<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057220_0001"/>
"Were it left to me to decide<lb/>
whether we should hsve s<lb/>
government without news-<lb/>
papers or newspapers without<lb/>
government, I should not<lb/>
hesitate a moment to prefer<lb/>
the latter<lb/>
-Thomas Jefferson<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
If you neve a story idee, a tip<lb/>
or a leed please telephone us:<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
757-6367<lb/>
757-6309<lb/>
Vol. 54 No.<lb/>
10 Pages today<lb/>
Thursday, October 4, 1979<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Stop sign down<lb/>
Accident reported<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
ews Editor<lb/>
The removal of a Stop<lb/>
sign was apparently the<lb/>
cause of a two car collision<lb/>
at the corner of Ninth and<lb/>
stop sign, though it is being<lb/>
investigated by the Green-<lb/>
ville Police Department.<lb/>
Barrus Construction<lb/>
Company had been working<lb/>
on the parking lot nearby<lb/>
earlier that day.<lb/>
Snack bar<lb/>
successful<lb/>
By BRENDA VINSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The new soda shop<lb/>
adjoining the Student Sup-<lb/>
ply Store has been extreme-<lb/>
ly successful so far, ac-<lb/>
cording to Joseph 0. Clark,<lb/>
manager of the Student<lb/>
Supply Store.<lb/>
The shop, which opened<lb/>
at the beginning of this<lb/>
ear, is actually not new.<lb/>
Three years ago a soda<lb/>
shop was located in the<lb/>
basement of Wright Audi-<lb/>
torium. It closed when the<lb/>
book store was remodeled<lb/>
and took away some of the<lb/>
area occupied by the soda<lb/>
shop. Clark said the shop is<lb/>
a renovation, not an ad-<lb/>
dition.<lb/>
Some students feel the<lb/>
- ia shop is at a more<lb/>
ivenient location than the<lb/>
Cretan. Others say that it is<lb/>
ss crowded. Some student<lb/>
Nfnments were as follows:<lb/>
Barbara Anderson ?<lb/>
"I'm very pleased with the<lb/>
new soda shop. It has lots<lb/>
of room and is centrally<lb/>
located. The addition of<lb/>
-alads to the choices<lb/>
available was a good idea<lb/>
Chris Herrmann ? "It's<lb/>
OK. I would rather it be set<lb/>
up like it used to be before<lb/>
they shut it down<lb/>
Renee McCulIen ? "It's<lb/>
really nice. It's more<lb/>
convenient and less crowded<lb/>
than the Croatan. I've used<lb/>
it more<lb/>
Ulysses Taylor ? "It's<lb/>
convenient for students,<lb/>
since all the classes are in<lb/>
the same general area.<lb/>
There is also a variety of<lb/>
items<lb/>
According to Clark, the<lb/>
Croatan is still profiting<lb/>
from the renovation, he<lb/>
said that a lot of people did<lb/>
not have time to go to the<lb/>
Croatan between classes<lb/>
because of the crowds and<lb/>
the location. Now students<lb/>
on either side of campus are<lb/>
served.<lb/>
Plans are being made to<lb/>
decorate the soda shop.<lb/>
Some art work will be<lb/>
provided by the School of<lb/>
Art, and plants will be<lb/>
placed in some areas.<lb/>
Clark said he is pleased<lb/>
with the response of the<lb/>
students, faculty and staff<lb/>
to the renovated facility.<lb/>
The accident occured<lb/>
about 7:30 p.m. on Sept.<lb/>
28.<lb/>
Diana Holyfielda N.C.<lb/>
State student, was driving<lb/>
south on Cotanche when<lb/>
she drove through the<lb/>
intersection at Ninth Street.<lb/>
Her passenger, Cindy<lb/>
Caveness, an ECU student,<lb/>
reportedly shouted, "D?<lb/>
that was a Stop sign you<lb/>
just drove through be-<lb/>
lieving that the stop sign<lb/>
was up.<lb/>
About the same time the<lb/>
vehicle was struck by the<lb/>
vehicle driven by Douglas<lb/>
Rodman of Washington,<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
When the 'officer who<lb/>
investigated the accident<lb/>
asked Holyfield why she<lb/>
had failed to see the stop<lb/>
sign, Holyfield pointed out<lb/>
that there was no sign up at<lb/>
the intersection.<lb/>
The officer, W.R.<lb/>
Robertson, then went to the<lb/>
place the sign had stood<lb/>
and found it on the ground.<lb/>
Robertson immediately<lb/>
ordered the sign to be<lb/>
replaced.<lb/>
Cause<lb/>
Robertson felt the sign<lb/>
being down was the primary<lb/>
cause of the accident.<lb/>
Another accident had<lb/>
occured only moments be-<lb/>
fore, when a person on a<lb/>
bicycle was struck by a car,<lb/>
at the same intersection. It<lb/>
is believed that the sign<lb/>
being down could hive been<lb/>
the contributing factor in<lb/>
this accident also.<lb/>
Officer Robertson<lb/>
pointed out that if Green-<lb/>
Only man running<lb/>
Mayoral candidate<lb/>
Bv BRENDA VINSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The only man running for Greenville<lb/>
mavor, Donald C. McGlohon, believes<lb/>
Greenville citizens need to fully understand<lb/>
that government exists to serve them.<lb/>
(There are also two women in the mayoral<lb/>
race: Mrs. Elizabeth Savage and Mildred<lb/>
McGrath.)<lb/>
McGlohon emphasizes that helpful<lb/>
government services may be provided only if<lb/>
people are willing to pay the price for such<lb/>
services.<lb/>
On traffic and transportation, McGlohon<lb/>
feels that Greenville needs a new transit<lb/>
system. He suggests the possibility of<lb/>
coordinating the Greenville Area Transit<lb/>
(GREAT) and the ECU bus services.<lb/>
McGlohon is also concerned with the Blue<lb/>
Law issue.<lb/>
"Blue Laws deal with moral and social<lb/>
issues which create special problems in<lb/>
legislation and enforcement the candidate<lb/>
ville residents or ECU<lb/>
students had been involved,<lb/>
they probably would have<lb/>
known to stop at the<lb/>
intersection. Since those<lb/>
involved were from out of<lb/>
town, they were unaware of<lb/>
the danger.<lb/>
Damage<lb/>
Damage to Rodman's<lb/>
car was estimated at $550.<lb/>
The accident resulted in<lb/>
approximately $1800 worth<lb/>
of damage to the Holyfield<lb/>
vehicle.<lb/>
Upon impact, Holyfield's<lb/>
car skidded some 60 feet<lb/>
while Rodman's vehicle slid<lb/>
about 20 feet.<lb/>
No one was seriously<lb/>
injured in the accident and<lb/>
no charges were filed.<lb/>
A downed stop sign at 9th Street and Cotanche resulted in<lb/>
an accident Friday.<lb/>
Parking violations<lb/>
strongly enforced<lb/>
Donald C. McGlohon<lb/>
said. "This matter must eventually be<lb/>
resolved by the wishes of the majority of our<lb/>
citizens he added.<lb/>
McGlohon, a native of Greenville, feels<lb/>
the city faces an exciting future.<lb/>
"Growth is inevitable, and comprehen-<lb/>
sive planning is an absolute necessity said<lb/>
McGlohon. "We must use all the resources<lb/>
available to establish written long-range<lb/>
plans to provide services needed for the<lb/>
community<lb/>
On the subject of recreation, McGlohon<lb/>
said that recreation has been and will<lb/>
continue to be an important factor in the<lb/>
quality of life we all enjoy.<lb/>
"If recreation facilities are to be used on<lb/>
a nondiscriminatory basis by all Pitt<lb/>
Countians, funding should come from both<lb/>
the city and county<lb/>
McGlohon described himself as a<lb/>
professed optimist and flag-waver. He firmly<lb/>
believes that the attitudes of the citizenry<lb/>
will eventually cause answers to be found in<lb/>
areas such as inflation, energy conservation<lb/>
methods and full employment.<lb/>
McGlohon is actively interested in both<lb/>
city and county schools because he graduated<lb/>
from a county school (Winterville High<lb/>
School), and his youngest child will graduate<lb/>
from a city school next spring. His oldest<lb/>
daughter, Keila, is a junior in accounting at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
McGlohon enrolled at East Carolina<lb/>
Teacher's College in 1950 and graduated in<lb/>
1954 with a bachelor's degree in business<lb/>
education.<lb/>
While at ECU, McGlohon was president<lb/>
of the Circle K Club and Pi Omega Pi<lb/>
honorary business fraternity. He was in the<lb/>
Air Force ROTC. After serving three years as<lb/>
a pilot in the Air Force, McGlohon went to<lb/>
work for Allstate Insurance Agency. In 1963,<lb/>
he joined a partnership in operating the<lb/>
Hines Insurance Agency in Greenville. His<lb/>
partner retired 10 years ago making<lb/>
McGlohon the sole owner of the independent<lb/>
insurance agency for the last several years.<lb/>
McGlohon has been involved in several<lb/>
fund raising projects and worked for the<lb/>
United Fund, the Heart Association, Red<lb/>
Cross and the Boy's Club. He has been<lb/>
active in the Greenville Chamber of<lb/>
Commerce serving as treasurer for two<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Presently, McGlohon is president of the<lb/>
Rose-Aycock Athletic Foundation and chair-<lb/>
man of the finance committee at Immanuel<lb/>
Baptist Church where he is a member.<lb/>
By TERRY GRAY<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Due to an ever-increas-<lb/>
ing parking problem at<lb/>
ECU, campus traffic officers<lb/>
are paying closer attention<lb/>
to improperly parked and<lb/>
unregistered vehicles in the<lb/>
days ahead.<lb/>
According to Joseph H.<lb/>
Calder, director of security<lb/>
and traffic, as many as 60<lb/>
to 70 parking tickets are<lb/>
being issued daily to<lb/>
unregistered vehicles. The<lb/>
majority of these vehicles<lb/>
are student owned or<lb/>
operated, Calder said.<lb/>
In a reminder to stu-<lb/>
dents, faculty and staff,<lb/>
Calder has repeated that<lb/>
only those vehicles regis-<lb/>
tered with the Traffic and<lb/>
Security Office are author-<lb/>
ized to park in designated<lb/>
areas on campus. He also<lb/>
said that if violations<lb/>
continue at the present rate,<lb/>
regulations provided for the<lb/>
towing of offending vehicles<lb/>
will be more stringently<lb/>
enforced.<lb/>
ECU campus regulations<lb/>
state that any vehicle<lb/>
accumulating more than<lb/>
three unpaid parking tickets<lb/>
may be towed.<lb/>
"In excess of three<lb/>
parking tickets, the towing<lb/>
policy will be enforced<lb/>
Calder said in an ECU<lb/>
News Bureau release.<lb/>
Campus officials added<lb/>
that the towing policy would<lb/>
only be resorted to as an<lb/>
ultimate measure and only<lb/>
after recommendation from<lb/>
appropriate university<lb/>
authorities.<lb/>
However, Vice Chancel-<lb/>
lor for Student Life Dr.<lb/>
Elmer E. Meyer said in the<lb/>
news release that further<lb/>
deterrent action may be<lb/>
taken.<lb/>
"It may be that we will<lb/>
have no choice but to turn<lb/>
over to the associate dean<lb/>
for students the names of<lb/>
those students who fail to<lb/>
comply with the university's<lb/>
regulations, for judicial<lb/>
action Meyer said.<lb/>
Also, students who d<lb/>
not pay parking ticketc or<lb/>
have a history of repealed<lb/>
violations may be barred<lb/>
from re-registering.<lb/>
Calder said that ho<lb/>
areas on campus with<lb/>
"critical" parking prlems<lb/>
will be more closely<lb/>
watched for offender<lb/>
Apathy is<lb/>
statewide<lb/>
By MARC BARNES<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
Student apathy on campuses across the UNC system is<lb/>
at an all time high, according to three student editors who<lb/>
were polled by telephone Monday afternoon.<lb/>
The three editors who were polled included John<lb/>
Flesher, editor of the North Carolina State University<lb/>
student newspaper, The Technician; Tay Criscoe, editor of<lb/>
the Appalachian State University student newspaper, The<lb/>
Appalachian; and J. Kraemer, editor of the University of<lb/>
North Carolina at Greensboro student newspaper. The<lb/>
Carolinian.<lb/>
"As far as our paper is concerned, apathy is a big<lb/>
problem Flesher said. "There are shortages of reporters<lb/>
in every department, and we also have a shortage of<lb/>
production workers<lb/>
"A lot of our department heads have to do a lot of their<lb/>
own writing Flesher continued, "when they really<lb/>
shouldn't have to<lb/>
Because of the shortage of good workers, and because<lb/>
the staff is concerned with putting out a quality product.<lb/>
The Technician has problems coming out on time.<lb/>
according to Flesher.<lb/>
The problem of apathy among students at large is also<lb/>
a problem at Appalachian State University, but the editor<lb/>
there says that this year is better than last year.<lb/>
"I know it's bad everywhere Criscoe said. "I really<lb/>
feel like it's better this year than last year, though<lb/>
Criscoe said he has sensed a "renewed spirit" at<lb/>
Appalachian. "It seems like it's a younger year because<lb/>
there are a lot of new people here this year<lb/>
"There is a lot of apathy here toward the SGA<lb/>
Criscoe said. "There is also tons of friction between the<lb/>
paper and the SGA, but I think it is mostly clashing<lb/>
personalities<lb/>
"I have been nice, and I have tried to get along with<lb/>
them Criscoe said. He added that it seemed that<lb/>
sometimes the only people who cared about what was<lb/>
going on in student government were the newspaper staff<lb/>
and student leaders.<lb/>
Criscoe said that academics were stressed at the<lb/>
newspaper but admitted that at least with him, his stud<lb/>
had become secondary. "It probably shouldn't be that<lb/>
way he said.<lb/>
J. Kraemer, editor of The Carolinian at the University<lb/>
of North Carolina at Greensboro wrote an editorial recently<lb/>
pleading for help from the student body in the form oi<lb/>
labor for the newspaper staff.<lb/>
"We have received some help since the editorial tan<lb/>
Kraemer said. "We had lost three key positions, plu<lb/>
equipment was breaking down<lb/>
"Our main problem is student apathy Kraemer said.<lb/>
"We do not have a journalism department, and students<lb/>
here have no interest in having bylined articles in the<lb/>
paper<lb/>
rnbject at meeting<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
After heated discussion<lb/>
concerning the SGA news-<lb/>
letter, the Media Board<lb/>
decided that it had "no<lb/>
jurisdiction over any publi-<lb/>
cation not directly funded<lb/>
by the Media Board<lb/>
This decision came<lb/>
about after the newsletter<lb/>
was brought up at the<lb/>
meeting by SGA president<lb/>
Brett Melvin.<lb/>
Police report<lb/>
By ARAH VENABLE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In September, six dorm rooms were burglarized and<lb/>
seven vehicles were robbed in the Freshman parking lot,<lb/>
according to Lt. Johnny Rose of the campus police.<lb/>
The rooms that were burglarized were in Clement<lb/>
(twice), Ay cock (twice), Scott and Jones. Rose said that<lb/>
miscellaneous articles such as money, wallets and jewelry<lb/>
were reported missing. In one case, a television was<lb/>
reported stolen.<lb/>
Cars in the Freshman parking lots were reportedly<lb/>
robbed of various items, such as tape players and<lb/>
speakers.<lb/>
Linwood Higgins, police investigator, said students<lb/>
should realize the importance of locking doors even if<lb/>
stepping out only for a second. He stressed the need of<lb/>
reporting a crime immediately so that the police can begin<lb/>
investigating.<lb/>
Ten sets of wheel covers were also stolen from the<lb/>
freshman parking lot last month, according to Rose, along f<lb/>
with three batteries which were taken from cars parked at<lb/>
Third and Reade Street lots. An alternator was also stolen<lb/>
from the dirt parking lot south of the library.<lb/>
The campus police can engrave a license number on<lb/>
wheel covers if a student brings the car by. Higgins said<lb/>
most of the wheel covers that were stolen were expensive<lb/>
