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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057302_0001"/>
?he iEafit (Earnltntatt<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
ol.55No3 LH ?<lb/>
H Pages<lb/>
luesdav, November IX. PHO<lb/>
(Greenville, North arolina<lb/>
( initiation 10.000<lb/>
Jury Finds Defendants Innocent<lb/>
Kl I<lb/>
v<lb/>
t NSB( R ,n.c a im)<lb/>
trial inNorth e arolina<lb/>
Monda with clerk<lb/>
 oice thai<lb/>
e neaut houl the coui -<lb/>
B 1he verdict that<lb/>
 KNazis inno-<lb/>
.<lb/>
undei way<lb/>
- a nu. all white six-<lb/>
six-womanbeen<lb/>
Nov 1 1 he<lb/>
lication they<lb/>
irdict until jury<lb/>
:K Manduley, a<lb/>
M<lb/>
escoi ted I the chambei s<lb/>
Supei ioi c out i lodge lames<lb/>
1 ong ai 4:50 p.m.<lb/>
1 ven then, some courti oom<lb/>
Wayne Wood noi guilty ol<lb/>
feloniously engaging in a riot<lb/>
Mis Dooley said, glancing at the<lb/>
jury. "You find the defendant<lb/>
verdict had Roland Wayne Wood nol guilty oi<lb/>
been reached, notim- thai the jury the murder" ol each ot the slam<lb/>
had been quitting its deliberations communists, as she listed cash in<lb/>
day. Mandulev alphabetical order.<lb/>
Mis. Doolev then read the same<lb/>
tund p m eat h<lb/>
returned to the jury room and the<lb/>
full jurv filed into the courtroomm<lb/>
at 5:10 p.m. aftei the last defense at-<lb/>
toi ney ai i iv ed in coui t.<lb/>
"as<lb/>
verdicl foi each ol the othei live<lb/>
defendants.<lb/>
Jurors sat expressionless as Mis.<lb/>
.w was handed Dooley read the verdict.<lb/>
l0 an.  s:i3 p.m rhe defendants sat behmc<lb/>
he<lb/>
said the prayed silently as Mrs<lb/>
Dooley began reaching the verdict<lb/>
and some cued when it became deal<lb/>
they would .ill go 11 ee.<lb/>
I hen families, sitting six rows<lb/>
behind them, sobbed openly. Some<lb/>
family members began crying once<lb/>
it became apparent a verdicl had<lb/>
been reached even before the jury<lb/>
had entered the coui troom.<lb/>
Once the verdicts were read, I ong<lb/>
allowed the families to embrace the<lb/>
d e t e n d a n t s .<lb/>
I he three prosecuting attorneys<lb/>
stared straight ahead as the verdicl<lb/>
dai the verdicts and defense table, erect in then black<lb/>
swivel chairs. I hey held hands and were read.<lb/>
e attorney Robert Cahoon -Security, which has<lb/>
em to Mrs. Dooley.<lb/>
You find the defendant Roland defense<lb/>
een nehr<lb/>
throughout the nial, was mere i<lb/>
foi the verdicts iv five<lb/>
uniformed and pi 'lice<lb/>
officers lined three rooms ol<lb/>
courti oom.<lb/>
dditiona<lb/>
stationed jusi ?<lb/>
I ong made it clt<lb/>
?a ould be tolerated.<lb/>
I ong kept repot tei s<lb/>
tioom until all the<lb/>
tead.<lb/>
I he n ial was two we ?<lb/>
thai r this yea<lb/>
Gold<lb/>
Jisrup-<lb/>
? the courthouse<lb/>
? al<lb/>
ked by the<lb/>
: I lohn<lb/>
' I<lb/>
I<lb/>
k. ;<lb/>
City Council<lb/>
m<lb/>
Calls For<lb/>
Liquor Vote<lb/>
s PAl 1 I Ol 1 INs<lb/>
n Si ?. t diloi<lb/>
? by the drink<lb/>
ivay Greenville.<lb/>
( ouncil approved by<lb/>
4-2 I hursday a requesl by<lb/>
. . Restaurant Associa<lb/>
? ng the matter before the<lb/>
nville in a city-wide<lb/>
m.<lb/>
I denied a similar<lb/>
. when two ol its six<lb/>
rhe vote at<lb/>
Keci ai <lb/>
? council<lb/>
approve the<lb/>
d .<lb/>
n<lb/>
the North Cai olina<lb/>
ra Assembly approv eu<lb/>
all 'wing certain sities to<lb/>
 ed bev. ei age v otes.<lb/>
? 979 a ? wide<lb/>
dl : k<lb/>
in Pitl ounty. In<lb/>
 ever, the vote was in<lb/>
lim Mallory of Easi<lb/>
a felt that the referendum<lb/>
have little effect on the<lb/>
" 1 he law pro<lb/>
ale of a<lb/>
he explained,<lb/>
see ii ha ing much effect<lb/>
- meeting opponents<lb/>
 ged the council to<lb/>
go by the way of peti-<lb/>
I ? ; . available to the<lb/>
' ave required 20 per-<lb/>
? ol the registered voters to sign a<lb/>
Brewer Said To Be<lb/>
In Running For Job<lb/>
B m bbii hoi i IM,<lb/>
si ? 11 ?<lb/>
eceived ovei 2hi up;<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
Easi a' o; ??? Univc M r, stepped di <lb/>
( hancellor rhomas B. Brewei is a Octobei<lb/>
finalist foi the posi ol presideni<lb/>
the University ol I ouisv ille, an-<lb/>
nounced sources last Friday<lb/>
Brewei. ch; ' I<lb/>
ilina foi the past three<lb/>
t!<lb/>
hop. i repla<lb/>
In an intervu<lb/>
New and Ol Brewei<lb/>
; Easi<lb/>
11 ustees, i<lb/>
interest<lb/>
I ouisville<lb/>
?. ti a a -<lb/>
?<lb/>
be ex<lb/>
aveled to 1 ouisville W? - happy EC I<lb/>
Chancellor Brevier<lb/>
inten iew . 1 le could noi b<lb/>
i eached foi comment lasl<lb/>
1 he University ol I ouisville has a<lb/>
loo membei search committee ii<lb/>
viewing applicants foi the posi<lb/>
ol presideni So far,<lb/>
made u<lb/>
members, administration and fa<lb/>
? ule on<lb/>
:re.<lb/>
Brewe<lb/>
view, "I would<lb/>
youi sell. 1 l toked<lb/>
ECU Visual Arts Forum Suffers<lb/>
Setback From Student Government<lb/>
etiti( for a referendum.<lb/>
 rtumbei ol local ministers<lb/>
ition to liquor by the<lb/>
rinl a suggested that an<lb/>
te would indicate sup<lb/>
?rt foi ileol mixed beverages.<lb/>
cilman W illiam Madden Jr<lb/>
a minister, felt otherwide. He<lb/>
! my firm conviction that<lb/>
 i and other members of<lb/>
council face tonight is noi<lb/>
i nol we will credit the<lb/>
: Greenville with the<lb/>
? cidc the issue.<lb/>
and on both sides<lb/>
ie here tonight and in our<lb/>
indeed has the right to<lb/>
nviction, pro y son.<lb/>
? .en should have the right<lb/>
his or hersell al the ballot<lb/>
? added.<lb/>
I ? mbers voting in favoi ol<lb/>
ferendum included Hadden,<lb/>
, McKee, Joe Iatt and 1 ouis<lb/>
lud) Greene and Clarence<lb/>
Gray were opposed to the matter.<lb/>
According to City Manages 1 d<lb/>
Wyatt, the earliest possible date foi<lb/>
referendum would be the first<lb/>
week in March. The date will be of-<lb/>
ficially set by the Pitt C ounty Board<lb/>
ol Elections.<lb/>
Wyatl also noted that it the<lb/>
referendum is passed it will mean<lb/>
additional revenue for I'm County<lb/>
because ol an additional tax. but he<lb/>
indicated that the revenue would not<lb/>
necessarily filter through to Green<lb/>
ville<lb/>
Bv II ion (,RU<lb/>
I he ECI Visua Arts Forum<lb/>
(VA1 iffered a legislative setback<lb/>
day w Studeni c iovern-<lb/>
meni Association tailed to override<lb/>
a vet pilations request.<lb/>
In a veek, theSGA<lb/>
v tdgei foi the<lb/>
 i . which was $4,600 less than the<lb/>
amount they originally asked for.<lb/>
Howevei. SGA Presideni c harlie<lb/>
d  el oed I he amended<lb/>
budget, noting in a memorandum to<lb/>
the SGA 1 egislature that, " The<lb/>
VA1 bill would have taken 19 per-<lb/>
cent ol the a SGA budge: that<lb/>
has to sun ti July I, 1981 <lb/>
rhe Vi ual Arts Foi um is made<lb/>
up ol nine groups that represent<lb/>
cash ol the depart merits in the 1 C I<lb/>
School ol  rhe VA1 sponsors<lb/>
exhibil i speakers and<lb/>
workshops connected with various<lb/>
ait media It is funded by an annual<lb/>
and from SGA monies,<lb/>
which come from studeni tees.<lb/>
Speaking on behalf o the VA1 ,<lb/>
i)i. Richard Eaing, dean ol the<lb/>
School ol Art, said that the ECU art<lb/>
school was "the besl school in the<lb/>
university and thai the V'AF's ac-<lb/>
tivities helped promote the reputa-<lb/>
tion ol the school.<lb/>
"Easiarolina University is nol<lb/>
known all ovei the I nited States,<lb/>
excepi foi those groups thai<lb/>
penetrate the I v 1 aing told the<lb/>
studeni legislators. "When we do<lb/>
something important, we announce<lb/>
ECU Police Beat<lb/>
n are<lb/>
 <lb/>
: Sw;<lb/>
?<lb/>
SGA Votes<lb/>
To Approve<lb/>
Budget<lb/>
Bv It RRN. (,H<lb/>
1<lb/>
S(<lb/>
?C. 1 egislature voted M<lb/>
appropriation<lb/>
n ? tudent gi<lb/>
Ml Pla use, described<lb/>
int Pro! ? N ?ti Pa<lb/>
I inn ol the N.<lb/>
comments to<lb/>
 ? 00! thestu-<lb/>
lled bv the<lb/>
it and invite people from all ovei the<lb/>
count i v <lb/>
I aing aKo noted that the art<lb/>
school's budget has not increased<lb/>
this year, making it "more im-<lb/>
perative" foi the VAF to continue<lb/>
its programs.<lb/>
Opponents of the bill argued in<lb/>
debate that the relatively large V Al<lb/>
requesl would take away money thai<lb/>
could be appropriated to other stu-<lb/>
dent groups later in the school year.<lb/>
"As president, I fell I had to look<lb/>
at the perspective o all OU!<lb/>
SGA Metinjj Monday<lb/>
standing room only.<lb/>
students said Charlie Sherrod<lb/>
"The art majors here make up<lb/>
about six percent of the studeni<lb/>
bodv. "here are groups at school<lb/>
who will be asking for money latei<lb/>
on. We wish we could give everyone<lb/>
everything thai thev ask for. but 19<lb/>
percent until .lulv seems unaffor-<lb/>
dahle "?<lb/>
Sherrod based his 2cJ percent<lb/>
figure on a total ol about $59,000 in<lb/>
SGA funds which does not take into<lb/>
account $30,000 that the legislature<lb/>
has set aside as a butter sum<lb/>
Doens ol art students crowded<lb/>
into the SGA's meeting room in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Centei to<lb/>
the debate on the bill<lb/>
I egislators who suppoix the bill<lb/>
argued generally that the 1 is a<lb/>
worthwhile student group thai has<lb/>
helped ECI and its art students by<lb/>
providing functions and activities<lb/>
thai the School of An cannot tund.<lb/>
()nc legislatoi. an out o! -st;<lb/>
student from New xoik. said she<lb/>
See AF, Pac 3.<lb/>
Greenville Resident Charged In Larceny<lb/>
B MIKI NOONAN<lb/>
Ni ?n t dmir<lb/>
 Z rwo Greenville residents have<lb/>
t "lG InSiQG heen a'tcsied and charged in con-<lb/>
J  Immmmmmmmm nection with the breaking and enter-<lb/>
ing o the Student Supply Store<lb/>
which occurred Oct. 2s. One suspect<lb/>
has been charged with breaking and<lb/>
Announcements  " entering. The other has been charg-<lb/>
Editorials 4 ed with possession o stolen proper-<lb/>
( lassitieds ty after receiving a class ring from<lb/>
1 etters the other s'lspecl and attempting to<lb/>
1 ea tires sell the ring to a local jewelry trader.<lb/>
sports ccording to police reports, on<lb/>
Nov. 12, at 9:30 a.m the 1 (I IM)<lb/>
received a call from an employee ol<lb/>
the Coin and King Man located on<lb/>
401 Evans Stifeet. The caller told<lb/>
police a male was attempting to sell<lb/>
a women's ring believed bv the<lb/>
employee to have been one stolen<lb/>
from the Student Supply Store on<lb/>
Oct. 25.<lb/>
Two officers dispatched to the<lb/>
business arrived in tune to find the<lb/>
suspect had already left the store.<lb/>
Aftei five minutes, however, the<lb/>
suspect returned with another male<lb/>
and the rmg was at this time ten-<lb/>
tatively identified as one that had<lb/>
been taken from the Student Supply<lb/>
Police described the ring as a<lb/>
women's 10-karat gold display ring.<lb/>
The two men were taken to the<lb/>
ECUPD foi questioning.<lb/>
one suspect, Wells, 20, ol 910<lb/>
Douglas Avenue in Greenville told<lb/>
police he had accepted the ring as<lb/>
payment of a persona! debt Horn a<lb/>
man identified as Jimmy Alan<lb/>
Wilson o Greenville.<lb/>
Wells and Wilson both denied<lb/>
having knowledge ol the breaking<lb/>
and entering of the Student Supply<lb/>
Store Wilson, however, did admit<lb/>
having the ring in his possession al<lb/>
the time the two exchanged the ring<lb/>
in place ol the personal debt<lb/>
Wilson furthei told police he hd<lb/>
bought the ring "from a dude" on<lb/>
W Fifth St.<lb/>
Wilson was ai tested foi break<lb/>
and entering and larceny and in-<lb/>
carcerated in Put County Jail under<lb/>
a $5,000 bond COurt date has been<lb/>
set foi No W.<lb/>
Welb was charged with posses<lb/>
sion ol stolen property and placed<lb/>
under a SSX) bond. Well's court<lb/>
date lias been set for Wx 10.<lb/>
Police estimate the value ol the<lb/>
recovered ring at S12(<lb/>
1 i. I f Music a<lb/>
id for pi<lb/>
up<lb/>
bands and<lb/>
rh e ECI<lb/>
? ally SI 3,350,<lb/>
lower<lb/>
Mr. Parker.<lb/>
ill ol the b<lb/>
?<lb/>
iery and other<lb/>
supp ? hy the drama<lb/>
depa<lb/>
Parkei sai ' ,n<lb/>
has forced<lb/>
the ns planned<lb/>
this yeai into smallei facilities<lb/>
"BOX 'Mu. !o<lb/>
be low beca I the -mallet<lb/>
