<?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">
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<pb facs="00057295_0001"/>
She iEaat Carolinian<lb/>
ol. 55 No. 18<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Serving the Fast Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
lhurxday, October 23. 1980<lb/>
 .n t iiillt . Northarolina<lb/>
( in ulalion 10.000<lb/>
Committees Eye Utilities Costs<lb/>
Heating Plant On 14th M. Prepares For Cold.<lb/>
The cost o utilities in the 15<lb/>
residence halls is skyrocketing.<lb/>
The total cost of utilities tor the<lb/>
dorms during the past academic<lb/>
year was $965,12X, a figure covering<lb/>
the cost of heat, electricity and hot<lb/>
water.<lb/>
The amount of money budgeted<lb/>
for tlie payment of the utilities was<lb/>
$600,000. This was surpassed by<lb/>
over $365,(XX) which was paid<lb/>
through additional income housing<lb/>
had received but was not apportion-<lb/>
ed for use in paying utilities. Ihe<lb/>
money had been apportioned foi<lb/>
use in repairing and renovating<lb/>
some ol the dorms and purch;<lb/>
materials needed foi the general<lb/>
upkeep of the doi ms.<lb/>
The problems associated with ris-<lb/>
ing utilities and housin<lb/>
are not going undetected, however,<lb/>
and two separate commottees have<lb/>
been formed to cope with the pro-<lb/>
blem ?e<lb/>
Ihe student residence associatin<lb/>
commit lee has beer, organized to ad<lb/>
vise the Student rewsidence v<lb/>
lion on problems associated with<lb/>
utilities usagge in the lence<lb/>
halls.<lb/>
Ihe committee has b ? i ned<lb/>
a list ol problems winch are affected<lb/>
bv utility usage. Among these<lb/>
inadequate wiring in the older-<lb/>
residence halls, leaking faucets and<lb/>
showers, steam heat which can not<lb/>
be efficiently regulated, and the<lb/>
number of electrical appliances in<lb/>
the residence halls used tor cooking<lb/>
According to the division's food<lb/>
service task force report, 93 percent<lb/>
ol the students who responded in<lb/>
the survey said they prepared meals<lb/>
in their dorm rooms. The survey<lb/>
estimated the numbet ol cooking<lb/>
appliances in the dorms at over<lb/>
20,000<lb/>
ccording to Ion Rogers, coor-<lb/>
dinatoi tor central campus who<lb/>
heads the committee on utilities. 'lt<lb/>
he function of this committee<lb/>
strict students form cooking in<lb/>
hat may become an<lb/>
: ity he said.<lb/>
" 1 ? - . . ippen until the<lb/>
uni ffer the student an<lb/>
act epi ' tion he added.<lb/>
?? I tie ? on ol the committee is<lb/>
make recommendations to the<lb/>
SKA to solve some ol the problems<lb/>
in idence halls caused bv<lb/>
Fundamentalists<lb/>
Church Group Gives Support<lb/>
KM i<lb/>
? I It;<lb/>
'<lb/>
Receiv<lb/>
Den<lb/>
:<lb/>
.<lb/>
! i'h I ne t i ienus<lb/>
! ibert  a North<lb/>
? nentalist<lb/>
i cross section<lb/>
R publicans and<lb/>
endorsement from the<lb/>
; k '<lb/>
K ea.an .<lb/>
teneral<lb/>
I . E d n<lb/>
: ' G<lb/>
 o i<lb/>
D-Johnson, or and<lb/>
listed ca<lb/>
rral Asset a c i<lb/>
inty basis,<lb/>
I he Rev Daniel D. Can i t<lb/>
i ouisburg, executive directoi m the<lb/>
non-partisan political action com-<lb/>
mi'tee i s the std .<lb/>
the letter had been sent to "a<lb/>
disproportionate mini her<lb/>
Southern Baptists1 bui<lb/>
Pre<lb/>
es<lb/>
He said roup sp<lb/>
"bundled- turs"<lb/>
researching ea ididate's -?<lb/>
issues including the 1 qual R<lb/>
Amendment, n, regulation<lb/>
u -by-the-drink,<lb/>
right is and<lb/>
div oi ce la a<lb/>
 an said vv ednesday 11 at can-<lb/>
didates receiving endorsements were<lb/>
those considered "able, iable can-<lb/>
hold the best overall v icw<lb/>
on vital family and moral issues<lb/>
f lid noi endorse can-<lb/>
 S. 1 louse and Senate<lb/>
race te insurance commis-<lb/>
luse "we did not have<lb/>
at on on I hose<lb/>
; aces I at r said.<lb/>
Ht ?aid the three page mailing<lb/>
i Till-in-the-blank"<lb/>
mode! lettei<lb/>
pastors w ho w I<lb/>
the fundamental<lb/>
and circulate then<lb/>
Pastors til' :?, ih ime ol<lb/>
proved legislative eandidates tor<lb/>
then county and mimeograph<lb/>
lettei which includes the gro<lb/>
stand on "moi al" issues.<lb/>
"If they change the v<lb/>
the letter or change the Candida<lb/>
they do not have pc n io use<lb/>
our material C ai r sa<lb/>
The letter desi i hes I K as<lb/>
legislating "forced<lb/>
women and legal<lb/>
homosexuals<lb/>
United Way<lb/>
Campaign<lb/>
Under Way<lb/>
'<lb/>
?lina University<lb/>
I mica Way Campaign kicked ofl<lb/>
breakfast meeting<lb/>
the Mendenhall Multi-purpose<lb/>
Room yesterday. "The goal for Pitt<lb/>
County this year is 5390,000.<lb/>
"b looks like the campaign is well<lb/>
said Dr. Rosalie Ann<lb/>
Hai lirman, "and it<lb/>
I 80 will be a good year<lb/>
The ' ? ? i hosted by<lb/>
llor 1 homas Brewer, and<lb/>
guest speakers included 1980 Cam-<lb/>
'? ne I aylor and<lb/>
i man V llliam I aupus.<lb/>
Lee Folger, 1 nited Way executive<lb/>
. showed a film about the<lb/>
ipaign that was made on the<lb/>
f C I .ampus.<lb/>
Di Haritun said that 90 percent<lb/>
of the representatives turned out tor<lb/>
the breal I thai they helped<lb/>
tdd pre the campaign. "It<lb/>
i e us a lot ol clout she said.<lb/>
i gear's campaign will be<lb/>
ais. and focused accor-<lb/>
From The Inside Out<lb/>
Most ECU students have had ample opportunity to<lb/>
observe the construction being done to McGinnts<lb/>
Auditorium, hut few. if an. have had a chance to<lb/>
peer into the building's interior. Here, a lone con-<lb/>
struction worker keeps his balance as he adds stone<lb/>
finishing touehes to the east wall of the building.<lb/>
dim<lb/>
D'<lb/>
Haritun. I he length of<lb/>
the campaign will be somewhat<lb/>
shorter than last year in order to<lb/>
maximize campus efforts.<lb/>
Scholarship By English-Speaking Union<lb/>
utilities usage Ihe mam probl<lb/>
it we put thim in to .<lb/>
ies would be cost,<lb/>
sanitationRodgers -aid<lb/>
The problem ol safety is especial-<lb/>
ly critical ut the older bu<lb/>
where the electrical wirin g is in<lb/>
quate for the number of appliai<lb/>
being used. "In c otton and I .<lb/>
ing there are fused fuses<lb/>
being blown almost every even<lb/>
Safety isdefinaiely in que<lb/>
he added.<lb/>
In extending the tune;<lb/>
committee beyond tl<lb/>
cooking in thge dorms. Rdgei<lb/>
"We hope to make<lb/>
tions in a package torn; I<lb/>
program ol energy -<lb/>
We may recommend a c<lb/>
effort to see which dorn<lb/>
serve the most ene<lb/>
"We are dealing w acl<lb/>
awareness he added.<lb/>
See COMMI1 I H page 3<lb/>
ECU Campus Police<lb/>
Investigating Thefts<lb/>
B MIKE NOOWN<lb/>
s.?. I i<lb/>
. is eat gh ofl the<lb/>
1I campus police<lb/>
Id like to know <lb/>
e d investigating a<lb/>
 and ? - i1 'tie Cia 11 c<lb/>
n dining facility which has<lb/>
resul the loss ol over 60<lb/>
pounds ol meat, i estimated<lb/>
; S161 89<lb/>
ccording to police reports,<lb/>
d intruders entered a win-<lb/>
dow a est Mdc . Galley<lb/>
serving area located underneath<lb/>
Jones Dorm. footprints were<lb/>
red by investigating officers<lb/>
i able below the window and<lb/>
also e serving counter which<lb/>
ne over to gei<lb/>
ere was also<lb/>
an u . ' tttempi to break in-<lb/>
to the lake box .nd pinball machine<lb/>
in area<lb/>
.? suspects broke into several<lb/>
meal lot - n the serving area ol<lb/>
the Ga where they ap-<lb/>
parently removed the food bv prv-<lb/>
ing open the doors. I hey then ap-<lb/>
jntly took the items to the dieti-<lb/>
cians office and parsed them<lb/>
lugh a hole they I ad cut in a<lb/>
een w indow.<lb/>
some items ol tood were<lb/>
discovered outside the galley room<lb/>
under the stairwell leading into the<lb/>
south side ol Jones Dorm.<lb/>
Greenville Police arrived at the<lb/>
scene and took pictures of the<lb/>
damages and took fingerprints.<lb/>
Ihe meat stolen included IN<lb/>
pounds ol turkey valued at $42. 15<lb/>
pounds ol chicken valued at $21.<lb/>
and two canned hams valuled al<lb/>
$22 hot plate valued al x was<lb/>
also included among the items<lb/>
stole according to the report.<lb/>
In an unrelated incident Friday,<lb/>
1 c I campus police arrested and<lb/>
charged a 16-year-old non-student<lb/>
with two counts of breaking and<lb/>
entering .md larceny aftei<lb/>
prehended the youth a<lb/>
ireyele trom the ui<lb/>
ty.<lb/>
According to police report<lb/>
Oct 15, Dr. Alfred King rep<lb/>
iv"4 Suzuki 125 cc n<lb/>
been taken trom the storage ;<lb/>
pound under the noi<lb/>
Ficklin Stadium.<lb/>
The motorcycle had beei<lb/>
to the school ol drivers edu<lb/>
and used for instructio<lb/>
cle safety. Or. King is the a man<lb/>
of the department of driver- educa<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
On the following Friday, cat<lb/>
police observed two s<lb/>
motorcycle larceny riding a I25cc<lb/>
Suzuki west on 14th streei<lb/>
1 he suspects parked the<lb/>
cle in the lot located between<lb/>
and Berkely Streets and<lb/>
foot towards the stadium.<lb/>
The investigating ol I<lb/>
ed the parked motorcycle and d<lb/>
mined that it had been hot wired,<lb/>
according to the report. V<lb/>
same time an anonymous ca -<lb/>
formed the ECUPD that some<lb/>
was attempting to enter the sto<lb/>
area under the north stands ol<lb/>
stadium.<lb/>
The officers arrived at the see<lb/>
in time to apprehend the two<lb/>
suspects attempting to steal a second<lb/>
motorcycle from the motor<lb/>
storage area.<lb/>
A; the scene, the suspects ad<lb/>
ted they had stolen the first bike<lb/>
Oct. 15 and that tney had en<lb/>
the secured area where the bike<lb/>
stored bv breaking the padlock<lb/>
with a pick axe they had taken from<lb/>
the tool storage shed at the stadi<lb/>
The 16-year-old and a 14-year<lb/>
accomplice were released under<lb/>
custody of their fathers. Court i<lb/>
for the 16-year-old has bee; <lb/>
Nov. 15. 1980 in Pitt Cc<lb/>
District Court.<lb/>
Congress Says U.S. Oil<lb/>
Production Is Slipping<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Art<lb/>
Conceri ? <lb/>
ECU Goes lo INC<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Letters <lb/>
Movies<lb/>
5<lb/>
5<lb/>
8<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
5<lb/>
GREENX II 1 I A $1,500<lb/>
scholarship tor studv in I ngland<lb/>
will be ottered this year to an<lb/>
eastern North Carolinian bv the<lb/>
Greenville Branch of the English-<lb/>
Speaking Union.<lb/>
Applicants may be from any<lb/>
academic or professional discipline<lb/>
who wish to pursue for formal<lb/>
credit an authorized course o for-<lb/>
mal study in England.<lb/>
Applicants should reside within<lb/>
the environs of the Greenville I -SI<lb/>
branch, specifically Pitt. Greene,<lb/>
SGA Minutes3<lb/>
Two Sports Axed8 Lenoir. Wayne, Craven, Beautort<lb/>
Martin. I dgecombe. Wilson and<lb/>
adjacent counties. Preferably, ap-<lb/>
plicants should plan to continue<lb/>
residing in the area.<lb/>
Among, study programs available<lb/>
to scholarship applicants are those<lb/>
at the University of London, the<lb/>
I diversity of Kent at Canterbury,<lb/>
Oxford University, the University of<lb/>
Birmingham and the University of<lb/>
Edinburgh.<lb/>
An international organization<lb/>
whose purpose is to promote<lb/>
understanding and good will among<lb/>
the English-speaking peoples ol the<lb/>
world, the English-Speaking Union<lb/>
has seven branches in North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Scholarship applicants should<lb/>
send letters of application, along<lb/>
with detailed curriculum vitae and<lb/>
letters of character and academic<lb/>
reference to the committee, in care<lb/>
of Elizabeth Webb, 204 North Oak<lb/>
St Apartment 4, Greenville. N.C<lb/>
27834.<lb/>
Application deadline is January<lb/>
8, 1981.<lb/>
 ASH 1 N v. 1 ON<lb/>
tl pi) ? A gloomy<lb/>
siudv says IS oil pro-<lb/>
duction could sink as<lb/>
low as 4 million barrels<lb/>
a day bv the turn ol the<lb/>
century, meaning the<lb/>
I nited States would<lb/>
have to look elsewhere<lb/>
foi the energy to fuel<lb/>
industrial growth.<lb/>
Congress' Office o!<lb/>
rechnology ssess<lb/>
ment. in a studv titled<lb/>
'?World Petroleum<lb/>
Availability :<lb/>
1980-2000 said cur-<lb/>
