<?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="00057237_0001"/>
"Were it left to me<lb/>
to decide whether<lb/>
we should have a<lb/>
government without<lb/>
newspapers or<lb/>
newspapers without<lb/>
government, I<lb/>
should not hesitate<lb/>
a moment to prefer<lb/>
the latter<lb/>
?Thomas Jefferson<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
If you have a story<lb/>
idea, a tip, or a<lb/>
lead, please tele-<lb/>
phone us.<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
757-6367<lb/>
757-6309<lb/>
3l5<lb/>
Vol. 54 No. Zf<lb/>
14 pages today<lb/>
Tuesday, 11 December 1979<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
SAVAK-SAVI<lb/>
Name changed due to feedback; hear Coach Odlim<lb/>
Student legislators<lb/>
sit on mall set for Wednesday<lb/>
B) KAREN WENDT<lb/>
Vetvs h.ditor<lb/>
SAV K has changed its name, but the<lb/>
purpose is the same.<lb/>
I in- organization known as SAVAK,<lb/>
Student- Ulied for Victory Against<lb/>
Khomeini, has taken a new title because<lb/>
of negative feedback.<lb/>
The group is now called SAVI,<lb/>
Students Allied tor Victory in Iran.<lb/>
? a meeting held b) two of the group<lb/>
lers Thursday night, the name change<lb/>
u a- announced.<lb/>
Plan- were made at the meeting to<lb/>
hold what is being called a "sit for 50 in<lb/>
silent protest The sit is scheduled for<lb/>
December 12 from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on<lb/>
The poster that is being passed out<lb/>
ntes all students who are interested in<lb/>
tin- to protest peacefully, and to bring<lb/>
books ami Hags but no alcohol.<lb/>
Drinking became quite controversial<lb/>
after the last demonstration. "That<lb/>
doesn'l accomplish" anything. It just<lb/>
embai the university -aid Brett<lb/>
Melvin, SGA president and a founder of<lb/>
SAVI.<lb/>
The sit is expected to be held<lb/>
itewide at all major universities.<lb/>
Melvin presented the idea of having a<lb/>
-it to the North Carolina Association of<lb/>
Student Governments on Sunday. It was<lb/>
passed unanimously.<lb/>
Student- are urged to wear white<lb/>
armbands in support of the American<lb/>
posil tncerning the hostages.<lb/>
Armbands will lie available at the sit.<lb/>
and donation- to the organization will be<lb/>
greatl appreciated.<lb/>
About twenty people attended the first<lb/>
formal meeting of the group. Members<lb/>
stressed that the organization is open to<lb/>
input and suggestions.<lb/>
"We hope to do a lot with this<lb/>
organization said Melvin.<lb/>
The group has received one outside<lb/>
donation from an outside source ? SGA<lb/>
attorney Charles MeLaughorn.<lb/>
The group was organized to promote<lb/>
"intelligent and.rational thinking" among<lb/>
students about the situation in Iran and<lb/>
the differences in culture. SAVI also<lb/>
hopes to sponsor speakers on the subject.<lb/>
The term "victory" in the organiza-<lb/>
tion's name has evidently aroused some<lb/>
controversy. Melvin said the word refers<lb/>
to the United States "not losing face<lb/>
Doug White, another founding mem-<lb/>
ber of the group, feels victory pertains to<lb/>
the "battle of nerves" with Iran.<lb/>
"A victory is peace said Melvin.<lb/>
SAVI will also be sponsoring three<lb/>
speakers on Tuesday night.<lb/>
Dr. John Howe, of the political science<lb/>
