<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057230_0001"/>
"Were it left tome<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/>
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/>
Vol. 54 No. 2ff<lb/>
<lb/>
10 pages today<lb/>
Thursday, November 8, 1979<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Circulation 10,OCX)<lb/>
Greensboro deaths topic of discussion;controversy<lb/>
From STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS<lb/>
"l could not believe that anyone would have the gall<lb/>
to stand there in front of television, newspapers and the<lb/>
whole world and gun down four people. I reallv have<lb/>
never seen anything like it and hope I don't ever again.<lb/>
'The absence of the police was all the more shock.<lb/>
The police had cars with the Klan in them under watch<lb/>
on 220 and I-85 and supposedly followed them in.<lb/>
"But then you see the television picture and the<lb/>
Klan gol out ot the cars and stood there and shot people<lb/>
which had to take at least three minutes, and then went<lb/>
and put the guns away in the trunks of the cars.<lb/>
"In one car where they went to the trunk and were<lb/>
reloading and still the police were not there<lb/>
These were the word's of one Greensboro resident<lb/>
after viewing what has been called the massacre of five<lb/>
people during an Anti-Ku Klux Klan rally held in<lb/>
Greensboro on Saturday on a local television station.<lb/>
Pledges come<lb/>
to aid starving<lb/>
Cambodians<lb/>
Many people have expressed opinions on what<lb/>
happened in Greensboro, and it is not yet certain just<lb/>
what did happen.<lb/>
Members of the Communist Workers Party, who<lb/>
sponsored the rally, are emphatic in their opinions on<lb/>
the killings.<lb/>
Sally Bermanzohn, a member of the Party, whose<lb/>
husband was shot during the rally, has accused the<lb/>
Greensboro police department of "orchestrating the<lb/>
assassination of our five comrades  and planning the<lb/>
escape" of the attackers.<lb/>
Bermanzohn has also accused the FBI and other<lb/>
investigative agencies with "continuing to threaten us,<lb/>
harass us, follow us and tap our phones<lb/>
Bermanzohn has filed suit , will seek permanent<lb/>
injunctions against the investigators from party<lb/>
members, and will seek to impound all television and<lb/>
newspaper film of the shootings.<lb/>
Local police and FBI agents have denied involvement<lb/>
in the shootings and claim that members of the<lb/>
Communist Workers Party are refusing to cooperate<lb/>
with the investigation.<lb/>
'That is because the investigators are part of the<lb/>
people we accuse of being part of the assassination<lb/>
Bermanzohn said.<lb/>
Worth Henderson, a Greensboro lawyer, gave his<lb/>
opinion on the case, "If they don't go to the gas<lb/>
chamber, they'll at least get life imprisonment ? every<lb/>
one of them<lb/>
"It's the worst premeditated deliberate murder<lb/>
that's ever happened in the history of Guilford County<lb/>
commented Henderson.<lb/>
Other Greensboro natives seemed shocked that<lb/>
something of this kind could happen in their communitv.<lb/>
Linda Link, who is also an ECU student, said that<lb/>
she couldn't believe that it could happen in Greensboro.<lb/>
She also said that she felt more mad than anvthing.<lb/>
Andy Roman, another Greensboro resident, said that<lb/>
he was shocked, and that he had not r<lb/>
was a KKK membership. "I didn't ihii<lb/>
happen like that said Roman.<lb/>
Many people who knew<lb/>
commented on their friend-<lb/>
Michael Nathan, one of the<lb/>
massacre, moved South from 5<lb/>
undergraduate and medical school<lb/>
He is remembered as calm and g<lb/>
deeply about children "He m<lb/>
always with a concern about medieii<lb/>
Paul Bermanzohn. from the- New <lb/>
seriously wounded in the attack,<lb/>
sometimes cocky and impatient with I<lb/>
agree with his views. A d<lb/>
medical work was largely a si<lb/>
politics.<lb/>
See GREENSBORO<lb/>
An agreement by the<lb/>
Cambodian government to<lb/>
open tlw Mekong river is<lb/>
g problems encount-<lb/>
ered by outside groups<lb/>
who are attempting to aid<lb/>
- an ing population of<lb/>
iuntry.<lb/>
The agreement from<lb/>
lorn Penh has also<lb/>
spur 13 countries<lb/>
g( $186 million in<lb/>
the 2.5 million<lb/>
diaris who are<lb/>
starving in (me of the<lb/>
severest famines in mod-<lb/>
ern times.<lb/>
The pledges came in a<lb/>
special United Nations<lb/>
conlerence Monday after<lb/>
Cambodian Premier Heng<lb/>
Samrin's government a-<lb/>
greed to allow relief<lb/>
supplies to be shipped<lb/>
through the Mekong Riv-<lb/>
er. The government stated<lb/>
that it was "from now on<lb/>
receive whatever<lb/>
quantity of humanitarian<lb/>
aid  without political<lb/>
- ierations<lb/>
Former attempts to<lb/>
liver relief supplies on<lb/>
the Mekong had been<lb/>
1 because of appre-<lb/>
hension in Phnom Penh<lb/>
that such supplies would<lb/>
fall into the hands of<lb/>
157 arrests<lb/>
opposing guerilla forces in<lb/>
the country.<lb/>
The guerillas are led<lb/>
b) former Premier Pol Pot,<lb/>
who wa ousted by the<lb/>
Vietnamese last Januarv.<lb/>
United Nations Secre-<lb/>
tary-General Kurt Wald-<lb/>
heim said in the con-<lb/>
ference that the arrange-<lb/>
ments of the agreement<lb/>
should "assure us and the<lb/>
donors that supplies arrive<lb/>
in the hands of the<lb/>
suffering civilians for<lb/>
whom they are destined<lb/>
Relief efforts by private<lb/>
organizations are also<lb/>
being facilitated by the<lb/>
government's go-ahead to<lb/>
use the river.<lb/>
One such organization<lb/>
is Oxfam of America,<lb/>
which has formed a group<lb/>
of 37 international volun-<lb/>
tary agencies to coordinate<lb/>
and channel assistance<lb/>
into the country.<lb/>
According to Susan<lb/>
Abrams, an Oxfam spokes-<lb/>
man, most of the supplies<lb/>
until now have been<lb/>
entering Cambodia at<lb/>
Kompong Som, a port in<lb/>
the south of the be-<lb/>
leagered nation. Abrams<lb/>
noted that the facilities at<lb/>
the port are limited and<lb/>
Minority<lb/>
publication<lb/>
may survive<lb/>
This photo, which was taken in Phnom Pehn recently, shows the extent of<lb/>
malnutrition evident among children in the country. The child lying on the mat<lb/>
died soon after this photo was taken.<lb/>
that future supplies may<lb/>
now be sent directly into<lb/>
the heart of the countrv at<lb/>
Phnom Penh.<lb/>
According to Abrams,<lb/>
Oxfam has sent 3,600 tons<lb/>
of food plus medical<lb/>
supplies and agricultural<lb/>
equipment into the country<lb/>
since its first deliveries in<lb/>
August.<lb/>
Although access to the<lb/>
river has been granted,<lb/>
Cambodian officials re-<lb/>
main steadfast in their<lb/>
opposition to other forms<lb/>
of distribution, such as<lb/>
trucking and airlifting.<lb/>
American representatives<lb/>
at the UN conference<lb/>
argued that truck routes<lb/>
were the only way to<lb/>
deliver the quantity of aid<lb/>
needed.<lb/>
The Red Cross has<lb/>
estimated that 1,000 tons<lb/>
are needed daily.<lb/>
The United States, one<lb/>
of the 13 nations that<lb/>
made pledges, offered $69<lb/>
million in aid. If other<lb/>
private agencies are suc-<lb/>
cessful, the $186 million in<lb/>
planned aid could rise to<lb/>
well over $200 million.<lb/>
Oxfam of America has<lb/>
set as its goal $50 million<lb/>
in aid, to be raised from<lb/>
private sources around the<lb/>
world. Part of the Oxfam<lb/>
goal is to restore the<lb/>
capacity in Cambodia to<lb/>
become self-sufficient in<lb/>
food population.<lb/>
"A nation is literally<lb/>
dying said Jim Howard,<lb/>
an international disaster<lb/>
expert with Oxfam. One of<lb/>
the few westerners with<lb/>
See PLEDGES, page 2<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
Aeus Editor<lb/>
The Ebony Herald was again the major<lb/>
topic of discussion at the Media Board<lb/>
meeting on Tuesday.<lb/>
Discourse centered around an ad-<lb/>
vertisement, to be placed in The hast<lb/>
Carolinian, for applicants to the position<lb/>
of editor.<lb/>
Some board members objected to the<lb/>
use of the word "editorship" in the ad.<lb/>
They felt this usage guaranteed that The<lb/>
Ebony Herald would be published if the<lb/>
ad was put in.<lb/>
"I do not want us to be bound said<lb/>
Charles Sune, president of the Student<lb/>
Union, "I want to see some plans first<lb/>
The board decided the application<lb/>
statement should include a clause in<lb/>
which the prospective editor would be<lb/>
required to submit a list of goals of the<lb/>
publication.<lb/>
Board members also agreed that if this<lb/>
year's publication does not work out,<lb/>
there will probably not be another one.<lb/>
"Even I'm agreeable to that said<lb/>
SGA president Brett Melvin.<lb/>
In other business, Buccaneer Editor<lb/>
Craig Sahli presented the board with<lb/>
itemized lists oi<lb/>
1980 printing and -<lb/>
Josten's earbook <lb/>
"Of the two I've w<lb/>
Josten's said .thli.<lb/>
Though Josten' - bid<lb/>
the other two, <lb/>
others were tentati<lb/>
Rudolph Alexander, ass<lb/>
student affairs, said that lie felt th<lb/>
should approve SahJi's choice and r.<lb/>
the motion that they accept the bid.<lb/>
the understanding that the total pi<lb/>
includes taxes, and all expensi<lb/>
exceed the amount in the budget.<lb/>
He also stated that it would al<lb/>
editor and the staff the rig<lb/>
money as the se fit.<lb/>
B o a r d members q u i<lb/>
Podeszwa, head of the PI<lb/>
line item transfer whicl<lb/>
through the proper chanm -<lb/>
Podeszwa stated<lb/>
oversight on his part.<lb/>
The board m<lb/>
standard policy that all requis<lb/>
have to be signed by Mi<lb/>
Chairpers Tri M :<lb/>
authorized representative m the<lb/>
Drug bust in Wake<lb/>
RALEIGH, N.C. (Ap)<lb/>
Wake County law-<lb/>
enforcement officials work-<lb/>
ed an unprecedented un-<lb/>
dercover operation in the<lb/>
county schools for two<lb/>
months using college stu-<lb/>
dents as drug agents, an<lb/>
investigation that resulted<lb/>
in 157 arrests Tuesday.<lb/>
Most of those arrested<lb/>
Inside<lb/>
today<lb/>
Gun control<lb/>
page 4<lb/>
Students<lb/>
interviewed<lb/>
on Iran <lb/>
page 5<lb/>
Appalachian<lb/>
this<lb/>
weekend<lb/>
page 8<lb/>
were students from the<lb/>
county's 12 senior high<lb/>
schools who were caught<lb/>
with drugs or selling drugs<lb/>
by young criminal justice<lb/>
students from a Piedmont<lb/>
technical school who posed<lb/>
as fellow high school<lb/>
students.<lb/>
The charges involved<lb/>
the selling of drugs or<lb/>
conspiring to sell drugs<lb/>
and most involved mari-<lb/>
juana.<lb/>
Police said the under-<lb/>
cover agents made drug<lb/>
buys on and off school<lb/>
campuses. The investi-<lb/>
gation involved Wake<lb/>
County school officials,<lb/>
Raleigh police, the Wake<lb/>
County Sheriffs office and<lb/>
the Wake County District<lb/>
Attorney's Office. It was<lb/>
initiated by school super-<lb/>
intendent John Murphy.<lb/>
Raleigh Police Chief<lb/>
Frederick K. Heineman<lb/>
said Tuesday placement of<lb/>
the undercover agents in<lb/>
the schools was an un-<lb/>
precedented move in a<lb/>
drug investigation.<lb/>
"As far as I know, it's<lb/>
the first time it's been<lb/>
done any place Heine-<lb/>
man said.<lb/>
Heineman said the<lb/>
undercover agents were<lb/>
"absolutely not" advised<lb/>
to solicit students for<lb/>
drugs. But that was<lb/>
disputed by a number of<lb/>
students at one of the high<lb/>
schools involved. Those<lb/>
students claim a student<lb/>
they suspected of being an<lb/>
undercover agent flashed<lb/>
large sums of money and<lb/>
asked students where he<lb/>
could find large quantities<lb/>
of marijuana.<lb/>
A Wake County grand<lb/>
jury handed down 206<lb/>
indictments against 157<lb/>
people in a late-night<lb/>
session Monday.<lb/>
Of the 157, 117 were<lb/>
high school students, an-<lb/>
other 33 were non-stu-<lb/>
dents charged with selling<lb/>
drugs to students. Fifteen<lb/>
ABC violations were filed<lb/>
for alleged sale of alco-<lb/>
holic beverages to minors.<lb/>
STuWtmatn<lb/>
4<lb/>
This bus, severely damaged in an accident on Oct. 22, may cost $20,000 to repair.<lb/>
(Photo by John H. Grogan)<lb/>
Bus repairs<lb/>
may exceed<lb/>
$20,000<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The bus which was wrecked in the October<lb/>
accident may never be fixed, and if it is, it could cosl<lb/>
the transit system upwards of $20,000. according to<lb/>
Leonard Fleming, SGA transit manager.<lb/>
Costs of fixing the bus have been based on a simple<lb/>
initial price estimate of body adjustments. It is<lb/>
unknown, however, how much damage has been done to<lb/>
the engine block and the transmission. There is a<lb/>
possibility that the entire engine framework was<lb/>
damaged in the accident.<lb/>
"We have no idea what kind of internal damage was<lb/>
done said Fleming.<lb/>
The absence of a bus and the disability of another<lb/>
have caused the Brown route to be out of operation for<lb/>
some time now. The route is expected to begin running<lb/>
on Monday, according to Fleming, since personnel at<lb/>
Hastings Ford, the company which works on the buses,<lb/>
say the transmission repairs should be finished by then.<lb/>
Kim "Chubby" Abshire and Fleming say that parts<lb/>
from the damaged bus may be used to replace some of<lb/>
the defective parts in the other bus that is presently out<lb/>
of operation.<lb/>
Fleming feels that the possibility of not repairing the<lb/>
bus will have no effect on the transit budget passed<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
See TRANSIT, page 2<lb/>
<pb facs="00057230_0002"/><lb/>
?Jaqe 2 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 8 November 1979<lb/>
Two UNCWstudents stabbed<lb/>
An early morning<lb/>
breakfast party ended<lb/>
tragically Saturday when a<lb/>
University of North Caro-<lb/>
lina at Wilmington student<lb/>
was murdered and another<lb/>
seriously wounded.<lb/>
George Davis Curtis,<lb/>
24, of Burlington has been<lb/>
