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<pb facs="00057278_0001"/>
She lEaat Carolinian<lb/>
Vol. 55 No. 1<lb/>
32 Pages<lb/>
Tuesday, August 26, 1980<lb/>
Greenville, V(<lb/>
Circulation 10.(MM)<lb/>
?<lb/>
Business School<lb/>
Tightens Doors<lb/>
School Replaced Education As ECU's<lb/>
Most Sought-After Degree Program<lb/>
An aerial view of the main campus here at East Carolina University<lb/>
Decades Of Growth<lb/>
Since Its Founding In 1907, The Small Teachers1 College Has Developed Into A Major University.<lb/>
By PENNY AUSTIN<lb/>
vuslam Nim Kdilor<lb/>
I9S0 ? Anyone looking at the<lb/>
campus of hast Carolina University<lb/>
today might have a hard time<lb/>
visualizing it as it once was in 1907.<lb/>
In 73 years, the campus, as well as<lb/>
the university, has changed greatly<lb/>
and experienced tremendous<lb/>
growth. What stands today as North<lb/>
Carolina's third largest university<lb/>
may indeed have had very meager<lb/>
beginnings, but never narrow or<lb/>
shortsighted ideals.<lb/>
During the first decade of the<lb/>
twentieth century, the country saw<lb/>
an expansion of the public school<lb/>
system. During this time, nearly<lb/>
3,000 schools were built in North<lb/>
Carolina: this was an average of<lb/>
about one a day. Adequately trained<lb/>
teachers were needed to meet this in-<lb/>
crease in public education.<lb/>
In 1902 a state association of<lb/>
county superintendents was organiz-<lb/>
ed. The purpose of this group was to<lb/>
explore the idea of establishing a<lb/>
training school for teachers to be<lb/>
located somewhere in the eastern<lb/>
part of the state.<lb/>
of the school at Elizabeth City fur-<lb/>
ther strengthened the move to<lb/>
establish the school at some other<lb/>
location.<lb/>
In 1906 Senator James L. Fleming<lb/>
worked to get a bill passed through<lb/>
the state legislature which would<lb/>
guarantee the establishment of the<lb/>
training school. The exact location<lb/>
of the school was not mentioned in<lb/>
the bill, but former Governor<lb/>
Thomas J. Jarvis hoped the school<lb/>
would be located in Greenville.<lb/>
The Greenville Chamber of Com-<lb/>
merce appointed a committee, or<lb/>
task force, of 80 people to study the<lb/>
possibility of establishing the school<lb/>
at Greenville.<lb/>
The school bill was finally passed,<lb/>
and the committee really got to<lb/>
work to make Greenville the site of<lb/>
the school. Through the efforts of<lb/>
Jarvis, William H. Ragsdale, Flem-<lb/>
ing, D. J. Whichard (editor of The<lb/>
Daily Reflector), as well as in-<lb/>
terested Greenville citizens, the site<lb/>
of the school was finally chosen; it<lb/>
was to be in Greenville.<lb/>
Land was chosen along Fifth<lb/>
Street for the school. Forty-seven<lb/>
School was founded on March 8,<lb/>
1907. Ground was broken for the<lb/>
first building on July 2, 1908 East<lb/>
Carolina Teachers Training School<lb/>
opened October 5, 1909 with 104<lb/>
women and 19 men enrolled.<lb/>
By the time the school opened, six<lb/>
buildings had been completed: an<lb/>
administration-classroom building<lb/>
(later to be named Austin), two dor-<lb/>
mitories (later Jarvis and Wilson<lb/>
Halls), the 'Refectory Infirmary,<lb/>
and a power plant with laundry.<lb/>
The school was authorized as a<lb/>
two-year normal school and the first<lb/>
president was Dr. Herring Wright,<lb/>
who served in this capacity until<lb/>
April 25, 1934. There were 13<lb/>
members on the faculty at this time.<lb/>
The first class to graduate with<lb/>
the two-year degree graduated on<lb/>
June 6, 1911. On November 20,<lb/>
1920, the school was authorized to<lb/>
grant a four-year degree. And in<lb/>
November of 1921, the name of the<lb/>
school was changed to East<lb/>
Carolina Teachers College. The first<lb/>
four-year degree was conferred in<lb/>
August of 1922.<lb/>
See ECU Page 8, Col. 1<lb/>
By TERRY GRAY<lb/>
?j tdilor<lb/>
For much of its history, East<lb/>
Carolina University, originally East<lb/>
Carolina Teacher's College, was<lb/>
known as a training ground for<lb/>
educators. But in the last several<lb/>
years, the size of ECU'S School of<lb/>
Education has been slowly shrink-<lb/>
ing, losing its No. 1 status to the<lb/>
School of Business.<lb/>
According to data compiled by<lb/>
the ECU Office of Institutional<lb/>
Research, more than one-fourth of<lb/>
all declared majors here are in the<lb/>
School of Business. At the beginn-<lb/>
ing of last fall, 2,240 of ECU's<lb/>
8,750 declared majors were studying<lb/>
economics, accounting or business<lb/>
administration.<lb/>
Education students were the se-<lb/>
cond largest group, with 1,466 ma-<lb/>
jors.<lb/>
An important factor affecting<lb/>
these overall figures is the way<lb/>
education students are counted. Ac-<lb/>
cording to Mrs. Ridenour of the<lb/>
Registrar's Office, "The only<lb/>
students who are considered educa-<lb/>
tion majors are those in early<lb/>
childhood or elementary educa-<lb/>
tion Students who major in an<lb/>
academic area and also receive<lb/>
teaching certificates are counted as<lb/>
majors in their academic area, not<lb/>
as education majors.<lb/>
The number of business majors<lb/>
promises to grow this fall if the<lb/>
trend of the last several years con-<lb/>
tinues. However, the Office of<lb/>
Academic Affairs recently suspend-<lb/>
ed any further admission to the<lb/>
business programs due to the high<lb/>
number of students.<lb/>
Assistant Director of Admissions<lb/>
Ron Brown said, "Based on<lb/>
preregistration figures and the<lb/>
number of applicants from new<lb/>
freshmen and transfer students, we<lb/>
determined what kind of enrollment<lb/>
pressures the School of Business was<lb/>
facing, which led to the decision to<lb/>
suspend further admittance<lb/>
"Our enrollment has been rising<lb/>
since 1974, and we started curtailing<lb/>
Films, Fun, Family Days<lb/>
At Mendenhall This Fall<lb/>
A proposal was made to the state and nine-twentieths acres were pur-<lb/>
senate in 1905 to establish the school chased at $200 an acre, or for<lb/>
at Elizabeth City; however, this pro- $9,490.<lb/>
posal was not accepted. The denial East Carolina Teachers Training<lb/>
Renovations Underway<lb/>
On Drama Buildings<lb/>
By PENNY AUSTIN<lb/>
AttUunt News l.diior<lb/>
Students returning to campus this fall may find<lb/>
things have stayed the same at ECU. However, they will<lb/>
find that there have been some changes made at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
The Mendenhall staff, in an effort to serve the univer-<lb/>
sity community better, has instigated some changes in<lb/>
programs, as well as in policy.<lb/>
Beginning this fall, students will have a place to eat<lb/>
Another new program at Mendenhall this fall will be<lb/>
the Family Fun Day. Yuhas explained tnat one Saturday<lb/>
each month. Mendenhall will sponsor the family day in<lb/>
an effort to provide programming for the non-<lb/>
traditional student (that is, the student with a family).<lb/>
The first Family Fun Day will be Sept. 20 from noon<lb/>
to 3 p.m. and will offer reduced rates at the recreation<lb/>
centers, games, prizes and a movie geared for family<lb/>
viewing.<lb/>
This fall will also see the return of the lce-Cream<lb/>
Bingo program. Beginning Sept. 9 at 7 p.m the univer-<lb/>
Beginning this fall, students will have a place to eat community will have the opportunity to come out to<lb/>
their lunches and to enjoy a film or two. According to M:ndenhaH for some ice cream and bingo. This pro-<lb/>
By JADE GORMAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The towering steel beams that<lb/>
form the skeleton of the new<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium are visible<lb/>
evidence that the long-awaited<lb/>
theatre complex is becoming a reali-<lb/>
ty-<lb/>
"This will be one of the finest<lb/>
theatres in the Southeast said<lb/>
Edgar Loessin, professor and<lb/>
chairperson of the ECU Drama<lb/>
Department.<lb/>
The renovations consist of two<lb/>
completed in June of next year and<lb/>
will cost approximately $1.9<lb/>
million, according to James Lowry,<lb/>
director of the physical plant at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
The second phase of renovations<lb/>
involves the other Drama Depart-<lb/>
ment buildings and includes the con-<lb/>
struction of a separate scenery shop.<lb/>
Phase 11 will cost about $1.12<lb/>
million and should be finished in<lb/>
December of 1981, Lowry said.<lb/>
According to Loessin, the main<lb/>
purpose of the renovations is to pro-<lb/>
Wanda Yuhas, assistant program director at<lb/>
Mendenhall, several film shorts will be shown in the<lb/>
Coffee House weekdays from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
Admission is free for the film shorts, and any student<lb/>
or faculty member is welcome, she said. Among the<lb/>
many shorts to be shown are the Flash Gordon serials,<lb/>
Abbot and Costello, W.C. Fields and excerpts from the<lb/>
Ali-Shavers fight.<lb/>
The first five weeks of the fall semester will be a trial<lb/>
run for this program, Yuhas said. If the program cat-<lb/>
ches on, then it will be continued, she added.<lb/>
Mendenhall for some ice cream and bingo. This pro-<lb/>
gram is also scheduled for once a month. Both the ice<lb/>
cream bingo and Family Fun Day are free and open to<lb/>
the university community.<lb/>
These programs may take a while to catch on, Yuhas<lb/>
added, since they are new.<lb/>
The handicapped student will also find some major<lb/>
changes a' Mendenhall according to Yuhas. This sum-<lb/>
mer, a hydraulic lift was installed in the bowling alley.<lb/>
The lift allows the wheelchair-bound student to have ac-<lb/>
See MENDENHALL Page 3, Col. 1<lb/>
it in 1977 by increasing admission<lb/>
requirements said Dr. Charles<lb/>
Broome, associate dean of the<lb/>
School of Business. "It is true that<lb/>
all over the country more and more<lb/>
students are opting to study<lb/>
business he said.<lb/>
According to the Admissions Of-<lb/>
fice, the suspension will probably<lb/>
remain in effect until spring, 1981.<lb/>
While the School of Business<lb/>
must now turn new students away,<lb/>
the School of Education has been<lb/>
experiencing a small but steady<lb/>
decline in its enrollment figures.<lb/>
Since fall 1976, enrollment has<lb/>
dropped eight percent.<lb/>
According to Furney James, who<lb/>
keeps the pulse of national job<lb/>
trends in his work as ECU place-<lb/>
ment director, there are several<lb/>
reasons for the decline.<lb/>
"First of all, there was a tremen-<lb/>
dous shortage of teachers in the<lb/>
1960s, and that attracted a lot of<lb/>
students into education Furney<lb/>
said. "But in the 1970s, we are see-<lb/>
ing an oversupply in that area.<lb/>
"Another reason is that since<lb/>
ECU became a full university, we<lb/>
have a greater variety of major of-<lb/>
ferings that are drawing students<lb/>
that might earlier have gone into<lb/>
education<lb/>
Mr. James also believes that other<lb/>
factors have had an influence on the<lb/>
size of the School of Education, in-<lb/>
cluding the relatively low starting<lb/>
salaries of career educators, and the<lb/>
See SALARY Page 2, Col. 1<lb/>
WITN Gives<lb/>
Tall Tower<lb/>
To University<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
Foundation has received a gift of a<lb/>
1,500-foot steel television tower.<lb/>
North Carolina Television Inc<lb/>
operators of W1TN-TV,<lb/>
Washington, Greenville and New<lb/>
Bern, presented the gift of the<lb/>
19-year old tower near Grifton, NC,<lb/>
and deeds were signed by company<lb/>
and university officials in the offices<lb/>
of ECU Chancellor Thomas B.<lb/>
Brewer Friday.<lb/>
Dick Paul, president of North<lb/>
Carolina Television Inc John F.<lb/>
Minges of Greenville, president of<lb/>
the ECU Foundation Inc and<lb/>
Donald Lemish, ECU Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Instiftional Ad-<lb/>
vancement and Planning, s gned the<lb/>
legal documents. Lemish is secretary<lb/>
of the ECU Foundation and and<lb/>
acted as liasion from the committee<lb/>
in accepting the tower as a gift.<lb/>
Minges said the tower is "a<lb/>
magnificent gift" which is "tangible<lb/>
evidence" of growing support of the<lb/>
university's educational and service<lb/>
goals. He said it would be used to<lb/>
enhance and enrich ECU's<lb/>
development.<lb/>
"You are a maximum citizen in<lb/>
ever) scitec of the word Minges<lb/>
told William R. Roberson, Jr<lb/>
chairman and chie executive officer<lb/>
of N.C Television.<lb/>
Roberson said WITN-TV<lb/>
recognizes the positive and creative<lb/>
See STUDY Page 3, Col. 1<lb/>
Students Face Shortage Of Housing<lb/>
By TIM GILES<lb/>
Staff MM<lb/>
phases according to Loessin. Phase vide a good practical working place<lb/>
I entails the renovation of the for theatre productions.<lb/>
auditorium and the ballet studio.<lb/>
This first phase is expected to be<lb/>
OnThe Inside<lb/>
Housing will once again be a pro-<lb/>
blem this semester, as ever-rising<lb/>
enrollment figures at ECU put in-<lb/>
creased pressure on the available<lb/>
off-campus and dormitory housing<lb/>
units.<lb/>
"This is a long overdue process<lb/>
Loessin said. "The plans began<lb/>
eight years ago, but there were com-<lb/>
plications with money he added.<lb/>
There were three main problems<lb/>
with the old theatre, Loessin Fall semester, with a projected<lb/>
pointed out. student body numbering over<lb/>
First of all, the stage was too 13,000, is expected to be another<lb/>
Announcements 2 fg and pooriy equipped. The new record-breaking semester for enroll-<lb/>
Editorials4 stage wm be much larger: 40 feet ment. Approximately 2500<lb/>
Hollywood Reep25 d witn a 32 fOQt wide pro- freshmen have been admitted along<lb/>
Inventor Cain27 scenium and a 40 foot wide wing with 500 to 600 re-admissions, 850<lb/>
Jenkins Remembered25 e to'store scenery. transfers, and 200 visiting students.<lb/>
Job MarketJ ?It ls much easier to produce big The remainder of the enrollment<lb/>
Liquor Petition10 shows when yQU nave room for figure is made up of continuing<lb/>
Non-credit CoursesJ1 scenery Loessin said. students.<lb/>
Pirates At Duke 3 expected t0 5500<lb/>
Steer Resigns sight p Cq students living in the dormitories. In<lb/>
I I I I<lb/>
i it<lb/>
?MHHK;<lb/>
nurid<lb/>
some situations three students may Sophomores to live on campus has<lb/>
find themselves assigned to one been suspended for the 1980-81<lb/>
room. Also, in the women's high school year.<lb/>
rises, the social rooms are being Another problem contributing to<lb/>
converted to living quarters for up the overcrowded dormitory life is<lb/>
to six coeds per room. that increasing rent and utilities for<lb/>
Freshmen are being given a off-campus living apparently make<lb/>
preference in room assignments, but dormitory life more appealing to<lb/>
the rule requiring Freshmen and upperclassmen. Rent for a one-<lb/>
)<lb/>
bedroom appartment usually ranges<lb/>
from $170 to $225. A year ago, rent<lb/>
was usually between $160 and $175.<lb/>
According to information<lb/>
reported during the summer, the<lb/>
off-campus housing market will also<lb/>
be crowded this year. As of mid-<lb/>
July, Eastbrook Apartments,<lb/>
Village Green and King's Row ? all<lb/>
of which cater mostly to tC i<lb/>
students ? were already full for the<lb/>
fall. River Bluff still had a few<lb/>
openings. The management of<lb/>
Eastbrook and Village Green Apart-<lb/>
ments, advise students to apply well<lb/>
in advance, since they had just been<lb/>
able to fill some requests for August<lb/>
that had been on their waiting lists<lb/>
since last November.<lb/>
According to Joe Laney of the<lb/>
Greenville Housing Authority, the<lb/>
Sec HOUSING Page 2, Col. 1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057278_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 26, 1980<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
SU MEETS<lb/>
The Student union Maior At<lb/>
tractions Committee will meet on<lb/>
Thursday August 28, at 3 p m. in<lb/>
Room 238 o Mendenhall Studenl<lb/>
Center All members are required<lb/>
to attend Anyone interested in<lb/>
concerts programming are invited<lb/>
to attend also<lb/>
APPLICATIONS<lb/>
Applications are now being ac<lb/>
cepted tor Chairperson for the Stu<lb/>
dent Union Special Events Com<lb/>
m.ttee Please come by the Stu<lb/>
dent union Office Room 234.<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center for<lb/>
more details<lb/>
CO-OP<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
Tuesda September 2nd at 7<lb/>
p m there will be an organua<lb/>
tional meeting of the Students for<lb/>
East team at the Reagan for<lb/>
President Headquarters 526 S<lb/>
Cotanch SI (next to the Universi<lb/>
v Book Exchange) All interested<lb/>
s'uoents are invited<lb/>
The Co Op Office. 313 Raw!<lb/>
Building. 757 6979 or 757 6375, is<lb/>
looking for students for IM<lb/>
MEDIATE fall placement with the<lb/>
following agencies<lb/>
OFFICE OF PERSONNEL<lb/>
MANAGEMENT Office of the<lb/>
Secretary. Healtti and Human Ser<lb/>
vices. Washington. D C is looking<lb/>
for students who are interested in<lb/>
a career in personnel and who<lb/>
have some office skillsex<lb/>
perience First work period, the<lb/>
student will be primarily involved<lb/>
m general office duties and the se<lb/>
cond work period the student will<lb/>
be involved in specialized ac<lb/>
tivities A rismg iunior should app<lb/>
ly immediately<lb/>
CAROLINA BARGAIN<lb/>
TRADER Students interested in<lb/>
selling ads on a 15?? commission<lb/>
basis for a new Greenville weekly<lb/>
publication Students will have a<lb/>
brief framing period<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVErSI<lb/>
TY A department needs a student<lb/>
with good typing and office skills,<lb/>
including experience in use of of<lb/>
fice equipment<lb/>
U S ENVIRONMENTAL PRO<lb/>
TECTION AGENCY Washington.<lb/>
D C A computer science student<lb/>
should apply<lb/>
These Co op positions are<lb/>
salaried Watch for listing of Spr<lb/>
mg and Summer 1981 Co op open<lb/>
mgs in future "Announcement"<lb/>
columns in The East Carolinian<lb/>
Register with Co op now and be<lb/>
ready for Spring placement<lb/>
COLLEGE BOWL<lb/>
Registration for ECU In<lb/>
tramural competition College<lb/>
Bowl, the competitive sport of the<lb/>
mind opens September 8 and ex<lb/>
tends through September 30 Col<lb/>
lege Bowl features knowledgeable<lb/>
college students, tour on a team,<lb/>
competing in answering questions<lb/>
from all academic areas Ques<lb/>
tions may concern any of the<lb/>
liberal arts. science,<lb/>
mathematics, sports, current<lb/>
events and inumerable other<lb/>
areas<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
sponsors both our own mtramurai<lb/>
competition and participation in<lb/>
regional and national tour<lb/>
yiaments If anyone has questions<lb/>
'?concerning College Bowl, come by<lb/>
the Program Office in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center or telephone<lb/>
717 6611, Ext 213<lb/>
cso<lb/>
If you have or intend to declare a<lb/>
major m a science or health<lb/>
related curriculum, you may<lb/>
qualify for COST FREE services<lb/>
made available through the<lb/>
Center for Student Opportunities<lb/>
(CSO)<lb/>
CSO currently has openings for<lb/>
students wishing to receive<lb/>
tutorial services There are also<lb/>
openings tor students to par<lb/>
ticipate in individualized or group<lb/>
speedreading, notetaking and test<lb/>
taking techniques, effective<lb/>
organization of lecture notes, and<lb/>
Active Reading ? knowing more<lb/>
about what you read in a shorter<lb/>
time Counseling services include<lb/>
career planning assistance,<lb/>
academic, personal, financial, test<lb/>
anxiety, andor group counseling<lb/>
If you would like to be con<lb/>
sidered for participation in any of<lb/>
the COST FREE services, contact<lb/>
Dr Frye, Center for Student Op<lb/>
portunities, 217 Whichard Annex,<lb/>
or call for an appointment at<lb/>
757 6122, 6075, or 6031<lb/>
TUTORS WANTED<lb/>
The Center for Student Oppor<lb/>
tunities (CSO) currently has open<lb/>
ings for part time tutors in the<lb/>
following subiect areas medicine,<lb/>
pre medicine, nursing, allied<lb/>
health, biology, chemistry,<lb/>
physics, and related science and<lb/>
health professions You may earn<lb/>
an income at standard campus<lb/>
rates Contact Dr Bodwell CSO,<lb/>
216 Whichard Annex or call<lb/>
757 6122. 6081. or 6075 for an ap<lb/>
pointment<lb/>
SOCIAL WORK<lb/>
September 22 is the deadline for<lb/>
Fall Admission to the Department<lb/>
of Social Work and Correctional<lb/>
Services Students who plan to ap<lb/>
ply to major must submit an ap<lb/>
plication to the Department Chair<lb/>
and complete two interviews prior<lb/>
to the deadline Students within<lb/>
ten hours of completion of general<lb/>
college credits who have a<lb/>
minimum 2 5 grade average are<lb/>
eligible to apply Applications and<lb/>
additional information may be<lb/>
secured in the Department Office.<lb/>
Room 312, Allied health (Carol<lb/>
Belk) Building Phone 757 6961<lb/>
Housing Future In Private Market<lb/>
( ontinued From Page 1<lb/>
the future in student<lb/>
housing will lie in the<lb/>
private market. ECU is<lb/>
already looking into<lb/>
this matter by exploring<lb/>
the possibility of leas-<lb/>
ing commercially own-<lb/>
ed apartments to rent<lb/>
to students. As it is,<lb/>
housing in Greenville<lb/>
has a vacancy rate of<lb/>
1.8 percent according<lb/>
to I.aney. Another in-<lb/>
teresting fact is the high<lb/>
percentage of apart-<lb/>
ments compared to all<lb/>
housing. Out of 12,000<lb/>
units in Greenville,<lb/>
about 3400 are apart-<lb/>
ments or about one-<lb/>
fourth of the housing in<lb/>
Greenville. Rising con-<lb/>
struction rates and in-<lb/>
terest on financing have<lb/>
slowed down apart-<lb/>
ment construction.<lb/>
Older houses are also<lb/>
available for rent to<lb/>
students, but they are<lb/>
often overpriced and<lb/>
suffer from landlord<lb/>
negligence, Laney said.<lb/>
Some low income<lb/>
housing is available to<lb/>
students if they meet<lb/>
certain requirements.<lb/>
The basic problem lies<lb/>
in the fact that this type<lb/>
of housing is aimed at<lb/>
families. Married<lb/>
students could possibly<lb/>
qualify. But, unfor-<lb/>
tunately, the single stu-<lb/>
dent does not.<lb/>
Student housing is<lb/>
definitely a problem<lb/>
that will continue to<lb/>
grow. One big factor in<lb/>
off-campus accomoda-<lb/>
tions is that the people<lb/>
with the money to build<lb/>
do not want to overex-<lb/>
tend themselves. These<lb/>
people are looking ten<lb/>
and twenty years in the<lb/>
future when enrollment<lb/>
will doubtlessly<lb/>
decrease. The cause of<lb/>
decreasing enrollment<lb/>
is that which has<lb/>
plagued many educa-<lb/>
tional institutions for<lb/>
the past twenty years,<lb/>
that is, the baby boom<lb/>
after World War 11.<lb/>
Since the birth rate has<lb/>
leveled off and today's<lb/>
college student is on the<lb/>
last of the fringes of<lb/>
that boom.B'ut until<lb/>
enrollment decreases,<lb/>
Greenville will continue<lb/>
to be a tight squeeze for<lb/>
housing.<lb/>
Salary Part Of Reason<lb/>
For School's Increase<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
effects of organizational changes in<lb/>
the university that have placed<lb/>
former education departments in<lb/>
other schools. For example, voca-<lb/>
tional rehabilitation was once in the<lb/>
School of Education, but is now in<lb/>
the School of Allied Health.<lb/>
On the other hand, James pointed<lb/>
out that the corresponding growth<lb/>
in business majors had much to do<lb/>
with the acceptance of women into<lb/>
those fields.<lb/>
"Several years ago, it was hard to<lb/>
find a woman in the School of<lb/>
Business. Now, I'd guess 30 percent<lb/>
of business majors are women<lb/>
James said. Of the 2,240 business<lb/>
students in 1979, over 700 were<lb/>
women.<lb/>
Another way of measuring the<lb/>
size of ECU's various programs is<lb/>
by the total number of student<lb/>
credit hours taught. In those terms,<lb/>
the School of Business is still the<lb/>
largest in the university, but the<lb/>
department of English takes second<lb/>
place from the School of Education,<lb/>
since all students must take English<lb/>
courses.<lb/>
Wanted:<lb/>
Writers<lb/>
for our News, Sports and<lb/>
Features columns.<lb/>
Experience is desired,<lb/>
but we will train applicants with<lb/>
strong basic language skills.<lb/>
Apply at our offices<lb/>
in the Publications Building.<lb/>
The<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
a For people who love the<lb/>
taste of chicken there's the<lb/>
good taste of Wendy's Chicken<lb/>
Sandwich. The real taste, the<lb/>
full flavor of 100 fillet of<lb/>
chicken with your choice of<lb/>
toppings. Now Wendy's gives<lb/>
you another great taste<lb/>
to love. W<lb/>
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OLD fASHIONCD<lb/>
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participating Wendy's. "<lb/>
Expire Sept 30, 1980 i<lb/>
CHEESE AND TOMATO EXTRA <lb/>
NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER OFFER I<lb/>
Let HJ?e lEafit (Earnlfman<lb/>
write home for you every<lb/>
Tues. and Thurs.<lb/>
Every Tuesday and Thursday you can read the most<lb/>
informative stories about the news events of the day<lb/>
at ECU and in Greenville the best sports coverage,<lb/>
and interesting features about the people, places and<lb/>
things surrounding youso can your parents. For $25<lb/>
your parents can get a one year mail subscription to<lb/>
the East Carolinian.<lb/>
Serving the campus community since 1925, the East<lb/>
Carolinian provides valuable insights into student<lb/>
life at East Carolinia University for your parents.<lb/>
Twice weekly, we can tell your family about the<lb/>
most current campus and local news. Student free<lb/>
flicks, concerts and sports events are all covered in<lb/>
the pages of the East Carolinian, as well as state and<lb/>
local news that affects the lives of ECU students.<lb/>
Our experienced, award winning news staff can br<lb/>
ing your parents the news wherever it is happening<lb/>
in eastern North Carolina, plus the most dynamic<lb/>
behind the scenes investigative reporting.<lb/>
Our features section will bring them fascinating and<lb/>
often humorous human interest stories about the peo<lb/>
pie of the university and the surrounding area. It also<lb/>
covers the cultural events that enrich student life, as<lb/>
well as presenting interesting slices of area flavor.<lb/>
Spanning the entire spectrum of ECU'S athletic ac<lb/>
tivity, our well trained staff of enthusiastic sports<lb/>
writers will bring your family comprehensive<lb/>
coverage of ECU'S exciting football schedule, in ad<lb/>
dition to highlighting the rest of an impressive sports<lb/>
program.<lb/>
Our remarkable staff works around the clock to pro<lb/>
duce the best possible newspaper, containing the<lb/>
most essential news, features and sports of interest<lb/>
not only to you, but to your parents and friends as<lb/>
well, wherever they may be. The East Carolinian. . .<lb/>
let us inform them.<lb/>
Your parents, friends, and relatives can subscribe<lb/>
to the East Carolinian for one year by sending a<lb/>
check for $25 to: George Hettich, Circulation Dept<lb/>
The East Carolinian, Old South Building, East<lb/>
Carolinia University, Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
If you wish, you may subscribe for them by mailing<lb/>
a check for $25 aing with the coupon below to the<lb/>
East Carolinian, or just drop by the East Carolinian<lb/>
office.<lb/>
mz last (Earoitmanj<lb/>
SUBSCRIPTION FORM<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Name<lb/>
I<lb/>
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RATE: $25 per year. j<lb/>
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(Earnlfman<lb/>
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5<lb/>
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sal<lb/>
<pb facs="00057278_0003"/><lb/>
THLEASTC AROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 26, 1S?H0<lb/>
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Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
expanding facilities and services this semester.<lb/>
Policy Changes Beginning<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
cess to the bowling alley, she said.<lb/>
Also, a close-captioned machine will be in-<lb/>
stalled in the television screen at Mendenhall<lb/>
tor the hearing impaired student. The machine<lb/>
will be installed sometime soon, she said.<lb/>
A C-phone has also been installed at the in-<lb/>
formation desk at Mendenhall. This phone,<lb/>
which is connected to the main switchboard,<lb/>
will allow the deaf student to "call in" and find<lb/>
out what programs are being offered at<lb/>
Mendenhall. According to Jackie Jackson,<lb/>
secretary for the office of programming, each<lb/>
day's activities will be listed on the phone.<lb/>
Several policy changes have also been made,<lb/>
according to C. Rudolph Alexander, director of<lb/>
Mendenhall. Beginning this fall, if a student<lb/>
loses his university I.D he may present his<lb/>
driver's license and activity card when getting<lb/>
tickets. In the past, the student had to present<lb/>
the valid university ID before he could pick up<lb/>
tickets. But Alexander pointed out that the stu-<lb/>
dent should have his university l.D. since it is a<lb/>
general university requirement.<lb/>
Another change in ticket distribution con-<lb/>
cerns the amount of tickets a student can ob-<lb/>
tain. In the past, a student could only pick up<lb/>
one ticket for an event. However, this fall, as<lb/>
long as the student has proper ID. and activity<lb/>
cards, he may pick up as many tickets as he has<lb/>
identifications, Alexander said.<lb/>
Also, according to Alexander, university<lb/>
departments and organizations will no longer<lb/>
have to pay for all the technicians they use. In<lb/>
the past, Mendenhall charged for all technical<lb/>
help. Now, one technician is provided at no<lb/>
cost. However, if more than one technician is<lb/>
needed, then the group or organization must<lb/>
pay for the additional services. Off-campus<lb/>
groups and non-university organizations must<lb/>
pay for all technical help, he added.<lb/>
On Aug. 25 and 26 the Mendenhall staff will<lb/>
sponsor an open house. The first day is set aside<lb/>
for faculty and staff and the second is set aside<lb/>
for students. Mendenhall will provide free beer<lb/>
and everyone is welcome, Alexander said.<lb/>
Study To Determine Tower's Use<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
role ECU holds in the<lb/>
eastern North Carolina<lb/>
region and that he<lb/>
hoped the gift would be<lb/>
used "to further educa-<lb/>
tional purposes<lb/>
"Use it in any way to<lb/>
further your develop-<lb/>
ment and help attain<lb/>
your purposes<lb/>
Roberson said.<lb/>
Chancellor Brewer<lb/>
said he echoes Minxes'<lb/>
expression of apprecia-<lb/>
tion on behalf of the<lb/>
university and promises<lb/>
that the gift would be<lb/>
put to "best use He<lb/>
said a study would be<lb/>
made to determine how<lb/>
to use the facility.<lb/>
The television station<lb/>
put a new, taller<lb/>
transmitting tower into<lb/>
operation earlier this<lb/>
year and Roberson said<lb/>
the hoard of directors<lb/>
had voted to offer the<lb/>
tower as "an outright<lb/>
gift" to ECU.<lb/>
"It is our hope and<lb/>
desire that this gift<lb/>
would be used for<lb/>
educational purposes at<lb/>
ECU Roberson said.<lb/>
"In exploring the<lb/>
potential of this gift,<lb/>
we found that a brand<lb/>
new similar structure<lb/>
would cost approx-<lb/>
imately $1 million<lb/>
Lemish said.<lb/>
During the past two<lb/>
years, the ECU Foun-<lb/>
dation has received<lb/>
gifts in kind which in-<lb/>
cluded a boat, a collec-<lb/>
tion of gems and<lb/>
precious stones and<lb/>
some real estate.<lb/>
"A television tower<lb/>
is somewhat unusual<lb/>
I emish added.<lb/>
?:?? ?:<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057278_0004"/><lb/>
?te East Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the campus community for 54 years.<lb/>
Richard Grei n, Gfw ??,<lb/>
Terry Herndon, umm tftmum, Charles Sune, tdm, pot, &amp;?.<lb/>
CRIS LlCHOK, Busine Manager CHARLES CHANDLER. s?, ??<lb/>
George Hi ttich. Mta u Terry Gray, ,?,???<lb/>
Anita Lancaster. ? ??,?,? Steve Bachner t?unLd??,<lb/>
August 26. 1980<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Leo Jenkins<lb/>
East Carolina's Builder<lb/>
In today's edition of The East<lb/>
Carolinian we pay special tribute to<lb/>
Dr. Leo Jenkins, ECU's chancellor<lb/>
emeritus.<lb/>
This year seniors at ECU are the<lb/>
last undergraduate students who<lb/>
had the pr'vilege of attending ECU<lb/>
during Leo's tenure as chancellor.<lb/>
Those of us who can remember<lb/>
him know what a delight it was to<lb/>
run into him walking down Fifth<lb/>
Street or across campus. He would<lb/>
always stop and speak to his<lb/>
students, tell an interesting story or<lb/>
ask a student what he thought about<lb/>
a certain problem or topic of the<lb/>
day.<lb/>
We can remember the "Beat<lb/>
Carolina" pep rally that he led at<lb/>
the top of the hill during his last<lb/>
year as chancellor.<lb/>
Leo was always in the forefront<lb/>
of the battle, like a seasoned general<lb/>
leading the troops in defense of his<lb/>
beloved ECU. Also like a general he<lb/>
