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<pb facs="00057439_0001"/>
?he lEaHt (Earnliman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 58 No. 23<lb/>
Effectiveness<lb/>
Survey Ready<lb/>
B DIANE ANDERSON<lb/>
Mundane lectures? Unfair pro-<lb/>
fessors?<lb/>
During the week of Nov. 16<lb/>
through 21, students will have a<lb/>
chance to express satisfaction or<lb/>
dissatisfaction with their instruc-<lb/>
tors.<lb/>
"Every student in every class will<lb/>
hae an opportunity to give their<lb/>
opinion of the instruction in that<lb/>
class explained Robert M. Ussery,<lb/>
director of institutional research.<lb/>
His office developed the student<lb/>
survey along with the Faculty Senate<lb/>
Committee for teaching effec-<lb/>
ts eness.<lb/>
Questionnaires will be distributed<lb/>
during every class with an enroll-<lb/>
ment of more than 5 students. It will<lb/>
take approximately 15 minutes to<lb/>
complete.<lb/>
Participation is voluntary, and<lb/>
students may remain anonymous.<lb/>
The instructors have been requested<lb/>
to leave the classroom while<lb/>
students complete the survey.<lb/>
Dr. Phil Adler, chairman of the<lb/>
committee for Teaching Effec-<lb/>
tiveness, encouraged students "not<lb/>
to get exasperated" with the ques-<lb/>
tionnaires since they will have to fill<lb/>
one out in every class.<lb/>
"We encourage them to take it in<lb/>
the spirit given, that is a serious ef-<lb/>
fort to find out what is going on in<lb/>
the classroom, to help the teachers<lb/>
find out where their strengths and<lb/>
weaknesses lie said Adler.<lb/>
The results of the survey will be<lb/>
confidential to the faculty and will<lb/>
be available sometime in January.<lb/>
Individual instructors can then put<lb/>
the information to use in their<lb/>
teaching methods.<lb/>
Selected items from the survey<lb/>
will also be used to choose those in-<lb/>
structors worthy of receiving alumni<lb/>
awards presented annually for<lb/>
teaching excellence.<lb/>
This particular survey will not be<lb/>
used for administrative personnel<lb/>
decisions. "It was the agreement<lb/>
between the committee and ad-<lb/>
ministration that personnel deci-<lb/>
sions would not be done until a part<lb/>
of the faculty handbook, appendix<lb/>
C, (Personal Policy), was approved<lb/>
by the faculty senate. It is running<lb/>
behind schedule said Adler. "This<lb/>
survey will not be for personnel<lb/>
things but solely for self-<lb/>
improvement<lb/>
Dr. Adler also explained that<lb/>
these surveys "presumably will be<lb/>
done within regular intervals, pro-<lb/>
bably no more frequently than once<lb/>
annually, maybe every third<lb/>
semester<lb/>
According to Chancellor Brewer,<lb/>
this program is part of the universi-<lb/>
ty's "continuing steps to provide a<lb/>
comprehensive program to promote<lb/>
improvements in teaching and ad-<lb/>
ministrative processes<lb/>
Paint the Town Purple And Gold: Homecoming 1981<lb/>
Photo By GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
Saturday's festivities were marked by the crowning of East Carolina's<lb/>
Homecoming Pirate, Kim Cloud (left). Sigma Tau Gamma gave the<lb/>
traditional parade an Animal House touch with their<lb/>
"Deathmobile(top right) and the crowd cheered the football team to<lb/>
victorv over East Tennessee State (below). The Delta Zetas and Clement<lb/>
Dorm took top honors for decorations. The Sigma Vis won first place<lb/>
for their float, with Beta Theta Pi and the Lambda (his taking second<lb/>
and third places. Cam Sloan and Jackie McClav were the runners<lb/>
the Homecoming Pirate contest.<lb/>
ce<lb/>
rid<lb/>
3<lb/>
Delayed Concert Incites Controversy<lb/>
r . i?,? ?i,j n&amp;t ;? n nl ih? maioi attractions C(<lb/>
B TOM HALL<lb/>
Of three bands slated to appear at<lb/>
Saturday's homecoming concert,<lb/>
one was late and another did not ap-<lb/>
pear at all.<lb/>
ken Hammond, Student Union<lb/>
program director, said he received a<lb/>
call Saturday afternoon from the<lb/>
concert promoter and was told that<lb/>
the bus carrying SOS, one of the<lb/>
scheduled bands, had broken down<lb/>
outside of Atlanta.<lb/>
According to Hammond, two<lb/>
signs were posted outside Minges<lb/>
Coliseum notifying the audience<lb/>
that the band would not appear and<lb/>
an announcement was made to the<lb/>
crowd that refunds would be given<lb/>
at the coliseum's ticket window.<lb/>
Hammond said Monday that he<lb/>
had been receiving calls all day from<lb/>
people who attending the concert<lb/>
demanding refunds.<lb/>
"I regret the fact that the show<lb/>
was late in starting but it did hap-<lb/>
pen Hammond said. He said he<lb/>
sympathized with the t who waited<lb/>
until midnight to see the musical<lb/>
group Slave, but emphasized that<lb/>
the show did take place. "A number<lb/>
of people are asking for refunds<lb/>
because they feel they did not get<lb/>
their money's worth Hammond<lb/>
added. "We would have given<lb/>
everyone a full refund if Slave had<lb/>
not appeared<lb/>
Slave did not arrive at Minges un-<lb/>
til 10:30 p.m. and did not start play-<lb/>
ing until 12 a.m. the program direc-<lb/>
tor said. CD. and Company, a male<lb/>
fashion show, began their act<lb/>
"around 8:35 or 8:40" and were<lb/>
followed by the band Brief En-<lb/>
counter at 10 p.m according to,<lb/>
Hammond.<lb/>
The East Carolina Student Union<lb/>
received a percentage of the gate<lb/>
receipts from Jim Rouse of T P and<lb/>
B Productions. Rouse approached<lb/>
the Major Attractions Committee<lb/>
this fall about a concert on the<lb/>
Saturday night of ECU's homecom-<lb/>
ing week, Hammond said. The com-<lb/>
mittee already had a "bird in the<lb/>
hand" with the Nov. 20 Charlie<lb/>
Daniels concert, so Rouse was given<lb/>
control of the concert's promotion.<lb/>
Hammond said Rouse's Bar-Kays<lb/>
concert in Minges last June had<lb/>
been a "very successful endeavor<lb/>
Hammond's office received a<lb/>
message that SOS would not per-<lb/>
form at 7 p.m. Saturday, according<lb/>
to the promoter. Rouse arrived at<lb/>
the box office at 7:30 p.m. after col-<lb/>
ic ting concert tickets and money<lb/>
from outlets throughout Pitt Coun-<lb/>
ty. He then got the confirmation<lb/>
that Slave was running late and SOS<lb/>
would not appear.<lb/>
Rouse, who is taking legal action<lb/>
against both bands, said everyone<lb/>
holding ticket stubs from the Satur-<lb/>
day's show would receive a 50 per-<lb/>
cent discount on his next concert.<lb/>
"It's just one of those things<lb/>
Rouse said. "I've built a good rela-<lb/>
tionship with the students of ECU<lb/>
and the black community. I am not<lb/>
going to run away fron. any pro-<lb/>
blems<lb/>
Da Vinci Metcalf, an ECU<lb/>
graduate student who attended the<lb/>
concert, received a refund but said<lb/>
Monday he was still angry about the<lb/>
performances.<lb/>
"I've been here three years, and<lb/>
I've never been so ticked off in m<lb/>
life Metcalf said. He said Brief<lb/>
Encounter "looked like something<lb/>
left over from Halloween" and<lb/>
described them as a black punk rock<lb/>
group. After CD. and Company<lb/>
performed, Metcalf said disco<lb/>
records were played over the sound<lb/>
system and a local disk jockey spoke<lb/>
to the crowd "to keep everyone<lb/>
pacified<lb/>
"The crowd started yelling<lb/>
obscenities Metcalf added. "1 felt<lb/>
like throwing tomatoes. 1 gave up<lb/>
and left in disgust at 10:30<lb/>
However. Hammond commented<lb/>
that the crowd, which numbered ap-<lb/>
proximately 2,000, was "probablv<lb/>
the most well-behaved crowd I've<lb/>
ever seen at any concert in the nine<lb/>
years I've been here<lb/>
"I am hoping that the credibility<lb/>
of the major attractions committee<lb/>
is not tarnished hv this Hammond<lb/>
said. Rouse stressed that the Major<lb/>
Attractions Committee and dean<lb/>
Rudolph Alexander "had nothing<lb/>
to do with the bad thing that hap-<lb/>
pened that night<lb/>
"I've been doing shows all my<lb/>
life Rouse said. "There arc<lb/>
segments in the community that<lb/>
don't receive live entertainment ?<lb/>
that's the black community<lb/>
Metcalf said he felt that students<lb/>
do not have enough imput into the<lb/>
concerts that come to ECU. "We<lb/>
need to have a campuswide survey<lb/>
to see what the students actually<lb/>
want. Instead of getting three<lb/>
bands, maybe we could get one<lb/>
good one<lb/>
Contract Bids For<lb/>
Med School Rigged<lb/>
More than $1 million dollars in<lb/>
restitution will be paid by Watson<lb/>
Electric for its role in bid rigging in<lb/>
connection with the East Carolina<lb/>
Medical Education Facility.<lb/>
Eight other electrical contracting<lb/>
companies wre also indicted on<lb/>
charges of rigging bids on the state<lb/>
building contract.<lb/>
"These indictments are the result<lb/>
of an eight-month investigation into<lb/>
bid rigging in the electrical contrac-<lb/>
ting industry State Attorney<lb/>
General Rufus L. Edminsten said.<lb/>
The indictments returned Mon-<lb/>
day charged the nine companies<lb/>
with conspiring to ensure Watson<lb/>
submitted the low id for the ECU<lb/>
contract. Ten officials from eight of<lb/>
the companies were also indicted.<lb/>
As a part of the plea bargain Wat-<lb/>
son has also agreed to cooperate<lb/>
with the state in a continuing in-<lb/>
vestigation, according to Ed-<lb/>
minsten.<lb/>
In addition to the conspiracy in-<lb/>
dictments, Watson Electrical of<lb/>
Wilson and Richard and Associates<lb/>
of Carrollton, Ga. werealso in-<lb/>
dicted on felony false pretense<lb/>
charges.<lb/>
Watson Electric is currently<lb/>
finishing work on the ECU drama<lb/>
building, according to Cliff Moore,<lb/>
vice chancellor for business affairs.<lb/>
ECU attorney David Stevens said<lb/>
that he has been assured by the at-<lb/>
tornev general's ofice that work on<lb/>
the medical school complex would<lb/>
continue despite the indictments.<lb/>
Due to an error in the bid bond<lb/>
the Watson bid was not opened and<lb/>
the contract was awarded tothe se<lb/>
cond low bidder, Richards and<lb/>
Associates.<lb/>
The indictments also named T.L.<lb/>
Watson Jr the board chairman of<lb/>
Watson Electric and company presi-<lb/>
dent William E. Boyette.<lb/>
Richards and Associates officials<lb/>
who were indicted were Roy<lb/>
Richards, the president, and<lb/>
William A. Williamson, the<lb/>
manager of the company's electrical<lb/>
division.<lb/>
Conspiracy indictments were also<lb/>
returned against:<lb/>
1 M it it ii ii i<lb/>
i ii ii ii lifn<lb/>
I II II II II II I<lb/>
I II 11 11 II II I<lb/>
I II II II II II I<lb/>
I<lb/>
NCSU Enforces<lb/>
Grade Requirements<lb/>
:<lb/>
- " 'T??PRR??f - ?"?V.? ?  m<lb/>
?Bryant-Durham Electric Co. Inc.<lb/>
of Durham and its president, Robert<lb/>
S. Shackleford.<lb/>
?Bryant Electric Co. Inc. of High<lb/>
Point and George F. Saunders, a<lb/>
vice president.<lb/>
?Cooper Electrical Construction<lb/>
Co. of Greensboro and company<lb/>
President J.E. Cooper.<lb/>
? Darden Electric Co. Inc. of<lb/>
Goldsboro and Tommy Lancaster, a<lb/>
vice president.<lb/>
?Eicon Corp. of Hendersonville.<lb/>
? Industrotech Constructors Inc. of<lb/>
Despite the conspiracy indictments involving bid rigging, officials have<lb/>
assured that work on the medical school complex will continue.<lb/>
knowledge in July, when the Justice<lb/>
department raided Watson's Wilson<lb/>
headquarters and seized records.<lb/>
Affidavits filed with a search war-<lb/>
rant said an informant working for<lb/>
the company toid investigators com-<lb/>
pany officials were allegedly<lb/>
destroying or altering company<lb/>
? lnausiroiecn lwioiiuhw ?????? ? ? - -<lb/>
Atlanta and William H. Howell, a records on contracts the company<lb/>
vice president. had recieved"<lb/>
?Starr Electric Co. Inc of At the time, Andrew A. Vanore<lb/>
Greensboro and compnay Presdint Jr a senior deputy attorney general<lb/>
said the seizure represented a<lb/>
broadening in scope of a state in-<lb/>
vestigation into bid rigging con-<lb/>
tracts.<lb/>
John W. Starr.<lb/>
The states investigation into elec-<lb/>
trical contractors became public<lb/>
Correction<lb/>
A story in Thursday's paper<lb/>
inaccurately reported that Vice<lb/>
Chancellor Elmer Meyer and his<lb/>
black roommate attended<lb/>
Howard University. Meyer at-<lb/>
tended George Washington<lb/>
University and his roommate<lb/>
went to Howard. They lived at<lb/>
the International Student<lb/>
House, which is independent of<lb/>
any university.<lb/>
By MIKE HUGHES<lb/>
M?ff Wrilcr<lb/>
Students at North Carolina State<lb/>
University may soon have to meet<lb/>
higher standards to graduate.<lb/>
The Faculty Senate at N.C. State<lb/>
recently proposed changes in that<lb/>
school's requirements for gradua-<lb/>
tion. The Senate also called for a<lb/>
change in State's academic suspen-<lb/>
sion regulations.<lb/>
Since 1974, State has had no<lb/>
grade-point average requirement for<lb/>
graduation. Students at State must,<lb/>
under current policy, earn a<lb/>
minimum grade of "C" in all of<lb/>
their required courses. However, 12<lb/>
hours of "D's" are permitted.<lb/>
The Faculty Senate's proposal<lb/>
called for the reinstatement of a 2.0<lb/>
GPA requirement, on a four-point<lb/>
scale, for graduation. A majority of<lb/>
State's faculty members who were<lb/>
present at a forum held October 21<lb/>
agreed with the proposed grade-<lb/>
point requirement.<lb/>
However, a few university faculty<lb/>
members expressed their opinions<lb/>
that a minimum GPA requirement<lb/>
would cause many students to avoid<lb/>
challenging courses, because the<lb/>
students would become extremely<lb/>
grade-conscious.<lb/>
A report issued by the Senate's<lb/>
academic policy committee supports<lb/>
the raise in graduation re-<lb/>