ones.<lb/>
He added that engraving helps in recovering the covers<lb/>
if stolen.<lb/>
On September 23 three students were arrested for<lb/>
possession of stolen property. An officer reportedly<lb/>
observed them taking down a traffic sign near the men's<lb/>
dorms. They also reportedly possessed several signs from<lb/>
the city of Greenville.<lb/>
A non-student was arrested for breaking into two cars<lb/>
behind the library on September 14.<lb/>
The ECU testing center was also burglarized recently,<lb/>
with an estimated $56 missing from the cashbox. The case<lb/>
is still under investigation.<lb/>
The question had been<lb/>
raised as to whether the<lb/>
Media Board, as "publisher<lb/>
of all student-sponsored<lb/>
Board members ques-<lb/>
tioned the content of the<lb/>
newsletter as well as the<lb/>
budgeting and inquired as<lb/>
to how it would be<lb/>
published.<lb/>
When asked how much<lb/>
of the SGA budget would be<lb/>
used to fund the newsletter,<lb/>
Brett Melvin replied, "Let's<lb/>
say 10 percent<lb/>
publications" at ECU was<lb/>
responsible for the news-<lb/>
letter.<lb/>
According to the board's<lb/>
constitution, "All student<lb/>
publications funded from<lb/>
the student activity fee (not ,<lb/>
to include Student Union<lb/>
publications, the Photo Lab,<lb/>
and Radio Station WECU)<lb/>
shall be administered by the<lb/>
board<lb/>
Vice Chancellor of Stu-<lb/>
dent Life Elmer E. Meyer<lb/>
said, "I think you're raising<lb/>
sort of a red flag<lb/>
"We will not lower<lb/>
ourselves into the gutter<lb/>
Melvin later commented.<lb/>
Melvin stated that the<lb/>
newsletter would be pri-<lb/>
marily used to announce<lb/>
what had been happening in<lb/>
the various subcommittees<lb/>
of the SGA and at the<lb/>
legislature meetings.<lb/>
The use of non-student<lb/>
employees on Media Board<lb/>
publications was also a topic<lb/>
of debate at the meetings.<lb/>
Melvin proposed that all<lb/>
publications be forbidden to<lb/>
hire anyone who was not a<lb/>
student for any position.<lb/>
"I think that if students<lb/>
are going to put it (a<lb/>
publication) out, then stu-<lb/>
dents ought to learn from<lb/>
it said Melvin.<lb/>
Meyer proposed an<lb/>
amendment that people<lb/>
could not be hired without<lb/>
approval by the Media<lb/>
Board. The final proposal<lb/>
was passed by acclamation.<lb/>
It reads, "No media shall<lb/>
hire non-students other than<lb/>
salaried employees  with-<lb/>
out approval of the Media<lb/>
Board<lb/>
The legal fees subcom-<lb/>
mittee passed a proposal<lb/>
concerning payment of legal<lb/>
fees for employees, a topic<lb/>
of concern at last week-<lb/>
meeting. The Media Board<lb/>
decided that it will not he<lb/>
responsible for any legal<lb/>
bills unless the board has<lb/>
approved advice irom<lb/>
counsel beforehand.<lb/>
Jim Dale, internal<lb/>
auditor, reported that all of<lb/>
the equipment thought<lb/>
missing from the Photo Lab<lb/>
inventory that was taken<lb/>
during the summer has<lb/>
been accounted for. Ap-<lb/>
parently, a cabinet had<lb/>
been counted twice on a<lb/>
previous inventory when<lb/>
there was only one in the<lb/>
lab.<lb/>
The board also deter-<lb/>
mined that the proposed<lb/>
survey concerning student<lb/>
feeling about the Media<lb/>
Board would have to be put<lb/>
off. The students to take the<lb/>
survey will be unable to do<lb/>
so until next semester.<lb/>
As many as 60 to<lb/>
70 parking tickets are being issued daily on campus, according to<lb/>
security and traffic director Joseph Calder.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057220_0002"/><lb/>
Page 2 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 4 October 1979<lb/>
Student learns<lb/>
a<lb/>
B KENNETH rYNDALL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
-I senior recentl)<lb/>
trm France after<lb/>
in the iu pair"<lb/>
51 iver, a 21 year-<lb/>
 ilmington, spent<lb/>
a suburb<lb/>
with ami<lb/>
Ms. Shaver worked for<lb/>
the famil) five hours a day,<lb/>
mostl) baby-sitting. Her<lb/>
"family1 pro ided free<lb/>
meals, and Ms. Shaver also<lb/>
earned a salary.<lb/>
Some families involved<lb/>
m the program would take<lb/>
advantage ol their boarders,<lb/>
making virtual maids of<lb/>
them, according to Ms.<lb/>
Shaver. Fortunately, this<lb/>
was not the rase with her.<lb/>
Ms. Shaver's duties in-<lb/>
I taking the three irls<lb/>
in the lamih to school and<lb/>
tg light housework.<lb/>
vl hen cu gn over<lb/>
vou tan always<lb/>
amities (if problems<lb/>
M Sha er said.<lb/>
classified<lb/>
R RENT: Private room<lb/>
? ?nu-priv ate bath close<lb/>
Phone<lb/>
in.<lb/>
752-4006<lb/>
<lb/>
HKW KP- Offered tor re<lb/>
light blue cover<lb/>
? ? i Saturday night<lb/>
m white Corvette beside<lb/>
rm. It will not tit<lb/>
please return it.<lb/>
tions asked. Tripp<lb/>
Murrav 311-A Brlk. 752-<lb/>
wnr J$<lb/>
RT-TIME SM.KS PKR<lb/>
SON in Retail Sale tor<lb/>
.? - X earlv afternoon<lb/>
K ' I.Miire ol Colt.<lb/>
$  . ?? ferred. ('all<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
PAPER fYPED<lb/>
term<lb/>
a<lb/>
iontb<lb/>
Leigh<lb/>
Rea-<lb/>
B SITTER need<lb/>
rransportation<lb/>
after<lb/>
- ULING RACING C.RF.W<lb/>
wanted. Local Pamilco ra-<lb/>
'o pay. Ti mv 7;2-<lb/>
pair<lb/>
?<lb/>
One thing that im-<lb/>
pressed Ms. Shaver about<lb/>
France was television.<lb/>
"When you first see it,<lb/>
you think, 'this is terrible<lb/>
but when you come back,<lb/>
you realize that it was more<lb/>
intelligently done over<lb/>
there<lb/>
Ms. Shaver pointed out<lb/>
that Paris social life is<lb/>
different from ours also.<lb/>
"It's expensive over<lb/>
there and it's more low<lb/>
key There are bars, but<lb/>
you just go there with<lb/>
friends. 1 don't think people<lb/>
go to tick up other people1<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
Shaver noticed that there<lb/>
art' a lot of foreign movies<lb/>
shown in Paris: Italian,<lb/>
American, etc.<lb/>
"On TV there's a lot of<lb/>
American movies, a lot of<lb/>
westerns. Everyone knows<lb/>
John Wayne over there<lb/>
Not only are American<lb/>
westerns big in France,<lb/>
American music is also<lb/>
popular according to Ms.<lb/>
Shaver.<lb/>
'They have a lot of<lb/>
French singers who sing in<lb/>
English. It's basically the<lb/>
same thing you hear here<lb/>
except vou don't hear much<lb/>
(hard) rock. Disco is real<lb/>
popular. More than rock,<lb/>
there was a lot of New<lb/>
W ave. I saw more New<lb/>
Wave than rock bands<lb/>
Ms. Shaver feeds she<lb/>
learned more about people<lb/>
while living in France and<lb/>
wants to return in the<lb/>
iuture.<lb/>
"I'd definitely like to go<lb/>
back after two years r so.<lb/>
and I would like to live<lb/>
there ? maybe<lb/>
Joan would like to<lb/>
emphasize that the "au<lb/>
pair" program is a good<lb/>
way for someone who<lb/>
doesn't have much money<lb/>
to be able to see another<lb/>
country. Anyone who would<lb/>
like more information should<lb/>
contact either the Foreign<lb/>
Language Department or<lb/>
Miss Grace Ellenberg in<lb/>
Brewster ALL<lb/>
BEACH MUSIC FESTIVAL<lb/>
vC Beach ty<lb/>
RESEARCH PAPERS<lb/>
10,250 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/>
r<lb/>
MAME<lb/>
I<lb/>
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Tickets $8 00 advance<lb/>
$10.00 gate<lb/>
CONTACT:<lb/>
Being<lb/>
Held<lb/>
At<lb/>
Emerald Isie. N C<lb/>
OUTDOOR STAGE<lb/>
?city<lb/>
I<lb/>
ISTATE<lb/>
I<lb/>
ZIP<lb/>
OCTOBER 7-11 a.m. - 7 p.m.<lb/>
Rain or Shine<lb/>
Make Your Reservations Early ? 919-326-3010<lb/>
on<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
requi<lb/>
ier 5a<lb/>
' these advertised items is reouired to be<lb/>
vailable for sale in each Kroger Sav-on Store<lb/>
ly noteo in ims aa. it we do run<lb/>
t 6 nn advertised item, we will offer you vour<lb/>
pp't as specificallv noted In this ad<lb/>
?rtisec<lb/>
ice of a comparable item, when available reflect<lb/>
FOOD.DRUG GENERAL<lb/>
MERCHANDISE STORES<lb/>
same savings or a raincheck which will en-<lb/>
. u to purchase the advertised item at the<lb/>
pel price within 30 days<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE TUES<lb/>
OCT. 2 THRU SUN OCT. 7, 1979<lb/>
Records and<lb/>
TaLes<lb/>
 Everyday I<lb/>
Magazines and<lb/>
Paperback<lb/>
Books<lb/>
from snacks to paperbacks to back packs<lb/>
Kroqef Sav-on has what East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
 students need this year Shop Kroger<lb/>
-?v on today<lb/>
-Beer &amp; Wine<lb/>
REG. OR DIP<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
FIRE BREWED<lb/>
Stroh's<lb/>
Beer <lb/>
6<lb/>
12 oz.<lb/>
cans<lb/>
$199<lb/>
1<lb/>
COUNTRY CLUB<lb/>
HEARTY BURGUNDY. PINK CHABLIS.<lb/>
ROSE, CHABLIS BLANC OR<lb/>
Gaiio<lb/>
Rhine b,j .<lb/>
1.5 Liter<lb/>
$288<lb/>
1.5 LITER CROCK<lb/>
Beameister $99<lb/>
Leibfraumilch<lb/>
$4<lb/>
STOP BY FOR A GREAT MEAL<lb/>
IN THE KROGER SAV-ON RESTAURANT<lb/>
BREAKFAST . . . LUNCH OR DINNER!<lb/>
Carefully prepared salads, sandwiches a<lb/>
dishes including fried chicken and bar-<lb/>
becued ribs, plus a pleasing va<lb/>
relishes, spreads and desserts Choose<lb/>
from more than 14 Kinds of party tra.<lb/>
every need and budget An uncommon .<lb/>
wide array of lunch meats and importer<lb/>
domestic cheeses, many custom-siicec I<lb/>
your order Great variety and superb<lb/>
quality-yet priced lower than you mil<lb/>
expect<lb/>
THAT'S KROGER<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
FOR YOU!<lb/>
NONE SOLD<lb/>
LERS<lb/>
OPEN 7 AM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
MON.<lb/>
THRU<lb/>
SAT<lb/>
mmt'oTpm m Greenville BlvdGreenville<lb/>
9 AM TO 9 PM Phone 756-7031<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057220_0003"/><lb/>
4 October 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Page 3<lb/>
Pecple places, arid ???<lb/>
yaid?ale<lb/>
invited to a<lb/>
yard extrava-<lb/>
Kit I<lb/>
ccnmuiJcn sin i<lb/>
Rebel is now<lb/>
- I'tmg high-quality liter-<lb/>
submissions. Poetrv,<lb/>
ays, plays and inter-<lb/>
iV s, short stories will<lb/>
(I Ml work must<lb/>
me, address, and<lb/>
number o writer.<lb/>
nanuscripts to The<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
eenville, N.C.<lb/>
? H?<lb/>
East Carolina Gay<lb/>
it) will hold its<lb/>
g tonight at<lb/>
House, at 608<lb/>
51 We will have a<lb/>
I heese party and<lb/>
discussion.<lb/>
g your choice of<lb/>
ptr more infor-<lb/>
758-9286 be-<lb/>
td 10:00 a.m.<lb/>
A service of Holy<lb/>
Communion will be con-<lb/>
ducted at the Methodist<lb/>
Center Wednesday, Oct.<lb/>
3rd. The service will be<lb/>
celebrated by the Rev. Bill<lb/>
Hadden, Episcopal Chaplain<lb/>
of ECU. The service will<lb/>
begin at 5:30 with supper<lb/>
following. Cost of the<lb/>
supper is $1.50.<lb/>
Bible Study will be<lb/>
conducted at 1003 West<lb/>
Fifth St. at 7:00 p.m. The<lb/>
Eucharist and Bible Study<lb/>
are open to all students<lb/>
interested.<lb/>
 II<lb/>
The Sierra Club will hold<lb/>
a get-acquainted meeting on<lb/>
Monday night, October 8, at<lb/>
8:00 p.m at the First<lb/>
Presbyterian Church in<lb/>
Greenville. The informal<lb/>
program will feature slides<lb/>
and information about local<lb/>
spots to hike or canoe in.<lb/>
Students are welcome to<lb/>
attend the meeting and to<lb/>
participate in outings, even<lb/>
it they are not Sierra Club<lb/>
members. The First Pres-<lb/>
byterian Church is located<lb/>
near campus at the corner<lb/>
of Elm St. and 14th St.<lb/>
t,il I III I<lb/>
basketball<lb/>
Anyone interested in<lb/>
trying out for men's basket-<lb/>
ball must register in the<lb/>
basketball office by Wed-<lb/>
nesday, Oct. 10, 1979.<lb/>
Physical, prelimimaries, etc.<lb/>
must be completed prior to<lb/>
practice which begins Oct.<lb/>
15th.<lb/>
mu?ic<lb/>
ii i 1<lb/>
F ight, a service<lb/>
sponsored by<lb/>
Force Reserve<lb/>
lining Program<lb/>
holding rush<lb/>
on Oct.<lb/>
t Munchies will<lb/>
the first two<lb/>
nd dinner will be<lb/>
ts1 night.<lb/>
-n ith the service<lb/>
he organization is j<lb/>
si le oi fun. Every-<lb/>
to come find<lb/>
sides. Rush<lb/>
1 in the ROTC<lb/>
upstairs in the<lb/>
l, besidp the<lb/>
re. Conic find<lb/>
??? are.<lb/>
II III I ll<lb/>
 right<lb/>
an Cultural<lb/>
pen daily from 9<lb/>
Mnday thru<lb/>
itions wishing to<lb/>
 t-iUer during<lb/>
? weekends<lb/>
ii I the director of<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
enter.<lb/>
Recreate at the ECU<lb/>
Parks, Recreation and Con-<lb/>
servation Society meeting<lb/>
on Tues. Oct. 2 at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
in the PRC building on<lb/>
campus. Find out what's<lb/>
going on. Refreshments will<lb/>
be served.<lb/>
The collegiate 4-H club<lb/>
will meet Monday, Oct. 8 in<lb/>
the 6th floor social room of<lb/>
Greene Dorm at 8:30 p.m.<lb/>
Any person with 4-H<lb/>
background or interested in<lb/>
helping others in this<lb/>
community are welcomed to<lb/>
attend. For more infor-<lb/>
mation, please call 758-8826<lb/>
or 752-9820.<lb/>
it c 11 hiIi ri<lb/>
There will be a meeting<lb/>
of the RHO EPS1LON Real<lb/>
Estate Fraternity Thursday,<lb/>
Oct. 4th. at' 4:00 in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
(room 221). There will be a<lb/>
guest speaker and all<lb/>
interest persons as well as<lb/>
old and new members are<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
ECU Air<lb/>
corps will be<lb/>
Force<lb/>
spon-<lb/>
Blood<lb/>
10<lb/>
at<lb/>
The<lb/>
ROTC<lb/>
soring it's annual<lb/>
Drive October 9 and<lb/>
Wright Auditorium between<lb/>
10 a.m. and 4 p.m. This<lb/>
year's goal has been set at<lb/>
750 pints. Be a Donor. Give<lb/>
Blood, Save a Life.<lb/>
Teresa Watkins, a stu-<lb/>
dent of Dr. Everett Pittman,<lb/>
will perform Friday, Oct. 5,<lb/>
at 8:15 p.m. in the Fletcher<lb/>
Recital Hall.<lb/>
A candidate for the<lb/>
Bachelor of Music degree in<lb/>
piano performance, Ms.<lb/>
Watkins has been active as<lb/>
a rehearsal accompanist for<lb/>
many ECU musical pro-<lb/>
ductions.<lb/>
The recital is free and<lb/>
open to the public.<lb/>
You are<lb/>
gargantuan<lb/>
ganza by the ECU Navi-<lb/>
gators. Valuable items of all<lb/>
descriptions will be offered<lb/>
for sale. Housewares, fur-<lb/>
nishings, clothing, and pot-<lb/>
pourri will entrance your<lb/>
fancy. Delicate dainties<lb/>
from local ovens will tempt<lb/>
your taste buds. Be there<lb/>
early Sat. Oct. 6, 201<lb/>
Summit St from 8:30 until<lb/>
sell-out.<lb/>
I II <lb/>
Does your ride embar-<lb/>
rass you? When you pick up<lb/>
your date, does she bring<lb/>
her own dust pan? Has your<lb/>
car been mistaken lately for<lb/>
the Gobi Desert? The ECU<lb/>
Navigators have a solution<lb/>
to your problem. Saturday<lb/>
Oct. 6 at Hooker Memorial<lb/>
Christian Church at car<lb/>
wash and was will be held.<lb/>
Come by (corner of Elm St.<lb/>
and 264 By-pass) or call<lb/>
758-0077 for an appoint-<lb/>
ment. Pickup and deliver)<lb/>
service will be provided.<lb/>
The dust will begin to fly at<lb/>
8:30.<lb/>
Ill I ll<lb/>
The Friends of East<lb/>
Carolina University Library<lb/>
are having a book sale in<lb/>
the lobby of Joyner Library<lb/>
on Wed Oct. 10 and<lb/>
Thurs Oct. 11.<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
Buy One<lb/>
Sanainiich<lb/>
One Free!<lb/>
Right now, when<lb/>
you buy an Arby's Roast Beet Sandwich,<lb/>
you'll get a second one Free!<lb/>
ARBY'S IN GREENVILLE<lb/>
E. 3REENVILLE BLVD.<lb/>
IN GREENVILLE SQUARE<lb/>
LIMIT ONE PER CUSTOMER PLEASE!<lb/>
WITH THIS COUPON<lb/>
BUY<lb/>
ONE<lb/>
ARBY'S ROAST<lb/>
