<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057422_0001"/>
Brewer Resigns<lb/>
B PVl 1 COI I INs<lb/>
M i hirl<lb/>
rhomas B. Brewer, chancelloi ol Easi<lb/>
. arolina foi the past three years, announced his<lb/>
resignation Wednesday in the wake of specula<lb/>
thai he ma be headed foi West Virginia<lb/>
I Iniversity as president.<lb/>
In a pi ess release issued Wednesda morning,<lb/>
Brev ed that his resignation will take<lb/>
. ?, June - 82. He also said that he has re<lb/>
ted a ive to begin at a date to be<lb/>
dele I N( President William Friday.<lb/>
sei will us me "to prepare toi othei<lb/>
equested by President<lb/>
rus ees. I have decided<lb/>
? 1 ast c arolina<lb/>
. the newly-elected chairman oi<lb/>
-lees, expressed hope that<lb/>
down and ol out<lb/>
educating the<lb/>
<lb/>
a<lb/>
bilitv. w<lb/>
.<lb/>
H Ki had been in turmoil since<lb/>
News ported on ug 28<lb/>
Brewei was a i he WVl position.<lb/>
he board had<lb/>
 "The boa' <lb/>
but 1 di<lb/>
know what action would have been taken<lb/>
Friday said Brewer's resignation would be ac<lb/>
eepted but added that no date had yet been set<lb/>
tor the chancellor to begin his leave. "He's en-<lb/>
titled to that (the leave), and the terms of it will<lb/>
be deeuied in the near future<lb/>
He added thai he may appoint an interim<lb/>
chancelloi foi ECU depending on the duration<lb/>
ot Brewer's leave. "If he ceases day-to-day ac-<lb/>
tivity as chancellor, I will appoint an interim<lb/>
replacement<lb/>
ccording to Futrell, "An interim chancellor<lb/>
will be appointed soon<lb/>
1 he UNC president also said that he first<lb/>
discussed tite situation with Brewer Saturday<lb/>
but would no! speculate upon what precipitated<lb/>
the resignation.<lb/>
"I don' want to be unfair to either faction?<lb/>
acknowledging thai there are factions<lb/>
futrell and a number of other trustees were<lb/>
upset thai Brewer had not informed the board<lb/>
that he was a candidate for the West Virginia<lb/>
job. Brewer, however, denied that he was seek-<lb/>
ing the WVl presidency and said that he had<lb/>
been nominated tor the job.<lb/>
"I have never been informed by West Virginia<lb/>
that 1 was being seriously considered, much less<lb/>
a finalist<lb/>
Responding to the concerns of Futrell and the<lb/>
other trustees, Brewer added. "Anything 1 hae<lb/>
to say to the board, I'll sav to the board,and if<lb/>
the board has anything to say to me, they'll say<lb/>
it to me<lb/>
futrell said Wednesday that he felt that there<lb/>
were primarily two factors involved in Brewer's<lb/>
resignation. "I think the two greatest factors o'<lb/>
all were, first, the overwhelming feeling of peo-<lb/>
ple in the Pitt County-Greenville area and in the<lb/>
ECU community that he was not happy, and,<lb/>
second, because he made too many changes too<lb/>
fast<lb/>
He cited a list oi changes in administrators<lb/>
that Brewer had made, including two vice<lb/>
chancellors and a number o academic deans<lb/>
and department chairmen. "He just made so<lb/>
many changes within the three years that he's<lb/>
made a lot o people unhappy<lb/>
According to Futrell, the board of trustees<lb/>
was concerned that Brewer was not totally com-<lb/>
mitted to ECU. He expressed doubt about<lb/>
Brewer's statements that it is normal in the<lb/>
academic world for administrators and faculty<lb/>
to keep abreast ot job openings in the field.<lb/>
"That's not the view o the trustees he com-<lb/>
mented. "When a chancellor comes to East<lb/>
Carolina, he comes to stav<lb/>
Futrell said he did not know of any specific<lb/>
reasons why Brewer may have been unhappy ai<lb/>
Nee BRFWFR. Page 3<lb/>
Photo By MARIANNE 8AINES<lb/>
( hancellor Thomas llrewer<lb/>
?he<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
ol. 56 No. (,<lb/>
Thursday .Neptember 10. 181<lb/>
Greenville, North (arolina<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
New Ordinance<lb/>
Limits Parking<lb/>
Bv kIH h f<lb/>
?<lb/>
new<lb/>
I<lb/>
i par!<lb/>
B<lb/>
I .<lb/>
irkinj<lb/>
, ? nance was<lb/>
lents<lb/>
who need<lb/>
I ?, . . .<lb/>
nienced when n<lb/>
"ere<lb/>
" Hie I<lb/>
tende<lb/>
often<lb/>
esiden<lb/>
tice ol<lb/>
.n vehic<lb/>
necessary vehi<lb/>
noise pollution (and) strains on<lb/>
the<lb/>
nance stale- nditions<lb/>
rk unacceptal ardships on<lb/>
dents ol -c neigl ds<lb/>
areas bv caus-<lb/>
ing t at ion ol ait quality,<lb/>
af' ue, tranquility<lb/>
? othei values le in an ur-<lb/>
residential env ii onmei<lb/>
1 ? designate residential parking<lb/>
council riiiisi follow<lb/>
.  letermined bv the city<lb/>
ing department. I he<lb/>
qua ns are that the street<lb/>
e must be in a residential<lb/>
- district, the property has to<lb/>
be used m a residential manner and<lb/>
? ? a residential parking per-<lb/>
mil Mon must be shown to<lb/>
the ifhmission arid signed<lb/>
bv 51 percent ot the adults living in<lb/>
I residential parking<lb/>
.a.<lb/>
1 in ther qualifications ini<lb/>
at a parking studv must be done<lb/>
proving that 70 percent ol the park<lb/>
-paces in an area are occupied<lb/>
during a two-hour period I he study<lb/>
also musi prove that a minimum o<lb/>
Two-Hour Parking<lb/>
may he found in residential areas near the ECU campus.<lb/>
5 percent ot the parked vehicles are<lb/>
owned bv non-residents.<lb/>
Persons living in a controlled<lb/>
residential parking area must pur-<lb/>
chase a $5 deca! to park on the street<lb/>
Campaign Guidelines Announced<lb/>
Fall Elections Approaching<lb/>
Bv IIMVn DuPRFF<lb/>
Attention politicians: ire! out youi<lb/>
e makers<lb/>
:all SC i<lb/>
lund the corni<lb/>
Dasha I t ird-1 ittle, n<lb/>
appointed elections chairperson,<lb/>
nounced guidelines Wednesday foi<lb/>
candidates for class offices and the<lb/>
legislature.<lb/>
Anyone interested in running<lb/>
musi sign up at the SGA office in<lb/>
Mendenhali Student enter room<lb/>
228 Sept 10-18, with no applica-<lb/>
tions accepted after 5 p.m. of the<lb/>
Final day.<lb/>
Freshmen, sophomores, junior<lb/>
and graduate students will be elec<lb/>
ting a class president and vice presi<lb/>
dent, while seniors will also choose a<lb/>
secretary-treasurer.<lb/>
Representatives from each dor<lb/>
mitory and an undetermined<lb/>
number of day legislators will also<lb/>
be held Get 7. Polling booths in the<lb/>
dorms and at Minges Coliseum will<lb/>
be open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m<lb/>
while those at theroatan,<lb/>
Mendenhali and the Students Supp-<lb/>
ly Store will remain open until<lb/>
p m.<lb/>
"If someone is concerned about<lb/>
last Carolina and their student tees<lb/>
and how ihev are spent, then this is<lb/>
their stepping stone to having their<lb/>
voice heard I ittle said. "We want<lb/>
much representation of the<lb/>
mizations and individuals on<lb/>
campus as we can get. Thai way it<lb/>
something comes up you object to,<lb/>
ir vote can count against it<lb/>
Little, a three vear veteran ot the<lb/>
legislature, pointed out candidates<lb/>
must be full-time students and have<lb/>
a! least a 2.0 grade point average.<lb/>
( ampaigning will begin mi-<lb/>
mediatelv following a Sept. 21<lb/>
meeting ol the candidates and elec<lb/>
tions committee. Candidates for<lb/>
class office are allowed under the<lb/>
SGA Constitution to spend up to<lb/>
SUM), while legislature hopefuls are<lb/>
limited to $75.<lb/>
Financial reports and a list of<lb/>
campaign workers must be turned in<lb/>
to the elections committee bv 5 p m<lb/>
Sept 30 1 vpenses encountered bv<lb/>
the candidates must be fully<lb/>
documented, and anyone failing to<lb/>
meet the deadline will be dis-<lb/>
qualified.<lb/>
"(Th? early deadline for reports)<lb/>
may cut down the rapid succession<lb/>
of events just prior to the election<lb/>
day, but we want to be fair to<lb/>
everybody involved Little stress<lb/>
ed "I think college students are that<lb/>
dependable. If they're not, we don't<lb/>
need them in the legislature<lb/>
Students may vote by absentee<lb/>
ballot bv obtaining an official<lb/>
Get To Chapel Hill<lb/>
Early If Parking Car<lb/>
Bv MIKE HI IGHES<lb/>
SI.HWrilrr<lb/>
Anyone who has been to a foot-<lb/>
ball game at Kenan Stadium in<lb/>
Chapel Hill probably already knows<lb/>
that parking can be a hassle, but for<lb/>
the ECU students making the trek<lb/>
tor the first time this weekend, and<lb/>
for those who have been in the past<lb/>
but have forgotten for one reason or<lb/>
another, some suggestions might be<lb/>
helpful.<lb/>
Andy Hager, who works for the<lb/>
parking control division of the traf-<lb/>
fic office at UNC, suggests anyone<lb/>
wishing to park on campus before a<lb/>
Saturday football game arrive early.<lb/>
Some lots are reserved for UNC<lb/>
students and faculty, and other lots<lb/>
will be closed.<lb/>
Cutting Crime A<lb/>
Full- Time Job<lb/>
tor more than two hours.<lb/>
The ones are effective between 8<lb/>
a.m. and 5 p.m. and are not en-<lb/>
forceable if a sign is not posted<lb/>
specifying the two-hour parking<lb/>
limit.<lb/>
university excuse to 1 ittle up to 72<lb/>
hours prioi to voting day. Any run-<lb/>
off which mav be necessary will be<lb/>
held Oct. 14. '<lb/>
Bv (,rk, mm n i<lb/>
According to Hager, there will be<lb/>
signs directing traffic and orange-<lb/>
vested monitors available to assist<lb/>
fans wishing to park.<lb/>
On campus, there are two lots<lb/>
open to visitors, according to<lb/>
Hager. Areas on the Manning Drive<lb/>
fringe lot and the North Carolina<lb/>
Memorial Hospital parking deck<lb/>
will be available for visitor parking.<lb/>
(EDITOR'S NOTE: The SGA will<lb/>
sponsor a bus to C 'hapel Hill Satur<lb/>
day. It will leave at 9:30 a.m. and<lb/>
return after the game. Riders must<lb/>
register at the Mendenhali Student<lb/>
(enter information desk. Accor-<lb/>
ding to Marvin Braxton, SGA vice<lb/>
president, the first 50 students to<lb/>
register will ride free of charge.)<lb/>
E( I mav<lb/>
crime :<lb/>
Singleton, w<lb/>
the pi ?<lb/>
says the in,<lb/>
and studen<lb/>
department sur<lb/>
the position I<lb/>
beding stalled b<lb/>
tions. she said.<lb/>
" I he implementai ion<lb/>
position would sir we the<lb/>
growing campus stem<lb/>
Singleton said, adv. it the full-<lb/>
time position is needed I erly<lb/>
inform students in how to prol<lb/>
themselves<lb/>
Singleton currenth i ducts a<lb/>
two-part program i university.<lb/>
One is a slide presentation on ba<lb/>
crime prevention lips; the othei is a<lb/>
seminar dealing with assault a<lb/>
rape<lb/>
" I he enthu e pas! I<lb/>
the programs ha- it she<lb/>
says. "Every student, tasiiitv<lb/>
member and stall (worker) should<lb/>
be informed on the methods to pre<lb/>
ven! a crime from happening to<lb/>
them<lb/>
The reception of Sing eton's pro<lb/>
giams bv the university community<lb/>
has given Singleton "high hopes"<lb/>
for the present .ear. She believes<lb/>
these programs have improved the<lb/>
rapport between the university<lb/>
police and student mg aspect<lb/>
of campus crime prevention.<lb/>
The first crime prevention pro-<lb/>
grams o the school vear are slated<lb/>
to be presented or' Monday, lues<lb/>
day and Wednesda e first lour<lb/>
weeks oi October The dormitories<lb/>
in which the programs will be<lb/>
presented will be posted once<lb/>
Singleton finishes arrangements<lb/>
dence hall<lb/>
tble on I hut - ark<lb/>
? stolen.<lb/>
?<lb/>
aui<lb/>
desi "bask i sense<lb/>
? Aiwa<lb/>
: oom, even<lb/>
i minute.<lb/>
?Nevei leave ke<lb/>
tind m<lb/>
trash cans. "Everybody t<lb/>
old tricks Singlet n<lb/>
?Alwavs take youi ke ?<lb/>
door alter unlock .<lb/>
?Never prop open do<lb/>
be locked<lb/>
?Always lock bicycles. 1 Ise a<lb/>
heavy chain with a lock and ?<lb/>
I oop  through as main moveable<lb/>
pans as possible. Utilize bike racks.<lb/>
?Report any suspicious per<lb/>
or around the dorms.<lb/>
? Viwavs lock your cai<lb/>
? Don't fumble with youi keys<lb/>
W.wc them read) ?I - <lb/>
your cai<lb/>
? Alwav s check the bav. k<lb/>
cat<lb/>
?Never leave valuables in youi cai<lb/>
?Try to walk with someone it you<lb/>
must go oui at night.<lb/>
?Stav away from dark, wooded<lb/>
areas .nd bushes<lb/>
?Slav alert oi youi surroundings<lb/>
when walking ou will be !c s likely<lb/>
to be taken bv surprise.<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements-<lb/>
Opinions4<lb/>
Features6<lb/>
Spoils9<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Q u a r t e r b a c A<lb/>
Carl ton Nelson<lb/>
(pictured at right)<lb/>
and the II foot-<lb/>
ball team travels to<lb/>
Chapel Hill this<lb/>
Saturday for a<lb/>
game with arch-<lb/>
rival Sorth<lb/>
Carolina. A special<lb/>
two-page section on<lb/>
the game and the<lb/>
history of the EC I -<lb/>
UNC series appears<lb/>
in today's sports<lb/>
section.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057422_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 10, l?81<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
NTE<lb/>
Students (.ompleting teacher<lb/>
preparation programs and ad<lb/>
vanced degree candidates in<lb/>
specific fields may take trie Na<lb/>
tionai Teacher Enamir atons on<lb/>
Nov 14, 1981 Feo 20, 1982 and<lb/>
April 17 1982. at test centers<lb/>
throughout the united States<lb/>
Prospective registrants -inould<lb/>
contact the school districts n<lb/>
which thev seek employment<lb/>
state agencies in which they seek<lb/>
certification or licensing thcr col<lb/>
leges or tne appropriate eduta<lb/>
tionai association tor advice acout<lb/>
which examinations o take and<lb/>
when to take them<lb/>
The NTE Bulletin of Intorma<lb/>
tion contains a list of test centers<lb/>
and general information aoout the<lb/>
examinations as well as a<lb/>
registration form Cop.oes may be<lb/>
obtained from college placement<lb/>
officers school personnel depar'<lb/>
ments or directly from National<lb/>
teacher Examinations. Box 911,<lb/>
Educational Testing Service<lb/>
Princeton New Jersey 08541<lb/>
FRISBEE<lb/>
There will be an organizational<lb/>
meeting of the Fnsoee Club this<lb/>
Thursday Sept 10 ' 00 r m<lb/>
room 221 WendenfM<lb/>
terested m playing<lb/>
how to play is welcome V idn us<lb/>
Officers for the W81 1992 I<lb/>
year will be elected ana pi<lb/>
tor the fall semester will be<lb/>
discussed<lb/>
ARTS MANAGEMENT<lb/>
There will be a meeting of all the<lb/>
Community Arts Management<lb/>
majors Monday .Septembe- !J at<lb/>
6 00 D m in jenk ins<lb/>
Pian to aiena so <lb/>
year Off r,ght' :<lb/>
BIOLOGY<lb/>
The ECU Biology Club is pleas<lb/>
ed to announce its office hours<lb/>
The office will be open Monday<lb/>
through FRiday trom 10 until 2<lb/>
and is m the lotiby of ttie Biology<lb/>
building room 102 Please come<lb/>
by if we can help you<lb/>
GMAT<lb/>
The Graduate Management Ad<lb/>
mission Test (GMATi will be of<lb/>
tered at East Carolina University<lb/>
on Saturday October 24 1981 Ap<lb/>
It Of! blanks are to be COfln<lb/>
pleted a'lc mailed to GMAT<lb/>
Educational Testing Service Box<lb/>
966 8 Pr nceton NJ 08S40 Ap<lb/>
plications must be postmarked no<lb/>
ia'e' than September 21 1981 Ap<lb/>
plications may be obtained from<lb/>
the ECU Testing Center Room<lb/>
105 Speight Building<lb/>
GRE<lb/>
The Graduate Record Examma<lb/>
tion will be offered at East<lb/>
Carolina University on Saturday.<lb/>
October 17 "81 Application<lb/>
blanks are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to Educational Testing<lb/>
Service Box 966 R Princeton NJ<lb/>
- Applications must be<lb/>
-? ? no later than<lb/>
-?'l '? 'V8l Applications<lb/>
? . -ire trom the ECU<lb/>
' S' Centei Room 105, Spe.ght<lb/>
Buiiam<lb/>
COUNSELING<lb/>
IS surviving<lb/>
enjoy nq .<lb/>
goal for<lb/>
UniverSit.<lb/>
?<lb/>
Staff benees so anc a't rffi<lb/>
?wo part mini-series on How to<lb/>
Succeed in College arc Ha -<lb/>
and How to Avoid T's' ft ixiety,<lb/>
Studen's may ? art cipate -1 ,<lb/>
or ail sessions The session i - ??<lb/>
'?i Succeed in College anc Hae tun<lb/>
wiil be conducted Vveuntsaa?<lb/>
September 9 from 3 00 p m 4 00<lb/>
Dm m Room 305 Ar.jh' A ???<lb/>
f setssioron Ho ' Av I Test<lb/>
Anxiety will be conoucted or<lb/>
Thursdasy Se, I 'moer 10. from<lb/>
 00 p rr 4 0C C  n Room JOS<lb/>
Aright Annex<lb/>
Sessions are available 1<lb/>
students free of c'large interested<lb/>
?students ma, call the Universi,<lb/>
Counseling Centet ?57 6661 te-<lb/>
tjrfher information Registration<lb/>
s not reau reu<lb/>
BIOLOGY CLUB<lb/>
The EC B.i gyClubt -nee'<lb/>
en Sept 14 it BN ? of the<lb/>
Pioioc, build u Bortj a<lb/>
be speaking about eers<lb/>
biology ava lOle ttii<lb/>
dent co op sei ' ?<lb/>
?. la ?? ? I Anyone 11<lb/>
terested is welcome to atte<lb/>
CADP<lb/>
The Campus a  ir Ji<lb/>
aduso Progi a 1 1 its first<lb/>
"meeting tor tne fa<lb/>
Thursday See<lb/>
the conference room on ?? . ?<lb/>
'oor of Erwin B Wembers<lb/>
r3 interested<lb/>
weic orr.e l itti<lb/>
BOWLING<lb/>
MSC Mixed Doubles bowling<lb/>
leagues are now being Ui med tor<lb/>
semester Students interested<lb/>
m ? Monday or Tues<lb/>
? ? evening league may sign up a'<lb/>
? 'in board at<lb/>
le ' Centei rhe<lb/>
? ?  , - eetinq wi'l<lb/>
beheld Mo epti mbei u at 6<lb/>
pm Bring son<lb/>
KISWAHILI<lb/>
- , ? v ??, mot ?<lb/>
-1<lb/>
1 ?<lb/>
I ? tarn <lb/>
? -<lb/>
embraces<lb/>
???? ? unti<lb/>
iPita and<lb/>
? es me :en<lb/>
-ies ot Congo.<lb/>
a" Republic<lb/>
noi Kiswahil<lb/>
o tbe western<lb/>
si ken<lb/>
. ? . . r his yeai<lb/>
? dents )ven an op<lb/>
. '  to study an African<lb/>
language 'or me ' rsl 'ime<lb/>
 . ?. ? ? - - .? 1 nor<lb/>
?1 ? I'stec please<lb/>
Matnenge at<lb/>
? ?Continuing<lb/>
? .<lb/>
SOCIAL WORK<lb/>
Students who wish to apply for a<lb/>
maior in social work or correc<lb/>
tions should contact the Depart<lb/>
ment of Social Work ? Correctional<lb/>
Services tor an application and<lb/>
schedule appointments for the re<lb/>
quired interviews (757 691) To be<lb/>
eligible to apply, the student is ex<lb/>
pected to have at least a 2.5 QPA<lb/>
and have had at least one course in<lb/>
sooal work or corrections<lb/>
Deadline tor submitting an ap<lb/>
plication and having completed<lb/>
the first interview with one ot the<lb/>
departmental faculty is<lb/>
September 16 The Department<lb/>
Chair will be holding the second in<lb/>
terviews on September 17 18, 1981<lb/>
HAPPINESS<lb/>
Everybody wants to be at peace<lb/>
with themselves The only way to<lb/>
do that is to study the word of God.<lb/>
the Bible, so you will learn, so you<lb/>
can change (Romans 122) That<lb/>
takes effort, you have to DO<lb/>
something We make the effort<lb/>
Thursday, (Sept 10) at<lb/>
MendenhaH Student Center, (1) at<lb/>
II 00 a m room 212 (2) at 7 30<lb/>
pm room 242 Also Monday<lb/>
? sept 14 at 7 30 p m room 242<lb/>
SGA ELECTIONS<lb/>
For all students who are con<lb/>
cerned about East Carolina<lb/>
University, here is your chance to<lb/>
have your voice heard Filing<lb/>
dates for SGA dorm and day stu<lb/>
dent legislators and class officers<lb/>
will be Sept 9 Sept 19 Come by<lb/>
the SGA office in Room 228<lb/>
MendenhaH<lb/>
LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
An organizational meeting tor<lb/>
the RCU Law Society will be held<lb/>
Thursday September 17 at 7.30<lb/>
pm in Room 221 MendenhaH All<lb/>
interested people please attend<lb/>
For further information please<lb/>
contact Diane Jones, 756 6556 after<lb/>
' pm<lb/>
CANOE<lb/>
The Tenth Annual Southeastern<lb/>
intercollegiate Canoe Race will be<lb/>
held Oct 3, 1981 on the Catawaba<lb/>
R .1" Any persons interested in<lb/>
? ; it.ng should call 752 7978<lb/>
SPAN<lb/>
All planning maiors and minors<lb/>
are invited to come 10m SPAN on<lb/>
Thurs Sept 10 at 12 15 m the plan<lb/>
n.ng studic tor a brief business<lb/>
meet ing<lb/>
PPHA<lb/>
The Preprotessional Health<lb/>
Alliance (PPHA) will hold its first<lb/>
