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<pb facs="00057443_0001"/>
?he 5EaHt Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 58 No. 27<lb/>
Tuesday, November 24,1981<lb/>
Greenville,N.C .<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
NAACP Appropriation<lb/>
Draws SGA Debate<lb/>
Photo By JIM WOLTJEN<lb/>
( titling the ribbon at the new bed tower: (from left) FXL medical school dean Dr. William I. I.aupus. hospital<lb/>
hoard chairman Dr. O. Henry I eslie, and chief o, medical staff Dr. R. William Mcionnell.<lb/>
New Bed Tower Opens<lb/>
H IOM H M I<lb/>
Put County Memorial Hospital<lb/>
held a ribbon-cutting ceremon and<lb/>
open house for its nev west bed<lb/>
lowei at 2 p.m. Sunday. The S5.5<lb/>
a i was funded through<lb/>
the ECU S hool ol Medicine.<lb/>
When staffed, the 138-bed addi-<lb/>
will increase the facility's bed<lb/>
capacity, to 5 56. With the<lb/>
73,000 square-loot wing, the<lb/>
hospital now covers 12 acres.<lb/>
l)i illiam 1 aupus, dean of the<lb/>
medical school, said "a ground<lb/>
swell of feeling ingrained in all<lb/>
eastern North Carolinians" that the<lb/>
area needed better health care was<lb/>
partly responsible for the expan-<lb/>
sion. He also credited the state<lb/>
government and former chancellor<lb/>
I eo Jenkins for the "evolution" of<lb/>
ECU and the medical school.<lb/>
The complex now has 870<lb/>
employees and will need at least 86<lb/>
more nurses to staff the facility, ac-<lb/>
cording to hospital officials. The 20<lb/>
off-premises beds for ambulators<lb/>
patients are now being phased out.<lb/>
The "snowflake-designed" tower<lb/>
has a nursing station at the "hub"<lb/>
of each floorT The eight hallways on<lb/>
each floor lead to six rooms.<lb/>
The first floor will be lived foi<lb/>
surgical sub-specialties, such as or<lb/>
thopedics. The second floor has<lb/>
been allocated to pediatrics, and the<lb/>
top floor to other medical services.<lb/>
Approximately 80 people attend-<lb/>
ed the open house, including<lb/>
numerous public officials from the<lb/>
eastern North Carolina area.<lb/>
By DIANE ANDERSON<lb/>
-il?nl Sr? Mll?r<lb/>
The Student Government<lb/>
Association, after an hour and<lb/>
forty-five minute debate, Monday<lb/>
voted to reconsider a bill which they<lb/>
approved in a previous meeting ap-<lb/>
propriating $815 to the L( I<lb/>
chapter of the NAACP.<lb/>
The controversy over the bill<lb/>
stems from Article IV, Section 4h ol<lb/>
the group's constitution which<lb/>
states, "The Political Action Com<lb/>
mittee shall seek to increase registra<lb/>
tion and voting; encourage and pro-<lb/>
mote voter education; anil work tor<lb/>
the enactment of municipal, state<lb/>
and federal legislation designed to<lb/>
improve the educational, political<lb/>
and economic status of minority<lb/>
groups The NAACP is a non<lb/>
partisan organization.<lb/>
The SCiA appropriations commit-<lb/>
tee's funding guidelines state that<lb/>
"No partisan political or social ac-<lb/>
tion organization shall K funded<lb/>
Over 20 supporters of th<lb/>
NAACP wcti present at the meeting<lb/>
including Virginia c arlton, presi<lb/>
dent o the 1(1 chapter. In hei<lb/>
comments to the legislature, Carlton<lb/>
expressed contusion about the<lb/>
reconsideration of the bill.<lb/>
"It seems thai 1 have been hearing<lb/>
so many different things; I am vast-<lb/>
ly contused she said. "One fact is<lb/>
about three weeks ago or maybe<lb/>
even a month ago the appropria-<lb/>
tions committee appropriated<lb/>
within that committee a large<lb/>
amount of money . . . for educa-<lb/>
tional use. 1 do not understand what<lb/>
the problem is.<lb/>
"NAACP, 1 feel, is being<lb/>
stereotyped because it is NAACP. I<lb/>
have to agree with one of the<lb/>
legislators that if NAACP, if that<lb/>
word wasn't there, there would not<lb/>
be a problem here she continued.<lb/>
"It clearly states in their constitu-<lb/>
tion 'social, political " pointed out<lb/>
Legislator Chuck Blake.<lb/>
The legislature decided t vote I<lb/>
secret ballot, and in a 17-14 decision<lb/>
moved to reconsidei the bill. It was<lb/>
then sent back to the appropriations<lb/>
committee to be reanalyzed and<lb/>
reintroduced to the legislature at a<lb/>
latei time.<lb/>
?ter the meeting, C arlton i<lb/>
mented, "From what 1 have been<lb/>
told the reason we did not get out<lb/>
moncv is because in our constitution<lb/>
the words social and political ap<lb/>
pear. Wc are going to amend our<lb/>
national constitution so that the new<lb/>
constitution is focused on E I .<lb/>
soIeK here at our campus<lb/>
Carlton explained how the money<lb/>
in the bill would be used. The<lb/>
organization has already held a<lb/>
membership drive and a convention<lb/>
here in Greenville. They are current-<lb/>
ly sponsoring a turkey raffle and a<lb/>
project called Operation Santa<lb/>
Claus to benefit the mental health<lb/>
center.<lb/>
I he group will hold a celebration<lb/>
to honor Martin l.uther King in<lb/>
lanuarv. a convention in February<lb/>
and another membership drive in<lb/>
March. "Within these months we<lb/>
have meetings and workshops she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
In other business, it was announc-<lb/>
ed that there are still two openings<lb/>
for representatives from Tyler and<lb/>
Belk dorms. 1 he last day to file for<lb/>
these positions is December 1, and<lb/>
residents of these dorms interested<lb/>
should contact the SGA office at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
The SGA financial statement in-<lb/>
dicated that .is of Nov. 23 the<lb/>
legislature has appropriated<lb/>
S40.246.40 to various campus<lb/>
organizations. Bills signed but not<lb/>
posted to the record are $15,(XX)<lb/>
h? X l . $9,800 for the School<lb/>
ol Music, an $800 loan to the Sign<lb/>
I anguage Club, $500 for the J.V.<lb/>
Cheerleaders and $815 to the<lb/>
NAACP.<lb/>
Financial Aid Delayed<lb/>
By I KM GRW<lb/>
M r.l. i<lb/>
1 he . nplainis<lb/>
 udciiU this sc;neioi about<lb/>
)l financial aid<lb/>
? hai i he -v stem<lb/>
little<lb/>
 Robert M.<lb/>
B u director ol student<lb/>
department did<lb/>
ike checks<lb/>
to the students before the<lb/>
he semeslei. He said<lb/>
lid was late in coming<lb/>
ii . -  rej illations<lb/>
; det al -? nernmeni late<lb/>
?<lb/>
Aid Department<lb/>
usual - . ocessing applica-<lb/>
ii Febt uat I his re; ills in 75<lb/>
80 percent ol the applications be<lb/>
mg processed and completed by the<lb/>
beginning of the semester.<lb/>
Boudrcaux says tins year it wav two<lb/>
three week- before a school pay-<lb/>
nl was even made, putting the<lb/>
department behind by about six<lb/>
months. Revisions had to be made<lb/>
on mam applications due to errors<lb/>
on ihe patt of applicants, and accor-<lb/>
ding to Boudrcaux, these revisions<lb/>
usually delay the process by another<lb/>
i w o weeks.<lb/>
There have also been a few stu-<lb/>
dent complaints received pertaining<lb/>
to the attitude o Boudrcaux when<lb/>
students wanted to know why then<lb/>
checks were not iead. Boudreaux<lb/>
stated he did not wish to be harsh to<lb/>
anyone and that he understands<lb/>
how the students feel about the<lb/>
situation  he iust wants them to<lb/>
understand his position also.<lb/>
"here are approximately 7,(XX)<lb/>
students receiving some type ol<lb/>
financial assistance at hast<lb/>
Carolina. Boudreaux said he did not<lb/>
have the time to explain to every stu-<lb/>
dent why his Of her check was not<lb/>
going to be on tune. "Instead of be-<lb/>
ing able to work, we were busy ex-<lb/>
plaining to students the problem<lb/>
he explained. There was nothing else<lb/>
that the office staff could do except<lb/>
to work continously to speed up the<lb/>
process, according to Boudreaux.<lb/>
This process may not have gone<lb/>
as fast as it did had it not been for<lb/>
systems analyst Mrs. Freda Pollard.<lb/>
She developed a new packaging pro-<lb/>
gram started in mid-May that<lb/>
allows the staff to process financial<lb/>
aid applications much more swiftly.<lb/>
Boudreaux commented on Mrs,<lb/>
Pollards' work by saying, "She did<lb/>
an excellent job getting this done in<lb/>
so short a time<lb/>
According to Boudreaux. the<lb/>
program is only "60 to 65 percent<lb/>
efficient" nght now. He says that ii<lb/>
usually lakes about two years to<lb/>
complete!) change over to a new<lb/>
system. Ihe processing until now<lb/>
had been done by hand. Boudreaux<lb/>
said that they still had to finish 35 to<lb/>
37 percent of the applications by<lb/>
hand because students did not fill in<lb/>
complete information.<lb/>
1 he largest problem with process-<lb/>
ing was the Basic Educational Op-<lb/>
portunities Grant, the director said.<lb/>
Approximately 32(X) students at<lb/>
ECU receive tins grant, according to<lb/>
Boudreaux. The BEOG was late in<lb/>
processing because the information<lb/>
that was required to make a school<lb/>
payment schedule was sent late by<lb/>
the government to the Financial Aid<lb/>
Department. The department can-<lb/>
not decide on who receives the<lb/>
BF.OG until the government lets<lb/>
them know where to draw the line<lb/>
on financial need<lb/>
Boudreaux said everyone should<lb/>
apply for the Basic Educational Op-<lb/>
portunities Grant 1 he van! is has<lb/>
ed on need and a ?! ap<lb/>
plications received. 1 In government<lb/>
decides how much moncv is to be<lb/>
sent to E I foi grants md w hai<lb/>
percentage ol the applicants will<lb/>
receive the grant.<lb/>
When Boudreaux was asked it<lb/>
ECU's lands were cut this year, he<lb/>
responded, "We are receiving more<lb/>
moncv this year, possibly $200,000<lb/>
more. Next year, hall ol the<lb/>
students (receiving grants based on<lb/>
financial need) will gel half o what<lb/>
they got this year When asked it<lb/>
the Work Study Program had been<lb/>
cut back, lie said that it had not even<lb/>
been considered to be cut m Con-<lb/>
gress.<lb/>
There are still main applications<lb/>
pending because the applicants have<lb/>
not finished then applications oi did<lb/>
not return their Student Eligibility<lb/>
Report (SIR) to the Financial Aid<lb/>
Department. Boudreaux said<lb/>
Pollard's new program should keep<lb/>
problems such as the current one<lb/>
from happening again.<lb/>
Photo By DAVE WILLIAMS<lb/>
"Long-Haired t ountry Hoy" at ECl<lb/>
The Charlie Daniels concert Friday night was a sell-out. See The East<lb/>
Carolinian review on page 5.<lb/>
Friday Ref<lb/>
Futrell<lb/>
Photo By GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
Bag lunches are off limits at Mendenhall's Faculty and Staff Dining Room.<lb/>
Bagged Lunches Prohibited<lb/>
By EMMA DAMS<lb/>
si?(f Writrr<lb/>
The Faculty and Staff Dining<lb/>
Room located in Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent (enter has recently been the<lb/>
subject of a small controversy. The<lb/>
issue of whether or not bag lunches<lb/>
should be allowed in the dining<lb/>
facilities has been challenged by<lb/>
several staff members.<lb/>
The dispute began when one staff<lb/>
member gave part of the lunch she<lb/>
had bought to another staff member<lb/>
who had carried in her lunch. Ac-<lb/>
cording to these women, who asked<lb/>
not to be identified, a man working<lb/>
in the lunchroom told them that<lb/>
splitting lunches was not permitted.<lb/>
An argument followed in which one<lb/>
of the women claims the man accus-<lb/>
ed her of stealing.<lb/>
"There was never any notice<lb/>
stating we couldn't split lunches or<lb/>
bring our own lunches said the<lb/>
first women.<lb/>
"Many members of the staff have<lb/>
husbands or wives who can't eat the<lb/>
food in the (Faculty and Staff) din-<lb/>
ing room. This rule means they<lb/>
can't eat together the second<lb/>
woman stated.<lb/>
Jim Mayo, manager of the dining<lb/>
room, claimed the reason for the<lb/>
no-bag lunches rule was the table<lb/>
cloths and flowers in the room.<lb/>
"There wouldn't be enough if we let<lb/>
everyone who brought their lunches<lb/>
from home eat in here Mayo said.<lb/>
There has always been a $1.75<lb/>
minimum purchase for anyone<lb/>
eating in the room, according to<lb/>
Mayo.<lb/>
However, the women who<lb/>
registered the complaint said that<lb/>
they had been bringing their lunches<lb/>
into the room for "a long time<lb/>
Mayo said that he had received<lb/>
many letters of complaint about the<lb/>
rule. "There's nothing that can be<lb/>
done he added.<lb/>
By MIKE HUGHES<lb/>
Sliff Wrii.r<lb/>
In the November 17 issue of The<lb/>
East Carolinian, ECU Board o<lb/>
Trustees Chairman Ashley Futrell<lb/>
was quoted as claiming that UNC<lb/>
President William Friday would<lb/>
name an interim chancellor to<lb/>
replace Thomas Brewer by January<lb/>
1, 1982.<lb/>
However, in an interview Mon-<lb/>
day, Friday denied having ever plac-<lb/>
ed that date limitation on the ap-<lb/>
pointment.<lb/>
Friday said that the appointment<lb/>
of an interim chancellor is depen-<lb/>
dent upon what he and Brewer<lb/>
decide on as an effective date for<lb/>
Brewer's leave of absence.<lb/>
"I have not had the opportunity<lb/>
to turn full attention to this subject<lb/>
for the last few days Friday said.<lb/>
Friday did comfirm that two or<lb/>
three persons are under strong con-<lb/>
sideration for the permanent post,<lb/>
but he would not reveal any names.<lb/>
Likewise, he would not speculate on<lb/>
the interim position.<lb/>
Earlier reports indicated that<lb/>
John Howell, a professor of<lb/>
political science at ECU, will be the<lb/>
acting chancellor.<lb/>
However. Howell, who was vice-<lb/>
chancellor for academic affairs<lb/>
under Chancellor Feo Jenkins, said<lb/>
Monday that he would rather not<lb/>
speculate on the subject since he has<lb/>
heard no official word from the<lb/>
chancellor selection committee Ol<lb/>
from Friday.<lb/>
Futrell, who is also chairman for<lb/>
the search committee, said that the<lb/>
board has received between 50 and<lb/>
75 nominations for the permanent<lb/>
post. Furthermore, between 25 and<lb/>
50 nominees have already applied.<lb/>
"There are several good applica-<lb/>
tions in Futrell affirmed.<lb/>
However, he too would not com-<lb/>
ment on any specific applicants.<lb/>
Futrell added that a copy of the<lb/>
15-point listing of criteria has been<lb/>
sent to each of the nominees. That<lb/>
list was released November 17 and<lb/>
will be used in screening applicants<lb/>
for the chancellor's position.<lb/>
