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<pb facs="00057431_0001"/>
?be<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 57 No. 15<lb/>
Tuesday, October 13,1981<lb/>
GrteaviNe. N.C.<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Unity Stressed<lb/>
SGA Holds First Meeting<lb/>
By DIANE ANDERSON<lb/>
vMsijni Nr??s r dtt?r<lb/>
I he SGA held its first meeting o<lb/>
the 1981-82 school year yesterday at<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
After a moment o( silence, Mar-<lb/>
vin Braxton. StiA vice president,<lb/>
called the meeting to order. The<lb/>
first ordei ol business was the<lb/>
sweating into office of the newly<lb/>
elected legislators.<lb/>
As the executive officers and<lb/>
faculty advisors and administrators<lb/>
were introduced to the legislature,<lb/>
the) spoke to the importance o re-<lb/>
maining united.<lb/>
I esier Nail, SGA president, said.<lb/>
"1 encourage you to talk to each<lb/>
other in here and out oi here. Know<lb/>
what is going on in each others<lb/>
minds and work together<lb/>
Braxton also encouraged the<lb/>
legislators to maintain a "theme of<lb/>
unity for the next year<lb/>
Gary Williams, a second year<lb/>
veteran of the SGA, was elected bv<lb/>
an overwhelming majority as the<lb/>
speaker of the legislature for<lb/>
1981-82. In his nomination speech,<lb/>
he expressed a desire to restructure<lb/>
the bylaws, "especially in the com-<lb/>
mittee areas<lb/>
There are still eight openings for<lb/>
day student and dormitory represen-<lb/>
taties. Tyler and Belk dorms need<lb/>
two representatives, Fletcher and<lb/>
l! instead need one, and there are<lb/>
two openings for day student<lb/>
representatives.<lb/>
Interested students can file in the<lb/>
SGA office between 8 a.m. and 5<lb/>
p.m Monday through Friday,<lb/>
before October 26. Appointments<lb/>
will then be made through inter-<lb/>
views bv the screenings and appoint-<lb/>
ments committee.<lb/>
Russell Overman presented a bill<lb/>
which now requires all appropria-<lb/>
tion requests to be into the commit-<lb/>
tee by November 2.<lb/>
The run-offs elections that were<lb/>
announced last week because of<lb/>
candidates who came within one<lb/>
vote of each other will not be held<lb/>
due to the bylaws which state that a<lb/>
run-off can only be held in the case<lb/>
of a tie vote.<lb/>
The official winners, therefore, in<lb/>
these elections are Becky Strine,<lb/>
freshman class president, Cindy<lb/>
Heines for junior class president,<lb/>
and Tracy Gray and Barry Peele as<lb/>
representatives for Aycock dorm.<lb/>
There will, however, be a run-off<lb/>
election for the representatives in<lb/>
Jones dorm, due to the fact that one<lb/>
of the candidates was left off of the<lb/>
first ballot. The election will be held<lb/>
on October 14 in Jones. The can-<lb/>
didates are Danny White, Mitchell<lb/>
Haber, and Keith Johnson.<lb/>
Throughout the meeting, an inter-<lb/>
preter sat in the front of the room<lb/>
and clearly mouthed everything that SGA Vice President Lester Nail recognized in yesterday's first meeting of the ear the legislators who have<lb/>
was said for the benefit of the hear- previously worked in the SGA. Nail, along with other administrators and executive council members, encouraged<lb/>
ing impaired. the new legislature to work together and remain united.<lb/>
rkoo Br GABY FATTfJBO<lb/>
Chancellor Search Committee Selected<lb/>
B TOM HALT<lb/>
Se?? fdiior<lb/>
The chairman oi the ECU Board of Trustees an-<lb/>
nounced Monday the appointment of a 15-member<lb/>
committee to choose the university's next chancellor.<lb/>
shley B Futrell said the Chancellor Selection Com-<lb/>
mittee's firs! meeting will be October 20 in the Willis<lb/>
Building. A public hearing will be held at 9:30 a.m and<lb/>
the committee will meet with UNC system president<lb/>
William Friday that afternoon to begin the search for a<lb/>
replacement for Thomas B. Brewer.<lb/>
" t the public meeting, people can express anything<lb/>
they think is wrong with ECU Futrell said. "I'd like<lb/>
for them to say what kind of chancellor they'd like to<lb/>
have<lb/>
Futrell added that faculty and student input is en-<lb/>
couraged. Anyone wishing to speak should contact Dr.<lb/>
Joseph Boyette, the executive secretary of the commit-<lb/>
tee, at the Willis Building. Futrell suggested that written<lb/>
summaries be prepared o any statements made for the<lb/>
permanent records of the committee.<lb/>
The trustees chairman said the committee had receiv-<lb/>
ed "a bunch" of nominations for an interim chancellor<lb/>
until the position can be permanently filled, including<lb/>
vice chancellor for academic affairs Dr. Robert Maier,<lb/>
Dr. William Byrd of the physics department. Dr.<lb/>
Douglas Jones of the School of Education, Dr. Charles<lb/>
Rob of the medical school and Dr. James Bearden of<lb/>
the School of Business. Dr. John Howell of the<lb/>
academic affairs office and the political science depart-<lb/>
ment is also a leading candidate, Futrell said.<lb/>
When asked when he thought the interim chancellor<lb/>
would be named, Futrell said he had asked Friday the<lb/>
same question four times. The UNC president told<lb/>
Futrell that an interim chancellor would be named as<lb/>
soon as Brewer was placed elsewhere, but Friday did not<lb/>
give him any information as to where the chancellor<lb/>
would be placed.<lb/>
Futrell added that he believes Brewer will begin his<lb/>
leave of absence before the interim chancellor is<lb/>
selected.<lb/>
"I'm sure the new chancellor will stress academic ex-<lb/>
cellence and be an athletic supporter Futrell said.<lb/>
Responding to the rumor that former U.S. senator<lb/>
and ECU alumnus Robert Morgan was the leading can-<lb/>
didate for the chancellor's post, Futrell said, "He's<lb/>
been nominated. Anyone can nominate anyone else<lb/>
The search committee is now advertising through<lb/>
academic journals for candidates to fill the post. As for<lb/>
any requirements such as a doctoral degree being needed<lb/>
to qualify for the chancellor's position, Futrell said he<lb/>
didn't think the chancellor even had to be a college<lb/>
graduate. The deadline for applications is December 15,<lb/>
according to the chairman.<lb/>
Futrell will act as chairman of the committee and<lb/>
Boyette will serve in a non-voting position.<lb/>
Faculty members on the committee are Dr. Robert<lb/>
Brame, professor of the School of Medicine; Dr. Clin-<lb/>
ton Downing, associate professor of the School of<lb/>
Education; Dr. Robert Hursey, associate professor of<lb/>
mathematics; Dr. Rosina Lao, chairwoman of the<lb/>
Department ol Psychology, and Dr. Thomas Johnson,<lb/>
chairman ol the Faculty Senate.<lb/>
Trustees rhomas Bennett, Dr. John Bndgers, Ralph<lb/>
Kmsev Jr John Minges II. and Troy Pate are also on<lb/>
the committee.<lb/>
Alumni members are Oerald Arnold, a judge in the<lb/>
N.C. Court ol ppeals; Carolyn Fulghum, associate<lb/>
dean and director ol residence life; and Phillip Dixon,<lb/>
president ol the EC! Mumni Association.<lb/>
E I students are represented on the committee by<lb/>
SGA president I estei Nail.<lb/>
The comm II meet once a week after October 20<lb/>
and probably twice a week after December 15, Futrell<lb/>
said after making the announcement.<lb/>
Futrell. Bndgers, Minges, Pate and Fulghum served<lb/>
on the 1977-1978 search committee that recommended<lb/>
Brewer for the position vacated by Leo W. Jenkins.<lb/>
Brewer's resignation is effective June 30, 1982.<lb/>
Moral Majority Reaffirmed<lb/>
Falwell Speaks In Raleigh<lb/>
Reverend Jerry Falwell, Moral Majority leader<lb/>
By MIKE HUGHES<lb/>
SUN Wriltr<lb/>
"Nowhere do we believe that we<lb/>
can impose our philosophy on so-<lb/>
meone else's lifestyle<lb/>
At a recent press conference in<lb/>
Raleigh, Moral Majority leader<lb/>
Jerry Falwell reaffirmed several of<lb/>
his organization's stands on today's<lb/>
moral and political issues. Falwell<lb/>
stated early in the conference that<lb/>
the Moral Majority believes in<lb/>
"decency, morality and the fami-<lb/>
ly"<lb/>
Falwel emphasized that the New<lb/>
Right, a fast growing political<lb/>
movement for which he is the<lb/>
spokesman, does believe in the con-<lb/>
stitutional separation of church and<lb/>
state. He explained that he concen-<lb/>
trates his message on encouraging<lb/>
members of different religious<lb/>
backgrounds to actively participate<lb/>
in moral issues.<lb/>
"Abortion today is the issue ?<lb/>
the civil rights issue of the 1980s ?<lb/>
and it is not going to go away he<lb/>
said. "From here on out, if you are<lb/>
going to run for dog catcher you<lb/>
had better do right on that issue<lb/>
Falwell said that some members<lb/>
of the "old conservative move-<lb/>
ment" have not endorsed the views<lb/>
of the New Right. He cited Sen.<lb/>
Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz as an ex-<lb/>
ample. Goldwater is reluctant to<lb/>
give up his position at the forefront<lb/>
of the old conservative movement,<lb/>
Falwell said.<lb/>
However, Goldwater's criticisms<lb/>
of the faction are not indicative of<lb/>
the Reagan administration's at-<lb/>
titude, according to Falwell. "We<lb/>
do believe the president's commit-<lb/>
ment is real he said. "We believe<lb/>
a majority of the Senate and<lb/>
perhaps a majorioty of the House is<lb/>
there to work with us<lb/>
Falwell cited some problems con-<lb/>
sistently facing conservatives in the<lb/>
past. "Conservatives have always<lb/>
had the tendency of shooting their<lb/>
own wounded he said. "We can't<lb/>
agree on everything, so we won't do<lb/>
anything together<lb/>
However, Falwell says that this<lb/>
practice has changed. "As a matter<lb/>
of fact, it has changed so rapidly in<lb/>
the last five years that it has<lb/>
frightened everybody he said. The<lb/>
reason why we have so many people<lb/>
screaming bloody murder is that<lb/>
we've put together a coalition ? the<lb/>
largest such coalition numerically<lb/>
ever put together<lb/>
According to Falwell, the attacks<lb/>
and criticisms of the New Right by<lb/>
leading government and non-<lb/>
government liberals has worked to<lb/>
the organization's advantage.<lb/>
"Norman Lear and George<lb/>
McGovern, more than any two per-<lb/>
sons, have helped the Moral Majori-<lb/>
ty become the force it is Falwell<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Falwell said he chose Lear, pro-<lb/>
ducer of television shows such as<lb/>
Maude and Mary Hartman, Mary<lb/>
Hartman, because Lear's shows<lb/>
caused the formation of a coalition<lb/>
for better television. "Here is<lb/>
America standing up, saying, 'Hey.<lb/>
we don't want a cesspool in our liv-<lb/>
ing rooms "Falwell said.<lb/>
"George McGovern is<lb/>
See FALWELL, Page 3<lb/>
NAACP Convention<lb/>
Held In Greenville<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Mill Wrilrr<lb/>
"I've spent half my life fightin'<lb/>
for things other people take for<lb/>
granted. Tell them where we came<lb/>
from<lb/>
These were the words of Ben-<lb/>
jamin Hooks, national president of<lb/>
the NAACP, spoken during his<lb/>
keynote address to the annual state<lb/>
convention of the association in<lb/>
Greenville last weekend.<lb/>
"We're on our way to freedom<lb/>
land and there ain't nobody gonna<lb/>
turn us around Hooks told the au-<lb/>
dience in a comment directed<lb/>
toward Ronald Reagan, budget<lb/>
director David Stockman and Sen.<lb/>
Jesse Helms. "The NAACP was<lb/>
here when Reagan was elected?<lb/>
we'll be here when he's gone<lb/>
Commenting further on past civil<lb/>
rights victories for blacks, Hooks<lb/>
said, "Remember how we got here<lb/>
tonight. There were folks who walk-<lb/>
ed in the streets, got bloody and<lb/>
beat? that's how we got here<lb/>
The standing-room-only audience<lb/>
at the Ramada Inn cheered loudly<lb/>
with each of Hooks' comments.<lb/>
Hooks recently filled the executive<lb/>
post after the death of Roy Wilkins.<lb/>
Hooks said 31 percent of all<lb/>
blacks live at or below the poverty<lb/>
line and 51 percent of black youths<lb/>
are unemployed.<lb/>
"The budget cuts are real he<lb/>
said. "Reagan has just lived in<lb/>
another world. He's sincere, but<lb/>
he's sincerely wrong Hooks added<lb/>
that he did not consider Reagan a<lb/>
rascist, but said "Reagan is anti-<lb/>
poor. He wants to turn back the<lb/>
clock, but we're gonna wind it for-<lb/>
ward. We're gonna move<lb/>
"The vote is our most powerful<lb/>
See BLACK, Page 3<lb/>
City Council Approves<lb/>
Controlled Parking<lb/>
Those Were The Days ?"? ?? CA"V ???"<lb/>
Carol Martoccia, the owner of Pipe Dreams, chats with an<lb/>
employee before the anti-parapernalia law took effect.<lb/>
By DIANE ANDERSON<lb/>
AmuUi Nrwi t.ditor<lb/>
The Greenville City Council ap-<lb/>
proved the establishment of a con-<lb/>
trolled residential parking area near<lb/>
the ECU campus Thursday night.<lb/>
The area includes the north side<lb/>
of Fourth Street from Summit to<lb/>
Student Street and the east side of<lb/>
Jarvis Street from Fourth to Third<lb/>
Street.<lb/>
The reason given for the<lb/>
establishment of the controlled<lb/>
parking area was that two-thirds of<lb/>
the vehicles parked in the area<lb/>
belonged to people not living there.<lb/>
Residents in these neighborhoods<lb/>
will be required to obtain parking<lb/>
stickers which allow them to park<lb/>
on the streets at any time of day.<lb/>
Between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. on<lb/>
weekdays, cars without stickers can<lb/>
park in the restricted areas for only<lb/>
two hours. Any unauthorized vehi-<lb/>
cle parked for more than the two-<lb/>
hour limit will be towed.<lb/>
Signs will be put up designating<lb/>
the controlled parking areas and<lb/>
warnings will be given for the first<lb/>
week of enforcement. The effected<lb/>
areas are all single family, residen<lb/>
tial neighborhoods.<lb/>
Early in the meeting, SGA vice<lb/>
president Marvin Braxton spoke as<lb/>
a representative of the student<lb/>
See PLAN, Page 3<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Opinions4<lb/>
Campus Forum4<lb/>
Entertainment5<lb/>
Sports8<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057431_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 13. 1981<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
ECU Law Society will meet on<lb/>
Thursday niflM, October 15 at i 30<lb/>
in Room Hi. Menuertiall Guest<lb/>
Speaker will be Linda Boon. Ofrec<lb/>
tor o Placement, university of<lb/>
Richmond Law School Please loin<lb/>
us. Further information call Diane<lb/>
Jones rS? ?S?<lb/>
SKI SNOWSHOE<lb/>
Christmas and Spring Break<lb/>
trips will be made to Snowshoe.<lb/>
West Virginia for PMVE credit or<lb/>
non credit There will be mn<lb/>
organiiational meeting on Man<lb/>
day, October 17 at 5 p.m in<lb/>
Minges. room let. A slide presen<lb/>
tat.on will be shown and informa<lb/>
tion on ski packages will be<lb/>
distributed Space is limited for<lb/>
each trip Reservations will be ac<lb/>
cepted at mis meeting For addi<lb/>
tional information contact Mrs Jo<lb/>
Saunders at W 4000. Memorial<lb/>
Gym 705<lb/>
VOLLEYBALL<lb/>
THe PRC Society and Jeffery's<lb/>
Beer and Wine will be sponsoring<lb/>
a Co Rec volleyball Tournament<lb/>
at Minges Coliseum on October 31<lb/>
fromlJepm There is a ten dollar<lb/>
entry fee First place, keg. second<lb/>
place, pony keg Other prizes will<lb/>
be awarded Sign up at the PRC<lb/>
building iBehmd McDonalds and<lb/>
across Irom Hardees on Cotanche<lb/>
St 1 Deadline Oct W Teams must<lb/>
consist of six persons with at least<lb/>
two females per team<lb/>
COMMUNITY ARTS<lb/>
MANAGEMENT<lb/>
There will be a meeting of all the<lb/>
Community Arts Management<lb/>
majors October 14 The meeting<lb/>
will be held in Jenkins Auditorium<lb/>
at :30 pm Mary Ann Penn<lb/>
ington. Director of Greenville Art<lb/>
Museum will be the speaker<lb/>
GEOLOGY<lb/>
The Geology Club would like to<lb/>
invite all persons to attend Brown<lb/>
Bag Seminar no J on October 16.<lb/>
at 1 p m in Room 301. Graham<lb/>
