<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057227_0001"/>
"Were it left to me<lb/>
to decide whether<lb/>
we should have a<lb/>
government without<lb/>
newspapers or<lb/>
newspapers without<lb/>
government, I<lb/>
should not hesitate<lb/>
a moment to prefer<lb/>
the latter<lb/>
?Thomas Jefferson<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Tuesday, October 30,1979<lb/>
If you have a story<lb/>
idea, a tip, or a<lb/>
lead, please tele-<lb/>
phone us:<lb/>
757-6386<lb/>
757-6367<lb/>
757-6309<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
SGA legislature<lb/>
postpones funds<lb/>
What apparently began as a spontaneous Halloween celebration on Oct. 31, 1975 ended as a small-scale riot<lb/>
involving 56 arrests. (photo by pete podeszwa)<lb/>
Riots remembered<lb/>
By TERRY GRAY<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Some seniors and<lb/>
graduate students may<lb/>
recall it, but few other at<lb/>
ECU remember the Hal-<lb/>
loween riot of 1975. It was<lb/>
one of the most provoca-<lb/>
tive events that ever<lb/>
occurred in Greenville,<lb/>
and its effects are not<lb/>
entirely absent today.<lb/>
Late on the night of<lb/>
October 31, 1975, a group<lb/>
of approximately 500 peo-<lb/>
ple, most of them ECU<lb/>
students, assembled spon-<lb/>
taneously in the downtown<lb/>
area. The Halloween<lb/>
crowd, many of them<lb/>
dressed in costumes, grew<lb/>
so large and unruly that<lb/>
traffic on Cotanche Street<lb/>
was blocked. What hap-<lb/>
pened afterwards was to<lb/>
become a subject of<lb/>
year-long investigation and<lb/>
debate.<lb/>
In a statement released<lb/>
later that week, Greenville<lb/>
Police Chief E.G. Cannon<lb/>
said that by 11:45 p.m<lb/>
the 'riotous' crowd had<lb/>
become so unmanageable<lb/>
that additional assistance<lb/>
from State ABC officers<lb/>
and the Pitt County<lb/>
Sherriffs department had<lb/>
to be called in. By the<lb/>
time these officers arrived,<lb/>
said Cannon, "the revelers<lb/>
had gotten completely out<lb/>
of control, and I directed<lb/>
Lr. J.H. Tripp to use a<lb/>
megaphone and order the<lb/>
crowd to disperse from the<lb/>
area within five minutes. I<lb/>
further instructed the<lb/>
Lieutenant to warn them<lb/>
that anyone left in the<lb/>
area after five minutes<lb/>
would be arrested<lb/>
Instead of scattering,<lb/>
continued Cannon, the<lb/>
crowd seemed to get<lb/>
worse. At this point, police<lb/>
used a Pepper Fog (not<lb/>
tear gas) generator to<lb/>
move the crowd ? a tactic<lb/>
which did not work, but<lb/>
only served to enrage the<lb/>
group. Bricks and bottles<lb/>
flew, and the rear window<lb/>
of one of the police cars<lb/>
was broken out.<lb/>
Police answered with<lb/>
tear gas and dozens of<lb/>
arrests. The tear gas drove<lb/>
the crowd away, scattering<lb/>
the rioters into groups that<lb/>
fled to the intersection of<lb/>
Fifth and Reade Streets to<lb/>
reassemble.<lb/>
' m<lb/>
?,with no tear gas<lb/>
to protect them,<lb/>
they had no<lb/>
alternative but<lb/>
ii<lb/>
to retreat.<lb/>
99<lb/>
During the regrouping,<lb/>
Cannon said, one of the<lb/>
police officers was shot in<lb/>
the face with a pellet gun.<lb/>
"I then instructed my<lb/>
officers to make arrests for<lb/>
'inciting a riot At ap-<lb/>
proximately this time in<lb/>
the sequence of events,<lb/>
the Pepper Fog generator<lb/>
stopped working and our<lb/>
supply of tear gas was<lb/>
exhausted reported the<lb/>
police chief.<lb/>
Then, according to the<lb/>
report, a fire truck was<lb/>
dispatched to the scene<lb/>
and began spraying the<lb/>
crowd, which was advan-<lb/>
cing again up Fifth Street<lb/>
towards the downtown<lb/>
area. The fire truck was<lb/>
soon called back to the<lb/>
Main Station by fire<lb/>
department supervisors,<lb/>
leaving a crowd of 300 in<lb/>
the street.<lb/>
"My officers  formed<lb/>
a riot control formation<lb/>
and tried to drive the<lb/>
crowd back once more.<lb/>
However, with no tear gas<lb/>
or shields to protect them<lb/>
from bricks, bottles and<lb/>
glass they had no alterna-<lb/>
tive but to retreat said<lb/>
Cannon.<lb/>
At this point, the<lb/>
rioters moved up Fifth<lb/>
Street, breaking store<lb/>
windows, damaging other<lb/>
property and looting a<lb/>
jewelry store window<lb/>
counter.<lb/>
Before the night was<lb/>
over, 56 persons were<lb/>
arrested and $3,075 in<lb/>
property damage had oc-<lb/>
curred. A total of 54 law<lb/>
enforcement officers from<lb/>
three agencies had been<lb/>
involved in the distur-<lb/>
bance.<lb/>
This, of course, is the<lb/>
police version of the<lb/>
events, and it did not go<lb/>
uncontested. Although<lb/>
most of the charges<lb/>
against those arrested<lb/>
were subsequently drop-<lb/>
ped, the already-strained<lb/>
relations between ECU<lb/>
students and the Green-<lb/>
ville establishment were<lb/>
further weakened.<lb/>
In following issues of<lb/>
The Fountainhead, alter-<lb/>
native accounts were pub-<lb/>
lished. Most of these came<lb/>
from students, but at least<lb/>
one Greenville merchant<lb/>
wrote citizens of<lb/>
Greenville will not tolerate<lb/>
the undue force and war-<lb/>
like tactics that were used<lb/>
(by police) Friday night<lb/>
This statement reflects<lb/>
the general concensus that<lb/>
developed among stu-<lb/>
dents. Others, however,<lb/>
recalled Kent State and<lb/>
praised the police for their<lb/>
restraint in the face of<lb/>
such provocation. All a-<lb/>
greed that there was a<lb/>
serious lack of communi-<lb/>
cation between students<lb/>
and authorities.<lb/>
See RIOT, page 2<lb/>
By CHRIS CAGLE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Despite a plea from<lb/>
SGA President Brett Mel-<lb/>
vin, yesterday the legis-<lb/>
lature postponed the fund-<lb/>
ing of the SGA transit<lb/>
budget until the next<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
"The legislature must<lb/>
make a decision today<lb/>
which will affect it the rest<lb/>
of the year remarked<lb/>
Melvin.<lb/>
According to Melvin, if<lb/>
the transit system receives<lb/>
the $70,504.50 appropri-<lb/>
ation requested, there will<lb/>
be less money available<lb/>
for other campus organi-<lb/>
zations.<lb/>
Melvin remarked to the<lb/>
members, "The decision is<lb/>
not the transit getting<lb/>
money, but do we need to<lb/>
fund other organizations,<lb/>
also. The transit system<lb/>
serves 10,000 students a<lb/>
week. It is in need in<lb/>
future years, and more<lb/>
students are living off<lb/>
campus. Do we owe these<lb/>
students transportation on<lb/>
and off campus?"<lb/>
"The transit system<lb/>
helps to remedy the<lb/>
problem with parking on<lb/>
campus. It is the entire<lb/>
legislature's responsibility,<lb/>
not an individual. We are<lb/>
setting a precedent to-<lb/>
day he stated.<lb/>
Melvin also informed<lb/>
the legislature that Colonel<lb/>
Blake, assistant to the<lb/>
chancellor, and Leonard<lb/>
Fleming, operations man-<lb/>
ager of the transit system,<lb/>
had met with the Green-<lb/>
ville City Transit System<lb/>
to come up with an<lb/>
alternative and also to<lb/>
work out a feasible<lb/>
solution for the SGA<lb/>
Transit System.<lb/>
Katherine Vollmer, a<lb/>
member of the legislature,<lb/>
also spoke to the members<lb/>
regarding the transit sys-<lb/>
tem appropriation and the<lb/>
conduct and work of the<lb/>
members in the weekly<lb/>
meetings.<lb/>
There is no point<lb/>
ramgling on or staying<lb/>
here for a half-hour to an<lb/>
hour without doing what<lb/>
we came here to do. For<lb/>
all the new members, if<lb/>
you don't understand, ask<lb/>
questions. No one is going<lb/>
to look down on you<lb/>
because you don't under-<lb/>
Transit cut<lb/>
Normal service to resume<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Only about $100 in<lb/>
damage resulted from<lb/>
Wednesday's bus acci-<lb/>
Inside<lb/>
Today<lb/>
No respect<lb/>
see page 4<lb/>
Greek news<lb/>
seepage 5<lb/>
Beaux-arts Ball<lb/>
see page 6<lb/>
Soccer<lb/>
see page 10<lb/>
dent, but there is still only<lb/>
one SGA bus1 running<lb/>
today.<lb/>
Two buses are ex-<lb/>
pected to be in operation<lb/>
tomorrow.<lb/>
According to Leonard<lb/>
Fleming, SGA transit<lb/>
manager, the backing<lb/>
lights and dents have been<lb/>
fixed on the bus involved<lb/>
in Wednesday's accident.<lb/>
Fleming also said that<lb/>
some work was done on<lb/>
the bus's brake system.<lb/>
Fleming cited difficulty<lb/>
in finding parts to be the<lb/>
major reason for the buses<lb/>
not being in operation.<lb/>
The Purple route will<lb/>
be running today, and the<lb/>
Purple and Gold routes<lb/>
will be running on Wed-<lb/>
nesday.<lb/>
The driver involved in<lb/>
Wednesday's fender<lb/>
bender will probably go<lb/>
through a proposed driver<lb/>
training program, added<lb/>
Fleming.<lb/>
Fleming says the tran-<lb/>
sit system may install a<lb/>
driver training and re-<lb/>
training program for all of<lb/>
their drivers.<lb/>
Freddy Simon, one of<lb/>
the current drivers, will be<lb/>
conducting the retraining<lb/>
seminars.<lb/>
Drivers will be taken<lb/>
on each of the routes and<lb/>
then asked to drive the<lb/>
routes again. On the<lb/>
second run they will<lb/>
receive a pass-fail grade,<lb/>
according to Fleming.<lb/>
Simon will be pre-<lb/>
senting the proposal to<lb/>
Fleming, and it is ex-<lb/>
pected to be put into<lb/>
action as soon as possible.<lb/>
"Nothing can be done<lb/>
overnight said Fleming,<lb/>
referring to the problems<lb/>
the SGA has had with the<lb/>
buses in the past 10<lb/>
months.<lb/>
Ana Sanchez<lb/>
From Asseri to ECU<lb/>
By MARGARET BUNCH<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Ana Sanchez is a<lb/>
bright, happy person who<lb/>
laughs frequently when<lb/>
she talks, especially if she<lb/>
has to hesitate for an<lb/>
English word to complete<lb/>
a sentence. Even though<lb/>
she has had only two and<lb/>
one half years of formal<lb/>
English training, she is<lb/>
attending East Carolina<lb/>
University, studying En-<lb/>
glish literature and lin-<lb/>
guistics and getting along<lb/>
very well to be a 'stranger<lb/>
in a strange land<lb/>
Ana is one of the<lb/>
students who have come to<lb/>
East Carolina to study as a<lb/>
result of a cooperative<lb/>
program between ECU<lb/>
and the Unbersidad<lb/>
Nacional in Costa Rica.<lb/>
The Universidad is about<lb/>
the same size as ECU,<lb/>
having 11,000 students.<lb/>
The exchange program is<lb/>
not the classic exchange<lb/>
with students being traded<lb/>
for students, but a trade of<lb/>
facilities at the Univer-<lb/>
sidad Nacional for three<lb/>
assistantships at East<lb/>
Carolina for Costa Rican<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Ana, an undergraduate<lb/>
senior, works in the<lb/>
Spanish Language Lab six<lb/>
hours per week and<lb/>
teaches Spanish four hours<lb/>
per week in the fifth grade<lb/>
at Wahl-Coates School.<lb/>
Another Costa Rican stu-<lb/>
dent, Miguel Gutierrez, is<lb/>
working on the graduate<lb/>
level in the School of<lb/>
Education at ECU.<lb/>
Asseri, a small town<lb/>
about the size of Green<lb/>
ville, is Ana's home town<lb/>
and she describes it as<lb/>
being very much like<lb/>
Greenville with its own<lb/>
Hardee's, McDonald's and<lb/>
Pizza Hut. She is im-<lb/>
pressed by the friendliness<lb/>
of the people in Green-<lb/>
ville, likes the movies very<lb/>
much, enjoys the ECU<lb/>
band at football games,<lb/>
but is not impressed by<lb/>
the discos which have not<lb/>
reached her home town in<lb/>
Costa Rica as yet. She<lb/>
attended the Pitt county<lb/>
fair and has been to<lb/>
Atlantic Beach, both new<lb/>
experiences for her. Ana<lb/>
would like very much to<lb/>
see California, but says<lb/>
that she "does not know<lb/>
why" as she pronounces<lb/>
every syllable in 'Califor-<lb/>
nia' distinctly in a Spanish<lb/>
accent. i<lb/>
See SANCHEZ, page 5 Ana Sanchez with Dr. Cramer<lb/>
(Photo by M. Balnea)<lb/>
stand Vollmer said.<lb/>
"Between the transit<lb/>
system and the executive<lb/>
salaries, both are going to<lb/>
take up the entire bulk of<lb/>
what we have to appro-<lb/>
priate. Think about it ?<lb/>
the decision you make<lb/>
today will determine the<lb/>
rest of the meetings, is<lb/>
SGA just going to fund the<lb/>
transit system or other<lb/>
organizations<lb/>
Transit System Admin-<lb/>
istration Manager Chubby<lb/>
Abshire spoke to the<lb/>
members regarding the<lb/>
importance of the appro-<lb/>
priation and the transit<lb/>
system. "We serve more<lb/>
people off campus than<lb/>
on, and the students who<lb/>
live off campus pay as<lb/>
much as the ones who live<lb/>
on campus<lb/>
According to Abshire,<lb/>
the transit system is<lb/>
operating now with three<lb/>
buses because of the<lb/>
wreck last week of the<lb/>
fourth bus. The two big<lb/>
buses were purchased in<lb/>
1975 and are designed for<lb/>
road travel and charter<lb/>
purposes, not for the use<lb/>
of travel around town. The<lb/>
other buses were bought<lb/>
in 1971 and the legislature<lb/>
supposedly set aside mon-<lb/>
ey for new buses.<lb/>
"Before long we will<lb/>
not have a transit system.<lb/>
The buses should have<lb/>
been gradually taken care<lb/>
of. We are trying this year<lb/>
to turn it around. Unless<lb/>
we pull the system back<lb/>
we won't have buses so<lb/>
we should be putting<lb/>
money aside now Ab-<lb/>
shire said. The transit<lb/>
system now owes a great<lb/>
deal of money for repairs.<lb/>
If the transit had not used<lb/>
vans this summer it would<lb/>
be operating in the red,<lb/>
but instead it saved<lb/>
$6,000, according to Ab-<lb/>
shire.<lb/>
Judy Allpn, chairper-<lb/>
son of the appropriations<lb/>
committee, spoke to the<lb/>
legislature regarding the<lb/>
amendment of the transit<lb/>
system bill. "As of<lb/>
November 1, the transit<lb/>
system will e out of<lb/>
money for gas, etc. The<lb/>
essence of bringing it out<lb/>
early is to the transit's<lb/>
advantage commented<lb/>
Allen.<lb/>
See SGA, page 2<lb/>
1 Leonard Fleming (P100 hr ChaP Gurley)<lb/>
NAACP against<lb/>
UNC proposal<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP)<lb/>
?A new proposal by the<lb/>
University of North Car-<lb/>
olina to resolve a desegre-<lb/>
gation dispute with federal<lb/>
officials has drawn criti-<lb/>
cism from the NAACP<lb/>
Legal Defense and Ed-<lb/>
ucation Fund.<lb/>
Joseph Rauh, an at-<lb/>
torney for the group, said<lb/>
in an interview that the<lb/>
UNC proposal to review<lb/>
duplicating programs on<lb/>
its 16 campuses again is<lb/>
weaker than earlier plans<lb/>
already rejected by Joe<lb/>
Califano, former secretary<lb/>
of the Department of<lb/>
Health, Education and<lb/>
Welfare.<lb/>
"If they buy this,<lb/>
they've sold out integra-<lb/>
tion. It's so much weaker<lb/>
than what Joe turned<lb/>
down. It's hard to under-<lb/>
stand how North Carolina<lb/>
would have the chutzpah<lb/>
to offer it Rauh said.<lb/>
The NCCAP Legal<lb/>
Defense Fund is among<lb/>
the agencies that have<lb/>
