<?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="00057235_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/>
?<lb/>
Vol. 54 No. ?S<lb/>
14 pages today<lb/>
Tuesday, 4 December 1979<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
66<lb/>
Tve had a tremendous amount of fun coaching at ECU .probably<lb/>
more than I will have anywhere else. Everybody here is so hungry-<lb/>
the players, students andfansto win. It's a great feeling to go places<lb/>
like Carolina as underdogs, yet knowing that your people really believe<lb/>
that you 'regoing to win p<lb/>
Dye resignation a shocking blow<lb/>
Internal problems cited as main cause<lb/>
(Photo by Chap Gurley)<lb/>
Brewer responds at Scott<lb/>
By TERRY GRAY<lb/>
Assistant .ews Editor<lb/>
In an informal question and answer session at Scott<lb/>
dormitory Monday night. Chancellor Brewer said that he<lb/>
expected the North Carolina General Assembly would<lb/>
wait until the 1981 Fall session to raise tuition rates in<lb/>
the state's university system, but that an increase in<lb/>
student fees might come sooner.<lb/>
Brewer said that he was "very much afraid that<lb/>
we're going to go up in fees. Our fees have remained at<lb/>
the same level for several years, with the exception of<lb/>
parking fees, but student organizations such as the<lb/>
Student Union, the SGA and the Transit Authority all<lb/>
want more money<lb/>
A group of approximately 35 students questioned the<lb/>
chancellor on a wide range of topics during the hour and<lb/>
a half meeting, which was arranged by the Scott House<lb/>
Council.<lb/>
Referring to the possible fee increase, Brewer said<lb/>
that the administration "would like to avoid having fees<lb/>
and tuition go up in the same year<lb/>
On the topic of the WECU-FM radio station, whose<lb/>
construction permit is currently pending before the<lb/>
Federal Communications Commission, the chancellor<lb/>
mentioned his support while offering suggetions on the<lb/>
station's format.<lb/>
Brewer said that he thought the station should not<lb/>
rely too heavily on album rock or on classical music, as<lb/>
See BREWER, page 6<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
After leading the East Carolina football team to six<lb/>
straight seasons, including a win in the 1978<lb/>
Independence Bowl, Pirate head coach Pat Dye shocked<lb/>
the city of Greenville and the ECU community when he<lb/>
announced his resignation last Thursday.<lb/>
Dye immediately became the leading candidate for<lb/>
the N.C. State head coaching job, recently vacated by<lb/>
Bo Rein, who accepted the head job at Louisiana State<lb/>
Friday.<lb/>
Dve met with the N.C. State selection committee last<lb/>
night and said yesterday that he expected to know<lb/>
something definite about his chances of moving to<lb/>
Raleigh sometime this week.<lb/>
Should Dye not be selected for the Wolfpack job, he<lb/>
will reportedly accept a similar position at the University<lb/>
of Wvoming. The Cowboys are members of the Western<lb/>
Athletic Conference. The program at Wyoming is<lb/>
supposedly on the rise, with millions of dollars being<lb/>
pumped into it by supporters.<lb/>
Dye's success at ECU has been phenomenal. Many<lb/>
students, in fact, look at him as sort of a "living<lb/>
legend" His record over his six-year tenure is 48-18-1.<lb/>
Since his ECU career began in J974, the Pirates have<lb/>
gone 7-4, 8-3, 9-2, 8-3, 9-3, and 7-3-1.<lb/>
His personal tenacity for the game is regarded highly<lb/>
by others, and reflected by his players, as evidenced by<lb/>
the fact that the 1979 team fought back from a 1-3 mark<lb/>
to end up 7-3-1.<lb/>
Dve announced his resignation at a hastily called<lb/>
press conference in Scales Field House. He said at the<lb/>
time that he had known for some time that he would be<lb/>
leaving ECU.<lb/>
"I think it is in the best interests for me and East<lb/>
Carolina University if I resign now Dye said. "I've<lb/>
known since the first of the season that I probably<lb/>
wouldn't be back<lb/>
Dve did not say so at the conference but la<lb/>
revealed that internal problem- had been th<lb/>
his resignation.<lb/>
The head coach and his athletii director, Bill (.am.<lb/>
have had their conflicts in the pasl tnd it was these<lb/>
conflicts that led to Dye- resignation.<lb/>
"At one time Dye -aid. "I coul<lb/>
myself staying at East Carolina for 10 to 15<lb/>
the school and could see us continuing to build up the<lb/>
program, helping it grow<lb/>
Dve said that finances were not a problem at h!<lb/>
"I could be financially secure here he said. "I could<lb/>
have left any year that I was hero. Just last year,<lb/>
Mississippi State made a very lucrativi r and<lb/>
evervone ? my staff, my family ? wanted I ? up<lb/>
and go. Every year I always looked for a g ison to<lb/>
stay.<lb/>
"This time he continued, "1 didn't oven bother. 1<lb/>
knew I couldn't be enthusiastic like 1 was in the past. 1<lb/>
knew I needed a change of scenery. a new challenge.<lb/>
The reason- why Dye needed thi<lb/>
go back to hit conflicts with Cain. For example, the<lb/>
head coach 'omplained constantly of the Pirate<lb/>
schedule, which included home games again no-name<lb/>
opponents.<lb/>
"We need to get some big people to day in Fieklen<lb/>
Stadium he said. "We need South Carolina, Wake<lb/>
Forest, Duke or somebody like that to come in here. Our<lb/>
plavers deserve this much<lb/>
Two unrelated incidents also seemed to verify Dj<lb/>
beliefs that he should leave ECU. In 1978 he submitted<lb/>
the budget for the upcoming season to Cain. The<lb/>
athletic director then cut the budget by S30,000 -<lb/>
Dve, without informing him of the move. Dye -aid Cain<lb/>
then handed this to the school's athletic committee<lb/>
See DYE RESIGNS, page 14<lb/>
REAL student volunteers<lb/>
negotiate increased bill<lb/>
Violence spreads to Puerto Rico<lb/>
Servicemen ambushed<lb/>
By LUIS R. MATOS<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
PUERTO RICO (AP)-<lb/>
Unidentified gunmen am-<lb/>
bushed a busload of U.S.<lb/>
Navy personnel this mor-<lb/>
ning in a barrage of pistol<lb/>
and shotgun fire, killing<lb/>
two servicemen and<lb/>
wounding 10 other per-<lb/>
sons, authorities reported.<lb/>
The wounded included<lb/>
three women. One of the<lb/>
women and two or three of<lb/>
the men were hospitalized<lb/>
in serious condition.<lb/>
No one claimed im-<lb/>
mediate responsibility for<lb/>
the attack, the First fatal<lb/>
assault against the U.S.<lb/>
military in Puerto Rico in<lb/>
almost a decade. Violence<lb/>
by underground pro-inde-<lb/>
pendence groups generally<lb/>
has been limited to attacks<lb/>
on property.<lb/>
Rear Adm. Arthur K.<lb/>
Knoizen, senior U.S. naval<lb/>
officer in the Carribbean,<lb/>
called it a "heinous crime<lb/>
we cannot tolerate<lb/>
The Navy said names<lb/>
of the victims were being<lb/>
withheld until next-of-kin<lb/>
could be notified. But local<lb/>
authorities said the two<lb/>
dead men were the bus<lb/>
driver and a radar tech-<lb/>
nician.<lb/>
The attack occurred at<lb/>
6:20 a.m. 5:20 EST as the<lb/>
servicemen were riding to<lb/>
work at a naval commun-<lb/>
ications facility in Toa<lb/>
Baja, 10 miles west of San<lb/>
Juan on Puerto Rico's<lb/>
north coast, in a yellow<lb/>
school bus with Navy<lb/>
markings, said Lt. Steve<lb/>
Chesser, public affairs<lb/>
officer at the Navy's<lb/>
Roosevelt Roads Naval<lb/>
Base.<lb/>
He said none of those<lb/>
on the Navy bus was<lb/>
armed. Police said the<lb/>
attackers abandoned their<lb/>
vehicle, a white van, not<lb/>
for from the scene of the<lb/>
attack, and apparently fled<lb/>
on foot. Police forces<lb/>
spead out through the area<lb/>
in search of the fleeing<lb/>
terrorists, a police spokes-<lb/>
man said.<lb/>
Small pro-independ-<lb/>
ence groups have bombed<lb/>
federal facilities and<lb/>
ranches of mainland banks<lb/>
in the bast, but such<lb/>
attacks have usually oc-<lb/>
curred in the hours<lb/>
between midnight and<lb/>
dawn, and there had been<lb/>
See ATTACK, page 6<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The Student Volunteers for REAL<lb/>
received a $600 appropriation at the SGA<lb/>
meeting on Monday.<lb/>
The bill was written by SGA President<lb/>
Brett Melvin, who had vetoed a similar<lb/>
bill after the last SGA meeting. The first<lb/>
bill had asked for a 1400 appropriation.<lb/>
The money was to be appropriated for<lb/>
such things as Student Counselor training<lb/>
and publicity for the center.<lb/>
Melvin had vetoed the previous bill<lb/>
because the money would have gone<lb/>
directly to the center and not the student<lb/>
organization involved in the center. He<lb/>
also cited that there were organizations on<lb/>
campus which offered the same services.<lb/>
However, Michele O'Bard, president<lb/>
of Student Counselor training at REAL,<lb/>
said that the center is different from<lb/>
on-campus organizations because they<lb/>
offer 24-hour hotline and counseling<lb/>
services, while on campus the student<lb/>
must have an appointment. She also<lb/>
pointed out that the counseling given at<lb/>
REAL was confidential, while that offered<lb/>
on campus often was not.<lb/>
The center also offers to come to the<lb/>
person in an emergency.<lb/>
When asked to estimate the number of<lb/>
students the center helps during the year,<lb/>
O'Bard cited a figure of 45 percent.<lb/>
The bill was passed with a clear<lb/>
majority of the SGA.<lb/>
The legislators also passed a bill which<lb/>
was meant to compliment Head Football<lb/>
Coach Pat Dye. The bill reads:<lb/>
WHEREAS: Pat Dye has been one of<lb/>
the most successful coaches in the history<lb/>
of East Carolina University and in addition<lb/>
one of the most successful coaches in the<lb/>
nation,<lb/>
WHEREAS: He has provided out-<lb/>
standing service and provided nationwide<lb/>
recognition to ECU and to the city of<lb/>
Greenville and all of Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina, and his presence will be missed<lb/>
greatly,<lb/>
BE IT THEREFORE RESOLVED: It is<lb/>
with sincere gratitude that we wish him<lb/>
the best of luck and the most success<lb/>
possible in the future. Unless he goes to<lb/>
State.<lb/>
After the meeting, some of the<lb/>
legislators seemed to regret passing the<lb/>
bill in this form, but the bill was passed<lb/>
by acclamation.<lb/>
Doug White presented a bill before the<lb/>
legislature for a new organization, to be<lb/>
known as SAVAK: Students Allied for a<lb/>
Victory Against Khomeini. White was<lb/>
asking for no funding, only for recognition<lb/>
of the organization by the SGA.<lb/>
The motion failed by an 18 for, 19<lb/>
against and 4 abstention vote.<lb/>
The legislature also passed a<lb/>
resolution to try to begin a student book<lb/>
exchange.<lb/>
See SGA, page 6<lb/>
For the second time this<lb/>
year, Brett Melvin helped<lb/>
a bill overcome his oun<lb/>
veto.<lb/>
Special Insert Today-Pirate Basketball '7980<lb/>
1<lb/>
n ? t ? " - - - - ? ?"<lb/>
r jr r - i-<lb/>
jt ? T.?.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057235_0002"/><lb/>
Page 2 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 4 December 1979<lb/>
People,<lb/>
places,<lb/>
arid<lb/>
I sit ! i 4-li club<lb/>
Students who are in-<lb/>
terested in applying for<lb/>
positions on the student<lb/>
residence hall staff for<lb/>
summer or next fall should<lb/>
file their applications be-<lb/>
tween now and Jan. 31. To<lb/>
be eligible for this em-<lb/>
ployment, a student<lb/>
should be enrolled full-<lb/>
time and have a real<lb/>
interest in residence hall<lb/>
living. Hall advisors are<lb/>
paid for two hours of work<lb/>
each day. Monday-Thurs-<lb/>
day, and have duty every<lb/>
other weekend.<lb/>
Application forms are<lb/>
available in the directors'<lb/>
offices or in the Residence<lb/>
Life office, 214 Whichard<lb/>
Building. All applications<lb/>
should be turned in to the<lb/>
Residence Life office.<lb/>
i ? K ct<lb/>
All members interested<lb/>
in participating in the<lb/>
Christmas project at Uni-<lb/>
versity Nursing Home<lb/>
should meet in the lobbv<lb/>
of Belk Building at 3:4b<lb/>
p.m. on December 3. For<lb/>
more information contact<lb/>
one of the advisors in the<lb/>
social work department.<lb/>
ittf i?li? i ?<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Major Attractions Com-<lb/>
mittee will meet Mon<lb/>
Dec. 3, at 5 p.m. in Room<lb/>
238 of Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. All members are<lb/>
urged lo attend.<lb/>
On Wed. 4 Dec, in<lb/>
Brewster B wing, room<lb/>
104, at 7:30 p.m. the ECU<lb/>
College Republicans will<lb/>
hold their final meeting of<lb/>
the semester. The featured<lb/>
speaker will be John Guy,<lb/>
candidate for state legis-<lb/>
lator. All interested per-<lb/>
sons are invited to attend.<lb/>
Refreshments will be<lb/>
served.<lb/>
I II II ill<lb/>
All students who plan<lb/>
to participate with the<lb/>
men's or women's team<lb/>
handball clubs should<lb/>
contact Susan Jeffrey,<lb/>
intramural-club sports<lb/>
trainer, at 757-6387 to<lb/>
schedule their physical<lb/>
examinations. Physicals<lb/>
should be scheduled prior<lb/>
to the Christmas break.<lb/>
The Collegiate 4-H<lb/>
Club will hold their final<lb/>
meeting of this semester<lb/>
on Dec. 3, at 6:30 p.m. at<lb/>
139 Green Mill Run<lb/>
Apartments. It is impor-<lb/>
tant all members attend.<lb/>
For more information, call<lb/>
752-9820.<lb/>
i i nip<lb/>
A ski trip to Massa-<lb/>
nutten, Va. Jan. 10, 11,<lb/>
and 12 is available to any<lb/>
M.R.C. or W.R.C. mem-<lb/>
ber. Lodging will be<lb/>
provided at the Holiday<lb/>
Inn in Harrisonburg, Va.<lb/>
for Thursday, Friday, and<lb/>
Saturday nights. For these<lb/>
accomodations as well as<lb/>
two full days of skiing,<lb/>
including rentals and lift<lb/>
tickets, the price is only<lb/>
868.50. A ski school is<lb/>
available for a $5.00<lb/>
charge. For those inter-<lb/>
ested in attending a $25.00<lb/>
deposit (refundable) will<lb/>
be required by Dec. 17.<lb/>
For reservations, or more<lb/>
information, please call<lb/>
752-9569.<lb/>
art<lb/>
The Student Union Art<lb/>
Exhibition Committee will<lb/>
meet Wed Dec. 5, at 6<lb/>
p.m. in Committee Room<lb/>
233 o Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. All members are<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
There will be a man-<lb/>
datory meeting of the<lb/>
Christmas Snowshoe Ski<lb/>
Group n Dec. 6 at 4:00<lb/>
p.m. iri Memorial Gym<lb/>
108. All participants need<lb/>
to be present for room<lb/>
assignments-travel plans-<lb/>
some still need rides.<lb/>
siiii I<lb/>
New ECU Ski Club<lb/>
forming for next semester<lb/>
Meeting will be held Dec.<lb/>
6, Thurs. afternoon. Of-<lb/>
ficers will be elected. All<lb/>
that is needed is a genuine<lb/>
interest. Memorial 104.<lb/>
fiii ?<lb/>
The Student Union Films<lb/>
Committee will meet<lb/>
Dec. 6, at 3:30 p.m. in<lb/>
Room 242 of Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. All mem-<lb/>
bers are urged to attend.<lb/>
classified<lb/>
h<lb/>
9<lb/>
FOR SALE: Alvarez 5014<lb/>
Guitar, one year old. Good<lb/>
condition. $160. or rea-<lb/>
sonable offer. 758-8687<lb/>
Ask for Johnnie.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Military Field<lb/>
jackets, $40; electric type-<lb/>
write $75; Girl's 10 speed<lb/>
bike $35. Call 752-1514,<lb/>
752-1750.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Used furni-<lb/>
ture. Used small ap-<lb/>
pliances and other mis-<lb/>
cellaneous household<lb/>
items. Call 756-5413.<lb/>
tor if qi<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE:<lb/>
To share 3 bedroom<lb/>
duplex. Call 758-0267.<lb/>
WANTED: Creative, en-<lb/>
lightened person to share<lb/>
two bedroom house and<lb/>
expenses. $80 per month<lb/>
plus half utilities.<lb/>
Come by 1207 Co-<lb/>
tanche St. or call Chan-<lb/>
elo's Pizza 758-7400 and<lb/>
ask for Jay or leave name<lb/>
and number and your call<lb/>
will be returned.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED:<lb/>
Working Graduate female<lb/>
needs responsible room-<lb/>
mate to share two bed-<lb/>
room house near campus.<lb/>
$85 plus utilities. Call<lb/>
752-8965 9-6, 758 6887<lb/>
after 6:00.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE:<lb/>
needed to share 2 bed-<lb/>
room apt. at Tar River.<lb/>
Rent is $210 per month,<lb/>
split two ways, plus 12 of<lb/>
utilties. Call 756-6897.<lb/>
MOVING OUT? I'm look-<lb/>
ing for a one bedroom apt.<lb/>