Building The topic will be<lb/>
"Geochronology as a Tool for<lb/>
Deciphering trie Geologic History<lb/>
of me Appalachians presented<lb/>
by Or Paul D Fullager, Prof of<lb/>
Geology. UNC CH A short<lb/>
meeting of the Geology Club will<lb/>
follow the seminar to discuss up<lb/>
coming events, including a Hallo<lb/>
ween party Remember ? bring<lb/>
your lunch!<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
COMMITTEES FOR<lb/>
STUDENT MEMBERS<lb/>
Applications are now being<lb/>
taken for students wishing to serve<lb/>
on university Committees for the<lb/>
101 17 school year A number of<lb/>
student positions art open on<lb/>
University Admimstrtative Com<lb/>
miftees and Faculty Senate Com<lb/>
mi flees<lb/>
These commmittees with stu<lb/>
dent vacancies art<lb/>
COMMITTEES<lb/>
Administrative Committees<lb/>
Alcohol'Orug Education Commit<lb/>
tee<lb/>
Committee for International Stu<lb/>
dent Affairs<lb/>
Committee for Residence Life<lb/>
Committee on Status of Minorities<lb/>
Committee on Student Health Ser<lb/>
vices<lb/>
Handicapped Student Services<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
Residence Status Appeals Com<lb/>
mittee<lb/>
Scholarship Weekend Committee<lb/>
Traffic Appeals Committee<lb/>
University Facilities Committee<lb/>
HISTORY<lb/>
All history maiors and minors<lb/>
are invited to attend Phi Alpha<lb/>
The'a's annual cookout Hotdogs<lb/>
and other refreshments" will be<lb/>
served1 Tickets can be purchased<lb/>
for S7 00 from any Phi Alpha Theta<lb/>
member or m the history dept of<lb/>
fkre It will be he'd Oct 16 at 4 X<lb/>
at tne picnic area next to<lb/>
Memorial Gym<lb/>
Any hisotry maior or minor who<lb/>
has 17 h .n history, ag pa of 3 0<lb/>
in history and a 7 y overall is m<lb/>
vited to become a member of the<lb/>
Lamoaa E'a chapter of Phi Alpha.<lb/>
Theta international Honor Society<lb/>
in H.story<lb/>
SNEA<lb/>
The Student National Education<lb/>
Association meeting will be held<lb/>
October Jl. Wednesday, at 4 00<lb/>
p m. m Speight 701 All education<lb/>
maiors are invited<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
There wii be a meeting ot the<lb/>
N C Student Legislature on Tues<lb/>
day. October 13 at 7 p.m in<lb/>
Menoenha" 717 All interested per<lb/>
sons please attend<lb/>
BILLIARDS<lb/>
Register now for the ACU I<lb/>
MEN'S DAY STUDENT<lb/>
BILLIARDS TOURNAMENT to<lb/>
be held Monday October 19 at 6<lb/>
p.m. at Mendenhaii All ECU day<lb/>
students who wish to participate<lb/>
must register at the Billiaros<lb/>
Center no later than Sunday. Oc<lb/>
tober IS<lb/>
This double elimination eight<lb/>
ball tournament will determine<lb/>
me top tour (4) day student con<lb/>
tenders who will face the dorm<lb/>
student winners m the ACU I All<lb/>
Campus B'Hiards Tournament to<lb/>
be held Monday November 2 and<lb/>
Tuesday. November 3 The first<lb/>
and second place finishers of the<lb/>
All Campus Tournament will<lb/>
represent ECU at the regional<lb/>
tournament in Virginia in<lb/>
February The ail expense paid<lb/>
trip for me delegates will be spon<lb/>
sored by Mendenhaii Student<lb/>
Center<lb/>
Registration torms and detailed<lb/>
information is available at the<lb/>
Billiards Center<lb/>
Faculty<lb/>
miftees<lb/>
Senate Academic Com<lb/>
WORSHIP<lb/>
A Student Episcopal service of<lb/>
Holy Communion will be<lb/>
celebrated Tuesday evening. Oc<lb/>
tober 13 m the chapel of St Paul s<lb/>
Episcopal Church. 406 4th Street<lb/>
lone block from Garrett Dormi<lb/>
The service will be at 5 30 p m<lb/>
witti the Episcopal Chaplain, the<lb/>
Bev Bill Hadden. celebrating<lb/>
Admissions Committee<lb/>
Career Education Committee<lb/>
Committee for Teaching EHec<lb/>
tiveness<lb/>
Course Drop Appeals Committee<lb/>
Continuing Education Committee<lb/>
Credits Committee<lb/>
General College Committee<lb/>
Student Scholarship. Fellowships<lb/>
and Financial Aid<lb/>
Teacher Education Committee<lb/>
university Computer committee<lb/>
University Libraries Committee<lb/>
Applications may be picked up<lb/>
at the following locations Office<lb/>
of the Vice Chancellor tor Student<lb/>
Life. 704 Whichard. Mendenhaii<lb/>
Student Center information Desk<lb/>
SGA Office. Mendenhaii Student<lb/>
Center Office of intramural<lb/>
Recreational Services. Memorial<lb/>
Gym and Residence Han Drec<lb/>
tors Offices<lb/>
The university greatly ap<lb/>
preciates the efforts of those<lb/>
students who have served in the<lb/>
past and hope that students will<lb/>
continue their interest and par<lb/>
ticipation Questions about<lb/>
University committees and<lb/>
membership may be directed to<lb/>
the Office of the Vice Chancellor<lb/>
tor Student Lite (757 6541)<lb/>
SURF CLUB<lb/>
A meeting will be held wednes<lb/>
day October 14 and Aednesdav<lb/>
October 71 at 7 00 8 OOP m . Room<lb/>
771 Mendenhaii<lb/>
All members are urged to at<lb/>
tend New members welcomed1<lb/>
CAMPUS<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
REGISTRATION<lb/>
The Office ot the Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Student Life is cur<lb/>
rently registering campus<lb/>
organizations for 1981 87 It you<lb/>
are a member of a new or existing<lb/>
organization, verify with the of<lb/>
ficers that a registration lorm tor<lb/>
your organization has been com<lb/>
pleted and returned to this office<lb/>
Forms are available at four loca<lb/>
tions on campus Mendenhaii Stu<lb/>
dent Center information Desk.<lb/>
SGA Office, intramural<lb/>
Recreational Services Office and<lb/>
704 Whichard Building The final<lb/>
deadline for receipt of these<lb/>
registration forms is October 78.<lb/>
1981 Organizations failing to<lb/>
register will not be allowed to use<lb/>
campus facilities The following is<lb/>
a list of last year's organizations<lb/>
that have not registered this year<lb/>
Alpha Xi Delta. American Choral<lb/>
Directors Association, American<lb/>
Society ot Interior Designers Ar<lb/>
chery Club of East Carolina Bap<lb/>
fist Student Union Beta tcappa<lb/>
Alphas. Buccaneer Campus<lb/>
Christian Fellowship Clay Guild.<lb/>
Delta Sigma Phi. Delta Zeta ECU<lb/>
Adult Education Association ECU<lb/>
Fencing Club, ECU Gay Com<lb/>
munity, ECU Hillel. ECU Media<lb/>
Board ECU Physical Fitness<lb/>
Club. ECU Raquetbali Club. ECU<lb/>
Snow Skiing Club. ECU Surf Club.<lb/>
Gamma Sigma Sigma. Geoid. In<lb/>
dependents for Anderson, intra<lb/>
Fraternity Council, international<lb/>
Students Association. Kappa<lb/>
Sigma. Lambda Alpha Epsilon,<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha. Medical<lb/>
School Guild. North Carolina<lb/>
Vocational Association. Omega<lb/>
Psi Phi. Physical Education Ma<lb/>
jors Club, Physical Therapy Club.<lb/>
Pi Mu Epsilon. Pi Sigma Alpha<lb/>
Rebel. Returning Older Students<lb/>
in Education Rho Epsilon. Rock<lb/>
Church Student Fellowship. Senior<lb/>
Class Presdent Sigma Nu Sigma<lb/>
Phi Epsilon, Sigma Pi Sigma<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma Sigma Tau<lb/>
Gamma Sigma Xi Society lor<lb/>
Collegiate journalists Society ot<lb/>
United Liberal Students<lb/>
Socialogy'Anthropology Club, Stu<lb/>
dent Council for Exceptional<lb/>
Children Student Dietetic<lb/>
Association Student Legislature<lb/>
of East Carolina Student<lb/>
Volunteers tor Real Tau KaptM<lb/>
Epsilon, University Folk ? Coun<lb/>
try Dance Club<lb/>
COURSES FOR<lb/>
NON MUSIC MAJORS<lb/>
Music Appreciation (Must 77081<lb/>
it the music class most often taken<lb/>
by non music maiors However,<lb/>
the following music classes also<lb/>
are available tor General Educa<lb/>
tion Fine Arts credit Muse 7718.<lb/>
Orchestral Music Muse 7738. Con<lb/>
temporary Music and Muse 7758.<lb/>
History of Jazz Music<lb/>
The following performance<lb/>
groups accept non music maiors<lb/>
by permission ot the instructor<lb/>
Concert Band Symphonic Band.<lb/>
University Chorale, Man's Glee<lb/>
Club. Women s Glee Club and<lb/>
Women's Chorus Limited spaces<lb/>
will be available tor private<lb/>
lessons m several applied music<lb/>
areas<lb/>
DEMOCRATS<lb/>
There will be an organizational<lb/>
meeting of the College Federation<lb/>
of Young Democrats m Room 248<lb/>
Mendenhaii at 7 p m Wednesday<lb/>
mght All interested students<lb/>
please attend A discussion of the<lb/>
itinerary tor the February visit<lb/>
from Vice President Mondale will<lb/>
be discussed 11 there are any<lb/>
questions please call Marvin<lb/>
Braxton at 758 2 791<lb/>
As of October 14 198' room<lb/>
reservations for any organization<lb/>
listed above desirng campus<lb/>
facilities through the Central<lb/>
Resevation Office will be held un<lb/>
til verification ot registration has<lb/>
Oeen received from the Office of<lb/>
the Vice Chancellor tor Student<lb/>
Lite<lb/>
THE WAY<lb/>
GOD wants you to have the best<lb/>
lite now To get the best life now<lb/>
you must understand God ano his<lb/>
promises To understand God and<lb/>
his promises you must understand<lb/>
the Bible (Word and will of God)<lb/>
is anybody out there not satisfied<lb/>
with what the know and wants to<lb/>
know more about how to live the<lb/>
best life now it you desire to<lb/>
know the truth come by and iOn<lb/>
us on our enioyable quest Always<lb/>
Monday and Thrusday night 7 30<lb/>
p m MSC Room 242 and Thurs<lb/>
day morning 11 30 am Room<lb/>
212 dust past the music listening<lb/>
room). Mendenhaii Stend Student<lb/>
Center i Romans 8)<lb/>
BACKGAMMON<lb/>
T he ACU I All Campus<lb/>
Backgammon Tournament will be<lb/>
held Monday October 26 at 6 p m<lb/>
in the MSC Multi Purpose Room<lb/>
The double elimination competi<lb/>
tion sponsored t Mendenhaii<lb/>
Student Center, will determine the<lb/>
two 12 representatives who will<lb/>
compete at the ACU I Region v<lb/>
Tournament n Virginia m<lb/>
February The all expense paid<lb/>
tnp tor the delegates will be spon<lb/>
sored by Mendenhaii<lb/>
All ECU students who wish to<lb/>
participate must register at the<lb/>
Billiards Center no later man Sun<lb/>
day October 25<lb/>
CORSSOCW<lb/>
AH Corrections and Social Work<lb/>
maiors and intended maior are m<lb/>
vited to attend a "blast" with the<lb/>
faculty Tickets to this wing ding<lb/>
are $2 00 and are on sale at the cor<lb/>
rections social work office on 3rd<lb/>
floor Allied Health or from any<lb/>
CORSO Member<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
Tau Chapter ot Phi Sigma P Na<lb/>
tional Honor Fraternity will meet<lb/>
at 6 p m tomorrow to address m<lb/>
vitations to the tall smoker Please<lb/>
try to attend<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHY<lb/>
Have you looked at a 35mm SLR<lb/>
camera and thought how difficult<lb/>
it must be to use with all the dials,<lb/>
numbers switches and settings?<lb/>
Many people are frightened away<lb/>
from the camera because it does<lb/>
look complex However, the<lb/>
camera is designed for everyone<lb/>
from beginner to professional<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHY a course now<lb/>
offered at Mendenhaii Student<lb/>
Center is an introduction for<lb/>
beginners to the operation of a<lb/>
35mm single lens reflex camera<lb/>
and to some basic photographic<lb/>
techniques Metering, depth of<lb/>
field, shutter speeds aperture<lb/>
control, filters electronic flash,<lb/>
and types of film will be discussed<lb/>
Participants will be required to<lb/>
shoot film and have it processed<lb/>
for reviewing during class time<lb/>
Also participants must have a<lb/>
35mm SLR or a twin lens reflex<lb/>
camera to use during the course<lb/>
The workshop will meet each<lb/>
Tuesday evening tor six weeks<lb/>
from 7pm until 10 p m begmn<lb/>
ing October 27 Participants must<lb/>
regster m person at the MSC<lb/>
Crafts Center no later than Satur<lb/>
day October 24<lb/>
WOMEN'S BILLIARDS<lb/>
Register now tor the ACU I All<lb/>
Campus Women's Billiards Tour<lb/>
namenl to be held Wednesday. Oc<lb/>
tober 28 a? 6 p m at Menoenhall<lb/>
The registration deadline is Mon<lb/>
day October 26<lb/>
This double elimination eight<lb/>
ball tournament will determine<lb/>
the one (1) winner who will repre<lb/>
sent ECU m the women's billiards<lb/>
event at the regional tournament<lb/>
in Virginia in February The all<lb/>
expense paid trip will be spon<lb/>
sored by Mendenhaii Student<lb/>
Center<lb/>
Registration forms and detailed<lb/>
information is available at the<lb/>
Billiards Center<lb/>
MODEL UNITED<lb/>
NATIONS<lb/>
There will be a meeting ot the<lb/>
Model united Nations on Thurs<lb/>
day October 15 at 4 00 m<lb/>
Brewster C 105 All interested peo<lb/>
pie are welcome to come<lb/>
RUSSIAN ANYONE?<lb/>
if you were closed out of Russian<lb/>
1001 last semester or could not fit<lb/>
it into your schedule, the course<lb/>
will be ottered again Spring<lb/>
semester. MWF at 9 00<lb/>
Also offered wii be Russian<lb/>
Literature of the 19th Century in<lb/>
translation. (RUSS 7770) a course<lb/>
which deals with Dostoevsky.<lb/>
Tolstoy and other great Russian<lb/>
wirters This course is taught m<lb/>
English (MWF 1 00) and if may be<lb/>
taken as an elective or to satisfy<lb/>
the General College humanities<lb/>
requirement<lb/>
GTU<lb/>
POETRY FORUM<lb/>
ECU Poetry Forum meet this<lb/>
Thursday. Oct 15, at 8 p m m<lb/>
Mendenhaii 748 Open to anyone<lb/>
wishing feedback on hisher<lb/>
poetry Those planning to attend<lb/>
are asked to bring 6 or 8 copies of<lb/>
each poem Listeners also<lb/>
welcome<lb/>
CORSO<lb/>
All Corrections and Social Work<lb/>
maiors and intended maiors are<lb/>
invited to attend the CORSO<lb/>
meeting Thursday. October 15<lb/>
(today) at 5 30 m room 271 of<lb/>
Mendenhaii Student Center. We<lb/>
are going to plan the big "bash"<lb/>
with the faculty Please come!<lb/>
GTU is the world wide<lb/>
Geography Honor Society It pro<lb/>
motes the advancement of<lb/>
geography, and gives honor<lb/>
students a chance to participate<lb/>
and converse with others of me<lb/>
same academic level its ac<lb/>
tivities include field trips world<lb/>
renowned travelers, domestic and<lb/>
toreign dinners, interesting guest<lb/>
speakers and much morel To<lb/>
become a member, one must have<lb/>
a 3 0 or above in at least I class ot<lb/>
geography For more information<lb/>
contact Chuck Ziehr at his office<lb/>
(BA73S) or call Mitch Doub at<lb/>
752 0673<lb/>
Check it out! Why not come Dr<lb/>
the next meeting of GTU on Thurs<lb/>
day. Oct 15 at 4 p m Iff Brewster<lb/>
C 703<lb/>
COMPUTERS<lb/>
The ECU chapter ol ACM<lb/>
(Association for Computer<lb/>
Machinery) will meet this Thurs<lb/>
day at 3 30, October 15, m Room<lb/>
771 Austin Anyone interested in<lb/>
any aspect of computers is invited<lb/>
to attend Dr Harper of Co<lb/>
operative Education will speak on<lb/>
the demand for Computer Science<lb/>
maiors and minors to work thru<lb/>
the co op program<lb/>
CHEMICAL SOCIETY<lb/>
On Monday. October 19<lb/>
American Chemical Society Stu<lb/>
dent Affiliate will have a business<lb/>
meeting at 7 p m in Flanagan 702<lb/>
If attending please bring a dsf<lb/>
for a covered dish supper a.<lb/>
members and interested person<lb/>
are urged to attend F or further m<lb/>
formation ran Dawn Williami<lb/>
758 8948<lb/>
BEGINNING PIANO<lb/>
AVAILABLE<lb/>
Beginning Piano Group classes<lb/>
will be available 'o "on musii ma<lb/>
,ors during the Spring Semester<lb/>
Because of limited capacity 'or<lb/>
these classes 't ? , no' ofr- mat<lb/>
these masses are eva lav - '<lb/>
non music maior These (<lb/>
classes win be taught Met<lb/>
and Wednesdays at 12 ??and?OJ!<lb/>
da,s and Wednesdays a' I V<lb/>
Permission to enroll m one o?<lb/>
these piano classes must re-<lb/>
tained in advance If<lb/>
RKhard Lucht Room 377 of ?<lb/>
A J Fletcher Music C I<lb/>
SLAPMAJORS<lb/>
pre regisira' on for ail '??<lb/>
College students interested n n-a<lb/>
lormg in SLAP will meet on Tues<lb/>
day. October 13 at 7 p n-<lb/>
Brewster D 113<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
? ; Jjp?<lb/>
The Fleming Center has been hare for you since 1974<lb/>
providing private, undeMtonding health care<lb/>
to women of an aBS at a reasonable ooet<lb/>