called for a shutoff of<lb/>
nearly 196 million in<lb/>
federal funds to the UNC<lb/>
system. HEW has de-<lb/>
manded that UNC elimi-<lb/>
nate some of its duplicat-<lb/>
ing programs on the<lb/>
various campusues to en-<lb/>
courage racial mixing.<lb/>
An administrative<lb/>
hearing on the dispute is<lb/>
scheduled for next March.<lb/>
Rauh charged that the<lb/>
latest UNC proposal "is<lb/>
nothing but a political<lb/>
plan, but the way the<lb/>
White House is giving<lb/>
away dough for political<lb/>
purposes, they may well<lb/>
give away civil rights<lb/>
"Since Gov. Jim Hunt<lb/>
is head of the Democratic<lb/>
governors for Carter, any-<lb/>
thing can happen he<lb/>
said. Rauh has supported<lb/>
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy,<lb/>
D-Mass for the Demo-<lb/>
cratic presidential nomin-<lb/>
ation.<lb/>
The UNC proposal was<lb/>
among the problems that<lb/>
will be turned over to<lb/>
Roma J. Stewart, a<lb/>
43-year-old black lawyer<lb/>
designated Friday aa the<lb/>
new director of HEW's<lb/>
Office of Civil Rights. Ms.<lb/>
Stewart, whose specialty<lb/>
bas been employee-dis-<lb/>
crimination ante, wiM suc-<lb/>
ceed David S. Tatel, who<lb/>
has resigned.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057227_0002"/><lb/>
Page 2 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 30 Qctahur 1070<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
continued from page 1<lb/>
According to Allen,<lb/>
purchasing a 15-passenger<lb/>
van and cutting spending<lb/>
on motor vehicle and office<lb/>
supplies in the long run<lb/>
will save money. The<lb/>
15-passenger van can be<lb/>
used on the brown route<lb/>
and night routes.<lb/>
Abshire told the legis-<lb/>
lature, "This bill is very,<lb/>
very important. The mon-<lb/>
ey belongs to us, we are<lb/>
entitled to $3 per person<lb/>
each semester and there is<lb/>
an average enrollment of<lb/>
12,000 students each year.<lb/>
We let the SGA hold on to<lb/>
our money for us, and<lb/>
what we don't need we<lb/>
give back to the SGA he<lb/>
added.<lb/>
Strikers reach<lb/>
tentative truce<lb/>
TARBORO, N.C. (AP)<lb/>
?Carolina Telephone and<lb/>
Telegraph Co. and the<lb/>
Communications Workers<lb/>
of America reached a<lb/>
tentative agreement Sat-<lb/>
urday on a new two-year<lb/>
contract, but a union<lb/>
official said the union's<lb/>
negotiating committee<lb/>
would not take a position<lb/>
on the proposal.<lb/>
Delbert Gordon, chair-<lb/>
man of the union's negot-<lb/>
iating committee, said it<lb/>
would not recommend that<lb/>
the union members either<lb/>
i<lb/>
approve or disapprove of<lb/>
the proposed contract.<lb/>
"We are merely taking<lb/>
it back for a vote he<lb/>
said. But he added that<lb/>
"The Great bus will<lb/>
not take us on now unless<lb/>
we can stand on our own<lb/>
feet<lb/>
In other business, SGA<lb/>
Treasurer Ricky Lowe<lb/>
reported that $103,212.14<lb/>
is available for appropria-<lb/>
tion this year.<lb/>
SGA Speaker Mike<lb/>
Adkins read a letter to<lb/>
legislators from Chancellor<lb/>
Brewer regarding the ex-<lb/>
tension of library hours, a<lb/>
suggestion discussed ear-<lb/>
lier.<lb/>
According to Brewer,<lb/>
the library hours at ECU<lb/>
are comparable to other<lb/>
universities. Library hours<lb/>
are longer than those at<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill, USC and<lb/>
Princeton. Also, the hours<lb/>
here are extended during<lb/>
exam time.<lb/>
RIOT<lb/>
continued from page 1<lb/>
The SGA of that year<lb/>
reacted swiftly and formed<lb/>
a committee to investigate<lb/>
the incident.<lb/>
The work of this<lb/>
committee began a dia-<lb/>
logue between ECU stu-<lb/>
dents and Greenville city<lb/>
government which con-<lb/>
tinues to this day. As a<lb/>
result of their efforts, a<lb/>
non-voting position on city<lb/>
council was created for the<lb/>
President of the SGA. This<lb/>
council seat still exists,<lb/>
and provides the council<lb/>
with student input when-<lb/>
ever the need arises.<lb/>
Another result of the<lb/>
Halloween riot was a<lb/>
process of mutual educa-<lb/>
tion between police, stu-<lb/>
dents and authorities. In<lb/>
the weeks following the<lb/>
riot, The Fountainhead<lb/>
published several articles<lb/>
analysing all sides of the<lb/>
event, including comments<lb/>
from police, students,<lb/>
faculty, administration and<lb/>
city government.<lb/>
As Halloween ap-<lb/>
proaches us four years<lb/>
later, memories of the<lb/>
night of October, 1975 are<lb/>
all hut faded away. But<lb/>
after all was said and<lb/>
done, after the tear gas<lb/>
and the bricks, after the<lb/>
arrests and the hard<lb/>
feelings, Greenville em-<lb/>
erged with a new con-<lb/>
sciousness of the different<lb/>
elements that make up<lb/>
its community. It was an<lb/>
awareness bought with<lb/>
sticks and stones, and one, Greenville police battled rioters with tear gas and physical force on th<lb/>
that has made words of Oct. 31, 1975.<lb/>
reason all the more<lb/>
possible today.<lb/>
e night of<lb/>
the<lb/>
had<lb/>
agreement<lb/>
50-50 percent chance of<lb/>
not passing He said the<lb/>
membership vote should<lb/>
be completed by mid-<lb/>
week.<lb/>
' i mTFt 'j J<lb/>
PRESBYTERIAN STUDENT MINISTRY<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 2783<lb/>
the" DEN<lb/>
401 E. 9th St.<lb/>
Stewart LaNeave, Campus Minister<lb/>
A listening ear<lb/>
A sounding board<lb/>
A guiding spirit<lb/>
Z52r72WOR758-qi5<lb/>
PROGRAMS AT THE DEN<lb/>
Tuesdays 5:30 $1.50<lb/>
Dinner &amp; Bible Study<lb/>
Sundays<lb/>
10:00 Free<lb/>
Coffee, Donuts, Discussion<lb/>
(A ride to 11:00 worship at<lb/>
First Presbyterian Church)<lb/>
Thursdays<lb/>
I<lb/>
12:30<lb/>
Bring your burger lunch<lb/>
Fellowship &amp; Discussion<lb/>
Free Tea or Soft Drink<lb/>
l<lb/>
it's Miller time<lb/>
ica<lb/>
l3,<lb/>
CLIFF'S<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
.ini.iT ?? C Bin iO???? w??"?<lb/>
1 ?d vn<lb/>
AIX YOU<lb/>
a.7t CAVEAT!<lb/>
MONDAY-THURSDAY<lb/>
TROUT, FLOUNDER,<lb/>
CRAB CAKES<lb/>
TEA is included with meal<lb/>
CLIFF'S SUPER<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
CRAB CAKE SPECIAL<lb/>
2 Golden Fried Crab Cakes<lb/>
French Fries, Slaw, and<lb/>
Hushpuppies. Qf)c ?<lb/>
Students Supply Store<lb/>
of<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
announces an<lb/>
autographing session for<lb/>
the novel, Vision Quest,<lb/>
authored by Terry Davis<lb/>
of the<lb/>
English Dept. faculty<lb/>
MONDAY-TUESDAY-WEDNESDAY<lb/>
Do You Dare to Come To<lb/>
D.A. Kelly's House of Values?<lb/>
Our Goulies have gone all out with prices that will shake you up.<lb/>
MONDAY AND TUESDAY<lb/>
PRE-HALLOWEEN SALES<lb/>
20-30<lb/>
Off Selected<lb/>
Fall Merchandise<lb/>
REGISTER FOR A BEAUTIFUL<lb/>
HIGH FASHIOH WARDROBE<lb/>
VALUED AT $200.00<lb/>
Also register for a "Trick or a Treat<lb/>
No purchase necessary. Do not have<lb/>
to be present to win.<lb/>
HALLOWEEN DAY<lb/>
SURPRISE JAR OF<lb/>
TREATS<lb/>
YOU GUESS THE<lb/>
AMOUNT-ANDWIN A<lb/>
$25.00 GIFT CERTIFICATE.<lb/>
The novel, Vision Quest, has been highly<lb/>
received by many critics and is scheduled for<lb/>
printings in French in the near future.<lb/>
John Irving, author off The World According to<lb/>
Garp, has this to say:<lb/>
DURING WEDNESDAY, COME<lb/>
DOWN &amp; "BOB" FOR A COUPON<lb/>
DISCOUNTAND IF YOU<lb/>
ARE ESPECIALLY DARING-<lb/>
FEEL YOUR WAY FOR ANOTHER<lb/>
POSSIBLE HIGH FASHION OUTFIT.<lb/>
"Terry Davis is a wonderful storyteller<lb/>
?comic and wise. Vision Quest is the<lb/>
truest novel about growing up since<lb/>
The Catcher in the Rye; and it's a bet-<lb/>
ter novel about wrestling, and wres-<lb/>
tlers, than The World According to<lb/>
Garp?John Irving<lb/>
Mr. Davis will be in the Students Supply<lb/>
Store Wednesday, Oct. 31, from 2:00pm<lb/>
to 4:00pm to autograph copies of his book<lb/>
BE SURE TO SHOP<lb/>
<lb/>
DOWNTOWN EVANS MALL<lb/>
OCTOBER 29, 30, 31 FOR<lb/>
THESE BEWITCHING SALES<lb/>
"All Trickers Will Be Treated<lb/>
Open 9-6<lb/>
20 OFF<lb/>
ANY ONE ITEM<lb/>
One coupon per customer<lb/>
)<lb/>
<pb facs="00057227_0003"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
Pecple. places, and<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Pare 3<lb/>
law<lb/>
The Law School Ad-<lb/>
mission Test will be<lb/>
offered at East Carolina<lb/>
University on Saturday,<lb/>
December 1, 1979. Appli-<lb/>
cation blanks are to be<lb/>
completed and mailed to<lb/>
Educational Testing Ser-<lb/>
vice, Box 966-R, Prince-<lb/>
ton, NJ 08540. Regis-<lb/>
tration deadline is Nov. 5,<lb/>
1979. Applications may be<lb/>
obtained from the ECU<lb/>
Testing Center, Speight<lb/>
Building Room 105.<lb/>
ll 4til l?l Isll CCISC<lb/>
supfc<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Program Board will meet<lb/>
Nov. 1, at 7 p.m. in Room<lb/>
212 of Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
May we remind stu-<lb/>
dents that all announce-<lb/>
ments for the People,<lb/>
Places and column must<lb/>
be typewritten, double<lb/>
spaced, and turned in<lb/>
before the deadline, or<lb/>
they will not be accepted.<lb/>
These rules will be strictly<lb/>
enforced.<lb/>
We cannot guarantee<lb/>
that all of the announce-<lb/>
ments that we receive will<lb/>
be published, but we will<lb/>
do our best.<lb/>
Deadlines are 2 p.m.<lb/>
on Tuesday for the Thurs-<lb/>
day edition and 2 p.m.<lb/>
Friday for the Tuesday<lb/>
edition.<lb/>
All announcements<lb/>
should be directed to the<lb/>
news editor only.<lb/>
There wiH be a Rho<lb/>
Epsilon meeting on Thurs-<lb/>
day, November 1 at 4:00<lb/>
p.m. in Room 221 Men-<lb/>
denhall. All members are<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
act<lb/>
The American College<lb/>
Testing (ACT) will be<lb/>
offered at East Carolina<lb/>
University on Saturday,<lb/>
December 8, 1979. Appli-<lb/>
cation blanks are to be<lb/>
completed and mailed to<lb/>
ACT Registration, P.O.<lb/>
Box 414, Iowa City, Iowa<lb/>
52240. Registration dead-<lb/>
line is November 9, 1979.<lb/>
Applications may be ob-<lb/>
tained from the ECU<lb/>
Testing Center, Speight<lb/>
Building Room 105.<lb/>
bowling<lb/>
Take advantage of<lb/>
these bowling specials at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Cen-<lb/>
ter: "Red Pin Bowling" ?<lb/>
7 p.m. to 10 p.m. every<lb/>
Sunday bowlers get a<lb/>
chance to win one FREE<lb/>
GAME with every game<lb/>
bowled. "Rent-A-Lane" ?<lb/>
Every Saturday from 12<lb/>
noon to 6 p.m. you can<lb/>
rent a lane for $3.00 for<lb/>
one hour. "Discount Day"<lb/>
? 13 off the price of<lb/>
bowling every Monday<lb/>
from 2 p.m. until 6 p.m.<lb/>
There are immediate<lb/>
openings for tutors of<lb/>
Chemistry 1120 and 1050.<lb/>
Applicants may be grad-<lb/>
uates or undergraduate<lb/>
students who are profi-<lb/>
cient in these areas.<lb/>
Contact Dr. Bridwell or<lb/>
Dr. Hensel in 208 Rags-<lb/>
dale Hall or call the<lb/>
Center for Student Oppor-<lb/>
tunities at 757-6122, 6081,<lb/>
or 6075.<lb/>
CORSO, the club for<lb/>
those interested in either<lb/>
social work or corrections<lb/>
will meet this Tuesday,<lb/>
Oct. 30 at 5 p.m. in Belk<lb/>
A-101. All members and<lb/>
prospective members are<lb/>
urged to attend this<lb/>
important meeting. A spe-<lb/>
cial welcome is extended<lb/>
to all recently accepted<lb/>
majors into the depart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Jaycees<lb/>
The Greenville Jaycees<lb/>
will be sponsoring a<lb/>
Haunted House during the<lb/>
Halloween season. The<lb/>
dates will be October<lb/>
20-22 and October 25th<lb/>
through Halloween night.<lb/>
One third of the proceeds<lb/>
will go towards assisting<lb/>
in the construction of the<lb/>
local Boys' Club. The<lb/>
house will be located on<lb/>
Airport Road and will open<lb/>
at 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
plhciie bccfe?<lb/>
The 1979-80 phone<lb/>
books are in. If you do not<lb/>
have one yet, they are<lb/>
available in the SGA office<lb/>
located on the second floor<lb/>
of Mendenhall, Room 228.<lb/>
Ml I US. I<lb/>
ecu ccc<lb/>
The ECU Collegiate<lb/>
Civital Club will have an<lb/>
organizational meeting at<lb/>
7 p.m. on Nov. 6 in<lb/>
Flanagan 201.<lb/>
The ECU Club is<lb/>
sponsored by the Green-<lb/>
ville Civital Club.<lb/>
Collegiate Civitan Clubs<lb/>
are dedicated to service to<lb/>
others with special em-<lb/>
phasis on mental health<lb/>
and mental retardation.<lb/>
Any student carrying 12<lb/>
semester hours or more is<lb/>
eligible to become a<lb/>
member. For further in-<lb/>
formation, see Dr. R.A.<lb/>
Klein, Flanagan 235 or<lb/>
phone 757-6274.<lb/>
si i tt le bus<lb/>
The shuttle bus be-<lb/>
tween the Allied Health<lb/>
Building and Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Union will not<lb/>
operate after November 2,<lb/>
1979.<lb/>
iriur<lb/>
There will be a general<lb/>
meeting of the ECU<lb/>
chapter of Model United<lb/>
Nations this Thursday at<lb/>
2:00 in Brewster C-105.<lb/>
All members and inter-<lb/>
ested people are urged to<lb/>
attend as we will be<lb/>
making preliminary plans<lb/>
for the upcoming con-<lb/>
ference at the University<lb/>
of Pennsylvania. No prior<lb/>
experience is necessary.<lb/>
amerccin<lb/>
If you like pinball, pool<lb/>
or foosball, the place to be<lb/>
is the MRC GAMEROOM.<lb/>
Located in the basement of<lb/>
Aycock Dorm, it is open<lb/>
from 10 a.m12 p.m.<lb/>
every day. The gameroom<lb/>
also serves as the check-<lb/>
out area for tents, canoes,<lb/>
car racks and life preser-<lb/>
vers. Remember, the<lb/>
Men's Residence Council<lb/>
provides these services.<lb/>
?hardball<lb/>
An organizational<lb/>
meeting for women's and<lb/>
men's Team Handball<lb/>
Clubs will be held on<lb/>
Thursday, Nov. 1, at 3:30<lb/>
p.m. in 104 Memorial<lb/>
Gym. All students inter-<lb/>
ested in this action-packed<lb/>
Olympic sport are invited<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
(re<lb/>
I 14 l II ill<lb/>
The ECU Racquetball<lb/>
Club is trying to identify<lb/>
all interested faculty, staff<lb/>
and students. Clinics and<lb/>
tournaments are being<lb/>
planned with competition<lb/>
between schools being<lb/>
scheduled. All interested<lb/>
persons, please contact<lb/>
Nancy Mize, 757-6387, 204<lb/>
Memorial Gym.<lb/>
The Graduate Record<lb/>
Examination will be offer-<lb/>
ed at East Carolina<lb/>
University on Saturday,<lb/>
January 12, 1980. Appli-<lb/>
cation blanks are to be<lb/>
completed and mailed to<lb/>
Educational Testing Ser-<lb/>
vice, Box 966-R, JPrine.<lb/>
ton, NJ 08540r ? Regfsrrr-<lb/>
tion deadline is November<lb/>
28, 1979. Applications may<lb/>
be obtained from the ECU<lb/>
Testing Center, Speight<lb/>
Building, Room 105.<lb/>
The James B. Mallory<lb/>
Men's Residence Council<lb/>
scholarship will be award-<lb/>
ed this semester to a<lb/>
young man who is a<lb/>
member of the Men's<lb/>
Residence Council. The<lb/>
scholarship will be based<lb/>
on need and residence hall<lb/>
