<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057282_0001"/>
Pirates<lb/>
Mow Down<lb/>
Blue Devi<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
sport- I dllur<lb/>
DURHAM ? "No words can tell<lb/>
you. I'm just so proud of you<lb/>
Following his successful debut as<lb/>
head football coach at Hast<lb/>
Carolina, Ed Emory could think of<lb/>
nothing more fitting to say to his<lb/>
team  after it had finished<lb/>
humiliating Duke, in hot sultry con-<lb/>
ditions, Saturday, 35-10.<lb/>
The Pirate offense came on<lb/>
strong in the second half, scoring<lb/>
three touchdowns and rolling up 267<lb/>
vards while the ECU defense<lb/>
swarmed over the Blue Devil<lb/>
back field like bees in both halves to<lb/>
get Emory started out on the right<lb/>
foot after replacing Pat Dye last<lb/>
December.<lb/>
All- American candidate at<lb/>
halfback Anthony Collins scored<lb/>
three TDs in the win despite some<lb/>
badlv bruised ribs that had threaten-<lb/>
ed to keep him out of the game<lb/>
altogether.<lb/>
Though the offense tallied a<lb/>
whoping 396 yards for the after-<lb/>
noon, it was the Pirate defenders<lb/>
that put the Blue Devils in the grave.<lb/>
Thanks to seven sacks of Duke<lb/>
quarterback Ben Bennett and some<lb/>
tough play in the trenches, the<lb/>
Pirate defense held its opponent to a<lb/>
mere two years rushing.<lb/>
"The defense was definitely the<lb/>
key for us said a jubilant I mor<lb/>
following the contest. "We rotated<lb/>
fresh people up front that day. The<lb/>
real key was getting to Bennett in<lb/>
key situations. I knew we needed a<lb/>
big rush, and I was very pleased<lb/>
with what we got<lb/>
The Pirate defense also played the<lb/>
offense when it came up with what<lb/>
might have been the game's key play<lb/>
late in the first half. With the score<lb/>
times at seven, Duke had the foot-<lb/>
ball on its own 35-yard laine when<lb/>
an ECU rush got to Bennett and<lb/>
forced a fumble that was recovered<lb/>
by Pirate defensive end Mike Davis<lb/>
on the Duke 25.<lb/>
With starting quarterback<lb/>
Carlton Nelson ailing from heat ex-<lb/>
haustion, the Pirates went with<lb/>
reserve Greg Stewart to direct the<lb/>
offense that would try to at least<lb/>
salvage a field goal with the 30<lb/>
seconds that remained in the half.<lb/>
Following two no-gain plays.<lb/>
Stewart completed a pass over the<lb/>
middle to Anthony Collins that<lb/>
went for 11 yeards, giving ECU a<lb/>
first down on the Devils' 14-yard<lb/>
line with 13 seconds remaining in<lb/>
the half.<lb/>
On the very next play Collins took<lb/>
a pitch from a falling Stewart and<lb/>
went untouched into the end one as<lb/>
ECU went to the locker room at<lb/>
halftime with a 14-7 lead. Collins<lb/>
had also scored his team's first TD<lb/>
Ste PIRAIK, Page . col. 1<lb/>
Collins Scores<lb/>
?he lEast Carolinian<lb/>
Vol. 55 No. 5<lb/>
12 Pages Toda<lb/>
Serving the lias! Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Tuesday, September 9, 1980<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Circulation 10.000<lb/>
Petition Calls For WZMB<lb/>
Station Manager To Quit;<lb/>
Asks Former Head Back<lb/>
Over 600 Students Signed Petition<lb/>
calling for resignation of M MB manager<lb/>
PhoTO by GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
Beer Blast, Concert Considered<lb/>
For 1980 Homecoming Event<lb/>
A beer blast and a concert on C ol-<lb/>
lege Hill ma follow the Homecom-<lb/>
ing Hep Rallv ii plan- arc approved<lb/>
in a September llth meeting, said<lb/>
Dean Mallory.<lb/>
On October 18 at 2 p.m East<lb/>
( at'ilma Pirates will host Western<lb/>
( arolina Mountaineers for the an-<lb/>
nual homecoming football game<lb/>
The beer blast is onl a part ol<lb/>
this year's Homecoming Celebra-<lb/>
tion. Concerts, contests, parades,<lb/>
parties and a cross campus run will<lb/>
fill out the 1980 ECU Homecoming<lb/>
Schedule.<lb/>
This year's theme for homecom-<lb/>
ing is "Pirate Spirit of the 80V and<lb/>
the homecoming committee is work<lb/>
ing hard to start off this decade with<lb/>
the best possible homecoming.<lb/>
A decorative contest will be held<lb/>
Wednesday &amp; rhursday, October 15<lb/>
and 16 for the dorms and all sorori-<lb/>
t and fraternity houses. Each entry<lb/>
participating will be alloted forty<lb/>
dollars and will be judged on design.<lb/>
color combination, originality,<lb/>
completeness ol theme, workman-<lb/>
ship, and overall evaluation.<lb/>
On 1 riday, October 17 at 8 p.m.<lb/>
there will be a pep rally.<lb/>
An lumni Open House kicks off<lb/>
Homecoming Day festivities on<lb/>
Saturday, October 18, at 9 a.m.<lb/>
At 9:30 a.m the Intramural Of-<lb/>
fice is hosting a Cross Campus Run,<lb/>
consisting of a 5 mile and a 2.5 mile<lb/>
run.<lb/>
The homecoming parade will start<lb/>
at 10 a.m. from Rose High School<lb/>
and move down Fifth Street.<lb/>
At 8 p.m. following the 2 p.m.<lb/>
football game, a band jamboree will<lb/>
be held at Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. Beach music, bluegrass.<lb/>
jazz, and soul are on the agenda.<lb/>
The Student Union will conclude<lb/>
homecoming with a concert, by<lb/>
Mike Williams on the mall at 2 p.m.<lb/>
Sunday, October 19.<lb/>
Decorations, Entertainment and<lb/>
Bands. Parade and Advertising are<lb/>
the five sub-committees which form<lb/>
the Student Homecoming Commit-<lb/>
tee.<lb/>
Anyone wanting to work on a<lb/>
committee should contact Dean<lb/>
Mallory 757-6824.<lb/>
By TERRY GRA<lb/>
V-w 1 ?1il?r<lb/>
Approximately 600 ECU students<lb/>
signed a petition Mondav that calls<lb/>
for the resignation of the present<lb/>
station manager of WZMB and the<lb/>
reinstatement of the former station<lb/>
manager until a "qualified ECU<lb/>
student with a broadcasting license"<lb/>
can be found to manage the station.<lb/>
The petition, which was address-<lb/>
ed to the ECU Media Beard, the<lb/>
Board of Trustees and Chancellor<lb/>
Thomas Brewer, stated that<lb/>
WZMiJ's station manage LcA<lb/>
Killingsworth, should resign her<lb/>
position "for the good of the stu-<lb/>
dent bod and WZMB<lb/>
Van Brown and lorn Zielinski,<lb/>
both friends o Jeter's, initiated the<lb/>
petition.<lb/>
The petition resulted from the<lb/>
resignation of John Jeter as special<lb/>
adviser to the station last Wednes-<lb/>
day in a closed session o the Media<lb/>
Board. Jeter was the station's<lb/>
manger until August 1, when Kill-<lb/>
inesworth succeeded him to the<lb/>
post. He had been staving on as an<lb/>
unofficial adisor to Killingsworth<lb/>
until the station's new equipment<lb/>
could be set up and the first broad<lb/>
cast aired<lb/>
According to sources. Kill-<lb/>
ingsworth appeared betore the<lb/>
Media Board Wednesday and said<lb/>
thai Jeter had been oerstepping his<lb/>
authority. David Creech, chairman<lb/>
ot the Media Board, said Monday<lb/>
that the board had "made it clear"<lb/>
that Killingsworth was in charge of<lb/>
the station.<lb/>
"Cilenda is the general manager<lb/>
of the station, and the Media Board<lb/>
is backing her 100 percent said<lb/>
Creech. "1 don't see where there<lb/>
should be any question about it. -V<lb/>
this point, we have all the con-<lb/>
fidence in the world in her he add-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
Van Brown, who helped start the<lb/>
petition, said Monday that the<lb/>
Media Board "did not consider the<lb/>
ramifications o (Jeter's) resigna-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Brown, a graduate o ECl , said<lb/>
that without Jeter's technical<lb/>
knowledge ot the new equipment,<lb/>
the station would have a hard time<lb/>
setting up.<lb/>
Killingsworth has responded to<lb/>
charges that she might be unable to<lb/>
get the station on the air. 'They<lb/>
should give me a few weeks. I'll get<lb/>
it cleared up. I've got a job to do,<lb/>
and 1 can't tight petitions and<lb/>
newspapers. I've got work to do<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
Killingsworth said that she had<lb/>
been the station's business manger<lb/>
tor two years and assistant manger<lb/>
for six months before Jeter recom-<lb/>
mended her for the general<lb/>
manager's job.<lb/>
"I know the station. 1 know how<lb/>
hard John has worked, but 1 have to<lb/>
be responsible for what goes on<lb/>
The petition also asks that Jeter<lb/>
"be reinstated to oversee placing the<lb/>
station on the air, as was originally<lb/>
agreed upon by the Media Board<lb/>
See PETITION, Page 2, Col. 1<lb/>
"Affair On Mall" Rescheduled<lb/>
"Student life Celebrates ? n<lb/>
Affair On The Mall" an ef-<lb/>
fort to familiarize students with the<lb/>
different services provided by the<lb/>
E.C.U. Division of Student Life ?<lb/>
will be held Wednesday, September<lb/>
10.<lb/>
ECU Students Charged<lb/>
?<lb/>
In Motorcycle Larceny;<lb/>
Auto Also Reported Stolen<lb/>
B MIKENOONAN<lb/>
suit nlir<lb/>
Two last Carolina University<lb/>
students have been charged with<lb/>
felonious larceny of a motorcycle,<lb/>
bringing the total o' on-campus<lb/>
vehicle break-ins to three since the<lb/>
beginning of fall semester.<lb/>
Michael Jerry Kirbv, 18. and<lb/>
Bryan Keith Kelly, 18, both of 135<lb/>
Jones Dorm, were apprehended b<lb/>
E U C ampus Police after allegedlv<lb/>
stealing a 1973 Honda motorcycle in<lb/>
front o the lnfirmirv August 28.<lb/>
Value of the motorcycle was<lb/>
estimated at $750.<lb/>
Kelly was also charged with<lb/>
assault on a police officer and plac-<lb/>
ed under a $900 bond.<lb/>
Smith, charged with no operators<lb/>
license, was placed under a bond of<lb/>
$400. Preliminary hearings for both<lb/>
have yet to be determined.<lb/>
The preceeding night, Aug. 27, a<lb/>
1976 Datsun was reported stolen<lb/>
from the Eighth Street parking lot<lb/>
between James Street and Cotanche<lb/>
Street.<lb/>
Value oi the car was estimated at<lb/>
3,000<lb/>
According to police reports, the<lb/>
car had been straight wired, and was<lb/>
later recovered, still running, in a<lb/>
parking place on Maple Street.<lb/>
The recovered vehicle had receiv-<lb/>
ed $250 worth o damage. The car<lb/>
was damaged on the passenger's<lb/>
side from front to rear, according to<lb/>
the police report.<lb/>
I here were no suspects in the case<lb/>
pending identification of finger-<lb/>
prints. Joseph C alder. Director of<lb/>
Security, expresses his concern over<lb/>
the number of auto break-ins this<lb/>
semester.<lb/>
"The main cause of so many<lb/>
thefts is that people leave their keys<lb/>
on floorboards or under the sun<lb/>
visor. These people stealing cars<lb/>
look in those places first he said.<lb/>
"We usually average five or six<lb/>
auto thefts a year he added. "In<lb/>
the past, there have been more<lb/>
vehicles stolen from the area around<lb/>
Minges Coliseum than any other<lb/>
location he said.<lb/>
The celebration, originaliv plann-<lb/>
ed for September 3 was interrupted<lb/>
by an afternoon thundershower and<lb/>
had to be rescheduled.<lb/>
Ms. Nancy Mie. Associate Direc-<lb/>
tor o Intramural and Recreational<lb/>
Services and coordinator of the<lb/>
celebration, said the event will take<lb/>
place as originally planned and will<lb/>
include the following schedule o<lb/>
events<lb/>
3:00-4:00 Frank Reilly. guitarist;<lb/>
4:00-4:30 Just For Fun, Interpreters<lb/>
for the Deaf; 4:30-5:00 Jeff<lb/>
Blumberg, BIO WOW disc jockey;<lb/>
5:00-6:00 Fd Collevecchio,<lb/>
guitarist; 6:00-6:30 Just For Fun;<lb/>
and 6:30-7:00 Billy and Sandra<lb/>
Stenson. guitarists.<lb/>
At 5:00 Chancellor Dr. Thomas<lb/>
Brewer and Dr. Elmer Myer. Vice<lb/>
C hancellor of Student Life will an-<lb/>
nounce the winners of a drawing tor<lb/>
tickets to the UNC-ECU football<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Other attractions include a<lb/>
wandering mime and face-painter.<lb/>
In addition, a wheelchair basket-<lb/>
ball exhibition game will be played<lb/>
with chairs available for students<lb/>
who want to trv their hook shots<lb/>
from wheelchairs, said Ms. Mie.<lb/>
A Pizza Hut pizza-eating contest,<lb/>
a Mellow Yello chugging contest<lb/>
and a Miller 6-pack toss will be<lb/>
available for those wishing to try<lb/>
their hand (or stomach) at contests.<lb/>
The event is a joint effort bv the<lb/>
U various departments of the Divi-<lb/>
sion of Student I ife.<lb/>
Prosecutors Set Stage To Show<lb/>
Slow-Motion Movies To Jury<lb/>
Rush Week Gets Off The Ground<lb/>
with a balloon from the sororities<lb/>
Photo by GARY<lb/>
-EHSON<lb/>
C.RFFNSBORO (UP1) Pro-<lb/>
secutors have set the stage for show-<lb/>
ing a jury slow-motion videotapes<lb/>
of the shooting deaths of five com-<lb/>
munists in the trail of six Ku Klux<lb/>
Klansmen and Nazis charged with<lb/>
the slayings.<lb/>
Two FBI videotape experts<lb/>
testified Monday they had made<lb/>
slow-motion copies of television<lb/>
film of the Nov. 3, 1979, Death to<lb/>
the Klan" rally that erupted into<lb/>
shooting after a caravan of<lb/>
Klansmen and Nazis had arrived to<lb/>
heckle the demonstration.<lb/>
Several up-to-speed videotapes<lb/>
have already been shown to the jury<lb/>
hearing the case. Prosecutors were<lb/>
expected to introduce the slow-<lb/>
motion tapes into evidence today.<lb/>
The defendants are Klansmen<lb/>
Jerry Paul Smith of Maiden; Col-<lb/>
eman Blair Pridmore of Lincolnton;<lb/>
Gene Morgan of Lincolnton; and<lb/>
David Wayne Matthews of Newton;<lb/>
and Nazis Jack Wilson Fowler and<lb/>
Roland Wayne Wood, both of<lb/>
Winston-Salem.<lb/>
Also Monday, District Attorney<lb/>
Michael Schlosser said he has filed a<lb/>
motion asking that the jury be taken<lb/>
to the Greensboro intersection<lb/>
where the shootings occurred. No<lb/>
ruling was made on the motion.<lb/>
In other testimony Monday, FBI<lb/>
firearms expert Gerald F. Wilkes<lb/>
said an unfired shotgun shell found<lb/>
at the site where the shooting occur-<lb/>
red was from a shotgun carried by<lb/>
Pridmore.<lb/>
OrTfheTnside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Classifieds12<lb/>
Defense Key9<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Letters4<lb/>
Pirates Win9<lb/>
Spring Mills6<lb/>
Store6<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057282_0002"/><lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
TUTORS WANTED<lb/>
CSO<lb/>
YOUTHGRANTS<lb/>
AVAILABLE<lb/>
HOLY TRINITY<lb/>
COLLEGE BOWL<lb/>
? ,? for 1 Iran<lb/>
petit eg i- .?.<lb/>
??<lb/>
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I  ? ? i '<lb/>
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SOCIAL WORK<lb/>
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Bow ??<lb/>
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FREE WILL<lb/>
SU MEETING<lb/>
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MASCOT<lb/>
JEWISH WISH<lb/>
STtSTUDENTS<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
. ?.<lb/>
.? . ?<lb/>
I Direct<lb/>
APPLICATIONS<lb/>
1980-81 BMI<lb/>
AWARDS OPEN<lb/>
rpei<lb/>
? . ? ? ' I v ??? "<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
