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The East Carolinian<lb/>
Vol. 54 No. 9<lb/>
14 pages today<lb/>
Tuesday, September 25, 1979<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
'hough not scheduled for completion until December, work onthe new parking lots seems wen unaer way.<lb/>
(Photo by John H. Grogan)<lb/>
Letter investigated<lb/>
Elections tomorrow<lb/>
By KAREN W ENDT<lb/>
cus Editor<lb/>
SG elections lor Day<lb/>
Sludenl Representatives,<lb/>
I lass Officers ami Dorm<lb/>
Representatives will be-<lb/>
gin at :0U a.m. sharp<lb/>
tomorrow.<lb/>
Student apathy, how-<lb/>
ever, has bt-t-ri a problem<lb/>
with past elections, and<lb/>
a- always, il may be a<lb/>
problem in this one. In<lb/>
the last election, only an<lb/>
estimated 12 percent ot<lb/>
students voted.<lb/>
I hi- time we hope<lb/>
to gel 30 percent of the<lb/>
: iM- io vote said<lb/>
I mi Mertz, chairperson<lb/>
lor the SGA elections<lb/>
committee.<lb/>
Ihere are 20 students<lb/>
tu be elected to the posts<lb/>
ol da) student repre-<lb/>
sentatives, and only 29<lb/>
student! are running.<lb/>
Charlie Sherrod, vice<lb/>
president ol the SGA,<lb/>
feels tin- is "terrible<lb/>
For the office of<lb/>
ire-hman das- president,<lb/>
ihere arc six candidates:<lb/>
Ldia Thomas, Charles<lb/>
Butler, John Dedrick,<lb/>
Erick Henderson, Wil-<lb/>
iiam W aters and Ronald<lb/>
Julie<lb/>
The only candidate<lb/>
lor Ire-hman class vice<lb/>
president is John Quinn.<lb/>
Quinn is also the sole<lb/>
person running for dorm<lb/>
representative in Aycock<lb/>
dorm.<lb/>
In the race for<lb/>
sophomore class presi-<lb/>
dent, there are three<lb/>
candidates: Kirk Little,<lb/>
Dill Hilliard, and Daniel<lb/>
Brown. Vice-presidential<lb/>
candidates are Peggy<lb/>
Davidson and Howard<lb/>
Brown.<lb/>
In the junior class<lb/>
presidential election,<lb/>
there are three candi-<lb/>
dates: Al Patrick, Cheryl<lb/>
Bohem, and Debra Zum-<lb/>
bach. Cariton Williams is<lb/>
(tie only candidate fur<lb/>
vice president.<lb/>
Doug While, William<lb/>
Little and Libby Lefler<lb/>
are running lor senior<lb/>
class president. The<lb/>
senior class vice presi-<lb/>
dency will go to either<lb/>
Patrick Quinn or Michael<lb/>
Gibson.<lb/>
Nicky Francis is the<lb/>
only candidate for grad-<lb/>
uate student president.<lb/>
The election of dorm<lb/>
representatives will also<lb/>
lake place tomorrow.<lb/>
Howard Brown, Al<lb/>
Patrick and Samuel<lb/>
Bernstein will be running<lb/>
lor Belk Dorm repre-<lb/>
sentative.<lb/>
UNCW president<lb/>
is impeached<lb/>
WILMINGTON -<lb/>
Like the Watergate con-<lb/>
troversy, a political battle<lb/>
at the University of North<lb/>
Carolina at Wilmington<lb/>
has a familiar theme �<lb/>
"Impeach the Presi-<lb/>
dent<lb/>
But Francis De Luca,<lb/>
president of the Student<lb/>
Government Association,<lb/>
says he is no Richard<lb/>
Nixon � although, like<lb/>
tin- former president, he<lb/>
claim- opponents are<lb/>
trvmg to "do him in" for<lb/>
political reasons.<lb/>
"I don't feel like<lb/>
Nixon because I didn't do<lb/>
an thing wrong said<lb/>
the 21-year-old senior.<lb/>
But opponents in the<lb/>
LNCW Student Senate<lb/>
claim he has done lots of<lb/>
things wrong. Recently<lb/>
the senate voted unani-<lb/>
mously to impeach De<lb/>
Luca and set a trial for<lb/>
this Wednesday.<lb/>
vmong the charges<lb/>
against De Luca are: not<lb/>
being available to stu-<lb/>
dents; falsifying infor-<lb/>
mation concerning fund-<lb/>
ed and non-funded stu-<lb/>
dent organizations to the<lb/>
Board of Trustees;<lb/>
downgrading the SGA's<lb/>
administrative assistant<lb/>
lo a clerk typist; and<lb/>
taking drastic action<lb/>
without the knowledge or<lb/>
consent of the senate.<lb/>
Calling his actions<lb/>
"unscrupulous in nature<lb/>
and far below the level of<lb/>
rectitude and integrity<lb/>
that one should possess<lb/>
as an elected student<lb/>
leader the senate im-<lb/>
peached De Luca for<lb/>
'maladministration and<lb/>
misrepresentation<lb/>
If found guilty and<lb/>
removed from office, De<lb/>
Luca will not only lose<lb/>
his position as president,<lb/>
but a $l06-a-month sal-<lb/>
ary, a tuition scholarship<lb/>
and a position on the<lb/>
UNCW Board of Trust-<lb/>
ees. He is confident,<lb/>
however, that the Stu-<lb/>
dent Court will find him<lb/>
not guilty of the charges,<lb/>
which he claims have not<lb/>
been substantiated.<lb/>
"It ail depends he<lb/>
said. "If it is a fair court,<lb/>
then 1 don't see any way<lb/>
1 can be impeached<lb/>
Correction<lb/>
In a story printed in<lb/>
the September 20, edi-<lb/>
tion of the East Caro-<lb/>
linian, due to a mistake<lb/>
in typesetting, it was<lb/>
incorrectly published that<lb/>
the Media Board pro-<lb/>
posal was presented on<lb/>
January 31, 1979.<lb/>
In actuality the pro-<lb/>
posal was presented on<lb/>
January 31, 1978. We<lb/>
regret the error, and<lb/>
apologize to our readers.<lb/>
Jones has four can-<lb/>
didates for its repre-<lb/>
sentative: David Buck-<lb/>
ingham, Eric Henderson,<lb/>
Jell Mitchell and Kenny<lb/>
Hooper.<lb/>
William Seabolt and<lb/>
William Overman will be<lb/>
running lor the position<lb/>
in Scott.<lb/>
Slay's two candidates<lb/>
are Nancy Collins and<lb/>
Samuel Mann.<lb/>
Linstead has only one<lb/>
candidate: Cameron<lb/>
Stanlorth.<lb/>
Clement will have two<lb/>
people on the ballot,<lb/>
fhev are Jaqueline Boys<lb/>
and Linda Bishop. Gotten<lb/>
also lias two candidates:<lb/>
Lydia Thomas and Tanta<lb/>
Chaplin.<lb/>
Susan Marshall, Judy<lb/>
Hunt and Jill Baleman<lb/>
will be running lor the<lb/>
position in Fletcher.<lb/>
Telena Lester is Gar-<lb/>
retl's only candidate.<lb/>
Elizabeth Albright<lb/>
and Dasha Elrid are<lb/>
running for the post in<lb/>
Greene dormitory.<lb/>
The candidates for<lb/>
Tyler are Cheryl Fel-<lb/>
binger and Lil Johnson.<lb/>
Students will be able<lb/>
to vote lor their candi-<lb/>
dates al twenty polling<lb/>
places across campus.<lb/>
Fhej are: the Allied<lb/>
Health Building, Gotten<lb/>
Hall, Fleming Hall,<lb/>
Jams Hall, Greene Hall,<lb/>
Garretl Hall, Fletcher<lb/>
Hall, While Hall, Cle-<lb/>
ment Hall, Tyler Hall,<lb/>
Lnislead Hall, Jones<lb/>
Hall, .Aycock Hall, Scott<lb/>
Hall, Belk Hall, Slay<lb/>
Hall, the Student Supply<lb/>
Store, the Croatan,<lb/>
Minges Coliseum, and<lb/>
the Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Voters are required to<lb/>
vole in their own pre-<lb/>
cincts, and all polls will<lb/>
be open from 9:00 a.m.<lb/>
to 5:00 p.m. with the<lb/>
exception ol the Student<lb/>
Supply Store, open until<lb/>
7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Every student on this<lb/>
campus should vole in<lb/>
the election. These are<lb/>
our representatives up<lb/>
lor office. Don't let<lb/>
someone else make your<lb/>
decision.<lb/>
From STAFF REPORTS<lb/>
SGA Attorney Gen-<lb/>
eral Randy Ingram has<lb/>
reported that he is<lb/>
investigating the circu-<lb/>
lation of a transcribed<lb/>
personal letter to Brett<lb/>
Melvin, SGA president,<lb/>
from former president<lb/>
Tim Sullivan.<lb/>
Melvin asked Ingram<lb/>
to look into the copying<lb/>
and mailing of the letter<lb/>
which Ingram said<lb/>
"seems to be a serious<lb/>
violation of the Honor<lb/>
Code<lb/>
A photocopy of the<lb/>
original letter and a<lb/>
transcribed copy, post-<lb/>
marked vug. 27, were<lb/>
sent anonymously to each<lb/>
member of the board of<lb/>
trustees, Chancellor<lb/>
Brewer, Mayor Percy<lb/>
Cox, Dr. Jack Thornton,<lb/>
James B. Mallory,<lb/>
Carolyn Fulghum, S.<lb/>
Rudoli .vlexander, Col.<lb/>
Dick Blake, Dr. Clinton<lb/>
Prewell, Dr. David B.<lb/>
Stevens, Cliff Moore, Dr.<lb/>
Elmer Meyer, Dr. Maier,<lb/>
Joe Calder and Marc<lb/>
Barnes.<lb/>
Board member Louis<lb/>
5uigleion said he was<lb/>
proud ol the I act that the<lb/>
letter was not mentioned<lb/>
al the vug. 29 board<lb/>
meeting. He said the<lb/>
anonymous correspon-<lb/>
dence "reeked of cow-<lb/>
ardice" and did not merit<lb/>
consideration.<lb/>
Most board members<lb/>
would make no comment,<lb/>
Inside<lb/>
Today<lb/>
�Pirates lose third<lb/>
game in a row See<lb/>
Page 7.<lb/>
� Herman, Cotton con-<lb/>
cert See page 11.<lb/>
�Zappa, live on WRQR<lb/>
See page 12.<lb/>
Editorial<lb/>
See page L<lb/>
:rilicized<lb/>
Transit changes discussed<lb/>
By TERRY GRAY<lb/>
Assistant Mews Editor<lb/>
11 Transit System<lb/>
manager Leonard Flem-<lb/>
ing has his way with the<lb/>
upcoming Legislature,<lb/>
students here may soon<lb/>
be gelling expanded,<lb/>
more reliable bus ser-<lb/>
vice.<lb/>
The Transit Opera-<lb/>
tions manager plans to<lb/>
present several new pro-<lb/>
posals to the Legislature,<lb/>
including a plan to<lb/>
replace one ol the buses<lb/>
with two smaller and<lb/>
more efficient vans. Ac-<lb/>
cording lo Fleming, the<lb/>
use of vans could result<lb/>
in expanded service,<lb/>
including a new night<lb/>
route connecting the<lb/>
University with local<lb/>
apartment complexes and<lb/>
shopping centers.<lb/>
Other proposals<lb/>
awaiting legislative ap-<lb/>
proval include a new<lb/>
driver-training program<lb/>
and a new merit raise<lb/>
system for drivc-s and<lb/>
Transit System staffers.<lb/>
The proposed changes<lb/>
are in part the result of<lb/>
an informal study con-<lb/>
ducted by Fleming at the<lb/>
University of Maryland<lb/>
last summer. Fleming<lb/>
said that he interviewed<lb/>
transit authorities there<lb/>
during July and August,<lb/>
and came away with<lb/>
some new ideas.<lb/>
"They have a very<lb/>
professional, top-rate<lb/>
system there, with a<lb/>
24-hour call-a-ride ser-<lb/>
vice, an evening security<lb/>
service, two-way radios<lb/>
in all their buses they<lb/>
have just about every-<lb/>
thing in the way of<lb/>
transit service.<lb/>
viler two trips to the<lb/>
Universit) of Maryland,<lb/>
Fleming tried the idea of<lb/>
using vans at ECU<lb/>
during the second sum-<lb/>
mer session. According<lb/>
lo him, the results were<lb/>
"fantastic<lb/>
We cut costs lor the<lb/>
same service by 60 by<lb/>
running those vans. Our<lb/>
International Harvester<lb/>
buses only get about 2!<lb/>
to SV2 miles to the gallon<lb/>
111 town, and the vans<lb/>
were getting 8V2 to<lb/>
l0'2.<lb/>
Fleming added that<lb/>
outine maintenance for<lb/>
the vans was also<lb/>
cheaper.<lb/>
"Cleaning, changing<lb/>
oil, and tuning up cost us<lb/>
around $120 for a bus.<lb/>
We had the same work<lb/>
done on the vans for<lb/>
$41<lb/>
11 the Legislature<lb/>
approves the purchase of<lb/>
vans, Fleming said that<lb/>
ihe Transit System could<lb/>
get two Dodge vans for<lb/>
$15,500. New Ford buses<lb/>
are currently priced<lb/>
around $21,000.<lb/>
.According lo Fleming,<lb/>
the vans would not<lb/>
replace all buses. In-<lb/>
stead, they would be<lb/>
used on routes with low<lb/>
ridership, especially the<lb/>
Brown route, or on new<lb/>
roules.<lb/>
Fleming's other plans<lb/>
include a driver training<lb/>
program and a merit<lb/>
raise system within the<lb/>
transit organization.<lb/>
Prospective drivers<lb/>
would be required to take<lb/>
one classroom period of<lb/>
technical instruction, and<lb/>
al least three or four<lb/>
hours of driving practice.<lb/>
Since the Ford buses<lb/>
drive differently than the<lb/>
International Harvesters,<lb/>
drivers would be re-<lb/>
quired lo practice in both<lb/>
makes, Fleming said.<lb/>
Under the new merit<lb/>
system, drivers would be<lb/>
periodically and secretly<lb/>
reviewed, and given<lb/>
raises on that basis.<lb/>
Fleming and others in<lb/>
the Transit System are<lb/>
currently working on a<lb/>
new manual in which all<lb/>
the new proposals will be<lb/>
included. When asked<lb/>
what he thought his<lb/>
chances were for gettfng<lb/>
il approved, Fleming<lb/>
replied "I don't know,<lb/>
but 1 think they might be<lb/>
pretty good.<lb/>
Laugh a li<lb/>
������<lb/>
STOCKHOLM, Swe-<lb/>
den (AP) � The 30-year-<lb/>
old man just left the<lb/>
parly for a stroll and<lb/>
some fresh air.<lb/>
But he forgot to<lb/>
pocket the key to the<lb/>
street door. And rather<lb/>
than rouse his neighbors,<lb/>
he tried to get back in<lb/>
the Stockholm apartment<lb/>
hou c through the gar-<lb/>
bage chute.<lb/>
A newspaper carrier<lb/>
found the repentent re-<lb/>
veler early Sunday mor-<lb/>
ning, firmly wedged half-<lb/>
way in the cfcute. The<lb/>
boy called police, bat a<lb/>
fire brigade had to apply<lb/>
axes and picks before the<lb/>
man was finally freed.<lb/>
but a few passages from<lb/>
the letter troubled other<lb/>
members.<lb/>
Following suggestions<lb/>
instructing Melvin on<lb/>
how to run the SGA,<lb/>
Sullivan slates, "It is<lb/>
worth spending 10 per-<lb/>
cent ol SG v s budget on<lb/>
propaganda � er else<lb/>
there will 110 SG.v to<lb/>
spend the other 90<lb/>
percent<lb/>
Ashley B. Futrell,<lb/>
ECU trustee and editor<lb/>
of the Washington Daily<lb/>
News, commented that<lb/>
spending students'<lb/>
money on "propaganda"<lb/>
is not "a standard<lb/>
practice and il is my<lb/>
opinion that il is illegal<lb/>
The SG.v has pub-<lb/>
lished a newsletter lo be<lb/>
distributed today. The<lb/>
Media Board Constitution<lb/>
slates thai "all student<lb/>
publications funded from<lb/>
the student activity fee<lb/>
(not to include the<lb/>
Sludenl Union publica-<lb/>
tions), the Photo Lab,<lb/>
and Radio Station W ECL<lb/>
shall be administered bv<lb/>
the Board The SGA<lb/>
newsletter is not admin-<lb/>
istered b) the Media<lb/>
Board.<lb/>
mother passage that<lb/>
was particularly disturb-<lb/>
ing lo some trustees<lb/>
concerned Brett Meivin's<lb/>
hearing before the board<lb/>
on charge- ol illegal use<lb/>
ol lunds in his election.<lb/>
Sullivan is in Thailand<lb/>
working lor ihe Peace<lb/>
Corps, and he -aid "this<lb/>
language training .is<lb/>
is more difficult than 10<lb/>
perlormances before a<lb/>
trustee jurv <lb/>
f rutee W iliiam H.<lb/>
Stanley said, "ll that<lb/>
statement was true, that<lb/>
there was an attempt to<lb/>
make a charade, if there<lb/>
was a calculated attempt<lb/>
to make a larce ol the<lb/>
Hearing, then I resent<lb/>
dial great!).<lb/>
Futrell fell that "his<lb/>
choice ol words is<lb/>
unusualBosh Stanley<lb/>
and Futrell agreed that<lb/>
part ol Sullivan's lesli-<lb/>
utoti) al the trial was<lb/>
questionable.<lb/>
It - a blueprint lor<lb/>
something unnholesome,<lb/>
it look- like lo me,<lb/>
I" u 11 e 11 said.<lb/>
ECU hosts Fifth<lb/>
Annual Workshop<lb/>
He has been called<lb/>
the "hero of the high<lb/>
school press in this<lb/>
country and he's com-<lb/>
ing lo East Carolina<lb/>
University to spend a day<lb/>
wilh a lew hundred<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina<lb/>
sludenl journalists.<lb/>
Michael D. Simpson,<lb/>
director of ihe Sludenl<lb/>
Press Law Center, W ash-<lb/>
inglou, D.C will be a<lb/>
leatured participant in<lb/>
lite filth annual ECU<lb/>
Publications W orkshop,<lb/>
Saturday, Sept. 29. Reg-<lb/>
istration will begin al 8<lb/>
a.m. in the Jenkins Fine<lb/>
�rts Center.<lb/>
The Pretos Law CtJler<lb/>
la l he only national<lb/>
organization devoted ex-<lb/>
clusively lo protection ol<lb/>
sludenl journalists' First<lb/>
1 in c n d in e 111 right<lb/>
Simpson, 29, graduated<lb/>
from Davidson and<lb/>
earned a law degree Irom<lb/>
the University ol Georgia,<lb/>
fhis fall's workshop<lb/>
is co-sponsored by ihe<lb/>
Division ol Continuing<lb/>
Education and ihe So-<lb/>
ciety lor Collegiate Jour-<lb/>
nalists, the campus hon-<lb/>
orary journalism frater-<lb/>
nity. Joyce Evans is<lb/>
president of the fra-<lb/>
ternity, and Ira L. Baker<lb/>
is adviser. Phil Martin is<lb/>
assistant director ol non-<lb/>
crcdil programs lor Con-<lb/>
tinuing Education. The<lb/>
theme of the workshop<lb/>
will be "Press Freedom<lb/>
and Responsibility<lb/>
Dr. lhoma- B. Brew-<lb/>
er, ECL chancellor, will<lb/>
welcome participants and<lb/>
visitors to the work-hop.<lb/>
Sessions lor newspaper,<lb/>
yearbook, magazine, and<lb/>
radio and 1 -tall- w ill<lb/>
be held Irom 1U:00 lo<lb/>
I2:UU a.m. vfternoon<lb/>
sessions will be devoted<lb/>
�' 1<lb/>
tu lab-workshops in the<lb/>
same media ai eas.<lb/>
V orkshop leader- 111-<lb/>
i lude ihe lollow ing: I errv<lb/>
tieriidou, The East Caro-<lb/>
linian assistant director<lb/>
'i 1 adverlisii Jell<lb/>
Rollins, toruier Rebel<lb/>
See W ORKM10P, page 5<lb/>
m. ' w<lb/>
1<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
1 iA<lb/>
� j� -5sr ��" '1<lb/>
J1<lb/>
5;1<lb/>
Michael D. Simpson, America's "Hero of the Student<lb/>
Press will be the featured speaker during<lb/>
Saturday s Publications Workshop.<lb/>
Media Board creates<lb/>
new Buccaneer position<lb/>
By WANE HENDERSON<lb/>
Copy Editor<lb/>
Yesterday ihe Media Board created<lb/>
an assistant editor position lor The<lb/>
buccaneer and formed a committee to<lb/>
investigate legal counsel guidelines for.<lb/>
The East Carolinian.<lb/>
Buccaneer Editor Craig Sahli asked<lb/>
the board for a pay position of $1000 �<lb/>
$125 a month for eight months � to<lb/>
create ihe position. Sahli said he would<lb/>
nol be able to carry on his job<lb/>
effectively without assistance. The<lb/>
board approved the position but did not<lb/>
decide where ihe appropriation should<lb/>
come from.<lb/>
One board member suggested the<lb/>
funds be taken from the current<lb/>
appropriation for printing yearbooks.<lb/>
There has been an excess of yearbooks<lb/>
