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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057228_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/>
Vol. 54 No. J<lb/>
10 pages today<lb/>
Thursday, November 1, 1979<lb/>
If you have a story<lb/>
idea, a tip, or a<lb/>
lead, please tele-<lb/>
phone us:<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
757-6367<lb/>
757-6309<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Board<lb/>
discusses<lb/>
Herald<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
At the regular Media Board meeting held<lb/>
Wednesday, The Ebony Herald was again the major<lb/>
topic of discussion.<lb/>
Members of the board questioned the feasibility of<lb/>
reinstating a new editor for the paper and whether the<lb/>
paper was necessary.<lb/>
According to Rudolph Alexander, associate dean of<lb/>
student life, "Unless there is negative action taken,<lb/>
there is still an Ebony Herald<lb/>
After a large amoung of discussion on the matter,<lb/>
action was postponed pending the results of an<lb/>
advertisement which will be placed in The East<lb/>
Carolinian. The ad seeks proposals for a possible<lb/>
"minority publication<lb/>
The possibility of changing The Ebony Herald into<lb/>
more of a magazine type format came up at the<lb/>
meeting, and it is possible that the board will decide to<lb/>
reinstate the publication with such a style.<lb/>
The repeating of news had been a topic of discussion<lb/>
at a subcommittee meeting held the day before, but no<lb/>
decisions were made at the meeting.<lb/>
Some other business of the meeting concerned<lb/>
reports presented by Marc Barnes, editor of The East<lb/>
Carolinian, and Pete Podeszwa, head of the Photo Lab.<lb/>
The problems of the two organizations have been solved<lb/>
to a large extent, according to the reports. It is expected<lb/>
to take a while longer to work out all of the difficulty in<lb/>
the two organizations, but progress is being made.<lb/>
Salaries (or East Carolinian employees has been a<lb/>
topic at previous meetings, and at this meeting, the<lb/>
advertising staff had been requested to come and<lb/>
present their point of view on the matter.<lb/>
Though the advertising staff was present, it was<lb/>
decided by the board to do a long term study on the<lb/>
past and current salary policies and then possibly<lb/>
propose changes in the structure.<lb/>
In the meantime, the budgets for each of the media<lb/>
have been approved, with the exception of The<lb/>
Buccaneer.<lb/>
Buccaneer Associate Editor Barrie Byland presented<lb/>
to the board a list of the bids received by The Buccaneer<lb/>
staff from different printing companies and their choice<lb/>
of printers. It was necessary for the board to approve<lb/>
their choice before they could sign the final contract.<lb/>
The board decided to ask The Buccaneer to present a<lb/>
more detailed list of the bids which would explain more<lb/>
fully why the staff has chosen the company in question<lb/>
to do the printing.<lb/>
Alexander commented, "We have a moral obligation<lb/>
to do this<lb/>
The proposal was tabled until the next meeting, to<lb/>
be held Tuesday at 3 p.m.<lb/>
SALT II<lb/>
ECU professor attends<lb/>
White House briefing<lb/>
By BRENDA VINSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Janice H. Faulkner, an English<lb/>
professor at ECU, recently took part in a<lb/>
Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (SALT)<lb/>
II briefing at the White House. The<lb/>
briefing was presented Wednesday Oct. 24<lb/>
by President Carter and national security<lb/>
affairs assistant. Dr. Zbigniew Brzezinski.<lb/>
(File Photo by John Crogan)<lb/>
John Jeter, General Manager of WECU Jeter still hopes to get the station on the<lb/>
radio station has still had no luck in air this year,<lb/>
having the station's FCC permit granted.<lb/>
WECU without<lb/>
FCC license<lb/>
By BRENDA VINSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Federal Communica-<lb/>
Itions Commission (FCC)<lb/>
approval of the university-<lb/>
operc'ed radio station's<lb/>
construction plans is still<lb/>
pending, according to<lb/>
WECU station manager<lb/>
John Jeter.<lb/>
WECU has been wait-<lb/>
ing since last spring for<lb/>
FCC licensing which will<lb/>
permit construction of an<lb/>
FM transmitter tower. An<lb/>
amendment to the original<lb/>
application for approval<lb/>
was filed in the spring.<lb/>
After encountering several<lb/>
problems since last filing<lb/>
in 1978, Jeter said that a<lb/>
decision on the present<lb/>
of a new policy being<lb/>
considered by the Com-<lb/>
mission. The new policy<lb/>
concerns a change in the<lb/>
or stop has been FCC's general position on<lb/>
the application education radio stations.<lb/>
application should have<lb/>
been reached in August.<lb/>
said that a<lb/>
Jeter<lb/>
"hiatus"<lb/>
placed on<lb/>
for so that action has been<lb/>
halted.<lb/>
Authorities say that<lb/>
FCC officials support the<lb/>
new regulation which<lb/>
Jeter has enlisted the<lb/>
help of N.C. Congressman<lb/>
Walter B. Jones in getting<lb/>
the delayed application<lb/>
approved. According to<lb/>
would limit the number of Jeter, Congressman Jones<lb/>
FM stations in university<lb/>
systems. If the new rule is<lb/>
passed before WECU's<lb/>
application is approved,<lb/>
there may be no chance<lb/>
has promised to act as<lb/>
soon as possible.<lb/>
"He<lb/>
contact<lb/>
said he would<lb/>
personally<lb/>
me<lb/>
as<lb/>
for an FM station at East soon as something comes<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
According to sources at<lb/>
FCC offices, the permit<lb/>
has been held up because<lb/>
up Jeter stated.<lb/>
At present,<lb/>
17 stations in<lb/>
system.<lb/>
there are<lb/>
the UNC<lb/>
Subcommittee discusses<lb/>
publications problem<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The reinstatement of<lb/>
The Ebony Herald was the<lb/>
subject of a special Media<lb/>
Board subcommittee meet-<lb/>
ing held on Tuesday.<lb/>
The board had asked<lb/>
several black leaders to<lb/>
attend the meeting to<lb/>
discuss whether there was<lb/>
a desire for The Herald, or<lb/>
whether it was necessary<lb/>
to reinstate the paper.<lb/>
The Ebony Herald has<lb/>
not been printed since<lb/>
October, 1978 due to<lb/>
management and other<lb/>
problems.<lb/>
of<lb/>
Ricky Lowe, treasurer<lb/>
the SGA, Jerry Sim-<lb/>
mons, former Herald ed-<lb/>
itor and Shelton Barnes,<lb/>
president of SOULS, were<lb/>
asked to the meeting to<lb/>
discuss whether or not<lb/>
they felt that The Herald<lb/>
was wanted or needed on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
All felt strongly that<lb/>
The Herald was needed on<lb/>
campus and that it should<lb/>
begin publication as soon<lb/>
as possible.<lb/>
However, only one<lb/>
person has applied for the<lb/>
position of editor, and<lb/>
most members have heard<lb/>
little interest expressed.<lb/>
When board members<lb/>
questioned the need for an<lb/>
Ebony Herald, Adderton<lb/>
stated, "The interest is<lb/>
there<lb/>
Problems with past<lb/>
Herald staffs have caused<lb/>
board members to be wary<lb/>
of attempts to renew the<lb/>
paper.<lb/>
In the past two years,<lb/>
only two issues of The<lb/>
Herald have appeared, the<lb/>
last issue being in October<lb/>
of last year. Salaries were<lb/>
paid to staff members<lb/>
until February 1979.<lb/>
Lowe repeatedly stated<lb/>
that he felt the people he<lb/>
had talked to expected to<lb/>
see The Ebony Herald<lb/>
during this fall semester.<lb/>
At the hearing held hi<lb/>
February, then Editor<lb/>
Jerry Simmons said that<lb/>
After Brzezinski's briefing, the Presi-<lb/>
dent joined the group and spoke<lb/>
informally about the necessity of ratifying<lb/>
the arms treaty. The thrust of the<lb/>
President's remarks concerned the threat<lb/>
of instability in the rest of the world if the<lb/>
United States does not come to an<lb/>
agreement with russia.<lb/>
Carter emphasized the<lb/>
other nations building up<lb/>
either of the two major<lb/>
possibility of<lb/>
arms against<lb/>
powers if no<lb/>
Faulkner said that she received a letter<lb/>
from White House Administrative Assis-<lb/>
tant Ann Wexler inviting her to attend the agreement is reached<lb/>
briefing. She was told to inform the White , . ? .<lb/>
House as to whether or not she would be . Aier hls talkf' theL Prflde"1 enJer"<lb/>
able to attend and to send her Social tained questions from the floor for about<lb/>
Security number to be used as a security 4,? minutes. Carter and Dr Brzezinski left<lb/>
check when she arrived. When Faulkner the podium together at 4:00, marking the<lb/>
arrived in Washington, guards checked end of the briefing<lb/>
in wasmngton, gua<lb/>
her identification to make sure it matched<lb/>
the Social Security number she sent in<lb/>
earlier.<lb/>
Faulkner and more than 50 other<lb/>
guests from North Carolina entered at the<lb/>
Southwest gate of the White House for<lb/>
the 2 o'clock session. The Southwest Gate<lb/>
is the one the Carter family uses.<lb/>
They were then ushered into the East<lb/>
Room where the public sees President<lb/>
Carter most often during his televised<lb/>
presentations. There the guests were<lb/>
introduced to Brzezinski who spoke for<lb/>
approximately 50 minutes.<lb/>
?<lb/>
Representatives of the State Depart-<lb/>
ment, the Department of Defense and the<lb/>
U.S. Senate were alio present<lb/>
Afterwards, Faulkner and other<lb/>
guests were invited to the State Dining<lb/>
Room for a reception. Faulkner left the<lb/>
White House to return to Greenville after<lb/>
the reception.<lb/>
Prior to the White House visit, the<lb/>
N.C. group had lunch with Sen. Robert S.<lb/>
Morgan, D-N.C, in Raleigh,<lb/>
Faulkner, who has long been active in<lb/>
all levels of political affairs, said that she<lb/>
doen not know exactly why she was<lb/>
chosen to attend the briefing. She was<lb/>
told that criteria for those invited was that<lb/>
they be dedicated civic, business and<lb/>
professional leaders of their respective<lb/>
communities. Faulkner added that not all<lb/>
of those invited to Washington were<lb/>
Democrats nor were they necessarily<lb/>
During his briefing, Brzezinski covered supporters of the treaty. They represented<lb/>
four major areas of the SALT II issue.<lb/>
They are as follows:<lb/>
.Review of the history of SALT.<lb/>
.Outline of the four objectives of SALT.<lb/>
.Information on which objectives had been<lb/>
Police report<lb/>
a cross-section of<lb/>
sional businesses.<lb/>
opinions and profes-<lb/>
Guests for the meeting personally<lb/>
financed the trip to and from Washington.<lb/>
Charges possible<lb/>
the inability to gain access<lb/>
to The Fountainhead<lb/>
(name of the campus<lb/>
paper at that time) layout<lb/>
room made it impossible<lb/>
for the Herald staff to put<lb/>
together the paper.<lb/>
When asked why he<lb/>
had been paying salaries<lb/>
to Herald employees, Sim-<lb/>
mons replied, "because Trkia MorrU Chairperson of the Media Board, was a<lb/>
they have been doing the memher of the subcommittee that is looking into the<lb/>
w0 Ebony Herald problems. (Photo by John Grogan)<lb/>
By ARAH VENABLE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
An ECU student found<lb/>
with drugs in Slay dorm<lb/>
on Oct. 18 may face<lb/>
charges, according to Cap-<lb/>
tain Wiggins, police in-<lb/>
vestigator. A plant sus-<lb/>
pected of being marijuana<lb/>
and 93 tablets of what<lb/>
appears to be LSD were<lb/>
found by police. No<lb/>
charges will be made until<lb/>
lab analysis reports are<lb/>
concluded.<lb/>
Wiggins added that<lb/>
charges have not yet been<lb/>
filed on the drug incident<lb/>
in Umstead dorm. The lab<lb/>
analysis is expected at any<lb/>
day.<lb/>
A male student was<lb/>
assaulted by two other<lb/>
males on Monday around<lb/>
1:25 a.m. Campus Police<lb/>
Chief Frances Eddings<lb/>
said the assault took place<lb/>
in the vicinity of 506 E.<lb/>
9th St. near the dirt<lb/>
parking lots. The two men<lb/>
attempted to rob the<lb/>
student but did not<lb/>
succeed.<lb/>
On Wednesday, three<lb/>
male students were appre-<lb/>
hended for breaking win-<lb/>
dows out of the stairwell<lb/>
on the second floor of<lb/>
Graham building. Eddings<lb/>
said they were throwing<lb/>
something through the<lb/>
windows. The students<lb/>
have not been charged but<lb/>
have been referred to<lb/>
Dean Mallory.<lb/>
In another instance of<lb/>
vandalization, the pipe on<lb/>
the fourth floor water<lb/>
fountain in Scott dorm was<lb/>
broken off by three male<lb/>
students. Dean Mallory<lb/>
will also handle this<lb/>
incident.<lb/>
Around 8:45 a.m. Mon-<lb/>
day, a student reported<lb/>
that someone had cut the<lb/>
top off his convertible<lb/>
Among the food stolen<lb/>
was 13 qts. of orange<lb/>
juice, one half gallon milk,<lb/>
3 pounds sausage, 2<lb/>
pounds of bacon and one<lb/>
dozen eggs. Police have<lb/>
not yet determined how-<lb/>
entry was gained.<lb/>
A fight started in Jones<lb/>
dorm on Monday when<lb/>
one student supposedly<lb/>
cut up the pillow cases<lb/>
and napsack of another.<lb/>
Charges will be ma !e<lb/>
through the men's resi-<lb/>
dence council.<lb/>
Another argument re-<lb/>
sulted in an alleged<lb/>
assault this weekend. Po-<lb/>
lice got a report from a<lb/>
female stating that she<lb/>
and her boyfriend had an<lb/>
argument which ended<lb/>
with him assaulting her.<lb/>
No charges have been<lb/>
during the night The car made but he<lb/>
was parked on the south student has been referred<lb/>
A policy was then<lb/>
adopted by the board to<lb/>
use a "wait and see"<lb/>
attitude concerning The<lb/>
Herald. They decided that<lb/>
no paychecks would" be<lb/>
issued unless a paper was<lb/>
printed.<lb/>
Fountainhead Editor<lb/>
Doug White said he had<lb/>
heard nothing from the<lb/>
editor of the Herald<lb/>
concerning use of the<lb/>
layout room.<lb/>
No paper has appeared<lb/>
since that time and no<lb/>
editor has been named.<lb/>
CT&amp;T strike may end<lb/>