litres Parl explained, d<lb/>
ding thai "next year, the Playhouse<lb/>
wou lor help<lb/>
ccording Parker, 75 perceni<lb/>
of the box office receipts come from<lb/>
sales ol the $1.50 student tickets<lb/>
"Nobody wants to raise (thai<lb/>
puce) Pat k.<lb/>
When asked i! the Playhouse<lb/>
would be discontinued it thev did<lb/>
nol receive the money, Parker<lb/>
replied, "No bui said he didn't<lb/>
know where thev would get the<lb/>
money,<lb/>
I he appropriation to the ECI<lb/>
School ol Musi, was originally<lb/>
700, a figure which included<lb/>
$1,600 in salaries to faculty<lb/>
members involved with the or-<lb/>
chestra, rhe SGA Appropriations<lb/>
Committee cut the salary request<lb/>
and made othei cuts before presen-<lb/>
ting the bill to the legislature for a<lb/>
vote<lb/>
t<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057302_0002"/><lb/>
THl- EASTCAROI INI N<lb/>
NOVIA1B1 R IX. 1W0<lb/>
t<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
GENERAL MANAGER<lb/>
Applications are now being ac<lb/>
cepted tor Genera! Manager ot<lb/>
The East Carolinian Position will<lb/>
be available as ot Dec 1 Appnca<lb/>
tions may be picked up in the<lb/>
Media Board Ottice in the Pubhca<lb/>
tions Center<lb/>
BLACK UNITY<lb/>
The 1st annual Black Ufl '? a '<lb/>
Awareness Beneti will bo held on<lb/>
the 25th o Nov 1980 at the Flam<lb/>
,ngo Dissoteque at 6 30 p m The<lb/>
Benetit is to sponsoreo by Mn<lb/>
bla It ?' '?  " M r?d sorori' i<lb/>
wei,  . id rhe PPHA<lb/>
pr0 ??  go to black. ?? ?<lb/>
. , . es and I<lb/>
Mm I ? INAACP<lb/>
ECU FRISBEE CLUB<lb/>
The Fnsbee dub will have ?n<lb/>
rational meel ng ' i<lb/>
N . II ?' '<lb/>
Mendenhall room ?8 "? ?<lb/>
I cH'f sonv . . m<lb/>
OHicei s a be ? ? '?<lb/>
HEALTH CARE<lb/>
interested in going into the<lb/>
care field' North<lb/>
Carolina s Educational Loan Pro<lb/>
gram may be able to help vhou<lb/>
with eduction costs Tne I<lb/>
t.onal Loan Program pi ?<lb/>
loans for students going into<lb/>
medical and othei '?? ? "<lb/>
studies such as den<lb/>
? ? fie optome'r . P"t <lb/>
LACROSSE CLUB<lb/>
All those who are interested m<lb/>
the ECU Lacrosse Club are needed<lb/>
for attendance at our first meeting<lb/>
Tues . Nov 18 at 6 30 in room 104<lb/>
of Memorial Gymnasium<lb/>
r<lb/>
HISTORY<lb/>
Phi Alpa Theta the History<lb/>
Honor Society m cooperation H<lb/>
the Dept ot History will be having<lb/>
a guest speaker on Wednesday<lb/>
Nov. ? ? -i .it 7 00 p m m<lb/>
the Richard C Todd Room<lb/>
Owing Brewster Di William N<lb/>
peat nderwat<lb/>
History The pul ited at no<lb/>
 , .  ??? A be<lb/>
- ? I<lb/>
ECU SPORT CLUB<lb/>
will be a meeting on<lb/>
Thursd . N l)th in Room<lb/>
j4? Mend) nhall a' 7 00 Plans tor<lb/>
OiSt t ?<lb/>
att<lb/>
SKISNOWSHOE<lb/>
All participants must pay their<lb/>
final payment on Thursday,<lb/>
November 20 Meet 4 00 Memorial<lb/>
Gym. Room 108<lb/>
PSI CHI<lb/>
Ps. Ch. Nat<lb/>
for psychology will meet Wed<lb/>
Nov 19 at 7 15 m Sp 129 A maie<lb/>
and female homosexual will<lb/>
d.scuss sex roles and related dit<lb/>
f.culties AM members and in<lb/>
ted, mature guests welcome<lb/>
INDUSTRIAL<lb/>
DEVELOPMENT<lb/>
What kind of industrial devi<lb/>
ment do we want in the Grei<lb/>
P M County a-v.iTht<lb/>
Women voters will address tl<lb/>
question at an opi I "foes<lb/>
 at 8 p.n ?' ?' ?<lb/>
? . ? pers the<lb/>
PPHA<lb/>
P?<lb/>
Spean<lb/>
therapy nu<lb/>
phar'? ? ?<lb/>
others Loa<lb/>
4000 pe'<lb/>
depe' '<lb/>
of s ?<lb/>
through c<lb/>
underserve<lb/>
Caro<lb/>
terested m I<lb/>
ig dental H?<lb/>
- - i<lb/>
n $500 t<lb/>
I Nortl<lb/>
I you sre in<lb/>
program and owuld<lb/>
BIOLOGY<lb/>
ita<lb/>
like an application pa. ??<lb/>
the Ecuational Loan I<lb/>
Division of F ?. Serv es NC<lb/>
Department of Human Resoun ?<lb/>
P O Box 12200 Rale u' N 17605<lb/>
telephone 919 733 2164<lb/>
SNA<lb/>
The next ? ? ' - I the ECU<lb/>
Student N rses Association will be<lb/>
Tuesday Nov !Bth at 7 00 m tne<lb/>
Nursing Auditorium Caroi Co?<lb/>
 present a I ir ' r w<lb/>
followed by d.<lb/>
PHI BETA LAMBDA<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda w ? ? ?<lb/>
Tuesday November 18th in kA<lb/>
103 Tickets for the December<lb/>
al wiii he disti buted ??<lb/>
members so they<lb/>
SCIENCE ED CLUB<lb/>
A ? .<lb/>
- ?? . a ten ?? afi ??<lb/>
ind techi a g is! b ???<lb/>
stns 1? '? a be serv<lb/>
ed at 3 30 anc 'he demons<lb/>
a I ? . It 4:0 ?"? ire invM<lb/>
Merchar<lb/>
near C<lb/>
? -<lb/>
Compie<lb/>
Biology '<lb/>
m e m be r -<lb/>
?<lb/>
abou' c y.<lb/>
ropear si "<lb/>
nge c-<lb/>
n a v<lb/>
? ?, spt akei<lb/>
forest rang.<lb/>
Pond - '<lb/>
' he proqra <lb/>
<lb/>
free ?<lb/>
series . red<lb/>
?<lb/>
II<lb/>
PRINT AUCTION<lb/>
I . ? ? . rtivei<lb/>
G'oup a ?' - d a' the<lb/>
? Cente<lb/>
? ? Clark Branch Reait,<lb/>
an official from Nati<lb/>
Resources and n n<lb/>
?pment An intei esti I<lb/>
sons are invited to a<lb/>
ARTISTSERIES<lb/>
Student Union Ai list<lb/>
??. ?. ? ? ' on Wednes<lb/>
 ?, embei ? it 6 00 p m in<lb/>
Room .i ?  Student<lb/>
enter. A ?????.?<lb/>
attenc:<lb/>
FILMSCOMMITTEE<lb/>
Room 238 i" ?<lb/>
attend<lb/>
COFFEEHOUSE<lb/>
.  . '???<lb/>
N<lb/>
?<lb/>
CAPS GOWNS<lb/>
Caps ami gowns tor lirst<lb/>
ster gra itet be<lb/>
delivered Nov 18 20 in the Student<lb/>
Supply Store  i iurs<lb/>
to keep pi c v H ? S10 00<lb/>
gi adi atii fee I<lb/>
these receiv Master!<lb/>
Degree '? ??<lb/>
?<lb/>
-? . ?. ? . s .???? nood<lb/>
Any gues' ? Si I be i ? ??? rred<lb/>
to Student . . ? ?<lb/>
Ann. ?<lb/>
ROSE<lb/>
The "?<lb/>
wilt be I<lb/>
hall Pli<lb/>
nl ormation dest loi i oom<lb/>
? i -<lb/>
sir<lb/>
Stuck '<lb/>
tor " ? ? I tin<lb/>
 ? ??<lb/>
working A '<lb/>
ludent-<lb/>
TURKEY SHOOT<lb/>
M<lb/>
? V N ?<lb/>
PHI BETA LAMBDA<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda <lb/>
. ?  i Rawl 103 ' ? -<lb/>
for the December social w<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
<lb/>
STUDENT RECITAL<lb/>
Sabr.na Colema<lb/>
il of Musu will present<lb/>
 la t piano music Fri I<lb/>
mber 21 1980. a' 9 oo p rr<lb/>
A.J Fletcher Ret I Ms<lb/>
Coi. man v<lb/>
Schun .?.?:??<lb/>
62. Beetl .???<lb/>
. Bai ? ?<lb/>
i1<lb/>
? E<lb/>
N<lb/>
 ? ? ?<lb/>
<lb/>
partial full entoi<lb/>
? for tl<lb/>
i student of I Pa ? ' '<lb/>
S.U. TRAVEL<lb/>
to ei<lb/>
' p to Fort Laui<lb/>
i ? i .ind or on<lb/>
.<lb/>
March (<lb/>
eturn I ?<lb/>
I think a<lb/>
; ' I<lb/>
? ' "lion<lb/>
MENDENHALl EN ??<lb/>
E AT 757 66t I<lb/>
!<lb/>
PKE<lb/>
molded pap?<lb/>
. the ECU<lb/>
unds ?<lb/>
. " -<lb/>
attend<lb/>
?<lb/>
MAGICIAN WANTED<lb/>
Mendenha ' ' ? '<lb/>
?. .  to employ a m,i .<lb/>
. ? ? tl Madriga D.n<lb/>
lers December 2 7 Interested m<lb/>
l.viduals should contact Wanda<lb/>
yuhas Merc, nha ludenl<lb/>
lenter 757 6?!1 e? 213 tor I<lb/>
mation p ? ? ? ? ? - pond<lb/>
is soon as .<lb/>
SOCIOANTHRO<lb/>
On Wednesday November 19.<lb/>
the Socoiogy Anthropology Club<lb/>
will hold its business meet.ng at<lb/>
7 00 p m in Brewster D 302 ??<lb/>
members and interested persons<lb/>
are encouraged to attend Pars<lb/>
for the Christmas party on<lb/>
December 3 will be disc ussed For<lb/>
more info, call Anna a' 752 0826 or<lb/>
Br.tta at 758 8867<lb/>
REAL ESTATE<lb/>
A real estate .nvestment<lb/>
seminar designed for real estate<lb/>
professionals lending officers and<lb/>
pote ? ' " a be off<lb/>
0 Eas' Carolina University<lb/>
Wednesda. Nov 19<lb/>
The program 'i be d rec te<lb/>
James R Hawkins A cr<lb/>
mayor of Durham Hawkins has<lb/>
more than ?1 years ot professional<lb/>
experience in commercial and .n<lb/>
come properties<lb/>
Co sponsors of the seminar are<lb/>
the ECU Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education and the Greenville Pitt<lb/>
County Board of Realtors Ses<lb/>
sions will be held at the Ramada<lb/>
Inn<lb/>
Topics to be discussed include<lb/>
characteristics of real estate in<lb/>
vestments forms of real estate<lb/>
ownership cash flow determina<lb/>
tion and analysis measuring in<lb/>
vestment returns and syndica<lb/>
t.ons<lb/>
Fjr-lher information about the<lb/>
semmar is available from "Real<lb/>
Estate investment Seminar<lb/>
Division of Continuing Education<lb/>
East Carolina university Green<lb/>
viiie. NC 27834<lb/>
PHI ETA SIGMA<lb/>
member! ' Ph Eta S g<lb/>
a<lb/>
A t" .? <lb/>
Aenclenhflll<lb/>
nee! rg in<lb/>
on Tues Nov<lb/>
18<lb/>
and dc<lb/>
Conve'<lb/>
Studei<lb/>
meet i<lb/>
7 00 t<lb/>
Georg<lb/>
Cieme<lb/>
I ? ??<lb/>
ACSSA<lb/>
  .<lb/>
fianagan 20.<lb/>
is and Dr Don<lb/>
ipeak on the use of<lb/>
?rnate I<lb/>
?d persons are<lb/>
end<lb/>
EPISCOPAL WORSHIP<lb/>
Ar episcopal service Of Holy<lb/>
be celebrated<lb/>
Tuesoa. ?  " rig Nov 18 m the<lb/>
chapel of the Methodist S'uaent<lb/>
entei 15th Street across from<lb/>
Garreft DormThe service will<lb/>
be at 5 30 P m with the Episcopal<lb/>
Chapla ? ?'? Rev Bill Hadden.<lb/>
celebr.i- ? g<lb/>
INTERIOR DESIGN<lb/>
Raleigh architect Joseph<lb/>
Flowers. A i A will speax at Eas<lb/>
Carolina University Nov 19 in a<lb/>
public program on the restoration<lb/>
0 the Andrew Johnsc birthplace<lb/>
? n Ra ?<lb/>
The lecture, scheduled tor 1 p m<lb/>
in Room I32n of the Lee Jenkins<lb/>
F ine Arts Center, is open o all m<lb/>
lerested persons Sponsor of the<lb/>
prog- ? ECU chapter of the<lb/>
National Society ot Interior<lb/>
Designers<lb/>
Women May Sue<lb/>
Army In Fight<lb/>
To Get A ward<lb/>
(UPl) A woman who<lb/>
could have been the<lb/>
first female to win the<lb/>
prized Special Forces<lb/>
Green Beret said she<lb/>
was denied the insignia<lb/>
because she is a<lb/>
woman.<lb/>
She has not sued the<lb/>
Army, but said she<lb/>
would if a grievance she<lb/>
has filed is not satifac-<lb/>
torily resolved.<lb/>
In August, officials<lb/>
of the U.S. Special<lb/>
Forces training school<lb/>
in Fort Bragg, N.C<lb/>
flunked Army Capt.<lb/>
Kathleen Wilder, 29,<lb/>
on the final part of a<lb/>
course which would<lb/>
have earned her the in-<lb/>
signia.<lb/>
But Ms. Wilder, of<lb/>
the West Bank Loui-<lb/>
siana community, said<lb/>
she passed the covert<lb/>
operations f ??<lb/>
cise and filed a<lb/>
grievance charging sex<lb/>
discrimination.<lb/>
Brig. Gen. F. Cecil<lb/>
Adams, commander of<lb/>
the 1st ROTC Region<lb/>
at Fort Bragg, was<lb/>
assigned the investiga-<lb/>
tion. He will determine<lb/>
how long investigation<lb/>
of the complaint will<lb/>
last, a spokesman said.<lb/>
Col. Ola Mize, direc-<lb/>
tor of the school, re-<lb/>
jected Ms. Wilder's re-<lb/>
quest for a grade<lb/>
change. Mize and his<lb/>
commander, Brig. Gen.<lb/>
Joseph Lutz, recom-<lb/>
mended the woman<lb/>
retake the part of the<lb/>
test she flunked.<lb/>
Ms. Wilder srid she<lb/>
was not offered the<lb/>
same option of a<lb/>
makeup test routinely<lb/>
given to male officers.<lb/>
??? ? ?<lb/>
Remembei<lb/>
. ?. it Mi<lb/>
TUTORS<lb/>
?<lb/>
MOUNT ST. HELENS<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
-<lb/>
nviti<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
? . ? ? i . ? <lb/>
?????. A<lb/>
at Par?.<lb/>
AKA<lb/>
- ??<lb/>
? ' <lb/>
. embei . ?<lb/>
? ? ' 00<lb/>
? .?<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ?? .r.ng<lb/>
im<lb/>
. <lb/>
Faleigh's<lb/>
Finest Hotel<lb/>
Experience.<lb/>
NC State vs. East Carolina<lb/>
November 22,1980<lb/>
Spectacular Weekend<lb/>
QQ50<lb/>
OH per night<lb/>
Includes<lb/>
Double occupancy guest room<lb/>
Plenty of free parking<lb/>
Free bus ride to &amp; from the game<lb/>
Free refreshments on the bus<lb/>
Also enjoy<lb/>
Year round tropical pool<lb/>
Friday night seafood buffet<lb/>
at the Palms Patio<lb/>
Nightly entertainment in Barons<lb/>
Continental cuisine<lb/>
in The Charter Room<lb/>
The Velvet Cloak Inn<lb/>
1505 Hillsborough Street Raleigh. NC 27604<lb/>
919828-0333<lb/>
pa V : : space available I<lb/>
Operated by Hospitality<lb/>
Management Corporation.<lb/>
w?rrrrrw<lb/>
ADVERTISEO<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these ?dvertiMd item, it required to be reedily available tor ??'??? or<lb/>
below the adveiiieed price m each AAP Store except a? ?peciflcalty noted<lb/>
in this ad <lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRUSAT . NOV 22AT A&amp;P INGREENVILLE<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALtHb<lb/>
