<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057445_0001"/>
Mike Cross<lb/>
The Smoothness And Wit<lb/>
Of An Old-Time Auctioneer<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
Basketball<lb/>
Pirates Heading West To<lb/>
Challenge Missouri's Tigers<lb/>
Page 10<lb/>
Ehe<lb/>
(Earnltntan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 58 No. 29<lb/>
Thursday, December 3, 1981<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
12 Paes<lb/>
WZMB Ready To Air<lb/>
Pnoto Bv GARY PATTtRSON<lb/>
"All positions are filled and we"re read lo go aid Sam Baruick, general manager of WZMB. I nfortunateh a<lb/>
fauh transmitter has prevented ihe station from airing until next semester.<lb/>
By DIANE ANDERSON<lb/>
A?tstaat Siewi KdJIor<lb/>
WZMB, East Carolina's long-<lb/>
awaited radio station, will<lb/>
"hopefully go on the air the first.<lb/>
week of classes next semester ac-<lb/>
cording to the station's general<lb/>
manager, Sam Barwick.<lb/>
"We would have been on the air<lb/>
three weeks ago if it had not been<lb/>
for our transmitter, which was not<lb/>
putting out enough power. We had<lb/>
planned to go on the air on Mon-<lb/>
day, Nov. 2, but we are making our<lb/>
final preparations. Our staff has<lb/>
been trained, and 1 think it looks<lb/>
pretty good Barwick said.<lb/>
The station is licensed to put out<lb/>
150 watts of power, but the faulty<lb/>
transmitter was only putting out 100<lb/>
watts, according to Barwick. "We<lb/>
sent it back to the company. They<lb/>
are going to fix it and return it to<lb/>
us<lb/>
When WZMB does get on the air,<lb/>
the bulk of the station's programm-<lb/>
ing will be rock and jazz music.<lb/>
"We're going to play a lot of<lb/>
classics said Barwick. "It is going<lb/>
to be about 20 percent jazz. We are<lb/>
also going to have a three-hour jazz<lb/>
show a week he continued.<lb/>
The station will present a campus<lb/>
call-in show. "We are going to pre-<lb/>
sent certain issues, and people wiH<lb/>
call and express their views.<lb/>
Hopefully students will call in and<lb/>
voice their opinions in a responsible<lb/>
manner<lb/>
A religious program will be<lb/>
presented for one hour on Sunday<lb/>
mornings and will deal with certain<lb/>
topics such as world hunger. This<lb/>
program will also include pro-<lb/>
gressive jazz music.<lb/>
A news program called "Rip and<lb/>
Read" will also be presented. Ac-<lb/>
cording to Barwick, it consists of<lb/>
"weird news, off-the-wall news that<lb/>
you don't read in your average<lb/>
newspaper<lb/>
Other programming will include<lb/>
three hours of classical music on<lb/>
Saturday and Sunday mornings, a<lb/>
two hour new wave show twice a<lb/>
week, five minutes of news eight<lb/>
times a day, and a "campus<lb/>
billboard" with informative infor-<lb/>
mation about activities on campus.<lb/>
"We are going to start out with<lb/>
very basic programming. We arc do-<lb/>
ing something that has never been<lb/>
done before on this campus in re-<lb/>
cent years. We can't come out with<lb/>
See WZMB, Page 2<lb/>
Fewer Break-Ins At Thanksgiving<lb/>
By GREG RIDEOl'T<lb/>
Staff Wnlrr<lb/>
The police blotter this week is ex-<lb/>
tended to include the reports Nov.<lb/>
IS through Dec. 1. The Thanksgiv-<lb/>
ing holiday break produced fewer<lb/>
break-ms than usual, according to<lb/>
one university policeman. The<lb/>
following are dorm reports and<lb/>
related incidents.<lb/>
Nov. 18. 7:50 a.m. ? John E.<lb/>
Paulos of 340 Jones was found in<lb/>
violation of hte visitation policv in<lb/>
Fletcher. 10:20 a.m. - Cliffon<lb/>
Anderson of Thorpe Music Com-<lb/>
panv repotted a breaking and enter-<lb/>
ing ol a vending machine in Clement<lb/>
Dorm.<lb/>
Wov. 19. 12:15 a.m. ? Nathaniel<lb/>
McGuire of 206-A Scott was accus-<lb/>
ed of possession of firearms on cam-<lb/>
pus and wreckless driving. 9:45 a.m.<lb/>
? Christopher Esworthy of 372<lb/>
Jones reported that his vehicle had<lb/>
been vandalized while parked in the<lb/>
14th and Elm Street freshman lot.<lb/>
12:50 p.m. ? Thomas N. Baker<lb/>
reported the breaking and entering<lb/>
and theft of items from his locker<lb/>
on the third floor of the Art<lb/>
Building. 3:05 p.m. ? Joe N. Essick<lb/>
of 408-A Scott reported the larceny<lb/>
of a watch and class ring from his<lb/>
residence. 4 p.m. ?L Artie E. Ver-<lb/>
non of 307-A Scott reported the<lb/>
larceny of his watch from a practice<lb/>
room of the music building. 2:40<lb/>
p.m. ? Barbara Ewlaine Hoffman<lb/>
of 514 White reported the larceny of<lb/>
$27 from her room. 5:15 p.m. ?<lb/>
Susan Elizabeth Roberts of 370 Cot-<lb/>
ten reported the larceny of her bicy-<lb/>
cle from the west side of the<lb/>
doromitiory. 10:30 pm. ?<lb/>
Rudolph Alexander, director of<lb/>
Mendanhall Student Ceenter,<lb/>
reported the larceny of a record<lb/>
album and tape from the center.<lb/>
Nov. 20. 1:15 a.m. - Jeffery A.<lb/>
Perry of 103-B Belk was found in<lb/>
violation of curfew regulations in<lb/>
Clement Dorm. 12 p.m. ? William<lb/>
L. Logan of the School of Medicine<lb/>
reported the larceny of an "Apple II<lb/>
Plus 32 K " computer and disk drive<lb/>
from the Health Sciences library of<lb/>
Pitt Memorial Hospital. (Joe<lb/>
Calder, Director of Security, asks<lb/>
anyone who ha aa information<lb/>
concerning this theft to contact the<lb/>
Security Department. There is a<lb/>
reward offered for information<lb/>
leading to the arrest and conviction<lb/>
of the individual responsible for the<lb/>
crime.) 3:10 p.m. ? Christopher<lb/>
Borwell of 140 Jarvis reported the<lb/>
larceny of his bicycle from the west<lb/>
side of the dormitory. 11:35 P Larry<lb/>
Raynor, second floor RA of Belk<lb/>
dorm, reported subjects having a<lb/>
keg in suite 205 of Belk.<lb/>
Nov. 21. 3:50 p.m. ? An<lb/>
anonymous caller reported that<lb/>
room 276 of Jones Dorm had been<lb/>
vandalized. 8:30 p.m. ? Michael<lb/>
L ee Biggerstaff of 140 Jones was ar-<lb/>
rested for alleged possession of<lb/>
stolen property.<lb/>
Nov. 22. 2:20 a.m. ? Charlie<lb/>
Phillips Taylor of 109 Jones<lb/>
Election Invalidated<lb/>
B MIKEHlGHES<lb/>
suff Wnicr<lb/>
In the wake of turbulence over the<lb/>
selection of a permanent student<lb/>
government president at the Univer-<lb/>
sity of North Carolina at<lb/>
Greensboro, yet another election<lb/>
has been invalidated.<lb/>
Following the recent resignation<lb/>
of the school's president, David<lb/>
Miller, the fifth such election took<lb/>
place. However, shortly after the<lb/>
results were tabulated, SGA Vice<lb/>
President Rusty Weadon admitted<lb/>
his intention to manipulate election<lb/>
results.<lb/>
Soon after Weadon's confession,<lb/>
he resigned, reading a statement to<lb/>
the Senate. Later in the evening, the<lb/>
Senate voted to rule the election<lb/>
results invalid.<lb/>
I ast spring, three elections were<lb/>
held, none of which gave a clear<lb/>
margin to any candidate. Finally, in<lb/>
September, Miller emerged as victor<lb/>
over opponent Brian Berkley.<lb/>
Miller spent a total of eight days<lb/>
in office, as he and another UNC-G<lb/>
student, Darius Davis, were arrested<lb/>
later in the month on charges of<lb/>
false pretense. After taking a<lb/>
month-long leave of absence, Miller<lb/>
ECU Admissions<lb/>
Director Resigning<lb/>
A<lb/>
Ml V(?i Bureau<lb/>
Walter M. Bortz, director of ad-<lb/>
missions at East Carolina University<lb/>
for the past two and a half years, is<lb/>
resigning effective Jan. 31 to accept<lb/>
a similar post at the University of<lb/>
Hartford in Hartford, Conn.<lb/>
Bortz' letter of resignation to Dr.<lb/>
Robert H. Maier, Vice Chancellor<lb/>
for Academic Affairs, brought ex-<lb/>
pressions of dismay and regret from<lb/>
top ECU officials.<lb/>
"Mr. Bortz has done an outstan-<lb/>
ding job for East Carolina Universi-<lb/>
ty Chancellor Thomas B. Brewer<lb/>
said. "He has implemented new<lb/>
ways of getting the university's<lb/>
message to prospective students and<lb/>
thanks to him and the dedicated<lb/>
staff of the Admissions office, the<lb/>
freshman class was slightly larger<lb/>
than last year's. He will be missed at<lb/>
the university but I am sure he will<lb/>
do the same outstanding job for the<lb/>
University of Hartford<lb/>
Maier said "We have been for-<lb/>
tunate in having the services of so<lb/>
capable a person as Walter Bortz in<lb/>
our continuing efforts to make the<lb/>
quality education at East Carolina<lb/>
University available to our young<lb/>
people.<lb/>
"Mr. Bortz has enhanced this<lb/>
university during his stay with us<lb/>
and we regret his departure. We will<lb/>
miss him, and wish him well for his<lb/>
future Maier said.<lb/>
See BORTZ, Page 3<lb/>
reported damage to his vehicle park-<lb/>
ed west of Jones Dorm. 10:50 a.m.<lb/>
? Cpl. Willis reported the breaking<lb/>
and entering and larceny from a<lb/>
vending machine on the first floor<lb/>
of the Biology building. 4 p.m. ?<lb/>
Mark A. Rosenburg of Jones<lb/>
reported the larceny of four chrome<lb/>
rims from his vehicle while it was<lb/>
parked in the 5th and Reade lot.<lb/>
Nov. 23. 6:20 a.m. ? Alicia<lb/>
Karen Lloyd of 321 White and<lb/>
Wilheim Carl Meinhardt, a non-<lb/>
student, were found in violation of<lb/>
the visitation policy in the dor-<lb/>
mitory. 12:35 p.m. ? The in-<lb/>
tramural office reported that a male<lb/>
was in the duct in the women's<lb/>
dressing room in Memorial Gym.<lb/>
3:45 p.m. ? Wendy O. Wallace of<lb/>
611 Fletcher reported the larceny of<lb/>
her bicycle from the east side of the<lb/>
dorm.<lb/>
Nov. 24. 3 a.m. ? Geroge P. Lea<lb/>
was found in violation of the visita-<lb/>
tion policy in White lobby. 1:45<lb/>
p.m. ? Michael K. Rogerson of 353<lb/>
resigned the position.<lb/>
With the fifth election declared<lb/>
invalid, another election was slated.<lb/>
Nine candidates filed for the posi-<lb/>
tion, thus making the possibility<lb/>
great that no single person would<lb/>
gain a majority of votes.<lb/>
If no candidate captures a majori-<lb/>
ty of the student vote, a seventh<lb/>
election will be held, according to<lb/>
the Carolinian, the student<lb/>
newspaper at UNC-G.<lb/>
Weadon admitted to the Senate<lb/>
that he held about 50 ballots with<lb/>
the intention of fixing the election.<lb/>
However, he claims that the ballots<lb/>
were never used and have since been<lb/>
destroyed.<lb/>
In reading his resignation to the<lb/>
Senate, Weadon stated, "What I<lb/>
would have done by using these<lb/>
ballots destroys the entire purpose<lb/>
of having elections<lb/>
With the student government<lb/>
lacking its two highest ranking<lb/>
elected officials, the Senate, in ac-<lb/>
cordance with the SGA constitu-<lb/>
tion, appointed Diedra Smith,<lb/>
former president pro tern, as acting<lb/>
vice president until the end of the<lb/>
current semester. However, the<lb/>
Senate implied that no special elec-<lb/>
tion for the vice presidential office<lb/>
will be held.<lb/>
After the appointment, Smith<lb/>
said that she and the rest of the<lb/>
government will do everything<lb/>
we can to regain the trust of the<lb/>
students<lb/>
Jones reported the larceny of his<lb/>
bicycle from the east side of Jones<lb/>
dorm. 6:15 p.m. ? A male student<lb/>
reported being assaulted in the<lb/>
Aycock gamcroom. 10:15 a.m. ?<lb/>
Stephanie Lynn Martin of 710 Flet-<lb/>
cher reported the larceny of her<lb/>
class ring from the seventh floor<lb/>
bathroom of Fletcher Dorm. 11:40<lb/>
p.m. ? officer Gurly reported the<lb/>
larceny of the house telephone from<lb/>
the lobby of White Dorm.<lb/>
Nov. 25 10:20 a.m. ? Tom N.<lb/>
Baker reported the breaking and<lb/>
entering of his locker from the<lb/>
Jenkins Art Building and the<lb/>
larceny of art supplies. 12:05 p.m.<lb/>
?Carol D. Tait of Jarvis reported<lb/>
the larceny of her rings from her<lb/>
room.<lb/>
Nov. 27. 5:35 p.m. ? Roger<lb/>
Wayne Creech of 133 Jarvis Dorm<lb/>
was arrested for breaking and<lb/>
entering and larceny by Officer<lb/>
Hales. He was found in Room 1<lb/>
Jarvis while the dorm was closed for<lb/>
the holidays. In his possession the<lb/>
officers found jewlery belonging to<lb/>
residents of Jarvis Dorm. In-<lb/>
vestigator McAbee would like those<lb/>
students believing this to be their<lb/>
property to come and identify it.<lb/>
Nov. 28. 1:30 a.m. ? Lt. Suggs<lb/>
reported that the telephone booth at<lb/>
the intersection of 10th street and<lb/>
College Hill Drive had been van-<lb/>
dalized.<lb/>
Nov. 30. 1 p.m. ? Winton H.<lb/>
William reported the larceny of<lb/>
books from his locker of the Jenkins<lb/>
Art Building.<lb/>
Dec. I. 12;05 a.m. ? Officer<lb/>
Anderson reported that the cover of<lb/>
the receiver of the phone in Belk<lb/>
lobby had been stolen. 2:30 a.m. ?<lb/>
Officer Anderson reported that two<lb/>
wehicles registered to dorm<lb/>
residents had been vandalized while<lb/>
parked in the Jones parking lot.<lb/>
1:50 p.m. ? Jane E. Heilman<lb/>
reported the larceny of books and<lb/>
art supplies from his locker of the<lb/>
Art Building.<lb/>
ly OAY f?ATT<lb/>
According to Amy Pickett, editor of the Buccaneer, the 1981 yearbook will begin distribution on Jan. 8.<lb/>
Buccaneer Distributed Jan. 8<lb/>
By PAUL COLLINS<lb/>
l diltir in Om<lb/>
The 1981 Buccaneer is scheduled<lb/>
to arrive on campus Dec. 16 or 17<lb/>
but will not be distributed until the<lb/>
spring semester, editor Amy Pickett<lb/>
said Wednesday.<lb/>
"We'll start distributing the book<lb/>
on Jan. 8, which is drop-add day.<lb/>
We'll have a place set up in<lb/>
Memorial Gym so students can pick<lb/>
up the boo, as they leave she ex-<lb/>
plained.<lb/>
Pickett said graduating seniors<lb/>
will be allowed to pick up their copy<lb/>
if the book arrives before the end of<lb/>
the exam period, but added that<lb/>
those who cannot may obtain a copy<lb/>
by sending a letter to the Buccaneer<lb/>
office along with $2.50 to cover<lb/>
mailing costs.<lb/>
Anyone who was a full-time stu-<lb/>
dent during either semester of the<lb/>
1980-81 school year may pick up a<lb/>
book. An East Carolina ID or a<lb/>
driver's license is needed for iden-<lb/>
tification. Eligibility will be checked<lb/>
by a computer printout, Pickett<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Part-time students can purchase a<lb/>
book for $5; the fee is $10 for<lb/>
freshman.<lb/>
"The book was supposed to ship<lb/>
on the twelfth, but due to numerous<lb/>
proof corrections the plant was hav-<lb/>
ing difficulties meeting the original<lb/>
shipping date Pickett said. She<lb/>
added that the book will now be<lb/>
shipped sometime before Dec. 15.<lb/>
Pickett and Craig Sahli, a former<lb/>
Buccaneer editor, went to<lb/>
Clarksville, Tenn. from Nov. 18 to<lb/>
23 to correct the final set of proofs.<lb/>
She said that she and he' staff<lb/>
were afraid the quality of the book<lb/>
See YEARBOOK, Pate 3<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
MtaMMnM<lb/>
J<lb/>
<pb facs="00057445_0002"/><lb/>
I HI t ASTCAROl INIAN<lb/>
IJI O MM K 3, 1981<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
CO-OP<lb/>
The Co op Office, located m 313<lb/>
Hawl. currently has iOb openings<lb/>
?ot Spring Semester 82 witht he<lb/>
following agencies interested<lb/>
students are urged to apply today'<lb/>
General Accounting Office in<lb/>
Virginia Beach VA Business<lb/>
maiors with 2 9 GPA's or above<lb/>
ho nave completed approximate<lb/>
ly 75 hurs duniors should apply<lb/>
Burroughs Corporation Com<lb/>
puter Science and accounting ma<lb/>
(O's placement may be in<lb/>
Charlotte NC. Atlanta GA, or other<lb/>
Burroughs Corporation worksites<lb/>
Student may lequest placement in<lb/>
specifk .ireas throughout the U S<lb/>
t ll secun'v Administration<lb/>
in Baltimore MD Recruiter will<lb/>
r. an , ampus January 28 to inter<lb/>
vie lODutei science and math<lb/>
maiors mteres'ed students<lb/>
should stop by the office to 10m<lb/>
piov necessarv forms<lb/>
HOME EC<lb/>
Phi UpsMon Omicron (Home<lb/>
'lies Honor Society) and the<lb/>
?1 Dete'ic Association in<lb/>
t 'os ?ou to have a cup of coffee<lb/>
and see an the bakeo goods ano<lb/>
ifts we will be selling at our<lb/>
Chi istmas Ba:aar It will be held<lb/>
-i1ci? Dec from 10 a m 4<lb/>
p m m the Home Ec s VanLan<lb/>
dnqham Room Please plan to<lb/>
stop h<lb/>
BAZAAR<lb/>
A Christmas Baiaar featuring<lb/>
homemade crafts and bakea<lb/>
goods, will b held on Monday, Dec<lb/>
? from 10 a.m to 4 p m in the Van<lb/>
Landingham Room of the Home<lb/>
Economics funding The bazaar is<lb/>
sponsored by Ph. U and the Stu<lb/>
dent Dietetic Association<lb/>
SLC<lb/>
lheECU Sign Language Club<lb/>
will hold its regular bimonthly<lb/>
covered dish supper and meeting<lb/>
on Sunday at the Mendenhall Stu<lb/>
dent Center Multi Purpose Room<lb/>
The supper will begin at 6 p m<lb/>
with a short business meeting and<lb/>
captioned film to follow<lb/>
The meal and meeting are open<lb/>
to any interested student, faculty<lb/>
member or a member of the com<lb/>
munity You do not need to know<lb/>
Sign Lanquage to attend 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 of<lb/>
the SLC is to allow sign langugage<lb/>
students and hearing impaired<lb/>
students and community<lb/>
members to socialize and develop<lb/>
communication skills<lb/>
We hope to see you there<lb/>
PRC SOCIETY<lb/>