The search committee has propos-<lb/>
ed December 15 as the deadline for<lb/>
reviewing applications.<lb/>
At an SCiA meeting November<lb/>
16, Futrell did speculate on the<lb/>
choice for the permanent<lb/>
chancellor. He said that the ECU<lb/>
Board of Governors has set high<lb/>
standards for the applicants.<lb/>
However, Futrell admitted that the<lb/>
standards are intended as goals<lb/>
rather than prerequisites.<lb/>
Brewer, ECU's chancellor since<lb/>
1978 was at a meeting Monday and<lb/>
could not be reached for comment.<lb/>
His-official resignation takes effect<lb/>
June 30. 1982.<lb/>
ECU Senior Dies<lb/>
An ECU senior, Douglas William<lb/>
Pinder, died Saturday at his home.<lb/>
No cause of death was immediately<lb/>
known.<lb/>
Pinder was a native of Norfolk,<lb/>
Va. and had been a Greenville resi-<lb/>
dent for the past three years. Pinder<lb/>
was president of the Phi Alpha<lb/>
Theta Honorary History Society<lb/>
and had received the Richard Cecil<lb/>
Todd Phi Alpha Theta scholarship.<lb/>
He was also a member of the<lb/>
Mother Church, the First Church of<lb/>
Christ, Scientist, Boston, Mass.<lb/>
His funeral service is scheduled to<lb/>
be conducted Tuesday at 9 a.m. and<lb/>
a graveside service will be held at 10<lb/>
a.m. Wednesday at Lakeview<lb/>
Cemetery, Hamilton, Va.<lb/>
Surviving him are his parents Mr.<lb/>
and Mrs. Percy Alfred Pinder of<lb/>
Greenville; two brothers, Daniel A.<lb/>
and Richard Reed, both of<lb/>
Hamilton, Va. and a sister, Mrs.<lb/>
Steven Howell of Hampton, Va.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057443_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROM MAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 24, 1981<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
it you or your organua'ion<lb/>
would like io nave an iem printed<lb/>
id the announcements i olumn<lb/>
please sriHI the announc ement (as<lb/>
brief as possible) typed and<lb/>
double spaced 10 Ttie F tis' Caroli<lb/>
man in care ol the news editor<lb/>
Tnrr is no charqe tor an<lb/>
nouncerrtertiV Dot span' IS oltefl<lb/>
limited<lb/>
Ttie deadline tor announcement<lb/>
are s p n Friday tor Hie Tuesday<lb/>
oape? anil s p m Toesday for In<lb/>
Thursday paper<lb/>
Ttin spa e is available lo an<lb/>
? umpim oroaniiaii v l id depart<lb/>
? ? -s<lb/>
BANKING AND<lb/>
FINANCE<lb/>
Beta tsappa Alpha in banking<lb/>
i ? ? Fraternity will meel<lb/>
.? ?. p m m Mendenball, room ??i<lb/>
A' ???-?? .i Dei Mr Paoi<lb/>
t . ? . Wheai Firsl<lb/>
SeturiiiesM state <lb/>
? , ? v. ? tai kr's Af<lb/>
itums and 'ir an lual dues ol<lb/>
I ,? Ih ?. ???. ft I IK<lb/>
let est i' poi s ms ,i<lb/>
attend<lb/>
ECGC BAKE OFF<lb/>
 . v ?? , eating again! Tins<lb/>
? s ,4 inn i oui so meal' In<lb/>
? i.<lb/>
FCGC wilt I ? annual<lb/>
?? : , rurkey will<lb/>
iS<lb/>
?  ' ? meal m<lb/>
n '? ' s'<lb/>
lyith tin t ?' .<lb/>
?? l!KS ?'<lb/>
 , ? I t I i<lb/>
? ; ? .<lb/>
N . :j r ' ie<lb/>
PRC<lb/>
P R C Society meeting on<lb/>
November 24 al 8 p m m<lb/>
Mendenhall. room ??1<lb/>
HOME EC<lb/>
Phi Upsilon Omicron iHome<lb/>
Economics Honor Society I and me<lb/>
Student Dietetic Association m<lb/>
vites you to have a cup ol collee<lb/>
and see all the baked goods and<lb/>
cratts we will be selling a' our<lb/>
Christmas Bazaar It will be held<lb/>
on Monday. Dec 7 Irom 10 a m i<lb/>
p m in the Home Ei s vai'Lao<lb/>
dtngham Room Please plan to<lb/>
Stop by<lb/>
POETRY CONTEST<lb/>
Ti'i REBEL is conducting a<lb/>
poeti v oniesl II s open lo all i of<lb/>
rent ECU students Firs' prite is<lb/>
V80 Second prize ? SSB there are<lb/>
two honorable mentions "I SIO<lb/>
Prill money is provided by the At<lb/>
 and lellrie's Beer and Wine Co<lb/>
Students who wish to enter should<lb/>
SUbmil three to live typed poems<lb/>
to me REBEL 01 Media Board ol<lb/>
n 'he pobiicat'on budding<lb/>
Contestants should include a over<lb/>
with their name, address nd<lb/>
number Ibe deadline is<lb/>
N vembei 10 Winners will be<lb/>
publ shed  Ine REBEl ALl en<lb/>
,r ? w ,n be i unsidei ed lor<lb/>
publii ' ? R! HE L AH sub<lb/>
s are pi let 'ed by, u S<lb/>
, , , ? ir ? i.nss aoi will<lb/>
? '  'Ol .1<lb/>
f . ' ? ' ?<lb/>
? , RCBF L H ' .r TS1 ftSOJ<lb/>
i Ru tirit Cfii ii Poetry Edit i<lb/>
ii '  SHIP<lb/>
P.E. MAJORS<lb/>
Ail students who plan to declare<lb/>
physical education as a maior dur<lb/>
mg the spring semes'er or who m<lb/>
lend ?' student teach during the<lb/>
spring semester should report to<lb/>
Minges Coliseum at 10 a m on<lb/>
Wednesday. Dec 9 lor a motor and<lb/>
physical litness test Satislactory<lb/>
perlormance on this lest is re<lb/>
quired as a prerequisite lor ol<lb/>
licia' admittance to the physical<lb/>
education maior program More<lb/>
detailed intorma'ion covering the<lb/>
test is available by calling<lb/>
757 644?<lb/>
SLC<lb/>
The ECU Sign Language Club<lb/>
will hold its regular bimonthly<lb/>
covered dish supper and meeting<lb/>
on Sunday at Hie Mendenhall Slu<lb/>
dent Center Mull' Purpose Room.<lb/>
Ttie supper will begin at 6 P m<lb/>
wi'o a short business meeting and<lb/>
i aptioiHd tilm lo follow<lb/>
Toe meal aod meeting are open<lb/>
to any interested student, laculty<lb/>
member, or a member ol the com<lb/>
munity Vou do not need to know<lb/>
Sign Language' to aiiend. but<lb/>
students who are taking sign<lb/>
language classes or who have<lb/>
taken them m the past are en<lb/>
couraged to attend The purpose ol<lb/>
Ibe SLC is to allow sign langugaae<lb/>
students and bearing impaired<lb/>
S luden t s and community<lb/>
members lo six ialize and develop<lb/>
communication sk.Ms<lb/>
We o-ix- l?i see you Ihere<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
l tiii r are still openings lor sr.A<lb/>
representatives Irom Beik and<lb/>
Tyli- D'irms Applications should<lb/>
be submitted a' Hie SGA olln t<lb/>
f iiing deadline is 4 p m .<lb/>
r( ember I<lb/>
MEN WANTED!<lb/>
The ECU Men's Glee Club is cur<lb/>
renlly recruiting men lor the Spr<lb/>
mg Semester The Glee Club wot<lb/>
be touring North Carolina in<lb/>
January with a number ol other<lb/>
appearances scheduled<lb/>
throughout the semester If you<lb/>
would like to join this line chorus.<lb/>
or only wish to inquire abou'<lb/>
luture membership please contact<lb/>
Ed Glenn, Director at the School ol<lb/>
Music. 7S7 A33I or at 753 l?5 The<lb/>
Men's Glee Club is open to all men<lb/>
tampuswide and oilers one hour<lb/>
credit per semester The Glee<lb/>
Club rehearses at 13 00 M W F<lb/>
Anyone interested in joininq the<lb/>
Glee Club next semester Should<lb/>
contact Mr Glenn as soon as<lb/>
possible in order to be eligible lor<lb/>
the Sprmo tour<lb/>
CERAMICSGUILO<lb/>
The Eighth Annual Ceramics<lb/>
Guild r?'iibiiion and Sale of func<lb/>
tionat poitery and ctay sculptural<lb/>
lorms will be held December 3 and<lb/>
4 (Thursday and Friday) Irom 9<lb/>
am til 5 p m This year's location<lb/>
is 'he Mam Entrance Lobby m the<lb/>
Leo W Jenkins F me Arts Buildmo<lb/>
on East Filth St All prot eeds<lb/>
bcnelii the Ceramic Guild's pro<lb/>
grams lor lecturers, workshops<lb/>
and symposiums All work is<lb/>
oricnnal ami hand made id this<lb/>
event winch has become an Easi<lb/>
Carolina Community holiday<lb/>
tradition<lb/>
Further information is available<lb/>
from Ms Linda LeMar. President<lb/>
?r cnarles Cl?mhcrta?n. Faculty<lb/>
Advisor. ECU Art School 7S7 666S<lb/>
8 17 mornings<lb/>
ACROSS<lb/>
1 Waterway<lb/>
6 Ofemonies<lb/>
111nvent<lb/>
12 Smoothed<lb/>
14 Sun god<lb/>
15 Odea<lb/>
17 Antic<lb/>
18 Haill<lb/>
20 Talk Idly<lb/>
22 Pigeon pea<lb/>
23 Reject<lb/>
25 Packs away<lb/>
27 Tellurium<lb/>
symbol<lb/>
28 Growing out<lb/>
of<lb/>
30 Built<lb/>
32 Chief god of<lb/>
Memphis<lb/>
34 Love god<lb/>
35 More pleas-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
38 Towers<lb/>
41 Italian river<lb/>
42 TV fare<lb/>
44 Malay canoe<lb/>
45 Number<lb/>
47 Lowest point<lb/>
49 The sun<lb/>
50 Norse god<lb/>
52 Lawful<lb/>
54 Compass pt.<lb/>
55 Sea nymph<lb/>
57 Chooses<lb/>
59 Spools<lb/>
60 Paper units<lb/>
DOWN<lb/>
1 Cowardly<lb/>
2 Diphthong<lb/>
3 Short sleep<lb/>
4 Above and<lb/>
touching<lb/>
5 Ogles<lb/>
6 Renovate<lb/>
7 Roman num-<lb/>
eral<lb/>
8 Spread hay<lb/>
9 Geraint's wife<lb/>
10 Sober<lb/>
11 Desire<lb/>
13 Apportioned<lb/>
16 Partner<lb/>
19 Russian<lb/>
stockade<lb/>
21 Pitchers<lb/>
24 Aquatic<lb/>
mammal<lb/>
26 Large ladle<lb/>
29 Consumed<lb/>
31 Despots<lb/>
33 Harbingers<lb/>
35 Neck<lb/>
36 Marvel<lb/>
37 Impolite<lb/>
39 Perches<lb/>
40 Vendit'ons<lb/>
CROSS<lb/>
WORD<lb/>
PUZZLE<lb/>
FROM COLLEGE<lb/>
PRESS SERVICE<lb/>
Turkey Farmer<lb/>
Gobbles Profits<lb/>
43 African river<lb/>
46 European<lb/>
land<lb/>
48 Death rattle<lb/>
51 Born<lb/>
53 Meadow<lb/>
56 Negative pre-<lb/>
fix<lb/>
58 Centimeter<lb/>
(abbr )<lb/>
?2i45 1?7???1<lb/>
11ii<lb/>
141517<lb/>
11W4623<lb/>
23is?Jr<lb/>
7m31<lb/>
34<lb/>
35M<lb/>
41?t44<lb/>
45Wu11.40<lb/>
50T?54<lb/>
551:<lb/>
?r?<lb/>
Answer On Page 3<lb/>
World's Fair Troubles Students<lb/>
KNOXVII 1 E ,<lb/>
TENN. (CPS)<lb/>
Students at the I niver-<lb/>
sii of rennessec arc<lb/>
worried iluii the WS2<lb/>
World's Fail about to<lb/>
viari next lo the campus<lb/>
ill drive their rents up,<lb/>
make i he ca in pus<lb/>
grounds unsafe, and<lb/>
create a carnival-like<lb/>
atmosphere that could<lb/>
disrupt elasswoi k.<lb/>
Despite a d -<lb/>
ministrator's cannons.<lb/>
"students worrj about<lb/>
(the el feel of)<lb/>
thousands of people<lb/>
wandering around the<lb/>
campus says Ed In-<lb/>
gle, student govern<lb/>
men! president. " I he<lb/>
worry about noise.<lb/>
crime, and fireworks<lb/>
every night<lb/>
Commuting students<lb/>
also anticipate trat tic<lb/>
and parking problems<lb/>
at the fair site, a<lb/>
70-aerc snip adjacent<lb/>
1 UT's downtown<lb/>
knowille campus.<lb/>
"An a muse men i<lb/>
park is being built over<lb/>
six of our commutci<lb/>
parking lots Engle<lb/>
notes.<lb/>
Students' foremost<lb/>
concern. Ingle sas, is<lb/>
housing. Some 4(MM)<lb/>
students live in the<lb/>
"walk-on" Fort<lb/>
Sanders area, where<lb/>
some tear landlords<lb/>
will raise rents, write<lb/>
short leases, and force<lb/>
students inn so ihey can<lb/>
reni space for more<lb/>
money lo fairgoers.<lb/>
"We will have<lb/>
landlords who will try<lb/>
lo make the most oi the<lb/>
World's lair sas<lb/>
Dr. Howard Aldman.<lb/>
UT's v ice-chancelloi<lb/>
tor studeni affairs. 'll<lb/>
any students feel that<lb/>
the have been thus<lb/>
abused, we certainly<lb/>
want to hear from<lb/>
them<lb/>
Roih the studeni af-<lb/>
fairs office and the city<lb/>
( liamber of Commerce<lb/>
have opened housing<lb/>
offices to try lo prevent<lb/>
rent gouging.<lb/>
So far, the problem<lb/>
seems not lo have been<lb/>
w i d e s p r ea d . W hiIe<lb/>
"some" students have<lb/>
complained of landlord<lb/>
pressure, "no set ions<lb/>
case has thus far been<lb/>
encountered by this of-<lb/>
fice Aldman says.<lb/>
Aldman adds the<lb/>
university's system for<lb/>
assigning on-campus<lb/>
housing insures thai<lb/>
cominumu students get<lb/>
lop pt lontv.<lb/>
Assurances of a nine'<lb/>
campus are hanlei lo<lb/>
get from ol licials o' ihe<lb/>
fair, winch will run<lb/>
continuously from May<lb/>
1 to Oct. 31 next year.<lb/>
Instead, officials lell<lb/>
students of the number<lb/>
ol jobs the fair will<lb/>
open for them. UT's<lb/>
financial aids office has<lb/>
distributed "about<lb/>
KM)" employment ap-<lb/>
plications in I he last<lb/>
month, and will pool<lb/>
them for fair organizers<lb/>
and subsidiary<lb/>
businesses.<lb/>
"We expect the fair<lb/>
to create about 2(MK)<lb/>
jobs for students In-<lb/>
gle says, "but the<lb/>
whole cult in al educa-<lb/>
tion we're receiving<lb/>
with visitors from all<lb/>
over the world ? we<lb/>
see thai as a definite ad-<lb/>
vantage<lb/>
University and city<lb/>
officials, however, are<lb/>
looking forward lo<lb/>
more material<lb/>
benefits<lb/>
"1 know says<lb/>
Aldman, "in the long<lb/>
run, the lair will help<lb/>
the university and the<lb/>
Knoxville area. We<lb/>
have a valley here thai<lb/>
was rapidly<lb/>
deteriorating being<lb/>
cleaned up<lb/>
The university also<lb/>
expects to inherit a new<lb/>
traffic system, as well<lb/>
as five "permanent<lb/>
structures" surroun-<lb/>
ding a seven-acre lake,<lb/>
and a park.<lb/>
"This we plan lo re-<lb/>
develop into studeni<lb/>
housing Aldman<lb/>
says.<lb/>
"We've pulled every<lb/>
political due bill we<lb/>
could, lo get the fail<lb/>
here says Steve I and.<lb/>
Knoxville Chamber of<lb/>
Commerce director for<lb/>
lodging services, "and<lb/>
we've put up over $25<lb/>
million in private finan-<lb/>
cing for it<lb/>
1 and expects the eiiy<lb/>
will receive S2 2 5<lb/>
million for interstate<lb/>
highway im-<lb/>
provements, and will<lb/>
"revitalize that 70-acre<lb/>
slum next to the univcr-<lb/>
siiy.<lb/>
"If you're hosting a<lb/>
party for 11 million<lb/>
people he observes,<lb/>
"you're inclined to<lb/>
clean up your house.<lb/>
1 and predicts the<lb/>
Ian will add S500<lb/>
million io i he local<lb/>
economy.<lb/>
GIY1NG<lb/>
Sitting down to a<lb/>
succulent Thanksgiving<lb/>
turkey is no big deal for<lb/>
William C. Bates, who<lb/>
eats turkey 365 days a<lb/>
year.<lb/>
"I eat turkey one<lb/>
meal every day,<lb/>
sometimes twice a<lb/>
day said the<lb/>
Alabama turkey<lb/>
farmer. "We fix it so<lb/>
many different ways. I<lb/>
eat turkey every day of<lb/>
my life<lb/>
The jovial Bates<lb/>
operates Bates Turkey<lb/>
Farm, a thriving<lb/>
business that has been<lb/>
in his family more than<lb/>
50 years.<lb/>
The farm literally<lb/>
hatched in June, 1923,<lb/>
when his great aunt,<lb/>
Mamie Bates, gave his<lb/>
father nine turkey eggs<lb/>
for a wedding present.<lb/>
Located 5 miles east<lb/>
of Fort Deposit in<lb/>
Lowndes County, the<lb/>
Bates farm is one of the<lb/>
few large turkey pro-<lb/>
ducers in (he southeast.<lb/>
Bates said he raises<lb/>
60.000 of the white<lb/>
birds at a time and their<lb/>
gobbling racket turns<lb/>
into a roar as they mill<lb/>
around under pecan<lb/>
trees near a small lake<lb/>
Bates and Eddie Per<lb/>
due, who has worked<lb/>
on the farm since 1948<lb/>
when he was 11 years<lb/>
ago, made their annual<lb/>
trip to the state capitol<lb/>
in Montgomery this<lb/>
year with a live<lb/>
Thanksgiving turkev<lb/>
and a frozen bird.<lb/>
Their presentation of<lb/>
the froen turkey to<lb/>
Gov. Fob James mark<lb/>
ed the 32nd year the<lb/>
