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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057223_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/>
le East Carolinian<lb/>
Vol. 54 No.yW 14 pages today Tuesday, October 16,1979 Greenville, N.C. Circulation 10,000<lb/>
If you have a story idea, a<lb/>
tip, or a lead, please<lb/>
telephone us:<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
757-6367<lb/>
757-6309<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Bus accident<lb/>
Driver claims brake failure;<lb/>
witnesses charge driver error<lb/>
Despite attempts<lb/>
headaches.<lb/>
to upgrade maintenance and driver competence, the transit system is still beset with<lb/>
(Photo by Steve Romero)<lb/>
SGA hosts speaker<lb/>
By CHRISTINE CAGLE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"Students at ECU spend<lb/>
85 percent of their time<lb/>
outside the classroom<lb/>
commented Dr. Elmer<lb/>
Meyer, vice-chancellor for<lb/>
student life, in hie address<lb/>
Monday to SGA legislature<lb/>
members. He spoke to the<lb/>
SGA regarding an increased<lb/>
student input into various<lb/>
aspects of college life that<lb/>
greatly affect ECU students.<lb/>
Dr. Meyer also highlighted<lb/>
some tips that the faculty<lb/>
received in a department<lb/>
meeting about working with<lb/>
students.<lb/>
"life blood"<lb/>
"Students are the most<lb/>
important people in our<lb/>
work; students are not an<lb/>
interruption in work but the<lb/>
purpose of it; students are<lb/>
part of our reason for being<lb/>
here, not outsiders. Stu-<lb/>
dents are not names, faces<lb/>
or numbers but individuals.<lb/>
Students bring us their<lb/>
wants, and our job is to<lb/>
fulfill them. Students de-<lb/>
serve the most courteous<lb/>
and attentive attention, and<lb/>
students are the life blood<lb/>
of our work said Dr.<lb/>
Meyer.<lb/>
Dorothy Homer, pro-<lb/>
spective secretary of aca-<lb/>
demic affairs, reported to<lb/>
the legislature about her<lb/>
work this year with the<lb/>
Faculty Senate. According<lb/>
to Ms. Horner, the senate is<lb/>
divided into committees<lb/>
which meet once a month<lb/>
and discuss faculty findings,<lb/>
and students are able to<lb/>
provide input into the<lb/>
finding? and what is<lb/>
needed. She encouraged all<lb/>
SGA members that would<lb/>
like to get involved to come<lb/>
to a meeting on October 25.<lb/>
The resolution to re-<lb/>
negotiate the 1979-80 SGA<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Office Lease Agreement<lb/>
was passed at the meeting.<lb/>
The current lease assign-<lb/>
ment is signed by the SGA<lb/>
president who makes office<lb/>
assignments to other con-<lb/>
stitutionally elected officers.<lb/>
The SGA president has the<lb/>
master key that allows him<lb/>
access to all SGA offices<lb/>
including those of the<lb/>
elected officers. Legislature<lb/>
members desired that the<lb/>
current lease agreement be<lb/>
re-negotiated so that each<lb/>
officer will be responsible<lb/>
for his or her assigned<lb/>
office and that there be only<lb/>
one master key which will<lb/>
remain with the SGA<lb/>
executive secretary.<lb/>
The resolution was<lb/>
brought up due to the fact<lb/>
that at present, the SGA<lb/>
president has keys to all of<lb/>
the offices and thus has<lb/>
almost unlimited access to<lb/>
those offices.<lb/>
SGA members felt that<lb/>
the resolution did not<lb/>
question the integrity of the<lb/>
SGA president or violate his<lb/>
honor. It was solely due to<lb/>
privacy considerations for<lb/>
the officers.<lb/>
New bill<lb/>
The legislature also<lb/>
passed the Consolidation of<lb/>
Appropriations Bill. Ac-<lb/>
cording to Doug White,<lb/>
co-chairperson of the ap-<lb/>
propriations committee,<lb/>
"We have a very limited<lb/>
budget this year, and we do<lb/>
not have a clear picture of<lb/>
how much to spend. The<lb/>
committee would rather<lb/>
take all bills in a lump sum<lb/>
and see how much each<lb/>
organization wants and how<lb/>
much money there is to<lb/>
appropriate<lb/>
White added, "We want<lb/>
to make sure each organi-<lb/>
zation gets a fair share and<lb/>
attempt to fund organiza-<lb/>
tions more equitably<lb/>
White also said that all<lb/>
requests for appropriations<lb/>
must be introduced to the<lb/>
legislature on or before<lb/>
November 5, and then the<lb/>
committee will have a given<lb/>
packet of all requests for<lb/>
appropriations.<lb/>
White commented that<lb/>
about 140,000 is left to<lb/>
appropriate after the transit<lb/>
system receives up to their<lb/>
amount of 181,000 set by<lb/>
the Board of Trustees. The<lb/>
appropriations committee<lb/>
has adopted a policy not to<lb/>
set aside any organization<lb/>
money for travel, such as<lb/>
transportation, hotel, etc.<lb/>
By TERRY GRAY<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
At least two ECU students suffered minor injuries<lb/>
Monday when the no. 4 transit system bus smashed into a<lb/>
tree near the intersection of Fifth and Jarvis Streets after a<lb/>
reported brake failure.<lb/>
Cheryl Boehm, a junior Spanish major, was treated at<lb/>
Memorial Hospital for a nose injury caused when the<lb/>
impact of the crash threw her against the seat in front of<lb/>
her. Another female student reportedly hurt in the accident<lb/>
remains unidentified.<lb/>
According to bus driver Mark Folsom, the accident<lb/>
occured when a failure in the brake system forced him to<lb/>
swerve into the tree to avoid hitting a car. Folsom said that<lb/>
the car had stopped on Fifth Street, waiting for oncoming<lb/>
traffic to pass so that it could turn left on Jarvis.<lb/>
witnesses9 view<lb/>
Anita Lancaster, a student who was on the bus during<lb/>
the accident, said Folsom was following the car too closely.<lb/>
"He started pumping the brakes about ten yards<lb/>
behind a beige-colored car that was stopped in the street,<lb/>
but the bus was going too fast. He couldn't turn left<lb/>
because of the traffic, so he turned right into the tree.<lb/>
Every time I ride that bus, he always drives too fast and<lb/>
follows too close Lancaster said.<lb/>
A reliable source confirmed Lancaster's account of the<lb/>
accident, adding that the car had given confusing turn<lb/>
signals. When it became clear that the car was not going to<lb/>
turn off Fifth Street, the bus driver had to veer to the right<lb/>
to avoid hitting the car, the source said.<lb/>
"I was trying to slow the bus down when the pedal just<lb/>
went to the floor. I couldn't turn to the left because of the<lb/>
oncoming traffic, so I had to choose between hitting the car<lb/>
ahead or hitting the tree. I chose the tree Folsom said.<lb/>
Folsom said also that he had noticed a weakening in the<lb/>
brakes only minutes before as he was leaving Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
Cheryl Boehm, who was hurt in the accident, said she<lb/>
did not blame the driver for what happened. "Of all the<lb/>
bus drivers we have, I think he is the best, and what<lb/>
happened today was just a freak accident<lb/>
According to Transit System Manager Chubby Abshire,<lb/>
faulty brakes have been a major problem in the operation<lb/>
of student buses. Abshire added that the mishap may have<lb/>
been the result of low air pressure in the brake lines,<lb/>
caused by the slight decrease in pressure which occurs<lb/>
each time the brakes are pumped and then released before<lb/>
the system has a chance to rebuild pressure.<lb/>
Abshire also noted that an engineering oversight may<lb/>
be the source of braking problems. According to him, the<lb/>
main braking power in the International buses is applied to<lb/>
the four rear wheels, but the weight of the bus is<lb/>
concentrated at the front, where the engine is located. As a<lb/>
result, braking may be inadequate in full-stop situations,<lb/>
said Abshire.<lb/>
Abshire said that he had received a letter from the bus<lb/>
manufacturers last Friday, in which a suggestion for<lb/>
remedying the problem was put forth.<lb/>
Cause undetermined<lb/>
The bus was towed to Hastings Ford, but service<lb/>
personnel there have not yet determined whether or not<lb/>
the brakes failed.<lb/>
The bus, a 1975 International, was on its way to begin<lb/>
the purple route when the accident happened, and there<lb/>
were only eleven riders on at the time.<lb/>
Damage to the bus was confined to the front and the<lb/>
right front side. Both windshields were shattered on<lb/>
impact, and the entrance door at the front of the bus was<lb/>
crushed in.<lb/>
Police and fire department vehicles arrived within<lb/>
minutes after the crash, and a Greenville fireman climbed<lb/>
the tree to remove a broken limb which was threatening to<lb/>
fall onto the sidewalk below.<lb/>
According to A. L. Colcough, director of the ECU<lb/>
Department of Occupational Health and Safety, repairs to<lb/>
the bus must be paid for from SGA funds, since the bus<lb/>
does not carry collision insurance.<lb/>
Supreme Court<lb/>
shuns bias case<lb/>
By RICHARD CARELLI<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) -<lb/>
The Supreme Court today<lb/>
refused to become involved<lb/>
in one of the largest and<lb/>
potentially most expensive<lb/>
sex discrimination lawsuits<lb/>
ever filed.<lb/>
The justices left intact<lb/>
an order forcing Western<lb/>
Electric Co a wholly<lb/>
owned subsidiary of Amer-<lb/>
ican Telephone &amp; Telegraph<lb/>
Co to pay virtually all<lb/>
costs in what may be more<lb/>
than 2,000 separate trials to<lb/>
determine damages.<lb/>
Vice-Chancellor of Student Life Meyer<lb/>
Innovations planned<lb/>
By ARAH VENABLE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Dr. Elmer E. Meyer<lb/>
became the vice chancellor<lb/>
for student life at ECU July<lb/>
1, 1979. He was vice<lb/>
president for student affairs<lb/>
and dean of students at<lb/>
Cornell University.<lb/>
Dr. Meyer will have<lb/>
administrative responsibility<lb/>
over the offices of Resi-<lb/>
dence Life, the Dean for<lb/>
Student Activities, the ECU<lb/>
Financial Aid Office, the<lb/>
Counseling Center, Career<lb/>
Planning and Placement<lb/>
Office, Housing, Food Ser-<lb/>
vices, Security, Student<lb/>
Health Services and Intra-<lb/>
mural activities.<lb/>
Meyer said he plans to<lb/>
make some changes in<lb/>
He would like to<lb/>
that all in his<lb/>
best serve the<lb/>
policies,<lb/>
plan so<lb/>
division can<lb/>
students.<lb/>
The vice chancellor said<lb/>
there will be a consolidation<lb/>
of the residence life pro-<lb/>
grams. This means doing<lb/>
away with the positions of<lb/>
deans of men and women.<lb/>
One reason for making<lb/>
changes in the Residence<lb/>
Mendenhall sponsors ECU<lb/>
students in tournament<lb/>
The top men and women<lb/>
in the events of back-<lb/>
gammon, bowling, billiards,<lb/>
chess, and table tennis will<lb/>
be determined through cam-<lb/>
pus level qualifying tourna-<lb/>
ments to be held during<lb/>
Fall Semester. Sponsored<lb/>
by Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center, the tournaments are<lb/>
some of several hundred<lb/>
being held at colleges and<lb/>
universities around the na-<lb/>
tion in the qualifying round<lb/>
for intercollegiate cham-<lb/>
pionships conducted by the<lb/>
Association of College Un-<lb/>
ions ? International.<lb/>
The all-campus winners<lb/>
in each event will represent<lb/>
ECU in the Region 5<lb/>
tournament with the cham-<lb/>
pions from approximately<lb/>
thirty other schools from the<lb/>
states of Kentucky, Vir-<lb/>
ginia, South Carolina, Ten-<lb/>
nessee, and North Carolina,<lb/>
the ACU-I Region 5 Recrea-<lb/>
tion Tournament will be<lb/>
held February 14, 15, and<lb/>
16, 1980 at the University of<lb/>
Korth Carolina ? Charlotte.<lb/>
The all-expense paid trip<lb/>
to the regional competition<lb/>
for the ECU representatives<lb/>
will be sponsored by<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Qualifying tournaments<lb/>
are being conducted in each<lb/>
men's residence hall to<lb/>
determine dorm winners<lb/>
and at Mendenhall to<lb/>
determine day-student win-<lb/>
ners who will participate in<lb/>
the All-Campus events.<lb/>
Participants for the BOWL-<lb/>
ING event will be selected<lb/>
from the MSCINTRA-<lb/>
mural - Recreational Sports<lb/>
sponsored program held in<lb/>
November.<lb/>
day-student qualifiers, to be<lb/>
decided on Monday, Octo-<lb/>
ber 22, and the three<lb/>
qualifiers from each dorm<lb/>
will meet in this double<lb/>
elimination tournament. The<lb/>
first and second place<lb/>
finishers will participate in<lb/>
the regionals.<lb/>
The All-Campus Chess<lb/>
tournament got underway<lb/>
October 8 with participants<lb/>
completing the initial rounds<lb/>
pf the round-robin competi-<lb/>
tion. The person winning<lb/>
the most games overall will<lb/>
Any full-time student of represent ECU at Charlotte.<lb/>
Scheduled for Tuesday,<lb/>
November 6 is the All-<lb/>
Campus Table Tennis Tour-<lb/>
nament. Four day student<lb/>
winners and approximately<lb/>
eight dorm winners will<lb/>
compete for the men's title.<lb/>
One winner will also be<lb/>
chosen in the women's<lb/>
division to compete in<lb/>
Charlotte. The double elim-<lb/>
ination tournaments will get<lb/>
underway at 6:00 p.m. in<lb/>
the Multi-Purpose Room at<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
The All-Campus Bowling<lb/>
Tournament will begin on<lb/>
See TOURNEY, page 3<lb/>
ECU is eligible to par-<lb/>
ticipate in any of the events<lb/>
but every participant must<lb/>
register at the Bowling or<lb/>
Billiards Centers at Men-<lb/>
denhall. Bowling partici-<lb/>
pants may register at the<lb/>
Intramural Office in Mem-<lb/>
orial Gym.<lb/>
The All-Campus Bil-<lb/>
liards Tournament is sche-<lb/>
duled for Monday, Novem-<lb/>
ber 12 at 6:00 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall with the semi-<lb/>
finals and finals scheduled<lb/>
for the following day if time<lb/>
does not allow completioin<lb/>
on Monday. The top four<lb/>
I Homecoming Queen Lisa Zack<lb/>
see page 7<lb/>
Life Program is to identify<lb/>
people rather than their<lb/>
sex, Meyer said. He added<lb/>
that the MRC is talking<lb/>
about changing it's name to<lb/>
College Hill Residence<lb/>
Council so that it will<lb/>
include Tyler dorm.<lb/>
According to Meyer, the<lb/>
Cc iseling Center and the<lb/>
Career and Placement Cen-<lb/>
ter are beginning to work<lb/>
together this year. The plan<lb/>
is to begin helping students<lb/>
earlier than their senior<lb/>
year through counseling and<lb/>
workshops.<lb/>
One of our biggest<lb/>
problems is parking. The<lb/>
new vice chancellor for<lb/>
student life attributes part<lb/>
of the difficulty to the fact<lb/>
that there is no director of<lb/>
parking, but he said the<lb/>
university is bringing in<lb/>
consultants to look at the<lb/>
problem.<lb/>
Also, the campus police<lb/>
are trying to warn students<lb/>
before towing their cars this<lb/>
year. Meyer said this has<lb/>
not been done previously.<lb/>
The Intramural and Re-<lb/>
creational Sports Depart-<lb/>
ment will be looking for a<lb/>
director and an advisory<lb/>
committee with student<lb/>
membership. The commit-<lb/>
tee's purpose is to help<lb/>
serve the students better.<lb/>
In the Food Services<lb/>
Department, Meyer said he<lb/>
is trying to arrange a<lb/>
faculty and staff luncheon<lb/>
buffet at Mendenhall in the<lb/>
coffee house. This would<lb/>
bring faculty into the<lb/>
building where students are<lb/>
and help to foster student-<lb/>
teacher relationships.<lb/>
See MEYER, page 3<lb/>
A federal trial judge<lb/>
ruled last year that Western<lb/>
Electric has systematically<lb/>
discriminated against wo-<lb/>
men at its Kearny, N.J<lb/>
plant.<lb/>
The original lawsuit was<lb/>
filed in 1973 by Cleo<lb/>
Kyriazi, now 47, who<lb/>
worked from 1965 to 1971<lb/>
as an industrial engineer at<lb/>
the Kearny plant.<lb/>
Her suit was lattr<lb/>
certified as a "class ac-<lb/>
tion and more than 2,000<lb/>
other women have joined<lb/>
her to charge Western<lb/>
Electric with illegal sex<lb/>
bias. It is possible more<lb/>
women ? those discrimin-<lb/>
ated against in their jobs or<lb/>
those refused employment<lb/>
at the Kearny plant ? also<lb/>
will join the suit.<lb/>
The issue of damages ?<lb/>
how much Western Electric<lb/>
must pay Ms. Kyriazi and<lb/>
other women who prove<lb/>
they were hurt by sex bias<lb/>
? still awaits trial. Western<lb/>
has announced its intention<lb/>
to contest each woman's<lb/>
damage claims on a case-<lb/>
by-case basis.<lb/>