contributions. Applicants<lb/>
must have at least a 2.5<lb/>
grade point average. Ap-<lb/>
-pffC&amp;ffons-Tnay te picked<lb/>
up in each dorm coun-<lb/>
selor's office.<lb/>
Got a story,<lb/>
idea, lead,<lb/>
or tip ?<lb/>
Let us<lb/>
KNOW!<lb/>
Call 757-6366<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Friday's Seafood<lb/>
2311S. Evans St.<lb/>
LUNCH ONLY<lb/>
Lunch 11:30-2:30<lb/>
SunThurs. 430-9:00<lb/>
Fri. and Sat. 4:30-10:00<lb/>
MOP Ladle's Day-Free trip<lb/>
to salad bar with<lb/>
each full meal<lb/>
ZlLSSi Ladle's Day<lb/>
Free cap of clam<lb/>
chowder with each<lb/>
full meal<lb/>
$2.2$<lb/>
Soup n'Salad<lb/>
$1.75<lb/>
Fri. all the trout you can<lb/>
eat for $1.99 with<lb/>
fries and slaw<lb/>
SMfl. Family Day<lb/>
? Lunch and Dinner<lb/>
All yon can eat<lb/>
Shrimp $4-9$<lb/>
Oysters $47$<lb/>
Flounder $3.$o<lb/>
Trout $2.9$<lb/>
MonThurs. $-10<lb/>
Frl.C Sat. $-10s3Q<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised Hems is re-<lb/>
qutoBd to be readily available for Mte ??<lb/>
Pelow the advertised price in each AAP<lb/>
Sjora except at specificity noted in this<lb/>
OOOOTWRUSilBMOV.3ATiUPIwQreen?illSr N.C.<lb/>
Greenville Square<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Start Your Collection<lb/>
Of Sparkling Italian<lb/>
Glass  Now<lb/>
iUST FOLLOW THIS WEEKLY FEATURE SCHEOULE<lb/>
?? em P"c?' 9 " Fe?'u'?J Wee only<lb/>
AN?f FeatufeJ Week each ,tem m avaoatxe at Regular H?.<lb/>
No additonal purchase s requ.ced anytime on any ,iem<lb/>
?fOuc??<lb/>
ZSm OIHfK<lb/>
 ?K? WHS<lb/>
!? 1 12'i-o water goblet<lb/>
2 13-oz double on-the-rocks<lb/>
 3 8-oz red wine<lb/>
4 9i-02 on-the-rocks<lb/>
? 5 6-oz white wine<lb/>
? 7-oz cocktail<lb/>
? 7 6-oz champagne sherbert<lb/>
?? 11-oz hi ball<lb/>
AMD THE FOLLOWING<lb/>
ARC ON SALE AT ALL TIMES.<lb/>
6-inch ash tray<lb/>
9-inch salad serving bowl<lb/>
4inch dessert bowl<lb/>
ice bucket<lb/>
NAVONA<lb/>
fiyM Aw  ,ft( f<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
1.99<lb/>
2.49<lb/>
49"<lb/>
3.99<lb/>
Fine Crystal Stemware<lb/>
? rjni. .1 oL. ?. - -<lb/>
Graceful elegant stemware and matching glasses So beauti-<lb/>
you can use them everyday And they can be vours at a<lb/>
fraction of what you d expect to pay Just shop a?p e?rv<lb/>
wSs v-Ti'LftSf'31 9laSS ?f ,he Week Start collecting<lb/>
yours, now Another reason you II do better at A4P<lb/>
LOOK AT THESE OUTSTANDING FEATURES<lb/>
" sZjl?? ten 9"assmafcers proud tradition of quality<lb/>
? and durable enough for everyday use<lb/>
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? Richly faceted design<lb/>
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Now, for a limited time at remarkable savings<lb/>
pSpTwg<lb/>
HOSTESS HAM<lb/>
OR<lb/>
A&amp;P FULLY COOKED SHANKLESS 5-LB<lb/>
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YOUR CHOICE<lb/>
SALE!<lb/>
EACH<lb/>
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BONE-IN<lb/>
AAP QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN-FED BEEF<lb/>
WHOLE BEEF<lb/>
t TO 13 LB. AVG. WT.<lb/>
CHUCK ROAST TENDERLOIN<lb/>
US DA INSPECTED<lb/>
MARKET STYLE<lb/>
FRESH FRYER ISLICED BACON<lb/>
BOX-O-CHICKEN<lb/>
 WECES<lb/>
tSONINC<lb/>
BACON<lb/>
388?<lb/>
C<lb/>
ASP COUPON<lb/>
A SUPERB BLEND, RICH IN BRAZILIAN COFFEES<lb/>
EIGHT O'CLOCK COFFEE<lb/>
$959<lb/>
CUSTOM GROUN<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH<lb/>
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LIMIT ONE COUPON<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT, NOV. 3 AT AAP IN GrSOnViilS N C<lb/>
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AAP COUPON<lb/>
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SEALTEST LIGHT N LIVELY<lb/>
UNIT ONE WITH<lb/>
THIS COUPON AND<lb/>
ADDITIONAL $7.50<lb/>
ORDER<lb/>
ICE MILK<lb/>
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LIMIT ONE COUPON<lb/>
GooDTHRusATNov.3ATAAP,N Qreenville, N.C.<lb/>
88<lb/>
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SOFT DRINKS<lb/>
ANN PAGE COLA<lb/>
2-LITER<lb/>
PLASTIC<lb/>
BOTTLE<lb/>
CHOCOLATE<lb/>
MILK gg(<lb/>
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ZIPPER SKINNED JWCV FLORIDA<lb/>
TANGERINES<lb/>
WHITE<lb/>
CAULIFLOWER<lb/>
: tti<lb/>
<pb facs="00057227_0004"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
&amp; Opinions<lb/>
Tuesday, October 30, 1979 Page 4<lb/>
Greenville, N.C,<lb/>
To crucify a movie<lb/>
Monty Python's latest movie, Life of<lb/>
Brian, is causing more controversy than<lb/>
it deserves, but no more than director<lb/>
Terry Jones expected.<lb/>
South Carolina Senator Strom<lb/>
Thurmond recently succeeded in closing<lb/>
the movie in Columbia after the heated<lb/>
protests of a minority of residents<lb/>
(constituents). If he had waited just two<lb/>
days, he would have seen an even<lb/>
larger demonstration in favor of<lb/>
showing the movie.<lb/>
People who have not seen the movie<lb/>
believe it is a spoof of the life of Christ.<lb/>
One of those people spearheaded the<lb/>
move to prevent Life of Brian from<lb/>
showing in the capital city. But if this<lb/>
gentleman had bothered to see the<lb/>
movie, he would have realized that it is<lb/>
not a spoof of Christ.<lb/>
"Life of Brian is about people; it<lb/>
just happens to be in Judea Jones<lb/>
explained in a recent interview with<lb/>
Rolling Stone. "We're laughing at man,<lb/>
not God. Nothing so divides men as<lb/>
belief in the same God<lb/>
If movies were to be closed down as'<lb/>
a result of popularity contests, there are<lb/>
many movies worse than Life of Brian.<lb/>
Thurmond acted on the spur of the<lb/>
moment, and he will probably regret it.<lb/>
The movie is reopening in Columbia<lb/>
and opened in Charleston with large<lb/>
crowds lining up for tickets.<lb/>
Unfortunately, Thurmond is not the<lb/>
only public figure to have heeded<lb/>
protests from religious groups in the<lb/>
Bible Belt and elsewhere, nor will he be<lb/>
the last. But these people should at<lb/>
least see the movie before making a<lb/>
judgement for the rest of the<lb/>
community if, in fact, they really have<lb/>
the right to do so.<lb/>
As for Life of Brian, it is right on<lb/>
target. The people living in Judea<lb/>
during the life of Christ were a joke.<lb/>
After all, many of his so-called<lb/>
followers turned on Christ and crucified<lb/>
him. And now a handful of people want<lb/>
to do the same to Life of Brian. Being<lb/>
misunderstood just ain't popular.<lb/>
We get no respect<lb/>
East Carolina University never gets<lb/>
any respect.<lb/>
They cut us down and call us a<lb/>
"stepsister" to the larger, firmly<lb/>
established school at Chapel Hill.<lb/>
They keep most of the money there.<lb/>
They even get national rankings in<lb/>
football. Sportswriters across the state<lb/>
follow blindly, and they pick UNC to<lb/>
beat the hapless ECU Pirates by two<lb/>
touchdowns or more.<lb/>
Not any more.<lb/>
The Pirates went to Chapel Hill last<lb/>
Saturday and ignored the critics. They<lb/>
ignored the writers, the Carolina fans,<lb/>
and the fact that it was Carolina's<lb/>
homecoming. They went to Chapel Hill<lb/>
for one reason and for one reason only.<lb/>
And from the opening kickoff, the<lb/>
Tar Heels found out why the Pirates<lb/>
were there.<lb/>
Soon it was apparent to the Carolina<lb/>
student section that those boys from<lb/>
down east play football. Cries of<lb/>
disbelief filled the afternoon air at<lb/>
Kenan Stadium as the Pirate eleven<lb/>
blocked and grunted their way through<lb/>
the Carolina secondary.<lb/>
Eighteen seconds to go, and<lb/>
Carolina had the ball. They decided to<lb/>
try the impossible. A 47 yard field goal<lb/>
went up and through the uprights to tie<lb/>
the score at 24-24.<lb/>
We didn't win the game, but we<lb/>
didn't lose either. We feel it should be<lb/>
remembered that Carolina had to come<lb/>
from behind to tie the game, and that<lb/>
they did not walk away with an easy<lb/>
two-touchdown win, as some who<lb/>
profess to know the game feel that they<lb/>
should have.<lb/>
This game changed a lot of opinions<lb/>
about our university. We are catching<lb/>
up to Carolina in many ways, and we<lb/>
suspect that UNC isn't too happy about<lb/>
it.<lb/>
All facets of the university<lb/>
community are looking up, and we are<lb/>
becoming aware of a new identity here<lb/>
at ECU. We can only hope that young<lb/>
people considering higher education in<lb/>
North Carolina are thinking of this as<lb/>
they are making their plans.<lb/>
To this end, UNC lost more than a<lb/>
football game.<lb/>
It was more like the beginning of a<lb/>
new era of respect. It's high time we<lb/>
shed the EZU image and start<lb/>
respecting each other and our school.<lb/>
And it's time that state legisoators and<lb/>
others realize that ECU is a major<lb/>
educational and athletic institution.<lb/>
Does he or doesn't he.<lb/>
uf P6i<lb/>
Uppity Women<lb/>
Burden of shame imposed<lb/>
By LARRY POPELKA<lb/>
Long hair is a drag.<lb/>
Ten years ago a full<lb/>
flowing head of hair<lb/>
served a useful purpose.<lb/>
At just a glance it told<lb/>
everyone what your opin-<lb/>
ion was of sex, drugs,<lb/>
wars and politics.<lb/>
But today long hair is<lb/>
useless. It no longer has<lb/>
meaning. Every 50-year-<lb/>
old disco duck has a full<lb/>
head of blow-dried locks to<lb/>
toss around.<lb/>
And judging from the<lb/>
advertising, you'd think<lb/>
hair care was as important<lb/>
as hemorrhoid relief.<lb/>
We've got Farrah<lb/>
Fa wcett-Majors shampoo,<lb/>
herbal-smelling cream<lb/>
rinses and conditioners,<lb/>
the Dry Look, the Dry<lb/>
Look look and all sorts of<lb/>
super power jet stream<lb/>
blow driers.<lb/>
If the hippies had had<lb/>
all this stuff in the '60s,<lb/>
nobody would have written<lb/>
a play called "Hair It<lb/>
would have been called<lb/>
"Gee, Your Hair Smells<lb/>
Terrific" instead.<lb/>
And what about hair-<lb/>
cutting?<lb/>
No longer can you go<lb/>
to a barber shop, plunk<lb/>
down a couple bucks and<lb/>
get your hair trimmed.<lb/>
Today you've got to get<lb/>
it "styled You've got to<lb/>
go to a "hair stylist" and<lb/>
pay $20 for what amounts<lb/>
to nothing more than a $2<lb/>
haircut in disguise.<lb/>
But that's not all. Now<lb/>
we've also got hair<lb/>
transplants, hair growth<lb/>
stimulators and all sorts of<lb/>
other gimmicks to ensure<lb/>
that nobody's ever short<lb/>
on hair.<lb/>
What are we going to<lb/>
be forced to put up with<lb/>
next? Farrah Kawcett<lb/>
shampoo for dogs?<lb/>
Well, a few weeks ago<lb/>
I discovered something<lb/>
that just may end our<lb/>
hairy woes.<lb/>
Head shaving.<lb/>
Actually, I discovered a<lb/>
magazine devoted to head<lb/>
shaving. It's called Razor's<lb/>
Edge, "the voice of<lb/>
recreational haircut ting<lb/>
Every issue of this<lb/>
bimonthly magazine is<lb/>
chocked full of heads<lb/>
being shaved, bald beau-<lb/>
ties and "hairmail" (let-<lb/>
ters from readers).<lb/>
The magazine, which<lb/>
was started two years ago<lb/>
by a group of hair fanatics<lb/>
in New York City and is<lb/>
published by Talisman<lb/>
Press (P.O. Box 685,<lb/>
Palisades, N.Y. 10964),<lb/>
has a circulation of 1,400.<lb/>
But according to Bob Fitz-<lb/>
gerald, the photo editor<lb/>
and magazine spokesman,<lb/>
the number of subscrip-<lb/>
tions is doubling every<lb/>
year as more and more<lb/>
long hairs discover the<lb/>
beauty of baldness.<lb/>
"In English insane<lb/>
asylums they used to<lb/>
shave everybody's head<lb/>
Fitzgerald says. "It was<lb/>
punishment. Social out-<lb/>
cast.<lb/>
"It's been capitalized<lb/>
on by Hollywood, too. In<lb/>
the 1950s there was a<lb/>
movie called 'Five Brand-<lb/>
ed Women and they all<lb/>
had their hair cut very,<lb/>
very short.<lb/>
"There is some atti-<lb/>
tude that a woman who<lb/>
shaves her head is the<lb/>
type who would do any-<lb/>
thing. The problem is that<lb/>
we associate beauty with<lb/>
hair<lb/>
I was fascinated.<lb/>
(Q1979 by Larry Popelka<lb/>
By G.C. CARTER<lb/>
Who can tell how many<lb/>
millions of lines of poetry<lb/>
have been written in<lb/>
celebration and lamenta-<lb/>
tion of "la difference<lb/>
with regard to men and<lb/>
women? This timeless,<lb/>
and evidently tireless sub-<lb/>
ject has undoubtedly oc-<lb/>
cupied the minds of almost<lb/>
every human inhabitant ?f<lb/>
this planet, at some point.<lb/>
This assumption is based,<lb/>
in part, on the obvious<lb/>
evidence that some type of<lb/>
close collaboration be-<lb/>
tween these two polar<lb/>
entities (that is, female<lb/>
and male) has indeed<lb/>
taken place on a large<lb/>
scale for an undetermined<lb/>
number of centuries; and<lb/>
also, there is reason to<lb/>
assume that the customs,<lb/>
taboos and ntuals regard-<lb/>
ing the two sexes have, in<lb/>
almost all cultures,<lb/>
strongly emphasized both<lb/>
inherent and contrived<lb/>
differences, presumably in<lb/>
an effort to enhance the<lb/>
attraction and fulfill the<lb/>
age-old paradox of oppe-<lb/>
sites.<lb/>
In any case, popular<lb/>
opinion, with regard to the<lb/>
distinctions between con-<lb/>
trived and inherent sex-<lb/>
related characteristics, has<lb/>
no rival in diversity, with<lb/>
the possible exception of<lb/>
proposed solutions to the<lb/>
most ancient riddle ever to<lb/>
have stumped humanity:<lb/>
Which came first ? the<lb/>
chicken or the egg?<lb/>
Now, if we knew the<lb/>
answer to that one, it<lb/>
would solve all kinds of<lb/>
other questions, which are<lb/>
really only chicken-and-<lb/>
egg riddles in disguise.<lb/>
For example: Which e-<lb/>
volved first ? the female<lb/>
or the male? Some people<lb/>
(I won't mention any<lb/>
names) believe that they<lb/>
have cornered the market<lb/>
as far as reliable informa-<lb/>
tion concernation this<lb/>
question.<lb/>
While the answer<lb/>
seems so obvious ? that<lb/>
females and males must<lb/>
have evolved simultan-<lb/>
eously ? many cultures<lb/>
have seen fit to establish a<lb/>
sexual hierarchy, and the<lb/>
patriarchy is in the lead at<lb/>
this point, by at least<lb/>
two-and-a-half millenia.<lb/>
As is invariably the<lb/>
case when an artificially<lb/>
it the unique perspectives<lb/>
and wisdom of half the<lb/>
human race, has been<lb/>
"revised reviled and,<lb/>
most successfully of all,<lb/>
omitted from the "valid"<lb/>
historical texts and myth-<lb/>
ologies of "civilized" cul-<lb/>
tures.<lb/>
These past records<lb/>
would be "dangerous" to<lb/>
the status quo of male<lb/>
superiority, for they would<lb/>
recall a time when women<lb/>
were free from the cul-<lb/>
turally-imposed burden of<lb/>
inherent shame, which<lb/>
"While criticized for lacking the<lb/>
capacity for intellect, reason,<lb/>
and general creativity, women<lb/>
have traditionally been sorely<lb/>
censored for trying to 'usurp9<lb/>
the privileges of men<lb/>
contrived stereotype is<lb/>
forced upon a natural<lb/>
situation, something has<lb/>
got to give, in order to<lb/>
"make it fit In the case<lb/>