Bates farm has provid-<lb/>
ed an Alabama gover-<lb/>
nor with the main<lb/>
course for Thanksgiv<lb/>
ing dinner.<lb/>
Clyde, the 44-pound<lb/>
show turkey that calm<lb/>
ly allowed James lo<lb/>
stroke his neck, will<lb/>
escape the turkey plat-<lb/>
ter this year as a reward<lb/>
for his good behavior<lb/>
Bates said President<lb/>
Reagan invited him to<lb/>
make the traditional<lb/>
turkey presentation to<lb/>
him in Washington, but<lb/>
he relinquished the<lb/>
honor to the president<lb/>
of the National Turkev<lb/>
Federation. Bales said<lb/>
he worked "real hard"<lb/>
for Reagan's election<lb/>
The Fast Carolinian<lb/>
V  I4W.N.1 I I ?<lb/>
 ??<lb/>
PuMI'S't' cvrry Turvlv ?<lb/>
1'u'VMy lurt'iq Ihe acarjcrrtii<lb/>
?i.r ,v?l every W-ci"?'ScMv 'ur<lb/>
mq llir u"liTicr<lb/>
Trtr Es' Carolinian s ihe 1<lb/>
Ik iI wppr i f EflS'<lb/>
Carolina Umvorsily, ? a<lb/>
perated, am pubi'S l .v'<lb/>
ii, the ciun!?. if EaV Car m<lb/>
University<lb/>
Subscription Bale I20vt')tiy<lb/>
The Easi Carolinian oliiccs<lb/>
are located in the Old Souiti<lb/>
Buildinq on the campus ol ECU<lb/>
Greenville. N C<lb/>
POSTWA5TFR S ' '<lb/>
,v'ci I Tim Eas Cai ?<lb/>
Old S"u" Boildniq, ECU (V<lb/>
v.llr. NC 7783J<lb/>
Telephone !?! 6 344 6J67 6I0?<lb/>
Application lo mail at second<lb/>
class postaqe rales is penduiq ?)<lb/>
Gteenviiie North Carolina<lb/>
Cacti Sale<lb/>
3 4" &amp; 6" potted Cacti<lb/>
C and up<lb/>
Over 40 varieties to choose from.<lb/>
Greenville Flower Shop<lb/>
1027 S. Evans ? 75 2774<lb/>
HXLP WHIN YOU NMD IT MOST.<lb/>
The Remlng Center has 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/>
Tt? Pregnancy Tasting<lb/>
Weekday tV Saturday Abortion Appta.<lb/>
atraning Birt)Control Hour<lb/>
CALL 781-5550 DAY OR NIGHT<lb/>
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We're here when you need us.<lb/>
NAME BRAND<lb/>
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AND MANY OTHERS<lb/>
NEXT TO EVANS SEAFOOD<lb/>
 O<lb/>
ii HAS a<lb/>
OYSTERS<lb/>
IN THE<lb/>
SHELL<lb/>
203 W. ?th St.<lb/>
752-2332<lb/>
I J?A. Uniforms Shop !<lb/>
I<lb/>
All types of uniforms at reasonable<lb/>
prices. Lab coats, stethoscopes, shoes,<lb/>
 and hose. Also ? used ECU nurses<lb/>
I uniforms. Trade-ins allowed.<lb/>
<lb/>
Located 1710 W. 6th St.<lb/>
off Memorial Drive<lb/>
Near Hollowell's Drug and old hospital.<lb/>
The School of Music<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
and the<lb/>
Friends Planning Committee<lb/>
announce<lb/>
the formation of the<lb/>
Friends of the School of Music<lb/>
Persons interested in additional information<lb/>
are invited to contact the School of Music, 757-6851.<lb/>
LSAT<lb/>
GRE<lb/>
MCAT<lb/>
GRE PSYCH ? GRE BIO ? MAT<lb/>
GMAT ? DAT ? OCAT ? PCAT<lb/>
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MSKP ? NATL MED BDS<lb/>
ECFMG ? FLEX ? VQE<lb/>
NOB - NPB I ? NLE<lb/>
EDUCATIONAL CENTER<lb/>
Test Preparation Specialists<lb/>
Since 1938<lb/>
For information. Please Call<lb/>
? 919 489 8720<lb/>
DEADLINE<lb/>
November 30<lb/>
RIGGAH<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
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1st prize<lb/>
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Current underprKjuaNf??"??<lb/>
medical studvnH may mow<lb/>
comt?i? for WWII hundred<lb/>
Air Fore SCb?l?r??lp? Thoio<lb/>
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medical schools as frosttmon<lb/>
or at the beginning ol their<lb/>
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RHON8 COLLRCT ?? ?S5-?I14<lb/>
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$125 1st prize<lb/>
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$10 Two Honoraries<lb/>
sponsored by<lb/>
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OfflCIAl NORIH CAROLINA STATE INSPfCllON STAK<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057443_0003"/><lb/>
er<lb/>
its<lb/>
Lmall lake.<lb/>
jl-ddie Per<lb/>
as worked<lb/>
since 148<lb/>
Is 11 years<lb/>
ltu annual<lb/>
tafc capitol<lb/>
Imeiv this<lb/>
a live<lb/>
g uirkev<lb/>
ird<lb/>
c ation oi<lb/>
kC tO<lb/>
s mark-<lb/>
eai the<lb/>
pro id-<lb/>
ima gover-<lb/>
main<lb/>
44-pound<lb/>
that calm-<lb/>
lames to<lb/>
it, will<lb/>
ke plat-<lb/>
;eward<lb/>
Dehavioi<lb/>
President<lb/>
:ed him to<lb/>
raditional<lb/>
v ttion to<lb/>
n, but<lb/>
J the<lb/>
? president<lb/>
Iurke<lb/>
Bates aid<lb/>
'? eal hard"<lb/>
i rction.<lb/>
<lb/>
MOST<lb/>
women<lb/>
Tiding<lb/>
armed<lb/>
xi elude:<lb/>
US.<lb/>
lie<lb/>
RE!<lb/>
THE FAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 24, 1981<lb/>
Iranian College Students Suffering Attacks<lb/>
DENVER, Colo. (CPS) - About<lb/>
30 Iranian students just settling<lb/>
down to watch a movie at a<lb/>
Metropolitan State College<lb/>
classroom in Denver when a mob of<lb/>
shouting, club-swinging coun-<lb/>
trymen burst into the room. They<lb/>
set upon the movie-goers with canes<lb/>
and ax handles. Fighting back, the<lb/>
movie-goers managed to drive the<lb/>
attackers out of the building just as<lb/>
the police arrived. About a half-<lb/>
dozen people were injured before<lb/>
the melee was subdued.<lb/>
But the September incident in<lb/>
Denver among Iranian students ?<lb/>
whose short history on American<lb/>
campuses has been punctuated fre-<lb/>
quently by controversy and elastics<lb/>
? was jus! one of main often-<lb/>
violent confrontations on campuses<lb/>
this fall around the United States<lb/>
And as the cycle oi protest and<lb/>
violence continues, increasing<lb/>
numbers of Iranian students ar<lb/>
ereportedly falling deeply into debt<lb/>
and becoming dejected over the pro-<lb/>
spect of returning home, where<lb/>
many have already lost family<lb/>
members. Iranian student observers<lb/>
say an increasing number of Ira-<lb/>
nians are suffering nervous<lb/>
breakdowns under a strain exacer-<lb/>
bated by the Reagan administra-<lb/>
tion's unwillingness to grant them<lb/>
political asylum.<lb/>
The cycle of confrontation bet-<lb/>
ween pro-and anti-Khomeini groups<lb/>
would set up booths side-by-side on<lb/>
campus and then start shouting at<lb/>
each other<lb/>
filings soon turned violent, Stan-<lb/>
ton says. "One (Iranian) group<lb/>
would jump someone in a parking<lb/>
lot, then the other group would<lb/>
strike hack. They travel in groups<lb/>
here now for their own self-<lb/>
protection<lb/>
A major brawl erupted in<lb/>
September at the University of Iowa<lb/>
when eight or nine Khomeini sup-<lb/>
porters objected to the posting of an<lb/>
anti-lranian-goernment poster and<lb/>
physically attacked other members<lb/>
of an Iranian student group.<lb/>
Security forces at the University<lb/>
of Oregon were recently forced to<lb/>
break up a fist fight between com-<lb/>
peting Iranian organizations who set<lb/>
up pro- and anti-Khomeini<lb/>
literature booths on the campus<lb/>
mall.<lb/>
At Central State in Oklahoma, an<lb/>
Iranian student attacked three coun-<lb/>
trymen with "a sharp object ac-<lb/>
cording to police, in a dispute over<lb/>
anti-Khomeini literature. A similiar<lb/>
brawl at the University of Kansas,<lb/>
which included the hurling of<lb/>
"ashtrays, coffee pots and chairs<lb/>
may result in the deportation of two<lb/>
Iranians.<lb/>
"I haven't heard of any alterca-<lb/>
tions recently on a major scale<lb/>
demurs Patricia Biddinger, who<lb/>
looks after Iranian student affairs<lb/>
for the National Association of<lb/>
Foreign Student Affairs. She has<lb/>
not done a campus-by-campus<lb/>
survey of intra-lranian strife,<lb/>
however.<lb/>
The 50,000-some Iranians who<lb/>
Valuable Manuscripts Housed<lb/>
In Joyner Library Collection<lb/>
have remained here have not been<lb/>
immune to the turmoil of their<lb/>
homeland. "There is certainly ten-<lb/>
sion everywhere between Iranian<lb/>
students Biddinger observes. "It<lb/>
reflects all the different pesuasions<lb/>
in Iran itself<lb/>
It also reflects some of the<lb/>
violence in Iran, as pro-Khomeini<lb/>
students here have resisted what<lb/>
Biddinger sees as a pronounced shift<lb/>
in sentiment against the Islamic<lb/>
government among their classmates.<lb/>
In turn, pro-Khomeini students<lb/>
have stepped up their attacks on<lb/>
government opponents. Perhaps the<lb/>
most violent confrontation was the<lb/>
Metro State affair in which the pro-<lb/>
Khomeini demonstrators stormed<lb/>
the anti-Khomeini Iranian Cultural<lb/>
Club's screening of a film about<lb/>
Kurdistan ? the rebellious Iranian<lb/>
province at war with Tehran.<lb/>
"There were a lot of children in<lb/>
the room says Kamal, a member<lb/>
of the Iranian Cultural Club.<lb/>
"(The pro-Khomeini students)<lb/>
want everyone to follow the govern-<lb/>
Mf<lb/>
ment's policy says a member ot<lb/>
the Metro State Moslem Student<lb/>
Society, which also opposes the<lb/>
Khomeini regime.<lb/>
The member insists on anonymi-<lb/>
ty, out of a fear shared by anti-<lb/>
government Iranian students that<lb/>
pro-Khomeini students are spies in<lb/>
the pay of the Ayatollah's regime.<lb/>
I've heard personally that they've<lb/>
reported names of students not on<lb/>
their side he says. "As a result,<lb/>
many sudents can't receive money<lb/>
from home, and their families are<lb/>
also in danger<lb/>
"One of my best friends here in<lb/>
Denver returned to Iran about six<lb/>
months ago Kamal says, "and she<lb/>
was executed<lb/>
"It's a real catch-22 says Bid-<lb/>
dinger. "They can't get money from<lb/>
home, yet they don't hold jobs here<lb/>
because their status as foreign<lb/>
students legally prevents it. Thus<lb/>
many of them feel they have no<lb/>
economic choice except to return to<lb/>
Iran. Yet they're afraid they'll be<lb/>
killed if they go back<lb/>
Biddinger says an increasing<lb/>
number of students have applied for<lb/>
political asylum here. Yet she<lb/>
reports "practically all the applica-<lb/>
tions ? some 300 to 400 ? have<lb/>
been rejected by State Department<lb/>
officials for no apparent reason.<lb/>
Biddinger believes the cnaotic<lb/>
situation in Iran has affected the<lb/>
academic performances of Iranians<lb/>
in America. "They've always had<lb/>
an extroardinarily good record here<lb/>
academically, yet ail the trauma of<lb/>
recent times has certainly, inevitably<lb/>
affected their studies. Some just<lb/>
can't function at all anymore.<lb/>
We've had a number of nervous<lb/>
breakdowns<lb/>
"They're suffering, there's no<lb/>
question about she laments.<lb/>
"And 1 don't have an answer to it<lb/>
B WILLIAM A. SHIRKS<lb/>
The relation oi the press to the<lb/>
people ol a tree government is one<lb/>
oi "courageous championship,<lb/>
! oval d e v o t i o n and eternal<lb/>
vigilance says a letter written in<lb/>
104 bv Dr. James Yadkin Joyner,<lb/>
legendary public educator.<lb/>
Joyner. who instituted sweeping<lb/>
educational reforms during the ad-<lb/>
ministration oi North Carolina's<lb/>
"education governor Charles B.<lb/>
Aycock, also saw the role oi<lb/>
newspapers as an indispensable tool<lb/>
? education.<lb/>
He wrote, "the clean well-edited<lb/>
paper, coming into thousands of<lb/>
homes, does the work of a multitude<lb/>
ol teachers in supplementing the<lb/>
formal work of the school, and in<lb/>
broadening and setting nee the<lb/>
minds and hearts of men<lb/>
This letter among others contain-<lb/>
ing rich original source material foi<lb/>
scholars and researchers, now lies in<lb/>
the repository of the fast Carolina<lb/>
Manuscript Collection in the J.Y.<lb/>
Joyner I ibrary ol I iasi c aroiina<lb/>
University.<lb/>
it is among more than 2.(XX) let-<lb/>
ters, speeches, reports, business<lb/>
records, clippings and other<lb/>
materials donated to the ECU col-<lb/>
lection bv William T. Joyner Jr<lb/>
Walton K. Joyner, both of Raleigh,<lb/>
and Mrs. Walter P. Sprunt, Mem-<lb/>
phis. Tenn members oi the Joyner<lb/>
family.<lb/>
Historical!) lames Y. Joyner<lb/>
(1862-1954) helped organize the first<lb/>
graded school in Winston (1884),<lb/>
practiced law in Goldsboro<lb/>
(1886-1889) and then became<lb/>
superintendent of Goldsboro<lb/>
schools. He became head oi the<lb/>
English Department and dean of the<lb/>
State Normal and Industrial Schoo<lb/>
t<lb/>
in Greensboro, now the University<lb/>
oi North Carolina at Greensboro, in<lb/>
1892.<lb/>
From 1902 until 1919, he served<lb/>
as State Superintendent of Public<lb/>
Instruction, which included the<lb/>
Aycock administration. In 1909 he<lb/>
became the first Southerner elected<lb/>
president of the National Education<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
Joyner's letter relating the press<lb/>
to public education was written July<lb/>
14. 1904. to a friend, J.B. Sherrill of<lb/>
C oncord. Excerps include:<lb/>
"The relation of the Press to<lb/>
public education is the relation of<lb/>
the Press to the freedom, the safety,<lb/>
the prosperity and the happiness of<lb/>
our people, for no truth is more<lb/>
clearl) demonstrated by all the<lb/>
history, oi human civilization that<lb/>
the truth that these are bound up in<lb/>
the education and the general in-<lb/>
telligence oi the great masses of the<lb/>
people of a free government. The<lb/>
relation oi the Press to these is<lb/>
known of all men<lb/>
"It is one of courageous cham-<lb/>
pionship, loyal devotion and eternal<lb/>
vigilance. It must follow, therefore,<lb/>
as the night the day, that this should<lb/>
be its logical relation to education as<lb/>
the foundation of all these others.<lb/>
"It would be an evil day for the<lb/>
good people oi this commonwealth,<lb/>
if the Press ol the state should ever<lb/>
assume any other attitude toward<lb/>
the enlightenment of the people of<lb/>
the state<lb/>
Joyner added that "no class of<lb/>
people will be more benefited by<lb/>
the diffusion of intelligence among<lb/>
all the people than the editors<lb/>
"An ignorant people is never a<lb/>
leading people he said. "The<lb/>
Press is not only dependent upon an<lb/>
intelligent, reading people for<lb/>
subscribers and financial support.<lb/>
but it is also dependent upon readers<lb/>
and the avAue of intelligence for<lb/>
the promotion of every other in-<lb/>
terest for which it stands, for how<lb/>
shall men believe and be convinced<lb/>
unless they first hear and read<lb/>
The J.Y. Joyner papers are<lb/>
among additional acquisitions of<lb/>
the East Carolina Manuscript Col-<lb/>
lection since last April, according to<lb/>