Stern has ordered the<lb/>
company to pav Ms.<lb/>
Kyriazi's attorney?" fees for<lb/>
the first trial, at least<lb/>
$280,000; the salaries of<lb/>
four "special masters"<lb/>
appointed to preside over<lb/>
the damage trials, amounts<lb/>
that could total hundreds of<lb/>
thousands of dollars; at-<lb/>
torneys' fees incurred by<lb/>
the women during the<lb/>
damage trials; and numer-<lb/>
ous other costs involved in<lb/>
the second round of litiga-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The 3rd U.S. Circuit<lb/>
Court of Appeals last April<lb/>
25 turned down Western<lb/>
Electric's special request for<lb/>
relief from Stern's order.<lb/>
Inside Today<lb/>
Field day<lb/>
seepage 3<lb/>
Jack Kerouac see page 4<lb/>
Homecoming see page 7<lb/>
Stepchildren see page 9<lb/>
'Scrap metal5<lb/>
see page 5<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057223_0002"/><lb/>
Page 2 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 16 October 1979<lb/>
People, places and<lb/>
ltd<lb/>
M I I I H II ??ClI<lb/>
cfficii?<lb/>
The organizational meet-<lb/>
ing of the Greenville<lb/>
Officials Association will be<lb/>
held xm Wed Oct. 17,<lb/>
1979, at 5:30 p.m. The<lb/>
meeting will take place at<lb/>
the Elm Street Gymnasium,<lb/>
upstairs in the meeting<lb/>
room. All those interested<lb/>
in officiating Junior High,<lb/>
9th Grade, and recreational<lb/>
basketball are invited to<lb/>
attend. For further informa-<lb/>
tion call 752-5214.<lb/>
teer<lb/>
The Student Union Pro-<lb/>
gram will meet Thursday,<lb/>
October 18, 1979, at 7:00<lb/>
p.m. in Room 212 of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
The main topic will be Beer<lb/>
&amp; Wine Consumption on<lb/>
Campus. Please plan to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
business<lb/>
bcwl<lb/>
ciicle I<lb/>
wesley<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda is a<lb/>
nationwide business service<lb/>
fraternity that is open to all<lb/>
business students. The only<lb/>
grade point average require-<lb/>
ment is that you meet those<lb/>
set by the university for<lb/>
enrollment. Among other<lb/>
things, we sponsor a<lb/>
symposium each year that<lb/>
brings in speakers from<lb/>
various fields of business. If<lb/>
you're ready to broaden<lb/>
your involvement beyond<lb/>
the classroom then we're<lb/>
ready for you. Come to our<lb/>
next meeting to see what<lb/>
we're about.<lb/>
titiU<lb/>
billiards<lb/>
The deadline for regis-<lb/>
tering for the ACU?I Day<lb/>
Student BILLIARDS Tour-<lb/>
nament is Friday, Oct. 19.<lb/>
All full-time day-students<lb/>
who wish to participate<lb/>
must register at the Bil-<lb/>
liards Center at Menden-<lb/>
hall. The tournament will<lb/>
begin Monday, Oct. 22 at<lb/>
6:00 p.m. at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
This tournament will<lb/>
determine the top four<lb/>
dav-student contenders who<lb/>
will face the twelve dorm<lb/>
winners in the ACU-I<lb/>
All-Campus Billiards Tour-<lb/>
nament to be held Monday,<lb/>
Nov. 12 at 6:00 p.m. The<lb/>
first anad second place<lb/>
finishers of the All-Campus<lb/>
Tournament will represent<lb/>
ECU at the regional ACU-I<lb/>
Recreation Tournament in<lb/>
Charlotte, N.C. in February.<lb/>
The all-expense paid trip for<lb/>
the delegates will be<lb/>
sponsored by Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
lit<lb/>
John Ranere wiU present<lb/>
a fine art reproductions sale<lb/>
beginning October 15 in the<lb/>
MSC Multi-Purpose room.<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 painting, drawing,<lb/>
printmaking, photography,<lb/>
and mixed media. If there<lb/>
are questions,contact Sue<lb/>
Aydelette, art director.<lb/>
peis<lb/>
The ECU Department of<lb/>
Physical Education, Recre-<lb/>
ation and Safety is offering<lb/>
two skiing trips during the<lb/>
winter and spring breaks.<lb/>
January 1-6 students can<lb/>
go to Snowshoe, West<lb/>
Virginia, for five nights on<lb/>
the slopes.<lb/>
Snowshoe will also be<lb/>
the goal of students March<lb/>
9-14.<lb/>
Costs will be $170.23 in<lb/>
January and $150.20<lb/>
March.<lb/>
For<lb/>
contact<lb/>
Memorial Gym, 757-6000.<lb/>
in<lb/>
more information,<lb/>
Jo Saunders at<lb/>
Take advantage of great<lb/>
savings in bowling at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Monday is 'Discount Day<lb/>
From 2:00 p.m. until 6:00<lb/>
p.m. bowling is 13 off the<lb/>
regular price. Also, on<lb/>
Saturdays from 1200 Noon<lb/>
to 6:00 p.m. you can<lb/>
'Rent-A-Lane' for $3.00 for<lb/>
one hour. Bring a friend<lb/>
and catch the savings.<lb/>
Ricky Lowe, a Senior<lb/>
political science major, has<lb/>
been selected as a partici-<lb/>
pant in a week-long confer-<lb/>
ence on the New Economic<lb/>
Order of Third World<lb/>
Countries. The trip is<lb/>
sponsored by the Board of<lb/>
Church and society of the<lb/>
United Methodist Church.<lb/>
On this trip, Ricky will meet<lb/>
with prominent United Na-<lb/>
tions officials in New York<lb/>
City as well as congression-<lb/>
al leaders in Washington,<lb/>
D.C. The trip will begin<lb/>
October 13.<lb/>
meimcrs<lb/>
Air student members of<lb/>
the Church of Jesus Christ<lb/>
of Latter DAy Saints<lb/>
(Mormons) are urged to<lb/>
attend Institute class held<lb/>
every Wednesday 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
in the Brewster Bldg. room<lb/>
B201. Randy Bott, an<lb/>
outstanding teacher from<lb/>
Raleigh, is director of the<lb/>
Institute.<lb/>
All other students inter-<lb/>
ested in knowing something<lb/>
about Mormon history and<lb/>
doctrine are welcome.<lb/>
Around the East Caro-<lb/>
lina campus students aften<lb/>
have a misconception that<lb/>
Circle K is a dude ranch, a<lb/>
fraternity, or a religious<lb/>
organization. These concep-<lb/>
tions are not totally true.<lb/>
Circle K is a co-ed<lb/>
organization that focuses on<lb/>
serving the community and<lb/>
the university. Through<lb/>
various projects such as<lb/>
rock-a-thons, skating and<lb/>
halloween parties for men-<lb/>
tally retarded children, and<lb/>
bar-be-cue chicken dinners,<lb/>
the club helps many people.<lb/>
This year the club has<lb/>
planned projects such as as<lb/>
disco dance to buy a fetal<lb/>
heart monitor for the<lb/>
hospital, parties for under-<lb/>
privileged children, and a<lb/>
continued playground<lb/>
clean-up project.<lb/>
Circle K is good times,<lb/>
rewarding experiences, and<lb/>
lifetime friendships. We<lb/>
invite anyone who is<lb/>
interested to come to our<lb/>
meetings. We meet every<lb/>
Tuesday night in Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center from<lb/>
7:00 until 8:00. Hope to see<lb/>
you there.<lb/>
psycb<lb/>
Psychology Majors and<lb/>
Minors. Psi Chi Honor<lb/>
Society for Psychology is<lb/>
accepting applications for<lb/>
Fall induction. You must<lb/>
have a minimum psyc gpa<lb/>
of 3.0, be in the upper 13<lb/>
of your class, and have a<lb/>
minimum of 8 hours in<lb/>
psyc. Last to apply is Oct.<lb/>
24.<lb/>
lefcel<lb/>
cbess<lb/>
bsc<lb/>
The Homecoming Steer-<lb/>
ing Committee will meet<lb/>
Wednesday, October 17,<lb/>
1979, at 3.00 p.m in Room<lb/>
212 of Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. Please plan to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
and<lb/>
will<lb/>
The ECU Chess<lb/>
Backgammon Clubs<lb/>
meet each Tuesday Evening<lb/>
at 7:00 p.m. in the MSC<lb/>
Coffeehouse. All players<lb/>
interested in getting to-<lb/>
gether on a weekly basis for<lb/>
some friendly competition<lb/>
are invited to drop by and<lb/>
join in.<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
Travel Committee<lb/>
Nov. 21 -25<lb/>
$80.00<lb/>
Central Ticket Office<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Deadline Nov. 1st<lb/>
Thanksgiving in<lb/>
NEW<lb/>
YOR K11<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
EAST CAItOUK UNIVERSITY<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/>
Wesley Center will be<lb/>
holding a coffeehouse once<lb/>
a month starting Nov. 1,<lb/>
1979. There will be various<lb/>
.forms of entertainment pro-<lb/>
vided. This is open to<lb/>
everyone with a small fifty<lb/>
cent admission charge. Re-<lb/>
freshments will be avail-<lb/>
able.<lb/>
ccminurlcr<lb/>
An Episcopal service of<lb/>
Holy Communion will be<lb/>
celebrated Wednesday eve-<lb/>
ning (Oct. 17th) in the<lb/>
chapel of the Methodist<lb/>
Student Center (5th Street<lb/>
across from Garrett Dorm).<lb/>
The service will be at 5:30<lb/>
p.m. with the Episcopal<lb/>
Chaplain, The Rev. Bill<lb/>
Hadden, celebrating. Sup-<lb/>
per will be served at 6:00<lb/>
p.m. following the service.<lb/>
A Bible Study at 7:00 p.m<lb/>
led by the chaplain, will be<lb/>
held at the home of Eleanor<lb/>
Coleman, 1003 E. 5th St.<lb/>
(across from main gate).<lb/>
II ss II<lb/>
Russian is for ordinary<lb/>
people who are eager to try<lb/>
something different but not<lb/>
difficult, challenging but not<lb/>
overwhelming. Little chil-<lb/>
dren in Russia learn to read<lb/>
and write in a few weeks,<lb/>
so can an E.C.U. student.<lb/>
Russian 1001-1004 satis-<lb/>
fies the language require-<lb/>
ment and gives the student<lb/>
an edge when applying for<lb/>
a job with the government,<lb/>
in business, and the mili-<lb/>
tary.<lb/>
Russian 1001 will be<lb/>
offered Spring semester<lb/>
MWF at 9:00.<lb/>
Modern Russian and<lb/>
Soviet Literature taught in<lb/>
English (Russ 2221), a<lb/>
Humanities course and an<lb/>
interesting elective will be<lb/>
offered MWF at 12:00. No<lb/>
knowledge of Russian is<lb/>
needed.<lb/>
The second meeting of<lb/>
the College Republicans will<lb/>
be held on Oct. 17 at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in BB-104. All mem-<lb/>
bers and interested persons<lb/>
are invited to attend. There<lb/>
will be a discussion on the<lb/>
functions of the club and<lb/>
the election of new officers<lb/>
for the 1979-80 year will be<lb/>
held. Refreshments will be<lb/>
served after the meeting.<lb/>
The East Carolina Comic<lb/>
Book Club will meet Tues-<lb/>
day Oct. 23 at the Nostalgia<lb/>
Newstand 919 Dickinson<lb/>
Ave, Greenville. The meet-<lb/>
ing will start at 7 p.m. and<lb/>
is open to all interested<lb/>
persons. Topics of discus-<lb/>
sion will include the up-<lb/>
coming December 2 con-<lb/>
vention. For more informa-<lb/>
tion call 758-6909.<lb/>
A pre-registration social<lb/>
will be held by the ECU<lb/>
Sociology-Anthropology club<lb/>
on Wednesday, Oct. All<lb/>
persons majoring or minor-<lb/>
ing in Sociology or Anthro-<lb/>
pology and those in these<lb/>
social sciences are invited to<lb/>
attend. Refreshments will<lb/>
be furnished at the affair<lb/>
which will be held at 6:30 in<lb/>
BD302.<lb/>
PHI KAPPA TAU<lb/>
Little Sister<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
$KT Fraternity would like to<lb/>
xtend an open invitation to all<lb/>
Interested young ladies, and<lb/>
encourage you to attend.<lb/>
Tues. Oct. 16 8:30<lb/>
Golden Sunshine with<lb/>
the Phi Taus<lb/>
at the Elbo Room<lb/>
Wed, Oct. 17<lb/>
8:30 OKT House<lb/>
(409 Elizabeth St.)<lb/>
<lb/>
Portraits<lb/>
will be<lb/>
taken:<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057223_0003"/><lb/>
Creek news<lb/>
16 October 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Page 3<lb/>
l<lb/>
I<lb/>
c<lb/>
V"<lb/>
F<lb/>
n<lb/>
D<lb/>
01<lb/>
th<lb/>
P,<lb/>
e<lb/>
"I<lb/>
a<lb/>
se<lb/>
wr<lb/>
At<lb/>
Do<lb/>
ov;<lb/>
lab<lb/>
con<lb/>
Eas<lb/>
safe<lb/>
pU-<lb/>
re m<lb/>
sea<lb/>
a bo<lb/>
r<lb/>
of<lb/>
laug<lb/>
bow<lb/>
StaiJ<lb/>
were<lb/>
watt;<lb/>
Far<lb/>
I<lb/>
Field day coming<lb/>
classified<lb/>
By RICKI GUARMIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha Field<lb/>
Day will be held this<lb/>
Saturday at the intramural<lb/>
field at the bottom of<lb/>
College Hill Drive.<lb/>
The first event will<lb/>
begin promptly at 10:30<lb/>
a.m. If there are any<lb/>
questions, call 752-5325.<lb/>
According to the Lambda<lb/>
Chi's, this should be the<lb/>
best field day ever!<lb/>
The Lambda Chi's are<lb/>
also having their annual<lb/>
Spaghetti Supper. The sup-<lb/>
per will be held Thursday,<lb/>
Oct. 18, from 5 p.m. until 7<lb/>
p.m. The supper will be<lb/>
"all you can eat" and all<lb/>
orority and fraternitv mem-<lb/>
bers are invited to come.<lb/>
The price of the meal will<lb/>
be $2.50.<lb/>
The associate members<lb/>
of Lambda Chi Alpha are<lb/>
sponsoring a Beer Blast at<lb/>
the Chapter X this Tuesday,<lb/>
Oct. 16. The party will<lb/>
egin at 9 p.m. Tickets are<lb/>
only 25 cents and can be<lb/>
purchased from any associ-<lb/>
ate member.<lb/>
The Phi Kappa Tau's<lb/>
had a very successful<lb/>
homecoming weekend. The<lb/>
Phi Tau's held an Alumni<lb/>
Dinner and afterwards,<lb/>
guests were entertained by<lb/>
"Talk of the Town<lb/>
?The Phi Tau's would like<lb/>
to extend an open invitation<lb/>
to all young women to<lb/>
attend Little Sister Rush.<lb/>
Rush will begin tonight at<lb/>
the Elbo Room with a<lb/>
Happy Hour which is being<lb/>
sponsored by the Little<lb/>
Sisters.<lb/>
On Wednesday night,<lb/>
rush will be held at the Phi<lb/>
Tau house at 8:30.<lb/>
The Alpha Phi Sorority<lb/>
is proud to announce the<lb/>
addition of 31 men to the<lb/>
Alpha Phi Big Brother<lb/>
organization. The success of<lb/>
the rush is credited to<lb/>
Martha McCoss, big brother<lb/>
advisor, and Ed Walters,<lb/>
big brother president. Wel-<lb/>
come new Big Brothers!<lb/>
The Alpha Phi's hope<lb/>
that everyone had a good<lb/>
homecoming. The Phi's<lb/>
would like to thank the<lb/>
Sigma Tau Gammas for<lb/>
working with the Phi's to<lb/>
build a beautiful float.<lb/>
The Sigmas would like<lb/>
to congratulate Cary Rich-<lb/>
ardson for finishing first in<lb/>
the Intramural Archery<lb/>
competition. The Sigmas<lb/>
are proud of all their<lb/>
participants as they had six<lb/>
finishers in the top ten.<lb/>
The Tri Sigs had a very<lb/>
successful Homecoming<lb/>
weekend. Many parents,<lb/>
alumni, and friends at-<lb/>
tended the brunch which<lb/>
was held before the game.<lb/>
The guests also watched the<lb/>
parade from the Sigma<lb/>
House.<lb/>
Iterate<lb/>
3<lb/>
?<lb/>
TOURNEY<lb/>
(cont. from pg.<lb/>
1)<lb/>
Monday, November 5 with<lb/>
the Team Captains' Meeting<lb/>
at 4:00 p.m. in MSC Room<lb/>
244. The Mendenhall and<lb/>
Intramural - Recreational<lb/>
Sports co-sponsored event<lb/>
will be a team competition<lb/>
but the ECU representatives<lb/>
to go to Charlotte will be<lb/>
decided by the top five<lb/>
singles scores overall in the<lb/>
men's and women's divi-<lb/>
sions.<lb/>
Scheduled for Monday,<lb/>
October 29 is the All-<lb/>
Campus Backgammon Tour-<lb/>
nament to be held in the<lb/>
Multi-Purpose Room at<lb/>
Mendenhall at 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
The tournament met with<lb/>
great success last year and<lb/>
this year should prove to be<lb/>
even better.<lb/>
MEYER<lb/>
(cont. from pg. 1)<lb/>
Meyer stated that he<lb/>
would like to see more<lb/>
activities on campus which<lb/>
are cultural and intellectual.<lb/>
"Things that make students<lb/>
think, things about the<lb/>
world, community, future<lb/>
Students at Cornell work<lb/>
harder at studying, accord-<lb/>
ing to Meyer, but the<lb/>
students at ECU are more<lb/>
involved in the student<lb/>
government, which, he<lb/>
added, is very important.<lb/>
Student-faculty relation-<lb/>
ships are very important,<lb/>
said Meyers. He encourages<lb/>
faculty members to be<lb/>
advisors, help with student<lb/>
organizations and work with<lb/>
the faculty and advisory-<lb/>
committee<lb/>
"I am delighted to be<lb/>
FRIDAY'S<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Tuesday Night<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
TROUT $2.95<lb/>
PERCH $295<lb/>
all you can eat<lb/>
No take-outs please.<lb/>
Meal Includes:<lb/>
French Fries, Cole slaw,<lb/>
Huthpupples.<lb/>
We are proud to<lb/>
announce that we<lb/>
have added<lb/>
one of the<lb/>
AREAS FINEST<lb/>
SALAD BARS<lb/>
for your<lb/>
dining pleasure.<lb/>
OPEN FOR LUNCH<lb/>
Daily<lb/>
(except Sat.) 11:30 - 230<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
MON - THURS.<lb/>
fSOO ? lOlOO<lb/>
FRI. 8 SAT.<lb/>
5:00 - 10:3S<lb/>
Located On Evans Straat<lb/>
here Meyer said, adding<lb/>
that he welcomes seeing<lb/>
students and talking with<lb/>
people in different depart-<lb/>
ments. "We wouldn't be<lb/>
here if it wasn't for the<lb/>
students. Our purpose is to<lb/>
work with them for educa-<lb/>
tional purposes<lb/>
Meyer welcomes student<lb/>
opinions.<lb/>