arrested and charged with<lb/>
murder in the stabbing<lb/>
death of 19-year-old Ricky<lb/>
Knight Gunter of Fuquay-<lb/>
Varina. Additional charges<lb/>
of assault with a deadly<lb/>
weapon are pending a-<lb/>
gainst Curtis in the attack<lb/>
on Jeffrey Nelligan of<lb/>
Bridgewater, New Jersey,<lb/>
also a student at UNCW.<lb/>
Details of the incident<lb/>
are sketchy, but Police<lb/>
Chief George Antley said<lb/>
that the party was held by<lb/>
several fraternity brothers<lb/>
and their girlfriends, and<lb/>
that Curtis was unknown<lb/>
to any of them. Curtis<lb/>
apparently crashed the<lb/>
party at 19 East Hender-<lb/>
son Street at around 2<lb/>
a.m Antley said.<lb/>
"Words went between<lb/>
them for him to leave the<lb/>
house, and somehow an<lb/>
altercation lollowed in the<lb/>
street" outside 17 E.<lb/>
Henderson Street, he<lb/>
added.<lb/>
It was unknown why<lb/>
Gunter and Nelligan went<lb/>
into the street where the<lb/>
murder occurred, said<lb/>
Antley. The weapon used<lb/>
in the murder is believed<lb/>
to have been a sheathed<lb/>
hunting knife.<lb/>
Other guests at the<lb/>
party ran after Curtis after<lb/>
the knifing and appre-<lb/>
hended him several blocks<lb/>
away, said Antley.<lb/>
A nursing student at<lb/>
the party tried in vain to<lb/>
keep Gunter alive with<lb/>
cariopulmonary resuscita-<lb/>
tion, Detective Gary<lb/>
Smithson said, but Gunter<lb/>
was pronounced dead on<lb/>
arrival at New Hanover<lb/>
Memorial Hospital.<lb/>
Twenty-one-year-old<lb/>
Nelligan is listed in<lb/>
serious condition in the<lb/>
intensive care unit of New<lb/>
Hanover Memorial Hospi-<lb/>
tal. Curtis, also injured in<lb/>
the scuffle, remained hos-<lb/>
pitalized in fair condition.<lb/>
Greensboro<lb/>
continued from page 1<lb/>
Bermanzohn and Nathan became active in Durham<lb/>
politics. They began with fashionable liberal causes. But<lb/>
anti-war liberalism gave way to health-care politics; and<lb/>
the various involvements gave way to increased<lb/>
radicalism that left them estranged from many of their<lb/>
old friends.<lb/>
But many acquaintances recognized a spark ot<lb/>
themselves in the two nice middle-class people who<lb/>
looked at the society around them, didn't like all they<lb/>
saw and decided to do something about it. But most of<lb/>
these people, after brief flings at radicalism, had moved<lb/>
"within the system ?<lb/>
"I can't help but feeling they had a death wish,<lb/>
said one woman who knew them both. "But I worked<lb/>
with them in earlier years and I keep thinking it could<lb/>
have been me out there<lb/>
"You had to wonder what spaceship they stepped ott<lb/>
of " said another, himself a left-wing political activist, of<lb/>
the Marxist-Leninist-Mao Tse-Tung line the radicals<lb/>
believed.<lb/>
Nathan, 33, graduated from Duke Medical School m<lb/>
1973, did a residency in pediatrics at Duke and<lb/>
post-graduate studies in child development at the<lb/>
University of Virginia. It wasn't known whether he knew<lb/>
Bill Sampson, 31, another of the dead, who attended<lb/>
Virginia's medical school in the mid-1970s.<lb/>
Sampson was an honor graduate in philosophy from<lb/>
Augustana College in Rock Island, 111. He received a<lb/>
master's degree in theology from Harvard Divinity<lb/>
School in 1973 and attended the University of Virginia<lb/>
Medical School, withdrawing in 1977.<lb/>
In North Carolina, he worked to try to organize a<lb/>
radical union at textile mills.<lb/>
Bermanzohn, 30, a graduate of New York University,<lb/>
graduated from the medical school in 1974 and did a<lb/>
residency in family practice at North Carolina Memorial<lb/>
Hospital in Chapel Hill.<lb/>
His wife, Sally, once was married to Nathan. She<lb/>
said Bermanzohn was an intellectual. "But people can<lb/>
come from different classes and change, she said.<lb/>
"Many communist movements start with working<lb/>
intellectuals<lb/>
He wasn't always a communist, she said, but he<lb/>
found other movements lacking. "He wanted an answer,<lb/>
so he studied Marx looking for answers she said.<lb/>
Both men were involved in the Medical Committee<lb/>
for Human Rights, union organizing and in a group<lb/>
called New American Movement.<lb/>
Dr. Evelyn Schmidt, director of Lincoln Community<lb/>
Health Center in Durham, where Nathan was head of<lb/>
the pediatrics section, said Nathan always conducted<lb/>
himself professionally at work. She said Nathan's<lb/>
political views were his own business.<lb/>
"Mike was a very concerned, caring and professional<lb/>
pediatrician she said. "I think that this tragedy is a<lb/>
loss to the community of children for which he had<lb/>
compassion and rendered great care<lb/>
Sandy Smith, 29, another of the dead, had gone to<lb/>
Bennett College in Greensboro. It was there that she<lb/>
met Nelson Johnson, the activist who was one of the<lb/>
leaders who organized the Greensboro rally. Ms. Smith<lb/>
had been a union organizer at a Cone Mills plant before<lb/>
moving to Piedmont, S.C.<lb/>
Johnson and Bermanzohn had both been active in<lb/>
the African Liberation Support Committee, the Durham<lb/>
Coalition for Quality Education and its statewide group<lb/>
and the Durham Coalition Against Police Brutality.<lb/>
James Waller Jr 37, of Pittsboro, was a 1970<lb/>
graduate of the University of Chicago Medical School<lb/>
and also a pediatrician.<lb/>
He was a union worker for Cone Mills in Haw River<lb/>
and president of the union local.<lb/>
Transit<lb/>
continued from page I<lb/>
Col. Dick Blake, assistant to the Chancellor has<lb/>
contracted a member of the N.C. department o<lb/>
Transportation about evaluating the current SGA transit<lb/>
system. Jim Ritchey, a transportation specialist for the<lb/>
Department, will speak with Fleming and Abshire<lb/>
concerning the evaluation, the present routes, he<lb/>
ridership and suggestions on how to improve the<lb/>
ALrding to Blake, Ritchey gave invaluable<lb/>
assistance to the Greenville municipal bus system. It is<lb/>
hoped he can offer some equally helpful adv.ce<lb/>
concerning the SGA system.<lb/>
Problems with the buses have been attributed to lack<lb/>
of preventive maintenance on the part of past systems<lb/>
and the fact that the vehicles were not made for the<lb/>
stop-and-go driving they are subjected to on the SGA<lb/>
routes.<lb/>
Pledges<lb/>
continued from page 1<lb/>
first-hand experience<lb/>
there, Howard called the<lb/>
situation "horrific ?<lb/>
worse than anything I've<lb/>
seen in 20 years of<lb/>
experience with disasters<lb/>
in countries like Biafra,<lb/>
Bangladesh and India.<lb/>
What we face now is the<lb/>
extinction of a nation<lb/>
Although shipments on<lb/>
the Mekong should ease<lb/>
distribution problems, it is<lb/>
presently unknown whe-<lb/>
ther the Cambodian gov-<lb/>
ernment will place limi-<lb/>
tations on the amount of<lb/>
food and supplies to be<lb/>
shipped.<lb/>
Distributed By<lb/>
Taylor Beverage Co.<lb/>
Qoldsboro<lb/>
?W?PORTISO H<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
4:00-8:00 PM<lb/>
SALAD?50 EXTRA<lb/>
Heinekeii<lb/>
HOLLAND BEER<lb/>
THE 1 IMPORTED BEER IN AMERICA.<lb/>
FRIDAYS<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
WITH FRIES &amp; COLESLAW<lb/>
FRIED -f<lb/>
; I<lb/>
WITH GARLIC BREAD<lb/>
ITALIAN -? 9 9<lb/>
SPAGHEjTTIqnlyI thur<lb/>
WITH FRIES &amp; COLE SLAW<lb/>
FRIED $499<lb/>
FISH 0NLY ? ?<lb/>
UP TO<lb/>
OFF MANUFACTURER S<lb/>
SUGGESTED RETAIL<lb/>
Friday' Seafood<lb/>
4311S. Evans St.<lb/>
LUNCH ONLY<lb/>
Lunch 11:30-2:30<lb/>
SunThurs. 4:30-9:00<lb/>
Frl. and Sat. 4:30-10:00<lb/>
Mon. Ladle's Day-Free trip<lb/>
to salad bar with<lb/>
each full meal<lb/>
Tues. Ladle's Day<lb/>
Free cup ?f clam<lb/>
chowder with each<lb/>
full meal<lb/>
Wed.<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
Fri.<lb/>
Soup n' Sandwich<lb/>
$2.25<lb/>
Soup n' Salad<lb/>
$1.75<lb/>
all the trout you can<lb/>
eat for $1.99 with<lb/>
fries and slaw<lb/>
(The folks at Kroger Sav-on know the<lb/>
complete student has a party side,<lb/>
too. So they have what East Carolina<lb/>
University students need for any bash<lb/>
from party platters to disco plat-<lb/>
ters  all in one convenient loca-<lb/>
tion. Don't be incomplete tr<lb/>
year?shop Kroger Sav-on today.<lb/>
AMP<lb/>
FKA6RAHC?$r<lb/>
T1MEX<lb/>
WATCHES<lb/>
Sugg<lb/>
Retai'<lb/>
REG. OR DIP<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
Potato<lb/>
Chips<lb/>
8-Oz. Twin Pak<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/>
ace your order! <lb/>
Records and<lb/>
Tapes<lb/>
QBSSH<lb/>
FIRE BREWED<lb/>
Stroh's<lb/>
Light<lb/>
Rossetto<lb/>
Lambrusco n.<lb/>
Family Day<lb/>
? Lunch and Dinner<lb/>
All you can eat<lb/>
Shrimp $491<lb/>
Oysters $4-75<lb/>
Flounder $3.50<lb/>
Trout $2.95<lb/>
SunThurs. 430-9:00<lb/>
Frl. Cf Sate4?0-?<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of th.ee sdvertleed items Is required to bsireadHy availableJtor<lb/>
sale In each Kroger Sav-on Store except ae specifically noted IntMe<lb/>
ad. H we do run out of an advertised Hem, we will offer you your choice<lb/>
of a comparable Ham, when available, reflecting the same "?n9?<lb/>
ralncheck which will entitle you to purch.se the advertised Item at the<lb/>
advertised price within<lb/>
FOOD, DRUG, GENERAL<lb/>
MERCHANDISE STORES<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE TUES<lb/>
NOV. 6 THRU SUN NOV. 11, 1979<lb/>
NONE SOLD<lb/>
TO<lb/>
DEALERS<lb/>
OPEN 7 AM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
Phone 756-7031<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057230_0003"/><lb/>
Pecple, places, and ???<lb/>
8 November 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Pape 3<lb/>
ft slit<lb/>
tuifeey<lb/>
f)ll?t?<lb/>
l i i il<lb/>
?td(<lb/>
Lambda Alpha Epsilon,<lb/>
the American Criminal<lb/>
Justice Association, will<lb/>
hold a mandatory meeting<lb/>
on Nov. 8 at 5 p.m. in<lb/>
Auditorium 101A of the<lb/>
Allied Health building. All<lb/>
applications for new mem-<lb/>
bers are due before or at<lb/>
this meeting. Applications<lb/>
may be obtained and<lb/>
returned to the following<lb/>
people: Richard Belthoff<lb/>
(758-4623), Toni Dye (758-<lb/>
4309) or Mr. Campbell in<lb/>
AH. 312. Please put fee<lb/>
($26) in a sealed envelope<lb/>
and attach to application.<lb/>
Dues ($20) for old mem-<lb/>
bers are also due at this<lb/>
meeting. Topics for meet-<lb/>
ing: fund raising for<lb/>
planned social with COR-<lb/>
SO and Christmas basket<lb/>
for needy family. All<lb/>
interested persons please<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
ill <lb/>
oil II I<lb/>
The Sierra Club will<lb/>
meet on Monday, Nov. 12,<lb/>
at 9 p.m. in the First<lb/>
Presbyterian Church,<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
"Alaska, a land in<lb/>
balance a non-political<lb/>
and straight-foreward film<lb/>
about Alaska will be<lb/>
featured.<lb/>
Visitors are welcome to<lb/>
attend both meetings and<lb/>
outings of the Sierra Club.<lb/>
Upcoming outings in-<lb/>
clude two canoe trips and<lb/>
two Sunday afternoon<lb/>
hikes.<lb/>
M?tci<lb/>
On Thursday, Nov. 8,<lb/>
there will be a meeting of<lb/>
Phi Alpha Theta History<lb/>
Honor Fraternity at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in the Todd Room<lb/>
located in D wing of<lb/>
Brewster. AU members are<lb/>
requested to attend.<lb/>
On the Hill in the<lb/>
basement meeting room of<lb/>
Scott Hall, a quiet,<lb/>
supervised STUDY HALL<lb/>
is open to anyone who<lb/>
would like to come in and<lb/>
study. It is open Monday,<lb/>
Tuesday, and Thursday<lb/>
from 8 to 11 p.m.<lb/>
The American College<lb/>
Testing (ACT) will be<lb/>
offered at East Carolina<lb/>
University on Sat. Dec. 8.<lb/>
Application blanks are to<lb/>
be completed and mailed<lb/>
to ACT Registration, P.O.<lb/>
box 414, Iowa City, Iowa<lb/>
52240. Registration dead-<lb/>
line is Nov. 9. Applications<lb/>
may be obtained from the<lb/>
ECU testing Center,<lb/>
Speight Building, Room<lb/>
105.<lb/>
 ARMY-NAVY STORE ?<lb/>
? Backpacks, B-15, Bomber <lb/>
?Field, Deck, Flighi.Snorkei;<lb/>
? Jackets, Peacoats, Parkas,<lb/>
J Shoes, Combat Boots,Plus <lb/>
 1501 S. Evans Street <lb/>
SAAD'S SHOE<lb/>
REPAIR<lb/>
116 Grande Aye.<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
'Jualitr Shoe Repair<lb/>
Win your Thanksgiving<lb/>
turkey at the Mendenhall<lb/>
Bowling Center. A $1.50<lb/>
entry fee allows you to<lb/>
bowl one (1) ball at a full<lb/>
set of pins on ten<lb/>
consecutive lanes. If you<lb/>
know down at least eight<lb/>
)?) pins with just nine of<lb/>
the balls, you WIN A<lb/>
TURKEY!<lb/>
The date is Thursdaym<lb/>
Nov. 15 from 7 p.m. until<lb/>
10 p.m. and you can try as<lb/>
many times as you like.<lb/>
Don't miss it.<lb/>
law<lb/>
The Law School Ad-<lb/>
mission Test will be<lb/>
offered at East Carolina<lb/>
University on Saturday,<lb/>
Decmeber 1, 1979. Appli-<lb/>
cation blanks are to<lb/>
completed and mailed to<lb/>
Educational Testing Ser-<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/>
?lmcitanj<lb/>
Jelta<lb/>
The next Sigma Tau<lb/>
Delta meeting will be held<lb/>
Nov. 14. Terry Davis,<lb/>
author of Vision Quest,<lb/>
will speak.<lb/>
I II l lit ill<lb/>
The ECU Racquetball<lb/>
Club is trying to identify<lb/>
all interested faculty, staff<lb/>
and students. Clinics and<lb/>
tournaments are being<lb/>
planned with competition<lb/>
between schools being<lb/>
scheduled. All interested<lb/>
persons, please contact<lb/>
Nancy Mize, 757-6387, 204<lb/>
Memorial Gym.<lb/>
The ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
has an immediate opening<lb/>
for the position of Staff<lb/>
Photographer. Anyone<lb/>
who is interested in<lb/>
applying for the position<lb/>
should fill out an applica-<lb/>
tion at the office of The<lb/>
East Carolinian in the Old<lb/>
South Building across from<lb/>
the Library.<lb/>
Mr. John Childers,<lb/>
Director of the ECU<lb/>
Testing Center, requests<lb/>
that all persons who have<lb/>
taken the College Level<lb/>