HIGHWAY 264 BY PASS<lb/>
GREENVILLE SQUARE SHOPPING<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
GREENVILLE,N.C. <lb/>
Beautiful, Fine Porcelain<lb/>
THIS WEEK S FEATURE ITEM<lb/>
SAUCER<lb/>
EACH<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
wrm each<lb/>
$5 PURCHASE<lb/>
50 COUPON<lb/>
50c WHEN YOU PURCHASE<lb/>
vc( him !<lb/>
FOOTED MUGS (pkg of) I<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT NOV 22 AT ALL A&amp;P SINN CAR AND .<lb/>
SC EXCEPT AIKEN AND BEAUFORT S C 6001<lb/>
DOMINO'S PIZZA<lb/>
CONTEST WINNERS<lb/>
MANY THANKS TO THE ECU DORM<lb/>
STUDENTS FOR THEIR PATRONAGE DUR-<lb/>
ING PIZZA PARTY WEEK.<lb/>
THE PRIZE WAS HOTLY CONTESTED<lb/>
WITH JUST ONE PIZZA SEPARATING<lb/>
TWO MALE DORMS. THE WIN-<lb/>
NERS,HOWEVER,OUTDISTANCED THE<lb/>
RUNNERS UP BY A LARGE MARGIN.<lb/>
THE WINNING MALE DORM WAS<lb/>
SCOTT. UMSTEAD,BEING A CO-ED DORM<lb/>
AND ELUGIBLE FOR EITHER MALE OR<lb/>
FEMALE DORM CATEGORIES,WON THE<lb/>
PRIZE FOR A FEMALE DORM. RESIDENT<lb/>
ADVISORS SHOULD CONTACT THE<lb/>
MANAGER AT DOMINO'S PIZZA FOR THE<lb/>
TIME OF THE PIZZA PARTY.<lb/>
COMPLETE RESULTS CAN BE OBTAIN-<lb/>
ED AT DOMINO'S PIZZA, 1201 CHARLES<lb/>
BLVD.<lb/>
THANKS AGAIN,<lb/>
HKS<lb/>
WIHLOOO DiST&amp;NTII<lb/>
$1.000.00 WINNER<lb/>
$100 00 WINNER<lb/>
i<lb/>
HCOCK<lb/>
TARBORO N C<lb/>
SI73,II9<lb/>
IN CASH PRIZES<lb/>
89.552<lb/>
CASH WINNERS<lb/>
$100 00 WINNER $100 00 WINNER<lb/>
VVA<lb/>
I<lb/>
It's easy to play<lb/>
? Pick up FREE Old Fashioned Bingo concealed<lb/>
ticket on every visit to A&amp;P<lb/>
? Match straight row of 5 numbers vertically<lb/>
horizontally 01 diagonally on any one of the 4<lb/>
games on master card<lb/>
? No purchase necessary to participate<lb/>
? See game card for complete rules<lb/>
I 48 WAYS TO WIN!<lb/>
?<lb/>
SANFORD N C<lb/>
 'MIRE S C<lb/>
U.S.DA. INSPECTED FRESH<lb/>
YOUNG<lb/>
LIMIT<lb/>
TWO PLEASE<lb/>
LB<lb/>
65c<lb/>
v.<lb/>
TURKEYS<lb/>
20 LB. &amp; UP<lb/>
PRSCU,LEFFECT?'<lb/>
Tut V "?<lb/>
W? ? WEO<lb/>
ONlv<lb/>
?'<lb/>
A&amp;P'S FINEST<lb/>
BUTTER<lb/>
BASTED<lb/>
TURKEYS<lb/>
10 LB &amp; Up<lb/>
LB<lb/>
SlW MON<lb/>
TUE? WED<lb/>
ONlV<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY<lb/>
SMOKED 98c<lb/>
SHANK PORTION<lb/>
vHAM<lb/>
ess<lb/>
'PRICE EFFECT<lb/>
SUN MO<lb/>
TUE &amp; WED<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
:tiveT<lb/>
LB.<lb/>
A SUPERB BLEND RICH IN BRAZILIAN COFFEES<lb/>
EIGHT 0 CLOCK<lb/>
BEAN COFFEE<lb/>
MACARONI &amp;<lb/>
? BAG<lb/>
fos<lb/>
y<lb/>
$99<lb/>
ANN PAGE<lb/>
1 2 LOW FAT<lb/>
MILK<lb/>
B<lb/>
with tht<lb/>
i Pi<lb/>
?<lb/>
V<lb/>
o<lb/>
C ontii<lb/>
$1j69<lb/>
GALLON JUD<lb/>
J3QQD ONL<lb/>
40 COUPON<lb/>
DUKES<lb/>
MAYONNAISE<lb/>
QUART<lb/>
JAR<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH THIS COUPON ??MWI1 , r-<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT . NOV 22 AT A4P IN G R E E N V I L L E<lb/>
89?<lb/>
601<lb/>
ifpiscol'<lb/>
44 COUPON<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
Ko<lb/>
?-?<lb/>
AT<lb/>
PURE VEGETABLE SHORTENING<lb/>
CRISCO<lb/>
t$69!<lb/>
w 602 <lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH THIS COUPON ?nrkw<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT. NOV 27 AT A4P IN G R E E N V I LLE<lb/>
I<lb/>
DOLE GOLDEN RIPE<lb/>
$&amp;?&amp;<lb/>
BANANAS<lb/>
4 LBS. $100<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
WAST. ST. X-FANCY V<lb/>
RED DELICIOUS <lb/>
?fc APPLES<lb/>
SjP - tb. 59 r<lb/>
K<lb/>
Dol<lb/>
H<lb/>
<pb facs="00057302_0003"/><lb/>
I Ml I SI.K( NA<lb/>
NOW 11il R 18, 1980<lb/>
-ERS<lb/>
1<lb/>
in<lb/>
!<lb/>
:es<lb/>
RS<lb/>
A N S L P<lb/>
c<lb/>
601<lb/>
I69<lb/>
602<lb/>
FANCY<lb/>
llOUS<lb/>
<lb/>
r<lb/>
Burial Grounds Uncovered<lb/>
(I PI) rennessee Valley Authority<lb/>
has asked foi an urgent pow-won<lb/>
with the Cherokee Indians to see<lb/>
what the tribe wants to do with the<lb/>
remains of some of then ancestors<lb/>
dug up during completion ot ihe<lb/>
lelhco Dam.<lb/>
The I85 Cherokee skeletons have<lb/>
been a sore spot with the North<lb/>
Carolina tribe in its latest fight with<lb/>
the U.S. government. The Indians<lb/>
sued rVA tot flooding lelhco.<lb/>
which the Indians said was the<lb/>
"sacred burial grounds" ol their-<lb/>
forefathers.<lb/>
I he Cherokee remains arc now<lb/>
tucked awa in a University ol Ten-<lb/>
nessee museum.<lb/>
r Chairman David Freeman<lb/>
asked, c herokee Chiel John A<lb/>
Crowe for the meeting in a lettei<lb/>
made public Monday. Freeman said<lb/>
rVA wanted to gel the In<lb/>
dians'views on the reinterment ol<lb/>
the remains and also talk about<lb/>
other ways to possibly memorialize<lb/>
the tribe.<lb/>
Freeman said he hoped to talk to<lb/>
the Indians about "projects and<lb/>
programs which could aid in mark-<lb/>
ing the place ot Cherokee history in<lb/>
the valley.<lb/>
"We need to meet as soon as<lb/>
possible because of the urgent and<lb/>
conflicting demands on the limited<lb/>
funds available to I  1 reeman<lb/>
told C roue in the lettei.<lb/>
Freeman told Crowe he'd he e<lb/>
to meet him in Cherokee. N.C<lb/>
any othei place the chiel desires.<lb/>
I ribal plannei Bob Blankenship<lb/>
said the tube had not fully discussed<lb/>
the meeting.<lb/>
"1 don't know what we will do.<lb/>
1 he council next meets Dec ?? and it<lb/>
will have to make a decision<lb/>
Blankenship said<lb/>
I he I ittle 1 ennessec Valley<lb/>
flooded by the controversial 1 ellico<lb/>
Dam was once t!<lb/>
a thriv<lb/>
ing ( herokee nation. I tic Indians'<lb/>
capital o! Chota was on the shore ot<lb/>
the clear blue rivet that snakes its<lb/>
way through East 1 ennessee.<lb/>
? Before the floodgates on the dam<lb/>
were closed last vear, the Indians<lb/>
asked I A to reburv all of the<lb/>
skeletons m then original giaves<lb/>
with lull ceremonial honors.<lb/>
But TVA refused, citing too little<lb/>
;me and the original graves were<lb/>
coveted bv the 16,000 acre lake.<lb/>
I he bones of the 185 Indians are<lb/>
actually only part ot the dilemma.<lb/>
Skeletal material from Vf? othei i'<lb/>
dividuals was found in the rellko<lb/>
region and some ol these bones date<lb/>
back y,(XK) years. The bones and<lb/>
other artifacts were dug out o<lb/>
numerous Indian villages discovered<lb/>
m the lelhco area, which an Interior<lb/>
Department repon called one of the<lb/>
nation's most significant ar-<lb/>
cheaoloiiic.il regions.<lb/>
UJUJ<lb/>
<lb/>
H?<lb/>
U<lb/>
UJz<lb/>
LL U. UJLU Ol<lb/>
X LU<lb/>
 U.Z<lb/>
Col. Sanders Comes<lb/>
Off Critical List<lb/>
A Touch Of Class<lb/>
ECl I risbee enthusiasts Peter 1 auberl (L), and Michael (otter (R), demonstrate their diverse talents<lb/>
with the plastie disk in Memorial (,m. Both students are in the proeess of organizing the 1(1 I risbee<lb/>
Club whieh meets I uesdav night at 7 p.m. in room 248 Mendenhall student (enter. Here 1 auberl and<lb/>
(Otter freestyle, one of the many facets of the sport.<lb/>
Application Deadline Approaching Soon<lb/>
1 ecembei<lb/>
i<lb/>
appli<lb/>
cauoi<lb/>
Ab<lb/>
out<lb/>
:50<lb/>
women wii<lb/>
e<lb/>
dead one-day workshop in selected, she said. They will include<lb/>
April tor North unemployed and underemph<lb/>
women interested in women scientists and college<lb/>
in science, mathematics, anj junior women majoring in<lb/>
engineering and social science. science, mathematics.<lb/>
The workshop will be at Meredith or social science.<lb/>
College in Raleigh on April 4, 1981. Postage-paid applications<lb/>
Research rriangle Institute tRl'h available from North Carolina<lb/>
will conduct the workshop under a ege and university offices ol conti-<lb/>
il horn the National Science nuing education or career planning.<lb/>
1 oundation.<lb/>
'lace said<lb/>
ii ri<lb/>
iversitie<lb/>
-<lb/>
tould<lb/>
K e ?<lb/>
stil<lb/>
arc<lb/>
ute. 919-<lb/>
W oinen<lb/>
e i n foi<lb/>
Mai)<lb/>
i yloi at<lb/>
riangle In-<lb/>
541-6324.<lb/>
1 OU1SV1U I Kv<lb/>
il I'll olonel<lb/>
Harland Sanders, the<lb/>
foundei ol the Ken-<lb/>
tucky fried Chicken<lb/>
Corp was off the<lb/>
ieal list today and in<lb/>
go d enough spirits to<lb/>
complain about his<lb/>
food.<lb/>
But doctors caution-<lb/>
ed the silver-haired<lb/>
founder of the multi-<lb/>
lion dollar last food<lb/>
chain was still seriously<lb/>
ill in his battle against<lb/>
pneumonia.<lb/>
' 1 he colonel has<lb/>
been taken ofl of the<lb/>
itical list John Cox,<lb/>
a spokesman fot Ken<lb/>
iuckv Fried Chicken,<lb/>
said Sundav. "He is sit-<lb/>
ting up and talking with<lb/>
people and even com-<lb/>
plaining about the<lb/>
tood, which in the col-<lb/>
onel's case, is a good<lb/>
. n.<lb/>
( ox said Sanders s<lb/>
looking much bettet,<lb/>
?h still seriously<lb/>
ill. But he said physi-<lb/>
cians have slopped<lb/>
iking predictions<lb/>
- u t Sanders'<lb/>
recovery p e r i o d<lb/>
because he keeps sur-<lb/>
prising them.<lb/>
lo fully appreciate<lb/>
M you had to see him<lb/>
Ihursday and Friday,<lb/>
he was on the brink. It<lb/>
is phenomenal<lb/>
Sanders, 91). slipped<lb/>
in and out o' con-<lb/>
sciousness Friday and<lb/>
was placed under ox-<lb/>
ygen.<lb/>
He was admitted to<lb/>
the hospital a week ago<lb/>
with a bladder and<lb/>
kidney ailment, and<lb/>
had been responding<lb/>
well to treatment when<lb/>
h e d e v e I o p e d<lb/>
p n e u m o n i a . T h e<lb/>
pneumonia attack was<lb/>
his third this vear.<lb/>
Sanders, who has<lb/>
held numerous jobs<lb/>
before developing his<lb/>
secret recipe tor tried<lb/>
chicken into a multi-<lb/>
million dollar fast-food<lb/>
industry, sold out tor<lb/>
$2 million in 1964 to a<lb/>
w'oup headed by John<lb/>
V. Brown Jr now<lb/>
Kentucky's governor.<lb/>
In 19"1, the firm was<lb/>
merged with Ffeublein,<lb/>
Inc a liquor<lb/>
w holesaler . tin t<lb/>
Sanders was kept on<lb/>
the payroll at a<lb/>
reported salary of<lb/>
$250,000 annually to<lb/>
promote the tried<lb/>
chicken div ision.<lb/>
VAF Upset<lb/>
Over Vote<lb/>
SPORTSWOKLD<lb/>
COLLEGE NIGHT<lb/>
Tuesdav Night<lb/>
Continued from Page I<lb/>
learned about ECl<lb/>
through the VA1 's par-<lb/>
pat ion in a Portfolio<lb/>
Day at Pratt Universi-<lb/>
!v .<lb/>
Ben Singleton, who<lb/>
opposed the bill. said.<lb/>
?'1 don't think the ques-<lb/>
tion is whether they are<lb/>
a worthwhile group,<lb/>
but the amount ot<lb/>
?ney involved1<lb/>
After about a half-<lb/>
hour ot debate and<lb/>
p a r 1 i a m e n t a r y<lb/>
manuevers, the motion<lb/>
to override Sherrod's<lb/>
veto tailed bv a 16-28<lb/>
vote, with two absten-<lb/>
When Speakei of the<lb/>
1 egislature Pegg <lb/>
Davison said thai the<lb/>
VAI would now have<lb/>
to re-submit a budget<lb/>
request, an art student<lb/>
w ho at tended t he<lb/>
meeting shouted back,<lb/>
"We will as he let!<lb/>
the room.<lb/>
6:30-10:00<lb/>
Bring I. D. and<lb/>
Get In For Only 11.25<lb/>
Dew it with<lb/>
Mountain Dew<lb/>
'inns.<lb/>
Rockwood Stables<lb/>
Horseback Riding<lb/>
m Miles east ??' llh s'<lb/>
1 lighw a<lb/>
ii<lb/>
714<lb/>
 1(1<lb/>
 AHMV MAVY STOU6 B<lb/>
 RackcxcM ??!?. ?oi??rc.<lb/>
? ???. Otc. P?g?A Snorkel ?<lb/>
g Jacket. PIKMH. PtrkM. <lb/>
 ShMt. Combat Soot. W? <lb/>
1M1 S. e?aii??r?t<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
OPRY HOUSE<lb/>
PRESENTS<lb/>
SAAD'SSHOE<lb/>
REPAIR<lb/>
I id  ,t. Avf<lb/>
B 1228<lb/>
Qualilv Repair<lb/>
THE<lb/>
LARRY FRANKLIN<lb/>
BAND<lb/>
WED.NOV. 19-SUN.NOV.23<lb/>
WED.NOV.19-LARRY FRANKLIN<lb/>
BAND<lb/>
&amp; THE GREENGRASS CLOGGERS<lb/>
WITH THE HOME TOWN BOYS<lb/>
$2.00 ADMISSION<lb/>
THUR.NOV.20<lb/>
Riggan Shoe<lb/>
Repair Shop<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
758-0204<lb/>
Aero The Street<lb/>
From Biount-Harvey<lb/>
I 11 W. 4th Street<lb/>
Greenville. N.C.<lb/>
LADIES NIGHT<lb/>
LADIES $1.00<lb/>
SUN.NOV.23<lb/>
DOORS OPEN AT 5:00<lb/>
LADIES FREE<lb/>
MEN $2.00<lb/>
L<lb/>
Mountain Dew from Pepsi Coia. the totally<lb/>
different soft drink with the lemony-fresh flavor<lb/>
that's like nothing else you ever tasted.<lb/>
Bottledt. PCI StCOtAf<lb/>
iNGCO f Greenville Ire 1809 Didf "son Avc Greerwill NC<lb/>
under appt frorr PfPS'COlNC<lb/>
<pb facs="00057302_0004"/><lb/>
