<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057300_0001"/>
?he<lb/>
(Earnlinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
oi.55Norr'?. 33<lb/>
10 Panes<lb/>
Tuesday, November 11, 1980<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation 10.000<lb/>
Greenville Group<lb/>
Sues Jaycee Chapter,<lb/>
Area Radio Station<lb/>
Glisson<lb/>
.filing suit against area Jaycees and a radio station.<lb/>
By TERRY GRAY<lb/>
staff V riter<lb/>
A local rock band has filed a suit<lb/>
in Pitt County Superior Court<lb/>
against the Washington. NC Junior<lb/>
Chamber of Commerce and WSF1<lb/>
radio in New Bern.<lb/>
The suit alleges that the radio sta-<lb/>
tion and the Washington Jaycees<lb/>
agreed to pay SI .5(H) or a percentage<lb/>
o the gate profits to the rock band<lb/>
that placed first in a "battle of the<lb/>
bands" competition held in<lb/>
Beaufort County this summer.<lb/>
Glisson, the group which has tiled<lb/>
suit, was judged to be The best band<lb/>
in the contest, but says the Jaycees<lb/>
?ailed to award them cash prize.<lb/>
Tom Glisson. Fred Glisson, Kyle<lb/>
Alcoholism<lb/>
Survey Shows Low Abuse At ECU<lb/>
Ul<lb/>
i<lb/>
aent!<lb/>
Univei<lb/>
de<lb/>
drin-<lb/>
problems,<lb/>
se who<lb/>
;bly<lb/>
3 nef ? :es as a<lb/>
a campus survey shows.<lb/>
A<lb/>
and<lb/>
sit)<lb/>
while<lb/>
consu<lb/>
result<lb/>
'The results of the study indicate<lb/>
that ECU is very comparable in its<lb/>
problems to most campuses where<lb/>
similar studies 'nave been done<lb/>
says Jerr 1 otterhos, Director of the<lb/>
Alcoholism Training Progiam, and<lb/>
Chairperson of the C am<lb/>
Alcohol Drug Education C<lb/>
tee.<lb/>
1 otterhos' committee conducted<lb/>
the research study last yeat to<lb/>
?neasure the drinking behavior oi<lb/>
the campus community, both<lb/>
students and employees, as a m<lb/>
oi determining the extent oi the pro-<lb/>
blems and needs which exist.<lb/>
"It's not that we have a unique<lb/>
problem here, but rather that we<lb/>
wish to assume a positive and<lb/>
responsible approach Lotterhos<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The survey was part of a broad<lb/>
program encouraged by ECU to<lb/>
promote responsibility in the use of<lb/>
alcohol for members of the campus<lb/>
community who indicated that they<lb/>
use or have used alcoholic beverages<lb/>
to some extent.<lb/>
Following the research study,<lb/>
recommendations to develop a stu-<lb/>
dent peer intervention prevention<lb/>
program to "support responsible<lb/>
decisions about alcohol and drugs"<lb/>
are being implemented, Lotterhos<lb/>
said<lb/>
Students To Receive<lb/>
Wages Retroactively<lb/>
A student centei for<lb/>
Alcohol- Drug Information is to be<lb/>
opened and manned by student<lb/>
volunteers to provide service to<lb/>
students. Also, a committee of the<lb/>
faculty and staff is planning an<lb/>
employee assistance program for all<lb/>
university employees, he said.<lb/>
Dr. Elmer E. Meyer, Jr Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Student Life, said<lb/>
"We feel that any university should<lb/>
do what it can to promote respon-<lb/>
sibility in our students in all areas<lb/>
including their chemical consump-<lb/>
tion Meyer last year appointed a<lb/>
campus AlcoholDrug Education<lb/>
Committee to study the problem<lb/>
and make recommendations.<lb/>
The Lotterhos survey indicated<lb/>
that a small percentage of the<lb/>
students and employees had ex-<lb/>
perienced some<lb/>
"negative"consequences as a result<lb/>
of drinking behavior. These conse-<lb/>
quences included such things as<lb/>
missing class because of drinking,<lb/>
damage to personal relationships,<lb/>
driving under the influence, being<lb/>
involved in fights and causing some<lb/>
property damage.<lb/>
The survey also showed that a<lb/>
small number of students and<lb/>
employees indicated they felt they<lb/>
might have a personal drinking pro-<lb/>
blem<lb/>
The great majority of the students<lb/>
and employees surveyed indicated<lb/>
that they use alcohol, but with no<lb/>
negative consequences as a result.<lb/>
ECU Chancellor Thomas B.<lb/>
Brewer said "We feel that, in keep-<lb/>
ing with our continuing efforts to<lb/>
provide an atmosphere of quality<lb/>
education, a campus-wide program<lb/>
promoting the responsible use of<lb/>
alcohol is supportive of our overall<lb/>
developmental goals, and is a<lb/>
responsibility we should pursue<lb/>
McBnde and Elliot White are the 800 people<lb/>
members of the group. All four are concert. As<lb/>
ECU students.<lb/>
Several other bands participated<lb/>
in the contest, which was sponsored<lb/>
in June by the Jaycees to help raise<lb/>
funds for the organization. The con-<lb/>
test was a part of the Jaycees Sum-<lb/>
mer Festival, which included other<lb/>
fundraising events.<lb/>
WSFL-FM radio helped promote<lb/>
the events for the Jaycees, according<lb/>
to Station Manager Ed Seeger.<lb/>
Seeger has also been named as a<lb/>
defendant in the suit.<lb/>
The band is seeking SI, 500<lb/>
damages and SI 5,000 punitive<lb/>
images, in addition to other costs.<lb/>
rhe East Carolinian could not<lb/>
rea Steve Nobles, President of the<lb/>
vs ashington Jaycees, for a comment<lb/>
on the case. But in an interview in<lb/>
Julv, Nobles said Seeger had in-<lb/>
dicated to the Jaycees thai as many<lb/>
as three or four thousand people<lb/>
would attend such an event.<lb/>
Seeger said that the radio station<lb/>
had successfully promoted a similar<lb/>
contest the previous year.<lb/>
According to Nobles, only about<lb/>
actually attended the<lb/>
a whole, the Summer<lb/>
festival lost SI.(XX), said Nobles in<lb/>
the July interview.<lb/>
Nobles said thai "no percentage<lb/>
was ever mentioned " for the bands,<lb/>
adding that his chapter did not have<lb/>
the money to pay.<lb/>
Bucanneers<lb/>
Unavailable In<lb/>
Student Store<lb/>
The 1980 Buccaneer is<lb/>
now available in the Buc<lb/>
office located on the<lb/>
second Poor o the<lb/>
publications center.<lb/>
Students wishing to pick<lb/>
up their copy of the<lb/>
yearbook must present a<lb/>
photo ID to the Media<lb/>
Board Secretary. The<lb/>
Buc may no longer be<lb/>
picked up at the Student<lb/>
Supply Store.<lb/>
Justice Department<lb/>
Asks Judge To Approve<lb/>
Discrimination Settlement<lb/>
WASHINGTON, D.C.<lb/>
(CPS)-After a brief but heated bat-<lb/>
tle, the U.S. Department of Educa-<lb/>
tion affirmed last week it- intent to<lb/>
allow students on College Work-<lb/>
Study financial aid programs to col-<lb/>
lect minimum wages retroactively<lb/>
from October 1.<lb/>
The new Higher Education<lb/>
Reauthorization Act, passed in<lb/>
September after two years oi intense<lb/>
politicking, made work-study<lb/>
students eligible for the S3.10<lb/>
minimum wage for the first time in<lb/>
history. Then a political battle<lb/>
erupted over when students could<lb/>
start getting the minimum wage.<lb/>
Many administrators?who had<lb/>
claimed giving work-study students<lb/>
the minimum wage would eliminate<lb/>
jobs for students?complained the<lb/>
new pay scale should not go into ef-<lb/>
fect until January 1, 1981.<lb/>
"We understood it wouldn't start<lb/>
until January 1 says an aide to<lb/>
Sen. Thomas Eagleton (D-Mo.), a<lb/>
member of the Senate education<lb/>
committee.<lb/>
A House education committee<lb/>
staffer, who requested anonymity,<lb/>
claims to be constantly fielding<lb/>
phone calls from college ad-<lb/>
ministrators worried about the addi-<lb/>
tional expense of paying their stu-<lb/>
dent workers more.<lb/>
Primarily because of the wage<lb/>
dispute, the Department of Educa-<lb/>
tion delayed sending out a letter to<lb/>
all colleges that explains how to im-<lb/>
plement other parts of the landmark<lb/>
reauthorization act, which provides<lb/>
Consequently, work-study<lb/>
students will soon be getting an ex-<lb/>
tra paycheck for the hours worked<lb/>
since October 1 that they hadn't<lb/>
received S3.10 per hour.<lb/>
The Department of Education let-<lb/>
ter warns schools to deliver the extra<lb/>
paychecks before the end of 1980.<lb/>
Opponents of making the wage<lb/>
hike retroactive were worried about<lb/>
more than paying the extra money<lb/>
to eligible students.<lb/>
They worry that since work-study<lb/>
funds are awarded as a lump sum,<lb/>
students will have to work fewer<lb/>
hours to make the same amount of<lb/>
money. Schools would therefore<lb/>
have to hire more people to work<lb/>
when work-study students have<lb/>
finished their hours.<lb/>
Administrators also fret that the<lb/>
new minimum wage will anger other<lb/>
workers on campus. Federal exemp-<lb/>
tions allow schools to pay<lb/>
"unclassified hourly employees"<lb/>
sub-minimum wages.<lb/>
When they suddenly find co-<lb/>
workers making a higher wage,<lb/>
"there is bound to be some<lb/>
disgruntled employees concedes<lb/>
Dallas Martin of the National<lb/>
Association of Student Financial<lb/>
Aid Administrators.<lb/>
Martin predicts that, as the result,<lb/>
schools will be forced to extend the<lb/>
minimum wage to their<lb/>
"unclassified" employees as well.<lb/>
Martin, who favors the minimum<lb/>
wage for students, notes that the<lb/>
October 1 date will be troublesome.<lb/>
"Many of these schools already<lb/>
WASHINGTON (UP1) ? The<lb/>
U.S. Justice Department Monday<lb/>
asked a judge to approve a proposed<lb/>
settlement of a discrimination suit<lb/>
that calls for substantially increas-<lb/>
ing the number of blacks and<lb/>
women in the North Carolina<lb/>
Highway Patrol.<lb/>
In the settlement, the state of<lb/>
North Carolina agrees to hire blacks<lb/>
for 50 percent of the openings in<lb/>
trooper training classes for the next<lb/>
five years and women for 25 percent<lb/>
of the openings.<lb/>
The long term hiring goal is to<lb/>
have the percentage of blacks and<lb/>
women in trooper positions equal<lb/>
the percentage of qualified blacks<lb/>
and women in the state's civilian<lb/>
labor force.<lb/>
Currently, women comprise 41.3<lb/>
percent of the state labor force and<lb/>
General<lb/>
become<lb/>
i federal<lb/>
Washington by Attorney<lb/>
Benjamin Civiletti, will<lb/>
final upon approval by ;<lb/>
judge.<lb/>
Besides settling most aspects of<lb/>
the federal suit charging the state of<lb/>
North CArolina with violating the<lb/>
1964 Civil Rights Act, the decree<lb/>
also would resolve a private class ac-<lb/>
tion suit filed in 1974.<lb/>
In addition, the state agreed to<lb/>
promote black officers in at least the<lb/>
percentage of their representation<lb/>
among eligible officers. The length<lb/>
of service requirement for line<lb/>
sergeant, the first supervisory rank,<lb/>
was reduced from seven to four<lb/>
years to increase the number of<lb/>
eligible blacks.<lb/>
The settlement also requires the<lb/>
state to hire minority applicants for<lb/>
30 percent of the state highway<lb/>
patrol's civilian positons. The state<lb/>
JJtlV-V-lll Ji HIV J1HIV ,M. ?- ? i -<lb/>
blacks 19 percent. There now are 53 agreed to start an active program to<lb/>
blacks among the 1,150 state<lb/>
troopers in North Carolina, and the<lb/>
only woman trooper was hired last<lb/>
March.<lb/>
The consent decree, announced in<lb/>
recruit blacks and women for<lb/>
trooper jobs, including the recruit-<lb/>
ment of women without regard to its<lb/>
minimum height requirement of five<lb/>
feet six.<lb/>
Teen Suicide Rate<lb/>
Jumps Dramatically<lb/>
Thirteen teenagers kill themselves 17-month period ending last sum<lb/>
IS:?wtteh collets mus, have ,he,r budge figured for ?he<lb/>
inc guiuciwiva , cvmnathie with their<lb/>
follow for the next five years<lb/>
At the department, Student<lb/>
Special Services representative Skee<lb/>
Smith confirmed the explanatory<lb/>
letter had been delayed, adding that<lb/>
"the department has acknowledged<lb/>
that schools will be inconvenienced<lb/>
(by the new wage), and that it will<lb/>
cost them money But she said i<lb/>
was clear from the start that<lb/>
students would be eligible for the<lb/>
wage as of October 1, not January<lb/>
I.<lb/>
year, and we sympathize with their<lb/>
predicament<lb/>
"But this provision has been in<lb/>
the proposed bill for almost a<lb/>
year he points out, adding that<lb/>
many colleges made the switch long<lb/>
ago in anticipation of the bill's<lb/>
passage.<lb/>
Indeed, the student minimum<lb/>
wage has been anticipated so long<lb/>
Along For The Ride<lb/>
in the U.S. every day.<lb/>
The film "Ordinary People'<lb/>
dramatizes this epidemic. The pro-<lb/>
blem the Jarrett family faces ? an<lb/>
adolescent son trying to recover<lb/>
from a mental breakdown, signaled<lb/>
by a suicide attempt ? is not un-<lb/>
common across the country.<lb/>
Nationwide, the suicide rate<lb/>
among teens is rising rapidly, as the<lb/>
suicide rate for the general popula-<lb/>
tion is declining. In 1977, the last<lb/>
year for which complete figures are<lb/>
available, 4,747 teenagers aged 15 to<lb/>
19 killed themselves, a 20 percent in-<lb/>
crease in one yar, and a 300 percent<lb/>
increase since 1960.<lb/>
Suicide is now the third largest<lb/>
leading cause of death among young<lb/>
people aged 15 to 19, ranking just<lb/>
behind accidents and homicides.<lb/>
For the general population,<lb/>
however, suicide is the ninth leading<lb/>
cause of death.<lb/>
Experts say, however, that since desperate for help but don t know<lb/>
many suicides are reported as ac- how to find it said Giffin.<lb/>
mer, 28 teenagers took their own<lb/>
lives.<lb/>
Chicago's North Shore, one ot<lb/>
the richest areas in the country, is<lb/>
known as the "suicide belt" among<lb/>
local therapists. Why is suicide so<lb/>
high in affluent areas?" "I just<lb/>
don't know said North Shore<lb/>
psychiatrist Mary Giffin.<lb/>
"Everyone will give their own<lb/>
sociological guesses on why suicide<lb/>
is a problem particularly in affluent<lb/>
areas, but no one has the answer<lb/>
Though about 5,000 teenagers kill<lb/>
themselves each year, the number<lb/>
who attempt suicide is as much as<lb/>
100 times as high, or about 500,000<lb/>
teens.<lb/>
Psychiatrists say that people who<lb/>
attempt suicides are really looking<lb/>
for help ? not death. "Those who<lb/>
attempt to commit suicide are<lb/>
Edward Murchison, of Umstead Dormitory, brought his pet, Krankie the<lb/>
Ferret, out into the unseasonably warm sunshine ECU students have en-<lb/>
ioved for the past several davs. Frankie's ancestors in Europe were com-<lb/>
wage has been anticipated so long JO " and bs Frwke fprs , f hjs<lb/>
? iX: ttjzxsz? ??his back -?and eamine (he passers b-<lb/>
cidents, suicide is the number one<lb/>
killer of young people.<lb/>
The news is worse for affluent<lb/>
teens. One cluster of 10 suburbs on<lb/>
Chicago's North Shore now leads<lb/>
Laurie Russell, a sophomore at a<lb/>
high school on Chicago's North<lb/>
Shore said she knows of people at<lb/>
her school who have attempted to<lb/>
commit suicide. "Growing up in<lb/>
the state in teenage suicides with a this kind of environment is tough.<lb/>
250 percent increase since 1970. In a Parents have very high expectations<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057300_0002"/><lb/>
I HI LAST CAROL INI AN<lb/>
NOV I MBl R II, 19S0<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ECU SURF CLUB<lb/>
VVe have a business meeting<lb/>
scheduled for this Thursday at 7<lb/>
p m in room 248 Mendenhall to<lb/>
develop plans for the Nov 22 con<lb/>
test at Wnghtsville Beach<lb/>
Members are urged to attend and<lb/>
all interested persons are<lb/>
welcome<lb/>
AMA<lb/>
There will be a meeting<lb/>
VVednesdaya, November 12 at 5 00<lb/>
p m in Rawl 130 All centest<lb/>
tickets are due November 11 at<lb/>
4 00 pm The tickets are to be<lb/>
turned m at Or Keyt s office<lb/>
EXCEPTIONAL<lb/>
CHILDREN<lb/>
interested m learn,ng more<lb/>
about exceptional ir"ldren and<lb/>
where education s heading for<lb/>
them in the 80 s' if so don't mis<lb/>
out on this great opportunity the<lb/>
Student Council tor Exceptional<lb/>
Children State Convention to be<lb/>
held here on campus at<lb/>
MendiPi  Nov 14 and<lb/>
Saturday ??? jnlights in<lb/>
ciudf? panel of<lb/>
the state,<lb/>
 shopsspeakers ana<lb/>
the Ci c hcnrAll programs<lb/>
revolve around the theme Spt<lb/>
 - of the 80s Registration<lb/>
Mendenhall trom 5 00 to 7 00<lb/>
?.?, night and from 8 30 9 00<lb/>
on Sa'uroa? morn-ng You don't<lb/>
t an SCEC member to at<lb/>
? or even a special ed maior<lb/>
? . ? - ? ??' spec ial<lb/>
Reg rratu ????? s: oo<lb/>
GAY COMMUNITY<lb/>
Fast Carolina Gay Com<lb/>
munity a hold "? weekly<lb/>
met' 'w Tuesday November 11th.<lb/>
' ?, meetings are held<lb/>
al 3 E 10th St at the bottom of<lb/>
College Mill This week there wilib<lb/>
e a guest speaxer Nominations for<lb/>
new i : CGC will also<lb/>
be accept ?? S meeting<lb/>
Nove" ' ?8 ECGC will<lb/>
have a Thanksgiving Dinner<lb/>
q $1 50 to<lb/>
help pay 1 " ? ? ? ? 1 ? ? ;l!an<lb/>
rue ecgc<lb/>