quirements, stating that students<lb/>
who graduate with low GPA's have<lb/>
difficulty finding jobs.<lb/>
The report also says that many<lb/>
qualified students are, in effect,<lb/>
shut out from admission at N.C.<lb/>
State, because other students with<lb/>
C<lb/>
: VCfC<lb/>
Caj<lb/>
sTf-<lb/>
low grade-point averages are allow-<lb/>
ed to remain at the school.<lb/>
Since 1978, the annual average<lb/>
number of N.C. State students<lb/>
graduating with a grade-point<lb/>
average below 2.0 has been about<lb/>
170 out of 2.489 or 6.8 percent, the<lb/>
report said.<lb/>
Last year, 133 students at State<lb/>
graduated with less than a "C"<lb/>
average overall.<lb/>
Also proposed by the Senate is a<lb/>
graduated suspension scale. Like<lb/>
that at ECU, this scale would re-<lb/>
quire students to earn a certain GPA<lb/>
after taking an established number<lb/>
of semester hours.<lb/>
After the first retention period,<lb/>
completion of at least 28 hours,<lb/>
students would be required to ob-<lb/>
tain a 1.25 average. The GPA re-<lb/>
quirement would increase by two-<lb/>
tenths of a point per year.<lb/>
According to the Technician,<lb/>
N.C. State's student newspaper, the<lb/>
new system would affect more than<lb/>
twice the number of students<lb/>
See FACULTY, Page 2<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Opinions<lb/>
Campus Forum4<lb/>
Entertainment5<lb/>
Sports8<lb/>
Classifieds 9<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
f<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057439_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 10, 1981<lb/>
<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
If you or your organization<lb/>
would like to nave an item printed<lb/>
in the announcements column<lb/>
please send the announcement (as<lb/>
brief as possible) typed and<lb/>
double spaced to The East Caroli<lb/>
man in care of the news editor<lb/>
There is no charge tor an<lb/>
nouncements. but space is often<lb/>
limited<lb/>
The deadline tor announcement<lb/>
are 5pm Friday for the Tuesdsay<lb/>
paper and S p m Tuesday tor the<lb/>
Thrusdasy paper<lb/>
The space is available to all<lb/>
campus organizations and depart<lb/>
ments<lb/>
ACT<lb/>
The Ameruan College Testing<lb/>
lACT) will be offered at East<lb/>
Carolina University on Saturday,<lb/>
December 12. W81 Application<lb/>
blanks are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to ACT Registration, p O<lb/>
Box 414 , lowa City, lowa 52340<lb/>
Registration deadline is<lb/>
November 13. 1981 Applications<lb/>
may be obtained from the ECU<lb/>
Testing Center Speight Building<lb/>
Room 105<lb/>
CIRCLE K<lb/>
Circle K would like 'o ihank Pol<lb/>
l? Brewer for the use of her apart<lb/>
ment this past weekend Please<lb/>
remember to sell your telephone<lb/>
book covers for the Donny<lb/>
I assitef special tund The meeting<lb/>
will be tonight at 6 30 room 221 at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Don't<lb/>
i ge' 10 read the continuing Or<lb/>
I le K atia m Thusdav's paper'<lb/>
LAW<lb/>
ECU i-aw Society will have a<lb/>
lat meeting on Thursday<lb/>
rung at 7 30, room 221,<lb/>
Mendenhall Guest speaker will be<lb/>
Elizabeth Warren a local at<lb/>
tomey Bring a friend Further in<lb/>
? ? ation call D-ane Jones<lb/>
?c 6S56<lb/>
COOP<lb/>
The Co op Office located .n 313<lb/>
Rawi currently tins ,0b openings<lb/>
tor Sp ing Semester 82 with the<lb/>
g agencies Interested<lb/>
students are crged to apply today !<lb/>
General Accounting Office.<lb/>
. 'U'nia Beach VA ? Business<lb/>
? on with 2 9 GPA's or aoove<lb/>
who have completed approximate<lb/>
? nours duniorsi should apply<lb/>
P?A GreenvHle NC - Corn<lb/>
puter Science n-iajors Aih 2 9<lb/>
 or above snouid app'?<lb/>
Burroughs Cororation - Com<lb/>
putei Si ience and Account,ng ma<lb/>
P i ? ment may be n<lb/>
C ??? ?'?? NC. Atlanta GA or<lb/>
B r'Oughs Corporate<lb/>
a ??s-os Student ma req<lb/>
; ? ? ? ? specific a I I<lb/>
mi  ? ?? ? us<lb/>
? ?, Administration<lb/>
B I i more MD Computer<lb/>
 ? i-o Ma 'h Mat ors<lb/>
R- ? let a , ch coming to cam<lb/>
ntervtcw stuoents earl.<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
The North Carolina Student<lb/>
Legislature will meet Tuesday<lb/>
NOv 10 m room 212 Mendenhall<lb/>
All members please attend<lb/>
TRAVEL COMMITTEE<lb/>
The Student union Travel Com<lb/>
mittee is now accepting applica<lb/>
lions for membership All persons<lb/>
interested in loinmg can pick up<lb/>
an application at the Student<lb/>
Union office room 234 Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center<lb/>
KDP<lb/>
The second meeting ot Kappa<lb/>
Delta Pi will be held at Pepp. s<lb/>
Pizza Den on Wednesday Nov 11<lb/>
at 6 30 pm Our speaker lor the<lb/>
evening will be Mr John Everette,<lb/>
Director of Federal Proiects m<lb/>
Beaufort County Schools His topic<lb/>
will be Teacher Evaluation "<lb/>
This should prove to be a very wor<lb/>
thwhile meeting Please make<lb/>
your reservations with Mrs Ellen<lb/>
Cheng - SP 231<lb/>
Recently we have sent out an<lb/>
important newsletter regarding<lb/>
our mailing list if you have not<lb/>
received or would !ke to cont.nue<lb/>
receiving your newslet'er. please<lb/>
contact Mrs Ellen Cheng SP 231<lb/>
PHYE 1000<lb/>
Make up 's tor Incompletes<lb/>
awarded spring or summer 1981<lb/>
will be given Thursday Nov 12 at<lb/>
Mmges Coliseum on the following<lb/>
schedule 5pm Room 142 Con<lb/>
cepts and Activity Written Ex<lb/>
animations ? 30 p m . Mmges<lb/>
Pool Swim Test and<lb/>
Drownprootmg Test<lb/>
BIOLOGY CLUB<lb/>
The ECU B'Ology Ctub held the<lb/>
drawing tor the Calvm Klein jeans<lb/>
on Oct 26 Dr Charles Bland<lb/>
chairperson ot the Biology Dept<lb/>
drew Glenn Olmstead s ticket dur<lb/>
ing the meeting Congratulation.<lb/>
to the winner ano the Biology Club<lb/>
thanks ail ot those who supported<lb/>
us<lb/>
BASKETBALL<lb/>
Th s year the Greenville<lb/>
Recreation ana Parks Depart<lb/>
ment will be booking .Is own<lb/>
Basketball Oft't als tor the Adult<lb/>
Basketball League Anyone m<lb/>
teresteo in officiating Baske'baii<lb/>
shi-uia contact me at 752 4137, ext<lb/>
248. or come D, my ofdee at Elm<lb/>
St Gym Also to ensure that we<lb/>
maintain the good quality of our<lb/>
official an,one mtereted in of<lb/>
ficiatmg in our Leagues will be re<lb/>
quired to attend a series of<lb/>
There wiil be a to'ai ot s? cin.es<lb/>
directed by Howard Pier<lb/>
each wil be held on Tuesday nqhts<lb/>
beginning Ncv 10 a' p m at the<lb/>
Elm St Gym For lurfhei<lb/>
mation you ma. call me a ? . ?<lb/>
t.ce<lb/>
STUDENT ATHLETIC<lb/>
BOARD<lb/>
D'rectors meeting Tuesday Nov<lb/>
10, 5 p m in Pam Hoi l OH<lb/>
unable 'o to attend call Kitty at<lb/>
752 8549 Also the SAB welcomes<lb/>
anyone interested in hepmg out<lb/>
wih basketball this seas<lb/>
come to the rnee'mg Monoa, N<lb/>
9 at 5 30 Mmges Room Ml 143<lb/>
ALPHARHO<lb/>
Who looks the best in a bikini?<lb/>
The pledges ot Kappa Sigma<lb/>
would like to know along with the<lb/>
rest ECU The date ot this contest<lb/>
will be on November 21. 1981 at<lb/>
Pappa Katz Three Grand prizes<lb/>
consisting of cash and prizes total<lb/>
mg almost 1400 will be awarded<lb/>
to the winners Keep looking for<lb/>
more details Alpha Rho is on the<lb/>
go' C J Veteran s Day is your<lb/>
day. enioy it!<lb/>
SURF CLUB<lb/>
Meeting Wednesdays Nov II.<lb/>
18 Dec 2 and 9 Room 221<lb/>
Mendenhall at 7 p m All members<lb/>
are urged to attend Be there!<lb/>
PPHA<lb/>
The Preprofessional Health<lb/>
Alliance iPPHA) will have a<lb/>
meeting this Thursday Nov 12<lb/>
This meetmq will be held at 6 p m<lb/>
at The Afro American Cultural<lb/>
Center All members and any<lb/>
other mtersted parties are urged<lb/>
to attend<lb/>
UNIVERSITYCLUB<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
Club will be holding its silent auc<lb/>
tion and wine and cheese party on<lb/>
Nov IS from 5 to 7 m The Gray Art<lb/>
Gallery There will be 33 items<lb/>
auctioned off to benefit the Leo<lb/>
Jenkins Scholarship Fund Facjt<lb/>
ty and staff are invited to call<lb/>
756 4271 for reservations<lb/>
FCA<lb/>
The Fellowship of Christian<lb/>
Athletes will meet Tuesday night<lb/>
at 9 45 m the basement ot Belk<lb/>
Dorm Everyone interested is m<lb/>
vited tc come and join the tun<lb/>
CORSO<lb/>
There will be a CORSO meeting<lb/>
on Thursday. Nov 12 at 5 30 in<lb/>
room 221 ot Menoenhall Student<lb/>
Center All Corrections and Social<lb/>
Work maiors ana intended maioi s<lb/>
are urged to attend<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
Calculator m the General Col<lb/>
leqe office durmq Change Ot MaiOr<lb/>
week May (laim item by properly<lb/>
identifying Come Or the General<lb/>
College office Brewster A 101<lb/>
SCIENCE MAJORS<lb/>
On Monday. Nov 16 American<lb/>
Chemical Society Student Affiliate<lb/>
will meet at 7pm in Flanagan<lb/>
202 All members and interested<lb/>
persons are urged to attend<lb/>
PARKING AUTHORITY<lb/>
reenville Parking Author i<lb/>
ty will meet at 9 15 a m at City<lb/>
Hall on Wednesday Nov 11<lb/>
UTILITIES<lb/>
The Board of Commissioners of<lb/>
the Greenville Utilities Commis<lb/>
SiOn will meet in reau'ar session at<lb/>
7 30 p m TuesdayV Nov 10 in the<lb/>
board room of the U'<lb/>
Buildmo<lb/>
RECEPTION<lb/>
The Greenville Woman's Club<lb/>
will sponsor its annual reception<lb/>
and program for international<lb/>
students and faculty of ECU from<lb/>
4 until 6pm Nov II at th<lb/>
Woman's Club A program of films<lb/>
and music will be presented and<lb/>
refreshments will be served<lb/>
IPETUMODU<lb/>
"The Traditional Pottery of<lb/>
ipetumodu with Winnie Owens will<lb/>
be presented on Saturday. Nov 14<lb/>
m the Jenkins Fine Arts Center<lb/>
auditorio i at ECU There will be<lb/>
a slide presentation lecture and<lb/>
short film that includes footage<lb/>
photographed by Owens in the<lb/>
village of Ipetumodu<lb/>
Winnie Owens is a black artist<lb/>
from Washington, D C who<lb/>
works m traditional Nigerian pot<lb/>
tery branching from Ipetumodu<lb/>
Everyone is encouraged to at<lb/>
tend this presntation<lb/>
ONA<lb/>
The Organization for Native<lb/>
Americans will have a meeting<lb/>
tonight (Nov 10) at 5 30 p m The<lb/>
meeting will be in the CSO Depart<lb/>
ment (back parti of Whichara<lb/>
Building Everyone is invited to<lb/>
attend<lb/>
PROSE CONTEST<lb/>
The Rebel. Jeffrey's Wine and<lb/>
Beer Co . and 1 he Attic are spon<lb/>
soring a Prose Contest Fiction.<lb/>
Drama. Mystery Typed entries<lb/>
may be submitted to the Media<lb/>
Board or Rebel offices by Nov 30<lb/>
Cash prizes of $125 S75 $25 and<lb/>
$10 First, second third and two<lb/>
honorarians respectively will be<lb/>
awarded before Christmas<lb/>
NAACP<lb/>
N A A C P meeting will be held<lb/>
Nov. 3. at 6 p m m the multipur<lb/>
pose room m Mendenhall Guests<lb/>
wil be Dean Elmer Meyer of Stu<lb/>
dent Lite, Mr D D Garrett Presi<lb/>
dent ot Pitt County NAACP.<lb/>
ana Mrs Willie tAae Carney. Vice<lb/>
President of Pitt County<lb/>
NAACP Everyone please at<lb/>
tend!<lb/>
CEREBRAL PALSY<lb/>
The United Cerebral Palsy is go<lb/>
mg to have a square dance and<lb/>
auction out at the Carolina Opry<lb/>
House, Tuesday, Nov 10. between<lb/>
the hours of 7 p m 11pm for the<lb/>
benefit of the UCP Center of<lb/>
Greenville Come and join us if<lb/>
you don't know how to square<lb/>
dance, we'll teach you' Jerry<lb/>
Powell, caller The Ambush Band<lb/>
will be playing from II pm on<lb/>
Donation $1 00 at the door<lb/>
GAY<lb/>
Yes it's once again time for<lb/>
another E C.G.C meeting But the<lb/>
old humdrum ot business at hand,<lb/>
reading the minutes, and general<lb/>
ly being very official needs a rest<lb/>
What could be more appropriate to<lb/>
take its place than a social gather<lb/>
ing That's right bring your<lb/>
favorite beverage and a friend<lb/>
Tuesday Nov 10. to 953 E 10th at<lb/>
7 30 Munchies will be provided<lb/>
See ya there'<lb/>
PEP BAND<lb/>
The ECU Athletic Department is<lb/>
in the process ot assembling a Pep<lb/>
Band tor all men and women's<lb/>
basketball games Those of you<lb/>
who are interested, please contact<lb/>
Pam Holt at 757 6417<lb/>
REGISTERS<lb/>
SGA Freshman Registers have<lb/>
arrived You may pick one up m<lb/>
Room 228 of Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center<lb/>
HARASSMENT<lb/>
The ECU Committee on the<lb/>
status of women will present a<lb/>
symposium "Sexual Harass<lb/>
ment Assault On Dignity  on<lb/>
Wednesday. Nov 11. at Room 244<lb/>
Mendenhall Keynote speakers<lb/>
are Dr Kenneth Wilson. Professor<lb/>
ot Sociology. ECU, and innovator<lb/>
of research on sexual harassment<lb/>
on college campuses and Maxme<lb/>
Brown, Personnel and Industrial<lb/>
Liaison Greensboro For schedul<lb/>
ed and more information contact<lb/>
Mary Ann Rose at 757 6804<lb/>
MINORITY LAW<lb/>
The UNC Law School invites<lb/>
undergraduate minority students<lb/>
to participate m a Law School In<lb/>
formation Day on Nov 20 1981<lb/>
The day long comterence will te<lb/>
held at the UNC Law School m<lb/>
Chapel Hill and is open to any<lb/>
minority person who is thinking<lb/>
about attending law school<lb/>
Registration forms are available<lb/>
in the Career Planning and Place<lb/>
ment Office, Bloxton House<lb/>
SIGMA BIG BROTHER<lb/>
There will be an informal<lb/>
meeting ot all Sigma Sioma Sigma<lb/>
Big Brothers on Thursday, Nov 12<lb/>
at 6 at the house All brothers<lb/>
please be present Any questions<lb/>
can Kathy at ;s; ?jit<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
V' wii- I I u"7'u i iHitmu'tt i<lb/>
??' i 92s<lb/>
Published every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during the academn<lb/>
year and every Wednesday dur<lb/>
mg the summer<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the of<lb/>
i newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina University, owned.<lb/>
operated and published for and<lb/>
by the students of East Carolina<lb/>
University<lb/>
Subscription Rate $20 yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
are located in the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus, of ECU<lb/>
Greenville, N C<lb/>
POSTMASTER Send address<lb/>
changes to The East Carolinian.<lb/>
Old South Building. ECU Green<lb/>
ville. NC 27834<lb/>
Telephone 757 636. 6367, 6309<lb/>
Application to mail at second<lb/>
class postage rates is pending at<lb/>
Greenville. North Carolina<lb/>
Housing Financial Problems Solved<lb/>
B MIKE HUGHES<lb/>
Slid V. rurr<lb/>
Although North<lb/>
Carolina law forbids<lb/>
the financing of college<lb/>
dormitories with state<lb/>
funds, at least two of<lb/>
the state's universities<lb/>
have proposed alter-<lb/>
native methods of bat-<lb/>
tling housing problems.<lb/>
Both the University<lb/>
of North Carolina at<lb/>
Chapel Hill and North<lb/>
Carolina State Univer-<lb/>
sity have 500-bed<lb/>
residence halls in dif-<lb/>
ferent stages of con-<lb/>
struction.<lb/>
At UNC, the Board<lb/>
of Trustees recently ap-<lb/>
proved an architectural<lb/>
firm and a site for a<lb/>
new dormitory on that<lb/>
campus. The Trustees<lb/>
approved the plan last<lb/>
spring, and, according<lb/>
to Vice Chancellor for<lb/>
Student Affairs Donald<lb/>
Boulton, the tentative<lb/>
date of completion in<lb/>
1985.<lb/>
NC State's new<lb/>
residence hall is already<lb/>
under construction. It<lb/>
is scheduled to be com-<lb/>
pleted around the<lb/>
beginning of the<lb/>
academic vear<lb/>
1983-1984.<lb/>
State's dormitory,<lb/>
which was originally<lb/>
proposed to house only<lb/>
athletes, will now house<lb/>
all students, since the<lb/>
Wolf pack Club, the<lb/>
university's athletic<lb/>
department fund-<lb/>
raising organization,<lb/>
was unable to finance<lb/>
the residence hall.<lb/>
The new building at<lb/>
Slate will cost an<lb/>
estimated $5.5 million,<lb/>
according to George<lb/>
W o r s1e y, vice<lb/>
chancellor for business<lb/>
and finance. The con-<lb/>
tract for the new<lb/>
residence hall at Chapel<lb/>
Hill has not yet been<lb/>
signed.<lb/>
The construction of<lb/>
the dormitory at UNC<lb/>
will be financed by a<lb/>
bond, the cost of which<lb/>
will be funded by in-<lb/>
creases in rent of bet-<lb/>
ween $50 and $60 for<lb/>
other residence hall<lb/>
rooms.<lb/>
The new building at<lb/>
State will also be fund-<lb/>
ed through revenue<lb/>
bonds<lb/>
Students Protest Restriction<lb/>
AMHERST, Mass<lb/>
(CPS) - The Tableaux<lb/>
was from a decade ago:<lb/>
a large student con-<lb/>
tingent presents a list of<lb/>
demands and com-<lb/>
plaints to a university<lb/>
administration, the ad-<lb/>
ministration says no,<lb/>
and the students storm<lb/>
and occupy the ad-<lb/>
ministration building.<lb/>
But it all happened<lb/>
again at the University<lb/>
of Massachusetts-<lb/>
Amherst in late Oc-<lb/>
tober, though the issue<lb/>
was more intimate. The<lb/>
protest this time was<lb/>
against a new ad-<lb/>
ministration ban on co-<lb/>
ed bathrooms in U.<lb/>
Mass. dorms.<lb/>
"Separate sex<lb/>
bathrooms are required<lb/>
by state law insists<lb/>
administration<lb/>
spokesman David<lb/>
Lyon, "even in co-ed<lb/>
dorms. We're simply<lb/>
obeying the law<lb/>
It's really a pro-<lb/>
blem protests Steve<lb/>
Semple, associate news<lb/>
editor of U.Mass' stu-<lb/>
dent newspaper.<lb/>
"Some of our co-ed<lb/>
dorms are 22-story<lb/>
towers. If they enforce<lb/>
the separate sex restric-<lb/>
tion, some students will<lb/>
have to walk from one<lb/>
end of the dorm to the<lb/>
other just to go to the<lb/>
john, and a lot of the<lb/>
hallways and stairs are<lb/>
littered with trash and<lb/>
broken bottles<lb/>
The controversy ac-<lb/>
tually goes much<lb/>
deeper than mere plum-<lb/>
bing priorities, protest<lb/>
organizer Harvey<lb/>
Ashman observed<lb/>
before the October 20<lb/>
building occupation.<lb/>
"The restroom issue is<lb/>
basically just a sym-<lb/>
bolic one<lb/>
"What we really<lb/>
want is more general<lb/>
student imput into the<lb/>
university decision-<lb/>
making process. All<lb/>
we're asking for is<lb/>
simply to have a say in<lb/>
what's going on <lb/>
DID YOU KNOW THERE<lb/>
ARE ONLY THREE MORE<lb/>
YEARS UNTIL 1984? DO YOU<lb/>
CARE? HOW MANY SHOPP<lb/>
ING DAYS ARE THERE UN<lb/>
TIL CHRISTMAS? FIND THE<lb/>
ANSWERS TO THESE ANO<lb/>
OTHER THRILLING QUES<lb/>
TIONS IN UPCOMING EDI<lb/>
TIONS OF THE EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Faculty Discuss<lb/>
Grade A verages<lb/>
Continued from Page I<lb/>
suspended under<lb/>
State's current policy,<lb/>
under which students<lb/>
are suspended if they<lb/>
fail to pass at least 50<lb/>
percent of their attemp-<lb/>
ted semester hours.<lb/>
Although State's Ac-<lb/>
ting Chancellor Nash<lb/>
Winstead has the<lb/>
authority to make the<lb/>
final decision on both<lb/>
matters, he has asked<lb/>
the faculty to decide on<lb/>
the graduation require-<lb/>
ment proposal this fall<lb/>
and on the proposed<lb/>
suspension policy in the<lb/>
spring of 1982.<lb/>
Winstead also said that<lb/>
he encourages student<lb/>
involvement on the<lb/>
discussion of these<lb/>
issues.<lb/>
Gl Camouflaged Fatigues And<lb/>
Shirts Sleeping Bags<lb/>
Backpacks Camping Eguip<lb/>
ment Steel Toed Shoes Dishes<lb/>
And Over 700 Different New And<lb/>
Used Items Cowbuy Boots<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY<lb/>
2X?<lb/>
want ads<lb/>
$125.00<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
To the first place<lb/>
winner of the<lb/>
PROSE CONTEST<lb/>
sponsored by<lb/>
Typed entries submitted to<lb/>
Media Board or Rebel offices by Nov. 30.<lb/>
ABORTIONS<lb/>
l 24 week terminations<lb/>
Appt's. Made 7 Days<lb/>
CALL TOLL FREE<lb/>
1-8OO-321-0575<lb/>
SAAD'S<lb/>
SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
113 Grande Ave<lb/>
754-1228<lb/>
ISO I S E?.<lb/>
Street<lb/>
Current undefraJu35?rT<lb/>
medical student mev now<lb/>
compote for several hundred<lb/>
Air Force scholonhipa. These<lb/>
scholarship ore to be award<lb/>
ed to students accepted into<lb/>
medical schools as freshmen<lb/>
or at me heotnnlng o their<lb/>
sophmore year. The scholar<lb/>
ship provides tor tuition,<lb/>
books, lab free and equip-<lb/>
ment, plus a ?? monthly<lb/>
allowance investigate tttfs<lb/>
financial alternative to the<lb/>
high coot qf medical educa<lb/>
tier Contact:<lb/>
U S A.F. HCALTH<lb/>
PROPCSSIOMS<lb/>
? tC?UITINO<lb/>
SUITE OL I. IIWNAVAHOOK<lb/>
?alkiom. M.c.mm<lb/>
mourn comet tw tis-am<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
EVERY TUESDAY<lb/>
IS COLLEGE NIGHT<lb/>
with VALID I.D.<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
104E. REDBANKSRD.<lb/>
756-6000<lb/>
Let (Ulie last (Earaliman<lb/>
write home for you every<lb/>
Tues. and Thurs.<lb/>
Every Tuesday and Thursday you can read the most<lb/>
informative stories about the news events of the day<lb/>
at ECU and in Greenville the best sports coverage,<lb/>
and interesting features about the people, places and<lb/>
things surrounding youso can your parents. For $25<lb/>
your parents can get a one year mail subscription to<lb/>
the East Carolinian.<lb/>
Serving the campus community since 1925, the East<lb/>
Carolinian provides valuable insights into student<lb/>
life at East Carolinia University for your parents.<lb/>
Twice-weekly, we can tell your family about the<lb/>
most current campus and local news. Student free<lb/>
flicks, concerts and sports events are all covered in<lb/>
the pages of the East Carolinian, as well as state and<lb/>
local news that affects the lives of ECU students.<lb/>
Our experienced, award winning news staff can br<lb/>
ing your parents the news wherever it is happening<lb/>
in eastern North Carolina, plus the most dynamic<lb/>
behind-the-scenes investigative reporting.<lb/>
Our features section will bring them fascinating and<lb/>
often humorous human interest stories about the peo<lb/>
pie of the university and the surrounding area. It also<lb/>
covers the cultural events that enrich student life, as<lb/>
well as presenting interesting slices of area flavor.<lb/>
Scanning the entire spectrum of ECU'S athletic ac<lb/>
tivity, our well-trained staff of enthusiastic sports<lb/>
writers will bring your family comprehensive<lb/>
coverage of ECU'S exciting football schedule, in ad<lb/>
dition to highlighting the rest of an impressive sports<lb/>
program.<lb/>
Our remarkable staff works around the clock to pro<lb/>
duce the best possible newspaper, containing the<lb/>
most essential news, features and sports of interest<lb/>
not only to you, but to your parents and friends as<lb/>
well, wherever they may be. The East Carolinian. . .<lb/>
let us inform them.<lb/>
Your parents, friends, and relatives can subscribe<lb/>
to the East Carolinian for one year by sending a<lb/>
check for $25 to: George Hettich, Circulation Dept<lb/>
The East Carolinian, Old South Building, East<lb/>
Carolinia University, Greenville, NC. 27834.<lb/>
If you wish, you may subscribe for them by mailing<lb/>
a check for $25 along with the coupon below to the<lb/>
East Carolinian, or just drop by the East Carolinian<lb/>
office.<lb/>
jSHje East &amp;ar0itntan!<lb/>
SUBSCRIPTION FORM<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
j Name<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
 ?p<lb/>
Telephone<lb/>
I<lb/>
)<lb/>
RATE: $20 per year<lb/>
lEaat<lb/>
(Eamlmian<lb/>
<lb/>
f<lb/>
r <lb/>
!<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057439_0003"/><lb/>
THE EASTAROl INIAN<lb/>
NOVtMBI R 10, 1981<lb/>
International Students Dinner Scheduled By ISO<lb/>
MATHEN<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
SAFARI<lb/>
Ni.fr Writer<lb/>
East Carolina's In-<lb/>
ternational Students<lb/>
Organization has an-<lb/>
nounced its Interna-<lb/>
tional Students Dinner<lb/>
scheduled for Friday<lb/>
Nov. 13 at 6:30 p.m. in<lb/>
the Mendenhall multi-<lb/>
purpose room. Two<lb/>
hundred people are ex-<lb/>
pected to enjoy the in-<lb/>
ternational meals,<lb/>
dances and other<lb/>
various entertainments<lb/>
that will be offered.<lb/>
1 ast year, the event<lb/>
was attended by ap-<lb/>
Writing<lb/>
For Rebel<lb/>
Awarding<lb/>
A prose contest is be-<lb/>
ing sponsored by The<lb/>
Rebel, the ECU<lb/>
literary-art magazine,<lb/>
Jeffrey's Beer and<lb/>
Wine Co. and The At-<lb/>
tic. Fiction and non-<lb/>
fiction works will be ac-<lb/>
cepted.<lb/>
Entries must be<lb/>
tvped and may be left<lb/>
in the Media Board or<lb/>
The Rebel offices. The<lb/>
deadline for the contest<lb/>
is Nov. 30.<lb/>
The cash prizes ?<lb/>
$125, $75, and $25 ?<lb/>
are for first, second,<lb/>
and third prizes respec-<lb/>
tively. Two honorary<lb/>
mentions will also be<lb/>
chosen, with the win-<lb/>
ners receiving $10 each.<lb/>
The cash prizes will<lb/>
be awarded before<lb/>
Christmas break. All<lb/>
submissions will be for-<lb/>
warded to The Rebel<lb/>
for consideration to be<lb/>
published. According<lb/>
to one Rebel staff<lb/>
member, this is an ex-<lb/>
cellent chance to be<lb/>
published and earn ex-<lb/>
tra cash.<lb/>
proximately 160 people<lb/>
representing a cross<lb/>
section of the universi-<lb/>
ty's population.<lb/>
"We were pleased<lb/>
about it. Our guests<lb/>
told us that they too<lb/>
were pleased. They<lb/>
gave us a positive feed-<lb/>
back says Mahmuad<lb/>
Muzaffari, the vice-<lb/>
president for the ISO.<lb/>
John Eldem, the<lb/>
organizations presi-<lb/>
dent, was not available<lb/>
for comment.<lb/>
Three weeks ago, of-<lb/>
ficials were hurriedly<lb/>
elected. Those elections<lb/>
made John Eldem,<lb/>
Photo By GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
mnhcr Great Game it Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
U says the U.<lb/>
2<lb/>
IIDIYC<lb/>
?V<lb/>
Gordon t.n<lb/>
MwrvE<lb/>
GOT A DATE<lb/>
NOV. 19th:<lb/>
"That's when the<lb/>
American Cancer<lb/>
Society asks every<lb/>
smoker in America<lb/>
to give up cigarettes<lb/>
for a day Give it a<lb/>
try You might find<lb/>
you can quit forever<lb/>
THE GREAT AMERICAN<lb/>
SMOKEOUT<lb/>
it s-ys 'the VA&amp;uaiamiks up ;<lb/>
TC'r'SOCCm G! -OME LOANS<lb/>
(U? TO t0)rOftS?VlCt-j<lb/>
a;s?n. mosr vfr?AMS. '<lb/>
 MtSSASi'W"11 surviving<lb/>
 jj?yKvsS?0uS?5 Of j<lb/>
 iAvmiuNS<lb/>
mH X-CtmechmtmI<lb/>
VA<lb/>
Sik3<lb/>
Contact nearest v ottce<lb/>
Check your phone book) or<lb/>
i iocil veterans group<lb/>
HACQUETBALL<lb/>
IT'S<lb/>
EXCITING<lb/>
COMPETITIVE<lb/>
AND<lb/>
TOUGH!<lb/>
TO KEEP WITH IT, YOU NEED US!<lb/>
H L HODGES &amp; BONDS SPORTING GOODS<lb/>
i ? . ? tr.at you need to stay with the game You'll find<lb/>
luerbaSs and much more' Not only is our rac<lb/>
? ut at prices you can afford Come in and see us to-<lb/>
RACQUETBALL SPECIALS<lb/>
DP 11 A H<lb/>
A I ?ttS.l H<lb/>
41 I MINI M sU'lNdl.K<lb/>
SJQ95<lb/>
RACKETReg 29.95-SALE<lb/>
GRAPHITE PERFORMER  Reg 39 95-sale$2695<lb/>
ROLLOUT RACQUETBALLS  Reg 4 95-sale$ 395<lb/>
Nlkr Kill shot A LADYKRXSHOT ? qr<lb/>
SHOES<lb/>
Sk? lollv deolgnrd<lb/>
lor Rorqurtball Reg. 3 1 .95 ? SALE<lb/>
28<lb/>
HODGES SPORTING GOODS<lb/>
BOND'S<lb/>
210 E FIFTH ST<lb/>
7524156<lb/>
218 ARLINGTON BI.VD<lb/>
756-6001<lb/>
(Turkey), Mahmoud<lb/>
Seyed-Muzaffari<lb/>
(Iran), and Jamal<lb/>
Ghraizi (Lebanon), the<lb/>
president, vice presi-<lb/>
dent and secretary<lb/>
respectively. Tom Freij<lb/>
(Lebanon) was elected<lb/>
treasurer.<lb/>
At the same meeting,<lb/>
plans were proposed<lb/>
and approved and an<lb/>
admission fee was<lb/>
declared. Sub-<lb/>
committees have been<lb/>
extablished to handle<lb/>
the preparation details.<lb/>
"We want the at-<lb/>
mosphere and the<lb/>
quality of the food to<lb/>
be superior to that of a<lb/>