PRC Fieidwork presentations on<lb/>
Fri Dec 4. from 2 to 4 p m<lb/>
Presentations will be given in<lb/>
Brewster B 305 The PRC Society<lb/>
is also having Wine and Cheese in<lb/>
honor of its graduating seniors and<lb/>
a Christmas party on Friday Dec<lb/>
4 from 4 30 to 6 30 m the lounge of<lb/>
the Home Economics building<lb/>
SCULPTURE<lb/>
A lot ot sculpture an all day<lb/>
alternative exhibition space ot<lb/>
sculpture by the sedpture depart<lb/>
ment will be presented Aednesday<lb/>
Dec 9 i Reading Day ' Location is<lb/>
at 504 Evans St at the old Park<lb/>
Theatre<lb/>
CERAMICSGUILD<lb/>
The Eighth Annual Ceramics<lb/>
Guild Exhibition and Sale ot func<lb/>
tional pottery and clay sculptural<lb/>
forms will be held December 3 and<lb/>
4 (Thursday and Friday) from 9<lb/>
am til 5pm This year's location<lb/>
is the Mam Entrance Lobby in the<lb/>
LeoW Jenkins Fine Arts Budding<lb/>
on East Fifth St All proceeds<lb/>
benefit the Ceramic Guild's pro<lb/>
grams for lecturers, workshops<lb/>
and symposiums All work is<lb/>
original and hand made in this<lb/>
event which has become an East<lb/>
Carolina Community holiday<lb/>
tradition<lb/>
Further information is available<lb/>
from Ms Linda LeMar, President<lb/>
or Charles Chamberlain, Faculty<lb/>
Advisor ECU Art School 757 6665<lb/>
8 12 mornings<lb/>
EBONY HERALD<lb/>
The Ebony Herald needs writers<lb/>
lor news, arts and people sections<lb/>
if you have interests in these areas<lb/>
and basic writing skills, please ap<lb/>
ply with Media Board secretary<lb/>
Monday through Friday, 9am<lb/>
5pm Leave name and phone<lb/>
number<lb/>
AUDITIONS<lb/>
Auditions tor Stephen B Fm<lb/>
nan s production of Neil Simon s<lb/>
BAREFOOT IN THE PARK will<lb/>
be held at the Methodist Student<lb/>
CEnter (5th nad Holly Streets) on<lb/>
Friday Dec 4 at 7 30 p ,m and<lb/>
Saturday Dec 5 at 2 00 p m The<lb/>
roles of Cone (young newlywed).<lb/>
Mr Velasco a Bohemian'<lb/>
Tolephon man and Delivery Per<lb/>
son are still open everyone is m<lb/>
vited to participate BAREFOOT<lb/>
IN THE PARK is the second pro<lb/>
duction ot Mr Finnan's develop<lb/>
ing little theatre organization and<lb/>
will open February 24 For further<lb/>
information, please call Mr Fin<lb/>
nan at 757 3546<lb/>
LET'S GET PHYSICAL<lb/>
The "physical" ECU Team<lb/>
Handball Club wilt meet Thursday<lb/>
Dec 3 at 3 30 pm in 105 Memorial<lb/>
Gym Plans for next semester will<lb/>
be discussed All interested per<lb/>
sons should attend<lb/>
BLESS YOU<lb/>
God bless you all during the hoii<lb/>
day! Why? Because with the help<lb/>
of Jesus. I am able to love<lb/>
EVERYONE<lb/>
PRCMEETING<lb/>
The Parks Recreation, Conser<lb/>
vation curriculum and<lb/>
Cooperative educaton are conduc<lb/>
ting a meeting tor all PRC maiors<lb/>
and PRC general college students<lb/>
who are interested in obtaining<lb/>
summer employment in their<lb/>
field The meeting will be held on<lb/>
Thursday, December 3 at 6 30<lb/>
p m in 244 Mendenhall<lb/>
MEN WANTED!<lb/>
The ECU Men's Glee Club is cur<lb/>
rently recruiting men for the Spr<lb/>
ing Semester The Glee Club will<lb/>
be touring North Carolina in<lb/>
January with a number ot other<lb/>
appearances scheduled<lb/>
throughout the semester If you<lb/>
would like to iom this fine chorus<lb/>
or only wish to inquire about<lb/>
future membership please contact<lb/>
Ed Glenn, Director at the Sc hool of<lb/>
Music. 757 6331 or at 752 6195 The<lb/>
Men s Glee Club is open to all men<lb/>
campuswide and offers one hour<lb/>
credit per semester The Glee<lb/>
Club rehearses at 12 00 M W F<lb/>
Anyone interested in lOining the<lb/>
Glee Club next semester should<lb/>
contact Mr Glenn as soon as<lb/>
possible in order to be eligible tor<lb/>
the Spring Tour<lb/>
SEMINAR<lb/>
The Department ot Chemistry<lb/>
will present an introduction to<lb/>
fourier transform NMR with ap<lb/>
plications to Carbon 13 and other<lb/>
nuclei by Dr Paul Ellis, Depart<lb/>
ment ot Chemistry, University of<lb/>
South Carolina, on Friday, Dec 4,<lb/>
at 1 p m in room 201. Flanagan<lb/>
Building<lb/>
AED<lb/>
On Tuesday. Dec 8. there will be<lb/>
a bar b que for all AED members<lb/>
at Dr Ayer's house The dinner<lb/>
will start at 6 p m- All interested in<lb/>
attending should sign up on the list<lb/>
outside Dr Ayer's office by 5 p m<lb/>
Monda Dec 7 Maps ot how to<lb/>
get to the Ayer's residence are<lb/>
await able in the Chemistry Office<lb/>
P.E. MAJORS<lb/>
REFRIGERATORS<lb/>
SGA Refrigerators rented this<lb/>
fall should be returned to the loca<lb/>
tion from which they were rented<lb/>
on Dec 9 and 10 between the hours<lb/>
ot 10 a m and 4 p m Extended of<lb/>
fice hours for deposit returns ot<lb/>
rental for spring semester will be<lb/>
from 10 a m to 4 p m on Dec V<lb/>
and 10 and from 12 am to 4 p m<lb/>
on Dec 11 and 14<lb/>
ATTENDANTS<lb/>
Applications are needed from<lb/>
students who are interested in<lb/>
becoming PERSONAL CARE AT<lb/>
TENDANTS to wheel chair<lb/>
students We will employ those<lb/>
who ravv a desire to assist m<lb/>
dividuals with their activities ot<lb/>
daily living<lb/>
For details concerning duties<lb/>
and compensation, contact C C<lb/>
Rowe. Coordinator Office of Han<lb/>
dicapped Student Services 212<lb/>
Whichard Building. Phone 757 6799<lb/>
All students who plan to declare<lb/>
physical education as a maior dur<lb/>
ing the spring semester or who in<lb/>
tend to student teach during the<lb/>
spring semester should report to<lb/>
Mmges Coliseum at 10 a m on<lb/>
Wednesday, Dec 9 for a motor and<lb/>
physical fitness test Satisfactory<lb/>
performance on this test is re<lb/>
quired as a prerequisite tor of<lb/>
ticial admittance to the physical<lb/>
education maior program More<lb/>
detailed information covering the<lb/>
test .s available by calling<lb/>
757 6442<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
All Fall Semester Graduates<lb/>
Uemember to pick up your cap<lb/>
and gown from the Student Supply<lb/>
Store before leaving sc hool These<lb/>
may be picked up m the Student<lb/>
Supply Store Dec 8 9 and 10<lb/>
These Keepsake gowns are yours<lb/>
to keep providing the 110 gradua<lb/>
lion tee has been paid For those<lb/>
receiving the Masters Degree the<lb/>
$10 tee fapy for your cap and<lb/>
gown but there is an extra fee of<lb/>
111 25 for your hood<lb/>
LSAT<lb/>
the Law School Admission Test<lb/>
will be offered at East Carolina<lb/>
University on Saturday. February<lb/>
20 1982 Application blanks are to<lb/>
be completed and mailed to<lb/>
Educational Testing Service Box<lb/>
966 R Princeton, NJ 08540<lb/>
Registration deadline is January<lb/>
21 1982 Registration postmarked<lb/>
after this date must be accom<lb/>
panied by a 115 non refundable<lb/>
late registration fee<lb/>
GRE<lb/>
The Graduate Re ord fc xamma<lb/>
tion will be offered at East<lb/>
Carolina University on Saturday<lb/>
February 6, 198? Application<lb/>
blanks art to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to Educational Testing<lb/>
Service Box 964 R Princeton. NJ<lb/>
08540 Applications must be<lb/>
postmarked no later than<lb/>
December 31. 1981 Applications<lb/>
may be obtained from the ECU<lb/>
Testing Center. Room 105 Speight<lb/>
Building<lb/>
AHPAT<lb/>
The ALIied Health Professions<lb/>
Admission Test will be offered at<lb/>
East Carolina University on Satur<lb/>
lay January 16. 1981 Application<lb/>
blanks are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to the Psychological Corp ,<lb/>
304 East 45th Street. New York.<lb/>
NY 10017 to arrive by Dei ember<lb/>
II, 1981 Application blanks are<lb/>
also available at the Testing<lb/>
Center. Speight Building.<lb/>
Room 105. ECU<lb/>
NTE<lb/>
The National Teacher Examma<lb/>
tions will be ottered at East<lb/>
Carolina University on Saturday.<lb/>
February 20, 1982 Appli ation<lb/>
blanks are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to the Educational Testing<lb/>
Service. Box 966 R. Princeton NJ<lb/>
08540. to arrive by January 18,<lb/>
1982 Application blanks are also<lb/>
available at the Testing Center,<lb/>
Speight Building. Room 105, East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
GMAT<lb/>
The Graduate Management Ad<lb/>
mission Test (GMATi will be of<lb/>
tered at East Carolina University<lb/>
on Saturday, January 23, 1982 Ap<lb/>
plication blanks are to be com<lb/>
pleted and mailed to GMAT.<lb/>
Educational Testing Service. Box<lb/>
966 R Princeton NJ 08540 Ap<lb/>
plications must be postmarked no<lb/>
later than December 21, 1981 Ap<lb/>
plcaiions may be obtained from<lb/>
the ECU Testing Center.<lb/>
Room 105. Speight Building<lb/>
PCAT<lb/>
The Pharmacy College Adm s<lb/>
sion Test (PCAT) ewiH be offered<lb/>
at East Carolina University on<lb/>
Saturday February 6. 1982 Ap<lb/>
plication blanks are to be com<lb/>
pleted and mailed to Pharmacy<lb/>
College Admission Test. P O Box<lb/>
3540 Grand Central Station. New<lb/>
York. NY 10163. to arrive by<lb/>
January ?, 1982 Application<lb/>
blanks a'e available in the ECU<lb/>
Testing Center. Room 105 Spe<lb/>
Building<lb/>
CHANGE<lb/>
iVi would like to ma<lb/>
aware of a change for Spr in g<lb/>
? ster 1982 In order to provide<lb/>
a' least one class meeting during<lb/>
the drop add period, the last day to<lb/>
drop add has been extended until<lb/>
5 00 p m Wednesday January 13<lb/>
1982<lb/>
ART SHOW<lb/>
rht Seventh Annual Ac Show<lb/>
will be from Jan 26 to Feb 5. 1982<lb/>
.n the Greenville Museum of Art<lb/>
All ECU art.sts are encouraged to<lb/>
prepare their best work to submit<lb/>
Fr.day ian 22 1982 to the e on<lb/>
ference room in the office of<lb/>
Jenkins Fine Arts Center tiCU<lb/>
Cash prizes provided by the A"<lb/>
and Jeffries Beer and A.ne Co<lb/>
will fange from 110 for Honorable<lb/>
Mentions to 1100 tor Best in Show<lb/>
ARTISTS<lb/>
Artists' The Seventh Annual<lb/>
Rebel Art Show sponsored by the<lb/>
Attic and Jeffrey's Beer and Wine<lb/>
Co . is coming up to give you an op<lb/>
portunity for recognition as Will as<lb/>
prue money AH registered ECU<lb/>
students may enter a maximum ot<lb/>
two pieces m arv of the following<lb/>
categories Painting. Sculpture.<lb/>
Ceram cs Drawing. Photography<lb/>
Design (metal fiber or a ? ?<lb/>
Graphic Art and Illustration Pan<lb/>
to bring your best work on Fr day<lb/>
Jan 2? 1982 to the conference<lb/>
Room in Jenk.ns Fine Art Center<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
?t you of your organization<lb/>
would like to have an item printer!<lb/>
,n the announcements column<lb/>
please send the announcement as<lb/>
brief as possible) typed and<lb/>
double spaced to The East Caroi.<lb/>
man in care of the news editor<lb/>
There is no charge tor an<lb/>
nouncements out space is often<lb/>
limited<lb/>
The deadline tor announi emen'<lb/>
Hf, ; 1.1 m Friday or tft Tuesday<lb/>
paper and 5pm ruesday tor thf<lb/>
tnursoay papf<lb/>
The space is available to ai<lb/>
I dmpus organzatons and depart<lb/>
ments<lb/>
The Kast Carolinian<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
Published every 'jesday and<lb/>
Thursday dur-ng the aca :?<lb/>
ins eer, Wednesda-<lb/>
ing the summer<lb/>
"e East Carolinian ?, the ot<lb/>
newspaper of Eas'<lb/>
Carolina University, owned<lb/>
i ei tted and pubtshed for arc<lb/>
by the students of Eas1 ' <lb/>
ijniyers.ty<lb/>
Subscription Rat 120 yean,<lb/>
The East Carolinian office<lb/>
are located m the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus of ECU<lb/>
Greenville. N C<lb/>
POSTMASTER Send a<lb/>
changes to The East -<lb/>
Old South Building ECU Green<lb/>
ville. NC 27834<lb/>
Telephone 757 434 37 ?1<lb/>
Application to mail at second<lb/>
class postage rates is pending at<lb/>
Greenville. North Carolina<lb/>
c<lb/>
B<lb/>
<lb/>
WZMB To Air<lb/>
In Spring Semester<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
this big scale of planning. We are<lb/>
going to keep things very basic and<lb/>
build onto it. We are also going to<lb/>
react to the stimuli on campus and<lb/>
what the people want Barwick<lb/>
continued.<lb/>
As far as his staff is concerned, he<lb/>
is confident that "all positions are<lb/>
filled and we're ready to go<lb/>
The staff consists of news director<lb/>
1 ori Niven, business manager Slater<lb/>
Burroughs, production director<lb/>
Warren Baker and assistant general<lb/>
manager and program director<lb/>
Llton Boney. This last position was<lb/>
combined because of the budget<lb/>
cuts last year, Barwick explained.<lb/>
There are also 15 disc jockeys,<lb/>
each with a regular air shift. "Very<lb/>
few of them have had experience.<lb/>
but those who don't have experience<lb/>
have taken some type of course in<lb/>
broadcasting he said.<lb/>
"There are several people at ECU<lb/>
who have experience, but these peo-<lb/>
ple are not wiling to work for the<lb/>
campus station because it doesn't<lb/>
pay anything he continued.<lb/>
'There are people working for the<lb/>
staff who have had experience and<lb/>
been paid before, and I don't know<lb/>
how they are going to like it<lb/>
"Hopefully in the future if we do<lb/>
increase our power and there are<lb/>
enough listeners in the area we can<lb/>
become a commercial station and<lb/>
get some kind of revenue to pay our<lb/>
DJ's something to reward them for<lb/>
working Barwick concluded.<lb/>
He also mentioned the possibility<lb/>
of giving one credit hour in speech<lb/>
lab for working at the station.<lb/>
From The SRA<lb/>
The Student<lb/>
Residence Association<lb/>
is comprised of an ex-<lb/>
ecutive council, and<lb/>
representatives from all<lb/>
residential units here on<lb/>
campus. The SRA is a<lb/>
means of providing<lb/>
communication bet-<lb/>
ween residence hall<lb/>
students, student resi-<lb/>
dent organizations and<lb/>
the administration.<lb/>
Dean Fulgum, the<lb/>
Associate Dean and<lb/>
Director of Residence<lb/>
life is the advisor.<lb/>
The SRA provides an<lb/>
emergency loan fund<lb/>
for residence hall<lb/>
students. They provide<lb/>
functions such as<lb/>
Christmas tree trimm-<lb/>
ings, Concert (Battle of<lb/>
the Bands during the<lb/>
spring). They sup-<lb/>
ported dorms students<lb/>
during Homecoming by<lb/>
entering a float in the<lb/>
parade.<lb/>
The SRA Energy<lb/>
Conservation commit-<lb/>
tee will be soon in-<lb/>
itiating a campus wide<lb/>
energy conservation<lb/>
contest for the Spring<lb/>
semester which will be<lb/>
giving out approx-<lb/>
imately $400 or more in<lb/>
prize money to be given<lb/>
to Energy conserving<lb/>
dorms.<lb/>
A major job of the<lb/>
SRA is to act as a<lb/>
judicial board for the<lb/>
students to lobby with<lb/>
the administration. The<lb/>
SRA Judicial Appeals<lb/>
Committee is proud to<lb/>
state, there has not<lb/>
been any reason for a<lb/>
session. This is due to<lb/>
an outstanding job be-<lb/>
ing done by the House<lb/>
Councils.<lb/>
The SRA would like<lb/>
to extend a personal<lb/>
congratulations toward<lb/>
Kim Cloud as ECU'S<lb/>
homecoming and<lb/>
would also like to con-<lb/>
gratulate Sgt. Singleton<lb/>
on her new job in<lb/>
Florida.<lb/>
The SRA is also<lb/>
working on a new idea<lb/>
of having a transit com-<lb/>
mittee which will be<lb/>
willing to work for a<lb/>
better transit system on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
The SRA needs your<lb/>
input, ideas and help as<lb/>
it is our goal to make<lb/>
living at ECU up to<lb/>
your standards. We<lb/>
need to know your pro-<lb/>
blems in order to deal<lb/>
with them. One thing<lb/>
we would like to have is<lb/>
unity in the Residence<lb/>
halls. Going to House<lb/>
Council meetings and<lb/>
participating in discus-<lb/>
sions is a good way for<lb/>
you the student to help<lb/>
us and become involved<lb/>
in the SRA.<lb/>
NOW<lb/>
A VAILABLE<lb/>
the cube<lb/>
only<lb/>
$295<lb/>
Central News ? Downtown<lb/>
Open 9 a.m6 p.m. 7 days a week<lb/>
Greenville Square Store<lb/>
Open 9:30-9:00 p.m. 7 days a week<lb/>
CHRISTMAS<lb/>
Items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Tues Dec i<lb/>
Thru Sat Dec 5, 1981<lb/>
Copyright 1981<lb/>
Kroger Sav on<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
None Sold fo Dealers<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
c<lb/>
0<lb/>
Fall means<lb/>
football, fun, and<lb/>
fine savings at the<lb/>
One-Stop-Shopping<lb/>
Place, Kroger Sav-on!<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is required to be readily<lb/>
available for sale m each Kroger Sav on, except as specifi<lb/>
cally noted in this ad If we do run out of an item we will offer<lb/>
you your choice of a comparable item when available reflec<lb/>
ting the same savings or a ramcheck which will entitle you to<lb/>
purchase the advertised item at the advertised price within 30<lb/>
days<lb/>
OPEN Mon. thru Sat. 8 AM TO<lb/>
MIDNIGHT-Sun. 9 AM TO 9 PM<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
P,E?M<lb/>
Beet<lb/>
RATH BLACK HAWK<lb/>
Canned Ham<lb/>
x<lb/>
t<lb/>
A2-0<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
DISPOSABLE<lb/>
Good News<lb/>
 ? Razor<lb/>
6<lb/>
R<lb/>
I Good,<lb/>
News<lb/>
?UO<lb/>
vello<lb/>
TAB<lb/>
SPBVTB<lb/>
Coca<lb/>
OB<lb/>
10-<lb/>
Pack<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
2-LU.<lb/>
N.B.<lb/>
Ft<lb/>
OBOA<lb/>
SLICED TO ORDER<lb/>
Boiled Ham<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