Members of the striking Communica- ment broke down over an automatic<lb/>
tions Workers of America voted yesterday cost-of-living adjustment demanded by the<lb/>
and will vote today to decide the fate of a<lb/>
proposed two-year contract with Carolina<lb/>
Telephone and Telegraph Co.<lb/>
The results of the balloting will not be<lb/>
released until late Thursday night, after<lb/>
all votes are tallied at the Ram ads Inn In<lb/>
Greenville, according to union negotiator<lb/>
Delbert Gordon.<lb/>
The telephone company workers have<lb/>
been on strike since Oct. 1 when contract<lb/>
negotiations between labor and manage-<lb/>
union.<lb/>
Approximately 3,100 of CT&amp;T's 5,100<lb/>
workers are represented by the union.<lb/>
About 250 union members are with the<lb/>
Norfolk-Carolina Telephone Co which<lb/>
serves all or part of six northeastern North<lb/>
Carolina counties and which is in the<lb/>
process of being merged with CT&amp;T.<lb/>
The two groups axe voting on basically<lb/>
the same proposed contract.<lb/>
side of Jones dorm, and a<lb/>
radio and speakers valued<lb/>
at $305 were stolen.<lb/>
Another car was bro-<lb/>
ken into on Sunday, and a<lb/>
student reported that her<lb/>
pocketbook was taken. The<lb/>
window of the car was<lb/>
broken, and the purse<lb/>
containing $25 and a<lb/>
couple of rings was stolen.<lb/>
The car was parked at the<lb/>
northwest corner of Min-<lb/>
ges.<lb/>
It is also not known<lb/>
who broke into an Um-<lb/>
stead room Saturday. Po-<lb/>
lice said that money and<lb/>
jewelry worth approxi-<lb/>
mately $68 were taken in<lb/>
the robbery which occured<lb/>
around 11:00 p.m.<lb/>
At 1:00 Tuesday morn-<lb/>
ing, Eddings said police<lb/>
received a report that the<lb/>
gallery at Jones Cafeteria<lb/>
had been burglarised.<lb/>
to Dean Mallory.<lb/>
Inside<lb/>
today ?<lb/>
Do we need it?<lb/>
page 4<lb/>
For colored<lb/>
girls<lb/>
, page 5<lb/>
Dye look<lb/>
at offense<lb/>
page 8<lb/>
<pb facs="00057228_0002"/><lb/>
Page 2 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 1 November 1979<lb/>
Hypertension study<lb/>
School recieves grant<lb/>
Carter; J or don to<lb/>
pay parking fees<lb/>
The East Carolina<lb/>
School of Medicine will<lb/>
soon be involved in a<lb/>
unique project to develop<lb/>
a new drug, according to<lb/>
Pharmacology Professor<lb/>
Dr. John P. DaVanzo.<lb/>
The USV Pharmaceuti-<lb/>
cal Corporation has recent-<lb/>
ly granted the ECU<lb/>
medical school $57,000 to<lb/>
develop a drug that has<lb/>
been effective in lowering<lb/>
high blood pressure in<lb/>
animals.<lb/>
According to DaVanzo,<lb/>
the grant represents the<lb/>
first time that a private<lb/>
corporation has engaged<lb/>
an academic institution in<lb/>
the direct development of<lb/>
a commercial product.<lb/>
"It's a new concept in<lb/>
academia, and it shows<lb/>
the trust and confidence<lb/>
the company has in East<lb/>
Computing majors<lb/>
recieve third place<lb/>
A team of ECU Com-<lb/>
puter Science majors won<lb/>
third place in a regional<lb/>
programming contest held<lb/>
in Raleigh Saturday.<lb/>
Fifteen colleges and<lb/>
universities from North<lb/>
Carolina and neighboring<lb/>
states competed in the<lb/>
contest, which was spon-<lb/>
sored by the Association of<lb/>
Compuing Machinery.<lb/>
Each team was given<lb/>
four problems to program<lb/>
into a computer, using a<lb/>
language known as<lb/>
FORTRAN-4. Winners<lb/>
were judged according to<lb/>
the ease and speed with<lb/>
which solutions to the<lb/>
problems were then ac-<lb/>
quired through the com-<lb/>
puter.<lb/>
Computer science ma-<lb/>
jors david Sowell, Gary<lb/>
r<lb/>
Boswook, Tim Finnell and<lb/>
Kevin Flannery were the<lb/>
ECU team members.<lb/>
According to Dr. Mi-<lb/>
lam Johnson, a Mathe-<lb/>
matics professor who ac-<lb/>
companied the team, suc-<lb/>
cussful computer program-<lb/>
ming requires skill in<lb/>
analysing problems as well<lb/>
as accuracy in anticipating<lb/>
how long their solutions<lb/>
must be handled by the<lb/>
computer.<lb/>
Johnson also noted that<lb/>
the ECU chapter of the<lb/>
Association for Computing<lb/>
Machinery will meet Tues-<lb/>
day Nov. 6 at 4 p.m. to<lb/>
discuss the ECU team's<lb/>
methods and results in the<lb/>
contest.<lb/>
N.C. State University,<lb/>
which hosted the compet-<lb/>
ition, placed first among<lb/>
the entrants.<lb/>
<lb/>
Student Phone Directories<lb/>
are in room<lb/>
228Mendenhall<lb/>
at the<lb/>
Student Government Offices<lb/>
Iart&amp;camera PLAZA CAMERA<lb/>
526 S. Cotanche St. Pitt p,aza<lb/>
Down Town Shopping Center<lb/>
tt$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$g<lb/>
g KODACOLOR g<lb/>
? Developed and Printed 2<lb/>
n<lb/>
J<lb/>
No Foreign<lb/>
12<lb/>
EXPOSURE<lb/>
ROLL. ONLY<lb/>
$075<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Film<lb/>
20<lb/>
EXPOSURE<lb/>
ROLL ONLY<lb/>
$395?<lb/>
KODACOLOR<lb/>
? Developed and Printed<lb/>
$435<lb/>
?J<lb/>
No Foreign<lb/>
Film<lb/>
24<lb/>
EXPOSURE<lb/>
ROLL. ONLY<lb/>
36<lb/>
EXPOSURE<lb/>
ROLL ONLY<lb/>
$57 5<lb/>
sTide$$$$$$$$$l<lb/>
FILM DEVELOPING ?<lb/>
20 EXPOSURE<lb/>
KODACHROME<lb/>
AND EKTACHROME<lb/>
PROCESSING ONLY<lb/>
36 EXPOSURE<lb/>
KODACHROME<lb/>
AND EKTACHROME<lb/>
PROCESSING. ONLY<lb/>
ft93l<lb/>
4&amp; LOW, LOW PRICES ON<lb/>
Movie<lb/>
PROCESSING<lb/>
KODACHROME<lb/>
AND EKTACHROME<lb/>
PROCESSING ONLY<lb/>
SUPER e AND STANDARD 8 MOVIES<lb/>
LIMITED OFFER<lb/>
OFFER EXPIRES.<lb/>
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$<lb/>
Carolina University said<lb/>
DaVanzo.<lb/>
High blood pressure,<lb/>
or hypertension, is a<lb/>
serious condition affecting<lb/>
millions of Americans.<lb/>
Medications for its treat-<lb/>
ment are available on the<lb/>
market, noted DaVanzo,<lb/>
but newer and more<lb/>
effective drugs are need-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
"We hope ECU can<lb/>
play a major role in filling<lb/>
this need he said.<lb/>
DaVanzo will head a<lb/>
team of four investigators<lb/>
who will conduct extensive<lb/>
studies on the new drug.<lb/>
Although the drug lowers<lb/>
blood pressure in animals,<lb/>
how it works and the<lb/>
mechanisms involved re-<lb/>
main unclear.<lb/>
"The team will actually<lb/>
be developing the whole<lb/>
drug, not just a portion of<lb/>
it DaVanzo said.<lb/>
The physiology and<lb/>
pharmacology departments<lb/>
of the medical school will<lb/>
cooperate in the study.<lb/>
Other members of the<lb/>
research team are Drs.<lb/>
Samuel lams, Alphonse<lb/>
Ingenito and John Yeager.<lb/>
The grant will cover<lb/>
research costs for one year<lb/>
and is renewable.<lb/>
By FRANK CORMIER<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
WASHINGTON - In<lb/>
another month, Hamilton<lb/>
Jordan and other top aides<lb/>
to President Carter will<lb/>
begin paying $32.50 a<lb/>
month for the privilege of<lb/>
parking inside the White<lb/>
House fence.<lb/>
Carter's principal as-<lb/>
sistants hold assigned<lb/>
parking slots right beside<lb/>
the White House West<lb/>
Wing. For many years,<lb/>
these slots have been<lb/>
provided free of charge as<lb/>
a fringe benefit to pres-<lb/>
idential aides.<lb/>
Last April 1, Carter<lb/>
announced that regular<lb/>
fees would be charged for<lb/>
these and thousands of<lb/>
other parking spaces al-<lb/>
lotted to federal workers in<lb/>
the Washington area.<lb/>
If parking costs money,<lb/>
Carter reasoned, bureau-<lb/>
crats might be motivated<lb/>
to take public transit or<lb/>
join car pools. The ob-<lb/>
jective, of course, is to<lb/>
save energy.<lb/>
Carter said the fees<lb/>
would be imposed Oct. 1<lb/>
but, perhaps predictable,<lb/>
the red tape involved has<lb/>
delayed implementation of<lb/>
the fee system until Dec.<lb/>
1.<lb/>
At $32.50 a month,<lb/>
staff chief Jordan's park-<lb/>
ing tab will be a bargin.<lb/>
Commercial rates near the<lb/>
White House run to $5 a<lb/>
day or more in many<lb/>
cases.<lb/>
The imposition of<lb/>
parking charges represents<lb/>
such a jolt to the personal<lb/>
budgets of may federal<lb/>
employees, however, that<lb/>
a decision has been made<lb/>
to have a one year, half-<lb/>
price transition period.<lb/>
After 12 months, the fee<lb/>
for parking inside the<lb/>
White House compound<lb/>
will jump to $65 a month.<lb/>
East Carolina Playhouse<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
L<lb/>
APPLY YOURSELF<lb/>
today. Education after high<lb/>
school can be the key to a<lb/>
better life.<lb/>
United States<lb/>
Office of Education<lb/>
For Colored Girls<lb/>
Who Have Considered<lb/>
Suicide<lb/>
When The<lb/>
Rainbow<lb/>
Is<lb/>
Enuf<lb/>
g by ntozake shange<lb/>
A pass.onately spellbinding choreopoem<lb/>
which captures the inner feelings of<lb/>
todays Black woman<lb/>
Directed Dy<lb/>
Edgar R. Loessin<lb/>
October 31 through November 3<lb/>
November 5 through 7<lb/>
8:15p.m.<lb/>
Studio Theatre<lb/>
Tickets are $2.50<lb/>
ECU Students $150<lb/>
For reservations and information<lb/>
call 757-6390<lb/>
between 10 and 4<lb/>
Monday through Friday<lb/>
J<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT 1<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
4:00 8:00 PM<lb/>
SALAD?50 EXTRA<lb/>
NOCARflYOUT<lb/>
ASST. VAR. 14<lb/>
PIZZA. .?nl? 1<lb/>
WITH FRIES &amp; COLESLAW<lb/>
FRIED <lb/>
CHICKEN ??<lb/>
WITH GARLIC BREAD<lb/>
ITALIAN i<lb/>
SPAGHETTI! ?.<lb/>
WITH FRIES &amp; COLE SLAW<lb/>
FRIED S4oo<lb/>
FISH. <lb/>
The folks at Kroger Sav-on know the<lb/>
complete student has a party side,<lb/>
too. So they have what East Carolina<lb/>
University students need for any bash<lb/>
. . . from party platters to disco plat-<lb/>
ters  all in one convenient loca-<lb/>
tion. Don't be incomplete this<lb/>
year?shop Kroger Savon today<lb/>
7V<lb/>
I<lb/>
FRA6RAHC?$r<lb/>
ISCOyNTEOl B<lb/>
UP TO<lb/>
TIMEX<lb/>
WATCHES<lb/>
Beta<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
REG. OR DIP<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
Potato<lb/>
Chips<lb/>
8-Oz. Twin Pak<lb/>
OFF MANUFACTURER S<lb/>
SUGGESTED RETAIL<lb/>
V<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/>
?<lb/>
a<lb/>
O<lb/>
jij<lb/>
a<lb/>
<lb/>
Records and<lb/>
Tapes<lb/>
iSGHSIB up<lb/>
Busch<lb/>
Beer.<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
12-oz. 199<lb/>
cans<lb/>
Rossetto<lb/>
15<lb/>
Lambrusco m.<lb/>
BUSCH BUSCH JftlSCH<lb/>
K<lb/>
L ,<lb/>
ljMk;<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
MFB<lb/>
SUG<lb/>
RETAIL<lb/>
Copyright 1979<lb/>
Kroger Sav-on<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
None Sow To Dollars<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of thaaa advertised Rams ia required to bo readily available for<lb/>
Ml In aach Krogar Sav-on Store except aa ?pacifically noted in this<lb/>
ad. If wa do run out of an advertieed Item, we will offer you your choice<lb/>
of a comparable item, when available, reflecting the ?eme savings or <lb/>
raincheck which<lb/>
,r<lb/>
advfti?d orica<lb/>
i you to purchase the advertieed Item at i<lb/>
30 days.<lb/>
5?)<lb/>
JsiUHr<lb/>
FOOD, DRUG, GENERAL<lb/>
MERCHANDISE STORES<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE TUES<lb/>
NONE SOLD<lb/>
I<lb/>
AIERS<lb/>
OPEN 7 AM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
MON<lb/>
THRU<lb/>
SAT<lb/>
OPEN SUNDAY<lb/>
9 AM TO 9 PM<lb/>
600 Greenville BlvdGreenville<lb/>
Phone 756-7031<lb/>
<pb facs="00057228_0003"/><lb/>
Il4l<lb/>
1 November 1979 THE EAST CAROUNIAN<lb/>
IdW<lb/>
e, places, and<lb/>
srea clustei mI 11 usi l ecu ccc<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 Sen-<lb/>
vice, Box 966-R, Prince-<lb/>
ton, N.J. 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/>
f c Ik I U il<lb/>
Folk Festival at the<lb/>
Treehouse, Saturday,<lb/>
November 3. Folk dancing,<lb/>
Greengrass Cloggers, Ole<lb/>
Time and Bluegrass mu-<lb/>
sic.<lb/>
There will be an SNEA<lb/>
Cluster meeting for all<lb/>
area chapters on Novem-<lb/>
ber 6 at J.H. Rose High<lb/>
School in Greenville. Ex-<lb/>
hibits will be displayed<lb/>
from 8:00 a.m. to 1:00<lb/>
p.m. All members are<lb/>
encouraged to attend.<lb/>
sfc Dttle 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/>
H<lb/>
(re<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, Prince-<lb/>
ton, N.J. 08540. Registra-<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/>
l(r 3tat<lb/>
Jelta<lb/>
The next Sigma Tau<lb/>
Delta meeting will be held<lb/>
November 14. Terry Davis,<lb/>
author of Vision Quest,<lb/>
will speak.<lb/>
I t?tt 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/>
Screenings will be held<lb/>
Thursday November 8 in<lb/>
the SGA Cabinet Room,<lb/>
Mendenhall for student<lb/>
positions on faculty com-<lb/>
mittees. For an appoint-<lb/>
ment, call the SGA office,<lb/>
757-6611, ext. 218. The<lb/>
following committees need<lb/>
to be filled:<lb/>
Admissions<lb/>
University Curriculum<lb/>
Library<lb/>
Student Recruitment<lb/>
Career Education<lb/>
Instructional Survey<lb/>
General College<lb/>
il oil i<lb/>
There will 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/>
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/>
plications may be picked<lb/>
up in each dorm coun-<lb/>
selor's office.<lb/>
I II It ill<lb/>
An organizational<lb/>
meeting for women's and<lb/>
men's Team Handball<lb/>
Clubs will be<lb/>
Thursday, Nov.<lb/>
p.m. in 104<lb/>
Gym. All students inter-<lb/>
ested in this action-packed<lb/>
Olympic sport are invited<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
held on<lb/>
1, at 3:30<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
recital<lb/>
On Sunday Nov. 4, an<lb/>
organ recital will be<lb/>
presented by Mickey<lb/>
Thomas Terry at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
in the sanctuary of Jarvis<lb/>
Memorial United Meth-<lb/>
odist Church. Performed<lb/>
will be "Fantasia and<lb/>
Fugue in G Minor" by<lb/>
Bach, "Introduction and<lb/>
Passacaglia in D Minor"<lb/>
by Max Reger, "Choral in<lb/>
B Minor" by Cesar<lb/>
Franck, "Meditation"<lb/>
from the Trois Improvi-<lb/>