rent U.S. production of<lb/>
10.2 million barrels a<lb/>
da may sink to bet-<lb/>
ween 7.2 million and<lb/>
H.f- million barrels bv<lb/>
1985 and decline to 4<lb/>
million to 7 million bat<lb/>
rels bv the year 2000.<lb/>
?if OlA's projec<lb/>
tions prove correct, the<lb/>
I nited States as well as<lb/>
the rest of the world<lb/>
will have to fuel its<lb/>
ec ono m i c and in-<lb/>
dustrial growth without<lb/>
the seemingly limitless<lb/>
supply of oil we have<lb/>
had in the past said<lb/>
John Gibbons, the of-<lb/>
fice's director.<lb/>
The studv found it<lb/>
might be possible to<lb/>
boost world production<lb/>
bv one-third in the<lb/>
l9V0s. But it said in-<lb/>
creases are unlikely<lb/>
because Arab oil expor-<lb/>
ting countries and Mex-<lb/>
ico, the countries with<lb/>
the best prospects for<lb/>
higher product! o n,<lb/>
have little financial or<lb/>
political incentive to<lb/>
boost output.<lb/>
The report, released<lb/>
Sunday, agreed with a<lb/>
CIA studv that con-<lb/>
cluded non-communist<lb/>
oil output ? 52 million<lb/>
bat rels a day in 19"<lb/>
could start dropping in<lb/>
this decade, and reach a<lb/>
range of 40 million to<lb/>
60 million barrels in 20<lb/>
years.<lb/>
The office sai d<lb/>
declining production<lb/>
could cut exports from<lb/>
the Soviet Union, the<lb/>
world's largest pro<lb/>
ducer, forcing I astern<lb/>
Europe and perhaps<lb/>
Russia itself to compete<lb/>
as buyers in the world<lb/>
market.<lb/>
Production by<lb/>
OPEC nations in the<lb/>
next 20 years should<lb/>
continue at its current<lb/>
level o about 31<lb/>
million barrels a day,<lb/>
with the bulk 01<lb/>
reserves controlled bv<lb/>
Arab countries.<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057295_0002"/><lb/>
1111 I M t Kt ?l ll <lb/>
K 1 t H! K  I i?<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
BtAttX ARTS BALL<lb/>
<lb/>
V<lb/>
EPISCOPAL WORSHIP TABll WNNISCIUH<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
A I D INTLRNSHII'S<lb/>
ROSSE<lb/>
WOMt N S Bll I I AROS<lb/>
r O U R N A M f NT<lb/>
A<lb/>
POSlUM<lb/>
SKIMAIMHAIAH<lb/>
UAt Ki-AMMON<lb/>
TOURNAMINl<lb/>
ALPHA Dl t 1 A PI<lb/>
CORRt C T IONS SOt IAI<lb/>
WORK<lb/>
SOCIOLOGY ANTHRO<lb/>
POLOGY<lb/>
WOMI N S Bll I I AROS<lb/>
BK A<lb/>
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&amp;afr&amp; ,2f'&amp;&amp;fr.2P &amp;&amp;fr<lb/>
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Announcing<lb/>
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and Rccessones from<lb/>
FAMOUS PIZZA<lb/>
FAST, FREE DELIVERY TO<lb/>
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call 758-5982<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
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1 i.tt I 4K j<lb/>
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? ? SUBS, ,1 1 St; ! 1 ?<lb/>
?.1.oo 2<lb/>
?Xao -i feo<lb/>
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SALADS ? ? - -<lb/>
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V -1 1 1 1 ?! . J<lb/>
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10 OFF YOUR NEXTDINEINMEAL<lb/>
At FAMOUS PIZZA. OFFER EXPIRES<lb/>
NOV. 4. 1980<lb/>
SNOWSK I<lb/>
HANOBAt I<lb/>
Uf t 1H<lb/>
I'KOUlt<lb/>
St,A<lb/>
PROII SSORS<lb/>
R At I<lb/>
BASK I I BAl I<lb/>
OFFICIALS<lb/>
ECU SURI t I lili<lb/>
WSI<lb/>
t St)<lb/>
I I S I I AK INI.<lb/>
BAt K GAMMON<lb/>
TOURNAMINI<lb/>
RAI f I I<lb/>
r<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
The Fleming Center has been here for you since 1974<lb/>
providing private, understanding htwdUi care<lb/>
women ol til ages at a reasonable cost<lb/>
Saturday abortion hours<lb/>
Free pregnancy testa<lb/>
Very early pregnancy testa<lb/>
Evening birth control hours<lb/>
The Fleming Center we're here when you need us<lb/>
Call 781 -8880 in Raleigh anytime<lb/>
ITER<lb/>
 10 Ndi th Greene St<lb/>
Gi i i'iiviIK N C<lb/>
5 Minutes I rom im?i<lb/>
JL4st A i tss I li' Rivei l-ii idge<lb/>
10 Off on any Meal !<lb/>
With This Coupon !<lb/>
and ECU ID.<lb/>
rakeOul Spet ial F ri ? i1<lb/>
SNACK PACK<lb/>
3 f 1i isl i ?i i? i ?,<lb/>
WE CATER ALL EVENTS<lb/>
 ? 11 m<lb/>
??? thM? ?)????<lb/>
n?ma It required t. t.a fadll<lb/>
? ? lot ???? ?? h i" ny? s? ?<lb/>
?i) apt ?? ?(? lf? ? 1 tHfimC In lh?? ?: II ??? '<lb/>
. ?n ??? ?! "?- fou foul '????' ?  ?<lb/>
arable ?'??' ??'??? ??????? ?' ? ' "fl "?'? ??? ???1"u ?<lb/>
? ???'?.? ' ??? ? ad??r1l??d '? ?? ?<lb/>
? il??: ???? ??" !???<lb/>
llama and  ??<lb/>
( Hax tive Thura Oc1 23<lb/>
opyi j<lb/>
Before, During &amp;<lb/>
After the Game<lb/>
Kroger Savon<lb/>
has everything<lb/>
you need!<lb/>
c<lb/>
FRESHLY MADE<lb/>
Sausage<lb/>
Biscuits<lb/>
Qf STROH S LIGHT OR<lb/>
m Stroh's Beer<lb/>
FOR ?<lb/>
6<lb/>
12-Oz<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
99<lb/>
FOX SAUSAGE OR<lb/>
Pepperoni<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
KROGER SLICED<lb/>
Dll I Pr PSI, Ml Dl W OR<lb/>
8<lb/>
16-0<lb/>
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Btls<lb/>
Pepsi-Cola<lb/>
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SAVE<lb/>
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PI US Dl POSIT<lb/>
CHAHUS. RHIN1 . ROSf OH<lb/>
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TO<lb/>
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OPEN 7 AM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
nsjwra<lb/>
600 Greenvie Blvd. - Greenvie<lb/>
Phon 756-7031<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057295_0003"/><lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
City's Recreation Department<lb/>
Plays Matchmaker<lb/>
U IXANDRIA arc sorry, Dei  N<lb/>
Va il 1M) ula Mgns allowed<lb/>
tip Denis site evei<lb/>
  ? place Dia i a<lb/>
a sij ? u mai: hei'<lb/>
di ia intei e?. lion asking ca 11 low you I<lb/>
his km mei gii Itriend i sign. A<lb/>
. him, so the city Reciea ?i i <lb/>
depanmeni K:<lb/>
s . ?ped in pia<lb/>
v pid dii ?'? d N<lb/>
1 h e d e pai da ii ? a<lb/>
dev ided to put up<lb/>
i ii sign foi illiams. lie ha<lb/>
aftei he was told he with w llianu,<lb/>
could . ii himsj lea e il<lb/>
1 ? r? ads " 1 heai from I<lb/>
<lb/>
i air K Back iu! I lu rt spU-ndiil linu tor Ml<lb/>
I<lb/>
ommittee Seeking Input<lb/>
iiinui<lb/>
. -<lb/>
v<lb/>
Let ullje last (Earolinian<lb/>
write home for you every<lb/>
Tues. and Thurs.<lb/>
One Year ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
 ? -or<lb/>
t<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
e<lb/>
SGA Minutes<lb/>
October 13, 1980<lb/>
NOTICES AND<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
<lb/>
I)<lb/>
I<lb/>
OLDKJSINESS<lb/>
ARMY NAVY STOftC<lb/>
Backpacks. ????,<lb/>
fl rtQlWt WWCW (PIIW JpWwWWt yf,<lb/>
jackvH. Pwcwta, ???rte?v<lb/>
?MM, MM. <lb/>
iWil<lb/>
SAAD'SSHOfc<lb/>
RtPAIR<lb/>
w.<lb/>
I 228<lb/>
Repair<lb/>
S<lb/>
ami HffHur<lb/>
7o<lb/>
Original hundtrafutl Jewelry<lb/>
in Sth r and (old<lb/>
(,rtmi ill, . i  rt,( <lb/>
g<lb/>
I and Silver andoin?<lb/>
758 2127<lb/>
IO?IONI  P TO<lb/>
in ?? op<lb/>
HIONtNC<lb/>
I 'ft 00 ???H Inclvtlv<lb/>
pregnancy l??t birfg con<lb/>
iroi ?n3 probi? (K?srnr,<lb/>
t ou"?ime For rvf'rw<lb/>
? n(or?n'tori c?n ?1J 0J1<lb/>
(IqII fr?? nuiril-tr<lb/>
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Special Guest (<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057295_0004"/><lb/>
?ije ?aat (Eawltmatt<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Richard Green, cm tar<lb/>
It rri Herndon, d?c?o 4,v.Tn, Lisa Drew, i?.<lb/>
Chris I.it HOK, ???? !??, Mikt Noonan. m em<lb/>
George Hi i i u n ????? mm Charles Chandler, wa thn?<lb/>
Anita Lancaster, product mom David Norris. rmm &amp;??<lb/>
Octobci 23, WHIl<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
Station Might Be Dead For 80-81<lb/>
By the time you read this,<lb/>
 ZMB-FM might be declared dead<lb/>
for the 1980-81 school year, for all<lb/>
practical purposes. The ECU Media<lb/>
Board was scheduled to hold an<lb/>
"emergency" meeting at 8:30 this<lb/>
morning to discuss the possibility of<lb/>
cancelling the equipment contract<lb/>
for the as yet unheard radio station,<lb/>
according to the station's General<lb/>
Manager Glenda Killingsworth.<lb/>
Most students are either so con-<lb/>
fused about the radio station con-<lb/>
troversy that they've stopped trying<lb/>
to understand, or still totally ig-<lb/>
norant o' the FM station we almost<lb/>
have. Liven if you know little or<lb/>
nothing now, you should know<lb/>
what could have happened this mor-<lb/>
ning.<lb/>
Until September, former station<lb/>
manager John Jeter was in charge<lb/>
of buying and installing the broad-<lb/>
casting system, which was described<lb/>
by Gale Hawks, a state engineer, as<lb/>
the "Cadillac" of transmitting<lb/>
systems. The only way Jeter could<lb/>
afford to get the equipment that<lb/>
would have made WZMB the<lb/>
highest-fidelity station in eastern<lb/>
North Carolina was to agree with<lb/>
the representative that Jeter himself<lb/>
would install it.<lb/>
Now that Jeter has resigned, the<lb/>
equipment representative wants out<lb/>
oi the contract because his deal with<lb/>
Jeter left with Jeter. In a meeting<lb/>
yesterday, attorneys determined<lb/>
that there was nothing illegal about<lb/>
the contract, but the Media Board<lb/>
will undoubtedly put all the blame<lb/>
on Jeter's head.<lb/>
WZMB petitioners claim that the<lb/>
only reason the board wants to<lb/>
cancel the contract is to make the<lb/>
petition a moot issue. That it would<lb/>
certainly do: The petition calls for<lb/>
the board to reinstate Jeter to get<lb/>
the station on the air as agreed to by<lb/>
the board last summer.<lb/>
Jeter has little chance of being<lb/>
reinstated because he is no longer a<lb/>
student. In fact, Media Board<lb/>
Chairman David Creech told Jeter<lb/>
about a week prior to Jeter's<lb/>
resignation that he should give up,<lb/>
not even bother to come back to<lb/>
school in the fall. No wonder Jeter<lb/>
tendered his resignation.<lb/>
We at The East Carolinian want<lb/>
to know why we weren't contacted<lb/>
about the meeting. (Fortunately, a<lb/>
concerned friend informed us and<lb/>
Killingsworth confirmed it. We<lb/>
planned to tape the meeting.) We<lb/>
would also like to know what the<lb/>
"emergency" was. With such short<lb/>
notice, there was no chance for any<lb/>
concerned students to attend.<lb/>
There's always the slight chance<lb/>
that Jeter convinced the board to let<lb/>
him put the station on the air, but<lb/>
don't count it.<lb/>
Carter Ensures Privacy<lb/>
On October 14, President Carter<lb/>
signed into law "the nation's first<lb/>
comprehensive privacy policy'<lb/>
which he initiated last year in the<lb/>
aftermath of the U.S. Supreme<lb/>
Court ruling of Zureher v. Stanford<lb/>
Daily.<lb/>
The Privacy Protection Act of<lb/>
1980 includes safeguards for<lb/>
employee records, reductions in the<lb/>
number of government files on in-<lb/>
dividuals, stricter guidelines on<lb/>
government computer "matching"<lb/>
programs, and greater First Amend-<lb/>
ment protection for the press.<lb/>
For any American interested in<lb/>
preserving hisher privacy, this act<lb/>
just might preclude two sweeping<lb/>
bills backed by Sen. Edward Ken-<lb/>
nedy and Sen. Strom Thur-<lb/>
mond?S. 1722 and H.R. 6915.<lb/>
These bills, holdovers from the Nix-<lb/>
on era, would require landlords and<lb/>
telephone companies to cooperate<lb/>
"forthwith" and "unobtrusively"<lb/>
with government wiretappers?and<lb/>
pay them for doing so; and facilitate<lb/>
the prosecution of journalists who<lb/>
refuse to reveal confidential news<lb/>
sources.<lb/>
Carter initiated the Foreign In-<lb/>
telligence Surveillance Act of 1978<lb/>
which limits the use of "national<lb/>
security" wiretaps. This act could<lb/>
hinder Kennedy and Thurmond, but<lb/>
a more comprehensive act has been<lb/>
deferred until 1981.<lb/>
The new privacy law, however,<lb/>
will be more effective in protecting<lb/>
journalists and their sources by for-<lb/>
biding "searches by federal, state,<lb/>
and local officials against those<lb/>
engaged in First Amendment (press)<lb/>
activities, including reporters,<lb/>
writers, scholars, etc<lb/>