printed in previous years, and this<lb/>
appears to be the case this year as<lb/>
well. Some board members feel the<lb/>
money spent on the excess should be<lb/>
directed to the new salary position.<lb/>
A major issue discussed at the<lb/>
meeting concerned whether or not the<lb/>
board should be responsible for the<lb/>
acts of employees at The East<lb/>
Carolinian. The newspaper employs<lb/>
legal counsel as part of its advertising<lb/>
budget. The counsel functions as a<lb/>
bill-collecting agency. The committee<lb/>
sel up at the meeting will decide if<lb/>
legal fees for employee law suits<lb/>
should be considered part of this<lb/>
lunding. Members of the committee<lb/>
are John Warren, faculty representa-<lb/>
tive, Brelt Melvin, SGA president, and<lb/>
fricia Morris, day student representa-<lb/>
tive and board chairperson.<lb/>
Salaries lor Easl Carolina staff were<lb/>
also discussed at the meeting.<lb/>
Employees receive a lull-month's salary<lb/>
in August, December and Mav even<lb/>
though they mighl nol work the entire<lb/>
months. The board will investigate this<lb/>
issue further, let ihe staff justify the<lb/>
current payment system and vote on<lb/>
ihe issue al a laler date.<lb/>
Hospitality expenses were brought<lb/>
up as well. Formerly included under<lb/>
miscellaneous items on the budget,<lb/>
hospitality must be listed separately if<lb/>
at all. Rudolph Alexander, Associate<lb/>
Dean of Student Affairs, felt the<lb/>
expense should be budgeted.<lb/>
Tn an operation as big as The East<lb/>
Carolinian, there may be times this<lb/>
(hospitality dinner is necessary<lb/>
vlexander stated.<lb/>
East Carolinian Editor Marc Barnes<lb/>
said thai as far as advertising revenues<lb/>
were concerned, hospitality to adver-<lb/>
tisers is "an investment on returns<lb/>
Other items on the agenda included<lb/>
ihe approval of an operations manual<lb/>
tor The Rebel and a report on the<lb/>
progress of WECU radio. The FCC is<lb/>
apparently holding up the construction<lb/>
permit for the new station and could<lb/>
continue to do so for some time to<lb/>
come.<lb/>
V<lb/>
<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Mfa<lb/>
XZZ�X�?��'i<lb/>
r4?'jfc"��.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057217_0002"/><lb/>
classified<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1971 Ply-<lb/>
mouth Fury. Very good<lb/>
transportation. New tires.<lb/>
Inexpensive. Call Pete at<lb/>
158-7955 or leave mes-<lb/>
sage at 757-6147.<lb/>
FOR SALE: V4 Carat<lb/>
diamond ring. $400. Call<lb/>
758-3424.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1975 Harley<lb/>
Davidson Sportster, black<lb/>
with chrome. Immacu-<lb/>
late, 10,000 mi. Call<lb/>
750-5301.<lb/>
Camera,<lb/>
102, 58<lb/>
condition.<lb/>
FOR SALE.<lb/>
Minolta SRT<lb/>
mm 1.4. Mint<lb/>
$190. Call 752-3543 after<lb/>
.) p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Yashica TL<lb/>
Eleetro . Brand new<lb/>
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Call alter 0 p.m. 752-<lb/>
1654.<lb/>
FOR SALE: World Sport<lb/>
10-speed. 3-weeks old.<lb/>
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FOR S vLE: Couch with<lb/>
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curtains, vacuum cleaner.<lb/>
ll in excellent condition.<lb/>
Call Glenn Griffin 758-<lb/>
o575.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 66 VW Bus.<lb/>
Man new parts. Very<lb/>
good condition. Tape.<lb/>
$895. Call 756-0895.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1973 Mus-<lb/>
tang Mach 1. Excellent<lb/>
condition. Good gas<lb/>
mileage. Sporty green. A<lb/>
bargain at $1900. Call<lb/>
758 -('J22.<lb/>
far went g<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE:<lb/>
W anled to share 2<lb/>
bedroom trailer. $75 plus<lb/>
1 2 utilities. Call 758-0312<lb/>
alter 2 p.m.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE:<lb/>
KCl student wanted to<lb/>
-hare furnished 2 bed-<lb/>
m apt. at Eastbrook.<lb/>
0 per month plus lfe<lb/>
utilities. Call 752-8677.<lb/>
ROOMMATES: I or 2<lb/>
needed to share 2-bed-<lb/>
room apt. Completelj<lb/>
lurnished. Walking dis-<lb/>
lance from ECU. Call<lb/>
1-1242.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE:<lb/>
Mature responsible fe-<lb/>
male needed to share<lb/>
furnished 2-bedroom apt<lb/>
at Village Green.$105 per<lb/>
month includes heat and<lb/>
hot water V2 phone and<lb/>
electricity. Call Stacy<lb/>
758-6621.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE:<lb/>
Wanted. V6 rent and<lb/>
utilities. 408 Lewis St.<lb/>
Walking distance to<lb/>
' campus. Call Susan,<lb/>
758-6277.<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/>
ROOM FOR RENT: To<lb/>
male. Call Mrs. Bert<lb/>
Whitehurst at 758-1239.<lb/>
personal�<lb/>
LOST: Girl's double<lb/>
strand serpentine chain<lb/>
bracelet at ECU and<lb/>
V estern Carolina football<lb/>
game. Please return be-<lb/>
cause of strong senti-<lb/>
mental alue. Reward<lb/>
offered. Call Millie at<lb/>
758-0269.<lb/>
EARN A FREE SKI TRIP<lb/>
to Killington, Vermont<lb/>
and make money too as<lb/>
an Intercollegiate Ski<lb/>
Association Campus<lb/>
Representative. Call<lb/>
(919) 942-2610.<lb/>
DANCE CLASSES: Sun-<lb/>
shine Studios. Beginning<lb/>
Sept. 19 classes in ballet,<lb/>
jazz, yoga, disco and<lb/>
.Arabic (belly dance). Call<lb/>
758-0736 or 756-7235.<lb/>
PAINTING: Is your room<lb/>
or apt DULL? New coat<lb/>
ol paint looks great! Low<lb/>
-ingle room rates. Call<lb/>
Dave at 758-2411.<lb/>
babysitter needed for<lb/>
young child. Transpor-<lb/>
tation provided. Call<lb/>
756-9487 alter 5:30.<lb/>
BELLY DANCING! Fun<lb/>
exercise lor increasing<lb/>
your suppleness and<lb/>
energ) level. Call Donna<lb/>
Whit lev at 752-0928.<lb/>
SAILING RACING Crew<lb/>
wanted. .Jifcejid Para-<lb/>
lico raves. No pay.<lb/>
Experience preferred.<lb/>
Call Tuny at 752-7278.<lb/>
lYPING: Fast, accurate<lb/>
typist, reasonable rates.<lb/>
Call 752-2724 after 5<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
having a party?<lb/>
Why Not<lb/>
Have It With Us?<lb/>
Dine With Us For Your<lb/>
Birthday, Anniversary, Or<lb/>
Other Special Occasion<lb/>
And<lb/>
We'll Provide The Cake Free!<lb/>
Plus We'll Take Free Pictures<lb/>
For You Too!<lb/>
Reservations Required<lb/>
In Advance.<lb/>
nun<lb/>
Call 756-2011 For Details mi s. e�. si<lb/>
BEACH MUSIC FESTIVAL<lb/>
vove Beacl, M<lb/>
ftve<lb/>
&amp;0<lb/>
Page 2 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 25 September 1979<lb/>
<lb/>
v<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
tYve<lb/>
O'<lb/>
Lv�<lb/>
<lb/>
 -JP<lb/>
<lb/>
.&amp;<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
fi<lb/>
Tickets $8.00 advance<lb/>
$10.00 gate<lb/>
THIDttSSItBtAL<lb/>
HARMONYHOUSE<lb/>
CONTACT:<lb/>
Being<lb/>
Held<lb/>
At<lb/>
Emerald Isle, N. C.<lb/>
OUTDOOR STAGE<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
RINGS AND<lb/>
Id Service Rings�Wedding Bands<lb/>
Any Gold Jewelry�Diamond Rings-<lb/>
Antique Jewelry�Pocket Watches-<lb/>
Scrap Gold (any kind) Sterling Stiver-<lb/>
Dental Gold<lb/>
OCTOBER 7-11 a.m7p.m<lb/>
Rain or Shine<lb/>
Make Your Reservations Early � 919-326-3010<lb/>
CONVERT YOUR OLD COINS &amp; SCRAP<lb/>
WTO CASH $$$$<lb/>
$9.00 9 $1.00 fan nht for Mm Cairn<lb/>
Sliver Coin � 50�, 25, 10 (1964 or before) 9.00 per<lb/>
1.00; Kenned) Halt Dollars (1965-1969) 1.50 each.<lb/>
Silver Dollars � (1935 and older); Old Coins (Vi cent,<lb/>
2 cent, 3 ct-nl, Indian If, 20t pieces and others.)<lb/>
COLD COWS tap dollar<lb/>
PAID IN CASH<lb/>
HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH<lb/>
MON-SA1<lb/>
401 S. Evans<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
From snacks to paperbacks to back packs, Kroger Sav-on<lb/>
has what East Carolina University students need  this<lb/>
year. Shop Kroger Sav-on today.<lb/>
FIRE BREWED<lb/>
Stroll's<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each oe mm atfvaniaao<lb/>
 in ucn K<lb/>
��"� '� "KJWKl to b rMOFy <lb/>
i m MKh Krogor Say-on Siora cp  apacificaay ,<lb/>
 H an do run oul ol an aovaniaad nmm n�lolaJ�<lb/>
ol . comparae wnmn .valla rl�lng ,�. aJJ��i<lb/>
ml S2SS T�,i'� �"��� �� aowt.aaoXn.<lb/>
�crv�tisax1 price wrthw 30 days<lb/>
12-Oz.<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
 Weddy SpccJif<lb/>
Beameister<lb/>
Leibfraumilch<lb/>
$XI99<lb/>
TIMEX<lb/>
WATCHES<lb/>
Records and<lb/>
Tapes<lb/>
ifUl<lb/>
M�<lb/>
REG. OR DIP<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
Potato Chips<lb/>
Everyday<lb/>
THE BEST OF ftT-<lb/>
tARTH WIND FIRE JU.Y JQ&amp;<lb/>
VUMM ESANGE�<lb/>
,    HI S -I rnt?1<lb/>
<lb/>
1 Vj-Liter<lb/>
Crock<lb/>
 Weekly Speda. f<lb/>
COUNTRY CLUB<lb/>
Ice<lb/>
Cream<lb/>
'2-Gal. Ctn.<lb/>
 Everyday <lb/>
(UNCOOKED)<lb/>
MADE FROM<lb/>
NATURAL INGREDIENTS<lb/>
Fresh<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
$79<lb/>
12-Inch<lb/>
30' Per Additional Ingredient<lb/>
cooked while<lb/>
you wait<lb/>
only S.50 more<lb/>
 EVERYDAY <lb/>
Magazines and<lb/>
Paperback<lb/>
Books<lb/>
ttfSS<lb/>
DRUG, GEN<lb/>
STORES<lb/>
Tum<lb/>
Thru Sun I<lb/>
cosmetics<lb/>
 <lb/>
COSMETIC<lb/>
DEPARTMENT<lb/>
Slockad w�H � compeoea aaeoctton or<lb/>
naltonal brand, and nationally advartiaad<lb/>
products lo aaaura you. our anoppar that<lb/>
you are galling mo boot brand at mm<lb/>
poaalWo prioa<lb/>
20 <lb/>
� Charloa 1 Ma ftito �Lav<lb/>
' Caly � u�C<lb/>
Co.lEeaaMoh Uatfcar)<lb/>
"faW<lb/>
<lb/>
' OaiaWii Ocay<lb/>
Maa Factor<lb/>
a Maaana RieMnaM<lb/>
� Ctatrol<lb/>
� L'Oraat<lb/>
UA T KAOOfft S V-OM<lb/>
�, N.C.<lb/>
N0NES01D<lb/>
TO<lb/>
DEALERS<lb/>
OPEN 7 AM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
�?��' 600 Greenville Blvd -Gfeemille<lb/>
Phone 756-70<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
�,aa ���a �, � ,  ,�m �, �.�, m m m laaaMaaataolaoafJtdjall<lb/>
m0mmmmmm mi �� � mil<lb/>
t i - r"Tfcm � a-iji Hawaii ae,<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057217_0003"/><lb/>
<lb/>
25 September 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Page 3<lb/>
THANK YOU SALE<lb/>
UBE is slashing prices<lb/>
for its biggest sale,<lb/>
of the year<lb/>
We want to thank you, ECU<lb/>
Students for making this our<lb/>
best fall ever! To show our<lb/>
appreciation, we're slashing<lb/>
all our sportswear prices<lb/>
528 S. COTANCHE<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
Clip these coupons and come on down to UBE and save<lb/>
ECU T-shirts and<lb/>
novelty T-shirts<lb/>
Reg. $2.95<lb/>
and $3.95<lb/>
$1.00 off<lb/>
� ���HHHMiaHinMWHHHHIBai<lb/>
iCU and plain zipperj<lb/>
front hooded<lb/>
sweatshirt<lb/>
Reg.$9.95<lb/>
to $11.95<lb/>
$2.00 off<lb/>
Sweatpants<lb/>
Reg. $5.95<lb/>
$1.00 Off<lb/>
ECU women's<lb/>
co-ordinated<lb/>
short sets<lb/>
Reg. $11.95<lb/>
112 price<lb/>
Tennis shorts<lb/>
Reg. $6.95<lb/>
i<lb/>
and $7.95<lb/>
$1.00 off<lb/>
r ECU and plain<lb/>
p�llover sweatshirts<lb/>
 Reg.$7.95<lb/>
 $2.00 off<lb/>
� ��MMUBMMaB �-��-� �  � � �� � -<lb/>
j ECU sport shirts<lb/>
j Reg. $9.95<lb/>
i to $10.95<lb/>
i<lb/>
j $2.00 off<lb/>
� n  i<lb/>
 wTld coupon<lb/>
20 off any<lb/>
sportswear<lb/>
Gym shorts<lb/>
Reg $2.99<lb/>
to $5.95<lb/>
$1.00 off<lb/>
ECUana'plarn<lb/>
sweatshirts<lb/>
Reg $5.95<lb/>
to $7.95<lb/>
$1.00 off<lb/>
ECU and plain<lb/>
nylon jackets<lb/>
Reg $9.95<lb/>
to $17.95<lb/>
$3.00 off<lb/>
ECU and<lb/>
plain jerseys<lb/>
Reg. $5.95<lb/>
to $6.95<lb/>
$1.00 off<lb/>
Hurry downtown and Save $ave $aVG!<lb/>
Prices will never be this low again.<lb/>
Sale ends Friday Sept. 28.<lb/>
I s<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
atMrfk<lb/>
� an �n.wi<lb/>
 " ft<lb/>
mA am i mmm <lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057217_0004"/><lb/>
The East (iaroli<lb/>
editorials<lb/>
&amp; Opinions<lb/>
Tuesday, September 25, f979f page 4<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
Students don h care<lb/>
The average student at ECU could<lb/>
care less about the ever-present<lb/>
arguments between the Student Gov-<lb/>
ernment Association and the campus<lb/>
media.<lb/>
The average football player, or<lb/>
freshman biology major, or English<lb/>
graduate student doesn't really care to<lb/>
read constant news coverage of what<lb/>
Brett Melvin said at this or that<lb/>
meeting, or what the editor wrote about<lb/>
it in his editorial column this time<lb/>
around.<lb/>
Most of us just don't care.<lb/>
Out of a projected enrollment of over<lb/>
10.000 students, only 12 percent of us<lb/>
bothered to turn out to elect the student<lb/>
government leaders during the past<lb/>
election. The SGA Elections Committee<lb/>
is hoping for a turnout of 30 percent<lb/>
during the up-coming election, but it is<lb/>
doubtful this goal will be reached.<lb/>
Student apathy is also manifested in<lb/>
other ways. Copies of the newspaper<lb/>
are left in racks, not to be read,<lb/>
although we go to a lot of trouble and<lb/>
expense to insure that every student has<lb/>
an opportunity to have his or her own<lb/>
copy of the newspaper.<lb/>
Also, after a three-year absence of<lb/>
the BUCCANEER, there areMII cases<lb/>
and cases of yearbooks to be jpjcked up.<lb/>
The office across the hall is open every<lb/>
day. with hopeful, eager yearbook<lb/>
employees waiting for students who<lb/>
never show up. After three years of hot<lb/>
debates, the formation of a Media<lb/>
Board, and at least one SGA election<lb/>
riding on the existence of a yearbook, a<lb/>
lot of students who have voiced concern<lb/>
� Letters to the Editor<lb/>
in the past do not even bother to come<lb/>
over to the Publications Building and<lb/>
sign their name for a book that they<lb/>
have been concerned about.<lb/>
Are we so concerned with ourselves<lb/>
and with what is going on in our little<lb/>
corner of the university that we don't<lb/>
care what is going on around us? Are<lb/>
we content to do our homework during<lb/>
the week and party on the weekend,<lb/>
without ever doing anything else?<lb/>
If this is the case, then we as a<lb/>
student body live a dull existence. We<lb/>
seem to have lost our youth and vitality,<lb/>
and we seem to have already started<lb/>
living as though we have crossed the<lb/>
hill toward mandatory retirement age.<lb/>
The ugly head of Complacency is<lb/>
rearing again this year, and as a result,<lb/>
we all suffer.<lb/>
The solution is simply stated, but<lb/>
the problem is hard to solve. It will<lb/>
involve work � hard work on<lb/>
everyone's part.<lb/>
We need to get off our rear ends<lb/>
and get involved in what's going on.<lb/>
vVe need to have a voice in how we are<lb/>
governed, and we need to let our<lb/>
student leaders � and newspaper<lb/>
editors � know how we feel about<lb/>
what s going on around us.<lb/>
Such involvement doesn't take very<lb/>
much time, but the payoffs are<lb/>
tremendous. We learn leadership and<lb/>
how to communicate better with others,<lb/>
and these are qualities that are as much<lb/>
m demand as the degrees we will<lb/>
presumably be holding in our grubby<lb/>
httle hands at the end of four years.<lb/>
Name change is "ill advised "<lb/>
l o u i � bidtlor:<lb/>
Mans EaM Carolina<lb/>
Lmversily students were<lb/>
surprised viih the name<lb/>
change ill tin' campus<lb/>
newspaper Irom rount-<lb/>
aiuhcad l I lit" East<lb/>
Laruliinan . a name<lb/>
given the campus news-<lb/>
paper -U car- ago when<lb/>
ihe school wa.� nothing<lb/>
more tlian a localized<lb/>
Community College lor<lb/>
teat her�.<lb/>
During that period 30<lb/>
years ago, the name ol<lb/>
thi- newspaper matched<lb/>
me total make-up ol the<lb/>
sluUeul body because<lb/>
maii il not all the<lb/>
students were Irom the<lb/>
surrounding communities<lb/>
in Eastern .North Caro-<lb/>
lina. :l that lime the<lb/>
school did not have many<lb/>
students from out-ofstate<lb/>
or foreign countries as<lb/>
there are today.<lb/>
1 suppose that all the<lb/>
students enjoy being in<lb/>
eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
Others ise they would not<lb/>
be here, but this is a<lb/>
campus newspaper sup-<lb/>
ported with student lees.<lb/>
The name should reflect<lb/>
its academic quality and<lb/>
the pride the students<lb/>
have in being at the<lb/>
University.<lb/>
Hie new name shows<lb/>
clauish altitudes of trying<lb/>
lu keep our distance Irom<lb/>
ihe real ol the stale. The<lb/>
uauie represents ihe<lb/>
opinion ol the old<lb/>
conservative who thinks<lb/>
in terms ol regions, with<lb/>
ihe we versus ihem<lb/>
syndrome. The newly<lb/>
named paper with all the<lb/>
local groceries and olher<lb/>
-lore advertisements<lb/>
could mistakenly be<lb/>
bought as a regional<lb/>
newspaper.<lb/>
Since ihe newspaper<lb/>
is supported by student<lb/>
Ues, I would think thai<lb/>
names should have been<lb/>
suggested and pul into<lb/>
vole by the student body.<lb/>
Therefore to chose a 30<lb/>
year old name is ill<lb/>
advised and a 30 year<lb/>
step backwards.<lb/>
vl least that's the<lb/>
way it looks from here.<lb/>
ndy C. .vdiele, Jr.<lb/>
Mascot is a "dodo"<lb/>
lu the Edilor:<lb/>
is all the football<lb/>
Ian- know, ECU has a<lb/>
new representative this<lb/>
year on the gridiron. I<lb/>
am referring to the<lb/>
Pirate's Parrot. 1 have<lb/>
ivo complaints to lodge<lb/>
against this kiddie show<lb/>
reject. First it is a dumb<lb/>
looking costume. The<lb/>
beak of the parrol is Hat<lb/>
and looks as if the parrot<lb/>