was always looking for a new con-<lb/>
quest, whether it was a new nursing<lb/>
school, a medical school, or a bigger<lb/>
and better football stadium.<lb/>
Our Leo was a man who loved<lb/>
everybody, and those who knew<lb/>
him loved him right back.<lb/>
As an administrator he was well<lb/>
liked by his students, who found in<lb/>
him an open ear and an open heart.<lb/>
Leo is best remembered as an ad-<lb/>
ministrator who kept in touch with<lb/>
his students. His door was always<lb/>
open, no appointments were<lb/>
necessary. If he was in then you<lb/>
could talk to him.<lb/>
He was down to earth. He would<lb/>
go up the hill to give pep talks to the<lb/>
football team before the big games<lb/>
at Chapel Hill and Raleigh. He went<lb/>
to those little informal gatherings<lb/>
with the football team in his "ECU<lb/>
No. 1" tee-shirt, not a three piece<lb/>
suit. His talks were genuine and had<lb/>
meaning. He preached the winning<lb/>
sermon. Leo loved to win.<lb/>
During his 31 years at ECU he<lb/>
became something of a legend in his<lb/>
own time, and rightly so. Few men<lb/>
can boast of his accompishments.<lb/>
The students owe Leo the most<lb/>
thanks and gratitude. It was his love<lb/>
of the students and his concern for<lb/>
our future that drove him to move<lb/>
the mountains that built ECU into<lb/>
what it is today.<lb/>
He was always the champion of<lb/>
our cause, whatever the cause hap-<lb/>
pened to be. If he thought that his<lb/>
students needed or wanted<lb/>
something then he did his damndest<lb/>
to get it for us, and usually with a<lb/>
great deal of success.<lb/>
We are able to attend a great state<lb/>
university today, instead of a two-<lb/>
year teachers college, because of Dr.<lb/>
Leo Jenkins' aggressive leadership<lb/>
and his burning desire to make a<lb/>
better wa of life for us and all the<lb/>
people of North Carolina.<lb/>
The memory of Leo Jenkins will<lb/>
live forever in the hearts and minds<lb/>
of those who hold ECU near and<lb/>
dear to their hearts.<lb/>
The Campus Forum<lb/>
Do you ever feel like getting up<lb/>
on the soapbox? Have you ever had<lb/>
a great idea or some hot informa-<lb/>
tion that the rest of the campus<lb/>
should know about? Do you ever<lb/>
get mad as hell and can't take it<lb/>
anymore?<lb/>
Then sit down with your favorite<lb/>
typewriter or pen and put it on<lb/>
paper. We'll be glad to print and<lb/>
deliver it to 10,000 people twice a<lb/>
week.<lb/>
If you are a student, a professor,<lb/>
an administrator or anyone af-<lb/>
filiated with ECU, you must have<lb/>
something to say about campus,<lb/>
state, national or international af-<lb/>
fairs. You can't possibly agree with<lb/>
everything we say. Everyone has an<lb/>
opinion, and your opinions have a<lb/>
much higher readership than ours.<lb/>
Contained in a small box in every<lb/>
issue of the paper is a little message<lb/>
with a BIG meaning: "The East<lb/>
Carolinian is the official newspaper<lb/>
of East Carolina University, owned,<lb/>
operated, and published for and by<lb/>
the students of East Carolina<lb/>
University<lb/>
Just think about it-you too can<lb/>
contribute to the newspaper without<lb/>
having to work long, hard hours for<lb/>
low, low pay. All you have to do is<lb/>
write it down in your spare time, no<lb/>
deadlines to worry about except<lb/>
your own. Keep it around 300<lb/>
words, don't libel anyone, make it<lb/>
legible, and we'll take to the street<lb/>
for you.<lb/>
And not only to the street. Top<lb/>
administrators, the ECU Board of<lb/>
Trustees and powerful alumni read<lb/>
The East Carolinian regularly. For<lb/>
many of them, it's the only source<lb/>
of student and faculty input. Don't<lb/>
let them think everything is fine and<lb/>
dandy if you think it isn't. Silence is<lb/>
equal to contentment.<lb/>
The East Carolinian is your<lb/>
newspaper and a campus<lb/>
newspaper, not the exclusive pro-<lb/>
vince of a handful of journalism<lb/>
students. After all, students pay<lb/>
about three cents for each issue.<lb/>
Why not get you 3 cents worth?<lb/>
Old Times Not Forgotten<lb/>
"1 wish I was in the land of cot-<lb/>
tonOld times they are not forgot-<lb/>
tenLook away! Look away! Look<lb/>
away! Dixie Land<lb/>
This lively old tune was written in<lb/>
1859, believe it or not, by a yankee,<lb/>
Daniel Emmett.<lb/>
It is a popular song that reflects<lb/>
the customs, culture, and way of life<lb/>
in the South, where indeed Old<lb/>
times are not forgotten.<lb/>
It is a song about the slow, easy<lb/>
and leisurely way of life in our<lb/>
region. It also reflects the intense<lb/>
pride that seems to be inborn with<lb/>
native sons and daughters of the<lb/>
South. "In Dixie Land I'll take my<lb/>
standTo live and die in Dixie<lb/>
The old tune has roused many an<lb/>
audience throughout the South and<lb/>
across the nation. When Abraham<lb/>
Lincoln first heard the song at a<lb/>
New York performance in 1860, he<lb/>
shouted, "Let's have it again<lb/>
from his box. And on the day the<lb/>
Civil War ended he ordered the Ar-<lb/>
my band to play the song in the<lb/>
streets of Washington.<lb/>
In 1863 a newspaper reported that<lb/>
the song was "as popular in New<lb/>
York as in Richmond<lb/>
We, as southerners, have always<lb/>
taken great pride in our history and<lb/>
our unique and very distinctive<lb/>
lifestyles. Our close ties to the<lb/>
church, family, and community<lb/>
have endured through the years. We<lb/>
are famed throughout the world for<lb/>
our hospitality, gracious manners,<lb/>
and of course the good food.<lb/>
The song Dixie is a reflection of<lb/>
all of this nostalgia about the South.<lb/>
It would be nice to hear this rous-<lb/>
ing and vibrant old melody at our<lb/>
home football games once again as<lb/>
it was in years gone by.<lb/>
Dixie is a song that we all love to<lb/>
hum along to and it makes a<lb/>
Southerner's heart swell with pride.<lb/>
"Away, away, away down South<lb/>
in Dixie<lb/>
&amp;OILT ECO ,OT0 a<lb/>
6H?AT UMlVfctoiTf <lb/>
East CW-Olioa<lb/>
Mendenhall: A Student Center?<lb/>
By CHARLES SUNE<lb/>
tdilorial P??f 1 dilur<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center? The next<lb/>
time you enter Mendenhall keep in mind<lb/>
that student fees are paying for the facility.<lb/>
With the exception of the salaries for the<lb/>
professional staff, and the land that the<lb/>
building was constructed on, Mendenhall<lb/>
is entirely supported with student activity<lb/>
fees. Yet, there is no direct student involve-<lb/>
ment in the operation of the facility.<lb/>
Every full-time student pays in excess of<lb/>
$15 per semester to pay off trie Mendenhall<lb/>
bonds and to operate the facility itself.<lb/>
Even those who are classified as part-time<lb/>
pay a proportionate amount to the center.<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center should not<lb/>
be confused with the Student Union pro-<lb/>
gramming organization. The Student<lb/>
Union, which is supported with student<lb/>
fees, has approximately 75 students involv-<lb/>
ed who make programming decisions. The<lb/>
Student Union organization, though it is<lb/>
housed in Mendenhall, has nothing what<lb/>
soever to do with the operation of the Stu-<lb/>
dent Center.<lb/>
Recently, Rudolph Alexander, Director<lb/>
of the Student Center, proposed that an<lb/>
Advisory Board be formed to give the<lb/>
director a better feeling of community in-<lb/>
volvement. Though it may appear other-<lb/>
wise, Alexander's proposal is a poor one.<lb/>
Seemingly, his plan would allow for stu-<lb/>
dent input as well as faculty input-<lb/>
however, the key to understanding the pro-<lb/>
posal is with the board's name. Alexander<lb/>
proposes an "Advisory" Board. By defini-<lb/>
tion, the Board would only advise. There<lb/>
would be no students, or faculty in policy<lb/>
making positions.<lb/>
Some might think that placing students<lb/>
in policy making positions is a bit too<lb/>
radical. Students are presently represented<lb/>
on all faculty and administrative commit-<lb/>
tees as well as standing departmental com-<lb/>
mittees. It is interesting to note that there is<lb/>
a voting student member of the Board of<lb/>
Trustees, the highest policy making board<lb/>
of the university, yet there is no student in-<lb/>
volvement in the operation of the Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Why should students be allowed to for-<lb/>
mulate Student Center policy? For one<lb/>
thing, if Mendenhall is indeed the Student<lb/>
Outer, students should help formulate its<lb/>
policies For the iast twenty years one man<lb/>
has been solely responsible for the opera-<lb/>
tion of the Student Center. Even before<lb/>
Mendenhall was constructed, while still in<lb/>
what was known as the old College Union,<lb/>
Rudolph Alexander was formulating his<lb/>
own policies as well as doing his own pro-<lb/>
gramming.<lb/>
There has never been any outside in-<lb/>
volvement in the operation of Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. The overriding question<lb/>
that immediately arises is, why hasn't there<lb/>
been any outside involvement? There are<lb/>
many reasons and few adequate explana-<lb/>
tions for this.<lb/>
To begin, Alexander has been making all<lb/>
of the decisions for a long time. Alexander<lb/>
is a conservative man and doesn't like<lb/>
change. Until his new boss (Dr. Elmer<lb/>
Meyer, Vice-Chancellor for Student Life)<lb/>
arrived, he had free reign.<lb/>
Alexander does not want to give up the<lb/>
power that he has enjoyed for the last 20<lb/>
yearshowever, he can see that he will be<lb/>
forced to open-up the Student Center if he<lb/>
doesn't do so of his own volition. Alex<lb/>
ander, being no fool, proposes a plan that<lb/>
would least errode his power. This is whv<lb/>
he proposes an "advisory" Board instead<lb/>
of a board that would make actual policv<lb/>
decisions.<lb/>
In fairness to Alexander it should be<lb/>
mentioned that he has managed to hire an<lb/>
excellent staff. They work hard because<lb/>
their boss is demanding. Though his staff<lb/>
is quite competent, it needs to be<lb/>
remembered that Alexander is unques-<lb/>
tionably the boss and his staff must follow<lb/>
every command.<lb/>
There is an alternative to the Advisory<lb/>
Board plan. It's called the University<lb/>
Union. By combining the Student Union<lb/>
organization with Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center there would be students placed in<lb/>
every area of the Student Center opera-<lb/>
tion. Students would be responsible for all<lb/>
programming done with student fees. The<lb/>
present Student Union Board of Director-<lb/>
would serve as a Student Center Board of<lb/>
Directors. The Student Center would then<lb/>
become responsive to the needs of those<lb/>
who are footing the bills. For the first<lb/>
time, students would be placed in actual<lb/>
decision making positions instead of token<lb/>
advisory positions.<lb/>
It's high time that Mendenhall became a<lb/>
Student Center, instead of a rigid dictator<lb/>
ship.<lb/>
The Press Rolls On ? Sometimes<lb/>
Neighbors and friends ? that special<lb/>
group of people who always seem to be<lb/>
there when you need them.<lb/>
It was the good fortune of this<lb/>
newspaper to have a friend and neighbor,<lb/>
The Havelock Progress, this past week.<lb/>
When the computerized typesetting<lb/>
machinery broke down last week we found<lb/>
ourselves in quite a predicament. We had a<lb/>
32 page newspaper to produce within just a<lb/>
few days and our whole production system<lb/>
was paralyzed.<lb/>
The only other system in this part of the<lb/>
state that is compatible with that which<lb/>
produces The East Carolinian is owned by<lb/>
The Havelock Progress.<lb/>
When our call for help went out ot the<lb/>
Havelock paper they responded quickly<lb/>
and graciously. Editor Stephanie Hailey<lb/>
and Publisher Eugene Smith opened the<lb/>
doors and invited us to use their facilities<lb/>
in order to get our paper out to the<lb/>
students of ECU.<lb/>
Mrs. Hailey stayed late, after the normal<lb/>
5 p.m. closing time several nights to allow<lb/>
us the use of their machinery and offered<lb/>
any and all assistance that she could<lb/>
possibly render. Her help and hospitality<lb/>
was most welcomed and greatly ap-<lb/>
preciated.<lb/>
We owe a great debt and tremendous<lb/>
thanks to the fine folks at The Havelock<lb/>
Progress who enabled us to bring this<lb/>
newspaper to our readers today.<lb/>
For three consecutive nights our staff<lb/>
made the hour and a half drive to that<lb/>
small "marine village" between New Bern<lb/>
and Morehead City. Not once when we<lb/>
called was there any hesitation on the part<lb/>
of the Progress to extend a helping hand.<lb/>
Certainly, if the opportunity ever<lb/>
presents itself, we look forward to the day<lb/>
when we may in some measure repay our<lb/>
debt of gratitude.<lb/>
im ii Mil &amp;, i ??? ??tt?<lb/>
UN<lb/>
Casi<lb/>
Gov<lb/>
?<lb/>
:<lb/>
H<lb/>
v.<lb/>
V<lb/>
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Car,<lb/>
Tun<lb/>
 11<lb/>
Cha<lb/>
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u ee -<lb/>
elec'<lb/>
StO<lb/>
ly w<lb/>
Ha i<lb/>
R<lb/>
'Trends<lb/>
Bv ROBrl<lb/>
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: k shi!<lb/>
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that<lb/>
earlv 196 i<lb/>
Have<lb/>
and j<lb/>
tttude-<lb/>
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rogance atvi<lb/>
I<lb/>
4<lb/>
'?' ? it 'i i imm0mmmmmmmmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057278_0005"/><lb/>
v4x.<lb/>
n<lb/>
to give up the<lb/>
for the last 20<lb/>
that he will be<lb/>
lent Center if he<lb/>
volition. Alex<lb/>
oses a plan that<lb/>
.c 1 his is wh<lb/>
Board instead<lb/>
ike actual polk)<lb/>
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maged to hire an<lb/>
Irk hard because<lb/>
"i hough his stafl<lb/>
It needs to be<lb/>
Inder is unques<lb/>
b alt musl follow<lb/>
to the Advisory<lb/>
the University<lb/>
e Student Union<lb/>
Idenhall Student<lb/>
udcnts placed in<lb/>
Center open<lb/>
esponsible tor all<lb/>
udent tecs The<lb/>
ard of Directors<lb/>
Center Board of<lb/>
enter would then<lb/>
le needs of those<lb/>
Is. For the first<lb/>
placed in actual<lb/>
instead of token<lb/>
Idenhall became a<lb/>
If a rigid dictator-<lb/>
es<lb/>
nd tremendous<lb/>
it The Havelock<lb/>
s to bring this<lb/>
oday.<lb/>
nights our slaff<lb/>
lit drive to that<lb/>
btween New Bern<lb/>
It once when we<lb/>
ation on the part<lb/>
a helping hand.<lb/>
portunity ever<lb/>
rward to ihe day<lb/>
beasure repay our<lb/>
is<lb/>
THE VAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OD-Ed Other Opinion<lb/>
JL ALL'1, - i 26. r 5<lb/>
UNC Desegregation<lb/>
Case Continues With<lb/>
Govt. Witnesses<lb/>
In its desegregation case agianst<lb/>
the University ol North Carolina<lb/>
system, the federal government is<lb/>
offering a parade ol witnesses<lb/>
recommending ways to bolster<lb/>
racial balance that almost certainly<lb/>
would impair educational oppor-<lb/>
tunit) foi both blacks and whites.<lb/>
Many of these witnesses have no<lb/>
special knowledge of problems in<lb/>
North Carolina, and their recom-<lb/>
mendations arc not consistent<lb/>
among themselves. A few examples<lb/>
from the government's shopping list<lb/>
are instructs e.<lb/>
One witness recommended open<lb/>
admission for all black high school<lb/>
graduates a UNC's most selective<lb/>
campuses. 1 his would mean that all<lb/>
black high school graduates who ap-<lb/>
plied for admission to UNC-Chapel<lb/>
Hill or NC. State would have to be<lb/>
accepted. 1 his is educational<lb/>
nonsense.<lb/>
With an extensive remedial pro-<lb/>
gram, the university might be able<lb/>
to carry some clearly unqualified<lb/>
students tor foul years and grant<lb/>
them diplomas. But without educa-<lb/>
tional standards, a degree is mererlv<lb/>
a piece of papei. Such students are<lb/>
better served bv programs more at<lb/>
tuned to their needs And the<lb/>
deliberate erosion of academic stan-<lb/>
dards would dimmish the oppor-<lb/>
tunity tor a meaningful education<lb/>
for both blacks and whites<lb/>
Anothei witness suggests that<lb/>
UNC's predominantly white cam<lb/>
puses could achieve a 15 percent<lb/>
representation o blacks on then<lb/>
faculties. 1 his is notwithstanding<lb/>
the fad that, according to the<lb/>
witnesses" own statistics, only 2 pei<lb/>
cent ol the PhDs in the countr are<lb/>
black and Ml percen: ol those<lb/>
have degrees in education, which<lb/>
means that less than 1 percent of the<lb/>
doctorate-holders in other fields are<lb/>
black.<lb/>
I N( can and must work to in-<lb/>
crease the number of blacks in its<lb/>
doctoral programs and to improve<lb/>
black representation on<lb/>
predominantly white faculties. But<lb/>
the witness' own data suggest that<lb/>
the goal could not be attained even<lb/>
it black PhDs were hired without<lb/>
regard to their qualifications. And<lb/>
who, black or white, would be well-<lb/>
served bv the hiring of unqualified<lb/>
teachers?<lb/>
Such recommendations go lar<lb/>
beyond anything the federal govern-<lb/>
ment has seriously espoused in near-<lb/>
ly a decade o wrangling with the<lb/>
university over desegregation. Main<lb/>
o them appear to go beyond the<lb/>
bounds ol allowable affirmative ac-<lb/>
tion set by the Supreme Court in the<lb/>
Bakke case. About the most one can<lb/>
conclude is that government at-<lb/>
torney hipe that such a shotgun<lb/>
bias! ol impractical proposals will<lb/>
make their position seem reasonable<lb/>
bv the tune they finish presenting<lb/>
their case in October.<lb/>
Ihe fact that people in responsi-<lb/>
ble positions make such proposals<lb/>
and the fact that educationally<lb/>
unsound ideas could find their way<lb/>
into a court order illustrates how<lb/>
crucial it is that the university<lb/>
demonstrate that it can carry out a<lb/>
legally acceptable, educationally<lb/>
sound desegregation plan. But when<lb/>
faced with proposal that obviously<lb/>
would be destructive, the INC<lb/>
system clearly should resist and<lb/>
assert the necessity ol retaining the<lb/>
right lo govern it sell.<lb/>
OAJT r-Hf i M<lb/>
Trl? CWPUS l KfDl BUioP, &amp;uT THE TUiTiOMb CHCAp<lb/>
States Rights Eroded Beyond Recognition<lb/>
V ?<lb/>
,1lh-CTc<lb/>
Campaign Breakfast<lb/>
Turns to Indigestion<lb/>
p . vv<lb/>
.<lb/>
One thing you have to sav for<lb/>
Charles Rose, the congressman<lb/>
from the 7th District, he doesn't<lb/>
hesitate to beard the lion in his den.<lb/>
Swinging about the district this<lb/>
week currying favor tor the general<lb/>
election in November, Rep. Rose<lb/>
stopped in Wilmington for<lb/>
breakfast with the Chamber oi<lb/>
Commerce. Besides differing sharp-<lb/>
ly with the congressman's views on<lb/>
basic issues, many of the Chamber<lb/>
members would like to see New<lb/>
Hanover County excised from<lb/>
Rose's district. There is strong senti-<lb/>
ment for returning the congressional<lb/>
seat to New Hanover, where it used<lb/>
to rest duing the 'enure of Alton<lb/>
Lennon. There is equally strong<lb/>
feeling that Rose is a touch too<lb/>
liberal for the region, and, for that<lb/>
matter, for North Carolina.<lb/>
The breakfast didn't figure to be<lb/>
comfy-cozy under the most cordial<lb/>
of circumstances.<lb/>
Rep. Rose ostensibly was there to<lb/>
seek the Chamber's endoresment of<lb/>
his re-election, or at least to gather a<lb/>
lew votes. In keeping with that pur<lb/>
pose, he might have been expected<lb/>
to trv to mollify those disenchanted<lb/>
hv his congressional performance ?<lb/>
stroke the gathering so to speak.<lb/>
So, what did Rep. Rose do Well,<lb/>
he lectured the Chamber on the<lb/>
danger of bulding an oil refinery in<lb/>
Brunswick County, across the Cape<lb/>
1 ear from New Hanover. He recall<lb/>
ed the oil tanker fire near Houston<lb/>
last spring and the near-spill in May<lb/>
when a tanker foundered off Frying<lb/>
Pan Shoals, and dwelled on the<lb/>
threat an oil refinery in Brunswick<lb/>
would pose to the North Carolina<lb/>
coast.<lb/>
Then, rounding out nicely his lit-<lb/>
tle breakfast pep talk. Rep. Rose<lb/>
said he would do nothing to help the<lb/>
Brunswick oil refinery along and<lb/>
would do everything he could to<lb/>
stop it. To the consortium planning<lb/>
the refinery, he said, "leave us<lb/>
alone<lb/>
As it happens, the Wilmington<lb/>
Chamber o' Commerce is a bastion<lb/>
of support for the refinery. If<lb/>
Rose's breakfast campaign chat<lb/>
didn't give the members indigestion,<lb/>
nothinu will.<lb/>
Ihe nation's blue-suited,<lb/>
buttoned-dow n governors are<lb/>
unlikely revolutionaries. But they<lb/>
have begun grappling anew with a<lb/>
question that preoccupied those<lb/>
revolutionaries who founded this<lb/>
country two centuries ago ? how<lb/>
? national" and how "federal" is<lb/>
the government established by the<lb/>
Constitutions<lb/>
At its recent session, the National<lb/>
Governors' Association approved a<lb/>
resolution asserting that "the<lb/>
tederal system has reached a<lb/>
crossroads" and that "the role of<lb/>
the states has been eroded to the<lb/>
point that the authors of the Con-<lb/>
stitution would not recognize the in-<lb/>
tergovernmental relationships they<lb/>
crafted so carefully in 1789 The<lb/>
governors called for the establish-<lb/>
ment o a National Commission of<lb/>
federalism to make recommenda-<lb/>
tions, possibly including constitu-<lb/>
tional amendments, for<lb/>
redistributing power among the<lb/>
various levels o government.<lb/>
Though the governors, as politi-<lb/>
cians, are riding the crest of a wave<lb/>
of anti-Washington sentiment, this<lb/>
is not an old-line, "fergit, hell<lb/>
type of states rights campaign. The<lb/>
federalism resolution was approved<lb/>
unanimously, with both liberal and<lb/>
conservative govoernors speaking<lb/>
out for it. Further, the governors'<lb/>
position is bolstered by an ex-<lb/>
haustive three-year study by the<lb/>
non-partisan Advisory Commission<lb/>
on intergovernmental Relations,<lb/>
which concluded that American<lb/>
federalism is in "serious disarray<lb/>
In the governors' view, states<lb/>
have become little more than branch<lb/>
offices or subcontractors of the<lb/>
federal government. The AC1R<lb/>
found the federal government now<lb/>
has nearly 500 grant programs,<lb/>
costing S88 billion, for state and<lb/>
local governments. Tied to this<lb/>
monev, according to AC1R, are<lb/>
about 1,260 "mandates" either in<lb/>
the form of direct orders or condi-<lb/>
tions for receiving the aid.<lb/>
Democratic Gov. George Busbee<lb/>
of Georgia declared ihat "there is<lb/>
no doubt that the federal umbilical<lb/>
cord is beginning to strangle us<lb/>
Republican Gov. Richard Snelling<lb/>
of Vermont spoke of finding ways<lb/>
to achieve "fiscal restraint without<lb/>
abandoning our social goals<lb/>
North Carolina Gov. James B.<lb/>
Hunt Jr. joined the chorus by urg-<lb/>
ing governors to work out a<lb/>
reassessment of roles in cooperation<lb/>
with Congress and the White<lb/>
House.<lb/>
Perhaps the most outspoken of<lb/>
the gubernatorial "revolutionaries"<lb/>
was Gov. Bruce Babbitt of Arizona,<lb/>
who described himself as a<lb/>
"committed liberal in social affairs,<lb/>
as an unapologetic Democrat<lb/>
"The Congress no longer even<lb/>
asks the question that preoccupied<lb/>
Hamilton and Madison: Is this<lb/>
legislative proposal an appropriate<lb/>
function for the federal govern-<lb/>
ment?" Babbitt said. "They would<lb/>
ask, Is it the role of the national<lb/>
congress to fund programs for jelly-<lb/>
fish control? A comprehensive pro-<lb/>
gram for rat control?  They would<lb/>
ask, Is it appropriate to have a na-<lb/>
tional program that buys<lb/>
typewriters, desks, guns and patrol<lb/>
cars for local police agencies across<lb/>
the entire continent?"<lb/>
It is unrealistic to expect that the<lb/>
United States will ever return to the<lb/>
unadulterated vision of the writers<lb/>
of the Federalist Papers. In<lb/>
Federalist Nos. 45 and 46, for exam-<lb/>
ple, James Madison argues that<lb/>
"the state governments will have the<lb/>
advantage of the federal gover-<lb/>
ment" and that should the tederal<lb/>
government ever try to "extend its<lb/>
power beyond the due limits<lb/>
states would have the "means ol<lb/>
defeating such encroachments<lb/>
How quaint those words seem.<lb/>
There has indeed beei a progfound<lb/>
shift of power to the federal govern-<lb/>
ment, which in turn has found the<lb/>
means to require states and local<lb/>
governments to follow its dictates.<lb/>
This shift has varied and complex<lb/>
causes. States often sought federal<lb/>
help and they sometimes failed to<lb/>
assume responsiblities. The shift is<lb/>
not, as some conservative critics<lb/>
would have it, the result simplv o<lb/>
liberal do-gooding. ACTR analyst<lb/>
David R, Beam points out that the<lb/>
effort to win World War 11 brought<lb/>
about expanded federal intervention<lb/>
in the economy and the response to<lb/>
the Soviet "Sputnik" led to the ma-<lb/>
jor federal involvement in educa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
W hat the governors are now seek<lb/>
ing is a trade. 1 hey want the fedei il<lb/>
government to takeover lull resp<lb/>
siblilv tor programs, such<lb/>
welfare, for which national objec<lb/>
lives are clear. In exchange, they<lb/>
want the federal government to<lb/>
divert itselt o certain tasks in, I<lb/>
example, education and crime con-<lb/>
trol and allow states and cities more<lb/>
discretion m accomplishing them.<lb/>
To the extent thai they are not<lb/>
seeking an abdication o govern<lb/>
ment's responsiblity to protect con-<lb/>
stitutional rights and to help pei<lb/>
m need, the governors have raised a<lb/>
significant question in asking<lb/>
whether a rejuvination ol fedcralsim<lb/>
could result in improved delivery<lb/>
services. Ihe United States cannot<lb/>
turn the clock back to 1789, but il<lb/>
can consider in contemporary terms<lb/>
Madison's point, in federalist No<lb/>
39, that the "Constitution  is, in<lb/>
strictness, neither a national nor a<lb/>
federal Constitution, but a composi<lb/>
ion of both<lb/>
?Trenpllers- lake a dive<lb/>
Triangle Area Turns Off To Prep<lb/>
By ROBERT M. SWAIM<lb/>
?! in Ihr (.rneml Mjnaurr<lb/>
Recently 1 read in The News and<lb/>
Observer that believe it or not, there<lb/>
may be a few folks in the Raleigh-<lb/>
Durham-Chapel Hill triangle who<lb/>
are sick of "prep<lb/>
The triangle area, well known tor<lb/>
its abundance of Kelly green pants,<lb/>
pink shirts (with little alligators ol<lb/>
course), weejuns, khakis, two tone<lb/>
belts, pink hair ribbons and add-a-<lb/>
beads, may be coming of age by<lb/>
beginning to turn away from the<lb/>
"preppy" scene.<lb/>
The world of prep is a strange cult<lb/>
that thrives on the nostalgia of the<lb/>
early 1960s college scene.<lb/>
Have you ever noticed the likes<lb/>
and dislikes of "preps their at-<lb/>
titudes and clone-like personalities?<lb/>
They are a strange sort of people,<lb/>
who carry about them an air of ar-<lb/>
rogance and snobbishness. The<lb/>
looking-dow n-thc-nos e<lb/>
characteristic is most noticable.<lb/>
They love to get sloshed. This has<lb/>
several benefits if you are a "prep<lb/>
1) It gives you an excuse to "gator<lb/>
2) You can be obnoxious and have<lb/>
an acceptable excuse when apologiz-<lb/>
ing for your actions the next day; 3)<lb/>
It gives you something to talk about<lb/>
at the next party.<lb/>
Then we have the "Charles Elliot<lb/>
Worthington 111" syndrome. This<lb/>
syndrome reflected in the male<lb/>
preps' habit of going about trying to<lb/>
convince the world thai they are in-<lb/>
dependently wealthy - part of the<lb/>
country club set. "My car is more<lb/>
expensive "I own $5,000 worth ot<lb/>
beach music "1 vvent to a private<lb/>
school "1 have alligators on my<lb/>
jocky shorts"  etc.<lb/>
And oh, how they love to shag,<lb/>
bee-bop. and jig-a-loo all around to<lb/>
the tune of the Embers. The Tarns,<lb/>
or the Georgia Prophets. Thev love<lb/>
to shag the night away and roll back<lb/>
the clock in their minds until they<lb/>
convince themselves that they are<lb/>
back at the Deke house in 1960 at<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
If you ever get to know a really<lb/>
devout prep, he or she will probably<lb/>
confess in a drunken stupor one<lb/>
night that they applied at Carolina,<lb/>
but were rejected; Chapel Hill is the<lb/>
Mecca of the North Carolina prep<lb/>
society.<lb/>
Getting back to beach music -<lb/>
which is nothing but a modern day<lb/>
version of a Negro minstrel - what<lb/>
is so appealing about bopping<lb/>
around listening to "I got sand in<lb/>
mv shoes or "1 love beach<lb/>
music<lb/>
What is really hilarious about the<lb/>
true preps is that they honestly<lb/>
believe in their own minds that they<lb/>
are trendsetters, setting the pace for<lb/>
others to follow in fashion (God<lb/>
forbid!), music, and culture.<lb/>
lzod and weejun will never be in<lb/>
the same league with Yves Saint<lb/>
Laurent, Pierre Cardin, or Calvin<lb/>
Klein.<lb/>
1 remember that shortly after Jim-<lb/>
my Carter took office Time<lb/>
magazine did a profile on Hamilton<lb/>
Jordan, Carter's chief strategist and<lb/>
aide-de-camp. Time described Jor-<lb/>
dan's appearance as immature and<lb/>
outdated  "still looking like a<lb/>
preppy fraternity boy Penny<lb/>
loafers and alligators are not im-<lb/>
pressive, or chic in any set.<lb/>
Fortunately, ECU has a small<lb/>
preppy population in comparison<lb/>
with schools in Raleigh and Chapel<lb/>
Hill,<lb/>
It is the sincere hope and dream<lb/>
of this writer that prep will, like<lb/>
zoot suits, raccoon coats, and<lb/>
swallowing goldfish, fade away and<lb/>
die a peaceful death, never to be<lb/>
seen again.<lb/>
?<lb/>
- - -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057278_0006"/><lb/>
6 fHE EAST CAROLINIAN AUGUST 26,1980<lb/>
An Educational<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
rtuni<lb/>
<lb/>
If money for college at ECU is<lb/>
a problem,<lb/>
the GUARD can help! A<lb/>
A<lb/>
$1,500.00 BONUS<lb/>
$500.00 tuition assistance<lb/>
per year.<lb/>
$56.80 pay per month.<lb/>
?:<lb/>
THE NORTH CAROLINA LEGISLATURE HAS ESTABLISHED A TUI-<lb/>
TION ASSISTANCE PROGRAM FOR NATIONAL GUARD MEMBERS.<lb/>
As an ECU student you can remain in school while receiving a $1,500<lb/>
enlistment bonus, plus $500.00 per school year to pay for tuition. Your<lb/>
monthly pay while staying in Greenville of $56.80 can also help with the<lb/>
costs of college.<lb/>
CONTACT:<lb/>
FTTH<lb/>
NATIONAL<lb/>
GUARD<lb/>
JERRY JENKINS<lb/>
752-9653<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
The Guard Belongs<lb/>
x<lb/>
STAT?<lb/>
.<lb/>
20<lb/>
3?<lb/>
X<lb/>
V<lb/>
QUAM<lb/>
?fr<lb/>
T<lb/>
a<lb/>
s<lb/>
Re<lb/>
ii<lb/>
<pb facs="00057278_0007"/><lb/>
THI EAST C AROl INIAN AUGUST 26, 1980<lb/>
Weekend values<lb/>
stance<lb/>
nth.<lb/>
The shirt<lb/>
at a great<lb/>
sale price<lb/>
Reg. $8<lb/>
The shirt that's great for golf, great<lb/>
for tennis. Suited for back yard<lb/>
sport and lounging, too. A soft<lb/>
blend of cottonpolyester wifh a<lb/>
branded Knit collar, three button-<lb/>
placket. And an extra long tail for<lb/>
plenty of tuck-in room. In great<lb/>
fashion colors for S,M,L and XL.<lb/>
Sporting Goods Department.<lb/>
J?&amp;<lb/>
i<lb/>
"vif-gt<lb/>
5SHZ<lb/>
-<lb/>
?;<lb/>
v  " U<lb/>
The Fox"<lb/>
<lb/>
 r<lb/>
?v'<lb/>
mm: -<lb/>
 W i<lb/>
<lb/>
??<lb/>
Only $13.<lb/>
Only at JCPenney.<lb/>
The Fox shirt for women Sportmg the favorite details<lb/>
you ve admired in the higher-priced knit Like easy,<lb/>
banded sleeves Classic placket front and sh.rtta.l<lb/>
bottom Poly cotton m lights bnghts and basics<lb/>
for sizes P-S-M-L<lb/>
Men s sizes $14<lb/>
Women's sizes $13<lb/>
Children's sizes 7.50 &amp; 8.50.<lb/>
Toddler $7<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
i<lb/>
V i<lb/>
5)<lb/>
Cushy<lb/>
comfort<lb/>
14.99<lb/>
Three styles to choose foom. C lassie san-<lb/>
dal stvlmg on a common ground of sued-<lb/>
ed cushioned in sole limns sturdv man-<lb/>
made Kraton soles. For hours of happv<lb/>
comfort. Hull leather done in a variety<lb/>
ot ways. Misses' sizes.<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
S<lb/>
ES9<lb/>
<lb/>
Z5?Z<lb/>
Sale<lb/>
$11.88<lb/>
30 plywood footiocker with vinyl covering, nickel<lb/>
plated hardware, tongue-n-groove closure Great for<lb/>
college home or garage<lb/>
reg. $17.00<lb/>
?<lb/>
?i<lb/>
<lb/>
IS:<lb/>
 -3&amp;3?33a2<lb/>
?&amp;<lb/>
? is<lb/>
$21.99<lb/>
JCPennv 20" three speed box tan. 5 plasm blades, with<lb/>
white safety grille. Harvest Gold.<lb/>
16.99<lb/>
TJ<lb/>
&amp;)m<lb/>
Lean back and relax. Watch TV or read a book<lb/>
With our cushy arm-style bedrest covered in<lb/>
colorful cotton'corduroy Plumped full with<lb/>
cottonkapok to help keep its shape<lb/>
Two great ways<lb/>
to charge<lb/>
XPewy<lb/>
VISA<lb/>
22"x22'5 34'<lb/>
Think SchoolThink XPenney<lb/>
Shop 10a.m. til 9p.m Phone 7 56-1190- Pitt Plaza.<lb/>
.ii . urnmijwi?H!iiiiWir'ilWMWMw m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057278_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN f AUGUST 26. 1980<lb/>
Tobacco Prominent In Area History<lb/>
C H ?? P<lb/>
K I has contributed to the growth of (ireen- vital part of the area's economy. Pitt County is<lb/>