FESTIVEV<lb/>
"?k "C ?fc<lb/>
For<lb/>
Poinsettas<lb/>
$399<lb/>
BAGGED<lb/>
ce Cteaw<lb/>
<lb/>
Of<lb/>
SUQO<lb/>
?? T?U<lb/>
COSMETICS &amp;<lb/>
FRAGRANCES<lb/>
10<lb/>
r?'<lb/>
rsM?'<lb/>
16<lb/>
2:00<lb/>
4:50<lb/>
7:00<lb/>
9:20<lb/>
W<lb/>
R<lb/>
:<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057445_0003"/><lb/>
IHl lASTC'AROl IMAN<lb/>
DKCFMBER.I. I9K1<lb/>
tENTS<lb/>
.rgamzation<lb/>
tern printed<lb/>
entf column<lb/>
cement (M<lb/>
typed and<lb/>
Fas' Caroli<lb/>
iws editor<lb/>
tor an<lb/>
? t otten<lb/>
jim ement<lb/>
? Toesdav<lb/>
tv tor tne<lb/>
ie 'o an<lb/>
roliman<lb/>
is the 04<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
owned<lb/>
k ??0 vearty<lb/>
li man office<lb/>
He Old South<lb/>
Impus o ECU<lb/>
aociress<lb/>
? second<lb/>
?, pending at<lb/>
li oima<lb/>
Reserved<lb/>
)eaiers<lb/>
ians<lb/>
land<lb/>
the<lb/>
ing<lb/>
on!<lb/>
De readily<lb/>
It as specifi<lb/>
lwe will offer<lb/>
liable refiec-<lb/>
 e you to<lb/>
 thin 30<lb/>
m<lb/>
College Art Collections Center Of Controversy<lb/>
TUCSON Ariz. (CPS) - Hoping<lb/>
to add a little visual flair to the cam-<lb/>
pus. University of Arizona ad-<lb/>
ministrators recently started<lb/>
building a $100,000 outdoor<lb/>
sculpture that will resemble a "giant<lb/>
stretched spring" when it's done<lb/>
later this year. Fifty-six percent of<lb/>
the student body has already said it<lb/>
didn't like the sculpture. But what<lb/>
administrators really fear ? and ex-<lb/>
pect ? is that vandals will make the<lb/>
spring a target as soon as it is finish-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
Similarly, a massive outdoor<lb/>
sculpture resembling a picnic table<lb/>
at the Northern Illinois Universtiy<lb/>
has been regularly vandalized and<lb/>
desecrated since it wwas completed<lb/>
in September.<lb/>
These are not, in short, great<lb/>
times for campus art. While college<lb/>
art collections have grown to un-<lb/>
precedented size, variety and value,<lb/>
they'e lately become centers of<lb/>
controversy and major attractions<lb/>
for vandals and thieves:<lb/>
?Someone stole over $50,000 in<lb/>
Oriental and Indian artwork from<lb/>
the Unvierstiy of Colorado museum<lb/>
in 1979. At the same time, the<lb/>
Universites of Rochester, Arkansas<lb/>
and Missouri, among others, also<lb/>
suffered major art thefts.<lb/>
?Last year vandals tore up a pair of<lb/>
outdoor statues on loan to the<lb/>
Universtiy of New Mexico, and<lb/>
threw them into a nearby pond. The<lb/>
works, designed by sculptor William<lb/>
King, are now in storage to prevent<lb/>
further damage.<lb/>
?There have been so many paintings<lb/>
stolen from the Universtiy of<lb/>
Massachusetts-Amherst that art<lb/>
students are now reluctant to<lb/>
display their works at the school's<lb/>
Fine Arts Center.<lb/>
? In what was perhaps the biggest art<lb/>
theft ever from an American<lb/>
museum, over 330 pieces of artwork<lb/>
cumulatively valued at $1 million<lb/>
were lifted from the Lowie Museum<lb/>
of Anthropology at the University<lb/>
of California-Berkeley.<lb/>
"Security is definitely a pro-<lb/>
blem says Dr. Peter Bermingham,<lb/>
director of the University of<lb/>
Arizona Museum of Art. Besides<lb/>
the uproar over the giant spring, the<lb/>
university has weathered the theft of<lb/>
$1300 in gold artwork from the stu-<lb/>
dent union a year ago.<lb/>
"But what do we do?" Berm-<lb/>
ingham asks. "Circle our wagons<lb/>
and not move?"<lb/>
"Curators, he explains, try to<lb/>
keep moving despite student con-<lb/>
troversy, vandalism, occasional<lb/>
thefts and an ever-increasing<lb/>
number of art-pieces that creat a<lb/>
ogistical nightmare of record-<lb/>
keeping and security efforts.<lb/>
"When I came here our records<lb/>
were a disgrace Bermingham<lb/>
recalls. "Over the years the school<lb/>
has had various collections of art<lb/>
dumped on it, but it was never ade-<lb/>
quately registered and recorded<lb/>
Recording them has brought<lb/>
some surprises. Bermingham says<lb/>
one collection valued at $250,000<lb/>
was actually a group of forgeries<lb/>
worth less than $200.<lb/>
University of Texas-Austin of-<lb/>
ficials still can't find an improperly-<lb/>
catalogued collection of Rembrandt<lb/>
etchings that were first missed two<lb/>
years ago. Officials now aren't sure<lb/>
they ever really owned them.<lb/>
"For all we know, they could be<lb/>
out on loan somewhere and turn up<lb/>
one of these days muses Andrea<lb/>
Norris, curator of the university's<lb/>
Arthur M. Hunnington Art Gallery.<lb/>
"It's still a mystery she says.<lb/>
"But I can say that today we keep<lb/>
much better records of our collec-<lb/>
tions. It couldn't happen again<lb/>
Most campus art curators deny<lb/>
such incidents mean they're doing a<lb/>
bad job.<lb/>
They argue that few campuses<lb/>
were designed to handle large,<lb/>
valuable art collections. No one,<lb/>
moreover, took the growing collec-<lb/>
tions seriously enough to build pro-<lb/>
per facilities until recently.<lb/>
"American art and much of the<lb/>
art developed in America just<lb/>
wasn't worth that much 20 years<lb/>
ago observed Rudy Turk, curator<lb/>
at Arizona State University.<lb/>
Consequently many schools<lb/>
didn't realize the value of their art<lb/>
until some of it was vandalized or<lb/>
stolen from the ill-protected<lb/>
Bortz Accepts Position At Hartford<lb/>
. ? . ? i? -ii ? J: mm ? ? A r-v i- ?. ? r-? ? t i c 111A ? n t 11 ?i rrrmc mnr? Qf nrncn<lb/>
(Ontinued From Page 1<lb/>
Bortz, 36, was<lb/>
selected for the ECU<lb/>
post in mid 1979 to suc-<lb/>
ceed retiring dean of<lb/>
admissions John H.<lb/>
Home. He had served<lb/>
for three years as dean<lb/>
o admissions at Texas<lb/>
Christian University<lb/>
and earlier served seven<lb/>
years, 1969 to 1976, in<lb/>
institutional reserach,<lb/>
as dean of men and<lb/>
director of admissions<lb/>
at Bethany College,<lb/>
Bethany, W. Va.<lb/>
Bortz said he would<lb/>
leave ECU with "mixed<lb/>
emotions" and that his<lb/>
work here has been<lb/>
"very rewarding<lb/>
"The interest and ac-<lb/>
tive involvement of the<lb/>
chancellor, not only in<lb/>
making himself<lb/>
available for our pro-<lb/>
spective student and<lb/>
parents programs, but<lb/>
also in financially sup<lb/>
porting the efforts of<lb/>
the Admissions Office<lb/>
in publications, facility<lb/>
improvement, data<lb/>
processing and<lb/>
audiovisual aids have<lb/>
helped us im-<lb/>
measurably. It is my<lb/>
hope the the ad-<lb/>
ministration will con-<lb/>
tinue this effort in the<lb/>
future; without it, East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
will not fulfill its enroll-<lb/>
ment objectives<lb/>
In addition to serving<lb/>
on a number of ad-<lb/>
ministrative commit-<lb/>
tees and in other<lb/>
assignments, Bortz also<lb/>
served as acting direc-<lb/>
tor of the ECU Com-<lb/>
puter Center during<lb/>
most of 1980 while a<lb/>
search for a fulltime<lb/>
director was in pro-<lb/>
gress.<lb/>
Recently, Chancellor<lb/>
Brewer designated<lb/>
Bortz as the University<lb/>
official to coordinate<lb/>
East Carolina Universi-<lb/>
ty's compliance with<lb/>
the University of North<lb/>
Carolina system con-<lb/>
sent decree in civil<lb/>
rights litigation.<lb/>
As admissions direc-<lb/>
tor, Bortz implemented<lb/>
a program of increasing<lb/>
number of honors<lb/>
scholarships for<lb/>
demonstrated academic<lb/>
achievers; initiated and<lb/>
implemented a series of<lb/>
ECU Today prospec-<lb/>
tive student-parent<lb/>
panel programs<lb/>
presented across the<lb/>
state and in Virginia;<lb/>
upgraded and improv-<lb/>
ed the publications pro-<lb/>
gram of the admissions<lb/>
office to attract more<lb/>
academic achievers and<lb/>
provide higher visibility<lb/>
for the university in the<lb/>
prospective student<lb/>
market place. He also<lb/>
reorganized and<lb/>
redesigned facilities of<lb/>
the admissions office to<lb/>
make offices and inter-<lb/>
view rooms more at-<lb/>
tractive and inviting;<lb/>
and implemented<lb/>
greater use of com-<lb/>
puters in making more<lb/>
timelv contact with<lb/>
prospective students.<lb/>
He assisted in develop-<lb/>
ing a computerized stu-<lb/>
dent data base and in-<lb/>
formation system with<lb/>
the Computing Center.<lb/>
buildings in which it was stored,<lb/>
Turk says.<lb/>
"Our only problem is that we<lb/>
need a new building he contends.<lb/>
"We are sitting in an old building<lb/>
that was built as a library. We have<lb/>
ample security. We have ample<lb/>
staff. And all our records are in<lb/>
order. But we have 9500 works of<lb/>
art, and only have enough room to<lb/>
show 400 works at a time<lb/>
Turk is luckier than most of his<lb/>
peers, who frequently must try to<lb/>
untangle the shoddy or incomplete<lb/>
record-keeping of the past with little<lb/>
help.<lb/>
It promises to get worse. Strapped<lb/>
administrations seem unlikely to<lb/>
devote larger shares of their dwindl-<lb/>
ing resources to help the curators<lb/>
move from the era of lackadaisical<lb/>
art warehousing to an age of protec-<lb/>
ting and advancing their<lb/>
increasingly-valuable collections.<lb/>
Some campuses, however, are<lb/>
recognizing the value of their collec-<lb/>
tions. Financially-troubled Lehigh<lb/>
University, for example, is about to<lb/>
put a sizable collection of rare<lb/>
books and manuscripts form its art<lb/>
collection on sale to raise funds.<lb/>
Last year Yale sold off gold<lb/>
dubloons, and coincidentally<lb/>
managed to balance its budget.<lb/>
Generally, collections arc left<lb/>
unappreciated and unprotected.<lb/>
Arizona State's Turk hopes to get a<lb/>
new art building for his collection,<lb/>
though "maybe not in my lifetime<lb/>
Curators must also anticipate<lb/>
another rush of art donations if<lb/>
Congres passes a law increasing the<lb/>
tax deducation for artists and<lb/>
writers who give works to non-<lb/>
profit institutions.<lb/>
"People love to give artwork<lb/>
Turk summarizes, "but they're not<lb/>
so excited to give away money<lb/>
Until they do, Turk says the only<lb/>
way to minimize the losses is better<lb/>
planning. "If you can't keep the<lb/>
things in your collection secure, you<lb/>
shouldn't be holding them. Many<lb/>
people don't think of it until the<lb/>
theft occurs<lb/>
Bermingham agrees. "In areas<lb/>
where you can't control security, as<lb/>
with outdoor sculptures, you just<lb/>
have to put up pieces that are<lb/>
reasonably repairable. Vandalism is<lb/>
something as predictable as the sun<lb/>
coming up in Tuscon<lb/>
I1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII<lb/>
Yearbook Completed<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
would suffer if they pressed for the<lb/>
earlier shipping dale.<lb/>
The book was orginally scheduled<lb/>
to be distributed in the latter part of<lb/>
September. This date was delayed,<lb/>
however, when Pickett replaced<lb/>
Barne Byland as editor in June.<lb/>
Byland resigned under pressure<lb/>
from the Media Board which was<lb/>
concerned about her ability to com-<lb/>
plete the book. At the time of<lb/>
Byland's resignation, only 13 of 336<lb/>
pages had been finished.<lb/>
When she took over. Picket!<lb/>
hoped to have the yearbook back to<lb/>
campus by Thanksgiving. She said<lb/>
the further delav was necessarv<lb/>
because "there was more work than<lb/>
I anticipated<lb/>
Pickett said she was generally<lb/>
pleased with thequalitv of the book.<lb/>
"Obviously the quality couldn't be<lb/>
as good as the 'SO book because of<lb/>
the time. But 1 feel we covered the<lb/>
school ear adequately. The design<lb/>
is similar to that used in the 1980<lb/>
book<lb/>
She added that several pages are<lb/>
being used by Josten's, the company<lb/>
that is printing the book, in its sam-<lb/>
ple yearbook. "The sample year-<lb/>
book is used by the company to<lb/>
show schools what thev can do. It<lb/>
highlights some o the company's<lb/>
better accounts<lb/>
Urban Resident<lb/>
Rate Increases<lb/>
B MIKE HUGHES<lb/>
staff Wnirr<lb/>
Nearly half of North Carolina's<lb/>
citizens live in urban areas, accor-<lb/>
ding to the 1980 governor's office<lb/>
census report.<lb/>
A total of 2,818,767 North<lb/>
Carolinians, approximately 48 per-<lb/>
cent of the state's population, reside<lb/>
in what are currently classified as<lb/>
"urban" areas.<lb/>
State officials and city planners<lb/>
throughout the state claim that the<lb/>
2.5-percent increase in urban<lb/>
residents is a natural result of the in-<lb/>
creasing industrialization of North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
According to Dr. Sheron<lb/>
Morgan, a member of the gover-<lb/>
nor's committee on population<lb/>
research, North Carolina was about<lb/>
60 percent rural in 1950. Despite the<lb/>
apparent shift to urban living,<lb/>
populations in rural areas have also<lb/>
increased, though not as fast.<lb/>
Morgan cited Governor Hunt's<lb/>
balanced growth policy, saying that<lb/>
an upsurge of industrial develop-<lb/>
ment in rural areas has resulted.<lb/>
Thus, employment growth has been<lb/>
achieved in both urban and rural<lb/>
areas of the state.<lb/>
The largest increase in population<lb/>
since 1970 was seen in Charlotte,<lb/>
where urban migrations and annex-<lb/>
ations brought an additional 70,000<lb/>
persons in the decade.<lb/>
The growth in population and<lb/>
subsequent problems have caused<lb/>
several major cities as well as 60 of<lb/>
the state's 100 counties to create<lb/>
positions either for city planners or<lb/>
planning commissions.<lb/>
Noting the increases, Hunt<lb/>
recently established a state commis-<lb/>
sion to consider growth problems<lb/>
and recommend necessary changes<lb/>
in policy.<lb/>
The report also estimated that<lb/>
North Carolina's population will<lb/>
reach eight million by the 21st cen-<lb/>
tury, a 30-percent increase in 20<lb/>
years.<lb/>
 if<lb/>
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It is unlikely that any other American him this year<lb/>
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and linger over"<lb/>
-GtntShalii NBC TV (Todail<lb/>
MERYL STREEP<lb/>
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Shrimp<lb/>
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Spec i a I Good Phcne 753-0327<lb/>
Tuesday,<lb/>
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and<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
This Week<lb/>
Bob Hearing ? Manager<lb/>
Cross Green Street Bridge<lb/>
Take left at 1st Light<lb/>
Located one block down on left.<lb/>
ratti<lb/>
Weekday<lb/>
11:39-11:00<lb/>
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11:30-12:00<lb/>
300 E. 10th St.<lb/>
75?-4121<lb/>
The Best Pizza in Town! (Honest)<lb/>
Fast Service!<lb/>
Game<lb/>
Machines<lb/>
Drive Up<lb/>
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PtZZA &amp; SPAGHETTI BUFFET<lb/>
Mon. &amp; Tues 5 30 800$2.79<lb/>
Mon thru Fri. 11 30 2:CO$2.69<lb/>
Wed. - All you can eo? Spaghetti 5 30-3 00 $2.69<lb/>
Thurs.?Lasagna?One Reg. Price?Second One<lb/>
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Mon<lb/>
Dec. 7<lb/>
ECU-Campbel!<lb/>
Game<lb/>
Prizes<lb/>
given by<lb/>
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U.B.E.<lb/>
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Bonds<lb/>
Ramada Inn<lb/>
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The Basics<lb/>
These two sweaters form the<lb/>
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thoughts . . the Vee Neck<lb/>
fLambswool pullover and the<lb/>
Shetland Cru neck Cox<lb/>
Moore of England knits<lb/>
these garments in<lb/>
their specialized<lb/>
unique manner that<lb/>
results in a pleasing<lb/>
combination of both<lb/>
style and comfort.<lb/>
And a quality product<lb/>
is their watchword . . .<lb/>
quality in yarn<lb/>
and quality in<lb/>
knitting. The<lb/>
colors will make<lb/>
your want to<lb/>
buy two or<lb/>
three<lb/>
At all of our fine stores<lb/>
of&amp;ncsnfe<lb/>
MEN<lb/>
W<lb/>
Downtown Oeenville - Monday-Saturdoy 8 30 to 5 30<lb/>
Carolina Eost Mall Monday-Friday 10 00 to 9 00<lb/>
Saturday 10:00 to 6 00<lb/>
TorrytownMoll - Rocky Mount - MonFri 1000 to9 00<lb/>
Saturday 1000 to 6 00<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
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J<lb/>
<pb facs="00057445_0004"/><lb/>
Qttfe lEaat (SttroliniaK<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Paul Collins, w??(v?<lb/>
Jimmy DuPREE, mmm emm<lb/>
Ric Browning. o,WMf , Charles Chandler, ??? e,o,<lb/>
CHRIS lICHOK, Business Manatrr TOM HALL, News Editor<lb/>
Alison Bartel, ?? m Steve Bachner, Bmmimmm Editor<lb/>
Steve Moore, cmu. !??? Karen Wendt.m?<lb/>
December 3, 1981<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Progeria<lb/>
'Youngsters' Visit Disneyland,<lb/>
Show Others How To Live<lb/>
Admittedly, these are trying times<lb/>
for our country. The crime rate is<lb/>
rising. Inflation is at a record peak.<lb/>
There has been a dramatic rebirth in<lb/>
racial and ethnic hatred. And the<lb/>
nuclear arms race is threatening to<lb/>
destroy society.<lb/>
But there is a glimmer of hope<lb/>
coming which shows that citizens of<lb/>
this country still have a big heart.<lb/>
Just ask Fransie and Mickey.<lb/>
