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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057441_0001"/>
?he iEast (Earnltman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
vol. 58 No. 25<lb/>
Tuesday, November 17, 1981<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
8 Pages<lb/>
Nuclear War?<lb/>
ECU Professors Respond<lb/>
B PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
stall Wiiui<lb/>
Massive demonstrations opposing<lb/>
nucleat weapons have been taking<lb/>
place recently in Western Europe.<lb/>
1 hese actions, coupled with remarks<lb/>
from President Ronald Reagan<lb/>
about a limited nucleat war being<lb/>
fought on European soil, are caus-<lb/>
ing main Americans to lake a closer<lb/>
look ai the administration's defense<lb/>
policies<lb/>
I on Felker, an East Carolina<lb/>
political science professor, said lie<lb/>
had his doubts about Reagan's posi-<lb/>
tion thai the Soviet Union cannot<lb/>
a nucleat war and the ad-<lb/>
, 0n's view that the United<lb/>
Slates onh negotiate arms<lb/>
agreements from a position of<lb/>
strt<lb/>
"The Soviet Union has historical-<lb/>
ly hown thai the) will make<lb/>
k ? us sacrifices to achieve<lb/>
parity 1 elket said. "The) will gel<lb/>
tough in i esponse.<lb/>
"Reagan is perceived as being<lb/>
iwkish in western Europe<lb/>
noted Dr. Robert Thompson, who is<lb/>
also in the Department of Political<lb/>
Science. "It's true in a sense that he<lb/>
is pushing tor increased arms spen-<lb/>
ding and new weapons systems<lb/>
One of Reagan's statements was,<lb/>
"I could see where you could have<lb/>
an exchange of tactical weapons<lb/>
against troops in the field without it<lb/>
bringing either one oi the major<lb/>
powers to pushing the button set-<lb/>
ting off a clamor in western Europe<lb/>
about what U.S. policy actually is in<lb/>
regard to nuclear war. The response<lb/>
from the Kremlin was, "Only he<lb/>
who has decided to commit suicide<lb/>
can start a nuclear war in the hope<lb/>
of emerging a victor from it<lb/>
"He (Reagan) doesn't think out<lb/>
his statements . . . he's not consider-<lb/>
ing their implications Thompson<lb/>
commented. Felker added, "you<lb/>
don't go out oi sour way to cause<lb/>
your supporters problems. No<lb/>
w estei n leader wants to be too close-<lb/>
See DEFENSE, Page 3<lb/>
'By January 1'<lb/>
Substitute Will Be Announced<lb/>
Photo By GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
Ashley B Futrell, Chancellor Selection Committee chairman, conducted an<lb/>
open hearing for students, staff and the general public last month.<lb/>
Bv DIANE ANDERSON<lb/>
and PAUL COLLINS<lb/>
An interim chancellor for East<lb/>
Carolina will be named bv UNC<lb/>
President William Friday b Jan. 1<lb/>
board of trustees chairman Ashlev<lb/>
Futrell told a meeting oi the SGA<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
Futrell, who is also chairman oi<lb/>
the chancellor selection committee.<lb/>
said, "My understanding is that an<lb/>
interim chancellor will be named as<lb/>
of that time<lb/>
Neither Fridav nor ECU<lb/>
Chancellor Thomas Brewer could be<lb/>
reached to confirm Futrell's asser-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The trustees chairman ret used to<lb/>
speculate about who might be nam-<lb/>
ed as interim chancellor but did say<lb/>
the person would be from the<lb/>
university and would nol be a can-<lb/>
didate for the permanent<lb/>
chancellorship.<lb/>
"We have nothing to do with who<lb/>
he (Friday) will name He has talk d<lb/>
about several different people with<lb/>
me but as to the exact person, I can-<lb/>
not answet the question<lb/>
According to several sources,<lb/>
John Howell will be named as in-<lb/>
terim chancellor. Howell, a pro-<lb/>
fessor of political science, was a vice<lb/>
chancellor for academic affairs<lb/>
under Chancellor 1 eo Jenkins.<lb/>
t Monday's meeting, Futrell<lb/>
also commented on whether or no!<lb/>
he thought the new chancellor<lb/>
should be from North Carolina. "It<lb/>
is not a matter of committing<lb/>
ourselves to a geographical loca-<lb/>
tion he said. "It everything else<lb/>
wa equal and a man (was) from<lb/>
N.C and a man (was) from Ohio. I<lb/>
would choose the man from North<lb/>
v. arolina<lb/>
Futrell said he felt that the criteria<lb/>
the committee is using in its search<lb/>
should be made public<lb/>
"We won't get perfection he<lb/>
said, "but what we are going to try<lb/>
to do is not get somebodv with a<lb/>
grade ol 100, but if we can get<lb/>
See SGA, P?tte 3<lb/>
Newmans, TKE's Open Negotiations<lb/>
Bv PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
the<lb/>
c o<lb/>
rep<lb/>
1<lb/>
MaH Wnlrr<lb/>
ik in the tensions that have prevailed between<lb/>
Tau Kappa Epsilon social fraternity and the<lb/>
Newman Community came about last week tor<lb/>
ne in over a vear.<lb/>
, mee i between the two groups was demanded bv<lb/>
Rom inatholic campus minister of the Newman<lb/>
nmunit Sistei Helen Shondell, as a result of an act<lb/>
indalism bv a few Tkl members on the Newman<lb/>
unity's homecoming parade float. Those present<lb/>
ii i k I officers as well as the president and<lb/>
I the Catholic Newman Students Group,<lb/>
esen of the Fast Carolina Gay Community,<lb/>
,ple affiliated with the Newman House.<lb/>
meeting was designed to "clear the air said<lb/>
? Shondell. "1 feel the meeting went well and the<lb/>
.  their ears open to listen to what we had to<lb/>
led  atholic Newman Student President Cheryl<lb/>
Both groups left with a better understan-<lb/>
ach other she continued.<lb/>
"It was a verv productive meeting. 1 was very well<lb/>
enlightened bv it commented Jim Wagner, president<lb/>
of the TKE fraternity. "The big step was the two ot us<lb/>
meeting. We developed an understanding ot all the<lb/>
functions of the Newman House<lb/>
Recent problems developed as a result of the act ol<lb/>
vandalism to the Newman float. According to Sister<lb/>
Shondell some of the siens and frames from their float<lb/>
were torn down, ripped and burned on the front lawn ot<lb/>
the TKE house by members or visitors at lh Ikl-<lb/>
residence.<lb/>
"I didn't want to go outside said Sistei Shondell.<lb/>
"I saw a lot of drunk men and decided to call the<lb/>
police<lb/>
The incident was also reported to James Mallory,<lb/>
Associate Dean of Student 1 ife, who oversees the Inter<lb/>
Fraternity Council. He is presently pursuing a course ol<lb/>
action.<lb/>
"It was one of those things that happen. It was really<lb/>
unfortunate said Wagner "I hone i won't be i<lb/>
reflection on the whole fraternity, it was just a couple of<lb/>
people who got a little rowdy<lb/>
Problems between the two groups have existed<lb/>
primarilj since the Newman Community moved into the<lb/>
house next dooi to the Ikl's last vear. Ihe root ot the<lb/>
problem seems to be the bi-monthly meetings at the<lb/>
Newman house conducted bv the Fast Carolina Cay<lb/>
C ommunit) (ECGC). This fact has spread rumors that<lb/>
all activities of the Catholic Community are centered<lb/>
around the ECGC and that the) were in some way con<lb/>
doning homosexuality.<lb/>
"The purpose ol th Newman Community is to pro-<lb/>
vide a welcoming community where students can come<lb/>
to worship, receive counselling, form friendships, and<lb/>
be provided with support said Sister Shondell.<lb/>
"We're not condoning sexual acts. I'm not here to<lb/>
judge anybody ? I don't want to judge anybody she<lb/>
further noted.<lb/>
"Thev are two groups that are two different clubs and<lb/>
there is no reason to associate them as one group said<lb/>
She defended the rights of the ECGC to<lb/>
meet at the Newman House. "They're people loo. rhey<lb/>
have feelings too, jusl like you and me she continued.<lb/>
Alter introductions b) Sister Shondell the meeting<lb/>
proceeded orderly. ECGC representatives Mark .urn-<lb/>
bach and Blair Carr gave a brief history oi their<lb/>
organization.<lb/>
The group began three years ago as a response to a<lb/>
suicide letter from a gav student that appeared in The<lb/>
Fountainhead, then the East Carolina student<lb/>
newspaper. Ga students decided there was a n-ii for a<lb/>
gay support group and a counselling service. Zumbach<lb/>
said that he "didn't sec homosexuality as a perdominant<lb/>
factor in our lives. We're students. Sex as far as an<lb/>
orientation plays a .ery small role in who we are<lb/>
Carr mentioned the high suicide rate among gavs and<lb/>
the difficult) of being accepted bv a "straight society"<lb/>
as two reasons for the group's existence. "We're not<lb/>
here to convert anybody. I think we can all act in a ra-<lb/>
tional manner c an said<lb/>
See I KF's. Pane 3<lb/>
Dorm Fire<lb/>
Started By<lb/>
Lit Pompon<lb/>
B EMMA DAVIS<lb/>
Stall Wrilrr<lb/>
Greene Residence Hall was<lb/>
ed Thursday night when<lb/>
flan in a resident's cigarette<lb/>
tei ignited a pompon.<lb/>
Wendy Goes, a student living on<lb/>
.floor of the dormitory, ex-<lb/>
plain jd the cause oi the fire.<lb/>
However, lieutenant Michael<lb/>
Branch oi the Greenville Fire<lb/>
Department said, "the cause of the<lb/>
is undetermined It was out<lb/>
when we not here<lb/>
Branch and another fireman that<lb/>
responded to the alarm brought<lb/>
smoke ejectors to the room to<lb/>
alleviate the smoke. According to<lb/>
Branch, no one was allowed to enter<lb/>
the building until the smoke was<lb/>
gone.<lb/>
"Smoke rises and depletes the ox-<lb/>
ygen Branch explained.<lb/>
"Ihe evacuation of the building<lb/>
was poor said Charles E. Lawler,<lb/>
the security guard on duty.<lb/>
Several students stayed in the<lb/>
residence hall during the evacuation<lb/>
and most residents were slow in get-<lb/>
ting out, according to Lawler. He<lb/>
commented that students should<lb/>
realize the seriousness of such<lb/>
alarms.<lb/>
The onlv damage was to the mat-<lb/>
tress on which the pom-pom caught<lb/>
fire according to several people on<lb/>
the hall. The residents of the room,<lb/>
Karen McGill and Roseann Blun,<lb/>
refused to comment<lb/>
Awareness Of Economic<lb/>
Indicators Beneficial<lb/>
The Charlie DnnleU concert will begin nt 9 p.m. Nov. 20 .1 Minges Coliseum. Appro?imelv 3.600 .ickels had<lb/>
been sold for the concert at 5 p.m. Monday.<lb/>
Concert Possible Sellout<lb/>
The<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Opinions<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
Entertainment5<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
si?le Mnor<lb/>
Tickets sales for the Charlie<lb/>
Daniels Band concert on Nov. 20<lb/>
have been brisk and there is a<lb/>
possibility of an advance sellout for<lb/>
the concert, according to Jerry<lb/>
Dilsaver, Student Union Major At-<lb/>
tractions Chairperson.<lb/>
Dilsaver said that about 3600<lb/>
tickets had been sold by 5 p.m.<lb/>
Monday, and of that number about<lb/>
2100 had been sold to students,<lb/>
which was unusually high for stu-<lb/>
dent ticket sales. He said that there<lb/>
had been "more student tickets than<lb/>
public so farSecurity has been<lb/>
tightened for the concert "because<lb/>
of the basic nature of the crowd"<lb/>
according to Dilsaver. Requests<lb/>
from the bands organization have<lb/>
also increased security. Security is<lb/>
being handled by Carolina Protec-<lb/>
tion Services, according to Dilsaver.<lb/>
Therre will be no chairs on the<lb/>
floor of the coliseum for the con-<lb/>
cert, but bleachers will be pulled out<lb/>
and balcony seating will be<lb/>
available.<lb/>
Apple Records in Greenville was<lb/>
the first outlet to sell out their supp-<lb/>
ly of tickets. They bave been provid-<lb/>
ed with additional tickets.<lb/>
The band plays from a variety ol<lb/>
musical types from rock to country<lb/>
and is usually known as a southern<lb/>
rock band. However Daniels does<lb/>
not agree with the labels. In an arti-<lb/>
cle in Newsweek Daniels was quoted<lb/>
as saying, "We don't bother with<lb/>
trends or fads. Our band represents<lb/>
a certain amount of something in a<lb/>
world that changes everyday ?<lb/>
oops I sound like John<lb/>
Chancellor<lb/>