ai i nes a.one who s n<lb/>
itte B ? of Our<lb/>
Ac are a service<lb/>
rga rat It rhe ECU campus<lb/>
u have any questions concern<lb/>
the purpose of our organization<lb/>
please feel tree to ask<lb/>
SAM<lb/>
? ?? The SOv ety tor the Ad<lb/>
vancement o Management will<lb/>
3 DuS!ness meefng Thursday<lb/>
N .mber 13th a 4 00 n Raw 104<lb/>
a- ? 'o attend There are no<lb/>
? dues this semester so iom 1V"A<lb/>
GAMMA SIGMA SIGMA<lb/>
. - ? - jma Serice<lb/>
Soror.t, s sp Wing 1 Cosmetic<lb/>
. NovemtM W it c 00<lb/>
? .s be 1 it Mendenha<lb/>
Room 244 Cosmot<lb/>
?  . - iners<lb/>
A ?'<lb/>
11.25 a in be ised al<lb/>
?? ? joor Procet a g ft ?? ?<lb/>
. . itiot ree ? ? . ? res<lb/>
HUNGER COALITION<lb/>
The C 1 ' s open to anyone<lb/>
tterested n study rtg and acting<lb/>
"e problem o iocai ana world<lb/>
hunger A meeting will be held<lb/>
Nov 13 ai 4 00 p m at the<lb/>
Ni'frian Center. 953 E tOth St<lb/>
LDS<lb/>
The LDS Student Association in<lb/>
vites you to join them for an in<lb/>
stifute class each Thursday night<lb/>
at 6 15 in Brewster B 20! Class<lb/>
content under the instruction of<lb/>
Bro Bill Evenhuis, Seminary In<lb/>
stitute Director for the Kmston ,<lb/>
NC Stake, centers around the doc<lb/>
tnnes and philosophies of The<lb/>
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter<lb/>
day Siants The class will be held<lb/>
at this time for the remainder ot<lb/>
the 1980 81 school year All in<lb/>
ferested persons are welcome to<lb/>
attend<lb/>
BUSINESS<lb/>
CONFERENCE<lb/>
The North Carolina Business<lb/>
Education Association will hold its<lb/>
'sixteenth annual conference<lb/>
November 6 8 at the Bordeaux<lb/>
Motor inn in Fayetfeville Approx<lb/>
imately three hundred business<lb/>
and office education teachers<lb/>
from lunior high school through<lb/>
the university level are expected<lb/>
to attend<lb/>
HEALTH CAREERS<lb/>
More than 60 health and human<lb/>
service agencies will visit East<lb/>
Carolina University Nov 14 to in<lb/>
terview upper level ECU students<lb/>
who are preparing for career m<lb/>
health related fields<lb/>
The represented agencies in<lb/>
elude hospitals rehabilitation<lb/>
centers state and local human<lb/>
resource agencies centers for the<lb/>
handicapped and the U S armed<lb/>
forces<lb/>
Interviewing institutions are<lb/>
located throughout the Carolines<lb/>
as wen as Virginia Maryland,<lb/>
Tennessee, Georgia and the<lb/>
District of Columbia<lb/>
informal interviews will be held<lb/>
in the ECU Nursing Building bet<lb/>
ween 9 45 a m and 1 p m<lb/>
REAL ESTATE<lb/>
A real estate investment<lb/>
seminar designed tor real estate<lb/>
professionals, lending officers and<lb/>
potential investors. will be offered<lb/>
b? East Carolina University<lb/>
Wednesday Nov 19<lb/>
The program will be directed by<lb/>
James R Mawkins A former<lb/>
mayor of Durham, Mawkms has<lb/>
more than 21 years of professional<lb/>
experience in commercial and in<lb/>
come properties<lb/>
Co sponsors ot the seminar are<lb/>
the ECU Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education and the Greenville Pitl<lb/>
County Board ot Realtors Ses<lb/>
sions will be held at the Ramada<lb/>
inn<lb/>
Topics to be discussed include<lb/>
 a'acteris'cs ot real estate in<lb/>
vestments forms o real estate<lb/>
ownership cash flow determma<lb/>
tion and analysis, measuring m<lb/>
vestment returns and sndica<lb/>
tions<lb/>
Further information about the<lb/>
seminar is available from Reai<lb/>
Estate investment Seminar<lb/>
Div son ot Continuing Educaiton.<lb/>
E Hi Carolina University Green<lb/>
? N C 28734<lb/>
ARCHITECT<lb/>
Ralegh architect Joseph<lb/>
Flowers A I A , will speak at East<lb/>
Carolina University Nov 19 in a<lb/>
public program on the restoration<lb/>
of the Andrew Johnson birthplace<lb/>
in Raleigh<lb/>
Tic lecture scheduled for 1 p m<lb/>
in Room 1327 of the Leo Jenkins<lb/>
F ,ne Arts Center, is open to all m<lb/>
terested persons Sponsor ot the<lb/>
program is the ECU chapter ot the<lb/>
National Society ot interior<lb/>
Designers<lb/>
ARTIFACTS<lb/>
A collection of 100 items from<lb/>
pre Columbian America and<lb/>
works by primarily local, contem<lb/>
porary artists are on display at the<lb/>
Gray Gallery of East Carolina<lb/>
University's Museum of Art<lb/>
The pre Columbian exhibition<lb/>
includes works from the Mayan<lb/>
mean and other old American In<lb/>
dian cultures and ranges from<lb/>
ceramic figures and pottery to<lb/>
pieces of woven textiles and stone<lb/>
carvings Both utilitarian articles<lb/>
and religious items are on display,<lb/>
most dating from the period<lb/>
before Columbus discovered the<lb/>
New World<lb/>
Also on view are items m<lb/>
various media from the traveling<lb/>
exhibition of works by ECU School<lb/>
of Art graduate stur its and a<lb/>
print retrospective Jf graphic<lb/>
art selected from folios from ECU<lb/>
art seniors during the years<lb/>
1969 1976<lb/>
The ECU students works will be<lb/>
on display through Nov 11 The<lb/>
pre Columbian art assembled<lb/>
from collections of Duke Universi<lb/>
ty the ECU anthropology pro<lb/>
gram and various private owners,<lb/>
will be shown through fall<lb/>
semester ???<lb/>
Gray Gallery, located in the Leo<lb/>
Jenkins Fine Arts Center on the<lb/>
mam campus, is open each week<lb/>
day from 10 a m until 5pm and<lb/>
on Sunday afternoons from 1 to 4<lb/>
p m<lb/>
HUNGER COALITION<lb/>
The Greenville Hunger Coalition<lb/>
will meet on Thursday. Nov 13 at<lb/>
4 00 p m at the Newman Center<lb/>
953 E Tenth St The Coalition is<lb/>
open to anyone interested m study<lb/>
mg and acting on the problem of<lb/>
Iocai and world hunger We are<lb/>
currently planning the Fast For A<lb/>
Wona Harvest Nov 20th<lb/>
FAST<lb/>
Each yeat the Greenville<lb/>
Hunger Coalition and the interne<lb/>
tional agency, Oxfam America,<lb/>
sponsor a tast on the Thursday<lb/>
before Thanksgiving The money<lb/>
you save by not eating is donated<lb/>
for self help projects to aid hungr,<lb/>
people become self suffic en'<lb/>
Plan to fast' Stop by the table out<lb/>
Side the Book Store on Nov 18th or<lb/>
19th to sign up<lb/>
AUTOMATION<lb/>
David Fraade of G<lb/>
internationally knowr<lb/>
will speak at Eas'<lb/>
University Nov 11 on the npart<lb/>
ot Automation in Today ?  ' <lb/>
Society " Fraadr<lb/>
Automation Engniu<lb/>
Burroughs WeMcomi- c H<lb/>
lecture is sponsored by Hillel a<lb/>
Jewish youth ana stud<lb/>
organization S .<lb/>
ticipating m the program tor<lb/>
ECU'S Jewish and international<lb/>
Festival w th a sef es o' I ms lee<lb/>
tures a lewish dance workshop<lb/>
anc a lo ind bage so ? ?? .<lb/>
2 6 I esl ? ? activities ? I ? ?'<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center ana<lb/>
the Ledonia S Wright Cuitura'<lb/>
Center on campus Fraade's lee<lb/>
ture is scheduled at 7 p m . Nov<lb/>
11, m Room 244. Mendenhall Stu<lb/>
dent Center<lb/>
SPORTCLUBCOUNCIL<lb/>
The November meeting ot the<lb/>
Sport Club Council will be held on<lb/>
Wednesday. November 12 at 3 30<lb/>
p m in 104 Memorial Gym All<lb/>
club presidents and advisors<lb/>
should attena Representatives of<lb/>
student groups wishing to become<lb/>
recognized sport clubs should also<lb/>
be in attendance at this meeting<lb/>
FOOSEBALL<lb/>
Register now to participate in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center's<lb/>
ACU i All Campus Table Soccer<lb/>
Tournament The double elirmna<lb/>
tion tournament will be held<lb/>
Wednesday. November 19 at 6 00<lb/>
p m m the MSC recreation area<lb/>
Open to ECU students, this tour<lb/>
nament will detenne the one (1)<lb/>
open doubles team who will repre<lb/>
sent ECU at the Assocation ot Coi<lb/>
ege Unions international Region<lb/>
V tournament at East Tennessee<lb/>
State University m Februrary An<lb/>
entering team may consist of two<lb/>
(2) men, two (2? women or oil-<lb/>
man and one (1) woman The<lb/>
participants who W'll be going to<lb/>
Tennessee will have all trip e?<lb/>
penses paid by Mendenhall Stu<lb/>
dent Center<lb/>
Registration forms and more in<lb/>
formation are available at the<lb/>
MSC Billiards Center Teams<lb/>
must register by Mono<lb/>
November !7 in order to par<lb/>
in 'pate<lb/>
EPISCOPAL WORSHIP<lb/>
An episcopal sevice ot Holy<lb/>
Communion will be celebrated<lb/>
Tuesday evening Nov llth in the<lb/>
chapel of the M-tbodist Student<lb/>
Center (5th Street across trom<lb/>
Garrett Dorm I The service will<lb/>
be at 5 30 p m with the Episcopal<lb/>
Chapiam the Rev B'H Hadden<lb/>
celebrating<lb/>
PROTECTIVE<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
Pa Capps win speak on Protec<lb/>
? .1- Services offered in Greenviie<lb/>
Monday night, Nov 17. at 7 p m at<lb/>
244 VSC Refreshments w n be<lb/>
served Everyone is 'nvited to<lb/>
come<lb/>
S.U. ARTIST<lb/>
Applications are now being<lb/>
taken for position of Student union<lb/>
Arl st for Spr.ng Semester Ap<lb/>
pneat'on forms may be picked up<lb/>
n the Student union Office, room<lb/>
234. Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Deadi.ne November 14 1980<lb/>
MUSIC<lb/>
? East Carolina University<lb/>
chapte' of Sigma Alpha iota a<lb/>
professional music fraternity, a<lb/>
be sponsoring a Community Ac<lb/>
Music Proiect The event a<lb/>
be held Thursday. November 13<lb/>
1980. from 6 30 to 9 00 p.m at the<lb/>
Carolina East MaU The purpose<lb/>
o the proiect is to make the public<lb/>
aware of the different organiza<lb/>
tions within the ECU School of<lb/>
Music and how they are beneficial<lb/>
to the community Among the<lb/>
organizations participating are<lb/>
The Music Therapy Club, the ECU<lb/>
chapters of the Music Educators<lb/>
National Conference iMENC<lb/>
National Assooat.on of Jazz<lb/>
Educators NAjEi. Phi Mu<lb/>
Alpha. S.gma Alpha iota, and the<lb/>
American Choral Directors<lb/>
Association (ACDA)<lb/>
GRE<lb/>
The Graduate Record Examma<lb/>
t,on viil be offered at East<lb/>
Carolina University on Saturday<lb/>
December 13. 1980 Application<lb/>
blanks are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to Educational Testing<lb/>
Service. Box 966 R Princeton NJ<lb/>
08540 Applications must oe<lb/>
postmarked no later than<lb/>
November1980 Applications<lb/>
may be obtained from the ECU<lb/>
Testing Center Room 105 Speght<lb/>
Building<lb/>
FILM<lb/>
The New England of Robert<lb/>
Frost a travel adventure film<lb/>
narrated by Dewitt Jones, will be<lb/>
shown at East Carolina universi<lb/>
?? s Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Nov 13 at 8 p m<lb/>
The film, first of ECU'S 1980 81<lb/>
Travel Adventure Film Series<lb/>
will be screened m Mendrix<lb/>
Theatre Tickets are available at<lb/>
the Central Ticket Office at J2 50<lb/>
each<lb/>
SIGN LANGUAGE<lb/>
The Sign Language Club will<lb/>
have its regular b' monthly<lb/>
meeting on Sunday November 16,<lb/>
1980 at 6 p m in the multi purpose<lb/>
room of MSC There will be a<lb/>
covered dish supper before the<lb/>
meeting and a Captioned film<lb/>
afterward This week s film is<lb/>
"The Poseidon Adventure' All<lb/>
members are reminded to attena<lb/>
and anyone interested in ioining<lb/>
may do so you need not know<lb/>
sign language<lb/>
LSAT<lb/>
The Law School Admission Test<lb/>
wilt be offered at East Carolina<lb/>
University on Saturday.<lb/>
December 6, 1980 Application<lb/>
olanks are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to Educational Testing<lb/>
Service Box 966 R, Princeton NJ<lb/>
08540 Registration deadline is<lb/>
November 10, 1980 Applications<lb/>
may be obtained from the ECU<lb/>
Testing Center Speight Building<lb/>
Room 105<lb/>
SIGMA TAU DELTA<lb/>
SIGMA TAU DELTA National<lb/>
English Honor Society, will meet<lb/>
Tuesday. November 11 1980, at<lb/>
7 30 p m in Mendenhall 221<lb/>
Following a short business<lb/>
meeting Dr Karen Baldwin will<lb/>
present a sound'Siide program<lb/>
about American Folklore An in<lb/>
formal coffee hour will follow<lb/>
Members, prospctive members,<lb/>
and interested persons are invited<lb/>
BIRTHDAY<lb/>
Announcing the birthday of<lb/>
Sharon Marie Albert On this<lb/>
special day. i give you nothing<lb/>
because all that is mine belongs to<lb/>
you l love you<lb/>
Forrest<lb/>
PHI BETA LAMBDA<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda will meet on<lb/>
Tuesday, November 18th at 4 pm<lb/>
in Rawl 103 Tickets for the<lb/>
December social will be<lb/>
distributed to members Please<lb/>
plan to attend this meeting, so the<lb/>
sale of the tickets can begin on<lb/>
Tuesday November 18th<lb/>
COFFEEHOUSE<lb/>
The Student union Coffeehouse<lb/>
Committee urgently needs new<lb/>
members for spring semester and<lb/>
next year<lb/>
The committee will lose 34 of its<lb/>
members to graduation in<lb/>
December, and the remaining 1 4<lb/>
will graduate in Ma<lb/>
It you enioy the Coffeehouse and<lb/>
have about four hours a week you<lb/>
can spare, please apply m the Stu<lb/>
dent union office, rm 234, MSC<lb/>
We especially encourage<lb/>
underclassmen to apply, although<lb/>
we welcome all students<lb/>
MINORITY<lb/>
LAW DAY<lb/>
The University of North<lb/>
Carolina School of Law is sponsor<lb/>
ing a Carolina Minority Law Day<lb/>
on Friday. November 21. 1980 in<lb/>
Chapel Hill All minorites con<lb/>
templatmg graduate law studies<lb/>
are encouraged to attend Applica<lb/>
tion forms are available in the<lb/>
Career Planning and Placement<lb/>
Center m the Bloxton House<lb/>
ART SHOW<lb/>
Art work m various med.a by<lb/>
Kathy Sholar senior student in the<lb/>
East Carolina University School of<lb/>
Art, wil be on display Nov 7 13 in<lb/>
joyner Library A candidate for<lb/>
the Bachelor of Arts deorpp In<lb/>
communication arts, Ms Shoiar s<lb/>
displaying a number of gra<lb/>
designs I logo, poster and bro I<lb/>
designs drawings ana iliustra<lb/>
tions, intaglio prints and<lb/>
photographs She is a member of<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi honor society,<lb/>
the Visual Arts Forum and Design<lb/>
Associates During her studies<lb/>
here, she has done several design<lb/>
proiects for local businesses and<lb/>
campus organizations<lb/>
AUDITIONS<lb/>
Auditions tor "Die Fleder<lb/>
maus a light opera by Johann<lb/>
Strauss Jr . will be held Nov 10<lb/>
and 11 7 10 p m m the Recita<lb/>
Hall of the Fletcher Music Center<lb/>
at East Carolina university The<lb/>
ECU Opera Theatre production<lb/>
auditions are open to students<lb/>
ECU faculty members and Singers<lb/>
from the local area Roles to be<lb/>
tilled include two sopranos one<lb/>
mezzo soprano (or alto) three<lb/>
tenors, two basses, as weM as<lb/>
chorus parts and speaking parts<lb/>
The opera will be presented Feb<lb/>
26 28, 1981 While rehersals will<lb/>
begin after Thanksgiving, mten<lb/>
sive rehearsals will not be under<lb/>
way until after Jan 1 Further m<lb/>
formation about the auditions and<lb/>
the production is available from<lb/>
Dr Clyde Hiss at the ECU School<lb/>
of Music, telephone 757 6331<lb/>
ROAD RACE<lb/>
Tr.e Coastai Care na Track<lb/>
Clue an Pitt Plaz ? ?<lb/>
Assoc of GreenviMe NC are spon<lb/>
sonng a 7 Mile Road Race ana a<lb/>
?' ? Ron Run to be held on<lb/>
. Novembei<lb/>
?, m. T he races w fart a<lb/>
? P M Piaza<lb/>
rchanaise awaras a<lb/>
g.ven to the overall male ana<lb/>
lie winners as well as t(  ??<lb/>
? st place mail and te' ?<lb/>
shers in each ag?' group<lb/>
Vodals will be presentea to the<lb/>
2na and 3rd place t n stw<lb/>
and female in ea ' ? ' 'up<lb/>
Pan panl ?  ' -<lb/>
? oups<lb/>
???" nated by the Pitt<lb/>
Plaza Merchant '? a tx<lb/>
 ?. i draw i to I held<lb/>
. ? . ? <lb/>
. ??<lb/>
wards w ? ? -<lb/>
cart pan's<lb/>
? ry tee for ftnl s S4 00<lb/>
ECU studet ' ? ? ' ? ?<lb/>
? H in ?" raged to par<lb/>
pate E n'r v blanks are<lb/>
available fro? Pitl Plan<lb/>
chants or at the  R<lb/>
Room 204 Memorial G '<lb/>
" . ? A ?<lb/>
VACCINE<lb/>
The Influenza vaccine is<lb/>
available for students at the Stu<lb/>
dent Health Center Students bet<lb/>
ween ages 13 27 should get the vac<lb/>
cine m two doses given one month<lb/>
apart Students over 28 years old<lb/>
need only one dose The cost ol the<lb/>
vaccine is $1 50 per dose It is par<lb/>
ticularly important tor students<lb/>
wth chronic respiratory disorders<lb/>
such as asthma and emphysema<lb/>
or any other chronic illnesses to<lb/>
receive the vaccine (both doses if<lb/>
under 28 years old) before<lb/>
Christmas<lb/>
ACCOUNTING TUTORS<lb/>
The Accounting Society will pro<lb/>
vide tutoring services every<lb/>
Wednesday afternoon from 4 to 5<lb/>
p m. in Rawl 339 for Acct 2401 and<lb/>
2521 students<lb/>
cso<lb/>
The Center tor Student Oppor<lb/>
tunit.es (CSO) in the School of<lb/>
Medicine has immediate openings<lb/>
for qualified tutors with expense<lb/>
m math, physics ana chemistry<lb/>
You must have an academic<lb/>
. erformance m the<lb/>
subiect amj Wage based on<lb/>
academo classification, eg<lb/>
undergraduate graduate Contact<lb/>
Dr Frye. 217 Whichard Annex or<lb/>
Call 757 6122 or 6075 tor ar inter<lb/>