department, Dr. Unesh Gulati of the<lb/>
economics department, and Dr. Duane<lb/>
Longue. a professor at ECU who has<lb/>
written a song about the Iranian situation,<lb/>
will be speaking at Hendrix theatre,<lb/>
beginning at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Students who are interested in the<lb/>
situation in Iran, and in SAVI, are asked<lb/>
to attend these informative lectures. They<lb/>
are also asked to watch the national news<lb/>
before the lectures so that they will have<lb/>
the latest information on the crisis.<lb/>
fter being denied immediate funding<lb/>
at Monday's SGA meeting, Sune<lb/>
commented, "That will not stop us<lb/>
Doug White, one of the founders of SAVI, is<lb/>
interviewed by Channel 9 News during an SGA<lb/>
meeting ivhere he later spoke about the organization<lb/>
and its request for funding.<lb/>
(Photo by Chap Gurley)<lb/>
Christian students for Cambodia<lb/>
Petitions being signed for aid<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Dave Odom, head basketball coach at ECU, received<lb/>
a standing ovation before the SGA legislature at their<lb/>
Monday meeting.<lb/>
"We've tried to change some things said Odom,<lb/>
referring to changes made within the program since he<lb/>
took the job.<lb/>
"I am very pleased with student support he added.<lb/>
Odom spoke briefly about the program and then left<lb/>
to attend the South Carolina at Aiken vs. ECU<lb/>
basketball game.<lb/>
In other business, the SGA approved 'he constitution<lb/>
for a new organization on campus, to be known as S 1,<lb/>
or Students Allied for Victory in Iran. The constitution<lb/>
was brought up because of a name change which<lb/>
executive council members felt would lead to such<lb/>
approval.<lb/>
SAVI was denied a motion, however, to suspend the<lb/>
rules in an attempt to get $100 in SGA funds in support.<lb/>
The group also distributed copies of a news release<lb/>
which has been sent to all of the newspaper and local<lb/>
radio stations.<lb/>
The release read, "We want to stress that we are<lb/>
interested in rational, informed protest. We do not want<lb/>
flag burnings, effigies, chants, drunken marches, etc.<lb/>
We want people to understand what they're protesting<lb/>
and why Sune said<lb/>
During the meeting, Melvin brought up the point<lb/>
that the hostages are being held by students, about the<lb/>
same age as ourselves.<lb/>
In the news release, he also stated, "Students are<lb/>
just as incensed at Khomeini as the rest of the public ?<lb/>
perhaps moreso. We sincerely believe that our actions,<lb/>
in combination with similar activities across the nation,<lb/>
will influence Iranian militants here and in Iran<lb/>
There was debate as to the organization's lack of a<lb/>
faculty advisor, but the bill reads that its passage was<lb/>
pending the naming of a faculty advisor.<lb/>
A resolution presented by Jeff Triplett welcomed a<lb/>
new football coach, Ed Emory, to ECU. In part, the<lb/>
resolution read that the legislature would like to extend<lb/>
"a heartv weocome home" to the new coach, an East<lb/>
Carolina alumnus.<lb/>
Charhe Sherrod, SGA Vice President, who held a<lb/>
seat on the selection committee for a new coach,<lb/>
explained some of the reasons that Emory was chosen<lb/>