BEEF SANDWICH<lb/>
GET ONE<lb/>
FREE!<lb/>
OFFER EXPIRES<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I OCTOBER 20, 19791<lb/>
if<lb/>
if<lb/>
if-<lb/>
<lb/>
rufcci<lb/>
iilisH<lb/>
Concerned about the<lb/>
proliferation of Nuclear<lb/>
power plants and Nuclear<lb/>
weapons? Beginning Thurs-<lb/>
day, Oct. 4 at 8 p.m a<lb/>
study group on alternatives<lb/>
to nuclear power and<lb/>
nuclear disarmament will be<lb/>
led by Reverend Anderson<lb/>
at the Methodist Student<lb/>
Center. Faculty and stu-<lb/>
dents who are concerned<lb/>
about these issues are<lb/>
encouraged to come. Call<lb/>
the MSC if you are<lb/>
interested ? 758-2030.<lb/>
Start preparing art work<lb/>
for The Rebel. It has been<lb/>
confirmed that there will be<lb/>
prize money awarded again<lb/>
this year thanks to The<lb/>
Attic and Jeffrey's Beer and<lb/>
Wine for Budweiser. Cate-<lb/>
gories include painting,<lb/>
drawing, printmaking, pho-<lb/>
tography, and mixed media.<lb/>
If there are questions,<lb/>
contact Sue Aydelette, art<lb/>
director.<lb/>
stfatew<lb/>
The ECU Strategic<lb/>
Games Club will meet<lb/>
Thursday, Oct. 4 at 7:00<lb/>
p.m. in Room 238 in<lb/>
Mendenhall. Anyone inter-<lb/>
ested in playing or learning<lb/>
to play is invited to drop in.<lb/>
I III III I<lb/>
There are -till places<lb/>
available lor the 'Biginning<lb/>
Darkroom1 workshop at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Crafts Center.<lb/>
The workshop- are offered<lb/>
on Tuesdays or Thursdays<lb/>
from 6 p.m. until 9 p.m. All<lb/>
interested persons must<lb/>
register at the Crafts Center<lb/>
a- soon as possible. Hours<lb/>
are 3 p.m. until 10 p.m<lb/>
Monday through Friday,<lb/>
and 12 noon until 5 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
SOUTH SEAS<lb/>
PET SHOP<lb/>
GREENVILLE SQUARE<lb/>
756-9222<lb/>
Parakeets $9.95<lb/>
All Bird Cages 10 OFF<lb/>
rrw Selected Tropical<lb/>
i6'A FI,h ON SALE<lb/>
JP ly offer good while<lb/>
supply lasts<lb/>
K<lb/>
M<lb/>
i m-<lb/>
n.<lb/>
PIRATE<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
? 6ox. Steak<lb/>
? Baked Potato<lb/>
?free Salad Bar<lb/>
JtFree Soft Drink<lb/>
? Free Jello or Pudding<lb/>
Offer valid seven days a week (lunch<lb/>
and dinner) to<lb/>
COLLEGE STUDENTS &amp; FACULTY<lb/>
Show your College I.D.<lb/>
to ordertaker to get the Special!<lb/>
CALL 75B-eSO&amp;<lb/>
to reserve Banquet Room for Groups<lb/>
BSO N. Greenville Blvd. Greenville<lb/>
tk 4tk ? t<lb/>
FOR HOMECOMING<lb/>
A<lb/>
IN CONCERT<lb/>
Tues. Oct.9 8.00 in Minges Coliseum<lb/>
students$4.?? puWic$6PO atdoor$6po<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057220_0004"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
&amp; Opinions<lb/>
Gripe, gripe, gripe<lb/>
It is generally the purpose of editorials<lb/>
to cry out at inequity, to give the opinion of.<lb/>
the editorial board on matters of grave<lb/>
importance, such as the Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Association or the serious situation<lb/>
developing in Cuba.<lb/>
This is not going to be one of those<lb/>
editorials.<lb/>
Rather, the editorial board of THE<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN would like to address<lb/>
a few problems that confront every college<lb/>
student in the daily life on campus.<lb/>
College life is fun. Those who are not in<lb/>
school bemoan the easy life that we college<lb/>
kids have. Parties. Members of the<lb/>
opposite sex in ample supply. No work.<lb/>
Easy life, right?<lb/>
Wrong.<lb/>
It's rough. We have to put up with a lot<lb/>
of pain, suffering and heartache during our<lb/>
four or five year sojourn in this institution<lb/>
of higher education. We have to endure<lb/>
8:00 a.m. classes (which should have been<lb/>
banned at the Geneva Convention), terrible<lb/>
food, inhumane roommates and impossible<lb/>
homework.<lb/>
This morning, my roommate's clock did<lb/>
not go off because the electricity was<lb/>
turned off for what were termed<lb/>
"important repairs I was late for my<lb/>
class. My instructor was upset.<lb/>
When first came to Greenville, I came<lb/>
vsiHh a Chamber of Commerce newsletter in<lb/>
hand, which stated that Greenville was a<lb/>
well-drained city of 35,000 residents. I read<lb/>
the rest of the handout at the service<lb/>
station where my car was being dried out,<lb/>
after going through a four-foot-deep lagoon<lb/>
at the bottom of the railroad overpass on<lb/>
Dickinson Avenue.<lb/>
I am told that showers in Fletcher Dorm<lb/>
have a mind of their own. (I am told this<lb/>
because, being male, I haven't had much<lb/>
occasion to spend time in the showers in<lb/>
Fletcher.) Girls who live in Fletcher report<lb/>
that after they are through taking a<lb/>
shower, the hot water handle inches over<lb/>
as if by magic. At the worse possible<lb/>
moment, as the young lady is reaching for<lb/>
her towel, the hot water blasts out at full<lb/>
force and usually scalds the posterior of the<lb/>
young lass.<lb/>
People in this office are at the least<lb/>
strange. At this moment, after a quick tour<lb/>
of the newsroom, the news desk takes the<lb/>
"Strange Award" for this particular<lb/>
afternoon. The news editor is presently<lb/>
ascending to a plane of higher<lb/>
consciousness, and the assistant news<lb/>
editor has been looking for the letter "D"<lb/>
on his typewriter for the last half hour.<lb/>
"Irregardless they are a great bunch.<lb/>
There seems to be some kind of early<lb/>
warning system on this campus with the<lb/>
administration. The minute one of us calls<lb/>
the Spilman Building for a quote from a<lb/>
top administration official, the official "has<lb/>
just walked out The administration<lb/>
should tell one of their secrets to the<lb/>
Strategic Air Command. No Russian<lb/>
missiles would make it out of their silos if<lb/>
the SAC knew as much about their<lb/>
movements as the administration knows<lb/>
about ours.<lb/>
College life, children, definitely ain't<lb/>
easy.<lb/>
We have had our say, and now we're<lb/>
happy.<lb/>
JACK ANDERSON <lb/>
WEEKLY SPECIAL<lb/>
Copyright. 1979,<lb/>
United Feature Syndicate. Inc<lb/>
Mr. Carter Should Walk, Not Run,<lb/>
For Re-election in 1980, Maybe?<lb/>
- When<lb/>
collapsed<lb/>
marathon<lb/>
By Jack Anderson<lb/>
and Joe Spear<lb/>
WASHINGTON<lb/>
Jimmy Carter<lb/>
during a running<lb/>
near his Camp David moun-<lb/>
tain retreat earlier this<lb/>
month, his White House<lb/>
image makers began fum-<lb/>
bling with their political<lb/>
worry beads. News photo-<lb/>
graphs of the president<lb/>
showed him gasping and<lb/>
groaning with mouth agape<lb/>
as Secret Service agents<lb/>
helped him to a limousine to<lb/>
whisk him back within the<lb/>
confines of Camp David.<lb/>
Carter subsequently that<lb/>
day made a subdued public<lb/>
appearance at a gathering of<lb/>
his fellow marathoners and<lb/>
sought to grin the ?vhole epi-<lb/>
sode off. His personal physi-<lb/>
cian, Dr. William Lukash,<lb/>
twice examined the chief<lb/>
executive and pronounced<lb/>
him in good health.<lb/>
Carter aides quickly com-<lb/>
mented that the former<lb/>
Naval Academy cross-coun-<lb/>
try runner did well to last<lb/>
nearly half the six-mile<lb/>
endurance trial compared to<lb/>
other potential presidential<lb/>
rivals.<lb/>
Yet the scary episode<lb/>
demonstrated that health<lb/>
and physical fitness will be a<lb/>
factor in the 1980 run for the<lb/>
White House. Carter, who<lb/>
becomes 55 years old on<lb/>
Monday, is believed to be in<lb/>
generally good physical fet-<lb/>
tle but the blind staggers he<lb/>
developed on the Catoctin<lb/>
Mountain run raised ques-<lb/>
tions as to his ability to car-<lb/>
ry the tremendous physical<lb/>
and emotional strains that<lb/>
every president undergoes in<lb/>
office. Some medical<lb/>
authorities associated his<lb/>
exhaustion with emotional<lb/>
Subsequent to the publicly<lb/>
recorded collapse, we<lb/>
learned from inside observ-<lb/>
ers that the jogging presi-<lb/>
dent still shows signs of<lb/>
strain. He recently conduct-<lb/>
ed a briefing on the SALT II<lb/>
treaty and many of those<lb/>
who were there reported to<lb/>
us that he looked "ashen'<lb/>
and "gray Despite the<lb/>
importance of the issue, they<lb/>
said, he appeared preoccu-<lb/>
pied and had trouble concen-<lb/>
trating.<lb/>
Even White House sources<lb/>
acknowledge he is physical-<lb/>
ly less bouncy than a year<lb/>
ago but they insist Carter is<lb/>
physically fit.<lb/>
Since the days of robust<lb/>
big-game hunter Teddy<lb/>
Roosevelt, .every occupant<lb/>
of the White House has<lb/>
engaged in some form of<lb/>
sports or exercise at his<lb/>
doctor's urging. Franklin D.<lb/>
Roosevelt, although crippled<lb/>
by polio, swam. Harry S.<lb/>
Truman took brisk morning<lb/>
walks. Dwight D. Eisenhow-<lb/>
er, even after his heart<lb/>
attack, golfed. John F. Ken-<lb/>
nedy went sailing. Lyndon<lb/>
Johnson rode horseback<lb/>
around his ranch. Richard<lb/>
Nixon went fishing in the<lb/>
Bahamas with his million-<lb/>
aire friends. Gerry Ford, an<lb/>
all-Big Ten football player,<lb/>
swam, skied and golfed.<lb/>
Jimmy Carter, however,<lb/>
may be overdoing it to show<lb/>
his athletic prowess. Per-<lb/>
haps he should try walking<lb/>
instead of jogging for a sec-<lb/>
ond term in the White<lb/>
House.<lb/>
CARTER'S BOOBY-<lb/>
TRAPS: With Teddy Kenne-<lb/>
dy looming in the wings and<lb/>
Carter's popularity sagging,<lb/>
the president's path to re-<lb/>
election is currently bes-<lb/>
trewn with some explosive<lb/>
political booby-traps involv-<lb/>
ing his closest confidants -<lb/>
Bert Lance and Hamilton<lb/>
Jordan.<lb/>
Lance, who bowed out<lb/>
under pressure as the<lb/>
administration's budget<lb/>
director, is under indictment<lb/>
for his slipshod practices<lb/>
when he was the president s<lb/>
"friendly banker" back in<lb/>
Georgia.<lb/>
Jordan, now Carter's chief<lb/>
White House honcho, has<lb/>
been charged with partici-<lb/>
pating in the cocaine-sniff-<lb/>
ing scene in New York's<lb/>
discotheque society and at<lb/>
Hollywood parties. The<lb/>
charges against the 35-year-<lb/>
old presidential protege thus<lb/>
far have been pretty nebu-<lb/>
lous but nevertheless the<lb/>
press and television have<lb/>
given extensive coverage to<lb/>
the allegations.<lb/>
The most potentially rui-<lb/>
nous scandal may be explod-<lb/>
ed, however, by a grand jury<lb/>
which is investigating a pos-<lb/>
sible White House cover-up<lb/>
of a Robert Vesco scandal.<lb/>
Vesco is the unscrupulous<lb/>
financier who did a moon-<lb/>
light flit from this country<lb/>
to escape jail for his fiduci-<lb/>
ary misdoings.<lb/>
This column disclosed that<lb/>
Vesco enlisted the help of<lb/>
two Georgians early in the<lb/>
Carter administration to<lb/>
approach the White House in<lb/>
the hope of ending extradi-<lb/>
tion proceedings against<lb/>
him.<lb/>
It has been established<lb/>
that one of the Georgians,<lb/>
Spencer Lee IV, accepted a<lb/>
$10,000 downpayment from<lb/>
Vesco and approached Rich-<lb/>
ard Harden, a Jordan chum<lb/>
in the White House chain of<lb/>
command. With visions of<lb/>
additional millions dancing<lb/>
Jn his head, Lee told Harden<lb/>
of Vesco's approach. The<lb/>
White House version is that<lb/>
Harden touted him off any<lb/>
further efforts on Vesco's<lb/>
behalf.<lb/>
Yet when we appeared<lb/>
before the grand jury at our<lb/>
request, we discovered that<lb/>
the panel had had no prior<lb/>
knowledge of the white<lb/>
House involvement. The Jus-<lb/>
tice Department has shuf-<lb/>
fled three ditierent prosecu-<lb/>
tors in and out of the<lb/>
presentation. The conscien-<lb/>
tious grand jury foreman,<lb/>
Ralph Ulmer. sought to quit<lb/>
his post, charging in a letter<lb/>
to the presiding federal<lb/>
judge that "coverup activi-<lb/>
ties are being orchestrated<lb/>
within the Department of<lb/>
Justice under the concept<lb/>
that the Administration<lb/>
must be protected at all<lb/>
costs "<lb/>
WATCH ON WASTE: Lob-<lb/>
byists for the nation's hospi-<lb/>
tals have succeeded thus far<lb/>
in smothering any legisla-<lb/>
tion to curb their inordinate<lb/>
profiteering at the expense<lb/>
of the sick and dying. An<lb/>
unpublished report prepared<lb/>
by the Government Account-<lb/>
ing Office for Sen. Herman<lb/>
Talmadge shows how the<lb/>
hospital profession is pursu-<lb/>
ing a devil-take-the-hind-<lb/>
most purchasing policy as<lb/>
long as the customer pays<lb/>
the bill.<lb/>
A study of six cities<lb/>
revealed that hospital pur-<lb/>
chasing agents pay wide<lb/>
variations in buying such<lb/>
basic supplies as bandages<lb/>
and oxygen units. The GAO<lb/>
investigators found that<lb/>
buyers in the same city rare-<lb/>
ly checked with each other<lb/>
on commonplace orders.<lb/>
They found that medical<lb/>
supply salesmen often<lb/>
conned hospital purchasing<lb/>
agents into thinking they<lb/>
were getting special price<lb/>
deals. The salesmen urged<lb/>
that the deal had to be kept<lb/>
hush-hush. The GAO report-<lb/>
ed that on most of the deals<lb/>
the hospitals were being<lb/>
stung for more than the<lb/>
going price.<lb/>
Footnote: Anyone with<lb/>
knowledge of government<lb/>
extravagance can write to<lb/>
JACK ANDERSONS<lb/>
WATCH ON WAST2, P.O.<lb/>
Box 2300 Washington, DC,<lb/>
20013.<lb/>
Thursday, October 4, 1979, Page 4<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
wFto<lb/>
H<lb/>
??I<lb/>
- NO TOVAXNfr -<lb/>
NORML grows older<lb/>
By LARRY POPELKA<lb/>
A few weeks ago a<lb/>
fellow well into his 40s<lb/>
invited me to listen to some<lb/>
of his generation&amp; music.<lb/>
I've just about had it<lb/>
with Frank Sinatra, Law-<lb/>
rence Welk and Geritol<lb/>
commercials, so I declined.<lb/>
"What's the matter?"<lb/>
he said. "Don't you like the<lb/>
Beach Boys, Jefferson Air-<lb/>
plane, the Beatles or any of<lb/>
those other '60s groups?"<lb/>
I do. But it wasn't until<lb/>
then that I realized just<lb/>
what's happened.<lb/>
The '60s have grown<lb/>
nearly 20 years old. The<lb/>
flower children are bus-<lb/>
inessmen. Richard Nixon is<lb/>
living in New York. Rolling<lb/>
Stone is doing articles about<lb/>
Johnny Carson. And Bob<lb/>
Dylan is singing about his<lb/>
born-again religion.<lb/>
Marijuana has grown<lb/>
up, too.<lb/>
In the '60s the act of<lb/>
lighting up a joint had<lb/>
meaning. It meant you were<lb/>
a rebel who hated the war,<lb/>
hated LBJ and probably<lb/>
hated your parents who<lb/>
were part of the establish-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Today the only thing it<lb/>
means is that you probably<lb/>
can't afford cocaine.<lb/>
Pot is as much a part of<lb/>
today's establishment as<lb/>
Hamilton Jordan, Chip Car-<lb/>
ter and all those other<lb/>
alleged druggies running<lb/>
the country.<lb/>
At last count an esti-<lb/>
mated 37 million Americans<lb/>
had lit up at least one joint<lb/>
and many others who<lb/>
hadn't, viewed it as a<lb/>
legitimate form of recrea-<lb/>
tion, like drinking, bowling<lb/>
and baseball.<lb/>
Perhaps the best ex-<lb/>
ample of how times have<lb/>
changed, however, is found<lb/>
at the National Organization<lb/>
for the Reform of Marijuana<lb/>
Laws headquarters in Wash-<lb/>
ington, D.C.<lb/>
NORML is about as<lb/>
ordinary as any Washington<lb/>
lobby group. They've got<lb/>
an office downtown with<lb/>
desks, typewriters, station-<lb/>
ery, copy machines and<lb/>
several full-time paid em-<lb/>
ployees.<lb/>
It's almost like a bus-<lb/>
iness. There are no mari-<lb/>