The Fleming Center we're here when you need ue.<lb/>
OaP 781-S5S0 to Eakritf atnytiaM.<lb/>
i<lb/>
FLEMING CENTER<lb/>
Civil Rights 'Intolerant'<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
S?v mi the i wnpus i 'tmmunn i<lb/>
m-ctl92i<lb/>
Published every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during the academic<lb/>
year and every Wednesday dur<lb/>
ing tne summer<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the of<lb/>
ficiai newspaper ot East<lb/>
Carolina University, owned<lb/>
operated, and published lor and<lb/>
by the students of East Carolina<lb/>
University<lb/>
Subscription Rate: 570yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
are located m the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus of ECU.<lb/>
Greenville. N C<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL<lb/>
(L'Pl) ? A chief<lb/>
negotiator for the<lb/>
University of North<lb/>
Carolina in its recently<lb/>
settled desegregation<lb/>
dispute with the federal<lb/>
government accused<lb/>
civil rights leaders<lb/>
Monday of intolerance<lb/>
that has hampered at-<lb/>
tainment of civil rights<lb/>
goals.<lb/>
UNC Vice President<lb/>
Raymond H. Dawson,<lb/>
speaking during the<lb/>
commemoration of the<lb/>
188th anniversary of<lb/>
the founding of UNC,<lb/>
said the civil rights<lb/>
establishment gained<lb/>
influence and power by<lb/>
fighting injustice and<lb/>
intolerance.<lb/>
"How ironic, how<lb/>
paradoxical, when we<lb/>
reflect on that move-<lb/>
ment, that some of its<lb/>
present-day Ladership<lb/>
has become intolerant<lb/>
of dissent from its<lb/>
prescriptions<lb/>
Dawson said.<lb/>
The settlement of the<lb/>
desegregation dispute<lb/>
has been opposed by<lb/>
civil rights groups,<lb/>
most notably the<lb/>
NAACP Legal Defense<lb/>
Fund. Dawson, while<lb/>
praising the ac-<lb/>
complishments of the<lb/>
civil rights movement,<lb/>
said dissent is now<lb/>
unacceptable to some<lb/>
civil rights leaders.<lb/>
"Past ac-<lb/>
complishments and<lb/>
achievements do not<lb/>
confer infallibility on<lb/>
any of that leadership<lb/>
or give it license for<lb/>
vindictiveness toward<lb/>
those who may hold<lb/>
honest but different<lb/>
views about how best to<lb/>
carry forward the goals<lb/>
of the civil rights move-<lb/>
ment in higher educa-<lb/>
tion he said. "Moral<lb/>
prestige is not a wai-<lb/>
rant for intolerance<lb/>
toward dissenting views<lb/>
and such a spirit is ut-<lb/>
terly contrary to the<lb/>
ideals of that move<lb/>
ment<lb/>
Dawson stressed he<lb/>
was not critical of the<lb/>
civil rights movement,<lb/>
which he said<lb/>
"embodies the hopes<lb/>
and aspirations of<lb/>
Americans tor equal<lb/>
justice under law But<lb/>
he said there is also a<lb/>
"civil rights establish-<lb/>
ment" that wields<lb/>
tremendous influence<lb/>
over the national media<lb/>
and other opinion<lb/>
leaders.<lb/>
Dawson said he<lb/>
believes the University<lb/>
of North Carolina is<lb/>
making progress in<lb/>
desegregating its<lb/>
system. He said univer-<lb/>
sity officials want to do<lb/>
better and are working<lb/>
towards that coal.<lb/>
POSTMASTER Send address<lb/>
changes to The East Carolinian.<lb/>
Old South Building. ECU Green<lb/>
ville. NC 77834<lb/>
Telephone 757 43?4. J7. J??<lb/>
Application to mail at second<lb/>
class postage rates is pending at<lb/>
Greenville. North Carolina<lb/>
InO,<lb/>
F MONOGRAMS <lb/>
NathMMlNnupMuWfwt<lb/>
Oct13<lb/>
PRIVATE CU,B<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
L<lb/>
UNLIMITED<lb/>
Get Your Sweaters &amp; Shirts<lb/>
Ready for the Fall.<lb/>
Co-Ed Outlet<lb/>
Located next to Plitt Theatre<lb/>
Mon. Sat. 10 9 Call 335 2424<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
WATER BEDS! Now students can<lb/>
buy a waferbed (Queen or King)<lb/>
direct from mgf. Yog can save up<lb/>
to one-half retail Complete beds<lb/>
with IS yr warranty matress, S yr<lb/>
warranty thermostat heater, liner,<lb/>
frame, headboard, pedestal for as<lb/>
low as it Queen in King. Call<lb/>
David. Deli vary Adv. TSII-MOe.<lb/>
Pi CANNON camera Good condi<lb/>
t.on. low price, CM 7M-1MS.<lb/>
HEADSKIS W Solomon bindings.<lb/>
New ladies siteSan Marfco boots.<lb/>
?i00. 7S7 i?0.<lb/>
ONE pair elegant Mack pumps.<lb/>
site 108 Like new. Call 7S1-U3S or<lb/>
7S7M3S. <lb/>
ALLIGATORS FOR Salt at<lb/>
bargain prices? your Hod<lb/>
Lecost headquarters? Gordon<lb/>
Pulp located at Greenville Coun-<lb/>
try Ciub m-as.<lb/>
LIKE NEW: Fender guitar with<lb/>
handshett case and all ac-<lb/>
cessaries. $1S. 71?;JIM.<lb/>
lMe MCI fjaod condition Call<lb/>
Rene at tSe-IMt.<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted 2<lb/>
bdrm townhouse approx. S blocks<lb/>
from man campus. Rent S75 mo<lb/>
utilities one-third Contact<lb/>
7S?-I47 Available now.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED to share<lb/>
Tar River Estates apt. S blocks<lb/>
from campus. 3 bedrooms. 1<lb/>
baths. S170 month one-half<lb/>
utilities, 0 deposit. Call Scott<lb/>
757-W around noon or late at<lb/>
night.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed to<lb/>
share apt. at Eastbrook S11S plus<lb/>
utilities. Call 7S7-4443.<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
WHO IS the ugliest man on cam-<lb/>
pusT<lb/>
TYPING for students, professors,<lb/>
etc. Kempie Dunn. 101 E Wright<lb/>
Rd. Greenville, NC 77114. Call<lb/>
7S7-4733 after 1 MR.<lb/>
NOTARY PUBLIC: Convenient<lb/>
and inexpensive. Call Amy at<lb/>
7 S7 37 34 .<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPIST wit<lb/>
fifteen years experience as ad<lb/>
mmistrative secretary wants to do<lb/>
typing at home. Reasonable rates.<lb/>
Call TSa-leae.<lb/>
LOOK GOOD<lb/>
sional typing:<lb/>
SSO0-S1200 monthly. Sightseeing.<lb/>
Free info. Write IJC Box 52 NC 4<lb/>
Corona Del Mar. CA 17S.<lb/>
TYPING: TMESIS, manuscripts,<lb/>
reports; all types and quantities<lb/>
protesional quality- reasonable<lb/>
rates Call 7S?-17?e.<lb/>
LOST: ORANGEGREEN striped<lb/>
beaded chokder necklace, along<lb/>
E 10th St. Thursday morning<lb/>
September 24. Contact Janice or<lb/>
Renate at 757-MSl or come by<lb/>
School ot Music office. Reward.<lb/>
GREEN M and M's ar an ag old<lb/>
secret to a helfhy sexual attitude.<lb/>
Have tun skating. Victoria.<lb/>
HELP NEEDED with term<lb/>
papers. Good pay included. Cal<lb/>
7S244M7.<lb/>
Precision<lb/>
Decisions<lb/>
Stylist Ron Nichols<lb/>
ECU Student Special<lb/>
$7 For Layer Styles<lb/>
$10 Ladies Fashions Styles<lb/>
219 Cotanche - Suite 7<lb/>
m<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTEO<lb/>
17Smonth plus on Halt utilities.<lb/>
Near campus on E. Tenth St. Call<lb/>
7SB-7W.<lb/>
ROOM FOR rent in a nice house 2<lb/>
blacks (rant campus an a2 East<lb/>
4ti St. Rent ?7S pips utilities Call<lb/>
7S1-M?. <lb/>
hi paper. Prefes-<lb/>
AMCAS. secon<lb/>
danes, resume research papers,<lb/>
ate. WRITE RIGHT. 7S-Wa.<lb/>
WE SPEAK Turabian (APA, PRC.<lb/>
etc.) Highest quality typing, all<lb/>
style manuals. WRITE RIGHT<lb/>
757 4.<lb/>
OVERSEAS JOBS<lb/>
mryar round<lb/>
Amer.<lb/>
Sum<lb/>
Europe. S.<lb/>
Australia. Asia. All fields.<lb/>
Sun. Testing Equipment Road Service<lb/>
N.C. Inspection Station<lb/>
Complete Automotive Service<lb/>
Foreign and Domestic Cars<lb/>
COREY'S EXXON<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
I SERVICE CENTER<lb/>
2753 East 10th Street<lb/>
I 758-2913<lb/>
MONDAY -<lb/>
CHOPPED STEAK<lb/>
30C<lb/>
one<lb/>
AT BARRE, ltd.<lb/>
Dancewear Specialty Shop<lb/>
See us for all<lb/>
of your Halloween Needs.<lb/>
422 ARLINGTOfl BLVD.<lb/>
ORCtnVILLC. N.C 27834<lb/>
(919) 756-6670<lb/>
3ft)C<lb/>
10?7o<lb/>
xxz<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
:5S<lb/>
Discount to All<lb/>
ECU Students and Faculty<lb/>
On All Repair Work.<lb/>
Located beside N.C.<lb/>
Department of Motor Vehicles<lb/>
OWNED &amp; OPERATED BY REXCOREX<lb/>
m&amp;n<lb/>
"The<lb/>
Family<lb/>
Steak<lb/>
House"<lb/>
Famous<lb/>
Salad Bar<lb/>
WESTERN SIZZLIN9<lb/>
1.99<lb/>
THURSDAY -<lb/>
STEAK SANDWICH<lb/>
$1.69<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
BEEF TIPS<lb/>
$1.99<lb/>
WEDNESDAY -<lb/>
CUBED STEAK.<lb/>
M.89<lb/>
FRIDAY -<lb/>
U.S.D.A. RIB EYE<lb/>
$3.79<lb/>
SATURDAY -<lb/>
BARBEQUE RIBS<lb/>
2.99<lb/>
SUNDAY -<lb/>
STEAK ON A STICK<lb/>
1.99<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
All Meals are<lb/>
complete including<lb/>
Baked Potato or<lb/>
French Fries &amp;<lb/>
Texas Toast<lb/>
Tak Out Service<lb/>
103 E. lm $t.<lb/>
rst-im<lb/>
1M Bypass?HMM<lb/>
Hours II a m Up m<lb/>
Mon Thurs<lb/>
19a m. 11 p.M. Fri Sun<lb/>
Bi<lb/>
A<lb/>
Greenvl<lb/>
c I u d i n<lb/>
student<lb/>
membt<lb/>
North<lb/>
Ne!Aor<lb/>
da<lb/>
Semoi<lb/>
I<lb/>
was<lb/>
precnl<lb/>
weapof<lb/>
which<lb/>
Com i<lb/>
B -52<lb/>
tiond<lb/>
weapoi<lb/>
i ontii<lb/>
the<lb/>
don<lb/>
the<lb/>
with<lb/>
and<lb/>
Helms<lb/>
BlaJ<lb/>
all<lb/>
tended<lb/>
as wc<lb/>
and<lb/>
I<lb/>
Contil<lb/>
govel<lb/>
apolq<lb/>
cil fo<lb/>
presi<lb/>
for<lb/>
a p p el<lb/>
Septe<lb/>
The<lb/>
The<lb/>
refere<lb/>
mere)<lb/>
bicvJ<lb/>
The!<lb/>
secul<lb/>
keet<lb/>
crei<lb/>
ing<lb/>
opei<lb/>
on<lb/>
andl<lb/>
dan)<lb/>
the<lb/>
pedj<lb/>
t'nf<lb/>
Ler.<lb/>
greJ<lb/>
enfi<lb/>
reg?<lb/>
sit<lb/>
Mo<lb/>
sau<lb/>
1SSI<lb/>
Cal<lb/>
seci<lb/>
T<lb/>
<pb facs="00057431_0003"/><lb/>
rHE EAST CAROLINIAN ' lUHl-k 13, IY81<lb/>
Nukes Protested By ECU Students<lb/>
IF T Y<lb/>
'IANO<lb/>
T4<lb/>
a<lb/>
r<lb/>
ily<lb/>
I<lb/>
 . <lb/>
it<lb/>
se<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
B PATRICK<lb/>
O'NEILL<lb/>
surf V?rtirr<lb/>
A large group of<lb/>
Greenville residents in-<lb/>
cluding 13 ECU<lb/>
students and faculty<lb/>
members joined the<lb/>
North Carolina Peace<lb/>
Network's igil Satur-<lb/>
day at the gates of<lb/>
Seymour Johnson Air<lb/>
Force Base in<lb/>
Goldsboro. The<lb/>
group's central purpose<lb/>
was to protest the<lb/>
presence of nuclear<lb/>
weapons at the base,<lb/>
which is a Strategic Ail<lb/>
Command base where<lb/>
B-52 bombers are sta-<lb/>
ll ond with nuclear<lb/>
weapons on board.<lb/>
l:dith Webber, an<lb/>
ECU English teacher<lb/>
who participated in the<lb/>
vigil, felt it was a<lb/>
positive experience. "1<lb/>
wouldn't be there if I<lb/>
didn't have hope-we've<lb/>
got to do something<lb/>
she said. "We're (The<lb/>
United States)<lb/>
senselessly building<lb/>
these weapons without<lb/>
thinking<lb/>
ECU political science<lb/>
student Tim Howard<lb/>
stated. "The weapons<lb/>
we're building now are<lb/>
bringing us closer to the<lb/>
threshold (of nuclear<lb/>
war). 1 don't agree with<lb/>
Reagan's defense<lb/>
policies ? 1 do believe<lb/>
in national defense ?<lb/>
but he's going the<lb/>
wrong way<lb/>
The North Carolina<lb/>
Peace Network is a<lb/>
coalition of many<lb/>
organizations<lb/>
throughout North<lb/>
Carolina. The group<lb/>
has held vigil at<lb/>
Goldsboro three<lb/>
previous times and plan<lb/>
to keep their focus<lb/>
there.<lb/>
"I'm not optimistic<lb/>
at all, it doesn't make<lb/>
any sense working for<lb/>
peace by building<lb/>
weapons that kill<lb/>
said Vicki Marder, and<lb/>
ECU nutrition major.<lb/>
"Why can't we work<lb/>
for peace in a peaceful<lb/>
manner?"<lb/>
The participants said<lb/>
they felt good about<lb/>
I heir efforts and noted<lb/>
many positive gestures<lb/>
from passing motorists.<lb/>
"I'd like to see a lot<lb/>
more students out<lb/>
here Webber com-<lb/>
mented. A small group<lb/>
of counter-<lb/>
demonstrators stating<lb/>
their belief in peace<lb/>
through strength felt<lb/>
the N.C. Peace Net-<lb/>
work was unrealistic.<lb/>
"I'm for the nuclear<lb/>
weapons here stated<lb/>
John Durrett, a<lb/>
Goldsboro resident<lb/>
The two groups stood<lb/>
next to each other and<lb/>
conversed in a friend!)<lb/>
manner. Passers-bv<lb/>
were not even aware ol<lb/>
the two separate groups<lb/>
unless they read each<lb/>
person's signs careful-<lb/>
ly.<lb/>
E CU students<lb/>
Theresa Dulski and Sue<lb/>
Lauver held a series of<lb/>
signs stating, "No<lb/>
nuclear weapons<lb/>
USA USSR Save<lb/>
Goldsboro On the<lb/>
lighter side. Marders<lb/>
sign read "More Cukes<lb/>
? 1 ess Nukes<lb/>
Goldsboro residents<lb/>
Black Leaders Meet<lb/>
Continued from Page I<lb/>
weapon Hooks told<lb/>
the audience " V e<lb/>
don have to continue<lb/>
the rest of our lives<lb/>
with Senator John East<lb/>
and Senator Jesse<lb/>
Helms<lb/>
Black leaders from<lb/>
all over :he state at-<lb/>
tended the convention<lb/>
.in well as ECU faculty<lb/>
and students,<lb/>
Virginia Carlton,<lb/>
president of the It I<lb/>
chapter of the<lb/>
NAACP, thanked the<lb/>
students who worked<lb/>
hard to make the State<lb/>
Youth Convention.<lb/>
aKo held in Greenville,<lb/>
a success.<lb/>
"We are in the learn-<lb/>
ing stages ourselves and<lb/>
now 1 have manv new<lb/>
ideas from the youth<lb/>
workshops Carlton<lb/>
said Monday. "I'm<lb/>
very optimistic She<lb/>
united further student<lb/>
participation in<lb/>
NAACP activities.<lb/>
"We are here for the<lb/>
students to come to us.<lb/>
W e want to help<lb/>
Carlton also thanked<lb/>
local NAACP president<lb/>
I).I). Garreti and con-<lb/>
vention chairperson<lb/>
Willie Mae Carney for<lb/>
their work at making<lb/>
the convention a suc-<lb/>
cess.<lb/>
When questioned<lb/>
about what role college<lb/>
students should play.<lb/>
Hooks said "we should<lb/>
use our education and<lb/>
build coalitions across<lb/>
racial lines<lb/>
"Don't give up hope<lb/>
or faith he said. "As<lb/>
sure as 1 stand, God is<lb/>
still onthe throne. If<lb/>
you do your best, there<lb/>
is a reward<lb/>
Plan Introduced<lb/>
Continued from Page I<lb/>
govern m en t. He<lb/>
apologized to the coun-<lb/>
cil for himself and S i <lb/>
president L ester Nail<lb/>
for the editorial that<lb/>
appeared in the<lb/>
September 22 issue of<lb/>
The East Carolinian.<lb/>
The editorial was in<lb/>
reference to Greenville<lb/>
merchants.<lb/>
A : im prehensive<lb/>
land development plan<lb/>
was introduced by<lb/>
planning director Bob-<lb/>
bv E. Roberson. The<lb/>
plan has taken dp<lb/>
proximateh 14 months<lb/>
to do he said.<lb/>
Planner Skip<lb/>
Browder explained the<lb/>
plan's inclusion of ar-<lb/>
rangements for pro-<lb/>
gress and growth within<lb/>
the K I campus. I he<lb/>
plan includes student<lb/>
living requirements,<lb/>
utilities and public<lb/>
transportation tor the<lb/>
university.<lb/>
Regarding t he<lb/>
medical school com<lb/>
plex, Browder stated<lb/>
that the long-range<lb/>
outlook was for it to be<lb/>
"the regional medical<lb/>
center.<lb/>
Several Department<lb/>
ol Geographv faculty<lb/>
members were included<lb/>
on the planning task<lb/>
force.<lb/>
Councilman I ouis I .<lb/>
Clark said he was<lb/>
"extremely proud to<lb/>
have been a part of it.<lb/>
It's not the answer, but<lb/>
it's a good start<lb/>
Regulations Enforced<lb/>
B TOMHAI.I.<lb/>
Sr?? fdiinr<lb/>
All Of V O U<lb/>
bicyclists?watch out!<lb/>
The ECU campus<lb/>
secuntv department is<lb/>
keeping an eve on you.<lb/>
"Because of the in-<lb/>
creasing problems be-<lb/>
ing caused by the<lb/>
operation of bicycles<lb/>
on university sidewalks<lb/>
and walkways and the<lb/>
dangers presented b<lb/>
these bicycles to<lb/>
pedestrian traffic, the<lb/>
University Police<lb/>
Department will place<lb/>
greater emphasis on the<lb/>
enforcement of bicycle<lb/>
regulations on Univer-<lb/>
sity property beginning<lb/>
Monday, October 12<lb/>
said a news release<lb/>
issued last week by Joe<lb/>
Calder, director of<lb/>
secuntv.<lb/>
Citations will be<lb/>
issued for tiding<lb/>
bicycles on sidewalks,<lb/>
disregarding stop signs,<lb/>
violating one-way street<lb/>
regulations and tailing<lb/>
to register bicycles with<lb/>
the security depart-<lb/>
ment, according to the<lb/>
release.<lb/>
S e v e r a I<lb/>
"near-misses" between<lb/>
pedest ria ns and<lb/>
.bicycles on campus<lb/>
sidewalks have been<lb/>
reported, prticularly in<lb/>
the area between the<lb/>
A.J. Fletcher music<lb/>
building and the<lb/>
Brewster Building.<lb/>
"Bicycles being<lb/>
operated against the<lb/>
How of traffic on the<lb/>