ille since 1907. h-it tobacco has always been a the flue-cured tobacco capital of the world.<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
War Years See Smaller Enrollment,<lb/>
School Gets Full University Status<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
On August 22, 1929, the college was<lb/>
authorized to grant the Master of Arts degree.<lb/>
The first masters degree was conferred in<lb/>
August of 1933.<lb/>
On April 25, 1934, Dr. Leon R. Meadows<lb/>
was elected president of the college. During the<lb/>
war sears, the college saw decreased enroll-<lb/>
ment. On May 1, 1944, Meadows resigned and<lb/>
Dr. H. J. McGinnis was elected as president.<lb/>
McGinnis served until August of 1946. Dr.<lb/>
Dennis H. Cooke was appointed acting presi-<lb/>
dent for the academic year 1946-47. On<lb/>
September 1, 1947, Dr. John D. Messick was<lb/>
elected as the fifth president of the college.<lb/>
Although the school was established for both<lb/>
men and women, the college was not really<lb/>
coeducational until the veterans began to enroll<lb/>
in the 1940s. In the fall quarter of 1947, the<lb/>
enrollment of men exceeded that of women for<lb/>
the first time. There were 728 men enrolled at<lb/>
that time and 676 women.<lb/>
In April of 1951, the name of the college was<lb/>
changed again to East Carolina College.<lb/>
In November of 1956, the Board of Trustees<lb/>
approved social fraternities on campus.<lb/>
On January 1, I960, Dr. Leo W. Jenkins was<lb/>
elected president when Messick resigned. By the<lb/>
1960s, the college had become the state's third<lb/>
largest institution of higher learning.<lb/>
(?round was broken for Ficklen Stadium in<lb/>
May of 1962 and the stadium was dedicated on<lb/>
September 21, 1963. The East Carolina Pirates<lb/>
played the University of Maine in the Tangerine<lb/>
Bovsl the following year and the University of<lb/>
Massachusetts in the Tangerine Bowl in 1965.<lb/>
The Pirates won both bowl games.<lb/>
On July 1, 1967, the General Assembly of<lb/>
North Carolina approved university status for<lb/>
the college and ECC became East Carolina<lb/>
University. On October 30, 1971, ECU became<lb/>
a constituent part of the North Carolina<lb/>
University system.<lb/>
A culmination of efforts, which began in<lb/>
1964 by physicians and college officials, saw the<lb/>
opening of the School of Medicine in 1977.<lb/>
There were 28 students enrolled in the School<lb/>
of Medicine at this time.<lb/>
On July 1,1978, Thomas B. Brewer became<lb/>
Chancellor of East Carolina University, East<lb/>
Carolina University now offers 105 bac-<lb/>
calaureate degree programs, 73 masters pro-<lb/>
grams, and doctoral degrees in medicine and<lb/>
basic medical sciences.<lb/>
ECU has the largest art school in the<lb/>
southeast and the only art school in North<lb/>
Carolina to be accredited by the National<lb/>
Association of Schools of Art. ECU also offers<lb/>
the largest undergraduate program in dance in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
The university provides employment for 1900<lb/>
residents of eastern North Carolina and has an<lb/>
annual faculty-staff payroll of $33 million. The<lb/>
university adds more than 12,000 students to<lb/>
the local population who spend over $30<lb/>
million each year off campus.<lb/>
What began as only a small teachers' training<lb/>
school with a limited curriculum and meager<lb/>
space has now become a leading university in<lb/>
North Carolina and promises to continue striv-<lb/>
ing for growth and improvement.<lb/>
0PittP<lb/>
XGreen<lb/>
Plaza Shopping Center<lb/>
ville, North Carolina 27834<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
Cut, Style &amp;<lb/>
Conditioner<lb/>
$9.00<lb/>
Reg. $15.00<lb/>
OFFER GOOD<lb/>
THRU AUG. 30<lb/>
Call one of our hair stylists fc<lb/>
a free Consultation<lb/>
756-2950 or 756-4042<lb/>
PITT PLAZA<lb/>
HELP SEND<lb/>
ASTUDENT<lb/>
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For Each Student Who Opens an<lb/>
(Account, We'll Give ECU One<lb/>
Dollar for Unrestricted Use as<lb/>
(Scholarship Money<lb/>
Come by and open a checking account at any<lb/>
one of our three close-to-campus locations.<lb/>
With a regular checking account, you qualify<lb/>
for free checking as long as you keep a $200<lb/>
minimum in a Planters checking or savings<lb/>
account.<lb/>
If minimum balances are not your strong<lb/>
point, we have a budget checking account for<lb/>
you, too.<lb/>
Planters National Bank in Greenville. When<lb/>
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Planters National Bank<lb/>
PLANTERS<lb/>
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Downtown. Pitt Plaza. &amp; Carolina East Mall.<lb/>
C<lb/>
By J<lb/>
The Ma)l<lb/>
tee, which i<lb/>
jor concert <lb/>
ding at EC<lb/>
devastating!<lb/>
there will<lb/>
concerts 01<lb/>
semester.<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
committee<lb/>
budget pro<lb/>
that indicat<lb/>
has hit the<lb/>
"VW're<lb/>
problems,<lb/>
to a front<lb/>
issue of<lb/>
headlined:<lb/>
Films, Coi<lb/>
He contini<lb/>
universities<lb/>
faced with<lb/>
dance.<lb/>
The last<lb/>
the Major<lb/>
bst appro?<lb/>
certs, said<lb/>
America<lb/>
ECU last<lb/>
November!<lb/>
$15,000 loj<lb/>
tions Comi<lb/>
plain wh<lb/>
loser, but<lb/>
Virginia 1<lb/>
money or<lb/>
played h<lb/>
the pe I<lb/>
The nexl<lb/>
and Moth<lb/>
Of<lb/>
Fo<lb/>
The lnt<lb/>
vices Deps<lb/>
need of<lb/>
sports pri<lb/>
tant Direc<lb/>
During<lb/>
over 90<lb/>
in the vat<lb/>
Approxii<lb/>
out in waj<lb/>
whom hal<lb/>
until begij<lb/>
program<lb/>
Trainn<lb/>
the beginj<lb/>
During<lb/>
malls tai<lb/>
sions of H<lb/>
officials<lb/>
a<lb/>
is able<lb/>
U<lb/>
HI<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057278_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 26, 1980<lb/>
is an<lb/>
One!<lb/>
e as<lb/>
my<lb/>
is.<lb/>
lify<lb/>
?200<lb/>
ings<lb/>
ng<lb/>
for<lb/>
en<lb/>
all<lb/>
ical<lb/>
Mall.<lb/>
Concert Committee Faces Program Problems<lb/>
By JADE GORMAN<lb/>
M?ff Wrilfr<lb/>
The Major Attractions Commit-<lb/>
tee, which is responsible for all ma-<lb/>
jor concert programming and fun-<lb/>
ding at ECU, is faced with such a<lb/>
devastating budget problem that<lb/>
there will probably not be any big<lb/>
concerts on campus during the fall<lb/>
semester.<lb/>
Charles Sune, chairperson of the<lb/>
committee, explained that the<lb/>
budget problem is part of a trend<lb/>
that indicated the nation's recession<lb/>
has hit the concert market.<lb/>
"We're not the only ones having<lb/>
problems said Sune, as he pointed<lb/>
to a front page article in the July '80<lb/>
issue of Billboard Magazine<lb/>
headlined, "Like Records and<lb/>
Films, Concert Business Drops<lb/>
He continued saying that other<lb/>
universities across the state are also<lb/>
faced with the drop in concert atten<lb/>
dance.<lb/>
The last academic year, 1979-80,<lb/>
the Major Attractions Committee<lb/>
lost approximately $25,000 on con-<lb/>
certs, said Sune. The rock group<lb/>
America was the first concert at<lb/>
ECU last year, appearing in<lb/>
November, and resulted in a<lb/>
$15,000 loss for the Major Attrac-<lb/>
tions Committee. Sune could not ex-<lb/>
plain why the group was such a<lb/>
loser, but said that the University of<lb/>
Virginia lost the same amount of<lb/>
money on the group when they<lb/>
played there just a few days after<lb/>
they performed at ECU.<lb/>
The next concert was Nantucket<lb/>
and Mother's Finest, who perform-<lb/>
ed at the first of December. This<lb/>
show resulted in a profit of about<lb/>
$5,000, said Sune.<lb/>
The rock group Toto appeared at<lb/>
ECU in the spring. According to<lb/>
Sune, this concert lost between<lb/>
$5,000 and $6,000. He said the fact<lb/>
that the concert was on a Thursday<lb/>
night, and close to exams, may have<lb/>
affected the poor turnout. "We<lb/>
can't select the days for the con-<lb/>
certs said Sune. "We had to get<lb/>
the group at the first of a tour and<lb/>
we felt Toto was a good selection<lb/>
At the end of the spring semester,<lb/>
the Major Attractions Committee<lb/>
had $8,000 left in their budget. Sune<lb/>
said they scheduled the Mother's<lb/>
Finest concert in the summer to<lb/>
make some money for the upcoming<lb/>
year, Mother's Finest usually being<lb/>
a big money maker. But things did<lb/>
not go as planned. "Mother's Finst<lb/>
failed miserably said Sune. The<lb/>
remaining $8,000 left in the budget<lb/>
was lost.<lb/>
Sune explained that unlike other<lb/>
Student Union Committees, such as<lb/>
the Films Committee and the Artist<lb/>
Series Committee, the Major At-<lb/>
tractions Committee gets no part of<lb/>
the Student Union fees appropria-<lb/>
tions. "We work on a break even<lb/>
basis said Sune. A concert is<lb/>
funded by the committee and they<lb/>
just hope to break even on the deal,<lb/>
he explained.<lb/>
"The concert business is very<lb/>
complicated said Sune. "Croups<lb/>
decide they will tour to make<lb/>
money. Then, ECU will get an offer<lb/>
from that group to appear. They<lb/>
want a flat fee and then a percentage<lb/>
of gate money. For example, Toto<lb/>
got a flat fee and then 60 percent of<lb/>
the gate. This percentage was con-<lb/>
servative as most groups get<lb/>
about 70 or 80 percent. Firefall got<lb/>
70 percent Sune emphasized.<lb/>
Sune also explained that the<lb/>
facilities at ECU are not large<lb/>
enough to attract major groups<lb/>
here. There are 6,000 seats at<lb/>
Minges Coliseum, compared to<lb/>
17,000 at Greensboro Coliseum.<lb/>
Obviously, groups will want to go to<lb/>
larger facilties when they are coun-<lb/>
ting on a percentage of the gate.<lb/>
"We can't get superstars; we have<lb/>
to get either rising acts or those that<lb/>
are falling Sune said.<lb/>
Furthermore, claimed Sune, the<lb/>
location of ECU is undesirable. This<lb/>
is a rural area that is not a major<lb/>
money market. There are no major<lb/>
airports here. "If the choice for a<lb/>
group is to come here or go to Duke<lb/>
University, they'll go to Duke<lb/>
because it's a major money area<lb/>
with three large universities near-<lb/>
by Sune said<lb/>
Sune explained that there are a<lb/>
few options for the prospects of<lb/>
concerts at ECU for the coming<lb/>
year. One alternative, Sune said, is<lb/>
for ECU to get out of the concert<lb/>
business. But he feels this alter-<lb/>
native would not be a popular one<lb/>
witn the students.<lb/>
Another option is for the Major<lb/>
Attractions Committee to get<lb/>
money from the Student Union Pro-<lb/>
gram Board, which is made up of all<lb/>
the Student Union Committees.<lb/>
"For this to be a viable alter-<lb/>
native said Sune, "other commit-<lb/>
tees would have to make sacrifices<lb/>
A third alternative is to terminate<lb/>
the present University policy of not<lb/>
allowing outside promoters on cam-<lb/>
pus. But it could mean higher prices<lb/>
and perhaps dissolving the Major<lb/>
Attractions Committee, Sune said.<lb/>
"If it meant dissolving the commit<lb/>
tee to keep concerts going, v<lb/>
would he said. "We may decide<lb/>
to go that route sometime during the<lb/>
coming year and then get back in it<lb/>
the next year<lb/>
Sune went on to say that ad<lb/>
ministrators at EC I vsould prefer<lb/>
that the Student Union get out ot<lb/>
the concert business because rock<lb/>
groups' contracts are demanding<lb/>
and complicated and difficult to<lb/>
negotiate,<lb/>
As for the immediate future, Sun<lb/>
said that nothing can be done until<lb/>
school gets back in and the Majoi<lb/>
Attractions Committee can meet<lb/>
Magazine<lb/>
To Be Issued<lb/>
In September<lb/>
The Rebel,<lb/>
magazine of<lb/>
Officials Needed<lb/>
For Intramurals<lb/>
The Intramural-Recreational Ser<lb/>
vices Department at ECU is again in<lb/>
need of officials for its intramural<lb/>
sports program, according to Assis-<lb/>
tant Director Bob Fox.<lb/>
During the 1979-80 school year,<lb/>
over 90 persons worked as officials<lb/>
in the various intramural activities.<lb/>
Approximately $11,000 was paid<lb/>
out in wages to the officials, most of<lb/>
whom had never officiated sports<lb/>
until beginning with the intramural<lb/>
program last year.<lb/>
Training clinics are held prior to<lb/>
the beginning of each sports season.<lb/>
During the clinics, which are nor-<lb/>
mally taught in three or four ses-<lb/>
sions of two hours each, prospective<lb/>
officials are given the necessary in<lb/>
formation and training to prepare<lb/>
them for officiating.<lb/>
The sessions include proper<lb/>
techniques and procedures, proper<lb/>
positioning, rules coverage, signals,<lb/>
mechanics and other information<lb/>
concerning the intramural program.<lb/>
The pav scale for the remainder<lb/>
of 1980 will be from $3.10 to $3.50<lb/>
per hour. In 1981. the rate will rise<lb/>
to between $3.25 to $3.75 per hour.<lb/>
Officials are paid by the game,<lb/>
which are slightly less than one hour<lb/>
in length. The rate for an official is<lb/>
based on experience and the ability<lb/>
to learn quickly and apply the rules<lb/>
correctly.<lb/>
Interested persons should contact<lb/>
Bob Fox at room 204 in Memorial<lb/>
Gymnasium.<lb/>
ECU'S<lb/>
student<lb/>
artwork and literature,<lb/>
is expected to be<lb/>
distributed on campus<lb/>
sometime in<lb/>
September, according<lb/>
to Walter Griffin,<lb/>
chairman of National<lb/>
Printing Co.<lb/>
The magazine was<lb/>
originally supposed to<lb/>
be distributed in May,<lb/>
but Rebel staffers<lb/>
returned the first prin-<lb/>
ting to National Prin-<lb/>
ting Co. because of<lb/>
dissatisfaction with the<lb/>
way the cover and some<lb/>
of the color prints turn-<lb/>
ed out.<lb/>
Sue Aydlette,<lb/>
associate editor of the<lb/>
Rebel, said that in the<lb/>
first printing, the<lb/>
magazine's cover ap-<lb/>
peared splotchy and in-<lb/>
consistent in color. The<lb/>
inside color plates of<lb/>
student artwork also<lb/>
contained too much<lb/>
blue, Aydlette said.<lb/>
National Printing<lb/>
Co. agreed afterward<lb/>
to reprint the Rebel,<lb/>
but has not been able to<lb/>
do so until now<lb/>
because of other con-<lb/>
tracts.<lb/>
This year's edition of<lb/>
the Rebel will be 60<lb/>
pages of drawings,<lb/>
prints, poetry, short<lb/>
stories and<lb/>
photography.<lb/>
 III<lb/>
AND GET THE SAME<lb/>
HEAPING PORTION<lb/>
AT A NEW<lb/>
LOWER PRICE!<lb/>
Now<lb/>
your favorite<lb/>
meals cost less at S&amp;SJ<lb/>
r ery week, we choose our most<lb/>
popular entrets, combine them with<lb/>
your choice off two vegetables, and mark them with<lb/>
a new LOW price. Thanks to volume purchasing power, S&amp;S<lb/>
is able to offer you these Favorites for a price that all America can afford!<lb/>
FRIDAY 8-29<lb/>
rUESDAY 8-26<lb/>
Smothered Chicken<lb/>
2 Vegetables $1.89<lb/>
WEDNESDAY 8-27<lb/>
liver and Onions<lb/>
2 Vegetables $1.89<lb/>
THURSDAY 8-28<lb/>
C'oun?r Steak<lb/>
2 Vegetables $1.89<lb/>
Trout Alinondine<lb/>
2 Vegetable $1.89<lb/>
SATURDAY g.j?<lb/>
Country Steak<lb/>
2 Vegetables $189<lb/>
SUNDAY 8.3<lb/>
Roast Turkey and Dressing<lb/>
2 Vegetables $1.99<lb/>
MONDAY 9-1<lb/>
Smothered Chicken<lb/>
2 Vegetables $.?a<lb/>
Where America Comes Home To Eat<lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
Daily IIam - 8pm continuously, f 1:36Fri. &amp; Sat.)<lb/>
WELCOME BACK<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS<lb/>
s ?<lb/>
.Get ready for<lb/>
fall with an exciting new Design Cut and<lb/>
take advantage of fantastic savings.<lb/>
sp,V<lb/>
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Thru Sept. 30<lb/>
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for appointment or consultation<lb/>
752-3419<lb/>
2800 E. 10th St.<lb/>
A FEW GOOD REASONS WHY<lb/>
YOU SHOULD SHOP A T THE<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPL Y STORE<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
. Student Supply Store is owned and operated bv " blast Carolina University.<lb/>
2. 100 ot the distributed profits are use tor scholarships awarded by the r acuity<lb/>
Scholarship Committee.<lb/>
3. Student Supply Store has the largest used textbook inventory in this area.<lb/>
4. We otter many services such as check cashing, charge card plan, special orders ot books and<lb/>
other items not normally carried in stock, year round book buvback program, and tree coin-<lb/>
return lockers.<lb/>
5. We carry a complete line of art supplies, imprinted wearing apparel, Greek<lb/>
jewelry, and school supplies.<lb/>
We also stock a complete line of<lb/>
school supplies, art supplies,<lb/>
room accessories, and imprinted<lb/>
wearing apparel.<lb/>
FOR THE FALL RUSH<lb/>
WE HAVE EXTENDED<lb/>
OUR STORE HOURS<lb/>
From 8:30 am til 6:00 pm<lb/>
Aug. 28, 29 and Sept. 2. 3. &amp; 4.<lb/>
For Your Shopping Convenience<lb/>
We will also be open Sat Aug. 30 from 8:30am 1:00pm.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057278_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THHEASI CARPI INIAN<lb/>
l GUS1 26, WHO<lb/>
Liquor Petition Runs Dry<lb/>
By PENNY AUSTIN<lb/>
Asisunl Nawi Kdiior<lb/>
This past summei<lb/>
was hot and dry in<lb/>
several respects. In ad-<lb/>
dition to the weather,<lb/>
Pitt County residents<lb/>
seemed once again to<lb/>
be destined to remain<lb/>
dry.<lb/>
In early July, the<lb/>
Greenville Chamber of<lb/>
Commerce voted down<lb/>
a request for a referen-<lb/>
dum concerning liquor-<lb/>
by-the-drink.<lb/>
This action led to a<lb/>
petition drive by several<lb/>
Greenville area<lb/>
restaurant owners. The<lb/>
drive, which at one<lb/>
time appeared to be<lb/>
successful, ran into<lb/>
problems<lb/>
It seems that<lb/>
restaurant owners did<lb/>
not follow proper pro-<lb/>
cedures regarding the<lb/>
petition. Cliff Everett<lb/>
Jr chairman of the<lb/>
Pitt Board of Elections,<lb/>
said that the Alcoholic<lb/>
Beverage Control<lb/>
Board had certain<lb/>
statutes regarding peti-<lb/>
tioning for a referen-<lb/>
dum.<lb/>
The procedures in-<lb/>
cluded requesting a<lb/>
special petition form<lb/>
from the board. It was<lb/>
this stipulation which<lb/>
the restaurant owners<lb/>
failed to adhere to.<lb/>
Because of this over-<lb/>
sight, the restaurant<lb/>
owners' petition was<lb/>
Sight Lines, Seating<lb/>
Improved In Theatre<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
The second problem with the<lb/>
theatre was poor sight lines. All of<lb/>
the seats did not provide good stage<lb/>
visibility. The number of seats will<lb/>
not be increased, but seating sill be<lb/>
improved because of the better<lb/>
slope, according to I oessin.<lb/>
The new theatre will have 6"<lb/>
seats and will provide facilities for<lb/>
the handicapped.<lb/>
The third major problem wih the<lb/>
old theatre complex was that there<lb/>
was no scene shop. The basement ol<lb/>
the theatre was used to store<lb/>
scenery, thus posing a problem since<lb/>
the stage was on the second floor ol<lb/>
the building. The renovation plans<lb/>
include a separate building<lb/>
specifically for scenery.<lb/>
The new building will have an<lb/>
elevator to bring scenery to the<lb/>
stage, according to Loessin.<lb/>
Also under renovation is the<lb/>
ballet studio. The floors are being<lb/>
redone to make them cushioned,<lb/>
c ushioning floors will make it safe<lb/>
for the dancers to work on. The<lb/>
room has also been enlarged by<lb/>
knocking out a wall to combine two<lb/>
rooms. The dance studios will be<lb/>
completed by the time classes<lb/>
resume for the fall semester, 1 oessin<lb/>
said.<lb/>
This in a complete plan said<lb/>
I oessm. "At one point, years ago.<lb/>
we were in nine different<lb/>
buildings'<lb/>
not accepted by the<lb/>
board as being valid.<lb/>
In July, Margaret<lb/>
Register, supervisor of<lb/>
the Board of Elections<lb/>
said that the petition<lb/>
group had an unlikely<lb/>
chance to complete the<lb/>
necessary requirements<lb/>
in time to hold the<lb/>
referendum prior to the<lb/>
November 4 general<lb/>
election.<lb/>
The board had not<lb/>
been contacted by the<lb/>
petition group since the<lb/>
July petition ran into<lb/>
trouble, Register said.<lb/>
As far as she knew,<lb/>
there is nothing going<lb/>
on with the movement<lb/>
at this time. She added,<lb/>
however, that the peti-<lb/>
tion movement will<lb/>
probably pick up later.<lb/>
College Costs Rise<lb/>
Slightly This Year<lb/>
The cost of higher<lb/>
education is going up<lb/>
this fall, but a survey<lb/>
by the College Board<lb/>
indicated that the rate<lb/>
of increase will be<lb/>
slightly less than it was<lb/>
last year.<lb/>
According to the<lb/>
survey of more than<lb/>
3,200 schools, con-<lb/>
ducted by the board's<lb/>
College Scholarship<lb/>
Service and released<lb/>
Tuesday, total costs for<lb/>
the 1980-81 academic<lb/>
year at a private, four-<lb/>
year college or universi-<lb/>
ty will average $6,082<lb/>
for a student who lives<lb/>
on campus. That's an<lb/>
increase of 10.3 percent<lb/>
over the price for the<lb/>
1979-80 academic year.<lb/>
From the fall of 1978 to<lb/>
the fall of 1979, the<lb/>
cost of a year at a<lb/>
private, four-year<lb/>
school went up 10.6<lb/>
percent.<lb/>
1 he latest increase in<lb/>
college costs, however.<lb/>
is less than the overall<lb/>
inflation rate, that is<lb/>
expected to average<lb/>
about 12 percent for<lb/>
1980. Joe Paul Case,<lb/>
director of program ad-<lb/>
ministration for the<lb/>
scholarship service,<lb/>
said he was surprised<lb/>
that the rise wasn't big-<lb/>
ger, "considering the<lb/>
way the rate of infla-<lb/>
tion has escalated<lb/>
Case said, however,<lb/>
that students and their<lb/>
parents ? who pay 56<lb/>
percent of the college<lb/>
bill on the average ?<lb/>
will have increasing<lb/>
trouble making ends<lb/>
meet.<lb/>
"If parents' incomes<lb/>
don't keep pace with<lb/>
inflation he said,<lb/>
"the gap between the<lb/>
amount they can pay <lb/>
and the rising cost of<lb/>
college will widen <lb/>
Case said he did not<lb/>
expect any increase in<lb/>
federal aid programs<lb/>
this vear.<lb/>
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A Warm up to those chilly autumn days<lb/>
 . ahead. Layer on our great tail classics-<lb/>
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itcnntttiniiiit i<lb/>
2<lb/>
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The biggest stars in Hollvwood are coming to Hendrix Theatre in Mendenhall Student Center this Fall. The<lb/>
Student I nion Films Committee brings you the year's top box-office hits ail semester long plus a diver-<lb/>
sified line-up of special American and foreign classics from this year and ears past. We also offer weekly<lb/>
double features starring such legends as Gary Cooper, Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, and, of course,<lb/>
The Duke. Don't miss seeing the Best Picture of the Year, Kramer s Kramer and Best Foreign Film win-<lb/>
ner, La Cage Aux Folks or such blockbusters as Apocalypse Now and Alien. See them in our plush theatre<lb/>
and hear them on our new and improved sound system. For your convenience, we have added a special 5<lb/>
p.m. showing of our Friday and Saturday evening popular films in addition to the regular 7 and 9 p.m.<lb/>
shos. Admission? ID and Activity Card. The Student I nion Films Committee-We Play the Hits!<lb/>
mm<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
IA5T CAROLINA UWIVWVTY<lb/>
U<lb/>
get<lb/>
elii<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
th<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
 A<lb/>
i<lb/>
Hi<lb/>
v<lb/>
Bt<lb/>
v<lb/>
hi<lb/>
1<lb/>
B;<lb/>
I<lb/>
B<lb/>
H<lb/>
Sel<lb/>
f<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057278_0011"/><lb/>
THEtASTCAROlIMAN<lb/>
AUGUST 26, 1980<lb/>
11<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
!? ? ? <lb/>
Y ! E ! RDAST DWICH pne: EEI !? ? ? ?<lb/>
XPIRES ?<lb/>
80 ? 2<lb/>
!????<lb/>
bit<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
tol<lb/>
St? I<lb/>
v<lb/>
? <lb/>
I<lb/>
!?<lb/>
W<lb/>
INION<lb/>
wvwsrnr<lb/>
Salaries And Prospects Brighter In 1980s<lb/>
Job Outlook Improved,<lb/>
Especially For Engineers<lb/>
College graduates this year will be looking<lb/>
for starting salaries some 5 to 9 percent<lb/>
higher than those of their 1979 counterparts,<lb/>
according to a recent Northwestern Universi-<lb/>
ty Placement Center survey.<lb/>
Most in demand by employers will be<lb/>
engineers, who can expect an average star-<lb/>
ting salary of $20,136 a year. Next in order<lb/>
with bachelor's degrees are computer<lb/>
science majors, $17,712; math and statistics<lb/>
grads, $17,604; chemistry, $17,124; sales<lb/>
and marketing, $15,936; accounting,<lb/>
$15,720; finance and economics, $14, 472;<lb/>
business administration, $14,000; liberal<lb/>
arts, $13,2.<lb/>
The job outlook continues to improve for<lb/>
college graduates, with 16 percent more posi-<lb/>
tions available this year for holders of<lb/>
bachelor's degrees and 4 percent more jobs<lb/>
for those with master's degrees. An M.S. in<lb/>
engineering will command an average star-<lb/>
ting salary of $23,136; and MBA. in a<lb/>
technical field, $22,632.<lb/>
Incidentally, when the interview stage ap-<lb/>
proaches, many job counselors are telling<lb/>
students to leave their resumes at home.<lb/>
Most interviewers, according to these con-<lb/>
sultants, are not comfortable in the inter-<lb/>
viewing process. Thus, by leaving the resume<lb/>
at home, the job applicant denies the inter-<lb/>
view this "crutch" or support, and the grad<lb/>
has a better chance ot directing the interview<lb/>
to his or her advantage.<lb/>
The unsuccessful job applicant may find<lb/>
the following reasons for rejection helpful.<lb/>
Responses from employment and personnel<lb/>
directors from one hundred major business<lb/>
firms cited the following factors, in order of<lb/>
frequency, as leading to rejections of job<lb/>
seekers:<lb/>
1) Poor grades or accomplishment level;<lb/>
2) Personality problems; 3) Lack of goals<lb/>
and motivation; 4) Lack of general en-<lb/>
thusiasm; 5) Lack of interest in firm's<lb/>
business.<lb/>
Slight Improvement In Liberal Arts Market<lb/>
(CPS) ? "Don't talk it up too much<lb/>
begs Karen Blakey of the U.S. Personnel<lb/>
Corp. in Washington, D.C. "Too much talk<lb/>
could make it go away<lb/>
She is talking about a slight improvement<lb/>
in the long-depressed job market for liberal<lb/>
arts majors this spring. "With a bit of hustl-<lb/>
ing and concentrated job seeking counsels<lb/>
Gordon Gray, Career Services director at<lb/>
George Washington University, "A liberal<lb/>
arts graduate should be successful.<lb/>
"The average liberal arts major has it<lb/>
much better than his predecessors of the last<lb/>
six or seven years, especially in the private<lb/>
sector of hiring he adds.<lb/>
Experts point to several factors that have<lb/>
improved, at least tenuously, liberal arts ma-<lb/>
jors' job prospects. One is that students have<lb/>
stayed away from liberal arts so long that<lb/>
they've created a shortage.<lb/>
The phemonenon is most noticeable in<lb/>
education. "We find (school) districts are re-<lb/>
quired to go out of state for new teachers<lb/>
says Ralph Graves of Maine's State Educa-<lb/>
tion Commission. "Until about 1977, we<lb/>
had people pounding down the doors" for<lb/>
jobs. Then "it leveled off for a while, and<lb/>
now it's a problem of actively recruiting to<lb/>
keep quality (of education) up<lb/>
Other areas of the country are also repor-<lb/>
ting current or imminent teacher shortages,<lb/>
especially in the Sun Belt stales. The<lb/>
Southern Regional Education Board expects<lb/>
its "current oversupply of new teachers" to<lb/>
dwindle into a teacher shortage by<lb/>
the end of the decade.<lb/>
Yet job hunting for liberal arts<lb/>
majors largely remains a catch-as-<lb/>
catch-can proposition. The federal<lb/>
government, traditionally the big<lb/>
gest recruiter of liberal arts majors,<lb/>
has a hiring freeze. Most state<lb/>
governments have drastically reduc-<lb/>
ed hiring. So in general a liberal arts<lb/>
major must "look for blips in the<lb/>
market" to find gainful empkn-<lb/>
ment. savs University of Illinois<lb/>
Career Development Director Dave<lb/>
Betchel.<lb/>
Gray of George Washington<lb/>
University uses language majors to<lb/>
illustrate the "little bit of hustling"<lb/>
he recommends. "Language degrees<lb/>
are very seldom sought after, except<lb/>
for teaching and translating posi-<lb/>
tions. More often a prospective<lb/>
employer may be searching for a<lb/>
language as a secondary qualifica-<lb/>
tion, for example, looking tor a<lb/>
librarian with a language degree<lb/>
Way Ion Called Cowboy Hero<lb/>
A University of Alabama pro-<lb/>
fessor says this summer's populari-<lb/>
ty of cowboy stuff ? brought on b<lb/>
the movie "Urban Cowboy" ? is<lb/>
more than a passing fad. and its<lb/>
hero is Waylon Jennings, not John<lb/>
Travolta.<lb/>
Professor Jim Salem as<lb/>
cowboyism has reversed the unisex<lb/>
trend. Says he, "For about 10years,<lb/>
we didn't know who anybody was<lb/>
but, he says the cowboy movement<lb/>
is a trend that has re-established (he<lb/>
fact that "there are men and<lb/>
women<lb/>
He explains thai quote<lb/>
"I adies love cowboys. Ladies love<lb/>
outlaws. These cowboy guvs are just<lb/>
men. The) drink too much they go<lb/>
out at night and are hard lo hold on<lb/>
to, and sometimes they're a little<lb/>
mean. Women don't control them<lb/>
Short Courses Cover Many Interests<lb/>
Two divisions of<lb/>
East Carolina Universi-<lb/>
ty are offering credit-<lb/>
free mini courses this<lb/>
fall. The course offer-<lb/>
ings range from<lb/>
aerobics to bicycle<lb/>
maintenance and<lb/>
repair.<lb/>
There will be 30 short<lb/>
courses offered by<lb/>
Continuing Education,<lb/>
according to Dr. Worth<lb/>
Worthington, director<lb/>
of the Office of Non-<lb/>
Degree Programs.<lb/>
Students, as well as the<lb/>
general public, are<lb/>
eligible to take the<lb/>
courses, he said.<lb/>
Of the many courses<lb/>
offered. Worthington<lb/>
said, the classes in<lb/>
dance, sailing, and<lb/>
scuba-diving are among<lb/>
the most popular with<lb/>
students. A course in<lb/>
calligraphy is also<lb/>
popular, he said,<lb/>
because many use the<lb/>
skills learned in the<lb/>
class to produce their<lb/>
own Christmas cards.<lb/>
There will also be<lb/>
several practical<lb/>
oriented courses of-<lb/>
fered. Two such<lb/>
courses are in buying<lb/>
stereo equipment and<lb/>
saving money through<lb/>
the use of coupons, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Most courses are<lb/>
spawned through<lb/>
public interest, Wor-<lb/>
thington said. "People<lb/>
call in saying they'd<lb/>
like to take such and<lb/>
such a course, then we<lb/>
try to find someone to<lb/>
teach it he said.<lb/>
"We're trying to<lb/>
build a variety of pro-<lb/>
grams he said. "Next<lb/>
spring we hope to offer<lb/>
courses in conversa-<lb/>
tional foreign<lb/>
languages<lb/>
Worthington sug-<lb/>
gested that anyone<lb/>
wishing -to register for<lb/>
the courses should<lb/>
register at least a week<lb/>
in advance of the first<lb/>
class meeting. Classes<lb/>
begin the first week of<lb/>
September. Registra-<lb/>
tion may be conducted<lb/>
by mail, phone, or by<lb/>
stopping by the office<lb/>
of Continuing Educa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center is also offering<lb/>
non-credit courses. The<lb/>
Non-Credit<lb/>
Courses<lb/>
Following is a partial list of courses offered<lb/>
through the ECU Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education. Average tuition is $25 per course.<lb/>
For further details, call 757-6143.<lb/>
Calligraphy ? Mon Sept.15-Oct.27,<lb/>
7:00-9:00 p.m. 7 sessions.<lb/>
Basic Aerobic Exercise ? Mon. v Thurs<lb/>
Sept.15-Oct.23, 6:30-7:00 p.m. 12 sessions.<lb/>
Buying Stereo Equipment ? Mon<lb/>
Nov. 10, 7:00-10:00 p.m. 1 session.<lb/>
Drawing For Fun ? Tues Sept.9-Oct.l4,<lb/>
7:00-9:00 p.m. 6 sessions.<lb/>
Basic Scuba Certification ? Tues. ?<lb/>
Thurs Sept.l6-Oct.9, 7:00-10:00 p.m. 8 ses-<lb/>
sions.<lb/>
Camera I ? Tues Sept. 16-Oct.l4,<lb/>
7:00-9:00 p.m. 5 sessions.<lb/>
Leaded Stained Glass ? Tues<lb/>
Sept.16-Oct.21, 7:00-9:00 p.m. 6 sessions.<lb/>
Jazz Exercise 1 ? Wed Sept.l7-Nov.l9,<lb/>
6:30-7:30 p.m. 10 sessions.<lb/>
Guitar ? Wed Sept.l7-Nov.5, 7:30-9:00<lb/>
p.m. 8 sessions.<lb/>
Clogging I ? Wed Sept.17-Oct.22,<lb/>
7:00-9:00 p.m. 6 sessions.<lb/>
Ballet I ? Wed Sept.17-Nov.19, 7:30-8:30<lb/>
p.m. 10 sessions.<lb/>
Basic Sailing ? Thurs Sept.ll ? 25, and<lb/>
Sat Sept. 13,20.27. 5 sessions.<lb/>
Speed Reading ? ThursSept.i8-Nov.6,<lb/>
7:00-9:00 p.m. 8 sessions.<lb/>
Home Furnishings ? Thurs Sept.25,<lb/>
9:00-11:50 a.m. u 1:10-3:40 p.m. I session.<lb/>
Acting I ? Thurs Oct.2-Oct.30, 7:00-9:00<lb/>
p.m. 5 sessions.<lb/>
How To Save On Groceries ? Thurs<lb/>
Sept.18 Fri Sept. 19. 2 sessions.<lb/>
crafts and Recreation<lb/>
Center is sponsoring<lb/>
four short courses, ac-<lb/>
cording to Tara<lb/>
Nobles, Crafts and<lb/>
Recreation director.<lb/>
I he tour courses are<lb/>
CPR training, clogg-<lb/>
ing, bicycle<lb/>
maintenance and<lb/>
repair, and shag danc-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Individuals must<lb/>
register in person at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Central<lb/>
Ticket Office between<lb/>
the hours of 10 a.m.<lb/>
and 4 p.m. Monday<lb/>
through Friday, she ad-<lb/>
ded.<lb/>
The Crafts and<lb/>
Recreation Center will<lb/>
also sponsor six<lb/>
workshops; the<lb/>
workshops, which are<lb/>