view<lb/>
RAFFLE<lb/>
Wn 1500 00 in records tapes of<lb/>
your choice from the Record Bar<lb/>
in Easter Seals Holiday $500<lb/>
Record Rattle Tickets each<lb/>
SI 00 Your group can buy and or<lb/>
sell t  ? ilSO 00 m<lb/>
records) or register by mail to<lb/>
day Can Easter Seals. 114 E<lb/>
? ? - ? Street ?58 3230<lb/>
ART CONTEST<lb/>
Worla Research inc . the San<lb/>
Diego California based non<lb/>
profit non part.san educational<lb/>
ana research group has announc<lb/>
? mat ' s sponsor ny a nation<lb/>
wide art competition among high<lb/>
sc hool and college studc '<lb/>
a new bole ogo<lb/>
 or ding to Barbara<lb/>
fevi promotion director tor<lb/>
Resea n All entries must<lb/>
be re e by midnight,<lb/>
Decembei N 1980 to t. ? .<lb/>
the 1 ? ? .<lb/>
? ?, ?? ? npetil m is open to all<lb/>
high scl ? '<lb/>
Students interested n submitting<lb/>
a log - should write ART<lb/>
CONTEST World Researc<lb/>
. lornia 92121<lb/>
tor entrant requirements and con<lb/>
tes' ' '<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
Ihe Easl aroliniun<lb/>
welcomes all campus<lb/>
organizations to submit items<lb/>
to the Vnnouni emenK sec-<lb/>
tion. Due lo oar span I<lb/>
tions, however, all<lb/>
submissions should be no<lb/>
longer than 5(1 words. Hand-<lb/>
written submissions will also<lb/>
no longer be accepted. Items<lb/>
must be submitted no later<lb/>
than 1 p.m. on Mondays or<lb/>
W ednesdas.<lb/>
PHIALHPATHETA<lb/>
Phi Alpha Theta, the History<lb/>
Honorary Society is having a<lb/>
meeting on Tuesday. November 11<lb/>
at 7 30 p m in the Richard C Todd<lb/>
Room in Owing Brewster items<lb/>
of discussion have not been f main<lb/>
ed so all members are encouraged 10<lb/>
attend<lb/>
SURFANDSAND<lb/>
The Sociology'Anthropology<lb/>
Club invites everyone from<lb/>
biologist to beach bum to a presen<lb/>
tation by Dr John Maiola and<lb/>
John Fisch on Marine Coastal<lb/>
Studies The lecture will be held<lb/>
Wednesday. November 12 at 7 00<lb/>
p m at Brewster D 302<lb/>
Refreshments will be served<lb/>
following the program For more<lb/>
info, call Anna (752 0826) or Britta<lb/>
(7S8 8867)<lb/>
AKA<lb/>
There has been a slight change<lb/>
in the dates previously listed for<lb/>
the Student of the Year Contest<lb/>
sponsored by Alpha Kappa Alpha<lb/>
The deadline has been moved to<lb/>
Nov 17 and the actual date of the<lb/>
contest to Nov 23 It will still be<lb/>
held in the Mendenhall<lb/>
Auditorium beginning at 7 00<lb/>
Would any person interest in par<lb/>
ticipating please call 752 9192 or<lb/>
contact any Alpha Kappa Alpha<lb/>
soror for details.<lb/>
CHANGE<lb/>
The Department of Geography<lb/>
at East Carolina University has<lb/>
been renamed the Department of<lb/>
Geography and Planning The<lb/>
change is effective immediately.<lb/>
according to Chancellor Thomas<lb/>
B Brewer The department offers<lb/>
both geography and urban and<lb/>
regional planning degrees at the<lb/>
bachelor's and master's levels<lb/>
MUSIC RECITAL<lb/>
Clarinetist Barbara Ellen<lb/>
Arneth ot Raleigh senior student<lb/>
in the East Carolina University<lb/>
School ot Music, will perform in<lb/>
recital Friday. Nov 14, at 7 30<lb/>
pm in the AJ Fletcher Music<lb/>
Center Recital Hall Her program<lb/>
will include Vaughan Williams'<lb/>
"Six Studies in English Folk<lb/>
song, ' the Brahms "Sonate Es<lb/>
Dur Opus 120, No 2 and CM<lb/>
Maria von Weber's Concertino<lb/>
Opus 26 She will be accompanied<lb/>
by pianists Elizabeth Braxton ana<lb/>
Va! Parks and assisted by flutists<lb/>
Dena Biomberg and Michael<lb/>
Elliot and guitarist Mark Stone<lb/>
CAREER SERVICES<lb/>
Mark Your Calendars Take A<lb/>
Giant step Workshop, November<lb/>
11 and 12, 3 5 p m 221 Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center A seminar which<lb/>
will help you "take a giant step m<lb/>
to your future Learn about<lb/>
career services available to you as<lb/>
a freshman, sophomore, tunior or<lb/>
senior Don't miss it!<lb/>
$4.81<lb/>
!$$S$$$$$$$$$$$$$$S$5$$$!<lb/>
KODACOLOR<lb/>
Developed and Printed<lb/>
EXPOSURE (C CQ<lb/>
ROLL ONLYP-?-JvJ<lb/>
No Foiegn<lb/>
Film<lb/>
;$$$$$$$$$$<lb/>
SUMMER CAMP<lb/>
Summer Camp Employment<lb/>
Day is November 18. 103pm in<lb/>
the Mendenhall multi purpose<lb/>
room Students who wish summer<lb/>
employment with camps should<lb/>
come be the Cooperative Educa<lb/>
tion office in 313 Rawl Building to<lb/>
arrange interviews with<lb/>
recruiters<lb/>
COMMITTEES<lb/>
The Office of the Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Student Life is still<lb/>
accepting applications for the 63<lb/>
committee openings The various<lb/>
committees fall under the<lb/>
headings, Administrative Comit<lb/>
tees. Faculty Senate Academic<lb/>
Committees, Academic Support.<lb/>
Institutional Support Please come<lb/>
by room 204 Whichard and fill out<lb/>
an application<lb/>
36<lb/>
EXPOSU<lb/>
ROLL ONLY<lb/>
Wld.?M4<lb/>
FILM DEVELOPING<lb/>
$1.92<lb/>
20 EXPOSURE<lb/>
KODACHROME<lb/>
AND EKTACHROME<lb/>
PROCESSING ONLY<lb/>
36 EXPOSURE Q K<lb/>
KODACHROME KV?AJ<lb/>
AND EKTACHROME<lb/>
PROCESSING ONLY<lb/>
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$!<lb/>
LOW, LOW PRICES ON<lb/>
Movie<lb/>
PROCESSING<lb/>
KODACHROME<lb/>
AND EKTACHROME<lb/>
PROCESSING ONLY<lb/>
$2.11<lb/>
SUPER ? AND STANOAftS MOVIES<lb/>
LIMITED OFFER<lb/>
OFFER EXPIRES<lb/>
In<lb/>
I<lb/>
AOVEBTISCD<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
 ach of th??? ?dv.rtlMd lt?tn? it .?quired to b? r.adlly available tor ??'??' ?'<lb/>
balow the advertiee'i price m each ASP Store except at apecifically noted<lb/>
in thlt ad <lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT. NOV. 15 AT ASP 'MOREEN VI LLE RS<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLfcbALfcHb<lb/>
iiiliiiiiHiiii<lb/>
ANN PAGE 2 gallon 11 70 !<lb/>
LOWFATMILK UG 1<lb/>
Beautiful, Fine Porcelain<lb/>
THIS WEEK S FEATURE ITEM<lb/>
CUP<lb/>
EACH<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
WITH EACH<lb/>
$5 PURCHASE<lb/>
r!r<lb/>
50 COUPON<lb/>
SAVE 50c WHEN YOU PURCHASE<lb/>
iikH him<lb/>
SALT AND PEPPER<lb/>
SHAKER SET<lb/>
667<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT NOV 15 AT ALL A&amp;P S IN N ??? AND<lb/>
S C EXCEPT AlKfN AND 8FAUEOBT S C<lb/>
wn ?uwo msmrra<lb/>
SI85,282<lb/>
IN CASH PRIZES<lb/>
CASH WINNERS<lb/>
$1,000.00 WINNER<lb/>
S1000 00 WINNER<lb/>
$100 00 WINNER<lb/>
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N 0<lb/>
NV<lb/>
H R<lb/>
?<lb/>
ALLEN<lb/>
.UMili N N C<lb/>
BARBARA CHAVI <lb/>
ROXBORO N C<lb/>
It's easy to play<lb/>
Pick up FREE Old Faahloned Bingo concealed<lb/>
ticket on every vlalt to ASP<lb/>
Match ttralght row o? 5 numbert vertically,<lb/>
horizontally or diagonally on any one of the 4<lb/>
garnet on matter card.<lb/>
? No purchate neceatary to participate<lb/>
See game card for complete rulet.<lb/>
48 WAYS TO WIN!<lb/>
sliced free<lb/>
into roast<lb/>
AND Sit A"<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF?WHOLE<lb/>
BONELESS BOTTOM&amp;<lb/>
EYE ROUND<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY CORN FRESH<lb/>
LOIN CHOPS<lb/>
$1.89lb.<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
CUT RIB<lb/>
PORK<lb/>
CHOPS<lb/>
US DA. INSPECTED<lb/>
FRESH FRYER<lb/>
BOX-0<lb/>
CHICKEN<lb/>
LIMIT<lb/>
2 LB.<lb/>
PKGS.<lb/>
TALMADGE FARM<lb/>
FRANKS BOLOGNA<lb/>
49?<lb/>
12 OZ.<lb/>
PKG.<lb/>
79?<lb/>
30" COUPON<lb/>
ANN PAGE<lb/>
MAYONNAISE 7QC<lb/>
QUART JAR M aaV "6&amp;4<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH THIS COUPON ? . " " <lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT. NOV 15 AT A&amp;P IN GREENVILLE<lb/>
4IC COUPON<lb/>
DONALD DUCK<lb/>
ORANGE JUICE<lb/>
m<lb/>
Vi GAL. CARTON<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH THIS COUPON <lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT NOV 15 AT A4P IN GREENVILLE<lb/>
88c<lb/>
w Rfi<lb/>
665<lb/>
AV<lb/>
40' COUPON<lb/>
CONTAINS RICH BRAZILIAN COFFEES<lb/>
EIGHT O CLOCK<lb/>
INSTANT COFFEE<lb/>
10-<lb/>
oz.<lb/>
JAR<lb/>
$3<lb/>
39<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH THIS COUPON<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT. NOV 15 AT A&amp;P IN GREENVILLE<lb/>
666<lb/>
I ORANGES<lb/>
l ggC?;Q3j? $oo<lb/>
FLORIDA SWEET &amp; JUICY 0fl red or white NORTH CAROLINA GROWN?TART ROME<lb/>
? WHITE POTATOES I APPL PS<lb/>
? YELLOW ONIONS aBT BT ??<lb/>
YOUR CHOICE! <lb/>
LESS THAN <lb/>
20- LB. <lb/>
<lb/>
I  ? ? :Vt I A<lb/>
l<lb/>
<pb facs="00057300_0003"/><lb/>
I Ml i M C AROl INI AN<lb/>
NO I MM k 1 I.<lb/>
y<lb/>
n<lb/>
tCH<lb/>
It ASE<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
664 J<lb/>
-J<lb/>
lei<lb/>
665 <lb/>
I?"1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
666 <lb/>
U-4<lb/>
)ME<lb/>
Individual Histories Preserved In Manuscript Collection<lb/>
By TKKKV C.RAY<lb/>
Staff riler<lb/>
Here's an old wai<lb/>
story from the memoirs<lb/>
of William von Ebcrs-<lb/>
tein into the historj<lb/>
book:<lb/>
During the Civil<lb/>
H ar, when Union<lb/>
forces occupied the<lb/>
coastal areas of North<lb/>
Carolina, the Con-<lb/>
federate Army detach<lb/>
ment in Greenville<lb/>
helped guard against<lb/>
any i 'nion raids deeper<lb/>
into the state<lb/>
c)nc morning, Con-<lb/>
federate scouts<lb/>
? t ported back to<lb/>
Greenville that a I 'nion<lb/>
army was advancing on<lb/>
the a i rough the<lb/>
da) 's ea fog. 1 he<lb/>
had seen tl<lb/>
adows and hec<lb/>
their march as the) ap-<lb/>
proached across<lb/>
Brow ns 'arm.<lb/>
('onfusi ke out<lb/>
the Confi derate<lb/>
ranks as offia rs sent<lb/>
ton on;<lb/>
mands. I mall).<lb/>
di isii n was made to<lb/>
real from (he i<lb/>
than face<lb/>
unprepared. 1<lb/>
con was sent o c<lb/>
to Brown's farm to<lb/>
 Blued tats at<lb/>
<lb/>
lerates retreated<lb/>
? ard Falkla<lb/>
But whi<lb/>
.  Bi farm as<lb/>
? i d, the<lb/>
 ? e company<lb/>
wai greeted b) an unex-<lb/>
i hi Instead oj<lb/>
umns<lb/>
. Sort hern<lb/>
i .<lb/>
pt field<lb/>
Von Eberstein was a<lb/>
sea-roving ship captain<lb/>
who settled in<lb/>
Washington, NC and<lb/>
i oined<lb/>
federates<lb/>
the Con<lb/>
when war<lb/>
dividuals.<lb/>
At least halt oi the<lb/>
manuscripts are family,<lb/>
personal, military or<lb/>
administrative papers<lb/>
that pertain to North<lb/>
gSS&amp;se<lb/>
tqtH J te<lb/>
hfoebent a fcm.tr<lb/>
ledae f t hm<lb/>
m<lb/>
 l(tNH: tf't (.rr'i <lb/>
rait fLarotina Lmii ersitu<lb/>
Cjreeni'ilCty r forth C urotina<lb/>
<lb/>
o.<lb/>
V j?r K<lb/>
kc His<lb/>
in the<lb/>
1870s, are preserved in<lb/>
Joyi Library's<lb/>
Manuscript c ollection<lb/>
as are the public and<lb/>
. ate papers of hun-<lb/>
dreds of interesting in-<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
c arohna, aIt houghthe<lb/>
collectionCXCclsin<lb/>
other areas, suchas<lb/>
documents a bo u t<lb/>
China.<lb/>
DonaldR. 1 ennon,<lb/>
d i r e c t o ioft h e<lb/>
manuscriptcollection.<lb/>
spends a lot of his time<lb/>
soliciting contributions<lb/>
to the collection.<lb/>
"There is a tremen-<lb/>
dous amount of com-<lb/>
petition, especially con-<lb/>
sidering that we don't<lb/>
have the prestige of the<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill or<lb/>
the Duke University<lb/>
collections I ennon<lb/>
said. "Most people<lb/>
wouldn't think of call-<lb/>
ing ECU. I spend a<lb/>
great deal of my time<lb/>
contacting people to see<lb/>
if they want their<lb/>
papers preserved here.<lb/>
As a result, we have to<lb/>
do a lot more outreach<lb/>
work<lb/>
I ennon, who also<lb/>
teaches history at ECU,<lb/>
began working with the<lb/>
collection in 1967 when<lb/>
it held only 25 collec-<lb/>
tions. Today, the<lb/>
records, letters, diaries<lb/>
and other papers of<lb/>
about 5(X) individuals<lb/>
have been acquired and<lb/>
classified.<lb/>
Getting manuscripts<lb/>
sometimes involves a<lb/>
little detective work.<lb/>
Once, a man called to<lb/>
ask about some papers<lb/>
he had seen, but would<lb/>
not say where the<lb/>
papers were located.<lb/>
"By the way he talk-<lb/>
ed, it seemed that he<lb/>
was on to something<lb/>
rathei important<lb/>
1 ennon recounted. "1<lb/>
did a little bit of sear-<lb/>
ching, and found the<lb/>
collection scattered on<lb/>
the top floor ol a<lb/>
tobacco warehouse<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
As it turned out, the<lb/>
papers belonged to a<lb/>
Charles Dyer, a naval<lb/>
attache in Madrid at<lb/>
the time that the<lb/>
Spanish-American Wai<lb/>
broke out. " J hings<lb/>
turn up in the most<lb/>
unlikely places I en-<lb/>
non said.<lb/>
The collections are<lb/>
concentrated in tour<lb/>
categories.<lb/>
Besides the large<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
category, the collec-<lb/>
tions include military<lb/>
records oi all kinds,<lb/>
missionary records and<lb/>
diaries, and documents<lb/>
dealing with tobacco.<lb/>
Although the tobac-<lb/>
co papers are often<lb/>
related to North<lb/>
Carolina, many of<lb/>
them are from tobac-<lb/>
conists who report oti<lb/>
then experiences while<lb/>
doing business in China<lb/>
and the Middle last.<lb/>
I he oldest single<lb/>
document in the<lb/>
manuscript collection is<lb/>
a land record dating to<lb/>
1715 concerning the<lb/>
sale of colonial Gov.<lb/>
I homas Carey's pro-<lb/>
perty after the rebellion<lb/>
now named alter him.<lb/>
The collection most<lb/>
requested is the<lb/>
7,000-piece collection<lb/>
from North Carolina's<lb/>
first p o s t -<lb/>
Revolutionary War<lb/>
governor, Filias Carr.<lb/>
According to Len-<lb/>
non, students are the<lb/>
largest users oi the<lb/>
manuscript facility,<lb/>
although authors and<lb/>
researchers from other<lb/>
states and nations have<lb/>
done work there.<lb/>
Jewel Tradsr<lb/>
Case &amp; Pouc)i<lb/>
30 day a <lb/>
ef CMKJ Us<lb/>
Many Pressures Lead To<lb/>
Suicides Among Teenagers<lb/>
Continued from pajt' 1<lb/>
1 aui ie Russell, a<lb/>
sophomore at a hi<lb/>
school on Chicaj<lb/>
North Shore said<lb/>
knows of people at her<lb/>
school who have at<lb/>
tempted to commit<lb/>
suicide. "Growing up<lb/>
in this kind ol envin<lb/>
ment is tough. Parents<lb/>
have very high expec<lb/>
tions and when you fall<lb/>
short it's hard to deal<lb/>
with. The all want<lb/>
their kids to be on the<lb/>
honor roll and the)<lb/>
don't realize that<lb/>
everyone just can't<lb/>
make those grades.<lb/>
I hose who don't, feel<lb/>
like failures<lb/>
"We have everything<lb/>
we want materially<lb/>
Russell said, "but that<lb/>
doesn't make up foi<lb/>
emotional needs that go<lb/>
unfulfilled. A lot oi my<lb/>
friends don't feel loved<lb/>
or needed<lb/>
 :hough there is no<lb/>
such thing as the<lb/>
"typical suicide vic-<lb/>
tim" experts generally<lb/>
agree that certain<lb/>
characteristics are<lb/>
signals that someone<lb/>
could be suicidal. "Any<lb/>
change in attitude is<lb/>
serious Giffin said.<lb/>
"It suddenly an outgo-<lb/>
ing person withdraws<lb/>
or a happy person<lb/>
becomes despondent,<lb/>
then they should be<lb/>
considered suicidal.<lb/>
I hese radical changes<lb/>
in personality are the<lb/>
key indicator.<lb/>
"The most common<lb/>
characeristic is depres-<lb/>
sion Vale Child<lb/>
Studies Center<lb/>
psychiatrist John<lb/>
Schowaltei said. "II<lb/>
the person seems very<lb/>
sad, wonders it life is<lb/>
worth living, feels that<lb/>
thev are a burden to<lb/>
ety or that the<lb/>
world would be better<lb/>
ofl without them, he oi<lb/>
she should be watched<lb/>
?ely. These kinds of<lb/>
things are very com-<lb/>
mon among suicide vic-<lb/>
tims<lb/>
,ide experts have<lb/>
ny theories on why<lb/>
the rate ot suicide is ris-<lb/>
ing among young, up-<lb/>
per middle class young<lb/>
people. "People on the<lb/>
lower end of the social<lb/>
lie expect less than<lb/>
these people do<lb/>
Chicago psychiatrist<lb/>
Harold Yisotskv said.<lb/>
"Whatever ar er the<lb/>
poo: experience ? thev<lb/>
act it out in antisocial<lb/>
wavs ? vandalism.<lb/>
homicide, riots. With<lb/>
well-to-do kids, when<lb/>
the rattle goes in the<lb/>
mouth the foot goes on<lb/>
the social ladder. The<lb/>
competition ethic takes<lb/>
over, making the stu-<lb/>
dent feel even more<lb/>
alone. He's more likely<lb/>
to take it out on<lb/>
himself<lb/>
"My friends have to<lb/>
deal with much more<lb/>
today than they did 20<lb/>
years ago Steve<lb/>
I atham, a senior at a<lb/>
high school in Dallas<lb/>
County said.1 he<lb/>
suicide rate among<lb/>
teens in Dallas C ounty<lb/>
is 50 percent higher<lb/>
than the national<lb/>
average.) "There are<lb/>
other reasons tor teen<lb/>
suicide then the typical<lb/>
ones who can't cope<lb/>
with their first B in col-<lb/>
lege. Students are<lb/>
aware of the state oi<lb/>
the country and the<lb/>
world. I here are SO<lb/>
many problems but no<lb/>
answers. I hey are<lb/>
disillusioned<lb/>
Yale psychiatrist<lb/>
Schow alter contends<lb/>
there are only two valid<lb/>
speculations on causes<lb/>
of suicide. "The break-<lb/>
up o the family unit, it<lb/>
is generally agreed, is a<lb/>
major factor in teenage<lb/>