regular be weekly meeting on<lb/>
Thursday. Sept 10, 1981 This<lb/>
meeting will be held at 6 00 at The<lb/>
Afro American Cultural Center<lb/>
New plans tor the coming year will<lb/>
be discussed All members and<lb/>
any other interested parties are<lb/>
urged to attend<lb/>
GRE<lb/>
? -<lb/>
?<lb/>
i'C Examma<lb/>
ej at East<lb/>
?? Saturday<lb/>
198). Application<lb/>
ompleted and<lb/>
it - Fesl<lb/>
- Princeton Nj<lb/>
jns must be<lb/>
uu'ami . me c<lb/>
lenter Room 105 Spe<lb/>
SuDDortthe<lb/>
March of<lb/>
imes<lb/>
BOTH<lb/>
DfffCTS<lb/>
FOUNDATION<lb/>
HOUSING<lb/>
For ECU students needing help<lb/>
with non university housing, the<lb/>
Oft Campus Housing Office<lb/>
publishes a listing of available<lb/>
rooms, apartments, houses and<lb/>
mobile homes in the Greenville<lb/>
area Since materials are updaied<lb/>
daily, students should come by the<lb/>
office in person for the most cur<lb/>
rent information Listings tor<lb/>
Greenville apartment complexes,<lb/>
for students seeking roommates,<lb/>
and a telephone for placing local<lb/>
calls are also provided The offices<lb/>
serves faculty and staff as well as<lb/>
students<lb/>
POETS<lb/>
The American Collegiate Poets<lb/>
Anthology and international<lb/>
Publications is sponsoring a Na<lb/>
tionai Poetry Contest in the fall of<lb/>
1981 The deadline is October 31<lb/>
For more mlormation write to In<lb/>
ternational Publications. P O Box<lb/>
44927, Los Angeles, Ca 90044<lb/>
SKIING<lb/>
irs not too soon to start thinking<lb/>
snow tor skung at Snowshoe. West<lb/>
Virginia at Christmas and during<lb/>
spring break Contact Ms Jo<lb/>
Saunders at 757 6000, Memorial<lb/>
Gym, Room 205 for information<lb/>
Limited registration<lb/>
CARTOONS<lb/>
Want to see Uncle Sam get a pie<lb/>
m the face' Stop by MendenhaH<lb/>
Student Center, from Sept 6<lb/>
through the 13th, to see the exhibit<lb/>
of editorial cartoons by John<lb/>
Weyler Displayed in the lower<lb/>
gallery (1st floor), the cartoons<lb/>
appeared m The East Carolinian<lb/>
trom January 1980 to the present<lb/>
Subiect matter includes campus<lb/>
crapola. international idiocy and<lb/>
predatory Presidents<lb/>
LSAT<lb/>
The Law School Admission Test<lb/>
will be offered at East Carolina<lb/>
University on Saturday, October 3.<lb/>
19o81 Application blanks are to be<lb/>
completed and mailed to Educa<lb/>
tionai Testing Service, Box 966 R.<lb/>
Princeton, NJ 08540 Registration<lb/>
postmarked after this date must<lb/>
be accompanied by a 115. non<lb/>
refundable late registration tee<lb/>
FRISBEE<lb/>
If yoiu want to play you are<lb/>
okay' Ultimate Team I F A af<lb/>
filiation and officer elections on<lb/>
agenda tor this Thursday evening,<lb/>
7 00 pm, room 721 MendenhaH Stu<lb/>
dent Center<lb/>
LACROSSE<lb/>
For all persons interested in in<lb/>
formation on and membership m<lb/>
the East Carolina Lacrose Club<lb/>
There will be a meeting on<lb/>
Wednesday. Sept. 16 at the Beta<lb/>
house, 603 E 9th St (Behind<lb/>
Joyner Library) at 6 00 p m For<lb/>
further information call 757 1366<lb/>
and ask for Tom<lb/>
CORSO<lb/>
There will be a meeting ot the<lb/>
Corrections Social work<lb/>
organization today in MendenhaH<lb/>
room 221 All social work and cor<lb/>
rections maiors and intended ma<lb/>
lOrs are urged to attmd!<lb/>
UNCTRANSIT<lb/>
Chapel Hill Transit's Tarheel<lb/>
Express bus service will be<lb/>
available for the University of<lb/>
North Carolina s season opening<lb/>
football game against East<lb/>
Carolina University on September<lb/>
12 This service operates non stop<lb/>
between each of three park ride<lb/>
lots around Chapel Hill and Gate 4<lb/>
at Kenan Stadium Free parking is<lb/>
available at the Kroger Plaza lot.<lb/>
located on Elliot Road between<lb/>
East Franklm Street and the<lb/>
15 501 bypass the airport lot on<lb/>
Estes Drive iust west ot NC 86<lb/>
(Airport Road! and the Glen Len<lb/>
nox Park Ride lot on NC 54 adia<lb/>
cent to the 15 501 bypass Buses<lb/>
leave the lots every 10 to 15<lb/>
minutes between 11 15 am and<lb/>
12 40 p m , and depart trom Gate 4<lb/>
at Kenan Stadium immediately<lb/>
after the game<lb/>
One way tares are Si 00 tor<lb/>
adults, and S 75 tor youth 17 and<lb/>
under or seniors 65 and over For<lb/>
passengers showing a valid<lb/>
Chapel Hill Transit bus pass these<lb/>
tares are reduced to75 tor<lb/>
adults, ano S 50 lor youths and<lb/>
seniors EXACT CJANGE will be<lb/>
necessary, as the drivers will not<lb/>
be able to make cna<lb/>
SIGN LANGUAGE<lb/>
East Carolina University and<lb/>
The Program for Hearing<lb/>
impaired Students will once again<lb/>
sponsor the ECU Sign Language<lb/>
Club for students and members of<lb/>
the Greenville community who<lb/>
would like to meet and practice<lb/>
thier communication skills The<lb/>
organizational meeting for the<lb/>
1981 82 school year will be held<lb/>
Sunday. Sept 13 at 7 p m in the<lb/>
MendenhaH Student Center Multi<lb/>
Purpose Room on the East<lb/>
Carolina University campus<lb/>
MINI COURSES<lb/>
Register today for a non credit<lb/>
mmi course m clogging, CPR<lb/>
training, popular dance or<lb/>
Calligraphy These courses are<lb/>
now being offered by MendenhaH<lb/>
Student Center and are available<lb/>
to all ECU students, faculty and<lb/>
stalf MSC members and their<lb/>
guests<lb/>
Individuals must register in per<lb/>
son at the MendenhaH Central<lb/>
Ticket Office between the hours ot<lb/>
10 am and 4 pm. Monday through<lb/>
Friday Registration will be ac<lb/>
cepted through the day prior to the<lb/>
drst class meeting The first<lb/>
course begins Monday, September<lb/>
14<lb/>
For further information contact<lb/>
the Central Ticket Office or Tana<lb/>
Nobles at 75 6iU Also, course<lb/>
schedules and detailed mforma<lb/>
tion are available at the MSC In<lb/>
formation Center<lb/>
DAT<lb/>
The Dental Aptitude Test will be<lb/>
offered at East Carolina Universi<lb/>
ty on Saturday, October 3 1981<lb/>
Application blanks are to be mail<lb/>
ed m time to be received by the<lb/>
Division of Educational<lb/>
Measurements. American Dental<lb/>
Association, 211 East Chicago<lb/>
Ave , Chicago, Illinois 60011 by<lb/>
September 7 1981 Applications<lb/>
may he obtained from the ECU<lb/>
Testing Center, Speight Building,<lb/>
Room 105<lb/>
TUTORIAL<lb/>
ASSISTANCE<lb/>
if you ar pursuing a degree m<lb/>
allied health nursing, pre<lb/>
medicine, pre dentistry, or<lb/>
medicine you may qualify for free<lb/>
tutorial assistance through the<lb/>
Center for Student Opportunities<lb/>
iCSO). School of Medicine in ad<lb/>
dition. eligible students can par<lb/>
tiopate m individualized or group<lb/>
learning skills sessions it you<lb/>
would tike to be considered tor<lb/>
participation in any ot the COST<lb/>
FREE services, contact Dr Frye.<lb/>
Center tor Student Opportunities<lb/>
217 Wh.chard Annex, or call for an<lb/>
appontment at 757 6122, 6075 or<lb/>
6081<lb/>
RECREATIONAL<lb/>
CLUBS<lb/>
Organizational meetings for the<lb/>
formation of several recreational<lb/>
clubs will be held at MendenhaH<lb/>
Student Center on the following<lb/>
dates<lb/>
Table Tennis Club - (Monday.<lb/>
Sept 21 7pm. Table Tennis<lb/>
Rooms)<lb/>
Chess Backgammon Club ?<lb/>
(Tuesday. Sept 71 7 pm. Cof<lb/>
feehouse)<lb/>
Hearts Spades Club<lb/>
(Wednesday. Sept 33 7pm. TV<lb/>
area)<lb/>
These groups meet on a week<lb/>
basis so participants can socialize<lb/>
and enioy some friendly competi<lb/>
tion with others who share their m<lb/>
terest m a sport Sign up today at<lb/>
the MendenhaH Billiards Center if<lb/>
you would like to participate in<lb/>
any of these clubs<lb/>
BOWLING LEAGUES<lb/>
MSC mixed doubles tX ? ' ?<lb/>
leagues are now being lormed lor<lb/>
ttie tall semester students m<lb/>
terested in oowling on a Monday<lb/>
or Tuesday evening league may<lb/>
Sign up at the ground floor I<lb/>
board at Mendi<lb/>
Thf league orgar zaql<lb/>
meeting will be held Monday<lb/>
September U at 6 pm Bring<lb/>
friends and sign up today<lb/>
COOP<lb/>
A representative from the Na<lb/>
?; institutes ot Health Normal<lb/>
nteer Program m Bethesda<lb/>
MD will be on campus Sept 2 and<lb/>
29 to mtervew students for Spring<lb/>
1982 plarement Anyone interested<lb/>
my aspe t of the health 'are<lb/>
would fmd this<lb/>
1 rnof <lb/>
nation contact tne Co Op Of<lb/>
f.ce 313 Rawi or telephone<lb/>
757 6979-6375 today'<lb/>
cso<lb/>
The Center for Student Oppor<lb/>
tunities (CSO). School of<lb/>
Medicine, is currently seeking<lb/>
highly qualified undergraduate<lb/>
and graduate students to work<lb/>
part time as tutors Interested<lb/>
students with expertise in either<lb/>
chemistry anatomy, physiology<lb/>
biology, math physics. English or<lb/>
SLAP are encouraged to at<lb/>
Other academic areas are also<lb/>
considered Competi'ivr wage<lb/>
Contact Dr Frye, Center tor Stu<lb/>
dent Opportunities, 217 Whichard<lb/>
Annex or call tor an appointment<lb/>
at 757 6122.6075,6081<lb/>
CRAFTS<lb/>
Crafts workshops are now<lb/>
available at the crafts center m<lb/>
MendenhaH Pottery darkroom<lb/>
techniques, floor loom weaving<lb/>
photography Christmas pat<lb/>
chwork. handbuiit Christmas<lb/>
ceram.es. beginning iewelry silk<lb/>
screening, and woodworking are<lb/>
the workshops which are<lb/>
available<lb/>
All ECU students, student<lb/>
dependents, as well as faculty.<lb/>
staff and their dependents who are<lb/>
MSC members, are eligible to par<lb/>
ticipate Everyone must register<lb/>
for the workshops at the Crafts<lb/>
Center no later than the Saturday<lb/>
prior to the first meeting of a<lb/>
workshop Workshop schedules<lb/>
are available at the Crafts Center<lb/>
and MSC Information Cente'<lb/>
first workshop begins Mo'<lb/>
September 14<lb/>
Crafts Center hours are ! ;<lb/>
10 pm Monday through Fr ? <lb/>
and 12 00 noon until 5 pm Sal<lb/>
day<lb/>
For further information ra' the<lb/>
Crafts Center or Tana No;<lb/>
157611<lb/>
BILLIARDS LEAGUE<lb/>
terested<lb/>
?<lb/>
and women, who are interested m<lb/>
forming a league to mee' wet ?<lb/>
may sign up at the Mit"1i nhan<lb/>
Billiards Center An organ.za<lb/>
tionai meeting will be held T ?<lb/>
day September 15 at 7 00 pr-<lb/>
the B'Hiards Center<lb/>
League scores will be I ?<lb/>
ped so persons with . 11<lb/>
of ability can compete equal ?<lb/>
Trophies will be awai ?<lb/>
several divisions<lb/>
LANGUAGE<lb/>
PLACEMENT<lb/>
University students are remind<lb/>
ed that, m accordance , tl<lb/>
University regulations ?-?<lb/>
they enroll tor the first time 1 n<lb/>
foreign language mat the, studied<lb/>
m high school they must tat<lb/>
placement examination in<lb/>
languagt-<lb/>
only date on which t<lb/>
language placement tps's "ay be<lb/>
taken before Preregistration and<lb/>
Registration for Spring. 19ft.<lb/>
Thursday, October I Tests <lb/>
given at 3 30 p m as follow<lb/>
Language Room<lb/>
French BC 301<lb/>
German BC 302<lb/>
Latin BC 303<lb/>
Spanish BC 306<lb/>
Students mtending to '<lb/>
a-guage placement test on Oc<lb/>
totoer 1 msut register tor it<lb/>
Foreign Language departrr.<lb/>
office. Brewster A431 on or c-<lb/>
 ? Jnesdasy. Sept 30<lb/>
Language placemen- rest! a<lb/>
not be given on registration da<lb/>
during the drop add period dui<lb/>
Sprmg semestesr 1982<lb/>
Students not properiy enrolled in<lb/>
a foreign language course a<lb/>
nave '0 withdraw from the course<lb/>
Gi amoutlayd Faliques<lb/>
Shuij Sleeping Bags Backpacks<lb/>
? 'amping Equipment. Sine1 Toad<lb/>
&amp;hoe Dishas And Ov?r 700 0t<lb/>
lrnt New And Us?d 'teins<lb/>
Jowboy Boots SiS 95<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY STORE<lb/>
iSOl S tvans Stieet<lb/>
NEW FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
ashif ?<lb/>
ItH group ? ? on<lb/>
? ? j r. goes<lb/>
? ? Meeting ?? ? Saturaai<lb/>
? ' at pm in the B <lb/>
build,ng room 103<lb/>
? ited to 1<lb/>
'ormation cor<lb/>
'56 9626 ? 1<lb/>
wift exciting timi<lb/>
God s ?<lb/>
The Kasl Carolinian<lb/>
Srrvinf tht. u ?  ?<lb/>
Published every Tuesday anc<lb/>
Thursday during the acactem r<lb/>
year and ever, Wednesday CKir<lb/>
? summer<lb/>
" ? . Fas' Carolinian s " ?<lb/>
tical newspaper of Eas'<lb/>
Carolina Univers ? owned,<lb/>
operated and pud shed tor and<lb/>
?  ' t F as' Carolina<lb/>
Subscription Rate SI0 yearly<lb/>
Second class postage paid at<lb/>
Greenville. N C<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
are located in the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus of ECU<lb/>
Greenville. N C<lb/>
Telephone 757 (.34 ?J7 ?J0?<lb/>
Application to mail at second<lb/>
class postage rates is pending at<lb/>
Greenville N C<lb/>
RIGGAN<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
q?t?ENV!LLE<lb/>
TWO DOORS FROM<lb/>
COX FLORIST<lb/>
111 W 4th SI<lb/>
SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
VERY BEST<lb/>
758-0204<lb/>
<lb/>
Copyr.ght 1981<lb/>
Kroger Sav on<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
0 Sold To Dealers<lb/>
on<lb/>
items and Prices<lb/>
Elective thru Sept 12 1981<lb/>
-<lb/>
We're at the head of the class<lb/>
when It comes to delivering<lb/>
campus needs. Be a high<lb/>
achiever in value-<lb/>
shop Kroger Sav-on!<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is required to be readily<lb/>
available for sale in each Kroger Sav on. except as specifi<lb/>
cally noted in this ad If we do run out of an item we will offer<lb/>
you your choice of a comparable item when available, reflec<lb/>
ting the same savings or a ramcbecK which will entitle you to<lb/>
purchase the advertised item at the advertised price within 30<lb/>
days<lb/>
OPEN Mon. thru Sat. 8 AM TO<lb/>
MIDNIGHT?Sun. 9 AM TO 9 PM<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Budweis1<lb/>
<lb/>
OSCAR MAYER SLICED<lb/>
f All-Meat<lb/>
W Bologna<lb/>
99<lb/>
A2-0z<lb/>
Gars<lb/>
SH??g? <lb/>
SHAMPOO<lb/>
OR CONDITIONER<lb/>
Vidal<lb/>
Sassoon<lb/>
Pepsi<lb/>
$4?9<lb/>
2- 30<lb/>
8-Oz:<lb/>
Btl.<lb/>
8-Oz<lb/>
Pkg.<lb/>
US NO 1 RED OR<lb/>
Golden Delicious<lb/>
5-Lb.<lb/>
Bag<lb/>
peanut<lb/>
BUTT<lb/>
?el"<lb/>
100-<lb/>
Page<lb/>
BEST RITE<lb/>
Theme<lb/>
Book<lb/>
59<lb/>
FRESH MADE CHEESE OR<lb/>
Pepperoni<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
? h -<lb/>
3P<lb/>
2 $5 -to<lb/>
stvle<lb/>
.?? Jf<lb/>
K - -<lb/>
BAGGED<lb/>
Btfctf chips &amp; Snacks<lb/>
2A-OX<lb/>
Loaves<lb/>
1i gBSBftslO<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
j<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
fcC<lb/>
fel<lb/>
I<lb/>
l<lb/>
j<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
ar<lb/>
b<lb/>
<pb facs="00057422_0003"/><lb/>
THE LAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTLMBFR10, 1981<lb/>
"it M?<lb/>
Normal<lb/>
? 2t ana<lb/>
? tng<lb/>
??.tea<lb/>
are<lb/>
mu<lb/>
t in<lb/>
p O<lb/>
'one<lb/>
fSHIP<lb/>
,?n.p is<lb/>
(?nun<lb/>
-<lb/>
N<lb/>
E<lb/>
P<lb/>
OM<lb/>
AIR<lb/>
IE<lb/>
KST<lb/>
04<lb/>
lass<lb/>
ring<lb/>
high<lb/>
lalue-<lb/>
v-on!<lb/>
'?adiy<lb/>
ipecifi<lb/>
offer<lb/>
re'iec<lb/>
to<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
IS<lb/>
Scott Back On The Farm? Haw River Style<lb/>
HAW RIVER<lb/>
(UPI)? For the first<lb/>
time in two decades,<lb/>
Robert W. Scott is back<lb/>
on the farm his family<lb/>
has worked since the<lb/>
1800s.<lb/>
The former gover-<lb/>
nor, lieutenant gover-<lb/>
nor, co-chairman of the<lb/>
Appalachian Regional<lb/>
Commission and<lb/>
soundly defeated<lb/>
gubernatorial can-<lb/>
didate has a new<lb/>
outlook on life from<lb/>
the vantagepoint of the<lb/>
1,500 acre Melville<lb/>
Farm.<lb/>
More than a year<lb/>
after losing every coun-<lb/>
ty in the state to Jim<lb/>
Hunt in the Democratic<lb/>
primary, Scott is asked:<lb/>
Is he politically dead I<lb/>
"Probably comes<lb/>
the quick reply from<lb/>
the man in work<lb/>
clothes.<lb/>
Does Bob Scott carer<lb/>
"No comes the<lb/>
quicker reply.<lb/>
The farm has only<lb/>
164 milking cows and<lb/>
Scott's concern now is<lb/>
not for campaigning,<lb/>
but rebuilding the dairy<lb/>
herd.<lb/>
"While I wasn't<lb/>
around, we got into<lb/>
some management pro-<lb/>
blems here because I<lb/>
wasn't here to look<lb/>
after all our breeding<lb/>
schedules and so<lb/>
forth Scott said in a<lb/>
recent interview.<lb/>
"My son is here with<lb/>
me now and he and 1<lb/>
think we have about<lb/>
got it turned so we will<lb/>
build back up to our<lb/>
capacity gradually<lb/>
Scott, like other<lb/>
farmers, worries about<lb/>
the weather. Will the<lb/>
summer thunder-<lb/>
showers hold off a few<lb/>
more days until the<lb/>
combines can get to a<lb/>
field of grain ready for<lb/>
harvest?<lb/>
"I'm my own boss<lb/>
he says. "Nobody tells<lb/>
me what to do except<lb/>
the banker, my<lb/>
preacher and my wife,<lb/>
and I'm not going to<lb/>
say in what order<lb/>
North Carolina's<lb/>
40th governor does not<lb/>
brood over what he in-<lb/>
sists was his last<lb/>
political bid.<lb/>
"When 1 lost this last<lb/>
campaign, the world<lb/>
didn't come to an end<lb/>
as far as 1 was concern-<lb/>
ed he says. "I en-<lb/>
joyed it. I don't regret<lb/>
running for a minute<lb/>
The reason he was<lb/>
defeated so soundly are<lb/>
self-evident to Scott:<lb/>
He was late entering<lb/>
the race. Hunt had<lb/>
already sewed up the<lb/>
major contributors<lb/>
who had financed his<lb/>
past political cam-<lb/>
paigns, and he just<lb/>
didn't have the bucks<lb/>
to be competitive.<lb/>
Scott is comfortable,<lb/>
relaxed and refleaive<lb/>
as he sits in the small<lb/>
wooden "office" in<lb/>
back of his father's<lb/>
house where he and his<lb/>
wife first lived after<lb/>
their marriage.<lb/>
Scott said he learned<lb/>
a hard lesson during the<lb/>
primary battle against<lb/>
Hunt? the campaign<lb/>
trail has changed.<lb/>
There is less personal<lb/>
contact with voters and<lb/>
the emphasis has<lb/>
shifted to slick and ex-<lb/>
pensive advertising<lb/>
campaigns.<lb/>
That's another<lb/>
reason he won't run<lb/>
Brewer Quits Post<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
ECU, but a source close to the admimstraion<lb/>
felt the chancellor's main problem was that he<lb/>
never became comfortable with the atmosphere<lb/>
of eastern North Carolina. "He was an out-<lb/>
sider the source said, "and he never learned to<lb/>
play ECU politics the way Leo could Leo<lb/>
Jenkins, Brewer's predecesssor, served a<lb/>
chancellor for 18 years.<lb/>
Futrell acknowledged that succeeding Jenkins<lb/>
may have been difficult for Brewer. "I think<lb/>
anybody following in Leo Jenkins' footsteps<lb/>
would have a tough row to hoe<lb/>
The trustee chairman would not speculate<lb/>
upon candidates for either the interim or perma-<lb/>
nent chancellor but said a number of candidates<lb/>
had been mentioned.<lb/>
According to Friday, a panel consisting of<lb/>
five members of the board of trustees, four<lb/>
faculty members, the alumni association presi-<lb/>
dent and SGA President Lester Nail would<lb/>
choose the new chancellor.<lb/>
Friday will attend the trustee's next meeting,<lb/>
tentatively scheduled for late September, and<lb/>
will announce at that time a timetable for nam-<lb/>
ing an interim and later permanent replacement.<lb/>
Futrell said the panel will study all candidates<lb/>
and said he felt the search will be "a very<lb/>
dedicated effort this time<lb/>
Friday felt the tendency of the panel would be<lb/>
to look within the university for a replacement.<lb/>
"I would assume that having just chosen<lb/>
somebody from outside, the inclination would<lb/>
be to consider someone from inside the universi-<lb/>
ty community<lb/>
Lester Nail said of the news, "My whole reac-<lb/>
tion to this is that I feel a loss. I think, as far as<lb/>
students go, he's done an excellent job<lb/>
He pointed to Brewer's support of the fall<lb/>
break as an example of the chancellor's concern<lb/>