sations and the "Finale"<lb/>
to the Fifth Symphony by<lb/>
Louis Vierne.<lb/>
A graduate student at<lb/>
ECU, Terry previously<lb/>
studied under Mrs. Selina<lb/>
Forbes, Dr. E. Robert<lb/>
Irwin and Dr. David L.<lb/>
Foster. Terry is also<lb/>
organist of Jarvis Method-<lb/>
ist Church as well as<lb/>
having served as organist<lb/>
for the Greenville Com-<lb/>
munity Chorus in former<lb/>
years hradditional to<lb/>
occasional recitals, just<lb/>
recently Terry returned<lb/>
from Washington, D.C.<lb/>
where he played at the<lb/>
National Cathedral. The<lb/>
admission to the recital is<lb/>
free, and the public is<lb/>
cordially invited to attend.<lb/>
' The ECU Collegiate<lb/>
Civitan 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 Civitan 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/>
mrc<lb/>
cimereem<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. ev-<lb/>
ery day. The gameroom<lb/>
also serves as the checkout<lb/>
area for tents, canoes, car<lb/>
racks and life preservers.<lb/>
Remember, the Men's<lb/>
Residence Council pro-<lb/>
vides these services.<lb/>
bewllr<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 noon<lb/>
to 6 p.m. you can rent a<lb/>
lane for $3 for one hour.<lb/>
"Discount Day" ? 13 off<lb/>
the price of bowling every<lb/>
Monday from 2 p.m. until<lb/>
6 p.m.<lb/>
ammafceta<lb/>
111<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi will<lb/>
have a covered dish<lb/>
supper and meeting<lb/>
Thursday Oct. 18 at 6:30<lb/>
p.m. in the multipurpose<lb/>
room in Mendenhall.<lb/>
Volunteers needed<lb/>
for War on Winter<lb/>
The Greenville "War<lb/>
on Winter" will be<lb/>
sponsoring a woodcut and<lb/>
a winterizing service to<lb/>
local homes in need.<lb/>
The "War on Winter"<lb/>
is an energy movement<lb/>
which is being sponsored<lb/>
by several groups in the<lb/>
Greenville area.<lb/>
The woodcut will begin<lb/>
at 8:30 a.m. on Saturday<lb/>
November 3 and Saturday<lb/>
November 10 at the Pitt-<lb/>
Greenville Groundstation.<lb/>
Local people are asked to<lb/>
"Bring yourself, any<lb/>
woodcutting equipment<lb/>
you can and pick up trucks<lb/>
if you can<lb/>
The projects chairman<lb/>
is David Goehring.<lb/>
Lunches will be pro-<lb/>
vided by local merchants.<lb/>
The wood that is cut<lb/>
will be distributed to<lb/>
people who need it to keep<lb/>
warm this winter from the<lb/>
REAL Crisis Center and<lb/>
the Silvation Army sta-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The winterizing service<lb/>
will begin at 8:30 a.m. at<lb/>
the Old Fire Station on<lb/>
West Chestnut.<lb/>
Linda Hicks, of the<lb/>
Junior Woman's Club of<lb/>
Greenville Conservation<lb/>
Department has asked that<lb/>
anyone who has hammers,<lb/>
screwdrivers, stapleguns<lb/>
or anything else that<lb/>
would be helpful to bring<lb/>
it along.<lb/>
Volunteers are needed<lb/>
to work on needy homes in<lb/>
the area.<lb/>
Local businesses have<lb/>
provided food for the<lb/>
workers and winterizing<lb/>
materials.<lb/>
HEAVEN<lb/>
CAN<lb/>
WATT<lb/>
PG A PARAMOUNT PICTURE<lb/>
AUTO SERVICE SPECIALS<lb/>
988 -4rtS?sStf<lb/>
$12.V ssSsReg<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
itm11-<lb/>
You<lb/>
C?<lb/>
??<lb/>
;???<lb/>
Cf<lb/>
PART<lb/>
TIME<lb/>
JOB<lb/>
Looking for part-time<lb/>
job with flexible hours<lb/>
and real buftiness<lb/>
experience? Nortliwett<lb/>
Mutual Life Int. Co.<lb/>
has openings for college<lb/>
agents. Call before noon<lb/>
for appointments!<lb/>
OUT<lb/>
W<lb/>
???<lb/>
All size<lb/>
tires<lb/>
available<lb/>
WE SERVICE NATIONAL ACCOUNTS<lb/>
?iPGoodrich<lb/>
TIRE CENTER<lb/>
MUL4?rJI<lb/>
Coggins Car Car<lb/>
756-5244<lb/>
fWtlM<lb/>
ML<lb/>
criemlstiy<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/>
11<lb/>
Screenings will be held<lb/>
Thursday November 8 in<lb/>
the SGA Cabinet Room,<lb/>
Mendenhall for SGA ad-<lb/>
ministrative committees.<lb/>
Call for an appointment<lb/>
(757-6611, ext. 218). The<lb/>
following committees need<lb/>
to be filled:<lb/>
Alcohol Drug Educa-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Soliciting on Campus<lb/>
Residence Life<lb/>
Status of Women<lb/>
Student Health Ser-<lb/>
vices<lb/>
International Student<lb/>
Affairs<lb/>
University Traffic<lb/>
Appeals<lb/>
Are You<lb/>
Confused?<lb/>
 about your portraits<lb/>
The Buccaneer Staff apologizes for<lb/>
any confusion you may have concerning<lb/>
the procedures of selecting your<lb/>
yearbook portrait. In order to have your<lb/>
picture in the 1980 Buccaneer, you must<lb/>
specify your choice by writing.<lb/>
"YEARBOOK PORTRAIT" on the back<lb/>
of your favorite pose. Then mail all<lb/>
proofs back to Yearbook Associates.<lb/>
You are under no obligation to order<lb/>
any pictures for your personal use and<lb/>
your yearbook portrait will be in the<lb/>
1980 book free of charge.<lb/>
?upt)<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/>
ccc<lb/>
The ECU Christian<lb/>
Choir and Orchestra will<lb/>
rehearse Thursday night at<lb/>
7:30 at the Presbyterian<lb/>
Church. If you would like<lb/>
to know more, call 752-<lb/>
9612.<lb/>
plhcme t)cck?<lb/>
The 1979-80 phone<lb/>
books are in. If your 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/>
BONANZA'S FAMOUS<lb/>
RIB EYE DINNEI<lb/>
2 FOR<lb/>
m<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
Imagine, this delicious steak plus a steaming hot baked potato or french<lb/>
fries and a slice of grilled Texas toast. And salad you can pile a mile high<lb/>
as often as you like . . . fresh greens and vegetables from our "Discov-<lb/>
ery" Salad Bar. What a treat! And now you can get two complete meals<lb/>
for just $5.99! Delicious!<lb/>
Call 756-5508 to reserve banquet<lb/>
room for groups<lb/>
BONANZA'S FAMOUS<lb/>
I<lb/>
Offer valid with Coupon Only<lb/>
thru Nov. 30, 1979 I<lb/>
???<lb/>
?<lb/>
t"?<lb/>
X<lb/>
?:?:?:?:<lb/>
 jZy<lb/>
<lb/>
a"<lb/>
"Let's worm up and have an ice-cold Stroh s<lb/>
?-??<lb/>
For the real beer lover.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057228_0004"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
&amp; Opinions<lb/>
Thursday, November 1, 1979 Page 4<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
Change the Herald<lb/>
The Ebony Herald has been revived,<lb/>
at least in the minds of the Media<lb/>
Board, who were recently called on to<lb/>
decide the fate of the minority<lb/>
newspaper.<lb/>
We cannot agree with bringing back<lb/>
the Herald in the form that existed last<lb/>
year. Our feelings are based on a<lb/>
variety of reasons. For example:<lb/>
?We cannot see a need for it.<lb/>
Minorities on this campus should<lb/>
realize that The East Carolinian serves<lb/>
ALL the students on this campus. To<lb/>
this end, we have appointed a minority<lb/>
affairs reporter, whose sole job will be<lb/>
to report on news of interest to<lb/>
minorities.<lb/>
?To say that The Ebony Herald of last<lb/>
year was of poor quality is an<lb/>
understatement. On page one, The<lb/>
Herald featured two press releases and<lb/>
a report on the activities of S.O.U.L.S.<lb/>
Inside, there was coverage of black<lb/>
fraternities and sororities, as well as a<lb/>
crossword puzzle and news of a new<lb/>
Latin course being offered. A good<lb/>
story on Sickle Cell anemia did appear<lb/>
on the back page.<lb/>
? The Ebony Herald appeared only once<lb/>
last year. Former editor Jerry Simmons<lb/>
cited problems in production with The<lb/>
Fountainhead (the former campus<lb/>
newspaper) as a reason for this.<lb/>
However when an effort was begun to<lb/>
straighten out the problems, no one on<lb/>
the staff of The Herald contacted<lb/>
former Fountainhead editor Doug<lb/>
White.<lb/>
?In past issues of The Ebony Herald,<lb/>
stories have been printed in both the<lb/>
minority newspaper and in the student<lb/>
newspaper as well. We cannot see<lb/>
spending large amounts of money to<lb/>
print matching stories in two different<lb/>
newspapers.<lb/>
We have no criticism of a minority<lb/>
forum on this campus; rather, we have<lb/>
sharp criticism of what the last Ebony<lb/>
Herald had become. We do offer some<lb/>
suggestions as to what we feel The<lb/>
Ebony Herald should be like.<lb/>
?First, The Ebony Herald should<lb/>
change its name and turn into an<lb/>
entirely different entity. All layout and<lb/>
design of the past Ebony Heralds<lb/>
should be scrapped, and new design<lb/>
should be its primary concern.<lb/>
?Any new editors chosen for The<lb/>
Herald should make quality their first<lb/>
priority. They should have logged time<lb/>
in professional newspapers or maga-<lb/>
zines, or they should have taken the<lb/>
advanced Journalism courses offered by<lb/>
the English Department.<lb/>
?A new operations manual, like that<lb/>
required of all other media, should<lb/>
specify who does what in this new<lb/>
minority publication.<lb/>
?This new publication should cover all<lb/>
minority students, rather than the black<lb/>
student population only.<lb/>
?This new enterprise should have a<lb/>
magazine type format, and it should<lb/>
appear twice a semester, rather than<lb/>
one proposal we heard of having it<lb/>
appear twice a month. A new staff will<lb/>
have enough problems in getting<lb/>
together enough material in the<lb/>
beginning for a twice a semester<lb/>
newspaper.<lb/>
Finally, before anything else is<lb/>
done, an effort should be made to find<lb/>
out what needs the minority populations<lb/>
of East Carolina have, and then<lb/>
determine what a minority publication<lb/>
could do to meet those particular<lb/>
needs.<lb/>
If no needs are found, or if student<lb/>
apathy results in no applications for<lb/>
editor, the entire project should be<lb/>
scrapped.<lb/>
American Journal<lb/>
Nukes breed overseas<lb/>
JACK ANDERSQN-jOE SPEAR<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
Carter's High-Interest Policy<lb/>
May Wreak Ruin on the Economy<lb/>
By JACK ANDERSON<lb/>
and JOE SPEAR<lb/>
WASHINGTON  Jimmy<lb/>
Carter kept his family<lb/>
peanut business afloat with<lb/>
free-and-easy bank loans<lb/>
from his Georgia buddy Bert<lb/>
Lance. He profited from low<lb/>
interest rates and extended<lb/>
credit.<lb/>
Now, as president of the<lb/>
United States, Carter has<lb/>
bestowed his blessing on a<lb/>
tight-money, high-interest<lb/>
banking policy that may<lb/>
well drive farmers, peanut<lb/>
or otherwise, into bankrupt-<lb/>
cy. His appointee as head of<lb/>
the Federal Reserve, Paul<lb/>
Volcker, has ordained higher<lb/>
bank interest rates that<lb/>
could also cost hundreds of<lb/>
thousands of American<lb/>
workmen their jobs, prove<lb/>
ruinous to small business-<lb/>
men and squeeze the budget<lb/>
of every housewife in the<lb/>
country.<lb/>
Playing politics with our<lb/>
pocketbooks. Carter is<lb/>
trying to play catch-up with<lb/>
inflation by going along with<lb/>
the Volcker Plan that hikes<lb/>
the prime interest rate to<lb/>
dry up the money supply for<lb/>
such vital sectors of the<lb/>
economy as home building,<lb/>
plant expansion and long-<lb/>
range investments.<lb/>
Unfortunately, the Geor-<lb/>
gian and his advisers have<lb/>
been guessing wrong on the<lb/>
American economy at every<lb/>
turn and the nation is headed<lb/>
into a deep recession. Secret<lb/>
Cabinet minutes furnished<lb/>
us from last February show<lb/>
the president's chief eco-<lb/>
nomic adviser, Charles<lb/>
Schultze, predicting "the<lb/>
economy should begin to<lb/>
slow down" and later opti-<lb/>
mistically discerning "some<lb/>
signs of a desired non-reces-<lb/>
sionary slowdown<lb/>
As Carter's efforts to curb<lb/>
the engulfing wave of infla-<lb/>
tion proved as futile as King<lb/>
Canute's order that the tide<lb/>
stop coming in, some of the<lb/>
president's men suggested<lb/>
price and wage controls.<lb/>
According to the secret<lb/>
es.<lb/>
At the dark end of the eco-<lb/>
nomic tunnel is. the Ameri-<lb/>
can consumer.<lb/>
Family Efforts: With the<lb/>
president desperately striv-<lb/>
ing as an underdog to win<lb/>
re-election, a number of<lb/>
states would adjust<lb/>
White House Cabinet states will soon become the<lb/>
minutes, "the President site of Carter family reun-<lb/>
noted that he has ncrauthon- i0ns jimmy Carter recently<lb/>
ty to impose mandatory tut-tutted that the presiden-<lb/>
pnce and wage controls and tial race was starting too<lb/>
that even if he had such early and he shouldn't have<lb/>
authority, he would not to leave the White House to<lb/>
exercise it. scramble for delegates in<lb/>
Like the emperor with no tne Democratic primaries.<lb/>
clothes, Carter is politically But- wife Rosalynn,<lb/>
posturing on the devastating mother Lillian, sonXhip and<lb/>
It's clear from intelli-<lb/>
gence reports that the other' enriched<lb/>
Arab states have not adjust-<lb/>
ed. Now the Egyptians are<lb/>
growing disillusioned. They<lb/>
expected immediate eco-<lb/>
nomic benefits for cooperat-<lb/>
ing with President Carter.<lb/>
Instead, the living standards<lb/>
in Egypt have deteriorated.<lb/>
By DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
As several hundred<lb/>
thousand gallons of radio-<lb/>
active water continue to<lb/>
confound technicians at<lb/>
the damaged Three Mile<lb/>
Island nuclear power<lb/>
plant, the American nu-<lb/>
clear industry is stepping<lb/>
up efforts to export<lb/>
dangerous atomic tech-<lb/>
nology abroad. This move<lb/>
Is a direct result of the<lb/>
increasingly unfavorable<lb/>
climate for nukes here that<lb/>
has cut orders for new<lb/>
domestic reactors to nearly<lb/>
zero.<lb/>
The campaign to export<lb/>
American nuclear tech-<lb/>
nology got a boost in early<lb/>
October when the State<lb/>
Department approved the<lb/>
export of a key component<lb/>
for a controversial nuclear<lb/>
power plant in the Philip-<lb/>
pines. The go-ahead must<lb/>
still be approved by the<lb/>
Nuclear Regulatory Com-<lb/>
mission, but President<lb/>
Carter can override the<lb/>
NRC and permit the<lb/>
shipment anyway. Last<lb/>
year, Carter okayed the<lb/>
export of seven tons of<lb/>
