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<pb facs="00057421_0001"/>
She ttaat Gtarolintan<lb/>
Vol. 56 No. 5<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Tuesday, September 8, 1981 Greenville. N.C.<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
First Financial Aid Cuts Hit Hard<lb/>
(CPS) ? Mary, about to start her<lb/>
first year of law school at Vander-<lb/>
bilt University in Nashville, says<lb/>
she'll have to "take it step by step. I<lb/>
csan't make it through three years<lb/>
without (financial) aid<lb/>
If she can't get enough aid. Mary<lb/>
(not her real name) will "either drop<lb/>
out of school, or wait to go, or just<lb/>
forget about it<lb/>
Mary is not alone. Like millions<lb/>
of undergraduate and graduate<lb/>
students this fall, she's feeling the<lb/>
first effects of President Reagan's<lb/>
cuts in federal student aid pro-<lb/>
grams.<lb/>
Financial aid officials around the<lb/>
country seem to agree that while this<lb/>
year's cuts wil hurt students, the<lb/>
worst effects are probably a year<lb/>
away.<lb/>
"The full impact of the changes<lb/>
won't start to be felt until next spr-<lb/>
ing and summer predicts Dallas<lb/>
Martin, executive director of the<lb/>
National Association of Student<lb/>
Financial Aid Administrators.<lb/>
Former U.S. Secretary of Educa-<lb/>
tion Shirley Hufstedler confirms<lb/>
they'll "hit in full and evil flower<lb/>
next year The impact them will be<lb/>
"shattering<lb/>
The relative scarcity of federal<lb/>
student aid "will literally foreclose<lb/>
the opportunity to go to school" for<lb/>
some students, Martin says.<lb/>
For others, the cuts "will cause<lb/>
students to maybe delay enrolling"<lb/>
while they hold a job, and "will<lb/>
most likely cause a shift in enroll-<lb/>
ment patterns from more expensive<lb/>
private schools to public colleges<lb/>
he adds.<lb/>
Indeed, some are predicting a<lb/>
rapid disappearance of all but the<lb/>
strongest private colleges. To meet<lb/>
higher tuitions, a greater percentage<lb/>
of private college students uses<lb/>
federal aid money, according to a<lb/>
February 1981 study by the National<lb/>
Center on Educational Statistics.<lb/>
So "when the axe falls, it might<lb/>
be the end of many small, private<lb/>
colleges specultes Carol Skribel,<lb/>
aid administator at private Case<lb/>
Western Reserve University in<lb/>
Cleveland. "We depend on strong<lb/>
financial aid to attract students<lb/>
At traditionally black colleges,<lb/>
where it is not unusual to find 100<lb/>
percent of the student body using<lb/>
some sort of federal aid, the cuts are<lb/>
expected to hit especially hard.<lb/>
Most public college aid officials<lb/>
were reluctant to predict just how<lb/>
many of their students won't be able<lb/>
to re-enroll because of the cuts. One<lb/>
? Jerome Sullivan of Iowa State ?<lb/>
at one point speculated ISU could<lb/>
lose 20 percent of its students, but<lb/>
that they could be replaced by<lb/>
transfers from private colleges.<lb/>
"We expect a large number of<lb/>
students will be affected says<lb/>
George Brooks, aid director at the<lb/>
University of Missouri-Columbia.<lb/>
"We don't know how many yet.<lb/>
We're certainly not going to be able<lb/>
to fund every student who needs it,<lb/>
which has been our commitment<lb/>
since the mid-sixties<lb/>
At Texas, "we don't know how it<lb/>
will translate into the number of<lb/>
students lost to the institution<lb/>
says Michael Novak, the universi-<lb/>
ty's aid director. "But the quality of<lb/>
the students' experience will be af-<lb/>
fected he predicts.<lb/>
The immediate impact will pro-<lb/>
bably be on the poorest students, of-<lb/>
ficials say.<lb/>
David K. Smith, Vanderbilt's stu-<lb/>
dent aid director, worries about "a<lb/>
return to the old days when Vander-<lb/>
bilt was known as a rich man's<lb/>
school<lb/>
He worries the school might even-<lb/>
tually be forced to admit students<lb/>
"in the bottom five percent of our<lb/>
applicant pool" according not to<lb/>
their academic abilities, but to their<lb/>
ability to pay their own way without<lb/>
aid.<lb/>
"That would be destroying what<lb/>
we've always worked for ? a<lb/>
diverse student body with a good<lb/>
sprinkling of minority students and<lb/>
lower income students Smith<lb/>
mourns.<lb/>
Missouri "hasn't discussed going<lb/>
back to ability-to-pay (admissions)<lb/>
yet Brooks says, "but I can see it<lb/>
coming up. Everything's going<lb/>
down the drain on this thing<lb/>
Confusion over congressional in-<lb/>
tent and an administration delay in<lb/>
processing aid applications last spr-<lb/>
ing have caused the most trouble for<lb/>
this fall's students, aid directors say.<lb/>
Most of the changes in aid awards<lb/>
go into effect October 1, but aid ad-<lb/>
ministrators didn't know that until<lb/>
well past June, when most aid<lb/>
"packages" are usually completed<lb/>
and announced.<lb/>
Vanderbilt's Smith complains of<lb/>
trying to arrange aid for students in<lb/>
the face of "confusion and conflic-<lb/>
ting directives" during the summer.<lb/>
Two weeks before school started,<lb/>
"we still do not have an official<lb/>
notification of a payment schedule"<lb/>
on which to compute awards.<lb/>
Brooks tried to reach his students<lb/>
well before the new August 23rd<lb/>
deadline for Guaranteed Student<lb/>
Loans (GSLs), but doesn't know<lb/>
how successful he was.<lb/>
"A lot of people are going to be<lb/>
awfully surprised when they come<lb/>
back this year, and find they won't<lb/>
be able to get as much money as last<lb/>
year Brooks frets.<lb/>
"You're going to see some terri-<lb/>
ble anxiety (among students this<lb/>
fall) Martin suggests. Many<lb/>
"students just aren't aware of the<lb/>
changes<lb/>
There are other immediate ef-<lb/>
fects, "many of them invisible for<lb/>
now Martin says. He recalls talk-<lb/>
ing to a textbook publisher who<lb/>
complained that bookstore<lb/>
managers, unsure of what to expect,<lb/>
are "ordering books conservative-<lb/>
ly" until they .an more accurately<lb/>
gauge demand.<lb/>
Other observers foresee tem-<lb/>
porary lapses in services like campus<lb/>
food operations, whose directors<lb/>
may have withheld ordering for the<lb/>
school year until they saw how<lb/>
many students had to drop out<lb/>
because of an inability to pay.<lb/>
Smith estimates that 175 of the<lb/>
500 students in Vanderbilt's nursing<lb/>
See AID, Page Five<lb/>
Publication Without Editor<lb/>
Ebony Herald Returns<lb/>
Photo By ROCHEL ROLAND<lb/>
Ron Maxwell, ECU Media Board chairman, plans lo hire an editor for The<lb/>
Ebonv Herald soon. He calls the newspaper's staff "enthusiastic<lb/>
ByCHADBLFFKIN<lb/>
Slmff W ritrr<lb/>
The Ebony Herald, East Carolina<lb/>
University's minority newspaper,<lb/>
may be coming back to life,<lb/>
although the publication has no per-<lb/>
manent editor.<lb/>
The Herald, defunct since 1978, is<lb/>
the only medium on the ECU cam-<lb/>
pus that is oriented toward the<lb/>
coverage of news events concerning<lb/>
minorities.<lb/>
Lamont Byrd, the editor selected<lb/>
for the 1981-82 year, will be away<lb/>
during, the fall semester serving as a<lb/>
cooperative education intern.<lb/>
Ron Maxwell, chairman of the<lb/>
ECU Media Board, said that several<lb/>
people have considered applying for<lb/>
the position of editor, but at this<lb/>
time the position is still vacant. "I<lb/>
hope :he media board will schedule<lb/>
a meeting soon and hire a replace-<lb/>
ment for Byrd Maxwell added.<lb/>
He also stated that he had talked<lb/>
with several members of The Ebony<lb/>
Herald statf and that all of them<lb/>
N. C. Tuition Triples In Decade<lb/>
By MIKE HUGHES<lb/>
Staff Wriltr<lb/>
Wouldn't it be nice to pay less<lb/>
than S220 a year for college tuition?<lb/>
No, there is no proposal before<lb/>
the state board of governors pro-<lb/>
viding for cuts to that extent, but<lb/>
believe it or not, in 1971 when in-<lb/>
state students paid $73 per academic<lb/>
quarter, to attend ECU, the annual<lb/>
bill totalled only $219.<lb/>
However, if a student wished to<lb/>
attend either the University of<lb/>
North Carolina at Chapel Hill or<lb/>
North Carolina State University, the<lb/>
yearly cost soared to $225.<lb/>
Needless to say, those figures are<lb/>
gone today. In fact, annual rates for<lb/>
tuition and fees at the state's three<lb/>
largest schools have tripled in those<lb/>
ten years.<lb/>
In-state residents now pay $664<lb/>
per year at ECU for full-time tuition<lb/>
and fees. At UNC, state residents<lb/>
pay $693.50 annually. NC State<lb/>
rounds out the trio with yearly costs<lb/>
to students of $670.<lb/>
Students paving out-of-state tui-<lb/>
tion in 1971 were billed for $1,300 at<lb/>
all three universities, but ten years<lb/>
later the average cost of tuition and<lb/>
fees for full-time students is $2454<lb/>
at ECU, $2,517 at UNC and ap-<lb/>
proximately $2,470 at NC State.<lb/>
Dormitory room rent has increas-<lb/>
ed sharply as well. In 1971, ECU<lb/>
students paid $270 per year to live<lb/>
on campus. Today, a residence hall<lb/>
room rents for $756 annually, ex-<lb/>
cluding the air conditioned Jarvis<lb/>
Hall, which currently costs an addi-<lb/>
tional $50 per semester.<lb/>
At UNC and NC State, female<lb/>
residence hall rooms were<lb/>
characteristically more expensive<lb/>
than rooms for males 10 years ago.<lb/>
At Chapel Hill, for instance, some<lb/>
female rooms cost as much as $630<lb/>
per year, whereas male students<lb/>
paid between $312 and $462.<lb/>
See N.C Page 5<lb/>
Today's Students<lb/>
More Self-Centered<lb/>
(CPS) ? The 1981 American stu-<lb/>
dent body is either more conser-<lb/>
vative than students of the past, no<lb/>
less liberal, or both ? according to<lb/>
two recent studies of political and<lb/>
social values.<lb/>
A Rutgers Univeresity survey of<lb/>
205 campuses concluded students<lb/>
today are as politically active as<lb/>
ever.<lb/>
"The only major difference bet-<lb/>
ween now and the sixties is that<lb/>
there was a central issue with Viet-<lb/>
nam that drew a great amount of<lb/>
media coverage contends Michele<lb/>
Lamoal, one of the Ruters resear-<lb/>
chers who oversaw the survey.<lb/>
The study found that the number<lb/>
of demonstrations on campuses has<lb/>
decreased by only 11 percent over<lb/>
the last two years.<lb/>
A University of Florida study, on<lb/>
the other hand, "seems to show that<lb/>
students mostly care about<lb/>
themselves summarizes Phyllis<lb/>
Meek, UF's associate dean of stu-<lb/>
dent affairs, who helped poll the<lb/>
student body.<lb/>
Florida students preferred alcohol<lb/>
to marijuana at parties by a three-<lb/>
to-one margin. Their most pressing<lb/>
concerns are grades, inflation and<lb/>
unemployment, all of which Meek<lb/>
characterized as personal concerns.<lb/>
When it comes to labelling stu-<lb/>
dent beliefs, contradictory studies<lb/>
like Rutger' and Florida's are<lb/>
typical.<lb/>
The annual UCLA-American<lb/>
Council on Education survey has<lb/>
shown a steadily-declining number<lb/>
of students who call themselves<lb/>
"liberal while the percentage<lb/>
subscribing to "moderate" and<lb/>
"conservative" labels increased.<lb/>
A February, 1981 study<lb/>
discovered that 68 percent of the<lb/>
students at Stanford agreed that<lb/>
"preparing myself for a career will<lb/>
be at least as important to me as ac-<lb/>
quiring a general education<lb/>
Yet 84 percent of American<lb/>
students believe student demonstra-<lb/>
tions "have a place on college cam-<lb/>
puses today according to a<lb/>
153-campus poll conducted by the<lb/>
Emhart Corp Inc.<lb/>
The same survey found students<lb/>
not only optimistic (83 percent ex-<lb/>
pected to be happy during the<lb/>
eighties), but sharing many of the<lb/>
anti-big business attitudes that<lb/>
marked the hey-day of campus<lb/>
liberalism.<lb/>
Business Today magazine un-<lb/>
covered similar anti-business, pro-<lb/>
environment attitudes in a survey of<lb/>
202 schools released in June.<lb/>
The magazine asserts the results<lb/>
of its study mean that students are<lb/>
noless liberal than in the past.<lb/>
MM?? By 0AY PATTaatON<lb/>
Is Ben waiting for a run-off?<lb/>
were enthusiastic about the paper<lb/>
coming out again this year.<lb/>
According to Edward Nesbitt, the<lb/>
associate editor of The Ebony<lb/>
Herald who is apparently holding<lb/>
the reins, the tentative publication<lb/>
date for the first issue of the paper is<lb/>
September 23.<lb/>
Nesbitt also indicated that some<lb/>
controversy had arisen over whether<lb/>
to keep the name Ebony Herald.<lb/>
"Just for the sake of tradition" he<lb/>
said, "we decided to keep the old<lb/>
name<lb/>
"The old Ebony Herald was a<lb/>
productive paper during its prime<lb/>
years the associate editor con-<lb/>
tinued, "but it didn't cover the total<lb/>
scope of minorities on campus<lb/>
"Our goal is to inform our<lb/>
readers of minority events not just<lb/>
on campus but around the world<lb/>
he added.<lb/>
"We want to bridge the gap<lb/>
Nesbitt said in a soft but firm voice<lb/>
as he gazed out the window of his<lb/>
dingy, sparceiy-furnished office in<lb/>
the Old South Building, "hopefully<lb/>
creating a better understanding bet-<lb/>
ween the minority and the majority<lb/>
on campus<lb/>
Nesbitt also stated that he was<lb/>
grateful for the cooperation and<lb/>
assistance that the staff had received<lb/>
from the media board and the ad-<lb/>
ministration in their efforts to revive<lb/>
the Herald.<lb/>
Reagan Snubbed At<lb/>
Labor Day March<lb/>
NEW YORK (UPD- Snubbing<lb/>
President Reagan and paying<lb/>
homage to the striking air con-<lb/>
trollers he fired, thousands of<lb/>
workers marched up Fifth Avenue<lb/>
today in a salute to the 100th an-<lb/>
niversary of the American labor<lb/>
movement.<lb/>
The marchers included a host of<lb/>
striking air traffic controllers who<lb/>
were fired by Reagan.<lb/>
AFL-CIO President Lane<lb/>
Kirkland, the parade's grand mar-<lb/>
shal in honor of the giant union's<lb/>
100th anniversary, was at the head<lb/>
of the column of workers as the<lb/>
parade began under heavily overcast<lb/>
skies at 10:50 a.m.<lb/>
Carpenters, electricians, laborers,<lb/>
plumbers, steam fitters and others<lb/>
marched amid a sea of buttons, ban-<lb/>
ners, flags and multi-colored<lb/>
balloons to celebrate the first such<lb/>
parade in New York in 13 years.<lb/>
Reagan was not invited to par-<lb/>
ticipate and Kirkland scoffed at the<lb/>
president's recent pledge to generate<lb/>
"jobs, jobs and more jobs<lb/>
"His actions speak a lot louder<lb/>
than his words Kirkland said. He<lb/>
said the federal budget already was<lb/>
aimed at eliminating 1.25 million<lb/>
jobs.<lb/>
Harry Van Arsdale, president of<lb/>
New York City's Central Labor<lb/>
Council, played down the fact<lb/>
Reagan was not invited to attend the<lb/>
parade, even though the president<lb/>
was to be in New York to present<lb/>
Mayor Edward Koch with a sym-<lb/>
bolic $85 million check for the city's<lb/>
Westway superhighway project.<lb/>
"This is not a political parade<lb/>
Van Arsdale insisted.<lb/>
But in a direct reference to<lb/>
Reagan's firing of 12,000 air con-<lb/>
trollers who struck in defiance of<lb/>
federal law, Van Arsdale appealed<lb/>
to the president's good will in urging<lb/>
him to reinstate the controllers.<lb/>
'?It's true that if your children<lb/>
make a mistake, you want to punish<lb/>
them, you don't want to destroy<lb/>
them the 76-year-old labor leader<lb/>
said. He said Reagan's action in the<lb/>
strike was "a terrible mistake" and<lb/>
"enough punishment for those peo-<lb/>
ple<lb/>
Standing near Van Arsdale when<lb/>
the parade began was Robert Poli,<lb/>
president of the Professional Air<lb/>
Traffic Controllers Organization,<lb/>
who cheered several thousand of his<lb/>
union members who made the trip<lb/>
to New York to participate in the<lb/>
Labor Day celebration.<lb/>
The PATCO marchers were deck-<lb/>
ed out in blue and white caps and<lb/>
blue T-shirts with white lettering<lb/>
that read, "Leading the nation with<lb/>
striking results<lb/>
"It's a message to everyone in this<lb/>
country, including the administra-<lb/>
tion, of our resolve and solidarity<lb/>
Poli said of the parade.<lb/>
"As far as 1 know Poli said,<lb/>
"there's a strong indication that the<lb/>
issue is coming to the forefront.<lb/>
This nation's air system can't<lb/>
operate without 12,000 air traffic<lb/>
controllers<lb/>
"Come as you work urged the<lb/>
invitations for the festivities, and<lb/>
organizers expected 200,000<lb/>
workers to march ? from plumbers<lb/>
shouldering plungers like drill rifles,<lb/>
to printers in regulation aprons and<lb/>
folded paper hats.<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Opinions4<lb/>
Features6<lb/>
Sports9<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
t<lb/>
 -1 ij<lb/>
UpMtf N4NN<lb/>
<pb facs="00057421_0002"/><lb/>
J??EASTCAROUNIAN M-ITEMBER1, 11<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
?t you or your organization<lb/>
would tike to have an item printed<lb/>
in the announcements column<lb/>
please send the announcement (as<lb/>
brie as possible) typed and<lb/>
ctoubte spaced to The East Caroli<lb/>
nian in care of the news editor<lb/>
There is no charge tor an<lb/>
nouncements. but space is often<lb/>
limited<lb/>
The deadline for announcement<lb/>
are Spm Friday for the Tuesdsay<lb/>
paper and Spir Tuesday for the<lb/>
Thrusdasy paper<lb/>
The space is availaole to all<lb/>
campus organuations ana depart<lb/>
ments<lb/>
YOGA<lb/>
A physical approach to inner<lb/>
serenity available through<lb/>
practice of yoga will be offered<lb/>
by the ECU Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education on Wednesday even<lb/>
ings Ocf 28 Dee 2<lb/>
According to instructor Lucy<lb/>
Mauger the class will feature a<lb/>
series of controlled postures and<lb/>
breattvnq enercises to help relieve<lb/>
anxiety and tension stimulate the<lb/>
circulation, improve stamina and<lb/>
increase muscle tone and booy<lb/>
suppleness<lb/>
Participants can improve their<lb/>
health, vigor and peace of mmrt<lb/>
without becoming rontort,onists<lb/>
she noted<lb/>
Loose, comfortable clothing (or<lb/>
leotard and t.gnts) a larqe towel<lb/>
or exercise mat and bare feet are<lb/>
recommended<lb/>
Further information about this<lb/>
and other fall evening and<lb/>
weekend classes is available from<lb/>
the Ohice of Non Credit Pro<lb/>