director Donald R. L.ennon. During<lb/>
the seven months period, 14 new<lb/>
collections of papers were acquired<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057443_0004"/><lb/>
2Jt?e East (Earnlmtan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Paul Collins, wmcm<lb/>
Jimmy Dupree, Mmm so<lb/>
Ric Browning, ????rfvr??,?, Charles Chandler, ?? emm<lb/>
CHRIS LlCHOK, Business Manafrr TOM HALL, ewi Editor<lb/>
Alison Bartel, pnwu?.? mm Steve Bachner, EnurtammtM?&amp;?<lb/>
Steve Moore, omwm m? Karen Wendt, &amp;??<lb/>
November 24, 1981<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Circus Time II<lb/>
Student Legislature At It Again<lb/>
Have you ever been bored on a<lb/>
Monday evening ? nothing to do<lb/>
and desperate for entertainment?<lb/>
Well, next time boredom stirkes, we<lb/>
suggest you venture over to<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center and<lb/>
catch the latest episode of Student<lb/>
Governors.<lb/>
It plays each Monday at 5 p.m. in<lb/>
room 248 of the student center and<lb/>
is filled with more excitement than<lb/>
The Perils of Pauline, more twists<lb/>
and turns than your favorite soap<lb/>
opera and more mystery than Col-<lb/>
umbo, McCloud and McMillan and<lb/>
Wife combined.<lb/>
Student Governors, also known<lb/>
as the SGA, is one of East<lb/>
Carolina's longest running and<lb/>
most endurable hits. And yester-<lb/>
day's meeting ? or episode as it<lb/>
may be ? is a prime example of ex-<lb/>
actly why the SGA is ECU's<lb/>
favorite comedy.<lb/>
The legislature debated Monday<lb/>
whether or not to reconsider a bill<lb/>
giving the NAACP $815. The merits<lb/>
of the bill are not important; the<lb/>
issue here is the manner in which the<lb/>
legislators conducted themlselves.<lb/>
In a two-hour debate, the<lb/>
legislature managed to avoid<lb/>
touching upon any of the important<lb/>
issues and instead wasted the time<lb/>
"clarifying" what had already been<lb/>
clarified five times. Members spoke<lb/>
out of turn, interrupted one<lb/>
another, walked around the room<lb/>
and generally conducted themselves<lb/>
like a pack of baboons.<lb/>
The legislature then decided to<lb/>
vote by secret ballot. After all that<lb/>
rigmarole, the legislators might<lb/>
have had the deceny to stand by<lb/>
their votes.<lb/>
The ultimate irony, however, is<lb/>
that the SGA voted to put its deci-<lb/>
sion off until next week. So<lb/>
remember to tune in next week.<lb/>
Same dingbat time. Same dingbat<lb/>
channel.<lb/>
Thanksgiving<lb/>
Reflections<lb/>
Charlie Brown has a special each<lb/>
year on CBS; Macy's in New York<lb/>
and J.L. Hudson in Detroit have<lb/>
gala parades; it was, until recent<lb/>
years, the unofficial opening of the<lb/>
Christmas shopping season; it<lb/>
means two extra days without<lb/>
classes in late November.<lb/>
Thanksgiving has become one of<lb/>
the most confused holidays in ex-<lb/>
istance. Rather than evolving into<lb/>
the celebration of unity and<lb/>
understanding which was its basis,<lb/>
Thanksgiving has become little<lb/>
more than an extra day on the<lb/>
calender for most people to relax.<lb/>
It is the one holiday which the<lb/>
United States does not share with<lb/>
any other nation; the one day<lb/>
citizens of this country should be<lb/>
thankful for the settlers who fought<lb/>
the elements and established a new-<lb/>
nation.<lb/>
So Thursday, for just a brief mo-<lb/>
ment, pause between commercial<lb/>
breaks of the parades or football<lb/>
games and be thankful for the<lb/>
freedom which every citizen of the<lb/>
United States enjoys.<lb/>
HERE<lb/>
? <lb/>
THERE<lb/>
?.?? ? ?fiE ? tO ?  ' -  ? ' ? -j3b<lb/>
3<lb/>
4<lb/>
C<lb/>
Of<lb/>
Envelopes Keep Reporter Talking<lb/>
By ART BUCHWALD<lb/>
A Japanese newspaperman came into<lb/>
my office the other day. bowed deeply,<lb/>
and said, "Forgive me for this awkward<lb/>
intrusion, but I am doing a story for a<lb/>
newspaper in Tokyo about Richard Allen<lb/>
and the Nancy Reagan interview<lb/>
"Ah so I said, "I would be most<lb/>
honored to answer any of your questions<lb/>
"What do you personally think of this<lb/>
situation?"<lb/>
"1 would -prefer not to comment on it I<lb/>
replied, "until the Justice Department<lb/>
finishes its investigation<lb/>
He smiled and gave me a white envelope<lb/>
containing $100 in cash.<lb/>
"Ah so I said, smiling back. "But I<lb/>
cannot accept a bribe fc granting you an<lb/>
interview<lb/>
"It is not a bribe he said indignantly.<lb/>
"It is a tradition in my country to give a<lb/>
small gift of appreciation when someone<lb/>
grants an interview<lb/>
"Why didn't you say that in the first<lb/>
place?" 1 said. I called in my secretary and<lb/>
told her to put the envelope in the safe.<lb/>
"Do you feel he continued, "that so-<lb/>
meone in high position in office should ac-<lb/>
cept a gift from a newspaperman for ar-<lb/>
ranging an interview with the First lady of<lb/>
the land?"<lb/>
"Mr. Allen expected nothing but he has<lb/>
great respect for your traditions and would<lb/>
do anything not to insult you. When Mr.<lb/>
Reagan took office the first thing he said<lb/>
to his foreign policy advisers was, 'Under<lb/>
no conditions do I want anyone in my ad-<lb/>
ministration to offend the Japanese<lb/>
The newspaperman smiled and handed<lb/>
me another white envelope. He looked at<lb/>
his notes. "What do you think Mr. Allen<lb/>
intended to do with the $1,000?"<lb/>
"He says he intended to give it to chari-<lb/>
ty<lb/>
" Why didn't he?"<lb/>
"Because he forgot about it. You must<lb/>
understand, Mr. Allen is the President's<lb/>
National Security Adviser and he forget<lb/>
very easily. One day he says a certain coun-<lb/>
try is a threat to the United States and then<lb/>
he forgets all about it<lb/>
"Am I taking up too much of your<lb/>
time?" he asked.<lb/>
"Heck no I said. "Not as long as you<lb/>
keep passing over white envelopes<lb/>
"Mrs. Reagan knew nothing about the<lb/>
arrangement?"<lb/>
"Mrs. Reagan doesn't even remember<lb/>
being interviewed by the Japanese<lb/>
magazine<lb/>
"That means she must be very unhappv<lb/>
with Mr. Allen?"<lb/>
"Well, she's not working on a needle-<lb/>
point pillow for him for Christmas this<lb/>
year<lb/>
The Japanese newspaperman was<lb/>
writing furiously.<lb/>
"I don't want to offend you I said,<lb/>
"but you forgot to give me another white<lb/>
envelope<lb/>
"Ah so he said. "A thousand par-<lb/>
dons<lb/>
"It's okay. But we Americans aren't us-<lb/>
ed to answering questions for nothing<lb/>
"One final question. Is it your opinion<lb/>
that Secretary of State Al Haig is happ<lb/>
unhappy about the way things are going<lb/>
for MrAllen?"<lb/>
"He looked very disturbed the last time<lb/>
I saw him on television and I couldn't tell<lb/>
whether it was because of Mr. Allen or<lb/>
Nicaragua<lb/>
The Tokyo newspaperman handed me<lb/>
my last envelope.<lb/>
As soon as he left 1 called Tom Bcokvw<lb/>
and said, "The next time you want me to<lb/>
do the 'Today' show it's going to cost you<lb/>
10 big ones<lb/>
"But that's checkbook journalism he<lb/>
cried.<lb/>
"Ah. so<lb/>
(e) 1981, I.os Angeles Times Syndicate<lb/>
- Campus Forum<lb/>
Major A ttractions Chairman Responds To Concert Criticism<lb/>
After reading yuour coverage of the<lb/>
concert of Nov. 7, 1981, I felt that I<lb/>
must reply to some of the charges made.<lb/>
The show did start late, run late and one<lb/>
of the support acts did not appear;<lb/>
however, the show did go on, and the<lb/>
headline act did appear so the concert<lb/>
did happen. I regret that these things<lb/>
happened, and could we the committee<lb/>
have forseen them, they would not have<lb/>
had the chance. I do though feel that we<lb/>
the committee acted in good faith and<lb/>
tried to do the job we volunteered for.<lb/>
Yes, I said volunteered ? none of us are<lb/>
paid, we do what we do as a service to<lb/>
East Carolina.<lb/>
It seems that everyone is very quick to<lb/>
criticize but not so quick to volunteer<lb/>
their own time to become one of us and<lb/>
help try to solves these problems they so<lb/>
quickly point out. To quote an old line<lb/>
? "If you are not a part of the solution,<lb/>
you are a part of the problem<lb/>
Criticism, if done properly, can be<lb/>
helpful, but criticism by the uninformed<lb/>
only serves to inflame others through a<lb/>
distortion of facts however uninten-<lb/>
tional that distortion may be.<lb/>
There are several of these distortions<lb/>
that 1 would like to point out now. Paul<lb/>
Collins says in his editorial that Jim<lb/>
Rouse is an unproven promoter. If he<lb/>
had taken the time to read the news story<lb/>
on the front page of that same edition,<lb/>
he would have found that we based our<lb/>
decision on Rouse's very successful pro-<lb/>
motion of the Bar-Kays Concert last<lb/>
summer. This was a very smooth-<lb/>
running concert that had no business or<lb/>
technical problems to speak of.<lb/>
I also would like to rcsond to one<lb/>
charge from Mr. Da Vinci Metcalf in<lb/>
which he questioned why the student<lb/>
body's money could not be spent for<lb/>
better concerts. First of all there is none<lb/>
of the student body's money involved in<lb/>
this or any other concet unless it is in the<lb/>
form of a loan.<lb/>
Yes, that is the truth, of all those<lb/>
dollars that we all pay under the title<lb/>
"other fees the Student Union Major<lb/>
Attractions Committee gets none, not a<lb/>
single penny. As far as the quality of<lb/>
groups, we are doing the best that is<lb/>
possible due to our limitations of facility<lb/>
acoustics, facility size, lack of funds and<lb/>
apparent lack of interest.<lb/>
I do not feel that this column is the ap-<lb/>
propriate place for only two individuals<lb/>
to banter charges and countercharges. If<lb/>
anyone had been interested enough to<lb/>
check, they would have found that I<lb/>
have office hours in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center on Monday through Friday from<lb/>
5:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
I will be more than glad to explain our<lb/>
functions and processes to anyone who<lb/>
cares enough to call or come by. I feel I<lb/>
can more accurately answer any ques-<lb/>
tions there than in the limited space of<lb/>
this column.<lb/>
My biggest concern through all of this<lb/>
is that in an issue that was considered<lb/>
important enough to merit nearlv a third<lb/>
of the front page, almost a full quarter<lb/>
page editorial and a lengthy letter in this<lb/>
column, I was not even contacted to ask<lb/>
my opinions on the matter or to evaluate<lb/>
it.<lb/>
In closing, I thank you for the use of<lb/>
this column to express these points and<lb/>
to ask concerned people to come by and<lb/>
talk to me in person or attend one of our<lb/>
meetings.<lb/>
JERRY DILSAVER<lb/>
Chairman, Major Att. Comm.<lb/>
Braxton's Peaked<lb/>
A point to be considered<lb/>
If a man seeks greatness then let him<lb/>
forget greatness and seek truth.<lb/>
In truth he will find greatness. Certain<lb/>
prominent students need to adhere to<lb/>
this. A man does not become a great<lb/>
leader through imagery. He does it<lb/>
through daring risks at his own public<lb/>
image for the benefit of the people he is<lb/>
representing. The student does not give a<lb/>
man, an office, a secretary, and $700 a<lb/>
year to try to look good. The vice presi-<lb/>
dent position is there for a reason Mr.<lb/>
Braxton It is easy to cancel emergency<lb/>
loan fund, medical or otherwise, but is it<lb/>
easy to come up with a better plan and<lb/>
hope it better serves the students? This is<lb/>
an example of Example number two Mr.<lb/>
Lippet. Mr. Sune pointed this out.<lb/>
As for example number one, Mr. Lip-<lb/>
pet, the Congressional staff of Mr.<lb/>
Jones has confirmed the report to The<lb/>
East Carolinian. How much more proof<lb/>
do you want that the students were<lb/>
misrepresented?<lb/>
Mr. Lippet I agree with you on one<lb/>
thing Mr. Braxton's plilosophical and<lb/>
political ideas are not very sound. I'd<lb/>
sure hate to see him look after the<lb/>
welfare of the students here at ECU as<lb/>
our president.<lb/>
When one is in the public eye, Mr.<lb/>
Lippet, they must undergo scrutiny. Mr.<lb/>
Braxton knows this. Where is Mr. Brax-<lb/>
ton's proofin the United States we<lb/>
have freedom of speech too, you know.<lb/>
Mr. Sune, in addition to bringing<lb/>
some mighty fine concerts in here at<lb/>
ECU, you sure did the student body a<lb/>
justice. We need to know about the peo-<lb/>
ple who are supposed to be looking out<lb/>
for us. If they aren't doing it, lets get rid<lb/>
of them.<lb/>
Mr. Braxton, your political future at<lb/>
ECU seems to have peeked. Please don't<lb/>
embarass yourself and ECU by running<lb/>
for president. The black people respect<lb/>
Martin Luther Kingpattern yourself<lb/>
more after him.<lb/>
With the new administration we need<lb/>
a worker to help make changes, not so-<lb/>
meone trying to look good politically.<lb/>
T. Dean<lb/>
Business<lb/>
Tired Of Inequality?<lb/>
This letter is in response to Thursday's<lb/>
letter to all students on campus who are<lb/>
tired of inequality. I would personally<lb/>
like to address the same group of<lb/>
students.<lb/>
I would like to say that this school is<lb/>
probably one of the most equal oppor-<lb/>
tunity schools I've ever been exposed to.<lb/>
Why should the majority of students<lb/>
always rule every aspect of campus life<lb/>
as the writer of Thursday's letter wishes?<lb/>
I think it's great that this campus could<lb/>
support such things as the East Carolina<lb/>
Gay Community, and as for the black<lb/>
homecoming queen, everyone on this<lb/>
campus had the opportunity to vote.<lb/>
Tough if you don't relish the fact that<lb/>
she won.<lb/>
If it was up to the writer of Thurs-<lb/>
day's letter slavery would be an in thing,<lb/>
and homosexuals would be chained and<lb/>
exported to a far away island, possibly<lb/>
the island of Lesbos.<lb/>
I suggest that the students of this<lb/>
author's persuasion tht have "spines<lb/>
and moral fiber" give us, the "morally<lb/>
diseased a complete definition of<lb/>
"equality Thank you, and God Bless<lb/>
America &amp; ECU.<lb/>
SARAH A. LYNN<lb/>
NE1LAG. HINGORANI<lb/>
Pirate Feature<lb/>
I would like to express my dislike of<lb/>
the front page of the Nov. 10 issue of<lb/>
The East Carolinian. Kim Cloud, East<lb/>