"Labels are restricting. I don't<lb/>
see why everything has to be<lb/>
pigeonholed, categorized, and com-<lb/>
puterized. I don't think about what<lb/>
kind oi music we play. 1 think about<lb/>
what quality of music we play. Our<lb/>
music has definitely got some coun-<lb/>
try influence on it, but it's definitely<lb/>
not what's known as traditional<lb/>
country music. We just play the<lb/>
music and let other people put titles<lb/>
on it. Some reviewers from up that<lb/>
way called it 'Southern twang, Nor-<lb/>
thern bang and city gang 1 thought<lb/>
that was prettv apt. But if people<lb/>
want to call me a hillbilly, hell,<lb/>
that's all right, if they want to call<lb/>
me a rocknroller I don't care<lb/>
about that, either. It doesn't make<lb/>
no difference Daniels said in an<lb/>
interview with Stereo Review.<lb/>
Tickets for the concert are on sale<lb/>
at the Central Ticket Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall and at local ticket<lb/>
outlets. Tickets are $7 for students<lb/>
in advance and $9 for non-students<lb/>
and at the door.<lb/>
By MIKE HUGHES<lb/>
SUfl Vnler<lb/>
The "ooh's" and "ahh's" mav<lb/>
run rampant after a person leads<lb/>
news about fluctuating unemplov<lb/>
ment rates, changes in the Gross Na<lb/>
tional Product (GNP) or Consumer<lb/>
Price Index (CPI) revisions, but<lb/>
how many people know what these<lb/>
terms ? these economic indicators<lb/>
? mean.<lb/>
For instance, the U.S. Depart-<lb/>
ment of Labor issued a report last<lb/>
month stating that the nation's<lb/>
jobless rate had risen three-tenths ol<lb/>
a percent to 7.5 percent during<lb/>
September.<lb/>
Many leading economists, in-<lb/>
cluding Monte J. Gordon and Jack<lb/>
M. Pompan, agree that these<lb/>
statistics are generally quite ac-<lb/>
curate, but what good is accuracy<lb/>
without definative meaning?<lb/>
In order to understand the<lb/>
unemployment percentages and<lb/>
rates, Americans should know that<lb/>
the figures issued monthly by the<lb/>
Bureau of Labor Statistics (BIS) are<lb/>
not intended to be reflective oi the<lb/>
total United States population.<lb/>
The rate of unemployment<lb/>
represents the number of jobless<lb/>
people who are actively in the work<lb/>
force, according to the Census<lb/>
Bureau, which compiles much of the<lb/>
data used by the BLS.<lb/>
The term "work force used in<lb/>
this context, refers to persons ac-<lb/>
tively seeking employment and<lb/>
those who are actively in the work<lb/>
force, including the self-employed.<lb/>
For the purposes of its unemploy-<lb/>
ment surveys, the Census Bureau ex<lb/>
eludes U.S. armed forces personnel<lb/>
from the totals.<lb/>
Each month, Census Bureau<lb/>
workers interview about 50.000<lb/>
households which the bureau deems<lb/>
reflective of the entire U.S. work<lb/>
force. The interviewers ask ques-<lb/>
tions of the household members to<lb/>
determine their working histories<lb/>
for the preceeding 30 days. The<lb/>
answers to these questions are the<lb/>
basis for determining work force<lb/>
size, unemployment rate and other<lb/>
labor statistics.<lb/>
?Wording to Pompan. the Cen-<lb/>
sus Bureau's statistical sampling<lb/>
method achieves a high degree oi ac-<lb/>
curacy on the national level but is<lb/>
much less accurate in determining<lb/>
jobless rates in cities and smaller<lb/>
measuring units.<lb/>
Another economic indicator, the<lb/>
GNP, measures the nation's rate of<lb/>
economic activity. According to the<lb/>
I abor Department, the GNP is in-<lb/>
tended to measure the market value<lb/>
of all the goods and services produc-<lb/>
ed in the United States.<lb/>
Ihe GNP is not an attempt to<lb/>
measure the quality of life or the<lb/>
standard oi living in the United<lb/>
States, the 1 abor Department says.<lb/>
Ihe GNP is mere.) a general<lb/>
economic summary of U.S. produc-<lb/>
tion of goods and seivices and is<lb/>
measured in dollars ? lots ot<lb/>
dollars.<lb/>
For example, the GNP tor PttO<lb/>
was more than $2.5 trillion, accor-<lb/>
ding to a Commerce Department<lb/>
report.<lb/>
1 ike many Americans today, 'he<lb/>
CPI, prepared monthly by the<lb/>
Department of labor, is concerned<lb/>
with inflation. To calculate this in-<lb/>
dex, the Labor Department prices a<lb/>
theoretical market basket of goods<lb/>
and services each month at locations<lb/>
around the country.<lb/>
These costs are compared to<lb/>
prices paid for the same items in the<lb/>
past with regard to changes in the<lb/>
average American worker's wages<lb/>
and other factors.<lb/>
The CPI figures are usually ac-<lb/>
companied by a percent-change<lb/>
listing. This represents the rate of<lb/>
inflation since the previous year, a<lb/>
figure calculated by the BLS.<lb/>
With President Reagan's new<lb/>
economic program just getting<lb/>
under way, many Americans will be<lb/>
greatly affected by these and other<lb/>
economic indicators. Therefore,<lb/>
several economists agree that an<lb/>
awareness of the economy and of<lb/>
economic terminology may prove<lb/>
beneficial in the near future.<lb/>
t<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057441_0002"/><lb/>
THt EAST C AROl INIAN<lb/>
NOMMBLK 17, 1981<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
it you or your organization<lb/>
would like to have an item printed<lb/>
in the announcements column<lb/>
please send the announcement ias<lb/>
Or et as possiOle' typed and<lb/>
couple spaced 'o The East Carol<lb/>
nan in care ot the news editor<lb/>
There is ro charge tor a<lb/>
nouncements but space s often<lb/>
I "tea<lb/>
The deadl'ne tor announcement<lb/>
areSpm Friday tor the Tuesdsa.<lb/>
paper anct S p m Tuesday tor trte<lb/>
I isdasy paper<lb/>
Tne space is ava lable to a'i<lb/>
ipus organizations anct depart<lb/>
PTC<lb/>
rue Greenv lie Pi b  wspof<lb/>
   ? s onmitl mee' n fh?<lb/>
d  Doom ?' r poblK<lb/>
AED<lb/>
? ? e - a be ?-? mei?no H 'r<lb/>
. Movem<lb/>
P.E. MAJORS<lb/>
All students who plan 'o tie. iare<lb/>
physical education as a maid dur<lb/>
.ng the spring semester or who n<lb/>
tend to student teach during the<lb/>
spring semes'er shou'd report to<lb/>
M.nges Coliseum at 10 a m on<lb/>
Wednesclav Dec 9 t-r a motor anci<lb/>
physical fitness tes' Satis! ?<lb/>
performance on tn.s tes' 1 'i<lb/>
quired as a prerequ s e ? ?<lb/>
tioal admittance Ic 'he p<lb/>
education maior program Vote<lb/>
detailed informal on i overing the<lb/>
test is ava.lab'e by cali.ng<lb/>
757 6442<lb/>
SIGMA THETA TAU<lb/>
The Fast Carolinian<lb/>
Published ever? Tuesoa? and<lb/>
Th0rsoav during 'he acade (<lb/>
yeat and every Ateonesday I '<lb/>
no, "ie summer<lb/>
operated and pul ? ' ' anc<lb/>
: . ????? students H E asi<lb/>
-? -s.ty<lb/>
Subscription Rate 110 yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian oltices<lb/>
are located in the Old South<lb/>
Buiidinq on the campus of ECU<lb/>
Greenville H C<lb/>
POSTMASTEI! I ? ' ? ?<lb/>
e nanges to The East ?? i"<lb/>
0 J South B ? '?- Ei Green<lb/>
. ? V. JJ4<lb/>
Telephone til 6J?6 636? 6 30i?<lb/>
Application to mail at second<lb/>
class postage rates is pending at<lb/>
Greenville North Carolina<lb/>
ALPHA KAPPA ALPHA<lb/>
Alpha kappa Alpha sorority<lb/>
warmlyinvites you to their annual<lb/>
Student of the year contest<lb/>
Tuesday November 17th at 7 00<lb/>
p m in MenoenhaM Auditorium<lb/>
Please lO.n us tor an evening of en<lb/>
,o,ment 'alent and fashion A<lb/>
a'Sh p will be awarded to the<lb/>
ties' 'a'ent<lb/>
ve would also like to encourage<lb/>
more students and non Greeks to<lb/>
share 'her ideas at the SOULS<lb/>
meetings every tirst and third<lb/>
Thursday at 7 00 p m<lb/>
Many thanks to all the students<lb/>
tor 'heir participation at the ALL<lb/>
(.reek Homecoming Biockshow<lb/>
Solidarity is 'he key to success<lb/>
UTILITY BILLS<lb/>
Greenville residents who are<lb/>
concerned about utility bills and<lb/>
what can be done to conserve<lb/>
ener an urqed to a'tend the<lb/>
general meet.nq Tuesday 8 p m of<lb/>
 , , ague rl Women voters<lb/>
i- ? Presbyterian Church Four<lb/>
 j  . ? ? a too ?<lb/>
H ? I Keep Ui lit Bins m<lb/>
Bounds rioo implementing Green<lb/>
t net gy Plan<lb/>
SAM<lb/>
The Shi<lb/>
of Advancement of<lb/>
. rh American<lb/>
As.<lb/>
w<lb/>
 Nov  a' 4 p m in<lb/>
u i ? a . 11 be T E<lb/>
Viai ' anagei ' saiar ied<lb/>
? . . menl al P irltngton in<lb/>
tries ' Fbe topic will be<lb/>
selection and inter<lb/>
.ipwmg techn.ques w.th Burl<lb/>
'ndus'ries Ah persons are<lb/>
a ? . ome 'o attend<lb/>
PROSE CONTEST<lb/>
The Rebel. Jeffrey s Wine and<lb/>
Beer Co . and The Attic are spon<lb/>
s-ino, a Prose Contest Fiction.<lb/>
Drama, Mystery Typedentr.es<lb/>
may be submitted to the Media<lb/>
Board or Rebel offices by Nov 30<lb/>
Cash prues of S175 175 M5 and<lb/>
JI0 First second, third and two<lb/>
honoranans respectively will be<lb/>
awarded before Christmas<lb/>
LIBRARY TRUSTEES<lb/>
The next regularly scheduled<lb/>
meeting of the Sheppard<lb/>
Memorial Library Board of<lb/>
Trustees will be held at 1 p m<lb/>
Thursday, Nov 19. in the Con<lb/>
terence Room ot the Mam<lb/>
Library<lb/>
ONA<lb/>
The Organijation tor Native<lb/>
Americans will be having a dinner<lb/>
meeting (tonight) Nov 17 at the<lb/>
Western Smlin It you plan to go<lb/>
meet us m the lobby of Mendenha'l<lb/>
at S p m For any additional infor<lb/>
mation call 7S8 9473 or 7S8 9597<lb/>
Evreyone is welcome to attend<lb/>
MINORITY LAW<lb/>
The UNC Law School invites<lb/>
undergraduate minority students<lb/>
to participate in a Law School In<lb/>
formation Day on Nov H) '981<lb/>
the day long comlerence will be<lb/>
held at the UNC Law School in<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/>
YHDL<lb/>
The Young HOme Designer's<lb/>
League will meet on November 17<lb/>
Tuesday at 5 00 All members are<lb/>
urged to attend The meeting will<lb/>
be held at Belk Tyler in the con<lb/>
terence room near the customer<lb/>
service desk (Carolina East Mali'<lb/>
We will be meeting with Vivian<lb/>
Strickland interior Designer at<lb/>
Belks<lb/>
MEN WANTED!<lb/>
The ECU Men's Glee Club scur<lb/>
rently recruiting men for the Spr<lb/>
ing Semester The Glee Club will<lb/>
be touring North Carolina in<lb/>
January with a numbet of other<lb/>
appearances sche4duled<lb/>
throughout the semesAer if you<lb/>
would like .o iom this fine chorus,<lb/>
or only wish to inquire about<lb/>
future membership piease contact<lb/>
Ed Glenn. Director at the School of<lb/>
Mustc. 757 6331 or at 752 6195 The<lb/>
Men's Glee Club is open to all men<lb/>
campuswtde and offers one hour<lb/>
credit per semester The Glee<lb/>
Club rehearses at I? 00 M W F<lb/>
Anyone interested in joining the<lb/>
Glee Club next semes'er should<lb/>
contact Mr Glenn as soon as<lb/>
possible m order to be eligible for<lb/>
the Spring Tour<lb/>
BOOK COVERS<lb/>
The Circle K Club will be selling<lb/>
phone book covers for only $3 in<lb/>
front of the book store Tuesday<lb/>
from 9 a m to 3 p m All proceeds<lb/>
will go 'o the Donny Lassiter fund<lb/>
For more information call<lb/>
7S8 5966 Great Christmas pre<lb/>
sent'<lb/>
LECTURE<lb/>
Or Vincent Mikkelson and Dr<lb/>
Patricia Terrell from the ECU<lb/>
School of Education will be the<lb/>
speakers at the Library Science<lb/>
Lecture which will be held on<lb/>
Wednesday Nov 18 The program<lb/>
topic will be What Reading<lb/>
Research Says to Librarians ' and<lb/>
will focus on the implications<lb/>
reading research has tor school,<lb/>
public and academic librarians<lb/>
The lecture win begin at 6 30<lb/>
p m m room 221 of the Depart<lb/>
ment of Library Soemce. East<lb/>
Wing ot Joyner Library A social<lb/>
hour will follow the lecture All in<lb/>
terested persons are invited to at<lb/>
tend<lb/>
The Library Science Lecture<lb/>
Series is being sponsored Omtly<lb/>
by the ECU Department ot<lb/>
Library Scieince, the Pitt<lb/>
Greenville Media Society and the<lb/>
ECU Library Science Alumni<lb/>
Association Dr Carol J Veitch is<lb/>
program director lor the lecture<lb/>
series Additional information on<lb/>
this lecture and the remaining lee<lb/>
tues m the series may be obtained<lb/>