YARD SALE: Saturday,<lb/>
Oct. 20 in front of PRC<lb/>
building, corner of Cotanche<lb/>
and Ninth. Furniture, cloth-<lb/>
ing, knick-knacks, time: 8<lb/>
a.m. to 1:00 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Classical Yama-<lb/>
ha Guitar (6-65). 1978<lb/>
model excellent condition.<lb/>
$125.00 contact Debbie:<lb/>
758-0269.<lb/>
PHOENIX SAVAGE KAY-<lb/>
AK: Excellent condition;<lb/>
Norse paddle, spray skirt,<lb/>
float bags, helmet, cartop<lb/>
mounts. $350. 758-3710.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Hohner 6 string<lb/>
guitar with case and fine<lb/>
leather strap. Mother of<lb/>
pearl in lay. Excellent<lb/>
condition. Call 752-6391.<lb/>
MARANTZ 2285 RECEIVER<lb/>
Bose 301's Technics Turn-<lb/>
table. Will sell separate.<lb/>
102-C Cherry Ct. Drive after<lb/>
6 p.m.<lb/>
TURNTABLE: Toshiba SL-<lb/>
32 Single Play; belt driven,<lb/>
still new (less than 6 mos.<lb/>
old). $150.00 756-7996.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 150 gallon oil<lb/>
tank with stand $40.<lb/>
758-0596 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Royal Medallion<lb/>
II Typewriter. 76 model,<lb/>
excellent condition. Price<lb/>
negotiable. Call 946-9485.<lb/>
1974 MUSTANG II: 2 dr.<lb/>
hardtop, 4 speed, AC.<lb/>
Good condition. $1500<lb/>
best offer. Call 758-4809<lb/>
or<lb/>
BEACH LOVERS! Part-time<lb/>
student sales representa-<lb/>
tive position available for<lb/>
Spring Semester. Job in-<lb/>
volves promoting high qual-<lb/>
ity sun trips on campus for<lb/>
commission 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/>
PARTY HEARTY at the 65201.(800)325-0439.<lb/>
ECtJ-Carolina game And NEED A PAPER TYPED?<lb/>
let us do the driving! A Theses, reports, term pa-<lb/>
chartered bus will take you pers, etc. Call Leigh<lb/>
from Greenville to the gates Coakley at 752-8027. Rea-<lb/>
of Keanan Stadium and sonable rates.<lb/>
back, again all for $6.00.<lb/>
Limited number of seats, so<lb/>
make vour reservations<lb/>
NOW Call 7522476 or<lb/>
752-8925.<lb/>
pareond(J)<lb/>
WANTED: Apartment and<lb/>
female roommate beginning<lb/>
Spring, 1980. Prefer a<lb/>
graduate student, but will<lb/>
consider a senior. Call<lb/>
Cathy Mills. Day: toll free<lb/>
1-800-662-7300 (say it's<lb/>
personal). After 6: (919)<lb/>
772-0667.<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT: Males<lb/>
only; graduate student pre-<lb/>
ferred. Phone 753-4530.<lb/>
WANTED: Male roommate,<lb/>
3 bedroom house w<lb/>
fireplace. $92 month plus<lb/>
13 utilities. 752-7416. 2-5<lb/>
afternoons. After 9:00 at<lb/>
night.<lb/>
THREE FEMALE ROOM-<lb/>
MATES needed to share<lb/>
apt. at Riverbluff. Rent is<lb/>
$52.50 per month, plus<lb/>
utilities and phone. Call<lb/>
758-5823.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
needed to share two bed-<lb/>
room apartment at East-<lb/>
brook. Pay half of rent and<lb/>
utilities. Call Cathy at<lb/>
752-7505.<lb/>
WANTED: Advanced Span-<lb/>
ish student to translate<lb/>
simple Spanish play. Good<lb/>
pay, 752-1897 after 5.<lb/>
DANCE ? Sunshine Studios<lb/>
will be offering the follow-<lb/>
ing at a discount rate to<lb/>
ECU students: Ballet, Jazz,<lb/>
Yoga Arabic (Belly Dance)<lb/>
and Partner Disco Dance.<lb/>
Classes are within walking<lb/>
distance of campus, be-<lb/>
ginning Oct. 29 &amp; 31. Call<lb/>
Sunshine at 756-7235, or<lb/>
758-0736.<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/>
WANTED: Strong person(s)<lb/>
with pick-up to help me<lb/>
move 1027. Will pay $20.<lb/>
752-9048.<lb/>
tocwrf g)<lb/>
campus division<lb/>
Society for Advancement<lb/>
of Management<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
wanted to share two bed-<lb/>
room duplex three blocks<lb/>
from ECU campus. 12<lb/>
rent, utilities, phone. Call<lb/>
757-6334 between 8:00 and<lb/>
5:00; 758-5910 after 5:00.<lb/>
Film &amp; Lecture<lb/>
-on-<lb/>
Interviewing &amp; Resumes<lb/>
with<lb/>
Linda Gaddis of the ecu<lb/>
Career Planning<lb/>
&amp; Placement Office<lb/>
Wed. Oct. 17th 4:00<lb/>
221 Mendenhall<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
4 00-8:00 PM<lb/>
SALAD?50 EXTRA<lb/>
ASST. VAR. t<lb/>
PIZZA. .wr <lb/>
WITH FRIES &amp; COLESLAW<lb/>
FRIED e<lb/>
CHICKEN ??y<lb/>
WITH GARLIC BREAD<lb/>
ITALIAN t h<lb/>
SPAGHETTIoTlI<lb/>
WITH FRIES &amp; COLE SLAW<lb/>
FRIED<lb/>
FISH. .<lb/>
WED.<lb/>
<lb/>
99<lb/>
THUR.<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
The folks at Kroger Sav-on know the<lb/>
complete student has a party side,<lb/>
too. So they have what East Carolina<lb/>
University students need for any bash<lb/>
 from party platters to disco plat-<lb/>
ters  all in one convenient loca-<lb/>
tion. Don't be incomplete this<lb/>
year?shop Kroger Sav-on today.<lb/>
TIMEX<lb/>
WATCHES<lb/>
<lb/>
COSMETICS<lb/>
AMP<lb/>
moMNcesr<lb/>
UP TO<lb/>
Sugg<lb/>
Retail<lb/>
REG. OR DIP<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
Potato<lb/>
Chips<lb/>
8-Oz Twin Pak<lb/>
OFF MANUFACTURERS<lb/>
SUGGESTEO RETAIL<lb/>
LET THE DELI DO IT! Planning a party? Let the<lb/>
Kroger Sav-on Deli supply the fixin's. Finest<lb/>
quality meats, delicious cheese, &amp; tasty<lb/>
salads combine to make our party trays<lb/>
perfect for entertaining. Just phone ahead to<lb/>
place your order!<lb/>
FIRE BREWED<lb/>
Stroh's 6<lb/>
Records and<lb/>
Tapes<lb/>
jmsESmfBl<lb/>
12 02.<lb/>
cans<lb/>
HEARTY BURGUNDY, PINK CHABLIS,<lb/>
ROSE, CHABLIS BLANC OR<lb/>
Gallo<lb/>
Rhine<lb/>
Copyright 1979<lb/>
Kroger Siv-on<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
None Sold To Dealers<lb/>
1.5 Liter<lb/>
Btl.<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is required to be readily available for<lb/>
sal in each Kroger Sav-on Store except es specifically noted in this<lb/>
ad. If we do run out of an advertised item, we will offer you your choice<lb/>
of e comparable Kern, when available, reflecting the same savings or a<lb/>
raincheck which will entitle you to purchase the advertised Item at the<lb/>
advertised price within 30 days.<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
NONE SOLD<lb/>
j<lb/>
DEALERS<lb/>
)<lb/>
OPEN 7 AM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
MON<lb/>
THRU<lb/>
SAT<lb/>
OPEN SUNDAY<lb/>
9AMT09PM<lb/>
FOOD, DRUG, GENERAL<lb/>
MERCHANDISE STORES<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE TUES<lb/>
OCT. 16 THRU SUN OCT. 21, 1979<lb/>
600 Greenville BlvdGreenville<lb/>
Phone 756-7031<lb/>
u<lb/>
I<lb/>
j- m ?? ? -? r rv?? ??$ m-xr ?r ??"? ?&amp;???' ?"?'&amp;? L  <lb/>
<pb facs="00057223_0004"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
?Opinions<lb/>
<lb/>
Tuesday, October 16, 1979 Page 4<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
A design flaw ?<lb/>
So now we hear that it is an<lb/>
engineering fault that has been causing<lb/>
all those bus brake pedals to stick to the<lb/>
floor, and therefore, all those buses to go<lb/>
careening into trees, Volkswagens and<lb/>
the like.<lb/>
The manufacturer is clearly at fault if<lb/>
the problem is indeed a design flaw in<lb/>
the buses. The SGA can and must act<lb/>
immediately to see that the buses are<lb/>
corrected before anyone is seriously hurt.<lb/>
We fail to see why the problem was<lb/>
not found a long time ago. It seems a<lb/>
little attention could have saved the SGA<lb/>
a lot of pain and anxiety. If it had only<lb/>
noticed that the same occurrence ?<lb/>
brake failure ? kept showing up time<lb/>
and time again. A call should have gone<lb/>
out to the manufacturer after a couple of<lb/>
these incidents.<lb/>
This latest accident also points out<lb/>
the need for all of the buses to carry<lb/>
collision insurance to make sure that<lb/>
damages will be promptly taken care of.<lb/>
According to an eyewitness account of<lb/>
the accident, the bus was bent sideways<lb/>
from its undercarriage up. Anyone who<lb/>
has ever had any experience with bent<lb/>
frames on a wrecked automobile can tell<lb/>
you that fixing them is almost worthless<lb/>
because of damage to the wheel<lb/>
alignment ? damage which will last for<lb/>
as long as the bus is driven.<lb/>
Finally, there is some question as to<lb/>
who will pick up the tab if it is<lb/>
determined that liability insurance will<lb/>
not carry the cost of the accident. Will<lb/>
the SGA immediately have to pay the<lb/>
bill, or will the Board of Trustees have to<lb/>
dig deep deciding where they can spare<lb/>
the money?<lb/>
Another point which must be<lb/>
considered is the absence of the bus<lb/>
itself. If the insurance company does<lb/>
pay, it may declare the bus a total loss.<lb/>
The school would then have to order a<lb/>
new bus, which takes time. In the<lb/>
meantime, where do we get a spare bus<lb/>
to bring students to school and carry<lb/>
them safely home?<lb/>
Several things need to be done right<lb/>
away. First, the manufacturer should be<lb/>
held accountable if there is an<lb/>
engineering error. The SGA or<lb/>
Chancellor's Office needs to look into<lb/>
this as soon as possible. If it is found<lb/>
that the design flaw exists on all buses<lb/>
made by this particular factory, the N.C.<lb/>
Department of Transportation or some<lb/>
other authority must be notified in order<lb/>
to prevent further injuries from this<lb/>
problem.<lb/>
Secondly, a clearer definition of<lb/>
liability should be written. Exactly what<lb/>
kind of insurance to be carried on the<lb/>
buses should be determined and<lb/>
coverage must be held for whatever kind<lb/>
is decided upon.<lb/>
Finally and obviously, the brakes on<lb/>
buses that have had problems in the past<lb/>
should be checked two or three times<lb/>
more often than usual to help insure<lb/>
against future accidents.<lb/>
There is no substitute for safety when<lb/>
it comes to the students of East Carolina<lb/>
University. If the problem is mechanical<lb/>
rather than administrative, it must be<lb/>
repaired. It seems that in this case, the<lb/>
SGA Transit System is not at fault.<lb/>
t-<lb/>
5r<lb/>
(zi -duf)<lb/>
? ifk i<lb/>
?<lb/>
ECU STUDENT TRANSIT<lb/>
. r<lb/>
?'?(<lb/>
American Journal<lb/>
No stamp for Kerouac<lb/>
Pop's People<lb/>
The way it was meant to be<lb/>
By LARRY POPELKA<lb/>
Rock V Roll was meant<lb/>
to be played on a jukebox.<lb/>
Sure that Led Zeppelin<lb/>
tune on your Crown DC-<lb/>
300A amplifier with 200<lb/>
watts of power shattering<lb/>
every window in sight<lb/>
sounds good. It should. It's<lb/>
got the power to destroy<lb/>
every eardrum within a<lb/>
three mile radius.<lb/>
But is this any way to<lb/>
impress your friends ? by<lb/>
blowing them away with<lb/>
your sonic weaponry?<lb/>
Rock V roll was meant<lb/>
to be loud, but it wasn't<lb/>
meant to be blasted out of a<lb/>
pair of speakers like a<lb/>
couple of cannon balls.<lb/>
It was meant to be<lb/>
played on a jukebox.<lb/>
Back in the '50s when<lb/>
Bruce Springsteen was still<lb/>
a frustrated school kid in<lb/>
New Jersey and no one<lb/>
knew who The Who were,<lb/>
people like Buddy Holly and<lb/>
Elvis were burning up the<lb/>
music business ? on<lb/>
jukeboxes.<lb/>
You didn't have to own<lb/>
a set of Electro-Voice<lb/>
Century III horn speakers<lb/>
with a 15-inch woofer.<lb/>
Back then such stereo-<lb/>
phonic weapons were still a<lb/>
thing of the future. You<lb/>
didn't need your own sound<lb/>
arsenal to defend your turn<lb/>
from Donnie and Marie<lb/>
fanatics.<lb/>
Everybody just kind of<lb/>
drifted down to the local<lb/>
malt shop or saloon and fed<lb/>
nickles to the jukebox.<lb/>
Listening to music was not<lb/>
a war, but a party. As the<lb/>
colored jukebox lit up and<lb/>
i<lb/>
Buddy started pounding out<lb/>
refrains of "Peggy Sue<lb/>
people would swarm to the<lb/>
floor, dancing, clapping and<lb/>
singing along.<lb/>
But then the high-<lb/>
powered stereo came along.<lb/>
So did acid rock. And a war<lb/>
in Vietnam.<lb/>
People stopped partying<lb/>
and started thinking about<lb/>
blowing everyone else a-<lb/>
way. And jukeboxes ended<lb/>
up in the garbage dump.<lb/>
Don Muller, manager of<lb/>
a rock radio station in<lb/>
Phoenix, was lamenting this<lb/>
sad fact a few years ago<lb/>
when he ran across an old<lb/>
1954 AMI jukebox in an<lb/>
antique store.<lb/>
Not one for passing up<lb/>
good outdated music equip-<lb/>
ment, Muller bought the<lb/>
machine for $75, filled it<lb/>
with 45s and put it in his<lb/>
home.<lb/>
One night Muller had a<lb/>
party at his house and<lb/>
eventually everyone got<lb/>
around to talking about the<lb/>
jukebox, admiring it and<lb/>
asking to play it.<lb/>
"Our parties before had<lb/>
been pretty dull Muller<lb/>
says. "I had a good stereo,<lb/>
but people never dance to<lb/>
that. They just screw<lb/>
around with your records.<lb/>
We usually ended up sitting<lb/>
around drinking until about<lb/>
1:30 when somebody would<lb/>
get drunk and everyone<lb/>
decided to go home.<lb/>
"But when I got that<lb/>
jukebox and started playing<lb/>
it, people would get up and<lb/>
start dancing right in front<lb/>
of the box. It became the<lb/>
center of attention. The<lb/>
atmosphere was electric.<lb/>
"Now my parties run to<lb/>
three or four in the<lb/>
morning, and I have to tell<lb/>
everyone to go home. Then<lb/>
afterward we have to sit<lb/>
down and decide who to<lb/>
invite to the next one. Our<lb/>
house accomodates about 35<lb/>
or 40 people, but it's gotten<lb/>
so there's a waiting list for<lb/>
people we want to invite<lb/>
Muller decided that to<lb/>
ease the crowds and spread<lb/>
the fun around he should<lb/>
find srae more old juke-<lb/>
boxes and sell them to<lb/>
people for their homes.<lb/>
So Muller bought a<lb/>
bunch of old boxes from<lb/>
local jukebox operators and<lb/>
ran an ad on TV.<lb/>
"Our commercial went<lb/>
on at 12:05 a.m. on a<lb/>
Saturday night after a lousy<lb/>
movie on an independent<lb/>
station. It gave them my<lb/>
home number to call if they<lb/>
wanted a jukebox. We were<lb/>
offering them for $125<lb/>
delivered with a one-year<lb/>
guarantee. I didn't expect<lb/>
much response<lb/>
But just like the Knack,<lb/>
Elvis Costello and other<lb/>
new wave acts that have<lb/>
found success by reverting<lb/>
to the roots of rock, the<lb/>
people who saw Muller's ad<lb/>
seemed to find nirvana in<lb/>
the thought of owning a<lb/>
jukebox to play rock V roll<lb/>
the way it was in its early<lb/>
years.<lb/>
"The phone started<lb/>
ringing after the ad and<lb/>
didn't stop until 5 a.m<lb/>
says Muller. "We sold 50 to<lb/>
60 boxes that one night<lb/>
Muller has since left the<lb/>
radio business and opened<lb/>
his own store, Jukeboxes<lb/>
Unlimited, in West Los<lb/>
Angeles, which has 10<lb/>
employees who sell more<lb/>
than 300 reconditioned<lb/>
jukeboxes a year.<lb/>
"I see no end to this<lb/>
says Muller. "Our sales<lb/>
have doubled in the last<lb/>
year. People want juke-<lb/>
boxes. If this keeps up,<lb/>
we'll have stores in 30<lb/>
.cities<lb/>
Some of the rarer<lb/>
models have sold for as<lb/>
much as $10,000 to $15,000.<lb/>
And an average box from<lb/>
the '40s or '50s now costs<lb/>
better than $1,000.<lb/>
Because of this sudden<lb/>
demand Muller and others<lb/>
have been scouring the<lb/>
country looking for old<lb/>
boxes stashed away in<lb/>
warehouses in small towns.<lb/>
"The price keeps going<lb/>
up because every one of<lb/>
these we sell means there's<lb/>
one less on the market<lb/>
says Muller. "I've com-<lb/>
pletely eliminated the old<lb/>
machines in four states<lb/>
myself. Now I've got to<lb/>
travel across the country<lb/>
just to get the stuff<lb/>
Muller says most bars<lb/>
and diners have already<lb/>
gotten rid of their old<lb/>
jukeboxes and replaced<lb/>
them with new models that<lb/>
pack more power but are<lb/>
much less amusing to look<lb/>
at or to dance to.<lb/>
"I don't know why<lb/>
says Muller, "but jukebox<lb/>
companies just don't make<lb/>
them the way they used<lb/>
to<lb/>
Maybe they've never<lb/>
heard rock V roll the way<lb/>
it was meant to be played.<lb/>
By DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
Jack Kerouac, writer<lb/>
and wanderer, melancholy<lb/>
king of the beatniks, died<lb/>
ten years ago this month.<lb/>
There is no postage stamp<lb/>
devoted to this influencial<lb/>
yet underrated writer, no<lb/>
"day" declared in the<lb/>
nation's libraries, no official<lb/>
observance, as far as I<lb/>
know, in his hometown of<lb/>
Lowell, Massachusetts.<lb/>
Kerouac's place in<lb/>
America's unofficial history,<lb/>
however, seems assured.<lb/>
With his spontaneous bop<lb/>