for students. "If it weren't for him, we wouldn't<lb/>
have a fall break<lb/>
He added tha he did not yet know whom he<lb/>
would support to be the new chancellor. "1 am<lb/>
so inexperienced at that I don't know. I just<lb/>
want to get a chancellor as good as Brewer<lb/>
Reacting to the announcement, Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Student Life Elmer Meyer said,<lb/>
"I'm sorry. I guess for me it's sad because I<lb/>
came here partly because of Chancellor Brewer<lb/>
and the mutual excitement we had about the<lb/>
potential of the job (as vice chancellor)<lb/>
Meyer praised Brewer for his emphasis on the<lb/>
internal organization of the university and his<lb/>
stress on academic quality. "I think Chancellor<lb/>
Brewer is ari excellent man<lb/>
Brewer, wo could not be reached for com-<lb/>
ment, was also a candidate for the presidency of<lb/>
Louisville University in November of 1980 but<lb/>
later withdrew his name from consideration.<lb/>
A source on the screening committee at WVU<lb/>
told United Press International that Brewer was<lb/>
a candidate for president of the university but<lb/>
that he had not yet visited the school. The<lb/>
source added that Brewer had not been ap-<lb/>
pointed to the position as of Wednesday.<lb/>
"There have been erroneous reports that we<lb/>
are going to make the announcement today, and<lb/>
that is verv off the wall the source said.<lb/>
again.<lb/>
"1 never was any<lb/>
good at raising<lb/>
money he said. "The<lb/>
requirement of raising<lb/>
large sums of money is<lb/>
distasteful to me. I<lb/>
know it is necessary,<lb/>
but that is just<lb/>
something I have never<lb/>
been interested in<lb/>
While his desire for<lb/>
political office is gone,<lb/>
Scott's interest in<lb/>
politics is undeminish-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
"I'll always be in-<lb/>
terested in government<lb/>
and politics-who is do-<lb/>
ing what to whom,<lb/>
whose throat is being<lb/>
cut and whose knife is<lb/>
in whose rib. I suspect I<lb/>
will be supportive of<lb/>
candidates, or be<lb/>
against them,<lb/>
whichever one will help<lb/>
them the most as time<lb/>
goes on.<lb/>
"I don't anticipate<lb/>
becoming involved in<lb/>
anything that would<lb/>
take me away from<lb/>
here<lb/>
From his farm 50<lb/>
miles from Raleigh,<lb/>
Scott sees a serious pro-<lb/>
blem with North<lb/>
Carolina's government.<lb/>
The cabinet form of<lb/>
government, he said,<lb/>
has been a mistake. It<lb/>
has taken government<lb/>
another step away from<lb/>
the people.<lb/>
"It has created a<lb/>
level of bureaucracy far<lb/>
beyond anything I<lb/>
foresaw or 1 would<lb/>
never have recommend-<lb/>
ed it he says.<lb/>
"You got the<lb/>
secretary of a given<lb/>
department, you got<lb/>
deputy secretaries, you<lb/>
got assistant<lb/>
secretaries. You got a<lb/>
whole level of ad-<lb/>
ministrative<lb/>
bureaucracy that was<lb/>
not there prior to that<lb/>
reorganization, and it<lb/>
has tended to insulate<lb/>
the management of the<lb/>
departments from the<lb/>
working people<lb/>
There are sources of<lb/>
pride in his administra-<lb/>
tion restructuring the<lb/>
system of higher educa-<lb/>
tion, beginning the<lb/>
public kindergarten<lb/>
system, the first steps<lb/>
to establish a school of<lb/>
veterinary medicine,<lb/>
support of the last<lb/>
Carolina medi I<lb/>
school.<lb/>
The remembered I<lb/>
times of the administi<lb/>
tion focus on civil<lb/>
unrest.<lb/>
"It as a very ten e<lb/>
time. We were caught<lb/>
up in what was happen-<lb/>
ing across the ent<lb/>
country and we w<lb/>
not immune to the<lb/>
dissatisfaction<lb/>
young people, par<lb/>
ticularK over the Vi<lb/>
nam war, over race<lb/>
relations, over<lb/>
dissatisfaction with tl<lb/>
establishment he says.<lb/>
"Some of the hard<lb/>
moments I had as<lb/>
governor were in deal<lb/>
ing with race relations,<lb/>
particularly whe<lb/>
things got out of ha:<lb/>
119 E.5th<lb/>
752-8711<lb/>
Lester Nail<lb/>
Photo By JON JORDAN<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
ABORTIONS FROM Ul?<lb/>
WEEKS<lb/>
AT FURTHER EXPENSE<lb/>
$11500 Pregn?p-y Test. Birth<lb/>
Control. anw Problem<lb/>
Pregnancy Counseling. For<lb/>
further information call<lb/>
832 0535 (Toll Free Number<lb/>
800 22) 2568 between 9 AM<lb/>
and 5PM Weekdays<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
917 West Morgan St<lb/>
Raleigh. N C<lb/>
EVANS SEAFOOD<lb/>
MKT.<lb/>
203 W. 9th St. 752-2332<lb/>
Pitt Plaza Barber Shop<lb/>
Walk Ins &amp;<lb/>
Appointments<lb/>
All Cuts<lb/>
5.00<lb/>
756-1760<lb/>
?Variety of Fresh &amp; Frozen Seafood<lb/>
?Lobster Tails 'King Crab Legs<lb/>
?Clams Crab Meat<lb/>
?Hard Crabs<lb/>
OF<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
OPEN TO THE PUBLIC<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
12 PRICE<lb/>
INTRODUCTORY OFFER<lb/>
Applications are now "<lb/>
being accepted.<lb/>
WE ALSO SELLCJ A 00<lb/>
USED TIRES 1U -<lb/>
LADIES' DON'T FORGET EVERY MONDAY<lb/>
IS SADIE HAWKINS DAY. TWO FOR ONE.<lb/>
WESTERN<lb/>
SIZZLIN'<lb/>
Steakhouse<lb/>
DAILY SPECIALS<lb/>
MONDAY - SI OO<lb/>
CHOPPED STEAK ??"<lb/>
TUESDAY - SI OO<lb/>
BEEF TIPS I.TT<lb/>
WEDNESDAY - $1 OQ<lb/>
CUBED STEAK ? 'O<lb/>
THURSDAY - SI AQ<lb/>
STEAK SANDWICH ? ?<lb/>
FRIDAY - SO TO<lb/>
U.S.D.A. RIB EYE .T<lb/>
SATURDAY - $o QO<lb/>
BARBEQUE RIBS Z.7T<lb/>
SUNDAY - SI OO<lb/>
STEAK ON A STICK ? ?"<lb/>
All Meals are Complete<lb/>
Including Baked Potato or<lb/>
French Fries &amp; Texas Toast<lb/>
and<lb/>
Free Tea bculd.<lb/>
Famous Salad Bar<lb/>
Take Out Service ? 203 E. 10th St. ? 750-2712<lb/>
24 By-Pass ? 756-0040 ? Hours II a.m10 p.m. ? MonThurs.<lb/>
10a.m11 p.m. FriSun.<lb/>
WAS A<lb/>
GREAT<lb/>
SUCCESS<lb/>
THANKS TO OUR SPONSORS<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/>
K<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/>
Ratters<lb/>
i-fajfK<lb/>
ofta<lb/>
A<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057422_0004"/><lb/>
.<lb/>
Qtye ?aat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Paul Collins. mw-cn<lb/>
Chuck Foster, ?ww ?Atxnmt Jimmy Dupree, ,???,?, Frf,W<lb/>
Chris Uchok. ?WAn) .???,? Charles Chandler, v? w.or<lb/>
Alison Bartel, production ttmmtm Tom Hall, nwmw<lb/>
Steve Moore, cv?w? m Steve Bachner, ?? ??<lb/>
September 10, 1981<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Cycle Tips<lb/>
Common Sense, And Courtesy<lb/>
It's time for a few lessons in com-<lb/>
mon sense for those friends of<lb/>
pedestrians and motorists alike:<lb/>
bicyclists.<lb/>
First and foremost on the list of<lb/>
common sense tips for enthusiasts<lb/>
of two-wheeled transportation:<lb/>
don't ride the thing on the sidewalk.<lb/>
Almost everyone who has toured<lb/>
the campus of East Carolina on foot<lb/>
has suffered the trauma of dodging<lb/>
one of these vehicles of terror. If the<lb/>
thing gets you to class so much<lb/>
faster than walking in the first<lb/>
place, why ride it in an area reserved<lb/>
for pedestrians?<lb/>
If common courtesy to people on<lb/>
foot is not reason enough to stay in<lb/>
the street, then consider the fact<lb/>
that it's against the law to operate a<lb/>
bicycle in a pedestrian walkway.<lb/>
True, campus police have been lax<lb/>
in enforcement of this law, and<lb/>
bicycles are not a serious threat to<lb/>
our national security. But<lb/>
nonetheless, the law is the law.<lb/>
Granted pumping your pedals up<lb/>
Fifth Street in rush-hour traffic is<lb/>
not one of the most relaxing ac-<lb/>
tivities around, but motor vehicle<lb/>
traffic is relatively light between<lb/>
classes.<lb/>
This brings us to a word in<lb/>
defense of motorists. Bicycles have<lb/>
as much right to be on public streets<lb/>
as a Mercedes, BMW or other car.<lb/>
But common sense dictates that the<lb/>
bicyclist should realize which<lb/>
operator is injured more severely in<lb/>
an accident? the driver of the 2,000<lb/>
pound automobile or the person on<lb/>
the 20-pound cycle. (If you're still<lb/>
wondering, it's not the guy in the<lb/>
car.)<lb/>
Probably one of the most puzzl-<lb/>
ing results of the Arab oil embargo<lb/>
and subsequent price escalation is<lb/>
the promulgation of mopeds. The<lb/>
idea behind this vehicle was the use<lb/>
of an inexpensive, fuel-efficient<lb/>
alternative to the car.<lb/>
Instead, American ingenuity (and<lb/>
laziness) turned the moped into an<lb/>
alternative to walking. Now instead<lb/>
of walking and using zero gallons of<lb/>
gas, people get to consume an even<lb/>
greater volume of our world's most<lb/>
priceless commodity.<lb/>
The operators of mopeds have<lb/>
earned special accolades for their ef-<lb/>
forts to further congest sidewalks<lb/>
and streets, as well as reduce<lb/>
petroleum reserves.<lb/>
The late 1970s and early 1980s<lb/>
have seen Americans realize the<lb/>
need for physical fitness, as many<lb/>
people jog or utilize some other ex-<lb/>
ercise program every day. But the<lb/>
most natural and conservative form<lb/>
of exercise? walking? has<lb/>
become a threat to personal safety.<lb/>
A Calm And Reasoned Man<lb/>
r Campus Forum<lb/>
ECU Student Embarrassed<lb/>
I wish to express my disappointment<lb/>
of the ECU students at Saturday night's<lb/>
football game between ECU and<lb/>
Western Carolina. First, during the<lb/>
playing of our national anthem several<lb/>
students displayed their limited in-<lb/>
telligence by their continuous yelling<lb/>
throughout the number. Secondly,<lb/>
although alcoholic beverages are pro-<lb/>
hibited in the stadium there was certain-<lb/>
ly no lack of "spirits which con-<lb/>
tributed to the four fights that I witness-<lb/>
ed. The university police were ineffective<lb/>
in controlling these problems.<lb/>
The constant running up and down<lb/>
the aisles reminded me more of a zoo<lb/>
than spectators at a football game.<lb/>
I would like to congratulate the team<lb/>
on a superb game and Coach Emory<lb/>
should be praised for rebuilding the<lb/>
Pirate football team.<lb/>
In conclusion, I'm not against anyone<lb/>
having a good time, however there are<lb/>
limits. In order for ECU to compete<lb/>
with ACC schools athletically ECU<lb/>
students must compete with ACC<lb/>
students by having more of an interest in<lb/>
the game rather than to the bottom of<lb/>
their beer can.<lb/>
GREG PARKER<lb/>
Sophomore, psychology<lb/>
Soccer Excitement<lb/>
Starting my fourth year here at ECU,<lb/>
I am ashamed to admit that today (Sept.<lb/>
8) was the first time I've ever attended<lb/>
an ECU soccer game. Have you ever<lb/>
seen a soccer game? They are exciting,<lb/>
fast, and full of skillful players. Our<lb/>
guys are really great! I think it is a terri-<lb/>
ble injustice that such a gifted bunch of<lb/>
guys play their guts out for a crowd of<lb/>
maybe fifty. With a school enrllment of<lb/>
thirteen thousand, it seems to me that<lb/>
more people should be going out to sup-<lb/>
port ouf soccer team. After watching<lb/>
our team play today, I know I am going<lb/>
to become a enthusiastic supporter.<lb/>
Come out and suport our soccer team.<lb/>
RICHELIE BRADLEY<lb/>
Junior, Early Child. Ed.<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<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 purposes of verification, all letters<lb/>
must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the author(s). i etters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced, or neatly printed. All let-<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for brevity.<lb/>
obscenity and libel, and no personal at-<lb/>
tacks will be pe, mitted. Letters by the<lb/>
same author are limited to one each 30<lb/>
days.<lb/>
HenthouJ<lb/>
O'<lb/>
WASH<lb/>
PI) - i<lb/>
O'Connor<lb/>
the opening<lb/>
tirmation h<lb/>
the I<lb/>
Supreme Co<lb/>
said today<lb/>
nov.<lb/>
vote oi<lb/>
tes like ah<lb/>
"I do r<lb/>
that, a<lb/>
can tel<lb/>
might<lb/>
ticular issue<lb/>
come be<lb/>
?<lb/>
prepared si<lb/>
the Senate<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
h e a r l:<lb/>
nination<lb/>
Her<lb/>
to be a<lb/>
blockade<lb/>
pected be<lb/>
tions on ho<lb/>
vote on a<lb/>
,e-? <lb/>
abortion anl<lb/>
Roy Wilkins died Tuesday at the<lb/>
age of 80, and even though his death<lb/>
was reported on the front page of<lb/>
newspapers across the country there<lb/>
are probably many wondering who<lb/>
he was.<lb/>
His name is not a household<lb/>
word, but his achievements are part<lb/>
of American history and culture. If<lb/>
Martin Luther King was the voice of<lb/>
the Civil Rights Movement, Wilkins<lb/>
was its mind.<lb/>
In 1955 Wilkins became executive<lb/>
director of the NAACP and served<lb/>
in that position for 22 years. During<lb/>
Wilkins' tenure, the NAACP helped<lb/>
lead black Americans from the<lb/>
shadows of discrimination and<lb/>
segregation to legal? ifnot always<lb/>
actual? equality with whites.<lb/>
In short, he was the primary ar-<lb/>
chitect of one of the greatest periods<lb/>
of advancement for an ethnic group<lb/>
in world history.<lb/>
His crowning achievement came<lb/>
with the Supreme Court's "Brown<lb/>
vs. the Board of Education" deci-<lb/>
sion in 1954 that outlawed separate<lb/>
but equal public schools. Wilkins<lb/>
was the chief planner of the strategy<lb/>
used in the case, and this classic of<lb/>
DOONESBURY<lb/>
American legal history was typical<lb/>
of the methods he used to win<lb/>
equality for blacks.<lb/>
He believed firmly that the court<lb/>
system was the best way to win<lb/>
equality and thus led the NAACP<lb/>
through a long series of court bat-<lb/>
tles. Wilkins was also a major pro-<lb/>
ponent of the various civil and<lb/>
voting rights acts Congress passed<lb/>
in the '60s. He believed in working<lb/>
through the sytem.<lb/>
Because of these beliefs, Wilkins<lb/>
was criticized and ridiculed by more<lb/>
militant blacks. But, if he thought it<lb/>
would do any good, Wilkins never<lb/>
hesitated to take the civil rights bat-<lb/>
tle to the streets.<lb/>
Like King though, he never ad-<lb/>
vocated violence. Calm, reason and<lb/>
persuasion were the tools with<lb/>
which he worked.<lb/>
Roy Wilkins was a man of whom<lb/>
not just blacks but all Americans<lb/>
should be proud. He was the em-<lb/>
bodiment of what is best in this<lb/>
country, and if he could give<lb/>
America one last message before he<lb/>
died it might have been this: the<lb/>
fight is not over.<lb/>
by Garry Trudeau<lb/>
m&amp;ziMtK-<lb/>
SWO10UIAN<lb/>
armAuam<lb/>
usrmxswi)<lb/>
nTtKHUATHON'<lb/>
I<lb/>
IHATSTW<lb/>
0UT0PA<lb/>
FtELOOF<lb/>
nan. i<lb/>
CAneiN<lb/>
I TENTH<lb/>
TBNTHT<lb/>
UOU'TBU.<lb/>
USTHE<lb/>
STDXYOF<lb/>
HOWnTU<lb/>
00 IT<lb/>
THESES ONLY<lb/>
ONBMtfTU<lb/>
00 m IRAN<lb/>
is SBvats ??<lb/>
fOKZbl MILES<lb/>
ant uiushs no manhole<lb/>
al0n6 the stoves if<lb/>
hay? thavsujhtt<lb/>
I 10VMEAN<lb/>
?Ht mi SHOKTBL<lb/>
ntAM BTOHtUM<lb/>
urfk-rue ntx&amp;sTOMi<lb/>
mwr- itrr. zosoce<lb/>
 vmumme'<lb/>
m a suou BuKsr of<lb/>
J smo. I bka em ne.<lb/>
 MCK! ASI8TCaN-<lb/>
. TAL MAX. I AM ALONE,<lb/>
i WOOff NOW ALL BUT<lb/>
CSPOMN! <lb/>
rrs the NExrn last<lb/>
HUE- TANOtAJNEP<lb/>
BVreLATWimJEVB<lb/>
I AM 6&amp;Ne JO UMN.<lb/>
SLCPENU. I HEAP.<lb/>
FOOTSTEPS' I LOOK<lb/>
BACK! <lb/>
mLES! 700 LATE! I<lb/>
mmiOOK KUNW0A<lb/>
BACK! LAMPPOST'<lb/>
Reagan Shadows 'Firesign Theatre9<lb/>
By DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
One of my favorite albums of all time is<lb/>
An LP called Think We're All Bozos on<lb/>
this Bus, recorded a few years back by a<lb/>
satirical troupe called the Firesign Theatre.<lb/>
The highlight of the record, for me, comes<lb/>
when the protagonist discovers that the<lb/>
President of the United States is not a real,<lb/>
flesh-and-blood person. He is, instead, a<lb/>
hologram ? a projected, three dimen-<lb/>
sional image, complete with a recorded<lb/>
voice that broadcasts trite homilies dripp-<lb/>
ing with phony friendliness and intimacy.<lb/>
Fantasies like that one seem to be merg-<lb/>
ing with reality now that Ronald Reagan is<lb/>
president. Here we have a chief executive<lb/>
who reportedly works only two or three<lb/>
hours a day. In August, tired and bored,<lb/>
Reagan took the month off, snoozing<lb/>
through the dogfight between U.S. and Li-<lb/>
byan jets, and venturing forth mainly to<lb/>
buy cowboy boots embossed with the<lb/>
presidential seal. When Reagan speaks<lb/>
without a script, aides say, he likes to<lb/>
reminisce about his old movies.<lb/>
Some have compared Reagan's style to<lb/>
that of Calvin Coolidge, but the unreal<lb/>
president of the Firesign Theatre may be a<lb/>
better comparison. Like the hologram-<lb/>
president of fantasy, Reagan is a symbol<lb/>
and a shill for Things As They Are, a<lb/>
dispenser of false affability and familiarity<lb/>
who is occasionally trotted out before the<lb/>
cameras by the men who really run the<lb/>
show, to hawk the New Right's political<lb/>
package. Then he is led back into the<lb/>
security of the White House, where he<lb/>
doesn't have to do anything tough, like<lb/>
recognize his Secretary of Housing and Ur-<lb/>
ban Development.<lb/>
Reviewing the old actor's performance,<lb/>
it's hard to believe that the man is real.<lb/>
And, actually, there is mounting evidence<lb/>
to suggest that Ronald Reagan is not of<lb/>
this earth. The tip-offs, not limited to his<lb/>
personality and workstyle, extend to his<lb/>
political positions.<lb/>
Reagan has, for example, proposed cut-<lb/>
ting back food stamps, upon which<lb/>
millions of Americans depend for<lb/>
subsistence-level meals. Real people have<lb/>
got to eat.<lb/>
Reagan proposes to foul the Clean Air<lb/>
Act. This is all very well for aliens, they<lb/>
don't have to breathe. People do.<lb/>
Reagan's National Institute of Occupa-<lb/>
tional Safety and Health has the names of<lb/>
hundreds of thousands of workers who are<lb/>
exposed to cancer-causing substances on<lb/>
the job ? but refuses to tell them about it.<lb/>
Flesh-and-blood humans get sick.<lb/>
Most revealing of all, though, is<lb/>
Reagan's decision to produce the neutron<lb/>
bomb ? you know, the weapon whose<lb/>
ultra-high radiation kills living things,<lb/>
while leaving property intact. Linked to<lb/>
this is the belief of some of the president's<lb/>
top advisors that we can survive a limited<lb/>
nuclear war ? even though most scientists<lb/>
and physiciains who have studied the mat-<lb/>
ter say otherwise, and basic human<lb/>
psychology tells us that living in a world<lb/>
devastated by atomic weapons would be a<lb/>
real-life horror show.<lb/>
There's one additional similarity bet-<lb/>
ween Reagan and the Firesign Theatre's<lb/>
fantasy-of-a-president. On the record, an<lb/>
alert, quizzical person fouls up the<lb/>
automated system that operates the presi-<lb/>
dent by asking a logical question that<lb/>
doesn't compute. Reagan, too, is thrown<lb/>
for a loop by thoughtful questions. That's<lb/>
why Press Secretary James Brady kept him<lb/>
at arm's length during the campaign, and<lb/>
why Reagan gives so few press conferences<lb/>
where he might have to face reporters ask-<lb/>
ing unrehearsed questions. Logic<lb/>
scrambles his circuits.<lb/>
One nice thing about the Firesign<lb/>
Theatre's White House scenario is that it's<lb/>
only 38 minute and 49 seconds in lengtu.<lb/>
The Reagan presidency will last a bit<lb/>
longer, until Americans, tired of the phony<lb/>
friendliness and concern masking anti-<lb/>
people policies, get up and change the<lb/>
record.<lb/>
&amp;AY, REMEMBER THE GAS SHORTAGE? PERFUME.<lb/>
MY ASHTRAY, PLEASE HOW 1 &amp;TOOD IN LINE FOR<lb/>
HOURfeA LITTLE COGNAC IN TME BATTERY, WILL<lb/>
YOU?FAYING ANY iACKEP-UP PRICE YOU ASKED<lb/>
SPlT-POLt&amp;H TME HEADLAMPS, OKAY? PUTTING<lb/>
UP WITH YOUR RUDENE&amp;SKl?)S MY 7TREg, WON'T<lb/>
YOU?TOO BAD ABOUT THl? OIL GLUT<lb/>
