<?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="00057221_0001"/>
"Were it left to me to decide<lb/>
whether we should have a<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/>
Ihe Last Carolinian<lb/>
If you have a story idea, a<lb/>
tip, or a lead, plaaaa<lb/>
telephone us:<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
757-6367<lb/>
757-6309<lb/>
f3<lb/>
Vd. 54 No. ?<lb/>
12 pages today<lb/>
Tuesday, October 9,1979<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Phone strike<lb/>
to continue<lb/>
TARBORO, N.C. (AP)<lb/>
Union insistence on an<lb/>
matic cost-of-living<lb/>
e adjustment and com-<lb/>
refusal to consider one<lb/>
the issue that precipi-<lb/>
I a strike last Monday<lb/>
50 to 75 percent of<lb/>
ilina Telephone and<lb/>
graph Co. workers.<lb/>
aders of the Commu-<lb/>
as Workers of Amer-<lb/>
local union have indi-<lb/>
te v will not return to<lb/>
bargaining table unless<lb/>
cost-of-living clause is<lb/>
uded in the contract.<lb/>
believe if we can<lb/>
'? at one hurdle, a cost<lb/>
provision, there<lb/>
other issues that<lb/>
ironed out easily<lb/>
bert Gordon, union<lb/>
lg chief.<lb/>
the company is<lb/>
no<lb/>
But<lb/>
adamant in its refusal to<lb/>
consider the cost-of-living<lb/>
adjustment.<lb/>
"We believe the cost-<lb/>
of-living adjustment is un-<lb/>
wise fundamentally said<lb/>
CT&amp;T Vice President T. P.<lb/>
Williamson. "It is not in the<lb/>
interest of the company or<lb/>
its subscribers to be tied to<lb/>
a national figure<lb/>
So, there is no apparent<lb/>
end in sight for the strike,<lb/>
which has been marked by<lb/>
heckling, vandalism and<lb/>
minor assaults which have<lb/>
resulted in arrests being<lb/>
made on both sides.<lb/>
Sources say the company<lb/>
has offered the workers a<lb/>
package that would mean<lb/>
$15 million in wage and<lb/>
benefit raises during the<lb/>
three-year-life of the pro-<lb/>
posed contract. The package<lb/>
indudes:<lb/>
Anti-nukes jailed<lb/>
BR00K, N.H. (AP)<lb/>
pite two days of<lb/>
n the fences at the<lb/>
k nuclear power<lb/>
protestors who bat-<lb/>
police dogs, high-<lb/>
re water hoses and<lb/>
still found them-<lb/>
on the outside<lb/>
strongest show of<lb/>
in five years of<lb/>
ibrook demonstra-<lb/>
te troopers and<lb/>
n Guardsmen re-<lb/>
the attempts Satur-<lb/>
unuay by as many<lb/>
,500 demonstrators with<lb/>
tear gas, water hoses, riot<lb/>
.tnd police dogs.<lb/>
ver, only 20 per-<lb/>
;re arrested, com-<lb/>
to 1,414 during a<lb/>
I in 1977.<lb/>
t-ral hundred demon-<lb/>
- returned to camp-<lb/>
he woods near the<lb/>
hed plant late Sun-<lb/>
to decide whether to<lb/>
more action today.<lb/>
The protestors suc-<lb/>
ceeded in dismantling small<lb/>
tions of the fence<lb/>
ounding the plant's 140-<lb/>
acre construction site, but<lb/>
none entered the construc-<lb/>
tion zone.<lb/>
Medics for the Coalition<lb/>
for Direct Action at Sea-<lb/>
brook, sponsor of the<lb/>
action, were busy treating<lb/>
dozens of demonstrators<lb/>
who had been sprayed in<lb/>
the eyes with Mace.<lb/>
On Sunday, hundreds of<lb/>
activists massed at the<lb/>
plant's main gate, blocking<lb/>
busy U.S. 1, the major road<lb/>
through the small ocean-<lb/>
front community of Sea-<lb/>
brook. Officials tried unsuc-<lb/>
cessfully to drive them away<lb/>
with two water hoses, but<lb/>
the demonstrators left vol-<lb/>
untarily later in the after-<lb/>
noon to plan for further<lb/>
action.<lb/>
Protesters said it was a<lb/>
disappointing weekend for<lb/>
them because they had<lb/>
failed to attract the thou-<lb/>
sands they had expected to<lb/>
charge the fences.<lb/>
But the action was a<lb/>
success for authorities,<lb/>
whose preparation and tac-<lb/>
tics kept the charging<lb/>
demonstrators from their<lb/>
goal.<lb/>
Demonstrators tried re-<lb/>
peatedly to cut holes in<lb/>
fences or pull them down<lb/>
with ropes and chains, but<lb/>
each time they were met<lb/>
with riot-equipped police. It<lb/>
was a marked escalation<lb/>
from the level of violence at<lb/>
other anti-Seabrook demon-<lb/>
strations, which have been<lb/>
generally peaceful.<lb/>
?A 10 percent wage<lb/>
hike the first year and 9<lb/>
percent boosts the following<lb/>
two years.<lb/>
?An additional holiday<lb/>
? George Washington's<lb/>
birthday ? that would<lb/>
bring the number of paid<lb/>
holidays to 11.<lb/>
?A dental plan, begin-<lb/>
ning the second year of the<lb/>
contract, in which the<lb/>
company would pay 60<lb/>
percent of the cost.<lb/>
?An improved hospital<lb/>
and sickness plan under<lb/>
which the company's parti-<lb/>
cipation would increase<lb/>
from 70 to 80 percent the<lb/>
first year, to 85 percent the<lb/>
second year and to 90<lb/>
percent the third year.<lb/>
?A $2,000 increase in<lb/>
the amount of company-paid<lb/>
life insurance.<lb/>
?An increase in the<lb/>
mileage allowance from 14<lb/>
cents -to 18 cents the first<lb/>
year and 20 cents the third<lb/>
year.<lb/>
? Shortened eligibility<lb/>
time for a third week of<lb/>
vacation.<lb/>
Gordon said the pro-<lb/>
posed package was accept-<lb/>
able providing the cost-of-<lb/>
living adjustment, based on<lb/>
a formula proposed by the<lb/>
union, was included to<lb/>
begin the second year of the<lb/>
contract.<lb/>
Strike<lb/>
of sit<lb/>
rsview<lb/>
<lb/>
CT&amp;T strikers will hold, out until their demand for a cost-of-living increase is met.<lb/>
(Photo by Kip Sloan)<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
"We're prepared to stay out there were the words of<lb/>
Elaine Curry, a service assistant with Carolina Telephone<lb/>
and Telegraph, and the group vice president of traffic<lb/>
(operators) in the Union.<lb/>
According to Ms. Curry, CT&amp;T is the only telephone<lb/>
utility that does not have a cost of living allowance in their<lb/>
contracts.<lb/>
The Union had asked for a cost-of-living clause in the<lb/>
past but had not received it. This time they voted to go on<lb/>
strike rather than give in to the company.<lb/>
The last strike lasted a month, but Curry said "I would<lb/>
hope the company would give us the cost-of-living clause.<lb/>
Due to a city ordinance, the strikers cannot picket the<lb/>
company, located on Fifth Street, except between the hours<lb/>
of 6:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
As far as Curry knows there were only three operators<lb/>
who passed the picket lines.<lb/>
"They say it's not practical said Curry, referring to<lb/>
the management's opinion of the clause.<lb/>
Offers have been made, but the strikers plan to hold<lb/>
out for the cost-of-living increase even though the<lb/>
management claims, according to Curry, that the clause<lb/>
would be a hardship on the company, as well as the<lb/>
customers.<lb/>
ECU College Bowl planned<lb/>
By RICHARD GREEN<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Applications for 1979<lb/>
College Bowl competition<lb/>
must be turned in by 5:00<lb/>
p.m October 12, at room<lb/>
204 in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. The only require-<lb/>
men' is that the person be a<lb/>
full-time student at ECU.<lb/>
The ECU team ranked<lb/>
third of fourteen teams last<lb/>
year, with Davidson first<lb/>
and UNC at Chapel Hill<lb/>
second. N.C. State finished<lb/>
last.<lb/>
use<lb/>
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP)<lb/>
? A college sophomore<lb/>
charged with killing two<lb/>
students and wounding five<lb/>
at a weekend fraternity<lb/>
party was upset over being<lb/>
denied a refund of $2 he<lb/>
had paid to attend another<lb/>
party off-campus two weeks<lb/>
earlier, his roommate said<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
But Donald C. Rivers,<lb/>
roommate of the alleged<lb/>
gunman, Mark A. Houston,<lb/>
19, at the University of<lb/>
South Carolina said that<lb/>
Houston had not tried to<lb/>
join the Kappa Alpha Psi<lb/>
fraternity, and had not<lb/>
mentioned disliking any of<lb/>
its members. Rivers is a<lb/>
member of the non-resi-<lb/>
dential fraternity.<lb/>
Houston allegedly ap-<lb/>
peared at the party, drew<lb/>
a pistol and began firing<lb/>
into the crowd.<lb/>
Prosecutor Richard Har-<lb/>
pootlian said the party two<lb/>
weeks ago was shut down<lb/>
by police because too many<lb/>
people were present. He<lb/>
said Houston apparently<lb/>
believed the fraternity spon-<lb/>
sored it when in fact it was<lb/>
held by a single member.<lb/>
Correction<lb/>
Due to a production<lb/>
error, an article was in-<lb/>
correct in the Oct. 4 issue of<lb/>
The East Carolinian. The<lb/>
article, headlined "Newslet-<lb/>
ter subject at meeting"<lb/>
concerned the Media Board<lb/>
meeting held Oct. 3. The<lb/>
column which appeared<lb/>
incorrectly is rerun here in<lb/>
its proper order. We regret<lb/>
the error.<lb/>
Johnny Paycheck headlined the bW unih Mike Cross and<lb/>
Delbert McClinton at an outdoor concert m Greenville<lb/>
Sunday, (see page 9) (P??to by Richard Green)<lb/>
The question had been<lb/>
raised as to whether the<lb/>
Media Board as "publisher<lb/>
of all student sponsored<lb/>
publications" at ECU was<lb/>
responsible for the News-<lb/>
letter.<lb/>
According to the Boards<lb/>
constitution, "All student<lb/>
publications funded from<lb/>
the student activity fee (not<lb/>
to include Student Union<lb/>
publications), the Photo<lb/>
Lab, and Radio station<lb/>
WECU shall be admin-<lb/>
istered by the board<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 pub-<lb/>
lished.<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/>
Vice Chancellor of Stu-<lb/>
dent life, Elmet E. Meyer<lb/>
said "I think you're raising<lb/>
sert of a red flag<lb/>
"fe will not lower<lb/>
ourselves inio the gutter<lb/>
Melvin later commented.<lb/>
Rivers described Hou-<lb/>
ston as a "tough personality<lb/>
 uncompromising" but a<lb/>
"real nice guy Rivers said<lb/>
he had no idea what might<lb/>
have led to the shooting.<lb/>
He said Houston bought<lb/>
a .32-caliber pistol about a<lb/>
month ago and kept it<lb/>
under his mattress. Houston<lb/>
did not tell him why he.<lb/>
acquired the weapon, Rivers<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Police said the pistol<lb/>
was stolen from a Columbia<lb/>
house last year but they did<lb/>
not know how Houston<lb/>
obtained it.<lb/>
Houston, a Columbia<lb/>
resident, appeared in court<lb/>
briefly Monday and told<lb/>
Circuit Judge Walter A.<lb/>
Cox he could not afford to<lb/>
hire a lawyer. Houston was<lb/>
ordered to remain in jail<lb/>
without bond after Cox<lb/>
named a public defender to<lb/>
represent him.<lb/>
Houston is accused of<lb/>
slaying Terrell G. Johnson,<lb/>
21, a St. Matthews senior,<lb/>
at the party early Saturday<lb/>
in a dormitory and fresh-<lb/>
man Patrick McGinty, 19, of<lb/>
Wilmington, Del on a<lb/>
nearby walkway.<lb/>
He is also charged with<lb/>
assault and battery with<lb/>
intent to kill in the<lb/>
wounding of five other<lb/>
students. One, Allen Uni-<lb/>
versity student John L.<lb/>
Aiken, 20, of Sumter,<lb/>
remained in serious con-<lb/>
dition in a Columbia<lb/>
hospital Monday. He was<lb/>
hit while on the walkway.<lb/>
Hospitalized in stable<lb/>
condition were Randy Mc<lb/>
Cray, 18, of Columbia and<lb/>
David L. Simmons, 17, of<lb/>
Charleston.<lb/>
Michael Lawyer, 18, of<lb/>
Moncks Corner was re-<lb/>
leased from a hospital<lb/>
Monday. Released earlier<lb/>
was William Terry Lang-<lb/>
ston, 22, of Easley.<lb/>
Police investigator Ray<lb/>
Chandler said no one<lb/>
noticed the gunman at the<lb/>
party until he began firing.<lb/>
"When people realized<lb/>
there were bullets flying<lb/>
around the room, there was<lb/>
general hysteria.  Some<lb/>
people hit the floor and<lb/>
others ran out the door<lb/>
said Ronald Dray ton, one of<lb/>
the party goers. "Then he<lb/>
ran up the ramp shooting<lb/>
people<lb/>
The team members were<lb/>
Rob Sample (Medical),<lb/>
Stacy Worthington (Political<lb/>
science), Bill Canuette<lb/>
(AFROTC), Ray Davis<lb/>
(English), and Doug Queen<lb/>
(English).<lb/>
Competition this year<lb/>
will be limited to the first<lb/>
sixteen teams that apply,<lb/>
according to Wanda Yuhas,<lb/>
assistant program director.<lb/>
Teams may be departmental<lb/>
or individually organized,<lb/>
and plans are being made<lb/>
for a match with adminis-<lb/>
trators.<lb/>
"The department staffs<lb/>
are not enthusiastic about<lb/>
it. The students are the<lb/>
ones who do it Yuhas<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Questions in the<lb/>
matches come from the<lb/>
Readeis' Digest Almanac,<lb/>
and topics include all<lb/>
academic subjects, current<lb/>
events, sports, popular mu-<lb/>
sic and others.<lb/>
Intramural competition<lb/>
is planned for October<lb/>
20-21, with finals on Oct.<lb/>
22.<lb/>
First place prize for<lb/>
intramural competition is<lb/>
$25 for each member and<lb/>
$10 each for the second<lb/>
place team. The English<lb/>
Department won last year.<lb/>
The competition was<lb/>
once known as the General<lb/>
Electric College Bowl and<lb/>
matches were teltvised.<lb/>
CBS will be picking up the<lb/>
competition sometime in<lb/>
January with much of the<lb/>
funding coming from Read-<lb/>
ers ' Digest.<lb/>
Prises for national com-<lb/>
petition include a $3,500<lb/>
scholarship and a scholar-<lb/>
ship fund for the college or<lb/>
university.<lb/>
Inside Today<lb/>
SGA and Media<lb/>
Board meetings,<lb/>
see page 5<lb/>
A star freshman<lb/>
football player<lb/>
seepage 6<lb/>
Concert coverage<lb/>
and photos<lb/>
see page 9<lb/>
Bo Thorpe for<lb/>
Homecoming<lb/>
seepage 10<lb/>
There are still<lb/>
questions,<lb/>
seepage 4<lb/>
'America9 tonight<lb/>
By RICHARD GREEN<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Only about 600 tickets to the America<lb/>
concert have been sold as of Monday at<lb/>
noon, according to Charles Sune, president<lb/>
of the Student Union. The student<lb/>
organization needs to sell 3,500 tickets to<lb/>
break even.<lb/>
"There is a real possibility that if this<lb/>
concert fails, there will be no more concerts<lb/>
this year Sune said.<lb/>
The turnout for yesterday's outdoor<lb/>
concert at the Carolina Opry House was<lb/>
somewhat less than many people expected.<lb/>
"Concerts are not<lb/>
Haines said, but he<lb/>
Tom Haines, manager of the Attic, said<lb/>
he lost about $20,000 on a recent concert that<lb/>
was rained out, but he sold almost $16,000<lb/>
worth of advanced tickets to people standing<lb/>
in the rain.<lb/>
easy to put on<lb/>
is trying to reschedule<lb/>
Atlanta Rhythm Section, Super Grit, Mothers<lb/>
Finest and Jesse Bolt for a future date at the<lb/>
Hugo Outdoor Theatre, 20 miles south of<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Haines said that if he cannot put the<lb/>
concert together, all tickets will be refunded.<lb/>
Tickets for America will be on sale at the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office in Mendenhall until 4<lb/>
p.m. Tuesday. Tickets cost $4 in advance for<lb/>
students and $6 at the door.<lb/>
By SUSAN WES<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Red Cross, in<lb/>
cooperation with the AF-<lb/>
ROTC. is sponsoring a<lb/>
blood drive October 9 and<lb/>
10 between 10 a.m. and 4<lb/>
p.m. in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
This year's goal is 750<lb/>
pints of blood, but Diane<lb/>
Snodgrass of the AFROTC"<lb/>
feels that "we could easily<lb/>
get 1000 pints with good<lb/>
publicity Last year, the<lb/>
Red Cross had a goal of 700<lb/>
pints and collected 776.<lb/>
According to Ms. Snod-<lb/>
grass, the process takes<lb/>
today<lb/>
under 10 minutes and is not<lb/>
painful. The Red Cross<lb/>
visits ECU twice a year.<lb/>
"They can always de-<lb/>
pend on ECU for a record<lb/>
turn out said Ms. Snod-<lb/>
grass.<lb/>
Those who give blood<lb/>
aren't the only ones helping<lb/>
out. Local businesses have<lb/>
been contributing coupons<lb/>
to be distributed to the<lb/>
donors. Krispy Kreme is<lb/>
donating donuts, and the<lb/>
sororities are engaged in<lb/>
sandwich-making competi-<lb/>
tion, the outcome of which<lb/>
will fortify those who give<lb/>
blood.<lb/>
America comas to ECU's Minges Coliseum Tuesday for the B<lb/>
<pb facs="00057221_0002"/><lb/>
?age 2 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 9 October 1979<lb/>
Birth control service offered<lb/>
classified<lb/>
By LEIGH COAKLEY<lb/>
Assistant to the Editor<lb/>
Information on birth<lb/>
?ontrol methods and veneral<lb/>
lisease may be obtained<lb/>
from the Student Health<lb/>
Service at ECU.<lb/>
The Student Health Ser-<lb/>
&amp;t ECU provides a<lb/>
o taped film on contra-<lb/>
eption and venereal di-<lb/>
ise on the second floor of<lb/>
Infirmary on Monday<lb/>
md Wednesday afternoons<lb/>
rom 3:00 to 4:00 and on the<lb/>
Tuesday of each month<lb/>
00 to 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
I. niversity physicians are<lb/>
,i liable for question and<lb/>
sessions following<lb/>
im. This session gives<lb/>
nts an opportunity to<lb/>
ome acquainted with<lb/>
iversity physicians and<lb/>
' iures in the Infirmary.<lb/>
lance of this session<lb/>
aired before a student<lb/>
be administered the<lb/>