and said Chancellor Brewer and Coach Emory should<lb/>
excellent coach and good for the university<lb/>
Mark Franke of the Christians for Cambodia group<lb/>
read their statement before the legisoature and asked<lb/>
legislators to sign one of the petitions identical to those<lb/>
being passed around campus earlier in the day.<lb/>
Charles Sune<lb/>
(Photo by Chap :<lb/>
lirett Melvin<lb/>
(Photo b) John Grogan)<lb/>
(Photo by Pete Podeszwa)<lb/>
Santa Claus slapped,<lb/>
kidnapped; Christmas<lb/>
'<lb/>
fl<lb/>
By MARC BARNES<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
Santa Claus has been<lb/>
kidnapped.<lb/>
Claus, age unknown, a<lb/>
six foot' tall mechanical<lb/>
fellow, was kidnapped<lb/>
from the dining room at<lb/>
Wendy's on Tenth Street<lb/>
last Saturday night.<lb/>
But that's not all.<lb/>
Sunday morning,<lb/>
thieves took the Christmas<lb/>
tree off a Christmas float<lb/>
which was parked in the<lb/>
back parking lot.<lb/>
"It was about 7:30<lb/>
Saturday night when they<lb/>
took Santa said Wendy's<lb/>
manager Robert Clements.<lb/>
"The assistant manager<lb/>
said he noticed cars going<lb/>
through the drive several<lb/>
times ? and then two or<lb/>
three people came in and<lb/>
hauled Santa away<lb/>
"We had borrowed the<lb/>
Santa from Pepsi-Cola ?<lb/>
it wasn't even ours<lb/>
Clement said. "It was<lb/>
a hundred<lb/>
worth about<lb/>
bucks<lb/>
Sunday morning, Cle-<lb/>
ments continued, the<lb/>
Christmas tree was taken<lb/>
from the float. "It was<lb/>
(assistant manager) Rob-<lb/>
bie McGlohon's tree he<lb/>
said. Apparently, McGlo-<lb/>
hon had lent the tree to be<lb/>
used for the float during a<lb/>
recent Christmas parade.<lb/>
When he returned for his<lb/>
tree later on Sunday, the<lb/>
tree was gone.<lb/>
"Ronnie was pretty<lb/>
upset Clements said.<lb/>
"First, Santa Claus is<lb/>
stolen during his shift, and<lb/>
then his tree is gone the<lb/>
next day. He was going to<lb/>
take the tree home and<lb/>
put it up in his apart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
This is not the first<lb/>
indignity Santa had had to<lb/>
endure in the Wendy's<lb/>
dining room. After the<lb/>
Santa was placed there,<lb/>
See SANTA, page 6<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
"Ueaders of the world,<lb/>
lay aside your pride in<lb/>
your conquering political<lb/>
ambition. Put down your<lb/>
swords! Stop the murder!<lb/>
Stop the suffering<lb/>
These words begin a<lb/>
petition sponsored by an<lb/>
organization known as<lb/>
Christians for Cambodia.<lb/>
The petition, signed by<lb/>
students and non-students,<lb/>
is aimed at appealing to<lb/>
the pride of the nations to<lb/>
aid the Cambodian refu-<lb/>
gees.<lb/>
According to an infor-<lb/>
mation sheet passed out<lb/>
by petitioners, "the situa-<lb/>
tion, already one of horror,<lb/>
is intensifying<lb/>
Robin Carson, spokes-<lb/>
man for the organization,<lb/>
recently attended a<lb/>
"rally" in front of the<lb/>
United Nations building in<lb/>
New York City. Carson<lb/>
claims that similar move-<lb/>
ments are occuring at<lb/>
every major college cam-<lb/>
pus in the United States.<lb/>
Christians for Cam-<lb/>
bodia is a nationwide<lb/>
organization which is bas-<lb/>
ed in Albuquerque, New<lb/>
Mexico.<lb/>
Copies of the petition<lb/>
were sent to ambassadors<lb/>