Of course the Supreme Court can<lb/>
always rule against these acts, but<lb/>
it's comforting to know that the<lb/>
president is attempting to prohibit<lb/>
invasion of privacy instead of ad-<lb/>
vocating it, unlike some former<lb/>
presidents and present senators.<lb/>
VtArl, Llltr SC0FOOP<lb/>
SO THERE'S A ROACH IN THE HALL. SO UHAT ?<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
Former Coach Praises Wrestling<lb/>
Editors' Note: The following letter<lb/>
was received on Tuesday, Oct. 21,<lb/>
before yesterday's announcement of the<lb/>
cancellation of the ECU Wrestling Pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
This letter may seem unusual. Most<lb/>
coaches and instructors that depart do<lb/>
not write letters to the school's<lb/>
newspaper. My leaving East Carolina<lb/>
was not a reflection on the university. 1<lb/>
feel my current position at West Point is<lb/>
one of the best teaching and coaching<lb/>
positions in the country.<lb/>
I enjoyed my year at ECU. Teaching<lb/>
in ECU's Department of Health,<lb/>
Physical Education, and Recreation was<lb/>
an honor. The department is top notch<lb/>
and certainly moving on to even bigger<lb/>
and better things.<lb/>
1 was also very proud of the progress<lb/>
of last year's wrestling team. We were<lb/>
receiving very good campus and com-<lb/>
munity support. We were receiving<lb/>
regional and national recognition. The<lb/>
team was definitely coming up, especial-<lb/>
ly with the outstanding group of<lb/>
freshman recruits. I believe the team can<lb/>
eventually become one of the best in the<lb/>
East.<lb/>
I want to wish everyone at ECU the<lb/>
best of luck in the pursuit of their goalv<lb/>
ED STEERS<lb/>
Head Wrestling Coach<lb/>
U.S.M.A.<lb/>
nities assured us that ECU would have a<lb/>
white (Caucasian) "greek" queen for<lb/>
homecoming.<lb/>
For those of you who voted tor so-<lb/>
meone you actually knew, or voted tor a<lb/>
girl you thought was pretty, 1 am sorry.<lb/>
Since the MRC (Men's Residence Coun-<lb/>
cil) split up this year to give more girls a<lb/>
chance to be on the court, the IK had<lb/>
no competition. 1 he MRC won last year<lb/>
with I isa Zack.<lb/>
For those girls who made the court<lb/>
this year, without having the power-<lb/>
hungry 11 C votes. 1 and many, main<lb/>
others would like to congratulate you.<lb/>
You ladies are the real winners. Your<lb/>
friends and admirers put von on the<lb/>
court, not a bunch o voting men who<lb/>
were pressured to vote for someone thev<lb/>
may not have liked or even known. It<lb/>
the fraternities had the guts, they could<lb/>
each nominate a separate girl to run tor<lb/>
homecoming queen, bin this is a slight<lb/>
possibility because the greeks can only<lb/>
persevere in their masses.<lb/>
For this year's homecoming queen. 1<lb/>
am not saving you don't deserve this<lb/>
honor. I only hoped you could have won<lb/>
it fairly, with the same chances all the<lb/>
other contestants had.<lb/>
Name Withheld b Request<lb/>
Questionable Queen Selection<lb/>
The fraternities of ECU have once<lb/>
again proven that they can get away with<lb/>
anything they want to at this university<lb/>
and escape punishment or persecution<lb/>
by our intimidated faculty. I am a senior<lb/>
at East Carolina and have been in a posi-<lb/>
tion for three of my four years here<lb/>
where 1 can clearly see the discrimina-<lb/>
tion that this university makes between<lb/>
the non-greek population, the black<lb/>
fraternities, and the favored white<lb/>
fraternities.<lb/>
The most recent injustice done to the<lb/>
non-greek population and black popula-<lb/>
tion at ECU deals with the election of<lb/>
this year's homecoming queen and her<lb/>
road to this honor. Here are some<lb/>
disheartening facts that many students<lb/>
and faculty mav not be aware of:<lb/>
Factl) This' year's 1980-81 ECU<lb/>
homecoming queen was sponsored by<lb/>
the IFC (Inter-fraternity Council) of<lb/>
ECU. This assures this young lady of the<lb/>
votes of all the white fraternity members<lb/>
on campus.<lb/>
Fact 2) This year's new queen is a<lb/>
Kappa Sig "sweetheart The Kappa<lb/>
Sigs were in charge of counting the votes<lb/>
to determine our new queen this year.<lb/>
They also ran the ballot box.<lb/>
Fact 3) A "block vote" by the frater-<lb/>
Editors ' Note: We were unable to on-<lb/>
firm all oj the allegations in the above<lb/>
teller ai press time.<lb/>
Fine Arts Festival Cancelled;<lb/>
Could Be Rescheduled<lb/>
The SGA Fall line Arts Festival<lb/>
scheduled for Oct. 22-2? has been<lb/>
cancelled due to the unusually heavy<lb/>
schedules o both the Art and Music<lb/>
schools this week. However, the dance<lb/>
films originally scheduled will be shown<lb/>
at a later date in another location, and<lb/>
Myron Carter, the mime, will be perfor-<lb/>
ming at various locations around cam-<lb/>
pus on Thursday, Oct. 23. The group<lb/>
Good Wood will also play both Wednes-<lb/>
day and Thursday on the Mall.<lb/>
This does not affect the possibility o<lb/>
trying again in the Spring to have a<lb/>
festival, possibly coinciding with the Art<lb/>
School's major student show o( the<lb/>
year. 1 hope also that more people will<lb/>
audition in the spring, thus providing<lb/>
more entertainment without having to<lb/>
rely solely on the departments<lb/>
themselves.<lb/>
CATHERINE VOL1 Ml R<lb/>
Junior, Drama<lb/>
'Biased, Incorrect Opinion?'<lb/>
I would like to ask Grace Wells, presi-<lb/>
dent o the SOU1 s organization, a v ery<lb/>
simple question. How can anyone be<lb/>
biased and incorrect in his opinion?<lb/>
MARK kl Ml'<lb/>
Junior, English<lb/>
'Life Of Brian Newspaper<lb/>
Expanded The Issue<lb/>
Responding to a recent article and<lb/>
editorial in the l.ast Carolinian referring<lb/>
to "Life of Brian 1 quote a comment<lb/>
in the editorial: "In this country, we are<lb/>
guaranteed certain freedoms, and two<lb/>
these are freedom oi expression and<lb/>
freedom of religion With these<lb/>
guaranteed freedoms, some members<lb/>
the community along with a few<lb/>
students from ECU expressed in a<lb/>
meeting that was held by courtesy of the<lb/>
Student Union Films Committee reasons<lb/>
from a Biblical view not to show the<lb/>
movie "Life of Brian<lb/>
One reason that wasn't mentioned by<lb/>
the Fast Carolinian but was given by an<lb/>
individual who had seen the movie prior<lb/>
to the meeting was the mocking ol<lb/>
Jewish people and tradition. From a<lb/>
Biblical viewpoint, what is done to His<lb/>
chosen is also done to He who has pro-<lb/>
vided guidelines for all to live by and to<lb/>
be held accountable for. All the reasons<lb/>
expressed during the meeting were in<lb/>
defense of a religion and not disrespect-<lb/>
ful to the rights of other beliefs. The<lb/>
East Carolinian is responsible for any<lb/>
extra attention that mav have been given<lb/>
to the movie because the newspaper is<lb/>
the one who publicized on the tront<lb/>
page, not the concerned individuals at<lb/>
the closed meeting.<lb/>
KEV1NGROSSG1 SS<lb/>
Sophomore. General College<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The fasi Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office m the Out South<lb/>
Building, across from Joyner 1 ihra<lb/>
Letters must include the name, major<lb/>
and classification, address, phone<lb/>
number and signature of (he authorfs)<lb/>
Letters should be limited to three<lb/>
typewritten pages, double-spaced, or<lb/>
neallv printed. Ml letters arc subject to<lb/>
editing tor brevity, obscenity and libel.<lb/>
I etters by the same author arc limited to<lb/>
one each 30 days.<lb/>
Keeping Warm On Campus Won't Be Easy This Year<lb/>
B RALPH NADER<lb/>
Ivory towers are not remote from<lb/>
energy price surges. As the cost of<lb/>
energy drives ever higher, colleges,<lb/>
like industrial and private con-<lb/>
sumers, are finding that the failure<lb/>
to conserve means rapidly escalating<lb/>
bills. For students, this inevitably<lb/>
translates into higher tuition or<lb/>
special surcharges.<lb/>
Such a surcharge was recently in-<lb/>
stituted by George Washington<lb/>
University, a well-known private<lb/>
college in Washington, D.C. Begin-<lb/>
ning this fall students will tack<lb/>
about $75 onto their yearly tuition<lb/>
bill to cover increased energy costs.<lb/>
university's director of plann-<lb/>
ing and budgeting says the universi-<lb/>
energy is available says George<lb/>
Beckmann, provost of the<lb/>
34,000-student University of<lb/>
Washington, "it's the cost that is<lb/>
getting to us. We've had to take the<lb/>
money from the hide of the<lb/>
budget<lb/>
All schools can do the obvious:<lb/>
turn off unused lights, keep<lb/>
classrooms, offices and libraries at<lb/>
moderate temperatures. Some have<lb/>
even altered their academic calen-<lb/>
dars to keep students off the campus<lb/>
longer during the coldest winter<lb/>
months. Larger campuses can sup-<lb/>
plement these measures with more<lb/>
sophisticated projects such as co-<lb/>
generation plants that produce both<lb/>
heat and power and the use of com-<lb/>
puters to regulate energy consump-<lb/>
tion across campus.<lb/>
As the ones ultimately left paying<lb/>
the bill, students have a large stake<lb/>
in promoting energy conservation<lb/>
on campus. Some student organiza-<lb/>
tions have already become involved<lb/>
in campus energy planning. In<lb/>
Washington state, Washington<lb/>
Friends of Higher Education are<lb/>
coordinating the student body<lb/>
presidents and college ad-<lb/>
ministrators of private schools to<lb/>
hold an energy reduction competi-<lb/>
tion. A prize will be awarded to the<lb/>
school that saves the most energy<lb/>
over a one-year period. Similarly,<lb/>
Harvard University is holding a<lb/>
competitive drive among its dor-<lb/>
mitories.<lb/>
Such competition is a good idea.<lb/>
Students can also conduct an energy<lb/>
"wastehunt" as outlined in the<lb/>
book For The People by Joanne<lb/>
Manning Anderson.<lb/>
In the wastehunt, students con-<lb/>
duct a "walk-thru" survey to find<lb/>
how a building's heating, cooling<lb/>
and ventilation systems work, how<lb/>
thermostats are regulated and where<lb/>
lighting can be curtailed or<lb/>
eliminated. Students then interview<lb/>
officials in charge of energy opera-<lb/>
tions to find out what energy con-<lb/>
servation procedures have been im-<lb/>
plemented and what fuel costs are.<lb/>
At the survey's end, students offer<lb/>
ty has tried to save energy. But GW .<lb/>
like many other institutions, he<lb/>
claims, is limited by the lack of the<lb/>
flexibility of its existing physical<lb/>
plant. Two ol GWS largest<lb/>
buildings, he savs, use oil ? and<lb/>
their construction prevents them<lb/>
from being converted to use coal Of<lb/>
gas.<lb/>
GW is far from the only school<lb/>
with energy problems. At Harvard<lb/>
University in Massachusetts, tuition<lb/>
is scheduled to increase 12 percent<lb/>
next year ? an increase, according<lb/>
to physical plant officials, directly<lb/>
attributable to energy costs. Some<lb/>
institutions have been forced to cut<lb/>
back on academic or service areas to<lb/>
keep everybody warm. Others just<lb/>
have to live closet to the wire: "The<lb/>
recommendations tot conservation.<lb/>
The individual student can save<lb/>
energv by not fiddling with<lb/>
classroom thermostats and by not<lb/>
using otherwise empty classrooms<lb/>
for studying purposes. University<lb/>
administrators and physical plant<lb/>
officials could use the prodding and<lb/>
students' pocketbooks could use the<lb/>
break.<lb/>
For The People is available for<lb/>
$5.95 at the Center for Studv of<lb/>
Responsive I aw, P.O. Box 19367,<lb/>
Washington, D.C, 20036.<lb/>
<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057295_0005"/><lb/>
l<lb/>
o<lb/>
UJ<lb/>
Uj<lb/>
3<lb/>
KT<lb/>
,lty<lb/>
piant<lb/>
and<lb/>
the<lb/>
l tit t S I C AKOl INIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
o( i mi k 23. rM' Page <lb/>
??<lb/>
Concert And Recital<lb/>
Highlight Music Events<lb/>
Fast Carolina University bassoonists Matthew Morri of Delco and Cynthia Cooley of Jericho. Vermont, are<lb/>