h control pill.<lb/>
In an interview with Dr.<lb/>
. Infirmary staff<lb/>
in, she expressed<lb/>
to encourage spouses<lb/>
yfriends of interested<lb/>
its to attend these<lb/>
"At ihis point,<lb/>
anticipation has been<lb/>
itely successful. They<lb/>
ite greatly to the<lb/>
ssions. The sessions<lb/>
handled in a non-<lb/>
mental and unembar-<lb/>
g manner said Woo-<lb/>
i student has had<lb/>
opportunity of viewing<lb/>
tape and discussing<lb/>
various methods of contra-<lb/>
ception with the physician,<lb/>
the student may, by ap-<lb/>
pointment only, go through<lb/>
a strict screening process<lb/>
prior to administration of<lb/>
the birth control pill or<lb/>
alternative method of con-<lb/>
traception. These screenings<lb/>
are handled on designated<lb/>
davs and they include an<lb/>
internal examination, pap<lb/>
smear, and a conference<lb/>
concerning the student's<lb/>
medical history. There is a<lb/>
$5 fee for this examination.<lb/>
Personal conferences<lb/>
may be set up on a one-to-<lb/>
one basis. All a student<lb/>
needs to do is to mark the<lb/>
information sheet "Per-<lb/>
sonal" when signing in at<lb/>
the front desk of the<lb/>
Infirmary.<lb/>
These screenings are not<lb/>
only for those students<lb/>
wanting to start a method of<lb/>
contraception, but also for<lb/>
those wanting routine<lb/>
checkups and for problem<lb/>
patients.<lb/>
The Student Health Ser-<lb/>
vice handles 98 of all<lb/>
gynocological problems,<lb/>
while only 2 are referred<lb/>
to outside patients. Patients<lb/>
wanting a IUD and abor-<lb/>
tions fall into the 2<lb/>
category.<lb/>
"The use of the pill is<lb/>
on the decline but is<lb/>
relatively safe if the patient<lb/>
is well screened for possible<lb/>
complicating factors and<lb/>
provided that the patient<lb/>
has had a thorough breast<lb/>
and pelvic examination, pap<lb/>
smear, blood pressure read-<lb/>
Professor charged<lb/>
RALEIGH. N.C. (AP) -<lb/>
charged a North<lb/>
ia State Univer <lb/>
professor with<lb/>
Sunday night after his<lb/>
a as gutted by fire.<lb/>
Magdi Mohammed El-<lb/>
ash, 38, a native of<lb/>
Said, Egypt, was also<lb/>
with two counts of<lb/>
isault with a deadly<lb/>
on, police said.<lb/>
The fire took place after<lb/>
nily dispute in which<lb/>
mm ash fired a pistol<lb/>
wife, Gloria, and one<lb/>
ir two children.<lb/>
ling to police.<lb/>
 injuries were re-<lb/>
Si 10,000. and El-Kammash<lb/>
was being held in the Wake<lb/>
County Jail.<lb/>
The value of the house<lb/>
was put at $80,000 to<lb/>
$100,000 by Mrs. El-<lb/>
Kammash. She declined to<lb/>
discuss the fire.<lb/>
;id was set<lb/>
at<lb/>
L<lb/>
CAROLINA K-9<lb/>
Is now offering Special<lb/>
Boarding Rates<lb/>
for all ECU students<lb/>
50 OFF<lb/>
10th St. Extension<lb/>
752-1170<lb/>
(across from PuttPutt)<lb/>
J<lb/>
ELECTROLYSIS<lb/>
Located in Greenville 18 years<lb/>
EFFECTIVE HAIR REMOVAL<lb/>
80 of women Lave this problem<lb/>
Needle or painless Tweezer Method<lb/>
Approved by Federal Communication Commission<lb/>
Deal with the Pros ? Certified &amp; Licensed Electrologists<lb/>
GLENDA'S<lb/>
224 Greenville Blvd 756-4366<lb/>
Tipton Annex - Next to McDonald's<lb/>
Free consultation<lb/>
MAKE THE<lb/>
i DIET<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
PART OF YOUR<lb/>
GAME PLAN!<lb/>
756-8545<lb/>
: HI i'Ol)CiEI rHIN<lb/>
NI HA I WAY'<lb/>
i a. ? ? mm '???<lb/>
jfl THE lQgv<lb/>
r, D1ET<lb/>
LOSE 17 TO 25 POUNDS I TFNTFR<lb/>
IN JUST 6 WEEKS!<lb/>
irSFAST" "?? ? ? ????<lb/>
LETS PARTY<lb/>
Your place or ours! Let Friday s provide the food for your<lb/>
group, whether it numbers 30 or 1.000! For groups up to<lb/>
100 Fridays offers a banquet room.<lb/>
Friday's offers a variety of fabulous fare. Shrimparoo ?<lb/>
Fish Fry ? Oyster Roast ? Chicken PickirT ? Pig PickirT<lb/>
And every Friday's Feast includes all the trimmings. Call<lb/>
us for your next bash! FYfelYAVfk<lb/>
2311 S. Evans St. Ext. ? HllMFHLl &amp;<lb/>
Greenville. N.C. IfiAA CFIFIMHI<lb/>
Phone 756-2011 KWV JiMl VW<lb/>
ing, and urine analysis<lb/>
stated Wooten.<lb/>
Dr. Wooten continued<lb/>
by saying that "medically,<lb/>
the diaphram is the most<lb/>
acceptable method of con-<lb/>
traception with a failure<lb/>
rate of 3 to 5. This failure<lb/>
rate often influences a<lb/>
patient's decision to use the<lb/>
birth control pill, which for<lb/>
all practical purposes, has a<lb/>
zero failure rate. They<lb/>
feel they cannot afford any<lb/>
? i "<lb/>
risk.<lb/>
"Wooten said, "Appar-<lb/>
ently, we are beginning to<lb/>
see a decline in the ever<lb/>
present problem of un-<lb/>
planned pregnancies and<lb/>
these are on par with other<lb/>
universities. This decline is<lb/>
attributed to the observation<lb/>
that students are more<lb/>
knowledgeable and are ta-<lb/>
king advantage of the<lb/>
facilities and information<lb/>
offered to them. Students<lb/>
seem more mature and<lb/>
responsible now than in the<lb/>
past.<lb/>
The Student Health Ser-<lb/>
vice has noted that adver-<lb/>
tising of over-the-counter<lb/>
contraceptives are very<lb/>
misleading and should not<lb/>
be relied on without medical<lb/>
advice.<lb/>
Questions concerning the<lb/>
confidentiality of such mat-<lb/>
ters as pregnancy and<lb/>
veneral diseases often arise.<lb/>
All information of this<lb/>
nature is held strictly con-<lb/>
fidential between physician<lb/>
and student.<lb/>
No professor or any<lb/>
other authority has access<lb/>
to any information in a<lb/>
student's medical record. In<lb/>
the event that a professor<lb/>
calls for verification of a<lb/>
student's absence, the In-<lb/>
firmary may inform the<lb/>
professor that the student is<lb/>
ill.<lb/>
Other sources of infor-<lb/>
mation concerning contra-<lb/>
ception, pregnancies, and<lb/>
venereal disease can be<lb/>
obtained from courses of-<lb/>
fered on campus such as<lb/>
Health 1000 or Sociology<lb/>
1025, "Courtship and Mar-<lb/>
riage Several residence<lb/>
halls have seminars fea-<lb/>
turing local physicians to<lb/>
come in and speak on these<lb/>
topics.<lb/>
Members of the Student<lb/>
Health Service are inter-<lb/>
ested in organizing a<lb/>
Student Health Advisory<lb/>
Committee. The board<lb/>
would consist of student<lb/>
representatives, faculty ad-<lb/>
visors and professionals.<lb/>
The purpose of this board<lb/>
would be to encourage<lb/>
feedback from the students<lb/>
of ECU and to inject new<lb/>
ideas into the Service.<lb/>
persona (X)<lb/>
BEACH LOVERS! Part-time<lb/>
student sales representative<lb/>
position available for Spring<lb/>
Semester. Job involves pro-<lb/>
moting high quality sun<lb/>
trips on campus for com-<lb/>
mission and free travel.<lb/>
Individual must be self-<lb/>
starter and highly moti-<lb/>
vated. Call or write for an<lb/>
application. Summit Travel,<lb/>
Inc Parkade Plaza, Suite<lb/>
11, Columbia, Missouri<lb/>
65201. (800) 325-0439.<lb/>
PARTY HEARTY at the<lb/>
ECU-Carolina Game And<lb/>
let US do the driving! A<lb/>
chartered bus will take you<lb/>
from Greenville to the gates<lb/>
of Keanan Stadium and<lb/>
back again all for $6.00.<lb/>
Limited number of seats, so<lb/>
make vour reservations<lb/>
NOW! Call 752-2476 or 752-<lb/>
8925.<lb/>
SAILINGRACING CREW<lb/>
wanted. Local Pamlico ra-<lb/>
ces. No pav. Tonv: 752-<lb/>
7278.<lb/>
REWARD: Offered for re-<lb/>
turn of light blue cover<lb/>
removed Saturday night<lb/>
from white Corvette beside<lb/>
Tyler dorm. It will not fit<lb/>
your car so please return it.<lb/>
NO questions asked. Tripp<lb/>
Murray 311-A Belk. 752-<lb/>
8816. '<lb/>
WANTED: Persons playing<lb/>
homemade instruments es-<lb/>
pecially washboard and<lb/>
spoons players to play in<lb/>
ECU Folk Festival Nov. 3rd.<lb/>
Contact Lin: 758-9368 or Dr.<lb/>
Paul Dowell: 756-1036.<lb/>
LOST: at Cultural Center. A<lb/>
beige tote bag and pocket-<lb/>
book. If found, contact<lb/>
Melinda Richardson, 758-<lb/>
8471.<lb/>
NEED A PAPER TYPED?<lb/>
Theses, reports, term pa-<lb/>
pers, etc. Call Leigh<lb/>
Coakley at 752-8027. Rea-<lb/>
sonable rates.<lb/>
TYPING done: Term pa-<lb/>
pers, Resumes, Thesis, etc.<lb/>
Reasonable. Call: Jane Pol-<lb/>
lock at 752-9719.<lb/>
LOST: A set of 4 keys. One<lb/>
has 207 engraved on it.<lb/>
Phone 752-3984 if found. A<lb/>
$10.00 reward is offered.<lb/>
EMPLOYEES NEEDED:<lb/>
Part time work. Apply in<lb/>
person at Buccaneer movies.<lb/>
Itorsde @<lb/>
FOR SALE: European Brand<lb/>
-tereo (turn table, AM-FM.<lb/>
8-Track). Excellent condi-<lb/>
tion. (Unique design.) Call<lb/>
Bill at 758-3530 after 6:30<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE. Fine leather<lb/>
sport Coat. Purchased from<lb/>
Coffman's less than a year<lb/>
ago. Worn twice. Size 40.<lb/>
$100 firm. Call anytime at<lb/>
757-6815.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Nikon FM<lb/>
Body, chrome, excellent<lb/>
condition. Without lens.<lb/>
$180.00. Call Kip at 758-<lb/>
2737 anytime.<lb/>
THREE FEMALE ROOM<lb/>
MATES needed to share<lb/>
apt. at Riverhluff. Rent<lb/>
$52.50 per month, y<lb/>
utilities and phone Call<lb/>
758-5823.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOM MA<lb/>
needed to share house m<lb/>
two other girls. Call<lb/>
5198 after 3: p<lb/>
5198 after 3:30 p.m.<lb/>
FURNISHED ROOM I<lb/>
i ? in htm-? N<lb/>
Charles Si Rent.<lb/>
Phone: 758-7010.<lb/>
CLASSIFIED l<lb/>
Carolinia<lb/>
 ed. F r<lb/>
'0 p.m. and<lb/>
Thur. i ?<lb/>
1:30 p.m.<lb/>
. .? yhi 1 979<lb/>
- kj??i Sa? On<lb/>
' i, Riqht?, Reserved<lb/>
? oid lo Dealers or Wholesalers<lb/>
FOOD.DRUG.GENERAL<lb/>
MERCHANDISE STORES<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is required to be<lb/>
readily available for sale in each Kroger Sav-on Store<lb/>
except as specifically noted In this ad If we do run<lb/>
out of an advertised Item, we will offer you your<lb/>
choice of a comparable item, when available, reflect<lb/>
ing the same savings or a raincheck which will en-<lb/>
title you to purchase the advertised item at the<lb/>
advertised price within 30 days.<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE TUES<lb/>
OCT. 9 THRU SUN OCT. 14, 1979<lb/>
Records and<lb/>
Tapes<lb/>
 Everyday I<lb/>
3zines and<lb/>
Paperback<lb/>
Books<lb/>
COUNTRY CLUB<lb/>
Ice<lb/>
Cream<lb/>
V2-Gal. Ctn.<lb/>
REG. OR DIP<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
Potato<lb/>
Chips<lb/>
8-Oz. Twin Pak<lb/>
From snacks to paperbacks to back packs<lb/>
Kroger Sav-on has what East Carolina Univer<lb/>
sity students need this year Shop Kroger<lb/>
Sav-on today<lb/>
-Beer &amp; Wine-<lb/>
FIRE BREWED<lb/>
iron's 262 $-99<lb/>
Lite  cins. I<lb/>
HEARTY BURGUNDY. PINK CHABLIS.<lb/>
ROSE, CHABLIS BLANC OR<lb/>
Gallo<lb/>
Rhine.<lb/>
1.5 Liter<lb/>
Btl.<lb/>
$988<lb/>
2<lb/>
1.5 LITER CROCK<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
MFFt<lb/>
SUGG<lb/>
RETAIL<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
MFR<lb/>
SUGG<lb/>
RETAIL<lb/>
Beameister $499<lb/>
Leibfraumilch<lb/>
$4<lb/>
STOP BY FOR A GREAT MEAL<lb/>
IN THE KROGER SAV-ON RESTAURANT<lb/>
BREAKFAST . . . LUNCH OR DINNER!<lb/>
i<lb/>
irw<lb/>
y jt<lb/>
Carefully prepared salads, sandwiches and<lb/>
dishes including fried chicken and bar-<lb/>
becued nbs. plus a pleasing variety of<lb/>
relishes, spreads and desserts Choose<lb/>
from more than 14 Kinds of party trays for<lb/>
every need and budget An uncommonly<lb/>
wide array of lunch meats and imported or<lb/>
domestic cheeses, manv custom-sliced to<lb/>
your order Great variety and superb<lb/>
quality-yet priced lower than you might<lb/>
expect<lb/>
THAT'S KROGER<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
FOR YOU!<lb/>
NONE SOLD<lb/>
DEALERS<lb/>
OPEN 7 AM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
M0N<lb/>
THRU<lb/>
SAT<lb/>
SStsoTpJ.y m Greenville Blvi-Greenville<lb/>
9 AM TO 9 PM Phone 756-7031<lb/>
<pb facs="00057221_0003"/><lb/>
Pecple places. ?? !?<lb/>
wke<lb/>
A member of the Wake<lb/>
Forest Law School admis-<lb/>
sions staff will be on the<lb/>
ECU campus October 15<lb/>
and 16 to speak with<lb/>
prospective applicants. Ten-<lb/>
tative plans call for an<lb/>
evening group meeting on<lb/>
the 15th for all interested<lb/>
students and individual<lb/>
meetings with juniors and<lb/>
seniors on the morning of<lb/>
the 16th. Contact Lynn<lb/>
Calder at 758-8914 or<lb/>
757-6611 (ext. 218) or<lb/>
Professor Warren in the<lb/>
English Department.<lb/>
ccmlcs<lb/>
The ECU Comic Book<lb/>
Club will meet Tuesday,<lb/>
October 9 at 7-9 p.m. The<lb/>
Meeting will be held at the<lb/>
Nostalgia Newstand 919<lb/>
Dickinson Ave. All inter-<lb/>
ested persons are invited to<lb/>
attend. Topics of discus-<lb/>
sion will include the up-<lb/>
coming December 2 comic<lb/>
convention. For more infor-<lb/>
mation call 758-6909.<lb/>
tcrcr<lb/>
The Phi Sigma Iota<lb/>
Foreign Language Honor<lb/>
Society will meet Thursday,<lb/>
October 11, 1979, 8:00<lb/>
p.m in the Coffeehouse at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Dr. and Mrs. Hill will<lb/>
show slides of their trip to<lb/>
China and Hong Kong. The<lb/>
public is cordially invited to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Following the slide pre-<lb/>
sentation we will welcome<lb/>
new members and elect<lb/>
officers and a faculty<lb/>
advisor.<lb/>
There will be a meeting<lb/>
of the Student National<lb/>
Environmental Health Asso-<lb/>
ciation (SNEHA), Wednes-<lb/>
day, October 10 at 7:00<lb/>
p.m. in the School of Allied<lb/>
Health and Social Pro-<lb/>
fessions, Room 101-A. All<lb/>
members should be present<lb/>
and any other interested<lb/>
persons are welcome.<lb/>
tebel<lb/>
Start preparing art for<lb/>
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,<lb/>
photography, and mixed<lb/>
media. If there are ques-<lb/>
tions, contact Sue Ayde-<lb/>
lette, art director.<lb/>
cctie<lb/>
There will be a work-<lb/>
shop of all COHE majors on<lb/>
Thurs Oct. 11, at 7:00<lb/>
p.m. in Brewster 303B. The<lb/>
workshop will be a signifi-<lb/>
cant aid in guiding the<lb/>
major through the program.<lb/>
The workshop is mandatory<lb/>
for all first year and<lb/>
incoming majors. Refresh-<lb/>
ments will be served.<lb/>
tjKe He c i I rte<lb/>
The ECU Air Force<lb/>
ROTC corps will be spon-<lb/>
soring its annual Blood<lb/>
Drive Oct. 9 and 10 at<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/>
bdird<lb/>
The Rebel is now<lb/>
accepting high-quality liter-<lb/>
ature submissions. Poetry,<lb/>
essays, plays and inter-<lb/>
views, and short stories will<lb/>
be accepted. All work must<lb/>
have name, address, and<lb/>
phone number of writer.<lb/>
Address manuscripts to the<lb/>
Rebel, Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
27834.<lb/>
fencing<lb/>
Dr. George Weigand,<lb/>
advisor and instructor for<lb/>
the ECU Fencing Club,<lb/>
invites all interested stu-<lb/>
dents to participate in the<lb/>
club's weekly instructional<lb/>
sessions. The club meets<lb/>
each Wednesday from 4-6<lb/>
p.m. in Memorial Gym 108.<lb/>
The MRC presents the<lb/>
Jubal Band from Indianap-<lb/>
olis, Indiana, Thurs Oct.<lb/>
15 on the hill from 7:00-<lb/>
10:00 p.m. Admission is<lb/>
free. MRC will also sponsor<lb/>
a pig-pickin' in the base-<lb/>
ment of Aycock Dorm on<lb/>
the same day from 5:30-7:30<lb/>
p.m. Tickets are available<lb/>
through Men's and<lb/>
Women's Residence Coun-<lb/>
cils.<lb/>
Ihcincf<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma Honor<lb/>
Fraternity will hold a<lb/>
meeting on Thurs Oct. 11<lb/>
at 5:00 in room C-102<lb/>
Brewster. All new and old<lb/>
members are invited to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
meetlrif<lb/>
sfel<lb/>
lit I H<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/>
There will be an organi-<lb/>
zational meeting for the<lb/>
Snow Skiing Club on Wed<lb/>
Oct. 10 at 7:30 p.m. in<lb/>
Memorial Gym 104. All<lb/>
interested skiers should<lb/>
attend so that planning can<lb/>
begin for the winter season.<lb/>
ruby<lb/>
Mlkl<lb/>
cccfccut<lb/>
Women interested in<lb/>
forming a women's rugby<lb/>
team, there will be a<lb/>
meeting Monday, Oct. 15 at<lb/>
7:00 p.m. in Memorial Gym<lb/>
104. No experience is<lb/>
necessary. This is a great<lb/>
way to have fun, get some<lb/>
exercise and get rid of your<lb/>
frustrations. For more in-<lb/>
formation call 758-8482.<lb/>
Hillel is having its fall<lb/>
cookout at 2 p.m. this<lb/>
Sunday at Elm Street Park,<lb/>
shelter 2. There will be<lb/>
plenty of food and fun for<lb/>
everyone, so come on out<lb/>
and have a good time. For<lb/>
more information, contact<lb/>
Mike Freelander 752-9473<lb/>
or Mark Cohen 758-7198.<lb/>
The Eta Chi Chapter of<lb/>
Kappa Delta Pi will hold its<lb/>
first meeting Wed Oct. 10<lb/>
at 6:30 p.m. in the Three<lb/>
Steers Restaurant.<lb/>
Our guest speaker will<lb/>
be Mrs. Nancy Middleton of<lb/>
the Pitt County Mental<lb/>
Health Center. Her topic<lb/>
will be "Coping with<lb/>
Stress<lb/>
Kadelpians should con-<lb/>
tact Mrs. Ellen Cheng,<lb/>
Speight 134, for reser-<lb/>
vations.<lb/>
arcicbicil?m<lb/>
The organizational<lb/>
meeting of the ECU-Green-<lb/>
ville branch of the Society<lb/>
for Creative Anachronism<lb/>
will be held Wed Oct. 10,<lb/>
1979, at 7:00 p.m. in Room<lb/>
248 Mendenhall. A nation-<lb/>