Examination Program<lb/>
(CLEP) English Compo-<lb/>
sition test from May 1979<lb/>
to October 1979 contact<lb/>
the ECU Testing Center at<lb/>
their earliest convenience.<lb/>
science<lb/>
Chi Beta Phi Scientific<lb/>
Fraternity meeting Thurs-<lb/>
day, Nov. 8th 7:30 p.m. at<lb/>
Biology BN-102. Dr.<lb/>
Moore of the Psychology<lb/>
Dept. will be talking about<lb/>
Sex. Initiation meeting: All<lb/>
people wishing to join<lb/>
please attend. All students<lb/>
invited. More info call<lb/>
President Tom Leech 758-<lb/>
7493.<lb/>
Ml I I 111 i<lb/>
All students interested<lb/>
in National Fellowships<lb/>
Scholarships are invited to<lb/>
attend a presentation by<lb/>
Dr. John Ebbs on Thurs<lb/>
Nov. 8 at 5:30 in 244<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma mem-<lb/>
bers will have a business<lb/>
meeting at 5 in 244, prior<lb/>
to the presentation. Those<lb/>
members who ordered<lb/>
T-shirts are asked to bring<lb/>
money at this time. See<lb/>
you there!<lb/>
The November meeting<lb/>
of the Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina section of the<lb/>
American Chemical Soci-<lb/>
ety will be on Wed. Nov.<lb/>
14th at 7 p.m. in Room<lb/>
201, Flanagan Building on<lb/>
the East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity campus. The featured<lb/>
speaker is Dr. Gerhard<lb/>
Popp of Eastman Kodak<lb/>
who will speak on "The<lb/>
Inside Story of Color<lb/>
Photography He will<lb/>
demonstrate how basic<lb/>
principles are combined<lb/>
with silver Hajide chemis-<lb/>
try in a variety of ways to<lb/>
produce the transparen-<lb/>
cies, motion pictures, con-<lb/>
ventional prints and in-<lb/>
stant prints which today<lb/>
comprise color photo<lb/>
graphy. The public is<lb/>
invited.<lb/>
The Alpha Xi Delta<lb/>
Fall Pledge Class is having<lb/>
a Shag Contest at Chapter<lb/>
X on Nov. 13th from 9-1<lb/>
a.m. Advanced tickets are<lb/>
25 cents and tickets at the<lb/>
door will be 50 cents. Door<lb/>
prizes will be given away.<lb/>
I ?M ill<lb/>
scj<lb/>
The Society for Col-<lb/>
legiate Journalists will<lb/>
meet Monday at 6 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Cen-<lb/>
ter, Room 248. All mem-<lb/>
bers are urged to attend.<lb/>
bcwl<lb/>
Take advantage of thes<lb/>
bowling specials at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Cen-<lb/>
ter: "Red Pin Bowling7<lb/>
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"?onethird<lb/>
off the price of bowling<lb/>
every Monday from 2 p.m.<lb/>
until 6 p.m.<lb/>
ECU Sign Language<lb/>
Club will meet Nov. 8 at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. in Brewster<lb/>
B-236.<lb/>
The Greeks go Hawai-<lb/>
ian. Coming Nov. 16, PIG<lb/>
PICKIN' and beverage at<lb/>
the Kappa Sigma house.<lb/>
Be thereALOHA!<lb/>
?nappy ticui<lb/>
Kappa Delta Happy Hour<lb/>
Thursday, Nov. 8th from<lb/>
7-9 p.m. at the Elbo<lb/>
Room. Advance Tickets<lb/>
are 25 cents and tickets at<lb/>
the door are 50 cents.<lb/>
Take a break from studies<lb/>
and join the fun<lb/>
Il II II I I ll<lb/>
The Intramural Council<lb/>
meeting will be held<lb/>
Thurs Nov. 8, at 4 p.m.<lb/>
in Memorial Gym, room<lb/>
104.<lb/>
?a -ac<lb/>
Screenings will be held<lb/>
Thurs Nov. 8, in the SGA<lb/>
Cabinet Room, Menden-<lb/>
hall for SGA adminis-<lb/>
trative committees. Call<lb/>
for an appointment (757-<lb/>
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 Ap-<lb/>
peals<lb/>
Admissions<lb/>
University Cirriculum<lb/>
Library<lb/>
Student Recruitment<lb/>
Career Education<lb/>
Instructional Survey<lb/>
General College<lb/>
ART&amp;CAMERA PLAZA CAMERA<lb/>
526 S. Cbtanche St. Pitt p'aza<lb/>
Down Town Shopping Center<lb/>
?$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$&amp;<lb/>
KODACOLOR ?<lb/>
j? Developed and Printed &amp;<lb/>
?<lb/>
12<lb/>
EXPOSURE<lb/>
ROLL ONLY<lb/>
$275<lb/>
No Fon<lb/>
ft. Film<lb/>
20<lb/>
EXPOSURE<lb/>
ROLL ONLY<lb/>
$395g<lb/>
J<lb/>
(ie<lb/>
ricsl<lb/>
The North Carolina<lb/>
Student Legislature will<lb/>
have a meeting tonight at<lb/>
7 p.m. at Mendenhall Rm.<lb/>
221. Topics to be dis-<lb/>
cussed will be Compend-<lb/>
ium review and about the<lb/>
upcoming fund raiser for<lb/>
the delegation. Also the<lb/>
November IC will be<lb/>
talked about. All members<lb/>
are expected to attend.<lb/>
The Graduate Record<lb/>
Examination will be offer-<lb/>
ed at East Carolina<lb/>
University on Saturday,<lb/>
January 12, 1980. Appli-<lb/>
cation blanks are to be<lb/>
completed and mailed to<lb/>
Educational Testing Ser-<lb/>
vice, Box 966-R, Princeton<lb/>
N.J. 08540. Registration<lb/>
deadline is Nov. 28, 1979.<lb/>
Applications may be ob-<lb/>
tained from the ECU<lb/>
Testing Center, Speight<lb/>
Building, Room 105.<lb/>
KODACOLOR<lb/>
Developed and Printed g<lb/>
f<lb/>
24<lb/>
EXPOSURE<lb/>
ROLL ONLY<lb/>
$435<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
36<lb/>
EXPOSURE<lb/>
ROLL ONLY<lb/>
$575g<lb/>
?$$$$$$$$$$?fjde$S$SS$$$S<lb/>
FILM DEVELOPING<lb/>
$<lb/>
20 EXPOSURE<lb/>
KODACHROME<lb/>
AND EKTACHROME<lb/>
PROCESSING ONLY<lb/>
36 EXPOSURE<lb/>
KODACHROME<lb/>
AND EKTACHROM<lb/>
PROCESSING ONLY<lb/>
I49<lb/>
?<lb/>
fl"<lb/>
f<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO 12JH<lb/>
WEEK OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
$175.00 "all inclusive'<lb/>
pregnancy test, birth control andl<lb/>
problem pregnancy counseling For<lb/>
further information call 832-0635 (toll-<lb/>
tree number 800-221-2568) between!<lb/>
9A.M-SPM weekdays.<lb/>
Raleigh Women's Health<lb/>
Organization<lb/>
917 West Morgan St.<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C. 27603<lb/>
tS$SS$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$?<lb/>
LOW, LOW PRICES ON<lb/>
Movie<lb/>
PROCESSING<lb/>
KODACHROME m . V<lb/>
AND EKTACHROME - Vfl<lb/>
PROCESSING ONLY ? ?"<lb/>
SUPER 8 AND STANDARD 8 MOVIES<lb/>
OFFER EXPIRES<lb/>
LIMITED OFFER<lb/>
?$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$K<lb/>
X<lb/>
lllE.IOS-<lb/>
rVuLijoufrLc<lb/>
?OTUA3<lb/>
WASH<lb/>
HOUSE<lb/>
I YOLLLd citric HliHI-n .<lb/>
VOO-loOO cLt?pti YtAil!<lb/>
iHrjmxi s<lb/>
Chanelo's<lb/>
itolion Foods, Inc<lb/>
DINE IN<lb/>
FAST - FREE<lb/>
DELIVERY<lb/>
CARRY OUT<lb/>
.Looking for part-time<lb/>
job with flexible hours<lb/>
and real bufineM<lb/>
experience? Northwest<lb/>
Mutual Life ins. Co.<lb/>
has openings for college<lb/>
agents. Call before noon<lb/>
for appointments!<lb/>
758-4080<lb/>
L<lb/>
BE SURE AND COME VISIT US<lb/>
AFTER THE GAME<lb/>
??????<lb/>
DON'T FORGET EVERY MONDAY<lb/>
as Draft 4:00 til XtOO am<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Coffeehouse Committee<lb/>
presents<lb/>
Jeff Blomberg<lb/>
(Comedian)<lb/>
and<lb/>
The ECU<lb/>
Sign Language<lb/>
Troupe<lb/>
(a uniquely entertaining act)<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat, Nov. 9 &amp; 10<lb/>
Half hour shows from 9-11 pm<lb/>
room 15 Mendenhall<lb/>
Admission 50<lb/>
NOTHING<lb/>
BEATSA-PIZZA FROM<lb/>
CHANELO'S<lb/>
CALL 758-7400<lb/>
In Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
507 E. 14th St.<lb/>
Phone 758-7400<lb/>
ree onacl<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
EAST CAHOUNA WffVBISfTY<lb/>
last<lb/>
ii<lb/>
<pb facs="00057230_0004"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
?Opinions<lb/>
Thursday, November 8, 1979 Page 4<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
A .38 in the drawer<lb/>
The shot rings out, and the man<lb/>
dies in a poo! of his own blood in the<lb/>
middle of a dirty street, in the middle<lb/>
of the afternoon, in the year of our Lord<lb/>
1979.<lb/>
Who the man is, or was, does not<lb/>
matter as much as the fact that he died<lb/>
while fighting for the right to speak his<lb/>
views against an organization which has<lb/>
traditionally held a reputation for<lb/>
violent actions.<lb/>
Others have died in similar violent<lb/>
actions across the country, in many<lb/>
places, and in many different ways. In<lb/>
the few days since the bloody massacre<lb/>
in Greensboro, a girl was stabbed as<lb/>
she stood in the hallway in her school in<lb/>
Nashville, and three were killed in a<lb/>
family dispute in Indianapolis.<lb/>
At the hour of this writing, Iranian<lb/>
students are still holding Americans<lb/>
hostage in the American embassy in<lb/>
Tehran, and thousands more Americans<lb/>
are afraid to go outside of their houses<lb/>
at night at home.<lb/>
We have become a nation of double<lb/>
bolt locks and .38 pistols tucked away in<lb/>
drawers near our beds. Community<lb/>
Watch programs help, but they are no<lb/>
match for professional thieves.<lb/>
Convenience store employees and<lb/>
those of us who work late at night sleep<lb/>
a little less soundly these days, because<lb/>
of the spread of violence all around us.<lb/>
spontaneous in our lives. We look with<lb/>
suspicion at the strangers around us,<lb/>
and it is making us a paranoid nation.<lb/>
Who, then, is to blame? The blame<lb/>
is as hard to place as the problem is to<lb/>
pinpoint. We are all in a sense to<lb/>
blame, from the desperate criminal who<lb/>
inflicts the damage, to the gun lobbyist<lb/>
who tries to stop gun control.<lb/>
The gas chamber is not the answer,<lb/>
either. It's not the answer because it's<lb/>
a solution that is too easy. We should<lb/>
be concerned with finding ways to make<lb/>
all lives better, rather than resorting to<lb/>
the quick punishment of cyanide.<lb/>
What can we do, then? It's hard to<lb/>
say. We could make a start by caring a<lb/>
little more for what goes on around us,<lb/>
and trying to make our corner of the<lb/>
world a little better one to live in.<lb/>
Secondly, we could help to elect<lb/>
good and just leaders that we feel will<lb/>
lead us out of the mess we are in now.<lb/>
We could not support a candidate for<lb/>
national public office who is not<lb/>
interested in seeing that the sale and<lb/>
distribution of handguns is curtailed.<lb/>
Finally, we could help to rid<lb/>
ourselves of our personal fears by<lb/>
getting involved in the rehabilitation of<lb/>
prisoners. We cannot solve any<lb/>
problems as long as our prisons<lb/>
continue to be schools of crime.<lb/>
In a real sense, then, we have If we do, we will continue to be<lb/>
become scared of our own shadows. We victimized by the graduates of these<lb/>
have become less caring, and less schools.<lb/>
JACK ANDERSON-JOE SPEAR<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
Brennan JVlay Resign Supreme Court;<lb/>
Carter Appointee Should Be Liberal<lb/>
By JACK ANDERSON<lb/>
and JOE SPEAR<lb/>
WASHINGTON  Presi-<lb/>
dent Carter may have the<lb/>
opportunity next year to<lb/>
appoint a Supreme Court<lb/>
justice. Unfortunately, it<lb/>
won't do much to defrost the<lb/>
Ice Age mentality of the<lb/>
Warren Burger Supreme<lb/>
Court or modify the chilling<lb/>
effect of four of Richard<lb/>
Nixon's men on the high<lb/>
tribunal.<lb/>
Associate Justice William<lb/>
Brennan Jr. has signaled to<lb/>
intimates that he probably<lb/>
will bow off the bench after<lb/>
this term, creating a vacan-<lb/>
cy for Carter to fill. Carter's<lb/>
choice is expected to be far<lb/>
less rigid-minded than the<lb/>
Nixon nominees who now<lb/>
dominate the court.<lb/>
Almost without exception,<lb/>
the Burger court has hacked<lb/>
away at the rights of the<lb/>
news media to be immune<lb/>
from the restrictive hand of<lb/>
government. An array of<lb/>
restrictive rulings has<lb/>
reflected the chief justice's<lb/>
own personal animosity<lb/>
toward the press. Burger<lb/>
shares the bitterness of Nix-<lb/>
on who appointed him. He<lb/>
has referred to the reporters<lb/>
who cover the doings of his<lb/>
court as "a bunch of<lb/>
Pipsqueaks When New<lb/>
ork Times reporter Myron<lb/>
Farber was jailed for con-<lb/>
tempt for refusing to turn<lb/>
over his confidential notes to<lb/>
a judge, Burger was elated.<lb/>
Brennan, recognized as a<lb/>
brilliant and articulate<lb/>
jurist, has stood against the<lb/>
repressive Burger tenden-<lb/>
cies of the highest court in<lb/>
the land. Appointed by the<lb/>
late President Dwight D.<lb/>
Eisenhower, Brennan was<lb/>
an active opinion-moulder<lb/>
during the landmark era of<lb/>
the Warren court.<lb/>
But with the coming of<lb/>
Burger, Brennan found him-<lb/>
self an odd man out. Court<lb/>
sources tell us that the icy-<lb/>
mannered chief justice rare-<lb/>
ly allows Brennan to write<lb/>
opinions even when he's on<lb/>
the majority side and<lb/>
assigns him only the dullest<lb/>
of cases.<lb/>
This they say is a major<lb/>
factor in Brennan s decision<lb/>
to withdraw from Burger's<lb/>
judicial deep freeze.<lb/>
Another Horror? The<lb/>
world was horrified last<lb/>
year with the ghoulish trage-<lb/>
dy in the South American<lb/>
country of Guyana when cult<lb/>
leader Jim Jones ordered his<lb/>
disciples to gun down five<lb/>
visiting Americans, includ-<lb/>
ing U.S. Rep. Leo Ryan, and<lb/>
then led 900 of his followers<lb/>
into mass suicide.<lb/>
Now we've learned that<lb/>
an equally rabid American<lb/>
cult leader is flourishing in<lb/>
the jungle undergrowths of<lb/>
Guyana. He has assumed the<lb/>
name of Edward Emmanuel<lb/>
Washington. His real name<lb/>
is David Hill, a bail jumper<lb/>
from Cleveland, Ohio, where<lb/>
he was convicted of corpo-<lb/>
rate blackmail eight years<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
The 50-year-old fugitive<lb/>
from justice has set up a<lb/>
black supremacist group<lb/>
called the House of Israel.<lb/>
Hill goes by the title of rabbi<lb/>
but claims to be an incarna-<lb/>
tion of God.<lb/>
He has gathered about<lb/>
him a band of fanatical<lb/>
followers, most of them<lb/>
unmarried. They have been<lb/>
persuaded to die on his<lb/>
command.<lb/>
Disturbingly, the cult sup-<lb/>
ports the Guyanan govern-<lb/>
ment of Prime Minister<lb/>
Forbes Burnham, who has a<lb/>
dictatorial bent. Some who<lb/>
have spoken out against<lb/>
Burnham's corrupt regime<lb/>
have been assaulted by Hill's<lb/>
bullyboy followers. There<lb/>