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(tie w.H nt<lb/>
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F ree A I pled (or Chairpi (or the Stu<lb/>
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PHI ETA SIGMA<lb/>
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(or the year <lb/>
??; ? ? ; ? for the 1<lb/>
made ? ? ? ?<lb/>
? )i<lb/>
SOCIOLOGY<lb/>
ANTHROPOLOGY<lb/>
CLUB<lb/>
MSC SHORT<lb/>
COURSES<lb/>
<lb/>
?. ? ? . i<lb/>
lor Dolly Mitel<lb/>
? ? ? . ' ; II . ' <lb/>
? ; ? ? . . . ?<lb/>
its an bea i . ??<lb/>
earn ba<lb/>
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(rod<lb/>
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hvidua I register m pei<lb/>
entra<lb/>
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bi ? ???? . ? ?<lb/>
CHORAL SOCIETY<lb/>
?. ??.  . . ? ?<lb/>
ee'<lb/>
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for a '<lb/>
Decembei I r<lb/>
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Higl ? ?<lb/>
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? ? ? . ?? ? teri<lb/>
faculty<lb/>
 ?  . ; ' ? ?'<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
HOUSE COUNCIL<lb/>
PEP RALLY<lb/>
PHYSICS<lb/>
CHESS CLUB<lb/>
S.N.E.A<lb/>
WELCOME BACK STUDENTS<lb/>
Cox Floral Service<lb/>
wages you to support the<lb/>
Football team by wearing<lb/>
a yellow Mum with purple<lb/>
bow to the opening game<lb/>
PHI BETA ETA<lb/>
LAW LAMBDA<lb/>
?  , <lb/>
PART TIME<lb/>
EMPLOYMENT<lb/>
' ?<lb/>
SKI GROUP<lb/>
POETRY<lb/>
CONTEST<lb/>
FRESHMEN<lb/>
irnvi ? ?<lb/>
rdet :<lb/>
is possible The E<lb/>
p at tin<lb/>
 . ? ? ? ?<lb/>
I at the wi i i<lb/>
; ?  ?.???-<lb/>
epi<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
CHOIR<lb/>
PHI ETA SJGMA<lb/>
.<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
ROCK CHURCH<lb/>
WELCOME BACK<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
Cj' ' . ' '<lb/>
fall with me ' new Design Cu?<lb/>
.? if fanta - <lb/>
o<lb/>
<lb/>
s<lb/>
o<lb/>
 i Sept. 30<lb/>
OFF ail Curly Perms or B<lb/>
Shampoo Blow :?. -Shampoo<lb/>
rvith ALL H<lb/>
Call today foi . ri eni or consi<lb/>
752 3419<lb/>
2800 E 10th St<lb/>
r<lb/>
Petition Asks Station<lb/>
Managers Resignation<lb/>
Continued from Page 1<lb/>
finaih approved this spring, and the<lb/>
ccording to Killingsworth and stations equipment was ordered<lb/>
ands. - summei.<lb/>
"Ii to have John take i!n<lb/>
Mthough the student -funded sta<lb/>
a and put the station on the tion is not yet on the air, Jeter had<lb/>
desei ves it but he<lb/>
iimated earlier this month thai the<lb/>
iny I<lb/>
ant '? 'til date should be sometime in<lb/>
Settling into campus<lb/>
? - 'he station an more<lb/>
h said.<lb/>
earl) October, bin Killingsworth<lb/>
that she was not going to name<lb/>
Since WLC U, the formei radio a date until all of the equipment is in<lb/>
 lei. was taken ofl the and operating.<lb/>
Brown and Zelinski said the)<lb/>
would continue to circulate the pen-<lb/>
1( license was tion this week.<lb/>
was taken oit the<lb/>
rked to gel<lb/>
ti pei ation<lb/>
life doesn't exactly<lb/>
mean settling down.<lb/>
Sell It Faster<lb/>
Through<lb/>
Classified Ads<lb/>
Call 757-6366 for information<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
N.C ? No. 1 1 Nightclub<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
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AD ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each ot these advertised<lb/>
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Kroger Savon except as spe-<lb/>
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do run out ot an item we will<lb/>
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the advertised item a! the<lb/>
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10 WED  CAROLYNE MAS"<lb/>
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THERE'S SOME PARTYING IN EVERY<lb/>
STUDENT'S LIFE, AND WEEKENDS ARE<lb/>
SHORT?SO WHY WASTE TIME JUST<lb/>
GETTING READY FOR THE FUN? WE'VE GOT<lb/>
EVERYTHING YOU NEED RIGHT HERE?FROM<lb/>
COLD BEER TO THAT HOT NEW ALBUM!<lb/>
8-Oz.<lb/>
Twin<lb/>
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BEER<lb/>
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DELI-SUBS<lb/>
3 VARIETIES OF MEAT<lb/>
CHEESE,LETTUCE<lb/>
2 FOR<lb/>
6<lb/>
12-Oz.<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
Records &amp; Tapes<lb/>
REFRESHING<lb/>
Coca-Cola<lb/>
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HILLCREST DRY ROASTED<lb/>
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600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
Phone 756-7031<lb/>
t<lb/>
(<lb/>
<lb/>
Irv<lb/>
I<lb/>
V<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057282_0003"/><lb/>
1 Ml 1 s K()1 IMW<lb/>
SI I'll MHI K9. I WO<lb/>
Governor<lb/>
it .<lb/>
i<lb/>
s<lb/>
GOT<lb/>
FROM<lb/>
D<lb/>
?s<lb/>
?pi 9<lb/>
1980<lb/>
,EN<lb/>
B DAN LOHWASSER<lb/>
RALEIGH (I PI) - Republican<lb/>
gubernatorial candidate 1 Beverly<lb/>
lake Jr. used Monday night's<lb/>
televised debate with Democratic<lb/>
Gov. .lames B. Hunt Jr. to launch<lb/>
an aggressive attack, accusing Hunt<lb/>
ol engaging in machine politics and<lb/>
creating an explosive growth in state<lb/>
bureauci acy.<lb/>
Hunt responded by saying he<lb/>
wanted to wage a campaign that<lb/>
dealt with issues such as jobs,<lb/>
education, crime control and<lb/>
energy.<lb/>
During the hour-long debate, ear-<lb/>
ned live from the Meredith College<lb/>
auditorium b the University ol<lb/>
North i arolina television network.<lb/>
I ake repeatedly tried to take the of-<lb/>
fensive, preferring to fire ofl ques-<lb/>
tions at his opponent rather than ad-<lb/>
dressing questions posed to ill by a<lb/>
four-member panel.<lb/>
Hunt repeatedly ignored lake's<lb/>
questions about his stand on the<lb/>
Panama C anal treaty, his involve-<lb/>
ment in a controversy surrounding<lb/>
Comprehensive Employment and<lb/>
Training Act contracts, and<lb/>
statements 1 ake attributed to Hunt<lb/>
about supporting a proposed Si5<lb/>
billion federal jobs program.<lb/>
Communist Workers Party leader<lb/>
Nelson Johnson, who had threaten-<lb/>
ed to disrupt the debates, appeared<lb/>
outside the auditorium with four<lb/>
other CWP members, but left<lb/>
without incident when told he would<lb/>
be arrested for trespassing.<lb/>
l he debate began with a dispute<lb/>
between the two candidates over<lb/>
several posters lake had hoped to<lb/>
use to illustrate his opening state<lb/>
ment. After he placed the first<lb/>
poster, which was titled "Hunt's<lb/>
Political Machine Hunt quickly<lb/>
objected, saying it was a "clear<lb/>
understanding" that no props<lb/>
would be allowed.<lb/>
Lake then said he was advised on-<lb/>
ly two minutes before the debate<lb/>
began that he could not use the<lb/>
displays, but agreed to leave them<lb/>
out of sight behind his speaker'<lb/>
podium.<lb/>
At the conclusion of the debate,<lb/>
Hunt said he was not disturbed by<lb/>
Lake's tactics.<lb/>
"1 didn't know what to expect<lb/>
Hunt said. "It didn't bother me.<lb/>
The set-up for the debate was for<lb/>
them, the panelists, to ask the ques-<lb/>
tions<lb/>
Lake said the ban on his displays<lb/>
"very seriously inhibited my ability<lb/>
to get my message across<lb/>
In his opening statement. Lake<lb/>
blasted Hunt, saving he had made a<lb/>
deal four years ago with state ALL-<lb/>
OC) leader Wilbur Hobby, promis-<lb/>
ing him CETA contracts inexchange<lb/>
for political support. The State<lb/>
Auditor's Office earlier this year<lb/>
questioned $260,000 in CLTA con-<lb/>
tracts awarded a firm headed by<lb/>
Hobby.<lb/>
Hunt said he preferred to address<lb/>
"the issues but said the state did<lb/>
have problems with the CLTA pro-<lb/>
gram. Hunt said he had moved to<lb/>
correct the problems, replacing two<lb/>
top officials and appointing a con-<lb/>
troller to tighten the reins on CLTA<lb/>
funds. Hunt said he was "really<lb/>
sorry that Sen. Lake is using these<lb/>
kinds of tactics and recited his<lb/>
record on bringing jobs to North<lb/>
Carolina as well as his state reading<lb/>
program.<lb/>
"I am running on my record<lb/>
Hunt said, adding that in 3 years,<lb/>
$7.2 billion in new industry had<lb/>
been pledged for the state that<lb/>
would create 110.000 new jobs.<lb/>
On education. Hunt said children<lb/>
in grade 1-6 were now at or above<lb/>
the national average in reading abili-<lb/>
ty.<lb/>
lake also accused Hunt of in-<lb/>
creasing state spending bv 62 per-<lb/>
cent during his administration,<lb/>
although Hunt said there had ac-<lb/>
tually been a decrease each vear in<lb/>
the number of new jobs added to<lb/>
state government.<lb/>
Hun said thai during the<lb/>
previous administration there had<lb/>
been an annual 4.8 percent increase<lb/>
in state jobs each year. He said the<lb/>
rate was reduced to 3.2 percent in<lb/>
his first year, 3.1 percent in his se-<lb/>
cond year, 2.5 percent in 1979 and<lb/>
0.48 percent this year.<lb/>
lake also said he was strongly<lb/>
against gubernatorial succession,<lb/>
while Hunt pushed through a con<lb/>
stitutional amendment that is allow-<lb/>
ing him to become the first governor<lb/>
in modern times to succeed himsell<lb/>
I he two men dittered on a possi-<lb/>
ble state gasoline tax increase,<lb/>
ratification of the Equal Rights<lb/>
Amendment and gubernatorial suc-<lb/>
cession<lb/>
1 ake said he was strongly oppos-<lb/>
ed to increasing gasoline taxes,<lb/>
while Hunt said there were not any<lb/>
"easy answers' to declining<lb/>
highway construction funds and<lb/>
that he had appointed a task force<lb/>
to make recommendations on how<lb/>
to raise money. He implied an in-<lb/>
crease in the gasoline tax would be<lb/>
an option.<lb/>
Hunt said he supports ERA,<lb/>
while I ake called it "a blank check<lb/>
to the federal government, and<lb/>
that's why I oppose it<lb/>
Cycle Race Scheduled For<lb/>
Sept. 11: 20 Teams Expected<lb/>
CXROl iN CRU-CH<lb/>
stall ??'?<lb/>
Shades of the movie<lb/>
Breaking Away ma be<lb/>
witnessed on lhursdav<lb/>
at Bunting I tack, when<lb/>
up to 120 cyclers will<lb/>
compete in a 50-mile<lb/>
event.<lb/>
Registration is still<lb/>
underway at 10-4<lb/>
Memorial Gym for<lb/>
those interested in com-<lb/>
peting in the September<lb/>
11 bicycle race. The<lb/>
race will begin at 4 p.m.<lb/>
and will continue until<lb/>
one team completes 50<lb/>
mile-<lb/>
Bob Fox, assistant<lb/>
director of Intramural-<lb/>
Recreation Services at<lb/>
Kl . expects between<lb/>
15 and 20 team's to<lb/>
register before the s<lb/>
p.m. Wc dnes d a y<lb/>
deadline. Bob explain-<lb/>
ed that racing bicycles<lb/>
on a track is new to this<lb/>
area. He said he hopes<lb/>
that the movie. Break<lb/>
ing Away, which was<lb/>
s h o w n in t he<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
C enter last weekend.<lb/>
generated more interest<lb/>
in bike racing.<lb/>
The movie features<lb/>
about ten minutes of<lb/>
footage from a race at<lb/>
Indiana University<lb/>
where this type of spor-<lb/>
ting event originated in<lb/>
the United States.<lb/>
" rhey've had a lot o'<lb/>
success at Indiana<lb/>
University Bob<lb/>
points out. The "Little<lb/>
500 as it is called at<lb/>
Indiana I  is now the<lb/>
focal point for a<lb/>
weekend of events.<lb/>
learns from<lb/>
residence halls, frater-<lb/>
nites, sororities, or in-<lb/>
dependents may have<lb/>
four, five, or six riding<lb/>
members. Each team<lb/>
will also include a cap-<lb/>
tain and a "catcher"<lb/>
who are nonriding<lb/>
members. The captain,<lb/>
by holding up a<lb/>
chalkboard, tells the<lb/>
riders their speed and<lb/>
the number of laps they<lb/>
have completed. The<lb/>
catcher will aid the<lb/>
riders after they have<lb/>
completed their laps.<lb/>
1 earns may use any<lb/>
type of bicycle, but it<lb/>
must first be certified at<lb/>
the intramural office to<lb/>
ensure that it is in good<lb/>
riding condition. Men<lb/>
and women will com-<lb/>
pete in two separate<lb/>
events.<lb/>
Any student may<lb/>
enter the competition<lb/>
with the exception of<lb/>
those in class one or<lb/>
class two of the U.S.<lb/>
Cycling Federation, or<lb/>
those who have com-<lb/>
peted m any inter-<lb/>
collegiate bicycle races.<lb/>
Bob Fox feels that<lb/>
this will be an exciting<lb/>
spectator event. He<lb/>
believes the beginning<lb/>
of the race and the first<lb/>
four or five miles will<lb/>
prove especially in-<lb/>
teresting. But he feels<lb/>
that the most exciting<lb/>
parts will come during<lb/>
the relay passing of the<lb/>
bikes. At this point, the<lb/>
rider must dismount<lb/>
the bicycle and literally<lb/>
throw it ahead to the<lb/>
member of the team<lb/>
whose turn it is to take<lb/>
over. This must be ac-<lb/>
complished with a great<lb/>
deal of precision,<lb/>
because the exchange<lb/>
can only take place<lb/>
within a relatively<lb/>
small, designated,<lb/>
stretch of the track.<lb/>
Student Graduate<lb/>
Assistant Mike<lb/>
Melehiorre is in charge<lb/>
o' the bicycle race, and<lb/>
he vsill be assisted by<lb/>
Mr. Fox.<lb/>
Study Shows Water. Alcohol Don't Mix<lb/>
s DN1 . ustralia<lb/>
ll'i I ifesaving ol<lb/>
Ocials wanted to show<lb/>
that drinking an d<lb/>
swimming don't mix.<lb/>
So they gave amateui<lb/>
swimmers five can- ol<lb/>
beet each and had them<lb/>
sw mi 60 lap- in a pool<lb/>
about a mile.<lb/>
've nevei seen<lb/>
anything like it said<lb/>
Dr. Ian Mackie, who is<lb/>
working on the stud<lb/>
lap b e c a use h i <lb/>
breathing became un-<lb/>
coordmaied<lb/>
which is funded bv the<lb/>
New South Wales state<lb/>
had reached his 60th<lb/>
lap<lb/>
"In fact, one swim-<lb/>
mer completed 60 laps <lb/>
and thoughi he'd done Mackie said the pro-<lb/>
20. Another stopped gram was important<lb/>
swinimirn: at the<lb/>
!nd<lb/>
because about half the<lb/>
government. 1 hev lap because he thought drownings in Australia<lb/>
were weaving all over he had finished and an each vear involve peo-<lb/>
e place and not one experienced life guard pte whotavIcohol in<lb/>
ol them knew when he had (o Mop ai Ihe lMh<lb/>
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i???j<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057282_0004"/><lb/>
Qttre 3E&amp;0t QIaroltnfan<lb/>
Serving the campus community since 1925.<lb/>
RichardGri i  w ? <lb/>
Terry Herndon, am ?? iivDki<lb/>
Chris i k hok. ? Chari i s Chandi i r. ,<lb/>
Georgi Hettk h, . Ferry Gray, v i<lb/>
Ami x I m siik,  ? DavidNorms.<lb/>
?<lb/>
Scptembei 9, 1980<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Debate<lb/>
Hunt Sticks To 'Issues'<lb/>
Lake Attacks 'Machine'<lb/>
Perhaps the best entertainment<lb/>
on television last night was an hour-<lb/>
long program which started at 7<lb/>
p m the North Carolina guber-<lb/>
natorial debate between Gov. James<lb/>
B. Hunt Jr. and state Sen. 1. Beverly<lb/>
I ake Jr.<lb/>
The fiasco began when Lake<lb/>
opened with an attack on Hunt's<lb/>
"political machine Only a few<lb/>
minutes into his allotted time. Lake<lb/>
unveiled a poster with pictures of<lb/>