Mickey Hayes is from Hallsville,<lb/>
Texas, and Fransie Geringer lives<lb/>
more than 11,000 miles away in<lb/>
South Africa. They went to<lb/>
Disneyland Wednesday.<lb/>
Ordinary kids go to Disneyland<lb/>
every day, but Fransie and Mickey<lb/>
are not ordinary kids. They are suf-<lb/>
fering from a rare disease, progeria,<lb/>
which is an incurable genetic<lb/>
disorder. It strikes only one in eight<lb/>
million children, and victims usually<lb/>
die in their mid-teens.<lb/>
What makes Mickey and Fransie<lb/>
look so different is that they do not<lb/>
look like they are eight and nine.<lb/>
They look closer to 80.<lb/>
Progeria manifests itself in bald<lb/>
heads, beaked noses and stunted<lb/>
growth and causes the body to age<lb/>
10 times faster than normal.<lb/>
The Associated Press carried a<lb/>
story in August about Fransie's<lb/>
tragedy, mentioning that his dream<lb/>
was to meet his storybook idol<lb/>
Pinocchio at Disneyland.<lb/>
Citizens of this country respond-<lb/>
ed with donations for his journey,<lb/>
which was orginated by the Sun-<lb/>
shine Foundation, a charity group<lb/>
based in Philadelphia.<lb/>
Meanwhile, Texans raised money<lb/>
so Mickey could meet Fransie. And<lb/>
a friendship was born.<lb/>
The children did not know about<lb/>
each other before they met. They<lb/>
thought they were unusual. Now<lb/>
they know different.<lb/>
Mickey can't keep his hands off<lb/>
Fransie said Mickey's mother,<lb/>
Cindy Edwards. "I don't think he<lb/>
can believe he's real.<lb/>
"I don't think they've been<lb/>
separated five minutes. To watch<lb/>
them play, you'd think they'd<lb/>
known each other for years.<lb/>
"When you see a change in your<lb/>
son, it can't help but change your<lb/>
life, too she added. "When your<lb/>
child's happy, you're happy<lb/>
And if Mickey and Fransie are<lb/>
happy, why can't we all be?<lb/>
Consider This. . .<lb/>
The Jimmy Carter Committee for<lb/>
a Greater America was established<lb/>
to "support the causes he sup-<lb/>
ports according an Associated<lb/>
Press report.<lb/>
A spokesman for Carter said the<lb/>
group will provide financial help to<lb/>
Democratic candidates and causes.<lb/>
Carter denied the political action<lb/>
committee will be used to further his<lb/>
career.<lb/>
In view of the 1980 presidential<lb/>
election results, it remains to be seen<lb/>
if the Carter-backed organization<lb/>
will be more beneficial for<lb/>
Democrats or the Republican op-<lb/>
position.<lb/>
'Moral Majority's' Purposes Cited<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: Jerry Falwell Jr. is a<lb/>
sophomore political science major at<lb/>
Liberty Baptist College in Lynchburg, Va.<lb/>
The following was submitted to The East<lb/>
Carolinian as an entry for the "Campus<lb/>
Forum" but because of its length and con-<lb/>
tent is reprinted as a column.<lb/>
By JERRY FALWELL, Jr.<lb/>
This letter is in response to the article<lb/>
"Moral Majority: Threat to Freedom" by<lb/>
Joseph C. Olinick that appeared in the<lb/>
September 22 issue of this newspaper.<lb/>
First of all, Mr. Olinick makes the<lb/>
classic mistake that most f Moral Majori-<lb/>
ty's opponents seem to make. He uses the<lb/>
argument of separation of church and<lb/>
state, which is totally irrelevant. If Mr.<lb/>
Olinick had done his homework, he would<lb/>
have known that Moral Majority is not a<lb/>
religious organization in any way. It is a<lb/>
conservative political organization, similar<lb/>
to many liberal organizations like the Na-<lb/>
tional Organization of Women and People<lb/>
for the American Way. Moral Majority's<lb/>
membership comes from Catholics, Jews,<lb/>
Mormons, Protestants and many people<lb/>
with no religious persuasion at all. Dr.<lb/>
Jerry Falwell heads the organization as a<lb/>
private citizen. Contrary to some people's<lb/>
beliefs one does not give up his status as a<lb/>
private citizen when he becomes a<lb/>
preacher.<lb/>
Moral Majority's objective is not to<lb/>
force moral standards on a public that<lb/>
does not want them. They believe ? and<lb/>
with good reason ? that most Americans<lb/>
agree that pornography and sex on TV<lb/>
simply lead to a general decline o; the na-<lb/>
tion's morals. It is a historical fact that<lb/>
whenever a nation has experienced moral<lb/>
decline, political and economic decline<lb/>
have followed promptly. This, not<lb/>
religion, is the basis for Moral Majority's<lb/>
objection to pornography and sex on TV.<lb/>
Moral Majority has never singled out a<lb/>
specific television program for any type of<lb/>
h t list as they have been accused of doing<lb/>
and the national Moral Majority organiza-<lb/>
tion has never and will never attempt to<lb/>
remove any book from any library or<lb/>
school. Moral Majority simply wants both<lb/>
sides of every issue to be taught in the<lb/>
public education system, not just the<lb/>
liberal view. Moral Majority seems to<lb/>
always catch the blame for these types of<lb/>
censorship actions practiced by other New<lb/>
Right organizations.<lb/>
Moral Majority is against abortion<lb/>
because they believe that it is murder. Most<lb/>
doctors now agree that life begins at con-<lb/>
ception. The freedom of choice in this<lb/>
country does not include the option to kill<lb/>
someone else. This is plain and simple<lb/>
enough for anyone to understand.<lb/>
However, Moral Majority is not opposed<lb/>
to abortions in extreme circumstances.<lb/>
Mr. Olinick speaks of freedom in his ar-<lb/>
ticle, but in some public universities and<lb/>
schools today, a student can read the ideas<lb/>
of Karl Marx on campus, but he cannot sit<lb/>
on the same campus and read the Holy Bi-<lb/>
ble. Is this freedom? Moral Majority is not<lb/>
trying to take away freedo. .s, but simply<lb/>
trying to regain the ones already lost to the<lb/>
liberals.<lb/>
Neither is Moral Majority trying to force<lb/>
any so called "moral legislation" on the<lb/>
people. Every law in our system today is<lb/>
based on morality in that they tell us what<lb/>
is absolutely right and wrong. The law<lb/>
distinguishes what is wrong by determining<lb/>
where our freedoms begin to harm others.<lb/>
In other words. Moral Majority believes<lb/>
that the freedom to present anything one<lb/>
desires on TV can be harmful to children<lb/>
and to the morals of the nation and could<lb/>
eventually lead to an overall decline of our<lb/>
nation as I explained earlier.<lb/>
The major misfortune of Moral Majori-<lb/>
ty is simply that it is often misunderstood<lb/>
by SO many people. This is mainly because<lb/>
the liberal press has distorted the goals of<lb/>
Moral Majority in as many ways as possi-<lb/>
ble. They have succeeded in making many<lb/>
people think that the freedoms in the First<lb/>
Amendment apply only to liberal causes<lb/>
and not to conservative or religious ones.<lb/>
It is my belief that when all the people<lb/>
learn the truth about the reasons for and<lb/>
objectives of Moral Majority, it will<lb/>
become an even much more influential<lb/>
force than it is today.<lb/>
i- Campus Forum<lb/>
Legislature Speaker Refutes Editorial's Soap Opera Scenario<lb/>
After reading the editorial concerning<lb/>
the Student Legislature in the Nov. 24<lb/>
edition of the East Carolinian, I felt<lb/>
compelled to comment on the<lb/>
"opinions" expressed. As Speaker of<lb/>
the Legislature, I was extremely<lb/>
displeased with the account of the SGA<lb/>
meeting and the sarcastic and<lb/>
melodramatic way in which the view was<lb/>
presented.<lb/>
Obviously, it was a slow news day and<lb/>
the staff was bored and had nothing bet-<lb/>
ter to do than "create a soap opera<lb/>
This newspaper is always reacting to<lb/>
something, but the problem is that the<lb/>
rewspaper does not always know to<lb/>
what it is reacting to, as evidenced by the<lb/>
SGA editorial. It was evident that the<lb/>
editorialist was unknowledgeable of the<lb/>
political precess and lacked any<lb/>
understanding of or familiarity with the<lb/>
legislative process or parliamentary pro-<lb/>
cedure.<lb/>
The SGA Legislature is not a soap<lb/>
opera combining the elements of<lb/>
mystery and excitement, nor is it a com-<lb/>
edy. The only comedy on this campus is<lb/>
the "newspaper" itself. If you wish to<lb/>
criticize the legislature's motion to<lb/>
reconsider the NAACP bill, then do so<lb/>
on the merits of the bill or on the<lb/>
motives behind the reconcideration mo-<lb/>
tion, not the reconsideration maneuver<lb/>
itself because it is a correct parliamen-<lb/>
tary process.<lb/>
Your perception and interpretation of<lb/>
the legislature's conduct reflected your<lb/>
misunderstanding of the parliamentary<lb/>
and legislative process. I recall no<lb/>
members speaking out of turn or inter-<lb/>
rupting one another except in the cases<lb/>
of correctly using parliamentary pro-<lb/>
cedure maneuvers as explained by<lb/>
Roberts Rules of Order.<lb/>
The only individuals I recall walking<lb/>
around were SGA executive officers,<lb/>
who are not members of the legislature,<lb/>
and members of the gallery present, such<lb/>
as yourself. The legislators did not con-<lb/>
duct themselves like a pack of baboons,<lb/>
though for someone who is unfamiliar<lb/>
with the legislative process it's possible<lb/>
to gain a false impression.<lb/>
Since the paper deems the SGA<lb/>
Legislature a circus, then surely you<lb/>
would characterize the U.S. Congress as<lb/>
a zoo, especially if you had seen one of<lb/>
the Congressional sessions. If the<lb/>
Legislature wasted time in open debate<lb/>
procedures by "clarifying" issues, then<lb/>
this is the price of representative<lb/>
democracy and having a deliberative<lb/>
legislative body. But the price is minimal<lb/>
as compared to the alternatives.<lb/>
If a soap opera exists on this campus,<lb/>
then it surfaces each Tuesday and Thurs-<lb/>
day as we endure the continuing saga of<lb/>
"What's the newspaper up to now<lb/>
Although I can hardly wait for the next<lb/>
episode, "Circus III I trust 'hat in the<lb/>
future the paper will be able to present a<lb/>
more informed opinion absent of any<lb/>
false perceptions about SGA.<lb/>
Also, it might be helpful to be present<lb/>
in the Legislative room 221 and not 248,<lb/>
although I am sure the meeting in 248<lb/>
has all the excitement and mystery of the<lb/>
Perils of Pauline, which you obviously<lb/>
like, but our SGA meeting in room 221<lb/>
does not.<lb/>
GARY R. WILLIAMS<lb/>
Speaker of the Legislature<lb/>
Fight Back<lb/>
To all interested readers: I AM<lb/>
DETERMINED TO FIGHT BACK!<lb/>
After reading the many responses to<lb/>
Ronald Fisk's letter published by the<lb/>
East Carolinian last Thursday, I felt<lb/>
compelled to writed my own opinion<lb/>
about the matter. Like Ron, it is also<lb/>
difficult for me to condone<lb/>
"homosexuality but 1 must add- to<lb/>
each his own However, there is no<lb/>
justification for such overt implications<lb/>
of discrimination and racism that Ron<lb/>
inferred upon the minority students here<lb/>
at ECU.<lb/>
With a large amount of Pride-<lb/>
Dignity-and-Courage, I willfully con-<lb/>
fess that I am a minority student (Black<lb/>
Afro-American) who can not sitback<lb/>
"idle" without defending myself for the<lb/>
rights charged against me. Yes, I AM<lb/>
DETERMINED TO FIGHT BACK!<lb/>
Without excuse, my four and a half<lb/>
years attending this institution, I have<lb/>
gained numerous friends and associates<lb/>
from various racial and ethnic<lb/>
backgrounds.<lb/>
Still, I have this personal problem. I<lb/>
feel I must rebel when someone is trying<lb/>
to keep me from reaching my goals. It is<lb/>
much similar to the Frustration-<lb/>
Agression theory. As a result of my<lb/>
frustration-instead of tolerating or<lb/>
compromising with it? 1 must retaliate.<lb/>
Yes, I am determined to fight back!<lb/>
Of course, my methods to resolve con-<lb/>
flict are very rare-indeed! Also, it would<lb/>
be very hard trying to influence others to<lb/>
support me. You see, "Threats and ver-<lb/>
bal abuse" are not that effective. Also, I<lb/>
have never used "nuclear arms and a<lb/>
"Saturday-night Special" is much too<lb/>
cheap for solving problems.<lb/>
Instead, the most powerful weapon I<lb/>
know to use is "love Believe me, it is<lb/>
the greatest force mankind can use to<lb/>
promote change and settle dispute. Also,<lb/>
it works!<lb/>
Ron, I really love you man. Even if<lb/>
that means, 1 must stand alone. Listen,<lb/>
if you ever get down and need a<lb/>
friendplease remember my hand and<lb/>
shoulders will always be there to help lift<lb/>
you up. Let's be brothers, OK. (I John<lb/>
4:7,8)<lb/>
P.S. Thanks Dad and Mom for your<lb/>
special child-rearing techniques -they<lb/>
are still working!<lb/>
MICHAEL SHERL LOCKAMY<lb/>
Senior, Political Science<lb/>
Homecoming<lb/>
The students who reside on campus<lb/>
here at ECU have had the privilege of<lb/>
formal representation by the Student<lb/>
Residence Association since it's creation<lb/>
in the fall of 1980.<lb/>
However, in my opinion the S.R.A.<lb/>
was poorly represented in the homecom-<lb/>
ing court election when only five out of<lb/>
15 dorms had representatives in the elec-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The committee headed by S.R.A. Vice<lb/>
President Barry Seay to select a<lb/>
representative out of all the dorms<lb/>
wasn't very successful. Some dorms<lb/>
received no information on how to pro-<lb/>
ceed selecting their representative. The<lb/>
young lady chosen to represent S.R.A<lb/>
ended up representiong her own dorm.<lb/>
I fail to see why such a traditional<lb/>
campus activity has to turn into such a<lb/>
complicated and confusing political pro-<lb/>
cess.<lb/>
I also fail to see why good com-<lb/>
munication has to be such a problem,<lb/>
which incidently was one of the reasons<lb/>
given by the S.R.A. vice president for<lb/>
the lack of information concerning the<lb/>
election.<lb/>
Obviously nothing can be done this<lb/>
year to remedy the problem, but I would<lb/>
hope that next year more girls have the<lb/>
opportunity to participate in this tradi-<lb/>
tion that is an entire campus activity.<lb/>
ED DOUGHERTY<lb/>
Junior, History<lb/>
Toilet Paper<lb/>
This is a response to Ms. Shirley's let-<lb/>
ter of complaint in the Nov. 24 issue of<lb/>
The East Carolinian. I agree with you,<lb/>
Ms. Shirley, in that toliet papering yards<lb/>
to such an extent is indeed ridiculous,<lb/>
but has it ever occurred to you that is is<lb/>
not the so-called prestigious sorority<lb/>
women who do the rolling, but rather<lb/>
the few immature members of frater-<lb/>
nities who clutter the yards?<lb/>
It seems to me, that you have<lb/>
mistakenly presented your "Golden<lb/>
Fleece Award" to the Greek organiza-<lb/>
tions of the wrong gender. Ms. Shirley,<lb/>
evidently it is not clear to you that it is<lb/>
quite impossible to remove all the toliet<lb/>
paper from the tops of the trees. I feel<lb/>
that genuine effort is made by all the<lb/>
sororities on Fifth Street to keep their<lb/>
houses and yards neat and presentable.<lb/>
Another item of your letter that 1<lb/>
found disturbing was the fact that you<lb/>
referred to sorority women as<lb/>
"prestigious "civilized and<lb/>
"scholarly" in a very sarcastic tone. For<lb/>
your information, being in a sorority<lb/>
does not mean that you are out for men,<lb/>
a partier, or that you think you are bet-<lb/>
ter than anyone else. In fact, many<lb/>
sorority women are also members of<lb/>
various honor organizations, and of<lb/>
course every individual in or out of a<lb/>
sorority or fraternity has his own special<lb/>
talents.<lb/>
As for myself, although only a pledge,<lb/>
I take pride in the fact that being in a<lb/>
sorority means involvement that benefits<lb/>
myself and the school. Obviously, you<lb/>
and many other people fail to see the<lb/>
good that sorority and fraternity<lb/>
organizations do for the community.<lb/>
So, Ms. Shirley, next time you pick up<lb/>
a stray piece of toilet paper, glance over<lb/>
to one of the sorority houses to sec some<lb/>
girls raking up the mess. If you are still<lb/>
annoyed after doing this, consider that<lb/>
there is a positive aspect to this problem<lb/>
in that you can save money by using<lb/>
your collection of bathroom tissue for<lb/>
your own personal needs.<lb/>
NANCY CROFT<lb/>
Freshman, English<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. All let-<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for brevity,<lb/>
obscenity and libel, and no personal at-<lb/>
tacks will be permitted.<lb/>
The meel<lb/>
and silent<lb/>
November<lb/>
wester'<lb/>
lone er<lb/>
the<lb/>
ha:<lb/>
re-cr ?<lb/>
rich mi<lb/>
Brea.<lb/>
aloi .<lb/>
Nigh! '<lb/>
Bount.<lb/>
son.<lb/>
Y<lb/>
con<lb/>
Onh H<lb/>
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at err<lb/>
all the<lb/>
in the<lb/>
rea<lb/>
just ar<lb/>
making a 1<lb/>
was m<lb/>
interview a<lb/>
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Ni<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Style<lb/>
DECEMBER 3.1981 Page 5<lb/>
Mike Cross<lb/>
Singer, Songwriter A Treat<lb/>
By GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The mechanical bull and punching bag were frozen<lb/>