Carolina's Homecoming Queen, (not<lb/>
pirate queen) should have been featured<lb/>
in a article telling the readers a little bit<lb/>
more about her. This is only my first<lb/>
year at East Carolina, but I thought the<lb/>
university newspaper would have<lb/>
recognized the homecoming queen bet-<lb/>
ter than they did. Maybe she's a little too<lb/>
dark for the staff of The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian!<lb/>
Along with other members of the stu-<lb/>
dent body, I thought it was disgusting to<lb/>
see the homecoming queen's picture in<lb/>
the appear alongside the picture of a<lb/>
float that read "EAT ME<lb/>
What college newspaper besides The<lb/>
East Carolinian would put that picture<lb/>
of the float with the "EAT ME" sign on<lb/>
the front page. Is the newspaper trying<lb/>
to impress Playboy magazine or<lb/>
something?<lb/>
The photographer could have chosen<lb/>
another photo of Miss Cloud to go in the<lb/>
newspaper so the students could see why<lb/>
she was crowned Miss East Carolina!<lb/>
The whole ordeal shows again that pre<lb/>
judice still exists strongly. It's a shame<lb/>
that the black race is always the target!<lb/>
WARREN D. JOHNSON<lb/>
Political Science<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: The official title of<lb/>
the homecoming court winner is "East<lb/>
Carolina University Homecoming<lb/>
Pirate<lb/>
'Golden Fleece'<lb/>
I would like to present my own<lb/>
"Golden Fleece Award" this year to all<lb/>
our prestigious sorority "women" who<lb/>
live along Fifth Street across from cam-<lb/>
pus. I admit that the first time I saw a<lb/>
sorority house yard rolled I thought it<lb/>
appropriate, but 1 was a freshman then.<lb/>
Through the years it has become more<lb/>
and more ridiculous.<lb/>
If nothing else, you would think they<lb/>
would add some variety by using colored<lb/>
toliet paper instead of boring white all<lb/>
the time (though this may be an indica-<lb/>
tion of where the toliet paper was ac-<lb/>
quired). Anyway, I never have seen any<lb/>
harm in it. As a matter of fact, it is pro-<lb/>
bably a much more docile form of van-<lb/>
dalism than something else they could<lb/>
think up.<lb/>
That is, I never saw any harm until<lb/>
now. For the past week, as I have walk-<lb/>
ed to class everyday across the field in<lb/>
front of Jarvis Dorm, I have spent most<lb/>
of the time picking up stray toliet paper<lb/>
strewn across the field.<lb/>
I can't think of any more likely place<lb/>
for it to have come from than those<lb/>
aforementioned residences of scholarly<lb/>
organizations. So, girls, all 1 am asking<lb/>
is, if you're going to litter each other's<lb/>
yards and leave the trash there for two<lb/>
weeks, at least do us "uncivilized" peo-<lb/>
ple a favor and keep it to yourselves!<lb/>
Thank you!<lb/>
ANN SHIRLEY<lb/>
Senior, Computer Science<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from Joyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all letters<lb/>
must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the author(s). Letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced, or neatly printed.<lb/>
D<lb/>
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COvc<lb/>
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life.<lb/>
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year<lb/>
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decade si<lb/>
jump.<lb/>
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under t h<lb/>
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THl l:AST t AROUNIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
N()VtMBlR24, 1981 Page 5<lb/>
D.B. Cooper:<lb/>
Embarrassing<lb/>
'Crash' Trash<lb/>
Bv PAl'l.l'OI 11<lb/>
? Ull"f In I Hirl<lb/>
You can't judge a book by its<lb/>
covei oi a movie by its title for that<lb/>
mattei And D.B. Cooper had bet-<lb/>
tei hope that you can't judge a man<lb/>
b the movie they make about his<lb/>
It was 10 years ago that Cooper<lb/>
hijacked a 727 and then parachuted<lb/>
into the Cascade Mountains in<lb/>
Washington with a $200,000 ransom<lb/>
strapped to his chest. Excep! for a<lb/>
wad oi soggj $20 bills thai an eight<lb/>
year-old bov stumbled upon last<lb/>
year, no chic about the hijacker or<lb/>
the money has been found. Cooper<lb/>
Che name is an alias) became an ins-<lb/>
Ik hero, and the legend sur-<lb/>
nding him has burgeoned in the<lb/>
le since his rhanksgiving Eve<lb/>
jum<lb/>
course Hollywood, which<lb/>
has always known a good thing,<lb/>
decided to wish, in on oV D.B 's rep<lb/>
The result is The Pursuit of D.B<lb/>
now showing at the Buc-<lb/>
Pu<lb/>
M.<lb/>
i)led as a high-<lb/>
a-minute flick with<lb/>
racters, a few<lb/>
bellylaughs and even a Deep Mean-<lb/>
ing. What it more closely resembles,<lb/>
however, is a dirty Dukes of Haz-<lb/>
zard.<lb/>
All (he elements are there,<lb/>
especially the obligatory chase<lb/>
scenes. In fact. Pursuit is one long<lb/>
chase scene with sex, violence and<lb/>
foul language thrown in.<lb/>
Robert DuVall plavs an insurance<lb/>
claims adjuster, also known as the<lb/>
Pursuer. Treat Williams plavs Jim-<lb/>
my Meade. alias D.B. Cooper, also<lb/>
known as the Pursuee, DuVall pur-<lb/>
sues Williams through a sawmill,<lb/>
down a ner, up a mountain and<lb/>
across a desert.<lb/>
All this is made more dramatic by<lb/>
the fact that the DuVall character<lb/>
used to be an army sergeant, and<lb/>
Williams was an enlisted man he us-<lb/>
ed to kick around. In case you miss-<lb/>
ed the significance, this means that<lb/>
Cooper is out to prove himself to<lb/>
the sergeant, and sarge has got to<lb/>
maintain his macho image<lb/>
throughout the chase or be<lb/>
destroyed.<lb/>
But let no one sav our boys don't<lb/>
See D.B Page 7<lb/>
Treat Williams as the folk hero D.B. Cooper in a scene from the new film now playing at the Buccaneer Theatres.<lb/>
Treva 'Floors' JJ's Crowd With Or a fie Music<lb/>
BARl N FBFRT<lb/>
siaft Xrt!pf<lb/>
?us crow of 1 i dav night revelers welcomed<lb/>
Sp ntaine And "he Grafics to Greenville in the<lb/>
jbul performance at J.Js Music Hall.<lb/>
New Vae Sensation no trace of disap-<lb/>
could be detected as the dance floor trembled<lb/>
il c's powerfully pleasing mixture of 60's<lb/>
: rock new wave standards.<lb/>
.  Spontaine's robustly mature vocals<lb/>
kie DeShannon's "Every Time That<lb/>
 ou Vs aik in the Room Herman's Hermits' "I'm In-<lb/>
m and Tommy James and the<lb/>
II hink We're Alone Now received more<lb/>
ample support from guitarist Doug Baker<lb/>
(doubling on keyboards), bassist Dwight Mabe and<lb/>
drummer Garry Collins.<lb/>
The band steamed back and forth for three sets bet-<lb/>
ween these new-breathing classics and straightforward,<lb/>
ringing covers of Tom Petty's "I Need To Know<lb/>
Carolyne Mas' "Stillsane and a number of Elvis<lb/>
Costello and Nick Lowe favorites. The dance floor<lb/>
crowd, ranging from leathers and wraparound<lb/>
sunglasses to leopard miniskirts and corduroy,blazers,<lb/>
responded to the happy mixture of sound with inspired<lb/>
improvisational combinations of jitterbug and pogo.<lb/>
The Grafics even pulled off 'I'm a Believer" (yes, the<lb/>
old Monkees hit) in graceful, blast-ahead rock si vie.<lb/>
Between songs, Spontaine cajoled the bar crowd to<lb/>
"come on up and dance with perfect Joplinesque<lb/>
<lb/>
toughness, breaking into the wide dimpled smile that re-<lb/>
mained on her gentle face as the band kicked up the next<lb/>
tune and she belted out the Police's "Born In the Fif-<lb/>
ties<lb/>
Born in the Fifties herself, Spontaine's music is ob-<lb/>
viously deeply influenced by the sounds ol the Sixties.<lb/>
Backstage, two fans are trying to pigeonhole her big,<lb/>
emotion-packed voice. "Grace Slick one insists. "No.<lb/>
no, Joplin. Definitely Joplin says the other.<lb/>
Spontaine grins, "I did do a full-fledged Jams act on<lb/>
Halloween at out home base, a club called Fridays in<lb/>
Greensboro. The band dressed up as dead rock stars ?<lb/>
Dwight was Jimi Hendrix, Doug did a Buddy Holly,<lb/>
and Garry, Jim Morrison. We knocked out "Born in<lb/>
the Fifties" as "Dead in the Sixties she recalls with<lb/>
relish. "I even did "Mercedes Benz" a eappella<lb/>
The Grafics were born about 18 months ago when<lb/>
Collins spotted Spontaine soloing on acoustic guitar in a<lb/>
local Greensboro club. With Baker and Mabe rounding<lb/>
out the lineup, the band quickly won a loval Greensboro<lb/>
following for their brand of modern hard pop and<lb/>
began louring North Carolina and cutting demo tapes<lb/>
with Arrogance's Don Dixon producing.<lb/>
A four-song demo eased past competition o hun-<lb/>
dreds of other tapes by unsigned bands and single,<lb/>
"Hands Off My Heart culled top honors in a contest<lb/>
sponsored by D.I.V. ("Do-It-Yourself), a new<lb/>
California-based national trade magazine devoted total-<lb/>
ly to "new music from up and coming bands and<lb/>
musical adventures<lb/>
"Hands Off My Heart" first caught local attention<lb/>
on WQDR-Raleigh's "Premieres but the band had<lb/>
been so wrapped up in nonstop touring that thev<lb/>
weren't even aware they were on the air waves.<lb/>
"They played it? Great enthused Spontaine, tugg-<lb/>
ing up the sagging crew socks that neatly complemented<lb/>
the navy-blue double-breasted minidress and worn<lb/>
sneakers. ("I'm into the Sixties look") A friend in<lb/>
Raleigh. Eddie Horst, wrote "Hands Off M Heart"<lb/>
especially foi Spontaine in 19 and the demo tape<lb/>
(which also included "S'H Vous Plait a tune Spon-<lb/>
taine co-wrote with Chris Stanley of New York's DBs)<lb/>
apparently packed enough commercial wallop to land<lb/>
"Hands Off on D.I.Ys recently released compilation<lb/>
album of the cream of the contest entries.<lb/>
The D.I.Y. "Han-O-Disc made by a new record<lb/>
pressing process that produces a virtually warp-tree<lb/>
disc, features ten excellent songs representing a wide<lb/>
range of the new "underground" music happening<lb/>
across America. The Grafics hope the white virgin vinyl<lb/>
Han-O-Disc version of "Hands (fl My Heart with an<lb/>
infectious pop hook and Spontaine's riveting vocals,<lb/>
ee 'GRAFIC Paje 7<lb/>
Wheels Still Rolling<lb/>
Bv JOHN WFMTR<lb/>
?taff W nler<lb/>
Wheels rolled up to the Attic again or.<lb/>
November 20, bringing with them their us <lb/>
blend of oldie and original high-energy rock<lb/>
Conversing with the five-man combo before their<lb/>
show began provided an excellent insight into the<lb/>
lifestyle oi these traveling troubadors of modem<lb/>
times<lb/>
see WHEELS, Page 7<lb/>
Southern Comfort<lb/>
CDB Fans Had 'Devilish' Fun<lb/>
PHOTO BY GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
N.c<lb/>
's own Charlie Daniels playing to a stupefied crowd in sold-out Minges Coliseum on Friday night.<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
Mk Kiilliir<lb/>
"Ladies and gentlemen of the great state of North<lb/>
Carolina ? we'll be happy to play you some more<lb/>
music were the words of Charlie Daniels at the begin-<lb/>
ning of his second encore at "An Evening with the<lb/>
Charlie Daniels Band" Friday night. And they did not<lb/>
disappoint us.<lb/>
The concert began with Daniels traditional<lb/>
"Tennessee Waltz and ended with a medley of<lb/>
religious hymns.<lb/>
Overall the energy level was high both on the side of<lb/>
the audience and on the part of the band. Breaks bet-<lb/>
ween songs were spent with abandoned cheers and the<lb/>
mopping of brows, respectively. Perhaps the greatest<lb/>
audience responses were with two songs, "In America"<lb/>
and "The Devil Went Down To Georgia both of<lb/>
which brought the crowds to their feet.<lb/>
The concert was well worth it's $7 and $9 admission<lb/>
charges and though the concert was more predictable<lb/>
than it should have been, it was enjoyable to even the<lb/>
most demanding fan.<lb/>
Indeed the only gripe I could find with the jncert<lb/>
was the fact that the encores (something that should be<lb/>
an honor or at least an unpredictable surprise) were so<lb/>
blatently staged in advance. Take for instance the dog-<lb/>
gers from the Grand Old Opry. They did not even ap-<lb/>
pear until the second encore. Do you mean to tell me<lb/>
that they carry around those six people and their<lb/>
costumes just in case they have an encore? Come now.<lb/>
And the second encore was just as predictable, this time<lb/>
using the doggers as backup singers.<lb/>
Daniels admitted that they plan on two encores<lb/>
"Yeah, we used to do three, but we decided to cut it<lb/>
down to two because it takes a little time off the set<lb/>
A whole host of CDB tunes were well performed at<lb/>
the concert including, "The legend of Wooley<lb/>
Swamp "Sweet Home Alabama "Nobodv Never<lb/>
Said That You Weren't A Partyin' Gal "Dont'cha<lb/>
know I'm Just a Lonesome Bov From Dixie and<lb/>
"Kansas City<lb/>
Greenvile was also treated to a preview to CDB's new<lb/>
album, "Windows" and heard performed for the first<lb/>
time "Window On The World<lb/>
Several other selections were also played from the<lb/>
new album, and it seemed that the new cuts were slower<lb/>
than the music that is traditionally attributed lo Daniels.<lb/>
One song in particular, "The Universal Hand" sounded<lb/>
more like a chant than a "rollicking" song as Daniels<lb/>
has described some of his music.<lb/>
Though the other cuts from the new album were not<lb/>
as slow, they certainly did not seem to have the tempo of<lb/>
"Devil" or "America<lb/>
The Band members seemed to be having as good a<lb/>
time as the audience, at times squirting water at each<lb/>
other; and backstage one man was hit with a total of<lb/>
three pies in honor o his birthday. And when band-<lb/>
member "Taz DiGregono was thrown a hat during the<lb/>
concert he put it on sideways and was called kiddingly<lb/>
"Boxcar Taz" by guitarist Thomas Crane.<lb/>
The concert was almost the epitome of southern rock<lb/>
and roll, from the music to the crowd. A Rebel Flag had<lb/>
to be taken from one viewer and Southern Comfort bot-<lb/>
tles were strewn on the floor after the crowd had left.<lb/>
Cowboy hats were abundant on both the members of<lb/>
the band and in the crowd. The positive energy emmited<lb/>
from both the crowd and the band were some of the<lb/>
most enjoyable things there. The music itself was not<lb/>
denyied an important part in the activities either.<lb/>