unfurnished near campus<lb/>
w southern exposure<lb/>
avail. Jan. 1. Please call k.<lb/>
758-6162.<lb/>
m<lb/>
NEED X- TRA CASH:<lb/>
Fair prices paid for gold<lb/>
and silver and silver coins.<lb/>
Mixed Media. 120 E. 5th<lb/>
St. Phone 758-2127.<lb/>
HORSEBACK RIDING:<lb/>
Day or Night, individual or<lb/>
groups. Tri-County Stables<lb/>
Grimesland call 752-6893.<lb/>
TYPING: Reliable and<lb/>
sp ? pist at reason-<lb/>
a.<lb/>
-all 752-2724.<lb/>
3005<lb/>
?. 10th St.<lb/>
ltaacccroJJ.????iT??'TTir-P?Jg:?j'g<lb/>
Z<lb/>
758 8550<lb/>
December Specials<lb/>
Sirloin<lb/>
gravy and potato<lb/>
S2.19<lb/>
Wednesday 1: $2.49<lb/>
MondayChop<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Filet of Chicken<lb/>
Steak and potato<lb/>
ushroom gravy and potato<lb/>
mushroom gravy ana potato<lb/>
Thnrsdavs,lces of Beef $2.59<lb/>
?? -lkJWfT peppers and onions or<lb/>
Friday steerburer $1.39<lb/>
Saturday Sonp and Sa,ad $1.79<lb/>
Sunday 8Woto6o"U $2.49<lb/>
Monday and Wednesday STUDENT SPECIALS<lb/>
5()f off any item on the menu board<lb/>
THE COMPLETE<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
4:00-8:00 ? WCAMITOUT<lb/>
SALAD?50? EXTRA<lb/>
ASST. VAR. t-fOQ<lb/>
PIZZA . .only I<lb/>
WITH FRIES &amp; COLESLAW<lb/>
FRIED<lb/>
CHICKEN ??<lb/>
WITH GARLIC BREAD<lb/>
ITALIAN $499<lb/>
SPAGHETTIqnlyI thur<lb/>
WITH FRIES &amp; COLE SLAW<lb/>
22? 1"<lb/>
FISH . . .?!u. fhi<lb/>
'hats the easiest way to complete your<lb/>
plans?no matter what you're planning?<lb/>
By making one convenient trip to your<lb/>
Kroger Sav-on  where you'll find<lb/>
everything from apple cider to transistor<lb/>
radios to footballs and more  all at<lb/>
cost cutter prices. No matter what your<lb/>
plans, complete them with one easy trip<lb/>
.to your Kroger Sav-on.<lb/>
A<lb/>
TIMEX<lb/>
WATCHES<lb/>
7V<lb/>
Records and<lb/>
Tapes<lb/>
AMP<lb/>
iMSCmiNTEDl<lb/>
OFF MANUFACTURER S<lb/>
SUOQESTEO RETAIL<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
ach of thaaa advartlsad ttams Is raquirad to b? rsadily available for<lb/>
its in sach Krogar Sav-on Stora axoapt aa apacWteally notad in this<lb/>
J Hwa do run out of an advartlsad itam.wawiHoflar you your cholca<lb/>
f a comparabia Ham, whan available, raflacting tha sama savings or <lb/>
ralnchack which wW antttta you to purchase tha advartJaad Ham at tha<lb/>
advacHaad prtca wttMn 30 days.<lb/>
NONE SOLD<lb/>
TO<lb/>
DEALERS<lb/>
OPEN 7 AM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
OPEN SUNDAY<lb/>
9AM' O 9PM<lb/>
<lb/>
FOOD, DRUG, GENERAL<lb/>
MERCHANDISE STORES<lb/>
Prices Effective Tues<lb/>
Dec. 4, thru Sun Dec. 9, 1979<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. ? Greenville<lb/>
Phone 756-7031<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057235_0003"/><lb/>
4 December 1979 THE EAST r.AROLINIAN Page<lb/>
i<lb/>
Greek New<lb/>
Kap<lb/>
rU RICKI GUARMIS<lb/>
ek (orrespondent<lb/>
h<lb/>
Pi K;<lb/>
he n Nap s intra-<lb/>
mural season has been<lb/>
ven successful. Pi Kappa<lb/>
Phi- finished the regular<lb/>
season at 15-1 in howling.<lb/>
rhe are also in the<lb/>
playoffs in Team Hand-<lb/>
1 he Pi Kaps are having<lb/>
their annual Christmas<lb/>
; sith their Little<lb/>
Sisters this Friday, Dee. 7.<lb/>
The Lambda Chi Alpha<lb/>
- closed this week<lb/>
initiation. The<lb/>
fraternit) held its First<lb/>
nnual Beet 'n Burn<lb/>
Party.<lb/>
They have been busy<lb/>
installing their first wood<lb/>
stove this week. Anyone<lb/>
interested in this idea may<lb/>
call the house at 752-5325.<lb/>
In order to raise money<lb/>
for a basketball court for<lb/>
their back yard, the<lb/>
Lambda Chi's will be<lb/>
selling raffle tickets. The<lb/>
tickets may be purchased<lb/>
from any brother or<lb/>
associate member. A Big<lb/>
Brother, Little Brother<lb/>
Pancake Break is in the<lb/>
planning stages. The date<lb/>
of the Pancake Break will<lb/>
be announced at a later<lb/>
date.<lb/>
The Lambda Chis wish<lb/>
to thank the IFC for an<lb/>
excellent Winter Greek.<lb/>
They also congratulate the<lb/>
new IFC treasurer, Tim<lb/>
Dodson, Lambda Chi<lb/>
Alpha.<lb/>
The Sigma Phi Epsi-<lb/>
lons had their annual<lb/>
Christmas Dance Saturday<lb/>
at the Tar River Club-<lb/>
house.<lb/>
Sig Ep elections were<lb/>
held on Sunday. New<lb/>
officers are Terry Peter-<lb/>
son, president; Mike<lb/>
Kindt, vice president;<lb/>
Mike Wetherington, con-<lb/>
troller; Pat Young, corres-<lb/>
ponding secretary and<lb/>
Hardee Whitehurst, re-<lb/>
cording secretary.<lb/>
The Sig Eps would like<lb/>
to congratulate all of the<lb/>
new officers and wish<lb/>
them luck through the new<lb/>
year. <lb/>
In the upcoming week,<lb/>
the Sig Eps will have an<lb/>
Alpha Phi Social on Wed-<lb/>
nesday and Little Sister<lb/>
Installation on Thursday at<lb/>
8 p.m. Next week, they<lb/>
will have their annual Cag<lb/>
Gift Party and a Tree<lb/>
Trimming Party with their<lb/>
Little Sister.<lb/>
On Dec. 1 in New<lb/>
Bern, the AOII's held their<lb/>
annual winter formal Rose<lb/>
Ball. Thanks go to Ann<lb/>
Sineath for a successful<lb/>
weekend. Among those<lb/>
presented were IIOA's,<lb/>
the honorary members of<lb/>
AOII, Robert Fletcher,<lb/>
Larry Speed and Jeff<lb/>
Betcher. Also presented<lb/>
were the new AOII<lb/>
pledges Patty Jackson and<lb/>
Brenda Foley.<lb/>
Awards given annually<lb/>
at this time went to the<lb/>
following girls: Best<lb/>
Pledge, Cindy Heins; Best<lb/>
Sister, Sandy Skellie and<lb/>
Founder's Day Award,<lb/>
Miss Dunn. Also, Linda<lb/>
See. GREEK, page 6<lb/>
? -<lb/>
AYKROYD-NED BEATTY-JOHN BELUSHI LORRAINE GARY MURRAY HAMILTON CHRISTOPHERLEE<lb/>
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The Student Union offers a<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057235_0004"/><lb/>
The East (aroli<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
6?0p<lb/>
inions<lb/>
Tuesday, December4,1979 Page 4 Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Pat Dye is a victim<lb/>
Pat Dye is gone. Nothing will<lb/>
change that, so we must resign<lb/>
ourselves to the fact that one of the<lb/>
most resourceful coaches ECU has ever<lb/>
seen has faded from the long afternoon<lb/>
shadows of Ficklen Stadium. The days<lb/>
of the reign of Dye have come to a<lb/>
close, and it's unfortunate for us who<lb/>
will have to live through the rebuilding<lb/>
of a program we have seen grown and<lb/>
nurtured ? a program which saw its<lb/>
climax in last season's win in the<lb/>
Independence Bowl, and this season's<lb/>
ranking as number one in rushing ?<lb/>
ove, such other teams as Nebraska,<lb/>
Oklahoma and Penn State.<lb/>
Dye is a victim, unfortunately, of<lb/>
changing fortunes and priorities within<lb/>
the athletic hierarchy here at East<lb/>
Carolina. Reports of funding conflicts<lb/>
with Athletic Director Bill Cain have<lb/>
certainly colored the departure of Dye.<lb/>
Dye reportedly left after a disagreement<lb/>
surrounding a cut in funding in the<lb/>
football program. We feel that several<lb/>
points should be brought out and<lb/>
discussed, in light of recent events:<lb/>
?Football is important. To the region,<lb/>
the only two things that people<lb/>
recognize about East Carolina is the<lb/>
football team, and this newspaper,<lb/>
which appears on several newsstands<lb/>
around Greenville.<lb/>
? Football is famous. Good publicity<lb/>
from the school can be generated by<lb/>
sportscasters who follow the progress of<lb/>
American Journal<lb/>
the Pirates during the season. This<lb/>
publicity can lead to a feeling of<lb/>
oneness on the part of the people of the<lb/>
region ? a feeling that they are a part<lb/>
of the university community, even<lb/>
though they may have never been a<lb/>
student here.<lb/>
?Football is followed by academics. We<lb/>
can't help but notice that schools with<lb/>
fine athletic programs often have had<lb/>
success with academic excellence as<lb/>
well.<lb/>
 ?Football can benefit those who are far<lb/>
from the playing field. One large<lb/>
university went to a bowl game ? and<lb/>
the proceeds from that game went to<lb/>
provide financial aid for minority<lb/>
students who could not otherwise afford<lb/>
to go to college.<lb/>
The list goes on and on. Many of us<lb/>
have not considered the difficulty a new<lb/>
coach may have ? if he runs into the<lb/>
same funding conflicts Pat Dye<lb/>
supposedly encountered. This factor<lb/>
must be weighed considerably by any<lb/>
coaching candidate.<lb/>
Oru thing is for ce; :ain ? a cutback<lb/>
in athletics now ? especially a cutback<lb/>
in the biggest revenue producing sport<lb/>
in the university ? will have<lb/>
devastating effects for the future of<lb/>
athletics here at East Carolina.<lb/>
And as athletics go, all too often,<lb/>
also go contributions to academic<lb/>
programs. Where will we be then?<lb/>
Jobs versus nature<lb/>
By DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
If ever two groups of<lb/>
people have seemed at<lb/>
impossible loggerheads,<lb/>
they are environmentalists<lb/>
and workers. Environmen-<lb/>
talists, according to a<lb/>
stereotype popular among<lb/>
working people, are those<lb/>
high-toned types who love<lb/>
the trees and birds, but<lb/>
look down their upturned<lb/>
noses at mere humans.<lb/>
And workers, according to<lb/>
a similar notion among<lb/>
ecology activists, are those<lb/>
benighted slobs who will<lb/>
chop down, churn up,<lb/>
pave or pulverize any-<lb/>
thing, anywhere, for a<lb/>
paycheck.<lb/>
Those are the stereo-<lb/>
types, and like all en-<lb/>
grained ideas, they die<lb/>
hard. They are beginning<lb/>
to give a little, though, as<lb/>
environmentalists and<lb/>
workers discover that each<lb/>
has something to teach the<lb/>
other. Belatedly, environ-<lb/>
mentalists are beginning<lb/>
to understand that the<lb/>
workplace is part of the<lb/>
environment. For their<lb/>
part, working people (and<lb/>
a few unions) are starting<lb/>
to question whether the<lb/>
big money projects belov-<lb/>
ed by corporate America<lb/>
really provide the safe,<lb/>
plentiful jobs industry<lb/>
spokespeople claim.<lb/>
"The myth that the<lb/>
workers 'have no right' or<lb/>
'are not interested in'<lb/>
environmental issues is<lb/>
dangerous and wrong. In<lb/>
fact, the working class is<lb/>
the most affected when<lb/>
the environment is ravag-<lb/>
ed. Who lives in the most<lb/>
polluted areas of the<lb/>
world's huge cities? Who<lb/>
bears the heaviest noise<lb/>
levels? Who lives in the<lb/>
least congenial areas? The<lb/>
less endowed, of course<lb/>
So writes Jack Mundy,<lb/>
former head of the New<lb/>
South Wales Builders'<lb/>
Union, and a communist.<lb/>
Mundy helped spark the<lb/>
Australian Green Bans, in<lb/>
which workers refused to<lb/>
work on projects they ?<lb/>
and the communities for<lb/>
which the projects were<lb/>
planned ? decided were<lb/>
ecologically unsound.<lb/>
As a communist,<lb/>
Mundy's concrete com-<lb/>
mitment to environment-<lb/>
alism is all' the more<lb/>
remarkable. Rooted in<lb/>
19th-century European ra-<lb/>
tionalism, strict construc-<lb/>
tionists of Marxism-Lenin-<lb/>
ism have long had an<lb/>
almost mystical belief in<lb/>
the efficacy of science and<lb/>
the desirability of tech-<lb/>
nological progress. This<lb/>
has carried over to the<lb/>
present where, in the<lb/>
U.S the left has been<lb/>
noticably slow to recognize<lb/>
the importance of the<lb/>
ecology movement, and in<lb/>
the Soviet Union, where a<lb/>
long term commitment to<lb/>
nuclear energy has helped<lb/>
ensure the entrenchment<lb/>
of socialism with a techno-<lb/>
cratic face.<lb/>
According to figures<lb/>
compiled by the Sierra<lb/>
Club, Environmentalists<lb/>
For Full Employment<lb/>
(EFFE) and other groups,<lb/>
however, it is precisely<lb/>
those mammoth technolo-<lb/>
gical projects required to<lb/>
build nuclear power and<lb/>
coal-conversion plants that<lb/>
poison the biosphere and<lb/>
throw people out of work.<lb/>
Highly centralized, spec-<lb/>
ialized industries, they<lb/>
rely on automation and<lb/>
often transient experts,<lb/>
having little need of less<lb/>
skilled locals.<lb/>
In industry parlance,<lb/>
nuclear, coal-conversion<lb/>
and petro-chemical com-<lb/>
plexes are capital-inten-<lb/>
sive, requiring extremely<lb/>
high levels of investment<lb/>
to produce what jobs they<lb/>
do create. According to<lb/>
EFFE, clean, decentralized<lb/>
solar energy projects could<lb/>
produce four times as<lb/>
many jobs as nukes built<lb/>
at the same cost. And the<lb/>
ratio of regular workers to<lb/>
experts in the solar field<lb/>
would be much higher.<lb/>
There would be nine<lb/>
carpenters, say, or sheet<lb/>
metal workers for every<lb/>
highly trained solar engi-<lb/>
neer, creating jobs for a<lb/>
broad range of people. In<lb/>
the nuclear field, the ratio<lb/>
is two to one.<lb/>
In the face of in-<lb/>
creasing evidence to the<lb/>
contrary, corporate spokes-<lb/>
people insist that it's<lb/>
either the environment or<lb/>
jobs, and that interfering<lb/>
with business will wreck<lb/>
the economy. To advocates<lb/>
of social change, that<lb/>
argument has a familiar<lb/>
ring. It was used to<lb/>
oppose workmen's com-<lb/>
pensation, unemployment<lb/>
insurance, even child labor<lb/>
laws, when those reforms<lb/>
were seen to threaten<lb/>
profits.<lb/>
Environmentalists fur-<lb/>
ther point' out that the<lb/>
American economy is<lb/>
hardly booming as it is.<lb/>
The current recession is,<lb/>
for example, the sixth and<lb/>
most severe slump since<lb/>
World War II. Retooling<lb/>
the economy to both<lb/>
protect the natural workd<lb/>
and create jobs is possible<lb/>
npw, they say, beginning<lb/>
with eliminating wasteful<lb/>
habits of production and<lb/>
consumption. As proof<lb/>
that it can be done, they<lb/>
point to places like<lb/>
Saugus, Mass where a<lb/>
trash disposal plant that<lb/>
services 300,000 people<lb/>
also manages to pay for<lb/>
itself.<lb/>
What kinds of jobs<lb/>
could be created in a<lb/>
conservation-minded eco-<lb/>
nomy? According to<lb/>
Letters to the Editor<lb/>
Students riled over Dye issue<lb/>
EFFE, a study by the state<lb/>
of Colorado "has esti-<lb/>
mated that 17 million<lb/>
private homes in America<lb/>
need caulking and weath-<lb/>
ering; 10 million need<lb/>
storm windows Includ-<lb/>
ing apartments and com-<lb/>
mercial and industrial<lb/>
buildings, the Colorado<lb/>
study says, such basic<lb/>
alterations could put up to<lb/>
487,000 people to work.<lb/>
Add to that the creat-<lb/>
ive job possibilities gen-<lb/>
erated by community re-<lb/>
cycling centers, the trans-<lb/>
fer of auto workers to<lb/>
public transit programs,<lb/>
the construction of more<lb/>
energy-efficient equip-<lb/>
ment, and the need for<lb/>
ecologically attuned archi-<lb/>
tects, engineers and other<lb/>
workers, and the outline of<lb/>
a safe, labor-intensive<lb/>
economy begins to appear.<lb/>
Most such jobs, ecology<lb/>
activists contend, would<lb/>
employ medium-to-low<lb/>
skilled people on the small<lb/>
scale most favorable to<lb/>
democracy.<lb/>
That profound trans-<lb/>
formation of the American<lb/>
economic and social sys-<lb/>
tem is a long way off. But<lb/>
at least something like it is<lb/>
being discussed in embry-<lb/>
onic alliances of environ-<lb/>
mentalists and labor. The<lb/>
Humphrey-Hawkins Bill,<lb/>
to cite an example, calls<lb/>
for a reduction to three<lb/>
percent unemployment by<lb/>
1981, and the conversion<lb/>
to a real peacetime<lb/>
economy. It would autho-<lb/>
rize jobs in childcare,<lb/>
health and recreation, the<lb/>
rehabilitation of decayed<lb/>
urban areas, and federal<lb/>
funding for the handi-<lb/>
capped and elderly.<lb/>
Editor's Note: David Arm-<lb/>
strong is a syndicated<lb/>
columnist.<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
Like many Pirate faith-<lb/>
ful I was very disappointed<lb/>
to find out about the<lb/>
resignation of coach Pat<lb/>
Dye. First of all I would<lb/>
like to publicly thank<lb/>
Coach Dye for putting<lb/>
ECU football on the<lb/>
national map, the man did<lb/>
a great job at East<lb/>
Carolina and will be sorely<lb/>
missed.<lb/>
Now comes the ques-<lb/>
tion, Why did coach Dye<lb/>
resign? Most of us would<lb/>
have left before Coach Dye<lb/>
did if we were in his<lb/>
position. No doubt there<lb/>
were major conflicts be-<lb/>
tween Coach Dye, Bill<lb/>
Cain and Thomas Brewer.<lb/>
I am sure it hurt Chan-<lb/>
cellor Brewer when he was<lb/>
not known around the<lb/>
state of North Carolina like<lb/>