wide medieval interest<lb/>
group, the SCA is for those<lb/>
who enjoy recreating the<lb/>
authentic arts, sciences, and<lb/>
pastimes (dancing, music,<lb/>
calligraphy, ceremony and<lb/>
courtesy, combat and ar-<lb/>
moring, costuming, needle-<lb/>
work and feasting, e.g.) of<lb/>
the Middle Ages.<lb/>
r tttt -ill<lb/>
Anyone interested in<lb/>
trying out for men's basket-<lb/>
ball must register in the<lb/>
basketball office by Wed<lb/>
Oct. 10, 1979. Physical,<lb/>
preliminaries, etc must be<lb/>
completed prior to practice<lb/>
which begins Oct. 15th.<lb/>
cultural<lb/>
center<lb/>
Ledonia Wright Cultural<lb/>
Center Advisory Board will<lb/>
meet on Wednesday, Oct.<lb/>
10, 1979 at 4:00 p.m. at the<lb/>
Ledonia Wright Cultural<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
spcrts<lb/>
The October meeting of<lb/>
the Intramural-Recreational<lb/>
Sports Council will be held<lb/>
Thurs Oct. 11 in Brewster<lb/>
C-103. All intramural repre-<lb/>
sentatives and interested<lb/>
students should attend.<lb/>
idquetbcill<lb/>
An organizational meet-<lb/>
ing for the Racquetball Club<lb/>
will be held Wed Oct. 17<lb/>
at 6:30 p.m. in Memorial<lb/>
Gym 104. All interested<lb/>
players should attend.<lb/>
service<lb/>
Fowl<lb/>
play<lb/>
CUERO, Texas (AP) ?<lb/>
A strutting Minnesota tur-<lb/>
key named Paycheck trotted<lb/>
to any easy second-heat<lb/>
victory in the Great Gobbler<lb/>
Gallop here. But Ruby<lb/>
Begonia ? the poultry<lb/>
pacing pride of Cuero ?<lb/>
captured the Traveling Tur-<lb/>
key Trophy of Tumultuous<lb/>
Triumph.<lb/>
The fleet-footed Worth-<lb/>
ington, Minn bird scram-<lb/>
bled through the course in<lb/>
1:39 Sunday, defeating<lb/>
Ruby Begonia by 40 sec-<lb/>
onds. However, Ruby Be-<lb/>
gonia won by a minute and<lb/>
a half during the running of<lb/>
the first heat at the King<lb/>
Turkey Day Celebration last<lb/>
month in Worthington.<lb/>
The Minnesota margin<lb/>
of victory was enough to<lb/>
send the traveling trophy<lb/>
back to Cuero for the first<lb/>
time since 1975.<lb/>
?fl<lb/>
9 October 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Page 3<lb/>
6o 4loal S4mc One m. I<lb/>
PHONE 738-2183<lb/>
1<lb/>
We Now Have TWO<lb/>
Locations to To Servo You I<lb/>
I HOMECOMING CORSAGES <lb/>
117 W. 4th St. 402 Evans St.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834 Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Open 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Downtown on the Mall<lb/>
Open 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
N.C. No. 3 1 Nightclub<lb/>
HOMECOMING<lb/>
AllTlC CONCERT<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Capricorn Recording<lb/>
Artists<lb/>
fcS With<lb/>
Dixie Road Ducks<lb/>
An Episcopal service of<lb/>
Holy Communion will be<lb/>
celebrated Wednesday eve-<lb/>
ning (Oct. 10) in the chapel<lb/>
of the Methodist Student<lb/>
Center (5th Street across<lb/>
from Garrett Dorm). The<lb/>
service will be at 5:30 p.m.<lb/>
with the Episcopal Chap-<lb/>
lain, the Rev. Bill Hadden,<lb/>
celebrating. Supper will be<lb/>
served at 6:00 p.m. fol-<lb/>
lowing the service. A Bible<lb/>
Study at 7:00 p.m led by<lb/>
the chaplain, will be held at<lb/>
the home of Eleanor<lb/>
Coleman, 1003 E. 5th St.<lb/>
(across from main gate.)<lb/>
it's Miller time<lb/>
vE5<lb/>
Leathar Bella<lb/>
$6 to $19<lb/>
Leather Handbags<lb/>
$10 to 125<lb/>
Shoes Repaired To Look<lb/>
Like New<lb/>
Riggon Shoe Repair<lb/>
ft Leather Shop<lb/>
111 WEST 4TH ST.<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
754294<lb/>
Parking in Front<lb/>
and ftear.<lb/>
VlW AND MINER, HggjAR S4v,NQS QN <lb/>
Tjexall<lb/>
VITAMIN<lb/>
rfNMw?4<lb/>
1?Z 1 (Thiomina)<lb/>
TJWK'OO<lb/>
50 mg.<lb/>
100 Tablets<lb/>
REG. 1.87<lb/>
(V 3037;<lb/>
iBO<lb/>
jpexa<lb/>
VITAMIN<lb/>
12<lb/>
?aexall<lb/>
VITAMIN<lb/>
50 meg<lb/>
100 Tablets<lb/>
REG 2.09<lb/>
v 3045<lb/>
CHEWA8LE<lb/>
?aexall<lb/>
VITAMIN<lb/>
c<lb/>
f<lb/>
fenwc<lb/>
100 mg<lb/>
100 Tablets<lb/>
REG. 159<lb/>
(W<lb/>
-VES?,<lb/>
3 YOUR CHOICE<lb/>
250 mg<lb/>
100 Tablets<lb/>
REG. 1.69<lb/>
(V 3023<lb/>
. TZexa<lb/>
(V-30281<lb/>
WCALCIUM<lb/>
PHOSPHATE<lb/>
with Calcium Gluconata<lb/>
and Vitamin<lb/>
D<lb/>
100 Capills<lb/>
REG. 1.69<lb/>
(V-3Q3M<lb/>
Owelcium<lb/>
Phosphate<lb/>
-x"s "X<lb/>
TteXall TREOFER"<lb/>
?oexall<lb/>
MAGNESIUM<lb/>
Iron<lb/>
foeOM"3 '? "?<lb/>
TaGMtS'OO<lb/>
325 mg<lb/>
Ferrous Sulfate,<lb/>
lOffs<lb/>
REG. 2.13<lb/>
(V 3017)<lb/>
vexall<lb/>
(VHaatal-3)<lb/>
50 mg<lb/>
100 Tablets<lb/>
REG. 1.37<lb/>
Niacin<lb/>
4SSAK? <lb/>
<lb/>
-pexall NATURAL<lb/>
CHEWABLE<lb/>
PAPAYA<lb/>
ENZYME<lb/>
TABLETS<lb/>
100' REG. 1.97<lb/>
<lb/>
PAPAYA<lb/>
NZYMI<lb/>
wwun<lb/>
MAGNISRIM<lb/>
wttmxn<lb/>
250 mg.<lb/>
100 Tablets<lb/>
REG. 13<lb/>
(V 3134)<lb/>
Tfexall<lb/>
ZINC<lb/>
(V-3034)<lb/>
(V-3126)<lb/>
15 mg<lb/>
200 Tablets<lb/>
REG. 2.13<lb/>
(V-3129)<lb/>
7?NC<lb/>
Students Supply Store<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
Sale Begin October 8,1979, End October 12,1979<lb/>
i<lb/>
4<lb/>
iMS'UlMli ?????" ll ?(<lb/>
?<lb/>
'<lb/>
?-? Wrii rr m'im tt nr if<lb/>
t5te!tpA,<lb/>
<pb facs="00057221_0004"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
nianl ? ? 1<lb/>
n.ditorials<lb/>
S?Op<lb/>
mions<lb/>
Tuesday, October 9, 1979, Page 4<lb/>
Greenville, NX.<lb/>
uestions remain<lb/>
Someone should be asking some<lb/>
probing questions about the SGA<lb/>
newsletter and its economic and ethical<lb/>
merits. The Media Board has washed its<lb/>
hands of the whole mess, and now it is up<lb/>
to the legislature and the student body to<lb/>
examine the matter.<lb/>
Why is there any question of how the<lb/>
newsletter was paid for? The SGA financial<lb/>
advisor knew nothing about the publica-<lb/>
tion, and the SGA vice president said the<lb/>
newsletter is not funded by the student<lb/>
government. SGA President Brett Melvin<lb/>
said the summer legislature approved the<lb/>
printing of the letter, yet no purchase order<lb/>
was issued to pay for it. Someone is not<lb/>
doing their job.<lb/>
The SGA newsletter is supposedly paid<lb/>
for by the students, but many students say<lb/>
that they have not even seen the letter. For<lb/>
the amount of student fees said to be spent<lb/>
for this publication, it would seem that the<lb/>
SGA could at least distribute the letter<lb/>
effectively.<lb/>
How much of the SGA budget will be<lb/>
spent on the letter this year? According to<lb/>
Brett Melvin, "Let's just say 10 percent<lb/>
Over $10,000 will be spent on a newsletter<lb/>
which disseminates information that could<lb/>
just as easily be printed by the campus<lb/>
newspaper.<lb/>
If the motives of the newspaper are<lb/>
questioned, it is due to the pkst record of<lb/>
the publication and not the present status.<lb/>
Hesitancy to speak with the media breeds<lb/>
suspicion in the student body. THE EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN wants to present both sides<lb/>
of every issue when possible, but "no<lb/>
comment" hardly tells the opposing view.<lb/>
At a time when money is in short<lb/>
supply in most areas of campus services, it<lb/>
is wasteful to spend where no spending is<lb/>
warranted. This year many worthwhile<lb/>
organizations could suffer because a<lb/>
possible $10,000 in appropriations will be<lb/>
unavailable. A good example of a possible<lb/>
loser is the Real Crisis Intervention Center.<lb/>
Organized in the '60s as a service to<lb/>
ECU and the community, REAL has not<lb/>
recently received funding from the SGA as<lb/>
it did in the past. About 70 percent of the<lb/>
people counseled at the all-volunteer center<lb/>
are students. This year REAL will ask for<lb/>
renewed SGA funding, and they deserve it<lb/>
for the services provided. This is only one<lb/>
of the many worthy organizations that<lb/>
could lose.<lb/>
Think of the advantages of printing and<lb/>
distributing only "happy news" about<lb/>
SGA. The only advantage goes to members<lb/>
of the government, whom the students will<lb/>
come to believe can do no wrong. Don't<lb/>
you want to know when your representative<lb/>
body is going against your wishes? Then<lb/>
don't expect that information from the SGA<lb/>
newsletter.<lb/>
Among journalists the newsletter is an<lb/>
atrocity, but to students it is an outright<lb/>
waste of precious funds. Leaders of campus<lb/>
organizations should determine their needs<lb/>
and demand that the money be spent on<lb/>
worthwhile student services. The new<lb/>
legislature needs to re-examine the<lb/>
supposed appropriation of last summer and<lb/>
stop the wasteful and unethical publication<lb/>
of the SGA newsletter.<lb/>
Junk mail is a pleasure<lb/>
By LARRY POPELKA<lb/>
One of the many simple<lb/>
pleasures of life is reading<lb/>
junk mail.<lb/>
Few things are as<lb/>
entertaining as reading<lb/>
about the free expense-paid<lb/>
vacation to Hawaii you<lb/>
won't win or the latest<lb/>
propaganda from the na-<lb/>
tional gun nut association.<lb/>
But a few weeks ago I<lb/>
received my most . eye-<lb/>
opening piece of junk mail<lb/>
yet.<lb/>
It came in an unmarked<lb/>
envelope and was typed on<lb/>
a sheet of light blue<lb/>
stationery with various<lb/>
hearts and flowers drawn on<lb/>
the sides.<lb/>
"I'm writing you the<lb/>
letter began, "because I<lb/>
want you ? or rather ? we<lb/>
want you to become a<lb/>
member of an exclusive<lb/>
private society; an organi-<lb/>
zation that was started by a<lb/>
group of fun-loving young<lb/>
ladies who are dedicated to<lb/>
the proposition that men<lb/>
and women were put on this<lb/>
earth for one reason ? to<lb/>
enjoy each other<lb/>
"I used to cruise around<lb/>
the discos and the singles'<lb/>
bars, wasting most of my<lb/>
time trying to weed out the<lb/>
decent men from the losers,<lb/>
and far too often getting<lb/>
involved with, well  let's<lb/>
i'ust say 'the wrong people<lb/>
"he sad fact is, that the<lb/>
most exciting nights I spent<lb/>
were when I stayed home<lb/>
and fantasized about meet-<lb/>
ing someone exciting <lb/>
someone like you<lb/>
Gagging on my coffee, I<lb/>
continued to read about how<lb/>
I was specifically chosen by<lb/>
some unidentified female to<lb/>
be a member of this<lb/>
swinging club called "The<lb/>
Glo-Worm Society<lb/>
"I'm sure you'd like to<lb/>
know why we're called the<lb/>
'Glo-Worm Society the<lb/>
letter said. "Well, you'll<lb/>
find out as soon as you get<lb/>
in ? and you're going to<lb/>
love it!<lb/>
"We have something<lb/>
that you want, and you have<lb/>
something that we need<lb/>
Can you guess what that<lb/>
something is?"<lb/>
Well, to start with they<lb/>
"needed" $20. Or accord-<lb/>
to Karen M the<lb/>
ing<lb/>
woman<lb/>
letter, I<lb/>
who signed<lb/>
could send<lb/>
!f<lb/>
the<lb/>
in $30<lb/>
and become an "executive<lb/>
member<lb/>
"You're finally gonna<lb/>
get your money's worth<lb/>
Karen promised.<lb/>
But I wasn't so sure.<lb/>
Twenty dollars is a lot of<lb/>
cash to throw away on some<lb/>
screwball broads.<lb/>
And what if they were<lb/>
just out to use me?<lb/>
Some women these days<lb/>
will take you to bed once<lb/>
and then toss you aside like<lb/>
a piece of used scrap metal.<lb/>
A guy can never be too<lb/>
careful.<lb/>
So I decided to write a<lb/>
letter back to Karen M<lb/>
explaining my problem.<lb/>
"Dear Karen I wrote.<lb/>
"You and your friends<lb/>
sound like very nice ladies,<lb/>
but I was kind of wondering<lb/>
what sort of interests you<lb/>
have.<lb/>
"Do you go to concerts?<lb/>
Ballets? Woody Allen mov-<lb/>
ies? You say you used to<lb/>
cruise discos. Does that<lb/>
mean you like disco music?<lb/>
I hope not! I've just about<lb/>
had my fill of Donna<lb/>
Summer and the Bee Gees.<lb/>
"And what are your<lb/>
hobbies? Do you play<lb/>
tennis? Ski? Go jogging?<lb/>
Collect barb wire?<lb/>
"I was never much for<lb/>
barb wire myself, but I once<lb/>
knew a fellow who had 200<lb/>
different kinds and said it<lb/>
was a lot of fun.<lb/>
"Anyway, I hope you<lb/>
don't think I'm prying. I'd<lb/>
just like to get to know you<lb/>
and your friends before we<lb/>
go romping in the hay. Or<lb/>
don't you like hay? Maybe<lb/>
we'll go romping in the<lb/>
mud instead. Whatever.<lb/>
Just tell me a little bit<lb/>
about yourself, and I'll send<lb/>
in my $20<lb/>
Well, maybe Karen M.<lb/>
and her buddies couldn't<lb/>
think of any hobbies. Or<lb/>
maybe they hated barb<lb/>
wire. I've never been able<lb/>
to figure out women. But<lb/>
Karen sure got upset about<lb/>
something. A week later<lb/>
she sent me a crushing<lb/>
second letter.<lb/>
"I've just heard from<lb/>
the girls in the back room<lb/>
that you haven't accepted<lb/>
our invitation yet. Where<lb/>
did we go wrong?" Karen<lb/>
demanded.<lb/>
"You know, I worked<lb/>
awfully hard on that letter I<lb/>
wrote to you. I wanted you<lb/>
to want us just as much as<lb/>
we want you. I wanted to<lb/>
make you an offer you<lb/>
couldn't refuse, and now I<lb/>
want to deliver the goods!<lb/>
"It's hard to believe that<lb/>
we didn't move you even a<lb/>
little bit What more<lb/>
could you possibly need to<lb/>
know? Please  I don't<lb/>
want to be alone. Help<lb/>
me<lb/>
Karen signed it with a<lb/>
felt tip pen and put a big<lb/>
red lipstick mark in the<lb/>
corner. On the bottom she<lb/>
also printed the Glo-Worm<lb/>
slogan: "Closing the com-<lb/>
munication gap between<lb/>
consenting adults<lb/>
But I was still a little<lb/>
leery. I didn't want to get<lb/>
the poor girl upset, but<lb/>
heck, I had to protect<lb/>
myself. There are a lot of<lb/>
shady women running<lb/>
around out there.<lb/>
"Dear Karen I wrote<lb/>
back. "Gee, I didn't mean<lb/>
to hurt your feelings or<lb/>
anything.<lb/>
"I can see from your<lb/>
Apple Blossom lipstick that<lb/>
you're a woman who's<lb/>
deeply concerned about her<lb/>
members. But I really did<lb/>
want to know if you were<lb/>
into Woody Allen.<lb/>
I was curious, though,<lb/>
since it's not every day that<lb/>
I get propositioned by mail.<lb/>
So the other day I dug out<lb/>
Karen's old letters and<lb/>
found there was a "Honey<lb/>
Line" phone number<lb/>
printed on the top of the<lb/>
stationery.<lb/>
Nervously, I dialed the<lb/>
number.<lb/>
"Hi a seductive voice<lb/>
answered. I knew it had to<lb/>
be Karen or one of her flaky<lb/>
friends. Nobody else could<lb/>
possibly salivate that loud<lb/>
into a telephone.<lb/>
"I'm tied up with so<lb/>
many members coming<lb/>
by the voice on the other<lb/>
end purred. "I just love to<lb/>
handle new members I'm<lb/>
really glad you called.<lb/>
Would you leave me a little<lb/>
message? Just a little<lb/>
something to keep me<lb/>
going, until your letter<lb/>
comes into my box<lb/>
There was a loud beep,<lb/>
and then silence.<lb/>
Karen M. was speaking<lb/>
from a tape recording.<lb/>
"Hi Karen I said on<lb/>
the tape. "It's me, Larry.<lb/>
You know, the guy who<lb/>
likes Woody Allen. Look, I<lb/>
was just wondering when<lb/>
you and the girls were<lb/>
going to write me back. I<lb/>
sort of got a kick out of your<lb/>
first two letters. But I'm<lb/>
still a little curious about<lb/>
this Glo-Worm thing.<lb/>
MY 6RMMNG POLICY?<lb/>
weu, I'D GIVE G00 AN A,<lb/>
JESUS CKR3T 8, MYSELF<lb/>
A C; THAT DOESN'T LEAVE<lb/>
A WHOLE LOT FOR YOU<lb/>
Guys, D0E,S ,T ?<lb/>
American Journal<lb/>
Ed Clark for president ?<lb/>
By DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
It's November, 1980.<lb/>
You're in the voting booth<lb/>
and your eyes run down the<lb/>
roster of presidential candi-<lb/>
dates: Ted Kennedy, Ron-<lb/>
ald Reagan, Ed Clark<lb/>
Ed who?<lb/>
Ed Clark. Lawyer. Age<lb/>
49. Lives in Los Angeles.<lb/>
He's the presidential candi-<lb/>
date of what Eugene<lb/>
McCarthy called "the most<lb/>
viable third force chal-<lb/>
lenge" in America, the<lb/>
Libertarian Party. You may<lb/>
not have heard of him yet,<lb/>
but time and megabucks<lb/>
permitting, you will.<lb/>
Founded in 1971 as a<lb/>
vehicle for a shrewd amal-<lb/>
gam of conservative eco-<lb/>
nomic theories and liberal<lb/>
social ideas, the Libertarian<lb/>
Party has come a long way,<lb/>
fast. The party's 1976<lb/>
presidential standard bear-<lb/>
er, Roger MacBride, polled<lb/>
only 200,000 votes nation-<lb/>
wide. But last year, Ed<lb/>
Clark, stumping for gov-<lb/>
ernor of California, pulled<lb/>
twice that many. Clark's<lb/>
400,000 votes were five<lb/>
percent of the state total,<lb/>
and that'8 plenty for a<lb/>
little-known third party<lb/>
candidate.<lb/>
There are always third<lb/>
parties chomping at the bit,<lb/>
eager to. knock the mighty<lb/>
Democrats and Republicans<lb/>
from their perches, of<lb/>
course. A pro-ecology Citi-<lb/>
zens Party has just formed,<lb/>
there is talk of a labor party<lb/>
for 1980 and New York state<lb/>
has a new anti-abortion<lb/>
party that's flexing some<lb/>
muscle. Then there are the<lb/>
hardy perennials: the Vege-<lb/>
tarians, Prohibitionists,<lb/>
Trotskyists, etc who . are<lb/>
always running for one<lb/>
thing or another.<lb/>
Of all those groups only<lb/>
the Libertarians look like<lb/>
contenders in the near<lb/>
future. The Libertarian<lb/>
Party platform, ratified at<lb/>
the party's convention in<lb/>