Nai<lb/>
' '? ? M<lb/>
<pb facs="00057422_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 10, 1981<lb/>
?<lb/>
o<lb/>
QL<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
4<lb/>
3<lb/>
-e<lb/>
n<lb/>
m<lb/>
that<lb/>
him<lb/>
and<lb/>
rences<lb/>
rs ak-<lb/>
gn<lb/>
it's<lb/>
length.<lb/>
a bit<lb/>
phony<lb/>
jnti-<lb/>
ihe<lb/>
Fume<lb/>
: FOR<lb/>
WILL<lb/>
?KED<lb/>
TTING<lb/>
won't<lb/>
PEPEIPENTHOU<lb/>
? Rev. Falwell Drops Suit Against Magazine<lb/>
Penthouse published an interview with Falwell earlier this year.<lb/>
ROANOKE, VA.<lb/>
(UP1) ? The Rev.<lb/>
Jerry Falwell has decid-<lb/>
ed not to pursue a 50<lb/>
million libel suit he fil-<lb/>
ed against Penthouse<lb/>
magazine earlier this<lb/>
year a spokesman said<lb/>
today.<lb/>
Cal Thomas,<lb/>
spokesman for the<lb/>
broadcast evangelist<lb/>
and founder of Moral<lb/>
Majority, said Falwell<lb/>
decided to "let it drop"<lb/>
after U.S. District<lb/>
Judge James Turk<lb/>
dismissed the lawsuit<lb/>
last month.<lb/>
"Jerry decided to let<lb/>
it drop, feeling that the<lb/>
point had been made<lb/>
and the message had<lb/>
gotten out to our peo-<lb/>
ple that he did not<lb/>
knowingly or willingly<lb/>
do the interview with a<lb/>
magazine that he con-<lb/>
sidered pornographic<lb/>
Thomas said in a<lb/>
telephone interview<lb/>
from the Lynchburg<lb/>
headquarters of<lb/>
FalwelPs ministry.<lb/>
Falwell had claimed<lb/>
the magazine bought<lb/>
interviews with him<lb/>
from two freelance<lb/>
writers who had pro-<lb/>
mised not to sell the<lb/>
material lo<lb/>
4'pornographic<lb/>
publications then<lb/>
published the material<lb/>
in March to make it ap-<lb/>
pear he gave an ex-<lb/>
clusive interview to a<lb/>
magazine he abhors.<lb/>
The freelance writers<lb/>
Andrew Duncan and<lb/>
Sashti Brata denied<lb/>
agreeing to any restric-<lb/>
tions on how they could<lb/>
use the material. Pen-<lb/>
thouse said it clearly<lb/>
identified the material<lb/>
as being based on two<lb/>
interviews by freelance<lb/>
writers.<lb/>
In dismissing the<lb/>
lawsuit Turk chided<lb/>
Falwell for trying to<lb/>
convert "what is essen-<lb/>
tially a private contrac-<lb/>
tual dispute into a<lb/>
broad based attack" on<lb/>
freedom of speech and<lb/>
press guaranteed by the<lb/>
First Amendment. The<lb/>
judge said Falwell<lb/>
could pursue breach of<lb/>
contract suit.<lb/>
After the suit was<lb/>
dismissed Falwell said<lb/>
he had achieved one of<lb/>
his "ultimate goals" in<lb/>
challenging Penthouse<lb/>
by letting the public<lb/>
know he would never<lb/>
give an interview to a<lb/>
pornographic<lb/>
magazine<lb/>
He also said he<lb/>
would not know what<lb/>
to do with money from<lb/>
Penthouse if he had<lb/>
won the suit.<lb/>
"What could a<lb/>
Christian ministser do<lb/>
with funds obtained<lb/>
from a pornographic<lb/>
industry?" he asked<lb/>
August 7.<lb/>
O'Connor Confirmation Hearings Begin<lb/>
I ROC K.Y M TM<lb/>
f'E-Vrffc Cps<lb/>
WASHINGTON<lb/>
(UP1) ? Sandra Day<lb/>
O'Connor, testifying at<lb/>
the opening of her con-<lb/>
firmation hearings as<lb/>
the first women<lb/>
Supreme Court Justice,<lb/>
said today she cannot<lb/>
now say how she would<lb/>
 ote on controversial<lb/>
issues like abortion.<lb/>
"I do not believe<lb/>
that, as a nominee, 1<lb/>
can tell you how I<lb/>
might vote on a par-<lb/>
ticular issue which may<lb/>
come before the<lb/>
court she said in a<lb/>
prepared statement as<lb/>
the Senate Judiciary<lb/>
Committee opened<lb/>
hearings on her<lb/>
nomination.<lb/>
Her position seemed<lb/>
to be a possible<lb/>
blockade to an ex-<lb/>
pected bevy of ques-<lb/>
tions on how she would<lb/>
vote on a variety of<lb/>
issues? particularly<lb/>
abortion and women's<lb/>
rights issues. The main<lb/>
opposition to her<lb/>
nomination has come<lb/>
from opponents of<lb/>
abortion and the Equal<lb/>
Rights Amendment.<lb/>
It was uncertain if<lb/>
the committee would<lb/>
accept her stance or<lb/>
press for answers,<lb/>
although she is ex-<lb/>
pected to win quick and<lb/>
easy confirmation.<lb/>
"This indeed is a<lb/>
historic occasion said<lb/>
Chairman Strom Thur-<lb/>
mond, R-S.C. who<lb/>
noted it was the first<lb/>
time the president had<lb/>
nominated a woman to<lb/>
the nation's highest<lb/>
court. "We will con-<lb/>
duct this proceeding in<lb/>
a full, fair and non-<lb/>
partisan manner<lb/>
Sen. Jeremiah Den-<lb/>
ton, RAla was one of<lb/>
the few senators openly<lb/>
critical of O'Conrwr.<lb/>
He said there were<lb/>
"questions with respect<lb/>
to your credibility"<lb/>
because of what he said<lb/>
was contradictory in-<lb/>
formation about her<lb/>
background.<lb/>
Denton, a New Right<lb/>
conservative, reserved<lb/>
judgment on her<lb/>
nomination, but said,<lb/>
"it is my earnest hope<lb/>
that your responses will<lb/>
be neither broad nor<lb/>
bland, as a lack of<lb/>
knowledge or lack of<lb/>
specificity in answers<lb/>
could easily be perceiv-<lb/>
ed as a lack of<lb/>
qualification or of can-<lb/>
dor<lb/>
But Sen. Edward<lb/>
Kennedy, DMass said<lb/>
based on what he knew<lb/>
he would support Mrs.<lb/>
O'Conncr and added<lb/>
she should not have to<lb/>
pass a litmus test of any-<lb/>
single group during the<lb/>
three days of hearings<lb/>
bv the committee.<lb/>
"The disturbing tac-<lb/>
tics of division, distor-<lb/>
tion and disay two<lb/>
dozen marchers for<lb/>
anti-abortion<lb/>
demonstrators paraded<lb/>
in front of the Dirksen<lb/>
Senate Office building<lb/>
with signs saying,<lb/>
"Vote No to Mrs. O<lb/>
"Dump O'Connor"<lb/>
and "Stop Abortion<lb/>
Dear Pirate Fans,<lb/>
On the way to Chapel Hill<lb/>
Saturday, show your tickets at the<lb/>
Happy Store and we will sell you a<lb/>
89 bag of ice for 25 C.<lb/>
?Sincerely,<lb/>
HAPPY STORE ?<lb/>
-  i r r in Tmi rr r '  <lb/>
i<lb/>
SAAD'S<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
3Kfc REPAIR<lb/>
J<lb/>
vZT4<lb/>
<lb/>
ll3 Grande<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
Qual<lb/>
Re pa<lb/>
LEARN<lb/>
TO SAIL<lb/>
(or just relax)<lb/>
aboard the<lb/>
sailing yacht<lb/>
"Celesity"<lb/>
one day of sailing ? $28<lb/>
(ECU special)<lb/>
Pamlico<lb/>
Sailing<lb/>
School<lb/>
?I ,???;<lb/>
Buccaneer MCV1SS ????<lb/>
756 3307 Greenville Square Center<lb/>
ALL SEATS<lb/>
SI SO til 5 30<lb/>
STARTS<lb/>
FRIDAY!<lb/>
.malt<lb/>
fOADlEj BAftBAKABACM<lb/>
Roadies f <lb/>
SHOWS,<lb/>
3 7<lb/>
Plaza Shell<lb/>
410 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Phone 75303<lb/>
Mrs.<lb/>
Moft-Sat. 7-11<lb/>
Sen. 10-it<lb/>
FINAL WEEK!<lb/>
WEEK!<lb/>
WOV1E<lb/>
A Complete Auto Repair Shop<lb/>
(Foreign &amp; Domestic)<lb/>
Full and Self Service Gas at Competitive<lb/>
Prices<lb/>
Road and Wrecker Service<lb/>
.7)<lb/>
SHELL'<lb/>
Discounts On Repairs With I.D. w<lb/>
HAIR<lb/>
PIZZAZZ<lb/>
WELCOMES<lb/>
If<lb/>
0tT<lb/>
 PT r I P EASTERN CAROLINA'S MOST COMPLETE<lb/>
Pi lC 7 ll PY COSMETIC AND FRAGRANCE STORE<lb/>
Carolina east mall igreenviHe<lb/>
now's the time to get your<lb/>
Clinique bonus: "Quick Answers"<lb/>
yours with any Clinique purchase<lb/>
of 6.50 or more. This is the time to<lb/>
come in and be given these five Clin-<lb/>
ique beauty-workers at no extra<lb/>
charge?because its Clinique bonus<lb/>
time You get: skin care in two famous<lb/>
forms, plus great makeups you might<lb/>
never have used before, all in handy<lb/>
travel sizes. After you've tried them?<lb/>
and seen how effective they are?we<lb/>
think you'll agree For good-looking<lb/>
skin. Clinique has all the answers<lb/>
Rose Poppy Lip Pencil. Sharpener.<lb/>
Pink Plum Lipstick, Clarifying Lotion 2.<lb/>
Bronzed Pink Colour Rub, Sub-Skin<lb/>
Cream<lb/>
From the Clinique collection:<lb/>
?-x Clinique Facial Soap8.50<lb/>
,Sl 2, 7th-Day Scrub Cream 8.50<lb/>
Clarifying Lotion 1, 2, or 3: 6 oz. 7.50<lb/>
12ozI2'50<lb/>
Dramatically Different Moisturizing<lb/>
Lotion: 2 oz, 8.50 4 oz, 13.50<lb/>
?0T<lb/>
X<lb/>
- I<lb/>
CLINIQUE<lb/>
Allergy Tested<lb/>
100 Fragrance Free<lb/>
!UI<lb/>
clarifying<lb/>
tattoo 2<lb/>
li<lb/>
U<lb/>
f.?<lb/>
Nancy Howell<lb/>
Bob Sladc, Jr. Cathy Swain<lb/>
(formerly fk LaKoamctlqug)<lb/>
We extend a personal invitation<lb/>
to all our clients and friends to<lb/>
visit us at our new location.<lb/>
v REDKEN Wc have the ReNun Hair Care,<lb/>
Skin Care &amp; Cosmetic Line.<lb/>
?<lb/>
?EED<lb/>
422 Arlington Boulevard<lb/>
(Taff Stationers Building)<lb/>
Telephone 756-7547<lb/>
Shop Monday<lb/>
Through Saturday<lb/>
10 a.m. Until 9 p.m.<lb/>
Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355)<lb/>
LZZHIZZD<lb/>
CLINIQUE<lb/>
computer<lb/>
t<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057422_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 10. 198!<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
L?toH<lb/>
Florida Band<lb/>
Blackfoot<lb/>
Still Developi<lb/>
Blackfoot is a rock'n'roll band.<lb/>
That deceptively simple statement<lb/>
may well be the most appropriate<lb/>
testimonial to this hard-working<lb/>
Florida-bred quartet, which has<lb/>
emerged from over a decade of<lb/>
dues-paying in bars and clubs across<lb/>
the nation to become a true interna-<lb/>
tional phenomenon.<lb/>
Guitarist?vocalist Ricky<lb/>
Medlocke, drummer Jakson Spires,<lb/>
bassist Greg T. Walker, and<lb/>
guitarist Charlie Hargrett are four<lb/>
musicians who believe in the time-<lb/>
honored doctrine of high voltage<lb/>
rock'n'roll. As shown on their third<lb/>
Atco album, "MARAUDER they<lb/>
preach that doctrine with a power<lb/>
and conviction that few contem-<lb/>
porary acts can match.<lb/>
The Blackfoot story begins in the<lb/>
town of Jacksonville - a small, in-<lb/>
dustrial city located in the north-<lb/>
east corner of the Florida panhan-<lb/>
dle. It's a tough, working-class<lb/>
town, one that doesn't enjoy that<lb/>
tropical, sunshine of Miami, the<lb/>
fashionable boulevards of Palm<lb/>
Beach, or the "Disney World" ex-<lb/>
citement of Orlando. What<lb/>
Jacksonville does possess, however,<lb/>
is a well-deserved reputation as one<lb/>
of the hottest rock'n'roll breeding<lb/>
grounds in the country. Since the<lb/>
late 1960's, tiny clubs that dot the<lb/>
Jacksonbille landscape have spawn-<lb/>
ed an impressive list of hard-rockin'<lb/>
supergroups, including The Allman<lb/>
Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd,<lb/>
Reggae Gets<lb/>
Rave Reviews<lb/>
Molly Hatchet, .38 Special, and of<lb/>
course, Blackfoot.<lb/>
Predating any of these groups,<lb/>
however, was a band called Fresh<lb/>
Garbage (named after a song by the<lb/>
group Spirit), which was the most<lb/>
popular act in the Jacksonbille club<lb/>
circuit back in 1968. The band<lb/>
featured the budding talents of four<lb/>
teen-aged musicians named<lb/>
Medlocke, Spires, Walker and<lb/>
Hargrett, and night after night they<lb/>
would excite the standingroom<lb/>
crowds with a brash, raw style that<lb/>
reflected their love for traditional<lb/>
southern blues as well as for the<lb/>
British hard rock sound of groups<lb/>
like The Who and The Rolling<lb/>
Stones.<lb/>
The Jacksonville music scene was<lb/>
incredibly rich at that time, and it<lb/>
wasn't long before Medlocke made<lb/>
the acquatintance of three other<lb/>
local talents - Ronnie Van Zant,<lb/>
Allen Collins and Gary Rossington -<lb/>
who were planning to start a band<lb/>
of their own a band that would soon<lb/>
be known as Lynyrd Skynyrd. By<lb/>
this time, Fresh Garbage had chang-<lb/>
ed its name to Blackfoot. All the<lb/>
aspiring young musicians would<lb/>
meet at Medlocke's home in the out-<lb/>
skirts of town to discuss future<lb/>
plans and to learn the blues whose<lb/>
knowledge of blues from Ricky's<lb/>
grandfather, Shorty Medocke,plans<lb/>
and to learn the blues from Ricky's<lb/>
grandfather, Shorty Medlocke, a<lb/>
legendary local performer whose<lb/>
? -<lb/>
DincKioot, appearing with Def Leppard and Johnny Van Zant will be<lb/>
appearing live in concert at Minges Coliseum on September 17 at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Tickets are on sale at Mendenhall Student Center and a various local<lb/>
ticket outlets.<lb/>
knowledge of blues lore kept the<lb/>
young rockers enthralled for hours<lb/>
on end.<lb/>
Inspired by Shorty Medlocke's<lb/>
teachings, Blackfoot soon set out on<lb/>
the road, relocating in New Jersey in<lb/>
an attempt to escape the restrictive<lb/>
grasp of the Jacksonville club scene.<lb/>
At the time, Van Zant, Collins and<lb/>
Rossington stayed at hiome, busy<lb/>
solidifying their new group. Their<lb/>
paths were soon to cross again,<lb/>
however, when Skynyrd's drummer,<lb/>
Bob Burns, unexpectedly left the<lb/>
band only days before thev wre<lb/>
scheduled to enter Muscle Shoals<lb/>
Sound Studio to record their first<lb/>
album. Van Zant sent out a call for<lb/>
help, and Ricky Medlocke, who had<lb/>
played drums with a number of<lb/>
bands as a teen-ager, was soon Mus-<lb/>
cle Shoals-bound.<lb/>
"I had been friends with Roonnie<lb/>
for quite a while by then<lb/>
Medlocke recalls. "He often came<lb/>
over to my house because he loved<lb/>
to hear Shorty play the blues on his<lb/>
harp. He knew that I had played<lb/>
See BLACKFOOT, Page 8<lb/>
By AL AGATE<lb/>
MtWittn<lb/>
The real thing came to Greenville<lb/>
Thursday night. J.Js brought in<lb/>
Roily Grey and Sun fire, a reggae<lb/>
band from Trinidad. It was the kind<lb/>
of show one could only otherwise<lb/>
get to see in the more progressive<lb/>
clubs of a major city. Put simply,<lb/>
these guys were good enough to play<lb/>
anywhere.<lb/>
For those of you who spent your<lb/>
First twenty- some odd years in caves<lb/>
and , thus, have never heard of reg-<lb/>
gae, permit me to inform you that<lb/>
reggae is a form of music which<lb/>
originated in the West Indies and is<lb/>
characterized by a distinctive beat.<lb/>
A lot of religious nad political in-<lb/>
fluences often go into the lyrics of<lb/>
reggae songs, but perhaps the best<lb/>
way to describe the music, in this<lb/>
print medium, is to offer two ex-<lb/>
amples of reggae that have been<lb/>
heard by almost everyone: "I SHOT<lb/>
THE SHERIFF" (Bob Marley and,<lb/>
later, Eric Clapton); and "The<lb/>
Master Blaster (Stevie Wonder).<lb/>
The band played the songs men-<lb/>
tioned above, the latter being a par-<lb/>
ticular crowd pleaser, as well as an<lb/>
interesting interpretation of Bob<lb/>
Dylan's "Lay, Lady, Lay But<lb/>
most of the music played<lb/>
throughout the three sets was the<lb/>
band's own. And almost all of it<lb/>
was good.<lb/>
Make no mistake: live reggae is<lb/>
not mellow. Those who came Thurs-<lb/>
day, misled by some recordings into<lb/>
thinking that reggae is something<lb/>
you listen to when you smoke lots of<lb/>
ganja and slip into a coma, walked<lb/>
into a house that was jumping with<lb/>
energy and excitement. People were<lb/>
on their feet, all of them dancing-<lb/>
cither on the dance floor<lb/>
(intentionally) or on the sidelines,<lb/>
tapping their feet and rocking back<lb/>
and forth in spi'e of themselves<lb/>
Those who came slaved; so by the<lb/>
end of the night there was a decent<lb/>
crowd. "Decent I say, for it to<lb/>
have been appropriate, and com<lb/>
mensurate with this band's quality,<lb/>
there would have been a packed<lb/>
house and a line out the door. There<lb/>
was neither.<lb/>
Yes, yes, I realize that it's<lb/>
frustrating reading a rave review on<lb/>
something you missed out on. I've<lb/>
had the same experience myself<lb/>
Either you feel bad that you missed<lb/>
out on something good, or you con<lb/>
elude that the reviewer must be<lb/>
wrong, as some kind of defense<lb/>
mechanism against feeling bed. This<lb/>
time do neither. Make a mental note<lb/>
that when Roily Grey and Sunfire<lb/>
come back here, you won't want to<lb/>
miss them.<lb/>
Meanwhile, over at the Attic last<lb/>
weekend, EAZE, a five piece rock<lb/>
band out of Tampa, Florida played<lb/>
to packed houses, in what can best<lb/>
be described as a apparenth<lb/>
unintentional nostalgia act. While<lb/>
their song list, by copy-band star.<lb/>
dards, was not particularly out-<lb/>
dated, this musical interpretation of<lb/>
their material was very much heavv<lb/>
metal circa 1973. Even their ap-<lb/>
pearances, (save for the lead singer)<lb/>
seemed outdated, their haircuts<lb/>
reminiscent of the kind I had as a<lb/>
sophomore at Curtis High. 1975.<lb/>
Lead singer, Melody Eagan, was<lb/>
the band's sole strong pont. and a<lb/>
substantial one. Her clothes were<lb/>
contemporary?she could easiilv<lb/>
See EAZE, Page 7<lb/>
Cheerleaders: A Nuisance Or A Necessity ?<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
Fralum Mllor<lb/>
Last Saturday's game brought to<lb/>
the forefront many things. Our<lb/>
ECU Pirate football team, our Mar-<lb/>
ching Pirate Band, our symbol, the<lb/>
Pirate ship and many other things.<lb/>
But one item that has gone for the<lb/>
most part unnoticed in the past and<lb/>
probably in the future is the ECU<lb/>
Cheerleading squad. Those gallant<lb/>
guys and gals who try to get you, the<lb/>
audience, to show your school spirit<lb/>
and pride with such rousing cheers<lb/>
as Go Go, Go Go, Go, Go Hey<lb/>
Let's Go. (An actual ECU pirate<lb/>
cheer).<lb/>
Cheerleading has not been mak-<lb/>
ing the impression it once made.<lb/>
The cheerleaders regularly come<lb/>
under fire for taking up too much<lb/>
time, or for interfering in a viewers<lb/>
line of vision or for making too<lb/>
much noise. Such was not always<lb/>
the case.<lb/>
Back when we were in high school<lb/>
cheerleaders made more of an im-<lb/>
pression than they do now. Of<lb/>
course the experience was different<lb/>
then. In high school they only had a<lb/>
crowd of one thousand or so to con-<lb/>
trol and keep occupied between<lb/>
plays. The college cheerleader has to<lb/>
keep a crowd of 20,000 happy and<lb/>
cheering between plays. No small<lb/>
chore.<lb/>
And cheerleaders in college are<lb/>
not usually as popular as they, were p<lb/>
in high school. You remember in<lb/>
high school the cheerleaders were<lb/>
the ones who dated the quarterbacks<lb/>
and were elected homecoming<lb/>
queens and went to all of the dances<lb/>
after they debuted (the females, not<lb/>
the males). Cheerleaders gained a<lb/>
different image a few years ago,<lb/>
with the advent of National League<lb/>
Cheerleaders.<lb/>
A few years ago National Foot-<lb/>
ball teams decided to try out<lb/>
cheerleading squads of their own.<lb/>
They were an amazing success for a<lb/>
limited time. The photos of the girls<lb/>
in their ranks made every magazine<lb/>
in the country including a rather ex-<lb/>
posing spread in Playboy magazine.<lb/>
The girls appeared on many of the<lb/>
major talk shows and were critisized<lb/>
by womens groups. A man received<lb/>
national publicity when he charged<lb/>
discirmination and demanded to be<lb/>
put on a squad.<lb/>
Cheerleaders have very definite<lb/>
objectives, according 'o<lb/>
Cheerleading by Newt Loken<lb/>
(published in 1945, the most recent<lb/>
book that Joyner library had on the<lb/>
subject). The following list is drawn<lb/>
from the sections on Game Behavior<lb/>
and Cheering Behavior:<lb/>
? Maintain dignity at all times (Not<lb/>
easy when reciting-<lb/>
Purple, Purple, give 'urn hell purple<lb/>
Gold, Gold, give 'urn hell gold<lb/>
Purple, Gold, Go (drawn out)<lb/>
Pirates!).<lb/>
? All bench behavior must be done<lb/>
as a group (sitting down in unison is<lb/>
an asset.)<lb/>
? There should be no cheering by<lb/>
boys and girls together (we think<lb/>
this is no longer applicable but we're<lb/>
not sure).<lb/>
? Cheerleaders should show spirit<lb/>
at all times (this does not mean the<lb/>
alcohol type).<lb/>
? Physical movements in accom-<lb/>
paniment to music-except school<lb/>
songs and clapping- are not to be<lb/>