of the United States,<lb/>
United Soviet Socialist<lb/>
Republic, Vietnam and the<lb/>
United Nations in general.<lb/>
"We were hoping<lb/>
through them to be able to<lb/>
distribute them (the peti-<lb/>
tions) to the most coun-<lb/>
tries said Carson.<lb/>
When asked why the<lb/>
United States should help<lb/>
the refugees, Carson re-<lb/>
plied, "They're people <lb/>
people in need<lb/>
Carson also claims that<lb/>
much of the action in<lb/>
Cambodia is for political<lb/>
rather than social gain. He<lb/>
calls the refugee issue<lb/>
both a moral and a<lb/>
political issue.<lb/>
He claims that in Cam-<lb/>
bodia, people are commit-<lb/>
ting "genocide in a<lb/>
country for political gain<lb/>
He later said, "That<lb/>
scares me<lb/>
At the rally, most<lb/>
people appeared to be ig-<lb/>
noring the petitioners.<lb/>
After rebuffing one peti-<lb/>
tioner, a student was<lb/>
heard to say, "I don't<lb/>
See PETITION, page 6<lb/>
New GREAT garage<lb/>
may aid ECU transit<lb/>
By TERRY GRAY<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Inside today<lb/>
Library hours pftge 3<lb/>
I Help them<lb/>
page 4<lb/>
Exam schedule page 6<lb/>
The party's over page 7<lb/>
A new coach<lb/>
page 11<lb/>
"Oh Lord, won't you<lb/>
buy me a Mercedes-<lb/>
enz<lb/>
Leonard Fleming sang<lb/>
the opening phrase of this<lb/>
famous song Monday as<lb/>
he looked over the $5,500<lb/>
maintenance bill that the<lb/>
SGA Transit Authority has<lb/>
racked up since July 1979<lb/>
for its Ford and Inter-<lb/>
national buses.<lb/>
Fleming, operations<lb/>
manager for the ECU<lb/>
transit system, said that<lb/>
the high cost-of-maintain-<lb/>
ing the school's buses was<lb/>
not entirely due to brand<lb/>
names. Part of the prob-<lb/>
lem, he explained, involv-<lb/>
es the rates charged by<lb/>
Hastings Ford in its<lb/>
agreement to service the<lb/>
vehicles.<lb/>
Fleming said that Hast-<lb/>
ings Ford, which charges<lb/>
$21 an hour for labor,<lb/>
"can't be blamed because<lb/>
they're in business to<lb/>
make money ? ey<lb/>
charge us what they<lb/>
charge everyone else.<lb/>
If things go well, this<lb/>
situation may change next<lb/>
year when Greenville op-<lb/>
ens a new maintenance<lb/>
yard for its GREAT buses.<lb/>
According to Fleming,<lb/>
preliminary talks with<lb/>
Greenville Transit Mana-<lb/>
ger Fred Haley indicate<lb/>
that the ECU system may<lb/>
be able to have their buses<lb/>
serviced by city mechanics<lb/>
when the yard goes into<lb/>
operation. This would<lb/>
bring considerable savings<lb/>
in overall costs in upkeep,<lb/>
Fleming said.<lb/>
Haley also noted Mon-<lb/>
dav that until now, dis-<lb/>
cussion of the idea has<lb/>
been very tentative, since<lb/>
the federal grant to help<lb/>
build the city's facility<lb/>
arrived only this week.<lb/>
If a "fair arrangement<lb/>
to both Greenville and<lb/>
ECU could be worked<lb/>
out he said, "then I<lb/>
think it could be possi-<lb/>
ble<lb/>
A consultant from the<lb/>
North Carolina Depart-<lb/>
ment of Transportation<lb/>
who visited the university<lb/>
recently has even suggest-<lb/>
ed that the school take a<lb/>
look at long-range plans to<lb/>
merge their transit system<lb/>
with that of Greenville,<lb/>
according to Fleming.<lb/>
Such a move would<lb/>
mean a high capital outlay<lb/>
in the beginning, -aid<lb/>
