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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057213_0001"/>
"Let us dare<lb/>
to read, think,<lb/>
speak<lb/>
and write<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Vol. 54 No. 5<lb/>
1' pages today<lb/>
Greenville, NIC.<lb/>
Tuesday, September 11, 1979<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Telephone<lb/>
Numbers<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
757-6367<lb/>
757-6309<lb/>
Ihe SGA Transit System continues to have problems.<lb/>
(Photo b) Frank Barrow)<lb/>
Friday defends UNC<lb/>
segre-<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL (AP) ? In refusing to meet federal<lb/>
guidelines fo further desegregation of the University<lb/>
oi North Carolina system, state officials fear they<lb/>
ma) have risked the reputation of the state as a<lb/>
radiacal moderate as well as millions of dollars in<lb/>
federal aid.<lb/>
I he 16-campus system stands to lose some of the<lb/>
$89 million in federal funds it receives annuallv if<lb/>
teh ussue cnno' be resolved to the satisfaction of tin<lb/>
U.S. Departnu of Health, Education and Welfare.<lb/>
I hat is dis bmg to state officials since that<lb/>
money represents about one-seventh the $634 million<lb/>
the colleges spent in fiscal 1978.<lb/>
Also distrubing is the possibility the dispute will<lb/>
portra) North Carolina as obstinate and<lb/>
gationist.<lb/>
I NC President William Friday and his staff keep<lb/>
close on news accounts of the desegregation dispute.<lb/>
Officials admit to some obstinance, but they<lb/>
igorous defend their record in desegregating the<lb/>
state university system.<lb/>
Norht Carolina has been more successfulthan<lb/>
an) other Southern state UNC Prsident William<lb/>
Friday said recently. "We have an incredible<lb/>
record<lb/>
In the 1978 academic year, 6,219 black 'students<lb/>
enrolled on the 11 predominantly white campuses,<lb/>
more than double the number ? 2,832 ? in 1973.<lb/>
Over the same six-year period, the number of<lb/>
non-black students on the five predominantly black<lb/>
campuses doubled to 1,630.<lb/>
L NC had a higher percentage of black students<lb/>
than all but seven of the nation's major research<lb/>
universities and higher than anv others in the South<lb/>
b) 1976.<lb/>
But according to the U.S. Office of Civil Rights<lb/>
and the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, the state has<lb/>
not done enough to desegregate.<lb/>
White students make up less than 10 percent of<lb/>
the enrollment in the system's five predominantly<lb/>
black schools. And although more than one-fourth of<lb/>
the state's high school graduates are black, less than<lb/>
one fifth of the public college students are black and<lb/>
less than 7 percent of the students attending the 11<lb/>
predominantly white colleges are black.<lb/>
Former HEW Secretary Joseph Califano said<lb/>
those figures describe "a fundamentally segregated<lb/>
system<lb/>
North cArolina's desegregation dispute with HEW<lb/>
ha- received more publicity than the other nine<lb/>
states HEW said were operating dual college<lb/>
s) stems.<lb/>
But Noreth Carolina has not been the onlv state<lb/>
to balk at the federal government's suggestions for<lb/>
further desegregation. Three others are in court<lb/>
centestin gthe government's effort. THe other six<lb/>
have reached agreements with HEW.<lb/>
Discussions between HEW and UNC broke off<lb/>
last spring alter the state refused to accept HEW's<lb/>
suggestion that duplicate programs on nearby<lb/>
campuses be eliminated to increase desegregation.<lb/>
Ihe two are now in court arguing HEW's<lb/>
attempts to cut off federal aid because of the failure<lb/>
to reach a settlement.<lb/>
Slate officials have said they will seek to further<lb/>
desegregation in the university system by making the<lb/>
Mack colleges better, encouraging more white<lb/>
student to attend black schools and by getting more<lb/>
blakc high school graduates to go to colleges.<lb/>
Law Society<lb/>
plans events<lb/>
ih<lb/>
ARAB YEN ABLE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
j-<lb/>
ECU Law So-<lb/>
an organization<lb/>
pre-<lb/>
cie<lb/>
designed to assist<lb/>
lav students and en-<lb/>
lighten those persons<lb/>
who have an interest in<lb/>
t he law. The basic<lb/>
requirement lor student<lb/>
membership is a 2.0<lb/>
overall average.<lb/>
1 he Society has<lb/>
meetings twice a month.<lb/>
Croup activities include<lb/>
speakers, trips, fund<lb/>
raising. and various<lb/>
socials in which guest<lb/>
speakers are invited.<lb/>
Wednesday, Septem-<lb/>
ber 12, the Society has<lb/>
planned a bake sale at<lb/>
the Student Store.<lb/>
Lynn Calder, presi-<lb/>
dent of the Society, said<lb/>
they plan to take a trip<lb/>
to Washington, D.C.<lb/>
this year to visit differ-<lb/>
ent law schools, and<lb/>
have a prominent citizen<lb/>
speaker at the Law-<lb/>
Day, U.S.A. on May 1,<lb/>
1980.<lb/>
Calder also said that<lb/>
Frank Wiswall, the<lb/>
Admiralty Council to the<lb/>
Government of Liberia<lb/>
and the Deputy Com-<lb/>
missioner for Maritime<lb/>
Affairs will address the<lb/>
-indents sometime in<lb/>
February. He will speak<lb/>
to students informally<lb/>
during the day, and will<lb/>
present a formal speech<lb/>
that night.<lb/>
ihe United Women's<lb/>
Methodist Association<lb/>
will hold a study pro-<lb/>
gram on U.S. Law of<lb/>
Sea. The workshop will<lb/>
consist ot several spea-<lb/>
kers. Calder said people<lb/>
will be coining from<lb/>
many areas of the State<lb/>
to participate.<lb/>
The U.S. Law of Sea<lb/>
'Vorkshop had previously<lb/>
been held at Texas<lb/>
A&amp;M, Scripts Ocean -<lb/>
ographic Institute in<lb/>
California, and Woods<lb/>
Hole Oceanog raphic<lb/>
Institute in Massachu-<lb/>
setts.<lb/>
The advisor for the<lb/>
organization is Dr.<lb/>
David Stevens, Univer-<lb/>
sity Attorney.<lb/>
"He's helped the<lb/>
club tremendously in<lb/>
the past Calder said.<lb/>
"John Warren is help-<lb/>
ing out a lot, too she<lb/>
added.<lb/>
Media Board member suggests poll<lb/>
<lb/>
By TERRY GRAY<lb/>
Asst. News Editor<lb/>
Discussion on Mon-<lb/>
day's Media Board<lb/>
meeting centered on<lb/>
SGA President Brett<lb/>
Melvin's proposed sur-<lb/>
vey to determine student<lb/>
opinion of the Board's<lb/>
own effectiveness. Al-<lb/>
though most members of<lb/>
the Board agreed that<lb/>
such a survey would<lb/>
help end certain con-<lb/>
flicts within the uni-<lb/>
versity, not all agreed<lb/>
?m details of the pro-<lb/>
posal.<lb/>
Melvin suggested the<lb/>
poll as a means of re-<lb/>
solving media-related<lb/>
problems that have sur-<lb/>
faced between the Me-<lb/>
dia Board, the Student<lb/>
Government Associating,<lb/>
and the Student Union,<lb/>
?specially since the SGA<lb/>
'?!? lions last Spring. He<lb/>
??xplauied thai if stu-<lb/>
dents expressed support<lb/>
f the Media Board's<lb/>
past performance, then<lb/>
?he SGA could "get<lb/>
behind the Media Board<lb/>
100 Melvin also told<lb/>
other Board members<lb/>
that he had received<lb/>
various complaints from<lb/>
students concerning the<lb/>
Board.<lb/>
However, Student<lb/>
Union President Charles<lb/>
Sune objected when<lb/>
Melvin proposed that<lb/>
the survey be conducted<lb/>
by the SGA, noting that<lb/>
the "entire purpose be-<lb/>
hind the creation of the<lb/>
Media Board was to se-<lb/>
parate student govern-<lb/>
ment politics from the<lb/>
media Sune held the<lb/>
position that each of the<lb/>
three organizations in<lb/>
question should handle<lb/>
their own problems, and<lb/>
questioned the SGA's<lb/>
jurisdiction in the mat-<lb/>
ter. After further debate<lb/>
alond these lines, Ass-<lb/>
ociate Dean of Student<lb/>
Affairs Rudolph Alex-<lb/>
ander suggested that the<lb/>
survey be conducted by<lb/>
Marketing Students on ,a<lb/>
scientific and impartial<lb/>
ba.sis. <lb/>
Addi lionai discussions<lb/>
ol the survey were post-<lb/>
poned until the next<lb/>
meeting in order to<lb/>
allow Melvin the chance<lb/>
to confer with other<lb/>
members of the Student<lb/>
Government Association.<lb/>
In other business,<lb/>
Peter Podeszwa, Head<lb/>
Photographer at the<lb/>
ECU Photo Lab, sub-<lb/>
mitted a memorandum<lb/>
to the Board in which<lb/>
he denied responsibility<lb/>
lor any equipment lost,<lb/>
stolen, or broken prior<lb/>
to his employment at<lb/>
the lab in 1977.<lb/>
In his memo Po-<lb/>
deszwa accounted for all<lb/>
equipment purchased<lb/>
since that time with the<lb/>
exception of one broken<lb/>
flash and one broken<lb/>
Hash meter. He also<lb/>
pointed out errors in the<lb/>
recent inventory which<lb/>
showed $4,000 worth of<lb/>
equipment missing. The<lb/>
Board was satisfied with<lb/>
Podeszwa's account and<lb/>
resolved that all media<lb/>
equipment would be<lb/>
more closely watched in<lb/>
the future.<lb/>
Tricia Morris was<lb/>
selected as the new<lb/>
Chairperson of the Me-<lb/>
dia Board, and Colleen<lb/>
Flynn was named new<lb/>
editor of the REBEL.<lb/>
Also, a revised Per-<lb/>
sonnel Policy was ac-<lb/>
cepted to be included in<lb/>
the EAt Carolinian's<lb/>
Operations Manual.<lb/>
Student Union Pre-<lb/>
sident Charles Sune and<lb/>
Major Attractions Com-<lb/>
mittee Charieman Randy<lb/>
Sessoms announced<lb/>
Monday that the Capitol<lb/>
recording group America<lb/>
has been booked for an<lb/>
Oct. 9 concert at Minges<lb/>
Coliseum. The group is<lb/>
currently on tour to<lb/>
promote their recent<lb/>
album Silent Letter.<lb/>
The concert is part<lb/>
of teh annual festivities<lb/>
planned for Homecomine<lb/>
Week, Oct. 12. Student<lb/>
tickets will be $4 and<lb/>
public tickets 16.<lb/>
Transit system<lb/>
accident prone<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Faulty brakes and<lb/>
driver error have been<lb/>
cited as the cause of<lb/>
seven bus accidents in-<lb/>
voling Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Association owned<lb/>
and operated buses<lb/>
since January, according<lb/>
to A.L. Colclough, head<lb/>
of the ECU Department<lb/>
of Occupational Safety<lb/>
and Health.<lb/>
When asked if this<lb/>
was an unusual amount<lb/>
of accidents involving<lb/>
SGA buses in such a<lb/>
short time, Colclough<lb/>
replied, "Certainly<lb/>
Colclough said the<lb/>
OSHA office has been<lb/>
concerned about the<lb/>
accidents, especially<lb/>
those attributed to<lb/>
faulty brakes.<lb/>
Ii the accidents<lb/>
continue, there is a<lb/>
possibility that the<lb/>
drivers insurance<lb/>
policies on the SGA<lb/>
buses will be dropped<lb/>
by ECU and the SGA<lb/>
will have to pay their<lb/>
own insurance on their<lb/>
drivers.<lb/>
SGA President Brett<lb/>
Melvin and the Director<lb/>
ol Transit Kim<lb/>
'Chubby" Abshire,<lb/>
have both been notified<lb/>
ol the problems by both<lb/>
the OSHA office and<lb/>
Vice Chancellor for<lb/>
Business Affairs C.G.<lb/>
Moore, according to<lb/>
Colclough.<lb/>
Abshire has been<lb/>
involved in three of the<lb/>
accidents, according to<lb/>
Colclough. The first<lb/>
traffic mishap occurred<lb/>
on March 15 as Abshire<lb/>
stopped to make a right<lb/>
turn onto Charles<lb/>
Street. A car attempting<lb/>
to make a left onto<lb/>
Ninth street could not<lb/>
pass by the bus and<lb/>
Abshire backed the bus<lb/>
up to allow the car to<lb/>
pass. It struck another<lb/>
vehicle. The estimated<lb/>
damage was $339.<lb/>
His second accident<lb/>
occurred on May 23 at<lb/>
the corner of Seventh<lb/>
street and Cotanche.<lb/>
The bus was traveling<lb/>
west toward Cotanche<lb/>
and down a slight<lb/>
incline approaching a<lb/>
stop sign. The brake<lb/>
failed, and the bus<lb/>
struck a car waiting for<lb/>
the traffic to break,<lb/>
hurling it 38 feet across<lb/>
the intersection. Brake<lb/>
failure was listd as the<lb/>
cause of the accident,<lb/>
and damage was<lb/>
estimated at S300.<lb/>
There has also been<lb/>
an unconfirmed report<lb/>
of an accident which<lb/>
occured last week<lb/>
downtown Greenville.<lb/>
in<lb/>
His most recent<lb/>
accident occured on<lb/>
August 30, at the East-<lb/>
brook Apts. Again<lb/>
Abshire was attempting<lb/>
to back up his bus and<lb/>
struck a car. The<lb/>
damage to the vehicles<lb/>
was given as $800.<lb/>
Abshire could not be<lb/>
reached for comment.<lb/>
Brake failure was<lb/>
listed as the cause of<lb/>
an accident which<lb/>
occured on January 15.<lb/>
31,400 in damages wa-<lb/>
ttle result. The bus,<lb/>
driven by Billy Clark,<lb/>
struck another car from<lb/>
behind while it was<lb/>
stopped at a light.<lb/>
Harold Dale was<lb/>
driving toward the<lb/>
corner of Tenth Street<lb/>
and Charles on March<lb/>
29 when he applied the<lb/>
brakes. When they did<lb/>
not respond, he tried<lb/>
them a second time,<lb/>
and the front right<lb/>
wheel locked causing<lb/>
the bus to skid into a<lb/>
lire hydrant. Damage<lb/>
was estimated at $767.<lb/>
Brake failure was<lb/>
also the cause of an<lb/>
April 20 accident.<lb/>
Randy Edwards was<lb/>
driving a bus east on<lb/>
Fifth street when the<lb/>
car in front of it<lb/>
stopped to make a left<lb/>
turn. The bus<lb/>
unable to Stop, and<lb/>
struck the car from<lb/>
rear, causing an<lb/>
mated $450 worth<lb/>
damage. Agai<lb/>
cause vsa- list<lb/>
faulty hrak. 5.<lb/>
Driver error<lb/>
listed as the<lb/>
an accident<lb/>
occured on February .<lb/>
Don Wagner was m<lb/>
nig a right turn, a<lb/>
turned too 1<lb/>
which caused him<lb/>
strike another<lb/>
owned vehicle. lie- v<lb/>
paid the $157 req .<lb/>
to fix the vehii les.<lb/>
No one con I<lb/>
could remember<lb/>
having so man) pr<lb/>
Idem- with the buses<lb/>
one time.<lb/>
According to<lb/>
official at Ha<lb/>
Ford, win<lb/>
the buses<lb/>
one of the - 1<lb/>
stalled in<lb/>
Greenvile <lb/>
from Hastii <lb/>
and started<lb/>
again. After<lb/>
-tart' i. th(<lb/>
slipped, an 1<lb/>
rolled forwai<lb/>
the workman<lb/>
vehicle in Ir<lb/>
The spokes<lb/>
that the<lb/>
been unable<lb/>
to work<lb/>
accident.<lb/>
Dean Capwell comments<lb/>
Bv<lb/>
ROBERT ALBANESE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE-<lb/>
East Carolinian staff<lb/>
writer Robert Albanese<lb/>
recently interviewed<lb/>
Dean Richard Capwell,<lb/>
of the College of Arts<lb/>
and Sciences on recent<lb/>
trends in education here<lb/>
at ECU. The interview<lb/>
lollows, in its entirety.<lb/>
EC: Universities a-<lb/>
cross the nation are<lb/>
experiencing a general<lb/>
decline in enrollment. Is<lb/>
this true of ECU?<lb/>
Dr. Richard Capwell:<lb/>
No. the University as a<lb/>
whole is doing well in<lb/>
maintaining the enroll-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
The figures aren't in<lb/>
yet, but there seems to<lb/>
be a slight increase.<lb/>
The College of Arts and<lb/>
Sciences is holding up<lb/>
well, too.<lb/>
EC: How has the<lb/>
university avoided this<lb/>
phenomenon?<lb/>
RC: Well, in the<lb/>
college, the various de-<lb/>
partments have done a<lb/>
fine job of recruiting. If<lb/>
a high school student<lb/>