Hunt, siate AFL-CIO leader<lb/>
Wilbur Hobby, and other members<lb/>
of the "machine Hunt objected<lb/>
and 1 ake reluctantly continued<lb/>
without visual aids.<lb/>
1 ake was obviously unprepared<lb/>
to discuss such topics as education<lb/>
and government spending, with<lb/>
most of his energies directed at<lb/>
Hunt's alleged involvement in<lb/>
misuse o C E I A funds, his stand on<lb/>
the Panama Canal treaty and his<lb/>
proposed SI5 billion federal jobs<lb/>
program. Lour times Lake cut short<lb/>
his answers to reporters' questions<lb/>
and directed a question o' his own<lb/>
to Hunt.<lb/>
Hunt countered his opponent's<lb/>
aggressive tactics casually, ignoring<lb/>
Lake's questions and even making<lb/>
jokes about Lake's ignorance of<lb/>
subjects and failure to answer<lb/>
reporters' questions. Hunt said he<lb/>
preferred to address the "real<lb/>
issues referring to jobs, educa-<lb/>
tion, waste disposal and crime<lb/>
prevention.<lb/>
If a winner must be chosen from<lb/>
the debate, it would have to be<lb/>
Hunt. He dealt quickly and<lb/>
smoothly with I ake's probing ques-<lb/>
tions, incorrect facts and interrup-<lb/>
tions. He chose every opportunity<lb/>
to use such tired but oratorically ef-<lb/>
fective phrases like "my fellow<lb/>
North Carolinians" and "we (the<lb/>
ivernor and N.C. citizens) have<lb/>
accomplished a lot Flashing a<lb/>
cocky grin, Hunt gracefully<lb/>
sidestepped Lake's feeble efforts.<lb/>
Despite Lake's poor showing, he<lb/>
did raise an all-important question<lb/>
about the CETA controversy, which<lb/>
has been the centerpiece of Lake's<lb/>
charges against Hunt and his<lb/>
"machine When Vic Carter of<lb/>
WRA1 -TV in Raleigh repeated<lb/>
Lakes opening question to Hunt.<lb/>
Hunt admitted there had been<lb/>
mistakes, but insisted that Hobby<lb/>
had obtained contracts in the same<lb/>
manner as others, through bids.<lb/>
The debate wasn't very infor-<lb/>
mative, and little was mentioned<lb/>
other than both candidates'<lb/>
repeated campaign jargon. What<lb/>
the debate did show was Hunt's ex-<lb/>
perience ? and 1 ake's inexperience<lb/>
? with the media and the issues.<lb/>
More On WZMB<lb/>
In our recent editorial "Jeter<lb/>
Resigns" (Sept. 4 issue), we stated<lb/>
that 'Chancellor Brewer called a<lb/>
meeting with the (media) board and<lb/>
requested that the station manager's<lb/>
position be filled b a professional,<lb/>
state employee, thus eliminating<lb/>
student control That was two<lb/>
years ago.<lb/>
According to Chancellor Brewer,<lb/>
WZMB was being proposed as a<lb/>
100,000-watl FM station at that<lb/>
time. With the requirements of a<lb/>
station that large. Brewer said he<lb/>
deemed a full-time "manager'<lb/>
necessary to keep the station on the<lb/>
air 365 days a year. He added that<lb/>
he checked university stations of<lb/>
that sie and found that none<lb/>
operated without full-time<lb/>
employees.<lb/>
As long as the station remained a<lb/>
campus station. Brewer said he saw<lb/>
no need for a full-time manager if<lb/>
that's what the students wanted.<lb/>
z<lb/>
<lb/>
2?<lb/>
T<lb/>
3<lb/>
7 C<lb/>
'THANKS. NOW GET LOST<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
'ECU, WZMB Suffered Great Loss'<lb/>
The ECU conitiHiP.il. particularly<lb/>
WZMB-FM, has suffered a great loss<lb/>
with the acceptance oi John Jeter's<lb/>
resignation as a WZMB advisor. Instead<lb/>
ot being berated b his former col-<lb/>
league, Glenda Killingsworth (now sta-<lb/>
tion manager), John should be issued a<lb/>
note o appreciation from every EC I<lb/>
student who has ever dreamed ot finally<lb/>
getting a community-oriented, rock and<lb/>
jazz station on die air.<lb/>
Foi years John has used to provide<lb/>
the Greenville area with the ultimate<lb/>
radio itation, one thai would be listened<lb/>
to and appreciated, having ??something<lb/>
tor everyone He put his personal and<lb/>
academic reputation on the line when he<lb/>
asked Congressman Jones to support<lb/>
our petition foi an FC license when<lb/>
tnan E( I administrators did little or<lb/>
nothing lo support the new station. John<lb/>
lias dedicated many personal hours, in-<lb/>
eluding hours that could have been spent<lb/>
with his academics, to further his efforts<lb/>
to get WZMB on the an. Because of<lb/>
John's efforts, ECU students will now<lb/>
have an upbeat radio station. Because ot<lb/>
his efforts, students interested in radio<lb/>
broadcasting experience will now have<lb/>
an opportunity to gather on the job ex-<lb/>
perience before they seek that fust job.<lb/>
I agree with John thai whereas Glenda<lb/>
may have an excellent business<lb/>
background, she is too inexperienced to<lb/>
run WZMB without his backup. The<lb/>
Broadcasting Department should not be<lb/>
expected to pick up the slack because<lb/>
Glenda no longer wants John to in-<lb/>
terfere in her new domain. The Media<lb/>
Board will be hard-pressed to find<lb/>
anyone with John's broadcasting<lb/>
knowledge, experience, and dedication<lb/>
to work for a mere $80 month. It<lb/>
anything, the Media Board should in-<lb/>
vestigate everv possibility to hire John's<lb/>
professional services now that he is a<lb/>
graduate and is ineligible to receive pay-<lb/>
ment for his services.<lb/>
1 empathize with Glenda in that she<lb/>
has a hard road ahead of her in assum-<lb/>
ing John's former managerial position.<lb/>
Instead ot resenting his "interference1<lb/>
1 would think she would appreciate his<lb/>
assistance and accept his suggestions as<lb/>
constructively as she can, realizing that<lb/>
he is only acting in the best interests ot<lb/>
the radio station.<lb/>
As for the closed-door Media Board<lb/>
meeting discussing John's removal:<lb/>
WHY weren't the students notified<lb/>
about this meeting in advance? Obvious-<lb/>
ly, John must have felt isolated in his<lb/>
defense since we weren't aware ot Glen-<lb/>
da's intentions to have him removed<lb/>
from his advisorv position. As a student<lb/>
paving mandatory student fees that sup-<lb/>
port boards such as the Media Board. 1<lb/>
feel well within my hunts m demanding<lb/>
that these meetings be opened and an-<lb/>
nounced, including a pre-planned agen-<lb/>
da so thai in future incidences, when we<lb/>
feel our voices need to be heard, we arc<lb/>
able to be there in person, prepared to<lb/>
offer our opinions.<lb/>
I think 1 speak for all I t I students<lb/>
when 1 say that it's high tune tot Star<lb/>
( hamber" meetings to come to an end<lb/>
1 lie administration and the enure<lb/>
Greenville area is watching the station<lb/>
and now is the time that everyone must<lb/>
do his her part to act constructively<lb/>
like winking together to get Z-91 ON<lb/>
IH1 MR<lb/>
Ml 1 AMI BENTLE<lb/>
Formet WZMB News<lb/>
and PS Dirt<lb/>
We need to unite ourselves on a com-<lb/>
mon feeling about our hopefully to be<lb/>
radio station WZMB.<lb/>
It all started with one young am-<lb/>
bitious student who started at the bol<lb/>
torn like the rest of us and through sheat<lb/>
determination managed to get us, the<lb/>
students, a radio station to be proud of.<lb/>
A feat that no one else dare attempted<lb/>
since our university has been establish-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
I hrough our funds and support. John<lb/>
Jeter has established a radio station with<lb/>
the best equipment and legal contract<lb/>
with the FCC. Never once did John<lb/>
break his spirit although now thai we<lb/>
have our dream at our doorstep the<lb/>
deadboll is stuck and we can't open the<lb/>
door.<lb/>
One week it was a changed lock on the<lb/>
station door leaving John helpless to do<lb/>
technical work vital to meet our airdate.<lb/>
Next it was a week later and our Media<lb/>
Board and newly hand-picked, Glenda<lb/>
Killingsworth, set conditions causing<lb/>
our gallant founder to resign in order to<lb/>
keep his self-respect.<lb/>
John was performing a job as official<lb/>
consultant with no pay yet doing the<lb/>
work of installantion and preparation ot<lb/>
the station which otherwise would cost<lb/>
us the students thousands of dollars.<lb/>
Our new management didn't think she<lb/>
needed the help.<lb/>
Well, it was a sad dav tot me and<lb/>
hopefully a lot of students feel the same<lb/>
way because WZMB is our station and<lb/>
dream which we've all waited a long<lb/>
time for. In essence, the station manager<lb/>
is nearly a representative of us the<lb/>
students. A poor representative Glenda<lb/>
Killingsworth turned out to be!<lb/>
1 ask the question, "Why did W 1 jusl<lb/>
resign a man who was hterallv worth<lb/>
millions to our university in gifts and<lb/>
was priceless to US?"<lb/>
THOMAS I I I I INSKI<lb/>
Leo Edit: 'Congratulations'<lb/>
( ngratulations on youi warm and<lb/>
human editorial salute to Chancelloi<lb/>
1 eo Jenkins! 1 eo, like Hear Old Dad. is<lb/>
probably belter appreciated now that<lb/>
we've "reached age 21" and see him in<lb/>
clearer perspective. Students and faculty<lb/>
alike used to give him hell, from time to<lb/>
tune But lie handled it well.<lb/>
Sometime in the early 70's, just alter<lb/>
completion of one of the new men's<lb/>
dorms, up on the Hill, students had<lb/>
draped a huge banner on its east wall,<lb/>
stating something like "Leo's last r<lb/>
tion I hey sure were wrong!<lb/>
some of the "eggheads" said I eo wa<lb/>
too much a politician. Bull! Leo simpU<lb/>
appreciated the fact that he had more<lb/>
than one constituency; the faculty and<lb/>
stafl were his constituency and the peo-<lb/>
pie of the eastern third ot North<lb/>
Carolina were his constituency. They<lb/>
didn't all know it! But he laid claim to<lb/>
thetn and preached to them ail, telling<lb/>
them how great they were and how thev<lb/>
needed to rise up and, by Golly, get their<lb/>
fair share o the benefits of our fair<lb/>
land.<lb/>
Leo could relate, as you have said, to<lb/>
the student. He related also to John Doe<lb/>
on the courthouse steps of Podunk<lb/>
County, or wherever John happened to<lb/>
be. 1 eo was for real and people saw it<lb/>
and loved it because he inspired them to<lb/>
believe in the unbelievable.<lb/>
I eo had his enemies, as anyone who is<lb/>
worth his salt is apt to have. 1 cussed<lb/>
him, admired him and supported him, as<lb/>
did the vast majority of the campus<lb/>
population. 1 miss him. And 1 nrav that<lb/>
his "retirement" is as much fun for him<lb/>
as were his days at last Carolina.<lb/>
BII I BYKD.SR.<lb/>
community Health<lb/>
Error In Editorial<lb/>
It you will check, I believe that you<lb/>
will find that the C roaian was paid I<lb/>
out of the operating funds of the Stu-<lb/>
dent Supply Store. It was not "built with<lb/>
bonds that were backed and are being<lb/>
paid off with student tees as stated in<lb/>
your editorial in the September 2, WHO<lb/>
edition.<lb/>
JOSEPH O. CLARK<lb/>
Managei<lb/>
Media Board Founder Questions Last Week's Closed Session<lb/>
By ROBERT SWAIM<lb/>
,sii leifcrOwnlMsaaipf<lb/>
As one of the four founders of the<lb/>
Media Board, 1 was deeply saddened and<lb/>
thoroughlv disgusted at the board's actions<lb/>
u the fast'meeting. They seem to have no<lb/>
appreciation for the four years of hard<lb/>
work that John Jeter put into the campus<lb/>
radio station.<lb/>
Jeter slaved for WECU (WZMB) everv<lb/>
dav of the last four years, and what thanks<lb/>
did he get? Insults, a kick in the rear end.<lb/>
and a punch in the face, as the Fast Caroli-<lb/>
nian so aptly put it.<lb/>
I recall very vividly the day John ap-<lb/>
proached the Media Board in the spring of<lb/>
1978 with his dream of an FM radio sta-<lb/>
tion. He received no help or encourage-<lb/>
ment from them. It was the newspaper<lb/>
staff who, like John, saw the need for and<lb/>
the possibility of a good radio station that<lb/>
would cater to the musical tastes of the<lb/>
students. And since that day it has been<lb/>
evident that John had few supporters out-<lb/>
side o the newspaper office.<lb/>
He worked tirelessly for many months,<lb/>
often without pay. He wrestled with the<lb/>
ICC. a hostile administration, and a<lb/>
bureaucatic Media Board.<lb/>
Despite all the obstacles placed in his<lb/>
path and despite being stepped on by ad-<lb/>
ministrators, who at best could be called<lb/>
cruel, he trudged on. His faith never<lb/>
faltered. Onlv those who knew and worked<lb/>
closely with John over the last three years<lb/>
can begin to realie the torture he went<lb/>
through for the radio station, the radio sta-<lb/>
tion he was building for the students of<lb/>
ECU. u ,<lb/>
There were many times when C harles<lb/>
Sune, also a founder o the Media Board,<lb/>
who later became one of its members as<lb/>
president of the Student Union, was the<lb/>
lone voice o encouragement and support<lb/>
for John and WECU. U ' not been foi<lb/>
Sune, Jeter would probably have been<lb/>
done in by the Media Board a long time<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
What happened to John Jeter at that<lb/>
Media Board meeting last week was the<lb/>
height of disrespect, ingratefulness, and<lb/>
bureaucratic buck passing. The board in-<lb/>
correctly took the position that Jeter could<lb/>
be dismissed by Killingsworth. Kill<lb/>
ingsworth did not appoint Jeter as an ad-<lb/>
visor to the radio station; the media board<lb/>
did. Since thev appointed him to that posi-<lb/>
tion, only they had the authority to remove<lb/>
him.<lb/>
It is inconceivable that anvbody with<lb/>
even the smallest heart and brain could act<lb/>
so cold and callous toward Jeter after his<lb/>
vears of dedicated service. The board put<lb/>
on the facade of backing general<lb/>
managers' rights to run their operations as<lb/>
thev see fit. That is a warped joke. Where<lb/>
is all of their righteous support for general<lb/>
managers when it comes to this<lb/>
newspaper's general manager0 And where<lb/>
was their support when Jeter was the<lb/>
general manager of WECU and Kill-<lb/>
ingsworth overstepped her bounds as<lb/>
business manager?<lb/>
In fairness to the Media Board, it must<lb/>
be noted that most of the members are new<lb/>
and were hay, at best, about the whole<lb/>
situation with the radio station. Unfor-<lb/>
tunately, the new members were led astray<lb/>
by one or two hardline anti-media<lb/>
members. The current management of the<lb/>
Media Board can be described as only as<lb/>
uncompromising, dictatorial, and insen<lb/>
sitive to the needs and best interests of the<lb/>
media on this campus.<lb/>
The only hope for the Media Board and<lb/>
the media is for each member of the board<lb/>
to think for themselves a little more and<lb/>
listen to the chairman and the administra<lb/>
tion a little less. To this founder of the<lb/>
Media Board, the future for the media on<lb/>
this campus looks very bleak and stormy.<lb/>
Now we are stuck with a radio station<lb/>
manager who is technically and<lb/>
mechanically ignorant of the broadcast<lb/>
media. Killingsworth trying to get that sta<lb/>
tion on the air without Jeter is tantamount<lb/>