Overall it was a concert that should not have been<lb/>
missed by any supporter of southern rock and roll. And<lb/>
an awful lot of those supporters were there.<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057443_0006"/><lb/>
6 THE fcAST CAROLINIANNOVEMBER 24, 1981<lb/>
" The Big<lb/>
Apple"<lb/>
NEW YORK,<lb/>
NEW YORK<lb/>
Photo By DAVID WILLIAMS<lb/>
Daniels plays his first encore to a capacity cnmdjn Minges Coliseum on Friday night. jeere?ie? on page 5.<lb/>
Simon Play Is Next Project<lb/>
Producing and direc-<lb/>
ting Tennesee<lb/>
William's The ('loss<lb/>
Menagerie, the initial<lb/>
production of Stephen<lb/>
B. Finnan's developing<lb/>
hi lie theatre organiza-<lb/>
tion, proved lo be an<lb/>
exhausting, yet satisfy-<lb/>
ing, creative ex-<lb/>
perience. "Doing<lb/>
theatre from scratch,<lb/>
without a technical sup-<lb/>
port staff, my problems<lb/>
were many and varied<lb/>
? negotiating for the<lb/>
use of a space, design-<lb/>
ing and executing a<lb/>
period set, installing<lb/>
lighting equipment and<lb/>
creating a lighting<lb/>
design, coordinating<lb/>
period costumes and<lb/>
props, handling com-<lb/>
ZN<lb/>
UTTLF SISTERS<lb/>
p<lb/>
TUBMOf. Z4 ?3000<lb/>
IFiALkEG<lb/>
I CASE<lb/>
BE TUW? 1<lb/>
Ccrtt EARLVl<lb/>
752-02S&amp;<lb/>
757-00?<lb/>
plete promotional<lb/>
responsibilities and, ot<lb/>
course, casting and<lb/>
directing the actors.<lb/>
However, audiences<lb/>
were large and en-<lb/>
thusiastic; critical com-<lb/>
ment, in general, very<lb/>
positive. We were able<lb/>
to recoup our expenses<lb/>
and even show a small<lb/>
profit! Thus, feeling<lb/>
rather encouraged b<lb/>
Greenville's response, I<lb/>
am presently involved<lb/>
in pre-production work<lb/>
for our group's second<lb/>
offering Neil Simon's<lb/>
riotous contemporary<lb/>
comedy Barefoot In<lb/>
The fork.<lb/>
Hare foot In The<lb/>
'ark is scheduled to<lb/>
open at the Methodist<lb/>
Student Center on<lb/>
February 24. Auditions<lb/>
for this production are<lb/>
being held on Friday,<lb/>
December 4:00 ai 7:?0<lb/>
p.m. and Saturday,<lb/>
December 5 at 2:00<lb/>
p.m. at the Methodist<lb/>
Student Center. All<lb/>
roles, with the excep-<lb/>
tions of Paul and the<lb/>
Mother, are open;<lb/>
everyone is welcome to<lb/>
participate. For further<lb/>
information, please call<lb/>
Mr. Finnan at<lb/>
757-3546.<lb/>
Advertise<lb/>
NOW<lb/>
for<lb/>
Christmas<lb/>
Shopping<lb/>
Students<lb/>
in The<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
THROUGH CANCELLATIONS, SPACES ARE NOW<lb/>
AVAILABLE FOR THE STUDENT UNION THANKSGIVING<lb/>
TRIP TO NEW YORK CITY. IF YOU'VE BEEN THINKING<lb/>
ABOUT THE TRIP, BUT HAVEN'T HAD THE MONEY,<lb/>
HERE'S YOUR CHANCE! CALL NOWTHESE RESERVA-<lb/>
TIONS WILL GO FAST!<lb/>
REDUCED PRICES THROUGH TOMORROW<lb/>
(PRICE NEGOTIABLE - PLEASE INQUIRE)<lb/>
CALL THE CENTRAL TICKET OFFICE IN<lb/>
MENDENHALL AT 757-661 1 OR PHONE 752-4935<lb/>
LCAIN<lb/>
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f<lb/>
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?$1.00 OFF WITH THIS COUPON"<lb/>
NOW OPEN<lb/>
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LOCATED ON 14th ST. ? behind Belk Dorm (within walking distance)<lb/>
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COMPLETE LINE OF PROFESSION AI HA IR CA RE PRODUCTS<lb/>
CALL 752-97061<lb/>
OWNERS: TIM MILLS, RANDY HODGES<lb/>
WESTERN SIZZLIN'<lb/>
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MONDAY? $199<lb/>
CHOPPED STEAK ?<lb/>
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BEEF TIPS '<lb/>
WEDNESDAY ? 1 89<lb/>
CUBED STEAK '<lb/>
THURSDAY? $169<lb/>
STEAK SANDWICH '<lb/>
FRIDAY ? $Q79<lb/>
U.S.D.A. RIB EYE ?<lb/>
SATURDAY ? $099<lb/>
BARBEQUE RIBS A<lb/>
SUNDAY? $199<lb/>
STEAK ON A STICK ?<lb/>
Hj Famous Salad Bar<lb/>
I Free Tea with ECU ID.<lb/>
jfe All meals are complete including baked potato or French fries &amp; Texas<lb/>
B toast.<lb/>
Take Out Service<lb/>
j?03 E. 10th II. M??rs: " am. 10 p.m.<lb/>
750-2172 MonThurS.<lb/>
!44 Bypass - 754 0040 10 a.m.ll p.m. FriSon.<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
PURCHASE , - fc<lb/>
OF W<lb/>
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COLORS:<lb/>
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BOND'S<lb/>
SPORTING<lb/>
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218 ARLINGTON BLVD.<lb/>
756-6001<lb/>
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75<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057443_0007"/><lb/>
??<lb/>
ow<lb/>
'ING<lb/>
ING<lb/>
INEY,<lb/>
,V<lb/>
b935<lb/>
A<lb/>
L?A.M(OG A BOOT CoLLCGeTHeHPjAM<lb/>
6V Pvip AJoegis<lb/>
TH? Poem's Ccrcros<lb/>
SHOULD eOVJCR<lb/>
 purvJNiO GUT, I<lb/>
sov?? ieL strict peoftel<lb/>
Ira ??? Rolling Again<lb/>
( ontinued From P. 5<lb/>
I he gi oup, con-<lb/>
sisting of talented 1 odd<lb/>
 ashbui n (lead<lb/>
guitar), Gar) I yon<lb/>
(bass), Scotty rhomas<lb/>
(drums), David Sim-<lb/>
mons (lead ocals, per-<lb/>
cussion) and l)a id<lb/>
H a r pei (keyboards),<lb/>
describe their special<lb/>
sound variously as<lb/>
"funk punk rock"<lb/>
and ' 'coniempoi ary<lb/>
1 1 rock The per-<lb/>
form mam originals,<lb/>
plus covei music from<lb/>
sii eh groups as<lb/>
Journe. the 1 ubes,<lb/>
and I o er Boj.<lb/>
Theii originals are<lb/>
(hopefully) soon to be<lb/>
the subject of an<lb/>
album, their first.<lb/>
 heels is on the road<lb/>
now, but before long<lb/>
ihe will enter into a<lb/>
recording studio and<lb/>
exit immortalized in<lb/>
vinyl, thai is, it monev<lb/>
and the machinations<lb/>
of record company ex-<lb/>
ecutives permit.<lb/>
Producing an album<lb/>
is an arduous endeavor,<lb/>
of which making the<lb/>
music is almost a minor<lb/>
factor, compared with<lb/>
ming up with the<lb/>
cash and convincing a<lb/>
label to take on a new<lb/>
group. But Wheels is<lb/>
deie r mined to b e<lb/>
albumized, and will<lb/>
produce the record<lb/>
themselves if necessarv.<lb/>
At tet the album is<lb/>
released Wheels will<lb/>
resume touring, this<lb/>
time playing only their<lb/>
own material, 10 pro-<lb/>
mote the record.<lb/>
1 he original music is<lb/>
written mostly b<lb/>
guitarist Wash burn.<lb/>
with lyrics main!) sup-<lb/>
plied b singer Sim-<lb/>
mons, lach member<lb/>
contributes to the crea-<lb/>
tion of Wheels unique,<lb/>
intense yet not over-<lb/>
pow e r i ng, sou nd.<lb/>
"Thank God, there are<lb/>
no kind of egos with<lb/>
the band, so everybody<lb/>
can put in his iwo cents<lb/>
worth s a s o n e<lb/>
Wheeler. "We sort of<lb/>
all write the songs<lb/>
together" says another.<lb/>
Life On Road?<lb/>
What about life on<lb/>
the road? When asked,<lb/>
choruses oi<lb/>
"?demanding "a real<lb/>
pain in the and<lb/>
"anxieties, anxieties"<lb/>
are heard. Yet the<lb/>
members stress that<lb/>
they've enjoyed work-<lb/>
ing with Wheels more<lb/>
than an other band<lb/>
they've been with. lhe<lb/>
explain the trials o'<lb/>
touring thusly: "It's a<lb/>
lot of dues to pay, but<lb/>
it's the only way to suc-<lb/>
ceed in this business.<lb/>
You nisi hae lo keep<lb/>
on playing until you<lb/>
develop a following<lb/>
Based in Charlotte,<lb/>
Wheels will roll from<lb/>
Virginia to Georgia.<lb/>
1 hey try to perform no<lb/>
more than 3 or 4 nights<lb/>
a week: "If we play<lb/>
more than 3 or 4 times,<lb/>
it lessens our spontanei-<lb/>
t. out energy level A<lb/>
shame, because that<lb/>
energetic intensity is the<lb/>
group's hallmark,<lb/>
breathing new life into<lb/>
mainstream rock and<lb/>
roll.<lb/>
Any more comments<lb/>
for the press, guys?<lb/>
"Tell the ones with<lb/>
all the coke to come up<lb/>
to the front of the<lb/>
stage<lb/>
"Buy our album<lb/>
"Yeah, please con-<lb/>
tribute to the Save The<lb/>
Wheels Fund<lb/>
D.B. Disappointing<lb/>
Continued From P. 5<lb/>
play fair. After DuVall<lb/>
chases Williams over<lb/>
hill and dale the two<lb/>
switch roles, and<lb/>
Williams gets his<lb/>
chance to chase DuVall<lb/>
? in an airplane no<lb/>
less. In one of the sillier<lb/>
scenes ever committed<lb/>
to celluloid, Williams<lb/>
puts the wheel of his<lb/>
plane through the roof<lb/>
of DuVall's ear. The<lb/>
Duke boys would be<lb/>
envious.<lb/>
Fspeeially since they<lb/>
never get to utter a dir-<lb/>
ty word or entertain an<lb/>
unchaste thought. Not<lb/>
so, however, for the<lb/>
characters in Pursuit.<lb/>
The movie is ripe with<lb/>
such repartee as,<lb/>
"What're you doin'<lb/>
here, you greasy<lb/>
chicken dick?"<lb/>
The film treats sex in<lb/>
the same gratuitous<lb/>
manner. Kathryn Har-<lb/>
r o 1 d . who plays<lb/>
Williams' wife, is in-<lb/>
troduced with a shot<lb/>
that gives us all a peek<lb/>
down her blouse. This<lb/>
scene is merely childish,<lb/>
but the one where she<lb/>
straddles Williams as<lb/>
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truck down the<lb/>
highway itasteless.<lb/>
It's a shame that<lb/>
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Williams and DuVall<lb/>
should be tied to this<lb/>
tired, cliched vehicle.<lb/>
Williams makes a<lb/>
valiant effort to break<lb/>
through the script's<lb/>
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No one knows if the<lb/>
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OPTICIANS<lb/>
ornct HOVt<lb/>
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Continued From P. 5<lb/>
will garner ihe band the<lb/>
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Well, I hope so too.<lb/>
They've certainly got<lb/>
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write home for you every<lb/>
Tues. and Thurs.<lb/>
Every Tuesday and Thursday you can read the most<lb/>
informative stories about the news events of the day<lb/>
at ECU and in Greenville the best sports coverage,<lb/>
and interesting features about the people, places and<lb/>
things surrounding youso can your parents. For $25<lb/>
your parents can get a one year mail subscription to<lb/>
the East Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the campus community since 1925, the East<lb/>
Carolinian provides valuable insights into student<lb/>
life at East Carollnia University for your parents.<lb/>
Twice weekly, we can tell your family about the<lb/>
most current campus and local news. Student free<lb/>
flicks, concerts and sports events are ail covered in<lb/>
the pages of the East Carolinian, as well as state and<lb/>
local news that affects the lives of ECU students.<lb/>
Our experienced, award winning news staff can br-<lb/>
ing your parents the news wherever it is happening<lb/>
in eastern North Carolina, plus the most dynamic<lb/>
behind the scenes investigative reporting.<lb/>
Our Matures section will bring them fascinating and<lb/>
often, humorous human interest stories about the peo-<lb/>
ple of the university and the surrounding area. It also<lb/>
covers the cultural events that enrich student life, as<lb/>
well as presenting interesting slices of area flavor.<lb/>
Scanning the entire spectrum of ECU'S athletic ac-<lb/>
tivity, our well trained staff of enthusiastic sports<lb/>
writers will bring your family comprehensive<lb/>
coverage of ECU'S exciting football schedule, in ad-<lb/>
dition to highlighting the rest of an impressive sports<lb/>
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Our remarkable staff works around the clock to pro-<lb/>
duce the best possible newspaper, containing the<lb/>
most essential news, features and sports of interest<lb/>
not only to you, but to your parents and friends as<lb/>
well, wherever they may be. The East Carolinian. . .<lb/>
let us inform them.<lb/>
Your parents, friends, and relatives can subscribe<lb/>
to the East Carolinian for one year by sending a<lb/>
check for $25 to: George Hettich, Circulation Dept<lb/>
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If you wish, you may subscribe for them by mailing<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057443_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
NOVEMBER 24, 1981<lb/>
Vafe 8<lb/>
Audit Reveals ECU Athletic Deficit<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
athletic department received some<lb/>
rather adverse, and unwanted,<lb/>
publicity last Thursday when it was<lb/>
announced that an audit by the<lb/>
State Auditor's Office revealed that<lb/>
the department lias been operating<lb/>
with a deficit since 1979.<lb/>
The audit revealed that the ECU<lb/>
athletic department lost more than<lb/>
$750,000 over the last three years<lb/>
and currently is $400,000 in the<lb/>
hole.<lb/>
"We arc gravely concerned over<lb/>
ihe rapid deterioration of the finan-<lb/>
cial condition o this fund and<lb/>
believe that appropriate action is<lb/>
needed bv ihe board of trustees to<lb/>
correct this deficit trend the audit<lb/>
saidWe believe the primary cause<lb/>
for (Ins condition is the lack of<lb/>
budgetary and fiscal controls exer-<lb/>
cised by management<lb/>
The ECU athletic department's<lb/>
recent deficit followed a $351,173<lb/>
surplus as of July 1, 1978. The<lb/>
department lost $77,778 in the fiscal<lb/>
year ending in June, 1979, $394,866<lb/>
in 1980 and $283,589 in 1981, accor-<lb/>
ding to last Thursday's audit.<lb/>
As of June 30, 1981 the depart-<lb/>
ment faced a deficit of $404,982.<lb/>
The most damaging losses last<lb/>
year came in football and basket-<lb/>
ball, the two sports that the univer-<lb/>
sity looks upon as its chief revenue<lb/>
producers. Football expenditures of<lb/>
$928,505 were not compensated for<lb/>
by gate receipts and guarantees<lb/>
totalling $616,866, making for a dif-<lb/>
ference of $309,639.<lb/>
The athletic department spent<lb/>
$214,175 on the men's basketball<lb/>
program last year, yet brought in<lb/>
only $52,454, a difference of<lb/>
$161,721.<lb/>
The deficits in football and<lb/>
basketball were offset somewhat by<lb/>
a number of contribuiers, including<lb/>
the ECU Educational Foundation<lb/>
(Pirate Club) and $414,397 in stu-<lb/>
dent fees.<lb/>
The cause for the current<lb/>
$400,000 is basically four-fold, said<lb/>
ECU Chancellor Thomas B.<lb/>
Brewer.<lb/>
The fourth-year chancellor cited:<lb/>
?Spending over budget, especially<lb/>
in football in 1978 and 1979.<lb/>
?The Pirate Club missing its<lb/>
fund-raising goal by $140,000 last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
?Title IX. Over $100,000 was<lb/>
spent to upgrade women's athletic<lb/>
in response to the bill's requiremnts<lb/>
that prohibit sexual discrimination.<lb/>
