
borrowers.<lb/>
So far, neither one<lb/>
is revealing many signs<lb/>
uf weakness, even<lb/>
though the stress has<lb/>
been building relentles-<lb/>
sly. Lenders keep rais-<lb/>
ing their rates. Bor-<lb/>
rowers keep paying the<lb/>
rales and asking for<lb/>
mote.<lb/>
Aren't higher inter-<lb/>
est rales supposed to<lb/>
discourage borrowing?<lb/>
That's what the books<lb/>
? say, but it hasn't been<lb/>
working out that way.<lb/>
In fact, as borrowing<lb/>
continues you can hear<lb/>
ihc critics grousing that<lb/>
the Federal Reserve has<lb/>
it ail wrong thai<lb/>
ufcuplc and companies<lb/>
ar?: , borrowing because<lb/>
ihry have to, not be-<lb/>
i-a?s?r they have to, nol<lb/>
ft- iu-? 'hey want to.<lb/>
There's .a difference,<lb/>
they say. If borrowing<lb/>
were a matter of choice,<lb/>
they say, then raising<lb/>
interest rates might in-<lb/>
deed discouraging such<lb/>
choices. When it's<lb/>
needed people will bor-<lb/>
row at any rate.<lb/>
Thy add that so<lb/>
long as the country has<lb/>
13 percent inflation the<lb/>
Federal Reserve's 10.5<lb/>
percent discount rate<lb/>
and the banks' 12.25<lb/>
percent prime lending<lb/>
rate are poor deterants<lb/>
to borrowing.<lb/>
In fact, this school<lb/>
of thought observes, it<lb/>
can even pay to borrow.<lb/>
In many instances, 13<lb/>
percent inflation effect-<lb/>
ively cancels out bor-<lb/>
rowing costs.<lb/>
The issue is indeed<lb/>
a confusing one, and<lb/>
even today, 50 years<lb/>
after the beginning of<lb/>
the Great Depression,<lb/>
"experts" still argue<lb/>
about whether the cor-<lb/>
rect monetary policy<lb/>
was pursued during the<lb/>
The traditional view<lb/>
is that loose money en-<lb/>
courages economic ac-<lb/>
tivity and that tight<lb/>
money restricts it. But,<lb/>
as some enconomists<lb/>
say, these arenot tra-<lb/>
ditional times.<lb/>
The ingredient not<lb/>
fully understodd, they<lb/>
assert, is the brand of<lb/>
inflation. Some maintain<lb/>
we shouldn't even use<lb/>
the inflation label to<lb/>
describe some of to-<lb/>
day's rising prices. It's<lb/>
misleading, they say.<lb/>
Simplified, the argu-<lb/>
ment is: Many of to-<lb/>
day's high prices result<lb/>
not from increased de-<lb/>
mand or because of a<lb/>
shortage in the pro-<lb/>
ductive capacity of the<lb/>
country. People are go-<lb/>
ing our and buying, and<lb/>
industry is not straining<lb/>
at the limits of its<lb/>
capacity to produce.<lb/>
What is happening,<lb/>
it is argued is that the<lb/>
standard of living is<lb/>
recalling decreasing. Ra-<lb/>
ther than surrounding<lb/>
themselves with goods<lb/>
and services, people are<lb/>
being denied them.<lb/>
And why are they<lb/>
being denied since so<lb/>
much income is going<lb/>
into maintaining living<lb/>
standards, which- have<lb/>
become enourmously<lb/>
more costly because of<lb/>
the sudden rise in the<lb/>
price of imported ener-<lb/>
gy?<lb/>
Whatever, Federal<lb/>
Reserve policy seems<lb/>
aimed at reducing de-<lb/>
mand by raising interest<lb/>
rates, and it has con-<lb/>
siderable support among<lb/>
economists and business<lb/>
people. They see it as<lb/>
the only corrective.<lb/>
When high interest<lb/>
rats have forced the<lb/>
economy to slow, they<lb/>
say, the aberrations will<lb/>
disappear.<lb/>
It may work out that<lb/>
way, but .with some of<lb/>
the "experts" still ar-<lb/>
guing over whether the<lb/>
United States pursued<lb/>
the proper money poli-<lb/>
cies 50 years ago, you<lb/>
never can, be sure.<lb/>
When 8,000 pro-<lb/>
nuclear demonstrators<lb/>
massed in Rocky Flats,<lb/>
Colorado at the nuclear<lb/>
weapons processing<lb/>
plant there, the bus-<lb/>
iness executives who<lb/>
direct the nuclear in-<lb/>
dustry were pleased but<lb/>
hardly surprised. They<lb/>
had helped plan and<lb/>
finance the demonstra-<lb/>
tion, held on the site of<lb/>
earlier rallies against<lb/>
nuclear power<lb/>
THe 1970s have<lb/>
been, in some ways,<lb/>
quiet after the tumult of<lb/>
the 1960s, but they<lb/>
have never been quiet<lb/>
enough for corporate<lb/>
higher-ups. Spooked by<lb/>
the growing strength of<lb/>
the anti-nuke movement,<lb/>
and worried about the<lb/>
long-term effects of pol-<lb/>
itical reform, the cor-<lb/>
porations have taken the<lb/>
offensive.<lb/>
Their game plan in-<lb/>
cludes an aggressive<lb/>
public relations war on<lb/>
the anti-nuke forces,<lb/>
surreptitious research,<lb/>
and a long-term study<lb/>
of ways to blunt and<lb/>
absorb social activism.<lb/>
The public relations<lb/>
effort was quietly<lb/>
launched in late spring<lb/>
by a group of manu-<lb/>
facturing firms and util-<lb/>
ities that do business in<lb/>
the nuclear field. THeir<lb/>
objective: to offset the<lb/>
enormous negative pub-<lb/>
licity of Three Mile<lb/>
Island. A memo dated<lb/>
May 1979 from the<lb/>
giant Bechtel Power<lb/>
Corp. of San Francisco<lb/>
to colleagues in the<lb/>
nuclear industry outlined<lb/>
highlights of the nation-<lb/>
wide campaign: A<lb/>
26-minute film boosting<lb/>
the glories of nuclear<lb/>
power, designed to be<lb/>
shown to the "press<lb/>
and to specialized<lb/>
groups Briefings for<lb/>
industrial leaders, "edi-<lb/>
torial roundtables" and<lb/>
a "seminar (on) today's<lb/>
social problems A<lb/>
major fund-raising ef-<lb/>
fort, spearheaded by<lb/>
Middle South Utilities of<lb/>
New Orleans and Kan-<lb/>
sas Power &amp; Light Co.<lb/>
College campus pro-<lb/>
grams conducted by<lb/>
Edison Electric Institute,<lb/>
an industry public relat-<lb/>
ions and lobbying arm.<lb/>
A persuasive program<lb/>
for senior citizens,<lb/>
headed by the Westing-<lb/>
house Corp. A "scien-<lb/>
tist's program direct-<lb/>
ed by the Atomic In-<lb/>
dustrial Forum, another<lb/>
PR and lobbying organ-<lb/>
ization. A stable of<lb/>
pro-nuke speakers.<lb/>
The most desirable<lb/>
spokespeople, according<lb/>
to the Bechtel memo,<lb/>
are university scientists,<lb/>
followed by "the young<lb/>
engineer" and, interest-<lb/>
ingly, the Nuclear Reg-<lb/>
ulatory Commission,<lb/>
which supposedly keeps<lb/>
an eye on the industry.<lb/>
The alleged safety and<lb/>
economy of nuclear<lb/>
power are the themes<lb/>
of the campaign, along<lb/>
with assurances that<lb/>
renewable sources of<lb/>
energy, such as solar<lb/>
power, are years away<lb/>
from being practical.<lb/>
The industry offen-<lb/>
sive began soon after<lb/>
the memo was circu-<lb/>
lated. Anti-nuke demon-<lb/>
strators outside the Liv-<lb/>
ermore Radiation Lab in<lb/>
California were given a<lb/>
"Social Ecology Survey"<lb/>
questionaire to fill out.<lb/>
The survey, addressed<lb/>
to "Fellow Conversion<lb/>
Project Dernonstrators<lb/>
was designed to pin-<lb/>
point attitudes of anti-<lb/>
nuke activists. Unknown<lb/>
to the demonstrators, it<lb/>
was commissioned by<lb/>
the Edison Electric In-<lb/>
stitute.<lb/>
The Rocky Flats<lb/>
pronuke demonstration<lb/>
was another part of the<lb/>
nuclear industry's new-<lb/>
offensive. The rally was<lb/>
financed in part by<lb/>
Rockwell International,<lb/>
operators of the plant,<lb/>
and was co-sponsored<lb/>
by a United Steel-<lb/>
workers union local. The<lb/>
featured speaker, a<lb/>
former U.S. labor sec-<lb/>
retary, scored points<lb/>
with workers by exhort-<lb/>
ing the crowd not to let<lb/>
"the kooks take your<lb/>
jobs awav from you<lb/>
While one branch of<lb/>
American business<lb/>
swings into action to<lb/>
stop the anti-nuke<lb/>
movement, other leading<lb/>
corporations are spend-<lb/>
ing big bucks to find<lb/>
out how they can a-<lb/>
bsorb reform movements<lb/>
into the power structure<lb/>
with a minimum of<lb/>
fuss. To do this, they<lb/>
must first find out what<lb/>
makes anti-establishment<lb/>
activists tick. The cor-<lb/>
porations have hired<lb/>
Arnold Mitchell of SRI<lb/>
International, a high-<lb/>
powered California think<lb/>
tank, to tell them.<lb/>
Mitchell is a re-<lb/>
searcher who com-<lb/>
manded rapt attention<lb/>
two years ago by de-<lb/>
scribing how the back-<lb/>
to-fhe-basios, "voluntary<lb/>
simplicity" trend could<lb/>
be made to work for<lb/>
American mega-corpora-<lb/>
tions. This time around,<lb/>
Mitchell has constructed<lb/>
a psychological profile<lb/>
of an inner-directed,<lb/>
idealistic, conserv-<lb/>
ation-minded person<lb/>
that he thinks will fuse<lb/>
populist ideals and<lb/>
traditional business<lb/>
practices in the years<lb/>
ahead. This "practical<lb/>
dreamer Mitchell<lb/>
says, is the business<lb/>
and government leader<lb/>
of the future.<lb/>
Young actii-t in<lb/>
the anti-nuclear. con-<lb/>
sumer, and small-is-be-<lb/>
autiful movement- are<lb/>
the tpes of practical<lb/>
dreamers Mitchell has<lb/>
in mind. I ritil thi new<lb/>
breed of social critic?<lb/>
are steered into elite<lb/>
government and busi-<lb/>
ness circles ?where they<lb/>
will presumably be iso-<lb/>
lated and made power-<lb/>
less?the U.S. faces<lb/>
years of social unrest,<lb/>
'Mitchell warns.<lb/>
Arnold Mitchell's<lb/>
?;lients are not enthusi-<lb/>
astic patron? oi social<lb/>