grams. Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education. ECU Greenville. N C<lb/>
telephone 757 6143<lb/>
WOMEN'S RUGBY<lb/>
Want to out a little excitement<lb/>
into your lite Play WOT<lb/>
rugby The tir?t semrs'er meet rtg<lb/>
is Wednesday Sept o. in<lb/>
Memofni Gym -oom 102 ?<lb/>
Noexper-enos nessv<lb/>
cannot attend but would<lb/>
participate call Kim si s; ?<lb/>
Tracev al 752 (?<lb/>
PSI CHI<lb/>
Psi Chi the na'ona. honot s.x ?<lb/>
ty tor psychology will h ia its lit s1<lb/>
meet.n for fa'i semester on Tues<lb/>
day Sept 8 a' 7 IS p m in S)<lb/>
179 All members and interrs'e.i<lb/>
ithers are urged to attend<lb/>
CARTOONS<lb/>
'Ann! to see Un<lb/>
in the face Stop ov Met ?<lb/>
Student Center from Stpt ?<lb/>
throjgh the 13' g s0 tr extl<lb/>
ol editor.al cartoons b. .John<lb/>
Wevier Displayed in the lowet<lb/>
gallery Ms- floor the cartoons<lb/>
appeared in The East Carolinian<lb/>
from January 1980 Ic 'he pr <lb/>
Subiect matter includes car<lb/>
crapoia international idio ? ana<lb/>
predatory PTStders<lb/>
COOP<lb/>
A representative trom the Kia<lb/>
tional Institutes ol Health Normal<lb/>
Volunteer Prouram .n Bethesaa<lb/>
WD will be on , ampos Sepl 28and<lb/>
79 to interview stcdents for Sor.no<lb/>
198? placement Anyone into<lb/>
in any aspect of the heaith an-<lb/>
field or in researi h would find Ih<lb/>
experience valuable Por more .r<lb/>
tor-nation contact tne Co Op Ot<lb/>
fice. J l J Rawi or viephon<lb/>
75' ?979 6075 today'<lb/>
LEARNING<lb/>
A new program for Increasing<lb/>
Learning Efficiency w i be ol<lb/>
fered by Dr Georcje Ac ganti<lb/>
beginning September 9 There W"1<lb/>
be two groups One will meet on<lb/>
Monday and Wednesday at 1 00<lb/>
p m and 'he other group wnl mee'<lb/>
on Tuesoasy and Thursdasr a'<lb/>
1 00 p m in room 305 Wr.gh; Ar<lb/>
nex The class is available 'o all<lb/>
s'uoents Attendance is voiunir,<lb/>
no formal registration is re<lb/>
Quired<lb/>
SUTRAVEL<lb/>
The East Carolina Student<lb/>
Union Travel Committee will njje<lb/>
a meeting on September 9 a' 4<lb/>
B m in MenovnnaH room 233 AH<lb/>
members are urged to attend<lb/>
PPHA<lb/>
The Pi-epro'essionai Hea "??<lb/>
Alliance PPHA) will hold its first<lb/>
regular bi weekly meeting on<lb/>
Thursdasy. Sept 10. '981 This<lb/>
mee'ing will be held at 6 00 p m at<lb/>
The Alro American Cu'turai<lb/>
Center New plans lor the coming<lb/>
year will be discussed All<lb/>
members and any other interested<lb/>
parties are urged to attend<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
King Youth Fellowship on We I<lb/>
Sep' 8 m room 221 Mendem<lb/>
The meeting will consist ot bible<lb/>
study, fellowship, and sharino<lb/>
LSAT<lb/>
The Law School Aom.ssion Test<lb/>
will be offered at East Carolina<lb/>
Universit, n Saturday. October 3<lb/>
1981 Apphcaton blanks are to oe<lb/>
completed and mailed lo Educa<lb/>
tional Testing Service, Box 966 R<lb/>
Pr.nceton Nj 0854C Registration<lb/>
postmarked after this date must<lb/>
be accompanied Dy a 115, non<lb/>
returnable ate registration fee<lb/>
DAT<lb/>
The Dental Aptitude Test will be<lb/>
offered at East Carolina universi<lb/>
ly on Saturday October 3, 1981<lb/>
Application blanks are to be mail<lb/>
ed in time to be received by Rw<lb/>
Division of Educational<lb/>
Measurements, American Dental<lb/>
Association, 2"il Eas' Chicago<lb/>
Ave Chicago. Illinois 6001) by<lb/>
September 7. 1981 Applications<lb/>
may be obtained from the ECU<lb/>
Testing Center. Speight Building.<lb/>
Room 105<lb/>
v<lb/>
TUTORIAL<lb/>
ASSISTANCE<lb/>
If you ar pursuing a degree in<lb/>
allied health, nursing, pre<lb/>
medicine, pre dentistry or<lb/>
medicine you may quality tor free<lb/>
tutorial assistance through the<lb/>
Center for Student Opportunities<lb/>
(CSO). School of Medicine in ad<lb/>
dilton, eligible students can par<lb/>
ticipate in individualized or group<lb/>
learning skills sessions H you<lb/>
would like to be considered for<lb/>
participation in any of the COST<lb/>
FREE services, contact Dr Frye.<lb/>
Center for Student Opportunities.<lb/>
217 Whichard Annex, or call for an<lb/>
appointment at 757 6122, 6075, or<lb/>
601<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
IIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllinilllllllllllllllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIB<lb/>
I ROCK OUT 1<lb/>
HOUSING<lb/>
For ECU students needing help<lb/>
with non university housing Hie<lb/>
Oft Campus Housing Office<lb/>
publishes a listing ot available<lb/>
rooms apar tments. houses and<lb/>
mobile homes m the Greenville<lb/>
? "aterialsari updated<lb/>
uaiiy students should come by the<lb/>
Off ce n person 'or the most cur<lb/>
rent information Listings tor<lb/>
Greenville apartment complexes.<lb/>
tor stuck nts seeking roommates,<lb/>
ano a telephone fen placing local<lb/>
calls are aisc provided The I<lb/>
serves faculty and statl as well .is<lb/>
students<lb/>
POETS<lb/>
Ttv Amei . ? Poets<lb/>
a<lb/>
? atlOns IS sponsoring  N<lb/>
tional Poel<lb/>
i98i n<lb/>
 1<lb/>
?? itions, P O Bo<lb/>
4jsi; . s Angeles C .i ?iXU4<lb/>
SKIING<lb/>
Ol fCK SOOn lo sirt thinking<lb/>
snow lot skiing at SnowShoe Wes'<lb/>
V ii Din .i ,ii C ht 1st mas and during<lb/>
spring break Contact Ms Jo<lb/>
Saunders at ,Ts' 6000 v.<lb/>
Gvm Room 70S tor information<lb/>
Limited registration<lb/>
FITNESS<lb/>
?. ?<lb/>
. n Wedrti<lb/>
Septem bei 9 i; 00<lb/>
v ? a ? ? R n 108<lb/>
<lb/>
.<lb/>
Da ? . ?<lb/>
v<lb/>
757 t<lb/>
?<lb/>
? s<lb/>
in<lb/>
VR<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
<lb/>
ng<lb/>
.?<lb/>
 ??<lb/>
"uk<lb/>
- ? JO0<lb/>
<lb/>
MINI COURSES<lb/>
6 'daylor a I<lb/>
?-i -<lb/>
' I  ? -<lb/>
<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
? the '<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
be ?<lb/>
? si<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
N<lb/>
?<lb/>
are avatta<lb/>
?<lb/>
NAACP<lb/>
 .<lb/>
r Chapl I tl<lb/>
? nil<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
CITY COUNCIL<lb/>
The Greenville City Council will<lb/>
 onduct a regular monthly agenda<lb/>
workshop meeting on Tuesday,<lb/>
Sept 8. at 8 a m in the lirst Moor<lb/>
conference room ot the Municipal<lb/>
Building<lb/>
The regular monthly City Coun<lb/>
I  meeting will be held on Thurs<lb/>
eta Sept 10, at 8 p m m the City<lb/>
Council Chambers, third floor ot<lb/>
the Muni ipal Building. 201 West<lb/>
Fifth Street<lb/>
NTE<lb/>
.nis completing teacher<lb/>
preparation programs and ad<lb/>
vanced degree candidates in<lb/>
spet tic fields may take the Na<lb/>
tional Teacher Examinations on<lb/>
NOV 14. 1981. Feb 70, 1982. and<lb/>
Apr,I 17. 1983 ,it lest cent s<lb/>
tghout the united States<lb/>
Prospective registrants should<lb/>
itacl the school districts in<lb/>
which they seek employment<lb/>
' ite agenc ies m which they seek<lb/>
. ii t.tication or licensing, their i ol<lb/>
leqes or the appropriate educa<lb/>
tional assix iahon lor advice about<lb/>
whuh examinations to lake and<lb/>
w hen '0 take them<lb/>
The NTE Bulletin ot Informa<lb/>
tion contains a list ot test centers<lb/>
and genei al information about the<lb/>
? ?filiations, as well as a<lb/>
registration torm Copioes may be<lb/>
obtained trom inllege placement<lb/>
H .('is school personnel depart<lb/>
ments. or directly trom National<lb/>
Teachei E nominations. Box 9)1.<lb/>
Educational Testing Servu e<lb/>
Princeton New Jersey 08541<lb/>
FRISBEE<lb/>
?'? Mill tie an orqani2ational<lb/>
ling ot the Frisbee Club this<lb/>
rhui sdav  pi 10. 1 00 p.m m<lb/>
 VHlonhali Anyone in<lb/>
?? ested hi playng or learning<lb/>
' ?? Ic . iy is welcome to iom us<lb/>
the I98i 198; school<lb/>
reai will tx elected and prefects<lb/>
' ? . ? ? semester will be<lb/>
SURFERS<lb/>
ill .s i 't n ii ? ?<lb/>
??t ? ? -it 7 p m in<lb/>
? 'os planning<lb/>
? attend the sun oft on Sunday<lb/>
? not freshmen,<lb/>
please ? ? ? I jf Stanley m<lb/>
? room 114, next<lb/>
omi ? iom aii new<lb/>
"end<lb/>
COUNSELING<lb/>
<lb/>
? ' ? eg fe a reasonable<lb/>
college students? The<lb/>
sei ing i<lb/>
'at) b g a<lb/>
ies on How to<lb/>
C oltege and Have Fun<lb/>
a ? ??. d Test Am<lb/>
? - . irtif cte in any<lb/>
ions TTh sssion on How<lb/>
' ? 11 ? ge ano Have fun<lb/>
 bt conducted Wednesday,<lb/>
en . r 9 from 3 00 p m 4 00<lb/>
Room 305 Wright Annex<lb/>
?? a ? a ?oid Test<lb/>
? ??? ? conducted on<lb/>
Thorsoav . Ii -ber 10. trom<lb/>
300pm 400pm m Room 305<lb/>
. ih? Al<lb/>
?is are available to all<lb/>
stuck ? ?harge interested<lb/>
'he University<lb/>
ntei ?57 6661. for<lb/>
' Registration<lb/>
?  red<lb/>
UTILITIES<lb/>
The board ol commfjiglMwes ol<lb/>
the Greenville irtmes Commis<lb/>
sion will meet in regular session at<lb/>
7 30 p m Tuesdasy Sept 8 m me<lb/>
Board Room of the Utilities<lb/>
Building<lb/>
EPISCOPAL<lb/>
A Student Episcopal service of<lb/>
Holy Communion will be<lb/>
celebrated on Tuesdasy evening<lb/>
September 8, in the chapel ol St<lb/>
Pauls Episcopal Church. 406 4th<lb/>
Street (one block from Garrett<lb/>
Dormi The service will be al 5 30<lb/>
p m with the Episcopal Chaplain<lb/>
the Rev Bill Madden, celebrating<lb/>
THE WAY<lb/>
We are looking tor you if ill<lb/>
You believe in God (21 You believe<lb/>
the Bible is truth (3) You desire to<lb/>
know more about both If you mi i '<lb/>
this criterion, you need to be at our<lb/>
fellowships at MendenhaH Student<lb/>
Center on September 10. Thursday<lb/>
morning, II 00 a m in room 717<lb/>
and Thursday night 7 30 p m in<lb/>
room 242<lb/>
CADP<lb/>
The Campus Alcohol and Drug<lb/>
Abuse Program will hold its first<lb/>
meeting lor the fall semester on<lb/>
Thursday Sept 10 at 3 30 p m in<lb/>
the conference room on the second<lb/>
floor ot Erwm Buildmq Members<lb/>
and interested students are<lb/>
welcome to attend<lb/>
SCEC<lb/>
Come iom the Student Council<lb/>
for Exceptional Children for out<lb/>
first meeting on Monday<lb/>
September 21. m Speight Building.<lb/>
Room 129 We will be plannmq tor<lb/>
this exciting new year<lb/>
CIRCLE K<lb/>
Circle K will hoid another open<lb/>
meeting this Tuesday, Sept 8. at<lb/>
6 30 m room 221 at MendenhaH<lb/>
Student Center After the meeting<lb/>
the clufo will go roller skating The<lb/>
cost will only be SI 25 Al 5 00<lb/>
there will be a board meeting at<lb/>
STuffy's lor all board members<lb/>
and interested club memtx??<lb/>
you at 6 30<lb/>
IVCF<lb/>
interval<lb/>
Fellowships a<lb/>
iht at 7 30<lb/>
Methodist Student Center David<lb/>
Watts will begin oc it<lb/>
study on the book ot<lb/>
 very on is we<lb/>
CSO<lb/>
The Center for Student Oppor<lb/>
tunities ,CSO). School ot<lb/>
Medicine, is currently seeking<lb/>
highly qualified under .<lb/>
and graduate students ?  . .<lb/>
part time as tutors<lb/>
students with expertisi n i H<lb/>
chemistry, anatomy, pbysuMOSy.<lb/>
biology, math, physics. English,<lb/>
or SLAP are encouraged to apply<lb/>
Other academic areas ,ir(<lb/>
considered Competitive wagi-<lb/>
Contact Dr Frye. Center for S'u<lb/>
dent Opportunities 217 Whichard<lb/>
Annex, or call for an ap;<lb/>
at 757 6122, 6075. or 6081<lb/>
BOWLING<lb/>
MSt Mixed Doubles bowling<lb/>
leagues are now being formed for<lb/>
fall semester Students interested<lb/>
in bowling un a Monday or Tues<lb/>
day evening league may sign up at<lb/>
the ground lloor bulletin board at<lb/>
Mendenhal! Student Center The<lb/>
league organizational meeting will<lb/>
be held Monday. September 14 at 6<lb/>
p m Bring some friends and sign<lb/>
up today<lb/>
BINGO<lb/>
Get ready for bingo and it ?<lb/>
cream on Tuesday. Sept 8 at 7<lb/>
p m in the MendenhaH mult,<lb/>
purpose room Prizes will be given<lb/>
to bingo winners and ice cream<lb/>
will be given to all at MendenhaH s<lb/>
Monthly Bingo lie Cream Party<lb/>
It's tree lo evei one so come join<lb/>
the tun you iust can't lose!<lb/>
KISWAHILI<lb/>
Kiswahili is the most commonly<lb/>
spoken language in Africa,<lb/>
seconded by F rent h and Aratm<lb/>
its territorial dominance extends<lb/>
trom all along the east Atman<lb/>
coastlands of Kenya. Uganda and<lb/>
Tanzania and embraces the cen<lb/>
tral African countries of Congo.<lb/>
Zaire. Central African Republic<lb/>
Ru.inda and Burundi Kiswahih<lb/>
has also penetrated the western<lb/>
hemisphere only to rank fifth after<lb/>
English. French German and<lb/>
Spanish as the most spoki<lb/>
language in the world This yeai<lb/>
ECU students will be given an op<lb/>
portunity to study an African<lb/>
language for the tirsl time<lb/>
Kiswahih will be taught as a non<lb/>
t interested pit<lb/>
contact Safari Mathpnge a'<lb/>
752 8736 or the Off ice Of Contn<lb/>
Education 757 6321<lb/>
SIGN LANGUAGE<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
The Program for Hearing<lb/>
impaired Students will oni e aga n<lb/>
sponsor the ECU Sign<lb/>
Club lor siudents and men '? i<lb/>
the Greenville community wl<lb/>
would like to meet ano pra I<lb/>
their communication skills Trie<lb/>
organizational meeting few<lb/>
1981 81 school year will be held<lb/>
Surv  . - 13 at 7 p n the<lb/>
Mendi nha I iter Mull<lb/>
- ?m<lb/>
? . ? ngi ire open 1<lb/>
and hearing students and<lb/>
Students The Sign Language<lb/>
is the perfect opportunity ' i II<lb/>
nguaot<lb/>
A II<lb/>
SIGN LANGUAGE<lb/>
? , ? ? (ran ? ? ??<lb/>
'<lb/>
sponsor the ECU -<lb/>
Out- ? embers ol<lb/>
? ' eenville con<lb/>
wou d like to<lb/>
thiei commui<lb/>
etmg I<lb/>
?<lb/>
Sunn ? . ?<lb/>
Menck ler Mull<lb/>
Pursose Room on th ? a '<lb/>
?JUS<lb/>
Meeting in pi<lb/>
and hearing students and non<lb/>
' II ut)<lb/>
is th. pei leet opporl r for I<lb/>
' n Sign lai<lb/>
? ii <lb/>
th deaf peopi. lerpreti<lb/>
Sign lanci . nts<lb/>
BIOLOGY<lb/>
The i CU Biology Club is pleas<lb/>
ed to announce its office hours<lb/>
i he offici will be open Monday<lb/>
'i "i 10 unto 1<lb/>
by ot the Biology<lb/>
g. room 102 Please ime<lb/>
by 'I We i an help you<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
The first meeting lor the N C<lb/>
Student i egislature will be Tues<lb/>
lay. Si 8. al MendenhaH<lb/>
712 at 7 i  All returning<lb/>
tend Any ques<lb/>
lions i all  ? I W'liiams at<lb/>
7 57 7093<lb/>
LANGUAGE<lb/>
PLACEMENT<lb/>
University students ar- remind<lb/>
ed that, in accordance with<lb/>
University regulations, before<lb/>
th. nroll for the firs' time in a<lb/>
foreign language thai they studied<lb/>
in high si nooi they must lake a<lb/>
? ?? on Pn that<lb/>
language<lb/>
T he only date on wf<lb/>
language p a I nay be<lb/>
!ration and<lb/>
Spring 1982. is<lb/>
Thursday Oi tobei<lb/>
liven al p.n v. follows<lb/>
Room<lb/>
I r. rx h BC 301<lb/>
in BC 30?<lb/>
SO<lb/>
CAM<lb/>
i<lb/>
Thursday, Sept. 10<lb/>
 Happy Hours ?7:00-9:30 p.m.<lb/>
Sponsored by the ECU Geology Club<lb/>
 Adm 50C Canned Bev 70C <lb/>
iMiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiininiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiinnniiMiiiiiiiiiiiiMiinnniiMMiiiiiiiiiiiiiM.JiiiiiiiMniiiniinifc<lb/>
Fl<lb/>
MIA'<lb/>
I<lb/>
Ben<lb/>
and I<lb/>
GMAT<lb/>
?<lb/>
??.??  be of<lb/>
? .<lb/>
. October 24. m<lb/>
lo be com<lb/>
to GMAT.<lb/>
?<lb/>
966 R  18540 Ap<lb/>
Imarl<lb/>
HI Ap<lb/>
.<lb/>
GRE<lb/>
hon ? ? Hi i al<lb/>
ipi<lb/>
' itionai<lb/>
'xi Nj<lb/>
?<lb/>
Imarkeo<lb/>
REPUBLICANS<lb/>
? C " COfl -mns<lb/>
' on a I<lb/>
? ?? ' ' rtt i 30 p m n<lb/>
'?.?. ????.?.<lb/>
.<lb/>
Mitchell's Hair Styling<lb/>
Special for all Students<lb/>
Haircuts ? reg. 6.50<lb/>
special price ?"V<lb/>
otter expires Sept. 14<lb/>
Located at<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
756-2950<lb/>
or<lb/>
756-4042<lb/>
<lb/>
-V i<lb/>
<lb/>
The Designer<lb/>
Diamond Collection<lb/>
from ArtCarved.<lb/>
Beautiful, fashionable.<lb/>
And Surprisingly Affordable<lb/>
A rtCarved proudly<lb/>
introduces its exclusive Designer<lb/>
Diamond Collection. A choice<lb/>
of college rings in three<lb/>
graceful styles, all with genuine<lb/>
diamonds. And each available<lb/>
in I OK and 14 K yellow or<lb/>
white gold.<lb/>
 The beautiful, yet affordable<lb/>
Designer Diamond<lb/>
Collection. A vailable only<lb/>
from ArtCarved.<lb/>
(Atl ring styles are also<lb/>
available in the elegant<lb/>
diamond substitute, Cubic<lb/>
Zirconia.) v<lb/>
i. ?<lb/>
w?<lb/>
n<lb/>
rrnii<lb/>
N<lb/>
Wmdmsh<lb/>
Radiance<lb/>
M<lb/>
H<lb/>
(irttiiinu<lb/>
RJQIRVED<lb/>
V ii ?,<lb/>
September 8-1 ECU Student Supply Store Lobby<lb/>
'V'ini u)firii ?Mivi,Mr,l' in Visa accepted.<lb/>
CJ981 ArtCannxi Cte? Ritivs. hu<lb/>
Xi.<lb/>
ATiTIC ATTIC ATTITt<lb/>
SOUTHS<lb/>
NO. 6<lb/>
ROCK CLUB<lb/>
10th<lb/>
,w ANNIVERSARY<lb/>
PARTY<lb/>
wCHOICE<lb/>
TUES SEPT 8<lb/>
50 ADMISSION<lb/>
ALL NIGHT LONG<lb/>
50C BEVERAGE<lb/>
ANNIVERSARY<lb/>
CONCERT NO. 1<lb/>
10T"<lb/>
NANTUCKET<lb/>
&amp;CHOICE<lb/>
WED SEPT. 9<lb/>
(<lb/>
-i?f I'fc<lb/>
L<lb/>
Thurs Sept. 10th<lb/>
Sat Sept. 12th<lb/>
Fri Sept. 11th<lb/>
DAZZLE<lb/>
WHKA<lb/>
4:00-7:00<lb/>
Sun. Sept. 13th<lb/>
M<lb/>
Wl<lb/>
LAI<lb/>
8 3<lb/>
ly<lb/>
lonj<lb/>
F<lb/>
D<lb/>
P'C<lb/>
sta<lb/>
unt<lb/>
yoi<lb/>
no<lb/>
SAJ<lb/>
r el<lb/>
md<lb/>
em<lb/>
mij<lb/>
ti<lb/>
mi<lb/>
SUl<lb/>
La<lb/>
no<lb/>
<pb facs="00057421_0003"/><lb/>
liimimimi<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
iniiititiiumti<lb/>
g<lb/>
a<lb/>
fC<lb/>
? - .4<lb/>
lth<lb/>
El<lb/>
A<lb/>
00<lb/>
3th<lb/>
k<lb/>
Floyd Strengthens; Emily Fades<lb/>
MIAMI (UPI) Hur-<lb/>
ricane Floyd aimed its<lb/>
95 mile-an-hour winds<lb/>
at Bermuda Monday<lb/>
and U.S. forecasters<lb/>
warned residents of the<lb/>
British resort the storm<lb/>
could get stronger<lb/>
before its center hit the<lb/>
inland early Tuesday.<lb/>
Meanwhile, Emily<lb/>
was downgraded from<lb/>
a hurricane to a<lb/>
tropical storm as it<lb/>
began breaking up over,<lb/>
cold Atlantic waters<lb/>
?out h of New-<lb/>
foundland and two new<lb/>
tropical weather threats<lb/>
loomed on the horizon.<lb/>
A weather recon-<lb/>
naissance plane from<lb/>
the National Oceanic<lb/>
and Atmospheric Ad-<lb/>
ministration (NOAA)<lb/>
round Hurricane Floyd<lb/>
gradually turning<lb/>
toward a northeast<lb/>
path that would carry<lb/>
the violent storm's<lb/>
center over or near Ber-<lb/>
muda early Tuesday.<lb/>
"All interests on the<lb/>
island should take the<lb/>
appropriate action to<lb/>
protect life and proper-<lb/>
ty warned Dr. Neil<lb/>
Frank, director of the<lb/>
U.S. Hurricane Center<lb/>
at Miami.<lb/>
"Gales (ranging 100<lb/>
miles to the east and 50<lb/>
miles to the west of the<lb/>
center) could spread<lb/>
across the island<lb/>