prose he foreshadowed the<lb/>
sixties sensibility, and with<lb/>
his fitful wanderlust in-<lb/>
spired a legion of back-<lb/>
packers and hitchhikers.<lb/>
Echoes of Kerouac's voice<lb/>
can also be heard in a<lb/>
number of popular artists:<lb/>
Bob Dylan, Neil Young and<lb/>
Patti Smith, to -name a few.<lb/>
Yet it is doubtful whether<lb/>
anyone really knew Jack<lb/>
Kerouac when he was alive.<lb/>
The writer who moved<lb/>
so many people was a<lb/>
solitary figure, glimpsed<lb/>
fleetingly in these pictures<lb/>
of the gone world: Jack<lb/>
alone as a child in grimy,<lb/>
redbrick Lowell; Jack alone<lb/>
together with his friends as<lb/>
an adult; Jack alone at the<lb/>
typewriter, cutting along on<lb/>
benzedrine and tokay wine,<lb/>
drinking deeply of imagina-<lb/>
tion and sometimes losing<lb/>
consciousness in the sweet-<lb/>
ness and excitement ?<lb/>
waking up at full speed to<lb/>
write it all down with the<lb/>
kind of energy that enabled<lb/>
him to finish The Sub-<lb/>
terraneans in three days.<lb/>
"This stream of fanta-<lb/>
sies, visions, myths<lb/>
made up his life write his<lb/>
biographer, Ann Charters.<lb/>
"They were the legend that<lb/>
he felt his life became. And<lb/>
they were more than this.<lb/>
In the intensity of the vision<lb/>
he had of his confused life,<lb/>
he caught the dreams of a<lb/>
generation; the feeling that<lb/>
at some point something<lb/>
had been together, that<lb/>
there was a special vision<lb/>
they all shared, a romantic<lb/>
ideal that called on the road<lb/>
just ahead<lb/>
Kerouac envisioned his<lb/>
books ? there are 18 of<lb/>
them, including many stor-<lb/>
ies, essays and poems ?<lb/>
coming together to create<lb/>
one grand design, one<lb/>
legend, through which he<lb/>
would explain himself. He<lb/>
literally created himself in<lb/>
print and in order to do that<lb/>
convincingly, he needed a<lb/>
style of writing distinctly his<lb/>
own.<lb/>
Kerouac found his style<lb/>
by joining the confessional<lb/>
qualities of his friend Neal<lb/>
Cassady's speed-rap with<lb/>
the blunt narrative of<lb/>
William Burroughs. Then<lb/>
he laid the whole thing out<lb/>
to the sounds of the new<lb/>
jazz of the early fifties.<lb/>
Miles and Bird, Monk and<lb/>
Mulligan, comedian Lord<lb/>
Buckley with his improvised<lb/>
monologues, Kerouac with<lb/>
his books ? they were all<lb/>
players in the New Reality<lb/>
Jam Session.<lb/>
Kerouac regarded music<lb/>
as a mythic source, and said<lb/>
his writing was based on<lb/>
"jazz and bop, in the sense<lb/>
of a, say, tenor man<lb/>
drawing a breath, and when<lb/>
he does, his sentencehis<lb/>
statement's- been made<lb/>
that's how I therefore<lb/>
separate sentences, as<lb/>
breath separations of the<lb/>
mindThen there's the<lb/>
raciness and freedom and<lb/>
humor of jazz instead of ail<lb/>
that dreary analysis<lb/>
The first book Kerouac<lb/>
wrote in his new style was<lb/>
On the Road, an account of<lb/>
his mad dashes across the<lb/>
spine of the continent with<lb/>
Cassady. He had worked<lb/>
two years on it in the late<lb/>
forties and given up. In his<lb/>
renewed attempt in 1951,<lb/>
he wrote it in a three-week<lb/>
blaze of benzedrine energy.<lb/>
When he finished the book,<lb/>
he was convinced he had<lb/>
found his writing soul at<lb/>
last. He hadn't a due of the<lb/>
notoriety On the Road<lb/>
would bring him when he<lb/>
finally succeeded in selling<lb/>
it six long, hard years later.<lb/>
The journeys mapped in<lb/>
Kerouac's most popular<lb/>
novel embody the mindless<lb/>
exhilaration of travel, of<lb/>
pure motion, of rolling<lb/>
through the warm, starry<lb/>
American night in a smooth-<lb/>
wheeling car, windows<lb/>
rolled down, engine hum-<lb/>
ming, a song beaming in on<lb/>
the radio. It was a modern<lb/>
version of the myth of<lb/>
Huckleberry Finn.<lb/>
Kerouac's finely tuned<lb/>
sense of place enabled him<lb/>
to convey, with an almost<lb/>
uncanny accuracy, the "is-<lb/>
ness" of his locale: the sea-<lb/>
sounds of the Pacific<lb/>
crashing on stone near Big<lb/>
Sur; the peeled, yellow bus<lb/>
terminal Johns and cafeter-<lb/>
ias of Manhattan; the<lb/>
foggy-bottom water gaps of<lb/>
the Susquehanna rier, the<lb/>
"desperate, end-of-the-con-<lb/>
tinent characters" that<lb/>
haunt San Francisco's Mar-<lb/>
ket Street.<lb/>
By ail accounts, Kerouac<lb/>
never developed as an<lb/>
integrated person. Charters<lb/>
says he was sexually un-<lb/>
settled and never wholly<lb/>
independent of his mother.<lb/>
He married three times, but<lb/>
was wed primarily to what<lb/>
Charters calls his "clenched<lb/>
determination" to be a<lb/>
great writer.<lb/>
That determination took<lb/>
him down some haH roads.<lb/>
Years of failure and strug-<lb/>
gle, of trying to prove<lb/>
himself, left Kerouac bitter<lb/>
and confused. When a<lb/>
measure of fame finally<lb/>
came, he was incapable of<lb/>
handling it.<lb/>
Kerouac, his vision blur-<lb/>
red, his energy draineJ,<lb/>
had discovered the price of<lb/>
American life: "the redbrick<lb/>
behind the neon, waiting<lb/>
Suffering from a monstrous<lb/>
sense of betrayal, he<lb/>
retreated to a Florida<lb/>
bungalow with his third<lb/>
wife and his mother, where<lb/>
he disowned everyone and<lb/>
everything connected with<lb/>
the beat scene. There, as a<lb/>
recluse among his bottles<lb/>
and books, his decline was<lb/>
swift. He died in St.<lb/>
Petersburg, the retreat for<lb/>
old folks, on Oct. 21, 1969.<lb/>
He was 47.<lb/>
(copyright)<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
(copyright)<lb/>
MANAGING EDITOm<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/>
Terry Gray<lb/>
Bill Jones<lb/>
Terry Herndon<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
ASST. SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
COPY EDITOR<lb/>
AD TECH. SUPER.<lb/>
CharM Chandler<lb/>
Jimmy DuPrw<lb/>
thane Henderson<lb/>
Paul Linck.<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 ,s: Old South Building ECU<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834. <lb/>
The phone numbers are: 7S7-6366 63?7<lb/>
6309. Subscription, are $10 annually , j<lb/>
$6 annually. '<lb/>
r<lb/>
?t ?? jt ?? 9? 4feV Of<lb/>
<pb facs="00057223_0005"/><lb/>
The East Carolin<lb/>
inian 1 ?<lb/>
features<lb/>
Tuesday, October 16, 1979 Page 5<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
New dean wants changes<lb/>
By WILLIAM JONES<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
'The pieces of 'scrap<lb/>
metal' you see at various<lb/>
places around campus can<lb/>
be considered art because<lb/>
the artist is using them as a<lb/>
medium to communicate a<lb/>
concept or feeling Dr.<lb/>
Richard Laing, the new<lb/>
dean of ECU's School of<lb/>
Art, paused.<lb/>
Dr. Laing explained<lb/>
further that most people see<lb/>
Michaelangelo's "David"<lb/>
simply as an extremely<lb/>
accurate reproduction of a<lb/>
well-developed male phy-<lb/>
sique, or, at most, as<lb/>
representing the "spirit" of<lb/>
vouth. But, with David,<lb/>
Michaelangelo was trying to<lb/>
capture the "energy" of<lb/>
Florence, a very progres-<lb/>
sive, alive city at that time.<lb/>
He thought this vigor best<lb/>
represented through the<lb/>
innocent vitality of youth.<lb/>
Dr. Laing feels that perhaps<lb/>
these "scrap metal" artists<lb/>
are trying to tell us<lb/>
something about the techno-<lb/>
logical society in which we<lb/>
live through their pieces of<lb/>
steel girder and bolts.<lb/>
Dr. Laing assumed his<lb/>
duties as dean on July 1.<lb/>
He had been chairperson of<lb/>
the art department of<lb/>
Edinboro State College in<lb/>
Pennsylvania since 1972.<lb/>
From 1968 until 1972, he<lb/>
headed the art department<lb/>
at Indiana's Ball State<lb/>
University. ?<lb/>
Dr. Laing says ECU<lb/>
probably has the best<lb/>
all-around art school within<lb/>
a five-state area and that it<lb/>
is one of the few art schools<lb/>
he has seen which has no<lb/>
"prima donnas totally<lb/>
self-concerned instructors<lb/>
with inflated egos.<lb/>
Dr. Laing would like to<lb/>
see increased communica-<lb/>
tion between the art school<lb/>
and the University. He put<lb/>
this desire into effect earlier<lb/>
this fall when he held a<lb/>
mandatory meeting for all<lb/>
art students. At the meet-<lb/>
ing, Dr. Laing introduced<lb/>
himself and the faculty and<lb/>
student leaders spoke of the<lb/>
goals he would like to see<lb/>
the art school meet and<lb/>
provided students with the<lb/>
opportunity to ask ques-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Other things which Dr.<lb/>
Laing says may change in<lb/>
the near future are:<lb/>
1) Strengthening the<lb/>
foundation courses by link-<lb/>
ing the subject areas<lb/>
together rather than a<lb/>
foundation of "parts and<lb/>
pieces<lb/>
2) Preparing the student<lb/>
with problem-solving infor-<lb/>
mation and a strong artistic<lb/>
bearing before entering the<lb/>
upper levels.<lb/>
3) The addition and fa-<lb/>
cilitation of our Product<lb/>
Design program which will<lb/>
be aimed at developing the<lb/>
post-industrial designer, the<lb/>
designercraftsman with<lb/>
emphasis on design. Thfs<lb/>
designer will not only nefj<lb/>
to learn the necessary tech-<lb/>
nology of industrial design<lb/>
but be able to move on the<lb/>
problems of furniture with a<lb/>
good feeling and back-<lb/>
ground in jewelry, metal,<lb/>
wood, ceramics, fabric de-<lb/>
sign, interior design and<lb/>
communication arts, as well<lb/>
as sociology and human and<lb/>
business management ? an<lb/>
architecture for living and<lb/>
making if you will.<lb/>
4) Some changes in the<lb/>
Art School alignment of<lb/>
departments.<lb/>
5) New emphasis on the<lb/>
W.B. Gray Gallery with a<lb/>
combination of the on-going<lb/>
contemporary scene and<lb/>
also special study exhibits<lb/>
as a beginning on the<lb/>
influences of the museum<lb/>
concept.<lb/>
?<lb/>
6) New faculty members,<lb/>
perhaps to include Harry<lb/>
Baxley, an architect for<lb/>
interior design from Auburn<lb/>
University; Randy Osman, a<lb/>
gallery director from the<lb/>
West Coast (Oregon); Mi-<lb/>
chael Davis, an art history<lb/>
teacher from the University<lb/>
of Michigan and Donna<lb/>
Sadler-Davis, from the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Indiana's art<lb/>
history department.<lb/>
Dr. Richard Laing is the<lb/>
new Dean of the ECU<lb/>
School of Art. Dr. Laing<lb/>
says the Art School here is<lb/>
he best in a five state area.<lb/>
(Photo by Hugh Johnson)<lb/>
The Theatre Arts Committee is pre- matinee at 1:00 p.m the Oct. 17<lb/>
senting The Pocket Mime Theatre on October performance is an evening performance at<lb/>
16 and 17 in Hendrix Theater in Mendenhall 8:00p.m.<lb/>
Student Center. The Oct. 16 performance is a<lb/>
Chapin's latest is delightful<lb/>
By PAT MINGES<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
Legends Of The Lost<lb/>
And Found ? Harry<lb/>
Chapin. The master story-<lb/>
teller has just released this<lb/>
live double album billed the<lb/>
"New Greatest Stories<lb/>
Live Few artists can<lb/>
match Harry Chapin in his<lb/>
sheer verbal proficiency,<lb/>
but this album is also a<lb/>
musical pleasure for it<lb/>
captures Chapin on his last<lb/>
concert tour with a five-<lb/>
piece backup group. Superb<lb/>
lyrics, excellent vocal har-<lb/>
monies and fine music make<lb/>
this album, but the addition<lb/>
of Ken Scholes on cello<lb/>
proves to be the piece de<lb/>
resistance. Chapin may be<lb/>
"one of the luckiest men<lb/>
alive but it is we who are<lb/>
lucky to be on the receiving<lb/>
end of this delightful<lb/>
album.<lb/>
Tusk ? Fleetwood Mac.<lb/>
This really is a disappoint-<lb/>
ing album and should be a<lb/>
shock to many longtime<lb/>
Fleetwood Mac fans. To<lb/>
produce a double album of<lb/>
enduring quality is a test of<lb/>
all except the truly gifted,<lb/>
and the tragic thing about<lb/>
Tusk is that there is hardly<lb/>
enough good material for<lb/>
one album much less two.<lb/>
The critics and the con-<lb/>
sumers may prove this one<lb/>
wrong, but there is not<lb/>
much that is impressive<lb/>
about this latest album<lb/>
except for it's elaborate<lb/>
production. There are a few<lb/>
nice Christine McVie tunes<lb/>
on the album, but they<lb/>
hardly manage to carry this<lb/>
lackluster production.<lb/>
Please, give us back our<lb/>
penguin, and release him<lb/>
from this bondage.<lb/>
Kid Blue ? Louse<lb/>
as Russ Kunkel, Lee Sklar,<lb/>
Carole King, Dave Paich,<lb/>
Mike Porcaro, Waddy<lb/>
Wachtel, J.D. Souther, and<lb/>
Don Henley. At times<lb/>
sounding like a more<lb/>
relevant Patti Smith, Louise<lb/>
Goffin showcases her fine<lb/>
young talent in Kid Blue<lb/>
and should carry on a<lb/>
family tradition of good<lb/>
music.<lb/>
I'm The Man ? Joe<lb/>
Jackson. Although this al-<lb/>
"Forget that this is Carole King's<lb/>
daughterand just enjoy the power<lb/>
of Coffin's music and vocal style<lb/>
Goffin. Hey ? This ain't no<lb/>
kid, and she surely don't<lb/>
seem blue. Forget that this<lb/>
is Carole King's daughter<lb/>
(as she probably has after<lb/>
Saturday's Saturday Night<lb/>
Live) and just enjoy the<lb/>
power of Goffin's music and<lb/>
vocal style. Produced by<lb/>
Danny Korchmar, and fea-<lb/>
turing Kootsch on guitar,<lb/>
this album also contains<lb/>
other studio musicians such<lb/>
bum is really pleasant, it<lb/>
would be nice if Jackson<lb/>
quit trying to emulate Elvis<lb/>
Costello in his music and<lb/>
struck out into a more<lb/>
creative vein. If you find<lb/>
Costello a bit too caustic,<lb/>
then perhaps you'll like Joe<lb/>
Jackson for his is a more<lb/>
middle of the road New<lb/>
Wave. I'm The Man is a<lb/>
superior endeavor to last<lb/>
year's Look Sharp and<lb/>
should give Jackson more<lb/>
pop appeal.<lb/>
In The Nick Of Time -<lb/>
Nicolette Larson. Larson is<lb/>
the epidomy of a commer-<lb/>
cial female vocalist of the<lb/>
'70s. Though she has a<lb/>
strong voice and surrounds<lb/>
herself with excellent mu-<lb/>
sicians, Larson cannot seem<lb/>
to escape the pop music<lb/>
web she has woven for<lb/>
herself. It is tragic to see a<lb/>
remarkable talent unable to<lb/>
find a vibrant release for<lb/>
her voice. In The Nick Of<lb/>
Time is nice, should contain<lb/>
a few FM hits and if you<lb/>
get the album, you will<lb/>
probably like it but not me.<lb/>
A Taste For Passion ?<lb/>
Jean Luc Ponty. Formerly a<lb/>
phenomenal jazz violinist,<lb/>
Ponty has severed his ties<lb/>
with jazz almost completely<lb/>
and is attempting to forge a<lb/>
career in rock. Ponty's new<lb/>
album still maintains that<lb/>
romantic, often ethereal,<lb/>
quality but does not contain<lb/>
the speed and dynamism of<lb/>
his earlier endeavors. Iron-<lb/>
ically, it seems that Ponty<lb/>
has lost the passion that<lb/>
this flying frenchman be-<lb/>
came famous for but still is<lb/>
one of the more progressive<lb/>
men in rock.<lb/>
Eve ? Alan Parsons<lb/>
Project. This is one of the<lb/>
fastest rising albums in rock<lb/>
music and is arguably one<lb/>
of Alan Parsons' finer<lb/>
albums. Sophisticated or-<lb/>
chestral and synthesizer<lb/>
magic have been Parsons'<lb/>
claim to fame, and Eve<lb/>
continues this tradition.<lb/>
Parsons still weaves intri-<lb/>
cate textures and manages<lb/>
mood manifestations<lb/>
through his complex mu-<lb/>
sical and engineering tal-<lb/>
ents.<lb/>
Rust Never Sleeps ?<lb/>
Neil Young and Crazy<lb/>
Horse. This album has been<lb/>
out far too long not to have<lb/>
merited attention until now.<lb/>
Rust never sleeps, but by<lb/>
the manner in which Neil<lb/>
Young continues to move<lb/>
and grow, it would be<lb/>
impossible for him to get<lb/>
rusty. This album is one of<lb/>
the significant releases of<lb/>
the year for few artists have<lb/>
been at it so long and<lb/>
maintained such a fresh<lb/>
approach to their music.<lb/>
Side one is acoustic music<lb/>
in the vein of Comes A<lb/>
Time, and side two exposes<lb/>
Crazy Horse at their rocking<lb/>
best. Be sure not to miss<lb/>
this one.<lb/>
Albums courtesy of Re-<lb/>
cord Bar, Carolina East<lb/>
Mall and Pitt Plaza.<lb/>
Disco puts station on top<lb/>
Real witch attends ECU<lb/>
By JOHN WALDEN<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
Have you ever seen a<lb/>
real witch? One may hi<lb/>
gone past you on the ECU<lb/>
campus without your ever<lb/>
having noticed her. Her<lb/>
name is Andrea, and she<lb/>
looks just like any other<lb/>
student. Yet, she is a<lb/>
practicing member of Wicca.<lb/>
In an interview with The<lb/>