restricted to Crafts<lb/>
Center members, in-<lb/>
clude Quilting, weaving,<lb/>
and photography, she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
To become a member<lb/>
of the Crafts Center, a<lb/>
full time student must<lb/>
pay a $10 fee. The fee<lb/>
allows the student to at-<lb/>
tend one workshop.<lb/>
Seminar Openings Available<lb/>
Freshmen and<lb/>
sophomores with a<lb/>
g.p.a. of 3.5, or a rank-<lb/>
ing in the top ten per-<lb/>
cent of their high<lb/>
school class may still<lb/>
register for two Honors<lb/>
Seminars being held<lb/>
this fall, according to<lb/>
Dr. David Saoders,<lb/>
coordinator of the<lb/>
Honors Program.<lb/>
The two seminars<lb/>
still open are-<lb/>
HSEM 2020 tollo-<lb/>
quim in Election Vear<lb/>
Politics: This seminar<lb/>
studies contemporary<lb/>
politics through the<lb/>
various resources<lb/>
available in an election<lb/>
year (i.e. Public opi-<lb/>
nion polis, campaign<lb/>
literature, news ac-<lb/>
counts, and partisan<lb/>
views.) 3 credit hours.<lb/>
Instructor: Dr. John<lb/>
Howell, Department of<lb/>
Political Science.<lb/>
HSEM 2050 How To<lb/>
Be An Old-Time<lb/>
Wizard in Modern<lb/>
Times (or Extracting<lb/>
Cents from History):<lb/>
This seminar is a non-<lb/>
traditional "historical"<lb/>
exploration of the prac-<lb/>
tical applications of<lb/>
organized and playful<lb/>
creative activity to the<lb/>
formulation of alter-<lb/>
native human systems.<lb/>
3 credit hours. Instruc-<lb/>
tors: Drs. Ralph Steele<lb/>
and Karl Rodabaueh.<lb/>
The class credit may<lb/>
be put towards the<lb/>
General Education re-<lb/>
quirements, Sanders<lb/>
added.<lb/>
Qualified students<lb/>
may register for the<lb/>
seminars along with<lb/>
their regular courses.<lb/>
Any questions about<lb/>
the seminars or the<lb/>
Honors Program may<lb/>
be addressed to the in-<lb/>
structor or to Sanders<lb/>
in Austin 117<lb/>
TRUCK LOAD PLANT<lb/>
SPECIAL !<lb/>
Choose From A Fantastic Selection Of<lb/>
Florida Foliage That Will Enhance Your<lb/>
Dorm Room Or Apartment!<lb/>
10" HANGING<lb/>
BASKETS<lb/>
10" FOLIAGE<lb/>
FLORIDA<lb/>
$3.88<lb/>
$6.88<lb/>
Free cups of<lb/>
fountain Pepsi<lb/>
are back<lb/>
just ask!<lb/>
Order any targe pizza and get up to<lb/>
4 free cups of Pepsi! If you order a<lb/>
small pizza, you can get up to 2 free<lb/>
cups of Pepsi!<lb/>
No coupons are necessary-just ask.<lb/>
Fast, Friendly<lb/>
Free Delivery<lb/>
758-6660<lb/>
Fast, Friendly, Free Delivery<lb/>
1201 Charles Boulevard<lb/>
Hours:<lb/>
11:00AM 1:00AM Sunday-Thursday<lb/>
11:00AM-2:00AM Friday and Saturday<lb/>
Ask for a free phonestfeker,<lb/>
also!<lb/>
Menu<lb/>
All Pizzas Include Our Special<lb/>
Blend of Sauce and Cheese<lb/>
Our Superb Cheese Pizza<lb/>
12" small $3.65<lb/>
16" large $5.35<lb/>
Domino's Deluxe<lb/>
Pepperoni, Mushrooms, Onions,<lb/>
Green Peppers, &amp; Fresh Sausage<lb/>
12" small Deluxe $6.45<lb/>
16" large Dsluxe $9.55<lb/>
Additional Items<lb/>
Pepperoni<lb/>
Mushrooms<lb/>
Olives<lb/>
Onions<lb/>
Green Peppers<lb/>
Ground Beef<lb/>
Sausage<lb/>
Ham<lb/>
Double Cheese<lb/>
Extra Thick Crust<lb/>
Anchovies<lb/>
Hot Pepper Rings<lb/>
12" small $.70 per item<lb/>
16" large $1.05 per item<lb/>
Stated prices do not include<lb/>
applicable state sales tax.<lb/>
We reserve the nght to limit our delivery area<lb/>
Copyright 1979<lb/>
i Emergency<lb/>
Numbers<lb/>
Campus Police<lb/>
757-6150<lb/>
Fire<lb/>
752-3116<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
758-6660<lb/>
0060635530<lb/>
<pb facs="00057278_0012"/><lb/>
12 THE EAST CAROLINIAN AUGUST 26, 1980<lb/>
Grand Opening Giveaway<lb/>
Tuesday August 26th<lb/>
Wednesday August 27th<lb/>
(two days only)<lb/>
FREE- Pepsi Cola -FREE<lb/>
FREE- Doughnuts -FREE<lb/>
FREE- Desk Blotters -FREE<lb/>
FREE- UBE T-Shirts -FREE<lb/>
(1st 100 customers each day)<lb/>
FREE- Pepsi Cola T-Shirts -FREE<lb/>
(1st 100 customers each day)<lb/>
FREE- Frisbees -FREE<lb/>
(1st 100 customers each day)<lb/>
2 Litre Pepsi<lb/>
or Mt. Dew<lb/>
All Regular<lb/>
$3.50<lb/>
T-SHIRTS<lb/>
$1.95<lb/>
All Regular<lb/>
$3.49<lb/>
Gym Shorts<lb/>
$1.95<lb/>
Book Rush Hours<lb/>
Open All Day<lb/>
Labor Day<lb/>
Tuesday August 26 9:00-6:00<lb/>
Wednesday August 27 9:00-6:00<lb/>
Thursday August 28 8:00-9:00<lb/>
Friday August 29 8:00-6:00<lb/>
Saturday August 30 9:00-6:00<lb/>
Monday September 1 9:00-5:30<lb/>
Open All Day<lb/>
Labor Day<lb/>
UBE-516 S. Cotanche St Downtown<lb/>
 (<lb/>
)<lb/>
<pb facs="00057278_0013"/><lb/>
I HI I AN I c ROI INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Al CUS1 26 i wo<lb/>
Injuries Add To<lb/>
Early Pirate Woes<lb/>
HII KI I s( IIWDI IK<lb/>
n inexperienced offensive line<lb/>
and a young quarterbacking corps<lb/>
along with several injuries are<lb/>
among ihe woirie ai nev 1 as)<lb/>
( arolina head football coach 1 d<lb/>
 mory faces as Ins team prepares to<lb/>
take on bably the<lb/>
toughest r edule in the<lb/>
school's histoi s<lb/>
"We defii a challenging<lb/>
scheduling ?' ' mory<lb/>
"esp one like<lb/>
I o prepai squad for<lb/>
the season i s and ms<lb/>
"contactful"<lb/>
fall n ' probably<lb/>
s yeai than ever<lb/>
Dej i iinm aid following<lb/>
' 1 hat's the<lb/>
learn, though,<lb/>
i ng. We'll<lb/>
on film<lb/>
. ? and ovei<lb/>
aj e showed<lb/>
offense, an<lb/>
a thougl lem region<lb/>
by n "Th fense definitely<lb/>
moN ay than we had an<lb/>
?ated Emoi v said.<lb/>
<lb/>
va<lb/>
poo<lb/>
had not<lb/>
elatively<lb/>
e of the<lb/>
ed<lb/>
ses ond<lb/>
love the<lb/>
our fii st<lb/>
was aKo<lb/>
sC was<lb/>
brakes on the<lb/>
1 c l offense when it began passing.<lb/>
"i were imitating Duke's offense<lb/>
foi out defense he said, "but we<lb/>
were very successful.<lb/>
"I don't know what to think he<lb/>
continued, "when you have a<lb/>
wishbone team like ours completing<lb/>
passes on the defense. What the<lb/>
heck do you think is going to hap<lb/>
pen when somebody that specializes<lb/>
m passing, like Duke, gets to pass<lb/>
mg on us<lb/>
Still, Emory and the staff feels the<lb/>
Pirate defense can capitalize on its<lb/>
quickness and become a good<lb/>
group. "When the defense wants to<lb/>
run, it can the first-year coach<lb/>
said. "We've got guvs that run like<lb/>
horses, rhey jusl have to got it in<lb/>
then minds thai they want to put<lb/>
out<lb/>
1 he inexperienced line and<lb/>
quarterbacking problem on ottense<lb/>
still takes precedence as Pirate tans<lb/>
await the upcoming season. "It's<lb/>
hard to say how we'll do Emory<lb/>
said. "1 hat's what I like about this<lb/>
game. ou get to see how a kid<lb/>
responds under pressure. I hat'll be<lb/>
a real kev for us<lb/>
Injuries are also beginning pile up<lb/>
and cause worry for Pirate<lb/>
hopefuls Reserve back Marvin<lb/>
Cobb is down with a knee ailment<lb/>
that may sideline him for the<lb/>
season. I his would be a big loss as<lb/>
Cobb was the team's top backfield<lb/>
reserve and could play cither the<lb/>
fullback or halfback position.<lb/>
Also down at the moment is star-<lb/>
center 1 odd Hensley. Filling in<lb/>
is Billy Parker.<lb/>
Not helping the situation at<lb/>
quarterback is the fact that reserve<lb/>
Greg Stewart is injured, leaving<lb/>
starter Carlton Nelson aided bv only<lb/>
freshmen. Stewart's leg injury is<lb/>
not believed to be serious, though,<lb/>
as he is expectged back in the camp<lb/>
soon.<lb/>
With IS starters gone from last<lb/>
season's 7-3-1 squad and with teams<lb/>
like North Carolina. Florida State,<lb/>
defending NCAA Division I-AA<lb/>
champ Eastern Kentucky and N.C.<lb/>
state on the ECU schedule, many<lb/>
would give up on the season to<lb/>
come. Not Emory and his statt,<lb/>
though.<lb/>
A backfield that includes An-<lb/>
thony C ollins, a 1mhi yard-plus<lb/>
rusher last year, and All-Southern<lb/>
Independent pick 1 heodore Sut-<lb/>
ton,there is optimism. Along with<lb/>
this dynamic duo is last year's top<lb/>
reserve, Mike Hawkins.<lb/>
Nelson is set to start at quarter-<lb/>
back and brings great quickness and<lb/>
athletic ability to the position.<lb/>
Most of the returning Pirates sav he<lb/>
already is a better passer than last<lb/>
vear's star QB 1 eander Green.<lb/>
On the line the Pirates plan to<lb/>
start returning All American Wayne<lb/>
Inman and lee Cut tin at tuiard.<lb/>
and footie Robbins and Mark Ervin<lb/>
at the tackles. big blow came to<lb/>
the line when Gary Gambrell, a<lb/>
touted sophomore and part-time<lb/>
stai tei a u ago, lefi school.<lb/>
Henslev is the top prospect at<lb/>
Parker has impressed<lb/>
irl al least until his<lb/>
Sutton 's<lb/>
Ineligible<lb/>
Says Duke<lb/>
Sutlon (36) could miss Duke game<lb/>
centei bur<lb/>
and will<lb/>
return.<lb/>
W ill Saunders has earned the nod<lb/>
a! tighl end with Norwood ami<lb/>
backing him up.<lb/>
Starting on the defensive front are<lb/>
Doug Smith, George - rump. Mike<lb/>
Davis And Rov.kv Butler. Ierry<lb/>
1 ong will start at nose guard and<lb/>
has impressed ihe stalt.<lb/>
Ihe linebackers are returning<lb/>
startei lettrev Warren and Glen<lb/>
Morris, strong backup help comes<lb/>
from Chuck Jackson and Moe Ben-<lb/>
nett.<lb/>
Ihe secondary is comprised ot<lb/>
returning starters Willie Hollev and<lb/>
Freddie Jones along with Marvin<lb/>
I lliott and James freer.<lb/>
rhe kicking game remains iden-<lb/>
tical to last vear's, with Vein Daven-<lb/>
port and Bill 1 amm handling the<lb/>
placekicking chores and Rodney<lb/>
Allen punting.<lb/>
IS?KO t M K()I ISA<lb/>
FOOTBAI I SCHFJM Lt<lb/>
al Duke; n<lb/>
I l ISIANA; .i!<lb/>
II Mil mi RV<lb/>
Sept. t<lb/>
sol 1 1 sll K<lb/>
I Iorida Stale.<lb/>
MISSISSIPPI<lb/>
Ocl 11 at Richmond; 18 WESTERN<lb/>
 k(?l INA; 25 at Northarolina;<lb/>
Nov I WIN AM &amp; M K 8 at<lb/>
Miami it la i. 15 I AMI k kl-s<lb/>
rUC'KY: 22 at N. State<lb/>
By CHARLES CH A Ml IK<lb/>
Spofl, I 1M1<lb/>
rhe availability ol "heodore Sut-<lb/>
ton, last Carolina's star fullback,<lb/>
tor the team's opener with Duke on<lb/>
September 6 is m limbo because ol<lb/>
some accusations made bv the Blue<lb/>
Devils<lb/>
Sutton was injured in the firsi<lb/>
I I jayvee game oi the season dui<lb/>
mg his first vear as a Pirate. He<lb/>
then appealed tot a hardship 10 the<lb/>
NCAA and received it, giving him<lb/>
tour years ol eligibility lefl.<lb/>
No problem, right? Wrong 1<lb/>
NC AA rules sav that hardship can<lb/>
be grained it the player is injured in<lb/>
the first hall ol the season and has<lb/>
played in no more than two games<lb/>
All's set then, correct ?<lb/>
Ihe Blue Devils sav no because<lb/>
the injury occured in the firsi jayvee<lb/>
game thai was played alter the I<lb/>
halt of the varsity season Nt <lb/>
rules do not specify on wl<lb/>
schedule will be in use in such a<lb/>
case.<lb/>
rhe reason Sutlon could miss the<lb/>
Duke contest is that the two con<lb/>
cerned schools have il in their con<lb/>
tract that only athletes eligible foi<lb/>
NCAA championship competition<lb/>
(such as a bowl game) are eligible<lb/>
tor a Duke II matel up.<lb/>
rherefore, it Sutton is ruled in-<lb/>
eligible tor championship competi<lb/>
lion bv the N  which is whai<lb/>
Duke would like to see. then he is<lb/>
lust as ineligible tor the Blue Devil<lb/>
contest.<lb/>
Ai the moment, though, things<lb/>
look to be in Sutton favoi<lb/>
nothing has been turned in to the<lb/>
NCAA. Faculty advisors from the<lb/>
two schools are currently studying<lb/>
the matter.<lb/>
A Commentary<lb/>
Changes Good,<lb/>
Critics Cursed<lb/>
V<lb/>
Starting QB Carlton Nelson 6<lb/>
unchallenged with sub dreg Stewart hurt<lb/>
Emory Has Been Through It!<lb/>
Bm ki ? x H M)1 I k<lb/>
Fron ai : 1 nted<lb/>
ai ! asi<lb/>
Ed I n ?? ? ha?<lb/>
?untei ed n ng pi<lb/>
ns<lb/>
"1 g' ' <lb/>
h as possible I n<lb/>
??Ii seems like we've had a<lb/>
.? ? ca ests "<lb/>
Emory said. " -??'<lb/>
staff, ai ' ave grow,rl<lb/>
? expei 'W taken<lb/>
and met each chal t<lb/>
tion he sa d "W e've made<lb/>
?? and ?<lb/>
because I<lb/>
mong the<lb/>
fcmory encoun as I he<lb/>
onestepr<lb/>
toy: ECl Fol I rmer<lb/>
head coach IV Dye's Nov 29<lb/>
resignation, the entire athletic pro-<lb/>
gram at the university seemed to go<lb/>
into turmoil. Dve came out publicly<lb/>
dnd denounced the ECl ad-<lb/>
ministrate ?<lb/>
1 mory stepped into the situation<lb/>
and had to smooth out man<lb/>
wrinkle in the football program<lb/>
Though, the Pirates had gone 7-3-1<lb/>
in 1s?sj and led the natioi fling<lb/>
nse, there seemed to be little to<lb/>
? ? rward to<lb/>
 total of 18 iettermen were lost<lb/>
to graduation, most ol them<lb/>
starters ?"The worst thing Emory<lb/>
said, "is that this ear we have only<lb/>
foul true seniors returning. We'll<lb/>
have to develop leadership<lb/>
With Dve gone but all the con-<lb/>
troversy still in the air. Emory<lb/>
to hurry and busy himself vvith<lb/>
recruiting. "When I go; here in<lb/>
December he said. "I had only<lb/>
two names on the old recruiting st<lb/>
We had to go out ar i scratv ?<lb/>
Kd Emon<lb/>
? -elves<lb/>
rhose problems were eventually<lb/>
ironed out. Emory said, as the<lb/>
Pirates have several top recruits<lb/>
coming in this fall.<lb/>
Much about those First tew mon-<lb/>
ths still bothers fcmory. though.<lb/>
"Pat Dve did a great job here he<lb/>
said "It bothers me. though, that<lb/>
people keep bringing up the past.<lb/>
They keep bringing up the dead.<lb/>
Many seem to be at raid to mention<lb/>
Pat's name in my presence. It<lb/>
shouldn't be this way. They seem to<lb/>
think 1 hold something against<lb/>
him "<lb/>
V a matter ot fact, said Emory,<lb/>
he had no hard feelings towards the<lb/>
former coach at all. "Heck he<lb/>
said. "I'm tickled to death that<lb/>
Pat's at Wyoming. I've got a great<lb/>
opportunity here because ot it.<lb/>
?"There's no animosity between us<lb/>
at all fcmory continued. "As a<lb/>
matter ol fact, we talk on the phone<lb/>
almost weekly <lb/>
One o the early problems he en-<lb/>
countered that does not bother<lb/>
fcmory so much is academic<lb/>
"When 1 got here he said, "things<lb/>
were in a shambles academically.<lb/>
The guvs are reallv working hard.<lb/>
though, i think they all realize now<lb/>
See EVOPs- r 7<lb/>
As everyone knows, a change in<lb/>
the top position at any business or<lb/>
institution will eventually result in<lb/>
some other changes. Inter Easl<lb/>
Carolina University.<lb/>
It is year three now tor Dr.<lb/>
Thomas Brewei as let's<lb/>
chancellor. His influence is now be-<lb/>
ing reflected all throughout campus<lb/>
as the influence of his predecessor,<lb/>
Dr. I eo Jenkins, is beginning to<lb/>
?wear off. Nowhere is Brewer's ai<lb/>
rival on campus brought more<lb/>
changes than in the athletic depart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Major changes throughout the<lb/>
department have occurred in the<lb/>
past three years, many of them not<lb/>
as a result ot him,ot others the op-<lb/>
posite.<lb/>
Jusl take a look at them. Since<lb/>
Brewer's arrival on campus, there<lb/>
have been changes in the following<lb/>
positions: athletic director, head<lb/>
football coach, head basketball<lb/>
coach, head baseball coach, wrestl-<lb/>
ing coach, sports information direc-<lb/>
tor, sports promotions director, to<lb/>
mention the more important ones<lb/>
Ihe problem is that all the<lb/>
changes have been unjustlyu criticiz-<lb/>
ed by many.<lb/>
?nvwav. whv all the facelifts'<lb/>
There were different reasons m each<lb/>
case, some oi them personal moves<lb/>
some of them housecleaning moves<lb/>
bv the athletic department.<lb/>
Last year alone the -D. head<lb/>
? otball coach. SID and promo-<lb/>
tions director resigned. The last<lb/>
three ,gnd coach Pat Dye. SID Walt<lb/>
Atkins and promotion- man Wayne<lb/>
Newnam. made moves as a result ot<lb/>
displeasure with the way things were<lb/>
being run within the department.<lb/>
Their moves probably played a big<lb/>
part in the resignation ot AD Bill<lb/>
Cain Dye's surelv did<lb/>
But so what1 Over the past 12<lb/>
months, fcc I has been in the news<lb/>
because ot all the changes and<lb/>
cotroverseys thev caused. People<lb/>
seemed to forget all the ac-<lb/>
complishments that occurred in the<lb/>
ECU athletic department during<lb/>
that time<lb/>
Brewer obviously agrees with this.<lb/>
"ECU is coming off what is pro-<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
Chandler<lb/>
babiy its most successful yeai ever,<lb/>
he said. "I'm afraid, though, th i<lb/>
lot ol that has been overshadowed<lb/>
bv all the resignation<lb/>
Brewer pointed to the fad thai<lb/>
the football team led the nation in<lb/>
rushing offense, that the basketl<lb/>
team posted its firs! winnii i<lb/>
in live years, that the womc<lb/>
basketball team won 20 games, the<lb/>
baseball team took a Tip to the<lb/>
c playoffs, the track team's<lb/>
mile relay squad earned natioi<lb/>
?ion. the women ftball<lb/>
team won the Easten <lb/>
that the swim and wrestlii .<lb/>
made big advances<lb/>
We have a highly d<lb/>
of coaches he Brewer said<lb/>
"who do more with less '<lb/>
place I've ever seen bet ore-<lb/>
above and beyond the call o! dul<lb/>
Despite the changes ol the pasi<lb/>
the EC I program ha continued -<lb/>
grow. Often il is changes lha<lb/>
needed to correct the problem- ol<lb/>
the past.<lb/>
So to those that have cracki<lb/>
down on the Pirate program in the<lb/>
last vear the word should be "bug<lb/>
off"<lb/>
The past is just that?the pa ? ? <lb/>
new era is about to begin at EO<lb/>
the Brewer and Karr era. In year<lb/>
past it was the Jenkins and<lb/>
Stasovich (ex-AD the late C larc<lb/>
and the Jenkins-Cain era- N<lb/>
doubt exists that Jenkins did much<lb/>
for ECU athletics But just because<lb/>
some changes have occurred under<lb/>
his successor does not mean thai<lb/>
they were for the worse<lb/>
Unfortunately, you can't prove<lb/>
this to some. The only way to do<lb/>
that is by performance Here's a bet<lb/>
that all those folks that did the<lb/>
bellyaching will end up with their<lb/>
feet in their mouths.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057278_0014"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 26, 1980<lb/>
?<lb/>
Helmic Optimistic About Recruit<lb/>
By<lb/>
CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
sport h l-dmr<lb/>
"1 look tor a much<lb/>
better performance<lb/>
than last year. 1 really<lb/>
feel good about the<lb/>
program now<lb/>
The warning is out<lb/>
from East Carolina<lb/>
golf coach Bob<lb/>
Helmick as he looks to<lb/>
the future of his<lb/>
Pirates. A poor 1979-80<lb/>
season had backers<lb/>
down but following a<lb/>
good recruiting year<lb/>
Helmick said the future<lb/>
looks bright. talent, though. We<lb/>
"We brought in a lot simply must develop<lb/>
of caliber golfers he experience from the top<lb/>
said, "a lot better than<lb/>
we had before. With<lb/>
the caliber of golfer we<lb/>
have now, we have the<lb/>
capability of playing<lb/>
with anybody in this<lb/>
district<lb/>
Though the recent<lb/>
recruiting season was a<lb/>
success, Helmick said<lb/>
the upcoming year will<lb/>
present some dif-<lb/>
ficulties. "We'll be<lb/>
short in experience<lb/>
he said. "We've got the<lb/>
of our team to the bot-<lb/>
tom<lb/>
Helmick said it is<lb/>
vital that he play as<lb/>
many people as possi-<lb/>
ble during the fall<lb/>
season, which begins<lb/>
September 22 at the<lb/>
Methodist College In-<lb/>
vitational. If he can do<lb/>
this, the Pirate coach<lb/>
foresees a super team in<lb/>
'8182.<lb/>
"If the guys get the<lb/>
proper experience he<lb/>
proclaimed, "e<lb/>
should have a<lb/>
powerhouse of a team<lb/>
next year<lb/>
Though the<lb/>
recruiting yeaT was a<lb/>
good one, Helmick still<lb/>
looks to a number of<lb/>
returnees to lead the<lb/>
way this fall and again<lb/>
in the spring. The top<lb/>
returnee is senior Steve<lb/>
Jones of Greensboro.<lb/>
Jones was the Pirates'<lb/>
number two golfer a<lb/>
year ago when he<lb/>
posted a seasonal 74.5<lb/>
stroke average.<lb/>
Melvin<lb/>
Months<lb/>
Even though the<lb/>
I nited States boycot-<lb/>
ted the Summer Olym-<lb/>
pic Games in Moscow<lb/>
nullifying any chance<lb/>
1 asl Carolina had at<lb/>
claiming a medal win-<lb/>
ner, former Pirate<lb/>
sprinter Otis Melvin<lb/>
continues to excel on<lb/>
the track.<lb/>
Melvin concluded a<lb/>
tour of duty in Europe<lb/>
with the Muhammad<lb/>
Ali Track Club in July,<lb/>
giving him first-hand<lb/>
experience of the talent<lb/>
participating for the<lb/>
coveted Olympic gold.<lb/>
'Most everyone 1<lb/>
ran against was getting<lb/>
ready for the Olympics<lb/>
in Moscow said<lb/>
Melvin. "Everyone was<lb/>
up everytime you step-<lb/>
ped onto the track<lb/>
Melvin admitted be-<lb/>
ing at a disadvantage<lb/>
by not attending the<lb/>
Games.<lb/>
"We had been runn-<lb/>
ing all year and gone<lb/>
through the nationals<lb/>
and the (Olympic)<lb/>
trials he said. "The<lb/>
Europeans were just<lb/>
getting underway. We<lb/>
were on our downward<lb/>
trend just while they<lb/>
were beginning to<lb/>
neak<lb/>
1 he entire huropean<lb/>
trip began as a<lb/>
frustrating and fatigue-<lb/>
ing experience for<lb/>
Melvin.<lb/>
"1 went to Europe<lb/>
immediately after the<lb/>
Olympic trials ex-<lb/>
plains Melvin. "1<lb/>
finished the Olympic<lb/>
trials on Wednesday.<lb/>
Thursday 1 was on a<lb/>
flight to L.A.Thursday<lb/>
night, 1 was on my way<lb/>
to London.<lb/>
Melvin returned to<lb/>
Europe in August, but<lb/>
his future as a world-<lb/>
class sprinter is cloudy<lb/>
at best.<lb/>
"At one point, 1 had<lb/>
lost interest in track<lb/>
and field Melvin con-<lb/>
fesses. "But now 1 am<lb/>
enjoying it more than<lb/>
ever. 1 hope 1 can stay<lb/>
interested at least until the way for us<lb/>
1984 so 1 can have Also returning<lb/>
Helmick feels those<lb/>
figures will be better<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
"Steve has the poten-<lb/>
tial to qualify for the<lb/>
NCAA finals<lb/>
Helmick said, "if he<lb/>
puts forth the effort<lb/>
needed. That's all he<lb/>
needs to do<lb/>
Jones had a big sum-<lb/>
mer with the sticks, his<lb/>
fourth place finish in<lb/>
the N.C. Amateur top-<lb/>
ping his achievements.<lb/>
Jones actually led that<lb/>
tourney heading into<lb/>
the final round but<lb/>
posted a six-over 78 on<lb/>
the last day to finsih<lb/>
fourth, four strokes<lb/>
back of champion<lb/>
Todd Smith of<lb/>
Greensboro. Jones also<lb/>
finished fourth in the<lb/>
Mid-South Invitational<lb/>
? at Pinehurst. Of .1 ones'<lb/>
summer exploits,<lb/>
Helmick simpl) said.<lb/>
"1 expect him to lead<lb/>
from<lb/>
shot at the Olympics. last year is Mike Move,<lb/>
a sophomore from<lb/>
Greenvile, Move strug-<lb/>
gled though a rough<lb/>
spring season last year<lb/>
but had a big summer<lb/>
himself, winning the<lb/>
North-South Invita-<lb/>
tional in Raleigh. He<lb/>
posted a 2-under score<lb/>
for the four-day event<lb/>
and is expected to con-<lb/>
tribute m u ch this<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Becoming eligible foi<lb/>
the first time this<lb/>
semester is St. John's<lb/>
transfer John Derrico.<lb/>
Derrico had to sit out<lb/>
last season following<lb/>
the transfer. He was the<lb/>
top golfer for the<lb/>
Redmen in '78 and<lb/>
Hemlick says he is ex-<lb/>
pecting big things.<lb/>
Also returing from<lb/>
last season's team are<lb/>
Mike Helms. Jerry I ee<lb/>
and Steve Wheeler.<lb/>
The recruits, ol<lb/>
course, are a favorite<lb/>
topic t discussion for<lb/>
Helmick. "We have six<lb/>
freshmen who should<lb/>
be capable of giving us<lb/>
great assistance he<lb/>
said. "Each ol them<lb/>
did big things in high<lb/>
school golf last year<lb/>
1 he six are Jim<lb/>
Delgrego olonnec<lb/>
ticut; Kris Keiser ol<lb/>
w inston Salem; Dan<lb/>
1 awruk from Mtoona,<lb/>
Pa William Mollo<lb/>
Crofton, Ki . Don<lb/>
Sweeting olhapel Hill<lb/>
and lames 1 ippit! from<lb/>
Washignton, D.<lb/>
rwo transfers also<lb/>
should give a big boost<lb/>
to the Pirate golf<lb/>
squad. Helmick said.<lb/>
1 eonard 1 ox comes<lb/>
from a Philadelphia<lb/>
minor college that com-<lb/>
peted in the nationals<lb/>
las! yeai<lb/>
( rmi i ng t o t he<lb/>
Pirates from national<lb/>
powei 1 ouisiana State<lb/>
is junior Don Gafnei<lb/>
"Wo expect him to be<lb/>
one of our top three<lb/>
goiters Helmick said.<lb/>
One problem. thou<lb/>
Gafnei will miss the fall<lb/>
season as he bec<lb/>
eligible onl following<lb/>
the first sen<lb/>
dek<lb/>
?'1 got to London at<lb/>
about noon and had to<lb/>
run at 9 o'clock that<lb/>
night. Everything was<lb/>
kind o pushy and 1<lb/>
never got a chance to<lb/>
recuperate. 1 didn't<lb/>
even have time to think<lb/>
about it.<lb/>
"But, 1 ran in that<lb/>
meet and did well he<lb/>
admits. "1 finished<lb/>
third behind Don<lb/>
Quarry, the 1976 Olym-<lb/>
pic champion, and one<lb/>
'o his teammates<lb/>
Melvin recorded<lb/>
ihree second place<lb/>
finishes in the seven-<lb/>
meet tour through Nor-<lb/>
wav, Italy, France,<lb/>
England and other<lb/>
western European<lb/>
countries.<lb/>
savs<lb/>
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12 oz Cans<lb/>
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ctn of 8<lb/>
Coca Cola<lb/>
i-i<lb/>
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10 Discount on<lb/>
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 Regardless ot size.<lb/>
Present this coupon and show your ECU ID<lb/>
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s<lb/>
<lb/>
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Golden Bananas<lb/>
4tbs<lb/>
?<lb/>
T<lb/>
<pb facs="00057278_0016"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
I HI EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 26, 1980<lb/>
Anthorn Collins Forge Yardage<lb/>
Pirates Seek<lb/>
Floor Leader<lb/>
U 1n Dul'KH<lb/>
. I<lb/>
to: a<lb/>
i ad . olleyball<lb/>
? of ihe<lb/>
; ta<lb/>
,<lb/>
: new<lb/>
1 <lb/>
find<lb/>
ea i ?<lb/>
epi .<lb/>
im<lb/>
 ouisbui -?: c oUege in<lb/>
I or bes<lb/>
ap-<lb/>
:<lb/>
: '<lb/>
k p i?s i<lb/>
 irrell<lb/>
in hei<lb/>
<lb/>
Burrell<lb/>
offense<lb/>
fen-<lb/>
two<lb/>
-hip<lb/>
P a 11 i<lb/>
homore<lb/>
Dianne I ?und<lb/>
? of<lb/>
W esl<lb/>
i High School<lb/>
12 record<lb/>
? - lour<lb/>
ci pat ion,<lb/>
. - as a<lb/>
irtei eai ! in<lb/>
i sclV -<lb/>
Pirates'<lb/>
a<lb/>
lifoi m<lb/>
lion<lb/>
to the ECU lineup.<lb/>
headed by senior All-<lb/>
State candidate Sharon<lb/>
Perry. Perry, another<lb/>
ansfer from<lb/>
1 ouisburg, is the Bucs'<lb/>
'allest player at 5-9 and<lb/>
one of the strongest hit-<lb/>
ters<lb/>
Seni or 1 oreti a<lb/>
H olden and<lb/>
sophomores Stacj<lb/>
V enel and Miti<lb/>
Davis round out rhe list<lb/>
etui ning stai tei s<lb/>
Holden. the team's<lb/>
onh southpaw spiker,<lb/>
saw limited action on<lb/>
defense a yeai ago but<lb/>
will be counted on as an<lb/>
all-around performei.<lb/>
Da ? earned Most<lb/>
 aluable Player honors<lb/>
in liri tor excelling on<lb/>
defense and passing,<lb/>
while Weitzel is listed<lb/>
as a strong hitter and<lb/>
solid defensive player.<lb/>
Rounding out the<lb/>
curreni roster is<lb/>
soph om ore Gi nger<lb/>
Rothermel and<lb/>
f r e shmen Lex ann e<lb/>
Keeter and Revardale<lb/>
1 a ant.<lb/>
Rothermel joins ih<lb/>
team alter a successfn<lb/>
tour ol dut at second<lb/>
base tor Dillon's<lb/>
regional champion<lb/>
sottball team. Both<lb/>
Keeter and I a ant will<lb/>
be used primaril) on<lb/>
? tense.<lb/>
" e've got to scrap-<lb/>
py on defense to make<lb/>
up for our lack of<lb/>
height said Dillon.<lb/>
"That's going to have<lb/>
to be our savior. The<lb/>
game of volleyball is<lb/>
like anv other sport in<lb/>
that what you lack in<lb/>
one particular aspect ol<lb/>
the game you can make<lb/>
up for in another.<lb/>
' 'Offensive! we<lb/>
have a couple of op-<lb/>
tions, but 1 think we'll<lb/>
stick with our 5-1 ap-<lb/>
proach. We're going to<lb/>
hae to be quick offen-<lb/>
sily.<lb/>
I he Lad Pirates<lb/>
have only tout home<lb/>
matches on their slate<lb/>
along with the third an-<lb/>
nual ECU ln itational<lb/>
1 i'ii rnament. but<lb/>
Hi lion prefers I he<lb/>
rigorous road schedule<lb/>
over a home schedule<lb/>
against less competitive<lb/>
opponants.<lb/>
"I'd just as soon be<lb/>
20-22 with this kind o<lb/>
tough schedule says<lb/>
Dillon. " I he type of<lb/>
schedule we have helps<lb/>
w ith rei i uiting because<lb/>
girls see that the) will<lb/>
be playing against the<lb/>
best teams It also helps<lb/>
keep the girls working<lb/>
hard 'ore's a<lb/>
challenging team that<lb/>
thev have to get up<lb/>
for<lb/>
I he I dd Bucs will<lb/>
travel to tournaments<lb/>
at N.C. State. South<lb/>
i arolina, Francis<lb/>
Marion and Maryland<lb/>
before preparing lor<lb/>
the N(. MAW Tourna-<lb/>
ment in Raleigh No<lb/>
14 iv<lb/>
'Kll I - ? VR??! V<lb/>
1 : ? ? ? v it i 1<lb/>
M HI IH I t<lb/>
Sept. I" at c State;<lb/>
20 .it ppalachian Mate.<lb/>
2f- 27 at State Invita-<lb/>
nal in lamenl.<lb/>
Oct. 1 1)1 Kl i 4 ai<lb/>
South i. arolina Invitational<lb/>
1 out namenl; 8 N i<lb/>
STATL; 10-11 ai I rancis<lb/>
Mar ion ln itational I ourna-<lb/>
men t; 14 N()RI M<lb/>
 K()1 INA; 17 1'<lb/>
PALACH1AN STATt;<lb/>
17-18 EAST CAROLINA<lb/>
IN VIT A TI ON A1 II K<lb/>
N AMI N I . 24-25 at<lb/>
Maryland hHiUiihMi.il Iiur<lb/>
namenl. 2s at Duke;<lb/>
Nov 6 at North<lb/>
i arolina. 11 at Pembroke<lb/>
State (1 rancis Marion); 14-15<lb/>
a: N( l W State lour<lb/>
namenl. Raleigh; 21<lb/>
al<lb/>
?1 W Region II rourna<lb/>
mem<lb/>
AC<lb/>
1,000-Yard Rusher From<lb/>
1979 Returns For Finale<lb/>
By JIMMY DnPREE<lb/>
Wisiani Spurt Idilor<lb/>
Prior to the 1979 football season, a running<lb/>
back by the name of Anthony Collins was<lb/>
recognized by Pirate fans as the other guy in the<lb/>
backfield with standouts Eddie Hicks, Theodore<lb/>
Sutton and Leander Green.<lb/>
Hicks and Green have graduated and Sutton<lb/>
returns for his final season after another steady<lb/>
performance a year ago, but the star of the 1979<lb/>
backfield returns in the person of Anthony Col-<lb/>
lins.<lb/>
Collins, a native of Penn Yan, N.Y ranked<lb/>
among NCAA leaders in yards per carry<lb/>
throughout the season and finished with a 7.3<lb/>
average. The senior speedster netted 1,130 vards<lb/>
on 154 carries while crossing the goal line 14 times<lb/>
for Pat Dye's final Pirate squad.<lb/>
What does a three-year veteran of the wishbone<lb/>
offense worry about when the coaches close simp<lb/>
and the future is uncertain?<lb/>
"When I first heard Coach Dye was leaving, I<lb/>
was really worried that whoever came in might<lb/>
change the offense admits Collins. " oach<lb/>
(Wright) Anderson has coached wishbone for<lb/>
vears. He was here when Coach Dye put in the<lb/>
wishbone, so he has had plenty o experience<lb/>
"They changed little things like techniques, but<lb/>
the approach is still the same<lb/>
Collins confesses he has set the 1,000-yard bar-<lb/>
rier as one of his personal goals, but many skep<lb/>
tics believe Pirate ballhandlers will find yardage<lb/>
on the ground hard to come bv due to the loss ol<lb/>
most of the front line.<lb/>
last Carolina stacked up strong in rhe trenches<lb/>
in 1979 with the front line o tackles Matt<lb/>
Mullholland and Joe Godette, guards Mitchell<lb/>
Johnston and Wayne lnnian and center Jefl<lb/>
Hagans.<lb/>
Unfortunately for Collins and the remainder of<lb/>
the running corps, only All-American Inman<lb/>
returns to open vita! holes. But nonetheless. Col<lb/>
lms has confidance in the new edition ol the ol<lb/>
tensive wall.<lb/>
Junior Fee Griffin is hkelv to till the vacancj at<lb/>
left guard, while senior Tootie Robbm- and<lb/>
sophomore Oscar Tyson are top candidates at<lb/>
tackle. Juniors Todd Hensley and Billy Parker<lb/>
lead the field for Hagan's center slot.<lb/>
"Those are all names nobody has ever heard<lb/>
of savs Collins. "But they were in and out of<lb/>
games all year. 1 have the same confidance in this<lb/>
line that I had in the line last year.<lb/>
'They are not as big as the guys we had last<lb/>
year, but they have the same heart; the same<lb/>
character<lb/>
The void left by the graduation of speedy<lb/>
veteran quarterback l.eander Green has been a<lb/>
major question mark, but sophomore Carlton<lb/>
Nelson has stepped in as the leading candidate.<lb/>
5 "Carlton is a super athlete says Collins<lb/>
"He's a better passer right now than I eander<lb/>
was. We'll probably be doing more passing than<lb/>
we did last year<lb/>
Should Collins need a rest during the rigorous<lb/>
schedule the Pirates will face, juniors Harold<lb/>
Blue and Roy Wiley will be called on for their<lb/>
running talents.<lb/>
"Our underclassmen, especially Roy and<lb/>
Harold, are as good as any of us (starters) said<lb/>
Collins. "They could probably start for a lot of<lb/>
the better teams, anyway<lb/>
Collins is billed as the outside threat, with<lb/>
powerful Sutton acclaimed as the inside carrier.<lb/>
"I don't run inside as much as he does, and he<lb/>
doesn't run outside as much as I do Collins<lb/>
said. " I hat's just the way the plavs arc designed.<lb/>
"What people don't realize is that Toad<lb/>
(Sutton) has exceptional speed and is effective<lb/>
outside, and 1 think I can run inside as well<lb/>
I earn goals lor the coming season, according<lb/>
to Collins, are to win every game and try to repeat<lb/>
as the number one rushing team in the nation.<lb/>
"We really ejoyed that honor last year and I<lb/>
think we have the potential to do it again he<lb/>
savs enthusiastically. "I think we can beat any<lb/>
team on our schedule.<lb/>
"Right now. we're concentrating everything on<lb/>
healing Duke (Sept. 6). That game really hurl our<lb/>