of male-dominant ex-role<lb/>
stereotypes, sad to say, it<lb/>
appears that there wasn't<lb/>
enough room for the whole<lb/>
of women's characters,<lb/>
perceptions, and possibili-<lb/>
ties, after the men had<lb/>
been assigned their<lb/>
"rightful shares So the<lb/>
women were "forced to<lb/>
fit by denying the true<lb/>
extent of their human<lb/>
potential.<lb/>
In every political sys-<lb/>
tem based on tyranny,<lb/>
there has been the "ne-<lb/>
cessity" of "re-organiz-<lb/>
ing" the culture and "re-<lb/>
educating" and, if neces-<lb/>
sary, restricting those who<lb/>
are to be controlled.<lb/>
Women's history, and with<lb/>
in<lb/>
served to keep them<lb/>
their place<lb/>
There would be epics<lb/>
of female community and<lb/>
religious leaders, who<lb/>
inspired and guided their<lb/>
people with love and<lb/>
peaceful vision. Mothers<lb/>
would draw strength from<lb/>
the honor and deference<lb/>
rightly granted to them, as<lb/>
advocates and valiant de-<lb/>
fenders of the birth of new<lb/>
life, in the face of death ?<lb/>
rather than the legacy of<lb/>
self-abasement and degra-<lb/>
dation which came with<lb/>
the knowledge that they,<lb/>
as women, were con-<lb/>
sidered to be privately-<lb/>
owned breeding animals,<lb/>
who were valued according<lb/>
to how many male off-<lb/>
spring they could whelp.<lb/>
The crumbs tradition-<lb/>
ally offered to women have<lb/>
been fatally tainted with<lb/>
chaotic contradiction. The<lb/>
cursed origin of lust, held<lb/>
responsible for the down-<lb/>
fall of the entire race,<lb/>
woman has been allowed<lb/>
to seek her redemption by<lb/>
modelling herself after a<lb/>
virgin mother.<lb/>
The sex of supposedly<lb/>
"inferior" character has<lb/>
been given responsibility<lb/>
for the upbringing of the<lb/>
next generation, and is<lb/>
held responsible tor xWvt<lb/>
moral development. While<lb/>
criticized for lacking the<lb/>
capacity for intellect, rea-<lb/>
son and general creativity,<lb/>
women have traditionally<lb/>
been sorely censored for<lb/>
trying to "usurp" the<lb/>
prerogatives and privileges<lb/>
of men, whenever the<lb/>
women have attempted to<lb/>
present their own view<lb/>
points and artistic and<lb/>
social interpretations.<lb/>
The notion of the<lb/>
equality of the sexes is.<lb/>
today, an unofficial<lb/>
"heresy There is no<lb/>
formal patriarchy ? there<lb/>
is instead the insidious<lb/>
blind tradition, and the<lb/>
inertia which is charac<lb/>
teristic of those who have<lb/>
been conditioned not to<lb/>
think ? only to accept.<lb/>
The penalty for this<lb/>
"heresy" is, of course, the<lb/>
charge of treason ?<lb/>
against the "natural or-<lb/>
der against God, against<lb/>
prevailing custom. Con-<lb/>
demnation is heaped on<lb/>
swiftlv and the traitors are<lb/>
exiled to the ranks of the<lb/>
"radicals" and advocates<lb/>
of uni-sex, where they are<lb/>
effectively imprisoned be-<lb/>
hind a "label" that the<lb/>
short-sighted society will<lb/>
never attempt to see past,<lb/>
because that attempt, in<lb/>
itself, would be trea-<lb/>
sonous.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
MANAGING EDITOR<lb/>
Richard Green<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER<lb/>
Anita Lancaster<lb/>
NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
ASST. NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
FEATURES EDITOR<lb/>
ASST. FEATURES EDITOR<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Marc Barnes<lb/>
DIRECTOR OF ADVERTISING<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim<lb/>
ASST. DIRECTOR OF ADVERTISING<lb/>
Terry Herndon<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/>
John Ross<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
ASST. SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
COPY EDITOR<lb/>
AD TECH. SUPER.<lb/>
Charles Chandler<lb/>
Jimmy Dupree<lb/>
Diane Henderson<lb/>
Paul Lincke<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN It the student<lb/>
off East Carolina University<lb/>
by the Media Board of ECU<lb/>
and Is distributed each Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during the academic year<lb/>
weekly during the summer.<lb/>
Office are located on the second floor of<lb/>
Yh Publications Center Old South<lb/>
Building. Our mailing address Is: Old<lb/>
South Building, ECU, Greenville, NC<lb/>
27834.<lb/>
The phone numbers ere: 757-6366, 6367,<lb/>
6306. Subscriptions are $10<lb/>
alumni $6 annually.<lb/>
<lb/>
v<lb/>
<pb facs="00057227_0005"/><lb/>
111<lb/>
r<lb/>
n<lb/>
Greek News<lb/>
Winter rush keg party<lb/>
By RICKI GLIARMIS<lb/>
Greek Correspondent<lb/>
The Chi Omegas have<lb/>
been busy planning their<lb/>
Winter Rush which was<lb/>
kicked off on Monday,<lb/>
Oct. 29. Last night, a keg<lb/>
party was held at Cherry<lb/>
Court Partyroom.<lb/>
On Thursday, Nov. 1, a<lb/>
cookout will be held in the<lb/>
backyard on the Chi 0<lb/>
house for the winter<lb/>
rushees.<lb/>
The Chi Omegas will<lb/>
be trick-or-treating on<lb/>
Halloween night for<lb/>
UNICEF.<lb/>
The Sigmas are holding<lb/>
a birthday dinner for their<lb/>
housemother, Mrs. M.<lb/>
Robbins. Alumni from the<lb/>
area and sisters will be<lb/>
attending the dinner. After<lb/>
the dinner, alumnis will<lb/>
hold a meeting.<lb/>
The Sigmas are plan-<lb/>
ning their Annual Sigma<lb/>
Pie Throw for Nov. 20.<lb/>
The Pie Throw will be held<lb/>
at the Chapter X and<lb/>
tickets will be sold in<lb/>
advance. Proceeds from<lb/>
this activity will go toward<lb/>
the Sigmas' philanthropy,<lb/>
the Robbie Page Memorial<lb/>
Fund.<lb/>
Please don't overlook<lb/>
the deadline for stories!<lb/>
Turn your articles in by 9<lb/>
a.m. Mondays at Dean<lb/>
Fulghum's office, second<lb/>
floor, Whichard.<lb/>
classified<lb/>
far<lb/>
?<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1980 Spirit<lb/>
Deluxe 2 door liftback,<lb/>
economy speical, 4 speed,<lb/>
4 cylinder, brown metallic<lb/>
with brown rally stripes,<lb/>
radials, t-glass. List $5496,<lb/>
Sale $5185. 752-9520.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1978 MGB<lb/>
conv. 4 speed. 4 cylinder.<lb/>
Locally owned, dark green,<lb/>
tan interior, sharp. $5500.<lb/>
752-9520.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1972 Vega<lb/>
Cot. Station Wagon. Must<lb/>
sell. For more information<lb/>
call 752-5422.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Hohner 12<lb/>
string acoustic guitar.<lb/>
Excellent condition, four<lb/>
months old. $150. Call<lb/>
George at 758-6708.<lb/>
pcnonai(?)<lb/>
?P1<lb/>
NEED X-TRA CASH: Fair<lb/>
prices paid for gold and<lb/>
silver and silver coins.<lb/>
Mixed Media. 120 E. 5th<lb/>
St. 758-2127.<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED: To and<lb/>
from Plymouth. Anytime.<lb/>
Will help with expenses.<lb/>
Call 752-8043.<lb/>
LET ME TYPE FOR<lb/>
YOUI have over 12<lb/>
years of typing experience<lb/>
to put to use. I'll type your<lb/>
term papers, tests, theses,<lb/>
etc neatly, accurately and<lb/>
with quick turnaround<lb/>
Work will be done<lb/>
new Seiko Silver-<lb/>
typewriter which<lb/>
in both pica and<lb/>
Contact Becky<lb/>
time,<lb/>
on a<lb/>
Reed<lb/>
types<lb/>
elite.<lb/>
Overstreet, 746-3798.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Wait-<lb/>
resses, bartenders, bar<lb/>
backs. Apply in person.<lb/>
Must be 21. Good pay plus<lb/>
tips. Call 756-8060.<lb/>
DANCE: Sunshine Studios<lb/>
will be offering the<lb/>
following classes at a<lb/>
discount rate to ECU<lb/>
students: Ballet, Jazz,<lb/>
Yoga, Arabic (Belly<lb/>
Dance) and Partner Disco<lb/>
Dance. Classes are within<lb/>
walking distance of cam-<lb/>
pus beginning Nov. 4 and<lb/>
7. Call Sunshine at<lb/>
756-7235 or 758-0736.<lb/>
PARKING: Leased parking<lb/>
directly across from ECU<lb/>
on corner of 5th and E.<lb/>
Holly Sts. $30 per semes-<lb/>
ter. 30 spaces available.<lb/>
Call Bull Ritter Realtors,<lb/>
756-5458 and leave name<lb/>
and number if interested.<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
151 iimum jwvwvry<lb/>
BLACK<lb/>
ARTS<lb/>
FESTIVAL<lb/>
Nov. I -9<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
ust cmoum mmmmn<lb/>
? Thurs. Nov. 1 -<lb/>
? Sun. Nov. 4 -<lb/>
? Mon. Nov. 5 -<lb/>
if<lb/>
Art Exhibition Mendenhall Gallery<lb/>
"Bound by the promises"<lb/>
5pm Gospel Concert with New Birth<lb/>
Chorale Ensemble, Fountain of Life<lb/>
Choir, and ECU Gospel Ensemble<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
3pm Seminar on<lb/>
"Who Killed Martin Luther King,Jr<lb/>
Afro-American Cultural Center<lb/>
8pm Film:<lb/>
"Who Killed Martin Luther King,Jr<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
6pm Soul Food Dinner<lb/>
Afro-American Cultural Center<lb/>
Tickets $3.50 (in Advance)<lb/>
for all you can eat!<lb/>
tickets available in Program Director's<lb/>
Office -Mendenhall<lb/>
8pm Film: "Black Roots and two<lb/>
Centuries of Black American Art"<lb/>
Afro-American Cultural Center<lb/>
? Thurs. Nov. 8 - 8pm Theatre Arts presents<lb/>
JUBILEE! Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Unless otherwise stated all Activities sponsored by theMinority Arts<lb/>
Writers<lb/>
Needed<lb/>
LtathorMts<lb/>
MtoSit<lb/>
Leather Handbags<lb/>
$10 to $29<lb/>
Shoot Repaired To Loo<lb/>
Uko Now<lb/>
Riggon Shoe Repair<lb/>
&amp; Leather Shop<lb/>
111 WEST 4TH ST.<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
7564204<lb/>
Parking in front<lb/>
and Rear.<lb/>
SANCHEZ<lb/>
continued from page 1<lb/>
The Universidad Na-<lb/>
tional and East Carolina<lb/>
are very different in the<lb/>
way that personal rela-<lb/>
tionships are developed,<lb/>
according to Ana. Classes<lb/>
at the Costa Rican Univery<lb/>
sity are arranged so that<lb/>
the same students attend<lb/>
the same classes together<lb/>
and warm friendships<lb/>
develop between the<lb/>
students and between the<lb/>
students and professors.<lb/>
Ana said that she does not<lb/>
get to know the students<lb/>
in her classes here at ECU<lb/>
"so much" because they<lb/>
scatter immediately after<lb/>
the bell, so friends are<lb/>
made in the dorm and<lb/>
other places where more<lb/>
leisurely contact may be<lb/>
made.<lb/>
The area around Asseri<lb/>
is mountainous, much like<lb/>
30 October 1979 THE EAST CAROUNIA'N Page 5<lb/>
able?he or she will attend<lb/>
the university with all<lb/>
expenses paid by the<lb/>
government if they cannot<lb/>
pay for themselves.<lb/>
Costa Rica is a very<lb/>
poor country, with a per<lb/>
capita income being about<lb/>
$2,000 per year according<lb/>
to Dr. Cramer. The<lb/>
principal religion is Cath-<lb/>
olicism and the families as<lb/>
a general rule are very<lb/>
large. Ana comes from a<lb/>
family of six sisters and<lb/>
four brothers.<lb/>
Dr. Cramer, an ECU<lb/>
professor of geography,<lb/>
will take 15 ECU<lb/>
to Costa Rica for the<lb/>
spring semester. They<lb/>
take classes at the Heredia<lb/>
Universidad and field trips<lb/>
are planned for weekends<lb/>
so that the students get<lb/>
first hand knowledge a-<lb/>
bout the country. Ar-<lb/>
rangements are made for<lb/>
the East Carolina students<lb/>
to live in the homes of<lb/>
selected Costa Rican fam-<lb/>
ilies.<lb/>
the western North Carolina<lb/>
area, Dr. Robert Cramer,<lb/>
director of the Costa Rican<lb/>
program, explained, and<lb/>
the chief crop is coffee<lb/>
which Ana has helped to<lb/>
harvest. The flatness of<lb/>
eastern North Carolina is<lb/>
strange to Ana and she<lb/>
remarks about the novelty<lb/>
of seeing the moon come<lb/>
over the horizon very early<lb/>
instead of seeing it only<lb/>
overhead in the high<lb/>
elevation (4,500 feet) of<lb/>
her home town.<lb/>
When Ana returns to<lb/>
Costa Rica, she will finish<lb/>
her Bachelor of English<lb/>
degree in education and<lb/>
be prepared to teach<lb/>
English on the high school<lb/>
level. The educational<lb/>
system in Costa Rica is<lb/>
similar to that in the U.S<lb/>
but Costa Ricans spend<lb/>
only 11 years in the<lb/>
elementary and secondary<lb/>
schools. After that they<lb/>
are prepared for university<lb/>
work and if the student is<lb/>
worthy?meaningcap-<lb/>
 PEKING<lb/>
PALACE<lb/>
CMCNVILLl hc<lb/>
7M?09?<lb/>
Featuring custom,<lb/>
hand-crafted belts,<lb/>
Turquoise an ndian<lb/>
Jewelry, Metal and<lb/>
Solid Brass Belt<lb/>
Buckles, Do-lt-Yourself<lb/>
Leather Kits.<lb/>
20 discount<lb/>
on jewelry<lb/>
with this ad.<lb/>
Mon. - Sat. 10-5:30<lb/>
Wed. 10-1<lb/>
cMonday thxu. cSatuxday tV.OO a.m3:30 fx.m.<lb/>
?undau JDufftt all you can eat It.OOa.m 4.00 jx.m.<lb/>
$395<lb/>
LircNcr rfcrt<lb/>
? 1 i ? ?? ? ? ? ? ? ?1 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? - g. rr rj-j j-j j j<lb/>
Luncheon Special $2.45<lb/>
?j<lb/>
JVo. - JVo.5 dhole one<lb/>
TlL cSexvea urltn Egg Jxop. Soup. ?r crjot Jia<lb/>
JVo. . CnlctUn Clou, JAiLn, DxUcl J?Lc &amp; Egg eRott<lb/>
JVo. 2. zRoail tPoxli Egg 'Doo louna, DxUd zRicz &amp; Egg zRoll<lb/>
JVo. 3- ?"f Wltn xn iPefifisx, SxUd J?ice &amp; Eaa J?oCC<lb/>
JVo. 4. CnicAen Wltn cAlmond, DxUd J?Lcs &amp; Eaa eRott<lb/>
JVo. $. JSurtet &amp; Soux ZPoxA, DxUd JLce. &amp; Egg cRoll<lb/>
'tMMmtrttut auaxe<lb/>
Pkont 756-l?9<lb/>
THE E.C.U. FRATERNITIES<lb/>
AND SORORITIES<lb/>
PRESENT THE3rd OF 4<lb/>
GREAT GREEK CONCERTS<lb/>
WED. NOV. 7th 8:45-1:00<lb/>
AT THE ATTIC<lb/>
WITH<lb/>
? Tues. Nov. 6 -<lb/>
? Wed - Nov. 7 -<lb/>
WEAR YOUR GREEK<lb/>
JERSEY'S AND RECIEVE<lb/>
A REDUCTION ON<lb/>
ADMISSION<lb/>
v<lb/>
n<lb/>
<pb facs="00057227_0006"/><lb/>
Tlit1 Kasl Carolinian<lb/>
Features<lb/>
Tuesday October 30, 1979 Page 6<lb/>
Greenville, N. C<lb/>
Beaux-Arts Ball attracts<lb/>
the creative and bizarre ?<lb/>
? i<lb/>
Jo Anne Seller an arl<lb/>
he award for<lb/>
the most bizai re i ostume<lb/>
: backless nun's<lb/>
B DIANE HENDERSON<lb/>
Copy Editoi<lb/>
The traditional ghouls<lb/>
and goblins of Halloween<lb/>
ma, have fell somewhat habit I<lb/>
out" of place at the<lb/>
Beaux-Arts Ball last Fri-<lb/>
day night. Costumes<lb/>
this festive, early cele-<lb/>
bration of Ml Hallow E'en<lb/>
leaned more toward the<lb/>
creative and bizarn<lb/>
n.i'<lb/>
ryptian<lb/>
guise<lb/>
or m<lb/>
- the<lb/>
en Qna'<lb/>
iv d<lb/>
aw ar<lb/>
One of the highlights<lb/>
of the evening, organized<lb/>
for the art. drama and<lb/>
music department was<lb/>
the judging o<lb/>
 :<lb/>
ult) members attended the<lb/>
Ball, only a few entered<lb/>
the best costume contest.<lb/>
Ra Elmore oi the Art<lb/>
Department made an out-<lb/>
standing wizard, and<lb/>
Betsy Ross, also an art<lb/>
teacher, won best faculty<lb/>
Lime for her creative<lb/>
wood nymph. Among<lb/>
who did not enter<lb/>
judging were Edward<lb/>
Reel who was almost<lb/>
ii n re ognizable in the<lb/>
? m) an Arab Sheik,<lb/>
and Dr. Laing, dean oi the<lb/>
b<lb/>
!<lb/>
IIOIIj<lb/>
of rt<lb/>
f the best<lb/>
tudent and faculty, i<lb/>
tumes. Member- ol the<lb/>
facultv made their de i<lb/>
sions on the mosl<lb/>
standing -tudent<lb/>
tumes, and these winners<lb/>