led or indulged in by cheerleaders.<lb/>
(That's right boys and girls, leave<lb/>
the dancing to the pom-pom girls.)<lb/>
Cheerleading also involves a wide<lb/>
variety of physical motion including<lb/>
Salutes, Arm Thrusts, Handclapp-<lb/>
ing, Finger Snapping Arm Flinging,<lb/>
Trunk Twists, Knee Slaps, Stag<lb/>
Leaps, Knee Plunges, Partner Side<lb/>
Leans, Straddle Touch Leaps and Beat 'em boys, beat 'em!<lb/>
Partner Shoulder Sits.<lb/>
Cheers from the 40's were often<lb/>
to give the opponents a boost such<lb/>
as:<lb/>
Hello, Opponents, Hello!<lb/>
Hello, Opponents, Hellc!<lb/>
No matter who wins<lb/>
We'll always be friends<lb/>
Hello, "Opponents Hello!<lb/>
Or:<lb/>
Come on, Bulldogs<lb/>
Get on the Beam<lb/>
Let's say hello<lb/>
To the visiting Team<lb/>
But not ali of the cheers<lb/>
friendly. Two which were<lb/>
opponents were:<lb/>
Let's go Let's go<lb/>
Let's really go<lb/>
Let's fight Let's fight<lb/>
Let's really fight<lb/>
Let's win Let's win<lb/>
Let's really win<lb/>
Let's Go Fight Win<lb/>
Beat 'em boys, beat 'em<lb/>
Beat 'em boys, beat 'em<lb/>
Beat 'em fair<lb/>
Beat 'em square<lb/>
were<lb/>
anti-<lb/>
The ECU cheerleaders have been<lb/>
the target of many complaints,<lb/>
shouts and coke filled pirate cup<lb/>
missies. Complaints that they can<lb/>
not be heard are common. Some say<lb/>
that they can not understand the<lb/>
words of the cheers. Many students<lb/>
don't understand what those people<lb/>
in the unusual outfits are doing<lb/>
down there in the first place.<lb/>
Cheerleaders have gripes too.<lb/>
They say that they are ignored and<lb/>
the target of flying debris. They<lb/>
must be out there despite the<lb/>
weather in the hot and the cold in<lb/>
uniforms that are often skimpy at<lb/>
best.<lb/>
We at The EASt Carolinian<lb/>
would like to change the fighting .<lb/>
The following are some of the<lb/>
cheers that the ECU squad uses. We<lb/>
print them in the hope that they will<lb/>
be used by all to cheer our team to<lb/>
victory in the upcoming season.<lb/>
? Go Pirates, Beat Western, Go<lb/>
Pirates, Beat Western,(Clap, clap,<lb/>
clap, clap, clap).<lb/>
? Let's Go Pirates,(Clap, clap,<lb/>
clap, clap, clap).<lb/>
? E-C-U, Hey E-C-U (Repeat)<lb/>
? Rip um up, tear um up, give 'urn<lb/>
hell Pirates.<lb/>
? Purple, Purple, give 'um hell pur-<lb/>
ple<lb/>
Gold, Gold, give 'um hell gold<lb/>
Purple, Gold, Go . . . (drawn out). .<lb/>
. Pirates<lb/>
? Well I got myself a rooster<lb/>
(repeat)<lb/>
And I put him on a fence (repeat)<lb/>
And that rooster cheered for<lb/>
Western (repeat)<lb/>
'Cause he had no sense (repeat)<lb/>
So I got another rooster (repeat)<lb/>
And I put him on a fence (repeat)<lb/>
And that rooster cheered Pirates<lb/>
(repeat)<lb/>
'Cause he had good sense (rpeat)<lb/>
I said a root, a root, a root, a toot<lb/>
toot.<lb/>
For the East Carolina Pirates.<lb/>
And of course the classic:<lb/>
? Hey Hey Hey Hey, EC, vou look<lb/>
so good to me (repeat).<lb/>
Ordinary People<lb/>
Sutherland Stars In Weekend Flick<lb/>
Ordinary People, staring Mary Tyler Moore, Donalds Sutherland and Tim Hutton will be appearing at Hendrix<lb/>
Theater this weekend for six shows. The film is sponosored by the Student Unions Films comittee.<lb/>
This Friday and Saturday nights in Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center's Hendrix Theatre, the Student Union<lb/>
Films Committee will present this year's Academy<lb/>
Award winner for Best Picture, Ordinary People.<lb/>
Times for the film are 5, 7:15, and 9:30 p.m. for both<lb/>
evenings.<lb/>
Ordinary People stands alone as one of the most<lb/>
heart-wrenching and incisive dramas in years ? both a<lb/>
critical and popular hit as well as winner of more major<lb/>
awards than any other American film at last year's<lb/>
Academy Awards (including Best Director, Robert Red-<lb/>
ford; Best Supporting Actor, Timothy Hutton).<lb/>
The performances are stunning in this story of a<lb/>
teenager (Hutton), troubled over the fact that he failed<lb/>
to save his older brother from drowning, who attempts<lb/>
suicide.<lb/>
His parents (Mary Tyler Moore, Donald Sutherland),<lb/>
affluent Chicago's urbanites, can't seem to be able to<lb/>
restore the boy's confidence in himself, nor can they<lb/>
themselves appear capable of true understanding.<lb/>
Only over a period of time is the family able to recon-<lb/>
cile itself to life's difficulties. Director Redford tells the<lb/>
story with genuine compassion.<lb/>
"One of the finest films of the year. Ordinary People<lb/>
is extraordinary entertainment, a sensitive, artfully-<lb/>
made exploration of love and loss. It's a memorable<lb/>
first film for neophyte director Robert Redford, who<lb/>
leaves the acting to an impeccable ensemble<lb/>
? Joseph Gelmis, Newsday<lb/>
"Ordinary People is excellent. It is so well-acted and so<lb/>
crisply directed by Robert Redford. One performance is<lb/>
better than the next<lb/>
? Gene Siskel, Chicago Tribune<lb/>
"Best Film of the Year<lb/>
? New York Film Critics<lb/>
? National Board of Review<lb/>
Next weekend, the Popular Film Series returns to its<lb/>
usual format with a single 7 p.m. showing on Thursday<lb/>
night in addition to its six FridaySaturday night show-<lb/>
ings.<lb/>
The film for next week, September 17, 18 and 19, is<lb/>
the rousing western saga The Long Riders, starring<lb/>
Keith Carradine and Stacey Reach.<lb/>
Coming soon are Fame, The Stunt Man, Private Ben-<lb/>
jamin, Stir Crazy, The Great Santini, Halloween, and<lb/>
Nine to Five, among many others.<lb/>
c<lb/>
A<lb/>
BM Si<lb/>
Stall<lb/>
Mark <lb/>
gets invited<lb/>
weddm.<lb/>
longer weai<lb/>
or clin<lb/>
your ro<lb/>
Petter<lb/>
of Caroling<lb/>
Cleaner<lb/>
G ree n v<lb/>
chimney<lb/>
doesn't cad<lb/>
tion. PetteH<lb/>
black<lb/>
knocke 1<lb/>
when ?<lb/>
chimne<lb/>
"Chi:<lb/>
began wea'i<lb/>
for two rei<lb/>
to poke f<lb/>
nobility. wn<lb/>
working t<lb/>
cond so the<lb/>
who they<lb/>
into the ch<lb/>
said. Petters<lb/>
ed that tM<lb/>
were worn<lb/>
who wa <lb/>
chimney<lb/>
He sak<lb/>
luck to invit<lb/>
sweep to a<lb/>
3-Lb<lb/>
S<lb/>
$<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057422_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROI INI AN<lb/>
SEPTEMBFR 10. 1981<lb/>
IO OI<lb/>
'lines,<lb/>
back<lb/>
 the<lb/>
let eni<lb/>
aht,<lb/>
icked<lb/>
ire<lb/>
L rtt<lb/>
um<lb/>
?ok<lb/>
te<lb/>
ick<lb/>
Isiiif. arlfully-<lb/>
fs a memorable<lb/>
Kedford. who<lb/>
Imhle<lb/>
Mi-Acted and so<lb/>
performance is<lb/>
irn to its<lb/>
i on Thursday<lb/>
night show-<lb/>
17, 18 and 19, is<lb/>
Riders, starring<lb/>
lnn. Private Ben-<lb/>
Halloween, and<lb/>
? - ? ? -<lb/>
0AJ?; fiite 0O p XOHrtY<lb/>
THIS 1?A ?<lb/>
 f6U? V LOCICi to<lb/>
&amp;&amp;? I ?OOhftfST? THJT<lb/>
I CAO 6?T AL0O6 AJtT(4?.<lb/>
Bt RlMiP A)oiCJtlS<lb/>
MftHJl?f PawjrJnrTi.?t<lb/>
I5THS YOOGlRCrcrtJf?Ap?<lb/>
, EAZE Disappointing<lb/>
For ECU Reviewer<lb/>
Chimney Sweeps Still Lucky<lb/>
According To Greenville's Own<lb/>
 ??! If  Vim fA f  ft o<lb/>
B SI SAN RIES<lb/>
Mark Petterson still<lb/>
gets invited to a lot ol<lb/>
weddings, but he no<lb/>
longei wears a top hat<lb/>
or climbs around on<lb/>
your root<lb/>
Petterson, the owner<lb/>
ol Carolina Chimney<lb/>
cleaners, is a<lb/>
e e n i 11 e - b a s c d<lb/>
chimney sweep who<lb/>
esn't cater to tradi-<lb/>
tion. Petterson said his<lb/>
black top hat get<lb/>
knocked o his head<lb/>
when he's peering up<lb/>
chimneys.<lb/>
"Chimney sweeps<lb/>
began wearing the hats<lb/>
?or two reasons-first,<lb/>
to poke fun at the<lb/>
nobility, who they were<lb/>
working for, and se-<lb/>
cond so they could tell<lb/>
who they had lowered<lb/>
into the chimney he<lb/>
said. Petterson explain-<lb/>
ed that the top hats<lb/>
were worn to identify<lb/>
who va working in the<lb/>
chimne.<lb/>
He said it is good<lb/>
luck tc invite a chimney<lb/>
sweec to a wedding. "I<lb/>
still keep the full regalia<lb/>
in my closet, just for<lb/>
kissing the bride<lb/>
Cleaning chimneys<lb/>
has changed a great<lb/>
deal since the Middle<lb/>
ages. "Chimneysweeps<lb/>
always had big<lb/>
families, and the two-<lb/>
year-olds got the task<lb/>
of sliding down a dirty<lb/>
chimney. If you didn't<lb/>
have any kids, you<lb/>
could always hire a<lb/>
street kid for a pence a<lb/>
week Petterson said.<lb/>
"Some sweeps used<lb/>
swan or geese. They<lb/>
just tied their feet<lb/>
together. The flapping<lb/>
wings knocked out all<lb/>
the creosote off the<lb/>
sides of the chimney<lb/>
However Petterson<lb/>
admitted there would<lb/>
be a problem with using<lb/>
the birds today. "I<lb/>
think the ASPCA<lb/>
(American Society for<lb/>
the Prevention of<lb/>
Cruelty to Animals)<lb/>
would take a dim<lb/>
view<lb/>
The sweeps wear<lb/>
coveralls, a cap and a<lb/>
specal mask that<lb/>
doesn't allow ash or<lb/>
any poinsonous<lb/>
substances through.<lb/>
The cancer and tuber-<lb/>
culosis rate was ex-<lb/>
tremely high among the<lb/>
chimney sweeps in<lb/>
Europe. "Creosote is<lb/>
very corrosive and ash<lb/>
wili turn to lye when it<lb/>
hits the moisture in<lb/>
your lungs. That's why-<lb/>
sweeps has to have lots<lb/>
of kids. The mortality<lb/>
rate was astounding<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Dress is not the only<lb/>
difference between Pet-<lb/>
terson and the chimney<lb/>
sweeps of the Middle<lb/>
Ages. He cleans a<lb/>
chimney from bottom<lb/>
up instead of from the<lb/>
top down. He says<lb/>
many homeowners<lb/>
neglect their chimneys,<lb/>
letting the mortar erode<lb/>
and making a once-<lb/>
strong chimney into an<lb/>
unstable pile of bricks.<lb/>
"It's not safe doing<lb/>
it (cleaning chimneys)<lb/>
that way. I've seen<lb/>
chimneys topple over at<lb/>
the slightest touch<lb/>
Petterson said. For<lb/>
safety's sake he sits in<lb/>
the fireplace, removes<lb/>
the damper and uses a<lb/>
high powered vacuum<lb/>
cleaner to suck the ash<lb/>
out of the chimney.<lb/>
"Old chimneys's are<lb/>
a lot more dangerous<lb/>
than the new ones. The<lb/>
older ones are crusted<lb/>
with creosote he said.<lb/>
"The only way to have<lb/>
a fire in your fireplace<lb/>
and not have to worry<lb/>
about creosote is by<lb/>
burning those<lb/>
smokeless logs they sell<lb/>
in the supermarket<lb/>
adds Petterson.<lb/>
"I've seen new<lb/>
houses, less than a year<lb/>
old. completely<lb/>
destroyed by a fire that<lb/>
started in the chimney.<lb/>
It's the creosote that<lb/>
burns<lb/>
Petterson says that<lb/>
even with the energy<lb/>
crisis, he hasn't noticed<lb/>
a dramatic increase in<lb/>
his business. "Oil is<lb/>
still cheaper than<lb/>
wood. In Virginia, a<lb/>
cord of wood is going<lb/>
for $200 Petterson is<lb/>
still the only sweep in<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
In his job, Petterson<lb/>
comes in contact with<lb/>
much more thatn<lb/>
creosote and it's impor-<lb/>
tant for Petterson's<lb/>
employees<lb/>
who's boss.<lb/>
know<lb/>
If we have to go<lb/>
under a house or far-<lb/>
ther into a chimney that<lb/>
we expected, 1 make my<lb/>
assistant so first, to<lb/>
scare away the spiders<lb/>
and snakes<lb/>
Continued From Page 6<lb/>
have fit in with a new wave band.<lb/>
Her singing was competent, but<lb/>
more importantly her magnetic<lb/>
stage presence and apparent con<lb/>
fidence projected a personality.<lb/>
Clearly she was a woman, not a girl<lb/>
as so many female lead singers are,<lb/>
and belonged onstage.<lb/>
Yet despite the general excellence<lb/>
of Miss Eagan, she could not<lb/>
counteract the band's performance,<lb/>
for the guitar dominated and in<lb/>
clearly detrimental ways. Almost<lb/>
every song the band played both<lb/>
contained and was concluded by a<lb/>
noisy, repetitious guitar solo. Occa-<lb/>
sionally solos would introduce<lb/>
material, reaching the height of ab-<lb/>
surdity when the Stones' blues-rock<lb/>
"Tumblin' Dice" was led into by a<lb/>
Zeppelinesque quitar break.<lb/>
Rock and roll cliches abounded; 1<lb/>
began to be able to guess what<lb/>
would happen next. Take the<lb/>
following example: the lead guitarist<lb/>
stepped out to do his obligatory ten<lb/>
minute guitar solo - discordant,<lb/>
deafening and completely irrelevant<lb/>
to the song this was to lead into<lb/>
(Ain'i That A Shame"). He had his<lb/>
cigarette in the fret of his guitar <lb/>
where else right? He looked into the<lb/>
front row like, "Get a load o' this<lb/>
He slapped his guitar with his hand,<lb/>
then began slapping it with a piece<lb/>
of cloth that looked like a tie. He<lb/>
put the guitar on the floor and<lb/>
began flaggelating it with a towel. I<lb/>
wondered, "When will he play the<lb/>
guitar with his teeth?He didn't<lb/>
disappoint me. He did that too. His<lb/>
guitar ran the gamut of sexual com-<lb/>
motation, but only put out noise.<lb/>
To the extent that theirs was a<lb/>
nostalgia show, it was a unique one.<lb/>
I can't help but feel that this band<lb/>
would best serve its talents (which I<lb/>
don't deny are evident), if they<lb/>
remembered that this is 1981 and ar-<lb/>
ranged their music accordingly.<lb/>
Hendrix is. afierall, dead, and Jim-<lb/>
my Page's golden age is gone.<lb/>
LLAR .<lb/>
OFF. I<lb/>
Buy one meal and<lb/>
get $1.00 off the<lb/>
second one.<lb/>
With this coupon, when you buy<lb/>
one meal at the regular price, you<lb/>
can get a second meal of the same<lb/>
value for a dollar less<lb/>
Must be used at time of purchase.<lb/>
Does not include sandwiches,<lb/>
unlimited salad bar, or specials.<lb/>
Offer good through<lb/>
August 31. 1981<lb/>
JACKS<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
PIRATE COUPON<lb/>
10 Discount on<lb/>
ANY FOOD ORDER<lb/>
 Regardless of size.<lb/>
Present this coupon and show your ECU ID<lb/>
to cashier. Offer expires Sept. 13th.<lb/>
"Home of Greenville's Best Meats"<lb/>
P.O. Box2 211JarvisSt.<lb/>
Greenville, N. C. Phone:752-5025<lb/>
Name<lb/>
ID Number<lb/>
K<lb/>
mtT Purchase<lb/>
Red, Delicious<lb/>
APPLES<lb/>
3 Lb. Bag<lb/>
Heavy Western<lb/>
SIRLOIN STEAKS<lb/>
. $2.49<lb/>
Heavy Western<lb/>
T-BONE STEAKS<lb/>
2.49<lb/>
Gwaltney<lb/>
FRANKS<lb/>
99 C<lb/>
Reg. or Diet<lb/>
7-Up or<lb/>
Dr. Pepper<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Breyers,<lb/>
Sealtest<lb/>
ICE<lb/>
CREAM<lb/>
Morrell<lb/>
BACON I DRESSINGS<lb/>
19<lb/>
12-Oz.<lb/>
Pkg.<lb/>
12-Ox.<lb/>
Pkg.<lb/>
KRAFT<lb/>
Thousand Island, French,<lb/>
Catalina, Cucumber<lb/>
2 Liter Bottle<lb/>
Star Kist Chunk Light<lb/>
TUNA<lb/>
U-Oi. Bottle<lb/>
98C<lb/>
78<lb/>
6 Oi. Can<lb/>
Sealtest<lb/>
SHERBET<lb/>
.?.Clip This Coupon ?? ?Cf? TW? Gl? ?<lb/>
KRAFT<lb/>
MAYONNAISE<lb/>
DIXIE CRYSTALS<lb/>
SUGAR<lb/>
Qt. Jar<lb/>
98 <lb/>
98C<lb/>
with this coupon and $7.50 food order excluding<lb/>
Specials Without coupon 169 Limit one per<lb/>
customer. Expires 9 12 81<lb/>
s-Lb. Bag<lb/>
with this coupon and 17 SO food ordor excluding<lb/>
specials. Without coupon 1.71. Limit one per<lb/>
customer. Expires 9-12-81.<lb/>
Generic or Delta<lb/>
PAPER<lb/>
TOWELS<lb/>
38<lb/>
Ot. Roll<lb/>
Limit 1 with S7.se food order.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057422_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 10, 1981<lb/>
<lb/>
Blackfoot Still Developing<lb/>
Musical<lb/>
Continued From Page 6<lb/>
drums in some bands<lb/>
before I switched to<lb/>
guitar with Blackfoot,<lb/>
and when he asked for<lb/>
help, man 1 was ready<lb/>
to give it! I just put<lb/>
Blackfoot on 'hold' for<lb/>
a while and headed<lb/>
down to Muscle Shoals.<lb/>
We went into the studio<lb/>
with Jimmy Johnson<lb/>
producing; and we<lb/>
recorded a whole bunch<lb/>
of tunes that finally<lb/>
came out a few years<lb/>
ago as Skynyrd's<lb/>
'FIRST AND LAST'<lb/>
album. I contributed<lb/>
four songs: 'White<lb/>
Dove 'Preacher's<lb/>
Daughter 'The<lb/>
Seasons' and 'Wino<lb/>
and we even got Greg<lb/>
(Walker) in the band<lb/>
for a while when<lb/>
Skynyrd's bassist left.<lb/>
That was rally a fun<lb/>
time<lb/>
Medlocke stayed<lb/>
with Skynyrd for nearly<lb/>
a year before Burns<lb/>
decided to rejoin the<lb/>
band. His rturn was a<lb/>
relief to Medlocke in a<lb/>
number of ways, for<lb/>
while he enjoyed per-<lb/>
formeing with<lb/>
Skynyrd, he longed to<lb/>
get back to playing<lb/>
guitar and fronting a<lb/>
group of his own. Un-<lb/>
doubtedly, he could<lb/>
have stayed on with<lb/>
Skynyrd, which as soon<lb/>
to add a third guitarist,<lb/>
but for Ricky the desire<lb/>
to lead his own band<lb/>
far outweighed his<lb/>
drive to play a subor-<lb/>
dinate role in Skynyrd's<lb/>
rise to fame. "Skynyrd<lb/>
already had two pretty<lb/>
fair pickers in Allen<lb/>
and Gary he ex-<lb/>
plains, "and everybody<lb/>
in the band could write.<lb/>
There really wasn't<lb/>
enough room for me to<lb/>
do what 1 wanted,<lb/>
which was to get back<lb/>
to writing and playing<lb/>
the guitar. When their<lb/>
drummer came back, 1<lb/>
felt free to get<lb/>
Blackfoot going<lb/>
again<lb/>
It was 1972 when<lb/>
Medlocke reformed<lb/>
Blackfoot, and once<lb/>
again the band headed<lb/>
North to be part of the<lb/>
flourishing New Jersey<lb/>
club scene. Medlocke<lb/>
knew that the road<lb/>
ahead would be filled<lb/>
with detours and<lb/>
hurdles, but he felt con-<lb/>
fident that Blackfoot's<lb/>
special approach would<lb/>
eventually bring them<lb/>
their own recording<lb/>
contract. For the next<lb/>
three years, the group<lb/>
beat an incessant war-<lb/>
path between their New<lb/>
Jersey stronghold and<lb/>
Texas ? the only other<lb/>
market that seemed to<lb/>
respond to the band's<lb/>
unique blend of<lb/>
southern blues and<lb/>
Anglo heavy-metal.<lb/>
By 1975 Blackfoot<lb/>
had developed a diverse<lb/>
and powerful repertoire<lb/>
of material, and they<lb/>
felt ready to record<lb/>
their first album.<lb/>
Medlocke, on a dare,<lb/>
called up producer Jim-<lb/>
my Johnson, who he<lb/>
had worked with dur-<lb/>
ing the Skynyrd ses-<lb/>
sions, to see if<lb/>
Blackfoot could book<lb/>
some time at Muscle<lb/>
Shoals. Much to his<lb/>
surprise, Johnson's<lb/>
response was im-<lb/>
mediate and en-<lb/>
thusiastic, and soon the<lb/>
band was in the studio<lb/>
under his watchful eye.<lb/>
The result of their<lb/>
labors was an album<lb/>
called "NO RESER-<lb/>
VATIONS a no-<lb/>
holds-barred gem of a<lb/>
record that packed the<lb/>
wallop of a loaded .45.<lb/>
Blackfoot tore through<lb/>
such tunes as "Take A<lb/>
Train" and Shorty<lb/>
Medlocke's "Railroad<lb/>
Man" ? only to be<lb/>
totally ignored by fans,<lb/>
press, and radio pro-<lb/>
grammers alike. "I still<lb/>
love some of the things<lb/>
on that album<lb/>
Medlocke says. "I<lb/>
guess it was just a case<lb/>
of being in the wrong<lb/>
place at the wrong<lb/>
time. The record com-<lb/>
pany we were with at<lb/>
the time gave it no sup-<lb/>
port, and it just died<lb/>
The band changed<lb/>
labels for their next<lb/>
album, "FLYIN'<lb/>
HIGH a disjointed,<lb/>
lackluster effort that<lb/>
exhibited little of the<lb/>
hard-rocking energy<lb/>
displayed on their first<lb/>
album. "Our managr<lb/>
at that time jsut walked<lb/>
in one day and said,<lb/>
'You've got a new<lb/>
record deal, now go<lb/>
ahead and make a<lb/>
record " Medlocke<lb/>
says with a laugh.<lb/>
"We'd been concen-<lb/>
trating on our live<lb/>
shows and we really<lb/>
didn't have any new<lb/>
material ready. Unfor-<lb/>
tunately, I think the<lb/>
finished product show-<lb/>
ed that<lb/>
While their records<lb/>
were generating only<lb/>
minimal interest,<lb/>
Blackfoot was slowly<lb/>
building up a dedicated<lb/>
core of followers in<lb/>
both New Jersey and<lb/>
Texas by playing a<lb/>
countless string of one-<lb/>
night stands. It was at<lb/>
one such Texas perfor-<lb/>
mance that the band,<lb/>
appearing as an open-<lb/>
ing act for Brownsville<lb/>
Station and Black Oak<lb/>