uranium fuel to<lb/>
India ? despite his stated<lb/>
policy of limiting U.S.<lb/>
sales of nuclear know-how.<lb/>
canoes are within 90 miles<lb/>
of the partially-completed<lb/>
plant, as are several major<lb/>
earthquake faults.<lb/>
Controversy has dog-<lb/>
ged the Morong plant<lb/>
from the first. Construc-<lb/>
tion costs have shot ug to<lb/>
$1.1 billion for only one of<lb/>
the two reactors ? over<lb/>
four times the original<lb/>
optimistic estimate. Local<lb/>
fishermen, who account<lb/>
pines Ministry of Energy<lb/>
itself has estimated that<lb/>
the country's present elec-<lb/>
trical needs could be met<lb/>
by hydroelectric power.<lb/>
Geothermal power is also<lb/>
undergoing rapid develop-<lb/>
ment in the Philippines.<lb/>
According<lb/>
critics and<lb/>
Morong is a<lb/>
strength for<lb/>
nuclear industry in<lb/>
U.S. ? one that<lb/>
to nuclear<lb/>
researchers,<lb/>
key test of<lb/>
the ailing<lb/>
the<lb/>
the<lb/>
the American nuclear<lb/>
industry is stepping up efforts<lb/>
to export dangerous atomic<lb/>
technology abroad<lb/>
of Morong's<lb/>
income, report<lb/>
impact the Volcker Plan<lb/>
will have on the average<lb/>
American working man and<lb/>
his family. He gave a pre-<lb/>
posterous pledge to a con-<lb/>
vention of construction<lb/>
unions that he would not<lb/>
trouble-shooter, Ambassa-<lb/>
dor Robert Strauss.<lb/>
will hit<lb/>
cans in<lb/>
daughter Amy are already<lb/>
taking the show on the road<lb/>
for votes. Faced with the<lb/>
challenge from Ted Kenne- The Ambassador indicat-<lb/>
dy, they hit the campaign ed that the economic prob-<lb/>
trail in Florida to pull out a lems facing Egypt were<lb/>
cosmetic caucus victory for very complex and that<lb/>
 ITL 'L???? k Jimmy and wasted no time American involvement in<lb/>
thI nrlonmJn?n aH?ie headin for Iowa for the the economic support of<lb/>
The president s own advis- next round of party Egypt would be critical to<lb/>
ffhtir ??air?H" caucuses Snowbound New its long-term future the<lb/>
fLl ??"TJT Jfl; HamPshire voters are very secret minutes state.<lb/>
SSL,aiaht ilgI 82 likely to hear some Mii "Ambassador Strauss<lb/>
Carter s tight-money tack Georgia accents on the win- reported that Prime Minis-<lb/>
millions of Amen- ter air before they go to the ter Begin  spent consider-<lb/>
hlhea?T fShaant P?lls in March ale time  emphasizing the<lb/>
?rtoJi S2? JS? No Deal: There have been need for American invest-<lb/>
mortgage money available secret, ominous reports that ment in Egypt to solidify the<lb/>
to finance housing will dwm- Preside.it Carter's diploma- peace treaty "<lb/>
die, fewer homes will be cy in the Middle East is<lb/>
Small businesses will have ir? V gypi as a Stabilizing<lb/>
E?- 4U force in the Middle East<lb/>
He recognized that the<lb/>
treaty had isolated Egypt The United states has xnt<lb/>
from its Arab neighbors. But millions' worth-of aid to<lb/>
he expected a happy ending Egypt Blt this has faUen<lb/>
l ne president s secret<lb/>
White House minutes show<lb/>
that he "noted the difficult<lb/>
The Philippines plant,<lb/>
near the village of Morong<lb/>
on the island of Luzon, has<lb/>
drawn the fire of anti-<lb/>
No less than Israeli Prime nuclear activists for sev-<lb/>
Minister Menachem Begin eral reasons. Morong is<lb/>
urged the United States to only 45 miles from the<lb/>
rush aid to Egypt. This mes- populous capital city of<lb/>
sage was brought back from Manilla and only 10 miies plant argue that nuclear<lb/>
Israel by President Carters from an yolcano<lb/>
for most<lb/>
municipal<lb/>
that fish moved away from<lb/>
the shoreline site when<lb/>
construction began in<lb/>
1977. The fishermen now<lb/>
have to go out to sea to<lb/>
find food.<lb/>
Local opposition to the<lb/>
plant, although apparently<lb/>
intense, is not tolerated by<lb/>
the dictatorial Philippines<lb/>
president, Ferdinand Mar-<lb/>
cos. Last winter, 1,000<lb/>
armed police swarmed<lb/>
over Morong, breaking<lb/>
into private homes,<lb/>
searching, they said, for<lb/>
antinuke activists. A lead-<lb/>
ing nuclear critic, Ernesto<lb/>
Nazareno, has mysterious-<lb/>
ly disappeared, and some<lb/>
Filipinos charge the Mar-<lb/>
cos regime with Naza-<lb/>
reno's murder.<lb/>
Filipino critics of the<lb/>
energy is unnecessary in<lb/>
Three other active vol- their country. The Philip-<lb/>
industry feels it can't<lb/>
afford to fail. The Morong<lb/>
plant is being heavily<lb/>
underwritten by the U.S.<lb/>
Export-Import Bank, a<lb/>
consortium of private<lb/>
banks and government<lb/>
agencies that underwrites<lb/>
the cost of such projects<lb/>
with American taxpayers'<lb/>
money.<lb/>
Exim has been verv<lb/>
active in recent years,<lb/>
having bankrolled 45 nuc-<lb/>
lear power plants around<lb/>
the globe. Nearly half of<lb/>
them are in underde-<lb/>
veloped third world coun-<lb/>
tries, many with notor-<lb/>
iously repressive regimes.<lb/>
The governments of South<lb/>
Africa, Brazil, Argentina<lb/>
and South Korea have all<lb/>
benefited from American<lb/>
nuclear aid. So has India,<lb/>
which in 1975 diverted<lb/>
nuclear waste from a<lb/>
Canadian-built reactor to<lb/>
make an atomic bomb.<lb/>
Morong plant is a bad deal<lb/>
for the Philippines from an<lb/>
economic as well a- an<lb/>
ecological point of view.<lb/>
The Philippines must rel<lb/>
on American multinational<lb/>
corporations for mainten-<lb/>
ance, spare parts and<lb/>
uranium fuei.<lb/>
Interestingly enough.<lb/>
the Morong plant is<lb/>
located near the Bataan<lb/>
free-trade zone, an eco-<lb/>
nomic enclave where tav -<lb/>
on foreign-owned industry<lb/>
are virtually non-existent.<lb/>
This gives rise to specu-<lb/>
lation that the main<lb/>
purpose of the plant is to<lb/>
provide electricity to for-<lb/>
eign industry in the zone<lb/>
which will, with cheap<lb/>
Filipino labor, make inex-<lb/>
pensive goods tor ship-<lb/>
ment to the I S.<lb/>
If that is true, the<lb/>
Morong plant will not only<lb/>
use local people as nuclear<lb/>
guinea pigs, it will mater-<lb/>
ially hurt American work-<lb/>
ers, since it will enable<lb/>
cheap foreign goods to<lb/>
flood these shores and<lb/>
take jobs away from<lb/>
Americans. Activist groups<lb/>
opposing the plant ? such<lb/>
as the Campaign tor a<lb/>
Nuclear-Free Philippines<lb/>
and the Third World<lb/>
Energy Action Group, both<lb/>
based in Washington.<lb/>
D.C. ? liken the situation<lb/>
of "runawav reactors to<lb/>
that of runaway shops.<lb/>
President Carter and<lb/>
the NRC have until the<lb/>
end of 1979 to rule on this<lb/>
latest accident-waiting-to-<lb/>
happen.<lb/>
(David Armstrong is a<lb/>
Critics charge that the syndicated columnist.)<lb/>
to pay higher interest rates<lb/>
to borrow the money to<lb/>
maintain inventories and<lb/>
thousands may go to the<lb/>
wall. Agriculture Depart-<lb/>
ment sources say that farm-<lb/>
ers compelled to go to the<lb/>
banks to borrow against position of President Sadat<lb/>
their upcoming crops will be vis-a-vis the other Arab<lb/>
hard-pressed and may have states, but expressed the<lb/>
to seek higher market pric- belief that  the other Arab<lb/>
far short of what the Egyp-<lb/>
tians expected. Now the<lb/>
whole Israeli-Egyptian deal<lb/>
is in trouble.<lb/>
Copyright. 1979,<lb/>
United Feature Syndicate, Inc<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
MANAQINQ 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 Is the student<lb/>
newspaper of East Carolina University<lb/>
sponsored 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/>
Offices ere located on the<lb/>
fhe Publications Cantor Old South<lb/>
Building. Our mailing address is: Old<lb/>
South Building, ECU, Groomtit. NC<lb/>
27834. m<lb/>
The phone numbers are: 757-6366, 6367<lb/>
6309. Subscriptions are $10<lb/>
alumni $6<lb/>
<pb facs="00057228_0005"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
man <lb/>
features<lb/>
Thursday, November 1, 1979 Page 5<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Symphony will perform<lb/>
By BILL JONES<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
The ECU School of<lb/>
Music will present three<lb/>
days of musical enter-<lb/>
tainment this weekend.<lb/>
This Fridav and Satur-<lb/>
day at 8:00 p.m. the ECU<lb/>
Opera Theater will stage<lb/>
Scenes From Opera, their<lb/>
annual Fall Scenes Pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
This year's Scenes will<lb/>
be the third act of<lb/>
Engelbert Humperdinck's<lb/>
Hansel and Gretel, Act 2<lb/>
of Giacomo Puccini's Tos-<lb/>
ca and scenes 1 and 2<lb/>
from Carl Orffs Der<lb/>
Mond.<lb/>
Hansel and Gretel will<lb/>
feature a Children's Cho-<lb/>
rus including 8 fourth<lb/>
v!<lb/>
graders from the Green-<lb/>
ville City Schools. Dr.<lb/>
Clyde Hiss, who has<lb/>
directed the ECU Opera<lb/>
Theater since 1965, will<lb/>
direct all scenes and acts.<lb/>
Charles Moore, an ECU<lb/>
School of Music faculty<lb/>
member, will narrate the<lb/>
scenes from Der Mond.<lb/>
Symphony<lb/>
This is the 197th<lb/>
anniversary of Beethoven's<lb/>
Eroica symphony, which<lb/>
was completed in August,<lb/>
1804. Eroica, the Sym-<lb/>
phony No. 3 in E-flat<lb/>
Major and Ginastera's<lb/>
Concerto for Harp and<lb/>
Orchestra will be per-<lb/>
formed this Sunday after-<lb/>
noon by the ECU Sym-<lb/>
phony Orchestra. Robert<lb/>
Hause will conduct.<lb/>
and Orchestra will feature<lb/>
harpist Marian Harding.<lb/>
Harding is the harp<lb/>
instructor for ECU and Old<lb/>
Domonion University in<lb/>
Norfolk, Va.<lb/>
Harding lives in Wil-<lb/>
liamsburg, Va where she<lb/>
is harp soloist at the<lb/>
Regency Dining Room of<lb/>
the Williamsburg Inn. She<lb/>
also offers private instruc-<lb/>
tion in her studio.<lb/>
Born in Philadelphia,<lb/>
Harding has played with<lb/>
the Richmond Symphony<lb/>
and the Norfolk Sym-<lb/>
phony. She is currently<lb/>
harpist with the Virginia<lb/>
lassical Symphony.<lb/>
The ECU Orchestra<lb/>
program will be held in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium this<lb/>
The Concerto for Harp Sunday at 3:15 p.m.<lb/>
"For Colored Girls <lb/>
is provoking , personal,<lb/>
spiced with dance<lb/>
By ALISON BARTEL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The sparse and simple<lb/>
scenery accompanied by<lb/>
charoscuro lighting sets the<lb/>
stage for the production<lb/>
"For Colored Girls Who<lb/>
Have Considered Suicide<lb/>
When the Rainbow is<lb/>
Enuf As the house lights<lb/>
go down, the lonely,<lb/>
isolated atmosphere is<lb/>
abruptly broken by sounds<lb/>
resembling native chants<lb/>
of Pamela Henry, Vernon<lb/>
Jones, Melinda Richardson<lb/>
and Earlie M. Washing-<lb/>
ton.<lb/>
This introduction is the<lb/>
prelude to a thought<lb/>
provoking and personal<lb/>
theme produced by a cast<lb/>
 of seven women: Charla L.<lb/>
I Davis, Penelope Alford,<lb/>
Debra Zumbach, Renee<lb/>
DuLaney, Gloria Brewing-<lb/>
ton and Crystal Barnes.<lb/>
Each actress represents<lb/>
 the attitude of a girl<lb/>
 attempting suicide in an<lb/>
 American city. The per-<lb/>
i formance of Gloria Brew-<lb/>
l ington, "The Lady in<lb/>
I Blue was outstanding<lb/>
; with her pleading voice<lb/>
? accompanied by her<lb/>
; flamboyant elocution and<lb/>
I contorted facial expres-<lb/>
I sions. This performance is<lb/>
 only one of the highlights<lb/>
t of the show. Another is<lb/>
' the beautiful dancing of<lb/>
 the entire cast thatJnt<lb/>
I prets the theme<lb/>
5 show extensively.<lb/>
The costuming is rela-<lb/>
tively simple, but it<lb/>
doesn't detract from the<lb/>
production. In fact, it<lb/>
enhances the show, com-<lb/>
bining elaborate verse so<lb/>
that the audience can<lb/>
accept few costume<lb/>
changes. Choreopoet<lb/>
ntozake shange's compli-<lb/>
cated lines are exactly<lb/>
wrought.<lb/>
The scenery is any-<lb/>
thing but elaborate; how-<lb/>
ever, it is very effective.<lb/>
The scenic plainness is<lb/>
developed with colorful<lb/>
lighting techniques. The<lb/>
effective lighting serves as<lb/>
Monitor diver speaks in Kinston<lb/>
a device for scene changes<lb/>
as well as focusing on<lb/>
specific actresses.<lb/>
When Edgar R. Loes-<lb/>
sin, director of the show,<lb/>
was asked what prompted<lb/>
him to select this show for<lb/>
direction, he replied, "I<lb/>
saw it in New York and<lb/>
thought it would be a good<lb/>
experience for the stu-<lb/>
dents<lb/>
"For Colored Girls <lb/>
will be showing through<lb/>
Wednesday, Nov. 7. Cur-<lb/>
tain time is 8:15 p.m and<lb/>
tickets are on sale at the<lb/>
Drama Department Box<lb/>
Office.<lb/>
Several East Caro-<lb/>
lina University students<lb/>
were privileged recently to<lb/>
hear scuba diving arche-<lb/>
ologist Richard Lawrence<lb/>
speak on this summer's<lb/>
work on the Civil War<lb/>
ironclad Monitor.<lb/>
Lawrence, who spoke<lb/>
at the monthly meeting of<lb/>
the East Carolina Dive<lb/>
Club in Kinston, is one of<lb/>
only four divers who have<lb/>
visited the underwater<lb/>
site. His presentation in-<lb/>
cluded a brief history of<lb/>
underwater archeology in<lb/>
North Carolina, beginning<lb/>
with the Modern Greece<lb/>
project in 1962 and the<lb/>
establishment of the un-<lb/>
derwater Branch of the<lb/>
N.C. Division of Archives<lb/>
and History.<lb/>
The Monitor Project is<lb/>
the latest and most<lb/>
ambitious undertaking win<lb/>
which the Underwater<lb/>
Branch has been involved.<lb/>
Monitor, in the first<lb/>
naval engagement be-<lb/>
tween ironclad vessels,<lb/>
fought CSS Virginia to a<lb/>
draw on March 8, 1882 at<lb/>
Hampton Roads, Virginia.<lb/>
On the last day of that<lb/>
year she sank in rough<lb/>
seas off Cape Hatteras<lb/>
while being towed south<lb/>
by USS Rhode Island. An<lb/>
expedition from Duke<lb/>
University found the site<lb/>
in 1973. Later projects<lb/>
filmed and mapped the<lb/>
wreck, but this summer<lb/>
marked the first time that<lb/>
divers have actually<lb/>
worked on the historic<lb/>
ship.<lb/>
surized chamber and went<lb/>
about the work of setting<lb/>
up their reference grid and<lb/>
"Our biggest<lb/>
problem was<lb/>