regular foreign food<lb/>
restaurant says<lb/>
Muzaffari.<lb/>
The students living at<lb/>
the international house<lb/>
have taken the event as<lb/>
a family project ?<lb/>
posters have been<lb/>
designed and posted at<lb/>
various public places,<lb/>
and the menu has been<lb/>
out-lined to represent<lb/>
far away lands ? Zim-<lb/>
babwe, China,<lb/>
Guyana, Iran,<lb/>
Lebanon, Turkey,<lb/>
Japan, England, the<lb/>
United States and<lb/>
possibly others.<lb/>
"This dinner must<lb/>
not be confused with<lb/>
the Wednesday, (Nov.)<lb/>
1 llh International Din-<lb/>
ner which will be spon-<lb/>
sored by the minority<lb/>
arts committee. That<lb/>
will be an entirely dif-<lb/>
ferent thing says<lb/>
Seyed Muzaffari.<lb/>
The Minority Arts<lb/>
Committee has a<lb/>
scheduled international<lb/>
dinner this Wednesday,<lb/>
a day before the inter-<lb/>
national students din-<lb/>
ner. Volunteer students<lb/>
will prepare dishes of<lb/>
various nationalities.<lb/>
Sixty people are ex-<lb/>
pected to attend.<lb/>
Seyed-Muzaf fari<lb/>
says of the apparent<lb/>
conflict, "We hope this<lb/>
is not intentional. In<lb/>
fact, the only thing that<lb/>
disturbs us is the use of<lb/>
the word<lb/>
'international We<lb/>
think it will not be fair<lb/>
to the students<lb/>
He explained that<lb/>
people may be deceived<lb/>
by the price difference<lb/>
without realizing what<lb/>
goes into the food to<lb/>
make it authentic. The<lb/>
Minority Arts Commit-<lb/>
tee dinner will cost<lb/>
$1.50; the International<lb/>
Students Dinner will<lb/>
cost $3.50.<lb/>
"We want the food<lb/>
to be as good as it<lb/>
would be at home. We<lb/>
must use the right<lb/>
spices and the right<lb/>
food-stuff. I plan to<lb/>
remember how it used<lb/>
to be on the dinner<lb/>
table at home said<lb/>
one cook, with a faint<lb/>
dreamy smile.<lb/>
A Bamboo dance,<lb/>
Lebanese dance and a<lb/>
Turkish dance will be<lb/>
performed after dinner.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
SOUTH<lb/>
MO. 6<lb/>
ROCK<lb/>
NKSHTCLUt<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
THE ROOKS<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS-<lb/>
12 PRICE<lb/>
ARROGANCE<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
SNUFF<lb/>
FRI. &amp; SAT.<lb/>
BADGE m sigKp<lb/>
HH 4:00-7:00<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
STORMZ<lb/>
NEW HOURS ? 8:00 1:00<lb/>
COUNTRY COOKING SPEC.$2.99<lb/>
TUES si M<lb/>
pizza specM.99<lb/>
BRUCE FRYE<lb/>
WED.<lb/>
SALAD BAR SPEC<lb/>
THURS. ?. <lb/>
SPAGHETTI SPEC. ?? 2.50<lb/>
BRUCE FRYE<lb/>
FRI. I SAT.<lb/>
MIKE JUSTICE mil ii ,<lb/>
SUN.<lb/>
COUNTRY COOKING Sffc'2.99<lb/>
WED.<lb/>
LADIES' NITE<lb/>
wALLAN<lb/>
THURS.<lb/>
FULL MOON<lb/>
FANTASY<lb/>
FRISAT.<lb/>
BILLY PRICE &amp;<lb/>
THE KEYSTONE<lb/>
RHYTHM BAND<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA3<lb/>
JARTYC1NT1R<lb/>
TUES.<lb/>
PHI KAPPA PHI<lb/>
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t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057439_0004"/><lb/>
@ttr ?a0t (Eoralfnfati<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Paul Collins, m?cm<lb/>
Jimmy DuPREE. itmtmearn<lb/>
Chuck Foster. ??. mim Charles Chandler, w E6,??<lb/>
Chris Lichok. ??,??? m??? Tom Hall, ???,?,<lb/>
Alison Bartel, n?nt?ii w0.?rr Steve Bachner. ???,?, mm<lb/>
Steve Moore, ctnw ???" Karen Wendt, so mm<lb/>
November 10, 1981<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Homecoming<lb/>
Promotion Causes Concert's Failure<lb/>
Homecoming week was fast ap-<lb/>
proaching, and the Student Union<lb/>
Major Attractions Committee had<lb/>
not booked a concert for Saturday<lb/>
night. As a result, there was con-<lb/>
siderable pressure on the committee<lb/>
to book a concert ? any concert.<lb/>
As any East Carolina student<lb/>
should know by now though, book-<lb/>
ing concerts is a tricky business that<lb/>
requires time, skill and more than a<lb/>
little luck.<lb/>
Consequently the situation seem-<lb/>
ed impossible for the folks from<lb/>
Major Attractions. But then, like<lb/>
pennies from heaven, our heroes<lb/>
happened onto a concert that seem-<lb/>
ed too good to be true.<lb/>
James Rouse of T P and B Pro-<lb/>
ductions offered the committee the<lb/>
chance to stage a no-lose concert.<lb/>
His company would book and pay<lb/>
for the acts ? Slave, SOS and Brief<lb/>
Encounter ? while ECU would<lb/>
provide the facility ? Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum. In return, Rouse would give<lb/>
Major Attractions a percentage of<lb/>
the gross.<lb/>
But then ECU's heaven-sent<lb/>
homecoming concert turned into a<lb/>
nightmare. SOS never showed, and<lb/>
headline act Slave did not make an<lb/>
appearance until midnight.<lb/>
Understandably, more than a few of<lb/>
the 2,000 fans who attended were<lb/>
less than satisfied. "I felt like<lb/>
throwing tomatoes said a<lb/>
DOONESBURY<lb/>
disgruntled Da Vinci Metcalf. "I<lb/>
gave up and left in disgust at<lb/>
10:30<lb/>
Rouse did post signs saying that<lb/>
SOS would not appear and gave<lb/>
about $460 worth of refunds to<lb/>
ticketholders who did not want to<lb/>
go into the concert. For those who<lb/>
did attend, he offered a 50 percent<lb/>
discount on tickets to the next con-<lb/>
cert he promotes.<lb/>
But what about the fans who did<lb/>
attend, were disappointed but did<lb/>
not receive any refund?<lb/>
Legally, Rouse was no' required to<lb/>
give any refunds since the headline<lb/>
act performed.<lb/>
Ethically, however, we would<lb/>
argue that Rouse should have given<lb/>
refunds to any displeased patrons.<lb/>
He did not produce what he promis-<lb/>
ed; it's that simple.<lb/>
We would also hope that the<lb/>
members of the Major Attractions<lb/>
Committee have learned a valuable<lb/>
lesson. Rouse is an unproven pro-<lb/>
motor without an established<lb/>
reputation, and the result of the<lb/>
concert proved out that giving him<lb/>
free rein to promote it was a<lb/>
mistake.<lb/>
The committee had nothing to<lb/>
lose financially, but sometimes the<lb/>
loss of a reputation can be more<lb/>
costly than losing any amount of<lb/>
money.<lb/>
by Garry Trudeau<lb/>
ANt HERE'S 0Uk WBATHErXMh VifTH TODAY'S<lb/>
TBRROMSM FORECAST "<lb/>
I<lb/>
Warehouse Sale At The Pentagon<lb/>
ByARTBlCHWALD<lb/>
King Naban of New Gurdy stepped out<lb/>
of the helicopter on the White House lawn<lb/>
and shook hands with the President of the<lb/>
United States. Four cannons fired off a<lb/>
21-gun salute.<lb/>
"Thank you, Mr. President, for that<lb/>
wonderful salute. What kind of cannons<lb/>
are they?"<lb/>
The President looked to his military<lb/>
aide. "A hundred and five millimeters,<lb/>
sir the aide whispered.<lb/>
"Would you like one?" the President<lb/>
asked the King.<lb/>
"I'd rather have 200 ground-to-ground<lb/>
missile launchers ? if it's all the same to<lb/>
you the King said.<lb/>
"I'll talk to Cap Weinberger about it.<lb/>
Will you join me while we play your na-<lb/>
tional anthem?"<lb/>
"Just a minute. 1 want to write down the<lb/>
namt of the U.S. Marine helicopter I just<lb/>
flew in on. We could use some of those<lb/>
"We don't have too many in stock now,<lb/>
your highness<lb/>
"We'll take what you've got, and you<lb/>
can send us the rest later<lb/>
"Couldn't we wait until the welcoming<lb/>
ceremonies are completed?"<lb/>
"Of course. Forgive me<lb/>
"Nancy and I are honored you would<lb/>
take time out of your busy schedule to visit<lb/>
us<lb/>
"It's my pleasure. I was only saying to<lb/>
the Queen last week how much I was look-<lb/>
ing forward to coming to Washington and<lb/>
meeting the man who singlehandedly won<lb/>
the AW ACS battle for Saudi Arabia<lb/>
"It was really nothing, your highness.<lb/>
The Saudis are our friends, and if anyone<lb/>
deserved AWACs, they did<lb/>
"How much do they cost?"<lb/>
"They're not for sale, your highness.<lb/>
We just made a special exception in the<lb/>
case of the Saudis, because they've kept<lb/>
the price of oil down in OPEC<lb/>
"Then how come they raised it two<lb/>
dollars a barrel, and cut back production<lb/>
the day after you persuaded the Senate to<lb/>
give them the AWACS?"<lb/>
"I'm sorry. I have to come to attention.<lb/>
They're playing the 'Star-Spangled Ban-<lb/>
ner "<lb/>
"That's no excuse. We're your friends<lb/>
too. But if we don't get AWACS, my peo-<lb/>
ple will think we're being treated as a third-<lb/>
rate power<lb/>
"The AWACS is overrated, your<lb/>
highness<lb/>
"Then how come you made such a big<lb/>
deal of it in Congress?"<lb/>
"It was a question of pride with the<lb/>
Saudis. Had we refused to sell them, they<lb/>
would have lost face in the Arab world<lb/>
"And you don't believe it's a question<lb/>
of face with my government if you refuse<lb/>
to sell them to me?"<lb/>
"Your highness, if we sell AWACS to<lb/>
every country, the Saudis will decide<lb/>
they're not worth much, and then we'll<lb/>
have to give them something else that<lb/>
nobody in the Middle East has<lb/>
"You always liked the King of Saudi<lb/>
Arabia more than you liked me<lb/>
"That isn't true, your highness. Didn't<lb/>
we give you 50 F-4 fighter planes on your<lb/>
last visit?"<lb/>
"Every Banana Republic in South<lb/>
America has F-4 fighter planes<lb/>
"Why don't we talk about it at the State<lb/>
Dinner we're giving for you tonight<lb/>
"I'd rather eat in my room if you're not<lb/>
going to give me AWACS.<lb/>
"But Nancy has invited 110 people and<lb/>
she had to borrow china from the Hilton<lb/>
Hotel. Look, I wasn't supposed lo men-<lb/>
tion it until tomorrow when we met with<lb/>
Al Haig, but how would you like a Stealth<lb/>
bomber for vour Air Force?"<lb/>
"Can it do more things than an<lb/>
AWACS?"<lb/>
"It makes an AWACS look like a<lb/>
Mediterranean Fruit Fly<lb/>
"If it's so good how come you didn't<lb/>
give it to the Saudis?"<lb/>
"Because they didn't ask for it<lb/>
Columnists Open To Criticism<lb/>
By CHARLES M. SUNE<lb/>
When a man assumes a public<lb/>
trust, he should consider<lb/>
himself as public property.<lb/>
? Thomas Jefferson<lb/>
Indeed, the decision to enter public life<lb/>
? even on the student level, means one<lb/>
subjects himself to public criticism. Life is<lb/>
hell, and the world is a horrible place to<lb/>
live. My fan club letters in recent issues of<lb/>
The East Carolinian, though I am sure<lb/>
unintentionally, indicate that confusion<lb/>
exists about my purpose as a columnist.<lb/>
Additionally, several writers make futile<lb/>
attempts to discredit me and thereby dilute<lb/>
the validity of my arguments. It appears,<lb/>
classmates, that some clarifications are in<lb/>
-Campus Forum<lb/>
Student Short-Changed By 'Strip Show9<lb/>
The homecoming 1981 concert was<lb/>
such a disgrace to the East Carolina Stu-<lb/>
dent Union Major Attractions Commit-<lb/>
tee that I thought the public should be<lb/>
made aware of the poor quality and<lb/>
shoddy nature of the performance.<lb/>
Overall, I thought that the concert<lb/>
suffered from a lack of forethought and<lb/>
planning. 1 expected a little more than 1<lb/>
got for my $7. The fact that the ticket<lb/>
office refused me a refund even after<lb/>
they had knowledge that SOS, one of the<lb/>
groups scheduled to appear, did not<lb/>
come, was intolerable. The two groups<lb/>
that did appear, however, were not<lb/>
worth the time that I took to see them.<lb/>
The male modeling troupe's (CD. and<lb/>
Company) performance on stage<lb/>
amounted to nothing more than a strip<lb/>
show.<lb/>
A group of males and females strut-<lb/>
ting around on stage modeling cheap<lb/>
clothes and underwear reflects poorly<lb/>
upon the caliber of the East Carolina<lb/>
Major Attraction Committee's planning<lb/>
and the quality of the concerts at this<lb/>
university. The group Slave finally ap-<lb/>
peared at 12 midnight, four hours after<lb/>
the concert was scheduled to begin. A<lb/>
performance such as the one that I per-<lb/>
sonally witnessed on the night of Nov. 7,<lb/>
was a slap in the face and a disgrace to<lb/>
the East Carolina student body. I would<lb/>
like to pose a Final question to the East<lb/>
Carolina Major Attractions Committee:<lb/>
why docs East Carolina have to settle for<lb/>
such a low caliber of concert? Why can't<lb/>
the student body's money be spent for<lb/>
better attractions such as the Doobie<lb/>
Brothers, Chicago or Earth, Wind, and<lb/>
Fire? I invite a response to this letter<lb/>
from the East Carolina University Ma-<lb/>
jor Attractions Committee.<lb/>
DA VINCI METCALF<lb/>
Graduate Student<lb/>
Hunger Coalition<lb/>
I very much appreciate Kim Albin's<lb/>
thoughtful article concerning the work<lb/>
of the ECU Hunger Coalition. As a par-<lb/>
ticipant in some of the activities, I want<lb/>
to explain what the effort meant to me.<lb/>
Ms. Albin pointed out my very feel-<lb/>
ings about the remoteness to most of us<lb/>
of the issues of world hunger. The ex-<lb/>
posure we get consists of Mom's com-<lb/>
ment about starving children on the<lb/>
other side of the world and countless<lb/>
photographs we've seen of skinny kids<lb/>
with lost faces. These are difficult, if not<lb/>
impossible, for us to relate to.<lb/>
We hoped that our fellow students<lb/>
would take note when they saw their<lb/>
peers standing in the street, making<lb/>
fools of themselves in a skit for<lb/>
something they believed in. Many did<lb/>
take note. The negative comments were<lb/>
few. By contrasting the lives of students<lb/>
with those who were, only by chance,<lb/>
born to less favorable circumstances we<lb/>
tried to bring the issue of hunger home.<lb/>
As a working student, struggling to<lb/>
get through, I often complain of needs<lb/>
and wants unmet. But I never have to<lb/>
wonder if I will eat. Our needs are many<lb/>