by calling the Department of<lb/>
Library Science at 757 6621<lb/>
SIGMA TAU DELTA<lb/>
Sigma Tau Delta National<lb/>
English Honor Society will meet at<lb/>
7 30 p m m the Mendenhall Cot<lb/>
feehouse on Thursday Nov 19<lb/>
There will be ar election of 'he<lb/>
society s 1982 cfficers. and an<lb/>
Honors Seminar discussion led by<lb/>
Dr Marie Farr and Dr Norman<lb/>
Rosenteid Refreshments will be<lb/>
served<lb/>
HRC<lb/>
The Greenville Human Rela<lb/>
tions Council will meet Tuesday<lb/>
Nov 17 a 7 p m in the first floor<lb/>
conference room of O'y Hail a'<lb/>
the corner of Fifth and<lb/>
Washington Streets<lb/>
UGLY MAN<lb/>
The 1981 winner of the Alpha<lb/>
Om.cron Pi First Annual Ugliest<lb/>
Man on Campus goes'o the Kap<lb/>
pa Delta soror'y wth the'<lb/>
representative Horrible Horn<lb/>
Hortance Second place ROfC<lb/>
with Zits Scarp.mple. 3rd<lb/>
place Delta Zeta sorority with<lb/>
Grog and 4th place Alpha x<lb/>
Delta with ' Wally Kjudd<lb/>
All contestants will receive con<lb/>
solation pries and a personal<lb/>
copy of their photograph Thanks<lb/>
to all who participated and con<lb/>
tr.buted to Arthr,t.s Rersearch<lb/>
ECGC BAKE OFF<lb/>
Yes were eating again1 Th.s<lb/>
time its a Ml course meal' In<lb/>
keeping with 'he festwe hoi.flair.<lb/>
ECGC w.H be having meir annual<lb/>
Thanksg.v.ng dinner Turker Will<lb/>
be prov del yet a SI donation is e<lb/>
quested To make the meal com<lb/>
plete or.no tour favorite s<lb/>
Along with 'he six. .al theme of 'he<lb/>
even.no, an informal discuss<lb/>
concern rvg Itw eie lion ot "t'?<lb/>
w.n be held So Come out ?<lb/>
lOy good compan, and rf ' <lb/>
meal Nov 24. 7 10 P m a' the<lb/>
Newman CcnH f<lb/>
PHI BETA LAMBDA<lb/>
The Onrticron Chapter ot Pr<lb/>
Beta Lambda will hold il<lb/>
meeting on Wednesday NOV 18 a'<lb/>
4pm m Rawi 130 important up<lb/>
. m.ng -veo' will Ot I<lb/>
N.C.Sl.<lb/>
The MOTtl<lb/>
Legislature <lb/>
MOV 17 in room Mer-<lb/>
er and intere<lb/>
pease a"end<lb/>
SANTA CLAUS<lb/>
?,??<lb/>
<lb/>
7522 8 ?<lb/>
SURF CLUB<lb/>
V ? ?<lb/>
.<lb/>
All rr .<lb/>
T<lb/>
Oxfam Sponsors Fast<lb/>
B PATRICK<lb/>
O'NEILL<lb/>
"?till Virile,<lb/>
he East Cartima<lb/>
Hunger Coalition is<lb/>
Tonsoring a fasion<lb/>
. ampus next week.The<lb/>
fasi in pan ot an inter-<lb/>
n.inonal program<lb/>
?;?an zed b 0fam<lb/>
merica tilled 'Fasi<lb/>
1 .i orld Harvesi <lb/>
f acli car onthe<lb/>
1h u r s d a b e; oi e<lb/>
Ilankseiving Oxtam<lb/>
asks people to go<lb/>
without food for 30<lb/>
irs, 01 skip a meal or<lb/>
? ? dii. donate the<lb/>
?ne t hex uould have<lb/>
spent on food to Ox-<lb/>
fam's various sell tielp<lb/>
projects in developing<lb/>
countries<lb/>
I he Oxfam hand<lb/>
book states thai In<lb/>
fasting a person can<lb/>
demonstrate a per-<lb/>
sonal willingness to ie-<lb/>
pond to the needs ot<lb/>
the poorer people . . .<lb/>
u share the hunger<lb/>
al a quarter of the<lb/>
global famih lives ith<lb/>
 in Mid ear out<lb/>
1 he handbook also<lb/>
states that even one<lb/>
person can make a dif-<lb/>
ference and urges the<lb/>
public to "support<lb/>
practical protects<lb/>
Hunger Coalition<lb/>
member Theresa Dulski<lb/>
said the fast will "help<lb/>
raise the consciousness<lb/>
of the participants<lb/>
because you can feel<lb/>
for thai one da how<lb/>
people are living then<lb/>
iies all the lime<lb/>
Dulski .ailed the fasi a<lb/>
"sell help project<lb/>
Oxfam helps coun-<lb/>
tries help themselves<lb/>
she continued. "The<lb/>
mone we gie goes fot<lb/>
projects thai aid in<lb/>
food production, ir-<lb/>
rigation, farming<lb/>
techniques and other<lb/>
long-range permanent<lb/>
solutions<lb/>
Sue I auv et. anothei<lb/>
alition member, said<lb/>
she hoped "a loi ot<lb/>
people participate in<lb/>
the fast because it's a<lb/>
good cause<lb/>
"It's been a success<lb/>
in the past and the<lb/>
Hungeroaiition is<lb/>
hoping tot a good<lb/>
response from students<lb/>
u ho would like to help<lb/>
the poor Dulski add<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
All i n t e rested<lb/>
students can sign up at<lb/>
various tables sei up on<lb/>
.ampus next Tuesday,<lb/>
Wednesday and Thurs-<lb/>
day or come to the<lb/>
Hungei Coalition's<lb/>
weekly meetings on<lb/>
Thursday nights. The<lb/>
group can be reached<lb/>
b calling 2-4216<lb/>
Gi Camavfla) Fatiques And<lb/>
Shirts. Sleeping t??i<lb/>
Backpacks Campm Equip<lb/>
??ant. StMt Toa?J Shoe. Dunes<lb/>
And Over 700 Different New And<lb/>
Used Items. Cowboy Boots<lb/>
"rmy-navy<lb/>
IS0I S. Evans<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
Tau Criapter ot Phi Sigma Pi Na<lb/>
??onal Honor Fraternity will mee'<lb/>
Jttpm Wednesday in 133 Aus'in<lb/>
KYF<lb/>
The K.nqs Youtn Fellowship<lb/>
will hold a mee'mg on Nov IV in<lb/>
Room 28 in the Mendenhall S'u<lb/>
dent Center Irom 8 10 p m The<lb/>
topics ot our discussion will in<lb/>
. lude 'he coming ot our Lord Jesus<lb/>
Chnst Everyone is invited and<lb/>
refreshments will be served a' the<lb/>
end ot 'he mee'mg<lb/>
ITALIAN NITE<lb/>
LASAGNA<lb/>
AND<lb/>
SPAGHETT<lb/>
ABORTIONS 1ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT<lb/>
1 24 week terminations<lb/>
Appt's. Made 7 Days<lb/>
CALL TOLL FREE<lb/>
1 800 321 0575<lb/>
D<lb/>
Plus Garlic Bread CQQ<lb/>
" WITH<lb/>
A ALL<lb/>
r<lb/>
?? Quality Repair<lb/>
SAAD'S<lb/>
SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
113 Grande Ave<lb/>
758 1228<lb/>
RIGGAN<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
TWODOORSFIOM<lb/>
COX FLORIST<lb/>
111 W 4tk St<lb/>
SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
VERY BEST<lb/>
758-0204<lb/>
EVERY WEDS.<lb/>
Current undergrade ?<lb/>
medical students may<lb/>
compete tor several hundred<lb/>
Ar Fore scholarship These<lb/>
scholarships art to be award<lb/>
ed to students accepted into<lb/>
medical schoois as ?restmen<lb/>
o, at the beginning o? their<lb/>
sopnmore year The scholar<lb/>
sh.p provdes tor tuition<lb/>
oooks. iao trees and equip<lb/>
ment plus a S530 monthly<lb/>
allowance investigate this<lb/>
tmancai alternative to the<lb/>
h,gh cost ot medical educa<lb/>
tion Contact<lb/>
U S A F HEALTH<lb/>
PROFESSIONS<lb/>
RECRUITING<lb/>
SUITE OL I. 1100 NAVAMO OR.<lb/>
RALEIGH. NC 1'<lb/>
PHONE COLLECT (?"W-4I<lb/>
LSAT ? MCAT ? GRE<lb/>
GRE PSYCH ? GRE BIO ? MAT<lb/>
GMAT- DAT- OCAT ? PCAT<lb/>
VAT'SAT.ACT-CPA-TOEFl<lb/>
MSKP ? NAT L MED BDS<lb/>
ECFMG ? FLEX ? VQE<lb/>
NDB ? NPB I ? NLE<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
432 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Veranda Room<lb/>
Happy Hour - Fri. 4 30-7.00<lb/>
Free Beef Ribs &amp; Taccs<lb/>
Happy Hour every day!<lb/>
Arbor Room Restaurant<lb/>
Special every Sat. Night<lb/>
All (heprime rib &amp; burgundy wine<lb/>
you can eat &amp; drink for only<lb/>
$9.95<lb/>
Both located at<lb/>
The Ramada Inn ? 264 By-Pass<lb/>
l<lb/>
Sti<lb/>
Di'<lb/>
SsmSimM<lb/>
EDUCATIONAL CENTER<lb/>
Test Preparation Specialists<lb/>
Smce !93?<lb/>
fo' information "ease Can<lb/>
? 919-489-8720<lb/>
II'<lb/>
Famous<lb/>
Salad Bar<lb/>
WESTERN SIZZLIN'<lb/>
MONDAY -<lb/>
CHOPPED STEAK<lb/>
$<lb/>
1.99<lb/>
TUESDAY -<lb/>
BEEF TIPS<lb/>
n.99<lb/>
THURSDAY -<lb/>
STEAK SANDWICH<lb/>
$1.69<lb/>
WEDNESDAY -<lb/>
CUBED STEAK.<lb/>
n.89<lb/>
FRIDAY -<lb/>
U.S.D.A. RIB EYE<lb/>
$3.79<lb/>
SATURDAY -<lb/>
BARBEQUE RIBS<lb/>
$2.99<lb/>
? ? ? ?<lb/>
Free<lb/>
Tea<lb/>
with<lb/>
ECU ID.<lb/>
SUNDAY -<lb/>
STEAK ON A STICK<lb/>
M.99<lb/>
All Meals are<lb/>
complete Including<lb/>
Baked Potato or<lb/>
French Fries &amp;<lb/>
Texas Toast<lb/>
Take Out Service<lb/>
203 E 10th St<lb/>
7S0 J7IJ<lb/>
JM Bypass- 75 0040<lb/>
Hours n am top m<lb/>
Mon. Thurt.<lb/>
lOa.m It p m Fri Sun.<lb/>
m<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
in<lb/>
?<lb/>
T<lb/>
<pb facs="00057441_0003"/><lb/>
A<lb/>
TKE's Negotiate<lb/>
Continued rom<lb/>
Pace 1<lb/>
Sistei Shondell<lb/>
i nt ed out t hat<lb/>
"sexual orientation i<lb/>
ablished between the<lb/>
cs of three and six<lb/>
years It's not sexual<lb/>
preference 1 nevei had<lb/>
a choice about m h'v<lb/>
ualit<lb/>
I Kl Vice President<lb/>
Mike Dinga spoke ol<lb/>
his own Catholic upbi<lb/>
$ing and Ins home<lb/>
 n church's apparent<lb/>
toleranee<lb/>
iosexualit  1 hese<lb/>
- nds ol beliefs are ver<lb/>
deep-rooted in man<lb/>
?pie he a<lb/>
"W e're asking you<lb/>
tan e e o u r<lb/>
behavioi but not youi<lb/>
opinions added John<lb/>
Gardnei. an I CU ad<lb/>
ministratoi in the Di<lb/>
sion ot Student I ife<lb/>
"We're talking about<lb/>
respect foi one<lb/>
another's individual<lb/>
i ights and freedoms<lb/>
Muatclli noted thai<lb/>
mam t atholics have<lb/>
stopped worshipping at<lb/>
the Newman House<lb/>
because of the in-<lb/>
timidation they are sub<lb/>
iected to by<lb/>
"intolerant students<lb/>
who oppose the I . -t-<lb/>
"l wish the Catholics<lb/>
who don't come to<lb/>
Newman would stop<lb/>
and think about what<lb/>
they're basing their<lb/>
reasons on. Would you<lb/>
stop coming to youi<lb/>
classes oi this school<lb/>
because there are gays<lb/>
here? No' It's not tan<lb/>
that we have to sui-<lb/>
te!  Muzzarelli said.<lb/>
Sister Shondell stated<lb/>
hei desire "to make<lb/>
peace with the HCE's.<lb/>
 e'd like to go beyond<lb/>
ignoi ing each other<lb/>
Wagnei said he felt<lb/>
hopeful that the situa<lb/>
tion could continue to<lb/>
improve when the new<lb/>
IKl officers begin<lb/>
theii terms later this<lb/>
month "1 hope it con<lb/>
linues the new of-<lb/>
ficers vant to keep the<lb/>
channels of com-<lb/>
munication open he<lb/>
noted. " I he other IKl<lb/>
brothers reacted very<lb/>
well. They all agreed il<lb/>
has to stop<lb/>
"The next move is<lb/>
their move said Sister<lb/>
Shondei. "I still<lb/>
haven't received an<lb/>
apology<lb/>
Ciardner also asked<lb/>
the IKl's tor further<lb/>
efforts, "not itist talk"<lb/>
at rectifying the pro-<lb/>
blems. "I want to see<lb/>
some commitment on<lb/>
your part to bring us<lb/>
together he noted.<lb/>
Contingency plans<lb/>
tor further dialogue<lb/>
were discussed alter<lb/>
this first step had been<lb/>
taken to resolve this<lb/>
lone struggle.<lb/>
i in I si i -k U IM VN<lb/>
SGA Hosts Futrell<lb/>
Continued From<lb/>
Page ?<lb/>
somebody with a grade<lb/>
of 88 we will I eel that<lb/>
we hae succeeded in<lb/>
getting the finest p?ss'<lb/>
hie person that we<lb/>
could possibly get as a<lb/>
chancellor<lb/>
Futrell said the com<lb/>
nnttee had not sel a<lb/>
date by which a new<lb/>
chancellor must In-<lb/>
chosen but added that<lb/>
applications must be<lb/>
Dec. Is. "We have just<lb/>
started to receive ap<lb/>
plications he added<lb/>
"We have had<lb/>
something like 50<lb/>
nominations<lb/>
"My guess is that we<lb/>
will have a chancelloi<lb/>
chosen sometime in the<lb/>
latter part ot pnl I<lb/>
am basing it on how<lb/>
long it took us before. 1<lb/>
believe that the last ot<lb/>
April will be a good<lb/>
date<lb/>
I he chairman was<lb/>
Recording uriist <lb/>
A like Williams will ap s<lb/>
pear ai Room 244 <lb/>
Yfendenhall at S p.m. <lb/>
Nov. 22. Admission ;s j<lb/>
free. <lb/>
111U11 Vl IHI! 11 11U Vl 1111111111111M1111M M M11M11J111M11M111 n 11111111M M11 t M i 11111 ni<lb/>
I CASH PAID FOR<lb/>
DIAMONDS AND GOLD<lb/>
also asked wh only represi<lb/>
one student had been ev,<lb/>
appointed to the ,eai h are dedicated to find<lb/>
committee a chancell<lb/>
" I he sole reason foi l!l students<lb/>
the existence of hCl<lb/>
you aend people lik v ' V<lb/>
you. students. We fell Lcsiei N<lb/>
thai unde. the rules<lb/>
having the president ol<lb/>
the student body<lb/>
represent the students<lb/>
directly and present a<lb/>
concert<lb/>
have would give<lb/>
students adequate i<lb/>
Defense Policies Cause Scrutiny<lb/>
FLOYD G.<lb/>
ROBINSON<lb/>
JEWELERS<lb/>
Mil<lb/>
'<lb/>
tain them (in<lb/>
mihtat v).<lb/>
the<lb/>
i,<lb/>
IC aCiCie<lb/>
Felkei said he h<lb/>
bilateral agreement<lb/>
can be reached<lb/>
number of nui<lb/>
a w a i e<lb/>
cei ns<lb/>
then con- time, we ought to be<lb/>
encouraging the na-<lb/>
only make us more in- <lb/>
secure in every way <lb/>
He called on students <lb/>
,11 ?r v i.t he tions of Western<lb/>