Arkansas, was first<lb/>
seen by Brownsville's<lb/>
manager Al Nalli.<lb/>
Overwhelmed by<lb/>
whawt he heard, Nalli<lb/>
moved in to sign the<lb/>
band to a management<lb/>
contract and soon<lb/>
began redirecting their<lb/>
stagnant recording<lb/>
career.<lb/>
Aligning the band<lb/>
with Atco Records,<lb/>
Nalli quickly :ook<lb/>
Blackfoot into the<lb/>
studio to begin work on<lb/>
what would become<lb/>
their breakthrough<lb/>
album, "STRIKES<lb/>
Providing Medlocke<lb/>
with the room he need-<lb/>
ed to properly display<lb/>
his superlative guitar<lb/>
and vocal abilities,<lb/>
Nalli (aided by former<lb/>
Brownsville drummer<lb/>
Henry Week) helped<lb/>
the band produce a<lb/>
rock'n'roll classic. On<lb/>
such MedlockeSpires<lb/>
compositions as "Road<lb/>
Fever" and "Highway<lb/>
Song" and Shorty<lb/>
Medlocke's "Train,<lb/>
Train as well as on a<lb/>
superlative rendition of<lb/>
Free's "Wishing<lb/>
Well Blackfoot<lb/>
managed to magnify<lb/>
their stage energy and<lb/>
prove that they were a<lb/>
force to be reckoned<lb/>
with on the rock'n'roll<lb/>
scene. In the wake of<lb/>
the album's immediate<lb/>
acceptance by fans and<lb/>
FM radio stations from<lb/>
coast to coast,<lb/>
Blackfoot began<lb/>
escalating their touring<lb/>
schedule, mixing open-<lb/>
ing act engagements<lb/>
with headlining gigs<lb/>
across the nation. After<lb/>
nearly ten years of<lb/>
struggling, Blackfoot<lb/>
was suddenly an<lb/>
"overnight sensation<lb/>
"I think on<lb/>
'STRIKES' we proved<lb/>
that we weren't just<lb/>
another Southen<lb/>
band Medlocke<lb/>
states. "Sure, we're<lb/>
from the South, and<lb/>
we're proud of it, but<lb/>
we've nevr believed in<lb/>
letting our heritage dic-<lb/>
tate the type of music<lb/>
we could play. Our<lb/>
roots are just as much<lb/>
in The Who and Free as<lb/>
they are in southern<lb/>
boogie<lb/>
The band followed<lb/>
the RIAA gold success<lb/>
of their Atco debut<lb/>
with a more expansive<lb/>
; e f f o r t ,<lb/>
"TOMCATTIN<lb/>
With the album<lb/>
showcasing the entire<lb/>
spectrum of their hard-<lb/>
rockin' repertoire,<lb/>
"TOMCATTIN' " fur-<lb/>
ther enhanced<lb/>
Blackfoot's growing<lb/>
reputation as a top-flite<lb/>
American rock unit.<lb/>
On songs such as "Fox<lb/>
Chase" (featuring a<lb/>
rockin' harp intro by<lb/>
Shorty Medlocke),<lb/>
"Gimme, Gimme,<lb/>
Gimme and the<lb/>
athemic "Every Man<lb/>
Shouuld Know<lb/>
(Queenie) Blackfoot<lb/>
gave ample evidence<lb/>
that they were now one<lb/>
of the best rock'n'roll<lb/>
bands in the world.<lb/>
They supported that<lb/>
contention with an<lb/>
s.r.o. 1980 world tour<lb/>
that saw them play<lb/>
before enthusiastic<lb/>
crowds throughout<lb/>
America and Europe.<lb/>
Now with the release<lb/>
of "MARAUDER<lb/>
the newest chapter in<lb/>
the Blackfoot story is<lb/>
about to unfold.<lb/>
Recorded at Al Naili's<lb/>
private studio in Ann<lb/>
Arbor, Michigan,<lb/>
"MARAUDER" is a<lb/>
tour-de-force display of<lb/>
rock'n'roll at its very<lb/>
best. From the incredi-<lb/>
ble full-tile energy of<lb/>
"Dry County" to the<lb/>
hook-laden power of,<lb/>
the album's first single,<lb/>
"Fly Away<lb/>
"MARAUDER"<lb/>
represents the fruition<lb/>
of Blackfoot's musical<lb/>
ideal. With the<lb/>
MedlockeSpires<lb/>
songwriting team pro-<lb/>
ducing ten of their most<lb/>
dynamic and accessible<lb/>
songs yet, Blackfoot<lb/>
displays a maturity and<lb/>
artistic polish that only<lb/>
serve to enhance their<lb/>
hard-racing style. On<lb/>
such tunes as<lb/>
Rattlesnake<lb/>
Rock'n'Roller" (which<lb/>
features a by-now-<lb/>
traditional appearance<lb/>
by Shorty Medlocke)<lb/>
and the blues-oriented<lb/>
ballad "Diary of a<lb/>
, Workingman the<lb/>
band has managed to<lb/>
deftly side-step brutual-<lb/>
ly all the standard hard<lb/>
rock cliches while<lb/>
creating a style that<lb/>
with high-<lb/>
excitement.<lb/>
bristles<lb/>
energy<lb/>
With<lb/>
"MARAUDER<lb/>
Blackfoot has recorded<lb/>
an album that seems<lb/>
destined to rocket them<lb/>
longest time on our<lb/>
career just to make sure<lb/>
we got everything soun-<lb/>
ding just the way e<lb/>
wanted it to-<lb/>
'MARAUDER' has got<lb/>
the power<lb/>
Em<lb/>
into a permanent place 'STRIKES' and the ac-<lb/>
in the rock'n'roll cessibihty<lb/>
stratosphere.<lb/>
"We worked long<lb/>
and hard to get this<lb/>
record just right<lb/>
Medlocke says. "I can<lb/>
honestly say that it's<lb/>
the best thing we've<lb/>
ever done. We stayed<lb/>
off the road for the<lb/>
TOMCATTIN 1<lb/>
guess you could say<lb/>
that with this album<lb/>
Blackfoot shows<lb/>
everybody how to<lb/>
rock'n'roll<lb/>
Yes, Blackfoot is a<lb/>
rock'n'roll band.<lb/>
We Need Writers<lb/>
Call 757-6366<lb/>
2.96 Clim Chowder<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Sttfood Flitur<lb/>
flit. Sfcrimp. Oyiun. Sollsp. Drrtl Crib<lb/>
SSSL pi a li? sonc. w $<lb/>
SISLCSB 3U Cm. Shrimp. Or?m. Scp Ml M<lb/>
10 SOTTBLI OaWOS 01 CCKB3 AT10IS<lb/>
Small Uxp<lb/>
4.26 6.26<lb/>
3.96 4.96<lb/>
4.26 6.26<lb/>
4.26 6.26<lb/>
fleuadir<lb/>
Trout<lb/>
Shrimp<lb/>
OjiUrt<lb/>
Beverages<lb/>
Pipd. XL Dtw, Sprite,<lb/>
SUtPtpn .40<lb/>
XetAT ?<lb/>
OefiM ?<lb/>
XT? -30<lb/>
131k M<lb/>
Dessert<lb/>
DtrilCrri<lb/>
Scallop<lb/>
BoUadSfcriap<lb/>
0u Sin 6.76<lb/>
5tid iitur Cnctan, Sum <lb/>
y MM mTP win<lb/>
nixies ram wu tuw uro luamras<lb/>
Broil Tun&amp;Ur<lb/>
Broil Trout<lb/>
MM Sfcriap<lb/>
t<lb/>
Broil Scallops<lb/>
MM Ftottadar<lb/>
Sib tyt Steak<lb/>
Choppad Sirloin<lb/>
SUVU WITH<lb/>
ranrcH rans on iaxkb potato aid colz slaw<lb/>
Children<lb/>
(unatarlfl)<lb/>
Fiah n?te (jwr ehetea)<lb/>
BlBbUfsr Plate wttk Fmes Ma<lb/>
arm win <lb/>
nsei pub. oou saw ajb iuupupibi<lb/>
rw nah Plate for CMldm 6 and aaiar<lb/>
Witt Bafakr ttaaw. Ow M m RB<lb/>
All ATAXLAJU ? UBn OMBI<lb/>
ooooo<lb/>
:I<lb/>
AFTeWOON OEUGHT<lb/>
F e aturing<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
Attic<lb/>
FRIDAY,<lb/>
SEPT. 11<lb/>
4:00-7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Admission<lb/>
25<lb/>
Canned Beverages<lb/>
only6(K<lb/>
Sponsored by Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity<lb/>
Tlie price<lb/>
of style<lb/>
has just come<lb/>
clown!<lb/>
SILADICTT<lb/>
College Rings now only $84.95.<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 hurrv on over this sale<lb/>
runs for a limited<lb/>
time only.<lb/>
.CLASS RINGS. INC<lb/>
DATE: Sept. 10th and 11th<lb/>
TIME: 9:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M.<lb/>
PLACE: ECU STUDENT SUPPLY STORE LOBBY<lb/>
Deposit required MasterCharse or Visa accepted<lb/>
?1961 ArtCarved Class Ring<lb/>
"i<lb/>
North Cl<lb/>
shed a<lb/>
day night Cj<lb/>
East Carol<lb/>
ing t'AO Pi<lb/>
the 14th ra<lb/>
practice pfl<lb/>
The -I<lb/>
they beh<lb/>
coaches w<lb/>
the UNC<lb/>
of the mer<lb/>
I aw, Scho<lb/>
but left an<lb/>
Broun si<lb/>
great reset<lb/>
EC!<lb/>
player wbt<lb/>
the sp<lb/>
appeared<lb/>
coach<lb/>
"I don'<lb/>
non<lb/>
there<lb/>
C'rum.<lb/>
P<lb/>
P<lb/>
Bv 4<lb/>
Ea<lb/>
Ed Emoi<lb/>
confer en<lb/>
much rr<lb/>
Pirates tl<lb/>
Carolina!<lb/>
nent Satt<lb/>
"I<lb/>
ry wi<lb/>
tmor <lb/>
rying wl<lb/>
are cot<lb/>
oursehej<lb/>
Emor<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
a<lb/>
A<lb/>
CH<lb/>
Caroi <lb/>
East (1<lb/>
vantai<lb/>
Heel'<lb/>
alreac<lb/>
?S<lb/>
prepal<lb/>
at a<lb/>
"The<lb/>
solid<lb/>
a ve<lb/>
gamei<lb/>
Thl<lb/>
favoif<lb/>
ferer<lb/>
seasc<lb/>
last<lb/>
thras<lb/>
Pij<lb/>
NelsJ<lb/>
the<lb/>
<pb facs="00057422_0009"/><lb/>
HU FASTCAROIINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
SI Ml MHl K 10, IS?H1 I'agf 9<lb/>
Emory Denies All Charges<lb/>
Crum Accuses Pirates Of Spying<lb/>
from si?(( tmt Wlrr Krports<lb/>
North Carolina athletic officials<lb/>
shed a ray of controversy Wednes-<lb/>
daj night ovei this weekend's UNC-<lb/>
i asi Carolina football game, accus-<lb/>
ing wo Pirate coaches of spying on<lb/>
ihe 14th-ranked Tar Heels pre-game<lb/>
practice preparations.<lb/>
The UNC officials said two men<lb/>
they believe are last Carolina<lb/>
. hts uatched the practice from<lb/>
UNC law school building. One<lb/>
ol the men was confronted by UNC<lb/>
a school Dean Kenneth Brojjn,<lb/>
bul left after Buuin arrived.<lb/>
Broun said that the man bore "a<lb/>
ai resemblance" to a picture of<lb/>
 C assistant Charlie Elmquist. A<lb/>
who made the first report of<lb/>
spying said that the second man<lb/>
appeared to be Pirate assistant<lb/>
. h darr hast<lb/>
"1 don't think theie's much ques-<lb/>
about those people being<lb/>
there said UNC coach Dick<lb/>
um "When the dean of the law<lb/>
school says to me they were the peo-<lb/>
ple and they were up there taking<lb/>
down what we were doing in prac-<lb/>
tice; I think the dean of the law<lb/>
school is a pretty reliable person<lb/>
East Carolina head coach Ed<lb/>
Emory flatly denied Crum's accusa-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
"My staff has been in Greenville<lb/>
all day. either in individual group<lb/>
meetings or squad meetings<lb/>
Emory said. "They have not been<lb/>
out of my sight. 1 don't know<lb/>
anything about what the Carolina<lb/>
people are talking about.<lb/>
"It looks to me like they are try-<lb/>
ing to get something pumped up for<lb/>
the ball game Saturday with the<lb/>
great Carolina press Emory add-<lb/>
ed. "I'm very concerned they<lb/>
haven't had the courtesy to call me<lb/>
or my athletic director. I'm very<lb/>
upset the dean of the law school<lb/>
would accuse me without concrete<lb/>
facts<lb/>
Emory said that the Pirates had to<lb/>
move their Wednesday practice<lb/>
Crum<lb/>
from the afternoon to the evening<lb/>
due to "a lot of unknown faces" at<lb/>
Tuesday's practice, including five<lb/>
people who were asked to leave.<lb/>
When security police went to con-<lb/>
front the five, Emory said, three left<lb/>
in cars and two others said they were<lb/>
Emory<lb/>
salesmen from out of town but<lb/>
refused to provide identification.<lb/>
"Because of all that Emory<lb/>
said, "we were forced to move our<lb/>
practice to (Ficklen) Stadium, where<lb/>
we could get some assured securi-<lb/>
ty<lb/>
Emory said that he cautioned his<lb/>
team Wednesday nighl against let<lb/>
ting the pre game "controversy"<lb/>
prey on their minds<lb/>
"I told them not to let this inter<lb/>
rupt their concentration lor Satur<lb/>
day's game. We cannot lei tin<lb/>
fabrication affect our pla come<lb/>
Saturday afternoon<lb/>
In Chapel Hill, Crum said there<lb/>
was no time to make major changes<lb/>
in his game plan for Saturday.<lb/>
"We're prepared to play and<lb/>
that's where it is. They've seen the<lb/>
total preparation. he certainly<lb/>
know what we're doing<lb/>
The two men who were claimed to<lb/>
be ECU coaches were observed wal<lb/>
ching the Tar Heel practice from the<lb/>
Law School librarv, which<lb/>
overlooks the UNC practice field.<lb/>
An injured player. Ken Say lor s,<lb/>
had been assigned to study in the<lb/>
library and report if anyone paid<lb/>
undue attention to football pra<lb/>
tices.<lb/>
Saylors said he saw a young man<lb/>
whom he later said resembled<lb/>
pictures of last ? in the library<lb/>
Tuesday paying more attention to<lb/>
the Tar Heels than law books but<lb/>
did not report the incident because<lb/>
"I didn't want to accuse anybody<lb/>
a rongly<lb/>
But when Saylors returned<lb/>
Wednesday he saw the young man<lb/>
immediately and then noticed a se-<lb/>
cond balding man with him. Saylors<lb/>
went to the field to notify Crum,<lb/>
who contacted Broun and asked him<lb/>
to find out who the two men were.<lb/>
"When he entered the library<lb/>
Broun said he confronted a man<lb/>
who "had on his desk what ap-<lb/>
peared to be play diagrams. He im-<lb/>
mediate! v coered them with a law<lb/>
book.<lb/>
"1 asked him if there were plays<lb/>
under there Broun said, "and he<lb/>
said he didn't have an answer to<lb/>
that The law school dean said the<lb/>
man refused to identify himself and<lb/>
left a short time later.<lb/>
Pirates Worried About<lb/>
Pirates, Not Tar Heels<lb/>
Bv( HARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
sport r dilxr<lb/>
- arohna head football coach<lb/>
rv -aid at his weekly press<lb/>
:e ednesda that he was<lb/>
re concerned about his<lb/>
m the Uth-ranked North<lb/>
far Heels, ECU's oppo-<lb/>
irdav afternoon.<lb/>
Carolina does not really<lb/>
? ia' North Carolina does<lb/>
aid. "We've been busy wor-<lb/>
a- last Carolina does We<lb/>
ring on improving<lb/>
Emory said that he expected the<lb/>
ECU Secondary Play Vital<lb/>
Crum Says<lb/>
ECU Has<lb/>
Advantage<lb/>
CHAPEl Hill U PI) ? North<lb/>
Carolina coach Dick Crum says<lb/>
Carolina may have a slight ad-<lb/>
vantakje when they take on his Tar<lb/>
Heels Saturday because they have<lb/>
already played and won one game.<lb/>
"We will have to be totally<lb/>
prepared to play them Crum said<lb/>
at a news conference Tuesday.<lb/>
'They will come in here with a very<lb/>
solid football team. 1 expect it to be<lb/>
a very tight and tough football<lb/>
eame<lb/>
The Tar Heels, the preseason<lb/>
favorite in the Atlantic Coast Con-<lb/>
ference, have not played yet this<lb/>
season, but East Carolina opened<lb/>
last weekend with a solid 42-6<lb/>
thrashing of Western Carolina.<lb/>
Pirate quarterback Carlton<lb/>
Nelson was "quite impressive" in<lb/>
the win, Crum said.<lb/>
"It is an accomplishment when<lb/>
you have four touchdown drives in<lb/>
excess of 80 yards as they did he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Because East Carolina has<lb/>
already played and the lopsided<lb/>
margin allowed the Pirates to use<lb/>
more of their game plan, Crum said<lb/>
they should have a slight advantage<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
But Crum's staff was able to<lb/>
scout East Carolina, which "might<lb/>
come in a little blind about us<lb/>
North Carolina holds a 5-1-1<lb/>
record in the series, but East<lb/>
Carolina is being dropped after this<lb/>
vear.<lb/>
"This is a big game for hast<lb/>
Carolina Crum said. "It has<lb/>
Tar Heels to be just as strong as a<lb/>
year ago, when the club went 11-1.<lb/>
But, he said, too much emphasis has<lb/>
been put on certain sidelines of the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
"People say we should beat<lb/>
Carolina because its the last game of<lb/>
the series with them the second-<lb/>
year Pirate coach said. "We want to<lb/>
beat Carolina simply because we<lb/>
don't ever go on the field intending<lb/>
to lose<lb/>
Emory said that he had talked<lb/>
with some supporters who asked<lb/>
him "what it was like to play in<lb/>
Kenan Stadium<lb/>
"1 told them I suppose it's just<lb/>
like playing in Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
They're both football fields that are<lb/>
100 yards long where you line it up<lb/>
and play<lb/>
Turning more to the specifics of<lb/>
the game, Emory said that his<lb/>
Pirates should be a much improved<lb/>
one over a year ago, when the club<lb/>
lost a 31-3 decision to the then<lb/>
seventh-ranked Heels.<lb/>
"We have a lot more chemistry<lb/>
and togetherness than we had a year<lb/>
ago Emory said. "But it's very,<lb/>
very important that we go up there<lb/>
and do what East Carolina can do<lb/>
? protect the football, move the<lb/>
down markers and play aggressive<lb/>
defense<lb/>
Emory said the fact that the<lb/>
Pirates have a more well-rounded<lb/>
offensive attack should prove to be<lb/>
a help Saturday.<lb/>
"We're not going to try to be a<lb/>
conservative football team. We will<lb/>
try to throw the football. We feel<lb/>
like we will not move the football<lb/>
unless we make them defend our<lb/>
passing game<lb/>
The Pirates were impressive<lb/>
through the airways in their season-<lb/>
opening, 42-6, win over Western<lb/>
Carolina last Saturday. Emory says<lb/>
there is a reason for his team's<lb/>
marked improvement in the passing<lb/>
game.<lb/>
"The passing game starts with<lb/>
protection he claimed. "You can<lb/>
never have a great passing game<lb/>
without protection. We didn't have<lb/>
that last year, but our offensive line<lb/>
is much bigger and stronger this<lb/>
year<lb/>
Emory said that he expected an<lb/>
impressive show from the Tar<lb/>
Heels, who are listed as 19-20 point<lb/>
favorites by oddsmakers.<lb/>
"I think their offense will be bet-<lb/>
ter than a year ago he said. "They<lb/>
lost some good people up front and,<lb/>
of course, Amos Lawrence out of<lb/>
the back field. But they have some<lb/>
quality people moving up. And<lb/>
On The Move<lb/>
The East Carolina offense, led by quarter-<lb/>
back Carlton Nelson (6), was impressive<lb/>
in win last week over Western Carolina.<lb/>
Nelson and his cohorts hope for success<lb/>
this weekend against the nationally-<lb/>
ranked North Carolina Tar Heels. (Photo<lb/>
B C hap (iurle.y)<lb/>
Kelvin Bryant is a great back.<lb/>
"I don't know how much they<lb/>
have changed things since Famous<lb/>
Amos is gone the ECU coach add-<lb/>
ed. "With an established quarter-<lb/>
back like Rod Elkins I feel like<lb/>
they'll do something different. If<lb/>
anything, they'll probably throw the<lb/>
football more. I also expect them to<lb/>
run Bryant on the sweep a lot<lb/>
Emory admitted that the Heels<lb/>
will miss some quality players who<lb/>
graduated on defense, like M I<lb/>
draftees Donnell Thompson am!<lb/>
Lawrence Taylor, but added that<lb/>
plenty of talent remains<lb/>
"God bless the coaches who've<lb/>
got great linebackers. They've got<lb/>
them at Carolina. All o them<lb/>
(Darrell) Nicholson, (Calvin)<lb/>
Daniels and (lee) Shaffei are<lb/>
super. Great linebackers can make a<lb/>
line look good<lb/>
The third-vear Buc mentoi ddd<lb/>
that last year's backups for the likes<lb/>
of 1 hompson and Taylor should<lb/>
become good starters this year.<lb/>
"When you play behind the likes<lb/>
ot those people you have a tendencv<lb/>
to be much bttter when they<lb/>
graduate. When you play behind the<lb/>
best, you discover what it takes to<lb/>
make it big<lb/>
The game will be the first of the<lb/>
season for the Tar Heels. Kickoff<lb/>
time at Kenan Stadium is 1 p.m.<lb/>
Booters Take Opener<lb/>
By WILLIAM YELVERTON<lb/>
Vwtslsat Sports Kdltor<lb/>
There's nothing quite like the first<lb/>
time ? at least for coach Brad<lb/>
Smith and his East Carolina Pirates.<lb/>
The Pirates got their soccer<lb/>
season off on the right foot Tuesday<lb/>
afternoon by defeating tradtional<lb/>
power Atlantic Christian College<lb/>
before a home crowd, 4 2.<lb/>
The victory marked the first time<lb/>
ever that East Carolina has beaten<lb/>
Atlantic Christian in a regular-seson<lb/>
match. Mark Hardy, competing in<lb/>
his first collegiate match, scored two<lb/>
goals and added another assist.<lb/>
Four Students Take<lb/>
The 'Carolina Ram'<lb/>
The Pirates and Heels will mix it up for<lb/>
the last time Saturday<lb/>
always been a tight game with the<lb/>
exception of last year when they<lb/>
came in with a lot of injuries.<lb/>
"It is always tough for us to get<lb/>
ready for them. They come in here<lb/>
highly motivated he said, but felt<lb/>
the Tar Hels will be ready for their<lb/>
first game.<lb/>
Quarterback Rod Elkins, who<lb/>
stepped into the starting lineup last<lb/>
season as a sophomore should be<lb/>
better after a year's experience,<lb/>
Crum said.<lb/>
"We certainly have more ex-<lb/>
perience with the guy who has to<lb/>
make it go going into this season. If<lb/>
you're asking whether we will throw<lb/>
the ball more, I would have to say<lb/>
yes he said.<lb/>
The two big questions about the<lb/>
Tar Heels will be the defensive line<lb/>
and the depth on offense, he said.<lb/>
North Carolina lost four of its<lb/>
front five from last season's 11-1<lb/>
squad.<lb/>
The replacements are "good<lb/>