in turn judged the most<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
Most everyone -pent<lb/>
the i arh part of the<lb/>
evening staring at every-<lb/>
 - - tumes. I here<lb/>
 ? re magicians, punk<lb/>
- ers, I hree people<lb/>
dressed as a box o<lb/>
Crayola crayons, cats ?<lb/>
from the leopard to the<lb/>
more dome-tie variety, a<lb/>
Cossack and even someone<lb/>
who came -imply as a<lb/>
large cardboard box.<lb/>
The ECU Jazz Ensem-<lb/>
ble provided dancing mu-<lb/>
si( . and by the latter part<lb/>
of the evening the liquid<lb/>
refreshment had gotten<lb/>
almost the entire crowd in<lb/>
the mood to dance. Earlier<lb/>
entertainment included<lb/>
dance performances by the .<lb/>
Drama Department dance<lb/>
group, who put on a good<lb/>
-how. They performed a<lb/>
sailor dance, a Scottish<lb/>
dance, a ma-k dame and<lb/>
ballet.<lb/>
There mav not have<lb/>
been one ghost at I<lb/>
Beaux-Arts Ball, but it<lb/>
was a lot oi fun anvw a ?<lb/>
,?<lb/>
Masqu<lb/>
Even . ? ECl<lb/>
thins a - thi ?<lb/>
Photos bv John Grogan<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
? ? t f<lb/>
Music history recreated<lb/>
J<lb/>
in Jubilee's varied program<lb/>
Vttructions<lb/>
Two year old loses legs todisea<lb/>
yd)<lb/>
st<lb/>
INK<lb/>
Si<lb/>
pro-<lb/>
traditi<lb/>
otic<lb/>
per-<lb/>
rs till tl<lb/>
nbination "t musi<lb/>
and aciintz.<lb/>
I utmee<lb/>
I  and<lb/>
Bc-s ' 'ngs as<lb/>
"Summert (?o1<lb/>
Plenty Bess<lb/>
. o ii i- My V on:<lb/>
"It Ain't Necessai<lb/>
and "A w - a<lb/>
Si met ime are<lb/>
lassies irom this native<lb/>
merican foil<lb/>
In additi ' Porgy<lb/>
and Bes other Broad-<lb/>
Jubilee a celebration in song, featuring music Jrom<lb/>
'Porgy and Bess 'showboat 'The Wiz and traditional<lb/>
numbers will be presented on November 8, at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
in Hendrix Theater.<lb/>
way hits such as "01 Man<lb/>
River" from "Showboat"<lb/>
and "If You Believe" from<lb/>
"The Wiz" are featured.<lb/>
The traditional songs<lb/>
include spirituals such as<lb/>
"Nobody Knows the Trou-<lb/>
ble I've Seen "Go Down<lb/>
Moses" and "Swing Low<lb/>
Sweet Chariot "Yankee<lb/>
Doodle "Lift every Voice<lb/>
and Sing" and "The<lb/>
Battle Hymn oi the<lb/>
Republic" are among the<lb/>
patriotic songs pertormed.<lb/>
The show is presented<lb/>
by a cast of young<lb/>
professionals who are both<lb/>
singers and actors. They<lb/>
travel with a pianist, with<lb/>
special sound and light,<lb/>
and with costumes and<lb/>
staging. They offer the<lb/>
sort of program made<lb/>
famous by the Fisk Jubilee<lb/>
Singers who raised they<lb/>
money to establish Fish<lb/>
University.<lb/>
Visual excitement and<lb/>
professional sound are the<lb/>
trademarks of the 1979<lb/>
version of the Jubilee<lb/>
Singers just as they were<lb/>
for the 1871 Jubilee<lb/>
Singers<lb/>
Tickets are priced at $1<lb/>
for ECU students, $3 for<lb/>
ECU faculty and staff, and<lb/>
$4 for the public. Groups<lb/>
of 20 or more may<lb/>
purchase tickets for $3. All<lb/>
tickets at the door are $4.<lb/>
For further information,<lb/>
contact the Central Ticket<lb/>
Office in Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center, 757-6611,<lb/>
ext. 266.<lb/>
 ? t ?<lb/>
Claude Frank will ; m ?<lb/>
to<lb/>
nighi rhi :<lb/>
atei e w ill ?<lb/>
?  ?<lb/>
and ?<lb/>
WlJ<lb/>
.it the<lb/>
ROX ;<lb/>
<lb/>
The Roxy Music, rts and;<lb/>
Crafts<lb/>
their 5th  Halloween i<lb/>
Masq i ed-<lb/>
lay, 0 at Twin<lb/>
Rinks on ! 1th St Four<lb/>
bands ?- 11 pro ide enter-<lb/>
tain m <lb/>
60SP1<lb/>
There will be i Gospel<lb/>
I itut ing the New<lb/>
Birth Chorale Ensemble,<lb/>
'1 he intain Life<lb/>
Choir. td The hCl<lb/>
pel Ensemble on Sun-<lb/>
day, No . at 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
in Hendrix Theater.<lb/>
?????????????'<lb/>
i ??????<lb/>
By PATRICIA ROBERTO<lb/>
ssot uitcd Press Writer<lb/>
0 UCLAND, Calif. (AP)<lb/>
Little Eddie Smith<lb/>
clutched his doll with<lb/>
- mpathetic understanding<lb/>
as the two left Children's<lb/>
Hospital, where Eddie's<lb/>
legs were amputated alter<lb/>
complications from chicken<lb/>
pox.<lb/>
 child psychologist<lb/>
who had prepared the<lb/>
2-year-old patient for the<lb/>
surgerj had removed the<lb/>
doll's legs and replaced<lb/>
them with bandaging sim-<lb/>
ilar to Eddie's.<lb/>
The boy suffered a rare<lb/>
blood-clotting complication<lb/>
of the common childhood<lb/>
disease and underwent<lb/>
surgerv four times to treat<lb/>
the problem before gan-<lb/>
grene forced the amputa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
"It's been a long<lb/>
ordeal, but we got him<lb/>
back. They said he wasn't<lb/>
-upposed to live Eddie's<lb/>
mother, Linda, said Sun-<lb/>
day as they left for home<lb/>
in Manteca.<lb/>
"I believe he under-<lb/>
stands that he doesn't<lb/>
have any legs. And 1 also<lb/>
think he accepts it. e<lb/>
knew if we accepted it. he<lb/>
would said Mrs. Smith.<lb/>
23.<lb/>
Dr. Byron Aoki, direc-<lb/>
tor of the pediatrie inten-<lb/>
sive care unit at Children's<lb/>
Hospital, said the compli-<lb/>
cation is somewhat ol a<lb/>
mystery.<lb/>
'No one knows why it<lb/>
happens. It is known to<lb/>
accompany chicken pox on<lb/>
rare occasions and is<lb/>
nearly always tatal he<lb/>
-aid.<lb/>
Eddie's illness began<lb/>
last June while he appear-<lb/>
ed to be getting over a<lb/>
simple ease oi chicken<lb/>
pox. Mrs. Smith noticed<lb/>
him rubbing a large purple<lb/>
-pot on his leg, but<lb/>
thought it was an insect<lb/>
bite.<lb/>
She said when the spot<lb/>
grew bigger, she took<lb/>
him to a local hospital.<lb/>
Then more spots, and<lb/>
bruises, appeared and<lb/>
spread to Eddie's thighs<lb/>
am bui<lb/>
hos,<lb/>
pupura<lb/>
order<lb/>
- stem trig<lb/>
lati<lb/>
low er (<lb/>
Eddie's .<lb/>
placed ;<lb/>
bleeding<lb/>
OUt 01 -I:<lb/>
ant<lb/>
wa- admin:<lb/>
at tern .<lb/>
clotting<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The<lb/>
ments w<lb/>
drug fai<lb/>
clotting and<lb/>
pea<lb/>
on his thigh- I<lb/>
and he had no .<lb/>
feet. Eddie<lb/>
lose, the officials <lb/>
 ascular surg -<lb/>
performed in an unsu<lb/>
cessful attempt die<lb/>
UhMiOb About Cotter TH n0 lAMf<lb/>
61 PWip AWkis<lb/>
v)acoe TO "fhfSTW<lb/>
0Klf)rAS COl TK.M?f<lb/>
TO U iOOLf tinti<lb/>
AMD IXfTtrf<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
V-<lb/>
THM<lb/>
im<lb/>
TlM?.<lb/>
fcOSb<lb/>
Mi i;u<lb/>
Ulluj.il id <lb/>
<pb facs="00057227_0007"/><lb/>
30 October 1979 THE EAST cam imiak,<lb/>
Weekly Album Review: New releases<lb/>
By PAT MINGES<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
?The Cars ? Candv-0 ;?? ?u-<lb/>
 Byu bure this is old, but th??<lb/>
pickings were not so great this week tk- iu<lb/>
certified anlH ?n tk- week. lhls album is<lb/>
ertiiied gold and the group ,s supposedly one of the<lb/>
forerunners of the New Wave<lb/>
Exposure of The Cars' musie has e?n reached<lb/>
mainstream America, but excuse me if I fall asleep<lb/>
Allhough the keyboards are excellent and he 'guitars<lb/>
are some ,mes entertaining, the group lacks variation<lb/>
and this tend, to dt.h excitement. The Cars stick wUh<lb/>
.he same droll beat that propelled them ?<lb/>
superstardom. v<lb/>
There is at least one good side of music on Candy-0<lb/>
e second one), and the album has not been<lb/>
?appointing to Cars' fans. Yet, why can't this group<lb/>
me on over instead of straddling the fence between<lb/>
New V ave and punk?<lb/>
?The Atlanta Rhythm Section - Are You Ready -<lb/>
Atlanta Rhythm Sectionis not a typical Southern rock<lb/>
band, not a purveyor of Clone rock<lb/>
Clone rock "catches all those groups who are<lb/>
followers, instead of leaders, which have a synthetic<lb/>
heaviness and mask whatever talent they have with<lb/>
volume ind special effects (The Vinyl Edition "A<lb/>
Great Flyswatter")<lb/>
Like the Dixie Dregs, the Atlanta Rhythm Section<lb/>
departs from Allman riffs, and presents an innovative<lb/>
progressive Southern rock appeal.<lb/>
ARS is an exciting group to catch live, and Are You<lb/>
Heady was recorded on the band's last tour The<lb/>
compilation features all of the group's best rockers,<lb/>
recorded live with some studio tracks. The recordings<lb/>
were produced by Buddy Buie and all post-production<lb/>
was done at Studio One in Doraville.<lb/>
Mellow tunes like "Get Your Head Out Of Your<lb/>
Heart' and "Jesus Hearted People" and "Dog Days"<lb/>
This is a good album.<lb/>
Bob James and Earl Klugh ? One on One ? It would<lb/>
be pleasing to take one of the matches from the cover an<lb/>
hum this album.<lb/>
My apologies to Earl Klugh, a talented guitarist, but<lb/>
what is he doing recording with Bob James?<lb/>
This is not jazz; this is Muzak.<lb/>
It's not bad; it is disgusting.<lb/>
Bob James should stick to television soundtracks and<lb/>
top perverting good people like Earl Klugh, Ron Carter<lb/>
and, for God sakes, Kenny Loggins.<lb/>
?The Records ? The Records ? Seeing these guys on<lb/>
'Midnight Special I found them a bit too good looking<lb/>
to be New Wave. Their music, though pleasant, is just<lb/>
more neo-pop dreck that attempts to pass for New<lb/>
v ave.<lb/>
What makes these guys even more presumptuous is<lb/>
that they come from England, the source of the new<lb/>
British invasion.<lb/>
The Records are the Freddie and the Dreamers of<lb/>
the New Wave. They're just too well fed to do anything<lb/>
but pop music.<lb/>
?Barbra Streisand ? Wet ? This is the hot one.<lb/>
Honestly folks, I have always been a Streisand fan,<lb/>
but this album really knocks me out. Wet gets a<lb/>
nomination for album of the year, for it is strong<lb/>
musically, and the production is really superb.<lb/>
Barbra's voice is dynamic and has lost none of<lb/>
beauty with age.<lb/>
The styles range from rock to jazz, from disco to<lb/>
lovely ballad and are performed by such outstanding<lb/>
musicians as Donna Summer, Larry Carlton, Paulinho da<lb/>
Costa, Fred Tacket, Billy Payne, Richard Tee, Tom<lb/>
Scott, Ian Underwood, Jeff Porcaro, Skunk Baxter, and<lb/>
David Hungate. The arrangements are really good arid<lb/>
utilize well the variety of instrumentation. To repeat for<lb/>
emphasis, the production is as fine as any album this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
I lost all control and was even disco dancin' to<lb/>
"Enough is Enough" and was really wooed by "Come<lb/>
Rain or Come Shine" because of Michael Frank's<lb/>
similarity.<lb/>
Don't pass this one up, or you'll regret it.<lb/>
?Gruppo Sportivo ? Mistakes and More Mistakes ?<lb/>
Were it not for the sheer strength of the Streisand<lb/>
album, this first release in the states for the Dutch<lb/>
group Gruppo Sportivo would get the nod for the pick<lb/>
hit. This band has a fresh, new sound that is vital<lb/>
creative and tends to avoid definition.<lb/>
Although the album has a neo-pop orientation its<lb/>
influences are derived from various sources the<lb/>
strongest being the New Wave.<lb/>
The music is very beautiful, tasteful, and among the<lb/>
strongest that has been produced by a new group in a<lb/>
long while. Each of the artists possesses a great deal of<lb/>
talent, both instrumentally and vocally. Mistakes is of<lb/>
considerable worth for another reason as well. It<lb/>
See ALBUM REVIEW, Page 8<lb/>
November Specials<lb/>
Mon. Slices off Beef , Toast &amp;<lb/>
Potato 92.49<lb/>
Tues. Soup &amp; Salad 91.49<lb/>
Wed. Srloin Tips, Toast &amp;<lb/>
Potato 92.49<lb/>
Thur. Old Fashion 91.49<lb/>
Cheeseburger &amp; Soup<lb/>
Fri. Filet off Chicken Sandwich<lb/>
&amp; Potato 91.39<lb/>
Sat. Chowder &amp; Salad 91.79<lb/>
Slin. ?oz. Sirloin , Toast &amp;<lb/>
Potato 92.49<lb/>
3005 E. 10th St. Greenville 758-8550<lb/>
A-<lb/>
Carolina East<lb/>
Mall<lb/>
Come Wednesday for<lb/>
Halloween Specials and<lb/>
Surprises<lb/>
Giving Away<lb/>
$50.00 Gift Certificates<lb/>
756-8242<lb/>
SUPER MARKETS<lb/>
7<lb/>
Wwbax Where Shopping Is A Pleasure f??<lb/>
PRICES GOOD THURS FRI SAT.<lb/>
GREENVILLE-AYDEN-Tarboro<lb/>
STAMPS<lb/>
STAMPS<lb/>
BAKERY SPECIALS<lb/>
FRANKLIN'S Natural Grain and<lb/>
Old Fashion white bread<lb/>
1 lb. loaf- buy one get one FREE<lb/>
12 PAK SUNBEAM<lb/>
glazed doughnuts 99<lb/>
3 pak SUNBEAM honey buns 2$1.09<lb/>
INSTANT<lb/>
LIPTON TEA<lb/>
'Ss&amp;rSsssssf<lb/>
30 oz. size<lb/>
$1.69<lb/>
save 50<lb/>
brand<lb/>
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stuffed potatoes<lb/>
with cheese or bacon<lb/>
12 oz. 2S1.00<lb/>
SALAD TIME<lb/>
CALIFORNIA LETTUCE<lb/>
39 head<lb/>
CALIFORNIA VINERIPE TOMATOES<lb/>
39lb.<lb/>
GREEN PEPPERS<lb/>
'? c<lb/>
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CELLO CARROTS<lb/>
2 pkg. 39<lb/>
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GREEN CUCUMBERS 100 CT. 229<lb/>
WHOLE FRESH<lb/>
FRYERS 2 per bag<lb/>
34?lb.<lb/>
SLICED<lb/>
PORK LOINS<lb/>
$1.19lb<lb/>
9-11 slices<lb/>
LIGHT'N LIVELY yogurt<lb/>
3$1.00<lb/>
8 oz. cups all flavors<lb/>
!j?HIJW'<lb/>
J.F.G. salad<lb/>
dressing<lb/>
quart<lb/>
size<lb/>
limit one please<lb/>
WELCH'S 20 oz.<lb/>
grape jelly or jam<lb/>
.BMcfcV<lb/>
2$1.00<lb/>
BES PAK lemon<lb/>
scented tall kitchen<lb/>
garbage bags<lb/>
15 count-<lb/>
save 40<lb/>
<pb facs="00057227_0008"/><lb/>
Page 8 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 30 October 1979<lb/>
Gray Gallery to host exhibition<lb/>
GREENVILLE - A<lb/>
new multi-media art exhi-<lb/>
bition will open at East<lb/>
Carolina's W.B. Gray<lb/>
Gallery in November.<lb/>
Works organized by the<lb/>
Southeast Center for Con-<lb/>
temporary Art (SECCA) in<lb/>
Winston-Salem will repre-<lb/>
sent 28 southeastern art-<lb/>
ists.<lb/>
The exhibition will run<lb/>
from Nov. 8 through Dec.<lb/>
5 with a reception open to<lb/>
the public 8-10 p.m<lb/>
Thursday, Nov. 8.<lb/>
The title "Art Patron<lb/>
Art" refers to the dis-<lb/>
tinguished collectors,<lb/>
members of SECCA's<lb/>
Advisory Council, each of<lb/>
whom recommended three<lb/>
artists from their home<lb/>
base state, in consultation<lb/>
with state museum di-<lb/>
rectors and curators.<lb/>
A 76-page color cata-<lb/>
logue accompanies the<lb/>
exhibition and will be on<lb/>
sale for $4.<lb/>
Works in the exhibition<lb/>
offer a cross section of the<lb/>
best contemporary art in<lb/>
the southeast in a wide<lb/>
range of media. Among<lb/>
the trends represented are<lb/>
minimal sculpture and new<lb/>
realist painting as well as<lb/>
works in photography,<lb/>
fiber, ceramics and metal.<lb/>
The SECCA Regional<lb/>
Advisory Council's found-<lb/>
ing members were: Mr. &amp;<lb/>
Mrs. George Clark, Nash-<lb/>
ville, Tenn Mr. &amp; Mrs.<lb/>
Edward Elson, Atlanta,<lb/>
Ga Mr. &amp; Mrs. Gordon<lb/>
Hanes and Mr. &amp; Mrs. R.<lb/>
Philip Hanes Jr Win-<lb/>
ston-Salem, N.C. Other<lb/>
founders include: Mr. &amp;<lb/>
Mrs. Joseph Hirshhorn,<lb/>
Naples, Fla Mr. &amp; Mrs.<lb/>
Henry Hope, Ft. Lauder-<lb/>
dale, Fla Dr. &amp; Mrs.<lb/>
Melvin Horowitz, Spartan-<lb/>