featured soloists with the ECU Wind ensemble at its fall concert Sunday, Oct. 26. at 8:15 pm in EC1 s<lb/>
I (etcher Music (enter Recital Hall.<lb/>
fr t News Huriat!<lb/>
GREENVH 1 E - A varied pro<lb/>
gram of original and transcribed<lb/>
music for band will be performed by<lb/>
the Fast Carolina University Sym-<lb/>
phonic Wind Ensemble at its fall<lb/>
concert Sunday, Oct. 26, at 8:15 pm<lb/>
in the Fletcher Music (enter Recital<lb/>
Hall here.<lb/>
Ensemble conductor is Herbert<lb/>
Carter. ECU music students Mat-<lb/>
thew Morris o Delco and Cynthia<lb/>
( ooley o Jericho, Vermont, will be<lb/>
featured bassoon soloists in Michael<lb/>
Campbell's "Variations on 'Silver<lb/>
Threads among the Gold<lb/>
Other works on the program are<lb/>
ProkofiefPs "Athletic Festival<lb/>
March a Grainger arrangement o<lb/>
the J.S. Bach "O Man, Weep for<lb/>
Thy Great Sin Rossini's Overture<lb/>
to "The Barber i) Seville Morion<lb/>
Gould's Symphony for Band. Paul<lb/>
Creston's "Square Dance '76 and<lb/>
Grainger's "Scotch Strathspey and<lb/>
Reel<lb/>
The concert is free and open to<lb/>
the public.<lb/>
The Symphonic Wind Ensemble<lb/>
is taking this program on tour from<lb/>
Nov. 3 ? 5. Concerts will be given<lb/>
on Nov. 3 at (ape Fear High School<lb/>
in lavetteville and in<lb/>
Fliabethtown; on Nov. 4 in<lb/>
Southport at South Brunswick High<lb/>
School and at F!N( -Wilmington;<lb/>
and on Nov. 5 at White Oak High<lb/>
School in Jacksonville<lb/>
Faculty Recital<lb/>
Brad Foley, faculty membei ol<lb/>
the School o Music, will present an<lb/>
evening o saxophone music on<lb/>
Monday, Oct. 27. 1980, at 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
in the AT Fletcher Recital Hall.<lb/>
Appearing with Foley in the<lb/>
varied program will be faculty per<lb/>
formers Donna Coleman and<lb/>
Patricia Foltz, piano, Antonia<lb/>
Dalapas, soprano, and local flute<lb/>
instructor and performer Anne<lb/>
Searl.<lb/>
The program will open with<lb/>
works bv .IS. Bach. Sonata No. 2<lb/>
will be performed by Foley andol<lb/>
eman, and three soprano arias from<lb/>
( antatas 89, 98, and 9 will be per-<lb/>
formed bv Dalapas, Foley, and<lb/>
Foltz.<lb/>
Originally from Indianapolis,<lb/>
Foley earned Ins B.A. degree from<lb/>
Ball State I niversity. A? the l niver-<lb/>
sity of Michigan, he studied ?<lb/>
Donald Suit a, internationally<lb/>
known saxophone arlisi and A<lb/>
Mariotti, formei principal oboist<lb/>
with the Detroit and Pittsbu<lb/>
Symphonies, while earning his<lb/>
M.M. degree in woodwind instru-<lb/>
ment performance. Foley b<lb/>
doctoral studies in saxophone per<lb/>
formance at the University<lb/>
Michigan during the summei ol<lb/>
1979.<lb/>
I ormerly principal oboist in the<lb/>
Longview fexas Symphony<lb/>
chestra for two yeai . i oley has pei<lb/>
formed in other organizations Mich<lb/>
as the Indianapolis Syn<lb/>
Band.<lb/>
Students Following Soap Operas<lb/>
(CPS) ? Vivian Relta, a graduate student at Cornell,<lb/>
starts with "Ryan's Hope Then she switches channels<lb/>
between ABC's "All My Children" andBS s "The<lb/>
Young and the Restless Afterwards comes T dec of<lb/>
Night "One 1 ife To Five and "General Hospital<lb/>
And Relta's viewing habits, once assumed to be ex<lb/>
clusively those of idle housewives or aged shut-ins, are<lb/>
oming more common among college students. Soap<lb/>
operas, in other words, have come to campus.<lb/>
Estimates of just how main students have taken to<lb/>
the soaps are almost always unscientific. But one<lb/>
scholarh study, bv Northern Illinois University pro<lb/>
lessors Myles Breen and Jon Powell, projected that 40<lb/>
percent of the female and 10 percent ot the male<lb/>
n campus regularly tuned in.<lb/>
"1 would estimate about 30 percent of the students<lb/>
here watch them" speculates a Vale senior who prefei<lb/>
red that her name be withheld. 1 he senior, whos iays<lb/>
she suspended most t viewing in deference to hei sut-<lb/>
dies, likes "General Hospital" because "it's s<lb/>
plicated. I started watching and got hook<lb/>
A male senior at Harvard's C urriei House "used to<lb/>
watch them, but I don't anymore sinct ol started.<lb/>
He notes that "quite a tew people seer; to know<lb/>
nething about them, so I would say most ot them<lb/>
e watched them<lb/>
pparently a number ot students haven't been able to<lb/>
give up the soaps for the duration ot Ore school year.<lb/>
Celia Roddy, a dorm head at Cornell, knows "quite a<lb/>
few" women who daily gather in the t rooms of sorori-<lb/>
ty houses and dormitories, particularly to watch<lb/>
"General Hospital<lb/>
But she claims Cornell women don't watch as much<lb/>
television as women at other colleges. And no one in<lb/>
college, she asserts, cares a- much about the soaps as<lb/>
high school students.<lb/>
Roddy supervised a group of high school seniors in a<lb/>
special summer program at the university. The students,<lb/>
she recalls with some awe. "planned their whole davs<lb/>
around the soaps<lb/>
1 orraine Zenka Smith, editor ot the soap tan<lb/>
magazine "Rona Barrett's Daytimers" savs the campus<lb/>
-oap opera boom is part of a more general spread ot<lb/>
popularity tor the shows.<lb/>
She cites a budding interest in the programs lor then<lb/>
production values and for sociological observations.<lb/>
She wouldn't mind cultivating that interest, either. She<lb/>
has been discussing the possibility ot teaching classes on<lb/>
soap operas with administrators at I t 1 and other<lb/>
( alitornia schools.<lb/>
"Soaps are more sophisticated than they evei were<lb/>
Smith savs. "They're shooting on location now in<lb/>
places hke Ireland, Greece, France, the Bahamas<lb/>
Moreover, "they can treat an issue with more in-<lb/>
depth coverage and perspective than night-time pro-<lb/>
gramming she adds. "They cover issues like wife<lb/>
beating, cancer, abortion, infidelity<lb/>
Smith guesses that the subject matter has helped<lb/>
soaps reach new, male audiences "We get a lot ot let-<lb/>
ters from men. Foi everv three men who write, you can<lb/>
bet there ate several behinu then, . write.<lb/>
ABC's line-up ot "General Hospital "Ail My<lb/>
Children and "One I ife to I ive" seems to be most<lb/>
popular among students, she observes.<lb/>
1 lie reason may be that the competition ? soaps like<lb/>
"As the World rums" and "The Guiding Light" are<lb/>
older and more conservative in tone.<lb/>
"The ABC stones integrate their oldest and their<lb/>
youngest storv lines Smith points out. She, like many<lb/>
ot the students contacted Tor this article bv College<lb/>
Press Service, thought "General Hospital" was the<lb/>
most successful integrator.<lb/>
Student interest tends to center on the tale ot Luke<lb/>
and I aura, just two of the tormented crew at "General<lb/>
Hospital 1 uke is a down-and-out-kid from the wrong<lb/>
side o town who got mixed up with mafioso. 1 aura's<lb/>
past is a bit checkered, too ? notably the business<lb/>
about killing her mother's lover. But then she married<lb/>
Scottv, and became respectable.<lb/>
1 uke rapes I aura, paradoxically because he thinks<lb/>
the Mafia is going to kill him for not carrying out a hit.<lb/>
Scottv finds out about it, tra.ks I uke to a boat, and at-<lb/>
tacks him. They struggle. 1 uke pitches overboard. Sc<lb/>
iv has killed Luke, as well as the viewing habits<lb/>
millions ot college students.<lb/>
But wait. 1 uke not only survived, he left town with<lb/>
I aura V hen last seen, they were both on the run fn<lb/>
E hit man.<lb/>
Figuring out why such material appeals to the<lb/>
educated elite o American youth can be a problem.<lb/>
" 1 he programs have obvious appeals savs sociolog<lb/>
Rodney Jacobs o the University of Delaware "THey<lb/>
iiffer romance and escape and relatively-harmless titilla-<lb/>
tion. But as to why college students watch them instead<lb/>
of higher-quality programs that otter the same things, 1<lb/>
don't know <lb/>
In the Northern Illinois study conducted last tail. 40<lb/>
percent o the soap watchers said they viewed s<lb/>
because they were interested in the involved plots. 30<lb/>
percent said they watched because the characters were<lb/>
"so dumb and almost 14 percent noted the beneficial<lb/>
effect ol watching televised programs that made their<lb/>
own troubles seem trivial.<lb/>
lacobs figures "it's the same reason people of all<lb/>
watch 'Three's Company AH o us who have studied<lb/>
television viewing know why people watch mindless<lb/>
shows. But no one honestly understands it<lb/>
New Show Opening<lb/>
Highlights Art News<lb/>
 collection ol prints bv FC I<lb/>
alumni along with works from the<lb/>
Graduate 1 raveling Exhibition and<lb/>
a Pre-( olumbian Art museum ex-<lb/>
hibition will open at the Fast<lb/>
lina Museum o Art in the<lb/>
 B Gray Gallery on Oct. 26.<lb/>
I he reception for this show Will<lb/>
ne<lb/>
held Sunday, Oct.<lb/>
6, 7 9<lb/>
will<lb/>
p.m and the exhibit will run<lb/>
through Nov. 11. Operating hours<lb/>
the gallery are 10 - 5 Monday<lb/>
through Friday, and I ? 4 Sundays.<lb/>
,pus visitors should ask at<lb/>
Art Office for admittance if the<lb/>
gallery is locked during these times.<lb/>
 he prints are from selected<lb/>
senior folios produced in the Print-<lb/>
making Department from 196Y<lb/>
through 1976. The Graduate 1 ravel<lb/>
Exhibition contains a variety ol<lb/>
work bv ECU graduate students<lb/>
which were exhibited throughout<lb/>
the state bv the North Carolina<lb/>
Museum of Art's Traveling Exhibi-<lb/>
tion Service during this past spring<lb/>
and summer. The Pre-Columbian<lb/>
ceramics, fabrics, and small stone<lb/>
catvmgs in the museum portion ot<lb/>
the gallery are from the collection of<lb/>
the ECU Anthropology Depart-<lb/>
ment. Duke University, and private<lb/>
collections. An exhibit o these<lb/>
works will continue throughout the<lb/>
tall semester.<lb/>
I he Gallery Committee wishes to<lb/>
thank two campus organizations tor<lb/>
donating their time for supervising<lb/>
the dray Gallery on Sundays, per-<lb/>
miting it to be open on that day. The<lb/>
c l 4 11 Club helped during the<lb/>
Beaux Arts Ball<lb/>
Tickets A vailable<lb/>
able tor<lb/>
'udv o'<lb/>
19367.<lb/>
K I S(? Bureau<lb/>
hough Halloween will still be a<lb/>
week away, many adults here will be<lb/>
wearing imaginative costumes Fri-<lb/>
day, Oct. 24 when the ECU School<lb/>
of Art hosts its sixth annual Beaux<lb/>
Arts Ball.<lb/>
The masquerade ball, a fund<lb/>
raising event for special projects<lb/>
planned by the art school, will<lb/>
feature music by the ECU Jazz<lb/>
Ensemble, an exhibition by dancers<lb/>
from the ECU Department ot<lb/>
Drama and Speech, and<lb/>
refreshments and prizes for the best<lb/>
costumes.<lb/>
The Beaux Arts Ball will run from<lb/>
8 p.m. until 1 a.m. in the Williis<lb/>
Building at the corner oi First and<lb/>
Reade Streets in Greenville.<lb/>
Public tickets at S3 each may be<lb/>
purchased at the door. Advance<lb/>
tickets. $2.50 each, are available<lb/>
from ECU art students or from the<lb/>
School of Art offices in the Leo<lb/>
Jenkins Fine Arts Center.<lb/>
This year's ball was planned by a<lb/>
student committee, including Gina<lb/>
Diehl of Rocky Mount. Nam Ki<lb/>
Kim of Greenville. Janet Micks and<lb/>
Adrienne Lot! of Raleigh, Kathy<lb/>
Sholar of Providence, Rhone<lb/>
lshald, Fori Hicks of Greencastle,<lb/>
Pa Michael Hitchcock of<lb/>
Charlotte, and Cynthia Efird of<lb/>
New Bern.<lb/>
Southeastern C on tempo r a r y<lb/>
Metalsmiths Show; Gamma Sigma<lb/>
Sigma is helping during the current<lb/>
exhibits.<lb/>
A wareness Day<lb/>
Over 250students from 14 eastern<lb/>
North Carolina high schools will<lb/>
visit the Jenkins Fine Arts Center<lb/>
Friday Oct. 24 for Awareness Day.<lb/>
The purpose ot Awareness Day is<lb/>
to introduce interested high school<lb/>
students to the School o Art at<lb/>
ECU and the types oi work being<lb/>
done in the different departments.<lb/>
The day's events will begin at<lb/>
10:30 a.m. in Jenkins auditorium<lb/>
with a lecture bv Dean Richard l.a-<lb/>
ing, of the School o Art, and will<lb/>
continue until 3 p.m.<lb/>
I ollowing is a list o the presenta-<lb/>
tions to be given:<lb/>