?The 1978 Independence Bowl,<lb/>
which turned out to be less than<lb/>
financially profittable for the<lb/>
school, even though officials bHieve<lb/>
it did uprgrade the image of the pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
Brewer refused to term the cur-<lb/>
rent ECU situation as "critical<lb/>
saying that it was just a period being<lb/>
experienced by a growing athletic<lb/>
department.<lb/>
"From my own point of view this<lb/>
is not a problem of major<lb/>
magnitude he said. "We feel that<lb/>
we have very solid leadership in the<lb/>
department of athletics and the<lb/>
situation will be stabilized<lb/>
Brewer cited a two-fold method<lb/>
for eliminating the deficit.<lb/>
"As long as we are dependent on<lb/>
day-of-game sales Brewer said,<lb/>
"the university will be hurting. The<lb/>
students are paying their fair share.<lb/>
The continued growth of this<lb/>
university's athletic department will<lb/>
be dependent on season ticket sales<lb/>
and the continued support of the<lb/>
Pirate club<lb/>
Brewer said that "rampant infla-<lb/>
tion" was a factor that the athletic<lb/>
department would have to deal<lb/>
more successfully with in the future<lb/>
than it has in the past.<lb/>
"Nowadays, you have to increase<lb/>
your budget 10 to 15 percent each<lb/>
year just to stay where already are<lb/>
he said. "It has been a problem for<lb/>
us trying to find that kind of<lb/>
revenue<lb/>
ECU Athletic Director Ken Karr<lb/>
concurred with Brewer's solution to<lb/>
the problem ? secure more season<lb/>
ticket sales and gain increased pro-<lb/>
duction from the Pirate Club.<lb/>
"Obviously this has been a verv<lb/>
difficult thing to do, or we would<lb/>
not have fallen short for the number<lb/>
of years we have Karr admitted.<lb/>
"I think this thing will take time,<lb/>
but those two areas are the ultimate<lb/>
solutions to our problem<lb/>
Brewer and Karr also agreed on a<lb/>
pair of other ideas that might help<lb/>
the program. Both said that a public<lb/>
fund-raising campaign in Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina is a possibility for<lb/>
the future.<lb/>
See ATHLETICS, Page 9<lb/>
Australia's Davies<lb/>
Sinks Scrappy Bucs<lb/>
Junior College transfer Charles<lb/>
(?reen lets her flv in game with<lb/>
Australians Mondav night.<lb/>
B CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
"If ever one man has beaten a<lb/>
team, it was tonight<lb/>
ECU head basketball coach Dave<lb/>
Odom hit the perfect note with this<lb/>
statement following his team's 72-71<lb/>
loss to the Australian national team<lb/>
in an exhitibion game Monday night<lb/>
in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Odom was referring to the in-<lb/>
credible shooting performance of<lb/>
Australia's Ian Davies, who con-<lb/>
nected on 16 of 28 field goals ?<lb/>
most from beyond 20 feet ? and<lb/>
-line of nine field goal attempts en<lb/>
route to a 41-point performance.<lb/>
Davies tallied 29 o his game-high<lb/>
point total in the second half alone.<lb/>
The red-hot forward almost single-<lb/>
handidly brought about the loss to a<lb/>
determined ECU squad.<lb/>
"We had our chances Odom<lb/>
said. "We showed the will to come<lb/>
back and I'm proud of that. But<lb/>
Davies definitely hurt us. And I was<lb/>
always taught that long shots won't<lb/>
beat you<lb/>
Davies performance overshadow-<lb/>
ed a strong performance by the<lb/>
ECU forward tandem of Charles<lb/>
Green and Morris Hargrove. Green<lb/>
tallied 16 points, ten of which came<lb/>
in the game's late, crucial stages.<lb/>
Hargrove led the team with both<lb/>
his 23 points and nine rebounds.<lb/>
The pesky Pirates jumped to a<lb/>
quick lead in the first half, which<lb/>
reached a peak of ten points at 30-20<lb/>
with 4:26 remaining before intermis-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
The Australians managed to cut<lb/>
the lead to 34-28 by halftime and<lb/>
wasted little time in the second half<lb/>
erasing the Buc advantage<lb/>
altogether.<lb/>
A 9-2 spurt over the first two<lb/>
minutes of the second period gave<lb/>
the Australians their first lead, at<lb/>
37-36.<lb/>
The Australians' lead reached a<lb/>
game-high peak of eight points, at<lb/>
53-45. when Davies canned one of<lb/>
his patented bombs with 10:01 re-<lb/>
maining. The bucket left Davies<lb/>
with 18 points over a ten-minute<lb/>
span.<lb/>
Eight straight points by the<lb/>
Pirates over the next minute and a<lb/>
half evened the score, though.<lb/>
Davies then came through with<lb/>
four consecutive free throws to give<lb/>
his team a lead that would be<lb/>
seriously threatened but not over-<lb/>
come.<lb/>
Junior Pirate forward Charles<lb/>
Green came through with clutch<lb/>
buckets time and again during the<lb/>
game's final five minutes to get his<lb/>
club in the contest.<lb/>
A ten-foot jumper by Green with<lb/>
43 seconds remaining brought the<lb/>
Pirates to within a single point of<lb/>
the visitors, at 72-71.<lb/>
A missed free throw attempt at<lb/>
the front end of a one-and-one<lb/>
situation by Australia guard Les<lb/>
Riddle with nine seconds remaining<lb/>
was rebounded by the Pirates, giv-<lb/>
ing the locals the opportunity pull<lb/>
off a successful comeback.<lb/>
Freshman guard Bruce Peartree<lb/>
rushed the ball downcourt and tried<lb/>
what could have been a game-<lb/>
winning layup. Peartree's shot roll-<lb/>
ed off the rim, as did follow at-<lb/>
tempts by forwards Green and Mor-<lb/>
ris Hargrove just before the final<lb/>
horn sounded.<lb/>
The Pirates begin their regular<lb/>
season this Saturday night in Minges<lb/>
Coliseumhosting Ohio University.<lb/>
Tip-off time is 7:30.<lb/>
At SIRAIIA 172)<lb/>
SriifMoik I 2 4 Omntt 19-941, VsaNh I CVO 2. Sitn'l,<lb/>
U4?. Kiddle ; 0-1 ??. All 0 04)0. Carroll 2 0-0 4. Dllli.il ?<lb/>
o- h. McCom I 0-0 2<lb/>
M I (71)<lb/>
Gfccfi K 0-4 ItH. Hvpmt ?? 58 2V Cltimii 4 12 ?.<lb/>
WailniN MM) 12 Byte 2 12V ikliriM 00-00. Mk I 0-0<lb/>
2. VKNsif O 0-0 0 Bi.mn 0 O O 0. Pcartrct 2 0-0 4<lb/>
HatftMK?ECl 4 AuMialia 2 Vnukd ,?ui-Bles<lb/>
li-itinuaK-NfflM A-1250<lb/>
Bv GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
Sophomore forward Morris Hargrove rams one home in a one-point loss<lb/>
to the Australians in Minges Coliseum Monday night. This dunk was<lb/>
only two of his 23 points on the evening.<lb/>
ECU's Lady Pirates Running For Gold<lb/>
B WILLIAM YELVERTON<lb/>
si.ijn. Spurt t ihtor<lb/>
I ady Pirate basketball coach<lb/>
Cathy Andruzzi's goals for the<lb/>
1981-82 season are simple: "We<lb/>
want to do the best we can do ? be<lb/>
the bes! club possible, on and off<lb/>
the court she says.<lb/>
East Carolina opens the season at<lb/>
3 p.m. Sunday against the Moun-<lb/>
taineers of Appalachian State in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Andruzzi, entering her fourth<lb/>
season as head coach, has turned<lb/>
East Carolina into a national con-<lb/>
tender. Her team vaulted into the<lb/>
lop twenty last season, finishing the<lb/>
year with a 23-7 record and an at-<lb/>
large bid to the regionals.<lb/>
Gone from that group are all-<lb/>
everything performer Kathy Riley,<lb/>
Marcia Girven, I.ydia Rountree and<lb/>
Laurie Sikes ? now an assistant<lb/>
coach.<lb/>
But her young team has "come<lb/>
along a tremendous amount in the<lb/>
preseason, Andruzzi says. "We're<lb/>
made big improvements; our<lb/>
defense has become tougher. We've<lb/>
been strict on fundamentals because<lb/>
we have a new set of principles for<lb/>
our newcomers and veterans. We<lb/>
have a whole new squad<lb/>
And that squad will count on<lb/>
senior guard-forward Sam Jones,<lb/>
forward Mary Denkler and guard<lb/>
Lillion Barnes for leadership. Jones,<lb/>
"a "real player who makes things<lb/>
S7<lb/>
P)uio By GARY PAITERSON<lb/>
Mary Denkler (35) and Sam Jones (2D "set" to begin another season of<lb/>
Lady Pirate basketball Sunday against Appalachian. The two will be<lb/>
counted on for leadership from the young team this season.<lb/>
happen says Andruzzi, averaged<lb/>
14.7 points and 5.3 rebounds last<lb/>
season after transferring from<lb/>
Louisburg Junior College. Denkler<lb/>
chipped in 14 points per game and<lb/>
added 6.8 rebounds as she improved<lb/>
steadily each game. "She played<lb/>
with (Marcia) Gervin for two<lb/>
years notes Andruzzi "so it's up<lb/>
to her now<lb/>
Barnes, Andruzzi says, could be<lb/>
the heart and soul of East Carolina<lb/>
this season. "She had done a<lb/>
tremendous job she said, "and<lb/>
has improved drastically Barnes is<lb/>
coming off of a shoulder operation<lb/>
in August and refuses to let it<lb/>
hamper her preparation for Sun-<lb/>
day's game.<lb/>
"She wouldn't let you know it if<lb/>
she was hurt or not Andruzzi<lb/>
says. "She is going to give 100 per-<lb/>
cent all the time<lb/>
After the completion of last<lb/>
season, Andruzzi faced the task of<lb/>
replacing the heart of her team. So<lb/>
she came up with a banner<lb/>
recruiting crop, including two high<lb/>
school All-Americans, center<lb/>
Darlene Chaney and point guard<lb/>
Loraine Foster, another freshman<lb/>
"sleeper 6-0 forward Laura<lb/>
Regal, and the most valuable player<lb/>
of the national junior college cham-<lb/>
pionship team, 5-8 forward Loletha<lb/>
Harrison. Another AII-VAIAW per-<lb/>
former from Division III Randolph-<lb/>
Macon, forward Ginger Noce<lb/>
transferred.<lb/>
Chaney, 6-2, was most valuable<lb/>
player at the annual Virginia high<lb/>
school all-star gameShe scored 20<lb/>
points and claimed 14 rebounds to<lb/>
solidify her standing as the best pro-<lb/>
spect in the state. She was also a<lb/>
member of the Converse All-<lb/>
American team. "She's young<lb/>
says Andruzzi, "but is learning the<lb/>
system. She's making very big<lb/>
strides<lb/>
Point guard Foster was another<lb/>
state high school ail-star most<lb/>
valuable player. "Loraine has been<lb/>
"We want to be the best club possible, on and off<lb/>
the court, academically and athletically. Our girls<lb/>
have worked very, very hard. We want a<lb/>
consistent group on the court. The ones who are<lb/>
the most responsible and consistent on and off the<lb/>
court will play the most. '<lb/>
-Cathy Andruzzi<lb/>
doing a tremendous job Andruzzi<lb/>
says. "She's the Isiah Thomas of<lb/>
basketball, as well call her The<lb/>
Spartanburg, S.C native was all-<lb/>
state and the leading scorer in nor-<lb/>
thern South Carolina last season<lb/>
with a 23.2 average. She also holds<lb/>
the South Carolina state prep record<lb/>
in the 100 meters, winning the event<lb/>
three times at the state track meet.<lb/>
The "sleeper" according to<lb/>
recruiters could be 6-0 forward<lb/>
Regal of Granger, Ind who averag-<lb/>
ed almost 15 points and 15 rebounds<lb/>
for Gray High School. She, too,<lb/>
"has got to get used to the system<lb/>
insists Andruzzi.<lb/>
Harrison led Louisburg to the na-<lb/>
tional junior college crown last<lb/>
season, averaing 10.4 points and<lb/>
over nine rebounds per game while<lb/>
considered to be the team's best<lb/>
defensive player. Andruzzi describes<lb/>
the 5-8 forward as "very intense ?<lb/>
on and off the the court<lb/>
The "hard-working" Noce'<lb/>
transferred from Randolph-Macon<lb/>
with all-regional honors, averaging<lb/>
15 points, nine rebounds and three<lb/>
assists per contest while playing<lb/>
three different positions.<lb/>
Andruzzi says she has "no idea"<lb/>
who will start against Appalachian<lb/>
State Sunday, but stresses that "the<lb/>
people who will start will be the<lb/>
hardgst-working, most responsible<lb/>
and most dedicated<lb/>
"We want to be the best club<lb/>
possible Andruzzi says, "on and<lb/>
off the court, academically and<lb/>
athletically. Our girls live worked<lb/>
very, very hard. We want a consis-<lb/>
tent group on the court. The ones<lb/>
who are the most responsible and<lb/>
consistent on and off the court will<lb/>
play the most.<lb/>
"Playing for East Carolina is a<lb/>
privilege. You earn your opportuni-<lb/>
ty to play, and you earn your oppor-<lb/>
tunity to start<lb/>
Andruzzi says her team doesn't<lb/>
let rankings bother them. "Ranking<lb/>
don't mean much now she says.<lb/>
"Your overall performance is what<lb/>
counts. We have a great deal of in-<lb/>
centive, having done so well last<lb/>
year. But they want their own ideni-<lb/>
ty ? they want to bring a winner to<lb/>
East Carolina. It's going to take us a<lb/>
little while to group<lb/>
With the likes of N.C. State,<lb/>
North Carolina, South Carolina and<lb/>
Virginia coming to Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum, plus other tough road con-<lb/>
tests, Andruzzi see this season as.a<lb/>
challenge ? not only to her team<lb/>
but to herself. "I demand a great<lb/>
deal from our players. We expect a<lb/>
Lady Pirate coach Cathy Andruzzi<lb/>
leads charge in last season's action.<lb/>
preat deal, not only in athletics but<lb/>
from academics, too. We put a great<lb/>
deal of responsibility on their<lb/>
shoulders. It will be a challenge to<lb/>
be consistent and patient as possi-<lb/>
ble. We have to bring the best<lb/>
teaching atmosphere here possible.<lb/>
After all, we are teachers<lb/>
Andruzzi says that the preseason<lb/>
has "been a very, very tiresome lime<lb/>
for us<lb/>
But she quickly adds, "Very en-<lb/>
joyable, though<lb/>
Swii<lb/>
Fan<lb/>
At<lb/>
By THOP<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
coach Ra<lb/>
home pie.<lb/>
Pirates spl<lb/>
at Old I;<lb/>
though,<lb/>
thai Jenj<lb/>
Nancy J;<lb/>
McH<lb/>
George<lb/>
break the<lb/>
in 'He<lb/>
relas I<lb/>
another<lb/>
in ihe<lb/>
even i<lb/>
(tonal cutj<lb/>
nai:<lb/>
100-mei<lb/>
ed iheir<lb/>
past<lb/>
det-<lb/>
bui<lb/>
Marvlan<lb/>
The<lb/>
losi 60 5;<lb/>
Monarch<lb/>
spoi t I<lb/>
wit I<lb/>
W Cl -<lb/>
Ku<lb/>
c v e n t s<lb/>
while Sc<lb/>
Stan W.I<lb/>
events.<lb/>
T he I<lb/>
1 cam wi<lb/>
with goo<lb/>
I a<lb/>
lo I NCI<lb/>
this Satui<lb/>
meet. Bo<lb/>
the won<lb/>
pete.<lb/>
Cl<lb/>
FOI<lb/>
WATE06EI<lb/>
m NC anOl<lb/>
waerbeds a<lb/>
piete beds ??<lb/>
toi as low<lb/>
available Cj<lb/>
formation 7<lb/>
RUG FOB<lb/>
Ported lOf<lb/>
Can Ti ?S7J<lb/>
Vince MrHa(<lb/>
C IBiCATi<lb/>
VVpylPr ha?<lb/>
immorUu'(<lb/>
que QiH ideal<lb/>
MO tor color!<lb/>
? 10 Call 7S<lb/>
FOI<lb/>
MOBILE H<lb/>
pitlely Iut<lb/>
month H<lb/>
?5J ?703<lb/>
ROOM POR<lb/>
Mi month<lb/>
call 52 07?<lb/>
ROMMATEl<lb/>
bed'Ocrr I<lb/>
close to ca'<lb/>