one-wa) streets around<lb/>
the Mall are creating a<lb/>
haard to motor vehicle<lb/>
traffic and pedestrian<lb/>
traffic alike the<lb/>
release continued.<lb/>
The regulations app-<lb/>
ly to bicycles, motoriz-<lb/>
ed bicycles and motor-<lb/>
cycles. The fine for an<lb/>
unregistered bicycle is<lb/>
$3. Those riding<lb/>
bicycles on sidewalks or<lb/>
riding the wrong way<lb/>
on a one-way street will<lb/>
be fined $5.<lb/>
The requirement tor<lb/>
registration of bicycles<lb/>
is stated in Article II,<lb/>
Section 8 of the ECU<lb/>
Traffic Regulations<lb/>
and restated in Article<lb/>
XIII, Section 2. accor-<lb/>
ding to the release. Ar-<lb/>
ticle XIII, Section 5 of<lb/>
the regulations states<lb/>
that "bicycles will not<lb/>
be operated on the<lb/>
sidewalks of East<lb/>
Carolina University.<lb/>
Bicycles will not be<lb/>
operated in excess of 15<lb/>
mph, and will observe<lb/>
and comply with all<lb/>
stop signs, one wav<lb/>
signs and all other traf-<lb/>
fic regulations<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
12th WEEK Of<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
ABORT IONS FROM ?-U<lb/>
WEEKS<lb/>
AT FURTHER EXPENSE<lb/>
t'M.M Pregnancy Test, Blrtti<lb/>
Control. and Problem<lb/>
Pregnancy Counseling. For<lb/>
further information call<lb/>
?32 0535 (Toll Free Number<lb/>
800 71) 25M) between 9 AW<lb/>
ana 5PM Weekdays<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
?17 West Morgan St<lb/>
Raleigh. N C<lb/>
SOUTHS<lb/>
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Call ahead or come by today<lb/>
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FREE CONSULATION<lb/>
Pitt Plaza Shopping Center<lb/>
756-6200<lb/>
found out this yeai how<lb/>
close to disastei they<lb/>
were when two nuclear<lb/>
oombs tell from a II 52<lb/>
bombet in 1962. Gover-<lb/>
nor James Hunt asked<lb/>
the Department of<lb/>
Defense foi the com-<lb/>
plete st.iiv and was told<lb/>
that five ol six safety<lb/>
devices had failed on<lb/>
one of those bombs and<lb/>
not all radioactive parts<lb/>
had been recovered.<lb/>
"I've leai ned to live<lb/>
under the mushroom<lb/>
cloud -aid Howard,<lb/>
explaining why he<lb/>
thought so few people<lb/>
seem concerned about<lb/>
the proliferaton of<lb/>
n ucleai weapons.<lb/>
"We're all into our<lb/>
ow n heads we're ni<lb/>
aware<lb/>
"I his is lust one way<lb/>
to ieach out to people,<lb/>
but 1 think most people<lb/>
are afraid ? They<lb/>
don't want to think<lb/>
about the issues we<lb/>
raise Marder com<lb/>
merited.<lb/>
c ommenting on the<lb/>
Pentagon's idea ol a<lb/>
limited nuclear wai<lb/>
Howard said, "I don't<lb/>
think there can be such<lb/>
a thing "I've studied<lb/>
this thing I know<lb/>
their (nuclear bombs)<lb/>
destructive power<lb/>
that's a frightening<lb/>
fact Marder final.)<lb/>
stated her wish that<lb/>
more students would<lb/>
gel involved in the<lb/>
poht leal process and<lb/>
learn about the alter-<lb/>
natives<lb/>
I he group is plann<lb/>
mil' to return to<lb/>
Seymoui Johnson on<lb/>
Decembei 19 and give<lb/>
an open invitation lor<lb/>
others to join them<lb/>
Falwell Speaks<lb/>
( on tinned from Page I<lb/>
unemployed Falwell<lb/>
continued. "So he<lb/>
makes a nice $5,000<lb/>
speech to attack the<lb/>
Moral Majority. It w.<lb/>
can help it, he will re-<lb/>
main unemploved lor a<lb/>
while.<lb/>
falwell who also<lb/>
heads the I homas<lb/>
Road Baptist Church in<lb/>
1 ynchburg, Va then<lb/>
explained thai the<lb/>
Moral Majority's<lb/>
thrust is on people<lb/>
coming together on<lb/>
moral issues and active<lb/>
ly participating a1- IS<lb/>
citizens.<lb/>
"Not ahristians,<lb/>
not as lews, not as<lb/>
Mi n m he em-<lb/>
phasized. "As<lb/>
citizens<lb/>
Psssst .<lb/>
Book<lb/>
Lovers<lb/>
Full Imp ol<lb/>
hardback papicbacks<lb/>
&amp; maqaimts Local<lb/>
&amp; out of town<lb/>
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Greeting C 'ards<lb/>
lor All<lb/>
Occasions!<lb/>
Landing SJi<lb/>
Books, Books<lb/>
&amp; More<lb/>
BOOKS<lb/>
BOTH STORESOPEN ALL DAY<lb/>
7 DAYS A WEEK<lb/>
CENTRAL NEWS &amp;<lb/>
CARD SHOP<lb/>
3.1 Evan St Mall<lb/>
752-3333<lb/>
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&amp;NEWS<lb/>
Greenville Sq ShoppingCtr.<lb/>
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STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
WRIGHT BUILDING<lb/>
<pb facs="00057431_0004"/><lb/>
3Ure Saat dar0ltntan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Paul Collins, Eduorichj<lb/>
Jimmy Dupree, m.?<lb/>
Ric Browning, aww ofArtmt Charles Chandler, spom Editor<lb/>
Chris Lichok. ???, m? Tom Hall, mm Edlor<lb/>
Alison Bartel, ?? w?w Steve Bachner, Emerta,nm,m Eduor<lb/>
Steve Mcxre, a?h???. M??wrr Karen Wendt, s$ ??,<lb/>
October 13, 1981<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Charles Sune<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
Major Attractions Wizard<lb/>
At the beginning of fall semester<lb/>
in 1977 the Student Union Major<lb/>
Attractions Committee was flat<lb/>
broke. Through some miracle of in-<lb/>
eptitude it had lost $60,000 the year<lb/>
before.<lb/>
Today the committee has a<lb/>
budget in excess of $25,000 and has<lb/>
sold out two of its last three con-<lb/>
certs.<lb/>
What happened?<lb/>
Charles Sune, that's what.<lb/>
Sune took over the chairmanship<lb/>
of Major Attractions in 1977 and<lb/>
turned it into one of the Student<lb/>
Union's most successful commit-<lb/>
tees. Now, in the wake of this, Sune<lb/>
has resigned to concentrate on his<lb/>
studies.<lb/>
Among students currently at East<lb/>
Carolina, Sune has done as much or<lb/>
perhaps more than anyone for this<lb/>
university, and we do not make this<lb/>
statement idly.<lb/>
In addition to serving as Major<lb/>
Attractions chairman, he was presi-<lb/>
dent of the Student Union for a<lb/>
DOONESBURY<lb/>
semester in 1979, he was a member<lb/>
of the SGA legislature in 1977, he<lb/>
was on the committee that presented<lb/>
the recommendation which resulted<lb/>
in the creation of the Media Board<lb/>
and he was chairman of that board<lb/>
for six months.<lb/>
Still, Sune considers his work<lb/>
with Major Attractions as his<lb/>
foremost accomplishment.<lb/>
When Sune took over as chair-<lb/>
man, the committee had to go<lb/>
$25,000 in debt in order to get back<lb/>
on its feet. Under Sune's guidance,<lb/>
that deficit has been turned into a<lb/>
surplus.<lb/>
During his tenure, the Student<lb/>
Union purchased $12,000 worth of<lb/>
staging and a $10,000 floor covering<lb/>
for Minges Coliseum. Last year<lb/>
featured back-to-back sold-out con-<lb/>
certs (Jimmy Buffett and Cheap<lb/>
Trick) that put the committee on its<lb/>
firmest footing in years.<lb/>
We need not say anything else;<lb/>
Sune's record speaks for itself.<lb/>
by Garry Trudeau<lb/>
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KATUBESPO TXN JO CONGRESS<lb/>
THEY EXPECT cK OCTOBER ?<lb/>
T06ET-<lb/>
A HLUON UNT. THATs<lb/>
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South African Suppression Evident<lb/>
By SAFARI MATHENGE<lb/>
It is almost with a touch of emergency<lb/>
that I have decided to raise a little out-cry<lb/>
over the controversial South African<lb/>
Rugby Team, which just completed a tour<lb/>
of the United States.<lb/>
On the surface, the issue does indeed<lb/>
seem irrelevant, But with a little<lb/>
humanitarian examination, the validity of<lb/>
opposition is quite evident.<lb/>
Last year, the United States boycotted<lb/>
the Moscow Olympics in protest of the<lb/>
Russian invasion of Afghanistan. Several<lb/>
other countries, including many African<lb/>
nations, joined the United States in the<lb/>
boycott to demonstrate to the world that<lb/>
peace loving people will not "play" with<lb/>
Barbaric, inhuman, man-slaughtering<lb/>
super powers. Little did the African na-<lb/>
tions know, that this country was not truly<lb/>
concerned with the Humanitarian aspect<lb/>
of the issue - America must have been pro-<lb/>
tecting its own self-interest.<lb/>
How else can we look at it? Here is a<lb/>
similar sporting issue: earlier this year<lb/>
while campaigning for the Prime<lb/>
Minister's Office, Botha (who won the all<lb/>
whites election) was humiliated by Dr. An-<lb/>
dries Treurnicht, the Arch-conservative<lb/>
leader of Transyuaal Nationalist Party, on<lb/>
the question of whether school boys of dif-<lb/>
ferent races in South Africa would play<lb/>
rugby (the same game in question here<lb/>
now, during South Africa's craven week.<lb/>
Dr. Treurnicht declared in public con-<lb/>
tradictiong the Prime Minister, that it<lb/>
would not happen. Both learned that if he<lb/>
took this momentous issue to the party<lb/>
caucus he would lose to Dr. Treurnicht,<lb/>
and so backed down.<lb/>
If Race and sports are so important in<lb/>
traveling rights are limited. I have to ob-<lb/>
tain permission whenever I want to go out-<lb/>
side my hometown. This applies to all<lb/>
black people, whether sportsmen or not.<lb/>
But white men can move freely and may<lb/>
choose to interact from city to city. Is this<lb/>
the kind of policy that the American peo-<lb/>
ple are supportive of?" "One may<lb/>
South African politics, why should they be wonder Sipho continues, "Why I bring<lb/>
unimportant elsewhere? In South Africa<lb/>
today, even sporting teams that are in-<lb/>
tegrated (like the Springboks ? the con-<lb/>
troversial rugby team touring the U.S.) are<lb/>
restricted on the basis of color. To quote<lb/>
Sipho Khanyile, a black South African stu-<lb/>
dent here at East Carolina, "During the<lb/>
past decade, blacks were not allowed to<lb/>
mix in sports with the whites in South<lb/>
Africa. Even soccer, which is the most<lb/>
popular game in South Africa was<lb/>
segregated. During these later years, the<lb/>
white people have realized the athletic<lb/>
superiority in blacks and so decided to<lb/>
make sports multi-racial. But all this is<lb/>
very ironical. Black sportsmen must use<lb/>
separate bathrooms and facilities outside<lb/>
the playing ground.<lb/>
If the issue is sports and not politics,<lb/>
then why must this be so? Color is race and<lb/>
race is the fundamental issue here. I, as a<lb/>
South African, have no rights in my own<lb/>
country. At home, I have to carry a<lb/>
reference (identification) book,<lb/>
("dumb-pass") around my neck. My<lb/>
in here the issue of 'dumb-pass law Black<lb/>
athletes cannot play freely as they choose<lb/>
in South Africa, unless they get the govern-<lb/>
ments permission. This is only so because<lb/>
of what they are ?black<lb/>
Is there any question then, why so many<lb/>
humanitarian people have demonstrated<lb/>
against American participation with South<lb/>
African athletes? The issue here is sup-<lb/>
pression. The only thing that will get<lb/>
through to the racist South African<lb/>
government is isolation. The world must<lb/>
isolate them not only in politics, but also in<lb/>
commerce and sports. There seems little<lb/>
hope, with the Reagan administration<lb/>
leaning so heavily towards the racist<lb/>
government.<lb/>
As I said before, Freedom for black peo-<lb/>
ple is in our own hands. "The point that is<lb/>
indisputable is that we who are oppressed<lb/>
will be free. That is not in question says<lb/>
Bishop Tutu of South Africa. It will only<lb/>
take time and blood ? and we are now<lb/>
ready to die.<lb/>
Americans 'Forced To Choose'<lb/>
By DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
Several years ago, economists Milton<lb/>
and Rose Friedman wrote a book entitled<lb/>
Free to Choose that laid the foundations<lb/>
for Reaganomics. Stripped to its core, Free<lb/>
to Choose argued taht government is best<lb/>
that governs corporations least, and that if riureiy bvhfs side"The" couple had just<lb/>
we just encourage top executives to returned from a promotional tour to Chile<lb/>
urious condominium atop San Francisco's<lb/>
highest hill. Milton, who commutes to his<lb/>
job at the Hoover Institute ? the think-<lb/>
tank inspired by the president who led us<lb/>
into the last depression ? was sitting in his<lb/>
leather-upholstesred chair, looking fit.<lb/>
Rose, in proper Republican fashion, sat<lb/>
- Campus Forum<lb/>
become as rich as they please, jobs will<lb/>
trickle down to the rest of us, and America<lb/>
will become bullish again. With the aid of<lb/>
a massive publicity blitz, the book became<lb/>
a bestseller.<lb/>
This year, the Friedmans are back with a<lb/>
follow-up to Free to Choose and just in<lb/>
time for the fall season, too. In keeping<lb/>
with 1981's no-nonsense political climate,<lb/>
their latest is called Forced to Choose.<lb/>
"The hot, new book you'll buy whether<lb/>
you like it or not exults People, "from<lb/>
the fiscal fun couple of the New Right<lb/>
I met the Friedmans recently in their lux-<lb/>
Harassment Coverage Praised<lb/>
I would like to congratulate The East<lb/>
Carolinian on its coverage of the issue of<lb/>
sexual harassment. Your reports clearly<lb/>
present most of the research, and I fully<lb/>
endorse your editorial position that sex-<lb/>
ual harassment is no joking matter. In-<lb/>
deed, the degree to which young women<lb/>
are being offended by faculty is supris-<lb/>
ing. The students in our students in our<lb/>
studies (Linda Kraus and myself) of sex-<lb/>
ual harassment who reported being of-<lb/>
fended by sexually offensive faculty are<lb/>
good students who establish better than<lb/>
average relationships with their peers<lb/>
and with most faclty membres (most<lb/>
report being offended by one professor).<lb/>
Most of these students think of their ex-<lb/>
periences as an unpleasant part of in-<lb/>
teracting with some men rather than as<lb/>
sexual harassment. The new policy clear-<lb/>
ly states that female students have the<lb/>
right to be treated as students and to ex-<lb/>
pect all faculty to act as college pro-<lb/>
fessors. Students, faculty and ad-<lb/>
ministrators should be willing to work<lb/>
together toward this worth goal.<lb/>
One point in your report on the<lb/>
Wilson and Kraus research needs to be<lb/>
corrected. The level of physical assault<lb/>
reported by female students is 0.9 per-<lb/>
cent rather than nine percent. While the<lb/>
proportion is smaller, the concern tha'<lb/>
you expressed is still justified. As you<lb/>
correctly reported, 0.9 percent of female<lb/>
students at ECU is composed of 65<lb/>
women. This is no joking matter.<lb/>
While the proportions reported in our<lb/>
studies are unacceptably high, no one<lb/>
should conclude that ECU is unusually<lb/>
bad. Most schools have not conducted<lb/>
studies to determine the extent of sexual<lb/>
harassment on campus, but every study<lb/>
that has been publically reported has<lb/>
found similar levels of sexual harass-<lb/>
ment. Further, these levels should not be<lb/>
interpreted as indicating that most facul-<lb/>
ty members harass students. Indeed,<lb/>
most victims report a single harasser;<lb/>
about 95 percent of their teachers did<lb/>
not offend them. People at ECU are<lb/>
willing to consider and to work at solv-<lb/>
ing the problem. The East Carolinian is<lb/>
making a contribution to this process.<lb/>
KEN WILSON<lb/>
Asst. Prof, of Sociology<lb/>
Letters Solicited<lb/>
I am a prisoner on death row at the<lb/>
Arizona State Prison, and I was wonder-<lb/>
ing if you would do me a favor. I have<lb/>
been here for quite a while and I don't<lb/>
have any family or friends on the outside<lb/>
to write to so what I was wondering is if<lb/>
you could put a letter in your campus<lb/>
newspaper for me for correspondence. I<lb/>
know that you are not a pen pal club or<lb/>
anything like that but I would really ap-<lb/>
preciate it if you could help me.<lb/>
JIM JEFFERS<lb/>
Box B-38604<lb/>
Florence, Ar. 85232<lb/>
and England, where their ideas are much-<lb/>
admired. They were polishing off a light<lb/>
lunch with Werner Erhard when I arrived.<lb/>
"I hear the tome is doing well I ven-<lb/>
tured.<lb/>
"Yes Milton said evenly. "Its<lb/>
numbers one through 50 on the bestseller<lb/>