(Bift fcwt Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Richard Green,  ?.?<lb/>
It RRV HERNDON, Outcto, oj idveriiuxg I-INA DREW, cm ?-<lb/>
CHRIS 1 ICHOK, Busuictt Unas Mlkl NOONAN, ??$ Edtiw<lb/>
David Severin, ?.??? Chari es Chandi t r. Vi?ma?<lb/>
11 l NCASTER, prodNciKw, um? DAVID NoRRIS. ? ??<lb/>
fysujufL.<lb/>
Niucmhc! IS. 1SS0<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
VAF Budget<lb/>
Sherrod's Veto Upheld<lb/>
For 'All Our Students'<lb/>
In an SGA meeting yesterday,<lb/>
student legislators dealt out an ex-<lb/>
tremely short-lived brand of reason-<lb/>
ing to the Visual Arts Forum<lb/>
(VAF), which represents nine<lb/>
groups in the ECU School of Art.<lb/>
The VAF came to the SGA this<lb/>
year, as usual, for money. Though<lb/>
the group cut S4,6(X) from their<lb/>
original request, the Legislature<lb/>
voted not to override the veto that<lb/>
SGA President Charlie Sherrod<lb/>
placed last week on the subsequent<lb/>
$11,150 request.<lb/>
Apparently, the legislators<lb/>
followed Sherrod's reasoning,<lb/>
which was based on the premise that<lb/>
such a large request would cut into<lb/>
money that other student groups<lb/>
would ask for later.<lb/>
Shortly afterward in the same<lb/>
meeting, the ECU Plavhouse receiv-<lb/>
ed $10,000 (original re-<lb/>
quest:S13,350) and the School oi<lb/>
Music got $5,100 (originally<lb/>
$8,700).<lb/>
There is little doubt that these two<lb/>
organizations needed the monies<lb/>
that were appropriated ? they pro-<lb/>
bably could have used more. But<lb/>
how can the SGA let those bills pass<lb/>
while stifling the VAF bid because<lb/>
"six percent of the student body"<lb/>
(art students) are asking for 19 per-<lb/>
cent of the budget? That's what<lb/>
about forty angry art students (and<lb/>
probably many more) would have<lb/>
wanted to know if they had stayed<lb/>
to see the rest of the day's work.<lb/>
That budgets must be trimmed<lb/>
according to student fees is a simple<lb/>
fact of life, but such a flimsy excuse<lb/>
cannot be accepted. It makes one<lb/>
wonder about President Sherrod's<lb/>
campaign platform promises to<lb/>
"the arts<lb/>
If the percentage method that<lb/>
defeated the VAF bill were applied<lb/>
to the ECU Playhouse and the<lb/>
School of Music, would those ap-<lb/>
propriations have been approved?<lb/>
You can rest assured that The East<lb/>
Carolinian will have those figures<lb/>
for the Thursday edition.<lb/>
While President Sherrod is look-<lb/>
ing "at the perspective of all our<lb/>
students he is tacitly forgetting<lb/>
the $30,000 buffer the legislature<lb/>
has set aside. Sherrod's explanation<lb/>
for making the VAF take up the<lb/>
slack will be very interesting.<lb/>
We agree with Dr. Richard Laing<lb/>
that the ECU School of Art is one<lb/>
of the best in the university; indeed,<lb/>
it is among the best in the nation.<lb/>
When the SGA singles out one ex-<lb/>
cellent school to bear the brunt of<lb/>
budgeting, someone's priorities are<lb/>
out of whack.<lb/>
Greener Pastures<lb/>
Dr. Brewer has been at ECU for<lb/>
only three years and it appears that<lb/>
he's already seeking greener<lb/>
pastures. We award Quote of the<lb/>
Week to the fellow who told us<lb/>
Monday, "When you become<lb/>
chancellor of a university, you are<lb/>
married to that university. Dr.<lb/>
Brewer just went out on a date<lb/>
CHEER UP. JIMMY. UlSToRY<lb/>
WCRK&amp; IN FUNNY WAYS-<lb/>
REMEMBER, YOU MADE THE<lb/>
FCRP PRESIDENCY LPCK GOOD!<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
'Screwed To The Wall'<lb/>
S-SSSss<lb/>
1 am writing this on behalf of my<lb/>
boyfriend who, upon withdrawing from<lb/>
dear ole EC, was promptly screwed to<lb/>
the wall. Getting out of this place is pret-<lb/>
ty tough?it takes a craftsman's skill.<lb/>
Signing papers, getting signatures of<lb/>
people you never heard of?the famous<lb/>
ECU "runaround After this madden-<lb/>
ing experience your refund check is pro-<lb/>
mised to arrive at your door within 2<lb/>
weeks. Six weeks later the check arrives<lb/>
after making 5 long-distance calls to ask<lb/>
where the check might be. The astute<lb/>
people in the cashier's office told m<lb/>
boyfriend the first time he called thai<lb/>
they never heard oi him. The second and<lb/>
third week he was assured that his check<lb/>
was being "processed The fourth<lb/>
week the check was in its "final stages<lb/>
The fifth week the voice at the end of the<lb/>
telephone line told him that his check<lb/>
had been ready for a "long time The)<lb/>
were waiting for him to come by and<lb/>
pick it up. He finally persuaded her that<lb/>
living two hours away "picking up" the<lb/>
check wasn't that simple. She said that<lb/>
was no problem; she would put it in the<lb/>
mail. The check did arrive?S40 short. It<lb/>
seems they calculated the refund from<lb/>
the last oi October instead oi Oct. 3.<lb/>
when he withdrew. Does the administra-<lb/>
tion realize that the student body pays<lb/>
their salary? Do they just not care or is u<lb/>
simply ignorance? Do they think that all<lb/>
students are wealthy? If our payment to<lb/>
them was five or six weeks late we would<lb/>
probably be relieved of our duties as<lb/>
students accompanied by several nastv<lb/>
letters. If there's one thing ECU ad-<lb/>
ministration hates, it's irresponsibility.<lb/>
MIRIAM C.RISSOM<lb/>
Sophomore, Education<lb/>
Support For Basketball<lb/>
1 thought 1 would write this letter in<lb/>
hopes that it would provide some in-<lb/>
spiration for students to support East<lb/>
Carolina basketball.<lb/>
I understand that at ECU football<lb/>
takes the spotlight, and there is nothing<lb/>
wrong with that, but those of you who<lb/>
are familiar with the relatively small<lb/>
crowds at ECU basketball games will<lb/>
understand what I'm talking about when<lb/>
I say that those crowds aren't nearly<lb/>
what they should be. I often wonder<lb/>
how many students realize that we even<lb/>
have a men's and women's basketball<lb/>
team. I think it's rather ironic that we<lb/>
can pull twenty to twenty-nine thousand<lb/>
to an ECU football game, but are doing<lb/>
good to get two thousand to a basketball<lb/>
game. It is great to support ECU foot-<lb/>
ball, but why not support ECU's other<lb/>
sports too? Its a shame to have a<lb/>
university oi nearlv 14.XK) and onlv get<lb/>
2(KH) to a basketball game and some ot<lb/>
those aren't even students. Come on<lb/>
now , we can do better than that! Minges<lb/>
should be full tor ever home game.<lb/>
You've heard all that stuff about how<lb/>
much a good home crowd can help a<lb/>
team win, well, it true?in football,<lb/>
basketball or art other sport.<lb/>
Whatevei a student's excuses are foi<lb/>
not going to basketball games the) can-<lb/>
not be cos! oi lack of qualil) teams. All<lb/>
students gel into home games tree with<lb/>
their ID. As foi the teams, ECU's men<lb/>
had their first winning season in five<lb/>
years lasl yeai 116-11 and the women<lb/>
had a erv successful season (21-9). I he<lb/>
men upset South Carolina and Illinois<lb/>
State last year. 1 he women scored more<lb/>
points against Old Dominion, the na-<lb/>
tional champs, than any other teams the<lb/>
Lady Monarchs played Certainly hoth<lb/>
teams are deserving oi our utmost sup-<lb/>
port. Coaches Dave Odom and Cath<lb/>
Andruzzi have pui together two high<lb/>
class programs, teams thai we as<lb/>
students can be proud ol and should<lb/>
support.<lb/>
The men have a young team this year;<lb/>
this should give us an added incentive to<lb/>
support them. As for the women, the)<lb/>
are going to have one of the toughest<lb/>
schedules in the nation including home<lb/>
games with Old Dominion. N.C. State,<lb/>
and Southern California, all of which<lb/>
are nationally ranked. I his should give<lb/>
us another incentive for supporting<lb/>
them.<lb/>
On campus 1 always hear students<lb/>
wanting to have a "big time" athletic<lb/>
program. We'll have to have a "big<lb/>
time" mentality to have a "big time"<lb/>
program?and that means supporting all<lb/>
sports, let's keep Minges packed this<lb/>
season. The women start their season<lb/>
against Virginia Tech. at 3:00 p.m. on<lb/>
November 23, and the guys start<lb/>
November 24 at 7:30 p.m. against<lb/>
Marathon Oil in an exhibition game.<lb/>
Hope to see you there!<lb/>
CHAR I SSAUNDERS<lb/>
Junior. Histor)<lb/>
Hope For The Future<lb/>
On Tuesday, Nov. 4, McGovern,<lb/>
Bayh, and Culver were voted out of the<lb/>
Senate: Reagen was elected. On Tues-<lb/>
day, Nov. 11. you printed a letter from<lb/>
Patrick O'Neill. O'Neill, upset by the<lb/>
election, frustrated and angered by some<lb/>
popular lies that played a large role, ex-<lb/>
pressed healthy indignation at<lb/>
widespread selfishness in the United<lb/>
Slates. The following words help explain<lb/>
the situation to me; maybe they will help<lb/>
hu and his sympathetic readers. The)<lb/>
are from Inch Ffomm's Beyond The<lb/>
Chains Of Illusion. Fromm, a<lb/>
psychoanalyst, may be best known as<lb/>
author ol 1 he Art Ot 1 oving.<lb/>
"Ihis need to be one with others<lb/>
(man's) strongest passion, stronger than<lb/>
sex and often even stronger than his wish<lb/>
to hve  I-or this reason the individual<lb/>
must blind hiniselt from seeing that<lb/>
which his group claims does nol exist, or<lb/>
accept as truth that which the majorit)<lb/>
savs is true, even it his own eves could<lb/>
convince him that it is fal herd is<lb/>
so vitally important foi the individual<lb/>
that their views, beliefs, feelings, con-<lb/>
stitute reality for him, more so that w<lb/>
his senses and his reason tell him <lb/>
I here is almost nothing a man will nol<lb/>
believe ? or repress ? uhen he is<lb/>
threatened with the explicit or implicit<lb/>
threat ol ostracism <lb/>
" hile man is afraid oi complete isola-<lb/>
tion from his social group, he is also<lb/>
afraid of being isolated from the<lb/>
humanit) which is inside him and which<lb/>
is represented bv his conscience and his<lb/>
reason. To be complete) inhuman is<lb/>
frightening, even when a whole societ)<lb/>
has adopted inhuman norms of beha ior<lb/>
 The ability to act according to one's<lb/>
conscience depends on the degree to<lb/>
which one has transcended the limits of<lb/>
one's society and has become a citizen of<lb/>
the world (Emphasis added.)<lb/>
For me, Fromm here clearly expresses<lb/>
ideas which help me understand the past,<lb/>
election, and help me hope.<lb/>
C.A. WEBBER<lb/>
Math (Ret.)<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes tetters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop (hem by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from Joyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all letters<lb/>
must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the author(s). Letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced, or neatly printed. All let-<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for brevity,<lb/>
obscenity and libel, and no personal at-<lb/>
tacks will be permitted. Letters by the<lb/>
same author are limited to one each 30<lb/>
daw.<lb/>
In a gnppinj<lb/>
(hroat ol Si<lb/>
production <lb/>
 ictnun, U A<lb/>
<lb/>
To<lb/>
???"??? ?<lb/>
Th<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Gi<lb/>
"Perhaps 100 People Will Starve As You Read This Article"<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Here we go again ? another arti-<lb/>
cle on hunger. You've heard it all<lb/>
before: the statistics, the estimates,<lb/>
the pleas. Why do we have to hear it<lb/>
again. Because the recently released<lb/>
"GLobal 2000 Report" to the presi-<lb/>
dent has presented the most horrify-<lb/>
ing developments yet. This three-<lb/>
year study conducted by the Council<lb/>
On Environmental Quality and the<lb/>
Department of State (yes, our very<lb/>
own State Department) predicts a<lb/>
population increase to approximate-<lb/>
ly 6.35 billion by 2000. Currently<lb/>
there are just over 4 billion people<lb/>
on our planet. This increase coupled<lb/>
with other expected environmental<lb/>
decays assures a greater disparity<lb/>