burg, S.C Mr. &amp; Mrs.<lb/>
Sydney Lewis, Richmond,<lb/>
Va Mrs. P.R. Norman,<lb/>
New Orleans, La Mrs.<lb/>
Samuel Rautbord, Palm<lb/>
Beach, Fla Dr. &amp; Mrs.<lb/>
Donald Saunders, Colum-<lb/>
bia, S.C. and Mr. &amp; Mrs.<lb/>
Ray.mond Zimmerman,<lb/>
Nashville, Tenn.<lb/>
The Gray Gallery is<lb/>
in the Leo W.<lb/>
Fine Arts Center<lb/>
Street in Green-<lb/>
located<lb/>
Jenkins<lb/>
on 5th<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
Tennessee Williams'<lb/>
"Summer and Smoke" ?<lb/>
A prim spinster and a<lb/>
reckless doctor in a<lb/>
dramatic duel between<lb/>
spirit and fleshBy all<lb/>
odds, Tennessee Williams'<lb/>
best play"<lb/>
-N.Y. Mirror<lb/>
I<lb/>
"Summer and Smoke" is<lb/>
about a woman struggling<lb/>
to overcome a desperate<lb/>
predicament. Alma Wine-<lb/>
miller (played by Jeanne<lb/>
Cullen) is as painfully<lb/>
lonely as the pathetic<lb/>
Laura who collects glass<lb/>
animals in "Menagerie<lb/>
festival<lb/>
"Summer and Smoke"<lb/>
is a story of tragedy in a<lb/>
small Southern town. Fes-<lb/>
tival Stage Company (a<lb/>
non-profit, professional<lb/>
theatre operated by The<lb/>
N.C. Shakespeare Festival<lb/>
in affiliation with the N.C.<lb/>
School of the Arts) will<lb/>
bring to the High Point<lb/>
Theatre the tender and<lb/>
haunting drama from the<lb/>
pen of America's foremost<lb/>
dramatist.<lb/>
Tennessee Williams'<lb/>
"Summer and Smoke"<lb/>
plays November 1-4 and<lb/>
November 6-10 at 8:15<lb/>
Like "The Glass Men-<lb/>
agerie" and Pulitzer<lb/>
Prize-winning "A Street-<lb/>
car Named Desire<lb/>
The theme of the<lb/>
drama is Alma's hopeless<lb/>
love for the man next<lb/>
door, John Buchanan<lb/>
(played by Terrence<lb/>
Mann). From a social<lb/>
point of view, she would<lb/>
become the victim of sociai<lb/>
circumstances which have<lb/>
imprisoned her.<lb/>
This Broadway success<lb/>
will be directed by Peter<lb/>
Bennett, an award-winning<lb/>
director who also directed<lb/>
the premiere N.C. Shakes-<lb/>
peare Festival production,<lb/>
"The Taming of the<lb/>
Shrew" in 1977.<lb/>
Oliver Goldsmith's<lb/>
"She Stoops to Conquer"<lb/>
will be presented by<lb/>
Festival Stage Company<lb/>
November 30 and Decem-<lb/>
ber 1-8 at the High Point<lb/>
Theatre. A new production<lb/>
of Dickens' immortal clas<lb/>
sic, "A Christmas Carol"<lb/>
will be presented Decem-<lb/>
ber 18-22, also at the High<lb/>
Point Theatre.<lb/>
ALBVM REVIEW<lb/>
continued from page 7<lb/>
contains an album and a half of music.<lb/>
If all this appeals to you, check it out; you will not be<lb/>
displeased.<lb/>
?Melissa Manchester ? Melissa Manchester ? This<lb/>
lady has been trying to make it big on the pop scene for<lb/>
some time, but aside from a few singles, she has not<lb/>
been able to achieve commercial status. This new<lb/>
album, although it is nice, will not bring her the acclaim<lb/>
she desires.<lb/>
Too many of the songs on this release walk the line<lb/>
between pop and disco to appeal to very many people.<lb/>
Manchester should decide whether she wants to sing<lb/>
pop or disco and stop trying to please everybody; it is<lb/>
too hard a task.<lb/>
If she ever wants to get out of the clubs and make it<lb/>
big time, Manchester has got to find a more powerful<lb/>
vehicle for her strong voice than this album.<lb/>
?The Jukes ? The Jukes ? These guys are Springsteen<lb/>
cronies from the Stone Pony on the boardwalk at Asbury<lb/>
Park. New Jersey. ("Sandy, the waitress I was seeing<lb/>
lost her desire for me).<lb/>
Their first album was an instant classic, being a<lb/>
mixture of rhythm and blues and boardwalk boogie.<lb/>
This, the follow up, though very good, does not match<lb/>
up to the quality of the first endeavor.<lb/>
The group seems to have lost some of its fire,<lb/>
perhaps because of the departure of Miami Steven Van<lb/>
Zandt. Another contributing factor may have been that<lb/>
Southside Johnny (the leader) had his arm severed, then<lb/>
surgically replaced, during the production of this album.<lb/>
Springsteen did not give the guys any help this time,<lb/>
so the album lacks that certain joie de vivre, but Barry<lb/>
Beckett helped to negate this deficit.<lb/>
If you like horns andor goodtime music, you might<lb/>
like to check out The Jukes. At least, they are not as<lb/>
bad as the Xallikaks.<lb/>
Albums Courtesy of The Record Bar, Pitt Plaza and<lb/>
Carolina East Mall.<lb/>
East Carolina Playhouse<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
For Colored Girls<lb/>
Who Have Considered<lb/>
Suicide<lb/>
When The<lb/>
Rainbow<lb/>
Is<lb/>
Enuf<lb/>
by ntozake shange<lb/>
A passionately spellbinding choreopoem<lb/>
which captures the inner feelings of<lb/>
today's Black woman.<lb/>
Directed oy<lb/>
Edgar R. Loessin<lb/>
October 31 through November 3<lb/>
November 5 thrqugh 7<lb/>
8:15p.m.<lb/>
Studio Theatre<lb/>
Tickets are $2.50<lb/>
ECU Students $1.50<lb/>
For reservations and information<lb/>
call 757-6390<lb/>
between 10 and 4<lb/>
Monday through Friday<lb/>
1<lb/>
ABRAMS<lb/>
Bar - B - Q<lb/>
FREE BEVERAGE WITH<lb/>
COLLEGE I.D.<lb/>
Daily Specials from<lb/>
$2.25  $2.50<lb/>
Located Just Across<lb/>
the Bridge on<lb/>
N. Greene St.<lb/>
Student Union Artist Series<lb/>
presents<lb/>
8pm<lb/>
Tues,Oct.30<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Taste the pride of Canada<lb/>
Molson.<lb/>
Student$2.00<lb/>
Public $5.00<lb/>
tickets at the<lb/>
door $5.00<lb/>
?<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
EAST CAROUNA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
t<lb/>
L 'MPORTED<lb/>
h???,?si tefeji<lb/>
r &amp;"T ?? ? ? -?.  Bt'V - ? -? j? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
&amp;&amp; "j1<lb/>
JJ<lb/>
kfctSv-tS-  " itf?ifcAi! ? ?ii'Li<lb/>
Bk-r-  ???"<lb/>
<lb/>
Ut<lb/>
raw- ????" w'<lb/>
Nfc mm ???<lb/>
. ? rnz<lb/>
?gisgm.<lb/>
m&amp;<lb/>
?NV<lb/>
,0<lb/>
r?<lb/>
You'll get a taste of<lb/>
nearly 200 years of brewing heritage every time you open<lb/>
a cool, green bottle of MOLSON GOLDEN ??<lb/>
fTf? &amp; brewcry ? its back<lb/>
m 1786. John Molson, our founder, wouldn't recoRnia<lb/>
our modem breweries, but he'd be proud of the<lb/>
good, smooth taste of GOLDEN.m<lb/>
A taste that says Canada in every refreshing sip.<lb/>
?? j ?j l-muj i. r1 fl . ff .flfniLi<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057227_0009"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
lian 1 ?<lb/>
sports<lb/>
Tuesday, October 30, 1979 Page 9<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
FG leaves Heels, Pirates tied 24-24<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL - A 47-yard field goal by North<lb/>
Carolina kicker Jeff hayes with 13 seconds remaining in<lb/>
the game gave the Tar Heels a 24-24 tie with<lb/>
upset-minded East Carolina Saturday.<lb/>
The 15th-ranked Tar Heels had to drive frantically<lb/>
downfield from their own 30-yard line in the last 1:11 of<lb/>
game to salvage the tie. Each play on the drive<lb/>
leatured a pass by Tar Heel quarterback Matt Kupec.<lb/>
Completions from Kupec to fullback Doug Paschall, tight<lb/>
end Mike Chatham and split end P.J. Gay of 11, 18 and<lb/>
yards, respectively, moved the ball into Hayes'<lb/>
range.<lb/>
I he Hayes field goal came on a fourth and ten<lb/>
tuition at the ECU 31-yard line. The fact that North<lb/>
Carolina coach Dick Crum opted for the tie instead of<lb/>
gambling tor a possible win came as a surprise to<lb/>
Paschall, who gained 151 yards on the ground.<lb/>
It -hocked me to see him (Hayes) come on the<lb/>
said the fullback from Greenville. "I just<lb/>
irally thought we'd go for it<lb/>
Crum said after the game that there was no doubt in<lb/>
ind at the time that he would kick for the tie. "We<lb/>
lecided before the last drive even began that we'd<lb/>
the field goal if we got into a fourth-and-long<lb/>
situation Crum said. "That kick has got to do a lot for<lb/>
Jeffs confidence<lb/>
rhe last-minute comeback by the Heels was not the<lb/>
eback in this game that had most all of the<lb/>
1 Kenan Stadium fans on the edge of their seats<lb/>
much of the contest.<lb/>
t halftime the Heels owned a 21-10 lead thanks to a<lb/>
-yard drie that began with only 42 seconds remaining<lb/>
in the initial half. The drive was culminated by an<lb/>
18-yard touchdown toss from Kupec to split end Jeff<lb/>
Gre.<lb/>
That touchdown pass was the third of the game for<lb/>
Kupec. giving him 13 for the season, a new school<lb/>
record. He now has 28 for his career, only six away from<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Conference record held by South<lb/>
- Tommy Suggs.<lb/>
Pirates wasted little time in the third period<lb/>
fore chopping away at the Tar Heel lead. Cornerback<lb/>
W illie Holley's driving interception of a Kupec to Wayne<lb/>
Tucker pass set up the Pirates' first second-half score.<lb/>
Alter Holley's steal, quarterback Leander Green directed<lb/>
a beautiful 89-yard ECU drive that was capped by a<lb/>
21-yard scoring jaunt by halfback Anthony Collins. Bill<lb/>
Lamm's extra point narrowed the Heels' lead to 21-17<lb/>
with 7:26 remaining in the third quarter.<lb/>
It was at almost exactly the same point of the fourth<lb/>
period that the Pirates scored their go-ahead touchdown.<lb/>
Again, the score came after a long drive. A 22-yard run<lb/>
by fullback Theodore Sutton and a 23-yard pass from<lb/>
Green to Vern Davenport highlighted the 92-yard drive<lb/>
that took over five minutes off the clock and ended in a<lb/>
12-yard pass from Green to Davenport. Lamm's point<lb/>
after made it ECU 24-21.<lb/>
The Tar Heels then wasted no time in their<lb/>
comeback attempt. An 18-yard pass from Kupec to end<lb/>
Phil Farris carried the ball to the ECU 43. But Farris,<lb/>
who dropped a pass in the end zone late in earlier loss<lb/>
to Wake Forest, fumbled on the play. The ball was<lb/>
recovered by ECU safety Ruffin McNeill.<lb/>
The Pirates were not able to sustain a drive and had<lb/>
to punt to the waiting Heels. The two teams exchanged<lb/>
punts again before the Heels drove for the tying field<lb/>
goal.<lb/>
Pirate quarterback Leander Green was disappointed<lb/>
that his club was unable to control the ball for very long<lb/>
after taking the lead in the fourth quarter. "A couple of<lb/>
first downs at the end could have put it out of reach<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
After Hayes' field goal, the Tar Heels tried an onside<lb/>
kick that was recovered easily by East Carolina. With<lb/>
(Photo by John Grogan)<lb/>
ECU linebacker Mike Brewington (96) chases UNC QB Matt Kupec (12)<lb/>
the ball on the UNC 41-yard line, Green attempted a<lb/>
pass to Davenport, who was on about the 20, in order to<lb/>
move the Pirates into easy field goal range. The pass<lb/>
failed and Davenport was forced to try a 57-yarder that<lb/>
fell just short and left the game in a tie, and both teams<lb/>
frustrated.<lb/>
ECU Coach Pat Dye said the kick was not an<lb/>
impossible one for Davenport. "I've seen Vern kick<lb/>
them from over sixty yards in practice said the Pirate<lb/>
coach after witnessing the first tie of his head coaching<lb/>
career. "If it hadn't been so late in the game, he would<lb/>
have been able to kick it. He was just so tired at tho<lb/>
time after playing all day<lb/>
Dye said that he felt his club had come through<lb/>
when least expected just to tie the favored Heels. "I<lb/>
don't think I've ever had a football team come into a<lb/>
game facing as great odds as we faced today he said.<lb/>
"I'm talking about the surroundings here, a<lb/>
nationally-ranked and well-coached team and all<lb/>
Dye was well-pleased with the play of a number of<lb/>
individuals on the team. "Fullback Theodore Sutton just<lb/>
played an excellent game, both blocking and running the<lb/>
football he said. Sutton finished the game as his<lb/>
team's leading rusher with 93 yards on 16 carries.<lb/>
Anthony Collins tallied 91 yards.<lb/>
"If our number ten (quarterback Green) can't play<lb/>
then there aren't many players anywhere said Dye<lb/>
with a shake of his head. Green directed the Pirate<lb/>
option attack to near-perfection all day. Surprising to<lb/>
many were his 124 yards passing.<lb/>
"We had to go to a combination of things today<lb/>
said Green. "We mixed our runs up, going inside<lb/>
sometimes and outside sometimes, and passed on<lb/>
occasion also<lb/>
The game was an offensive showcase all the way, the<lb/>
Tar Heels accumulating 475 yards total offense and the<lb/>
Pirates 383 yards.<lb/>
Kupec had an excellent day for the Heels,<lb/>
completing 18 of 32 passes for 265 yards. "Matt threw<lb/>
the ball very well said Crum. "He'means an awful lot<lb/>
to our attack<lb/>
Dye had respectful words for the Tar Heel<lb/>
quarterback also. "He's really great said Dye. "I'm<lb/>
glad we don't have to face him again<lb/>
Though Dye was evidently upset to come away with<lb/>
a tie, he did feel his team had proven a lot. "I told the<lb/>
squad they didn't win he said, "but that they won a<lb/>
whole lot of hearts today<lb/>
The tie left the Heels with a 5-1-1 record going into<lb/>
this Saturday's game with ACC foe Maryland. The<lb/>
Pirates are 3-3-1 and will face Appalachian State in<lb/>
Boone Saturdav afternoon.<lb/>
Should ties be discontinued or not?<lb/>
(Photo by Chap Gurley)<lb/>
Leander Green's expression reflects tie<lb/>
"Nobody likes a tie<lb/>
North Carolina coach Dick Crum said it right<lb/>
following Saturday's 24-24 tie between his Tar Heels<lb/>
and East Carolina. It seems that no one is happy to<lb/>
settle for only a tie. It leaves everyone with a strange,<lb/>
sort of empty feeling.<lb/>
"This feels real strange said Pirate linebacker<lb/>
Mike Brewington after the game, "not like a win or a<lb/>
loss<lb/>
It was a game that saw both teams work oh so hard<lb/>
for a victory that neither could claim in the end. "I'm<lb/>
pretty beat said safety Ruffin McNeill as he sat in the<lb/>
Pirate locker room after the game. "All of us hustled so<lb/>
hard today. I know we tied, but we're all winners<lb/>
inside.<lb/>
So maybe the Pirates got a little more consolation<lb/>
from the tie than did the favored and nationally-ranked<lb/>
Tar Heels, right? WRONG.<lb/>
"You won't see any celebrating in our locker room<lb/>
said ECU coach Pat Dye to a group of reporters<lb/>
following the tie. "Our players are heartbroken. The<lb/>
character that comes out of playing football and the<lb/>
other things that you learn can come from this, but it's<lb/>
mighty disappointing<lb/>
The North Carolina players and coaches were no less<lb/>
pleased with the tie than were the Pirates, despite the<lb/>
fact that it was the Tar Heels who made a late comeback<lb/>
to tie the game.<lb/>
"This was not a bad game for us said UNC<lb/>
punter-defensive back Steve Streater, "but not a good<lb/>
one either. This tie just leaves you with an awful<lb/>