and varied but far from the basic needs<lb/>
of survival many are faced with. And it<lb/>
is naive to believe that the millions of<lb/>
starving people could do better if they<lb/>
just tried a little harder. We needn't feel<lb/>
guilty for being lucky, nor should we be<lb/>
smug about it. Let's share.<lb/>
The Hunger Coalition has contributed<lb/>
materially in the past to help alleviate<lb/>
starvation, but in order to do more, peo-<lb/>
ple must first be made aware of the pro-<lb/>
blems. This has been the point of our<lb/>
educational drive. When people begin to<lb/>
view the whole world as our community,<lb/>
then, as a group we will stop hunger.<lb/>
ELIZABETH EDGERTON<lb/>
Senior, Business<lb/>
Bloomers And Corsets<lb/>
In reference to the letter about the wet<lb/>
tee-shirt contest in Tuesday's edition of<lb/>
The East Carolinian, the girls on our floor<lb/>
feel that the photograph was in good taste<lb/>
and did display a form of beautiful art.<lb/>
You say nudity is beautiful. Why does it<lb/>
make it cheaper it it is in a wet tee-shirt?<lb/>
We ask you, are we still in a time of<lb/>
bloomers and corsets? We are sure you<lb/>
have seen worse exposure on this campus<lb/>
during the summer months! In closing we<lb/>
would like to say that we admire our friend<lb/>
for having the guts to show what she's got,<lb/>
and if it's boobs, then more power to her!<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: The above letter was<lb/>
signed by numerous residents of the<lb/>
seventh floor of White dorm.<lb/>
Depression<lb/>
Are you depressed? Let me guess. You<lb/>
are depressed because<lb/>
? You don't have a date to homecoming<lb/>
? You can't fit into your Levi's<lb/>
? You flunked an accounting test<lb/>
? There's a new zit on your forehead and<lb/>
you feel like a "unicorn"<lb/>
? All of the above<lb/>
Well before you get suicidal ? look<lb/>
around you. Take note of all the<lb/>
students in wheelchairs who have taken<lb/>
that extra challenge. They have over-<lb/>
come all of these "problems" and have<lb/>
accepted what life has to offer. To all of<lb/>
you students in wheelchairs ? Thank<lb/>
you!<lb/>
JENNY BOGGS<lb/>
Senior, Industrial Technology<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view.<lb/>
order:<lb/>
?Lesson one ? the basics: 1 am an<lb/>
editorial columnist, my columns appear on<lb/>
the editorial page and because my name<lb/>
appears above the column, it should be<lb/>
understood that the opinions expressed<lb/>
therein are my opinions.<lb/>
Obviously, this does not give me a free<lb/>
hand to libel at will. Like any journalist, I<lb/>
verify facts. 1 make no claim that my opi-<lb/>
nions are the gospel, simply, they arc my<lb/>
opinions for anyone to accept or reject.<lb/>
?Lesson two ? the columnist as a public<lb/>
figure: As a columnist, I am susceptible to<lb/>
public criticism. Unlike some, I have no<lb/>
fear of anyone who desires to access my<lb/>
public record as a columnist, Major At-<lb/>
tractions chairman, Student Union presi-<lb/>
dent, Media Board chairman or student<lb/>
legislator. Like anyone who dares to<lb/>
become involved, my record is one of suc-<lb/>
cess and failure, however, it i? important<lb/>
to remember that my recci . column was<lb/>
not a discussion of my failures but a<lb/>
discussion of the failures of another public<lb/>
figure ? Marvin Braxton. My detractors<lb/>
seem to be confused on this point. Their<lb/>
letters deU more with a misrepresentation<lb/>
of my public record than with the column I<lb/>
wrote.<lb/>
Considering that one letter writer, Joe<lb/>
Fink, was a member of Braxton's spring<lb/>
election staff no one should be surprised.<lb/>
My column, throughout all of this, re-<lb/>
mains unrefuted.<lb/>
I have no fear of those who disagree<lb/>
with my conclusions. In fact, I welcome<lb/>
arguments from those who can rebut my<lb/>
conclusions. The strength of my argument<lb/>
will be found only after I find and remove<lb/>
the weakness.<lb/>
?Lesson three ? my purpose: my involve-<lb/>
ment in campus activities has been con-<lb/>
siderable to say the least. I would be the<lb/>
first to admit my extented stay at this<lb/>
resort needs to come to a conclusion. Con-<lb/>
trary to one line of thought, my involve-<lb/>
ment better qualifies me as a political col-<lb/>
umnist. As long as I have the ability to<lb/>
reason, I will continue to express my opi-<lb/>
nions. My purpose, therefore, will be to<lb/>
"call them as 1 sec them" and hopefully to<lb/>
leave this place better than I found it. You<lb/>
see, even after all of my years of involve-<lb/>
ment I still have not given up hope: I'm the<lb/>
eternal optimist.<lb/>
ru!<lb/>
M<lb/>
Sol<lb/>
I<lb/>
I a<lb/>
tM<lb/>
I<lb/>
In<lb/>
Intel<lb/>
evej<lb/>
L<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057439_0005"/><lb/>
THE FAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
lion<lb/>
i ? u e<lb/>
we'll<lb/>
s.iudl<lb/>
uth<lb/>
u're not<lb/>
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to men-<lb/>
net with<lb/>
a Stealth<lb/>
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hke a<lb/>
u didn't<lb/>
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appear on<lb/>
name<lb/>
? ild be<lb/>
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reject<lb/>
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sceptible to<lb/>
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dares to<lb/>
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detractors<lb/>
int. Their<lb/>
presentation<lb/>
if olumn I<lb/>
writer, Joe<lb/>
ton's spring<lb/>
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f this, re<lb/>
io disagree<lb/>
I welcome<lb/>
in rebut my<lb/>
ly argument<lb/>
and remove<lb/>
my involve-<lb/>
been con-<lb/>
rould be the<lb/>
ta) at this<lb/>
iion. Con-<lb/>
my involvc-<lb/>
olitical col-<lb/>
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will be to<lb/>
hopefully to<lb/>
pund it You<lb/>
of involve-<lb/>
kope: I'm the<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
NOVEMBER 10. 1981<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
Genius Fuller<lb/>
Scheduled For<lb/>
Next Tuesday<lb/>
'Firs! Poet Of Technology'<lb/>
Originated Geodesic Dome<lb/>
Buckminister Fuller, noted ar-<lb/>
chitect, scientist, artist and inen-<lb/>
tor, will return to East Carolina<lb/>
University Nov. 17 to speak in Hcn-<lb/>
drix Theatre as part of the 1981-82<lb/>
Student Center Lecture Series.<lb/>
Fuller, who has been called "the<lb/>
first poet of technology" and "the<lb/>
I eonardo da Vinci of our times is<lb/>
credited as originator of the<lb/>
geodesic dome.<lb/>
His other creations have ranged<lb/>
from apartment houses made of in-<lb/>
dustrial weight alloys to vertical<lb/>
waterless toilets. He is also widely<lb/>
known for his ideas on education,<lb/>
art and energy.<lb/>
Fuller's career at Harvard Univer-<lb/>
sity ended when he skipped his<lb/>
freshman mid-term exams. He later<lb/>
joined the Nay and was sent to the<lb/>
Naai Academy to study logistics,<lb/>
ballistics and navigation.<lb/>
It was then he realized that the<lb/>
world was rapidly moving from<lb/>
"the wire to the wireless, the track<lb/>
to the trackless, the visible to the in-<lb/>
visible, where more and more could<lb/>
be done with less and less to quote<lb/>
Fuller.<lb/>
Before turning to the building in-<lb/>
dustry where most of his innovative<lb/>
ideas were developed, Fuller ex-<lb/>
perienced several personal<lb/>
tragedies?the death of a daughter,<lb/>
a period as an alcoholic, a brush<lb/>
with suicide and the death of his<lb/>
wife.<lb/>
His major breakthrough?the<lb/>
geodesic dome?came during his<lb/>
search for a shelter that was cheap,<lb/>
transportable and versatile. He was<lb/>
struggling to develop a new tool?a<lb/>
geometry of energy, using spheres as<lb/>
idealized models of energy fields.<lb/>
Crowding the spheres as close<lb/>
together as possible around a central<lb/>
sphere, he realized that instead of<lb/>
forming a bigger sphere, they made<lb/>
a 14-faced polyhedron - the shape of<lb/>
his now-familiar dome.<lb/>
Tickets for Buckminister Fuller's<lb/>
ECU lecture are available from the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, telephone 757-6611,<lb/>
ext. 266. Public tickets are $5 each.<lb/>
Southern 'Rocker' Charlie Daniels Comes To Minges November 20<lb/>
The ECU Student Union Major Attractions Committee will present The $9 for the general public. Tickets ma be purchased at the Central Ticket<lb/>
Charlie Daniels Band in concert on Friday. November 20 at 9 p.m. in Office located in Mendenhall Student Center and all area ticket outlets;<lb/>
Minges Coliseum. Advance tickets are now on sale at $7 for students and Apple Records in Greenville and both Record Bar locations.<lb/>
Duvall Steps Out Of Character, Into Stardom<lb/>
By SUZANNE DALEY<lb/>
The New ork T imc.<lb/>
M: YORK. ? In September, Robert Duvall drove<lb/>
680 miles across Eastern Texas looking for someone<lb/>
with iust the right accent to read his next script into a<lb/>
rape recorder.<lb/>
"I did it out of respect for the people of East Texas<lb/>
he saw "And also, well" ? he seems embarassed to<lb/>
say it ? "1 want to do the best 1 can<lb/>
That kind of preparation for a role has been a<lb/>
hallmark of Duvall's in the more than 30 movies and 60<lb/>
plays he has performed in. But until recently ? with the<lb/>
noteworthy exception of his starring role on Broadway<lb/>
as Teach in David Mamet's American Buffalo ? he<lb/>
usually had small parts or supporting roles.<lb/>
He was the man who leved the smell of napalm in the<lb/>
morning ? Lt. Col. Kilgore in Apocalypse Now, the<lb/>
ruthless corporate executive in Network and the self-<lb/>
righteous doctor seduced by Hot Lips Houlihan in<lb/>
MASH. He was Tom Hagen. the Mafia consiglieri, in<lb/>
The Godfather and Dr. Watson in The Seven Percent<lb/>
Solution.<lb/>
But now, at 50, Duvall has emerged as a lead player.<lb/>
I ast year he starred in The Great Santini. Though the<lb/>
film didn't make much money, at least in part because<lb/>
of a distribution deal that sold it to the airlines before it<lb/>
had even opened in New York, Duvall's performance as<lb/>
Lt. Col. Bull Meecham, an ace pilot who treats his fami-<lb/>
ly like Marines, won him a third Oscar nomination ?<lb/>
his first for a leading role.<lb/>
In his latest movie. True Confessions (opening next<lb/>
week at Greenville's Plitt Theatre), he shares top billing<lb/>
with Robert DeNiro. The film is a murder mystery set in<lb/>
1947. Duvall plays Tom Spellacy, a Los Angeles detec-<lb/>
Cinema<lb/>
tive. DeNiro is his brother, Desmond, an ambitious<lb/>
monsignor wheeling and dealing to build up the church<lb/>
coffers. As Tom Spellacy relentlessly tracks the<lb/>
murderer, he keeps turning up criminal evidence poin-<lb/>
ting to his brother's shady business associates.<lb/>
Duvall will also have leading roles in his next two<lb/>
films. In The Pursuit of D.B. Cooper (scheduled to<lb/>
open here on Nov. 13), he plays an insurance detective<lb/>
on the trail of a hijacker (Treat Williams.) The film is a<lb/>
fictional account of what happened to the man known<lb/>
as D.B. Cooper, who jumped from a jetliner in 1971<lb/>
with $200,000 ransom and was never caught. And in<lb/>
Tender Mercies, the part he is now preparing for, he will<lb/>
play a down-and-out country and western singer.<lb/>
It's hard to find a bad review of Duvall's work. His<lb/>
attention to detail, coupled with his ability to bring to<lb/>
his roles what one critic has called "a past has won<lb/>
him about as much critical acclaim as any actor could<lb/>
hope for. But only now is Duvall approaching star<lb/>
status.<lb/>
Why? One reason is that he has never hesitated to<lb/>
change his appearance. While other actors often refuse<lb/>
to disguise themselves, Duvall is hardly recognizable<lb/>
from one part to the next. He shaved his head when he<lb/>
played in Wait Lntil Dark on Broadway. He wore an<lb/>
eyepatch for The Eagle Has Ianded ancfa mustache for<lb/>
The Seven Percent Solution.<lb/>
It hasn't been easy for the public to match his name to<lb/>
his face. Also, his roles have varied so much that he<lb/>
hasn't really established a trademark. And, until recent-<lb/>
ly, Duvall hasn't paid much attention to the business<lb/>
side of being an actor. He has chosen parts because they<lb/>
appealed to him with little concern about the commer-<lb/>
cial potential of a film.<lb/>
"1 used to pick a part because I liked it says Duvall,<lb/>
sitting in the kitchen of the West Side co-op he bought<lb/>
two months ago. "I guess that's the passive, lazy side.<lb/>
Maybe I should have been more careful<lb/>
Now, Duvall is taking a more aggressive tack. "I'm<lb/>
looking for a good script, and at the director he says.<lb/>
"Money too, not that it's that important but I .<lb/>
want to have to work all the time<lb/>
Toward that end, he hired his brother two years ago<lb/>
to be his manager. "1 can trust him Duvall sayv<lb/>
See DUVALL, Page 6<lb/>
A merican European<lb/>
Print Exhibit Planned<lb/>
A special exhibition and sale of Original Graphic Art<lb/>
will be presented on Tuesday, Nov. 17, 1981 at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.<lb/>
Marson Graphics of Baltimore, Md. specializes in ex-<lb/>
hibiting for sale a distinguished collection of original et-<lb/>
chings, woodcuts, lithographs, and serigraphs. Featured<lb/>
will be works by Chagall, Daumier, Fantin-Latour,<lb/>
Maillol, Rouault, and Whistler. A fine selection of<lb/>
works by noted contemporary artists such as Baskin,<lb/>
Coughlin, O'Connor, Kaczmarek. and Eggers will also<lb/>
be included in the collection.<lb/>
The collection is affordably priced with prints beginn-<lb/>