Frank's advisory said.<lb/>
At noon EDT Mon-<lb/>
day, Floyd was<lb/>
centered about 300<lb/>
miles southwest of Ber-<lb/>
muda, near latitude<lb/>
29.2 north, longitude<lb/>
68.3 west. It was mov-<lb/>
ing towards the north-<lb/>
northeast at 10 mph,<lb/>
but turning gradually<lb/>
toward a northeast<lb/>
path.<lb/>
Bermuda, a rocky<lb/>
promentory rising high<lb/>
above the sea, has had<lb/>
many brushes with hur-<lb/>
ricanes in past years<lb/>
without sustaining ma-<lb/>
jor damage but Floyd<lb/>
could give residents<lb/>
there a rough time. The<lb/>
hurricane's projected<lb/>
path would put the<lb/>
island on the strong<lb/>
side the northeast<lb/>
quadrant of the<lb/>
storm.<lb/>
The other threat to<lb/>
land is a tropical<lb/>
depression roughly<lb/>
centered at noon EDT<lb/>
about 200 miles east of<lb/>
the Caribbean island of<lb/>
Martinique. Although<lb/>
an Air Force<lb/>
"hurricane hunter"<lb/>
plane found highest<lb/>
winds of only 35 mph<lb/>
in late morning,<lb/>
forecasters said con-<lb/>
ditions were favorable<lb/>
for it to become<lb/>
"Gert the seventh<lb/>
tropical storm of the<lb/>
season with sustained<lb/>
winds of 39 mph or<lb/>
higher.<lb/>
The depression was<lb/>
on a westward course at<lb/>
about 15 mph. Satellite<lb/>
pictures and air recon-<lb/>
naissance showed the<lb/>
disturbance was pack-<lb/>
ing heavy rains and<lb/>
forecasters warned the<lb/>
northern Windward<lb/>
and Leeward islands fr-<lb/>
inging the eastern<lb/>
Caribbean against flash<lb/>
floods.<lb/>
Pictures from the<lb/>
weather satellite also<lb/>
showed another<lb/>
tropical disturbance<lb/>
developing Monday<lb/>
about 1,000 miles west-<lb/>
Nixon A llegedly Offered Bribe<lb/>
PANAMA CITY,<lb/>
Panama (UPI)? The<lb/>
late Panamanian<lb/>
strongman Omar Torri-<lb/>
jos was offered a $1<lb/>
million bribe by former<lb/>
President Richard Nix-<lb/>
on to cancel a United<lb/>
Nations meeting called<lb/>
to oppose U.S. control<lb/>
of the Panama Canal, a<lb/>
new book alleges.<lb/>
 Tor r i i os: No<lb/>
American Colony<lb/>
written by Torrijos'<lb/>
political adviser<lb/>
Romulo Escobar<lb/>
Bethancourt, says the<lb/>
bribe was offered in<lb/>
1973 just prior to a<lb/>
Security Council ses-<lb/>
sion on the canal.<lb/>
"Nixon sent severe<lb/>
threats to Gen. Omar<lb/>
rorrijos, above all<lb/>
through the<lb/>
Nuaraguan dictator<lb/>
Anastasio Somoza<lb/>
?Unaiort; attempting to<lb/>
bribe the Panamanian<lb/>
leader, wrote Escobar<lb/>
Bethancourt.<lb/>
The book quotes<lb/>
Torrijos as responding,<lb/>
"If I fall, they will tilt<lb/>
the flag, give it a kiss<lb/>
and continue for-<lb/>
ward meaning the<lb/>
Panamanian people<lb/>
would not give up their<lb/>
struggle to wrest the<lb/>
canal from U.S. con-<lb/>
trol.<lb/>
Escobar Bethancourt<lb/>
wrote that a Nixon en-<lb/>
voy, whom he did not<lb/>
identify, flew to<lb/>
Panama to offer the $1<lb/>
million bribe to Torri-<lb/>
jos, then head of<lb/>
government and Na-<lb/>
tional Guard<lb/>
commander-in-chief.<lb/>
Escobar Bethancourt<lb/>
gave few details on how<lb/>
the money was to be<lb/>
paid or how he knew<lb/>
Nixon was behind the<lb/>
attempted bribe, but<lb/>
said Torrijos sent the<lb/>
envoy back to<lb/>
Washington "with his<lb/>
tail between his legs<lb/>
The Security Council<lb/>
meeting proceeded as<lb/>
scheduled and, after<lb/>
hearing Torrijos im-<lb/>
passioned plea, voted<lb/>
to back Panama's<lb/>
demands for the return<lb/>
of the 51-mile-long<lb/>
waterway and the<lb/>
U.Scontrolled Canal<lb/>
Zone.<lb/>
itt Plaza Barber Shop<lb/>
Walk Ins &amp;<lb/>
Appointments<lb/>
All Cuts<lb/>
5.00<lb/>
756-1760<lb/>
t SAAD'S<lb/>
'V; SHOE<lb/>
r ? REPAIR<lb/>
113 Grande Ave<lb/>
7 MO 228<lb/>
Quality<lb/>
Repair<lb/>
m<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
The Fleming Center has been here for you &amp;nce 1974.<lb/>
providing private, understanding health care<lb/>
to women of all ages at a reasonable cost<lb/>
The Fleming Center<lb/>
Call 781-B8B0 in Rmimigh any<lb/>
we're here when you need us.<lb/>
gnu,<lb/>
i<lb/>
LrTMl<lb/>
h n o y u j ;<lb/>
southwest of the Cape<lb/>
Verde Islands. The<lb/>
system was moving<lb/>
westward at 15 mph but<lb/>
did not show any signs<lb/>
of storm development<lb/>
at midday.<lb/>
The noon advisory<lb/>
that downgraded Emily<lb/>
to a tropical storm<lb/>
estimated highest winds<lb/>
at 70 mph centered<lb/>
about 415 miles south-<lb/>
southwest of St. Johns,<lb/>
Newfoundland, near<lb/>
latitude 42.0 north,<lb/>
longitude 55.0 west. It<lb/>
was moving toward the<lb/>
east-northeat at 10<lb/>
mph.<lb/>
" 1 he ' storm con-<lb/>
tinues to move over col-<lb/>
der water and is<lb/>
gradually losing its<lb/>
tropical<lb/>
characteristics the<lb/>
lyisory said.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Sening the campus itimmumiv<lb/>
since W5<lb/>
Publ.ihed every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during the academic<lb/>
tear and every Wednesday dur<lb/>
ing the summer<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the ot<lb/>
Mcial newspaper ot East<lb/>
Carolina University, owned,<lb/>
operated, and published tor and<lb/>
by the students of East Carolina<lb/>
University<lb/>
Subscription Rate: $20 yearly<lb/>
Second class postage paid at<lb/>
Greenville. N.C.<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
art located in the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus of ECU,<lb/>
Greenville. N.C<lb/>
Telephone: ?3? 437, ?JOT<lb/>
Application to mail at second<lb/>
class postage rates is pending at<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBER 8, 1981 3<lb/>
Bus ScheduleGOLD SCHEDULE" (7:30 a.m. - 8:30 p.m.)<lb/>
PURPLE SCHEDULEPlaceDeparts<lb/>
(7:30-5:30)10th College Hill25 after hr.<lb/>
PlaceDepartsCollege Hill26 after hr.<lb/>
Speighton half hr.Mingcson half hr.<lb/>
Univ. Cond.25 till hrStratford Arms28 till hr.<lb/>
Eastbrook23 ill hrAllied health27 till hr.<lb/>
River Bluff21 till hrGreenville Square25 till hr.<lb/>
Kings Row18 till hrPitt Plaza24 till hr.<lb/>
Village Greene15 till hrOakmont21 till hr.<lb/>
Memorial Gym10 till hrMendenhall16 till hr.<lb/>
Mendenhall7 till hr10th College Hill5 till hr.<lb/>
Speighton the hr.College Hill4 till hr.<lb/>
Univ.Cond5 after hr.Mingeson the hr.<lb/>
Eastbrook7 after hr.Stratford Arms2 after hr.<lb/>
River Bluff9 after hr.Allied Health3 after hr.<lb/>
Kings Row15 after hr.Greenville Square5 after hr.<lb/>
Village Greene18 after hr.Pitt Plaza6 after hr.<lb/>
Memorial Gym20 after hr.Oakmont9 after hr.<lb/>
Mendenhall23 after hr.Mendenhall14 after hr<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
ABORTIONS FROM 1 U<lb/>
WEEKS<lb/>
AT FURTHER EXPENSE<lb/>
SI8S 00 Pregnancy Test, Birth<lb/>
Control, and Problem<lb/>
Pregnancy Counseling For<lb/>
further information call<lb/>
83? 0535 (Toll Free Number<lb/>
BOO ??1 2S68! between 9AM<lb/>
and 5PM Weekdays<lb/>
RAlEIGH WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
97 Wes Morgan St<lb/>
Raieigh, N C<lb/>
flttfo<lb/>
OPEN TO THE<lb/>
(soon to<lb/>
be private)<lb/>
PUBLIC<lb/>
Application for membership<lb/>
are now being accepted.<lb/>
DON'T MISS OUT!<lb/>
Grttnrilk,HC<lb/>
TONITE<lb/>
ALLAN HANDELMANS ROCK N<lb/>
ROLL SHOW<lb/>
WED.NITE<lb/>
LADIES' N1TE<lb/>
758-0711 209 E. 5th St.<lb/>
Located behind the Elbo Room<lb/>
Back to<lb/>
School<lb/>
Eyeglass<lb/>
Special<lb/>
For all ECU Students,<lb/>
Faculty &amp; Staff<lb/>
Offer Good Through<lb/>
Sept. 30, 1981<lb/>
Located across Dr. Park<lb/>
7521446<lb/>
LJeot- (Jan<lb/>
OPTICIANS<lb/>
opticians<lb/>
anoabon<lb/>
of amBncB<lb/>
9 5:30<lb/>
Mon.<lb/>
Fri.<lb/>
Where to Go<lb/>
When You're in a Rush<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
Fastest Growing Fraternity<lb/>
on Campus<lb/>
Tonight: Island Paradise Night<lb/>
a mixer with the natives<lb/>
and their women<lb/>
Wed. ? Sept. 9th ? Cheers with<lb/>
the Pi Kapps an evening<lb/>
with the ECU Cheerleaders<lb/>
Thurs. ? Sept. 10th ? Grand Finale Night<lb/>
"See You There"<lb/>
TnicholsI<lb/>
Greenville Blvd. (264)<lb/>
()<lb/>
14th St<lb/>
r<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
t<lb/>
T<lb/>
About 3 Miles<lb/>
nl<lb/>
J JPM<lb/>
w CO<lb/>
ONE<lb/>
OMP<lb/>
DOR<lb/>
Q<lb/>
a<lb/>
a<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
803 Hooker Rd.<lb/>
For Rides or Info<lb/>
Call 756-3540<lb/>
<lb/>
i'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057421_0004"/><lb/>
2Ul iEaat (Earaltnfan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Paul Coll ins, smmimcm<lb/>
Chuck Foster, o,w???, ifilTi, Jimmy Dupree. ia?ul?tmw<lb/>
Chris Lichok. ???,? uunr Charles Chandler, spot ?(w<lb/>
Alison Bartel, nnn??nm Tom Hall. srwSEd,ior<lb/>
Steve Moore, cmwm un? Steve Bachner. ???? ??,<lb/>
September 8, 1981<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Reaganomics<lb/>
Return Greeted With Maladies<lb/>
When President Reagan returned<lb/>
to Washington last week after a<lb/>
month's absence, he must have felt<lb/>
like the man who comes home from<lb/>
his vacation to find that his house<lb/>
has been ransacked. When he left<lb/>
for his August recess, Reagan had<lb/>
every reason to feel confident about<lb/>
the continued success of his<lb/>
economic program. Passage of the<lb/>
program's major elements in Con-<lb/>
gress was the major accomplish-<lb/>
ment during his first six months in<lb/>
office. In that time the administra-<lb/>
tion scored major victories against<lb/>
the Democrats in battles to trim the<lb/>
budget, increase defense spending<lb/>
and reduce taxes. Part one of<lb/>
Reaganomics was successfully com-<lb/>
pleted, and the president seemed<lb/>
confident that part two would fall<lb/>
into place just as surely.<lb/>
Somehow though, the economy<lb/>
has not cooperated, now Reagan's<lb/>
plan is collapsing all about him. His<lb/>
return to Washington was greeted<lb/>
by high interest rates, falling stock<lb/>
prices and increasing budget<lb/>
deficits. Why all this happened is a<lb/>
question that economists may<lb/>
debate forever and never answer<lb/>
satisfactorily.<lb/>
But there is no question about<lb/>
what all this means politically: The<lb/>
promises Reagan made about the<lb/>
economy during the campaign have<lb/>
lost their plausibility and substantial<lb/>
changes will be needed to save the<lb/>
Reagan economic program.<lb/>
The primary problem with the<lb/>
program is one that opponents have<lb/>
been pointing out all along: That it<lb/>
is difficult, if not impossible, to<lb/>
lower taxes while also raising<lb/>
defense spending considerably.<lb/>
Such a policy of raising military<lb/>
spending and cutting taxes at the<lb/>
same time now seems bound to push<lb/>
federal budget deficits out of sight.<lb/>
In a front-page story last week, The<lb/>
Wall Street Journal reported that a<lb/>
number of private forcasters have<lb/>
indicated that federal budget<lb/>
deficits may reach $100 billion in<lb/>
the near future if such a policy is<lb/>
pursued.<lb/>
The administration is now re-<lb/>
evaluating the feasibility of an<lb/>
unlimited arms build-up. Once that<lb/>
evaluation is complete, the only<lb/>
logical conclusion the administra-<lb/>
tion can reach is that defense spen-<lb/>
ding is the only area left that can be<lb/>
cut. Other programs have been cut<lb/>
to the bone and can be cut no fur-<lb/>
ther. In other words, defense spen-<lb/>
ding must be cut. To decide other-<lb/>
wise would be irresponsible and un-<lb/>
thinking.<lb/>
Increase Of Auto Traffic<lb/>
Causes Perilous Situations<lb/>
When fall semester begins at East<lb/>
Carolina, automobile traffic in<lb/>
Greenville and on the ECU campus<lb/>
increases tremendously.<lb/>
As vehicle traffic increases so do<lb/>
the chances of auto accidents.<lb/>
Many of the high-traffic areas<lb/>
close by and on campus have receiv-<lb/>
ed extra attention. The lanes are<lb/>
clearly marked, the areas are well<lb/>
lighted at night and in some places<lb/>
caution lights have been installed.<lb/>
Still there are a number of high-<lb/>
traffic areas left that are not nearly<lb/>
as safe as they could be.<lb/>
One such area is the intersection<lb/>
of Tenth Street and College Hill<lb/>
Drive, in front of Brewster<lb/>
Building. If you're on Tenth Street<lb/>
waiting to turn left onto College<lb/>
Hill Drive, it is impossible to see the<lb/>
oncoming traffic because of the car<lb/>
facing you and waiting to turn left<lb/>
onto the campus. The driver of this<lb/>
car can't see to turn left because<lb/>
your car is blocking his view.<lb/>
The only way to successfully turn<lb/>
left from either direction is to pull<lb/>
DOONESBURY<lb/>
up as far as you dare (forcing the<lb/>
flow of pedesiiians out of the<lb/>
designated crosswalk) and pray that<lb/>
the light doesn't change before the<lb/>
traffic clears.<lb/>
It is dangerous enough for vehicle<lb/>
traffic at this intersection, but for<lb/>
the hundreds of students who are<lb/>
forced to dodge through this maze<lb/>
every day, it is like playing Russian<lb/>
roulette.<lb/>
A simple way to eliminate the left<lb/>
turn problem would be to install a<lb/>
traffic light with a left-turn in-<lb/>
dicator. The traffic would then be<lb/>
safely regulated and the chances of<lb/>
an accident occurring would be cut<lb/>
drastically.<lb/>
Fall semester has been in session<lb/>
for only a few weeks and more ac-<lb/>
cidents have already occurred at this<lb/>
intersection. As usual, pedestrian<lb/>
and car traffic in the area were<lb/>
heavy. Fortunately, no one was in-<lb/>
jured.<lb/>
Next time, we may not be so<lb/>
lucky.<lb/>
by Garry Trudeau<lb/>
HI, THERE'THIS TS<lb/>
COUSIN ZONK ER. SUB<lb/>
aim vr the rm-<lb/>
strkxen harkslack<lb/>
meyeron'Mu?S<lb/>
OHPAMPE<lb/>
1 TODAYS GUEST<lb/>
ISMR HUES<lb/>
POTASH, AUTHOR<lb/>
AMD PROFESSION<lb/>
ALMASOOUST<lb/>
WELCOME BACK.<lb/>
MILES i <lb/>
1HANK<lb/>
YOU MR<lb/>
Hfiggjc,<lb/>
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TELL US,<lb/>
uhenoid<lb/>
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getinter-<lb/>
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TITWE POR It. BUT<lb/>
J 6UES61DlDNT<lb/>
BEAUXBEGINHURT-<lb/>
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AFTERCOUEGE<lb/>
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youcreate<lb/>
most of your<lb/>
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jogging, right'<lb/>
NO RUNNING<lb/>
BUTTHAVS<lb/>
AGOCO<lb/>
WAY TO<lb/>
START<lb/>
UEHB BACK AW TAU.SG<lb/>
ItTTH MARATHON PVNNE<lb/>
RULES POTASH, AUTHOR OF<lb/>
THE BEST-SELLING"THE<lb/>
I COMPLETE KBOF PAIN'<lb/>
MILES. YOU ARGUE IN YOUR<lb/>
BOOt. THAT PAIN THROUGH<lb/>
RUNHN6 IS NOT ONLY GOOD<lb/>
F0RTHE80PY. ITSGOOO<lb/>
FOR THE MINV. TOO RIGHT7<lb/>
THATS BJGHT,<lb/>
ZONKBt. YOU<lb/>
JUSTCAN7SAY<lb/>
ENOUGH ABOUT<lb/>
8UTSUREU<lb/>
THERE'S A THATSRJGHK<lb/>
THRESHOLD. ZONKER. YOU<lb/>
! A BREAK- MSTCAtfTSAr<lb/>
 ING POINT' ENOUGH ABOUT<lb/>
WE CHANGED THE TEAM'S NAME<lb/>
TO KEEP UP MITH CERTAIN TRENDS<lb/>
In Accordance With Parents9 Wishes<lb/>
I will give no deadly medicine to anyone<lb/>
if asked, nor suggest any such counsel, fur-<lb/>
thermore, I will not give to a woman an in-<lb/>
strument to produce abortion.<lb/>
?from The Hippocratic Oath<lb/>
By WILLIAM YELVERTON<lb/>
Four months ago Robert and Pamela<lb/>
Mueller were about to become parents for<lb/>
the first time ? to twins. Robert, a physi-<lb/>
cian, stood by his wife's side in the<lb/>
operating room at Lakeview Medical<lb/>
Cener in Danville, Illinois.<lb/>
A few days later the Muellers, along<lb/>
with the case obstetrician, were charged<lb/>
with attempted murder.<lb/>
Pamela indeed had twins, but the boys<lb/>
were a horrible mistake of nature ? sadly<lb/>
referred to as Siamese. They were joined at<lb/>
the waist and shared one leg, genitals and<lb/>
part of the circulatory system.<lb/>
The obstetrician reportedly said "Don't<lb/>
resuscitate" when recognizing the twins'<lb/>
condition, to which the father was said to<lb/>
have agreed. A message was placed on the<lb/>
twins' chart in the nursery: "Do not feed,<lb/>
in accordance with parents' wishes<lb/>
Some nurses could not let the twins die.<lb/>
One fed them a sugar solution intravenous-<lb/>
ly, and another told authorities about the<lb/>
case. A prosecutor, ridiculously, charged<lb/>
the Muellers and the obstretician with at-<lb/>
tempted murder, but the charges were later<lb/>
dropped because of a lack of evidence.<lb/>
The question remains, however, who<lb/>
"plays God" in a case such as this? The<lb/>
doctor? Hardly, when considering many<lb/>
break a once-sacred oath they have sworn<lb/>
by.<lb/>
The final decision should be left with the<lb/>
parents. They are the ones who have to<lb/>
care and provide for the child. The<lb/>
parents, not the doctor, are familiar with<lb/>
the environment the child would be sur-<lb/>
rounded by.<lb/>
The Mueller twins now lie in the<lb/>
intensive-care unit of Chicago's Children's<lb/>
Memorial Hospital with no hope of life as<lb/>
individuals because an operation would<lb/>
result in death. A hearing will soon be held<lb/>
to determine their future. The agony they<lb/>
now share would have never been if only<lb/>
their parents' request had been obeyed.<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes Inters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from Joyner Library.<lb/>
For purpi ses 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. AII let-<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for brevity,<lb/>
obscenity and libel, and no personal at-<lb/>
tacks will be permitted. Letters by 'He<lb/>
same author are limited to one each 30<lb/>
days.<lb/>
Iran's Self-Destruction Imminent<lb/>
By PAUL COLLINS<lb/>
Ever since the Shah was exiled in<lb/>
1979, the government of Iran has been<lb/>
on the verge of total collapse but<lb/>
somehow has managed to struggle<lb/>
through. Until now.<lb/>
The revolutionary government, head-<lb/>
ed by the Ayatollah Khomeini, has sur-<lb/>
vived the hostage situation, a deposed<lb/>
president, mass executions, war with<lb/>
neighboring Iraq and innumerable other<lb/>
crises.<lb/>
Now the country seems to have finally<lb/>
reached the breaking point. The peoples'<lb/>
tempers have begun to boil over; chaos<lb/>
has become the rule rather than the ex-<lb/>
ception. Mass hysteria has become the<lb/>
status quo in Iran.<lb/>
Since late June, a violent terrorist<lb/>
campaign has claimed the lives of Iran's<lb/>
president, prime minister, prosecutor<lb/>