juana plants growing in a<lb/>
back room or stashes of<lb/>
dope hidden behind books.<lb/>
When I walked into their<lb/>
office a few weeks ago,<lb/>
Peter Meyers, their chief<lb/>
legal counsel wasn't fum-<lb/>
bling with a rolling paper.<lb/>
He was fumbling with a<lb/>
carton of Carleton cigar-<lb/>
ettes.<lb/>
Meyers, who looks like a<lb/>
throwback to the '60s with<lb/>
his long uncombed hair and<lb/>
unshaven face, has been<lb/>
with NORML for six years<lb/>
and seen it change.<lb/>
"Six years ago we were<lb/>
just trying to break in and<lb/>
present a perspective that<lb/>
wasn't being presented<lb/>
he remembers. "Nobody<lb/>
really took us seriously.<lb/>
"Today we're estab-<lb/>
lished. We present our-<lb/>
selves in a straight middle-<lb/>
class way, and a lot of times<lb/>
now the press calls us<lb/>
instead of us calling them.<lb/>
We're no different than the<lb/>
National Rifle Association.<lb/>
Some people ? like the<lb/>
yippies ? don't even<lb/>
support us any more,<lb/>
because they think we've<lb/>
gotten too conservative.<lb/>
Yes, it's true. NORML<lb/>
has become just another<lb/>
conservative piece of the<lb/>
establishment. The long<lb/>
fight for marijuana legaliza-<lb/>
tion has mellowed them.<lb/>
Earlier this year Keith<lb/>
Stroup, who founded and<lb/>
led the organization through<lb/>
its first nine years, left to<lb/>
seek fame and fortune as a<lb/>
yVashington criminal law-<lb/>
yer. He mellowed.<lb/>
To raise funds, NORML<lb/>
now sells a complete line of<lb/>
NORML accessories, such<lb/>
as match books and leafy-<lb/>
green T-shirts which are<lb/>
advertised in national maga-<lb/>
zines such as Playboy.<lb/>
Mellow, very mellow.<lb/>
But last summer<lb/>
NORML topped itself. In-<lb/>
stead of leading their<lb/>
annual Fourth of July<lb/>
Washington, D.C, smoke-in<lb/>
? which has become so<lb/>
established it now ranks<lb/>
mention in The Washington<lb/>
Post's listing of Indepen-<lb/>
dence Day events ? the<lb/>
NORML folks backed out<lb/>
for fear that it would be too<lb/>
riotous. Now that's mellow.<lb/>
"We didn't think the<lb/>
smoke-in would accomplish<lb/>
anything says Meyers.<lb/>
"The yippies are still into<lb/>
that type of protest, and<lb/>
they were the only ones<lb/>
who came<lb/>
According to Meyers,<lb/>
the more sensible thing to<lb/>
do is lobby government<lb/>
leaders.<lb/>
So far his group has<lb/>
talked 11 states into decrim-<lb/>
inalizing pot, and Meyers<lb/>
says Washington, Wiscon-<lb/>
sin, Michigan and the<lb/>
District of Columbia are<lb/>
also close to dropping<lb/>
treaty allows<lb/>
for meducal<lb/>
so pot could<lb/>
criminal penalties tor simple<lb/>
possession.<lb/>
One of their biggest<lb/>
detractors, so far, says<lb/>
Meyers, has been President<lb/>
Carter.<lb/>
"Carter's been ver<lb/>
good with his words, but<lb/>
he's had no followup<lb/>
Meyers says. "His Drug<lb/>
Enforcement Agency head.<lb/>
Peter Bensinger, keeps<lb/>
sabatoging us by putting<lb/>
out distorted studies on<lb/>
marijuana's effects. And<lb/>
Carter's never done a damn<lb/>
thing to help us out in<lb/>
Congress<lb/>
However, Meyers says<lb/>
NORML has found a few<lb/>
loopholes.<lb/>
First, the<lb/>
legalization<lb/>
use, he says,<lb/>
conceivably be sold in drug<lb/>
stores alongside aspirin.<lb/>
Second, the treaty says<lb/>
nothing about THC, the<lb/>
chemical in marijuana which<lb/>
makes you high. So,<lb/>
according to Meyers, syn-<lb/>
thetic THC could be le-<lb/>
galized.<lb/>
Finally, Meyers says.<lb/>
the treaty specifically in-<lb/>
cludes nothing about canna-<lb/>
bis leaves and seeds since<lb/>
in some countries such as<lb/>
India they are used in a<lb/>
popular drink called bhang.<lb/>
"It's unlikely that the<lb/>
U.S. will drop out or try to<lb/>
change the treaty, so<lb/>
marijuana may never be<lb/>
sold in grocery stores like<lb/>
regular cigarettes Meyers<lb/>
says. "But there are lots of<lb/>
ways to get around it<lb/>
Marijuana aspirin? Svn-<lb/>
thetic THC? Bhang soda?'<lb/>
Maybe we were better<lb/>
off in the '60s.<lb/>
MANAGING EDITOR<lb/>
Richard Green<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER<lb/>
Anita Lancaster<lb/>
NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
ASST. NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
FEATURES EDITOR<lb/>
ASST. DIRECTOR OF ADVERTISING<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Marc Barnes<lb/>
ASSISTANT TO THE EDITOR<lb/>
DIRECTOR OF ADVERTISINGLeigh Coakley<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim<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 DuPree<lb/>
Jiane Henderson<lb/>
Paul Lincke<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/>
v<lb/>
<lb/>
(.<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057220_0005"/><lb/>
he East Carolinian<lb/>
tian ?<lb/>
sports<lb/>
Thursday, October 4, 1979, Page 5<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Pirates take week off after<lb/>
disaDPointin;<lb/>
Freshman quarterback Carlton Nelson<lb/>
(Photo by Chap Gurley)<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Following their big 45-10 victory over VMI last<lb/>
Saturday, the East Carolina Pirates now have a week off<lb/>
before taking on The Citadel on Oct. 13.<lb/>
"I'm glad to have this time to work on some rough<lb/>
edges said ECU head coach Pat Dye. "We still have<lb/>
some problems on defense that 1 want to work on a lot.<lb/>
"It's not a matter of effort. We seem to be whipping<lb/>
people but not controlling the block. We're getting better,<lb/>
though, and hopefully will get better with the time we'll<lb/>
have this week<lb/>
The Pirates ahve the usual number of bumps and<lb/>
bruises and will use the open date this Saturday to heal<lb/>
some of them. Having an open date this week gives the<lb/>
team one less game it must play without injured starters<lb/>
Joe Godette and Noah Clark, both out with knee injuries.<lb/>
The coaching staff plans to use the extra time, also, to<lb/>
refine and improve the games of some younger players<lb/>
who have potential but few minutes on the collegiate<lb/>
gridiron.<lb/>
"With this open date and the one on October 20, we<lb/>
will try to get some of the younger guys ready for action<lb/>
further on down the road said Pirate assistant coach<lb/>
Frank Orgel.<lb/>
The team will, of course, work on some of the things<lb/>
that have been problems in the past. "We hope to iron out<lb/>
some of our past mistakes said Orgel. "We will work a<lb/>
great deal on fundamentals<lb/>
The Pirates will spend much of the week working on the<lb/>
Oct. 13 game with Citadel. Because it is this year's<lb/>
homecoming game, the East Carolina squad will want to<lb/>
carry over the momentum started in last Saturday's win to<lb/>
the Citadel game.<lb/>
One would wonder if the open date is a negative point<lb/>
for the team rather than a positive one, since the VMI<lb/>
game was such a spirited effort by the Pirates.<lb/>
"We needed badly to win big last week said Orgel,<lb/>
"but we also need badly to work on some things. It's good<lb/>
to be able to practice when team enthusiasm is high. Right<lb/>
now, it is very high after our big win<lb/>
Orgel feels the extra week of practice will allow the<lb/>
team to become even more spirited than had a game been<lb/>
played this week. "We plan to build on the enthusiasm<lb/>
started last week said Orgel, "but we also need badly to<lb/>
work on some things. It's good to be able to practice when<lb/>
team enthusiasm is high. Right now, it is very high after<lb/>
our big win<lb/>
Orgel feels the extra week of practice will allow the<lb/>
team to become even more spirited than had a game been<lb/>
played this week. "We plan to build on the enthusiasm<lb/>
started last week he explained. "We should come<lb/>
together more emotionally this week than usual.<lb/>
"And, too, we have two weeks to get ready to play a<lb/>
good Citadel team. They run the I-formation much like<lb/>
Carolina does, so that should help us even further<lb/>
Looking ahead to the Oct. 27 meeting with the Tar<lb/>
Heels, the Pirates have to like the looks of the schedules of<lb/>
the two teams. East Carolina has this open date, the<lb/>
Citadel game and then another open date before facing the<lb/>
16th-ranked Heels.<lb/>
North Carolina, on the other hand, has a tough road<lb/>
ahead before facing the Pirates. The Heels have an easy<lb/>
one at home this week witn Cincinnati but then must host a<lb/>
tough Wake Forest club before traveling to Raleigh to face<lb/>
a very physical N.C. State team.<lb/>
Doubles as campus cop<lb/>
Karpovich stars for Pirate soccer team<lb/>
ECU cagers begin workouts<lb/>
The East Carolinia basketball season is getting near as<lb/>
evidenced by Tuesday afternoon's Pirate media day.<lb/>
Numerous reporters and photographers were invited to the<lb/>
interview and picture session.<lb/>
One thing that was evident to all onlookers at the<lb/>
-ession was the heighth that the Pirates have this season.<lb/>
Coach Dave Odom has any number of prospects for the<lb/>
front line. t M .<lb/>
Also evident on this day was who the Pirates' "star' is.<lb/>
For the past two seasons Oliver Mack has received all the<lb/>
limelight. This year guard George Maynor is around to<lb/>
steal the show from the rest of the team.<lb/>
Mavnor is well thought of because of his heady play<lb/>
last season and the fact that he was drafted in the fourth<lb/>
round of last year's National Basketball Association draft.<lb/>
He, of course, decided to finish his career with ECU rather<lb/>
than trying to make a go at it with the Chicago Bulls.<lb/>
Maynor was occupied with a reporter or a photo man<lb/>
almost'all afternoon. It appears that, if he performs up to<lb/>
standards, Maynor will be busy in the locker room after<lb/>
most Pirate contests.<lb/>
 ? ?<lb/>
ALSO APPEARING at the basketball media day, which<lb/>
also included women's basketball, was ECU head football<lb/>
coach Pat Dye. Dye showed up, on the request of the<lb/>
Sports Information Office to be photographed with Lady<lb/>
Pirate superstar Rosie Thompson. Dye recruited Thompson<lb/>
for the university when the Blounts Creek native was a<lb/>
senior in high school.<lb/>
WELL THE BASEBALL PLAYOFFS are underway and<lb/>
it is time to look to the World Series and pick the eventual<lb/>
winner there. The pick here is the Baltimore Orioles. The<lb/>
Orioles finished with the best record in baseball, by far.<lb/>
The team has the best manager in baseball in Earl<lb/>
Weaver, the game's best pitching staff headed by Mike<lb/>
Flanagan and a super combination of established veteran<lb/>
stars and scrappy youngsters. Outfielder Ken Singleton<lb/>
had a super year and would seem to be as good a bet as<lb/>
anyone to win the American League's Most Valuable<lb/>
Plaver award. Flanagan is the odds-on favorite to capture<lb/>
the'Cy Young award in the A.L. after winning 23 games for<lb/>
the Birds. ?? , .<lb/>
BALTIMORE'S OTvnONENT, California, is making its<lb/>
first appearance ever in the post-season playoffs. Even<lb/>
though the Orioles are heavily favored, the Angels cannot<lb/>
be counted out. Not with Don Baylor, Bob Grich Rod<lb/>
Carew Brian Downing and Willie Aikens around to knock<lb/>
the cover off of any baseball not thrown perfectly. Baylor<lb/>
will battle Singleton for MVP honors after leading the<lb/>
majors in runs batted in, with 139. Nolan Ryan and Frank<lb/>
Tanana head up a more than respectable Angel pitching<lb/>
THE LADY PIRATE basketball squad lost an<lb/>
experienced team member Monday. Lynn Emerson, a<lb/>
junior, decided to quit the squad after having suffered with<lb/>
a leg injury for some time. Lady Pirate coach Cathy<lb/>
Andruzzi noted that the injury and a busy schedule had<lb/>
made it hard for Emerson to continue playing. We 11 miss<lb/>
Lynn said Andruzzi, "but I guess she knows what s best<lb/>
for her . .<lb/>
TWO PIRATE FOOTBALL starters, both seniors, are<lb/>
currently sidelined with knee injuries. Offensive tackle Joe<lb/>
Godette and defensive tackle Noah Clark are both expected<lb/>
to be out until the Oct. 27 game at North Carolina. Both<lb/>
sat on the bench last Saturday when the Pirates trounced<lb/>
VMI 45-10. Both wanted to play badly. An example ot this<lb/>
came at halftime when Clark was seen by Godette scoping<lb/>
the student section of the crowd. "You wish you were in<lb/>
the stands with that girl, don't you? questioned Godette.<lb/>
"No " answered Clark, "I wish I were in there, said<lb/>
Clark as he pointed directly to the Pirate dressing room.<lb/>
"No lie followed Godette, "no lie<lb/>
Bv ED WILLIAMS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
There's a person on the<lb/>
East Carolina campus who<lb/>
is out to assist others in two<lb/>
totally different ways.<lb/>
His name is Jeff Kar-<lb/>
povich and he leads a<lb/>
'1'iuble life.<lb/>
On ?ne handx he is an<lb/>
important member of the<lb/>
ECU soccer squad, assisting<lb/>
teammates in the pro-<lb/>
duction of goals.<lb/>
On the o her hand, he is<lb/>
also a campus security<lb/>
policeman who assists<lb/>
others tn their times r<lb/>
need.<lb/>
Karpovich, a senior at<lb/>
ECU, was born in Ramsey,<lb/>
New Jersey. He has an<lb/>
uncle who is the Chief of<lb/>
Detectives in the City of<lb/>
New York Police Depart-<lb/>
ment. He also has two<lb/>
brothers who are in various<lb/>
forms of law enforcement.<lb/>
These people have influ-<lb/>
enced him in his law<lb/>
enforcement career.<lb/>
Karpovich claims his<lb/>
brothers also helped him to<lb/>
develop his soccer abilities.<lb/>
Karpovich, who is from<lb/>
a large family, was never<lb/>
able to afford to go to a<lb/>
soccer camp, but would<lb/>
instead compete against his<lb/>
brothers and friends in his<lb/>
back yard to practice. He<lb/>
liked to play against older<lb/>
and bigger competition.<lb/>
"I got roughed up a bit,<lb/>
but I learned more he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
He first played organ-<lb/>
ized soccer twelve years<lb/>
ago. He also played Inter-<lb/>
scholastic soccer in the<lb/>
eighth grade. But it wasn't<lb/>
until his senior year in high<lb/>
school that "everything<lb/>
came together<lb/>
He shattered the school<lb/>
scoring record of eleven<lb/>
goals by booting in 27 goals<lb/>
in 14 games. He was the<lb/>
captain and most valuable<lb/>
player of his team and the<lb/>
count) scoring champion.<lb/>
He "made just about every<lb/>
team" for honors, including<lb/>
all-America.<lb/>
This led to Karpovich's<lb/>
being heavily recruited and<lb/>
he credits his high school<lb/>
coach, Ed Groh, with<lb/>
helping him handle this<lb/>
area.<lb/>
"He went out of his<lb/>
way to do you favors he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Coach Groh supplied<lb/>
information and newspaper<lb/>
clippings concerning Kar-<lb/>
povich's accomplishments to<lb/>
the college recruiters who<lb/>
had shown interest in the<lb/>
high scoring forward.<lb/>
One of the coaches in<lb/>
the chase was Curtis Fye<lb/>
who was the soccer coach at<lb/>
East Carolina at the time.<lb/>
"He phoned me and<lb/>
wrote me handwritten let-<lb/>
ters Karpovich said.<lb/>
Coach Frye explained to<lb/>
Karpovich that the ECUsoc-<lb/>
cer program was growing<lb/>
and was not as good as<lb/>
some of the "name"<lb/>
schools in soccer, such a<lb/>
Lynchburg College which<lb/>
Karpovich was considering.<lb/>
Frye wanted Karpovich to<lb/>
help him build a successful<lb/>
program here.<lb/>