and silent at the Carolina Opry House on Sunday,<lb/>
November 22. As all eyes and ears in this country and<lb/>
western bar were focused on the stage. There stood a<lb/>
lone entertainer named Mike Cross. A native of Lenoir,<lb/>
North Carolina, Cross performed his three hour set with<lb/>
the smoothness and wit of an old time auctioneer who<lb/>
had something to please everyone.<lb/>
Cross opened with "Rocky Top Bar-B-Que" from his<lb/>
recent album entitled "Rock-N-Rye The night was a<lb/>
rich mixture of foot stomping songs like "Whiskey for<lb/>
Breakfast" "Nobby and "Too Late to Be Saved<lb/>
along with folk songs such as "The Scotsman "Good<lb/>
Night Medley" and the slow rythmic melodies of "The<lb/>
Bounty Hunter" and "Kentucky Song Two other<lb/>
songs that seemed as if they were especially written for<lb/>
ECU called "Start Drawing the Lines" and the other a<lb/>
comical take off from "The Wizard of Oz" called "If I<lb/>
Only Had Some Cocaine Both brought the crowd into<lb/>
a roaring sing-a-long.<lb/>
Going to a Mike Cross concert is like Sunday dinner<lb/>
at grandma's with something for everyone. Mike does<lb/>
all the cooking himself. Though he uses other musicians<lb/>
in the studio, he rarely takes them on the road. This<lb/>
really gives a down-home and wholesome atmosphere to<lb/>
his concerts.<lb/>
While most of today's performers seem like unac-<lb/>
cessable and unrealistic people, Cross comes across as<lb/>
just an average guy out doing the thing he loves and<lb/>
making a living for his family, just like anyone else. He<lb/>
was more than welcome to grant The East Carolinian an<lb/>
interview after the show. Backstage, fans and autograph<lb/>
hunters swarmed around him like bees to honey. One<lb/>
teenage girl with blonde hair was a very avid fan who<lb/>
follows him whenever he tours North Carolina. She<lb/>
couldn't stop hugging him and was eager to see him in<lb/>
Raleigh and Greensboro during the Thanksgiving<lb/>
holidays. Cross just sat by a pot of coffee taking it all<lb/>
in, with an occasional wink to his wife, sitting across the<lb/>
room. He took the time to be personal with each fan,<lb/>
never once sounding plastic as one would think most<lb/>
performers would. That is just one of the qualities that<lb/>
separates Cross from other performers, making him an<lb/>
entertainer.<lb/>
After the fans cleared out, he offered us a round of<lb/>
Michelobs and reminisced on his university days at<lb/>
UNC during the early seventies. There he learned "the<lb/>
fine art of drinking" and how to play the guitar. His<lb/>
love for the guitar grew, and eventually he did some gigs<lb/>
on the local college bar scene. He chose Western<lb/>
literature as his major because "it was the only thing I<lb/>
could think of that I wouldn't have to go to class, just<lb/>
sit at home and read After two years, he withdrew<lb/>
from school, totally absorbed in music.<lb/>
Continuing to play bars, he made a quiet debut in<lb/>
1979 with the album "Child Prodigy released on<lb/>
G.H.E. Records. In 1980, he burst onto the radio scene<lb/>
of the Southeastern United States with two albums titled<lb/>
"Bounty Hunter" and "Born in the Country Out of<lb/>
these albums, beside the popular title tracks, came such<lb/>
hit songs as "Blue Skies and Teardrops and<lb/>
"Kentucky Song Airplay in North Carolina was<lb/>
especially high. His latest release is a live album called<lb/>
"Live and Kicking on the Sugar Hill label out of<lb/>
Chapel Hill, North Carolina, where Cross currently<lb/>
resides. He says it will probably be next fall before he<lb/>
will release a new studio album. "I've really just started<lb/>
on it Cross commented. "I just got back from<lb/>
See MIKE, Page 8<lb/>
Mike Cross<lb/>
regales the audience with the fiddle<lb/>
roto ? (,ar pa rrmsos<lb/>
Need Christmas Cash? Here Are Some Ideas<lb/>
By JOSEPH Ol I NICK<lb/>
Usually around this time of year,<lb/>
a lot of people start digging in their<lb/>
pockets, searching for extra cash;<lb/>
consequently, some people try to<lb/>
raise money through various<lb/>
methods.<lb/>
If you happen to be in need of ex-<lb/>
tra cash, you might want to pawn<lb/>
some valuable object. According to<lb/>
an employee of one of Greenville's<lb/>
pawn shops, guns usually bring the<lb/>
most money when pawned; below<lb/>
them in price are 35mm cameras<lb/>
then gold and diamonds, then<lb/>
stereos and televisions, then<lb/>
bicycles. To pawn something is like<lb/>
taking a loan out on it. The item,<lb/>
pawned, is held by the shop for 30,<lb/>
60 or 90 days; then if the item has<lb/>
not been claimed by the original<lb/>
owner, it is put up for sale. If the<lb/>
original owner of the pawned item<lb/>
does decide to claim it, he must pay<lb/>
a fairly high rate of interes' on the<lb/>
money that had been borrowed on<lb/>
the pawned item.<lb/>
Another way of making extra<lb/>
cash is selling gold jewelry or other<lb/>
gold items to one of the many gold<lb/>
buyers. At present, the approximate<lb/>
price of gold is $400 an ounce;<lb/>
however, that does not mean that a<lb/>
gold object, weighing an ounce, can<lb/>
be sold for $400, for the value of<lb/>
gold items is determined by the<lb/>
number of carats of gold in them.<lb/>
Thus, high carat gold will bring a<lb/>
high price.<lb/>
Selling books is another standard<lb/>
way of raising cash. Usually, half of<lb/>
the new price of a book is paid for a<lb/>
used book. According to one UBE<lb/>
employee, the condition of the book<lb/>
does not really matter; UBE will buy<lb/>
back books in almost any condition.<lb/>
Really, there are a lot of jobs that<lb/>
one could take to raise cash. With<lb/>
Christmas shopping in full swing,<lb/>
there should be some temporary<lb/>
jobs at local stores. Then, one could<lb/>
charge other people for doing small<lb/>
jobs for them. For example, one<lb/>
could tutor someone in something,<lb/>
chauffer someone around, rake<lb/>
leaves or split wood for some local<lb/>
citizen, do a term paper for so-<lb/>
meone The list is endless; there is<lb/>
always someone who would rather<lb/>
pay to have something done than do<lb/>
it themselves. One just has to think<lb/>
a little and search a little.<lb/>
If you are really ambitious, you<lb/>
might ant to collect aluminum<lb/>
cans and sell them to a recycler.<lb/>
Definitely, there are a lot of empty<lb/>
cans on campus after k weekend1<lb/>
and it takes a lot of aluminum cans<lb/>
to make money. The price that is<lb/>
paid for aluminum cans is .20 a<lb/>
pound. However, one recycler said<lb/>
he paid one woman 5100 for the<lb/>
cans that she had gathered in one<lb/>
week, so there must be a lot of cans<lb/>
around.<lb/>
Those who like to make crafts<lb/>
and hand-make, decorative items<lb/>
have some opportunities open to<lb/>
them because it seems like people<lb/>
like to buy hand-make, decorative<lb/>
items and give them as gifts. Such<lb/>
items tend to sell for high prices,<lb/>
too. For example, a wreath of dried<lb/>
graRe,vines wit,h a sparse arrange-<lb/>
ment of dried flowers on ft sells for<lb/>
$25 in some places. Of course, one<lb/>
must find a place to sell such items.<lb/>
Sometimes, merchants or gift shops<lb/>
will sell crafts and art works for<lb/>
other people on consignment.<lb/>
For those of you who are<lb/>
desperate and devious, there are a<lb/>
lot of ways to make extra cash. For<lb/>
example, one could pretend to be<lb/>
with some big charity and go around<lb/>
and collect extra cash, or one could<lb/>
sell Christmas cards or magazine<lb/>
subscriptions and pocket the sales<lb/>
money with no intention of deliver-<lb/>
ing the goods. Really, it takes no<lb/>
time to think up a quick, cheap<lb/>
scam, but naturally, the students at<lb/>
ECU are above such things.<lb/>
Overall, there are many ways to<lb/>
make extra cash; one just hac to<lb/>
have enough initiative and ambition<lb/>
to think of them.<lb/>
Book Dedicated To Anti-Preps<lb/>
The Preppie.<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
The cover tells it all.<lb/>
"If you think that "Mummy" is<lb/>
nothing but an old Egyptian<lb/>
"If you have an allergic reaction<lb/>
to the sight of pink and green<lb/>
"If the only alligator you can<lb/>
relate to is on "Wild Kingdom<lb/>
"Then here's the book for you<lb/>
Yes, it's the latest in the how-to-<lb/>
hate line of books, "The I-Hate-<lb/>
PREPPIES Handbook subtitled,<lb/>
"A Guide for the Rest of Us<lb/>
No one is certain whether its im-<lb/>
pact will be as striking to the<lb/>
clothing styles of the U.S. as the<lb/>
"Preppie Handbook" but the same<lb/>
basic issue is there. It is a guide to<lb/>
the supposedly uninitiated on how<lb/>
to dress to impress those of your<lb/>
social circle.<lb/>
The book centers on four primary<lb/>
groups; the Jock, who is born; the<lb/>
Greaser, who is born; the Nerd, who<lb/>
is born; and the Freak, who is made.<lb/>
It includes sections on dress, places<lb/>
to shop, names for children,<lb/>
heritage, homes, food, social life,<lb/>
decor, vacation spots, pastimes,<lb/>
music, films, parties and evensex.<lb/>
For its educable readers it also in-<lb/>
cludes several quizzes on how to<lb/>
spot the scene which indicates the<lb/>
most about the anti-prep lifestyle.<lb/>
But seriously,(if possible) the<lb/>
book is an enjoyable parody of the<lb/>
handbook mentioned earlier. As a<lb/>
matter of fact it is modeled as close-<lb/>
ly to the origial as possible, using<lb/>
the same style page layouts and even<lb/>
a remarkably similar cover (the<lb/>
alligators are substituted with<lb/>
turtles).<lb/>
The only problem with the book<lb/>
is a lack of a cohesive audience.<lb/>
They type of people that would<lb/>
benefit learn from the book would<lb/>
never be caught dead reading it and<lb/>
'Muffle' would never be caught<lb/>
dead with this book at the sorority<lb/>
house.<lb/>
The book contains a host of<lb/>
relatively useless information. It<lb/>
does define its characters in an<lb/>
original manner, one which Webster<lb/>
is probably turning over in his grave<lb/>
about.<lb/>
The Nerd: "The only group that<lb/>
goes back to Biblical days, when<lb/>
making flour was a compulsory<lb/>
course<lb/>
The Jock: "Contrary to popular<lb/>
opinion, the word Jock is not deriv-<lb/>
ed from the term athletic supporter.<lb/>
Nothing is derived from an athletic<lb/>
supporter<lb/>
The Greaser: "Once again con-<lb/>
trary to popular opinion, the word<lb/>
Greaser is not derived from grease,<lb/>
which Greasers stoped using in the<lb/>
spring of '63. Greaser instead goes<lb/>
way back, like a Greaser's hair<lb/>
The Freak: "The First American<lb/>
Freak was a member of the Con-<lb/>
tinental Congress named Eugene<lb/>
Brissie, who found a way to<lb/>
mainline snuff and as late as 1802<lb/>
was asking how the war had come<lb/>
out<lb/>
The thing to remember is that it is<lb/>
always best to listen to both sides of<lb/>
view and to admit new ideas into<lb/>
your life.<lb/>
This book won't do it for you<lb/>
though.<lb/>
k?<lb/>
?<lb/>
t&amp;rfc<lb/>
??<lb/>
0$<lb/>
Pfcolw ? ,AB rAm RM<lb/>
Gift Ideas Vary<lb/>
For Christmas Time<lb/>
and the Anti-Prep<lb/>
By DONNA LEIGH DAVIS<lb/>
suff Wiiitf<lb/>
Well, it's that time of year again.<lb/>
For all of those scholars whose<lb/>
minds have been temporarily befud-<lb/>
dled due to menacing upcoming ex-<lb/>
ams, it is time to lay aside such petty<lb/>
trivialities as Organic Chemistry and<lb/>
Qualitative Analysis and concen-<lb/>
trate on the hard stuff - like what to<lb/>
get Grandma for Christmas. Being<lb/>
the spontaneous unique, fun-loving<lb/>
individuals tha all true East Caroli-<lb/>
nians are confirmed to be, it goes<lb/>
without saying that ordinary, mun-<lb/>
dane gifts such as a tie for daddy,<lb/>
Fruit of the Loom products and<lb/>
socks in assorted colors for other<lb/>
members of the family are not fit to<lb/>
grace the shopping list. This being<lb/>
an established fact, the seeker of<lb/>
higher learning must then logically<lb/>
rationalize the identity of the "<lb/>
right" Christmas present. Step one<lb/>
in solving the dilema (or at least for<lb/>
into grotesque faces that if anything<lb/>
would be a grand diet-aide or<lb/>
cuspidor. Another splendid gift idea<lb/>
guaranteed to delight and amaze is<lb/>
the ever-popular "Pickled-People<lb/>
Who wouldn't love to wake every<lb/>
morning to a pruned ace with glazed<lb/>
eyes gazing fixatedly through a glass<lb/>
jar? However, if the loved one and<lb/>
alleged recipiant lacks a profound<lb/>
appreciation for the state of rigor<lb/>
mortis, there are other alternatives.<lb/>
When looking for the truly charm-<lb/>
ing, cute, useful, enjoyable, chic<lb/>
gift, some may have to look no fur-<lb/>
ther than the nearest mirror.<lb/>
However, for those individuals who<lb/>
are blessed with precisioned,<lb/>
analytical minds coupled with<lb/>
periodic artistic tendencies but must<lb/>
duck to avoid broken glass every<lb/>
time a mirror comes in view, it is<lb/>
suggested that you refer back to step<lb/>
one, or better yet, the socks and<lb/>
underwear. Ohand for you who<lb/>
Humor And Drama<lb/>
In Weekend Flicks<lb/>
the unexperienced freshman shop- don't exactly fit into that category,<lb/>
per) is usually to visit sundry<lb/>
establishments of mercantile. After<lb/>
extensive research and clinical ex-<lb/>
perience the average student will<lb/>
find himself swathed in assorted<lb/>
paraphenalia such as mugs distorted<lb/>
but feel like the Grinch who stole<lb/>
'Rock V<lb/>
Roil High School'<lb/>
Christmas without the annual pur- is the late show at Hendrix Theatre this weekend. The film<lb/>
chase of underwear, do not despair. will be shown after the featured presentation, ' The Elephant<lb/>
I hear they have it out in several new . ,??  . . . y<lb/>
flavors this year, if you have a Man- Both films are sponsored by the Student I nion Films<lb/>
"taste" for that sort of thing Committee.<lb/>
East Carolina will be treated to<lb/>
two films this weekend. The Student<lb/>
Union Films Committee will be<lb/>
presenting The Elephant Man as its<lb/>
primary feature and the film Rock<lb/>
and Roll High School will appear as<lb/>
the late show on Friday and Satur-<lb/>
day night.<lb/>
The Elephant Man is the true<lb/>
story of the life of John Merrick, a<lb/>
man so hideously deformed that his<lb/>
only means to eke out a living was as<lb/>
a freakshow attraction.<lb/>
A sympathetic doctor treats him<lb/>
and helps to restore a visage of<lb/>
dignity to this maligned person. The<lb/>
film is set in atmospheric London<lb/>
and treats a delicate subject matter<lb/>
with both compassion and insight to<lb/>
man's inner nature.<lb/>
The fi'm stars John Hurt as the<lb/>
Elephant Man.<lb/>
"Brilliant! No film more ar-<lb/>
tistically daring and emotionally<lb/>
overwhelming has come along this<lb/>
year. John Hurt gives a perfor-<lb/>
mance that is unforgettable. John<lb/>
Gielgud is excellent, and Anne Ban-<lb/>
croft is almost too grand to be<lb/>
true. "<lb/>
?Charles Champlin, Los Angeles<lb/>
Times<lb/>
Rock 'n' Roll High School is<lb/>
everyones high school fantasy<lb/>
played out. The film is about clever,<lb/>
rebellious teens who battle their<lb/>
militaristic principal and literally<lb/>
blow their high school to pieces.<lb/>
P.J. Soles (Carrie) is Riff, ardent<lb/>
rock-and-roll fan and leader of the<lb/>
rebellion, who attempts to bring her<lb/>
brand of music and her favorite<lb/>
rock group, The Ramones, to Vince<lb/>
Lombardi High in Southern<lb/>
California.<lb/>
What ensues between Riff's<lb/>
followers and the school principal is<lb/>
fast moving, satirical, anarchy<lb/>
punctuated by the rapid-fire musical<lb/>
intenstiy of the Ramones.<lb/>
Music by Fleet wood Mac, Paul<lb/>
McCartney, Devo, ALice Cooper,<lb/>
Brian Eno, Velvet Underground,<lb/>
Chuck Berry, Nick Lowe, and<lb/>
others provide the background for<lb/>
innumerable visual puns and sight<lb/>
gags in this outrageous rock V roll<lb/>
extravaganza.<lb/>
See ROCK, Page 9<lb/>
T-<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057445_0006"/><lb/>
Hearts<lb/>
Delight<lb/>
ACRILWI &amp;R<lb/>
(Reduced Ice Cream Prices)<lb/>
Chapter X<lb/>
(Best In Beach Music)<lb/>
0M<lb/>
<lb/>
ifk<lb/>
n<lb/>
ECO. Qp?M?IH?. N C<lb/>
or<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
(Not Open to General Public)<lb/>
? ???? t -???? m it<lb/>
ieAp<lb/>
<lb/>
?Mi<lb/>
5<lb/>
58<lb/>
Greenville, NX.<lb/>
(Opening Soon On Monday Night)<lb/>
Mil<lb/>
Your Painters Hat from<lb/>
The UBE<lb/>
and Ticket Stub from the<lb/>
ECU-Campbell Game for. . .<lb/>
Reduced Beverage Prices<lb/>
Reduced<lb/>
Admission<lb/>
MINGESMANIA This Monday<lb/>
Don<lb/>
Miss<lb/>
MtNGES-MANIA<lb/>
from UBE, Pepsi Cola and ECU Athletic Department<lb/>
A<lb/>
,<lb/>
? .<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057445_0007"/><lb/>
mmGES<lb/>
MANIA<lb/>
1000<lb/>
HALFTIVNE<lb/>
GIVE AWAV<lb/>
Monday, Dec.<lb/>
ECU-Campbell Game<lb/>
ATiTIC One year free pqss<lb/>
$50000 Value<lb/>
??!??.?? v. i,tij??ii ?0k ii??i?n ? -<lb/>
textbooks from the<lb/>
$10000 Value<lb/>
U.B.ES<lb/>
51 S. COTANCHE<lb/>
GREENVILLE. N.C.<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
h l hodges ? Q000 Gift Certificate<lb/>
Dinner for four at<lb/>