have been fearful reports of<lb/>
government opponents being<lb/>
beaten with iron bars, sticks,<lb/>
and stabbed by knife-wield-<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
The State Department is<lb/>
"very concerned about Mr.<lb/>
Hill's activities but a<lb/>
spokesman explained: "The<lb/>
Guyanese government is<lb/>
really responsible for taking<lb/>
any legal action against<lb/>
him<lb/>
Dry Economy: Labor Sec-<lb/>
retary Ray Marshall sur-<lb/>
vived Jimmy Carter's Cabi-<lb/>
net shakeup but the<lb/>
president's new tight-money<lb/>
policy may prove too much<lb/>
for the affable, well-liked<lb/>
Marshall to stomach.<lb/>
He is complaining pri-<lb/>
vately that Federal Reserve<lb/>
Board Chairman Paul<lb/>
Volcker and Carter's finan-<lb/>
cial advisers are launched<lb/>
on an anti-inflation course<lb/>
that will cast American<lb/>
workers to the sharks.<lb/>
Volcker and Treasury Secre-<lb/>
tary William Miller espouse<lb/>
a tight-credit policy that<lb/>
most economists predict will<lb/>
dry up the inflated economy<lb/>
and create widespread<lb/>
i <lb/>
unemployment.<lb/>
The only recourse labor<lb/>
unions have is to demand<lb/>
inflationary wage settle-<lb/>
ments to keep pace with<lb/>
double-digit inflation. Volck-<lb/>
er and Miller, weekly break-<lb/>
fast companions, are striv-<lb/>
ing to keep the president on<lb/>
their side of the fence.<lb/>
If Carter loses the popular<lb/>
Marshall as a result, ne may<lb/>
wind up with organized<lb/>
labor going all out for Teddy<lb/>
Kennedy in the battle for the<lb/>
upcoming Democratic presi-<lb/>
dential nomination.<lb/>
Under the Dome: Carter<lb/>
and the other two partici-<lb/>
pants in the Camp David<lb/>
Mideast peace summit are<lb/>
facing uneasy futures. While<lb/>
Carter is confronted with an<lb/>
uphill fight to win re-elec-<lb/>
tion, Israeli Prime Minister<lb/>
Menachem Begin has sus-<lb/>
tained a rebuff from his<lb/>
Supreme Court on settle-<lb/>
ments in the lands seized<lb/>
from the Arabs and the<lb/>
desertion of his best-known<lb/>
Cabinet member, Moishe<lb/>
Dayan.<lb/>
Egypt's Anwar Sadat is<lb/>
also enmeshed in domestic<lb/>
troubles. Secret Cabinet<lb/>
minutes from the White<lb/>
House disclose that Carter's<lb/>
emissary Robert Strauss<lb/>
brought back a message<lb/>
from Begin urging the Unit-<lb/>
ed States to rush more eco-<lb/>
nomic help to Sadat.<lb/>
Strauss told the Cabinet<lb/>
meeting that the economic<lb/>
problems facing Egypt were<lb/>
very complex and that<lb/>
American involvement in<lb/>
the economic support of<lb/>
Egypt would be critical to<lb/>
its long-term future<lb/>
United FaMar Syndicate, lac.<lb/>
'BANZAf!<lb/>
PC7<lb/>
Letters to the Editor<lb/>
Reader defends 'discomania9<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
In reading a letter to<lb/>
the Editor of The East<lb/>
Carolinian, I have decided<lb/>
to respond to the criticism<lb/>
of disco music. As a senior<lb/>
here at ECU, I have also<lb/>
been downtown and ex-<lb/>
perienced that "disco-<lb/>
mania" which Mr. Nilsson<lb/>
so harshly described as<lb/>
emanating from the down-<lb/>
town establishments.<lb/>
I only with to indicate<lb/>
to him, and others, that<lb/>
there are others among us<lb/>
who appreciate the unique<lb/>
sounds of Glenn Miller,<lb/>
the jazz of Chic Corea, the<lb/>
softness of Brahms, and<lb/>
the easy listening of<lb/>
Manilow.<lb/>
Where the current<lb/>
trend in music is obviously<lb/>
the disco beat of the likes<lb/>
of the Bee Gees and<lb/>
Donna Summer, their mu-<lb/>
sical popularity is not<lb/>
necessarily contingent up-<lb/>
on the popularity of the<lb/>
disco sound. For example,<lb/>
Dionne Warwick and Bar-<lb/>
bra Streisand have rolled<lb/>
with the musical punches<lb/>
throughout the years and<lb/>
will probably continue to<lb/>
be popular in the future,<lb/>
regardless of the ups and<lb/>
downs of the musical<lb/>
community.<lb/>
Music is not unlike an<lb/>
electronic component,<lb/>
made up of many fila-<lb/>
ments of different natures.<lb/>
It is our natural and God<lb/>
given right to have and<lb/>
express opinions of our<lb/>
likes and dislikes on<lb/>
subjects ranging from<lb/>
Gregorian chants to John<lb/>
Travolta.<lb/>
I for one do not<lb/>
particularly object to disco<lb/>
music, however I agree<lb/>
with Mr. Nilsson that we<lb/>
should not close our minds<lb/>
to the "music of different<lb/>
drummers<lb/>
Marianne Harbison<lb/>
Poole dealt blow<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
I would like to recog-<lb/>
nize the quality of sports-<lb/>
manship and character<lb/>
that one particular Caro-<lb/>
lina football player dis-<lb/>
played in Saturday's<lb/>
game.<lb/>
The player was number<lb/>
32 (listed as Greg Poole in<lb/>
the game program), and<lb/>
the sportsmanship and<lb/>
character of this mindless<lb/>
dimwit was comparable to<lb/>
that of a spineless coward.<lb/>
Those who watched the<lb/>
game highlights and the<lb/>
Pat Dye Show know<lb/>
exactly what I'm referring<lb/>
to.<lb/>
In the first half,<lb/>
Leander Green was<lb/>
pushed out of bounds into<lb/>
a mass of Carolina players<lb/>
on the sidelines. To keep<lb/>
him from running into the<lb/>
bench and possibly getting<lb/>
hurt, 32, Greg Poole,<lb/>
alertly offerred a jolting<lb/>
elbow-forearm "shot" into<lb/>
Leander's throat, nearly<lb/>
decapitating him.<lb/>
Leander, being a first<lb/>
class, first rate person and<lb/>
athlete, just recovered and<lb/>
quietly ran back onto the<lb/>
field and resumed play as<lb/>
if nothing happened.<lb/>
In my opinion it took a<lb/>
much bigger man to do<lb/>
what Leander did than it<lb/>
took Poole to deliver such<lb/>
a malicious and deliberate<lb/>
blow.<lb/>
I tip my hat to you<lb/>
Leander for giving Caro-<lb/>
lina a lesson in class and<lb/>
sportsmanship that was<lb/>
obviously sorely needed.<lb/>
As for Poole, I doubt<lb/>
he would have offerred the<lb/>
same gesture to Mike<lb/>
Brewington or Jeff Warren<lb/>
since he doesn't have the<lb/>
backbone to pick on<lb/>
someone unless they un-<lb/>
derweigh him by 40<lb/>
pounds as Leander did.<lb/>
It's a disgrace to<lb/>
"mighty" Carolina that<lb/>
they have someone of<lb/>
Poole's caliber represent-<lb/>
ing them on an otherwise<lb/>
decent football team.<lb/>
Ben Toler<lb/>
Auditor<lb/>
criticized<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
The purpose of this<lb/>
letter is to speak out<lb/>
against the attitude of<lb/>
self-importance that is<lb/>
prevalent in the adminis-<lb/>
tration of ECU. The<lb/>
administration seems to<lb/>
think that their job would<lb/>
be much simpler if the<lb/>
students would take their<lb/>
clutter of problems and go<lb/>
awav.<lb/>
In trying to straighten<lb/>
out a payroll problem, I<lb/>
had the opportunity to<lb/>
speak with the Internal<lb/>
Auditor over the phone<lb/>
He implied that if I wasn't<lb/>
polite and respectful, he<lb/>
could make it very difficult<lb/>
for me to get an<lb/>
emergency loan. Students<lb/>
are the reason his job<lb/>
exists, but this gentleman<lb/>
insists on treating them<lb/>
like adolescent nuisances<lb/>
instead of responsible<lb/>
adults.<lb/>
Students do not exist to<lb/>
be preyed upon by the<lb/>
administration; the oppo-<lb/>
site is true, the adminis-<lb/>
tration exists to serve the<lb/>
students of this University.<lb/>
Let's keep that in mind.<lb/>
Susan Ries<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
MANAGING EDITOR<lb/>
Richard Green<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER<lb/>
Anita Lancaster<lb/>
NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
ASST. NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
FEATURES EDITOR<lb/>
ASST. FEATURES EDITOR<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Marc Barnes<lb/>
DIRECTOR OF ADVERTISING<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim<lb/>
ASST. DIRECTOR OF ADVERTISING<lb/>
Terry Herndon<lb/>
ASSISTANT TO THE EDITOR<lb/>
Cheryl Holder<lb/>
BUSINESS MANAGER<lb/>
Steve O'Geary<lb/>
Karen Wendt<lb/>
Terry Gray<lb/>
Bill Jones<lb/>
K.C.<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<lb/>
weekly during the summer).<lb/>
the Publications Center Old South<lb/>
Building. Our mailing address is: Old<lb/>
South Building, ECU, Greenville, NC<lb/>
27834.<lb/>
The phone numbers are: 757-8366, 6367,<lb/>
$10<lb/>
Offices are located on the<lb/>
fleer of<lb/>
<pb facs="00057230_0005"/><lb/>
The Kast Carolinian<lb/>
inian. 1 m<lb/>
features<lb/>
Thursday, November 8, 1979 Page 5<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
m jpm<lb/>
American hostages in Iran<lb/>
ECU students voice opinions<lb/>
David Friedman, Ratzo Harris, Michael DiPasqua, and Dave Samuels of the<lb/>
Double Image Jazz Ensemble.<lb/>
The Double Image brings<lb/>
innovative jazz Tuesday<lb/>
Hn BILL JONES<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
'The group is com-<lb/>
pletely innovative. There<lb/>
cedent for it in<lb/>
At their best, they<lb/>
and project a<lb/>
of intensity that<lb/>
the room in a<lb/>
silence<lb/>
Double Image, the jazz<lb/>
emble which John S.<lb/>
?A The New York<lb/>
thus describes, will<lb/>
?i in a free concert<lb/>
esday, Nov. 13. The<lb/>
will be held<lb/>
the A.J. Fletcher<lb/>
Hall in the ECU<lb/>
? Music.<lb/>
Double Imago is made<lb/>
?i<lb/>
Coming<lb/>
Attractions<lb/>
IjlBILEE!<lb/>
up of four gifted and<lb/>
innovative musicians.<lb/>
Thirty-one year old David<lb/>
Samuels is a former<lb/>
instructor of mallet per-<lb/>
cussion and jazz improvis-<lb/>
ation at the Berklee<lb/>
College of Music<lb/>
Besides playing vibes<lb/>
and marimba for Double<lb/>
Image, Samuels is a<lb/>
Ladwig clinitian and lec-<lb/>
tures at colleges through-<lb/>
out the United States. He<lb/>
has performed and re-<lb/>
corded with Gerry Mull-<lb/>
igan, Frank Zappa, Carla<lb/>
Blev and Herman Szobel,<lb/>
among others.<lb/>
Besides having been<lb/>
featured in a cover story in<lb/>
Downbeat magazine and<lb/>
receiving recognition in<lb/>
their Critics Poll, Samuels<lb/>
has contributed to the<lb/>
development of a new<lb/>
pick-up system for vibra-<lb/>
; phone and marimba.<lb/>
Di Pasqua,<lb/>
By K.C. NEEDHAM<lb/>
Assistant Features Editor<lb/>
"What do you think of<lb/>
the present situation in<lb/>
Iran concerning the 60<lb/>
Americans being held<lb/>
hostage in lieu of the<lb/>
return of the Shah?'1<lb/>
On November 7, mem-<lb/>
bers of The East Caro-<lb/>
linian staff conducted an<lb/>
informal survey of student<lb/>
and faculty opinion on the<lb/>
recent developments in<lb/>
Iran. The<lb/>
people of his country<lb/>
desire the United States to<lb/>
turn him over to Iranian<lb/>
authorities and to these<lb/>
ends have taken 60<lb/>
Americans hostage.<lb/>
The following is a<lb/>
sample of the opinions of<lb/>
to his individuality and the ECU community.<lb/>
versatility. A native son of<lb/>
New York, he is one of<lb/>
that city's most sought<lb/>
after mallet specialists.<lb/>
Friedman also teaches<lb/>
mallet percussion and jazz<lb/>
ensemble classes at the<lb/>
Manhattan School of<lb/>
Music and the Institute for<lb/>
Advanced Musical Studies<lb/>
in Montreux, Switzerland.<lb/>
He has performed and<lb/>
recorded with some of<lb/>
today's most influential<lb/>
contemporary musicians,<lb/>
such as George Benson,<lb/>
Hubert Laws, Horace Sil-<lb/>
ver and others.<lb/>
Born in Indiana in<lb/>
1954, Ratzo Harris em-<lb/>
barked on his musical<lb/>
career at the ripe old age<lb/>
of 13. He lived in Chicago<lb/>
and Detroit before joining<lb/>
Joe Henderson's band.<lb/>
Harris has been based in<lb/>
New York since 1977.<lb/>
Having experienced<lb/>
?I think it's inadvisable;<lb/>
inappropriate for us to use<lb/>
force. We'll just simply<lb/>
have to work it out diplo-<lb/>
matically. (Dr. Wm. Still,<lb/>
Professor, History Dept.)<lb/>
?Iran? I really don't keep<lb/>
up much, but I don't think<lb/>
we have anything to get<lb/>
involved in  um, really I<lb/>
guess there's not much we<lb/>
can do, unless the Shah<lb/>
wants to give himself up<lb/>
freely. We can't force him<lb/>
to go. I really don't see<lb/>
the point in trying to get<lb/>
us to hand over the Shah.<lb/>
I think we should try in<lb/>
some way to save the<lb/>
hostages without any<lb/>
force.<lb/>
?I think they're crazy <lb/>
really.<lb/>
?I think it's very disgust-<lb/>
ing that they did that. It<lb/>
shows how totally un-<lb/>
civilized they are.<lb/>
?I think they're serious. I<lb/>
think they're real serious.<lb/>
He's gonna die anyway.<lb/>
He's gonna die when they<lb/>
send him back over there<lb/>
cause they've already<lb/>
planned to kill him, right?<lb/>
I think we should get his<lb/>
medical records straight<lb/>
and send him back over<lb/>
there.<lb/>
?I haven't really thought<lb/>
abut the situation.<lb/>
?Personally, I think it's<lb/>
best, nationally, to send<lb/>
him back.<lb/>
?The situation currently in<lb/>
Iran, given the state of<lb/>
affairs, looks very difficult<lb/>
for the American govern-<lb/>
ment to deal with. We<lb/>
have no bargaining power.<lb/>
Returning the Shah is<lb/>
against the principles of<lb/>
this country. Therefore, I<lb/>
suppose "concern" is the<lb/>
only feeling I really have<lb/>
at this point. There's<lb/>
nothing that can be done<lb/>
logically or effectively<lb/>
unless the Iranians change<lb/>
their position. (Dr. John<lb/>
Bort, Assistant Professor<lb/>
of Sociology and Anthro-<lb/>
pology Dept.)<lb/>
?I'm not following it<lb/>
wouldn't be able to help<lb/>
you.<lb/>
?Uh, I wouldn't go back,<lb/>
man. You know, we've<lb/>
been good to the Shah,<lb/>
man, and I wouldn't go<lb/>
back if I were him. You<lb/>
know, it's like "pull up<lb/>
the ladder, I'm aboard<lb/>
?Well, being a political<lb/>
scientist  There's no<lb/>
alternative but what we're<lb/>
doing. It's one of those<lb/>
situations that you're go-<lb/>
ing to have to play by ear.<lb/>
We're between a rock and<lb/>
a hard place. We'll just<lb/>
have to go through<lb/>
diplomacy and hopefully<lb/>