ART EDUCATION The Art<lb/>
F ducat ion Department will present<lb/>
information on the current job<lb/>
market, training required for cer-<lb/>
tification, salaries, related job op-<lb/>
portunities, and prospects for the<lb/>
future.<lb/>
ART HISTORY ? A short<lb/>
presentation will be given on the<lb/>
discipline of art history, its methods<lb/>
of research and its interrelationship<lb/>
with other areas o study in the<lb/>
visual arts.<lb/>
See ART, page 6, col. I<lb/>
Apocalypse Now To Play At Hendrix<lb/>
poealvpse Now will pla at the Hendrix Theatre in Mendenhall Student tenter this Friday and Saturday at<lb/>
SOO 7-30 and 10:00 pm. The film, directed by Francis Coppola, stars Marlon Brando, Martin sheen and<lb/>
Robert Duvall. Admission is free with student II) and activity cards or a Mendenhall Studententer<lb/>
Membership Card for faculty and staff.<lb/>
Students Scream Away Frustrations<lb/>
We Mere Wrong<lb/>
In reference to the Tuesday, Oct.<lb/>
21 article about the George Brett<lb/>
show, a quote from the March,<lb/>
1980 issue o the Arts lournai<lb/>
was used without proper attribu-<lb/>
tion. We sincerely regret this er-<lb/>
ror and apologize for any<lb/>
misunderstanding it may have-<lb/>
caused. <lb/>
ITHACA, NY (CPS) ? Until<lb/>
now, frustrated freshmen had just a<lb/>
few choices: Quit school, kill<lb/>
themselves, or somehow manage to<lb/>
hang on.<lb/>
But now there's an alternative.<lb/>
It's simple, inexpensive, and it takes<lb/>
only a few minutes. It's called<lb/>
screaming.<lb/>
Though not nearly a fad yet, as<lb/>
streaking was a few years back,<lb/>
screaming has caught on at Cornell<lb/>
University. Facing academic<lb/>
pressures they had never an-<lb/>
ticipated, a group of seven freshmen<lb/>
students began one night last month<lb/>
to scream out of their windows to<lb/>
relieve their anxieties.<lb/>
What began, though, as a simple<lb/>
release o tension has evolved into a<lb/>
Cornell ritual that has stirred a cam-<lb/>
pus controversy. Angry and bitter<lb/>
calls from a number of students,<lb/>
complaining of the nightly screams,<lb/>
has prompted dorm officials to<lb/>
charge the screamers with harrass-<lb/>
ment. If the screams don't stop<lb/>
soon, these officials warn, the<lb/>
freshmen could face severe judicial<lb/>
penalties.<lb/>
The practice is officially a therapy<lb/>
called Primal Scream, which was<lb/>
developed by Dr. Arthur Janov. It<lb/>
enjoyed a rief vogue in pop<lb/>
psychology circles in the early seven-<lb/>
ties when rock star John l.ennon<lb/>
mentioned he used it.<lb/>
It was revived innocentlv one<lb/>
evening in September Neil O'Shea,<lb/>
a freshman, wandered into the ad-<lb/>
joining suite, complaining about the<lb/>
usual tlow oi homework and<lb/>
pressures. He said he fell hke<lb/>
screaming because the tension was<lb/>
getting so high. Another student<lb/>
agreed, and decided to see how it<lb/>
would feel. Within a few minutes,<lb/>
seven freshmen were screaming out<lb/>
of their windows as loud as they<lb/>
could.<lb/>
"It fell good savs David<lb/>
Bremner, one of the original seven,<lb/>
"so we decided to keep doing it<lb/>
every night. After a while, we tried<lb/>
to organize it. We saw how ii really<lb/>
See STUDENTS, page 6, col. 1<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057295_0006"/><lb/>
!U t M i KOl IN1AN K loltt K 23, l80<lb/>
A'<lb/>
4ft - 4fVvT C 0u ? t<lb/>
' ?'?' - - A. pfctP (<lb/>
rn ! mic " o<lb/>
Students Scream Away Frustrations<lb/>
, , c m nopularit came rhe Primal Scream weren't expecting it to<lb/>
( onl.nued from page 5 rf c ub  are ca?. become an occasion fOI<lb/>
. made us<lb/>
soni<lb/>
unexpccic<lb/>
d. seem hiitci that the crazies to yell out<lb/>
changes. Instead oi usi et<lb/>
non-verbal screams their friendly screaming anything they want.<lb/>
sure which the seven claim is has turned into an op Parti) because o!<lb/>
Within a few days, all lhc evel intended, portunitv foi nuts to that development, as<lb/>
;p went from there have been scream out obscenities sell as the persistent<lb/>
?a few dozen, to stutJents screaming and racial remarks. pressure from dorm<lb/>
500 who yell racja and dirt) slurs. "It's gotten out ol and school officials,<lb/>
minutes at 10 phese verbal messages hand now Bremnet the original screamers<lb/>
tsaweek. have angered students confesses, "because<lb/>
  witl crease rh. mnti anything goes. We<lb/>
the mosi<lb/>
Art Awareness Day;<lb/>
Students Visit Campus<lb/>
have already moved the<lb/>
screaming time from 11<lb/>
to H' p.m and are<lb/>
considering ways to end<lb/>
the newest school tradi<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
"We've been think-<lb/>
ing about it . and<lb/>
believe there may be a<lb/>
more constructive way<lb/>
things started on most<lb/>
nights, much oi the in-<lb/>
itiative for the scream-<lb/>
ing lias gone out oi<lb/>
then control.<lb/>
"I think we could<lb/>
make it die down on<lb/>
most nights, but on<lb/>
days when there are a<lb/>
lot ol exams, we<lb/>
 ouidn'l have a chance<lb/>
to contain it he sa s,<lb/>
"Foi example, the next<lb/>
nighi aftei a chemistry<lb/>
prelim, tins place will<lb/>
pi obably go w ild<lb/>
( me va i iman who is<lb/>
already wild and<lb/>
angi about the<lb/>
screaming is university<lb/>
-<lb/>
The<lb/>
fair<lb/>
North Carolina State Fair Continues<lb/>
North Carolina State Fair is open daily from 9:00 a.m. until 12 midnight through Sunday. I he<lb/>
offers crafts exhibits, music, amusement rides and over MH) places to buy food.<lb/>
t ontinued from page 5<lb/>
t R M1CS isitors will see<lb/>
ry made on the<lb/>
? ?: mal discussion bet<lb/>
students and visitoi -<lb/>
MMl NIC M IONS RT<lb/>
( ommunications art<lb/>
wed by a slide show<lb/>
work and a demonstra-<lb/>
media equipment. Following<lb/>
demonstration there will be a<lb/>
of possible careers in<lb/>
a ns art.<lb/>
I BR1( DI SIGN - Slides ol<lb/>
and professional work will<lb/>
Demonstrations of b<lb/>
fabric printing pro-<lb/>
v i WIN A slide presenta-<lb/>
formal discussion will be<lb/>
contemporary trends<lb/>
? Howing the slides, a<lb/>
tudios will be given<lb/>
nts will be wea ing<lb/>
ap loom and floor<lb/>
V easl one loom will be<lb/>
allow visiting students the<lb/>
?? to weave on a floor<lb/>
INT1 RIOK DESIGN ? The In-<lb/>
Department will pre-<lb/>
a ion on the practice of<lb/>
basic forms, dnd<lb/>
at ions. The<lb/>
kill be made bv a panel<lb/>
? :urrent design students<lb/>
:ei . ' aduates.<lb/>
11 V l 1 R Metal students will<lb/>
be domstrating various forming and<lb/>
fabricating techniques used in mak-<lb/>
ing jewelry. n informal discussion<lb/>
and explanation ol the processes<lb/>
demons!rated will be part ol the<lb/>
program.<lb/>
PA1N1 ING AND DRAW INC,<lb/>
Members of the painting and draw<lb/>
ing faculty and then students will<lb/>
display and discuss their work. <lb/>
short demonstration of a color<lb/>
phenomena will also be presented.<lb/>
PRINTMAKING Various<lb/>
print processes will be demonstated<lb/>
bv two faculty and two graduate<lb/>
students Four print studios will be<lb/>
utilized foi the demonstrations V<lb/>
exhibition ol prints will be provided<lb/>
in each studio.<lb/>
SCI LPTl Ri DI P K I 11 Nl<lb/>
1 irst demo: In the 1 oundry area:<lb/>
I he department will demonstarate<lb/>
the melting and pouring of bronze<lb/>
into losi wax molds for the purpose<lb/>
of casting sculpture. Second demo:<lb/>
In the court yard area: Students will<lb/>
demonstrate the carving ol stone<lb/>
sculpture using both hand tools and<lb/>
pneumatic power tools.<lb/>
WOOD DESIGN tour ol the<lb/>
wood design studio will be followed<lb/>
b a demonstration ol the making<lb/>
ot a small "handsaw box a con-<lb/>
tainer made from a small .hunk of<lb/>
wood. In-progress and finished<lb/>
wood design products bv faculty<lb/>
and siudents will be shown and ex-<lb/>
plained.<lb/>
to handle our anxiety librarian Yoram Szeke-<lb/>
Bremnei adds. s she savs the<lb/>
"perhaps we may have students have been ac-<lb/>
a weekly frisbee toss in ring ve;v irresponsibly.<lb/>
the gym or a nightly "Who the hell do<lb/>
game ot touch toot- jhe think they are to<lb/>
ball disturb the peace and<lb/>
Stopping the game quiel ol others who<lb/>
may not be as simple as mav want to study, or<lb/>
starting it. Bremnet ad- sleep, oi listen to music<lb/>
nuts that though it or whatever on an even<lb/>
takes the seven to gel inj<lb/>
ATTIC ATTIC<lb/>
SOUTHS NO. 6<lb/>
ROCK<lb/>
NIGHTCLUB<lb/>
hSrBRICE street<lb/>
24 fri ARROGANCE<lb/>
bsAiSTILLWATER<lb/>
JcobE BOL<lb/>
28 TUES<lb/>
ATTIC 9th ANN.<lb/>
PARTY with<lb/>
SKIP CASTRO<lb/>
ATBARRE <lb/>
MONSTER MASKS<lb/>
AND<lb/>
HALLOWEEN MAKE-UP<lb/>
AND ACCESSORIES<lb/>
? C7n 422 ARLINGTON<lb/>
756-6670 BLVD.<lb/>
cfk Tii(a<lb/>
(3kSc?<lb/>
204 E. 5th St.<lb/>
Across From<lb/>
Newby's Sub Shop<lb/>
Open Til 9:30 Nightly<lb/>
THIS WEEK'S SALE ALBUMS<lb/>
ALL CURRENT RERLEASES<lb/>
S8.98 List for 5.99<lb/>
Jackson Browne<lb/>
Rolling Stone<lb/>
Billy Joel<lb/>
Doobie Brother<lb/>
Roiington-Collmi Band<lb/>
The Jackton<lb/>
Queen<lb/>
Molly Hatchet<lb/>
Van Halen<lb/>
B. Streuand<lb/>
$5 98 Liat 3.99<lb/>
Nantuchet<lb/>
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$13.98 List 9.99<lb/>
Supertramp<lb/>
Pan<lb/>
$17 98 List 11.99<lb/>
No Nuke<lb/>
Bruce Springtten<lb/>
The River<lb/>
 We Buy Used Albums<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
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LEVI'S!<lb/>
Picture yourself in a pair of<lb/>
snappy Levis ieansina<lb/>
variety of sizes, colors and<lb/>
textures Choose from<lb/>
corduroys or denim<lb/>
in Straight<lb/>
Leg. Boot Cut<lb/>
and Flair models<lb/>
You II be sure to find<lb/>
ust what you've been<lb/>
looking for1 Be com<lb/>
fortable and look<lb/>
good. too. in eans<lb/>
with Levi's'<lb/>
famous fit<lb/>
10.88<lb/>
Choose from Men s Sizes<lb/>
28-38 Student Sizes 25 30<lb/>
Junior Boys 8-14 Some ir-<lb/>
regular<lb/>
Levis<lb/>
SHOP AT BELK TYLEP<lb/>
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LEVI S IN THE AREA'<lb/>
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Shop Monday Through Saturday 10 a m Until 9pm<lb/>
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Walking Lady,<lb/>
the GlobeTrotters<lb/>
by<lb/>
trotters<lb/>
"WE MAKE SHOES FOR WALKING<lb/>
M<lb/>
THE BOOTERy<lb/>
Huh I hompson<lb/>
301 S. Evans Mall 752-8778<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
Across town, or around the world, get there i<lb/>
Maine Trotters' famous Walking Lady, the<lb/>
comfortable walking shoe ever maoe I<lb/>
perfect-fit shoe that supports and cushions-<lb/>
Handsome, too, in antique finished tot<lb/>
Just tie it on. and go globe trotting<lb/>
walking Lady Price $3 100<lb/>
Colors n 'ine, 'av. ('a<lb/>
Siz0s-4A 's to I s to '<lb/>
! "?<lb/>
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THE<lb/>
GREAT<lb/>
RING<lb/>
EXCHANGE.<lb/>
(Or How To Get Your College Ring For Less.)<lb/>
Trade up. Trade in. And save. Because<lb/>
ArtCarved offers you the unique opportun-<lb/>
ity to trade in your 10K gold high school ring.<lb/>
You can save up to $90 on the c llege ring i f<lb/>
your choice. And ArtCarved offers twenty<lb/>
different styles from which tachoose.<lb/>
Get ready for The Great King Exchange.<lb/>
You can't afford to pass it up.<lb/>
i<lb/>
IRTC7IRVED<lb/>
COLLEGE RINGS<lb/>
Symbolizingyow ability to achu r.<lb/>
Oct. 23-24<lb/>
Date<lb/>
10am-4pm<lb/>
The Official ECU<lb/>
Class Rings<lb/>
. ttion<lb/>
Student Supply<lb/>
Store Lobby<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
$10<lb/>
Deposit required Master Chaqp oi Visa accepted<lb/>
-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057295_0007"/><lb/>
I HI I SIAROl INIAN<lb/>
(H mm k  iMKo<lb/>
L<lb/>
q<lb/>
Happenings<lb/>
Campus Events:<lb/>
?<lb/>
Thursday 23<lb/>
? 4:00 P.M. Beat Carolina Pep Rallv, 409<lb/>
Huabeth St. at the Phi Kappa Tau House. L ive<lb/>
tand starts at 4:00 P M<lb/>
7:30 P.M. Sigma Alpha Iota Musicale,<lb/>
? S:00 P.M. Minority Arts Film Series: "I Will<lb/>
Fight No More Forever Ledonia S. Wright<lb/>
Atro American Cultural Center,<lb/>
"Apocalypse<lb/>
Friday 24<lb/>