Los Angeles in September,<lb/>
calls for the abolition of<lb/>
income taxes and all<lb/>
government regulation of<lb/>
business. The party favors<lb/>
the legalization of marijuana<lb/>
and prostitution, and<lb/>
staunchly opposes CIA and<lb/>
FBI spying and the return<lb/>
of the draft.<lb/>
It is their audacious<lb/>
hybrid quality that gives the<lb/>
Libertarians their appeal.<lb/>
They have mated some rJew<lb/>
Left demands of the 1960s<lb/>
with the neo-conservatism<lb/>
of the 1970s and come up<lb/>
with something that at first<lb/>
fiance seems new. In the<lb/>
est tradition of the parties<lb/>
they seek to replace, the<lb/>
Libertarians claim to have<lb/>
something for everybody.<lb/>
At bottom, however,<lb/>
what they offer the elect-<lb/>
orate is simply old wine in<lb/>
new bottles. Libertarian<lb/>
economics are essentially<lb/>
19th century laissez-faire<lb/>
capitalism. That is a system<lb/>
that worked quite well for a<lb/>
few people, but caused<lb/>
intolerable suffering for a<lb/>
good many more. That's<lb/>
why it has been progres-<lb/>
sively modified in this<lb/>
century. The Libertarians<lb/>
are promoting a fnture<lb/>
we've already had.<lb/>
Nostalgic futurists like<lb/>
the Libertarians like to point<lb/>
to the failures of govern-<lb/>
ment to solve society's ills,<lb/>
and those failures are<lb/>
many, to be sure. What<lb/>
they forget ? or neglect to<lb/>
mention ? is that the<lb/>
functions of government<lb/>
have multiplied primarily<lb/>
because private enterprise<lb/>
was unable to carry them<lb/>
out, or no longer cared to<lb/>
try- m<lb/>
Rail passenger service,<lb/>
for example, was aban-<lb/>
doned by the powerful<lb/>
corporations that own the<lb/>
railroads because they were<lb/>
losing money on it, not<lb/>
because the government<lb/>
callously shoved them<lb/>
aside. Now, when Amtrak.<lb/>
with its modest budget ana<lb/>
the antiquated equipment<lb/>
bequeathed by big busi-<lb/>
ness, fails to meet ex-<lb/>
penses, it is cited as<lb/>
evidence that public man-<lb/>
agement is not as efficient<lb/>
as business.<lb/>
Or take the War on<lb/>
Poverty. The classic boon-<lb/>
doggle, right? Perhaps. Yet<lb/>
the War on Poverty was<lb/>
made necessary in the first<lb/>
place because private en-<lb/>
terprise, in its rush to<lb/>
compound profit, created a<lb/>
desperate underclass of<lb/>
people without jobs, edu-<lb/>
cation, decent housing or<lb/>
food.<lb/>
Ed Clark is acquainted<lb/>
with profit. Clark does his<lb/>
lawyering, not in the service<lb/>
of civil liberties, but for the<lb/>
Atlantic-Richfield Corp<lb/>
whose rights have not been<lb/>
noticably trammeled lately.<lb/>
His vice presidential run-<lb/>
ning mate, David Koch, is<lb/>
the brother of Charles<lb/>
Koch, who has poured a<lb/>
reported $10 million into<lb/>
Libertarian projects. Charles<lb/>
is big in cattle and oil.<lb/>
Not surprisingly, the<lb/>
Libertarians have drawn<lb/>
their greatest early re-<lb/>
sponse from among the<lb/>
'naves" of American so-<lb/>
ciety, who are loathe to give<lb/>
up their post-positions in<lb/>
the race for the good life.<lb/>
Clark drew up to u) percent<lb/>
of the vote in affluent areas<lb/>
in California, such as<lb/>
moneyed Marin County, last<lb/>
year ? double his statewide<lb/>
average.<lb/>
The Libertarian philos-<lb/>
ophy is perhaps best<lb/>
summed up by Roger<lb/>
MacBride: 'Taint yourself<lb/>
into the picture of an<lb/>
emerging Libertarian so-<lb/>
ciety in the late 80s ? with<lb/>
no inflation, taxes slashed<lb/>
 able to educate your<lb/>
children, support charities<lb/>
as you would like to,<lb/>
subscribe to the opera ?<lb/>
and, if you wish, have that<lb/>
mountain chalet in Switzer-<lb/>
land<lb/>
The Libertarian Party is<lb/>
a- ParU for the 80s, all<lb/>
right. The 1880s.<lb/>
Letters<lb/>
Letlers to the editor<lb/>
are welcome, however,<lb/>
they raut contain the<lb/>
name, address, "and 1.0.<lb/>
number. No letters will<lb/>
be printed if- they are<lb/>
not sighdl in 'ink hy the<lb/>
person vf itirtg the<lb/>
fetter.<lb/>
Lettecs must be re-<lb/>
ceived by noon Mon-<lb/>
days ' artd Wednesdays,<lb/>
at the .newspaper office<lb/>
on the econ? floor of<lb/>
the ?Publications . Build-<lb/>
ing, which is directly<lb/>
across from Joyner Lib-<lb/>
rary<lb/>
Letters wilj be edited<lb/>
for ' brevity libel or<lb/>
obscenity.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
MANAGING EDITOR<lb/>
Richard Green<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER<lb/>
Anita Lancaster<lb/>
NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
ASST. NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
FEATURES EDITOR<lb/>
ASST. DIRECTOR OF ADVERTISING<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Marc Barnes<lb/>
DIRECTOR OF ADVERTISING<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim<lb/>
ASSISTANT TO THE EDITOR<lb/>
Leigh Coakley<lb/>
BUSINESS MANAGER<lb/>
Steve O'Geary<lb/>
Karen Wendt<lb/>
Tarry Gray<lb/>
Bill Jones<lb/>
Tarry Herndon<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
ASST. SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
COPY EDITOR<lb/>
AD TECH. SUPER.<lb/>
Charles Chandlar<lb/>
Jimmy DuPree<lb/>
Diana Henderson<lb/>
Paul Lincka<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN is the student<lb/>
newspaper of East Carolina University<lb/>
sponsored by the Media Board of ECU and<lb/>
is distributed each Tuesday and Thursday<lb/>
during the academic year (weekly during the<lb/>
summer).<lb/>
Offices are located on the second floor of the<lb/>
Publications Center (Old South Building). Our<lb/>
mailing address is: Old South Building ECU<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834.<lb/>
The phone numbers are: 757-6366 6367<lb/>
6309. Subscriptions are S10 annuallyalumni<lb/>
$6 annually.<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
V<lb/>
-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057221_0005"/><lb/>
Jones aids WECU<lb/>
Congressman Walter B.<lb/>
Jones has joined the fight to<lb/>
get radio station WECU on<lb/>
the air.<lb/>
"I am taking the<lb/>
liberty of requesting that<lb/>
you personally intercede in<lb/>
this matter and instruct the<lb/>
appropriate office to grant<lb/>
the permit to WECU as<lb/>
soon a possible. While 1 do<lb/>
not wish to intercede with<lb/>
the functions of the FCC, I<lb/>
am requesting this conces-<lb/>
sion only because I honestly<lb/>
feel there is no reason to<lb/>
hold it up any longer<lb/>
This is part of a letter<lb/>
sent to Charles D. Ferris,<lb/>
chairman of the Federal<lb/>
Communications Commis-<lb/>
11, bj Jonesr<lb/>
Jones, at the request of<lb/>
John Jeter, station manager<lb/>
ol VI ECU. has been trying<lb/>
to help WECU get its<lb/>
permit granted so that<lb/>
construction can begin on<lb/>
the tower.<lb/>
In the letter, Jones also<lb/>
cites, "On September 7, a<lb/>
member of my staff was<lb/>
advised by an attorney in<lb/>
the Legal Division of the<lb/>
FCC that it was expected<lb/>
that the permit would be<lb/>
granted in about two<lb/>
weeks<lb/>
WECU has still not<lb/>
received the permit.<lb/>
According to sources at<lb/>
the FCC offices, the permit<lb/>
has been held up because of<lb/>
a new policy which is being<lb/>
considered by the FCC. The<lb/>
policy concerns a change in<lb/>
the Commission's general<lb/>
position on educational<lb/>
radio stations.<lb/>
Jones also stated that he<lb/>
will look forward to hearing<lb/>
from Ferris with a positive<lb/>
response in the near future.<lb/>
Brewer speaks to SGA<lb/>
Board trims budgets<lb/>
By CHRISTINE CAGLE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"It is more important to<lb/>
get on with the business of<lb/>
working together in the best<lb/>
interest of ECU and look<lb/>
back over the year's accom-<lb/>
plishments with pride and<lb/>
quit beating dead horses<lb/>
remarked Chancellor<lb/>
Brewer to SGA legislature<lb/>
members regarding the<lb/>
personal letter between<lb/>
SGA President Brett Melvin<lb/>
and Tim Sullivan.<lb/>
Dr. Brewer was guest<lb/>
speaker at Monday's SGA<lb/>
legislature meeting.<lb/>
Members of the legis-<lb/>
lature directed several<lb/>
questions to Dr. Brewer<lb/>
concerning the short library<lb/>
hours, the Media Board and<lb/>
the letter between Melvin<lb/>
and Sullivan.<lb/>
When asked about his<lb/>
reaction to the letter printed<lb/>
regarding Tim Sullivan and<lb/>
Brett Melvin and the three<lb/>
trustees' comments, Dr.<lb/>
Brewer stated that he "was<lb/>
not happy about the fact<lb/>
that the letter was obtained<lb/>
by robbery and that after<lb/>
he saw the letter, he found<lb/>
nothing in it worthwhile.<lb/>
According to Dr.<lb/>
Brewer, "Any kind of new<lb/>
organization such as the<lb/>
Media Board takes time to<lb/>
smooth out its edges He<lb/>
also stated that you cannot<lb/>
expect a new structure to<lb/>
function smoothly in the<lb/>
first, second or third year.<lb/>
Brewer added, "There are<lb/>
problems with the Media<lb/>
Board and any new organi-<lb/>
zation. Yes, things need to<lb/>
be worked out and hopefully<lb/>
in future years things will<lb/>
be straightened out<lb/>
Dr. Brewer stated that<lb/>
he was not aware of the<lb/>
library hours, but he will<lb/>
look into them and see if<lb/>
something can be done<lb/>
about an extension.<lb/>
Brett Melvin, SGA pres-<lb/>
ident, addressed the legis-<lb/>
lature members regarding<lb/>
SGA summer accomplish-<lb/>
ments, its goals of the<lb/>
upcoming year and the<lb/>
responsibilities<lb/>
poses of SGA.<lb/>
and<lb/>
pur-<lb/>
The goals of the coming<lb/>
year for SGA, stated<lb/>
Melvin, are "to increase<lb/>
student awareness and faith<lb/>
in SGA, more publications<lb/>
by SGA and continued<lb/>
improvement of SGA transit<lb/>
system by expanding routes<lb/>
to the hospital and the<lb/>
malls<lb/>
Melvin further explained<lb/>
the purposes and respon-<lb/>
sibilities of the SGA, "To<lb/>
represent the needs of<lb/>
students, faculty and ad-<lb/>
ministration, to provide<lb/>
necessary service to stu-<lb/>
dents through the transit<lb/>
system, refrigerator rentals<lb/>
and emergency loans and to<lb/>
recognize student organi-<lb/>
zations and funding<lb/>
According to Melvin, for<lb/>
important communication<lb/>
between student body and<lb/>
faculty, this year adminis-<lb/>
trators will come and speak<lb/>
tothe legislature.<lb/>
B TERRY GRAY<lb/>
h- ews Editor<lb/>
The Media Board solved<lb/>
. roblem of ,a $16,500<lb/>
ficit in their proposed<lb/>
Monday by<lb/>
trimming the budgets of<lb/>
various campus media.<lb/>
1 he deficit was caused<lb/>
part b a<lb/>
?r r u n for<lb/>
Flu<lb/>
?<lb/>
?u lating<lb/>
S3.500 cost<lb/>
the 1979<lb/>
? rest of the<lb/>
to a mistake<lb/>
funds that<lb/>
e<lb/>
av;<lb/>
ailal<lb/>
?Je<lb/>
this<lb/>
th<lb/>
return<lb/>
ard. T;<lb/>
Elmer Mover, vice<lb/>
or for tudent life<lb/>
Vie lia Board mem-<lb/>
id that the miscal-<lb/>
urred last year<lb/>
yearbook staff<lb/>
13,000 to the<lb/>
nmnev was the<lb/>
the funds from<lb/>
of the ill-fated<lb/>
which was<lb/>
- hed. The monev<lb/>
tended i be used for<lb/>
- 197Q edi-<lb/>
iia Board in-<lb/>
the money as a part<lb/>
oi the genera) budget,<lb/>
rever, and approved the<lb/>
: vidual budgets of the<lb/>
media on that<lb/>
make up the<lb/>
. campus media or-<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY STORE<lb/>
Backpacks. B-15, Bomber,<lb/>
Fitld, Dock, Flight, Snorkel<lb/>
Jackets. Peacoats, Parkas,<lb/>
Sftoes, Combat Boots Plus<lb/>
Over 400 Different 61 Items<lb/>
1501 S. Evans Street<lb/>
ganizations trimmed off<lb/>
some of the money alloted<lb/>
to them in their tentative<lb/>
budgets.<lb/>
Six thousand dollars was<lb/>
taken from The East<lb/>
Carolinian s budget, and<lb/>
$5,000 from WECU. Most<lb/>
of the remainder of the sum<lb/>
was made up from the 1980<lb/>
Buccaneer funds.<lb/>
Among other business,<lb/>
the Board discussed the<lb/>
future of the Ebony Herald.<lb/>
Since it appeared that all<lb/>
Media Board funds were<lb/>
exhausted, the board<lb/>
passed a motion to form a<lb/>
sub-committee which will<lb/>
investigate the feasibility of<lb/>
publishing the black-ori-<lb/>
ented newspaper this year.<lb/>
The board also clarified<lb/>
a former decision relating to<lb/>
the employment of non-<lb/>
students on student media<lb/>
staffs. Board member<lb/>
Rudolph Alexander explain-<lb/>
ed that while students<lb/>
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when applying for a job,<lb/>
non-students would not be<lb/>
excluded from considera-<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057221_0006"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
tian m<lb/>
sports<lb/>
Tusdy, October 9, 1979, Page 6<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Frosh NG Doug Smith<lb/>
could be big star of future<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREfc<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Following the graduation of veteran nose guard 0iver<lb/>
Felton, a large question mark remained in the center of the<lb/>
ECU Pirates' defensive line.<lb/>
Most observers expected Felton's replacement would be<lb/>
last year's Outstanding Freshman Award winner, John<lb/>
Hallow. For the first few games of the season, that is<lb/>
exactly what happened.<lb/>
But a young freshman named Doug Smith had otner<lb/>
1 eSmith, an imposing figure at 6'5 225, started in the<lb/>
Bucs' 45-10 romp over the Keydets of VMI, and though he<lb/>
only managed two unassisted tackles on the night, the<lb/>
Pirate coaches were impressed.<lb/>
"Doug Smith has as much talent as any lineman we<lb/>
have says defensive line coach Wayne Hall. "He s not<lb/>
the best lineman we have but by the time he is a senior, he<lb/>
could be e . ,<lb/>
The missing ingredient for the bullish bmitn is<lb/>
experience; raw talent exists but must be refined through<lb/>
hard work and practice. <lb/>
"He's just like any other high school football player<lb/>
with a Uttle talent said Hall. "He really never had to<lb/>
push himself to be better than his opposition.<lb/>
"He's just beginning to learn the proper techniques;<lb/>
getting low on Mockers and working on his initial<lb/>
quickness . ,<lb/>
It would be understandable for a young player who has<lb/>
moved into a starting role on the defensive unit that was<lb/>
ranked number two in the nation in 1978 to become<lb/>
complacent; to be satisfied with his present<lb/>
&amp;&amp;?<lb/>
ECU's Doug Smith (92) in hot pursuit of VMI quarterback<lb/>
(Photo by Hugh Johnson)<lb/>
got<lb/>
every day in practice.<lb/>
'What you learn in technique from the coaches makes<lb/>
the game a lot easier physically. You don't rely on just<lb/>
shoulder tackles<lb/>
Hall stated that although Smith moved into the tirst<lb/>
string, "no one has a starting position sewn up<lb/>
"This year we've had Tim Swords move in and start<lb/>
instead of Vance Tingler. It all depends on how they grade<lb/>
t out in each game.<lb/>
<lb/>
??Doub could be and I think will be a great football<lb/>
player fo?uapr?aed Hall. "You can only push a k.d so<lb/>
fort ?? that he is capable of being, then he s go.ng<lb/>
,0h"Dougr"es? defensive lineman ability-wise ,?<lb/>
come out of eastern North Carolina in a long tune. I think<lb/>
tip can be as good as he wants to be<lb/>
lull compares Smith to North Carolina State's Bubba<lb/>
Green and Simon Gupton, as well as North Carolina ?<lb/>
Donnell Thompson.<lb/>
"Those are all outstanding defensive football players<lb/>
explains Hall, "but they all got there through hard work.<lb/>
"For his size, he's the fastest lineman I have. His<lb/>
initial quickness is not where it could be. In high school, he<lb/>
was fast enough that he could hesitate for a second when<lb/>
the ball was snapped and still make the play. But now, you<lb/>
have to be the first one off the ball<lb/>
Playing collegiate football is a dream come true for the<lb/>
Bayboro native.<lb/>
"In high school, I dreamt about playing against team-<lb/>
like State, Duke, Wake Forest and all the big name<lb/>
schools reflects Smith, "but when you're on the field<lb/>
with them, it's just another team.<lb/>
"I saw Ritcher (Wolfpack all-American center Jim) as<lb/>
just another player, just like in practice<lb/>
Doug Smith has come a long way in just a few months<lb/>
in the Pirate camp, but as he explains, it has been a<lb/>
constant learning process.<lb/>
"It was up to me as to how hard I wanted to work and<lb/>
how much I wanted to improve he said. "I had to have a<lb/>
lot of help. The coaches naturally helped, but John Hallow<lb/>
has helped me out a lot. I guess we both help each other in<lb/>
practice and cheering for each other during games<lb/>
Smith says that the early losses suffered by the Pirates<lb/>
could be blamed on a lack of unity.<lb/>
"Everybody is getting to know each other; the oneness<lb/>
is there, now<lb/>
ECU's Melvin Orioles, Pirates set for Series rematch<lb/>
among<lb/>
ECU Sports Information<lb/>
As if opponents weren't<lb/>
worried enough about him,<lb/>
East Carolina sprinter Otis<lb/>
Melvin mav have found<lb/>
another event while he was<lb/>
running in the World<lb/>
University Games in Mexico<lb/>