suicide. One-half to<lb/>
two-thuds ol teens who<lb/>
who kill themselves use<lb/>
guns. Drugs and hang-<lb/>
ing are the other most<lb/>
common methods.<lb/>
I he highest rate of<lb/>
suicide is among<lb/>
18-year olds. Tedford<lb/>
said that 18 is a par-<lb/>
ticular vulnerable age<lb/>
because teenagers have<lb/>
to leave home to go to<lb/>
college and have many<lb/>
difficulties adjusting<lb/>
when they get there.<lb/>
Another study releas-<lb/>
ed m October, shows a<lb/>
disproportionately high<lb/>
suicide rate among<lb/>
juveniles held in adult<lb/>
jails. The study, spon-<lb/>
sored by the Office of<lb/>
Juvenile Justice and<lb/>
Delinquency Preven-<lb/>
tion found that the<lb/>
suicide rate for young<lb/>
people in adult jails is<lb/>
tour times greater than<lb/>
the rate for the general<lb/>
population.<lb/>
The suicide rate con-<lb/>
tinues to swell despite<lb/>
various community ef-<lb/>
forts to curtail the<lb/>
surge. Teachers and<lb/>
social workers are<lb/>
trained in suicide<lb/>
prevention and 24-hour<lb/>
hotlines are operated in<lb/>
many areas. One<lb/>
hotline, manned by<lb/>
Chicago psv choanalyst<lb/>
Joseph Pribyl, receive<lb/>
150 suicide-related calls<lb/>
a month.<lb/>
The National In-<lb/>
stitute oi Mental<lb/>
Health operates a<lb/>
S u i c i d e P r e ven t i o n<lb/>
Center as part of the<lb/>
Disaster Assistance<lb/>
Program. The Center<lb/>
organizes conferences<lb/>
and publishes literature<lb/>
but does not fund any<lb/>
suicide prevention<lb/>
clinics.<lb/>
"Suicide can be<lb/>
prevented said Social<lb/>
S c i e n c e A n a 1 y s t<lb/>
Dorothy Lewis. With<lb/>
programs set up to<lb/>
counsel young people,<lb/>
many suicides could be<lb/>
stopped. The problem<lb/>
is that here are no<lb/>
funds to back up our<lb/>
concerns. There is no<lb/>
legislation directed at<lb/>
suicide prevention so<lb/>
it's up to the individual<lb/>
community to address<lb/>
the problem ? and it's<lb/>
not being done<lb/>
I ewis explained that<lb/>
there is no money for<lb/>
suicide prevention.<lb/>
"Given other problems<lb/>
in terms of sheer<lb/>
numbers, suicide is not<lb/>
considered a priority<lb/>
item for people who<lb/>
design the budget<lb/>
At the local level,<lb/>
psychiatrist Giffin said<lb/>
that the problem<lb/>
should be addressed<lb/>
through the schools.<lb/>
Some high schools have<lb/>
set up pre-eollege rap<lb/>
groups that deal with<lb/>
separation from family<lb/>
and how to deal with<lb/>
academic pressure.<lb/>
Sell It Faster<lb/>
Sell it faster<lb/>
Classified through<lb/>
Classified Ads<lb/>
id t cd'Os<lb/>
Research in the col<lb/>
lections is supervised,<lb/>
and no documents may<lb/>
be removed from the<lb/>
room. Many oi the ap<lb/>
proximately 1.5 million<lb/>
items in the collection<lb/>
are fragile, hundred-<lb/>
year-old papers that<lb/>
cannot be replaced.<lb/>
lor this reason, the<lb/>
manuscript room has<lb/>
humidity and heat con-<lb/>
trols that are separate<lb/>
from the rest ol the<lb/>
library.<lb/>
"We keep the room<lb/>
at the optimum condi-<lb/>
tions tor the prserva<lb/>
lion of the papers<lb/>
said Pennon. " The col-<lb/>
lections are stored in<lb/>
acid-free paper boxes,<lb/>
and deterioration is<lb/>
kepi at a minimum<lb/>
I he collection<lb/>
open to the public<lb/>
Monday through Fri<lb/>
dav trom X a.m. until<lb/>
p.m. Visiting scholai<lb/>
genealogists, and I<lb/>
public are welcome<lb/>
use the facility.<lb/>
CLIFFS<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
E. 10th St. Extension<lb/>
752-3172<lb/>
MONDAY-THURSDAY<lb/>
Oyster Plate3.95<lb/>
Shrimp Plate3.95<lb/>
Seafood Plate3.95<lb/>
Ocean Perch2.50<lb/>
Blue Fish2.50<lb/>
Crab Cakes1.85<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
Popcorn Shrimp2.95<lb/>
LA KOSMETIQUE<lb/>
UNISEX SALON<lb/>
2800 EAST 10th STREET<lb/>
IN SHOPPING CENTER WITH<lb/>
J.D.DAWSON CATALOG SHOWROOM<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
THROUGH<lb/>
NOVEMBER 30th<lb/>
ALL DESIGNER<lb/>
HAIR CUTS $6.50<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
MEN AND WOMEN<lb/>
WE ALSO SPECIALIZE<lb/>
IN TOTAL HAIR<lb/>
CARE FOR THE<lb/>
BLACK WOMAN<lb/>
CALL 752-3419<lb/>
ask about our<lb/>
FROSTINGS HAIR RELAXERS<lb/>
HENNA CALIFORNIA CURL<lb/>
BODY WAVES JERI CURL<lb/>
CURLY PERMS HIGH LIGHTING<lb/>
LUM1N1ZING MANICURES<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
) 8:30am - 7:30pm<lb/>
i MON. thru SAT.<lb/>
MS<lb/>
The Contest:<lb/>
Domino's Pizza will award<lb/>
free, 50 large pizzas to the<lb/>
winning male ?female<lb/>
dorms purchasing the most<lb/>
pizzas during the 7-day<lb/>
period starting Nov. 9 and<lb/>
running through Nov. 15.<lb/>
(coed dorms included)<lb/>
The pizza sales will be com-<lb/>
puted on a per capita basis.<lb/>
The Rules:<lb/>
1. Carry-out orders and all<lb/>
deliveries will be counted if<lb/>
we are given your dorm ad-<lb/>
dress.<lb/>
2. Any pizza over $7.00 will be<lb/>
counted twice.<lb/>
3. The winning dorm's Resi-<lb/>
dent Advisor will be notified.<lb/>
Announcements will be<lb/>
published in the East Caroli-<lb/>
nian Nov. 18, 1980.<lb/>
4. The location and the time<lb/>
of the party will be conve<lb/>
nient to both the winning<lb/>
dorms and Domino's Pizza.<lb/>
5. The 50 pizza will be one<lb/>
item pizzas. The winning<lb/>
dorms will have the choice of<lb/>
item. The pizzas do not have<lb/>
to be the same.<lb/>
All Pizzas Include Our<lb/>
Special Blend of Sauce<lb/>
and Cheese<lb/>
Our Superb<lb/>
Cheese Pizza<lb/>
12' cheese S3 65<lb/>
16" cheese $5 35<lb/>
Domino's Deluxe<lb/>
5 items for the price of 4<lb/>
Pepperom, Mushrooms,<lb/>
Onions, Green Peppers,<lb/>
and Sausage<lb/>
12' Deluxe $645<lb/>
16" Deluxe $9 55<lb/>
1980 Donrnes P zza Inc<lb/>
The vegi<lb/>
5 items for the price of 4<lb/>
Mushrooms. Black Olives.<lb/>
Green Olives. Onions and<lb/>
Green Peppers<lb/>
12" Vegi $6 45<lb/>
16" Vegi $9 55<lb/>
Any 1 item<lb/>
Any ViVa<lb/>
Any 2 items<lb/>
Any 3 items<lb/>
Any 4 items<lb/>
12" 13"<lb/>
$4.35 $640<lb/>
$4.35 $640<lb/>
$505 $7 45<lb/>
$5 75 $8 50<lb/>
$645 $9 55<lb/>
Additional Items<lb/>
Mushrooms Pepperoni<lb/>
Green Peppers Anchovies<lb/>
Ground Beef Sausage<lb/>
Double Cheese Ham<lb/>
Black Olives Onions<lb/>
Green Olives<lb/>
Extra Thick Crust<lb/>
Hot Pepper Rings<lb/>
12" pizza70<lb/>
16" pizza $1.05<lb/>
Greenviile hours:<lb/>
11:00-100 SunThurs<lb/>
11:00-200 Fri. ? Sat.<lb/>
Our divers ca"y less than $20 00<lb/>
Lim.ted deltve-y area Pnces do not<lb/>
include applicable saws tax.<lb/>
Fast<lb/>
Friendly<lb/>
Free<lb/>
Delivery<lb/>
758-6660<lb/>
1201 Charles Blvd.<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057300_0004"/><lb/>
5Jt?? !Eaat ffiarultntan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
RichardGrh n, ???,? w<lb/>
TtRRV HlRNDON, Dmctoro) -Wmm LlSA DREW, ? ?<lb/>
Chris LiCHOK, ???,? ???, MlKE NOONAN, v ???,<lb/>
David Severin, (md Mm- Chari es Chandi er, ???<lb/>
Ami a Lancaster,  mm David Norris, fm ?.???? ii?<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN SAYS<lb/>
SECURITY IS AX A?AR 7W?<lb/>
lNFt8.MAR.YI WtVE GOT<lb/>
TO DO S6mETHMGI<lb/>
Novembci 11. 1980<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
I'ajjc 4<lb/>
'Cultural' Problem<lb/>
K'ce Chancellor Gets Mad,<lb/>
Campus Security Gets Back,<lb/>
SOULS Get Minority Seat?<lb/>
When The East Carolinian ran<lb/>
the story "Officials Disclaim<lb/>
Responsibility For Center" ?<lb/>
about the problems associated with<lb/>
the Ledonia Wright Afro-American<lb/>
Cultural Center ? we never guessed<lb/>
the response would be so strong or<lb/>
so negative.<lb/>
We did get one positive response<lb/>
from a concerned parent: "(T)hat<lb/>
the college chancellor or the board<lb/>
of trustees would permit a condition<lb/>
such as reported to exist where doc-<lb/>
tors andor nurses cannot reach the<lb/>
Infirmary in emergency situations is<lb/>
unthinkable (Nov. 4, page 4)<lb/>
Along with public consumption of<lb/>
alcohol and disturbing the peace,<lb/>
it's unthinkable to us too. But Cam-<lb/>
pus Security and Vice Chancellor<lb/>
for St" ' nf T ?"? lTT"?r Mever<lb/>
weren't too thrilled about our con-<lb/>
cern.<lb/>
After last week's story and<lb/>
editorial on the situation, an<lb/>
"unwritten" agreement with Cam-<lb/>
pus Security that allowed East<lb/>
Carolinian employees to park beside<lb/>
the Old South Building was forgot-<lb/>
ten. The car belonging to the<lb/>
reporter who wrote the story was<lb/>
towed, even though she had been<lb/>
parking there for the entire fall<lb/>
semester and had never received a<lb/>
warning that she was on the towing<lb/>
list. When a passerby mentioned to<lb/>
officers that the owner was an<lb/>
employee of the paper, they chuckl-<lb/>
ed and said they knew. It's too<lb/>
damn bad that they aren't as<lb/>
zealous in other areas of their jobs<lb/>
that might be more "politically<lb/>
touchy<lb/>
A former managing editor of The<lb/>
East Carolinian overheard Vice<lb/>
Chancellor Elmer Meyer chastising<lb/>
journalism professor John Warren<lb/>
in front of the library about the<lb/>
story. Meyer said that he didn't ex-<lb/>
actly agree with the type of jour-<lb/>
nalism Mr. Warren was teaching us,<lb/>
and he mentioned something about<lb/>
"social responsibility We at this<lb/>
newspaper know the kind of jour-<lb/>
nalism that Meyer and the ad-<lb/>
ministration want: the kind that<lb/>
never reports "bad" news or<lb/>
criticizes their operation. This<lb/>
newspaper will never stoop to that<lb/>
level of puff and hype ? unless we<lb/>
were interested in training our<lb/>
employees for jobs in the Soviet<lb/>
Union.<lb/>
What's Going On?<lb/>
But it might be interesting to<lb/>
evaluate and speculate some of the<lb/>
recent actions in and around the<lb/>
campus media just to try to get a<lb/>
handle on the situation.<lb/>
The ECU Media Board and the<lb/>
SOULS organization have been in<lb/>
cahoots to swing a "minority" seat<lb/>
for the SOULS president. The<lb/>
board wants the chancellor to re-<lb/>
quest authorization from the Board<lb/>
Of Trustees to create a voting seat<lb/>
for SOULS. The trustees do not<lb/>
meet again until January, and there<lb/>
is no guarantee that Chancellor<lb/>
Brewer will submit the request or<lb/>
that it would be approved. But<lb/>
Dean Rudolph Alexander said that<lb/>
a SOULS representative will sit as a<lb/>
non-voting member before the<lb/>
trustees make their decision.<lb/>
Sources in the administration<lb/>
have told The East Carolinian that<lb/>
the real reason behind this move is<lb/>
to pacify minorities because of<lb/>
federal law suits pending against the<lb/>
university system. There's little if<lb/>
any concern about proper student<lb/>
representation on the Media Board<lb/>
? it's just plain politics.<lb/>
No wonder Meyer got so upset<lb/>
over a good investigative story<lb/>
about a problem at the cultural<lb/>
center. Now the administration is<lb/>
caught between a rock and a hard<lb/>
place: It must remedy the situation<lb/>
at the cultural center and risk seem-<lb/>
ing "prejudiced or it can accuse<lb/>
the student newspaper of being<lb/>
"prejudiced" and use that to help<lb/>
swing the SOULS seat on the Media<lb/>
Board (to assure fair coverage, of<lb/>
course).<lb/>
We continue to oppose a SOULS<lb/>
seat on the Media Board and refuse<lb/>
to recognize it until approved by the<lb/>
ECU Board Of Trustees. W;e will<lb/>
also continue to print the news ?<lb/>
the truth ? as we see fit. If the ad-<lb/>
ministration wants puff, it can print<lb/>
its own.<lb/>
UJEIL HASSLE<lb/>
THE EAST CAROUlNlANI<lb/>
??Campus Forum<lb/>
Handicap Story Poorly Edited<lb/>
1 am writing in reference to an article<lb/>
you printed in the November 6 issue of<lb/>
The East Carolinian entitled,<lb/>
"Handicaps Do Not Prevent Relation-<lb/>
ships The staff writer, Dana Neill,<lb/>
worked very hard and diligently in trying<lb/>
to gather all the correct data by per-<lb/>
sonally finding and interviewing most of<lb/>
the handicapped students, both on cam-<lb/>
pus and off, so she could write a factual<lb/>
article on a very sensitive subject. I had<lb/>
the pleasure of reading the article ap-<lb/>
proximately ten minutes before she car-<lb/>
ried it to you for publication. However,<lb/>
the pleasure was from reading the entire<lb/>
writing, not from the vicitimied, but-<lb/>
chered version that appeared in the<lb/>
paper.<lb/>
By reading the version in the paper, it<lb/>
was clearly evident that complete<lb/>
paragraphs had been deleted from Ms.<lb/>
Neill's original writing o' the article;<lb/>
supposedK to preserve space. If it really<lb/>
was too long, Ms. Neill should have<lb/>
been called to the office and collaborted<lb/>
with on what could be cut. As a result of<lb/>
not consulting her, and of the insen-<lb/>
sitive, unprofessional, editorial excess<lb/>
that was projected, the article lost its<lb/>
meaning.<lb/>
Finally, since the article lost its mean-<lb/>
ing, a grave disservice was done not only<lb/>
to the author, but to the handicapped<lb/>
students and tne entire student body ?<lb/>
to say nothing of journalistic principles.<lb/>
BILLM1ZELLE<lb/>
Senior, Psychology<lb/>
Marching Pirates Commended<lb/>
Editor's Note: the following is an open<lb/>
letter to the director and members of the<lb/>
Marching Pirates.<lb/>
For two years now 1 have been wat-<lb/>
ching the Marching Tarheel Band pre-<lb/>
sent poor openings and half-time shows.<lb/>
1 have many times been tempted to ex-<lb/>
press my disappointment in UNC's band<lb/>
to our Director. But after watching your<lb/>
fantastic performance on Saturday, Oct.<lb/>
25 in Chapel Hill, 1 am more inclined to<lb/>
congratulate you.<lb/>
I cannot be profuse enough in my<lb/>
praise of your marching band. The<lb/>
young man directing the halftime show<lb/>
was dynamic and exciting to watch.<lb/>
Your band brought enthusiasm and foot<lb/>
tapping to UNC fans like I have never<lb/>
seen our own band do. Your musical<lb/>
selections were appropriate, exciting,<lb/>
and technically flawless. The whole-<lb/>
band displayed an enthusiasm which was<lb/>
infectious to everyone around me. Many<lb/>
fans waited till the end of your show<lb/>
before leaving the stadium for their hot<lb/>
dogs and cokes. You were captivating.<lb/>
After your performance, 1 was rather<lb/>
embarassed when our own band took<lb/>
the field, claiming to be the pride of the<lb/>
ACC. At the close oi your show , though<lb/>
you may not have noticed, you received<lb/>
a standing ovation from the majority of<lb/>
the South seating area. A young man<lb/>
near me commented. "It's a good thing<lb/>
that their football team is not as good as<lb/>
their marching band From a school<lb/>
with a 7-0 record, could there be a higher<lb/>
compliment? You were fantastic!<lb/>
T1SH INK<lb/>
Graduate School, I N -CH<lb/>
'We're Number One'<lb/>
We've always been number 1: no. 1 in<lb/>
the export of military goods; no. 1 con-<lb/>
sumer of natural resources (oil); no. 1 in<lb/>
agricultural production (to feed animals<lb/>
? not people); no. 1 home of the<lb/>
multinational conglomerates; no. 1 liar<lb/>
to the world <lb/>
Nineteen hundred eighty is the year-<lb/>
Conservatism has overwhemlmed us.<lb/>
The common cries are: "Make America<lb/>
no. 1 again "Let's regain the respect<lb/>
we deserve" How? Not through a true<lb/>
commitment to human rights; not by<lb/>
setting the example o peace; not by<lb/>
leading the way to a better standard of<lb/>
living for the poor; But through strength<lb/>
? increasing the already insane arms<lb/>
race, scraping the Salt 2 treaty, hard-<lb/>
lining the Soviets and doing nothing to<lb/>
reduce the world's tensions.<lb/>
This incredible contradiction reaches<lb/>
its pinicle in the final verse of our Na-<lb/>
tional Anthem: the land of the free<lb/>
and the home of the brave We are not<lb/>
free from the threat of annihilation; we<lb/>
are not free from the horrors of poverty<lb/>
and racism; we are not brave enough to<lb/>
feed the hungry; we are not brave<lb/>
enough to lead the peace race; We are<lb/>
not free from the fear that confronts us<lb/>
now. We are, in fact, not free enough to<lb/>
control our own destinies nor brave<lb/>
enough to admit it.<lb/>
Our Congress is now in the hands of<lb/>
the Conservative "leaders Main<lb/>
"bleeding heart" liberals are gone.<lb/>
What does this mean for the poor0 the<lb/>
cities? education0 hopes of world peace<lb/>
Mv optimism is fading. Americans are<lb/>
determined to do all thev can to main-<lb/>
tain their high standard of living. V<lb/>
is our responsibility to the rest of the<lb/>
world in 'his age of scarcity? Can we<lb/>
guiltlessly continue our incredible<lb/>
consumption of everything0 Do we<lb/>
the right to abandon those less<lb/>
tunate0 Are we the "chosen ones"<lb/>
These are questions that we can<lb/>
overlook. The economic order<lb/>
world is tilting more out ol<lb/>
every day. The rich get richer<lb/>
poor die' Americans must take tl<lb/>