ing at 55. A representative will be present to answer<lb/>
questions about the work, the artists, and the various<lb/>
graphic techniques employed. The prints are shown in<lb/>
open portfolios in an informal atmosphere and ihe<lb/>
public is invited to browse through the collection.<lb/>
He Plays It Tonight<lb/>
Bogart &amp; Grail Quest On Tap<lb/>
'Casablanca' Leads Into Full Week Of Campus Film Fare<lb/>
In the famous finai scene from the 1943 classic, Claude Rains (dark uniform) helps Paul Henreid, Bogart and<lb/>
lngrid Bergman out of a jam. The film will be shown tonight at ft p.m. in the Hendrix Theatre. Tomorrow-<lb/>
evening beginning at 7 p.m a "Quest for the Grail" double feature will be shown with Robert Bresson's<lb/>
"Lancelot of the Lake" and send-up "Monty Python and the Holy Grail<lb/>
The Student Union Films Committee has a<lb/>
superlative lineup of films scheduled for this week<lb/>
beginning with the classic 1943 Academy Award winner<lb/>
for Best Picture, Casablanca. The film, postponed from<lb/>
an earlier date, will be shown one time only tonight at 8<lb/>
p.m. in Mendenhall Student Center's Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
Tomorrow evening, November 11, a "Quest for the<lb/>
Grail" double feature includes the best in medieval<lb/>
adaptation and paiody with Robert Bresson's masterful<lb/>
Lancelot of the Take showing at 7 p.m. followed by the<lb/>
cult classic Monty Python and the Holy Grail at 9 p.m.<lb/>
Both films will be shown in the Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
As always, admission to the movies is by student ID<lb/>
and activity cards or MSC membership.<lb/>
Casablanca is one of the most memorable of all film<lb/>
experiences, lt has over the years taken on the status of<lb/>
a true Hollywood legend. All the elements of the pro-<lb/>
duction, story, cast, photography, direction and music<lb/>
are woven together to create a motion picture monu-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
The plot concerns wartime refugees gathering in<lb/>
Morocco to obtain scarce exit visas to Lisbon and cer-<lb/>
tain freedom. The encounters between the diverse<lb/>
characters, particularly Bogart and lngrid Bergman, are<lb/>
interpreted with an extraordinary flair.<lb/>
The final airport sequence is an event not to be<lb/>
forgotten.<lb/>
Nominated for eight Academy Awards, the film went<lb/>
on to win three for Best Picture, Best Director and Best<lb/>
Screenplay.<lb/>
Lancelot of the Lake is Robert Bresson's dream pro-<lb/>
ject, a film that he wanted to make for over twenty<lb/>
years.<lb/>
lt has the breadth of vision and distillation of style<lb/>
that marks the comprehensive late masterpiece of a<lb/>
great artist.<lb/>
Set in the last days of the quest for the Holy Grail, it<lb/>
describes the spiritual pall that falls over King Arthur's<lb/>
knights as they are overtaken by the failure of their mis-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
Bresson's masterly color photography depicts the<lb/>
bright surfaces of pageantry surrounded by dark.<lb/>
treacherous forests and the twilight tones of a dying age.<lb/>
Horses, armor, and pennants take on an almost<lb/>
mystical force.<lb/>
The jousting tournament, reduced to its essentials by<lb/>
dramatic editing, has been called "one of the most ex-<lb/>
citing action sequences in the history of cinema<lb/>
(Jonathan Rosenbaum, Film Comment). The film won<lb/>
the 1974 International Critics Prize at the Cannes Film<lb/>
Festival:<lb/>
"A film to see again and again.  ? Penelope Gillian,<lb/>
The Sew Yorker.<lb/>
Call it what you will, Monty Python and the Holy<lb/>
Grail sets the cinema back 900 years and "makes Ben<lb/>
Hur look like an epic<lb/>
Here's what the critics have to say about the Python<lb/>
crew's most successful film:<lb/>
"As funny as a movie can get. " ? Richard Schickel.<lb/>
Time.<lb/>
"It's a dazzling blitzkrieg of some of the most ex-<lb/>
cruciatingly funny visual gags. There is so much<lb/>
sublimely outrageous visual humor you could watch the<lb/>
movie silent. " ? Joseph Gelmis, Sewsday.<lb/>
"Recklessly funny and sometimes a matter of comic<lb/>
genius, a triumph of errancv and muddle. " ? Penelope<lb/>
Gilliatt, The New Yorker.<lb/>
This spoof of the King Arthur legend stars the entire<lb/>
Monty Python ensemble: Graham Chapman, John<lb/>
Cleese, Terry Gilliam, Eric Idle, Terry Jones, and<lb/>
Michael Palin.<lb/>
<lb/>
f<lb/>
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rm east -Koi im s<lb/>
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Duvall Pursues Legendary D.B. Cooper In Latest Film Endeavor<lb/>
Robert Duvall poses with co-stars kaihrn Han-old and I real Cooper opening Friday ai (,reenille Buccaneer Theatres.<lb/>
Williams on Ihe set of his new film, "I'he Pursuit of D.B.<lb/>
Duvall Sheds Some Old Make-Up<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
CUT ? FRENCH STYLE<lb/>
Stokely<lb/>
Green Beans<lb/>
Continued From P. 5<lb/>
" nd besides, if I have<lb/>
to give somebody 10<lb/>
perceni. wh not give it<lb/>
to rm brother?"<lb/>
I ack Du all, a<lb/>
 rginia-based lawyer,<lb/>
pushing for lead roles<lb/>
? i his brother's<lb/>
hi to approve the<lb/>
irs of his movies,<lb/>
a common demand of<lb/>
mar stars but<lb/>
something Duvall got<lb/>
onl) for the first time<lb/>
with fender Mercies.<lb/>
"His career had<lb/>
evolved to v tiere there<lb/>
is no point in playing<lb/>
secondary roles lack<lb/>
Duvall savs. Now<lb/>
we're looking at<lb/>
scripts, at directors, at<lb/>
the people producing<lb/>
the film and at the cast,<lb/>
too. We're looking at<lb/>
the overall package<lb/>
with a more careful<lb/>
eye. We vant an artistic<lb/>
success but we also<lb/>
want it to have some<lb/>
commercial potential<lb/>
Duvall has not paid<lb/>
much attention to<lb/>
creating the image of a<lb/>
star. He doesn't give<lb/>
man) interviews. He<lb/>
doesn't go to "in"<lb/>
places. He doesn't like<lb/>
tiding in limousines.<lb/>
Even his new home,<lb/>
though it has a 25-foot<lb/>
living room ceiling,<lb/>
carved paneling and<lb/>
stained-glass windows,<lb/>
is modest bv star stan-<lb/>
dards. It isn't a pen-<lb/>
thouse and it isn't on a<lb/>
fashionable street.<lb/>
There isn't even a door-<lb/>
man.<lb/>
Duvall is not elo-<lb/>
quent. He often<lb/>
answers questions with<lb/>
a yes or a no. And he<lb/>
seems to have a hard<lb/>
time sitting still. But he<lb/>
is polite and earnest in<lb/>
a gruff sort ot way. He<lb/>
often paces the floor,<lb/>
abruptly throwing open<lb/>
the door ol his<lb/>
refrigerator, first offer-<lb/>
ing a visitor something<lb/>
to drink, then cheese<lb/>
and later yogurt.<lb/>
He says he doesn't<lb/>
care that he hasn't<lb/>
achieved the kind of<lb/>
super-stardom a Robert<lb/>
Redford or a Al Pacino<lb/>
has. "I don't feel star-<lb/>
dom has eluded me or<lb/>
anything Duvall savs<lb/>
with a shrug. "I've<lb/>
been well-known for a<lb/>
while and 1 get parts<lb/>
Over the veais, thread between them, wasn't offered to him,<lb/>
Duvall has played such If there is one, it is that Duvall dismisses nice-<lb/>
an enormous range of usually his characters guy parts like the male<lb/>
roles that it is difficult have a tough streak in<lb/>
to find anv sort ol them Although it See DRF.AM, Page 7<lb/>
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'He's A Dream To Work With'<lb/>
Continued From P. 6<lb/>
lead in Kramer vs.<lb/>
Kramer.<lb/>
"That's soap<lb/>
opera he says. "1<lb/>
guess most of my parts<lb/>
have been complex,<lb/>
contradictory. They<lb/>
mostly have a hard side<lb/>
to them, the more in-<lb/>
teresting side<lb/>
Yet in some cases the<lb/>
parts turned out to pro-<lb/>
duce an even tougher<lb/>
image than Duvall<lb/>
would have liked.<lb/>
Several scenes that<lb/>
would have made his<lb/>
characters seem more<lb/>
compassionate were<lb/>
lost in the editing<lb/>
rooms. In Apocalypse<lb/>
Sow, for instance, Lt.<lb/>
Col Kilgore was sup-<lb/>
posed to rescue a Viet-<lb/>
namese baby, but the<lb/>
scene was cut. In The<lb/>
Creal Santini, there<lb/>
was supposed to be a<lb/>
scene in which Bull<lb/>
Meechum brings his<lb/>
daughter flowers, but<lb/>
that too, was cut.<lb/>
Making sure that<lb/>
Duvall doesn't become<lb/>
typecast as a bad guy is<lb/>
one of the things Jack<lb/>
Duvall is looking out<lb/>
for. "If you want to<lb/>
know something, 1<lb/>
think he's played<lb/>
enough bad guys<lb/>
Jack Duvall says. "If<lb/>
that label gets attached,<lb/>
you don't have as much<lb/>
choice or movement in<lb/>
parts. Tender Mercies<lb/>
will be different there.<lb/>
It's a kind of pastoral<lb/>
role<lb/>
When Duvall was ap-<lb/>
proached to play Tom<lb/>
Spellacy in True Con-<lb/>
fessions, he wasn't anx-<lb/>
ious to do it. But he<lb/>
had worked with Ulu<lb/>
Grosbard, the film's<lb/>
director, before ? in<lb/>
the first Broadwax pro-<lb/>
duction of American<lb/>
Buffalo ? and he ad-<lb/>
mired him. "I took it<lb/>
because of Ulu<lb/>
Duvall says. "He lets<lb/>
an actor alone. He can<lb/>
handle someone im-<lb/>
provising. You've got<lb/>
to wing it in acting.<lb/>
Things happen that<lb/>
can't be present. I'm an<lb/>
actor vho can im-<lb/>
provise. A director who<lb/>
can allow that to hap-<lb/>
pen a little, that is<lb/>
good<lb/>
Grosbard says of<lb/>
Duvall: "He's a dream<lb/>
actor to work with. He<lb/>
locks into the<lb/>
character. He acts in-<lb/>
tuitively and spon-<lb/>
taneously<lb/>
To prepare for this<lb/>
role, Duvall "hung<lb/>
out" with Los Angeles<lb/>
detectives. He went to<lb/>
the scene of a murder<lb/>
and stoou over the<lb/>
body taking the notes<lb/>
that a policeman would<lb/>
take. He watched a lie<lb/>
detector test being ad-<lb/>
ministered, and he even<lb/>
went on a stakeout.<lb/>
D ua 11 says he<lb/>
doesn't like talking<lb/>
about acting: "Maybe<lb/>
on a date, you know, if<lb/>
you feel a little ner-<lb/>
vous, then you talk<lb/>
about acting he says.<lb/>
But asked about his<lb/>
technique, he says he<lb/>
spends a lot of time just<lb/>
thinking about a part.<lb/>
"You ruminate about<lb/>
the part. But it's always<lb/>
you, if it isn't bad ac-<lb/>
ting, it's always you. I<lb/>
think of what I would<lb/>
be like if 1 was in the ar-<lb/>
my or whatever. If this<lb/>
had happened to me.<lb/>
"A script is just<lb/>
words on a page.<lb/>
There's an expression<lb/>
like 'a pound of<lb/>
behavior is worth a ton<lb/>
of ideas' or something<lb/>
like that. An actor<lb/>
takes those ideas and<lb/>
lifts them off a page<lb/>
and transforms them<lb/>
into behavior. My life<lb/>
is geared toward<lb/>
behavior. I need to<lb/>
make something hap-<lb/>
pen at that moment. I<lb/>
want to see people<lb/>
thinking on film, think-<lb/>
ing thoughts on film. A<lb/>
balance between real<lb/>
life and movie life<lb/>
Duvall was born in<lb/>
San Diego, the second<lb/>
of three brothers. His<lb/>
father was a career<lb/>
Navy man, and as a<lb/>
result his family moved<lb/>
around a lot, finality<lb/>
settling in Virginia.<lb/>
Duvall decided to act<lb/>
when he was attending<lb/>
Principia College in Il-<lb/>
linois. "My parents<lb/>
really helped me<lb/>
decide he says. "I<lb/>
was floundering and<lb/>
they thought it was a<lb/>
good idea<lb/>
After college, he<lb/>
came to New York and<lb/>
studied two years at the<lb/>
Neighborhood<lb/>
Playhouse. His first big<lb/>
break came, he says,<lb/>
when he landed the role<lb/>
of Eddie Carbone in an<lb/>
off-Broadway produc-<lb/>
tion of Arthur Miller's<lb/>
1 View From the<lb/>
Bridge. He made his<lb/>
movie debut in 1963 as<lb/>
Boo Bradley in To Kill<lb/>
a Mockingbird.<lb/>
In 1964, he married<lb/>
Barbara Benjamin, a<lb/>
former Jackie Gleason<lb/>
Away We Go girl, and<lb/>
raised two step-<lb/>
daughters. But the cou-<lb/>
ple split up several<lb/>
years ago, and the<lb/>
divorce became final<lb/>
recently. "Someone<lb/>
asked me the other day<lb/>
what the hardest part<lb/>
o' this business was<lb/>
he says. "It's getting<lb/>
your personal life<lb/>
together<lb/>
In the next few weeks<lb/>
Duvall will start work<lb/>
on Tender Mercies, to<lb/>
be directed by Bruce<lb/>
Beresford (Breaker<lb/>
Morant). Already<lb/>
Duvall is sporting a<lb/>
scruffy-looking beard<lb/>
and his hair is long and<lb/>
straggly.<lb/>
"I reality can't grow<lb/>
much of a beard he<lb/>
says, pointing out the<lb/>
bare patches. "But it's<lb/>
better than sticking the<lb/>
fake stuff on<lb/>
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I<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057439_0008"/><lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
NOVEMBER 10. IV8I<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
Pirates Rip ETSU To Even Record<lb/>
66 Points Mark Highest Total<lb/>
Since Coach 's Playing Days<lb/>
By WILLIAM YELVERTON<lb/>
vstMini Spocu Milor<lb/>
There's no place quite like home,<lb/>
as East Carolina coach Ed Emory<lb/>
and his Pirates discovered after<lb/>
thrashing the Buccaneers of East<lb/>
Tennessee State, 66-23, before a<lb/>
Homecoming crowd of 21,342.<lb/>
The 66 points marked the highest<lb/>
point total for an ECU team in 22<lb/>
vears.<lb/>
The Pirates scored 38 first-half<lb/>
points to guarantee the victory, in-<lb/>
cluding 17 in the first quarter and 21<lb/>
more in the second before finishing<lb/>
the contest with 14 each in the final<lb/>
two periods.<lb/>
The win evened the Pirate's<lb/>
record at 5-5 this season, and with a<lb/>
victory over William and Mary next<lb/>
week in Greenville, the club will<lb/>
have its first winning season under<lb/>
Emory.<lb/>
"East Tennesse is a much better<lb/>
team than they showed today<lb/>
Emory said following the game.<lb/>
"This game just goes to show what<lb/>