City last month.<lb/>
The slender 200-meter<lb/>
all-America performer from<lb/>
Fayetteville turned onthe<lb/>
afterburners in a pre-Games<lb/>
meet and won the 400-<lb/>
meters over an impressive<lb/>
is a fine sprinter.<lb/>
"I really feel like I can<lb/>
run with anybody now he<lb/>
said with a smile. "I really<lb/>
get fired up when I'm<lb/>
running against great com-<lb/>
petition. That's when I<lb/>
know I'll be at my best<lb/>
Bill Carson, Melvin's<lb/>
coach at East Carolina,<lb/>
knows the abilities of his<lb/>
senior well, considering him<lb/>
one of those athletes who<lb/>
refuses to lose.<lb/>
"Otis is the type of<lb/>
person you like to have on<lb/>
"He only sees one thing when he runs<lb/>
and that is the finish line'<lb/>
ECU track coach Bill Carson<lb/>
field, which brought him to<lb/>
the obvious conclusion.<lb/>
"I think that I can run<lb/>
either one this year said<lb/>
the senior blur. "I'll<lb/>
probably run a lot of 400s to<lb/>
get in shape to run the 200<lb/>
meters anyway, so now that<lb/>
I know what I can do, I may<lb/>
run the longer race some,<lb/>
??<lb/>
too.<lb/>
Before this past season<lb/>
Melvin could sneak up on<lb/>
the other competitors in his<lb/>
race and sometimes even<lb/>
win with virtual anonymity.<lb/>
But, that all ended when he<lb/>
made the NCAA final in the<lb/>
200 meters last June.<lb/>
"It used to be that if I<lb/>
performed well I was always<lb/>
a surprise performer to the<lb/>
others he said. "I can't<lb/>
surprise them as much any<lb/>
more.<lb/>
"I really feel I'm just as<lb/>
good as any of the other top<lb/>
splinters in the country and<lb/>
on any given day, any one<lb/>
of us can win. It's a good<lb/>
thing we don't all look at<lb/>
this as a life or death<lb/>
matter because a different<lb/>
person wins almost every<lb/>
race.<lb/>
The World University<lb/>
Games afforded Melvin his<lb/>
first exposure to inter-<lb/>
national competition and<lb/>
whetted his appetite for<lb/>
more. He worked with six<lb/>
different coaches, trained<lb/>
daily with the finest athletes<lb/>
in toe world and proved to<lb/>
himself and the rest of the<lb/>
track world that Otis Melvin<lb/>
<lb/>
??<lb/>
<lb/>
??<lb/>
i ??<lb/>
<lb/>
- <lb/>
<lb/>
-t<lb/>
the end of a relay, for<lb/>
example Carson said.<lb/>
"He only sees one thing<lb/>
when he runs and that's the<lb/>
finish line. He'll fight and<lb/>
strain to be the first one<lb/>
there every time, too<lb/>
He's been the first one<lb/>
there many times. He won<lb/>
three straight meets prior to<lb/>
the last NCAA outdoor meet<lb/>
and was named the out-<lb/>
standing runner in the Pitt<lb/>
Invitational after winning<lb/>
the 100 meters and the 200<lb/>
meters.<lb/>
Melvin's summer in-<lb/>
cluded training in Arizona,<lb/>
the National Sports Festival<lb/>
in Colorado Springs, Colo<lb/>
more training and the<lb/>
World University Games, so<lb/>
he's quite ready for a rest.<lb/>
In Mexico City Melvin<lb/>
won his trial heat of the 200<lb/>
meters going away, took<lb/>
second in the semifinal heat<lb/>
and was the only American<lb/>
in the final. He was running<lb/>
for a medal when he pulled<lb/>
a muscle in his leg with<lb/>
about 30 yards to go.<lb/>
"I need the rest for my<lb/>
leg, too he said. "I'll<lb/>
start back in about the<lb/>
middle of October and work<lb/>
toward preparing myself for<lb/>
the indoor and outdoor<lb/>
national meets and, hope-<lb/>
fully, a spot on the Olympic<lb/>
team<lb/>
But, in which event,<lb/>
Otis?<lb/>
He responds with only a<lb/>
puzzled look and then a big<lb/>
confident smile.<lb/>
It is that time of the year again when the leaves on<lb/>
trees begin to turn, the air gets colder and living rooms get<lb/>
more crowded. It is the time of year that television sets are<lb/>
watched with intense concentration by millions of<lb/>
Americans. ,<lb/>
Why all the excitement? Because it is World Series<lb/>
time, of course.<lb/>
The excitement should really be apparent this season<lb/>
with a seemingly great matchup set. The American<lb/>
League's Baltimore Orioles and the National's Pittsburgh<lb/>
Pirates seem destined to play a close series that should go<lb/>
down to the seventh and final game.<lb/>
The Orioles, considered by most the favorites, have it<lb/>
all. The excellence of the Baltimore defense was evident in<lb/>
the final game of their playoff series with California. Each<lb/>
time the Angels threatened, it seemed the Bird's defense<lb/>
came up with a crucial double play.<lb/>
The Orioles can score runs, too. The offense is<lb/>
spearheaded by MVP candidate Ken Singleton, Baltimore's<lb/>
Mr. Steady all season long. First baseman Eddie Murray is<lb/>
an awesome cleanup hitter and has plenty backup help at<lb/>
the plate in third baseman Doug DeCinces, outfielder Gary<lb/>
Roenicke, centerfielder Al Bumbry and oltimer Lee May.<lb/>
Utility man John Lowenstein proved the quality of the<lb/>
Oriole bench play when he slammed a pinch-hit homer in<lb/>
the bottom of the tenth inning to give the Orioles a victory<lb/>
in Game One of the A.L. Championship Series with<lb/>
California.<lb/>
Though the orioles are a well-balanced team, the bright<lb/>
spot of the club has to be their pitching. One veteran<lb/>
broadcast announcer called the Bird pitching "perfect<lb/>
Heading the hurlers is Cy Young candidate Mike<lb/>
<lb/>
Flanagan, a 23-game winner this season. The other starters<lb/>
include future Hall of Famer Jim Palmer, Dennis Martinez,<lb/>
Scott McGregor and Steve Stone. All four are capable of<lb/>
putting the stops on any team in the major leagues,<lb/>
including the awesome Pirates. ,<lb/>
And awesome is just how one would describe the'<lb/>
Pirates. Power and speed are the main elements of what,<lb/>
at times, is a devastating run-scoring machine.<lb/>
Leading the way for the Bucs is the dynamic duo of<lb/>
Willie Stargell and Davd Parker. Parker, the N.L. MVP last<lb/>
season, may have to stand aside the season and surrender<lb/>
the award to the 38-year old Stargell.<lb/>
Manager Chuck Tanner says Stargell is like wine<lb/>
because he seems to get better with age. The most<lb/>
valuable player in the playoff series with Cincinnati last<lb/>
week, Stargell smacked a surprising 32 home runs during<lb/>
the regular season.<lb/>
Though Parker and Stargell get most of the media<lb/>
attention, there are other Pirates deserving of i.<lb/>
Outfielders Bill Robinson and John Milner both swing a bi<lb/>
bat, asUoes third baseman Bill Madlock, who has a couple<lb/>
of batting championships to his credit.<lb/>
The Pirate defense is steady, as is the pitching. Starters<lb/>
Bruce Kison, Bert Blyleven and John Candelaria all are<lb/>
capable of having a super series. The bullpen is anchorea <lb/>
by Kent Tekulve, who appeared in more than 90 games<lb/>
this past season.<lb/>
Both the Orioles and the Pirates are led by superb<lb/>
managers. Baltimore's Earl Weaver is the best in the<lb/>
business. His cleverness has enabled the Orioles to stay<lb/>
near the top of the baseball world throughout the 70's,<lb/>
despite having at times what many considered little talent.<lb/>
Weaver should someday have a place in baseball's Hall of<lb/>
Fame, as he has led the Orioles to the playoffs many<lb/>
times.<lb/>
Tanner, on the other hand, is making his first playoff <lb/>
appearance. Yet he has always been considered one of the <lb/>
best in the business. His work in making the Chicago ?<lb/>
White Sox a contender in the early 70's is still considered a <lb/>
miracle.<lb/>
This series has all the elements of a great one. Not to<lb/>
mention all the strengths that both teams possess, this<lb/>
series is a rematch of the one played in 1971. That series<lb/>
was won by the Pirates in seven games, thanks to the<lb/>
excellent play of the late Roberto Clemente.<lb/>
The 1971 World Series is considered one of the greatest <lb/>
series ever played. This one has the potential to be just as <lb/>
good. <lb/>
There should be one big difference this time though. J<lb/>
The Orioles should win in seven this time around.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
-?<lb/>
 fieadinc tne nuners is vjy iouhk ?hiu?u?ic ???c o?o? o? ? . ?<lb/>
:???a?TM?aM.a?.n<lb/>
In S,C. tourney<lb/>
Lady<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Disappointment seems to be underscored thus far in the<lb/>
1979 campaign of the Lady Pirate volleyball team.<lb/>
In the South Carolina Invitational Tournament held this<lb/>
weekend, the Lady Bucs wee eliminated in their first day of<lb/>
competition, with the deciding blow being dealt by the<lb/>
University of Georgia, 15-11, 15-6.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates began their trek with an opening<lb/>
round loss to the University of Kentucky, 15-6, 15-12.<lb/>
From there it appeared that the luck of the East<lb/>
Carolina lasses would improve.<lb/>
In front of a noisy partisan crowd, the Lady Bucs upset<lb/>
the tournament hosts, the University of South Carolina.<lb/>
The victory came in a grueling three game marathon,<lb/>
17-15, 10-15, 18-16.<lb/>
"We beat a very strong South Carolina team praised<lb/>
Coach Alita Dillon. "Our defense looked a whole lot better<lb/>
and our offense was under control for the first time this<lb/>
season.<lb/>
"We were attacking more effectively and serving more<lb/>
consistently<lb/>
ECU's second loss of the day came in an upsetting<lb/>
15-9, 10-15, 15-7 squeeker for N.C. State University.<lb/>
"We split with State, but I still think there were some<lb/>
things we should have done and we would have beaten<lb/>
them. Overall, though, I was really impressed.<lb/>
"Oddly enough, South Carolina lost four in a row and<lb/>
went out early also<lb/>
The Tar Heels of North Carolina walked away with first<lb/>
place honors, nipping the Kentucky Wildcats in the finals.<lb/>
The Wildcats earlier eliminated State to earn a berth in<lb/>
the finals.<lb/>
North Carolina was the only undefeated team in their<lb/>
pool.<lb/>
Dillon cited Mitzi Davis and Ginny Rodgers for their<lb/>
improved defensive play in the tourney.<lb/>
"We're starting to look more like a team said Dillon.<lb/>
Senior spiker LaVonda Duncan feels that a lack of the<lb/>
personnel that the 1978 squad possessed is the reason for<lb/>
the sluggish start.<lb/>
"WeTre really just starting to progress explains<lb/>
Duncan. "This weekend is the first time we've played<lb/>
together as a team and not as six individuals out on the<lb/>
court.<lb/>
"We've had a lot of problems<lb/>
Duncan says that the loss of stars Rosie Thompson and<lb/>
Becky Beauchamp have hurt the team, as they provided<lb/>
much of the offensive punch and the defensive flexibility.<lb/>
"It's hurt us a great deal Duncan relates. "Overall<lb/>
we're a very short team.<lb/>
"We've got Sharon Perry and she's pretty tall, but<lb/>
beyond that we have no height.<lb/>
"Another thing, I guess, is that Rosie was so<lb/>
aggressive. We miss that.<lb/>
"The game (tonight) with N.C. State is very important<lb/>
to this team.<lb/>
"We've had to do s lot of adjusting said Duncan,<lb/>
"and we've got a long way to go. But we're definitely<lb/>
coming around<lb/>
ECU volleyball action<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057221_0007"/><lb/>
9 October 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Page 7<lb/>
Series pits 'Mr. Sunshine 9 vs. 'Mr. Computer<lb/>
Anthony Collins scores for the Pirates<lb/>
UNC-Wake Forest matchup<lb/>
is crucial to ACC race<lb/>
By DICK BRINSTER<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
North Carolina has not<lb/>
von its first five football<lb/>
games in any season since<lb/>
148, but the man most<lb/>
responsible for bettering the<lb/>
Tar Heels' 4-0 mark says he<lb/>
isn't concerned about that.<lb/>
It's not that Coach Dick<lb/>
Crum is figuring all the<lb/>
LSih-ranked Tar Heels must<lb/>
do is show up Saturday to<lb/>
beat Wake Forest in their<lb/>
N79 Atlantic Coast Con-<lb/>
ference debut. In fact, that<lb/>
would be a ridiculous notion<lb/>
in view of the Demon<lb/>
Deacons' 4-1 record.<lb/>
'We'll probably mention<lb/>
that to the players Crum<lb/>
said Sunday, "but that's<lb/>
really not important to us <lb/>
jusl the ball game Crum<lb/>
is long on theory and short<lb/>
on pomp and circumstance,<lb/>
and his theory at this point<lb/>
is that the Tar Heels must<lb/>
contain Wake Forest quar-<lb/>
terback Jay Venuto. They<lb/>
had their share of practice<lb/>
Saturday when Cincinnati<lb/>
quarterback Tony Kapetanis<lb/>
completed 14 of 26 passes<lb/>
for 227 yards in the<lb/>
Bearcats' 35-14 loss to the<lb/>
Tar Heels.<lb/>
"I think Cincinnati was<lb/>
good for us in that regard<lb/>
said Crum. "That's going to<lb/>
be the big question in the<lb/>
ball game he said when<lb/>
asked if North Carolina<lb/>
couid keep Wake Forest's<lb/>
aerial circus from stealing<lb/>
the show.<lb/>
The Deacons had a<lb/>
tough time for much of their<lb/>
contest against Virginia<lb/>
Tech, but Venuto hit on key<lb/>
passes in the fourth period<lb/>
as Wake Forest overcame a<lb/>
14-7 deficit to come away as<lb/>
a 19-14 winner.<lb/>
While Crum will be<lb/>
concerned with stopping<lb/>
Venuto, Wake Forest Coach<lb/>
John Mackovic has a major<lb/>
problem of his own ?<lb/>
Famous Amos Lawrence,<lb/>
the nation's leading rusher.<lb/>
"I remember Amos<lb/>
Lawrence said Mackovic.<lb/>
"Once you see him you<lb/>
don't forget him<lb/>
Tailback Lawrence<lb/>
maintained his 140-yard per<lb/>
game average against Cin-<lb/>
cinnati with a 143-yard,<lb/>
performance. And if that<lb/>
did not present a big<lb/>
enough problem for Mac-<lb/>
kovic, the Tar Heels showed<lb/>
him fullback Doug Paschal,<lb/>
generally Lawrence's block-<lb/>
er and quarterback Matt<lb/>
Kupec's short-yardage re-<lb/>
ceiver. Paschal gained a<lb/>
career-high 111 yards a-<lb/>
gainst Cincinnati.<lb/>
"I think we'll have to<lb/>
play our best defensive<lb/>
game of the year Mac-<lb/>
kovic explained. "They<lb/>
certainly run the ball as<lb/>
well as anyone<lb/>
Those were the precise<lb/>
thoughts of Clemson Coach<lb/>
Danny Ford prior to the<lb/>
Tigers' 17-7 victory over<lb/>
Virginia. On Saturday the<lb/>
Tigers will face a lesser<lb/>
threat in the form of<lb/>
Virginia Tech's runners.<lb/>
By WILL GRIMSLEY<lb/>
AP Special Correspondent<lb/>
Baseball's 1979 World<lb/>
Series boils down to this: it<lb/>
is "Mr. Computer" match-<lb/>
ing strategies with "Mr.<lb/>
Sunshine the close-to-the<lb/>
-vest gang going against the<lb/>
free-wheeling Happiness<lb/>
Boys.<lb/>
The Birds and the Bucs<lb/>
? one of the most<lb/>
intriguing matchups in<lb/>
years.<lb/>
When you think of the<lb/>
Baltimore Orioles, the A-<lb/>
merican League champions<lb/>
who ran off and hid from<lb/>
the favored Yankees and<lb/>
Red Sox, you conjure up a<lb/>
huge green chessboard<lb/>
presided over by a little<lb/>
puckish guy with silver hair.<lb/>
But 'Earl Weaver, the<lb/>
Orioles manager, is base-<lb/>
ball's Bobby Fischer ? a<lb/>
mind like a steel trap, a<lb/>
plotter, a man of a thousand<lb/>
moves who leaves nothing<lb/>
to chance.<lb/>
With Earl Weaver, the<lb/>
buck stops at his cluttered<lb/>
desk. "How important is a<lb/>
manager's role?" he re-<lb/>
peats an oft-asked, loaded<lb/>
question. "It's everything. I<lb/>
pick the 25 men who play<lb/>
for me. I say when they<lb/>
play. I say what they do. I<lb/>
am responsible<lb/>
When you think of the<lb/>
Pittsburgh Pirates, the Na-<lb/>
tional League champions,<lb/>
you visualize a gang rumble<lb/>
? ear-puncturing noise,<lb/>
raucous banter, heavy bats,<lb/>
a lot of muscle, friendly<lb/>
pushing and shoving.<lb/>
From the wings, a<lb/>
benign-looking man watched<lb/>
the tumult not with distaste<lb/>
but with obvious amuse-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
"Aren't they great?<lb/>
says Chuck Tanner, the<lb/>
skipper. "They have a lot of<lb/>
fun. No jealousies. No<lb/>
brooders. No fatheads. This<lb/>
is their style. Everything is<lb/>
loose<lb/>
Tanner is called "Mr.<lb/>
Sunshine" because of his<lb/>
amicible disposition and<lb/>
perpetual optimism. He<lb/>
looks upon his protegees as<lb/>
adults. He lets each do his<lb/>
own thing. He maintains<lb/>
discipline with a padded<lb/>
glove.<lb/>
Weaver, winner of six<lb/>
division titles and four AL<lb/>
pennants in his 12 years as<lb/>
Baltimore boss, is quieter<lb/>
and appears more serious<lb/>
though he possesses a wry<lb/>
sense of humor. Many rate<lb/>
him the best manager in<lb/>
baseball.<lb/>
This year he took a team<lb/>
without any big-salaried<lb/>
superstar and nursed them<lb/>
to 102 victories ? the<lb/>
fourth time his teams have<lb/>
won more than 100 games.<lb/>
He won out in the toughest<lb/>
division in either league. He<lb/>
didn't do it with mirrors.<lb/>
He didn't do it with soft<lb/>
talk or iron discipline. He<lb/>
did it with cold logic. He<lb/>
complied an exhaustive<lb/>
"book" on rival teams and<lb/>
set up a detailed card<lb/>
system on comparative<lb/>
strengths and weaknesses.<lb/>
He developed what he<lb/>
called "deep depth" ?<lb/>
plenty of strong arms in the<lb/>
bullpen and bats on the<lb/>
bench. He moved them<lb/>