ltiative. The weight ol I<lb/>
our shoulders. We<lb/>
challenge. Let's end I<lb/>
"The time is now  f<lb/>
PATRICKO'NI II.1<lb/>
Member, Greenville Peace Comm.<lb/>
Glad To Be Graduating,<lb/>
Even With Bitterness<lb/>
1 put mv senior show up in<lb/>
Mendenhall on Nov. 2. After finishing<lb/>
that, I asked for the lectern so I could<lb/>
leave a hook in which mv friends, cril<lb/>
whatever, could sign. This was rathei<lb/>
important to me. After all. the show is a<lb/>
requirement for graduation and is sup<lb/>
posed to comemmorate the past <lb/>
years in which the student has worke<lb/>
better his or her art. The book was to be<lb/>
a memento o this event and 1 thought a<lb/>
nice one. Unfortunately, someone else<lb/>
also thought it was nice, and bv Mondav<lb/>
morning, Nov. 3, it had been ripped off.<lb/>
What I think o the person or persons in<lb/>
volved is unprintable.<lb/>
Since this letter is simplv a sound<lb/>
off to make my opinions known, and 1<lb/>
know that the thief will not change his oi<lb/>
hei ways, and will probablv simplv<lb/>
laugh this letter off (if they are capable<lb/>
ol leading). I would simplv like to state<lb/>
if that is the level of some o the students<lb/>
at this university, 1 am very glad to be<lb/>
graduating this semester and leaving,<lb/>
even it ii is with a sense o bitterness.<lb/>
SANDRA MOM! I I H<lb/>
Senior. Interioi Design<lb/>
the<lb/>
hav<lb/>
1<lb/>
untui<lb/>
w<lb/>
1<lb/>
des<lb/>
To The Right<lb/>
ERA Could Open Pandora's Box For Future Amendments<lb/>
By STAN RIDGLEY<lb/>
I note with increasing alarm that<lb/>
we seem to be forever at the mercy<lb/>
of the naive; thus it is with the con-<lb/>
troversy surrounding the Equal<lb/>
Rights Amendment.<lb/>
Limiting a discussion to purely<lb/>
the merits of just such an amend-<lb/>
ment, this writer would be hard-<lb/>
pressed to make an argument<lb/>
against ERA?that is the task of<lb/>
more knowledgeable scholars of<lb/>
constitutional law such as former<lb/>
Senator Sam Ervin. On the matter<lb/>
of tinkering with the constitutional<lb/>
process, however, I must speak out.<lb/>
Verbum sat sapienti est.<lb/>
Every proposed amendment to<lb/>
the Constitution has its proponents<lb/>
and opponents, all of whom<lb/>
perhaps are convinced of the<lb/>
manifest Tightness of their respec-<lb/>
tive positions. Politically, perhaps,<lb/>
there is nothing wrong with this.<lb/>
Each side of the argument is funnel-<lb/>
ed through the constitutional pro-<lb/>
cess by which the proposed amend-<lb/>
ment is either accepted or rejected at<lb/>
any of a number of points along the<lb/>
way.<lb/>
Trying to end-run this process,<lb/>
however, are the proponents of<lb/>
ERA. Reaching to the very founda-<lb/>
tion upon which our laws are laid,<lb/>
the ERAers would have us make a<lb/>
special exception for them?exempt<lb/>
them from having to fulfill the re-<lb/>
quirements by which the Constitu-<lb/>
tion is amended. And a very touchy<lb/>
subject it is, generating emotional<lb/>
responses in otherwise rational per-<lb/>
sons.<lb/>
A previous column of mine on<lb/>
ERA elicited the type of facile<lb/>
response expected. Unfortunately,<lb/>
though several good points were<lb/>
made, the bulk of the letter concern-<lb/>
ed extraneous issues and the fact<lb/>
that 1 perhaps misquoted the<lb/>
amendment. As to that misquota-<lb/>
tion, the blame goes to Susan<lb/>
Rouder, Professor of Political<lb/>
Science at San Francisco State<lb/>
University, and her book American<lb/>
Politics?Playing the Game from<lb/>
?<lb/>
t<lb/>
which 1 took the amendment.<lb/>
But as to my basic assertion that<lb/>
ERA proponents are perverting the<lb/>
constitutional process, the only<lb/>
response was an emotional tug at<lb/>
the heartstrings: "Women are ask-<lb/>
ing for a place in the constitution,<lb/>
the Law of the Land, that says in ef-<lb/>
fect that we can no longer be denied<lb/>
equal rights as Americans because<lb/>
we happen to be female<lb/>
Aside from the fact that that is<lb/>
not what the ERA states (some per-<lb/>
sons seem to think that ERA will af-<lb/>
fect only women; it doesn't say<lb/>
anything about women), it doesn't<lb/>
address the original thesis: namely,<lb/>
what special significance attaches<lb/>
itself to this particular amendment<lb/>
that merits such a radical departure<lb/>
in the procedure of its ratification?<lb/>
ERA proponents do not appear to<lb/>
have considered the ramifications of<lb/>
their scheming to make their idee<lb/>
fixe the supreme law of the land.<lb/>
They are setting a dangerous prece-<lb/>
dent which they will perhaps be<lb/>
sorry for all too soon. Unfortunate-<lb/>
ly, there appears no cure for ERA<lb/>
myopia.<lb/>
A word of explanation: With the<lb/>
Republican landslide in the<lb/>
presidential and senatorial elections<lb/>
last Tuesday, Republicans now con-<lb/>
trol the White House and the senate.<lb/>
However likely this makes the<lb/>
realization of Republican Party<lb/>
Platform goals is a matter for<lb/>
speculation, but one can't help but<lb/>
point out that that party took a very<lb/>
conservative stand in its platform on<lb/>
abortion, calling for a constitutional<lb/>
amendment "to restore protection<lb/>
of the right to life for unborn<lb/>
children<lb/>
Ahh, now get the picture? What is<lb/>
going to happen w hen Ban Abortion<lb/>
groups start lobbying for their<lb/>
amendment (which, by the way, I<lb/>
am also against) and their time limit<lb/>
of seven years for ratification is up?<lb/>
Will ERA backers be as anxious to<lb/>
extend the time limit this time<lb/>
around? Or not allow states to res-<lb/>
cind their ratification of an anti-<lb/>
abortion amendment if they choose<lb/>
to do so?<lb/>
That is what is meant by<lb/>
"perverting the constitutional pro-<lb/>
cess If it is done once for what<lb/>
some persons consider a "good"<lb/>
amendment, what is their argument<lb/>
if another amendment which they<lb/>
consider "bad" is up for ratifica-<lb/>
tion? They have no argument,<lb/>
because the precedent has been set.<lb/>
As to the alleged "paternalistic"<lb/>
and subtle undercurrent in my<lb/>
previous article, I have neither ex-<lb/>
planation nor apjlogy. 1 assume no<lb/>
special position from which to write<lb/>
when tackling the ERA controver-<lb/>
sy?as far as I know, my style never<lb/>
wavers.<lb/>
If one accepts that, then one<lb/>
would logically have to assume that<lb/>
paternalistic undercurrents through<lb/>
all my articles whether they concern<lb/>
ERA, Liberalism, or high school<lb/>
football (a brief note here to<lb/>
acknowledge the tacit compliment<lb/>
that my articles have sufficient<lb/>
depth to sustain undercurrents,<lb/>
paternalistic or otherwise).<lb/>
The alternative to that assump<lb/>
tion is that any paternalism<lb/>
registered with my work is a product<lb/>
of the mind of that particular<lb/>
reader, arising, perhaps, from a<lb/>
search for a father-figure. But that<lb/>
is idle speculation.<lb/>
What should be realized is that<lb/>
with the special treatment given to<lb/>
this particular constitutional<lb/>
amendment, a pandora's box has<lb/>
been opened that ERA proponents<lb/>
may very well wish they hadn't. By<lb/>
initiating the perversion of the con-<lb/>
stitution, they have set the stage for<lb/>
its further perversion?for better or<lb/>
worse.<lb/>
Stan Ridgley is a senior Political<lb/>
Science major with a degree in jour-<lb/>
nalism from the University of Sorth<lb/>
Carolina at Chapel Hill.<lb/>
??i5itsRfc  ?  i.<lb/>
-M<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
asl<lb/>
pl<lb/>
sii<lb/>
?I11<lb/>
<pb facs="00057300_0005"/><lb/>
I Ml I s i KOl IM-W<lb/>
Features<lb/>
N(I MM R I i 980<lb/>
I .<lb/>
I mr ?<lb/>
ts<lb/>
i<lb/>
Palm Reading<lb/>
Lady's Talent Helps People<lb/>
International Foods Festival<lb/>
Photo by GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
I ast week, the student I nion Minority Arts Committee sponsored the annual International and Jewish Arts<lb/>
Festival. I he International roods Festival, held last Wednesday night, was part of the week's events. Guests<lb/>
enjoyed such dishes as Hungarian cabbage rolls, blintes and Indonesian tried rice.<lb/>
By TOM HALL<lb/>
Muff Wnltr<lb/>
The outstretched hand beckons<lb/>
from the roadside. "Madame<lb/>
Lurane the sign says. "Palmist ?<lb/>
Divine Healer<lb/>
Is this the right house? Except for<lb/>
the sign in front, the home looks no<lb/>
different from the other dwellings<lb/>
that line U.S. Highway 64 east of<lb/>
Bethel. The driveway dips steeply<lb/>
off the road; the house is nestled in<lb/>
its own private valley. Tall pines<lb/>
cast the house and yard in perpetual<lb/>
shadow, and perfect doughnuts of<lb/>
pine needles are raked around the<lb/>
trees and shrubs. A stone lion<lb/>
crouches in infinity near the plant-<lb/>
lined sidewalk. A pale plastic jack-<lb/>
o-lantern offers belated Halloween<lb/>
greetings from a window.<lb/>
The woman moves noiselessly to<lb/>
the storm door. "Yes, I am<lb/>
Madame Lurane she says, turning<lb/>
and leading the way through the<lb/>
cluttered living room. "I forgot you<lb/>
College Classrooms Lack<lb/>
Clocks, Flags And Intercoms<lb/>
Bv DWII) NORRls<lb/>
One j about college that<lb/>
me when I arrived was<lb/>
appearance of the<lb/>
High school<lb/>
? ? :re always visually in<lb/>
sometimes a bit<lb/>
dy But, the colorful bulletin<lb/>
wall posters, class projects<lb/>
? years past and the ever-present<lb/>
: Si pe arc completely,<lb/>
lege classrooms.<lb/>
Mai - here don't even<lb/>
locks t stare at. (If there<lb/>
irobably would<lb/>
have the ? me, anyway.)<lb/>
V siting an elementary school<lb/>
be a rich visual ex-<lb/>
perie I mbarding the viewer<lb/>
with bright colors, patriotic<lb/>
knicknacks and maps. (The maps<lb/>
fell " ' the wall often enough to<lb/>
sensory bombardment a<lb/>
literal one as well.) Class projects,<lb/>
like flour-paste replicas of the<lb/>
al and bug collections,<lb/>
Saturn rockets and<lb/>
Shah ire's Globe Theatre, and<lb/>
untold acres o children's drawings<lb/>
.ring the walls left very little<lb/>
space for empty areas.<lb/>
Even through high school, the<lb/>
av full of things to<lb/>
k al So, i! is quite a shock to ar-<lb/>
ollege, expecting all kinds of<lb/>
wonderful classroom visual aids and<lb/>
finding only a spartan room full of<lb/>
desks and only a trash can to relieve<lb/>
the monotony.<lb/>
The desks at college aren't so<lb/>
good, cither. You can't put your<lb/>
feel on the shell under the desk in<lb/>
front of you, so your feel fidget ner-<lb/>
vously for the entire period. The<lb/>
desktops aren't even large enough to<lb/>
open a notebook on without spilling<lb/>
loose papers from the front of the<lb/>
book. As for opening a notebook<lb/>
and a textbook at the same time,<lb/>
you have to hold one of them in<lb/>
your hand to do it. College desks<lb/>
don even have one of those little<lb/>
grooves at the top of the desk to<lb/>
hold pencils.<lb/>
My second grade desk was<lb/>
perhaps the most comfortable one 1<lb/>
have had in any school. The desk<lb/>
and chair parts were separate,<lb/>
enabling one to slide the chair<lb/>
around on the polished floor. The<lb/>
desk part itself had a big draawer<lb/>
under it, large enough to hold all my<lb/>
books, paper airplanes, crumpled<lb/>
reports and an orange that 1 forgot I<lb/>
had for three months.<lb/>
Maps are a wonderful decorating<lb/>
accessory for any classroom,<lb/>
although perhaps more appropriate<lb/>
for a history class than a math class.<lb/>
I hey are good teaching aids, pro-<lb/>
vide color and also provide amuse-<lb/>
ment when they fall off the wall<lb/>
(which happens every time a teacher<lb/>
even thinks about using a map.)<lb/>
By the way, maps are one area in<lb/>
which college classes are better<lb/>
equipped than their public school<lb/>
counterparts. Public schools like<lb/>
tradition in the field of mapmaking,<lb/>
and are slow about replacing maps<lb/>
with nice countries like French In-<lb/>
dochina. Anglo-Egyptian Sudan<lb/>
and Austria-Hungary just because<lb/>
the countries no longer exist. Keep-<lb/>
ing old maps around made for some<lb/>
interesting (but not accurate)<lb/>
reports when I was a kid.<lb/>
Have you noticed the difference<lb/>
between a bulletin board, a type of<lb/>
mural constructed out of construc-<lb/>
tion paper and staples, was a<lb/>
widespread art form during my<lb/>
childhood. Despite the obstacles of<lb/>
cutting paper with those ridiculous<lb/>
scissors they give kids in school<lb/>
(these scissors are cheap, too small<lb/>
to hold and don't cut well), hardly<lb/>
an inch of cork ever showed on a<lb/>
bulletin board anywhere.<lb/>
The bulletin boards in college<lb/>
contrast sharply with this creativity.<lb/>
A typical board here is decorated<lb/>
with a couple of 1974 day legislator<lb/>
campaign posters, an ad for<lb/>
student-rate magazine subscrip-<lb/>
tions, another ad for one of those<lb/>
outfits that writes term papers for<lb/>
students and a flyer advertising a<lb/>
party that was over six months ago.<lb/>
The rest is just plain old cork. There<lb/>
is not much to look at, and if it<lb/>
weren't for some strange sense of<lb/>
historical preservation that keeps<lb/>
anyone from removing obsolete<lb/>
posters, there would be even less to<lb/>
look at.<lb/>
Besides bulletin boards, other<lb/>
common classroom wall accessories<lb/>
include flags, clocks, pencil<lb/>
sharpeners (also called pencil<lb/>
disintegrators) and intercoms. Most<lb/>
of these don't exist here in colle<lb/>
though, making it difficult to pledge<lb/>
allegiance, stare at the clock or<lb/>
disintegrate pencils. The lack of in-<lb/>
tercoms is probably the biggest dif-<lb/>
ference between the high school<lb/>
See CLASSROOMS, Page 6. Col. 1<lb/>
were coming she admits "My<lb/>
husband just reminded me She<lb/>
pulls back two chaus from her kit-<lb/>
chen table and slides into one. I take<lb/>
the hint and sit down.<lb/>
"How about Reagan winning?"<lb/>
she asks. "I said Ronald Reagan<lb/>
was going in by a landslide, but the<lb/>
people here in Bethel laughed and<lb/>
said it would be a close race She-<lb/>
adjusts the silver bracelets on one<lb/>
wrist. Her hair falls about her<lb/>
shoulders; it is brown streaked with<lb/>
gray until it reaches her ears, where<lb/>
it abruptly turns ruby-tinted "1 was<lb/>
as surprised as anybody about<lb/>
Morgan and Dr. Fast, though she<lb/>
says, drawing on a cigarette.<lb/>
"1 read the cards and tea leaves as<lb/>
well as palms says Madame<lb/>
Lurane. She vehemently denies that<lb/>
she is a gypsy. "I am a rumney-<lb/>
tell she explains. Her maternal<lb/>
grandmother, a rumney-tell in<lb/>
Wales, came to the United State<lb/>
the late 19th century<lb/>
"Palm reading isn't taught . it's a<lb/>
gift she says. Her grandmother<lb/>
and mother were psychics, and so is<lb/>
Madame Lurane. "I only look in<lb/>
hands to get the marriage line and<lb/>
the life line. It says in the Bible<lb/>
your life is known by the lines in<lb/>
your hands It is a strain to take<lb/>
notes under her intense stare, and<lb/>
there is that uncanny feeling that she<lb/>
knows your next question before<lb/>
you ask it.<lb/>
Lurane Branton was born in 192<lb/>
in King's Mountain. She was<lb/>
reading tea leaves in a Clevel<lb/>
Ohio tearoom when she was 12<lb/>
years old. Her father, a ma<lb/>
carpenter, moved his family to P<lb/>
smounth, Va. in 1940. She has lived<lb/>
in Bethel "since Eisenhower went in<lb/>
office Her husband, William<lb/>
Robert Jones, is an asphalt contrac-<lb/>
tor; they haw: two children and nine<lb/>
grandchildren.<lb/>
Madame 1 urane says there is no<lb/>
formal organization of palmist<lb/>
divine healers. "1 have to buy a<lb/>
business license like anyone else<lb/>
she says. She charges $10 lor palm<lb/>
readings and $100 to $500 tor heal-<lb/>
ings, depending on the success and<lb/>
extent of the cure.<lb/>
Her divine healing works through<lb/>
faith, she explains. "I do have peo-<lb/>
ple who come here that are sick with<lb/>
cancer or heart trouble, and 1 make<lb/>
sure they go to a doctor first She-<lb/>
supposes that her treatment is a<lb/>
form of psychiatry, but hasten-<lb/>
add that it is also a gift.<lb/>
"I have had people that an<lb/>
sick that their families had to carry<lb/>
them in Madadme Lurane says.<lb/>
"I don't understand how I do it, 1<lb/>
just know it happens. They hav<lb/>
have faith People have come to<lb/>
her from New York .Illinois and<lb/>
Florida, and she will try to help<lb/>
them over the phone if they cannot<lb/>
come to Bethel.<lb/>
Healers .ailed "mother" and<lb/>
"sister" take religious names to<lb/>
avoid buying a license or paying<lb/>
taxes, according to Madame<lb/>
Lurane. She says their money never<lb/>
reaches the church. "They often use<lb/>
a con trick with an egg or th<lb/>
person's hair she adds. "I.<lb/>
what gives pali bad name. I've<lb/>
never done that; I make a very g<lb/>