between the haves and the have-<lb/>
nots.<lb/>
In 1978 President Carter formed<lb/>
his own study group to deal with the<lb/>
hunger question. The 1980 final<lb/>
report of the Presidential Commis-<lb/>
sion on World Hunger was also far<lb/>
from hopeful. The commission's<lb/>
bottom-line message was clear:<lb/>
Continued lack of concern for the<lb/>
hungry  could have grave im-<lb/>
plications for all nations, including<lb/>
the United States That's where we<lb/>
come in. Now we're talkling about<lb/>
our survival ? not some person<lb/>
hundreds of miles away. Until now<lb/>
hunger was something we saw in<lb/>
pictures or heard about on televi-<lb/>
sion. We never expected it to go<lb/>
beyond the media.<lb/>
Richard Barnet, a noted foreign<lb/>
affairs specialist, calls hunger and<lb/>
malnutrition ' the hidden holocaust<lb/>
of our day In his recently publish-<lb/>
ed book, The Lean Years: Politics in<lb/>
the Age of Scaricity, he says, "It<lb/>
(hunger) is avoidable, and because it<lb/>
is avoidable it is as much an indict-<lb/>
ment of this generation of<lb/>
bystanders as Hitler's Holocaust<lb/>
stands as an indictment of the last<lb/>
Why does Barnet use this analogy?<lb/>
Human suffering speaks for itself:<lb/>
28 deaths per minute occur as a<lb/>
result of hunger. Perhaps 100 peo-<lb/>
ple will have died, as you read this<lb/>
article. The division between rich<lb/>
and poor keeps haunting us. Arthur<lb/>
Simon, author of Bread for the<lb/>
World writes, "New York City,<lb/>
with a population under 8 million,<lb/>
has an annual budget almost the<lb/>
same size as that of India, a nation<lb/>
with 600 million people<lb/>
Quotes and statistics don't even<lb/>
begin to tell the story. The Presiden-<lb/>
tial Report accuses the United States<lb/>
and other developed countries of<lb/>
placing  a very low priority on<lb/>
alleviating world hunger Many<lb/>
hunger activists note the high levels<lb/>
of military assistance to these<lb/>
developing nations when so many<lb/>
basic human needs are still unmet.<lb/>
Many multi-national corporations<lb/>
have emerged on the scene and fur-<lb/>
ther add to foreign economic<lb/>
downfall by reaping incredible pro-<lb/>
fits. Lester Brown in his book,<lb/>
"World Without Borders" writes:<lb/>
"Too often companies have taken<lb/>
undue advantage of cheap raw<lb/>
materials, cheap labor, and various<lb/>
tax havens in order to maximize<lb/>
profits The complexities keep pil-<lb/>
ing up and action needs to be taken<lb/>
now. The Presidential Report<lb/>
recommends that the United States<lb/>
make the elimination of hunger its<lb/>
"primary focus" of the 1980's.<lb/>
Global 2000 states further "There<lb/>
are no quick fixes" and that some<lb/>
form of international cooperation is<lb/>
a must. One solution that has been<lb/>
given high recomendations from<lb/>
both, relief organizations and the<lb/>
developing countries, is the in-<lb/>
troduction oi a "new international<lb/>
economic order that benefits<lb/>
everyone. This idea was first men-<lb/>
tioned in a United Nations declara-<lb/>
tion in April oi 1975.<lb/>
It fundementally calls for a<lb/>
greater cooperation between coun-<lb/>
tries to help bring self subsistence to<lb/>
the poorer nations. Other actions<lb/>
can be taken by Americans on a per-<lb/>
sonal level. Too often individuals<lb/>
feel helpless amidst such an over-<lb/>
whelming problem. Many relief<lb/>
organizations and political action<lb/>
groups invite participation on a<lb/>
local level, stressing the idea of the<lb/>
whole human family.<lb/>
OXFAM-America, the American<lb/>
I<lb/>
arm of the very successful British<lb/>
relief organization, sponsors a na-<lb/>
tionwide fast every year on the<lb/>
Thursday before Thanksgiving. The<lb/>
fast asked that participant, go<lb/>
without food for 24 hours and make<lb/>
a donation to hunger relief.<lb/>
Through events such as this one they<lb/>
try to call attention to the hunger<lb/>
problem and help educate people.<lb/>
Ted Howard, an active member of<lb/>
"The Hunger Project" states: "The<lb/>
challenge before us is enormous.<lb/>
Hunger can be ended by the turn of<lb/>
this century Let's meet this<lb/>
challenge.<lb/>
Patrick OWeili is a member of<lb/>
the Greenville Peace Committee and<lb/>
the Greenville Hunger Coalition.<lb/>
GRI 1 <lb/>
for l<lb/>
will be<lb/>
fOOl w<lb/>
watei<lb/>
1 h<lb/>
is espex<lb/>
centt<lb/>
an East Cai<lb/>
ol -Vr<lb/>
"It's swr<lb/>
here sa<lb/>
spokespersc<lb/>
retreat<lb/>
"We're exri<lb/>
Bu-<lb/>
brick aquedul<lb/>
water ftom il<lb/>
plant. The tl<lb/>
wool, will K<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057302_0005"/><lb/>
5r<lb/>
F<lb/>
dual<lb/>
w nat<lb/>
he is<lb/>
lplicit<lb/>
8ER<lb/>
Ma:or<lb/>
d South ters<lb/>
and<lb/>
iber<lb/>
MenP"ges.<lb/>
ted.Alllet-<lb/>
'or rci (<lb/>
personalat-<lb/>
bythe<lb/>
ach<lb/>
ie'<lb/>
cessful British<lb/>
jponsors a na-<lb/>
vear on the<lb/>
nksgivmg. The<lb/>
irtiapants go<lb/>
ours and make<lb/>
unger relief.<lb/>
i they<lb/>
: Hunger<lb/>
i i al people<lb/>
member of<lb/>
ites I he<lb/>
is enormous.<lb/>
'he turn of<lb/>
f meet this<lb/>
p member of<lb/>
mil tee and<lb/>
ilit ion.<lb/>
1 HI I SI . Akol INIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
N()! MBLR 18, 1980<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
Streamers Presented By<lb/>
Drama Department<lb/>
GREENVILLE?The Vietnam<lb/>
War, probably the most important<lb/>
issue in America during the past 25<lb/>
years, is the setting of "Streamers<lb/>
a serious drama by David Rabe to<lb/>
be produced by the East Carolina<lb/>
Playhouse Nov. 17-22, 24-25.<lb/>
"Streamers is concerned with<lb/>
the average young American male,<lb/>
thrown into a conscriptive military<lb/>
situation in which individual worth<lb/>
is totally ignored. The internal con-<lb/>
flicts of five draftees are por-<lb/>
trayed?their failure to live up to an<lb/>
image of heroism and their inability<lb/>
to cope with that failure. Issues of<lb/>
race, impersonality, homosexuality<lb/>
and brutality are part of the turmoil<lb/>
in the play.<lb/>
In 1976 "Streamers" won the<lb/>
New York Drama Critics Award as<lb/>
best American play o the year<lb/>
along with rave reviews from major<lb/>
critics.<lb/>
Its ECU production is directed by<lb/>
Cedric Winchell, a new member of<lb/>
ECU's theatre faculty, who brings<lb/>
to campus a wide range of ex-<lb/>
moment. Gregory Smi h of Wash.ngton holds a knife to the nencePin actine direclinB, writing<lb/>
t Rodger ol Jacksonville. Both appear in the EC I Playhouse and teaching Dr. winchell has ap-<lb/>
"Streamers a serious drama about American soldiers in the peared ,n more than 30 TV shows,<lb/>
intended for mature audiences. "Streamers" will run Nov. ,nree fealure films and numerous<lb/>
at 8:15 p.m. in East Carolina University's Studio Theatre. stage productions in New York and<lb/>
Los Angeles. He has been a direc-<lb/>
Tom Robbins' New Novel<lb/>
Still Life With Woodpecker<lb/>
Thoroughly Entertaining Story<lb/>
ting instructor at three universities<lb/>
and headed an award-winning ac-<lb/>
ting company in Los Angeles.<lb/>
Among his publications is an<lb/>
analysis of the use of psychological<lb/>
projections in "Streamers Win-<lb/>
chell, who received the PhD in<lb/>
theatre history and dramatic theory<lb/>
from UCLA, comes to ECU from<lb/>
the University of Washington.<lb/>
Among his all-male cast are tour<lb/>
veterans of U.S. armed forces. Per-<lb/>
formers include drama majors<lb/>
Donald Waponer of Winston-<lb/>
Sal em, Gregory<lb/>
Washington, Keith<lb/>
tnd Chap Gurley of<lb/>
of<lb/>
of<lb/>
S m 11 h<lb/>
Guillorv<lb/>
Jacksonville a<lb/>
Raleigh.<lb/>
Also appearing are Eric Tilley,<lb/>
Wilmington; Scott Rodger,<lb/>
Jacksonville; John Robbins,<lb/>
William Tyson and Jim Ensor,<lb/>
Robert Willie, Nor-<lb/>
and<lb/>
liam<lb/>
Greenville;<lb/>
VII V.v.11 t lllv IWH'VI I " I I I H, ,<lb/>
thport, I ong Island, N.Y<lb/>
Mark Zimei, Croton, N.Y.<lb/>
Streamers' is paving new<lb/>
ground in eastern North Carolina<lb/>
commented Winchell. "It makes us<lb/>
reconsider easily submerged issues<lb/>
such as war and draft registration,<lb/>
which are especially significant now<lb/>
in the light of recent world ten-<lb/>
sions<lb/>
Scott Parker, general manager of<lb/>
the ECU Playhouse, noted that the<lb/>
play is "a powerful military drama"<lb/>
and is intended for mature au-<lb/>
diences.<lb/>
Each of the eight performances is<lb/>
scheduled for ECU's Studio Theatre<lb/>
at 8:15 p.m. Tickets are available at<lb/>
the Playhouse Box Office,<lb/>
757-6390<lb/>
France's Claudine Beccarie<lb/>
Stars In Film: Exhibition<lb/>
In a gripping<lb/>
throat of Scot<lb/>
production of<lb/>
Vietnam War<lb/>
17-22, 24-25<lb/>
B DOUG QUEEN<lb/>
Matt M nlrr<lb/>
The old saying that college-<lb/>
students never have time to read<lb/>
seems to hold true at ECU. Yet dur-<lb/>
ing vacations and weekends when<lb/>
are ahead in our academic work, it<lb/>
is pleasant to pick up a book and<lb/>
relax. Xo do this properly depends<lb/>
on the book. It would be self-<lb/>
defeating to peruse Kant's Critique<lb/>
of Pure Reason or Defoe's Journal<lb/>
ol the Plague Year when all we want<lb/>
i- a pleasant sojourn in reading that<lb/>
doesn't overwhelm the rational<lb/>
faculties. Hence, the great demand<lb/>
tor historical romances. Harlequin<lb/>
romances, and the Harold Robbin's<lb/>
brand of so-called literature.<lb/>
These books rarely are worth the<lb/>
paper and ink in them. They do<lb/>
nothing to illuminate the mystery oi<lb/>
life and love and art. They are facile<lb/>
in the shallow sense. But there is an<lb/>
alternative. There are books that are<lb/>
facile but not shallow, well-written,<lb/>
and worth the time and effort plac-<lb/>
ed into them. One such book is Tom<lb/>
Robbin's new novel Still Life With<lb/>
W oodpecker.<lb/>
The jacket blurb states that, "Still<lb/>
Life With Woodpecker is sort of a<lb/>
love story that takes place inside a<lb/>
pack of Camel cigarettes. It reveals<lb/>
the purpose i' the moon, explains<lb/>
the difference between criminals<lb/>
and outlaws, examines the conflict<lb/>
between social activism and roman-<lb/>
tic individualism, and paints a por-<lb/>
trait of contemporary society that<lb/>
includes powerful Arabs, exiled<lb/>
royalty and pregnant cheerleaders<lb/>
It also deals with the problem of<lb/>
redheads Quite an order. passion; Tequila, the buzzard god<lb/>
Whether Robbins achieves a com- who copulates in midair with tlie<lb/>
pletion of this "portrait"he paints is ascending souls of dying virgins; te-<lb/>
debatable, but getting there is all the quila, firebug in the house oj good<lb/>
fun. taste; O tequila, savage water or<lb/>
sorcery, what confusion and<lb/>
mischief your sv, rebellious drops<lb/>
do generate.<lb/>
Robbins has a fine sense of the<lb/>
language and his prose is never dull.<lb/>
More than once, however, he suc-<lb/>
cumbs to the tyranny oi cuteness,<lb/>
which styllistically weakens the<lb/>
work considerably.<lb/>
The strongest part of this novel is<lb/>
the plot. Mention Tom Robbins to<lb/>
people in the know and they will<lb/>
regale you with tales of zany plots<lb/>
from his two previous novels:<lb/>
Another Roadside Attraction and<lb/>
Even Cowgirls Get The Blues. The<lb/>
man is most creative when he sets<lb/>
his characters moving through<lb/>
chains of cause and effect that obey<lb/>
no laws but those oi the author's.<lb/>
Despite the weakness of the cute<lb/>
passages, Still Life With<lb/>
Woodpecker is a thoroughly enter-<lb/>
taining story with hundreds of<lb/>
asides from the author, sometimes<lb/>
an irritating intrusion, on<lb/>
everything from pyramids to te-<lb/>
quila. The "tequila" aside could<lb/>
have been written by Bil Shepley,<lb/>
and this review ends in dedicating<lb/>
the aside to Bil:<lb/>
Now, tequila may be the favored<lb/>
beverage of outlaws, but that<lb/>
doesn 7 mean it gives them preferen-<lb/>
tial treatment. In fact, tequila pro-<lb/>
bably had betrayed as many outlaws<lb/>
as has the central nervous system<lb/>
and dissatisfied wives. Tequila,<lb/>