k<lb/>
,00<lb/>
n<lb/>
Value<lb/>
PLANTERS<lb/>
NATIONAL<lb/>
BANK<lb/>
,00<lb/>
Savings Account<lb/>
$10000 worth of groceries from<lb/>
Five 2000 Winners<lb/>
Overton s<lb/>
Supnm.tiUt'l Iiu<lb/>
YOU MUST HAVE YOUR PAINTER'S HAT FROM<lb/>
THE UBE AND TICKET STUB TO WIN<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057445_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DECEMBER 3. 1981<lb/>
Language Interests This<lb/>
Student Of Strange Words<lb/>
By ANNE HENRY<lb/>
MafTWrfKr<lb/>
The second and most<lb/>
common translation is<lb/>
As many foreigners to remove your body<lb/>
who are learning the from the presence of<lb/>
English language will the speaker. The choice<lb/>
attest, English is one of of the verb "take" is<lb/>
the most complicated questionable. Accor-<lb/>
and unpredictable ding to Webster's New<lb/>
languages. There are World Dictionary of<lb/>
many rules to learn and American Language<lb/>
for each, there are (2nd College Edition),<lb/>
twice as many excep- to take means, "to<lb/>
tions. With the hun- grasp, to seize to<lb/>
dreds of thousands of capture However, it<lb/>
words in the English could not be found to<lb/>
Value is the worth of<lb/>
an objects (usually<lb/>
monetary). Priceless is<lb/>
to have no value. It is<lb/>
therefore logical to say<lb/>
that a priceless object is<lb/>
really a piece of junk.<lb/>
The winners of the<lb/>
Superbowl are not<lb/>
world champions as<lb/>
they are called. Cana-<lb/>
dian football is quite<lb/>
different from<lb/>
American football<lb/>
Therefore, the Super-<lb/>
bowl winners are only<lb/>
the American cham-<lb/>
pions.<lb/>
Parts of the body are<lb/>
also misnamed. Your<lb/>
back is the back por-<lb/>
tion of the body; why is<lb/>
the front portion of the<lb/>
body called the<lb/>
stomach? Should it not<lb/>
be called the "front"?<lb/>
Your belly button is not<lb/>
a button; it is a scar.<lb/>
You do not have an ap-<lb/>
pendicitis attack (it<lb/>
does not attack you).<lb/>
Rather, it an inflamma-<lb/>
tion of the appendix<lb/>
Eyes are not whipped<lb/>
or beaten as eyelashes<lb/>
suggest.<lb/>
Articles of clothing<lb/>
See WORDS. Page 9<lb/>
<lb/>
The Romantics<lb/>
will be appearing at the Attic on Sunday, December 6. I ook for a review<lb/>
of the concert in Tuesday's edition of The East Carolinian<lb/>
Mike Cross Enjoyed<lb/>
Continued From Page 5<lb/>
Ireland,<lb/>
where 1 was gathering some new material and a<lb/>
tour of Saudi Arabia which he described as a<lb/>
wierd experience. "The audience couldn't speak<lb/>
Englishso it was hard to tell if I was pleasing<lb/>
themEvery now and then, someone would<lb/>
shout JOHN DEAN-VERR, and I would break<lb/>
into "Thank God I'm a Countr Boy<lb/>
Unlike his colleagues in the music industry<lb/>
Cross sees the live stage as a special event that<lb/>
should be treated difierently every time. He<lb/>
remembered when he was recording the<lb/>
"Rock-N-Rye" album in New York. Bruce Spr-<lb/>
ingsteen was sharing the same studio with him,<lb/>
and they got to become friends. He was amazed<lb/>
that Bruce has a lot of the same ideas about per-<lb/>
forming as himself. "Bruce is a starHe doesn't<lb/>
have to go out and sweet and scream for three or<lb/>
four hours.<lb/>
"Bruce and 1 remembered standing in long, cold<lb/>
lines just to see vnir favorite performers only to be<lb/>
disappointed when thev came out and played a<lb/>
90-minute show like it was a chore and dashed<lb/>
back to the hotel. The fans don't have to buy<lb/>
tickets or albumsand a lot of singers seem to<lb/>
forget that<lb/>
Cross doesn't want to leave a show until he's<lb/>
sure that crowd is pleaded. As he stated, "I've<lb/>
never had a bad show Now I'll admit that a few<lb/>
were a little offbeat, but it 1 ever had a bad show<lb/>
it was the ticketholders' fault, not mine.<lb/>
"You have to be able to sense the atmosphere<lb/>
of the place you're playing and plan around that.<lb/>
The Opry House is a country-and-Western bar<lb/>
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so I've got to get rowdy. When I'm playing an<lb/>
auditorium where the seating is very formal, and<lb/>
alcohol isn't served. I have to adjust my show to<lb/>
fit that tpe of surround?"?s.<lb/>
language, one can im-<lb/>
agine the multitude of<lb/>
combinations formed<lb/>
to express ideas and<lb/>
thoughts.<lb/>
A great many of<lb/>
these combinations are<lb/>
accurate and concise,<lb/>
fully explaining the<lb/>
thought transmitteed.<lb/>
For example, the<lb/>
sentence, "Jack and<lb/>
Jill went up the hill to<lb/>
fetch a pail of water"<lb/>
clearly communicates<lb/>
the thought of the<lb/>
speaker. The structure<lb/>
is correct and clearly<lb/>
expresses an idea.<lb/>
However, most<lb/>
Americans do not<lb/>
always express<lb/>
themselves clearly, nor<lb/>
do they put words<lb/>
together that make<lb/>
complete sense. For ex-<lb/>
ample, think of many<lb/>
slang terms that have<lb/>
been created. Can you<lb/>
see the English student<lb/>
trying to memorize the<lb/>
multitude of modern<lb/>
jargon? Chances are<lb/>
slim that he could han-<lb/>
dle all the terms<lb/>
without rupturing a<lb/>
blood vessel as a result<lb/>
of anxiety, the expres-<lb/>
sion "take a hike" can<lb/>
mean one of two<lb/>
things. One is that the<lb/>
person wishes to<lb/>
observe his natural sur-<lb/>
roundings, thus walks<lb/>
amid the wild and free.<lb/>
L?Ma,oo Aqout CoiutgcThe Hwp Ia))i<lb/>
?7 i7 H- inn ? i ? ? ' ? ? ?-? - f<lb/>
OH, I H?P A TV Pajm<lb/>
fof. -TWsfcS6viAJ6, A)o'<lb/>
it's too mo yovj Couuwt<lb/>
GO MoMC AO HWt<lb/>
A TUfiJI<lb/>
THE <lb/>
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GREAT FOOD<lb/>
7(c44ei tyte<lb/>
tine, (u?t&amp;<lb/>
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SPICY ITALIAN<lb/>
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ROAST BEEF<lb/>
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TURKEY BREAST<lb/>
PASTRAMI<lb/>
PEPPERONI<lb/>
GENOA SALAMI<lb/>
BOLOGNA<lb/>
ALASKAN KING CRAB<lb/>
SHRIMP<lb/>
TUNA<lb/>
ITALIAN EXPRESS<lb/>
(Sausage &amp; Meatballs)<lb/>
SAUSAGE<lb/>
MEATBALLS<lb/>
CHEESE<lb/>
VEGETARIAN<lb/>
SALAD PLATE<lb/>
Srrtrd ?ilh touf rhiiicr of ? nwrkan (I<lb/>
? Oniiiiu ?IriiiKr 'lull Plrkkn ? toiaalon<lb/>
?( .rrrn Prppro ?BI?ik Olitrs 'Sail ?Ptpprr n4 OH<lb/>
We've got more taste.<lb/>
We now have iced tea and<lb/>
potato chips.<lb/>
208 E. 5th St.<lb/>
758-7979<lb/>
have "take" defined as<lb/>
the action described in<lb/>
the above term.<lb/>
Although this is the on-<lb/>
ly reference consulted,<lb/>
this writer does not<lb/>
believe that dictionaries<lb/>
would greatly differ<lb/>
between definitions.<lb/>
Among our everyday<lb/>
foods and appliances,<lb/>
we find odd names.<lb/>
Hamburger steak is a<lb/>
redundancy<lb/>
(hamburger is steak).<lb/>
Electrical tape has no<lb/>
electricity in it. Posters<lb/>
should be caller postees<lb/>
because a poster is so-<lb/>
meone who hangs up<lb/>
printed material. A<lb/>
postee is something<lb/>
that is being hung.<lb/>
"Janitor in a Drum" is<lb/>
a very misleading name<lb/>
for a product; one ex-<lb/>
pects a man to pop out<lb/>
similar to a jack-in-a-<lb/>
box or a genie from a<lb/>
bottle. Peppermint<lb/>
contains no pepper.<lb/>
Buildings should be<lb/>
called "builts" because<lb/>
the structure has<lb/>
already been com-<lb/>
pleted. Hot water<lb/>
heaters are actually<lb/>
cold water heaters; hot<lb/>
water is not heated in<lb/>
the machine. The coat<lb/>
of arms is certainly not<lb/>
to be taken literally.<lb/>
Snow shoes are not<lb/>
made of snow as the<lb/>
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61 VtNW AJokkis<lb/>
?-?<lb/>
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YOURSEIKOAND<lb/>
PULSAR WATCH<lb/>
HEADQUARTERS<lb/>
WE BUY GOLD<lb/>
AND DIAMONDS.<lb/>
YOUR INDEPENDENT<lb/>
JEWELERS<lb/>
407 EVANS MALL<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
ACROSS<lb/>
1 Quart pan<lb/>
5 Fermented<lb/>
drink<lb/>
9 Imitate<lb/>
12 Maple genus<lb/>
13 Unemployed<lb/>
14 Born<lb/>
15 Goddess of<lb/>
grain<lb/>
17 Unlawful<lb/>
19 Conceit<lb/>
21 Irritates<lb/>
22 Jog<lb/>
24 Suffice<lb/>
25 Sob<lb/>
26 Pronoun<lb/>
27 Ring<lb/>
29 Scale note<lb/>
31 Ethiopian<lb/>
title<lb/>
32 Zeus s<lb/>
beloved<lb/>
33 Cooled lava<lb/>
34 Ron<lb/>
35 Hypothetical<lb/>
force<lb/>
36 Be present<lb/>
38 Illuminated<lb/>
39 Some<lb/>
40 Negative<lb/>
41 Rational<lb/>
42 Datum<lb/>
44 Robs<lb/>
46 Understand-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
48 Dull finish<lb/>
51 Card game<lb/>
52 Adriatic wind<lb/>
54 Rip<lb/>
55 Sailor<lb/>
56 Church part<lb/>
57 Icelandic<lb/>
writing<lb/>
DOWN<lb/>
1 Moccasin<lb/>
2 Bar need<lb/>
3 Edgy<lb/>
4 Handle<lb/>
5 Scale note<lb/>
6 Redactor<lb/>
7 Partner<lb/>
8 State Abbr<lb/>
9 Irate<lb/>
10 Mountaintop<lb/>
11 Lampreys<lb/>
16 Tin symbol<lb/>
18 European<lb/>
land<lb/>
20 Simpleton<lb/>
22 Beginner<lb/>
23 Highway<lb/>
25 Clothed<lb/>
27 Municipality<lb/>
28 Dugout<lb/>
29 Devastation<lb/>
30 Grafted Her<lb/>
34 Exploded<lb/>
36 Poker stake<lb/>
37 Goes in<lb/>
39 Performer<lb/>
CROSS<lb/>
WORD<lb/>
PUZZLE<lb/>
See Answer<lb/>
Page 9<lb/>
41 Schedule<lb/>
42 Sensed<lb/>
43 Ox of<lb/>
Celebes<lb/>
44 Halt<lb/>
45 Part of to<lb/>
be<lb/>
47 Basketball<lb/>
org<lb/>
49 Youngster<lb/>
50 Time period<lb/>
53 Diphthong<lb/>
1i141?7?1011<lb/>
iiit14<lb/>
ut?<lb/>
?ff?Uii<lb/>
?<lb/>
ji au??<lb/>
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15 Discounts on reaervationa made by January 15, 1982<lb/>
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Shouk<lb/>
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THE CHOICE OF CHAMPIONS<lb/>
iacoStCP<lb/>
The tradition of a Lacosta . There's more to it<lb/>
than just the alligator emblem trademark. This<lb/>
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?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057445_0009"/><lb/>
IS<lb/>
s<lb/>
not<lb/>
a s m<lb/>
(it<lb/>
ptd<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DEC EMBER 3, 1981<lb/>
Tricks To Cutting Costs<lb/>
Calls Home Cheerful<lb/>
By JULIE MORGAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
I think most college kids, especially freshmen,<lb/>
enjoy a phone call from home. Most kids will not<lb/>
admit this weakness though. After living away for<lb/>
couple of months, I have begun to learn the ins<lb/>
and outs of the high cost phone bills.<lb/>
The best solution that 1 have come up with is:<lb/>
"call collect or bust Do you think your mother<lb/>
is going to hang up on a pitiful voice from her<lb/>
own flesh and blood? Now if your father<lb/>
answers, hang up as soon as the operator iden-<lb/>
tifies your name. This way he'll think there's an<lb/>
emergency or something and call you right back.<lb/>
My Dad is quite a worry-wart. It's usually within<lb/>
ten seconds that I receive my return call from<lb/>
home.<lb/>
Because I am the eldest of six children in my<lb/>
family, and the first to leave home, I have an ad-<lb/>
vantage over most college kids to receive a larger<lb/>
amount of long distance calls. However, in my<lb/>
case, 1 believe the disadvantages outweigh the ad-<lb/>
vantages. The conversations I have with my fami-<lb/>
ly over the phone are the most unique exchange of<lb/>
verbal communication ever heard in my ex-<lb/>
perience.<lb/>
1 usually talk to my father everyday. He calls<lb/>
from his office. Usually he has little to no news<lb/>
for me. Our call is interupted almost everytime<lb/>
with people running in and out of his office. I<lb/>
guess he calls to make sure I'm still down here, or<lb/>
haven't done anything rash. At the same time, if 1<lb/>
have any news for him, he usually forgets to tell<lb/>
my mother altogether, or worse yet, if (by some<lb/>
miracle from God) he does remember to tell my<lb/>
mother something I've told him, he twists or even<lb/>
leaves out half of what I've said. Instead of an 83<lb/>
on my history test, I got a 93. Sometimes I<lb/>
wonder if he does this because he really doesn't<lb/>
remember, or he's subconsciously wishing that<lb/>
Yale would start offering me free-tuition or<lb/>
something.<lb/>
Ordinarily, I receive a call from the rest of my<lb/>
family once a week. This call always leaves me<lb/>
laughing hysterically for the rest of the week.<lb/>
First, I catch up on the latest news or gossip from<lb/>
Rock' And 'Elephant Man<lb/>
Appear As Weekend Flicks<lb/>
my mother. Then my little sisters get chance to<lb/>
talk. Cindy, a six-year old Brownie, gymnist and<lb/>
Barbie expert tells me about when she fell down<lb/>
on the playground at school, scraped both of her<lb/>
knees and cried real hard. She says good-bye, and<lb/>
hands the phone to my two-year old sister. Sally,<lb/>
sometimes as confused as one of the devil's<lb/>
children, begins her conversation with such<lb/>
creativity as: "Julie she begins excitely, "Cindy<lb/>
fell down on the playground at school Before<lb/>
she hangs up she manages to count to thirteen for<lb/>
me. This phone call lasts for at least hour with lit-<lb/>
tle said of any importance, however it does get me<lb/>
through the next week.<lb/>
When I'm sick it's good to know I can call<lb/>
home for comfort. Maybe this sounds foolish to<lb/>
most people. Sure, I'll admit I miss my home, but<lb/>
I like to think of my dorm room as home too;<lb/>
even though my father would quickly remind me<lb/>
that my room here is only somewhere I hang my<lb/>
hat. In turn, I remind my father that in my room<lb/>
also hangs my phone, and if he would only admit<lb/>
that he missed me too, he wouldn't mind the<lb/>
I phone bill expense so much.<lb/>
REE<lb/>
120<lb/>
ION<lb/>
The F.lephant Man<lb/>
will he shown tonight at 7. It will also he shown Friday<lb/>
and Saturday nights at 5, 7:15 and 9:30. The film is<lb/>
sponsored hy the Student Union Films Committee.<lb/>
Words Intriguing<lb/>
continued From Page 5<lb/>
"The best non-documentary rock film in years,<lb/>
High School which features the Ramones, ex-<lb/>
ploding mice, and white kids on punk who joyful-<lb/>
ly blow up their school, is indeed the real thing.<lb/>
It's a rowdy, exuberant, wonderfully sophomonc<lb/>
movie that puts its more expensive competition to<lb/>
shame. In capturing the rebelious adolescent<lb/>
spirit of rock and roll. High School is downright<lb/>
masterful. It's an accomplishment that a director<lb/>
who is less passionate about rock and roll could<lb/>
not have pulled off. The film is about high school<lb/>
kids and how music lets them live out their fan-<lb/>
tasies.<lb/>
-l.lovd Sachs. Rolling Stone<lb/>
Continued From Page 8<lb/>
are included in the<lb/>
misnamed category.<lb/>
Sneaker, a common<lb/>
term among Nor-<lb/>
therner, for tennis<lb/>
shoes, do not creep up<lb/>
behind people but are<lb/>
worn on the feet. Pants<lb/>
uorn above the knee<lb/>
are called shorts.<lb/>
Should not pants cover-<lb/>
ing the entire leg be<lb/>
called "longs"? Are<lb/>
Ci rtinouiuqrd Fatiquev And<lb/>
Shirt Sifi'pntq Baqi<lb/>
b.?ckpHi?.jmp.nq Equip<lb/>
mni Stvel Iod Shoe 0?srH-s<lb/>
And O.i-i '00 Different Near And<lb/>
Ui items Cowboy Boots<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY<lb/>
t SO I S Evans<lb/>
Street<lb/>
jocke) shorts worn on-<lb/>
K by, jockeys, boxer<lb/>
shorts only b boxers1<lb/>
Why are swim suits<lb/>
often called bathing<lb/>
suits? You swim in<lb/>
them, not bathe. One<lb/>
the other hand, why are<lb/>
thev called "suits"?<lb/>
i <lb/>
This list of<lb/>
linguistical oddities<lb/>
could go on indefinite-<lb/>
k. Eiwy langaage-hms<lb/>
them, and they are<lb/>
written and spoken<lb/>
without a great deal of<lb/>
thought.<lb/>
'The Ramones in V Roll H.gh School! What<lb/>
a great idea! More than two decades ot<lb/>
amateur criticism have been shown us that,<lb/>
especially in a B-movie. it's not the surface drama<lb/>
that counts, but the 'mise en scene The<lb/>
Ramones are heroes of New York punktheir<lb/>
music sounds good on the sound track, and you<lb/>
believe it when the kids go wild for them. The real<lb/>
glee in the movie comes from P.J. Soles - her eyes<lb/>
shin with it. WAmping in her baseball cap, she<lb/>
was the sexiest thing in Came. She tries to carry<lb/>
the film with pure energy - running, jumping,<lb/>
talking nonstop. The Ramones rock out in<lb/>
celebration<lb/>
-Greil Marcus, New West<lb/>
10<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Student<lb/>
Discount<lb/>
on<lb/>
glasses<lb/>
?1M??!A&amp;??1<lb/>
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RALEIGH WOMEN'S<lb/>
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PUBLISHER NEEDS<lb/>
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We are looking for a faculty member or spouse,<lb/>
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The role is one of public relations. The prere<lb/>
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with the skills and knowledge about textbook<lb/>
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We are a 63-year old publishing house with many<lb/>
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Your inquiry is completely confidential so send a<lb/>
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People take to o Pi lot like ifs the own<lb/>