had run face first into a<lb/>
brick wall. The comic<lb/>
expression on the parrots<lb/>
lace lends itself more to<lb/>
ridicule than support.<lb/>
Secondly ihis has to<lb/>
be the most "do noth-<lb/>
ing" 'naseol I have ever<lb/>
observed. Through three<lb/>
games, this thing has<lb/>
done little more than<lb/>
stand on the 30 yard line<lb/>
and occasionally clap its<lb/>
hands. Even when the<lb/>
two Wolfpack mascots<lb/>
ran over and kicked the<lb/>
parrot in ihe tail il did<lb/>
nothing hut turn around<lb/>
and cover ilsell. 1 am<lb/>
ashamed when I see the<lb/>
proud ECU Pirates being<lb/>
represented by this ar-<lb/>
ihrilic dodo bird.<lb/>
Paul W. Young Jr.<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
s most of you know,<lb/>
Wednesday, September<lb/>
20 is SG.v elections and<lb/>
at this lime 1 would like<lb/>
to encourage all of you to<lb/>
vote. Remember, voting<lb/>
isn't a right, it's a<lb/>
privilege. Think of ECU<lb/>
as a machine made up of<lb/>
all its working parts such<lb/>
as ihe board of Trustees,<lb/>
each department, the<lb/>
professors, SGA, elc. As<lb/>
students you don't have<lb/>
any choice in who the<lb/>
members of ihe Board of<lb/>
Trustees are going to be<lb/>
or who your professors<lb/>
are going to be. That's<lb/>
what makes SGA so<lb/>
unique as lunclioning<lb/>
part of the ECU ma-<lb/>
chinery You do have a<lb/>
choice. You are given the<lb/>
privilege of voting for<lb/>
those whom you think<lb/>
are best qualified and<lb/>
will work for you.<lb/>
If you don't vote and<lb/>
you become dissatisfied<lb/>
wilh your represenlative<lb/>
in ihe course of the year,<lb/>
don't complain because<lb/>
you did have the chance.<lb/>
Remember, the choice is<lb/>
yours.<lb/>
h hope the voter<lb/>
turnout is much higher<lb/>
this year than in previous<lb/>
years and that you will<lb/>
be satisfied with the<lb/>
actions of SGA this year<lb/>
because we have a lot of<lb/>
students running for SGA<lb/>
who really care about the<lb/>
students and are willing<lb/>
to work with them.<lb/>
Don't forget to vole<lb/>
Wednesday, September<lb/>
20.<lb/>
Cheryl Boehm<lb/>
Candidate for<lb/>
Junior Class President<lb/>
Thanks<lb/>
To The Edilor:<lb/>
1 wish to express my<lb/>
appreciation to Mr. Terry<lb/>
Gray, assistant news<lb/>
director of the East<lb/>
Carolinian, for his ob-<lb/>
jective and well-written<lb/>
article on my possible<lb/>
candidacy for the U.S.<lb/>
Senate. In addition, 1 am<lb/>
grateful, lo say the least,<lb/>
for the accompanying<lb/>
editorial in the Septem-<lb/>
ber 13lh issue.<lb/>
John P. East<lb/>
Professor<lb/>
Dept. of Political Science<lb/>
Furthermore . .<lb/>
Transit defended by the SGA<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE. In the<lb/>
Sept. 20 edition of this<lb/>
newspaper, several mem-<lb/>
bers of the SGA Transit<lb/>
system signed a letter<lb/>
which was written in<lb/>
protest of news coverage<lb/>
of a recent rash of bus<lb/>
accidents. Unfortunately,<lb/>
due to technical prob-<lb/>
lems, the letter was<lb/>
almost loo faded to read.<lb/>
Therefore, in the spirit of<lb/>
fairness, the letter is<lb/>
reprinted here.<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
in the article and<lb/>
jdilorial of the Septem-<lb/>
ber 11th edition concern-<lb/>
ing the SG A Transit<lb/>
system, numerous mis-<lb/>
conceptions were formu-<lb/>
lated.<lb/>
While those accidents<lb/>
did occur since January<lb/>
1, 1979, the paper would<lb/>
have ihe readers believe<lb/>
ihal lliey were the fault<lb/>
ol the present transit<lb/>
system and SGA admin-<lb/>
istration.<lb/>
For reasons which<lb/>
most people already are<lb/>
tainiliar with, this admin-<lb/>
istration did not take<lb/>
office until June 6, 1979.<lb/>
Since lhal lime the<lb/>
transit system has been<lb/>
revamped (which the<lb/>
paper should be familiar<lb/>
wilh since ihey wrote<lb/>
numerous articles con-<lb/>
cerning this).<lb/>
Under the new sys-<lb/>
tem, a transit committee<lb/>
was sel up in the middle<lb/>
of June. In mid-July,<lb/>
ihey began work on a<lb/>
transit manual which is<lb/>
now nearing completion.<lb/>
The manual will con-<lb/>
lain instructions on main-<lb/>
tenance checks, driver<lb/>
disciplinary action and<lb/>
numerous olher articles<lb/>
not covered in the<lb/>
editorial or article.<lb/>
Since this action has<lb/>
been taken under the<lb/>
new administration, there<lb/>
has been one reported<lb/>
accident. This one, which<lb/>
occurred on August 30,<lb/>
involving Chubby Ab-<lb/>
slure, was due to a short<lb/>
in the back-up lights on<lb/>
ihe bus. That short has<lb/>
been repaired and was<lb/>
not present in the safely<lb/>
check made earlier that<lb/>
month.<lb/>
Over the summer,<lb/>
repairs were made to the<lb/>
buses so lhal now they<lb/>
are up lo par, which ihev<lb/>
haven't been in the past.<lb/>
Maybe the reporters<lb/>
should be more careful to<lb/>
verily their stories.<lb/>
Neither Chubby nor<lb/>
Brett Melvin were con-<lb/>
tacted by OSHA con-<lb/>
cerning the issue of the<lb/>
insurance policy, as the<lb/>
quote attributed to Col-<lb/>
dough staled, but in-<lb/>
stead Charlie Sherrod<lb/>
and Joe Bullard were<lb/>
contacted on this mailer,<lb/>
neither of which now<lb/>
hold the oil ice ihey did<lb/>
at that lime.<lb/>
For future references,<lb/>
SG v money does pay for<lb/>
ihe insurance on the<lb/>
buses.<lb/>
lu the lulure, let s<lb/>
separate rumors from<lb/>
tacts.<lb/>
Chubby Abshire<lb/>
vdminislralive Mgr.<lb/>
Leonard Fleming<lb/>
Operations Mgr.<lb/>
Jesse M. High<lb/>
Edward T. Wallers<lb/>
Brett Melvin<lb/>
Student Body President<lb/>
Photographer objects<lb/>
lo the Edilor:<lb/>
This letter is in<lb/>
response to the Editorial<lb/>
lhal appeared in the<lb/>
September 20th issue of<lb/>
The East Carolinian. Let<lb/>
me say 1 have no<lb/>
objection lo an editorial<lb/>
expressing an opposing<lb/>
viewpoint. The first sen-<lb/>
tence in the second para-<lb/>
graph is an outright lie<lb/>
as lasl year's BUC was<lb/>
published. If you don't<lb/>
believe me, just ask ihe<lb/>
1000 students who al-<lb/>
ready picked them up. It<lb/>
was the year before lasts<lb/>
thai was not published<lb/>
and even lhal was not<lb/>
ihe fault of t1 ��� Photo<lb/>
Lab. Th. .second dis-<lb/>
tortion of truth was in<lb/>
saying lhal the Photo Lab<lb/>
was pul on trial thus<lb/>
shilling the blame en-<lb/>
tirely on ihe Photo Lab.<lb/>
The responsibility was to<lb/>
be shared equally by<lb/>
both the newspaper and<lb/>
ihe Photo Lab according<lb/>
lo ihe Media Board sub-<lb/>
committee.<lb/>
the newspaper staff<lb/>
can write whatever they<lb/>
please but what is finally<lb/>
printed is the responsibil-<lb/>
ity of the edilor and<lb/>
reflects the credibility of<lb/>
the paper.<lb/>
1 have been associ-<lb/>
ated with the campus<lb/>
newspaper for 3Vfc years,<lb/>
during which lime six<lb/>
editors have come and<lb/>
gone, the best of them<lb/>
being Jim Elliott. The<lb/>
editors lhal have followed<lb/>
cither have not wanted<lb/>
the position, couldn't<lb/>
handle the pressure, or<lb/>
command the authority<lb/>
that goes wilh the<lb/>
position, it's been a<lb/>
downhill slide for the<lb/>
pasi ihree years wilh a<lb/>
credibility so bad that in<lb/>
my opinion, that's why<lb/>
ihey changed the name.<lb/>
They say we're not doing<lb/>
our job properly. The<lb/>
first issue of the paper<lb/>
had al least forty mis-<lb/>
lakes on the front page<lb/>
plus the use of ihe word<lb/>
irregardless. Their paper<lb/>
layout goes on until 3:00<lb/>
orl:00 a.m. The paper<lb/>
doesn't even make it on<lb/>
the streets on time or at<lb/>
the same time every<lb/>
issue. The first five<lb/>
issues they couldn't even<lb/>
gel it together to give the<lb/>
Photo Lab proper photo<lb/>
credits. There must be<lb/>
internal problems some-<lb/>
where lo cause all these<lb/>
mistakes. One has to<lb/>
wonder how they have<lb/>
the time, much less the<lb/>
gall to criticize another<lb/>
media lor how it runs its<lb/>
stall and operation.<lb/>
Peter E. Podeszwa<lb/>
Head Photographer<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
MANAGING EDITOR<lb/>
Richard Green<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER<lb/>
Anita Lancaster<lb/>
NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
ASST. NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
FEATURES EDITOR<lb/>
ASST. OIRECTOR OF ADVERTISING<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Marc Barnes<lb/>
DIRECTOR OF ADVERTISING<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim<lb/>
ASSISTANT TO THE EDITOR<lb/>
Leigh Coaktey<lb/>
BUSINESS MANAGER<lb/>
Steve O'Geary<lb/>
Karen Wendt<lb/>
Terry Gray<lb/>
Bill Jones<lb/>
Terry Herndon<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
ASST. SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
COPY EDITOR<lb/>
AD TECH. SUPER.<lb/>
Charles Chandler<lb/>
Jimmy DuPraa<lb/>
Barry Clayton<lb/>
Paul Line<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN is the student Publications Center (Old South Building). Our<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/>
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/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
0 W'ltwtiMfciinjmaM<lb/>
 ' '<lb/>
y<lb/>
<pb facs="00057217_0005"/><lb/>
"Touch of Magic" to be theme<lb/>
25 September 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Page 5<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
GREENVILLE � "A Touch of Magic" is the theme<lb/>
lor East Carolina University's 1979 Homecoming<lb/>
week, a five-day celebration featuring films, concerts,<lb/>
parties and a football game with the Citadel Bulldogs.<lb/>
A popular music concert by "Wet Willie" and the<lb/>
Atlanta Rhythm Section" in Minges Coliseum<lb/>
ollidally opens Homecoming Week Tuesday, Oct. 9 at<lb/>
8 p.m.<lb/>
Two events are set for Wednesday, a women's<lb/>
volleyball game with N.C. Central at 7 p.m. and a<lb/>
Humphrey Bogart film festival in Hendnx Theatre at 8<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
On Friday, another film, "The Buddy Holly Story<lb/>
will be screened in Hendnx Theatre at 7 and 9 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday's schedule includes an alumni coffee hour<lb/>
at 9 a.m the annual Homecoming Parade at 10 a.m.<lb/>
and the football game at 1:30 p.m. Saturday evening<lb/>
highlights will be"an Alumni "Keg Social" at 5 p.m. at<lb/>
the Greenville Moose Lodge and a homecoming dance<lb/>
from 9 p.m. until 1 a.m. featuring "Bo Thorpe and the<lb/>
Generation 11" in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Returning alumni are invited to view an art<lb/>
exhibition in the Gray Gallery in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m. Saturday. On display<lb/>
will be an exhibit sponsored by the Southeastern<lb/>
Center lor Contemporary Art.<lb/>
The gallery will host visitors at a reception at 11<lb/>
a.m. Saturday. A special invitation is extended to<lb/>
alumni and friends of the ECU School of Art.<lb/>
Tickets lor the films and concerts are available from<lb/>
the Central Ticket Office in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center, and may be purchased by mail. Details are<lb/>
available by telephoning the Ticket Office at 757-6611.<lb/>
Further information about other events is available<lb/>
from the ECU Alumni Office at 757-6072.<lb/>
Homecoming '79 will take place on<lb/>
October 13 when ECU will face the<lb/>
Citadel Bulldogs in Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
This years theme is, "A Touch of<lb/>
Magic The parade will begin<lb/>
Saturday morning at 10:00 a.m. from<lb/>
Rose High School. All those interested<lb/>
m entering a float in the parade or<lb/>
participating in the house or dorm<lb/>
decoration contest must submit a<lb/>
written committment to Dean Mallory<lb/>
or Mike Smith in Dean Mallory's office<lb/>
as soon as possible; The written<lb/>
committment should consist of your<lb/>
organization, which contest or contests<lb/>
vou will participate in, how we can get<lb/>
in touch with you if needed and signed<lb/>
b) vour respective advisor.<lb/>
This year all floats entered will be<lb/>
allowed up to 8150 for preparation and<lb/>
all house or dorm decorations entered<lb/>
will be allowed up to $40.00 for<lb/>
preparation. This money can be<lb/>
secured through the Student Fund<lb/>
accounting Office one day after your<lb/>
written committment is submitted to ,<lb/>
Dean Mallory's office. All money will<lb/>
be allocated on a first-comefirst-serve<lb/>
basis since there is only enough money<lb/>
lor 15 floats and 15 house or dorm<lb/>
decorations.<lb/>
All entries will be judged on design,<lb/>
color combination, originality, com-<lb/>
pleteness ol theme, workmanship, and<lb/>
overall evaluation. Awards will be<lb/>
given lor first place and second place<lb/>
lloal entries. first place house<lb/>
decoration, and first place dorm<lb/>
ile. oration. All awards will be<lb/>
presented during halftime of the<lb/>
loot ball game.<lb/>
The Homecoming Steering Com-<lb/>
mittee strongly urges you to participate<lb/>
vear to make Homecoming '79 the<lb/>
best ever! It vou have anv questions,<lb/>
please leel free to contact Dean<lb/>
Mallory at 757-6824 or Mike Smith at<lb/>
758-0000 anv time.<lb/>
Rules for electing Homecoming Queen<lb/>
and her court.<lb/>
Procedures for Delegate Registration<lb/>
1. Nominees must be ECU students<lb/>
and onlv one (1) girl mav represent<lb/>
each organization.<lb/>
2. vll candidates must submit an 8<lb/>
bv ll) black and white, glossy<lb/>
photograph, along with name,<lb/>
address, and telephone number to:<lb/>
Rob Kidney, Kappa Sigma<lb/>
Fraternity, 700 E. 10th St<lb/>
Greenville N.C. 27834.<lb/>
S. information must be<lb/>
submitted no later than 12:00 noon<lb/>
October 5, 1979.<lb/>
 uttng Procedures<lb/>
1. Voting will be held in the lobby<lb/>
ol the Student Supplv Store Oct.<lb/>
8-9-10 from 8:00-4:00.<lb/>
2. vii) student with a valid ECU<lb/>
1.1). and activit) card ma) vote.<lb/>
3. mi eight girl court will be<lb/>
selected and notified rhursda) prior<lb/>
l" the parade on Saturday.<lb/>
rransportation in the parade will be<lb/>
provided lor the court and all girls<lb/>
are expected l� ride in the parade<lb/>
did attend the game with escort.<lb/>
1. queen will be chosen from<lb/>
these eight girls (on totals<lb/>
accumulated during the voting<lb/>
period) and presented at hall-time.<lb/>
ll organizations are urged to<lb/>
submit an entry so that the court will<lb/>
represent .ill students ol East Carolina<lb/>
University. Voting procedures are<lb/>
organized bv the kappa Sigma<lb/>
Kiaternilv in conjunction with the<lb/>
Intelr ratei'nil v Council. It there are<lb/>
.in questions please contact Rob<lb/>
Kidnev at 7.)2-55i3.<lb/>
Ill<lb/>
Portraits<lb/>
will be<lb/>
taken:<lb/>
Workshop<lb/>
continued troin page 1<lb/>
editor; Rich) Smith ol<lb/>
the A in stim tree Press;<lb/>
John W arren, ECl jour-<lb/>
nalism lacult); oodv<lb/>
I'eele, sports editor lor<lb/>
the Daily Reflector, Bill<lb/>
Sloess ol Delmar Pub-<lb/>
lishing Co Professor<lb/>
James Rees and Dr.<lb/>
Cat lion Ben ECL De-<lb/>
partment ol Speech and<lb/>
Drama, Tommy Forrest,<lb/>
Dad) Reflector photo-<lb/>
grapher; Don Schlienz,<lb/>
Daily Reflector news<lb/>
editor, Craig Sahli, editor<lb/>
ol the ECl Buccaneer;<lb/>
.lame- V ise, editor ol<lb/>
 Heel magazine; Dr.<lb/>
Sail) Bretl ol the ECU<lb/>
E ilglia h l)e part in e n I ;<lb/>
Georgette Hedrick, in-<lb/>
loi inatioii ami publica-<lb/>
tions coordinator lor ECl<lb/>
Medical School; vshlc)<lb/>
I" hi i ell, editor and pub-<lb/>
hshei ol the it ushington<lb/>
Daily i us. Henrietta<lb/>
ii.ii boui. Hock Mount<lb/>
High School; Vlonika<lb/>
Outlier land, loriner Hue<lb/>
i aneei editor; and Ira L.<lb/>
Bakei. I.t .1 journalism<lb/>
I earlic i .<lb/>
CLIFF'S s&amp;<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
IMfcgW MW� (N.C.HEkI GfWYvlin. Korm Crolin�<lb/>
w� mnn<lb/>
ALL YOU<lb/>
a.7s CAST EAT!<lb/>
MONDAY-THURSDAY<lb/>
TROUT, FLOUNDER,<lb/>
CRAB CAKES<lb/>
TEA is included with meal<lb/>
CLIFF'S SUPER<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
CRAB CAKE SPECIAL<lb/>
2 Golden Fried Crab Cakes<lb/>
French Fries, Slaw, and<lb/>
Hushpuppies. QQ �<lb/>
ALL TOU CAN EAT SALAD BAR witl �m1.<lb/>
�'<lb/>
f<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057217_0006"/><lb/>
I I It � 11 s. arid<lb/>
tc knew<lb/>
vs of Sept. 18 no<lb/>
items lor People, Places<lb/>
and column will be<lb/>
accepted unless they are<lb/>
typed, double-space, and<lb/>
include on the bottom a<lb/>
name and phone number<lb/>
ol a person who can be<lb/>
coulacled if there is some<lb/>
problem vith the piece.<lb/>
We reserve the right to<lb/>
edito lor brevity, and will<lb/>
"ids run the items we<lb/>
consider most important<lb/>
the most students.<lb/>
Hue lo space limitations<lb/>
ie are unable lo print all<lb/>
nl the items received, but<lb/>
c vill do our best lo<lb/>
print as man) as possi-<lb/>
ble. Deadlines are 2:00<lb/>
p.m. on Fridays lor the<lb/>
lucsda) edition, and<lb/>
2:00 lucsda) lor the<lb/>
1 liuisdav edition.<lb/>
l iKtt ts o<lb/>
Beginning this rues-<lb/>
la) ul 1:30 p.m. a<lb/>
scussiou group on<lb/>
Christian worship shall<lb/>
begin. W e will be Irving<lb/>
sec how Gods pre-<lb/>
iicc made manliest<lb/>
in ilic breaking ol the<lb/>