plus one hall<lb/>
atte S p<lb/>
W!<lb/>
OOLLAfisI<lb/>
Rebel Prosf<lb/>
Sponsored<lb/>
Attic Cas<lb/>
Deadline<lb/>
chance to<lb/>
CLOSET P<lb/>
voor vfise<lb/>
lei b.<lb/>
a<lb/>
ajajM "It<lb/>
The deadlil<lb/>
don t dt-lav<lb/>
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The<lb/>
for<lb/>
(Toi<lb/>
post<lb/>
will<lb/>
Bea<lb/>
beei<lb/>
recei<lb/>
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fuiul<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057443_0009"/><lb/>
<lb/>
; mi Mtai<lb/>
<lb/>
-r<lb/>
ok,<lb/>
"3<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
tin ndruAi<lb/>
as?n action.<lb/>
but<lb/>
epui<lb/>
on i heir<lb/>
cnge to<lb/>
cm as possi-<lb/>
ng the best<lb/>
ere psstble.<lb/>
ason<lb/>
n i nine<lb/>
Swimmers<lb/>
Fare Well<lb/>
AtODU<lb/>
B THOMAS BRAMF<lb/>
stall ?nlrr<lb/>
ECU swimming<lb/>
coach Ray Scharf came<lb/>
home pleased after his<lb/>
Pirates split a dual meet<lb/>
at Old Dominion t his<lb/>
though, was the fact<lb/>
that Jennifei layes,<lb/>
Nancy James, Moria<lb/>
McHugh and Nan<lb/>
George teamed to<lb/>
break the school record<lb/>
,11 the 400-freesiyle<lb/>
relay. George broke<lb/>
another school record<lb/>
in the 500 freestyle<lb/>
event and had two na-<lb/>
tional cuts, laves had a<lb/>
national cut time in the<lb/>
100-meter backstroke.<lb/>
the Pirate men mov-<lb/>
ed their record to 2-1<lb/>
past weekend,<lb/>
defeating the Monarchs<lb/>
but falling to<lb/>
Maryland.<lb/>
The women's team<lb/>
lost 60-52 to the I ad)<lb/>
Monarchs. A bright<lb/>
spot for the ladies,<lb/>
with I lie split. For the<lb/>
weekend, K ein<lb/>
Richards won three<lb/>
events individually<lb/>
while Scott Fagle and<lb/>
Stan Williams won two<lb/>
events, respectfully.<lb/>
The 400-meter relax<lb/>
team won both days<lb/>
with good tunes.<lb/>
East Carolina travels<lb/>
io UNC-Wilmington<lb/>
this Samrdav lor a 1:30<lb/>
meet. Both the men and<lb/>
the women will com-<lb/>
pete.<lb/>
IHt l AST C AROI INI AN NOVtMBFR 24, 1981<lb/>
9<lb/>
Be<lb/>
on the<lb/>
Lookout<lb/>
A thirties Face A Deficit<lb/>
Continued From Page 8<lb/>
Both also said that a television ap-<lb/>
pearance by the East Carolina foot-<lb/>
ball team next season would almost<lb/>
balance the budget. Royalties from<lb/>
such telecasts usually run over<lb/>
$200,000.<lb/>
The current fiscal year, which<lb/>
ends June 30, 1982, has not been a<lb/>
kind one as of yet to the ECU<lb/>
athletic department. Gate receipts at<lb/>
home football games have fallen<lb/>
under what was projected.<lb/>
?'I was very disappointed Karr<lb/>
said of the fan support during the<lb/>
recently-completed football season.<lb/>
"We brought a team in here like<lb/>
Miami (Fla.) and got very disap-<lb/>
pointing local support. We've got<lb/>
our faithful few, but we've got to<lb/>
expand on those numbers<lb/>
ECU's athletic budget for 1981-82<lb/>
is $2,185,818, according to Clifton<lb/>
G. Moore, vice chancellor for<lb/>
business affairs. Moore said that the<lb/>
department would most likely have<lb/>
another deficit this year.<lb/>
The current deficit that the<lb/>
athletic department faces is one that<lb/>
has caused deep concern within the<lb/>
department, according to Assistant<lb/>
Athletic Director for Business At-<lb/>
fairs Earline l.eggett.<lb/>
"If you care you have to be con-<lb/>
cerned said Leggett. "I've been<lb/>
here for 19 years, and I love it. We<lb/>
have come such a long ways and<lb/>
now things are looking a little bad.<lb/>
That doesn't mean that we will not<lb/>
continue to grow, though. I am con-<lb/>
fident that we will. But, yes, the<lb/>
situation we now face does worry<lb/>
me very much<lb/>
Also concerned is Ashley Futrell,<lb/>
chairman of the board of trustees.<lb/>
"Of course, this is an unfortunate<lb/>
thing said Futrell. "We have to<lb/>
overcome it, though. There's too<lb/>
much at stake not to come out of it<lb/>
good. We definitely have to begin<lb/>
an all-out effort. We've got to do<lb/>
everything we possiWty can to<lb/>
remedy this situation as soon as<lb/>
possible<lb/>
Futrell blamed the situation par-<lb/>
tially on the fact that the ECU foot-<lb/>
balf team has had two consecutive<lb/>
losing seasons, 4-7 in 1980 and 5-6<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
"When you have a losing team<lb/>
for two years, you lose fans he<lb/>
said. "If we had won eight games<lb/>
each year, we wouldn't be in this<lb/>
position<lb/>
The East Carolinian is publishing a special<lb/>
basketball tabloid on December 1. All the info<lb/>
on both the men and women Pirates. Specials<lb/>
include a lock at the ECAC-Scuth and an in-<lb/>
depth, personal lock at Cathv Andruzzi, the<lb/>
force behind the Lady Pirates' success. Be en<lb/>
the lookout. Hitting the newsstands on<lb/>
December 1.<lb/>
BUCK'S GULF<lb/>
HRS.<lb/>
MONSAT. 7-8<lb/>
NO SUNDAY<lb/>
2704 E. 10th St.<lb/>
752-3228<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
WATEBBEDS LOWEST pricei<lb/>
M NC and SC on Hnc o"l<lb/>
waierbetH and acccssoi.es Com<lb/>
pirii- beds with lsyeai waantv<lb/>
to. as low as l? Delivery<lb/>
available Can David to. more in<lb/>
lormaon ?S? J408<lb/>
BUG FOR sale! t It by II ft<lb/>
Polled 'or dorm or apa'tmoni<lb/>
Call 7S??S71 alter !0 p m Ask lor<lb/>
v nee Metcalt<lb/>
CABICATURES BY<lb/>
wyii i havr- your sell 01 a Ir.end<lb/>
,mmorialiied cartoon style Aon.<lb/>
que qiH idea' Special Xma- tas<lb/>
S10 lor color or black and white 8<lb/>
X 10 Can ?53 S77S<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
MOBILE HOME lor rent Com<lb/>
pieiely furnished w d ii'S pe.<lb/>
month Near campus Call<lb/>
75? 110<lb/>
BOOM FOR rent close to campus,<lb/>
?0 month plus one si?th utilities<lb/>
call 7SJ 0741 or 7S? 3545<lb/>
ROMMATE NEEDED to lh?r? 7<lb/>
or-d.oom turn,shed apartment<lb/>
rioseocampus iii7 SO per mnnth<lb/>
p.us one nail utilities Can 750 1358<lb/>
altei 5 P m<lb/>
ORGANIST CHOIR dCC'Oi<lb/>
, . rt. cl Fountain P.rsby'ei.an<lb/>
Chuich inMciested can Susan<lb/>
B, s -S6 VS88 davs W '58 8741<lb/>
, vt niiigs<lb/>
WANTEO GO GO dancers pa<lb/>
me oi lull time lie?.ble hou.s<lb/>
Good money Possible MOO week<lb/>
or mete Must ineel qualifications<lb/>
Call ?56 8207<lb/>
DEAOLINE NOVEMBER 30 Pro<lb/>
so Contest, all types Sponso.edby<lb/>
Jellnes Beer and the Attic One<lb/>
siZS. 75. 2S and two SI0 prues.<lb/>
Cash belore Christmas Don't<lb/>
lorqel -deadline Nov 30<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
NOTARY PUBLIC Convenient<lb/>
and me?pensive Call Amy at<lb/>
757 3'34<lb/>
PBOFESSIONAL TYPIST with<lb/>
lilteen years e?per.ence wants<lb/>
typmq to do at home Reasonable<lb/>
V Call 7So M60<lb/>
TYPING FOR students pro<lb/>
lessors, etc Kemp.e Dunn 101 E<lb/>
Wnqhi Bd Greenville. NC J7834<lb/>
Call 75J 4733 atter I p m<lb/>
TYPING THESIS manuscripts<lb/>
leports. all types and quantities<lb/>
professional quality -reasonabe<lb/>
ales Call 756 3748<lb/>
EXPERIENCED TYPIST will<lb/>
type at home Call 7S 7183<lb/>
FF W<lb/>
wftSV1<lb/>
DOLLARS FOR vour wntmq<lb/>
Rebel Prose and Poetry Contests<lb/>
Sponsored by Budweiser and the<lb/>
Attic Cash belore Christmas<lb/>
Deadline November 30 Great<lb/>
chance to be published.<lb/>
Cl OSET POETS br.nq the Rebel<lb/>
voui veise. three io live poems<lb/>
0, bttc" o. wn.se It vou wt ite<lb/>
well,   ludqes' eyes, you could<lb/>
wtUl nil with the S80 lust pme<lb/>
The deadline .s Novembe. 30. so<lb/>
don ' diiav P'Ck up you. pens and<lb/>
;a I wi itinq today<lb/>
EXCELLENT TYPIST w.ll do<lb/>
turn research and thesis pape.s<lb/>
articles lor publication and dissei<lb/>
tatmns Reasonable tales Call<lb/>
757 1378<lb/>
FOUND LADIES watch on In<lb/>
tramurai soccer lield Ca<lb/>
752 9657 to ciaim .1<lb/>
KIM ALBIN out senual notions<lb/>
are not contused We know what<lb/>
we ie doinq ?do you' Siq Eps<lb/>
FRESHMEN WOMEN contused<lb/>
'i-Miial notions 24 hr counselinq<lb/>
at Ihe Siq Ep house<lb/>
DEAR MR Fatiques You knrck<lb/>
ed on my door And I real! was at<lb/>
home But i couldn't get<lb/>
downstairs Cause I was on th.<lb/>
phone So conn back aqa ?'?<lb/>
qtv me a ciianci- CaiiM i it' pi<lb/>
Affectionately from O'Ba' Happy<lb/>
Thanksgiving Foot, Susan Sam<lb/>
my. Vicky! '? '?<lb/>
dying to qei in youi pants<lb/>
JOOY - WISHING you a spec .a'<lb/>
bnthdav with Thundei Buns a'<lb/>
Twiiqht and the contents ol youi<lb/>
hoi ii case W.sh I were there' In<lb/>
stead I ollei a belated invitation Io<lb/>
dmnei - the place is voui<lb/>
choice-to .etuin youi kindness<lb/>
RSVP' Bully<lb/>
ORACULA THANKS lor Ihe<lb/>
talks, the ndes, the map and<lb/>
especially Saturday night Youi<lb/>
luend always and loievei. M and<lb/>
Ms with nuts<lb/>
CIRCLE K EBS. I.u.ts Owen<lb/>
Jane and my Mmnowesl room<lb/>
male Joy Satu.dav was ihc<lb/>
daiquiri es' I love ' ya n Jean<lb/>
ON THE l.lth day belore<lb/>
Thanksgiving, one al'e.noon bout<lb/>
3 one ca wash, two tilths ol<lb/>
vodka one qua. t ol O J . lou.<lb/>
piece o botiies. nine diunken pen<lb/>
pie one toy i.de. one blown up<lb/>
tubber one moon.ng. two tesui<lb/>
rections and a btother I'm<lb/>
thanklui to be I<lb/>
PLEDGE S OF Alpha Omicion P.<lb/>
Fuday the 20th was youi big n.qhi<lb/>
and you looked so pi etty all di ess<lb/>
rd m wh.tr' Thanks loi the sonqs<lb/>
now you n halt way through By<lb/>
the way this bud s Io. you<lb/>
JTG OF PKP thanks loi ? bos'<lb/>
R B evei tee! massages and sn"<lb/>
uses loi the second limt i? a i "w '<lb/>
Enioy T giving bieak PLW<lb/>
stAw WATtlM: Mir vh?i ?<lb/>
?tekr?il w) ? ?? ?" ?"?" 1' u<lb/>
L?,a n mm r ,l)r?  mlr  <lb/>
I ,iUi took ?i Hi.ixc pictara inii<lb/>
I didn't ?? I" ??'?' " I ?'<lb/>
Bo.l.tMll ??????"?? <lb/>
msutrd. ??! ???' tmM ' "? hul "k'v<lb/>
Vaa -err. ifirr ill. ? nuesl in m m?n<lb/>
???. v.mrlimrN I ihink ??u ?re irMitg<lb/>
In n.rrupi me. ?snli In drink ill ilw<lb/>
time. II ??? ??ur Mtm I" t?i drunk ??<lb/>
loo in Ihe illrrn.mn. N?N mine nil H<lb/>
? your Mi? Vm dnnk Binirdi Prr-<lb/>
n- . I ?i?ir.l In dnnk imil.in<lb/>
Hint. Wui "? ?"? ?? ????'  '<lb/>
, oul.in i ??s inyihinn And ih.n.r<lb/>
(rukm' hurps.<lb/>
Aunl Pr ?ly l bomh Ibil i.?k -ure<lb/>
rro?cd more thin mt nmr ikn nghi<lb/>
Bui nu lilted I" check up ?n nw. mil I<lb/>
ipprnulr<lb/>
COMPLETE AUTO REPAIR SHOP<lb/>
(FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC)<lb/>
FULL AND SELF-SERVICE GAS AT<lb/>
QUALITY PRICES<lb/>
ROAD AND WRECKER SERVICE<lb/>
10<lb/>
DISCOUNT<lb/>
ON REPAIRS<lb/>
WECU I.D.<lb/>
PILOT TRAINING<lb/>
OPPORTUNITIES<lb/>
FLY NAVY<lb/>
The Navy presently has several openings tor tne<lb/>
most exciting and challenging job in the world -<lb/>
NAVY PILOT. If you qualify, we will quarantee<lb/>
you a seat in the most prestigious flight school<lb/>
anywhere. At the completion of training you will<lb/>
fly the Navy's high performance aircraft<lb/>
Qualifications are:<lb/>
? Bachelors degree<lb/>
? Less than 28"years old<lb/>
? 2020 urtcorrected vision<lb/>
? Excellent health<lb/>
? U.S. Citizen<lb/>
If you thank you can qualify, and would like to<lb/>
earn a starting salary of S18,000 with $28,000 n<lb/>
four years, send a letter of qualifications to<lb/>
NAVY PILOT PROGRAMS<lb/>
001 Navaho Dr.<lb/>
Raleigh, N. C. 27609<lb/>
or call 1-800 662 7231<lb/>
CAMPUS VISIT SCHEDULED<lb/>
FOR 1 3 DECEMBER<lb/>
apprrtiair it<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
MONOGRAMS<lb/>
UNLIMITED<lb/>
Get Your Swearers &amp; Shirts<lb/>
Ready for the Fall.<lb/>
Co-Ed Outlet<lb/>
Located next to Plitt Theatre<lb/>
Mori. Sat. 10 9 Call 335 2424<lb/>
I<lb/>
f<lb/>
but<lb/>
WMkdayt<lb/>
11:30-11:00<lb/>
Fri. A S?t.<lb/>
11:30-12:00<lb/>
300 E. 10th St.<lb/>
758 6121<lb/>
The Best Pizza in Town! (Honest)<lb/>
Post Service!<lb/>
The Philosophy Cluh Meeting set<lb/>
for Tuesday, November 24th<lb/>
(Topic: The Immortalist) has been<lb/>
postponed until a later date. There<lb/>
will be no meeting on this date.<lb/>
Because of the confusion there has<lb/>
been, the active members will<lb/>
receive additional information later.<lb/>
Also, please be on the lookout for<lb/>
future notices.<lb/>
Game<lb/>
Machines<lb/>
Drive Up<lb/>
Window For<lb/>
To Go Orders<lb/>
$2.79<lb/>
$2.69<lb/>
PIZZA m SPAGHETTI BUFFET<lb/>
Mon. &amp; Tues. 5:30 8:00<lb/>
Mon. thru Fri. 11:30 2:00<lb/>
Wed. - All you can cot Spaghetti 5:30-3:00 $2.69<lb/>
Thurs.?Lasagna?One Reg. Price?Second One<lb/>
SI.00<lb/>
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1111111<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
EVERY TUESDAY<lb/>
IS COLLEGE NIGHT<lb/>
with VALID I.D.<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
104E.REDBANKSRD.<lb/>
754-4000<lb/>
qoIdgiv<lb/>
CQHtt tnuc aUtH<lb/>
BUNCH<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
The construction work in our store has been<lb/>
completed and we are moving all bocks<lb/>
from Wright Auditorium back to the main<lb/>
store.<lb/>
We have a "bunch of bocks" that have been<lb/>
taking up much needed space and we want<lb/>
to move them out as we move back in. Many<lb/>
subject categories are represented in this<lb/>
group of discontinued titles and old edi-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Each book on sale is priced 25 cents. Come<lb/>
on in and buy a "bunch This sale will con-<lb/>
tinue as long as our supply of books lasts.<lb/>
No refunds can be given. Shop early for the<lb/>
best selection.<lb/>
Morehead Plaza<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
Owned and Operated by East Carolina University<lb/>
t<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057443_0010"/><lb/>
The Inter-Fraternity Council would like to thank the following<lb/>
sponsors of the 2nd Annual Pig Cook-Off Tournament:<lb/>
Attic<lb/>
Boyd's<lb/>
Briley's Store<lb/>
Crow's Nest<lb/>
Carolina East Cleaners<lb/>
Carraway Oil Co. (Exxon)<lb/>
Coffman's<lb/>
Camelot Inn<lb/>
Coke<lb/>
Domino's Pizza<lb/>
Deli Kitchen<lb/>
Elbo Room<lb/>
Famous Pizza<lb/>
The Flower Basket<lb/>
Heart's Delight<lb/>
Home Builders<lb/>
Hendrix-Barn Hill<lb/>
Happy Store<lb/>
Jack's Steak House<lb/>
Keel Peanuts<lb/>
Lil-Ann's Boutique<lb/>
of Finer Hairstyling<lb/>
Larry's Carpetland<lb/>
Overton's<lb/>
Partial proceeds go<lb/>
to charity.<lb/>
Papa Katz<lb/>
Pepsi<lb/>
Peaches<lb/>
Parkers<lb/>
Phelps Chevrolet<lb/>
Robinson Tower<lb/>
Subway<lb/>
Tree House<lb/>
Tar Landing Seafood<lb/>
UBE<lb/>
Venter's<lb/>
? IHB<lb/>
<pb facs="00057443_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>