See I in v Page 7. Col. 1<lb/>
Allen's Stardust Memories<lb/>
Depicts Life's Absurdities<lb/>
By DOUG QUEEN<lb/>
In the opening scene of Woody<lb/>
Allen's new film, Stardust<lb/>
Memories, Allen is sitting in a stop-<lb/>
ped train which is filled by grotes-<lb/>
que people. Sandy Bates, Allen's<lb/>
character, looks out the window and<lb/>
sees the train that is stopped beside<lb/>
them. The telling difference is that<lb/>
the other train is full of beautiful<lb/>
people doing beautiful things. San-<lb/>
dy Bates would very much like to<lb/>
ride in the other train; we all would.<lb/>
The story is about a film-<lb/>
writer director, Sandy Bates, whose<lb/>
latest films have turned towards a<lb/>
more serious subject matter which is<lb/>
a major departure from his earlier<lb/>
'funny' films. While lecturing at a<lb/>
seaside resort in New Jersey, he is<lb/>
constantly accosted by his fans and<lb/>
critics who want to know why he<lb/>
doesn't write 'funny' films<lb/>
anymore. Bates answers them say-<lb/>
ing, "How can I with all the human<lb/>
suffering in the world Indeed,<lb/>
how can a serious artist work in the<lb/>
modern world when all around him<lb/>
is misery?<lb/>
Bates answers this question<lb/>
although it leaves the viewer un-<lb/>
satisfied. He states in one scene that<lb/>
he doesn't want to die because there<lb/>
are "women to pinch For Bates,<lb/>
life is only grotesquely funny. and at<lb/>
best, absurd, but with death as the<lb/>
only alternative, it may be worth liv-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Allen drives this point home bv<lb/>
interjecting scenes stolen from such<lb/>
filmmakers as Fellim, especially the<lb/>
party-on-the-lawn scene from Juliet<lb/>
Of The Spirits that serves admirably<lb/>
in illustrating the often<lb/>
"disconnectedness" o life. Is there<lb/>
a cause and effect in the universe, or<lb/>
do we just blunder through stages ol<lb/>
lives blindly mixing fantasy<lb/>
me hybrid<lb/>
Mien has taken a huge step, and a<lb/>
great risk, with this film. Filme<lb/>
black and white like Manhattan<lb/>
Interiors, although with little of the<lb/>
lyricism oi Manhattan, it is a long<lb/>
mood-piece. I he mood is that ol<lb/>
absurdists who see the vagratie-<lb/>
life as horrifingly funny. In this<lb/>
way, Allen is as funny as in his early<lb/>
films, but with a significant chance<lb/>
Gone is the slapstick and situa-<lb/>
tional humor of the early work In<lb/>
its place is a more profound nuance<lb/>
which is the mark of maturity in the<lb/>
artist. Manhattan, Interiors,<lb/>
now Stardust Memories mark<lb/>
Allen's move into the realm of<lb/>
seriousness that could also be<lb/>
dangerous from an artistic stand-<lb/>
point. Allen is truly a funny man,<lb/>
see M Rl)l ST, Page 7, Col. 7<lb/>
Renowned Maestro<lb/>
Mo n toy a Performs<lb/>
Flamenco Recital<lb/>
Carlos Mont ova, world-<lb/>
renowned maestro of the Flamenco<lb/>
guitar, will perform in concert in<lb/>
Hendnx Theatre, Mendenhal! Stu-<lb/>
dent Center on Nov. 12, 1980 at<lb/>
8:00 p.m. Those here who heard the<lb/>
power oi Montoya's music and felt<lb/>
the charm of his personality in 1978<lb/>
will be sure to return; newcomers<lb/>
are encouraged to partake of this<lb/>
most delightful experience.<lb/>
Carlos Montoya asks himself,<lb/>
and sometimes people who have<lb/>
never attended a Flamenco recital:<lb/>
How can an elderly gentleman play-<lb/>
ing music totally outside of<lb/>
mainstream culture hold the interest<lb/>
of a general audience for an entire<lb/>
evening? After 30 years of over-<lb/>
whelming success, Mr. Montoya is<lb/>
still amaed. Perhaps the answer lies<lb/>
in some of the comments made by-<lb/>
people from his audiences.<lb/>
A girl in Longview, Texas said,<lb/>
"You put your music inside of me<lb/>
Amazing ? that's the phrase Mr.<lb/>
Montoya uses when an interviewer<lb/>
asks what he thinks about while<lb/>
playing: "I try to put my music in-<lb/>
side of them<lb/>
A middle-aged gentleman in a<lb/>
small Pennsylvania town said, "I<lb/>
don't think I've ever heard a purer,<lb/>
freerer expression of the human<lb/>
spirit than I did tonight<lb/>
A young woman from Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina stated, "The music<lb/>
was elating, the personality,<lb/>
mesmerizing<lb/>
It seems that each person feels<lb/>
that Montoya is playing specifically<lb/>
for him or her. There is no need to<lb/>
be knowedgeable about his music; it<lb/>
reaches all audiences, young and<lb/>
old, in big cities, small towns, in<lb/>
America, Spain, Japan, Alaska, in<lb/>
every place Montoya plays.<lb/>
Montoya's improvisational gypsy<lb/>
guitar has never been tamed. It re-<lb/>
tains its fiery spontaneity in the<lb/>
remarkable hands of the charming<lb/>
Spanish gentleman who reads no<lb/>
music but lives Flamenco guitar.<lb/>
Flamenco is Montoya's ruling pas-<lb/>
sion. "It is he states simply, "my<lb/>
life<lb/>
Tickets are priced at $2.00 for<lb/>
ECU students, and $5.00 for the<lb/>
public. For further information<lb/>
contact the Central Ticket Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center,<lb/>
757-6611, ect. 266.<lb/>
Carlos Montoya, world-renowned maestro of the flamenco guitar, will<lb/>
perform in concert in Hendrix Theatre, Mendenhall Student C enter, on<lb/>
Nov. 12, at 8 p.m. After 30 years of overwhelming success. Mr.<lb/>
Montoya's music reaci.e out to all audiences.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057300_0006"/><lb/>
( I HI I S1 l K? 'I I Si <lb/>
Some Conservation Organizations Issue<lb/>
Their Own Stamps For Publicity<lb/>
f<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057300_0007"/><lb/>
1 HI I S I KOI IMW<lb/>
NOVI MHi K II, IS-M.<lb/>
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Stardust Memories Entertains<lb/>
<lb/>
Man's Screenwriting Dream<lb/>
Produces Film: Wise Blood<lb/>
You're studying for your lit class when the<lb/>
standard screenwriting fantasy overtakes you.<lb/>
Wow, you gush to yourself, what a terrific movie<lb/>
this book would make. And no one's done it<lb/>
before. You see it all clearly: the credits, the<lb/>
lighting, the climax<lb/>
Then, of course, you sink back into reality, and<lb/>
return to youi studying.<lb/>
One student who didn't give up the fantasy was<lb/>
one Michael Fitzgerald, who long ago figured he<lb/>
could make Flannery O'Connor's Wise Blood in-<lb/>
to a movie, although it had been so frequently<lb/>
deemed uncommercial" that about the only<lb/>
place a student could encounter the story was in<lb/>
one of Fitzgerald's lit classes.<lb/>
Well, it took Fitzgerald, who is now 29, years<lb/>
to bring his screenwriting fantasy to life. But he<lb/>
did if Hi "Wise Blood" was finally made on a<lb/>
SZ million budget. Opening to critical raves in<lb/>
New voik several months ago, it is just now go-<lb/>
nto wider release around the country.<lb/>
zgerald started b figuring the way to make<lb/>
. - was to move to Los Angeles and become a<lb/>
eenwriter. He made the trip with his brother,<lb/>
find that "young" screenwriters who go<lb/>
 tend not to be successful, and they<lb/>
?uc cessi ul<lb/>
n 1 he heard that a Canadian investor<lb/>
ghts to H ise Blood, and planned to film<lb/>
nerv O'Connor had written the story while<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
and his departure from slapstick<lb/>
humor may also weaken his impact<lb/>
on the film-going public. Can<lb/>
Wood) Allen go any further'7 I his<lb/>
reviewer thinks so.<lb/>
Allen obviously learned from his<lb/>
mistakes in Interiors. A heavy Film<lb/>
by a non-Swede is inpalable to the<lb/>
tans and critics alike, at least to the<lb/>
tans and critics ol Allen's work.<lb/>
What he needs is a fine balance bet-<lb/>
ween the austere vision ol the<lb/>
modern artist and the playful<lb/>
joyfulness thai characterize his early<lb/>
films. I hat balance is closely ap-<lb/>
proached in Stardust Memories. It is<lb/>
the first film combining the two<lb/>
seemingly divergent visions of the<lb/>
artist into a unified whole.<lb/>
Gone is the slapstick that used to<lb/>
bring tears ol laughter to the eyes,<lb/>
but in its place is the more sat' ?ying<lb/>
humoi that i directly related to our<lb/>
VfN<lb/>
ARMY MAW STOKS<lb/>
Backpacks. ? li lonXtr, <lb/>
? FteM. Deck. FI19M. Snorkel <lb/>
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SMM, Combat Boots. Mm. <lb/>
personal lives. The questions he asks<lb/>
are the questions any intelligent per-<lb/>
son asks of himself and his universe<lb/>
Is there a God? Can there be mean-<lb/>
ing to our lives? What is value in the<lb/>
apparent random shifting of time?<lb/>
Ot course these questions are not<lb/>
answered, but they are raised in the<lb/>
course of the film with a subtle<lb/>
power and presented to us so that<lb/>
we laugh But the laughter, as we<lb/>
tealie when we leave the theatre, is<lb/>
directed at ourselves. Thus the artist<lb/>
makes his point.<lb/>
Stardust Memories is a thought-<lb/>
provoking film by one of the most<lb/>
engaging directors ol our time.<lb/>
There is laughter and many one-<lb/>
liners that we've come to expect<lb/>
from Allen's films, but there is just<lb/>
a bit more. There is serious thought<lb/>
wrapped in the candy ot laughtei<lb/>
that we may swallow it a little easier.<lb/>
It is an altogether entertaining film<lb/>
now being shown at the Park<lb/>
But<lb/>
it. 1<lb/>
living with the 1 ltzgeralds in 1950. When Fit-<lb/>
zgerald Canadian's sereenplav, though,<lb/>
he vvvl- appalled. "It was one o the worst<lb/>
travesties of a piece of literature I'd ever seen<lb/>
Through family ties, he made his move at last.<lb/>
O'Connor's mother, happily enough, transferred<lb/>
the rights to the young Fitgerald. "So then I had<lb/>
to make a picture he sighs.<lb/>
First, he tried to interest a top-notch director in<lb/>
the project, and chose John Huston. Fitgerald<lb/>
remembered Huston from boarding school davs<lb/>
when Huston lived in the west of Ireland. Huston<lb/>
then was "a great personage, a flamboyant man<lb/>
living in a castle, with a stream of world<lb/>
celebrities coming by every day. He became<lb/>
synonymous with films to me<lb/>
But Fitgerald had to track Huston to Mexico<lb/>
before getting the veteran's agreement to direct<lb/>
the still-vaporous project.<lb/>
Even landing Huston was no guarantee of pro-<lb/>
gress. Huston's most recent films had been com-<lb/>
mercial Hops. "He wasn't 'on the charts Fit-<lb/>
zgerald notes. "And he wasn't under 30, and that<lb/>
seems to be a criminal offense in Hollywood<lb/>
So raising money for the film was a herculean<lb/>
chore. "The years went by he recalls. At one<lb/>
point, while watching t.v. together in a F.A. hotel<lb/>
room, Huston told Fitzgerald, "Y'know Mike.<lb/>
you can't spend your lite doing something that<lb/>
can't be done<lb/>
Fitgerald was undeterred. "1 had to do it<lb/>
At last he went overseas, where he got 90 per-<lb/>
cent of his financing. "When no one else will give<lb/>
you money to make a picture. Italian television<lb/>
will he smiles.<lb/>
The resulting picture is almost as hard to take<lb/>
as it was to make. Scrupulously faithful to<lb/>
O'Connor's prose, the film tells a disturbing story<lb/>
oi faith and cynical faith healing.<lb/>
But Fitzgerald, like O'Connor, insists the story<lb/>
is a "comedy "All true comedy O'Connor<lb/>
once wrote, "is about matter of life and death<lb/>
And true to form, young producer Fitzgerald is<lb/>
planning further "impossible" projects. He's<lb/>
currently producing Proust's Remembrance of<lb/>
Things Pas! from a legendary Harold Pinter<lb/>
screenplay that's languished eight years with a<lb/>
reputation as "uncommercial<lb/>
Next will be Lnder the Volcano, Malcolm<lb/>
Iowiv's account of an alcoholic's "deliberate<lb/>
descent into the pits of hell<lb/>
Pulling such projects through "requires<lb/>
becoming a professional Fitgerald counsels.<lb/>
"You have to learn how, and schools provide on-<lb/>
ly theory, which is only one-hundreth of it.<lb/>
"If anyone wants to make a picture, find a pic-<lb/>
ture that is worth making. The essential<lb/>
significance o' (having made "Wise Blood") is<lb/>
that anyone can make any picture he sum-<lb/>
marizes.<lb/>
Igrftt<lb/>
s ir.ssfioi<lb/>
REPAIR<lb/>
J t.rai '<lb/>
r )<lb/>
AftORTIONt  P TO<lb/>
lTttiWttKOF<lb/>
CKIONANCY<lb/>
Sl76 00"aMinclvsivr<lb/>
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trot, artd problem preean<lb/>
cT cogntolmcj For tvrmor<lb/>
information can 137 0515<lb/>
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Health Ortantia'tor.<lb/>
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Mob. - Fri. 11:30 2sOO<lb/>
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758 6266 Evening buffet 92.79<lb/>
Hwy 264 bypass Greenville , C.<lb/>
Lady Uses Ability<lb/>
To Help People<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
living without that She believes in<lb/>
God and goes to church, but "not to<lb/>
any one in particular<lb/>
"I can talk to anyone unless<lb/>
they're trying to be smart<lb/>
Madame Lurane says, "it's really<lb/>
up to the individual. If they're skep<lb/>
tical, it won't help Someone<lb/>
coughs in the room down the hall.<lb/>
"My husband has a terrible cold<lb/>
she explains. Her red-ringed<lb/>
cigarette drops a clump of ashes on-<lb/>
to the table. She pushes the clump<lb/>
into an ashtray and hides the bulky<lb/>
dish in the chair beside her.<lb/>
"You see, you can change the<lb/>
direction in your life, but you can't<lb/>
change the way you're born or the<lb/>
wav you end up she says. When<lb/>
two women from Rocky Mount<lb/>
visited Madame Lurane last year,<lb/>
tne palmist "drew a blank" from<lb/>
one of them. "I couldn't read for<lb/>
her. I couldn't even tell her her<lb/>
name, she says. 'The women<lb/>
were in an automobile accident on<lb/>
the way back, a mile outside oi<lb/>
Rock) Mount, and she was killed<lb/>
Others come with problems not<lb/>
quite so severe. Madame Lurane<lb/>
once read for a man who had<lb/>
separated from his wife; she told<lb/>
him that his wife would come back<lb/>
to him. The man called Madame<lb/>
I urane a few months later on<lb/>
Christmas Eve, worried because his<lb/>
wife had not come home.<lb/>
"1 told him thev would have<lb/>
Christmas dinner together she<lb/>
"We laughed and talked, and I<lb/>
told him to have a drink and go to<lb/>
bed. His wife called him in the mid-<lb/>
dle of the night and asked him to<lb/>
pick her up, and they had that<lb/>
Christmas dinner<lb/>
?V the same time, a woman in<lb/>
Bethe! asked Madame I urane to<lb/>
find her daughter car, which had<lb/>
been stolen from the ECU campus.<lb/>
"I told her the car was still in Green-<lb/>
ville and that thev would find it<lb/>
before Christmas. They found it on<lb/>
Christmas five, six blocks away<lb/>
from where it was stolen<lb/>
Her bedroom slippers patter soft-<lb/>
ly as she moves to the sink of her<lb/>
neat yellow kitchen for another<lb/>
cigarette. "Smoking is the worst<lb/>
habit I've got, but it certainly will<lb/>
never kill you. I've been smoking<lb/>
since I was 14<lb/>
Madame I.urane's 14-year-old<lb/>
graddaughter has inherited her gift,<lb/>
the palmist says. "She can read the<lb/>
cards and tea leaves. I don't want<lb/>
her to go into anything else yet.<lb/>
She's too young. It will come to her<lb/>
naturally Madame Lurane points<lb/>
out her granddaughter from her col-<lb/>
lection ot family photographs.<lb/>
"Send me a copy of your article,<lb/>
will you, son?" she asks. "I save the<lb/>
stories for her<lb/>
"So many people come to me that<lb/>
don't believe she says. Her eyes,<lb/>
often too piercing to meet with my<lb/>
own, are softened in earnest.<lb/>
"When I tell them something that<lb/>
has happened to them in the past, or<lb/>
if I tell them something that will<lb/>
happen in the future and it really<lb/>
does happen, then they just have to<lb/>
believe<lb/>
wg?<lb/>
s@3?J<lb/>
s??55?<lb/>
&amp;&amp;&amp;$<lb/>
<lb/>
SPORTSWOKLD<lb/>
COLLEGE NIGHT<lb/>
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9 ALIVE SPORT TEAM<lb/>
Carlester Crumpler Jim Woods<lb/>
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? ' ? ? - , '&amp;?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057300_0008"/><lb/>
1 HI- LAS1 CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
( i I 1HI KM. 1VVS0<lb/>
Miami Fights Off<lb/>
Pirates' Upset Bid<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
sport, r dilor<lb/>
MIAMI. Fla. ? Halfback<lb/>
Smokey Roan rushed for a school<lb/>
record 249 yards in 33 carries to lead<lb/>
Miami's Hurricanes to a hard-<lb/>
earned 23-10 win over stubborn Last<lb/>
Carolina in the Orange Bowl Satur-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Roan's performance broke by 62<lb/>
vards Frank Smith's 29-year-old<lb/>
single-game standard o 187 yards.<lb/>
The Pirates stayed within reach of<lb/>