general, Supreme Court chief and four<lb/>
cabinet ministers, as well as dozens of<lb/>
other officials.<lb/>
Prosecutor General Ayatollah Ali<lb/>
Qodussi, killed Saturday, is the latest<lb/>
victim of this violent purge. His death is<lb/>
particularly ironic in light of the fact<lb/>
that he prosecuted many of the more<lb/>
than 600 people that have been executed<lb/>
by the government since June 22 when<lb/>
President Abol Hassan Bani-Sadr was<lb/>
dismissed by Islamic fundamentalists.<lb/>
So while the government executes its<lb/>
opponents, the opponents retaliate by<lb/>
bombing government officials to death.<lb/>
Iran seems to be steadily annihilating<lb/>
itself.<lb/>
Most Americans are likely to react to<lb/>
this news by declaring their satisfaction<lb/>
that Iran is finally getting what it<lb/>
deserves.<lb/>
Let them blow themselves to<lb/>
smithereens for all we care after the way<lb/>
they treated the United States. Right?<lb/>
Wrong. While the natural human<lb/>
tendency would be to glory in Iran's<lb/>
downfall, the United States can by no<lb/>
measure afford to sit by and let Iran<lb/>
crumble.<lb/>
For years? through six presidential<lb/>
administrations in fact? the United<lb/>
States cultivated the Shah because of the<lb/>
strategic importance of his country.<lb/>
Today the importance of Iran is even<lb/>
more pronounced: It is a major cil-<lb/>
producing nation and is located at the<lb/>
center of the Middle East, one of the<lb/>
world's political hotspots.<lb/>
And quite simply the United States<lb/>
needs as many allies in the Middle East<lb/>
as it can get. To abandon Iran now is to<lb/>
leave it to the Russians, that is if Iran is<lb/>
not already permanently aligned agahst<lb/>
the United States.<lb/>
That, however, is unlikely, especially<lb/>
since Iran is destined to inherit a new<lb/>
government in the near future.<lb/>
The basis of American foreign policy<lb/>
has always been pragmatism. And now<lb/>
the pragmatic thing to do is to offer Iran<lb/>
our friendship.We need them, and they<lb/>
need us. It may not be a marriage made<lb/>
in heaven, but after all politics makes<lb/>
strange bedfellows.<lb/>
Cooperation Benefited Shah, U.S.<lb/>
By DIANE ANDERSON<lb/>
Throughout history, it has been the<lb/>
policy of the United States when dealing<lb/>
with a country with which good relations<lb/>
prove to be profitable, to look the other<lb/>
way when the rulers of such a country<lb/>
are discovered to be infringing upon the<lb/>
inalienable rights that we as Americans<lb/>
hold to be granted to every human by<lb/>
virtue of his being created equal.<lb/>
Such was the case during the reign of<lb/>
the late Shah of Iran, and is now also the<lb/>
case with the present government of the<lb/>
Ayatollah Khomeini. Many years were<lb/>
devoted to the building of favorable<lb/>
relations between the U.S. and Iran,<lb/>
especially since Iran has been a leading<lb/>
producer of oil is the Middle East.<lb/>
Because of the crimes the Shah was<lb/>
committ ng against the people of Iran,<lb/>
Khomeini followers dissolved the Shah's<lb/>
administration and took over the<lb/>
government.<lb/>
Years of cooperation between the<lb/>
Shah and several U.S. administrations<lb/>
strengthened the bonds between the two<lb/>
countries. The Ayatollah's regime con-<lb/>
sidered these efforts crimes against the<lb/>
people of Iran because the support of<lb/>
the deposed leader made the United<lb/>
States almost as much of an enemy to<lb/>
the people of Iran as the Shah himself.<lb/>
In an act of retaliation on Nov. 4,<lb/>
1979, the American embassy in Tehran<lb/>
was overtaken by militants of the new<lb/>
government, and 52 Americans were<lb/>
held hostage for more than a year.<lb/>
This action taken against the U.S.<lb/>
resulted from political chaos in a coun-<lb/>
try where the dictator had been over-<lb/>
thrown because of crimes committed<lb/>
against his people.<lb/>
So, what kind of position will the<lb/>
United States now take towards a coun-<lb/>
try whose factions seem to be<lb/>
systematically killing each other off?<lb/>
It's certainly time for the U.S. to stop<lb/>
looking the other way when dealing with<lb/>
the Iranians and start dealing with the<lb/>
Ayatollah as the unreasoning md<lb/>
hypocrital dictator that he is. Khomeini<lb/>
is now committing the same horrible<lb/>
crimes against the people of his country<lb/>
for which he condemned the Shah.<lb/>
The aborted rescue mission for the<lb/>
hostages pointed out the strategic value<lb/>
of the allegiance built between the Shah<lb/>
and the U.S. Iran was utilized as the<lb/>
closest military ally of the United States<lb/>
in the Persian Gulf region. Current<lb/>
defense department plans call for the ex-<lb/>
pansion of the Rapid Deployment<lb/>
Force; a force which would have benefit-<lb/>
ted greatly from a close relationship with<lb/>
Iran.<lb/>
For the United States to ignore what<lb/>
has transpired under Khomeini would be<lb/>
to turn our backs on the ideals which we<lb/>
as a nationhave espoused for so long.<lb/>
Se<lb/>
SAN<lb/>
(UPI, -<lb/>
nia Suprei<lb/>
considering<lb/>
p'ea thai r)<lb/>
overnight<lb/>
from his g<lb/>
Convict<lb/>
mgs, 46,<lb/>
a life term<lb/>
asked the<lb/>
allow, s<lb/>
prisoners'<lb/>
children, t<lb/>
privilege.<lb/>
The <lb/>
because<lb/>
who is mai<lb/>
visit<lb/>
g i r 1 f r i e r.<lb/>
fe?ani<lb/>
friend<lb/>
anothe- <lb/>
Bui<lb/>
I<lb/>
s riend,<lb/>
I<lb/>
was sent<lb/>
j<lb/>
ing<lb/>
prisor<lb/>
restr<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
Donald<lb/>
I ?<lb/>
-<lb/>
N.<lb/>
In<lb/>
( ontinuedl<lb/>
Steady<lb/>
room rei<lb/>
sears havi<lb/>
1981-8: <lb/>
NC State<lb/>
imate;<lb/>
averavge<lb/>
student at<lb/>
Costs<lb/>
indeed, mj<lb/>
creased.<lb/>
K 12.480<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?mi mmmt<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057421_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBERS. 1981<lb/>
k<lb/>
k<lb/>
u<lb/>
vi<lb/>
:???'<lb/>
I'm<lb/>
as<lb/>
held<lb/>
ie<lb/>
and<lb/>
'Tiber<lb/>
:iers<lb/>
at-<lb/>
the<lb/>
f ?0<lb/>
ted<lb/>
the<lb/>
en<lb/>
3il-<lb/>
5 he<lb/>
iall<lb/>
neu<lb/>
oncv<lb/>
now<lb/>
Iran<lb/>
they<lb/>
nade<lb/>
lakes<lb/>
g with<lb/>
th the<lb/>
and<lb/>
memi<lb/>
rrible<lb/>
untry<lb/>
pr the<lb/>
value<lb/>
Shah<lb/>
las the<lb/>
States<lb/>
(urrent<lb/>
the ex-<lb/>
,ment<lb/>
;nefit-<lb/>
lp with<lb/>
what<lb/>
ild be<lb/>
;h we<lb/>
ng.<lb/>
Sexual Jail Visits Considered<lb/>
SAN FRANCISCO<lb/>
(UPI) - The Califor-<lb/>
nia Supreme Court is<lb/>
considering a convict's<lb/>
plea that he be allowed<lb/>
overnight sexual visits<lb/>
from his girlfriend.<lb/>
Convict Ray Cumm-<lb/>
ings, 46, who is serving<lb/>
a life term for murder,<lb/>
asked the state, which<lb/>
allows visits by<lb/>
prisoners' wives and<lb/>
children, to extend the<lb/>
privilege.<lb/>
The issue is confused<lb/>
because Cummings,<lb/>
who is married, wants a<lb/>
visit from his<lb/>
girlfriend?not his<lb/>
wife?and his girl<lb/>
friend is married to<lb/>
another man.<lb/>
But, said Cummings,<lb/>
he lived with his<lb/>
girlfriend, now 28, for<lb/>
seven years before he<lb/>
was sent to San Quen-<lb/>
tin.<lb/>
"The state is impos-<lb/>
ing its own morality on<lb/>
prisoners when it<lb/>
restricts such visits only<lb/>
to married couples<lb/>
Cummings attorney,<lb/>
Donald Spector, said<lb/>
Friday during<lb/>
arguments.<lb/>
The issue brought a<lb/>
flurry of questions<lb/>
from the bench. Chief<lb/>
Justice Rose Bird asked<lb/>
whether the court<lb/>
should sanction<lb/>
"adultery" in prison.<lb/>
Justice Stanley Mosk<lb/>
inquired "How about<lb/>
visits for hire" and<lb/>
Justice Frank Richard-<lb/>
son wondered "how<lb/>
about multiple part-<lb/>
ners?"<lb/>
Spector said the only<lb/>
real issue was prison<lb/>
security. Problems of<lb/>
adultery and prostitu-<lb/>
tion are already<lb/>
covered by state law, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Justice Mathew<lb/>
Tobriner speculated<lb/>
that overnight visits<lb/>
might promote a<lb/>
calmer atmosphere<lb/>
because inmates are<lb/>
"mostly young men<lb/>
who are at the height of<lb/>
their sexual needs<lb/>
But Deputy Attorney<lb/>
General Karl Mayer<lb/>
said the state law is<lb/>
clear. It specifically<lb/>
makes wives, blood<lb/>
relatives and adopted<lb/>
children eligible for<lb/>
42-hour visits in private<lb/>
apartments and trailers<lb/>
inside the prison.<lb/>
Last year 12,000 such<lb/>
visits occurred. Mayer<lb/>
said extenstion of the<lb/>
privilege would jeopar-<lb/>
dize the whole pro-<lb/>
gram, intended to<lb/>
strengthen family ties,<lb/>
because appropriate<lb/>
housing is limited.<lb/>
But Spector said the<lb/>
case involves common-<lb/>
law relationships in<lb/>
which two people live<lb/>
together and "hold<lb/>
themselves out as a<lb/>
couple<lb/>
Mayer said the state<lb/>
should not be forced to<lb/>
pick and choose in<lb/>
deciding which rela-<lb/>
tionships meet that<lb/>
standard. California<lb/>
law does not recognize<lb/>
common-law marriage.<lb/>
The court will rule on<lb/>
the case at a later date.<lb/>
Aid Drops<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
school would have to<lb/>
drop out if "we hadn't<lb/>
made it up with about<lb/>
$100,000 in institu-<lb/>
tional funds<lb/>
But "I don't know<lb/>
what we're going to do<lb/>
next year" if Congress<lb/>
doesn't re-fund a nurs-<lb/>
ing loan and other aid<lb/>
programs, Smith says.<lb/>
 change of heart is<lb/>
unlikely. Most<lb/>
Washingtonians pro-<lb/>
mise even deeper cuts<lb/>
next year.<lb/>
"Anyone who<lb/>
believes that Stockman<lb/>
is content with this<lb/>
year's cuts in<lb/>
(Guaranteed Student<lb/>
Loans) is as loony as<lb/>
David Stockman<lb/>
himself says Jerry<lb/>
Roschwalb of the Na-<lb/>
tional Association of<lb/>
State Universities and<lb/>
Land-Grant Colleges.<lb/>
N. C. University Costs Soar<lb/>
In Tuition, Housing, Fees<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
Steady increases in<lb/>
room rent over the<lb/>
vears have brought the<lb/>
1981-82 bills to $710 at<lb/>
NC State and approx-<lb/>
imately $700 for the<lb/>
averavge on-campus<lb/>
student at UNC.<lb/>
Costs have soared,<lb/>
indeed, much the same<lb/>
mm? enrollment has in-<lb/>
creased. Approximate-<lb/>
ly 12,480 more students<lb/>
fill the three campuses<lb/>
today. Enrollment at<lb/>
ECU jumped from<lb/>
slightly over 10,000<lb/>
students to more than<lb/>
13,200. In the same 10<lb/>
years, UNC added<lb/>
nearly as many, climb-<lb/>
ing from 18,000 to<lb/>
21,000. And NC State<lb/>
showed a 68 percent in-<lb/>
crease during the<lb/>
decade, with enroll-<lb/>
ment reaching 19,597 in<lb/>
1980.<lb/>
The three schools<lb/>
now make up 20 per-<lb/>
cent of North<lb/>
Carolina's total college<lb/>
enrollment, including<lb/>
private institutions.<lb/>
Statistics show that<lb/>
272,000 people are<lb/>
enrolled in the state's<lb/>
colleges, universities<lb/>
and technical schools.<lb/>
Despite the<lb/>
similarities that ensue<lb/>
from the mere size of<lb/>
the universities, such as<lb/>
lines stretching far as<lb/>
the eye can see, student<lb/>
life differs considerably<lb/>
from school to school.<lb/>
Each has its finer and<lb/>
lesser points and its<lb/>
reputations to protect<lb/>
in the academic,<lb/>
athletic and social<lb/>
realms, and each cer-<lb/>
??ainly costs more to at-<lb/>
tend than it did 10 years<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
REGISTER TO WIN A FREE<lb/>
YEAR'S TUITION TO ECU<lb/>
AT ANY FAST FARE!<lb/>
Fast Fare is giving away, to some lucky person, a<lb/>
years (in-state) tuition at ECU, FREE. Fast Fare<lb/>
will pay $666 to ECU to be used by the winner for<lb/>
two semesters of full time ECU course work.<lb/>
How To Win<lb/>
Register to win at any Fast Fare in Greenville as<lb/>
often as you wish through Wednesday, Sep-<lb/>
tember 30,1981. The drawing will be held on Sat-<lb/>
urday, October 3 at the Fast Fare located at 220<lb/>
Cotanche Street.<lb/>
You must be 18 years of age or older to register<lb/>
and a full time resident of North Carolina. No pur-<lb/>
chase necessary and you need not be present to<lb/>
win.<lb/>
While you're registering, be sure to check out<lb/>
our:<lb/>
? Self-serve Fountain Drinks ? Self-serve Cof-<lb/>
fee ? Fast Microwave Sandwiches ? Carton<lb/>
Cigarettes ? Video Games ? IceChips<lb/>
Snacks ? Keg Beer ? Monthly Soft Drink<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
FARE PRICES ON MANY ITEMS AND MORE<lb/>
This Month You Can Be A Big Winner At Fast Fare!<lb/>
Aren't You Glad We're There.<lb/>
Chaps<lb/>
Hwy. 258 North<lb/>
Kins ton, N.C.<lb/>
Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina's Largest<lb/>
&amp; Finest Private Club<lb/>
Presents in Sept.<lb/>
9 ? Kid Shaleen ? Ladies' Night<lb/>
11- Band of Oz<lb/>
' "Breeze<lb/>
16 ? Zipper ? Ladies' Night<lb/>
18 ? Band of Oz<lb/>
19 ? Mainstream ? Bikini Contest<lb/>
$200 ? Total Price Money<lb/>
23 ? Castaways ? Ladies' Night<lb/>
25 ? Fantastic Shakers<lb/>
26 ? Catalinas<lb/>
30 ? Staircase ? Ladies' Night<lb/>
Oct. 2 ? Chairmen of the Board<lb/>
Bands Subject to Change Without Notice<lb/>
Memberships Required<lb/>
Annual Memberships ? $10 Special<lb/>
Price for ECU Students wID's<lb/>
$5.00 ? Available Sept. &amp; Oct. Only<lb/>
All ABC Permits Phone 523-2449<lb/>
EVANS SEAFOOD<lb/>
MKT.<lb/>
203 W. 9th St. 752-2332<lb/>
'Variety of Fresh &amp; Frozen Seafood<lb/>
 Lobster Tail s King Crab Legs<lb/>
'Clams'Crab Meat<lb/>
'Hard Crabs<lb/>
WE ALSO SELL CJAAA<lb/>
USED TIRES MU .<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
PHI KAPPA<lb/>
TAU<lb/>
CATCH<lb/>
THE<lb/>
BUS<lb/>
AND<lb/>
PARTY<lb/>
yv<lb/>
W<lb/>
CALL<lb/>
FOR A<lb/>
RIDE<lb/>
752-4379<lb/>
?.f<lb/>
?<lb/>
I WANT YOU<lb/>
TO BE A PISH MJ8<lb/>
TUES. - 9:00-UNTIL - WE'RE HAVING A WILD WEST PARTY)<lb/>
WED. - 4:00-6:30 - Beat Carolina Pep Rally with ECU<lb/>
Cheerleaders, ECU Pep Band, and Coach Ed Emory<lb/>
9:00-UNTIL ROCK &amp; ROLL PARTY WITH D.J.<lb/>
THURS - 900-UNTIL - SMOKER<lb/>
<pb facs="00057421_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
SH-II-MBER8. 1981 Page 6<lb/>
Van Zant Band<lb/>
Has Six-Year<lb/>
Rock History<lb/>
Tickets are currently on sale for the<lb/>
September 17 Black foot concert<lb/>
(with special guests The Johnny t an<lb/>
ant Hand and Def l.eppard)<lb/>
scheduled for Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Student tickets can be purchased at<lb/>
the Central Ticket Office,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, bet-<lb/>
ween the hours of 10 a.m. and 4<lb/>
p.m Monday through Friday.<lb/>
Public tickets can be purchased at<lb/>
the student center as well as all area<lb/>
ticket outlets. Prices are $6 for<lb/>
students in advance and $8 for the<lb/>
public, ill tickets will be S8 the<lb/>
night of the concert. The concert is<lb/>
sponsored by the Student I nion<lb/>
Major Attractions Committee.<lb/>
Brother of the late Ronnie, who<lb/>
fronted the renowned Lynyrd<lb/>
Skynyrd, and Donnie, who heads<lb/>
.38 Special, young Johnny Van Zant<lb/>
inherits his legendary family's rock<lb/>
'n' roll tradition with a very special<lb/>
intensity on Round Two, the<lb/>
eagerly-awaited follow-up to last<lb/>
year's acclaimed No More Dirty<lb/>
Deals. Accompanied by the blister-<lb/>
ing twin lead guitars of fellow band<lb/>
members Eric Leif-Lundgren and<lb/>
Robbie Gay, the steadfast bass of<lb/>
Danny Clausman, and the pro-<lb/>
pulsive drumming of youthful Rob-<lb/>
bie Morris, Johnny Van Zant's<lb/>
soulful vocals are given the full-tilt<lb/>
backing they deserve, recalling his<lb/>
two seminal forebears ? Bad Com-<lb/>
pany's Paul Rodgers and, of course,<lb/>
his brother Ronnie.<lb/>
Round Two finds Johnny Van<lb/>
Zant and company taking up where<lb/>
they left off on their<lb/>
PoIydorPolyGram Records debut.<lb/>
The rockers ring out with dueling<lb/>
guitars and compassion on such<lb/>
originals as "Keep Our Love<lb/>
Alive "Right &amp; Wrong" and<lb/>
"Standing In The Falling Rain<lb/>
The group shows its versatility on<lb/>
cover material like Orleans' "Let<lb/>
There Be Music" and LennonMc-<lb/>
Cartney's "Drive My Car while<lb/>
evoking painful sentiments on<lb/>
"Yesterday's Gone "Shot<lb/>
Down" and "Cold Hearted<lb/>
Woman Produced by Kevin<lb/>
(Journey) Elson, who engineered<lb/>
I ynyrd Skynyrd's live shows as well<lb/>
as their last album, Street Survivors,<lb/>
See VAN ZANT, Page 7<lb/>
The Johnny Van Zant Band Appearing In September 17 Concert<lb/>
The Johnny Van Zant Band will appear in concert, along with headliners<lb/>
Blackfoot and Def Leppard, on September 17 at 8 p.m. in Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum. The group consists of lead guitarists Eric Leif-Lundgren and Rob-<lb/>
bie Gay, bassist Danny Clausman, drummer Robbie Morris, and lead<lb/>
vocalist Johnny Van Zant. Brother of the late Ronnie of Lynyrd Skynyrd<lb/>
and Donnie of .38 Special, Johnny began his band six years ago as the<lb/>
Austin Nickels. The current line-up recently released its second album en-<lb/>
titled Round Two, follow-up to last year's No More Dirty Deals. Songs<lb/>
from the new release include "Keep Our Love Alive "Right and<lb/>
Wrong "Standing in the Falling Rain Orleans' "Let There Be<lb/>
Music LennonMcCartney's "Drive My Car "Yesterday's Gone<lb/>
"Shot Down and "Cold Hearted Woman Tickets for the concert are<lb/>
still on sale at the Central Ticket Office in Mendenhall student Center<lb/>
and all area ticket outlets including Apple Records and both Record Bar<lb/>
locations. The concert is being sponsored by the ECU Student I nion Ma-<lb/>
jor Attractions Committee.<lb/>
Germany's The Tin Drum' Shows Wednesday<lb/>
Tomorrow evening at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center's Hen-<lb/>
drix Theatre, the Student Union<lb/>
Films Committee will present the<lb/>
highly acclaimed motion picture<lb/>
The Tin Drum.<lb/>
Following the film, there will be a<lb/>
short, informal discussion in room<lb/>
221 of the student center.<lb/>
Refreshments will be served, and all<lb/>
interested students, faculty and staff<lb/>
are welcome to attend.<lb/>
Director Volker Schlondorff's<lb/>
(The lost Honor of Katharine<lb/>
Blum) superb adaptation of Gunter<lb/>
Grass' celebrated novel won an<lb/>
Academy Award as Best Foreign<lb/>
Film and shared Grand Prize at<lb/>
Cannes with Apocalypse Now.<lb/>
A brilliantly imaginative allegory.<lb/>