expresses an interst in<lb/>
attending ECU, we im-<lb/>
mediately respond in<lb/>
the most encouraging<lb/>
way.<lb/>
Lately we Have put<lb/>
increased emphasis on<lb/>
our teaching methods.<lb/>
We want to make our<lb/>
courses as intersting as<lb/>
possible in order to<lb/>
attract students. New<lb/>
courses have been in-<lb/>
troduced. These courses<lb/>
are legitimate, but in-<lb/>
novative. We have, for<lb/>
example, "Philosophy of<lb/>
Sports" in the philo-<lb/>
sophy department and<lb/>
"The Role of Women in<lb/>
History" in the history<lb/>
department. If you give<lb/>
students what they want<lb/>
and need, they are<lb/>
attracted.<lb/>
EC: Will the faculty<lb/>
then, stay about the<lb/>
same in numbers?<lb/>
RC: Yes, it should.<lb/>
There is a state forumla<lb/>
RC: It should, yes.<lb/>
There is a state formula<lb/>
for alotting faculty pos-<lb/>
itions on the basis of<lb/>
student enrollment.<lb/>
EC: What depart-<lb/>
ments in the College<lb/>
are growing the fastest?<lb/>
RC: The most dra-<lb/>
matic rises have been<lb/>
in Psychology, Socio-<lb/>
logy, and the pure<lb/>
sciences.<lb/>
EC: Are there any<lb/>
departments which have<lb/>
shown decreases in en-<lb/>
rolllment?<lb/>
RC: In the foreign<lb/>
language department<lb/>
there's been a drop,<lb/>
but it has probably<lb/>
bottomed out. Just this<lb/>
fall, for instance, we<lb/>
had to add a section of<lb/>
French II. The basic<lb/>
language courses, levels<lb/>
one through four, are<lb/>
doing well, Latin is<lb/>
doing well. History, too,<lb/>
was experiencing a de-<lb/>
cline, but i ve we<lb/>
are on the upturn there.<lb/>
EC: How would .<lb/>
explain these gains and<lb/>
losses ?<lb/>
RC: For the n<lb/>
part it's cyclical. Ten or<lb/>
15 years ago there was<lb/>
a much greater interest<lb/>
in foreign language than<lb/>
there is today. Market<lb/>
demand has alot to do<lb/>
with it. One of the j,<lb/>
of the university admin-<lb/>
istration is to trv to<lb/>
anticipate these trends<lb/>
so that we can allocate<lb/>
resources where they're<lb/>
needed.<lb/>
EC: Are anv new<lb/>
majors going to be<lb/>
added to the Colh .<lb/>
curriculum in the near<lb/>
future?<lb/>
RC: There has been<lb/>
an interest in develop-<lb/>
ing an interdisciplinary<lb/>
major in communications<lb/>
major, and what would<lb/>
it include?<lb/>
RC: It's still a pro-<lb/>
see CAPWELL<lb/>
page 2<lb/>
The Media Board is getting quite a bit accomplished,<lb/>
for so early in the year.<lb/>
(Photo by John H. Grogan)<lb/>
'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057213_0002"/><lb/>
Page 2 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 11 September 1979<lb/>
Could this be a replica of the blobs from outer<lb/>
space? Oceonagraphy experts would say no!<lb/>
Chocolate pudding?<lb/>
HOUSTON (AP) - Two<lb/>
mysterious blobs found<lb/>
J<lb/>
bv a North Texas wo-<lb/>
J<lb/>
man in her front lawn<lb/>
look like 'chocolate<lb/>
pudding with tJBs in<lb/>
it but are defying<lb/>
analysis by scientists at<lb/>
the Johnson Space Cen-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
The blobs, found last<lb/>
month, are purplish in<lb/>
color, about the size of<lb/>
a soup dish and contain<lb/>
crumbled bits of led,<lb/>
National Aeronautics and<lb/>
Space Administration<lb/>
spokesman Paul Red-<lb/>
mond said Friday.<lb/>
"We don't what it is<lb/>
at this point, but it is<lb/>
not radioactive he<lb/>
said. "It could be from<lb/>
space.<lb/>
"But there's a good<lb/>
likelihood it will turn out<lb/>
to some form of indust-<lb/>
rial compound he con-<lb/>
tinued. "We suspect it<lb/>
is some form of sodium<lb/>
or potassium hydroxide.<lb/>
It is quite caustic and<lb/>
those who have handled<lb/>
it have reported skin<lb/>
irritation and burns like<lb/>
you get from lye<lb/>
Since the blobs tend<lb/>
to melt, they are being<lb/>
kept in a freezer at<lb/>
NASA, awaiting more<lb/>
tests, he said.<lb/>
The . mysterious<lb/>
hunks of jelly first<lb/>
turned up Aug. 10 in<lb/>
front of Sybil Christian's<lb/>
house in Frisco, a com-<lb/>
munity north of Dallas,<lb/>
after a severe electrical<lb/>
storm.<lb/>
Liquor has<lb/>
1st anniversary<lb/>
By MONTE PLOTT<lb/>
AP Writer<lb/>
CHARLOTTE, (AP)-It has been a year since a<lb/>
vote ended the arguments on liquor by the drink in<lb/>
Mecklenburg County. But spokesmen on both sides<lb/>
of the issue are still talking.<lb/>
"What we said would happen is exactly what<lb/>
has happened. Crime is on the increase declared<lb/>
Henderson Belk, a leader in the anti-liquor forces<lb/>
and a member of the Belk department stores family.<lb/>
But Belk offered no figures to support his<lb/>
contention an opponents of mixed drinks sales say<lb/>
liquor by the drink in Charlotte has not led to a<lb/>
crime increase and has spurred business.<lb/>
Voters in Charlotte and surrounding Mecklenburg<lb/>
County made history on Sept. 8, 1978, when, by<lb/>
more than a 2-to-l margin they approved mixed<lb/>
drink sales under North Carolina's new local option<lb/>
bill. That vote, and the official pouring of the first<lb/>
drink a couple of months later, marked the end of<lb/>
70 years of prohibition against liquor by the drink<lb/>
sales in the state.<lb/>
Since mixed drink sales were legalized, the<lb/>
volume of alcohol sales in the county and tax<lb/>
revenue connected with that has gone up by more<lb/>
than 8 percent, according to Henry Severs, General<lb/>
Manager of the local ABC board.<lb/>
One of the dire predictions made by opponents<lb/>
during the heated campaign last year was that<lb/>
mixed drink sales would lead to an increase in<lb/>
drunk driving.<lb/>
There were 922 drunk driving arrests in<lb/>
Charlotte from January to August of 1978 and 717<lb/>
arrests during the same time this year.<lb/>
Chamber of commerce officials say mixed drinks<lb/>
have not produced an increase in convention<lb/>
business for Charlotte because major conventions are<lb/>
planned up to five years in advance and availability<lb/>
of motel rooms is a major consideration.<lb/>
"But the new hotel will increase the number of<lb/>
rooms and make Charlotte more attractive, and so,<lb/>
therefore, it will be indirectly related to mixed<lb/>
drinks said J.D. Dennis, manager of the<lb/>
chamber's convention and visitor's bureau.<lb/>
Greek News-<lb/>
CAPIVELL continued from page 1<lb/>
posal. We have to get<lb/>
it approved here and in<lb/>
Chapel Hill, and the<lb/>
funds have to be al-<lb/>
located. As a major, it<lb/>
would probably consist<lb/>
of a core of basic<lb/>
courses in speech and<lb/>
writing. Students could<lb/>
specialize in a print<lb/>
track or an electronic<lb/>
track.<lb/>
RC:<lb/>
quality<lb/>
EC: Why do you<lb/>
feel that this major terests<lb/>
would be a good idea<lb/>
for ECU?<lb/>
We offer a<lb/>
education to<lb/>
students of the area.<lb/>
We have students from<lb/>
all over the country, but<lb/>
most of them are from<lb/>
eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
Continuing Education<lb/>
serves the general<lb/>
public by offering<lb/>
courses for personal en-<lb/>
richment. We are a<lb/>
source of cultural in-<lb/>
and<lb/>
entertain-<lb/>
RC: There has been<lb/>
student interest, and<lb/>
some of the faculty<lb/>
have the necessary<lb/>
background. Our motto<lb/>
is, of course, "service<lb/>
and we want to serve<lb/>
where there is a need.<lb/>
Many of the world's<lb/>
problems stem from a<lb/>
breakdown in commun-<lb/>
ications, and although<lb/>
the basics of commun-<lb/>
ications are simple,<lb/>
mastery of it is not.<lb/>
EC: In what ways do<lb/>
you feel that ECU<lb/>
serves the community of<lb/>
eastern North Carolina?<lb/>
ment. You don't have<lb/>
to go to Richmond or<lb/>
Raleigh to hear an<lb/>
outstanding lecture or<lb/>
Welcome back<lb/>
see a good play. Our<lb/>
faculty's expertise is<lb/>
available as a resource<lb/>
to the region.<lb/>
EC: What are the<lb/>
University's goals, and<lb/>
in particular those of<lb/>
the College, for the<lb/>
near future?<lb/>
RC: I think Dr.<lb/>
Brewer has stated very<lb/>
well his emphasis on<lb/>
the "persuk of excel-<lb/>
lence This renewed<lb/>
insistance of the quality<lb/>
of our programs is the<lb/>
theme of his admini-<lb/>
stration.<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
The Student Union is<lb/>
the principle student<lb/>
programming organ-<lb/>
ization at the Univer-<lb/>
sity. The governing<lb/>
body for this organiz-<lb/>
ation is the Board of<lb/>
Directors. Two seats on<lb/>
the Board are reserved<lb/>
for day students. Per-<lb/>
sons interested in serv-<lb/>
ing may secure applic-<lb/>
ations at the Infor-<lb/>
mation Desk in Men-<lb/>
denhaU -Student Center.<lb/>
Deadline is Tuesday,<lb/>
September 18, 1979, at<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
REVLON<lb/>
LIPSTICK<lb/>
to our Fabulous<lb/>
REVLON<lb/>
Collection.<lb/>
Choose from<lb/>
over 300 Shades including<lb/>
exciting new fall colors.<lb/>
Offer good thru 9-15-79<lb/>
fclSS?TT?S<lb/>
DISCOUNT CENTER<lb/>
On the Mall Downtown<lb/>
?H COUPON MUST ACCOMPANY ORDER j3<lb/>
A Refreshing Fall<lb/>
?Dangkin Camisole<lb/>
A color for every<lb/>
outfit, only $8.00<lb/>
each.<lb/>
?Oxford Cloth Shirts<lb/>
Brody's own oxford<lb/>
cloth shirt in<lb/>
pink, yellow,<lb/>
white, and blue,<lb/>
only $17.00<lb/>
?Add - A - Bead<lb/>
Save on bead?<lb/>
3mm to 7mm, only<lb/>
$.78 to $3.49<lb/>
Woman's Cogs<lb/>
New fall style.<lb/>
i Bass shoes<lb/>
New styles and<lb/>
colors.<lb/>
pw<lb/>
'Rush' week has begun<lb/>
By RICKI GLIARMIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Everyone thumbs<lb/>
through The East Caro-<lb/>
linian on Tuesdays try-<lb/>
ing to find Greek News.<lb/>
When they do find it<lb/>
they naturally look for<lb/>
their name of the name<lb/>
of their organization.<lb/>
When they don't see it<lb/>
they get quite upset.<lb/>
So, to keep your<lb/>
fraternity or sorority<lb/>
sisters from getting up-<lb/>
set, I suggest the best<lb/>
solution would be to<lb/>
drop a note of your<lb/>
announcement in the<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma box<lb/>
in Dean Fulghum's<lb/>
office. Her office is<lb/>
located on the second<lb/>
floor oi Whichard Build-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
The announcements<lb/>
should be in the box by<lb/>
9 a.m. on Mondays so<lb/>
they can get in the<lb/>
paper by Tuesday.<lb/>
PLEASE send informa-<lb/>
tion about your organi-<lb/>
zation to be printed in<lb/>
Greek News.<lb/>
Fraternities will be<lb/>
starting rush on Sun-<lb/>
day, Sept. 16 with a<lb/>
party at the bottom of<lb/>
the Hill. Anyone inter-<lb/>
ested in pledging a<lb/>
fraternity or just inter-<lb/>
to see<lb/>
what<lb/>
ested<lb/>
they're all about, should<lb/>
make a point to be at<lb/>
the party which will<lb/>
start at 2 p.m. on<lb/>
Sunday.<lb/>
Sororities are busy<lb/>
with rush this week.<lb/>
Open houses will be<lb/>
held tonight. A break<lb/>
will be taken on Wed-<lb/>
nesday, with Skit Night<lb/>
on Thursday and Pref<lb/>
Night on Friday.<lb/>
Sorority rush should<lb/>
not be taken lightly by<lb/>
members or rushees.<lb/>
For girls going through<lb/>
rush, this should be a<lb/>
very important time in<lb/>
your lives. The decision<lb/>
you will have to make<lb/>
Friday night will not be<lb/>
an easy one but it wilj<lb/>
be one you may cherish<lb/>
?most. Friday night duri<lb/>
ing Pref nights, and on<lb/>
the mall afterwards, will<lb/>
be a time to remember<lb/>
for the rest of your<lb/>
lives.<lb/>
Eva Pittman, presi-<lb/>
dent of Panhellenic,<lb/>
summed it up perfectly<lb/>
Thursday night at the<lb/>
end of convocation when<lb/>
she said, "To be born<lb/>
a sister is an unavoid-<lb/>
able situation. But to be<lb/>
chosen a sister is th$<lb/>
greatest joy on earth ;<lb/>
classified<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1973 Mus-<lb/>
tang Mach I, excellent<lb/>
condition, good gas<lb/>
mileage. Sporty green<lb/>
color. A bargain at<lb/>
$1900. Call 758-9322.<lb/>
FLEA MKT: Greenville<lb/>
Collectors Club 8th<lb/>
Annual Antique Flea<lb/>
Mkt.? Sat. Sept. 8?<lb/>
Evans Mall ? Host<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
.Assoc?Info. 752-3456.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1978 Ford<lb/>
Courier, 5 speed, 30<lb/>
MPG AMFMCBTape,<lb/>
campertop, New Cond.<lb/>
756-0895.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 2 acoustic<lb/>
guitars. Conn 6-string,<lb/>
like new $150.00 wcase<lb/>
Ventura 12-string, like<lb/>
new $150.00 wcase.<lb/>
Call 752-3426.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Early<lb/>
American couch; best<lb/>
offer Call anytime 752-<lb/>
1239.<lb/>
ROOMS FOR RENT:<lb/>
Serious Students ?<lb/>
Private rooms, semi-<lb/>
private baths, Vfcblock<lb/>
from ECU on Eastern,<lb/>
in a very quiet area.<lb/>
Bicycle storage. From<lb/>
$80. Ginger Hackett<lb/>
REALTORS 756-7976,<lb/>
758-0050.<lb/>
APT. FOR RENT: Ser-<lb/>
ious Married or Grad<lb/>
Student. Walk Vfe block<lb/>
to ECU. Unfurnished<lb/>
one-bedroom apartment,<lb/>
living room and fire-<lb/>
place, equipped kitchen,<lb/>
not an apartment build-<lb/>
ing, quiet residential<lb/>
area, $145 plus Vfe<lb/>
utilities. Ginger Hackett<lb/>
REALTORS. 756-7986,<lb/>
758-0050.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE:<lb/>
Wanted to share 2<lb/>
bedroom trailer $75.00<lb/>
and 12 ultilities. Call<lb/>
after 2 p.m. 758-0312.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 12 x 65<lb/>
mobile home, 2 bed-<lb/>
rooms. $150.00 mnth.<lb/>
$50.00 deposit. Call 752-<lb/>
6177.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Room on<lb/>
Fourteenth Street be-<lb/>
hind dormitories. Male<lb/>
preferred. Call 758-2585.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE:<lb/>
Needed to share 2-bed-<lb/>
room apt. at Tar River.<lb/>
Immediately. Call Mark<lb/>
or Mike at 752-2643.<lb/>
personal?<lb/>
DANCE CLASSES: Sun-<lb/>
shine studios?beginning<lb/>
Sept. 19, classes in<lb/>
ballet, jazz, yoga, disco<lb/>
and arabic (belly dance)<lb/>
call 758-0736 or 756-<lb/>
7235.<lb/>
LOST: Irish Setter; fe-<lb/>
male, 6 years old. Lost<lb/>
on 10th St. Call 752-<lb/>
3235. Reward offered.<lb/>
LOST: A girl's double<lb/>
strand serpentine chaii<lb/>
bracelet at ECU and<lb/>
Western Carolina foot-<lb/>
ball game. Please return<lb/>
because of strong ent?-<lb/>
mental value. Reward<lb/>
offered. Call Millie; 758-<lb/>
0269.<lb/>
BABYSITTER: Fultv<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/>
Must have own trans-<lb/>
portation. Call 752-0578<lb/>
after 5.<lb/>
CAR POOL: Rock)<lb/>
Mount Commuters lets<lb/>
'ride together. Leave<lb/>
Rocky Mount 7 a.m.<lb/>
return 3:30 p.m. MWF.<lb/>
Contact Jenkins in math<lb/>
department.<lb/>
LOST: 1979 Men ECU<lb/>
class ring. Fire blue<lb/>
stone ? initials WPH.<lb/>
Reward offered. Call<lb/>
Phil at 758-5375.<lb/>
CLIFF'S<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
Washington Highway (N.C.? Ext.) GrMnvillt. North Carotin<lb/>