to sending a plumber to the hospital to do<lb/>
open heart surgery.<lb/>
"One<lb/>
that a<lb/>
the 5<lb/>
. potiti<lb/>
While<lb/>
nar-<lb/>
? <lb/>
GoldwaU<lb/>
Poland<lb/>
a mil I<lb/>
ring ? <lb/>
Bi<lb/>
the<lb/>
paign v<lb/>
ren<lb/>
Wa<lb/>
Gui<lb/>
tlatterm<lb/>
senator<lb/>
gues<lb/>
politician<lb/>
ind; I<lb/>
stil<lb/>
tnt<lb/>
goven<lb/>
I<lb/>
mmufj<lb/>
i<lb/>
ab<lb/>
munist<lb/>
the ba.<lb/>
C arthy<lb/>
stige<lb/>
re<lb/>
?<lb/>
 ?0 I ?<lb/>
'<lb/>
J-J<lb/>
<pb facs="00057282_0005"/><lb/>
I Ml EAS1 CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SI I'll MBl Ry. 1980<lb/>
k I<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
? as<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
3<lb/>
:s<lb/>
IMls<lb/>
I<lb/>
n<lb/>
insert<lb/>
of the<lb/>
B ard and<lb/>
board<lb/>
more and<lb/>
dminist ra-<lb/>
tter oi the<lb/>
: media on<lb/>
id storm)<lb/>
XI 11 Id<lb/>
ant amount<lb/>
lospital to dc<lb/>
<lb/>
Other Opinion<lb/>
To The Right<lb/>
'Goldwater Knew In I9609<lb/>
By STAN RIDGLEY<lb/>
"One does not have to take the view<lb/>
that a communist regime will never<lb/>
'evolve' into a non-communist one<lb/>
(though I tend to it) in order to see that<lb/>
this is practically impossible as long as<lb/>
the Soviet Union possesses the military<lb/>
and political power to prevent it. "<lb/>
?Barry Goldwater<lb/>
March, I960<lb/>
While it isn't fashionable in certain<lb/>
naive circles to quote Barry Goldwater<lb/>
? especially the early, "scary"<lb/>
Goldwater ? the continuing upheaval in<lb/>
Poland and Afghanistan brings to mind<lb/>
a number of Goldwater aphorisms that<lb/>
ring with frightening and timely truth.<lb/>
But the usual tack taken when quoting<lb/>
Goldwater is to ridicule his 1964 bid for<lb/>
the presidency by citing his numerous<lb/>
gaffes, how he torpedoed his own cam-<lb/>
paign with off-hand and outrageous<lb/>
remarks. News and Observer<lb/>
Washington correspondent Ferrel<lb/>
Guillory dredged up some less-than-<lb/>
flattering remarks b Arizona's seniors<lb/>
senator (see Sept. 5 N&amp;O) to show, I<lb/>
guess, that Ronald Reagan isn't the first<lb/>
politician to fall victim to his own verbal<lb/>
indiscretions.<lb/>
Vet Goldwater, in fact, was ? and<lb/>
still is ? a highly principled public ser-<lb/>
vant believing strongly in limned<lb/>
government and the maximization of in-<lb/>
dividual freedom. A -munch anti-<lb/>
communist, Goldwater made some poig<lb/>
nant and unsettling observations in I960<lb/>
about what he perceived as the com-<lb/>
munist menace. At the time, main<lb/>
dismissed Goldwater as dn alarmist in<lb/>
the backlash of the recently-ended Mc<lb/>
t arthv era. but his insight gains fresh<lb/>
prestige in light of the Soviet Union's<lb/>
renewed belligerence.<lb/>
Granted, it may not seem timely to ap-<lb/>
pear frightened by something as mun-<lb/>
dane as communist aggression or repres-<lb/>
sion, as long as it happens in places most<lb/>
of us aren't concerned with on a daily<lb/>
basis. It is more common to overhear so-<lb/>
meone parrot Michael Doonesbury's<lb/>
latest misgivings concerning a Ronald<lb/>
Reagan presidency, which usually con-<lb/>
sists of the cartoon character threatening<lb/>
to shoot himself or leave the country.<lb/>
()ne can only hope.<lb/>
But Barry Goldwater, the old warrior,<lb/>
has kept his sights trained on what he<lb/>
perceives as the communist menace, a<lb/>
perception that until recently had re-<lb/>
mained buried in the American subcons-<lb/>
cience. Perhaps the Vietnam experience<lb/>
desensitized Americans to the very real<lb/>
prospect that Russia again might take up<lb/>
the gun.<lb/>
T hat complacency was shattered in<lb/>
December when Soviet troops moved<lb/>
against Aghanistan. Soviet troops, not<lb/>
proxy thrid-world mercenaries. What<lb/>
has happened to the strategic deterrent<lb/>
of global nuclear war we've relied upon<lb/>
for set many years to keep the Soviets m<lb/>
check Goldwater knew in I960.<lb/>
"The horrors of all-out warfare are<lb/>
said to he so great that no nation would<lb/>
consider resorting to nuclear weapons<lb/>
unless under direct attack by these same<lb/>
weapons. .Yon the moment our leaders<lb/>
really accept this, strategic nuclear<lb/>
weapons will be neutralized and Com-<lb/>
munist armies will be able to launch<lb/>
limited wars without fear of retaliation<lb/>
by our Strategic Air Command1<lb/>
military and psychological situation is<lb/>
fast developing in which aggressive<lb/>
( Omniums! forces will be free to<lb/>
manuever under the unbrella oj nuclear<lb/>
terror. "<lb/>
Goldwater favored encouraging East<lb/>
European countries thaf were striving to<lb/>
throw off the Soviet yoke. That, admit-<lb/>
tedly, isn't possible in the context of<lb/>
1980. But Goldwater did oppose giving<lb/>
economic aid to Soviet surrogate states<lb/>
for reasons as valid now as they were 20<lb/>
years ago. Apply his 1960 reasoning to<lb/>
the unrest in 1980 Poland:<lb/>
"The Kremlin may, for its own pur-<lb/>
poses, permit certain 'liberalization'<lb/>
tendencies in satellite countries; it may<lb/>
even permit small deviations from the<lb/>
approved Soviet Foreign Policy line. But<lb/>
it will never let things go too far.<lb/>
Hungary proved that. The moment a<lb/>
Communist government threatens to<lb/>
become a non-Communist one, or<lb/>
threatens to align itself with the West<lb/>
against the Soviet Union, the Kremlin<lb/>
will take steps to bring the defecting<lb/>
government into line. "<lb/>
Goldwater realized that a policy of<lb/>
continually bailing the satellites out of<lb/>
economic crises caused by defects in-<lb/>
herent in the communist system does<lb/>
nothing to advance the cause of<lb/>
democracy and only prolongs Hast<lb/>
Europe's subservience to the Soviet<lb/>
Union. Perhaps it's time we listened to<lb/>
Barry Goldwater.<lb/>
 Strengthening their (East<lb/>
Europe's) captors can only postpone<lb/>
that upheaval within the Communist<lb/>
I mpire that is our best hope of defeating<lb/>
Communism without resorting to<lb/>
nuclear war. "<lb/>
Stan Ridgley is a senior Political Science<lb/>
manr with a degree in journalism from<lb/>
the I niversify of North Carolina at<lb/>
Chapel Hill.<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
SUPPORT<lb/>
lEast (Earfllima<lb/>
ADVERTISERS<lb/>
JOBS AVAILABLE<lb/>
Mht lEafit Carolinian<lb/>
Needs one or two good<lb/>
people from each dorm to<lb/>
work in<lb/>
sales for<lb/>
the Circulation<lb/>
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Good pay, good work.<lb/>
Only hard working,ambitious people<lb/>
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mBe a part of something<lb/>
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NEED<lb/>
YOU!<lb/>
Apply in person at the<lb/>
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2nd floor of the Publications<lb/>
Center across the sidewalk from the<lb/>
Library. Apply on Wednesday Sept.10<lb/>
7:30-8:30p.m.<lb/>
i<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057282_0006"/><lb/>
Features<lb/>
SEPTEMBERS 1980 Pa?? <lb/>
THEEAS1 i AROl IN1AN<lb/>
?rill;<lb/>
Taking Entries Soon<lb/>
I w o nationally recognized<lb/>
special isis in contemporary'<lb/>
American arl will judge the Springs<lb/>
vt Show (his fall.<lb/>
rhe show, the largest non-juried<lb/>
exhibition in the Southeast, will be<lb/>
n to the public Oct. 24 - No. 17<lb/>
I ancaster, S.C.<lb/>
Entries from amateur and profes-<lb/>
sional artists iu the twoarolinas<lb/>
will be received Oct. 3-12, according<lb/>
to Stephen K. McCrae, directo! o<lb/>
an services foi Springs Mills, who<lb/>
ects the show.<lb/>
Barbara Haskeil, curator o the<lb/>
Whitne) Museum o' American Art,<lb/>
id William S. Lieberman, chair<lb/>
man o the Department of lwen<lb/>
I Gentry Art at the Metropolitan<lb/>
Museum o Art, will determine win-<lb/>
ners in the 22nd annual art competi-<lb/>
tion sponsored b Springs Mills.<lb/>
Ms. Haskeil joined the Whitney<lb/>
New York City as curator in 1975<lb/>
from the Pasadena Museum of<lb/>
Modem Art in California. During<lb/>
six years in Pasadena, her respon-<lb/>
sibilities included being director ol<lb/>
exhibitions and collections and<lb/>
curator of painting and sculpture.<lb/>
Ms Haskeil is an ait<lb/>
historyhilosophy graduate ol the<lb/>
University of California, 1 os<lb/>
Angeles. In 191 she won the<lb/>
Mademoiselle Award lor Achieve-<lb/>
ment in the field oi Centemporary<lb/>
Art.<lb/>
1 leberman was named chairman<lb/>
o the Department o Twentieth<lb/>
( entry Art at the Metropolitan in<lb/>
lew York City in 1979 alter being<lb/>
ociated with the Museum o<lb/>
lodern Art (MOMA) foi over 35<lb/>
?is t MOMA he established the<lb/>
Department o Prints in W4? and<lb/>
the Department ol Drawings in<lb/>
1971.<lb/>
I ieberman is a graduate ol Swai<lb/>
thrnore C ollege and has done<lb/>
duate work at Harvard Universi-<lb/>
He is a trustee of the American<lb/>
at ion of Arts and the<lb/>
c ismopolitan Aits foundation.<lb/>
 .asi yeai the Springs Art Show<lb/>
attracted nearly 900 entries from ai<lb/>
- in North and South Carolina.<lb/>
lop award is a ?2,000 purchase<lb/>
prize for best-of-show. Springs also<lb/>
awards $500 prizes to top winner in<lb/>
each oi five categories: easel pain-<lb/>
ting, mixed media, graphics,<lb/>
sculpture and paintings and draw-<lb/>
ings on paper.<lb/>
Some 25-30 honorable mention<lb/>
works also will be selected by Ms.<lb/>
Haskeil and I ieberman, with<lb/>
awards oi $50 each. These work<lb/>
together with the six top award win-<lb/>
ners, will make up the Springs<lb/>
Traveling Art Show which will<lb/>
follow a six-month itinerary oi ex-<lb/>
hibitions after the 1 ancaster show<lb/>
closes.<lb/>
Springs I raveling Show exhibi-<lb/>
tions this year will be in Atlanta,<lb/>
da Charleston, Columbia and<lb/>
Rock Hill, S.C; and Asheville and<lb/>
Greensboro, N.C.<lb/>
1 he sponsoring company, Springs<lb/>
Mills, is a major manufacturer of<lb/>
finished fabrics, home furnishing<lb/>
products and froen foods. Springs<lb/>
employes 22,500 people in 44 plants<lb/>
in 12 slates. Mexico and 1 ranee.<lb/>
Sales in lrv exceeded MOO million.<lb/>
Corporate headquarters are in 1 ort<lb/>
Mill.<lb/>
 truck will be at the 1 eo W.<lb/>
Jenkins I ine rts Center on campus<lb/>
to pick up ait works tor the show on<lb/>
Monday. October 6. I here will be<lb/>
extra entry forms on the truck for<lb/>
anyone who needs one. There is no<lb/>
entry fee.<lb/>
Drawings, graphics, and mixed<lb/>
media pieces must be framed for the<lb/>
show. (Easel paintings are exempt<lb/>
form this.) All 2-D works must be at<lb/>
least 12" and no more than 66" in<lb/>
any dimension.<lb/>
Sculpture must be free standing.<lb/>
Bases will be provided for any<lb/>
sculpture thai requires them. The<lb/>
sculpture must measure at least 12"<lb/>
and no more than 60" in any dimen-<lb/>
sion. Also, the sculpture must weigh<lb/>
no more than 1 50 pounds.<lb/>
Everyone is united to enter, and<lb/>
n is not necessary thai you be a stu-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
The Solitude Of This Quiet Afternoon<lb/>
contrast wkh the throng of student who crowd this street during clones.<lb/>
This Grocery Store Really<lb/>
Has Everything You Need<lb/>
MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) - It's not<lb/>
exactly a Ma and Pa Grocery store.<lb/>
In fact, Ma and Pa's store wouldn't<lb/>
even fill up the produce section.<lb/>
It's one oi the most lavish super<lb/>
markets in the world the latest in<lb/>
Don Byerly's growing chain of Twin<lb/>
Cities-area "retail complexes<lb/>
He launched a 90,000 square foot<lb/>
store in the affluent St. Louis Park a<lb/>
couple oi months ago with an open-<lb/>
ing rivaling a Hollywood premier It<lb/>
had floodlights, traffic jams and<lb/>
elderly women in their Sunday best<lb/>
gawking at the mall area in front of<lb/>
the store or in its various depart<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
LARMlMG Afcour CouutU rnc HhHO lAH<lb/>
W Dwo aW?3<lb/>
PAf)r0 I MIL WOKTIMt'rl<lb/>
GOJNCr TO 0?U?&amp; TW?<lb/>
,V0f0?l TO THObt<lb/>
MDrtWMLS T0a)I6HT?<lb/>
H? vJWTf TO (O00U)<lb/>
s tax DepJcrieL? I<lb/>
A customer can purchase tresn<lb/>
trout or lobster ? both live in tanks<lb/>
? from a fish selection featuring a<lb/>
more than 100 varieties, taro root<lb/>
from the produce section, fresh-<lb/>
baked bagel from the bakery, candy<lb/>
from Wood's Chocolate, and ice<lb/>
cream cone or one of 100 arieties<lb/>
ol coffee.<lb/>
He or she can also eat a meal,<lb/>
take a cooking course or purchase a<lb/>
$25,000 pair of diamond earii gs<lb/>
from the gift shop.<lb/>
"I honestly feel that this is the<lb/>
finest supermarket in the world<lb/>
Byerly said , looking down the busy<lb/>
mall area. "1 really think this is our<lb/>
finest hour<lb/>
Byerly opened his first super-<lb/>
market in suburban Golden Valley<lb/>
in 1968 and several others since then<lb/>
in Minneapolis suburbs and St.<lb/>
Paul, but he may have reached his<lb/>
pinnalce.<lb/>
"We've been doing a lot of these<lb/>
things in our other stores, but there<lb/>
they're just spread out he said.<lb/>
"Here, we've tied it all into one neat<lb/>
package<lb/>
The store employs more than 500<lb/>
persons ? about half oi them full-<lb/>
time<lb/>
Besides the usual carpeted grocery<lb/>
aisles, the new store has a card shop,<lb/>
ice cream shop, pharmacy, candy<lb/>
shop. 24-hour restaurant, flower<lb/>
shop, attached liquor store and gift<lb/>
shop. There is also space n the front<lb/>
for the cooking school.<lb/>
"Customers from all ol<lb/>
can sign up for the cooking classes<lb/>
We offer classes evenings, dd.<lb/>
and some Saturday classes B<lb/>
said. "We have classes on how to<lb/>
run equipment classes on<lb/>
Chinese or French cooking<lb/>
how<lb/>
Byerly himself attends a session<lb/>
on microwave cooking.<lb/>
The gift shop, with prices ranging<lb/>
from S5 to S50.000, is a pet project<lb/>
of Byerly and his wife. Marlys.<lb/>
"I'm partial to the gift shop he<lb/>
said. "That's where m wife and 1<lb/>
spend our Friday evenings work-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
Among items sold at the gift shop<lb/>
are a marble fireplace for $20,000.<lb/>
TV Detective Shows:<lb/>
Predictable But Fun<lb/>
B DAVID NORMS<lb/>
fr?lurf idilor<lb/>
Most genres of American televi-<lb/>
sion are based on a solid foundation<lb/>
of traditional cliches, and the detec-<lb/>
tive show is certainly no exception.<lb/>
Although new detective shows ap-<lb/>
pear on TV every year, new ideas<lb/>
for them never do.<lb/>
TV detectives and cops differ<lb/>
from each other only in the fact that<lb/>
each one has to have a gimmick ? a<lb/>
rumpled raincoat; a pet cockatoo;<lb/>
being a deputy U.S. marshal from<lb/>
Taos, New Mexico, on loan to the<lb/>
New York Police Department to<lb/>
study modern police techniques (for<lb/>
seven years); having a wheelchair;<lb/>
being in Hawaii ? so they won't<lb/>
look so obviously alike.<lb/>