the Hurricanes until the end, Roan<lb/>
going over from one yard out with<lb/>
eight seconds left to stretch the score<lb/>
to 23-10.<lb/>
Miami had an awesome offensive<lb/>
night despite the fact that starting<lb/>
quarterback Jim Kelley missed the<lb/>
game with a hip pointer.<lb/>
Kelley's replacement, junior Mike<lb/>
Rodgngue, directed the team to 534<lb/>
yards total offense. But strong<lb/>
defensive play in the clutch by the<lb/>
Pirates kept the score close.<lb/>
The Hurricanes opened the game<lb/>
with possession on their own 37 and<lb/>
quickly moved toward paydirt. A<lb/>
28-yard run on a draw play by Roan<lb/>
helped move the ball to the ECT 5.<lb/>
The Pirate defense then kept<lb/>
H I Miami? 7 ? 3 13 03 N :<lb/>
I MMilk-r W f.Hd goal<lb/>
I MMilter 13 tirirj goal<lb/>
K IHawkins 15 pass frum siewart tl ammkuki<lb/>
t MHu.h :i run (MilWr Uck)<lb/>
I MMiller 41 field foal<lb/>
M t1 amm M fiHd goal<lb/>
I M -Rom 1 run (Davis Urhl<lb/>
K 1Miami<lb/>
rirsl di'ssns " Passing ssrtls 11XII 2d si<lb/>
Ponls10-) 1.? 42 "<lb/>
tumhlrs-lust M Prnallirs ?rds ? otfll if fens ?4 2 I 14<lb/>
MH 11)1 1 t unx<lb/>
Kush.n ECU: Mr-art U-40. t ??  suiion<lb/>
4-r?. HSms a-H. I M: Hoaa PHI. ? -?. Hush<lb/>
-7, Hofebs 13-48. Sea' S-X<lb/>
Passing Ml Mfwarl UMM:i UM H.Klnitue<lb/>
?(MO Kuhi J-l-l-31<lb/>
Rrrrmng HI Ha?Wins h-fTUins 2-5. ann I 2V<lb/>
I M Kust. M, Brodsks 2 14. Kan 2-h. Belk 1-31. Haraiu<lb/>
1-1"<lb/>
Miami out of the end one for the<lb/>
next three plays to set up a fourth-<lb/>
and-goal situation with the ball on<lb/>
the six-inch line. Roan got the call<lb/>
but ran into a wall of Pirates as<lb/>
ECU held.<lb/>
The Hurricanes took their next<lb/>
possession and again moved into<lb/>
Pirate territory. Again, though, the<lb/>
ECU defense stiffened as Miami set-<lb/>
tled for a 35-yard field goal from<lb/>
Dan Miller to go up 3-0.<lb/>
Miami added to that total on their<lb/>
next drive, this time being stopped<lb/>
on the ECU 33 as Miller added a<lb/>
33-yarder to put his team up 6-0<lb/>
with 13:43 remaining in the First<lb/>
half.<lb/>
The Pirates struck back quickly.<lb/>
Tight end Norwood Vann made a<lb/>
miraculous one hand grab of a pass<lb/>
from Stewart as the play covered 29<lb/>
vards to get the drive going.<lb/>
A 32-yard run by Stewart follow-<lb/>
ed moments later and moved the<lb/>
ball to the Miami 12.<lb/>
After he was dropped for a two-<lb/>
yard loss halfback Mike Hawkins<lb/>
came back and connected with<lb/>
Stewart on a 15-yard scoring strike.<lb/>
Bill Lamm's extra point made it 7-6<lb/>
ECU with 9:10 left in the half.<lb/>
Exactly three minutes later<lb/>
Miami's Roan came up with a<lb/>
43-yard jaunt that moved the ball to<lb/>
the ECU 29.<lb/>
Roan's backup, sophomore Mark<lb/>
Rush, capped the 79-yard drive two<lb/>
plays later with a 21-yard<lb/>
touchdown run that put the Hur<lb/>
ricanes up 13-7.<lb/>
Miami was not done for the half,<lb/>
though. Miller made it ten points<lb/>
for him in the first two periods when<lb/>
he drilled a 41-yard Field goal<lb/>
through the uprights at the end ol<lb/>
the half to put his team up 16-7 at<lb/>
intermission.<lb/>
With Roan leading the way,<lb/>
Miami took its first possession ol<lb/>
the second half and marched to the<lb/>
ECU six. The hero quickly became<lb/>
the goat, though, as Roan coughed<lb/>
up the football.<lb/>
ECU defensive end Doug Smith<lb/>
fell on the loose ball, giving the<lb/>
Pirate defense two big goal line<lb/>
stands in the game.<lb/>
A third stand followed on the<lb/>
Hurricane's next possession. Miami<lb/>
took advantage of a 19-yard reverse<lb/>
run b end Jim Joinei and moved to<lb/>
the ECU 15.<lb/>
Hie Pirates defense got tough<lb/>
again to set up a fourth-and-one<lb/>
situation at the six. QB Mike<lb/>
Rodrigue tried to sneak for the yard<lb/>
but got nowhere as defensive tackle<lb/>
Nate Wigfall made the stop.<lb/>
"On fourth down situations thev<lb/>
just lined up and stopped us<lb/>
Miami coach Howard<lb/>
Schnellenbergei said following the<lb/>
contest. "1 hey were a gutty football<lb/>
team out there tonight<lb/>
After being held to but 12 yards in<lb/>
the third quarter, the Pirate offense<lb/>
got cianked up early in the fourth<lb/>
when a scrambling Stewart found<lb/>
Mike Hawkins open foi a gain o 36<lb/>
yards to move the ball to Miami's<lb/>
36.<lb/>
1 he Pirates got as tar as the 15<lb/>
and had to settle foi a 32-yard field<lb/>
goal from I amm that narrowed the<lb/>
Miami margin to 16-10.<lb/>
With 7:38 remaining the Pirates<lb/>
took ovei on their own 10 with the<lb/>
chance to move ahead. The Hur-<lb/>
ricane defense was tough, though,<lb/>
as Kl go: no further than its 22<lb/>
and had to punt the ball awaj.<lb/>
1 he Hurricanes then took ovei at<lb/>
then 35 and marched 65 vards for a<lb/>
game-clinching score. Roan ran for<lb/>
39 ol those yards m .dpp the<lb/>
drive with a TD dive From one yard<lb/>
out.<lb/>
The win pushed Miami's record<lb/>
to 5-3 while the Pirates fell to 4-5.<lb/>
I ollowing the game ECU head<lb/>
coach Id 1 morv praised the Hur-<lb/>
ricanes and especially Roan.<lb/>
'?Miami has a hell o a football<lb/>
team. 1 know thev missed Kelley,<lb/>
though, l'hev have good backs but<lb/>
nobody knew si because thev<lb/>
haven't been tunning much this<lb/>
year. Roan was just plain super<lb/>
?V foi his own club the Pirate<lb/>
Mauling Mike<lb/>
ECU defensive tackle Hal<lb/>
Stephens (93) and Doug<lb/>
Smith (92) provide a big<lb/>
rush of Miami QB Mike<lb/>
Rodrigue (above) and move<lb/>
in for the big kill (at right).<lb/>
Rodrigue and the Hur-<lb/>
ricanes won the<lb/>
game,though. 23-10. The<lb/>
Pirates lost out in two ways<lb/>
as Stephens was injured and<lb/>
may be out for this Satur-<lb/>
days bout with Eastern<lb/>
Kentucky. (Photo by C hap<lb/>
(iurlev)<lb/>
mentoi said his<lb/>
defense "showed<lb/>
lots ol c rtarac " but had harshei<lb/>
comments about the offensive line.<lb/>
??We're still vcrv young and must<lb/>
improve he said. "But our offen-<lb/>
sive line just looked like they'd been<lb/>
stepping on Vietnamese mines<lb/>
The Pirates return home tins<lb/>
Saturday to host defending NCAA<lb/>
Division I A A national champ<lb/>
I astern Kentucky while Miami<lb/>
travels to Yanderbilt.<lb/>
Jayvees Win, Varsity Hosts Tough Colonels<lb/>
Pirate Notes:<lb/>
The East Carolina jayvee football<lb/>
team got its first win of the season<lb/>
Sunday afternoon, downing Fort<lb/>
Bragg 7-0.<lb/>
The Pirates scored on their first<lb/>
possession of the game as running<lb/>
back Eric Redmond raced 29 yards<lb/>
for a touchdown. Greenville native<lb/>
Ted King kicked the extra point to<lb/>
make it 7-0.<lb/>
The score was set up by a fumble<lb/>
recovery by ECU defensive lineman<lb/>
J.C. Plott in Fort Bragg territory.<lb/>
The remainder of the game was<lb/>
filled with errors on the part of both<lb/>
clubs, though Fort Bragg threatened<lb/>
to score several times and got as<lb/>
close as the ECU two-yard line.<lb/>
The win pushed the jayvee team's<lb/>
record to 1-2. The club has one<lb/>
more contest left, hosting Fork<lb/>
Union Military Academy in Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium on Friday, November 21 at<lb/>
3 p.m.<lb/>
The varsity football Pirates will<lb/>
host defending NCAA Division<lb/>
I-AA national champion Eastern<lb/>
Kentucky this Saturday in Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium.<lb/>
The Colonels defeated perenially<lb/>
powerful Delaware in the cham-<lb/>
pionship game last season to claim<lb/>
the title.<lb/>
The club is enjoying another big<lb/>
year in 1980 as it has a 7-2 record<lb/>
coming into this weekend's game<lb/>
and is ranked among the nation's<lb/>
top ten Division I-AA teams.<lb/>
ECU head coach Ed Emory ob-<lb/>
viously thinks very highly of the<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
Chandler<lb/>
-<lb/>
Colonels despite the fact that they<lb/>
play in a division below the Pirates.<lb/>
"This year's team has continued<lb/>
great coaching and great person-<lb/>
nel he said. "Eastern Kentucky is<lb/>
as good as Southern Mississippi and<lb/>
better than the Richmonds, William<lb/>
and Marys and Dukes<lb/>
A quick look back reveals that<lb/>
Southern Miss downed the Pirates<lb/>
in Ficklen 35-7 and later defeated<lb/>
Mississippi State, a club that went<lb/>
on to defeat Alabama.<lb/>
ECU fullback Theodore Sutton's<lb/>
drive towards the all-time Pirate<lb/>
rushing record was tarnished greatlv<lb/>
in last Saturday's 23-10 loss to<lb/>
Miami.<lb/>
The Hurricane defense held the<lb/>
Kinston native to but 17 yards, leav-<lb/>
ing him 235 yards short of Carlester<lb/>
Crumpler's standard of 2,889 yards.<lb/>
Sutton must average 117.5 yards in<lb/>
the last two Pirate games to equal<lb/>
that mark.<lb/>
Halfback Anthony Collins<lb/>
jumped two positions among the<lb/>
top ten all-time Pirate rushers Satur-<lb/>
dav, moving from the seventh posi-<lb/>
tion to the fifth.<lb/>
Collins has 2,116 yards, only 39<lb/>
shy o fourth place Kenny<lb/>
Stravhorn's total. "AC ' moved<lb/>
ahead o Eddie Hicks (2,101) and<lb/>
Dave Alexander (2.112)<lb/>
Placekicker Bill I amm is climb-<lb/>
ing the ladde all-time I CU<lb/>
scorers. He needs just seven points<lb/>
to move ahead ol Butch Colson into<lb/>
the fourth position.<lb/>
Colson finished with 164 career<lb/>
points while I amm has 158.<lb/>
There will be 12 captains tor the<lb/>
ECU team when it hosts Eastern<lb/>
Kentucky. Each one of the club's<lb/>
seniors will serve in that capacity.<lb/>
Thev are: fullback 1 heodore Sut-<lb/>
ton. halfback Anthony Collins, split<lb/>
end Vern Davenport, linebac)<lb/>
Jeffrey Warren and C buck Jacks<lb/>
cornerback Willie Holley, kicl<lb/>
Bill 1 amm, punter Rodney !<lb/>
defensive ends Rock) Butler<lb/>
Clifl Williams, safety James<lb/>
and defensive tackle Nate Wigfa<lb/>
Seniors Wayne Inman (guat<lb/>
and Tim Swords (defensive tackle)<lb/>
are injured and cannot suit up but<lb/>
will receive special recognitii<lb/>
The ECU men's basketball te;<lb/>
will be on public displav tor the first<lb/>
time this Saturday. The annual<lb/>
Purple-Gold game will begin 30<lb/>
minutes following the '<lb/>
game.<lb/>
The public is cordially invited<lb/>
attend. No admission will be cl<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
Says A Disappointed Emory<lb/>
We Should've Won'<lb/>
"? ?4M?<lb/>
Miami halfback Smokey Roan<lb/>
gets a rede awakening from ECU<lb/>
safety James Freer (20) after<lb/>
hauling in a pass. The 58" Roan<lb/>
still finished with a school-record<lb/>
249 yards rushing,<lb/>
though.(Photo by Chap Gurley)<lb/>
B CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports l iliiix<lb/>
MIAMI. Fla. ? "There's no<lb/>
doubt, we should've won the foot-<lb/>
ball game<lb/>
ECU head coach Ed Emory sum-<lb/>
med up his team's narrow 23-10 loss<lb/>
to Miami's powerful Hurricanes in<lb/>
the Orange Bowl Saturday very<lb/>
simply.<lb/>
"We had the opportunity to pull<lb/>
off an upset. The stage and setting<lb/>
was all there. The defense gave us<lb/>
the opportunity. That's the way<lb/>
upsets are made. That's how<lb/>
Georgia lech tied Notre Dame<lb/>
The first-year mentor was ob-<lb/>
viously disappointed that his club<lb/>
had stopped the Hurricanes three<lb/>
times at the goal line only to come<lb/>
away a loser. Emory said when<lb/>
his club took over possession with<lb/>
just under eight minutes remaining<lb/>
in the game and down only 16-10, it<lb/>
should have scored.<lb/>
"The momentum should have<lb/>
been on our side he said. "Our<lb/>
guys should have realized that with<lb/>
one score we could win the football<lb/>
game. We wouldn't have won it<lb/>
with statistics or yards gained but by<lb/>
taking advantage of some breaks<lb/>
As it turned out the Pirates could<lb/>
move no further than their own<lb/>
22-vard line on the forementioned<lb/>
possession and had to punt the ball<lb/>
away.<lb/>
The Hurricanes took things in<lb/>
their owns hands from there, mar-<lb/>
ching 65 yards for the game-<lb/>
clinching touchdown.<lb/>
As Emory stated, had the Pirates<lb/>
come up with a late score the win<lb/>
would not have come via statistics.<lb/>
The Hurricanes outgained ECU 534<lb/>
vards to 224.<lb/>
In fact, Miami halfback Smoke)<lb/>
Roan single-handidly outgained the<lb/>
Pirate offense, rambling for a<lb/>
school-record 249 yards.<lb/>
Despite the mass chunks of yar-<lb/>
dage given up by the ECU defense,<lb/>
Emory could be proud of its perfor-<lb/>
mance after stopping the Hurricanes<lb/>
twice on fourth-and-goal situations<lb/>
and another time by recovering a<lb/>
fumble on the Pirate six-yard line.<lb/>
"Our defense played with a lot of<lb/>
character he said. "We held<lb/>
Miami out of the end zone for 29<lb/>
minutes in the second half<lb/>
The main problem foi his club.<lb/>
Emory said, was not maintaining<lb/>
possession ol the football. i"he<lb/>
Pirates could mustei only one real<lb/>
drive on the evening, an v yardei<lb/>
than ended in a Greg Stewart-to-<lb/>
Mikc Hawkins I 1) pass it came in<lb/>
the fust half. Foi the game E( U<lb/>
garnered only nine first downs.<lb/>
"We just didn't move the foot-<lb/>
ball. We've got to do that the next<lb/>
two weeks. It hurt us against Miami.<lb/>
On the other hand. Miami's offense<lb/>
dominated the football. You just<lb/>
can't expect a defense to stay on the<lb/>
field all night<lb/>
Though his club gained ovei 500<lb/>
yards foi the evening. Miami coach<lb/>
How aid Schnellenbergei was happy<lb/>
to come away a winnei following<lb/>
two lost fumbles, an ECU intercep-<lb/>
tion and the goal line stands.<lb/>
"Thank God we put this one in<lb/>
the win column he said. "It's very<lb/>
difficult to make mistakes against a<lb/>
scrappy football team and win.<lb/>
Thev were a gutty toot ball team and<lb/>
plaved as well. On fourth down<lb/>
situations, they just lined up and<lb/>
stopped us<lb/>
Both teams had injury problems<lb/>
at quarterback coming into the<lb/>
game, Miami's Mike Kelley our and<lb/>
EC I 's Greg Stewart questionable<lb/>
with an ankle problem. V<lb/>
Rodrigue filled in admirably foi<lb/>
Kelley but Stewari got the call<lb/>
1I<lb/>
"We didn't know until right<lb/>
before garnet! me whethei G<lb/>
would plav or not Emory said.<lb/>
"We wanted to wait and wa m<lb/>
in his warmups. He said he felt good<lb/>
so we started him<lb/>
1 he Pirate mentoi was impressed<lb/>
with the sophomore's performance<lb/>
"It was a real gutty effort on Grej<lb/>
part. 1 had no idea he could have<lb/>
played as well as he did<lb/>
1 mot v added, though, that a<lb/>
completely healthy Stewart or a<lb/>
healthy Carlton Nelson (out for the<lb/>
year with a neck injury) would have<lb/>
made a difference.<lb/>
"They gave us the quarterback. It<lb/>
Greg had been 100 percent or it we<lb/>
had had Nelson things might have<lb/>
been different. That's no excuse but<lb/>
1 would have like to have seen it.<lb/>
Mississippi State (also a wishbone<lb/>
team) was given the quarterback too<lb/>
and beat them<lb/>
H<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057300_0009"/><lb/>
<lb/>
p<lb/>
?<lb/>
I HI i AS I C AkOl INIAN<lb/>
NOVI-MBIR 11, 1980<lb/>
Lady Pirates Suffer<lb/>
With Early Injuries<lb/>
Fran Hooks<lb/>
Monday Casualty<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
AsmnIhui Sports rdllor<lb/>
The 1980-81 season<lb/>
opener for the East<lb/>
Carolina women's<lb/>
basketball team is less<lb/>
than two weeks away,<lb/>
but head coach Cathy<lb/>
Andruzzi and assistant<lb/>
Sherri Pickard are<lb/>
already shaking the<lb/>
trees in hopes of<lb/>
locating talent for<lb/>
future Lady Pirate<lb/>
campaigns.<lb/>
"Sherri has been to<lb/>
areas in the last few<lb/>
weeks that we've never<lb/>
been to before says<lb/>
Andruzi. "We're go-<lb/>
ing after kids in South<lb/>
Carolina, Florida;<lb/>
whereever they may be.<lb/>
"As far as the<lb/>
growth of the program<lb/>
here, Sherri has meant<lb/>
a lot to us. She's done a<lb/>
great job recruiting<lb/>
Before the coaches<lb/>
can get too wrapped up<lb/>
in the recruiting game,<lb/>
the Pirates must<lb/>
manuever their way<lb/>
through an awesome<lb/>
schedule featuring na-<lb/>
tional powers such as<lb/>
national champion Old<lb/>
Dominion, North<lb/>
Carolina State, South<lb/>
Carolina and North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates<lb/>
host Atlantic Christian<lb/>
College Wednesday<lb/>
night at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum in a<lb/>
pre-season scrimmage<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Losing R o s i e<lb/>
Thompson, who holds<lb/>
nearly all ECU offen-<lb/>
sive records, is an<lb/>
obstacle in itself. But<lb/>
aside from Thompson,<lb/>
only freshmen Donna<lb/>
Brayboy and walk-on<lb/>
Sandy Raneiri do not<lb/>
return for the '80-81<lb/>
schedule.<lb/>
The addition of<lb/>
former N.C. State<lb/>
guard Caren Truskc to<lb/>
Auburn Sets Sights<lb/>
On No. 1 Bulldogs<lb/>
the Pirate backcourt<lb/>