Phont 752 3m<lb/>
? ALL YOU CAN EAT <lb/>
$2.75<lb/>
? Halston<lb/>
Natural Spray cologne,<lb/>
only $9.50<lb/>
? Levi'g<lb/>
The largest selection<lb/>
ofLevVs anywhere,<lb/>
for both men and<lb/>
women, only<lb/>
$12.90<lb/>
jWFree Monogran<lb/>
on Sweaters<lb/>
Choose your own crazy<lb/>
horse sweater and get a<lb/>
free monogram, all colors<lb/>
only $17.00<lb/>
 Sperry Topsiders<lb/>
Traditional moccasin stylQ<lb/>
for women.<lb/>
Monday-Thursday<lb/>
Trout<lb/>
Crab Cakes<lb/>
Flounder<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Tea Is Included with meal<lb/>
E. lOth St Extension<lb/>
Th<lb/>
Soeiet;<lb/>
o r g a n i<lb/>
Wed<lb/>
7:30<lb/>
of M<lb/>
interr<lb/>
and <lb/>
? io<lb/>
Great<lb/>
being<lb/>
please<lb/>
Noj<lb/>
dent<lb/>
Wed<lb/>
The<lb/>
held<lb/>
Mendl<lb/>
Center!<lb/>
ested<lb/>
couragl<lb/>
intorml<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
758-63)<lb/>
person<lb/>
756-4(<lb/>
Th<lb/>
I aion<lb/>
tion<lb/>
presenl<lb/>
eon cen<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Ticket-<lb/>
?luden<lb/>
the pul<lb/>
A<lb/>
si<lb/>
b tht<lb/>
&amp; Plai<lb/>
the ai<lb/>
ing tti<lb/>
prepar<lb/>
s u m e<lb/>
Technj<lb/>
held el<lb/>
begin<lb/>
"Reu<lb/>
will<lb/>
Thurs<lb/>
ning<lb/>
will<lb/>
each<lb/>
and al<lb/>
in<lb/>
sen ioi<lb/>
attendl<lb/>
T?<lb/>
these<lb/>
at M<lb/>
Cenlei<lb/>
Rt<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Sun.<lb/>
chanct<lb/>
r'Kfcfcl<lb/>
evert<lb/>
Sat. i<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
MM<lb/>
hour.<lb/>
tin<lb/>
until<lb/>
<pb facs="00057213_0003"/><lb/>
Drinldnanddriving<lb/>
Do you know enough?<lb/>
?<lb/>
11 September 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Page 3<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP)<lb/>
? A true-false test on<lb/>
the risks of drinking<lb/>
and driving, designed<lb/>
primarily for new<lb/>
drivers, has been pre-<lb/>
pared by the U.S.<lb/>
Brewers Association as<lb/>
part of its new Alcohol<lb/>
Awareness Program.<lb/>
The test is included<lb/>
in the association's<lb/>
leaflet on drinking and<lb/>
driving, being<lb/>
distributed by motor<lb/>
vehicle bureaus, law<lb/>
enforcement officials,<lb/>
state highway depart-<lb/>
ments and driver<lb/>
education classes.<lb/>
"Even though the<lb/>
test is aimed generally<lb/>
at young persons, many<lb/>
adults cannot give all<lb/>
the right answers' says<lb/>
George Minshew, senior<lb/>
vice president of the<lb/>
association. He suggests<lb/>
that parents check and<lb/>
discuss with family<lb/>
teenagers the following<lb/>
test statements:<lb/>
TRUE OR FALSE?<lb/>
-1. All states pro-<lb/>
hibit driving under the<lb/>
influence of alcohol.<lb/>
-2. A 16-or 17-year-<lb/>
old person who commits<lb/>
a moving traffic<lb/>
violation would be<lb/>
treated differently than<lb/>
an adult offender.<lb/>
-3. By law, it is<lb/>
never possible for a<lb/>
person under 18 to be<lb/>
sentenced to prison.<lb/>
-4. If, while driving,<lb/>
you are at fault injuring<lb/>
someone and drive away<lb/>
without stopping, you<lb/>
may have committed a<lb/>
criminal offense.<lb/>
-5. If you are ar-<lb/>
rested as DWI Driving<lb/>
While Intoxicated, you<lb/>
can lose your license<lb/>
and be subjected to a<lb/>
fine, but you cannot be<lb/>
imprisoned.<lb/>
-6. The highest pro-<lb/>
portion of alcohol-related<lb/>
accidents occur in the<lb/>
21-24 age group.<lb/>
-7. If you cause an<lb/>
accident while driving,<lb/>
your car-insurance rates<lb/>
will not be affected.<lb/>
-8. Under certain<lb/>
circumstances, one drink<lb/>
mav affect a driver's<lb/>
judgement, resulting in<lb/>
such actions as running<lb/>
through a red light,<lb/>
passing on a curve,<lb/>
speeding.<lb/>
-9. Consumption of<lb/>
alcohol by persons rid-<lb/>
ing with you constitutes<lb/>
a public offense in<lb/>
many states.<lb/>
-10. If you have<lb/>
been drinking at a<lb/>
party, coffee will sober<lb/>
you up quickly before<lb/>
you drive.<lb/>
ANSWERS<lb/>
-1. True.<lb/>
-2. False. Some<lb/>
states provide that a<lb/>
minor shall be treated<lb/>
as an adult for motor<lb/>
vehicle offenses.<lb/>
-3. False. A state<lb/>
juvenile court can de-<lb/>
termine that a minor<lb/>
shall be treated as an<lb/>
adult.<lb/>
-4. True.<lb/>
'5. False. You might<lb/>
be fined or imprisoned<lb/>
or both.<lb/>
-6. True.<lb/>
-7. False. Most in-<lb/>
surance rates are<lb/>
directly and upwardly<lb/>
affected by an accident.<lb/>
-8. True.<lb/>
-9. True.<lb/>
-10. False.<lb/>
Tfc 6tubent 'Union t?Um? Committee presents<lb/>
Stton 33ctte?<lb/>
in<lb/>
Wippe $)e S8roco'?<lb/>
SKing of hearts<lb/>
?c&amp; abebneSbay ntflfct at 8<lb/>
in tl)e ?enbrix eatre<lb/>
9ftenben&amp;all 6tubcnt ?enter<lb/>
HAVE YOU<lb/>
GOTTEN YOURS?<lb/>
IV<lb/>
The ECL Law<lb/>
Societj will have an<lb/>
organizational meeting<lb/>
Wed Sept. 12th at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. in room 221<lb/>
?it Mendenhall. Anyone<lb/>
interested in law school<lb/>
and or the legal pro-<lb/>
fession i- welcome.<lb/>
Great new things are<lb/>
being planned, so<lb/>
please come!<lb/>
rc?l<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 tudents are en-<lb/>
couraged to attend. For<lb/>
information concerning<lb/>
NCSL contact Chairper-<lb/>
son Anne Northington<lb/>
758-6358 or Vice Chair<lb/>
person Larry Zicherman-<lb/>
756-4004.<lb/>
dttiMlk)n?<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/>
caieei?<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 Tues. in Sept<lb/>
beginning Sept 11.<lb/>
"Resume Preparation"<lb/>
will be covered each<lb/>
Thurs. in Sept begin-<lb/>
ning Sept. 13. There<lb/>
will be two sessions<lb/>
each day -one at 2 p.m.<lb/>
and another at 4 p.m.<lb/>
in Rawl 130. Every<lb/>
senior is invited to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
bcwl<lb/>
Take auvantage of<lb/>
these bowling specials<lb/>
at Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center:<lb/>
Ked Pin Bowiing7<lb/>
p.m. to 10 p.m. every<lb/>
Sun. bowlers get a<lb/>
chance to win one (1)<lb/>
KKEE GAME with<lb/>
every game bowled.<lb/>
Rent-A-LaneEvery<lb/>
Sat. from 12 nooi. to 6<lb/>
p.m. you can rent a<lb/>
lane for $3 for one<lb/>
hour.<lb/>
Discount Day'l3<lb/>
oil the price of bowling<lb/>
eiry Mon. from 2 p-m-<lb/>
until b p.m.<lb/>
lecf leff Jcice$9-rir I<lb/>
i mi iii<lb/>
The 1979 ACU-I Rec-<lb/>
reational Tournaments,<lb/>
sponsored by Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center, will<lb/>
be held in BILLIARDS,<lb/>
BOWLING, TABLE<lb/>
TENNIS, CHESS and<lb/>
BACKGAMMON. All<lb/>
full-time students are<lb/>
eligible to participate.<lb/>
Get your information<lb/>
and registration forms<lb/>
at the Mendenhall Bil-<lb/>
liards and Bowling Cen-<lb/>
ters.<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Special Attractions Com-<lb/>
miftee will present<lb/>
GENE COTTEN Tues<lb/>
Sept. 25 at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium. Tic-<lb/>
kets for ECU Students<lb/>
are $1.50 and $3.00 for<lb/>
the Public.<lb/>
pM eta<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma<lb/>
Freshman Honor Frater-<lb/>
nity will have its first<lb/>
meeting Thurs Sept.<lb/>
13 at 5 p.m. in<lb/>
Brewster C-103. All<lb/>
members, new and old,<lb/>
are welcome!<lb/>
teciecite<lb/>
Interested in joining<lb/>
a billiards league? All<lb/>
billiard players interes-<lb/>
ted in forming a league<lb/>
tu meet weekly, sign up<lb/>
at the Mendenhall Bil-<lb/>
liards Center. An organ-<lb/>
izational meeting will be<lb/>
held Mon Sept. 17 at<lb/>
6:30 p.m. in the Bil-<lb/>
liards Center. Trophies<lb/>
will be awarded in<lb/>
several division.<lb/>
 l ? I i<lb/>
Psi Chi-Psychology<lb/>
Honor Society meeting-<lb/>
Wed Sept 12th, 7:15<lb/>
in Sp 129. Important<lb/>
business, also Furney<lb/>
James-ECU Placement<lb/>
Service will discuss<lb/>
senior strategies and<lb/>
survival. Non-members<lb/>
welcome. Refreshments<lb/>
served.<lb/>
H CM lti I<lb/>
Recreational clubs<lb/>
will be f o r m e d for<lb/>
CHESS, BACKGAM-<lb/>
MON, TABLE TENNIS<lb/>
and . STRATEGIC<lb/>
GAMES for all persons<lb/>
interested in getting<lb/>
together on a weekly<lb/>
basis. Sign up today at<lb/>
ihe Mendenhall Billiards<lb/>
Center if you would like<lb/>
to participate.<lb/>
-rt-f'f'<lb/>
f,<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
PIRATE<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
6oz. Marenated<lb/>
Tcriyaki Steak<lb/>
? Baked Potato<lb/>
? Free Salad Bar<lb/>
? Free Soft Drink<lb/>
? Free Jello or Pudding<lb/>
E7?<lb/>
i<lb/>
rJS<lb/>
A<lb/>
S$<lb/>
JJ<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
Offer valid seven days a<lb/>
week-Lunch and Dinner to<lb/>
COLLEGE STUDENTS<lb/>
Show your College I.D.<lb/>
to ordertaker to tfet the Special!<lb/>
CALL 756-608<lb/>
to reserve Banquet Room for Groups<lb/>
?SO N. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
(S64L Bypass), Greenville<lb/>
!t'i<lb/>
There will be a<lb/>
meeting of the ECU<lb/>
Sign Language Club on<lb/>
Thurs. Sept. 13th at<lb/>
7:30 held in Brewster<lb/>
B-203 on the ECU<lb/>
campus. Old members<lb/>
are asked to attend and<lb/>
new officers for the<lb/>
year will be elected.<lb/>
Interested students are<lb/>
welcome to come<lb/>
regardless to their<lb/>
knowledge of sign lan-<lb/>
guage. The SLC will<lb/>
again sponsor another<lb/>
educational weekend trip<lb/>
to Washington, D.C.<lb/>
'???" fi<lb/>
?  " !<lb/>
?.<lb/>
MEMBERSHIP<lb/>
m<lb/>
Time it running out-Don't miss savings<lb/>
Due to bad weather last week, the sale<lb/>
deadline has been extended thru Wed.<lb/>
Sept. 19th These special semester passes<lb/>
are only $10.00! So hurry and save<lb/>
yourselfi $! PLUS- The the nert 80<lb/>
people to purchase a pass receive an<lb/>
ELBO T-shirt valued at 0400 for only<lb/>
01.OO!<lb/>
DON'T MISS OUT ON<lb/>
THIS GREAT SAVINGS!<lb/>
11 RECIVERS<lb/>
ANO MORE<lb/>
SELECTED<lb/>
MERCHANDISE<lb/>
Models<lb/>
Sansui 550<lb/>
HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH<lb/>
Cloaranco Sale<lb/>
H-H-S- has a large stock of new and<lb/>
discontinued receivers that must be<lb/>
sold to make room for new merchan-<lb/>
dise. All of. these receivers come with<lb/>
new warrantys and of course can be<lb/>
serviced by our qualified technician.<lb/>
We are selling all these receivers at<lb/>
dealer cost or below! so, for great<lb/>
savings on really nice name brand<lb/>
equipment come to H-H-S- for our<lb/>
Clearance Sale.<lb/>
Power<lb/>
around 30 watts per chanel<lb/>
40 watts per chanel<lb/>
26 watts per chanel<lb/>
30 watts per chanel<lb/>
25 watts per chanel<lb/>
15 watts per chanel<lb/>
? 20 watts per chanel<lb/>
55 watts per chanel<lb/>
150 watts per chanel<lb/>
115 watts per chanel<lb/>
85 watts per chanel<lb/>
Morontz 2240B<lb/>
Morontz 2226<lb/>
Morontz 1530<lb/>
Technichs i 5170<lb/>
Toshiba 220C<lb/>
Fisher 1022<lb/>
Sony 7055<lb/>
Sony V7<lb/>
Sony V6<lb/>
Sony V5<lb/>
Our Cost<lb/>
150.00<lb/>
256.30<lb/>
195.80<lb/>
218.90<lb/>
152.90<lb/>
90.00<lb/>
153.00<lb/>
196.02<lb/>
540.00<lb/>
420.00<lb/>
348.00<lb/>
NOTE: H-H-S- will offer an additional<lb/>
10 percent savings on any of the<lb/>
receivers listed above with a pair of<lb/>
speakers<lb/>
HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH<lb/>
on the mail downtown Greenville<lb/>
752-3651<lb/>
 m ?? v- ?-?? ?<lb/>
? ?? art f<lb/>
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The Kast i aroli<lb/>
tiditorials<lb/>
&amp; Opinions<lb/>
Tuesday, September 11,1979 Page 4 Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Ih<lb/>
?'<lb/>
Su<lb/>
ECU students have<lb/>
a right to safety<lb/>
The bus accident reports are were listed as driver error and the<lb/>
coming in so fast, we can hardly keep third mishap was said to have been<lb/>
up with them all. caused by faulty brakes.<lb/>
We had no sooner learned of<lb/>
seven bus accidents, and assigned the<lb/>
cartoonist accordingly, than an eighth<lb/>
accident, unconfirmed as of press<lb/>
time, was reported, in which a worker<lb/>
was injured when the bus moved<lb/>
forward by accident.<lb/>
We all have a right to safety,<lb/>
especially when an arm of the student<lb/>
government like the SGA Transit<lb/>
System is running the show. Driver<lb/>
error and brake failure would be poor<lb/>
excuses if a student were maimed or<lb/>
killed by an act of carelessness in<lb/>
operation or maintenance of the<lb/>
buses.<lb/>
Surely, the assistant bus transit<lb/>
manager must realize the gravity of a<lb/>
bus accident. The driver himself, or<lb/>
his supervisor, could quite realistically<lb/>
be held liable if a student were killed<lb/>
by riding on an SGA bus. This<lb/>
thought alone should have reduced<lb/>
the number of accidents by SGA<lb/>
buses long ago.<lb/>
The assistant transit manager<lb/>
himself, however, was behind the<lb/>
wheel of the bus when three of the<lb/>
accidents occurred. Two of these three<lb/>
Who trains bus drivers? Who<lb/>
inspects the buses, and makes sure<lb/>
they are safe for the road? Certainly,<lb/>
this job must not be getting done, if<lb/>
so many more bus accidents than<lb/>
usual have been occurring in so short<lb/>
a period of time.<lb/>
The solution, it seems to us,<lb/>
 would be to make up a manual to be<lb/>
followed by the SGA Transit System.<lb/>
The manual would include such things<lb/>
as how to drive a bus and how to<lb/>
maintain one. This manual, if written<lb/>
properly, would show when certain<lb/>
maintenance checks, such as inspec-<lb/>
tion of brakes, should be done.<lb/>
Secondly, a personnel change<lb/>
might be in order. There should be<lb/>
some policy written down for discipl-<lb/>
inary action for a bus driver if he is<lb/>
judged to be the cause of a bus<lb/>
accident.<lb/>
Finally, the SGA Transit System<lb/>
should be held accountable to the<lb/>
SGA Legislature about the bus<lb/>
problem. The priority of safe travel<lb/>
for every student should top the list,<lb/>
once the legislature is sworn in.<lb/>
No control by SGA<lb/>
The question of the Student<lb/>
Government Association holding an<lb/>
opinion survey on the way students<lb/>
feel about the Media Board is<lb/>
absolutely ludicrous. It's like Richard<lb/>
Nixon asking the Republican National<lb/>
Convention how it feels about Wood-<lb/>
ward and BVernstein and the Wash-<lb/>
ington Post's coverage of teh Water-<lb/>
gate mess. The SGA means Govern-<lb/>
ment, and any government, especially<lb/>
any government which wants total and<lb/>
absolute control of teh citizenry,<lb/>
knows that one of teh first things it<lb/>
has to do is make an attempt to<lb/>
control the press.<lb/>
If the Media Board were to be<lb/>
done away with, and the SGA were to<lb/>
resume control of funding of the<lb/>
media, control of the press would be<lb/>
the result. For example, if this<lb/>
newspaper did a story on corruption<lb/>
on high ranking officials in the SGA,<lb/>
and the SGA did not like the story,<lb/>
or simply did not like the bad<lb/>