Coach Dye. Could the<lb/>
problem be identity?<lb/>
One must realize Dye<lb/>
has been at ECU for six<lb/>
years and Brewer for only<lb/>
two. Second of all, who is<lb/>
the Chancellor at Ohio<lb/>
State? Michigan? Or Army<lb/>
for that matter. Ask the<lb/>
same question about the<lb/>
football coach at those<lb/>
schools and see if most<lb/>
people know the coach or<lb/>
the chancellor.<lb/>
Yes, granted Brewer<lb/>
comes from a school that<lb/>
hasn't had a winning<lb/>
season since George<lb/>
Washington left the White<lb/>
House. Chancellor Brewer<lb/>
was probably widely<lb/>
known at TCU and granted<lb/>
he is widely known now at<lb/>
East Carolina but for what<lb/>
I do not know.<lb/>
Also let us look at what<lb/>
Bill Cain has done for East<lb/>
Carolina. He reportedly<lb/>
cut the football budget<lb/>
$30,000 without informing<lb/>
coach Dye first. Where<lb/>
does the money for the<lb/>
rest of ECU athletics come<lb/>
from? Also next time you<lb/>
go to a home football<lb/>
game and see teams like<lb/>
The Citadel, and Rich-<lb/>
mond opposing ECU stand<lb/>
up and let Cain know how<lb/>
well you like the opposi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Now, who are you, the<lb/>
students and loyal Pirate<lb/>
fans, going to back: Coach<lb/>
Dye or the administration?<lb/>
Neal Spivey<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
The following was written<lb/>
as an open letter to former<lb/>
Pirate football coach Pat<lb/>
Dye.<lb/>
I'm a student here at<lb/>
ECU and an avid fan of<lb/>
yourself and the ECU<lb/>
football teams which<lb/>
you've built here. While<lb/>
watching the news tonight,<lb/>
I heard of your resig-<lb/>
nation. It kind of took me<lb/>
off-guard, instead of hear-<lb/>
ing more bad news from<lb/>
Iran there was now a<lb/>
tragedy in Greenville. By<lb/>
the quickness of your<lb/>
decision it seems evident<lb/>
there is nothing that could<lb/>
be done to change your<lb/>
mind. I only wish there<lb/>
was.<lb/>
Your title here is Head<lb/>
Football Coach, but you<lb/>
have become much more<lb/>
than this to the students at<lb/>
East Carolina. There's no<lb/>
doubt you've supplied us<lb/>
with plenty of thrills on<lb/>
Saturday afternoon and an<lb/>
installment of pride which<lb/>
we will never relinquish,<lb/>
but your honesty, frank-<lb/>
ness, and your true<lb/>
concern for your players<lb/>
and for ECL's upward<lb/>
struggle in this state is<lb/>
something we admire the<lb/>
most.<lb/>
In closing, we wish you<lb/>
the best, whether it be at<lb/>
Wyoming or for that<lb/>
matter anywhere you<lb/>
"are" the best! 1 only<lb/>
hope you never forget this<lb/>
little town in N.C be-<lb/>
cause there's not a chance<lb/>
in hell that it will ever<lb/>
forget you.<lb/>
Bill Sawver<lb/>
Chansky<lb/>
roasted<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
In rebuttal to the<lb/>
column of Art Chansky<lb/>
from The Durham Herald I<lb/>
would like to voice my<lb/>
opinion. I have a great<lb/>
deal of loyalty to East<lb/>
Carolina University even<lb/>
though there are many<lb/>
factors which pull me in<lb/>
other directions. I live<lb/>
within 10 miles of Chapel<lb/>
Hill and have grown up<lb/>
with "Carolina Fever" all<lb/>
of my life. My father is a<lb/>
graduate of UNC and my<lb/>
mother works in Fowler's<lb/>
Food Store which has been<lb/>
serving the Tarheels for<lb/>
many years.<lb/>
I, in my pre-college<lb/>
days, was a devoted<lb/>
Carolina fan and was as<lb/>
"sick" with the "fever"<lb/>
as all Chapel Hillians are,<lb/>
but now, having gone to<lb/>
further my education at<lb/>
East Carolina University, I<lb/>
am converted to the proud<lb/>
lot of Pirate fans.<lb/>
1 also find that, having<lb/>
been the !?n<lb/>
The Peace Times (Pea<lb/>
College, Raleigh. C), in<lb/>
my judgem the<lb/>
column. Mr. Chansky<lb/>
stoops tn m. re libie . ws<lb/>
in order to suj ind<lb/>
defend hi- bias<lb/>
the Tarl - The infer-<lb/>
ence that Leander Creen.<lb/>
ECU's niarterback, is i<lb/>
an All-American type be-<lb/>
cause he i- black and<lb/>
5-foot -7 is a form<lb/>
bigotry and<lb/>
sionalism which 1 would<lb/>
not expect 's'<lb/>
paperman 01 "r<lb/>
Chansky's caliber -<lb/>
this general plane of<lb/>
thought Mr. Chanskv re-<lb/>
ferred to other ECl<lb/>
players as "black and<lb/>
bowlegged and "third-<lb/>
string kicker  whose<lb/>
father owns a hot dog<lb/>
stand in Wilson This<lb/>
type of low grade pre-<lb/>
judice is surprizing in a<lb/>
supposedly professional<lb/>
column and is in very poor<lb/>
personal taste. I might add<lb/>
that the use of such a<lb/>
mud-slinging journalistic<lb/>
approach has shown the<lb/>
public the stuff of which<lb/>
Mr. Chansky is really<lb/>
made<lb/>
My fina 1 ana 1 y sis<lb/>
comes to Mr. Chansky-<lb/>
insinuation that ECU luck-<lb/>
ed out in a tie score. It is<lb/>
evident to me that he is<lb/>
merely using his column<lb/>
as a pouting session tor<lb/>
his sour grapes attitude.<lb/>
East Carolina and INC<lb/>
played an excellent game<lb/>
in which there was no<lb/>
winner, no loser, and no<lb/>
"easy defeat Mr.<lb/>
Chansky, it is time for you<lb/>
to eat humble pie.<lb/>
Marianne Harbison<lb/>
r<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/>
Knren Wendt<lb/>
Terry Gray<lb/>
Bill Jones<lb/>
K.C. NeerJham<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 L. eke<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN la the student<lb/>
newspaper of East Carolina University<lb/>
sponsored by the Media Board of ECU<lb/>
and Is distributed each Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during the academic year<lb/>
(weekly during the summer.<lb/>
Offices are located on the second floor of<lb/>
the Publications Center Old South<lb/>
Building. Our malting address la: Cm<lb/>
South Building, ECU, Greenville, NC<lb/>
27834.<lb/>
<lb/>
The phono numbers are: 757-S366, 6987<lb/>
Subscription, ore $10 annually.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057235_0005"/><lb/>
Tuesday, December 4,1979 Page 5<lb/>
Other Opinion<lb/>
ruest Editorial<lb/>
Let's thank Iran<lb/>
Editors' Note: The following guest editorial was written<lb/>
by Paul Miller, a special student preparing to enter<lb/>
graduate school.<lb/>
As people walk down the streets in protest, or as<lb/>
banners are hung calling for the deportation of those<lb/>
Iranian students here and in other parts of this country,<lb/>
we should take the time to give thanks ? thanks to<lb/>
those militant students abroad, thanks to Ayatollah<lb/>
Khomeini, and thanks to those students in this country<lb/>
at whom we have chosen to direct our anger. It is they<lb/>
who symbolize that which we have no control over.<lb/>
Finally, and most importantly, we should thank those<lb/>
victims held against their will ? those victims that are<lb/>
powerless so that we may be powerful.<lb/>
A drastic change in my routine has taken place in the<lb/>
last couple of weeks. Whereas I'm usually assured that<lb/>
the Aeus and Observer will be there most any time<lb/>
during the day that I choose to read it, of late I have<lb/>
found the slight inconvenience of either getting it early<lb/>
or not getting it at all. I would suppose this means that<lb/>
more people are taking an interest in the daily news. In<lb/>
class, at meals, or under a shade tree, the print is held<lb/>
close to the face. People are eating the latest word of<lb/>
news about the personal, diplomatic, international, and<lb/>
economic hardships surrounding the holding of those<lb/>
sixty American citizens. A cruel and inhumane act by a<lb/>
barbaric people, with the support of a religiously crazed<lb/>
ruler.<lb/>
So today it was nearly 7:00 in the evening before I<lb/>
able to acquire a paper, and at that it was in<lb/>
ua<lb/>
econd-hand condition. But the day was not wasted. I<lb/>
sat down, relaxed, and read the notorious bathroom<lb/>
walls that surrounded me. The East Carolinian has<lb/>
already run a story on the quality of ECU's graffiti in<lb/>
the year 1979, and I see no value in duplicating that<lb/>
piece oi journalistic investigation.<lb/>
Interesting though was the sense of irony I felt,<lb/>
sitting among those slanted words oi' witless men: the<lb/>
rise oi social and national consciousness ?<lb/>
reverberating from the chants oi passioned protesters ?<lb/>
on the one hand, and the walls of writing that<lb/>
surrounded me on the other. Sixty held against their will<lb/>
is so terrible that we immediately tell the Iranians here<lb/>
in this country "to go to Hell We follow the drive of<lb/>
our patriotic spirit, speaking loud and clear, "This<lb/>
country has been pushed around too long We speak<lb/>
out in the name of freedom and righteousness. Then we<lb/>
go to our walls and read, kill the nigers and castrate the<lb/>
fags. <lb/>
Yes, we should indeed thank the Iranians. They have<lb/>
given people something to identify with. We are now,<lb/>
once again, united. As students, our youth, our energy,<lb/>
and our ideas can once again be directed. And as one<lb/>
student put it, "Ya know, it's fun to protest when you're<lb/>
in college. It gives you something to do<lb/>
I could continue with the argument that the Iranian<lb/>
students who are here peacefully for the purpose of<lb/>
getting an education (something they may not be able to<lb/>
get in their homeland), should be allowed to do so.<lb/>
Indeed, they should be given a hand, with the<lb/>
knowledge that they are people with stress and tension<lb/>
upon them. I could ask you not to take away the very<lb/>
rights from them, that you are asking to be given to<lb/>
those Americans overseas. This, however, would be a<lb/>
wasted effort on my part, for you will hold your attitudes<lb/>
long after you read anything I have to write.<lb/>
The Iranian situation will come and go. People will<lb/>
say and do what they feel is right. Finally, one way or<lb/>
the other, the issue will be resolved, and though my<lb/>
concern for those violated is real, it is not the reason I<lb/>
write.<lb/>
The sad fact (perhaps because I see it every day) is<lb/>
that we really do have the Iranians to thank for our<lb/>
spurred unity. They have become the target for public<lb/>
opinion. And just as it sprang forth with energy, it will<lb/>
fold back again with apathy. We are a people of crisis!<lb/>
The double standards we live with every day are only<lb/>
inspected after they become explosive. We will again<lb/>
tolerate the wrongs that are in front of our very noses.<lb/>
The black will remain a nigger and we will continue to<lb/>
laugh at the fag ? the challenge of understanding and<lb/>
accepting either will remain latent!<lb/>
Iran's real hostages:<lb/>
Americans or Iranians?<lb/>
Iranian student leaves NC State<lb/>
RALEIGH. N.C. (AP) ? Iranian Pirooz Zelli, a<lb/>
-tudent at North Carolina State University, left the<lb/>
United State Monday, a move he hopes will enable him<lb/>
to return soon.<lb/>
But he's heading for Switzerland instead of his<lb/>
homeland. He hopes the L.S. embassy there will be<lb/>
sympathetic to his plight and help him obtain a proper<lb/>
S. student visa.<lb/>
The 19-year-old Zelli, a student at North Carolina<lb/>
State University, has remained in the United States<lb/>
since his visa expired in 1978. His departure comes just<lb/>
days before investigators from the Federal Immigration<lb/>
ind Naturalization Service are to visit the school to<lb/>
check the status of Iranian students.<lb/>
Zelli withdrew from the university Friday.<lb/>
"It I stayed, they would have tried to deport me<lb/>
he said in an interview. "I think I have a better chance<lb/>
of returning to the United States as a student if I leave<lb/>
now and try to get a student visa<lb/>
He entered the country on a tourist visa in July,<lb/>
1977. When his visa expired 14 months later, he stayed<lb/>
on unnoticed by authorities.<lb/>
If the Iranian situation had not reached crisis<lb/>
proportion, Zelli, the son of a retired oil executive,<lb/>
might have been able to continue the ail-American<lb/>
college life he was living.<lb/>
Zelli said he will not return to Iran soon. He isn't<lb/>
ure he would be welcomed after converting to<lb/>
Christianity, and an uncle who was at the time a<lb/>
government official in Iran was jailed for several months<lb/>
after the revolution.<lb/>
By JACK ANDERSON<lb/>
and JOE SPEAR<lb/>
WASHINGTON - Ay-<lb/>
atollah Khomeini and his<lb/>
rabid mobs scrawling their<lb/>
"Death to the Shah" and<lb/>
virulent anti-American slo-<lb/>
gans on the walls of the<lb/>
U.S. embassy in Tehran<lb/>
are blinded by hate to far<lb/>
more ominous handwriting<lb/>
on the wall for themselves<lb/>
and their country. The<lb/>
message spells out the<lb/>
prospect of economic dis-<lb/>
aster for the Iranians.<lb/>
Expert authorities on<lb/>
the Middle East now<lb/>
believe that Khomeini hid<lb/>
behind his guise of Mos-<lb/>
lem fanaticism and deli-<lb/>
berately inflamed his fol-<lb/>
lowers into precipitating a<lb/>
world crisis by the hostage<lb/>
seizure as part of a callous<lb/>
scheme to conceal the<lb/>
days of economic ruin that<lb/>
lie ahead for his wild-eyed<lb/>
government.<lb/>
Khomeini's govern-<lb/>
ment inherited an eco-<lb/>
nomy that had one huge<lb/>
asset ? oil. Experts we've<lb/>
talked to predict that<lb/>
won't be enough. The<lb/>
ayatollah and his revo-<lb/>
lutionary followers face<lb/>
unemployment, a broken-<lb/>
down economic system<lb/>
and chaos that bodes ill<lb/>
for his regime.<lb/>
Small wonder that the<lb/>
militant students holding<lb/>
American embassy person-<lb/>
nel captive were able to<lb/>
muster marching, shouting<lb/>
masses to demonstrate<lb/>
outside the embassy. One<lb/>
out of every three Iranians<lb/>
is unemployed and has<lb/>
time to clench fists and<lb/>
hoist impassioned ban-<lb/>
ners.<lb/>
The ayatollah, accord-<lb/>
ing to our sources, also<lb/>
was confronted with the<lb/>
necessity of raising taxes<lb/>
next vear. In some in-<lb/>
stances, they say, the<lb/>
taxes on the people must<lb/>
double and Iran must keep<lb/>
oil exports between 2 and<lb/>
a half and 3 and a half<lb/>
billion barrels a day just to<lb/>
keep aloat financially.<lb/>
But intelligence esti-<lb/>
mates we've seen indicate<lb/>
the output is well below<lb/>
the 3 and a third barrels<lb/>
daily the Khomeini gov-<lb/>
ernment claims is being<lb/>
exported. And, they add,<lb/>
even if they are kept high,<lb/>
Iran will have to borrow<lb/>
heavily from abroad in the<lb/>
coming year.<lb/>
Iran's credit rating is<lb/>
near zero after the United<lb/>
States ordered a freeze on<lb/>
its bank assets in this<lb/>
country and the Khomeini<lb/>
government declared it<lb/>
won't pay debts incurred<lb/>
under the shah in foreign<lb/>
circles.<lb/>
The Iranian Air Force<lb/>
and the countrv's trans-<lb/>
portation system is des-<lb/>
tined for collapse now that<lb/>
the United States has cut<lb/>
off further sales of spare<lb/>
parts. The oil fields are<lb/>
likely to become dust<lb/>
bowls without technical<lb/>
help and equipment from<lb/>
abroad.<lb/>
The entire nuclear<lb/>
reactor program will have<lb/>
to be canceled. The gov-<lb/>
ernment's television and<lb/>
radio programs are ex-<lb/>
pected to be blacked out<lb/>
for budgetary reasons.<lb/>
Once long ago, decadent<lb/>
rulers such as Nero and<lb/>
Caligula threw Christians<lb/>
to the lions and staged<lb/>
gladiator fights to conceal<lb/>
from their people the<lb/>
pending fall of the Roman<lb/>
empire. In the same<lb/>
tradition, Ayatollah<lb/>
Khomeini is using hos-<lb/>
tages and Islamic zealotry<lb/>
to divert his unwitting<lb/>
followers from awareness<lb/>
of the pit of poverty that<lb/>
lies ahead of them.<lb/>
NIXON'S ABUSES:<lb/>
With indirect thanks to<lb/>
Richard M. Nixon, the<lb/>
godfathers of the Mafia<lb/>
are now able to thumb<lb/>
their noses with impunity<lb/>
at the government's anti-<lb/>
crime strike forces.<lb/>
In the wake of Water-<lb/>
gate, Congress took action<lb/>
to curb the White House<lb/>
from using the Internal<lb/>
Revenue Service to punish<lb/>
or threaten political ene-<lb/>
mies of a president be-<lb/>
cause of the sordid<lb/>
chronicle of Nixon's use of<lb/>
the government's tax<lb/>
agency.<lb/>
Because of the Nixon<lb/>
abuses, legislation was<lb/>
enacted after Watergate to<lb/>
restrict what the IRS can<lb/>
do with its voluminous<lb/>
files of intimate data on<lb/>
individual Americans. For<lb/>
the law-abiding, it was a<lb/>
long overdue reform to<lb/>