cad (communion) and<lb/>
iu the proclaiming ol the<lb/>
word (sermon). k e shall<lb/>
aUu do some discussion<lb/>
on tun Lnilcd Method-<lb/>
crecdal beliefs and<lb/>
now the) ailed our<lb/>
spiritual life, ll vou are<lb/>
interested in deepening<lb/>
ur understanding ol<lb/>
id i ome on over and<lb/>
i Ml Us!<lb/>
I: lor some reason<lb/>
vou cannot come at this<lb/>
Lime but would like to be<lb/>
.i participant let us know<lb/>
and in a be iv c ca n<lb/>
cliangi our time. Call<lb/>
i  Stewart or Gar<lb/>
. rson at 758-2030.<lb/>
- ussions will lake<lb/>
in tiic Lounge ol<lb/>
Methodist Student<lb/>
ueuti i. 501 L. 5th.<lb/>
il 5th and Hollv<lb/>
 t Hi i )I center ttie tebel<lb/>
Vi ltil<lb/>
flic Wesley Found-<lb/>
i lion io putting on<lb/>
ipeii Nov. 29, 30 and<lb/>
i . 1. mdilioils will be<lb/>
ueld I ue� Sept. 25 and<lb/>
( I Sept. 20 in ihe<lb/>
iiulli-purpose room at<lb/>
,ne Mctiiodist Student<lb/>
Center, JUl t. 5th St.<lb/>
 11 tun Gar ret I<lb/>
iJoiui). tudilions will<lb/>
-tail at 7:30 p.m. Please<lb/>
uriiig music and be<lb/>
prepared lo sing (pianist<lb/>
 i i be a adable). Ever) -<lb/>
tiic welcome. ll vou<lb/>
i auitol make il call Lisa<lb/>
itisoii at 7j8-2030.<lb/>
i ii'ii 'i<lb/>
l4tlH il <lb/>
fhere will be an<lb/>
organizational meeting ol<lb/>
tiic College Republicans<lb/>
vCil. Sept. 20, at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in BB-iUl. All<lb/>
Republicans are urged to<lb/>
liiue and so are all other<lb/>
nilcrcslcd persons, fhe<lb/>
purpost oi this meeting<lb/>
- it reorganize itsell and<lb/>
:tt w officers lor the<lb/>
t � .10) school year. We<lb/>
a ill also discuss many<lb/>
republican projects lor<lb/>
die upcoming vear.<lb/>
sM<lb/>
1 here will be an<lb/>
organizational meeting<lb/>
or people taking the<lb/>
l'hvsical Education Snow<lb/>
"kniig class (credit or<lb/>
tioii-credil) which will ski<lb/>
over Christmas and<lb/>
Spring Break, in Brew-<lb/>
�ler, B W ing, Room 102,<lb/>
w i ti Sepi. 26, at 7 p.m.<lb/>
�(d<lb/>
The Ledonia Wright<lb/>
vlrovmerican Cultural<lb/>
Center is open daily from<lb/>
9- a.m. lo 5 p.m. Monday<lb/>
thru Friday.<lb/>
Organizations wishing<lb/>
lo use ihe center during<lb/>
evenings and on week-<lb/>
ends are to contact the<lb/>
director ol services ol<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
itxrt jtier<lb/>
Ihe 1979 .CU-1 Rec-<lb/>
reational Tournaments,<lb/>
sponsored bv Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, will be<lb/>
Ueld in Billiards, Bowl-<lb/>
ing, fable Tennis, Chess<lb/>
and Backgammon. All<lb/>
lull-time students are<lb/>
eligible to participate.<lb/>
Gel our information and<lb/>
registration forms al the<lb/>
Mendenhall Billiards and<lb/>
Bowling Centers.<lb/>
beta ru<lb/>
Bela Nu Chapter of<lb/>
Sigma iheta Tau will<lb/>
hold its lirsl business<lb/>
meeting oi the ,7980<lb/>
vear Sept. 25 al 7 p.m. in<lb/>
Room 101 ol the nursing<lb/>
building. Sigma Theta<lb/>
lau is a national honor<lb/>
society ol nursing. All<lb/>
members are encouraged<lb/>
lo attend.<lb/>
if il III I<lb/>
fhere will be a<lb/>
Famil) Child Association<lb/>
meeting on lues Sept.<lb/>
25, ai 5 p.m. in Room<lb/>
I 13 in the Home Eco-<lb/>
nomics Building. All<lb/>
Child Development and<lb/>
Family Relation majors<lb/>
and minors are urged to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
emt<lb/>
til LMT's interested<lb/>
ni joining a first Re-<lb/>
sponded Squad please<lb/>
call Lester Nail al 758-<lb/>
3038.<lb/>
The Rebel is now<lb/>
accepting high-quality<lb/>
I hlcralure submissions.<lb/>
Poetry, essays, plays,<lb/>
interviews, and short<lb/>
stones will be accepted.<lb/>
�ll work must have<lb/>
name, address, and<lb/>
phone number ol writer.<lb/>
tddrcss manuscripts to<lb/>
the Rebel, Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, Green-<lb/>
wile, .C. 27831.<lb/>
�Illlf I<lb/>
The East Carolina<lb/>
Circle K Club meets<lb/>
1 ues. nights at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center (Room 221). Ev-<lb/>
en one is welcome lo<lb/>
conic!<lb/>
miI<lb/>
fhere will be an<lb/>
important meeting ol the<lb/>
Soctcl) ol Utuled Liberal<lb/>
Students (S.O.U.L.S.)<lb/>
I'hurs Sept. 27 at 8<lb/>
p.m. al the Ledonia S.<lb/>
V right . vfromerican<lb/>
Cultural Center. Perti-<lb/>
nent information con-<lb/>
cerning Homecoming will<lb/>
be discussed.<lb/>
crafts<lb/>
Gratis workshops are<lb/>
now available al the<lb/>
Grails Center in Men-<lb/>
deuhall. Beginning Dark-<lb/>
room, Macrame, Pottery,<lb/>
atained Glass, Quilting,<lb/>
Vv ood Design, Floor<lb/>
Loom Weaving, Begin-<lb/>
ning Jewelry, Batik,<lb/>
llaudbuilt Christmas<lb/>
Ceramics, and Christmas<lb/>
Patchwork are the work-<lb/>
shops which are avail-<lb/>
able.<lb/>
vll lull-tune students,<lb/>
student dependents, and<lb/>
I acuity, stall, and their<lb/>
dependents who are MSC<lb/>
members, are eligible to<lb/>
participate. Everyone<lb/>
musl register lor work-<lb/>
siiops al the Crafts<lb/>
Center no later than<lb/>
Saturday, Sept. 29.<lb/>
Gratis Center hours are 3<lb/>
p.m. until 10 p.m Mon.<lb/>
through Friday, and 12<lb/>
noon until 5 p.m. Sat-<lb/>
urday .<lb/>
IKlfl<lb/>
On Huns Sept. 27<lb/>
at 7:30 p.m Phi Mpha<lb/>
the la History Honor<lb/>
Society will have its lirst<lb/>
meeting in ihe Richard<lb/>
C. lodd Room located in<lb/>
L) W tug ol Brewster.<lb/>
Featured as guesi speak-<lb/>
er will be Dr. uilhonv<lb/>
Papaias who will talk on<lb/>
the Significance ol Sports<lb/>
in e-lcrn Civ ili.alion.<lb/>
dl members and pro-<lb/>
spective members are<lb/>
cord tall in v ited to<lb/>
a l lend.<lb/>
ma�cct�<lb/>
Ma-cot try mils w ill be<lb/>
held Wed Sept. 29 al<lb/>
Mmges. 1 lie actual Iry-<lb/>
oui lime w ill be posted at<lb/>
various plait's. ll you<lb/>
have all) questions ask<lb/>
au ul ihe cheerleader<lb/>
episcopalians<lb/>
fhere will be an<lb/>
l.jo-i opal sen ice ol Holy<lb/>
Communion at 5:30 p.m.<lb/>
al t lie hapel in the<lb/>
Meihodi-i Center, 501 E.<lb/>
� i.n St V cdne-day .<lb/>
epi. !(. Supper will be<lb/>
served billowing the ser-<lb/>
vice (charge $1.50). v 11<lb/>
students welcome.<lb/>
Persons wishing to<lb/>
examine platforms of<lb/>
candidates in Wednes-<lb/>
day's SGA elections may<lb/>
do so in Mendenhall<lb/>
Room 228.<lb/>
Screening lor the<lb/>
Student Government U-<lb/>
lorney General, Public<lb/>
Defender and 3 Honor<lb/>
Board Positions will be<lb/>
held on Fri. Sept. 28 at<lb/>
2:00 p.m. in Mendenhall<lb/>
Room 228. .Appllications<lb/>
are available in the SG.<lb/>
Office through Thurs. at<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
cliemlsls<lb/>
Student affiliates ol<lb/>
the . merican Chemical<lb/>
Society are offering lu-<lb/>
toiing services tor all<lb/>
chemistry courses, in-<lb/>
cluding nursing chemis-<lb/>
try. Interested persons<lb/>
should contact the<lb/>
Chemistry Departmental<lb/>
Office in the lobby of<lb/>
Flanagan Budding.<lb/>
fhe ECL Student<lb/>
kffiliulcs ol the wneri-<lb/>
can Chemical Society will<lb/>
meet Mon Oct. 1 at 7<lb/>
p.m. in Room 202<lb/>
1 lauagau. Prospect i e<lb/>
new members ami all<lb/>
interested persons are<lb/>
til v lied.<lb/>
medieval<lb/>
1 in Mctliev al and<lb/>
l e ii a t - - a il ce S I u d i e s<lb/>
cuiinai .SMR 5000)<lb/>
will nc ollered Spring<lb/>
iriii. -icr 1980, lues,<lb/>
an.I I Itui  ')U- It): 15.<lb/>
1 in topic i- Medici al<lb/>
and Humanistic Life in<lb/>
1 in ee i.nu � J- lorence,<lb/>
t'ai i- and Oxloiil: mi<lb/>
Interdisciplinary Explor-<lb/>
ation oi the Flow of<lb/>
Civilization from about<lb/>
1200 to about 1000.<lb/>
1 "i i ui ihci informa-<lb/>
tion -it aus one<lb/>
nl .in seminar instruct-<lb/>
ors: Dr. McMillan (Eng-<lb/>
lish, l)i. Ran (Philos-<lb/>
ophy), or Dr. Bassman<lb/>
(foreign Language).<lb/>
Captain's Soup<lb/>
&amp; Salad $1.75<lb/>
The best cup of clam<lb/>
chowder south of Boston,<lb/>
with crisp, green salad<lb/>
and your choice<lb/>
of dressing.<lb/>
11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.<lb/>
Daily except Saturday<lb/>
(reek<lb/>
: non-credit course in<lb/>
New Testament Greek is<lb/>
being ollered by the<lb/>
Wesley Foundation at the<lb/>
Methodist Student Cen-<lb/>
ter, 501 E. 5th St.<lb/>
Classes will begin on<lb/>
Mon. Oel. 1 and will<lb/>
continue every Monday<lb/>
and Thursday from 7:30<lb/>
to 9 p.m. lor 10 weeks.<lb/>
fh5 is an introductory<lb/>
course and no prior<lb/>
foreign language study is<lb/>
required. The course<lb/>
would be ol particular<lb/>
interest lo those persons<lb/>
who anticipate attending<lb/>
graduate school in reli-<lb/>
gion, lo lliose who are<lb/>
now involved in leaching<lb/>
bible classes in churches,<lb/>
and lo those who would<lb/>
like lo study a classical<lb/>
language to enable lur-<lb/>
ther scholastic explora-<lb/>
tion. moderate course<lb/>
lee will be charged, ll<lb/>
you have a serious<lb/>
interest in learning to<lb/>
read the New Testament<lb/>
in ihe original language<lb/>
and are prepared to<lb/>
spend some lime study-<lb/>
ing outside ol class as<lb/>
well, call 758-2U3U and<lb/>
have your name, or<lb/>
come to class Monday,<lb/>
Oct. 1.<lb/>
I if t and<lb/>
recieatlcn<lb/>
W ho fhe Greenville<lb/>
Recreation and Parks<lb/>
Department.<lb/>
 Hal x Physical<lb/>
I il iiess Program lor<lb/>
nun.<lb/>
Where? fhe Elm<lb/>
direct Gy uinasium.<lb/>
When October 1<lb/>
iinough Nov. 23 (each<lb/>
kveek Mou. through In.).<lb/>
I ones: 1 classes,<lb/>
1J p.m1 p.m.<lb/>
I p.in2 p.in.<lb/>
(� p.m p.m.<lb/>
. p.nid p.m.<lb/>
Coal i IU per month<lb/>
i'H the 1st lour weeks;<lb/>
:iu per month lor the<lb/>
Jii'l tour weeks.<lb/>
nuclear<lb/>
Concerned about the<lb/>
proliferation of Nuclear<lb/>
power plants and Nuclear<lb/>
weapons? Beginning<lb/>
I'hurs Oct. 4 at 8 p.m.<lb/>
a study group on altern-<lb/>
atives to nuclear power<lb/>
and nuclear disarmament<lb/>
will begin. The study will<lb/>
be led by Rev. Gary<lb/>
.vnderson at the Meth-<lb/>
odist Student Center.<lb/>
Faculty and students who<lb/>
are concerned about<lb/>
these issues are encour-<lb/>
aged to come. Call the<lb/>
MSC d you are inter-<lb/>
ested � 758-2030.<lb/>
Hie ladies of Sigma<lb/>
Caniina Rho Sorority<lb/>
cordially invite you to<lb/>
Sorority Rush on Thurs<lb/>
Sept. 27 at Mendenhall<lb/>
Kin. 244, at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Please be prompt.<lb/>
7 : �<lb/>
�u artist<lb/>
Applications are be-<lb/>
ing taken for Student<lb/>
Union Artist. Qualifi-<lb/>
cations: Full-time East<lb/>
Carolina University Stu-<lb/>
dent with a background<lb/>
in Commercial Art. Ap-<lb/>
plicants may apply at the<lb/>
Student Union Office,<lb/>
Room 234 of Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, between<lb/>
the hours 8:30-5, Mon<lb/>
Fri.<lb/>
Icaltl<lb/>
fhe Student National<lb/>
Environmental Health<lb/>
association will meet<lb/>
Wed. at 7 p.m. in the<lb/>
Re Ik Ruilding audito-<lb/>
rium. All environmental<lb/>
health majors or pro-<lb/>
spective majors should<lb/>
attend. All other inter-<lb/>
ested persons are wel-<lb/>
come.<lb/>
1<lb/>
There will be a<lb/>
meeting of the East<lb/>
Carolina Gay Community<lb/>
al 5 p.m. Tues Sept.<lb/>
25, in the Newman<lb/>
House. The agenda will<lb/>
include election of new<lb/>
officers and a pot luck<lb/>
dinner. All interested<lb/>
persons are welcome. For<lb/>
information contact Mark<lb/>
al 752-0790.<lb/>
tead club<lb/>
fhe East Carolina<lb/>
Road Club invites all<lb/>
bicycling enthusiasts to<lb/>
participate in our weekly<lb/>
program ol events. The<lb/>
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and tours, and monthly<lb/>
meetings with programs<lb/>
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For up lo the minute<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057217_0007"/><lb/>
The East Caroli<lb/>
nian �<lb/>
sports<lb/>
Tuesday, September 25, 1979, page 7<lb/>
ake takes 23.2Q win<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Pirates lose third game in a row<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Wake Forest quarterback Jay Venuto completed 28<lb/>
ol 33 passes for 334 yards, both new team and Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference records, to lead the Demon Deacons<lb/>
to a thrilling 23-20 win over East Carolina Saturday<lb/>
night in Groves Stadium.<lb/>
Venuto, who was redshirted last season, was on the<lb/>
money all night as a confused Pirate defense struggled<lb/>
in their attempts to stop him.<lb/>
Running back James McDougald<lb/>
(Pholo by John Grogan)<lb/>
cJLJ<lb/>
Pat Dye 9s worst start<lb/>
the<lb/>
ma.<lb/>
Fur the .iniitime in his career as a head coach at<lb/>
La La,u mm, Pirate head coach Pat Dye has watched<lb/>
ins team drop three consecutive games<lb/>
With locs io N.C. State, Duke and most recently<lb/>
wakt ro  die Pirates now stand 1-3 including an<lb/>
opening i, �� over Western Carolina.<lb/>
1 hati like heck to see this happen said Dye "I<lb/>
fed especulv bad lor the fans. They're the ones that<lb/>
 must hurl. hs my responsibility to make sure that<lb/>
Uiey do ,ave lu hurt'<lb/>
"ig about the Pirates' 1-3 mark is that<lb/>
 not a team that should own such a<lb/>
 Last Carolina team is loaded with talented<lb/>
ai hve suffered at times from lackadaisical<lb/>
play and at others lrom just plain bad luck.<lb/>
Us really eating at me inside said Dye "I've<lb/>
never been around losing much as a player or a coach<lb/>
and aimplv cant stand to lose.<lb/>
"What we've got to do now is say the heck with<lb/>
the garner we ve lost; they're finished now. We've got<lb/>
to try and win our remaining seven games "<lb/>
There will be no real pressure on the Pirates to do<lb/>
this though, as many observers have lost faith and<lb/>
conl.dence in the 1979 ECU squad<lb/>
. l01 g,Ve" Up- "We had rea problems<lb/>
alter the Duke game We played very poorly there. But<lb/>
last Saturday at Wake there was some real progress<lb/>
made J ,avv m re oneness deve rf fc <lb/>
titan 1 ve seen all season 6<lb/>
'�������������������������a<lb/>
LADY PIRATE BASKETBALL will get a big boost<lb/>
tin, year when WNCT-TV airs The Cathy Andruzz!<lb/>
Snow, a weekly program featuring the ECU head<lb/>
coach.<lb/>
This is a real boost for our program said<lb/>
vndruzzi joyously. "It will give our team some much<lb/>
needed exposure. It should certainly help our<lb/>
attendance out.<lb/>
LaDY PIRATE TRYOUTS begin next week. All<lb/>
interested girls should go by the Minges Coliseum<lb/>
gymnasium any day next week and contact Andruzzi<lb/>
between 2:30 p.m. and 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
TRYOUTS FOR MENS' basketball will be held<lb/>
October 15, said Pirate coach Dave Odom. The<lb/>
lirsl-year coach noted that anyone interested in trying<lb/>
out should contact him during the first week in October<lb/>
so that he may give them some important information<lb/>
�����������������,�.��,<lb/>
THE ECU "SOCCER TEAM'stands 3-2-1 after<lb/>
defeating Davidson 2-1 yesterday afternoon. This<lb/>
marks the first time the Pirates have been over the<lb/>
.500 mark since 1974.<lb/>
�������������������������<lb/>
� �<lb/>
WITH HIS 132-YARD performance against Wake<lb/>
Forest, ECU halfback Anthony Collins now has 414<lb/>
yards on the season, and an average of 103.5 per<lb/>
game. He is averaging 7.8 yards per carry. If he<lb/>
continues this pace, Collins would finish the season<lb/>
with 1138 yards and become the Pirates' first<lb/>
1000-yard runner since Carlester Crumpler achieved<lb/>
the leal in 1972 and 1973.<lb/>
"It was a fine football game, one<lb/>
I'm sure the fans enjoyed. I didn't see<lb/>
anyone on either side quit<lb/>
Pat Dye<lb/>
The Pirates had a chance to tie the game with no<lb/>
lime left on the clock but watched a 54-yard field goal<lb/>
by Vern Davenport fall short. This miss concluded<lb/>
what was a most exciting game for the more than<lb/>
28,000 gans present.<lb/>
"It was a fine football game said ECU head<lb/>
coach Pat Dye, "one I'm sure the fans enjoyed. I<lb/>
didn't see anyone on either side quit<lb/>
Fhis was a big change from a week earlier for East<lb/>
Carolina. .After that game, a 28-14 loss to Duke, Dye<lb/>
Venuto stars in<lb/>
said that his team had not put forth the necessary<lb/>
eiiort needed to win.<lb/>
Things were different after the Wake game,<lb/>
though. "I can accept losing this game a lot better<lb/>
than the one last week because the kids came back and<lb/>
ioughl said Dye.<lb/>
"We just ran into a guy with a really hot hand<lb/>
said the Pirate coach in reference to Venuto.<lb/>
To say Venuto had a "hot hand" is being modest.<lb/>
vll this 6-0 205-pound junior did was break two<lb/>
records, lor most completions and passing yardage in a<lb/>
single game, that were held by ex-N.C. State and Los<lb/>
vngeles Ram great Roman Gabriel.<lb/>
Venuto was equally successful at throwing long<lb/>
downiield to his outside receivers and throwing in the<lb/>
Hal to his running backs.<lb/>
.vlso starring in the game was Pirate halfback<lb/>
Anthony Collins, who rambled for 132 yards on just 8<lb/>
carries despite missing over half the game due to a<lb/>
minor shoulder injury.<lb/>
Collins finished the game with all three Pirate<lb/>
touchdowns, one a 72-yard beauty of a run.<lb/>
Collins first scored at the 12:43 mark of the second<lb/>
period. This lied the game at six all and followed two<lb/>
Wake Forest field goals. A two-point conversion<lb/>