. publicity generated by such a story, it<lb/>
might conceivably attempt to cut off<lb/>
funding for the campus newspaper in<lb/>
retaliation.<lb/>
The reason the Media Board was<lb/>
formed was to separate the SGA from<lb/>
the campus media, in order to insure<lb/>
that a free press would exist here<lb/>
without government funding and<lb/>
control.<lb/>
I<lb/>
Tremendous progress has been<lb/>
made to the campus media in the<lb/>
short time of the Media Board's<lb/>
existence. The first campus yearbook<lb/>
in three years, the possibility, the<lb/>
first time, of an F.M. radio station<lb/>
being constructed, and a revamped ?<lb/>
and shortly computerized ? student<lb/>
newspaper with a stronger emphasis<lb/>
on student life have been the major<lb/>
accomplishments of the media while<lb/>
under Media Board leadership.<lb/>
During the years of SGA control of<lb/>
teh campus newspaper, it was a<lb/>
different story. Desks and typewriters<lb/>
were old, obsolete and often in poor<lb/>
repair. The newspaper was half the<lb/>
size it is now, and it was almost<lb/>
totally operated by student fees. Now,<lb/>
under the leadership of the Media<lb/>
Board, which has only been in<lb/>
existence for a year and a half, the<lb/>
newspaper is the size of other<lb/>
commercial newspapers in this area<lb/>
and it is 75 self supporting.<lb/>
The SGA has no right to go<lb/>
meddling into the affairs of the<lb/>
campus media, just as the U.S.<lb/>
Senate has no right to meddle into<lb/>
the affairs of the Washington Post.<lb/>
Freedom of the press is the bulwark<lb/>
of democracy, and it must be<lb/>
continually protected from government<lb/>
interference and control.<lb/>
BIG DEAL ecu's buses viireimoixeqin<lb/>
tEH fiCODEHTS fURERDYj EWttWMHKES MIJ<lb/>
Carter embarrasses Hunt<lb/>
By WILLIAM WELCH<lb/>
AP Writer<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP)-The<lb/>
Hunt administration has<lb/>
found itself embarassed<lb/>
and angered by the<lb/>
White House, even<lb/>
though Gov. Jim Hunt<lb/>
has remained one of<lb/>
President Carter's stron-<lb/>
gest supporters.<lb/>
The embarassment<lb/>
stems from the White<lb/>
House's reversal on a<lb/>
pay raise for federal<lb/>
employees, agreeing to<lb/>
back a 7 percent in-<lb/>
crease on Oct. 1 instead<lb/>
of a 5.5 percent hike<lb/>
originally .planned.<lb/>
Why should Hunt<lb/>
care what federal work-<lb/>
ers make?<lb/>
Because three<lb/>
months ago, Hunt alien-<lb/>
a' (1 politically?potent<lb/>
let hers and state gov-<lb/>
ernment workers by<lb/>
going to bat for Car-<lb/>
ter's wage-increase<lb/>
guidelines.<lb/>
Hundreds of teachers<lb/>
marched on Raleigh and<lb/>
the Legislature, some<lb/>
carrying "Dump Hunt"<lb/>
signs, while Hunt re-<lb/>
mained insistent that<lb/>
they receive a pay hike<lb/>
of no more than 5<lb/>
percent this year.<lb/>
That amount, toge-<lb/>
there with assorted<lb/>
fringe benefit improve-<lb/>
ments, was the most<lb/>
the White House said<lb/>
could be granted under<lb/>
the voluntary anti-infla-<lb/>
tion guidelines, Hunt<lb/>
said then.<lb/>
Now, Hunt finds<lb/>
himself alone on a limb<lb/>
that even Carter has<lb/>
abandoned.<lb/>
Hunt has protested<lb/>
the turn-about in a<lb/>
hand-written letter to<lb/>
presidential aide Stuart<lb/>
Eizenstat.<lb/>
Responding to a<lb/>
question at his press<lb/>
conference last week,<lb/>
Hunt said he was "dis-<lb/>
appointed" in Carter's<lb/>
change of signals on<lb/>
the anti-inflation guide-<lb/>
lines affecting' pay in-<lb/>
creases.<lb/>
And around the Cap-<lb/>
itol, Hunt aides were<lb/>
chosing their words<lb/>
carefully as they made<lb/>
clear their anger at the<lb/>
White House. "I gave<lb/>
leadership in- North<lb/>
Carolina to help us do<lb/>
our share in dealing<lb/>
with inflation Hunt<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"Although I know<lb/>
federal employees are<lb/>
hurt byinflation just like<lb/>
everyone else, I think<lb/>
the president should<lb/>
have stuck by his fight<lb/>
against inflation he<lb/>
added.<lb/>
"At the time we<lb/>
acted we thought that<lb/>
federal employees would<lb/>
be getting about a 5<lb/>
percent raise. I am<lb/>
disappointed<lb/>
The Legislature<lb/>
eventually provided the<lb/>
5 percent raise recom-<lb/>
mended by Hunt, plus<lb/>
a $200 per person<lb/>
one-time bonus that<lb/>
Hunt opposed.<lb/>
State budget officer<lb/>
John A. Williams, also<lb/>
Hunt's top policy aide,<lb/>
said the development<lb/>
undermines the adminis-<lb/>
tration's confidence in<lb/>
its dealings with the<lb/>
Carter administration,<lb/>
and will make it more<lb/>
wary of guidelines next<lb/>
year.<lb/>
What it also means,<lb/>
however, is that it will<lb/>
be harder for Hunt to<lb/>
avoid backing a signifi-<lb/>
cantly larger pay in-<lb/>
crease next year ?<lb/>
when he is running for<lb/>
a second term.<lb/>
Lloyd Isaacs, head of<lb/>
the 50,000-member N.C.<lb/>
Association of Educa-<lb/>
tors, says his group<lb/>
intends to seek an even<lb/>
larger pay raise next<lb/>
year because of the<lb/>
higher federal raise.<lb/>
Isaacs said the group<lb/>
will seek an increase'of<lb/>
3 percent greater than<lb/>
the inflation rate next<lb/>
year to make up what it<lb/>
considers a loss.<lb/>
'We're going to<lb/>
come back and ask for<lb/>
the difference we didn't<lb/>
get because of the<lb/>
president's change of<lb/>
mind and heart Isaacs<lb/>
said. "If the inflation<lb/>
rate is 12 percent we'l<lb/>
ask for 15<lb/>
The teachers organi-<lb/>
zation and two groups<lb/>
representing state em-<lb/>
ployees will also be<lb/>
pressing to have the<lb/>
$200 bonus made a<lb/>
permanent increase in<lb/>
the salary scales, in<lb/>
addition to the cos<lb/>
living rise.<lb/>
Hunt, in a speech<lb/>
Saturday to the N.C.<lb/>
State Employees Vsa<lb/>
ciation convention, tried<lb/>
to repair some of the<lb/>
political damage, saying<lb/>
he hoped to reward<lb/>
them with a bigger pay<lb/>
boost next year.<lb/>
"In the short budget<lb/>
session of the Legisla-<lb/>
ture next June, I be-<lb/>
lieve we should provide<lb/>
a pay raise lor tate<lb/>
employees that i? U<lb/>
close as possible to the<lb/>
increased cost ot liv-<lb/>
ing Hunt said.<lb/>
That pay raise, not<lb/>
so incidentally, will be<lb/>
coming in an election<lb/>
vear.<lb/>
Letters<lb/>
Letters to the editor<lb/>
are welcome, however,<lb/>
they must contain the<lb/>
name, address. and ID.<lb/>
number. No letters ww<lb/>
be printed it the are<lb/>
not signed in ink by the<lb/>
person writing ??<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 Boor 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/>
obscenity.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
BUSINESS MANAGER<lb/>
Steve O'Geary<lb/>
NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
ASST. NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
FEATURES EDITOR<lb/>
ASST. FEATURES EDITOR<lb/>
ASST. DIRECTOR OF ADVERTISING<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Marc Barnes<lb/>
DIRECTOR OF ADVERTISING<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER<lb/>
Anita Lancaster<lb/>
Karen Wendt<lb/>
Terry Gray<lb/>
Bill Jones<lb/>
Richard Green<lb/>
Terry Herndon<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
ASST. SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
COPY EDITOR<lb/>
ASST. TO THE EDITOR<lb/>
AD TECH. SUPER.<lb/>
Charles Chandler<lb/>
Jimmy DuPree<lb/>
Barry Clayton<lb/>
Leigh Coekley<lb/>
Paul Links<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN is the - student<lb/>
newspaper of East Carolina University<lb/>
sponsored by the Media Board of ECU and<lb/>
is distributed each Tuesday and Thursday<lb/>
during the academic year (weekly during the<lb/>
summer).<lb/>
Offices are 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: 757-6366, 6367<lb/>
6309 Subscriptions are $10 annually alumni<lb/>
?6 annually.<lb/>
I1<lb/>
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Pirates fall to Wolfpack despite early lead<lb/>
By JIMMY DUPREE<lb/>
Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
RALEIGH ? East Carolina university came out<lb/>
lighting throughout much of the contest, but the<lb/>
power and speed of the Wolfpack of N.C. staste<lb/>
proved too much as the Pirates fell 34-20.<lb/>
Junior running back Dwight Sullivan set the tone<lb/>
in State's first possesion as he carried the ball for<lb/>
the first three plays from scrimmage, carrying for a<lb/>
first down on the STate 44-yard line.<lb/>
Despite first down provided by Billy Ray Vickers<lb/>
and a personal foul, the "Swarm" defense ultimately<lb/>
held and the Pack was forced to punt.<lb/>
"I really believe that this is<lb/>
the best football team N'C'<lb/>
State has ever had.<lb/>
99<lb/>
Pat Dye<lb/>
,?-?? ???<lb/>
WS<lb/>
ECU fullback Theodore Sutton<lb/>
ECU's first possession proved fruitless and the<lb/>
Wolfpack again took the offensive.<lb/>
On the first down at the STate 43, quarterbakc<lb/>
Scott Smith swpept right and penetrated ECU<lb/>
territory for what appeared would be the first points<lb/>
(it the game.<lb/>
A gain of six by Vickers and 17 yard draw by<lb/>
Sullivan caried the ball to the 22 yard line. Anotehr<lb/>
burst of 17 yards by Vickers brought the Pack to<lb/>
with in 19 yards of paydirt.<lb/>
However, on a Vickers run to the left, NCSU was<lb/>
penalized for clipping, pushign them back to the 39.<lb/>
A pass to Lyn Dawson for six set up a 49 yard<lb/>
field goal attempt by Nathan Ritter; the golden-toed<lb/>
placekicker who haunted the Pirates a year ago.<lb/>
The kick fell dreadfully short, and the Pirates<lb/>
took over on teir 33 yard line.<lb/>
With 6:46 remaining in the first quarter, fullback<lb/>
Theodore Sutton blasted up the middle for the first<lb/>
big break of the game for visitors, carrying the<lb/>
pigsin 53 yards to the State 14.<lb/>
Quarterback Leander Green optioned left for gains<lb/>
In case you weren't paying attention<lb/>
Official blows call from twenty yards<lb/>
? ???<lb/>
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"I thought the two key plays in the football<lb/>
game were the punt return for a touchdown and the<lb/>
pass interference call<lb/>
Little did he know it at the time, but when East<lb/>
Carolina head football coach Pat Dye uttered these<lb/>
words alter las! Saturday night's 34-20 loss to N.C.<lb/>
Mate he va- being prophetic.<lb/>
These two "key plays" showed up in the game<lb/>
films a plays that contained very questionable calls<lb/>
b) the officials, Atlantic Coast Conference officials,<lb/>
bj the vva.<lb/>
The pass interference call came with 5:59 left in<lb/>
the contest and the Wolfpack leading 27-20. Just<lb/>
before the pass, the Pirate defense was in control<lb/>
ot quarterback Scott Smith and the State offensive<lb/>
attack. .<lb/>
With the Pirates in control, State coach Bo Rein<lb/>
opted to go for a long pass from Smith to wide<lb/>
receiver Mike Quick. Covering for ECU was Willie<lb/>
Holley. r . , <lb/>
The two players both went up for the ball and<lb/>
then- is a possiblity that there was some contact.<lb/>
Hollev aid after the game that there was not. The<lb/>
pass was badly overthrown and the football actually<lb/>
nil the ground at the same time that the supposed<lb/>
contact occured.<lb/>
The official covering the play ruled the play an<lb/>
incomplete pass. It appeared that the Pirate<lb/>
defense, which had been in control of the game for<lb/>
some time now, had come through again.<lb/>
Then all of a sudden, out of nowhere, came an<lb/>
oll.c.al that was exactly 20 yards away from the<lb/>
play at the time of "contact" between Quick and<lb/>
"This official dropped his penalty flag, approx-<lb/>
imately 1.5 seconds after the official on the scene<lb/>
had ruled the play clean and made a pass<lb/>
interference call against Holley.<lb/>
ih.s play was so shocking to Holley and the<lb/>
Pirate defense that "the Swarm as the defense<lb/>
ha eome to be known as, could never recover.<lb/>
That just look the wind out of our sails, said<lb/>
defensive back Kuffin McNeill.<lb/>
il at the time, and f has<lb/>
The play was controversy<lb/>
grown in controversey now that the game film has<lb/>
been looked over.<lb/>
I felt the need to talk to ECU coach Pat Dye<lb/>
about the call and gave him a ring. As is his usual<lb/>
manner, he would not comment on the legitimacy of<lb/>
the call. He simply said, "There was some<lb/>
incidental contact. It had nothing to do with keeping<lb/>
the man from catching the football<lb/>
Though Dye would not reveal his thoughts on<lb/>
the call, he did allow me to take a look a! the<lb/>
game films.<lb/>
What these films reveal is that the official that<lb/>
ruled the pass incomplete was right on the play, in<lb/>
perfect position. The play Was clearly his call.<lb/>
The official who made the call was standing on<lb/>
the East Carolina 38-yard line when the two players<lb/>
supposedly made contact. Holley and Quick were on<lb/>
the State 42-yard line, a full 20 yards away from<lb/>
the official.<lb/>
With this official so far away from the play, and<lb/>
directly behind the two players, it is possible,<lb/>
indeed very possible, that he did not even see the<lb/>
football land on the ground. The films clearly show<lb/>
that the ball hit the ground at exactly the same<lb/>
time that the two players made contact.<lb/>
Therefore, pass interference would be an<lb/>
impossible call. Nevertheless, it was made.<lb/>
The films also showed something very disturbing<lb/>
on Woodrow Wilson's second quarter 61-yard<lb/>
touchdown on a punt return. It is clear on this play<lb/>
that ECU linebacker Chuck Jackson was clipped by<lb/>
a Wolfpack player, whose number was illegible.<lb/>
Jackson was closing a gap that Wilson would<lb/>
eventually pass through when the Wolfpack player<lb/>
hit him squarely in the back and ended Jackson's<lb/>
chances of making a tackle. It appeared on the<lb/>
films that Jackson would have had an excellent<lb/>
chance at making a stop. Whether he would have<lb/>
or not, we will never know as no call was made.<lb/>
These gripes about the officiating last Saturday<lb/>
night are not excuses but rather pleas to ACC<lb/>
officials. East Carolina games with ACC teams in<lb/>
the past have been very similar to this one with the<lb/>
Wolfpack. The officiating has simply not been fair<lb/>
and objective at all times.<lb/>
Pat Dye is not amind to cry about bad officiating<lb/>
and he didn't cry in this. case, though he had a<lb/>
right to. But then he did not have to say anything.<lb/>
It is all right there on film for anybody that wants<lb/>
to see it.<lb/>
Had the two calls in question been made<lb/>
properly, there is no guarantee that the Wolfpack<lb/>
would not have won anyhow. For the Pack is a very<lb/>
excellent team. Coach Bo Rein and his staff have<lb/>
the makings of one of the best teams in America.<lb/>
But so does Pat Dye and his staff. And all Pat<lb/>
wants to do is play and play fair. It is a shame<lb/>