I elker saia tu in "form your opinions<lb/>
thought there would be Europe to begin to plan iu<lb/>
an increased arms race, tor then own defense,<lb/>
"In the final analvsis, he said.<lb/>
no weapons system will I elker feels thai<lb/>
,<lb/>
?<lb/>
t h e<lb/>
a<lb/>
missiles in Europe. It ??J nLToTwam<lb/>
such action is not said, suggesting the onger need o, .van,<lb/>
: en. 1 elker .eels elimination of poverty "tag brother polices<lb/>
Western cood and the eradication o. such as NATO. He also<lb/>
disparities in wealth as sees a slight weakening<lb/>
insurers to security, of Soviet control in the<lb/>
Felkei also stressed Eastern European bloc.<lb/>
pohces to increase the "It's an opportune<lb/>
levels ol contact bet- time to bring about<lb/>
ween the last and change he said. "A<lb/>
Wesi "A! the same majoi arms race can<lb/>
es t ern<lb/>
lavior" in the<lb/>
S i e t s.<lb/>
;ves<lb/>
!<lb/>
think<lb/>
moved in<lb/>
atory mannei<lb/>
could to the<lb/>
now . 1 hese college<lb/>
years are the seed times<lb/>
of life and unless oU<lb/>
plant well, you won't<lb/>
have a harvest of high<lb/>
yield Felkei added<lb/>
that s o m e coo 1 -<lb/>
Leaded, concerned and<lb/>
intelligent involvement<lb/>
m issues" is needed to<lb/>
"confront policy<lb/>
makers with the tacts<lb/>
dnd prov ide alternative<lb/>
points of v lew <lb/>
407 EVANS MALL<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE <lb/>
 MIKE ROBINSON <lb/>
 VALERIE HARRIS<lb/>
 BUSINESS (919)758-2452 <lb/>
1 INDEPENDENT !<lb/>
I JEWELERS <lb/>
tTiiiiiittiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiimimiiii'ii11111"11111111111111111"1<lb/>
?oeaches<lb/>
'PROUDLY PRESENTS<lb/>
THE ROCK AND ROLL<lb/>
OF<lb/>
'A,<lb/>
,j0 mm<lb/>
<lb/>
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1981<lb/>
.COLLEGE.<lb/>
oriLLU NlTE<lb/>
THE GREENVILLE SQUAKb<lb/>
SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
a western<lb/>
"He can talk<lb/>
ui cone i<lb/>
equences<lb/>
wai i and<lb/>
iniption of the<lb/>
SAI 1 talks. He can al<lb/>
at thai he is<lb/>
ccc<lb/>
OAA<lb/>
GRR<lb/>
G E<lb/>
AUTO SERVICE SPECIALS<lb/>
NEW &amp; USED<lb/>
Retraad Tires<lb/>
S7.00 &amp; UP<lb/>
-ft to<lb/>
ClM-S<lb/>
s<lb/>
SUN NOV. 22<lb/>
Doors Open 7:15 to 8:00 P.M. for Advance Tickets<lb/>
ADVANCE TICKETS $5.00<lb/>
TICKETS AT THESE LOCATIONS:<lb/>
WESTERN PI ! AM IRE. APPLE KM ORDS AND THE AKi .1 INA OPRY H ?JSE<lb/>
FOR MOKE INFORMATION CALL 758-3943<lb/>
I GREENVILLE M ? HI AK( (UNA<lb/>
"CONSIDER<lb/>
US<lb/>
YOUR<lb/>
CARS'<lb/>
HOME<lb/>
AWAY<lb/>
FROM<lb/>
HOME"<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
8:00 A.M. 1 00 P.M.<lb/>
OPEN MON.FRI.<lb/>
8:00 A.M. 5:30 P.M.<lb/>
Coupon- ctLTE'LU '<lb/>
$5.50<lb/>
XnAv? v ? Jr<lb/>
"?coopoh"<lb/>
"? 1<lb/>
?<lb/>
NATE <lb/>
$3V95<lb/>
'coopom-<lb/>
4cvnder r<lb/>
s29.95 i<lb/>
 h and 8 cyin <lb/>
All size<lb/>
tires<lb/>
available<lb/>
master charge<lb/>
VISA<lb/>
OFFICIAL NORTH CAROLINA STATE INSPECTION STATION<lb/>
WE SERVICE NATIONAL ACCOUNTS<lb/>
ISFGoodrich Coggins Cor Care<lb/>
756-5244<lb/>
320 West Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
IS YOUR CAR READY FOR<lb/>
THAT BIG TRIP HOME?<lb/>
WE CAN GET YOU THERE!<lb/>
ATTIC<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/>
1<lb/>
teto8'<lb/>
TUES. - WZZA SPECIAL $199<lb/>
LADIES' NITE WJ.J. MILLER<lb/>
WED - SALADBARSPEC.52.15<lb/>
THURS - AFTERNOON<lb/>
DELIGHT 4-7 WJ.J. MILLER<lb/>
SPAGHETTI SPEC.ALucANS2A49<lb/>
FRI - AFTERNOON DELIGHT<lb/>
4-7 WAL BRIGGS<lb/>
SAT - EVENING DELIGHT<lb/>
8 10 WAL BRIGGS<lb/>
SUN &amp; MON COUNTRY<lb/>
COOKING SPEC<lb/>
? AU DINNER SttCIAli<lb/>
ARE FROM 5PM TIL9PM<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
lEW WAVE NITE<lb/>
WITH ALLAN<lb/>
DIES' NITE<lb/>
JLIES PLUS BAND<lb/>
NEW WAVE <lb/>
SENSATION<lb/>
TREVA SPONTAINE<lb/>
AND THE GRAPHICS<lb/>
noi uikrKi<lb/>
3-7 &amp; 9-11<lb/>
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?Bi6RFAMOUS<lb/>
LADIES1 Mil<lb/>
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KfW<lb/>
3995<lb/>
ftlNOLE VISION<lb/>
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imeand<lb/>
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SUATCHCUARD<lb/>
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BAUSCH &amp; LOMB<lb/>
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sor '<lb/>
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? ENSI<lb/>
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ABOVE PRICES DO NOT INCLUDE EXAM FEE<lb/>
OfTOMCTWC<lb/>
?YECAR?C?MTCR<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
228 Greenville Blvd<lb/>
Call: 756-9404<lb/>
Comprehensive Eye Exams<lb/>
includes glaucoma tesl<lb/>
cataract check<lb/>
CONVENIENT EVENING<lb/>
AND SATURDAY HOURS<lb/>
Dr. Peter W. Hollis<lb/>
15 ECU DISCOUNT<lb/>
ON EYEGLASSES<lb/>
?OTHER DISCOUNTS DO NOT APPLY<lb/>
VISA<lb/>
???e.smst. ? m-mi<lb/>
Downtown Groonvlllo<lb/>
GOOD TIMES<lb/>
GREENVILLE'S 1<lb/>
OLDEST 4 FINEST<lb/>
PARTS-<lb/>
BACKGAMMON<lb/>
AND MORE<lb/>
FREE PENBALL<lb/>
1-4 on Mondoys<lb/>
DART TOURNAMENT ? 100<lb/>
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No open 7 day a week 3 P m lam<lb/>
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UfEAST Jlh STREET<lb/>
7J1 ?71l<lb/>
NOW OPEN<lb/>
Greenville's<lb/>
Newest Private Club.<lb/>
Applications Now Bemq<lb/>
Accepted!<lb/>
Not Open to the General Public<lb/>
Soon to be Open Afternoons<lb/>
at 4 00<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057441_0004"/><lb/>
Stye East Olaroiinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Paul Collins, ??? in m?<lb/>
Jimmy DuPREE, Maamt emo,<lb/>
Ric Browning. ?,??? v-n Charles Chandler. - ?<lb/>
Chris Lichok. mm mm- ToM Hall ?" Bd"w<lb/>
a. u.Ak, d.dtci ?  w Steve Bachner, ?nrri??m?Me?w<lb/>
Alison dartel, mmmmw ????? ?<lb/>
crr-yiDc w KA?EN WENDT. sifk BMm<lb/>
STfcVE MOORE, Onulaiion Munofrr <lb/>
November 17. 1981<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Ed Emory<lb/>
Should Pirate Coach Walk Plank?<lb/>
"Make Emory a Memory<lb/>
The phrase is simple, yet cutting.<lb/>
It, of course, applies to ECU head<lb/>
football coach Ed Emory.<lb/>
Emory's Pirates saw their chances<lb/>
for a winning season go down the<lb/>
drain Saturday due to a 31-21 upset<lb/>
loss at the hands of William and<lb/>
Mary.<lb/>
The "Make Emory a Memory"<lb/>
slogan first appeared a week earlier<lb/>
during the Pirates' 66-23 homecom-<lb/>
ing win over East Tennessee State.<lb/>
A group of ECU students displayed<lb/>
a .banner which broadcast their<lb/>
slogan for the entire Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium crowd to see.<lb/>
The essence of the slogan is sim-<lb/>
ple. Emory has been with the<lb/>
Pirates for two years, during which<lb/>
lime the club has gone 9-13 (4-7 last<lb/>
year and 5-6 this season).<lb/>
The losing seasons come on the<lb/>
heels of eight consecutive winning<lb/>
seasons. Before the Emory era<lb/>
began the club had not fielded a<lb/>
loser since 1971.<lb/>
The solution is simple, right? Out<lb/>
with Emory!<lb/>
Wrong. There is much more to<lb/>
the recent problems of the East<lb/>
Carolina football team than just Ed<lb/>
Emory.<lb/>
No doubt Emory has made some<lb/>
bad decisions during the past two<lb/>
years. But there have been some<lb/>
positive advancements as well.<lb/>
Plainly and simply, we feel that<lb/>
Ed Emory should be allowed to<lb/>
fulfill his three-year contract. Two<lb/>
vears is not sufficient time for<lb/>
anyone to build a successful foot-<lb/>
bail program.<lb/>
"Why build?" you say. "The<lb/>
program was fine until Emory got<lb/>
here<lb/>
The very successful Pat Dye<lb/>
preceeded Emory. Perhaps the best<lb/>
Dye team was fielded in the coach's<lb/>
last season at ECU. That team,<lb/>
though, was made up of a large con-<lb/>
tingent of seniors. Dye would not<lb/>
have wanted to tackle the task of<lb/>
molding an under-talented, inex-<lb/>
perienced team that Emory faced a<lb/>
year ago.<lb/>
Under Emory the Pirate program<lb/>
has improved in a number of areas.<lb/>
The team now has a sufficient<lb/>
weight-training system, something<lb/>
that was not as notable under Dye.<lb/>
ECU's recruiting process is also<lb/>
much improved.<lb/>
This, of course, brings to surface<lb/>
Emory's greatest strength. He came<lb/>
to ECU with the reputation as a<lb/>
great recruiter and has proven this<lb/>
to be the case. Last year's recruiting<lb/>
class may have been ECU's greatest<lb/>
DOONESBURY<lb/>
ever.<lb/>
"THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
, .NY<lb/>
Emory can be expected to come<lb/>
through with another strong group<lb/>
of newcomers this year. Therefore,<lb/>
the talent it takes will be present.<lb/>
This brings us to another point.<lb/>
First, Emory should be allowed to<lb/>
stay on, but he must realize that<lb/>
changes have to be made. Those<lb/>
changes reach to the very heart of<lb/>
the ECU football team.<lb/>
Any great football team is backed<lb/>
by a great staff. This is something<lb/>
that Ed Emory does not have. He<lb/>
must make some coaching changes.<lb/>
If he does not, he can rest assured<lb/>
that 1982 will be his last year as<lb/>
head coach of the Pirates ? if angry<lb/>
supporters allow him to hang on<lb/>
that long anyway.<lb/>
Speculation has arisen that some<lb/>
rich Pirate supporters may come up<lb/>
with $30,000-plus to cover Emory's<lb/>
1982 paycheck, therefore making it<lb/>
possible for the Pirates to hire a new<lb/>
head man for next year.<lb/>
If Emory fails to make the<lb/>
necessary staff changes this specula-<lb/>
tion could become a reality.<lb/>
In our opinion, the ball is in<lb/>
Emory's hands. We feel he can field<lb/>
a winner at ECU. He certainly can<lb/>
bring quality talent to Greenville.<lb/>
Now he must readjust his staff to<lb/>
make sure the Pirates are adequate-<lb/>
ly coached.<lb/>
Further, we should remember that<lb/>
Emory is an ECU graduate and is<lb/>
truly in love with the school and its<lb/>
football team. His life-long goal has<lb/>
been to return to coach at his alma<lb/>
mater. That goal has been reached,<lb/>
now he is reaching for success.<lb/>
Perhaps the most positive thing<lb/>
about Emory is that he is dedicated<lb/>
and that he is a Pirate. If he were<lb/>
cut on the wrist he would bleed pur-<lb/>
ple and gold. He is not here to use<lb/>
ECU as a stepping stone.<lb/>
For all his good qualities, Pat Dye<lb/>
was here for just that reason. ECU<lb/>
was only a step toward where he<lb/>
eventually wanted to go ? to the<lb/>
real big-time. If allowed, Ed Emory<lb/>
is here to stay. This is his home, his<lb/>
love. Perhaps the student or sup-<lb/>
porter who does nothing but gripe<lb/>
about him should take this into con-<lb/>
sideration.<lb/>
Again, though, Emory cannot ex-<lb/>
pect to keep his job simply because<lb/>
of his love for the school. He has<lb/>
lots of decisions to make during the<lb/>
off-season. Some of them may hurt,<lb/>
but they have to be made.<lb/>
Make Emory a memory? Only if<lb/>
he is foolish enough to ignore some<lb/>
problems that simply must be cor-<lb/>
rected.<lb/>
by Garry Trudeau<lb/>
'Rudygate'?Trip Funds Questioned<lb/>
By CHARLES M. SUNE<lb/>
 live too much by principles . . . the rest of<lb/>
the world doesn't. . . if I don't change, I'll<lb/>
only get hurt.<lb/>
? CM.<lb/>
When I first arrived at this Mecca of<lb/>
eastern North Carolina several years ago, I<lb/>
came seeking a complete education.<lb/>
I became involved in various organiza-<lb/>
tions in order that I might learn some of<lb/>
the secrets of success and thereby become<lb/>
better prepared in my world conquest. I ex-<lb/>
pected to be taught many lessons by my<lb/>
teachers, and I have not been disap-<lb/>
pointed. In all frankness though, they were<lb/>
not always lessons of what to do, but fre-<lb/>
quently, lessons of what not to do.<lb/>
Enter Rudolph Alexander, associate<lb/>
dean of students for student activities and<lb/>
exective director of Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. I must admit my first impression<lb/>
of Alexander was a good one. Though 1<lb/>