prevent vindictive White<lb/>
House occupants from<lb/>
punishing those they<lb/>
deemed as enemies.<lb/>
Unfortunately, the new<lb/>
law provided a happy<lb/>
escape hatch for the<lb/>
Mafia. Often, Internal<lb/>
Revenue agents picked up<lb/>
evidence of crime, graft<lb/>
and corruption. In the<lb/>
past, they could provide<lb/>
their information to the<lb/>
FBI and prosecuting attor-<lb/>
neys.<lb/>
Now their hands are<lb/>
tied. They must notify the<lb/>
person under investigation<lb/>
that information on him<lb/>
has been sought by a law-<lb/>
enforcement agency. This<lb/>
obviously tips a big-time<lb/>
criminal that he's under<lb/>
investigation and he can<lb/>
cover his tracks.c<lb/>
Federal investigators<lb/>
have complained privately<lb/>
to us that the drive against<lb/>
organized crime has been<lb/>
hurt by the Nixon-inspired<lb/>
limitation. Statistics show<lb/>
the number of organized<lb/>
crime cases triggered by<lb/>
tax information has fallen<lb/>
from 620 in 1974 to 221<lb/>
last year.<lb/>
Before the law took<lb/>
effect in 1977, the Justice<lb/>
Department checked out<lb/>
6,500 tax returns as part<lb/>
of its criminal investi-<lb/>
gation. Now only about<lb/>
2,500 returns are under-<lb/>
going scrutiny this year.<lb/>
WATCH ON WASTE:<lb/>
Lots of government bu-<lb/>
reaucrats succumb to<lb/>
Potomac fever. At the<lb/>
Federal Aviation Adminis-<lb/>
tration recently, a group of<lb/>
the agenev's big wigs<lb/>
were seized with Poconos<lb/>
fever. The FAA held a<lb/>
conference for their top<lb/>
East Coast officials at a<lb/>
plush country club in the<lb/>
scenic Poconos ostensiblv<lb/>
J<lb/>
to ponder management<lb/>
techniques. The flyers<lb/>
inviting participants to the<lb/>
conference failed to em-<lb/>
phasize the management-<lb/>
technique sessions. They<lb/>
offered instead the de-<lb/>
lights of boating, fishing,<lb/>
swimming and tennis. The<lb/>
tab for the taxpayers:<lb/>
$60,000.<lb/>
The Federal Aviation<lb/>
Administration also re-<lb/>
cently underwrote a trip to<lb/>
sunny Honolulu for 25 of<lb/>
its officials in the guise of<lb/>
a conference.<lb/>
The Health, Education<lb/>
and Welfare Department<lb/>
picked up the bill for 142<lb/>
government employees at<lb/>
a lavish resort. The<lb/>
purpose of their get-<lb/>
together was to study the<lb/>
problems of poverty.<lb/>
Footnote: Those who<lb/>
are aware of government<lb/>
extravagance should write<lb/>
to Jack Anderson's Watch<lb/>
on Waste, P.O. Box 2300,<lb/>
Washington, D.C. 20013.<lb/>
I I'pvnght !979<lb/>
Cmted Feature Syndicate Inc<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
THE E. C. U.<lb/>
FRATERNITIES<lb/>
AND<lb/>
SORORITIES<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
PRESENT THE FOURTH<lb/>
GREAT<lb/>
GREEK<lb/>
CONCERT<lb/>
J<lb/>
WEAR YOUR GREEK JERSEY<lb/>
AND RECEIVE A REDUCTION ON ADMISSION PRICE<lb/>
s<lb/>
?? ?<lb/>
A<lb/>
??3 9 S3 2 2 <lb/>
V<lb/>
i<lb/>
-r ?<lb/>
i m <lb/>
<pb facs="00057235_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 4 December 1979<lb/>
Brewer , .<lb/>
(com. from pg. 1)<lb/>
I<lb/>
various groups have suggested, but should develop a<lb/>
broad format that would include many types of music<lb/>
and services. He also put forth the idea that a full-time<lb/>
professional might be desirable for the fledgling station.<lb/>
Along the same lines, Brewer said that the university<lb/>
needed to develop a communications major for students<lb/>
interested in broadcasting and journalism. At present<lb/>
there are only minor degrees offered in these fields.<lb/>
Dr. Brewer told the assembled students that a<lb/>
research group would soon be making recommendations<lb/>
to the administration regarding improvements in parking<lb/>
facilities on campus. He said that one possibility might<lb/>
be the construction of parking decks over the present<lb/>
an improved food service could be developed.<lb/>
Communal dormitory kitchens might also be built, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
?Suggested that it might be better to fund separately<lb/>
the SGA, the Media Board and the Transit Authority<lb/>
from student fees which are presently paid in a lump<lb/>
sum.<lb/>
?Said that the UNC system's present court battle<lb/>
with HEW, which has charged the system for having<lb/>
unequal facilities in its predominantly black universities,<lb/>
might take three years to settle and may cost taxpayers<lb/>
as much as SI.3 million in legal fees.<lb/>
?Estimated that ECU is receiving seven to eight<lb/>
research grants each month.<lb/>
?Said he would not oppose the sale of alcoholic<lb/>
Greek<lb/>
lots at the bottom of College Hill Drive and near beverages on campus if the present state law forbidding<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. Brewer estimated the cost ;t were repealed.<lb/>
of such structures at around $3,000 per space.<lb/>
When asked whether his program to raise the<lb/>
academic standing at ECU would be carried out at the<lb/>
expense of the school's athletic programs, Brewer<lb/>
responded that he didn't "agree with the dichotomy that<lb/>
says you can have one but not the other. Why can't you<lb/>
do both? That's wha we're going to do. We haven't<lb/>
scratched the surface for the budgets on either one.<lb/>
We're going to have excellent academics and excellent<lb/>
athletics<lb/>
On other topics, Brewer:<lb/>
?Raised the possibility that cooking in the dorms<lb/>
might eventually have to be phased out, during which<lb/>
In his closing comments, Brewer also urged student<lb/>
organizations to take advantage of the expertise which<lb/>
exists in the faculty.<lb/>
Throughout his remarks, Brewer noted that he was<lb/>
raising all of the suggestions only as points for<lb/>
discussion, and stressed the role of planning and<lb/>
development in translating them into future realities.<lb/>
The chancellor told the group that he would like to<lb/>
hold similar meetings with students in the future, and<lb/>
that he would go to "any dorm that wants me" to open<lb/>
the communication between students and<lb/>
up<lb/>
administrators.<lb/>
Attack<lb/>
(cont. from pg. 1)<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
The premise of the bill is that if the<lb/>
students could try to sell their books in a<lb/>
flea market type atmosphere, both the<lb/>
sellers and the buyers could get better<lb/>
prices on their books.<lb/>
Al Patrick, who presented the bill, suggestions as<lb/>
tu m? ?f a hnnV whirh football bring them to his office anytime,<lb/>
cave the example ot a book wnicn ? :???.<lb/>
He desires a lot ot student input.<lb/>
Sherrod is the student representative<lb/>
to the selection committee.<lb/>
The legislature also welcomed a new<lb/>
member, William Dickson, who was sworn<lb/>
in at the meeting.<lb/>
no injuries until today.<lb/>
The FALN-Armed Forces<lb/>
for National Liberational-<lb/>
so has staged bombing<lb/>
attacks in the United<lb/>
States.<lb/>
Some of the pro- originallv cost $10 which the bookstore<lb/>
independence groups had would buy for $5 and would sell again for<lb/>
vowed vengence of the $7.50. Patrick said that with this new idea<lb/>
death of Angel Rodriguez the person selling the book could sell for<lb/>
Cristobal, who was found $6.25 gaining themselves more money,<lb/>
dead in his cell at the and saving the buyer mone;<lb/>
federal prison in Talla-<lb/>
hassee, Fla three weeks<lb/>
ago. Prison authorities<lb/>
said he apparently hanged<lb/>
himself.<lb/>
Rodriguez Cristobal was<lb/>
among 21 persons arrested<lb/>
and tried for trespassing<lb/>
on Navy target beaches on<lb/>
the small offshore island<lb/>
of Vieques. Nineteen were<lb/>
convicted. Protests have<lb/>
been held on the island in<lb/>
an attempt to force the<lb/>
Navy ti stop its target<lb/>
bombardment and am-<lb/>
phibious exercises. The<lb/>
Navy maintains the island<lb/>
is vital for trai- ng the<lb/>
Atlan neet.<lb/>
Patrick said that the bill was aimed at<lb/>
, f  cutting the costs of the students,<lb/>
(cont. from pg- 1) The bil) passed with Hule debate.<lb/>
Cheryl Felbinger brought a message to<lb/>
the legislator from SGA Vice-President<lb/>
Charlie Sherrod, who was in a meeting to<lb/>
attempt to find a new football coach.<lb/>
Sherrod asked that students with any<lb/>
to the future of ECU<lb/>
(cont. from pg. 3)<lb/>
Evans and Alice Martin<lb/>
won the Certificate of<lb/>
Honor Awards.<lb/>
Special congratulations<lb/>
go to Cindy Rogers, co-<lb/>
captain of the ECU gym-<lb/>
nastics team who was first<lb/>
all-around on the ECU<lb/>
team on their first meet.<lb/>
The AOII's also con-<lb/>
gratulate Sherry Jones for<lb/>
winning the A.J. Fletcher<lb/>
Music Scholarship and for<lb/>
her performance as a<lb/>
finalist in ECU's Concerto<lb/>
Competition.<lb/>
The Alpha Delta Pi's<lb/>
are sponsoring a "Football<lb/>
Sunday" at the Attic on<lb/>
Dec. 16, starting at 1 p.m.<lb/>
and lasting until about 6<lb/>
p.m. There will be reduc-<lb/>
ed prices on beverages<lb/>
and free refreshments.<lb/>
The afternoon entertain-<lb/>
ment will feature a giant<lb/>
television screen to watch<lb/>
the Dallas Cowboys ?<lb/>
Washington Redskins<lb/>
game. Various door prizes<lb/>
will be given away. Ad-<lb/>
mission will be 50 cents<lb/>
The Chi Omegas will<lb/>
have their annual Christ-<lb/>
mas party on Sunday, Dec.<lb/>
9, at 7 p.m.<lb/>
The spring pledge class<lb/>
of Chi Omega locked the<lb/>
sisters out of the house<lb/>
this past weekend to trim<lb/>
the tree and surprise the<lb/>
sisters with a beautifully<lb/>
decorated house. Thanks<lb/>
go to the pledges!<lb/>
The Kappa Deltas are<lb/>
busy celebrating Christ-<lb/>
mas at their house.<lb/>
Last week, they made<lb/>
educational games for the<lb/>
children at Crippled Child-<lb/>
ren's Hospital in Rich-<lb/>
mond, Virginia. Support-<lb/>
ing the children is their<lb/>
national philanthropy.<lb/>
Monday, Dec. 3, the<lb/>
East<lb/>
Kappa Deltas held a rush<lb/>
tree-trimming party- T?<lb/>
night, they will hold their<lb/>
annual gag gift party for<lb/>
all sisters and pledges.<lb/>
Alpha Xi Deltas had<lb/>
a winter cocktail party at<lb/>
the Ramada Inn Saturday<lb/>
night, December I. Inis<lb/>
annual dinner dance is<lb/>
given to honor Alpha Xi s<lb/>
alumni. The sisters and<lb/>
pledges had a tree tr.mm-<lb/>
,ng party at the house las<lb/>
night. The Alpha Xi s<lb/>
seniors are having a<lb/>
Christmas Party Happy<lb/>
Hour at the Chapter X<lb/>
Tuesday night, Dec. 4.<lb/>
Come join in the tun.<lb/>
The Sigma Sigma Sig-<lb/>
ma's held their elections<lb/>
last week. The new<lb/>
officers are Eva Pittman,<lb/>
president; Ruth Bazemore,<lb/>
vice president; Joy Stroud,<lb/>
treasurer; Lynne Words-<lb/>
worth, secretary; Sandv<lb/>
Burke, rush chairman and<lb/>
Martha Lambert, educa<lb/>
tion chairman. Congratula<lb/>
tions and good luck to all<lb/>
the new officers.<lb/>
The Sigmas tree trim<lb/>
ming and alumni Christ<lb/>
mas Dinner will be held<lb/>
Wednesday night at the<lb/>
house. Thursday night<lb/>
Virginia Minges is hosting<lb/>
a party at her homt<lb/>
honor the seniors.<lb/>
Sigma's would like to<lb/>
welcome their two nev<lb/>
pledges, Jill McAllister<lb/>
and Lela Miller.<lb/>
Carolina Playhouse<lb/>
presents<lb/>
SAAD'S SHOE<lb/>
REPAIR<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
Quality Shoe Repair<lb/>
<lb/>
 ARMY-NAVY STORE<lb/>
jField, Deck, Flight, Snorkel <lb/>
 Jackets, Peacoats, Parkas,<lb/>
 Shoes, Combat Boots, Plus <lb/>
 1501 S. Evans Street . <lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI<lb/>
Little Sister Rush<lb/>
Tuesday Dec. 4,1979<lb/>
8:30 At the house<lb/>
803 Hooker Road<lb/>
Phone- 756-3540<lb/>
PART<lb/>
TINE<lb/>
JOB<lb/>
Looking for i part-time<lb/>
job with flexible hours<lb/>
and real business<lb/>
experience? Northwest<lb/>
Mutual Life Ins. Co.<lb/>
has openings for college<lb/>
agents. Call before noon<lb/>
for appointments!<lb/>
752-4080<lb/>
THE CHILDREN'S HOUR<lb/>
by<lb/>
Lillian Kellman<lb/>
From one of America's<lb/>
foremost playwrights<lb/>
a powerfully moving<lb/>
drama about the evil<lb/>
that a lie can do<lb/>
Directed by<lb/>
Travis Lockhart<lb/>
November 28 through December 1<lb/>
December 3 through 8<lb/>
8:15 p.m.<lb/>
Studio Theatre<lb/>
Tickets are $2.50<lb/>
ECU Students $1.50<lb/>
For reservations and information<lb/>
call 757-6390<lb/>
between 10 and 4<lb/>
Monday through Friday<lb/>
BEST EATIN'ALL AROUND,<lb/>
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A CARL REINER FILM<lb/>
STEVE MARTIN<lb/>
IfiejERK<lb/>
in<lb/>
BERIMADETTE PETERS, CATLIN ADAMS JACKIE MASON<lb/>
STEVE MARTIN CARL GOTTLIEB, MICHAEL ELIAS :STEVE MARTIN &amp; CARL GOTTLIEB<lb/>
DAVID V. PICKER WILLIAM E.MCEUEN CARL REINER 2 -D ??"??"?? <lb/>
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a<lb/>
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Good at all participating Hardee's. Please present this coupon be-<lb/>
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pay any sales tax due on the purchase price. This coupon not good<lb/>
in combination, with any other offers.<lb/>
4 'A<lb/>
"BEST EATM ALL AROUND "<lb/>
Coupon expires December 17,1979<lb/>
???"?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057235_0007"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
man. 1 ? <lb/>
features<lb/>
Tuesday, December 4,1979 Page 7<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
"I love it ? it's loud,<lb/>
and I can just hang<lb/>
right there<lb/>
Joyce Kennedy<lb/>
Mothers Finest took<lb/>
everyone another<lb/>
mother further<lb/>
M album out<lb/>
:our behind it<lb/>
? that's good, they<lb/>
't have to guess. '<lb/>
nn Murdoch<lb/>
By RICHARD GREEN<lb/>
and STEVE BACHNER<lb/>
"It was a professional consideration<lb/>
That's how one person backstage<lb/>
explained the billing of Mothers Finest<lb/>
before Nantucket at Saturday's concert at<lb/>
Minges. He went on to say that Nantucket<lb/>
was much more popular in this area and<lb/>
that three members of the group went to<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
If that's a professional consideration, it<lb/>
was a poor one. The reasoning should<lb/>
have been that MF is ten times the<lb/>
superior to Nantucket, and MF should<lb/>
have appeared after the home boys. But<lb/>
they didn't.<lb/>
As it turned out, MF blew everyone<lb/>
away with their high-energy tunes, a<lb/>
skillful blend of old and new, and a<lb/>
dvnamic stage presence led by lead singer<lb/>
Joyce Kennedy. Nantucket, as would any<lb/>
other second-rate rock group propelled by<lb/>
a local following, provided a horrible anti-<lb/>
climax to what could have been a great<lb/>
night (I can't wait for those cards and<lb/>
letters).<lb/>
The flawless musicianship of the Mr<lb/>
players is testimony to their more than ten<lb/>
years together (only the drummer has<lb/>
changed since the beginning). They<lb/>
churned out "Baby Love" and "Fire"<lb/>
with exceptional fluidity and drive, and<lb/>
the old Steppenwolf tune, "Magic Carpet<lb/>
Ride never reached the excellence of<lb/>
the Finest arrangement. Lead guitarist<lb/>
"Mo" flashed licks reminding me of vocal<lb/>
and saxophone solos, weaving unique<lb/>
jazz-rock smokin' around the driving<lb/>
melodies. And while not as flashy, "the<lb/>
Wizard" kept the bass line in high gear,<lb/>
playing his unique "thumb up" style<lb/>
(which reminds me of a character in a<lb/>
famous novel).<lb/>
Then it was time for the home boys,<lb/>
and the crowd was ready. I really cannot<lb/>
decide whether they really liked<lb/>
Nantucket's music or they simply<lb/>
appreciated the fact that the group is from<lb/>
North Carolina. I certainly hope it is the<lb/>
latter.<lb/>
Nantucket's performing abilities are<lb/>
adequate enough, but their lyrics, and<lb/>
even the lack of diversity of melodies, are<lb/>
an ample cure for insomnia. It was quite<lb/>
evident that they tried to match MF's<lb/>
drive ? and failed ? but the crowd did<lb/>
not seem to mind too much. E ERY song<lb/>
was about some fairy-tale love affair gone<lb/>
sour, and every song featured a worn-out<lb/>
guitar solo echoing the late sixties.<lb/>
Originalitv is not one of Nantucket's<lb/>
shining points. Tommy Redd's stage attire<lb/>
outdistances his song-writing and guitar-<lb/>
plaving abilities (though I'm sure most<lb/>
mothers wouldn't allow him inside their<lb/>
homes).<lb/>
If vou left before the end of the<lb/>
concert, you probably enjoyed it that<lb/>
much more.<lb/>
Interview<lb/>