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Special gifts<lb/>
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Special People.<lb/>
Including<lb/>
Fresh nut mixes<lb/>
Herb teas<lb/>
Ginseng products<lb/>
Ananda scented body oils<lb/>
Handmade silk boxes<lb/>
Cookbooks<lb/>
Teapots<lb/>
 Potpourri<lb/>
Carafection candy<lb/>
Rainbows<lb/>
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Greenville Location<lb/>
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Greenville, H. C.<lb/>
Monday-Friday 10 a.m. 'til 8 p.m<lb/>
Saturday 10 a.m. 'til 5 p.m.<lb/>
758-6264<lb/>
Sale Ends<lb/>
Dec. 12th<lb/>
f?w<lb/>
BASF Chrome.<lb/>
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.SEASON OF MAGIC<lb/>
ail oi me musn;<lb/>
BASF<lb/>
Carolina East MallPitt Plaza<lb/>
I <lb/>
<pb facs="00057445_0010"/><lb/>
1 HI t-ASI lAROl INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Anxious Emory Admits Next Year Is Critical<lb/>
Kmon Hopes lo lead Pirates For Main N ears<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sport tdllitr<lb/>
"1 would belying if I didn't admit<lb/>
that 1 realize I've got to win next<lb/>
year to remain the head coach at<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Relaxed in a chair at his Cireen-<lb/>
ville home, Ed Emory made the<lb/>
statement Wednesday night alter he<lb/>
had reviewed the 1981 season that is<lb/>
now past and looked ahead to the<lb/>
19S2 campaign that lies on the dis-<lb/>
tant horizon.<lb/>
The ECU head coach discussed<lb/>
what he fell were past mistakes and<lb/>
delved into changes that will most<lb/>
likely come about in the near future.<lb/>
Emory's record is 9-13 after tak-<lb/>
ing ovei the reigns o the ECU pro-<lb/>
gram from Pat Dye almost exactly<lb/>
two years ago At that time he sign<lb/>
ed a three yeai contract.<lb/>
W ith but (me year left on the con-<lb/>
tract and after two disappointing<lb/>
seasons, which were the first two<lb/>
losmt! years at ECU since 1971, the<lb/>
pressure is on for 1982. Emory savs<lb/>
next yeai is definitely a critical one.<lb/>
a yeai thai will sureiv hold for him<lb/>
main a km less night.<lb/>
"1 must be honest he said,<lb/>
'i rom a purely selfish standpoint I<lb/>
know I'll feel some pressure once<lb/>
next season starts ? 1 teel it to a<lb/>
degree now<lb/>
? knew when I took this job that<lb/>
football is not the kindest thing in<lb/>
the world. Bui I've never been a<lb/>
losei and 1 believe with all mv heart<lb/>
that we will get the job done here at<lb/>
 asl Carolina. If we do not succeed<lb/>
next year and arc asked to leave 1<lb/>
know it'll be the toughest thing in<lb/>
the world tor me to accept<lb/>
Emory, an ECU graduate and a<lb/>
Pirate Ml -America in the late<lb/>
I950's, sas he feels all the ingre-<lb/>
dients are available for a big-time<lb/>
program at ECU.<lb/>
"We've got the greatest product<lb/>
in the world to sell (to recruits) he<lb/>
said. "We've got the school, the<lb/>
facilites, the town and the<lb/>
schedule<lb/>
Winning, though, has not come<lb/>
easy for Emory since he came on the<lb/>
Pirate scene. Building a talented<lb/>
foundation, he said, has taken tune.<lb/>
Now that he has had two sears to<lb/>
recruit his own players into the pi"<lb/>
gram, Emory said the time has come<lb/>
for changes. One ot the hist areas<lb/>
that figure to change next season is<lb/>
the Pirate offensive scheme. Emory<lb/>
hinting that the wishbone attack is<lb/>
on the outs<lb/>
" I he first yeai 1 was here I did<lb/>
not feel we were good enough on<lb/>
defense to win he said. "1 did not<lb/>
feel the defense could hold the othei<lb/>
teams and get the turnovers thai you<lb/>
would need to win defensively<lb/>
I herefore, we went w ith the<lb/>
wishbone on o! tense We wanted to<lb/>
use up time offensively, control the<lb/>
football and keep the defense ofl<lb/>
the field.<lb/>
"Now we teel more confident<lb/>
about the defense, thai we've im-<lb/>
proved a great deal. We will make<lb/>
some changes in the structure ot oui<lb/>
offense because ot that<lb/>
I he new ot tensive sti uctui e<lb/>
would include throwing the ball a<lb/>
greai deal more than in the past.<lb/>
Emory said.<lb/>
"Oui theory will be thai we'll<lb/>
thiow the tootbatl any place on the<lb/>
field next year, WeTJ work out ot<lb/>
multiple sets. We will make the<lb/>
commitment to throw the ball at<lb/>
least 4() percent ol time, at any<lb/>
lime and on any down<lb/>
I he Pirate coach said the offen-<lb/>
sive switch is not something he jusl<lb/>
recently decided upon.<lb/>
"We knew the first year that this<lb/>
was coming he said. "Bui we<lb/>
wanted to wait until we had the right<lb/>
people here We thought bv staving<lb/>
with the wishbone we might have a<lb/>
chance to go 7-4 or 6-5<lb/>
I he reverse occurred, though, the<lb/>
Pirates finishing 4-7 and 5 6. "It we<lb/>
could have known that ahead ot<lb/>
time Emory said, "we might not<lb/>
have waned. Maybe we would have<lb/>
gone ahead and made the switch<lb/>
Othei changes' I he E I mentoi<lb/>
says the entire program is being<lb/>
evaluated, hinting that chat<lb/>
might even take place within the<lb/>
coaching stal<lb/>
" 1 hat's always the first thing you<lb/>
look at he said. "I beleive our<lb/>
stall is outstanding, but it 1 discover<lb/>
thai changes are necessary, thev will<lb/>
be made<lb/>
Negative. Emory hates the word,<lb/>
vet has been taced with it time and<lb/>
again this year. The 19H1 season<lb/>
not exactly kind to the program that<lb/>
he ha been called to lead Incident<lb/>
after incident in 1981 occurred '<lb/>
the coach now admits tried his pa-<lb/>
tience. 1 he press made cacti case<lb/>
verv clear to the public<lb/>
I irsl there was the resignation ot<lb/>
Chancellor rhomas B Brewei Next<lb/>
came the accusation bv North<lb/>
c arolina coaches that two 1(1<lb/>
.idles had spied on the la- Heel-<lb/>
m the I N( law school library<lb/>
One week later the Pirates were feel-<lb/>
ing the wounds ot a 56-0 loss to the<lb/>
Heels<lb/>
 it all that was no!<lb/>
irting spin end 1 arry 'K<lb/>
quit the team and biased Emo<lb/>
the newspapers, saying he had "losi<lb/>
respect" tor his coach.<lb/>
1 hen came pei hap- ors<lb/>
wound ot ail, the Pirate<lb/>
final game ol th n 31-21<lb/>
William and Mar. H<lb/>
lett I! c 6 oi, tl<lb/>
wm would have imam a<lb/>
positive 6-5.<lb/>
just two weel<lb/>
daggers struci the ECU pi <lb/>
sta'e audit was released<lb/>
revelaed thai the EC!<lb/>
department was in d I<lb/>
than $400,000,<lb/>
"It's been pretty ini redibli<lb/>
Emory admitted w<lb/>
head. "People have a tende<lb/>
eve the printed word a<lb/>
re read a ? st abo i<lb/>
was negative.<lb/>
"It certainly won<lb/>
recruiting. I hose sort oi<lb/>
what other coaches will lov?<lb/>
to recruits about. I jusl h<lb/>
make the kids realizi<lb/>
great place<lb/>
football<lb/>
Emory discussed .<lb/>
aforementioned "negative'<lb/>
but felt that the tw<lb/>
hardest felt.<lb/>
?? 1 hey're the<lb/>
ild really do anyth<lb/>
tid. "I think b<lb/>
case ol extreme- W<lb/>
for thearolina .<lb/>
fidem tor illiai<lb/>
1 I lov 12-<lb/>
win ovei W ?? tei i <lb/>
team and<lb/>
? i ed up '<lb/>
( arolina<lb/>
IU-UN<lb/>
the game and I ai H<lb/>
it would :<lb/>
"W e d<lb/>
.v. ? ?<lb/>
see EMOK . Page 12<lb/>
Ninth-Ranked State<lb/>
Holds Off Lady Pirates<lb/>
Bv M1 I.IAM EI.ER10N<lb/>
mil sp.trl. I dllm<lb/>
and EC 1 i et<lb/>
e 1 adv Wolfpack<lb/>
. 1 a ice in i<lb/>
da was different.<lb/>
ranked N.C. State held ofl<lb/>
? second-half rally bv the<lb/>
. Pirates ol I ast Carolina for a<lb/>
b2 56 win in Raleigh before 14(H).<lb/>
state jumped out to a 20-5 lead<lb/>
nd the play ol Louisburg Junior<lb/>
C ollege transfer Paula Nicholson ?<lb/>
tot met teammate ol ECl 's<lb/>
etha Harrison ? who poured in<lb/>
rter 21 'points in the first halt.<lb/>
? mission the Wolfpack held a<lb/>
I Ad Pirates fought back in<lb/>
iecond half, cutting the lead to<lb/>
little as three, but clutch shots bv<lb/>
Ginger Rouse lifted State to the win.<lb/>
We played very well defensively,<lb/>
we did not do what we wanted<lb/>
jo in the first half offensively<lb/>
remarked Easl arolina coach<lb/>
( athy ndruzzi. "In the second<lb/>
??.c flattened oui their one and<lb/>
the ball down low to Marv<lb/>
(Denkler) and I oraine (Foster),<lb/>
"I ?a especially pleased with the<lb/>
defensive play ol 1 oletha Harrison,<lb/>
who shut ofl Nicholson in the se-<lb/>
cond half she added. "Harrison<lb/>
guarded hei man to-man in the se<lb/>
cond half, limiting her to one field<lb/>
and one tree throw  Harrison<lb/>
and Nicholson were on I ouisburg's<lb/>
national junior college champion-<lb/>
ship team last yeai<lb/>
1 he 1 adv WOlfpack found a<lb/>
"different" East Carolina squad in<lb/>
the second period. Denklei goi hot,<lb/>
scoring 12 of her team's 16 points in<lb/>
that halt and IV overall.<lb/>
Freshman rocket Loraine 1 oster<lb/>
also keyed the second half com-<lb/>
eback, pumping in 17 points and<lb/>
dishing o six assists while limiting<lb/>
star State guard Angie Armstrong<lb/>
only two points and two assists<lb/>
overall.<lb/>
State jumped out to an early lead<lb/>
a- Nicholson scored the first then<lb/>
first 10 point- as the lady Pirates<lb/>
were bothered bv cold shooting<lb/>
31.3 percent in the first halt. 1 ast<lb/>
Carolina missed their first seven<lb/>
shots.<lb/>
1 he 1 adv Pirates gradually cut<lb/>
the State lead in the second half,<lb/>
though, to as little as three al 53-50<lb/>
on a free throw bv Denkler with live<lb/>
and a half minutes to play.<lb/>
Both teams traded baskets, and<lb/>
with a little more than four minutes<lb/>
to go, Foster hit a jump shot from<lb/>
the side, cutting the lead to 55-52.<lb/>
State's Rouse shot the Lady<lb/>
Wolfpack to a nine-point lead at<lb/>
bl-52 with a little more than two<lb/>
minutes lett in the game. After<lb/>
Foster's shot with 4:11 left, the<lb/>
I adv Pirates didn't score again until<lb/>
there was less than a minute left.<lb/>
An important factor in the second<lb/>
half was an aggressive man-to-man<lb/>
defense applied bv State. But the<lb/>
1 adv Pirates did outrebound their<lb/>
rivals, 36- 34, even t ho u g h<lb/>
Nicholson corralled 14.<lb/>
The lady Pirates, despite their<lb/>
poor shooting in the first half, out-<lb/>
shot State for the game but turned<lb/>
the ball over 20 times. However,<lb/>
State hit 14 of 17 free throws while<lb/>
the Pirates connected on only 4 of<lb/>
10.<lb/>
Prominent individual perfor-<lb/>
mances included Jones' 11 points<lb/>
and five assists and Rouse's 10<lb/>
points and five assists. She was<lb/>
bothered bv a back injury last year.<lb/>
Denkler scored 15 of her 19 points<lb/>
in the second halt.<lb/>
Next action for the 1 adv Pirates<lb/>
is at the Dial Classic in New Jersey<lb/>
Dec. 5-6. Then the team returns to<lb/>
Greenville to face the 1 adv<lb/>
SeaHawks of UNC-Wilmington<lb/>
Dec. 12.<lb/>
ECU's Sam Jones (Rijjhn Sets To Pass<lb/>
Robbins Is<lb/>
Named A-A<lb/>
A pait<lb/>
wen. named to a pan<lb/>
all star<lb/>
East Carolii<lb/>
I f bins wa<lb/>
nd-team Ml<lb/>
America,<lb/>
dav. Robbins ?<lb/>
first-teame-<lb/>
dependent<lb/>
today.<lb/>
Defensive end lody S<lb/>
named to tru S<lb/>
was  h<lb/>
America on. 1<lb/>
230-pound c hester, M<lb/>
transfered to E( I last<lb/>
C how an Junior C olid<lb/>
Robbins, a 6 c. 275 ; n de I<lb/>
Merry Hill, is the only the<lb/>
Fc l playei to be named an P <lb/>
America. He<lb/>
mer defensive sate a<lb/>
P i ates to evei be nam<lb/>
team A <lb/>
Guard Wayne Inman, deft<lb/>
end v arv i iodette and<lb/>
Damn Kepley all were thi<lb/>
are the only othei playe<lb/>
been named to one ol P's<lb/>
three A- squads since the<lb/>
began playing on the Di<lb/>
level.<lb/>
Robbins had earliei beet<lb/>
to play in the :<lb/>
all-star game in Mob <lb/>
c hristmas Dav I<lb/>
nually features some ol the<lb/>
senioi - in the i<lb/>
'We've Got To Get On The Boards'<lb/>
Odom Outlines Gameplan For Missouri<lb/>
Odom Shouts Instructions To The Pirates<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
spurts r dilnr<lb/>
rating on I6th-ranked Missouri<lb/>
in the first round of the Show-Me<lb/>
Classic this Friday presents East<lb/>
Carolina with a "can't lose" situa-<lb/>
tion, says Pirate coach Dave Odom.<lb/>
The only way the Pirates could<lb/>
really lose out, Odom says, is if they<lb/>
fall flat on their faces against the<lb/>
powerful Tigers, a team the ECU<lb/>
coach rates as the best his club has<lb/>
faced since then-number one<lb/>
ranked Duke two years ago.<lb/>
"Our team is very well-rounded<lb/>
he said. "We're confident going out<lb/>
there. If we really got beat bad I do<lb/>
think we'd feel some ill affects.<lb/>
Otherwise, though, we have nothing<lb/>
to lose. Nobody expects us to beat<lb/>
Missouri<lb/>
That doesn't mean Odom doesn't<lb/>
have a few tricks up his sleeve,<lb/>
though.<lb/>
"Oh, I think we've got a chance.<lb/>
The players do too. But there are<lb/>
some things that we have to do in<lb/>
order to upset them<lb/>
The first ten minutes. Odom savs.<lb/>
are most important.<lb/>
" I hat's when we can give<lb/>
ourselves a chance to win. During<lb/>
the first ten minutes there are some<lb/>
things we must establish, lust,<lb/>
we've got to get on the boards.<lb/>
Secondly, we can't let them come<lb/>
out running like Secretariat.<lb/>
"How do you do this? One, you<lb/>
play every shot as a missed shot. Go<lb/>
for the boards haul. 1 wo, you con-<lb/>
trol them on offense bv not allowing<lb/>
them to have the ball as much as<lb/>
they would like. We'll be verv selec<lb/>
tive in our shots<lb/>
Odom added that it is important<lb/>
for the Pirates, 1-0 after a 72-54 win<lb/>
over Ohio University last Saturday,<lb/>
to challenge the tall I igers inside.<lb/>
Doing so won't be easy, especially<lb/>
with the likes o 6-11 All America<lb/>
candidate Sieve Stipanovich in the<lb/>
center spot. Forward Mark<lb/>
Dressier. All-Big Fight last year,<lb/>
also is an all-star candidate.<lb/>
Three years ago Stipanovich was<lb/>
named one of the three best high<lb/>
school centers in the nation along<lb/>
with an rent Ail-Americans Ralph<lb/>
Sampson (Virginia) and Sam Bowie<lb/>
(Kentucky). He had perhaps his besi<lb/>
game last veai in the title game ol<lb/>
the Show-Me c lassie, scoring 25<lb/>
points and pulling down 10 re<lb/>
bounds in a wm ovei 1 amai<lb/>
Missouri opened its season lues<lb/>
dav night with an impressive 82-51<lb/>
wm over Alcorn State Stipanovich<lb/>
had 16 points and 11 boards in the<lb/>
win.<lb/>
I he victory was the team's 20th in<lb/>
a row at home. Missouri also has<lb/>
never lost in the eight-yeai history<lb/>
of the Show Ale Classic.<lb/>
"That doesn't bother us Odom<lb/>
said. "Sure, it's impressive, but we<lb/>
didn't lose anv o those 20 games or<lb/>
any games in the tournament<lb/>
before<lb/>
1 he rest oi the tourney field is im-<lb/>
pressive as well Wyoming, J-0 and<lb/>
the pre-season favorite over<lb/>
Bngham Young in the Western<lb/>
Athletic Conference, and Canisius<lb/>
are the other two entires that will<lb/>
battle it out in the otht I<lb/>
game<lb/>
Missouri and W yom<lb/>
partk ipants in the NCAA I<lb/>
merit last year, are<lb/>
favorites to meet in the champ<lb/>
ship game. The Pirates a<lb/>
parently the last seed in the t<lb/>
as thev are lined up aj<lb/>
I igers.<lb/>
" 1 hey 're certainly very<lb/>
or thev wouldn't have picked u<lb/>
play in the opening round Od<lb/>
commented. "They obviously Hunk<lb/>
we're the easiest to bea thai<lb/>
shows very little respect tor oui pro<lb/>
gram<lb/>
Preturbed? Odom says noi Bui<lb/>
he would like to break a string<lb/>
begun last yeai ol foui consecutive<lb/>
tournament losses I he Pirates<lb/>
played in two foui team tourneys<lb/>
last year and failed to win a contest<lb/>
"That reallv bothered me<lb/>
Odom admitted "What bothered<lb/>
me was the way we lost those games<lb/>
I'd certainly like to break that streak<lb/>
this weekend<lb/>
Sw<lb/>
Bv I MUM v<lb/>
FOR 5<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
Wi<lb/>
Jan<lb/>
"Moti<lb/>
4 p<lb/>
3 dc<lb/>
?Full<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057445_0011"/><lb/>
<lb/>
! tO<lb/>
pCt loss<lb/>
kt- 12<lb/>
Is<lb/>
-A<lb/>
-i I ULlOlia<lb/>
A,l-<lb/>
'om<lb/>
77<lb/>
us! think<lb/>
? thai<lb/>
pro-<lb/>
Bul<lb/>
siring<lb/>
onsecutive<lb/>
Pit ates<lb/>
?urneys<lb/>
ed me<lb/>
i' bothered<lb/>
ose games<lb/>
'hat streak<lb/>
Swimmers Head For Tough Penn State Relays<lb/>
B THOMAS BRAMK<lb/>
This weekend's Penn<lb/>
State Relays is the last<lb/>
meet before the<lb/>
holidays for the ECU<lb/>
swim team. A strong<lb/>
field of 14 teams sur-<lb/>
rounds the Pines in this<lb/>
event. The field in-<lb/>
cludes last year'smeet<lb/>
champ for the women,<lb/>
NCSU, the men's<lb/>
champ of a year ago,<lb/>
UNC, and Eastern<lb/>
Champ (ECU swimm-<lb/>
ing conference) Pitt-<lb/>
sburgh.<lb/>
After last week's<lb/>
sweep of UNC-W, op-<lb/>
timism surrounds the<lb/>
Pirates. "Our kids are<lb/>
progressing well ex-<lb/>
pressed ECU coach<lb/>
Ray Scharf. "They are<lb/>
tough kids and hard<lb/>
workers, and that<lb/>
makes a difference in<lb/>
the success<lb/>
"Some of our times<lb/>
are among the best in<lb/>
the country believed<lb/>
Scharf. "On a given<lb/>
day we can swim with<lb/>
anyone<lb/>