considered him to be more conservative<lb/>
than myself, I had no disrespect for him<lb/>
and in fact trusted him.<lb/>
It was not an unusual assumption to<lb/>
make since most people would<lb/>
automatically believe a man in his position<lb/>
who had served the university for so long,<lb/>
and who you might respect as your grand-<lb/>
father. Remember though what your<lb/>
grandfather taught you ? never judge a<lb/>
book by its cover.<lb/>
All our lives we will be faced with the<lb/>
basic questions of what is right and what is<lb/>
wrong. We come to college expecting,<lb/>
perhaps naively, to be taught those dif-<lb/>
ferences by our teachers. When I speak of<lb/>
teachers, I mean teachers in the broad<lb/>
sense ? those entrusted with shaping our<lb/>
lives. Alexander is one of those teachers.<lb/>
Not unlike any other teacher, he provided<lb/>
me with an example ? though it has been a<lb/>
bad one.<lb/>
In his capacity as director of Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, he serves as adviser to the<lb/>
Student Union programming organization.<lb/>
Like the doctor-patient relationship and<lb/>
lawyer-client relationship, the teacher-<lb/>
student relationship is sacred. As in all<lb/>
cases, one party depends on the other for<lb/>
help. A violation of that trust, because it<lb/>
involves human lives, is a violation of<lb/>
those people. Alexander has violated that<lb/>
trust.<lb/>
The "principle" example: Rudy goes to<lb/>
the Big Apple: "The goal of the Travel<lb/>
Committee is for everyone to have the<lb/>
most fun possible on the New York City<lb/>
Trip read the travel committee general<lb/>
information sheet in 1978. Fun is exactly<lb/>
what Alexander must have had. Alexander<lb/>
decided he wanted his girlfriend, Sara<lb/>
Henderson, to go on the 1978 trip. No pro-<lb/>
blem.<lb/>
He decided to make an exception to the<lb/>
travel committee rules which "provides<lb/>
these trips for students, faculty, staff,<lb/>
alumni and their dependents" to allow his<lb/>
girlfriend who had never attended or work-<lb/>
ed at ECU, to go on the student sponsored<lb/>
trip.<lb/>
He decided that his girlfriend should<lb/>
receive a complementary room on an<lb/>
isolated floor next to his in the Hotel Taft<lb/>
in New York City (rooms 1111 and 1112 to<lb/>
be specific).<lb/>
It was he, without committee approval<lb/>
who made all the exceptions, that violated<lb/>
the student trust that he is ethically bound<lb/>
to uphold. "To hell with principles, to hell<lb/>
with ethics ? I want to take my girlfriend<lb/>
on a trip to New York at student expense<lb/>
Times and circumstances change, but<lb/>
principles do not. I have no problem with<lb/>
someone who wants to take his girlfriend<lb/>
on a trip. But Alexander did not simply do<lb/>
that. He made exceptions to rules he<lb/>
helped formulate; he made those excep-<lb/>
tions without committee approval. He<lb/>
gave his girlfriend a free room that other-<lb/>
wise would have gone to a member of the<lb/>
travel committee and, in short, he violated<lb/>
a trust.<lb/>
I am not a pillar oi irtue. 1 have done<lb/>
things in my time that I regret and, in<lb/>
retrospect, would do differently if I had to<lb/>
do again. But 1 have never violated a trust<lb/>
as Alexander did.<lb/>
If Alexander were a doctor he might lose<lb/>
his practice; if Alexander were a lawyer Tie<lb/>
might be disbarred. But. because he is an<lb/>
administrator at ECU with nearly 20 years<lb/>
seniority, he will probably remain to<lb/>
manipulate the minds of maturing students<lb/>
just as he did me and others before me.<lb/>
Though it is often difficult, we have no<lb/>
choice but to live by principles. Though<lb/>
one can get hurt for living by these in-<lb/>
tangibles, it is far more difficult to surie<lb/>
without them. However, it is painfully evi-<lb/>
dent that people will be hurt by those who<lb/>
live without principles. Some of us had to<lb/>
find that out the hard way.<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: This is (he first in a<lb/>
series of columns that will deal with the<lb/>
record of Rudolph Alexander.<lb/>
i- Campus Forum<lb/>
'Klanism' Expressed In Letter<lb/>
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TO. IPTDALUMNI'<lb/>
This is in response to Ronald Fisk's<lb/>
letter of concern about the minority rule<lb/>
here at East Carolina University. Well,<lb/>
since you claim to be so concerned about<lb/>
inequality, then sit back and get your<lb/>
taste buds ready for this.<lb/>
Although the majority of the students<lb/>
here at ECU are white, that does not ex-<lb/>
clude the fact that everyone deserves<lb/>
equal rights and opportunities and will<lb/>
not stop until we (the minority) get it.<lb/>
Whether the Homecoming Queen had<lb/>
been Chinese, Iranian or any other<lb/>
minority, should not be looked on as a<lb/>
basis for the malicious slander that was<lb/>
written toward our 1981 homecoming<lb/>
queen. Beauty does not come in colors,<lb/>
it comes in the quality of the person.<lb/>
In justifying your argument, you had<lb/>
the audacity to compare the ECU Gay<lb/>
Community with the Afro-American<lb/>
Culture Society. These two organiza-<lb/>
tions are entirely different and working<lb/>
toward two adverse goals. We feel<lb/>
angered that there is such a presence of<lb/>
Klanism, when you obviously don't<lb/>
know what it is like to be in our shoes.<lb/>
We feel that there are more serious<lb/>
issues that you could have been in-<lb/>
terested in rather than the fact that there<lb/>
is a black homecoming queen. Where<lb/>
were you when blacks had to drink from<lb/>
separate water fountains and Jews were<lb/>
put in concentration camps?<lb/>
Obviously you are a follower of Hitler<lb/>
and believe in the perfect "blond hair<lb/>
"blue-eyed race but tell me, "Do you<lb/>
fit in this category?" The only thing that<lb/>
I agree about your statement is "God<lb/>
Bless You because at the rate you are<lb/>
going, you will need all of God's Bless-<lb/>
ings to succeed in this world of turmoil<lb/>
and depression.<lb/>
v LISA WHITE<lb/>
Senior, PRC<lb/>
More Fisk<lb/>
Ronald Fisk, you are an ignorant in-<lb/>
dividual, and the only moral disease on<lb/>
this campus is the one you have, pre-<lb/>
judice. People (black or white) make up<lb/>
this campus, and it takes everybody to<lb/>
make this campus function. Packs have<lb/>
contributed a lot in making this universi-<lb/>
ty and this nation great. It is people like<lb/>
you who hold up the progress of this<lb/>
university and you should not even be<lb/>
here. So why don't you go join the KKK<lb/>
or the Nazi party, you would fit in with<lb/>
them perfectly. From one angry and<lb/>
shocked white Anglo-Saxon individual<lb/>
with spine and moral fiber.<lb/>
MICHAEL WATKINS<lb/>
Junior, Political Science<lb/>
American Smokeout<lb/>
I am happy to be involved in the 1981<lb/>
Great American Smokeout. 18 Vi years<lb/>
ago I quit a three-pack-a-day habit of<lb/>
smoking cigarettes myself.<lb/>
We've learned from past smokeouts<lb/>
that those people who successfully quit<lb/>
for one day really want to quit per-<lb/>
manently, so we're prepared to give<lb/>
those Smokeout Day participants all the<lb/>
support we can.<lb/>
A Gallup survey done for the<lb/>
American Cancer Society showed that<lb/>
nearly 16.5 million Americans attempted<lb/>
to give up cigarettes last year during the<lb/>
Great American Smokeout. Just under 5<lb/>
million made it through the 24 hours.<lb/>
One to ten days later, 2.2 million were<lb/>
still free of the cigarette habit.<lb/>
Each year, volunteers and staff across<lb/>
the country spend time planning for<lb/>
Nov. 19 ? plans which wil hopefully<lb/>
capture the imagination of every smoker<lb/>
in America. I hope ECU students will be<lb/>
convinced to take a one-day health<lb/>
break ? a break which just might free<lb/>
them from the cigarette habit for good.<lb/>
JOAN S. BOUDREAUX<lb/>
Pitt Co. Chairman<lb/>
The Great American Smokeout<lb/>
Campus Poetry<lb/>
M here Is The Joy-<lb/>
Where is the joy that that once came<lb/>
from giving<lb/>
Where is the joy that once came from<lb/>
living<lb/>
Is there anyone left to smile,<lb/>
Is there anyone willing to talk for a little<lb/>
while!<lb/>
Where is the Joy?<lb/>
 H here are the People<lb/>
Where are the people that like to run<lb/>
Where are the people who like to have<lb/>
fun<lb/>
Is there anyone left to play with,<lb/>
Is there anyone left to pray with for a lit-<lb/>
tle while<lb/>
Where are the People?<lb/>
"Who is There?"<lb/>
Can Anyone hear me?<lb/>
What happened to Prayer?<lb/>
How can it be?<lb/>
Is there anyone left to care?<lb/>
Who is There?<lb/>
' Where is the hope' <lb/>
Should all burdens lie on the Pope?<lb/>
How are you gdng to cope?<lb/>
Where is your hope?<lb/>
Where is the hope?<lb/>
JESUS LIVES!<lb/>
G.HARRIS<lb/>
Senior, Social Work<lb/>
Next Si<lb/>
Commitu<lb/>
featuring j<lb/>
Toatch<lb/>
and tren<lb/>
Theatre<lb/>
ECl ID<lb/>
Hi I<lb/>
bah! I<lb/>
history<lb/>
thriller'<lb/>
there h<lb/>
c enl<lb/>
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Buildd<lb/>
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THE hAST CAROL 1N1AN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
NOVLMHLR 17, 1981<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
Elvis Costello<lb/>
Goes C&amp;W On<lb/>
 Almost Blue'<lb/>
Paying Homage To Country<lb/>
Coslello during lasl ear Chapel Hill concert. The photograph is by Spectator magazine's Chris Seward of Raleigh.<lb/>
By CHARLES LAWRENCE<lb/>
Nl?fl Wrilrt<lb/>
In 1977, Elvis Costello came to<lb/>
prominence in the New Wave Music<lb/>
scene, playing a powerful range of<lb/>
pop music with a vengeance unlike<lb/>
any heard on the radio at that time.<lb/>
Now, four years, six albums, and<lb/>
almost 100 original tunes later, Elvis<lb/>
Costello feels comfortable enough<lb/>
to stop doing his own material long<lb/>
enough to acknowledge some of his<lb/>
influences. With the release of<lb/>
Almost Blue (Columbia Records),<lb/>
Elvis makes public his love for<lb/>
country and western with a collec-<lb/>
tion of 12 songs bv other people.<lb/>
The material on Almost Blue<lb/>
reveals the range ot styles to be<lb/>
found in country music, going from<lb/>
a rave-up version ol Hank Williams'<lb/>
"Why Don't You Love Me 1 ike<lb/>
You Used ro Do" to ballads like<lb/>
"Too Far Cone" and tearjerkers<lb/>
like "Brown to Blue<lb/>
Elvis' two country music heroes<lb/>
are well represented. George Jones<lb/>
is represented with three tunes.<lb/>
"Brown To Blue Color Of The<lb/>
Blues" and "A Good Year For The<lb/>
Roses Flying Burn to Brother,<lb/>
Gram Parsons is given fitting<lb/>
memorial with "How Much I I ied"<lb/>
and "Hoi Burrito no. 1<lb/>
Othei sources tor material include<lb/>
Merle Haggard. 1 oretta I vnn, Pat-<lb/>
s (line, lamim Wynette, Charlie<lb/>
Rich and RdvB artist Joe I inner.<lb/>
When the material is good, Elvis<lb/>
is very good and most of the<lb/>
material is very good indeed. The<lb/>
best cuts (end to be the slowei<lb/>
numbers. Elvis is able to make full<lb/>
use ol his own vocal style and make<lb/>
those songs his own. Standouts in-<lb/>
clude "Sweet Dreams "Color Of<lb/>
Ihe Blues" and "How Much I<lb/>
1 ied<lb/>
Ihe Attractions, Elvis' back-up<lb/>
band, are as usual excellent, with<lb/>
Steve Nieve getting a chance to shine<lb/>
on honkytonk piano. Supplemen-<lb/>
ting the sound is John Mel ce<lb/>
(originally from Clover, the band<lb/>
heard on My Mm is I rue, now with<lb/>
the Doobie Brothers) on lead and<lb/>
pedal steel guitar.<lb/>
for Costello fans, the album is a<lb/>
must. For the casual listener, this<lb/>
collection can serve as an excellent<lb/>
introduction to the world of country<lb/>
music from one of its biggest fans,<lb/>
Elvis Costello<lb/>
Hitchcock Showcased In Sunday Film Festival<lb/>
ByJOHNWEYLER<lb/>
statt VVnlcf<lb/>
Next Sunday, November 22. the Student Union Films<lb/>
c ommittee will present an Alfred Hitchcock Festival,<lb/>
featuring foreign Correspondent (showing at 2 p.m.).<lb/>
ToCatch i Thief(4 p.m.), The Lady Vanishes (6 p.m.),<lb/>