list. Required reading for all Americans,<lb/>
you know<lb/>
"1 know 1 replied. "I got a phone call<lb/>
ordering me to buy a copy, and hustle here<lb/>
for the interview. Just what is Forced to<lb/>
Choose all about, anyway?"<lb/>
Milton puffed contemplatively on his<lb/>
pipe. Rose straightened her stockings.<lb/>
"Simply this he said. "That the time for<lb/>
coddling the non-productive elements in<lb/>
society is over. Some people didn't buy our<lb/>
thesis in the first book he frowned.<lb/>
"Well, in this one, we prove once and for<lb/>
all that it's not enough to just let the cor-<lb/>
porations make a few bucks; we have to let<lb/>
them have it all<lb/>
"How so?" I asked.<lb/>
"Abolish government and let the cap-<lb/>
tains of industry command Milton said<lb/>
emphaticallyl. "We can get a man to head<lb/>
Interior who's trained for the job by<lb/>
fighting panty-waist environmental laws,<lb/>
for example. He'll know how to make<lb/>
nature safe for profits again. In time, we<lb/>
can just do away with the department<lb/>
altogether<lb/>
"By the end fo the year, at the latest<lb/>
Rose chimed in.<lb/>
"All those damned trees Milton mut-<lb/>
tered, "taking up room. What do they do?<lb/>
Nothing. With a coat of paint and a little<lb/>
toughening up, they can be converted to<lb/>
smokestacks. And those groundhogs and<lb/>
squirrels, they can be placed in productive<lb/>
jobs. Those who are willing to work, that<lb/>
is He arched his eyebrows meaningfully.<lb/>
"That's preposterous I objected.<lb/>
"Who ever heard of groundhogs digging<lb/>
for Anaconda and squirrels carrying lunch<lb/>
buckets for General Steel? And, besides,<lb/>
who would just hand over the wilderness to<lb/>
an anti-environmentalist? That's asking<lb/>
the fox to guard the henhouse<lb/>
"Ah, but it's the fox that lays the eggs<lb/>
rejoined the cagey Nobel Prize winner.<lb/>
"It is?" I said.<lb/>
"Isn't it?" he replied. "Well, no matter.<lb/>
Just listen to these ideas for getting<lb/>
America moving again. How about ap-<lb/>
pointing a New Jersey construction king<lb/>
with suspected mob ties to lead the labor<lb/>
department? And a doctor who's crusaded<lb/>
against reproductive rights as Surgeon<lb/>
General? And the Disney organization to<lb/>
run the national parks ? give 'em more<lb/>
pizazz. It's all in here he smiled, tapping<lb/>
the thick volume in his hand. "Both theory<lb/>
and practice<lb/>
Milton was warming to the task. I was<lb/>
perspiring heavily. "More tea?" Rose ask-<lb/>
ed, pouring a cup. It was piping hot.<lb/>
"Enjoy she said.<lb/>
Milton suddenly stood up, waving his<lb/>
arms and pacing the room. His words were<lb/>
hard to decipher, he was talking so fast ?<lb/>
something about letting the nursing home<lb/>
industry run Social Security. Rose smiled<lb/>
pleasantly and patted my hand. She gave<lb/>
me an autographed copy of Forced to<lb/>
Choose. "He wants you to have it she<lb/>
whispered, nodding toward her husband,<lb/>
who had strode out to the balcony, where<lb/>
he began addressing a small knot of wdl-<lb/>
dressed passerby.<lb/>
Rose glanced at her appointment book.<lb/>
A gentleman from The New York Times<lb/>
stespped briskly into the room. "Scotty<lb/>
Rose smiled. The Timesman gave her a<lb/>
peck on the cheek, and joined Milton on<lb/>
the balcony, where they slapped the high-<lb/>
five. My interview was over.<lb/>
I rode the elevator to the lobby, and ex-<lb/>
ited to the bus stop, where I waited for<lb/>
more than an hour. "No more public tran-<lb/>
sit, you know the doorman in a nearby<lb/>
condo reminded me. "Oh, yeah I started<lb/>
walking. "And no more left turns he<lb/>
called out, as I made to cross the street.<lb/>
"They were ruled illegal this morning. On-<lb/>
ly right turns now, if you please<lb/>
1 started up the block, thumbing<lb/>
through my copy of Forced to Choose,<lb/>
taking only sharp right turns. It was a long<lb/>
walk home.<lb/>
nam<lb/>
seen<lb/>
eier<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
heat<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
y<lb/>
1<lb/>
l<lb/>
<pb facs="00057431_0005"/><lb/>
I HI t S1 CAROl INIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
OCTOBER 13. 1981<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
V<lb/>
ob-<lb/>
g 3 out-<lb/>
lo all<lb/>
not.<lb/>
j may<lb/>
s this<lb/>
n pco-<lb/>
may<lb/>
bring<lb/>
Black<lb/>
;hoose<lb/>
overn-<lb/>
?cause<lb/>
many<lb/>
Lstrated<lb/>
South<lb/>
! sup-<lb/>
ill get<lb/>
an<lb/>
d must<lb/>
also in<lb/>
is little<lb/>
ttration<lb/>
It that is<lb/>
pressed<lb/>
says<lb/>
only<lb/>
now<lb/>
I besides.<lb/>
:mess to<lb/>
asking<lb/>
Hcggs<lb/>
iner<lb/>
matter.<lb/>
getting<lb/>
ut ap-<lb/>
lon king<lb/>
ne labor<lb/>
trusaded<lb/>
rgeon<lb/>
ition to<lb/>
m more<lb/>
tapping<lb/>
h theory<lb/>
I was<lb/>
lose ask-<lb/>
ing hot.<lb/>
Ivtng his<lb/>
rds were<lb/>
fast ?<lb/>
lg home<lb/>
smiled<lb/>
Jhe gave<lb/>
rced to<lb/>
ju she<lb/>
msband,<lb/>
where<lb/>
of well-<lb/>
it book<lb/>
Ik Times<lb/>
Jcotty<lb/>
ft her a<lb/>
lilton on<lb/>
he high-<lb/>
and ex-<lb/>
iited for<lb/>
iic tran<lb/>
nearby<lb/>
1 started<lb/>
rns he<lb/>
le street,<lb/>
fing On-<lb/>
vumbing<lb/>
 Choose,<lb/>
a long<lb/>
Frank Zappa:<lb/>
He Reflects A<lb/>
Crazed Society<lb/>
B JOHN WEtl.ER<lb/>
slid Wnlrt<lb/>
"More people have heard my<lb/>
name or have seen my face or have<lb/>
seen me silting on a toilet than have<lb/>
ever heard the music or have any<lb/>
idea nhat I do. " ? trank Zappa<lb/>
The unfortunate accuracy oi the<lb/>
above statement is the reason you<lb/>
are reading this article As John<lb/>
Swenson, in an article in High<lb/>
Times, saw<lb/>
"Frank Zappa is probably the<lb/>
most misunderstood man in the<lb/>
history of popular music. A brilliant<lb/>
compose arranger, satirist and<lb/>
critic, Zappa is nevertheless better<lb/>
known as an eccentric crank who<lb/>
writes funny and controversial<lb/>
songs<lb/>
nd why not, since the misan-<lb/>
thropic musician releases albums<lb/>
with titles such as Freak Out urn-<lb/>
py Gravy, Burnt Weenie Sandwich<lb/>
and H easels Ripped My flesh;<lb/>
which include songs with such titles<lb/>
as "Dog Breath "Who Are The<lb/>
Brain Police? "Cleetus Awreetus<lb/>
Awnghtus and "I'm the Slime<lb/>
which concern such subject matter<lb/>
as Montana dental floss ranches,<lb/>
penguins in bondage, baby snakes<lb/>
and a mountain named Billy (with a<lb/>
tree named Ethel growing off of its<lb/>
shoulder).<lb/>
But behind the amus-<lb/>
ingdisgusting titles and lyrics lay<lb/>
something of substance. Most of<lb/>
Zappa's songs are cleverly disguised<lb/>
commentaries on modern society,<lb/>
morals, lifestyles, and various<lb/>
varities of "Cosmik Debris Even<lb/>
the songs which appear to have no<lb/>
meaning at all are making a com-<lb/>
ment  on the meaningless of our<lb/>
existence.<lb/>
Not only the words, but the style<lb/>
of the music itself is making a state-<lb/>
ment on the virtues of moving<lb/>
ahead. While remaining on the edge<lb/>
of commercialism, Zappa has<lb/>
always been one of the most in-<lb/>
novative and avant-garde of musical<lb/>
experimentors; mixing rock and<lb/>
roll, rhythm and blues, jazz,<lb/>
classical, abstract inprovisation and<lb/>
God knows what with his original<lb/>
and often-unexplainable imagina-<lb/>
tion, producing a totally unique<lb/>
sound.<lb/>
Strange as it sounds, Zappa ac-<lb/>
tually has a real name and birthdate<lb/>
? they are: Francis Vincent Zappa<lb/>
See ZAPPA, Page 7<lb/>
Popular jazz artist Maynard Ferguson received a standing ovation from a sell-out crowd last night in Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
'50s Creature He Once Walked Among Us<lb/>
B JOHN WEYI.ER<lb/>
Miff Wnlrr<lb/>
( reature From the Black I agoon (1954)<lb/>
Says Dennis Saleh in Science Fiction Gold: "When<lb/>
you consider the sheer numbers of 50's sci-fi films, little<lb/>
was truly memorable. But there was one figure who rose<lb/>
up out of the din to a kind of permanent greatness, who<lb/>
heath irp the decade's- ci-fi movie hall of fame as its<lb/>
single best known visage.<lb/>
Bad Sci Fi<lb/>
"He was merchandized like a celebrity screen idol: on<lb/>
posters, paperbacks, pencil erasers, figurines, lunch<lb/>
boxes, belt buckles, bars of soap, and best of all, beach<lb/>
towels. He was the entire ocean, all he seas' finny glory<lb/>
come to join us out of the deeps: (the) C reature From<lb/>
the Black I agoon<lb/>
In some ways this 1954 monster movie was futuristic,<lb/>
in other ways old-fashioned. It was created as part of<lb/>
cinema's scientific counterattack against the then-<lb/>
modern marvel, television: moviemakers hoped that the<lb/>
3-D gimmick in particular and monster movies in<lb/>
general (which were rare on TV in those days) would<lb/>
lure audiences away from the already-hypnotic home<lb/>
screen.<lb/>
Though the "creature" carried on with all the com-<lb/>
forts modern technology could provide, including the<lb/>
latest in 3-D, under-water photography techniques, and<lb/>
special effects, he still acted just like all the old creatures<lb/>
of the 30's and 40's fright films.<lb/>
Like Frankenstein, the Wolf Man, the Mummy and<lb/>
many others long before him, the lagoon goon was<lb/>
basically just a nice (if unusual) fellow, misunderstood<lb/>
and hunted by the hard world around him, he had the<lb/>
habit of kidnapping pretty young women for no ap-<lb/>
parent reason, and got killed at the climax, only to<lb/>
return whole and unharmed for the inevitable sequel.<lb/>
The "creature" (or Gill-Man as he was also known)<lb/>
was first found in fossil form. Scientists near the<lb/>
Amazon find a preserved fishy claw. Hoping to find a<lb/>
more complete fossil, they journey to the forbidden<lb/>
Black Lagoon where they find more than they'd ex-<lb/>
pected: a live specimen. This is, of course, when the pic-<lb/>
ture's star steps (or swims) in.<lb/>
After abducting the swim-suited heroine, the web-<lb/>
footed throwback to the Devonian period is shot and<lb/>
driven back into the water. The End. The multiple bullet<lb/>
holes didn't stop him from returning only a year later,<lb/>
to extract the Revenge of the Creature (1955).<lb/>
In the first film, Florida stood in for South America.<lb/>
For the second in the series, the producers didn't put up<lb/>
with that pretense ? they simply had the "creature" get<lb/>
caught in his native habitat and shipped to Marineland<lb/>
in Florida, where filming would be easier and cheaper.<lb/>
Once installed as an exhibit in Marineland, the scaley<lb/>
specimen is up to his old tricks, escaping, attacking, and<lb/>
kidnapping young starlets. Says Donald C. Willis<lb/>
(Horror and Science Fiction Films: A Checklist) regar-<lb/>
ding this sequel: "The creature from the Devonian<lb/>
should have faded into oblilvion instead of being given<lb/>
another movie. Nerve-wracking music and childish<lb/>
dialogue<lb/>
A year later, The Creature Walks Among Is was<lb/>
released. Not content with forcing the poor thing into<lb/>
being a fish-show freak to be gawked at, the scientists<lb/>
commit the ultimate indignity on the Gill-Man, an<lb/>
operation which removes his gills and turns him into an<lb/>
air-breathing sub-human who can't survive in the sea.<lb/>
In A Pictorial History of Horror Movies, Denis Gif-<lb/>
ford has pity for him: "The sinous swimmer, elegant in<lb/>
his own element, turns into a shambling, clumsy hulk.<lb/>
pathetic as he harks to the strange call of the oceans, ug-<lb/>
ly in his sackcloth Frankenstein suit.<lb/>
"For once, man is the monster, the monster his vic-<lb/>
tim. Last seen the Gill-Man was heading out to sea,<lb/>
preserving sufficient natural instinct to steer clear of<lb/>
Abbott and Costello<lb/>
'Stir Crazy' Cancelled<lb/>
The Free Flick for this weekend. "Stir<lb/>
Crazy starring Richard Pry or and Gene<lb/>
Wilder, has been withdrawn due to a conflict<lb/>
in booking beyond the control of the Student<lb/>
Union Films Committee. Running in its place<lb/>
is Richard Pryor's most recent film, "Bustin'<lb/>
Loose co-starring Cicely Tyson. "Bustin'<lb/>
Loose" will be shown on Thursday evening at<lb/>
7 p.m and Friday and Saturday nights at 5.<lb/>
7:15, and 9:30 p.m. The Films Committee<lb/>
would like to apologize for the cancellation.<lb/>
The committee hopes to reschedule "Stir<lb/>
Crazv" for dates in the future.<lb/>
It's No Mystery!<lb/>
Lit Course Offering Holmes<lb/>
The novels of Arthur Conan Doyle, among many others, will be covered in English 3430 this spring.<lb/>
By CORNELL MEDLOCK<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Sherlock Holmes, Miss Marple and Poirot, Lord<lb/>
Peter Wimsy, Nero Wolfe, Inspector Maigret, and Sam<lb/>
Spade finally have their place in the ECU curriculum.<lb/>
Beginning with spring semester 1982, the ECU<lb/>
English Department will offer ENGL 3430, Mystery<lb/>
Fiction, MWF 10:00-10:50 (3 s.h.). The new course will<lb/>
fill General College Humanities requirements.<lb/>
Curriculum<lb/>
Mystery Fiction will concentrate on the history of<lb/>
mystery writing from Poe and Conan Doyle to the pre-<lb/>
sent, and it will cover the range of detective fiction from<lb/>
the classic British novel of detection, such as those of<lb/>
Agatha Christie and Dorothy L. Sayers, to the hard-<lb/>
boiled American private eye stories of Dashiell Ham-<lb/>
mett, Raymond Chandler, and Ross Macdonald. And it<lb/>
will also include crime capers, police procedural, spy<lb/>
stories, suspense novels, and gothics.<lb/>
The new course ? a companion to the English<lb/>
Department's courses in science fiction, fantasy, and<lb/>
westerns ? appears at a time when the popularity of<lb/>
mysteries is growing by leaps and bounds: paperback<lb/>
publishers are reprinting classic mysteries of the 20's,<lb/>
30's, and 40's; serious writers are trying their hands at<lb/>
mysteries; two or three mysteries can always be found in<lb/>
the best-seller lists; and on TV, PBS has run its Mystery<lb/>
for two seasons and even network TV had Nero Wolfe,<lb/>
in addition to its run-of-the-mill crime programs.<lb/>
The course's instructor, Dr. McKay Sundwall, says<lb/>
that the study of popular literature "can reveal to us im-<lb/>
portant things about the concerns as well as the tastes of<lb/>
past generations, for popular fiction reflects its au-<lb/>
dience more clearly than serious or elite literature does.<lb/>
"But, because popular fiction speaks so directly to<lb/>
us, because it touches us and moves us, its study can<lb/>
also tell us something even more important about<lb/>
ourselves ? especially the mystery story, for it is always<lb/>
about what its readers fear and their reasons for fearing<lb/>
it.<lb/>
"The mystery is a realistic literary form, and there are<lb/>
good mysteries which give readers an accurate and vivid<lb/>
sense of life in an English country home or a Los<lb/>
Angeles ghetto, 18th-century London or the Australian<lb/>
outback, the Navaho reservation or a 7th-century<lb/>
Chinese provincial magistrate's court. When a murder<lb/>
occurs, whether it is an axe murder, death from an<lb/>
Amazonian blow-dart dipped in curare, arsenic poison-<lb/>
ing, tetanus infection, or a machinegun execution, he<lb/>
society in which it occurs is ripped apart and threatened<lb/>
with total collapse.<lb/>
"It is the detecive's job to root out the deep evil, and<lb/>
he can do it only by coming to understand the reason<lb/>
behind the evil ? the 'why' of ;t. And 'Why?' is both<lb/>
the most difficult question to answer and the only one<lb/>
worth asking. The answer to 'Why?' touches on the<lb/>
stuff of dreams and nightmares<lb/>
However, Sundwall ? who began reading mysteries<lb/>
at the age of seven (the Hardy Boys, Nancy Drew), went<lb/>
on to Ellery Queen and Rex Stout, and still reads three<lb/>
or four mysteries each week ? intends for the course to<lb/>
be more than just analylsis.<lb/>
"Of course, I want the course to be good science he<lb/>
says. "We will look at the evidence which mysteries of-<lb/>