allempt by ihe Pirates failed.<lb/>
The game was also tied at halftime, at 13-13, as<lb/>
both teams scored after Collins' initial touchdown. The<lb/>
Deaes socred on a one-yard run by star halfback James<lb/>
McDougald and the Pirates scored on a 7-yard jaunt by<lb/>
Collins belore intermission. Both teams' conversion<lb/>
allempis were successful.<lb/>
Wake went ahead in the third quarter when Venuto<lb/>
hit end Wayne Baumgardner on a 27-yard scoring toss.<lb/>
Just three plays earlier Venuto had set up the score<lb/>
when he connected with Kenny Duckett on a 53-yard<lb/>
pass.<lb/>
The Pirates tied the game with 8:40 remaining<lb/>
when Collins scampered 72 yards for a score.<lb/>
"The end look me on the play and we got a good<lb/>
block on ihe corner said ECU quarterback Leander<lb/>
victory<lb/>
Green. "(Billy Ray) Washington made a great block<lb/>
downiield and Collins just outran the rest<lb/>
Bill Lamm's extra-point try was good and tied the<lb/>
game at 20-20.<lb/>
The Deacons scored on the ensuing possession<lb/>
when kicker Phil Denfield connected on a field goal<lb/>
lrom 40 yards out to put Wake ahead 23-20.<lb/>
The Pirates spent the rest of the evening trving<lb/>
desparately to spring a long gainer that would set up a<lb/>
score.<lb/>
On their last possession of the contest, the Pirates<lb/>
drove lrom iheir own 37-yard line to the Wake 38<lb/>
belore time ran out on the clock. It was then that<lb/>
Davenport attempted the 54-yard field goal that fell<lb/>
aboul ten yards short.<lb/>
'Vern has kicked them from over 60 in practice "<lb/>
said Dye. "He was just awfully tired at the end of the<lb/>
game. Davenport is a starter at split end.<lb/>
viler ihe game both coaches looked drained vet<lb/>
had enough left in them to express praises in ihe<lb/>
direction ol their opponents.<lb/>
1 think East Carolina is the best football team we<lb/>
have played without a doubt said Wake coach John<lb/>
Mackovic, whose team has now upset Georgia and<lb/>
Lasl Carolina on consecutive weekends. "Thev played<lb/>
an excellent game. And that guy (ECU QB Leander)<lb/>
Green is as good ol a wishbone quarterback as there Is<lb/>
an) where.11<lb/>
"We knew Wake Forest had a good football team<lb/>
belore we got here1 said Dye. "Thev can compete<lb/>
with anvbody they play1<lb/>
Dye did point out that he felt the home field<lb/>
advantage and the home crowd were a big advantage<lb/>
lor the Deaes and noted that he was pleased with th<lb/>
pla ol the Pirates. 'Tin proud of our people. We have<lb/>
nothing to be ashamed about. I have to he proud of<lb/>
our ullciise and the play of Leander Green<lb/>
The win puts the Deacons at 3-0 lor the season, the<lb/>
best start by a Wake Forest team since 1951. heading<lb/>
into next week's big game at N.C. State.<lb/>
Ihe Pirates are a disappointing 1-3 and will host<lb/>
VMl this Saturda) at 7:3U p.m. in Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
Deacon quarterback sets new marks<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
What can you say to a quarterback who is<lb/>
red-shiried one season and leading his team to its best<lb/>
start in over 25 years the next?<lb/>
How about congratulating him for being named<lb/>
Spurts Illustrated magazine's Offensive Player of the<lb/>
W eek lor his part in an upset victory over the touted<lb/>
Georgia Bulldogs in his second outing of the year?<lb/>
How about congratulating him for establishing two<lb/>
new ulantic Coast Conference passing records in a<lb/>
23-20 win over the Pirates of East Carolina?<lb/>
However, the player involved is Wake Forest senior<lb/>
Jay Venuto, any praise directed his way is likely to be<lb/>
verbally deflected to the strong Demon Deacon<lb/>
ullensive line.<lb/>
The Sports Illustrated thing is just something<lb/>
bestowed on me for the entire team's play said<lb/>
Venut.<lb/>
"Anything I do is just a reflection of the offensive<lb/>
line.<lb/>
"The two times I got pressure were my own fault "<lb/>
ollered Venuto. "I left the pocket and I shouldn't have<lb/>
and East Carolina's defense was just too fast<lb/>
Venuto ripped the Pirates for 334 yards passing<lb/>
while completing 28 out of 33 attempts establishing<lb/>
new Wake and ACC records in both categories<lb/>
Venuto, a native of Salem, New Jersey, ran for onl<lb/>
one net yard and WFU collectively had just 111 on tht<lb/>
night.<lb/>
They did a pretty good job shutting off our<lb/>
running game, so we knew we would have to pass to<lb/>
win. r<lb/>
Passing seems to have become a way of life for the<lb/>
upstart Deacons.<lb/>
In the victory over Georgia, Venuto connected on 2(<lb/>
out ol 34 aerials for a total of 283 yards.<lb/>
Wake quarterbacks last year passed for a new<lb/>
school record of 1,816 yards in 11 games for an<lb/>
average of 165 yards per contest.<lb/>
Venuto thus far in the 1979 season has passed for<lb/>
over 700 yards in three games, for an average over 233<lb/>
yards.<lb/>
"We have some of the best receivers in college<lb/>
iootball lauds Venuto. "I don't think they've<lb/>
dropped one pass over the last three weeks.<lb/>
"Our receivers can beat anyone in man-to-man<lb/>
coverage They blitzed a lot and that's what we knew<lb/>
they would do.<lb/>
"We knew that when they blitzed, they'd drop back<lb/>
into man-to-man, so we tried to create that situation as<lb/>
much as possible. Someone would get open; it was just<lb/>
a matter of getting the ball there<lb/>
Again and again Venuto hit his wide receivers, m<lb/>
wei as anyone out of the backfield. Tight end Mike<lb/>
Mullen and fullback Albert Kirby led the Deacs<lb/>
platoon with seven each, while wide receiver Wayne<lb/>
Baumgardner snared six.<lb/>
"We send oat five receivers on almost every pass<lb/>
play we call Venuto explained, "often we line up<lb/>
three receivers wide to the lef ��at's one of our<lb/>
iavorite plays.<lb/>
"When I come to the line I try to see how the<lb/>
defense is set and then eliminate the receivers to one<lb/>
side of the field or the other, but we don't rely on<lb/>
having just one primary receiver ,<lb/>
Venuto's analysis of the Pirate defense Saturday<lb/>
drew praise from Wake Forest's rookie coach John<lb/>
Mackovic, but especially ECU h -ad coach Pat Dye.<lb/>
We ran into a guy with a H hand tonight Dye<lb/>
said following the game. "W tried to come with a<lb/>
rush and they hurt us with a long past.<lb/>
We gave him too much time to throw and he<lb/>
dumped the ball to his backs well<lb/>
ECU senior defensive back Charlie Carter echoed<lb/>
his coach s sentiment.<lb/>
"Anything I do is just a reflection<lb/>
of the offensive line<lb/>
Jay Venuto<lb/>
He (Venuto) ran around a lot and that made it<lb/>
hard lo stay with the receivers lamented Carter. "I<lb/>
think he's the best I've faced since I've been here-<lb/>
better than Rozantz (former Appalachian State<lb/>
standout quarterback Tom)<lb/>
After three impressive wins, Venuto and his Demon<lb/>
Deacon teammates now must prepare for what may be<lb/>
their loughesl test thus far: the nationally ranked<lb/>
w'ollpack ol N.C. State.<lb/>
Woodrovv WilSon, Bubba Green, Simon Gupton and<lb/>
Donnie LeGrande will anchor perhaps the strongest<lb/>
defense in ihe ACC, but Venuto looks to the challenge I<lb/>
with optimism.<lb/>
"I've heard people say that the game might be<lb/>
televised, but we'll have to wait to find out said<lb/>
Venuto. "That would be nice for the team, but we just<lb/>
want io get ready now.<lb/>
"Right now we're playing together as a team.<lb/>
individuals. I think that's the main reason we've dune<lb/>
so well<lb/>
Would Jay Venuto want to repeat this week as<lb/>
player of the week?<lb/>
"It really doesn't matter that much to me. Mavbe<lb/>
when I'm fifty I'll look back and it'll seem important.<lb/>
I'd really like to see McDougald or James Parker (nose<lb/>
guard) get it now. They really deserve it<lb/>
u<lb/>
<pb facs="00057217_0008"/><lb/>
Page 8 THf east Carolinian 25 September 1979<lb/>
Lady Pirates disappointed<lb/>
at William and Mary meet<lb/>
Anthony Collins on 7 yard TD run<lb/>
(Photo by John Grogan)<lb/>
By JOHN NOLAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Lady Pirate vol-<lb/>
leyball team returned<lb/>
S. lurday night from a<lb/>
tour-team match at Wil-<lb/>
liam and Mary where<lb/>
ECU registered a disap-<lb/>
pointing 1-2 slate.<lb/>
ECU heat William<lb/>
and Mars lor their first<lb/>
win of the season, 15-8,<lb/>
15-13, hut lost to Virginia<lb/>
Com in on weal th U Diver-<lb/>
sity, 15-10, 15-12, and<lb/>
NCSU, 15-9, 15-5.<lb/>
"1 was disappointed<lb/>
in our play against<lb/>
William and Mary even<lb/>
though we won ex-<lb/>
plained Coach Dillon<lb/>
whose team's record now<lb/>
stands at 1-4.<lb/>
"We lacked teamwork<lb/>
and showed no con-<lb/>
sistency . However, 1<lb/>
though we improved our<lb/>
play as the day wore<lb/>
on<lb/>
The Lady Pirates did<lb/>
show some gutsy play in<lb/>
the first match against<lb/>
Virginia Commonwealth.<lb/>
Down 11-2, the girls<lb/>
made a great comeback<lb/>
in scoring eight unan-<lb/>
swered points to close<lb/>
the gap to 11-10. But the<lb/>
inconsistency that Coach<lb/>
Dillon spoke ol turned<lb/>
what might have been a<lb/>
great win into an agon-<lb/>
izing defeat as ECU lost<lb/>
the next lour points.<lb/>
Against State, ihe<lb/>
Lady Pirato played what<lb/>
Coach Dillon considered<lb/>
to he their best match ol<lb/>
the day.<lb/>
"We played State<lb/>
earlier this week so we<lb/>
knew their game plan.<lb/>
We worked verj well as<lb/>
a team and blocked<lb/>
extremely well. What<lb/>
hurt us vyas our services.<lb/>
We were very weak in<lb/>
our serves and lost a<lb/>
total of nine serves by<lb/>
either netting them or<lb/>
hilling them out ol<lb/>
bounds.<lb/>
What I'm hoping is<lb/>
Jial the girls won't get<lb/>
discouraged and will<lb/>
learn from their mis-<lb/>
takes<lb/>
Coach Dillon ex-<lb/>
plained that no one was<lb/>
to blame for the losses. It<lb/>
was just a case ol<lb/>
spurratic play by the<lb/>
vv hole team.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates face<lb/>
a tough Duke squad<lb/>
Tuesday at 7:00 p.m. at<lb/>
Minges in what Coach<lb/>
Dillon calls "a big one<lb/>
It is the last home match<lb/>
unlil October 16.<lb/>
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Made in 1950, before the movies had begun to tap D. H. Lawrence as a literary source, THE ROCKING<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057217_0009"/><lb/>
25 September 1979 THE FAST CAROLINIAN Page 9<lb/>
teams<lb/>
'eon<lb/>
B)<lb/>
ilt KM.Ht.l. N1SSENS0IS<lb/>
I' Sports U liter<lb/>
Southern California<lb/>
i it mi in the tir&amp;t<lb/>
Wabama rolled u<lb/>
tic second halt ami<lb/>
ihoina �lit things<lb/>
much down the<lb/>
Hut no matter<lb/>
 v i mi slice ii. college<lb/>
ill s three top-<lb/>
i teams had mat-<lb/>
- tirmlv under control<lb/>
lav.<lb/>
I lie same could not<lb/>
said lor the rest ol<lb/>
The Associated Press<lb/>
"op 1 enty. Notre<lb/>
Dame, Penn State and<lb/>
Pittsburgh were losers<lb/>
while Texas, Nebraska,<lb/>
Michigan State, Missouri<lb/>
and W ashington hat! to<lb/>
rally tor second-hall vic-<lb/>
tories.<lb/>
There likel) will be no<lb/>
changes at the top ol this<lb/>
week's ratings. Top-<lb/>
ranked Southern Cal<lb/>
surged to a 35-0 halitime<lb/>
lead as All-America<lb/>
Charles White rushed tor<lb/>
153 ards and two touch-<lb/>
Flag football registration<lb/>
held by Intraniurals<lb/>
I<lb/>
CKI GL1 VRMIS<lb/>
- . .<lb/>
CD Kit<lb/>
-t, KOOTB l.l.<lb/>
Ke Klag Football<lb/>
his tall. It<lb/>
ilroail) done<lb/>
lime to gel your<lb/>
lor the<lb/>
;it ration is<lb/>
I until Oct. I I.<lb/>
w ill be<lb/>
KTIC IK IKK<lb/>
- low that the<lb/>
lt has a<lb/>
I athletic<lb/>
L- read) and<lb/>
L-are tor vour<lb/>
. - a an intra-<lb/>
Susan<lb/>
 training<lb/>
ii : I'ichl hours ,i?<lb/>
londa rhurday: 2<lb/>
.m Room<lb/>
 G m.<lb/>
. i - day . I-<lb/>
7 p.m IM<lb/>
NCINC CLl B<lb/>
be an<lb/>
ting nt<lb/>
ig Club on<lb/>
Oct. at 1<lb/>
i Memorial<lb/>
t�in.<lb/>
All interested persons<lb/>
should attend. Prior ex-<lb/>
perience is not necessary.<lb/>
Dr. George Weigand will<lb/>
serve as club advisor and<lb/>
instructor.<lb/>
ALMOST<lb/>
ANYTHING GOES<lb/>
There will he an<lb/>
vlmost Anything Goes<lb/>
plavers' meeting on<lb/>
ruesdav, Oct. 2, at 7<lb/>
i.in. The meeting will be<lb/>
held m Brewster B-102.<lb/>
vll participants are urged<lb/>
lu attend thi meeting.<lb/>
1) VTES AND<lb/>
DE xDLJNES<lb/>
Horseshoes entry da-<lb/>
le- run through Sept. 27<lb/>
with play beginning Oct.<lb/>
I . rchery sign-up will<lb/>
run until Oct. I. 1'lay will<lb/>
begin Oct. . Entrv dates<lb/>
lor the Track and Field<lb/>
Meet arc Sept. 2 until<lb/>
Oct. 8. Pla) begins Oct.<lb/>
it).<lb/>
Don't lorget to sign<lb/>
up lor Almost Anything<lb/>
Goes b Oct. 1.<lb/>
DON'T FORGET<lb/>
The Team Goll Tour-<lb/>
nament bfgiib loda) and<lb/>
will run through Thurs-<lb/>
ila at the .) den Country<lb/>
Club.<lb/>
downs and plastered<lb/>
Minnesota 18 1 i.<lb/>
Meanwhile, runnerup<lb/>
Alabama broke open a<lb/>
relatively close game<lb/>
with tour touchdowns in<lb/>
the final period and<lb/>
flattened Baylor 15-0<lb/>
while third-ranked Okla-<lb/>
homa scored 21 points in<lb/>
the opening period, 21<lb/>
more in tin- final one and<lb/>
crushed Tulsa 49-13.<lb/>
Elsewhere, though.<lb/>
fourth-ranked Texas over-<lb/>
came a )-3 halftone<lb/>
deficit to turn hack Iowa<lb/>
Mate 17-9, tilth-ranked<lb/>
Notre Dame was knocked<lb/>
it 28-22 b) No. 17<lb/>
Purdue, Texas S. 1<lb/>
stunned No. 0 Penn State<lb/>
27-11, No. 7 Nebraska<lb/>
and No. 8 Michigan<lb/>
squeaked past Iowa and<lb/>
Miami of Ohio, respec-<lb/>
tively, bv 21-21 scores<lb/>
and ninth-ranked Mis-<lb/>
souri walloped Missis-<lb/>
sippi 33-7 alter trailing<lb/>
7-3 at halitime. Houston,<lb/>
the No. 10 team, was<lb/>
�lie.<lb/>
The onl) loser in the<lb/>
Second Ten was No. 13<lb/>
Pitt, which bowed to<lb/>
North Carolina 17-7.<lb/>
Eleventh-ranked Michi-<lb/>
gan downed Kansas 28-7,<lb/>
No. 12 W ashington edged<lb/>
Oregon 21-17, No. 11<lb/>
Florida Stale thrashed<lb/>
Miami. Fla 10-23, No.<lb/>
15 Arkansas whipped<lb/>
Oklahoma State 27-7. No.<lb/>
I Ohio State trimmed<lb/>
 ashington State 15-2(),<lb/>
No. 18 Southern Meth-<lb/>
odist held oil North<lb/>
Texas Mate 20-9, No. 19<lb/>
North Ca rolina State<lb/>
trounced est irginia<lb/>
38-1 1 and No. 20 I CLA<lb/>
mauled Wisconsin 37-12.<lb/>
W e wanted to come<lb/>
out lastand we did<lb/>
said I SC's � W lute, who<lb/>
scored un a spectacular<lb/>
b8 aid scamper and a<lb/>
M) yard hurst as the<lb/>
I rojans tallied on live ol<lb/>
their lirsl six possessions<lb/>
against Minnesota. Coach<lb/>
John Robinson, however,<lb/>
said he "didn't expect<lb/>
this kind ol game 586<lb/>
v a i ds to M i nnesol a's<lb/>
2.o. 1 thought it would<lb/>
be more dillicult.<lb/>
Ii would be an<lb/>
understatement to -av<lb/>
v I a ha in a is an mi I -<lb/>
-landing loolball team,<lb/>
hul I want to sa) il just<lb/>
the same, Baylor Coach<lb/>
( ran I Teatl said alter t he<lb/>
Bears sullered their<lb/>
worst pa-ting in a<lb/>
decade.<lb/>
"Sleadman Sheal) is<lb/>
just an outstanding quar-<lb/>
terback, Major Ogilvie<lb/>
and Steve W hitman are<lb/>
line running backs that<lb/>
-how great balance and<lb/>
that o 11 e 11 s i v e line is<lb/>
ever) hit as good a you<lb/>
hear.<lb/>
vlabama not onl)<lb/>
allowed Baylor to cross<lb/>
midi-ield just once in each<lb/>
halt but intercepted six<lb/>
passes, recovered two<lb/>
tumbles and blocked a<lb/>
punt while the oflense<lb/>
reeled oil 131 yards on<lb/>
the ground.<lb/>
Hei-nian I rophv win-<lb/>
ner Bill) Mm- scored<lb/>
twice while romping lor<lb/>
109 y aid- on 11 carries<lb/>
while J.C. an- rushed<lb/>
for 122 on 20 to lead<lb/>
Oklahoma over Tulsa.<lb/>
invites the homecoming<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057217_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 25 September 1979<lb/>
Lee, ACLU reopen controversy<lb/>
By WILLGRIMSLEY<lb/>
11' Special Correspondent<lb/>
Bowie Kuhn, the lord<lb/>
lugh commissioner of<lb/>
baseball, is a man of<lb/>
dignity, unquestioned in-<lb/>
ii indwell-meaning,<lb/>
in hi?- latest square-<lb/>
oil with Pitcher Bill Lee<lb/>
ilu- Montreal Expos,<lb/>
don us, but we have<lb/>
line up in the<lb/>
Spaceman's' corner.<lb/>
Detrimental to base-<lb/>
Someone's gotta be<lb/>
Bill Lee - or<lb/>
Space'1 or Moon<lb/>
an, u his mates call<lb/>
m � i- the freshest<lb/>
l breeze to blow<lb/>
the diamond in<lb/>
- His manager ion-<lb/>
ium a mars el. I o<lb/>
animates, he i a<lb/>
w ho keeps the<lb/>
room loose. He i<lb/>
inig<lb/>
the darling of the college<lb/>
liberals, most of the fans<lb/>
and the media.<lb/>
With all his idio-<lb/>
syncracies, he's the kind<lb/>
of guy you wouldn't mind<lb/>
our son growing up to<lb/>
be.<lb/>
So he gets belted with<lb/>
a $250 fine for acknow-<lb/>
ledging � honestly and<lb/>
oli-handedly � that,<lb/>
sure, he'd used a little<lb/>
marijuana in his lifetime.<lb/>
He didn't say he was a<lb/>
junkie. He didn't say he<lb/>
was hooked on the stuff.<lb/>
He just admitted in a<lb/>
conversation that he had<lb/>
exposed himself to the<lb/>
horrible weed that more<lb/>
ihan hall of the nation's<lb/>
school kids treat like<lb/>
bubblegum.<lb/>
This all happened in<lb/>
the .spring. Now the<lb/>
mailer has been re-<lb/>