it is the story of Oskar, a young<lb/>
Polish boy of extraordinary will;<lb/>
confused and terrified by the adult<lb/>
world of sex, violence and Hitler's<lb/>
rising Nazism, he refuses to grow<lb/>
after the age of three.<lb/>
But Oskar's mind and emotions<lb/>
continue to develop inside his<lb/>
stunted body and he shrewdly<lb/>
observes the world around him.<lb/>
Twelve-year-old David Bennent is<lb/>
eceHerrt as"Oskar: it is an excep-<lb/>
tional performance ? a difficult<lb/>
role.<lb/>
Schlondorff's masterful direction<lb/>
perfectly illuminates Grass'<lb/>
f righteningly realistic and darkly ab-<lb/>
surd world in this stunning example<lb/>
of New German Cinema.<lb/>
The following is a recent review<lb/>
of The Tin Drum:<lb/>
"Volker Schlondorff's The Tin<lb/>
Drum is one of the best cinematic<lb/>
translations of a major novel ever<lb/>
made. The film has caught the<lb/>
rhythm of Grass's sensibility, a<lb/>
sizzling ferment of myth, epic,<lb/>
satire, political polemic, religious<lb/>
symbolism, transmuted<lb/>
autobiography and more. In this<lb/>
respect, the screertolayj, by Schlon-<lb/>
dorff, Jean-Claude Carriere and<lb/>
Franz Seitz, working closely with<lb/>
Grass himself, is remarkable.<lb/>
"Not only have they included an<lb/>
immense number of details from<lb/>
Grass's gigantic novel, but the<lb/>
details have been effectively placed<lb/>
in an imaginative space that<lb/>
resonates amazingly well with the<lb/>
original. On this level the film is a<lb/>
brilliant achievement. Schlondorff<lb/>
and his superb cinematographer Ig-<lb/>
or Luther have absorbed the sense<lb/>
of place and time that's so impor-<lb/>
tant in Grass's epic tale.<lb/>
"The drum parodies a German<lb/>
trait, the appeal of militarism and<lb/>
regimentation, satirized hilarikously<lb/>
when Oskar disrupts a Nazi rally by-<lb/>
screwing up the band's rhythms<lb/>
with his drumming so that everyone<lb/>
winds up dancing to the 'Blue<lb/>
Danube The film lives in details,<lb/>
and Schlondorff makes them live by-<lb/>
getting an astonishingly fine ensem-<lb/>
See TIN, Page 7<lb/>
Noted film<lb/>
critic G e n e<lb/>
Siskel of the<lb/>
Chicago<lb/>
Tribune calls<lb/>
The Tin Drum<lb/>
"quite shatter-<lb/>
ing. It offers<lb/>
for the first<lb/>
time in film<lb/>
history the<lb/>
birth of a child<lb/>
shot from the<lb/>
point-of-view<lb/>
of the child. It<lb/>
makes for a<lb/>
startling, dar-<lb/>
ing, and amus-<lb/>
ing image. The<lb/>
Tm Drum of-<lb/>
fers one strik-<lb/>
ing image after<lb/>
another. That<lb/>
would be<lb/>
enough to<lb/>
make it a fine<lb/>
film. What<lb/>
makes it<lb/>
memorable,<lb/>
however,<lb/>
comes later as<lb/>
the child grows<lb/>
older<lb/>
Confused and terrified by the adult world of sex, violence and Hitler's rising Nazism,<lb/>
young Oskar (twelve-year-old David Bennent) lets out a scream that can shatter glass<lb/>
in this scene from Schlondorff's award winning "The Tin Drum The film win" be<lb/>
shown tomorrow night at 8 p.m. in Mendenhall's Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
Fassbinder, Hitchcock.<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Cinema Society Offers International List<lb/>
Top: Dirk Bogard and Andrea Ferreol in a scene from Fassbinder's<lb/>
"Despair Bottom: Gerard Depardieu (left), Carol Laure and Patrick<lb/>
Dewaere in Blier's "Get Out Your Handkerchiefs Both films will be<lb/>
shown this fall by the Cinema Society of Greenville.<lb/>
The Cinema Society of Greenville, in conjunc-<lb/>
tion with Mendenhall Student Center, is presen-<lb/>
ting a diverse line-up of seven Films for fall<lb/>
semester ranging from Fassbinder's Despair to<lb/>
Hitchcock's silent British effort The Lodger.<lb/>
All Films will be shown in Hendrix Theatre,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, on Sunday evenings<lb/>
at 7 p.m.<lb/>
The six night series may be attended by<lb/>
subscription only. Season subscriptions may be<lb/>
obtained by sending $10 along with your name,<lb/>
address and phone number to Karen Blansfield<lb/>
or Glen Brewster Cinema Society of Greenville<lb/>
 English Department, ECU Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
? 27834.<lb/>
The following films will be shown on their<lb/>
respective dates:<lb/>
? Get Out Your Handkerchiefs (September 13),<lb/>
FranceBelgium, directed by Bertrand Blier,<lb/>
1978 ? A love story and a buddy movie, a com-<lb/>
edy of new morality with a classical charm,<lb/>
Blier's Going Places) film "makes you feel<lb/>
unreasonably happy said Pauline Kael of New<lb/>
Yorker magazine. Raoul will do anything to<lb/>
make his wife happy including finding a poten-<lb/>
tial lover to lift her out of her depression. The<lb/>
resulting confusion provides an unusual twist on<lb/>
the Oedipal theme, and leads to a startling and<lb/>
touching climax. The overwhelming hit of the<lb/>
New York Film Festival.<lb/>
? Despair (September 20), Germany England,<lb/>
directed by Ramer Werner Fassbinder, 1977 ?<lb/>
"An insanely brilliant conspiracy of talent"<lb/>
(Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times), the film was<lb/>
directed by Fassbinder, perhaps the major figure<lb/>
of the New German Cinema. The celebrated<lb/>
English playwright Tom Stoppard wrote the<lb/>
screenplay with the advice of Vladimir Nabokov,<lb/>
from whose novel it is adapted. Dirk Bogarde<lb/>
plays a Russian exile watching his chocolate fac-<lb/>
tory go to ruin in the worldwide depression. Like<lb/>
his earlier l.olita, Nabokov's story concerns a<lb/>
mild little man driven to murder by his own delu-<lb/>
sions. Fassbinder's use of color is particularly<lb/>
sensitive, and the result is an incisive translation<lb/>
of Nabokov's work.<lb/>
? Cars That Hat People (October 4), Australia,<lb/>
directed by Peter Weir, 1977 ? A bizarre and<lb/>
fascinating film, this picture is the first feature<lb/>
project by Australian Weir, whose subsequent<lb/>
Picnic at Hanging Rock and The Last Wave have<lb/>
established him as a major cinematic talent. Cars<lb/>
has an intellectual substance often lacking in<lb/>
thrillers. The film is brilliantly constructed,<lb/>
carefully developing its story to a harrowing con-<lb/>
clusion. As Paris is destroyed by its own<lb/>
marauding youth, Cars emerges as a deeply mov-<lb/>
ing fable of corruption and evil, and as a<lb/>
scathing satire on a society dominated by<lb/>
automobiles.<lb/>
? Lola Monies (November 15). France, directed<lb/>
by Max Ophuls, 1955 ? Called by Andrew Sar<lb/>
ris "the greatest film of all time ole Monies<lb/>
is a masterpiece of visual richness as we 1 as nar-<lb/>
rative development. The story centers of the life<lb/>
of the celebrated courtesan of the last century.<lb/>
Yet she is so reduced that she plays out the<lb/>
tableaux of her notorious love affairs (with<lb/>
Franz Liszt, a Bavarian king, a student sne meets<lb/>
fleeing a revolution) as the central focus of a<lb/>
three-ring circus directed by ringmaster Peter<lb/>
Ustinov. The circus within the film is ma:ehed by<lb/>
Ophuls' visual circus of mammoth action, swirl-<lb/>
ing colors, and brilliant decor, and by his cir-<lb/>
cular tracking camera which underlines the<lb/>
theme that "life is movement<lb/>
? Double Feature (December 6): The Dentist.<lb/>
U.S directed by Leslie Pearce from a<lb/>
screenplay by W.C. Fields, 1932; The lodger.<lb/>
Britain, directed by Alfred Hitchcock, 1926 -<lb/>
Although the film is only twenty minutes long,<lb/>
The Dentist is in two distinct parts. The Gold Se -<lb/>
quence is lifted directly from one of Fields'<lb/>
Ziegfield Follies acts, and stands quite by itself.<lb/>
Perhaps funnier, however, are the sequences in<lb/>
his dental office dealing with two female pa-<lb/>
tients. Watching Fields pull teeth may keep v ou<lb/>
away from your dentist forever.<lb/>
See FILMS, Page 8<lb/>
Lo<lb/>
fit<lb/>
Vi<lb/>
( ontint<lb/>
Round<lb/>
COI<lb/>
mr ?<lb/>
fru<lb/>
tal<lb/>
The<lb/>
bet<lb/>
alrr<lb/>
and b<lb/>
pla<lb/>
vili<lb/>
H(<lb/>
Id<lb/>
1: (<lb/>
Itm<lb/>
It se<lb/>
F3<lb/>
'Anile<lb/>
The It<lb/>
tra<lb/>
unknc<lb/>
This<lb/>
<pb facs="00057421_0007"/><lb/>
J<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBER 8, 1981J<lb/>
t<lb/>
vv Sar-<lb/>
rtontes<lb/>
nar<lb/>
;ntur.<lb/>
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th<lb/>
meets<lb/>
a<lb/>
Peter<lb/>
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swirl-<lb/>
i :ii<lb/>
ies the<lb/>
pentist,<lb/>
torn a<lb/>
dger.<lb/>
'926 -?<lb/>
long,<lb/>
Mid Sh-<lb/>
ields'<lb/>
 itself.<lb/>
fnces in<lb/>
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.frwfofr Atov r Coci?gC- Tt ftop JAJh<lb/>
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tuicmy ftc cut fo a<lb/>
CBH<lb/>
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lAL fOO COUL0 OuW<lb/>
tHI At-fC6? COOKWC? ST<lb/>
AT C?A ST H? MOT<lb/>
HOlO VCL 4 ?OUfc<lb/>
K??; Zafif Legacy Lives On<lb/>
Continued Frci.m P, 6<lb/>
Round Tho i s the se-<lb/>
cond LP of vhat pro-<lb/>
mises to be a long and<lb/>
fruitful career for the<lb/>
alented Jortnny Van<lb/>
ant Band.<lb/>
The grou' p itself has<lb/>
been together for<lb/>
almost six y ears. As the<lb/>
ust in Nickels,<lb/>
Johnny, Kobbie Gay<lb/>
and Rob bie Morris<lb/>
played t! ie Jackson-<lb/>
ville. FL. , bar circuit,<lb/>
taking tl ieir ages for<lb/>
ar the local police<lb/>
would shut the place<lb/>
down, which they often<lb/>
did. Following the sug-<lb/>
gestion of brother Ron-<lb/>
nie, the Nickels added<lb/>
guitarist Eric Leif-<lb/>
Lundgren and a veteran<lb/>
from a bar band called<lb/>
86 Proof, bassist Dan-<lb/>
ny Clausman. The cur-<lb/>
rent line-up was com-<lb/>
pleted.<lb/>
Eric was a former<lb/>
East Coast surfing<lb/>
champ whose in-<lb/>
fluences ranged from<lb/>
the Outlaws to the<lb/>
Allman Brothers to<lb/>
current PolyGram<lb/>
stablemate Pat Travers.<lb/>
Robbie Gay has been<lb/>
influenced by British<lb/>
rock, while drummer<lb/>
Robbie Morris, only<lb/>
19, is Johnny's<lb/>
nephew. Considering<lb/>
the youthfulness of<lb/>
these skilled rockers,<lb/>
the possibilities for<lb/>
their future are<lb/>
boundless.<lb/>
For many years,<lb/>
Johnny Van Zant<lb/>
refused to use his own<lb/>
name for the group<lb/>
because he didn't want<lb/>
people to get the wrong<lb/>
idea. His father Lacy<lb/>
and mother Marion<lb/>
nurtured the band<lb/>
themselves as they did<lb/>
for their other two<lb/>
sons, giving the boys a<lb/>
practice house to get<lb/>
the act together. And,<lb/>
in addition, Ronnie<lb/>
would tell anyone<lb/>
who'd listen that his<lb/>
kid brother would one<lb/>
day challenge, if not<lb/>
surpass, the elder Van<lb/>
Zant.<lb/>
With the release of<lb/>
Round Two, Johnny<lb/>
Hollywood's 'It9 Movies Were<lb/>
Idiots-Only Screen Treatment<lb/>
B JOHN WEYLER<lb/>
Sl?n U rtter<lb/>
c me From Outer Space (1953)<lb/>
It C mquered The World (1956)<lb/>
It seems that for some reason the word "it"<lb/>
v Is a fascination for sci-fi fantasy filmmakers.<lb/>
Bad Sci-Fi<lb/>
i Mile in the 1920's, the heyday of Clara Bow,<lb/>
The It Girl, the word meant a feeling of sexual at-<lb/>
traction, later on "it" came to mean the<lb/>
unknown, the feared.<lb/>
This usage resulted in such film titles as It<lb/>
(1967), Came From Beneath the Sea (1955), <lb/>
Lives Again (1978) and It! The Terror From<lb/>
Beyond Space (1958). Two of the worst "it"<lb/>
movies ever made, as well as two of the worst<lb/>
movies ever made of any type, are It Came From<lb/>
Outer Space (1953) and It Conquered the World<lb/>
(1956).<lb/>
Both films are products of the climate of fear<lb/>
present in the U.S. during the 1950s. The Cold<lb/>
War, says John Broshan in Future Tense,<lb/>
"produced an atmosphere of anxiety and<lb/>
paranoia: anxiety mainly caused try the ever-<lb/>
present possibility of atomic war between the two<lb/>
super-powers and the resulting global destruc-<lb/>
tion; paranoia caused by the fear of communist<lb/>
subversion, an invasion from within by people<lb/>
who looked like ordinary Americans but who wre<lb/>
actually the pawns of an alien power.<lb/>
See ITS Page 8<lb/>
Van Zant is out from<lb/>
under the long shadow<lb/>
of his famous family,<lb/>
emerging from his in-<lb/>
fluences and personal<lb/>
tragedies to create a<lb/>
work taht would make<lb/>
those who have in-<lb/>
spired him proud.<lb/>
Tin Drum<lb/>
Touching<lb/>
Continued From P. 6<lb/>
ble performance from<lb/>
his actors.<lb/>
"Angela Winkler,<lb/>
whjse magnificent face<lb/>
seems to hold the entire<lb/>
history of the German<lb/>
film, is perfect as<lb/>
Oskar's mother. That<lb/>
sterling character actor<lb/>
Mario Adorf plays<lb/>
Oskar's father, an<lb/>
eager recruit to the<lb/>
Nazis with the perfect<lb/>
book stupidity of the<lb/>
lower-middle class that<lb/>
was suckered by<lb/>
Hitler's malignant<lb/>
Disneyland.<lb/>
"Olbrychski is splen-<lb/>
did as Agnes's lover.<lb/>
Fritz Hakl and Mariella<lb/>
Oliveri are poignant<lb/>
and elegant as the two<lb/>
midgets whose troupe<lb/>
Oskar joins. Charles<lb/>
Aznavour is touching<lb/>
?Jack Kroll,<lb/>
N e H' s h' e e k<lb/>
?<lb/>
The price<lb/>
of style<lb/>
has just come<lb/>
down!<lb/>
College Rings now only 8.95<lb/>
SILADIUM rings produce the<lb/>
brilliant lustre of a fine jeweler's<lb/>
stainless.<lb/>
Men's and women's Siladium<lb/>
rings are on sale this week<lb/>
only through your<lb/>
ArtCarved representative.<lb/>
A visit to the ArtCarved<lb/>
College Ring table will give you<lb/>
the chance to see the full<lb/>
collection of rings for the fall.<lb/>
But hurry on over this sale<lb/>
runs for a limited<lb/>
time only.<lb/>
CLASS RINGS,INC<lb/>
DATE: Sept. 8-11<lb/>
TIME: 9:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M.<lb/>
PLACE- ECU STUDENT SUPPLY STORE LOBBY<lb/>
Deposit required MastetCharge or Visa accepted<lb/>
? 1981 ArtCarved Class Rings<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each ol these ?dv?ftt??d items i? required to be reedily avertable tor sale<lb/>
I below the advertised price in each AtP Store eicept as specifically noted<lb/>
in this ad<lb/>
at or<lb/>
'J<lb/>
unices er?cTive THeu sat sept. n. at????ggwmx .c<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER<lb/>
RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
Highway 264 By-Pass Greenville Square<lb/>
Shopping Center Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
Open 24 Hours<lb/>
Monday thru Saturday<lb/>
Open Sun. 7:00 a.m. 'til 12:00 Midnight<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
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CONTAINS RICH BRAZILIAN COFFEES<lb/>
Pillsbury Plus m Eight 0'Clock<lb/>
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Save 40 i?r<lb/>
299<lb/>
TROPIC ANA 100 PURE<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
88'<lb/>
64 02.<lb/>
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IN QUARTERS<lb/>
Parkay Margarine<lb/>
JANE PARKER<lb/>
Hamburger Rolls<lb/>
Or<lb/>
Hot Dog<lb/>
Buna<lb/>
8ct<lb/>
pkgs.<lb/>
88c<lb/>
Pepsi Cola<lb/>
Mountain Dew<lb/>
05<lb/>
Each<lb/>
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1<lb/>
DECORATED ? DESIGNER<lb/>
Viva Towels<lb/>
69"<lb/>
MESS.<lb/>
RESHWITHQUAlT<lb/>
U.S. 1 ALL PURPOSE EASTERN<lb/>
White (a) 10<lb/>
Potatoes<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
bag<lb/>
PLUMP SWEET &amp; JUICY<lb/>
Seedless Grapes<lb/>
.69'<lb/>
SUNNY SLOPE FROM S.C.<lb/>
Fresh Peaches<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
Wooden Box<lb/>
For Storage<lb/>
2&amp;500<lb/>
<pb facs="00057421_0008"/><lb/>
8 THE EAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBER 8, 1981<lb/>
Films<lb/>
International<lb/>
List Planned<lb/>
Continued From P. 6<lb/>
?<lb/>
? The Lodger, one<lb/>
of Hitchcock's earliest,<lb/>
introduces many of the<lb/>
themes and cinematic<lb/>
devices the Master of<lb/>
Suspense would<lb/>
become celebrated for<lb/>
later. Another Jack the<lb/>
Ripper, one who preys<lb/>
only on blondes, is<lb/>
loose in London, and is<lb/>
played by Ivor Novello,<lb/>
an immensely popular<lb/>
and mysterious matinee<lb/>
idol of the 20s. Hit-<lb/>
chcock acknowledged<lb/>
his visual debt to the<lb/>
German Expressionistic<lb/>
cinema; nighttime Lon-<lb/>
don, all mists and fogg-<lb/>
ed lamplight, is ex-<lb/>
ploited with wonderful<lb/>
visual effects and the<lb/>
mood of apprehensive<lb/>
fear is beautifully sus-<lb/>
tained in some of Hit;<lb/>
chcock's most<lb/>
memorable sequences,<lb/>
including a shot of the<lb/>
lodger's feet visible<lb/>
through a ceiling.<lb/>
? Down and Dirty<lb/>
(December 13), Italy,<lb/>
directed by El tore<lb/>
Scola, 1975 ? Nino<lb/>
Manfredi, acclaimed<lb/>
for his performance in<lb/>
Bread and Chocolate,<lb/>
reveals another side of<lb/>
his talent in his por-<lb/>
trayal of the beleagured<lb/>
patriarch of a large and<lb/>
lusty extended family<lb/>
living in cramped<lb/>
squalor on the outskirts<lb/>
of Rome. This<lb/>
delightful comedy is<lb/>
full of ribald humor<lb/>
and Italian bravado,<lb/>
but beneath the surface<lb/>
lies a poignant, bit-<lb/>
tersweet study of life in<lb/>
the grip of oppressive<lb/>
poverty.<lb/>
Coffee and<lb/>
refreshments will be<lb/>
served from 6:30-7<lb/>
p.m. in the Multi-<lb/>
purpose Room of<lb/>
Mendenhall on each<lb/>
film evening except<lb/>
September 13.<lb/>
For additional infor-<lb/>
mation about the<lb/>
series, call 757-6041,<lb/>
756-2315 or 758-4519.<lb/>
Luboff Choir Coming To Campus<lb/>
The Norman I uboff Choir will appear in Hendrix Theatre on November 19 as part of the MSC Ar-<lb/>
tists Series. The artistic range of the group has been called -unparalleled in all of vocal music.<lb/>
Where else can one hear a Bach Chorale and a Beatles tune sung in the same program with equal ar-<lb/>
tistic master)<lb/>
The 'Its' Had It<lb/>
Continued From Page 7<lb/>
Another factor in the climate of paranoia that<lb/>
existed in America during the late 1940s and the<lb/>
1950s was the 'flying saucer' scare that began in<lb/>
1947 and continued for well over a decade.<lb/>
Whether this w as a genuine cause of the paranoia<lb/>
or merely a psychological side-effect of the Cold<lb/>
War is still a matter for debate<lb/>
Both of these movies were created to cash in on<lb/>
their audiences' uncertainty. Regarding It Came<lb/>
From Outer Space, its director, Jack Arnold,<lb/>
once said, "The film started because Universal<lb/>
had bought a story from Ray Bradbury and they<lb/>
thought it could be successfully adapted to make<lb/>