change. Shell Oil, Time.<lb/>
Inc Xerox. Polaroid,<lb/>
Mercedes Benz and Levi<lb/>
Straus? are footing the<lb/>
bill tor hi? continuing<lb/>
?tudy.<lb/>
Are the 1970s really<lb/>
a quiet decade? That's<lb/>
the pupular notion, but<lb/>
the behind-the-scenes<lb/>
action? of America"?<lb/>
most powerful corpor-<lb/>
ation? show they don't<lb/>
believe it.<lb/>
DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
Letters<lb/>
Letter? to the editor<lb/>
are welcome, however,<lb/>
thev must contain the<lb/>
name, address, and ID.<lb/>
number. No letter? will<lb/>
be printed if the) 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/>
i obscenity.<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/>
News Editor<lb/>
Asst. News Editor<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
Asst. Features Editor<lb/>
Karen Wendt<lb/>
Lisa Drew<lb/>
Bill Jones<lb/>
Richard Green<lb/>
Asst. Director of Advertising Terry Herndon<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN is the student newspaper<lb/>
of Eat Carolina University sponsored by the Media<lb/>
Board of 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 of 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 ere 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 27834.<lb/>
The phone numbers are: 757-638, 8387, 8308<lb/>
Subscriptions are 810 annually, alumni 86 annually,<lb/>
t<lb/>
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Thursday, September 6, 1979 Page 5 GreenWHe, N.C,<lb/>
Kickoffset for 7p.m<lb/>
Pirates invade Wolfs den Saturday<lb/>
Pirate split end Yern Davenport<lb/>
(Photo b John H. (.r'an<lb/>
IU CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
"This i- probably, the strongest, most physical<lb/>
team thai we've every played since I've been at<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
This was the assesmenl of the North Carolina<lb/>
Mat. football team by Pirate head coach Pat Dye at<lb/>
hi- Wednesda) afternoon press conference as he<lb/>
looked ahead at his team's 7 p.m. Saturday<lb/>
encounter vith the W olfpack.<lb/>
'I don't know what to expect in the game he<lb/>
continued. "They're so big and strong that 1 don't<lb/>
knew even it we played out best it we could win<lb/>
But Dye did say that he felt the Pirate chances<lb/>
would he fairl) good d they could avoid a repeal of<lb/>
the mistakes that lead to the Pack's 29-13 victory<lb/>
last season.<lb/>
"It we don'l give them anything easy, we can<lb/>
make a contest out of it said Dye, obviously<lb/>
remembering the -even turnover- that plagued his<lb/>
team against State a year ago.<lb/>
"1 was encouraged by the tan) that we did not<lb/>
have a single turnover last week against Western<lb/>
Carolina he -aid "And this happened with us<lb/>
using a lot ot reserves, including three different<lb/>
quarterbacks.<lb/>
One thing that doe- bother Dye about la-t<lb/>
week game is the 110 yards in penalties that were<lb/>
assists against the Pirate "You can't have that sort<lb/>
ot thing against a good football team. Dye -aid.<lb/>
" il North Carolina State may just be a great<lb/>
football team by the end of the year. They may be<lb/>
now. e just don't know v et.<lb/>
Due thing that must lie pleasing to Dye i- the<lb/>
fact thai, unlike la-t season, the Pirates go into the<lb/>
State game relatively health).<lb/>
Last vear both ECU halfbacks, Anthony Collins and<lb/>
Eddie link- (now a New York Giant), were forced<lb/>
to -it out the entire game with injuries.<lb/>
In addition, -tarting tight end Joe Codette was<lb/>
hurt on the very first -eries of down- and did not<lb/>
play tile rest of the game. A big blow came at the<lb/>
end of the first half when beamier Green was<lb/>
sandwiched b) a pair of Wolfpack linemen and was<lb/>
forced to -it out most of the second halt.<lb/>
"We were certainly forced to play handicapped<lb/>
Dve later -aid.<lb/>
Hut no excuses came from Dye tor the loss.<lb/>
"N.C. State played an excellent football game and<lb/>
we didn't  he -aid.<lb/>
So it revenge tune come Saturday, right<lb/>
"1 know our team feels we didn't plaj well la-t<lb/>
vear noted Dve. "We would definitely like to<lb/>
make a better showing of ourselves this tune, I<lb/>
hope the game i- no runaway. It shouldn't be it we<lb/>
( an avoid the turnov ers.<lb/>
The team attitude toward- the game seems to<lb/>
he one ol great anxietv av- Dye. 'The) are<lb/>
definitely, looking forward to playing the game he<lb/>
-aid. "That i- encouraging<lb/>
Encouraging also must be La-t Carolina 31-6<lb/>
thrashing ot Western Carolina la-t week that -aw<lb/>
the Pirate offense ama 51V yards total offense.<lb/>
Leading the way for the offense against the<lb/>
Catamount- was fullback Theodore Sutton wh<lb/>
112-vard, two touchdown performance gave him two<lb/>
irreat game- in a row. dating hack to la-t seasons<lb/>
Independence Bowl.<lb/>
"Theodore is about to become a great plaver.<lb/>
said Dye. "He been a good player ever since he's<lb/>
been here and is ju-t now crossing the tine line<lb/>
that separates the good from the great.<lb/>
.<lb/>
?MJI<lb/>
vwwwwiKwwr, wm s-<lb/>
M a n euvering Mike H a h k i n<lb/>
(Pi<lb/>
Publicized A-A Richter<lb/>
ready to live up to laurels<lb/>
H -  nter ol attention.<lb/>
  . ni Richter, the N.C. Mate All-America<lb/>
H - praises have come from all over<lb/>
,untrv during pre-season. Richter has received<lb/>
publicity and praise, in tact, that it will be<lb/>
i live up to hi billing.<lb/>
But the 6-3, 245-pound senior recently received<lb/>
ne unusual praise from sports editor Bill Brill of<lb/>
. Roanok Tirrn s.<lb/>
"Few piaver- m recent collegiate football history<lb/>
. ?, are as good at their positions a- their<lb/>
' wrote Brill in a recent story. "But it you<lb/>
believe the pro scouts, Richter is even better than<lb/>
thev -av he 1<lb/>
"The besl tributes to Richter have been paid<lb/>
byother ACC coaches, who refer to their own<lb/>
ters a- 'the second best in the league They do<lb/>
not have to mention number 1.<lb/>
On coach outside of the ACC whose team must<lb/>
face Richter and the Wolfpack this Saturday night<lb/>
aj spoken highly of the Hinckley, Ohio native.<lb/>
' honestly think that State may have m Richter<lb/>
the best offensive center that ever lined up to<lb/>
pla a college football game -an! Ea-t Carolina<lb/>
; i man Pat Dye.<lb/>
"He's a better center than Ted Brown a runner.<lb/>
Some thing- he can do are inhuman<lb/>
flu- i- high praise from even a "nice guy like<lb/>
Pat Dve. But Dve logic i- evident a- Richter s list<lb/>
honors is long and ever-growing.<lb/>
j, wa- named a first team -election on la-t<lb/>
season's Associated Pro- and American Football<lb/>
aches Association (Kodak) All-America teams. He<lb/>
a unanimous cho.ee by everyone to repeat again<lb/>
thi- season.<lb/>
Richter 1- a very legitimate candidate tor the<lb/>
(Jutland Trophy, an' award given annually to the<lb/>
nation best lineman. There has also been some<lb/>
buildup b) Mate people mentioning him as a<lb/>
Heisman Trophy candidate.<lb/>
All tin- along with hi- size and speed (he runs<lb/>
a u fljvard dash), make Richter a big pro<lb/>
prospect ? tact, most scouts -ay he is a "can't<lb/>
miss" prospect.<lb/>
The amazing thing about Richter is that he gets<lb/>
x this attention as an offensive lineman, an area<lb/>
that i- almost always overshadowed by quarterbacks,<lb/>
running backs and receivers<lb/>
But Richter is so good that his play is noticeable<lb/>
t0 even the worst backfield-oriented fan It is not<lb/>
uncommon to hear fans or member- ol the press<lb/>
yell, "Boy, what a block. I cant believe it. Its<lb/>
Tut, believe U, J K.chter is very real; and<lb/>
verv much a threat to the East Carolina defensive<lb/>
h?e come Saturday night at 7 p.m.<lb/>
With Hurricane David speculated to be heading<lb/>
( ree, Ic's way all week, Pirate tans have been<lb/>
Grccnviiie 7 grassy bank<lb/>
! tg the south end zone of Carter Stad.um this<lb/>
h v ma also find themsleves taking cover<lb/>
?alU anotherhurncane That's Nathan "Hurri-<lb/>
?? Bitter as the Wolfpack kicker has become<lb/>
cane ruuci, a<lb/>
known around Raleigh.<lb/>
Pi ite fans may remember that it was Ri ter<lb/>
br the most part, did East Carolina in last<lb/>
J w.tb his five field goal, 17-point perlormance<lb/>
Tom Wolfpack's 29-13 defeat of the Pirates last<lb/>
reason.<lb/>
Strength, speed, experience<lb/>
characterize Wolfpack squad<lb/>
N .C. State's Bubba Green<lb/>
By jiMn Dl PREE<lb/>
tsst. Sports Editor<lb/>
Victor) was sweel as the Pirate- conquered<lb/>
Western Carolina University Saturday in the season<lb/>
opener at r icklen Stadium.<lb/>
But while ECl was notching it- premier victory,<lb/>
the Wolfpack ui N.C. Slate wa plotting to end the<lb/>
Bucs quest tor the unofficial .North Carolina State<lb/>
chain pn ui-hip.<lb/>
The Wolfpack return- a host of players<lb/>
offensively and defensively, the big question mark<lb/>
in the State camp is who will, replace Ted Brown?<lb/>
 hile maintaining strong contention for the<lb/>