Karpovich narrowed his<lb/>
choice of schools to Lynch-<lb/>
burg College and ECU. He<lb/>
felt that a university would<lb/>
be able to offer him more<lb/>
socially and academically<lb/>
than a college, so he<lb/>
eventually chose to come to<lb/>
East Carolina.<lb/>
His first two years were<lb/>
illness and injury plagued.<lb/>
In his freshman year, he<lb/>
contracted mononucleousis,<lb/>
and was out of shape when<lb/>
the season got under way.<lb/>
When he finally got a<lb/>
chance to play against Old<lb/>
Dominion, he was hit in the<lb/>
leg and suffered internal<lb/>
contusions that put him out<lb/>
for the remainder of the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
His sophomore year was<lb/>
not much better. He<lb/>
suffered through the season<lb/>
with a virus which put him<lb/>
out of action for two weeks,<lb/>
plus a broken hand.<lb/>
He then quit school for a<lb/>
vear to "establish in-state<lb/>
residency" and returned to<lb/>
school for his junior year.<lb/>
He continued to have<lb/>
problems as a junior, but<lb/>
these were "more mental<lb/>
than physical<lb/>
Karpovich "didn't see<lb/>
things eye to eye" with<lb/>
second-year coach Brad<lb/>
Smith and wound up sitting<lb/>
on the bench.<lb/>
Even with his limited<lb/>
playing time, Karpovich<lb/>
managed to score five<lb/>
goals, second highest on the<lb/>
team for the year (which<lb/>
tied him with Phil Martin).<lb/>
He also finished tied with<lb/>
Martin foe second in team<lb/>
scoring honors.<lb/>
Karpovich came into his<lb/>
senior year wanting to "just<lb/>
play up to my full<lb/>
potential But illness again<lb/>
caught up with him in the<lb/>
form of a fever and swollen<lb/>
glands. He couldn't practice<lb/>
for the first two weeks and<lb/>
then missed the Elon game.<lb/>
But as the season has<lb/>
advanced, Karpovich's<lb/>
physical condition has im-<lb/>
proved. In a 2-0 win over<lb/>
Davidson he scored both<lb/>
goals and "started getting<lb/>
the respect of the team<lb/>
back<lb/>
He was pleased with<lb/>
that effort because his job a<lb/>
a forward "is mostVy to<lb/>
score He has collected<lb/>
four goals so far this season<lb/>
to lead the team.<lb/>
"The morale ot the team<lb/>
is pretty high he said.<lb/>
"We all get along pretty<lb/>
well. We're playing really<lb/>
well and we're winning<lb/>
"I live two different<lb/>
lives. I put on a uniform<lb/>
and play that role he said<lb/>
referring to his police work.<lb/>
"Then I put on a uniform<lb/>
and play this role he said<lb/>
motioning out towards the<lb/>
soccer field.<lb/>
Hopefully, for the bene-<lb/>
fit of the ECU soccer team,<lb/>
Jeff Karpovich will continue<lb/>
to play at least one of his<lb/>
roles very well.<lb/>
Lady Pirate basketball recruits new look<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
After finishing the 1978-79 season with a respectable<lb/>
18-11 record and losing only two seniors, it would appear<lb/>
that this year's edition of Lady Pirate basketball would be<lb/>
filled with experience and destined for glory.<lb/>
Destined for glory they may be, but experience is one<lb/>
thing the Lady Bucs will miss.<lb/>
True; only gouard Gale Kerbaugh and reserve forward<lb/>
April Ross were lost as seniors, but only four of their<lb/>
teammates will return to do battle for East Carolina.<lb/>
"They just weren't able to compete on the Division 1<lb/>
level of women's basketball explains second-year head<lb/>
coach Cathy Andruzzi. "They just didn't have the skill<lb/>
required<lb/>
,v<lb/>
This is the year that we want to start<lb/>
a tradition. We're very young, but very<lb/>
enthusiastic<lb/>
Cathy Andruzzi<lb/>
Of the returnees, NCAIAW scoring champion Rosie<lb/>
Thompson will again be the catalyst of the fast-break<lb/>
oriented defense. From there, however, it's an open field<lb/>
of battle for the remaining slots.<lb/>
Lanky Marcia Girven returns to fight for her center<lb/>
position, but others vying for starting roles this year don't<lb/>
have to look up to the six-foot junior.<lb/>
With Thompson virtually assured of one forward spot,<lb/>
three freshmen and two transfers have until the November<lb/>
17 opener with William and Mary to prove themselves.<lb/>
Standing 6'1 Mary Denkler would lffnr t) be<lb/>
equipped to play the post, but her outside shooting touch<lb/>
makes her far too valuable to hide under the goal.<lb/>
Donna Brayboy (510") and Donna Moody (5'11") are<lb/>
the other two freshmen struggling for the top five.<lb/>
Junior Kathy Riley conies to East Carolina via Middle<lb/>
Tennessee State University, where she averaged 20 points<lb/>
per game but chose to leave because of the tougher<lb/>
schedule the Lady Pirates will face.<lb/>
Afer two years at Wagner College, Heidi Owen rejoins<lb/>
her coach after a separation of one year.<lb/>
"I had played under Coach Andruzzi and I knew what<lb/>
type of a program she would have at ECU said Owen<lb/>
'We had a new coach at Wagner last year and she and I<lb/>
really didn't get along very well. It's been no cultural<lb/>
shock changing from the north to the south though.<lb/>
Talent will not be sacrificed at the guard positions, as<lb/>
season assist record holder Lydia Rountree and speedy<lb/>
Lillion Barnes have a freshman and junior college transfer<lb/>
pursueing starting berths.<lb/>
Fran Hooks from nearby Goldsboro joins the Lady Bucs<lb/>
this season with the same situation as Barnes a year ago.<lb/>
Hooks, though a talented shooter and ball handler, boards<lb/>
the Pirate's ship without benefit of a scholarship.<lb/>
Peace College transfer Uurie Sikes rounds out the East<lb/>
Carolina back court experts. Sikes, a native of Marietta,<lb/>
Georgia, brings an added" dimension lacked by Lady Pirate<lb/>
teams in the past; a flashy ballhandler with deadly<lb/>
accuracy from the perimeter.<lb/>
"From what I've heard, in the past there's usually been<lb/>
six or seven top girls says the enthusiastic Sikes, "but<lb/>
here, everybody is about on the same level.<lb/>
"We wouldn't be here right now if we thought there<lb/>
was no chance of having a winning season. We want to win<lb/>
the big games, but I play against every team the same<lb/>
way<lb/>
The 'new-look' Lady Pirates have a great deal of raw<lb/>
talent, but these must be unifird and orchestrated by<lb/>
Andruzzi afod her assistant, Marcia Richards.<lb/>
"This year is a year that we want to start a tradition<lb/>
says Andruzzi. "With the depth that we have, even though<lb/>
they're freshmen, I'm not going to be scared to look down<lb/>
the bench. '<lb/>
"We're very young, but hopefully very enthusiastic,<lb/>
explains Andruazi. "It takes a lot of time to teach our<lb/>
system, but I think they'll pick up fast. We have several<lb/>
potential leaders out there<lb/>
Barnes, Girven in 1978-79 action<lb/>
1F? <lb/>
41<lb/>
<pb facs="00057220_0006"/><lb/>
4 October 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Page 6<lb/>
The Fearless Football Forecast<lb/>
CINCINATTI AT NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
N.C. STATE AT AUBURN<lb/>
GEORGIA TECH AT NOTRE DAME<lb/>
WASHINGTON STATE AT SOUTHERN CAL<lb/>
NEW MEXICO STATE AT NEBRASKA<lb/>
MICHIGAN AT MICHIGAN STATE<lb/>
NORTH TEXAS STATE AT SOUTHERN MISS<lb/>
TENN-CHATANOOGA AT APPALACHIAN STATE<lb/>
VIRGINIA AT CLEMSON<lb/>
PENN STATE AT MARYLAND<lb/>
OKLAHOMA STATE AT SOUTH CAROLINA<lb/>
UCLA AT STANFORD<lb/>
CHARLES CHANDLERTERRY HERNDONJIMMY DuPREEJOHN NOLAN<lb/>
31-16-130-17-127-20-114-9-1<lb/>
North CarolinaNorth CarolinaNorth CarolinaNorth Carolina<lb/>
N.C. StateN.C. StateN.C. StateN.C. State<lb/>
Notre DameNotre DameNotre DameNotre Dame<lb/>
Southern CalSouthern CalSouthern CalSouthern Cal<lb/>
NebraskaNebraskaNebraskaNebraska<lb/>
MichiganMichiganMichiganMichigan<lb/>
Southern MissSouthern MissSouthern MissNorth Texas State<lb/>
Appalachian StateTenn-ChatanoogaAppalachian StateAppalachian State<lb/>
ClemsonClemsonVirginiaClemson<lb/>
Penn StateMarylandPenn StateMaryland<lb/>
South CarolinaSouth CarolinaSouth CarolinaSouth Carolina<lb/>
UCLAUCLAUCLAUCLA<lb/>
JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Durham Morning Herald<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Southern Cal<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Southern Miss<lb/>
Tenn-Chatanooga<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Oklahoma State<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
V.<lb/>
Trojans maintain top ranking<lb/>
Bv<lb/>
HERSCHEL NISSENSON<lb/>
AP Sports Writer<lb/>
Three of the weekend's<lb/>
most publicized shootouts<lb/>
turned out to be little more<lb/>
than target practice for<lb/>
Texas, Nebraska and Notre<lb/>
Dame.<lb/>
While top-rated South-<lb/>
ern California and No. 14<lb/>
Ohio State had to rally for<lb/>
last-minute triumphs over<lb/>
No. 20 Louisiana State USC<lb/>
17-12 and No. 17 UCLA<lb/>
Ohio State 17-13, the other<lb/>
matchups between members<lb/>
The Associated Press Top<lb/>
Twenty were really mis-<lb/>
matchups.<lb/>
Fourth-ranked Texas put<lb/>
the clamps on Missouri's<lb/>
offense, holding the fifth-<lb/>
ranked Tigers to 164 yards<lb/>
in a 21-0 triumph. Sixth<lb/>
ranked Nebraska trailed No.<lb/>
18 Penn State 14-0 after one<lb/>
period but erupted for a<lb/>
28-14 halftime bulge and<lb/>
ted the Nittany Lions<lb/>
42-17. the most points<lb/>
against a Joe Paterno team<lb/>
-ince 1966, his first year as<lb/>
ad coach.<lb/>
And No. 15 Notre Dame,<lb/>
facing its third straight Big<lb/>
Ten power, crunched se-<lb/>
enth-ranked Michigan<lb/>
State 27-3 as Vagas Fer-<lb/>
- ? rushed for 169 vards<lb/>
and moved past the legend-<lb/>
ary George Gipp into<lb/>
second place on the school's<lb/>
all-time rushing chart.<lb/>
Meanwhile, runnerup<lb/>
Alabama walloped Vander-<lb/>
bilt 66-3, third-ranked Okla-<lb/>
homa pasted Rice 63-21 ?<lb/>
Oklahoma's offense meets<lb/>
Texas' defense in two<lb/>
weeks ? No. 8 Houston<lb/>
trounced West Texas State<lb/>
49-10 and No. 9 Washington<lb/>
buried Fresno State 49-14.<lb/>
The only other Top<lb/>
Twenty team to have it easy<lb/>
was No. 13 Arkansas, a 33-8<lb/>
winner over Tulsa.<lb/>
Tenth-ranked Purdue<lb/>
was hard-pressed to turn<lb/>
back Oregon 13-7, No. 11<lb/>
Michigan shaded California<lb/>
14-10, No. 12 Florida State<lb/>
downed Virginia Tech 1710,<lb/>
No. 16 North Carolina State<lb/>
edged Wake Forest 17-14<lb/>
and No. 19 Southern<lb/>
Methodist was knocked off<lb/>
by Tulane 24-17.<lb/>
Texas rolled to an 18-0<lb/>
halftime lead over Missouri<lb/>
on three of John Goodson's<lb/>
four field goals and a 1-yard<lb/>
run by Jam Jones, who<lb/>
finished with 142. Missouri<lb/>
has been a second-half team<lb/>
all season, but Texas Coach<lb/>
Fred Akers explained that<lb/>
"we're a second-half ball-<lb/>
club, too, and we pride<lb/>
ourselves on that fact<lb/>
Tim Hager, getting his<lb/>
first start, rallied Nebraska<lb/>
from a two-touchdown defi-<lb/>
cit with scoring passes of 11<lb/>
and 70 yards to Junior<lb/>
Miller in the second<lb/>
quarter.<lb/>
Before the period ended,<lb/>
Kenny Brown dashed 16<lb/>
yards to put the Corn-<lb/>
huskers ahead and Andra<lb/>
Franklin added a 5-yad<lb/>
touchdown run.<lb/>
"We can explode any<lb/>
time said Miller.<lb/>
Notre Dame's Ferguson<lb/>
rushed for 167 yards,<lb/>
including touchdowns of 24<lb/>
and 48 yards in the third<lb/>
period, as the Irish stopped<lb/>
Michigan State's 10-game<lb/>
winning streak. His second<lb/>
TD came on fourth-and-one.<lb/>
"It was an off-tackle<lb/>
play and suddenly every-<lb/>
thing opened up Fer-<lb/>
guson said. "Tim Foley<lb/>
took his man out, and when<lb/>
the linebackers went with<lb/>
the outside flow I just cut<lb/>
back in and blew it out. You<lb/>
don't think big run. You<lb/>
just stay with the ball and<lb/>
let it happen<lb/>
Southern Cal trailed LSU<lb/>
12-3 with 10 minutes left,<lb/>
but Charles White, who<lb/>
rushed for 185 yards,<lb/>
plunged across from 4 yards<lb/>
out and the Trojans pulled<lb/>
it out on Paul McDonald's<lb/>
to Kevin<lb/>
32 seconds<lb/>
8-yard pass<lb/>
Williams with<lb/>
left.<lb/>
Alabama got two touch-<lb/>
downs apiece from Stead-<lb/>
man Shealy and Joe Jones<lb/>
in crushing Vandervilt,<lb/>
while Oklahoma<lb/>
while Oklahoma's Billy Sims<lb/>
rushed for 103 yards and<lb/>
three touchdowns ? all in<lb/>
the first half ? against<lb/>
Rice.<lb/>
Backup fullback David<lb/>
Barett scored three times in<lb/>
the second period as<lb/>
Houston drubbed West<lb/>
Texas State, while Tom<lb/>
Porras scored one touch-<lb/>
down and passed for<lb/>
another and Joe Steele<lb/>
scored twice in Washing-<lb/>
ton's rout of Fresno State.<lb/>
WESTERN<lb/>
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2903 E. 10th St. 758-2712<lb/>
Theater Arts<lb/>
presents:<lb/>
October 16th and 17th<lb/>
Hendrix Theater<lb/>
Tickets are now on Sale <lb/>
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STUDENT UNION<lb/>
EAST CAROUNA UttlVHKITY<lb/>
i<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057220_0007"/><lb/>
?jv-t - V<lb/>
4 October 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Page,<lb/>
ECU-VMI touchdown festival action<lb/>
(Action sequence by Chap Gurley)<lb/>
Ritcher leads nationally<lb/>
ranked N.C. State<lb/>
By DICK BRINSTER<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) ?<lb/>
Jim Ritcher sat there and<lb/>
smiled as he pondered<lb/>
another of those All-<lb/>
America, Outland-Trophy<lb/>
questions he is forced to<lb/>
tnswer each time a man<lb/>
with a microphone or a<lb/>
pencil comes within earshot.<lb/>
"Yes. they can come<lb/>
r me, but I've got two<lb/>
r guards next to me<lb/>
ami they can't ignore<lb/>
them said Ritcher in<lb/>
some of the credit for<lb/>
Carolina State's sue-<lb/>
to teammates Chris<lb/>
Dieterieh and Chuck Stone.<lb/>
Ritcher. the returning<lb/>
All-America center, was<lb/>
asked to recall a play in the<lb/>
unbeaten Wolfpack's thrill-<lb/>
ing 17-14 victory over<lb/>
previously unblemished<lb/>
Wake Forest. It involved<lb/>
one of his many encounters<lb/>
with the Deacons' out-<lb/>
standing noseguard James<lb/>
Parker.<lb/>
The 6-foot, 210-pound<lb/>
Parker lined up helmet-to-<lb/>
helmet with the 6-3, 245-<lb/>
pound Ritcher. It was a play<lb/>
neither would soon forget.<lb/>
"Yes. I remember the<lb/>
play said Ritcher. "That's<lb/>
the way I'd like to block all<lb/>
the time<lb/>
On that play Parker<lb/>
moved neither left nor to<lb/>
right, and the 20-year-old<lb/>
center from Hinckley, Ohio,<lb/>
simph muscled him five<lb/>
yards downfield and de-<lb/>
posited him in the mud.<lb/>
Did Parker<lb/>
get even:<lb/>
Here was Ritcher's chance<lb/>
to claim he overwhelmed<lb/>
the best noseguard in this<lb/>
part of the country. As the<lb/>
weekly recipient of the best<lb/>
grade among N.C. State<lb/>
lineman, he had an oppor-<lb/>
tunity to downgrade Par-<lb/>
ker's performance. Only<lb/>
those who saw the films<lb/>
would know for sure.<lb/>
"He sure did said<lb/>
Ritcher. "He embarrassed<lb/>
me a couple of times<lb/>
Ritcher would qualify as<lb/>
a shy country boy on the<lb/>
surface. And what more<lb/>
could one expect from a<lb/>
native of a town famous for<lb/>
the annual return of the<lb/>
buzzards? As San Juan<lb/>
Capistrano goes, so goes<lb/>
Hinckley, Ohio.<lb/>
The Wolfpack center, a<lb/>
odds-on first-round pick in<lb/>
the NFL draft, is just<lb/>
learning to cope with the<lb/>
busy schedule of a young<lb/>
celebrity.<lb/>
Everywhere he goes he's<lb/>
asked about his All-America<lb/>