? 5:00, 7.00, 9:00 P.M. Movie-<lb/>
Now" Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
7 30 P.M. Senior recital, Bari Webster,<lb/>
? W omens Volleyball: Univ. of Maryland, Col-<lb/>
lege Park Maryland.<lb/>
Saturday 25<lb/>
Womens Volleyball, Univ. of<lb/>
College Park, Maryland,<lb/>
Football: UNC ? Chapel Hill,<lb/>
Hill. N.C<lb/>
? 5:00, 7:00, 9:00 P.M. Movie: "Apocalypse<lb/>
Now" Hendrix Theatre,<lb/>
? All day,<lb/>
Maryland,<lb/>
? 130 P.M.<lb/>
Chapel<lb/>
Sunday 26<lb/>
? 2:(K) P.M. Soccer: William and Mary, Home,<lb/>
? 8:15 P.M. Wind Ensemble Concert, Wright<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
Monday 27<lb/>
? 6:00 P.M. MSC All-Campus Backgammon<lb/>
rournament for ACU-1, Student Center Aud.<lb/>
244.<lb/>
? 8:15 P.M. Faculty Recital, Brad Folev, sax-<lb/>
ophone.<lb/>
Tuesday 28<lb/>
? 6:00 P.M. MSC All-Campus Backgammon<lb/>
Tournament for ACU-1, Student Center Multi-<lb/>
purpose room.<lb/>
7:00 P.M. Womens Volleyball: Duke<lb/>
University, Durham, N.C<lb/>
? 7:15 P.M. MSC Dinner Theater Dessert per-<lb/>
formance, Student Center Aud. 244.<lb/>
Wednesday 29<lb/>
? Soccer: Campbell University, Home,<lb/>
? 7:15 P.M. MSC Dinner Theatre Dessert per-<lb/>
formance. Student Center Aud. 244,<lb/>
? 7:00 &amp; 9:00 P.M. Western Double Feature:<lb/>
"High Noon" and "She Wore A Yellow Rib-<lb/>
bon Hendrix Theater,<lb/>
? 7:30 P.M. Senior Recital, John Jones, Tuba,<lb/>
? 9:00 P.M. Graduate Recital: Ellen Kaner,<lb/>
Flute.<lb/>
Thursday 30<lb/>
? Womens Field Hockey: NCA1AW State<lb/>
Championship, Durham N.C<lb/>
? 6:30 P.M. MSC Dinner Theater Dessert Per-<lb/>
formance Student Center Aud. 244,<lb/>
October 26 - November 16<lb/>
School of Art<lb/>
? Pre-Columbian Art, Gray Art Gallery,<lb/>
? Print Retrospective, Gray Art Gallery,<lb/>
? Traveling Graduate show, Gray Art Gallery.<lb/>
Movies<lb/>
Buccaneer:<lb/>
? "Times Square" shows at 1:10, 3:10 5-10<lb/>
7:10&amp; 9:10 P.M<lb/>
? "Somewhere in Time" starring Christopher<lb/>
Reeve, shows at 1:00, 3:00, 5:00, 7:00 &amp; 9:00<lb/>
P.M<lb/>
? "Fame" shows at 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, &amp; 9-30<lb/>
P.M.<lb/>
Plaza:<lb/>
? "Oh God! Book Two" starring George<lb/>
Burns, shows at 3:15, 5:10, 7:05, &amp; 9:00 P.M<lb/>
? "Prom Night" shows at 3:30. 5:25. 7:20. &amp;<lb/>
9:15 P.M<lb/>
? "Urban Cowboy" shows at 2:00, 4:30, 7:00,<lb/>
&amp; 9:30 P.M.<lb/>
? STARTING FRIDAY "Motel Hell" &amp;<lb/>
"Loving Couples<lb/>
Park:<lb/>
? "Snake Fist vs The Dragon" shows at 7:00 &amp;<lb/>
9:00 P.M.<lb/>
Nightlife<lb/>
Carolina Opry House:<lb/>
? Thursday LARRY FRANKLIN BAND and<lb/>
SNUFF<lb/>
? Friday LARRY FRANKLIN BAND<lb/>
? Saturday LARRY FRANKLIN BAND<lb/>
? Sunday MIKE CROSS<lb/>
Attic:<lb/>
? Thursday BRICE STREET<lb/>
? Friday ARROGANCE<lb/>
? Saturday STILLWATLR<lb/>
? Sunday JESSE BOLT<lb/>
? Tuesday Attic's 9th Anniversary Parts with<lb/>
SKIP CASTRO<lb/>
? Wednesday THE EAI<lb/>
? Thursday THE EAZE<lb/>
? Thursday THE LEGENDARY Bl UES "t' Mlk? Cross will perform at the Carolina Opry House on Sundaj<lb/>
BAND Oct. 26 at 9:00 pm. He plays blues. Irish jiKs and reels, mountain fiddle<lb/>
? Friday HAV - A - HAPPY WITH TOMMY ,um's ant' somt' original compositions.<lb/>
Ci. and CO. doors open at 5:00<lb/>
? Saturday TOMMY G. and CO.<lb/>
? Sunday Greenville's Own Nationally Famous<lb/>
GREEN GRASS CLOGGERS Road Team and<lb/>
Square Dance<lb/>
Mike Cross To Perform<lb/>
If you have anything that you would like to put<lb/>
in HAPPENINGS, send them to T. Ashe<lb/>
Lockhart Jr The East Carolinian, East Carolina<lb/>
University, Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
AN EVENING<lb/>
WITH<lb/>
Mountains' Fall Colors Draw Tourists<lb/>
SHEV1LLE (AP)<lb/>
Western North<lb/>
Carolina is bracing for<lb/>
hundreds of thousands<lb/>
ol tourists who are ex-<lb/>
pected to crowd the<lb/>
area this weekend as<lb/>
the blaze of autumn<lb/>
colors peaks.<lb/>
Reds, oranges,<lb/>
yellows, pinks and<lb/>
purples are bursting out<lb/>
m all areas, intensified<lb/>
b) the dr summer and<lb/>
recent clear, crisp air.<lb/>
The fall color will<lb/>
probably combine with<lb/>
two other attractions ?<lb/>
the Alabama-Tennessee<lb/>
football game in Knov<lb/>
s. ilie. Term and a<lb/>
mammoth textile show<lb/>
in Greensville, S.C. ?<lb/>
to till everj available<lb/>
motel room within the<lb/>
region.<lb/>
Dick I rammell of<lb/>
the Asheville Area<lb/>
C lumber of Commerce<lb/>
said reservations are<lb/>
running heavy in<lb/>
Asheville hotels and<lb/>
that fans attending the<lb/>
football game in Knox-<lb/>
ville already have filled<lb/>
hotels in Cherokee and<lb/>
Maggie Valley and in<lb/>
Gatlinburg and Pigeon<lb/>
Forge in Tennessee.<lb/>
Trammell said that<lb/>
the chamber is making<lb/>
arrangements with the<lb/>
American Red Cross to<lb/>
set up emergency hous-<lb/>
ing in the gymnasium at<lb/>
Asheville High School.<lb/>
The chamber will be<lb/>
open until 9 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday to assist<lb/>
visitors in finding a<lb/>
place to stay. Trammel<lb/>
said. When all the<lb/>
motel rooms fill up. the<lb/>
emergency facilities will<lb/>
open and radio spots<lb/>
will inform visitors.<lb/>
Blue Ridge Parkway<lb/>
dispatcher Gary Barnes<lb/>
said the color is now<lb/>
greater than 65 percent<lb/>
in the lower elevations<lb/>
and 90 percent in the<lb/>
Great Balsam moun-<lb/>
tains southwest of<lb/>
Asheville and in the<lb/>
Bluffs section near the<lb/>
Virginia line.<lb/>
The color will peak<lb/>
over the weekend in<lb/>
those two areas and<lb/>
peak color is expected<lb/>
in midweek in the lower<lb/>
areas, Barnes said.<lb/>
At the Boone<lb/>
MIKE<lb/>
Chamber of Com-<lb/>
merce, Teri Van Dyke<lb/>
said the color is almost<lb/>
at its peak in Boone<lb/>
and should peak this<lb/>
weekend and hold<lb/>
through the next<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
She said that many<lb/>
of the hotels in the<lb/>
Boone area are filled,<lb/>
but there are still many<lb/>
cottages con-<lb/>
dominiums and private<lb/>
rooms that visitors may<lb/>
rent.<lb/>
The Boone chamber<lb/>
is open seven days a<lb/>
week, she said.<lb/>
The color has already<lb/>
peaked in an area stret-<lb/>
ching along U.S. 64 in<lb/>
southwestern North<lb/>
Carolina. The area<lb/>
stretches from Lake<lb/>
Toxawav in T r a n -<lb/>
s y 1 v a n i a County<lb/>
through Cashiers and<lb/>
Highlands to Franklin<lb/>
and into Clay County.<lb/>
The color is<lb/>
"beyound descrip-<lb/>
tion C.C. Mertes of<lb/>
the Franklin Chamber<lb/>
of Commerce, said. "It<lb/>
is at its peak and<lb/>
beautiful<lb/>
Mertes said motel<lb/>
and hotel reservations<lb/>
in the area are extreme-<lb/>
ly high for the<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
CROS<lb/>
I<lb/>
Womens' Symposium<lb/>
Offered On Monday<lb/>
He Here Wrong<lb/>
I he Last Carolinian would like to<lb/>
apologize to the International Language<lb/>
Organization for our coverage of the<lb/>
Oktoberfesl in the Tuesday, Oct. 21 issue.<lb/>
T he article contained a number of factual er-<lb/>
rors. I lie Oktoberfesl was held by the Inter-<lb/>
national 1 anguage Organization, not the<lb/>
foreign Language Department as stated in<lb/>
the article. The ILO began planning the<lb/>
event in May, 1980. Bratwurst, not hot dogs,<lb/>
were served. The band that played at the<lb/>
Oktoberfesl was The Schmu'zigs, a group<lb/>
put together from the school of music bv<lb/>
Barry Shank. I he ECU Country and Folk<lb/>
Dancing club performed and taught German<lb/>
dances throughout the evening. The polka,<lb/>
which was misspelled as the "poca was not<lb/>
one of ihem.<lb/>
I he ILO had a rather large budget for the<lb/>
celebration, contrary to what was stated in<lb/>
the article, and chose Budweiser by<lb/>
preference, not because of the expense of<lb/>
buying German beer.<lb/>
About 4(X) people attended last Thurs-<lb/>
day's Oktoberfesl held by the ILO.<lb/>
We sincerely apologize for any inconve-<lb/>
nience that these errors may have caused.<lb/>
K I r?s Burrati<lb/>
"A Growing Up of Women a<lb/>
symposium on the challenges facing<lb/>
contemporary women, will be of-<lb/>
fered at ECU Monday, Nov. 3.<lb/>
Sponsored by the ECU Commit-<lb/>
tee on the Status of Women, the<lb/>
Program features a presentation by<lb/>
Dr. Patricia Gurin, professor of<lb/>
psychology and faculty associate at<lb/>
the University of Michigan Institute<lb/>
of Social Research. Gurin is co-<lb/>
author of the book, "Black Con-<lb/>
sciousness, Identity and Achieve-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
Gurin's presentation is scheduled<lb/>
for the symposium's opening ses-<lb/>
sion in the Fletcher Music Center<lb/>
recital hall, 1 ? 2 p.m. Following<lb/>
will be afternoon small group<lb/>
discussions and workshops on<lb/>
various issues of interest to women,<lb/>
including career development and<lb/>
management skills.<lb/>
The evening session, to be held at<lb/>
Freddie's restaurant on Fifth St<lb/>
6:30 ? 9:30 p.m will be a dinner<lb/>
program with a panel of speakers.<lb/>
The symposium day sessions are<lb/>
open to the public, wiht a fee of S7<lb/>
for the evening program (dinner and<lb/>
panel discussion) or $3 (panel<lb/>
discussion only).<lb/>
According to Mary Ann Rose,<lb/>
chairperson of the campus Commit-<lb/>
tee on the Status of Women, the<lb/>
symposium will "address the<lb/>
changes necessary for mature<lb/>
decision-making and problem-<lb/>
solving" among American women<lb/>
today.<lb/>
"Specifically, women will speak<lb/>
about how their areas of expertise<lb/>
can help others with real problems,<lb/>
the essential needs of a women<lb/>
'growing up' to meet challenges of<lb/>
life, career and family she said.<lb/>
Further information about the<lb/>
symposium is available from Ms.<lb/>
Rose or Peggy Balcome at 757-6061<lb/>
14k (old bcadi IKt<lb/>
?: .<lb/>
 5mm M c<lb/>
r ?<lb/>
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CAROLINA OPRY<lb/>
HOUSE<lb/>
SUN. OCT.26,1980<lb/>
ONE SHOW ONLY<lb/>
SHOW STARTS AT 9:00PM<lb/>
ADMISSION $5.00 PER PERSON<lb/>
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT<lb/>
THE DOOR<lb/>
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CAfcL<lb/>
758-3943<lb/>
VIRGINIA<lb/>
fta&amp;tee<lb/>
MOONLIGHT SALE<lb/>
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AA7T End Of The Week<lb/>
Party From 4-8pm Friday<lb/>
FREE ADMISSION4:00 5:30<lb/>
ADMISSION 25C After 5:30<lb/>
50C After 6:30<lb/>
75 After 8:30<lb/>
$1.00 8:30 Until<lb/>
FRiday Admission Can<lb/>
Be Used Friday Night<lb/>
Beverages are 40 From<lb/>
4:00-5:00<lb/>
Go Up IOC Every Hour<lb/>
Sponsored ByAATT's<lb/>
And<lb/>
CHAPTERXEvery<lb/>
Friday Afternoon<lb/>
FRIDAY 6:00-11<lb/>
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OFF<lb/>
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LIKE DOWN LOOK-POLY<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057295_0008"/><lb/>
. -V "<lb/>
THl EAS1 t -K()l IN1AN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
(K mill R23, 1VK0<lb/>
Pag? <lb/>
ECU Axes Wrestling, Field Hockey<lb/>
NCAA wrestling and A1AW field<lb/>
hockey are being dropped from the<lb/>
Last Carolina athletic program, ef-<lb/>
fective at the end of each sport's<lb/>
respective season, it was announced<lb/>
Wednesday by ECU Director of<lb/>
Athletics Ken Karr.<lb/>
"Today's economic situation is<lb/>
extremely tough for athletic pro-<lb/>
grams, especially those like ours<lb/>
that are attempting to grow Karr<lb/>
said. "It's felt at the present time<lb/>
that in the best interest of the ECU<lb/>
total athletic program, we must<lb/>
drop field hockei and wrestling<lb/>
Karr said that the Pirate program<lb/>
focused on growth and that such<lb/>
ECU AD Ken Karr<lb/>
growth is not possible without cuts.<lb/>
"We must divert resources and<lb/>
energies in the areas most suited to<lb/>
our needs he said.<lb/>
The first-year ECU AD said the<lb/>
situation here was not unusual.<lb/>
"We regret that this move must be<lb/>
made he said, "but we find<lb/>
ourselves having the same problems<lb/>
here that other schools are having<lb/>
cross the country. In order to make<lb/>