coveted Heisman Trophy until -lowed by injuries,<lb/>
Brown firmly estblished himself in the annals ol<lb/>
NCSl -tar- as the schools all-time leading rusher.<lb/>
Though not certain who the back to replace<lb/>
Brown will be, as defensive head coach Frank Orgel<lb/>
States "Thev have a -table full of back<lb/>
Apparently the leading candidate tor the -lot 1-<lb/>
junior Dwight Sullivan, who wa- hampered la-t<lb/>
season with a hamstring pull and an elbow<lb/>
infection.<lb/>
Senior S-ott Smith return- at quarterback to<lb/>
direct the veteran tilled veer offense. Billy Rav<lb/>
Vickers, the leading returning ground gainer from<lb/>
last season's Tangerine Bowl champions, round- out<lb/>
the Pack backfield.<lb/>
The strong force m the State offense remains<lb/>
their powerful line.<lb/>
All-America center Jim Richer open- his final<lb/>
season in the red and white with preseason honors<lb/>
1 omine Inmi all directions.<lb/>
t. tards Chuck Stone and I<lb/>
- - Chris Koehne an I<lb/>
form me of the most devastating<lb/>
W eiver Lee Juki 5 and<lb/>
Dawson round out the starting -<lb/>
- - king gam<lb/>
ker N RiU<lb/>
team- leading scorer in 1978. Ritter<lb/>
number on East CArolina la-t vear<lb/>
amassed IT point- m the Pack 29-13 v<lb/>
Defensively, the Wolfpack again seems I<lb/>
weakness<lb/>
Massive Bubba Gree and Brian O'D<lb/>
currentlv battle tor the one -tartn.<lb/>
- non Gupton. Senior middle g<lb/>
round- out the front line.<lb/>
Replacing departed inside linebackers B<lb/>
and Kvle Wescoe will be sophom R I<lb/>
Abraham and Dann Lute.<lb/>
Outside linebacker- David Horning and<lb/>
Hannah add to what may be one<lb/>
devastating defenses in the nation.<lb/>
"Thev're certainly the largest team w.<lb/>
faced in quite a while said Orgel. "C a h R<lb/>
-av- he really can't find a weakness<lb/>
and we really can't find one either<lb/>
Head coach Pat Dye looks forward<lb/>
meeting, but -tates cautiously, C. Si<lb/>
mi pares with any team we've ever<lb/>
probably the strongest physical footl 1 am w<lb/>
ever played.<lb/>
Collins, ankle, ready for N.C. State<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Spurts Editor<lb/>
"I felt useless<lb/>
Sound- bad, huh? It was.<lb/>
The date was Saturday. Sept. 9, 1978 and the<lb/>
place was Raleigh. Carter Stadium in Raleigh. The<lb/>
East Carolina Pirate- were about to face the N.C.<lb/>
Stale Wolfpack in what was a football game of<lb/>
major importance to two teams that would<lb/>
eventually play in post-season bowl games.<lb/>
Absent from the Pirate lineup was Anthony<lb/>
Collins, a 5-11 sophomore halfback that would<lb/>
eventually be his team's second leading rusher as<lb/>
he amassed 179 yards and averaged 5.8 yards per<lb/>
carry.<lb/>
The Pirate- went on to lose that game 29-13 in<lb/>
what was a humiliating defeat for the team and a<lb/>
humiliating experience for Collins. . -<lb/>
"There tva. nothing I could do said Collins,<lb/>
who was badlj hampered by an ankle injury at the<lb/>
time. "1 kept'feeling like 1 was getting in the way<lb/>
on the sidelines. I knew that I belonged on the<lb/>
field but that just wasn't possible<lb/>
So Anthony Collins is definitely looking forward<lb/>
to this Saturday's game with the Wolfpack. "I have<lb/>
two games work to do he said.<lb/>
"My goal and the team's goal is to go 11-0<lb/>
said Collins, "and we've got to win this one if that<lb/>
is to happen<lb/>
Though the Wolfpack are clear-cut favorites for<lb/>
Saturday night's game and are, likewise, clear-cut<lb/>
favorites to win the 1979 Atlantic Coast Conference<lb/>
Championship, Collins feels the Pirtates do have one<lb/>
advantage.<lb/>
That being that the Pirates have one game<lb/>
under their bell, a 31-6 defeat of Western Carolina,<lb/>
and the Wolfpack do not. "1 don't care who you<lb/>
are, you're going to be a little nervou that firsl<lb/>
game; a lot more so than usual he said.<lb/>
Aside from his health, there is a lot ot<lb/>
difference in Anthony Collins now as compared to a<lb/>
vear ago when he'was forced to miss the State<lb/>
game. <lb/>
"Anthony is a much more complete player,<lb/>
said East Caroline coach Pat Dye. "Last year he<lb/>
was not a very good blocker, but he has overcome<lb/>
that and now does a great job<lb/>
"1 worked a lot on my blocking last season,<lb/>
said the man his teammates call simply "A.C<lb/>
never was asked to block in high school. So 1 guess<lb/>
that's why it's taken me three years to master the<lb/>
technique<lb/>
Though it mav have taken him a vvh.le to learn<lb/>
to block, Collins has always been an excellent<lb/>
runner.<lb/>
"He showed us a great deal from the very first<lb/>
dav that he came to practice Dye said. "He is<lb/>
and always has been, an excellent runner both<lb/>
inside and outside<lb/>
Could "A.C gain 1,000 yards this season He<lb/>
definitely has that potential said Dye. "I will say<lb/>
that he "will get the ball more this season than last.<lb/>
We've worked that into out offense<lb/>
How does the Penn Yan, N.Y native feel about<lb/>
the thousand? "That's every back's goal of<lb/>
course he said. "1 feel that both 1 and Toad<lb/>
(fullback Theodore Sutton) have a chance. If one of<lb/>
us could do it, 1 feel that the rest of our offense<lb/>
would benefit<lb/>
Collins looked back at last season at the stage<lb/>
and saw a number of things he likes. "We have<lb/>
more talent this season. We're probably a better<lb/>
team now than we were last season at this time<lb/>
There is no doubt that the Pirates are a better<lb/>
team heading into the State game. With "A.C c<lb/>
hand, the Wolfpack could be in big trouble. <lb/>
??<lb/>
ASKS:<lb/>
?-??<lb/>
A'ilp<lb/>
A.C at full power<lb/>
U'holo by John H. Grogan)<lb/>
<pb facs="00057212_0006"/><lb/>
From snacks to paperbacks to back packs, Kroger Sav-on<lb/>
has what East Carolina University students need  this<lb/>
year. Shop Kroger Sav-on today.<lb/>
TIMEX<lb/>
WATCHES<lb/>
Sis? 20<lb/>
CARLINGS<lb/>
Black Label<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
Page 6 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 6 September 1979<lb/>
ADVIRTISIO 11 IMPOLICY<lb/>
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ifJ<lb/>
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Thru Sun Sept. 9, 1979<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057212_0007"/><lb/>
iber 1979<lb/>
6 September 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Pafl. 7<lb/>
; ?<lb/>
c<lb/>
0<lb/>
Lott takes TMen over Conners<lb/>
B WILL GRIMSLEY<lb/>
P Special Correspondent<lb/>
 YORK (AP) ? Old George Lott is d y<lb/>
m .i but not overawed by the hardsockin g,<lb/>
ipingi grunting, two-fisted racket swinging brerd<lb/>
modem tennis players.<lb/>
l Jimm) Connors used that two-handed stu,f<lb/>
Bill niden, he'd lie lucky to get two games t<lb/>
ih, venerable doubles star of the late 1920's<lb/>
I uU 1930 s commented as he watched the<lb/>
n-ar-old American championships unfold in the<lb/>
j,ig, almost antispectic setting at the new<lb/>
tilling Meadow complex.<lb/>
 Bill, who was a master tactician and could<lb/>
a,i) hol in the book, would have, exploited the<lb/>
, ! reach of the two-handed stroke and would<lb/>
driven the kid crazy<lb/>
H, now 72, who still teaches the game at the<lb/>
md Park Racquet Club outside Chicago, came<lb/>
liwn to watch Slew Hester's big show but<lb/>
pally to promote the doubles tournament,<lb/>
' he feels is being gradually downgraded.<lb/>
bridged the gap between Tilden and the era<lb/>
.u?nh Vines, F.ed Perry and Donald Budge<lb/>
I siayed on to marvel at the exploits of Jack<lb/>
.? Pancho Gonzales, Rod Laver and, more<lb/>
. the games Big Three - Bjorn Borg, Jimmy<lb/>
 and John McEnroe.<lb/>
M, js not one to insist that the present-day<lb/>
iUners don't compare with the old-timers and<lb/>
? when l.lden died they lost the mold. On the<lb/>
he is bug-eyed over the tremendous<lb/>
a?ccs made b) the game since it went open 11<lb/>
- ago.<lb/>
"h is foolish to compare men who played in<lb/>
different periods of time he said, "but my feeling<lb/>
is that the game today is far superior in the<lb/>
second, third, fourth and lower plateaus. There are<lb/>
manv more good players. At the very top, players<lb/>
are no better and no worse than they were in the<lb/>
old days<lb/>
II somebody stuck a gun to his head and forced<lb/>
him to pick a top plateau, the occupants, he said,<lb/>
would be Tilden, Budge, Gonzales and Borg, in no<lb/>
particular order. .<lb/>
Kod Laver had the best record of anybody he<lb/>
added, -winning the Grand Slam twice both as an<lb/>
amateur and a professional, but I would have to put<lb/>
him a notch below those I've named.<lb/>
"Like Ellsworth Vines, Laver was unbeatable on<lb/>
davs when he was on but he suffered too many<lb/>
losses to lesser players. Borg because he s so<lb/>
young and already winner of four Wimbledons at<lb/>
age 23, could wind up with the best record of all.<lb/>
"But 'i think potentially the best player in the<lb/>