East Carolinian, Andrea,<lb/>
who did not wish to have<lb/>
her last name disclosed,<lb/>
told us what it was like to<lb/>
be a real witch and how<lb/>
witchcraft has been formed<lb/>
down through the ages.<lb/>
When asked why she<lb/>
became a witch, Andrea<lb/>
replied, "Because I was<lb/>
upset with Christianity and<lb/>
the hypocrisy of the Christ-<lb/>
ians I had contact with and<lb/>
also because I am into<lb/>
archeology and the religion<lb/>
of Celts<lb/>
Andrea says she has<lb/>
been a witch since she was<lb/>
12 years old. She, like other<lb/>
witches, has had to work for<lb/>
her right to practice witch-<lb/>
craft. People wishing to<lb/>
become witches must first<lb/>
start out as students of<lb/>
Wicra. They gradually work<lb/>
(<lb/>
up to the level of initiation.<lb/>
From there, they go on to<lb/>
become full-fledged witches.<lb/>
Andrea says that the<lb/>
highest level any witch can<lb/>
obtain is the Flameness or<lb/>
the high priestess of the<lb/>
witches' chapter.<lb/>
According to Andrea,<lb/>
the origins of witchcraft, or<lb/>
Wicca, which means the<lb/>
craft of the wise, date back<lb/>
several thousand years. It<lb/>
started with an inter-<lb/>
European tribe known as<lb/>
the Celtics. This Celtic tribe<lb/>
built a huge empire in<lb/>
Europe that reached it's<lb/>
peak around the year 500<lb/>
B.C. The Celtics, however,<lb/>
were eventually broken up<lb/>
by internal strife and by<lb/>
wars with both the Germans<lb/>
and the Romans. The<lb/>
remnants of this tribe fled<lb/>
to Wales, England where to<lb/>
this day one of the largest<lb/>
witch populations in the<lb/>
world exists.<lb/>
Witches are not confined<lb/>
to just England. Andrea<lb/>
estimates that the United<lb/>
States has at least 2000 true<lb/>
witches in it. In New Bern,<lb/>
North Carolina alone, there<lb/>
is a chapter of some 500<lb/>
w'tches. There is also a<lb/>
mail order school of Wicca<lb/>
for people around the<lb/>
country interested in the art<lb/>
of witchcraft. Andrea her-<lb/>
self plans to be spending<lb/>
the upcoming Halloween<lb/>
festivities with other<lb/>
witches.<lb/>
One thing Andrea wants<lb/>
to emphasize about her<lb/>
witchcraft is that it is not<lb/>
satanism. She says that<lb/>
witches do not worship the<lb/>
devil in any form. According<lb/>
to Andrea, witches do not<lb/>
take part in human sacri-<lb/>
fices or wild orgies either,<lb/>
as rumours would have it.<lb/>
Instead, witches worship<lb/>
naturalistic deities such as<lb/>
gods of rivers, of fertility<lb/>
and warrior gods. Witches<lb/>
do, however, like to hold<lb/>
their meetings in Oak<lb/>
groves because the trees<lb/>
represent strength to them.<lb/>
Andrea also says that<lb/>
witches prefer the magic of<lb/>
nature to any other type of<lb/>
magic.<lb/>
Finally she says that the<lb/>
main function of her witch-<lb/>
craft is to help develop her<lb/>
mental powers such as ESP<lb/>
and astral projection fully.<lb/>
To Andrea, this is basically<lb/>
what the art of witchcraft is<lb/>
all about.<lb/>
By MICHAEL COLLINS<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) - a<lb/>
radio station that was sold<lb/>
for $7,500 in 1951 today is<lb/>
New York City's top-rated<lb/>
WKTU, which jumped from<lb/>
No. 20 to No. 1 after<lb/>
switching to a format of<lb/>
all-disco music.<lb/>
The station has a<lb/>
30-year history of changes<lb/>
and innovation, but only the<lb/>
last revamping, the change<lb/>
to all-disco format, brought<lb/>
success.<lb/>
The station broadcasts<lb/>
on 92.3 FM.<lb/>
Not satisfied with being<lb/>
No. 20 in New York City,<lb/>
WKTU introduced its all-<lb/>
disco format, without fan-<lb/>
fare or announcements, in<lb/>
the summer of 1978.<lb/>
In just one rating period,<lb/>
the FM station jumped from<lb/>
20th to the No. 1 spot in<lb/>
Arbitron's rating book for<lb/>
last SeptemberOctober.<lb/>
WKTU, leading all sta-<lb/>
tions in both AM and FM,<lb/>
thus became the first music<lb/>
station to beat the long-<lb/>
dominant WABC in more<lb/>
than a decade.<lb/>
The station went on the<lb/>
air on Christmas Day in<lb/>
1948 as WMCA-FM and,<lb/>
like most other FM stations<lb/>
then, it duplicated the<lb/>
programs of its AM sister,<lb/>
WMCA 570.<lb/>
The FM station was sold<lb/>
for $7,500 in 1951 after<lb/>
Nathan Straus, who then<lb/>
was WMCA's president,<lb/>
determined that almost no<lb/>
one was listening.<lb/>
At the time, he said that<lb/>
to gauge its audience, his<lb/>
FM station had signed off<lb/>
the air at night in the<lb/>
middle of baseball games<lb/>
for several summer weeks.<lb/>
He said this had provoked<lb/>
only two complaining tele-<lb/>
phone calls.<lb/>
Straus sold the station to<lb/>
WHOMAM, an ethnic sta-<lb/>
tion, which decided to<lb/>
introduce innovative pro-<lb/>
gramming on its new FM<lb/>
station, whoch became<lb/>
WHOM-FM.<lb/>
Instead of duplication<lb/>
the AM programs as other<lb/>
FM stations did, WHOM-<lb/>
FM introduced an all-<lb/>
Chinese format and distri-<lb/>
buted FM radios in public<lb/>
gathering places in Man-<lb/>
hattan's Chinatown.<lb/>
But this was before the<lb/>
golden era of FM radio, and<lb/>
the idea did not succeed.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Coming<lb/>
attractions<lb/>
?RIDE ON!<lb/>
.ART SALE<lb/>
John<lb/>
Ranere is di-<lb/>
recting a sale of art<lb/>
reproductions of works by<lb/>
classical and modern artists<lb/>
in Mendenhall's Multi-Pur-?<lb/>
pose Room. The show and,<lb/>
sale will begin at 9 a.m.<lb/>
and run until 6 p.m. each<lb/>
day now through October<lb/>
19.<lb/>
? Ride On an art<lb/>
?r-exhibition dealing with bi-<lb/>
? cycles, is on display now<lb/>
? through November 1.<lb/>
<lb/>
? PIANIST<lb/>
?<lb/>
? Friends of ECU Library<lb/>
? will sponsor a recital by<lb/>
? internationally renowned OCTUBAFEST '79<lb/>
?pianist Ruth Slenczynska on<lb/>
$Oct. 25, at 8:00 p.m. in The ECU School<lb/>
?Wright Auditorium. Pro- Music will present Octuba-<lb/>
?ceeds from the recital will fest '79 at A.J. Fletcher .<lb/>
go to support the Friends Recital Hall on Friday, Oct.<lb/>
Jand the library. 19 at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
oil<lb/>
See RADIO STATION, page 10 ????<lb/>
Learning Abour Cou.fGr.THf Wwp tViy<lb/>
Bf David Nomis<lb/>
 fUM-Of LK? TB05C<lb/>
H0fCCOlliO&amp; V0EE?A)DS<lb/>
PftJNKlN' AOP mTV4'nt0<lb/>
 PM0. SO AAOC0, fA STILL.<lb/>
HOrtCOVEA Af?0, it's<lb/>
TUf 50AV f HAD ft f?AL<lb/>
THf 64Mf ?<lb/>
T<lb/>
X<lb/>
<pb facs="00057223_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 16 October 1979<lb/>
The Little River Band<lb/>
has song writing depth<lb/>
By MARY CAMPBELL<lb/>
IP ewsfeatures Writer<lb/>
The Little River Band, from Australia, in the middle ol<lb/>
ol America, has the pleasure ol seeing its<lb/>
'Lonesome Loser No. 7 and climbing on the<lb/>
. harts .i- October begins.<lb/>
st David Bnggs wrote the song, the only<lb/>
Drummer Derek Pellicci and guitarist and<lb/>
im Goble are pleased about the song-writing<lb/>
aid. "I don't know of another act in the<lb/>
that has four individual song writers each<lb/>
ible says.<lb/>
i Ivantage. It you rely on one writer and he<lb/>
: id period, where are you? Even now<lb/>
. t songs. If we had to go in the studio<lb/>
mid probabh put together a good album<lb/>
made an album.<lb/>
arieU of songs out of our situation. It we<lb/>
si rigs would have a similar flavor.<lb/>
Shorrock wrote "Help Is on Its Way<lb/>
Diamantina Cocktail" album. Goble<lb/>
m personal experience and observation,<lb/>
ger Beeb Birtles wrote "Happ<lb/>
ther hit single from "Diamantina<lb/>
avs he writes a variety of kind- oi songs<lb/>
ills "musician No. 1 who dabbles in<lb/>
mainly fictional things Goble says, lb'<lb/>
two biggest hits. He says,<lb/>
? ? No. 3 in the United State 'Lady1<lb/>
it sold 100,000 more copies than<lb/>
- mt Loser' is still climbing. It's our<lb/>
tirplay<lb/>
pop-music figures one thinks ol are<lb/>
n Barry, Maurice and Robin Gtbb, the<lb/>
the Little River Band's current<lb/>
? ? Wire on Capitol Records. Goble<lb/>
? broken out internationally as the<lb/>
It's No. 10 on the best-selling<lb/>
"1 believe we've been building steadily<lb/>
mproving. In 1977 we toured with<lb/>
filling 5,000-seat halls, a little bit<lb/>
w. Then they made 'Breakfast in<lb/>
?? seaters. It can happen that<lb/>
the besl cuts from those two were released in America as<lb/>
"Diamantina Cocktail Then there was a "greatest hits"<lb/>
album in ustralia only. Then came "Sleeper Catcher<lb/>
which like "Diamantina Cocktail" is gold in America, then<lb/>
the new one. That makes six in Australia and four in<lb/>
Amcrit a<lb/>
 live album made with the Adelaide Symphony will be<lb/>
released in Australia before Christmas. The last 12<lb/>
performances of the current tour will be recorded and may<lb/>
be added so that a live album released in the U.S. will be<lb/>
double. The Little River Band is now performing songs on<lb/>
stage they haven't previously recorded.<lb/>
The group has not broken through in England. When<lb/>
they first went there, in 1976, punk rock was all the rage.<lb/>
"People were walking down Kings Road with safety<lb/>
pins -tuck through their lips Pellicci says, "I went to<lb/>
check it out, to hear Tom Robinson's band. It was a good,<lb/>
exciting band but all the followers were spitting. 1 couldn t<lb/>
?"I think a lot of the New Wave is an excuse for a lot of<lb/>
musicians who never found success with anything else<lb/>
Coble adds. "You don't need a whole lot of musical<lb/>
expertise to play, some of the music. The proof of the whole<lb/>
thing will be the longevity of it. If it doesn't last, that<lb/>
prove- it wasn't so good<lb/>
The second biggest trauma in the group's life has been<lb/>
two lineup changes. Just before the first American tour in<lb/>
N7t. lead guitarist Rick Formosa decided to leave. Goble<lb/>
says "We weren't 100 percent happy with the bass player<lb/>
so we took the opportunity to replace him, too. Lead<lb/>
guitarist David Briggs and George McArdle came in. Then<lb/>
George left after the Januarv tour this year and Barry<lb/>
Sullivan came in. For this tour, we've added a seventh<lb/>
person. Mai Logan, on keyboards.<lb/>
I<lb/>
Pianist Ruth Slenczynska receives Poland's<lb/>
tinguished decoration, the Golden Cross of Merit, from His<lb/>
Excellency, the Honorable Edward Drozniak, Ambassador<lb/>
from the Polish People's Republic to the United States, for<lb/>
'role in bringing Chopin's music closer to the people<lb/>
0fth?slenczynska, who has In collet<lb/>
h<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
keyboard artist since Mozart by th New<lb/>
appear in a recital sponsored byFriends o HI<lb/>
Set 25 at 8:00 p.m. in Wright A ud.<lb/>
ier<lb/>
Keep the Red<lb/>
Cross Ready<lb/>
SUdtn, Center PRESENTS AN<lb/>
EXHIBITION AND SALE<lb/>
OF<lb/>
- the right album. But Glenn says it'<lb/>
gradually ? you can't add pluses<lb/>
i a 12-week tour of America<lb/>
.use bass guitarist George<lb/>
but honored his committment to<lb/>
d the radio was advising people not<lb/>
w and we were trying to get them out<lb/>
through the roof. It's easily the most<lb/>
ng we've done. I know some acts aren t<lb/>
- year but we haven't been affected<lb/>
imed for a river and a town 32 miles<lb/>
fhe -aw the turnoff sign on the freeway<lb/>
k ng for a name. Thev're all from<lb/>
licci and Shorrock moved to Australia<lb/>
Birtles moved from Holland, all as<lb/>
families. All now live in Australia.<lb/>
bum, "Little River Band came out in<lb/>
ilbums were released in Australia ami<lb/>
FINE ART PRINTS<lb/>
FEATURING 22 X 28<lb/>
REPRODUCTIONS OF<lb/>
MASTER ARTISTS<lb/>
VAN GOGH ESCHER<lb/>
RENOIR PICASSO<lb/>
REMBRANDT MONET<lb/>
DALI WYETH<lb/>
BRUEGHEL CHAGALL<lb/>
OVER 150 ARTISTS<lb/>
LOW STUDENT PRICES<lb/>
1<lb/>
Mon. Oct. 15 thru<lb/>
DATE Fri. Oct. 19<lb/>
TIME 9-6<lb/>
PLACE Mendenhall<lb/>
Stud. Center<lb/>
Multi- Purpose Room<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
 .fpy.<lb/>
PART<lb/>
TIME<lb/>
JOB<lb/>
king r - uart-time<lb/>
?h flexible hours<lb/>
reai business<lb/>
 Nortnwest<lb/>
Ins. Co.<lb/>
g for college<lb/>
Call before noon<lb/>
lintments<lb/>
752080<lb/>
Visit the Art Carved Representative<lb/>
This Week<lb/>
? Buy Now and Save on Selected<lb/>
Traditional and Contemporary<lb/>
Rings.<lb/>
? See our Wide Variety of New<lb/>
Styles.<lb/>
Men's Contemporary<lb/>
Women's Fashion<lb/>
symbolizing<lb/>
your ability<lb/>
to achieve<lb/>
Save money, trade in<lb/>
your high school ring<lb/>
Oct. 16, 17, 18<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY STORE LOBBY<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
I Supplier for the 1980<lb/>
 United States Olympic Team<lb/>
Deposit required MasterCharge or Visa accepted<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057223_0007"/><lb/>
cH<lb/>
oYn?.aom<lb/>
1Q79<lb/>
Lncj<lb/>
<lb/>
r<lb/>
Ihotos h<lb/>
Chap Gurley<lb/>
an<lb/>
Kip Sloan<lb/>
<pb facs="00057223_0008"/><lb/>
Page 8 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 16 October 1979<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
. ?:?<lb/>
? ?.<lb/>
C7fc Student Hlnlon ?i?mi. Committee. (ixeienU<lb/>
"The best film of the year<lb/>
-Molly Haskell, New York<lb/>
logical as a theorem, as mysterious as a dream,<lb/>
and as funny as a vaudeville gag<lb/>
-Vincent Canby, New York Times<lb/>
x<lb/>
jvx:&amp;&amp;??k<lb/>
Luis<lb/>
Bunuel's<lb/>
? ,1 hat<lb/>
Obscure<lb/>
Object<lb/>
Of Desire<lb/>
fCet Obscur Objet du Desir)<lb/>
. ww<lb/>
? ? ? "T .A.<lb/>
;$x<lb/>
<lb/>
??<lb/>
cr<lb/>
N)C;<lb/>
Ev.v.vv<lb/>
Released by First Artists<lb/>
Produced by Serge Silberman<lb/>
Directed by Luis Bunuel<lb/>
Starring Fernando Rey, Carole Bouquet, Angela Molina<lb/>
Color R<lb/>
?:?:?:<lb/>
?.?-?.?.?<lb/>
.?.?.?.?.?.?.?.wv.v.aB<lb/>
?x-x-x-x-wgfc&amp;j<lb/>
7T cSfiEciai Jilm lPs?entat<lb/>
ton<lb/>
U?i<lb/>
Oat. 18<lb/>
YYt.<lb/>
? ??? ?????? ? ?<lb/>
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? <lb/>
?????????<lb/>
3 ? ??????????<lb/>
SV.v.v<lb/>
dhzruUnhatl i cHzndxix DkzcitxE.<lb/>
zndmi&amp;xlon by Z72 W ctfativltu Caxd<lb/>
laouLty ana Staff Caxdx WeCcome<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
UST CMOUN UWVmiTY<lb/>
<pb facs="00057223_0009"/><lb/>
16 October 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Page 9<lb/>
Step families have special relationships<lb/>
By KAY BARTLETT<lb/>
AP eivs Features Writer<lb/>
BR0NXV1LLE, N.Y. (AP) - Kit was 23 and Bill was 37<lb/>
when they met and fell in love. He was divorced and had<lb/>
custody of his three children, aged 9, 8 and 5. That didn't<lb/>
bother a starry-eyed Kit at all.<lb/>
"I vas going to make Bill terrifically happy Kit now<lb/>
recounts, 12 years and many heartaches later. "1 was<lb/>
tiling in as the great crusader. I was going to make<lb/>
veryone happy. The children would adore me and Bill<lb/>
would love me. Together, we would erase all the unhappy<lb/>
experiences the children had<lb/>
The night of the wedding, the three little ones were<lb/>
packed into a limousine when the bride and groom came<lb/>
out lo say goodnight. The eldest, 9-year-old Debbie, looked<lb/>
up and asked: "Now can we call you Mommy?"<lb/>
"I was ecstatic says Kit. "It helped solidify the<lb/>
myth Researchers estimate that some 25 million adults<lb/>
are tepparents and that one out of every sixth child is a<lb/>
stepchild. As divorce and remarriage rates climb, these<lb/>
figures art apt to go even higher.<lb/>
ch a family has its special problems, problems that<lb/>
? ; is just starting to deal with. They are compounded<lb/>
a- individuals and even mental health professionals try to<lb/>
impose solutions that work for the "intact" or traditional<lb/>
family, but may not work for a family with a different set<lb/>
o relationships, a different history.<lb/>
Kit and Bill Moseley made perhaps the most common<lb/>
mistake stepparents make when they remarry. They set up<lb/>
false expectations. At first, the idyll survived.<lb/>
The children would race home from school to see who<lb/>
could get to me first. And 1 remember after the first week,<lb/>
sitting at the dinner table thinking that I had fed this<lb/>
family, kept it alive for one week Kit says.<lb/>
Then came trouble.<lb/>
The daughter took to stealing household items and<lb/>
selling them. The elder of the two boys became withdrawn<lb/>
tnd passive, reacting neither to punishment nor reward;<lb/>
the younger, a hyperactive child to start with, broke all the<lb/>