that eertain occurances make this difficult.<lb/>
State's Dwight Sullivan moves for part of his 131 yards<lb/>
of eight and two yards before diving for a one-yard<lb/>
gain of first and goal from the four.<lb/>
Sutton got the call on the second down and<lb/>
plunged the remaining three yards to the goal line.<lb/>
Bill Lamm added the extra point and the Bucs led<lb/>
7-0.<lb/>
That lead, however was to be brief, as the Pack<lb/>
cranked up the heavy artillery with all-American<lb/>
center Jim Richter leading the way.<lb/>
Key sprints of 34 and 20 yards by Sullivan, the<lb/>
games leading rusher, set up a 15-yard touchdown<lb/>
run by Vickers.<lb/>
The record 53,400 crowd at the newly-renamed<lb/>
Carter-Finley Stadium roared in anticipation as Ritter<lb/>
took the field to attempt the extra point. Again,<lb/>
Ritter missed, but this time he was saved by an<lb/>
offside penalty on the anxious Pirates. His second<lb/>
attempt was successfull, and the score was notted<lb/>
7-7.<lb/>
ECU drew blood again seven minutes in the<lb/>
second quarter as Green swept right 14 yards to the<lb/>
end zone following a 20 pass to tight end Billy Ray<lb/>
Washington.<lb/>
fcast Carolina's next drive ended as punter<lb/>
Rodney Allen booted what appeared to be a routine<lb/>
punt to State safety Woodrow Wilson.<lb/>
But the speedy Wilson scampered 45 yards to the<lb/>
end zone, stunting the Pirates' efforts.<lb/>
Ritter's attempted extra point sailed wide right<lb/>
and ECU maintained a slim 14-13 edge.<lb/>
A 29-yard field goal by Lamm capped the scoring<lb/>
as time expired in the first half.<lb/>
Midway though the third quarter, freshman<lb/>
quarterback Darnell Johnson burst through the<lb/>
pattered Pirate line for a touchdown on his first play<lb/>
from scrimmage for STate.<lb/>
On second down, following the kickoff. Green<lb/>
lofted a pass which wide receiver Vern Davenport<lb/>
tipped into the awaiting hands of safety Mike Nail,<lb/>
giving NCSU the ball on the 29.<lb/>
Five plays later, Sullivan again stung the Pirates<lb/>
on a 12-vard burst from scrimmage.<lb/>
ECU closed their scoring attack with 12:15<lb/>
remaining in the contest on a Lamm field goal from<lb/>
the 21.<lb/>
State added the crushing blow with 3:02 left in<lb/>
the game, however, as again Sullivan sprinted right<lb/>
for 11 yards and a touchdown, producing the final<lb/>
margin of 34-20.<lb/>
"There's no question that they were good enough<lb/>
to win said State coach Bo Rein. "Scott Smith<lb/>
gave us good execution and good leadership, and<lb/>
Woodrow Wilsons punt return was probably the<lb/>
game's biggest play for us.<lb/>
"LEander Green is real good (wishbone<lb/>
quarterback); I'm glad we don't have to see him<lb/>
again. We made some adjustments at half-time, and<lb/>
our kids had the poise. I was proud of that, but we<lb/>
still need some work in certain areas.<lb/>
"They has the right look in their eyes at<lb/>
helf-time to go bake out there. That's a sign, I think,<lb/>
that we've got some good seniors<lb/>
ECU coach Pat Dye voiced disappointment in<lb/>
several factors of the Pirate performance.<lb/>
"We really let them get untracked on offense in<lb/>
the second half said Dye.<lb/>
"I really believe that this is the best football<lb/>
team N.C. sTate have ever had. I'm proud of our<lb/>
plavers and coaches for th preparation they made for<lb/>
this game<lb/>
The Pirates must now regroup and prepare for<lb/>
Saturday's match-up with the Blue Devils of Duke<lb/>
University at Wallace Wrade Stadium ?j Durham.<lb/>
Wolfpack strength lies<lb/>
in offensive line<lb/>
by JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
isst. Sports Editor<lb/>
RALEIGH?With a game now under their belts,<lb/>
the N.C. State Wolfpack shapes up to be the<lb/>
definite favorite in the Atlantic Coast Conference<lb/>
race.<lb/>
With their backs to the wall throughout much of<lb/>
the first half, the Pack offensive line met the<lb/>
challenge of their preseason publicity head-on.<lb/>
Everybody's all-American Jim Ritcher took<lb/>
command early in the contest, showing why he has<lb/>
been called the best center ever to hit the ACC.<lb/>
Running back Dwight Sullivan tallied 131 yards<lb/>
on 15 carries, followed by quarterback Scott Smith<lb/>
with 104 and senior speedster Billy Ray Vickers<lb/>
with 71.<lb/>
"Dwight Sullivan is a good one said NCSU<lb/>
head coach Bo Rein after the 34-20 victory. "He's<lb/>
healthy now ?<lb/>
"That young fellow has great ability; maybe not<lb/>
as shifty in the open field as Ted Brown but when<lb/>
he gets up a head of steam, he can run right over<lb/>
people<lb/>
Nevertheless, the key to the Pack's offensive<lb/>
success was their bullish line.<lb/>
Ritcher is by no means the biggest center in the<lb/>
ACC. At 6-3, 245, he would not appear to be the<lb/>
blocking menance he is, but his quickness and<lb/>
determination prove to be an awesome combination.<lb/>
Ritcher and guards Chris Dieterich and Chuck<lb/>
Stone gave the Pirate middle-men fits all night.<lb/>
Middle guards John Hallow and Doug Smith<lb/>
both fell prey to the driving Wolfpack blockers;<lb/>
Hallow credited with one solo tackle and an assist<lb/>
and Smith with a lone assist.<lb/>
Sonte stands 6-3, 258 and Dieterich follows at 6-3,<lb/>
260, but their most impressive asset is their speed<lb/>
and stamina.<lb/>
Firing off the ball, it was not uncommon for the<lb/>
Pirate defenders to be buried in their tracks. It was<lb/>
also very common for the intense Pack to drive<lb/>
even after they were down.<lb/>
"ECU would stuff us inside on some of their<lb/>
formations and that would throw us off said<lb/>
Dieterich. "I wasn't really surprised by their speed,<lb/>
though.<lb/>
"East Carolina was really good defensively<lb/>
The tackles, Todd Eckerson and Chris Koehne,<lb/>
were no less impressive at their position. Eckerson<lb/>
(6-4, 268) and Koehne (6-6, 249) pressed and drove<lb/>
the entire contest as did tight end Lin Dawson.<lb/>
"We've got some big horses<lb/>
up front. I think we can run<lb/>
on any team in the country<lb/>
99<lb/>
State's Lin Dawson<lb/>
"We've got alot to put together as the season<lb/>
moves on said Dawson, after the Pack's season<lb/>
opener. "We've got to get our timing down.<lb/>
"We've got some big horses up front he<lb/>
added. "I think we can run on any team in the<lb/>
country<lb/>
The Pirates suffered through one of their most<lb/>
frustrating games defensively in many days, as<lb/>
State rolled up 307 yards rushing, but only 11<lb/>
passing.<lb/>
With their veer attack plowing yards on the<lb/>
ground Smith atempted only four passes, completing<lb/>
two.<lb/>
"I believe that this is the best football team<lb/>
N.C. State has ever had said ECU head coach Pat<lb/>
Dye. "It is a very, very strong football team. We<lb/>
really let them get untracked on offense in the<lb/>
second half<lb/>
Indeed, many teams may find themselves victims<lb/>
of the hard fighting line of the-Wolfpack from N.C.<lb/>
State.<lb/>
<lb/>
? ? - ???pMiMfli<lb/>
<pb facs="00057213_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 11 September 1979<lb/>
Winners in U.S. Open finals<lb/>
ECUfil<lb/>
McEnroe,Austin climb rapidly in tennis world<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP)<lb/>
? She's 1(, quiet, re-<lb/>
served, stoutly rather<lb/>
than flashy, a sprightly<lb/>
suburban schoolgirl with<lb/>
pigtails and pink<lb/>
ilrt'os.<lb/>
He's 20, brash,<lb/>
brazen, a shoot-from-the<lb/>
-hip street kul in<lb/>
sneakers with the talent<lb/>
to back up his words.<lb/>
Tracy Austin and<lb/>
John McEnroe. They<lb/>
are tennis' younger<lb/>
generation, and Sunday<lb/>
they showed a sellout<lb/>
crowd at the U.S. Open<lb/>
and a national television<lb/>
audience that the future<lb/>
is now.<lb/>
Austin, playing her<lb/>
Trojans, CrimsonTide<lb/>
win season openers<lb/>
By HERSCHEL<lb/>
NISSENSON<lb/>
AP Sports W riter<lb/>
Southern California's<lb/>
top-ranked rrojans won<lb/>
first battle. Now it<lb/>
remains to he seen it<lb/>
the i an go on and win<lb/>
war.<lb/>
Pvrrhus doesn't play<lb/>
i hese men ol 1 ro)<lb/>
and it was not immedia-<lb/>
telv known how man)<lb/>
injured warriors will be<lb/>
hale and heart) for next<lb/>
ek's Oregon State<lb/>
tne or whether Satur-<lb/>
ught's 21-7 season-<lb/>
opening triumph over<lb/>
"exas Tech was a<lb/>
p rrhic ictorj .<lb/>
The Trojans lost All-<lb/>
Vmerica tailback Charles<lb/>
 hite shoulder injury,<lb/>
immoth tackle An-<lb/>
ii Munoz knee, cen-<lb/>
Chris Fotte leg and<lb/>
ier Ronnie Lott shoul-<lb/>
"We lost White and<lb/>
Munoz in the first halt<lb/>
and 1 wa- starting to<lb/>
sav, 'Oh, m God but<lb/>
m team kept playing<lb/>
said Coach John Robin-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
Among the players<lb/>
were fullback Marcus<lb/>
Allen, who rushed for<lb/>
105 yards and scored on<lb/>
a 1-vard run, and<lb/>
quarterback Paul<lb/>
McDonald, who passed<lb/>
tor two second-half<lb/>
touchdowns.<lb/>
"1 don't know whe-<lb/>
ther White will play<lb/>
next week Robinson<lb/>
said. The Pac-10's<lb/>
career rushing king was<lb/>
hurt after gaining 39<lb/>
 arils on 10 carries.<lb/>
Second-ranked Ala-<lb/>
bama, college football's<lb/>
defending national<lb/>
champion, got r 'nig<lb/>
after a sluggish -tart<lb/>
and whipped Georgia<lb/>
Tech 30-6. E.J. Junior<lb/>
returned an interception<lb/>
59 yards for the first<lb/>
score while Major Ogil-<lb/>
vie, Steve Whitman and<lb/>
Steadman Shealy pro-<lb/>
duced touchdown runs<lb/>
and the defense had a<lb/>
shutout until only 12<lb/>
seconds remained.<lb/>
patient baseline game to<lb/>
perfection and capitali-<lb/>
zing on her opponent's<lb/>
uncommonly frequent<lb/>
errors, dethroned four-<lb/>
time defending titlist<lb/>
Chris Evert Lloyd 6-4,<lb/>
6-3 to become the<lb/>
youngest champion in<lb/>
U.S. tennis champion-<lb/>
ship history.<lb/>
Then it was McEn-<lb/>
roe's turn, and the<lb/>
outcome was never in<lb/>
doubt. In the first<lb/>
all-New York final in<lb/>
U.S. Open history, Mc-<lb/>
Enroe's strong serve<lb/>
and volley game proved<lb/>
far too effective for<lb/>
Vitas Gerulaitis.<lb/>
McEnroe won 7-5, 6-3,<lb/>
6-3, to become the<lb/>
youngest winner of the<lb/>
men's singles title since<lb/>
Pancho Gonzalez, ? who<lb/>
was 19 when he won in<lb/>
1948.<lb/>
Both singles winners<lb/>
earned $39,000 from the<lb/>
totl prize money of<lb/>
$563,600.<lb/>
When it was all<lb/>
over, McEnroe heaved<lb/>
his racket 25 feet into<lb/>
the air, his ruddy face<lb/>
contorted in esctacy. He<lb/>
had proven himself a<lb/>
champion before an<lb/>
ornery hometown crowd<lb/>
that earlier in the<lb/>
two-week event had<lb/>
cheered his every fault.<lb/>
"This is bv far the<lb/>
biggest win I've ever<lb/>
had, especially because<lb/>
this tournament is<lb/>
practically in my back-<lb/>
yard said McEnroe,<lb/>
who lives with his<lb/>
family in Douglaston,<lb/>
some 10 minutes from<lb/>
the National Tennis<lb/>
Center in Flushing<lb/>
Meadow.<lb/>
"I didn't think I got<lb/>
nervous at matches, but<lb/>
these last two "have<lb/>
really been something. I<lb/>
was so nervous it was a<lb/>
joke<lb/>
McEnroe, the No. 3<lb/>
seed, had a tumultuous<lb/>
road to the finals. Two<lb/>
of his opponents de-<lb/>
faulted. His second-<lb/>
round match against Hie<lb/>
Nastase was a circus,<lb/>
an unruly crowd holding<lb/>
up play for 15 minutes<lb/>
and forcing the removal<lb/>
of umpire Frank Ham-<lb/>
mond.<lb/>
Saturday he faced<lb/>
Jimmy .Connors, the de-<lb/>
fending champion who<lb/>
had beaten McEnroe in<lb/>
staight sets in the same<lb/>
circumstances a year<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
"Last year I went in<lb/>
with a negative attitude<lb/>
? 1 knew Jimmy was<lb/>
going to beat me said<lb/>
McEnroe. "This year it<lb/>
was different. This was<lb/>
the first time I came<lb/>
into the tournament<lb/>
confident I could win<lb/>
McEnroe knocked off<lb/>
Connors 6-3, 6-3, 7-5<lb/>
and rode that high into<lb/>
the final against<lb/>
Gerulaitis. 'Tin sorry 1<lb/>
had to beat Vitas,<lb/>
because he's a friend of<lb/>
mine said McEnroe.<lb/>
"But I'm glad he went<lb/>
out there and played<lb/>
lous .<lb/>
Actually, Gerulaitis?<lb/>
the No. 4 seed who<lb/>
grew up in Brooklyn<lb/>
and Howard Beach and<lb/>
now resides in nearbv<lb/>
Kings Point ?didn't play<lb/>
that badl; McEnroe<lb/>
played that well.<lb/>
Of 15 service game<lb/>
McEnroe was broken<lb/>
only once. The rest of<lb/>
the time he dominated<lb/>
play with his brilliant<lb/>
net game. Gerulaitis,<lb/>
whose strength i,s his<lb/>
speed and agility, va-<lb/>
sunpl) no match lor<lb/>
McEnroe's power.<lb/>
Staff announces<lb/>
reservation rules<lb/>
B KRAI GLIARMIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Reservations for the<lb/>
handball and racquetball<lb/>
irts located in Minges<lb/>
and the tennis courts on<lb/>
Hill may be<lb/>
in person at the<lb/>
uipment room in 116<lb/>
Memorial Gym. Reser-<lb/>
maj also be<lb/>
made b calling 757-<lb/>
691 1 (equipment room.)<lb/>
Onl) ECU- students,<lb/>
and stall may<lb/>
niakr reservations. How-<lb/>
ever, dependents ma<lb/>
lize the facilities dur-<lb/>
ing non-reserved time<lb/>
periods. Dependents<lb/>
mav also use the courts<lb/>
during reserved time<lb/>
period when accompan-<lb/>
ied b) a student, facul-<lb/>
?v o stafl member.<lb/>
Students making res-<lb/>
ervations in person<lb/>
must have their identifi-<lb/>
cation eard and current<lb/>
ictivit) card. Faculty or<lb/>
stafl making reserva-<lb/>
ns must have their<lb/>
current t acuity, stall<lb/>
identification card. Peo-<lb/>
ple wishing to reserve a<lb/>
time period over the<lb/>
telephone must give<lb/>
their student identifica-<lb/>
tion number or their<lb/>
faculty, staff number.<lb/>
Reservations are<lb/>
limited to one reserva-<lb/>
tion period (15 minutes)<lb/>
da) on handball<lb/>
racquetball courts,<lb/>
reservation period<lb/>
and a half hours)<lb/>
dav may be made<lb/>
lor the tennis courts.<lb/>
Reservations may be<lb/>
made between the hours<lb/>
of 10 a.m. and 5 p.m.<lb/>
Monday through Friday<lb/>
ami must be made a<lb/>
dav in advance, Monday<lb/>
through Thursday. Sin-<lb/>
gles, doubles or any<lb/>
combination may be<lb/>
played on any court,<lb/>
but, no consecutive res-<lb/>
ervations may be made<lb/>
I any member ol a<lb/>
playing group. Back to<lb/>
ha k reservations will<lb/>
not fi- allowed.<lb/>
Valid student identi-<lb/>
lnalion cards or laculty,<lb/>
,latl identification cards<lb/>
must be .resented upon<lb/>
demand to verify the<lb/>
i.Mirt reservation and to<lb/>
per<lb/>
ami<lb/>
One<lb/>
(one<lb/>
uer<lb/>
secure the court. Reser-<lb/>
ved courts which are<lb/>
not claimed within 15<lb/>
minutes of reservations<lb/>
time, will become free<lb/>
courts.<lb/>
Physical Education<lb/>
classes and Intramural<lb/>
activities take prece-<lb/>
dence over individual<lb/>
reservations. If you<lb/>