The things most TV cops have in<lb/>
common (besides bad scripts) are<lb/>
numerous. They spend endless<lb/>
hours driving in huge, black<lb/>
official-looking limousines or<lb/>
souped-up sports cars, despite the<lb/>
gas crisis faced by the world of reali-<lb/>
ty. One might say that the<lb/>
automobile is to the detective what<lb/>
the horse was to the cowboy. Guns,<lb/>
though, are to the detective what the<lb/>
gun was to the cowboy. (Some<lb/>
things never change.) Few detectives<lb/>
are married, since their fiancees are<lb/>
usually gunned down by criminal<lb/>
elements during the season<lb/>
premiers.<lb/>
The "car is to the detective as the<lb/>
horse was to the cowboy" analogy is<lb/>
a pretty good one, but there are<lb/>
some flaws in it. A horse's brakes<lb/>
don't ever fail while driving down a<lb/>
winding mountain road overlooking<lb/>
a 1,00-foot plunge to the ocean.<lb/>
Neither does a horse explode every<lb/>
time someone puts the key in the ig-<lb/>
nition or slams the door  Horses<lb/>
don't have trunks for tying up peo-<lb/>
ple and stuffing them into. In fact,<lb/>
horses have almost nothing to offer<lb/>
a modern detective.<lb/>
Police marksmanship on these<lb/>
shows is, to say the last, inconsis-<lb/>
tent. Think of how many times<lb/>
you've seen the hero in a narrow<lb/>
alley being chased by a huge gas-<lb/>
guzzling limuosine, which he shoots<lb/>
at six times and misses. Then, at the<lb/>
end of the episode, the same hero<lb/>
will kill a running blackmailer at a<lb/>
range of 2,000 yards with the same<lb/>
pistol that can't hit a car at ten<lb/>
paces.<lb/>
The courage of video gumshoes is<lb/>
certainly beyond question. Besides<lb/>
having the steel nerves necessary for<lb/>
driving brakeless cars down winding<lb/>
mountain roads, they have the<lb/>
bravery to go unarmed into a<lb/>
building where an insane gangster is<lb/>
holed-up, in order to talk him into<lb/>
giving himself up for life in prison.<lb/>
And any TV cop worth his salt<lb/>
wouldn't blink an eye at the pro-<lb/>
spect of going up to some syndicate<lb/>
bigshot (usually a childhood pal ?<lb/>
it's a small world on television, too)<lb/>
and not only telling him he's under<lb/>
arrest, but that he eats too much<lb/>
and has crummy taste in suits.<lb/>
The best way of getting across<lb/>
some of the flavor of these crime<lb/>
melodramas may be to use a sum-<lb/>
marv of an imaginary script. There<lb/>
are several different scripts<lb/>
available.<lb/>
There is the old protection-racket<lb/>
ploy, with the police trying to get<lb/>
small shopkeepers to testify against<lb/>
the gangsters at a grand jury hear-<lb/>
ing. Police protection is always pro-<lb/>
mised, but on some shows such as<lb/>
The Untouchables, the witness<lb/>
either has his store blown up or calls<lb/>
the cops from a phonebooth that is<lb/>
run over right then by a truck.<lb/>
The undercover police operation<lb/>
is often used, especially on shows<lb/>
about beautiful female detectives.<lb/>
It's surprising how much crime goes<lb/>
on around swimming pools in lux-<lb/>
urious beach resorts, glamorous<lb/>
modeling agencies, or beauty con-<lb/>
tests.<lb/>
See TV, Page 8, Col. 1<lb/>
Tardy Students Hurry Along<lb/>
.iiishing that they had never signed up for that early morning rUi.<lb/>
Il<lb/>
(<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
COf<lb/>
l<lb/>
11<lb/>
W (<lb/>
Be<lb/>
l<lb/>
W I<lb/>
ml<lb/>
s. J<lb/>
A<lb/>
I<lb/>
w i<lb/>
pr<lb/>
l<lb/>
I<lb/>
all<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057282_0007"/><lb/>
-?<lb/>
m. sses.<lb/>
tvtirne<lb/>
I shop<lb/>
rhi i sn kot isi-w<lb/>
si I'll tm ksi, ivm)<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
Offers Travel<lb/>
A Peaceful Interlude In A Busy Day<lb/>
is a good time to relax in the afternoon sun and read a newspaper, 'ege <lb/>
The E.C.U. Student<lb/>
Union Travel c ommit-<lb/>
tee announces tour<lb/>
great vacations for the<lb/>
1980-81 school year-<lb/>
New Yo r k, For I<lb/>
L a u d e r d a 1 e. Fort<lb/>
I. a u d e r d a I e a h a m a s<lb/>
Cruise, and Myrtle<lb/>
Beach.<lb/>
The New ork trip<lb/>
will again be sponsored<lb/>
during the Thanksgiv-<lb/>
ing break. Participants<lb/>
will depart on Wednes-<lb/>
day, Noember 26 and<lb/>
rei urn Sunda .<lb/>
November 30. Ninety-<lb/>
two places are available<lb/>
at SI 10.00 per person.<lb/>
This price includes<lb/>
transportation and<lb/>
lodging, lour days in<lb/>
the Big Apple are hard<lb/>
to beat at any price, hut<lb/>
at $110.00, it's impossi-<lb/>
ble.<lb/>
The traditional col-<lb/>
acation is ottered<lb/>
at an econom) price ?<lb/>
enjo the sea and sand<lb/>
o! 1 on 1 auderdale<lb/>
during spring break. It<lb/>
days in the sun aren't<lb/>
appealing, nights on<lb/>
the town maj be. Nine-<lb/>
teen pi aces ai e<lb/>
available for 1 ()<lb/>
wonderful days in Fort<lb/>
1 auderdale at $219.00<lb/>
quad occupanc) and<lb/>
$309.00 foi double oc<lb/>
cnpanc.<lb/>
I he glamoui trip ol<lb/>
the I ravel C ommittee<lb/>
ret in ns this yeai 1 he<lb/>
1 or i l audei ?<lb/>
dale Bahamasruise is<lb/>
back. Spend pan ol<lb/>
spring break in Forl<lb/>
1 auderdale. then com-<lb/>
plete the vacation b<lb/>
ci uising to the beautiful<lb/>
Bahamavosl per per-<lb/>
son is $499.00 foi a<lb/>
quad room cabin and<lb/>
$549.00 foi a double<lb/>
room cabin. Space is<lb/>
available for nineteen<lb/>
people.<lb/>
New this year is the<lb/>
faster weekend in Myr-<lb/>
tle Beach, lour days<lb/>
and three nights in a<lb/>
beautiful ocean front<lb/>
motel, and transport a<lb/>
tion to Myrtle Beach.<lb/>
cost onlv $79.00 in a<lb/>
quad room and Si09.00<lb/>
in a double room.<lb/>
Space is available for<lb/>
ninetv people.<lb/>
Choose the vacation<lb/>
thai best suits your in-<lb/>
terests and bank a<lb/>
count, then see the<lb/>
world with the Student<lb/>
I mon I ravel Commit-<lb/>
tee. I rips are open to<lb/>
I .CM . students, facul-<lb/>
 stall, alumni, and<lb/>
their immediate<lb/>
families.<lb/>
I'm Dancing: Gordon's Tale<lb/>
Of Tragedy And Survival<lb/>
Bv JOHN LDFN<lb/>
It i h<lb/>
ev cry one is selling th<lb/>
stori(<lb/>
these days Some ol<lb/>
books<lb/>
celebrities ai e<lb/>
terestmg. while<lb/>
dull <lb/>
-<lb/>
ids out iiom the iest<lb/>
It is<lb/>
. Bat<lb/>
bara Gordon<lb/>
"Tm Dancing as 1 asl<lb/>
as I Can" Ms. c ioi don<lb/>
is : Met<lb/>
confession sior about<lb/>
closet life.<lb/>
is hook is the tale of<lb/>
a woman struggling to<lb/>
refind herself when hei<lb/>
wot Id has fallen<lb/>
How she recovered a<lb/>
triumphed to build a<lb/>
new life is her true<lb/>
'V .<lb/>
?i the age ol fo<lb/>
Bai bai a (iordon Mad<lb/>
aii ol what m a<lb/>
w omen could evt i<lb/>
from life. She had good<lb/>
h ea It h, plenty of<lb/>
 a brillia<lb/>
sj! eet as ,i 11 'I v . . .<lb/>
produce and sharei<lb/>
home with a loving<lb/>
man.<lb/>
Still, something was<lb/>
wrong with her world,<lb/>
she began to have in-<lb/>
creasingly heavy anxie-<lb/>
ty attacks. On some<lb/>
days, she fell too ter<lb/>
nfied to even enter a<lb/>
clothing store. Hei<lb/>
psychiatrist had<lb/>
prescribed vatium for<lb/>
her condition, but the<lb/>
pills were no longer<lb/>
working. She fell into<lb/>
an even greatei depres-<lb/>
sion when one of her<lb/>
best friends died ol<lb/>
cancer<lb/>
SMe knew what had<lb/>
to be done with her life.<lb/>
Against the advice ol<lb/>
her doctor, she decided<lb/>
to stop taking the Iran<lb/>
quihers foi her anxiety<lb/>
attacks. t first, Gor-<lb/>
don seemed to be able<lb/>
to handle going 'cold<lb/>
turkey she even<lb/>
: ecei v ed encou rage -<lb/>
ment and help from her<lb/>
live-in com pa n ion,<lb/>
Eric. Bui then i<lb/>
withdi aw a I became<lb/>
and hei aniety<lb/>
u until she was<lb/>
afr; ive hei<lb/>
apartment.<lb/>
? not hei tragedy<lb/>
began to lake place.<lb/>
 he n her m i nd<lb/>
iduatly cleared from<lb/>
the pills, I i is began to<lb/>
do strange things. He<lb/>
would lock hei in the<lb/>
apartment, and let hei<lb/>
see no one. Soon, even<lb/>
it she attempted<lb/>
? a walk, he would<lb/>
beat her senseless. I he<lb/>
man she had loved and<lb/>
depended on was<lb/>
becoming insane. She<lb/>
- ,u she had to get<lb/>
away from him, and<lb/>
nally escaped with<lb/>
the help ol some<lb/>
tr lends.<lb/>
oubles did<lb/>
thoramc tablet. She<lb/>
was diagnosed a s<lb/>
"schizophrenic, mank<lb/>
depressive. a<lb/>
cyclothymic personali-<lb/>
ty, borderline<lb/>
psychotic, an agitated<lb/>
depressive, hy sterical<lb/>
and just plain<lb/>
neurotic Gordon felt<lb/>
that she didn't tit into<lb/>
any ol these descrip-<lb/>
hospital from a pa-<lb/>
tient's viewpoint is very<lb/>
interesting. She gives us<lb/>
new insight into an age-<lb/>
old shrouded institu-<lb/>
tion. Noi does Gordon<lb/>
leave oul ol her ac-<lb/>
count the stigma that<lb/>
accompanies a mental<lb/>
pa! lent returning to<lb/>
normal life.<lb/>
V. the end ol the<lb/>
book, one feels that<lb/>
Barbara Gordon may<lb/>
not have found herself<lb/>
vet. but that she is still<lb/>
searching. She pro-<lb/>
bably will not stop until<lb/>
she has. Somehow Bar-<lb/>
bara Gordon managed<lb/>
10 survive the many pit -<lb/>
tions, and kept sear-<lb/>
ching until she found<lb/>
the right people and the<lb/>
right help.<lb/>
Although Gordon<lb/>
may be rough on the<lb/>
people in her book, she<lb/>
can be just as harsh<lb/>
with herself. S h e<lb/>
describes herself as a<lb/>
nervous woman con-<lb/>
stantly looking for the<lb/>
easy way out; a woman<lb/>
wanting a 'magic pill'<lb/>
or so m e s i m p 1 e<lb/>
psychological truth to<lb/>
solve all o f h e r<lb/>
troubles; a woman who<lb/>
would fly into tantrums<lb/>
at the slightest things.<lb/>
Gordon's writing is<lb/>
just as honest about her<lb/>
environment. Her<lb/>
description o' a mental<lb/>
tails around her, but<lb/>
she wonders how many<lb/>
did not survive. Thus,<lb/>
her book provides us<lb/>
with both good reading<lb/>
and a warning.<lb/>
end<lb/>
i h c r e<lb/>
 though she was tree<lb/>
ol hei lover, she still<lb/>
did no free ol<lb/>
herself. Gordon began<lb/>
asking hersell why she<lb/>
had not noticed Eric's<lb/>
distui bed mind before.<lb/>
More important!v. w hy<lb/>
had she let him do these<lb/>
things to her<lb/>
Gordon knew she<lb/>
needed help. It was<lb/>
here that, through her<lb/>
struggle, she began to<lb/>
discover i . self. It<lb/>
was a fight thai took<lb/>
her through many<lb/>
psychiatiists, hospitals.<lb/>
and menial institutions<lb/>
Along the way. Ciordon<lb/>
exposes some ol the in-<lb/>
eptitude of the medical<lb/>
profession. She met<lb/>
doctors who nevei real-<lb/>
ly under stood, oi cared<lb/>
to understand, their pa-<lb/>
tients She found<lb/>
psych ia t r ists who<lb/>
answered every pro-<lb/>
blem vv ith a v ahum or a<lb/>
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Art Camera Shop-Two Nikon Coffee Mugs<lb/>
Bigg's Drug Store-Timex Watch<lb/>
Bissette's-Westbend Popcorn Popper<lb/>
Blount Harvey-SIO.OO Gift Certificate<lb/>
Book Barn- $10.00 Gift Certificate<lb/>
Brody's-$25.00 Worth of Cosmetics<lb/>
Catos-$25.00 in Merchandise<lb/>
Central News-$15.00 Gift Certificate<lb/>
Certain Things-$15 00 Gift Certificate<lb/>
Coffman's-$25.00 Gift Certificate<lb/>
College Shop-$15.00 Gift Certificate<lb/>
Cox Floral Service-Green Plant<lb/>
Cozart's Auto Supply-10-Speed Huffy Bicycle<lb/>
Coin Ring Man<lb/>
of Key Sales, IncOne Silver Dollar<lb/>
Curry Copy Center-Personalized Stationery<lb/>
D. A. Keliy's-SlO.OO Gift Certificate<lb/>
Diener's Bakery-Birthday Cake<lb/>
C. Heber Forbes-$20.00 Gift Certificate<lb/>
Freddies-Dinner For Two ($10.00 maximum)<lb/>
Friendly Wig Shop-Earrings<lb/>
Gaxebo-$10.00 Gift Certificate<lb/>
Giant Discount-$5.00 Gift Certificate<lb/>
Globe Hardware-Waste Basket<lb/>
CLIP AND SAVE<lb/>
Hollowed' Drug-Desk Lamp<lb/>
Harvest Natural Foods -2 Gal. Apple Juice<lb/>
House of Hats-Raincoat<lb/>
J-Sue-Jan-$15.00 Gift Certificate<lb/>
Jason's-Dinner for Two ($10.00 maximum)<lb/>
Jean's Glory-$5.00 Gift Certificate<lb/>
J. Herring's Mens Weor-$25.00 Gift Certificate<lb/>
Lautares Jewelry-Watchband<lb/>
V.A. Merritt Sons-Small Appliance<lb/>
Morgan Printers-Personalixed Stationery<lb/>
Mushroom-Surprixe Gift Packoge<lb/>
Park Theatre-Movie Passes<lb/>
Proctor's LtdGift Certificate<lb/>
Pugh's Tire Service-Free Lubrication<lb/>
Riggan Shoe Repair-Choice of Leather Belt<lb/>
Robinson's Jewelry-$10.00 Gift Certificate<lb/>
The Shoe Room, IncPair of Boots, Pair of<lb/>
Shoes<lb/>
Smith Electric-$5.00 Gift Certificate<lb/>
The Snooty Fox-$25.00 Gift Certificate<lb/>
Steinbeck's $10 00 Gift Certificate<lb/>
Taff Office Supply-Pen, Pencil Set<lb/>
Toft rurniture- 2 Table Lamps (2 Winners)<lb/>
University Book Ex2 Nikon Coffee Mugs<lb/>
Western Auto Supply-Tire Rotation<lb/>
White's Store $10 00 Gift Certificate<lb/>
Downtown Greenville Association, Inc.<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057282_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
THl EASI CAROl ININ<lb/>
si I'll 1Hl K 9, 1980<lb/>
Television Detective Shows:<lb/>
Predictable, But Still Amusing<lb/>
Continued from page 6<lb/>
The opening scene ot a mad-killer<lb/>
story has an innocent victim (1 wish<lb/>
that mad killers could at least limit<lb/>
themselves to guilty victims) being<lb/>
stalked and murdered in an at-<lb/>
mosphere of darkness and spooky<lb/>
music.<lb/>
The next scene, if it's a private<lb/>
detective shovs, has the victim's<lb/>
sister asking for help in finding the<lb/>
murderer. In these shows, the police<lb/>
always insist that the death was a<lb/>
suicide and that the detective should<lb/>
drop the case. It the murdei is on a<lb/>
regular police show, this second<lb/>
scene takes place in the police head-<lb/>
quarters, with the hero sticking col-<lb/>
ored pins m a huge map of the cits,<lb/>
marking the latest in a series ot<lb/>
unrelated, mysterious killings.<lb/>
At some point in the show, the<lb/>
phone rings It's him the Mad<lb/>
Killer! "Don't bother with a trace,<lb/>
cop' I'll hang up long before you<lb/>
can find me 1 ots ot insane<lb/>
laughter tolling, topped ott by a<lb/>
loud click N on see, even mad killers<lb/>
Madrigal Dinner<lb/>
Tickets On Sale<lb/>
rickets are now on sale for the<lb/>
1980 Madrigal Dinners. Because<lb/>
tickets are usually sold out b mid-<lb/>
October, all patrons are urged to<lb/>
reserve and purchase tickets as soon<lb/>
as possible.<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center spon<lb/>
sors Madrigal Dinners each year to<lb/>
open the Christmas season in tradi-<lb/>
tional English fashion. The dinners<lb/>
are modeled after an Hiabethan<lb/>
feast in a country manor house. The<lb/>
1 ord and lady of the Manor<lb/>
preside over the entire feast; they<lb/>
are dressed in luxurious period<lb/>
costumes of velvet and lace and<lb/>
stand readv to greet their guests.<lb/>
Iim and Franceine Rees are the<lb/>
gracious host and hostess.<lb/>
I ntertainment is provided b<lb/>
magicians, tumblers, poets, and<lb/>
musicians. The Madrigal Singers<lb/>