world today is this kid, McEnroe. If he ever gets<lb/>
his head on straight and settles down, nobody<lb/>
should beat him , ,<lb/>
Lott who won five U.S. doubles titles with three<lb/>
different partners and ranked No. 2 behind Vines in<lb/>
1931 is a stickler for court decorum and believes<lb/>
greatness is forged more in the mind than with<lb/>
arms and legs. . ,<lb/>
That the reason he has reservations about the<lb/>
20-year-old McEnroe, who in two years has hit the<lb/>
tennis scene like a bombshell.<lb/>
"He has a natural instinct, quick feet, a delecate<lb/>
touch he said. "He ahs all the stuff to be a great<lb/>
()IU. like Tilden, Bulge and Gonzales - if he d only<lb/>
learn patience and restraint.<lb/>
"He is not as bad as Connors and he seems to<lb/>
be getting better, but I wish all these surly,<lb/>
racket-banging kids could learn that they only hurt<lb/>
themselves when they go into such tantrums. It<lb/>
breaks up concentrations<lb/>
Lott said he vvas particularly disenchanted with<lb/>
Connors.<lb/>
"A couple of weeks ago in Indianappolis, I saw<lb/>
him make an obscene gesture to the umpire, he<lb/>
added "His mother was in the stands. It was<lb/>
terrible<lb/>
Lott said he tells all of his young pupils that<lb/>
they should pattern their court temperament after<lb/>
Borg or any of the Australians.<lb/>
"You would think Borg was an Aussie the way<lb/>
he remains cool, never changing expression whether<lb/>
he's losing or winnrng Lott said. "It's a way of<lb/>
life with Australians. Eve only seem one Australian<lb/>
blow up - Bob Hewitt - and he mellowed when<lb/>
lie go! older<lb/>
The veteran teacher acknowledged that Tilden, in<lb/>
his heyday, was not beyond court flareuos.<lb/>
"Tilden was an actor Lott said "He even<lb/>
played Dracula on the stage. He was a showman.<lb/>
But he was never vicious or vulgar.<lb/>
Bob Hope<lb/>
Affair on the Matt' delayed Sg keep<lb/>
Red Cross<lb/>
By R1CK1 GUARMIS<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Writer<lb/>
he "Affair on the<lb/>
which was sche-<lb/>
for Wednesday,<lb/>
5. has been post-<lb/>
due to bad wea-<lb/>
MalL<lb/>
Sept.<lb/>
x ned<lb/>
ther.<lb/>
The "celebration"<lb/>
been rescheduled<lb/>
Wednesday Sept. 12<lb/>
m 3 p.m. until 7<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
- veral deadlines are<lb/>
proaching. Flag Foot-<lb/>
A deadline is on Sept.<lb/>
7 Co-Rec. Softball dead-<lb/>
line is Sept. 13 and the<lb/>
Tennis Singles Deadline<lb/>
is Sept. 13.<lb/>
Captain's meetings<lb/>
for these three events<lb/>
are Sept. 10 for Hag<lb/>
football. This meeting<lb/>
will be held at 4 p.m.<lb/>
in Biologv 103<lb/>
Tennis Singles cap-<lb/>
tain's meeting will be<lb/>
held on Sept. IT at 4<lb/>
p.m. in Memorial 104.<lb/>
Co-Rec Softball captain's<lb/>
meeting is scheduled for<lb/>
Sept. IT, at T p.m. in<lb/>
Brewster B-102.<lb/>
This weekend, sever-<lb/>
al members of the ECU<lb/>
Pepsi Physical Fitness<lb/>
Club will travel to<lb/>
Wilmington to take part<lb/>
in a Triathlon. This<lb/>
event will consist of<lb/>
swimming, biking, and<lb/>
running. Good luck to<lb/>
participants from ECU.$<lb/>
Football officials<lb/>
clinics are being held<lb/>
this week. The first<lb/>
meeting was held Wed-<lb/>
nesday. The next meet-<lb/>
ing will be held on<lb/>
Thursday, Sept. 6, from<lb/>
7 p.m. until 9 p.m. in<lb/>
Brewster C-103. Friday's<lb/>
meeting, Sept. 7, is<lb/>
scheduled for 3:30 p.m.<lb/>
until 5 p.m. at IM Field<lb/>
si.<lb/>
Upcoming e n t r y<lb/>
dates to keep an eye on<lb/>
are One-on-One Basket-<lb/>
ball on Sept. 10-20, and<lb/>
Team Golf on Sept.<lb/>
10-20.<lb/>
Almost Anything<lb/>
Goes, a popular event<lb/>
on campus, has been<lb/>
planned lor Oct. 3. The<lb/>
entry date for .this<lb/>
program is Sept. l-Oet.<lb/>
1.<lb/>
ready.<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO 12TH<lb/>
WEEK OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
$175.00 "ail inclusive"<lb/>
pregnancy lest birth control and<lb/>
problem pregnancy counseling For<lb/>
further information call 832-0535 (toll-<lb/>
free number 800-221-2568) between<lb/>
9 A M 5 P M weekdays<lb/>
Raleigh Women's Health<lb/>
Organization<lb/>
917 West Morgan St.<lb/>
Raleigh. NC 27603<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
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V-Necks, &amp; Cardigan<lb/>
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ALL US FOR ALL YOUR PARTY NEEDS Wl<lb/>
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id<lb/>
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Ask for a f ree phonestlcker,<lb/>
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Numbers-<lb/>
Campus Pollcs<lb/>
757-6150<lb/>
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Pizza<lb/>
758-6660<lb/>
Menu<lb/>
All Pizzas Include Our Special<lb/>
Blend of Sauce and Cheese<lb/>
Our Superb Cheese Pizza<lb/>
12" small $3.25<lb/>
16" large $4.80<lb/>
Domino's Deluxe<lb/>
PeDDeroni, Mushrooms, Onions,<lb/>
Green Peppers, &amp; Fresh Sausage<lb/>
12" small Deluxe $5.65<lb/>
16" large Deluxe $8.40<lb/>
Additional Items<lb/>
Pepperoni<lb/>
Mushrooms<lb/>
Olives<lb/>
Onions<lb/>
Green Peppers<lb/>
Ground Beef<lb/>
Sausage<lb/>
Ham<lb/>
Double Cheese<lb/>
Extra Thick Crust<lb/>
Anchovies<lb/>
Hot Pepper Rings<lb/>
12" small $60 per item<lb/>
16" large $.90 per item<lb/>
Stated prices do not include<lb/>
applicable state sales tax.<lb/>
We r?an? the right to Mmrt our 0?wry ???<lb/>
Copyright 1979<lb/>
SN.<lb/>
o a.<lb/>
s<lb/>
0060635630<lb/>
senville<lb/>
<pb facs="00057212_0008"/><lb/>
Page 8 THE EAST Ci lOLINIAN 6 September 1979<lb/>
The Fearless Football Forecast<lb/>
CU AT N.C. STATE<lb/>
SOUTHERN CAL. AT TEXAS TECH<lb/>
PURDUE AT WISCONSIN<lb/>
ALABAMA AT GEORGIA TECH<lb/>
APPALACHIAN ST. AT WAKE FOREST<lb/>
HOUSTON AT UCLA<lb/>
SOUTHERN MISS. AT FLORIDA ST.<lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA AT SOUTH CAROLINA<lb/>
OHIO ST. AT SYRACUSE<lb/>
STANFORD AT TULANE<lb/>
WILLIAM AND MARY AT VMI<lb/>
N- TEXAS ST. AT OKLAHOMA ST.<lb/>
CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
ECU 21-16<lb/>
SOUTHERN CAL.<lb/>
PURDUE<lb/>
ALABAMA<lb/>
WAKE FOREST<lb/>
HOUSTON<lb/>
FLORIDA ST.<lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
OHIO ST.<lb/>
STANFORD<lb/>
VMI<lb/>
N. TEXAS ST.<lb/>
JIMMY DUPREE<lb/>
ECU 24-22<lb/>
SOUTHERN CAL.<lb/>
PURDUE<lb/>
ALABAMA<lb/>
APPALACHIAN ST.<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
FLORIDA ST.<lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
OHIO ST.<lb/>
STANFORD<lb/>
WILLIAM AND MARY<lb/>
N. TEXAS ST.<lb/>
DAVID MAREADY<lb/>
N.C. STATE 17-16<lb/>
SOUTHERN CAL<lb/>
PURDUE<lb/>
ALABAMA<lb/>
WAKE FOREST<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
FLORIDA ST.<lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
OHIO ST.<lb/>
STANFORD<lb/>
VMI<lb/>
OKLAHOMA ST.<lb/>
TERRY HERN DON<lb/>
ECU 27-24<lb/>
SOUTHERN CAL<lb/>
PURDUE<lb/>
ALABAMA<lb/>
WAKE FOREST<lb/>
HOUSTON<lb/>
FLORIDA ST.<lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
OHIO ST.<lb/>
STANFORD<lb/>
VMI<lb/>
N. TEXAS ST.<lb/>
Chip Alexander<lb/>
Raleigh News and Observer<lb/>
N.C. STATE 21-17<lb/>
SOUTHERN CAL.<lb/>
PURDUE<lb/>
ALABAMA<lb/>
WAKE FOREST<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
FLORIDA ST.<lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
OHIO ST.<lb/>
STANFORD<lb/>
WILLIAM AND MARY<lb/>
N. TEXAS ST.<lb/>
The<lb/>
ECU to hosth<lb/>
Mayor's Cup tourney set<lb/>
ROUGH GOING AT CARTER STADIUM: ECU quarterback Leander Green is<lb/>
sandwiched between several N.C. State defensive linemen in last year's 29-13<lb/>
n olfpack victory. The two teams meet again this Saturday.<lb/>
Young Yaz following Dad<lb/>
By DAVID MAREADY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Saturday and Sunday, September 8th and 9th,<lb/>
the East Carolina Pirate Soccer Team will host the<lb/>
annual Mayor's Cup Soccer Tournament on Minges<lb/>
Soccer Field.<lb/>
The Pirates will face the tough Duke Blue Devils<lb/>
at 1 p.m. on Saturday followed by a traditional<lb/>
battle between N.C. State and the UNC Tarheels at<lb/>
4 p.m.<lb/>
Sunday's roundup will include a consolation<lb/>
game at 1 p.m. for Saturday's losers and the<lb/>
tournament championship match at 4.<lb/>
"Our defensive players are<lb/>
going to have to see a lot of action<lb/>
in a hurrywe are very young<lb/>
99<lb/>
Brad Smith<lb/>
NEW YORK AP-<lb/>
 az is ? a familiar<lb/>
word in big league<lb/>
baseball. Get used to it.<lb/>
It could be around for<lb/>
the next 20 to 25 years.<lb/>
Kidding? Not in the<lb/>
least.<lb/>
Another Carl Michael<lb/>
astrzemski is being<lb/>
readied to pick up the<lb/>
glove and bat of the old<lb/>
man when Yaz Sr Mr.<lb/>
Indestructible ol the<lb/>
Boston Red Sox, finally<lb/>
decide- lie- had<lb/>
enough?if ever.<lb/>
Keen-eyed diamond<lb/>
- 'lit- call Yaz Jr just<lb/>
turned 18 and a fresh-<lb/>
man at Florida State, a<lb/>
natural.<lb/>
"Sure, I'm pointing<lb/>
lor a baseball career<lb/>
the trim, handsome<lb/>