opened by Lee, with the<lb/>
support of the American<lb/>
Civil Liberties Union and<lb/>
the players association,<lb/>
to test the constitutional<lb/>
right of free speech.<lb/>
It's hard to see how �<lb/>
baseball can win this<lb/>
onv.<lb/>
W ell leave that to<lb/>
(he judges. But it is in<lb/>
our province to reveal bill<lb/>
Lee as the person he is<lb/>
� not an ogre, not a<lb/>
slumblebum but a bright,<lb/>
articulate athlete and<lb/>
family man, father of<lb/>
three, who is a blythe<lb/>
spirit yet genuinely con<lb/>
corned about the qualit<lb/>
o I I i f �<lb/>
111.<lb/>
He cuts<lb/>
fakerv.<lb/>
through all<lb/>
hypocrisy,<lb/>
social snobbery and pon-<lb/>
tifical, holier-than-thou<lb/>
altitudes to put his sport<lb/>
and his world jn true<lb/>
perspective.<lb/>
His greatest sin, il<lb/>
any, is that he goes<lb/>
heavy on the hyperbole.<lb/>
He once referred to<lb/>
Billy Martin and the<lb/>
Yankees as "that neo-<lb/>
INazi and his Brown<lb/>
Shirts Of the 1972-74<lb/>
champion Oakland A's,<lb/>
he said, "They remind<lb/>
me ol Gates Brown lying<lb/>
on a rug He rated<lb/>
Cincinnati's Big Red<lb/>
Machine as third in<lb/>
fundamentals behind the<lb/>
Taiwan Little Leaguers<lb/>
and Southern Cal's col-<lb/>
lege champs.<lb/>
Personally, he is a<lb/>
physical fitness and rock<lb/>
V roll freak. He is deep<lb/>
into the evils of pollution,<lb/>
nuclear energy, tobacco,<lb/>
alcohol, junk foods, sugar<lb/>
and white breads.<lb/>
'The "Spaceman"<lb/>
was fined not because he<lb/>
used marijuana � it<lb/>
would be naive to believe<lb/>
scores of ball players are<lb/>
not as involved, or more<lb/>
� but that he said so<lb/>
publicly.<lb/>
In baseball's eyes,<lb/>
hat is the cardinal<lb/>
crime. By mentioning it,<lb/>
the maverick left-hander<lb/>
defiled the minds of<lb/>
countless innocent Young-<lb/>
sters. That's ludicrous.<lb/>
Surveys have shown kids<lb/>
are into the "dope"<lb/>
scene probably more<lb/>
deeply than their sport<lb/>
heroes.<lb/>
largely an act. friends<lb/>
insist he is a man of<lb/>
intellectual depth and<lb/>
feeling using his kooki-<lb/>
ness as a platform.<lb/>
The bothersome ele-<lb/>
ment is that baseball �<lb/>
or any other pro sport �<lb/>
feels that it can purify its<lb/>
ranks by stifling free<lb/>
speech.<lb/>
THE DELI<lb/>
KITCHEN<lb/>
"Home -cooked meals at<lb/>
reasonable prices<lb/>
open 7a.m. to 7:30p.m.<lb/>
AFTER 5:00P.M. SPECIAL<lb/>
$2.75 meal Includes meat,<lb/>
2 vegetables,biscuit or corn<lb/>
bread, and iced tea<lb/>
t in or Take out located on cornei<lb/>
Dickinson and Raleigh Av.<lb/>
752-5339<lb/>
Cag<lb/>
e<lb/>
unced<lb/>
as l Carolina will<lb/>
13 home games on<lb/>
1979-80 basketball<lb/>
as announcer<lb/>
ay by Uhletics Di-<lb/>
I Cain.<lb/>
ile the large<lb/>
liedule, the Pi-<lb/>
J-15 a year ago,<lb/>
season on<lb/>
. I, participating in<lb/>
le r C lassie at<lb/>
id, Va along<lb/>
Kh hmund, irginia<lb/>
Aeallh an.i esl<lb/>
fech � 'ii Nov. ,0<lb/>
against<lb/>
4.<lb/>
rirales begin the<lb/>
 hedule<lb/>
g in Dec<lb/>
une opponents<lb/>
I linois Mate. Old<lb/>
nun, UNC-Wil-<lb/>
ls  Madi<lb/>
- n-Milwaukee<lb/>
lilficult road<lb/>
includes trips to<lb/>
Maryland, Duke; N.C.<lb/>
and<lb/>
�cne<lb/>
Slate, South Carolina,<lb/>
Detroit, Oral Roberts and<lb/>
Nevada-Reno in addition<lb/>
to return engagements<lb/>
with Old Dominion, LING-<lb/>
VO ilmington and Madison.<lb/>
Our schedule has<lb/>
plenty of teams from<lb/>
 irginia, North and South<lb/>
Carolina, yet we still<lb/>
have 11 opponents from<lb/>
other stales, too said<lb/>
new Pirate mentor Dae<lb/>
Odotn. "1 Like having a<lb/>
good regional base to our<lb/>
schedule and yet at the<lb/>
same tune having a<lb/>
national perspective in<lb/>
our program.<lb/>
Practice opens lor the<lb/>
Pirates on Oct. 15.<lb/>
1 he complete sche-<lb/>
dule:<lb/>
Nov. 30-Dee. 1 �<lb/>
Spider Classic. Rich-<lb/>
mond, a. (Virginia Com-<lb/>
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Dec. 4 - LYNCH-<lb/>
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� at Duke; 10 �<lb/>
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18 - OLD DOMINION;<lb/>
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Jan. 2 � at N.C.<lb/>
Male; 5 � UNC-ASHE-<lb/>
V1LLE; 7 � at Oral<lb/>
Roberts; 10 � at Baptist;<lb/>
12 - vTL.v.MTC CHRI-<lb/>
STIAN; 14 � at Madi-<lb/>
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� UNC-W1LM1NGTON;<lb/>
Feb. 2 � at Detroit; 7<lb/>
� at South Carolina; 9<lb/>
� ILLINOIS STATE; 11<lb/>
� DEL.xW.vRE STATE;<lb/>
l.j � at Maryland, 16 �<lb/>
at UNC-Wilmington; 20<lb/>
� at Old Dominion; 27<lb/>
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Local and Out-of-Town Newspapers<lb/>
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Grade A Whole Fryers 36lb.<lb/>
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Ground Beef $1.59 ID.<lb/>
3lb. pkg. or more<lb/>
Gwaltney Franks 12oz. Pk9. 99<lb/>
Crest Toothpaste 0ur price 98<lb/>
Reg. or mint 7oz. tube Reg. 1.53<lb/>
Kraft Single Slice 98<lb/>
Anerican Cheese 12 oz. Pkg.<lb/>
Del Monte Ketchup<lb/>
Quart Bottle<lb/>
Coca-Cola - (no limit)<lb/>
16 oz. carton of 8 plus deposit<lb/>
Starkist Chunk Light Tuna Fish<lb/>
6 oz. can<lb/>
US No. 1 White Potatos 78<lb/>
10 lb. bag<lb/>
Golden Bananas<lb/>
4 lb. bag<lb/>
Listerine Mouthwash $1 .58<lb/>
Reg. 2.79 24 oz. bottle<lb/>
Bic disposable Lighters 99<lb/>
Reg. 1.98 value Twin pack<lb/>
Please have coupons clipped.<lb/>
Kraft Mayonnaise Qt. jar 98 <lb/>
with this coupon and 7.50 food order o<lb/>
excluding advertised specials. �<lb/>
Without coupon 1.18. Z<lb/>
Limit one coupon per customer. a.<lb/>
Expires September 29, 1979. o<lb/>
78 ISL<lb/>
Cold Power Detergent gt.box 98 <lb/>
with this coupon and 7.50 food order o<lb/>
excluding specials. Without coupon 58 m<lb/>
Limit one coupon per customer. �j<lb/>
Kraft<lb/>
Macaroni Cheese Dinner 4$1.00<lb/>
7 oz. box<lb/>
Expires September 29, 1979.<lb/>
Bounty Towels gt. roll 38<lb/>
with this coupon and 7.50 food order<lb/>
excluding advertised Specials<lb/>
Without coupon 1.18.<lb/>
Limit one coupon per customer.<lb/>
Expires September 29, 1979.<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
<pb facs="00057217_0011"/><lb/>
h� Kastarolinian<lb/>
features<lb/>
Tuesday, September 25, 1979 page 11<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
'Bread and Roses9<lb/>
afresh release<lb/>
Just ten<lb/>
Woodstock<lb/>
By PATRICK MINGES<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
years ago, on August 21, 1969, the<lb/>
Arts and Music Fair captured the<lb/>
imagination of the nation and the spirit of the '60s.<lb/>
This summer, an effort was made to rekindle that<lb/>
flame of consciousness in upstate New York, yet the<lb/>
attempt was a dismal failure. Little did the promoters<lb/>
realize that the Zeitgeist of Woodstock had been<lb/>
regenerated two years earlier and has now been<lb/>
released in a phenomenal new album, Bread and<lb/>
Hoses.<lb/>
The Bread and Roses Festival of � Acoustic Music<lb/>
was held over three days in October 1977 at The Greek<lb/>
Theater of the University of California, Berkeley. It<lb/>
was the most dynamic assemblage of folk legends ever<lb/>
on the same stage. The Bread and Roses Festival was<lb/>
an important musical, social and political affair as was<lb/>
the event at Yasgur's farm.<lb/>
Bread and Roses, a non-profit organization based in<lb/>
California, was founded by Mimi Farina. Its purpose is<lb/>
to bring free, live entertainment to people who<lb/>
otherwise might not have the opportunity to enjoy<lb/>
uch. Hospitals, mental health facilities, geriatric<lb/>
homes, and prisons house people who are in desperate<lb/>
need ol the joy, diversion and positive human contact<lb/>
thai live entertainment can offer. The Bread and Roses<lb/>
Festival had two aims: to raise funds for the operation<lb/>
ol the organization and to bring back to life the sound<lb/>
oi acoustic music.<lb/>
The event was hosted by Mimi Farina, emceed by<lb/>
Howard Hesseman, the first underground FM disc<lb/>
joekev in the nation who now plays Dr. Johnny Fever,<lb/>
and featured such luminaries as Joan Baez, Jackson<lb/>
Browne, Hoyt Axton, Boys of the Lough, Terry<lb/>
Garthwaite, Toni Brown, Ramblin' Jack Elliot, Arlo<lb/>
Guthrie, Richie Havens, John Herald Band, Dan Hicks,<lb/>
David Lindley, Country Joe McDonald, Maria<lb/>
Muldaur, Mickey Newbury, Tom Paxton, The<lb/>
Tersuasions, Malvina Reynolds, Buffy Sainte Marie,<lb/>
Pete Seeger, Dave Van Ronk, and Jesse Colin Young.<lb/>
The entire event was recorded live by the Record<lb/>
Plant. The proceeds of the record sales of Bread and<lb/>
Ruses will provide operating funds for the Bread and<lb/>
Roses continuing community services to institution-<lb/>
alized audiences. The engineering and production of<lb/>
Bread and Roses is superb � a necessity considering<lb/>
iis content is entirely acoustic.<lb/>
Aside from the tremendous social significance of<lb/>
Bread and roses, its intention to bring a renaissance to<lb/>
acoustic music is worthy of special note. In a time<lb/>
when music is dominated by walls of power and<lb/>
inuitilracking wizardry, it is refreshing to listen to the<lb/>
simple beauty ol acoustics.<lb/>
Each side of the double album seems to exist as a<lb/>
separate entity, possessing specific characteristics and<lb/>
growing in spiritual and musical wealth throughout the<lb/>
album.<lb/>
Side one is perhaps weakest, but reveals the roots<lb/>
oi folk music deep in the culture of America. It<lb/>
features such obscure early '60s New York influences<lb/>
as Ramblin1 Jack Elliot, Malvina Reynolds, and Dave<lb/>
Van Ronk, all Dylan compeers. The strongest<lb/>
selections are by Pete Seeger, Jesse Young, and John<lb/>
Herald.<lb/>
See BREAD, page 14<lb/>
Wargaming<lb/>
is popular<lb/>
By JOHN W.vLDEN<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
The hobby of wargaming has grown considerably in<lb/>
the United States and abroad since 1968. ECU recently<lb/>
started its own wargaming club. Yet if asked what a<lb/>
wargame is, most people could not tell you.<lb/>
To clear the air, a wargame is a simulated portrayal<lb/>
of a historical battle. The game board is basically a<lb/>
map in which the area of the battle had taken place.<lb/>
Each piece or counter represents a military unit such<lb/>
as an army or a division that fought in that particular<lb/>
battle. The players have the job of fighting the historic<lb/>
battle in their own way and obtaining the necessary<lb/>
victory conditions lo win the game.<lb/>
Wargames are definitely not little kids' games. The<lb/>
rules are very complicated and sometimes take hours<lb/>
lo learn properly. The games themselves can take from<lb/>
a lew hours to a couple of days to play. Both patience<lb/>
and concentration are needed to play them. This is<lb/>
going to scare off the average "Monopoly" player who<lb/>
starts a game expecting to finish within the hour.<lb/>
Another discouraging fact is the price of wargames.<lb/>
vn average wargame can run from $10-15 while the<lb/>
bigger games cost as much as $30. This may also help<lb/>
to explain why wargaming has not become as widely<lb/>
known as backgammon or chess.<lb/>
When asked why he played wargames, Wade<lb/>
Dudley, an ECU graduate, says he likes the challenge<lb/>
and the escapism of the games. Dudley could be called<lb/>
a hard core wargamer. He owns a huge collection of,<lb/>
over 200 wargames and admits to spending at least ten<lb/>
hours a week playing them.<lb/>
Like nearly all wargamess, Dudley denies any<lb/>
fascination with real war. He says that no one could be<lb/>
more peace loving than him. In fact, Dudley feels that<lb/>
the wargames help to bring out the foolishness of all<lb/>
wars.<lb/>
Whatever a wargamer's motives for playing, the<lb/>
possibilities for new games are endless. Although most<lb/>
gamers prefer games from the World War II era, the<lb/>
leading manufacturers of wargames keep coming up<lb/>
with wargames to suit any player's taste. The variety<lb/>
of the games ranges from the Punic Wars all the way<lb/>
up lo the Vietnam era.<lb/>
Unfortunately, each new game also brings with it a<lb/>
new set of rules that must be learned. This is probably<lb/>
why wargames will never catch on heavily in the<lb/>
United Stales.<lb/>
For those interested in wargaming or for those who<lb/>
are just plain curious to see some wargames, the first<lb/>
Strategy and Tactics wargame club meeting will be<lb/>
held on Thurs Oct. 4 at 7:00 p.m. at Mendenhall.<lb/>
For those who could care less, there is always<lb/>
poker.<lb/>
Woody Herman and the Young Thundering Herd will appear in Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Sept. JO, al 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Gene Cotton will be in concert Tuesday, Sept. 25, at 8:00 p.m. in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
j<lb/>
offers ways to study<lb/>
By CHERYL FISHER<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
The ability to study<lb/>
well indicates a success-<lb/>
ful sludenl. To study<lb/>
means: lo acquire ihe<lb/>
knowledge of, to ex-<lb/>
amine, to search into. Is<lb/>
thai not what we are all<lb/>
here al East Carolina<lb/>
for? .Alter being here<lb/>
awhile it becomes ap-<lb/>
parent that there are<lb/>
many different ways<lb/>
through which you can<lb/>
learn lo sludy, and ECU<lb/>
offers them all.<lb/>
Take for example the<lb/>
lawn-studier. These peo-<lb/>
ple take advantage of the<lb/>
cool days of late and<lb/>
settle themselves on the<lb/>
grass in some quiel,<lb/>
secluded spot on campus.<lb/>
The idea sounds re-<lb/>
freshing and could be<lb/>
quite advantageous ex-<lb/>
cept that by the time you<lb/>
gather up everything,<lb/>
from pillow to pencil,<lb/>
that you will need for you<lb/>
study in the wilderness<lb/>
and lake it outside with<lb/>
you fifteen or twenty<lb/>
minutes of your precious<lb/>
study time has slipped<lb/>
by.<lb/>
Once you get to your<lb/>
back-lo-nature nest,<lb/>
many problems could<lb/>
arise. If you decide to<lb/>
study while lying on your<lb/>
back you may find you<lb/>
have company. Just when<lb/>
you get to the exciting<lb/>
part where the cell is in<lb/>
the clevage stage of<lb/>
development, a leaf or an !<lb/>
acorn will decide to see if<lb/>
you are still awake,<lb/>
entertaining you with a j<lb/>
plop on the head or, I<lb/>
better yet, a tap dance<lb/>
on your book.<lb/>
If the supine position<lb/>
does not suit you; the<lb/>
stomach is always avail-<lb/>
able. While lying on the<lb/>
stomach, if variety is<lb/>
needed when breezing<lb/>
through 50 physics prob-<lb/>
lems, the ants are readily<lb/>
available as a source of<lb/>
energy.<lb/>
As soon as you<lb/>
become enthralled in the<lb/>
wonderful world of text a<lb/>
sudden gust of wind may<lb/>
decide to give you a<lb/>
study break by scattering<lb/>
jour neatly compiled<lb/>
notes about a radius of<lb/>
1.257 miles, or a perfect<lb/>
blue sky bursts into 400<lb/>
billion raindrops. People<lb/>
who say studying is a<lb/>
bore, "just do not know<lb/>
how 'much fun it can<lb/>
be<lb/>
vboul studying and<lb/>
lun, 1 am sure many of<lb/>
)ou have run into a<lb/>
studying controversy with<lb/>
your roommate. If you<lb/>
haven't you do not<lb/>
realize what you are<lb/>
missing.<lb/>
How often has<lb/>
your roommate<lb/>
announced that<lb/>
heshe would he<lb/>
out for the<lb/>
Herman Cotton to<lb/>
appear in concert<lb/>
evening,<lb/>
By WILLIAM JONES<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
As ihe L.A. Herald-Examiner puts<lb/>
it, "Woody Herman has the unique<lb/>
distinction of being able to please the<lb/>
kids of the kids he pleased 20 years<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
The Student Union's 1979-1980<lb/>
Artists Series will present its first<lb/>
guest, Wood Herman and the Young<lb/>
Thundering Herd, on Wednesday,<lb/>
Sept. 26, at 8:00 p.m. in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
Unlike other famous band leaders<lb/>
from the 'big band era Woody<lb/>
Herman has remained active, con-<lb/>
temporary and progressive.<lb/>
Herman has been able to avoid<lb/>
stagnation by continually adapting his<lb/>
musical style to the timely demand of<lb/>
the audience. He is constantly working<lb/>
with new and young musicians, looking<lb/>
for new sounds and new twists to the<lb/>
golden oldies<lb/>
Herman made his debut as a band<lb/>
leader on election night, 1936. Now, at<lb/>
the age of 69, he seems to find it<lb/>
impossible lo stop performing.<lb/>
Herman's band, The Young Thun-<lb/>
dering Herd, was so named by jazz<lb/>
writer George Simon. He called the<lb/>
"shouting jazz band" the "thundering<lb/>
herd" because he thought it sounded<lb/>
like a herd of animals thundering<lb/>
along. The exuberence of the original<lb/>
herd' caused Herman himself to say,<lb/>
"When they blew, I ducked The<lb/>
'newest Herd' can be expected to.<lb/>
provide the same vigor.<lb/>
Hermans performance here will<lb/>
��������������������������������������<lb/>
Coming<lb/>
Attractions<lb/>
You are about to<lb/>
greet the Sandman when<lb/>
awakened by a dreaded<lb/>
dream come to life. One<lb/>
roommate plus two new<lb/>
laces all having a party<lb/>
for the term paper your<lb/>
roommate suddenly re-<lb/>
membered was due at<lb/>
nine o'clock sharp the<lb/>