convincing the<lb/>
people  that our<lb/>
purpose was to<lb/>
determine the<lb/>
condition of the<lb/>
off a lot of<lb/>
souvenirs.<lb/>
ii<lb/>
The survey group,<lb/>
composed of personnel wreck, not to cart<lb/>
from the National Ocean-<lb/>
ographic ann Atmospheric<lb/>
Administration (NOAA),<lb/>
the Harbor Branck Foun-<lb/>
dation and the N.C.<lb/>
Underwater Branch, work-<lb/>
ed from Harbor Branch's<lb/>
ship RV Johnson. De-<lb/>
scents to the 225-foot deep<lb/>
wreck were made via<lb/>
Johnson's four-man sub-<lb/>
mersible craft. On the site<lb/>
the divers locked out of<lb/>
the sub through a pres-<lb/>
excavating a selected 5' X<lb/>
5' section of the officers'<lb/>
quarters.<lb/>
Aside from the great<lb/>
depth, which necessitated<lb/>
the use of a special<lb/>
breathing mixture of he-<lb/>
lium and qxygen in place<lb/>
of air, work was often<lb/>
hindered by adverse wea-<lb/>
ther, bad visibility and<lb/>
strong currents across the<lb/>
wreck.<lb/>
Illustrating his talk<lb/>
with slides of the work<lb/>
area, Lawrence showed<lb/>
how samples of wood and<lb/>
metal were carefully re-<lb/>
moved for laboratory anal-<lb/>
ysis. Each piece was<lb/>
replaced with sections of<lb/>
non-corrosive materials to<lb/>
prevent further deterio-<lb/>
ration. One wine bottle, a<lb/>
relish jar and three small<lb/>
mustard containers were<lb/>
recovered from the exca-<lb/>
vation site.<lb/>
"Our biggest problem<lb/>
was convincing the people<lb/>
we were working with that<lb/>
our purpose was to<lb/>
determine the condition of<lb/>
the wreck, not to cart off a<lb/>
lot of souvenirs Law-<lb/>
rence reported. "Arche-<lb/>
ology is delicate and<lb/>
exacting work. You can't<lb/>
just start ripping artifacts<lb/>
out of a site or you destrov<lb/>
any information you might<lb/>
have been able to gain<lb/>
from them. Some of our<lb/>
co-workers just could't see<lb/>
that<lb/>
He stated that although<lb/>
some of the main timbers<lb/>
and the larger metal parts<lb/>
seem to be in good shape,<lb/>
the overall condition of the<lb/>
wreck is quite fragile.<lb/>
When asked if the ship<lb/>
could be raised, Lawrence<lb/>
was not optimistic.<lb/>
"Not with the technol-<lb/>
ogy and resources avail-<lb/>
able today. The whole<lb/>
thing would probably fall<lb/>
apart and we'd lose it<lb/>
forever. The wreck is<lb/>
better off left where it is<lb/>
until some future date<lb/>
when raising her is more<lb/>
feasible<lb/>
The ECU Sociology-<lb/>
Anthropology Club is cur-<lb/>
rently trying to schedule<lb/>
Lawrence to speak.<lb/>
of the<lb/>
Rural crime increases<lb/>
By LEE MITGANG<lb/>
AP Urban Affairs Writer<lb/>
Indiana farmers used to worry about kids<lb/>
cherry-bombing their mailboxes. Now those same kids<lb/>
are often high on drugs or booze, and farmers are<lb/>
locking their doors against thieves and vandals.<lb/>
Cattle-rustling in New Mexica jumped 300 percent in<lb/>
the past year.<lb/>
Fruit by the truckload in routinely ripped off in<lb/>
Florida.<lb/>
From the cornfield of Ohio to the coalfield of West<lb/>
Virginia to the cow country of the Southwest, an almost<lb/>
fivefold increase in crime in the past two decades is<lb/>
threatening the easygoing, secure lifestyle of rural<lb/>
America.<lb/>
Annual FBI statistics show that since 1960, crime in<lb/>
rural America is increasing more rapidly than in urban<lb/>
areas.<lb/>
See CRIME, page 7<lb/>
o?<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
.vv<lb/>
?<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
BLACK ARTS<lb/>
The ECU Black Arts<lb/>
Festival will begin Nov-<lb/>
ember 1 and continue<lb/>
through November 9. An<lb/>
art exhibition which kicks<lb/>
off the Festival will be on<lb/>
display in the MSC Gallery<lb/>
throughout the duration.<lb/>
GOSPEL CONCERT<lb/>
There will be a Gospel<lb/>
concert on Sunday, Nov-<lb/>
ember 4, which will<lb/>
feature the New Birth<lb/>
Chorale Ensemble, the<lb/>
Fountain of Life Choir,<lb/>
and the ECU Gospel<lb/>
Ensemble.<lb/>
JUBILEE!<lb/>
The Theater Arts Com-<lb/>
mittee presents Jubilee a<lb/>
celebration in song with<lb/>
tunes from Porgy and<lb/>
Bess, Shouboat, The Wiz<lb/>
and more. Jubilee! will be<lb/>
held in Hendrix Audi-<lb/>
torium at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Artist equates art with communication<lb/>
J<lb/>
By ALISON BARTEL<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
"We limit ourselves by<lb/>
trying to create. Art is a<lb/>
way of communicating,<lb/>
saying 'I'm happy or<lb/>
'I'm sad or 'the world is<lb/>
bad' or 'the world is<lb/>
good says Bobby Sim-<lb/>
mons, a graduate of ECU<lb/>
School of Art and a<lb/>
teacher at Sampson Tech-<lb/>
nical Institute.<lb/>
Simmons, for whom a<lb/>
reception will be given by<lb/>
the Student Union Art<lb/>
Exhibition Committee this<lb/>
Sunday, feels that being<lb/>
an artist offers many<lb/>
things beyond just the act<lb/>
of creation.<lb/>
"Art is also a way of<lb/>
escape, and I can com-<lb/>
municate all these things<lb/>
(the feelings mentioned<lb/>
above) just by a stroke of<lb/>
a pen or pencil. Then,<lb/>
afterwards, I can still be<lb/>
the same person Sim-<lb/>
mons added.<lb/>
Simmons did not take<lb/>
art lessons until he was in<lb/>
his senior year of high<lb/>
school. He then entered<lb/>
ECU and graduated in<lb/>
1978. His favorite medium<lb/>
is oil, but that doesn't<lb/>
prevent him from experi-<lb/>
menting with other types<lb/>
of media. His style is a<lb/>
combination of collage and<lb/>
Picasso's later style of<lb/>
painting. Realism appeals<lb/>
to him, too, when he is<lb/>
able to add a touch of<lb/>
abstract.<lb/>
Besides his teaching at<lb/>
the technical institute,<lb/>
Simmons conducts classes<lb/>
at a prison unit and<lb/>
teaches drawing to inter-<lb/>
ested people in the com-<lb/>
munity. Simmons believes<lb/>
Bobby Simmons, an ECU Art graduate, is a born-again artist<lb/>
the student must learn to<lb/>
trust himself and his<lb/>
emotions in order to "see<lb/>
art<lb/>
method wouldn't be to<lb/>
give a class, a student, an<lb/>
abstract idea such as<lb/>
'morning' or 'evening' and<lb/>
have them draw what they<lb/>
"My ideal teaching think. People need to<lb/>
know how to see art as<lb/>
they can think it Sim-<lb/>
mons said.<lb/>
See ARTIST, page 7<lb/>
Folk<lb/>
music<lb/>
festival<lb/>
By BILL JONES<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
"Bluegrass music has<lb/>
moved up in the world<lb/>
says Lorraine Jordan. For<lb/>
what used to be uncul-<lb/>
tured hillbilly music,<lb/>
"people are paying $8 and<lb/>
$9 just to see one blue<lb/>
grass band So, the ECU<lb/>
Folklore Classes' 3rd An-<lb/>
nual Folkmusic Festival<lb/>
will be a real treat for<lb/>
lovers of bluegrass and<lb/>
"Old Time" music.<lb/>
The Folk M.usic Festi-<lb/>
val will be held at The<lb/>
Treehouse this year. In<lb/>
past years the festival has<lb/>
been held in the Art<lb/>
building, but according to<lb/>
festival organizer Lorraine<lb/>
Jordan, holding the event<lb/>
at The Treehouse will<lb/>
make it much easier for<lb/>
people who want to go<lb/>
downtown Saturday night<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
Jordan, an ECU grad-<lb/>
uate, plays mandolin for<lb/>
Blue Grass '78, a Raleigh<lb/>
band, who, along with<lb/>
Greenville's Green Grass<lb/>
Cloggers and Carolina<lb/>
Bluegrass (a band from<lb/>
Piney Neck, just outside of clogging entourage. The<lb/>
Vanceboro, N.C.) will pro- Cloggers will again be<lb/>
vide music and entertain-<lb/>
ment for the event.<lb/>
Bluegrass '78 is one of<lb/>
the top bluegrass bands in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Carolina Bluegrass fea-<lb/>
tures Dickey Robinson, the<lb/>
"No. 1" fiddler in the<lb/>
state, according to Ann<lb/>
Massengill, one of the<lb/>
Green Grass Cloggers.<lb/>
The Green Grass Clog-<lb/>
gers are a widely traveled<lb/>
sponsoring their annual<lb/>
Clogger's Day on Decem-<lb/>
ber 1. Clogger's Day will<lb/>
be held in Wright Audi-<lb/>
torium and will include<lb/>
workshops in fiddle play-<lb/>
ing, banjo, clogging and<lb/>
English contra dance.<lb/>
Saturday's Festival will<lb/>
begin at 9:00 p.m. The<lb/>
jam session is open to all<lb/>
who can play an instru-<lb/>
ment or clog.<lb/>
Admission to the Festi-<lb/>
val is FREE.<lb/>
mt<lb/>
LEAKitMr A tour Couxg f tte HMto lAtol<lb/>
ti PWID A)0KKI5<lb/>
REM1 fOR 00 AM DTEHA<lb/>
NW1, MOW THAT TU?0K.<lb/>
1H3 0TIO0HJ3 Od WY2DH<lb/>
HIS H00?3S rooj3<lb/>
CMfcrv MWJ. Win MilH<lb/>
'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057228_0006"/><lb/>
Paoe 6 THE EAST CAROClNIANf j Novemher 1979<lb/>
Heaven Can Wait promises immortality<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Films Committee will pre-<lb/>
sent Warren Beatty and<lb/>
Julie Christie in the<lb/>
romantic comedy Heaven<lb/>
Can Wait this Friday and<lb/>
Saturday night at 7 and 9<lb/>
p.m. in MendenhalPs<lb/>
Hendrix Theater. Admis-<lb/>
sion for students is by ID<lb/>
and Activity Card. Faculty<lb/>
and staff may use their<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Cen-<lb/>
ter membership cards.<lb/>
Warren Beatty's Heav-<lb/>
en Can Wait has recap-<lb/>
tured the spirit of the<lb/>
glorious films of the<lb/>
1940's, added a few stars<lb/>
and a lot of color.<lb/>
His film is a remake of<lb/>
the 1941 Here Comes Mr.<lb/>
Jordan, a fantasy about a<lb/>
prizefighter (Robert Mont-<lb/>
gomery) who is accident-<lb/>
ally sent to heaven before<lb/>
his time and forced to find<lb/>
a new body to occupy.<lb/>
As co-writer, co-direc-<lb/>
tor and producer, Beatty<lb/>
has crafted one of the<lb/>
most likeable screen char-<lb/>
acters in recent memory.<lb/>
His performance of the<lb/>
confused Joe Pendleton is<lb/>
bursting with a celestial<lb/>
spirit that he enjoys even<lb/>
more on earth than at his<lb/>
heavenly detour.<lb/>
Pendleton is a quarter-<lb/>
back with the Los Angeles<lb/>
Rams who is informed at<lb/>
the outset of the movie<lb/>
that he has overcome a<lb/>
serious knee injury and<lb/>
will start against Dallas<lb/>
that Sunday.<lb/>
The following day,<lb/>
however, Pendleton is<lb/>
involved in an accident<lb/>
while riding his bicycle.<lb/>
Soon he is being led<lb/>
through the clouds to a<lb/>
weigh stationin Heaven by<lb/>
an impatient celestial es-<lb/>
cort (Buck Henry). Joe<lb/>
protests that there has<lb/>
been some mistake ? that<lb/>
he can't be dead. When<lb/>
the arch-angel Mr. Jordan<lb/>
(James Mason) arrives, he<lb/>
makes a quick check which<lb/>
confirms that Pendleton is<lb/>
not due in Heaven for<lb/>
another 50 years. The dis-<lb/>
illusioned Pendleton is<lb/>
rushed back to earth, but<lb/>
it is too late. His body<lb/>
has been cremated.<lb/>
Jordan immediately be-<lb/>
gins a search for a new<lb/>
body. After rejecting sev-<lb/>
eral possibilities, they<lb/>
arrive at the estate of Leo<lb/>
Farnsworth, a wealthy<lb/>
businessman who is in the<lb/>
process of being murdered<lb/>
by his wife Julia (Dyan<lb/>
Cannon) and his personal<lb/>
secretary Tony Abbot<lb/>
(Charles Grodin). Not<lb/>
wishing to get involved<lb/>
with the two, Pendleton is<lb/>
about to leave the estate<lb/>
when Betty Logan (Julie<lb/>
Christie) arrives.<lb/>
She demands to see<lb/>
Farnsworth about a re-<lb/>
finery his company is<lb/>
going to build which will<lb/>
destroy her village in<lb/>
England. Sympathizing<lb/>
with her plight and im-<lb/>
pressed with her spirit as<lb/>
well as her beauty,<lb/>
Pendleton agrees to tem-<lb/>
porarily use Farnsworth's<lb/>
body so he can help her.<lb/>
? - ' '<lb/>
?<lb/>
j$fe<lb/>
I,H?,<lb/>
 -&amp;<lb/>
Warren Beatty will star in this week's free flick "Heaven Can Wait<lb/>
DEL TA ZE TA<lb/>
BIG BROTHER<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
A T THE HOUSE<lb/>
801 5th 7:00-9:00<lb/>
GUYS COME TO MEET<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Coffeehouse Committee<lb/>
presents<lb/>
Ufiix DxL &amp; Sat<lb/>
7 &amp; g fx.m.<lb/>
cMinaiix. Jhcutxc<lb/>
?fioni.ox?.d by<lb/>
ike. StutUnk iXnion rfmi CommikUc<lb/>
and<lb/>
Distributed By<lb/>
Taylor Beverage Co<lb/>
Goldsboro<lb/>
IMPORTED<lb/>
Heineken<lb/>
HOLLAND BEER<lb/>
THE 1 IMPORTED BEER IN AMERICA.<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat Nov. 2 &amp; 3<lb/>
9&amp;10pm<lb/>
Room 15 Mendenhall<lb/>
Admission 50<lb/>
Free snacks!<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
Jordan explains about the<lb/>
exchange of bodies: in-<lb/>
wardly he will still be Joe<lb/>
Pendleton, but outwardly<lb/>
everyone will still see and<lb/>
hear Leo Farnsworth<lb/>
(throughout the film we<lb/>
continue to see and hear<lb/>
Warren Beatty as Pendle-<lb/>
ton).<lb/>
Naturally, Julia and<lb/>
Tony are shocked to find<lb/>
Farnsworth still alive and<lb/>
set about to murder<lb/>
him once again.<lb/>
In one of Heaven<lb/>
Can Wait's best scenes,<lb/>
the fumbling Pendleton,<lb/>
obviously out of place off<lb/>
the football field, is forced<lb/>
to attend one of Farns-<lb/>
worth's board meetings<lb/>
where he delivers an<lb/>
expertly comic monologue<lb/>
that Is laced with football<lb/>
lingo.<lb/>
He<lb/>
is<lb/>
able to help<lb/>
Betty by rescinding the<lb/>
order to build the refinery<lb/>
in England. She is over-<lb/>
come with gratitude and a<lb/>
bond quickly develops<lb/>
between them. Hence, a<lb/>
twist is in order when it<lb/>
becomes more and more<lb/>
evident that Pendleton is<lb/>
becoming a bit too content<lb/>
with his temporary body.<lb/>
He even goes so far as to<lb/>
get in shape for the Super<lb/>
Bowl, only to receive the<lb/>
crushing news that he<lb/>
must give it up because<lb/>
"it is not in his destiny to<lb/>
continue on as Leo Farns-<lb/>
worth<lb/>
All of this is handled<lb/>
very well, including the<lb/>
elaborate football se-<lb/>
quences, and, this being a<lb/>
strict Holly wood fantav.<lb/>
the loose ends and<lb/>
See HEAVEN, page 7<lb/>
SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE<lb/>
CAUTION<lb/>
Vo-i may lose money il<lb/>
uu miss the Shoe<lb/>
Gallery's, buy one pair at<lb/>