toys before Christmas Day was over. Things got so serious<lb/>
that for nine-and-a-half years of their 12-year marriage, at<lb/>
least one member of the family was in analysis or therapy.<lb/>
Like many children in a step-family, the Moseley<lb/>
youngsters consciously or unconsciously wished they could<lb/>
go back to the way they were, before the divorce. They<lb/>
seemed to feel that if it weren't for Kit, that would<lb/>
happen.<lb/>
When Kit and Bill had their first child nine years ago,<lb/>
there was the predictable jealousy as well as a new threat<lb/>
of stability for this family.<lb/>
Kit and Bill decided to divorce. But as a last resort,<lb/>
they went to a marriage counselor. "For two years, it was<lb/>
nip-and-tuck says Bill. Kit adds: "We finally realized we<lb/>
had a completely child-centered relationship. We had no<lb/>
relationship for ourselves. We had to grow up and let go of<lb/>
the problems of the kids<lb/>
Dr. Emily Visher, a clinical psychologist in Palo Alto,<lb/>
Calif and her psychiatrist husband, Dr. John Visher,<lb/>
recently published their book: "Step-Families: A Guide to<lb/>
Working with Stepparents &amp; Stepchildren They wrote<lb/>
from their clinical experience as well as their personal<lb/>
vantage point. They were both divorced, and the parents ot<lb/>
four children each when they married 20 years ago.<lb/>
Their book is filled with practical advice, case histories<lb/>
and statistics.<lb/>
Emily Visher is also president of the Stepfamily<lb/>
Foundation of California, an organization of some 200<lb/>
families. Self-help groups, survival courses, crisis hot lines<lb/>
and professional workshops are among the services the<lb/>
group provides. Dr. Visher is also setting up a national<lb/>
organization, Stepfamily Association of America.<lb/>
People think a second marriage is going to be the same<lb/>
as the first. "There are obvious differences that tend to get<lb/>
overlooked says Dr. Visher. "One is that the parent-<lb/>
child relationship is the older, better-established one<lb/>
That, she says, can be potentially dangerous. "In most<lb/>
relationships, the couple relationships must be the primary<lb/>
one if the step-family is to succeed<lb/>
The parents must remain united despite childrens'<lb/>
efforts to separate them. Says Jeanette Lofas: "A kid's<lb/>
full-time occupation is working over the parents<lb/>
Alan Williams, father of an 8-year-old daughter, and his<lb/>
new wife, Helayne, mother of boys aged 11 and 7, fell<lb/>
right into that trap as the kids predictably got into fights.<lb/>
"I would rush right in and not be aware of it says<lb/>
Alan, a school teacher in San Jose, Calif. "I wasn't aware<lb/>
how defensive I would become. Helayne would sit back,<lb/>
but we would both take sides and argue about it later. The<lb/>
kids were using it, of course<lb/>
They signed up for a survival course sponsored by Dr.<lb/>
Visher's group and they were first relieved when they<lb/>
found others were having the same problem.<lb/>
Williams says his second great relief came when he was<lb/>
told he didn't have to love his stepsons.<lb/>
Ms. Lofas believes in giving out<lb/>
assignments to those who come to her.<lb/>
very practical<lb/>
Stepmothers whose children won't get close might plan<lb/>
to be in the kitchen alone for one hour every night before<lb/>
dinner. That way, the stepchildren know where she is when<lb/>
they want to start closeness.<lb/>
Dr. Visher also gives practical advice.<lb/>
Some samples: Move into a new house, even if it seems<lb/>
impossible. The old house is already territorially claimed, it<lb/>
has its histories and memories of something that no longer<lb/>
is.<lb/>
If you are the stepparent who sees the children on<lb/>
visitations or weekends, make sure the child has some<lb/>
space of his very own, even if it's only a drawer.<lb/>
Don't expect or demand instant love, loyalty and<lb/>
affection. Give it time.<lb/>
"All of these warnings sound as though a step-family<lb/>
points to nothing but gloom says Dr. Visher. "Please let<lb/>
me emphasize that is not true. There are wonderful<lb/>
advantages in the interaction. The children now have more<lb/>
role models to choose from.<lb/>
"A stepfamily is and can be a wonderful experience<lb/>
Writers<lb/>
Needed<lb/>
Wl??9<lb/>
3005<lb/>
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????.?  ii i. nr?-ni:iim ??!?? JaBBO T-rr L<lb/>
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Call 757-6366<lb/>
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STUDENT SPECIAL<lb/>
Any style permanent<lb/>
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Reg. $33.50<lb/>
SALE PRICE $19.95<lb/>
For More Information Call: 756-2950<lb/>
PITT PLAZA GREENVILLE<lb/>
Month of October Specials<lb/>
MondayOId fa8hi?nndcph;tburger $1.39<lb/>
Tuesday Soup ftnd 8alad $1.69<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
Sirloin tips,<lb/>
baked potato<lb/>
and toast<lb/>
Salad and potato<lb/>
old fashion Cheeseburger<lb/>
and soup<lb/>
Clam Chowder<lb/>
and Salad<lb/>
6oz. Sirloin, potato<lb/>
and toast<lb/>
SUN.THUR.<lb/>
ll:OOa.m. 10:00p.m.<lb/>
SpWe'wO<lb/>
$1.79<lb/>
$1.39<lb/>
$1.89<lb/>
FRI 8P SAT.<lb/>
11:00a.m. ll:00p.m<lb/>
THE POCKET MIME THEATRE<lb/>
Tues Oct. 16 1:00 pm<lb/>
Wed Oct. 17, 8:00pm<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Matinee:<lb/>
Students $1.00<lb/>
Facility &amp; Staff $2.00<lb/>
Public $3.00<lb/>
Evening<lb/>
Facility &amp; Staff $3<lb/>
Public $4.00<lb/>
RIDE ON!<lb/>
October 15 - November 1<lb/>
? A wordless<lb/>
magical evening<lb/>
remarkable. 55<lb/>
(Christian Science Monitor)<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
l?$7 C??0O? UlltVIKVTY<lb/>
? ? Astonishing in their ease and<lb/>
familiarity with their medium, they<lb/>
avoid both the saccharine sweetness<lb/>
of conventional mime and the freneticism<lb/>
of other progressive' companies, 5 j<lb/>
(Harvard University Independent)<lb/>
? ? The Pocket Mime Theatre is wonderful I<lb/>
In no time at all, they had the audience in their 'pocket<lb/>
We loved them! J J (Texas Wesley an College)<lb/>
? ? Perfection? Yes. Audiences must feel they have entered a new<lb/>
world of mime. It's rich and dazzling and I dare you not to<lb/>
be hooked. 5 5 (len Krisak, The Boston Phoenix)<lb/>
TICKETS NOW ON SALE!<lb/>
Whether for pleasure, exercise<lb/>
or transportation, the bicycle<lb/>
has filled the bill. Ever since<lb/>
1876 when Americans saw their<lb/>
first "ordinary" bicycle (one<lb/>
large front wheel, one small<lb/>
rear wheel) at the Philadelphia<lb/>
Centennial Exposition, its<lb/>
popularity and use has grown.<lb/>
The exhibition was researched<lb/>
and organized by SITES staff<lb/>
member Andrea Stevens under<lb/>
a grant provided by the Charles<lb/>
E. Merrill Trust and through<lb/>
color and black and white pho-<lb/>
tographs with text, chronicles<lb/>
the social and technological his-<lb/>
tory of the bicycle. It traces the<lb/>
evolution of the bicycle from<lb/>
celerifere to safety and presents<lb/>
the bicycle as a serious trans-<lb/>
portation alternative today.<lb/>
Oct. 15 - Nov. 1<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Art Gallery<lb/>
Traffic officer to register bicycles Oct. 24<lb/>
Sponsored by Art Exhibition Committee<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
IAST CAROUMA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
)<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057223_0010"/><lb/>
Pa<lb/>
Page 10 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 16 October 1979<lb/>
Square rigger Young<lb/>
America trains youth<lb/>
By PETER MATTIACE<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
ABOARD THE YOUNG<lb/>
AMERICA (AP) - The<lb/>
onshore breeze is cool and<lb/>
the blue-gren sea is<lb/>
strangely silent aboard the<lb/>
wide, open deck of this<lb/>
sailing vessel just a few<lb/>
miles off the boardwalk of<lb/>
Atlantic City, N.J.<lb/>
"Stand by to raise the<lb/>
mainsail barks First Mate<lb/>
Lou Buck from the foredeck<lb/>
as his young crew scurries<lb/>
among the 66 wide-eyed<lb/>
tourists sitting amidships.<lb/>
"Raise the mainsail<lb/>
Buck commands, and the<lb/>
weathered canvas slowly<lb/>
unfurls in the breeze.<lb/>
The mainsail, and the<lb/>
other sails, of this 130-foot<lb/>
brigantine are set twice<lb/>
daily on weekdays and three<lb/>
times daily on weekends for<lb/>
landlubbers who seek a<lb/>
three-hour taste of what it<lb/>
was like to sail the sea by<lb/>
the wind.<lb/>
The Young America, the<lb/>
largest American-built<lb/>
square-rigger still sailing,<lb/>
as its crew proudly boasts,<lb/>
is a modern replica of an<lb/>
old-time sailing ship work-<lb/>
ing the Atlantic for $10 a<lb/>
passenger off the New<lb/>
Jersey gambling resort.<lb/>
And although she is<lb/>
only 4 years old, not 100,<lb/>
and her hull is reinforced<lb/>
concrete, not wood, the<lb/>
Young America plies the<lb/>
sea in the tradition of the<lb/>
great sailing ships of old.<lb/>
"When you get out here<lb/>
and you shut the engine<lb/>
down, it's just peaceful and<lb/>
quiet says Buck, 27, in an<lb/>
easy moment near the<lb/>
wheel. "It's as quiet as you<lb/>
can get. You're just moving<lb/>
along with the wind.<lb/>
"There's no other place<lb/>
you can take a ride like<lb/>
this he said. "We're not<lb/>
out here with a microphone<lb/>
and stuff like that<lb/>
The 96-ton brigantine<lb/>
was built in 1975 in Port<lb/>
Jefferson, N.Y by a<lb/>
contractor who dreamed of<lb/>
running charters around<lb/>
Long Island Sound.<lb/>
Last year the contractor,<lb/>
foiled by bankruptcy, sold<lb/>
the ship, then called The<lb/>
Enchantress, for $417,000 to<lb/>
the Oceanic Society's Mid-<lb/>
Atlantic Region and Historic<lb/>
Gardner's Basin maritime<lb/>
park in Atlantic City, the<lb/>
vessel's home port.<lb/>
Her crew of a half-dozen<lb/>
young men and women<lb/>
sleeps and eats aboard the<lb/>
ship. It's not unusual to<lb/>
smell the appealing scent of<lb/>
the crew's dinner, perhaps<lb/>
clams and mariana sauce,<lb/>
mixed in with the salt air on<lb/>
an afternoon cruise.<lb/>
Twice as long as Colum-<lb/>
bus' Snta Maria and about<lb/>
the size of the old New<lb/>
Bedford whaling ships, the<lb/>
Young America spends her<lb/>
falls in Long Island, hop-<lb/>
ping from port to port with<lb/>
maritime exhibits. She tra-<lb/>
vels to Miami in the winter,<lb/>
sailing Atlantic and Carib-<lb/>
bean waters as a trainer for<lb/>
young scouts.<lb/>
Although its charm is in<lb/>
the sails and the silence,<lb/>
the brigantine uses a<lb/>
250-horsepower diesel en-<lb/>
gine to keep her moving on<lb/>
windless nights and in<lb/>
ticklish ports.<lb/>
"I mean, she's an old<lb/>
sailing vessel to a point<lb/>
says chief engineer Mike<lb/>
Murphy, 26, whose machin-<lb/>
ery is one of the ship's few<lb/>
concessions to the 20th<lb/>
century. "It would be pretty<lb/>
miserable on this ship<lb/>
without electricity<lb/>
Renowned pianist<lb/>
Claude Frank will perform a<lb/>
selection of Beethoven's<lb/>
Pianist to<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
GREENVILLE - Noted<lb/>
pianist Claude Frank will<lb/>
perform works by Bee-<lb/>
thoven at East Carolina<lb/>
University Tuesday, Oct. 30<lb/>
at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Frank's performance,<lb/>
part of ECU's Artists<lb/>
Series, is scheduled for<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre in Men-<lb/>
denhall Student Center.<lb/>
Since his debut with<lb/>
Leonard Bernstein and the<lb/>
New York Philharmonic,<lb/>
there is hardly an or-<lb/>
chestra, festival, university<lb/>
music club or community<lb/>
concert series which has not<lb/>
invited Claude Frank to<lb/>
perform.<lb/>
He has frequently ap-<lb/>
compositions on<lb/>
Oct. 30, at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Hendrix Theater.<lb/>
in<lb/>
perform<lb/>
peared with the Berlin Phil-<lb/>
harmonic, the New York<lb/>
Philharmonic, the Chicago<lb/>
Symphony, the Boston Sym-<lb/>
phony and the Royal Phil-<lb/>
harmonic of London. His<lb/>
chamber appearances in-<lb/>
clude performances with the<lb/>
Guarneri Quartet, the Juil-<lb/>
liard Quartet and others.<lb/>
During his recent fifth<lb/>
tour of Latin America, a Sao<lb/>
Paulo music reviewer term-<lb/>
ed him "one of the greatest<lb/>
Beethoven players of inter-<lb/>
national calibre<lb/>
Tickets for the Oct. 30<lb/>
concert are available from<lb/>
the campus Central Ticket<lb/>
Office at $5 each. Tickets<lb/>
will also be sold at the door.<lb/>
Further information and<lb/>
ticket reservations are avail-<lb/>
able by telephone at<lb/>
757-6611.<lb/>
Radio Station<lb/>
In the mid-1950s the<lb/>
station introduced a so-<lb/>
called "Storecast" format,<lb/>
broadcasting tunes that<lb/>
served as background music<lb/>
for supermarkets.<lb/>
Then in 1959, the station<lb/>
introduced its "Heritage"<lb/>
format of classical music.<lb/>
There were many other<lb/>
classical music stations on<lb/>
the dial then, and most of<lb/>
them were -not making<lb/>
money.<lb/>
So, starting in 1962 and<lb/>
continuing through the early<lb/>
1970s, WHOM-FM began<lb/>
duplicating the all-Spanish<lb/>
format of its AM station. In<lb/>
doing this, the station was<lb/>
again being different, since<lb/>
it was during this period<lb/>
that most other FM stations<lb/>
owned by AM stations<lb/>
stopped the duplicating<lb/>
practice and began offering<lb/>
separate programming.<lb/>
In 1971, the station<lb/>
began offering a program of<lb/>
background Latin music<lb/>
known as "The Continental<lb/>
Sound but again the<lb/>
station failed to attract a<lb/>
significant audience.<lb/>
continued from page 5<lb/>
In 1975, WHOM was<lb/>
sold. The AM call letters<lb/>
became WJIT and the<lb/>
broadcasting remained all-<lb/>
Spanish.<lb/>
But the FM station<lb/>
became WKTU and intro-<lb/>
duced a new format of<lb/>
music on the New York dial,<lb/>
soft rock, or mellow music.<lb/>
The mellow music for-<lb/>
mat attracted a very loyal<lb/>
audience among young peo-<lb/>
ple, but the station seldom<lb/>
rose above No. 20 in the<lb/>
ratings.<lb/>
UN FiftUT Inflation Ni&amp;Mt<lb/>
25 AtM OTH6R SP?CIM-S<lb/>
u?? imm?S night<lb/>
LAOlCS FfttE. ADMISSION<lb/>
BRING NICKELS<lb/>
s. - dance. Contest<lb/>
"02 csn -first P?ixe-<lb/>
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CLIFF'S<lb/>
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WMtt.noton Highway (N.C. M Ext.) GfWtwMt. North Crln<lb/>
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AIX YOU<lb/>
ssa.75 CAN EAT<lb/>
MONDAY-THURSDAY<lb/>
TROUT, FLOUNDER,<lb/>
CRABCAKES<lb/>
TEA is included with meal<lb/>
CMFF'S SUPER<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
CRAB CAKE SPECIAL<lb/>
2 Golden Fried Crab Cakes<lb/>
French Fries, Slaw, and<lb/>
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ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of th ?J2J2JJ"Z"A iVo; <lb/>
quired to bo roodlly avalloblo foe ? ai or <lb/>
S?lc?tho vottljodprtco jy-ft? J<lb/>
Store oxcopt at apocWIclly notod in ww? <lb/>
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PRICES OCOO THRU SAT OCT. 20, AT A&amp;P<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057223_0011"/><lb/>
The Easl Carolinian<lb/>
sports<lb/>
Tuesday, October 16, 1979 Poge 11<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
ECU rolls past stunned<lb/>
Bulldo<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
East Carolina exploded for three first-quarter<lb/>
touchdowns and rolled to an easy 49-7 homecoming victory<lb/>
over The Citadel Saturday before a Ficklen Stadium crowd<lb/>
t 28,751.<lb/>
Though the 49 points were the fourth highest one-game<lb/>
total in Pirate history, and the most points scored by an<lb/>
ECU team since 1976, Citadel coach Art Baker felt his<lb/>
team came out of the contest with only a mild whipping.<lb/>
'Thanks Ba ker said to ECU head coach Pat Dye<lb/>
after the game, "it could've been 100-0<lb/>
Baker was not far off. With 6:33 still to play in the first<lb/>
period, the Pirates were already ahead 21-0.<lb/>
"I had no earthly idea it would be that eas said Dye.<lb/>
"I don't think they're nearly that bad. Our quick start just<lb/>
took the wind out of their sails<lb/>
Another factor in the Pirate victory was the play of the<lb/>
jefenSe ? an area that has been of major concern to Dye<lb/>
.ughout the season.<lb/>
Dye has repeatedly said that the defensive unit has not<lb/>
been "making things happen Against The Citadel, the<lb/>