need assistance or wish<lb/>
to make a suggestion,<lb/>
please call or come by<lb/>
the Intramural office at<lb/>
204 Memorial Gvm, or<lb/>
call 757-6911.<lb/>
Flag Football<lb/>
Flag football begins<lb/>
today. The Intramural<lb/>
Office has not scheduled<lb/>
any games which in-<lb/>
volve fraternities or sor-<lb/>
orities due to rush<lb/>
weeks.<lb/>
Affair on the Mall<lb/>
The "Affair on the<lb/>
Mall" was postponed<lb/>
until Wednesday, Sept.<lb/>
12 because of the bad<lb/>
weather last week. The<lb/>
affair will begin at 3<lb/>
p.m. A drawing, for a<lb/>
pair of ECU-UNC foot-<lb/>
ball tickets, will be held<lb/>
at 5 p.m.<lb/>
The band will begin<lb/>
playing at 4 p.m.<lb/>
Everyone should come<lb/>
out to the mall Wednes-<lb/>
day for a day of fun.<lb/>
Handbooks<lb/>
The Intramural hand-<lb/>
books have finally arri-<lb/>
ved Anyone wishing<lb/>
to get a copy can do so<lb/>
by stopping by the<lb/>
Intramural Office in<lb/>
Memorial Gym.<lb/>
Deadlines<lb/>
Don't forget the<lb/>
deadline for Tennis and<lb/>
Co-Rec Softball is Sept.<lb/>
13 at 5 p.m.<lb/>
There will be a<lb/>
Tennis meeting at 4<lb/>
p.m Sept. 17 and a<lb/>
soflball captain's meet-<lb/>
ing at 7 p.m. on the<lb/>
17th.<lb/>
Also, keep in mind<lb/>
that the deadline for<lb/>
One-on-One Basketball<lb/>
and Team Golf are<lb/>
Sept. 20, at 5 p.m.<lb/>
WANT ADS<lb/>
Anyone who wishes to place a classified<lb/>
advertisement (for rent, for sale, etc)<lb/>
can submit their ad to the East Carolinian<lb/>
office MWF from 2 - 3 p. m. and on TTH<lb/>
from 12:30 -1:30. Classified ads must be<lb/>
submitted in person. Do not call in ads,<lb/>
they will not be accepted over the<lb/>
telephone. Classified ads are $1.00 for the<lb/>
first three lines and 25 for each additional<lb/>
line . Five words constitutes a line. All ads<lb/>
must be paid for when submitted .<lb/>
Checksin - state onlyare accepted.<lb/>
w<lb/>
(<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
,<lb/>
I)ukel<lb/>
Jf 4<lb/>
Pizza Inn<lb/>
AMERICA'S FAVORITE PIZZA<lb/>
m<lb/>
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PIZZA BUFFET<lb/>
ALL THE PIZZA AND<lb/>
SALAD YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
Mon. -Fri. 11:30 2:00<lb/>
Mon. ?P Tues. 6:00 8:00<lb/>
Evening buffet 0S.S9<lb/>
758 6266 Hwy 264 bypass Greenville , If, C.<lb/>
Blue De<lb/>
SAAD'S SHOE<lb/>
REPAIR<lb/>
1 13 Grande Ave.<lb/>
Tad-1228<lb/>
luality Shoe Repair<lb/>
Sports Writers needed.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
N.C. No. 3 1 Nightclub<lb/>
Call 757-6366<lb/>
Tues. Two Dollar Pistol!<lb/>
WED. EAZE<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
WET WILLIEEAZE<lb/>
ARMY MEDICAL DEPARTMENT<lb/>
BULLETIN BOARD<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIP PROCRAM: The US Army Health<lb/>
Professions Scholarsp Program offers a unique<lb/>
opportunity for financial support to a number of<lb/>
students in the health professions. The program<lb/>
is substantial, both in the size and scope of the<lb/>
scholarship and the number offered. Every<lb/>
student or potential student of medicine,<lb/>
osteopathy, veterinary medicine, optometry,<lb/>
psychology is invited to examine the program and<lb/>
submit an application, if eligible.<lb/>
Financial support in the scholarship includes<lb/>
approximately $5600 per year. In addition, tuition<lb/>
and certain other expenses required by all<lb/>
students In a particular course of study will also<lb/>
be paid by the government.<lb/>
A fact sheet containing information as to<lb/>
eligibility criteria, pay, a service obligation, and<lb/>
application procedures is available from your<lb/>
nearest Army Medical Department Personnel<lb/>
Counselor. The personnel counselor will also<lb/>
answer questions your may have about this or<lb/>
other programs and will assist you in the<lb/>
completion and submission of your application.<lb/>
Army Medical Department Major Roy J. Leatherberry, III, MSC<lb/>
p- i n i Federal Building, Suite 310<lb/>
Personnel Counselor aj,<lb/>
A Special 1979 ECU Pirate Collector's Cup<lb/>
Is Now Available for a limited Time Only<lb/>
at McDonald's in Greenville!<lb/>
ev<lb/>
Thl<lb/>
Ni<lb/>
Wi<lb/>
St!<lb/>
G<lb/>
R<lb/>
R<lb/>
Mol<lb/>
T<lb/>
Infli<lb/>
c<lb/>
K<lb/>
This year's edition of our famous Pirate<lb/>
Collector's Cup is now available at<lb/>
McDonald's at 10th &amp; Cotanche in<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
These reusable 16 oz. cups come filled with a<lb/>
medium size soft drink and will not be<lb/>
available anywhere except at McDonald's.<lb/>
Start your collection today!<lb/>
m.<lb/>
' ?? tUDpht Mt<lb/>
10th &amp; Cotanche<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
&amp;&amp;&amp;GMJW<lb/>
Inflj<lb/>
J<lb/>
Qu;<lb/>
Dl<lb/>
Infli<lb/>
D<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057213_0007"/><lb/>
rid<lb/>
and played<lb/>
Gerulaitis?<lb/>
 seed who,<lb/>
m Brooklyn<lb/>
h and<lb/>
s in nearb)<lb/>
lidn'l tia<lb/>
McE n roe<lb/>
ECU finishes last<lb/>
11 September 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Page 7<lb/>
N.C. State wins Mayor's Cup soccer tourney<lb/>
,<lb/>
games,<lb/>
broken<lb/>
ol<lb/>
brilliant<lb/>
uI a i t is,<lb/>
-<lb/>
Nite 9-?<lb/>
Dukc?UNC action<lb/>
0-8:00<lb/>
?.59<lb/>
vtlle ? X. C.<lb/>
lector's Cup<lb/>
Time Only<lb/>
iville!<lb/>
Donald's<lb/>
Cotanche<lb/>
?nville, NC<lb/>
Blue Devils move towards goal<lb/>
By DAVID MAREADY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Greenville Mayor Percy Cox presented the<lb/>
. second annual Mayor's Cup championship trophy to<lb/>
? Coach Larry Gorss' N.C. State Wolfpack Soccer<lb/>
team after they defeated the Duke Blue Devils 4-2<lb/>
before a record crowd Sunday.<lb/>
The UNC Tarheels finished third in the<lb/>
tournament by defeating the Pirates of East Carolina<lb/>
2-1 in a consolation game.<lb/>
Two Pirates, Brad Winchell and Phil Martin,<lb/>
were named to the All-Tournament team which also<lb/>
included the tournament's MVP, Tom Fink of N.C.<lb/>
State. Also honored were Danny Allen of State;<lb/>
?t Steve Turner and Walter Buckley of UNC; and,<lb/>
Richard Murray and Ian Garrett of Duke.<lb/>
Coach Brad Smith's Pirates were eliminated from<lb/>
championship contention Saturday when they were<lb/>
ousted by the Blue Devils 4-2 on the strength of<lb/>
three Richard Murray goals.<lb/>
N.C. State advanced to the finals with a hair<lb/>
raising, double overtime defeat of the UNC Tarheels<lb/>
by a score of 1-0. A crowd estimated at 300 viewed<lb/>
the contest under a scorching sun which took its toll<lb/>
late in the marathon when several players left the<lb/>
game due to heat exhaustion.<lb/>
The game between the longtime rivals was a<lb/>
rematch of last year's Mayor's Cup finals which the<lb/>
Tarheels won by a convincing 5-0 score; however,<lb/>
this was not to be the case this year as both<lb/>
squads battled on even terms throughout the contest<lb/>
with neither team able to take command until<lb/>
regulation play ended with the score deadlocked at<lb/>
0-0.<lb/>
Wolfpack striker, Tom Fink tallied the only goal<lb/>
of the contest early in the first of two ten minute<lb/>
overtimes on an assist from teammate Steve Green.<lb/>
A bewildered Carolina squad could not answer<lb/>
the State goal and thus were defeated by a final<lb/>
score of 1-0.<lb/>
In the second first round game between teh<lb/>
Pirates and the Duke Blue Devils, the Bucs stunned<lb/>
the crowd and the Blue Devils when Sophomore,<lb/>
Brad Winchell, broke through the Duke defenses<lb/>
and scored a surprisingly easy goal with only 5:30<lb/>
gone in the opening half.<lb/>
Nevertheless, Duke rebounded later in the period<lb/>
when Richard Murray kicked his first goal of the<lb/>
day, unassisted, with 30:46 gone in the half.<lb/>
Duke's William Holmes broke the tie after 5:45<lb/>
had elapsed in the second half on a goal with an<lb/>
assist from Ian Garrett. Richard Murray added<lb/>
two more insurance goals for the Blue Devils later in<lb/>
' the second half to boost the Duke squad to a<lb/>
commanding 4-1 lead.<lb/>
Brad Winchell added his second goal of the<lb/>
contest on an unassisted kick with 29 seconds left<lb/>
on the clock to make the final score 4-2 in favor of<lb/>
the Duke Blue Devils.<lb/>
Coach Smith was disappointed with the loss, but<lb/>
he was pleased with the effort put forth by the<lb/>
Pirates in the game.<lb/>
"We are doing much better at this stage of the<lb/>
season than last year said Smith.<lb/>
"We shouldn't have given up a couple of the<lb/>
goals that we did, but, overall, I thought it was a<lb/>
good game<lb/>
In Sunday's Consolation game between the<lb/>
Pirates and the Tarheels, the only goals scored<lb/>
during the first half came as the result of penalties<lb/>
called against both teams. The first penalty, against<lb/>
the Pirates, led to a goal on a direct kick from<lb/>
UNC's Rick Marvin. The second penalty, against the<lb/>
Tarheels, ended with a goal for the Pirates on a<lb/>
direct penalty kick by Jeff Karpovich.<lb/>
Tim Ensley's goal for the Carolina squad with<lb/>
7:58 gone in the second half provided the winning<lb/>
margin for the Tarheels as they escaped with a<lb/>
narrow 2-1 victory and third place in the<lb/>
tournament.<lb/>
Tom Fink scored two goals and adde'4 an assist<lb/>
to lead the Wolfpack to victory in the championship<lb/>
contest against Duke.<lb/>
SUMMARY<lb/>
N.C. State 2, North Carolina I<lb/>
State 0 1-1<lb/>
UNC 0 0-0<lb/>
Goals: State, Fink; Assists: State, Green.<lb/>
Duke 4, East Carolina 2<lb/>
Duke 1 3-4<lb/>
ECU 1 1-2<lb/>
Goals: Duke, .Murray (3), Holmes; ECU, Winchell<lb/>
(2); Assists: Duke; Garrett, Natelli; ECU, none.<lb/>
North Carolina 2, East Carolina 1<lb/>
UNC 1 1-2<lb/>
ECU 1 0-1<lb/>
Goals: UNC, Marvin, Ensley; ECU, Karpovich;<lb/>
Vssists, UNC, Brown<lb/>
Championship<lb/>
N.C. State 4, Duke2<lb/>
State 2 2-4<lb/>
Duke 1 0-2<lb/>
Goals: State, Fink (2) Green, King; Duke, Gigli"<lb/>
(2) Assists; State, Elsmore, Cochran, Fink.<lb/>
?s.<lb/>
?ii3Z<lb/>
Located on corner 3rd and Jarvis St.<lb/>
You can believe It, our food prices are lower than ever before. With Greenville's lowest meat prices plus<lb/>
everyday low prices on over 500 items, Overton's is the place to shop-the supermarket with personal service.<lb/>
The smiles, the courteous employees, the clean store and the extra good service is all free of charge.<lb/>
No stamps, no games, no gimmicks, no thrills-just our promise to save you money wherever possible<lb/>
We put money we would have spent on games, stamps, etc back in your pocket-that way everybody wins.<lb/>
Start shopping Overton's ?there is a difference.<lb/>
Grade "A" Whole Fryers 39 lb.<lb/>
Coca-Cola<lb/>
98<lb/>
Rath Bacon 12oz. pkg.<lb/>
89<lb/>
99<lb/>
Rath Bologna 12ozpkg.<lb/>
Morrell Pride ? m<lb/>
T-Bone Sirloin Steak $2.19 lb.<lb/>
Inflation Fighter Special<lb/>
Charm in Bathroom Tissue 4-roll pkg.<lb/>
78<lb/>
16oz. carton of 8<lb/>
plus deposit<lb/>
Golden Bananas<lb/>
4 lbs.$1.00<lb/>
Please have coupons clipped separately.<lb/>
JprGian7B0X Expires Sept 5. <lb/>
jl"aDLaundry Detergent <lb/>
 with this coupon end $7.50 or more food ?<lb/>
I order excluding advertised specials. 2<lb/>
I Without coupon $1.18. QAt ??<lb/>
! Limit one coupon per customer. wO ?<lb/>
Kraft 7oz. box<lb/>
Macaroni &amp; Cheese Dinner 3$1.00<lb/>
Inflation Fighter Special<lb/>
JOV Liquid Detergent 98<lb/>
Quart size Limit one (1) with ?7.50 or more food order<lb/>
Duke's Mayonnaise ot.jar 98<lb/>
Inflation Fighter Special C?$<lb/>
Duncan Hines Cakes Mixes aB<lb/>
Yellow - Buttar Golden ? Lemon SuPrm.0iJ<lb/>
i<lb/>
Bounty Towels 38 .<lb/>
j Giant Rollwlth coupon and $7.50 or moreg<lb/>
I food order excluding advertised specials. ?<lb/>
without coupon 58. Limit one coupon ?<lb/>
I per customer. Expires September 15. <lb/>
PleaseJiaiMMju?on? o<lb/>
jpfrate special<lb/>
 Present this coupon<lb/>
o<lb/>
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for a 5 discount <lb/>
<pb facs="00057213_0008"/><lb/>
rhe East Carolinian<lb/>
inian 1 ?<lb/>
features<lb/>
Page 8 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 11 September 1979<lb/>
Musical Confusion<lb/>
'NewWave 'not'Punk'<lb/>
2?r;LTr?r,hu eroup u ike nos'powerui b?nd ,o ,he ??<lb/>
New Fiction Bestseller<lb/>
Generals predict WWIII<lb/>
By JOHN WALDEN<lb/>
One has to wonder<lb/>
what General Sir John<lb/>
Hackett and other top<lb/>
NATO generals had in<lb/>
mind when they wrote<lb/>
the book: The Third<lb/>
World War: August<lb/>
iy8o. Were they trying<lb/>
to give us a realistic<lb/>
account of a battle that<lb/>
could possibly happen<lb/>
tomorrow, or merely<lb/>
just a good fiction<lb/>
novel?<lb/>
In the latter, they<lb/>
can be said to have<lb/>
achieved success, for<lb/>
The Third World War is<lb/>
a highly entertaining<lb/>
novel. The book is<lb/>
written in such a style<lb/>
that the events and the<lb/>
battles of the war are<lb/>
seen ia a historic light.<lb/>
General Hackett's pro-<lb/>
fessional knowledge of<lb/>
the strategies and<lb/>
tactics used by the<lb/>
present day nations and<lb/>
armies help to add a<lb/>
certain realism to the<lb/>
book. Yet, this realism<lb/>
i? quickly lost as can<lb/>
la;er be seen.<lb/>
The book begins in<lb/>
1984 with tensions de-<lb/>
veloping between the<lb/>
United States and the<lb/>
Soviet Union over the<lb/>
question of Polish<lb/>
nationalism. Russia<lb/>
knows that it can no<lb/>
longer quiet it's<lb/>
European satellites with<lb/>
the use of force as it<lb/>
. did in the past. Yet,<lb/>
?-Poland, East Germany,<lb/>
"Hungrary, and<lb/>
Czechoslovakia are<lb/>
wanting more and more<lb/>
to tnrow off their Soviet<lb/>
yoke to be able to<lb/>
better their economies<lb/>
and raise their standard<lb/>
of living.<lb/>
Things are further<lb/>
complicated by South<lb/>
Africa which is sur-<lb/>
rounded by hostile<lb/>
Third World Nations<lb/>
supported by communist<lb/>
military personal and<lb/>
equipment. India, too,<lb/>
faces the same predi-<lb/>
cament.<lb/>
Still, it is Yugoslavia<lb/>
which finally brings the<lb/>
two superpowers into<lb/>
conflict when it's weak<lb/>
government tries to<lb/>
lean more towards the<lb/>
West. If the Soviets<lb/>
allpwed this to happen<lb/>
in Yugoslavia, they<lb/>
knew that they would<lb/>
not be able to stop the<lb/>
other Eastern European<lb/>
Countries from doing the<lb/>
same.<lb/>
They decide to<lb/>
launch an invasion of<lb/>
Yugoslavia hoping to<lb/>
bring it back into the<lb/>
communist ring.<lb/>
Unfortunately, they<lb/>
did not take into ac-<lb/>
count that the U.S. and<lb/>
NATO forces would try<lb/>
to stop a Soviet in-<lb/>
vasion of this neutral<lb/>
country. They land U.S.<lb/>
Marines at Rijeka,<lb/>
Yugoslavia. Within<lb/>
twenty-four hours, they<lb/>
encounter Soviet<lb/>
infantry troops, and a<lb/>
small skirmish proves to<lb/>
be the opening shot in<lb/>
the first phase of World<lb/>
War III. The Soviet<lb/>