youngster said while<lb/>
lounging in the Red Sox<lb/>
dugout prior to Mon-<lb/>
day's game with the<lb/>
New ork Yankees at<lb/>
Yankee Stadium.<lb/>
"Dad wants me to<lb/>
get an education first.<lb/>
I'll try to work my<lb/>
baseball around my stu-<lb/>
dies. 1 have been play-<lb/>
ing in an independept<lb/>
league this summer.<lb/>
Yaz Jr. motored<lb/>
down from Boston with<lb/>
his father for the Yan-<lb/>
kee series, hoping to<lb/>
see his famous dad gei<lb/>
his 3,000th hit. Earlier<lb/>
this year, he had seen<lb/>
the eider Yastrzemski<lb/>
hit his 100th home run.<lb/>
"1 think that's the<lb/>
toughest-400 home<lb/>
runs the kid said.<lb/>
"Anybody can hit sin-<lb/>
gles V astrzemski, a<lb/>
Boston fixture for 19<lb/>
year, needed only five<lb/>
more hits of any des-<lb/>
cription o join the<lb/>
exclusive 400 homer-3<lb/>
000 hit club.<lb/>
"That will be some-<lb/>
thing special the<lb/>
youngster said proudly.<lb/>
"Only Hank Aaron,<lb/>
Stan Musial and Willie<lb/>
Mays have done both.<lb/>
Nobody in the American<lb/>
League<lb/>
Yaz Jr clean-cut<lb/>
with an athlete's build,<lb/>
?,aid his father stuck a<lb/>
bat in his hand when<lb/>
hi- was big enough to<lb/>
toddle and he hasn't<lb/>
been spittin' distance<lb/>
for ? "ar C'UD since.<lb/>
"At first, he taught<lb/>
me the do's and<lb/>
don'ts the youngster<lb/>
explained. "Now he<lb/>
doesn't correct me too<lb/>
much. We work out<lb/>
together all winter<lb/>
Th Yastrzemskis<lb/>
live on Highland Beach<lb/>
in Florida, not far from<lb/>
Boca Baton. Mike?as<lb/>
he prefers to be called<lb/>
so there will be no<lb/>
confusion with father<lb/>
Carl ? is the only boy.<lb/>
He ha three sisters,<lb/>
one older, two younger.<lb/>
Mike specializes as a<lb/>
third baseman-outfielder,<lb/>
is a switch-hitter but a<lb/>
natural lett-hander.<lb/>
Scouts contend he has<lb/>
all the ingredients of<lb/>
potential greatness<lb/>
? power, speed, excel-<lb/>
lent arm and the inspi-<lb/>
ration of a father des-<lb/>
tined for the Hall of<lb/>
Fame.<lb/>
Although his father<lb/>
attended Notre Dame<lb/>
and got his degree from<lb/>
Merrimac College,<lb/>
young Mike chose<lb/>
Florida State because of<lb/>
its reputation for pro-<lb/>
ducing good baseball<lb/>
teams. While Yaz Jr.<lb/>
could break into the<lb/>
minors today, his father<lb/>
insists on a college<lb/>
education.<lb/>
"It took me seven<lb/>
years to get through<lb/>
college, going one term<lb/>
a year because ol base-<lb/>
ball conflicts the elder<lb/>
Yastrzemski said. "Mike<lb/>
has to go three years<lb/>
because he is on a<lb/>
scholarship. He's a<lb/>
bright boy, makes good<lb/>
grades. I want him to<lb/>
have all the options<lb/>
It was obvious that<lb/>
alternatives mean little<lb/>
to the Yaz off-spring.<lb/>
Third year Pirate coach Brad Smith considers the<lb/>
Tar Heels to be the toughtest of the three Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference teams. However, he feels the<lb/>
chances are good for the Pirates.<lb/>
"I am very confident with this team<lb/>
commented Smith, "they are a good group of<lb/>
players capable of winning any game they go into<lb/>
this season. Whether they win or not will depend<lb/>
on developing a team leader and the character of<lb/>
the team as well as the skills<lb/>
Smith will rely heavily on several returning<lb/>
lettermen from last year's squad including the<lb/>
team's only seniors, Phil Martin and Jeff Karpovich.<lb/>
Both scored five goals last season and will be the<lb/>
driving force behind a veteran offensive unit.<lb/>
Several other lettermen will lend support to the<lb/>
offense including sophomore, Brad Winchell, who<lb/>
was named to the All Tournament team in the 1978<lb/>
Mayor's Cup. As a freshman, Winchell led the<lb/>
Pirates with nine goals and contributed four assists.<lb/>
Defensively, the Pirates lack the maturity of the<lb/>
offense, yet returning defenders including Stan Griff<lb/>
and Dennis Elwell combined with a group of<lb/>
promising new freshmen should produce a talented<lb/>
backfield for the Pirates.<lb/>
In addition to seniors, Karpovich and Martin,<lb/>
there will be eight sophomores, six juniors and<lb/>
?<lb/>
ECU soccer action<lb/>
thirteen freshmen on this year's squad. Most of the<lb/>
freshmen will be on defense.<lb/>
"Our defensive players are going to have to see<lb/>
a lot of action in a hurry noted Smith, "We are<lb/>
very young<lb/>
The Soccer team has seen some early action<lb/>
already this season in two scrimmages. In the First<lb/>
scrimmage against the Goldsboro Soccer Club, the<lb/>
Pirates easily won 7-0 with a second string team. In<lb/>
the second, against the Pirate Alumni, they also<lb/>
won bv a close 3-2 score.<lb/>
Visit the Art Carved Representative<lb/>
This Week<lb/>
? Buy Now and Save on Selected<lb/>
Traditional and Contemporary<lb/>
Rings.<lb/>
? See our Wide Variety of New<lb/>
Styles.<lb/>
Men's Contemporary<lb/>
Women's Fashion<lb/>
Date:<lb/>
Place:<lb/>
. . . symbolizing<lb/>
your ability<lb/>
to achieve<lb/>
Sept. 10, 11, 12, 13, 14<lb/>
Student Supply Store Lobb<lb/>
Supplier for the 1980<lb/>
United States Olympic Team<lb/>
Student Supply Store<lb/>
Deposit required. MasterCharge or Visa accepted.<lb/>
F<lb/>
c<lb/>
B'<lb/>
oU i<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
?? !<lb/>
'I' i<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
??<lb/>
?.<lb/>
?<lb/>
Eui<lb/>
C<lb/>
an<lb/>
wh<lb/>
Ba?<lb/>
 Ba<lb/>
? Bal<lb/>
?<lb/>
bis<lb/>
he<lb/>
an<lb/>
cii<lb/>
tra<lb/>
CO I<lb/>
n<lb/>
tei<lb/>
W '<lb/>
le<lb/>
- Br?<lb/>
5 cap<lb/>
? -1' :<lb/>
he<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
i;<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057212_0009"/><lb/>
rver<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
IN A<lb/>
MARY<lb/>
set<lb/>
b Most of the<lb/>
o have to see<lb/>
th, "We are<lb/>
earl) action<lb/>
In the first<lb/>
leer Club, the<lb/>
tnng team. In<lb/>
mi, thev also<lb/>
CA805<lb/>
features<lb/>
Thursday. S?pfmb0r 6, 1979 PQ? 9 Qf-vlto. N.C,<lb/>
Folk dance<lb/>
club begins<lb/>
By WILLIAM JONES<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
"If you can skip,<lb/>
ou can folk dance<lb/>
So says Dr. Peter<lb/>
Fricke, a visiting assoc-<lb/>
? iate professor with the<lb/>
'? Sociology Dept. Dr.<lb/>
; Fricke is from Louth, in<lb/>
(Lincolnshire County, En-<lb/>
?gland.<lb/>
j He is one of three<lb/>
t 'dance leaders' in the<lb/>
! University Folk and<lb/>
 Country Dance Club.<lb/>
?tThe other dance leaders<lb/>
?tare Barbra Skelly<lb/>
I (country dancing and<lb/>
European folk) and<lb/>
Greysolynne Fox (Balkan<lb/>
and Mideast dance).<lb/>
Also, Nelson Jarvis,<lb/>
an ECU undergraduate<lb/>
who plays with the<lb/>
Bassett Mountain String<lb/>
 Band, instructs in<lb/>
EjJ square dance. Douglas<lb/>
 Baker, of the Green<lb/>
Grass Cloggers. teaches<lb/>
clogging.<lb/>
Dr. Fricke went to<lb/>
sea in 1956. Throughout<lb/>
his travels worldwide,<lb/>
he has found folk<lb/>
dancing to be a com-<lb/>
mon denominator among<lb/>
all peoples. Most port<lb/>
cities hae folk dnacing<lb/>
groups, which welcome<lb/>
traveler- from other<lb/>
countries, Fricke says.<lb/>
Thus providing an in-<lb/>
ternational community<lb/>
which can help the<lb/>
'foreigner' feel at home.<lb/>
I<lb/>
Dr. Fricke, along<lb/>
with Ms. Skelly and<lb/>
Ms. Fox, helped start<lb/>
the Folk and Country<lb/>
Dance Club last year.<lb/>
ECU is the first univer-<lb/>
sity in the US and<lb/>
England which Dr.<lb/>
Fricke has been to that<lb/>
did not have a folk<lb/>
dance club.<lb/>
The University Folk<lb/>
and Country Dance Club<lb/>
is open to all members<lb/>
of the university com-<lb/>
munity. Folk dancing<lb/>
experience is not neces-<lb/>
sary.<lb/>
The club will have a<lb/>
business meeting Sept.<lb/>
6, in Brewster D-109, at<lb/>
7 p.m. It will meet on<lb/>
Thurs. thereafter at the<lb/>
same time and place.<lb/>
A special event?<lb/>
'Folk for AH will be<lb/>
presented on Sept. 19.<lb/>
It will feature dancing<lb/>
demonstration partici-<lb/>
pation and will be held<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center at 7 D.m.<lb/>
Woodstock: Part II<lb/>
By JAY STONE<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
Continued from Tue?Sept. 6<lb/>
Woodstock<lb/>
entertainment<lb/>
Graham Nash and David Crosby were to among the<lb/>
performers at Woodstock. (Photo by Henry Dmz)<lb/>
Woodstock<lb/>
recreation<lb/>
Changing social mores were highly visible. Photo<lb/>
by Lee Marshall)<lb/>
Bradbury captures lift<lb/>
By WILLIAM JO.ES<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
There are few wri-<lb/>
ters, living or dead, the<lb/>
: calibre of Ray Bradbury.<lb/>
"Bradbury takes life,<lb/>
I captures, bottles it, and<lb/>
; sprinkles it out again in<lb/>
 the form of words, like<lb/>
! so much spice on sterile<lb/>
And that is the art<lb/>
; of writing in it's highest<lb/>
; form. Not to convey<lb/>
! notions and theories.<lb/>
. Not the simple adjec-<lb/>
I live-laden telling of<lb/>