pick and whether or not he<lb/>
should win the Outland<lb/>
Trophy.<lb/>
He leaves the selections<lb/>
to those who vote and the<lb/>
Ritcher legend of impossible<lb/>
blocks to those who see him<lb/>
play. They will spread the<lb/>
word. That is virtual<lb/>
certainty.<lb/>
"It was really difficult to<lb/>
answer questions at first<lb/>
said Ritcher. "I was always<lb/>
looking to give the perfect<lb/>
answer. Now I may not say<lb/>
the right thing, but I give<lb/>
all the answers<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 and<lb/>
your choice of dressing.<lb/>
Captain's Soup<lb/>
&amp; Sandwich $2.25<lb/>
A steaming cup of Clam<lb/>
Chowder and a filet of Fish<lb/>
on a toasted Bun, Tartar<lb/>
Sauce, and French Fries<lb/>
11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.<lb/>
Daily except Saturday<lb/>
But Ritcher is not<lb/>
concerned with repeating as<lb/>
an All-America or winning<lb/>
the Outland Trophy at this<lb/>
point. He looks at N.C.<lb/>
State's 4-0 record and has a<lb/>
burning desire to make it<lb/>
5-0.<lb/>
"I just want us to put<lb/>
four good quarters to-<lb/>
gether he said,<lb/>
gether he said. "It's a<lb/>
matter of getting your<lb/>
assignments straight<lb/>
Ritcher, according to the<lb/>
Wolfpack coaching staff, is<lb/>
the most perfect offensive<lb/>
lineman they've ever seen.<lb/>
And no opponent ever has<lb/>
hinted he's had a bad<lb/>
game.<lb/>
At that rate he can't be<lb/>
missing too many assign-<lb/>
ments, either on or off the<lb/>
football field.<lb/>
Got a real problem ?<lb/>
Get some REAL help!<lb/>
Phone:<lb/>
758HELP<lb/>
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THE PARTY BEVERAGE CENTER<lb/>
Corner of 10th &amp; Evans St.<lb/>
Open 24 Hours<lb/>
CALL US FOR ALL YOUR PARTY NEEDS WE<lb/>
HAVE DELIVERY &amp; CATERING SERVICES<lb/>
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WE SUPPORT THE PIRATES<lb/>
Stadium length rain slicker reverses from khaki color vinyl to either<lb/>
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reinforced stitching. 1Q if)<lb/>
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OCTOBER at THE OPRY HOUSE<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
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CR-Country Rock, Willie, Waylon, Hank Jr.<lb/>
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BG-Biue Grass, Doc Watson, Earl Scruggs<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057220_0008"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
nian 1 am<lb/>
features<lb/>
Thursday, October 4, 1979,Page 8<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Interview<lb/>
Bandy's life is country music<lb/>
Woe Bandy stands beside the six foot tall bar stool<lb/>
rented him by the management of the Carolina Opry<lb/>
(Photo by Tamara Bryan)<lb/>
"The Long Run<lb/>
a must<lb/>
Eagles fans<lb/>
By PAT MINGES<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
Admittedly a lot of junk music is being proliferated in<lb/>
cording studios. Yet there is also a lot of good music<lb/>
ing released. Older artists such as the Eagles and The<lb/>
Who have released excellent new material, and neophyte<lb/>
ups uch as Wha-Koo and The Sims Brothers Band are<lb/>
celling also. The unifying characteristic of these albums<lb/>
- a very pleasant balance of up-tempo and mid-tempo<lb/>
tunes producing a crowd-pleasing selection.<lb/>
The Eagles, one of the more influential groups of the<lb/>
have released The Long Run, and it proves to be one<lb/>
?heir finer albums. The vocals are as tight as ever, and<lb/>
Felder. Frey, and Walsh's electric guitars have taken the<lb/>
forefront of the Eagles sound. Timothy Schmidt has joined<lb/>
Don Henley to fill out the rhythm section and Dave<lb/>
Sanborn and Jimmy Buffett make guest appearances on<lb/>
The Long Run.<lb/>
The Long Run extends the tradition of the Eagles last<lb/>
album, being a hard-driving rock sound surrounded by<lb/>
guitar pyrotechnics. The songs are written by the Eagles,<lb/>
J.D. Souther and Bob Seger, and Bill Scymczyk handles<lb/>
production chores. Good music paired with superb<lb/>
production make The Long Run a must for rock<lb/>
enthusiasts.<lb/>
The Who have released the original motion picture<lb/>
soundtrack from their film Quadrophenia The album<lb/>
features new recordings of some Quadrophenia selections,<lb/>
classic R &amp; B, and previously unreleased material featuring<lb/>
the late Keith Moon. The new material is very good, and<lb/>
the reworkings of the old tunes provide a cleaner, crisper<lb/>
sound.<lb/>
"The Long Run "extends the tradition<lb/>
of the Eagles last album being a<lb/>
hard driving rock sound surrounded<lb/>
by guitar pyrotechnics.<lb/>
It is hard to imagine The Who being mentioned in the<lb/>
context of pop albums, but Quadrophenia reveals the<lb/>
gentler side of The Who. The new music possesses an<lb/>
almost pop sound. In fact much of Quadrophenia is early<lb/>
'60s pop music by various artists, and a good deal of<lb/>
Quadrophenia itself exposes the natural, more mellow<lb/>
approach Townshend prefers. This album is best for Who<lb/>
collectors, though not recommended for everyone.<lb/>
Although Wha-Koo has released two previous albums,<lb/>
their latest release will bring the group major rock status.<lb/>
Fragile Line features David Palmer (formerly of Steely<lb/>
Dan) on lead vocals and as composer and Ron Fransen on<lb/>
keyboards. The group maintains its vocalkeyboard<lb/>
orientation and their influences range from classical to folk<lb/>
and jazz. Fragile Line is a smoothly flowing, cleanly<lb/>
produced album chock full of breezy poprock hits.<lb/>
ElektraAsylum has captured an exciting new group call<lb/>
ElektraAsylum has captured an exciting new group<lb/>
called The Sims Brothers Band who have just released an<lb/>
album by the same name. Outstanding vocals, poignant<lb/>
guitars, and catchy keyboards make The Sims Brothers<lb/>
Band worthy of special note. Their debut release wields a<lb/>
progressive approach to pop music and shows much<lb/>
promise.<lb/>
The growth of pop music has manifested itself in the<lb/>
multitude of excellent selections available on the market.<lb/>
Old favorites are being challenged by new artists, and<lb/>
competition can only benefit the listener. All we have to do<lb/>
is sit back, listen, and enjoy.<lb/>
House last Thursday. The barstool was given to Bandy<lb/>
while he was singing his country hit song Barstool<lb/>
Mountain.<lb/>
By WILLIAM JONES<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
Wagon wheels, thick rough hewn paneling, and a front<lb/>
porch overlooking the floor tables which face the stage<lb/>
provide the Carolina Opry House with an unmistakably<lb/>
down home atmosphere. It is an air that lends itself very<lb/>
well to the kind of music that Moe Bandy, who headlined<lb/>
here last Thursday, performs.<lb/>
Moe Bandy writes and sings pure, untoward<lb/>
"honky-tonk His musical style might most readily be<lb/>
compared to that of George Jones. The songs are simple<lb/>
and straight forward. They most often deal with life's hard<lb/>
times.<lb/>
Bandy is familiar with paying dues in life. He was<lb/>
raised on the music of Hank Williams and Jimmie Rogers<lb/>
(his grandfather worked with Rogers on the railroad). Upon<lb/>
finishing high school, Bandy became a sheet metal worker<lb/>
by day, and entertainer by night. These long (often 70<lb/>
work hours a week), hard days eventually paid off.<lb/>
In 1973, he released Just Started Hating Cheating<lb/>
Song Today. It did very well on the country charts. The<lb/>
next 17 singles Bandy has released since then have made it<lb/>
to the top 15. This includes two singles which have been<lb/>
no. 1 hits, Bandy the Rodeo Clown, Cheating Situation,<lb/>
and Good Ole Boys.<lb/>
Prior to his performance, this reporter, along with Jon<lb/>
Philips, City Editor of The Washington Daily News, had<lb/>
the opportunity to speak with Moe Bandy about his music.<lb/>
(Many thanks to Mr. Buzzledford of the Carolina Opry<lb/>
house for arranging the interview.)<lb/>
EC: You have a tour coming up called the "Moe and Joe"<lb/>
tour, with Joe Stamply.<lb/>
Bandy: We're currently doing that, we've just split up for a<lb/>
few days. We just played New York Monday night and<lb/>
meet in Charleston, West Virginia tomorrow. We'll be<lb/>
Humor<lb/>
Hey Guys<lb/>
Is your roommate beginning to get on your nerves?<lb/>
Mine most assuredly is. Granted, it takes a lot of<lb/>
patience to live with another person, but I certainly feel<lb/>
that I've tried. Why, I've put up with all kinds of things,<lb/>
and I simply don't know how much more I can take.<lb/>
For one thing, my roommate is absolutely insane about<lb/>
beach music and insists upon playing it 25 hours a day.<lb/>
Now don't get me wrong, I like it all right myself, but let's<lb/>
face it, there are only so many beach song in existence.<lb/>
So the same ones play over and over and over. I don't<lb/>
know if I can stand it another day and, adding insult to<lb/>
injury, my roommate tends to go berserk when I attempt to<lb/>
listen to my punk rock favorites.<lb/>
Another thing ? was quite peeved the other day when<lb/>
I woke up to 75-degree weather only to discover that my<lb/>
dear roomie had absconded with my odor-ro-no. She may<lb/>
have done it on purpose. I think she was still mad at me<lb/>
for finishing off her shampoo on the morning of the last<lb/>
football game. I thought she'd already washed her hair<lb/>
since she had a towel wrapped around her head, but she<lb/>
was actually giving herself a hot oil treatment.<lb/>
On the flip side, I'll admit that I did make the mistake<lb/>
.of losing her $18 biology book two days before the test, but<lb/>
it was an accident and besides, she had gotten drunk the<lb/>
week before and had thrown up all over my history notes.<lb/>
We don't see eye to eye about our quarters either. She<lb/>
can't understand that I have to leave my bike in the room<lb/>
or someone might steal it, and she hates it when I let dirty<lb/>
dishes sit. I still think a little green mold never hurt<lb/>
anything. The other day my roommate got irritated because<lb/>
I left my cup of ice on her dresser. She put the cup, ice<lb/>
and all, between the sheets of my bed. I feel I was quite<lb/>
justified in leaving an uncapped magic marker between her<lb/>
sheets.<lb/>
Do you know what else she did? She knocked a full<lb/>
ashtray into my clothes basket and later got furious<lb/>
because I did something minor like burn a hole in one of<lb/>
her dresses. You can hardly even tell it's there, unless you<lb/>
see it in the sunlight.<lb/>
My roommate also went crazy when I drew a mustache<lb/>
and an earring on her boyfriend's picture, but I hardly<lb/>
think it's my fault. She can't take a joke. The other day,<lb/>
after I remarked that she tied up the phone for three<lb/>
hours, she was rude enough to say that I never get phone<lb/>
calls anyway, so what difference did it make? That hurt.<lb/>
Just for that, I stole her toothbrush and hairspray. She<lb/>
can't survive without either of them.<lb/>
I'm telling you, she's really driving me up a wall.<lb/>
Yours, 775134<lb/>
working some next week. Then we start a real long tour<lb/>
Oct. 25, in Seattle. It will take us all through California,<lb/>
Arizona and New Mexico.<lb/>
Philips: Being on the road you must play al kinds o<lb/>
places. Do you prefer to play the big halls or the smaller<lb/>
clubs like this?<lb/>
Bandy: It don't matter. I like a variety. I hate to play one<lb/>
type place all the time. We play a lot of rodeos, fairs,<lb/>
nightclubs, concerts, and I like that. That way you don t<lb/>
know what you're going to run into next ? it soui.ds like a<lb/>
lively place here.<lb/>
EC: Have you gotten into any funny or rough situati<lb/>
while performing?<lb/>
Bandy: Oh, I used to quite a bit. I played in Texas for<lb/>
about 12 years before I got my first record and used to pla<lb/>
in some wild places. Everything's been going prt<lb/>
smoothly for a while. There's always something happen<lb/>
with the band, we're always cutting up.<lb/>
Philips: Have you ever been in eastern N.C. before.1'<lb/>
Bandy: Yeah, I worked a show here four or five years ago<lb/>
with Dolly Parton and Jack Green and several other people.<lb/>
Philips: You've had several hits in the past but it see<lb/>
like lately, with Good Ole Boys, Cheating Situation, and<lb/>
Barstool Mountin, they've just been piling up one on top oi<lb/>
the other.<lb/>
Bandy: Yeah, really. I don't know, something happened.<lb/>
Our last 17 songs in a row have done real well, and we ve<lb/>
done 12 albums now. Last year, Cheating Situation went to<lb/>
no. 1. Barstool Mountain was in the top 5, and Good Ole<lb/>
Boys was just no. 1.1 don't know what it is. but I hope it<lb/>
keeps coming. We're putting down seme good songs and<lb/>
I've got a good producer and record company (Columbia)<lb/>
and good people working for me.<lb/>
Philips: When did you decide to grow the Ieard9<lb/>
Bandy: I grew it during the Christmas holiday- w<lb/>
ioing a T.V. show and the girl doing the makeup told me it<lb/>
See Bandy, page 10<lb/>
Brood album<lb/>
lacks big<lb/>
seller touch<lb/>
Reader blasts Zappa story<lb/>
Dear Features Editor,<lb/>
The purpose of this<lb/>
letter is two-fold: to correct<lb/>
some of the errors and<lb/>
misleading statements in<lb/>
your recent review of Joe's<lb/>
Garage called "Zappa Cuts<lb/>
Loose" and to make a plea<lb/>
for more carefully written<lb/>
reviews.<lb/>
First, let me state that I<lb/>
am not a writer. I don't<lb/>
have an impressive vocabu-<lb/>
lary, I don't spell very well,<lb/>
and I've never studied<lb/>
journalism. I'm just a guy<lb/>
who, among other things,<lb/>
likes to listen to records <lb/>
especially Frank Zappa<lb/>
records. I've listened in-<lb/>
tensely to all his public<lb/>
releases, six concerts, quite<lb/>
a few bootlegs and inter-<lb/>
views ? anything I could<lb/>
get my hands on. This<lb/>
 Albums courtesy of Record Bar, Pitt Plaza &amp; Carolina<lb/>
East Mall.<lb/>
Coming<lb/>
Attractions<lb/>
HOMECOMING<lb/>
Beau Thorp and Generation<lb/>
will provide music at this<lb/>
year's homecoming dance.<lb/>
The dance will be held Oct.<lb/>
13, in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Tickets are $2.00 for<lb/>
students, $4.00 for the<lb/>
public.<lb/>
AMERICA<lb/>
The Major Attractions<lb/>
Committee presents Amer-<lb/>
ica in concert on Tuesday,<lb/>
October 9, at 8:00 p.m. in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
ART EXHIBITION<lb/>
Ride on an art exhibition,<lb/>
will begin October 15 in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
gallery.<lb/>
background and not my<lb/>
writing experience is what<lb/>
supports the statements in<lb/>
this letter.<lb/>
My first reactions to the<lb/>
article were surprise and<lb/>
disappointment. Although a<lb/>
lot of statements were in-<lb/>
accurate, they were minor<lb/>
flaws which I attributed to a<lb/>
combination of human error<lb/>
and the writer's not know-<lb/>
ing any better. Some points<lb/>
were so misleading, how-<lb/>
ever, I felt I had to speak<lb/>
my mind.<lb/>
The most obvious mis-<lb/>
take was calling Joe's<lb/>
Garage the first release on<lb/>
Zappa Records. The first<lb/>
was Sheik Yerbouti. Joe's<lb/>
Garage was the second.<lb/>
Saying that Joe's Garage<lb/>
is Zappa's finest work is<lb/>
like playing God. I'll<lb/>
certainly go along with<lb/>