feeling<lb/>
Saturday's tie brought up something that has been<lb/>
discussed for quite some time. Why not have a<lb/>
sudden-death playoff to decide college football ties like<lb/>
they have in high school and professional ball?<lb/>
The answer, well why not. Tradition has a great deal<lb/>
to do with it. After all, the college game has always<lb/>
been played this way.<lb/>
Another reason is pointed out by a statement that<lb/>
Dye made following Saturday's game. When asked if he<lb/>
thought there should be a playoff in case of a tie, Dye<lb/>
replied, "Naw, you prepare to play 60 minutes of<lb/>
football and if it's not settled then, then let everyone go<lb/>
home frustrated<lb/>
But the fact is that every other level of the game has<lb/>
a playoff. Even most little leagues now have some sort<lb/>
of system to decide a tie. College football is about the<lb/>
long supporter of the traditional "let it be" system.<lb/>
Pirate assistant coach Henrv Trevathan was a very<lb/>
frustrated man following Saturday's tie with the Heels.<lb/>
As he stood alone in a corner of the ECU locker room<lb/>
thinking back over the game, he was asked if he would<lb/>
like a playoff to decide such games. "Yeah he said,<lb/>
"we'd love to play this one off<lb/>
Before anyone gets all fired up about having a<lb/>
system in college ball to decide ties, one thing must be<lb/>
remembered about Saturday's game. It was a game<lb/>
featuring two fierce rivals, so the tie hurt more for the<lb/>
players, fans and coaches of the two teams because they<lb/>
wanted badly to win this particular game.<lb/>
Still there is always that terrible feeiing that a tie<lb/>
leaves with anyone involved. Fans seem to ask, "What<lb/>
was settled by all this? Did these guys play 60 minutes<lb/>
of football for thisV These fans have a point.<lb/>
But so does Dye. The teams do prepare to play 60<lb/>
minutes and 60 minutes only.<lb/>
But wouldn't a rule change change all that? A team<lb/>
that knows a head of time that a tie would mean<lb/>
sudden-death could prepare for such a situation.<lb/>
Such a rule change seems necessary. True, no one<lb/>
deserved to lose Saturday's game, but there's no doubt<lb/>
that somebody deserved to win it.<lb/>
Despite 151 yards<lb/>
Paschall disappointed<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
assistant sports editor<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL ? "We didn't play up to our<lb/>
potential said UNC running back Doug Paschal following<lb/>
the 24-24 tie between the Heels and the ECu Pirates<lb/>
Saturday. "When you don't, you're in trouble.<lb/>
Paschal may call it not playing up to their potential,<lb/>
but the Tar Heels still had to credit the Pirates with one<lb/>
of the most galient come-backs of the season.<lb/>
It took a Jeff Hayes field goal from 47 yards out with<lb/>
13 remaining in the contest between interstate rivals for<lb/>
the 18th ranked Heels to salvage a tie.<lb/>
"It shocked my to see him (Hayes) come onto the<lb/>
field said Paschal. "I really thought we would go for<lb/>
it.<lb/>
"I always think about winning; a tie just never<lb/>
entered my mind .<lb/>
Paschal led the Heels' first two touchdown drives,<lb/>
though never crossing the goal line himself.<lb/>
"We didn't take them lightly he said. "It s really<lb/>
a disappointment not to win<lb/>
Paschal charged through the ECU defense for 151<lb/>
yards on 31 carries for his best performance of the 1979<lb/>
season. . , ,<lb/>
"As far as I know, they stuck to their basis<lb/>
defense Paschal stated.<lb/>
Quarterback Matt Kupec threw for 265 yards while<lb/>
completing 18 out of 32 passes on the afternoon<lb/>
including an 11-yard pass for a crucial first down which<lb/>
led to the deciding field goal by Hayes.<lb/>
"I'm capable of doing both (running and receiving)<lb/>
said paschal. "I usually just stay back and block on pass<lb/>
plays, though<lb/>
Kupec out-manuevered the Pirate blitz several times<lb/>
in the game, includeing a second quarter 18-yard<lb/>
touchdown toss to tight end Jeff Grey.<lb/>
"East Carolina is a team that doesn't really hide<lb/>
their blitz offered paschal. "We thought we had<lb/>
picked up some tendencies through watching the films,<lb/>
and the plays we called just paid off<lb/>
"1 didn't see where there was any easy yardage<lb/>
anywhere<lb/>
Paschal may physically be the best proof of that<lb/>
statement.<lb/>
Sitting in his lockert in the Heels' dressing room,<lb/>
Paschal looked more like a war casualty than a football<lb/>
player; both elbows absent skin as well as the knuckles<lb/>
of his right hand, along with a bruise covering the upper<lb/>
portion of his left leg.<lb/>
"East Carolina is a fine ball club he replied when<lb/>
asked how much the game meant to his team. "Tying<lb/>
East Carolina is not like tying some high school team<lb/>
Carolina moved the ball 225 yards on their first 30<lb/>
plays from scrimmage before the Pirate defense stopped<lb/>
them for no gain. Paschal accounted for 59 of that total<lb/>
on 11 carries.<lb/>
The Greenville native said that playing the school<lb/>
from his home town added no pressure to him.<lb/>
"It makes the game a little more fun he said. "I<lb/>
know a lot of the players for East Carolina; I played with<lb/>
a lot of them at Rose High.<lb/>
<lb/>
(Photo by John Grogan)<lb/>
Theodore Sutton rolls up the yardage<lb/>
Dye, Pirates<lb/>
frustrated<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL ? "You won't see any celebrating in<lb/>
our locker room said a teary-eyed East Carolina<lb/>
football coach Pat Dye to a group of reporters following<lb/>
Saturday's 24-24 tie with 15th-ranked North Carolina.<lb/>
"Our players are heartbroken<lb/>
Indeed, the scene inside the Pirates' locker room was<lb/>
heartbreaking. The players took an unnecessarily long<lb/>
amount of time leaving the crowded, hot room. Why?<lb/>
The team had just seen what could have been the<lb/>
biggest win in Pirate football history go down the drain<lb/>
following a 47-yard field goal by North Carolina kicker<lb/>
Jeff Hayes with 13 seconds remaining in the contest that<lb/>
tied the game. Instead of a big win, the Pirates had to<lb/>
settle for a mere tie.<lb/>
"I've never had a football team come into a game<lb/>
facing as great odds as we faced today said Dye. "I'm<lb/>
talking about the surroundings here, a nationally-ranked<lb/>
and well-coached team and all<lb/>
After losing three straight games early in the season,<lb/>
all to Atlantic Coast conference and Big Four schools<lb/>
the Pirates needed this game to save their season and<lb/>
put them back into the bowl picture.<lb/>
"A win Saturday could get us back in the picture<lb/>
Dye had said last week before the game with the Heels.<lb/>
"A win over North Carolina and wins in the remainder<lb/>
of our games should make us attractive to someone<lb/>
And that win it seemed the Pirates had when the had<lb/>
See PIRATES, page 12<lb/>
00 ?jJ)'? &amp;- ?-?- " ? ?? ll" - ? ?? ? <lb/>
-? W Of ir ' ?<lb/>
- - ? '<lb/>
?"??MMlMBMBMMl<lb/>
<pb facs="00057227_0010"/><lb/>
Paoe 10 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 30 October 1979<lb/>
Heels down ECU inOT<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL - The <lb/>
upset hopes of East<lb/>
Carolina's soccer team<lb/>
were dashed when with<lb/>
five minutes remaining in<lb/>
overtime North Carolina<lb/>
scored to defeat the<lb/>
Pirates 2-1 Saturday<lb/>
morning.<lb/>
David Blum scored his<lb/>
second goal of the day on<lb/>
an assist by Ricky Marvin<lb/>
to give the Heels the win<lb/>
and break a tie that had<lb/>
stood since the first half.<lb/>
The Pirates got on the<lb/>
scoreboard first when Phil<lb/>
Martin stole a pass<lb/>
intended for the goalie and<lb/>
cashed in at 7:08 of the<lb/>
first period.<lb/>
Fifteen minutes later<lb/>
Blum tied the game at one<lb/>
on a penalty kick.<lb/>
Big Ten to be<lb/>
renamed 'Big Two'?<lb/>
By<lb/>
HERSCHEL NISSENSON<lb/>
AP Sports Writer<lb/>
The Big Ten looks like<lb/>
the Big Two once again ?<lb/>
what else is new? ? and<lb/>
Ohio State and Michigan<lb/>
both have No. 1 on their<lb/>
minds.<lb/>
There's just one little<lb/>
difference  Ohio State<lb/>
has its sights set on a No.<lb/>
1 national ranking while<lb/>
Michigan is grateful for<lb/>
the last-second heroics of<lb/>
freshman wide receiver<lb/>
Anthony Carter, who<lb/>
wears uniform No. 1.<lb/>
While Ohio State, tied<lb/>
for No. 4 with Arkansas in<lb/>
The Associated Press rat-<lb/>
ings, was mauling Michi-<lb/>
gan State 42-0, 10th-<lb/>
ranked Michigan needed a<lb/>
last-second 45 yard touch-<lb/>
down prayer from John<lb/>
Wangler to Carter to<lb/>
salvage a 27-21 victory<lb/>
over Indiana and remain<lb/>
tied with the Buckeyes for<lb/>
the Big Ten lead. They<lb/>
meet in Ann Arbor, Mich<lb/>
on Nov. 17.<lb/>
Art Schlichter threw<lb/>
scoring passes of 53 and<lb/>
12 yards to Doug Donley<lb/>
and scored on runs of 3<lb/>
and 6 yards as unbeaten<lb/>
Ohio State piled up more<lb/>
than 500 yards in offense<lb/>
for the third week in a row<lb/>
and handed Michigan<lb/>
State its first shutout in 51<lb/>
games.<lb/>
Coach Earle Bruce,<lb/>
whose eight victories in<lb/>
his first year at the helm<lb/>
have surpassed last year's<lb/>
seven under the ousted<lb/>
Woody Hayes, was asked<lb/>
if he thought the Buckeyes<lb/>
should be No. 1 nationally.<lb/>
"I don't know about<lb/>
that he replied.<lb/>
Blum's play throughout<lb/>
the contest was impres-<lb/>
sive, said his coach. "The<lb/>
game ball should go to<lb/>
Blum said Tar Heel<lb/>
head man Anson Dor-<lb/>
rance. "He makes me look<lb/>
like a good coach<lb/>
North Carolina con-<lb/>
trolled the ball for most of<lb/>
the game, taking 20 shots<lb/>
to just five for the Pirates.<lb/>
Yet Dorrance was very<lb/>
impressed with the play of<lb/>
the Pirates. "East Caro-<lb/>
lina really hung tough<lb/>
Dorrance said. "They gave<lb/>
us a good game the last<lb/>
time we played them and<lb/>
did so again this time.<lb/>
"In all honesty it<lb/>
should have been a tie. If<lb/>
we were going to score,<lb/>
we should have done so<lb/>
earlier<lb/>
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East Carolina coach<lb/>
Brad Smith was also well-<lb/>
pleased with the perfor-<lb/>
mance of his squad.<lb/>
"Everybody really played<lb/>
well for us said Smith.<lb/>
"You don't play a team<lb/>
like North Carolina the<lb/>
way we did unless every-<lb/>
body plays well<lb/>
The Pirate cause was<lb/>
hurt by the ejection of<lb/>
leading scorere Phil Mar-<lb/>
tin with nine minutes<lb/>
remaining in the first half.<lb/>
"We were hurting without<lb/>
Martin said Smith. "He<lb/>
is half our offense. We<lb/>
played 74 minutes one<lb/>
man down. The other guys<lb/>
did real well to hang in<lb/>
there like they did<lb/>
The loss left the<lb/>
Pirates at 4-9-2 for the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Winchell twins key hooters<lb/>
If you've ever seen the East Carolina sofccer team in<lb/>
action, you probably thought that your eyes were<lb/>
deceiving you as two of the top Pirate players, Brad and<lb/>
Brian Winchell, came onto the field.<lb/>
These brothers are twins in more than one respect.<lb/>
Of course they look alike physically, but they are also<lb/>
"twins" in their play. Both young men are considered<lb/>
excellent players by Pirate coach Brad Smith.<lb/>
As sophomores, Brad, the school's first scholarship<lb/>
soccer player, and Brian, the starting goalie, are looking<lb/>
forward to East Carolina's remaining matches which<lb/>
include one against North Carolina at Chapel Hill on<lb/>
Oct. 27 at 11 a.m.<lb/>
Brad, the leading scorer last year as a freshman with<lb/>
nine goals and four assists, feels that his quickness is<lb/>
his biggest asset to the team.<lb/>
"I think that my speed is my main contribution to<lb/>
the team Brad said with a smile.<lb/>
Brad, even with his tremendous potential, strong<lb/>
right foot and excellent speed has his areas where he is<lb/>
working for improvement, too. In practice, he is trying<lb/>
to develop his skills with his left foot and better ball<lb/>
control. He has three goals and assists this season.<lb/>
Brian, the other half of this duo, is experiencing his<lb/>
first year with the team since transfering from LbU last<lb/>
year. At the beginning of the season Brian was not the<lb/>
starting goalie but has since earned the starting nod.<lb/>
"As a a team, we haven't been gettmg all the<lb/>
positive results we would like said Brian, the more<lb/>
talkative of the two. "We have already won more games<lb/>
than any team has before, but there have been some<lb/>
other matches that I feel we could have won. We'll have<lb/>
to work harder for those, I guess<lb/>
Brian has enjoyed some good matches for East<lb/>
Carolina this fall including an impressive showing<lb/>
against William and Mary last weekend when he shut<lb/>
out the Indians for the first half.<lb/>
Like his brother, Brian believes that his speed is the<lb/>
key to his play.<lb/>
"Speed is my greatest asset as a goalie said Brian.<lb/>
His coach agrees about his athletic ability.<lb/>
"Brian is an excellent all-round athlete stated<lb/>
Smith. "He has had some excellent matches for us and<lb/>
continues to improve<lb/>
With Brad on one end of the field as a right halfback<lb/>
and Brian on the other end as a goalie the W'nchell<lb/>
brothers seem to be everywhere, but they know that<lb/>
they can't do it alone.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057227_0011"/><lb/>
30 October 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Page 11<lb/>
Yanks oust Martin<lb/>
(Photo by Chap Gurley)<lb/>
UNC fullback Doug Paschall is snowed under<lb/>
By KEN RAPPOPORT<lb/>
AP Sports Writer<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) -<lb/>
Billy Martin is out, after<lb/>
another strike call. In the<lb/>
wake of an alleged fight in<lb/>
Bloomington, Minn the<lb/>
free-swinging Martin was<lb/>
fired Sunday as manager<lb/>
of the New York Yankees<lb/>
and replaced by one-time<lb/>
coach Dick Howser.<lb/>
Yankee owner George<lb/>
Steinbenner, supportive of<lb/>
Martin in many of his<lb/>
earlier controversies, ap-<lb/>
parently had reached the<lb/>
limit of his endurance<lb/>
after the manager's latest<lb/>
news-making incident last<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Martin, who has a long<lb/>
history of similarly sordid<lb/>
affairs, was accused of<lb/>
punching an Illinois man<lb/>
last Wednesday night in<lb/>
the lobby of a Bloomington<lb/>
hotel. His alleged victim,<lb/>
Joseph Cooper of Lincoln-<lb/>
shire, 111 was sent to a<lb/>
hospital where he required<lb/>
15 to 20 stitches to close<lb/>
cuts on his lip.<lb/>
Martin denied throwing<lb/>
any punches. But just the<lb/>
news was enough to get<lb/>
Steinbrenner up in the air<lb/>
over the weekend, jetting<lb/>
off to New York from his<lb/>
home in Florida to inves-<lb/>