and Frenzy( p.m.). The Films will be shown in Hendrix<lb/>
rheatre ai Mendenhall Student Center. Admission is b<lb/>
 Cl ID and Activity Card or MSC membership.<lb/>
Hitchcock, who died last yeai at the age of SO. is pro-<lb/>
bablj the single most respected filmmaker in cinema<lb/>
history. Though his movies are "mere" entertaining<lb/>
thrillers (not to mention that themes and insights are<lb/>
there for the astute viewer), thev were created with con-<lb/>
Best Foreign Film<lb/>
Plays Wednesday<lb/>
Tomorrow evening at 8 p.m the Student<lb/>
Union films committee will present Jin<lb/>
Menel's Academv vvard winning film Closely<lb/>
M atched Trains.<lb/>
It will be shown in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
C enter's Hendrix Theatre and Dr. McKav Sund-<lb/>
See CZECH. Page 6<lb/>
summate craft and skill. Hitchcock figured his pictures<lb/>
out to the last detail before a foot of film was exposed<lb/>
? indeed the actual filming he considered anti-<lb/>
climactic. His technical triumphs, and the suspense, fear<lb/>
and dark humor they unfailingly evoke, have made him<lb/>
both an inspiration to filmmakers and a star in his own<lb/>
right to audiences (the only director ever so honored).<lb/>
Foreign Correspondent (1940), is both the usual Hit-<lb/>
chcock combination of spine-tingling suspense and rib-<lb/>
tickling humor, and an obvious propaganda piece for<lb/>
war-torn Britain. The plot concerns an American<lb/>
reporter (Joel McCrea) sent to England to cover the<lb/>
war. who becomes embroiled in an elaborate espionage<lb/>
plot. Says Donald Spoto in The Art of Alfred Hit-<lb/>
chcock, "it is difficult to maintain that Foreign Cor-<lb/>
respondent is simply a propaganda movie. It's struc-<lb/>
ture, the complexity of the secondary characters, the<lb/>
disarming humor and a curious subtext about the use oi<lb/>
language establish it as a work concerned less with the<lb/>
war than with the people who see complexities have<lb/>
created the war. It is indeed a film with many levels, and<lb/>
it deserves somewhat more consideration than the<lb/>
Hollywood historians have accorded it<lb/>
To Catch A Thief 1955) is one of Hitchcock's lighter,<lb/>
frothier films, "Hitchcock Champagne" as someone<lb/>
once called it. The natural beauty of Cary Grant and<lb/>
Grace Kelly (the typical ice-cool, patrician Hitchcock<lb/>
heroine) are contrasted with the splendor of the French<lb/>
Riviera in a sophisticated vamp about cat burglars and<lb/>
jewel thefts. Says Spoto, "To Catch A Thief h rather in<lb/>
the genre of The l.ady Danishes ? happy, irresistable, a<lb/>
creampuff of a movie with a little suspense at the very<lb/>
end<lb/>
Which brings us to The lady Vanishes (1938), of<lb/>
which The New York Times critic enthusiastically<lb/>
wrote: "If it were not so brilliant a melodrama, we<lb/>
should class it as a brilliant comedy. Seeing it imposes a<lb/>
double, a blessedly double, strain: when your sides are<lb/>
not aching from laughter your brain is throbbing in its<lb/>
attempts to outguess the director. Hitchcock occasional-<lb/>
ly relents with his rib-tickling, but his professional<lb/>
honor would not brook your catching up with his plot<lb/>
The plot involves a kindly old lady, (Dame May Whitty)<lb/>
who meets a young woman (Margaret Lockwood) on a<lb/>
train. Awakening from a nap, the woman tuids that not<lb/>
only has the old ladv vanished, but that all the other<lb/>
passengers denv she ever existed.<lb/>
Contrasted with The I ady I anishes is Frenzy (1972),<lb/>
one o Hitchcock's grislier pictures. I he theme is one ol<lb/>
Hitchcock's favorites, an innocent man accused ol<lb/>
crime. Here the innocent is Jon Finch, suspected of be-<lb/>
ing the rapist-murderer that has been terrorizing Lon-<lb/>
don. Ihe guilty partv is actually his friend (Barry<lb/>
Morse). Ihe most well remembered scene occurs in the<lb/>
back o a trunk, as Morse, amid heaps oi potatoes,<lb/>
wresiles w th the nude corpse o a woman he recently<lb/>
killed, attempting to recover some incriminating<lb/>
evidence. Hitchcock's second-to-last film. Frenzy is<lb/>
considered one of his Finest.<lb/>
?v:xttvNWM<lb/>
What Price Mood?<lb/>
Pipeline Fare Too Expensive<lb/>
By KATHY WEYI.ER<lb/>
Slaff Wnlfr<lb/>
1 ocated in the subterranean depths of the Minges<lb/>
Building in downtown Greenville is a restaurant with<lb/>
Real Class. This is the Pipeline, which, if you're like<lb/>
many ECU students, you've probably heard of but<lb/>
never been to because you assumed it was too expensive.<lb/>
I o be honest, such an assumption is probably correct.<lb/>
The Pipeline is expensive. But it is such an impressive<lb/>
little place, it's worth at least a visit or two on special oc-<lb/>
casions.<lb/>
Cuisine<lb/>
IRRIS<lb/>
The Pipeline offers appetizers ($1.35-53.25), salads,<lb/>
including a spinach salad ($2.50-53.95), sizeable sand-<lb/>
wiches ($2.95-54.65) ? the best deal here - and entrees<lb/>
($6 25-510 00). Believe it or not, a selection of vegetable<lb/>
side dishes is also available. Entrees come with a baked<lb/>
potato fries, Potatoes Pipeline (tiny block potatoes<lb/>
seasoned with pimento) or Vegetable du Jour. The<lb/>
Garden Salad Bar is also icluded, or you may opt for<lb/>
spinach salad for an extra dollar. French bread com-<lb/>
pletes the meal.<lb/>
If you can still manage dessert after all that, the<lb/>
Pipeline has a selection of simple sweets ($.95-$1.95) to<lb/>
choose from. Mocha Chocolate Mousse and Strawberry<lb/>
Cheese Crepes are available for the more adven-<lb/>
turesome. .<lb/>
Beer, wine and mixed drinks are offered in addition<lb/>
to the usual coffee, tea, soda-type beverages. Beer prices<lb/>
are a bit high ? $1.00 for regular domestic brands and<lb/>
Stroh's draft for $.85. However, Happy Hour (4 to 7<lb/>
p.m.) prices are considerably lower.<lb/>
My companion and I reallly enjoyed persuing the<lb/>
Pipeline's menu, which offers many welcome changes<lb/>
from usual downtown fare. The waitress pointed out<lb/>
which items were unavailable, and despite the fact that<lb/>
this seemed to indicate some slackness, we appreciated<lb/>
her thoughtfulness in informing us of the changes.<lb/>
While waiting on our dinner, we sampled the drinks,<lb/>
and, I'm sad to say they weren't very good. The Pina<lb/>
Colada my companion ordered seemed to be made with<lb/>
watered-down pineapple juice ? period. My vodka sour<lb/>
threatened to leave my lips in a perpetual pucker.<lb/>
We were also a bit disappointed in the salad bar. The<lb/>
items were very fresh, but there were few of them.<lb/>
Our dinner was elegantly served from a standing tray<lb/>
and looked incredibly appetizing ? like advertising<lb/>
food. Unfortunately, within a few bites we came to the<lb/>
conclusion that the Pipeline must not employ a gourmet<lb/>
chef. The food was good, mind you, but not as superb<lb/>
as it should have been for the money. Too much of the<lb/>
food ? particularly the vegetables and sauces ? ob-<lb/>
viously came from a can or a packaged mix. We never<lb/>
got to sample the French bread as they were out of it<lb/>
that night, for which our waitress was almost embarass-<lb/>
ingly apolegetic.<lb/>
Why, you well may ask, if the food is less than<lb/>
outstanding, is the Pipeline so impressive? Precisely<lb/>
because of its top-drawer atmosphere and service. You<lb/>
feel comfortable at the Pipeline. It's not so cozy that<lb/>
you feel you're eavesdropping on others and it's not so<lb/>
spacious you begin to feel iosolated and agoraphobic.<lb/>
The waitresses make you feel welcome. The decor is<lb/>
comfortably luxurious. All in all, the Pipeline is just a<lb/>
nice place to be.<lb/>
Norman Luboff Choir Peforming Here Thursday<lb/>
The versatile Norman Luboff Choir will perform choral arrangements in the Hendrix Theatre this Thursday<lb/>
evening at 8 p.m. The internationally known conductor and composer will lead his choir in a program of<lb/>
popular songs, show tunes and renditions of his folk and gospel songs. Tickets for the performance can be<lb/>
obtained at the Central Ticket Office in Mendenhall Student Center or by calling 757-6611 (ext. 266).<lb/>
Tickets are $2 for students and $5 for the general public. All tickets sold on the night of the show will be $5.<lb/>
The performance is being brought to campus as part of the '8182 MSC Artists Series.<lb/>
!<lb/>
&amp;&amp;&amp;Mtt<lb/>
 <lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057441_0006"/><lb/>
rHEEASl IAROIIN1AN NOMMIII.K 1?, IVM<lb/>
Buckminster Fuller, the originator of the geodesic dome, will lecture tonight at 8 p.m. in the Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
Czech Film Coming To Hendrix<lb/>
Continued From P. 5<lb/>
the station dispatcher, release and continues to sihilities<lb/>
who talks constanth inform the artisi i sen yel to conn<lb/>
wall of the English about sex, seduces a<lb/>
Department will lead a numbei ol women, and<lb/>
short, informal discus- ecu into trouble when<lb/>
sum following the film he uses the station's<lb/>
in room 221 ol the stu- stamps on parts ol a<lb/>
dent center. Coffee and girl telegraphist's<lb/>
doughnuts will be serv- anatomy; and Milos'<lb/>
ed and all interested girlfriend, a conduc-<lb/>
students, faculty and tress with whom he<lb/>
staff are united to at- tries unsuccessfully to<lb/>
tend. hae sex. "his en<lb/>
Winner ol the counter leads him to an<lb/>
cadem ward as abortive suicide at<lb/>
Best 1 oreign I anguage tempt<lb/>
i 1m (1967), Jiri Milos' final success<lb/>
Menel's Closely Hat- at real his<lb/>
ched trains is un manhood occurs with<lb/>
pretentious, lacking in an oldei woman, a<lb/>
cinematic flashiness membei ol the<lb/>
and a masterpiece ol resistance. He has to<lb/>
understatement. Its face his political<lb/>
subject ? the ex- responsibility im-<lb/>
periences ol Milos, a mediately afterward,<lb/>
17-year-old trainee in a when he is given the job<lb/>
provincial railway oi blowing up a Ger-<lb/>
staton during the Ger- man ammunitions<lb/>
man occupation ol train. He succeeds, but<lb/>
t, zechoslovakia ?- is killed: the iron is in<lb/>
slight Milos' becoming a man<lb/>
Bui the station sexually jusl in tune to<lb/>
represents a microcosm be killed because ol his<lb/>
ol the world; it is in its political awakening:<lb/>
detailed observations "It is quite the best<lb/>
ol the station's in- product oi the<lb/>
habitants that the film celebrated - zech<lb/>
derived its richness. cinema renaissance thai<lb/>
Menzel depicts we have seen in this<lb/>
Milos' sudh comic at- counrty so far. It is also<lb/>
tempts to become a the best movie I have<lb/>
man both, politically seen this year. Having<lb/>
and sexually. Ihe sup- gone that far, 1 might<lb/>
porting characters in- as well go all the way<lb/>
elude the station- and predict that it has<lb/>
master, a huge and an excellent chance ol<lb/>
sloppy man who col- becoming a film clasic<lb/>
laborates with the on the order of Grand<lb/>
Nazis and sees sin all Illusion ot Citizen Kane<lb/>
around him but flirts ? one of those pictures<lb/>
ivith visiting women; that is nevei out ol<lb/>
Richard Schickel<lb/>
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MonSun. 11:30-2:00 2.69<lb/>
MOIl.&amp;TueS. 6:00-8:30 2.89<lb/>
HELP WHEN TOTJ NSBD IT MOST.<lb/>
The Fleming Center haa been here for women<lb/>
of all ages since 1974, offering understanding<lb/>
and help to anyone faced with an unplanned<lb/>
pregnancy  day or night. Services include<lb/>
Free Pregnancy Testing<lb/>
Weekday ft Saturday Abortion Appte.<lb/>
Evening Birth. Control Hoars<lb/>
CALL 781-5550 DAY OR mGHT<lb/>
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WEDNESDAY<lb/>
SPAGHETTI DAY<lb/>
43<lb/>
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BONUS TRIP TO SALAD BAR<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057441_0007"/><lb/>
J<lb/>
58<lb/>
70,<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
NOVEMBER 17. 1981<lb/>
Page 7<lb/>
How Quickly Tide Turned On East Carolina<lb/>
B CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