lull price get the second<lb/>
pair at 'i price, COUPON<lb/>
SALE. ou must bring<lb/>
luupoti with you.<lb/>
10-6, MonSat.<lb/>
1st pair must be<lb/>
at least $10.00<lb/>
1 he bhu Caller <lb/>
720 Atlantic at<lb/>
Dick in .oh .<lb/>
r3alR, by Nature's Way<lb/>
specializing in natural hair cuts for men &amp; women<lb/>
Downtown Mall<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
appointments only<lb/>
758-7841<lb/>
FRIDATS<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Thurs. Night<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
HRIMP $4.95<lb/>
YSTERS $4.75<lb/>
FLOUNDER 3.5<lb/>
TROUT $Z.95<lb/>
1PERCH $2.95<lb/>
all you can eat<lb/>
No take-outs please.<lb/>
Meal include:<lb/>
French Fries, Cole slaw,<lb/>
IHushpupples<lb/>
I<lb/>
We are proud to<lb/>
announce that we<lb/>
have added<lb/>
one of the<lb/>
AREAS FINEST<lb/>
SALAD BARS<lb/>
for your<lb/>
dining pleasure.<lb/>
OPEN FOR LUNCH<lb/>
Dally<lb/>
(exeep Sat.) 1130 - MO<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
SUN-THUR<lb/>
4:30-0:00<lb/>
IFRI. ? SAT.<lb/>
4:30-10:O0<lb/>
v<lb/>
(<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057228_0007"/><lb/>
1 November 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Page 7<lb/>
CRIME<lb/>
continued from page 5<lb/>
Heaven Can Wait is straight forward fantasy<lb/>
iAn Zl ' , FUral CFime rate was 423 incidents per<lb/>
I00,000population. In 1977, the latest year for which<lb/>
hgures are available, the rate stood nearly five times<lb/>
higher at 2,012 per 100,000 population. During the same<lb/>
period crime in metropolitan areas rose about four<lb/>
times higher.<lb/>
Put another way, in 1960 the odds of someone in a<lb/>
rural area being a crime victim were about one in 236.<lb/>
B 177, the odds were one in 49.<lb/>
Professor Howard Phillips of Ohio State University<lb/>
says the FBI figures show that rural crime is now<lb/>
roughly equal to urban rates reached in 1967.<lb/>
The question I have says Phillips, "is do you<lb/>
have to catch up to the problems of urban centers before<lb/>
W ashmgton and others will pay attention?"<lb/>
Information on the nature and extent of the problem<lb/>
i sketchy, but researchers generally agree rural crime<lb/>
ha- certain characteristics: Property crime is the leading<lb/>
problem, especially vandalism and theft. Phillips<lb/>
estimates that in rural Ohio, vandalism accounts for as<lb/>
ich as 50 percent of crime. Purdue University studies<lb/>
two Indiana counties found vandalism accounted for<lb/>
23 percent of crime.<lb/>
In Hampshire County, W. Va farm equipment theft<lb/>
the most prevalent crime, according to researchers<lb/>
omas Bean and Layle Lawrence, and a local hunter<lb/>
here was recently caught shooting up a farmer's house.<lb/>
rhis summer, someone took a four-wheel drive<lb/>
vehicle and ripped through cornfields on the outskirts of<lb/>
roleda, Ohio.<lb/>
Around the country, tractors, combines and other<lb/>
expensive farm machines are easy prey for thieves,<lb/>
because many rural Americans can't get used to the<lb/>
idea of locking things and removing kevs.<lb/>
-Rural crime is generally not as violent as urban crime,<lb/>
but the murder rate in rural areas is only slightly less<lb/>
than in cities.<lb/>
-Rural criminals are almost always voung males.<lb/>
Ihe usually commii their crimes in their home county,<lb/>
although net in the same town.<lb/>
One thing's tor sure. It's not people from<lb/>
metropolitan areas running out and victimizing rural<lb/>
is, says Purdue researcher Joseph Donnermever.<lb/>
Several reasons are ottered for the rise in rural<lb/>
crime. A leading cause cited is the lack of law<lb/>
enforcement personnel in rural areas.<lb/>
 second tactor is the wealth in many county towns:<lb/>
there's plenty worth stealing and not much protecting it.<lb/>
Rural America is much more affluent these days.<lb/>
In Montmorenci, Ind Thunderbirds are parked in<lb/>
' $100,000 homes. As often as not, the keys are<lb/>
leit in the cars, and the front doors of the houses are<lb/>
unlocked.<lb/>
Inside are stereos, color TVs and microwave ovens.<lb/>
New highways and new industry have helped open<lb/>
the way tor crime in rural America. Strange cars cruise<lb/>
continued from page 6<lb/>
hopeless situations are all<lb/>
tied together neatly in a<lb/>
single passage; everything<lb/>
is resolved in the end.<lb/>
As it should be, Beatty<lb/>
and Christie communicate<lb/>
almost exclusively through<lb/>
eye contact. The film<lb/>
relies very heavily on plot<lb/>
and Beatty has managed<lb/>
to get the best work out of<lb/>
his cohorts. Elaine May<lb/>
has turned in some of her<lb/>
funniest scripting since the<lb/>
early days with husband<lb/>
Mike Nichols.<lb/>
She has rewritten the<lb/>
old script for Here Comes<lb/>
Mr. Jordan so that her<lb/>
jokes about money, mar-<lb/>
riage and adultery are not<lb/>
out of context. The film<lb/>
ends happily and makes<lb/>
you feel good chiefly by<lb/>
implying that we will<lb/>
live forever.<lb/>
So at this point in his<lb/>
career, no one has more<lb/>
potential to change the<lb/>
outlook of films in the 70's<lb/>
than Warren Beatty. With<lb/>
Heaven Can Wait it has<lb/>
now become evident that,<lb/>
in many ways, the films of<lb/>
the forties are the films of<lb/>
through, strangers move in.<lb/>
In many towns, city people buy country homes. The<lb/>
distinction between country and suburb is gradually<lb/>
blurring.<lb/>
Phillips notes that the past decade witnessed the first<lb/>
increase in rural population in years. Rural communities<lb/>
are losing their first line of defense: knowing your<lb/>
neighbor, knowing who belongs.<lb/>
"What you have is homogeneous communities<lb/>
becoming more heterogeneous. People don't know each<lb/>
other he says.<lb/>
Life for rural teen-agers has also changed. In many<lb/>
states, tight money has forced small high schools to<lb/>
consolidate into sprawling county schools just as<lb/>
crowded as their city cousins.<lb/>
Donnermever says peer pressure and lack of adult<lb/>
attention in these county schools often lead to drug use,<lb/>
drinking, and sometimes crime.<lb/>
Ironically, according to sociologists, rural America<lb/>
tinds itself facing the same basic problem faced by<lb/>
crime-ridden city neighborhoods: the ripping of the<lb/>
social fabric, of knowing and caring about neighbors.<lb/>
Many, including the federal Law Enforcement<lb/>
Assistance Administration and the National Sheriffs<lb/>
Association, feel the answer is to restore the strength of<lb/>
country neighborhoods, to make neighbors care again.<lb/>
Since 1972, the sheriffs' group has received an<lb/>
annual $250,000 grant from LEAA to operate a National<lb/>
Neighborhood Watch Program. The program, initially<lb/>
geared toward the suburbs, is shifting its emphasis<lb/>
toward rural crime.<lb/>
Director Ben Gorda says the program teaches people<lb/>
to fight crime with common-sense precautions like<lb/>
locking doors and vehicles and installing anti-burglary<lb/>
devices.<lb/>
It also encourages people to keep an eye on strange<lb/>
cars driving along rural roads, and note license plates if<lb/>
they appear suspicious.<lb/>
Warren Beatty in the 70's.<lb/>
And if we want to<lb/>
understand what the cin-<lb/>
ema stands for today, few<lb/>
filmmakers can give us as<lb/>
much insight as Warren<lb/>
Beatty.<lb/>
Beatty is one of those<lb/>
directors who has made<lb/>
films more modern by<lb/>
taking us backward in<lb/>
time. Though they are<lb/>
very much a product of<lb/>
our own time, his films<lb/>
have always been cut off<lb/>
by their position as a mass<lb/>
form of entertainment<lb/>
from the influences of<lb/>
other, more inventive art<lb/>
forms. In the recent past,<lb/>
Heaven Can Wait would<lb/>
have been considered an<lb/>
experimental film and<lb/>
experimental cinema has<lb/>
been no more than a<lb/>
fringe activity and has had<lb/>
as little influence on the<lb/>
film industry as a whole as<lb/>
the equally specialized<lb/>
form of the cartoon.<lb/>
Beatty has customized<lb/>
the commercial movie,<lb/>
typified by Hollywood,<lb/>
which was always seen to<lb/>
be simply a form of<lb/>
storytelling, as the popular<lb/>
novel had been in the<lb/>
nineteenth century. In<lb/>
Heaven Can Wait, Beatty<lb/>
has poured all of his<lb/>
efforts not into rivaling the<lb/>
most up-to-date literature<lb/>
of the day, but into finding<lb/>
the film equivalents of the<lb/>
storytelling methods of<lb/>
Charles Dickens.<lb/>
The traditional cin-<lb/>
ema's favorite forms like<lb/>
the western and the gang-<lb/>
ster film continued to tell<lb/>
their stories with a<lb/>
straightforwardness that is<lb/>
lost in many of today's<lb/>
movies. With the success<lb/>
of Heaven Can Wait, the<lb/>
cinema could continue on<lb/>
in this way for the<lb/>
audience for which it<lb/>
ago the<lb/>
different<lb/>
a much<lb/>
new<lb/>
caters is one that still likes<lb/>
good stories excitingly and<lb/>
grippingly told. Certainly<lb/>
times have changed, but<lb/>
the more things change<lb/>
the more they stay the<lb/>
same.<lb/>
Five years<lb/>
cinema had a<lb/>
audience, and<lb/>
reduced one.<lb/>
generation of freer film-<lb/>
makers with wider hori-<lb/>
zons had arrived and were<lb/>
not that well received<lb/>
except in small art-film<lb/>
circles. Beatty exemplifies<lb/>
the director of the 40's<lb/>
whose style persuades us<lb/>
to lose ourselves in the<lb/>
swiftly unfolding events of<lb/>
his stories and makes us<lb/>
identify with his heroes (as<lb/>
we do when John Wayne<lb/>
leads a cavalry charge).<lb/>
Beatty does not try to<lb/>
remind us that what we<lb/>
are seeing is no more, and<lb/>
no less, than a film. His<lb/>
style is larger than life.<lb/>
Heaven Can Wait gives<lb/>
us straightforwardness,<lb/>
excitement, fantasy and<lb/>
humor all rolled into one.<lb/>
Its success relies on the<lb/>
studio structure in films<lb/>
which is so crucial to an<lb/>
understanding of the A-<lb/>
merican cinema, and the<lb/>
contributions of writers<lb/>
and producers are no<lb/>
longer passed over in the<lb/>
cult of the director.<lb/>
Thanks to the success<lb/>
of this film, our knowledge<lb/>
of Hollywood can grow<lb/>
even further and ulti-<lb/>
mately we can no doubt<lb/>
expect a full-scale re-<lb/>
assessment which takes<lb/>
into account social and<lb/>
economic pressures and<lb/>
faces the critical problems<lb/>
posed by Hollywood as a<lb/>
popular art.<lb/>
The customary deroga-<lb/>
tion of Hollywood films as<lb/>
escapist is unfair. What<lb/>
Heaven Can Wat, does as<lb/>
an escapist film is invite<lb/>
further analysis of its<lb/>
function. Its success at the<lb/>
box office obviously re-<lb/>
flects moral values, as it<lb/>
offers a model of behavior<lb/>
and basic reassurance to<lb/>
the audience. We don't<lb/>
need another world war to<lb/>
begin to enjoy the escapist<lb/>
fare Beatty and other<lb/>
filmmakers are currently<lb/>
churning out.<lb/>
Chanelo's<lb/>
Italian Foods, Inc<lb/>
Wave Forms on display<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAV<lb/>
GREENVILLE -<lb/>
K ave forms" and other<lb/>
kinetic sculptures by Bif<lb/>
Bream of Chapel Hill,<lb/>
senior student in the East<lb/>
Carolina University School<lb/>
rt. are on display this<lb/>
week at the Baptist<lb/>
Student Center gallerv at<lb/>
511 East Te nth St. here.<lb/>
Bream noted that his<lb/>
moving sculptures, made<lb/>
from wood and dacron, are<lb/>
designed to enable the<lb/>
 low er to "participate<lb/>
physically as well as<lb/>
emotionally and intellec-<lb/>
tually<lb/>
This sculpture is a-<lb/>
nalagous to light and<lb/>
sound waves that are the<lb/>
of human per-<lb/>
eption he said.<lb/>
Bream, a member of<lb/>
LCI 's Visual Arts Forum,<lb/>
a candidate for the<lb/>
Bachelor of Fine Arts<lb/>
degree in design with a<lb/>
minor concentration in<lb/>
sculpture.<lb/>
ARTIST<lb/>
continued from page 5<lb/>
About being a black<lb/>
artist, Simmons said, ' I'm<lb/>
a black artist because I'm<lb/>
black  I'm black in<lb/>
nature also, but other than<lb/>
that. I consider myself an<lb/>
artist seeking the truth<lb/>
Simmons believes that<lb/>
producing art is a talent<lb/>
from God. He is concerned<lb/>
that too many people allow<lb/>
their talents to be wasted.<lb/>
s an artist, Simmons<lb/>
finds his work a liberating<lb/>
force for the mind, but as<lb/>
a private person, he<lb/>
acknowledges another,<lb/>
more powerful force.<lb/>
'Tin a born-again<lb/>
Christian. The most im-<lb/>
portant motivating factcJr<lb/>
in my life is Christ,<lb/>
Simmons said.<lb/>
A reception sponsored<lb/>
bv the Student Union Art<lb/>
Exhibition Committee will<lb/>
be given in Simmon's<lb/>
honor. It will be held in<lb/>
the upper gallery of Men-<lb/>
denhall Student Center<lb/>
November 4th at 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Everyone is cordially in-<lb/>
vited to attend. Refresh-<lb/>
ments will be served.<lb/>
During his senior stu-<lb/>
dies at ECU. he has<lb/>
taught introductory cour-<lb/>
ses in drawing and art<lb/>
history at ayne Com-<lb/>
munity College in Golds-<lb/>
boro and has worked in his<lb/>
own Greenville Studio.<lb/>
His parents are Dr.<lb/>
and Mrs. Charles R.<lb/>
Bream of Buttons Road,<lb/>
Chapel Hill.<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO 12TH<lb/>
WEEK OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
$175.00 "all Inclusive'<lb/>
pregnancy test, birth control and<lb/>
problem pregnancy counseling For<lb/>
further information call 832-0535 (toll-<lb/>
free number 800-221-2568) between<lb/>
9AM-5PM weekdays<lb/>
Raleigh Women's Health<lb/>
Organization<lb/>
917 West Morgan St.<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C. 27603<lb/>
xWASH 111 E. 10th St.<lb/>
lj"i ioc across from<lb/>
nUUofc Krispy Kreme<lb/>
Donuts<lb/>
"A full service laundry"<lb/>
New Maytag Washers<lb/>
Carpeted lounge with color T.V.<lb/>
Fluff and Fold service<lb/>
Pinball Machines<lb/>
 Excellent professional Dry Cleaning<lb/>