scorpion honey, harsh dew of the<lb/>
doglands, essence of Aztec, crema<lb/>
de cacti; tequila, liquid geometry of<lb/>
Screened at the Cannes and New-<lb/>
York Film Festivals in 1975, the film<lb/>
Exhibition was the first "hardcore"<lb/>
porno movie (adults only) to be<lb/>
shown at the New York Eilm<lb/>
Festival. Exhibition will be screened<lb/>
this Wednesday night, Nov. 19, at 8<lb/>
p.m. in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center's Hendrix Theatre. This<lb/>
special movie presentation is spon-<lb/>
sored by the Student Union Eilms<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
Admission is by student ID and<lb/>
activity card or Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Membership Card. Follow-<lb/>
ing the film, coffee and doughnuts<lb/>
will be served in room 221 of the<lb/>
student center. All students, faculty<lb/>
and staff seeking others with whom<lb/>
they might discuss the film further<lb/>
are welcome.<lb/>
Exhibition is an attempt to ex-<lb/>
plore, in documentary fashion, the<lb/>
lifestyle and philosophy of France's<lb/>
premiere porno rtar, Claudine Bee<lb/>
cane. Truly a woman oi contradic-<lb/>
tions, Ms. Beccarie is a product of<lb/>
the convent (she was a Cadet of the<lb/>
Virgin) and the reform school,<lb/>
where she was unjustly imprisoned<lb/>
to cover up her rape by her uncle.<lb/>
Claudine Beccarie<lb/>
An admitted bisexual, she is anx-<lb/>
ious to promote bisexuality as an<lb/>
alternative lifestyle, yet she refuses<lb/>
to discuss her political persuasions,<lb/>
as she considers politics too<lb/>
personal" to be discussed, even<lb/>
among consenting adults.<lb/>
Casual about her participation in<lb/>
various sexual entanglements within<lb/>
her films, she is. for the most part,<lb/>
the monogamous partner of a man<lb/>
10 years her junior ? a porno queen<lb/>
who remains on close terms w.iih her<lb/>
mother.<lb/>
She is a woman of principle. That<lb/>
is, Beccarie disdains foul language<lb/>
and absolutely draws the line at per-<lb/>
forming sex acts with animals or<lb/>
film producers. She will carry on,<lb/>
either solo or in various combina-<lb/>
tions, almost any other amorous ac-<lb/>
tivity, provided it is being filmed by<lb/>
professionals and the price is right.<lb/>
In the film, the heroine may be<lb/>
observed, shedding tears in closeup,<lb/>
as she tells how she was raped by her<lb/>
uncle when she was only 15. This<lb/>
assault precipitated a descent into<lb/>
prostitution and an unfortunate<lb/>
marriage in which her soldier hus-<lb/>
band insisted on having a child<lb/>
against his wife's express wishes.<lb/>
"He tied me down on the bed and<lb/>
everything she reveals. All of this<lb/>
occurred before Claudine's ascent<lb/>
to stardom in a series of quickies<lb/>
produced by Erance's newly<lb/>
burgeoning porno industry.<lb/>
One of Claudine's most<lb/>
remarkable skills is a knack for con-<lb/>
stant searching of the soul even as<lb/>
more accessible parts of her body<lb/>
See FILMS, Page 6, Col. 1<lb/>
Campus Capsules<lb/>
A Brief Look At Other Campuses<lb/>
A Room Inspection Policy is<lb/>
under scrutiny at Western Kentucky<lb/>
U. A group of students is seeking<lb/>
the help of the American Civil<lb/>
Liberties Union in protesting the<lb/>
policy, which requires two announc-<lb/>
ed inspections of dorm rooms for<lb/>
fire hazards each month. The WKU<lb/>
student government defeated a<lb/>
resolution asking that inspections be<lb/>
abolished but may seek to have the<lb/>
policy made more standard.<lb/>
Validation Stickers on student<lb/>
identification cards are often abus-<lb/>
ed, say Ohio State U. officials.<lb/>
Since 1970, students there received a<lb/>
fee card and a validation sticker on<lb/>
their identification card when pay-<lb/>
ing fees. A study by a sports office<lb/>
there showed, however, that under<lb/>
the sticker system, many ineligible<lb/>
people were using university<lb/>
facilities. OSU students must now<lb/>
carry both ED. and fee cards, until<lb/>
a new validation system is<lb/>
developed.<lb/>
.4 .S7. Louis Hotel offers students<lb/>
a 10 percent commission on every<lb/>
room they book for friends or fami-<lb/>
ly members. In a student newspaper<lb/>
ad, the Clayton Inn says students<lb/>
can beome "booking agents" and<lb/>
collect 10 percent of mom and dad's<lb/>
room price?after they've checked<lb/>
out. of course.<lb/>
Student Politics is now offered<lb/>
for credit at the U. of Florida. An<lb/>
interdisciplinary course allows those<lb/>
in student government or other cam-<lb/>
pus activities to get one academic<lb/>
credit for their work. To get that<lb/>
credit, however, students must at-<lb/>
tend every Student Senate meeting,<lb/>
work on committees and produce a<lb/>
research paper or project that<lb/>
focuses on campus issues.<lb/>
A "Party Patrol" run by the In-<lb/>
diana Stale U. Student Association<lb/>
attempts to head oii problems bet-<lb/>
ween partying students and their<lb/>
neighbors. Students are asked to<lb/>
report anv upcoming parties to the<lb/>
patrol, leaving a phone number of<lb/>
an individual who can be contacted<lb/>
in the event of complaints. The<lb/>
patrol also advises hosts about<lb/>
alcohol laws and gives tips for keep-<lb/>
ing noise and littering complaints to<lb/>
a minimum.<lb/>
A fraternity that had its charter<lb/>
revoked by Rider College is suing to<lb/>
have it reinstated. Former members<lb/>
of the Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity<lb/>
are seeking an order for the school<lb/>
to "show cause" what the frat was<lb/>
ordered disbanded. Among com-<lb/>
plaints against the house at the time<lb/>
of revocation last July were reports<lb/>
that members vandalized their own<lb/>
house by lighting bonfires in the liv-<lb/>
ing room and engaging in<lb/>
"anti-social behavior<lb/>
A Volunteer Fire Department is<lb/>
housed in one dorm at Antioch Col-<lb/>
lege. All 15 residents of the hall are<lb/>
firefighters, and their equipment<lb/>
garage is attached to the building.<lb/>
The department works as a first-<lb/>
response rescue and attack squad<lb/>
and is backed up by the township<lb/>
fire department.<lb/>
Monthly Installment Billings will<lb/>
be mailed to students at Southern<lb/>
lllinois-Carbondale beginning next<lb/>
term. Although the option of paying<lb/>
fees and tuition through a monthly<lb/>
bill is expected to be a popular con-<lb/>
venience for students, it will also<lb/>
mean a big administrative load and<lb/>
increased postage bill for the univer-<lb/>
sity<lb/>
Gigantic Tapestry<lb/>
Art Teacher Has Big Project<lb/>
GREENVILLE - In his spare time<lb/>
for the next year or so, Joe B. Buske<lb/>
will be weaving a ninety-six square<lb/>
foot wool tapestry into a design<lb/>
depicting symbolically the gift of<lb/>
water to a sprouting plant.<lb/>
The design, which Buske created,<lb/>
is especially for a religious retreat<lb/>
center which commissioned Buske,<lb/>
an East Carolina University School<lb/>
of Art professor, for the work.<lb/>
"It's symbolic of our ministry<lb/>
here says Carolyn Massey, a<lb/>
spokesperson for the religious<lb/>
retreat, Aqueduct, at Chapel Hill.<lb/>
"We're excited about it<lb/>
Buske's design depicts a yellow<lb/>
brick aqueduct delivering life-giving<lb/>
water fiom its source to a growing<lb/>
plant. The tapestry, of hand-dyed<lb/>
wool, will be eight by twelve feet in<lb/>
size and hang on a wall of the con-<lb/>
ference center.<lb/>
The design took several months<lb/>
"through about three or four<lb/>
stages Buske says. "Now 1<lb/>
estimate it will take about 18 mon-<lb/>
ths to complete He will work at a<lb/>
special loom, fixed at a height of his<lb/>
knee from the floor, in ECU's Leo<lb/>
W. Jenkins Fine Arts Center, and it<lb/>
will be one of Buske's most<lb/>
challenging projects.<lb/>
"It's biggish, maybe not gigantic,<lb/>
but definitely biggish" for a woven<lb/>
tapestry, says Buske. He will work<lb/>
slowly and carefully. "It's a<lb/>
monster. The size of the thing, the<lb/>
scale, just scares the hell out of<lb/>
me.<lb/>
Buske studied ceramics and<lb/>
sculpture at the University of Texas,<lb/>
then as a high school teacher in<lb/>
i<lb/>
Dallas took up weaving in night<lb/>
classes because most of his students<lb/>
already knew pottery and weaving.<lb/>
"Any teacher who didn't was out to<lb/>
sea he said.<lb/>
"I remember riding 20 miles on a<lb/>
bus to get to my class Later, he<lb/>
returned to the university to get a<lb/>
master's degree in Fine Arts and<lb/>
came to ECU in 1967 as an associate<lb/>
professor of art education. Weaving<lb/>
in his spare time is an avocation and<lb/>
he has tapestries in private collec-<lb/>
tions both in Texas and North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
For the Aqueduct project, Buske<lb/>
studied the room in which the<lb/>
tapestry will hang and chose deep<lb/>
maroon for the background. Colors<lb/>
and texture will be important.<lb/>
"It is very, very challenging he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Joe B. Buske, East Carolina University artist, shows the design planned for square foot tapestry he will weave<lb/>
for a Chapel Hill religious retreat. Aqueduct. The tapestry will be of hand-dyed wool, depicting a yellow brick<lb/>
aqueduct on a deep maroon background. <lb/>
f<lb/>
flMHBHMMHH<lb/>
mm mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057302_0006"/><lb/>
I HI i AM C k()l IM <lb/>
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Uahm.ajg ftow Cttau rnr Hmo h)fi<lb/>
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UH;0H If our Of<lb/>
HSHfoopI OH, (AJCIL<lb/>
7)<lb/>
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; ILL RIGHT ??v?<lb/>
LCj'b FIG OUT <lb/>
in?X,<lb/>
f. -SfelrCSfi-i ? ??&amp;<lb/>
1A<lb/>
ugh.<lb/>
Jimmie "J.J was spotted by a talent<lb/>
Walker, who this year booker in a small New<lb/>
enters his seventh York nightclub. Televi-<lb/>
season as the star of sion however, is not<lb/>
( BS-TV's Good Jimmie's specialty. As<lb/>
limes, will invade the great as he is as "J.J<lb/>
stage of Mendenhall Jimmie's heart and best<lb/>
Student (enter's Hen- performances are still<lb/>
drix Theatre on Tues- on stage in front of a<lb/>
day, Nov. 18 at 8:(X) live audience. Stand-up<lb/>
p.m. comedy is a craft not<lb/>
Walker, who has easily learned he notes,<lb/>
regularly played before and there are, in fact, a<lb/>
packed houses in Las great many more brain<lb/>
Vegas, and throughout surgeons in the world<lb/>
the United Stales and than there are stand-up<lb/>
Canada at leading comedians.<lb/>
reigning queen of gestion that she might this Friday and Satur nightclubs and colleges, Tickets for EC I<lb/>
French pornography. find anything day night is -Academj ? considered by many students are ' 0, and<lb/>
YI T0L0 w Ajor<lb/>
70 N0j? -TO f COLLCtf I<lb/>
Jimmie Walker<lb/>
Appears At Hendrix<lb/>
?????fA?ORT IONS P TO IttH WICK Of PMONANCV $16 00 ???II IlKlMXI prvffftancy ??? t?rt$ tor trot. ?na problem prtgn cr coun??iirio P(f tvtirtt' information c?n HI 04JS I 1 ton ('?? rumh?r ?rC 731 J5?l bttwon t AM CM ??Hri ? ?(?If ?????? . HoalHi Orfanlit'ton' ?? ??!? 1<lb/>
SU Films Presents Exhibition<lb/>
( ontinued Irom Page 5 rather more proficient<lb/>
ly, at leas! for th.<lb/>
are being set upon by a cameras, with members distasteful about hei Award winner for Besl to be one of the finest, $3.00 for the genera<lb/>
batter ol lovers. She o! ne own sCV  rhe film proceeds in daughter's profession Picture, Kramei vs. most entertaining public.<lb/>
to thmk being bisexual alternating episodes, and cheerfully affirms Kramer. The film will stand-up comic Be there when lim<lb/>
Art and Camera<lb/>
526<lb/>
hi St.<lb/>
CD<lb/>
n makers'<lb/>
m off-<lb/>
Wherc .<lb/>
( laudine?"<lb/>
e is finishing<lb/>
 emak-<lb/>
film about the making<lb/>
ot a film in 'his ase<lb/>
Talent Competition<lb/>
planned Wednesday<lb/>
gives one a Daiance.<lb/>
ween ;r- director, .lean own sex life continues<lb/>
Exhibition is typica Krancoib Davy, and vigorously, rhis con-<lb/>
oi a good deal ol Beccarie to scenes in<lb/>