fer us in an objective way, keeping in mind broad social<lb/>
functions and also moral and esthetic values. But I hope<lb/>
that we ? the students and I ? can arrive at an<lb/>
understanding of what makes mysteries so much fun to<lb/>
read, and do it in such a way that, at the course's end,<lb/>
we have even more fun reading mysteries, not less<lb/>
f<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057431_0006"/><lb/>
THHEXST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 13. 1V8I<lb/>
Zap.<lb/>
Drop vour guard tor a<lb/>
minute Even though you're<lb/>
in college nght now, there<lb/>
are many aspects of the Army<lb/>
that you might find very<lb/>
attractive.<lb/>
Maybe even irresistible.<lb/>
See for yourself.<lb/>
MED SCHOOL. ONUS<lb/>
You read it right<lb/>
The Army's Health Professions Scholarship<lb/>
Program provides necessary- tuition, books, lab<lb/>
fees, even microscope rental during medical<lb/>
school<lb/>
Plus a monthly stipend that works out to<lb/>
about $6,000 a year.<lb/>
After you're accepted into medical<lb/>
school, you can be accepted into our program<lb/>
Then you're commissioned and you go<lb/>
through school as a Second Lieutenant in the<lb/>
Army Reserve.<lb/>
The hitch7 Very simple. After you graduate,<lb/>
vou give the Army a year as a doctor for every<lb/>
year the Army gave you as a med student, with<lb/>
a minimum obligation of three years service<lb/>
INTERNSHIP<lb/>
&amp; CASH BONUSES<lb/>
Besides scholarships to medical school, the<lb/>
Army also offers AMA-approved first-year<lb/>
post-graduate and residency training programs<lb/>
Such training adds no further obligation to<lb/>
the scholarship participant But any Civilian<lb/>
Graduate Medical Education sponsored by the<lb/>
Army gives vou a one-year obligation for<lb/>
every year of sponsorship, with a minimum<lb/>
obligation ot two years service<lb/>
But vou get a $9,000 annual bonus even,<lb/>
year you re paving back medical school or post-<lb/>
graduate training.<lb/>
So vou not only get vour medical education<lb/>
paid for. you get extra pay while you're paying<lb/>
it back Not a bad deal<lb/>
A GREAT PLACE TO BE A NURSE<lb/>
The rich tradition oi Army Nursing is one<lb/>
of excellence, dedication, even heroism And<lb/>
it's a challenge to live up to<lb/>
Today, an Army Nurse is the epitome of<lb/>
professionalism, regarded as a critical member<lb/>
of the Army Medical Team<lb/>
A BSN degree is required And the clinical<lb/>
spectrum is almost impossible to match in<lb/>
civilian practice.<lb/>
And, since you'll be an Army Officer, you'll<lb/>
enjoy more respect and authority than most o(<lb/>
your civilian counterparts You 11 also enjoy<lb/>
travel opportunities, officer's pay and officer's<lb/>
pnvileges.<lb/>
Army Nursing offers educational oppor-<lb/>
tunities that are second to none As an Army<lb/>
Nurse, you could be selected for graduate degree<lb/>
programs at civilian universities<lb/>
ADVANCED NURSING COURSE,<lb/>
TUITION-FREE<lb/>
You get tuition, pay and living allowances<lb/>
You can also take Nurse Practitioner courses<lb/>
and courses in many clinical specialities All on<lb/>
the Army.<lb/>
While these programs do not cost you any<lb/>
money, most of them do incur an additional<lb/>
service obligation<lb/>
A CHANCE TO PRACTICE LAW<lb/>
If you re about to get your law degree and<lb/>
be admitted to the bar, you should consider a<lb/>
commission in the Judge Advocate General<lb/>
Corps. Because in the Army you get to practice<lb/>
law right from the start<lb/>
While vour classmates are still doing other<lb/>
lawyers research and other lawyers briefs, vou<lb/>
could have vour own cases, vour own clients,<lb/>
in effect, vour own practice<lb/>
Plus vou 11 have the pay. prestige and privi-<lb/>
leges of being an Officer in the United States<lb/>
Armv. With a chance to travel and make the<lb/>
rnot ot what vou ve worked so hard to<lb/>
become A real, practicing lawyer. Be an Army<lb/>
Lawyer<lb/>
ROTC SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
Though vou re too late for a 4-vear<lb/>
scholarship, there are 3 2 and even I-year<lb/>
scholarships available<lb/>
They include tuition, books, and lab tees.<lb/>
Plus S100 a month living allowance Naturally<lb/>
they're very competitive Because<lb/>
besides helping you towards your<lb/>
degree, an ROTC scholarship helps<lb/>
you towards the gold bars of an<lb/>
Army Officer.<lb/>
Stop by the ROTC office on<lb/>
campus and ask about details<lb/>
UPTOSTTOAMONTH<lb/>
You can combine service in the<lb/>
Army Reserve or National Guard<lb/>
with Army ROTC and get between<lb/>
$7,000 and $14,000 while you're<lb/>
still in school.<lb/>
It's called the Simultaneous<lb/>
Membership Program. You get $100<lb/>
a month as an Advanced Army ROTC<lb/>
Cadet and an additional $70 a month<lb/>
(sergeants pay) as an Army Reservist<lb/>
When you graduate, you'll be<lb/>
commissioned as a Second Lieutenant,<lb/>
but not necessarily<lb/>
assigned to active duty Find<lb/>
out about it.<lb/>
A BONUS FOR<lb/>
PART-TIME WORK<lb/>
You can get a $1,500<lb/>
bonus just for enlisting in some Army Reserve<lb/>
units Or up to $4.000 in educational benefits<lb/>
You also get paid for vour Reserve duty It<lb/>
comes out to about $1.100 a year tor one weekend<lb/>
a month and two weeks annual training<lb/>
And now we have a special program to help<lb/>
vou fit the Armv Reserve around vour school<lb/>
schedule<lb/>
Its worth a kxik<lb/>
A SECOND CHANCE AT COLLEGE<lb/>
Some may find college to be the nght place<lb/>
at the wrong time tor a variety ot reasons The<lb/>
Armv can help them too<lb/>
A few years in the Armv can help them get<lb/>
money tor tuition and the maturity to use it<lb/>
wisely<lb/>
The Armv has a program in which money<lb/>
saved for college is matched two-fbr-one bv the<lb/>
government Then, it one qualities, a generous<lb/>
bonus is added to that<lb/>
So 2 years ot service can get you up to<lb/>
515.200 for college. 3 and 4 years up to 520.100<lb/>
In addition, bonuses up to $5,000 are available<lb/>
for 4-vear enlistments in selected skills<lb/>
Add in the experience and maturity gained.<lb/>
and the Armv can send (n individual back to<lb/>
college a richer person in more ways than one<lb/>
We hope these Armv opportunities have<lb/>
intrigued vou as well as surprised vou Because<lb/>
there is indeed a lot the Armv can otter a bright<lb/>
person like you<lb/>
For more information, send the coupon<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
rase toil me more about Ot AM I Medical School and Arnn Medicine<lb/>
D lAN ?the Armv Nurse Corps.l ALl Armv Law<lb/>
DIFRI ROTC Scholarships. D (SS l Armv Resen e Bonuses<lb/>
? I PC i Armv Education Benefits<lb/>
-Mk<lb/>
lM"RfcS<lb/>
rn<lb/>
?MU<lb/>
n Hv.VI -TTtPIV.<lb/>
p Ml i! P<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
Send to ARMY OPPORTUNITIES PC BOX KV<lb/>
NORTH HOLLYWOOD. CALIF IKM<lb/>
BE ALL YOU CAN BE. ,<lb/>
ARMY.<lb/>
Note To insure1 receipt of information requested, all blank mu-t be completed<lb/>
XSSOC '0"CH<lb/>
Continued From Page 5<lb/>
Junior; December 21,<lb/>
1940 (in Baltimore.<lb/>
Maryland) His lather<lb/>
was, and is. Francis<lb/>
Vincent Zappa Seni r,<lb/>
a scientist who in 1956<lb/>
moved his famil) to the<lb/>
desert desolation<lb/>
Lancaster, California.<lb/>
There young frank at-<lb/>
tended Antelope Valley<lb/>
High (a school chum<lb/>
was madcap musical<lb/>
maestro iptain<lb/>
Beefheart) w h<lb/>
teachers experiei<lb/>
his eer ur<lb/>
rebellious attitude<lb/>
In the Z a<lb/>
biographs o nm-<lb/>
merciat Potential<lb/>
Frank's former tea<lb/>
Ernest Tossi rec i<lb/>
his pupil: "Frank<lb/>
the forerunner<lb/>
dent militancy and a<lb/>
forerunner of the I<lb/>
niks  I don't want to<lb/>
use the word rebel, this<lb/>
implies negativism, bu!<lb/>
Frank was an indc<lb/>
dent thinker<lb/>
couldn't accept the<lb/>
? ? <lb/>
Road To Homo<lb/>
 MARTY BE<lb/>
In The Cotfehouse<lb/>
PIZZA, Si<lb/>
MonS<lb/>
AAon. &amp;<lb/>
WEI<lb/>
SPAGH<lb/>
LARGI<lb/>
OFSPI<lb/>
garlI<lb/>
- BONUS Tl<lb/>
T<lb/>
j<lb/>
i -? ???;?,<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057431_0007"/><lb/>
Zappa Twists A merican Dream<lb/>
 onlinued From Pae 5<lb/>
Decembei 21,<lb/>
1940 (in Baltimore,<lb/>
Maryland) His fathei<lb/>
a? and ;s. i rancis<lb/>
 inceni Zappa Seni<lb/>
.i scientist who in 1956<lb/>
ved his family to<lb/>
California<lb/>
ank at<lb/>
I A alle<lb/>
. urn<lb/>
a nusical<lb/>
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, ntial.<lb/>
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ross ailed<lb/>
ink was<lb/>
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dent th k h o<lb/>
I stablishment's set oi<lb/>
rules<lb/>
Early on rank<lb/>
decided the work! was<lb/>
tot ten and ridiculous,<lb/>
oi at any rate he didn't<lb/>
like it What he did like<lb/>
was music, especially<lb/>
rhythm-and blues and<lb/>
the uorks o! Edgai<lb/>
 arese, the avant garde<lb/>
model n com pose!<lb/>
graduating from<lb/>
high school ("with<lb/>
about twenty units less<lb/>
than what was re-<lb/>
quired, simplv because<lb/>
they were in a hurr to<lb/>
gel tul of me") and at-<lb/>
tending around one<lb/>
semester of college, he<lb/>
went 111 e r a 11 and<lb/>
velly on the<lb/>
: oad where he's I<lb/>
evet since.<lb/>
H lM Zappa form<lb/>
ed the Mothers of In<lb/>
vent ion, w ith w I<lb/>
group he made music<lb/>
and committed strange<lb/>
atrocities on stage, as<lb/>
desct ibed in a ife<lb/>
trticle on<lb/>
c New Rock<lb/>
igt then s the<lb/>
possibility that<lb/>
anything can happen.<lb/>
Dolls are mutilated. A<lb/>
gas mask is displayed.<lb/>
A bag of vegetables is<lb/>
unpacked and examin-<lb/>
ed. There are spaced in-<lb/>
tervals o 'honks' and<lb/>
suddenly the Mothers<lb/>
perform 'Dead Air<lb/>
I hey stop, sit down<lb/>
and ignore the audience<lb/>
. . . they keep this going<lb/>
foi as long as it takes<lb/>
the audience to become<lb/>
unsettled, uncomfor-<lb/>
table and angry. Then<lb/>
 a p p a calmly a p -<lb/>
proaches the mike and<lb/>
savs, 'It brings out the<lb/>
hostilities in you,<lb/>
doesn't it?<lb/>
Zappa's biarre an-<lb/>
tics aroused the ire of<lb/>
others besides au-<lb/>
diences. His conflicts<lb/>
w ith critics, music com<lb/>
pany executives and oc-<lb/>
casional law enforce-<lb/>
m eni officials are<lb/>
legendary. He<lb/>
persevered however,<lb/>
producing over the<lb/>
years an astonishing<lb/>
satietv and number of<lb/>
live concerts, albums<lb/>
(over .10 to date), films<lb/>
(200 Motels, Haby<lb/>
Snakes) and other<lb/>
assorted exceptional<lb/>
enterprises<lb/>
1 oday Zappa runs<lb/>
his own record com-<lb/>
pany (Zappa Records),<lb/>
has started creeping in-<lb/>
to the public con-<lb/>
sciousness, and has<lb/>
even begun becoming<lb/>
(gasp') popular. The<lb/>
latter fact is attested to<lb/>
by the verv existence of<lb/>
a mass-circulation<lb/>
biography, No Com-<lb/>
mercial Potential. Its<lb/>
author, David Wallcv,<lb/>
describes him thusly:<lb/>
"frank Zappa is<lb/>
definitely an American<lb/>
artist in so tar as he<lb/>
repeatedlv examines<lb/>
and is fascinated by<lb/>
American concerns;<lb/>
(Mir love affair with<lb/>
technology, our overtly<lb/>
puritanical libertine at-<lb/>
titudes about sex. our<lb/>
acceptance of mediocri-<lb/>
ty  . an environmen<lb/>
tal artist, he focuses on<lb/>
maior trends, amplifies<lb/>
them, and presents<lb/>
them for public con<lb/>
sumption, twisting the<lb/>
fragments of an already<lb/>
twisted American<lb/>
dream<lb/>
Zappa Looks<lb/>
For America<lb/>
Zappa of course has<lb/>
own views on America:<lb/>
"In the United States,<lb/>
the problems are a<lb/>
combination of<lb/>
organied religion,<lb/>
television, poor educa-<lb/>
tion, military<lb/>
industrial-complex and<lb/>
the government which 1<lb/>
think is extremely cor<lb/>
rupt on all levels and<lb/>
the easiest way to at<lb/>
tack that is through the<lb/>
medium which caused<lb/>
it. They (those who<lb/>
protest against<lb/>
America) have to get<lb/>
into . . all the things<lb/>
that are causing the<lb/>
problem and straighten<lb/>
it out from the inside.<lb/>
It's verv difficult to at-<lb/>
tack these things exter<lb/>
nally, there's virtually<lb/>
no hope of ripping it all<lb/>
down. I don't even<lb/>
think it's advisable. '<lb/>
? from an interview<lb/>
with Chris Hodenfeld<lb/>
in England; June, 1970.<lb/>
Some see Zappa as a<lb/>
ruthless pup-<lb/>
peteer pirate who ap-<lb/>
propriates the music of<lb/>
other people, whom he<lb/>
then discards along the<lb/>
wav. Others call him a<lb/>
genius who will one day<lb/>
be remembered as a<lb/>
major figure of 20th<lb/>
century music<lb/>
Frank Zappa himself<lb/>
characteristically<lb/>
couldn't care less what<lb/>
people sav about him.<lb/>
His former teacher,<lb/>
Ernest I ossi, was<lb/>
perceptive enough to<lb/>
somewhat understand<lb/>
him: "He's an indepen-<lb/>
dent thinker and to<lb/>
make progress you've<lb/>
got to be creative and<lb/>
independent in your<lb/>
thinking. The direction<lb/>
in w hich you take your<lb/>
independent thinking is<lb/>
something else<lb/>
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RYOR IN HIS LATEST MOST OUTRAGEOUS FILM THIS WEEKEND'<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057431_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
I<lb/>
Prxto By Dave Williams<lb/>
Jody Schulz (95) returns after intercepting a Richmond pass<lb/>
Buc Defense Emerges<lb/>
The East Carolina football<lb/>
team showed something different<lb/>
in its 17-13 win over Richmond<lb/>
Saturday ? defense. Darn good<lb/>
defense.<lb/>
"This was the best defensive<lb/>
performance we've had since I've<lb/>
been at East Carolina com-<lb/>
mented an overjoyed Pirate head<lb/>
coach Ed Emory. "The defense<lb/>
played well in all phases and<lb/>
came up with the big plays when<lb/>
we needed them<lb/>
The Pirate defenders have<lb/>
struggled this season, and really<lb/>
needed the super-strong pefor-<lb/>
mance they had against the<lb/>
Spiders. With the Buc offense<lb/>
finding it hard to do much of<lb/>
anything, the defense hung in<lb/>
there and eventually came up<lb/>
with two big plays that led to the<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
In fact, the defense set up every<lb/>
bit of ECU's scoring. The first<lb/>
came in the opening quarter when<lb/>
safety Marvin Elliott intercepted<lb/>
a pass. That paved the way for a<lb/>
43-yard field goal by Chuck<lb/>
Bushbeck.<lb/>
On the next-to-last play of the<lb/>
third quarter, and the Pirates<lb/>
trailing 7-3, defensive end Jody<lb/>
Schulz intercepted another Spider<lb/>
pass and returned it to the Rich-<lb/>
mond eight-yard-line. On the<lb/>
first play of the fourth quarter<lb/>
the Pirates followed up Schulz'<lb/>
steal with a touchdown.<lb/>
Perhaps the game's biggest<lb/>
play came just after the<lb/>
aforementioned TD. Cornerback<lb/>
Gerald Sykes blocked a Rich-<lb/>
mond field goal try and Schulz<lb/>
scooped up the loose ball and<lb/>
returned it to the Spiders'<lb/>
32-yard-line. Three plays later the<lb/>
eventual winning ECU<lb/>
touchdown was scored.<lb/>
The most impressive thing<lb/>
about the showing was the fact<lb/>
that the defense never seejned to<lb/>
lose its intensity despite the fact<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
Chandler<lb/>
that the offense was naving a sub-<lb/>
par performance.<lb/>
"The defense could have quit a<lb/>
million times Emory said.<lb/>
"But they didn't. They hung in<lb/>
there and that's why we won this<lb/>
football game<lb/>
The defensive unit had a<lb/>
number of stars. Schulz, of<lb/>
course, was one them. Not only<lb/>
did he come up with seven tackles<lb/>
but he also got to step into the<lb/>
limelight as a runner on the two<lb/>
big returns.<lb/>
Sykes had a superb day, in-<lb/>
tercepting one pass and breaking<lb/>
up three others in addition to<lb/>
blocking the kick. The ex-split<lb/>
end said he had hopes of a block<lb/>
all of last week.<lb/>
"We saw on film last week that<lb/>
they had a slow ? incredibly<lb/>
slow ? kicker Sykes explained.<lb/>