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specialty teams can do to you when<lb/>
they breakdown.<lb/>
"Our defense just got the ball in<lb/>
good field position he continued.<lb/>
"They (ETS) coughed it up a lot; we<lb/>
got the ball in great field position,<lb/>
and we scored<lb/>
The coach went on to add that the<lb/>
team seemed to become closer after<lb/>
published reports said there was<lb/>
much dissention on the squad. "If<lb/>
adversity makes us score 66 points<lb/>
he quipped, "maybe we need some<lb/>
more next week<lb/>
The kicking game proved to the<lb/>
Buccaneers' downfall. After taking<lb/>
the opening kickoff and driving to<lb/>
their 42 before stalling, punter Phil<lb/>
Wilso couldn't handle a bad snap<lb/>
from center and was dropped for a<lb/>
loss of 13 yards, giving the Pirates<lb/>
excellent field position.<lb/>
Running back Leon Lawson<lb/>
blasted through the right side of the<lb/>
Pirate line for a gain of 11 yards on<lb/>
East Carolina's premiere play from<lb/>
scrimmage, putting the ball on the<lb/>
Buccaneer 10.<lb/>
However, the drive stalled after<lb/>
quarterback Carlton Nelson fumbl-<lb/>
ed out of bounds, so placekicker<lb/>
Chuck Bushbeck came on to kick a<lb/>
23-yard field goal and give the<lb/>
Pirates a 3-0 lead after four minutes<lb/>
of play.<lb/>
East Tennessee State reteived the<lb/>
kickoff and drove to their 42 again,<lb/>
only to have quarterback Walt<lb/>
Bowlin's pass intercepted by Clint<lb/>
Harris, who returned it 20 yards to<lb/>
the Buccaneer 32.<lb/>
Lawson then gained 20 yards on<lb/>
an option right, putting the ball on<lb/>
the 10 yard line. He then ran around<lb/>
right end for an 11-yard score, giv-<lb/>
ing the Pirates a 10-0 lead after<lb/>
Bushbeck's extra point ? only one<lb/>
of a school record nine on the after-<lb/>
noon.<lb/>
Lawson's score marked the first<lb/>
time in three weeks that the Pirates<lb/>
have crossed the goal line.<lb/>
After a Buccaneer drive stalled at<lb/>
their 33. Wilson went back to punt<lb/>
and again fumbled the snap from<lb/>
center, giving the Pirates a first and<lb/>
The Way It Was<lb/>
Things did not exactly go well for the East Tennessee State<lb/>
football team Saturday during a 66-23 loss to ECU. The Buc-<lb/>
caneers suffered from numerous erros, like this fumble<lb/>
which was recovered by Pirate defensive back Freddie Jones<lb/>
(30). (Photo By Dave Williams)<lb/>
10. However, on the next play,<lb/>
Nelson fumbled and the Buccaneers<lb/>
recovered.<lb/>
Marvin Elliot highlighted an<lb/>
agressive defensive stand by in-<lb/>
tercepting a Bowlin pass, putting the<lb/>
ball on the ETS 10. On the next<lb/>
play, Nelson saw an opening in the<lb/>
left corner of the endzone but<lb/>
fumbled out of bounds.<lb/>
After freshman fullback Scott<lb/>
Lewis picked up one yard, Lawson<lb/>
bolted in from one yard out for his<lb/>
second touchdown of the afternoon.<lb/>
Bushbeck s extra point put the<lb/>
Pirates up, 17-0.<lb/>
East Tennessee State bounced<lb/>
back, however, after the Pirates<lb/>
elected to punt on third and six ?<lb/>
hoping to take advantage of a<lb/>
30-mile-per-hour wind ? but runn-<lb/>
ing back Jerry Butler caught the ball<lb/>
on the run and rambled 55 yards for<lb/>
a touchdown, cutting the score to<lb/>
17-7.<lb/>
East Carolina retaliated,<lb/>
however, and upped their lead to<lb/>
24-7 after punter Wilson fumbled<lb/>
another snap from center, giving the<lb/>
Pirates a first and 10 on the Buc-<lb/>
caneer nine-yard line. Senior runn-<lb/>
ing back Harld Blue then scored on<lb/>
a quick pitch right on third and<lb/>
goal.<lb/>
The Pirates iced the contest after<lb/>
stopping East Tennessee State on<lb/>
four downs. After a punt, Villanova<lb/>
transfer Milt Corsey gained three<lb/>
yards on an option play, putting the<lb/>
ball on the East Carolina 49.<lb/>
Nelson then spotted fleet-footed<lb/>
split end Ricky Nichols alone in the<lb/>
secondarv for a 49-vard bomb for a<lb/>
38-7 ECU lead.<lb/>
Second, third and fourth-string<lb/>
players continued the East Carolina<lb/>
assault in the second half.<lb/>
Highlights included a 46-yard run<lb/>
for a touchdown by quarterback<lb/>
Kevin Ingram, a Corsey two-yard<lb/>
score and a Jimmy Walden 93-yard<lb/>
kickoff return that pleased Emory.<lb/>
"I was glad to see Jimmy get that<lb/>
touchdown he remarked. "I've<lb/>
said all along that we've got one of<lb/>
the best kicing schemes in the eoun-<lb/>
try<lb/>
Fullback Marvin Cobb ended the<lb/>
East Carolina scoring by bolting 37<lb/>
yards for a touchdown late in the<lb/>
fourth quarter.<lb/>
"The people we counted on just<lb/>
didn't come through said a puzzl-<lb/>
ed Buccaneer coach Jack Carlisle.<lb/>
"Our kicking game killed us. We<lb/>
were banged up when we came into<lb/>
the game, and we got more banged<lb/>
up as the game went on<lb/>
The Pirates, who finished the<lb/>
game with 421 yard's in total of-<lb/>
fense, host the Indians of William<lb/>
and Mary next Saturday afternoon<lb/>
in Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
Kickoff time is 1:30.<lb/>
Emory,<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
Savor A<lb/>
Big Win<lb/>
By WILLIAM YELVERTON<lb/>
vvtolam Sports l.dilor<lb/>
Homecoming, with its color<lb/>
and pagentry, is always a special<lb/>
event. But words can't describe<lb/>
how special this year's<lb/>
Homecoming was for coach Ed<lb/>
Emory and his East Carolina<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
East Carolina, coming off<lb/>
disappointing defeats to Miami<lb/>
and West Virginia, had just<lb/>
beaten East Tennessee State,<lb/>
66-23. And Emory sat in his of-<lb/>
fice, smiling because the 66<lb/>
points were the most scored by a<lb/>
Pirate team in 22 years.<lb/>
The highest total? Well, the<lb/>
year was 1959, and East Carolina<lb/>
had beaten Newport News Ap-<lb/>
prentice, 74-0.<lb/>
One of the team's captains?<lb/>
None other than Ed Emory.<lb/>
"Jack Boone was coaching<lb/>
then, and I think James Speight<lb/>
scored the first five times he<lb/>
touched the ball he noted.<lb/>
Boone and Speight are now in the<lb/>
ECU Hall of Fame.<lb/>
The Pirates had cast aside<lb/>
reports of dissention and<lb/>
disrespect for their coach made<lb/>
by former split end Larry<lb/>
O'Roark and played football.<lb/>
Big-time football.<lb/>
The Pirate coach was obvious-<lb/>
ly still bothered by those accusa-<lb/>
tions. "I thought the adversity<lb/>
made us closer he stresses.<lb/>
"The seniors all felt like it was a<lb/>
positive affect. Nine-for-nine felt<lb/>
it helped the team stay together.<lb/>
I'm sorry it happened<lb/>
He then paused, looking down<lb/>
at his hands. "I've been coaching<lb/>
for 22 years he says, "and it is<lb/>
the only negative activity in those<lb/>
22 years. But people know what I<lb/>
stand for.<lb/>
"We want to forget it. People<lb/>
who write football must realize<lb/>
Smith Hopes Soccer Program<lb/>
Soon Able To Create Revenue<lb/>
ECU linebacker Mike Grant (49), shown here sacking<lb/>
East Tennessee State quarterback Walt Bowlin, and his<lb/>
Pirate teammates had things pretty .nuch their way in a<lb/>
66-23 romp over ETSU this past Saturday. The im-<lb/>
pressive Homecoming victory was dedicated to a<lb/>
number of ECU supporters, including two players, who<lb/>
are striken with cancer. (Photo By Gary Patterson)<lb/>
that things like this will happen.<lb/>
"If people only knew how<lb/>
much respect he (O'Roark) was<lb/>
given. 1 gave him as much respect<lb/>
as 1 would my own son. You just<lb/>
have to do the best you can when<lb/>
you've got someone else's son. I<lb/>
know ? I've got four of them.<lb/>
"We have 153 players on our<lb/>
squad he continued, "so<lb/>
something must be going good<lb/>
The Pirate coach then looked<lb/>
on the lighter side. "We have<lb/>
almost been trouble-free here.<lb/>
And if adversity makes us score<lb/>
66 points he laughed, "we need<lb/>
some more next week<lb/>
Emory then turned his<lb/>
thoughts to the Buccaneers of<lb/>
East Tennessee State and admit-<lb/>
ted he was unsure of how his<lb/>
team would perform. "I was ner-<lb/>
vous last night he said. "I<lb/>
couldn't sleep. The kids played<lb/>
hard, and their (ETS) kicking<lb/>
game got us ahead.<lb/>
"I admire coach Carlisle and<lb/>
his kids. My heart goes out for<lb/>
them. I have been on the other<lb/>
end of the stick, too.<lb/>
"We didn't play a devastating<lb/>
football game he added. "It<lb/>
just mushroomed<lb/>
Emory was then asked whether<lb/>
his team watched the ABC sports<lb/>
special on kicker Chuck<lb/>
Bushbeck and his fight against<lb/>
Hodgkin's Disease, a form of<lb/>
cancer. "No he said, "but I'll<lb/>
tell you this. We have another kid<lb/>
on our team who's fighting<lb/>
cancer: Chris Durand. He has<lb/>
bone cancer, but it's in remission.<lb/>
He's here today. He's lost all his<lb/>
hair, all his weight.<lb/>
"Today's game was dedicated<lb/>
to five people with cancer he<lb/>
added, "all related to the ECU<lb/>
football family: Kevin Harold, a<lb/>
13-year-old whose father works<lb/>
for ECU, Harold Battle, a<lb/>
13-year-old whose father also<lb/>
works for ECU, Chris (Durand),<lb/>
Chuck (Bushbeck), Janet Over-<lb/>
ton, a faithful Pirate fan and to<lb/>
the father of Donald and Ronald<lb/>
Reid of Farmville<lb/>
He added that autographed<lb/>
game balls will be given to each.<lb/>
"They are such great fans he<lb/>
says.<lb/>
"If you ever see me down he<lb/>
adds slowly, "just kick me in the<lb/>
butt because their (the cancer pa-<lb/>
tients) battle is a whole lot<lb/>
tougher than our's<lb/>
Yes, Saturday was a very<lb/>
special Homecoming indeed.<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Only days after his Pirates finish-<lb/>
ed with a 7-9-1 season, breaking a<lb/>
host of school records along the<lb/>
way, ECU soccer coach Brad Smith<lb/>
relaxed in his compact office in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum last Thursday and<lb/>
spoke candidly about the club's<lb/>
future.<lb/>
Smith, in his fifth year at the helm<lb/>
of the school's soccer program,<lb/>
spoke of big things for the future<lb/>
and said that this season had been<lb/>
another one of advancement for his<lb/>
team.<lb/>
"Every year I've been here we've<lb/>
taken one giant step toward what we<lb/>
need he said. "This year it was<lb/>
playing in Ficklen Stadium. Heck,<lb/>
10 years ago that was just a dream<lb/>
The Pirates drew approximately<lb/>
1,000 fans into Ficklen for a<lb/>
nightime match with nationally-<lb/>
ranked N.C. State. The club lost the<lb/>
match but Smith says it may have<lb/>
won in the long run.<lb/>
"We definitely got our foot in the<lb/>
door this year he said. "1 can see<lb/>
where we are headed in the right<lb/>
direction. But it's going to take a lot<lb/>
more than me sitting in my office<lb/>
talking about it<lb/>
The ECU soccer budget is well<lb/>
below that of arch-rivals 'ike Old<lb/>
Dominion, N.C. State, Duke and<lb/>
William &amp; Mary. Smith says the<lb/>
club must find ways in the future to<lb/>
generate revenue.<lb/>
"More or less that's wucre our<lb/>
future is Smith said. "We've got<lb/>
to be able to help fund ourselves. 1<lb/>
think we showed that one night in<lb/>
Ficklen that we can do it<lb/>
Smith said he would like to set up<lb/>
home matches on a regular basis at a<lb/>
location where general admission<lb/>
could be charged. Playing the mat-<lb/>
ches at a reasonable time for the<lb/>
paying customer also would be im-<lb/>
portant.<lb/>
"We're playing with the idea<lb/>
now he explained. "I'm not say-<lb/>
ing the site has to be Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium. But we've got to find a<lb/>
place where we can play at night<lb/>
without interfering with people who<lb/>
work during the day and kids that<lb/>
A<lb/>
"It's great to support a win-<lb/>
ner. But it does take money to<lb/>
be a winner. To be a winner<lb/>
you've got to go first class all<lb/>
the way. What we're doing<lb/>
here at East Carolina is taking<lb/>
what we've got and making<lb/>
gradual moves toward first<lb/>
class<lb/>
? Brad Smith<lb/>
go to school. Playing at three of<lb/>
four (o'clock) in the afternoon just<lb/>
does not do that<lb/>
"What we'd really like Smith<lb/>
continued, "would be a regular<lb/>
Wednesday night thing. That way it<lb/>
would be accessible to most of the<lb/>
people that would be interested. If<lb/>
we do it like that on a regular basis<lb/>
not only will the crowd increase as<lb/>
we go along, but the potential for a<lb/>
crowd increase<lb/>
Smith's feels his ideas for creating<lb/>
revenue are the only way out for a<lb/>
program that is not yet ready to<lb/>
spend the dollars needed to make it<lb/>
big. He added, though, that the<lb/>
Pirates as they are now have the<lb/>
capabilities to play with the big<lb/>
names.<lb/>
"I feel that we can already com-<lb/>
pete with those people he said.<lb/>
"We're not going to win every time,<lb/>
probably not half the time. But we<lb/>
can compete with them and pro-<lb/>
bably pull off a few upsets. My only<lb/>
hope is that we can stay close<lb/>
enough to them so that when the<lb/>
. people at East Carolina decide they<lb/>
want a big-time kind of program,<lb/>
it'll only take about two years to get<lb/>
there<lb/>
Smith said he realizes that money<lb/>
is his number one obstacle. On the<lb/>
other hand, he feels the program<lb/>
can gradually make its way to where<lb/>
it wants to be, even if the revenues<lb/>
are not swift in surfacing.<lb/>
"It's great to support a winner<lb/>
he said. "But it does take money to<lb/>
be a winner. To be a winner you've<lb/>
got to go first class all the way.<lb/>
What we're doing here at East<lb/>
Carolina is taking what we've got<lb/>
and making gradual moves toward<lb/>
first class<lb/>
Smith related his situation back to<lb/>