next day. One writes,<lb/>
lealure a mixture of<lb/>
contemporary numbers.<lb/>
one edits and one types.<lb/>
i keep you awake and<lb/>
all ruin your chances lor<lb/>
a possible 100 on that<lb/>
lest you have just spent<lb/>
the night studying for.<lb/>
We have all seen the<lb/>
serious' studier who<lb/>
lakes all his belongings<lb/>
lo the middle of ihe mall<lb/>
amidst the guitarists, dog<lb/>
walkers and frisbee<lb/>
throwers of America.<lb/>
This fellow claims he has<lb/>
lo gel oulside before he<lb/>
goes crazy with claustro-<lb/>
phobia. He can often be<lb/>
identified as the student<lb/>
humming to himself in<lb/>
the back of ihe class-<lb/>
room.<lb/>
Whal about the Croa-<lb/>
tan lor an official cram<lb/>
session al lunch. It is not<lb/>
easy to memorize 25<lb/>
different theorums for<lb/>
your main class between<lb/>
the reverberaling hellos,<lb/>
how ya doin's and the<lb/>
crunching of your nutri-<lb/>
tious bag of potatoe<lb/>
chips.<lb/>
The library is also a<lb/>
good place lo study and<lb/>
definitely ihe most tradi-<lb/>
tional place at any<lb/>
university, but do not try<lb/>
lo sludy al a seat near<lb/>
the door. If you take<lb/>
note, those students who<lb/>
do take those seats are<lb/>
the students whose heads<lb/>
spend the whole evening<lb/>
bobbing up-and down as<lb/>
the people pour into the<lb/>
building.<lb/>
Mendenhall Sludenl<lb/>
Center presents The<lb/>
Marriage Go Round, the<lb/>
first Dinner Theater of<lb/>
the semester beginning<lb/>
October 3. Tickets musl<lb/>
be purchased 36 hours in<lb/>
advance and are available<lb/>
al the Central Ticket<lb/>
Office.<lb/>
The Faces of France,<lb/>
a travel-adventure lilm,<lb/>
will be presented Wed-<lb/>
nesday, Oct. 3, at 8:00<lb/>
p.m. in Hendrix Theater.<lb/>
Ihe film will highlight<lb/>
various aspects ol France.<lb/>
oldies and<lb/>
Tickets are<lb/>
available at the Central Ticket Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
The Encyclopedia of Jazz says of<lb/>
Herman, "His real importance in jazz<lb/>
history lies in his retention, often<lb/>
against severe economic odds, of an<lb/>
uncompromising band that progressed<lb/>
with each new trend and provided an<lb/>
incubator for some of the most brilliant<lb/>
soloists and arrangers throughout the<lb/>
years<lb/>
On the day preceeding the Woody<lb/>
Herman concert, under auspices of the<lb/>
Student Union, Ariola recording star<lb/>
Gene Cotton will appear at Wright<lb/>
uditorium on Tuesday, September 25,<lb/>
at 8:00 p.m. The concert is a return<lb/>
engagement for Cotton.<lb/>
In the past, Gene Cotton has been<lb/>
known as a veteran of the college and<lb/>
small club circuits. Now Gene has<lb/>
established himself as one of America s<lb/>
finest singer-songwriters, as evidenced<lb/>
by his lalest single, "Before My Heart<lb/>
Finds Out This melodic ballad is jusi<lb/>
one of the many sensational songs<lb/>
found on his debut album for Ariola<lb/>
Records, Save The Dancer.<lb/>
Gene was born in Columbus, Ohio,<lb/>
and comes from a musically inclined<lb/>
family. He spent his college years<lb/>
alternating between a political science<lb/>
career and performing on the local folk<lb/>
club scene. Opting for the latter, he<lb/>
dedicated his time to touring midwest<lb/>
venues and singing his way over the<lb/>
east coast. He feels that there is no one<lb/>
single influence in his life, but rather a<lb/>
potpourri ol tastes.<lb/>
In 1974 Gene had a charted single<lb/>
called "Sunshine Roses" which<lb/>
climbed lo a top thirty spot on the<lb/>
national playlists. The song was a<lb/>
significant step in the right direction,<lb/>
but it wasn't until the release of<lb/>
"You've Got Me Running" that Cotton<lb/>
gained national acclaim.<lb/>
Cottons lalest album, Save The<lb/>
Dancer, has Kim Carnes singing duet<lb/>
on "You're A Part Of Me" and<lb/>
features such notables as Larnie<lb/>
Londin, Kenny Buttrey, Joe Osbourne.<lb/>
Jack Williams and Shane Keister. In<lb/>
addition, the album is produced by<lb/>
Steve Gibson, whose accomplishments<lb/>
include working with Olivia Newton-<lb/>
John, Neil Young, and George<lb/>
Harrison.<lb/>
 limited number of tickets are<lb/>
available al the Central Ticket Office on<lb/>
a first-come, first-serve basis. Tickets<lb/>
for ECU students are priced at $1.50<lb/>
and $3.00 for the public. All tickets<lb/>
sold at the door will be $3.00.<lb/>
ECU archive is largest<lb/>
By JEAN HARTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Whistling women<lb/>
and crowing hens always<lb/>
come lo no good end<lb/>
The above is an<lb/>
example of a folk proverb<lb/>
from East Carolina Univ-<lb/>
ersity's Folklore Archive,<lb/>
it is the largest univer-<lb/>
sity-based archive in the<lb/>
country, according lo Dr.<lb/>
Paul Dowell, associate<lb/>
professor in the English<lb/>
department and co-di-<lb/>
rector of the archive.<lb/>
Dr. Douglas McMillan<lb/>
started the collection in<lb/>
1970, and today it<lb/>
contains approximately<lb/>
100,000 index cards oi<lb/>
folk sayings and almost<lb/>
2,000 individual collec-<lb/>
tions of legends, super-<lb/>
stitions, ghost stories,<lb/>
songs and other reflec-<lb/>
tions of human culture.<lb/>
Students collected<lb/>
most of the material,<lb/>
which is an "on going<lb/>
record of folk culture in<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina<lb/>
See STUDY, page 13<lb/>
Learning- Abour Coa�&amp;rrT�e Harp VMay<lb/>
said Dr. Dowell. The<lb/>
folklore is mainly from<lb/>
this region, but the<lb/>
archive does contain<lb/>
material from all across<lb/>
the stale and other states<lb/>
as well. Historians, soci-<lb/>
ologists, anthropologists<lb/>
and others interesled in<lb/>
culture mighl use the<lb/>
information. .According to<lb/>
Dr. Karen Baldwin, co-<lb/>
direclor of the archive,<lb/>
The collections are pri-<lb/>
mary research mater-<lb/>
ials<lb/>
ECU's Folklore Ar-<lb/>
chive is listed wilh the<lb/>
Library of Congress, and<lb/>
stories from the archive<lb/>
have been read for<lb/>
meetings of the Amer-<lb/>
ican Folklore Society.<lb/>
National Geographic used<lb/>
a slory from the archive<lb/>
in the book, 'We<lb/>
wnericans" (copyright<lb/>
1975).<lb/>
"The primary prob-<lb/>
lem wilh the archive is<lb/>
the lack of space in the<lb/>
English department<lb/>
commented Dr. Baldwin,<lb/>
winch is whv we arc<lb/>
going lo start using the<lb/>
computer<lb/>
.Assistant Professor<lb/>
John Warren suggested<lb/>
the use of the English<lb/>
department's terminal<lb/>
and created the computer<lb/>
program. The terminal<lb/>
ma) be used by the<lb/>
faculty, administration,<lb/>
or anyone with the<lb/>
proper authorization code<lb/>
and phone number,<lb/>
fhrough the telephone<lb/>
the computer can be<lb/>
connected lo anv where in<lb/>
the United Stales.<lb/>
.viler the data have<lb/>
been submitted, the<lb/>
terminal can recall all the<lb/>
lolklore pertaining to a<lb/>
specified subject. Ac-<lb/>
cording to Dr. Dowell,<lb/>
the folklore is classitied<lb/>
bv the informant's name,<lb/>
address, birthplace, age,<lb/>
race and occupation.<lb/>
Dr. Baldwin and Dr.<lb/>
James Kirkland, an<lb/>
See FOLKLORE, Page 13<lb/>
&amp;1 DtwoHowb<lb/>
THtS? �"I6HT O'CLOCK<lb/>
CLASPS fl� KIUIN6 rA� I<lb/>
M)TT C0ff��<lb/>
BUT, rJKp THIS fIX<lb/>
OF Cr)fHCh� SO I CfliO<lb/>
lAlflK Up<lb/>
'J2<lb/>
coffer? its<lb/>
p�C)fflCfOATep<lb/>
V<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057217_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 25 September 1979<lb/>
Zappa speaks his mind<lb/>
on local radio program<lb/>
By RICHARD GREEN<lb/>
"You should always<lb/>
he aware of the iact that<lb/>
the first order of gov-<lb/>
ernment is lo perpetuate<lb/>
ilself.<lb/>
Just look at the track<lb/>
record of the people who<lb/>
are in government. Do<lb/>
vou actually think they<lb/>
are working lor you?"<lb/>
Composer and gui-<lb/>
tarist Frank Zappa spoke<lb/>
his mind on everything<lb/>
from music to politics<lb/>
Sundav night on Allan<lb/>
riandelman's radio pro-<lb/>
gram. Forum, on KQR.<lb/>
Handeltnan called<lb/>
Zappa at his home in<lb/>
California around 10:00<lb/>
p.m. and hegan taking<lb/>
telephone calls at 10:30<lb/>
from the Greenville area<lb/>
and elsewhere around<lb/>
the country.<lb/>
Fred Midgett of<lb/>
Maysville, N.C was the<lb/>
first caller, but he was<lb/>
calling from La Jolla,<lb/>
California where he is<lb/>
vacationing. Midgett is<lb/>
an avid Zappa fan who<lb/>
had missed the first two<lb/>
.shows with Zappa on<lb/>
WKQR.<lb/>
Zappa was quite flat-<lb/>
tered to be called from<lb/>
La Jolla via North<lb/>
Carolina. 'This is<lb/>
science he said.<lb/>
Midgett asked some<lb/>
detailed questions in-<lb/>
eluding an inquiry into<lb/>
the origin of a bootleg<lb/>
Zappa album that "ap-<lb/>
peared" in a record<lb/>
store. Zappa had no<lb/>
knowledge of the release<lb/>
and commented, "Just<lb/>
remember � people are<lb/>
o nice<lb/>
Zappa has produced<lb/>
twenty-seven albums in<lb/>
his career, but including<lb/>
bootleg material, he said<lb/>
the total exceeds forty<lb/>
albums.<lb/>
Jerry Jaffee, in<lb/>
charge of album promo-<lb/>
tion for Poly dor Records,<lb/>
called from New York<lb/>
City to ask Zappa what<lb/>
the impact of artists<lb/>
having their own record<lb/>
labels will be on radio<lb/>
stations.<lb/>
"1 think, ultimately,<lb/>
that radio stations are<lb/>
gonna have to loosen up<lb/>
on the restrictions<lb/>
they've been placing on<lb/>
records,11 Zappa pre-<lb/>
dicted.<lb/>
Zappa's latest album,<lb/>
Joe's Garage, is getting<lb/>
more airplay than any of<lb/>
his previous albums. It<lb/>
See ZAPPA, page 13<lb/>
Newborn survives odds<lb/>
Zappa 102977<lb/>
Photo b Fred Midgett)<lb/>
Chocolate chip romance<lb/>
ends in cookie suit<lb/>
Minn.<lb/>
K 'W alke's<lb/>
over a<lb/>
chip<lb/>
is fian-<lb/>
i g, he<lb/>
,i ii it<lb/>
� we-<lb/>
'd to<lb/>
irried<lb/>
had<lb/>
-� tor<lb/>
lhe<lb/>
Mav,<lb/>
she returned the ring.<lb/>
"I fell that 1 should<lb/>
have some recompense,<lb/>
he said. He asked her lor<lb/>
a dozen cookies lor each<lb/>
Li the) had been<lb/>
together.<lb/>
1 he 21-year-old wo-<lb/>
man missed an uig. 22<lb/>
deadline, but finished up<lb/>
the job lasl week. Her<lb/>
deli t was paid and<lb/>
Kowalke s treezt r as<lb/>
lull.<lb/>
1 ve given aw a) at<lb/>
least 100 doen said<lb/>
kow alke.<lb/>
NORFOLK, Va. (AP)<lb/>
� Against all odds,<lb/>
 ernetta Shemeika John-<lb/>
son, born weighing oni<lb/>
a single pound, has clung<lb/>
lo hie lor 1:2 days at<lb/>
Children's Hospital of<lb/>
the King's Daughters.<lb/>
 ernetta. a twin born<lb/>
three months prema-<lb/>
turely Sept. IJ in nearby<lb/>
Suliolk, is the smallest<lb/>
bab ever treated at the<lb/>
N oil oik hospital. Her<lb/>
twin died, and doctors at<lb/>
iiist thought the girl's<lb/>
chance lor sur i al w ere<lb/>
mi slim thai they dis-<lb/>
couraged a request to<lb/>
nave her transferred to<lb/>
the hospital s sophisti-<lb/>
cated neonatal intensive<lb/>
n- unit.<lb/>
Doctors normally<lb/>
not try Lo save inianls ol<lb/>
her size, and neonatal<lb/>
specialists elsewhere in<lb/>
the state said they knew<lb/>
l no baby that small<lb/>
hing lor more than a<lb/>
lew hours.<lb/>
If she anil lour other<lb/>
unusually small pre-<lb/>
mature newborns at<lb/>
Kings Daughters survive<lb/>
to lead normal lives, it<lb/>
could trigger changes in<lb/>
national medical guide-<lb/>
lines, said Dr. Frederick<lb/>
 nth. director ol the<lb/>
hospitals neonatology<lb/>
unit.<lb/>
I rider the guidelines,<lb/>
lie said, the five babies<lb/>
would have been con-<lb/>
sidered too small or too<lb/>
piemature to trv to saye.<lb/>
Our policy is that<lb/>
babies born belore 25<lb/>
weeks of gestation are<lb/>
not viable Wirth ex-<lb/>
plained. "Our reason is<lb/>
that babies' lungs have<lb/>
not matured enough to<lb/>
sustain life al that point.<lb/>
.vll over the nation,<lb/>
physicians have sup-<lb/>
ported those babies, only<lb/>
to have them all die<lb/>
Closed eyelids are the<lb/>
criterion doctors use to<lb/>
tell if a baby has reached<lb/>
its 25th week, Wirth<lb/>
said. "If a babv can't<lb/>
J<lb/>
open his eyes, doctors<lb/>
don t resuscitate the<lb/>
baby<lb/>
However, Vernetta<lb/>
and the other four<lb/>
See .NEWBORN, page 13<lb/>
(fthapfrrX<lb/>
presents<lb/>
5 Degrees South<lb/>
WED. SEPT. 26th<lb/>
Show Time 9:30 with one<lb/>
of the the best Beach &amp;<lb/>
Top 40 Shows Around<lb/>
TAKE A BREAK-DINE IN<lb/>
4f fefc LUNCHEON SPECIAL<lb/>
ptif,kVJM<lb/>
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY<lb/>
� FRESH TOSSED SALAD SHORT SANDWICH<lb/>
CHOICE OF DRESSING<lb/>
�LARGE ICED TEA<lb/>
(YOUR CHOICE)<lb/>
. hove lUnc6<lb/>
e Chanelo's ot<lb/>
Only $2.19<lb/>
.HOURS 11:30 A.M. 'TILL 1:30 P.M.<lb/>
DID YOU KNOW?<lb/>
Every Tuesday from Opening til Closing<lb/>
SPAGHETTI and MEAT SAUCE SPECIAL<lb/>
Stoamlnghot ond piled high<lb/>
A PLATTER<lb/>
Hfflffifl<lb/>
1800<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Tuesday Night<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
TROUT $2.95<lb/>
PERCH $a.9S<lb/>
all you can eat<lb/>
No take-outs please.<lb/>
Meal Include:<lb/>
French Frier, Cole slew,<lb/>
Hash nappies.<lb/>
OMLY 99C<lb/>
Just come on in and ask for<lb/>
Spaghetti and Meat Sauce Special<lb/>
J<lb/>
1 W-N!ijG 5<lb/>
$ 1.00 OFF<lb/>
Any 17" Pizza<lb/>
or 14" Pizza<lb/>
NOT VALID DURING ANY<lb/>
OTHER SPECIAL OFFER<lb/>
FXPIRES101579<lb/>
I<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/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is required to<lb/>
be readily available for sale at or below the<lb/>
advertised price in each A&amp;P Store, except as<lb/>
specifically noted in this ad.<lb/>
PRICES GOOD THROUGH SATURDAY, SEPT. 29<lb/>
AT A&amp;P IN<lb/>
703 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
Greenville , N.C.<lb/>
COCA COLA<lb/>
�.�. $1.09<lb/>
8<lb/>
lo-OZ.<lb/>
KETURNBLE GOOD ONLi IN<lb/>
KOITLES GREENVILLE<lb/>
ANN PAGE V2 LOW FAT<lb/>
MILK $1.49<lb/>
GALLON<lb/>
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ll-W. OK VIRGIN � F ,HMS<lb/>
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BAKING HENS<lb/>
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MARKET STYLE<lb/>
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TALMADGE FARM BRAND<lb/>
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AP<lb/>
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medium eggs<lb/>
2 �m 98<lb/>
DOZEN<lb/>
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LIMIT ONE COUPON<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT, SEPT. 29. AT AP IN I, KEEN ILLE<lb/>
644<lb/>
OPEN FOR LUNCH<lb/>
Dally<lb/>
(except Sat.) 11:30 - 2:3<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
MON - THURS.<lb/>
Stoo � 10:00<lb/>
FRI. &amp; SAT.<lb/>
Stoo � IOt30<lb/>
ih"<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057217_0013"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
Doctors are warned against<lb/>
allowing death with dignity<lb/>
B DANIEL Q. HANEY <lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
BOSTON (AP) -<lb/>
Doctors should be reluc-<lb/>
tant to accept the re-<lb/>
quests of sick persons tor<lb/>
death with dignity<lb/>
because their desire to<lb/>
die may change, be<lb/>
based on needless tears<lb/>
or be a quest tor<lb/>
attention, two physicians<lb/>
sa).<lb/>
In recent years, doc-<lb/>
tors have paid increasing<lb/>
attention to patients'<lb/>
wishes tor quiet death as<lb/>
tlu- development of res-<lb/>
pirators and other ad-<lb/>
vances allowed them to<lb/>
keep people alive<lb/>
a tier the) lost<lb/>
sciousness.<lb/>
 team ol physicians<lb/>
who treat people with<lb/>
bad burns recently re-<lb/>
commended that patients<lb/>
long<lb/>
con-<lb/>
Study<lb/>
be allowed to make life-<lb/>
and-death decisions, be-<lb/>
cause "who is more<lb/>
likely to be totally and<lb/>
lovingly concerned with<lb/>
the patients' best inti�-<lb/>
es'ts than the patient<lb/>
himself?" Now, two<lb/>
Cleveland doctors say<lb/>
this view "may be iome-<lb/>
what naive and, in<lb/>
certain clinical situations,<lb/>
potentially dangerous<lb/>
In today's New Eng-<lb/>
land Journal of Medicine,<lb/>
the doctors said that<lb/>
before pulling the plug,<lb/>
doctors should make sure<lb/>
the patient who seeks<lb/>
death really means what<lb/>
he says.<lb/>
'Physicians who are<lb/>
uncomfortable or inex-<lb/>
perienced in dealing with<lb/>
the complex psycho-so-<lb/>
cial issues lacing crit-<lb/>
ically ill patients may<lb/>
ignore an important as-<lb/>
pect of their professional<lb/>
responsibilities by taking<lb/>
a patient's statement at<lb/>
lace value without fur-<lb/>
ther exploration or clari-<lb/>
fication they wrote.<lb/>
The doctors, David L.<lb/>
Jackson and Stuart<lb/>
Younger, described six<lb/>
cases they encountered<lb/>
in the intensive care unit<lb/>
at University Hospitals of<lb/>
Cleveland.<lb/>
In one ease, an<lb/>
80-year-old man with<lb/>
lung disease at first said<lb/>
he did not want to be<lb/>
kept alive by a respirat-<lb/>
lor. However, later, he<lb/>
changed his mind several<lb/>
limes. They case, they<lb/>
said, shows that "one<lb/>
must be cautious not to<lb/>
act precipitously on the<lb/>
side of the patient's<lb/>
ambivalence with which<lb/>
one agrees, while piously<lb/>
claiming to be following<lb/>
the principle of patient<lb/>
autonomy<lb/>
in another case, a<lb/>
52-year-old man with<lb/>