the major sports go, we must draw<lb/>
the purse strings tighter in other<lb/>
areas<lb/>
Wrestling has also been cut at<lb/>
Georgia, Alabama, Florida, UCLA<lb/>
and LSU recently. Of the 256 Divi-<lb/>
sion I schools, 52 have made cuts<lb/>
recently in their athletic program.<lb/>
Field hockev has long suffered at<lb/>
ECU because only 18 North<lb/>
Carolina high schools have teams.<lb/>
"As we project to the future and<lb/>
possible conference alignment<lb/>
Karr added, "we must realie what<lb/>
sports are likely to be sanctioned by<lb/>
a conference<lb/>
Karr said that the two sports<lb/>
dropped were the most logical<lb/>
choices in comparison to other<lb/>
minor sports.<lb/>
"Wrestling and field hockey are<lb/>
not very likely to be sanctioned he<lb/>
said, "whereas MAW and NCAA<lb/>
cross country and AiAW golf are<lb/>
more likely choices. This is due to<lb/>
dollars involved in fielding such<lb/>
teams and the availability o<lb/>
recruiting talent in one's own<lb/>
backyard<lb/>
With the cuts, the question arises<lb/>
of what the involved atheletcs will<lb/>
do following the current season.<lb/>
Assistant AD and Sports Informa-<lb/>
tion Director Ken Smith addressed<lb/>
the problem by saving. "We will<lb/>
follow NCAA and AIAW rules<lb/>
regarding scholarships Smith<lb/>
said. "We will go strictly by the<lb/>
book. We will make sure that<lb/>
everything turns gut in the best in-<lb/>
terests of the athletes involved<lb/>
NCAA regulations concerning<lb/>
athletes participating in a sport that<lb/>
has been axed or considered leniant.<lb/>
Anv athlete involved in such a case,<lb/>
as the Pirate wrestlers are, can<lb/>
transfer to any other school and<lb/>
become eligible immediately, rather<lb/>
than having to sil out a year.<lb/>
NCAA scholarships are signed<lb/>
foi only one yeai al a rune so each<lb/>
I wrestler will be Ireed to<lb/>
negotiate with other schools and will<lb/>
no longer be undci scholar Tup <lb/>
June 30, 1981.<lb/>
AIAW regulations state that any<lb/>
girl participating in a sport that has<lb/>
been cut ma be given an academic<lb/>
scholarship for on: additional year<lb/>
following the move.<lb/>
Pirates Look To Upset<lb/>
Seventh-Ranked Heels<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sport Kdilur<lb/>
"1 can't see where they have any<lb/>
weaknesses<lb/>
East Carolina head football coach<lb/>
Ed Emory was simple in his asser-<lb/>
tion of the seventh-ranked North<lb/>
Carolina Tarheels, a team that his<lb/>
Pirates have the unenviable task ot<lb/>
tacmg this Saturday in Chapel Hill.<lb/>
"On defense Emory said,<lb/>
"they've been awesome. Their of-<lb/>
fense also is something with great<lb/>
backs like Famous Amos<lb/>
(1 awrenee) and (Kelvin) Bryant<lb/>
Indeed, the Tarheels have been<lb/>
awesome in winning their first six<lb/>
games o the 1980 season. The UNC<lb/>
defense has allowed but 36 points m<lb/>
those six games with only 15 points<lb/>
coming before the fourth quarter.<lb/>
"We have to move the football on<lb/>
the ground to win said the first-<lb/>
Year Pirate coach. "Everybody goes<lb/>
up there trying to pass on them.<lb/>
We've got to establish our running<lb/>
name<lb/>
Emory said if the Pirates are able<lb/>
to get a ground attack established,<lb/>
patience will be a factor. "We need<lb/>
to move the ball north and south<lb/>
he claimed. "We've got to fight for<lb/>
field position. And we can't try to<lb/>
do anything too fast. We must be<lb/>
careful and take our time in doing<lb/>
what we do best<lb/>
Concerning the Tarheel offense.<lb/>
Emory said the leader o the UNC<lb/>
attack was not who everybody<lb/>
thinks it is.<lb/>
"People always look at their great<lb/>
running backs Emory said. "But<lb/>
Elkins (Rod, quarterback) is their<lb/>
key.<lb/>
"He's done a super job and is the<lb/>
guy that keeps the ball alive in then<lb/>
attack<lb/>
The ball usually stays "alive"<lb/>
when the Heels have it too. I he<lb/>
tailback duo o' Bryant and<lb/>
Lawrence has produced nearly 1 ,(KK<lb/>
vards by itself. Lawrence has rambl-<lb/>
ed for 524 yards and Bryant 462<lb/>
through the team's first six contests.<lb/>
The Heels, 6-0, ranked seventh in<lb/>
both wire service polls this week and<lb/>
are the highest ranked team an last<lb/>
Carolina squad has ever faced.<lb/>
Florida State, which downed ECU<lb/>
63-7 earlier this season, was ranked<lb/>
ninth before its matchup with the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
"Here we are looking forward to<lb/>
a challenge o' playing a team ranked<lb/>
higher than Ohio State, Oklahoma.<lb/>
Arkansas and Penn State Emory<lb/>
said. "This is an opportunity that<lb/>
we at East Carolina have been<lb/>
waiting tor for main years<lb/>
The Pirate head man said that he<lb/>
felt good about his club's chances<lb/>
due to some improvements made in<lb/>
recent weeks.<lb/>
"To date, we are capable of play-<lb/>
ing very good or very bad. We're<lb/>
not real solid yet. But we have made<lb/>
some big improvements after star-<lb/>
ting off 1-3<lb/>
The Pirates have taken con-<lb/>
secutive victories over Richmond<lb/>
and Western Carolina to even their<lb/>
record at 3-3. Still. 1 mory, savs there<lb/>
is no doubt that ECU is the under-<lb/>
dog Saturday(with I Nc being<lb/>
tavored by local bookies bv 25<lb/>
points).<lb/>
"On paper 1 mory noted.<lb/>
" 1 hey are better than we arc. Bui<lb/>
you don't plav on paper, you play<lb/>
on turf. And on turt is where it<lb/>
counts<lb/>
 r<lb/>
ECU defensive back Manin Elliott (32) brings down<lb/>
I NC "s Amos Lawrence in last season's 24-24 tie.<lb/>
Wooten Says ECU<lb/>
Rivalry Not Same<lb/>
ECU's Vern Davenport<lb/>
He Has One Last Chance<lb/>
By JIMMY DaPREE<lb/>
xstsiant sports l-dilor<lb/>
Over the past few years, the<lb/>
rivalry between the University of<lb/>
North Carolina and East Carolina<lb/>
University has become one of the<lb/>
best in the state. Last season's 24-24<lb/>
tie on a late Tar Heel field goal<lb/>
stands as testimony to that tact.<lb/>
With the coming o' a new coach<lb/>
at 1 C1 and the coming of age of the<lb/>
1 ar Heel veterans, senior All-<lb/>
American Ron Wooten of UNC<lb/>
feels that that rivalry has been erod-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
"The main way I'm taking<lb/>
(Saturday's game) says Wooten,<lb/>
an offensive guard from Kinston,<lb/>
"is that it will be our seventh win.<lb/>
"1 don't feel as much of a rivalry<lb/>
as 1 have in the past. It's not that<lb/>
East Carolina doesn't have a good<lb/>
team, it's just the fact that we have<lb/>
to win it we are going to achieve our<lb/>
goals for the season.<lb/>
"Our first goal is that we want to<lb/>
win the AC C and (the East Carolina<lb/>
game) is not a part of it. We have to<lb/>
win this game to achieve another<lb/>
goal, which is to go undefeated<lb/>
To accomplish the latter goal the<lb/>
Heels must beat the powerful<lb/>
Sooners ot Oklahoma, but Wooten<lb/>
insists he and his teammates have<lb/>
their minds solely on the Pirates at<lb/>
this time.<lb/>
"Don't get me wrong he adds.<lb/>
"We've never really beaten East<lb/>
North Carolina AH-America<lb/>
offensive guard Ron Wooten<lb/>
heads an awesome Tar Heel<lb/>
ground attack<lb/>
Carolina badly since I've been here<lb/>
and 1 don't think we will this Satur-<lb/>
day either. If ECU was another<lb/>
team from out of state or<lb/>
something, Ed say we could make it<lb/>
a blow-out. But they play well<lb/>
against us every year<lb/>
Runningbacks 'Famous' Amos<lb/>
Lawrence and Kelvin Bryant head<lb/>
the UNC ground attack, with<lb/>
Woolen and center Rick Donnelley<lb/>
opening holes and providing protec-<lb/>
tion for sophomore quarterback<lb/>
Rod Elkins. Wooten's observation<lb/>
of the Pirates on films leads him to<lb/>
believe ECU will be one of their best<lb/>
challenges o' the season.<lb/>
"From what I've seen, they do<lb/>
more stunting than any other team<lb/>
we've played Wooten states.<lb/>
"Lheir line coverage has been better<lb/>
the last few games.<lb/>
"The main thing that gives us<lb/>
confidence, though, is our defensive<lb/>
line he adds. "They've been able<lb/>
to get to the quarterback a lot, and<lb/>
that has made a difference in a cou-<lb/>
ple o games. East Carolina doesn't<lb/>
throw as much, so that may not be<lb/>
that much of a factor<lb/>
The Tar Heels have been ranked<lb/>
in the top twenty of both major wire<lb/>
service polls throughout the season,<lb/>
but according to Wooten, only head<lb/>
coach Dick Crum carefully watches<lb/>
those figures.<lb/>
"Coach Crum has gotten to<lb/>
where he pays attention to the<lb/>
polls says Wooten. "But we<lb/>
(players) haven't let it go to our<lb/>
heads or anything like that.<lb/>
"We're aware of them, of course.<lb/>
But we haven't let it put additional<lb/>
pressure on us.<lb/>
"No Carolina team in recent<lb/>
history has won five in a row; we<lb/>
pay more attention to something<lb/>
like that<lb/>
The ultimate goal of the Tar<lb/>
Heels is to earn a berth in a major<lb/>
bowl, but personal goals are also a<lb/>
factor for Wooten.<lb/>
"Sure I'd like to take a shot at<lb/>
pro ball if the offer's there<lb/>
Wooten says. "If the money is<lb/>
there, 1 don't think 1 could turn it<lb/>
down. But aside from that, I would<lb/>
probably go on to graduate school<lb/>
in business<lb/>
An ACC crown; an undefeated<lb/>
season; a major bowl bid: all these<lb/>
are realistic goals for the Tar Heels<lb/>
of North Carolina with Ail-<lb/>
American Ron Wooten leading the<lb/>
way.<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
sporN t diinr<lb/>
For East Carolina senior<lb/>
split end Vern Davenport this<lb/>
Saturday marks the last time<lb/>
that he can get what he most<lb/>
wants out o' his college toot-<lb/>
ball career: a win over North<lb/>
Carolina's Tarheels.<lb/>
In his and the Pirates<lb/>
previous three tries, UNC has<lb/>
won 12-10 in 1976, 14-10 in<lb/>
'77, and the two clubs tied,<lb/>
24-24, last season. lor Daven-<lb/>
port. 1980 represents a "now<lb/>
or never" situation.<lb/>
"I'm trying to look al h as<lb/>
anv othei game he said.<lb/>
"But that's hard to do. I've<lb/>
been there three years and<lb/>
we've played well each time.<lb/>
We've done everything you<lb/>
need to do to win and we've<lb/>
never won<lb/>
Though the Pirates have<lb/>
never been favorites going to<lb/>
Chapel Hill, the team has<lb/>
Davenport Kicks Off<lb/>
never been an as big o an<lb/>
underdog as it is this year,<lb/>
winch finds L NC ranked<lb/>
seventh in the nation.<lb/>
"The odds have never been<lb/>
against us like this Daven-<lb/>
port said. "It will take a lot of<lb/>
breaks for us to win. But I'm<lb/>
not going up there planning to<lb/>
lose<lb/>
Past performance, says the<lb/>
Grifton native, is enough to<lb/>
give ECU fans hope. "We<lb/>
always seem to play good<lb/>
against them. You can throw<lb/>
the record books out the win-<lb/>
dow when these two teams<lb/>
play<lb/>
I he one danger the young<lb/>
Pirates might face, said<lb/>
Davenport, was respecting the<lb/>
Tarheels too much.<lb/>
"1 just hope the young guys<lb/>
on the team don't get awed by<lb/>
Carolina he said. "All of us<lb/>
should just line up and treat<lb/>
our man as anv other guy.<lb/>
That's all they are<lb/>
lo Davenport, and to main<lb/>
o the Pirate faithful, the an-<lb/>
nual game with the Heels is the<lb/>
game o the season. There are<lb/>
specific reasons for this, said<lb/>
the senior end.<lb/>
"It's like Carolina is in an<lb/>
upper echelon Davenport<lb/>
said. "There is this aristocratic<lb/>
atmosphere<lb/>
The way today's Pirates feel<lb/>
about Saturday's game goes<lb/>
back to the way former ECl<lb/>
head coach Pay Dye approac-<lb/>
ed the annual rivalry. Daven-<lb/>
port said.<lb/>
"He used to say in the<lb/>
papers that we were a bunch of<lb/>
skinny-legged guys from<lb/>
eastern North Carolina. And<lb/>
that wasn't all that wrong. Not<lb/>
many of the guys on this team<lb/>
were recruited by Carolina.<lb/>
It's like we've all got<lb/>
something to prove<lb/>
With Dye gone to Wyoming<lb/>
and Ed Emory now at the<lb/>
Pirate helm, Davenport con-<lb/>
trasted how the two men<lb/>
prepared their teams for the<lb/>