pride lasl vear. I've relived that fumble I made on<lb/>
the goal line over and over.<lb/>
"It we're not ready tor any other team, we'll be<lb/>
readv tor Duke "<lb/>
Critics aigue mat with a new offensive line and<lb/>
quarterback, as well as a new coaching stall. i<lb/>
( arolina University football tans may be in to; ;i<lb/>
long and disappointing season. But with talented<lb/>
speedster Anthony c olhns in the backfield, tl<lb/>
will plenty of open field excitement throughout<lb/>
the season<lb/>
Steers Resigns<lb/>
As Mat Head<lb/>
last Carolina wrestl<lb/>
ing coach Ed Steers an-<lb/>
nounced his resignation<lb/>
for the post last 1 rida<lb/>
and said he has ac<lb/>
cepted the head wrestl-<lb/>
ing job at the U.S.<lb/>
Military Academy at<lb/>
West Point. N.Y.<lb/>
"My wile and I did<lb/>
not want to leave<lb/>
Greenville and last<lb/>
C arolina1 Steers said,<lb/>
"but we tell this oppor<lb/>
tunny in my career was<lb/>
just too great to turn<lb/>
down I he recruiting<lb/>
budget and operating<lb/>
budget at West Point is<lb/>
just super.<lb/>
"1 feel Last Carolina<lb/>
will continue to develop<lb/>
a strong program he<lb/>
continued. " I here is<lb/>
great potential here<lb/>
Steers joined the Easi<lb/>
C arolina program just<lb/>
one vear ago alter five<lb/>
successful seasons at<lb/>
W illiam and Marv IT<lb/>
i in medial civ turned<lb/>
around what had b<lb/>
a dormant team<lb/>
vear earlier into<lb/>
squad resembling the<lb/>
old EC I powerhouse<lb/>
wrestling teams o the<lb/>
late 60's and ea<lb/>
"We at 1<lb/>
C arolina very m .<lb/>
hate to see a coacl<lb/>
I d Steers' caliber le<lb/>
our program<lb/>
new Pirate thlei<lb/>
Director Dr ken, k,<lb/>
"At the same tim<lb/>
give 1 d a big pal<lb/>
bak as he leaves<lb/>
pursue vet an<lb/>
challenge in his c i<lb/>
rhe move to W<lb/>
Point is obviously<lb/>
credit to Ed and a. n<lb/>
tor ward<lb/>
karr said tl<lb/>
hoped a succe<lb/>
Steers could be c!<lb/>
almost immed ?<lb/>
Course in<lb/>
Wtchovia<lb/>
An easy course in applied economics<lb/>
that could win you twenty bucks<lb/>
worth of free food from McDonald's.<lb/>
1979 Volleyball Action<lb/>
It's the easiest course you'll take all year.<lb/>
All you have to do is show up at Wachovia's<lb/>
University Office at 802 East 10th Street, any<lb/>
time between now and September 8. We'll show<lb/>
you how7 Teller II works and demonstrate all the<lb/>
many tilings it can do for you wliile you're here<lb/>
at ECU.<lb/>
You'll learn a lot.<lb/>
You'll learn how you can get cash from your<lb/>
checking or savings account, 24 hours a day.<lb/>
How to make deposits or payments. How to get<lb/>
a balance on your accounts. How to get Fast<lb/>
Cash - $20 from your checking account with just<lb/>
one push of a button. How to transfer money<lb/>
from one account to another. And how to get<lb/>
money from your MasterCard v balance.<lb/>
Teller II does it all.<lb/>
And maybe win $20<lb/>
worth of free food from McDonald's.<lb/>
WTiile you're there, be sure and register for one<lb/>
of the five McDonald's gift certificates wTe'll be<lb/>
giving away at 4:30 pm on September 8. That's<lb/>
$20 worth of free hamburgers, shakes and fries<lb/>
with your name on them.<lb/>
It'll only take about<lb/>
10 minutes to pass the course.<lb/>
So stop by Wachovia's University Office before<lb/>
4:30 on September 8 for your demonstration.<lb/>
You'll be glad you did.<lb/>
Wachovia<lb/>
Bank&amp;Trust<lb/>
Em<lb/>
<pb facs="00057278_0017"/><lb/>
I Ht i su -k(?l ! N<lb/>
t .l s<lb/>
17<lb/>
rom<lb/>
ale<lb/>
ne a,id<lb/>
? I asi<lb/>
'? a<lb/>
i!en ted<lb/>
. there<lb/>
igns<lb/>
ead<lb/>
He<lb/>
ned<lb/>
been<lb/>
earn one<lb/>
1 a<lb/>
the<lb/>
? the<lb/>
"O's<lb/>
ea v e<lb/>
said<lb/>
etic<lb/>
cnK<lb/>
ve<lb/>
the<lb/>
to<lb/>
her<lb/>
eer.<lb/>
Wesi<lb/>
.<lb/>
o v e<lb/>
he<lb/>
tot<lb/>
? chosen<lb/>
itelv<lb/>
1CS<lb/>
it<lb/>
s.<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Member F I11 C<lb/>
Emory has been through much in short time<lb/>
' nued from p 13<lb/>
' 'or his hiring,<lb/>
oi had to bring in a<lb/>
stafl I hough he came<lb/>
up with one tie liked<lb/>
well, it soon began to<lb/>
disband "We've had<lb/>
? coaches leave foi<lb/>
tei jobs he ex-<lb/>
plained. "1 hat's whai<lb/>
happens when you hue<lb/>
good people. You i un<lb/>
the risk oi losing<lb/>
them <lb/>
Mtei filling in the<lb/>
aching ,i, a<lb/>
iieu and complex pro<lb/>
m came to 1 mory's<lb/>
attention. In pril, the<lb/>
Greenville Police<lb/>
Depai tment conducted<lb/>
a mass drug raid ol<lb/>
iI campus. (me ol<lb/>
t hose an ested v? as<lb/>
Pirate stai linebackei<lb/>
leffi e W ai ten.<lb/>
("harged w ii h posses<lb/>
sion ot marijuana,<lb/>
 ai ten claimed in<lb/>
? cence, but faced ti ial<lb/>
1 left his coach ith<lb/>
a most difficult situa<lb/>
lion.<lb/>
I ha! situation, oo<lb/>
has begun to look bet-<lb/>
? " I moiv and the<lb/>
it iftei a long,<lb/>
hai d sti uggle. " Jet! re<lb/>
ecu found inno-<lb/>
: : ol one chai ge<lb/>
iach said. "He has<lb/>
thei misdemeanoi<lb/>
i me np in court.<lb/>
I hings look good foi<lb/>
n, though, and he<lb/>
will be a pan ol the<lb/>
cam this<lb/>
 ith the W ai ten<lb/>
. it ion finalh behind<lb/>
in now , 1 moi <lb/>
simplv look to pro<lb/>
 c : i e s t<lb/>
! I<lb/>
fter a I 98i I<lb/>
Bowl partici-<lb/>
i da State,<lb/>
Bo a  va inner<lb/>
though, has crept into<lb/>
the life t 1 mor) thai<lb/>
piobabK gives him<lb/>
ulcei s 1 heodore Sut<lb/>
ton, the team's leading<lb/>
rusher in 1978 and se<lb/>
cond leading i ushei last<lb/>
season, ma be inehgi<lb/>
hie for the club's<lb/>
openei with Duke on<lb/>
sept 6.<lb/>
1 he Blue Devils ma<lb/>
h.ne found a wa) to<lb/>
keep but l fullback out<lb/>
ol the contest<lb/>
"IK re was hurt in<lb/>
his fji si ja vee game in<lb/>
76 Hmorj said<lb/>
"C oach l)e the got a<lb/>
hardship tor him, giv-<lb/>
ing him foui more<lb/>
vears ol eligibility<lb/>
left<lb/>
I he rules sj<lb/>
that hardship can be<lb/>
granted it the player is<lb/>
injured in the first halt<lb/>
ol the season and has<lb/>
played no more than<lb/>
two g -i m e s.<lb/>
1 etthing's oka then<lb/>
right?<lb/>
Not really. SuttorTs<lb/>
injury came in the<lb/>
jay vee opener. ol<lb/>
course. But that openei<lb/>
came alter the first halt<lb/>
ol the ars!i season<lb/>
had past.<lb/>
" l he NCAA rule<lb/>
book does not vn<lb/>
whether the rule ap<lb/>
plied to the jayvee or<lb/>
xarsit season Emory<lb/>
said. "It Duke pushes<lb/>
the matter, there will<lb/>
have to be a ruling b<lb/>
the NCAA eligibility<lb/>
committee<lb/>
I he reason a ruling<lb/>
may occur is because<lb/>
the Pirates and Blue<lb/>
Devils have it in their<lb/>
contract thai only<lb/>
players eligible for<lb/>
championship competi-<lb/>
tion (such as bowl<lb/>
games) are eligible tor<lb/>
the Duk- I:( I mat-<lb/>
chup.<lb/>
Should the NCAA<lb/>
rule that Sutton is in-<lb/>
eligible for champion-<lb/>
ship c o m p e t i t i o n<lb/>
because of the time of<lb/>
his injury, he would<lb/>
then be just as ineligible<lb/>
tor the Duke game,<lb/>
though he would be<lb/>
allowed to play in the<lb/>
other ten regular season<lb/>
games<lb/>
With all this on his<lb/>
mind Emory still has to<lb/>
prepare a young and in-<lb/>
experienced squad for a<lb/>
tough season.<lb/>
Among the major<lb/>
problems. Emory said,<lb/>
is at quarterback and<lb/>
the offensive line. 1 ast<lb/>
year's star QB. I candor<lb/>
Green, has graduated<lb/>
and all that is left is a<lb/>
group of interested<lb/>
sophomores and<lb/>
freshmen. On the line.<lb/>
only one starter, All-<lb/>
American guard Wayne<lb/>
Inman, returns.<lb/>
That makes it<lb/>
tough on us he said.<lb/>
"I would be okay it we<lb/>
had an experienced line<lb/>
and a rookie quarter-<lb/>
back or an experienced<lb/>
quarterback and a<lb/>
rookie line. But we<lb/>
have both. If the line<lb/>
doesn't perform the<lb/>
v oung quarterb a c k<lb/>
(probably Carlton<lb/>
Nelson o Portsmouth.<lb/>
Va.) won't gain con-<lb/>
fidence. It the quarter-<lb/>
back doesn't perform,<lb/>
the line loses con-<lb/>
fidence<lb/>
Emory looks on the<lb/>
bright side though.<lb/>
"The biggest thing is<lb/>
that the talent is<lb/>
there he said. "It's<lb/>
just that that talent has<lb/>
never lined up in front<lb/>
o 50.IKK) fans.<lb/>
"That's what makes through so far, you can<lb/>
football so in bet Emory is expecting<lb/>
teresting he con- the unexpected<lb/>
tinned. "You get to see ?????????<lb/>
how a young man will<lb/>
react under pressure.<lb/>
I'm excited about fin-<lb/>
ding out what's going<lb/>
to happen<lb/>
w h -til he has been<lb/>
N o r i<lb/>
i<lb/>
1979<lb/>
N( Division I <lb/>
lion I astei n ken-<lb/>
am N. St<lb/>
ii muh won ies<lb/>
LUITS<lb/>
TRADING CO.<lb/>
Welcomes Back ECU Students<lb/>
Featuring:<lb/>
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Delicious imported and domestic<lb/>
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Shop Monday Through Saturday<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057278_0018"/><lb/>
18<lb/>
THE HAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 26, 1980<lb/>
New AD Karr<lb/>
Sets New Goals<lb/>
B CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Now that the moving-in process is over, the<lb/>
work of working on an entire athletic program<lb/>
has come to the forefront of the attention of new<lb/>
I CU Athletic Director Dr. Kenneth Karr.<lb/>
Karr, who took over tor the resigned Bill Cain<lb/>
on August 1. said that the opportunities ahead of<lb/>
him and his new university were challenging yet<lb/>
enticing.<lb/>
"I'm ei happy and excited to he here he<lb/>
said "1 feel this affords me a real challenge. It's a<lb/>
good administrative opportunity<lb/>
Karr, who served as D at San Diego State<lb/>
from 1969-79, expressed pleasure with the qulity<lb/>
ot people that will work under him. "I'm tremen-<lb/>
dousl) impressed wit) the quality of coaches and<lb/>
supporting staff members he said. "There is<lb/>
obviously a wealth ot dedicated and talented peo-<lb/>
ple here<lb/>
1 hough he is happy with his aides, Karr did<lb/>
name a numbei ot areas which he hopes some im-<lb/>
provements can be made. "Presently, we're ver<lb/>
much in a catch-up role he said. "Our first con-<lb/>
cern, though, is to get the total department func-<lb/>
tioning as an efficient unit. An important concern<lb/>
also is to attempt to put the total program on a<lb/>
sound fiscal basis<lb/>
Kan went on to say that any big changes in the<lb/>
athletic department would come only after the<lb/>
completion of a total departmental evaluation<lb/>
process, which is presently in progress.<lb/>
Kan, who turned things around at San Diego<lb/>
state from an average Division 11 program to a<lb/>
strong Division 1 program, has his share ot goals<lb/>
foi the ECU department. Main o' those goals<lb/>
concern areas that most Pirate fans are interested<lb/>
in that of football scheduling and the total<lb/>
athletic budget.<lb/>
Ot the scheduleing, Karr said he had hopes opt<lb/>
continuing and improving some ot the resent ties<lb/>
and creating new onews. "As we look to the<lb/>
future he said, "our number one priori! is to<lb/>
continue the present relationships with the Big<lb/>
Four schools in as main sports as possible.<lb/>
"Beyond that he continued, "and particular<lb/>
iv in football, we will attempt to schedule more<lb/>
people in the top 1(H) schools of Division 1<lb/>
()! the athletic budget. Karr said that he had lit<lb/>
tie to do with the budget for the upcoming season<lb/>
due to his late arrival but that he would make<lb/>
some changes in the future.<lb/>
Basically, the budge! for 'SO-SI was set b<lb/>
campus personnel prior to my arrival he said.<lb/>
"We will function as closely and effectively as we<lb/>
can under those guidelines. AS we project into<lb/>
'8182 I'll have the opportunity to have a far<lb/>
greater influence on the formation of the budget.<lb/>
1 here will be some changes.<lb/>
"In essence Kan continued, "this budget<lb/>
doesn't reflect Ken Karr. Future budgets will, in<lb/>
all probability<lb/>
Kair speaks sternly and has earned the respect<lb/>
ot the entire athletic department. The halls ot<lb/>
Minges C oliseum hum when his name is mention<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
Dr. Kenneth Karr<lb/>
1 hough he senses the respect he receives. Karr<lb/>
knows why it comes his way. "I've been fortunate<lb/>
enough to work with a number of different in-<lb/>
stitutions he said. "I hat gives me a broad base<lb/>
ot experience to bring to this particular situation.<lb/>
I'm just happy to have the opportunity to<lb/>
hopefully affect some solutions to some o the<lb/>
problems here.<lb/>
Indeed, Karr's credentials are impressive. Dur-<lb/>
ing his decade as D at San Diego State the Aztec<lb/>
athletic rogram increased greatlv in stature. A<lb/>
Division II school when he took over in 1969,<lb/>
San Diego Sate was in Division 1 and ranked in<lb/>
the top 20 in football by 1977.<lb/>
lor two of the last five seasons, the Atec<lb/>
basketball team competed in the Western<lb/>
Regional ot the NCAA Championship Tourna-<lb/>
ment 1 he baseball team has averaged 45 wins<lb/>
over the las! four seasons and the women's pro-<lb/>
gram has improved markedly.<lb/>
Karr was also involved in some sidebar acv-<lb/>
tivities during his days at San Diego State. He was<lb/>
instrumental in obtaining NCAA sanction for the<lb/>
post season II tliday ! wl and since 1975 has<lb/>
been on the N( AA Division I Basketball Com-<lb/>
mittee, to name only a tew ot the main outside<lb/>
acti ities.<lb/>
V the announcement ot his hiring. ECU<lb/>
Chancellor "homas Brewer was jubilant. "We<lb/>
are extremely pleased that a man with the stature<lb/>
arid experiecne ot Dr. Ken Karr will be providing<lb/>
the leadership to carrv an already fine athletic<lb/>
program to even greater levels of quality and<lb/>
achievement Brewer said. "When we began<lb/>
taking applications Ken Karr clearly and quickly<lb/>
emerged as the most gifted and to lead the pro-<lb/>
gram. We are extremely blessed<lb/>
WELCOME<lb/>
BACKPIRATES!<lb/>
Shop Sears for All of Your<lb/>
Back-to-School Needs<lb/>
And While You're There,<lb/>
Register for a FREE Refrigerator!<lb/>
For the dorm to re<lb/>
duce student's trips to<lb/>
the snack bar<lb/>
size for the<lb/>
dorm or den1<lb/>
Where America shops<lb/>
for Value<lb/>
SEARS MMBUCI AND CO<lb/>
SaUtfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Back<lb/>
Come by the<lb/>
Greenville,N.C. Sears<lb/>
store to register in the<lb/>
FREE Drawing Contest<lb/>
for a Kenmore<lb/>
Compact Refrigerator<lb/>
to be given away at<lb/>
1 2:00 noon on Sept. 1,<lb/>
1980: Labor Day in<lb/>
our Refrigeration<lb/>
Dept<lb/>
You do not have to<lb/>
Be present to win.<lb/>
No purchase neccessary<lb/>
GREENVILLE,N.C<lb/>
ONLY!<lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
PHONE: 756-9700<lb/>
?peit? Writers Needed<lb/>
M iV U iit iHf<lb/>
If M.i tll- H<lb/>
tautilus<lb/>
THE<lb/>
FITNESS<lb/>
CLUB<lb/>
for men and women<lb/>
toot ivani wrmmrr<lb/>
ONKKNVIULC. H.C. ITM4<lb/>
Come by or call<lb/>
TODAY and set<lb/>
up an appointment<lb/>
for a free workout<lb/>
Student Rates<lb/>
Features Include:<lb/>
Male &amp; Female Instructors<lb/>
Nautilus MacWnes<lb/>
1 to 1 Supervision on Nautilus Workouts<lb/>
? Olympic Barbells ? Coed Hours ? Dumbells<lb/>
? Showers, And Lockers ? Sauna<lb/>
?Whirlpool<lb/>
AT NAUTILUS FITNESS IS OUR SPECIALITY<lb/>
758-9584<lb/>
Stii<lb/>
Ou<lb/>
Editoi<lb/>
following is<lb/>
?<lb/>
( oil. ?<lb/>
neth M<lb/>
oj nirn <lb/>
SlU(t<lb/>
dm tea ?<lb/>
legt<lb/>
Bi<lb/>
Athlete H<lb/>
thr<lb/>
I re<lb/>
opp<lb/>
be f i i<lb/>
the<lb/>
I98( .<lb/>
i<lb/>
H<lb/>
I -?<lb/>
fre<lb/>
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whom I admi<lb/>
and from w ho<lb/>
A<lb/>
Gn<lb/>
The ????<lb/>
mu-<lb/>
Last<lb/>
club<lb/>
Black Oak<lb/>
Romantics<lb/>
the ?<lb/>
Badae ai<lb/>
spect-<lb/>
fusion<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
pic<lb/>
Lo<lb/>
specializing<lb/>
I is open t( <lb/>
Toi<lb/>
dovv '<lb/>
stuc-<lb/>
rela<lb/>
acac<lb/>
band<lb/>
As G<lb/>
i<lb/>
stuc-<lb/>
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for E (<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057278_0019"/><lb/>
mt EAST CAROLINIAN AUGUST26. 1980 <lb/>
11<lb/>
nt<lb/>
lit<lb/>
Student Speaks<lb/>
Out On Athletics<lb/>
Bditors's Note: The<lb/>
? allowing is the<lb/>
response of Ashland<lb/>
College student Ken<lb/>
h Murphy on behalf<lb/>
nine shland<lb/>
tdents who were tn-<lb/>
ted into the col-<lb/>
lect 5 Robert<lb/>
Brownson Student-<lb/>
Xthlete Honor Society<lb/>
s year.<lb/>
1 relly appreciate this<lb/>
opportunity to stand<lb/>
before you representing<lb/>
the student-athletes of<lb/>
1980 and to reflect on<lb/>
what the last tour years<lb/>
,i Ashland College<lb/>
have meant to me and<lb/>
to express my own per-<lb/>
sonal feeling on what<lb/>
involvement in athletics<lb/>
on the college level has<lb/>
meant.<lb/>
1 h r o u g h o u t a n <lb/>
athlete's career, the<lb/>
question often arises as<lb/>
to whether his or her<lb/>
dedication is worth it.<lb/>
We are all aware that<lb/>
sporting competition<lb/>
provides exercise, tun<lb/>
and an outlet to direct<lb/>
our attention from<lb/>
more serious subjects.<lb/>
However, competi-<lb/>
tion on the varsitv level<lb/>
involves more than<lb/>
pickup games or show-<lb/>
ing up once a week tor<lb/>
a son ball game. The<lb/>
time and work required<lb/>
?o be a member of a<lb/>
varsity team place<lb/>
numerous mental and<lb/>
physical demand on a<lb/>
person. Ana iien that<lb/>
person happens to be a<lb/>
student enrolled in col-<lb/>
lec ' re<lb/>
intensil led.<lb/>
1 think back to when<lb/>
1 was a young child,<lb/>
around eight or 10<lb/>
years old. 1 he question<lb/>
of mv devotion to<lb/>
athletics arose quite<lb/>
frequently. 1 had the<lb/>
opportunit) to spend a<lb/>
great deal ot tune with<lb/>
m g r a nd m other,<lb/>
whom I admire, love,<lb/>
and from whom I have<lb/>
learned many a lesson;<lb/>
but one thing we could<lb/>
never see eye-to-eye on<lb/>
was my involvement<lb/>
and interest in sports.<lb/>
1 ookmg out for my<lb/>
best interests, grand-<lb/>
mother felt the physical<lb/>
demands o sports far<lb/>
outweighed an y<lb/>
benefits that could be<lb/>
derived from simple<lb/>
games. Being very ap-<lb/>
preciative of music, she<lb/>
thought it would be<lb/>
more appropriate for<lb/>
me to be banging on a<lb/>
piano rather than bang-<lb/>
ing into people.<lb/>
So the question<lb/>
arose. Whv sports'? In<lb/>
my case, why football?<lb/>
And, finally, where<lb/>
would it get me? At<lb/>
that time, 1 couldn't<lb/>
answer with more than,<lb/>
"Why? Because it's<lb/>
tun and "Where will<lb/>
it get me? To the pros,<lb/>
o course<lb/>
Y ell, now I'm<lb/>
prepared to address<lb/>
those questions in a<lb/>
somewhat different<lb/>
manner.<lb/>
1 irst, 1 believe the<lb/>
people one meets<lb/>
through involvement in<lb/>
athletics are the best<lb/>
around. Individuals<lb/>
vuch as the people in<lb/>
this very room ? the<lb/>
athletes, the coaches<lb/>
and those who have<lb/>
supported us, our<lb/>
parents and friends. No<lb/>
value can be placed on<lb/>
the camaraderie that<lb/>
exists in the world o<lb/>
sports. That alone had<lb/>
made it well worth mv<lb/>
hile<lb/>
I hen there ate those<lb/>
great intangibles that<lb/>
you have<lb/>
c o a c h e s<lb/>
 t h le t i c s<lb/>
chara c t e t<lb/>
dedication,<lb/>
heard all<lb/>
m e n 11 o n :<lb/>
builds<lb/>
requires<lb/>
discipline<lb/>
and in t e g r 11 v and<lb/>
develops a sense of<lb/>
responsiblity. All this<lb/>
sounds good, and 1 was<lb/>
prepared to tell you<lb/>
that college athletics<lb/>
can do all these things<lb/>
when an article ap-<lb/>
peared in a recent<lb/>
Sports Illustrated that<lb/>
made me begin to<lb/>
think. In fact, it was<lb/>
the cover story and<lb/>
read like this: "The<lb/>
Shame of American<lb/>
Education: The<lb/>
Student-Athlete<lb/>
Hoax<lb/>
The article deals with<lb/>
circumstances such as<lb/>
transcript alterations<lb/>
and other violations<lb/>
that do not exist on the<lb/>
small-college level. But<lb/>
the point is if athletics<lb/>
builds character and<lb/>
does all these wonder-<lb/>
ful things as we have<lb/>
been led to believe,<lb/>
then how can such<lb/>
atrocities occur? And<lb/>
how can they be com-<lb/>
mittted by the very peo-<lb/>
ple who sing the praises<lb/>
of athletics, the<lb/>
coaches?<lb/>
Furthermore, it<lb/>
should upset us to see a<lb/>
statement such as the<lb/>
one by the article's<lb/>
author, John Under-<lb/>
wood:<lb/>
The rash of<lb/>
phony transcripts and<lb/>
academic cheating<lb/>
spells out the fact that<lb/>
athletics are now an<lb/>
abomination to the<lb/>
ideals of higher educa-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
In actuality, athletics<lb/>
should exemplify the<lb/>
ideals of higher educa-<lb/>
tion, as our gathering<lb/>
here today<lb/>
demonstrates.<lb/>
So now I'm faced<lb/>
with this conflict. Can 1<lb/>
tell mv grandmother<lb/>
that sports are<lb/>
beneficial and have<lb/>
been good for me or<lb/>
should 1 tell her that 1<lb/>
should have stuck with<lb/>
the piano way back<lb/>
when I was first advis-<lb/>
ed ?<lb/>
I have finally realized<lb/>
that, in fact, athletics<lb/>
does not b u I d<lb/>
character, nor does it<lb/>
make a person more<lb/>
responsible or disciplin-<lb/>
ed or anything else.<lb/>
Those qualities have to<lb/>
come from within one's<lb/>
self. Athletes can mere-<lb/>
ly help to bring those<lb/>
qualities to the surface.<lb/>
When those qualities<lb/>
do surface, it is the in-<lb/>
dividual's duty to apply<lb/>
them to every facet o<lb/>
his or her life.<lb/>
Although athletic in-<lb/>
volvement never will be<lb/>
considered a prerequi-<lb/>
site for success, the<lb/>
same intangible<lb/>
qualities required for<lb/>
success in sports are<lb/>
also prerequisites for<lb/>
success in almost any<lb/>
other endeavor.<lb/>
The problem is that<lb/>
sometimes the athletes<lb/>
and coaches do not ap<lb/>
ply the same standards<lb/>
they have toward their<lb/>
sport to other areas of<lb/>
their lives and in par-<lb/>
ticular to academics.<lb/>
I he true student-<lb/>
athlete will realize that<lb/>
athletics and academics<lb/>
should complement one<lb/>
another, not work in<lb/>
opposition, and that<lb/>
the ingredients for<lb/>
achievement in both<lb/>
areas are inter-<lb/>
changeable. As a result,<lb/>
the student-athlete can<lb/>
bring honor, not<lb/>
shame, to the institu-<lb/>
tion he or she attends.<lb/>
So, as 1 reflect on the<lb/>
last four years and ask<lb/>
myself, "Was it worth<lb/>
it? the reply is an em-<lb/>
phatic "yes College<lb/>
athletics and Ashland<lb/>
College have given me<lb/>
the opportunity to<lb/>
develop and let these<lb/>
qualities surface. So,<lb/>
v e s, grand m othei ,<lb/>
sports have been good<lb/>
for me, and where has<lb/>
it gotten me? Well, it<lb/>
had put me right here in<lb/>
the midst ot all these<lb/>
quality people, lor<lb/>
this, 1 always will be<lb/>
grateful<lb/>
Attic Enters 1 Oth Year<lb/>
Greenville has the distinction of housing the No. 6 live rock night club in the South:<lb/>
The Attic, located at 103 E. Fourth St. For nine years, quality and diversification in<lb/>
music has been the Attic's goal.<lb/>
Last year the Attic presented 92 different bands to its customers, more than any other<lb/>
club in a three state area. Such nationally famous names as Wet Willie, Griderswitch,<lb/>
Black Oak Arkansas, Amazing Rhythm Aces, Savoy Brown, Sea Level, Stillwater, The<lb/>
Romantics, Dixie Dregs, Nantucket,and Louisiana's Le Roux have all performed upon<lb/>
the Attic's stage in just the past yrar. Regional favorites such as Brice St Super Grit,<lb/>
Nighthawks, Fat Ammons, Tain't, The Eaze, Choice, The Pedestrians, Jesse Boit,<lb/>
Badge, and Suffer s Gold regularly fill the Attic to capacity. In addition to the whole<lb/>
spectrum of live rock music including album rock, country rock, southern, show, blues,<lb/>
fusion, jazz, and New Wave, the Attic also offers a large dance floor and your favorite<lb/>
beverages at easy to swallow prices. Pinball and footsball are also available. The Attic,<lb/>
who introduced footsball to Greenville in 1972, has hosted the N.C. State Footsball Cham<lb/>
pionship for the past two years.<lb/>
Located in the back room of the Attic is the Phoenix Room which presents live music<lb/>
specializing in Blues, Jazz, and Fusion Rock on Tuesday nights. The Phoenix also offers<lb/>
a 7 ff TV Screen showing selected live and recorded musical acts and sports events and<lb/>
is open to Attic customers on most nights of the week.<lb/>
Tom Haines and Stewart Campbell, managers of the Attic, feel that the clubs<lb/>
downtown are important to most of the students at ECU because they fill a void in the<lb/>
students' curriculum. It provides them with an alternative to work and study: a place to<lb/>
relax, unwind, and socialize. "After a big test, a long term paper, or a grueling<lb/>
academic week, nothing beats a cold one, a large crowd, an accomodating date and good<lb/>
band - all readily available at the Attic<lb/>
As Chip Gwynn (Staff Writer) said in a past article in this paper, "The Attic seems to<lb/>
have reached a certain plateau of success. It has remained a favorite nightspot of<lb/>
students for several years and has remained successful because students know the Attic<lb/>
is going to book good entertainment, even if they have never heard of the performing<lb/>
band " Open seven days a week, the Attic's low cover charge (generally $12), student<lb/>
oriented specials and Friday "Afternoon Delights" make it a favorite gathering place<lb/>
for ECU students.<lb/>
SAT. AUG.30th<lb/>
A&amp;M Recording Artist<lb/>
TORONTO<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Epic Recording Artist<lb/>
The Young Invaders<lb/>
THUR. SEPT.4th<lb/>
Ovation Recording Artists<lb/>
R0BBM THOMPSON<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
WED. SEPT. 10th<lb/>
Mercury Recording Artists<lb/>
The No.6<lb/>
South's Rock Club<lb/>
TUES: BRICE S I .<lb/>
WED: SIDEWINDER<lb/>
THURS: SIDEWINDER<lb/>
FRI: YOUNG INVADERS<lb/>
S<lb/>
F<lb/>
Pizza lull<lb/>
WELCOME BACK<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
IZZA<lb/>
BIT<lb/>
ALL THE PIZZA AND<lb/>
SALAD YOU CAST EAT<lb/>
$2.59<lb/>
MonI ri. 11:30-2:00<lb/>
Mon. &amp; Tues.<lb/>
6:00-8:00<lb/>
j $2.79<lb/>
758-8266 Hwy ?64 Bypass Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
?PEPSPPEPSICOI.V AND CATCH THAT PEPSI SPIRITARE REGISTERED TRADEMARKS OF PEPSICO. INC.<lb/>
ICHASE. N.Y.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057278_0020"/><lb/>
20<lb/>
1 hi SI CARPI 1NIAN<lb/>
AUCil SI <lb/>
t<lb/>
Odom Confident<lb/>
Despite Youth<lb/>
Spill Iv I Jlll<lb/>
"I think that rookie<lb/>
stuff is ovcrtdone a lit-<lb/>
tle hit<lb/>
 likeh story. Alter<lb/>
all, uhai would you ex-<lb/>
I eel from a basketball<lb/>
coach who returns only<lb/>
' ur players from last<lb/>
ison's 12-man squad.<lb/>
dd to that thefact that<lb/>
,ie ol the tour<lb/>
returnees are guards<lb/>
i you'd have to have<lb/>
I jith in roolies.<lb/>
1 his is exactly the<lb/>
uatio that last<lb/>
I arolina cage coach<lb/>
Dave Odom tinds<lb/>
rtself in as he looks<lb/>
the 1980-81 season,<lb/>
i ve seniors graduated<lb/>
ve.u and three<lb/>
hers left foi various<lb/>
isons, leaving the<lb/>
I' rates with seven in-<lb/>
ning recruits that<lb/>
v ill be counted upon<lb/>
avily.<lb/>
Returning are centers<lb/>
m Szymanski and<lb/>
Mike (obson along<lb/>
th forwards Dave<lb/>
I nderwood and Mark<lb/>
Mel aurin. Ihe five<lb/>
io graduated were<lb/>
iding scorer George<lb/>
iav nor. I eading re<lb/>
1 'under Herb Cirav.<lb/>
? ps hooter Herb<lb/>
Krusen and two top<lb/>
serves in Kvle Powers<lb/>
d 1 rank Hobson.<lb/>
I our guards were set<lb/>
to return to the Pirates<lb/>
for the upcoming<lb/>
season but none made<lb/>
it back. 1 ast veat <lb/>
starting point man,<lb/>
Tony Byles, left school<lb/>
due to personal pro-<lb/>
blems while Raymond<lb/>
1 vson, Bryant iggins<lb/>
and Quail Roseboro<lb/>
lefl with academic dil<lb/>
ficulties.<lb/>
Ihe i n c o ming<lb/>
back c ours m en ,<lb/>
therefore, are the entire<lb/>
backcourt. Ihey in-<lb/>
clude Herbert Gilchri it,<lb/>
an -Ml State performer<lb/>
from 1 illington; Mike<lb/>
I ox from Raleigh;<lb/>
Mike Bledshoe from<lb/>
Cars ; and Ha. rr<lb/>
Wright from Port<lb/>
smouth, Va.<lb/>
The frontcourt<lb/>
newcomers include<lb/>
center .left Be si from<lb/>
Pikeville: forward Bill<lb/>
McNair from Dunn.<lb/>
(who was quite im<lb/>
pressive in the I ast<lb/>
West All Star Game in<lb/>
July as he scored 15<lb/>
points) and forward<lb/>
Morris Hargrove from<lb/>
Southern Pines<lb/>
"Obv ioush we could<lb/>
well be the youngesl<lb/>
team in the country<lb/>
()dom said realistically.<lb/>
" Ihe bulk of oui roster<lb/>
are new . mexpener.<lb/>
euys<lb/>
Adding to the inex<lb/>
peiience, Odom said, is<lb/>
the tact that returning<lb/>
(.enter lorn Szymanski<lb/>
is "totally untested<lb/>
I hat leaves Gibson,<lb/>
I nder w ood a nd<lb/>
Mc Laurin, a nd as<lb/>
(Kiom sav s, none of<lb/>
them were game-to-<lb/>
game starters a yeai<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
I lungs will be dif-<lb/>
ferent h' those let-<lb/>
ter nun this time<lb/>
around, though, said<lb/>
the second-vear Pirate<lb/>
head man ' 1 hey all<lb/>
m u s t c ont ribul e<lb/>
mote he said. "1 hen<lb/>
contributions are just<lb/>
much more important<lb/>
this yeai <lb/>
I he Pirate<lb/>
backcourt, totally new<lb/>
and untried, could be<lb/>
better than main might<lb/>
suspect. (dom said.<lb/>
" AI e ng out<lb/>
summer<lb/>
he claimed, "I'm very<lb/>
pleased lhev'ie all<lb/>
a nd<lb/>
runn<lb/>
athletic talent. 1 hey<lb/>
also seem to have good<lb/>
quickness and savvy <lb/>
Odom said that he<lb/>
knew not what to ex-<lb/>
pect as far as a record<lb/>
tor the upcoming<lb/>
season, but that he did<lb/>
expect the club to be<lb/>
competitive. "Heck<lb/>
he said, "this may be ,<lb/>
totally rebuilding year.<lb/>
I hope not and I don't<lb/>
think it will be. I wil<lb/>
sav that I don't expeel a<lb/>
step backwards. I think<lb/>
it's reasonable tor us to<lb/>
shoot for a winning<lb/>
season<lb/>
Some might considei<lb/>
that quite a n a c<lb/>
complishmeni con<lb/>
sidering the numerous<lb/>
tough away games the<lb/>
Pirates will face. Trips<lb/>
io Duke. N.C. State,<lb/>
l N c harlotte, ok<lb/>
Dominion and Illinois<lb/>
Slate do! the slate tha<lb/>
gets underway Nov. 29<lb/>
when the Pirates trave<lb/>
io Vthens, Ohio to face<lb/>
Ohio I Iniversity<lb/>
Mon ? Fri 4 AM to 11:30 AM<lb/>
Student Special ? 2 pancakes,<lb/>
2 eggs, meat, coffee? $1.75<lb/>
MONDAY - FRIDAY<lb/>
11 AM to 7 PM<lb/>
Chicken Special<lb/>
with fries &amp; Slaw $1.49<lb/>
Hamburger Plate<lb/>
with lettuce &amp; tomato<lb/>
&amp; fries $1.20<lb/>
lumpei<lb/>
ii<lb/>
Magazine<lb/>
Predicts<lb/>
Grid Mark<lb/>
Girls' Try outs<lb/>
Are Announced<lb/>
Girls interested in<lb/>
:n tryouts tor the<lb/>
so Lady Pirate<lb/>
Hey ball team or serv-<lb/>
a s managers,<lb/>
riould get in contact<lb/>
with head coach Alita<lb/>
Dillon or assistant<lb/>
I ynn Davidson in<lb/>
oom 162 of Minges<lb/>
? oliseum, or b calling<lb/>
 6161 Irvouts will<lb/>
conducted at 5p.m.<lb/>
I uesdav and Wednes-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Curls desiring to<lb/>
trvout tor the I t t<lb/>
w omens basketball<lb/>
team should contact<lb/>
head coach Cathy An<lb/>
drui in IfS Minges<lb/>
Coliseum, or call<lb/>
757-6384. The 1 ady<lb/>
Pirates also have open<lb/>
ings for managers tor<lb/>
the coming season.<lb/>
I lie 1 asl arolina<lb/>
til Pirates have<lb/>
bet - ed io finish<lb/>
ieason<lb/>
i 6-4-1 slate by<lb/>
Streel ami smith's Of-<lb/>
ficial IVNOollege<lb/>
Football Yearbook, a<lb/>
well r e s p e c t ed<lb/>
thai<lb/>
;?? h lied a n nually<lb/>
prioi to the collegiate<lb/>
gridiroi season<lb/>
rhe publicat ion rates<lb/>
ea h majoi college<lb/>
he season ans<lb/>
1 ? two ol the Pu ate's<lb/>
f(cs. Noith arolina<lb/>
and 1 lorida State, pick-<lb/>
ed to finish the year at<lb/>
Ihe Pirates are rated<lb/>
underdogs to the abo t<lb/>
two squads, as well as<lb/>
to Duke and N.<lb/>
State I he Pirates'<lb/>
game with Miami is<lb/>
rated a toss-up<lb/>
Head Coach<lb/>
1 mory s first ECl<lb/>
squad is favored in<lb/>
h ome games with<lb/>
S uthwest 1 ouisiana,<lb/>
Southern Mississipi,<lb/>
Western Carolina.<lb/>
W illiam and 1ar and<lb/>
Eastern Kentucky. Ihe<lb/>
Pirates are also picked<lb/>
to down Richmond on<lb/>
the road.<lb/>
SAM<lb/>
hu<lb/>
STUDENT WEEKLY<lb/>
SAVINGS PLAN<lb/>
CLIPCOUPONS<lb/>
BELOW AND SAVE<lb/>
EVERYWEEK<lb/>
FOR FOUR WEEKS<lb/>
Hot Sam Pretzels<lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
This coupon good fo<lb/>
Buy One Pretze<lb/>
Get One for 5C<lb/>
Offer expires Sept 23, 1980<lb/>
Not combinable with any<lb/>
other offe<lb/>
This coupon good for<lb/>
Buy One PretzelJ I<lb/>
Get One FREEj <lb/>
ffer Expires Sept 9 1980- <lb/>
Not combinable with any? ?<lb/>
other offer I K <lb/>
IHtHMIieDwlhli<lb/>
1<lb/>
This coupon good fo<lb/>
Buy Any SizeB<lb/>
Soft Drink, GetfJ<lb/>
One Pretzel FREE-j<lb/>
er expires Sept 16, 1980?<lb/>
Not combinable with any<lb/>
other offer.H<lb/>
?????????<lb/>
This coupon good tor I<lb/>
One Hot Sam"j<lb/>
Pretzel for 5C?<lb/>
er expires Sept. 30, 1980 ?<lb/>
Not combinable with any<lb/>
other offer. j<lb/>
Blllllllrf<lb/>
AT FIRST STATE BANK YOU'RE<lb/>