multiple sclerosis said he<lb/>
did not want doctors to<lb/>
try to save him if he<lb/>
developed serious com-<lb/>
plications. However, he<lb/>
later admitted he was<lb/>
upset with his family for<lb/>
not paying attention to<lb/>
him.<lb/>
An 18-year-old wom-<lb/>
an with chronic asthma<lb/>
resisted treatment with a<lb/>
respirator. But after she<lb/>
was questioned by doc-<lb/>
tors, she said she was<lb/>
afraid of the hospital<lb/>
equipment. Her fears<lb/>
were calmed and she was<lb/>
discharged eight days<lb/>
later.<lb/>
The doctors said they<lb/>
hoped their experience<lb/>
would help other physi-<lb/>
cians copy with situations<lb/>
25 September 1979 THfe EAST CAROLINIAN Page 13<lb/>
Newborn<lb/>
continued from page 12<lb/>
Pop Sanchez<lb/>
(Photo by Richard Green)<lb/>
infants, all born with<lb/>
closed eyes, survived<lb/>
their first hours and were<lb/>
transported to King's<lb/>
Daughters. Three are<lb/>
certain to go home, and<lb/>
the hospital plans follow-<lb/>
up checks for brain<lb/>
damage, he said.<lb/>
"If these five babies<lb/>
are normal neurolog-<lb/>
ically, it would be a real<lb/>
shocker to the entire<lb/>
nation Wirth said.<lb/>
New York doctors<lb/>
have reported the survi-<lb/>
val of a baby even<lb/>
smaller than Vernetta.<lb/>
Chaya Snyder, born se-<lb/>
ven weeks ago weighing<lb/>
just under 15 ounces, has<lb/>
a good chance for a<lb/>
normal life, doctors at<lb/>
Monteliore Hospital in<lb/>
the Bronx said Friday.<lb/>
Since Vernetta's ar-<lb/>
rival here on Sept. 13,<lb/>
she has "done great<lb/>
in which "superficial and<lb/>
automatic acquiescence<lb/>
to the concepts of patient<lb/>
autonomy and death with<lb/>
dignity threaten sound<lb/>
clinical judgment<lb/>
said Dr. Edward Karot-<lb/>
kin, a neonatologist.<lb/>
Unlike many larger pre-<lb/>
mature babies, she<lb/>
hasn't needed an extra<lb/>
oxygen to help her<lb/>
breathe since she was i<lb/>
lew days old.<lb/>
Warmed by a radiant<lb/>
heater, Vernetta's eyes<lb/>
opened occasionally when<lb/>
nurses touch her. Her cry<lb/>
is almost inaudible, bare-<lb/>
ly a whimper.<lb/>
Nurses feed her le<lb/>
than a teaspoon ol<lb/>
hall-strength milk ever)<lb/>
two hours, and a needle<lb/>
nourishes her inirav<lb/>
uously around the clock.<lb/>
"She has all of her<lb/>
lingers and all oi her<lb/>
toes � everything a nor-<lb/>
mal babv has, juM<lb/>
smaller, said nur-t<lb/>
clinician Calh) Kohler.<lb/>
The babv is doing<lb/>
ainazingl) well<lb/>
Have vou noticed how<lb/>
the stud) rooms in the<lb/>
dorms are right next door<lb/>
to the television rooms?<lb/>
Just try to concentrate<lb/>
between the congregation<lb/>
ol socializers and their<lb/>
laughter from Mork and<lb/>
Vlind) as it echoes<lb/>
Ilirough the walls.<lb/>
Last, but not least, is<lb/>
vour vcrv own bed. Many<lb/>
do resort to studying<lb/>
.liilc surrounded by<lb/>
mattress, pillows, and all<lb/>
me comforts ol home.<lb/>
How comfortable a bed<lb/>
can make studying. Do<lb/>
vou know all the places a<lb/>
bed can make the mind<lb/>
wander while trying to<lb/>
study?<lb/>
These are just a few<lb/>
of the many study habits<lb/>
executed by students<lb/>
lodav. 1 am sure we all<lb/>
lit into one of these<lb/>
categories at one time or<lb/>
another. Between the<lb/>
monotony of biology, the<lb/>
thrills of physics, and the<lb/>
agonv of historv, we the<lb/>
students of East Carolina<lb/>
will survive. We are, and<lb/>
continued from page 11<lb/>
shall be dedicated and<lb/>
persistent to our profes-<lb/>
sion as students.<lb/>
Our motto must be<lb/>
"study to our hearts<lb/>
content In that case<lb/>
many of us will be at The<lb/>
Elbo Room, or Pantana<lb/>
Bobs at precisely ten<lb/>
o'clock. But amidst the<lb/>
noise and excitement of<lb/>
ECU, our efforts, pens<lb/>
and minds echo with<lb/>
"The Name of the Game<lb/>
is Study<lb/>
Zappa<lb/>
continued trom page 12<lb/>
Folklore<lb/>
jumped thirty points on<lb/>
Billboard's Top LP sur-<lb/>
Irom 67 last week to<lb/>
37 this week. In Sweden<lb/>
) crbooti is the<lb/>
sixth best-seller and<lb/>
Jot's Garage backs it up<lb/>
at number -even.<lb/>
Local callers wanted<lb/>
to know when Zappa will<lb/>
be louring this area. He<lb/>
aid llial he is not<lb/>
louring at all until next<lb/>
year but is working on a<lb/>
movie entitled Baby-<lb/>
Snakes.<lb/>
Zappa had to get back<lb/>
to work, so he said<lb/>
goodbye at 11:30 (DST).<lb/>
But he promised he<lb/>
would conduct another<lb/>
interview with Handel-<lb/>
man shortly after Nov. 1.<lb/>
Zappa seems to like the<lb/>
folks in N.C and the<lb/>
teeling is mutual.<lb/>
associate professor who<lb/>
leaches folklore, are now<lb/>
working with East Caro-<lb/>
lina's School of Medicine<lb/>
on a project concerned<lb/>
with folk medicine and<lb/>
home remedies. They<lb/>
plan to put this inform-<lb/>
ation into the terminal<lb/>
and to publish the<lb/>
collection of cures in the<lb/>
lulure.<lb/>
ECU STUDENT SPECIAL<lb/>
UNITED FIGURE<lb/>
SALON<lb/>
Limited Tlmo<lb/>
2 for th�<lb/>
Price of 1<lb/>
Bring a friend $37.90 each<lb/>
and share thepffer ends Oct.6th<lb/>
cost of a 4 month program<lb/>
756-2820<lb/>
RED OAK PLAZA<lb/>
264 ByPass<lb/>
WEDNESDAY IS NOW<lb/>
t<lb/>
Hum<lb/>
4<lb/>
t<lb/>
TACOS<lb/>
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Every Sunday Taco<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
is Now Moving to<lb/>
Wednesday.<lb/>
Located at $12 W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
(next to Tarheel Toyota)<lb/>
756-2072<lb/>
Come In and Enjoy!<lb/>
(Eaatd darmf<lb/>
RESTAURANT AND PIZZA<lb/>
129 Carolina East Mall<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
GRMD OPENING<lb/>
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IN GREENVILLE<lb/>
FEATURING<lb/>
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and A COMPLETE MEM<lb/>
OF ITALIAN FOODS<lb/>
including the best tasting<lb/>
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LASAGNA<lb/>
VEAL SC ALOPPINE<lb/>
SICILIAN PIZZA<lb/>
HOT AND COLD<lb/>
SANDWICHES<lb/>
SPAGHETTI<lb/>
take-out available 756-8704<lb/>
open at 11:00 a.m. dally<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
OPRY HOUSE<lb/>
THE FINEST ROCK-n-ROLL BAND<lb/>
VIRGINIA HAS TO OFFER<lb/>
SNUFF<lb/>
PIG-PICKIN AT 6:30 SO'<lb/>
BEVERAGES FROM 3-9<lb/>
LADIES ADMITTED TO<lb/>
PIG-PICKIN AND BAND FOR $1.00<lb/>
Coming Sun. Oct. 7�<lb/>
Johnny Paycheck, Mike Cross<lb/>
Detbert McCllnton, and Heatemonth'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057217_0014"/><lb/>
Page 14 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 25 September 1979<lb/>
Michelob beer can and<lb/>
ice chest saves lives<lb/>
v Michelob beer can<lb/>
and tiberglass ice chests<lb/>
saved the lives of two<lb/>
Florida men who were<lb/>
adrift for two days after<lb/>
tlicir fishing boat sank<lb/>
Sunda) off the Bahamas.<lb/>
'Yeah. Michelob<lb/>
37-year-old Robert C.<lb/>
Rice said Wednesday<lb/>
afternoon just before a<lb/>
checkup at the U.S.<lb/>
Public Health Service<lb/>
hospital.<lb/>
He and David Feder-<lb/>
ico, 20, both of the West<lb/>
Fuhn Beach area, used<lb/>
the beer can to reflect<lb/>
sun ra to signal the<lb/>
Japanese container ship<lb/>
Rokako, which docked at<lb/>
the Portsmouth Marine<lb/>
Terminals Wednesday.<lb/>
liies used the chests as<lb/>
life rafts.<lb/>
The Japanese are<lb/>
greatest people in the<lb/>
whole world said the<lb/>
badly sunburned Fed-<lb/>
erico.<lb/>
They stayed afloat for<lb/>
hours in 10-foot seas in<lb/>
the two heavy duty ice<lb/>
chests. Federico kept his<lb/>
bleeding, cut foot inside<lb/>
the chest so it would not<lb/>
attract sharks, he said.<lb/>
Federico, a self-em-<lb/>
ployed mechanic, and<lb/>
Rice, a carpet salesman,<lb/>
left West. Palm Beach in<lb/>
a 23-foot fiberglass boat<lb/>
about 7:30 a.m. Sunday.<lb/>
"We checked the wea-<lb/>
ther and the forecast<lb/>
sounded good Federico<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Bui after they had<lb/>
cruised eastward towards<lb/>
th<lb/>
rich Gulf Stream<lb/>
fishing grounds, they<lb/>
noticed water in the<lb/>
cabin area in the bow of<lb/>
the boat and the weather<lb/>
was getting rougher.<lb/>
The men stopped the<lb/>
boat and discovered a<lb/>
212-foot by V2-inch crack<lb/>
up forward near the bow.<lb/>
"We called for the<lb/>
Coast Guard and then we<lb/>
tried every channel on<lb/>
the' radio Federico<lb/>
said, but eventually,<lb/>
water short-circuited the<lb/>
radio and they had to<lb/>
abandon ship.<lb/>
Wearing life jackets,<lb/>
the men freed two heavy-<lb/>
duty ice chests to use as<lb/>
life boats, steadying them<lb/>
with bunk cushions.<lb/>
'Those Pompanette<lb/>
ice chests were great.<lb/>
They saved us. I've<lb/>
fished in that'area before<lb/>
and 1 remembered that<lb/>
one night I saw 75<lb/>
sharks. I didn't want to<lb/>
have nay foot in the water<lb/>
because it was bleeding<lb/>
from the cut Federico<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Rice said they saw<lb/>
one shark during their<lb/>
time in the water. "I<lb/>
turned away. I wanted to<lb/>
ignore it so I wouldn't<lb/>
think about it Federico<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Rice said the chests<lb/>
proved very seaworthy,<lb/>
especially with a sea<lb/>
anchor rigged up by<lb/>
lassoing a chair from the<lb/>
boat and tying it to the<lb/>
chests. The chair sank<lb/>
beneath the water and<lb/>
lightened the line so the<lb/>
ice chests pointed into<lb/>
the wind.<lb/>
"We could ride the<lb/>
waves better that way<lb/>
Rice said.<lb/>
We used a beer can<lb/>
to reflect the sun's<lb/>
rays Federico said of<lb/>
attracting the Rokako.<lb/>
Free beer,dope given<lb/>
away at party<lb/>
Bv L vRR POPELKA<lb/>
Bluio would be proud.<lb/>
hi fine Animal<lb/>
House" fashion the stu-<lb/>
- at the University ol<lb/>
 is oiisin in Madison<lb/>
. arried out Delta<lb/>
mut coveted<lb/>
I he roga Party.<lb/>
rO-G.v! TOGA! TO-<lb/>
Last sear the students<lb/>
Madison held what<lb/>
. eved to be the<lb/>
biggest loga partv ever,<lb/>
with 10.000 voga-clad<lb/>
in a huge circus<lb/>
.uunai House"<lb/>
asts till talk a-<lb/>
bout that nationally-pub-<lb/>
licized event as if it were<lb/>
one of the seven wonders<lb/>
ill the world.<lb/>
Bui now they have<lb/>
something new to talk<lb/>
about: TOGA 11.<lb/>
 e're going to have<lb/>
a loga parlv twice as big<lb/>
as last year's screamed<lb/>
V isconsin Student Asso-<lb/>
ciation President Jim<lb/>
Mallon when 1 called to<lb/>
jk about the event.<lb/>
" ou've never seen any-<lb/>
thing like it. We've got<lb/>
lour bands hundreds of<lb/>
barrels ol beer and it's<lb/>
going lo last eight<lb/>
hours<lb/>
Bread<lb/>
CO<lb/>
nlinued from page 11<lb/>
tond -ide is infinitely stronger, exposing the<lb/>
western influence upon folk music. In an inebriating<lb/>
nance, Hoyt Axton shows what a lovable<lb/>
in is with "Boney Fingers" and<lb/>
gelina both portraits of the working class. Dan<lb/>
k "I Got Mine" is pleasant, but the unique Irish<lb/>
ul Boys ol The Lough are among the strongest<lb/>
inances ol the albui.<lb/>
Perhaps the most powerful collation of<lb/>
.nuances in modern music is exhibited on side<lb/>
ol Bread and Roses. It begins with The<lb/>
Persuasions1 stirring vocal performance, a capella, of<lb/>
Just mother Night with the Boys This song is<lb/>
aled to the residents of correctional institutions,<lb/>
present via radio transmission of Bread and Roses<lb/>
Festival.<lb/>
Richie Havens, in a remarkable guitar performance,<lb/>
wields the most dynamic exhibition of music and lyrics<lb/>
on the album. The hries of "What About Me" reveal<lb/>
essence ol the Bread and Roses concept:<lb/>
"Well, 1 worked in your factories<lb/>
nd studied in your school<lb/>
nd 1 fill your penitentiaries<lb/>
uid your military too<lb/>
W ell, I feel just like a stranger<lb/>
In the land where I was born<lb/>
.nd I live just like an outlaw<lb/>
You've got me always on the run"<lb/>
Jackson Browne and David Lindley, the<lb/>
"glimmer-twins" of folk-rock, present the last<lb/>
attraction ol the festival. Browne is one of a second<lb/>
generation ol folk singers who have made a significant<lb/>
contribution lo the seventies. The entire Bread and<lb/>
Roses group is assembled on stage for a choral<lb/>
performance of "Just a Closer Walk with Thee and<lb/>
thus the album ends.<lb/>
lvo (actors fce supposedly characteristic of the<lb/>
Hfcj � a flight from social responsibility and an<lb/>
increasing dependence upon a tenuous technology. Is<lb/>
,i Lit up to ghosts from the sixties to break these<lb/>
trends of self-destruction, to shatter the "me-genera-<lb/>
lion Atypology, and bring about a neo-renaissance for<lb/>
ihe eighties? Perhaps it is true that others are not<lb/>
worthy of our concern, but to quote the song most<lb/>
symbolic of the concept behind Bread and Roses,<lb/>
"There but lor fortune, go you and I<lb/>
Between sets Varjian<lb/>
lot! his I mal event: a<lb/>
Dalai Lama look-alike<lb/>
contest.<lb/>
The Dalai Lama, a<lb/>
Tibetian spiritual leader<lb/>
who sports a toga every<lb/>
day, was scheduled to<lb/>
-peak in a building just<lb/>
one block away from the<lb/>
part) that same day. But<lb/>
universil) ollicials, tear-<lb/>
ing a disruption, moved<lb/>
the speech off campus.<lb/>
We're not saving<lb/>
we're better than God<lb/>
shouted Mallon into the<lb/>
microphone. "But they<lb/>
had lo move because ol<lb/>
this event<lb/>
Before the contest<lb/>
Barjian announced that<lb/>
since Dalai Lama is a<lb/>
really spiritual kind ol<lb/>
guv, you've got to get<lb/>
into the right frame of<lb/>
mind.<lb/>
"This is to help you<lb/>
he shouted, tossing the<lb/>
crowd about 20 plastic<lb/>
bags filled with mari-<lb/>
juana<lb/>
Meanwhile several<lb/>
contestants filed on stage<lb/>
lo show off their togas,<lb/>
give speeches and moon.<lb/>
One of the mooners<lb/>
had a giant "TOGA H"<lb/>
painted on his buttocks.<lb/>
The third place Dalai<lb/>
Lama was a puppet<lb/>
weariiig a toga. Second<lb/>
was a man with a pink<lb/>
tlamingo on his head,<lb/>
mil the winner was a tat<lb/>
guv who wore a plain<lb/>
white toga and received<lb/>
boisterous cheers.<lb/>
Back down on the<lb/>
street where the crows of<lb/>
about 15,000 students<lb/>
pushed and shoved to get<lb/>
closer lo the stage,<lb/>
people set off fireworks,<lb/>
climbed light poles and<lb/>
passed out.<lb/>
One of the losers was<lb/>
a student in a Richard<lb/>
.Nixon mask who raised a<lb/>
peace sign as the crowd<lb/>
chanted, Bull-shit!<lb/>
Bull-shit! Bull-shit<lb/>
He never mooned.<lb/>
The group in the<lb/>
gorilla heads � who did<lb/>
� won.<lb/>
The final band of the<lb/>
night, which played for<lb/>
more than 2Vfe hours,<lb/>
was an Animal House"<lb/>
clone called ihe Shakers.<lb/>
l'he played several re-<lb/>
frains ol "Louie, Louie<lb/>
"Shout" and "Twistin<lb/>
the Night Away" while<lb/>
toga-wearers danced in<lb/>
eircles with hands on<lb/>
each others hips through<lb/>
a maze of drunken<lb/>
bodies.<lb/>
One man wore a toga<lb/>
made of an American<lb/>
Hag. Another had a<lb/>
linloil loga. Two others<lb/>
wore helmets with flash-<lb/>
ing lights and carried a<lb/>
doll the) called Heidi.<lb/>
"We rescue oung togas<lb/>
in distress one said,<lb/>
blowing into Heidi's ear.<lb/>
Wanted:<lb/>
iFeature Writers<lb/>
Call 757-6366<lb/>
AL PATRICK<lb/>
PART<lb/>
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Looking for a part-time<lb/>
job with flexible hours<lb/>
and real business<lb/>
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Mutual Life Ins. Co.<lb/>
has openings for college<lb/>
igents. Call before noon<lb/>
Tor appointments!<lb/>
754-4080<lb/>
1<lb/>
- Uue<lb/>
OPTICIANS<lb/>
RESEARCH PAPERS<lb/>
10,260 on File � All Academic Subjects<lb/>
Send $1.00 for your up-to-date, 306-page mail order catalog<lb/>
ACADEMIC RESEARCH<lb/>
P.O. BOX 24873<lb/>
LOS ANGELES, CA 90024<lb/>
pjAME <lb/>
address<lb/>
fclTY<lb/>
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Soft Contact Lenses<lb/>
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FOR<lb/>
Double Barrel Productions<lb/>
Present<lb/>
Polydor Recording Artists<lb/>
Atlanta Rhythm Section<lb/>
JUNIOR<lb/>
CLASS<lb/>
PRESIDENT<lb/>
rora�;ft'Mi�.(biK,j<lb/>
with Special Guests<lb/>
Mothers Finest, Super Grit,<lb/>
&amp; Jesse Bolt Sun. Sept 30<lb/>
at the Hugo Outdoor Theatre<lb/>
20 min. south of Greenville<lb/>
$7 Limited Advance$9 all others<lb/>
Gates open at 11:00<lb/>
(no glass)<lb/>
tickets at Apple<lb/>
CHARLES<lb/>
BUTLER for<lb/>
FRESHMAN<lb/>
CLASS<lb/>
PRESIDENT<lb/>
A paid political advertisment<lb/>
Showing Monday &amp; Tuesday Oct. 1&amp;2<lb/>
Mendenhall 7:00 &amp; 9:00<lb/>
MUSIC BY THE BEATLES. JOHN DENVER RlTACOOLlDGE KANSA CTHEPS<lb/>
BLENDED WITH 2.000 VISUALS OF BREATH-TAKING PHOTOGRAPHY<lb/>
SHOWN ON 3 LARGE SCREENS FROM 14 COMPUTERIZED PROJECTORS<lb/>
A UNIQUE 75-MINUTE ENTERTAINMENT EXPERIENCE YOU WON T WANT TO MISS<lb/>
A PARAGON PRODUCTION PRESENTED THROUGH CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST<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/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
presents<lb/>
GENE<lb/>
COTTON<lb/>
Tonight!<lb/>
8pm<lb/>
Wright And.<lb/>
$1.50 Students<lb/>
$300 at the door<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
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