? "one of his finest though.<lb/>
I rather doubt if "Cath-<lb/>
? olic Girls" was released to<lb/>
J "gesture defiantly" at cri-<lb/>
l tics of "Jewish Princess"<lb/>
t (Sheik Yerbouti) as "Cath-<lb/>
l olic Girls" was written<lb/>
? before the critics ever heard<lb/>
I "Jewish Princess<lb/>
? The most disturbing part<lb/>
of the article to me, though,<lb/>
was when the authors<lb/>
suggested that this was the<lb/>
first time Zappa was able to<lb/>
speak his mind "without<lb/>
fear of censorship This is<lb/>
ridiculous! The only re-<lb/>
strictions on him were in<lb/>
the areas of proper distri-<lb/>
bution and promotion. Ap-<lb/>
parently the authors heard<lb/>
news of Zappa's split from<lb/>
Warner Bros. Records and<lb/>
assumed that this was the<lb/>
reason. I don't feel that this<lb/>
kind of unsupported as-<lb/>
sumption is fair to the artist<lb/>
or the reader.<lb/>
There are more points<lb/>
that I could touch on, but I<lb/>
won't. I'm sure many feel<lb/>
I'm getting too picky as it<lb/>
is. Perhaps I am, but this is<lb/>
important to me and other<lb/>
reviews will deal with<lb/>
things that are important to<lb/>
other people. I don't expect<lb/>
the writers of these reviews<lb/>
to know everything, but I<lb/>
think it would be nice if<lb/>
they gave their opinions<lb/>
without sticking in things<lb/>
they have made up because<lb/>
it sounds good.<lb/>
People want to believe<lb/>
what they read. Something<lb/>
as opinionated as a review,<lb/>
unless written carefully, can<lb/>
easily mislead the reader<lb/>
into believing other things<lb/>
that simply aren't true. I<lb/>
enjoy reading other people's<lb/>
opinions, but I think it is a<lb/>
writer's responsibility to<lb/>
know what he's talking<lb/>
about before he prints it.<lb/>
I'm tired of confusing<lb/>
reviews full of big words<lb/>
that only seek to expose the<lb/>
swank journalistic technique<lb/>
of the writer. Parts of the<lb/>
article were really good, but<lb/>
other parts were very guilty<lb/>
of my previous statement. I<lb/>
hope that a little more time<lb/>
and thought will go into<lb/>
future reviews. Thanks.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Fred Midgett<lb/>
P.O. Box 663<lb/>
Maysville, NC 28555<lb/>
(Editors note: Any al-<lb/>
bum review with a byline is<lb/>
an opinion and enjoys the<lb/>
privilege of fair comment,<lb/>
and readers should realize<lb/>
this. However, factual err-<lb/>
ors are unforgivable yet<lb/>
inevitable, and we are<lb/>
always open to corrections.)<lb/>
By LARRY GRAHAM<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
Over the past few yeras,<lb/>
there has been an influx of<lb/>
musicians from the Nether-<lb/>
lands. Few of the musicians<lb/>
are well known here in the<lb/>
United States with the<lb/>
exception of Jan Akkerman,<lb/>
a guitarist whose abilities<lb/>
rival those of Eric Clapton's.<lb/>
The Netherlands does not<lb/>
always export quality,<lb/>
though, as in the case of<lb/>
Herman Brood who it trying<lb/>
to break into the American<lb/>
market.<lb/>
Brood is an unusual<lb/>
musician at best. Brood is<lb/>
the head of what might be<lb/>
termed rinky-dink rock.<lb/>
While the guitar, bass and<lb/>
"Saturday Night" which -<lb/>
fair in its own right, the<lb/>
album went downhill. Brood<lb/>
seems to have achieved that<lb/>
wonderful art of cloning<lb/>
music, i.e every<lb/>
sounds like the la<lb/>
One song. 'Hit<lb/>
sounded very good to me.<lb/>
musically. Brood's sing<lb/>
soured it. thoi.<lb/>
the lyrics: "Y" say she ai<lb/>
mine, and I'll beat you<lb/>
jelly It's a hit on the head.<lb/>
a knock on the knucklt<lb/>
The last line just mentioned<lb/>
is repeated ad nauseum.<lb/>
Brood seems to have<lb/>
trouble getting the mixing<lb/>
on this album right; some of<lb/>
the songs have a bass track<lb/>
that almost blows the other<lb/>
Brood seems to have trouble getting the<lb/>
mixing on this album right; some of the<lb/>
songs have a bass track that almost blows<lb/>
the other instruments away<lb/>
drums are eking out their<lb/>
miserable tunes, Brood is<lb/>
hammering away at the<lb/>
keyboard as if he were<lb/>
trying to shorten his<lb/>
fingers. He also sings with<lb/>
a voice with gritty, non-<lb/>
musical aspects which rival<lb/>
and surpass those of Rod<lb/>
Stewart.<lb/>
The record on which I<lb/>
first heard Brood is called<lb/>
Herman Brood and His<lb/>
Wild Romance. I put on the<lb/>
record. For the first thirty<lb/>
seconds, the album sounded<lb/>
as if it were another pro-<lb/>
gressive rock-jazz album.<lb/>
Then, when Brood began to<lb/>
sing, the image fell apart.<lb/>
Brood was nothing more<lb/>
than another promoter of<lb/>
cheap rock.<lb/>
After the first cut,<lb/>
instruments away, and at<lb/>
other times, the bass can<lb/>
hardly be heard. (One never<lb/>
misses Brood vocals<lb/>
though.)<lb/>
The cover of this album<lb/>
is a grandiose example of<lb/>
the current trend of pro-<lb/>
moting records with sex.<lb/>
Brood could have been<lb/>
drunk when he agreed to<lb/>
the design. The record<lb/>
contains no lyrics sheet<lb/>
which is not surprising.<lb/>
What is there that is worth<lb/>
printing?<lb/>
All in all, this is an<lb/>
awful album not worth the<lb/>
effort of looking at. Mavbe<lb/>
Brood will come up with<lb/>
something better next time.<lb/>
I'll give him one more<lb/>
chance; everyone has their<lb/>
bad days, right?<lb/>
L?AWMMr I&amp;OVJT COLUtf- Tr)? HflRP A)At<lb/>
?1 PWip IMoRRlS<lb/>
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LOOCr- SH)TT?ft?P<lb/>
AfJCtl HT UJOf.L.0, o<lb/>
Hood um?, 511 6og <lb/>
LOOKlT THCaA OC<lb/>
ANDffOMEP &amp;??R c)n)5<lb/>
9<lb/>
I<lb/>
t<lb/>
im- ?<lb/>
miA?!ttnvMi0Ktiww'<lb/>
!tmimme?-<lb/>
!<lb/>
mumimm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057220_0009"/><lb/>
Records burned<lb/>
NORTH BELMONT<lb/>
N.C. (AP) - To get their<lb/>
point across about the<lb/>
detriment of rock 'n roll<lb/>
music to teenagers, parish-<lb/>
ioners at Goshen Free Will<lb/>
Baptist Church set ablaze<lb/>
more than $1,000 worth of<lb/>
records Saturday night.<lb/>
Rev. Benny Turner, 41,<lb/>
asked young people of the<lb/>
church to bring their rock<lb/>
records to a fellowship<lb/>
camp meeting on the church<lb/>
grounds. Almost 200 per-<lb/>
sons showed up for the<lb/>
Poaching, gospel music<lb/>
and bonfire in which the<lb/>
records, laced with refer-<lb/>
ences to sex and drug use,<lb/>
went up in smoke and<lb/>
flames.<lb/>
"We see that rock 'n<lb/>
roll is very much detrimen-<lb/>
tal to the lives of young<lb/>
people' said Turner. "I've<lb/>
yet to see a Bible Christian<lb/>
really involved 100 percent<lb/>
with rock 'n roll. All this is<lb/>
a menace, really, to the<lb/>
youth<lb/>
Rock 'n roll wasn't the<lb/>
only category to draw<lb/>
Turner's ire. Country and<lb/>
western and any recordings<lb/>
that suggested illicit sex<lb/>
were added to the flaming<lb/>
protest.<lb/>
"It's time the Christian<lb/>
really stood up and burned<lb/>
such trash as this Deacon<lb/>
Henry Scarborough said. "I<lb/>
hope later we have<lb/>
burning 10 times as big as<lb/>
we just had<lb/>
Turner hopes that in the<lb/>
next record-burning session,<lb/>
sex-oriented magazines and<lb/>
Ouija Boards will go into<lb/>
the pile. Turner says they<lb/>
are "Satan-connected<lb/>
Carter<lb/>
Spice of Life<lb/>
4 October 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Page 9<lb/>
a<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) -<lb/>
The president, said Johnny<lb/>
Cash, was a country boy<lb/>
who "had a sense of the<lb/>
propaganda value of songs<lb/>
Cash was talking about<lb/>
Abraham Lincoln but his<lb/>
words could have applied as<lb/>
well to Jimmy Carter, who<lb/>
was sitting in the front row<lb/>
of Ford's Theater soaking<lb/>
up some friendly television<lb/>
exposure and reminding<lb/>
folks that he, too, is a<lb/>
country boy.<lb/>
The president served<lb/>
partly as master of cere-<lb/>
monies, partly as prop,<lb/>
partly as "first fan" as<lb/>
television cameras recorded<lb/>
a 212-hour benefit perfor-<lb/>
mance by Cash, Dolly<lb/>
Parton, Glenn Campbell a d<lb/>
more than a dozen other<lb/>
country music stars.<lb/>
The program was re-<lb/>
corded Tuesday night for<lb/>
broadcast by NBC-TV Oct.<lb/>
16.<lb/>
It couldn't come at a<lb/>
better time for Carter, his<lb/>
political popularity droop-<lb/>
ing, Sen. Edward Kennedy<lb/>
nipping at his heels and the<lb/>
fate his SALT II treaty still<lb/>
clouded despite his stern<lb/>
television address Monday<lb/>
night about those 2,600<lb/>
Russian troops in Cuba.<lb/>
This television appear-<lb/>
ance was all gravy, a golden<lb/>
chance to say some nice,<lb/>
non-controversial things to<lb/>
the nation's growing audi-<lb/>
ence of country music fans<lb/>
and to start dusting off his<lb/>
own log-cabin image for the<lb/>
1980 campaign.<lb/>
"When I grew up in<lb/>
Plains, Ga when we asked<lb/>
for music, we got country<lb/>
music Carter said as he<lb/>
None bright enough forFamilyFeud<lb/>
By PETER J. BOYER<lb/>
AP Television Writer<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Los Angeles has run out of<lb/>
families bright enough to be on "Family Feud<lb/>
Howard Felscher, who produces "Family Feud" for<lb/>
dson-Todman Productions, has had to send scouts out<lb/>
ss the country to find families possessed of enough<lb/>
reasoning ability and exhuberance to make good<lb/>
contestants for television's No. 1 game show.<lb/>
"Our concern says Felscher, "is that we've milked<lb/>
the LA. area dry<lb/>
But, "Family Feud" is in no shortage of hopefuls.<lb/>
Felscher says his staff interviews 300 families every week,<lb/>
uhich 292 are eliminated. I'm telling you, that's scary.<lb/>
The show and its host, Richard Dawson, are enormously<lb/>
ular, both in the regular daytime slot on ABC and in<lb/>
-vndicated nighttime versions.<lb/>
Family Feud" has made six visits to prime-time as a<lb/>
ial, the first game show to venture onto a network's<lb/>
time schedule since 1962.<lb/>
A short while ago, "Family Feud" scouts went to<lb/>
Bostnn. Minneapolis, Kansas City and Atlanta with the<lb/>
intention of staying a week in each city to screen<lb/>
tants. "But our first morning turned out to be our<lb/>
last, because we booked as many as we could in the first<lb/>
hour says Felscher.<lb/>
in case you haven't seen "Family Feud I don't want<lb/>
give the impression that it's television's version of<lb/>
Mensa quiz. It's not. Two families of five try to match<lb/>
be responses given in a nationwide poll to questions such<lb/>
"T<lb/>
'Name something you might take a bath with The<lb/>
families give some incredibly stupid answers such as, "My<lb/>
whip" some bright answers "A rubber duck they win<lb/>
some money, and Richard Dawson kisses the ladies.<lb/>
Why the huge success, Mr. Felscher?<lb/>
"Who knows? Why was 'My Fair Lady' something<lb/>
special?" No, Lerner and Lowe did not do the music for<lb/>
"Family Feud But for whatever reasons, probably host<lb/>
Dawson's refreshing personal involvement with each<lb/>
contestant, the show has become the king of TV games.<lb/>
And now comes the topper: The Hatfields vs. The<lb/>
McCoys. Honest.<lb/>
"For a year, we'd been prospecting through West<lb/>
Virginia for some really good Hatfields and some really<lb/>
good McCoys Felscher says, "and we came up with the<lb/>
mother lode<lb/>
Next week, 10 Hatfields and 10 McCoys go at it in a<lb/>
special edition of "Family Feud There are 1Q on each<lb/>
side instead of the usual five because the captain of each<lb/>
team will be allowed to make substitutions, in case any<lb/>
member of his family proves too dim for the challenge.<lb/>
baiR,<lb/>
by Nature's Way<lb/>
specializing in natural hair cuts for men &amp; women<lb/>
appointments only<lb/>
753-7841<lb/>
Downtown Mall<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Iil.nyS . . . WHERE THERE<lb/>
'S<lb/>
MORE FOR FALL<lb/>
WOOL VEST AND<lb/>
SKIRT SEPARATES<lb/>
VEST<lb/>
$13.98 VALUE<lb/>
NOW $10.48<lb/>
SKIRT<lb/>
$18.98 VALUE<lb/>
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PLAID<lb/>
BLAZERS<lb/>
?WOOL BLENDS<lb/>
?FULLY LINED<lb/>
$45.98 VALUES<lb/>
NOW $39.90<lb/>
TRENCH-STYLE<lb/>
COATS<lb/>
?FLEECE OR WOOL-LINED HOODS<lb/>
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?ALL STYLES WATER REPELLENT<lb/>
$69.98 VALUES<lb/>
now $49.90<lb/>
SPECIAL GROUP ASSORTED FALL FASHIONS<lb/>
NOW 25 to 50 OFF<lb/>
Downtown, Greenville<lb/>
Ph 752-8965<lb/>
Coming In Oct. to Carolina East Mall<lb/>
introduced the show.<lb/>
Country music has re-<lb/>
mained people music he<lb/>
said. "Today all kinds of<lb/>
people listen to and love<lb/>
country music<lb/>
McCartney-<lb/>
Quick, who's the most<lb/>
successful composer of all<lb/>
time?<lb/>
Beethoven, perhaps, or<lb/>
Wagner? Or maybe it's<lb/>
Irving Berlin or Cole<lb/>
Porter?<lb/>
The answer, says Norris<lb/>
McWhirter, editor of the<lb/>
Guinness Books of Records,<lb/>
is Paul McCartney, and he<lb/>
will be honored as such Oct.<lb/>
24 in London.<lb/>
Former Beatle McCart-<lb/>
ney holds three entries in<lb/>
the Guinness book: most<lb/>
successful composer of all<lb/>
time, with 43 songs written<lb/>
between 1962 and 1978 that<lb/>
sold one million copies; a<lb/>
record number of 60 golden<lb/>
discs overall; and estimated<lb/>
record sales of 100 million<lb/>
singles and 100 million<lb/>
albums.<lb/>
Darty round - up<lb/>
LOUDON, Tenn. (AP) -<lb/>
All that was missing was a<lb/>
watchful cowboy astride his<lb/>
horse with Roy Rogers and<lb/>
Dale Evans crooning "Hap-<lb/>
py Trails" somewhere off<lb/>
stage. The last of the tiny<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY STORE<lb/>
Backpacks, B-15, Bomber,<lb/>
Fiold, Dock, Flight, Snorkel<lb/>
Jackots, Peacoats, Parkas,<lb/>
Shoes, Combat Boots Plus<lb/>
Over 400 Different Gl Items<lb/>
1501 S. Evans Street<lb/>
Leather Belts<lb/>
$6 to $19<lb/>
Leather Handbags<lb/>
$10 to $25<lb/>
?Shoes Repaired To Look<lb/>
Like New<lb/>
Riggon Shoe Repair<lb/>
&amp; Leather Shop<lb/>
111 WEST 4TH ST.<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
756-0204<lb/>
Parking in Front<lb/>
nd Rgar.<lb/>
are<lb/>
being<lb/>
snail darters<lb/>
rounded up.<lb/>
The Tennessee Valley<lb/>
Authority began its final<lb/>
push Tuesday to drive the<lb/>
embattled and endangered<lb/>
darter out of the Little<lb/>
Tennessee River Valley<lb/>
forever. Biologists with fish<lb/>
nets and snorkels rounded<lb/>
up 53 of the tiny fish and<lb/>
have about another 150 to<lb/>
find in the next four weeks<lb/>
before the Little Tennessee<lb/>
is turned into a 16,000-acre<lb/>
lake.<lb/>
The rare three-inch fish<lb/>
that halted the $130 million<lb/>
Tellico Dam for three years<lb/>
is being herded to the<lb/>
Holston River after Presi-<lb/>
dent Carter signed a bill<lb/>
last week exempting the<lb/>
project from protection by<lb/>
the Endangered Species<lb/>
Act.<lb/>
ELECTROLYSIS<lb/>
PERMANENT REMOVAL<lb/>
OF UNWANTED HAIR<lb/>
Electrolysis Is ihe ONLY permanent method of<lb/>
hair removal. Safe and comfortable<lb/>
FREE CONSULTATION<lb/>
Mrs. VicW Smith, Licensed Electrolog 1st<lb/>
103 Oakmont Dr. Greenville 756-3780<lb/>
Tues. Wed. Frl. -10:00-5.00 Thursday -2:00-7:00<lb/>
MARATHON RESTAURANT<lb/>
Now offering FREE MEAL every day for a week<lb/>
to the first person to give the correct number of<lb/>
pieces of wood on the inside front wall of the restaurant<lb/>
Marathon Restaurant<lb/>
560 Evans St.<lb/>
752-0326<lb/>
ndSP<lb/>
i<lb/>
i v a<lb/>