MORE THAN "JUST A FACE<lb/>
I fJ f fl tc 1 ?mAl ? Standing in line is part of every student's life. Just like<lb/>
 I J ? ? V W w Lw ? making neu friends, going neu. plac es. getting used to<lb/>
your new. hometown! At First State Bank you're more<lb/>
than just a face in a line. . and ue want you to knou it<lb/>
FIRST STATE BANK HAS A BETTER<lb/>
WAY OF BANKING. . . JUST FOR YOU<lb/>
There are a lot of reasons to c house a bank<lb/>
. . . bank locations. . special services. . . free checking<lb/>
. . . and of course. I irst Stite Bank offers all of this to<lb/>
you.<lb/>
THERE IS A BETTER WAY OF BANKING<lb/>
FIRST STATE CLUB<lb/>
Better than free c hec king!<lb/>
Our club ace mint is a spec ial pac kage of banking services<lb/>
designed just for you. For one low monthly fee you get<lb/>
such services as no minimum balance checking. . . at<lb/>
tractive club checks. . . accidental death insurance. . .<lb/>
special discount coupons (good at local merchants and<lb/>
theatres) and 24 hour BankAround!<lb/>
YOU MAY NEVER HAVE TO STAND IN LINE AGAIN!<lb/>
Now you tan handle your banking 24 hours a day. every<lb/>
day with a First State BankAround card. You can use<lb/>
your card at both BankAround locations in Greenville or<lb/>
at any BankAround interchange location in North or<lb/>
South Carolina. All at no charge to you!<lb/>
PLUS WE HAVE SATURDAY MORNING<lb/>
BANKING AT OUR WINTERVILLE OFFICE<lb/>
No other bank in town offers a better banking bargain or<lb/>
lower costs. The hometown bank wants you to feel right<lb/>
at home. . . friendly servic e. . lower costs. . . better<lb/>
banking.<lb/>
It's worth changing banks for.<lb/>
THE HOMETOWN BANK INVITES YOU TO<lb/>
ITS DOWNTOWN OFFICE ON THE MALL<lb/>
FOR REFRESHMENTS AND AN OPPORTUNI<lb/>
TY TO VISIT YOUR HOMETOWN BANKER<lb/>
No matter which banking plan you choose. . . student<lb/>
checking. . . or our regular club account. . . you won't<lb/>
find a better way of banking!<lb/>
First State Bank<lb/>
"THE HOMETOWN BANK 756-2427<lb/>
Downtown branch. Corner of<lb/>
3rd and Evans. 3 blocks from<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Northwest branch: Memorial<lb/>
Drive, across from hospital<lb/>
complex.<lb/>
Greenville branch: Memorial<lb/>
Drive, beside Parkers<lb/>
Barbecue.<lb/>
vVinferville office: Main St.<lb/>
Winterville.<lb/>
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To serve you<lb/>
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OUR<lb/>
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Ham99<lb/>
Sausage99<lb/>
Steak1.59<lb/>
Chicken1.59<lb/>
Cheddar Cheese79<lb/>
Fried Egg79<lb/>
Plain30<lb/>
Buttered40<lb/>
Ham Cheese1.39<lb/>
Sausage Cheese1.39<lb/>
Steak Cheese1.89<lb/>
Chicken Cheese1.89<lb/>
Ham Egg1.39<lb/>
Sausage Egg1.39<lb/>
CHICKEN<lb/>
2 Pc. Dinner.<lb/>
3 Pc. Dinner.<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
One Piece Special99<lb/>
Two Piece Dark 1.59<lb/>
Two Piece White 1 89<lb/>
Three Wings1.59<lb/>
Chicken N Gravy Biscuit 149<lb/>
Steak Biscut Fries 1.95<lb/>
Two Cheddar Cheese Bisc. 1.29<lb/>
RIBS<lb/>
One Rib Snack<lb/>
Two Rib Dinner<lb/>
Three Rib Dinner.<lb/>
FEATURING<lb/>
the all New<lb/>
BISCUIT BURGER<lb/>
BEVERAGES<lb/>
Mt.Dew,Coke,<lb/>
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Lemonade,Tab,<lb/>
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A Quarter Pound of<lb/>
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Cheeseburger 1.49<lb/>
BUCKETS<lb/>
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Small(6)3.79<lb/>
Large(8) 4.79<lb/>
Super(12)5 99<lb/>
Party(l6)7 99<lb/>
Picnic(20)9 59<lb/>
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to<lb/>
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I<lb/>
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BACK-TO-SCHOOL<lb/>
VALUES<lb/>
Texas Instruments<lb/>
electronic slide-rule calculator<lb/>
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economical, pocket-portable<lb/>
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row eri  slide rule, sta-<lb/>
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Four function memory.<lb/>
Optional rechargeable<lb/>
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Mating ?? easy-tii-<lb/>
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$30.88 $17.95 nows36.97<lb/>
TRAVEL ALARM CLOCKS<lb/>
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The 3 in 1 Hairsetter that gives a deep<lb/>
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Sug. Retail $9.95<lb/>
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s5.95<lb/>
"<lb/>
,?<lb/>
OokhdOumou<lb/>
Polaroid s OneStep<lb/>
The world's simplest camera<lb/>
Polaroid's OneStep<lb/>
? The a rkj's simr. est camera.<lb/>
? Press oniy one button.<lb/>
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? America's best selling camera1<lb/>
Sug. Retail $39.95<lb/>
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s27.77<lb/>
NORELCO<lb/>
Gotctia Gun 1000<lb/>
lOOO<lb/>
WAITS of<lb/>
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No. HB-1717<lb/>
Sug. Retail $14.95<lb/>
ore<lb/>
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8.99<lb/>
Prices Good Through Aug.30,1980<lb/>
Versatile Mini<lb/>
ACDC Cassette<lb/>
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with Digital<lb/>
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reset button One button re<lb/>
cord system Electrical Pa ?<lb/>
troi Sensitive built-in on li<lb/>
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Sug. Retail $69.95<lb/>
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48.95<lb/>
DIGITAL<lb/>
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r.<lb/>
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Digital Clock readout with large lighted numerals<lb/>
?Wake-to-Music or Wake-to-Alarm -Forward and re<lb/>
verse time set control -Adjustable volume tone alarm<lb/>
?Attractive styling to blend with any decor ?Walnut<lb/>
gram finish on polystyrene "Compact fits almost<lb/>
anywhere<lb/>
Sug. Retail $31.95<lb/>
NOW<lb/>
s22.88<lb/>
brother<lb/>
CORRECT-O-RITERI MODEL 4712<lb/>
Reg. Sale Price $173.95<lb/>
NOW<lb/>
M64.95<lb/>
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2 to 6 cup<lb/>
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milk, water, tea. and roffM<lb/>
FAST Five heat settings<lb/>
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Sug. Retail $49.95<lb/>
$9.95<lb/>
BE T0AST-R-0VEK<lb/>
TOASTER<lb/>
(T83B)<lb/>
? A 2-slice<lb/>
toaster, top<lb/>
browner, oven.<lb/>
See-thru door<lb/>
pops open<lb/>
automatically<lb/>
to serve toast.<lb/>
NO.T93B<lb/>
Sug. Retail $47.98<lb/>
$31.97<lb/>
SMITH-CORONA<lb/>
CORONET SUPER 12<lb/>
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homework gets the electric<lb/>
look with The Super 1 2<lb/>
ot a super value price.<lb/>
? full sized keyboard with<lb/>
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? use professional looking<lb/>
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? get this double walled case, too<lb/>
PArtNrfD<lb/>
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Escort"<lb/>
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1<lb/>
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?<lb/>
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1800 Series Only<lb/>
Samsonite<lb/>
CHOI<lb/>
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Our Already Low Price<lb/>
On All Samsonite Luggage<lb/>
Attache' Cases Not Included!<lb/>
NO RAIN CHECKS OR SPECIAL ORDERS QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED!<lb/>
2818 ?. 10th St.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
752-1600<lb/>
102 Main St.<lb/>
Belhaven, N.C.<lb/>
943-2121<lb/>
DAWSON COMPANY<lb/>
Catalog Showroom<lb/>
Your Back To School Store And A Whole Lot More<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057278_0023"/><lb/>
24<lb/>
HI hASr k? '1 IM W<lb/>
l lil'Nl<lb/>
Lady Pirates Face Killer Slate<lb/>
H JIMMN IU I'Kll<lb/>
-?- ,<lb/>
 f t e i i u s t two<lb/>
seasons ai the helm ol<lb/>
the I ad Pirate basket<lb/>
ball squad,ath -n<lb/>
m I face<lb/>
the tot<lb/>
an<lb/>
lime cope ith oi e ol<lb/>
the toughest scheduler<lb/>
the nation<lb/>
1 he 1979 ?<lb/>
marked the<lb/>
a new all time<lb/>
SCO<lb/>
t:C L ; R<lb/>
1 mpson. Bui<lb/>
M ints Creel<lb/>
ow I in<lb/>
hi <lb/>
Iowa - oi onets ol<lb/>
Women' Pi<lb/>
<lb/>
-<lb/>
 on I 11<lb/>
u<lb/>
K<lb/>
Sht doe<lb/>
kath K .<lb/>
?<lb/>
in nu followed<lb/>
1 hompson in the final<lb/>
N l st its b a<lb/>
le p Rile<lb/>
urns with a pro<lb/>
Olympu in out<lb/>
belt.<lb/>
I (. I the<lb/>
season No 23 in<lb/>
1 Coliseum<lb/>
nia rech<lb/>
? cd b .i<lb/>
I'hanl trip to<lb/>
-<lb/>
Pi ites' next<lb/>
be the<lb/>
easi<lb/>
y I a n w ith two<lb/>
impion<lb/>
1 ad M olM ld<lb/>
?<lb/>
Bucs will<lb/>
the<lb/>
i C lassii<lb/>
I ! ??<lb/>
Dec.<lb/>
 C o 11 <lb/>
nameni ec.<lb/>
1 c I stai is the new<lb/>
I ' llorii .<lb/>
S md I loi uia<lb/>
State 1 he Pirates will<lb/>
have five days to<lb/>
prepare foi theii an<lb/>
nual showdown with<lb/>
tru I M 1 at Heels at<lb/>
c a ' in i c li a e 1<lb/>
uditortum<lb/>
 ithin a pei iod ol<lb/>
two weeks, las!<lb/>
(. ai olina will host N.C<lb/>
State, Southernal,<lb/>
ppalachian State and<lb/>
I N( Chapel H II.<lb/>
along with a road trip<lb/>
to powei! ul I as! 1 en<lb/>
lies see and p<lb/>
palachian stale.<lb/>
P ites Jose out<lb/>
the season against N (<lb/>
State in Raleigh and the<lb/>
finale I ebi uar 2 at<lb/>
h om e wit h W a k e<lb/>
i o r <lb/>
' ui home schedule<lb/>
is evscllan says n<lb/>
,i. ?? This has he i<lb/>
a ital part ol the plans<lb/>
i came here. It's<lb/>
i fan could want;<lb/>
11' - certain! the<lb/>
toughest we've evei<lb/>
had<lb/>
"It's important foi<lb/>
national recognition<lb/>
that you have a tough<lb/>
schedule<lb/>
1I will siill have lo<lb/>
relv on speed and hustle<lb/>
to ov ei come the lac k ol<lb/>
height, but iniiu.vi<lb/>
added forwards Sam<lb/>
lone- and I isa 1 ennell<lb/>
along wnil guardaien<lb/>
11 uske to the i ostei<lb/>
I ones, a 5-9<lb/>
southpaw i ransfei from<lb/>
I ouisburg, comes w nh<lb/>
impressive credentials<lb/>
hoih m college and al<lb/>
S iuthei n W av ne 1 lij<lb/>
School.<lb/>
1 en nell<lb/>
characi I b<lb/>
new coach as having<lb/>
Ljtikk hands and "an<lb/>
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nisi goes in the hoop<lb/>
1 he Goldsboro II;<lb/>
produt l ' ecentlv led her<lb/>
I ast squad in scoi ing in<lb/>
the annual 1 as! ,<lb/>
Ml Si ii game.<lb/>
Sen oi guards I ydia<lb/>
k ?unt i ee and 1 aui ie<lb/>
Sikes and centei Marcia<lb/>
(. iirv en retui n from the<lb/>
starting lineup ol the<lb/>
1979 80 unit w Inch<lb/>
posted a 2 I 10 mark foi<lb/>
iheii final campaign in<lb/>
the purple and gold<lb/>
Senioi 1 leidi ()wen and<lb/>
sop h om oi e Mary<lb/>
Denklei return a- the<lb/>
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IVXll-HI I sl KOI ISA<lb/>
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lit H; 28 at Queen i ol-<lb/>
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Dec 3 OLD DOM I<lb/>
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- ;u .i ? .ii ol ina<lb/>
slmas I oui ne. 2 24 ?<lb/>
ai Q leei i allege 1 ourney .<lb/>
 at ! lorida; 6 al<lb/>
Su ? K .ii iorida Mate;<lb/>
at North arolina; 1"<lb/>
WI1.LI M v M K1 . 1<lb/>
DUKE; 21 WES1<lb/>
MRCilNIA; 24 at lames<lb/>
Madison; 25 al irginia;<lb/>
N STATE ; 30<lb/>
si 11 I HI RN M link<lb/>
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at p<lb/>
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l w ion; 18 al<lb/>
 t State; 2' w KI<lb/>
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Marcia Girven Squares To Shoo!<lb/>
Tickets9<lb/>
Sale Dales<lb/>
Announced<lb/>
rickets foi la<lb/>
Carol ina' " '<lb/>
opener with I)uke .<lb/>
now on sale in I lie I I<lb/>
ticket office in 1<lb/>
C oliseum and those<lb/>
latet Pirate garni<lb/>
rivals Not th Cai<lb/>
and Stai<lb/>
on sale soon<lb/>
Student ti 1<lb/>
Dul<lb/>
5 ' apiece<lb/>
mav purcl i<lb/>
ticket : 11<lb/>
this game<lb/>
1 ii. ?<lb/>
and Carolina ? i<lb/>
w ill I<lb/>
student<lb/>
a in I<lb/>
tickets will be<lb/>
each while<lb/>
may put cha<lb/>
for !4<lb/>
foi ' '<lb/>
game<lb/>
Person<lb/>
furthei in I or i<lb/>
concerning I<lb/>
sale b<lb/>
I ickel Manag t Hi<lb/>
1 dwards al 75<lb/>
1 vans st. billboard reflects feelings of man) Pirate tans<lb/>
w<lb/>
MAKE<lb/>
YOUR MARKS<lb/>
WITH MUSIC<lb/>
We havebuyer who has put in an order for 2,500 class rings.<lb/>
We desperately need to fill that order as soon as possible, so for<lb/>
the coming week Coin and Ring Man will be offering a SPECIAL<lb/>
PREMIUM on all class rings . . from High Schools, Colleges.<lb/>
Armed Services, Fraternities. Sororities, Technical Institutes,<lb/>
Organizations  all class rings will be bringing an EXTRA HICH<lb/>
PRICE all week. Take advantagp of this offer.<lb/>
Ir<lb/>
If.<lb/>
? Record Bar has<lb/>
 a few suggestions to make<lb/>
the next year at E.C.U. happier.<lb/>
1) Avoid last minute cramming as this could make you<lb/>
cranky irrrtable, and no tun<lb/>
2) Donl put all your farm in disasters like earthquakes<lb/>
ro get you ocr of exams<lb/>
3) Dorl dnnk anything stronger than beer<lb/>
before lunch.<lb/>
4) And whatever you do. do rf to music<lb/>
You II probably ignore the first three, but at the<lb/>
Record Bar. the fourth suggestion is easy<lb/>
Record Bar has a wide selection of rock.<lb/>
an. soul, dance music and more<lb/>
Record Bar has a complete line of<lb/>
blank tapes to get your lectures<lb/>
painlessly, and crate krts that will<lb/>
tit any dorm decor<lb/>
So, mark these words<lb/>
with Record Bar!<lb/>
ALSO BUYING GOLD &amp; STERLING FRATERNITY AND<lb/>
SORORITY PINS, RINGS. ETC AND ANY GOLD OR<lb/>
STERLING NECKLACES, BRACELETS, RINGS.<lb/>
fr<lb/>
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K?rS?l?tCo AHBIflhlt R???r??d<lb/>
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Record Bar<lb/>
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OF COURSE, WE<lb/>
ALSO PAY CASH<lb/>
FOR STERLING,<lb/>
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AND ANY OTHER<lb/>
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10K, UK, 18K.<lb/>
OF V SALES coMC.<lb/>
401 S. EVANS ST. SUSSi<lb/>
(HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH) PHONE 75<lb/>
i j ? <lb/>
k<lb/>
OPEN 9:30-5:30 MONSAT.<lb/>
PHONE 752-3866<lb/>
MiM'tr Minim<lb/>
<pb facs="00057278_0024"/><lb/>
Features<lb/>
Al Cl SI 26. IMO 25<lb/>
l'Hl t si (. KOI INIAN<lb/>
Ex-Chancellor<lb/>
In Retrospect<lb/>
Leo Jenkins Led Us<lb/>
From ECC to ECU<lb/>
B STEVE BACHNER<lb/>
KOBERI M.SW MM<lb/>
ssl In Iht (.<lb/>
tl M.tMdm t<lb/>
For 1 eo Jenkins, the dream of a<lb/>
better education for North<lb/>
Carolina's young people has never<lb/>
dimmed. Hi vision o a great<lb/>
university rising from the status ot a<lb/>
teacher's college has been, at last,<lb/>
realized. His dream for a better way<lb/>
of life tor his students and the peo-<lb/>
ple of North Carolina lives on. and<lb/>
the dream shall never die.<lb/>
I eo Jenkins was inaugurated as<lb/>
chancellor on Ma 13, I960. Under<lb/>
his leadership. 1 ast Carolina would<lb/>
grow from a small school of 4,(XH<lb/>
students to a full multi-faceted<lb/>
university with 12,000 enrolled on<lb/>
campus and thousands more enroll-<lb/>
Duld<lb/>
ed al off campus centers. !i wc<lb/>
also become a center for training<lb/>
medical professionals including doc-<lb/>
tors and nurses. nd its Schools of<lb/>
Art, Business, Music, Drama and<lb/>
Athletics would achieve state and<lb/>
national acclaim.<lb/>
Ml added up, East Carolina<lb/>
would become a focal point of pro-<lb/>
gress in this state Knd 1 eo Jenkins<lb/>
would -tcp. not only into the annals<lb/>
o education, but also into the<lb/>
history of leadership in North<lb/>
c arolina.<lb/>
Some people ma) have doubted<lb/>
Jenkins' genius in accepting a<lb/>
dean's with a backwater<lb/>
teachers college, but that never stop-<lb/>
ped 1 eo Jenkins. The first thing he<lb/>
did when he hit town was to jump<lb/>
feel first into state politics.<lb/>
i,I went i campaigned for<lb/>
Kerr Scott's road bond issue he<lb/>
said, "even though 1 was just a<lb/>
greenhorn. People campaigning<lb/>
against the bonds - their number<lb/>
included a good-sized hunk of the<lb/>
same power structure Jenkins was to<lb/>
challenge later when he went after a<lb/>
medical school for his university<lb/>
and its region ? charged, among<lb/>
other things, the expense would be<lb/>
too greal "They said he would<lb/>
bankrupt North C arolina Jenkins<lb/>
said, "but we didn't bankrupt<lb/>
North Carolina, and those roads<lb/>
paved with the money from that<lb/>
bond issue are still carrving people<lb/>
from the farms into town all across<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina<lb/>
When Jenkins jumped into the<lb/>
medical school battle years later, go-<lb/>
ing around the higher education<lb/>
superstructure to the General<lb/>
Assembly, his opponents were rais-<lb/>
ing the same cry: the cost would be<lb/>
too great, the state could not afford<lb/>
the millions of dollars such a project<lb/>
would cost. "There's always been a<lb/>
gang of dark clouds that didn't want<lb/>
things to happen he said.<lb/>
In the fight for the road bonds,<lb/>
Jenkins was convinced the cause<lb/>
was right, just as convinced as he<lb/>
was o the need for a medical school<lb/>
in the expanse of tobacco and corn<lb/>
fields that surrounds his university.<lb/>
"We could prove everything we said<lb/>
about the medical school Jenkins<lb/>
said. "Everything 1 said, 1 could<lb/>
back up with the facts. We kept<lb/>
pumping the truth at people. We<lb/>
told our people not to go out unless<lb/>
they could prove what they would<lb/>
say.<lb/>
His case, on the face o' it. was<lb/>
simple. Just as in 1948 there were<lb/>
not enough paved roads to get the<lb/>
farmers into town, there were not.<lb/>
in 18. enough doctors to serve the<lb/>
needs of the poeple in the rural parts<lb/>
of the state, and Greenville was the<lb/>
only place in that sprawling I ast<lb/>
that made logical place for a<lb/>
medical school specializing in family<lb/>
practice training. There was a<lb/>
school of nursing at ECl 1 here<lb/>
was a health sciences building as a<lb/>
support for his medical school.<lb/>
But as plain as the need was to<lb/>
Leo Jenkins, it was not plain to<lb/>
others. The fight lasted a halt dozen<lb/>
years or so in the halls of the<lb/>
I egislative Building in Raleigh. The<lb/>
university power structure was un-<lb/>
convinced until Jenkins convinced<lb/>
the legislature and the legislature-<lb/>
ordered the school built. In the<lb/>
course of convincing the legislature<lb/>
he was right, Leo Jenkins became<lb/>
more than a chancellor for a small<lb/>
university. He became a folk hero<lb/>
for the people of the East<lb/>
At last, in 1975. after heated<lb/>
debate in newspaper editorials and<lb/>
in legislative committee rooms, the<lb/>
General Assembly appropriaated<lb/>
the funds to develop a four-year<lb/>
School of Medicine at East Carolina<lb/>
University. For Leo Jenkins, it had<lb/>
been a 15 year fight against<lb/>
sometimes heavy opposition. But in<lb/>
Leo W. Jenkins, Chancellor Fmerilus, in his office shortly before his retirement in June, 1978<lb/>
those 15 years. Jenkins had con-<lb/>
structed a solid foundation that<lb/>
would have hardly been complete<lb/>
without the approval for the<lb/>
medical school complex.<lb/>
In 196 Jenkins faced a decision<lb/>
that had concerned him for many<lb/>
months; the 1976 gubernatorial<lb/>
campaign.<lb/>
His friends told him. "Your place<lb/>
is right here where you are<lb/>
"You have a greal record. You<lb/>
have spoken for education and for<lb/>
practical education for all citizens<lb/>
from the mountains to the sea. The<lb/>
people trust you and will follow<lb/>
you. Lead them in the direction of<lb/>
better education and greater oppor-<lb/>
tunity he was told.<lb/>
?you can do mure at LCL than<lb/>
you could ewer do in Raleigh<lb/>
Jenkins listened to their advice<lb/>
and announced that he would re-<lb/>
man at ECl until his retirement on<lb/>
June 30. 1978.<lb/>
"My philosophy as Chancellor of<lb/>
Last Carolina University is to main-<lb/>
tain a 'two-way street' of com-<lb/>
munication with the community, the<lb/>
region and the state. By doing this,<lb/>
by communicating with people.<lb/>
listening to their likes and dislikes<lb/>
and by offering programs that are<lb/>
needed, Last Carolina University<lb/>
will be fulfilling its motto 'To<lb/>
Serve To that. 1 am forever<lb/>
dedicated he said.<lb/>
'Daddy Leo'<lb/>
Jenkins: The Family Man<lb/>
By HUGH P. STANLEY<lb/>
Rrpnnird h p?rmi?Mn lar Mrrl Migiiinr<lb/>
Immediately after commencement in May of 1978,<lb/>
I eo Jenkins stepped down as Chancellor of East<lb/>
Carolina I niversity. Hi thirty-one years here, first as<lb/>
dean and vice-president, then as president and later as<lb/>
chancellor, were marked with major accomplishments<lb/>
foi both the university and the people of eastern North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Needless to say. Leo Jenkins was a controversial<lb/>
leader. To those ot us here in the east he has been a<lb/>
gift-gier who has bequeathed to us a new sense of pride<lb/>
and identity. On the other hand, to some other people in<lb/>
this state he has been an overbearing and uncompromis-<lb/>
ing arch-rival.<lb/>
Both o' these images, however, related only to Leo<lb/>
Jenkins the public figure. They depicted him as a hard-<lb/>
nosed politician, a forceful leader, a tough-minded<lb/>
educator. What these images did not depict was Leo<lb/>
Jenkins the man.<lb/>
A rather difffereni image is that held by the six<lb/>
Jenkins children. The six are adults now and have made<lb/>
accomplishments of their own.<lb/>
Jimmy Jenkins is chief of staff in anesthesiology at a<lb/>
St. Louis hospital. The second son, Jeff, is co-owner of<lb/>
Buckman's Clothing Store in Washington, NC.<lb/>
Suzanne lives in Charlottesville, Va. where her huband<lb/>
is a lawver. Patty teaches driver education at Cary High<lb/>
School in Raleigh. Third daughter Sallie recently<lb/>
completed master's in special education at ECL. Jack,<lb/>
voungest of the Jenkins children, is an ECU graduate<lb/>
and second-year law student. What the children have to<lb/>
say about their father affords a glimpse of the man<lb/>
behind the images.<lb/>
One might imagine that when the Jenkins family<lb/>
moved into the president's home, a new life-style wouid<lb/>
be forced on the children. It would be most important<lb/>
that they do nothing to make their father appear less<lb/>
than dignified.<lb/>
And so it was that as Leo and Lillian made plans for<lb/>
See EX Page 26, Col. 1<lb/>
ECU Professor<lb/>
Once Designed<lb/>
For Hollywood<lb/>
Wall Disney visits Ed Reep's studio at the Chouinard Art Institute<lb/>
(nm the California Institute of the Arts) about 1960. Disney was<lb/>
Chairman of the Board of Direetors at Chouinard during that time.<lb/>
Reep remembers him as a very kind man and says, "I was very fond of<lb/>
Disney For a picture of ECU's Artist-ln-Residence Edward Reep as<lb/>
he is today, See Page 30.<lb/>
Bv DIANE HENDERSON<lb/>
Si?ft Wmrr<lb/>
An art professor at East Carolina<lb/>
for the last 10 years, Edward Reep<lb/>
has a past filled with unusual events<lb/>
ranging from the vision of<lb/>
Mussolini, dead, hanging by his<lb/>
heels, to an introduction with a<lb/>
Pope. He brings to his art and his<lb/>
teaching a world of vibrant and<lb/>
tragic experience.<lb/>
From junior high school through<lb/>
five years at the Art Center College<lb/>
in California, Reep was steeped in<lb/>
technical training. An unflinching<lb/>
drive to learn the art kept him going<lb/>
even during the Depression.<lb/>
"Some of the students today<lb/>
complain of poor facilities Reep<lb/>
remarked with a chuckle. "I used to<lb/>
ride across town (to art school) in a<lb/>
street car for an hour and a half,<lb/>
then transfer and do the same again<lb/>
at night. Then I'd stay up most of<lb/>
the night working on the kitchen<lb/>
floor.<lb/>
"After my first year, 1 won a<lb/>
scholarship, which meant if I clean-<lb/>
ed up nine Johns three times a day, I<lb/>
had my tuition ? $300. That was<lb/>
more than my whole family had at<lb/>
that time.<lb/>
"So I cleaned Johns for the next<lb/>
four vears, and I went to art school<lb/>
for five years night and day ? and<lb/>
Saturdays<lb/>
But with all this technical train-<lb/>
ing, Reep felt lacking as an artist<lb/>
without the understanding of the<lb/>
deeper implications o painting<lb/>
which could come only with ex-<lb/>
perience. He began to achieve this<lb/>
understanding after he joined the<lb/>
Armv.<lb/>
"I always felt that I could not<lb/>
draw  1 knew in my heart that 1<lb/>
wasn't composing and drawing as<lb/>
well as 1 ought to. 1 did learn to<lb/>
manipulate media and became a<lb/>
rather good technician. And then<lb/>
the War came along<lb/>
A few months before Pearl Har-<lb/>
bor, Reep volunteered for a year's<lb/>
service, which turned out to be five<lb/>
years. But his dedication to painting<lb/>
did not cease.<lb/>
"We'd get up at 5 in the morning<lb/>
and fall out, and we'd be through<lb/>
with our hiking in boot camp after<lb/>
about 2 in the afternoon. In the long<lb/>
summer days in July and August, 1<lb/>
would take a shower and then put<lb/>
my art materials on my back and go<lb/>
up in the hins to paint<lb/>
The work the young artist did<lb/>
during those months brought him<lb/>
national attention. Besides winning<lb/>
first place in one Life magazine con-<lb/>
test, Reep won fourth place in Life's<lb/>
All-Service competition.<lb/>
See REEP Page 30, Col. 4<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057278_0025"/><lb/>
26<lb/>
TH1: FAST C AROI INI AN<lb/>
AUGUST 26. 1980<lb/>
Ex-Chancellor Jenkins: Family M<lb/>
( on tinned From Page 25<lb/>
their first big reception, the children were especially cau-<lb/>
tioned to be perfect ladies and gentlemen. It was to be a<lb/>
strictly formal affair, and it was very important to Leo<lb/>
that everything go perfectly.<lb/>
Initially everything did seem to go very well. But sud-<lb/>
denly, some disruption occurred in the dining room.<lb/>
1 eo checked to see what was happening. He discovered<lb/>
three-year-old Jack, hiding beneath the tablecloth with<lb/>
a water gun in his hand and an impish smile on his face.<lb/>
1 he boy was having the time of his young life squirting<lb/>
the guests as they passed the hors d'oeuvres tables.<lb/>
Gradually the general shock subsided and smiles<lb/>
began to creep across the faces of the guests, but<lb/>
everyone watched for a reaction from the newly-<lb/>
appointed president. He caught the amusement in their<lb/>
eyes and smiled himself.<lb/>
1 he ice was broken, the time was set. Leo and Lillian<lb/>
decided then that never again would there be such a<lb/>
strictly formal affair in their home. From that moment,<lb/>
the house was to be a place where the family could live a<lb/>
full life and where close friends could visit and feel com-<lb/>
fortable. As I illian says, "It was a good way to be in-<lb/>
augurated into this house<lb/>
1 hough most people know Leo Jenkins as a "doer<lb/>
ver few people know him as a "do-it-yourselfer Jim-<lb/>
my recalls that, "When we lived in Brookgreen (a<lb/>
Greem ille subdivision), Dad taught himself to be a fair-<lb/>
Is good carpenter. His first project was to finish off an<lb/>
upstairs bedroom. Evidently he was pleased with his<lb/>
work because a short time later he added an extra<lb/>
bedroom<lb/>
 BOTWIN ' (AT<lb/>
DOC QUIXOTE<lb/>
The do-it-yourself bug evidently stayed with Leo, for<lb/>
another project soon materialized: a backyard swimm-<lb/>
ing pool, Jimmy relates.<lb/>
"All in all it was a three-or-four-year project and was<lb/>
built in stages. The first year it was round, but Daddy<lb/>
was not content with it and changed it to an oblong the<lb/>
second year. Still not content, he deepened it by two feet<lb/>
the third year. The next year he built a deck around it<lb/>
and left it pretty much alone after that<lb/>
Swimming pool? Jeff does not quite go along with<lb/>
that term. "Actually, it was more like a big cement<lb/>
pond built up off the ground. There was nothing pretty<lb/>
about it at all. Like everything else Daddy does, he put it<lb/>
up in a hurry. But it had a filter and a pump and was<lb/>
very functional. Really though, it didn't matter what it<lb/>
looked like as long as it held water. To us, it was the<lb/>
greatest thing in the world and we loved him for<lb/>
building it<lb/>
In the making of that pool seems to lie a key to Leo<lb/>
Jenkins' personality. Everything he was to undertake,<lb/>
he would undertake with an intense impatience to com-<lb/>
plete the job as quickly as possible. Hand in hand with<lb/>
the impatience would go the everpresent discontent to<lb/>
create, to expand and to make better. It would be this<lb/>
commitment to continued development that would<lb/>
characterize his entire career.<lb/>
Not one of the Jenkins children remembers ever being<lb/>
spanked. It was not that they may not have needed it ?<lb/>
Leo had his own brand of justice.<lb/>
"He handles himself like Andy Griffith on the old<lb/>
television show notes Jack. "When I was playing Lit-<lb/>
tle League baseball, I'd go out to the park and act like a<lb/>
big shot. One day I took a watergun, and was squirting<lb/>
the smaller kids and even the umpire. They kicked me<lb/>
out of the park for a week. Though I knew it was fair<lb/>
punishment, I was upset ? mainly worried about what<lb/>
my parents would say. But Daddy just sat down and<lb/>
talked to me. 'I know you're upset he said, 'and I can<lb/>
tell I don't need to scold you That impressed me. Since<lb/>
then, I've never tried to act like a bully or tough guy<lb/>
again.<lb/>
Patty remembers a slightly different case When she<lb/>
was sixteen, she went to a beach party with forty other<lb/>
girls her age. As will happen, some of them decided to<lb/>
experiment with beer. Patty and six others, unable to<lb/>
handle "strong drink were caught after they became<lb/>
sick. Their chaperones notified the parents and the<lb/>
seven girls were sent home.<lb/>
"Daddv and Momma were away at the time Patty<lb/>
remembers. "So Daddy called Doris Lamm, his<lb/>
secretary, and told her to keep me at home until they<lb/>
could return. That woman nearly worked me to death. I<lb/>
think 1 cleaned everything in the house, he simply said,<lb/>
'Patty, there's a beer in the refrigerator for you. I want<lb/>
you to drink it. If you're going to drink away from<lb/>
home, you may as well drink while you're here Just the<lb/>
thought of drinking another beer made me sick.<lb/>
'Please I pleaded, ' please don't make me drink that<lb/>
beer Daddy didn't respond. The longer 1 thought<lb/>
about it. the sicker 1 got. Soon I was begging. Finally<lb/>
Daddy backed off, and 1 was so relieved 1 don't think 1<lb/>
ever drank another beer until I had graduated from col-<lb/>
lege. I'm not sure a spanking wouldn't have been easier<lb/>
to take than just the thought of a can of beer<lb/>
Leo Jenkins' children have known the criticism of<lb/>
their father and his opponents' efforts to "put him in<lb/>
his place They have known him in his happy moments<lb/>
and in times when he was downright chagrined. They<lb/>
have heard him labeled as egotistical, power mad and<lb/>
even crazy.<lb/>
Sallie feels that "egotistical" is the adjective most<lb/>
commonly used to decribe her father. "It comes on as<lb/>
arrogance to those who don't know him she admits.<lb/>
"1 agree that he is egotistical, but his egotism is very<lb/>
positive. It's not that he's the greatest and can do<lb/>
anything he wants. It's just that he has confidence and<lb/>
self-assurance. You have to admit that his record is hard<lb/>
to beat<lb/>
Jeff recalls that he was a student at Chapel Hill dur-<lb/>
ing the fight to change ECC to ECU in the sixties.<lb/>
"Every day the newspapers woudl carry cartoons and<lb/>
very negative articles about this character who was try-<lb/>
ing to get university status for that little school in the<lb/>
east. I would put them in our hallway. He always acted<lb/>
like he got a kick out of them<lb/>
Sallie recalls the controversy over visitation rights at<lb/>
ECU dorms several years ago. "Even though the Board<lb/>
of Trustees had denied them, the students blamed Dad-<lb/>
dy. They marched all over the campus and even<lb/>
gathered in our yard to protest. The criticism itself<lb/>
didn't bother Daddy. His position on such matters is 'If<lb/>
This series of photographs and cartoons depict Leo<lb/>
Jenkins' career as Chancellor of East Carolina<lb/>
University. Clockwise, from upper right: Jenkins ad-<lb/>
dressing an audience in Mendenhall Student Center,<lb/>
1976; Leo Jenkins speaking with then-Governor<lb/>
James Holsouser in Raleigh, 1974; ECU'f chancellor<lb/>
shaking hands with President Richard Nixon at a<lb/>
White House Reception, 1973; a selection of editorial<lb/>
cartoons from various North Carolina newspapers il-<lb/>
lustrating the opposition of much of the western part<lb/>
of the state against Jenkins' fight for universisty<lb/>
status from East Carolina College and his later drive<lb/>
for a medical school at East Carolina University; Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins and his wife Lillian at the 1976 ECU com-<lb/>