? tales, engrossing as<lb/>
' they might be. But, to<lb/>
 give the reader living,<lb/>
 breathing stories full to<lb/>
I the brim with wonder,<lb/>
3 pain, fear, love, and<lb/>
t eery other feeling coro-<lb/>
- mon to homo sapien.<lb/>
Long After Midnight,<lb/>
? hi- most recently pub-<lb/>
lished book, follows in<lb/>
the Bradbury tradition.<lb/>
It contains 22 of what<lb/>
the cover aptly des-<lb/>
cribes as 'hauntings and<lb/>
celebrations Most of<lb/>
the selections have been<lb/>
previously published in<lb/>
magazines, such as<lb/>
Playboy, and Life.<lb/>
The stories range<lb/>
from bizarre and terri-<lb/>
fving desires and fears<lb/>
which we all hide, to<lb/>
the most personal, ex-<lb/>
cruciatingly tender emo-<lb/>
tions. But, they all have<lb/>
one thing in common-<lb/>
Bradbury's superb capa-<lb/>
city to transform the<lb/>
written page into an<lb/>
intensly accurate record<lb/>
of what it feels like to<lb/>
be human.<lb/>
Long After Midnight<lb/>
begins with a story<lb/>
entitled, 'The Blue Bot-<lb/>
tle It is set on Mars,<lb/>
where two friends are<lb/>
continuing a month long<lb/>
search for the fabled<lb/>
Blue Bottle. Legend has<lb/>
it that the Bottle con-<lb/>
tains something special,<lb/>
very special. And it<lb/>
does. But not always<lb/>
what the finder expects.<lb/>
'The October Game'<lb/>
deals with an insane<lb/>
hatred that develops<lb/>
between a man and his<lb/>
wife. On Halloween, the<lb/>
'game' of passing<lb/>
around 'pieces' of the<lb/>
'old dead witch' comes<lb/>
to a bizarre and sudden<lb/>
end.<lb/>
'The Miracles of<lb/>
Jamie' demonstrates a<lb/>
vivid recollection ol<lb/>
detail about childhood.<lb/>
And the special ways in<lb/>
which a child can view<lb/>
the world.<lb/>
Ray Bradbury has<lb/>
been published in every<lb/>
major American maga-<lb/>
zine. What is perhaps<lb/>
his most famous book,<lb/>
The Martian Chronicles,<lb/>
has been made into a<lb/>
TV mini-series which<lb/>
will air this fall. It has<lb/>
also been made into a<lb/>
play which has been<lb/>
touring colleges for the<lb/>
past several years. Long<lb/>
After Midnight is ano-<lb/>
ther in a long list of<lb/>
delightful Bradbury<lb/>
accomplishments.<lb/>
The crowd that gathered on Max Yasgur s farm<lb/>
in August 1969 would be unlike any other crowd<lb/>
that had . assembled in history. It was hands down<lb/>
walking away, the largest crowd that had ever<lb/>
assembled anywhere for peaceful purposes With no<lb/>
ulterior motives except Rock and Roll. There was a<lb/>
random mixture of gurus, prophets, vagabonds<lb/>
jugglers, clowns, college students, blue collar<lb/>
lorkers, and street people. Th. drer.?ty m<lb/>
lifestyles and ideologies was educational in that<lb/>
people were simultaneously cast in the roles ot<lb/>
Teacher and student. Everyone was anxious to share<lb/>
belongings and knowledge. Eventually people<lb/>
developed a tremendous sense of affinity for one<lb/>
another. . , . . . . <lb/>
These factors along with the physical impact o<lb/>
400,000 people partying and living together without<lb/>
hassles or negative vibrations contributed to making<lb/>
the audience the real star of the show Even<lb/>
performers who had played many festivals and<lb/>
concerts later said that the crowd made Woodstock<lb/>
one of the peak experiences of their lives.<lb/>
The spontaneity and freedom of the festival gave<lb/>
many people their first opportunity to get to know<lb/>
themselves and to explore a, lifestyle independent<lb/>
from family, friends, or community. For three days<lb/>
they could leave behind jobs, girlfriends, boyfriends<lb/>
parents, everything that was straight. They would<lb/>
make the pilgrimage in decorated cars, vans, and<lb/>
buses, in tye-dye shirts, army fatigues, and saris<lb/>
(Saris are popular dress among Hare Knshnas)<lb/>
with books, bongos, and guitars with wine and<lb/>
drugs. Whatever their choice of lifestyle, they could<lb/>
be themselves. j <lb/>
One of the groups at Woodstock tha played a<lb/>
major part in getting food to the people, helping<lb/>
with drug "freak-outs" and keeping the peace, as<lb/>
well as cleaning up the garbage after the concert<lb/>
was over, was the Hog Farm commune. Led by<lb/>
Merry Prankster Hugh Romney (alias Wavy Gravy)<lb/>
the Hog Farmers arrived in a $17,000 chartered jet.<lb/>
One of the emotional rushes of the festival came<lb/>
when Wavy Gravy announced, "Breakfast in bed for<lb/>
500 000<lb/>
Abbie Hoffman made a contribution to<lb/>
Woodstock as well. After working in the hospital<lb/>
tent for twenty-two consecutive hours he P?unced<lb/>
upon the stage in the middle of a set by the Who<lb/>
grabbed the microphone, and screamed Free John<lb/>
Sinclair After which he was promptly smashed in<lb/>
airman. r?? Townshend s<lb/>
the head with the top neck ot rete<lb/>
Tbbie's point was that as long as John Sinclair<lb/>
was in jail for two joints, the festival was a<lb/>
contradiction, even though there was a camp called<lb/>
Movement City at the festival with emmisanes<lb/>
representing the various radical elements in the<lb/>
country, for the majority Woodstock was a peaceful<lb/>
gathering. It had been staged to promote peace in a<lb/>
Time of war and harmony at a time when the rift<lb/>
growing between the counter-culture and the<lb/>
establishment was perpetuating a malignant,<lb/>
Correction<lb/>
All thumbs<lb/>
In tha September 4 shaw, the huge-thumbed<lb/>
issue of the East Caro- hitchhiker in Tom Rob-<lb/>
linian, p. 11, the article ? novel Even Cow-<lb/>
"Albums .Spotlighted" girls Get the Blues.<lb/>
was not written, by Unfortunately, the<lb/>
Sissy Hankshaw. aricle wa? severely<lb/>
The original article edited due to space<lb/>
was written by Pat limitations, and in the<lb/>
Minges in the style of a process, Sissy got credit<lb/>
letter from Sissv Hank- for the story.<lb/>
festering hostility between the two groups. To<lb/>
activist groups such as the Weathermen, the<lb/>
Students for a Democratic Society, the Movement<lb/>
for a Democratic Society, and others, full scale<lb/>
revolution was beginning to look increasingly<lb/>
attractive. ?<lb/>
Woodstock was a turning point. It vented the<lb/>
anxieties and frustrations of a tumultous period<lb/>
when paranoia and reactionary policies governed the<lb/>
actions of both the underground and the<lb/>
establishment. The climate on the street was<lb/>
becoming increasingly volatile after the riot at the<lb/>
Chicago Democratic Convention. In 1969 anything<lb/>
seemed possible, including revolution.<lb/>
Perhaps because of this climate of turmoil and<lb/>
confusion, Woodstock assumed a religious quality.<lb/>
For hundreds of thousands, it was a pilgrimmage to<lb/>
Mecca. They needed to know who their brothers<lb/>
and sisters were, where they were from, and what<lb/>
they were like. They wanted to see their cult-heroes<lb/>
and political leaders close-up, and find out what<lb/>
they had to say. In a very real sense, people came<lb/>
to the festival to commune and to plot some course<lb/>
of action. To find out if there would be revolution<lb/>
or a policy of passive assertiveness.<lb/>
The fact that peace and harmony prevailed is a<lb/>
testimony to the sincerity of the cause that people<lb/>
were fighting for. The radicals of Movement City<lb/>
came to regard' Woodstock as a political failure,<lb/>
however, because of the generally mellow<lb/>
atmosphere and the spirit of affinity that<lb/>
transcended the event itself. People began to see<lb/>
the youth culture and its values in a new, more<lb/>
positive light.<lb/>
Woodstock certainly had its detractors and the<lb/>
press became its chief arch-advocate with quotes<lb/>
like: "Young people die of dope" and The smell<lb/>
in the air over the festival was like Egyptian filth.<lb/>
But there were positive reports as well. Quoting<lb/>
Max Yasgur, "What happened at Bethel this past<lb/>
weekend was that these young people together with<lb/>
our local residents turned the Aquarian Festival into<lb/>
a dramatic victory forthe spirit of peace, good will,<lb/>
and human kindness<lb/>
Lou Yank, head of Monticello police called the<lb/>
young people "the most courteous, considerate<lb/>
group of kids" he had ever seen.<lb/>
Many newspapers carried exaggerated accounts<lb/>
of "mountains of garbage" generated by Wood-<lb/>
stock. In truth, there was garbage, but thousands<lb/>
stayed after the concert to help the Hog Farmers<lb/>
clean it up.<lb/>
Please turn to page 12<lb/>
Humor<lb/>
"1ft trf-X -w<lb/>
i:<lb/>
Pieces ofSkylab spotted overUClK J left by David.<lb/>
Two ECU students<lb/>
frolic in the floods<lb/>
To- All of you who never get any mail (This, of<lb/>
course, does not count hate mail from jo?rp.??J.<lb/>
menacing thin notices from the bank and nasty<lb/>
letters from the phone companv<lb/>
I was thinking the other day a rare event) of<lb/>
how seldom some of us get maiL Thu? occured <lb/>
me as I pondered my cobwebbed mailbox and<lb/>
Realized that yet another year of pitying smiles from<lb/>