highlight the evening. Resplendani<lb/>
in their beautiful costumes, thev<lb/>
sing a number o traditional<lb/>
madrigals and Christmas selections.<lb/>
In addition to singing, lhe also pel<lb/>
form it aditional 1 lizabethan<lb/>
dances.<lb/>
Dinner it sell is served bv costum<lb/>
ed waiters and waitresses. Wassail<lb/>
and roao beet with ail the trimm-<lb/>
ings provide a delicious meal to<lb/>
complement exciting entertainment,<lb/>
lone feasting tables covered with<lb/>
snowy white cloths add to the feel-<lb/>
ing ol a ttue royal least.<lb/>
I hose who have attended before<lb/>
attend this feasl again and again,<lb/>
and tickets sell out verv quickly,<lb/>
long before the event i scheduled.<lb/>
Don't miss Madrigal Dinners.<lb/>
Reserve youi tickets now. Vhev are<lb/>
priced at S8.00 foi E.C.I - students<lb/>
and $10.(X) tot the public, rickets<lb/>
must te picked-up within 2 hours<lb/>
after thev are reserved, rickets may<lb/>
be reserv ed o<lb/>
watch television, and know it takes<lb/>
time to trace a phonecall. We don't<lb/>
get to see the Mad Killer at this<lb/>
stage; all we get is a shot of an emp-<lb/>
ty phonebooth with the receiver sw-<lb/>
inging back and forth. (These insane<lb/>
criminals never bother to hang up<lb/>
the phone.)<lb/>
In a private detective show, there<lb/>
is usually a scene where, just as he's<lb/>
given up on the case, someone tries<lb/>
to kill the private detective with a<lb/>
machine gun. This makes him feel<lb/>
better, since he's getting closer to<lb/>
solving the crime.<lb/>
1 ven the smartest mad killers<lb/>
screw up sometime, and finally drop<lb/>
some kind of a clue. "Take this in-<lb/>
dex card and check every store in<lb/>
Los Angeles that sells them. Then<lb/>
find the store that sold this par-<lb/>
ticular card. And find out TO-<lb/>
DAY says the tough police<lb/>
lieutenant. After a montage o'<lb/>
shopkeepers shaking their heads,<lb/>
one is found who remembers selling<lb/>
a pack of index cards to a guy about<lb/>
three weeks ago. The name and ad-<lb/>
dress are conveniently in the stores<lb/>
files.<lb/>
Now, the police arrive at a seedy-<lb/>
looking transient hotel. They break<lb/>
down the door of the suspect's room<lb/>
and find boxes of rifles, bullets,<lb/>
grenades and maybe a cat for a<lb/>
touch of comic relief. Alas, the Mad<lb/>
Killer is out doing his laundry.<lb/>
So, the hero decides to become a<lb/>
decoy to lure the Mad Killer out into<lb/>
the open. In a city of millions of<lb/>
people, it takes only a few minutes<lb/>
for them to find each other, since<lb/>
the show is about over. So, justice<lb/>
triumphs, unless the show is going<lb/>
to be a two-parter. Then , it would<lb/>
be learned that this Mad Killer is the<lb/>
wrong one and the search would go<lb/>
on.<lb/>
Well, that's the detective show. In<lb/>
a world where we arc bombarded<lb/>
daily with news of inflation,<lb/>
unemployment and impending<lb/>
disaster, it certainly is nice to be able<lb/>
to escape into a world of extortion,<lb/>
murder, bombings and blackmail,<lb/>
even if just for a little while.<lb/>
Short changed?<lb/>
The Student Union offers a variety oi events lor<lb/>
just pennies or Ions. Films sponsored by the<lb/>
Films Committee and the Minority Am B<lb/>
Film Series are absolutely tree. Foi 50 ami<lb/>
For 50 cents there is live entertainment MMMt<lb/>
at the Coffeehouse. So when you're I HP<lb/>
short on cash. . .<lb/>
STUOfHT UMIOfJ<lb/>
!? 'HKXJM JH?f?V"<lb/>
Look for the Union label. <lb/>
tral I<lb/>
Stude<lb/>
Charg<lb/>
foi ma<lb/>
irehased ai the c en-<lb/>
i Mendenh ill<lb/>
y'<lb/>
S A AD'S SHOE<lb/>
REPAIR<lb/>
I 1 S Grande Ave.<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
Qualitv Repair.<lb/>
n<lb/>
MNTtNH UP TO<lb/>
ltmWSBKO<lb/>
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$176 00"eilh?cl??lve"<lb/>
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information call I3J 6535<lb/>
(toll ' fraa number<lb/>
?00 221 ISM) b?tw??n <lb/>
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Rate4fc W??n?M't<lb/>
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TYPE SETTER NEEDED<lb/>
? Must be able to type between<lb/>
60-65 w.p.m<lb/>
? Must be able to learn<lb/>
? Must be able to work nights<lb/>
? Experience on Compugraphic<lb/>
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I HI I ASIRoi ININ<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
si i-11 Mm K v. ivmi Pagey<lb/>
Defense Pounces On Devils<lb/>
B 11MM DUPREE<lb/>
Mstart Sports r llitoi<lb/>
DURHAM 1)1 -1 1 ENSE<lb/>
DEE I I NS1 "<lb/>
Ihc cts oi '1)1 I 1 I NSl " can<lb/>
be heard am Saturday during the<lb/>
fail at any college football game.<lb/>
Often it is a pica from disenchanted<lb/>
tans to their favorite team in hopes<lb/>
they will eventually put an end to a<lb/>
persistent offensive drive.<lb/>
On a few occasions, it is a cheer<lb/>
foi a talented unit to continue to<lb/>
retire the opposition aftei three<lb/>
plays 1 oi the Blue Devils oi Duke<lb/>
I niversity. the fii st example was the<lb/>
case Saturday; for East Carolina's<lb/>
Pirates, the latter<lb/>
rhe Devil's first possession of the<lb/>
afternoon was to forecast what<lb/>
could be expected foi the rest oi the<lb/>
contest<lb/>
s expected, Duke offensive<lb/>
coordinatoi Steve Spurrier called<lb/>
tor freshman quartet back Ben Ben-<lb/>
nett to drop back into the pocket<lb/>
What wasn't expected was for<lb/>
senior ECU linebacker Jeffrey War-<lb/>
ren to blitz on the Devil's first play<lb/>
from scrimmage in 1980.<lb/>
For hast Carolina, the results<lb/>
were impressive, with Warren and<lb/>
end Mike Davis charging in for the<lb/>
first oi seven sacks the Pirates<lb/>
would accomplish.<lb/>
I or Duke, the results were<lb/>
devastating. Bennett failed to com-<lb/>
plete a pass in the first five minutes<lb/>
oi the game and connected on just<lb/>
11 out o' 23 attempts on the after-<lb/>
noon, for 128 yards.<lb/>
That statistic alone wouldn't seem<lb/>
so dismal compared to the ECU<lb/>
total passing yardage of 85 yards,<lb/>
but taking into consideration the<lb/>
embarassing two (2) yards net<lb/>
rushing amassed by the Blue Devils<lb/>
backs and it's hard to figure a way a<lb/>
team could possibly win. Bennett<lb/>
starts the season owing the the net<lb/>
rushing column 55 yards, courtesy<lb/>
oi East Carolina University.<lb/>
"1 thought they would block the<lb/>
back side end better than thev did<lb/>
said sophomore defensive end Brian<lb/>
McDaniei. "When you don't, it's<lb/>
like setting a wild dog on meat. He<lb/>
just can't get enough<lb/>
McDaniei sacked Bennett once<lb/>
for a tne-yard loss, though coming<lb/>
off the bench in relief oi Rocky<lb/>
Butler.<lb/>
"Our strategy was to get after<lb/>
him early and stay after him<lb/>
McDaniei explained, "and we<lb/>
managed to keep the heat on him.<lb/>
We (defensive players) got what we<lb/>
were looking for<lb/>
Warren, a senior from Snow Hill,<lb/>
concurred with the assessment of<lb/>
McDaniei.<lb/>
"We knew we had to have pass<lb/>
rush and that just three up front<lb/>
couldn't do it Warren states, "so<lb/>
we kept showing different blitcs.<lb/>
We just kept coming at them<lb/>
With 8:57 remaining in the game,<lb/>
senior defensive back Willie Holley<lb/>
intercepted a pass which eventually<lb/>
led to the final touchdown by<lb/>
fullback Theodore Sutton. Ironical-<lb/>
ly, the Pirate pair had to wait until<lb/>
Friday to receive final word concer-<lb/>
ning their eligibility for the game<lb/>
from the NCAA.<lb/>
"That (interception) comes from<lb/>
putting pressure on the quarter-<lb/>
back reasoned Holley. "I just<lb/>
came on at the right time. There<lb/>
were a couple of more times when<lb/>
the ball could have been intercepted<lb/>
if (Bennett) had gotten it off<lb/>
Sophomore tackle Doug Smith<lb/>
was pleased with the overall defen-<lb/>
sive performance, but added that<lb/>
there was a long season still ahead.<lb/>
"It's a different season now<lb/>
said Smith. "We played just how we<lb/>
wanted to play. The effort was just<lb/>
what we wanted. We have to start<lb/>
all over now.<lb/>
"We need the effort we had to-<lb/>
day; that's what counts<lb/>
Warren speaks for his defensive<lb/>
comrades when he speaks of the<lb/>
1980 Pirate unit.<lb/>
"We'll be 11 bodies out on the<lb/>
field he says. "But we're going to<lb/>
play as one person<lb/>
CHAP G ( O . E<lb/>
ECU'S Cliff Williams (90) Zeros<lb/>
kii On Duke ()B Ben Bennett<lb/>
Pirate Lines, Backs Mow Down<lb/>
Helpless Blue Devils In 35-10 Rout<lb/>
?.? -<lb/>
PhO'O tW CHAP GUKLfc T<lb/>
Halfback ntlionv Collins scores ECU's first TD of game Saturday<lb/>
A Successful Start<lb/>
The Ed Emory Era<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
when he went over from one yard<lb/>
out, aided by a superb block by spin<lb/>
end 1 arry O'Roark.<lb/>
The second Pirate TD, though,<lb/>
may have been the game breaker.<lb/>
"It definitely gave us momentum<lb/>
going into the second half Emory<lb/>
said. "If we hadn't scored on that<lb/>
play we would have went for a field<lb/>
goal<lb/>
1 he Pirates picked up where thev<lb/>
left off in the second half, scoring<lb/>
on drives oi 74, 80 and 50 yards.<lb/>
I he 80 vaider used up nearly ten<lb/>
minutes and consisted of 20 plays.<lb/>
The score came early in the fourth<lb/>
quarter as the drive culminated with<lb/>
a two-yard run by Collins. 1 hat<lb/>
score followed an earlier third<lb/>
quarter 41-yard TD run by Mike<lb/>
Hawkins.<lb/>
Following Collins' third TD of<lb/>
the day. the Pirates were up 28-10<lb/>
(Duke's Scott McKinney booted a<lb/>
thud quarter field goal). Emory<lb/>
then began playing some oi his<lb/>
reserves bur make sure that fullback<lb/>
I heodore Sutton was in the game in<lb/>
the laic stages oi the 50-yard drive.<lb/>
Sutton, whose eligibility for the con<lb/>
test had been hotly contested by<lb/>
Duke but approved by the NCAA,<lb/>
scored the game's final touchdown<lb/>
on a one-yard jaum late in the<lb/>
fourth period<lb/>
Following the contest Sutton said<lb/>
the sorc mean: a great deal to him.<lb/>
"1 feel like 1 was due at least one<lb/>
he said with a smile. "Ihis whole<lb/>
thine (questioning ol eligibility) has<lb/>
been something el<lb/>
IHlki<lb/>
iim 11?i vi ii vhi k<lb/>
K?,hi,n. Ml I lhn- IM.M Ha?kin g-5") niin<lb/>
i' 4? v i.i.n ii Vitr?-4 Hwirri iuk. Brown<lb/>
II l Hni 4 I<lb/>
PavO? HI N.Iii 4 4 Ii M vi, ?Jf' I 4 II 4 I hill<lb/>
Bra ii II : I i:x imk ifa : '? 1 15<lb/>
Krirnini: III (ii44 rtawki - II ???? I I<lb/>
Hwitt I 4 link, I ill. 5 4" M H ? I 44 Hrinkmjn<lb/>
: I<lb/>
One ol the keys tor the Pirate of-<lb/>
fense, said Anthonyollins, was the<lb/>
use ol many reserves. "We just<lb/>
wore them down said the Perm<lb/>
Van, N.Y. native. "In heat like to-<lb/>
day you need fresh people in there<lb/>
and we had thai . I hey didn't<lb/>
( ollins, though still hurting from<lb/>
"the rib injury, said he had full con-<lb/>
fidence in the team's young offen-<lb/>
sive line. "I wasn't worried to begin<lb/>
with he said. "I hey have so much<lb/>
heart and Wayne (All-America In-<lb/>
man) is such a great leader. They'll<lb/>
do a fine job this year I'm sure<lb/>
Duke coach Red Wilson was<lb/>
evidently down after his team's loss<lb/>
and said that his club had simply<lb/>
been beaten all over the field. "It<lb/>
was a long afternoon he said.<lb/>
"We got a lesson in an old-<lb/>
fashioned, ball-control, taii-<lb/>
whipping tvpe of game<lb/>
Wilson had began his career at<lb/>
Duke last season with a 28-14 win<lb/>
over the Pirates and saw Emory turn<lb/>
the cards on him Saturday with a<lb/>
likewise successful debut.<lb/>
"Purple don't mean gen though<lb/>
Emory said to a press group follow-<lb/>
ing the game. "Can anyone tell me<lb/>
it Bear Bryant won his first college<lb/>
game' It's not how you start off.<lb/>
It's how you finish<lb/>
?eg icts<lb/>
special<lb/>
here<lb/>
('lint<lb/>
BvH-XRITX HANDLER<lb/>
SpM, ,1,1<lb/>
"Can anybody tell me if Bear<lb/>
Bryant won his fust game It's not<lb/>
you start but how you finish<lb/>
rhose were the words from new<lb/>
East Carolina head football coach<lb/>
! d 1 mory follow . successful<lb/>
, Pirate mentoi Sal urday,<lb/>
( to in- club's 35-10 win over<lb/>
-ugh he made sure not too<lb/>
h emphasis was placed on his<lb/>
 beginning, I mory could not<lb/>
hide his personal joy " I tus is pro-<lb/>
bably one oi the (nippiest moments<lb/>
ol my life he said. "It's just a<lb/>
great feelinj<lb/>
I he rookie coach was not without<lb/>
either. "I just wish four<lb/>
people could have been<lb/>
he said. "1 wish my dad, i)r<lb/>
Prewetl (chairman oi the<lb/>
ommittee that lured I mory<lb/>
and who died two months ago) and<lb/>
(nnger Parker (wifeoi Pirate defen-<lb/>
sive coordinator who was paralyzed<lb/>
in a wreck during the faster<lb/>
holidays and is still recovering)<lb/>
could have been here to see this<lb/>
game. I feel very proud and I know<lb/>
thev would too<lb/>
I mory said that a big lump came<lb/>
in tus throat as he departed from the<lb/>
Wallace Wade Stadium field follow-<lb/>
ing the game, and was greeted bv<lb/>
tumultuous cheering and ap-<lb/>
plauding from the Pirate tans on<lb/>
hand. "There are no words to<lb/>
describe that kind of feeling<lb/>
Emory said. "1 know I'll always<lb/>
remember that moment because<lb/>
there will probably be some when<lb/>
the fan reaction is the exact op-<lb/>
posite<lb/>
Emory described Saturday's game<lb/>
as a "peak" and said thai most like-<lb/>
i here would be some "valleys"<lb/>
ahead in the future. 'That's the way<lb/>
this game is he said. "Sooner or<lb/>
later everybody catches it<lb/>
Though the week prior to the<lb/>
Duke game was full of problems, in-<lb/>
cluding injuries to several members<lb/>
ol the offensive line and star<lb/>
halfback Anthony Collins, in addi-<lb/>
tion to the question oi Theodore<lb/>
Simon's elegibility, Emory said that<lb/>
he was run nervous. "People kept<lb/>
asking me it I was nervous he<lb/>
said "1 was not nervous. 1 was<lb/>
more in a state oi anxiety ? man or<lb/>
something ? over the Sutton ease<lb/>
and everything<lb/>
Emory said one of his main con-<lb/>
cerns entering the game was making<lb/>
sure the team looked together and<lb/>
organized. "Face it he said,<lb/>
"everybody was there to praise or<lb/>
condemn the new staff. You only<lb/>
have one chance to make a good<lb/>
first impression. I felt we had to<lb/>
look solid and organized That the<lb/>
Pirates did, as no mixups occured<lb/>
and only one turnover, an Anthony<lb/>
Collins fumble, was committed.<lb/>
Not only was it important to pro-<lb/>
ve something to the fans, Emory<lb/>
said, it was also important to prove<lb/>
something to the players themselves.<lb/>
"I ots oi them had to have ques-<lb/>
tions he said. "Heck, last January<lb/>
and February we held 5:30 a.m.<lb/>
workouts. At the start of fall prac-<lb/>
tice we held four-a-day. Some of<lb/>
them must have wondered what we<lb/>
were trying to do<lb/>
Emory said the big success at<lb/>