ECU defenders forced six turnovers, all of which gave the<lb/>
offense the ball in good field position. Cornerback Willie<lb/>
Holley led the defense with an interception and fumble<lb/>
"I definitely think the defense played better today than<lb/>
in the past said Dve. "We simplified some things this<lb/>
week and that helped. We tried to do too many things<lb/>
(earner in the season) that we were not capable of. Today<lb/>
we used just three basic defenses. We were a lot more<lb/>
iCtive and confident because of it<lb/>
There is no doubt that the Pirate offense, ranked ninth<lb/>
nationally in total offense going into the game, was in<lb/>
gearThey steamrolled the Bulldogs for 447 yards rushing<lb/>
and another 100 through the air ?<lb/>
"It's hard to say that our offense is that good said<lb/>
Dye "It came so easy. But a lot of times that's the way<lb/>
our offense looks when we're executing well.<lb/>
Quarterback Leander Green directed the Pi rates<lb/>
excellently, compiling 192 yards total offense, 13dthem<lb/>
on the ground, despite the fact that he saw limited duty<lb/>
because of the romp Green also scored three touchdowns<lb/>
on Tuns of 11, 12 and 40 yards. Afterwards, Green said the<lb/>
Pirates were confident and ready going into the game<lb/>
"They didn't show us anything we didn t expect, ne<lb/>
said. "Whey they tried to close up one thing on us, we<lb/>
opened up something else ??<lb/>
Reserve fullback Martin Cobb enjoyed a stellar<lb/>
afternoon, running for 104 yards on just six carries, lhe<lb/>
burlv sophomore scored the game's first touchdown on a<lb/>
M-yard run. He also broke loose for a 38-yarder later in<lb/>
The'pirate victory left both teams with ai 3-3 record, but<lb/>
there was little doubt in Baker's mind that ECU is the<lb/>
TheTly difference between me and General Custer<lb/>
said Baker, "is that I have to go home and look at fitas.<lb/>
The impressive win has the Pirates looking forward to<lb/>
their next contest, an October 27 date with<lb/>
nationally-ranked North Carolina. That game should be a<lb/>
real thriller now that the Pirate defense seems to be<lb/>
Plarwlrr ready said offensive guard Matt<lb/>
Mulholland. "We've got a good offense and our line is<lb/>
great We're starting to get our mess together now. lne<lb/>
oneness we need on offense is coming. I'm really looking<lb/>
forward to it<lb/>
(Photo by Kid Sloan)<lb/>
Jeffrey Warren, Doug Smith and Tim Swords 'swarm' Traeey Shrader<lb/>
How ard's right, for once<lb/>
H. ward Cosell says they'll remember this one. For once<lb/>
the ABC-TV sportscaster may just be right.<lb/>
sell was speaking of the 1979 World Series, which is<lb/>
presently in progress. After five games, the Baltimore<lb/>
s lead the Pirates of Pittsburgh three games to two.<lb/>
series has had everything thus far. There has been<lb/>
hitting, great pitching at times, big comebacks, big<lb/>
and big innings. There has also been plenty of<lb/>
se. Drama describes perfectly the atmosphere that<lb/>
n present from the very beginning. <lb/>
Both teams have displayed the never-say-die attitude<lb/>
that a world champion must have. In Game 4 the Orioles<lb/>
re down 6-3 late in the contest when the Pirates brought<lb/>
in their top reliever, Kent Tekulve, to steal the victory. All<lb/>
the Orioles did was jump on Tekulve and score six runs in<lb/>
that eighth inning and go on to win the game 9-6, taking a<lb/>
3-1 series lead.<lb/>
In Game 5 it was the Pirates' turn to show their<lb/>
character. Down 1-0 after five innings, the Pirates went on<lb/>
an awesome tear and went on to win 7-1 and send the<lb/>
series back to Baltimore for a sixth game. The Pirates<lb/>
plaved as well as they possibly can in the late innings of<lb/>
Game 5. Clutch hitting, great defense and excellent<lb/>
pitching were all in evidence.<lb/>
On the other hand, the Orioles seemed a little<lb/>
nonchalant about things in the fifth game. But one can be<lb/>
-are the Birds will be ready for the sixth game come<lb/>
Tuesday night. Manager Earl Weaver will start ace Jim<lb/>
Palmer; which makes it apparent that he does not have any<lb/>
-ire to go to a seventh and deciding game.<lb/>
But do not be surprised to see the series come down to<lb/>
that last game. For as Howard said, it has been a great<lb/>
er.es. It would certainly be great to see these two.fine<lb/>
clubs battle it out in a real squeaker for the world<lb/>
hampionship.<lb/>
One thing that has made the series such a "???<lb/>
far has beetf.he superb play of several 'uP.ra<lb/>
i i PKil T.arner an ex-Oakland v, na&amp;<lb/>
second baseman Phil earner, ? crucial<lb/>
j ii Uoil nf Famer since committing a cruuim<lb/>
performed like a Hall ot tamers <lb/>
error in the first inning of Game l wne<lb/>
exploded for five runs. Since; then Ga n r has beena<lb/>
hitting a fielding whiz and will surely get<lb/>
,ries MVP award should the Pirates wm.<lb/>
Willie Staraell, Bill Madlock and Dave Parker have an<lb/>
, ? r !i! R Starizell has two homers while<lb/>
played well for the Bucs. rgeii<lb/>
Madlock and Parker have been terrors at tne pia<lb/>
pitchers.<lb/>
?,?- sure ap?SS5<lb/>
well as has catcher Rick Dempsey t<lb/>
baserunners have g Jk?Stop has also excelled<lb/>
Dempsey's great arm. The for MVP<lb/>
at the plate and may be a darwiorse<lb/>
honors.<lb/>
Citadel coach "grateful<lb/>
for final margin<lb/>
??<lb/>
pt iij?'??mu'V)n<lb/>
Cobb turns upfield<lb/>
(Photo by Chap Gurley)<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
"The only difference in me and General Custer is that I<lb/>
have to go back and vateh the films maligned Citadel<lb/>
Coach Art Baker after the Pirates of ECU embarassed his<lb/>
Bulldogs, 49-7.<lb/>
It became apparent early into the Homecoming contest<lb/>
that the Bulldogs were in for a long afternoon as ECU s<lb/>
Marvin Cobb put the Pirates on the board with less than<lb/>
two minutes elapsed. .<lb/>
Ruffin McNeill fell on a Citadel fumDie on the ECU M<lb/>
with 10:33 to play in the first quarter, silencing the premier<lb/>
drive of the visitors. Fullback Theodore Sutton converted<lb/>
on a first and goal from the four and the Dogs trailed by<lb/>
two touchdowns. ,<lb/>
Again quarterback Tim Russell attempted to take his<lb/>
Bulldog offense to the end zone, and again (this time on<lb/>
their first play from scrimmage), his backfield mates<lb/>
niayed hot potato into the hands of defensive tackle Nate<lb/>
Wigfall. , , <lb/>
"Pat (Dye) was really good to us, because they could<lb/>
have beaten us worse than they did praised Baker.<lb/>
"They are a good football team and did everything a good<lb/>
football team should do to win. They completely dominated<lb/>
the line of scrimmage<lb/>
None of the 28,751 who attended the massacre would<lb/>
The Pirates rolled up 547 yards total offense compared<lb/>
to the Citadel's 214.<lb/>
Quarterback Leander Green led the Bucs with 113 yards<lb/>
rushing and 79 yards passing, followed by reserve Cobb<lb/>
with 104 and Sutton and Anthony Collins with 66.<lb/>
"When they tried to close up one thing on us, we<lb/>
opened something else said the elusive Green. "We got<lb/>
some points on the board early and moved the ball well.<lb/>
They didn't show us anything we didn't expect<lb/>
Some would say the Bulldogs didn't show anything,<lb/>
'didn't see anything good about our Romance<lb/>
today " groaned Baker. "We played poor defense, we<lb/>
executed'poorly, we blocked poorly, and passed poorly.<lb/>
The five turnovers set the tone of the game.<lb/>
"Against a team like East Carolina you can t turn the<lb/>
ball over at all and hope to win. We have a much better<lb/>
football team than we played today.<lb/>
"Our offense gave them momentum early. I don t think<lb/>
we could play that badly again if we tried, Baker<lb/>
"leutach Pat Dye n-ed L his<lb/>
team's overall play and lauded the defense for<lb/>
improvement over previous outings.<lb/>
P"I had no idea it would be that easy said Dye I<lb/>
thought the defense played better today (Saturday). They<lb/>
made some things happen. 0ffensive<lb/>
"I don't think that they have that bad an otlensve<lb/>
football team Dye said. "What happened early took the<lb/>
wind out of their sails. , ,<lb/>
"At Baker told me after the game it could have been<lb/>
DO-0 and that he was grateful I'm sorry it turned out that<lb/>
vay. Art is an excellent football coach and has done a<lb/>
great job with them.<lb/>
"We had all the momentum. It was a non-conference<lb/>
game for them and with it our Homecoming, that added to<lb/>
it explained Dye. "I'm sure the Citadel will bounce<lb/>
back<lb/>
East Carolina has established over the years a<lb/>
reputation as a team centered around walk-ons, and<lb/>
Saturday Pirate fans got to see the spirited reserves m<lb/>
action. .<lb/>
"I'm tickled that everyone got to play at<lb/>
Homecoming stated Dye. "I tried to get everyone into<lb/>
the game<lb/>
Lady Pirate rally<lb/>
falls short, 3-2<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
"We had more shots on the goal than<lb/>
they had says ECU Assistant Coach Anne<lb/>
Holmes. "We just weren't able to capitalize<lb/>
After falling to a 2-0 deficit early in the on T"m plagued with their<lb/>
Numbed to High Point College 3-2 ???? on us this year<lb/>
Sa,Thea Udy Pirates' defense allowed two said Coach Uurie Arrants "four have not<lb/>
goJsb, right inner Cheryl Egner and been on break-aways. This is where the<lb/>
f ppearJ to be ou, of the game early but ?SSrtl get buroed on<lb/>
the spirit of Homecommg came through tn WhestaTuS ? and backing<lb/>
the second penod.  i ?? j<lb/>
After 13 minutes had elapsed, K? ??. ,hat the overall 8peed ?f<lb/>
dSSWcMS fe .earn fa. not been a factor in any of the<lb/>
r?. i t? ? j ,?.? losses thus tar.<lb/>
High Point edge to one. "Nobodv we've faced is as fast as Sue<lb/>
3E? "tier and the, B,u? have gone to - goahe "We'reoldmg: teams d-fa-jjfc but<lb/>
.ZtZZXSZS ;otTliVato,faHdneaabU,rraerT "dfreSe. ' . .<lb/>
U Ummg oiT ?pU? Egt who had "I Uke to play aggressive, ack-onented<lb/>
earlier suffered a nose injury, Parkinson defense.<lb/>
client bullpen at toe ?e?. -jjj- reftl da8sic h<lb/>
The 1979 World Series is shaping p . <lb/>
may end up being compared witn i <lb/>
the Boston Red Sox an - t0 deserve t0<lb/>
are very similar in that neu?<lb/>
lose. h wiu be two winners in<lb/>
As was the case in ?? In no ,osers for either the<lb/>
the 1979 fall classic. For there are no<lb/>
Orioles or the Pirates.<lb/>
n<lb/>
delivered the crushing blow with nine<lb/>
"I'm not too discouraged, though<lb/>
1-4 as time ran out on their hopes of victory, they re tne most mwure<lb/>
tf 4<lb/>
(Photo bv John Grogan)<lb/>
U<lb/>
<pb facs="00057223_0012"/><lb/>
Pac<lb/>
Page 12 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 16 October 1979<lb/>
Flag football playoffs<lb/>
highlight IM calender<lb/>
Bv RICKI GLIARMIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
FLAG FOOTBALL<lb/>
Flag Football play-offs<lb/>
were held last week to<lb/>
determine the divisional<lb/>
champions. The division<lb/>
champions are for Sorority<lb/>
Division, Alpha Xi Delta;<lb/>
Kappa Alpah "A Frater-<lb/>
nity Division; Tvler Heart-<lb/>
breakers, Dorm-Indepen-<lb/>
dent Women Division; Ani-<lb/>
mals, Independent Men's<lb/>
"A Jones Raiders, Dorm<lb/>
Men "A and Aycock<lb/>
Sidewinders, Dorm Men<lb/>
"B<lb/>
The finals for the All-<lb/>
Campus championships will<lb/>
match up Animals against<lb/>
Belk Bandits for the all-<lb/>
campus men's title, and<lb/>
Tyler Termites against Tyler<lb/>
Heartbreakers for the wo-<lb/>
men's title.<lb/>
TENNIS RESULTS<lb/>
In Men's "A" Division<lb/>
of Intramural tennis, B.<lb/>
Shi piev defeated M. Davis,<lb/>
10-7. Men's "B" division<lb/>
winner was A. Newby as he<lb/>
defeated D. Evans, 10-6. E.<lb/>
Kutteh was Women's Divi-<lb/>
sion champion after de-<lb/>
feating B. Freeman, 10-6.<lb/>
CO-REC TENNIS<lb/>
Tennis mixed doubles<lb/>
entries are now being taken<lb/>
in the Intramural Office.<lb/>
Teams will consist of one<lb/>
man and one woman.<lb/>
Entries will be accepted<lb/>
from Oct. 8 until Oct. 18 at<lb/>
5 p.m. Play begins Oct. 22,<lb/>
so grab a partner, a couple<lb/>
of rackets, and hit the<lb/>
courts. If you can't find a<lb/>
partner, come by the office<lb/>
and check the rosters for<lb/>
the tennis singles that have<lb/>
just been played.<lb/>
CO-REC FLAG FOOTBALL<lb/>
Having extended the<lb/>
deadline for Co-Rec Foot-<lb/>
ball, the number of teams<lb/>
participating has increased.<lb/>
Scheduling has been com-<lb/>
pleted and will be available<lb/>
at the team captain's<lb/>
meeting to be held tonight,<lb/>
Tuesday, Oct. 16, in<lb/>
Brewster B-102, at 7 p.m.<lb/>
CROSS CAMPUS RUN<lb/>
RESULTS<lb/>
The fourth Annual Cross<lb/>
Campus Run was held<lb/>
Saturday with two events,<lb/>
the two and a half mile and<lb/>
the five mile run.<lb/>
John Russ captured the<lb/>
two and a half mile run with<lb/>
a time of 13:49. Debbie<lb/>
Renz was the top female<lb/>
runner, completing the<lb/>
course in 24:04. William<lb/>
White cruised to victory in<lb/>
the five mile run with a<lb/>
time of 27:34. The top<lb/>
female performer in this<lb/>
event was Linda Mason<lb/>
with a finishing time of<lb/>
34:14.<lb/>
Lieutenant Governor<lb/>
Jimmy Green presented<lb/>
awards to the top runners<lb/>
from each race.<lb/>
SOCCER<lb/>
Soccer play begins to-<lb/>
day. This year, a record<lb/>
number of teams signed up<lb/>
for this sport. The matches<lb/>
are being played on the IM<lb/>
fields from 4 p.m. until 10<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
TEAM HANDBALL<lb/>
OFFICIALS' CLINIC<lb/>
The Team Handball<lb/>
Official's Clinic will be held<lb/>
Wednesday, Oct. 24 in<lb/>
Memorial 104. All inter-<lb/>
ested persons should attend.<lb/>
VOLLEYBALL AND<lb/>
RACQUETBALL<lb/>
Co-Rec Volleyball and<lb/>
Racquetball Singles entries<lb/>
are now being accepted in<lb/>
Memorial Gym, Room 204.<lb/>
SPORTS CLUBS<lb/>
Sports Clubs in Skiing,<lb/>
Racquetball, and Fencing<lb/>
have been formed. All<lb/>
interested persons are in-<lb/>
vited to join these clubs and<lb/>
if interested should contact<lb/>
the IM-Rec Office in 204<lb/>
Memorial Gym.<lb/>
FEATURED VALUE<lb/>
ALL YOU<lb/>
CAN EAT!<lb/>
FLOUNDER<lb/>
DINNER<lb/>
INCLUDES<lb/>
FRENCH FRIES,<lb/>
TARTAR SAUCE,<lb/>
HUSHPUPPIES,<lb/>
COLESLAW<lb/>
$2.55<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
Tyson to join<lb/>
pirate cagers later<lb/>
Al Tyson, the 6-11 center who last season quit the<lb/>
Pirate basketball team at the end of the stormy tenure of<lb/>
ex-coach Larry Gillman and subsequently decided to<lb/>
remain at ECU, was absent Monday as the Dave Odom<lb/>
directed Bucs began pre-season drills.<lb/>
Tyson is reportedly eligible by NCAA academic<lb/>
standards, but falls short of those established by Odom.<lb/>
Tyson, a native of Winterville and all-Conference<lb/>
performer at D.H. Conley High School, will rejoin the team<lb/>
later in the semester, according to the source.<lb/>
FRIMTC<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
East Carolina Playhouse<lb/>
presents<lb/>
THE STREETS OF<lb/>
NEW YORK<lb/>
The rollicking musical based<lb/>
on the famous old-time<lb/>
melodrama<lb/>
directed by<lb/>
Del Lewis<lb/>
October 17-20<lb/>
October 22-27<lb/>
8:15 p.m.<lb/>
Studio Theatre<lb/>
Tickets are $3.50 ECU Students $2.50<lb/>
For reservations and information<lb/>
call 757-6390<lb/>
between 10 and 4 Monday through Friday<lb/>
SAVE MONEY!<lb/>
Season coupons for all six shows this year are only<lb/>
$12.00. To order your season tickets call the<lb/>
Playhouse Box Office.<lb/>
Buy now, SAVE 25!<lb/>
I<lb/>
Sun. thru Thurs. 430-900<lb/>
Frl. &amp; Sat. 4:3O-l0rOO<lb/>
Friday's Seafood<lb/>
2311S. Evans St.<lb/>
Lunch 11:30-2:30<lb/>
Mon. Ladle's Day-Free trip<lb/>
to salad bar w it h<lb/>
each full meal<lb/>
Tues. Ladie's Day<lb/>
Free cup of clam<lb/>
chowderwith each<lb/>
full meal<lb/>
Wed. Soup iTSandwich<lb/>
S2.2S<lb/>
Thurs. Soup n' Salad<lb/>
$1.75<lb/>
Fri. Fish Fry<lb/>
all the trout you can<lb/>
eat for $1.99 with<lb/>
fries and slaw<lb/>
Sun. Family Day<lb/>
? Lunch and Dinner<lb/>
All you can eat<lb/>
Shrimp $495<lb/>
Oysters $4.75<lb/>
Flounder $3-50<lb/>
Trout$2.95<lb/>
KIOOMK<lb/>
200 ct Facial Tissue 251.00<lb/>
WHOLE WESTERN<lb/>
BEEF RIBEYES<lb/>
9 - 121b avg<lb/>
Cut into steaks free<lb/>
$2.99lb<lb/>
Family Pak<lb/>
Rib Eye<lb/>
$3.89lb<lb/>
Steaks<lb/>
J. F. G.<lb/>
Salad Dressing<lb/>
qt size<lb/>
limit one please<lb/>