playersbut they are very inex-<lb/>
perienced Crum said.<lb/>
I<lb/>
Four East Carolina students<lb/>
took off for Chapel Hill<lb/>
Wednesday and came home<lb/>
with one of the University of<lb/>
North Carolina's most prized<lb/>
possessions.<lb/>
The students, who chose to<lb/>
remain anonymous for ob-<lb/>
vious reasons, returned to<lb/>
Greenville late Wednesday<lb/>
night with Ramseus VI, the of-<lb/>
ficial UNC mascot.<lb/>
"We were on a mission<lb/>
from God one of the<lb/>
students told The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian after they returned.<lb/>
The student said the group<lb/>
did not plan to harm Ramseus,<lb/>
but did have some interesting<lb/>
plans for the "Carolina ram<lb/>
"We are taking good care of<lb/>
him said the student. "We<lb/>
want to do this classy. We will<lb/>
paint his horns purple and<lb/>
gold and put an ECU banner<lb/>
over it. Then we hope to get it<lb/>
on the field at Kenan Stadium<lb/>
just before the game starts<lb/>
The group's spokesman said<lb/>
that the four tried once to cap<lb/>
ture the ram and failed, then<lb/>
tame away with it on a second<lb/>
try.<lb/>
"Someone saw us the hist<lb/>
time the student said. "We<lb/>
ran away and met to discuss<lb/>
everything. After a pep talk,<lb/>
we decided we'd get the ram or<lb/>
get caught. There was no in-<lb/>
between<lb/>
Aside from being "on a mis<lb/>
sion from God" the students<lb/>
said they took the ram to have<lb/>
something to remember in<lb/>
future years.<lb/>
"We took it because this is<lb/>
supposed to be the last game<lb/>
between ECU and Carolina<lb/>
one of the group members<lb/>
claimed. "We wanted<lb/>
something to remember this<lb/>
last one by<lb/>
Brad Winchell also scored two goals<lb/>
in the Pirate victory.<lb/>
The Pirates took a 3-0 lead early<lb/>
in the match only to see Atlantic<lb/>
Christian rally to cut the margin to<lb/>
one with two second-period goals.<lb/>
The Pirates added another goal in<lb/>
the final period to assure the team<lb/>
o its first victory in the first attempt<lb/>
o the season.<lb/>
"In the first half we played as<lb/>
well as we've ever played said<lb/>
coach Brad Smith. "We had a let-<lb/>
down in our defense (in the final<lb/>
period) which let them score and<lb/>
also fired them up for their second<lb/>
goal<lb/>
The East Carolina coach was<lb/>
pleased with the play of Hardy and<lb/>
goalie Steve Brown. "Steve had<lb/>
some excellent saves. Mike Swann<lb/>
also came off the bench and played<lb/>
well<lb/>
Junior college transfer Tom<lb/>
Lawrence also played well, adding<lb/>
an assist, as did Winchell and his<lb/>
brother, Bryan.<lb/>
The East Carolina defense was<lb/>
tough throughout the afternoon as<lb/>
Atlantic Christian fired 13 shots on<lb/>
goal compared to 14 by the Pirates.<lb/>
The win over the Bulldogs, usual-<lb/>
ly one of the toughest clubs on the<lb/>
Pirate schedule, was important in<lb/>
that Atlantic Christian captured the<lb/>
Governor's Cup in the Club League<lb/>
last spring.<lb/>
The Pirates are at home again this<lb/>
Saturday against nationally-ranked<lb/>
George Mason. "If we get by<lb/>
George Mason says Smith,<lb/>
"we've got a good chance of going<lb/>
into the N.C. State match<lb/>
undefeated<lb/>
Gametime is 2 p.m.<lb/>
"<lb/>
<pb facs="00057422_0010"/><lb/>
(Btje tast Ularoltntan<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 10, 1981<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Special Report: The End Of An Era<lb/>
Swofford Rules Out Series Renewal<lb/>
B CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
sports tdilor<lb/>
An era is set to end in Kenan<lb/>
Stadium this Saturday afternoon<lb/>
when North Carolina and East<lb/>
Carolina get together for what is<lb/>
probably the last game in a college<lb/>
football series that has developed in-<lb/>
to a bitter rivalry.<lb/>
The ECU-UNC series, which<lb/>
began in 1972, is coming to a close<lb/>
a a result of a policy adopted by the<lb/>
UNC athletic department a few<lb/>
years back which states that Tar<lb/>
Heel football and basketball teams<lb/>
can play no in-state schools other<lb/>
than the ones in the Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Conference (Duke. N.C. State and<lb/>
Wake Forest).<lb/>
The decision, which takes effect<lb/>
for the Pirates after Saturday's<lb/>
eighth meeting on the gridiron bet-<lb/>
ween the two schools, has not been<lb/>
taken lightly in the many parts of<lb/>
the state. Still, UNC officials stand<lb/>
firm by the policy.<lb/>
"The athletic council endorsed it<lb/>
about four years ago said L'NC<lb/>
athletic director John Swofford,<lb/>
"and the athletic department ac-<lb/>
cepts it and will obey it. It is in the<lb/>
best interest of our program that we<lb/>
do so, not meaning any disrespect to<lb/>
East Carolina.<lb/>
"This has been the policy in<lb/>
basketball for a long time Swof-<lb/>
ford added. "It was felt that it<lb/>
would be best to apply it to football<lb/>
as well<lb/>
Swofford said that the decision<lb/>
was not directed at ECU, but admit-<lb/>
ted admitted that East Carolina had<lb/>
its part in the council's decision,<lb/>
more so than any other non-ACC<lb/>
school in the state.<lb/>
"The fact that we played East<lb/>
Carolina every year became very at-<lb/>
tractive to some other schools in the<lb/>
state he said. "I guess they felt if<lb/>
we could play East Carolina we<lb/>
could play them too. It became dif-<lb/>
ficult for us to say no to those peo-<lb/>
ple and keep saying yes to East<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
The fact that the Pirates fill<lb/>
Carolina's Kenan Stadjum annually<lb/>
does not create a reason to recon-<lb/>
sider the decision, Swofford said,<lb/>
because the Heels do not have a pro-<lb/>
blem getting capacity crowds<lb/>
"We're fortunate in that we've<lb/>
been sold out for every nome game<lb/>
the past five years he said. "We<lb/>
hope that will continue<lb/>
ECU athletic director Ken Karr<lb/>
naturally feels that the series should<lb/>
continue, and that it is good for<lb/>
both institutions.<lb/>
"We feel it's very unfortunate<lb/>
that such good competition should,<lb/>
be ended after such a short run<lb/>
Karr said. "While we can appreciate<lb/>
the university's (UNC) decision, we<lb/>
feel there were many positive<lb/>
aspects to this competition that were<lb/>
lot considered when the scheduling<lb/>
policy was established<lb/>
The policy was established, Swof-<lb/>
ford said, so that the Heels could<lb/>
play a better national schedule.<lb/>
"We are locked in for seven con-<lb/>
ference games a year he explain-<lb/>
ed. "That leaves us only four non-<lb/>
conference ames to play with. We<lb/>
want to play, from a geographic-<lb/>
standpoint, a schedule that is as na-<lb/>
tionally reputable as possible. That<lb/>
does not mean that East Carolina is<lb/>
not nationally reputable. It's the<lb/>
geography that makes the dif-<lb/>
ference<lb/>
Swofford added that the Heels'<lb/>
"uture scheduling has all but ruled<lb/>
Mil any chance that the two schools<lb/>
;an meet on the playing field again,<lb/>
saying that the Carolina schedule is<lb/>
set through 1994.<lb/>
ECU's Karr has yet to give up<lb/>
hope, though, and says that enough<lb/>
public demand for the continuation<lb/>
of the series could make a dif-<lb/>
ference.<lb/>
"In light of this existing schedui<lb/>
ing policy of the Universitv o! V<lb/>
Carolina-Chapel Hill he said.<lb/>
would appear that this excel<lb/>
competition in football between<lb/>
fine universities is at an end unles<lb/>
the friends, fans and alumni o both<lb/>
North Carolina and last Carolina<lb/>
band together and demand that it<lb/>
return<lb/>
Swofford said that Karr has been<lb/>
in contact with him about continu-<lb/>
ing the series and added that he did<lb/>
not expect the ECU athletic dire<lb/>
to sit still on the matter.<lb/>
"If I were in his shoes I would<lb/>
want the series to continue t<lb/>
Swofford said. "I certainlv re :<lb/>
him and his position<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
Chandler<lb/>
History Of A College Football Rivalry<lb/>
UNC Policy<lb/>
Will Hurt<lb/>
Both Sides<lb/>
As it has been well-documented,<lb/>
this Saturday's ECU-North<lb/>
Carolina football game appears to<lb/>
be the last ever between the two<lb/>
schools.<lb/>
UNC athletic director John Swof-<lb/>
ford verified that Tuesday in a<lb/>
phone conversation, saying that the<lb/>
Heels' scheduling policy states that<lb/>
no in-state schools, other than ACC<lb/>
teams, can be scheduled.<lb/>
Swofford added that the Tar Heel<lb/>
schedules are set through 1994.<lb/>
Why did the UNC athletic council<lb/>
make the decision it did some four<lb/>
ears ago? You can bet the East<lb/>
( arolma Pirates had a great deal to<lb/>
do with the decision. In fact, the<lb/>
Bucs were probably the driving<lb/>
force behind the move.<lb/>
After all. what does the Universi-<lb/>
tv of North Carolina have to gain<lb/>
from playing East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sitv every year in football. The<lb/>
Heels are usually nationally ranked<lb/>
and the Pirates are not, yet the game<lb/>
.ally ends up a tough one for the<lb/>
Chapel Hill boys.<lb/>
seven Tar Heel-Pirate contests<lb/>
have been played to date. Carolina<lb/>
ha five wins. ECU one, with the<lb/>
other game ending in a tie.<lb/>
Three of the five UNC wins did<lb/>
not come easy, though. In fact, they<lb/>
were all-out battles until the very<lb/>
end.<lb/>
Three of the series' seven games<lb/>
to date have been mismatches, UNC<lb/>
winning the series opener in 1972 by<lb/>
a 42-19 margin, the Pirates getting a<lb/>
big 38-17 victory in 1975 and the<lb/>
highly-ranked Heels powering their<lb/>
wav to a 31-3 win last season.<lb/>
The other four games went as<lb/>
follows ? UNC coming back for a<lb/>
28-27 win in 1973 after trailing 21-7<lb/>
at the half; UNC winning without a<lb/>
touchdown in 1976, 12-10; the Heels<lb/>
easing out a 14-10 win in 1978 after<lb/>
ECU fumbled the ball on the<lb/>
Carolina 16-yard line late in the<lb/>
fourth quarter; and the two teams<lb/>
battling to a 24-24 tie in 1979.<lb/>
Those are some pretty tough<lb/>
games for the big boys up in Chapel<lb/>
Hill. Therein probably lies the main<lb/>
reason for the UNC council's deci-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
What does North Carolina have<lb/>
to gain by playing East Carolina?<lb/>
Don't the Pirates have it all to gain<lb/>
and the Tar Heels it all to lose.<lb/>
The answer is a resounding NO.<lb/>
The ECU program is definitely on<lb/>
the move upward, and has been for<lb/>
over a decade. Credit the UNC<lb/>
board for being able to see that.<lb/>
What the UNC board does not<lb/>
need is another game in which their<lb/>
boys must play against a so-called<lb/>
"arch-rival After all, it is com-<lb/>
mon knowledge that all of the<lb/>
ACC's other N.C. schools ? N.C.<lb/>
State, Duke and Wake ? look upon<lb/>
the Carolina game as they do no<lb/>
other. In fact, the rest of the ACC<lb/>
has, in recent years, put the UNC<lb/>
game at the top of priority lists. A<lb/>
game with the upset-minded Pirates<lb/>
only adds another contest in which<lb/>
the Heels are at a certain<lb/>
psychological disadvantage.<lb/>
There is no doubt in the mind of<lb/>
this columnist that the UNC board<lb/>
is running away from playing East<lb/>
Carolina. The new scheduling policy<lb/>
and its effect on the ECU-UNC<lb/>
series is both unfortunate and sad<lb/>
for fans, students and alumni of<lb/>
both of these fine institutions.<lb/>
With the final game of the<lb/>
ECU-North Carolina series set<lb/>
for this Saturday, The East<lb/>
Carolinian thought it might be<lb/>
worthwhile to take a look at what<lb/>
has transpired over the past<lb/>
decade in Tar Heel-Pirate games,<lb/>
what has occurred as a rivalry<lb/>
grew to bigger and bigger heights.<lb/>
Following are summaries of<lb/>
each game between the two<lb/>
schools. It should be noted that<lb/>
while three of the contests have<lb/>
been one-sided, four have been<lb/>
real "barn-burners<lb/>
Trampling On The 'I it tie Guy'<lb/>
1972 ?UNC 42, ECl 19<lb/>
The first game of the UNC<lb/>
series did not go so well for the<lb/>
Pirates. FCU's season finale<lb/>
turned out to be an embarassing<lb/>
loss, dropping the team's record<lb/>
to 9-2 on the season.<lb/>
The Tar Heels fashioned a 21-7<lb/>
halftime lead and rolled to vic-<lb/>
tory behind Ike Oglesby's. three<lb/>
touchdowns.<lb/>
UNC quarterback Nick Vid-<lb/>
novic hit five of isx passes in the<lb/>
first period while the running trio<lb/>
of Sammy Johnson, Tommy<lb/>
Bradley and Oglesby combined<lb/>
for 137 yards on the ground in<lb/>
the opening quarter.<lb/>
Halfback Carlester Crumpler<lb/>
was about the only bright spot<lb/>
for the Pirates, scoring twice ?<lb/>
from 13 and 45 yards out.<lb/>
Despite being down 21-7 at the<lb/>
half, the ECU team felt it had a<lb/>
chance to make a comeback ?<lb/>
until a big blow befell the club in<lb/>
the third quarter.<lb/>
Starting quarterback Carl<lb/>
Summerell suffered a broken<lb/>
right collarbone and had to leave<lb/>
the game. The Bucs were not able<lb/>
to pass the ball after that.<lb/>
Leander Green fumbles<lb/>
late in 1978 game<lb/>
The Most Incredible Game Tver?<lb/>
1973 UNC 28, ECU 27<lb/>
It was another beautiful after-<lb/>
noon in Kenan Stadium on the<lb/>
University of North campus.<lb/>
More than 41,000 fans had<lb/>
gathered to watch the highly-<lb/>
favored Tar Heels square off<lb/>
against the underdog Pirates.<lb/>
Oddsmakers had the Heels as<lb/>
much as three touchdown<lb/>
favorites and certainly not one<lb/>
UNC fan would believe that ECU<lb/>
could stay in the game with their<lb/>
1972 Sun Bowl champions.<lb/>
The game turned out to be<lb/>
quite a battle for the Tar Heels.<lb/>
In fact, only a miracle finish<lb/>
prevented Coach Sonny Randle's<lb/>
ECU team from winning.<lb/>
The Pirates jumped to an im-<lb/>
pressive 21-7 halftime lead.<lb/>
Carlester Crumpler and Carl<lb/>
Summerell both had TD plunges<lb/>
in the first half for ECU.<lb/>
What began the Tar Heel com-<lb/>
eback was a third quarter fumble<lb/>
recovery. ECU was still ahead<lb/>
21-7 and had driven to the Tar<lb/>
Heel 19-yard line before Sum-<lb/>
merell had the ball knocked away<lb/>
from him. UNC's Ted Elkins got<lb/>
the recovery and the comeback<lb/>
had begun.<lb/>
From there. UNC's offense<lb/>
scored on each of its next three<lb/>
possessions.<lb/>
Freshman tailback Mike<lb/>
Voight had a big 20-yard gainer<lb/>
after the fumble, setting up a<lb/>
seven-yard score by Ted<lb/>
Lerenen? The ECU lead was<lb/>
now 21-14.<lb/>
The Bucs were forced to punt<lb/>
on their next possession. UNC's<lb/>
Jimmv DeRatt returned the punt<lb/>
to the UNC 48. Four plays later,<lb/>
the game was tied. Sammy<lb/>
Johnson got the touchdown,<lb/>
rambling 32 yards for the tying<lb/>
score.<lb/>
The Pirates bounced back,<lb/>
though, driving 72 yards in 11<lb/>
plays to recapture the lead.<lb/>
Crumpler went over from one-<lb/>
vard out to give ECU a 27-21<lb/>
lead. UNC's Gary Cowan burst<lb/>
through the Buc line to block<lb/>
ECU's extra point attempt in<lb/>
what was one of the key plays.in<lb/>
the game.<lb/>
The game's biggest play,<lb/>
though, came on the winning<lb/>
Carolina drive. A pass in-<lb/>
terference call on ECU's Reggie<lb/>
Pickney at the Tar Heel eight set<lb/>
up the game-winning score. The<lb/>
final TD of the game came on a<lb/>
pass from Billy Paschall to Dick<lb/>
Oliver. Ellis Alexander connected<lb/>
on an all-important extra point<lb/>
and the game belonged to the Tar<lb/>
Heels.<lb/>
Many still call it the most in-<lb/>
credible contest in ECU football<lb/>
history.<lb/>
A Fitting Memoriam<lb/>
1975-ECU 38, UNC 17<lb/>
The stunning upset by the<lb/>
Pirates of the Tar Heels came one<lb/>
day after the death of ECU<lb/>
athletic director Clarence<lb/>
Stasovich, the man who is deem-<lb/>
ed responsible for the school's<lb/>
rise to NCAA Division 1 status.<lb/>
The team dedicated the game<lb/>
to the memory of Stasovich and<lb/>
did his memory well, simply<lb/>
destroying the Tar Heels in<lb/>
Coach Pat Dye's first game<lb/>
against the bovs from Chapel<lb/>
Hill.<lb/>
Kenny Strayhorn scored two<lb/>
touchdowns for the inspired<lb/>
Pirates. Eddie Hicks rambled 53<lb/>
yards for another six-pointer,<lb/>
while Willie Hawkins and Clay<lb/>
Burnett scored the team's other<lb/>
two touchdowns.<lb/>
The only bright spot for the<lb/>
Heels was the play of tailback<lb/>
Mike Voight, who rushed for 209<lb/>
yards on 42 carries, while scoring<lb/>
both UNC touchdowns.<lb/>
The 42,000 fans in attendance,<lb/>
the large majority of them Tar<lb/>
Heel fans, began to file out of<lb/>
Kenan Stadium in hords as the<lb/>
final period began.<lb/>
Stasovich would have love to<lb/>
have seen it.<lb/>
ECU's Reggie Pickney (30) was<lb/>
in a crucial situation in the 1973<lb/>
called for pass interference<lb/>
game.<lb/>
The No-Touchdown Win<lb/>
1976 ? UNC 12, ECU 10<lb/>
ECU went into the game<lb/>
unbeaten, at 6-0, and ranked 20th<lb/>
in the nation. The club nearly<lb/>
kept that record intact. Instead,<lb/>
the Pirates fell prey to their own<lb/>
mistakes.<lb/>
ECU got the game's only<lb/>
touchdown and outgained the<lb/>
Tar Heels, 321 yards to 259.<lb/>
Pirate halfback Eddie Hicks was<lb/>
the game's leading rusher with<lb/>
129 yards.<lb/>
Nevertheless, the Pirates lost,<lb/>
fumbling three times. Two of<lb/>
those times Carolina turned the<lb/>
mistakes into field goals.<lb/>
A fumble by ECU's Willie<lb/>
Haw kins set up the first field goal<lb/>
by Carolina's Tom Biddle in the<lb/>
second quarter. Another fumble,<lb/>
just seconds later, provided the<lb/>
Heels with another big break.<lb/>
This one was by quarterback<lb/>
Mike Weaver at the ECU 17. The<lb/>
Buc defense held, though, as<lb/>
UNC settled for another Biddle<lb/>
field goal.<lb/>
The Pirates went in at the half<lb/>
down by that 6-0 margin. In the<lb/>
third quarter, the Heels drove<lb/>
downfield and came away with<lb/>
Biddle's third field goal of the<lb/>
game, giving them a 9-0 advan-<lb/>
tage.<lb/>
ECU began to come back in<lb/>
the fourth quarter, though. The<lb/>
Pirates recovered a UNC fumble<lb/>
on their own 46 and moved 54<lb/>
yards to paydirt.<lb/>
Weaver made up for his earlier<lb/>
fumble, scoring on a 15-yard run.<lb/>
Pete Conaty's extra point cut the<lb/>
UNC lead to 9-7.<lb/>
Midway through the final<lb/>
period, the Bucs started a posses-<lb/>
sion deep in their own territory,<lb/>
at the 17. On the first play of the<lb/>
series, Eddie Hicks burst off-<lb/>
tackle and into the Tar Heel<lb/>
secondary. A total of 75 yards<lb/>
later, UNC's Russ Conley made a<lb/>
saving tackle at the Tar Heel<lb/>
eight-yard-line.<lb/>
The Pirates could not score<lb/>
what would might have been a<lb/>
winning TD, though. Instead,<lb/>
Conaty chipped in a 19-yard field<lb/>
goal to put ECU up 10-9.<lb/>
ECU took the ensuing kickoff<lb/>
and drove downfield, setting Bid-<lb/>
dle up for another three-point at-<lb/>
tempt. The kicker made the winn-<lb/>
ing field goal with 2:14 left in the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Yet Another Disappointment<lb/>
1978 UNC 14, ECU 10<lb/>
The game was called by ECU<lb/>
coach Pat Dye as the one in<lb/>
which his team "arrived The<lb/>
young Pirates obviously came of<lb/>
age in battling favored North<lb/>
Carolina to the end.<lb/>
The Bucs were lucky in one<lb/>
respect. None of the team's six<lb/>
fumbles resulted in Carolina<lb/>
scores. The credit for that went to<lb/>
a strong ECU defense, which<lb/>
finished the year as one of the<lb/>
better defenses in the nation.<lb/>
North Carolina had numerous<lb/>
scoring opportunities in the first<lb/>
half, but each time the ECU<lb/>