Continental wnjcn slc an(j other versation is so wildly<lb/>
regulars in the por- out of keeping with her<lb/>
nography trade are person and her sur-<lb/>
directed, again b roundings that she ma<lb/>
 seems ;vl a documentary about Davy, in what would be instantly become<lb/>
. and he private life, profes- for them a routine pro another person in the<lb/>
scent etfect on sional careei and jecl (m whose story an-<lb/>
nul performs iical views ol the diences would like to<lb/>
Beccarie admits in have told.<lb/>
one interview that she<lb/>
would prefei to be a ,llm critic Richard<lb/>
comedienne; she would Corliss calls Exhibition<lb/>
also like to direct films, "an act, not ol inde-<lb/>
in order to promote the cent exposure, but of<lb/>
general practice ol human revela<lb/>
1 he Student Union Judges for the event bisexuality. But tionClaudine Bec-<lb/>
rity Arts Commit- are: business is business. carie could easily be the<lb/>
is sponsoring their Mrs. Selina Forbes, I here is a scene with Stanislavsky of<lb/>
nnual Ialent retired music teacher in Baccarie's mother in porn. .<lb/>
? petition on the Greenville citv which the eider woman<lb/>
nesday, Nov. 19 at School system; Mrs. depreciates Davy's sug The populai film foi<lb/>
in Room 244 Derrie land, office <lb/>
managei foi E. aJ'ii;v  s ?- ? <lb/>
Mendenhall Student land, M.l). and Mrs<lb/>
( enter. Admission is I loise Beech, wife ol<lb/>
00; tickets will be on attorney Harvey 1<lb/>
? he door and Buck ol the 1 C I<lb/>
will be limited Board ol Frustees.<lb/>
i 200 people.<lb/>
dditional informa<lb/>
Prizes will be award- nor, may be secured by<lb/>
I, witl -? to contacting Ronald<lb/>
first place winner, Makweer, Minoi<lb/>
nd place Arts Chairperson, ii<lb/>
? im, r a &amp;15 to the Room 234.<lb/>
?winner. Pla- Mendenhall. His office<lb/>
awarded to hours are 3-4 MW1 and<lb/>
dinners. 11-12 TT1<lb/>
I.J Walker br-<lb/>
shifting Horn talks bei to them both thai hei be shown in Hendrix an'wnere mic<lb/>
j Walkei rose to pro- mgs a stellar explosion<lb/>
minence as the star of o laughter to the last<lb/>
Good limes alter he Carolina campus.<lb/>
1 heatre at 5,<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
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COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents A RAY STARK Products CHEVY CHASE G0LDIE HAWN CHARLES GRODIN<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057302_0007"/><lb/>
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HI I M I KOl IM N<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
NOVl MMI K I8, 1980 Page<lb/>
E. Kentucky Upends Pirates, 28-16<lb/>
ECU Coach Emory Expresses<lb/>
Grave Disappointment At Effort<lb/>
?&amp;siwe<lb/>
B CHARI ES CHANDLER<lb/>
"I'm glad you guys can't sec in-<lb/>
side o me. It would be an awful<lb/>
poor sight<lb/>
1 he disappointment fell by last<lb/>
Carolina head football coach Ed<lb/>
Emory was clear as he spoke to the<lb/>
media at his post-game press con-<lb/>
ference following a 28-16 loss to the<lb/>
defending N( Division I-AA na-<lb/>
tional champion, Eastern Kentucky,<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
?"1 was disappointed in out inten-<lb/>
sity in the first hall by both our ol<lb/>
tense and defense Emory said.<lb/>
"( oming in here 1 felt like we would<lb/>
play with much more intensity and<lb/>
aggressiveness than we did<lb/>
I he loss upped the Colonels'<lb/>
record to 8-2 as they set then sights<lb/>
on a second successive national title.<lb/>
Ihc Pirates fell to 4-6, ending any<lb/>
chances they had of having a winn-<lb/>
ing season.<lb/>
"I'm verv disappointed that we<lb/>
can't in goal of having a<lb/>
winning season in the transition<lb/>
year the first-year ECU mentor<lb/>
said. "It had been my goal from day<lb/>
one<lb/>
The chance of achieving that goal<lb/>
were dented on Eastern Kentucky's<lb/>
firsi drive ol the day. Colonel<lb/>
quarterback Chris Isaac mixed up<lb/>
running and passing plays excellent<lb/>
lv as the club moved the ball 66<lb/>
?<lb/>
culminated the march,?<lb/>
from four yards i. 1<lb/>
touchdown. David 1 lores added the<lb/>
extra point as the llels went up<lb/>
7-0.<lb/>
The Pirates1 e ensuing<lb/>
kickofi and thread to match<lb/>
Eastern's teat. A 17-yad pass from<lb/>
ECU quarterback Greg Stewari to<lb/>
split end Larry O'Roarke was the<lb/>
big plav in a drive that moved ft<lb/>
the ECU 20 to Eastern's 28.<lb/>
I he Buc drive abruptly ended at<lb/>
the26, though, when halfback Mike<lb/>
Hawkins fumbled following a two-<lb/>
yard gain.<lb/>
1 he shoe switched to the other<lb/>
foot mid way through the second<lb/>
period when Eastern QB Isaac<lb/>
tumbled on his own 46 with the<lb/>
I'iiales' Chuck Jackson recovering.<lb/>
ECU got as far as the Colonel<lb/>
iluce but had to settle for a a<lb/>
20-yard field goal from Bill Lamm,<lb/>
cutting the margin to 7-3 with 6:57<lb/>
remaining in the first half.<lb/>
Eastern Kentucky added another<lb/>
score before half time. The Colonels<lb/>
took over on the ECU 45 with 1:31<lb/>
remaining. Two passes from Isaac<lb/>
to end David Booe covered 2K<lb/>
yards and another to Steve Bud<lb/>
went foi 17 as the visitors moved<lb/>
quickly downfield.<lb/>
I he drive ended with a 11) pass<lb/>
from Isaac to flanker Jerry Parrish<lb/>
that covered three yards. It came<lb/>
with but 11 seconds left before inter-<lb/>
mission and pushed the Colonels'<lb/>
halftime lead to 14-3.<lb/>
1 he Pirates came out smoking in<lb/>
the second half, Anthony Collins<lb/>
setting the pace with a ard<lb/>
kickoff return.<lb/>
From there Stewart directed a<lb/>
well-balanced drive that ended with<lb/>
halfback Harold Blue taking a pitch<lb/>
and gomg ovet from two yards out<lb/>
to narrow Eastern's margin to<lb/>
14-10.<lb/>
ECU had one more drive in the<lb/>
third period, moving from their own<lb/>
21 to the Colonel 4 before having<lb/>
to punt.<lb/>
Easl took o cr on its w n<lb/>
threw the dagger that all but<lb/>
destroyed ECU'S hopes o victory,<lb/>
Isaac launching a 54-yard bomb to<lb/>
Booe that gave the Colonels first<lb/>
and goal on the Pirate eight.<lb/>
Three plays later Isaac hit tight<lb/>
end Chris Curtis from two yards out<lb/>
as Eastern went ahead 21-10.<lb/>
1 he Pirates took the ensuing<lb/>
kickoff and vied to narrow the<lb/>
margin but onlv got as tar as the<lb/>
Eastern 36 before Bill 1 amm was<lb/>
mailed on to punt.<lb/>
I amm's pun; sailed into the end-<lb/>
zone, eivint the Colonels possession<lb/>
on their own 20. After moving to<lb/>
the 33 the Colonels dug a big hole<lb/>
for themselves, being penalized 15<lb/>
yards that brought on a third-<lb/>
and-25 situation at the 16.<lb/>
The final dagger in the Bue's<lb/>
hopes was then thrown, Isaac<lb/>
threading the needle in the ECU<lb/>
defense as he connected with Bird<lb/>
on a 29-yard pass play that gave<lb/>
Eastern a first down on its own 45<lb/>
with just over eight minutes left in<lb/>
the game.<lb/>
The Colonels rode the current of<lb/>
the emotional pass completion into<lb/>
the endzone, fullback Dale Patton<lb/>
diving ahead from one ard out for<lb/>
the clinching score with 3:48 left to<lb/>
put Eastern up 28-10.<lb/>
The Pirates added to their point<lb/>
total on the ensuing possession as<lb/>
OB Stewart passed for 78 yards of<lb/>
an 80-yard drive that ended with a<lb/>
TD pass from the freshman signal-<lb/>
callei to split end Reggie Harden. A<lb/>
two-point pass try failed as the final<lb/>
margin remained at 28-16.<lb/>
Colonel coach Roy Kidd was<lb/>
understandably estactic following<lb/>
his team's win. "This is a great,<lb/>
great win for uC he said. "We're<lb/>
getting more and more experienced<lb/>
every week and that's certainly a big<lb/>
factor in why we're playing so well.<lb/>
In fact, 1 believe we're playing bet-<lb/>
ter now than we did last year when<lb/>
we won the national champion-<lb/>
ship<lb/>
The loss brought to a disappoin-<lb/>
ting end the home careers t 14<lb/>
EC I seniors, following the loss the<lb/>
disappointed Emory said that he<lb/>
took the blame for the loss.<lb/>
"I accept full responsibility for<lb/>
this game. 1 didn't push real hard on<lb/>
getting the guys up for this one. 1<lb/>
didn't think I had to. Because o the<lb/>
great tradition we've had here 1 felt<lb/>
the desire to have a a winning season<lb/>
would be plenty enough. I'm very<lb/>
disappointed that this didn't turn<lb/>
out to be the case<lb/>
The Pirates travel to Raleigh next<lb/>
week to face N.C. Slate in their<lb/>
season finale.<lb/>
Freer Gets 'Boozed'<lb/>
Eastern Kentucky split end l)aid Booe hauls in one<lb/>
of his three receptions in the Colonels 28-16 win<lb/>
Saturday as ECU cornerback James Freer fails in a<lb/>
deflection attempt. (Photo by Jon Jordan<lb/>
Frosh McNair Gets 23<lb/>
Gold Downs Purple, 61-54<lb/>
ECU freshman guard Barry Wright goes over junior center Mike (iibson<lb/>
for a lay up in Saturday's Purple-Gold inlrasquad game. The Gold team<lb/>
won. 61-54, with Wright scoring seen points. (Photo by Jon Jordan)<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
-C spurts 1 dilor<lb/>
"It's a new year with new faces<lb/>
ECU head coach Dave Odom<lb/>
summed up the feeling o many<lb/>
Pirate basketball fans after Satur-<lb/>
day's 61-M victory o the Cold over<lb/>
the Purple in the annual public<lb/>
scrimmage.<lb/>
"1 told the players before the<lb/>
game that my number one concern<lb/>
was for them to look like they knew<lb/>
what to do said Odom.<lb/>
"To do the right things on the<lb/>
court you have to know what to do<lb/>
first. And they showed just that in<lb/>
our scrimmage<lb/>
The Pirates return only five<lb/>
veterans from last year's squad<lb/>
which posted the first winning<lb/>
record since 1975. Of that five, only<lb/>
juniors Michael Gibson and David<lb/>
Underwood started with any<lb/>
regularity.<lb/>
The Purple-Gold game did,<lb/>
however, produce a number of<lb/>
bright spots foi Odom and his staff.<lb/>
Freshman Willie McNaii led all<lb/>
scorers with 23 points for the Cold,<lb/>
while freshman guard Mike Fox led<lb/>
the Purple with 14. McNair, a 65"<lb/>
Dunn native, connected on eight oi<lb/>
nine tiled goals and seven of eight<lb/>
free throws.<lb/>
Point guards Herbert Gilchrist<lb/>
and Mike Bledsoe emerged as top<lb/>
candidates at that position, with<lb/>
Odom characterizing the race as<lb/>
"neck-n-neck" for the starting<lb/>
berth.<lb/>
Junior guard-forward Mark<lb/>
McLaurin aided the Purple with 14<lb/>
points, while Underwood added 14<lb/>
and Bledsoe eight for the victorious<lb/>
Gold squad.<lb/>
"1 want Mark (McLaurin) to be a<lb/>
little more offense-minded and take<lb/>
his shot more said Odom. "He<lb/>
did it more tonight than he has, but<lb/>
we'll work on that<lb/>
Odom praised freshman center<lb/>
Jeff Best for his performance<lb/>
underneath the boards saying he<lb/>
"may well beoui most pleasant sur-<lb/>
pi ise thus far.<lb/>
?"Best played harder tonight than<lb/>
I've seen him plav said Odom. "I<lb/>
think he'll be readv to see some ac-<lb/>
tion this year<lb/>
Offensively, the Pirates staved<lb/>
away from the last break offense<lb/>
they would ordinarily rely on. 1 he<lb/>
move was designed to prevent<lb/>
fatigue caused by the limited<lb/>
substitutions available and to "keep<lb/>
the game from getting out o<lb/>
hand<lb/>
"I think we have nine or 10 ge-<lb/>
nuine players Odom offered.<lb/>
" I his will be something new for me.<lb/>
1 was pleased with all our individual<lb/>
plav in the scrimmage. Die veterans<lb/>
showed good leadership and the<lb/>
newcomers arc getting into the<lb/>
system real well.<lb/>
"Strangely enough, out perimeter<lb/>
defense is better than our post<lb/>
defense and that's where our<lb/>
veterans are. 1 know they'll come<lb/>
around though.<lb/>
"1 his year's team is ahead o last<lb/>
year's team defensively, and I think<lb/>
we played good defense the second<lb/>
hall ol last year. It won a lot of<lb/>
games for us<lb/>
Odom feels the extra year he has<lb/>
had building the programs helps<lb/>
build a more desirable player-coach<lb/>
relationship.<lb/>
"We are obviously a very young<lb/>
team he said. "But this team is<lb/>