I FREE!<lb/>
 One wash and a soft drink with this coupon<lb/>
I Valid thru Oct. 31.<lb/>
j 8:00-6:00<lb/>
I Limit one per visit<lb/>
DINE IN<lb/>
FAST - FREE<lb/>
DELIVERY<lb/>
CARRY-OUT<lb/>
MONDAY<lb/>
'RETURN OF THE 25 DRAFT<lb/>
4:00pm til closing<lb/>
?????. ?.<lb/>
???<lb/>
This FRIDAY Only<lb/>
2 FREE QUART COKES<lb/>
with the purchase of any large pizza<lb/>
Be sure and visit Chanelo's in Appalachain<lb/>
Nov. 3rd 835-A Faculty St. 262-1770<lb/>
&amp; PEKING<lb/>
PALACE<lb/>
Jvjnday thxu. Sutuxduy ii.OO a.m3:30fx.m.<lb/>
Sunday !Huffe.t uU you can eut 1f:OOu.m4:OOf.m.<lb/>
$3 95<lb/>
Urctccr ffiefiu-<lb/>
Luncheon Special 2.45<lb/>
"??fr'1 ?? O ??M?.?lli??PU<lb/>
JVo. - JV0.5 Choice one<lb/>
ctl Se.xve.ti witft Eag Uxofi Soufi &amp; cMot Uea<lb/>
JVo. 1. CkicHen Ckow Jein, Dxied J?lce &amp; Eaa J?ott<lb/>
JVo. 2. J?oait Poxk Eag 3oo tyoung, 3xied cRlce &amp; Egg eRoi<lb/>
JVo. 3. Beef Witn xeen Peex, DxUd J?ice &amp; ?99 J?olL<lb/>
JVo. 4. Chicken Witk cAUond, Dxied eRice &amp; Eaa J?oCt<lb/>
JV-y. 5. Sweet &amp; Soux Poxk, Dxied J?ice &amp; Eaa zRofl<lb/>
xeenvLLle Sauaxe<lb/>
ZPkone: 756-1l6g<lb/>
novemBep 8,1979 ? 800 p.m.<lb/>
henfcuix theatae ? east Caaoliiu university<lb/>
puBliCt $4.00, Qeoups of ao or more. $3.00<lb/>
:<lb/>
ATTENTION: Music Appreciation Students receive double credit for attending<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
A Theatre Art Presentation<lb/>
(<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057228_0008"/><lb/>
The Easl Carolinian<lb/>
lian 1 ?<lb/>
sports<lb/>
Thursday, November 1, 1979 Page 8<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
Tyson, ECl finished<lb/>
I he soap opera has ended.<lb/>
ast Carolina basketball center Al Tyson has put an<lb/>
it. After a controversial one-year stint with the<lb/>
the sophomore from Winterville has officially<lb/>
hdrawn from school and will look for another campus<lb/>
all his , ii.<lb/>
?m the wrv beginning of his career at ECU, Tyson<lb/>
? Hi- recruitment by the Pirate staff,<lb/>
h Larry Gillman, was protested by the<lb/>
sippi State staff, who claimed that Gillman and<lb/>
e about getting Big Al in the wrong way.<lb/>
complaint brought on an NCAA investigation,<lb/>
s a long, drawn out one that ended<lb/>
-ummT. f ie result - ECU's basketball<lb/>
was put on one-year probation. This meant that<lb/>
'uld not appear on television or compete in<lb/>
urnament.<lb/>
he probation Tyson was a big question<lb/>
He uit the team at the end of last season and did<lb/>
trip to Notre Dame with the Pirates. His<lb/>
hat he had had it with East Carolina, and<lb/>
Gillman.<lb/>
I nu Tyson must surely have<lb/>
fell as though he had a monkey<lb/>
on his hack.<lb/>
;ood reason to be fed up with his coach at<lb/>
1 he 6-11 center had not honestly been<lb/>
chance by the controversial Gillman. A<lb/>
was the aftermath oi hi- sparkling<lb/>
perforn last year at N.C. State. The<lb/>
nmediat ly after that Tyson saw very little<lb/>
. It seemed as though he were being benched for a<lb/>
e, rather than being rewarded for a good<lb/>
Perhaps disgust with situations like that one were<lb/>
Ivs ? s iceasional lackadaisical effort on<lb/>
"s there seemed to be something<lb/>
hi- mind.<lb/>
Gillman and the hiring ol ex-Wake<lb/>
m seemed to breathe new life into<lb/>
inced the big man to give it another<lb/>
ryson even went as far as to attend<lb/>
?hat he might be able to play-<lb/>
next roadblock. Even though he met<lb/>
NCAA requirement concerning academic<lb/>
n was suspended from the team at the<lb/>
?i practice by Odom. The new coach<lb/>
did not meet his requirements<lb/>
i. though, that Tyson could return as<lb/>
rea h -i the point where he met the<lb/>
- Odom said that he felt Tyson would be<lb/>
?rig his time working on his studies, rather<lb/>
until he reached that point. Al agreed.<lb/>
r.vsn so tar as to say that he would be out of<lb/>
m for only one or two weeks.<lb/>
rhen came the grand finale. Tyson withdrew from<lb/>
last Tuesday. Odom was out of town at the time,<lb/>
uld not be reached. The coach later made it<lb/>
?n did make an effort to contact him in<lb/>
id am e ol the taken actions.<lb/>
Odom spoke with Tyson last week concerning his<lb/>
ns "He related to me that he felt it would be<lb/>
r him if he left Greenville and East Carolina<lb/>
) dd. "He had so much pressure on him here. He<lb/>
- a local boy and there was a great deal expected of<lb/>
him He felt it would be better if he could go somewhere<lb/>
where he would be somewhat of a stranger<lb/>
rrue, ryson must surely have felt as though he had<lb/>
? on his back. Everywhere he went he was<lb/>
-il recognized, if nothing else for his 6-11 frame. It<lb/>
seemed as though almost everyone he saw would ask<lb/>
him the same questions, all about basketball.<lb/>
See TYSON, page 10<lb/>
Dye looks for<lb/>
'offensive show'<lb/>
Down goes Billv Johnson<lb/>
(Photo hv John Crogan)<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
'Anybody that wants to see an<lb/>
offensive show should be in Boone<lb/>
Saturday said Fast Carolina football<lb/>
coach Pat Dye at his Wednesday press<lb/>
luncheon as he looked forward to<lb/>
Saturday's game with Appalachian -<lb/>
"I've always thought that defense wins<lb/>
football games Dye continued, "but<lb/>
with the way we and Appalachian move<lb/>
the football, that might not be the case<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Dye certainly has a point. The Pirates<lb/>
rank tenth in the nation in total offense<lb/>
with an average of 128.6 yarl- ime.<lb/>
ECl s 259 yards rushing per game is<lb/>
the fifth best mark in the nation, while<lb/>
their 29 points per game scoring average<lb/>
stands 15th in the latest NCAA Mats.<lb/>
The Mountaineers are nol without<lb/>
impressive offensive Mats either, ranking<lb/>
11th nationally in passing offense. ASl<lb/>
quarterback Steve Brown ranks fourth in<lb/>
the nation in total offense, while end Rick<lb/>
Beasley leads the entire country in<lb/>
receiving with an average of 6.2<lb/>
game. Beasley's nine touchdowns is<lb/>
second best mark in the nation.<lb/>
Appalachian is a er. ver<lb/>
team to me live said. "th the<lb/>
type ol team that can score enough I<lb/>
a game solely on offensive perfoi<lb/>
The two team- are similar in that I<lb/>
both employ the wishbom nse. But.<lb/>
Dye said, the Apps run a more pass<lb/>
oriented attack than do the Pira<lb/>
"W ishbone team- usually rank high in the<lb/>
national statistics in total off ut vou<lb/>
can usually find them among the top<lb/>
rushing team Appalachian is different.<lb/>
Brown and Beasley make up a great<lb/>
combination for them. There's no dubt<lb/>
they can score on anybody<lb/>
So Dye knows that the Pirates must<lb/>
move the football well in order win<lb/>
"But<lb/>
ved th<lb/>
There<lb/>
ensive<lb/>
number<lb/>
? X' optional -? as Hi<lb/>
with an 8 i<lb/>
nation . <lb/>
97. 1 v ard-<lb/>
Perin Yan, )<lb/>
Is per g<lb/>
Quarterbai K I<lb/>
?<lb/>
q u a r ?<lb/>
said. "H<lb/>
Despii<lb/>
ha<lb/>
foil<lb/>
nationally-ranked <lb/>
llli!<lb/>
It ? ?<lb/>
frus<lb/>
told th<lb/>
i.<lb/>
W hat is<lb/>
important<lb/>
Carolina Dye -aid. "I jus<lb/>
I players<lb/>
Brown leads passing attack<lb/>
ASU dep<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Saturday's contest between the Pirates of East<lb/>
Carolina and the Mountaineers of Appalachian State<lb/>
could prove to be more of a contest than many<lb/>
speculators give credit if the Apps can untrack their<lb/>
potent passing attack.<lb/>
But qualify that with a big IF.<lb/>
Appalachian quarterback Steve Brown enters the<lb/>
contest with an impressive 332.5 vards total offense per<lb/>
game, fourth best in the NCAA.<lb/>
Junior split end Rick Beasley (6-1, 180) should<lb/>
present a familiar problem for the Pirate secondary; an<lb/>
expert receiver teamed with a quality passer.<lb/>
The primary weakness of the Mountaineers offensive<lb/>
attack will be their inexperienced front line. To beat a<lb/>
defense with the power and ability to blitz which ECU<lb/>
has, a team has to be strong in the trenches.<lb/>
Tight end Stan Cunningham (6-2, 229) and guard<lb/>
David Turner (6-3, 228) return as ASU's only seniors on<lb/>
the line. Sophomore tackle John Sellers is the most<lb/>
massive of the linemen at 6-2, 250.<lb/>
"Their offense is similar to ours said ECU<lb/>
assistant Wayne Hall. "They run the wishbone, but they<lb/>
switch off and run the I-formation as well<lb/>
on<lb/>
?ff<lb/>
Hall feels that the Pirates will have to be warv of the<lb/>
run ami not expert ASU to unload passes on every plav.<lb/>
People tend to over-compensate for the run when<lb/>
they are playing a wishbone team and that's how<lb/>
the) ve been able to roll up so much passing yardage.<lb/>
It you can throw out of the wishbone, then chances<lb/>
are you're going to have a lot of success. Over the past<lb/>
few years, the wishbone teams have begun to improve<lb/>
their passing games to balance their attack<lb/>
Defensively, ends Craig Bonner (6-1, 190) and Sami<lb/>
Killman (6-4, 225) provide leadership and strength to<lb/>
battle the Easl Carolina speedsters.<lb/>
One fact reassuring after the 24-24 tie with UNC last<lb/>
weekend is the fact that Appalachian State has a track<lb/>
record of losing close games through their 2-6 effort<lb/>
thus far. Four of their losses have been by less than a<lb/>
touchdown, and another bv a TD and a field goal.<lb/>
"They've been in close games all year long said<lb/>
Hall. "The last couple of times we played them they had<lb/>
a quarterback hurt. The last time we plaved them with a<lb/>
healthy quarterback, thev beat us.<lb/>
"I don't think we're the big point of their season,<lb/>
but a win would help them a lot<lb/>
ASU coach Jim Brakcfield<lb/>
; Clark's return strengthens defense<lb/>
Noah Clark<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
It seems like a long time ago that the Pirates of East<lb/>
Carolina rolled into Raleigh and faced the Wolfpack of<lb/>
N.C. State, but no player counted the days until ECU<lb/>
faced North Carolina last Saturday with more<lb/>
anticipation than senior defensive tackle Noah Clark<lb/>
"I was finally ready to play said Clark, who<lb/>
suffered a knee injury in practice the week after the<lb/>
34-20 loss to State.<lb/>
. 7 t6?1 VOr the knee any- Fve tried to keep mv<lb/>
mind off that (injury)<lb/>
"We're glad to have Noah back on defense " said<lb/>
assistant coach Wayne Hall of the 6-1, 229 native of<lb/>
Robersonville. "He makes a lot of big plays.<lb/>
"At defensive tackle, when Noah's there, we have a<lb/>
lot of depth along with Tim Swords, Vance Tingler and<lb/>
Nate Wigfall. He's a super athlete<lb/>
Clark made his presence known to the Tar Heel<lb/>
running backs early in the contest, making two no gain<lb/>
tackles in the first two UNC possessions.<lb/>
"We were down after the first half he said. "We<lb/>
knew the offense was moving the ball, but we had hold<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Clark had confidence that the Pirates could beat the<lb/>
15th ranked Tar Heels, though they had had limited<lb/>
success this season with other Atlantic Coast Conference<lb/>
rivals.<lb/>
'There was no doubt in my mind that we could win<lb/>
the game Clark stated. "We had to approach it as i( it<lb/>
were the last game of the season.<lb/>
"Take nothing away from Carolina; they're a great<lb/>
football team offensively and defensively. They deserve<lb/>
to be ranked<lb/>
The Pirates final opportunity for victory fell short as<lb/>
exhausted place kicker, split end Vern Davenport's 57<lb/>
yard field goal attempt fell just a few yards short of<lb/>
target.<lb/>
"I was just hoping said Clark. "I knew he was<lb/>
very tired after running pass patterns all day, though<lb/>
The physical pain of his injury was minor compared<lb/>
to the mental anguish of having to sit helplessly on the<lb/>
sidelines as East Carolina lost to Duke and Wake Forest<lb/>
before whipping VMI and The Citadel in homecoming.<lb/>
"It was tough on me mentally he said. "The<lb/>
Sports Medicine department kept me in shape and I ran<lb/>
for two weeks before I could work out with the team.<lb/>
"They stayed on me about rehabilitating my knee. I<lb/>
was back faster than I thought I would be<lb/>
Clark expressed disappointment in the Buc's 3-3-1<lb/>
record and the 24-24 tie with UNC.<lb/>
"As a team we have to put it behind us and shoot to<lb/>
win the rest of our games he said. "We didn't get<lb/>
started as good as we should have this season It w ?s<lb/>
especially hard after the defense was ranked second<lb/>
nationally last year.<lb/>
The defense administered battle scars to several T ir<lb/>
Heel backs, most noticablv Amos Lawrence and Doug<lb/>
raschal.<lb/>
"I noticedI Paschal had his leg bandaged before the<lb/>
game, said Clark, "but I think we might have hurt i, a<lb/>
little more.<lb/>
Lawrence, who suffered from a groin pull prior to the<lb/>
contest, left the game ,n the third quarter with another<lb/>
.  (gr.7 PU,1) a bothering me real bad in the firs!<lb/>
half, said Lawrence. "I just hid it so I eould stav in the<lb/>
game. ? r<lb/>
"When I left the game, my entire left arm and<lb/>
shoulder were numb am1<lb/>
Clark has his own version of how the injury occured<lb/>
The defense had been hitting him hard all dav " he<lb/>
said. They put the clamps on him and he was out the<lb/>
rest of the game. He was spinning and got hit<lb/>
turned to face the line g hU as he<lb/>
The Pirates must now focus on the Mountaineers of<lb/>
Appalachian State, a wishbone team with an impressive<lb/>
passinc attack. passive<lb/>
"We just have to control the ball anA i l r<lb/>
run as well as the pass ' and look for ?he<lb/>
<pb facs="00057228_0009"/><lb/>
1 November 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Pane 9<lb/>
The Fearless Football Forecast<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
ECU AT APPALACHIAN STATE<lb/>
DUKE AT GEORGIA TECH<lb/>
VIRGINIA AT GEORGIA<lb/>