reason will prevail. As my<lb/>
minister would say, "We<lb/>
should probably pray a<lb/>
lot<lb/>
?I myself don't know what<lb/>
to think. They made<lb/>
suggestions about holding<lb/>
Iranians in this country<lb/>
hostage, and I don't think<lb/>
that's a good idea. But I<lb/>
don't know what we could<lb/>
do unless we just storm<lb/>
the place.<lb/>
?I think since the Shah's<lb/>
only one and they got 60<lb/>
of them, we ought to send<lb/>
him back.<lb/>
?Could you run that by me<lb/>
again?<lb/>
Editor's note: Most<lb/>
students interviewed de-<lb/>
clined giving name<lb/>
classification.<lb/>
or<lb/>
I<lb/>
Humor<lb/>
Wonder's Journey is<lb/>
a phenomenal effort<lb/>
; I a celebration in ?<lb/>
?song, featuring selections;<lb/>
Jfr The Wiz, Porgy and I<lb/>
li. ss ther musicals, ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
Sweater TONIGHT at 8:001<lb/>
?p.m<lb/>
I ESCAPE<lb/>
Michael<lb/>
drummer-percussionist for such a large variety of<lb/>
the group, is a versatile different musical styles,<lb/>
and sensitive musician. He Harris has developed a<lb/>
has performed and re- unique bass-playing style,<lb/>
corded with such artists as The individual origin-<lb/>
Zoot Sims, Marian Mc- ality that characterizes<lb/>
appear in Hendnx J partlanc Ralph Towner each of the members of<lb/>
and many others. Di the Double Image Jazz<lb/>
Pasqua began his career Ensemble has contributed<lb/>
strictly as a drummer but to the group's unique<lb/>
expanded into other ve- instrumentation and fresh<lb/>
nues of percussion to be individual and group im-<lb/>
able to work with a wider provisation.<lb/>
scope of textures, sounds Downbeat summarized<lb/>
and artists. Double Image's perfor-<lb/>
For two consecutive mance at the Newport Jazz<lb/>
years, Downbeat maga- Festival as, technically<lb/>
zine's "Talent Deserving complex music vibrating<lb/>
Wider Recognition" has with rich coloristic, timbral<lb/>
voted David Friedman No.<lb/>
1 vibraphone player, due See JAZZ, page 7<lb/>
t"Em ape to the South!<lb/>
? - is a travel-adventure;<lb/>
tfilm by Thayer Soule, will ?<lb/>
I'bv shown on Nov. 15, at<lb/>
?800 p.m. in Hendrix.<lb/>
5 Auditorium. ?<lb/>
Stevie Wonder<lb/>
By PAT MINGES<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
When Paul Simon re-<lb/>
ceived a Grammy for his<lb/>
album Still Crazy After All<lb/>
These Years and it came<lb/>
time to give acknowledg-<lb/>
ments, he simply stated "I<lb/>
would like to thank Stevie<lb/>
Wonder for not putting<lb/>
anything out this year,<lb/>
enabling me to win this<lb/>
award<lb/>
Well, it has been three<lb/>
years since the release of<lb/>
Songs In The Key Of<lb/>
Life, and Stevie Wonder<lb/>
has released his latest<lb/>
endeavor, Stevie Wonder's<lb/>
Journey Through The Se-<lb/>
cret Life of Plants.<lb/>
This is truly an asto-<lb/>
nishing album, perhaps<lb/>
the most phenomenal ef-<lb/>
fort in the history of<lb/>
modern pop music.<lb/>
The new release is<lb/>
based on the book The<lb/>
Secret Life of Plants, by<lb/>
Peter Tompkins and<lb/>
Christopher Bird, and<lb/>
substantial portions of this<lb/>
recording are contained in<lb/>
the soundtrack of the<lb/>
motion picture, 'The Se-<lb/>
cret Life of Plants<lb/>
released through Para-<lb/>
mount Pictures.<lb/>
Journey Through The<lb/>
Secret Life Of Plants is a<lb/>
most remarkable album.<lb/>
Stevie Wonder composed<lb/>
all of the music, performs<lb/>
it mostly by himself and<lb/>
handles the arrangement<lb/>
and production chores for<lb/>
this double album. Only a<lb/>
true musical genius could<lb/>
attempt such an endeavor<lb/>
and pull it off with the<lb/>
success that this album<lb/>
will surely receive.<lb/>
Stevie Wonder is the<lb/>
single most highly paid<lb/>
performing artist in con-<lb/>
temporary music, and with<lb/>
the release of this album,<lb/>
there is little wonder as to<lb/>
See WONDER, page 7<lb/>
Fall edition of Tar River Poetry reviewed<lb/>
Three ECU students<lb/>
poems<lb/>
By RICHARD GREEN<lb/>
It feels like autumn outside, as well as<lb/>
inside the pages of the fall edition of Tar<lb/>
Rner Poetry.<lb/>
This is mv favorite season of the year,<lb/>
but I fear it will be springtime before<lb/>
knowing whether this slender collection of<lb/>
poems will rank as highly. Some of the<lb/>
poems will take time to enjoy fully, to<lb/>
savor. For now, it impresses me with the<lb/>
variety of language and depth of the<lb/>
poems, and they read in an unpretentious<lb/>
order. .<lb/>
Ironically, yet perhaps fittingly, the<lb/>
first four poems are by A. Poulin Jr who<lb/>
will edit Peter Makuck's forthcoming<lb/>
book, Where We Live. As the editor of<lb/>
Tar River Poetry, Makuck chose to lead<lb/>
with poems that embrace the overall tone<lb/>
of the book.<lb/>
Though many of the selections move in<lb/>
and around the season, the majority do<lb/>
not Few poetic cliches appear as the<lb/>
fresh language weaves through autumn<lb/>
and relationships, and the final pattern is<lb/>
quite pleasing. Everyone should be able to<lb/>
find a number of personally relevant<lb/>
poems and to acknowledge that all of the<lb/>
poems are fine-tuned and professional.<lb/>
Three ECU students are featured in<lb/>
this edition, which is a compliment to<lb/>
their poetic abilities and an asset to the<lb/>
book as a whole.<lb/>
Colleen Flynn, 1979-80 editor of the<lb/>
award winning Rebel, gives us a poem<lb/>
entitled "Counterpane" that is full of<lb/>
meaning from the title to the last line. In<lb/>
a very human voice, she uses a simple<lb/>
language in an original metaphor of<lb/>
not-so-simple feelings:<lb/>
poem forthcoming in the New Earth<lb/>
Review, and both students are in the<lb/>
writing program at ECU and members of<lb/>
the Poetry Forum.<lb/>
Joseph's "Hooked" and Andrew's<lb/>
"By Lamplight" are about separation<lb/>
from or the absence of a loved one. So all<lb/>
three students express similar feelings in<lb/>
beautiful verse, feelings with which most<lb/>
students can empathize.<lb/>
The production of Tar River Poetry is<lb/>
excellent, from a pleasing and very<lb/>
readable body type to the peach-tinted<lb/>
stock. The cover photo is an interesting<lb/>
duotone of a photo by Pete Podezswa, and<lb/>
small, low-key, ink sketches by Joseph<lb/>
Dudasik are appropriate and well-placed<lb/>
throughout as pleasant visual breaks from<lb/>
the type.<lb/>
Tar River Poetry can be purchased for<lb/>
$2 at the ECU Student Supply Store and<lb/>
other bookstores in Greenville.<lb/>
Greetings fellow residents of ECU: Suit case college<lb/>
extraordinaire,<lb/>
On the theory that all of you have taken road trips on<lb/>
one occasion or another, I thought I would address<lb/>
myself today to the various do's and don'ts of successful<lb/>
road tripping. I feel I am a authority on the subject,<lb/>
having taken quite a few such jaunts during my college<lb/>
days, and I would like to share my findings with you.<lb/>
For those of you who are confused as to what a road<lb/>
trip actually is, I will be more than happy to give a<lb/>
simple definition. It is any excursion one decides to<lb/>
take on the spur of the moment. For example, if a friend<lb/>
accosts you at Happy Hour on Friday afternoon and<lb/>
drags you off to the beach, you are embarking on a road<lb/>
trip.<lb/>
Road trips usually succeed best when one has gas in<lb/>
the car and money in the bank. If you're lacking either,<lb/>
vou're in trouble.<lb/>
If you don't have much gas, you may find yourself<lb/>
running out in the booming metropolis of Stumpy Point,<lb/>
North Carolina. Stumpy Point unfortunately leaves<lb/>
something to be desired in the way of social hfe and<lb/>
places to sleep. If you don't have much money, the<lb/>
consequences may be the same.<lb/>
It's also a good idea to make sure that the car you<lb/>
are driving is trustworthy. I once took off on a road trip<lb/>
to Nag's Head at 2:00 in the morning and found myself<lb/>
in a dead car at Columbia, N.C. at 4:00 a.m. I remained<lb/>
in this small town until late the next afternoon while the<lb/>
car was being fixed. Taking angry pulls at a fifth of<lb/>
Early Times, I wondered how in the hell I was going to<lb/>
cover the expense of a new transmission.<lb/>
When a friend cons you into a visit to his mountain<lb/>
cabin for the weekend, by all means, grab a sweater and<lb/>
go, but please, ask him to make sure he has the keys to<lb/>
his cabin. I spent a rather uncomfortable evening in a<lb/>
VW bug during one road trip to the mountains. It was<lb/>
nice to have a driveway to sleep in, but a bed would<lb/>
have been infinitely preferable.<lb/>
While we're on the subject of places to sleep, I<lb/>
wo id like to remind everyone to make sure they have<lb/>
one before leaving Greenville on a wild and crazy road<lb/>
trip. It's also a good idea to give everyone in the car<lb/>
their own directions on how to find the place.<lb/>
On yet another journey, I found myself cruising<lb/>
around an unfamiliar Chapel Hill after an evening of<lb/>
partying. All other occupants of the car were solidly<lb/>
passed out, including the Chapel Hill native who was<lb/>
supposed to let us sleep in her house. After emptying<lb/>
several beer cans over her head in an effort to awaken<lb/>
her, I gave up and steared into a parking lot hoping to<lb/>
get'some rest myself. I was quite embarrassed when I<lb/>
woke up to find a policeman peering in the windows<lb/>
with the aid of a high-beam flashlight.<lb/>
I must say though, that no matter what the<lb/>
destination, the actual ride in the car is the most fun. I<lb/>
love to drink and drive. It's one of my favorite bad<lb/>
habits.<lb/>
Always be sure to lay in plenty of beer for the drive,<lb/>
a well stocked cooler makes for a happy crew. Be<lb/>
3.S<lb/>
prepared for mumerous pit stops, and never deny<lb/>
fellow passenger the luxury of a quick stop. The car<lb/>
seats you save may be your own.<lb/>
And listen guys, whatever happens, don't let those<lb/>
nasty highway patrolmen ruin a good time. They have a<lb/>
rotten habit of putting a crimp in some real great road<lb/>
trips. Aloha! Yours<lb/>
775134<lb/>
Cranberry-colored pigeons<lb/>
On my bedroom wallpaper are eating stems<lb/>
Of cherries.<lb/>
We lie close on the counterpane<lb/>
As close as the frilled, feather-like leaves that<lb/>
Just touch tips around the birds.<lb/>
I want to be covered<lb/>
By you<lb/>
Not shielded<lb/>
Of touch<lb/>
Like the stiff Geisha doll in glass<lb/>
On the dresser.<lb/>
The other student poets are Jeffrey<lb/>
Joseph and Denise Andrews. Joseph has a<lb/>
Louwjog Aeour Cou-ftf re H?p Way<lb/>
bl Pwip Noris<lb/>
f 00. T??TH<lb/>
AHiJCTECN TlYfcS TOQfM <lb/>
I<lb/>
4<lb/>
<pb facs="00057230_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 8 November 1979<lb/>
Hunter Thompson<lb/>
is running loose<lb/>
B) JAY STONE<lb/>
To discover thai Hunter S. Thompson is running<lb/>
loose and strange and riding high on the momentum of<lb/>
a hue nevs book entitled The Great Shark Hunt was<lb/>
amusing to me. I have read all three of Dr. Thompson's<lb/>
previous hooks: The Hell's Angels: A Strange and<lb/>
Terrible Saga, Fear and Lathing In Las legas and Fear<lb/>
and Loathing On the Campaign Trail '72, as well as<lb/>
several ol his pieces in Rolling Stone magazine, for<lb/>
which he was the national affairs editor throughout the<lb/>
1.2 presidential election. Subsequently, the concept of<lb/>
venturing into the hinterlands of "gonzo journalism"<lb/>
and had craziness" filled my spirit vith great joy.<lb/>
Hunter Thompson is one of those rare eeeentrics who<lb/>
somehow manages to acquire the ability to practice<lb/>
responsible journalism and then runs amuck, to<lb/>
everyone's dismay and horror In 1970. Thompson took<lb/>
it upon himself to run for sheriff of Aspen, Colorado.<lb/>
His campaign promise- included ripping up the city<lb/>
streets with jackhammers and installing a set of wooden<lb/>
stocks on the courthouse lawn with which to punish<lb/>
dishonest druti dealers<lb/>
He narrowly lost the election. However, the Aspen<lb/>
Freak Power Uprising" has snue become a legend,<lb/>
and i! is covered in detail in The Great Shark Hunt.<lb/>
Tin new $15 hard-cover anthology contains what is<lb/>
certainly some of Thompson's most powerful and<lb/>
accessible work. It spans the career of a writer who has<lb/>
been called 'America's foremost Outlaw Journalist<lb/>
and it is from his decidedly unconventional perspective<lb/>
that we see our own society with a heightened<lb/>
sensitivity. Simultaneously, we are filled with the<lb/>
conviction that none oi it can be taken too seriously,<lb/>
regardless ol how ominous or cumbersome events<lb/>
become.<lb/>
The Great Shark Hunt is divided into<lb/>
four separate parts, each composed of<lb/>
various essays and narratives that may<lb/>
bear a loose affinity with theme<lb/>
- - ilitical material in The Great<lb/>
iguely enlightening to read. To<lb/>
sample, that Hunter Thompson almost<lb/>
Muskie's political career by<lb/>
his press pass an aggressive drunk is just<lb/>
?ther con rmation that keeps the<lb/>
g out enough on "gonzo journalism" to read<lb/>
thr n insightfi . intelligent analysis of the 1972<lb/>
esidential m.<lb/>
The Great Shark Hunt is divided into four separate<lb/>
parts, each composed of various essays and narratives<lb/>
that may bear a loose affinity with a common topic or<lb/>
theme. For the nn rt, however, the work is simply<lb/>
arranged in chronological order.<lb/>
The title oi this new book owes its inspiration to an<lb/>
essay n pa this piece, Thompson and a<lb/>
mpanion, Yail Bloor, set out to cover a<lb/>
ing Mazatlan, Mexico on the expense<lb/>
m igazine and the Striker<lb/>
 . eventually, the reader<lb/>
mpson is merely using the<lb/>
sy ej use to get locked into a<lb/>
full-blow n dm .<lb/>
Eventually, a series ol serious yet somehow<lb/>
inevitable miscalculations lead- to a confrontation with<lb/>
the people in authority, and the reader follows<lb/>