h mailman las about to begin. I know there are<lb/>
others like me. Granted, I am a pessimist, but no<lb/>
enough of one to believe that I am the only soul<lb/>
who 'attend, this university who doesn't receive<lb/>
mail. The telephone company corresponds with me<lb/>
regularly. We no longer speak via the phone; it has<lb/>
been disconnected.  .<lb/>
At any rate, I pondered thi. sad state of af airs<lb/>
for awhile,and since my television was on the blink,<lb/>
I certainly couldn't think of anything else to do, so<lb/>
I though I'd write you all a letter. You know just<lb/>
something to read and pretend it came out of your<lb/>
mailbox A real, honest-to God letter.<lb/>
Now that my explanation for this atrocity is out<lb/>
of the way, I'm trying to figure out how to get this<lb/>
damn thing started.<lb/>
"Hello<lb/>
"How are you?"<lb/>
"How was your summer?<lb/>
I personally happen to hate latters that begin<lb/>
that way. You know, right off, that you re in for a<lb/>
one-page bore. And I'm already sick of people<lb/>
asking how my summer was<lb/>
The minute you get back to scnool, that s the<lb/>
opening gambit for every conversation.<lb/>
"How was your summer?<lb/>
"My summer was fine. How was your<lb/>
summer?" M<lb/>
"Oh, my summer was fine, too.<lb/>
And then you look at each other for a minute<lb/>
and realize that you have absolutely nothing else to<lb/>
say. Then again, if you remember someone fairly<lb/>
well from the year before, you might add. How s<lb/>
your schedule?"<lb/>
The response is invariably hostile, with a politely<lb/>
added, "And yours?" An equally nasty epithet<lb/>
follows. End of discussion.<lb/>
I read once in a magazine that universities house<lb/>
the soil from which intellectual conversation sprouts.<lb/>
I found the magazine under a pile of National<lb/>
Lampoon . I have no idea how it got there. Even<lb/>
so I sometimes wonder where that intellectual<lb/>
conversation is supposed to be born. I found<lb/>
thorugh the old trial-and-error method, that it is not<lb/>
easily born, if at all. I tried.<lb/>
For instance, last year, after returning to school,<lb/>
I was approached with the never-fail, "How was<lb/>
your summer?<lb/>
"Summer?" I mused. "What is summer?"<lb/>
Summer is what one perceives it to be. Yon and<lb/>
I may have a different idea of what summer is. To<lb/>
me, it may be a state of mind, or a season while it<lb/>
could be<lb/>
When I looked up, my partner in intellectual<lb/>
repartee was heading uneasily for the door. "My<lb/>
summer was fine, thanks<lb/>
I have since, of course, given up.<lb/>
So, uh, what's your schedule look like?<lb/>
Yours,<lb/>
7751M<lb/>
I<lb/>
- mm itai mmm?m<lb/>
-m ? ?r ??<lb/>
<pb facs="00057212_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 6 September 1979<lb/>
4<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
rrlV'<lb/>
 i<lb/>
V<lb/>
:<lb/>
lT<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ?? .<lb/>
61<lb/>
-?;<lb/>
-1<lb/>
w I<lb/>
 <lb/>
ss2<lb/>
?fi<lb/>
33 a<lb/>
More than any other<lb/>
element, friendship is<lb/>
the foundation of a<lb/>
sorority. Old friends are<lb/>
shared and new friends<lb/>
are gained. Friendships<lb/>
never to be forgotten<lb/>
are formed. Members<lb/>
share their concerns,<lb/>
interests, affections and<lb/>
understanding. There is<lb/>
no greater gift than a<lb/>
true friend?living,<lb/>
learning and loving<lb/>
while sharing in the<lb/>
unique experience of a<lb/>
small group relationship.<lb/>
College education is not<lb/>
just a four-year class-<lb/>
room experience, but a<lb/>
development process<lb/>
wherein a sorority<lb/>
woman may prepare<lb/>
herself for her years<lb/>
ahead as a citizen of<lb/>
the community, mother<lb/>
or career woman. The<lb/>
sorority encourages the<lb/>
member to become in-<lb/>
terested in campus and<lb/>
community activities.<lb/>
Past records prove that<lb/>
sorority members are<lb/>
consistently prevalent a-<lb/>
mong campus leaders.<lb/>
Opportunities to develop<lb/>
leadership and organ-<lb/>
izational skills and re-<lb/>
sponsibility are an in-<lb/>
tegral part of sorority.<lb/>
Today's sorority woman<lb/>
is an individual who is<lb/>
committed to the pur-<lb/>
suit of excellence in<lb/>
many areas. The soro-<lb/>
rity encourages these<lb/>
interests thus adding<lb/>
another dimension of<lb/>
diversification to the<lb/>
campus community.<lb/>
Service to the less<lb/>
fortunate is freely given<lb/>
within the sorority.<lb/>
Each has numerous<lb/>
philanthropic projects as<lb/>
diverse as the indiv-<lb/>
idual's interest. A<lb/>
national philanthropy is<lb/>
actively supported by<lb/>
each of the 26 NPC<lb/>
sororities. Whether col-<lb/>
lecting for a drive or<lb/>
working as a hospital<lb/>
volunteer, sorority<lb/>
members can always be<lb/>
found participating in<lb/>
some phase of com-<lb/>
munity involvement.<lb/>
Sororities work with-<lb/>
in the university frame-<lb/>
work, encouraging and<lb/>
supporting academic and<lb/>
cultural growth. They<lb/>
strive to provide an<lb/>
atmosphere wherein<lb/>
scholastic potential is<lb/>
furthered and intellec-<lb/>
tual ideas are<lb/>
exchanged.<lb/>
Through the friendship<lb/>
and sisterhood of soro-<lb/>
rity membership, college<lb/>
can indeed mean<lb/>
SO MUCH MORE<lb/>
!<lb/>
A<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057212_0011"/><lb/>
6 September 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Page 11<lb/>
Greek Life<lb/>
Skateboardingbalancq,<lb/>
Photos by-<lb/>
Green<lb/>
speed and poise<lb/>
THE INTER FRATERNITY COUNCIL<lb/>
INVITES YOU TO<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
SEPT.16 SEPT. 23<lb/>
The fraternity system at East Carolina plays an<lb/>
important role in campus and community activities.<lb/>
Each of the 12 fraternities that make up the IFC<lb/>
have something to offer every man.<lb/>
Functions of fraternities include such things as;<lb/>
socials with sororities, participation in Intramurals<lb/>
and community involvement. Each of our 12<lb/>
fraternities have unique ideas and capabilities, yet<lb/>
they are all bound together under the common goal<lb/>
of friendship and personal betterment.<lb/>
By becoming involved in fraternity life a person<lb/>
can receive a once in life time experience of living<lb/>
and learning with people from different back-<lb/>
grounds. If you feel you are a well rounded person,<lb/>
scholastically and socially, or you feel that a<lb/>
fraternity experience can help you attain this, then<lb/>
the Greek Life is for YOU!<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI<lb/>
PHI KAPPA TAU<lb/>
KAPPA SIGMA<lb/>
DELTA SIGMA PHI<lb/>
LAMBDA CHI ALPHA<lb/>
SIGMA NU<lb/>
SIGMA PHI EPSILON<lb/>
KAPPA ALPHA<lb/>
SIGMA TAU GAMMA<lb/>
BETA THETA PI<lb/>
ALPHA SIGMA PHI<lb/>
TAU KAPPA EPSILON<lb/>
GO GREEK<lb/>
BISCUIT INN<lb/>
Invites you to come in and try our delicious<lb/>
homemade biscuits.<lb/>
Featuring Biscuits<lb/>
With<lb/>
Gay Community meets<lb/>
6:30 8:00<lb/>
Mon. -Sat.<lb/>
333 S. Greene<lb/>
(corner of 4th<lb/>
 By STEVE COOPER<lb/>
t futures K riter<lb/>
The East Carolina<lb/>
?Cav Communitv held its<lb/>
;tir-t weekly meeting on<lb/>
Tuesday, September 4th<lb/>
'J&amp; 5:00 in the Newman<lb/>
?House. The session was<lb/>
basically a discussion of<lb/>
-e events in the near<lb/>
"future in which the<lb/>
?ECGC will participate.<lb/>
l The ECGC is an<lb/>
'organization that pro-<lb/>
Sides a non-sexual<lb/>
atmosphere for Gay<lb/>
Ipeople to meet other<lb/>
IGay people. Its purpose<lb/>
"t to "help members of<lb/>
.?the Gay community<lb/>
?Increase self-awareness<lb/>
?and pride, and also to<lb/>
;fac ililitate harmony be-<lb/>
tween persons of all<lb/>
?;iffectional preferences.<lb/>
Membership in the<lb/>
Organization is open to<lb/>
all ECL students, staff<lb/>
and faculty. However,<lb/>
participation by all<lb/>
uiieinbers of the Green-<lb/>
ville community is wel-<lb/>
come and appreciated.<lb/>
I The ECGC is a<lb/>
university recognized<lb/>
Organisation and<lb/>
ahhough it is entitled<lb/>
rto student lunds, it has<lb/>
so far been self-sup-<lb/>
porting. Last year,<lb/>
I-through fund-raisers,<lb/>
dinners, donations, and<lb/>
'A winning the Burger<lb/>
"King "Best Darn<lb/>
Organisation" contest<lb/>
ihe ECGC was able to<lb/>
pay for its peer counsel-<lb/>
ing center.<lb/>
This center was sug-<lb/>
gested by the ECU<lb/>
counseling service. It is<lb/>
manned by students<lb/>
who have been screened<lb/>
and trained by profes-<lb/>
sional counselers. The<lb/>
service provides a<lb/>
friendly ear to any<lb/>
student who might be<lb/>
having doubts or prob-<lb/>
lems.<lb/>
The ECGC also runs<lb/>
a roommate referal ser-<lb/>
vice that helps people<lb/>
find compatible room-<lb/>
mates and housing<lb/>
which they can afford.<lb/>
At present the<lb/>
ECGC is getting ready<lb/>
for the "National March<lb/>
on Washington for Les-<lb/>
bian and Gay Rights"<lb/>
on October the 14th.<lb/>
The purpose of this<lb/>
march is to "end all<lb/>