Duke made all the work worth it.<lb/>
"Coming back home on the bus<lb/>
he claimed, "1 heard someone say<lb/>
they remembered those 5:30<lb/>
workouts when they were on the<lb/>
field. Those workouts are worth it<lb/>
because it's hard to give up<lb/>
something you've had to bust your<lb/>
butt and sacrifice for<lb/>
Though he was happy with the<lb/>
oriener, Emory warned against a let-<lb/>
down. "Our guvs went over such a<lb/>
great hurdle at Duke he said,<lb/>
"that I'm concerned thev will be a<lb/>
little content. Heck, we've got to get<lb/>
better, a lot better.<lb/>
"Our schedule is tough he con-<lb/>
tinued. "This Saturday we play<lb/>
Southwest Louisiana, the 'Ragin<lb/>
Cajons That's a super name. A<lb/>
guy could really get up to play under<lb/>
a nickname like that. 1 hey<lb/>
(nicknames) do make a difference.<lb/>
That's why I like 'Pirates' so<lb/>
much<lb/>
following Saturday's game, it ap-<lb/>
pears those Pirates like their new<lb/>
coach a great deal also.<lb/>
ECU fans greet Emory. Pirates following win Saturday<lb/>
Pho'o by Cnp Gurlev<lb/>
Ex-Coach Impressed Saturday<lb/>
last Carolina's 35-10 win over<lb/>
Duke proved a number oi things.<lb/>
Among them was that the Pirates<lb/>
will again field a respectable team in<lb/>
1980.<lb/>
There had been doubts that this<lb/>
was possible after the club suffered<lb/>
greatly from graduation losses<lb/>
following the great '79 season.<lb/>
Saturday's game showed, though,<lb/>
that all is not lost in Pirate Coutry.<lb/>
All on hand were impressed with<lb/>
the aggressive style of play<lb/>
employed by new head coach Ed<lb/>
Emory's troops. There were even<lb/>
whisperings of "Pat who?" in the<lb/>
stands following the contest. The<lb/>
fans were referring to Emory's<lb/>
predecessor, Pat Dye. who resigned<lb/>
in December after six successful<lb/>
seasons at the ECU helm.<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
Chandler<lb/>
Emory was not willing to forget<lb/>
Dye, though. "1 or my staff cannot<lb/>
accept all the credit for this win he<lb/>
said. "It's a lot easier to teach and<lb/>
work with kids who have good work<lb/>
habits. The players here had good<lb/>
habits and that's a credit to Pat. He<lb/>
and 1 have the same philosophies<lb/>
and that has been a big help<lb/>
No doubt when he heard of the<lb/>
Pirates' big win, Dye was a proud<lb/>
man. One ot his former assistants.<lb/>
Ken Hutcherson, certianly was<lb/>
Hutcherson. once the running<lb/>
back coach under Dye and now an<lb/>
officer in the Pirate Club, said he<lb/>
was very impressed Saturday. "It<lb/>
was great he said 'Thai staff<lb/>
over there has done a super ob in<lb/>
molding those players<lb/>
Hutcherson said he felt the win at<lb/>
Duke was probably the biggest he<lb/>
had seen at ECU. "When 1 was on<lb/>
the staff with Pat he said, "we<lb/>
had some big ones at State. Duke<lb/>
and Carolina. But 1 think this might<lb/>
be the biggest one ever here because<lb/>
of the doubts everyone had.<lb/>
Everyone had their eyes on that<lb/>
game. The team really impressed<lb/>
lots and lots of people<lb/>
Hutcherson said the game should<lb/>
end all the regrets of Dye's depar-<lb/>
ture. "Pat Dye and our group is<lb/>
history now he said "Id and his<lb/>
staff proved that. This program is<lb/>
still on the rise<lb/>
Those are high words oi praise,<lb/>
especially considering the fact that<lb/>
Hutcherson was a part oi the Dye<lb/>
regime. He speaks the truth,<lb/>
though.<lb/>
The Pirate offensive live, which<lb/>
had been questioned following the<lb/>
graduation losses, put the Devils in<lb/>
the dirt, so to speak.<lb/>
The ECU defense looked as good<lb/>
or better than it did at any time last<lb/>
year. The pass rush looked better<lb/>
than it did at anv time in '79.<lb/>
t<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057282_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
I Ml I sl C XKOl IM <lb/>
si l'l I MM K si. ls?ht)<lb/>
Pirates Open Home Slate Against Caj<lb/>
By JIMMY DoPREE<lb/>
Ami. Sporu Ml?or<lb/>
When the Ragin' Ca-<lb/>
juns of Southwestern<lb/>
Louisiana take the field<lb/>
Saturday against the<lb/>
Pirates of Hast<lb/>
Carolina, they will be<lb/>
coming off with a 14-12<lb/>
upset win over New<lb/>
Mexico State and look-<lb/>
ing to continue to pro<lb/>
ducc under first-year<lb/>
head coach Sam<lb/>
Robertson.<lb/>
The Cajuns finished<lb/>
4 -7 in W79 under Augie<lb/>
I ammariello, who call-<lb/>
ed it quits after six<lb/>
seasons a l the<lb/>
Southland Conference<lb/>
sdiool.<lb/>
Robertson doesn'1<lb/>
have the size up from<lb/>
that ECU mentor Ed<lb/>
Emory enjoys, but in<lb/>
the back field the Ca-<lb/>
juns have an abun-<lb/>
dance oi competition at<lb/>
quarterback.<lb/>
Senior Phillip<lb/>
Reynolds sat through<lb/>
the PT9 campaign in<lb/>
the chair of the third<lb/>
string signal-callei. but<lb/>
moved past bot h<lb/>
sophmore Dwighi<lb/>
Prudhomme and senior<lb/>
Hal King to start for<lb/>
the Cajuns against New<lb/>
Mexico State.<lb/>
Sophomore Da id<lb/>
Chat man and senior<lb/>
Rodney Smith line up<lb/>
at runningback, with<lb/>
s o p h o mores David<lb/>
Frost and Norris Ham<lb/>
set as the top reserves.<lb/>
Defense will be the<lb/>
key to the Cajuns' suc-<lb/>
cess in 1980. Robertson<lb/>
enjoys the benefit of<lb/>
nine returning starters<lb/>
from a year ago, in-<lb/>
cluding - Southland<lb/>
Conference nose guard<lb/>
Dale T h o m a - and<lb/>
honorable mention All-<lb/>
S1C tackle Kent Head<lb/>
and linebacker Mike<lb/>
Buckles.<lb/>
"Our character and<lb/>
attitude that we've been<lb/>
showing should carry<lb/>
us a long way savs<lb/>
Robertson. "If attitude<lb/>
and hard work<lb/>
Dd measuring sticks<lb/>
to go by. we should go<lb/>
undefeated.<lb/>
"We still need to<lb/>
develop more con<lb/>
sistency with our of-<lb/>
fense he admits, but<lb/>
adds, "our defense nas<lb/>
done a tremendous job<lb/>
so far. They've provid-<lb/>
ed our offense with<lb/>
man opportunities, we<lb/>
just haven't taken ad-<lb/>
vantage of them"<lb/>
Southern<lb/>
Mississippi<lb/>
When the Golden<lb/>
Eagles of Southern<lb/>
Mississippi roam into<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
September 27, the<lb/>
Pirates will hve ample<lb/>
motivation for a sound<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
The last meeting of<lb/>
the two Southern In-<lb/>
dependent schools end-<lb/>
ed with the Pirates on<lb/>
the short end o a 17-16<lb/>
score; a loss which<lb/>
some feared would<lb/>
keep the Bucs out of<lb/>
the Independence Bowl<lb/>
running.<lb/>
The Pirates could<lb/>
have a tough time get-<lb/>
ting ready for the<lb/>
Eagles mentally if it<lb/>
weren't for the 1978<lb/>
loss, as they will have<lb/>
jus! returned from a<lb/>
showdown with na-<lb/>
tionally ranked Florida<lb/>
Suttc the previous<lb/>
week<lb/>
Bobby Collins enters<lb/>
his sixth season at<lb/>
Southern Miss with a<lb/>
career mark of 30-25-1.<lb/>
including their 1979<lb/>
record of 6-4-1.<lb/>
I he Eagles opened<lb/>
with a 17-14 victory<lb/>
ovei Iiilane. but Col-<lb/>
lins' youthful squad<lb/>
will come to Pirate<lb/>
country a the under-<lb/>
dogs.<lb/>
Collins has had to<lb/>
replace 13 starters, six<lb/>
of oi tense and seven o<lb/>
defense. But Collins<lb/>
has confidence in<lb/>
sop li om or e s ignal-<lb/>
callei Reggie Collier,<lb/>
who is pressed for the<lb/>
position by junior let -<lb/>
terman Davy Sellers.<lb/>
Juniors Sammy<lb/>
Winder and Ricky<lb/>
Floyd return as the top<lb/>
runners from a vear<lb/>
ago, although neither<lb/>
held a starting position.<lb/>
Winder led the Eagles<lb/>
in carries and vardage<lb/>
with 173 for 44 vards.<lb/>
Floyd tallied 78 points<lb/>
to lead the team and tie<lb/>
a school record of 12<lb/>
rushing TD's.<lb/>
"We'll be young,<lb/>
mighty young says<lb/>
Collins. "But we'll just<lb/>
hitch our belts a notch<lb/>
and work that much<lb/>
harder<lb/>
Western<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
The Pirates hold a<lb/>
slim 15-13 edge over the<lb/>
Catamounts of<lb/>
Western Carolina in the<lb/>
series which dates back<lb/>
to 1936, but East<lb/>
Carolina has<lb/>
dominated the past five<lb/>
meetings of the in-state<lb/>
rivals.<lb/>
Head coach Bob<lb/>
Waters has posted a<lb/>
68-42-3 record in his 11<lb/>
seasons at the<lb/>
Cullowhee school, and<lb/>
looks to 1980 to be<lb/>
more successful than<lb/>
the 6-5 outing of a year<lb/>
ago. Only four starters<lb/>
are lost from the Cata-<lb/>
mount squad which<lb/>
placed seventh in the<lb/>
Southern Confenece in<lb/>
1979.<lb/>
The Cats must<lb/>
replace quarterback<lb/>
Mike Pusey, who guid-<lb/>
ed the Multiple-1 WCU<lb/>
offense for the past few<lb/>
years, as well as center<lb/>
David Willingham and<lb/>
three top defensive<lb/>
ends.<lb/>
Fullback Mark<lb/>
Womak and tailback<lb/>
Leonard Williams<lb/>
return in the backfield,<lb/>
with Ronnie Mixon<lb/>
listed as the top QB.<lb/>
One position solid<lb/>
for the Catamounts in<lb/>
1980 will be wide<lb/>
receiver, with Ail-<lb/>
American candidate<lb/>
Gerald Harp leading<lb/>
the field of veteran<lb/>
ends. Harp caught 142<lb/>
passes in 1979 for 2,441<lb/>
yards and scored 25<lb/>
touchdowns to earn<lb/>
All-Southern Con-<lb/>
ference honors.<lb/>
Juniors Jeff Dean<lb/>
and Dwayne Norman<lb/>
provide depth and ex-<lb/>
perience at wide<lb/>
receiver, with Dean<lb/>
snaring 31 catches for<lb/>
456 yards and Norman<lb/>
averaging over 20 yards<lb/>
per catch.<lb/>
Defensive end<lb/>
George Alston and<lb/>
lineback Ricky Smith<lb/>
return as All-Southern<lb/>
Conference per-<lb/>
formers, with tackles<lb/>
Larry McClain and<lb/>
John Strong,<lb/>
linebacker Charlie<lb/>
Hughes, and corner-<lb/>
backs Lee McCall and<lb/>
Willie Wells all having<lb/>
started at their posi-<lb/>
tions for the past two<lb/>
seasons.<lb/>
William<lb/>
And Mary<lb/>
Not since the 1977<lb/>
21-17 upset at the<lb/>
Oyster Bown have the<lb/>
Indians of William and<lb/>
Mary been able to<lb/>
penetrate the armour of<lb/>
the Pirates, but new-<lb/>
head coach Jimmy<lb/>
Laycock hopes to im-<lb/>
prove on last year's<lb/>
38-14 drubbing by ECU<lb/>
at Cary Stadium<lb/>
"There are a thou-<lb/>
sand things we stil need<lb/>
to correct said<lb/>
Laycock following spr-<lb/>
ing drills. "But the kids<lb/>
are hitting. They're<lb/>
showing ag-<lb/>
gressiveness, and that's<lb/>
a good sign<lb/>
Senior Chris Garritv<lb/>
returns as the only im-<lb/>
pressive quarterback in<lb/>
the Indian camp. Garri-<lb/>
ty threw tor 916 yards<lb/>
and five touchdowns a<lb/>
vear ago.<lb/>
Keith Best is the<lb/>
leading rusher return<lb/>
ing, with 126 vards to<lb/>
his credit in 1979.<lb/>
Senior tailbacks Mike<lb/>
Brown and Tom Fran-<lb/>
co wil round out the<lb/>
backfield of the<lb/>
(?formation Indian of-<lb/>
fense.<lb/>
Only guards Doug<lb/>
Martini and Dennis<lb/>
Fitzpa trick return to<lb/>
the offensive line, giv-<lb/>
inga r r i t y ample<lb/>
reason tor concern up<lb/>
front.<lb/>
Srr llHPOM S v<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
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Composition and Grammar Call<lb/>
7S8 073S alter 5 00 p m<lb/>
LOST Gtay Cat w.th whit, collar<lb/>
last seen on campus Call<lb/>
Methodist Student Center 7S8 2030<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHY BY<lb/>
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Apartments '00 yds from Art<lb/>
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Take the course individually<lb/>
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 I<lb/>
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Across From<lb/>
Newby's Sub Shop<lb/>
Open 'Til 9:30 Nightly<lb/>
THIS WEEK4S SALE<lb/>
ALBUMS<lb/>
LIST $8.98<lb/>
SALE $5.77<lb/>
Maze Commodors Ojays<lb/>
Cars Molly Hatchet<lb/>
Rolling Stones<lb/>
Rossington Collins Band<lb/>
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Van Morrison Mike Cross<lb/>
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Pizza urn<lb/>
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Monu-Fri. 11:30 2:00<lb/>
Mon. fiP Tues. 6:00 8:00<lb/>
758-6266 Evening buffet 2.79<lb/>
Hwy 264 bypass Greyjlii-il-?l<lb/>
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WE BUY USED ALBUMS<lb/>
SWEATER<lb/>
SAVINGS<lb/>
Certain things is<lb/>
offering you<lb/>
the student $4.00<lb/>
OFF on any sweater<lb/>
during the month<lb/>
of September.<lb/>
There are SHETLANDS<lb/>
plus a vanetyof<lb/>
others. Present<lb/>
your ID and<lb/>
take advantage<lb/>
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CbSTAISI<lb/>
Mod<lb/>
f<lb/>
-??-? ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057282_0011"/><lb/>
I HI 1 ASIC AHOI IMW<lb/>
St I'll MB! K V. 1980<lb/>
11<lb/>
s<lb/>
ndiai<lb/>
Dennis<lb/>
'<lb/>
8:00<lb/>
.79<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?W ?o<lb/>
Former Pirate Stars<lb/>
Excel As Professionals<lb/>
By CHARLFS<lb/>
CHANDLER<lb/>
sports I? itu ii<lb/>
 s the N a t i 0 n a I<lb/>
football 1 eague season<lb/>
opened Sunday four<lb/>
former last Carolina<lb/>
Pirates remained<lb/>
members of their<lb/>
respective clubs, having<lb/>
survived all preseason<lb/>
CUts.<lb/>
One of the four, run-<lb/>
ning back Eddie Hicks<lb/>
of the New York<lb/>
Giants, gained a star-<lb/>
ling nod for his club's<lb/>
opener. Two others,<lb/>
Zack Valentine of the<lb/>
Pittsburgh Steelers and<lb/>
defensive back Reggie<lb/>
P i n k n ey of the<lb/>
Baltimore Colts, saw<lb/>
limited duty.<lb/>
The fourth Pirate in<lb/>
the pros, running back<lb/>
Sam Harrell of the<lb/>
Minnesota Vikings, has<lb/>
been placed on the in-<lb/>
jured reserved list after<lb/>
suffering a hip pointer.<lb/>
Harrell will not return<lb/>
to action this year<lb/>
because to bring him<lb/>
back the Vikes must<lb/>
first put him on the<lb/>
waiver list. Harrell<lb/>
must then clear waivers<lb/>
before he can play for<lb/>
the Vikings this season.<lb/>
Minnesota officials say<lb/>
that are not willing to<lb/>
risk losing the former<lb/>
Pirate and are therefore<lb/>
waiting to use his ser-<lb/>
vices next year. Harrell<lb/>
will continue to prac-<lb/>
tice with the club.<lb/>
Hicks saw his first<lb/>
regular season action at<lb/>
running back Sunday.<lb/>
The Henderson native<lb/>
did not rur any last<lb/>
year as he was used<lb/>
strictly on special<lb/>
teams. Starting in place<lb/>
of injured Billy Taylor<lb/>
Sunday, Hicks gained<lb/>
39 yards on 15 carries<lb/>
in his club's win over<lb/>
the St. Louis Cardinals.<lb/>
Hicks was used ex-<lb/>
tensively in the first<lb/>
period, carrying the<lb/>
ball six straight times<lb/>
and catching a ten-<lb/>
yeard pass in one seven-<lb/>
play seriers. Ironically,<lb/>
Hicks made the tackle<lb/>
on the ensuing punt.<lb/>
Linebacker Valentine<lb/>
still waits in the wings<lb/>
as he begins his second<lb/>
season on the talent-<lb/>
laden world champion<lb/>
Steelers. He is used ex-<lb/>
tensively by Pittsburgh<lb/>
on special teams,<lb/>
though.<lb/>
Pinkney impressed<lb/>
Colt officials in pre-<lb/>
season and earned a<lb/>