a 3D picture<lb/>
Unfortunately, even the 3D gimmick couldn't<lb/>
enliven what was basically low-budget, low-key<lb/>
"scare fare" about alien invaders. The extra-<lb/>
terrestia! trespassers are travellers standed on<lb/>
Earth by the crash-landing of their space ship.<lb/>
The alien's real appearances are unseen by the<lb/>
audience: in order to obtain materials needed to<lb/>
repair their ship, they leave their Arizona deseri<lb/>
site and enter the nearby small town disquised as<lb/>
normal citizens.<lb/>
At the end of the film we get a brief glimpse of<lb/>
how the creatures really look: unbelievable and<lb/>
ridiculous, somewhat resembling the bilge beast<lb/>
in Godzilla Vs. The Smog Monster. The overall<lb/>
qualitiy of the picture may be easily guessed at by<lb/>
the presence of one of its stars, Russell Johnson.<lb/>
This fellow is best known as the Professor on<lb/>
Gilligan's Island and also appeared in the clasic<lb/>
Attack of the Crab Monsters (1957).<lb/>
An accurate assessment of It Conquered the<lb/>
World may also be made by reading the cast list:<lb/>
Peter Graves, who once led the Mission Im-<lb/>
possibleieam and whose career now seems to<lb/>
consist entirely of doing commercials for<lb/>
Carolina Telephone; Beverly Garland, who is<lb/>
best known as Fred MacMurray's wife on My<lb/>
Three Sons and appeared in Swamp Women<lb/>
(1955) and Airport 1975, both of which are in-<lb/>
cluded in the book The Fifty Worst Films Of All<lb/>
Time, and Lee Van Cleef, who is most (in)<lb/>
famous for a long series of Grade-C spaghetti<lb/>
westerns. ?<lb/>
The "It" of the title is an alien monstrosity,<lb/>
resembling an inverted ice cream cone wearing a<lb/>
child's Halloween mask, that deceives scientist<lb/>
Cleef into aiding its sinister scheme, which con-<lb/>
sists mostly of sending out small bat-like things<lb/>
to attack humans. The script, direction, acting<lb/>
and special eftects are among the most excreble<lb/>
ever seen onscreen. ?<lb/>
It Conquered The World has the dubious<lb/>
distinction of being the inspiration for a satiric<lb/>
song by Frank Zappa, appropriately entitled<lb/>
"Cheepnis<lb/>
RIGGAN<lb/>
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AT THE<lb/>
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758-0204<lb/>
CLIFF'S<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
HO<lb/>
COPY CENTER<lb/>
Copies  4.25<lb/>
100 OR MORE<lb/>
5 1 TO 99<lb/>
CASE PRICESON<lb/>
BEER&amp;WINE<lb/>
WholesIt 4 Re" .i Ice Sales<lb/>
lib 4 4 lb bags<lb/>
Keo 4 Ice Delivery ? M Hours<lb/>
Visa and Mast -charge<lb/>
Greenville ? 752 a77J<lb/>
Chapel Hill-?7?7?1<lb/>
?4<lb/>
,ed(<lb/>
s<lb/>
A<lb/>
LEARN<lb/>
TO SAIL<lb/>
(or just relax)<lb/>
aboard the<lb/>
sailing yacht<lb/>
Celesity"<lb/>
a<lb/>
one day of sailing ? ttt<lb/>
(ECU special)<lb/>
Pomlico<lb/>
Soiling<lb/>
School<lb/>
75<lb/>
0203<lb/>
MonThurs.<lb/>
Seafood Plate<lb/>
(Fish, shrimp, oysters)4.50<lb/>
Ocean Perch2.50<lb/>
Crab Cakes1.85<lb/>
Thurs. ?<lb/>
Popcorn Shrimp2.95<lb/>
East 10th St. ? Extension past Hastings Ford<lb/>
Phone 752-3172 ? 4:30-9:00 Mon Sat.<lb/>
At Last. A BankThat<lb/>
Treats College Students<lb/>
LikeThey Have Money.<lb/>
???<lb/>
BB&amp;T gives full H" o?lies?<lb/>
students no senio- charge<lb/>
checking So rfs. ands cr but<lb/>
With a Tilbe Altome TeUercard.<lb/>
you can use the BB&amp;T Tillie<lb/>
machine at our Arlington<lb/>
Boulevard Office 24 hours a day.<lb/>
7daysaweek<lb/>
Nobody works hardertoryour ?????.<lb/>
BB&amp;T<lb/>
P<lb/>
B( H<lb/>
Q iariei<lb/>
rushed<lb/>
111 more<lb/>
big 42 (<lb/>
this pa<lb/>
The I (<lb/>
all phasc<lb/>
in what ar<lb/>
Halfbac<lb/>
big night,<lb/>
sconr<lb/>
Defensi<lb/>
?<lb/>
three V<lb/>
re<lb/>
Fo<lb/>
Ed F.mor<lb/>
team'<lb/>
"This .<lb/>
said<lb/>
bu<lb/>
Th<lb/>
his team'<lb/>
"I'm <lb/>
sa<lb/>
bea<lb/>
Bu1<lb/>
are<lb/>
The P<lb/>
pigsl<lb/>
ther<lb/>
v.r I<lb/>
H I<lb/>
M I<lb/>
Vk( I<lb/>
K 1<lb/>
VW I<lb/>
M I<lb/>
H I<lb/>
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Hiu.<lb/>
Hi???<lb/>
<lb/>
Sir.<lb/>
flrl tl -<lb/>
???hea-yarea<lb/>
P?vm?s ?arri?<lb/>
Puol?<lb/>
V u ni h ll<lb/>
Praaill? ?,r<lb/>
. 1rnst<lb/>
Winning H<lb/>
tt.k ? 2 sir<lb/>
IW?v 20-10<lb/>
gr?m 1 Ml 1<lb/>
KcrriM<lb/>
B Wll<lb/>
Before<lb/>
Western<lb/>
wa? opti<lb/>
chances<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
How<lb/>
change,<lb/>
mounts<lb/>
Pirates,<lb/>
for both<lb/>
"We<lb/>
personabl<lb/>
I3th yearl<lb/>
"There'4<lb/>
just pla<lb/>
was partij<lb/>
overwheij<lb/>
The<lb/>
was poro<lb/>
and 321<lb/>
dary all<lb/>
through<lb/>
up 499 y<lb/>
Even<lb/>
defense<lb/>
from th<lb/>
that as nj<lb/>
formanc<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057421_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 8, 1981<lb/>
Page 9<lb/>
Pirates Impressive In Opening Romp<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Spom t diior<lb/>
Quarterback Carlton Nelson<lb/>
rushed for 118 yards and passed for<lb/>
111 more to lead East Carolina to a<lb/>
big 42-6 romp of Western Carolina<lb/>
this past Saturday.<lb/>
The ECU offense looked sharp in<lb/>
all phases, amassing 499 total yards<lb/>
in what appeared to be easy fashion.<lb/>
Halfback Harold Blue also had a<lb/>
big night, rushing for 88 yards and<lb/>
scoring two touchdowns.<lb/>
Defensively, cornerback Gerald<lb/>
Sykes was the standout, intercepting<lb/>
three Western passes to tie a school<lb/>
record for single game pick-offs.<lb/>
Following the game, ECU coach<lb/>
Ed Emory was overjoyed at his<lb/>
team's performance.<lb/>
"This is a great, great thrill he<lb/>
said. "But it's not how you start,<lb/>
but how you finish that counts<lb/>
The Buc coach was most happy at<lb/>
his team's offensive performance.<lb/>
"I'm very pleased with the way<lb/>
we moved the down markers he<lb/>
said. "Carlton Nelson did a<lb/>
beautiful job directing the offense.<lb/>
But we are concerned about a lot of<lb/>
areas where we stopped ourselves<lb/>
The Pirates seemed to move the<lb/>
pigskin better than Emory gave<lb/>
them credit, gaining yardage almost<lb/>
W( I060e-? <lb/>
K I7147M4:<lb/>
MlBlur 13 run iBmhbrck lick)<lb/>
?(lRlUMirri 11 H,<lb/>
MlNrtvn 24 nin (Buohhrck kicki<lb/>
VK IBiatsucci 45 Hi<lb/>
Ml - i?um nin tBushhrck kk"k<lb/>
M tNu-h.ils 34 paw from Nrtvm cBirsnhrck kKk<lb/>
MlBlur h run .Bushbwk kkk)<lb/>
M IS Adam 4 run Bu?hhrck kick M IVM l<lb/>
Hr?i do?n 2??<lb/>
Kiuan?ard? 5 -32132-115<lb/>
P?SM(ard?, 11111"<lb/>
PlMlis-v 131 12-3<lb/>
Puou2-3305-35 4<lb/>
tumblo-lm M2 1<lb/>
Prnalit?-ard 3-427-62<lb/>
3 .Mm! ftrnsr 4232<lb/>
indimdi l LEABESS<lb/>
Hn.nin M I Nelson 12 II. Blur l?-K. Bxnrr 5-1'<lb/>
V?il? (t-29. sicoart 3-17, Conti 2-13. UnN 4-10. kt'l<lb/>
Doracs 20-105. Vtomack 6-21. Joaason 1-3.<lb/>
Paaata -?Clti toetaa ka-a-l tit. kta?aat J-l-0-17. lav<lb/>
gram 1-1-0-3. WCU: Mhoi 30-12VH7. (illbrrt 1-(MM?<lb/>
Rfcciv.ag - ECU: Nicliob 2-4. aaa 2-31. O'Koark<lb/>
2-23. frailer 1-3. Bar 1-20. UaM I IV WCI Mct.ill<lb/>
3-411. IVaa KB, Iors 3- -3. Jamrs 2-2. Ball 1-14.<lb/>
at will , the backs following a<lb/>
wall of offensive linemen that did a<lb/>
real number on the Western defen-<lb/>
sive front.<lb/>
ECU wasted little time getting on<lb/>
the board, taking its first possession<lb/>
of the game 97 yards in 14 plays for<lb/>
the game's first score.<lb/>
Catamount punter Eddie McGill<lb/>
executed a perfect coffin corner<lb/>
punt after his team failed to move<lb/>
the ball on its first possession, pinn-<lb/>
ing the Pirates on theii own three.<lb/>
A 27-yard run by Nelson on the<lb/>
drive's first set of downs got things<lb/>
going. A third-down pass from<lb/>
back-up quarterback Greg Stewart<lb/>
to split end Larry O'Roark later<lb/>
went for 14 yards and the Bucs were<lb/>
on their way.<lb/>
Blue culminated the drive with a<lb/>
12-yard dash into the endzone.<lb/>
Kicker Chuck Bushbeck made it 7-0<lb/>
with an extra point.<lb/>
Western bounced right back,<lb/>
marching to the ECU 10-yard-line<lb/>
before settling for a 31-yard field<lb/>
goal from Dean Biassucci.<lb/>
The Pirates took the ensuing<lb/>
kickoff and pulled a repeat of their<lb/>
first drive, going 80 yards for a<lb/>
score. Nelson carried the ball only<lb/>
twice in the series for 56 yards. The<lb/>
last carry was a 24-yard TD scamper<lb/>
at the i0:44 mark of the second<lb/>
quarter.<lb/>
Western got its last points of the<lb/>
game mid-way through the second<lb/>
period, Biassucci connecting from<lb/>
45-yards out to trim the ECU lead to<lb/>
14-6.<lb/>
ECU asserted its dominance once<lb/>
again, though, taking another drive<lb/>
80 yards to paydirt before the half<lb/>
ended. This time it was the Buc<lb/>
passing game that did most of the<lb/>
damage.<lb/>
Nelson hit tight end Norwood<lb/>
Vann for a 21-yard gainer on the se-<lb/>
cond play of the drive and later con-<lb/>
nected with freshman split end<lb/>
Ricky Nichols on a 14-yarder.<lb/>
Greg Stewart spelled Nelson for<lb/>
the remainder of the drive and came<lb/>
up with a big third-and-13 play,<lb/>
connecting with tight end Vann on a<lb/>
17-yard pass.<lb/>
Halfback Leon Lawson<lb/>
culminated the drive with a three-<lb/>
yard touchdown dive. Bushbeck's<lb/>
extra point made it 21-6 at the half.<lb/>
The Pirates began the second half<lb/>
with the kind of dominance that<lb/>
they displayed in the first half, driv-<lb/>
ing from their own 20 to the<lb/>
Western 22 in only six plays. A fum-<lb/>
ble by fullback Roy Wiley at the<lb/>
Catamount 19-yard-line ended the<lb/>
club's hopes of scoring, though.<lb/>
After the Pirate defense held<lb/>
Western at bay, the ECU offense<lb/>
took over at its own ten and went<lb/>
back to work. Halfback Earnest<lb/>
Byner began the drive with a<lb/>
16-yard from scrimmage. A big pass<lb/>
play ended it, Nelson hitting Ricky<lb/>
Nichols in the end zone from 34<lb/>
yards out to put the Bucs up 28-6.<lb/>
Western took the ensuing kickoff<lb/>
and marched to the ECU 43 before<lb/>
Sykes ended the drive with the last<lb/>
of his three interceptions. ECU then<lb/>
marched to the Western 35 before<lb/>
Nelson was intercepted by Walter<lb/>
Smith just after the beginning of the<lb/>
game's final period.<lb/>
Later in the quarter. Nelson got<lb/>
one last chance to direct a drive<lb/>
before being spelled by reserves. He<lb/>
took full advantage of the oppor-<lb/>
tunity, moving the club 54 yards for<lb/>
in ten plays for a TD.<lb/>
On a third-and-seven situation in<lb/>
the drive's first set of downs, Nelson<lb/>
hit Byner with a big 19-yard pass.<lb/>
Blue later crossed the goal line at<lb/>
almost exactly the halfway point of<lb/>
the fourth quarter, putting ECU up<lb/>
35-6.<lb/>
The Pirate reserves also got a<lb/>
chance to show their wares, scoring<lb/>
a TD late in the fourth period. A<lb/>
hard hit by defensive back Chuck<lb/>
Bishop resulted in a Western fum-<lb/>
ble, which was recovered by Buc<lb/>
linebacker Chris Skeeter on the<lb/>
WCU 35.<lb/>
Two plays later reserve quarter-<lb/>
back Kevin Ingram, a transfer from<lb/>
Villanova, combined with split end<lb/>
Carlton Frazier for a 36-yard pass<lb/>
play. Freshman halfback Stefon<lb/>
Adams got the call on the next play<lb/>
and made it 42-6, going over from<lb/>
four yards out on his first carry as a<lb/>
Pirate.<lb/>
The game was a frustrating one<lb/>
for the Catamounts, who suffered<lb/>
their seventh straight defeat at the<lb/>
hands of the Buc ?? ???, tW"<lb/>
Following the contest WCU<lb/>
coach Bob Waters termed the game<lb/>
"a total loss<lb/>
About the only bright spot in the<lb/>
A Blue Day<lb/>
ECU halfback Harold Blue rolls over the<lb/>
goal line in the Pirates' 42-6 win over<lb/>
Western Carolina Saturday. The score<lb/>
was one of two in the game for the Blue,<lb/>
who also rushed for 88 yards. (Photo By<lb/>
Jon Jordan)<lb/>
game for the Catamounts was the<lb/>
play of halfback Melvin Dorsey, a<lb/>
transfer from Georgia. Dorsey rush-<lb/>
ed for 105 yards on 20 carries.<lb/>
Dorsey and Western quarterback<lb/>
Ronnie Mixon seemed to find a few<lb/>
weak spots in the ECU defense,<lb/>
especially in the first half. Still, the<lb/>
v,JPiratejdefenders finished the game<lb/>
: allowing only 232 total yards and no<lb/>
touchdowns.<lb/>
"Our quickness on defense was a<lb/>
real key Emory said. "We kept<lb/>
bending but did not break. 1 was<lb/>
concerned about the way we did on<lb/>
third down situations, though<lb/>
A troubled spot in the 1980 ECU<lb/>
attack could turn out to be a big<lb/>
plus in '81 if the Western game is<lb/>
any indication, Emory said.<lb/>
"Our offensive line did a super<lb/>
job he claimed. "Our pass protec-<lb/>
tion was excellent. I felt like the line<lb/>
should do well with the size we had<lb/>
and the size they had. We must get<lb/>
better for next week, though.<lb/>
because those people are a lot bigger<lb/>
and better than what we saw<lb/>
tonight<lb/>
Next week the Pirates travel to<lb/>
Chapel Hill to face 12th-ranked<lb/>
North Carolina. Emory had high<lb/>
praises for the Tar Heels.<lb/>
"They might be ranked in the top<lb/>
ten in the country he said, "but<lb/>
talent-wise they might be in the top<lb/>
five. We have to get lots better this<lb/>
week before we're ready to play<lb/>
those people<lb/>
QB Paces ECU Victory<lb/>
Nelson's Return Successful<lb/>
'iia?5t<lb/>
Photo By Jon Jordan<lb/>
Carlton Nelson Slips Between Two WCU Defenders<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports 1 diior<lb/>
Members of the media had little<lb/>
trouble deciding who should be<lb/>
voted the "King of the Gridiron"<lb/>
after East Carolina's 42-6 thrashing<lb/>
of Western Carolina last Saturday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
The decision was almost a<lb/>
unanimous one. No, the honor did<lb/>
not go to cornerback Gerald Sykes,<lb/>
whose three interceptions tied a<lb/>
school record. Instead, quarter-<lb/>
back Carlton Nelson walked away<lb/>
with the award, his play over-<lb/>
shadowing even Sykes' great perfor-<lb/>
mance. All the Portsmouth, Va.<lb/>
native did was rush for 118 yards<lb/>
and pass for 111.<lb/>
What made Nelson's perfor-<lb/>
mance even more impressive was the<lb/>
fact that the game was his first after<lb/>
recovering from a neck operation<lb/>
that threatened to end his career.<lb/>
Even after he recovered from the<lb/>
surgery, Nelson was not sure that he<lb/>
wanted to play football again.<lb/>
"I really didn't decide to play un-<lb/>
til it came time for fall practice<lb/>
Nelson said. "I just didn't know.<lb/>
The doctor told me after the opera-<lb/>
tion that my neck would be 100 per-<lb/>
cent. Still, 1 wasn't sure<lb/>
Nelson's decision to play definite-<lb/>
ly was the right one if the Western<lb/>
game is used as any sort of measure-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
His 118 yards rushing came on<lb/>
Waters: Game 'A Total Loss'<lb/>
By WILLIAM YELVERTON<lb/>
Aatutaal Sport MMat<lb/>
Before Saturday night's kickoff,<lb/>
Western Carolina coach Bob Waters<lb/>
was optimistic about his team's<lb/>
chances against the Pirates of East<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
How quickly emotions can<lb/>
change, especially after the Cata-<lb/>
mounts were trounced by the<lb/>
Pirates, 42-6, in the season's opener<lb/>
for both teams.<lb/>
"We were just awful said the<lb/>
personable coach, who enters his<lb/>
13th year at the Catamount helm.<lb/>
"There's net a whole to say. We<lb/>
just played poorly, but the defense<lb/>
was particularly bad. We were just<lb/>
overwhelmed<lb/>
The Western Carolina defense<lb/>
was porous, allowing 25 first downs<lb/>
and 321 yards rushing. The secon-<lb/>
dary allowed another 178 yards<lb/>
through the air, as the Pirates piled<lb/>
up 499 yards in total offense.<lb/>
Even though the Catamount<lb/>
defense returned only three starters<lb/>
from the 1980 team. Waters saw<lb/>
that as no excuse for his team's per-<lb/>
formance, giving credit to Coach Ed<lb/>
Emory's Pirates. "We were just<lb/>
beaten by a more physical team<lb/>
said Waters, who saw his career<lb/>
record drop to 71-50-4.<lb/>
"East Carolina was far better<lb/>
than we were. They did so many<lb/>
things well. I think we let them get<lb/>
to us. They have so many good<lb/>
athletes<lb/>
Waters agrees that one game does<lb/>
not make a season and did see a cou-<lb/>
ple of bright spots in a game he<lb/>
labeled "a total loss<lb/>
One glimmer of hope was running<lb/>
back Melvin Dorsey, a transfer<lb/>
from the University of Georgia,<lb/>
who picked up 105 yards on 20 car-<lb/>
ries. "We have alot of potential at<lb/>
the running back position Waters<lb/>
added.<lb/>
The other bright spot, Waters<lb/>
said, was at the quarterbacking<lb/>
position, where quarterback Ronnie<lb/>
Mixon threw for 117 yards. Waters<lb/>
feels Mixon "will be a good quarter-<lb/>
back<lb/>
Western Carolina travels to VMI<lb/>
this Saturday to face a team Waters<lb/>
says is "always physical but doesn't<lb/>
have as many athletes as East<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Photo By Chap Gurkty<lb/>
Western Coach Bob Waters reluctantly watches ECU split<lb/>
end Larry O'Roark haul in a pass.<lb/>
only 12 carries. Time after time he<lb/>
turned the corner and faked out<lb/>
Western safety men and<lb/>
linebackers.<lb/>
Nelson's passing was impressive<lb/>
as well. He connected on six of 12<lb/>
attempts, throwing one touchdown<lb/>
and one interception.<lb/>
"I was pretty pleased with the<lb/>
way that I threw the ball tonight<lb/>
Nelson claimed. "You know. I've<lb/>
heard that some people don't think 1<lb/>
can pass.<lb/>
"But he added, "I don't really<lb/>
listen to what people say. I can't let<lb/>
that bother me from doing the job<lb/>
that 1 need to do<lb/>
Perhaps Nelson's most impressive<lb/>
pass was his 34-yard touchdown toss<lb/>
to freshman split end Ricky Nichols<lb/>
in the third quarter. Nichols was lin-<lb/>
ed up on the left side and ran a deep<lb/>
sideline pattern. Nelson spotted him<lb/>
and released the ball with full con-<lb/>
fidence that the pass would go for<lb/>
six points.<lb/>
"1 knew that was a touchdown<lb/>
when the ball left my hand Nelson<lb/>
said. "Ricky's really quick and<lb/>
when I saw him in the spot I just<lb/>
knew we had it<lb/>
Nelson's play overshadowed the<lb/>
fact that two other ECU quarter-<lb/>
backs got substantial playing time<lb/>
and had good moments as well.<lb/>
Greg Stewart, who took over as<lb/>
the starter last year when Nelson<lb/>