TOWELS<lb/>
I<lb/>
Jumbo Rolls<lb/>
Gallon 2 Lowftt Country Froth<lb/>
Milk<lb/>
$1.59<lb/>
Dinner Boll<lb/>
all moat FRANKS<lb/>
12oz pkg<lb/>
99<lb/>
Jamestown<lb/>
Sliced BACON<lb/>
Carolina Dairies<lb/>
6- pak ice Cream<lb/>
Sandwiches<lb/>
buy 1 gat 1 free<lb/>
Light n' Lively<lb/>
YOGURT<lb/>
3I00<lb/>
8oz. cups-all flavors<lb/>
Joy Dishwashing Liquid<lb/>
e<lb/>
22oz 13 off label<lb/>
11b pkg<lb/>
16oz.<lb/>
COCA-COLA<lb/>
8-pak<lb/>
plus deposit<lb/>
99<lb/>
carton<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
1NMNM<lb/>
. W?W? ??.?.<lb/>
17 'Tmmmmm mmmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057223_0013"/><lb/>
Cotton Bowl possibilities<lb/>
Texas, Alabama to meet?<lb/>
By<lb/>
HERSCHEL N1SSENS0N<lb/>
AP Sports Writer<lb/>
Would you believe Ala-<lb/>
bama and Texas shooting it<lb/>
out for college football's<lb/>
national championship on<lb/>
New Year's Day in Dallas?<lb/>
It could happen, and in<lb/>
the same arena ? the<lb/>
Cotton Bowl ? where<lb/>
fourth-ranked Texas con-<lb/>
vincingly upended No. 3<lb/>
Oklahoma 16-7 Saturday<lb/>
what Alabama does. And<lb/>
Georgia will go even if it<lb/>
loses non-league games to<lb/>
Virginia and Georgia Tech<lb/>
and finishes 6-5.<lb/>
What the second-ranked<lb/>
Crimson Tide did Saturday<lb/>
was manhandle Florida 40-0<lb/>
while top-rated Southern<lb/>
California was held to a<lb/>
21-21 tie by Stanford,<lb/>
throwing the top spot in<lb/>
The Associated Press rat-<lb/>
ings up for grabs.<lb/>
Alabama, therefore,<lb/>
Those moans and groans could wind up 11-0 with a<lb/>
and gnashing of teeth you 20-game winning streak and<lb/>
hear are coming from the not represent the SEC in<lb/>
Sugar Bowl, which boasted New Orleans. And if Texas<lb/>
last season's national also is 11-0  interesting,<lb/>
championship match but isn't it?<lb/>
-ces another one easily However, all the intn-<lb/>
slipping away. guing possibilities and all of<lb/>
For example, if Georgia, Saturday's fireworks were<lb/>
2-3 overall but 2-0 in overshadowed by the start-<lb/>
Southeastern Conference ling development in Tempe,<lb/>
play after Saturday's 21-14 Arix where Arizona State<lb/>
triumph over 13th-ranked Coach Frank Kush was<lb/>
removed as coach after 23<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Kush says he was fired<lb/>
because his boss didn't<lb/>
believe him when he denied<lb/>
Louisiana State, wins its<lb/>
remaining SEC games a-<lb/>
gainst Vanderbilt and Au-<lb/>
burn, the Bulldogs will go<lb/>
to the Sugar Bowl no matter<lb/>
shine<lb/>
in Chapel Hill win<lb/>
By DICK BRINSTER<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
There may remain a<lb/>
number of nonbelievers, but<lb/>
it would be a safe bet to<lb/>
assume few possess ad-<lb/>
dresses which end<lb/>
27514. That is the U.S.<lb/>
Posval Service's zip code for<lb/>
Chapel Hill, N.C.<lb/>
They've heard of John<lb/>
Mackovic, Jay Venuto,<lb/>
James Parker and associ-<lb/>
s. The events of Satur-<lb/>
day have left those names<lb/>
permanently inscribed in<lb/>
the minds of football fans in<lb/>
the bustling college town<lb/>
that houses the University<lb/>
: North Carolina.<lb/>
Lawrence rushed tor i$4<lb/>
yards because Parker and<lb/>
his defensive cohorts<lb/>
"squeezed him<lb/>
The scouts, from the<lb/>
Orange and Peach bowls,<lb/>
decided to drop by after-<lb/>
with ward to say hello to<lb/>
Mackovic.<lb/>
"Sure, we could be an<lb/>
attractive bowl team he<lb/>
said Sunday. "When you<lb/>
put out money to see a<lb/>
game you'd like to see an<lb/>
interesting one<lb/>
With Venuto, who is<lb/>
among the nation's leaders<lb/>
in total offense, passing the<lb/>
ball up and down the field<lb/>
each week, it's a virtual<lb/>
certainty no one will expire<lb/>
that he hit a player last<lb/>
year. Dr. Fred Miller, the<lb/>
ASU athletic director, says<lb/>
Kush was suspended<lb/>
"pending further review of<lb/>
the matter<lb/>
Kush, whose record rose<lb/>
to 176-54-1 when he coach-<lb/>
ed an emotional Sun Devil<lb/>
team to a 12-7 upset of<lb/>
sixth-ranked Washington ?<lb/>
the dismissal was effective<lb/>
Sunday, with defensive<lb/>
coordinator Bob Owens<lb/>
taking over ? is being sued<lb/>
for $1 million by former<lb/>
ASU punter Kevin Rut-<lb/>
ledge, who accused the<lb/>
coach of punching him in<lb/>
the face after a poor kick<lb/>
last season.<lb/>
Kush was given a<lb/>
roaring welcome by more<lb/>
than 70,000 fans, many of<lb/>
whom carried banners sup-<lb/>
porting him. After the<lb/>
game, the players carried<lb/>
him off the field.<lb/>
Elsewhere, fifth-ranked<lb/>
Nebraska whipped Kansas<lb/>
42-0, No. 7 Houston nipped<lb/>
Texas A&amp;M 17-14, No. 8<lb/>
Ohio State trimmed Indiana<lb/>
47-6, No. 9 Florida State<lb/>
downed Mississippi State<lb/>
17-6 and No. 10 Notre<lb/>
Dame trounced Air Force<lb/>
38-13.<lb/>
In the Second Ten, No.<lb/>
14 North Carolina lost to<lb/>
Wake Forest 24-19, No. 15<lb/>
Missouri was edged by<lb/>
Oklahoma State 14-13 and<lb/>
No. 19 Michigan State<lb/>
bowed to Wisconsin 38-29.<lb/>
However, No. 11 Michi-<lb/>
gan beat Minnesota 31-21,<lb/>
No. 12 Arkansas defeated<lb/>
Texas Tech 20-6, No. 16<lb/>
Brigham Young outlasted<lb/>
Utah State 48-24, No. 17<lb/>
North Carolina State nosed<lb/>
out Maryland 7-0, No. 18<lb/>
Auburn trumped Vanderbilt<lb/>
52-35 and No. 20 Purdue<lb/>
beat Illinois 28-14.<lb/>
Meanwhile, Stanford's<lb/>
Turk Schonert threw touch-<lb/>
down passes of 19 yards to<lb/>
Mike Doterer and 9 yards to<lb/>
Ken Margerum and ran 10 Jimmy Jordan's passes to<lb/>
yards for the final score as Jackie Flowers<lb/>
the Cardinals wiped out<lb/>
Southern Cal's 21-0 halftime<lb/>
deficit.<lb/>
Alabama's fearsome de-<lb/>
fense held Florida to 66<lb/>
yards in total offense ?<lb/>
only 6 in the second half ?<lb/>
while second-string quar-<lb/>
terback Don Jacobs set up<lb/>
one touchdown with a<lb/>
24-yard run after a fake<lb/>
punt alignment and scored<lb/>
on a 73-yard gallop.<lb/>
Texas also unleashed a<lb/>
ferocious defense that held<lb/>
Oklahoma to 158 yards and<lb/>
ended Heisman Trophy<lb/>
winner Billy Sims' string of<lb/>
100-yard games at 13. Sims<lb/>
rushed for 73 on 20 carries,<lb/>
the longest a 16-yarder.<lb/>
Meanwhile, Texas' Steve<lb/>
Hall caught a 2-yard toss<lb/>
from Donnie Little late in<lb/>
the first half while John<lb/>
Goodson booted field goals<lb/>
of 37, 23 and 38 yards,<lb/>
giving him 14 in four<lb/>
games.<lb/>
"That<lb/>
is<lb/>
one great<lb/>
defensive unit said Okla-<lb/>
homa Coach Barry Switzer.<lb/>
"That was the factor in the<lb/>
game. Our offense just<lb/>
couldn't move<lb/>
"Our defense is one of<lb/>
the most experienced in the<lb/>
country echoed Texas'<lb/>
Fred Akers.<lb/>
Alabama and Texas<lb/>
might get a No. 1 argument<lb/>
from Nebraska. Tim Hager<lb/>
threw two touchdown pass-<lb/>
es and Craig Johnson ran<lb/>
for a couple to lead the<lb/>
Cornhuskers past Kansas.<lb/>
Meanwhile, sub quarterback<lb/>
Terry Elston rallied Houston<lb/>
over Texas A&amp;M by hitting<lb/>
on two passes for 55 yards<lb/>
in the final minute and<lb/>
scoring on a 5-yard keeper<lb/>
with only 15 seconds left.<lb/>
' Paul Campbell scored<lb/>
twice while Art Schlichter<lb/>
ran for one score and<lb/>
passed for another as Ohio<lb/>
State mauled Indiana.<lb/>
for one TD and set up<lb/>
another as Florida State<lb/>
turned back Mississippi<lb/>
State. Vagas Ferguson<lb/>
scored twice and Rusty<lb/>
Lisch passed for two<lb/>
touchdowns in Notre<lb/>
Dame's walloping of the Air<lb/>
Force.<lb/>
Butch Woolfolk scored,<lb/>
on runs of 58 and 41 yards!<lb/>
to lead Michigan over<lb/>
Minnesota while Arkansas<lb/>
used Gary Anderson's 57-<lb/>
yard punt return and a<lb/>
76-yard pass play from<lb/>
Kevin Scanlon to Bobby<lb/>
Duckworth in topping Texas<lb/>
Tech.<lb/>
Georgia got third-period<lb/>
touchdowns on Matt Sim-<lb/>
on's 11-yard run and Buck<lb/>
Belue's 11-yard pass to<lb/>
Carmon Prince in turning<lb/>
back LSU. James Mc-<lb/>
Dougald scored twice on<lb/>
short runs and Jay Venuto<lb/>
hit Albert Kirby on a<lb/>
60-yard pass play to lead<lb/>
Wake Forest past North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
16 Ortotw 1879 T?f m rHOUNIAN PM013<lb/>
Dioime Warwick<lb/>
says: "Get your<lb/>
blood into<lb/>
circulation<lb/>
Call Red Cross n<lb/>
for a blood donor<lb/>
appointment.<lb/>
Sub quarterback John<lb/>
Doerner threw touchdown<lb/>
passes of 15 yards to Ron<lb/>
Ingram and 10 to Mel<lb/>
Campbell in the second half<lb/>
as Oklahoma State rallied<lb/>
from a 13-0 halftime deficit<lb/>
to beat Missouri. Marc<lb/>
Wilson passed for 372 yards<lb/>
and two touchdowns while<lb/>
Eric Lane scored five times<lb/>
on short runs as BYU<lb/>
flattened Utah State.<lb/>
Dwight Sullivan's 14:yard<lb/>
run in the third quarter<lb/>
enabled N.C. State to beat<lb/>
Maryland.<lb/>
CATERING SERVICE<lb/>
SPECIALIZING<lb/>
IN PIG PICKINS<lb/>
FAMILY STYLE-<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
INCLUDING: Bar-B-Q<lb/>
Fried Chicken Chicken Pastry<lb/>
Stew, Potatoes, and Slaw<lb/>
BUILDING A REPUTATION<lb/>
NOT DEPENDING ON ONE<lb/>
710 Greene St. Just Across<lb/>
The River Bridge 752-0090<lb/>
For il was on thai day from boredom at a Wake<lb/>
at Coach Mackovic Forest game.<lb/>
??-m?"WWWWWPWWW<lb/>
brought his Wake Forest<lb/>
Meatballs to town to do<lb/>
battle with Dick Crum's<lb/>
undefeated and 14th-ranked<lb/>
Tar Heels.<lb/>
Despite Wake Forest's<lb/>
4-1 record, the Demon<lb/>
Deacons were a two-touch-<lb/>
down underdog against<lb/>
North Carolina. They went<lb/>
home to Wrinston-Salem<lb/>
with a 24-19 victory, a 5-1<lb/>
record that includes three<lb/>
upsets (all on the road) and<lb/>
a piece of second place in<lb/>
the Atlantic Coast Con-<lb/>
ference.<lb/>
"Maybe said Mack-<lb/>
ovic when asked Sunday if<lb/>
the Deacons would be<lb/>
favored in Saturday's game<lb/>
with Maryland.<lb/>
The Terrapins, a peren-<lb/>
nial ACC power, dropped a<lb/>
7-0 decision to league<lb/>
leader North Carolina State.<lb/>
It was their third straight<lb/>
defeat.<lb/>
Being an underdog each<lb/>
week is making each Wake<lb/>
Forest victory that much<lb/>
more newsworthy. The<lb/>
Deacons, led by the passing<lb/>
of quarterback Venuto and<lb/>
the tackling of noseguard<lb/>
Parker, have been raising<lb/>
eyebrows all season.<lb/>
They were dubbed<lb/>
"Mackovic's Meatballs" in<lb/>
a Georgia newspaper the<lb/>
second week of the season<lb/>
when they ventured to<lb/>
Athens to play Vince<lb/>
Dooley's Bulldogs. Mack-<lb/>
ovic was furious with the<lb/>
label.<lb/>
A week later the Dea-<lb/>
cons slipped by talented<lb/>
East Carolina and Mackovic<lb/>
said something about a<lb/>
player being lost for the<lb/>
remainder of the "regular<lb/>
season He was thinking<lb/>
about a bowl bid.<lb/>
That drew its fair share<lb/>
of laughs. They're not<lb/>
laughing anymore.<lb/>
You see, there were<lb/>
bowl scouts at Kenan<lb/>
Stadium Saturday. They<lb/>
were there primarily to<lb/>
watch North Carolina, and<lb/>
Famous Amos Lawrence. <lb/>
it<lb/>
And there seems to be<lb/>
one additional guarantee.<lb/>
The games will be close.<lb/>
"I didn't know how it<lb/>
was going to go scorewise<lb/>
said Crum. "But I knew it<lb/>
would be close one way or<lb/>
another.<lb/>
To date the Deacons<lb/>
have won by seven, one,<lb/>
three, five and five points.<lb/>
Their only loss was a 17-14<lb/>
heartbreaker in the rain to<lb/>
N.C. State.<lb/>
But they can get that<lb/>
one back because the<lb/>
Wolfpack, despite its un-<lb/>
beaten 3-0 league mark, has<lb/>
been devastated by injuries.<lb/>
And its opponent Saturday<lb/>
is North Carolina, an angry<lb/>
4-1 football team.<lb/>
"There are upsets to be<lb/>
had Mackovic said last<lb/>
week.<lb/>
He should know about<lb/>
such things.<lb/>
Coach Bo Rein's Wolf-<lb/>
pack didn't need an upset<lb/>
to beat Maryland.<lb/>
"We decided that it<lb/>
didn't make any sense to<lb/>
get fancy against what is<lb/>
usually the best defense in<lb/>
the conference<lb/>
Class Rings<lb/>
$58.90<lb/>
From<lb/>
<lb/>
Make our store your<lb/>
Class Ring Headquarters<lb/>
? Name and other options available at nominal charge<lb/>
said Rein.<lb/>
2-4 Week Delivery<lb/>
Pizza inn,<lb/>
AMERICAS FAVORITE PUZA<lb/>
PIZZA BUFFET<lb/>
ALL THE PIZZA Al<lb/>
SALAD YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
$239<lb/>
Mon. - Fri. UtSO-ftOO<lb/>
Mon. fiP Tues. 6iOO-8tOO<lb/>
Evening buffet 0S.S9<lb/>
758-6266 Hwy 264 bypass Greenville ?If. C.<lb/>
V<lb/>
OVERTONES<lb/>
irade "A" Whole Fryers<lb/>
37 Lb.<lb/>
I Morrell Pride T-Bone -<lb/>
Sirloin Steaks<lb/>
$2.49 Lb.<lb/>
Argo Cream Style<lb/>
Golden Corn<lb/>
303 can 4$1.00<lb/>
Star Kist Chunk Light<lb/>
Tuna Fish<lb/>
6 OZ. Can 68 Limit two<lb/>
Soft N Pretty Toilet Tissue<lb/>
4 Roll Pkg. 78<lb/>
Bold Trial Size Detergent<lb/>
10 Per Envelope<lb/>
Campbell's Tomato Soup<lb/>
10 oz. can 18<lb/>
Golden Bananas<lb/>
4 LbS. $1.00 clip thl? coupon<lb/>
PepSi -C0lai6 oz. Cm. of 8, Plus Deposit, 88<lb/>
with this coupon and $7.50 food order excluding<lb/>
specials. Without coupon $1.08. Expires oct. 20. Limit<lb/>
Jl ???? Mr customer. Plea so have coupon clipped<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057223_0014"/><lb/>
Page 14 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 16 October 1979<lb/>
Pirates dominate Homecoming contest<lb/>
LEFT: Vern<lb/>
Davenport snares<lb/>
pass<lb/>
(Photo by Chap Gurley'<lb/>
RIGHT: Leander<lb/>
Green rolls right<lb/>
for part of his 113<lb/>
yards<lb/>
(Photo by Kip Sloane)<lb/>
ore<lb/>
? LEFT: Theod<lb/>
1 o<lb/>
Sutton takes<lb/>
handoff<lb/>
(Photo by Kip Sloane)<lb/>
RIGHT: George<lb/>
Crump, Doug<lb/>
Smith sack QB<lb/>
Tim Russell<lb/>
(Photo by Chap Gurley)<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
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WEEK OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
$175.00 "all inclusive'<lb/>
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further information call 832-0535 (toll-<lb/>
free number 800-221-2568) between<lb/>
9 A M -5 P M weekdays<lb/>
Raleigh Women's Health<lb/>
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917 West Morgan St.<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C. 27603<lb/>
SAAD'S SHOE<lb/>
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113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
Quality Shoe Repair<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY STORE!<lb/>
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Jackets, Peacoats. Parkas,<lb/>
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Over 400 Different Gl Items, ?<lb/>
1501 S. Evans Street i v<lb/>
Leather Belts<lb/>
$6 to $19<lb/>
Leather Handbags<lb/>
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Riggan Shoe Repair<lb/>
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Parking in Front<lb/>
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A Convenient<lb/>
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Meal plans accepted<lb/>
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Permanent Removal<lb/>
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103 Oakmont Dr. Greenville<lb/>
756-3780<lb/>
Tues.Wed.Fri. 10:00-5:00<lb/>
Thurs. 2:00-7:00<lb/>
Distributed By<lb/>
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IMPORTED<lb/>
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17 W. 4th Si. 402 Evans St.<lb/>
Ireenville, N.C. 27834 Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
)pen 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Downtown on the Mall<lb/>
Open.l0:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m<lb/>
ill<lb/>
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jffi?  , m<lb/>
a ???<lb/>
Reg. $269.95<lb/>
NOW<lb/>
Model KD-25<lb/>
REG. $389.95<lb/>
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REG. $229.95<lb/>
o-<lb/>
Model QL-F4<lb/>
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AMFM Stereo Receiver-35W RMS X2,20-20KHz (FTC) 0.03 THD, DC Amp and SEA<lb/>
JVC<lb/>
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Model QL-A2<lb/>
NOW<lb/>
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REG. $189.95<lb/>
$15995<lb/>
j<lb/>
mass cfttrgi<lb/>
 <lb/>
"OUR QUALITY PRODUCTS<lb/>
ARE BACKED BY<lb/>
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am<lb/>
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See Us<lb/>
Today!<lb/>
i<lb/>
t<lb/>
irjrrv  ???? rvrv-?r ? ?- -?,?,? .<lb/>
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