Fleming, but it would pay<lb/>
for itself in the long run.<lb/>
The SGA transit sv-<lb/>
tern, which has been ap-<lb/>
propriated close to $60,000<lb/>
this year, represents the<lb/>
largest single expense<lb/>
from student funds<lb/>
annually.<lb/>
"The cost of our<lb/>
system will hae to go up<lb/>
everj year said Fleming.<lb/>
The transportation con-<lb/>
sultant also suggested that<lb/>
the SGA Transit Authority<lb/>
make a thorough survey ot<lb/>
ridership patterns to deier-<lb/>
See TRANSIT, page 6<lb/>
The SGA transit system has been fighting recurring<lb/>
accidents and rising costs to keep the two<lb/>
remaining bus schedules runnin?- . ?. , .<lb/>
(Photo by Chap Gurley)<lb/>
S<lb/>
3 i<lb/>
I 1 '33 i aaiisti i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057237_0002"/><lb/>
Page 2 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 11 December 1979<lb/>
Pecple, places, arid<lb/>
?lt<lb/>
The Pharmacy College<lb/>
Admission Test' (PCAT)<lb/>
will be offered at East<lb/>
Carolina University on<lb/>
Saturday, February 9,<lb/>
1980. Applications blanks<lb/>
are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to the Psycholo-<lb/>
gical Corp 304 East 45th<lb/>
Street, New York, N.Y.<lb/>
10017, to arrive by Jan.<lb/>
14, 1980. Application<lb/>
blanks are available in the<lb/>
Testing Center, Speight<lb/>
Building, Room 105.<lb/>
 I nl<lb/>
A ski trip to Massa-<lb/>
nutten, Va. Jan. 10, 11,<lb/>
and 12 is available to any<lb/>
M.R.C. or W.R.C. mem-<lb/>
ber. Lodging will be<lb/>
provided at the Holiday<lb/>
Inn in Harrisonburg, Va.<lb/>
Thursday, Friday, and<lb/>
Saturday nights. For these<lb/>
aeeomodations as well as<lb/>
two fu days of skiing,<lb/>
including rentals and lift<lb/>
tickets, the price is only<lb/>
?68.50. A ski school is<lb/>
available for a $5.00<lb/>
cha For those inter-<lb/>
sted in attending a $25.00<lb/>
deposit (refundable) will<lb/>
he required by Dec. 17.<lb/>
F r reservations, or more<lb/>
information, please call<lb/>
2-9569.<lb/>
11 i I?1 i<lb/>
I ii III<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda (the<lb/>
ness club) will meet at<lb/>
4:00 p.m. on Dc 11 for<lb/>
the raffle ticket drawing.<lb/>
Please bring your ticket<lb/>
-tubs. Anyone who would<lb/>
like to buy a 50 cent raffle<lb/>
ticket can either buy one<lb/>
in "he morning in front of<lb/>
,? Student Supply Stare<lb/>
,r tali 752-5076 and ask<lb/>
for Sharon.<lb/>
act<lb/>
The American College<lb/>
Testing (ACT) will be<lb/>
offered at East Carolina<lb/>
University on Saturday,<lb/>
February 16, 1980. Appli-<lb/>
cation blanks are to be<lb/>
completed and mailed to<lb/>
ACT Registration, P.O.<lb/>
Box 414, Iowa City, Iowa<lb/>
52240. Registration dead-<lb/>
line is January 18, 1980.<lb/>
Mr. Childers, Director of<lb/>
Testing at ECU, reminds<lb/>
candidates that deadlines<lb/>
occur during the holiday<lb/>
break, so they should take<lb/>
care of this matter before<lb/>
leaving school. Applica-<lb/>
tions may be obtained<lb/>
from the' ECU Testing<lb/>
Center, Speight Building,<lb/>
Room 105.<lb/>
I!tici <lb/>
Students who are in-<lb/>
terested in applying for<lb/>
positions on the student<lb/>
residence hall staff for<lb/>
summer or next fall should<lb/>
file their applications be-<lb/>
tween now and Jan. 31. To<lb/>
be eligible for this em-<lb/>