defense held while highly-touted<lb/>
UNC kicker Jeff Hayes aided the<lb/>
Pitates with three missed field<lb/>
goals, all within easy range.<lb/>
On their third possession of the<lb/>
game the Heels drove 62 yards in<lb/>
13 plays for the game's first<lb/>
touchdown. Halfback Terence<lb/>
Burrell got the call and went over<lb/>
on fourth and one. Hayes' extra<lb/>
point put UNC up 7-0. The score<lb/>
staved that wav until the second<lb/>
half.<lb/>
The Pirates quickly turned<lb/>
things around in the second half,<lb/>
moving methodically for 70 yards<lb/>
in six plays to tie the game at<lb/>
seven apiece. Reserve quarter-<lb/>
back Steve Greer's 22-yard carry<lb/>
around the right side set up a<lb/>
touchdown run by fullback<lb/>
Theofore Sutton.<lb/>
The Heels' only drive of any<lb/>
substance in the second half came<lb/>
in the third quarter and resulted<lb/>
in the game-winning score.<lb/>
The drive ended with quarter-<lb/>
back Matt Kupec hitting tight end<lb/>
Bob I oomis on a 28-yard scoring<lb/>
strike.<lb/>
ECU's Bill Lamm narrowed<lb/>
the UNC lead to 14-10 with a<lb/>
38-yard field goal with 5:31 left in<lb/>
the gain.<lb/>
ECU regained possession at the<lb/>
4:08 mark, taking over at its own<lb/>
31. The Bucs moved quickly<lb/>
downfield after Mike Hawkins<lb/>
got the drive off on the right foot<lb/>
with a 19-yard gainer.<lb/>
On a first and ten situation at<lb/>
the UNC 21, Pirate quarterback<lb/>
Leander Green had split end<lb/>
Terry Gallaher wide open on the<lb/>
right side but overthrew him. On<lb/>
the next play Anthony Collins<lb/>
picked up five yards, moving the<lb/>
ball to the 16.<lb/>
With time running out Green<lb/>
rolled out to his left side and was<lb/>
spun around by UNC lineman<lb/>
Bunn Rhames, who popped the<lb/>
ball loose for teammate David<lb/>
Simmons to recover.<lb/>
A big drive ended in a big<lb/>
disappointment.<lb/>
The Game Nobody Won<lb/>
1979 ? ECU 24, UNC 24<lb/>
"Nobody likes a tie<lb/>
The words could be heard in<lb/>
both locker rooms following the<lb/>
game between two powerful<lb/>
rivals.<lb/>
The game ended that way when<lb/>
Jeff Hayes booted a 47-yard field<lb/>
goal with less than a minute re-<lb/>
maining, which erased a 24 21<lb/>
ECU lead.<lb/>
The Pirates had to battle to get<lb/>
the lead, though, com.ng back<lb/>
from as much as an 11-point<lb/>
deficit.<lb/>
The 15th-ranked Heels jumped<lb/>
to a quick 21-10 lead in the firs:<lb/>
half as quarterback Matt Kupec<lb/>
threw three touchdown passes.<lb/>
What may have been the kc<lb/>
score was Kupec's 18-yard scor-<lb/>
ing strike to Jeff Grev with just<lb/>
nine seconds left in the opening<lb/>
half, making the UNC lead 21-10<lb/>
instead of 14-10 at intermission.<lb/>
The Pirates cut into that lead<lb/>
on their second possesion of the<lb/>
third quarter, driving from their<lb/>
own 11 to the Tar Heel endone<lb/>
The passing of Leander Green<lb/>
got the Pirates to the UNC 21<lb/>
From there Anthony Collins ran<lb/>
untouched on the next play from<lb/>
scrimmage into the endone, nar-<lb/>
rowing the lead to 21-1"<lb/>
In the fourth quarter, the<lb/>
Pirates began a drive that wa<lb/>
helped along by a face-mask<lb/>
penalty. Theodore Sutton had a<lb/>
22-yard run just before Green hit<lb/>
split end Yern Davenport with a<lb/>
12-yard pass and the go-ahead<lb/>
score.<lb/>
A UNC fumble gave the ball<lb/>
back to the Pirates three plavs<lb/>
after the kickoff. ECU could not<lb/>
move, though, and turned the<lb/>
ball over. The Heels then stalled,<lb/>
giving ECU the ball again. ECl<lb/>
could not run the clock out to<lb/>
assure the victory and had to<lb/>
punt to the Heels with 1:11 re-<lb/>
maining in the game.<lb/>
Kupec then engineered a drive<lb/>
that resulted in Hayes' game-<lb/>
tying field goal.<lb/>
The Heels tried an onside kick<lb/>
on the ensuing kickoff, but it wun<lb/>
recovered by the Pirates. ECU<lb/>
opted to go for a 57-yard field<lb/>
goal attempt by Davenport. It fell<lb/>
just short of the uprights.<lb/>
An A wesome Showing<lb/>
1980 ?UNC 31, ECU 3<lb/>
North Carolina came into the<lb/>
game ranked seventh in the na-<lb/>
tion and did little to hurt that<lb/>
status, running past the overmat-<lb/>
ched Pirates.<lb/>
The UNC defense, which was<lb/>
ranked first nationally in scoring<lb/>
defense, not only held the ECl<lb/>
wishbone attack to no<lb/>
touchdowns but also allowed the<lb/>
Pirates only 64 yards rushing.<lb/>
The Carolina running game<lb/>
was awesome, as two backs went<lb/>
over the 100-yard barrier.<lb/>
Tailbacks Amos Lawrence and<lb/>
Kelvin Bryant combined for 245<lb/>
yards and three touchdowns.<lb/>
The young, injury-laden<lb/>
Pirates were simply no match for<lb/>
the powerful Heels.<lb/>
In<lb/>
will<lb/>
kac<lb/>
4 00<lb/>
of y<lb/>
ever'<lb/>
distal<lb/>
men<lb/>
defei<lb/>
W<lb/>
footl<lb/>
the 1<lb/>
DI P<lb/>
NI 1<lb/>
ci<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
direct ire- <lb/>
to ? rp<lb/>
,r ?rrn,<lb/>
'inf. trie- Hi<lb/>
liner rrami<lb/>
tor a m l<lb/>
Can Dv: D<lb/>
Sma r?4 <lb/>
cenent co?c-i?<lb/>
rear ?h, refit j<lb/>
Call 'i' I<lb/>
16, 0 I<lb/>
iflfeyit'<lb/>
Carolinian a<lb/>
Time orme<lb/>
artist<lb/>
Of Ca<lb/>
Men s i ipe<lb/>
bike 23 inch trf<lb/>
transportation<lb/>
17 Honda CI<lb/>
Good coodtion<lb/>
otte'<lb/>
SuBFEBS Get<lb/>
SlI tOOt s-n?,i?<lb/>
ooara Nt it,<lb/>
earthtonei or<lb/>
?of li? c?.<lb/>
The scoreboard tells the story of '75 ECU win.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057422_0011"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 10, 1981<lb/>
11<lb/>
rdui-<lb/>
INorth<lb/>
1, "it<lb/>
olina<lb/>
? it it<lb/>
been<lb/>
e did<lb/>
)<lb/>
ung<lb/>
lb<lb/>
ion.<lb/>
he<lb/>
their<lb/>
lone<lb/>
ran<lb/>
irom<lb/>
I<lb/>
I:<lb/>
nve<lb/>
the<lb/>
na-<lb/>
that<lb/>
fmat-<lb/>
as<lb/>
r.ng<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
n u<lb/>
the<lb/>
tame<lb/>
went<lb/>
trier.<lb/>
and<lb/>
24 5<lb/>
iden<lb/>
h tor<lb/>
Im-Rec Dept.<lb/>
Offers Football<lb/>
Bicycle Race<lb/>
The Intramural-Recreation Dept.<lb/>
will hold its second annual "Bike<lb/>
Race" on Thursday Sept. 10th at<lb/>
4:00 pm. at Bunting Track. As many<lb/>
of you may remember this event was<lb/>
a tremendous success last year and<lb/>
everyone involved had a great time.<lb/>
The event is designed for teams of 4,<lb/>
5, or 6 riders who must complete a<lb/>
distance of 50 miles. There are both<lb/>
men's and women's divisions and the<lb/>
defending champs in each category<lb/>
will be back. The IM-REC DEPT.<lb/>
would like to welcome everyone to<lb/>
come out and view the race. A good<lb/>
time is guaranteed for all!<lb/>
Flag Football<lb/>
Well, it's that time again when<lb/>
footballs fill the air. In keeping with<lb/>
the fall tradition the ECU IM-REC<lb/>
DEPT. beging their version of the<lb/>
NFL with flag football starting on<lb/>
the 14th of Sept. Last year's winners<lb/>
were "Streak of Lightning" in the<lb/>
men's division and "Alpha Delta Pi"<lb/>
in the women's league. Everyone is<lb/>
invited to come out and watch the<lb/>
games which will be played on the In-<lb/>
tramural Fields behind Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium Mon. Through Thurs. from<lb/>
4 pm until 10 pm. All teams should<lb/>
remember that a TEAM CAP-<lb/>
TAIN'S MEETING will be held on<lb/>
Thurs. Sept. 10th at 7pm in Biology<lb/>
Bldg. Rm 103. A representative from<lb/>
each team must attend or the team<lb/>
will be DROPPED!<lb/>
Entry Dates<lb/>
Note that all entries must be in<lb/>
the IM Office by Sept. 15th for both<lb/>
Co-Rec. Softball and Team Putt-<lb/>
Putt. Further information can by<lb/>
received through the IM Office at<lb/>
Memorial Gym, Fm. 204 or EExt.<lb/>
6387.<lb/>
The Final<lb/>
Sorority Rush<lb/>
Registration<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
ateb6EDS Now students can<lb/>
buy a waferbed (Queen of King)<lb/>
direc' from mot You can save up<lb/>
to ' retail Complete beds with IS<lb/>
yr warranty mattress, i yr war-<lb/>
ranty thermostat, heater liner,<lb/>
liner frame, headboard, pedestal<lb/>
tor as low as II Queen n King<lb/>
Call David Delivery adv. 7S?-I?0.<lb/>
Small refrigerator. Sanyo, ex-<lb/>
cellent condition used only one<lb/>
year Why rent when you can buy0<lb/>
Call 757 3310<lb/>
I by 10 caricatures by John<lb/>
wtyier cartoonist tor The East<lb/>
Carolinian and the Greenville<lb/>
Times, former Carowinds portrait<lb/>
artis' S'O for b and w, $1S tor col-<lb/>
or CaM 7SJ-S77?1 <lb/>
Men s Oipeed Schwinn Varsity<lb/>
Bike :J inch frame, good cheap<lb/>
transportation SS0 Call 7SW<lb/>
UN Honda CoiaoT street bike.<lb/>
Good condition Good deal Best<lb/>
offer 7S2-04SI. <lb/>
SURFERS! Get ready for spring!<lb/>
Six foot single tin Caster surf<lb/>
board New, never used. Beautiful<lb/>
earthtones Worth t300, sacrificing<lb/>
for V Call 7S 714a andf ask for<lb/>
Jen to set up a viewing time.<lb/>
Custom airbrush artwork (tee<lb/>
shirts) SS to SiO. Artist has worked<lb/>
professionally at Oaytona Beach<lb/>
and Myrtle Beach. Call 752311.<lb/>
ask tor Mike. <lb/>
1976 Chevette. AM FM, air cond<lb/>
Good condition. Call weekdays on<lb/>
ly 78-074.<lb/>
One Carolina ticket lor tale. Con-<lb/>
tact Jett at 7S1-42W.<lb/>
So you both brought your stereos<lb/>
Rent one to me. Price negotiable<lb/>
Al (Jarvis) 751-M7).<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
FEMALE roommate wanted in<lb/>
house on Charles St 1 block from<lb/>
campus. l00 per month (utilities<lb/>
included) Phone 75 7010.<lb/>
ROOM tor rent immediately.<lb/>
Great location one block from<lb/>
ECU and downtown. S7S. Call<lb/>
753 2?5?.<lb/>
Female roommate wanted to<lb/>
share 3-bedroom mobile home<lb/>
located 5 mms. from campus on<lb/>
the North end of Greenville 7S a<lb/>
month plus one-Halt utilities Call<lb/>
7SI-7973. <lb/>
Duplex to share tour blocks from<lb/>
campus, partially furnished. 10 S.<lb/>
Woodiawn St si 25 per month.<lb/>
7M-74M.<lb/>
ROOMMATES wanted to share a<lb/>
partially furnished 3 bedroom<lb/>
house in Lake Ellsworth-<lb/>
Greenville. tUO per month-<lb/>
utilities included. Call 7J4-4JM<lb/>
after 5 p.?.<lb/>
Female roommate needed to<lb/>
share 2 bedroom apt. at<lb/>
GreeneWay Hi2.SO per month<lb/>
rent plus ? utiuUes. Call 355-47U.<lb/>
Female roommate needed to<lb/>
share 3 bedroom apt. at<lb/>
Eastbrook. M7 plus one-third<lb/>
utilities. Can ShoHa at 7sa-2Sd.<lb/>
Female roommate needed- will<lb/>
consider male. J3 Oakmont So,<lb/>
pis. 7S?32. ?7 per month rent<lb/>
plus one-third. Pool, cabie TV, bus<lb/>
service. Need bad.<lb/>
Furnished, private efficiency<lb/>
apartment lor rent, across from<lb/>
college, utilities furnished.<lb/>
7S 255.<lb/>
Personal<lb/>
Typing for students, professors.<lb/>
etc. Kempie Dunn 101 E. Wright<lb/>
Rd. Greenville, NC 2734. Call<lb/>
7S247U alter I p.m.<lb/>
Notary Public: convenient and in<lb/>
expensive Cally Amy at 757-3734.<lb/>
Female resident counselor; must<lb/>
take training and internship Pay-<lb/>
ment in-kind (free room, utilities,<lb/>
phone and house privileges). Ex<lb/>
ceUent opportunity lor students in<lb/>
human services. Calal 75 HELP.<lb/>
Help wanted: Positions open for 2<lb/>
males at Tar Landing Seafood<lb/>
Restaurant. Come by for applica-<lb/>
tions. <lb/>
"Clip Joint" has moved to lit Gar<lb/>
reft Call Martena at WMW.<lb/>
Ride needed: To Charletlesvilie.<lb/>
Va. Sept. 11-13, will pay all ex-<lb/>
penses. Contact Jeanne at<lb/>
752143.<lb/>
Faculty, students, staff- looking<lb/>
tor extra income Part time job.<lb/>
with unlimited future. Minimal m<lb/>
vestment. Free framing Interna<lb/>
tional orsanuation. Send name,<lb/>
address, phone number, where<lb/>
you can be reached and a brief<lb/>
resume to FUTURE, PO Box 47,<lb/>
Greenville, NC 2734. You will be<lb/>
promptly contacted. <lb/>
Thursday, 10th<lb/>
from 6:30-7:30<lb/>
before Convocation<lb/>
Mendenhall Theater<lb/>
CAROLINA EAST<lb/>
GOES WEST-ERN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 11-12<lb/>
-T's<lb/>
A i<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/>
?Marshal Desten's Wild West Shows ? Friday 7:00 &amp; 7:45 P.M.<lb/>
?Greengrass Cloggers &amp; The Home Town Boys ?<lb/>
Saturday 6:30-9:00 P.M.<lb/>
?Register to win authentic CBS ?'Dallas" script<lb/>
autographed by the stars, during both performances<lb/>
?Mechanical bull demonstrations by Carolina Opry House<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
20 OFF ON SHOE PURCHASE<lb/>
ii<lb/>
STCRRY TOP STOER<lb/>
Lw.<lb/>
and Carolina East Centre<lb/>
264 By-pass on Hwy It, Greenville<lb/>
Fraternity and Sorority<lb/>
Jerseys<lb/>
Just Arrived.<lb/>
ECU Sweatshirts<lb/>
&amp; Jackets<lb/>
 HODGESBOND'S SHOE CLUB<lb/>
E. SMl St. ? 218 Arlinoton Blvd.<lb/>
M<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057422_0012"/><lb/>
Fearless 1 CHARLES CHANDLER7ootbai WILLIAM YELVERTON11 Foj JIMMY DuPREE'ecast CHRIS HOLLOMANCHUCK FOSTER (10-2)<lb/>
(12-0)(12-0)(10-2)(10-2)<lb/>
ECU AT UNC (Score)ECU 26-24ECU 28-27ECU 24-21ECU 21-20ECU 24-10<lb/>
DUKE AT OHIO STATEOhio StateOhio StateOhio StateOhio StateOhio State<lb/>
N.C. STATE AT WAKE FORESTN.C. StateN.C. StateN.C. StateN.C. StateN.C. Slate<lb/>
CLEMSON AT TULANEClemsonClemsonClemsonTulaneClemson<lb/>
CALIFORNIA AT GEORGIAGeorgiaGeorgiaGeorgiaGeorgiaGeorgia<lb/>
WEST VA. AT VIRGINIAWest Va.VirginiaVirginiaVirginiaVirginia<lb/>
N.TEXAS ST. ATSMUSMUSMUSMUSMUSMU<lb/>
TENNESSEE AT SOUTHERN CALSouthern CalSouthern CalSouthern CalSouthern CalSouthern Cal<lb/>
MISSISSIPPI AT S. CAROLINAS. CarolinaS. CarolinaS. CarolinaS. CarolinaS. Carolina<lb/>
LSU AT NOTRE DAMENotre DameNotre DameNotre DameNotre DameNotre Dame<lb/>
RICHMOND AT VA. TECHVa. TechVa. TechVa. TechVa. TechVa. Tech<lb/>
STANFORD AT PURDUEPurdueStanfordStanfordStanfordStanford<lb/>
VFLORIDA AT MIAMI (Fla.)<lb/>
Swimmers Must Mature<lb/>
To Succeed This Season<lb/>
YELVER<lb/>
Wiiiii: Sporu S-dilof<lb/>
Coach Ray Scharf<lb/>
and his East Carolina<lb/>
swimmers are ready to<lb/>
dive into competition<lb/>
?- literally.<lb/>
For the first time in<lb/>
six years. East Carolina<lb/>
will have a diving team.<lb/>
Handling the team will<lb/>
be Jon Rose, former<lb/>
gymnastics coach at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
"I'm really glad<lb/>
John's with us says<lb/>
Sharf. (Gymnastics was<lb/>
dropped from the<lb/>
athletic program last<lb/>
year.) "He's a super<lb/>
coach, and he's going<lb/>
to do a super job. We<lb/>
gave away 14 points<lb/>
each meet last season<lb/>
(without diving). This<lb/>
is going to help our<lb/>
team a lot<lb/>
One diver Scharf is<lb/>
looking for help from<lb/>
freshman Scott Eagel,<lb/>
the N.C. State cham-<lb/>
pion. "Diving is closer<lb/>
ILLIAM to gymnastics<lb/>
than<lb/>
swimming says<lb/>
Scharf, which explains<lb/>
why some former East<lb/>
Carolina gymnasts will<lb/>
be on the diving team<lb/>
this season.<lb/>
Scharf says the<lb/>
swimming-diving<lb/>
schedule "looks pretty<lb/>
good. It's the best<lb/>
we've had in a long<lb/>
time. It's a very<lb/>
challenging schedule<lb/>
for such a very young<lb/>
team<lb/>
Scheduled teams in-<lb/>
clude N.C. State,<lb/>
North Carolina, Navy,<lb/>
James Madison, Old<lb/>
Dominion, Duke and<lb/>
Virginia Tech.<lb/>
Scharf's squad con-<lb/>
tains well over 30<lb/>
freshmen and will<lb/>
count on Doug<lb/>
Nieman, Lance Tim-<lb/>
mons, Sally Marberger<lb/>
and Dordi Henrikeen<lb/>
for leadership. The<lb/>
women's team returns<lb/>
six swimmers, five of<lb/>
whom were All-<lb/>
Amcricans. "We've got<lb/>
some fairly outstanding<lb/>
people Scharf says.<lb/>
The men return four<lb/>
swimmers who scored<lb/>
in the Eastern<lb/>
Regionals last year.<lb/>
"We're a little thin<lb/>
Scharf says.<lb/>
"We want our kids<lb/>
to try to win every<lb/>
single meet he adds,<lb/>
explaining the team's<lb/>
goal for the upcoming<lb/>
season which starts<lb/>
Oct. 7 with the ECU<lb/>
Pentathlon. "We're<lb/>
hoping for seven vic-<lb/>
tories for the men and<lb/>
seven for the women.<lb/>
It's hard to say because<lb/>
we're such a young<lb/>
team. I hope the men<lb/>
can finish in the top<lb/>
three or four in the<lb/>
Eastern Regionals.<lb/>
HAVE A PROBLEM?<lb/>
NEED INFORMATION?<lb/>
REAL Crisis Intsrvtntio<lb/>
24 HOUR SERVICE<lb/>
7S8-MELP<lb/>
1117 Evans Strut<lb/>
Greanvilla.N.C. 27834<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
? ? l.<lb/>
l<lb/>
ThsFtalrigCanterh?been bare ftryousmoe 1Q??<lb/>
proridta private, uialarsta&amp;Dtf health aare<lb/>
towamenofaDailBg at a reasonable o?t<lb/>
The Fleming Center we're here when<lb/>
Pen 781<lb/>
pep you i<lb/>
Hei<lb/>
Bang-Up Pep Rally<lb/>
On Campus Tonight<lb/>
IS THIS<lb/>
WHAT YOUR<lb/>
KISSES<lb/>
TASTf LIKE?<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/>
752-1446<lb/>
OPTICIANS<lb/>
There will be a "Beat<lb/>
Carolina" pep rally<lb/>
tonight at 7 behind<lb/>
Garret dorm on the<lb/>
East Carolina campus.<lb/>
Head football coach Ed<lb/>
Emory will recognize<lb/>
seniors preparing for<lb/>
their final game against<lb/>
the Tar Heels.<lb/>
This pep rally will be<lb/>
a little different in that<lb/>
a "Carolina car" will<lb/>
be on hand for East<lb/>
Carolina fans to pound<lb/>
on, for 50 cents. Half<lb/>
the proceeds will be go-<lb/>
ing to local charity and<lb/>
the other half to the<lb/>
new Student Athletic<lb/>
Board.<lb/>
l<lb/>
THE<lb/>
GREAT AMERICAN<lb/>
FAVORITES<lb/>
ARE BACK!<lb/>
a&amp;23h<lb/>
GET HEAPING PORTIONS<lb/>
AT A PRICE<lb/>
ALL AMERICA CAN AFFORD!<lb/>
September 10. Thursday (QM<lb/>
CHICKEN PAN PIE. 2 vegetable  ?"<lb/>
September 11, Friday ?VM<lb/>
SALMON PATTY. 2 vegetable ?"<lb/>
September 12. Saturday t 1?q<lb/>
VEAL PARMESAN. 2 vegetable E"<lb/>
September 13, Sunday o?o<lb/>
SMOTHERED CHICKEN V?<lb/>
2 vegetable<lb/>
September 14. Monday ? am<lb/>
MEAT LOAF A SPAGHETTI 'Z1<lb/>
2 vegetables<lb/>
September 15. Tuesday .a4<lb/>
FRIED CHICKEN, 2 vegetables F<lb/>
September 16. Wednesday aOno<lb/>
STUFFED GREEN PEPPER.  ?"<lb/>
2 vegetables<lb/>
Everyday 112S<lb/>
CHILD'S PLATE lw<lb/>
A delicious choice of fried chicken, chopped steak, or a<lb/>
specified entree plus 2 vegetables and a roll! For<lb/>
children 12 and under with adult.<lb/>
I<lb/>
JUST<lb/>
ARRIVED<lb/>
J.D.<lb/>
DAWSON<lb/>
CO.<lb/>
1982 GIFT<lb/>
CATALOG<lb/>
COME BY AND<lb/>
PICKUPYOUR<lb/>
COMPLEMENTARY<lb/>
COPY<lb/>
Many New Items with Extra<lb/>
Savings Now Available<lb/>
"The Place to<lb/>
Wash"<lb/>
The k<lb/>
WASHT<lb/>
HOUSE<lb/>
111 E. 10th St. (Across from Krispy Kreme)<lb/>
514 E. 14th St. (Across from Hot Dog City)<lb/>
<lb/>
s<lb/>
Also ?<lb/>
?Color TV ?Attendant on Duty e<lb/>
? Pinball -Lots of Washers &amp; Dryers J<lb/>
COUPON1<lb/>
 Good for one FREE WASH on Mm. or Thurt.<lb/>
 9 a.m4 p.m. - Offer expire Sept. 30<lb/>
? wash house ? wash house ? wash house ? wash house ?<lb/>
e<lb/>
Already Low Prices<lb/>
Starting Sept. 14th&amp;<lb/>
Running 'til Sept. 30th<lb/>
Special Prices on 1982<lb/>
Catalog Merchandise<lb/>
I<lb/>
Caroline Eaet Mali<lb/>
Mon-Frt LUNCH 1 laat -115pm. SUPrtR<lb/>
4:90pm 8pm (?30 Fri). Sat. ft Sun llaai - ? coattauona ? Sat)<lb/>
2818 E. 10th St.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
7521600 27834<lb/>
102 Main St.<lb/>
Bel haven, N. C.<lb/>
943-2121 27810<lb/>
ortlj Carolina<lb/>
?tadnt legislature<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
WANTS<lb/>
YOU<lb/>
"It's time for the students who<lb/>
talk about North Carolina's pro-<lb/>
blems to join the students who<lb/>
are doing something about<lb/>
them<lb/>
THE TIME IS NOW FOR NCSL<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING:<lb/>
Monday, September 14,1981<lb/>
Mendenhall 221 ? 7:00 p.m<lb/>
NCSL:<lb/>
THE ULTIMATE<lb/>
STIMULATION<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057422_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>