(Photo by<lb/>
Following<lb/>
Mothers Finest's perfor- young appeal - they'll always have the<lb/>
ristmas building up<lb/>
Bv K.C NEEDHAM<lb/>
Assistant Features If riter<lb/>
Have vou ever felt that<lb/>
Christmas Day itself is an<lb/>
anticlimax after all the<lb/>
pla and gaity of the<lb/>
Christmas season? Many<lb/>
ECU students do, and the<lb/>
majority of those cite valid<lb/>
reasons for feeling that<lb/>
way.<lb/>
"It's tough to take<lb/>
Christmas seriously wnen<lb/>
the street decorations go<lb/>
up before Thanksgiving<lb/>
a -ophomore complained.<lb/>
"I can remember when<lb/>
the week before Christmas<lb/>
was the big build-up.<lb/>
People started to get in<lb/>
the mood for it a senior<lb/>
commented. "Now, the<lb/>
whole idea of Christmas is<lb/>
thrown on us the first of<lb/>
December and by the time<lb/>
the twentv-fifth arrives I'm<lb/>
kind of numb<lb/>
"I'll admit it another<lb/>
confessedI love the<lb/>
Christmas shows on T,<lb/>
but it spoils it when they<lb/>
put my favorites on during<lb/>
the first week of Decem-<lb/>
ber<lb/>
"December is sup-<lb/>
posed to be a month long<lb/>
season of good cheer these<lb/>
days, and I'm here to tell<lb/>
vou that nobody can stay<lb/>
in a good mood for a<lb/>
whole month on junior<lb/>
muttered.<lb/>
The street decorations<lb/>
bear witness to the fact<lb/>
that Christmas is coming,<lb/>
while radios blare the<lb/>
countdown of shopping<lb/>
days left and Santas begin<lb/>
to appear in department<lb/>
stores. Some students<lb/>
resent the commercial-<lb/>
ization.<lb/>
"It used to be that<lb/>
Christmas was seen as a<lb/>
time to spend with your<lb/>
family and be happy on<lb/>
student said, "but now it<lb/>
just seems like a pro-<lb/>
motional thing for stores<lb/>
"There's too much<lb/>
emphasis on presents<lb/>
another agreed, "and not<lb/>
enough on what we're<lb/>
truly celebratingChrist's<lb/>
birth. Sometimes it seems<lb/>
like the value of Christmas<lb/>
is placed totally on ma-<lb/>
terial things<lb/>
Part of the long,<lb/>
drawn-out build-up of<lb/>
Christmas that so many<lb/>
students feel and dislike<lb/>
has to do with the fact that<lb/>
they are students.<lb/>
"Here at EC, you have<lb/>
to get hyped up on<lb/>
Christmas long before it<lb/>
actually is so you can<lb/>
share it withvour friends<lb/>
a junior noted. "Once<lb/>
exams start, no one has<lb/>
time to be feeling Christ-<lb/>
masy, and after exams are<lb/>
over, everyone's gone<lb/>
home'<lb/>
"We have to have our<lb/>
Christmas parties before<lb/>
exams another said. "1<lb/>
mean, I hate to rush the<lb/>
season as much as anyone,<lb/>
but I can't have Christmas<lb/>
with a lot of my friends<lb/>
unless I do it ahead of<lb/>
time<lb/>
Of course, there are<lb/>
always those students who<lb/>
would be happy if the<lb/>
build-up of the holiday<lb/>
season lasted year-round.<lb/>
"I love it one<lb/>
laughed. "Every time<lb/>
those decorations come out<lb/>
I get so excited I can't<lb/>
stand it. The build-up is<lb/>
the best part<lb/>
use prodm<lb/>
The opening production<lb/>
of The Children 's Hour by<lb/>
Lillian Hellman, was pre-<lb/>
sented by the ECU<lb/>
Playhouse cast and crew<lb/>
with exquisite, artistic<lb/>
execution.<lb/>
Excellent casting by<lb/>
Director Travis Lockhart,<lb/>
brought about a realistic,<lb/>
personalized view of child-<lb/>
hood treachery. Seven<lb/>
giggling, nagging school-<lb/>
girls introduce the first act<lb/>
of the play. Their sassy,<lb/>
nonchalant attitudes give<lb/>
the audience a chance to<lb/>
reminisce about their per-<lb/>
sonal schooldays. How-<lb/>
ever, this scene is abruptly<lb/>
ever, this scene is abruptly<lb/>
interrupted by the en-<lb/>
trance of classmate Mary<lb/>
Tilford, played by Paige<lb/>
Weaver.<lb/>
Mary's irresponsible<lb/>
talk about an "unnatural"<lb/>
relationship between<lb/>
Karen, played by Debra<lb/>
Zumbach, and Martha,<lb/>
played by Shauna Holmes,<lb/>
depicts the good verses<lb/>
evil theme Hellman creat-<lb/>
ed. Mary's unjust accusa-<lb/>
tions about the two women<lb/>
who run the schoolhouse<lb/>
eventually involves black-<lb/>
mailing her schoolmate as<lb/>
well as convincing her<lb/>
grandmother of her lies.<lb/>
Consequently, the very<lb/>
dramatic and skillful dia-<lb/>
logue between the charac-<lb/>
ters proves to be detri-<lb/>
mental for everyone.<lb/>
The difficulty of play-<lb/>
ing the monstrous child<lb/>
that Mary is, did not<lb/>
prohibit Paige Weaver<lb/>
from staging a brilliant,<lb/>
convincing performance.<lb/>
Mary's malicious attitude<lb/>
was magnified by the<lb/>
certainty with which Sallie<lb/>
Clodfelter imitates Rosa-<lb/>
lie's innocent character.<lb/>
Mrs. Mortar, played by<lb/>
Hazel Stapleton, lives in a<lb/>
dream world of her past<lb/>
stage experiences. Her<lb/>
pettish, unsatisfied ways<lb/>
are imitated so accurately<lb/>
that the audience begins<lb/>
to resent her as much as<lb/>
her niece does. There was<lb/>
an amazing resemblance<lb/>
between Grandma Tilford<lb/>
and the grandmother that<lb/>
we know. Being over-<lb/>
protective, overbearing<lb/>
and biased to her grand-<lb/>
child are all characteristics<lb/>
Mrs. Helen Steer portrays<lb/>
with abandon.<lb/>
The Children's Hour'<lb/>
will be showing through<lb/>
Friday in the Studio<lb/>
Theatre. Tickets are on<lb/>
sale in the Drama Building<lb/>
Box Office from 10 a.m. to<lb/>
 p.m. The price is $1.50<lb/>
for ECU students with ID<lb/>
and Activity Card, and<lb/>
the general<lb/>
$2.50<lb/>
public.<lb/>
for<lb/>
C?<lb/>
<lb/>
d<lb/>
$o<lb/>
V<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
Sj<lb/>
'<lb/>
o<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
$<lb/>
mance, we talked with Joyce Kennedy and<lb/>
Glenn Murdock, lead singers for the<lb/>
group. MF recently toured Europe, at<lb/>
times with Gruppo Sportivo, a new wave<lb/>
group from Holland, and said they were<lb/>
one of the finest groups MF has toured<lb/>
with. Somehow, we digressed, and the<lb/>
subject of disco entered the discussion.<lb/>
East Carolinian: Disco began in Europe<lb/>
and came over to the United States. Do<lb/>
you think it will be around for a while?<lb/>
Joyce Kennedy: Europe hates disco. You<lb/>
ten-year crowd. Actually, all they did was<lb/>
pick up a brand new audience. So I think<lb/>
thev were businessmen, as far as that was<lb/>
concerned.<lb/>
Murdoch: Yeah, with a group like that,<lb/>
vou just don't need to (come out with a lot<lb/>
of albums) ? as long as you keep giving<lb/>
people something.<lb/>
Kennedy: They've got their audience.<lb/>
EC: Album sales are off, according to<lb/>
statistics, and at least three record<lb/>
companies have raised prices to<lb/>
(now ACDC is considered a disco band Peop e justtaren t buyingalbumsso<lb/>
SWEDISH<lb/>
Swe dish Summer, a<lb/>
travel-adventure film by<lb/>
Dick Reddy, will be<lb/>
shown in Hendrix The-<lb/>
ater on Thursday, Dec.<lb/>
6, at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
BORGE<lb/>
Victor Borge, the<lb/>
"clown prince of the<lb/>
piano will perform in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium,<lb/>
Dec. 10, at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
The performance is<lb/>
sponsored by the Stu-<lb/>
dent Union Artists Ser-<lb/>
ies.<lb/>
MADRIGAL<lb/>
Mendenhall's Madrigal<lb/>
Dinners begin tonight<lb/>
and continue through<lb/>
December 8.<lb/>
in Europe? Let me tell you about disco in<lb/>
Europe ? forget it. They don't<lb/>
particularly care for disco there.<lb/>
EC: So you like ACDC?<lb/>
Glenn Murdock: Yeah, they're great!<lb/>
?C.What, their energy?<lb/>
Murdoch: They're just not buying albums<lb/>
they have to guess on, that they think<lb/>
thev're going to like.<lb/>
Kennedy: But with inflation, they're going<lb/>
right to what they know is good, and they<lb/>
put that money there rather than buying a<lb/>
Kennedy: That's right. Dog e' dog! I love lot of groups that might be good, and they<lb/>
it - it's loud, and I can just hang right don't know nothing about.<lb/>
"here There's some people that are loud EC: Well you have your foot in the door in<lb/>
and I can't hang no more than two or that respect.<lb/>
three songs, but thev're so loud and so Murdock: Yeah, right. We ve got good<lb/>
good you just can't'leave. You just let management, good tours - or this album<lb/>
goou, yuu j mportant to let people hear<lb/>
EC- rhyo7:orrraymabout ending up like you. To put ot an album and then tour<lb/>
Emerson Uke and Palmer, or the Eagles, behind it - that's good, they don t have<lb/>
fohat matter - one album every two or to guess. Then, they go out and buy the<lb/>
three Years? album' and the re pretty mU satisf,ed<lb/>
Kennedy: No, you see, the thing about - if you're good If you're: noi?<lb/>
the Eagles - what happened with a lot of EC: Do you think most of your appeal is<lb/>
those biff groups, like Fleetwood Mac ? on stage.  u<lb/>
s the disco thing. And when vou're in Murdock: It's the initial thing that gets<lb/>
hi business, vou get to a certain point, people to start buying, so when they start<lb/>
you have to deal with it as a business. It buying, then other people are going to<lb/>
is not only fun and games. You have to hear<lb/>
get yourself organized and pace your<lb/>
career because it can go down in a<lb/>
second. If you don't make the right moves<lb/>
and the right decisions <lb/>
Murdock: And the right albums<lb/>
Kennedy: and the right albums. And<lb/>
while disco was doin' its thing, it had the<lb/>
whole business in an uproar. It would<lb/>
have been absolutely stupid for them to<lb/>
put an album out at that time.<lb/>
Murdock: So they just stayed away from<lb/>
it<lb/>
Kennedy: and just waited it out<lb/>
EC- or they could have done what the EC: Oh, by the way, how did the name of<lb/>
Stones did? the group come about?<lb/>
Kennedy: That's because they have a very Kennedy: Mother-? ers.<lb/>
Kennedy: yeah, because sometimes<lb/>
word of mouth is alot more important than<lb/>
radio.<lb/>
EC: Are you under pressure to produce,<lb/>
or are you pretty relaxed?<lb/>
Kennedy: We're still growing. It would be<lb/>
different if we were already over.<lb/>
EC: You're not worried about peaking too<lb/>
soon?<lb/>
Kennedy: We're still a baby.<lb/>
Murdock: We just have a good time.<lb/>
Kennedy: We're looking forward<lb/>
everything.<lb/>
to<lb/>
LfAMIOr A Boor C0LU6? -rwc MftKP W<lb/>
&amp;i Dwo AJoiueii<lb/>
t<lb/>
 i. ,5-<lb/>
-? V ? <lb/>
i - -?-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057235_0008"/><lb/>
Page 8 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 4 December 1979<lb/>
Weekly Album Review?Latest Releases<lb/>
By PAT MINGES<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
Little Feat ? Down On The Farm<lb/>
This is the last real record album from one of the<lb/>
most progressive groups of the seventies and one of the<lb/>
best live bands in existence.<lb/>
Lowell George was with Frank Zappa, having played<lb/>
on Reuben and the Jets and Weasels Ripped My Flesh,<lb/>
when he played his truckers theme song, "Willin" for<lb/>
Frank. Zappa said he was impressed, but he thought the<lb/>
material was not appropriate for the Mothers, and why<lb/>
didn't Lowell start his own band. Zappa helped Lowell<lb/>
start up Little Feat, and they released their first albums,<lb/>
Little Feat and Sailin' Shoes, which were not met with<lb/>
great commercial success. The band was on its last legs<lb/>
when co-manager Bob Cavallo found a studio in<lb/>
Maryland cheap enough for Feats to afford.<lb/>
D.C. nightlife and the release of Feats Don't Fail Me<lb/>
Now in 1974 made LoweH George and Little Feat<lb/>
national sensations. The Last Record Album and Time<lb/>
Loves A Hero were both tremendously successful, and<lb/>
the live album Waiting For Columbus was perhaps their<lb/>
finest endeavor yet, receiving four stars from the<lb/>
Downbeat critics, quite a remarkable feat for a rock<lb/>
group. Lowell George died last summer, perhaps a<lb/>
victim of the vicious rock-and-roll lifestyle, and Down On<lb/>
The Farm is a posthumous tribute to one of the most<lb/>
unique and creative forces in his genre of rock.<lb/>
Down On The Farm is, if I am permitted for once to<lb/>
ascend to Olympus, the best Little Feat album ever<lb/>
released. Little Feat is the most dynamic assemblage of<lb/>
musicians in rock, and joining Feats are Fred Tackett,<lb/>
David Lyndley (of LyndleyCooder fame), Sneaky Pete,<lb/>
Robben Ford, Bonnie Raitt, Rosemary Butler (one of the<lb/>
finest female vocalists in the business) and Fran<lb/>
Payne. Need I say more? Of course!<lb/>
The compositions on the album are splendid, ranging<lb/>
from the "Deadish" "Six Feet Of Snow" to distinctly<lb/>
Feat's "Straight From The Heart "Front Page News"<lb/>
and "Be One Now" are very tender songs, and "Feel<lb/>
The Groove by drummer Sam Clayton and Gordon<lb/>
DeWitty, has something to say to us all.<lb/>
"Negative<lb/>
Attitudes<lb/>
Like a fire that's burning<lb/>
All the things you should be learning<lb/>
And positive<lb/>
Attitudes<lb/>
Help you in growing<lb/>
Towards the things you should be knowing"<lb/>
Tell the Ayatollah to look that up in his holy book.<lb/>
Cliff Richard - We Don't Talk Anymore<lb/>
True rock and roll never dies, as geeksters like<lb/>
Chuck Berry, Jerry Lee Lewis and now Cliff Richards,<lb/>
continue a legacy as they are reappearing on the charts<lb/>
after twenty years in the recording industry. Cliff<lb/>
Richard had his first million seller in 1959 with "Living<lb/>
Doll his next hit was "Devil Woman" in 1976, his<lb/>
first in the U.S. after 49 in the U.K and his current hit<lb/>
is "We Don't Talk Anymore rapidly rising on the<lb/>
singles chart.<lb/>
He was born Harry Webb in Luckow, India, on Oct.<lb/>
14, 1940, and likenesses were made between Richard<lb/>
and the late Elvis in that both were deeply religious<lb/>
superstars. To look at Cliffs picture on the cover, you<lb/>
could scarcely guess he could easily be your father. The<lb/>
music on the inside would continue to amaze you, as<lb/>
therein lie some of the most modern and pleasing<lb/>
melodic structures of this year in the rock-and-roll<lb/>
format. The album was recorded in Paris and did well<lb/>
on the European market and, hopefully, will do well in<lb/>
the United States. The single "We Don't Talk<lb/>
Anymore" reminds one of Todd Rundgren, and "You<lb/>
Know That I Love You" resembles Robert Palmer, but<lb/>
most of the album is very original and palatable. It's a<lb/>
nice one.<lb/>
Dan Fogelberg ? Phoenix<lb/>
Dan Fogelberg was the son of two professional<lb/>
classical performers, and has worked with Van Morrison<lb/>
and Jackson Browne. His first album was released in<lb/>
1972 entitled Homefree, featuring the first pairing of<lb/>
Eagles veterans Joe Walsh, Don Henley and Glen Frey.<lb/>
Souvenirs and Captured Angel were arguably his finest<lb/>
endeavors, and with the release of Netherlands,<lb/>
Fogelberg's recordings began to take a mysterious turn.<lb/>
He began to undertake increasingly elaborate<lb/>
productions, lunging into self-indulgence that appeared<lb/>
once again in Twin Sons Of Different Mothers, an album<lb/>
that received horribly critical reviews. Weisberg clearly<lb/>
outshone Fogelberg, and the album wasn't so bad; it<lb/>
was perfect for Muzak.<lb/>
Phoenix has a few nice cuts, but altogether it is not<lb/>
that impressive. Fogelberg is perhaps trying a little too<lb/>
hard, for one can only stand so much sugar in his tea, or<lb/>
it starts to taste like medicine. Fogelberg's strength lies<lb/>
in his lyrical imagery, and his compositional skills are<lb/>
also pleasant, but he needs to lighten up on the<lb/>
production end. Too many tears make your pretzels<lb/>
soggy. The proceeds of this album go toward<lb/>
anti-nuclear and pro-solar activities, but where was Dan<lb/>
at the MUSE concert in Madison Square Garden (soon<lb/>
to be released as an album, a la Bread and Roses).<lb/>
Fogelberg has risen from the ashes on Phoenix, but<lb/>
he certainly doesn't fly.<lb/>
The Emotions ? Come Into Our World<lb/>
Known for their singles and for their association with<lb/>
Maurice White and Earth, Wind, and Fire, this is a trio<lb/>
of talented vocalists. There are plenty of dance tunes on<lb/>
this album, a few popular ballads, and several songs<lb/>
penned by Maurice White. These are definitely the best<lb/>
cuts on the album. The personnel lineup features<lb/>
Paulinho da Costa, Ndugu, Steve Ferrone, David Foster,<lb/>