mencement exercises.<lb/>
you get to take the credit, shouldn't you also take the<lb/>
abuse?" What did bother him was that the demonstra-<lb/>
tions scared my mother. She didn't like people mar-<lb/>
ching, chanting and throwing things in opuf yard. Dad-<lb/>
dy didn't take it personally, but it upset him that his<lb/>
family would be subject to such abuse<lb/>
Still another side is Leo the storyteller, the tease and<lb/>
the drv wit.<lb/>
would do. Bui Jack tells him, 'No, I don't want youi<lb/>
help I can do things on m own I hen Daddy feels thai<lb/>
he is not needed and thai really hurts him. His attitude is<lb/>
" hat have I worked so hard tor it I can'l help my own<lb/>
sons?' rhough each one respects the other's position,<lb/>
neither is willing to bend an inch, and therefore the)<lb/>
into some pretty hoi debates I he really funny thini<lb/>
ipleteiy admires the other s ability<lb/>
that each o! them com.<lb/>
i ?? m rrv ? noint oi argument to its tines! degree<lb/>
"He's entertaining-almost a comedian, says Jeff to carry a point ?gunic children is thai<lb/>
He loves to tell stories about his days as a Marine I he .rony ol eo i desire tohelp.hi cl<lb/>
h? ) iiiian have reared children v<lb/>
ndependeni o their parents<lb/>
Sallie adds Thai he is full of risque stories and has been he and illian have reared children who are<lb/>
known to pass on a bit of nifty gossip. "But he'll tell<lb/>
you a really neat bit, get your curiosity up 'til you're dy-<lb/>
ing to know who the story is about, and then he won't<lb/>
tell you any names<lb/>
"Daddy had an old checkered vest she said, "and<lb/>
each night he would put it on when he came to tell us a<lb/>
story before we went to sleep. Some of the stories were<lb/>
from the I Iliad or the Odyssey, and they would be about<lb/>
heroes, strange places and magic. Just before he kissed<lb/>
us goodnighr, he would remind us of his magic vest.<lb/>
Each person had to earn his own magic vest, he would<lb/>
tell us, and the only way to earn it would be to work<lb/>
hard and be good. And to him who earned it would<lb/>
come good fortune, safekeeping from wild beasts, and<lb/>
trips to faraway places<lb/>
As the children reached their teenage vears, they were<lb/>
told that their parents would provide th necessities o<lb/>
life, but any luxuries, such as cars, would have to be<lb/>
purchased out of their own pockets, and they would<lb/>
have to work to earn the money. They were also told<lb/>
that, if they ever found themselves in trouble, the only<lb/>
assistance their father would give them would be to help<lb/>
them find a job. Yet, like the others, Sallie discovered<lb/>
that when the chips were down, her father and mother<lb/>
would be more than willing to help her in any way they<lb/>
could.<lb/>
When Sallie was eight months pregnant, she and her<lb/>
husband decided to separate. Not really knowing what<lb/>
to expect, she called her parents. "They could have<lb/>
made things really rough on me she says. "They could<lb/>
have called me stupid and irresponsible. Instead, they<lb/>
told me to come home right away and offered to pay for<lb/>
everything that 1 would need. After I was home, they<lb/>
asked me what went wrong with my marriage. At first 1<lb/>
told them I'd rather not talk about it; they didn't push<lb/>
the issue. Later, I talked with them. Daddy simply<lb/>
responded, 'That's okay. You're welcome to stav with<lb/>
us as long as you want to. We love you. We'll love your<lb/>
child And that was it. He ireated the whole situation as<lb/>
a mistake ? not the end of the world ? just a<lb/>
mistake<lb/>
According to the children, their lather's favorite past-<lb/>
times include painting, cooking and fishing. But their<lb/>
dad is no leisurely hobbyist. The words "intense" and<lb/>
"impatient characterize his behavior in every project<lb/>
he undertakes.<lb/>
When the mood strikes. I eo will slip away to his base-<lb/>
ment. There he throws his total energy into his painting.<lb/>
Sallie swears to the fact that "Daddy can go down into<lb/>
the basement just alter supper, and by eleven o'clock he<lb/>
will have whipped out five or si paintings. Mostly, his<lb/>
subjects are beach scenes, oceans and seagulls. Daddy<lb/>
gives them awav as wedding presents. While they may<lb/>
not be great as art goes, his friends value them and have<lb/>
placed some of them in pretty expensive frames<lb/>
The same qualities that produce the paintings are also<lb/>
evident in Leo's forays into the kitchen. As Patty<lb/>
remembers it, "There's never been one complete meal<lb/>
that he cooks, but if the rest of us are in the kitchen<lb/>
preparing a meal. Daddy will come in, grab a spoon and<lb/>
go to work. He has little dishes that he learns to cook,<lb/>
and after he has learned to prepare a particular item,<lb/>
we'll have it every meal for two weeks. Once it was Dad-<lb/>
dy's Famous French Fries; then it was scallops that melt<lb/>
in your mouth. Last Christmas it was Daddy's Famous<lb/>
Omelettes, and this year it was Daddy's Famous Golden<lb/>
Brown Pancakes According to Suzanne, "He takes<lb/>
everything out of the refrigerator when he goes into ac-<lb/>
tion. Everything! He'll use ten knives to do one job, and<lb/>
every time he needs to stir something he will go after a<lb/>
clean spoon. After everyone has eaten and every dish<lb/>
has been used, he'll leave. Then the girls are left to clean<lb/>
up the kitchen<lb/>
The same impatience that is present when he paints<lb/>
and cooks is magnified threefold when he becomes Leo<lb/>
the fisherman. Unless his luck is with him, he does not<lb/>
remain Leo the fisherman for long. "He likes it fine if<lb/>
the fish are biting laughs Patty, "but if nothing is<lb/>
biting after fifteen minutes, he will put his fishing gear<lb/>
away. His reason ? 'there is nothing in the ocean<lb/>
Though Leo was always present when his children<lb/>
really needed him, it would be folly to surmise that the<lb/>
children were always in total agreement with their<lb/>
father. While most of the children tended to avoid con-<lb/>
flicts with Leo, it is no secret that he and Jack have had<lb/>
some pretty heated arguments. Sallie has an insight into<lb/>
the disputes between her father and brother.<lb/>
"They both have their own opinions, and they are<lb/>
both as stubborn as they can be. Jack has a strong moral<lb/>
sense of what is right and what is wrong ? he's an<lb/>
idealist in every respect. On the other hand Daddy is a<lb/>
realist. He wants to get things done as expediently as<lb/>
possible. He knows he is influential, so he wants to help<lb/>
his children as much as he can ? like any other father<lb/>
totallv .<lb/>
earned a college decree on his own men! I ach<lb/>
capable ol being financially independeni I n<lb/>
recalls, then fathei was nevei an overly generous per<lb/>
with his children. Whal they needed, he<lb/>
whal they wanted, they earned on then own. In the<lb/>
backs of'their minds, the children all remembei on<lb/>
symbol that was presenl to remind ihem how lortun;<lb/>
they were. I hat was a picture ol a piect ol bread which<lb/>
I eo had eul from a magazine. He had framed il and<lb/>
placed it on the wall in the kitchen. It was ther<lb/>
mind them to work for what they wanted and to be<lb/>
thankful tor what they had<lb/>
It is not likely thai the people who ha<lb/>
heard ol I eo Jenkins would think ol the n<lb/>
underdog s a mattei ol fact, most people might think<lb/>
oi him as an out-and-out winner. Bui lack realizes<lb/>
the success Ins fathei now enjoys did not come easily.<lb/>
"Daddy was a nobody when he came to I<lb/>
Carolina he says and his voice becomes suddenly<lb/>
serious. "He was an outsider with a typical educator'?<lb/>
background. But he wanted his school to serve people.<lb/>
And so he took on the big dogs went alter things that<lb/>
weren't necessarily written in his contract<lb/>
won lack pauses, then lie gives I eo the highe<lb/>
pliment a son can give his father.<lb/>
"I don't want to be a chancelloi oi anything like<lb/>
that he says. "I don't even want to be in educa-<lb/>
tion.But I want to be somebody who wants to<lb/>
something. I want to be an underdog like he's been an<lb/>
underdog ? I wanl to be like him<lb/>
?Jn No timm Fm Sure He'U Be Like One Of Thm FamUy<lb/>
' rh-nk '? fmrlhnii you ?iw?ji??f '<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057278_0026"/><lb/>
llde In<lb/>
Encoder Inventor<lb/>
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C harles Cain bears the mantle of genius with<lb/>
the same affable humor that characterizes all of<lb/>
his actions. Even when he is involved with the<lb/>
most serious activities, that smile that at times<lb/>
becomes a boyish grin is always present.<lb/>
Besides being a genius (Cain will tell you that<lb/>
it s hard to eat genius), he is an inventor, engineer<lb/>
and president of the company that markets one of<lb/>
his inventions. The Cain Encoder, publicized<lb/>
recent!) along with its inventor in "Business<lb/>
Week" and "Popular Science is developed and<lb/>
marketed by the Cain Encoder Company that is<lb/>
headquartered right here in Greenville.<lb/>
1 he device can. when hooked into any of<lb/>
several communications systems, read an electric<lb/>
oi gas meter and report the reading and a number<lb/>
o' other bits of information, including malfunc-<lb/>
tion and tampering. T he device stands to save the<lb/>
utilities companies a substantial amount of<lb/>
money, that can be passed on to the consumer. It<lb/>
will make time-of-day metering a possibility<lb/>
without the purchase of new meters.<lb/>
The relatively peaceful exterior gives no hint<lb/>
that inside. Charles Cain is walking mayhem. No<lb/>
machine is safe from his careful scrutiny, which<lb/>
usuallv involves dismantling and study of the<lb/>
works. To be sure, the machine goes back<lb/>
together again, but oniv after its guts are examin-<lb/>
ed and the principle of its function is understood.<lb/>
Cain's car is the first hint that he is not the or-<lb/>
dinary businessman he appears to be. It is a<lb/>
Plymouth Valiant that looks like it was involved<lb/>
in a hardware store holdup. Tools and gadgets of<lb/>
everv description fill the back seat and trunk.<lb/>
Cam is a private pilot and has been flying for<lb/>
ovei 2o years. He owns a 1952 Cessna 170B. The<lb/>
airplane reflects the personality of its owner in<lb/>
much the same wav as the car does. Outside it<lb/>
looks like a tal-dragger that has seen too much<lb/>
hard service as an Alaskan bush plane, but inside<lb/>
there is a small fortune in II R radio equipment.<lb/>
The interior o the plane has been largely refur-<lb/>
bished and resembles a modern, sophisticated air-<lb/>
craft. Cain refers to himself as "Super Chicken"<lb/>
when he talks about his Hying. Although he is an<lb/>
expert pilot and IPR rated, he never flies in even<lb/>
marginally bad weather. "There are old pilots,<lb/>
but there are no old, bold pilots Charles Cain<lb/>
expects to get verv old.<lb/>
After any conversation with Charles Cain, it is<lb/>
hard not to feel like Dr. Watson. Cain, like<lb/>
Sherlock Holmes, operates on a plane somehow<lb/>
separate from the one that ordinary men operate<lb/>
on. His mind makes imaginative leaps that leave<lb/>
the mortal behind in a cloud of confused wonder.<lb/>
He is extraordinarily well-read for an English ma-<lb/>
jor, let alone an engineei. His taste in music runs<lb/>
to High Opera and his favorite album is "The<lb/>
Greatest Hits of 1720" which includes "Pacobel's<lb/>
Canon in D<lb/>
He can quote Milton, Shakespeare and<lb/>
Chaucer (in Middle English of course) as well as<lb/>
read German, Russian and Latin (some French,<lb/>
too, enough to translate French patent law.)<lb/>
He is a fine mechanic and has done most of the<lb/>
work of converting his Cessna to IFR himself. He<lb/>
has singlehandedly kept any number of cars on<lb/>
the road when they would otherwise have perish-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
The Renaissance Man would certainly be<lb/>
Charles Cain in this day and time. He is a sublime<lb/>
blend of the artist and scientist as well as the<lb/>
humanist. His gift is much more than the sum of<lb/>
his talents. He is Plato's philosopher; he has seen<lb/>
the sun and is come back to the cave to enlighten<lb/>
the rest of us and yet has not lost any essence of<lb/>
humanity.<lb/>
Charles Cain is, besides being a Renaissance<lb/>
Man, a truly unselfish friend to many students<lb/>
and faculty members. He is generous with the lit-<lb/>
tle time that is his own and is always ready to<lb/>
share his wisdom and experience with his friends.<lb/>
Cain's skill as an engineer has gotten him jobs<lb/>
with such corporations as North American<lb/>
Rockwell (working on the guided missile projects<lb/>
of the sixties) and DuPont, which is how he ended<lb/>
up here in Greenville, not exactly the Mecca of<lb/>
the industrial world. While at DuPont, he<lb/>
developed the Encoder and so just naturally head-<lb/>
quartered his company here.<lb/>
Charles Cain's wife is Myra Cain, the assistant<lb/>
to the vice-chancellor for academic affairs and an<lb/>
assistant professor of English here at ICE. They<lb/>
have two children, Meg, who starts college at<lb/>
Princeton this fall, and Glen, who is in the 6th<lb/>
grade.<lb/>
Cain earned his bachelor's degree at V'anderbilt<lb/>
University and his master's degree at Auburn.<lb/>
:r'<lb/>
mm, w<lb/>
: mn,<lb/>
 : <lb/>
 <lb/>
. <lb/>
iii '<lb/>
 <lb/>
? :?? v?yr<lb/>
??g?<lb/>
i ?<lb/>
Charles Cain, Inventor<lb/>
Rock Fan Brings<lb/>
Battle Ax To<lb/>
Nugent Concert<lb/>
11-Year-Old Boy Sues Creditor<lb/>
1 lev e n - v e a r - o 1 d<lb/>
Louis e! a o, who<lb/>
makes 5 cents on everv<lb/>
paper he delivers for<lb/>
The Berkshire Eagle in<lb/>
Adams, Mass had a<lb/>
problem. One of his<lb/>
cusl o m e r s. Cheryl<lb/>
Bugbee, had moved to<lb/>
Pittsfield. Mass<lb/>
without paving S8.50<lb/>
for seven weeks of<lb/>
papers. Louis sued her<lb/>
in Small Claims Ses-<lb/>
sion. He won bv<lb/>
default.<lb/>
Other kids have<lb/>
enough money to go to<lb/>
McDonald's everv<lb/>
night, and 1 didn't he<lb/>
was quoted in a victory<lb/>
statement.<lb/>
But winning in court<lb/>
is one thing; collecting<lb/>
is another. Louis<lb/>
waited and waited.<lb/>
Nothing.<lb/>
"I had to have a<lb/>
show-clause hearing<lb/>
he says, and earlier this<lb/>
month he collected ?<lb/>
$8.50 plus S5.80 for his<lb/>
court costs.<lb/>
One good thing that<lb/>
has come out of his<lb/>
court experience and<lb/>
the resulting publicity<lb/>
about it: His customers<lb/>
pay belter now. "I had<lb/>
one that owed me $7<lb/>
Eouis says, "and the<lb/>
next day, after it was in<lb/>
the paper, she paid<lb/>
me<lb/>
r rOffl I he bar nMI? ' ?hsf ci<lb/>
Charlotte police of-<lb/>
ficer G.M. Law son<lb/>
worked his first concert<lb/>
at the Charlotte Col-<lb/>
iseum last month and<lb/>
confiscated his first<lb/>
weapon at a concert ?<lb/>
a battle ax.<lb/>
"It's one of those old<lb/>
Roman-type things<lb/>
with a sharp thing on<lb/>
one side Eawson<lb/>
said. "It'll split<lb/>
somebody's head<lb/>
open<lb/>
Law son discovered<lb/>
thhe silver-bladed ax<lb/>
with an 18-inch handle<lb/>
tucked in a teenager's<lb/>
belt after a July 8 Ted<lb/>
Nugent concert.<lb/>
"1 was walking out<lb/>
to get some air and ther<lb/>
was a fight and one guy<lb/>
said, 'He's trying to kill<lb/>
me Eawson said. "I<lb/>
saw this ax sticking out<lb/>
of another kid's shirt<lb/>
Eawson said he took<lb/>
the ax but did not arrest<lb/>
the youths, whose<lb/>
names he wouldn't<lb/>
reveal. "I didn't arrest<lb/>
them because they were<lb/>
pretty well drunk<lb/>
Eawson said.<lb/>
The youth told<lb/>
Law son he was carry-<lb/>
ing the ax for protec-<lb/>
tion "because of the<lb/>
Ted Nugent concert in<lb/>
Florida where 20 per-<lb/>
sons were injured in a<lb/>
battle between eoncet-<lb/>
goers and police.<lb/>
Miami Herald rock<lb/>
critic Bill Ashton said<lb/>
Nugent's Saturday<lb/>
night concert in<lb/>
Hollywood. Fla. was<lb/>
disrupted when about<lb/>
250 people, angry over<lb/>
the arrest of 15 concert-<lb/>
goers who were drink-<lb/>
ing or using drugs,<lb/>
began fighting with<lb/>
police.<lb/>
About 50 Charlotte<lb/>
police officers worked<lb/>
tne show ? tne normal<lb/>
number for a concert at<lb/>
the coliseum. About<lb/>
8,000 people attended<lb/>
the concert, police said.<lb/>
Police turned awav<lb/>
some poeple t h e <lb/>
suspected being intox-<lb/>
icated or using drugs<lb/>
byt had no estimate of<lb/>
the number. "They<lb/>
were strung out on<lb/>
marijuana, liquor and<lb/>
what -ha v -you Sm.<lb/>
H.E. Wilkins said.<lb/>
The police arrested<lb/>
five persons on charg-<lb/>
ed ranging from posses-<lb/>
sion of hashish to<lb/>
disorderly conduct.<lb/>
FALL<lb/>
SEMESTER<lb/>
1980<lb/>
SUN.<lb/>
MUG CLUB NIGHT<lb/>
MON.<lb/>
GAMMA DELTA IOTA<lb/>
TUE.<lb/>
LADIES NIGHT<lb/>
WED.<lb/>
GREEK NIGHT<lb/>
THURS.<lb/>
STUDENT NIGHT<lb/>
FRI.<lb/>
AFTERNOON<lb/>
BLOW OUT<lb/>
BEGINNING AT 3:30<lb/>
FOR THE LADIES<lb/>
WHILE THEY LAST<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
JOLLY ROGER<lb/>
PENDANT<lb/>
TO TAKE TO<lb/>
ECU BALL GAMES<lb/>
We never charge students a service charge for<lb/>
checking. No matter how lowyour balance goes.<lb/>
(Just as long as there is a balance.)<lb/>
So come see us. We're handyto ECU. And<lb/>
we've got special f reebies for students who open<lb/>
accounts now.<lb/>
Bank of North Carolina<lb/>
Member FDIC<lb/>
Locations:<lb/>
10th and Hamilton - 4th and CotancheTelephone 758-5165.<lb/>
America's Surfers:<lb/>
Fiberglass Cowboys<lb/>
B JON VI'HAS<lb/>
Mall W rfcff<lb/>
Now that summer is over there<lb/>
are surfers here on campus, and<lb/>
they are easy to pick out from the<lb/>
crowd. It is not the dark tans or the<lb/>
bleached out hair or the well-<lb/>
developed pectorals that marks<lb/>
them as a group apart. It is rather a<lb/>
childlike lack oi concern that<lb/>
characterizes their demeanor.<lb/>
Surfers, like most athletes, are af-<lb/>
flicted with a Peter Pan complex.<lb/>
Athletics in general is a young man's<lb/>
endeavor, and that is exactly true of<lb/>
surfing. There is no such thing as an<lb/>
old surfer. While some people surf<lb/>
at the age of 40 and beyond, they<lb/>
are not surfers. In fact, there are a<lb/>
lot of people who surl who are not<lb/>
surfers. One of the girls in "Big<lb/>
Wednesday" (a film about surfing<lb/>
which was shown on wampus this<lb/>
summer) makes the comment,<lb/>
"Back home being young was just<lb/>
something that you did until vou<lb/>
grew up. Here it's everything<lb/>
It is true wherever surfers con-<lb/>
gregate. The young guys are the in-<lb/>
novators. They have the radical<lb/>
moves that can cause a veritable<lb/>
revolution in the surfing world.<lb/>
"That is no country for Old Men<lb/>
said Yeats of Byzantium, and the<lb/>
same holds true tor the north shore<lb/>
of Oahu (the Mecca of surfing) or<lb/>
any other place where the break is<lb/>
good and the sets come big and<lb/>
long.<lb/>
Surfers are not dumb or shallow.<lb/>
A great number ol them are well-<lb/>
read and can talk of subjects totally<lb/>
unrelated to the waves or the shape<lb/>
of their boards. Bui nothing elicits<lb/>
the same response as a discussion of<lb/>
the glass at the point or a goofy-toot<lb/>
tube in a left break. I hcv can be ar-<lb/>
tists, writers, carpenters or gar-<lb/>
bagemen. It does not matter ?<lb/>
because what they are is surfers.<lb/>
Although the activity is an ancient<lb/>
one, it was not until the early '60s<lb/>
See AMERICA'S Page 26, Col. 1<lb/>
Men's and Boys'<lb/>
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Save on men's and boys Levi s m sues 28 to<lb/>
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is good for Levi s made of corduroy or blue<lb/>
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Shop Monaiy Through Ssturtoy 10 A. M. Until 10 P M - Phone 736-B-t-LX. (756-2X5)<lb/>
 <lb/>
<pb facs="00057278_0027"/><lb/>
28<lb/>
THF FASTAROl IN!N AUGUST 26 WHO<lb/>
<lb/>
Patriotism Today<lb/>
Is Nothing New<lb/>
B .ION VI HAS<lb/>
Sail Vni't<lb/>
In these troubled<lb/>
times o The Iranian<lb/>
Situation and I h c<lb/>
Afghanistan Situation<lb/>
we can better examine<lb/>
the role of the<lb/>
American citizen today<lb/>
and to compare it with<lb/>
thai role in the past.<lb/>
Patriots are<lb/>
something America has<lb/>
never lacked, yet the<lb/>
definition of that term<lb/>
has changed over the<lb/>
years. 1 o one section of<lb/>
the population the term<lb/>
means military service,<lb/>
and indeed main of out<lb/>
great patriots have been<lb/>
military m e n a n d<lb/>
women. From the earl)<lb/>
davs of this country,<lb/>
America has kept a<lb/>
large military machine<lb/>
that has actively par-<lb/>
ticipated m every major<lb/>
conflict on this planet.<lb/>
Since the time of<lb/>
George Washington<lb/>
and Francis Mat ion,<lb/>
through IS. Granl<lb/>
and Robert 1 . 1 ee,<lb/>
through I c d d <lb/>
Roosevelt and Sgt.<lb/>
Alvin York and up to<lb/>
udie Murphv and<lb/>
Chesty Puller, the<lb/>
miliiarv has produced<lb/>
many famous patriots.<lb/>
In addition to these<lb/>
famous soldiers,<lb/>
countless numbers of<lb/>
Americans have served<lb/>
theii country and their<lb/>
own sense o! patriotism<lb/>
by serving in the<lb/>
military. If, in fact,<lb/>
there is "no greater<lb/>
love than to give up<lb/>
youi lite for a friend<lb/>
t h e n A m e r i c a h a s<lb/>
millions of gieat<lb/>
fl lends.<lb/>
Milton reminds us<lb/>
that " Ihev also serve<lb/>
who only stand and<lb/>
wait Other<lb/>
Americans have proven<lb/>
America's Surfers<lb/>
Today's Cowboys<lb/>
Continued From Page 27<lb/>
that suiting became so romanticized<lb/>
by the American public. The Beach<lb/>
Boys are responsible to a great ex-<lb/>
tent for bringing surfing to everv<lb/>
merican shore from Hatteras to<lb/>
Malibu, from Galveston to Atka.<lb/>
I er since, the surfer has become a<lb/>
.ort of cowboy, a symbol of in-<lb/>
dependence and righteousness to the<lb/>
ordinary folk that they refer to dis-<lb/>
dainfullv as inlanders or rednecks.<lb/>
1 he surfer rides the sea, for cen-<lb/>
turies a svmbol of untamable fury.<lb/>
1 he seeming ease with which a<lb/>
surfer conquers the raw force of an<lb/>
n wave makes him an object of<lb/>
a we and admiration.<lb/>
Surfers seem to taunt the Sand-<lb/>
bound folk with their freedom.<lb/>
1 heir lives are totally uncomplicated<lb/>
b the evervdav worries that make<lb/>
an inlander so uncomfortable.<lb/>
W lien the surf is good, everything is<lb/>
good. When the surf is not good.<lb/>
simply pack up and move on to<lb/>
where it is good. Inlanders cannot<lb/>
migrate so easily. They have mor-<lb/>
tgages and kids and a hundred<lb/>
things thai keep them tied to land.<lb/>
rhere has been an on-eoinu wat<lb/>
between the sinters and ordinary<lb/>
people for years. Fishing pier<lb/>
owners, resort motel owners and<lb/>
beach developers have tried to<lb/>
legislate the surfers out of existence<lb/>
with restrictions on where and how<lb/>
close to the pieis they can surf and<lb/>
where they can park The surfers<lb/>
have come back everv time. 1 ike the<lb/>
last breed of American hero, the<lb/>
cowboy, they have prospered in the<lb/>
face ot adversity. Ihev have manag-<lb/>
ed to keep their lifestyle their own,<lb/>
while the rest ot us tune changed,<lb/>
grown up. In a societ that places a<lb/>
premium on youth, the suiter is<lb/>
perpetually young, a tact that we<lb/>
find deplorable. 1 ike the How aid<lb/>
families in Heinlein's books, surfers<lb/>
have been persecuted foi our own<lb/>
failings.<lb/>
Not everv one should be a surfer. I<lb/>
do not intend that when 1 praise<lb/>
their lifeslyle so much. lust as not<lb/>
everv one was meant to be a cowboy,<lb/>
the pressures to remain young and<lb/>
the actual physical strain arc pro-<lb/>
bably too much tor most ot us to<lb/>
make it. It takes a cei tain attitude to<lb/>
spend an entire life in pursuit ol the<lb/>
per tec t wave.<lb/>
their patriotism<lb/>
without any military<lb/>
service or with service<lb/>
in addition to military.<lb/>
In the sixties and seven-<lb/>
ties, in the aftermath of<lb/>
the V i e t n a m war,<lb/>
military service became<lb/>
unpopular. Americans<lb/>
had to use other means<lb/>
io show their love of<lb/>
country and the ideals<lb/>
that America stands<lb/>
tor. 1 o some, the spirit<lb/>
thai m a d e the<lb/>
American military the<lb/>
best in the world<lb/>
characterized these<lb/>
other efforts. In the<lb/>
Peace Corps the so-<lb/>
called Military In-<lb/>
dustrial Complex<lb/>
Americans were mak-<lb/>
ing the world better and<lb/>
most importantly,<lb/>
freer.<lb/>
American patriots<lb/>
come from everv con-<lb/>
ceivable background,<lb/>
from Cechoslavakian<lb/>
immigrants to members<lb/>
of the Fust Families of<lb/>
Virginia. I 'bey are rich,<lb/>
poor and middle class<lb/>
and everv color and<lb/>
size. Ihev are old men<lb/>
and young women.<lb/>
1 hey have supported<lb/>
America everv where on<lb/>
earth. Ihev have also<lb/>
criticized their country<lb/>
and its actions but that<lb/>
criticism and the<lb/>
freedom that allows it<lb/>
have served to make the<lb/>
count rv better and<lb/>
stronger.<lb/>
In the veais that<lb/>
followed World War II<lb/>
the image of the United<lb/>
States abroad suffered<lb/>
and it was not until<lb/>
these past two vears<lb/>
that that image was<lb/>
poor enough to elicit a<lb/>
reaction among the<lb/>
citizens of the United<lb/>
States. Now Charlie<lb/>
Daniels sings patriotic<lb/>
songs reminiscent of<lb/>
the Hoagy Carmichael<lb/>
and Johnny Mercer hits<lb/>
of the forties. All over<lb/>
the country, from rural<lb/>
outposts like Greenville<lb/>
to the Urban centers ot<lb/>
leftist liberalism,<lb/>
Americans are talking<lb/>
tough, ready to fight<lb/>
their way out of the<lb/>
various predicaments<lb/>
they find themselves in.<lb/>
If patriotism is an ex-<lb/>
treme love of country,<lb/>
then the United States<lb/>
has always had an<lb/>
abundance of patriots<lb/>
Even during the worst<lb/>
of Vietnam and<lb/>
Watergate, the two<lb/>
greatest tests of<lb/>
American patriotism,<lb/>
Americans did not give<lb/>
up on their coun-<lb/>
try. Ihev m a y h a v e<lb/>
despised their leaders<lb/>
and the actions of their<lb/>
government, but they<lb/>
were still flag-waving<lb/>
Americans and they<lb/>
knew that their eountrv<lb/>
was still the greatest<lb/>
and freest country<lb/>
available. The so call-<lb/>
ed ' ' n e w<lb/>
pat riot ism "elicited bv<lb/>
the taking of American<lb/>
hostages in Iran is not<lb/>
new at all. It is the same<lb/>
reaction that this coun<lb/>
try had to the direct at-<lb/>
tack on our citizens by<lb/>
Japan, Germany and<lb/>
even England. If indeed<lb/>
we end up at war ? an<lb/>
abhorrent development<lb/>
? over the hostages,<lb/>
then the reaction of the<lb/>
people will probablv be<lb/>
the same as in those<lb/>
past 11 mes w hen<lb/>
America was attacked<lb/>
bv a foreign power.<lb/>
America's true patriots<lb/>
have traditionally come<lb/>
to the forefront when<lb/>
the need arose. This<lb/>
crisis is no exception<lb/>
War cm peace, the real<lb/>
lovers of truth, justice<lb/>
and the American Way<lb/>
will support their eoun-<lb/>
trv .<lb/>
All Gospel Juk Bv<lb/>
Coming Soon:<lb/>
I .ivchritidi! I .nlii l<lb/>
PEIWE SICILIAN PIZZAS Beverages<lb/>
TmiO C?US'<lb/>
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CHEESE $3 50 5 20 fa <lb/>
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GREEN PEPPER 4 10. I<lb/>
PEPPEROM ?!? HI f0<lb/>
FRESH SAUSAGE ? ? l? 7 :Q<lb/>
GROUND BEEF 4lQ 6 95 ; 2q<lb/>
OLIVEiBUc? o' Greent 410 595 20<lb/>
ANCHOVY 4 10 5 95 7 20<lb/>
MUSHROOM 4 10 5 95 20<lb/>
HAM 41? S95 72?<lb/>
ADDITIONAL ITEMS 60 75 95<lb/>
SICIL'AN SUPREME 5 10 8 60 1045 ?3<lb/>
PeppetonItalian Sausage Muin-oomj Onion Green Peppe<lb/>
G'een Olive. Anchovy on reyues'<lb/>
B :i<lb/>
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10 20<lb/>
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io 20<lb/>
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Chef s Salad<lb/>
Dinner Salad<lb/>
Garlic Bread<lb/>
82.95<lb/>
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79<lb/>
r ?<lb/>
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DELUXE PIZZAS<lb/>
DOUQ MAO FR4AH OAM.V<lb/>
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ONION<lb/>
GREE PEPPi ?? 3 bc<lb/>
PEPPf RON 3 &amp;0<lb/>
FRES"SA A ?<lb/>
GR ? i F<lb/>
OLi v F 8' K ?  ?? ? j i)L<lb/>
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MUSHROOM 3 50<lb/>
HAM 3 50<lb/>
ADDITIONAL ITEMS 60<lb/>
CHANE LOSSUPREMf b 50<lb/>
Peppe'on: Ital ir - .ojje V ishi<lb/>
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ito Cheese<lb/>
i 50<lb/>
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FAST FREE DELIVERY<lb/>
CALL NOW 758-7400<lb/>
$2.00 Mm. Campus<lb/>
$4 00 Mm. Delivery Area<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
Mon Thurs 11am 1 am<lb/>
Fri &amp; Sat 11 am 2am<lb/>
Sun 5 p m to 1 2 p m<lb/>
JXOYE <lb/>
1 Cor. 10:31 N<lb/>
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BRt AD bAKt P f RESh OAk i<lb/>
Short Loat $2 00<lb/>
Long Loaf S2.95<lb/>
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? ?II Ham. Sauce Cheesp Baked<lb/>
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VERSUVIAN STEAK<lb/>
Musid'O Mayonnaise Lettuce. Tomato<lb/>
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ROAS' Bm tloaf - 2 40<lb/>
Kiihall sub short ? $2.40 " y '  3 40<lb/>
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Dinners<lb/>
Spaghetti &amp; Meat Sauce. Hot Garlic Bread 2.50<lb/>
Spaghetti &amp; Meat Balls Hot Garlic Bread 2 95<lb/>
Lasagna with Hot Garlic Bread 3 50<lb/>
Extra Meat Balls each .40<lb/>
SdV<lb/>
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$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ra$m$mm$w$$$$$$$$$$<lb/>
Sept. I -6 Back to school Special<lb/>
CHANELO'S PIZZA BOCK<lb/>
BUY ONE 10" PIZZA<lb/>
GET ONE FREE<lb/>
$ ONE<lb/>
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I HI ST CAROI INIAN<lb/>
Al.(it SI 26. IVS0<lb/>
29<lb/>
ens At ECU:<lb/>
A Party Maj<lb/>
By I)A II) NOKKIS<lb/>
East Carolina University offers its students<lb/>
their choice of many fields of study: art, music,<lb/>
drama, English, education, and others. But<lb/>
perhaps the largest department at ECU is the<lb/>
Department of Downtown and Partying. This<lb/>
course of study is among the most grueling, ex-<lb/>
hausting, expensive and time-consuming offered<lb/>
al any university in the world. Some excerpts<lb/>
from the introductory D&amp;P textbook will give<lb/>
you an idea of what the students in this depart-<lb/>
ment have to go through.<lb/>
I. Required Supplies<lb/>
To stav in the Downtown and Parts depart-<lb/>
ment, one must invest a great sum of money in<lb/>
supplies. A refrigerator is necessary for storage of<lb/>
study and research equipment and supplies such<lb/>
as beer, wine and various mixers. A valid college<lb/>
ID. card is needed to gain admission to the<lb/>
classrooms downtown. Specific courses require<lb/>
various supplies, which will be discussed later.<lb/>
II. The Courses ? Foundation<lb/>
D&amp;P majors must complete rigorous course re-<lb/>
quirements. If you join this department, you<lb/>
must successfully complete such tough courses as:<lb/>
Beer Appreciation: This popular, but difficult<lb/>
freshman course introduces the student to about<lb/>
750 beers, which he must learn to identify, along<lb/>
with 75 types of ale. Hangover remedies are also<lb/>
discussed in detail.<lb/>
Partving Survey: A basic introduction to col-<lb/>
lege partving. Freshmen learn how to set up kegs,<lb/>
make PJ, and build up the necessary stamina to<lb/>
survive four (or more) years of constant partying.<lb/>
Annoyance and Rudeness 1: (Replaces Hell-<lb/>
Raising) The student learns how to give loud<lb/>
Rebel yells at odd hours when neighbors have 8<lb/>
am exams; how to wake up roommates; how to<lb/>
throw up all over the bathroom so nobody can go<lb/>
into it; and how to insult and or throw things at<lb/>
people from cars.<lb/>
Booe Survey: (prerequisite: Beer Apprecia-<lb/>
tion) This survey continues the freshman's in-<lb/>
troduction to alcohol, beginning with cheap wine<lb/>
and covering rum, whiskey, gin, vodka and<lb/>
others at the discretion of the instructor.<lb/>
Booe History: This course covers the hisiorv<lb/>
o alcoholic partying, beginning with mead and<lb/>
continuing with ale, rum, rotgut whiskey and<lb/>
bathtub gin. Special emphasis in the 1980 term is<lb/>
on Medieval and Baroque tavern brawling and its<lb/>
evolution into the American saloon fight.<lb/>
Philosophy of Partying: An introduction and<lb/>
inquiry into the intellectual motivations and<lb/>
philosophical questions that trouble partiers.<lb/>
Chugging: Beginning students learn skills and<lb/>
methods of chugging. To pass successfully, the<lb/>
student must chug a keg of beer in twelve seconds<lb/>
or less.<lb/>
III. The Courses ? Major Departments<lb/>
After successful completion of the foundation<lb/>
courses, the student may apply for admission to<lb/>
the upper school. He has his choice of several ma-<lb/>
jors, including disco, barhopping, rednecking.<lb/>
and hanging out. A few upper level courses will<lb/>
be disc used here.<lb/>
Disco Dancing I, II, and III: Students master<lb/>