Union, with it's vast<lb/>
military strength, now<lb/>
prepares to launch an<lb/>
invasion of West Ger-<lb/>
many to destroy NATO.<lb/>
It is at this point,<lb/>
Hackett begins letting<lb/>
his book turn into<lb/>
fantasy. Although he<lb/>
describes the up-coming<lb/>
battles between East<lb/>
and West vividly<lb/>
enough and in good<lb/>
detail, he seems to<lb/>
have forgotten that each<lb/>
side has a deadly<lb/>
nuclear arsenal capable<lb/>
of destroying each other<lb/>
in half an hour.<lb/>
Hackett isj in effect,<lb/>
Herman,FrankandBorge<lb/>
headline Artist Series<lb/>
describing what a con-<lb/>
ventional war would be<lb/>
like and not the real<lb/>
one.<lb/>
He probably knows<lb/>
that the real one would<lb/>
be quite ugly and would<lb/>
make for a pretty short<lb/>
book. Still, it would be<lb/>
far better than deluding<lb/>
the reader into the<lb/>
belief that any future<lb/>
war could be fought<lb/>
without the use of<lb/>
nukes.<lb/>
However, the Gen-<lb/>
eral did put two nuclear<lb/>
strikes in his book. One<lb/>
missile was launched by<lb/>
the Soviets after they<lb/>
were losing the war at<lb/>
Birmingham, England.<lb/>
He does take time out<lb/>
to describe the horrible<lb/>
effects of a nuclear<lb/>
blast that destroyed half<lb/>
a million people. The<lb/>
second strike was two<lb/>
missiles launched by the<lb/>
United States and Great<lb/>
Britain at Minsk, Russia<lb/>
in retaliation.<lb/>
Yet, it is beyond any<lb/>
layman's understanding<lb/>
why the Soviet Union<lb/>
would choose to launch<lb/>
only one missile to<lb/>
show they meant bus-<lb/>
iness and not an entire<lb/>
fleet of them. It is also<lb/>
equally incomprehensible<lb/>
to'imagine that the U.S.<lb/>
and Great Gritain would<lb/>
be "cool as cucumbers"<lb/>
and not launch a full<lb/>
scale nuclear retaliatory<lb/>
By PATRICK MINGES<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
I try to pull a trick,<lb/>
sliding over and at-<lb/>
tempting to put on The<lb/>
Clash for some un-<lb/>
suspecting friends.<lb/>
"According to Time<lb/>
magazine, this group is<lb/>
the 'most powerful band<lb/>
to hit the states since<lb/>
the Stones or the<lb/>
Who I stuttered. But<lb/>
my deception fails when<lb/>
someone catches a<lb/>
glimpse of the album-<lb/>
cover. "Is that punk?"<lb/>
he queries.<lb/>
"No, it is not punk.<lb/>
It is new wave music as<lb/>
punk is not only wrong,<lb/>
it is an unfounded<lb/>
prejudicerooted in ig-<lb/>
norance. Communication<lb/>
fosters awareness, but<lb/>
prejudice is a stumbling<lb/>
block for com-<lb/>
munication.<lb/>
An awareness of the<lb/>
quality of music and<lb/>
musicians working in<lb/>
the new wave should be<lb/>
developed. In a time<lb/>
when most rock is<lb/>
floundering in self-<lb/>
mockery and succumb-<lb/>
ing to the AOR formula<lb/>
of the recording in-<lb/>
dustry, new wave is<lb/>
forging new careers by<lb/>
encouraging in-<lb/>
dependence and creati-<lb/>
vity. New wave is one<lb/>
of the few frontiers of<lb/>
rock, where novelty and<lb/>
originality are of para-<lb/>
mount importance.<lb/>
The new wave is a<lb/>
rejection of the stand-<lb/>
ards for performance of<lb/>
the recording industry.<lb/>
It flaunts itself at the<lb/>
smoothly saleable com-<lb/>
mercial market, they are<lb/>
symbols for millions of<lb/>
youths in rebellion.<lb/>
Street-wise<lb/>
The new wave de-<lb/>
veloped along parallel<lb/>
lines in the U.S. and<lb/>
the U.K having their<lb/>
roots in the street-wise<lb/>
music of urban areas.<lb/>
In the U.S groups like<lb/>
the New York Dolls and<lb/>
Wayne County were<lb/>
spinoffs of the sophist-<lb/>
icated decadence of the<lb/>
Doors and the Velvet<lb/>
Underground. In Britain,<lb/>
the punk of the Sex<lb/>
Pistols was inspired by<lb/>
the Who, the Stones<lb/>
and other mod in-<lb/>
fluences. Two inter-<lb/>
national influences were<lb/>
the sounds of David<lb/>
Bowie and Roxy Music.<lb/>
Brian Eno figured<lb/>
strongly in the develop-<lb/>
ment of new wave.<lb/>
Nick Lowe, a key<lb/>
ties,<lb/>
then<lb/>
and<lb/>
sive.<lb/>
figure in new wave,<lb/>
gives his account of the<lb/>
development of the new<lb/>
wave as such. First,<lb/>
there was pre-progres-<lb/>
sive music (rock and<lb/>
roll, beach boys music),<lb/>
then progressive (Bea-<lb/>
Stones, Hendrix),<lb/>
post-progressive,<lb/>
now neo-progres-<lb/>
Patti Smith, rock-<lb/>
poetess, states that<lb/>
since new wave is not<lb/>
new any more, we<lb/>
should refer to it as<lb/>
simply "wave<lb/>
It is the aim of the<lb/>
new wave to catch you<lb/>
nodding in the mundane<lb/>
world of the FM (for-<lb/>
mula music). The wave<lb/>
will sneak up on you<lb/>
and clobber you with<lb/>
hits like "Cruel To Be<lb/>
Kind" by Nick Lowe,<lb/>
"Roxanne" by the<lb/>
Police, "Let's'Go" by<lb/>
the Cars, or "Is She<lb/>
Really Going Out With<lb/>
Him" by Joe Jackson.<lb/>
Elvis<lb/>
Even Linda Ronstadt,<lb/>
has recorded Elvis Cos-<lb/>
tello's beautiful ballad<lb/>
"Alison And Dick<lb/>
Clark's American Band-<lb/>
stand, vou can see a<lb/>
few out of place kids<lb/>
doing strange things<lb/>
with the scenery.<lb/>
Elvis Costello is the<lb/>
strongest performer in<lb/>
the neo progressive<lb/>
movement. His big<lb/>
break came when the<lb/>
Sex Pistols cancelled a<lb/>
Saturday Night ap-<lb/>
pearance, and Elvis was<lb/>
called upon to fill in.<lb/>
His powerful stage<lb/>
presence and superb<lb/>
songwnting skins are<lb/>
bringing wave to a<lb/>
much wider audience.<lb/>
Elvis and the Attrac-<lb/>
tions' last album,<lb/>
Armed Forces, was a<lb/>
classic and achieved<lb/>
gold album status.<lb/>
An early seventies<lb/>
group out of' the U.K.<lb/>
has manifested a pro-<lb/>
found influence on the<lb/>
neo-progressive move-<lb/>
ment of today. Brinsley<lb/>
Schwarz, having re-<lb/>
leased six albums, con-<lb/>
tained four members<lb/>
who each have played<lb/>
an important role in the<lb/>
wave movement. Nick<lb/>
Lowe, producer of<lb/>
Armed Forces, has<lb/>
recently released his<lb/>
Labour of Lust, which is<lb/>
please turn to page 9<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
artist's<lb/>
painting on<lb/>
album cover<lb/>
GREENVILLE-An<lb/>
oil painting by Edward<lb/>
Reep, artist-in residence<lb/>
at East Carolina univer-<lb/>
sity, is reproduced on<lb/>
the jacket of a recently-<lb/>
released British record<lb/>
album.<lb/>
The recording, Just<lb/>
For Today, is a col-<lb/>
lection of Christian and<lb/>
Jewish prayers and<lb/>
music produced by Pye<lb/>
Records for ictor Mad-<lb/>
dern Enterprises, Ltd<lb/>
London, for the benefit<lb/>
of several British<lb/>
charities.<lb/>
(please turn to page 9)<lb/>
Art,music festival<lb/>
planned for Littleton<lb/>
By PATRICK MINGES<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
The Lakeland Cultural Arts Cen-<lb/>
ter, Inc will hold its second Annual<lb/>
Arts i and Music Festival Sept. 28-30,<lb/>
on the campus in Littleton, N.C.<lb/>
Artists from all parts of the<lb/>
country will exhibit and sell their<lb/>
work.<lb/>
Last year the festival was a great<lb/>
success and attracted large crowds of<lb/>
art and music lovers. Directors at<lb/>
the center expect a crowd of more<lb/>
than 10,000 this year.<lb/>
During the three-day festival,<lb/>
musicians will compete for cash<lb/>
prizes in the following categories:<lb/>
rock, disco, country, bluegrass, barber<lb/>
shop, gospel, soul , jazz, classical<lb/>
piano, classical strings, and clogging.<lb/>
A $500 firsL prize will be awarded<lb/>
in each category.<lb/>
In, the art competition, prizes of<lb/>
$500, $300 and $200 will be awarded.<lb/>
Other activities include cooking<lb/>
exhibitions disco marathons, musical<lb/>
revues, concerts, softball games and<lb/>
dance shows.<lb/>
The campground at Lake Gastonia<lb/>
and other accomodations in Roanoke<lb/>
Rapids, N.C. were sold out earlv last<lb/>
year, and it is advised ' that<lb/>
reservations be made soon.<lb/>
Located in Littleton, N.C, the<lb/>
Lakeland Cultural Arts Center was<lb/>
lormed by a group of<lb/>
artists,<lb/>
?n April<lb/>
educators, and businessmen<lb/>
1978. The non-profit organization Is a<lb/>
training center for the performing<lb/>
and visual arts.<lb/>
The project is under the direction<lb/>
of Mark E. Taylor, who has spent<lb/>
the past twenty-two years in profes-<lb/>
sional theatre in New York, California<lb/>
and Europe. The activities and<lb/>
curricula of the center are pro-<lb/>
grammed to benefit all age groups,<lb/>
from pre-school to senior citizens.<lb/>
The festival promises to be an<lb/>
exciting and entertaining cultural<lb/>
event. It is an excellent opportunity<lb/>
for artists, musicians and patrons to<lb/>
unite for a celebration of the arts.<lb/>
For further information, call the<lb/>
Lakeland Arts Center at 919-586-3124.<lb/>
Backpacking:How to begin<lb/>
Rv I ARRV flQAUAAA .i  V<lb/>
GREENVILLE?Jazz master Woody<lb/>
Herman, concert pianist Claude<lb/>
Frank, comedian-pianist Victor Borge,<lb/>
the Zurich Chamber Orchestra and an<lb/>
evening of medieval music are<lb/>
featured on ih- 1979-80 Artists Series<lb/>
sponsored by the East Carolina<lb/>
University Student Union.<lb/>
The season opens Sept. 26 with<lb/>
Woody Herman and his orchestra in<lb/>
a program of "golden oldies" and<lb/>
the jazz of the present and future.<lb/>
Claude Frank, performing Oct. 30,<lb/>
is known internationally as one of the<lb/>
world's finest interpreters of the<lb/>
music of Beethoven. His RCA<lb/>
recording of Beethoven's sonatas was<lb/>
named one of "Ten Best" by Time,<lb/>
High Fidelity and Stereo Review.<lb/>
Another pianist, beloved as the<lb/>
"Piano Prince of Comedy Victor<lb/>
Borge, will perform here Dec. 10. A<lb/>
one-time child prodigy now<lb/>
recognized for his mirth as well as<lb/>
music, Borge combines the right<lb/>
witty phrases with the right musical<lb/>
note and gives his audience the best<lb/>
of both.<lb/>
The return of the Zurich Chamber<lb/>
Orchestra to the U.S. is very<lb/>
welcome news to music lovers in<lb/>
eastern North Carolina and else-<lb/>
where. Their Jan. 28 ECU program<lb/>
will include works from the classical,<lb/>
romantic and contemporary periods.<lb/>
An ensemble called "Music for a<lb/>
While" is the final feature on the<lb/>
series. The group presents an<lb/>
evening of medieval verse and music,<lb/>
clad in authentic costumes and<lb/>
performing on period instruments.<lb/>
The March 3 program will include<lb/>
a few works from the Renaissance<lb/>
period as well as the Middle Ages,<lb/>
evoking the sounds of the worlds of<lb/>
Geoffrey Chaucer and Henry VIII.<lb/>
Season tickets<lb/>
All programs, except the Woody<lb/>
Herman and Victor Borge<lb/>
appearances, are set for 8 p.m. in<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. The Herman and<lb/>
Borge shows will take place at 8<lb/>
p.m. in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Public tickets for the entire season<lb/>
are available at $20 each. The season<lb/>
price offers a substantial saving over<lb/>
single-ticket prices, enabling season<lb/>
ticket holders to attend the Victor<lb/>
Borge concert free of charge.<lb/>
Tickets and further information<lb/>
are available from the Central Ticket<lb/>
Office in Mendenhall Student Center,<lb/>
telephone 757-6611, extension 266.<lb/>
Victor Borge will appear<lb/>
" bright Auditorium on<lb/>
Dec. 10, at 8 p.m.<lb/>
By LARRY GRAHAM<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
Being tied to Green-<lb/>
ville with classes and<lb/>
bills and such mundane<lb/>
things can really de-<lb/>
press a person. Every-<lb/>
one needs an escape of<lb/>
some kind.<lb/>
For some it is the<lb/>
beach, disco, or beer.<lb/>
For others, backpacking<lb/>
provides a refreshing<lb/>
breather from everyday<lb/>
life. Backpacking allows<lb/>
you to get back to<lb/>
nature, back to the<lb/>
things that make life<lb/>
exciting.<lb/>
Before you can enjoy<lb/>
backpacking though, you<lb/>
must invest in some<lb/>
basic equipment.<lb/>
The most important<lb/>
piece of equipment is<lb/>
yourself. Are you in<lb/>
shape? Remember that<lb/>
backpacking is a fairly<lb/>
strenuous activity. For<lb/>
an overnight venture<lb/>
you will have to carry<lb/>
at least thirty pounds of<lb/>
gear, more for longer<lb/>
trips. Thirty pounds<lb/>
may not seem like<lb/>
much, but after several<lb/>
hours an undercondi-<lb/>
tioned person will feel<lb/>
overburdened.<lb/>
You may want to<lb/>
take several day-hikes<lb/>
.to begin with to see<lb/>
what carrying gear is<lb/>
like.<lb/>
The next most<lb/>
important piece of hik-<lb/>
ing gear to get is a<lb/>
solid pair of boots.<lb/>
Hiking boots are the<lb/>
best because they sup-<lb/>
port the foot better over<lb/>
rough terrain. Get a<lb/>
quality boot. A poorly<lb/>
designed boot will give<lb/>
you nothing but hell on<lb/>
the trail.<lb/>
Boots run from $30<lb/>
to over $70 a pair. I<lb/>
have a pair of $35 J.C.<lb/>
Penney specials that<lb/>
have lasted three years<lb/>
and still feel fantastic.<lb/>
It is important to<lb/>
break them in well as a<lb/>
new pair of boots are<lb/>
stiff which can cause<lb/>
blisters and agony on<lb/>
the trail.<lb/>
After you choose<lb/>
your boots, next in line<lb/>
is your choice of a<lb/>
backpack. The best kind<lb/>
of backpack is the<lb/>
wraparound with a pad-<lb/>
ded belt that let the<lb/>
hips support most of<lb/>
the pack's weight.<lb/>
Again, Fit is important.<lb/>
A too?small or too?<lb/>
large pack will chafe at<lb/>
the shoulders and neck<lb/>
and create back trouble. should be padded and<lb/>
Test the strength of adjustable for length,<lb/>
a frame in the store. Also check the stitching<lb/>
Set- ,t up diagonally which should be small<lb/>
with one leg touching straight and made of<lb/>
push nylo? Gr cotton wrapped<lb/>
down with increasing<lb/>
firmness until you are<lb/>
fairly sure how much<lb/>
stress the frame can<lb/>
take. Just don't break<lb/>
it.<lb/>
Shoulder straps<lb/>
nylon.<lb/>
Quality packs will<lb/>
have reinforced stitching<lb/>
at stress points such as<lb/>
zippers, corners of the<lb/>
packing under the scorm<lb/>
please turn to page 10<lb/>
4m f-<lb/>
v<lb/>
i hi<lb/>
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1<lb/>
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be<lb/>
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Hai<lb/>
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hj in :i<lb/>
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orav<lb/>
Sybi<lb/>
Lidel<lb/>
actor<lb/>
:ULti<lb/>
leade<lb/>
Rev.<lb/>
gan.<lb/>
Cantei<lb/>
"A fc I<lb/>
ol th<lb/>
and<lb/>
N.<lb/>
te<lb/>
one<lb/>
album<lb/>
aturj<lb/>
Cruel<lb/>
Brim<lb/>
Bob<lb/>
membj<lb/>
Parke<lb/>
i, who<lb/>
album;<lb/>
ker:<lb/>
Frogs<lb/>
krauti<lb/>
former!<lb/>
Bnnsle<lb/>
Release!<lb/>
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with B;<lb/>
ha<lb/>
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rising<lb/>
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hardly<lb/>