Dave Paich and almost a hundred other musicians.<lb/>
The best songs are "On and On" and "The Movie<lb/>
but I am sure the most popular will be the dance tunes.<lb/>
There are none as strong as "Best of My Lov-  but I<lb/>
think this album would please those interested in soulful<lb/>
dance music or prefer the sound of the dynamic Earth,<lb/>
Wind and Fire.<lb/>
Aerosmith ? Night In The Ruts<lb/>
These guys have come a long way from their thirty-<lb/>
dollar-a-night gigs in New Hampshire. They are one of<lb/>
the forefront bands of the teen rock scene of the Kiss,<lb/>
Led Zep, and Ted Nugent. This album surprises me, for<lb/>
I let it sit for two weeks without hearing it, and then I<lb/>
heard it for the first time at a party Friday. It was a big<lb/>
Greenville partv like 1 have not seen in a while, full of<lb/>
"veterans and rNervbody was rocking out and wearing<lb/>
a big smile. Who am I to argue with such a prestigious<lb/>
group of hipsters It ha, to be a good-selling album.<lb/>
Not having much of a preference for this type of<lb/>
hard-rock jam, it was weird to find out the more I<lb/>
listened, the more I liked it. Steve Tyler 8 flapjack lips<lb/>
surpass even Mich's floppies and could possibly such on<lb/>
former staff writer Sissy Hankshaw's enormous thumbs.<lb/>
This m.ght be a last gasp for these guys as thev trv to<lb/>
get back to their ruts. Definitely for the rockers.<lb/>
SAVE THE<lb/>
CHILDREN<lb/>
OF<lb/>
A<lb/>
CLIFF'S<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
 <lb/>
WiWor ?<lb/>
,X??, " tJt?' ?"? ? notw Cront<lb/>
AIX YOU<lb/>
$a.9s CAN EAT!<lb/>
MONDAY-THURSDAY<lb/>
TROUT, FLOUNDER,<lb/>
CRAB CARES<lb/>
TEA is included with meal<lb/>
800-243-50751<lb/>
WSave<lb/>
I the<lb/>
Children<lb/>
?<lb/>
CLIFF'S SUPER<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
CRAB CAKE SPECIAL<lb/>
Z Golden Fried Crab Cakes<lb/>
French Fries, Slaw, and<lb/>
Hushpuppies. ?)?c<lb/>
Grade 'A' Whole Fryers<lb/>
41 Lb.<lb/>
Rich-N- Easy Cake Frosting<lb/>
Reg. 99 Value Choc.<lb/>
Vanilla 15oz 21.00<lb/>
Pepsi-Cola<lb/>
10oz- Ctn.of6 78<lb/>
Plus deposit<lb/>
Soft 'W Pretty<lb/>
Toilet Tissue<lb/>
4 Rol l Pkg, 78<lb/>
Bounty<lb/>
Paper Towels Giant Roll 48<lb/>
with this coupon and<lb/>
$7.50 food order excluding specials<lb/>
expires Dec. 8. Without coupon 88<lb/>
Limit one per customer.<lb/>
Clip this Coupon<lb/>
Duncan Hines Yellow Cake Mix <lb/>
17 oz. Box 58 with coupon and<lb/>
$7.50 food order excluding specials.<lb/>
Without coupon 78s<lb/>
Ortega<lb/>
Taco Shells<lb/>
10 Count<lb/>
Pkg3$1.00<lb/>
LeSeur<lb/>
Garden Peas<lb/>
1 303 Can 38<lb/>
?i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
-i<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
!<lb/>
I<lb/>
Expires DEC.8 Limit one per cuetomer <lb/>
Clip this coupon I<lb/>
Golden<lb/>
Bannanas<lb/>
4 lbs. $1.00<lb/>
ftlllf'o Clip this Coupon<lb/>
Mayonnaise Qt. Jar 88 with coupon.<lb/>
With $7.50 food order excluding specials.<lb/>
$1.08 Without coupon<lb/>
Expires Dec. 8. Limit one per customer.<lb/>
Look What A Dime Will Buy<lb/>
White Potatoes Lb<lb/>
Yellow Onions Lb 10<lb/>
Green Cabbage Lb<lb/>
White Grapefruit CP?. coupon<lb/>
E.C.U. COUPON<lb/>
10 DISCOUNT ON ORDERS OVER $15<lb/>
5 DISCOUNT ON ORDERS<lb/>
BETWEEN $5 and $15<lb/>
'The more you buy the more you save<lb/>
name<lb/>
ID<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057235_0009"/><lb/>
4 December 1979 THE past CAROLINIAN Page 9<lb/>
Campus Spice<lb/>
Pom<lb/>
TV<lb/>
Pots, Mugs, Bowls,<lb/>
- and other functional<lb/>
v iteru a well as<lb/>
n tional A corative<lb/>
- v ill be on sale to<lb/>
. iblic at East Carolina<lb/>
v( sit) Dec <lb/>
ECl Ceramic<lb/>
 will have its animal<lb/>
I rtristmas show and<lb/>
10 a.in until 7<lb/>
W i ight Auditorium<lb/>
W . rk to he<lb/>
n the sale were<lb/>
? b ei amics students<lb/>
ECl S? hool ol rt.<lb/>
ds from the sale<lb/>
sed l the Guild<lb/>
enrichment<lb/>
amics programs<lb/>
Recognition<lb/>
I oordinator<lb/>
hild nursing in<lb/>
? - Carolina Univers-<lb/>
? ! Nursing, is<lb/>
? 21 nurse admin-<lb/>
im the I S and<lb/>
ted ut-<lb/>
rial per-<lb/>
?<lb/>
gnized<lb/>
urses in a recenl<lb/>
 included nurse<lb/>
t r 14<lb/>
from Nova<lb/>
- i Id nursing<lb/>
at ECU, Ms.<lb/>
,i a liai -<lb/>
? . ult members<lb/>
fract<lb/>
u d i n g I -<lb/>
public health<lb/>
ents, physician's of-<lb/>
I da) i<lb/>
-he is<lb/>
en-<lb/>
ini with the Piti<lb/>
and i-<lb/>
? ? lop-<lb/>
?? - .<lb/>
th the ECl<lb/>
M<lb/>
n a mem-<lb/>
N.C. Dep;<lb/>
an Resoui<lb/>
Health Program Develop-<lb/>
ment, chair of the com-<lb/>
mittee on Nurses in School<lb/>
Health and a governing<lb/>
councilor of the American<lb/>
Puhlu Health Association,<lb/>
Award<lb/>
on<lb/>
 painting hv illiam<lb/>
Holle) . chairperson ol art<lb/>
education inthe East Caro-<lb/>
lina I niversity School of<lb/>
rt. was -elected tor a<lb/>
 rth Carolina National<lb/>
k Purchase Award at<lb/>
1 U Semi-Annual<lb/>
Juried Competition ol the<lb/>
W atei oloi Society ol<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Di Holley's painting.<lb/>
Pi hide to V inter as<lb/>
? 16 vorks chos( n tor<lb/>
the exhibition from more<lb/>
than 300 entries.<lb/>
Juror tor the exhibition<lb/>
w as Doris V lute of the<lb/>
National Academy ol De-<lb/>
sign and the American<lb/>
W atercolor Society.<lb/>
The 36 exhibited v orks<lb/>
are on view in the Duke<lb/>
Museum of Art at Duke<lb/>
I niversity and will remain<lb/>
there through the month<lb/>
No ember.<lb/>
Clarinet<lb/>
Deborah Chodacki,<lb/>
inet instructor in the<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Scho ?1 Music has<lb/>
ipleted a series ol solo<lb/>
? chamber appearances<lb/>
in the Chicago area.<lb/>
She was chamber solo-<lb/>
in 'The Daphne<lb/>
 ariations a composition<lb/>
lancers and tour<lb/>
musicians, in a perform-<lb/>
sponsored bv tlie<lb/>
ional Endowment for<lb/>
In a recital ol works by<lb/>
nposer Dennis Lovin-<lb/>
?mposer-in-resi-<lb/>
University ol<lb/>
Nebraska, Ms. Chodacki<lb/>
I his solo clarinet<lb/>
work " Arioso" and per-<lb/>
i in the premier<lb/>
amber work. "Pro-<lb/>
She also appeared in a<lb/>
chamber ensemble at teh<lb/>
Second Annual Concert of<lb/>
Minimal and Conceptual<lb/>
Music at Northwestern<lb/>
University, Evanston, 111<lb/>
where Ms. Chodacki re-<lb/>
ceived the Master ol<lb/>
Music degree in clarinet<lb/>
performance.<lb/>
Deborah Chodacki is an<lb/>
alumna of the Eastman<lb/>
School of Music and has<lb/>
performed concertos with<lb/>
the Eastman Musica Nova<lb/>
and the Pierre Monteux<lb/>
Donmaine School Orche-<lb/>
stra in Maine.<lb/>
She has been principal<lb/>
clarinet with the Chicago<lb/>
Friends of Music Chamber<lb/>
Orchestra, the Park Forest<lb/>
Symphony Orchestra, the<lb/>
Spoleto (Italy) Festival of<lb/>
Two Worlds and the<lb/>
Colorado Philharmonic<lb/>
(rrhchestra.<lb/>
Winner<lb/>
Dena Harrell, depart-<lb/>
mental secretary for the<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
School of Music, is the<lb/>
winner of the Greenville<lb/>
Business and Professional<lb/>
 omen's Club "Young<lb/>
t lareerist" Competition.<lb/>
Winners in the annual<lb/>
competition are selected<lb/>
onthe basis of professional<lb/>
activities, career goals,<lb/>
and performance in indi-<lb/>
vidual interviews, panel<lb/>
discussions and brief bio-<lb/>
graphical speeches.<lb/>
Judges for this year's<lb/>
local competition were Dr.<lb/>
Dorothy Muller, assistant<lb/>
professor in the ECU<lb/>
School of Education; Boh<lb/>
 icke district manager<lb/>
for .letter-on Standard Life<lb/>
Insurance Co and Anne<lb/>
 ortham of Farm Man-<lb/>
agement-Real Estate De-<lb/>
velopment. Henderson.<lb/>
The "Young Careerist"<lb/>
award is the Business and<lb/>
Professional W omen's<lb/>
Club highest professional<lb/>
recognition for women<lb/>
between the ages of 20<lb/>
ami 30 years. Ms. Harrell<lb/>
and other winners from<lb/>
other area local compet-<lb/>
itions will enter a district<lb/>
competition in Tarboro<lb/>
March 23, 1980, and<lb/>
district winners will be<lb/>
judged in a statewide<lb/>
event in Winston-Salem<lb/>
June 13-15.<lb/>
Dena Harrell is a<lb/>
native of Richmond, Va<lb/>
and the daughter of the<lb/>
late Charles R. Viverette<lb/>
and Mr. and Mrs. Robert<lb/>
D. Staton or Shaw nee<lb/>
Estates, Powhatan, Va.<lb/>
She is the grand-<lb/>
daughter of Mrs. Rena<lb/>
Hodges of Scotland Neck.<lb/>
Appointment<lb/>
Dr. G. Earl Trevathan<lb/>
has been appointed pro-<lb/>
fessor of pediatrics at the<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
School of Medicine, ac-<lb/>
cording to Dr. Jon B.<lb/>
Tingelstad, chairman of<lb/>
pediatrics.<lb/>
Trevathan has been in<lb/>
private practice in Green-<lb/>
ville for the last 25 years.<lb/>
He opened his first office<lb/>
in 1954 and in 1960 started<lb/>
a group practice, Green-<lb/>
ville Pediatric Services. He<lb/>
has a special interest in<lb/>
pediatric neurology.<lb/>
A native of Pitt County.<lb/>
Trevathan has been active<lb/>
in many community or-<lb/>
ganizations, including the<lb/>
Pitt County Medical Soci-<lb/>
etv, Pitt County Tuber-<lb/>
culosis Association, Pitt<lb/>
County Mental Health<lb/>
Association, Greenville<lb/>
Rotary Club and the Sierra<lb/>
Club<lb/>
He has served as chiet<lb/>
of staff at Pitt County-<lb/>
Memorial Hospital and<lb/>
chairman of the Mid-East<lb/>
Comprehensive Health<lb/>
Planning Committee. He<lb/>
currently is a member oi<lb/>
the N.C. Commission on<lb/>
Health Services.<lb/>
Trevathan received his<lb/>
undergraduate degree from<lb/>
the University of North<lb/>
Carolina-Chapel Hill and<lb/>
his M.D. from the L'ni-<lb/>
versitv of Colorado.<lb/>
HAWAII<lb/>
march 0 -16<lb/>
Quad occupancy<lb/>
Room $675.00<lb/>
STUDIKT JNKM<lb/>
??' iMOUM ?VMVTV<lb/>
(Want<lb/>
A grant of $5,300 has<lb/>
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School of Business faculty<lb/>
for a study of real estate<lb/>
advertising.<lb/>
Wardrep's project,<lb/>
"Media Effectiveness of<lb/>
Real Estate Advertising<lb/>
received funding from the<lb/>
Realtors National Market-<lb/>
ing Institute, a division of<lb/>
the National Association of<lb/>
Realtors. The grant to<lb/>
Wardrep was one of five<lb/>
such grants to colleges<lb/>
and universities across the<lb/>
U.S.<lb/>
The objective ol the<lb/>
project is to test the effec-<lb/>
tiveness of various adver-<lb/>
tising media on the key<lb/>
market segments of a<lb/>
residential realty firm,<lb/>
Wardrep said.<lb/>
These key groups in-<lb/>
clude home buyers (local<lb/>
and out-of-town), home<lb/>
sellers (local moves and<lb/>
out-of-town moves), and<lb/>
sales associates.<lb/>
Wardrep formally ac-<lb/>
cepted the grant at the<lb/>
recent meeting of the<lb/>
National Association of<lb/>
Realtor- in New Orleans.<lb/>
Price includes plane fare,<lb/>
airline meals , transfers, &amp; baggage handling,<lb/>
&amp; hotel accomodations. (Sign up before Jan. 7<lb/>
to avoid another price increase)<lb/>
The Student Union Travel Committee<lb/>
Leather B?tt?<lb/>
$6toS1?<lb/>
Leather Handbag<lb/>
$10 to $25<lb/>
Shoes Repaired To Look<lb/>
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pregnancy test birth control and<lb/>
problem pregnancy counseling For<lb/>
further mtorma'ion call 832-0635 (toll<lb/>
tree number 800-221-2568) between<lb/>
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3. Offer valid only on rings ordered during this sale<lb/>
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5. At that time of order your ArtCarved Representative will<lb/>
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mailed along with proof of full payment to ArtCarved within<lb/>
three months after you order your ring Rebate void after this<lb/>
period Allow four weeks for rebate processing<lb/>
An ArtCarved Representative will oe at<lb/>
Student Supply Store<lb/>
DATE: mon. - wed. dec. 3,4,5<lb/>
W<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057235_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 4 December 1979<lb/>
TWO local poets will Support<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
highlight reading<lb/>
Photo b Diane Rathbun<lb/>
Reading machine<lb/>
for ECU's blind<lb/>
B FRANCEINE I'KKK<lb/>
ECL eu s Bureau<lb/>
- f-times it-was-the-worst-of-times<lb/>
he vicinity ol Easl Carolina I niversity's<lb/>
a Center who recent!) overheard these lines<lb/>
inicalh read aloud in "synthetic English"<lb/>
lered t a robot were beginning Charles<lb/>
I 7al( oj In 0 Cities.<lb/>
?.nnal" and "robot-like" are two of the terms<lb/>
ribe the of the Kurzweil<lb/>
Mai the Blind, a desk top microcom-<lb/>
tnted material to spoken<lb/>
KRM's synthetic English take- great<lb/>
omprehend, at least at first, it<lb/>
ward tor ECl - blind<lb/>
n- Braille books. I ntil now.<lb/>
lo others to n ad these maten.il aloud<lb/>
i them on sound tape.<lb/>
d users ol ECl 's Joyner Libran ma<lb/>
inted page on the KHM screen and<lb/>
n It tl hine's pronunciation oi a<lb/>
lear, the u in push a button and the<lb/>
 ? I<lb/>
he most exciting libran media<lb/>
years. We're reall glad to have<lb/>
! Vnn Watson, coordinator oi the<lb/>
.1 ('enter.<lb/>
is able to read b scanning the<lb/>
lution camera, then trans-<lb/>
1 trical impulses v hich it<lb/>
 she explained.<lb/>
ids are taken from a tape casette and<lb/>
? is, the KRM identifies<lb/>
. - 1 hem into w 1 ?rds, using<lb/>
guistic rule- and 1,500 e<lb/>
- : bet ause the<lb/>
lion marks<lb/>
said thi - inds spoken b the<lb/>
machine's speech synthesizer<lb/>
udspeaker lo ated nearby.<lb/>
re orded on reeb<lb/>
blind to the KHM s stem.<lb/>
: item d I r readers<lb/>
lirments 1- ECl 's V isualtek<lb/>
the standard<lb/>
. 'T. w hich projects printed<lb/>
1 tele ision screen t"r<lb/>
ttes large s olumes and ran<lb/>
typewriter, so that a visually-<lb/>
parh read tie1 typed material on<lb/>
?<lb/>
12 ,000 for the purchase of the<lb/>
ment tor the blind originated from<lb/>
igh the NLC. Department i Human<lb/>
i b ECl Foundation funds and some<lb/>
iversit) administration.<lb/>
the other two campuses with KRM<lb/>
, been designated b the state Division<lb/>
- ? regional centers tor program- for<lb/>
ti 1UM1IW0I4 titlhl<lb/>
Two local poets will<lb/>
highlight a multi-media<lb/>
poetrj reading scheduled<lb/>
for Thursday evening in<lb/>
Jenkins Fine Arts ("(Miter<lb/>
Dianne Rathbun ol<lb/>
Greenville ami Margaret<lb/>
Boothe Baddour oi Golds-<lb/>
boro will read their poems<lb/>
on 'The Family<lb/>
Rathbun vas a visiting<lb/>
artist at both ance<lb/>
Granville Community Col-<lb/>
lege (ll77 78 and Wayne<lb/>
Community College (1("B-<lb/>
7')), and she has worked<lb/>
a- a graphir designer tor<lb/>
the NC.SI Extension Ser-<lb/>
 ice.<lb/>
lso a graphir artisl<lb/>
and photographer, Rath<lb/>
bun sees as her goal "to<lb/>
develope and understand-<lb/>
ing and appreciation tor<lb/>
contemporary graphics<lb/>
with the fine art- a-<lb/>
common denominator<lb/>
Baddour is president ol<lb/>
the North Carolina Poetrj<lb/>
Society and has served as<lb/>
the direi tor ol the Com-<lb/>
munity rts Council in<lb/>
Goldsboro a ne !ount<lb/>
tor tun years. She has<lb/>
arranged, directed and<lb/>
performed in reader's<lb/>
theater produi tions ol The<lb/>
Jf nrltl or Carl Sandburg<lb/>
and I Christmas Wassail.<lb/>
Baddour's poetry<lb/>
awards include the l('7o<lb/>
Tarheel ntcrs Round<lb/>
table Award tor " Hie Mad<lb/>
liner" and a ')7() Irene<lb/>
Lea he Ward lor "W hat<lb/>
Color I- The Sun?"<lb/>
1 tit- reading begins al<lb/>
8:00 p.m. Thursday in the<lb/>
second-floor auditorium oi<lb/>
the Jenkins Fine Arts<lb/>
Center. I here v ill also be<lb/>
a workshop, and Forum<lb/>
nihrr- are in ited to<lb/>
i poems 'ii th- subject<lb/>
1 il I ho Familv<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057235_0011"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
lian ? ?<lb/>
sports<lb/>
Tuesday, December 4,1979 Page 11<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
ECU players saddened<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
"He's like a father to us. He's always there when<lb/>
you need him<lb/>
But "he" is on the way out. Afters six years as head<lb/>
coach of the East Carolina Pirates, Pat Dye is moving<lb/>
on. Behind him, he is leaving a group of players who<lb/>
look at him as more than a football coach. As ECU<lb/>
guard Wayne Inman put it above, they look at him as a<lb/>
father.<lb/>
Most of the Pirates have said that they were very<lb/>
shocked by Dye's abrupt resignation Thursday, but that<lb/>