went down with the neck injury in<lb/>
mid-season, directed a TD drive, as<lb/>
did Villanova transfer Kevin In-<lb/>
gram. The competition and support<lb/>
that the two quality reserves supply-<lb/>
does not bother Nelson.<lb/>
"I think it's great he said.<lb/>
"That's good help when you can<lb/>
come out and not have to worry<lb/>
about anything. When I'm out I<lb/>
know that Greg and Kevin can get<lb/>
the job done. It's also nice to know<lb/>
that they're there when I'm in the<lb/>
game, to not have to worry about<lb/>
that little stuff<lb/>
Nelson also had kind words for<lb/>
the people that made sure he had<lb/>
room to roam ? the offensive line.<lb/>
"1 thought those guys did a great<lb/>
job he said. "The protection was<lb/>
just super. I couldn't have asked for<lb/>
any better<lb/>
Even though he called the<lb/>
Western contest "the best game I've<lb/>
played since I've been here Nelson<lb/>
was critical of his play in some<lb/>
areas. He especially did not like the<lb/>
play in in the fourth quarter on<lb/>
which he overthrew Nichols on what<lb/>
probably would have been a sure<lb/>
touchdown.<lb/>
"1 didn't have too many<lb/>
mistakes he said. "But I<lb/>
shouldn't have overthrown Ricky or<lb/>
thrown the interception. Also, I<lb/>
missed a few reads on the line that<lb/>
could have been big gainers<lb/>
Sound like Nelson is hard on<lb/>
himself? He says he is.<lb/>
"I hate to make mistakes he<lb/>
said. "Sometimes I get down on<lb/>
myself when I mess up. Most of the<lb/>
time, though, I just try that much<lb/>
harder<lb/>
The junior signal-caller says that<lb/>
he has not felt any pressure to per-<lb/>
form well after coming back from<lb/>
the surgery ? at least not from out-<lb/>
siders.<lb/>
"I had to prove myself to<lb/>
myself he said. "I don't try to<lb/>
prove myself to anyone else. My ac-<lb/>
tions will speak for me if I do like I<lb/>
should<lb/>
Now that the Western game is<lb/>
entered into the win column, Nelson<lb/>
is looking forward to his team's<lb/>
game this weekend with nationally-<lb/>
ranked North Carolina, the team's<lb/>
arch-rival.<lb/>
Nelson has extra incentive to want<lb/>
to defeat the heavily-favored Tar<lb/>
Heels. It was against Carolina last<lb/>
year that he went down with the in-<lb/>
jury that sidelined him for the<lb/>
season. The team went on to lose<lb/>
that game by a substantial 31-3<lb/>
margin. The Pirate quarterback says<lb/>
things should be different this year.<lb/>
"I think we have an excellent<lb/>
chance this year. We gained a lot of<lb/>
experience from last season. Now<lb/>
we know what to do. We've improv-<lb/>
ed at least 110 percent. I think we'll<lb/>
give them a good game.<lb/>
"Yep Nelson added, "this is<lb/>
the one 1 want. The Carolina game<lb/>
is definitely special to me<lb/>
mmmtmmmmmmm<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057421_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBER 8. 1981<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
Karr Says<lb/>
Attendance<lb/>
Is The Answer<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Spam Editor<lb/>
"We need to get more people in the stands.<lb/>
Everything else is tied to that<lb/>
East Carolina athletic director Ken Karr is very<lb/>
specific about what it will take to put Pirate<lb/>
sports where he wants them. Without question,<lb/>
money is the key.<lb/>
Karr says that filling Ficklen Stadium for foot-<lb/>
ball games on Saturdays and filling Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum during basketball season will go a long<lb/>
ways toward meeting the financial needs of the<lb/>
school.<lb/>
When Karr arrived on campus over a year ago,<lb/>
taking over for the resigned Bill Cain, he said that<lb/>
improved scheduling and getting the men's<lb/>
basketball team in a conference were two of his<lb/>
big goals.<lb/>
To a degree, both of those goals have been met.<lb/>
ECU now has future football dates with such<lb/>
powers as Missouri, Florida State and West<lb/>
Virginia. Karr says he will continue to attempt to<lb/>
upgrade the schedule further.<lb/>
Late in August it was announced that ECU had<lb/>
been admitted to the Eastern College Athletic<lb/>
Conference (ECAC), South division. The con-<lb/>
ference has a post-season tournament, whose<lb/>
winner goes to the NCAA championship tourney.<lb/>
"This is a very positive thing for East Carolina<lb/>
University Karr said. "The best thing, of<lb/>
course, is that it provides access to the NCAA<lb/>
tournament as early as this season<lb/>
Now that the second-year AD has for the most<lb/>
part reached two of his big goals, his attention<lb/>
has now turned to increasing the department's<lb/>
financial standing so that further capital im-<lb/>
provements can be made.<lb/>
"We would like someday to have a new athletic<lb/>
facility that would meet the increased needs of<lb/>
our major sports Karr explained. "This facility<lb/>
would catch us up for the most pan with some of<lb/>
the major schools across the nation.<lb/>
"Also Karr added, "we have to continue to<lb/>
Ken Karr<lb/>
explore ways to get a 10-12,000 seat coliseum to<lb/>
showcase our basketball program and other<lb/>
winter sports<lb/>
Karr said that he liked a great deal the often-<lb/>
heard proposal of a community civic center.<lb/>
"If we got those things (facility and civic<lb/>
center) Karr said, "we would be in a solid posi-<lb/>
tion. We'd have the tools. But before we can<lb/>
make those plans we have to market our sporting<lb/>
events now. After we do that, then we can begin<lb/>
making these moves<lb/>
Questions are often asked of Karr concerning<lb/>
ECU'S financial standing. The athletic director<lb/>
says the footing is not unstable, but is not yet<lb/>
solid.<lb/>
"You're never satisfied he said of the current<lb/>
athletic budget. "We've had to restrict our<lb/>
budget because we've not shown the ability in the<lb/>
past to sell enough tickets to our football and<lb/>
basketball games. Those are our revenue-<lb/>
producing sports and the success of them reflects<lb/>
on the budget<lb/>
ihe number of intercollegiate teams at ECU is<lb/>
down from a year ago as a result of the AD's<lb/>
dropping of several non-revenue sports. Karr says<lb/>
this does not mean that there is excess money<lb/>
abounding.<lb/>
"In terms of money he said, "we have exact-<lb/>
ly what we did last year ? approximately $2.2<lb/>
million. We're trying to produce better teams on<lb/>
basically the same dollars. Yes, there are fewer<lb/>
sports, but when you consider what inflation<lb/>
does, the money saved is more than consumed<lb/>
with basic increases<lb/>
Talented Heels Await Bucs<lb/>
In Last ECU-UNC Game?<lb/>
Now that the ECU<lb/>
Pirates have properly<lb/>
disposed of Western<lb/>
Carolina, winning 42-6<lb/>
Saturday in their<lb/>
season opener, they can<lb/>
turn their attention to<lb/>
this weekend's big con-<lb/>
test against North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
You can bet that the<lb/>
Bucs are fired up for<lb/>
this one, especially<lb/>
since its stands as the<lb/>
last game between the<lb/>
two rivals in the<lb/>
scheduling books.<lb/>
The Tar Heels are<lb/>
ranked 12th and 14th in<lb/>
the two national polls,<lb/>
and were listed at<lb/>
number ten in the an-<lb/>
nual Sports Illustrated<lb/>
pre-season poll.<lb/>
The game will be the<lb/>
first for the Heels and,<lb/>
of course the Pirates'<lb/>
second contest.<lb/>
Carolina has been<lb/>
made the odds-on<lb/>
choice to repeat as the<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Con-<lb/>
ference champion. The<lb/>
Heels won going away-<lb/>
last year, finishing at<lb/>
11-1 on the season, in-<lb/>
cluding a win over<lb/>
Texas in The Bluebon-<lb/>
net Bowl.<lb/>
Coach Dick Crum's<lb/>
team suffered a number<lb/>
of major losses to<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
Chandler<lb/>
graduation. Six defen-<lb/>
sive and four offensive<lb/>
starters from 1980 are<lb/>
now gone. The word is<lb/>
that there are quality<lb/>
replacements.<lb/>
Still, some of the<lb/>
losses have got to hurt.<lb/>
It is simply impossible<lb/>
to lose players such as<lb/>
Lawrence Taylor, Don-<lb/>
nell Thompson, Harry<lb/>
Stanback, Steve<lb/>
Streater, Ron Wooten,<lb/>
Rick Donnalley, Billy<lb/>
Johnson and Amos<lb/>
Lawrence without feel-<lb/>
ing the hurt.<lb/>
"They've got great<lb/>
players coming up,<lb/>
though ECU head<lb/>
coach Ed Emory says.<lb/>
"They may be ranked<lb/>
in the top ten in the<lb/>
country, but their<lb/>
talent may be in the top<lb/>
five<lb/>
Taylor was called the<lb/>
most important defen-<lb/>
sive player a year ago.<lb/>
His value was definitely<lb/>
shown when he was<lb/>
chosen by the New<lb/>
York Giants as the se-<lb/>
cond pick in the entire<lb/>
NFL draft.<lb/>
Amos Lawrence Scores In '80 Contest<lb/>
ECU Fall Schedules<lb/>
1981 ECU<lb/>
VOLLEYBALL<lb/>
SCHEDULE<lb/>
(Home Matcies In Caps)<lb/>
Sept. 18 ? at Duke, 19 ?<lb/>
at Appalachian State, 25-26<lb/>
? at N.C. State Inviational,<lb/>
29 ? NORTH CAROLINA.<lb/>
Oct. 2-3 ? at Univ. of<lb/>
South Carolina Tourney, 8<lb/>
? N.C. STATE. 9-10 ?<lb/>
ECU INVITATIONAL, 13<lb/>
? at North Carolina, 16 ?<lb/>
APPALACHIAN STATE,<lb/>
22 ? at William and Mary,<lb/>
23-24 ? at Univ. of<lb/>
Maryland Tourney, 27 ?<lb/>
DUKE.<lb/>
Nov. 4 ? at N.C. State,<lb/>
13-14 ? NCAIAW State<lb/>
Tourney.<lb/>
1981 ECU<lb/>
FALL GOLF SCHEDULE<lb/>
Sept. 24-25 ? at Campbell<lb/>
Univ. Invitational.<lb/>
Oct. 2-4 ? at James<lb/>
Madison Univ. Invitational,<lb/>
22-24 ? at Iron Duke<lb/>
Tourney, Duke Univ 26-27<lb/>
? at William and Mary In-<lb/>
vitational.<lb/>
1981 ECU<lb/>
WOMEN'S TENNIS<lb/>
SCHEDULE<lb/>
(Home Matches In Caps)<lb/>
Sept. 16 ? at N.C. State,<lb/>
19 ? at Appalachian State.<lb/>
Oct. 3 ? at Duke Racquet<lb/>
Club, 11 ? High Point Col-<lb/>
lege, 25 ? DUKE RAC-<lb/>
QUET CLUB.<lb/>
Nov. 13 ?<lb/>
CULMINATING EVENTS<lb/>
(Men's and women's singles;<lb/>
mixed doubles).<lb/>
1981 ECU<lb/>
MEN'S TENNIS<lb/>
SCHEDULE<lb/>
(Home Matches In Caps)<lb/>
24<lb/>
at Elon Col-<lb/>
Sept.<lb/>
lege.<lb/>
Oct. 2-3 ? at James<lb/>
Madison, 15 ? CAMP-<lb/>
BELL. 29 ? Atlantic Chris-<lb/>
tian.<lb/>
TBA ? at UNC-Wilmington<lb/>
Fall Invitational<lb/>
TBA ? at High Point Col-<lb/>
lege<lb/>
Still, the loss of<lb/>
tackles Thompson and<lb/>
Stanback and backup<lb/>
John Brugos figure to<lb/>
create the team's big-<lb/>
gest void. There is plen-<lb/>
ty of talent, but no ex-<lb/>
perience with which to<lb/>
replace the trio.<lb/>
Of the team's front<lb/>
five defensive players<lb/>
from a year ago, only<lb/>
linebacker Calvin<lb/>
Daniels returns.<lb/>
Linebacking will be a<lb/>
strength, though, with<lb/>
Darrell Nicholson and<lb/>
Lee Shaffer returning.<lb/>
The UNC offense led<lb/>
the ACC in scoring,<lb/>
total offense and<lb/>
rushing a year ago. The<lb/>
offense figures to be<lb/>
strong once again,<lb/>
especially if quarter-<lb/>
back Rod Elkins and<lb/>
tailback Kelvin Bryant<lb/>
have matured as they<lb/>
were expected to.<lb/>
Elkins took over at<lb/>
the signal-calling posi-<lb/>
tion last year when an<lb/>
injury sidelined Chuck<lb/>
Sharpe. Elkins did a<lb/>
fine job as the Tar Heel<lb/>
starter, completing 81<lb/>
of 160 passes, throwing<lb/>
12 of them for<lb/>
touchdowns.<lb/>
Talented targets like<lb/>
Victor Harrison and<lb/>
Jon Richardson return<lb/>
for Elkins to throw to,<lb/>
making his job that<lb/>
much easier.<lb/>
The return of the<lb/>
multi-talented Bryant<lb/>
makes the loss of<lb/>
Lawrence seem small.<lb/>
Bryant went over the<lb/>
1,000 mark a year ago<lb/>
and, if he develops,<lb/>
may prove to be Amos'<lb/>
superior.<lb/>
The Heels always<lb/>
seem to have quality<lb/>
back-ups at the tailback<lb/>
position. Reserve help<lb/>
this year must come<lb/>
from some highly-<lb/>
recruited, multi-<lb/>
talented, yet very inex-<lb/>
perienced backs.<lb/>
Coming out of spring<lb/>
practice, Tyrone An-<lb/>
thony, a sophomore<lb/>
from Winson-Salem,<lb/>
was Bryant's back-up.<lb/>
Anthony performed as<lb/>
a jayvee a year ago.<lb/>
A pair of talented<lb/>
freshman should get<lb/>
some playing time as<lb/>
well. Eddison Bramble<lb/>
of Garden City Park,<lb/>
N.Y. and Eddie Colson<lb/>
of Jacksonville were<lb/>
very highly recruited<lb/>
and rate as future stars.<lb/>
As a whole, the Tar<lb/>
Heels are both definite<lb/>
and questionable. They<lb/>
are definitely talented,<lb/>
yet the losses and the<lb/>
inexperience that must<lb/>
take over create many<lb/>
questions.<lb/>
All of that makes this<lb/>
Saturday's contest with<lb/>
the Pirates a most in-<lb/>
teresting one. The fact<lb/>
that it is, at least for<lb/>
now, the last ECU-<lb/>
Carolina game adds to<lb/>
the game's attraction.<lb/>
PIRA TES<lb/>
in the pros<lb/>
ratti<lb/>
Collins' Season<lb/>
Debut Is A Smash<lb/>
Former East Carolina star running back An-<lb/>
thony "Tony" Collins made his regular season<lb/>
debut in the National Football League Sunday<lb/>
and was a smashing success.<lb/>
Collins learned late last week that he would be<lb/>
starting at halfback for the New England Patriots<lb/>
when they took the field for their regular season<lb/>
opener against the Baltimore Colts on Sunday.<lb/>
Collins, who was the talk of the Patriots' pre-<lb/>
season camp, was a bright spot in a disappointing<lb/>
afternoon for New England. The Pats lost a<lb/>
heartbreaker to the Colts, 29-28.<lb/>
The former Pirate did it all, though, finishing<lb/>
the afternoon with a total offensive output of 194<lb/>
yards (includes rushing, receiving and returning<lb/>
yardage).<lb/>
Collins led the team in rushing, gaining 81<lb/>
yards on 15 carries for a 5.4 average. He pulled in<lb/>
three receptions, second best on the squad, for 48<lb/>
yards. A 19-yard rush and a 22-yard pass recep-<lb/>
tion were the two longest plays of the day from<lb/>
scrimmage for the Penn Yan, N.Y. native.<lb/>
Kickoff returns were something that Collins<lb/>
specialized in at ECU. The Patriots took advan-<lb/>
tage of that also on Sunday. Collins returned<lb/>
three for 65 yards.<lb/>
Collins' 81 yards rushing put him among the<lb/>
NFL's top ten after Sunday's games, with onlv<lb/>
Monday night's game between Cleveland and San<lb/>
Diego not on the record books.<lb/>
Collins was tied for the tenth position with<lb/>
Chicago superstar Walter Payton, who gained 81<lb/>
yards on 19 carries against Green Bay Sunday.<lb/>
?<lb/>
Week jays<lb/>
11:30-11:00<lb/>
Frl. &amp; Sat.<lb/>
11:30-12:30<lb/>
300 E. 10th St.<lb/>
758-6121<lb/>
The Best Pizza in Town! (Honest)<lb/>
Fast Service!<lb/>
Game<lb/>
Machines<lb/>
Big<lb/>
Screen TV<lb/>
Drive Up<lb/>
Window For<lb/>
To Go Orders<lb/>
PIZZA &amp; SPAGHETTI BUFFET<lb/>
AAon. &amp; Thurs. 5:30-8:00$2.79<lb/>
AAon. thru Fri. 11:30-2:00 $2.69<lb/>
Wed. ? All you can eat Spaghetti -5:30-8:00 $2.69<lb/>
Thurs. ? Lasagna ? One Reg. Price.Second One<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
Sports Writer<lb/>
Needed<lb/>
Person must<lb/>
have avid interest<lb/>
&amp; experience in<lb/>
Sports Journalism<lb/>
Call 757-6366<lb/>
or come by<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
office.<lb/>
; r,<lb/>
it Lulling Swu'oodiC &amp;<lb/>
Etao Hmtviq ? Monagar<lb/>
ttm 75? 0327<lb/>
IOOOOOCK<lb/>
Introductory<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
Tuesday &amp; Wednesday<lb/>
Shrimp or<lb/>
Flounder<lb/>
includes French Fries, Cole Slaw,<lb/>
and Hushpuppies<lb/>
3.50<lb/>
Combination Shrimp<lb/>
and Flounder<lb/>
includes French Fries, Cole<lb/>
Slaw, and Hushpuppies<lb/>
3.95<lb/>
Cross Tar River bridge-<lb/>
take left at light?<lb/>
building located on left<lb/>
cccoeoscoGccooooooooooooooooooocoooooeosoeco5?og?ocoO'<lb/>
LET US JOIN<lb/>
YOU<lb/>
You are the future of North Carolina<lb/>
We are the<lb/>
North Carolina Student Legislature<lb/>
THE TIME IS NOW FOR NCSL<lb/>
ORGANIZATION MEETING:<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 14, 1981<lb/>
MENDENHALL 221 ? 7:00 P.M.<lb/>
NCSL: WE MAKE<lb/>
A DIFFERENCE<lb/>
By<lb/>
you<lb/>
gei<lb/>
cleai<lb/>
ball<lb/>
Tl<lb/>
junj<lb/>
Gen<lb/>
the<lb/>
ting<lb/>
feel 11<lb/>
threl<lb/>
Pir;<lb/>
Wtrvi<lb/>
Satul<lb/>
Staui<lb/>
grabJ<lb/>
in tl<lb/>
recoi<lb/>
joins<lb/>
ciudi<lb/>
agairl<lb/>
in 191<lb/>
i<lb/>
just<lb/>
ing i<lb/>
i<lb/>
mem <lb/>
receil<lb/>
on t<lb/>
A ii<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057421_0011"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
:00<lb/>
it.<lb/>
:no<lb/>
k<lb/>
Sykes Has Big Night Returning<lb/>
From A Year On The Sidelines<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 8, 1981<lb/>
11<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Maaatwg Ldilur<lb/>
"When you see<lb/>
you've got a chance to<lb/>
get it, your head is<lb/>
clear. All you see is the<lb/>
ball coming at you<lb/>
That's the way ECU<lb/>
junior cornerback<lb/>
Gerald Sykes desribes<lb/>
the feeling of intercep-<lb/>
ting errant passes ? a<lb/>
feeling he experienced<lb/>
three times as the<lb/>
Pirates downed<lb/>
Western Carolina 42-6<lb/>
Saturday at Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium. His three<lb/>
grabs earned him a spot<lb/>
in the East Carolina<lb/>
record books, as he<lb/>
joins five others in-<lb/>
cluding Jim Bolding<lb/>
who performed the feat<lb/>
against the Catamounts<lb/>
in 1975.<lb/>
"1 knew 1 had a<lb/>
chance all three times<lb/>
Sykes adds. "It was<lb/>
just a matter of hang-<lb/>
ing on<lb/>
For a former<lb/>
member of the Pirate<lb/>
receiving corps hanging<lb/>
on to the ball was no<lb/>
problem. Just two<lb/>
years ago Sykes saw ac-<lb/>
tion as a wide receiver<lb/>
in the Pat Dye version<lb/>
of the wishbone.<lb/>
Many questioned the<lb/>
wisdom of switching<lb/>
Sykes to defense, but<lb/>
he now admits that the<lb/>
move has proved<lb/>
beneficial to his future<lb/>
as well as the teams<lb/>
Sykes sat out the 1980<lb/>
campaign as a red-<lb/>
shirt, and that move<lb/>
gave him time to adjust<lb/>
to his new-found home.<lb/>
" Coach 4Ed) Emory<lb/>
left the decisn (to be<lb/>
red-shirted) to me ? I<lb/>
made the decision with<lb/>
his guidance Sykes<lb/>
explains. "He com-<lb/>
municates with his<lb/>
players very well. I en-<lb/>
joyed playing split end,<lb/>
but I realize now that I<lb/>
am more valuable to<lb/>
the team on defense<lb/>
The Fayetteville<lb/>
native not only in-<lb/>
tercepted three Ronnie<lb/>
Mixon tosses, but also<lb/>
broke up another pair<lb/>
to lead the team in that<lb/>