around like pieces on a<lb/>
chess board. His moves<lb/>
were amazing.<lb/>
"I've got good pitching<lb/>
and good defense he<lb/>
says. "Sure I make the<lb/>
wrong move sometimes, but<lb/>
nobody's going to get many<lb/>
runs off us<lb/>
Big Dave Parker and<lb/>
Willie Stargell may offer a<lb/>
dissenting opinion.<lb/>
Gordon Fulp's<lb/>
located at Greenville Country Club<lb/>
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Thursday 8alad and potato $1.79<lb/>
Friday -????-??-? $1.39<lb/>
Saturday clZ?Aer $1.89<lb/>
Sunday ???; p??? $g25<lb/>
SUNTHUR.<lb/>
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FRI &amp; SAT.<lb/>
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BARREL OF<lb/>
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CONTAINS 22 PIECES<lb/>
8 PC. THIGHS<lb/>
3 PC. DRUMSTICKS<lb/>
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Gwaltney<lb/>
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PICNICS<lb/>
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Light n' Lively<lb/>
YOGURT<lb/>
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8oz. cups-all flavors<lb/>
3Lb. pkg. or more<lb/>
Fresh<lb/>
Lean Stew Beef<lb/>
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PORK CHOPS<lb/>
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plus deposit<lb/>
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SAUSAGE "Vx oz<lb/>
cheese 11 oz.<lb/>
popporotil 11 oz.<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057221_0008"/><lb/>
8 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 9 Ortrtwr iqtq<lb/>
Intramural info<lb/>
By RICKI GUARMIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
FENCING CLUB<lb/>
Dr. George Weigand,<lb/>
advisor and instructor for<lb/>
the ECU Fencing Club,<lb/>
Fencing club meets this Wednesday<lb/>
invites all interested stu-<lb/>
dents to participate in the<lb/>
club's weekly instructional<lb/>
sessions. The club meets<lb/>
each Wednesday, from 4<lb/>
p.m. until 6 p.m in<lb/>
Memorial Gym, Room 108.<lb/>
Gaither sparks<lb/>
Florida A &amp;M<lb/>
By HERSCHELNISSENSON<lb/>
AP Sports Writer<lb/>
Let's forget about the<lb/>
Southern Cals and the<lb/>
Amabamas and the Okla-<lb/>
homas and the rest of the<lb/>
Top Twenty for awhile and<lb/>
devote a few paragraphs to<lb/>
the Rattlers of Florida<lb/>
A&amp;M.<lb/>
That's the predominantly<lb/>
black school from Talla-<lb/>
hassee which the legendary<lb/>
Coach Jake Gaither put on<lb/>
the football map. And that's<lb/>
rA' as in agile, 'M' as in<lb/>
mobile and, as Gaither liked<lb/>
to say, the Rattlers were<lb/>
quite hostile Saturday in<lb/>
defeating Miami of Florida<lb/>
16-13.<lb/>
On the surface, it seems<lb/>
like just a game between<lb/>
two intrastate rivals. But it<lb/>
goes deeper than that.<lb/>
Florida A&amp;M won the<lb/>
NCAA Division I-AA nation-<lb/>
al championship last vear<lb/>
while the University of<lb/>
Miami is classified as<lb/>
Division I-A.<lb/>
The Southern Cals and<lb/>
Alabamas and Oklahomas,<lb/>
of course, reside in Division<lb/>
I-A with Miami. Besides<lb/>
Florida A&amp;M, Division I-AA<lb/>
includes the likes of the<lb/>
Ohio Valley, Big Sky and<lb/>
Yankee Conferences, among<lb/>
others.<lb/>
While Florida A&amp;M was<lb/>
embarrassing Miami, the<lb/>
top five teams in The<lb/>
Associated Press ratings all<lb/>
rolled to relatively easy<lb/>
victories. Top-rated South-<lb/>
ern California blasted Wash-<lb/>
ington State 50-21, runner<lb/>
up Alabama blanked Wichi-<lb/>
ta State 38-0, No. 3<lb/>
Oklahoma crushed Colorado<lb/>
and former Sooner coach<lb/>
Chuck Fairbanks 49-24,<lb/>
fourth-ranked Texas de-<lb/>
feated Rice 26-9 and No. 5<lb/>
Nebraska swamped New<lb/>
Mexico State 57-0.<lb/>
Elsewhere, sixth-ranked<lb/>
Houston nipped Baylor 13-<lb/>
10, No. 7 Washington<lb/>
whipped Oregon State 41-0,<lb/>
No. 8 Ohio State shaded<lb/>
Northwestern 16-7, No. 9<lb/>
Florida State drubbed Lou-<lb/>
isville 27-0 and No. 10<lb/>
Notre Dame held off<lb/>
Georgia Tech. 21-13.<lb/>
In the Second Ten, No.<lb/>
11 Michigan knocked off<lb/>
No. 16 Michigan State 21-7,<lb/>
Minnesota upset No. 12<lb/>
Purdue 31-14<lb/>
SKI CLUB<lb/>
There will be an organi-<lb/>
zational meeting for the<lb/>
Snow Skiing Club on Wed-<lb/>
nesday, Oct. 10, at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in Memorial Gym,<lb/>
Room 104. All interested<lb/>
skiers should attend so that<lb/>
planning can begin for the<lb/>
winter season.<lb/>
RACQUETBALL CLUB<lb/>
An organizational meet-<lb/>
ing for the Racquetball Club<lb/>
will be held on Wednes-<lb/>
day, Oct. 17, at 6:30 p.m. in<lb/>
Memorial Gym, Room 104.<lb/>
All interested players should<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Intramural-Recreational<lb/>
SPORTS COUNCIL<lb/>
The October meeting of<lb/>
the Intramural-Recreational<lb/>
Sports Council will be held<lb/>
on Thursday, Oct. 11, in<lb/>
Brewster C-103. All intra-<lb/>
mural representatives and<lb/>
interested students should<lb/>
attend!<lb/>
SOCCER<lb/>
The Soccer entry dead-<lb/>
line is Thursday, Oct. 11. A<lb/>
Captain's Meeting will be<lb/>
held on Monday, Oct. 15, at<lb/>
7 p.m. in Brewster B-102.<lb/>
ALMOST ANYTHING GOES<lb/>
The top eight finishers<lb/>
(not listed in order) in last<lb/>
week's Almost Anything<lb/>
Goes were Village Green<lb/>
Villians, On Your Backs,<lb/>
The Cloudy Grads, Easy<lb/>
U's, Invincables, Who Done<lb/>
It, Kelley's Heroes, and<lb/>
Power Hitters.<lb/>
These eight teams, along<lb/>
with 14 others, were<lb/>
competitors last Wednesday<lb/>
afternoon in crazy activities<lb/>
like the silly centipede and<lb/>
the dance balloon -a- thon.<lb/>
Prizes were awarded by<lb/>
local merchants for the top<lb/>
eight finishers, with the<lb/>
intramural department also<lb/>
awarding T-shirts to the<lb/>
first place Power Hitters. A<lb/>
special award went to Patty<lb/>
Brown and her New Com-<lb/>
munity "A" team for a nip<lb/>
and tuck last place fiuish.<lb/>
FLAG FOOTBALL<lb/>
Flag Football play-offs<lb/>
begin this week. Divisional<lb/>
finals will be played on<lb/>
Thursday at 5 p.m. All-<lb/>
Campus play-offs will begin<lb/>
Sunday at 5:30 p.m.<lb/>
DEADLINES<lb/>
Cross Campus Run entry<lb/>
dates are scheduled from<lb/>
Oct. 5-12. The last day to<lb/>
sign up for Soccer is Oct. 11<lb/>
and the last day for team<lb/>
handball is Oct. 25.<lb/>
Two-on-Two Basketball<lb/>
and Co-Rec Flag Football<lb/>
participants have until Oct.<lb/>
11 to sign up.<lb/>
11 to sign up. Tennis<lb/>
Doubles sign-up will last<lb/>
until Oct. 18.<lb/>
TENNIS RESULTS<lb/>
Round 4 ? Women's<lb/>
JONES CAFETERIA<lb/>
YOU CAN EAT DINNER<lb/>
$3.25<lb/>
:30 Meal plans accepted<lb/>
SERVOMATION CORPORATION<lb/>
South Central Dining Services<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
919-758-2424<lb/>
Division:<lb/>
E. Kutteh df.<lb/>
M. Pemberton 10-1<lb/>
B. Freeman df.<lb/>
A. Northington<lb/>
Round 4 ? Men's "A"<lb/>
Division:<lb/>
M. Davis df.<lb/>
S. Woodie 10-1<lb/>
B. Shipley df.<lb/>
D. McPhail 6-0, 6-2<lb/>
B"<lb/>
Round 4 ? Men's<lb/>
Division:<lb/>
D. Evans df.<lb/>
S. Rogers<lb/>
A. Newby df.<lb/>
W. Dixon 7-6, 6-1<lb/>
Finals are being played<lb/>
today at 5 p.m. at College<lb/>
nill lennis Courts.<lb/>
PREDICTIONS<lb/>
Ginn's Guesses:<lb/>
Women<lb/>
1. Tyler Heartbreakers<lb/>
2. IBAC<lb/>
3. Tyler Termites<lb/>
4. Fleming Hall<lb/>
5. Alpha Xi Delta<lb/>
Men<lb/>
1. Sadaharu Oh's<lb/>
2. Belk Bandits<lb/>
3. Bronx Zoo<lb/>
4. Animals<lb/>
5. Phi Epsilon Kappa<lb/>
6. Scott SSS<lb/>
7. Lambda Chi Alpha<lb/>
8. Belk Running Rogues<lb/>
9. Scott Stooges<lb/>
10. Village Green Meanies<lb/>
Fox's Forecast:<lb/>
Women<lb/>
1. Tyler Heartbreakers<lb/>
2. IBAC<lb/>
3. Alpha Xi Delta<lb/>
4. Tri Sigma<lb/>
5. Greene Giants<lb/>
Men<lb/>
1. Lambda Chi Alpha<lb/>
2. Dough Boys<lb/>
3. Sadaharu Oh's<lb/>
4. Belk Bandits<lb/>
5. Kappa Alpha "A"<lb/>
6. Belk Running Rogues<lb/>
7. Scott Stooges<lb/>
8. Phi Epsilon Kappa<lb/>
9. Ay cock Sidewinders<lb/>
10. Village Green Meanies<lb/>
Red Cross Blood Center<lb/>
Hwy43W<lb/>
758-1140<lb/>
Keep Red Cross ready.<lb/>
jj?:<lb/>
AM FiGMT iNPLATiarj Mi'&amp;HT<lb/>
25Adm OtmR Specials<lb/>
Uyfc - l-MMES NIGHT<lb/>
LADIES Fft?? ADMISSION<lb/>
B&amp;ING NiCKELS<lb/>
TkugSr- dance Contest<lb/>
r50 ? CASH -FIRST P?X?.<lb/>
MTINQ<lb/>
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Cards, Gifts,<lb/>
Books<lb/>
The Gazebo<lb/>
Leather n Wood<lb/>
Lynn's Hallmark<lb/>
Shop<lb/>
Walden Books<lb/>
Food Services<lb/>
Baskin-Robbins (ice cream)<lb/>
Big-Top Deli<lb/>
Chic-Fil-A<lb/>
General Nutrition Center<lb/>
(health foods)<lb/>
Hot Sam (subs &amp; sandwiches)<lb/>
Morrow's Nuts<lb/>
(nuts, candies)<lb/>
Orange Julius<lb/>
Second Cup (coffee, tea,<lb/>
spices)<lb/>
Swiss<lb/>
Colony<lb/>
(package<lb/>
cheesewine)<lb/>
Tiffany Bakery (cookies)<lb/>
Jewelry<lb/>
Henebry's<lb/>
The Jewel Box<lb/>
Rings G Things<lb/>
Time Square (time &amp; repair)<lb/>
Zales Jewelers<lb/>
Junior Dept. Store<lb/>
Blount-Harvey<lb/>
10a.m. to 9 p.m.<lb/>
MonSat.<lb/>
Men's Apparel<lb/>
Chess King<lb/>
Coffman's Men's Wear<lb/>
Fine's<lb/>
The Junction<lb/>
Just Pants<lb/>
The Pro Shop<lb/>
Steinbeck's<lb/>
T-Shirts <lb/>
Topps &amp; Trowsers<lb/>
Music, Records, and Radio<lb/>
Lowrey Organ Center<lb/>
Radio Shack<lb/>
The Record Bar<lb/>
Restaurants<lb/>
Castel Carini Restaurant &amp;<lb/>
Pizza, Inc.<lb/>
S &amp; S Cafeteria<lb/>
Athletic Attic<lb/>
Butler's Shoes<lb/>
Connie Shoes<lb/>
Father &amp; Son<lb/>
Jack and<lb/>
Jill<lb/>
Kinney Shoe<lb/>
Red Cross<lb/>
Thorn Mc An<lb/>
Department Stores<lb/>
Belk-Tyler<lb/>
Sears<lb/>
Specialty Apparel<lb/>
Dottie Lou's (children's)<lb/>
Motherhood Maternity<lb/>
Specialty G Services<lb/>
Aladdin's Castle<lb/>
(amusementgames)<lb/>
Women's Ready To Wear<lb/>
Charles Shop<lb/>
College Shop<lb/>
DAKS<lb/>
Foxmoor<lb/>
Lerner Shops<lb/>
Sidney's<lb/>
16 <lb/>
Stuart's<lb/>
Virginia Crabtree<lb/>
Planter's Nad'Bank<lb/>
Circus World (toys)<lb/>
Docktor Pet (pets)<lb/>
Rowers by<lb/>
Roselind (florist)<lb/>
Great Expectations<lb/>
(men G women's<lb/>
hair styling)<lb/>
Merle Norman Cosmetics<lb/>
Pearle Vision Center<lb/>
t- i'optometrist)<lb/>
Tinder Box (tobacco)<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
264 By-Pass<lb/>
on Highway t1<lb/>
IlilHMWIHIIII?H<lb/>
<pb facs="00057221_0009"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
features<lb/>
Tuesday, October 9, 1979, Page 9<lb/>
Greenville, N.C,<lb/>
Paycheck and Cross<lb/>
headline outdoor concert<lb/>
Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown<lb/>
Leah Ferree and parents<lb/>
(Concert photos by Richard Green)<lb/>
By WILLIAM JONES<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
A brilliant Carolina sun shown down through the<lb/>
cloudless azure of last Sunday's laid-back afternoon. The<lb/>
crowd gathering to attend the open-air concert jointly<lb/>
promoted by Outdoor Opry Productions (the same folks<lb/>
who run the Carolina Opry House) and the CU<lb/>
Interfraternity Council, couldn't have asked for a finer day<lb/>
on which to enjoy live music in the out of doors.<lb/>
Throughout the afternoon and early evening performances<lb/>
of Mike Cross, Delbert McClinton, Clarence "Gatemouth"<lb/>
Brown, and Johnny Paycheck, a blustery western breeze<lb/>
proved to be the only inconvenience the audience and<lb/>
musicians had to deal with.<lb/>
The concert was a fine example of a first-class<lb/>
entertainment production. The grounds had been prepared<lb/>
to accomodate up to 20,000 people. There was no problem<lb/>
with space or facilities for the approximately 5,000 which<lb/>
attended. The Greenville Jaycees provided refreshments<lb/>
(soft drinks and hot dogs). The Greenville and Winterville<lb/>
rescue squads were available in case of emergencies (one<lb/>
traffic accident did occur from which 3 people were taken<lb/>
to Pitt Memorial Hospital). Security men in red T-shirts<lb/>
with large stars and the word "security" emblazoned in<lb/>
white across the front patrolled the grounds on foot and<lb/>
horseback.<lb/>
At 2:00, Mike Cross began the opening act. Cross<lb/>
prefers being the lead act on multi-performance bills. He<lb/>
says he likes to set the mood.<lb/>
Mike Cross' music is not immediately classifiable. He<lb/>
refers to himself as a "hippie folksinger One of his major<lb/>
influences has been the blues "pickers" of the '20s and<lb/>
'30s such as Ledbelly. The other is Celtic folk songs.<lb/>
Cross dropped out of law school with only one semester<lb/>
to complete before receiving a diploma. When asked how<lb/>
his wife felt about him leaving law school for the uncertain<lb/>
fate of an individual performer, Cross replied, "She was<lb/>
the one who encouraged me to do itI met her when I<lb/>
was playing in a little pizza parlor. My wife was going to<lb/>
school at Duke, and she came in there one night and really<lb/>
liked some of the blues I was playing and that's how we<lb/>
got to know each other. So, she's always assumed I was a<lb/>
musician primarily. When I went to law school she was<lb/>
slightly disappointedI told her, 'Laurie, I want to do<lb/>
something a little more secure than music 'cause I feel<lb/>
responsible to you and to any children we have?' She<lb/>
said 'Mikeif you're in law school for me, you're not<lb/>
doing what I want you to do  If you were going to die in<lb/>
a couple of years, what would you do?' So, I said OK<lb/>
When asked how his son was doing, Cross said, "He's<lb/>
doing great, he's a fine little fella' If he can overcome the<lb/>
genetic difficulties he's going to have being my son, I think<lb/>
he'll work out OK<lb/>
Joyner offers new service<lb/>
By JEFFREY JOSEPH<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A new service is being<lb/>
offered by the ECU libra-<lb/>
ries. Jo Ann Bell, Director<lb/>
of the Health Sciences<lb/>
Library and Eugene Bru-<lb/>
nelle, Director of Joyner<lb/>
Library have announced<lb/>
that the two libraries are<lb/>
cooperating to provide a<lb/>
journal delivery service for<lb/>
faculty and students.<lb/>
Under the new system,<lb/>
faculty and student users<lb/>
may request that journals<lb/>
located permanently at the<lb/>
Health Sciences Library,<lb/>
Joyner Library, or the<lb/>
Music Branch Library be<lb/>
delivered to another of<lb/>
these libraries for their use.<lb/>
The service is designed to<lb/>
aid those lacking transporta-<lb/>
tion to or from one of the<lb/>
libraries, and will be<lb/>
available Monday through<lb/>
Friday of each week be-<lb/>
ginning Oct. 1st.<lb/>
To request a journal, the<lb/>
complete title, the volume<lb/>
number and the publication<lb/>
date must be given. The<lb/>
page number to be con-<lb/>
sulted should also be cited.<lb/>
Faculty members should<lb/>
give their name, the name<lb/>
of their department and<lb/>
their office telephone num-<lb/>
ber. Students must provide<lb/>
their name and major, as<lb/>
well as their telephone<lb/>
number. Also indicate the<lb/>
library to which the journal<lb/>
will be delivered.<lb/>
The delivery schedule<lb/>
includes four time periods.<lb/>
Requests received by 11:00<lb/>
a.m. will be delivered to the<lb/>
specified location by 1:30<lb/>
p.m. If a request comes in<lb/>
between 11:00 a.m. and<lb/>
2:00 p.m delivery will be<lb/>
made by 5:00 that evening.<lb/>
Requests received between<lb/>
2:00 and 4:00 p.m. will be<lb/>
delivered by 9:00 the<lb/>
following morning. Calls<lb/>
after 4:00 p.m. will result in<lb/>
delivery by 1:30 the next<lb/>
day.<lb/>
About his having "gone national Cross says, If<lb/>
the question is, 'Are you working on reaching people in<lb/>
other parts of the country?' the answer is yes. We're<lb/>
doing that by having me travel and perform and try to get<lb/>
records out. At this point in time, however, there are only<lb/>
isolated sections of the United States where people have<lb/>
even heard of me, much less whether they like me or not<lb/>
When asked if he had anything to say to the students of<lb/>
ECU, Cross replied, "Yes. I'd like to say that college is a<lb/>
serious business. Don't be fooled into going down that<lb/>
primrose path where you have fun. You've got to suffer to<lb/>
learn. And I'd like to say that my tongue is deeply<lb/>
imbedded in my cheek as I say these words<lb/>
The same Puckish, cracker-barrel humor that makes<lb/>
Mike Cross one of North Carolina's most popular<lb/>
performers remains when Cross leaves the stage.<lb/>
After a few minutes changing equipment, Delbert<lb/>
McClinton and band came on stage. The most recent<lb/>
edition of Playboy states that McClinton may be the<lb/>
best white rhythm and blues rock n roller in the world<lb/>
His performance Sunday bore this out.<lb/>
When asked what he thought of the Playboy article,<lb/>
McClinton replied, "Well, they butchered it up some. But<lb/>
any kind of deal like that is good. Lots of people see it<lb/>
Although he prefers to play small clubs (because that's<lb/>
where you make it sound right), McClinton was satisfied<lb/>
with his set, except for the effect of the breeze.<lb/>
"That wind's a killer he said. The wind blows it<lb/>
(the music) around like a bad radio station. It fades in, and<lb/>