spot on the club. The<lb/>
former Pirate defender<lb/>
sat out last season after<lb/>
spending several years<lb/>
with the Detroit 1 ions.<lb/>
Pirate Opponents<lb/>
( untinurd from p 10<lb/>
Eastern<lb/>
Kentucky<lb/>
The Pirates close out<lb/>
the 1980 home slate<lb/>
November 15 against<lb/>
Eastern Kentuck<lb/>
University, the 1979<lb/>
NCAA Division 1-AA<lb/>
national champions.<lb/>
The two squads have<lb/>
met only once in the<lb/>
past, a 1962 meeting<lb/>
which the Pirates won<lb/>
29-12, but the outcome<lb/>
of the 1980 matchup<lb/>
could be different.<lb/>
The Colonels return<lb/>
their three top rushers<lb/>
of a year ago in<lb/>
fullback Dale Patton<lb/>
and tailbakcs Alvin<lb/>
Miller and Anthony<lb/>
Braxton.<lb/>
Patton, a two-time<lb/>
All-Ohio Valley per-<lb/>
former, returns for his<lb/>
senior season as the top<lb/>
rusher with 777 yerds<lb/>
adn nine TD's to his<lb/>
credit in 1979. Braxton<lb/>
added 290 yards and<lb/>
two touchdowns as the<lb/>
starting tailback early<lb/>
in teh season before in-<lb/>
juries forced him to the<lb/>
sidelines.<lb/>
Quarterback Chris<lb/>
Isaac will have second-<lb/>
team All-OVC flanker<lb/>
Jerry Parrish as his top<lb/>
target again this<lb/>
season. Isaac grabbed<lb/>
25 passed for 549 yards<lb/>
and four touchdowns a<lb/>
year ago and is touted<lb/>
as one of the top retur-<lb/>
ning Division 1-AA<lb/>
receivers. The versatile<lb/>
Parrish sprinted for 111<lb/>
yards on 11 flanker<lb/>
reverse plays for<lb/>
another three Colonel<lb/>
TD's, and led the Divi-<lb/>
sion I-AA in kickoff<lb/>
returns with a 28.7 yard<lb/>
average.<lb/>
Junior All-OVC guard<lb/>
Kevin Greve leads the<lb/>
offensive line returnees.<lb/>
Hick? as a Pirate<lb/>
Herrmann Leads Irish Win<lb/>
B 1R KAUFMAN<lb/>
1  SputU W Ml, r<lb/>
?s expected, it was a<lb/>
senior quarterback who<lb/>
spelled the difference in<lb/>
Saturday's Purdue-<lb/>
Notre Dame game. His<lb/>
name, however, was<lb/>
not Mark Herrmann.<lb/>
Senioi Mike Courey,<lb/>
who didn't know he<lb/>
would start until late in<lb/>
the week, threw tor one<lb/>
I ouchdon n. scored<lb/>
anothei and set up two<lb/>
more scores while<lb/>
sophomore Phil Carter<lb/>
ran fot 142 yards and<lb/>
one 1 D to spark 12th-<lb/>
ranked Notre Dame to<lb/>
a 31-10 triumph over<lb/>
!h-rated Purdue,<lb/>
highlighting the first<lb/>
big weekend of college<lb/>
football action.<lb/>
Herrmann, the Big<lb/>
10's all-time leading<lb/>
1 asser, was sidelined<lb/>
with a sprained thumb<lb/>
suffered in practice<lb/>
I uesdav and was<lb/>
replaced by freshman<lb/>
scott Campbell  who<lb/>
was hounded by the<lb/>
Fighting Irish defense<lb/>
and sacked six times.<lb/>
Courey, who com-<lb/>
pleted 10 of 13 passes<lb/>
for 178 yards, sat on<lb/>
the bench for most of<lb/>
his Notre Dame foot-<lb/>
ball career behind Rus-<lb/>
t v Li sen, who<lb/>
graduated last season.<lb/>
He refused to look<lb/>
back in anger, though.<lb/>
Notre Dame Coach<lb/>
Dan Devine, in his final<lb/>
season before retire-<lb/>
ment, tried lo minimize<lb/>
the pressure for his in-<lb/>
experienced quarter-<lb/>
back.<lb/>
Herrmann sprained<lb/>
his thumb on his throw-<lb/>
ing hand in practice<lb/>
early this week and is<lb/>
doubtful for the Big 10<lb/>
opener next week at<lb/>
Wisconsin.<lb/>
Courey, who had<lb/>
completed only 8 of 15<lb/>
passes for 141 yards in<lb/>
his first three years with<lb/>
the Irish, hit Tony<lb/>
Hunter with a 9-vard<lb/>
scoring pass on Notre<lb/>
Dame's first scoring<lb/>
drive of the second half<lb/>
to ensure the victory<lb/>
after the Boiler-<lb/>
makers, who were<lb/>
down 17-0, closed to<lb/>
within 17-10.<lb/>
Campbell wound up<lb/>
17-for-26 for 175 yards,<lb/>
but passed for only 30<lb/>
yards in the second<lb/>
half.<lb/>
In other games in-<lb/>
volving top 20 teams,<lb/>
second-ranked<lb/>
Alabama rolled over<lb/>
Georgia Tech 26-3, No.<lb/>
13 Penn State routed<lb/>
Colgate 54-10. 14th-<lb/>
rated Stanford topped<lb/>
Oregon 35-25. 16th-<lb/>
ranked Florida State<lb/>
blanked LSU 16-0, No.<lb/>
17 North Carolina beat<lb/>
Furman 35-13, New<lb/>
Mexico upset 19th-<lb/>
ranked Brigham Young<lb/>
25-21 and No. 20<lb/>
Georgia edged Ten-<lb/>
nessee 16-15.<lb/>
Ninth-ranked Texas<lb/>
beat eieht-rated Arkan-<lb/>
sas 23-17 last Monday<lb/>
night to kick off the<lb/>
1980 season.<lb/>
Billy Jackson scored<lb/>
on runs of 15 and 5<lb/>
yards on his first two<lb/>
possessions to help<lb/>
Alabama extend the na-<lb/>
tion's longest winning<lb/>
streak to 22 games.<lb/>
With 32 seconds left in<lb/>
the first halt, a 39-yard<lb/>
ID pass from quarter-<lb/>
back Don Jacobs to<lb/>
James Mallard put the<lb/>
Crimson 1 ide ahead<lb/>
19-0 and the final<lb/>
Alabama TD came with<lb/>
2:30 left in the game on<lb/>
a 4-yard run by backup<lb/>
quarterback A1 a n<lb/>
Cray.<lb/>
The game marked<lb/>
the 297th career<lb/>
triumph for Alabama<lb/>
Coach Bear Bryant,<lb/>
who is now only 17<lb/>
behind the all-time<lb/>
leader, the late Amos<lb/>
Alono Stagg.<lb/>
Cieorgia lech's Bill<lb/>
Curry, making his head<lb/>
coaching debut, was<lb/>
dripping with com-<lb/>
pliments aftei being<lb/>
engulfed by therim-<lb/>
son Jide.<lb/>
rail back Curt<lb/>
Warner scored three<lb/>
first-halt touchdowns <lb/>
on runs of 5v and 11<lb/>
yards and an 89-yard<lb/>
kickoff return to lift<lb/>
Penn State to an easy,<lb/>
v ictorv. Warnei ran foi<lb/>
101 yards on seven car-<lb/>
ries in the first halt<lb/>
alone and ended with<lb/>
149 yards.<lb/>
John llway passed<lb/>
lor a pair ot 1 l)s and<lb/>
also ran 1 yard for<lb/>
another score to help<lb/>
Stanford open up with<lb/>
a triumph. 1 he Cat<lb/>
dinals scored three<lb/>
s e c o n d -quart e r<lb/>
touchdowns to break<lb/>
the game open.<lb/>
Bill Capece kicked<lb/>
three field goals and<lb/>
tailback Sam Plait<lb/>
scored on a 3-yard run<lb/>
to lilt Florida State<lb/>
over tumble-plagued<lb/>
1 ouisiana State. All<lb/>
four I SI scores came<lb/>
after 1 SU turnovers m<lb/>
the first game foi new<lb/>
1iger C oach Jerry<lb/>
Stovall. It was the lust<lb/>
tune in 30 years 1 SU<lb/>
was shut out at home in<lb/>
a season opener.<lb/>
BUY 3 TAPES GET FREE CASE<lb/>
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TODD'S CENTER<lb/>
The Fast Carolinian !<lb/>
Vf ' WHi; the tu"iu ,?? .<lb/>
umt 192<lb/>
Published every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday dying The academic<lb/>
year and every Wednesday dur<lb/>
ing the summer<lb/>
The East Caroinian ,s the o(<lb/>
ticial newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina University, owned.<lb/>
operated and publ shed tor and<lb/>
by the students ot East Carolina<lb/>
University<lb/>
Subscription Rates<lb/>
Business $35 yearly<lb/>
All others S25 yearly<lb/>
Second class postage pa.d a1<lb/>
Greenville, N C<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
are located in the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus of ECU.<lb/>
Greenville. N C<lb/>
Telephone 757 JW. ?J?7 3Cr?<lb/>
GORDON FULP'S<lb/>
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ALL SUMMER MERCHANDISE<lb/>
ON SALE NOW<lb/>
Short Sleeve IZOD LA COSTA Shirts<lb/>
Quanity Discount Buy 2 or More and Save<lb/>
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ALL WATER SKIES HALF PRICE<lb/>
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STRAIGHT SALE 20?oOFF<lb/>
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(Presenting our Designer Diamond Collection.)<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Jk This week only, ArtCarved presents its<lb/>
A' dramatic new college ring concept for women<lb/>
 in 10K and 14K gold. On display only while<lb/>
the ArtCarved representative is on campus.<lb/>
The new Designer Diamond Collection,<lb/>
reflecting the importance, value, and rare 4<lb/>
beauty of genuine diamonds, is an v<lb/>
ArtCarved innovation. f4<lb/>
This collection is also available with a new<lb/>
diamond substitute, Cubic Zirconia, which<lb/>
creates the same dazzling elegance for less.<lb/>
if<lb/>
rT<lb/>
KOFVED<lb/>
VcOLLEGE RINGS<lb/>
Symbolizing your ability to achieve.<lb/>
Sept. 10,11,12<lb/>
DESIGNER<lb/>
DIAMOND<lb/>
COLLECTION<lb/>
Students Supply Store Lobby<lb/>
Wright Bldg. 9:30-4:00<lb/>
?also available with Cubic Zirconia. a diamond substitute<lb/>
HI Deposit required Master Charge or Visa accepted<lb/>
?1980 ArtCarved College Rings<lb/>
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12<lb/>
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Soccer Team<lb/>
Loses Twice<lb/>
The East Carolina<lb/>
soccer team got off to a<lb/>
disappointing start this<lb/>
weekend, dropping<lb/>
consecutive matches to<lb/>
George Mason and St.<lb/>
Mary's in its first two<lb/>
games of the season.<lb/>
The Pirates fell to<lb/>
George Mason 3-0 on<lb/>
Saturday and to St.<lb/>
Mary's of Maryland<lb/>
2-1 on Sunday.<lb/>
The two losses left<lb/>
ECU head coach Brad<lb/>
Smith, who had been so<lb/>
optimistic about this<lb/>
club, in a state of<lb/>
disaray and disappoint-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
"The people we have<lb/>
to have doing well did<lb/>
not do well he said.<lb/>
"We just didn't seem<lb/>
to be into it<lb/>
The losses will have<lb/>
an effect on the team's<lb/>
lineup for this Wednes-<lb/>
day's home opener with<lb/>
Guilford and this<lb/>
weekend's Mayor's<lb/>
Cup tourney in Chapel<lb/>
Hill, Smith said.<lb/>
"We're going to<lb/>
make some ad-<lb/>
justments he said.<lb/>
"There will definitely<lb/>
be some new faces in<lb/>
our starting lineup<lb/>
Smith was most<lb/>
disappointed with his<lb/>
team's defensive play.<lb/>
He was especially<lb/>
displeased with the fact<lb/>
that the team gave up<lb/>
four breakaway goals<lb/>
in two games.<lb/>
Photi<lb/>
Stewart (15) follows Pirate offensive line<lb/>
Photo bv Chap Gurtey<lb/>
ineligible Holley. Sutton eheek eoin toss<lb/>
Youthful Blue Devils<lb/>
Wot Ready To Plaf<lb/>
DURHAM, N.<lb/>
UP1 Duke coach Re<lb/>
 Ison 1iMKta sai<lb/>
"It also lakes Mine charisma, and a strong<lb/>
foi a team to jell arm. and hc"s a<lb/>
lind a freshman scrambler. He has a<lb/>
M quarterback Wilson chance to be a fine<lb/>
. dn't ha added. quarterback<lb/>
"We need this open Bennett did not get<lb/>
date he said. "We much time to throw,<lb/>
will do a lot ol scrim- Wilson noted, predic-<lb/>
maging and head nne the offensive line<lb/>
knocking and work on will improve.<lb/>
<lb/>
.? a better time.<lb/>
et a  10 "<lb/>
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 ilson<lb/>
Ad need- is oU mental touehness1 "The hardest post-<lb/>
ion.<lb/>
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his wee<lb/>
rhe one bright spot tion io coach is the of-<lb/>
 saw in Satin fensive line he said.<lb/>
s performance was "The line did not give<lb/>
pla ol freshman Bennett much time to<lb/>
erback Ben Ben thro and this is<lb/>
nett, who completed 11 something we are not<lb/>
? 23 passes foi 128 proud of. We have a<lb/>
.auU great deal of youth and<lb/>
'Ben Bennett is trul) inexperience on the<lb/>
? for in a line, but they should<lb/>
. ?  ? . said improve with each<lb/>
WiUon. "He has eame.<lb/>
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Coonrys ITiinlstcr-401 IT St Nin-fcK i 3ans The. Green HooSC The D?r???<lb/>
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Topics lor Discussion<lb/>
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Stpber 1990<lb/>
J- A FresK Start<lb/>
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2 "Alt?r"<lb/>
30 Otirso, Horrar<lb/>
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IS 3r 6pport?M"tvf?r-F-?od, Fe.ncu?k.pK ard<lb/>
FONlil<lb/>
OPEN HOUSE<lb/>
Sunday bep.ervN,be?' 21<lb/>
3-5<lb/>
215 K 4th STRF.E1<lb/>
GREENVILLE. N 27834<lb/>
752-2183<lb/>
Cimifilfie Meai On A Bun<lb/>
ORDER BY M'MHKR<lb/>
1 Ham &amp; Cheew<lb/>
2 Bologna &amp; Cheese<lb/>
3 Ham. Salami &amp; Chees<lb/>
4 Salami Cheese &amp; Pepperoni<lb/>
5 Cheese. Turkey &amp; Ham<lb/>
6 Roast Reef &amp; Cheese<lb/>
7 Cheese. Pepperoni &amp; Ham<lb/>
8. Cheese. Salami &amp; Cappicola<lb/>
9 Ham. Cheese &amp; Cappicola<lb/>
10 Turkey &amp; Cheese<lb/>
11 Tuna Fish &amp; Cheese<lb/>
12 All Cheese<lb/>
13 Salami. Cheese. Pepperoni &amp; Ham<lb/>
14 Proscettino &amp; Cheese<lb/>
15 Ham. Cheese &amp; Proscettino<lb/>
16 Corned Beef &amp; Cheeae<lb/>
17 Cappicola &amp; Cheese<lb/>
18 Bologna. Ham. Cheese &amp; Cappicola<lb/>
19 SUPER SPECIAL<lb/>
Salami, Bologna. Cheese. Turkey.<lb/>
Cappicola. Ham &amp; Pepperoni<lb/>
20 Pastrami On Rye<lb/>
21 Ruben On Rye with Corned Beef.<lb/>
Swiss Cheese. Mustard &amp; Sauerkraut<lb/>
22 Italian Meatball (in sauce)<lb/>
23 Italian Sausage with peppers (in sauce)<lb/>
24 Hot Pastrami on onion roll<lb/>
26 Cheese Steak<lb/>
26 Hot Dog (with Chili)<lb/>
27 Chef Salad<lb/>
28 Filet of Chicken on Onion Roll<lb/>
1 25<lb/>
1 15<lb/>
I 30<lb/>
1 25<lb/>
1 40<lb/>
1 60<lb/>
1 30<lb/>
1 40<lb/>
1 45<lb/>
1 25<lb/>
1 60<lb/>
1 30<lb/>
1 45<lb/>
1 60<lb/>
1 60<lb/>
1 60<lb/>
1 30<lb/>
1 50<lb/>
1 80<lb/>
2 30<lb/>
2 00<lb/>
2 25<lb/>
35<lb/>
50<lb/>
90<lb/>
30<lb/>
40<lb/>
55<lb/>
25<lb/>
2 90<lb/>
2 25<lb/>
2 55<lb/>
2 95<lb/>
2 95<lb/>
2 95<lb/>
2 30<lb/>
2 70<lb/>
1 70<lb/>
Sandu whes include lettuce, tomato, onion, oil, vinegar,<lb/>
oregano. tail and pepper<lb/>
fe- PHONE AHEAD FOR FASTER SERVICE ?4<lb/>
211 Jarvis St.<lb/>
Greenville, NX. 27834<lb/>
on S<lb/>
Supermarket, Inc.<lb/>
Phone:<lb/>
752-5025<lb/>
"Home of Greenville's Best Meats<lb/>
MAOLA 12 Fresh<lb/>
Low fat Milk<lb/>
Gallon Jim JpA79<lb/>
GREAT FOR COOK-OUT BEFORE THE GAME<lb/>
MORRELL Pride T-Bone or Sirloin Steaks 82.59 lb.<lb/>
Overtoil's Finest Ground Beef 3 lb. pkg. or more SI.69 lb.<lb/>
Fryer Breast with Wing .79 lb. Leg with Thigh .69 lb.<lb/>
Italian Swiss Colony Wines<lb/>
1.5 Liter<lb/>
Gold or Pink Chablis<lb/>
Reg. $3.99 Special $2.79<lb/>
olonu,<lb/>
PmkChabii<lb/>
iMtiiiVinhn<lb/>
Just A DIME &amp; TWO<lb/>
Pennies<lb/>
?White Potatoes lb.<lb/>
?Yellow Onions lb.<lb/>
?Green Cabbage lb.<lb/>
?Juicy Lemons eaeh<lb/>
SUPER BUCK <lb/>
COCA-COLA or PEPSI COLA<lb/>
16oz. carton of 8 SI.00<lb/>
With this coupon and $7.50 food order<lb/>
excluding advertised specials.<lb/>
Without coupon SI.79. Limit one carton<lb/>
of vour choice. Expires 9-13-80.<lb/>
?<lb/>
in<lb/>
&amp;ies&amp;<lb/>
Banquet Frozen Chicken<lb/>
or Turkey TV Dinners<lb/>
lie pkg. llGm<lb/>
CLIP THIS COUPON<lb/>
i BUDWEISER or MILLER BEER<lb/>
1 ttl 7Q 6-pack of 12 oz. cans $1.79 with this j<lb/>
 Plm i Jr coupon. Without coupon 2.19 J<lb/>
Limit one per c ustomer at this price j<lb/>
AO ?i Limit one per (U8tomer<lb/>
2$1.00 ocifC) 11Ewf<lb/>
Coca-Cola<lb/>
32 oz. bottle<lb/>
0O PU,H Deposit<lb/>
Ovengold Bread<lb/>
24 oz. loaf 2.99<lb/>
Hunt's Ketehup<lb/>
qt. bottle ,6o<lb/>
Kraft<lb/>
Maearoni &amp; .28<lb/>
Cheese<lb/>
Dinners 7Vi oz. box<lb/>
DANNON<lb/>
Yogurt<lb/>
ALL Flavors<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057282_0013"/>
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