LSU AT MISSISSIPPI<lb/>
UNC AT MARYLAND<lb/>
NAVY AT NOTRE DAME<lb/>
NEBRASKA AT MISSOURI<lb/>
N.C. STATE AT SOUTH CAROLINA<lb/>
WAKE FOREST AT CLEMSON<lb/>
OKLAHOMA AT OKLAHOMA STATE<lb/>
ARIZONA STATE AT STANFORD<lb/>
TEXAS TECH AT TEXAS<lb/>
CHARLES CHANDLERJIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
(66-28-2)(57-37-2)<lb/>
ECU 49-24ECU 45-21<lb/>
Georgia TechGeorgia Tech<lb/>
GeorgiaVirginia<lb/>
LSULSU<lb/>
UNCUNC<lb/>
Notre DameNotre Dame<lb/>
NebraskaNebraska<lb/>
N.C. StateN.C. State<lb/>
Wake ForestWake Forest<lb/>
OklahomaOklahoma<lb/>
Arizona StateStanford<lb/>
TexasTexas<lb/>
TERRY HERNDON<lb/>
(58-36-2)<lb/>
ECU 41-10<lb/>
Georgia Tech<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
LSU<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
South Carolina<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Stanford<lb/>
Texas<lb/>
DAVE ODOMGARY DORNBURG<lb/>
ECU Basketball CoachWolf pack Sports Network<lb/>
ECU 35-21ECU 35-29<lb/>
Georgia TechGeorgia Tech<lb/>
GeorgiaGeorgia<lb/>
LSULSU<lb/>
UNCUNC<lb/>
Notre DameNotre Dame<lb/>
MissouriNebraska<lb/>
South CarolinaN.C. State<lb/>
Wake ForestClemson<lb/>
OklahomaOklahoma<lb/>
StanfordStanford<lb/>
TexasTexas<lb/>
Kuhn's ruling questioned<lb/>
'Say Hey' kid forced to resign<lb/>
By WILL GRIMSLEY<lb/>
AP Special Correspondent<lb/>
 illie Mays' dark eyes<lb/>
widened in that naive,<lb/>
little boy way of his and<lb/>
he said he didn't under-<lb/>
stand why he couldn't<lb/>
work for an Atlantic City<lb/>
resort hotel and still wear<lb/>
his New York Mets<lb/>
uniform.<lb/>
'They say it's because<lb/>
the hotel has a gambling<lb/>
casino he said. "That<lb/>
has nothing to do with me.<lb/>
I don't know anything<lb/>
about gambling.<lb/>
"Besides, look at all<lb/>
the owners in baseball<lb/>
who have race horses.<lb/>
That's gambling, too. If<lb/>
you gamble, what differ-<lb/>
ence does it make how you<lb/>
do it?"<lb/>
Mays' question was<lb/>
being echoed all around<lb/>
the country today ? by<lb/>
pinstriped executives hav-<lb/>
ing lunch at the athletic<lb/>
club, guys tossing a few<lb/>
beers in the neighborhood<lb/>
pub, kids, taxi drivers and<lb/>
housewives.<lb/>
Why? Really, why?<lb/>
Commissioner Bowie<lb/>
Kuhn gave his explan-<lb/>
ation?a forthright dictum<lb/>
that fit nicely the straight-<lb/>
laced corset of base-<lb/>
ball?but a majority of<lb/>
people were left confused.<lb/>
After all, little old<lb/>
ladies fly out to Las Vegas<lb/>
to feed nickels into the slot<lb/>
machines. Secretaries en-<lb/>
ter office pools at Ken-<lb/>
tucky Derby time. Kids<lb/>
pitch pennies at a crack in<lb/>
the sidewalk. Churches<lb/>
hold bingo games and<lb/>
preachers are not averse<lb/>
to engaging in a two-buck<lb/>
Nassau on the golf course.<lb/>
Millions play the football<lb/>
:ards.<lb/>
Where does the sin of<lb/>
gambling actually lie? Can<lb/>
you be half pregnant?<lb/>
Kuhn says this is<lb/>
largely immaterial. The<lb/>
key factor, he insists, is<lb/>
that the one thing baseball<lb/>
has going for it is<lb/>
integrity, which should<lb/>
never be jeopardized.<lb/>
"The commissioner's<lb/>
main job he says, "is to<lb/>
protect this integrity at all<lb/>
costs<lb/>
Baseball, he reasons,<lb/>
must avoid not only evil<lb/>
but the appearance of evil.<lb/>
It must guard against the<lb/>
slightest intrusion?even if<lb/>
it's a tiny germ?that<lb/>
could ultimately contam-<lb/>
inate the whole sport.<lb/>
Gambling, in his view,<lb/>
is a dire threat. He<lb/>
always, he contends, has<lb/>
opposed legalized as well<lb/>
as illegal gambling and<lb/>
will combat it at every<lb/>
gate. Acceptability of<lb/>
baseball involvement in<lb/>
horse racing was deeply<lb/>
entrenched when he took<lb/>
office in 1969 and there's<lb/>
little he can do to change<lb/>
it.<lb/>
He can only try to<lb/>
prevent the spread of the<lb/>
infection, which he did 10<lb/>
years ago by persuading<lb/>
Charlie Finley of the A's<lb/>
and three Braves directors<lb/>
to divest themselves of<lb/>
stock in a company with<lb/>
casino noldmgs. iiie Wil-<lb/>
lie Mays affair is the first<lb/>
such case since then.<lb/>
American pasttime, a<lb/>
sport that has not sold its<lb/>
soul to the money chan-<lb/>
Tou can't fault the<lb/>
commissioner's idealism.<lb/>
Baseball still is the great<lb/>
gers and has remained<lb/>
within reach of the com-<lb/>
UNCC hooters defeat injury<lb/>
plagued ECU Pirates, 4-0<lb/>
By DAVE SEVERIN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Sophomore Fernando<lb/>
Sosa scored his 25th and<lb/>
26th goal of the season to<lb/>
lead the UNC-Charlotte<lb/>
46ers over an injury-<lb/>
riddled East Carolina soc-<lb/>
cer team 4-0 Monday<lb/>
afternoon at the Minges<lb/>
soccer field.<lb/>
"We did not play well<lb/>
at all cited Coach Brad<lb/>
Smith. "We were worn<lb/>
out from the Carolina<lb/>
game Saturday. We had<lb/>
no movement whatsoever<lb/>
to the ball and we showed<lb/>
a great lack of team play.<lb/>
It just wasn't our day<lb/>
The lack of play cer-<lb/>
tainly showed in the first<lb/>
half of play as the 49ers<lb/>
took control of the game<lb/>
early and scored all four of<lb/>
the goals within a span of<lb/>
18 minutes. But a lot of<lb/>
the lack of play was due to<lb/>
the loss of Chip Baker and<lb/>
Phil Martin.<lb/>
"Chip hurt his foot and<lb/>
there's a possibility it is<lb/>
broken. Phil has a severe<lb/>
sprained ankle and will be<lb/>
out a couple of weeks. The<lb/>
rest of the team is either<lb/>
aching with bruises or<lb/>
ailing with colds and<lb/>
viruses<lb/>
But out of this big<lb/>
black cloud of dilemmas,<lb/>
Coach Smith still found a<lb/>
trace of silver lining.<lb/>
"We got to play some<lb/>
of our younger players and<lb/>
found we have a little<lb/>
depth he said. "I was<lb/>
especially pleased with<lb/>
Howard Beimus. He came<lb/>
off the bench and played<lb/>
an exceptional game<lb/>
Coach Smith also point-<lb/>
ed out Mike Hitchcock and<lb/>
Brad Winchell as playing<lb/>
well against UNCC.<lb/>
It is clearly evident<lb/>
that what the Pirate<lb/>
booters need is a little<lb/>
consistency.<lb/>
"Our guys will play<lb/>
great one day and play<lb/>
bad the next game we<lb/>
play. A good example is<lb/>
our coming off a close<lb/>
game against Carolina in<lb/>
which we played very well<lb/>
and turn around and play<lb/>
bad against UNCC. It's<lb/>
something we'll have to<lb/>
work on; and we'll find<lb/>
it<lb/>
The Pirates will be<lb/>
trying to improve on their<lb/>
current 4-10-2 record when<lb/>
they travel to the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Richmond this<lb/>
Friday at 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057228_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 1 November 1979<lb/>
Lady Bucs scrimmage<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
"We have a lot to do in the next twelve days said<lb/>
Lady Pirate basketball coach Cathy Andruzzi following a<lb/>
Tuesday scrimmage with Louisburg College.<lb/>
Andruzzi stated that the team did an excellent job of<lb/>
working the ball around to the open player for a shot,<lb/>
but added that they "need to concentrate on teamwork.<lb/>
"I mean they need to learn to help each other on<lb/>
defense; to help cover she explained. "The offense<lb/>
was working very well<lb/>
The team opens regular season play in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum November 27 against William and Mary, and<lb/>
Andruzzi feels the scrimmage benefitted her squad as<lb/>
well as Louisburg.<lb/>
"Louisburg was a very good team to scrimmage<lb/>
against said Andruzzi. "Our big team was not quick<lb/>
enough for their fast team, and when we put in our fast<lb/>
team we gave up a lot of height<lb/>
Andruzzi stated that defense was her main concern<lb/>
after viewing the scrimmage.<lb/>
"We didn't take them out of their offense like I<lb/>
thought we should have she said.<lb/>
"We're very aggressive when we play against each<lb/>
other every day in practice, but they got out on the<lb/>
court, they calmed right down.<lb/>
"We played with a lot of intensity at times she<lb/>
?aid, "but it has to be maintained throughout the<lb/>
ame<lb/>
The competition was the first for the eight new<lb/>
members of the Lady Pirate program, and Andruzzi<lb/>
stated that she was pleased with their overall<lb/>
performance.<lb/>
"Our freshmen are something else; they're young,<lb/>
they're inexperienced, but they feel for each other out<lb/>
Ion the court<lb/>
The second year head coach from Staten Island, N.Y.<lb/>
expressed concern over ECU's failure to dominate the<lb/>
boards as they should have.<lb/>
"We were pushed under the boards she said.<lb/>
"Louisburg was a much more physical team than we<lb/>
were last night (Tuesday). We were boxed out all<lb/>
night<lb/>
Sophomore guard Lillion Barnes saw no failure of the<lb/>
team to work the ball on offense.<lb/>
"We did very well on offense Barnes said. "Even<lb/>
with all the new players we haven't had any trouble<lb/>
adjusting to one another.<lb/>
"We've still got a lot of work ahead of us before<lb/>
we'll be ready<lb/>
Depth will be a new dimension to the Lady Pirate<lb/>
scheme in the 1979-80 season, with several players six<lb/>
feet tall or over and better ball handlers.<lb/>
"Everybody should get a chance to play said junior<lb/>
center Marcia Girven. "We had ups and downs against<lb/>
Louisburg, but overall we're a much better team than<lb/>
last year. We'll all be able to rest more during games.<lb/>
"We need to work on defense and denying the ball<lb/>
We let them move it too easily<lb/>
The 6-0 Girven played against N.C. State's 6-2 Genia<lb/>
Beasley and 6-5 June Doby, as well as Old Dominion 6-5<lb/>
all-American Inge Nissen, but admits that smaller<lb/>
centers such as High Point's Ethel White gave her more<lb/>
trouble.<lb/>
"The shorter centers usually are faster and have<lb/>
better moves than the 6-5 girls she explained.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will face Peace College Monday in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum at 5:30 p.m. and Louisburg November<lb/>
12 at 5 p.m.<lb/>
"The team would like to see the students come to<lb/>
Avatch the scrimmages and show support said<lb/>
Andruzzi. "I think student support is essential to the<lb/>
program growing as we want it to grow<lb/>
Kansas State forms winning team with<lb/>
Dickey father-son combination<lb/>
HERSCHEL NISSENSON<lb/>
AP Sports Writer<lb/>
Darrel Dickey, Kansas<lb/>
State's hotshot freshman<lb/>
quarterback, has lived<lb/>
with the Wildcats' head<lb/>
coach for almost 20<lb/>
years?he'll be 20 on Dec.<lb/>
6?but there's no recruit-<lb/>
ing violation involved.<lb/>
Darrell's father, Jim<lb/>
Dickey, is Kansas State's<lb/>
head coach and last<lb/>
weekend he gave his<lb/>
son his first starting<lb/>
assignment. Darrell re-<lb/>
sponded by throwing two<lb/>
touchdown passes as the<lb/>
W ildcats upset missouri<lb/>
19-3 before 70,000 people<lb/>
atColumbia, Mo.<lb/>
He completed 15 of 25<lb/>
passes for 187 yards to<lb/>
earn Big Eight Offensive<lb/>
Plaver of the Week honors<lb/>
from The Associated<lb/>
Press. Six of his comple-<lb/>
tions came on third-down<lb/>
plays with more than 6<lb/>
yards to go and he<lb/>
completed seven of eight<lb/>
passes in the Wildcats'<lb/>
three scoring drives.<lb/>
Darrell was redshirted<lb/>
in 1978 after throwing for<lb/>
2,800 yards and 24 touch-<lb/>
downs in two years at<lb/>
Chapel Hill High School<lb/>
?Jim Dickey was an<lb/>
assistant at the University<lb/>
of North Carolina before<lb/>
getting the head job at<lb/>
K-State?and was voted<lb/>
conference Player of the<lb/>
Year in 1977. That created<lb/>
the problem of which<lb/>
college to attend.<lb/>
"I figured out the<lb/>
people who were telling<lb/>
me about all the problems<lb/>
I would have playing for<lb/>
his father were just trying<lb/>
to recruit me for other<lb/>
schools Darrell says.<lb/>
"And I remembered that<lb/>
everything my dad ever<lb/>
told me was true, that he<lb/>
had never lied to me. So I<lb/>
decided to come to Kansas<lb/>
State and everything has<lb/>
worked out exactly like he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
While Darrell was<lb/>
growing up, Jim was<lb/>
serving as an assistant<lb/>
coach at Houston, Okla-<lb/>
homa State, Oklahoma,<lb/>
Kansas and North Caro-<lb/>
lina.<lb/>
"I guess he probably<lb/>
made a nuisance of<lb/>
himself, but there's no<lb/>
doubt being around foot-<lb/>
ball all his life has helped<lb/>
him to understand the<lb/>
game<lb/>
And, says Jim Dickey,<lb/>
he, had an advantage over<lb/>
other recruiters "because<lb/>
I'm close to the kid's<lb/>
mother<lb/>
Tyson saga ends<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
The simple reason Tyson quit the team was probably<lb/>
that he realized this situation could only get worse. If he<lb/>
played elsewhere, the pressure would not be nearly as<lb/>
great and he could settle down to being an average<lb/>
student-athlete, hopefully.<lb/>
The fact that Tyson left ECU creates no hard<lb/>
feelings, said Odom. "I feel for Al he said. "I told<lb/>
him that I'd be glad to help him out in any way I could<lb/>
in his relocation. He told me that he wouldn't hesitate to<lb/>
call me<lb/>
Now that Tyson is gone, there is no one left on the<lb/>
ECU squad that had anything to do with the team being<lb/>
put on probation. The recruiters are gone and now so is<lb/>
the recruitee.<lb/>
Are there hard feelings because the school must<lb/>
suffer and the culprits are gone? "Not on my part<lb/>
said Odom. "And I'm sure the team has no hard<lb/>
feelings. But I'm sure that has crossed a lot of people's<lb/>
minds. I look at it from a positive standpoint. Those<lb/>
elements are gone now. We can now look to a bright<lb/>
future<lb/>
Let's hope the same can be said for Al Tyson. After<lb/>
what he has been through, he deserves it.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057228_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>