wave.<lb/>
one<lb/>
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vith<lb/>
Doll ?<lb/>
creative<lb/>
ever.<lb/>
Head<lb/>
round<lb/>
and hai<lb/>
become<lb/>
potent<lb/>
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deavor<lb/>
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Center was<lb/>
artists,<lb/>
i?men in April<lb/>
krantzatiun is a<lb/>
the performing<lb/>
er the direction<lb/>
kho has spent<lb/>
ar? in profes-<lb/>
Jfork, California<lb/>
activities and<lb/>
Miter are pro-<lb/>
all age groups,<lb/>
Inior citizens.<lb/>
- to be an<lb/>
taming cultural<lb/>
I opportunity<lb/>
and patrons to<lb/>
In of the arts.<lb/>
(?mation, call the<lb/>
at 919-586-3124.<lb/>
gin<lb/>
e padded and<lb/>
e tor length.<lb/>
:k the stitching<lb/>
iould be small,<lb/>
and made of<lb/>
cotton wrapped<lb/>
lit y packs will<lb/>
Enforced stitching<lb/>
points such as<lb/>
corners ot the<lb/>
under the siorm<lb/>
turn to page 10<lb/>
ll to" AH,<lb/>
Jrf<lb/>
Cicely 'sMoreos:<lb/>
Copycat Oreos<lb/>
By CECILY BROWNSTONE<lb/>
AP Food Editor<lb/>
DEAR CECILY: I enjoy your copycat recipes.<lb/>
Now I'd like to try making those chocolate cookies<lb/>
sandwiched together with white frosting that my<lb/>
kids are forever wanting me to buy.<lb/>
Have you ever tried to duplicate them? If so, I<lb/>
think a lot of other mothers besides me would<lb/>
appreciate your giving the recipe.<lb/>
- MODERN MOM<lb/>
DEAR MODERN MOM: Here's my attempt<lb/>
to copycat the cookies you describe ? available, I'm<lb/>
sure, in every supermarket from California to North<lb/>
Dakota. The homemade ones, which I've named<lb/>
Moreos, went over big at my house. Hope you have<lb/>
the same success.<lb/>
It you and your children enjoy culinary history,<lb/>
you may be interested to know that the bought<lb/>
cookies were first put on the market 67 years ago<lb/>
and have been popular ever since. At that time the<lb/>
manufacturer described the cookie as "two<lb/>
beautifully embossed chocolate-flavored wafers with<lb/>
a rich cream filling at 30 cents per pound<lb/>
Nowadays the cookies cost about $1.16 per pound.<lb/>
Anv cook who has more time than money can use<lb/>
m copycat recipe and save some pennies.<lb/>
-C.B.<lb/>
CECILY'S MOREOS<lb/>
21 2 cups fork-stirred all-purpose flour<lb/>
14 teaspoon baking soda<lb/>
?4 teaspoon salt -<lb/>
Vt cup cocoa<lb/>
1 cup two !4-pound sticks butter or margarine,<lb/>
room temperature<lb/>
1! 2 cups tirmly packed dark brown sugar<lb/>
1 teaspoon vanilla<lb/>
1 large egg<lb/>
Filling, recipe follows: In a medium bowl stir<lb/>
together salt and cocoa.<lb/>
In a large bowl cream butter, sugar and vanilla;<lb/>
beat in egg, then flour mixture, until blended. With<lb/>
a rubber spatula scrape the dough together and<lb/>
flatten it across the bowl. Mark in half. There will<lb/>
be a generous 3V2 cups of dough. It will be very<lb/>
soft, but don't worry because it will roll out easily.<lb/>
11 September 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Page 9<lb/>
Million Mile Reflections<lb/>
Daniels' latest a monster<lb/>
uAai<lb/>
With a wide metal spatula lift half the dough<lb/>
onto a well-floured pastry cloth. With a<lb/>
well-floured stockinet-covered rolling pin, roll out to<lb/>
about a 14-inch round ? it will be about 18-inch<lb/>
thick.<lb/>
With a floured round lV4-inch cookie cutter, cut<lb/>
out. Form scaps of dough into a ball and, rubbing<lb/>
more flour into pastry cloth if necessary, roll out to<lb/>
the same thickness and cut out as before.<lb/>
Place cutouts at least Vfe-inch apart on ungreased<lb/>
cookie sheets. With the tip of a small sharp knife,<lb/>
carve the letter "M" on half the cookies, but do<lb/>
not cut all the way through. Bake in a preheated<lb/>
400-degree oven until cookies lose their shiny<lb/>
appearance, look dry, but do not brown ? 6<lb/>
minutes. With a wide spatula remove to wire racks<lb/>
to cool completely. Meanwhile chill remaining<lb/>
portion of dough and treat the same way.<lb/>
Sandwich each unmarked cookie together with a<lb/>
marked one, using about 1 teaspoon of filling for<lb/>
each pair. To do so, dip the tip of a small metal<lb/>
spatula into the filling, judge the amount with your<lb/>
eye and with another small metal spatula scrape it<lb/>
onto the bottom center of an unmarked cookie; top<lb/>
with an M-carved cookie, pressing it down so Filling<lb/>
shows at sides. Place cookies on racks for filling to<lb/>
dry for several hours. Store loosely covered. Makes<lb/>
about 5V2 dozen sandwich-style cookies.<lb/>
Filling: With a spoon beat together until blended<lb/>
2 cups confectioners' sugar, V4 cup chilled churned<lb/>
honey, 4 teaspoons hot water and 1 teaspoon<lb/>
vanilla; it will be sticky. If necessary, stir in extra<lb/>
confectioners' suger to make frosting easy to work<lb/>
with.<lb/>
Artist's painting<lb/>
continued from page 8<lb/>
The record includes<lb/>
hymns sung by British<lb/>
school choruses and<lb/>
pravers read by Dame<lb/>
Sybil Thorndike, Alvar<lb/>
Lidell and other British<lb/>
actors as well as by<lb/>
such noted religious<lb/>
leaders as the Most<lb/>
Rc. Dr. Donald Cog-<lb/>
gan. Archbishop of<lb/>
Canterbury; Gen. Erik<lb/>
Wickberg, Ninth Leader<lb/>
of the Salvation Army;<lb/>
and the late Cardinal<lb/>
NewWave<lb/>
(please turn to page 10)<lb/>
one of the fastest rising<lb/>
albums on the charts,<lb/>
Featuring the hot single<lb/>
"Cruel To Be Kind<lb/>
Brinsley Schwarz and<lb/>
Bob Andrews are<lb/>
members of Graham<lb/>
Parker's band, Rumour<lb/>
(who have had two fine<lb/>
albums, Graham Par-<lb/>
ker's Squeezing Out<lb/>
Sparks and their own<lb/>
Frogs Sprouts Clogs<lb/>
Krauts). Ian Gomm,<lb/>
former guitarist for<lb/>
Bnnslev Schwarz, has<lb/>
?released a superb new<lb/>
?ilbu i, Gomm With The<lb/>
John Heenan,<lb/>
Archbishop of<lb/>
Westminster.<lb/>
European Peace Cross<lb/>
awardee Herbert Sulz-<lb/>
bach repeats a prayer<lb/>
he addressed in 1945 to<lb/>
4,000 German<lb/>
prisoners-of-war in Scot-<lb/>
land; Moshe Davis<lb/>
reads the 23rcLPsalm in<lb/>
Hebrew and in English;<lb/>
and prayers for peace<lb/>
in Northern Ireland are<lb/>
said by a Catholic<lb/>
soldier and a Protestant<lb/>
doctor.<lb/>
The Reep work<lb/>
selected for the album's<lb/>
cover was painted im-<lb/>
mediately after the !963<lb/>
assassination of John<lb/>
Kennedy, and its<lb/>
neutral color and vague<lb/>
forms against a dark<lb/>
background convey the<lb/>
artist's mood of "empt-<lb/>
iness" and "solitude<lb/>
Before joining the ECU<lb/>
faculty in 1970, Reep<lb/>
chaired the painting<lb/>
department at the Cali-<lb/>
fornia Institute of the<lb/>
Arts. He has exhibited<lb/>
widely in museums and<lb/>
galleries throughout the<lb/>
U.S. and is represented<lb/>
in numerous public and<lb/>
private art collections.<lb/>
His work has ap-<lb/>
peared in Life, Look,<lb/>
Fortune and Newsweek<lb/>
magazines and in var-<lb/>
ious art books.<lb/>
Among the honors<lb/>
and awards Reep has<lb/>
received during his<lb/>
career have been a<lb/>
Guggenheim Fellowship,<lb/>
several major commis-<lb/>
sions from corporations<lb/>
and government<lb/>
agencies, and more than<lb/>
25 exhibition awards.<lb/>
By LARRY GRAHAM<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
Many bands change<lb/>
their sound as they<lb/>
mature and break out to<lb/>
try new musical angles.<lb/>
None, however, has<lb/>
changed as much as the<lb/>
Charlie Daniels Band.<lb/>
Their new album,<lb/>
Million Mile<lb/>
Reflections is the<lb/>
culmination of six years<lb/>
of experimentation and<lb/>
metamorphosis, produc-<lb/>
ing one of the best<lb/>
albums of 1979.<lb/>
Band<lb/>
When the Charlie<lb/>
Daniels Band started<lb/>
out, it was mainly<lb/>
concerned with country<lb/>
rock, churning out such<lb/>
songs as "The South's<lb/>
Gonna Do It Again"<lb/>
and "Tomorrow's Gonna<lb/>
Be Another Day<lb/>
Charlie started to<lb/>
break away from the<lb/>
restrictions of country<lb/>
rock, however, and ex-<lb/>
perimented. The band<lb/>
picked up three new<lb/>
members in 1975, in-<lb/>
cluding Charlie<lb/>
Hayward, one of the<lb/>
best bassists I have had<lb/>
the pleasure of listening<lb/>
to.<lb/>
Heavy rock<lb/>
The band gradually<lb/>
brought heavy rock,<lb/>
country, jazz and a little<lb/>
funk into their albums<lb/>
until 1979 when they<lb/>
broke loose. Million<lb/>
Mile Reflections is the<lb/>
result.<lb/>
The first side starts<lb/>
out fast with "Passing<lb/>
Lane This song, easily-<lb/>
one of the best on the<lb/>
record, is good rock<lb/>
sprinkled with funk.<lb/>
Charlie Daniels is a<lb/>
master of rhythm and<lb/>
m usical character,<lb/>
strengths he flexes only<lb/>
on this song. The con-<lb/>
trast between verse and<lb/>
chorus is surprising.<lb/>
Blue Star<lb/>
"Blue Star" is<lb/>
another straight-ahead<lb/>
rocker, heavy, but more<lb/>
harmonically and<lb/>
rhythmically complex<lb/>
than "Passing Lane<lb/>
Charlie Daniels loves<lb/>
to tell stories about<lb/>
people. "Jitterbug" is<lb/>
the story of a wild<lb/>
Harlem-ish loan shark<lb/>
who bites off more than<lb/>
he can chew. The song<lb/>
is set to a walking<lb/>
bassjazz format which<lb/>
elicits vivid pictures of<lb/>
this man and his<lb/>
street-life.<lb/>
Reflection<lb/>
"Behind Your Eyes"<lb/>
is a wistful reflection of<lb/>
a man trying to resist<lb/>
love and finding that he<lb/>
cannot. The song is<lb/>
quiet, a change that<lb/>
breaks away from the<lb/>
bawdiness of the first<lb/>
three songs and intro-<lb/>
duces the poignant<lb/>
"Reflections a tribute<lb/>
to Elvis Presley, Janis<lb/>
Ian, and Ronnie Van<lb/>
Zant. Complete with<lb/>
sweeping violins and<lb/>
booming cellos, this is<lb/>
truly an impressive tri-<lb/>
bute.<lb/>
The second side<lb/>
opens with the over-<lb/>
played "The Devil<lb/>
Went Down to<lb/>
Georgia This is easily<lb/>
the worst song on the<lb/>
record. There are two<lb/>
versions, one for the<lb/>
nice stations and one<lb/>
for the avant-garde.<lb/>
Support<lb/>
East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Advertisers<lb/>
Leather Belts<lb/>
$6 to $19<lb/>
Leather Handbags<lb/>
$10 to $25<lb/>
?Shoes Repaired To Look<lb/>
Like New<lb/>
Riggon Shoe Repair<lb/>
&amp; Leather Shop<lb/>
111 WEST 4TH ST.<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
Tfini<lb/>
Parking in Front<lb/>
and Rear.<lb/>
i<lb/>
.lost'<lb/>
T<lb/>
associated<lb/>
withBrimsley Schwarz is<lb/>
Uavc Edmunds, who<lb/>
has a hit single with<lb/>
"Girl's Talk" and a<lb/>
rising album with Re-<lb/>
peat When Necessary.<lb/>
Several members<lb/>
have been with the<lb/>
mo-progressive move-<lb/>
ment since it's inception<lb/>
in the early seventies.<lb/>
The Ramones were one<lb/>
of the original punk<lb/>
groups, but have pro-<lb/>
gressed little in five<lb/>
years, so we could<lb/>
hardly term them as<lb/>
wave. David Johansen,<lb/>
one of the founders of<lb/>
the wave movement<lb/>
with the New York<lb/>
Dolls, is more vital and<lb/>
creative today than<lb/>
ever. The Talking<lb/>
Heads have been a-<lb/>
round for a long time,<lb/>
and have progressed to<lb/>
become one of the most<lb/>
potent forces in rock<lb/>
music. Their new album<lb/>
tear of Music, is Per-<lb/>
haps their finest en-<lb/>
deavor and one of the<lb/>
top new albums of the<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Perhaps the finest<lb/>
new group in the neo-<lb/>
pr gre?hive movement<lb/>
are" the Police, from<lb/>
pU-u.se turn to page I0<lb/>
DO YOU HAVE TROUBLE<lb/>
MAKING YOUR 8:00am CLASS?<lb/>
HAVE YOU EVER SLEPT<lb/>
THROUGH YOUR ALARM?<lb/>
FOR AN INEXPENSIVE<lb/>
GUARANTEE TO BE ON TIME<lb/>
FOR ANYTHING I<lb/>
CALL 758-7904<lb/>
or 752-5506<lb/>
FOR MORE INFORMATION<lb/>
WE HAVE THE ANSWERI<lb/>
Jerry's Sweet Shop<lb/>
13th Anniversary Sale<lb/>
Sept. 10-15<lb/>
Glazed Donuts-only $1.25 doz.<lb/>
(plus tax)<lb/>
Free Cake Delivery to ECU Students.<lb/>
Complete line of donuts, pastries,<lb/>
decorated cakes, cookies, and breads.<lb/>
?e<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Everything you always wanted in a beer.<lb/>
And less.<lb/>
announces<lb/>
ECU NIGHT<lb/>
?very Thursday 6:30-10:00<lb/>
featuring<lb/>
All students admitted for $1.00<lb/>
(Includes skate rental) when<lb/>
presenting ECU I.D.<lb/>
104 Red Banks Rd.<lb/>
Behind Shoney's<lb/>
756-6000<lb/>
jtJu.&amp;<lb/>
 -<lb/>
(ft<lb/>
"Mississippi" is<lb/>
another quiet song.<lb/>
Emphasis is placed on<lb/>
the keyboards and vio-<lb/>
lins, giving this beaut-<lb/>
iful song a very mellow<lb/>
feel.<lb/>
Charlie Daniels rocks<lb/>
again with "Blind<lb/>
Man This is another<lb/>
driving story, both<lb/>
musically and lyrically.<lb/>
It tells of an old black<lb/>
guitar player who lost<lb/>
his sight during a Ku<lb/>
Klux Klan raid. Almost<lb/>
haunting, this song will<lb/>
draw the listener back<lb/>
more powerfully than<lb/>
any other on the record.<lb/>
Ride<lb/>
The best was saved<lb/>
for last. "Rainbow<lb/>
Ride" starts off with<lb/>
soft guitars in an<lb/>
arpeggio study. This<lb/>
breaks down to A <lb/>
interlude which is im-<lb/>
mediately followed by a<lb/>
fast-breaking jazz<lb/>
section with truly fine<lb/>
bass walking. From<lb/>
then on it never lets<lb/>
up. Charlie Daniels<lb/>
throws everything he<lb/>
knows into this song.<lb/>
It's a monster.<lb/>
The sound on this<lb/>
album is as good as<lb/>
you cati get, although<lb/>
the cymbals still come<lb/>
out a little fuzzy. This<lb/>
record comes with a<lb/>
lyrics sheet, something<lb/>
which Dnaiels has not<lb/>
included before. It's<lb/>
handy ("See? He does<lb/>
say 'son-of-a-bitch).<lb/>
All in all, Million<lb/>
Mile Reflections is a<lb/>
monster of an album.<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO 12TH<lb/>
WEEK OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
$175.00 "all inclusive"<lb/>
pregnancy test birtn control and<lb/>
problem pregnancy counseling For<lb/>
further information call 832-0535<lb/>
free number 800-221-2568) between<lb/>
9AM-5PM weekdays<lb/>
Raleigh Women's Health<lb/>
Organization<lb/>
917 West Morgan St.<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C. 27603<lb/>
HEADLINES<lb/>
Fall Service<lb/>
Hair Salon<lb/>
Relaxers<lb/>
Jherl Curl<lb/>
Permanent<lb/>
Super Cote<lb/>
Rlverrfate Shopping Center<lb/>
Call 752 3462<lb/>
flfflnnrs<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 slew,<lb/>
Huthpapples.<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 - 2:3?<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
MON . THURS.<lb/>
?t? ? ft?<lb/>
FHI. &amp; SAT<lb/>
f :oc ? issse<lb/>
V-W3te<lb/>
?y<lb/>
I<lb/>
f 0m ? ?-?-? ?' ?r v<lb/>
mm<lb/>
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;<lb/>
<lb/>
"V<lb/>
w<lb/>
l <lb/>
Former teacher is now<lb/>
a<lb/>
i<lb/>
black<lb/>
siniin<lb/>
ll<lb/>
ft ?<lb/>
'Alt<lb/>
a is a pop opera<lb/>
I forge<lb/>
.<lb/>
 oriel War III<lb/>
M'll<lb/>
er<lb/>
in<lb/>
<pb facs="00057213_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>