one that the entire ECU athletic<lb/>
department faces, the expectations<lb/>
of fans to defeat more extravagant<lb/>
and established programs. He also<lb/>
spoke with admiration for the job<lb/>
that former ECU football coach Pat<lb/>
Dye did during the late 1970's, when<lb/>
his gridders were able to upset<lb/>
several Atlantic Coast Conference<lb/>
teams and made it to a post-season<lb/>
bowl game in 1978.<lb/>
"We may have gotten spoiled<lb/>
when Pat was here Smith said.<lb/>
"But, let's face it, what Pat did here<lb/>
is what each of the coaches here<lb/>
wants and needs to do ? beat the<lb/>
school with more money. You have<lb/>
to work your butts off to do it, but<lb/>
when it's done it's a great feeling<lb/>
Smith got to experience such a<lb/>
feeling late this season when his club<lb/>
downed Old Dominion, 3-2. The<lb/>
Monarchs had been ranked number<lb/>
five nationally during the pre-<lb/>
season.<lb/>
"That has to be one of the biggest<lb/>
thrills ever for us he said. "But<lb/>
that's just the beginning. We've got<lb/>
to take that and work even harder<lb/>
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bad When I am ready I will say<lb/>
double meat in your ear Then<lb/>
we will see what I will lie on w B<lb/>
or can you aflord it Remember ?t<lb/>
m.nu? 30 equals ? Changed<lb/>
numbers<lb/>
PART TIME make S50C per 1000<lb/>
mailing our circulars Also share<lb/>
in profits For information'ap<lb/>
plication, send sell laddressed<lb/>
stamped envelope Global Wealth<lb/>
Enterprises Box 230. Lawrence.<lb/>
Ks 6045<lb/>
WANTED FEMALE roommate<lb/>
with excessive amounts ol body<lb/>
hair, especially chest and<lb/>
underarms Call William at<lb/>
7 s 7 ???<lb/>
ANGEL CONDOM HEAD next<lb/>
year let's dress up as a dog I'M<lb/>
lust ftt you go as you are Go cock<lb/>
a leg I Jack O Lantern head<lb/>
HOMECOMING IS lots ol dates,<lb/>
very many lates Boats lor floats,<lb/>
tots to smokes The boys are back<lb/>
in town and we showed them The<lb/>
Legend is still around Lots ol<lb/>
folks to hug and squeeze and some<lb/>
that will let you between their<lb/>
knees The band was great and<lb/>
rocked all night, oh my God here<lb/>
comes the morning light Alumni<lb/>
thanks, it was all lor you. The<lb/>
Brothers and Plagues ol Phi Kap<lb/>
pa Tau.<lb/>
Third Floor Attic is Lots of folks<lb/>
thats loves to take What s that<lb/>
smell? Oh. what the hell Doctor<lb/>
Doctoi help my head Here take<lb/>
a snill ol this and thai girl to bed<lb/>
Hey. theie is a wasp in my room<lb/>
fly robin lly F M receives no<lb/>
static when he smiles<lb/>
McSmiles A duty balhioom and<lb/>
Red Eye lounge My lord it looks<lb/>
like a hospital halloway Look out<lb/>
lor the wall Telephones constant<lb/>
ly, he's not here, can I take a<lb/>
message lots ol ferret's on the<lb/>
pi owl my T V is qone but where<lb/>
when and how?<lb/>
Cyn Hope you enioyed dinner on<lb/>
Friday niqht I was so nervous<lb/>
you gave me a friqht The band<lb/>
was great they rocked and we<lb/>
rolled See you lor lunch like you<lb/>
were told Siqned your waiter<lb/>
RIDE wanted to NEW YORK lor<lb/>
Thanksqivmq and or Christmas<lb/>
Will share enpenses and drivinq<lb/>
Call 758 6686 Ask loi Gieqq<lb/>
STAFF WATUSI Man you 1UH<lb/>
were into?icatmqiy diunk Satur<lb/>
day niqhl Some of youi great con<lb/>
vcrsalion has been firmly im<lb/>
planted in my warped mind I will<lb/>
continue to remember it and wr ite<lb/>
a book called Staff Watusians<lb/>
Hire is a preview lor youi friends<lb/>
and mine Man is it hard to<lb/>
see Boy. Sunkist soda qoes<lb/>
good with Seaqiam 7 What s<lb/>
takinq Paul so lonq in the DZ<lb/>
house Maybe I should qo r. ,m?<lb/>
him from those damsels ol<lb/>
distress Man was she biq<lb/>
You know wha cheese does to<lb/>
you I wish the ground hadn t<lb/>
hrt me in the leg Stay tuned next<lb/>
time lot the second part of the<lb/>
ser les<lb/>
BIG AL Have you lost youi fancy<lb/>
lor Durham boys Is Scott a true<lb/>
blonde Bud s the drink and I<lb/>
nevei was the qame We found out<lb/>
you have done it all Who qot the<lb/>
real peck from SP<lb/>
&amp;VSOOOGOSOOCOOG<lb/>
l Ar iqh'<lb/>
nc r'Sji Call<lb/>
FOR an occa<lb/>
resumes ed<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
??s Go<lb/>
Pizza inn<lb/>
BUFFET<lb/>
PIZZA, SALAD, SPAGHETTI, SOUP<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
Pis'<lb/>
Pl?D6?.<lb/>
<lb/>
MonSun.<lb/>
Mon. &amp; Tues.<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
SPAGHETTI DAY<lb/>
11:30-2:00<lb/>
6:00-8:30<lb/>
<lb/>
.<lb/>
ut<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
LARGE PORTION<lb/>
OF SPAGHETTI,<lb/>
GARLIC BREAD 1.88<lb/>
BONUS TRIP TO SALAD BAR<lb/>
0<lb/>
li?<lb/>
? .49<lb/>
Hwy 264 Bypass, Greenville<lb/>
5Z?M7<lb/>
7i?S MOV. O ,<lb/>
 ADM. W. 7f<lb/>
(HbapfrrX<lb/>
presents<lb/>
1st Annual All-Campus<lb/>
-Off<lb/>
Divisions<lb/>
im<lb/>
nue<lb/>
Dale<lb/>
lues Nov. 10<lb/>
rues V. 17<lb/>
lues Nov. 24<lb/>
rues Dec. 1<lb/>
Chug<lb/>
Sorority Girls Competition<lb/>
Campus Guys Competition<lb/>
Campus Girls Competition<lb/>
Fraternity Guys Competition<lb/>
Items ana Prices<lb/>
Effective thru Sat<lb/>
Nov 14 1981<lb/>
rionvrlahl 1981<lb/>
Kroger Sav on<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
None Soid To Dealers<lb/>
k?A<lb/>
Finals ? Tuesday, December 8th<lb/>
Sorority Girls vs. Campus Girls<lb/>
Campus Guys vs. Fraternity Guys<lb/>
Entry Fee is ONLY $5.00 per team!<lb/>
No Limit on teams per organization!<lb/>
FOUR MEMBERS PER TEAM<lb/>
TROPHIES and CASH MONEY for each weekly winner!<lb/>
Division Winners: $25.00 per team &amp; individual<lb/>
trophy for each team member.<lb/>
Final Winner: $100.00 per team &amp; plaque for each<lb/>
team with members' names on it.<lb/>
Fall means<lb/>
football, fun, and<lb/>
fine savings at the<lb/>
One-Stop-Shopping<lb/>
Place, Kroger Sav-on!<lb/>
.?-?-?.??-??<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
?p<lb/>
OPEN Mon. thru Sat. 8 AM TO<lb/>
MIDNIGHT?Sun. 9 AM TO 9 PM<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
ij Mtiith<lb/>
<lb/>
ggesi<lb/>
'Bui<lb/>
Bausch &amp; Lomb<lb/>
soft contacts<lb/>
Includes<lb/>
(Fitting by eye doctor<lb/>
() Easy care cold disinfection<lb/>
(Refund policy<lb/>
() Wear lenses home same day<lb/>
NOW LOOKING GOOD COSTS LESS<lb/>
39<lb/>
95<lb/>
SINGLE VISION<lb/>
PBISCBIPTIOM<lb/>
tYICLAtSIS<lb/>
es over '00<lb/>
12<lb/>
00<lb/>
SCRATCHGUARD<lb/>
Scrati h Resistant<lb/>
al nq for plastic<lb/>
lenses<lb/>
175<lb/>
00<lb/>
BAUSCH I LOMB<lb/>
BIFOCAL<lb/>
SOFT CONTACT<lb/>
LENSES<lb/>
wieners<lb/>
-&amp;i J<lb/>
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AMERICAN OR<lb/>
MUSTARD<lb/>
Potato '<lb/>
iC<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
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BAUSCH IOMJ<lb/>
SOFT CONTACTS<lb/>
FOR ASTIGMATISM<lb/>
ALSO<lb/>
PHMAIIMS<lb/>
EXTENDEOWEAR<lb/>
SOFT LENSES<lb/>
ABOVE PRICES DO NOT INCLUDE EXAM FEE<lb/>
Q9-<lb/>
iTANGELOSO?<lb/>
Tanoenne<lb/>
GOLDEN RIPE<lb/>
Bananas<lb/>
Ea<lb/>
i<lb/>
I.I J-<lb/>
i<lb/>
OPIOMCTWC<lb/>
?Y?CAREC?MTeR<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
228 Greenville Blvd<lb/>
Call 756-9404<lb/>
Dr Peter W. Hollis<lb/>
Comprehensive Eye Exams<lb/>
includes glaucoma test<lb/>
cataract check<lb/>
SOFIENS<lb/>
pofymoc on<lb/>
CONVENIENT EVENING<lb/>
AND SATURDAY HOURS<lb/>
15 ECU DISCOUNT<lb/>
ON EYEGLASSES<lb/>
?OTHER DISCOUNTS DO NOT APPLY<lb/>
V7S4-<lb/>
89?<lb/>
CD<lb/>
16<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057439_0010"/><lb/>
d?j<lb/>
10 THE EAST CAROLINIAN NOVEMBER 10, 1981<lb/>
'o -f <lb/>
&amp;&amp;JQOP<lb/>
Winter Rush<lb/>
ECU Defeats Madison<lb/>
with<lb/>
By<lb/>
mm<lb/>
M?fl V ntrr<lb/>
s<lb/>
"This meet showed a<lb/>
lot of bright spots but<lb/>
there is a lot of work to<lb/>
be done<lb/>
ECU swimming<lb/>
coach Ray Scharf was,<lb/>
as always, optimistic<lb/>
following his team's<lb/>
62-51 opening match<lb/>
victory over james<lb/>
Madison lat Friday.<lb/>
"We swam well<lb/>
said Scharf. "James<lb/>
Madison was a much<lb/>
more formidable oppo-<lb/>
nent than I expected.<lb/>
Three Pirates came<lb/>
away double winners in<lb/>
the victory. Doug<lb/>
Nieman, Stan Williams<lb/>
and Kevin Richards<lb/>
each pulled a double in<lb/>
the competition.<lb/>
ECU goes back into<lb/>
action on Friday,<lb/>
traveling to Norfolk for<lb/>
a tri-meet with Old<lb/>
Dominion and<lb/>
Maryland.<lb/>
The ECU women's<lb/>
swim team opens its<lb/>
season on Friday<lb/>
against Old Dominion.<lb/>
The action gets under-<lb/>
way at 3:30 p.m. at the<lb/>
ODU natatorium.<lb/>
"Sigma Nu<lb/>
91<lb/>
New Pirates Defeat Old, 74-56<lb/>
The East Carolina<lb/>
women's basketball<lb/>
team overcame the aura<lb/>
of past legends last Fri-<lb/>
day night, defeating a<lb/>
group of former I ady<lb/>
Pirate stars by a 74-56<lb/>
margin.<lb/>
Junior forward Mary<lb/>
Denkler led the way for<lb/>
the Lady Bucs with 17<lb/>
points in this, the first,<lb/>
ECU Alumni Classic.<lb/>
Senior Sam Jones<lb/>
followed with 16.<lb/>
The current ECU<lb/>
squad overcame a 14-8<lb/>
deficit to take a 45-30<lb/>
halftime lead and the<lb/>
eventual win over the<lb/>
former Pirates.<lb/>
The alumni team was<lb/>
paced by April Ross' 11<lb/>
points. The school's<lb/>
all-time leading scorer,<lb/>
Rosie Thompson,<lb/>
followed with nine.<lb/>
Broderick Award win-<lb/>
ner Kathy Riley also<lb/>
added nine points.<lb/>
Three members of<lb/>
the 1981-82 Lady<lb/>
Pirates joined Denkler<lb/>
and Jones in double<lb/>
figures. Senior guard<lb/>
Lillian Barnes poured<lb/>
in ten points, as did a<lb/>
pair of first-year<lb/>
players, point guard<lb/>
Loraine Foster and<lb/>
center Darlene Chaney.<lb/>
Clemson Tigers On D In Win<lb/>
One touchdown by<lb/>
third-ranked Clemson<lb/>
in its defensive<lb/>
showdown with ninth-<lb/>
ranked North Carolina<lb/>
was enough to maintain<lb/>
the undefeated Tigers'<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Con-<lb/>
ference lead.<lb/>
Maryland now looms<lb/>
as Clemson's only<lb/>
obstacle to a perfect<lb/>
league record.<lb/>
A ruthless defense<lb/>
keved Clemson. now<lb/>
9-6, to a 10-8 victory<lb/>
Saturdav that spoiled<lb/>
North Carolina's<lb/>
homecoming before a<lb/>
record crowd, scouts<lb/>
from eight bowls and a<lb/>
regional television au-<lb/>
dience.<lb/>
In other games<lb/>
Saturdav involving<lb/>
ACC teams, sixth-<lb/>
ranked Penn State<lb/>
downed North<lb/>
Carolina State 22-15;<lb/>
Duke thrashed Wake<lb/>
Forest 31-10; Notre<lb/>
Dame crushed Georgia<lb/>
Tech 35-3; and<lb/>
Maryland fell to Tulane<lb/>
14-7. Virginia was idle.<lb/>
This week Clemson<lb/>
hosts Maryland, 3-5;<lb/>
Duke. 5-4. hosts North<lb/>
Carolina State, 4-5;<lb/>
Georgia Tech, 1-8,<lb/>
RIGGAH<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
TWOOOORSFROM<lb/>
COX FLORIST<lb/>
111 W 4t Jt<lb/>
SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
VERY BEST<lb/>
758-0204<lb/>
entertains Navy; North<lb/>
Carolina, 7-2, travels to<lb/>
Virginia, 1-7; and<lb/>
Wake Forest, 3-7,<lb/>
journeys to Richmond.<lb/>
The Tigers plaved so<lb/>
well defensively in<lb/>
building a 7-5 halftime<lb/>
lead coach Danny Ford<lb/>
said he didn't expect<lb/>
North Carolina to score<lb/>
in the second half.<lb/>
But the Tigers allow-<lb/>
ed the Tar Heels a field<lb/>
goal in each half on 22<lb/>
and 26-yard kicks by<lb/>
Brooks Barwick.<lb/>
Clemson squelched<lb/>
three fourth-quarter<lb/>
North Carolina drives<lb/>
to preserve the win.<lb/>
Danny Barlow blocked<lb/>
a punt by Clemson's<lb/>
Dale Hatcher late in the<lb/>
first half for a safety<lb/>
and North Carolina's<lb/>
other points.<lb/>
Clemson's scoring<lb/>
came on a 7-yard run<lb/>
by Jeff McCall and a<lb/>
39-yard field goal by<lb/>
Donald lgwebuike.<lb/>
Normally soft-<lb/>
spoken North Carolina<lb/>
coach Dick Crum<lb/>
shrugged off questions<lb/>
about his team's bowl<lb/>
chances.<lb/>
"To hell with those<lb/>
guys (the scouts) said<lb/>
Crum. "This business<lb/>
of bowls, they are only<lb/>
interested in you if you<lb/>
win, anyway<lb/>
"We're out to win<lb/>
ball games (one at a<lb/>
time)<lb/>
Kiffin took the<lb/>
blame for the<lb/>
Wolfpack's fourth con<lb/>
secutive loss.<lb/>
Plaza Shell<lb/>
410 Oreenvillt Blvd.<lb/>
Phon?7S4-3023<lb/>
Mrs.<lb/>
Men-Sat. 7 16<lb/>
m. It-it<lb/>
A Complete Auto Repair Shop<lb/>
(Foreign &amp; Domestic)<lb/>
Full and Self Service Gas at Competitive<lb/>
Prices<lb/>
Road and Wrecker Service ailliV<lb/>
Discounts On Repairs With I.D. ll<lb/>
"The Active Fraternity"<lb/>
?Most Eligible Bachelor Award<lb/>
?All?Campus Service Champions<lb/>
?Homecoming Float Winners<lb/>
?Home of the Bull Run '81 Party<lb/>
Come Meet the Brothers Who<lb/>
Live in the "Church"<lb/>
Tuesday, Nov.10<lb/>
?:?"?:?<lb/>
SS8SS<lb/>
??:??:<lb/>
.?.??<lb/>
V. - ? ? ?? ?? ?<lb/>
M Sun. Testing Equipment Road Service<lb/>
N.C Inspection Station<lb/>
:?:?:?:<lb/>
<lb/>
??!?:?<lb/>
v.<lb/>
I<lb/>
Complete Automotive Service<lb/>
Foreign and Domestic Cars<lb/>
COREY'S EXXON<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
SERVICE CENTER<lb/>
2753 East 10th Street<lb/>
758-2913<lb/>
10 O 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 REX COREY<lb/>
wmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
CASH<lb/>
WE PAY IMMEDIATE CASH<lb/>
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DIAMONDS mmm-m<lb/>
ALL GOLD &amp; SILVER<lb/>
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I ad PPflrHSlONAt PERMANENT PEAIER.<lb/>
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SHARE A CREAMY-LIGHT CUP OF CAFE FRANCAIS.<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
WRIGHT BUILDING<lb/>
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NMNNP <lb/>
<pb facs="00057439_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>