the skills of the bump, the hustle , etc. Instruc-<lb/>
tional films such as "Saturday Night Fever" are<lb/>
included.<lb/>
The Poetry of Disco: Members of the English<lb/>
faculty discuss and explore the themes of man's<lb/>
loneliness and alienation in an industrial society;<lb/>
mortality and insignificance in an infinite<lb/>
universe; and the existentialist crisis, as treated in<lb/>
such masterpieces as "Macho Man "Get Up<lb/>
and Boogie and "Disco Duck<lb/>
Cruising Around: This course covers sitting in<lb/>
parking lots, outrunning police cars, and<lb/>
shooting mailboxes and dogs, as well as basic-<lb/>
mechanical skills, such as souping up engines.<lb/>
Problems in Barhopping: This graduate course<lb/>
includes a field trip to New York and Fos<lb/>
Angeles, giving experience in partying situations<lb/>
in other cities.<lb/>
Introduction to Punk: This new course covers<lb/>
punk fashions and music, as well as the lifestyle.<lb/>
Required materials: leather jacket, safety pins,<lb/>
punk buttons, and a diet of pizza and beer.<lb/>
Students must be experienced in smashing disco<lb/>
records.<lb/>
Overall, the Downtown major suffers more<lb/>
harships that any other student. The booze survey<lb/>
class often costs $150 a month. The week long<lb/>
parties required in Partying II leave the student<lb/>
no time for his unimportant general college re-<lb/>
quirements; often, they don't have enough time<lb/>
to even get a good grade in library Science. All-<lb/>
night beer socials ruin TV-watching, as well as<lb/>
take their toll on the students' health. If vou want<lb/>
to just have a good time and take crip courses<lb/>
here at ECU, this department is not the one. Pick<lb/>
something easy, like nuclear physics.<lb/>
??? IW<lb/>
WESTERN SIZZLIN<lb/>
STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
The Family Steak House'<lb/>
WELCOME BACK ECU!<lb/>
U.S. CHOICE BEEF<lb/>
NEVER FROZEN<lb/>
CUT FESH DAILY<lb/>
50 ITEM SALAD BAR<lb/>
PRICES $1.09-$5.69<lb/>
SALAD BAR: 99<lb/>
WITH MEAL<lb/>
EVERY TUESDAY SPECIAL:<lb/>
STARTS NOW AT 11:00 AM<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057278_0029"/><lb/>
30<lb/>
( Ml IAS! AROI INI W<lb/>
t (,1 v! 26 198(1<lb/>
t<lb/>
Reep Sees Mussolini's Death<lb/>
<lb/>
i OV H<lb/>
? - ? ZICHERMAN<lb/>
Kdward Reep concentrates on his work in his studio at his home. His<lb/>
studio is crowded with his works of art and someniers of the last fort)<lb/>
years, as well as a number of ongoing projects.<lb/>
Violence<lb/>
Fading From Films<lb/>
B SUM R-U'HM-K<lb/>
ii ?? .i<lb/>
We<lb/>
n -1"<lb/>
are siowiv<lb/>
an era o<lb/>
ap-piop stao -planet movie<lb/>
violence and explicitness thai was in<lb/>
its zenith around 1972. Before 2,<lb/>
the camera, like a worried friend,<lb/>
used to avert its gaze just before the<lb/>
au ful thing happened.<lb/>
In the old Ronald Colman version<lb/>
 rale ol fwo Cities, we watched<lb/>
with a mixture of admiration (for<lb/>
his heroism) and horror (at his fate)<lb/>
while Sidnev. Carton's neck was fit-<lb/>
ted into the grooved guillotine chop-<lb/>
ping block.<lb/>
I he camei a, how e er. was<lb/>
alreadv scanning a peaceful eternity<lb/>
in some painted clouds above the<lb/>
guillotine at the moment the blade<lb/>
ved dow n.<lb/>
uvhat is certainh one ol the<lb/>
violent wastes-of-time in re-<lb/>
cent memory. Petet Benchley's I he<lb/>
Island splattered onto the silvei<lb/>
screen this summer. Its hack plot<lb/>
about centuries-old pirates responsi-<lb/>
ble for the disappearances in the<lb/>
Bermuda 1 riangle is merelv an ex-<lb/>
cuse for a bloodbath of un-<lb/>
precedented carnage.<lb/>
I he Island broughi back<lb/>
memories ol the films ol the earlv<lb/>
seventies; Polanski's Macbeth, Don<lb/>
Siegel's Dim Harry, Peckinpah's<lb/>
Straw Dogs and 1 he Wild Bunch.<lb/>
Kubrick's C lockwork Orange, el<lb/>
al.<lb/>
Not all ol these movies I mention<lb/>
are of equal importance. I think it I<lb/>
had been able to do so without<lb/>
disturbing the people around me, I<lb/>
would have walked out o! I he<lb/>
Island. I must admit that I enjoyed<lb/>
Dirty Harry, but I am contused not<lb/>
only with the uses to which it puts its<lb/>
violence, but also with its idiotic<lb/>
plot premise. I he movie is such a<lb/>
ridiculous polemic for Neanderthal<lb/>
law and order that I doubt even the<lb/>
genius ot a Kubrick could make u<lb/>
artistically acceptable.<lb/>
so. no: all of the violence in<lb/>
these movies is of the same order,<lb/>
but all ot it is to a greater ? rather<lb/>
than to a lesser ? degree unnerving,<lb/>
some tor good reasons, some, as in<lb/>
the case ot I he Island, tor bad.<lb/>
However, it is only a little more<lb/>
unnerving than the hysterical out-<lb/>
bursts thai movies like I he Warriors<lb/>
prompt from politicians and othei<lb/>
opportunists who know that the<lb/>
easiest wav lo attract attention is to<lb/>
attack movie violence, as it that,<lb/>
and not any number ot a thousand<lb/>
other factors, were responsible tor<lb/>
the admittedly dreadful state ot the<lb/>
world<lb/>
Among some movie viewers, not<lb/>
necessarilv card-carrying critics or<lb/>
professional movie viewers, a<lb/>
favorite line ol reasoning is that<lb/>
movie violence is evil because it in-<lb/>
structs in the methods of evil, and.<lb/>
what's worse, it is boring, although<lb/>
it never seems to occur to them that<lb/>
if something is really boring, then its<lb/>
power to instruct ? to seduce ?<lb/>
must be minimal.<lb/>
rhrough the wizardry of the<lb/>
special effects men. we see heads<lb/>
opped ott. bullets passing through<lb/>
mot jusl into) bodies, people burn-<lb/>
ing themselves up. people getting<lb/>
axed and slashed, and even, and this<lb/>
is ver big now, people' getting<lb/>
dismembered with iaei guns and<lb/>
swords or eaten by zombies<lb/>
I ven m the bad. last, hv poci itical<lb/>
davs ot the Production Code, we<lb/>
usually knew how things would turn<lb/>
out generally. and it wasn't often<lb/>
that we were surprised and<lb/>
almost made ill ?? by a shotgun go-<lb/>
ing ott in someone's face, on-<lb/>
screen.<lb/>
A lot ot this, as in 1 he Island, is<lb/>
just bad drama ? oi jusl no drama<lb/>
at all Sometimes you wonder ? it<lb/>
you can distance yourself from the<lb/>
gore - how the tuck was rigged. All<lb/>
ol this, over the long run. is<lb/>
guaranteed. I think, to make us all a<lb/>
little mote callous. I'm speaking<lb/>
here oi movies that, tot me. could<lb/>
not support the violence thev show<lb/>
rhere ate some, however, that can,<lb/>
but evervone has his own tolerance<lb/>
level.<lb/>
1 he violence in an earlier film like<lb/>
 Clockwork Orange is, bv com-<lb/>
parison, practically poetic ? not (in<lb/>
spite ot everything you've read up to<lb/>
nowas explicit as anything in a film<lb/>
like 1 he Island. It is a horror show,<lb/>
but cool, so removed from reality<lb/>
that it would take someone who<lb/>
really cherished his perversion to get<lb/>
any vicarious pleasure from it.<lb/>
Io isolate this violence is to ig-<lb/>
nore everything else that is at work<lb/>
in the movie which is nothing less<lb/>
than the fate of mankind.<lb/>
One of the reasons, I think, that<lb/>
movies keep pressing the outer<lb/>
limits of acceptability is that<lb/>
although they are. on their visual<lb/>
surface, realistic, they use up<lb/>
realistic actions so quickly that the<lb/>
actions become as unreal as the tot<lb/>
mal gestures of a ritual.<lb/>
People once were shocked when<lb/>
gangsters in movies ot the thirties<lb/>
shot people on the screen and the<lb/>
victims doubled up, as if they had<lb/>
suffered sudden heart attacks. Not<lb/>
much blood, but death was ap-<lb/>
parent.<lb/>
We in the audience eventually see<lb/>
the make-believe in the drama. 1 he<lb/>
shootings had to become more and<lb/>
more vivid to impress us. to excite<lb/>
us and whether we like to believe<lb/>
it or not ? to give us pleasure. Now<lb/>
that the explicitness has gone almost<lb/>
as tar as it can go. as anyone who<lb/>
has ever seen vour average garden<lb/>
varietv horror film, like I he Iexas<lb/>
C hainsaw Massacre, can tell you, it<lb/>
may be that the margins ot pleasure<lb/>
have been exceeded, but after seeing<lb/>
and hearing the crowds' reaction to<lb/>
Chainsaw Massacre in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center right here on cam-<lb/>
pus a tew weeks ago, I seriously<lb/>
doubt it.<lb/>
It may be about time, hopefully,<lb/>
anyway, for movies to realize that<lb/>
they aren't realistic. Ihey are, for<lb/>
all the reality o their locales, and of<lb/>
their actors and of then cir-<lb/>
cumstances, only representations of<lb/>
realitv and nothing more.<lb/>
But showing us how a man looks<lb/>
when his head is chopped ott. a<lb/>
movie can capture our shocked at-<lb/>
tention for a second or two. but it<lb/>
has said very little about the nature<lb/>
o man we didn't already know, and<lb/>
absolutely nothing about the nature<lb/>
ot the poor man who was the victim<lb/>
? except that he died violently.<lb/>
Continued From Page 25<lb/>
Shortlv after this.<lb/>
Keep met the woman<lb/>
who would be his wife.<lb/>
"We were married<lb/>
with $13 to our<lb/>
names Reep recalls<lb/>
with a smile. "We got<lb/>
married the day 1<lb/>
graduated from officer<lb/>
candidate school and<lb/>
went ott to the Oark<lb/>
mountains, where, in<lb/>
the ice and snow, I fell<lb/>
out troops at 5:30 a.m.<lb/>
with icicles hanging<lb/>
from my cap. I taught a<lb/>
company how to blow<lb/>
up and build bridges<lb/>
and a lot of other<lb/>
things that I wasn't too<lb/>
expert in<lb/>
Reep was transferred<lb/>
from the ice o' the<lb/>
Oarks to the warmth<lb/>
of New Orleans, then<lb/>
to Alaska and back to<lb/>
Monterrey.<lb/>
" There I was con-<lb/>
tacted bv the secretary<lb/>
of war with a telegram<lb/>
asking me if I would<lb/>
consider being a war ar-<lb/>
tist overseas<lb/>
Reep eagerly ac-<lb/>
cepted the position and<lb/>
became a part of a<lb/>
corps ot 42 artists that<lb/>
went throughout the<lb/>
world foi the next tew<lb/>
years, painting the Se-<lb/>
cond World W ar.<lb/>
"1 was thrown in<lb/>
w ith some of the great<lb/>
artists of that era:<lb/>
Reginald Marsh.<lb/>
rhomas Benton and<lb/>
 asuo Kunyoshi. nd<lb/>
they scared me because<lb/>
I was so young and in-<lb/>
experienced<lb/>
So. I got a call one<lb/>
d a v 11 om Gen<lb/>
I isenhowet 's adjutant.<lb/>
I went to his head-<lb/>
quarters, and he called<lb/>
me into his ot fice, and<lb/>
said, "Reep  There<lb/>
are five artists; you're a<lb/>
Second 1 leutenant, and<lb/>
I'm putting you in<lb/>
charge o' these five ar-<lb/>
tists And he said,<lb/>
' I here are five divi-<lb/>
sions going into Italy.<lb/>
Pick a division, and<lb/>
assign these other tour<lb/>
men to a division. That<lb/>
is all<lb/>
'M was with him tor<lb/>
possibly 40 seconds and<lb/>
iiad to make the deci-<lb/>
sion. I saw there were<lb/>
tour infantry and one<lb/>
armored division, so I<lb/>
put myself down for<lb/>
the armored one, jusl<lb/>
to be significant<lb/>
Reep said with a laugh.<lb/>
"Soon after, we were<lb/>
on our way to Italy, the<lb/>
invasion of Salerno and<lb/>
up Italy he added.<lb/>
Reep feels that his<lb/>
most amazing war ex-<lb/>
perience came in Italy.<lb/>
He and his sargeant<lb/>
were (.hiving on a road<lb/>
near Milano one day.<lb/>
I hey had intended to<lb/>
bypass the city, when<lb/>
the sargeant suggested,<lb/>
"Whai the hell. I ct's<lb/>
go into Milano and<lb/>
the quick turn Reep<lb/>
made led down a path<lb/>
that would bring him<lb/>
one of his most vivid<lb/>
memories.<lb/>
"Halfway in we were<lb/>
stopped by two par-<lb/>
tisans with machine<lb/>
guns. They were very<lb/>
excited, shouting,<lb/>
' A m e r i c a n i ,<lb/>
American Ihev had<lb/>
these big p a p et<lb/>
American Hags, and<lb/>
tney put one on each<lb/>
fender. I hen thev<lb/>
jumped on the lenders<lb/>
and said. 'Do you want<lb/>
to see Mussolini?'<lb/>
"So I drove in to a<lb/>
service station, where<lb/>
they had Mussolini and<lb/>
his girlfriend and 17<lb/>
other people killed and<lb/>
hanging up bv 'heir<lb/>
feet Then thev were<lb/>
cutting them down, and<lb/>
people were lining up.<lb/>
Women were taking<lb/>
then heels ott and<lb/>
beating Mussolini to a<lb/>
pulp<lb/>
At the end ot the<lb/>
war. Reep returned to<lb/>
the States as a captain<lb/>
who had been given the<lb/>
Bronze Star. More im-<lb/>
portant to his profes-<lb/>
sion, he had also been<lb/>
awarded a Guggenheim<lb/>
Fellowship, which lie<lb/>
worked on for a cur<lb/>
at let leaving the Armv.<lb/>
Reep taught at the-<lb/>
art school he had once<lb/>
attended but quit after<lb/>
tout veais and wen!<lb/>
work in the film in-<lb/>
dustry .<lb/>
In our next issue on<lb/>
August 28, id K<lb/>
will tell about his years<lb/>
us an wast m<lb/>
Holly wood Don 7 miss<lb/>
the next installment,<lb/>
where he reminisces<lb/>
about meeting Orson<lb/>
II elles and I t<lb/>
Astaire, anumu others<lb/>
FLOYD G. ROBINSON<lb/>
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Check Downtown<lb/>
First for<lb/>
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Extended Fall Hours:<lb/>
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until<lb/>
I<lb/>
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and pal<lb/>
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can assl<lb/>
despite<lb/>
want U<lb/>
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Farth<lb/>
enough<lb/>
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or extra!<lb/>
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Whilci<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057278_0030"/><lb/>
hi at the<lb/>
had i<lb/>
hson<lb/>
l<lb/>
 ECU Artists Series<lb/>
Highlights Montoya<lb/>
For 1980-81 Season<lb/>
THf EAST CAROLINIAN AUGUST 26, 1980<lb/>
31<lb/>
The staff of (he Fast Carolinian gratefully<lb/>
acknowledges the valuable assistance and<lb/>
cooperation of Mrs. Stephanie Hailey of<lb/>
The Havelock Progress, in the prepara-<lb/>
tion of this issue.<lb/>
Juilliard String Quartet<lb/>
The Julliard String Quartet, consisting of<lb/>
Robert Mann, Samuel Rhodes, Karl Carlyss,<lb/>
and Joel Krosnick will perform in the Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre on January 22, 1981.<lb/>
By DAVID NORR1S<lb/>
The 1980-81 Artists<lb/>
Series has been finaliz-<lb/>
ed by the East Carolina<lb/>
University Student<lb/>
Union Artists Series<lb/>
Committee. Season<lb/>
tickets are now on sale<lb/>
at a 33 percent discount<lb/>
on single ticket prices.<lb/>
The Artists Series Com-<lb/>
mittee urges everyone<lb/>
to purchase tickets now<lb/>
as a limited number of<lb/>
seats are available.<lb/>
The first event of the<lb/>
1980-81 series is the<lb/>
Empire Brass Quintet.<lb/>
A brass quintet of<lb/>
serious musical ambi-<lb/>
tion, Empire Brass won<lb/>
the 1976 Naumburg<lb/>
Chamber Music<lb/>
Award. The quintet<lb/>
features Rolf Smedvig,<lb/>
trumpet; Charles A.<lb/>
Lewis, Jr trumpet;<lb/>
David Ohanian, French<lb/>
horn; Normal Bolter,<lb/>
trombone; and Samuel<lb/>
Pilafian, tuba. They<lb/>
are presently ariists-in-<lb/>
residenee at Boston<lb/>
University. They will<lb/>
perform on September<lb/>
18, 1980.<lb/>
On October 16. 1980,<lb/>
a fine duo, Charles<lb/>
Bressler and Menahem<lb/>
Pressler, combine voice<lb/>
and piano virtuosity in-<lb/>
to a dynamic perfor-<lb/>
mance. Bressler. an<lb/>
oratorio tenor, is par-<lb/>
ticularly noted for the<lb/>
scope of his repertoire.<lb/>
H i s m a s t e r y o f<lb/>
diverse and difficult<lb/>
scores has made him<lb/>
one of the vorld's<lb/>
leading tenors. Like<lb/>
Bressler, Pressler is<lb/>
noted for his vast reper-<lb/>
toire. He has perform-<lb/>
ed with nearly every<lb/>
major orchestra in the<lb/>
western world. Each<lb/>
Welcome Back Students<lb/>
B DAVID NORMS<lb/>
Welcome back to ECU; or, for those oi you<lb/>
who are freshmen or transfer students, just plain<lb/>
"welcome to ECU This article is mainly for<lb/>
those oi you who are new victims ? I mean,<lb/>
students at East Carolina University, to help get<lb/>
you introduced to life at college. Those of you<lb/>
who are returning students may want to skip this<lb/>
article, since if you aren't used to college life by<lb/>
now, you might as well hang it up.<lb/>
College is a great place for a young person to<lb/>
mature and grow, since most young people don't<lb/>
reach their full height until the age of twenty or<lb/>
so. You will meet every imaginable type of person<lb/>
here at ECU, as well as many types you probably<lb/>
never imagined. You'll learn how to survive stan-<lb/>
ding in endless lines and later how to avoid having<lb/>
to stand in endless lines. Most important of all,<lb/>
this place will give you a sense oi humor or drive<lb/>
you crazy.<lb/>
Most of you will soon become acquainted with<lb/>
those peculiar institutions known as dormitories<lb/>
and roommates. In vain attempt to make life run<lb/>
more smoothly, the school has made a large<lb/>
number of rules to go by. Like most rules, people<lb/>
don't pay much attention to them. Just to help<lb/>
you out, 1 have some rules of my own that can<lb/>
give you an idea of what to expect in our<lb/>
residence halls:<lb/>
1. Student cars, if found by the police, will be<lb/>
towed away.<lb/>
2. Pet piranas are not allowed in fountains,<lb/>
sinks, toilets, etc.<lb/>
3. If you do not like your roommate, it is possi-<lb/>
ble to change rooms. Do not kill your roommate<lb/>
until you have permission from the housing of-<lb/>
fice.<lb/>
4. If you are locked out of your room, don't<lb/>
break down the door. After three years in an<lb/>
American high school, nobody should need a key,<lb/>
anyway.<lb/>
5. Remember that profanity on school property<lb/>
is forbidden (1 didn't make this up; it's a real rule.<lb/>
Like 1 said, people don't pay that much attention<lb/>
to the rules.)<lb/>
6. If you bring munchies into the dorm, either<lb/>
bring enough for the moochers or get something<lb/>
that .nobody else likes.<lb/>
7. Students are permitted torearrange the beds,<lb/>
chairs, etc in their rooms, but may not cut addi-<lb/>
tional windows or doors into the walls.<lb/>
Now that you know some of the rules, you<lb/>
might as well learn some facts and statisticsabout<lb/>
East Carolina University.<lb/>
Enrollment: Around 12,(XX) students are enroll-<lb/>
ed in ECU classes; of whom half actually attend<lb/>
class.<lb/>
Length of stay: Somehow, four years seems to<lb/>
be the American idea of the length of time it takes<lb/>
to get a college degree. In real life, though, unless<lb/>
you know exactly what you want to major in<lb/>
from the first day and stick carefully to your<lb/>
course of study, it may take longer. Many people<lb/>
stay here five years, and some take six or seven.<lb/>
But then, some wise guys get out in three and a<lb/>
half years. Others stay only a couple of weeks,<lb/>
but they usually don't quite finish their course of<lb/>
study in that time.<lb/>
Brief history: Thomas Jefferson died over 80<lb/>
years before the founding of East Carolina<lb/>
University, and had almost nothing to do with it.<lb/>
ECU miraculously escaped the wrath of Sher-<lb/>
man's march to the Sea by cleverly hiding in<lb/>
another state and century. The first buildings<lb/>
were put up in 1907. Dozens of other buildings<lb/>
and parking spaces were added as the college<lb/>
grew. Today, ECU students can boast of having<lb/>
the third largest university in North Carolina,<lb/>
even though they were taught when little that<lb/>
boasting is impolite.<lb/>
Since you new folks are here reading this, we<lb/>
can assume you survived the ordeal of packing,<lb/>
despite the help of your family. Parents always<lb/>
want to make sure their college-bound son or<lb/>
daughter has everything they need to re-start<lb/>
Earth civilization on another planet, much less<lb/>
enough to fill up a dorm room. I never used most<lb/>
of the things like daguerrotype cleaner or quinine<lb/>
or extra Victrola needles that Mom talked me into<lb/>
bringing, but you never know.<lb/>
While packing, it s good to take advantage of<lb/>
all the free stuff from home, like groceries,<lb/>
toothpaste, soap, dishes, tape, string, thumbtacks<lb/>
and all those other things that homes abound with<lb/>
and arc necessary for maintaining a life at college.<lb/>
For your convenience, the Student Government<lb/>
Association rents refrigerators to students. For<lb/>
your inconvenience, they don't deliver, so you<lb/>
have to lug them back to your own room. The<lb/>
refrigerators are a little small, but that's a bless-<lb/>
ing since they have to be carried across the rugged<lb/>
terrain of the mall or the Hill and then up varying<lb/>
numbers of staits.<lb/>
The big refrigerators are against the rules in the<lb/>
dorms, because of cheap stairs and potential<lb/>
blown fuses and hernias. You can sneak one in if<lb/>
you like, but remember it's hard to hide a six-foot<lb/>
high refrigerator in a dorm room, and that you'll<lb/>
have to drag it back down the stairs within eight<lb/>
months, or less it you flunk out. Besides, lots of<lb/>
people I've known with those dinasaur sized<lb/>
iceboxes keep only a head oi lettuce and a coke in<lb/>
it. hardly, worth the effort oi having the thing in<lb/>
the first place.<lb/>
Sometimes there is a line at the refrigerator<lb/>
place, but these are barely worth calling lines.<lb/>
When you go through the heartbreak of drop-<lb/>
add, then you will know what a line really is.<lb/>
Drop-add is a biannual event (or is that semian-<lb/>
nual? Twice a year is what I'm driving at.), at-<lb/>
tended by all students who have to pick up or<lb/>
drop a course. This is usually about half of the<lb/>
student body. Lhey include lazy folks wno want<lb/>
to drop everything except P.E. KXX) and vacation<lb/>
until December and frantic students whose entire<lb/>
schedules were obliterated somewhere along the<lb/>
line.<lb/>
Drop-add is really not as bad as people think,<lb/>
though. It can be a good way to meet old friends,<lb/>
since everybody ends up there sooner or later. Br-<lb/>
ing some cookies or brownies and try to get stuck<lb/>
in a line with somebody nice.<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
ALL DANCE<lb/>
downtown STUDENTS<lb/>
eVe the college student<lb/>
Headquarters<lb/>
For All Dance Wear<lb/>
The Classic<lb/>
Capezio<lb/>
e have a complete<lb/>
selection of toe. tap,<lb/>
ballet, and modern<lb/>
dance shoes and<lb/>
bodywear in a<lb/>
spectrum of colors!<lb/>
Capezio's been<lb/>
dancing since 1887<lb/>
We also have children dancewear<lb/>
at our Pitt Plaza Store<lb/>
There's a lot more to be said about drop-add,<lb/>
but I'm saving it for a book.<lb/>
After a grueling day or two in drop-add, you<lb/>
might want to spend a quiet afternoon of relaxa-<lb/>
tion by fighting your way through the mobs in the<lb/>
bookstore to purchase your textbooks. To save<lb/>
money, try to find used texts, which are half-<lb/>
price. To really save, just don't buy the books at<lb/>
all and hope that they really aren't that important<lb/>
for passing the class. If you like this fall's book<lb/>
rush, you'll love the mob that tries to sell their<lb/>
books back in December.<lb/>
As if you haven't stood in enough lines already,<lb/>
you'll need to stand in another one it you want to<lb/>
have a telephone in your room. This usually isn't<lb/>
too bad a line, since they give you a phonebook<lb/>
and you get a chance to meet lots of people in<lb/>
line, who you can exchange brand-new phone<lb/>
numbers with.<lb/>
By now, it's probably time to get in line for<lb/>
your dorm (I'm just kidding. They let you walk<lb/>
on in.) Fixing a meal after such a tiring day is<lb/>
really too much work. It's quite understandable<lb/>
to say something like "Damn the expense - full<lb/>
pizzas ahead<lb/>
man is a major artist in<lb/>
his own right; the two<lb/>
together are beyond<lb/>
compare.<lb/>
The series' third at-<lb/>
traction, Carlos Mon-<lb/>
toya, is familiar to<lb/>
many patrons. Though<lb/>
Montoya is appearing<lb/>
on the Artists series for<lb/>
the first time, he was<lb/>
one of the highlights of<lb/>
the 1978 Mendenhall<lb/>
Scries. Montoya thrill-<lb/>
ed the audience with his<lb/>
superb flamenco guitar<lb/>
and charmed them with<lb/>
his endearing personali-<lb/>
tv. He will appear on<lb/>
November 12, 1980 to<lb/>
both excite and delight<lb/>
his audience.<lb/>
On January 22. 1981,<lb/>
the renowned Juilliard<lb/>
School of Music sends<lb/>
its magnificent string<lb/>
quartet to East<lb/>
Carolina University.<lb/>
The Juilliard String<lb/>
Quartet sets a standard<lb/>
oi excellence among<lb/>
string ensembles. They<lb/>
have played over 3,000<lb/>
sold-out concerts, and<lb/>
are widely acknowledg-<lb/>
ed as "without peer in<lb/>
the world<lb/>
The final perfor-<lb/>
mance oi the season is<lb/>
pianist Charles Rosen.<lb/>
His appearance is on<lb/>
April 2. 198' Besides<lb/>
being one of the coun-<lb/>
try's foremost pianists,<lb/>
Rosen is also an ardent<lb/>
music historian.<lb/>
He eschews personal<lb/>
glorv to do justice and<lb/>
render service to the<lb/>
music itself. Rosen per-<lb/>
forms the music oi the<lb/>
old masters, the roman-<lb/>
tic composers, and the<lb/>
contemporary and<lb/>
avant-garde creators.<lb/>
Season tickets for all<lb/>
these excellent per-<lb/>
formers are priced at<lb/>
$20.00 for the public,<lb/>
$15.00 for ECU faculty<lb/>
and staff, and $7.50 for<lb/>
ECU students.<lb/>
Opry<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Lovers<lb/>
Fosdick's<lb/>
"All You Can Eat"<lb/>
Seafood Buffet<lb/>
Every night from 5 till closlnc, we will feature<lb/>
our fabulous new Seafood Juffet - Delicioua<lb/>
Fried Shrimp, Golden Brown Oyatera, Flan,<lb/>
Deviled Crab, Shrimp Creole, Fried Chicken,<lb/>
Clam Chowder, Slaw, Huah Puppies and Your<lb/>
Choice of Ice Tea or Coffee.<lb/>
All You Can Eat<lb/>
Only 6.99<lb/>
Fosdick's<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
A Great Place for Seafood<lb/>
Dinner Catering<lb/>
Coming Soon:<lb/>
Oyater Bar<lb/>
Freah Seafood MM.<lb/>
Hours:<lb/>
Lunch<lb/>
Sunday-Friday<lb/>
11:30 A.M2:38 PM<lb/>
Dinner<lb/>
Sunday-Thursday<lb/>
IMP.M.4.MP.M.<lb/>
Friday and Saturday<lb/>
5:00 PM10:30 P M<lb/>
3US EraMStowt<lb/>
Gr?i?vtl!?. N.C<lb/>
Party Room Available Wall<lb/>
Umlih th Caka lor Birth-<lb/>
day Aaalvcraarlaa. air lor<lb/>
Parttaa of 8 or more Call lor<lb/>
Raaarvatlon. 7 56 21 1<lb/>
AUGUST<lb/>
27 - North Star - Ladies Free Men $2.00<lb/>
28 - North Star - Ladies $1.00<lb/>
29 - J. Murphy Martin Band<lb/>
30 - J. Murphy Martin Band<lb/>
SEPTEMBER<lb/>
2 - Bill Lyerly Band<lb/>
3 - Snuff - Ladies Free Men $2.00<lb/>
4 - Ambush - Ladies $1.00<lb/>
5 - Ambush<lb/>
6 - Ambush<lb/>
9 - Tennessee Hat Band<lb/>
10 - Tennessee Hat Band - Ladies Free Men $2.00<lb/>
11 - Tennessee Hat Band - Ladies $1.00<lb/>
12 - Tennessee Hat Band<lb/>
13 - Tennessee Hat Band<lb/>
16 - Bill Lyerly Band<lb/>
17 - Bill Lyerly Band - Ladies Free Men $2.00<lb/>
18 - Bill Lyerly Band - Ladies $1.00<lb/>
19 - Bill Lyerly Band<lb/>
20 - Bill Lyerly Band<lb/>
23 - Fargo<lb/>
24 - Fargo - Ladies Free Men $2.00<lb/>
25 - FargO - Ladies $1.00<lb/>
26 - The Variation Band<lb/>
27 - The Variation Band<lb/>
<pb facs="00057278_0031"/><lb/>
32<lb/>
1 Ml I AM r-R(M IM l,1 M 26, 1980<lb/>
WE WELCOME<lb/>
FEDERAL<lb/>
FOOD<lb/>
STAMPS<lb/>
rrst<lb/>
to dealer<lb/>
restaurants<lb/>
MONDAY THRU<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
8 am-10 pm<lb/>
OPEN SUNDAYS<lb/>
9 am-9 Dm<lb/>
WELCOME BACK<lb/>
PIRATES!<lb/>
BIG STAR EXTENDS<lb/>
A PERSONAL<lb/>
INVITATION TO YOU!<lb/>
SHOP AND SAVE<lb/>
r OUR CONVENIENT<lb/>
LOCATION IN<lb/>
PITT PLAZA<lb/>
SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
GREENVILLE BOULEVARD<lb/>
QUALITY CONTROLLED'<lb/>
FRESHLY<lb/>
GROUND<lb/>
BEEF<lb/>
3 LBS.<lb/>
OR MORE<lb/>
LB.<lb/>
$1<lb/>
38<lb/>
MILLER<lb/>
HIGH LIFE<lb/>
BEER<lb/>
CARTON OF SIX<lb/>
,? 12 0Z CANS<lb/>
OLDE TOWNE SLICED<lb/>
"<lb/>
BACON<lb/>
1 LB.<lb/>
PKG.<lb/>
.98<lb/>
6?&amp;"Y<lb/>
o i<lb/>
BOLOGHA J<lb/>
$1<lb/>
PEPSI<lb/>
MOUNTAIN DEW<lb/>
)z. RETURNABLE<lb/>
BOTTLE<lb/>
fill Hi R<lb/>
GWALTNEY SUCED<lb/>
BOLOGNA<lb/>
1 LB. 0-i 08<lb/>
PKG.<lb/>
SI.1<lb/>
(LAND OFROStI<lb/>
WAFER SUCED<lb/>
LUNCH<lb/>
MEATS<lb/>
ALL VARIETIES<lb/>
2 12- 3 A Q<lb/>
oz. pkg. ,?0.<lb/>
CELEBRITY N<lb/>
BRAND<lb/>
SLICED<lb/>
COOKED<lb/>
HAM<lb/>
PAK<lb/>
$i<lb/>
45<lb/>
12 oz.<lb/>
pkg.<lb/>
P&amp;<lb/>
38<lb/>
<lb/>
FRESH<lb/>
SNOW WHITE<lb/>
MUSHROOMS<lb/>
lb .99<lb/>
JS<lb/>
NABISCO ASSORTED '<lb/>
SNACK 8 oz PKG on<lb/>
CRACKERS -89<lb/>
CfWaltneii<lb/>
J Of SrtlTHFIUD J<lb/>
TOP QUALITY MEAT<lb/>
FRANKS 12 ? 98<lb/>
<lb/>
MINUTE MAID<lb/>
ORANGE JUICE<lb/>
HALF GALLON<lb/>
CARTON<lb/>
SI:<lb/>
29<lb/>
PINE STATE<lb/>
ASSORTED FLAVORS<lb/>
FRUIT DRINKS <lb/>
.89<lb/>
<lb/>
BOUNTY<lb/>
PAPER<lb/>
TOWELS<lb/>
LARGE<lb/>
ROLL<lb/>
o<lb/>
? :?<lb/>
FOX<lb/>
DELUXE<lb/>
PIZZAS<lb/>
SAUSAGE<lb/>
CHEESE<lb/>
HAMBURGER<lb/>
PEPPERONI<lb/>
79<lb/>
EACH<lb/>
TROPICANA<lb/>
FRUIT<lb/>
DRINKS<lb/>
ORANGE GRAPE PUNCH<lb/>
5<lb/>
10 oz.<lb/>
BOTTLES<lb/>
$1!<lb/>
00<lb/>
CALIFORNIA<lb/>
WHITE<lb/>
GRAPES<lb/>
LB.<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057278_0032"/><lb/>
Every<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
and Thursday<lb/>
you can read the<lb/>
most informative stories<lb/>
about the news events of the<lb/>
'of the day at ECU and in Greenville<lb/>
the best sports coverage, and<lb/>
interesting features about the people, places and<lb/>
things surrounding you  so can your parents.<lb/>
For $25 your parents can get a one year mail<lb/>
subscription to the East Carolinian.<lb/>
Serving the campus community since 1925, the<lb/>
East Carolinian provides valuable insights into<lb/>
student life at East Carolina University for your<lb/>
parents. Twice-weekly, we can tell your family<lb/>
about the most current campus and local news.<lb/>
Student free flicks, concerts and sports events are<lb/>
all covered in the pages of the East Carolinian, as<lb/>
well as state and local news that affects the lives<lb/>
of ECU students.<lb/>
Our experienced, award-winning news staff<lb/>
can bring your parents the news wherever it is<lb/>
happening in eastern North Carolina, plus the<lb/>
most dynamic behind-the-scenes investigative<lb/>
reporting. Our UPI wire instantly brings you the<lb/>
hottest state and national news.<lb/>
Our features section will bring them<lb/>
fascinating and often humorous human interest<lb/>
stories about the people of the university and the<lb/>
surrounding area. It also covers the cultural<lb/>
events that enrich student life, as well as presen-<lb/>
ting interesting slices of area flavor.<lb/>
Spanning the<lb/>
entire spectrum of<lb/>
ECLr,s athletic activity,<lb/>
our well-trained staff<lb/>
of enthusiastic sports<lb/>
writers will bring your<lb/>
family comprehensive coverage of<lb/>
ECU 's exciting football schedule,<lb/>
in addition to highlighting the rest of an<lb/>
impressive sports program.<lb/>
Our remarkable staff works around the clock<lb/>
to produce the best possible newspaper, contain-<lb/>
ing the most essential news, features and sports<lb/>
of interest not only to you, but to your parents<lb/>
and friends as well, wherever they may be. The<lb/>
East Carolinian ? let us inform them.<lb/>
Your parents, friends, and relatives can<lb/>
subscribe to the East Carolinian for one year by<lb/>
sending a check for $25 to: George Hettich, Cir-<lb/>
culation Dept The East Carolinian, Old South<lb/>
Building, East Carolina University, Greenville,<lb/>
N.C. 27834.<lb/>
If you wish, you may subscribe for them by<lb/>
mailing a check for $25 along with the coupon<lb/>
below to the East Carolinian, or just drop by the<lb/>
East Carolinian office.<lb/>
i?iic ?a0t (Carolinian<lb/>
SUBSCRIPTION FORM<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address<lb/>
C'ilv<lb/>
Slate<lb/>
Zip<lb/>
Telephone )<lb/>
RATK: $25 per year.<lb/>
I SUfi SaBt (Eamlf man<lb/>
Vv<lb/>
kA-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057278_0033"/><lb/>
AM<lb/>
kes,<lb/>
I ? 5<lb/>
AY<lb/>
1.49<lb/>
.<lb/>
I Ml I AMAROLINIAN<lb/>
E<lb/>
d i<lb/>
OK<lb/>
AUGUST 26. 1980<lb/>
21<lb/>
1979 Pirate Scenes<lb/>
EASTERN N.Cs NO. 1 BEACH CLUB<lb/>
WELCOMES BACK<lb/>
ALLE.C.U. STUDENTS!<lb/>
TUES.<lb/>
WED.<lb/>
Weekly Beginning September:<lb/>
SIGMA PHI EPSILON<lb/>
LADIES NIGHT<lb/>
SIGMA NU 5050 NIGHT<lb/>
.50 Admission and all canned beverages.50<lb/>
THURS.OVER THE HUMP NIGHT<lb/>
The Weekend Begins Here  Don't Miss it<lb/>
With John Moore 'The American Dream'<lb/>
FRI. END OF THE WEEK PARTY<lb/>
Free Admission - All Beverages.50<lb/>
Also  Collins Cooper and OldyGoldy Night<lb/>
SAT. AFTER THE GAME PARTY<lb/>
Relax and Enjoy After Latest Football Game<lb/>
SUN. KAPPA ALPHA - NICKEL NITE !<lb/>
See You There!<lb/>
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 752-9745<lb/>
) A 1<lb/>
H L HODGES<lb/>
COMPANY<lb/>
LOCATED AT 210 EAST FIFTH STREET<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
OFF ON SHOE'PURCHASE<lb/>
KSviss<lb/>
Coupon Good Until Sept 15. Must Present With ECU ID Cart.<lb/>
ASAHI<lb/>
HX. Hodges Co.<lb/>
Bond's Sporting Goods<lb/>
CoTJpW<lb/>
Iretom<lb/>
Adidas<lb/>
SPERRY TOP SIDER<lb/>
BOND'S<lb/>
SPORTING GOODS<lb/>
Located At 218 Arlington Blvd<lb/>
Two Stores To Serve You<lb/>
Welcome To Greenville<lb/>
?<lb/>
t mmttmmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057278_0034"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>