ployment, a student<lb/>
should be enrolled full-<lb/>
time and have a real<lb/>
interest in residence hall<lb/>
living. Hall advisors are<lb/>
paid for two hours of work<lb/>
each day. Monday-Thurs-<lb/>
day, and have duty every<lb/>
other weekend.<lb/>
Application forms are<lb/>
available in the directors'<lb/>
offices or in the Residence<lb/>
Life office, 214 Whichard<lb/>
Building. All applications<lb/>
should be turned in to the<lb/>
Residence Life office.<lb/>
National Teacher Ex-<lb/>
aminations will be offered<lb/>
at East Carolina University<lb/>
on Saturday, February 16,<lb/>
1980. Application blanks<lb/>
are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to the Educational<lb/>
Testing Service, Box 911,<lb/>
Princeton, N.J. 08540 to<lb/>
arrive by January 23,<lb/>
1980. Application blanks<lb/>
are also available at the<lb/>
Testing Center, Speight<lb/>
Building, Room 105.<lb/>
rcsl<lb/>
?cj<lb/>
artists<lb/>
I ic t-?Mit?<lb/>
PRC T-Shirts will be<lb/>
here Tuesday, Dec. 11,<lb/>
1979. Those in the Curri-<lb/>
culum may pick up the<lb/>
shirts in the PRC building.<lb/>
ARTISTS: Register now<lb/>
until Dec. 20 for the Rebel<lb/>
Art Contest and Show<lb/>
which will be held January<lb/>
11-19 in the Kate Lewis<lb/>
Gallery. Prize money pro-<lb/>
viced by the Attic and<lb/>
Jeffries Wine and Beer.<lb/>
Categories: Drawing,<lb/>
Printmaking, Painting,<lb/>
Black and White Photo-<lb/>
graphy, Color Photography<lb/>
and 2-d (hangable) Mixed<lb/>
Media. You may register<lb/>
in any two categories at<lb/>
the Rebel office or Men-<lb/>
denhall Information Desk.<lb/>
One dollar registration fee<lb/>
will be collected on<lb/>
January 11 when you<lb/>
deliver your work.<lb/>
financial aid<lb/>
All students who are<lb/>
interested in applying for<lb/>
financial aid for the<lb/>
1980-81 school year are<lb/>
encouraged to attend a<lb/>
meeting on Wednesday,<lb/>
December 12, at 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
in Wright Auditorium. The<lb/>
purpose of the meeting is<lb/>
to distribute applications<lb/>
and disseminate informa-<lb/>
tion concerning financial<lb/>
aid for the 1980-81 school<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The North Carolina<lb/>
Student Legislature will<lb/>
meet Monday, Jan. 14 at<lb/>
Mendenhall Rm. 221. This<lb/>
is a very important<lb/>
meeting and all members<lb/>
are urged to attend.<lb/>
Topics will be the Jan.<lb/>
I.C. and the legislative<lb/>
reception to be held Jan.<lb/>
22.<lb/>
?cea<lb/>
The SCEC will sponsor<lb/>
a most exciting Christmas<lb/>
program Tuesday, Dec. 11<lb/>
at 7:30 p.m. The Caswell<lb/>
Choir will be singing<lb/>
Christmas music at the<lb/>
Walter B. Jones Alcoholic<lb/>
Rehabilitation Center<lb/>
(Falkland Hwy, next to the<lb/>
old-hospital). Please come<lb/>
and share the festive<lb/>
evening. Refreshments<lb/>
will be served.<lb/>
The Society for Col-<lb/>
legiate Journalists will<lb/>
have its Christmas dinner<lb/>
on Tuesday, December 11<lb/>
at 5:30 p.m. at the S&amp;H<lb/>
Cafeteria. All members<lb/>
and pledges are urged to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
management<lb/>
The Graduate Man-<lb/>
agement Admission Test<lb/>
will be offered at East<lb/>
Carolina University on<lb/>
Sat Jan. 26, 1980.<lb/>
Application blanks are to<lb/>