big game.<lb/>
"Coach Dye brought out<lb/>
this intensity in us he said.<lb/>
"He would tell us that we<lb/>
weren't as good as they were,<lb/>
that we didn't stack up. That<lb/>
would really fire us up<lb/>
 era<lb/>
Davenport<lb/>
lmory takes a different ap-<lb/>
proach, said the German-born<lb/>
Pirate. "Coach Pmory looks<lb/>
at it from the aspect that we're<lb/>
not supposed to like them. He<lb/>
tells us that we should hate<lb/>
them and instills this hatred<lb/>
and madness in us<lb/>
In reminiscing ovei his<lb/>
career Davenport does not<lb/>
have to look far to find his<lb/>
most disappointing moment.<lb/>
"If there's vine play in the<lb/>
world I'd like to go over he<lb/>
said, "it would be that kick<lb/>
last year<lb/>
In addition to his duties as<lb/>
split end. Davenport often<lb/>
kicks off for the Pirates and is<lb/>
called on for long-range field<lb/>
attempts.<lb/>
With the score tied 24-24<lb/>
last year at Carolina and less<lb/>
than a minute remaining.<lb/>
Davenport was called on to try<lb/>
a 59-yard field goal. The kick<lb/>
fell about three yards short,<lb/>
spelling "defeat" for the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
"It was just like a loss for<lb/>
us Davenport said,<lb/>
"because we had had the game<lb/>
won<lb/>
As for the missed kick,<lb/>
Davenport says the only thing<lb/>
that will atone for it is a win<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
"1 wish I had stretched<lb/>
more before I tried it he<lb/>
said. "I definitely should have<lb/>
made it. I can go out here to<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium right now and<lb/>
make 10 out of 12 of those<lb/>
After Saturday's game is<lb/>
over, Davenport would surely<lb/>
settle for one out of four;<lb/>
games that is.<lb/>
,??<lb/>
Kv II<lb/>
It<lb/>
two<lb/>
B<lb/>
Na<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
 tevery<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
(L I"1<lb/>
 C -?'?'?? ? . MMk ?<lb/>
t<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057295_0009"/><lb/>
I HI t AS IAROI INIAN<lb/>
(K OBI R 23. I9K0<lb/>
' <lb/>
n<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
Women Cagers<lb/>
Begin Practice<lb/>
B JIMMY DvPREE<lb/>
rhrough her first<lb/>
two years as the head<lb/>
women's basketball<lb/>
coach at Last Carolina,<lb/>
Cathy Andrui had<lb/>
the luer of depending<lb/>
heavil) on veteran<lb/>
strong forward Rosie<lb/>
rhompson to provide<lb/>
an offensive or defen-<lb/>
sive lift for the I ad<lb/>
Pirates in times of trou-<lb/>
ble.<lb/>
But as the squad<lb/>
p; epares tor its<lb/>
November 23 opener<lb/>
against Virginia Tech,<lb/>
Andruzzi has the<lb/>
ominous task of fin-<lb/>
ding a replacement tor<lb/>
1 hompson, who has<lb/>
joined the Iowa Cor-<lb/>
onets of the Women's<lb/>
Professional 1 eague.<lb/>
"1 or two seasons,<lb/>
Rosie carried the<lb/>
ballclub savs An-<lb/>
druzzi. "Hut last year<lb/>
other people helped<lb/>
carry the load. Nome<lb/>
games in which Rosie<lb/>
scored only four points<lb/>
or so, we won. We'll<lb/>
miss her more on<lb/>
defense<lb/>
 vital element in the<lb/>
I ady Pirates 20-11 per-<lb/>
formance of a year ago<lb/>
was forward Kathy<lb/>
Riley, who averaged<lb/>
17.3 points and si re-<lb/>
bounds per contest.<lb/>
Riley, an All-American<lb/>
candidate from<lb/>
Nashville, renn <lb/>
returns with the added<lb/>
honor of surviving until<lb/>
il cut at the trials<lb/>
o! the 1980 Olympic<lb/>
team.<lb/>
"kattn will be very<lb/>
important tot he team<lb/>
again this year An-<lb/>
druzzi says. "She will<lb/>
have to know all the<lb/>
positions. With the ex-<lb/>
ception (of center), she<lb/>
will prohahly be used<lb/>
everywhere<lb/>
s has been the pro-<lb/>
blem with the ECU<lb/>
football squad, the<lb/>
I ad Pirates have had<lb/>
to contend with a<lb/>
number of serious in-<lb/>
juries to kev players,<lb/>
including senior guards<lb/>
I ydia Rountree and<lb/>
Laurie Sikes.<lb/>
Rountree, who rank<lb/>
ed third on the team<lb/>
last year with 13.0<lb/>
points per contest, suf-<lb/>
fered a severe groin<lb/>
muscle pull last week<lb/>
and will be out o' ac-<lb/>
tion for several more<lb/>
weeks.<lb/>
Sikes, meanwhile,<lb/>
continues limited<lb/>
workouts while suffer-<lb/>
ing with recurrent knee<lb/>
ailments. The Marietta,<lb/>
Cia. native established a<lb/>
new school record a<lb/>
vear ago with 225<lb/>
assists while averaging<lb/>
8.5 points per outing.<lb/>
Also included on the<lb/>
list o' casualties is<lb/>
freshman point guard<lb/>
I isa Fcnnell who is ex-<lb/>
pected to see con-<lb/>
siderable action in the<lb/>
I ady Pirate backcourt.<lb/>
"Fennell has a stress<lb/>
fracture, which is<lb/>
something she had<lb/>
before she came here<lb/>
savs Andruzzi. "Sikes<lb/>
has what is called<lb/>
'jumpers knee That<lb/>
leaves us with two<lb/>
starters from last<lb/>
season<lb/>
long with Riley<lb/>
senior center Marcia<lb/>
Ciirven returns on the<lb/>
1 ady Pirate front line.<lb/>
Ciirven is the leading re-<lb/>
bounder returning,<lb/>
with an average of 7.6<lb/>
per outing along with<lb/>
6.4 points per game.<lb/>
Sophomore Mary<lb/>
Denkler and senior<lb/>
Heidi Owen served as<lb/>
top reserves a year ago<lb/>
and expected to provide<lb/>
height and experience<lb/>
again this season.<lb/>
Denkler averaged 4<lb/>
points and 5.2 re-<lb/>
bounds per game on the<lb/>
front line, while Owen<lb/>
excelled defensively ex-<lb/>
cept for a late season<lb/>
surge in the offensive<lb/>
catagories.<lb/>
Transfers Sam Jones<lb/>
and Caren Truske add<lb/>
depth up front and in<lb/>
the backcourt, with<lb/>
Jones a potential<lb/>
starter at forward.<lb/>
Jones ear n e d A11 -<lb/>
American honors twice<lb/>
in her two seasons at<lb/>
I ouisburg College,<lb/>
while Truske comes<lb/>
from the nationally<lb/>
ranked N.C. State pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
"Caren worked at<lb/>
one of our camps this<lb/>
summer says An-<lb/>
druzzi, "and 1 guess<lb/>
that's when she decided<lb/>
to come to Hast<lb/>
Carolina. She had<lb/>
already left State and<lb/>
was going to Virginia<lb/>
Tech. We're certainly<lb/>
happy to have her here.<lb/>
"1 think Caren and<lb/>
Sam have done an ex-<lb/>
cellant job adjusting to<lb/>
our program<lb/>
Also returning from<lb/>
the 1979-80 edition are<lb/>
guards Lillion Barnes<lb/>
and Fran Hooks and<lb/>
forward Donna<lb/>
Moody. Barnes, a<lb/>
junior, returns as the<lb/>
quickest of the guards,<lb/>
with Hooks adding<lb/>
scrappy detense and<lb/>
Moody sorely needed<lb/>
height on the front line.<lb/>
"We're going to<lb/>
have to work extremely<lb/>
hard because we are so<lb/>
small Andruzzi ad-<lb/>
mits. "We don't have<lb/>
the 6-2 or 6-3 players<lb/>
other teams have, so we<lb/>
have to make up tor it<lb/>
with intensity<lb/>
Part-time Delivery Job<lb/>
Must Have Transportation<lb/>
Good Pay And Flexible<lb/>
Hours<lb/>
Call<lb/>
Biscuit Towne USA<lb/>
756-7828<lb/>
And A?k For Ivy Knight<lb/>
ECU'S Heidi Owen<lb/>
. . . defensive standout<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
CUSTOM CRAFTING and repair<lb/>
ot gold and silver Buvincj and<lb/>
selling of gold and silver by Les<lb/>
Jewelers 120 E 5th St 7S8 2127.<lb/>
SUNSHINE STUDIOS ottering<lb/>
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Within walking distance ot cam<lb/>
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7 5? 196<lb/>
WANTED Faculty or statt wife<lb/>
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For part time work See Tommy<lb/>
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m Greenville Only those who<lb/>
don t mmd physical &amp; dirty work<lb/>
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CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVE<lb/>
POSITION! Part time position<lb/>
promoting high quality Spring<lb/>
Break beach trips on campus for<lb/>
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CARTE The ultimate n<lb/>
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FOR SALE<lb/>
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FOR SALE Technics SA 500 60<lb/>
atts SL 230 tuliy automatic<lb/>
turntable with Empire 2000 El 11<lb/>
Phase Linear speakers<lb/>
Aluminum antennae Paid suoo<lb/>
best offer Call 753 8860 ask tor<lb/>
Graham<lb/>
FOR SALE Acoustic Jumbo<lb/>
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Pre Amp 15 watts I7S will talk.<lb/>
756 442 I 00 6 00 Robert<lb/>
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FOR SALE New Electric Ranq(<lb/>
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758 7332<lb/>
FOR SALE Beggmner set<lb/>
Golfpro Princess' lefty golf clubs<lb/>
with bag Rarely used. Call Peg<lb/>
758 6186 before 10 31 80<lb/>
FOR SALE Filibuster U multi<lb/>
band Best otter 752 8860 ask for<lb/>
Kevin<lb/>
TURN TABLE Tape ft speakers<lb/>
S100 Twin beds(maple) box spr<lb/>
mgs &amp; mattresses<lb/>
so ?957<lb/>
565<lb/>
Call<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED Five<lb/>
blocks from campus 5100 m<lb/>
eludes rent utilities, heat<lb/>
Available Nov 1 752 6970<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE Tosher,<lb/>
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7S7 4652 or 757 6161 Ask for Ellen<lb/>
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utilities Single parent wanting to<lb/>
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Call Becky 756 8637<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTE D lor large<lb/>
house Private room with house<lb/>
privelges 305 E 14th St 580<lb/>
month Call 752 3444<lb/>
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS CAN BE PUR<lb/>
CHASED AT THREE LOCA<lb/>
TIONS<lb/>
Student Supply Store Lobby, MWF<lb/>
10:00 11 00, TTH 11 00 12 00<lb/>
East Carolinian Office, MTTH<lb/>
4 00 5 00 WF 2 00 3 CO<lb/>
Student Organization Booth<lb/>
(Mendenhalll, MWF 12.00 100<lb/>
TTH 11 00 12 00<lb/>
Venuto, Wysocki<lb/>
Lead ACC Stats<lb/>
I Classified Ad Form<lb/>
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Make cherts payable to The Bast<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
hyphenations<lb/>
GREENSBORO<lb/>
(L'Pl) ? Wake forest<lb/>
quarterback .lav<lb/>
Venuto, who had 224<lb/>
yards passing and<lb/>
rushing against<lb/>
Maryland Saturday.<lb/>
lead the Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Conference in total of-<lb/>
fense this week, averag-<lb/>
ing P6.S yards per<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Maryland tailbacK<lb/>
ran for yards in<lb/>
Maryland's 11-10 vic-<lb/>
tory over Wake forest,<lb/>
is the league's leading<lb/>
rusher with 11)8 yards<lb/>
per game. He is follow-<lb/>
ed by Virginia's Tom-<lb/>
my Vigorito with 88<lb/>
yards, North<lb/>
Carolina's Amos<lb/>
Lawrence with 87.3<lb/>
yards, and the Tar<lb/>
Heels' Kelvin Brvant<lb/>
I MAIL TO:<lb/>
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Classilted Ads<lb/>
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Charlie Wysocki, who with 77 yards per game.<lb/>
ELECTROLYSIS!<lb/>
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TueWedFri. 9:30-5:30<lb/>
Thursday 9:30am7:00pm. t<lb/>
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EXPERT STYLING<lb/>
FOR BOTH MEN<lb/>
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Siladium rings are made from a fine jewelers<lb/>
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In short, it's quality and durability at an<lb/>
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Both men's and women's Siladium ring<lb/>
styles are on sale this week only through<lb/>
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It's a great way of saying you've earned it.<lb/>
IRTC7IRVED<lb/>
COLLEGE RINGS<lb/>
Symbolizing your ability to achieve.<lb/>
Oct. 23-24<lb/>
The Official<lb/>
ECU Class Rings<lb/>
Date<lb/>
Location<lb/>
10am-4pm<lb/>
$10<lb/>
IVposit required Master Charge or Visa accepted.<lb/>
Student Supply<lb/>
Store Lobby<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
?1W ArtCarved College RW?<lb/>
ft<lb/>
T<lb/>
<pb facs="00057295_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057295_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>