The women continue<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
to improve as they gain<lb/>
experience. The ECU<lb/>
women's team consists<lb/>
of all underclassmen.<lb/>
This youth is no han-<lb/>
dicap, Scharf declares.<lb/>
"This is the best<lb/>
women's team we have<lb/>
had in five years<lb/>
Their record is 1-1.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates<lb/>
hope to improve on<lb/>
their sixth-place finish<lb/>
of last year. This will be<lb/>
tough because there are<lb/>
four teams competing<lb/>
which finished in the<lb/>
top 10 in the nation last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The ECU men hope<lb/>
to keep improving,<lb/>
their record standing at<lb/>
3-1. With the loss of<lb/>
Doue MacMillian due<lb/>
10 sickness, the Pirates<lb/>
still hope to improve on<lb/>
their seventh-place<lb/>
finish. "The best relay<lb/>
for us is the butterfly,<lb/>
which MacMillian will<lb/>
be missing from<lb/>
Scharf says.<lb/>
"This is a very ex-<lb/>
citing meet, and our<lb/>
main objective is to bet-<lb/>
ter our times he pro-<lb/>
claims. "I still hope we<lb/>
impove on our posi-<lb/>
tions, but time is most<lb/>
important T h e<lb/>
highest the Pirates have<lb/>
ever finished in the<lb/>
Penn Relavs is second,<lb/>
back in 1970. This meet<lb/>
will be the last for ilk<lb/>
Pirates until Jan. II<lb/>
when the men swim<lb/>
aeainst Maine and the<lb/>
women take on James<lb/>
Madison.<lb/>
SUPPORT<lb/>
THE ECU<lb/>
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FOR SALE<lb/>
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ill NC and SC on line wood<lb/>
waterbedi and accessories Com<lb/>
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in great shape Must sell Call<lb/>
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plates lor sale York and Weider<lb/>
Irom I' to 100 lbs 70 cents per<lb/>
oound no ta? no freight Contact<lb/>
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OATSUN 2402 silver air dam.<lb/>
jerlect interior no rust must sell<lb/>
S2SO0 752 U52<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
ROOM FOR rent, close lo campus.<lb/>
HO month plus one sixth utilities<lb/>
call 7S2-0748 or '58 3545<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed.<lb/>
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utilities, lust need your bedroom<lb/>
lurmture available Jan 1, phore<lb/>
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Keep trying<lb/>
WANTED FEMALE roommate<lb/>
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pus 5100 rent plus one third<lb/>
utilities Cheryl 752 1?5?<lb/>
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utilities Beginning Jan I, cail<lb/>
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MALE ROOMMATE needed to<lb/>
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utilities Call 752 6901<lb/>
ROOMS AVAILABLE FOR<lb/>
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ASK FOR MARTHA 75 6336<lb/>
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ROOMMATE WANTED to share<lb/>
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POINT O PINES Camp for Girls is<lb/>
looking for female counselors<lb/>
Check placement office of write:<lb/>
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EXTRA MONEY up to 5100,000<lb/>
or more a year paid daily! Intar<lb/>
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PERSONAL<lb/>
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typing to do at home Reasonable<lb/>
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anytime weekends<lb/>
LOST SILVER<lb/>
Square Frame.<lb/>
but it won't be no fun when her<lb/>
husband shows up with a gun<lb/>
Hose and Noe.<lb/>
CIRCLE K is n organuation<lb/>
which does protects like baag no<lb/>
tnti selling peanut and<lb/>
DO YOU need a ride to Charleston<lb/>
WVa or Columbus. Ohio or Fort<lb/>
Wayne. IN. ?r?a tar Christmas? If<lb/>
so, I can take I riders willing ??<lb/>
split gas. Leaving Friday 12 18 8<lb/>
at ?.m. Contact Dr. Chenowefh<lb/>
at 751427 alter 5 3 p m before<lb/>
Dec. 11.<lb/>
FOUNO: LADIES watch on In<lb/>
tramural soccer field. Call<lb/>
7J2-MS7 to claim it.<lb/>
TERRI. JAMIE AND HELEN: It<lb/>
was a long wait, but you finally got<lb/>
what you deserve! We love you!<lb/>
Congratulations!<lb/>
CANDY: EXPLAIN it to me on<lb/>
more time, I'm confused! Love.<lb/>
Skippy<lb/>
Even though I had to pick you up<lb/>
first downtown, you know how<lb/>
much I love you Happy Anniver-<lb/>
sary Snowman!<lb/>
I would like to meet the girl who<lb/>
has been putting the notes under<lb/>
my windshield wiper Mike.<lb/>
AUSTRALIAN RULES FOOT<lb/>
BALL: A crowd of 1M braved the<lb/>
elements and watched ECU'S<lb/>
Australian LRLules Football Club<lb/>
trounce 10th ranked Kentucky,<lb/>
19 47. as Cornell transfer and ltfM<lb/>
U.S.A.R.F. Associaton Pleyer-ol<lb/>
the Year Rick Turner scored an<lb/>
American record 4 points. All<lb/>
American Spain Barwick chipped<lb/>
in with 2 Unfortunately<lb/>
freshman sensaton Bu Bel was lost<lb/>
tar the season with a broken<lb/>
femur. ECU. now ranked number<lb/>
? in the nation, plays host to<lb/>
number S UNC CH at 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
Thursday at Greene Field. This<lb/>
will be the team's final tune-up<lb/>
before it participates over the<lb/>
weekend in the prestigious Norfolk<lb/>
Invitational. The 4 team tourna<lb/>
ment pits ECU vs. number 14 Old<lb/>
Dominion, number 4 Cornell and<lb/>
number 1 Notre Dame in round<lb/>
robin competition. The winner of<lb/>
th tourney advances into the East<lb/>
Regiona's with a possibility of<lb/>
playing tar the National Cham-<lb/>
pionship. Come support<lb/>
Swashbucklers Thursday as they<lb/>
continue their quest for the<lb/>
U.S.A.R.F Association National<lb/>
Championship.<lb/>
JILL. LON. AND ZOOIE? don t<lb/>
you ever die you beautiful young<lb/>
things you. Lovage?Flashcubes.<lb/>
THE BROTHERS and the plagues<lb/>
of Phi Kappa Tau would like to<lb/>
thank the Tri Sigmas for a<lb/>
wammer jammer Mai-Tai party<lb/>
that left us with mai-heedaches<lb/>
The drinks were cold and the fever<lb/>
was hot, hold on tight and shoot<lb/>
your best shot! Oh Hell Yes! CDL<lb/>
Ladies Watch<lb/>
LaMarque If<lb/>
found please call Carol 7SI-MI0 or<lb/>
drop it off at White Dorm office.<lb/>
Thank you. <lb/>
CLARENCE? YOU'RE flirting<lb/>
with disaster Your married gal<lb/>
turned out to be more than a pal.<lb/>
HXLP WHSH YOU NMD IT MOST.<lb/>
The Fleming Center has been here for women<lb/>
of all ages since 1974, otter4 understanding<lb/>
and help to anyone faced with an unplanned<lb/>
pregnancy  day or night. Services include:<lb/>
rrfM Pregnancy Testing<lb/>
Wcttkday ?V Saturday Abortion Appte.<lb/>
Broiling Birth. Control Hours<lb/>
GALL 781-5550 DAY OR NIGHT<lb/>
The naming Center<lb/>
We're here wheu you need us.<lb/>
6th Annual<lb/>
Kappa Sigma- ELBO<lb/>
Christmas Party!<lb/>
Tues Dec. 8th<lb/>
Lots of Prizes, Gifts &amp; Specials<lb/>
1st GRAND PRIZE<lb/>
Two Days all expense paid trip to Wintergreen.<lb/>
2nd GRAND PRIZE<lb/>
Your Very Own Pinball Machine<lb/>
ST. NICK WILL BE THERE AND WE'LL HA VE<lb/>
OUR END OF THE YEAR T-SHIRT SALE!<lb/>
START YOUR HOLIDAYS RIGHT TUESDAY<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
C<lb/>
HR1STMAS PARTY<lb/>
Currenturidergradua ???<lb/>
medical students may now<lb/>
compete for sever! htmdred<lb/>
Air Force ?c??M?rf?4t??. TfcMd<lb/>
scholar" ore H 1 ??"?'<lb/>
ed to tuJe?t? ???? wrlo<lb/>
medical school a freshen<lb/>
or at the beginning) of meir<lb/>
vophmore year The ?cho?er<lb/>
ship provide for tuition,<lb/>
books, lab free ??? owc<lb/>
ment, ptu a tSX moimiy<lb/>
allowance investigate thl<lb/>
financial alternative ?o tt?e<lb/>
h.gh cost of medical educ<lb/>
iio" Contact<lb/>
U S A f HEALTH<lb/>
PROFESSIONS<lb/>
RECRUIT! MS<lb/>
SUITE GL V ItM NAVAMO OR<lb/>
1RALEIOM, NX. I???<lb/>
PHCNE COLLECT HW1WWI34,<lb/>
AS<lb/>
SKI<lb/>
WINTERGREEN<lb/>
Jan. 4-715000 per person<lb/>
Motorcoach transportation from Greenville<lb/>
3 nights lodging in condominium ?<lb/>
4 persons per unit<lb/>
3 days lift tickets and 1 night ski ticket<lb/>
 Fully escorted<lb/>
Meet your friends on the slopes. Great way to<lb/>
spend your Christmas holiday<lb/>
TV' Booking and brochure available.<lb/>
QUIXOTE TRAVELS,<lb/>
INC.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
RECORD BAR<lb/>
APPLE RECORDS<lb/>
JJ'S<lb/>
SUBWAY<lb/>
HEART'S DELIGHT<lb/>
UI-jVCXQRY<lb/>
TREEHOUSE<lb/>
DOMINO'S<lb/>
MR. GATTI'S<lb/>
THORPE VENDING &amp;<lb/>
SPACE WORLD GAMES<lb/>
JEANS GLORY<lb/>
COX FLORAL<lb/>
CHEESEHOUSE<lb/>
BET4TNGFIELD<lb/>
PHARMACY<lb/>
S&amp;S&amp;iff&amp;&amp;<lb/>
PEPSI<lb/>
PIZZA HUT<lb/>
H.L. HODGES<lb/>
BOOK BARN<lb/>
GROG'S<lb/>
THE FAMILY FUN<lb/>
ARCADE<lb/>
TU-DA GIFT SHOP<lb/>
?2g4M???rc?K<lb/>
M&amp;&amp;S&amp;&amp;<lb/>
us every Sunday<lb/>
beginning August 30<lb/>
V<lb/>
119nianrnr si<lb/>
(.rrtrmllr. V <lb/>
P II B.i 45<lb/>
Phnnr 75ft-145<lb/>
SaRDKY BUFFET<lb/>
11:30-2:30<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
This weekend at the Coffeehouse:<lb/>
3s<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
PURCHASE<lb/>
OF<lb/>
HOODED<lb/>
JACKETS<lb/>
LIMITED QUANTITY<lb/>
OF SELECTION<lb/>
AND SIZES<lb/>
COLORS:<lb/>
NAVY, WHITE<lb/>
sale $695<lb/>
Chuck Ball<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Laurie Loftin<lb/>
Mark Rochelli,<lb/>
Chuck Ezzell &amp;<lb/>
Joe Pass<lb/>
9:00-1 1:00 p.m. Dec. 4 &amp; 5, 1981<lb/>
Room 1 5, fylendenhall<lb/>
Admission 50C<lb/>
HODGES<lb/>
210 E. FIFTH ST.<lb/>
752-4156<lb/>
BOND'S<lb/>
SPORTING<lb/>
GOODS<lb/>
218 ARLINGTON BLVD.<lb/>
756-6001<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057445_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
THE LAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DfcChMBfcR 5, 1981<lb/>
Football Team Holds<lb/>
Annual Awards Night<lb/>
Chowan Downs J Vs<lb/>
Despite McNair's 35<lb/>
Defensive end Jody Schulz,<lb/>
kicker Chuck Bushbeck and offen-<lb/>
sive tackle Tootie Robbins walked<lb/>
away with the majority of the<lb/>
honors Wednesday night when the<lb/>
ECU football team held its annual<lb/>
awards banuqet.<lb/>
Schulz received the E.E. Rawl<lb/>
Memorial Award, given for<lb/>
character scholarship and athletic<lb/>
ability. The Chowan College<lb/>
transfer was also named the team's<lb/>
outstanding defensive player, the<lb/>
"Super Purple Pirate and receiv-<lb/>
ed the big play award.<lb/>
Robbins, who was named second-<lb/>
team Associated Press All-America<lb/>
earlier in the day, was named the<lb/>
most outstanding offensive player,<lb/>
the offensive captain, and received<lb/>
the blocking trophy.<lb/>
Bushbeck, who played this year<lb/>
despite suffering from Hodgkin's<lb/>
disease, received the Swindell<lb/>
Memorial Award, which goes to the<lb/>
player who shows dedication and<lb/>
leadership and puts team before<lb/>
self. Bushbeck was also named the<lb/>
outstanding special teams player.<lb/>
The complete list of award win-<lb/>
ners follows:<lb/>
lJHI II I ?nhall V??ti1.<lb/>
I ul,lundini? Oflensne hfhnwn<lb/>
Outstanding l)rtrn.i,r rtrihrnan<lb/>
Kuk ??rtiln Memorial oil, n.i<lb/>
Kuk HanUl.m Memnripl IMrnsr<lb/>
Mini Improved HW??i?? Plus"<lb/>
M'i Improved llenMr<lb/>
tindell Memorial xifd<lb/>
 r Ka?l Memorial k?ard<lb/>
Outstanding Oft spr, ial Iram<lb/>
Outstanding let "special lum<lb/>
Viadrmn Vbiesmeni<lb/>
I n k)rhampuin<lb/>
Purple 1'iralr<lb/>
?super Purple Pirate<lb/>
' luKiandtnv Delenvist- Plater<lb/>
Hl?kinv r,iph<lb/>
Best HI. king ?ark<lb/>
Ouuianding ottensisr Haii<lb/>
land Oserlon Outstanding Vnn't<lb/>
lietrnstsr aptain<lb/>
IHIfdMHaptain<lb/>
Npmal I earn aptain<lb/>
in mi liJcn<lb/>
Sim lohnstrn<lb/>
KiAi'l.ilJ K .i<lb/>
Man ? I .i in<lb/>
1 eon I .i. ? i r I ?iw<lb/>
VI it ? i<lb/>
i ?  H i-N.k<lb/>
Ul. N,<lb/>
. H ? ? <lb/>
.<lb/>
Id I IV kti 1 wr Btobs.1<lb/>
M Li i<lb/>
I.sis S,<lb/>
I . VIil iv<lb/>
?<lb/>
rtH? Robb<lb/>
K ? tt .11: ihJ Him<lb/>
H v'h,IK<lb/>
Mil <lb/>
l k i irani I ? Grillin<lb/>
I ? k.hiiiv<lb/>
l k, IV,<lb/>
Four players scored<lb/>
in double figures to<lb/>
lead Chowan Junior<lb/>
College to a 94-87 win<lb/>
over the Hast Carolina<lb/>
jayvee basketball team<lb/>
Wednesday night.<lb/>
Ken Kapel and Win-<lb/>
fred Basnight did the<lb/>
most to spoil the season<lb/>
debut of the J V Pirates.<lb/>
Capel poured in 23<lb/>
points, while Basnight<lb/>
tallied 16 and added<lb/>
nine assists.<lb/>
Chowan had to over-<lb/>
come a superb perfor-<lb/>
mance by ECU forward<lb/>
Bill McNair to come-<lb/>
away victorious.<lb/>
McNair connected on<lb/>
14 of 19 shots from the<lb/>
floor en route to scor-<lb/>
ing a game-high 35<lb/>
points. McNair also<lb/>
snared a team-hich 13<lb/>
rebounds.<lb/>
The only other Pirate<lb/>
in double figures was<lb/>
freshman guard Bruce<lb/>
Peartree. The former<lb/>
Pantego High star<lb/>
finished with 16 points.<lb/>
Soph o m ore g u a r d<lb/>
Herbert Gilchrisl pitch-<lb/>
ed in nine points and<lb/>
eight assisis.<lb/>
Herb K r u sen, a<lb/>
former ECU player and<lb/>
now a Pirate assistant<lb/>
coach, said the ECU<lb/>
J V' s w e re simply<lb/>
outplayed.<lb/>
"We fought back<lb/>
real well Krusen said.<lb/>
"We were down from<lb/>
the very start. But, by<lb/>
and large we were jusl<lb/>
outplayed. Chowan<lb/>
practices togethei and<lb/>
we don't. That could<lb/>
have had some affect<lb/>
Emory Maintains Hope<lb/>
Bill McNair<lb/>
Continued From Page 10<lb/>
I fust walked into the door here in<lb/>
1956, and the learn wanted it just as<lb/>
bad. It was our last chance too. It<lb/>
turned out to be a real embarass-<lb/>
ment, though<lb/>
So did losing the season finale,<lb/>
and a winning campaign in the pro<lb/>
cess. Emory now says that his<lb/>
heavily-favored Pirates and the<lb/>
coaching staff were over-confident<lb/>
going into the William and Marv<lb/>
game.<lb/>
"We didn't respect them like we<lb/>
should have. It we had plaved them<lb/>
like we did Miami and West Virginia<lb/>
it would have been a different storv.<lb/>
I hat has to be the toughest loss in<lb/>
mv life since I first got into spoils in<lb/>
the third grade<lb/>
With negativity growing to sur-<lb/>
round both Hmorv and the football<lb/>
program as the season wore on, the<lb/>
talk of the coach's dismissal erew<lb/>
more frequent among E( I<lb/>
followers. Emory knows if things do<lb/>
not improve in 1982 it could be the<lb/>
end o' his head coaching dav v<lb/>
"1 believe next vear will be a good<lb/>
one for us, though he said. "We<lb/>
have a verv good nucleus of talent<lb/>
returning. But 1983 should really be<lb/>
our year. Thai will be a senior laden<lb/>
football team I just hope we're<lb/>
here to coach it.<lb/>
"It would be a real shame it we're<lb/>
not. I'd hate to see all the eps<lb/>
we've taken and progress we've<lb/>
made in 36 months ruined because<lb/>
ot that<lb/>
Emor sas he refuses to think t<lb/>
1982 in a negative light, though,<lb/>
saving thai he is confident the vim.<lb/>
can be a winner<lb/>
'? reall) believe we can go 7 4 oi<lb/>
8-3 he iaid. "I'm more excited<lb/>
now than I've ever been I really<lb/>
want to gel out on the mad to<lb/>
recruit and sell out program <lb/>
matter ot fact I'm laving at four<lb/>
o'clock tomorrow morning to go on<lb/>
a recruiting trip<lb/>
When Emory made that<lb/>
nieni Wednesdav night the<lb/>
had alreadv passed the 11<lb/>
mark. What about rest?<lb/>
M don't have time to rest he<lb/>
said. " I here's too much to do it<lb/>
we're going to become a great toot<lb/>
ball team And I won't accept<lb/>
less than that, no matter what the<lb/>
eosis<lb/>
clock<lb/>
p.m<lb/>
GET THE SPIRIT<lb/>
MINGES-MANJA<lb/>
IS CATCHING<lb/>
SEE THE PIRATES<lb/>
PLAY MonDec. 7th<lb/>
vs. Campbell<lb/>
Led bv 7-ft. center Tonv Britto<lb/>
Minges Coliseum ? 7:30<lb/>
WESTERN SIZZLIN'<lb/>
"The Family Steak House<lb/>
9 9<lb/>
MONDAY? $199<lb/>
CHOPPED STEAK ?<lb/>
TUESDAY? $199<lb/>
BEEF TIPS '<lb/>
WEDNESDAY? $189<lb/>
CUBED STEAK '<lb/>
THURSDAY? $169<lb/>
STEAK SANDWICH '<lb/>
FRIDAY ? $179<lb/>
U.S.D.A. RIB EYE <lb/>
SATURDAY ? $099<lb/>
BARBEQUE RIBS A<lb/>
SUNDAY? $199<lb/>
STEAK ON A STICK ?<lb/>
B. Famous Salad Bar<lb/>
? Free Tea with ECU i.D.<lb/>
? All meals are complete including baked potato or French fries &amp; Texas<lb/>
B toast.<lb/>
 Take Out Service<lb/>
1?03 E 10th SI. H?urs: m.miop.m.<lb/>
? to 2172 MonThurs.<lb/>
2M Bypass - 75.0040 loam 11 p.m. Fri Suit.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Souths No. 6 A Rock Night Club<lb/>
THURS J FRI. &amp; SAT.<lb/>
SUH SNOW MC<lb/>
RjrniaiiJloS<lb/>
tifA h U.<lb/>
ek<lb/>
<lb/>
)<lb/>
r<lb/>
<lb/>
TUES<lb/>
DEC. 8<lb/>
THURSDAY NIGHT<lb/>
RHYTHM AND BLUES DELUXE<lb/>
ARHOCLEY<lb/>
FRI. AND SAT. NITE<lb/>
GLENN PHILLIPS BAND<lb/>
"HIS GUITAR WORK HAS BEEN COMPARED WITH JEFF BECK<lb/>
HIS ALBUM DARK LIGHTS WAS RATED WITH 3? j STARS BY<lb/>
ROLLING STONE MAGAZINE<lb/>
LOCATED<lb/>
BEHINDTHE<lb/>
ELBO ROOM<lb/>
758-0711<lb/>
COMING - THURS DEC 10<lb/>
8th Annual BRICE ST CHRISTMAS PARTY<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
BUSCH. The official beer of The Charlie Daniels Band<lb/>
i ? m<lb/>
V<lb/>
'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057445_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>