"We worked hard on the block<lb/>
and it paid off for us.<lb/>
"Also he continued, "their<lb/>
center was kind of jittery. He<lb/>
jerked before he snapped the<lb/>
ball. When he jerked that was my<lb/>
key to go<lb/>
Certainly one of the more<lb/>
welcome accomplisments by the<lb/>
defense Saturday was the play of<lb/>
linebackers Mike Grant and<lb/>
Glenn Morris. That position has<lb/>
been one that Emory has been<lb/>
concerned with all year.<lb/>
Against the Spiders, though,<lb/>
Grant and Morris each had 15<lb/>
tackles, definitely making for the<lb/>
best performance by the<lb/>
linebackers this year.<lb/>
Defensive end Mike Davis has<lb/>
played in Schulz' shadow all<lb/>
year, but he did his part as well in<lb/>
the Saturday win. He had nine<lb/>
tackles and made Sykes' blocked<lb/>
kick possible.<lb/>
"The key to the whole thing<lb/>
was Mike Sykes said. "He<lb/>
came hard inside. The man that<lb/>
was supposed to block me went<lb/>
inside to block Mike. After that I<lb/>
had a clean shot<lb/>
Perhaps the biggest "story" on<lb/>
the defense, though, comes from<lb/>
freshman nose guard Tony<lb/>
Smith. The Laurinburg native<lb/>
was injured and red-shirted last<lb/>
season. He started this year as the<lb/>
club's fourth-string nose guard.<lb/>
When Wally Myers quit the<lb/>
club and Fee Griffin was injured.<lb/>
Smith was suddenly the back-up<lb/>
at nose guard to Mark Ervin.<lb/>
Smith was forced into the game<lb/>
Saturday when Ervin went down.<lb/>
Smith's response was simply<lb/>
fabulous.<lb/>
He finished the contest with<lb/>
five tackles. Two of them,<lb/>
though, were sacks of Richmond<lb/>
quarterback Steve Krainock on<lb/>
the last drive of the game when<lb/>
the Spiders were threatening to-<lb/>
pull off a miraculous comeback.<lb/>
The last of the sacks ended the<lb/>
game, Smith throwing Krainock<lb/>
for an 11-yard loss as the buzzer<lb/>
sounded.<lb/>
"I was really nervous when I<lb/>
went in said an ecstatic Smith<lb/>
in the locker room following the<lb/>
game. "I felt like I had<lb/>
something to prove, though. I<lb/>
knew I could play. I wanted to<lb/>
show the coaches 1 could<lb/>
"I was just going all out<lb/>
Smith said of the game-ending<lb/>
sack. "1 got past my man and<lb/>
grabbed him (Krainock) ana pull-<lb/>
ed him down as hard as 1 could.<lb/>
It was really a great feeling<lb/>
Indeed, it must have been for<lb/>
each member of the ECU<lb/>
defense.<lb/>
Big-Play Defense The<lb/>
Key In 17-13 ECU Win<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Npom r dilor<lb/>
RICHMOND ? The East<lb/>
Carolina defense came through with<lb/>
its best performance of the season to<lb/>
lead the Pirates to a 17-13 win over<lb/>
Richmond in the Tobacco Bowl<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
The Pirate defenders came up<lb/>
with two big second-half plays to<lb/>
rally a struggling offense from a 7-3<lb/>
halftime deficit.<lb/>
The four-point Richmond lead<lb/>
lasted through the third period. On<lb/>
the next-to-last play of the quarter,<lb/>
though, ECU defensive end Jody<lb/>
Schulz intercepted a pass from<lb/>
Spider quarterback Steve Krainock<lb/>
and returned it to the Richmond<lb/>
eight.<lb/>
Two plays later, on the first play<lb/>
of the fourth quarter, Pirate QB<lb/>
Carlton Nelson hit tight end Nor-<lb/>
wood Vann with a six-yard scoring<lb/>
strike. Chuck Bushbeck's extra<lb/>
point put the Bucs up 10-7.<lb/>
The Spiders rallied back quickly,<lb/>
moving to the ECU 24 before hav-<lb/>
ing to settle for a Scott Schramme<lb/>
field goal attempt. Pirate corner-<lb/>
cX( 0 0 1417<lb/>
Richmond7 6 0 a13<lb/>
Richmond Redden 1pa? from krainock vhdmrar<lb/>
ckk)<lb/>
1(1 BmMwck 43 M,<lb/>
HI - Vann pus from Nrhon iBaBhsbark ktrkl<lb/>
Ml - Srboa ? ran iBtukhrck kick)<lb/>
Richmond Jackson 2 pav. from krainock pm faikrdl<lb/>
rxi Rich.<lb/>
lirvt downs10 4<lb/>
Riahr?-ards$3-151 47-12<lb/>
Pasting tank50 lit<lb/>
Pawn15-5-2 3 3-12-3<lb/>
Punls?-J4).0 -3?.3<lb/>
1 umbkvtoii3-2 11<lb/>
Praaltm-ard2-3? 6-43<lb/>
loial offmw201 244<lb/>
INUIVIIU Al UEADOB<lb/>
Rinlunt K I Nrhon 12-41. Ykakira 10-45. War (-47.<lb/>
I a?on 7-15. WBfJ 6-11. (onr? 1-7.obb 2-1 Richmond:<lb/>
Redden 34-114. Jraniag 7-11. ItuBoa 3-10<lb/>
Pa?mf 1(1 : Nrhon 11-4-2-3. Ingrain 2-1-0-12.<lb/>
Stewart 2-0-0-0 Richmond DnBofc 1-2-0-13. hxainork<lb/>
25-10-2-105.<lb/>
RrcritiM. - KV; WaWen 1-12. Mchok 117. lawioa<lb/>
1. O'Roark 1-7. Vim l-o Richmond While 4-57. Rrd<lb/>
dm 4-17. J nekton 2-13, Nchrerr 2-31.<lb/>
back Gerald Sykes found an open-<lb/>
ing in the Richmond line, though,<lb/>
and blocked Schramme's try. The<lb/>
ever-present Schulz returned the<lb/>
loose ball to the Richmond 29.<lb/>
Three plays later Nelson faked<lb/>
out a number of Richmond<lb/>
defenders en route to a 29-yard<lb/>
touchdown run. Bushbeck con-<lb/>
nected on the extra point and the<lb/>
Buc lead was 17-7.<lb/>
Sykes gave a teammate the ma-<lb/>
jority of the credit for his crucial<lb/>
block.<lb/>
"The key to the whole thing was<lb/>
Mike Davis (defensive end) Sykes<lb/>
said. "He came hard inside. The<lb/>
man that was supposed to block me<lb/>
went inside to block Mike. After<lb/>
that I had a clean shot. I didn't even<lb/>
get touched<lb/>
The Spiders responded well<lb/>
following the second big play by the<lb/>
Pirate defense. Bushbeck's kickoff<lb/>
was returned by Billy Starke 50<lb/>
yards to the ECU 47-yard-line.<lb/>
Eleven plays and four minutes<lb/>
later Krainock hit wide receiver<lb/>
Kevin Jackson with a two-yard<lb/>
touchdown pass. A two-point try by<lb/>
the Spiders failed as the Buc lead<lb/>
dropped to 17-13.<lb/>
The Richmond defense held the<lb/>
Buc offense to but one first down on<lb/>
its next possession and gave the<lb/>
Spider offense the ball on its own 20<lb/>
with 1:37 remaining in the game.<lb/>
Krainock's passing moved 'he<lb/>
ball to the ECU 43. The Spiders<lb/>
began the drive with no timeouts,<lb/>
though, and game came down to a<lb/>
lone play with 11 seconds remain-<lb/>
ing. Krainock went back for a pass<lb/>
but had no chance as a nose guard<lb/>
Tony Smith dropped him for an<lb/>
11-yard loss.<lb/>
Smith, a freshman, had replaced<lb/>
starter Mark Ervin, who was injured<lb/>
in the first half.<lb/>
"This was one helluva defensive<lb/>
game ECU head coach Ed Emory<lb/>
said following the contest. "This is<lb/>
the bet defensive effort we've had<lb/>
since I've ben at ECU. I'd say we<lb/>
won it on defense and didn't lose it<lb/>
on offense<lb/>
The defensive effort was definite-<lb/>
ly the key to the game, as the Buc<lb/>
offense struggled the entire first half<lb/>
and had its share of problems in the<lb/>
second.<lb/>
Actually, neither team did very<lb/>
much at all offensively in the first<lb/>
half, the two clubs combining for a<lb/>
mere nine first downs.<lb/>
All of the first-half scoring came<lb/>
in the opening period. Turnovers set<lb/>
both scores up.<lb/>
A Harold Blue fumble set up<lb/>
Richmond's touchdown. Heisman<lb/>
Trophy candidate Barry Redden got<lb/>
the score, hauling in an eight-yard<lb/>
pass from Krainock. An intercep-<lb/>
tion by Pirate safety Marvin Elliott<lb/>
led to a 43-yard field goal by<lb/>
Bushbeck at the midway point of<lb/>
the quarter.<lb/>
For the game, the Pirates commit-<lb/>
ted four turnovers ? two fumbles<lb/>
and two interceptions. Richmond<lb/>
actually finished the contest with<lb/>
more first downs and total yards<lb/>
than the Pirates. The Bucs picked<lb/>
up but ten first downs and 201<lb/>
yards, while the Spiders had 14 firsts<lb/>
and tallied 244 yards.<lb/>
Redden, though he had a sub-par<lb/>
day, gained nearly half of the Rich-<lb/>
mond total, picking up 114 yards on<lb/>
34 carries.<lb/>
Second-year Spider coach Dal<lb/>
Shealy was obviously disappointed<lb/>
following the contest.<lb/>
"We played our hearts out and<lb/>
still came up short on the<lb/>
scoreboard he said. "There's not<lb/>
much you can say when that hap-<lb/>
pens. Our guys are giving it<lb/>
everything they have, but still<lb/>
haven't been able to get that real<lb/>
taste of victory. That hurts us great-<lb/>
ly<lb/>
Shealy's Spiders travel to Ohio to<lb/>
face Cincinnati this Saturday. The<lb/>
Pirates go south to face<lb/>
Southwestern Louisiana before<lb/>
returning home to host 13th-ranked<lb/>
Miami (Fla.) on October 24.<lb/>
Richmond Suffering<lb/>
After Heartbreaker<lb/>
By WILLIAM YELVERTON<lb/>
Autetanl Sports Editor<lb/>
A game of incredible similarity.<lb/>
With 1:48 remaining, the situa-<lb/>
tion was the same. Even the teams<lb/>
were the same. However, Rich-<lb/>
mond, not East Carolina as in last<lb/>
season's thriller won by the Pirates,<lb/>
24-22, was faced with a do-or-die<lb/>
situation: score a late touchdown or<lb/>
lose to a bitter rival.<lb/>
Even a few drops of rain were<lb/>
falling, a reminder of last year's bat-<lb/>
tle played in a rainstorm.<lb/>
But for the University of Rich-<lb/>
mond, the eventual results were the<lb/>
same ? a tough defeat, 17-13.<lb/>
"I can't say a whole lot on a<lb/>
positive note said a disappointed<lb/>
coach Dal Shealy in the Richmond<lb/>
dressing room. "When you come up<lb/>
short and your guys played hard,<lb/>
there's not much to say t<lb/>
For Richmond, the loss was in-<lb/>
deed frustrating, especially after<lb/>
two impressive wins in a row. The<lb/>
last victory, a 24-7 decision over<lb/>
James Madison, coming without<lb/>
quarterback Steve Krainock and<lb/>
tailbck Barry Redden, who were out<lb/>
with injuries.<lb/>
Krainock, suffering with a slow-<lb/>
healing shoulder separation, was<lb/>
only 10-25 for 105 yards and threw<lb/>
two interceptions against the Pirates<lb/>
while Redden was hobbled with a<lb/>
strained knee, even though he rush-<lb/>
ed 34 times for 131 yards.<lb/>
"Redden showed real heart and<lb/>
courage when he technically<lb/>
shouldn't have gone back in the<lb/>
game (he was shaken up in the first<lb/>
half) Shealy said. "At halftime he<lb/>
said he wanted to go back<lb/>
The Heisman Trophy candidate<lb/>
had trouble catching passes. "He<lb/>
dropped more today than I've ever<lb/>
seen him drop Shealy said. "But<lb/>
when you're hurt you do things you<lb/>
don't ordinarily do<lb/>
The Richmond coach applied the<lb/>
same logic with Krainock. "He<lb/>
doesn't ordinarily throw intercep-<lb/>
tions, but he was hurt<lb/>
Krainock, however, refused to<lb/>
make any excuses. "I just couldn't<lb/>
throw the ball like I usually can he<lb/>
said softly. "If I can keep loose, it<lb/>
feels good. Once we started runn-<lb/>
ing, I tightened up. I'll just have to<lb/>
live with it right now<lb/>
There was an uneasiness in his<lb/>
voice. "I thought we had a good<lb/>
week of practice he said. "But to<lb/>
come back and have something hap-<lb/>
pen the same way it did last year, it<lb/>
just hurts bad<lb/>
Even though the two Richmond<lb/>
stars were below par, Shealy was op-<lb/>
timistic about winning. "When we<lb/>
went up 7-0 he said, "1 thought<lb/>
we were in control of the game. But<lb/>
we kept East Carolina the ball<lb/>
Sec SHEA I Y, Page 9<lb/>
Photo By Dave Williams<lb/>
Tight end Norwood Vann (81) hauls in ECU's second TD of the day in 17-13 win<lb/>
Cage Drills<lb/>
Open On<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
sports M?or<lb/>
Competition. It is said that all<lb/>
coaches like it. If this is true, then<lb/>
East Carolina head t lsketball coach<lb/>
Dave Odom should be a happy man.<lb/>
The 15-member Pirate squad will<lb/>
begin pre-season practice this<lb/>
Thursday. The newest members of<lb/>
the ECAC-South head into the<lb/>
1981-82 season with more depth<lb/>
than in either of Odom's two<lb/>
previous seasons at the helm.<lb/>
"We're going into practice with<lb/>
almost every position open Odom<lb/>
said. "The competition for playing<lb/>
time should be at an all-time hiah<lb/>
here<lb/>
Indeed. The only position that ap-<lb/>
pears to be set as practice begins is<lb/>
point guard, where 6-4 Tony Bvles<lb/>
returns after a one-year absence.<lb/>
The flashy playmaker is back for his<lb/>
senior year after starting in '79-80.<lb/>
Freshman Bruce Peartree and<lb/>
sophomore Herbert Gilchrist are ex-<lb/>
pected to share back-up time at the<lb/>
point.<lb/>
Junior Charles Watkins, the<lb/>
See DEPTH page 10<lb/>
A 'Fake' TD<lb/>
Richmond's second and last touchdown in the club's<lb/>
17-13 loss to ECU Saturday was literally a fake. Here,<lb/>
tailback Barry Redden (20) dives for the end zone from<lb/>
two yards out. Meanwhile, QB Steve Krainock (7)<lb/>
prepares to hit wide receiver Kevin Jackson (not pic-<lb/>
tured) with a scoring strike. Most everyone in City<lb/>
Stadium thought Redden had the ball. (Photo By Dave<lb/>
Williams)<lb/>
D,<lb/>
I<lb/>
M ' I<lb/>
i<lb/>
Si<lb/>
I<lb/>
v<lb/>
j<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057431_0009"/><lb/>
in<lb/>
didn't lose if<lb/>
efinite-<lb/>
a- :he Buc<lb/>
half<lb/>
Iems in the<lb/>
n d;d e;<lb/>
the first<lb/>
or a<lb/>
?rmg came<lb/>
-ers set<lb/>
 up<lb/>
Heisman<lb/>
Kedden got<lb/>
ard<lb/>
 : cep-<lb/>
I lliott<lb/>
. a bj<lb/>
: of<lb/>
ommit-<lb/>
ked<lb/>
par<lb/>
Dal<lb/>
ted<lb/>
.uid<lb/>
? n t h e<lb/>
not<lb/>
at hap-<lb/>
. reat-<lb/>
:o Ohio to<lb/>
The<lb/>
to face<lb/>
a before<lb/>
I3th-ranked<lb/>
k 24<lb/>
ma?-<lb/>
I  A I JTIJ<lb/>
win<lb/>
ills<lb/>
n<lb/>
NDLER<lb/>
d that all<lb/>
true, then<lb/>
eetbali coach<lb/>
happy man.<lb/>
te squad will<lb/>
ractice this<lb/>
members of<lb/>
kd into the<lb/>
Imore depth<lb/>
doms two<lb/>
helm,<lb/>
jractice with<lb/>
en Odom<lb/>
for playing<lb/>
H-time high<lb/>
Ition that ap-<lb/>
ice begins is<lb/>
Tony Byles<lb/>
par absence,<lb/>
nack for his<lb/>
kg in '79-80.<lb/>
irtree and<lb/>
Jurist axe ex-<lb/>
time at the<lb/>
ii kins, the<lb/>
fee 10<lb/>
f<lb/>
Indians Scalp ECU<lb/>
SAAD'S<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
Photo By GABY PATTERSON<lb/>
ECU's Mike Swann eludes defender.<lb/>
Depth An ECU Plus<lb/>
East Carolina saw<lb/>
their record fall to 3-7<lb/>
Sunday after losing to<lb/>
the Indians of William<lb/>
and Mary 4-1 in soccer<lb/>
action.<lb/>
The victory was 18th-<lb/>
ranked William and<lb/>
Mary's eighth against<lb/>
one loss and one tie.<lb/>
The Indians were ahead<lb/>
4-0 at halftime.<lb/>
The only East<lb/>
Carolina goal was<lb/>
scored by Brian Win-<lb/>
chell on an assist by<lb/>
Mike Swan.<lb/>
East Carolina was<lb/>
credited with 18 saves,<lb/>
13 by freshman goalie<lb/>
Danny Curtis who<lb/>
replaced Steve Brown<lb/>
after the Pirate star was<lb/>
struck in the eye with<lb/>
the ball. At first, it was<lb/>
believed that Brown<lb/>
was bleeding internally<lb/>
behind his eye but was<lb/>
taken to the hospital<lb/>
where he was pro-<lb/>
nounced fit.<lb/>
The Pirates travel to<lb/>
Pembroke State<lb/>
Wednesday afternoon<lb/>
at 3:30.<lb/>
113 Grande Ave<lb/>
758 1228<lb/>
Quality<lb/>
?<lb/>
Repair<lb/>
Ol Cdmoutld?)f(J Fliqus And<lb/>
Shuts Sleeping B j s<lb/>
Backpacks Cjmpinq Equip<lb/>
mtnl SWti Tod Snots Oisfu-s<lb/>
Ana 0?i-f '00 Ditleten! ?? And<lb/>
Used Items Cowboy Souls<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
I S01 S E ?ns<lb/>
Stieel<lb/>
ABORTIONS<lb/>
1 74 week terminations<lb/>
Appt's Made 7 Days<lb/>
CALL TOLL FREE<lb/>
1 800 321 0575<lb/>
RIGGAN<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
TWO DOORS FROM<lb/>
COX FLORIST<lb/>
111 W 4th St<lb/>
SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
VERY BEST<lb/>
758-0204<lb/>
( ontinued From Page 8<lb/>
team's leading scorer last year with<lb/>
a 12.8 average, is the top candidate<lb/>
for the other guard position.<lb/>
Sophomore Mike Fox. a 6-3 sharp-<lb/>
shooter will provide a threat,<lb/>
though.<lb/>
The big forward position is full of<lb/>
candidate. Sophomore Morris<lb/>
Hargrove, at 6-6 and 215 pounds, is<lb/>
said bv Odom to be the most im-<lb/>
proved plaver on the squad. Tom<lb/>
Brown, a 6-6 transfer from Maine,<lb/>
joins the club after sitting out last<lb/>
season due to the NCAA's transfer<lb/>
rule. Charles Green and Al Mack,<lb/>
both JuCo Ail-Americans last year,<lb/>