sports i ditoi<lb/>
How sudden things can change.<lb/>
And how sudden they did change<lb/>
for the East Carolina football team<lb/>
and Pirate head coach Ed Emory<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
Following last week's 66-23<lb/>
thrashing of East Tennessee State<lb/>
the Pirates stood at 5-5 on the year,<lb/>
needing only a win over William and<lb/>
Mary in the season finale to record a<lb/>
winning campaign.<lb/>
Aftci facing a mass of negativity-<lb/>
all season long the thoughts of<lb/>
finishing above the .500 mark must<lb/>
have been pleasing for Emory and<lb/>
troops After all. William and<lb/>
Mai was i fS. and had been ranked<lb/>
as one of the nation's 20 worst<lb/>
learns m Playboy magazine's pre-<lb/>
season issue in August.<lb/>
ro even the most negative ECU<lb/>
observers last Saturday's finale had<lb/>
a 'W" written all over it. It seemed<lb/>
sure that the record books would<lb/>
forever tell of a 6-5 1981 finish.<lb/>
William and Mary had other<lb/>
ideas, though, and spoiled<lb/>
everything for Emory and his club.<lb/>
Behind Chris Garrity's 399-yard,<lb/>
four-touchdown passing perfor-<lb/>
mance the Indians upset the Bucs,<lb/>
31-21.<lb/>
The loss left the entire East<lb/>
Carolina community in a near state<lb/>
of shock. The team had, for the se-<lb/>
cond year in a row, finished below<lb/>
.500. Last season's 4-7 ECU mark<lb/>
coupled with this season's finish<lb/>
leaves Emory at 9-13 for his career.<lb/>
Following career loss number 13<lb/>
Emory refused to thing negatively<lb/>
and looked toward the future with<lb/>
optimism.<lb/>
"We're extremely disappointed<lb/>
a red-eyed Emory said in his post-<lb/>
game press conference. "This loss<lb/>
will make things tougher on us. But<lb/>
we cannot and will not dwell on it.<lb/>
Our efforts will be turned to 1982<lb/>
starting Monday at 3:00. We will<lb/>
have a great off-season program<lb/>
and we will have a great recruiting<lb/>
year. We did it last year after a 4-7<lb/>
record and we will do it again this<lb/>
season<lb/>
Emory admitted to being<lb/>
"shocked" that his team had failed<lb/>
the test he most wanted it to pass.<lb/>
Overconfidence, he said, could have<lb/>
been a problem.<lb/>
"I know I didn't see any way we<lb/>
could lose he admitted. "I think<lb/>
maybe our guys felt the same way. 1<lb/>
think we felt we probably had better<lb/>
athletes and better speed than they<lb/>
did. We may have taken for granted<lb/>
that William and Mary has improv-<lb/>
ed a great deal since the start of this<lb/>
season (when the Indians lost their<lb/>
first four). We damn sure didn't<lb/>
think they would beat us, but they<lb/>
did<lb/>
Emory said he felt no pressure<lb/>
following Saturday's disappoint-<lb/>
ment. Their have been murmurs of<lb/>
strong discontent for the head coach<lb/>
from both team members and peo-<lb/>
ple in the ECU community. Emory<lb/>
said, though, that things are much<lb/>
better in Pirateland than most peo-<lb/>
ple realize.<lb/>
"From the elements that were<lb/>
here in December of 1979 (when he<lb/>
has named head coach, replacing<lb/>
Pat Dye) to the elements that are<lb/>
here in November, 1981 said the<lb/>
second-year mentor, "I know our<lb/>
program is so much stronger than it<lb/>
was. Everything that wasn't there is<lb/>
there except the 'WV, and they are<lb/>
coming. You have to build a pro-<lb/>
gram on a foundation, and we have<lb/>
got that foundation.<lb/>
"I guarantee that we will be a fine<lb/>
football team he continued. "If I<lb/>
didn't feel this way 1 wouldn't stay<lb/>
here and beat a dead horse. Our<lb/>
program is going in the right direc-<lb/>
tion, both internally and external-<lb/>
ly"<lb/>
Emory admitted, though, that<lb/>
Pirate fans could expect to see some<lb/>
changes made during the off-<lb/>
season.<lb/>
"I will evaluate every phase of<lb/>
our progam ? coaches, players,<lb/>
schemes, systems. I'm the man that<lb/>
has that responsibility. 1 will make<lb/>
whatever changes I feel are<lb/>
necessary<lb/>
Changes are probably a necessity.<lb/>
A second straight losing season cer-<lb/>
tainly will not sit well with sup-<lb/>
porters of a program that did not<lb/>
field a loser for eight consecutive<lb/>
years (1972-1979) before Emory's<lb/>
arrival.<lb/>
No doubt there will be some at-<lb/>
tacks at Emory in the coming weeks.<lb/>
They began Saturday when a chorus<lb/>
of "boos" followed the Pirates off<lb/>
the field. Emory said, though, that<lb/>
the negative attitudes come from a<lb/>
small minority of supporters.<lb/>
"I know that 90 percent of our<lb/>
supporters are behind us in our ef-<lb/>
forts he said. "But our program is<lb/>
in a situation where we will have lots<lb/>
of comments on finishing 5-6. But 1<lb/>
expect the East Carolina people to<lb/>
be the most supportive in the<lb/>
world<lb/>
Emory said that the negativity did<lb/>
not bother him, that recruiting and<lb/>
preparing for 1982 was much more<lb/>
on his mind.<lb/>
"Anybody that wants to put any<lb/>
pressure on me is going to have to<lb/>
catch me he said, "because I'm<lb/>
going to be in Norfolk, Charlotte<lb/>
and places like that recruiting. I'm<lb/>
going to work and not worry about<lb/>
what people say<lb/>
QB Garrity Passes<lb/>
Indians To Win<lb/>
B CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports r dilor<lb/>
William and Mary, quarterback<lb/>
ris Garrity passed for 399 yards<lb/>
and foul touchdowns to lead the In-<lb/>
dians to a H-21 upset victory over<lb/>
1 ast ? aroima Saturday.<lb/>
1 he loss vsas a bitter one for the<lb/>
Pirates, who fell one win short of a<lb/>
winning season. The club, which<lb/>
finished at -b, had been a heavy<lb/>
favorite hut not play like it in its<lb/>
sea- ' 'ale.<lb/>
"VK e are verv disappointed said<lb/>
ECU head coach Ed Emory follow-<lb/>
rig the game. "This is probably the<lb/>
toughest loss I've had in 22 years of<lb/>
ng I've never felt the agony<lb/>
i loss hke tliis one. We've worked<lb/>
so hard for it. h was a must win fo?-<lb/>
a w inning season<lb/>
1 he Indians jumped on top early,<lb/>
scoring the Hues 10-0 in the first<lb/>
quarier. The visitors scored on the<lb/>
opening possession, mar-<lb/>
80 yards in just over five<lb/>
Ciarnty connected with wide<lb/>
eiver Kurt Wngley from 24 yards<lb/>
out to cap the drive.<lb/>
A big break resulted in the second<lb/>
Indian score of the afternoon.<lb/>
I aszlo Mike-Mayer's kickoff that<lb/>
followed the TD was a line drive and<lb/>
struck ECU's James Bunn in the<lb/>
chest The ball was recovered by<lb/>
William and Mary at the Pirate 47.<lb/>
rhe Indians took advantage of<lb/>
the opportunity, increasing their<lb/>
lead to 10-0 on a 28-yard field goal<lb/>
by Mike-Mayer.<lb/>
The Pirates got back in the game<lb/>
a lib, a score less than two minutes<lb/>
into the second quarter. A 33-yard<lb/>
run by reserve quarterback Kevin<lb/>
Ingram set up a three-yard<lb/>
touchdown run by senior halfback<lb/>
Harold Blue, which narrowed the<lb/>
Indians' lead to 10-7.<lb/>
The clubs exchanged possessions<lb/>
for the remainder of the half and<lb/>
appeared set to go into halftime<lb/>
with the visitors up by three. That<lb/>
Williamand Man 10 T 6 14 11<lb/>
K I8 7 7 721<lb/>
V.MWrtgks M pas frnai (.arms iMiac Marr ktcki<lb/>
VMMikr-Mascr 2? K.<lb/>
a iBlur ma iBushbrrk kick)<lb/>
WMsandrrs 41 paw from Umn iMtkr Marf kirki<lb/>
K I1 antoa 1 run iBusbbrtk kick)<lb/>
Kl1 iiwi 1 rua iBuskbrck kick)<lb/>
WM? ngl? 14 pau Iron s.arrits iMiar-Masrr luckl<lb/>
WMWriglrs ? pau from (.arrils iMikf-Masrr kick)<lb/>
AAM Ht<lb/>
hm dMa ns 26 21<lb/>
Kushrssards 32-S? S-i33<lb/>
Passmisards 403 t?<lb/>
Passes4S 3J-2 7-1-0<lb/>
PunlsJ.JJ7 MU<lb/>
tumblrs-ioM 0-0 2-2<lb/>
Praallirs.sards 4-35 -J0<lb/>
Total IItrirsr 453 J52<lb/>
isnivini 4.1 11 MM us<lb/>
Raskin! V4 4M Po.rll 19-44 Wrighl 9-24 K I<lb/>
Wit) P M I mum 17(1. Nr Ivk ? A2 Ingrain 31.1. lenis<lb/>
5 IV Waklca 2-?. Buna 4-10<lb/>
Pacing - wm (.amis 44-34-2-399 Murpnt 11-0-4<lb/>
K I Sflsoa n-0-0-0 Ingram 11-0-19<lb/>
Rrrnsing VNAM: Sullon H01. Wrigks S-9 Sandrrs<lb/>
6 I2J. Po?HI 103. Walters 2 19. Vsrighl I 9 Kl Pope<lb/>
I 19<lb/>
was before "it" happened.<lb/>
With three seconds remaining in<lb/>
the opening half the Indians faced a<lb/>
third-and-nine situation at the ECU<lb/>
41 and called for a timeout. What<lb/>
resulted turned out to be a big turn-<lb/>
ing point in the contest.<lb/>
Garrity faded back to pass and, as<lb/>
time ran out, launched a high "Hail<lb/>
Mary" pass into the endzone, where<lb/>
a group of six players ? three<lb/>
Pirates and three Indians ? were<lb/>
waiting.<lb/>
William and Mary wide receiver<lb/>
Jeff Sanders, a freshman and the<lb/>
smallest in the six-man crowd at 5-7,<lb/>
leaped high and came away with the<lb/>
ball. The TD gave the Indians<lb/>
momentum and a 17-7 lead at the<lb/>
half.<lb/>
ECU came back strong in the<lb/>
third quarter, running 28 plays to<lb/>
seven for the Indians. The Bucs<lb/>
drove 80 yards on their first second-<lb/>
half possession for a score. The<lb/>
drive lasted 6:03 and was ac-<lb/>
complished totally via the ground<lb/>
gain.<lb/>
Halfback Leon Law son and<lb/>
fullback Roy Wiley combined for 66<lb/>
of the drive's 80 yards. Law son<lb/>
dove over from three out to put the<lb/>
finishing touches on the march,<lb/>
pulling the Pirates to within 17-14.<lb/>
The Pirates soon were at it again,<lb/>
controlling the ball for over five<lb/>
minutes in a scoring effort. Ingram<lb/>
connected with freshman tight end<lb/>
Damon Pope on a 19-yard pass play<lb/>
to get things going. I aw son once<lb/>
again closed out the drive, scoring<lb/>
on a one-yard run early in the fourth<lb/>
quarter to give ECU its first lead of<lb/>
the day, 21-17.<lb/>
The Indians went to their passing<lb/>
attack as a source for a comeback.<lb/>
Garrity connected once with<lb/>
Sanders for 20 yards and with Mike<lb/>
Sutton twice for a total o 44 to<lb/>
move the ball to the ECU 14.<lb/>
From there Garrity tossed a pass<lb/>
to Wngley for the go-head score.<lb/>
What Comes Up<lb/>
Photo By OAVE WILLIAMS<lb/>
Must come down. And this time, the ball came down in the arm of the smallest Indian, 5'7" split end Jeff<lb/>
Sanders, who leaped over Pirate defenders for a touchdown at the end of the first half Saturday against Past<lb/>
Carolina. Sander's catch may have been the turning point of what turned out to he a disappointing game for<lb/>
the Pirates.<lb/>
Down 24-21, the Pirates took the<lb/>
ensuing kickoff and drove to the<lb/>
Western 40 before being turning the<lb/>
pigskin over on downs.<lb/>
Garrity and the Indian offense<lb/>
then went to work again, ripping in-<lb/>
to the Pirate secondary with<lb/>
punishing success. The Wrigley-<lb/>
(iarrity combination again dealt a<lb/>
crushing blow, the two connecting<lb/>
on a scoring pass from eight yards<lb/>
out. marking the third time that the<lb/>
quarterback and wide receiver had<lb/>
struck gold.<lb/>
Wrigley's final score came with<lb/>
only 2:01 remaining and clinched<lb/>
what has to be the biggest Indian<lb/>
win of the season.<lb/>
"I can't express how great this<lb/>
victory feels William and Mary<lb/>
head coach Jimmye Laycock said<lb/>
following the contest. "Garrity's<lb/>
passing performance was the<lb/>
greatest passing exhibition I've ever<lb/>
witnessed, pro or college. Our game<lb/>
plan was to throw, throw, throw<lb/>
And that Garrity did, completing<lb/>
34 of 44 en route to his school-<lb/>
record total of 399 yards.<lb/>
Tailback Jeff Powell was Garri-<lb/>
ty's most frequent target, finishing<lb/>
with 10 catches for 53 yards.<lb/>
Wrigley pulled down eight recep-<lb/>
tions ? including the three TDs ?<lb/>
as did Sutton<lb/>
The Pirates completed only one<lb/>
pass, getting all of their success on<lb/>
the ground. Wiley led the way with<lb/>
88 yards on 17 carries. Law son gain-<lb/>
ed 81 on the same number of at-<lb/>
tempts.<lb/>
W&amp;M A Mystery To Laycock<lb/>
By WILLIAM YELVERTON<lb/>
4.sstsiaai Sports Kdilor<lb/>
William and Mary head football<lb/>
coach Jimmye Laycock finally<lb/>