Th. mpson and Bloor through some mind-bending<lb/>
escapades that cause a distinctive numbing quality in<lb/>
the brain.<lb/>
1' is indeed unfortunate that none of Ralph<lb/>
Steadman's illustration- were included in The Great<lb/>
Shark Hunt as they have been in past Hunter Thompson<lb/>
publications. Steadman's illustrations give the writer's<lb/>
word- a -urreal quality that tends to pail anv other<lb/>
attempt at journalism by comparison.<lb/>
The Great Shark Hunter, however, is a desperate<lb/>
attempt at respectability by a dope-addled manic<lb/>
depressive writer who is nearing male menopause. It<lb/>
must be taken in that context, for there is no choice but<lb/>
to get caught up in this thing and follow Hunter<lb/>
Thompson's antics and see the world from his vantage<lb/>
point.<lb/>
In a world completely devoid of rational<lb/>
interpretations the only logical response is bad craziness<lb/>
and perhaps, on occasion, sex and drugs and<lb/>
Rock-n-Roll.<lb/>
Exiled Dalai Lama may return to Tibet<lb/>
By HUGH A. MULLIGAN<lb/>
AP Special Correspondent<lb/>
LHASA, Tibet (AP) ?<lb/>
When construction work-<lb/>
ers in coolie hats were<lb/>
building a tea house for<lb/>
tourists at the edge of the<lb/>
lotus pond where the Dalai<lb/>
Lama used to look for<lb/>
meaningful reflections, the<lb/>
water had been drained,<lb/>
,but the handwriting was<lb/>
on the wall for his<lb/>
lollowers to see.<lb/>
The Potala, his thou-<lb/>
sand-room winter palace<lb/>
taller than the dome of<lb/>
Christopher Wren's St.<lb/>
Paul's Cathedral, has been<lb/>
turned into a museum.<lb/>
The Jokka Kang Temple,<lb/>
the Vatican of the lamaist<lb/>
religion where his devoted<lb/>
acolytes used to burn a ton<lb/>
of yak butter a day to keep<lb/>
the votice lamps flickering,<lb/>
is open only a few hours a<lb/>
week to the most elderly<lb/>
faithful.<lb/>
The Drepung monas-<lb/>
tery, once the world's<lb/>
largest with 10,300 lamas,<lb/>
echoes hollowly now to the<lb/>
footsteps of only a few<lb/>
hundred lamas, all of them<lb/>
getting on in years, too.<lb/>
The Dalai Lama, if he<lb/>
comes back to Tibet, will<lb/>
find lots of other changes<lb/>
have taken place under the<lb/>
Chinese communists since<lb/>
1959.<lb/>
That's when he made<lb/>
his dramatic escape 20<lb/>
years ago on foot and by<lb/>
yak-skin canoe to India<lb/>
across three-mile high<lb/>
mountain passes and down<lb/>
wild, roaring rivers, wear<lb/>
ing cheap spectacles and<lb/>
disguised as a begging<lb/>
monk.<lb/>
The Chinese govern-<lb/>
ment says it would wel<lb/>
come the Dalai Lama back,<lb/>
like any other exile, either<lb/>
to visit or to stay, and five<lb/>
of his senior emissaries<lb/>
now art- on an extended<lb/>
tour of the (ountry to<lb/>
assess under what condi-<lb/>
tions he could make his<lb/>
return.<lb/>
If - plain the<lb/>
Himalayan peaks<lb/>
this short-time tour I<lb/>
Tibet that the<lb/>
the 1 1-th and m<lb/>
reincarnation of the B<lb/>
dhisl god of iii-<lb/>
be coming I<lb/>
kind leader.<lb/>
spiritual or temp<lb/>
All the lama<lb/>
living Buddh<lb/>
working in th rnrni<lb/>
RICHARD<lb/>
PRYOR<lb/>
Filmed y<lb/>
LIVE IN<lb/>
CONCERT<lb/>
East Carolina's<lb/>
minority<lb/>
news-<lb/>
<lb/>
paper s<lb/>
<lb/>
WARNING: This Picture Contains<lb/>
Harsh And Very Vulgar Language<lb/>
And May Be Considered Shocking<lb/>
And Offensive.<lb/>
<lb/>
position<lb/>
is now<lb/>
available<lb/>
to any full-time<lb/>
ECU student.<lb/>
Fri. @ Sat. night<lb/>
7 ? 9 p.m.<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Sponsored by the Student Union Films Committee<lb/>
Seethe Media Board secretary<lb/>
at the East Carolinian office<lb/>
Nov. 7 - 14.<lb/>
Ad provided by the East Carolinian<lb/>
for the Media Board<lb/>
Equal opportunity employers<lb/>
MRC<lb/>
GAMEROOM<lb/>
LOCATED IN<lb/>
BASEMENT OF<lb/>
AYCOCK DORM<lb/>
? Pinball Contest<lb/>
with Prizes<lb/>
? Serves as checkout<lb/>
area for recreation<lb/>
equipment.<lb/>
? One-half of Game<lb/>
room receipts goes<lb/>
back to students<lb/>
through MRC projects.<lb/>
SUPPORT<lb/>
THE MRC GAMEROOM<lb/>
This weekend Eat, Eat,Eat!<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
ALPHA PHI<lb/>
Presents a<lb/>
? a<lb/>
Your<lb/>
Student<lb/>
Union<lb/>
Committees<lb/>
Computer Dating<lb/>
Happy Hour'<lb/>
Sun. Nov. 11, at<lb/>
Jolly Roger<lb/>
Tickets will be sold at the Book store<lb/>
Thurs. &amp; Fri. between the hours 10-1<lb/>
Music: Disco Beach Rock<lb/>
November 11th ? a hearty brunch bonanza!<lb/>
All the hotcakes, syrup, butter and sizzling<lb/>
patties of pure pork sausage you can eat. All the<lb/>
fresh, hot coffee you can drink. No limit. No<lb/>
kidding!<lb/>
You'll get a cold glass of juice, too. Orange cr<lb/>
grapefruit. A juicy decision.<lb/>
Nobody can do it<lb/>
like McDonalds can<lb/>
All for $2.29. And all you have to do is just sit,<lb/>
relax, and enjoy while the special All-You-Can-<lb/>
Munch Brunch hostess keeps the hotcakes.<lb/>
sausage and coffee coming till you cry -Uncle<lb/>
The $2.29 All-You-Can-Munch Brunch Sun-<lb/>
day, November 11th, 6:30-10:30 a.m. Much<lb/>
munching at the 10th Street McDonald's !<lb/>
TM<lb/>
<pb facs="00057230_0007"/><lb/>
8 November 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
faculty<lb/>
concert<lb/>
GREENVILLE - The<lb/>
Brahms Serenade No. 2,<lb/>
Opus 16, will be perform-<lb/>
ed at an East Carolina<lb/>
University Faculty Cham-<lb/>
ber Concert Sunday, Nov.<lb/>
11, at 4:15 p.m. in the<lb/>
Fletcher Recital Hall.<lb/>
The program is the<lb/>
second in a series of<lb/>
chamber concerts featur-<lb/>
ing members of the ECU<lb/>
School of Music faculty.<lb/>
Coordinating the series<lb/>
this year are faculty<lb/>
members Joseph Distefano<lb/>
and David Hawkins.<lb/>
The chamber ensemble<lb/>
will include two flutes, a<lb/>
piccolo, two oboes, two<lb/>
clarinets, two bassoons,<lb/>
two horns, three violas,<lb/>
three cellos and a bass<lb/>
viol. Conducting the en-<lb/>
semble is Robert Hause,<lb/>
professor of music at ECU,<lb/>
who also conducts the<lb/>
ECU Symphony Orchestra.<lb/>
All concerts in the<lb/>
chamber series are free<lb/>
and open to the public.<lb/>
Other programs will fea-<lb/>
ture chamber works by<lb/>
such composers as Beet-<lb/>
hoven, Schumann, Web-<lb/>
ern, Albeniz and Turpin.<lb/>
GREENVILLE - An-<lb/>
tonia Dalapas, soprano, a<lb/>
member of the voice<lb/>
faculty in the East Caro-<lb/>
lina University School of<lb/>
Music, will perform in<lb/>
recital Sunday, Nov. 11 at<lb/>
8:15 p.m. in the Fletcher<lb/>
Recital Hall.<lb/>
Accompanied by pian-<lb/>
ist Everett Pittman, dean<lb/>
of the School of Music,<lb/>
Ms. Dalapas will perform<lb/>
arias from Handel's Julius<lb/>
Caesar, six Brahms songs,<lb/>
an aria from Puccini's<lb/>
Manon Lescaut, four songs<lb/>
by Faure, two songs by<lb/>
Ginastera, two Greek folk<lb/>
songs and Ravel's "Five<lb/>
Popular Greek Melodies<lb/>
The program is open to<lb/>
the public without charge.<lb/>
An assistant professor<lb/>
at ECU, Ms. Dalapas has<lb/>
degrees from the New<lb/>
England Conservatory of<lb/>
Music. She has performed<lb/>
in the Pacific Northwest as<lb/>
well as in several Eastern<lb/>
cities and was featured<lb/>
with the ECU Symphony<lb/>
in performances of<lb/>
Strauss's "Four Las<lb/>
Songs" and the Beethoven<lb/>
Ninth Symphony.<lb/>
Spell may be broken<lb/>
WONDER<lb/>
continued from page 5<lb/>
the justification of this<lb/>
tact.<lb/>
Born Stephen Judkins<lb/>
in Saginaw. Michigan on<lb/>
May 13. 1950, Wonder has<lb/>
been blind since birth. His<lb/>
family moved to Detroit<lb/>
when he was 12. and there<lb/>
he met Berry Gordy, head<lb/>
of Tamla Records. Gordy<lb/>
immediately signed the<lb/>
youngster up, for besides<lb/>
his urgent, piping vocal<lb/>
style, the boy was also an<lb/>
adept harmonica and<lb/>
bongo player. His first<lb/>
album was Recorded Live<lb/>
-The Twelve Year<lb/>
Genius, and the rest is<lb/>
history. Stevie Wonder is<lb/>
ably the most re-<lb/>
? performer in all of<lb/>
if not ot all<lb/>
music.<lb/>
new album is<lb/>
mtly different from<lb/>
last effort; it is<lb/>
stantially more relaxed<lb/>
v rigs In The Key of<lb/>
There is less of an<lb/>
towards AM<lb/>
: il is more bent<lb/>
 ai Is the prominent FM<lb/>
music. Accord-<lb/>
fiere are only a<lb/>
uple of tunes with a<lb/>
flavor. which is<lb/>
TPhing and indicative<lb/>
-wing away from<lb/>
that has been<lb/>
Id in the press.<lb/>
It is absolutely amazing<lb/>
that one individual could<lb/>
form a large majority of<lb/>
the music that is contained<lb/>
on Journey Through The<lb/>
- ret Life of Plants.<lb/>
Wonder has always been<lb/>
known to work in isolation.<lb/>
quite independent of the<lb/>
Motown organization. The<lb/>
range and expertise of<lb/>
instruments played on this<lb/>
album by the artist is<lb/>
psychologically debilitat-<lb/>
ing, for he does everything<lb/>
from accompaniment on<lb/>
strings to the vocal tracks<lb/>
and almost all in between.<lb/>
Always, there are a lot<lb/>
of surprises thrown into<lb/>
the production of a Stevie<lb/>
Wonder album. The entire<lb/>
effort for this one was<lb/>
recorded and edited on a<lb/>
Sony PCM 1600 digital<lb/>
sound reproduction unit,<lb/>
which is reproduction<lb/>
completely without tape<lb/>
recorders. This method<lb/>
? liminates any of the<lb/>
noises usually associated<lb/>
with tapes and produces a<lb/>
cleaner, crisper sound. Ry<lb/>
Cooder and Fleetwood<lb/>
Mac have used this<lb/>
method on their last<lb/>
albums, both of which<lb/>
have been great commer-<lb/>
cial successes, and this<lb/>
digital method seems to be<lb/>
the wave of the future.<lb/>
Perhaps the theme of<lb/>
The Secret Life of Plants is<lb/>
for man to develop a more<lb/>
profound appreciation of<lb/>
the ecological relationship<lb/>
between plants and him-<lb/>
self. In turn, this enlight-i<lb/>
ened acknowledgment can<lb/>
perhaps foster a deeper<lb/>
understanding of the im-<lb/>
portance of replenishing<lb/>
our all too fragile environ<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
When man's techno-<lb/>
logy has gotten too big foH<lb/>
even our greatest minds to<lb/>
direct, it may prove to be<lb/>
his Armageddon, yet alas,<lb/>
from a tiny seed can a<lb/>
yvhole new world begin.<lb/>
Such is the strength of a<lb/>
mere plant, that it dwarfs<lb/>
man's greatest technolog-<lb/>
ical advances.<lb/>
In the las. words of the<lb/>
liner notes, Stevie Wonder<lb/>
thanks all who have so<lb/>
patiently yvaited for this<lb/>
accomplishment and hopes<lb/>
that his effort is worthy of<lb/>
the wait. All good things<lb/>
take time to develop<lb/>
properly.<lb/>
Stevie Wonder's Jour-<lb/>
ney Through The Secret<lb/>
Life of Plants is perhaps<lb/>
the greatest accomplish-<lb/>
ment of the most respect-<lb/>
ed performer in popular<lb/>
music and is destined to<lb/>
take it's proper place in<lb/>
the history of modern<lb/>
music.<lb/>
Photo Lab<lb/>
Photographer needed<lb/>
apply in the East Carolinian Office<lb/>
By RICHARD GREEN<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Halloween 1979 passed<lb/>
with almost every night-<lb/>
time establishment in<lb/>
downtown Greenville<lb/>
closed Wednesday night,<lb/>
but 1980 may break the<lb/>
four-year spell.<lb/>
The riot on Halloween<lb/>
night, 1975, in Greenville<lb/>
resulted in numerous ar-<lb/>
rests, property destruction<lb/>
and ultimately the ghost-<lb/>
town appearance of the<lb/>
downtown area on Hallo-<lb/>
ween night.<lb/>
Alleged causes of the<lb/>
riot vary, but nightclub<lb/>
owners generally agree<lb/>
that the reasons were a<lb/>
combination of non-com-<lb/>
munication and poor or-<lb/>
ganization of the Green-<lb/>
ville Police Department<lb/>
and the willful destruction<lb/>
of private property by the<lb/>
public.<lb/>
Nightclub owners met<lb/>
with the police to discuss a<lb/>
plan of action prior to the<lb/>
1975 riot, but when it<lb/>
actually happened, nothing<lb/>
went as planned. One<lb/>
example was the sug-<lb/>
gestion that owners keep<lb/>
people inside the clubs if<lb/>
trouble started. The Attic<lb/>
abided by that request<lb/>
only to have a tear gas<lb/>
canister thrown inside the<lb/>
club.<lb/>
The Halloween mora-<lb/>
torium began by orders of<lb/>
the police. The Greenville<lb/>
Nightclub Association has<lb/>
voluntarily continued the<lb/>
practice but not without<lb/>
pressure from the police.<lb/>
Halloween 1980 will<lb/>
fall on a Friday night, and<lb/>
many club owners say they<lb/>
will be open. Among them<lb/>
are the Attic, Sun Set,<lb/>
and the Rathskeller.<lb/>
The owners expect<lb/>
pressure from the city, but<lb/>
they agree that Halloween<lb/>
1975 should be tucked<lb/>
away in the history books<lb/>
where it belongs. Con-<lb/>
tinually canceling the fes-<lb/>
tive night only serves as a<lb/>
reminder of the freak riot.<lb/>
Patronize<lb/>
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JAZZ<lb/>
continued from page 5<lb/>
hues. Highlights included<lb/>
the mellifluous parquetry<lb/>
of marimba, vibraphone,<lb/>
acoustic bass and drums,<lb/>
deft segues between lyr-<lb/>
ical and percussive pas-<lb/>
sages and sensitive dia-<lb/>
logues among various<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057230_0008"/><lb/>
"he East Carolinian<lb/>
lianj m<lb/>
sports<lb/>
Thursday, November 8, 1979 Page 8<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
From winless Richmond<lb/>
Dy<lb/>
e expects<lb/>
'war'<lb/>
Theodore Sutton takes off against ASU<lb/>
(Photo by John Grogan)<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
One has to wonder if East Carolina football coach Pat<lb/>
Dye is really concerned about the Pirates' game this<lb/>
Saturday with winless Richmond.<lb/>
"You better believe I am said Dye. "I expect an<lb/>
all-out war<lb/>
Dye evidently based his statement on tradition rather<lb/>
than the present. The Spiders, 0-9 this season, have<lb/>
scored a measley 59 points all season. That translates to<lb/>
an average offensive output of 6.6 points per game.<lb/>