in a way they were expecting such a move.<lb/>
"I kind of felt it coming said Inman, a junior who<lb/>
will return next season. "The last couple of team<lb/>
meetings before he resigned you could tell something<lb/>
was up. He was so emotional<lb/>
Inman said that he felt that Dye really hated to leave<lb/>
East Carolina. "I know he does Inman said, "because<lb/>
he's the type of coach that gets very close to his players.<lb/>
I guess some problems with administration forced him to<lb/>
leave<lb/>
Before Dye announced his resignation officially<lb/>
Thursday at 4:30 p.m he held a meeting with the team<lb/>
amidst rumors that had spread throughout Scales Field<lb/>
House claiming the coach was going to make a drastic<lb/>
move. He called the meeting at 3:30, exactly one hour<lb/>
before the resignation.<lb/>
With all the rumors that were going around that<lb/>
Davenport<lb/>
Inman<lb/>
said split end Vern Davenport, "we sort ot<lb/>
expected that he would resign. But I went in there<lb/>
hoping he wouldn't say it<lb/>
The meeting was a very emotional one, both for the<lb/>
coach and his players. "It really hit all the players<lb/>
hard commented Inman. "All the guys were hanging<lb/>
their heads ? just kind of shaking their heads like it<lb/>
couldn't be happening<lb/>
Naturally, the meeting with the team was a very<lb/>
emotional one for Dye. "There's no way I could come<lb/>
out of there dry he said later in the day.<lb/>
The mood in Scales Field House after the resignation<lb/>
was a somber one, to say the least. "It was almost like a<lb/>
funeral there for a while said senior defensive Wayne<lb/>
Poole. "It all happened so quick. I guess everyone was<lb/>
in sort of a state of shock<lb/>
The thing that bothers the Pirates the most now that<lb/>
they have "accepted" Dye's resignation is the question<lb/>
of who the next ECU head coach will be.<lb/>
"The committee needs to move quickly said senior<lb/>
safety Ruffin McNeill. "The guys who are coming back<lb/>
next year are kind of lost. They need someone to turn<lb/>
to<lb/>
And Davenport, a senior who could come back next<lb/>
season because he has a year of eligibility left, said the<lb/>
selection had better be a good one. "We don't want just<lb/>
anybody to come here said Davenport. "We don't<lb/>
want anybody who plans on using ECU as a stepping<lb/>
stone. Wexneed somebody who will stay here and devote<lb/>
themselves to making this program as good as<lb/>
possible<lb/>
Most of the Pirate players, and Dye, would like to<lb/>
see assistant coach Dick Kupec get the job. "I can think<lb/>
of no one more qualified than Dick said Dye.<lb/>
"I would like to see Coach Kupec get the job<lb/>
because the change wouldn't be so great said tackle<lb/>
Matt Mullholand. "He's very knowledgeable and is<lb/>
definitely qualified<lb/>
Other than Kupec, names that have been rumored as<lb/>
being considered by the selection committee include<lb/>
Citadel coach Art Baker, Western Carolina coach Bob<lb/>
Waters, ex-N.C. State assistant Jim Donnan,<lb/>
ex-Clemson coach Carl Reese, Missouri assistant Kenny<lb/>
Wheeler, ex-ECU assistant Carl Reese and ex-pro<lb/>
quarterback Roman Gabriel.<lb/>
Pat Dye looks ahead<lb/>
Brewer appoints committee<lb/>
Chancellor Brewer<lb/>
(Photo by John Grogan)<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Less than 24 hours after the abrupt resignation of<lb/>
heralded ECU football coach Pat Dye, Chancellor<lb/>
Thomas B. Brewer called a special press conference to<lb/>
announce the formation of a committee to find a<lb/>
successor.<lb/>
Brewer read excerpts of a letter to Coach Dye dated<lb/>
November 30, the day after the six-year Pirate<lb/>
helmsman announced his departure.<lb/>
"In expressing our appreciation to you for<lb/>
your outstanding efforts in behalf of our<lb/>
football program at East Carolina<lb/>
University, I want to speak for the<lb/>
trustees, administration, faculty, staff,<lb/>
students, alumni, friends and supporters<lb/>
of East Carolina University. Your teams<lb/>
deported East Carolina University at its<lb/>
finest, both on the field and off the field,<lb/>
and you have brought to us a sense of<lb/>
identity which allows us to compete with<lb/>
the major universities with dignity,<lb/>
knowing that we have a chance to win.<lb/>
Our University is extremely grateful to<lb/>
you.<lb/>
We know that we have your best wishes<lb/>
for the continued development of athletics<lb/>
at East Carolina University along the lines<lb/>
which you hae set forth. We intend to do<lb/>
our utmost. All East Carolinians, and all<lb/>
friends of East Carolina University wish<lb/>
for you and your family the greatest of<lb/>
happiness and success in the years<lb/>
ahead. "<lb/>
Brewer restated the University's commitment to the<lb/>
pursuit of athletic excellence, and cited that although no<lb/>
date has been announced for the announcement of a<lb/>
new head coach, he assured it would be "as quickly as<lb/>
possible<lb/>
"We know that the university football program must<lb/>
have leadership immediately Brewer said in a<lb/>
published statement to the media. "The recruiting days<lb/>
are upon us.<lb/>
"I have formed a committee to recommend a new<lb/>
coach and have asked them to proceed with all judicious<lb/>
speed<lb/>
The names of the members of that committee, unlike<lb/>
the one formed to find a new head basketball coach at<lb/>
the end of the 1978-79 season, were" released by Brewer<lb/>
and were as follows:<lb/>
Clinton Prewett, assistant to the Chancellor,<lb/>
chairman of the athletics council; Clifton Moore, athletic<lb/>
council, vice-chancellor of business affairs; Bill Cain,<lb/>
athletic director; Jerry Powell, president of the ECU<lb/>
Alumni Association; Ernie Schwartz, department of<lb/>
physical education; Janice Faulkner, faculty representa-<lb/>
tive to the athletic council; Tommie Little. Pirate Club<lb/>
Plank Owner ($2000 annual); Max Ray Joyner. athletic<lb/>
council, Pirate Club Plank Owner; Ashley Futrell. vice<lb/>
chairman of the ECU Board of Trustees; Charlie<lb/>
Sherrod, vice president of SGA; and Jack Minges, Pirate<lb/>
Club Plank Owner.<lb/>
"At the college and university level. I recognize the<lb/>
unique value that athletics has for an institution<lb/>
Brewer stated. "Athletics enables a broad spectrum of<lb/>
people to get together and support a school for a<lb/>
common cause.<lb/>
"I understand all this, for I lost my voice, too, for<lb/>
three days after the Chapel Hill game, which I consider<lb/>
one of the most exciting contests I have ever<lb/>
witnessed he mused. "It is our intention at East<lb/>
Carolina University to build teams in football that will<lb/>
enable us to play any team and not have to worry about<lb/>
a last-second field goal beating us.<lb/>
"We hope to have the situation sufficiently in<lb/>
command so that this will not matter<lb/>
When asked if the football budget would be<lb/>
increased in order to entice candidates to seek the<lb/>
position, Brewer replied that "we're going to have to<lb/>
increase the budget for inflation if nothing else<lb/>
"My personal commitment to quality athletics t<lb/>
unswerving he affirmed. "Outstanding high school<lb/>
players are beginning to make their choice, and we want<lb/>
this to be a great recruiting year at East Carolina<lb/>
University.<lb/>
"Our mission at East Carolina continues<lb/>
Pirates capture<lb/>
Clemson Tourney<lb/>
By JOHN NOLAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU wrestling<lb/>
Pirates pulled off a major<lb/>
upset this weekend by<lb/>
winning the Clemson In-<lb/>
vitational wrestling tour-<lb/>
nament. ECU outscored<lb/>
their nearest opponents,<lb/>
Georgia, by thirteen points<lb/>
en route tc an impressive<lb/>
team victory.<lb/>
'This was a big<lb/>
tournament for everyone<lb/>
commented first year ECU<lb/>
mentor Ed Steers.<lb/>
Steers added that he<lb/>
was a little surprised<lb/>
about his team's victory,<lb/>
but insisted this team has<lb/>
the talent to compete with<lb/>
anyone.<lb/>
"This team has a lot of<lb/>
pride and they all work<lb/>
together both on and off<lb/>
the mats. Although wrest-<lb/>
ling is basically an indi-<lb/>
vidual sport, it really helps<lb/>
when everyone is pulling<lb/>
for each other<lb/>
Another positive note<lb/>
for the team is that only<lb/>
nine wrestlers entered the<lb/>
tournament while the other<lb/>
teams entered the maxi-<lb/>
num of 10 allowed to<lb/>
?articipate. Of the nine<lb/>
vrestling for ECU, Frank<lb/>
'ruitt was forced to<lb/>
vrestle eight pounds over-<lb/>
veight and still finsihed<lb/>
ind impressive fourth.<lb/>
"We have had some<lb/>
njuries which have slowed<lb/>
iome of the wrestlers<lb/>
down. Frank usually<lb/>
wrestles at 150 pounds but<lb/>
since we needed him at<lb/>
158 he moved up<lb/>
ECU had three wrest-<lb/>
lers win their individual<lb/>
weight classes. Butch<lb/>
Revils placed first at 177<lb/>
pounds and<lb/>
named the<lb/>
wrestler of<lb/>
was also<lb/>
outstanding<lb/>
the tourna-<lb/>
ment. Other winners were<lb/>
Steve Goode at 167 pouhds<lb/>
and D.T. Joyner who<lb/>
wrestles in the unlimited<lb/>
category.<lb/>
"I was very impressed<lb/>
with the three winners<lb/>
especially since this is the<lb/>
second time they have<lb/>
placed first this year<lb/>
said Steers. All three of<lb/>
the Pirate matmen dom-<lb/>
inated their weight div-<lb/>
isions in the Monarch-<lb/>
Civitan Open.<lb/>
Other wrestlers placing<lb/>
in the tournament were<lb/>
John Brennan (118), Char-<lb/>
ley McGimsey (126), Scott<lb/>
Eaton (142), and Frank<lb/>
Shady (150) who all<lb/>
finished third.<lb/>
Although the Pirates<lb/>
have gotten off to an<lb/>
outstanding start this sea-<lb/>
son, Coach Steers clearly<lb/>
wants to avoid any binding<lb/>
sta-jments.<lb/>
"I am very, very proud<lb/>
of everyone on this team. I<lb/>
really don't want to amke<lb/>
any predictions about the<lb/>
team at this time. Yes,<lb/>
they have surprised me<lb/>
and I think we'll do well in<lb/>
the future but is is still too<lb/>
early in the season to<lb/>
predict any championships.<lb/>
The Pirates travel to<lb/>
Maryland next weekend<lb/>
for the Morgan State<lb/>
University tournament.<lb/>
According to Steers, Ken-<lb/>
tucky and Hofstra repre-<lb/>
sent the best talent in the<lb/>
tournament and will be the<lb/>
teams to beat is ECU<lb/>
hopes to continue their<lb/>
winning ways.<lb/>
All in all, the 1979-80<lb/>
season looks promising for<lb/>
the Pirates. This year's<lb/>
team definitely has the<lb/>
talent and experience a-<lb/>
long with a lot of pride to<lb/>
surprise many teams.<lb/>
However, the threat of<lb/>
injury still looms big as<lb/>
perhaps the one thing that<lb/>
can soundly defeat the<lb/>
pirates this season.<lb/>
Although Steers con-<lb/>
tinues to maintain his<lb/>
low-key approach it is<lb/>
obvious that the Wrestling<lb/>
Pirates will once again be<lb/>
a team to reckon with and<lb/>
may even be the team to<lb/>
beat.<lb/>
VCU spoils Buc opener;<lb/>
split in Spider Classic<lb/>
FrankHobson(33) rebounds<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
East Carolina defeated little known<lb/>
West Virginia Tech 92-79 Saturday night<lb/>
in the consolation game of the fourth<lb/>
annual Spider Classic in Richmond, Va.<lb/>
The win followed a narrow 72-71 ECU loss<lb/>
to Virginia Commonwealth in the<lb/>
tourney's opening round Friday.<lb/>
Guard George Maynor, who was<lb/>
named on the all-tourney team, scored 23<lb/>
points, 19 in the last 12 minutes, to aid<lb/>
the Pirate victory over WVT. The Golden<lb/>
Bears led by as many as seven points in<lb/>
the second half before Maynor's heroics<lb/>
saved the Pirates.<lb/>
The Golden Bears jumped on the<lb/>
Pirates for an early 17-6 lead, as the ECU<lb/>
starters looked lackadaisical to say the<lb/>
least. ECU coach Dave Odom then made<lb/>
wholesale substitutions with what he calls<lb/>
his "second group of regulars<lb/>
This combination of Mike Gibson, Kyle<lb/>
Powers, Mark McLaurin, Dave Underwood<lb/>
and Tony Byles brought the Pirates back<lb/>
quickly, outscoring the Bears 18-0 in a<lb/>
period of just under five minutes to give<lb/>
ECU a 24-17 lead.<lb/>
"I'm very pleased with the way they<lb/>
came in there and picked us up Odom<lb/>
said. "Our first five was just totally flat at<lb/>
the outset<lb/>
The reason for the lackadaisical play of<lb/>
the Pirates probably came from the<lb/>
disappointment of the heartbreaking 72-71<lb/>
loss to VCU just one night earlier.<lb/>
"We worked on mental preparation all<lb/>
day long Odoun said. "Maybe we<lb/>
overdid it. I knew West Virginia Tech was<lb/>
better than our guys were giving them<lb/>
credit for<lb/>
The Pirates opener with Virginia<lb/>
Commonwealth was in every sense of the<lb/>
word a thriller.<lb/>
The game came down to a last second<lb/>
shot by Clarence Miles that was blocked<lb/>
by a VCU defender.<lb/>
As in the game with WVT, the Pirates<lb/>
fell behind the Rams in the earlv going.<lb/>
VCU led by as many as 13 points, at<lb/>
37-24, before the Pirates began getting<lb/>
their act together.<lb/>
The lead was cut to four at 43-39 by<lb/>
the half, thanks a great deal to the<lb/>
aggressive play of reserve freshman guard<lb/>
Bryant Wiggins.<lb/>
The second half was tight all the wav<lb/>
as neither team led by more than four<lb/>
points.<lb/>
The Pirates lead 71-70 on a Herb<lb/>
Krusen jumper with 35 seconds left in the<lb/>
contest. The Rams then immediately<lb/>
called two back-to-back timeouts.<lb/>
Senior guard Danny Kottack drove the<lb/>
lane and put up what turned out to be the<lb/>
winning shot with 16 seconds left in the<lb/>
contest, putting the Rams up 72-71.<lb/>
The Pirates quickly moved the ball<lb/>
past the half court line and called timeout<lb/>
with ten seconds remaining. When the<lb/>
designed play failed the Pirates called yet<lb/>
another timeout with four seconds' left to<lb/>
try and set up the winning shot.<lb/>
'The plan said Odom, "was to draw<lb/>
a foul. Every man who got the ball was to<lb/>
have double-pumped. We planned this<lb/>
because Virginia Commonwealth is so<lb/>
blocked shot-conscious<lb/>
When Miles got the pass, he failed to<lb/>
"double-dump" as Odom had planned,<lb/>
and his shot was subsequently blocked.<lb/>
"Clarence was not sure bow much time<lb/>
was left Odom said, "he felt that He<lb/>
didn't have time to do what we had<lb/>
planned<lb/>
A<lb/>
M<lb/>
<pb facs="00057235_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 4 December 1979<lb/>
Lady Bucs succumb to Devils9power<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
DURHAM - After trailing 45-40 at halftime, the Lady<lb/>
Pirates of East Carolina rallied behind forward Rosie<lb/>
Thompson and guard Lydia Rountree to fight back in the<lb/>
second half but lost to Duke nonetheless, 76-75.<lb/>
The Lady Bucs trailed by as much as 11 with 2:54<lb/>
left in the first frame but fought back to the five-point<lb/>
deficit at the half as Rountree swished a pair of field<lb/>
goals, and point guard Laurie Sikes and reserve center<lb/>
Mary Denkler connected on two free throws each.<lb/>
Rountree netted eight of her 26 points in the opening<lb/>
eight minutes of the second half, as East Carolina<lb/>
forged to a 56-55 lead with 12:12 remaining in the<lb/>
battle. <lb/>
The lead exchanged hands three times before the<lb/>
Lady Blue Devils powered their way to a 62-58 lead with<lb/>
6:51 remaining. Thompson sand a field goal to cut the<lb/>
margin to two and followed with a driving lay-up, on<lb/>
which she was fouled by Duke center Lisa Warren.<lb/>
Thompson's free throw gave ECU a 65-64 edge with<lb/>
3:33 showing on the clock.<lb/>
Duke took the lead with an outside shot by guard<lb/>
Kim Matthews, but Rountree answered with a 20-foot<lb/>
jumper.<lb/>
East Carolina stole the ball and had a chance to gain<lb/>
a three-point lead, but Matthews fouled Rountree to<lb/>
prevent ECU from widening the gap.<lb/>
Rountree missed the front half of a one-and-one and<lb/>
husky Barb Krause grabbed the rebound for the Devils.<lb/>
Tara McCarthy popped a 15-footer as the 30-second<lb/>
clock ran out to give Duke a 68-67 advantage with 2:32<lb/>
remaining.<lb/>
After an ECU timeout, Thompson took a back-door<lb/>
assist from center Marcia Girven to again put the<lb/>
Pirates out front.<lb/>
McCarthy and Rountree traded baskets, and with<lb/>
1:10 left, Rountree stepped to the line after being fouled<lb/>