it fades out<lb/>
The wind was a problem for "Gatemouth" Brown also,<lb/>
who said he felt like he was eating his words, getting them<lb/>
blown back in his face. Brown refuses to have his music<lb/>
classified. It runs the gamut from rock 'n' roll to blues to<lb/>
country.<lb/>
Brown has only recently begun to attract a lot of<lb/>
national attention though he's been playing music for over<lb/>
20 years. A few months ago he cut an album with Roy<lb/>
Clark, having returned from an international tour of Africa,<lb/>
Europe and the Soviet Union.<lb/>
After Brown and the Gatemouth Express's perfor-<lb/>
mance, The West Texas Music Company, Johnny<lb/>
Paycheck's band, came on stage and began to warm up the<lb/>
crowd for the country star.<lb/>
Simply dressed in overalls, orange T-shirt and with a<lb/>
blue bandana holding back his long hair, the country<lb/>
spokesman for the working man proceeded to entertain.<lb/>
After an assortment of numbers including his 1971 hit<lb/>
"Don't Take Her She's All I Got Paycheck closed the<lb/>
show with his former number one song, "Take This Job<lb/>
and Shove It<lb/>
Security men hustled Paycheck off into the cool<lb/>
evening. After a full but all too short day of entertainment,<lb/>
the crowd dispersed and headed for home.<lb/>
Foreign Service<lb/>
Mike Cross<lb/>
Delbert McClinton<lb/>
(Concert photos by Richard Green)<lb/>
Exciting careers available after graduation<lb/>
"College PaPers?publtehed j c<lb/>
by "Rolling Stone"<lb/>
? AMERICA<lb/>
By JAY STONE<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
College Papers is a new<lb/>
tabloid magazine published<lb/>
by Rolling Stone Press. Its<lb/>
style is even reminiscent of<lb/>
Rolling Stone, and it shares<lb/>
some of its staff with the<lb/>
larger magazine. To dwell<lb/>
upon the similarities of the<lb/>
two publications, however,<lb/>
would be to obscure their<lb/>
differences. In order to<lb/>
properly appreciate the<lb/>
College Papers approach to<lb/>
politics and popular culture<lb/>
one must understand the<lb/>
motives behind its con-<lb/>
ception.<lb/>
Issue number one of<lb/>
College Papers is at local<lb/>
news stands now. In its<lb/>
introduction Kate Wenner<lb/>
writes: "When Rolling<lb/>
Stone published its first<lb/>
issue in 1967, it launched a<lb/>
new kind of journalism.<lb/>
Rock V roll, drugs, the<lb/>
protest against the war, and<lb/>
the sexual revolution were<lb/>
all issues of the times.<lb/>
Rolling Stone reported on<lb/>
them from the inside, ss a<lb/>
participant in what was<lb/>
i,<lb/>
happening, while the rest of<lb/>
the prtds looked on from<lb/>
the outside, unable to<lb/>
appreciate the profound<lb/>
changes that were going<lb/>
on.<lb/>
i<lb/>
Indeed, College Papers<lb/>
bills itself as a publication<lb/>
for college students not<lb/>
about them. College Papers<lb/>
will regularly run a section<lb/>
entitled "Notebook which<lb/>
will be a continuing forum<lb/>
where college students can<lb/>
publish their work. Fiction,<lb/>
journalism, poetry, photo-<lb/>
graphy, cartoons, essays,<lb/>
illustrations and reviews are<lb/>
all eligible.<lb/>
College Papers is a<lb/>
quarterly publication; there-<lb/>
fore, the next issue is not<lb/>
due out until January 2,<lb/>
1980. That should give<lb/>
students just enough time<lb/>
to accumulate some quality<lb/>
work.<lb/>
In its first issue College<lb/>
Papers examines the anti-<lb/>
nuclear movement, new<lb/>
legislation to reinstate the<lb/>
draft, rising tuition costs,<lb/>
and a new law that would<lb/>
allow college students and<lb/>
the public to receive copies<lb/>
of aptitude tests for admis-<lb/>
sion to college and graduate<lb/>
school. There are feature<lb/>
articles on Bruce Spring-<lb/>
steen, Gilda Radner, and<lb/>
William Borroughs. Also<lb/>
included is an article on<lb/>
beer which includes the<lb/>
results of a poll taken on<lb/>
several campuses in order<lb/>
to determine what the 20<lb/>
most popular brands are.<lb/>
These topics maintain an<lb/>
unmistakably college pos-<lb/>
ture. It may be hoped that<lb/>
ultimately a magazine ap-<lb/>
proaching news and culture<lb/>
form this angle will serve to<lb/>
inspire a degree of self-<lb/>
consciousness among the<lb/>
college community. It is a<lb/>
credit to the .foresight of<lb/>
Rolling Stone Press that<lb/>
college students finally have<lb/>
a national forum and,<lb/>
subsequently, a common<lb/>
denominator. We shall have<lb/>
to allow events to create the<lb/>
present and the future to<lb/>
chart its own course,<lb/>
however, before it will be<lb/>
possible to measure its<lb/>
impact.<lb/>
J The Major Attractions<lb/>
I Committee presents Amer-<lb/>
J ica in concert TONIGHT!<lb/>
? The show begins at 8:00<lb/>
? p.m. in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
i HOMECOMING<lb/>
A homecoming dance fea-<lb/>
turing Beau Thorp and<lb/>
Generation II will be held<lb/>
on Oct. 13, in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
By MICHAEL F. GEORGE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Are you interested in<lb/>
traveling abroad? Do you<lb/>
look forward to an exciting<lb/>
career after graduation?<lb/>
Well, it just may be that the<lb/>
Foreign Service is for you!<lb/>
The first step in a<lb/>
Foreign Service career is<lb/>
the Foreign Service exam,<lb/>
which will be given in<lb/>
Raleigh on Saturday, Dec.<lb/>
1, 1979. The deadline for<lb/>
registration is Oct. 19.<lb/>
Over 130 countries are<lb/>
served by the Foreign<lb/>
Service, the State Depart-<lb/>
ment's diplomatic, consular<lb/>
and overseas cultural and<lb/>
information service. There<lb/>
are four specialized fields:<lb/>
administrative, consular,<lb/>
economiccommercial and<lb/>
political affairs.<lb/>
The administrative field<lb/>
is the management division<lb/>
of the foreign service. In<lb/>
administration, a great ima-<lb/>
gination is needed to come<lb/>
up with ideas to keep the<lb/>
system working, and this<lb/>
field involves great respon-<lb/>
sibility. The administrator<lb/>
would be involved in budget<lb/>
planning, maintenance of<lb/>
property, procurement of<lb/>
supplies, contracts and tra-<lb/>
vel arrangements and<lb/>
labor-management negotia-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
In the consular field, one<lb/>
would work primarily with<lb/>
the local people of the<lb/>
particular country.<lb/>
"They must combine the<lb/>
skills of the diplomat, social<lb/>
worker, lawyer and judge<lb/>
is how the Foreign Service<lb/>
con-<lb/>
Handbook describes a<lb/>
suiar officer. This<lb/>
requires fluency<lb/>
native language<lb/>
in<lb/>
of<lb/>
job<lb/>
the<lb/>
the<lb/>
country because of the close<lb/>
association with local offi-<lb/>
cials and the public in<lb/>
general.<lb/>
Trade, investment, and<lb/>
monetary matters and en-<lb/>
ergy are some concerns in<lb/>
the economic field. An<lb/>
individual working in this<lb/>
field reports on any eco-<lb/>
nomic trends that would<lb/>
affect U.S. interests. Again,<lb/>
local officials would be<lb/>
consulted. "In addition to<lb/>
knowing economics, they<lb/>
must be politically and<lb/>
culturally perceptive, skillful<lb/>
in drafting, and flexible<lb/>
the Foreign Service Hand-<lb/>
book says of personnel in<lb/>
this field.<lb/>
The fourth field of<lb/>
specialty in the Foreign<lb/>
Service is political affairs.<lb/>
Foreign language is a<lb/>
definite requirement here.<lb/>
Political officers present the<lb/>
U.S. government's views on<lb/>
all political issues and<lb/>
report on anything political<lb/>
or involving U.S. interests.<lb/>
Knowledge of the history,<lb/>
culture, language and poli-<lb/>
tics of the particular country<lb/>
is essential.<lb/>
The entrance examina-<lb/>
tion must be passed before<lb/>
entering the Foreign Ser-<lb/>
vice. Last year 12,200 took<lb/>
the test and 2,800 passed.<lb/>
A wide range of knowledge<lb/>
? from foreign and domes-<lb/>
tic affairs to U.S. history,<lb/>
government and culture ?<lb/>
is needed to complete the<lb/>
exam successfully. Appli-<lb/>
cants must also be fluent in<lb/>
English grammar skills. The<lb/>
minimum age requierd to<lb/>
apply is 20.<lb/>
Even after passing the<lb/>
exam, applicants are not<lb/>
admitted to the Service<lb/>
permanently. Depending<lb/>
upon test scores, each<lb/>
individual is placed in one<lb/>
of eight classes. At the end<lb/>
of a four-year trial probation<lb/>
period, employees are<lb/>
either promoted or fired,<lb/>
according to the caliber of<lb/>
their work.<lb/>
Employees who are kept<lb/>
on can look forward to a<lb/>
30-year career ? 15 years<lb/>
in overseas work with<lb/>
relocation every two to four<lb/>
years. Promotions come<lb/>
every 18 months, depending<lb/>
on performance.<lb/>
The pay scale for Class 8<lb/>
is from $13,014-15,618 per<lb/>
year. For Class 7 the pay is<lb/>
$15,222-18,264. Everything<lb/>
depends on your perform-<lb/>
ance, experience, and<lb/>
qualifications.<lb/>
Anyone interested in the<lb/>
exam should see Dr.<lb/>
Griffith in Brewster A-123,<lb/>
who will be able to explain<lb/>
the Foreign Service.<lb/>
LtMHlNb AWOT COLL?? THf HU Vfol<lb/>
SI Dtmo Norris<lb/>
THIS Oj?CTJUrJ I c U - sorr<lb/>
6Am? IS LOTM FUri- ANP,<lb/>
A SfllPITWfl5<lb/>
I<lb/>
.<lb/>
V<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057221_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 9 October 1979<lb/>
Bo Thorpe to perform in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium<lb/>
A new musical pheno-<lb/>
menon will come to ECU on<lb/>
Saturday, Oct. 13, when Bo<lb/>
Thorpe and Generation II<lb/>
perform in Wright Auditor-<lb/>
ium. . c<lb/>
Rocky Mount native Bo<lb/>
Thorpe has put together a<lb/>
big band ? but not just<lb/>
another big band. Genera-<lb/>
tion II combines the best of<lb/>
the traditional big band<lb/>
sound with today's modern<lb/>
electronic sound. The re-<lb/>
sults may be described as<lb/>
orchestrated disco.<lb/>
The Student Union Spe-<lb/>
cial Attraction's Committee<lb/>
sponsors this appearance<lb/>
which climaxes the Home-<lb/>
coming festivities.<lb/>
According to Thorpe the<lb/>
idea for the band was<lb/>
conceived while attending a<lb/>
collegiate football game.<lb/>
During the half-time show<lb/>
he noticed that the band<lb/>
was playing big band<lb/>
music, the cheerleaders<lb/>
were jitterbugging, and the<lb/>
people in the stands were<lb/>
going wild.<lb/>
Convinced this idea<lb/>
would work, Thorpe went to<lb/>
New York and contacted<lb/>
Dan Rather, a friend from<lb/>
Vietnam days. Rather put<lb/>
him in touch with noted<lb/>
composer Sid Cooper who<lb/>
had worked with such<lb/>
luminaries as Tommy Dor-<lb/>
sey, and Frank Sinatra .<lb/>
Thorpe and Cooper star-<lb/>
ted by substituting the<lb/>
electronic sounds of today<lb/>
for the acoustic instruments<lb/>
that were long associated<lb/>
with big bands. They also<lb/>
re-arranged many of the old<lb/>
favorites giving them a<lb/>
harder disco beat.<lb/>
The band debuted last<lb/>
March at Regine's, one of<lb/>
New York's ultra-chic d's-<lb/>
cos. This appearance by the<lb/>
band at Regine's marked<lb/>
the first ever for a live band<lb/>
at the club. The event was<lb/>
given national coverage on<lb/>
ABC evening news.<lb/>
In the first six months of<lb/>
its existence the band<lb/>
appeared on a national<lb/>
television special with Dan-<lb/>
ny Thomas, Eartha Kitt,<lb/>
and Bob Hope, played a<lb/>
two-week stand at the<lb/>
Riverboat Room, performed<lb/>
the concert dance for the<lb/>
Belmont Stakes, and played<lb/>
at a reception for President<lb/>
Carter.<lb/>
Tickets for the dance are<lb/>
on sale at the Central Ticket<lb/>
office and are priced at $2<lb/>
for ECU students and $4 for<lb/>
the public. All tickets sold<lb/>
at the door will be $4.<lb/>
Real Crisis Center<lb/>
Got a real problem?<lb/>
Get some REAL help!<lb/>
758-HELP<lb/>
24-hour walk-in clinic<lb/>
1117 Evans Street Greenville, N. C. 2 7834<lb/>
REAL CRISIS CENTER<lb/>
Portraits<lb/>
will be<lb/>
taken:<lb/>
OVERTON<lb/>
Located on corner 3rd and Jarvis St.<lb/>
Grade "A" Whole Fryers<lb/>
34'lb.<lb/>
Aurora Toilet Tissue<lb/>
2 roll pkg. 2$1.00<lb/>
Coca-Cola<lb/>
2 liter plastic btl. 78'<lb/>
Bounty Paper Towels<lb/>
Giant Roll 58'<lb/>
Morton's Frozen Chicken Pot Pies<lb/>
8ozpkg. 4$1.00<lb/>
Golden Ripe Bananas<lb/>
4 lbs. $1.00<lb/>
Carolina Dairies All Flavors Sherbet<lb/>
Qt. pkg. 2$1.00<lb/>
Expires Oct. 13. Please have coupons clipped.<lb/>
Dawn detergent<lb/>
Giant btl. 68' with this<lb/>
coupon and $7.50 food<lb/>
order excluding<lb/>
specials.Limlt one Per<lb/>
customer, without coupon 68.<lb/>
Crisco Oil<lb/>
24 oz. btl.78' with this<lb/>
coupon and $7.50 food<lb/>
order excluding<lb/>
specials. Limit ?ne pr<lb/>
customer, without coupon 98.<lb/>
Duncan Hines Yellow or<lb/>
Butter Golden Cake Mix<lb/>
17 oz. box 58' with this coupon<lb/>
and $7.50 food order excluding<lb/>
specials. Llmlt ?ne per customer,<lb/>
without coupon 78.<lb/>
ECU Pirate<lb/>
Coupon<lb/>
5 discount on<lb/>
$10.00 or more food<lb/>
purchase<lb/>
expires Oct. 13<lb/>
name<lb/>
ID number<lb/>
Kraft Orange Juice<lb/>
12 Gal. Jug 98'with<lb/>
this coupon and $7.50<lb/>
food order excluding<lb/>
Specials. Llmit one per<lb/>
customer, without coupon $1.18<lb/>
Coca-Colas<lb/>
16 oz ctn. of 8 88' plus<lb/>
deposit with this coupon<lb/>
and $7.50 food order<lb/>
excluding specials. Limit<lb/>
one per customer, without<lb/>
coupon $1.08.<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057221_0011"/><lb/>
Stormwatch<lb/>
9 October 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Page 11<lb/>
18<lb/>
TulVs latest<lb/>
By PAT MINCES<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
To consistently produce music of high caliber<lb/>
throughout an entire career in rock is a task wnkh<lb/>
overcomes all except those gifted with true genius. Living<lb/>
legends such as Frank Zappa, Stevie Wonder and The Who<lb/>
have been able to withstand the strain of time and release<lb/>
music that shows artistic growth and enduring creativity.<lb/>
Jethro Tull is also one of those anomalies, and the<lb/>
bands new album Stormwatch is a testament to the<lb/>
strength of its long career. Ian Anderson's compositional<lb/>
and arrangement skills and TulTs musical proficiency are<lb/>
unfaltering m their devotion to the highest standards of<lb/>
quality. Despite personnel changes, Jethro Tull has proven<lb/>
to be one of the most articulate spokesman of a musical<lb/>
generation spanning ten years.<lb/>
Stormwatch is a most impressive album and should<lb/>
prove to be one of the finer releases of the year. Tull<lb/>
confirms that musical integrity can be achieved within the<lb/>
confines of a rock production by using the combination of<lb/>
beauty and complexity that is uniquely Jethro Tull. The<lb/>
theme behind Stormwatch predicts a foreboding future<lb/>
when the energy is depleted and the earth succumbs to a<lb/>
creeping chill. Stormwatch is a devastating album, a<lb/>
reaffirmation of the strength of one of the most prominent<lb/>
groups in rock history.<lb/>
A relatively new band, yet one which has shown<lb/>
consistent growth, is Blondie. With the release of Eat To<lb/>
The Beat, Blondie should become one of the definitive<lb/>
groups of the '70s. Eat To The Beat has a strong '60s<lb/>
orientation, but the power and drive of Deborah Harry's<lb/>
voice and the band's newly gelled wall of sound should<lb/>
propel Blondie to superstar status. This is perhaps the<lb/>
most significant release in Blondie's career and should<lb/>
prove to be a milestone in the acceptance of New Wave.<lb/>
The theme behind 'stormwatch'<lb/>
predicts a foreboding future when the<lb/>
energy is depleted and the earth<lb/>
succumbs to a creeping chill.<lb/>
Tom Johnston, one of the founding Doobies, recently<lb/>
left the Doobie Brothers (perhaps because of Michael<lb/>
McDonald's takeover) to engage in a solo career. His first<lb/>
release Everything You've Heard Is True is superb,<lb/>
recapturing the beauty of the Doobies' music before<lb/>
McDonald arrived. Outstanding personnel, inspired<lb/>
performances, and lovely pop melodies make Johnston's<lb/>
album a marvelous endeavor and show that the goodtime<lb/>
Doobie spirit is not dead.<lb/>
Kennv Loggins and Jim Messina have released their<lb/>
new abums. Both show continued growth since they- split<lb/>
several years ago. Loggins' Keep The Fire is much in the<lb/>
vein of last year's Celebrate Me Home, featuring elaborate<lb/>
productions, complex arrangements and that sweet, mellow<lb/>
Kenny Loggins sound that has been the hallmark of his<lb/>
career.<lb/>
Messina's album, Oasis, seems to be a change of<lb/>
direction for the artist, who has been in the mainstream of<lb/>
pop music since Buffalo Springfield. The Messina flair is<lb/>
definitely present, but a strong Columbia Jazz influence<lb/>
takes presidence in Oasis ? his first solo effort. This<lb/>
album offers a nice blend of jazz and pop influences.<lb/>
Any discussion of jazz-pop would not be inclusive<lb/>
without the mention of the godfather of jazz-pop Van<lb/>
Morrison and the release of his new album Into The Music.<lb/>