more my people, also. I hat's not to<lb/>
cast anything negative on last year's<lb/>
crop, but this is my crop. Even those<lb/>
ere before I did are mine<lb/>
w<lb/>
,i came ner<lb/>
now and we've worked awefully<lb/>
hard this year on establishing a close<lb/>
coaching relationship with them.<lb/>
"When I correct a kid, I want him<lb/>
to feel that I'm doing it to help him<lb/>
so he can help the team<lb/>
The Pirates' first action against<lb/>
outside opposition is a Monday<lb/>
scrimmage with Marathon Oil at<lb/>
7:30 p m. in Minges Coliseum, with<lb/>
the first NC -A contest November<lb/>
29 at Ohio University .<lb/>
Now Vie For Title Repeat<lb/>
Colonels Thrilled Over Victory<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPRFF<lb/>
ImMmM spTls f dilor<lb/>
While Eastern Kentucky's jS-16<lb/>
win Saturday over East Carolina in-<lb/>
sured the first losing season since<lb/>
1 s 1 for a Pirate football team, it<lb/>
reinforced EKU coach Roy Kidd's<lb/>
faith in his team's progress and<lb/>
potential.<lb/>
"That was a great win for our<lb/>
school Kid said following the rain<lb/>
drenched contest. "We're not very<lb/>
well known around here, but 1 think<lb/>
that was more of an advantage for<lb/>
us than a disadvantage. A win like<lb/>
this does a lot for our players and<lb/>
fans<lb/>
The Colonels were greated as they<lb/>
came off the field by a small con-<lb/>
tingent of faithfuls who traveled the<lb/>
distance from Richmond, Kentucky<lb/>
to Greenville. Both players and fans<lb/>
dike savored the victory over an<lb/>
NCAA Division I-A foe.<lb/>
While EKU followers cherished<lb/>
their 'upset' victory. Pirate coach<lb/>
Ed Emory summarized his feelings<lb/>
concerntg the game in a somber<lb/>
lone.<lb/>
"By far, this is the most disap-<lb/>
pointing game of the season for<lb/>
us he said, " because you have to<lb/>
face the reality that you cannot have<lb/>
a winning season<lb/>
Eastern Kentucky is the only Divi-<lb/>
sion l-AA opponant the Pirates<lb/>
have scheduled in recent years, but<lb/>
the Colonels were national champs<lb/>
in their division a year ago and came<lb/>
into Ficklen Stadium with a 7-2<lb/>
record and a tie for fifth place na-<lb/>
tionally.<lb/>
The Colonels win over the Pirates<lb/>
is likely to raise the question of a<lb/>
switch to Division 1-A status for<lb/>
EKU, but Kidd quickly dismisses<lb/>
that possibility with an "economic"<lb/>
approach to the problem.<lb/>
"It just wouldn't be practical for<lb/>
our school at this time he ex-<lb/>
plains. "Right now we're limited to<lb/>
65 scholarship players on our team.<lb/>
The division allows 75, but our con-<lb/>
ference (Ohio Valley) allows only<lb/>
65.<lb/>
"Schools in that division (I-A)<lb/>
give out 90; we're just not ready to<lb/>
take a step like that<lb/>
The Colonels amassed 374 yards<lb/>
total offense as on 60 plays, while<lb/>
the Pirates managed only 341 yards<lb/>
Set COLONELS, Page 8, Col. 4<lb/>
Stewart To Blue<lb/>
ECU halfback Harold Blue (23) waits to catch a pass<lb/>
that was hurled to him from quarterback Greg<lb/>
Stewart in Saturday's loss to Eastern Kentucky.<lb/>
Blocking for Stewart on the play was fullback<lb/>
Theodore Sutton (36). (Photo by Jon Jordan)<lb/>
t<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057302_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
1 HI EAST C ROl INI AN<lb/>
NOM-MHl'R IS, 1980<lb/>
Volleyball Team<lb/>
Gets Surprising<lb/>
AIA WInvitation<lb/>
By JIMMY DhPREE<lb/>
sMinni sptirl ditw<lb/>
Attention all<lb/>
members of last<lb/>
Carolina's volleyball<lb/>
team: at the decree of<lb/>
the A1AW Region I!<lb/>
tournament selection<lb/>
committee, Christmas<lb/>
comes early this year.<lb/>
Despite a 16-25<lb/>
overall record this<lb/>
season, the Lady<lb/>
Pirates of ECU will be<lb/>
leaving this afternoon<lb/>
for Highland Heights,<lb/>
Kentucky where the<lb/>
will compete in the<lb/>
A1AW Region 11 Tour-<lb/>
nament as an at-large<lb/>
entry.<lb/>
"It was like a<lb/>
million-to-one shot<lb/>
says ECU assistant<lb/>
coach Lynn Davidson.<lb/>
"It really should not<lb/>
have happened, but it<lb/>
did.<lb/>
" 1 here were a lot of<lb/>
little things which had<lb/>
to go just right for us to<lb/>
get (a bid), and the<lb/>
just seem to have fallen<lb/>
into place<lb/>
The Lady Pirates<lb/>
competed over the<lb/>
weekend in the<lb/>
NCAIAW Tournament<lb/>
in Raleigh, losing in<lb/>
their opening game to<lb/>
Appalachian State<lb/>
15-8, 15-13 before<lb/>
defeating Duke 15-9,<lb/>
15-9 to insure the<lb/>
would not finish in last<lb/>
place. They were<lb/>
eliminated from the<lb/>
double elimination<lb/>
event with another loss<lb/>
to ASI , 15-11, 15-13.<lb/>
The complex series<lb/>
of events which led to<lb/>
their invitation to the<lb/>
regionals had already<lb/>
begun, as Morehead<lb/>
State failed to comply<lb/>
fully with application<lb/>
rules by not having<lb/>
their entry post-marked<lb/>
"as of the Monday<lb/>
prior to their state tour-<lb/>
nament<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill<lb/>
lost to N.C. State in the<lb/>
finals of the North<lb/>
Carolina tourney, but<lb/>
the Heels received an<lb/>
at-large bid on the<lb/>
strength of their record<lb/>
and schedule. State<lb/>
champions<lb/>
automatically receive<lb/>
an invitation to<lb/>
regional competition.<lb/>
Eastern Kentucky<lb/>
claimed a solid lock on<lb/>
another at-large bid as<lb/>
did the University of<lb/>
Tennessee, which left<lb/>
one remaining slot. Ac-<lb/>
cording to Davidson,<lb/>
South Carolina would<lb/>
have probably received<lb/>
a bid had they made ap-<lb/>
plication. But even that<lb/>
went in favor of the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
"Middle Tennessee<lb/>
had a better record<lb/>
than we did explains<lb/>
Davidson. "But our<lb/>
schedule is much<lb/>
stronger than their's.<lb/>
It's really strange that<lb/>
some of the teams did<lb/>
not bother to put in<lb/>
bids.<lb/>
"I had planned to at-<lb/>
tend the tournament to<lb/>
go to the regional<lb/>
coaches meeting; I<lb/>
never expected to be<lb/>
taking the team with<lb/>
me.<lb/>
"Seriously, a team<lb/>
with a record of 16-26<lb/>
who hasn't won a tour-<lb/>
nament and came in<lb/>
fourth in their state<lb/>
toul namcut; who<lb/>
would think a team like<lb/>
that would go to the<lb/>
regionals<lb/>
Appearantly. many<lb/>
of the Lady Pirates had<lb/>
ruled out the possibility<lb/>
of regional invitations.<lb/>
Davidson slated she<lb/>
had a length) debate<lb/>
with one player over<lb/>
the phone to convince<lb/>
her there really would<lb/>
be practice Monday.<lb/>
"Don't get me<lb/>
wrong Dav id son<lb/>
hastilv adds. "I'm ex-<lb/>
cited about going. To<lb/>
our underclassmen, this<lb/>
is going to be a learning<lb/>
experience. It's a real<lb/>
plus to have kids who<lb/>
have national tourna-<lb/>
ment experience.<lb/>
"A lot of people<lb/>
don't understand how a<lb/>
thing like this could<lb/>
happen, but it's not all<lb/>
that unusual of a situa-<lb/>
tion. I simply put in the<lb/>
bid because 1 felt it was<lb/>
part of my duty to the<lb/>
team here and to the<lb/>
region<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will<lb/>
open competition<lb/>
Thursday at noon<lb/>
against Memphis State.<lb/>
Other teams in Pool II<lb/>
are UNC-Chapel Hill.<lb/>
N.C. State and Eastern<lb/>
Ken tuck v.<lb/>
Women Tankers Win<lb/>
SLAM l<lb/>
ECU freshman forward Morris Hargrove slams one home with authority<lb/>
in warmups before Saturday's Purple-Cold intrasquad game. The Gold<lb/>
team went on to win as Hargrove aided the cause with four points.<lb/>
(Photo by Jon Jordan)<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREF<lb/>
East Carolina trimm-<lb/>
ed Old Dominion 77-62<lb/>
Friday in the women's<lb/>
portion of a dual swim<lb/>
meet, but the Monar-<lb/>
ches returned the favor<lb/>
as they upset the Pirate<lb/>
men 61-52.<lb/>
"1 thought our<lb/>
women did a very com-<lb/>
mendable job working<lb/>
as a team said head<lb/>
coach Ray Scharf. "We<lb/>
only had nine out of 12<lb/>
in the water, but I think<lb/>
all of our girls gave<lb/>
good showings<lb/>
Freshman Sally Col-<lb/>
lins posted new varsity<lb/>
records in the 200 and<lb/>
500 freestyle, while<lb/>
freshman Jennifer<lb/>
Jayes added new<lb/>
records in the 50 and<lb/>
100 backstroke.<lb/>
Junior Julie Malcolm<lb/>
established a new mark<lb/>
in the 50 breaststroke.<lb/>
Freshman Moria<lb/>
McHugh finished se-<lb/>
cond in the 100 free,<lb/>
but her time of :54.86<lb/>
was good enough for a<lb/>
new ECU record.<lb/>
"Both our relays<lb/>
swam good times<lb/>
Scharf added. "I'm<lb/>
real proud of the way<lb/>
they performed. In<lb/>
fact, Collins' time was<lb/>
actually better than two<lb/>
of the guys we had in<lb/>
the water<lb/>
Scharfs enthusiasm<lb/>
does not carry over into<lb/>
his discussion of the<lb/>
men's performance.<lb/>
"On paper, it would<lb/>
appear that the dis-<lb/>
qualification in the<lb/>
third leg of the last<lb/>
relay (400 free) cos! us<lb/>
the meet says Scharf.<lb/>
"But it's my opinion<lb/>
that they lost the meet<lb/>
long before the last<lb/>
relay by poor attitude<lb/>
and lack ot determina-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
"The thing about the<lb/>
false-star! in the relay<lb/>
was that he had enough<lb/>
of a lead that it didn't<lb/>
matter<lb/>
The next meet for<lb/>
both suuads will be<lb/>
Monday in Chapel Hill<lb/>
against the rai I feels of<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
"If the) don't swim<lb/>
better againstarolina<lb/>
than they did Friday<lb/>
Scharf savs. "it's going<lb/>
to he a long ride ba<lb/>
to Greenv ille<lb/>
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Blue Gets TD<lb/>
ECU halfback Harold Blue scores his club's<lb/>
first touchdown of the day Saturday in a 28-16<lb/>
loss to Fastern Kentucky (Photo by Jon Jor-<lb/>
dan)<lb/>
snaps. Kidd attributes<lb/>
players determination and progress<lb/>
in recent games for their perfor-<lb/>
mance.<lb/>
"Our defense is playing great;<lb/>
they have all season long for us<lb/>
Kidd praises. "The key to our suc-<lb/>
cess for the past three games has<lb/>
been the way our quarterback (Chris<lb/>
Isaac) has played. He hit some<lb/>
passes today when we had to have<lb/>
them and made a couple of first<lb/>
downs himself running the ball<lb/>
Kidd expressed disappoint only<lb/>
with the his defense's failure to stop<lb/>
the Pirates' last drive which ended<lb/>
with a 15 yard touchdown pass from<lb/>
quarterback Greg Stewart to wide<lb/>
receiver Reggie Harden. The veteran<lb/>
coach also expressed fear ECU was<lb/>
set for a comeback when Anthony<lb/>
Collins returned the second half<lb/>
opening kickoff to the Colonels' 43<lb/>
yard line.<lb/>
"It kind of scared when when the<lb/>
guy had that long return of the<lb/>
kickoff Kidd said. "The crowd<lb/>
got behind them and you could see<lb/>
the momentum start to swing over<lb/>
to their side.<lb/>
"I see so many times on Saturday<lb/>
when one big play really makes the<lb/>
difference in the outcome of a<lb/>
game. It may be a play that doesn't<lb/>
even lead to a score, but it gives the<lb/>
team the drive it takes to win<lb/>
The Colonels close out their<lb/>
regular season next week at home<lb/>
against Morehead State with hopes<lb/>
of another shot at the national title<lb/>
on then minds.<lb/>
"We re getting more and more<lb/>
experienced every week and that's<lb/>
certainly a big factor in why we're<lb/>
playing so well said Kidd. "In<lb/>
fact, I believe we're playing better<lb/>
now than we did last year when we<lb/>
won the national championship<lb/>
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or French Fries<lb/>
Banquet<lb/>
&amp; Party<lb/>
Facilities<lb/>
Available<lb/>
SPECIALS DAILY<lb/>
NO TAKE OUTS<lb/>
ON DAILY SPECIALS<lb/>
Monday And Wednesday<lb/>
Beef Tips<lb/>
$229<lb/>
Tuesday Anu ihursaay<lb/>
Chop Sirloin<lb/>
$-89<lb/>
8 0z<lb/>
Dally Specials Served With Baked Potato or French Fries &amp; Toast<lb/>
30 Item Delicious Salad Bar<lb/>
i<lb/>
t<lb/>
<lb/>
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