"They've had some rough breaks said Dye.<lb/>
"Actually, Richmond is a very capable football team<lb/>
with some very capable personnel<lb/>
Dye pointed to the Spiders 17-14 loss to Cincinnati<lb/>
several weeks ago when the Spiders had the ball on the<lb/>
Bearcats one-yard line late in the game but failed in two<lb/>
chances to get the ball across the goal line. "I'm not<lb/>
sure they didn't beat Cincinnati Dye noted. "I've seen<lb/>
the films and it looks like their guy scored both times<lb/>
The loss to Cincinnati was only one of many close<lb/>
defeats this season for the Spiders. They fell to<lb/>
Wyoming 9-7, West Virginia 20-18, and fumbled on the<lb/>
goal line with 1:20 left in the game in last week's 9-3<lb/>
loss to Villanova.<lb/>
So Dye is wary, and rightfully so, that this may just<lb/>
be the week that things fall into place for the Spiders.<lb/>
"One tremendous advantage they have Dye said,<lb/>
"is that they played awisJj.bone team in Villanova last<lb/>
week (the Pirates also run the wishbone attack). So<lb/>
they've had two weeks to prepare for us plus they got to<lb/>
get in a game scrimmage last week<lb/>
Some observers sav that a decision by the Richmond<lb/>
Board of Trustees later this week could have an effect<lb/>
on Saturday's matchup. The board will vote on whether<lb/>
to continue the football program.<lb/>
Dye said that either way the decision goes the<lb/>
Pirates will come out on the short end. "I certainly hope<lb/>
they keep football at Richmond he said. "If they do do<lb/>
away with it, their team will probably fight that last<lb/>
effort to prove that there should be a football program.<lb/>
If they keep it, they'll play hard in hopes of a continued<lb/>
program<lb/>
Pye pointed to the fact that in the past the Spiders<lb/>
had given the Pirates a tough time in the past. 'They<lb/>
gave us all we could handle last year (a 21-14 ECU<lb/>
win) he said. The coach is right. It took a late<lb/>
fourth-quarter drive by the Pirates to prevent a 14-14<lb/>
tie.<lb/>
The Spiders defeated the Pirates in 1974 and 1975,<lb/>
Dye's first two seasons at ECU, by scores of 28-20 and<lb/>
17-14.<lb/>
The sixth-year ECU mentor is also wary of the speed<lb/>
of the Spiders. In the backfield is sprinter Jesse<lb/>
Williams, who runs the 100-yard dash in 9.1 seconds.<lb/>
"Williams caused a lot of problems for us last year as<lb/>
did Short said Dye.<lb/>
"Short" is James Short, the Richmond split end who<lb/>
quarterbacked the club last season. "He gives them a<lb/>
great deal of speed at the end position Dye said.<lb/>
As for his own team, Dye said he was impressed by<lb/>
the performance of the defense over the last four games.<lb/>
"The first four games, when we went 1-3, we forced<lb/>
only four turnovers. The last four games (in which the<lb/>
Pirates went 3-0-1) we forced 16. Some led to scores.<lb/>
That definitely has been a big factor in some of the Dig<lb/>
scores that we have posted lately.<lb/>
dL-J2?<lb/>
Lady Bucs take a pair;<lb/>
end season even at 20-20<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE William and Mary 15-13,<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor 15-17, 15-4.<lb/>
Odom working on basics<lb/>
PIRATE ROUNBALL NOTES:<lb/>
Things are going along in a normal sort of way for<lb/>
the East Carolina basketball team, especially since the<lb/>
team is adjusting to a new coaching staff.<lb/>
"I'd say that right now we are a little behind the<lb/>
other college teams said new ECU head man Dave<lb/>
Odom. "This is because we have worked a great deal on<lb/>
fundamentals. This may hurt us some early but should<lb/>
really pay off as the season goes on<lb/>
Odom will unveil the Pirates to the public officially<lb/>
for the first time next Wednesday night when the team<lb/>
will hold a Purple-Gold intrasquad scrimmage game.<lb/>
The game will be preceded by a similar contest<lb/>
featuring the women's team.<lb/>
THE NEW COACH also invites all interested persons<lb/>
to show up at a Men's Residence Council-sponsored<lb/>
event next Tuesday night. Beginning at 7:00 p.m. the<lb/>
team will hold a brief scrimmage. Following the<lb/>
scrimmage, Odom will introduce the Pirate players to<lb/>
the assembled group before making a brief talk. The<lb/>
talk will be followed by a question-and-answer session,<lb/>
at which time Odom will entertain any questions that the<lb/>
audience may have.<lb/>
A WELL-KNOWN pre-season basketball publication<lb/>
has rated the ECU schedule "above average evidently<lb/>
citing tough road tests at Old Dominion, Duke,<lb/>
Maryland, Detroit, N.C. State, Oral Roberts and South<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
THE RAVES ARE coming in from Pirate players<lb/>
about their new coach already. Odom must definitely be<lb/>
a welcome change considering Larry Gillman was the<lb/>
coach at ECU for two long seasons.<lb/>
One player who should know what kind of coach<lb/>
Odom is, senior Herb Krusen, is impressed. "Coach<lb/>
Odom is really energetic said Krusen. "He's very<lb/>
emotional and gets involved in what you do. If you do<lb/>
something good, he jumps for joy. I'm really impressed<lb/>
and quite surprised at how well he knows the game of<lb/>
basketball. It's impressive to me that he knows so well<lb/>
what a big man should do in all situations<lb/>
Krusen said this pointing evidently to Odom's short<lb/>
frame. It would be interesting to place the coach and<lb/>
ex-N.C. State mighty-mite Monte Towe (who is 5-7)<lb/>
side-by-side and compare heights.<lb/>
PIRATE FANS WILL probably find one of the team's<lb/>
new recruits to be quite enjoyable to watch on the court.<lb/>
Tony Byles, a 6-4 transfer, has been quite impressive in<lb/>
practice and Must rate, at this point at least, to be the<lb/>
favorite to start at point guard when the Pirates begin<lb/>
their season on Nov. 30 in the Spider Classic.<lb/>
FOOTBALL NOTES:<lb/>
Carlton Nelson, the freshman quarterback who has<lb/>
been so impressive to ECU coach Pat Dye, continues to<lb/>
thrill his coach. In a scrimmage featuring freshmen that<lb/>
was held last week, Nelson was superb in running the<lb/>
ECU option attack. He also connected with split end<lb/>
Reggie Harden on two long touchdown passes.<lb/>
"Carlton did some things last week that were<lb/>
incredible said Dye. "Right now, I'd have to say he's<lb/>
better than any quarterback that we've ever had at that<lb/>
stage<lb/>
IT WAS EVIDENT at Dye's Wednesday press<lb/>
conference that the Pirate coach is certainly not giving<lb/>
up hopes that his team may get a poet-season bowl bid.<lb/>
When the NCAIAW<lb/>
Volleyball Tournament o-<lb/>
pens Friday at North<lb/>
Carolina State University,<lb/>
coach Alita Dillon and her<lb/>
Lady Pirates will be<lb/>
starting a new season.<lb/>
Well, almost.<lb/>
The Lady Bucs closed<lb/>
out their regular season<lb/>
Tuesday evening in Min-<lb/>
ges Coliseum with a pair<lb/>
of wins to even their<lb/>
record at 20-20 in 1979.<lb/>
"We're pleased about<lb/>
that Dillon said. "It<lb/>
helps to have two wins<lb/>
going into the state<lb/>
tournament<lb/>
ECU easily defeated<lb/>
Pembroke State 15-9, 15-6<lb/>
in the final match of the<lb/>
evening, but narrowly<lb/>
defeated the Indians of<lb/>
"The main thing that<lb/>
has been inconsistent for<lb/>
us has been our serving<lb/>
said Dillon. "We had<lb/>
some mental errors on<lb/>
positioning, but the serv-<lb/>
ing worries me the most.<lb/>
"I think they knew that<lb/>
it (William and Mary)<lb/>
would probably be a good<lb/>
match. That certainly was<lb/>
our better match of the<lb/>
night<lb/>
The Pirates trailed<lb/>
William and Mary 6-2 in<lb/>
the opening game of the<lb/>
match but struggled back<lb/>
to a 6-6 knot before again<lb/>
lapsing to a margin of<lb/>
10-6.<lb/>
The hard hitting of<lb/>
spikers Sharon Perry,<lb/>
Stacey Weitzel and Judith<lb/>
Ausherman enabled the<lb/>
Lady Bucs to retaliate and<lb/>
claim victory.<lb/>
"We showed confi-<lb/>
dence in our offense<lb/>
Dillon offered. "We don't<lb/>
panic anymore in close<lb/>
games.<lb/>
"I think Yvette (Lewis)<lb/>
has been faily consistent<lb/>
serving for us. Our<lb/>
passing and hitting was<lb/>
decent, but nothing spec-<lb/>
tacular. I guess you could<lb/>
say we played well enough<lb/>
to win<lb/>
Team spirit and atti-<lb/>
tude has taken a turn for<lb/>
the better in recent<lb/>
matches, and senior de-<lb/>
fensive standout Joy<lb/>
Forbes credits the team's<lb/>
play in the recent Univer-<lb/>
sity of Maryland Invi-<lb/>
tational Tournament<lb/>
that boost.<lb/>
for<lb/>
"We really played well<lb/>
at Maryland said<lb/>
Forbes, who is also a 800<lb/>
meter runner for the<lb/>
women's track team. "We<lb/>
got off to a real slow start<lb/>
at the first of the season. I<lb/>
wasn't really surprised<lb/>
though, because I knew<lb/>
that we would be re-<lb/>
building.<lb/>
"I knew we'd come<lb/>
around, so I wasn't really<lb/>
worried. We feel a lot<lb/>
more confident now after<lb/>
finishing with a few wins<lb/>
and playing so well in<lb/>
Maryland.<lb/>
"Our record is not real<lb/>
great, but we know we can<lb/>
beat teams like State and<lb/>
Carolina when we play<lb/>
well<lb/>
(Photo by Kip Sloan)<lb/>
(L-R) Duncan hits; Perry, Lewis set<lb/>
Coach Praises consistency<lb/>
Inman still the kid after three years<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
He can be considered the kid on the block.<lb/>
In his fourth year with the East Carolina Pirates,<lb/>
guard Wayne Inman ranks as the only member of the<lb/>
offensive line who will return to battle when the 1980<lb/>
season rolls around.<lb/>
Inman joined ECU head coach Pat Dye and his<lb/>
troops after a successful career at South View High<lb/>
School in Hope Mills, but the 6-3, 242-pound blocker is<lb/>
yet another example of the talent which other colleges<lb/>
passed up by not recruiting.<lb/>
Wayne Inman<lb/>
The veteran-dominated line has enabled the Bucs to<lb/>
earn a ranking, of fourth in the nation in rushing offense<lb/>
and seventh in total offense.<lb/>
"I love it he emphatically states. "Everytime they<lb/>
(running backs) get recognition, I know everybody's got<lb/>
to look at the offensive line and think- how well were<lb/>
opening the holes.<lb/>
"The backs we have running the ball are something<lb/>
special. Blocking for them is exciting. I want to have a<lb/>
good block every play because you never know which<lb/>
one can go all the way and win a game for us. They can<lb/>
break any play for a touchdown<lb/>
Indeed they can. So far the Pirate backfield has<lb/>
accounted for 32 touchdowns.<lb/>
"It makes us (linemen) feel real good to see Anthony<lb/>
Collins rated second nationally in yards per carry said<lb/>
Inman. "The ball carriers really appreaate what we do<lb/>
up front, and that makes if fun to really take care of<lb/>
them as best we can<lb/>
The backfield through eight games has averaged 443<lb/>
yards per game behind the blocking of Inman and<lb/>
company. Offensive back caoch Ken Hutcherson<lb/>
appreciates the value of a Rood block.<lb/>
"The offensive line deserves the credit for any<lb/>
success we've had on offense this year said<lb/>
Hutcherson. 'They've really done a fine job. I think the<lb/>
backs ought to bow down and thank them everyday in<lb/>
practice<lb/>
Three members of the ECU backfield (quarterback<lb/>
Leander Green, fullback Theodore Sutton and running<lb/>
back Anthony Collins) already boast career rushing<lb/>
totals over 1000 yards and senior running back Sam<lb/>
Harrell needs only 173 yards to reach that plateau.<lb/>
"Early in the year, Theodore wasn't getting to carry<lb/>
up the middle as much as he did last year explained<lb/>
Inman. "The wishbone is a type of offense where you<lb/>
have to take what the defense is giving. They were<lb/>
playing strong up the middle, so we went outside and<lb/>
Anthony rolled up a lot of yardage.<lb/>
"It makes me happy that he (Collins) has done so<lb/>
well because he runs to the right behind me and Matt<lb/>
(Mulholland) a me ana mat<lb/>
Inman expressed displeasure with the performance of<lb/>
the Pirates against the 'Big Four but added that the<lb/>
team was still not out of the bowl picture.<lb/>
"State has had a lot of problems on defense since we<lb/>
played there he said. ' James Butler hurt us worse<lb/>
than anyone else on their team. He can up with the big<lb/>
play at the start of the second half that turned the game<lb/>
around. He went out with a knee injury in the fourth<lb/>
quarter and he's out for the season; that's the way it's<lb/>
been for them.<lb/>
"Wake Forest is when we really ime together as a<lb/>
team. They just beat us.<lb/>
"The Duke game is a nightmare he lamented. "It<lb/>
sort of makes me sick to think aoout it. We gave them<lb/>
21 points turning the ball over deep in their territory<lb/>
Praise from a coach comes seldom in the duration of<lb/>
a college football player, so when the praise comes from<lb/>
the person that held the position for three years before<lb/>
the flayer-entered ECU, it just adds more satisfaction.<lb/>
He's been our most consistant lineman all season<lb/>
lauded Wayne Bolt, former All-Southern Conference<lb/>
lineman and now assistant offensive line coach. "He<lb/>
does it all; he blocks well on running plays and passing<lb/>
plays. You can single him out every week in the game<lb/>
films for efforts. He just gets the job done week in and<lb/>
week out.<lb/>
"He was an All-South Independent lineman last year<lb/>
and I m sure he will be again this year<lb/>
Is it difficult for Wayne Inman being the onl<lb/>
married player on the ECU football team?<lb/>
'It doesn't pose any problem for me he said. "Ii<lb/>
takes a lot of discipline, though. My wife is a big help tc<lb/>
me; she takes care of me when Pm hurting anc<lb/>
encourages me, too.<lb/>
"I'm a family person. We both really ehjoy having<lb/>
the family around for the games and going home witE<lb/>