can also line up at big forward,<lb/>
though Mack may see more action<lb/>
at center.<lb/>
Mark Mel aurin (6-6) and Bill<lb/>
McNair (6-5), along with Green, ap-<lb/>
pear read) to battle it out for play-<lb/>
ing time at small forward.<lb/>
McLaurin, who averaged 9.4 points<lb/>
per game last season as a starter,<lb/>
and McNair can also shift to big<lb/>
guard.<lb/>
At center, senior Michael Gibson<lb/>
(6-8) and Mack are the top can-<lb/>
didates. Freshman David<lb/>
Reichenecker, a sturdy 6-10, and 6-8<lb/>
sophomore Jeff Best are also<lb/>
available.<lb/>
Odom appears excited about his<lb/>
team's chances. "I really fell we will<lb/>
show definite and marked improve-<lb/>
ment said the third-year Buc<lb/>
coach. "Perhaps the biggest pro-<lb/>
blem we as coaches have outside of<lb/>
having a winning season is meeting<lb/>
the needs and desires of our players<lb/>
as far as playing time is concerned<lb/>
The Pirates begin their season on<lb/>
Saturday, November 28, when Ohio<lb/>
University invades Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum. Tip-off time for the opener is<lb/>
7:30 p.m.<lb/>
V.<lb/>
Shealy Praises Pirates<lb/>
(ontinued From Page 8<lb/>
game.<lb/>
"The three interceptions were<lb/>
really big. and the missed field goal<lb/>
proved to be gigantic. Coach Emory<lb/>
had his team really prepared. They<lb/>
made fewer mistakes. Penalties and<lb/>
missed opportunities were the key<lb/>
As was a young offensive line.<lb/>
"Our inexperienced line is giving us<lb/>
problems he said. "But they are<lb/>
trying hard. We're just too young<lb/>
and inexperienced in the offensive<lb/>
line for this type of game. But we<lb/>
did gear down in a few pressure<lb/>
situations. The played courageous-<lb/>
ly. We put too much responsibility<lb/>
on that area of our team this week.<lb/>
"You can't have the turnerovers<lb/>
and penalties we had and still win<lb/>
the ball game<lb/>
The ineffectiveness of Krainock<lb/>
proved to be costly for Richmond.<lb/>
"He wasn't as sharp as he usuall<lb/>
is Shealy said. "1 put too much<lb/>
pressure on him at the start. His<lb/>
timing wasn't as good as it should<lb/>
have been<lb/>
Shealy inserted freshman quarter-<lb/>
back Napoleon DuBois in the first<lb/>
half after Krainock was unable to<lb/>
move the team. "We put him in so<lb/>
we could run more spring outs and<lb/>
options he said. "East Carolina<lb/>
was gung-ho on Redden I wanted<lb/>
to loosen them up a bit, but our er-<lb/>
rors were verv, very critical.<lb/>
"Our game with East Carolina<lb/>
was disappointing last year he<lb/>
continued. "Last year's game with<lb/>
VMI was disappointing (a 22-17 loss<lb/>
for the Spiders). This game ranks<lb/>
right with those<lb/>
Shealy continued to praise the<lb/>
Pirates. "Talent-wise he said,<lb/>
"East Carolina was as good as<lb/>
anybody we'll play. We rank their<lb/>
defense with Southern Mississipi's.<lb/>
Their whole team is explosive and<lb/>
dangerous<lb/>
Richmond was not surprised by<lb/>
the fact that the Pirates opened the<lb/>
game with the I-formation, Shealy<lb/>
said. "East Carolina didn't fool us<lb/>
at all. When they've gotten behind<lb/>
they've abandoned the 'bone and<lb/>
thrown more and run more options.<lb/>
We helped them out with field posi-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Even with the disappointing<lb/>
defeat, Shealy wasn't discouraged<lb/>
with the play of his team. "Our guys<lb/>
are doing everything they can he<lb/>
said. "They're living with the agony<lb/>
of defeat. They deserved more than<lb/>
what was on the scoreboard<lb/>
"The attitude on the team is real<lb/>
good Kraiock echoed.<lb/>
"Everybody is closer together on<lb/>
Monday after a loss. It's just a dif-<lb/>
ferent atmosphere this year<lb/>
But for Richmond the results on<lb/>
an overcast Saturday in October<lb/>
were painfully the same as one year<lb/>
before.<lb/>
PRESBYTERIAN<lb/>
CAMPUS<lb/>
MINISTRY<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
Stewart LaNeave, Campus<lb/>
Minister<lb/>
104 Hardee Circle<lb/>
A listening ear<lb/>
A sounding board<lb/>
A guiding spirit<lb/>
752-7240 or 758-0145<lb/>
PROGRAM<lb/>
At the International House<lb/>
306 East 9th Street<lb/>
Tues. $2.00<lb/>
5:30 Discussion &amp; Dinner Out<lb/>
Wed.<lb/>
Noon<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
 Noon<lb/>
Faculty &amp; Staff<lb/>
Mendenhall Faculty Dining<lb/>
A time of sharing and<lb/>
discussion over meal.<lb/>
Mendenhall Snack Bar<lb/>
Student Fellowship Lunch<lb/>
Join us with lunch.<lb/>
BLACK RUSSIAN<lb/>
IS COMING<lb/>
ECCDEC<lb/>
FOR MORE<lb/>
INFORMATION WINTER<lb/>
CALL: 7S88448 GUARDE<lb/>
Proudly &amp;&amp;<lb/>
81<lb/>
KM<lb/>
Chaps<lb/>
Hwy. 25t North<lb/>
Kins ton, N. C.<lb/>
Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina's Largest<lb/>
&amp; Finest Private Club<lb/>
YOUR FAVORITE BEVERAGE<lb/>
Out S'From M P.M.<lb/>
35'From 9-10 P.M.<lb/>
TACOS this<lb/>
COMING TUESDAY<lb/>
OCTOBER 13TH<lb/>
October 14 Kays?Ladies' Night<lb/>
October 16 Entertainers<lb/>
October 17 Showmen<lb/>
rHE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 13. 1981<lb/>
S<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of th? advertised items is required to be readily available lor sale<lb/>
below the advertised price in each AP Store, escapi as specifically noted<lb/>
in this ad<lb/>
at o7<lb/>
o<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT. OCT. 17 AT AP IN GREENVILLE, N.C<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL<lb/>
DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
Highway 264 Bypass<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. <lb/>
OKTOBERFEST<lb/>
It's a festival of Green P's<lb/>
I A&amp;P QUALITY FRESHLY<lb/>
Ground<lb/>
5 lb. Roll Pkg.<lb/>
Limit 10 lbs. with<lb/>
$7.50 Additional<lb/>
Food Order<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
New York Strips<lb/>
16-20 ib<lb/>
avg<lb/>
Cut Free!<lb/>
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH FRYER<lb/>
ilV Box-0-<lb/>
-T7 Chicken<lb/>
Canned Savffi9S<lb/>
Vegetables<lb/>
3<lb/>
APPLESAUCE ? TOHATOtS ? SW?T PEAS<lb/>
? CUT OR FRENCH GREEN BEANS<lb/>
? SUCEO CARROTS<lb/>
? MIXED VEGETABLES<lb/>
? SAUERKRAUT ? WHOLE 1 SVl 02.<lb/>
OR SLICED POTATOES " <lb/>
C4MS<lb/>
Your<lb/>
Choice,<lb/>
ANN PAGE<lb/>
Homestyle<lb/>
Buttermilk<lb/>
Biscuits<lb/>
4igoct. "7Q0<lb/>
cans ? w<lb/>
TROPIC AN A CHILLED<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
89'<lb/>
64 oz.<lb/>
ctn.<lb/>
FROZEN<lb/>
Totino s Pizza<lb/>
? Canadian Bacon<lb/>
? Pepperoni<lb/>
? Hamburger 12oz.<lb/>
? Sausage pkg.<lb/>
ANN PAGE LOOK-FIT<lb/>
Ice Milk<lb/>
19<lb/>
'4 gal.<lb/>
ctn.<lb/>
1<lb/>
Save<lb/>
20<lb/>
BEEF FLAVOR<lb/>
Tony Dog Food<lb/>
5 1<lb/>
cans S<lb/>
CONTAINS RICH BRAZILIAN COFFEES<lb/>
Eight O'clock<lb/>
Instant<lb/>
Coffee 10 oz.<lb/>
Jar<lb/>
299<lb/>
SALISBURY STEAK ? MEAT LOAF<lb/>
CHICKEN-TURKEY<lb/>
AnnJage Dinners<lb/>
r oir<lb/>
Dinners<lb/>
PLAIN ? SELF RISING ? UNBLEACHED<lb/>
Red Band Flour<lb/>
5 89<lb/>
October 21<lb/>
North Tower ? Ladies' Night<lb/>
October 23 kid Shaken<lb/>
October 24 Tempest<lb/>
October 28<lb/>
Castaways ? Ladies' Night<lb/>
October 30<lb/>
We play it all.<lb/>
October 31<lb/>
Fantastic Shakers<lb/>
(Halloween Party)<lb/>
Ladies' Night ? Lady Members Free<lb/>
Bands Swbfact to Chant Without Notic<lb/>
Memberships Required<lb/>
Annual Memberships ? $10 Special<lb/>
Price for ECU Students wID's<lb/>
$5.00 ? Available Sept. &amp; Oct. Only<lb/>
All ABC Permits Phone 523-2449<lb/>
" SFRESH WITH QUAUTY<lb/>
CALIFORNIA CRISP ICEBERG<lb/>
Head<lb/>
Save 78<lb/>
On 2 Heads<lb/>
Lettuce<lb/>
large<lb/>
heads<lb/>
GOLDEN YELLOW RIPE<lb/>
Dole Bananas<lb/>
00<lb/>
3 v 1<lb/>
SUNMAtD QUALITY<lb/>
Mini Raisins<lb/>
14<lb/>
v?o.<lb/>
DkCfS<lb/>
t<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057431_0010"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
10<lb/>
1HE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 13. IWI<lb/>
Charlotte Wins Championship<lb/>
By CHRIS<lb/>
HOLLOMAN<lb/>
Staff Writ<lb/>
The East Carolina<lb/>
volleyball team finished<lb/>
second to UNC-<lb/>
Charlotte in their own<lb/>
Invitational last<lb/>
weekend. The Pirates<lb/>
and the Forty-Niners<lb/>
faced each other in the<lb/>
finals for the second<lb/>
year in a row.<lb/>
To reach the finals<lb/>
on Saturday, however,<lb/>
the Pirates had to face<lb/>
and defeat some very<lb/>
tough foes in their own<lb/>
pool. Teams included<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington, the<lb/>
University of Virginia<lb/>
and High Point Col-<lb/>
lege.<lb/>
In the first match of<lb/>
the day, East Carolina<lb/>
faced the Lady<lb/>
Seahawks and defeated<lb/>
them in two straight<lb/>
games by scores of<lb/>
15-10 and 16-14.<lb/>
The second match of<lb/>
the tournament match-<lb/>
ed Virginia against the<lb/>
Pirates. Once again,<lb/>
East Carolina prevailed<lb/>
in just two games by<lb/>
identical 15-5 scores.<lb/>
The Pirates' third<lb/>
match provided one of<lb/>
the first real upsets of<lb/>
the day as High Point<lb/>
defeated East Carolina,<lb/>
14-16 and 7-15. The<lb/>
loss gave three out of<lb/>
the four teams in the<lb/>
pool 3-1 records. By us-<lb/>
ing the scoring<lb/>
margins, High Point<lb/>
and East Carolina were<lb/>
allowed to advance to<lb/>
the championship<lb/>
round against the top<lb/>
two teams in the other<lb/>
pool which included<lb/>
Duke, UNC-Charlotte,<lb/>
Elon and North<lb/>
Carolina A &amp; T.<lb/>
In the other pool,<lb/>
Duke finished first with<lb/>
a 3-0 mark while UNC-<lb/>
Charlotte finished se-<lb/>
cond at 2-1.<lb/>
On Saturday morn-<lb/>
ing, Duke and East East Carolina come<lb/>
Carolina squared off in back and take the se-<lb/>
the semi-final round. In cond set.<lb/>
George<lb/>
' Vaults'<lb/>
To Title<lb/>
V'olleying<lb/>
Lady Pi rale Lit a Lamas (3) volleys<lb/>
in last weekend's ECU Invitational<lb/>
as Lexanne Ketter (9) looks on. The<lb/>
Lady Bucs finished second in the<lb/>
tournament to USC-Charlotte, fall-<lb/>
ing in the finals 15-10. 16-14.<lb/>
(Photo By Gary Patterson)<lb/>
For East Carolina<lb/>
swimmer Nan George,<lb/>
uhat a different a year<lb/>
makes.<lb/>
Last year she was a<lb/>
ECU gymnast but<lb/>
because of a restructur-<lb/>
ing in the athletic<lb/>
department that caused<lb/>
her sport to be drop-<lb/>
ped, she chose to<lb/>
become a swimmer.<lb/>
And did it pay off.<lb/>
In the East Carolina<lb/>
Pentathlon, an intras-<lb/>
quad competition,<lb/>
George won the overall<lb/>
championship with a<lb/>
total of 2436 points<lb/>
over Sally Reinhard,<lb/>
who tallied 1846.<lb/>
George won the 200<lb/>
IM with a time of<lb/>
222.81, the 100-meter<lb/>
breaststroke in a time<lb/>
of 114.87 and the<lb/>
100-meter freestyle in a<lb/>
time of 57.54. She also<lb/>
placed second in the<lb/>
100-meter fly with a<lb/>
time of 105.48.<lb/>
Dordi Henriksen<lb/>
finished third with 1614<lb/>
points.<lb/>
In the men's division<lb/>
Kevin Richards was the<lb/>
overall winner with a<lb/>
total of 2098 points. He<lb/>
placed first in the<lb/>
100-meter backstroke<lb/>
in a time of 57.24 and<lb/>
claimed second place in<lb/>
the 100-meter fly in<lb/>
54.75. He also finished<lb/>
third in the 100-meter<lb/>
breaststroke in a time<lb/>
of 107.01.<lb/>
Doug Nieman finish-<lb/>
ed second place with a<lb/>
total of 1857 points<lb/>
while Doug Mac-<lb/>
Millan's 1627 points<lb/>
enabled him to finish<lb/>
third.<lb/>
Next action for the<lb/>
Pirate swimmers is the<lb/>
Purple-Gold Meet is<lb/>
scheduled for October<lb/>
21 at 7 p.m. in Minges<lb/>
Natatorium.<lb/>
:<lb/>
EVANS SEAFOOD<lb/>
MKT.<lb/>
203 W. ?th St. 752-2332<lb/>
'Variety ot Fresh &amp; Frozen Seafood<lb/>
?Lobster Tails 'King Crab Legs<lb/>
Clams'Crab Meat<lb/>
'Hard Crabs<lb/>
DON'T LET THE NAME OF OUR<lb/>
RESTAURANT FOOL YOU WE<lb/>
ALSO SERVE FANTASTIC<lb/>
LUNCH AND DINNER VlTTLES<lb/>
SUCH AS BAR-B-Q BEcT RIBS,<lb/>
FRESH COUNTRY STYLE FRIED<lb/>
CHICKEN, STEAKS AND MUCH,<lb/>
MUCH MORE.<lb/>
BUY ANY MEAT<lb/>
BISCUIT-GET<lb/>
ADDED<lb/>
EGG OR CHEESE<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
6 A.M6 P.M. Only Monday<lb/>
Oct. 12-Friday 16<lb/>
No Coupon Required.<lb/>
CAS<lb/>
WE PAY IMMEDIATE CASH<lb/>
CLASS RINGS FOR:<lb/>
WEDDING BANDS<lb/>
DIAMONDS mam-mm<lb/>
ALL GOLD &amp; SILVER<lb/>
SILVER COINS<lb/>
CHINA &amp; CRYSTAL<lb/>
FINE WATCHES<lb/>
&amp;RINC<lb/>
OF KEY SALES COc<lb/>
401 S.EVANS ST. ZZnv"?<lb/>
(HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH) KHUNC 3-JOOO<lb/>
I YOUR PROFISSIONAI PERMANENT DCALIR<lb/>
r Just fell us<lb/>
wnalyou want.<lb/>
Your ArtCarved representative will be on campus -soon to show you the<lb/>
latest in class ring designs. With dozens of styles to choose from, you'll abe proud to select<lb/>
your one of-a-kind design. Just tell us what you want. And be on the<lb/>
lookout for posters on campus to get you where you want.<lb/>
Oct. 14,15,16<lb/>
DATE: 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
Location ECU Student Store Lobby<lb/>
 Now is th? ?? ? mohe y?ur bwt 9?W fl buy <lb/>
the best thrce-out-of-<lb/>
five match the Pirates<lb/>
won by downing the<lb/>
Blue Devils in three out<lb/>
of four games. The<lb/>
team scores were Duke,<lb/>
15-4, and East<lb/>
Carolina, 15-5, 15-11<lb/>
and 15-6.<lb/>
This combined with<lb/>
the Forty-Niners' win<lb/>
over High Point set the<lb/>
stage for the rematch<lb/>
between ECU and<lb/>
UNC-C.<lb/>
In the first game of<lb/>
the match, UNC-C<lb/>
downed the Pirates,<lb/>
5-15. only to have the<lb/>
Charlotte then won the<lb/>
last two games by iden-<lb/>
tical 9-15 scores to take<lb/>
the ECU Invitational<lb/>
for the second year in a<lb/>
row against the host<lb/>
team.<lb/>
In the consolation<lb/>
game the University of<lb/>
Virginia defeated<lb/>
North Carolina A &amp; T<lb/>
to take fifth place.<lb/>
After the tournament<lb/>
head volleyball coach<lb/>
Lynn Davidson was<lb/>
pleased with the com-<lb/>
petition and the overall<lb/>
play of her Pirate team.<lb/>
played against Duke,<lb/>
we played very well<lb/>
she said. "We had the<lb/>
best blocking we have<lb/>
had all season. Lexanne<lb/>
Keeter had her best<lb/>
game this year<lb/>
"In the match<lb/>
against UNC-C<lb/>
harlotte.wepiayed very<lb/>
inconsistently she<lb/>
noted. "We never real-<lb/>
ly established an offen-<lb/>
sive pattern. Observ-<lb/>
ing game hurt us.<lb/>
"I thought Jenny<lb/>
Hauser and Sandy<lb/>
Gideoms did a fine job<lb/>
for us she continued.<lb/>
"I think overall it was a<lb/>
wins though we didn't<lb/>
play well against UNC<lb/>
C. The Duke and<lb/>
Virginia games were<lb/>
very good wins,<lb/>
though.<lb/>
The Pirates placed<lb/>
Hauser on the all-<lb/>
tournament team.<lb/>
East Carolina will be<lb/>
back in action Tuesday<lb/>
night against the<lb/>
University of North<lb/>
Carolina Tar Heels in<lb/>
Chapel Hill. The<lb/>
Pirates then return<lb/>
home on October 16 to<lb/>
face Appalachian<lb/>
State, a team they were<lb/>
beaten by earlier in the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
I-FREE<lb/>
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SOAP-WASH HOUSE-FREE SOAP-WASH HOUSE-FREE SOAP-WASH 1<lb/>
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The wash house will supply detergent to every<lb/>
washing machine you use absolutely Free.<lb/>
You no longer have to buy your own detergent. Just bring<lb/>
this Coupon to either of the two conveniently located Wash<lb/>
Houses for Free Detergent.<lb/>
This offer is good MonSat 8:00 5:00 For The Entire Month of October at<lb/>
The Wash House on 10th St. (across from Krispy Kreme) or The Wash<lb/>
House on 14th Street (one and a half blocks from Belk Dorm).<lb/>
Coupon For<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
Detergent For Every Wash<lb/>
Offer Expires Oct. 31,1981<lb/>
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Coupons For Free Detergent will appear in<lb/>
Thurs. Edition of The East Carolinian<lb/>
Throughout The Month of October.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057431_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>