This album is nice and does possess moments of brilliance<lb/>
but is not generally recommended for anyone except<lb/>
Morrison fans.<lb/>
Disappointingly enough, Santana's current release is no<lb/>
better than last year's Inner Secrets. The group seems to<lb/>
be locked into the same dismal discorock realm and<lb/>
cannot escape the lure of that commercial dollar. If you<lb/>
liked Inner Secrets, you will love Marathon, but traditional<lb/>
Santana fans may think the band has been running a bit<lb/>
too long.<lb/>
Tonight, we will be granted a special pleasure to<lb/>
witness America in concert at Minges Coliseum. America is<lb/>
one of the foundations of pop music, releasing hits since<lb/>
the beginning of the decade, and their new album Silent<lb/>
Letter (minus Dan Peek) is no exception. Those present at<lb/>
the coliseum shall be treated to a real delight ? Dewey<lb/>
Bunnell and Gerry Beckley with a pleasant backup band. It<lb/>
should be a night to remember.<lb/>
Albums courtesy of Record Bar: Pitt Plaza and Carolina<lb/>
Carolina East Mall.<lb/>
UK iiiuiray Trotn<lb/>
r Fare saves you a super 25 (Fri. thru Sun.)<lb/>
or 35 (Mon. thru Thurs.) roundtrip if you make your reser-<lb/>
vations and ticket purchase 30 days before departure, and<lb/>
stay at least 7 days. mmmt . .<lb/>
IsssRsiitl Excursion Fmf means a 30 roundtrip dis-<lb/>
count if you leave Saturday and return any day except Sun-<lb/>
day (12:01 pm until midnight)or Friday.<lb/>
For complete information, including time and reservation<lb/>
requirements and fare availability, see your travel agent or<lb/>
call Piedmont Airlines. Discount fares subject to change<lb/>
without notice.<lb/>
I joined Chain-Smokers Anonymous<lb/>
79:NP-2<lb/>
By STEVE COOPER<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
"My name is Steve and I am ? "At this point I broke<lb/>
into sobs. I couldn't spit out the words. It was so unreal,<lb/>
like a dream. I never though it could happen to me, but it<lb/>
had. I was addicted, I knew it, and I wanted to quit. So I<lb/>
sought out help, and there I was at the Chain-Smokers<lb/>
Anonymous meeting. Encouraged by the other nico-freaks<lb/>
that were there, I managed to get through the first barrier.<lb/>
"My name is Steve and I  smoke<lb/>
The meeting was helpful. It made me realize that I<lb/>
wasn't alone. There are many, many smokers. When I<lb/>
looked around, I saw John T. He'd been chain smoking<lb/>
since he was 6 years old. His kid sister got him started on<lb/>
the habit. Then I met Lydia H an explosives technologist,<lb/>
now unemployed because she wasn't allowed to smoke on<lb/>
the job. There was Sister Magnolia, the smoking nun,<lb/>
"Bacco-Breath Sam the brown-toothed hobo, and me,<lb/>
Steve C, the smoking sophomore. After listening to the<lb/>
others tell their sad stories, it was my turn.<lb/>
"I still can't believe it happened to me. Why me? I<lb/>
never smoked as a child. My parents didn't smoke. In<lb/>
school I always took the long way to class just so I wouldn't<lb/>
have to walk past the sleazy people in the smoking area. I<lb/>
avoided discotheques because they always had such poor<lb/>
ventilation, and my eyes watered. So, why me? Why me?<lb/>
Why? Why? Why?"<lb/>
Once again I broke into tears.<lb/>
"Calm down, Steve Lydia H. tried to settle me down.<lb/>
"We know where you're coming from John T. added.<lb/>
"Tell us when you first started smoking Sister<lb/>
Magnolia requested. "But first, pass the ash tray<lb/>
"I think it was in Wilmington last summer. Yes, it was<lb/>
there. I'd started working on a show about a week after the<lb/>
spring semester. My roommate, Tony, was directing it.<lb/>
Tony smoked. God, did he smoke! He sometimes had three<lb/>
cigarettes going at once. I was doing imitations at the cast<lb/>
party. When it came time to imitate Tony, I had to have a<lb/>
cigarette to do it, don't you see? I had to have it<lb/>
"You're blocking Bacco-Breath told me. "Tell us<lb/>
when you really started<lb/>
"I'm getting there! I'm getting there! Just give me a<lb/>
chance Anyway, a few weeks later Tony was playing the<lb/>
part of Snoopy in "You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown<lb/>
During the rehearsal, Tony was singing. 'It's suppertime!<lb/>
Yeah! It's ?' Then he stopped and clutched his heart and<lb/>
fell off the doghouse<lb/>
"Did he die?" Sister Magnolia, who at times at<lb/>
ghoulish inclinations, asked.<lb/>
"No. He didn't die. It was nothing serious. Just<lb/>
pneumonia<lb/>
"What's this have to do with you?"<lb/>
"I'm getting there! Anyway, because Tony had<lb/>
pneumonia he was supposed to quit smoking, but he<lb/>
didn't. He'd say, 'Lord help me! I can't direct without a<lb/>
cigarette! Anybody got a menthol?' And then he'd smoke.<lb/>
"I wanted to help him. Call it stupid, call it asinine, call<lb/>
it what you want. But, I thought that I was helping<lb/>
"What did you do?"<lb/>
"I figured that if every time Tony lit up a cigarette and<lb/>
smoked it, if I lit up one and smoked it, he'd feel guilty<lb/>
about messing up my virgin lungs or something, and then<lb/>
he'd quit<lb/>
"Oh no<lb/>
"Oh yes. That's what started it. Tony didn't quit. He<lb/>
only got worse. And I, I started. From that one little<lb/>
cigarette I went to two, then to a pack a day, then to three<lb/>
packs a day, then to cartons. It was awful. I had to have<lb/>
cigarettes to live. I went from brand to brand. I didn't<lb/>
care. Cigarettes became part of my new image. I had to<lb/>
have them at work, at rehearsal, every time I entered a<lb/>
restaurant ? constantly.<lb/>
"Then it started to get really bad. My white teeth that I<lb/>
had gotten compliments on since sixth grade started<lb/>
turning ivory, then they changed to a pale biege. My<lb/>
clothes began to smell like K-Mart fire sale discounts. My<lb/>
dorm room began to smell like tobacco warehouses. And I,<lb/>
I too began to smell like a Salem Light 100. Oh, God! Is<lb/>
there no hope for me?"<lb/>
Once again I sobbed hysterically.<lb/>
"Settle down John T. shouted. "It's all right<lb/>
"Of course you can quit Lydia H. informed me. "It'p<lb/>
easy to quit. I've done it several times<lb/>
"And you've come to the right place for help Bacco-<lb/>
Breath added<lb/>
"Yes, you're in good hands here Sister Magnolia told<lb/>
me. "We'll get you through this. Can I borrow your<lb/>
lighter?"<lb/>
And so I had begun my campaign to quit smoking. No<lb/>
more will those little paper bastards have me at their<lb/>
mercy. I'll either quit smoking or die!<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO 12TH<lb/>
WEEK OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
$175.00 "all inclusive'<lb/>
pregnancy test, birth control and<lb/>
problem pregnancy counseling For<lb/>
further information call 832-0535 (to<lb/>
free number 800-221-2568) between<lb/>
9AM-5PM weekdays<lb/>
Raleigh Women's Health<lb/>
Organization<lb/>
917 West Morgan St<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C. 27603<lb/>
Writers<lb/>
Needed<lb/>
call<lb/>
or<lb/>
come by<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Old South Bldg.<lb/>
Pizza inn<lb/>
AMERICA'S FAVORITE PIZZA<lb/>
PIZZA BUFFET<lb/>
ALL THE PIZZA AND<lb/>
SALAD YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
$2.39<lb/>
MonFri. 11:30-2:00<lb/>
Mon. &amp; Tues. 6:00-8:00<lb/>
Evening buffet 0Z.B9<lb/>
758 6266 Hwy 264 bypass Greenville , If. C.<lb/>
WED SPECIAL 4-7<lb/>
LADIES NITE 9-?<lb/>
WED -THURS BUFORD T<lb/>
Wednesday night 7 p.m. in Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Also TREASURE OF SIERRA MADRE at 9 p.m. ggf<lb/>
Sponsored by the Student Union Films Committee U(fJ<lb/>
FRIDAY'S<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Tuesday Night<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
TROUT $2.95<lb/>
PERCH $2.95<lb/>
all you can eat<lb/>
No take-outs please.<lb/>
Meal Includes:<lb/>
French Fries, Cole slaw,<lb/>
Hushpnppies.<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/>
Dally<lb/>
(except Sat.) 11:30 - 1:30<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
MON ? THURS.<lb/>
f too ? IOtOO<lb/>
FRI. 8 SAT.<lb/>
stoo ? 10130<lb/>
5<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057221_0012"/><lb/>
? age 12 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 9 October 1979<lb/>
)ouble Bogey at Hendrix Theater<lb/>
i hi- Wednesday night,<lb/>
I 10, the Student Union<lb/>
- uimittee will spon-<lb/>
Humphre Bogart<lb/>
ature as part of<lb/>
i lal Film Series.<lb/>
Falcon will be<lb/>
 p.m. and<lb/>
Sierra Madre at<lb/>
th films will be<lb/>
in Mendenhall's<lb/>
Theater. Admission<lb/>
Student ID and<lb/>
ird or Faculty and<lb/>
Maltese Falcon,<lb/>
I, was director<lb/>
ii - first feature<lb/>
One usually<lb/>
ri mentation<lb/>
debut<lb/>
:it also might<lb/>
to be sacri-<lb/>
shy camera<lb/>
interferes with<lb/>
here<lb/>
ts us to the<lb/>
nstant inter-<lb/>
bile camera.<lb/>
ves along at a<lb/>
t viewer<lb/>
h 's been<lb/>
tor 100<lb/>
s (Bogart)<lb/>
with the<lb/>
(Sydne)<lb/>
i classic<lb/>
a Huston<lb/>
- attention<lb/>
and creates<lb/>
his char-<lb/>
the<lb/>
an's bulk<lb/>
oting from a<lb/>
itseli<lb/>
a I read <lb/>
ed its<lb/>
'  version<lb/>
. that<lb/>
here W ed-<lb/>
is produced<lb/>
3 in 1941.<lb/>
I filming of<lb/>
It's novel of<lb/>
. The first<lb/>
I in 1931<lb/>
Bi : ? Daniels<lb/>
Cortez. It was<lb/>
R v Del Ruth,<lb/>
id sion was<lb/>
. adv and<lb/>
1936. It<lb/>
Davis and<lb/>
blance to<lb/>
n .<lb/>
- por-<lb/>
Spade in this<lb/>
 Bogart<lb/>
I himself<lb/>
I star of the<lb/>
Stage<lb/>
I r enstreet,<lb/>
his screen<lb/>
- film. He was<lb/>
61 years old and was<lb/>
nominated for an Academy<lb/>
Award for his performance.<lb/>
A quick reading of the<lb/>
novel reveals some interest-<lb/>
ing points about the film.<lb/>
For one thing, Huston, who<lb/>
also wrote the screenplay,<lb/>
saw fit to eliminate at least<lb/>
one character: In the novel<lb/>
Gutman had a daughter.<lb/>
The film censors much of<lb/>
Hammett's original intent.<lb/>
The blame for this most<lb/>
certainly rests with film<lb/>
industry heads who allowed<lb/>
themselves to be intimi-<lb/>
dated by government and<lb/>
religious censors. We can<lb/>
see a recurrence of this<lb/>
mentality cropping up again<lb/>
today.<lb/>
Nevertheless, in<lb/>
Hammett's book, Cairo<lb/>
(Peter Lorre) is quite<lb/>
obviously taken with Wil-<lb/>
mer (Elisha Cook, Jr.). This<lb/>
is hardly hinted at in the<lb/>
film. Also in the book,<lb/>
Spade completely strips<lb/>
Brigid (Mary Astor) in<lb/>
search of the thousand<lb/>
dollars palmed by Gutman,<lb/>
but not here. And Spade's<lb/>
relationships with Brigid<lb/>
and his secretary can only<lb/>
be left to our imagination<lb/>
which, fortunately, cannot<lb/>
be censored.<lb/>
Another difference i<lb/>
that at the end of the novel<lb/>
we learn that Gutman was<lb/>
killed by Wilmer. Thi is<lb/>
clearly not the case in the<lb/>
film. Warner Bros. had<lb/>
originally envisioned a se-<lb/>
quel to The Maltese Falcon<lb/>
but. alas, it never materi-<lb/>
alized. Too bad, it could<lb/>
have been tun.<lb/>
'Treasure of<lb/>
Sierra Madre<lb/>
The following review,<lb/>
run in its entirety, was<lb/>
written by former ea York<lb/>
Times film critic Bosley<lb/>
Crowther and published on<lb/>
January 24, 1948. shortly<lb/>
after this film's release:<lb/>
"Greed. a despicable<lb/>
passion out of which other<lb/>
bae ferments may spawn.<lb/>
is seldom treated in the<lb/>
movies with the frank and<lb/>
ironic contempt that i<lb/>
vividlv manifested toward it<lb/>
in 'Treasure of Sierra<lb/>
Madre And certainly the<lb/>
big tar of the movies are<lb/>
rarely exposed in such cruel<lb/>
light as that which is<lb/>
thrown on Humphrey<lb/>
Bogart in this new picture<lb/>
at the Strand. But the fact<lb/>
that this steel-springed<lb/>
outdoor drama transgresses<lb/>
1<lb/>
Distributed By<lb/>
Taylor Beverage Co<lb/>
Goldsboro<lb/>
IMPORTED<lb/>
p?<lb/>
?<lb/>
Heinekeii<lb/>
HOLLAND BEER<lb/>
HIE 1 IMPORTED BEER IN AMERICA<lb/>
convention in both respects<lb/>
is a token of the originality<lb/>
and maturity that you can<lb/>
expect of it.<lb/>
"Also, the fact that John<lb/>
Huston, who wrote and<lb/>
directed it from a novel by<lb/>
B. Traven, has resolutely<lb/>
applied the same sort of<lb/>
ruthless realism that was<lb/>
evident in his documen-<lb/>
taries of war is further<lb/>
assurance of the trenchant<lb/>
and fascinating nature of<lb/>
the job.<lb/>
"Taking a story of three<lb/>
vagrants on 'the beach' in<lb/>
Mexico who pool their<lb/>
scratchv resources and go<lb/>
hunting for gold in the<lb/>
desolate hills. Mr. Huston<lb/>
has shaped a searching<lb/>
drama of the collision ol<lb/>
civilization's vicious greeds<lb/>
with the instinct for self-<lb/>
preservation in an environ-<lb/>
ment where all the barriers<lb/>
are down. And, bv charting<lb/>
the moods of his prospect-<lb/>
or- alter they have hit a<lb/>
vein of gold, he has done a<lb/>
superb illumination ot basic<lb/>
characteristics in men. One<lb/>
might almost reckon that he<lb/>
has filmed an intentional<lb/>
comment here upon the<lb/>
irony of avarice in indivi-<lb/>
dual- and in nations today.<lb/>
"But don't let this note<lb/>
of intelligence distract your<lb/>
attention from the fact that<lb/>
Mr. Huston i putting it<lb/>
over in a most vivid and<lb/>
exciting action display .<lb/>
Even the least perceptive<lb/>
patron should find this a<lb/>
swell adventure film. For<lb/>
the details are fast and<lb/>
electric from the moment<lb/>
the three prospectors start<lb/>
into the Mexican moun-<lb/>
tains, infested with bandits<lb/>
and beasts, until two of<lb/>
them come down empty-<lb/>
handed and the third one,<lb/>
the mean one, comes down<lb/>
dead. There are vicious<lb/>
disputes among them, a<lb/>
suspenseful interlude when<lb/>
a fourth man tries to horn<lb/>
in and some running fights<lb/>
with the banditi that will<lb/>
make your hair stand on<lb/>
end. And since the outdoor<lb/>
action was filmed in Mexico<lb/>
with all the style of a<lb/>
documentary camera, it has<lb/>
integrity in appearance, too.<lb/>
-hitl<lb/>
eons wree<lb/>
fe'<lb/>
"Most shocking to one-<lb/>
tracked moviegoers, how-<lb/>
ever, will likely be the job<lb/>
that Mr. Bogart doe as the<lb/>
prospector who succombs to<lb/>
the knawing of greed.<lb/>
Physically, morally and<lb/>
mentally, this character<lb/>
goes to pot before our eye<lb/>
dissolving from a t airly<lb/>
decent hobo under the<lb/>
corroding chemistry oi gold<lb/>
into a hideous wreck of<lb/>
humanity t - ? ssed with<lb/>
onlv one passion ? to save<lb/>
his 'stuff.1 And the final<lb/>
appearance of him, before a<lb/>
Captain's Soup<lb/>
&amp; Salad $1.75<lb/>
The best cup off clam<lb/>
chowder south off Boston,<lb/>
with crisp green salad and<lb/>
your choice off 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 r<lb/>
11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.<lb/>
Daily except Saturday<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
4:00a.m. to 11 s90a.ni.<lb/>
F ttnAujSgfni<lb/>
Two pancakes, two eggs,<lb/>
choice off bacon, sausage, or ham,<lb/>
and cup of coffee $1.50 pill tax<lb/>
4:00a.m. to ?p. ??? 80<lb/>
Kiscuits- Sausage, Ham, or Egg and Cheese<lb/>
?08 E. lOth St. open ?4 HOURS<lb/>
758-M46<lb/>
Bob Hope<lb/>
says,<lb/>
" Help keep<lb/>
Red Cross<lb/>
ready<lb/>
couple of roving bandits<lb/>
knock him off in a manner<lb/>
of supreme cynicism, is one<lb/>
to which few actors would<lb/>
lend themselves. Mr.<lb/>
Bogart's compensation<lb/>
should be the knowledge<lb/>
that his performance in this<lb/>
film is perhaps the best and<lb/>
most substantial that he has<lb/>
ever done.<lb/>
"Equally, if not more,<lb/>
important to the cohesion of<lb/>
the whole is the job done by<lb/>
Walter Huston, father of<lb/>
Joh, as a wise old<lb/>
sourdough. For he is the<lb/>
symbol of substance, of<lb/>
philosophy and fatalism, in<lb/>
the film, as well as an<lb/>
unrelenting image of per-<lb/>
sonality and strength. And<lb/>
Mr. Huston plays this<lb/>
ancient with such humor<lb/>
and cosmic gusto that he<lb/>
richly suffuses the picture<lb/>
with human vitality and<lb/>
warmth. In the limited,<lb/>
somewhat negative role of<lb/>
the third prospector, Tim<lb/>
Holt is quietly appealing,<lb/>
while Bruce Bennett is<lb/>
intense as a prospecting<lb/>
lone wolf and Alfonso<lb/>
Bedoya is both colorful and<lb/>
revealing as an animalistic<lb/>
bandit chief.<lb/>
"To the honor of Mr.<lb/>
Huston's integrity, it should<lb/>
be finally remarked that<lb/>
women have small place in<lb/>
this picture, which is just<lb/>
one more reason why it is<lb/>
good<lb/>
Bogart to Mary Astor: 'Dor<lb/>
silly. You're taking the fall.<lb/>
MEN'S RESIDENCE COUNC<lb/>
PRESENTS<lb/>
THE JUBAL<lb/>
BAND<lb/>
from Indianapolis, Indiana<lb/>
Thursday Oct. 15th<lb/>
?<lb/>
on the Hill 7:00-10:00 p.m.<lb/>
ADMISSION IS FREE<lb/>
MRC will also sponsor a pig-pickin<lb/>
in the baserment of Aycock Dorm<lb/>
on the same day from 5:30-7:00 p.m<lb/>
TICKETS AVAILABLE<lb/>
THROUGH MRC AND WRC<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057221_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>