them afterwards.<lb/>
Inman remains optomistic about the Pirates' chanced<lb/>
of being selected for a bowl even though the season<lb/>
record of 4-3-1 dims the outlook.<lb/>
"We need to win the next three games and we neec<lb/>
to win them big he savs. "Bowl scouts look for team,<lb/>
who can put points on the board and that's what we've<lb/>
got to do. Our record is not that had<lb/>
t<lb/>
)<lb/>
<pb facs="00057230_0009"/><lb/>
8 November 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Page 9<lb/>
The Fearless Football Forecast<lb/>
RICHMOND AT ECU<lb/>
ALABAMA AT LSU<lb/>
ARIZONA STATE AT UCLA<lb/>
CLEMSON AT NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
DUKE AT WAKE FOREST<lb/>
GEORGIA AT FLORIDA<lb/>
SOUTH CAROLINA AT FLORIDA STATE<lb/>
TEXAS AT HOUSTON<lb/>
MICHIGAN AT PURDUE<lb/>
PENN STATE AT N.C. STATE<lb/>
NOTRE DAME AT TENNESSEE<lb/>
SOUTHERN CAL AT WASHINGTON<lb/>
Rejects racial barbs<lb/>
CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
(73-33-2)<lb/>
ECU 56-7<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
South Carolina<lb/>
Texas<lb/>
Purdue<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Southern Cal<lb/>
Dr. J in new movie<lb/>
By WILL GRIMSLEY<lb/>
IP Special Correspondent<lb/>
Julius "Dr. J" Erving<lb/>
more amused than<lb/>
chagrined at some of the<lb/>
iemaning barbs, largely<lb/>
lal, aimed at the<lb/>
staining aspects of<lb/>
essional basketball.<lb/>
One of the most widely<lb/>
ulated goes like this:<lb/>
Pro basketball is 10 black<lb/>
n leaping for a ball<lb/>
ry 24 seconds. Another<lb/>
- that if you tune in on a<lb/>
:ne in the last 10<lb/>
minutes, you don't miss a<lb/>
thing.<lb/>
NEw York newspapers<lb/>
have publicly explored the<lb/>
suggestion that declining<lb/>
attendance at Madison<lb/>
Square Garden may be<lb/>
attributable to the fact that<lb/>
the Knicks are all black,<lb/>
with no Bill Bradley or<lb/>
Dave DeBusschere woven<lb/>
into the ranks.<lb/>
"Ridiculous retorts<lb/>
Dr. J, one of the sport's<lb/>
premier talents, now with<lb/>
the Philadelphia 76ers.<lb/>
'The game transcends<lb/>
color. When the ball drops<lb/>
into the net from 20 feet<lb/>
out, nobody thinks of the<lb/>
color of the man who<lb/>
tossed it.<lb/>
Articulate, poised, sans<lb/>
hangjups and crusading<lb/>
tendencies, Erving came<lb/>
to New York earlier this<lb/>
week not to indulge in or<lb/>
espouse the merits of his<lb/>
profession but to kick off a<lb/>
new movie in which he has<lb/>
a starring role, "The Fish<lb/>
THat Saved Pittsburgh .<lb/>
It opened Tuesday<lb/>
night at a chain of<lb/>
theaters.<lb/>
"It's a delightful mus-<lb/>
ical comedy?colorful, wit-<lb/>
ty, youth oriented with a<lb/>
basketball theme the<lb/>
76ers' star said. "The<lb/>
music is catchy. Others in<lb/>
the cast are Jonathan<lb/>
Winters, Flip Wilson,<lb/>
James Bond III and<lb/>
Meadlowlark Lemon. I<lb/>
have a serious role with a<lb/>
love interest. It's all built<lb/>
around a team on which<lb/>
every member was born<lb/>
under the astrological sign<lb/>
of pisces fish<lb/>
It is easy to understand<lb/>
why Lorimar Productions<lb/>
chose Dr. J. He radiates<lb/>
the kind of charisma out<lb/>
of which stars are born.<lb/>
A product of Roosevelt,<lb/>
Long Island, he attended<lb/>
the University of Mas-<lb/>
sachusetts and in 1971 at<lb/>
age 21 joined the Virginia<lb/>
Squires of the old Amer-<lb/>
ican Basketball Associ-<lb/>
ation. For the next six<lb/>
years he became the<lb/>
center of franchise battles<lb/>
and multimillion dollar<lb/>
suits involving the<lb/>
Squires, Atlanta Hawks<lb/>
and Milwaukee Bucks.<lb/>
Finally he landed with<lb/>
the New York Nets, who<lb/>
subsequently traded him<lb/>
to the 76ers in a $2.5<lb/>
million deal.<lb/>
Dr. J, no longer<lb/>
wearing braces on his<lb/>
fragile knees, has fixed a<lb/>
timetable for his retire-<lb/>
ment?in 1982 at the<lb/>
conclusion of his present<lb/>
:ontract. He will be 32.<lb/>
"I have been preparing<lb/>
a business portfolio he<lb/>
said. "I don't care about<lb/>
going into the movies or<lb/>
becoming a TV commen-<lb/>
tator<lb/>
TERRY HERNDON<lb/>
(67-39-2)<lb/>
ECU 49-3<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
Florida State<lb/>
Houston<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
Tennessee<lb/>
Washington<lb/>
JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
(66-40-2)<lb/>
ECU 45-7<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Florida<lb/>
Florida State<lb/>
Houston<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Southern Cal<lb/>
classified<lb/>
toric<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1978 Yamaha<lb/>
500 special. 2020 miles,<lb/>
excellent condition. Black<lb/>
with gold stripes matching<lb/>
bike trailer. 1978 model<lb/>
comes with helment and<lb/>
color. $1600. Contact<lb/>
Brownie N. Meekins at<lb/>
946-1331, 6-5 and after 5<lb/>
p.m. call 946-8212.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sanyo Refri-<lb/>
gerator dorm size, Smith<lb/>
Corona Electric Cartridge<lb/>
typewriter with case. Both<lb/>
in very good condition.<lb/>
Prices Negotiable. Call<lb/>
Greg, 752-6163.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Bayley full-<lb/>
length wetsuit with boots<lb/>
&amp; gloves, used 10 times,<lb/>
like new, $100 firm. Call<lb/>
758-2585 or 757-6366,<lb/>
Richard Green.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1976 Datsun<lb/>
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miles. Matalic blue. Ex-<lb/>
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FOR SALE: Telescope<lb/>
Jason 280 power. Like<lb/>
new. $85. Call: Katrina at<lb/>
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NEED X-TRA CASH: Fair<lb/>
prices paid for gold and<lb/>
silver and silver coins.<lb/>
Mixed Media. 120 E. 5th<lb/>
St. Phone 758-2127.<lb/>
CLIP AND SAVE: This<lb/>
number for the times you<lb/>
need typing done. Term<lb/>
papers, thesis, resume's,<lb/>
etc. 756-1461.<lb/>
TYPING DONE: Term<lb/>
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FEMALE ROOMMATE:<lb/>
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apartment. Phone 752-<lb/>
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DAVE ODOM<lb/>
ECU Basketball Coach<lb/>
ECU 42-7<lb/>
LSU<lb/>
Arizona State<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Florida<lb/>
Florida State<lb/>
Houston<lb/>
Purdue<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Southern Cal<lb/>
RICH BRENNER<lb/>
Sports Director - WRAL-TV<lb/>
ECU 49-7<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
Florida State<lb/>
Houston<lb/>
Purdue<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Tennessee<lb/>
Southern Cal<lb/>
CLIP COUPON<lb/>
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Expires: November30.1979<lb/>
CLIP COUPON<lb/>
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Corner of 10th &amp; Evans St.<lb/>
Open 24 Hours<lb/>
CALL US FOR ALL YOUR PARTY NEEDS Wl<lb/>
HAVE DELIVERY &amp; CATERING SERVICES I<lb/>
752-6303 or 752-5933 <lb/>
WE SUPPORT THE PIRATES j<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057230_0010"/><lb/>
10 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 8 November 1979<lb/>
ECU stomps Spiders, 2-1<lb/>
By DAVE SEVERIN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Second half goals by<lb/>
Mike Lawrence and Jeff<lb/>
Karpovich overcame an<lb/>
early 1-0 deficit as the<lb/>
ECU Soccer team bea the<lb/>
University of Richmond<lb/>
2-1 at the Spiders' home<lb/>
turf.<lb/>
The Pirates took con-<lb/>
trol of the game early but<lb/>
a violation in the penalty<lb/>
area resulted in an penalty<lb/>
kick with less that five<lb/>
minutes elapsed. Steve<lb/>
Poole drilled it through for<lb/>
the Spiders and they led<lb/>
1-0.<lb/>
"We were in control of<lb/>
the game all the way but<lb/>
with the poor condition of<lb/>
the field, we couldn't put<lb/>
the ball through said<lb/>
Coach Brad Smith.<lb/>
"The rain definitely<lb/>
was a factor. There was a<lb/>
lot of sloppy play at the<lb/>
beginning of the game<lb/>
because we weren't used<lb/>
to such poor playing<lb/>
conditions. It had rained<lb/>
all day and all during the<lb/>
game and it made the field<lb/>
extremely muddy<lb/>
Even with the Pirates<lb/>
in control of the game,<lb/>
they still found themselves<lb/>
trailing by one goal at the<lb/>
end of the half.<lb/>
The Pirates came out<lb/>
in the second half and<lb/>
dominated the Spiders. On<lb/>
a corner-kick by Brad<lb/>
Winchell, Lawrence put<lb/>
the ball in the net on an<lb/>
assist from Karpovich,<lb/>
who later added the<lb/>
winning goal when he<lb/>
stole the ball from a<lb/>
Richmond defender and<lb/>
beat the goalie one-on-<lb/>
one.<lb/>
"I was pleased with<lb/>
ouq play today. We played<lb/>
under a constant down-<lb/>
pour, and adapted well to<lb/>
the muddy field<lb/>
But the most impres-<lb/>
sive thing was that the<lb/>
firates were playing with-<lb/>
out two of their starters.<lb/>
"Chip (Baker) and Phil<lb/>
(Martin) didn't even make<lb/>
the trtp to Richmond. Chip<lb/>
broke his foot last week<lb/>
and will be out for the rest<lb/>
of the season. Phil severe-<lb/>
ly sprained his ankle and<lb/>
will be out indefinitely<lb/>
But Coach Smith found<lb/>
some surprises when he<lb/>
turned to his younger<lb/>
players for help.<lb/>
"I was extremely<lb/>
pleased with our younger<lb/>
players. Calvin Mangum,<lb/>
who is a freshman, came<lb/>
off the bench and played<lb/>
an exceptional game.<lb/>
Sophomore Howard Bei-<lb/>
mus and junior Mike<lb/>
Hitcock played well, also.<lb/>
"Then there's Mike<lb/>
Lawrence. He was really<lb/>
our reserve goalie but he<lb/>
went out there on the<lb/>
front line and played very<lb/>
well<lb/>
The win brought the<lb/>
Pirates' record to 5-10-2; a<lb/>
definite improvement from<lb/>
last year.<lb/>
Sports Writers<lb/>
Needed<lb/>
Call: 757-6309<lb/>
Mike Hitchcock in ECU soccer action<lb/>
Premier Saturday on WNCT-TV<lb/>
Lady Pirates get coach's show<lb/>
DRm-raWf BEVEnAGE STORE<lb/>
ON THE CORNER OF CHARLES &amp; 14th ST.<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
By JIMMY DUPREE<lb/>
Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
It's been a while since<lb/>
women's basketball at<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
featured six players, with<lb/>
two remaining on each end<lb/>
throughout a game.<lb/>
In those days, players<lb/>
were short and were<lb/>
expected to play with<lb/>
grace and dignity instead<lb/>
of fire and determination.<lb/>
Up until the arrival of<lb/>
second year head coach<lb/>
Cathy Andruzzi, ECU had<lb/>
never had a full-time<lb/>
coach; certainly not a<lb/>
full-time assistant.<lb/>
But times change; sit-<lb/>
uations change; and the<lb/>
game of women's basket-<lb/>
ball has certainly under-<lb/>
gone a multitude of<lb/>
changes.<lb/>
The 1979 season adds a<lb/>
new outlook to the Lady<lb/>
Pirate scene. There are<lb/>
new players, but perhaps<lb/>
the most unusual addition<lb/>
will be "The Cathy<lb/>
Andruzzi Show the first<lb/>
women's basketball co-<lb/>
aches show in North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
The show premiers this<lb/>
Saturday at 3:30 p.m. on<lb/>
WNCT-TV (channel 9),<lb/>
with sports director Jim<lb/>
Woods as commentator.<lb/>
"It's an important<lb/>
innovation said Woods.<lb/>
"I think certainly it will<lb/>
help the program with<lb/>
regards to publicity and<lb/>
exposure. It will give the<lb/>
general public the idea<lb/>
that women's basketball is<lb/>
here<lb/>
The show will feature<lb/>
highlights of past games<lb/>
and the outlook of up-<lb/>
coming games. Player<lb/>
interviews along with<lb/>
'hidden' aspects of the<lb/>
ATiTIC<lb/>
N.C. No. r<lb/>
see East Carolina.<lb/>
"Anytime we're on TV,<lb/>
East Carolina University is<lb/>
on TV and gets ex-<lb/>
posure Andruzzi added.<lb/>
"That helps every pro-<lb/>
gram we have here at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
"We want people to<lb/>
see that the game is no<lb/>
longer plaved with six on<lb/>
the floor for each team;<lb/>
that the game has pro-<lb/>
gressed. We want them to<lb/>
see that women's basket-<lb/>
ball players today are<lb/>
strong, skilled athletes<lb/>
Featured guests on the<lb/>
first show will be ECU<lb/>
all-time scoring leader<lb/>
Rosie Thompson and<lb/>
junior college transfer<lb/>
Laurie Sikes.<lb/>
"We plan to have'<lb/>
everyone on the team on<lb/>
at some time or another<lb/>
explained Andruzzi, a<lb/>
native of Staten Island,<lb/>
N.Y. "People will see the<lb/>
girls at home in the dorm<lb/>
and around campus as<lb/>
well as on the court. This<lb/>
helps their enthusiasm on<lb/>
the court, also<lb/>
Andruzzi<lb/>
will<lb/>
basketball program<lb/>
add depth to the format.<lb/>
Andruzzi is excited and<lb/>
proud that ECU has the<lb/>
first show, but that pride<lb/>
is not selfish.<lb/>
"We're not excited<lb/>
about it because we beat<lb/>
out Carolina and State.<lb/>
We know it will help all<lb/>
the programs in the area.<lb/>
We are competitive, but<lb/>
we are competitive with<lb/>
class<lb/>
"It will possibly be one<lb/>
of the few women's<lb/>
coaches' shows on a major<lb/>
television station in the<lb/>
nation said Andruzzi.<lb/>
"Hopefully we'll be set-<lb/>
ting a trend<lb/>
"We won't just be<lb/>
helping the growth of<lb/>
women's basketball at<lb/>
East Carolina, but<lb/>
women's basketball every-<lb/>
where. It's going to help<lb/>
high school girls' basket-<lb/>
ball program and let them<lb/>
ACCOUNTING AND<lb/>
FINANCE MAJORS<lb/>
FT US HE LP YOU PLAT<lb/>
4f AD TO BE COME A ?<lb/>
Our successful students represent<lb/>
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novemB?R 8,1979 ? 8.00 p.m.<lb/>
nenftRix theatpe ? east CaaotifU. Univepsity<lb/>
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ATTENTION: Music Appreciation Students receive double credit for .Mending.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057230_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>