social, economic, judi-<lb/>
cial, and legal oppres-<lb/>
sion of Lesbian and Gay<lb/>
people The march is<lb/>
being held in conjunc-<lb/>
tion with the National<lb/>
Third World Lesbian<lb/>
Gay Conference that<lb/>
runs from October 12th<lb/>
through the 15th.<lb/>
200,000 to 300,000<lb/>
people are expected to<lb/>
attend the march which<lb/>
is occuring ten years<lb/>
after the Stonewall riots<lb/>
that began the current<lb/>
LesbianGay rights<lb/>
movement.<lb/>
The ECGC now<lb/>
meets every Monday at<lb/>
5:00 at 608 East Ninth<lb/>
Street (the Newman House<lb/>
For information about<lb/>
the group, roommate<lb/>
referral service, or the<lb/>
Washington March, call<lb/>
752-6088.<lb/>
STUFFY'S<lb/>
Famous Subs<lb/>
Good Stuff<lb/>
NCSU Game<lb/>
Special!<lb/>
Take a Bucket<lb/>
to the Game<lb/>
10 DISCOUNT<lb/>
and Greene on all<lb/>
2 blocks from Large Orders of Chicken<lb/>
The Attic)<lb/>
when you call in your<lb/>
order For Group<lb/>
or Take-Out<lb/>
 , ? - n Cal1 752 3595<lb/>
ham<lb/>
cheese<lb/>
sausage<lb/>
smoked sausage<lb/>
tenderloin<lb/>
steak<lb/>
chicken<lb/>
butterjelly<lb/>
combination of<lb/>
any ingredients<lb/>
BUY ONE GET ONE<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
ALL Beverages<lb/>
AND<lb/>
Chili or Cheese Dog<lb/>
3PM to 5PM<lb/>
Monday Thru Friday<lb/>
located in Georgetown Shoppes<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
752-6130<lb/>
offer expires : Sept. 14, 1979<lb/>
I ll"iM ' COUPON<lb/>
With This Coupon<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
I STUFFY'S T-Shirt with purchase<lb/>
I of '5.00 FoodOrder j<lb/>
Makethe campus connection.<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
If you want to be listed in the ECU Telephone Directory<lb/>
for 7980, 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/>
DGQQ Carolina Telephone<lb/>
UMTED TELEPHONE SYSTEM<lb/>
V<lb/>
<pb facs="00057212_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 6 September 1979<lb/>
-?  Jf ' <lb/>
Surfing hurricane swells on the Outer Banks.<lb/>
Woodstock<lb/>
from page 9<lb/>
Why is this man cooking a watermelon?<lb/>
Photo by Richard Green<lb/>
The world had to wait for those people who<lb/>
were at the festival to drift back to city streets and<lb/>
rural communes to learn of what a positive<lb/>
experience it had been for the majority. The hard<lb/>
cure were n high on the festival they didn't want<lb/>
lo leave. They talked of staying and inventing a<lb/>
new way of life. They would put up windmills for<lb/>
energy, take care of Mav's cows for him, and call<lb/>
the land "Jerusalem City<lb/>
The original promoters of Woodstock. Michael<lb/>
Lang and Artie Kornfeld, were pressured into<lb/>
selling their shares of Woodstock Ventures for<lb/>
STo.000 apiece.<lb/>
W arner Brother Communications has since made<lb/>
about S35,0OO,0O0 on the film and many more<lb/>
millions on the records. By buying Woodstock,<lb/>
W arner Brothers managed lo pull themselves out ol<lb/>
debt, and begin making money oil the youth<lb/>
culture.<lb/>
Woodstock came and went, changing lives in the<lb/>
process, however. it epilogue persists. Something of<lb/>
Woodstock linger- and flourishes today. It is more<lb/>
than nostalgia. It is too intangible and omnipresent<lb/>
to isolate or define. oodstock i a legacy<lb/>
bequeathed, not only to the young, but to all<lb/>
Americans In 1969 it was the passion play for a<lb/>
culture, a -wan song tor the idealism oi that era.<lb/>
With the passage of ten years, however, it has<lb/>
come to represent a much larger force. People are<lb/>
beginning to perceive a void in the culture. They<lb/>
recognize the menacing danger of apathy, of<lb/>
lethargy and inaction.<lb/>
Ten years mav have been a necce-sary period to<lb/>
cool off and reassess our priorities. There were<lb/>
many casualties a a result of the brash sponteniety<lb/>
of the era: Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, the Kent<lb/>
State and Jackson State massacres. The psychedelic<lb/>
revolution was forced to become invisible after Tim<lb/>
Learv and Ken Kesey were busted and discredited,<lb/>
in the same way that all artistic movements have<lb/>
retreated in the face of authoritarian retaliation.<lb/>
This tact has been borne out through the passage<lb/>
oi history, from the Renaissance to the Beat<lb/>
movement.<lb/>
In the lQSO's, however, many new battles must<lb/>
be fought that will decide the kind of future our<lb/>
nation is to have or if one will even exist. Old<lb/>
issues will be scrutinized for re-evaluation as well.<lb/>
Energy will become a particularly critical issue as<lb/>
our dwindling oil reserves continue to be consumed<lb/>
and pressure to sacrifice the ecology for electricity<lb/>
mounts. We will have to be at least as courageous<lb/>
as our forebearers were in the sixties if we are to<lb/>
face these issues. It will take a unique combination<lb/>
of the courage to be an individualist and a will to<lb/>
cooperate in achieving common goals. It will take<lb/>
idealism to win victories over corruption and<lb/>
m n-democratic dogmatism.<lb/>
The patriotism exemplified at Woodstock when<lb/>
Jimi Hendrix played "America The Beautiful" can<lb/>
perpetuate itself and nurture a new America. A<lb/>
country that will be more flexible and receptive to<lb/>
the wishes of its people. It can be a land governed<lb/>
bv a more pure democracy, when freedom is<lb/>
absolute. Young people today often express a sense<lb/>
of loss because they missed the activism and<lb/>
excitement of the sixties. Having had a mere 33<lb/>
percent voter turnout for our last national election is<lb/>
indicative of a sense of alienation and loss of<lb/>
purpose.<lb/>
People want an active role in the political<lb/>
structure of their country, but they are not willing<lb/>
to get arrested or beaten in the head for<lb/>
disagreeing with its law and social customs.<lb/>
Subsequently, protest in the United States has<lb/>
become much more subdued and passive, the theory<lb/>
being that one cannot effect change by provoking<lb/>
riot<lb/>
Efforts are still being made to organize a<lb/>
"Woodstock II" or "Second Coming however at<lb/>
the present time prospects for the festival look<lb/>
dismal. Promoters John Morris and Michael<lb/>
V adleigh have seen their proposal rejected by town<lb/>
alter town. Though it was first postponed to<lb/>
September 7th, 8th, and 9th it now looks doubtful<lb/>
that any such event will take place at least until<lb/>
next year. Morris is reported to have scouted for<lb/>
locations in California and seven other states have<lb/>
extended invitations for the festival. The agenda for<lb/>
the show is said to be evenly divided between<lb/>
veteran- of the first Woodstock, current big name<lb/>
acts, and up and coming bands.<lb/>
Tickets to the three-day event would cost $37.50<lb/>
and would be sold on a random, computer-selected<lb/>
basis, with a certain number allocated to each part<lb/>
of the country and Europe. Total sales would be<lb/>
limited to 300,000.<lb/>
As for Michael Lang's opinion of doing another<lb/>
Woodstock: "For me, Woodstock, from conception to<lb/>
completion, was a wonderful experience. I think<lb/>
that's true for all of us who worked on it,<lb/>
something that we will always cherish. I've been<lb/>
asked repeatedly about doing another Woodstock,<lb/>
but I think the festival was unique event, and to try<lb/>
to repeat it would be a mistake. Times have<lb/>
changed, and new ideas should grow out of new<lb/>
times<lb/>
Woodstock is not a place or time-<lb/>
Woodstock is in your mind,<lb/>
Woodstock is wherever you find it-<lb/>
Bring back the sixties man.<lb/>
ECU STUDENT SPECIAL<lb/>
UNITED FIGURE<lb/>
SALON<lb/>
Limited Time<lb/>
2 for the<lb/>
piece of 1<lb/>
Bring a friend $07 QA<lb/>
and share the Oi m5JUeach<lb/>
cost of a 4 month program<lb/>
756-2820<lb/>
RED OAK PLAZA<lb/>
264 ByPass<lb/>
Eatfeyir<lb/>
Crttmvilla. N, C.<lb/>
and Sun. Return Engagement<lb/>
2 Dollar Pistol<lb/>
Don't forget Fri. afternoon!<lb/>
A greeting<lb/>
card makes<lb/>
someone<lb/>
happvand<lb/>
shows vouYe<lb/>
remembered.<lb/>
Select from our gallery<lb/>
of beautiful expressions.<lb/>
Creative excellence is an American tradition.<lb/>
CENTRAL NEWS AND CARD SHOP<lb/>
321 EVANS EVANS St<lb/>
OPEN 7 DAY8 A WEEK<lb/>
Local and oat of town newspapers<lb/>
r<lb/>
<lb/>
.0<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
&amp; ?.<lb/>
fltironrs<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/>
Hushpupples.<lb/>
We are proud to<lb/>
announce that we<lb/>
have added<lb/>
one of the<lb/>
AREAS FINEST<lb/>
SALAD BARS<lb/>
for your<lb/>
dining pleasure.<lb/>
OPEN FOR LUNCH<lb/>
Daily<lb/>
(except Sat.) 11:30 - 1:30<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
MON ? THURS.<lb/>
?:oo ? 10:00<lb/>
FRI. &amp; SAT.<lb/>
StOO - 10:30<lb/>
LoeaUd On Evan Stra?t<lb/>
nsuNfaw- i ?-?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057212_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>