tigate the case. The owner<lb/>
appeared to prejudge<lb/>
Martin when he com-<lb/>
mented:<lb/>
"We just can't have<lb/>
him getting into these<lb/>
things every two months.<lb/>
It's not good for organized<lb/>
baseball<lb/>
But Steinbrenner had<lb/>
nothing to say Sunday<lb/>
after letting Martin go,<lb/>
ending a stormy relation-<lb/>
ship that started in the<lb/>
middle of the 1975 season.<lb/>
No definitive statement<lb/>
concerning Martin was<lb/>
included in the Yankee<lb/>
announcement, just these<lb/>
succinct words:<lb/>
"The New York Yan-<lb/>
kees announced tonight<lb/>
that Billy Martin will not<lb/>
be returning as manager<lb/>
of the Yankees<lb/>
It was the second time<lb/>
in his controversy-studded<lb/>
career that Martin has<lb/>
parted with the Yankees.<lb/>
In the middle of the<lb/>
1978 season he resigned<lb/>
under pressure after a<lb/>
series of problem with<lb/>
management and super-<lb/>
star Reggie Jackson, ut-<lb/>
tering his infamous phrase<lb/>
that Steinbrenner and<lb/>
Jackson deserved each<lb/>
other because "one is a<lb/>
born liar and the other is a<lb/>
convicted liar<lb/>
But less than one week<lb/>
after Bob Lemon had been<lb/>
hired to replace Martin,<lb/>
Steinbrenner reversed his<lb/>
field with the shocking<lb/>
announcement that Martin<lb/>
would return as manager<lb/>
in 1980.<lb/>
It didn't take Martin<lb/>
quite that long to come<lb/>
back, however. He re-<lb/>
turned prematurely in the<lb/>
middle of 1979 in an effort<lb/>
to fire up a flagging team.<lb/>
Martin's return did no<lb/>
good as the Yankees<lb/>
finished a desultory fourth<lb/>
in the American League<lb/>
East.<lb/>
While neither Stein-<lb/>
brenner nor Martin was<lb/>
available for comment<lb/>
Sunday, Howser was.<lb/>
"I've been around New<lb/>
York 12 years he said.<lb/>
"I understand what a<lb/>
manager of the Yankees<lb/>
has to go through<lb/>
Howser said he then<lb/>
flew Sunday to Ocala.<lb/>
Fla where Steinbrenner<lb/>
has a horse farm, to see<lb/>
the owner and "the deal<lb/>
was consummated<lb/>
Although Howser had<lb/>
settled in the Tallahassee,<lb/>
Fla area to get out of the<lb/>
glaring major league spot-<lb/>
light, he said: "It would<lb/>
be hard for anyone to turn<lb/>
down the New York<lb/>
Yankees' managing job.<lb/>
especially when you've<lb/>
been part of the organi-<lb/>
zation for 12 years. I'm a<lb/>
Yankee. I know the<lb/>
players fairly well<lb/>
Suprrnwirkrt, Inc<lb/>
? it<lb/>
"Home of Greenville's Best Meats<lb/>
Located on corner 3rd and Jarvis St.<lb/>
COUPONS EXPIRE NOV. 3<lb/>
Please have<lb/>
coupons clipped<lb/>
Soft'n Pretty Toilet Tissue<lb/>
4 roll package 68 with this<lb/>
coupon and $7.50 fo<lb/>
order without coupon 88<lb/>
Fab Detergent Giant Box<lb/>
88 with this coupon and<lb/>
$7.50 food order without<lb/>
coupon $1.08<lb/>
DuncanHines Yellow or<lb/>
Butter Golden Cake Mix<lb/>
17 oz. box 48 with this<lb/>
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Grade A Whole Fryers<lb/>
33lb.<lb/>
Coca-Cola quart<lb/>
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plusde<lb/>
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White House Apple Sauce<lb/>
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limit 4 with<lb/>
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food order<lb/>
Star Kist Chunk Light<lb/>
. limit 2 with<lb/>
$ $7.50<lb/>
food order<lb/>
Tuna Fish ?. can<lb/>
White Potatoes<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057227_0012"/><lb/>
1 I<lb/>
Page 12 THE EAST CARQ1INIAN 30 October 1979<lb/>
IM point standings beginning to shape up<lb/>
By RICKI GLIARMIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
With Fall Semester<lb/>
half over, and several<lb/>
Intramural activities fin-<lb/>
ished for another year, the<lb/>
point standings are begin-<lb/>
ning to take shape.<lb/>
In the fraternity div-<lb/>
ision, the top three teams<lb/>
after tallying flag football,<lb/>
golf, track, and IM<lb/>
Council, are Kappa Alpha,<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau, and Sigma<lb/>
Nu. Top Three Residence<lb/>
Hall division teams are<lb/>
Scott, Aycock, and Belk<lb/>
and the leaders in the<lb/>
Club-Independent Division<lb/>
are ROTC, Phi Epsilon<lb/>
Kappa, and the Dolemites.<lb/>
The Women's point<lb/>
standings have been to-<lb/>
taled including track, One-<lb/>
on-One, golf, archery, flag<lb/>
football, horseshoe sin-<lb/>
gles, tennis singles, and<lb/>
IM Council. In the Sorority<lb/>
division, Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Sigma is leading, followed<lb/>
by Alpha Xi Delta and<lb/>
Alpha Omicron Pi.<lb/>
Residence Hall Division<lb/>
leaders are Tyler holding<lb/>
first place, with Fleming<lb/>
and Cotten in second and<lb/>
third places, respectively.<lb/>
The Independent Divis-<lb/>
ion's Streakers are in first<lb/>
place, followed by PRC.<lb/>
These points are to be<lb/>
tallied throughout the<lb/>
entire school year with a<lb/>
winner from each division<lb/>
named at the end of the<lb/>
year. Each winner will<lb/>
receive the prestigious<lb/>
Chancellor's Cup.<lb/>
Top Team Projections<lb/>
Co-Rec Flag Football<lb/>
projections include the top<lb/>
two teams from each<lb/>
division. In Punter's Div-<lb/>
ision, Driftv Derelicks and<lb/>
Ame's Army are top two.<lb/>
Blitz Division lists Slighty-<lb/>
ly Used and Double<lb/>
Trouble as its top two.<lb/>
Talking Hands and On<lb/>
Your Back take the<lb/>
starting polls in PAT's<lb/>
division with Tri Sig Tau<lb/>
Gamma and Lambda Chi's<lb/>
taking the top two pos-<lb/>
itions in Touchdowns Div-<lb/>
ision.<lb/>
Pre-season picks for<lb/>
Team Handball list Alpha<lb/>
Xi Delta as number one in<lb/>
'he Women's division<lb/>
followed by Heartbreakers<lb/>
II, P.E. and Company, and<lb/>
Fleming Goalie Trotters.<lb/>
In the Men's Division,<lb/>
King's Royal netters are<lb/>
number one followed by<lb/>
Alien, TKE, Dolemites,<lb/>
Phi Epsilon Kappa, and<lb/>
Belk Gola.<lb/>
Frazier's Soccer Se-<lb/>
lections (Men's Division)<lb/>
gives top billing to Scott<lb/>
Rogues, while Independ-<lb/>
ents and Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
closely follow. Sigma Nu,<lb/>
Belk Gola, Phi Kappa Tau,<lb/>
and Aycock Desolation<lb/>
Angels, follow the top<lb/>
three teams. The Slash,<lb/>
Tau Kappa Epsilon, and<lb/>
Kappa Alpha round off the<lb/>
list.<lb/>
Two-on-Two Basketball<lb/>
Biff Jones, graduate<lb/>
assistant, files the fol-<lb/>
lowing report on Two-on-<lb/>
Two Basketball, which he<lb/>
refers to as Big Four<lb/>
Tournament.<lb/>
"Gerald Hall and<lb/>
Cookie McPhatter are the<lb/>
favorites to win, I have<lb/>
heard. They play Tom<lb/>
Pupa and Linda Burt, but<lb/>
you sure can't count them<lb/>
out, they're good too.<lb/>
 ell, how about Dexter<lb/>
Wingfield and tempsie<lb/>
Jones? They're nothing to<lb/>
N.C. State ha<lb/>
the week off<lb/>
VC. State gets a<lb/>
chance to watch its<lb/>
pursuers in the ACC race,<lb/>
Wake Forest and North<lb/>
Carolina, battle Clemson<lb/>
and Maryland Saturday.<lb/>
The much-maligned Wolf-<lb/>
Is defense threw up a<lb/>
late goal line stand against<lb/>
Clemson and won on the<lb/>
-trength of Nathan Ritter's<lb/>
third field goal of the day.<lb/>
The fans here at<lb/>
Clemson saw two great<lb/>
lootball teams going at<lb/>
each other said Wolf-<lb/>
pack Coach Bo Rein.<lb/>
You've heard about how<lb/>
beat up these teams were<lb/>
and how they weren't<lb/>
going at full strength, but<lb/>
you sure couldn't tell it<lb/>
todav<lb/>
?<lb/>
Ritter's field goals<lb/>
were the difference for<lb/>
N.C. State, while two bv<lb/>
Dale Castro were inci-<lb/>
dental in Maryland's rout<lb/>
of Duke. The first, a<lb/>
42-yarder, set an NCAA<lb/>
record, however. It was<lb/>
Ritter's 14th straight, and<lb/>
he extended the streak to<lb/>
15 with a 30-yarder in the<lb/>
fourth period.<lb/>
"I'm real happy for<lb/>
him said Terrapin Coach<lb/>
Jerry Claiborne, who was<lb/>
even happier for the team.<lb/>
The Terrapins, who<lb/>
will try to all but eliminate<lb/>
North Carolina from the<lb/>
race Saturday, had lost<lb/>
four games in succession<lb/>
for the only time in<lb/>
Claiborne's eight years at<lb/>
the helm.<lb/>
Virginia, which was<lb/>
idle Saturday, will have its<lb/>
hands full at Georgia.<lb/>
Pirates frustrated<lb/>
Cont'd from page 9<lb/>
possession of the football on their own 17-yard line with<lb/>
a 24-21 lead and only 2:20 remaining to play. All, it<lb/>
seemed, the Pirates needed to do was get one first<lb/>
down. But the Tar Heel defense held and the Pirates<lb/>
were forced to punt.<lb/>
The Tar Heel offense then went to work and drove<lb/>
the ball downfield for the tying field goal. As Hayes'<lb/>
kick split the uprights perfectly, a sigh of shock fell over<lb/>
the Pirate players, coaches and fans.<lb/>
"We all hustled so hard said safety Ruffin McNeill<lb/>
after the game. "We needed and wanted this one bad. I<lb/>
know we tied the game but I know too that we're all<lb/>
winners inside<lb/>
ECU linebacker Mike Brewington was no less<lb/>
satisfied with the outcome. "We're definitely not<lb/>
happy said Brewington. "But we proved a point. We<lb/>
can play with anybody when we're ready<lb/>
And ready the Pirates were said Dye. "I think we<lb/>
were well-prepared said the sixth-year Pirate mentor,<lb/>
"it was our game all the way in the second half<lb/>
Dye wanted this game for reasons that he had<lb/>
probably not revealed to many. "This is really<lb/>
disappointing he said after the game. "I wanted it so<lb/>
bad for our players. Heck, before the game I looked at<lb/>
some of their shoes and saw the holes he said<lb/>
before stopping to fight back the tears.<lb/>
To come so close yet be so far away is the biggest<lb/>
hurt for quarterback Leander Green. "A couple of first<lb/>
downs at the end could have put it out of reach said<lb/>
the senior from Jacksonville.<lb/>
Split end Vern Davenport likes the way the Pirates<lb/>
accepted the tie. "I think we showed a lot of class he<lb/>
said, "despite all the disappointment. I keep thinking<lb/>
that all we needed at the last was to make a first<lb/>
d ??<lb/>
own.<lb/>
Though he himself was disappointed, Dye offered a<lb/>
word of comfort for the players following the game. "I<lb/>
told tie squad that they didn't win he said, "but that<lb/>
I'm sure they won a lot of hearts today<lb/>
laugh ar, they could very<lb/>
easily win. Of course, they<lb/>
have to beat Tarn Bobbitt<lb/>
and Cindy Beck and boy,<lb/>
they sure can shoot them<lb/>
in from way out! Tune in<lb/>
next show for the exiting<lb/>
conclusion of the Big Four<lb/>
Tournament<lb/>
Rugby Club<lb/>
The Rugby Club, one<lb/>
of ECU's fastest growing<lb/>
sports clubs, helds its<lb/>
Second Annual Invitational<lb/>
Tournament, Oct. 21.<lb/>
Among the eight teams<lb/>
that entered the compet-<lb/>
ition, ECU's Rugby team<lb/>
finished the runner-up,<lb/>
second only to the Old<lb/>
Charlotte Originals, an<lb/>
extremely talented, estab-<lb/>
lished club. Leading scor-<lb/>
ers in the tournament<lb/>
were Roby Robertson,<lb/>
Scott Taylor, Chris Her-<lb/>
man, John Hill and Keith<lb/>
Dickson. Leading scrum-<lb/>
mers were Possum Mc-<lb/>
Lamb, Omar Rafey, Alan<lb/>
Poindexter, and Eric<lb/>
Johnston.<lb/>
The Rugby Club is still<lb/>
looking for recruits. The<lb/>
club is open to all students<lb/>
at ECU. The club has<lb/>
three seasons during the<lb/>
year, fall, spring, and<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
Congratulations to the<lb/>
Rugby Club for its excel-<lb/>
lent performance in the<lb/>
tournament.<lb/>
Deadlines<lb/>
Team Bowling Cap-<lb/>
tain's Meeting is being<lb/>
held Nov. 5, at 4 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall 244, with play<lb/>
beginning Nov. 6.<lb/>
The deadline for CoRec<lb/>
Volleyball registration is<lb/>
Nov. 7, with deadline for<lb/>
Racquetball Singles regis-<lb/>
tration being Nov. 8.<lb/>
The FencingClub meets<lb/>
from 4 p.m. until 6 p.m.<lb/>
each Wednesday.<lb/>
ATiTIC<lb/>
N.C. No. 3<lb/>
Nightclub<lb/>
Tues<lb/>
"Hat Party"<lb/>
BrecKenridge<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
EAZE<lb/>
Fri.&amp; Sat.<lb/>
loth Ave.<lb/>
&amp; EAZE<lb/>
Sun.<lb/>
SUPER GRIT<lb/>
6o4c $Ual SmMMC Hhc<lb/>
PHONE 758-2 T 83<lb/>
We Now Have TWO<lb/>
Locations to To Serve You!<lb/>
HALLOWEEN OCT. 31<lb/>
117 W 4th St.<lb/>
jGreenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
JOpen 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
402 Evans St.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Downtown on the Mall<lb/>
ODefi.l0:00a.m.to5:00<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO 12TH<lb/>
WEEK OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
$175.00 "all inclusive'<lb/>
pregnancy test. Dirtu control and<lb/>
problem pregnancy counseling For<lb/>
further information call 832-0535 (toll-<lb/>
free number 800-221-2568) between<lb/>
9 A.M5 PM weekdays<lb/>
Raleigh Women's Health<lb/>
Organization<lb/>
917 West Morgan St<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C. 27603<lb/>
Monday-Friday<lb/>
2:00-5:00 p.m.<lb/>
small draft (to oz.) 30<lb/>
large draft (16 Oz.) 4S'<lb/>
with student I.D.<lb/>
Come by and visit our complete<lb/>
game room.<lb/>
Pinball, video games, footsball.<lb/>
208 E. 10th St. 758-2446<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
4 008:00PM NOCARRYOUT<lb/>
SALAD?50 EXTRA<lb/>
ASST. VAR 9 9<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
TUE.<lb/>
PIZZA.<lb/>
WITH FRIES &amp; COLESLAW<lb/>
FRIED S -t 9 9<lb/>
CHICKEN ??? I"<lb/>
WITH GARLIC BREAD<lb/>
ITALIAN $400<lb/>
SPAGHETTIotvl "<lb/>
WITH FRIES &amp; COLE SLAW<lb/>
FRIED t-fQQ<lb/>
FISH. . .? 1 "<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/>
Records and<lb/>
Tapes<lb/>
30<lb/>
COSMETICS<lb/>
AMP<lb/>
FRAGRANCES<lb/>
fDISCOUNTED ffl<lb/>
TIMEX<lb/>
WATCHES<lb/>
Ret.<lb/>
UP TO<lb/>
REG. OR DIP<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
Potato<lb/>
Chips<lb/>
8-Oz. Twin Pak<lb/>
OFF MANUFACTURER S<lb/>
SUGGESTED 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/>
12-oz. 99<lb/>
cans<lb/>
Rossetto<lb/>
B'<lb/>
?<lb/>
BUSCH BUSCH BUSCH<lb/>
?S-? 4 r<lb/>
15<lb/>
Lambrusco?;<lb/>
Off<lb/>
MFR<lb/>
SUG<lb/>
RETAIL<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
SEXISTS ?dvfd "?"? '? rsqulrsd to be readily available for<lb/>
2 h 1?m Kto9? Sav-on Store except aa specifically noted in this<lb/>
J! . ??12i!L0i of ?L?dv?rt?? '? we will offer you your choice<lb/>
?JJ?ZZ??Zwhn ????"?. '?"?cttag the eame savings or a<lb/>
2??whteh wlH entttle you to purchase the advertised Item at the<lb/>
advertised price within 30 days.<lb/>
NONE SOLD<lb/>
DEALERS<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. 30 THRU SUN NOV. 4,1979<lb/>
600 Greenville BlvdGreenville<lb/>
Phone 756-7031<lb/>
f<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057227_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>