handed the Tobacco Festival cham-<lb/>
pionship trophy to one of his<lb/>
assistants and calmly sat on a water<lb/>
cooler. He sighed deeply and then<lb/>
looked up at the group of reporters<lb/>
gathered around him.<lb/>
"Don't wait for me to start talk-<lb/>
ing, gentlemen he laughed.<lb/>
And he surely had good reason<lb/>
to. After all, his Indians had just<lb/>
beaten East Carolina, 31-21, spoil-<lb/>
ing the Pirates' chances for a winn-<lb/>
ing season ? their first under<lb/>
second-year coach Ed Emory.<lb/>
Football "experts" term this type<lb/>
of game as a "season maker<lb/>
Laycock, however, described the<lb/>
game as a "mystery<lb/>
"Last week was a mystery to<lb/>
me he said, referring to his team's<lb/>
23-14 loss to lowly Harvard. "And<lb/>
this one's a mystery, too. I don't<lb/>
know what the heck is going on<lb/>
Indian quarterback Chris Garrity<lb/>
sure did. He threw 44 passes, com-<lb/>
pleting 34 for 399 yards and four<lb/>
touchdowns. The yardage and com-<lb/>
pletions were new school records<lb/>
while the touchdowns tied the old<lb/>
mark.<lb/>
"We went in with the idea that we<lb/>
were going to throw the football<lb/>
Laycock explained. "Our best runn-<lb/>
ing back (Bernie Marrazzo) had a<lb/>
bad side bruise, and we didn't want<lb/>
to take any chances<lb/>
Why throw the ball 44 times?<lb/>
"They play their safeties very<lb/>
deep he said. "We felt we could<lb/>
cross people underneath. A lot of<lb/>
credit goes to our offensive line.<lb/>
They really held up well. Chris<lb/>
(Garrity) had all day<lb/>
Laycock had nothing but praise<lb/>
for his senior quarterback. "I've<lb/>
never seen a kid who threw the ball<lb/>
like that he said. "He was unreal.<lb/>
Unreal. He was so hot<lb/>
Laycock admitted that he was<lb/>
worried about a letdown, especially<lb/>
after his team's showing against<lb/>
Harvard. "The kids did a fine job<lb/>
he stressed. "They picked<lb/>
themselves up more than I ever<lb/>
could<lb/>
The Indian coach left all the<lb/>
"picking up" to quarterback Garri-<lb/>
ty, who says, "I felt really good. I<lb/>
saw what Luck (West Virginia<lb/>
quarterback, Oliver) and the Miami<lb/>
quarterback (Jim Kelly) did to<lb/>
them.<lb/>
"1 knew 1 was going to have a<lb/>
good day he continued. "They<lb/>
have weak spots in their secon-<lb/>
dary<lb/>
The game's most crucial play<lb/>
came near the end of the first half<lb/>
when Garrity threw a pass into the<lb/>
endzone, which split end Jeff<lb/>
Sanders ? all 5'7" of him ? pulled<lb/>
down for a touchdown, much to the<lb/>
dismay of three East Carolina<lb/>
defensive backs.<lb/>
"He (Sanders) took it away from<lb/>
everybody Garrity explain-<lb/>
edOne waits for the tip, and the<lb/>
others follow the ball<lb/>
"We work on a desperation pass<lb/>
like that all the time Emory<lb/>
countered. "You car try it 1000<lb/>
times, and it will work one of those<lb/>
1000 times. We just happened to hit<lb/>
on that one time. Our defender did<lb/>
not time the play well, but (Sanders)<lb/>
made a great catch<lb/>
Garrity said more roll-outs were<lb/>
called in the second half "because<lb/>
we figured they'd (East Carolina)<lb/>
pressure us more. But I had time all<lb/>
day. I couldn't believe it.<lb/>
"East Carolina was so big and<lb/>
quick. But 1 could look look all over<lb/>
the field ? up and down, and the<lb/>
cross over the middle was there all<lb/>
day long. Their safeties play back<lb/>
too deep<lb/>
"We lost our chances for a winn-<lb/>
ing season last week Garrity add-<lb/>
ed, "And that's all I wanted ? a<lb/>
winning season<lb/>
ECU Intrasquad Game Set Wednesday<lb/>
Alone In The Pocket<lb/>
H illiam and Mary quarterback Chris Garrity has his arm cocked and<lb/>
ready to throw against ECU Saturday, as he did 43 other times,<lb/>
completing 34 for nearly 400 yards and four touchdowns.<lb/>
The East Carolina basketball<lb/>
team will hold its annual Purple-<lb/>
Gold pre-season intrasquad game<lb/>
tomorrow night (Wednesday) at<lb/>
7:30 in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Admission to the game is $2 for<lb/>
adults and $1 for children. ECU<lb/>
students will be admitted free with a<lb/>
valid ID and activity card.<lb/>
Pirate coach Dave Odom an-<lb/>
nounced on Tuesday the breakdown<lb/>
of his 15-man squad for the scrim-<lb/>
mage.<lb/>
The Purple team will consist of<lb/>
point guard Tony Byles, swingmen<lb/>
Mark McLaurin and Bill McNair,<lb/>
forwards Morris Hargrove and Al<lb/>
Mack, center David Reichenecer<lb/>
and guard Mike Fox.<lb/>
The Gold team will include<lb/>
centers Mike Gibson and Jeff Best,<lb/>
forwards Thorn Brown and Charles<lb/>
Green, point guards Herbert<lb/>
Gilchrist and Bruce Peartree, along<lb/>
with guard Charles Watkins.<lb/>
Guard Greg Batson will see action<lb/>
for both squads.<lb/>
Fans are asked to choose a squad<lb/>
to cheer for and sit accordingly.<lb/>
Gold fans will sit in the south<lb/>
bleachers while Purple supporters<lb/>
are asked to sit on the north side.<lb/>
The Pirates will hold an offical<lb/>
pre-season scrimmage in between<lb/>
the intrasquad game and the Nov.<lb/>
28 season opener at home against<lb/>
Ohio University.<lb/>
ECU will face the Australian na-<lb/>
tional team on Monday, Nov. 23 at<lb/>
7 p.m. The Australians recently cap-<lb/>
tured the Oceania basketball cham-<lb/>
pionship, qualifying them to play<lb/>
for the Men's World Basketball<lb/>
championship in August in South<lb/>
America.<lb/>
Seven members of the Australian<lb/>
team have played on one or more<lb/>
Olympic teams. ECU is one of only<lb/>
11 U.S. schools on the national<lb/>
team's pre-tournament schedule.<lb/>
Peter Walsh, a seven-foot center<lb/>
who has competed in two Olympic<lb/>
Games and one world champion-<lb/>
ship, leads the Austrian squad.<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057441_0008"/><lb/>
IHt I ASl f-XKOl INIAN NOVEMBER 17, 1961<lb/>
East Carolina Falls In Tourney<lb/>
Bv CHRIS<lb/>
HOI IOMAN<lb/>
Mali rtiili<lb/>
The East Carolina<lb/>
volleyball team finished<lb/>
on a strong but down<lb/>
note, losing two out of<lb/>
three contests in the<lb/>
NCAIAW tournament<lb/>
in Chapel Hill.<lb/>
On Friday, in the<lb/>
first round, East<lb/>
Carolina defeated<lb/>
Duke for the third time<lb/>
this season, 15-7 and<lb/>
15-13. By winning this<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
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CARICATURES BY<lb/>
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X I I Call 'SJ ?'?<lb/>
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WATER SKI equipment ski<lb/>
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G 'J' Chr.stmas qitt Call<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
kOOMS TO rent 3 blocks from<lb/>
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l-EMALE ROOMMATE wanted<lb/>
lot sprtrq st.mester at Cannon Ct<lb/>
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ROOMMATE NEEDED to share<lb/>
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HELP<lb/>
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TALK OF The Town band desires<lb/>
two students to work part time as<lb/>
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.?. m Greenville area Exceilentr<lb/>
pay Related expenses paid Can<lb/>
Fieddv "s: 4674 Leave message<lb/>
DOLLARS FOR your w'lng<lb/>
Rebel Prose and Poetry Contests<lb/>
Sponsored b, Budweiser ana the<lb/>
ah c Cas before Christmas<lb/>
Deadline November 30 Great<lb/>
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CLOSET POETS bring the Rebel<lb/>
vOiir verse thre tr ti.t poems<lb/>
for better or worse If you write<lb/>
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tor vou that success now and<lb/>
always Happy 21st birthday' I m<lb/>
look mg forward 'o<lb/>
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FRIEND<lb/>
LORI B Happy Birthday Jama<lb/>
HAPPY 21ST BIRTHDAY GW' Do<lb/>
you believe me now that it iust<lb/>
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anymore' It s you and me babes'<lb/>
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special as Wednesdays Lots of<lb/>
love. Jello butt<lb/>
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git! shop' Contact Margare'<lb/>
volney 757 1836<lb/>
THE SNU s may have called you<lb/>
bitches but never tail we II still<lb/>
give you mustache rides without<lb/>
your britches Love T T<lb/>
PI K APPS s looking forward to a<lb/>
wild on. Big Brothers had a<lb/>
great 'ime Thursday Love The<lb/>
Sigmas<lb/>
WAYNE HERE S wishing you a<lb/>
happ, nd birthday Haveagrea'<lb/>
day Lc.e your little sis KLK<lb/>
TO ALL 'he generous brothers and<lb/>
pledges ol Phi Kappa Tau Thanx<lb/>
to you the auction was a great sue<lb/>
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Thanksgiving meal together Love<lb/>
always Your little sisters XXOO<lb/>
SIGMAs Are you ready to take a<lb/>
trip with the Pi Kapps? How about<lb/>
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BOBBY WHERE S 52 Sooth is<lb/>
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my phoi number so we can have<lb/>
some ch ese and wine before dm<lb/>
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YO ADRIANNE some good ad<lb/>
vice for your trip Don t eat too<lb/>
many gummy beai s and stay<lb/>
away from the boats<lb/>
HAPPY BIRTHDAY Sun B Why<lb/>
does turning 21 make youu do thu<lb/>
things you do' Is that a battle scar<lb/>
or did you fan oft the bar at PB s'<lb/>
Has Sidney fixed the draft in his<lb/>
front door' Warrant' For<lb/>
Hay wood s arrest? But he is out of<lb/>
town<lb/>
PRINCE WHAT do you want a<lb/>
harem of slaves'<lb/>
HEY ED The Wad Nimonas-I<lb/>
heard you made a new movie call<lb/>
ed Exhausted II it was with a<lb/>
fat girl you probably were<lb/>
DELAYED ANNOUNCEMENT<lb/>
the tudges have tallied their votes<lb/>
and the winner of the first annual<lb/>
Dansey with no Pantsies is third<lb/>
floor resident Jetl Humbert Jeff<lb/>
illustrated his winning technique<lb/>
tor an those people present at<lb/>
Homecoming He combined<lb/>
epelectic gyrtions with designer<lb/>
Hearts Delight Ockey shorts for a<lb/>
winning performance Con<lb/>
graduations Jeff<lb/>
RUPERT HOW much crappola<lb/>
can you take in one week' You<lb/>
really must hafve messed up to<lb/>
deserve all this lu'k Bui when he<lb/>
went there there was no air, and<lb/>
he ahad to catch a ride home go<lb/>
mg down Hawa better week<lb/>
match the Pirates earn-<lb/>
ed the right to face the<lb/>
second-seeded UNC<lb/>
Tar Heels.<lb/>
In the first match,<lb/>
the home team was<lb/>
deteated by the 1 ad)<lb/>
Pirates, 16-14, only to<lb/>
see the Lady Tar Heels<lb/>
come back to take the<lb/>
last two by scores ot<lb/>
9-15 and 10-15.<lb/>
On Saturday, the<lb/>
Pirates were knocked<lb/>
from the tournament<lb/>
by Appalachian State,<lb/>
the Pirates' third loss<lb/>
of the season to the<lb/>
Mountaineers.<lb/>
Alter the tourna-<lb/>
ment, head volleyball<lb/>
coach Lynn Daidson<lb/>
was disappointed that<lb/>
the Pirates could not<lb/>
put it all together but<lb/>
was very pleased with<lb/>
the way her squad hung<lb/>
in against tough UNC.<lb/>
"The first match<lb/>
against Duke wasn't a<lb/>
very good match<lb/>
Davidson said. "It was<lb/>
very slow. I think<lb/>
everyone had the tour-<lb/>
nament jitters.<lb/>
"The match against<lb/>
UNC was very, very<lb/>
close she explained.<lb/>
"What was sit great<lb/>
about the match was<lb/>
that we never gave up.<lb/>
We were down 12-4 in<lb/>
the second game and<lb/>
came back and scored<lb/>
six points<lb/>
With the games in<lb/>
the state tournament<lb/>
concluded, the 1 adv<lb/>
Pirates finished the<lb/>
season with an 11-23<lb/>
record, overall.<lb/>
A regional bid,<lb/>
which was thought to<lb/>
be a possibility, never<lb/>
materialized so the<lb/>
tournament ended the<lb/>
season for the I ady<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
ECAC Basketball<lb/>
Tournament Specials<lb/>
NAME BRAND<lb/>
SHOES<lb/>
at 50 &amp; 60<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057441_0009"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>