along with high school<lb/>
Ail-American Lisa Fen-<lb/>
nell of Goldsboro was<lb/>
expected to provide<lb/>
depth behind returning<lb/>
starters Laurie Sikes<lb/>
and I ydia Rountree.<lb/>
As juniorsSikes and<lb/>
Rountree combined to<lb/>
form one of the most<lb/>
talented duos in their<lb/>
region. But neither<lb/>
started in the Pirates<lb/>
first scrimmage of the<lb/>
season Monday against<lb/>
Chow an nor are they<lb/>
expected to be ready<lb/>
for the official opener.<lb/>
Sikes suffers from<lb/>
recurring k n e e<lb/>
ailments, while Roun-<lb/>
tree sustained a pulled<lb/>
hamstring in early prac-<lb/>
tice.<lb/>
Fennel entered camp<lb/>
with a stress fracture<lb/>
and has just received<lb/>
permission to begin<lb/>
light workouts. She and<lb/>
Rountree are expected<lb/>
to begin workouts to-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Senior forward Heidi<lb/>
Owen has missed the<lb/>
last tew weeks of drills<lb/>
with mononucleosis,<lb/>
but Andruzi indicates<lb/>
a blood test in the near<lb/>
future will indicate<lb/>
when she amy return to<lb/>
practice.<lb/>
"We're not going to<lb/>
rush into anything<lb/>
Andruzi states. "We<lb/>
certainly don't want to<lb/>
risk any type of perma-<lb/>
nant injury to one of<lb/>
our players. Sikes will<lb/>
see limited action, but<lb/>
that's on a day-by-day<lb/>
basis.<lb/>
We don't have<lb/>
depth at any positions<lb/>
with the injuries. But 1<lb/>
think there have been a<lb/>
lot of bright spots.<lb/>
"The kids' dedica-<lb/>
tion has been<lb/>
phenominal. We've got<lb/>
a lot to work on, but<lb/>
they're really working<lb/>
hard to progress to the<lb/>
level we want to be at<lb/>
Senior Ail-American<lb/>
candidate Kathy Riley<lb/>
and sophomore Mary<lb/>
Denkler have emerged<lb/>
as the top forwards,<lb/>
while steady senior<lb/>
Marcia Girven anchors<lb/>
the center slot. Truske<lb/>
and junior college All-<lb/>
Am en v. an Sam Jones<lb/>
round out the list of<lb/>
possible starters for the<lb/>
Pirates' pre-season<lb/>
bouts.<lb/>
Photo Oy jON JORDAN<lb/>
Steelwheeler Richard Hudson<lb/>
U M1KETULL1<lb/>
l l'l sp.irlv Writer<lb/>
?uburn must be rub-<lb/>
bing its hands with an-<lb/>
Thwarting Georgia's<lb/>
- igai Bowl hopes the<lb/>
as tun.<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Li row<lb/>
Sal m ?. .ould<lb/>
add the satisfaction of<lb/>
knocking oft the na-<lb/>
tion's V I t am.<lb/>
v teoreia knows it on-<lb/>
oowell.<lb/>
Some strange<lb/>
?Jungs have happened<lb/>
un a: Auburn<lb/>
Georgia coach Yince<lb/>
Dooley acknowledged<lb/>
after the Bulldogs stak-<lb/>
ed a claim to No. 1 with<lb/>
a 26-21 victorv over<lb/>
20th-ranked Florida.<lb/>
If Georgia is voted<lb/>
No. 1 b the L PI Board<lb/>
Coaches, Auburn<lb/>
ild wind up being the<lb/>
rd straight team to<lb/>
ow a banana peel in<lb/>
. path of a No. 1.<lb/>
1 ast week it was<lb/>
Mississippi State<lb/>
defeating Alabama and<lb/>
this time, Georgia Tech<lb/>
i Notre Dame 3-3,<lb/>
leaving the Bulldogs as<lb/>
the only unbeaten, un-<lb/>
tied major college team<lb/>
in the nation.<lb/>
Georgia came from<lb/>
behind with a last-<lb/>
minute, 93-yard bomb<lb/>
to Lindsay Scott to<lb/>
avert a defeat against<lb/>
Florida.<lb/>
'We've definitely<lb/>
got to be a contender<lb/>
for it, ' said Georgia<lb/>
c ornerback Mike<lb/>
Fisher. "But, there's<lb/>
been so much talk<lb/>
about a national cham-<lb/>
pionship, I'm afraid it<lb/>
might take our minds<lb/>
oft the Southeastern<lb/>
C onference champion-<lb/>
ship<lb/>
Fisher sounds like a<lb/>
wise man and his mates<lb/>
would do well to listen<lb/>
to him.<lb/>
The Bulldogs, the<lb/>
only SEC team without<lb/>
a league loss, could win<lb/>
the SEC title and an<lb/>
automatic Sugar Bowl<lb/>
bid by beating Auburn.<lb/>
But they had the same<lb/>
chance the past two<lb/>
years and failed both<lb/>
times ? tying in 19s<lb/>
and losing last year.<lb/>
As Dooley celebrated<lb/>
and began preparing<lb/>
for next week, Notre<lb/>
Dame was brooding<lb/>
over its outcome<lb/>
UPI Top Twenty<lb/>
NEW YORK (UPI) The United Press<lb/>
lnternational Board olCoachesTop Ten<lb/>
ratings after 10 weeks, with first place votes<lb/>
and records in parenthesis.<lb/>
1. Georgia (34)9-0618<lb/>
2. Southern C'al (4)7-0-1560<lb/>
3. Nebraska (2)8-1505<lb/>
4. Florida State (1)9-1495<lb/>
5. Alabama8-1470<lb/>
6. Ohio State8-1447<lb/>
7. Notre Dame7-0-1402<lb/>
8. Pittsburgh8-1355<lb/>
9. Penn State8-1263<lb/>
10. Bavlor8-1219<lb/>
11. Oklahoma6-2175<lb/>
12. Michigan7-2163<lb/>
13. Brigham Young8-1101<lb/>
14. South Carolina7-283<lb/>
15. North Carolina8-182<lb/>
16. Purdue7-250<lb/>
17. Mississippi St.7-234<lb/>
18. 1XI A6-232<lb/>
19. Texas6-225<lb/>
20. Washington7-219<lb/>
against Georgia Tech.<lb/>
Despite ascending to<lb/>
No. 1 on Alabama's<lb/>
loss to a weak team,<lb/>
Notre Dame ignored<lb/>
the lesson to be learned<lb/>
and made the same<lb/>
mistake.<lb/>
The Yellow Jackets<lb/>
intercepted two passe-<lb/>
and recovered three<lb/>
fumbles to shut down<lb/>
Notre Dame. In fact,<lb/>
following Johnny<lb/>
Smith's 3 6 - y a r d<lb/>
second-period field<lb/>
goal, the Fighting Irish<lb/>
needed Harry Oliver's<lb/>
47-yard field goal with<lb/>
4:44 remaining to<lb/>
secure the tie.<lb/>
Georgia Tech had a<lb/>
golden opportunity to<lb/>
win the game when<lb/>
linebacker Robert<lb/>
Jaracz recovered a<lb/>
fumble at the Notre<lb/>
Dame 12 with 8:39 left.<lb/>
but Notre Dame's<lb/>
Stacey Toran in-<lb/>
tercepted a pass at the<lb/>
1.<lb/>
In other games in-<lb/>
volving the Top 10, No.<lb/>
3 Southern California<lb/>
crushed Stanford 34-S),<lb/>
No. 4 Florida State<lb/>
beat Yirginia Tech<lb/>
31-7, No. 5 Nebraska<lb/>
walloped Kansas State<lb/>
55-8, No. 6 Alabama<lb/>
defeated Louisiana<lb/>
ECU-NCSU<lb/>
Tickets<lb/>
A vailable<lb/>
Tickets to the ECU-<lb/>
N.C. State Nov. 22<lb/>
football game are still<lb/>
on sale and can be pur-<lb/>
chased in the Minges<lb/>
Coliseum ticket office.<lb/>
ECU students, facul-<lb/>
ty and staff can pur-<lb/>
chase the first ticket at<lb/>
a 50 percent discount<lb/>
($4.50) and will be<lb/>
charged the full admis-<lb/>
sion price ($9.00) for a<lb/>
second.<lb/>
The game will be<lb/>
played in Raleigh's<lb/>
Carter-Finley Stadium<lb/>
and will get underway<lb/>
at 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
.<lb/>
H<lb/>
i -<lb/>
t RESTAURANT<lb/>
Student<lb/>
Happy Hour<lb/>
Mon-Fri. 2 to 5pm<lb/>
Sm. draft .35C<lb/>
Lg. draft .50C<lb/>
ECU ID. Only<lb/>
Come In and Enjoy<lb/>
The Hottest Game Room<lb/>
In Town<lb/>
State 28-7, No. 7 Ohio<lb/>
State outlasted Illinois<lb/>
49-42, No. 8 Pittsburgh<lb/>
beat Louisville 41-23.<lb/>
Nik 9 LCI A was upset<lb/>
by Oregon 20-14 and<lb/>
No. 10 Penn State held<lb/>
off North Carolina<lb/>
Stale 21-13.<lb/>
Marcus Mien ran fot<lb/>
196 yards and two I I s<lb/>
to help Southern Cal.<lb/>
7 - 0 -1 , extend its<lb/>
unbeaten string to 28<lb/>
games. LSC is ineligi-<lb/>
ble for the conference<lb/>
title and postseason<lb/>
piav this year as are<lb/>
tour othei conference<lb/>
schools. The loss ended<lb/>
Slantord's hopes tor a<lb/>
Rose Howl berth.<lb/>
Rick Stockstill threw<lb/>
two ID passes to Har-<lb/>
dis Johnson and plung-<lb/>
ed 1 yard for another<lb/>
score to lead Florida<lb/>
State. The Seminoles,<lb/>
9-1, found themselves<lb/>
stymied by Pi's na-<lb/>
tional) second-ranked<lb/>
defense until late in the<lb/>
first half, when they<lb/>
scored two TDs in less<lb/>
than a minute. Sam<lb/>
Plati gained 108 yards<lb/>
for his fifth (00-yard<lb/>
game of the season, a<lb/>
team record.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE Technics SA 500 60<lb/>
watn SL 230 fully automatic<lb/>
turntable With Empire ?000 E" Ml<lb/>
Phase Linear speakers<lb/>
Aluminum 'itennae Paid s<lb/>
best oHei Co<lb/>
Graham<lb/>
FOR SALE Fuubuster multi<lb/>
band Best ofter 7 52 8860 ask for<lb/>
Kevin<lb/>
FOR SALE 1972 CB 100 Honda<lb/>
Many new parts, very good shape<lb/>
85 MPG S30C Firm, Call ?S8 8124<lb/>
FOR SALE Alvarei Guitar, 7<lb/>
months old With case S430<lb/>
7 58 6302<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
CHRISTIAN FEMALE Seeks<lb/>
responsible roommate for furnish<lb/>
ed trailer $65 month naif<lb/>
utilities 756 8664 after00 p m<lb/>
FOR RENT Two bedroom<lb/>
duplex, three blocks from campus<lb/>
Gas heat and air Large kitchen<lb/>
available Dec I S210 per month<lb/>
7 58 6050<lb/>
RESPONSIBLE FEMALE<lb/>
ROOMMATE Needed im<lb/>
mediately Two bedroom apart<lb/>
meni hall rent hall utilities close<lb/>
C?U "58 -<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
CUSTOM CRAFTING and repair<lb/>
of gold and stiver Buying and<lb/>
selling of gold and silver by Les<lb/>
Jewelers 120 E 5th St 7S8 2127<lb/>
SUNSHINE STUDIOS offermg<lb/>
classes .n Ballet Jazz Yoga and<lb/>
Exercise Special student rates<lb/>
Within walking distance of cam<lb/>
ous 756 7235<lb/>
PERFECT CHRISTMAS GIFTS<lb/>
H.gn quality low cost portraits,<lb/>
caricatures T shirts people, pets<lb/>
you name it John Weyler<lb/>
752 5775<lb/>
ANYTHING YOU CAN WRITE<lb/>
We can write better Typing pro<lb/>
ofreadmg editing Write Right<lb/>
7 56 9946<lb/>
HELP WANTED RNs LPNs<lb/>
and Technicians at Pungo District<lb/>
Hospital needs you Opening on all<lb/>
three shifts with shift differential<lb/>
for 3 00 11 00 and II 00 7 00 Con<lb/>
tact Dnector of Nurses. Pungo<lb/>
District Hospital 943 2111<lb/>
DOMINO S PIZZA Now hiring<lb/>
part time help Must be 18. have<lb/>
own car and insurance, must be<lb/>
willing to work weekends Apply<lb/>
m person 1201 Charles Blvd<lb/>
WANTED Female housekeeper<lb/>
to live m' and free to travel Call<lb/>
756 3511 daily at 2 00 p m<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, TTM 11:00 12:00.<lb/>
East Carolinian Office, MTTH<lb/>
4 00 5:00. WF 2 00 3:00<lb/>
Student Organization Booth<lb/>
(Mendenhall) MWF 12001 00.<lb/>
TTH 11 00 12 00<lb/>
i<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o1<lb/>
Marshes<lb/>
Surf-n-Sea<lb/>
Grand Opening<lb/>
Rivergate Center<lb/>
O<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o:<lb/>
1<lb/>
Nov. 15 10am-5pm<lb/>
Door Prizes<lb/>
Other Gifts<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
JMiJJMMMMMMMMMaMJE<lb/>
I Classified Ad Form<lb/>
I<lb/>
1 PRICE ?1 00 lor 15 words 05 lor<lb/>
each additional word<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I Mke cfcCCfcf payablt<lb/>
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The Eai'<lb/>
Abbreviations coun' as one wjrd<lb/>
as do phone numbers and,<lb/>
hyphenjl on<lb/>
MAIL TO<lb/>
The E.is' Carolinian<lb/>
Classified Ads<lb/>
I Old Sou'h Building<lb/>
Greenville N C 27834<lb/>
A<lb/>
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All Day<lb/>
Every Day<lb/>
Open<lb/>
11 A.M9 P.M.<lb/>
Sun. -Thru Thurs.<lb/>
11 A.M10P.M.<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat.<lb/>
?v<lb/>
j<lb/>
J<lb/>
Stet <lb/>
I<lb/>
W<lb/>
3005 E.<lb/>
10th Street<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
(Beside Hastings Ford)<lb/>
Take Out<lb/>
Service<lb/>
Available<lb/>
758-8550<lb/>
Fast &amp; Easy Delicious Lunches<lb/>
Soup &amp; Salad<lb/>
$-99<lb/>
thicken Filet Sandwich<lb/>
Baked Potato or French Fries<lb/>
Chllds Plate<lb/>
4 0z. Chopped Sirloin<lb/>
Baked Potato or French Fries<lb/>
Toast<lb/>
Diet Plate<lb/>
4 Oz. Chop Sirloin J<lb/>
Cottage Cheese &amp; Fruit<lb/>
Old Fashion Cheeseburger<lb/>
$-29<lb/>
No Potato<lb/>
Banquet<lb/>
&amp; Party<lb/>
Facilities<lb/>
Available<lb/>
Steak Sandwich<lb/>
Plain. PeDDers &amp; Onions<lb/>
Mushroom Gravy, C 4fOC<lb/>
Baked Potato or M J - ?<lb/>
French Fries<lb/>
Steerburger<lb/>
$-J9<lb/>
Baked Potato<lb/>
or French Fries<lb/>
NO TAKE OUTS<lb/>
ON DAILY SPECIALS<lb/>
SPECIALS DAILY<lb/>
Monday And Wednesday<lb/>
Beef Tips<lb/>
$?29<lb/>
Dally Specials Served With Baked Potato or Frer &amp; Toast<lb/>
Tuesday Ana ihursoay<lb/>
Chop Sirloin<lb/>
$i89<lb/>
8 0z<lb/>
30 Item Delicious Salad Bar<lb/>
TfcEAMERS<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA PLAYHOUSE<lb/>
STUDIO THEATRE<lb/>
November 17-22, 24-25 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
General Admission $2.50<lb/>
ECU Students $1.50<lb/>
?57-6390<lb/>
STREAMERS IS A POWERFUL MILITARY DRA7 <lb/>
INTENDED FOR MATURE AUDIENCES<lb/>
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Lady Pirates<lb/>
Close Slate<lb/>
At Pembroke<lb/>
Vviia?i Spot is i ditoi<lb/>
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sen ? 1 ad<lb/>
Va: volleyball team<lb/>
mil; vK begin to<lb/>
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towing at the<lb/>
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v.iw. " s a result, our<lb/>
offensive came was not<lb/>
as strong as we needed<lb/>
it to be. We were on<lb/>
defense all night<lb/>
Both Davidson and<lb/>
head coach Alitu Dillon<lb/>
agree that defense lias<lb/>
come to be one ol the<lb/>
keys to 1 CU success,<lb/>
but the feel the team<lb/>
a) still overcome their<lb/>
disadvantages through<lb/>
intense practice and<lb/>
make a solid bid foi an<lb/>
"at large" berth to the<lb/>
regional tournament.<lb/>
??( Hii blocking still is<lb/>
uist killing us admits<lb/>
Davidson. "When you<lb/>
don't get a hand on the<lb/>
ball at all. then it's<lb/>
coming straighl down<lb/>
and it just makes it that<lb/>
much hardei to dig<lb/>
"Out defense is<lb/>
looking good, though<lb/>
1 he siil! havenM leam<lb/>
ed how to die. I<lb/>
they're getting there. 1 season<lb/>
. think if thev could nisi " ??? mate<lb/>
Booters 'Battle'<lb/>
For Final Win<lb/>
Senior Sharon Ferry (overs Net For ECU<lb/>
an<lb/>
d see v hat it'<lb/>
th<lb/>
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then<lb/>
down<lb/>
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do it once m<lb/>
a came broke Stat <lb/>
tllj scheduled to<lb/>
. l rancis Marion as<lb/>
well, but that match<lb/>
since been cancell-<lb/>
"(Pembroke) heat us<lb/>
a n at the 1 rancis<lb/>
Marion Invitational<lb/>
earlier this yeai sas<lb/>
Davidson. "They<lb/>
shouldn't have, but we<lb/>
weren't playing well. It<lb/>
we don't pla well<lb/>
(tonight), they'll beat<lb/>
us again<lb/>
1 ast ai ohna opens<lb/>
competition in the<lb/>
NC 1 W 1 OU1<lb/>
against Appalachian<lb/>
State 1 ridav, with the<lb/>
dinner advancing to<lb/>
face top Milked I .<lb/>
Chapel Hill.<lb/>
 astarolina goalie<lb/>
Steve Brown ran his<lb/>
season shutout total to<lb/>
five as the Pirate soccer<lb/>
team equaled the<lb/>
school record foi vic-<lb/>
tories in a season with a<lb/>
2-0 win ovei Cokei<lb/>
College in its season<lb/>
finale.<lb/>
I he Pirate booters<lb/>
finished the season with<lb/>
a 7-14-1 mark after<lb/>
winning then final two<lb/>
games oi the sea on.<lb/>
Brown was in the<lb/>
goal during each win,<lb/>
setting a new single-<lb/>
season 1(1 shutout<lb/>
mark.<lb/>
1 he game with C oker<lb/>
was interrupted b a<lb/>
brawl thai broke oul<lb/>
between the two teams.<lb/>
1 aiis and players both<lb/>
got into the act before<lb/>
dei was restored<lb/>
( oach Brad Smith's<lb/>
young squad returns<lb/>
almost intact next<lb/>
season, senior Mike<lb/>
1 awrence the only loss<lb/>
. i aduation.<lb/>
7&amp;iS4<lb/>
Goalie Brovsn Stretches -or Save<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Calender<lb/>
luesday, Nov. 11: Volleyball<lb/>
d) at Pembroke Stale. 7<lb/>
Krida. Nov. 14: Volleyball at<lb/>
NCAJAW tournament in Raleigh,<lb/>
Met d women's swimming<lb/>
Old Dominion in Minges<lb/>
. 7 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday Nov. 15: Volleyball at<lb/>
rnament in Raleigh<lb/>
i BA,<lb/>
(4-5) vs. Eastern Ken-<lb/>
tucky, Ficklen Stadium. 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
basketball, Purple-Gold<lb/>
a 30 minutes after<lb/>
eame in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
j<lb/>
Fosdick's<lb/>
INCREDIBLE<lb/>
$1.99 LUNCH!<lb/>
Monday:<lb/>
Fish Fry a you can eat<lb/>
Tuesday.<lb/>
Salad Bar ali you can eat 1 ?<lb/>
Wednesday:<lb/>
Shrimp Creole all you can eatl.99<lb/>
Thursday:<lb/>
Chowder and Salad<lb/>
all you can eat 1.99<lb/>
Friday.<lb/>
Fish FrV an eat 1.99<lb/>
Sunday Lunch Special:<lb/>
MOM'S DAY<lb/>
All Mothers EAT FREE<lb/>
Ken accompanied by family<lb/>
of 2 or more<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT SPECIAL<lb/>
lo . ully Monday <lb/>
00pm I tmaypurchax out<lb/>
 for only<lb/>
$2.50<lb/>
FOSDICKS<lb/>
I890$eatood<lb/>
"A Great<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Restaurant"<lb/>
2311 S F vans St ?Greenville<lb/>
lEant (Eartflmfan classifieds<lb/>
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THESE LOCATIONS:<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
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il 0:00-1 1:00 111 :00-1 2:00 I 1 0:00-1 1:00 I1 1 ?- 2:001 000" 1 0?<lb/>
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4:00-5:00 I 4:00-5:00 I 2:00-3:00 I 4:00-5:00 I 2:00-3:00<lb/>
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