by fiesty point guard Patti Thomasson.<lb/>
Rountree missed, and Girven was fouled ont the<lb/>
i 'bound by Leslie Earnhardt. The drama continued to<lb/>
unravel when she too was unable to score and Matthews<lb/>
rebounded for Duke.<lb/>
The cat-quick Sikes swiped the ball from Thomasson<lb/>
and sped down-court for a lay-up, as ECU claimed a<lb/>
73-72 lead with :40 remaining.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates' defense was late setting up, and<lb/>
McCarthy sprinted through the land, and the lead again<lb/>
shifted.<lb/>
ECU took a time out with :20 left in order to set up<lb/>
what could have been the last play of the game.<lb/>
Earnhardt Fouled Thompson with :16 left to save a last<lb/>
effort ol the Devils.<lb/>
Thompson, the game's leading scorer with 29, sank<lb/>
two free throws to close out the Lady Bucs scoring.<lb/>
Thomasson again drove on the permeable ECU<lb/>
defense but was undercut en route to the goal by Sikes.<lb/>
Thomasson hit both attempts for the final 76-75 spread.<lb/>
The Lady Bucs had one final chance to win with :06<lb/>
showing on the clock, but time ran out as forward Heidi<lb/>
Owen squared to the goal to shoot.<lb/>
"We didn't make it difficult for them to get the<lb/>
ball explained ECU coach Cathy Andruzzi. "We<lb/>
allowed them to get the ball inside too much.<lb/>
"They (Duke) played with a lot of intensity. We need<lb/>
to work much harder on defenseI can see that now.<lb/>
When the picks were set we didn't help each other. Our<lb/>
defense had to work for us to win, and it didn't.<lb/>
"I don't think we took thet game lightly. We lost it<lb/>
in the first half. We came back and that's good, but we<lb/>
shouldn't have been behind.<lb/>
"I think Lydia played the best game of her career<lb/>
site praised. "She played very good fundamental<lb/>
basketball<lb/>
With this loss, the Lady Pirates drop to 4-1 on the<lb/>
season and remain idle until they face James Madison<lb/>
University Friday at 7:30 p.m. in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
ECU (75)<lb/>
Thompson 12 5-5 29, Riley 5 0-1 10, Girven 2 0 1 4.<lb/>
Sikes 1 2-2 4, Rountree 12 0-4 26, Denkler 0 2-2 2, Ow<lb/>
0 0-0 0, Hooks 0 0-0 0. Totals 33 -15 75.<lb/>
Duke (76)<lb/>
Krause 7 2-3 16, Matthew 2 1-1 5, M arren 1 <lb/>
McCarthy 13 2-3 28, Thomasson 3 2 2 8. Earnhardt 2<lb/>
4, Monroe 1 0-0 2, Rose 2 0-1 4, Rokus ? 0-0 0, Wal-<lb/>
0-0 0. Totals 34 8 12 76.<lb/>
Halftime: Duke 45. ECU 10. Fouled -ut: Warren,<lb/>
Rilev. Total fouls: Duke 20. ECU 15. Technical none<lb/>
A-350.<lb/>
Lydia Rountree struggles<lb/>
CROW'S NEST<lb/>
7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Monday Dec. 10<lb/>
1979<lb/>
PHI BETA LAMBDA<lb/>
Don't take a chance on Santa Claus<lb/>
take a chance for our cause<lb/>
1st prize- Attic &amp; Elbo Room<lb/>
5 month free pass $250 value<lb/>
2nd prize- Apple Records $60 value<lb/>
3rd prize- Traffic light pair of ECU jeans<lb/>
$27 value<lb/>
other sponsors:<lb/>
California Concept<lb/>
Cliff's<lb/>
Coffman's<lb/>
Kentucky Fried Chicken<lb/>
King &amp; Queen<lb/>
Newby's<lb/>
Pizza Inn<lb/>
Tree House<lb/>
Western Sizzlin<lb/>
13 prizes valued at over $400<lb/>
Money goes to underprivleged children of<lb/>
Pitt County and War on Winter campaign<lb/>
Price of Ticket 50<lb/>
Purchased from any PHI BETA LAMBDA member<lb/>
In ECU Book Store Lobby, Th. &amp; Fri. 10-1<lb/>
White Cloud<lb/>
4pack bathroom tissue<lb/>
89c<lb/>
Bounty towels<lb/>
jumbo roll<lb/>
59fc<lb/>
G.E. Light bulbs-<lb/>
4 pack,<lb/>
60 watt, 75 watt, 100 watt,<lb/>
save mfgsugg. price 3I6<lb/>
$1.27 nowony $1.89<lb/>
i<lb/>
SUPER MARKETS, INC.<lb/>
"Where Shopping Is A Pleasure<lb/>
a<lb/>
Cremora Coffee Creamer<lb/>
16 oz.<lb/>
89c<lb/>
Meat<lb/>
Kal Kan Dog Food<lb/>
14 oz. all flavors<lb/>
4$1<lb/>
Kal Kan Cat Food<lb/>
6V2 oz all flavors<lb/>
Morrel All meat<lb/>
Hot Dogs<lb/>
12 oz. Pkg.<lb/>
Frozen Foods<lb/>
69e<lb/>
Fox Delux Pizzas-<lb/>
6$1<lb/>
Quaker Instant Grits<lb/>
reg. flavor 8 oz. packets<lb/>
2$1<lb/>
Dairy<lb/>
Hamburger 11fe oz<lb/>
sausage 11 V2 oz.<lb/>
cheese 1IV2 oz.<lb/>
pepperoni, 11oz.<lb/>
12 gal. Country Fresh<lb/>
homogenized milk<lb/>
69c<lb/>
J.F.G. Mayonnaise<lb/>
Qt. Jar<lb/>
99 without coupon<lb/>
79<lb/>
996<lb/>
i<lb/>
Expires 12879<lb/>
Limit 1 per customer<lb/>
<pb facs="00057235_0013"/><lb/>
4 December 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Page 13<lb/>
X<lb/>
Pirate gymnasts<lb/>
fall in opener<lb/>
ECU's gymnastics team<lb/>
-uttered their first loss of<lb/>
the 1979-80 season Friday<lb/>
against a strong UNC-<lb/>
Chapel Hill squad, the<lb/>
final score being 122-107.<lb/>
Top performers for the<lb/>
Pirates included Cindv<lb/>
Rogers with a second<lb/>
place finish in the floor<lb/>
exercise (7.55) and a<lb/>
fourth in the balance beam<lb/>
i), kim Lowe, a fourth<lb/>
the vault (7.6), and<lb/>
Susan Mi Knight with a<lb/>
fifth in the uneven parallel<lb/>
bars (7.15).<lb/>
Coach Jon Rose also<lb/>
-ft! Carol Layton for<lb/>
her performance in the<lb/>
tnce beam, Lisa Red-<lb/>
n in vaulting and<lb/>
ii?eth Jackson in<lb/>
vaulting and floor exer-<lb/>
Tm pretty<lb/>
ised with our<lb/>
performance1<lb/>
well<lb/>
overall<lb/>
said Rose.<lb/>
The ECU girls did a<lb/>
 repectable job, but<lb/>
-till didn't reach the<lb/>
: 115 to 120 points<lb/>
h I had set for us.<lb/>
1 he have some hard<lb/>
 tk ahead to be where I<lb/>
em to be. YJ e've<lb/>
'ome a polished<lb/>
the remainder of<lb/>
- ason.<lb/>
"Chapel Hill is in the<lb/>
ear of their program.<lb/>
the 're prettj com-<lb/>
(Photo by Kip Sloan)<lb/>
Pirate gridders named<lb/>
to Independent squad<lb/>
Three East Carolina<lb/>
University players have<lb/>
been named to the first<lb/>
team of The Associated<lb/>
Press All-South Indepen-<lb/>
dent football team.<lb/>
Running back Anthony<lb/>
Collins, offensive guard<lb/>
Wayne Inrnan and line-<lb/>
backer Mike Brewington<lb/>
were named to the 24-man<lb/>
squad. Brewington is a<lb/>
senior and Collins and<lb/>
Inman are juniors.<lb/>
Collins became the first<lb/>
ECU player to gain 1,000<lb/>
yards under head coach<lb/>
Pat Dye while Brewington<lb/>
lived up to his pre-season<lb/>
All-America laurels. This<lb/>
marks the second straight<lb/>
year that Inman has<lb/>
received the honor.<lb/>
Three ECU players ?<lb/>
offensive tackle Matt Mul-<lb/>
holland, fullback Theodore<lb/>
Sutton and defensive back<lb/>
Charlie Carter ? were<lb/>
named to the second team.<lb/>
South Carolina landed<lb/>
two berths on the first<lb/>
team and Virginia Tech<lb/>
one. Florida State domi-<lb/>
nated the selections with<lb/>
seven first-team picks.<lb/>
The Gamecock selec-<lb/>
tions were offensive tackle<lb/>
George Schechterly and<lb/>
defensive tackle Steve<lb/>
Bernish, while Virginia<lb/>
Tech's berth was landed<lb/>
by punter Dave Smigelsky.<lb/>
One noticeable player<lb/>
left off the teams was ECU<lb/>
quarterback Leander<lb/>
Green, who received hon-<lb/>
orable mention.<lb/>
Rein heads to<lb/>
Louisiana State<lb/>
PARTY!<lb/>
At Chapter X<lb/>
Discount BEvERage<lb/>
Prices<lb/>
Tuesday Dec. 4<lb/>
9PM- 1AM<lb/>
Sponsored by<lb/>
Delta Zeta Pledges<lb/>
Advanced Tickets 25'<lb/>
At The Door 50'<lb/>
IZOD SALE<lb/>
Gordon Fulp located at<lb/>
Greenville Country Club has<lb/>
just received a large<lb/>
selection of IZOD LaCoste<lb/>
Short Sleeve Shirts that were<lb/>
supposed to have come in<lb/>
much earlier. These will be<lb/>
priced at $18.00<lb/>
ALL IZOD Sweaters now<lb/>
reduced to18.00<lb/>
V-neck &amp; Cardigan.<lb/>
All Hurricane Globes in stock<lb/>
$3.00 All mens winter &amp;<lb/>
Summer slacks 12 price.<lb/>
All West Wind Lined Jackets<lb/>
for men , women &amp; children<lb/>
Normally $16.00 to $20.00<lb/>
NOW only $10.00<lb/>
Also included are the<lb/>
Crested Jackets for ECU<lb/>
- State - UNC -<lb/>
Wake Forest &amp; Duke.<lb/>
Gordon Fulp<lb/>
Located at Greenville Country Club<lb/>
Off Memorial Drive<lb/>
756-0504<lb/>
L<lb/>
IN HOI GE(AP)-<lb/>
- . I mers-<lb/>
- now coach, Bo Rein,<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
long enough Sunday to<lb/>
u assistant<lb/>
?in him in his<lb/>
neN j :<lb/>
Rein, named Frida to<lb/>
Charles McClen-<lb/>
? interviewed his for-<lb/>
orth Carolina Slate<lb/>
I niversin assistants one-<lb/>
Aiih<lb/>
The) art- George<lb/>
Bol Morrison.<lb/>
V I) and Greg<lb/>
'A iams<lb/>
Rein -aid he hopes to<lb/>
- stafl in 10 days,<lb/>
are tour more<lb/>
I - ' ns "pen.<lb/>
ys!L50<lb/>
Sunday. Kein talked to<lb/>
two high school prospects.<lb/>
He was expected to talk to<lb/>
inre today.<lb/>
Of the assistants,<lb/>
Mood) and Morrison had<lb/>
worked with Rein all four<lb/>
year- at NCSl .<lb/>
Belu is an offensive<lb/>
line coach, Morrison de-<lb/>
fensive line. Moody offen-<lb/>
sive hack field and ft il-<lb/>
liams defensive secondary.<lb/>
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)<lb/>
<pb facs="00057235_0014"/><lb/>
Page 14 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 4 December 1979<lb/>
Dye resigns<lb/>
continued from page 1<lb/>
(tic coach's official request.<lb/>
H the end of the season, the football staff had run<lb/>
out i't money, going over their set budget by 816,000.<lb/>
rhis forced D- to have to apply for a personal loan.<lb/>
The final incident that locked Dye's decision involved<lb/>
the transfer of quarterback Aaron Stewart to Duke<lb/>
iversity. Stewart applied tor his release from ECU<lb/>
summer, a request that was firmly debated by Dye,<lb/>
but w as granted bj Cain.<lb/>
I didn't want Aaron running our offense against<lb/>
Duke's all of preseason Dye said, noting that the Blue<lb/>
Devils first game was against the Pirates. "I explained<lb/>
n- to Viron. hi- family and Tom Butters (Duke AD),<lb/>
and told them that 1 wouldn't allow the release<lb/>
( ain nevertheless went ahead, and with Chancellor<lb/>
Records fall at<lb/>
Penn St<lb/>
u JIMNH DuPREE<lb/>
1 - s v rts h d it or<lb/>
ss it two<lb/>
swimmers to<lb/>
the H'( men's<lb/>
am -til! man-<lb/>
seventh place<lb/>
P ;in State<lb/>
and se1 five new<lb/>
records in the<lb/>
C lina State<lb/>
meet title,<lb/>
I NC, West<lb/>
I Penn State<lb/>
the ?<lb/>
and<lb/>
; swimmers<lb/>
I ? . I<lb/>
Ray<lb/>
irth <lb/>
in<lb/>
-? <lb/>
Knu-<lb/>
i knocked<lb/>
18.41<lb/>
?I the<lb/>
by a<lb/>
I a<lb/>
! Scharf.<lb/>
:<lb/>
ance<lb/>
he besl<lb/>
Relays<lb/>
. - ?? II in the<lb/>
back-<lb/>
is well as<lb/>
n and<lb/>
The hack relay team of<lb/>
Bjorn Johansen, David<lb/>
Evans, David Giovine and<lb/>
Neal ITlman posted the<lb/>
new time of 3:47.97, while<lb/>
the fly relay unit ol<lb/>
Johansen, Perry Newman,<lb/>
John Akright and Mark<lb/>
Lovette clocked in at<lb/>
3:35.96.<lb/>
The 400 1M relay<lb/>
brushed five seconds of!<lb/>
the old record with a<lb/>
3:39.86 performance. Nie-<lb/>
nian. McDonald, Hopkins<lb/>
and Mike Triau scored a<lb/>
fourth place finish for the<lb/>
Pirate- in the event.<lb/>
The final record was<lb/>
set in the 200 medley relav<lb/>
with a tune of 1: W.36 for<lb/>
a sixth place finish.<lb/>
Johansen. Knubowitz.<lb/>
Lovette and Mark Medei<lb/>
participated in the new<lb/>
portion of Pirate history.<lb/>
This was really a big<lb/>
improvement over our<lb/>
performance last year,<lb/>
said Scharf. "1 think West<lb/>
Virginia looked very strong<lb/>
this point ot the<lb/>
season.1<lb/>
'The gul- didn't lair<lb/>
so well he added. "V e<lb/>
I a lew sick girls up<lb/>
there- swimming.<lb/>
"They swam against<lb/>
some real tough competi-<lb/>
tion so I think the trip was<lb/>
valuable from that apect.<lb/>
They LT'?t a reall) good<lb/>
look at what top level<lb/>
competition is like.<lb/>
"While it wasn't all<lb/>
that we had expected, it<lb/>
wasn't all that had<lb/>
her<lb/>
Thomas Brewer's approval, went through with the<lb/>
release.<lb/>
Despite all the problems, though, Dye said that he<lb/>
would always be loyal to ECU. "Heck he said, "I feell<lb/>
like an ECU alumnus.<lb/>
"I've had a tremendous amount of fun coaching at<lb/>
ECU he continued, "probably more than I will have<lb/>
anywhere else. Everybody here is so hungry 8 the<lb/>
players, the students and fans ? to win. It's a great<lb/>
feeling to go to places like Carolina as underdogs, yet<lb/>
knowing that your people really believe that you're<lb/>
going to win<lb/>
The fact that Dye's resignation is so controversial,<lb/>
mainly because of the release of the conflicts with Cain,<lb/>
Is of concern to the coach. "I hate to leave in such a<lb/>
swirl of controversy he said. "You'd think this thing<lb/>
was a bitter controversy, but it's not. Sure there were<lb/>
disagreements, but there were the good times too<lb/>
Dye said that he felt it was unfair that he had<lb/>
received so much credit for the Pirates' success in<lb/>
recent seasons. "That's a said thing he said. "After<lb/>
all, I'm just a small part of a big machine. The assistant<lb/>
coaches and players should get the credit.<lb/>
"They've helped create the type of program that<lb/>
exist- here now Dye continued. "And there's no<lb/>
doubt in my mind that East Carolina has a bright future.<lb/>
The tradition is great and winning will definitely<lb/>
continue to be a part of East Carolina football<lb/>
Dye promoted a member of his staff as a possibility<lb/>
for his successor. "1 can think of no better man for the<lb/>
job than Dick Kupec he said. "He is a very intelligent<lb/>
man and has all the tools of a great head coach<lb/>
There has been speculation that the selection<lb/>
committee would go outside, as it did when Dye was<lb/>
hired from Alabama, and hire a member of a staff from<lb/>
a national powerhouse.<lb/>
The names most prominently mentioned yesterday<lb/>
were Citadel head coach Art Baker, Western Carolina<lb/>
coach Bob Waters, ex-Clemson coach Red Parker,<lb/>
Ex-NCSU assistant Jim Donnan, Ex-ECU assistant Carl<lb/>
Reese, Missouri assistant Kenny Wheeler, ex-pro<lb/>
quarterback Roman Gabriel and Kupec.<lb/>
Members of the selection committee include Clinton<lb/>
Prewett, assistant to the chancellor; Clifton Moore, vice-<lb/>
chancellor of business; athletic director Bill Cain; Jerry<lb/>
Powell, president of the ECU Alumni Association; Ernie<lb/>
Schwartz, P.E. professor; Janice Faulkner, faculty<lb/>
representative to the athletic council.<lb/>
Also, Pirate Club member Tommie Little; Pirate Club<lb/>
President Max Ray Joyner; Ashley Futrell, vice<lb/>
chairman of the ECU Board of Trustees; SGA Vice-<lb/>
President Charlie Sherrod; and Pirate Club member Jack<lb/>
Minges.<lb/>
ECU chancellor Thomas Brewer said in a news<lb/>
release that the committee would proceed with<lb/>
"judicious speed" in selecting a new head coach.<lb/>
The children<lb/>
of Cambodia<lb/>
are dying<lb/>
800-243-5075<lb/>
Save the<lb/>
Children<lb/>
i<lb/>
B<lb/>
For the one of a kind<lb/>
Christmas Gift<lb/>
Try Cable &amp; Craft Yarns<lb/>
812 Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
(Across from Diener's Bakery)<lb/>
For Pottery and Leather<lb/>
By Easy Street<lb/>
Plain Batiked Silk Scarves<lb/>
Hand Woven Items<lb/>
Don Vick Jewelry<lb/>
and more<lb/>
i!i<lb/>
i!<lb/>
Minority Arts Film Series<lb/>
presents<lb/>
SolTriafiriwAL<lb/>
vace<lb/>
Dec. 4<lb/>
8:00pm<lb/>
Cultural Center<lb/>
Admission - ID and activity card<lb/>
mm<lb/>
STUOCNT UNION<lb/>
USt CMOUIM UMVMKITT<lb/>
Comedy<lb/>
in<lb/>
biusie"<lb/>
'UMTS<lb/>
1800<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Tuesday Night<lb/>
Special<lb/>
TROUT $2.9$<lb/>
PERCH $2.95<lb/>
Flounder $2.95<lb/>
all you can eat<lb/>
No take-outs please.<lb/>
Meal includes:<lb/>
French Fries, Cole slaw,<lb/>
Hash puppies.<lb/>
with<lb/>
MARYLYN MULVEY<lb/>
Monday, December 10,1979 8:00 PM<lb/>
WRIGHT AUDITORIUM<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
ADVANCE TICKETS- PUBLIC: $7.00 ECU STUDENTS: $4.00<lb/>
ALL TICKETS AT THE DOOR: $7.00<lb/>
Tickets Available at ECU Central Ticket Office 757 6611 Ext.266<lb/>
We are proud to<lb/>
announce that we<lb/>
have added<lb/>
one of the<lb/>
AREAS FINEST<lb/>
SALAD BARS<lb/>
for your<lb/>
dining pleasure.<lb/>
OPEN FOR LUNCH<lb/>
Dally 11:30<lb/>
Sun. ? Thur.<lb/>
4:30-9:00<lb/>
Frl. and Sat.<lb/>
4:30-10:00<lb/>
Loot?4 On tin StrMt<lb/>
All<lb/>
Nylon Jackets<lb/>
25?(<lb/>
Ooff<lb/>
Now Thru Dec. 81<lb/>
Great Christmas Gifts<lb/>
528 S. COTANCHE<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
Free gift wrapping too!<lb/>
v<lb/>
???.???<lb/>
<pb facs="00057235_0015"/>
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