d<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
?j<lb/>
<lb/>
III<lb/>
Portraits<lb/>
will be<lb/>
taken:<lb/>
V<lb/>
When:<lb/>
Sept. 24-<lb/>
Oct. 20<lb/>
Where:<lb/>
Call the Buc<lb/>
office for an<lb/>
appointment:<lb/>
757-6501<lb/>
<pb facs="00057220_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 4 October 1979<lb/>
Reporter poses as migrant worker<lb/>
for first-person account<lb/>
BANDY<lb/>
continued from page 8<lb/>
MEADOW, N.C. (AP) - "Get up<lb/>
It was still dark, and the words shattered the<lb/>
early-morning silence. Within minutes, about 40 migrant<lb/>
farmworkers crawled from their iron cots and staggered<lb/>
from wooden shacks. A cool breeze, from a barren-looking<lb/>
field next to the camp, greeted the workers and passed<lb/>
through the camp to a large pond on the other side.<lb/>
Under the fading light of the moon, some of the<lb/>
workers wiped sleep from their eyes; some sat beneath a<lb/>
tall oak or on some wooden benches and sharpened knives.<lb/>
Others sipped leftover moonshine liquor or smoked<lb/>
cigarettes or marijuana butts. Some thought about the egg<lb/>
sandwich that they would get as breakfast.<lb/>
It was the beginning of just another work day. For most<lb/>
it would be another day of poverty ? long hours for little<lb/>
and no hope for a better way of life.<lb/>
It would be another day of monotonous labor, followed<lb/>
b a night of drugged or drunken escape, which often<lb/>
ended iolently.<lb/>
This scene of migrant labor-camp activity was reported<lb/>
m Tuesday by The Fayetteville Times, which sent reporter<lb/>
Tim Smith to the camp.<lb/>
S iith posed as a migrant farmworker to see how the<lb/>
workers lived. Here is his first-person account:<lb/>
X hat l saw was frightening: Workers bought drugs and<lb/>
liquor, leaving them little or no money for food on<lb/>
k nds; workers who wanted a bath often used the same<lb/>
they urinated in; workers were offered wooden<lb/>
outhouses and showers occupied by poisonous snakes.<lb/>
Getting into the camp was not difficult.<lb/>
On a hot, July morning I was picked up while<lb/>
litchhiking on N.C. 50, about two miles outside of<lb/>
M,<lb/>
dow, by a middle-aged black man who said his brother<lb/>
rev leader at two nearby camps. He offered me a<lb/>
but it ?a? his brother who eventually hired me.<lb/>
was told there would be a room and board charge of<lb/>
I later learned it was $40 a week and that all my<lb/>
- would be hot and that bedding would be supplied.<lb/>
The meals often were cold and the utensils and bedding<lb/>
were not given to me.<lb/>
As a result of high consumption of alcohol or drugs at<lb/>
night, the camp's atmosphere changed dramatically.<lb/>
Usually timid workers became violent, workers who<lb/>
were good-natured became angry and depressed, and those<lb/>
who were strong and quick suddenly stumbled into<lb/>
doorways or fell against the walls.<lb/>
It was a scene reminiscent of a back alley filled with<lb/>
drunks.<lb/>
Sleep for me was difficult. A scratching, crawling thing<lb/>
in my mattress kept me awake for two nights<lb/>
Food was a problem for everyone. Workers complained<lb/>
often, but to no avail. For the $40-a-week charge, workers<lb/>
were served an egg sandwich for breakfast, a bologna<lb/>
sandwich for lunch and a plate of beans and rice for<lb/>
supper. The meat for supper was either a turkey neck or<lb/>
fish.<lb/>
But the biggest problem with the meals was on<lb/>
weekends. Saturday breakfast was the only meal until<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
Little money was left after the workers bought food and<lb/>
beverages. Those who bought liquor paid $35 a pint.<lb/>
Some of the money also was used for another form of<lb/>
escape ? sex. One of the workers told me women<lb/>
sometimes were brought into the camp on Saturday nights.<lb/>
They received marijuana for their sexual favors, he said.<lb/>
There also were male prostitutes.<lb/>
All of this combined to create a weekend atmosphere<lb/>
that was seamy, violent, noisy and depressing. But it<lb/>
offered a change for the workers from the dog-days and<lb/>
nights during the week.<lb/>
Such an atmosphere did nothing, however, to help my<lb/>
spirits. Lack of sleep and hunger made me dizzy and<lb/>
frustrated. And by Saturday night, I could no longer cope.<lb/>
I broke down and cried. I wanted to leave camp.<lb/>
The next night I did leave, after being refused any pay<lb/>
for my work.<lb/>
("an ton is gormet capital of Orient<lb/>
take the chief<lb/>
to predict that<lb/>
By HUGH A MULLIGAN<lb/>
AP Special Correspondent<lb/>
CANTON, China (AP) ? It wouldn't<lb/>
gi sti ator in a fortune cookie factory<lb/>
. the gourmet capital of the Orient, would have<lb/>
iacular restaurants.<lb/>
nothing in the guide books of in the imagination<lb/>
the greedy gourmet for the total Chinese<lb/>
overwhelms him at the Restaurant Pan Hsi,<lb/>
 be the largest Chinese restaurant anywhere in<lb/>
ture, if you can, 8,000 chopsticks clicking away at<lb/>
h delectable delicacies as quail eggs marinated in<lb/>
roe. webbed feet of duck dappled with tiny prawns<lb/>
rice bird- stuffed with liver sausage in a lovely setting<lb/>
imbling tea houses tucked into bamboo groves around<lb/>
acid lake.<lb/>
There is even a floating dining room for those who<lb/>
-t that their golden carp be freshly plucked from the<lb/>
r, although real aficionados of Cantonese cook T are<lb/>
prefer fish billed from the sea by trained<lb/>
rmoranl -<lb/>
N ? only can the 400 chefs at Pan Hsi whip up 4,000<lb/>
a time, but on any given day they can and often<lb/>
rve 10.000 people in the 40 dining rooms.<lb/>
Thi? i- all the more remarkable when you consider that<lb/>
urant is only open for dinner, from 5 to 9 p.m<lb/>
: ? ? takeout service.<lb/>
Despite the serving statistics, it is wise to call ahead for<lb/>
rvation, especially in early April and October when<lb/>
0 traveling salesmen overrun Canton for the twice<lb/>
annual trade fair.<lb/>
It tipping were allowed in the People's Republic ? a<lb/>
adent Western custom that disappeared after the<lb/>
solution ? the head waiter here would make like a<lb/>
warlord.<lb/>
At Pan Hsi, which means "by the lake guests are<lb/>
.mered about the 30 separate buildings according to how<lb/>
much they want to eat and how much they want to spend.<lb/>
This may seem an odd way for a classless society to treat<lb/>
the famished masses, but the Pan Hsi has been in business<lb/>
for over 100 years.<lb/>
We were escorted to a private room behind hand carved<lb/>
teak screens and seated at a lacquered table exquisitely set<lb/>
with authentic willowware and cooled by an enormous<lb/>
ding fan.<lb/>
Following the Cantonese custom, our host had called<lb/>
ahead from the hotel on the morning of our visit and asked<lb/>
the chef to prepare a nine-course spread of traditional<lb/>
delicacies ranging from pigeon, sea slugs and "jade tree"<lb/>
? artistically presented green vegetables ? to the<lb/>
THE GREAT "X" PERM SALE<lb/>
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unforgettable winter melon soup cooked right inside the<lb/>
melon.<lb/>
Since our insensitive Western palates were not yet<lb/>
adjusted to the subtleties of Cantonese cuisine, our host<lb/>
eschewed the more exotic dishes like sweet and sour bear<lb/>
paws, clear broth of boa constrictor with a chrysanthemum<lb/>
petal, "fragrant meat which is the chefs name for roast<lb/>
dog and "dragon and tiger a delicate mating of snake<lb/>
and civet cat.<lb/>
"Cantonese people very brutal said a Foreign Office<lb/>
man from Peking. "They eat dogs, cats, rats, baby seals,<lb/>
shark fins, anything No place to ask for a doggie bag,<lb/>
unless you like the real thing.<lb/>
But the piece de resistance which most people manage<lb/>
to resist is snake bile delivered fresh to your table by the<lb/>
snake handler. He arrives with a basket and a long thin<lb/>
knife ready to de-bile the snake you choose. Although the<lb/>
fainthearted might not agree, snake bile is said to be good<lb/>
for the heart and the liver. The man with the knife and<lb/>
wicker basket will also skin a snake at your table and<lb/>
prepare a sort of serpent glambe before your very eyes.<lb/>
"They do it right in your face said the man from<lb/>
Peking, screwing up his otherwise inscrutable face with a<lb/>
Northerner's disgust for Southern-style cooking.<lb/>
would make my face look thinner.<lb/>
Philips: Lately a sort of "Cosmic Cowboy" consciousness<lb/>
has arisen and I've noticed friends of mine who are into<lb/>
that going out and buying Moe Bandy albums. Have you<lb/>
made a conscious effort to appeal to this sort of people?<lb/>
Bandy: This is something that has just happened, but<lb/>
we're very glad it has. We're doing what we've always<lb/>
been doing. We've always wanted to reach the younger<lb/>
kids, the college level. In fact, next year we're going to<lb/>
concentrate on working at colleges.<lb/>
Philips: It looks like there are a lot of college students here<lb/>
tonight.<lb/>
Bandy: I've noticed this more and more, and I'm tickled to<lb/>
death with it. It's good, it's very good that we're able to<lb/>
reach them with our musicl.<lb/>
Philips: Is your road band the same people you use for<lb/>
recording?<lb/>
Bandy: No, I use studio musicians to record. But, these<lb/>
boys are good, and they travel everywhere with me. We've<lb/>
been all over the world.<lb/>
Philips: Who do you listen to?<lb/>
Bandy: I listen to a lot of people. I'm a big George Jones<lb/>
fan. Probably more than anything, my father was a big<lb/>
influence on me. He played guitar and sang.<lb/>
EC: Hank Williams' music has seen a resurgence in<lb/>
popularity in the last few years with the so called "outlaw<lb/>
movement" in courftry music. Do you feel this has made<lb/>
honky-tonk music more widely accepted?<lb/>
Bandy: Yes, I definitely do. Right now we have a lot of<lb/>
people listening to country music that have never listened<lb/>
to it before. So, when you bring back Hank Williams'<lb/>
music, it's new to a lot of folks, (pause) Are ya'll from<lb/>
around here?<lb/>
Philips: I'm from the Washington (NC) Daily News.<lb/>
EC: I write for the ECU student newspaper.<lb/>
Bandy: Great! I'm glad I said that about the college<lb/>
students then, (laughs)<lb/>
Philips; Do you ever get tired of playing the same songs<lb/>
over and over?<lb/>
Bandy: No ? as long as they're hits, I don't mind a bit.<lb/>
I'll play them forever. I recorded Just Started Hating<lb/>
Cheating Songs Today six years ago and I still play it every<lb/>
show.<lb/>
EC: What do you like most about being a big star now?<lb/>
Bandy: Well, it's just a thrill for me. Probably the thing I<lb/>
like most is just entertaining. It's something I've always<lb/>
wanted to do. It's great to get paid for something you like<lb/>
doing. I'd be doing this whether I was a star or not. This<lb/>
tour that Joe (Stamply) and I have been doing has had<lb/>
great crowds ? standing ovations and everything.<lb/>
Entertaining people who respond like that is just a<lb/>
tremendous amount of fun. I'm getting paid for something<lb/>
I used to do as a hobby.<lb/>
Twenty minutes later, Moe Bandy launched into a very<lb/>
professional performance of unadulterated "honky-tonk<lb/>
Dressed in cream colored, skin-tight pants and silk shirt, a<lb/>
showy but ungaudy set of duds, Bandy proceded to wow<lb/>
'em. The audience, mostly middle-aged with a surprising<lb/>
number (perhaps 30) of college aged folks, unabashedly<lb/>
voiced their appreciation.<lb/>
JOKE<lb/>
What do you get when you<lb/>
cross Ruta Lee with a bum?<lb/>
You get a Rutabegger.<lb/>
ELECTROLYSIS<lb/>
Effective Hair Removal<lb/>
Needls or Painless Tweezer<lb/>
QLENDA'S -756-4366<lb/>
224 Grssnvllls Blv.<lb/>
STUDENT UNION '<lb/>
SPECIAL ATTRACTIONS COMMITTEE<lb/>
presents<lb/>
Thorpe<lb/>
and<lb/>
Generation<lb/>
II<lb/>
HOMECOMING DANCE<lb/>
Sat Oct. 13, 1979<lb/>
9:00 pm<lb/>
Wright Auditorium<lb/>
TICKETS NOW<lb/>
ON SALE!<lb/>
Well into the first set (which lasted over an hour), the<lb/>
management of The Carolina Opry House surprised Mr.<lb/>
Bandy with a six foot bar stool. As he entered the last<lb/>
refrain of his current hit, the bar stool was brought onstage<lb/>
and Bandy conceeded to Performing another verse from<lb/>
atop it. He sang the verse grinning, his head brushing the<lb/>
steel girders of the ropf. . .?.<lb/>
The Bill Lyerly Band, who had entertained before<lb/>
Bandy's opening, and the crowd, wound up and on go,<lb/>
demanded an encore. The Lyerly Band obliged.<lb/>
On returning again to the stage, Bandy and his band<lb/>
The Rodeo Cowboys expressed their appreciation of the Bill<lb/>
Lyerly Band saying they were the best band they had had<lb/>
the pleasure of working with in some time.<lb/>
During a shorter second set, Bandy signed autographs<lb/>
and hugged a few of his less inhibited female fans. I hey,<lb/>
after appreciative applause, Bandy was off into the night<lb/>
for a long bus ride to West Virginia.<lb/>
The Carolina Opry House has done a tremendous job in<lb/>
bringing to eastern N.C. country performers of the highest<lb/>
caliber such as Hank Williams Jr. and Ernest Tubb, along<lb/>
with some of the best country rock bands in the area. 1 his<lb/>
Sunday the Opry House, along with the ECU Interfraternity<lb/>
Council, is hosting what for this area is an entertainment<lb/>
extravaganza. No less than four nationally known<lb/>
entertainers, Johnny Pavcheck, Delbert McChnton (who<lb/>
knocked 'em out at the Roxy here last year), Gatemouth<lb/>
Brown and the most populat home grown in quite a while.<lb/>
Mike Cross, have been scheduled to appear. The Opry<lb/>
House is expecting a crowd of some 10,000. We wish the<lb/>
Opry House (and the IFC) good luck and more power<lb/>
them.<lb/>
SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE<lb/>
CAUTION<lb/>
Vou may lose money it<lb/>
you miss the Shot'<lb/>
Gallery's, bu one pair at<lb/>
lull price get the second<lb/>
pair at ' 2 price, COUPON<lb/>
SALE. You must bring<lb/>
coupon with you.<lb/>
1U-6, MonSat.<lb/>
1st pair must be<lb/>
at least $10.00<lb/>
rhe Shot Gal<lb/>
720 Allantii<lb/>
DicKuioon Ave.<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO 12TH<lb/>
WEEK OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
$175.00 "all inclusive<lb/>
pregnancy test birth contr<lb/>
problem pregnancy course ng<lb/>
further information call 832-053"<lb/>
free number 800-221-2568 be<lb/>
9AM-5PM weekdays<lb/>
Raleigh Women's Health<lb/>
Organization<lb/>
917 West Morgan St<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C. 27603<lb/>
nun<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Thurs. Night<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
SHRIMP $4.75<lb/>
OYSTERS $475<lb/>
FLOUNDER 3.50<lb/>
TROUT $Z.95<lb/>
PERCH $295<lb/>
all you can eat<lb/>
No take-outs please.<lb/>
Meal Includes:<lb/>
French Fries, Cole slaw,<lb/>
Hushpappies<lb/>
We are proud to<lb/>
announce that we<lb/>
have added<lb/>
one of the<lb/>
AREAS FINEST<lb/>
SALAD BARS<lb/>
for your<lb/>
dining pleasure.<lb/>
OPEN FOR LUNCH<lb/>
Daily<lb/>
except Sat.) 11:30 - 13?<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
MON . THURS.<lb/>
5:00 ? IO:00<lb/>
FRI. &amp; SAT.<lb/>
f :00 ? 10:30<lb/>
located On Evan Street<lb/>
4<lb/>
t<lb/>
t<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057220_0011"/>
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