category as well. Sykes<lb/>
added three tackles to<lb/>
his defensive totals.<lb/>
"Gerald graded out<lb/>
at 85 percent ? pretty<lb/>
good for a defensive<lb/>
back praised defen-<lb/>
sive secondary coach<lb/>
Ricky Bustle. "All<lb/>
three times (he in-<lb/>
tercepted) we were in a<lb/>
prevent defense. Gerald<lb/>
was back deep in the<lb/>
coverage.<lb/>
"We just happened<lb/>
to be in the right<lb/>
defense at the right<lb/>
time<lb/>
Early in the contest<lb/>
Mixon had little dif-<lb/>
ficulty finding open<lb/>
receivers, but both<lb/>
Sykes and Bustle ad-<lb/>
mitted adjustments to<lb/>
the defense stiffled<lb/>
later efforts.<lb/>
"We were rushing<lb/>
three people early in the<lb/>
game; we thought that<lb/>
was enough pressure on<lb/>
their quarterback and<lb/>
still enough to stop<lb/>
their inside running<lb/>
game said Bustle.<lb/>
"Let there be no<lb/>
mistake about it.<lb/>
Western Carolina runs<lb/>
very good routes.<lb/>
"Twice earlier they<lb/>
tried to get us in a jum-<lb/>
ping match with their<lb/>
6-6 tight end (Eddie<lb/>
McGill), but Gerald<lb/>
managed to get in front<lb/>
and knock the ball<lb/>
away<lb/>
But according to<lb/>
Bustle, it was not all<lb/>
luck which enabled<lb/>
Sykes to step into the<lb/>
record book.<lb/>
"Gerald is the most<lb/>
natural back-peddler<lb/>
I've ever coached<lb/>
Bustle states. "The<lb/>
main difference in<lb/>
receiver and defensive<lb/>
back is that the end is<lb/>
running the pattern for-<lb/>
ward and the defense<lb/>
has to run it in reverse.<lb/>
(Back-peddling) is<lb/>
something you can't<lb/>
really teach ? you can<lb/>
show somebody how,<lb/>
but they have to have<lb/>
the talent for it.<lb/>
"He's got a super at-<lb/>
titude toward the game.<lb/>
He's had some habits<lb/>
J<lb/>
V<lb/>
PRESBYTERIAN<lb/>
CAMPUS<lb/>
MINISTRY<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, N. C. 27834<lb/>
Stewart LaNeave, Campus<lb/>
Minister<lb/>
104 Hardee Circle<lb/>
,4 listening ear<lb/>
A sounding board<lb/>
A guiding spirit<lb/>
752-7240 or 758-0145<lb/>
PROGRAM<lb/>
At the International House<lb/>
306 East 9th Street<lb/>
Tues. $2.00<lb/>
5:30 Discussion &amp; Dinner Out<lb/>
Add Greenery<lb/>
to your<lb/>
Scenery<lb/>
We have a thriving selection<lb/>
of 5" hanging baskets on sale<lb/>
now for $5.00. It's the natural<lb/>
way to decorate your dorm<lb/>
room or apartment. Stop by to-<lb/>
day and make your selection.<lb/>
Wed.<lb/>
Noon<lb/>
Faculty &amp; Staff<lb/>
Mendenhall Faculty Dining<lb/>
A time of sharing and<lb/>
discussion over meal.<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
 Noon<lb/>
Mendenhall Snack Bar<lb/>
Student Fellowship Lunch<lb/>
Join us with lunch.<lb/>
r<lb/>
1027 S.EVANS<lb/>
CORNER 11th &amp; EVANS 758-2774<lb/>
Good Sept. 8 thru 19<lb/>
Closed Wed.<lb/>
WESTERN<lb/>
SIZZUN'<lb/>
Steakhouse<lb/>
BAIL Y SPECIALS<lb/>
MONDAY - $1 ??<lb/>
CHOPPED STEAK . 1.99<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
BEEF TIPS<lb/>
WEDNESDAY -<lb/>
CUBED STEAK<lb/>
THURSDAY -<lb/>
STEAK SANDWICH<lb/>
FRIDAY -<lb/>
U.S.D.A. RIB EYE<lb/>
SATURDAY -<lb/>
BARBEQUE RIBS<lb/>
SUNDAY -<lb/>
STEAK ON A STICK<lb/>
n.99<lb/>
1.89<lb/>
1.69<lb/>
3.79<lb/>
2.99<lb/>
1.99<lb/>
All Meals are Complete<lb/>
Including Baked Potato or<lb/>
French Fries &amp; Texas Toast<lb/>
and<lb/>
Free Tea<lb/>
Famous Salad Bar<lb/>
with ECU I.D.<lb/>
Take Out Service ? 203 E. 19th St. ? 752712<lb/>
244 By Pass ? 750040 ? Hours 11 a.mlOp.m. ? Woo. Thurs.<lb/>
10 a.m11 p.m. Fri. Sun.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Photo<lb/>
' Chap Gurley<lb/>
Sykes Dives For WCU's Melvin Dorsey<lb/>
he's had to break, and<lb/>
he's done everything<lb/>
possible break them.<lb/>
He's got more natural<lb/>
skills for the corner-<lb/>
back position than<lb/>
anyone I've ever coach-<lb/>
ed<lb/>
WHile confident<lb/>
concerning his own<lb/>
skills and progress,<lb/>
Sykes is most concern-<lb/>
ed about those of the<lb/>
entire Pirate football<lb/>
squad.<lb/>
"There are people<lb/>
who didn't believe in<lb/>
me he says, "but I<lb/>
think I showed 1 have<lb/>
all the tools to play<lb/>
(cornerback).<lb/>
"Overall, I think we<lb/>
had one Hell of a game.<lb/>
G! amcmiiagadatiqu?s Are f<lb/>
Shtrtb Sle?pinyj Bags Baopao-<lb/>
arncmy f juipm.nt Sleo' Ti&amp;j<lb/>
Sio- C.shes Aid OytH 700 Oft<lb/>
rsienl Ne And L's?d items<lb/>
o??r.w, feints iii "?'i<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY STORE<lb/>
We are way ahead of<lb/>
where we were last<lb/>
year<lb/>
The Pirates must<lb/>
now prepare to battle<lb/>
the Tar Heels of North<lb/>
Carolina Saturday in<lb/>
Kenan Stadium. Sykes<lb/>
indicates he's ready for<lb/>
what is apparantly the<lb/>
final ECU-UNC clash.<lb/>
"I'll use (the<lb/>
Western Carolina<lb/>
game) for a stepping<lb/>
stone he reasons. "I<lb/>
think we all will.<lb/>
"We've got a week<lb/>
to get ready ? it'll just<lb/>
be a matter of who<lb/>
wants it the most<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
WATERBEDS Now students can<lb/>
buy a waterbed (Queen o( King)<lb/>
direct from mqt. You can save up<lb/>
to ' retail Complete beds with IS<lb/>
yr warranty mattress, 5 yr war<lb/>
ranty. thermostat, heater, liner,<lb/>
liner, frame, headboard, pedestal<lb/>
for as low as 189 Queen 199 King<lb/>
Call David. Delivery adv 7S8 7408<lb/>
FOR SALE 6 Caster Twinlm<lb/>
surfboard, make offer. Pioneer<lb/>
KP 373 Casette underdash player<lb/>
560 7S8 22S4<lb/>
WETSUITS: I pullover top (L) I<lb/>
longiohn (L), 140apiece or $100 for<lb/>
both. Call Dirk at 7S7 699 or<lb/>
7S8 6JS4<lb/>
Small refrigerator. Sanyo, ex<lb/>
cellent condition, used only one<lb/>
year. Why rent when you can buy-<lb/>
Call 757 3210.<lb/>
8 by 10 caricatures by John<lb/>
Weyler, cartoonist for The East<lb/>
Carolinian and the Greenville<lb/>
Times, former Carowinds portrail<lb/>
artist. $10 for b and w, $1$ for col<lb/>
or. Call 7S2 S77S<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
ROOMMATE, wanted to share<lb/>
two bedroom towntiouse in Green<lb/>
ville Share of rent US plus share<lb/>
of utilities Please call 7S8 7734 or<lb/>
3SS 6717<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed<lb/>
to share Oakmont Sq Apts. Seimi<lb/>
private room Bed needed $76 66<lb/>
per month and one third ulilitui<lb/>
and phone 1 baths, pool, laundry<lb/>
room, bus sekrvice. cable TV<lb/>
FEMALE roommate wanted to<lb/>
share 5 bedroom 1' hath partially<lb/>
furnished townhouse located<lb/>
beside Eastbrook You have to<lb/>
share.larqe master bedroom and<lb/>
bring bedroom furniture Total<lb/>
rent $?95 plus utilities Your share<lb/>
one third of both I no deposit i Call<lb/>
anytime 7S8 S809 (no smokers<lb/>
please)<lb/>
FEMALE roommate wanted in<lb/>
house on Charles St I block Irom<lb/>
campus $100 per month (utilities<lb/>
included) Phone 7S8 7010<lb/>
ROOM lor rent immediately<lb/>
Great location one block Irom<lb/>
ECU and downtown $7$ Call<lb/>
7S2 26S9<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
WANTED: Bass, lead and rhythm<lb/>
guitar players lor rock'n'roll<lb/>
band Serious minded musicianms<lb/>
only, no egos Call 7S476I0 or<lb/>
7S3 5182 Marc or Al<lb/>
FEMALE RESIDENT<lb/>
COUNSELOR: Musi take training<lb/>
and internship. Payment in kind<lb/>
(free room, utilities, phone and<lb/>
house privileges) Excellent op<lb/>
portunity for students in human<lb/>
services Call 754 HELP<lb/>
HELP WANTED Positions open<lb/>
fro 2 males at Tar Landing<lb/>
Seafood Restaurant Come by for<lb/>
application<lb/>
SPORT F'ers unite Wed at 10 69<lb/>
pm All heads will meet at BB and<lb/>
B's lor an evening of sewnous<lb/>
sporting. This is a cobber remem<lb/>
brance meeting and a welcome<lb/>
back bread party! The column is<lb/>
back YEA!<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED To Chariot<lb/>
tesville, va. Sept II 13. will pay<lb/>
all expenses Contact Jeanne at<lb/>
757 9143<lb/>
CLIP JOINT' has moved to 119<lb/>
Garrett Call Marlena at 7S? 183;<lb/>
PART TIME work on campus,<lb/>
stapling posters to bulletin boards<lb/>
Chose your own schedule. 4 IS<lb/>
hours weekly No selling, your pay<lb/>
is based on the amount of material<lb/>
distributed Our position lequires<lb/>
the ability to work without super<lb/>
vision For information, contact<lb/>
Jeanne Swenson. $00 Third Ave<lb/>
W Seattle, Washington 9SI19.<lb/>
(206) 282 81II<lb/>
. fk SAAD'S<lb/>
SS SHOE<lb/>
Km repair<lb/>
.7 113 Grande Ave<lb/>
&amp;?kh 758m8<lb/>
$ j Quality<lb/>
Repair<lb/>
Tuesday Is<lb/>
Family Night<lb/>
From 4 P.M. To 9 P.M<lb/>
$<lb/>
2.49<lb/>
Reg.<lb/>
2.99<lb/>
WELCOME BACK,<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
EVERY TUESDAY<lb/>
IS COLLEGE NIGHT<lb/>
with VALID I.D.<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
104E.REDBANK5RD.<lb/>
756-6000<lb/>
Includes our No. 2 Ribeye Steak, Baked Potato<lb/>
and Dinner Roll.<lb/>
JACKS<lb/>
500 W. Greenville Blvd<lb/>
Greenville. N.C<lb/>
Added Feature<lb/>
Drawing<lb/>
Each Week For FREE Dinners<lb/>
Registertor FREE ECU Tickets!<lb/>
No purciUM iwcnur; roo do not n??? to b? present to ?nn<lb/>
wiimmiii mim<lb/>
JM 1<lb/>
BOND'S<lb/>
SPORTING GOODS<lb/>
Located at 218 Arlington Blvd.<lb/>
Two Stores To Serve You<lb/>
Welcome to Greenville<lb/>
H L HODGES<lb/>
COMPANY<lb/>
LOCATED AT 210 EAST FIFTH STREET<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
207o OFF ON SHOE PURCHASE<lb/>
Coupon Good Onto Sept 15. Must fjggj With BCD P Call A<lb/>
K-Swlss<lb/>
SHERRY TOP SIDS&amp;<lb/>
Lw.<lb/>
Fraternity and Sorority<lb/>
Jerseys<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Just Arrived.<lb/>
ECU Sweatshirts<lb/>
&amp; Jackets<lb/>
HODGESBOND'S SHOE CLUB<lb/>
E. 51ft St. ? 218 Arlington Blvd.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057421_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBER 8, 1981<lb/>
f<lb/>
?<lb/>
Soccer Team<lb/>
Will Begin<lb/>
Season Today<lb/>
East Carolina soccer<lb/>
coach Brad Smith feels<lb/>
his team is prepared for<lb/>
its 1981 season opener<lb/>
today (Tuesday)<lb/>
against Atlantic Chris-<lb/>
tian College, a team the<lb/>
Pirates have never<lb/>
beaten in the regular<lb/>
season.<lb/>
"We're better<lb/>
prepared and more<lb/>
skilled than we've ever<lb/>
been Smith said. "I<lb/>
feel we're certainly able<lb/>
to beat them if we play<lb/>
to our potential<lb/>
Smith warned,<lb/>
though, that ACC<lb/>
should be the same<lb/>
strong team that the<lb/>
Bucs have had trouble<lb/>
with in the past.<lb/>
"They won the<lb/>
Governor's Cup last<lb/>
spring in the club<lb/>
league he said.<lb/>
"They have two or<lb/>
three kids that are truly<lb/>
outstanding<lb/>
Still, Smith says he<lb/>
has a good feeling<lb/>
about the season<lb/>
opener, scheduled for 4<lb/>
p.m. today on the<lb/>
Minges soccer field.<lb/>
"We'd always like to<lb/>
have more time to get<lb/>
ready he said. "But<lb/>
we've got a good at-<lb/>
titude. Everybody is<lb/>
getting itchy to start.<lb/>
That's always a good<lb/>
sign<lb/>
The Pirates will be<lb/>
looking to a number of<lb/>
seasoned veterans to<lb/>
lead a strong con-<lb/>
tingent of young, but<lb/>
talented newcomers.<lb/>
Offensively, Brad<lb/>
Winchell returns after<lb/>
leading the team in<lb/>
scoring two of the past<lb/>
three seasons. Before<lb/>
the season ends he<lb/>
should be the team's<lb/>
all-time leading scorer<lb/>
and assist man.<lb/>
W i n c h e 11' s twin<lb/>
brother, Brian, will<lb/>
start on offense as well,<lb/>
making for some exciti-<lb/>
ment, Smith says.<lb/>
"Brian will be up<lb/>
front with Brad<lb/>
Smith said. "They do a<lb/>
lot of special things<lb/>
together. They must<lb/>
have some kind of<lb/>
special instinct for what<lb/>
the other is doing<lb/>
Defensively veterans<lb/>
Dennis Elweil, Dwayne<lb/>
Degaetano and Steve<lb/>
Brody are looked to for<lb/>
early leadership.<lb/>
"We've got to get<lb/>
leadership from those<lb/>
guys Smith proclaim-<lb/>
ed. "They need to show<lb/>
the way until we jell<lb/>
Smith announced<lb/>
Monday that a trio of<lb/>
newcomers are will be<lb/>
starting this afternoon.<lb/>
One freshman, Mark<lb/>
Hardy of Basking<lb/>
Ridge, N.J will get a<lb/>
starting call. Tom<lb/>
Lawrence, a junior col-<lb/>
lege transfer from<lb/>
Montgomery JC in<lb/>
Maryland, and Bill<lb/>
Merwin, a transfer<lb/>
from New England<lb/>
College in New Hamp-<lb/>
shire, also will begin<lb/>
the game for the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
1981 ECU<lb/>
SOCCER SCHEDULE<lb/>
(Home Games In Caps)<lb/>
Sept. 8 ? ATLANTIC<lb/>
CHRISTIAN. 12 -<lb/>
GEORGE MASON, 17 -<lb/>
ELON COLLEGE. 20 ?<lb/>
COKER COLLEGE, 23 -<lb/>
at Campbell. 26 ? at<lb/>
Guilford College, 30 ? N.C.<lb/>
STATE.<lb/>
Oct. 4 ? at Catawba, 7 ?<lb/>
UNC-G. 11 ? at William<lb/>
and Mary, 14 ? at Pem-<lb/>
broke State, 17 ? at Rich-<lb/>
mond. 18 ? at Va.<lb/>
Wesleyan. 21 ? at UNC-W,<lb/>
28 ? OLD DOMINION, 31<lb/>
? at Christopher Newport<lb/>
Nov. 4 ? at N.C. Wesleyan.<lb/>
Support the<lb/>
March of Dimes<lb/>
mmmmwmu dchcts foundation ?????<lb/>
r<lb/>
l<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
l<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
I COME BY AND<lb/>
) PICKUPYOUR<lb/>
J COMPLEMENTARY<lb/>
j COPY<lb/>
Many New Items with Extra<lb/>
Savings Now Available<lb/>
2818 E. 10th St.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
752-1600 27834<lb/>
102 Main St.<lb/>
Belhaven, N.C,<lb/>
943-2121 27810<lb/>
JUST<lb/>
ARRIVED<lb/>
J.D.<lb/>
DAWSON<lb/>
CO.<lb/>
1982 GIFT<lb/>
CATALOG<lb/>
IZOD LACOSTE SHIRTS<lb/>
M9.50<lb/>
1 ?u<lb/>
ECU Goalie Steve Brown In Pre-Season Action<lb/>
REG. $25 ? NOW<lb/>
"IF YOU ARE BUYING TWO OR MORE SHIRTS A<lb/>
QUANTITY DISCOUNT IS AVAILABLE! WE HAVE<lb/>
AN EXCELLENT SELECTION OF SKI APPAREL AND<lb/>
EQUIPMENT<lb/>
Gordon Fulp<lb/>
LOCATED AT THE GOLF SHOP<lb/>
AT GREENVILLE COUNTRY CLUB<lb/>
756-0504 OPEN 7 DAYS<lb/>
Intramural Recreational Services-<lb/>
FALL SEMESTER<lb/>
MEN'S ND WOMEN'S INTRAMURAL PROGRAMS<lb/>
!?!??<lb/>
Cli'tl<lb/>
CAH?M? WIW<lb/>
txfeta Ami<lb/>
??. ma Tim.<lb/>
ym? M '?<lb/>
'?? 'n. 1k Came Mill<lb/>
Tm?? Spit 1mm<lb/>
I'M! ?<lb/>
Saaan<lb/>
? la. SfMi Tmi<lb/>
?l?T ?fetus<lb/>
 S.e- ?<lb/>
i nil ? Ur i<lb/>
? ? i i ? ?? "<lb/>
I il ii ? tap 11<lb/>
I I ? )? ? Sir II<lb/>
M On I<lb/>
? Oci II<lb/>
M OiMS<lb/>
? s 0" i; it<lb/>
m ??? I<lb/>
M N?. I<lb/>
Mil<lb/>
? I II<lb/>
? III<lb/>
? IK<lb/>
I ? II<lb/>
'? luii to Ian<lb/>
?! S.lll. li<lb/>
ACH.ITT<lb/>
?? Mi C.tefeii<lb/>
Sim l-icl Sank<lb/>
I 14 II I<lb/>
I II 10 II<lb/>
I II It II<lb/>
I II II II<lb/>
'I I 10 II<lb/>
0 I II II<lb/>
II II II I S. 4 . I<lb/>
io il ii i is a il ;i<lb/>
II II II I I ? S Ok 1 l<lb/>
ii il il ; '??????<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
? il II<lb/>
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? ??<lb/>
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?  HI<lb/>
i.i.i m<lb/>
?Co 11)<lb/>
??? Crw 'II<lb/>
? i. I 'II<lb/>
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use in<lb/>
???I '0!<lb/>
ran ruei<lb/>
ijii i ii i ?? iw.i in<lb/>
l?ll 11 l? l. trail Id<lb/>
T ? II nil ll. Ul ill<lb/>
mil i '? tw.i in<lb/>
CO RECREATIONAL PROGRAM<lb/>
fu. '?-?.<lb/>
II.IW Nlr<lb/>
? ii.mil?.<lb/>
out<lb/>
I l? 10 I<lb/>
I 14 II I<lb/>
10 I '0 I)<lb/>
??I' MT ' '<lb/>
? ? It Gil<lb/>
?in Sic I<lb/>
Wi.<lb/>
?UCI<lb/>
?'?? C II)<lb/>
l.i. I 101<lb/>
l.i. C 101<lb/>
In. C 'I)<lb/>
04'1<lb/>
? III<lb/>
?wi ruci<lb/>
Kill! I'). Iinlin<lb/>
III. I'M 'U<lb/>
SPRING SEMESTER<lb/>
MEN S AND WOMEN'S INTRAMURAL PROGRAMS<lb/>
Rrtklnl<lb/>
? 0 Bin DM I<lb/>
ivi i ???? ?'<lb/>
'rl<lb/>
' ? llMI II '<lb/>
IWW<lb/>
Hm ?? Oi't<lb/>
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4?r fan Tib.i<lb/>
?climTT<lb/>
? 4i .Mil'<lb/>
imn<lb/>
o?ks<lb/>
i ' i ii<lb/>
i iti ii<lb/>
I i I '0<lb/>
I II 1 IS<lb/>
1111)<lb/>
1 11 II<lb/>
ll)?<lb/>
) III<lb/>
! 'S 'I<lb/>
) I II<lb/>
) I 1 IS<lb/>
3 1 )C<lb/>
) 11 4 <lb/>
?PI4iaS Ml<lb/>
?in iicias<lb/>
H i? II<lb/>
t ?: 4<lb/>
? S ?? I' '4<lb/>
TIM lil lb ' I<lb/>
Hf ?? 14<lb/>
llll'II<lb/>
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? S Mi' l 1'<lb/>
Mi Mi 11<lb/>
Mm M?. II<lb/>
M ? Mi. II I<lb/>
ml" J )' I i<lb/>
' ft 4?? I '<lb/>
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0411<lb/>
? 1 II<lb/>
I 1 1!<lb/>
M 1<lb/>
? I 'I<lb/>
?4? J ?<lb/>
? 'I<lb/>
I'M!<lb/>
P<lb/>
?I4CI<lb/>
I 'II<lb/>
I.i I 11<lb/>
? ?.? HI<lb/>
I ?? I '01<lb/>
1' 1 'OAt CVIWC<lb/>
u?T Timi fuCl<lb/>
in mi ll ?,?? I '?:<lb/>
? I) is II I 11. IVm I 'II<lb/>
ft ?) 17 II lll. Ir. I ill<lb/>
CAS<lb/>
) I) 4 'I I ft 4 0 II<lb/>
CO RECREATIONAL PROGRAM<lb/>
' twvt 0m4Mi<lb/>
IVtu Nfej<lb/>
Inititul ItMVM<lb/>
(?Tt?<lb/>
OAIfl<lb/>
I J I (<lb/>
' '? 1 I<lb/>
MlII<lb/>
?.? KUj ??<lb/>
PlA? BtGiftS<lb/>
Hn -?? ?<lb/>
Mm ?? If<lb/>
? u n ri<lb/>
- . Mt n<lb/>
 7; a I t j i :<lb/>
?.?(?<lb/>
St?m-M.M<lb/>
MSC 231<lb/>
??? br? 117<lb/>
OATf TlMf P Alf<lb/>
WMfMll 1 ? i 1<lb/>
? INTRAMUR4L RECREATIONAL REPRESENTATIVE MEETINGS<lb/>
(Ni?<lb/>
'???.? ran ? I<lb/>
OCATMM<lb/>
? IB<lb/>
WE PAY IMMEDIATE CASH<lb/>
FOR:<lb/>
CLASS RINGS<lb/>
WEDDING BANDS<lb/>
DIAMONDS<lb/>
ALL GOLD &amp; SILVER<lb/>
SILVER COINS<lb/>
CHINA &amp; CRYSTAL<lb/>
FINE WATCHES<lb/>
l&amp;RINCi<lb/>
if KEY SALES CO j?<lb/>
401 S. EVANS ST. 0PEN 9 30 5 30 M0N s<lb/>
(HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH) PHONE 752-38I:<lb/>
I "YOUR PROFISSIONAL PERMANENT DEALER<lb/>
fYe<lb/>
- "jUV<lb/>
t.<lb/>
S<lb/>
?ki<lb/>
At the Phi Kappa Tau House<lb/>
409 Elizabeth St.<lb/>
Lots of your FREE Favorite Beverage<lb/>
and Favorite Tunes r-fi i<lb/>
Everyone is invited to attend ECU Cneerl60derS<lb/>
Featuring Carolina Recording Artist<lb/>
The NICKY HARRIS BAND<lb/>
Pompom Girls<lb/>
Pep Band<lb/>
Coach Ed Emory<lb/>
And lots of Good Beverage<lb/>
Sponsored By Our Friends At:<lb/>
Grog's<lb/>
The Second Chance<lb/>
Clark-Branch Realty<lb/>
Realty World<lb/>
Factory Direct Furniture<lb/>
Coca-Cola of Greenville<lb/>
The Crow's Nest<lb/>
King Sandwich<lb/>
Happy Store<lb/>
Tree House<lb/>
Etna No. 1<lb/>
Kash &amp; Karry No. 8<lb/>
Pantana Bobs<lb/>
U.B.E.<lb/>
Mr. C. J. Pharo<lb/>
Apple Records<lb/>
Stereo Village<lb/>
Bissette's of Greenville<lb/>
Edgewater Motors<lb/>
Home Builders Supply<lb/>
Southern Pride Car Wash<lb/>
Overton's Supermarket<lb/>
Cliff's Seafood<lb/>
Morgan Printers<lb/>
Pipe Dreams<lb/>
Dominoes Pizza<lb/>
Taco Cid<lb/>
Rafters<lb/>
flctift-f<lb/>
7- .?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057421_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>