be completed and mailed<lb/>
to Educational Testing<lb/>
Service, Box 966-R,<lb/>
Princeton, NJ 08540 to<lb/>
arrive by Jan. 4, 1980.<lb/>
Applications are also<lb/>
available at the Testing<lb/>
Center, Speight Building,<lb/>
Room-105, East Carolina<lb/>
University.<lb/>
?cec<lb/>
The SCEC will sponsor<lb/>
a most exciting Christmas<lb/>
program Tuesday, Dec. 11<lb/>
at 7:30 p.m. The Caswell<lb/>
Choir will sing Christmas<lb/>
music at the Walter B.<lb/>
Jones Alcoholic Rehabili-<lb/>
tation Center (Falkland<lb/>
Hwy, next to the old<lb/>
hospital). Please come and<lb/>
share the festive evening.<lb/>
Refreshments will be<lb/>
served.<lb/>
t II It ill<lb/>
All students who plan<lb/>
to participate with the<lb/>
men's or women's team,<lb/>
handball clubs should<lb/>
contact Susan Jeffrey,<lb/>
intramural-club sports<lb/>
trainer, at 757-6387 to<lb/>
schedule their physical<lb/>
examinations. Physicals<lb/>
should be scheduled prior<lb/>
to the Christmas break.<lb/>
icfcel<lb/>
The Rebel is extending<lb/>
the deadline for literary<lb/>
submissions to Dec. 20.<lb/>
Address manuscripts to<lb/>
The Rebel, Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, Green-<lb/>
ville, N.C or bring sub-<lb/>
missions by the office.<lb/>
PART<lb/>
TINE<lb/>
JOB<lb/>
Looking for i part-time<lb/>
job with flexible hours<lb/>
and real business<lb/>
experience? Northwest<lb/>
Mutual Life Ins. Co.<lb/>
has openings for college<lb/>
agents. Call before noon<lb/>
for appointments!<lb/>
7SS-4080<lb/>
4emcciat?<lb/>
The Young Democrats<lb/>
of ECU will hold a dinner<lb/>
tonight at Jason's up-<lb/>
stairs. All members are<lb/>
urged to attend. This will<lb/>
be the last meeting of the<lb/>
semester.<lb/>
located above I<lb/>
the Jolly Roger!<lb/>
Use the Reade I<lb/>
Street I<lb/>
entrance and I<lb/>
avoid the I<lb/>
downtown I<lb/>
traffic I<lb/>
Looking for that<lb/>
special gift<lb/>
Try<lb/>
Cable &amp; Craft Yarns<lb/>
812 Dickenson Ave.<lb/>
Across from Diener's Bakery<lb/>
V<lb/>
tchell s Hair Styling<lb/>
Pottery<lb/>
Leather<lb/>
Silk Scarves<lb/>
Jewelry<lb/>
Handwoven Items<lb/>
f P,rt Pt.i. SKoppl C?i'?<lb/>
7562950<lb/>
Call today for Complete Hair Care<lb/>
SPECIAL FOR THE<lb/>
WEL iv<lb/>
P.P.T. ? Mendex<lb/>
Reg. $6.oos4.5o Conditioner<lb/>
lVOWONLYS3.50aPS3.00<lb/>
Frosty Morn sliced<lb/>
? ?: ?<lb/>
12oz.<lb/>
Brawny towels<lb/>
ii<lb/>
SUPER MARKETS, INC.<lb/>
Where Shopping Is A PLosure<lb/>
II<lb/>
jumbo roll<lb/>
J.F.G. Salad Dressing<lb/>
Qt.size<lb/>
21.00<lb/>
 Scrub Streng<lb/>
Hunts 44oz ketchup<lb/>
'hick ric"<lb/>
ketchup<lb/>
Western Boneless<lb/>
Chuck Roast<lb/>
-391b.<lb/>
W<lb/>
SAVE.<lb/>
i<lb/>
Purex<lb/>
Washing Powder<lb/>
72oz. King<lb/>
new size<lb/>
Frosty Morn<lb/>
Honey Gold Sausage<lb/>
12 oz.<lb/>
Hunts<lb/>
lonwf'1<lb/>
ketchup<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
2 litre Pepsi Colas<lb/>
Carolina dairies<lb/>
12 oz onion dip<lb/>
Cracker Jacks<lb/>
1 oz boxes<lb/>
71.00<lb/>
sgr-<lb/>
Cracker<lb/>
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i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057237_0003"/><lb/>
11 December 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Pace 3<lb/>
l"<lb/>
Extended Library hours during exams<lb/>
Fri Dec. 78 AM - 11 PM<lb/>
Sat Dec. 89 AM - 11 PM<lb/>
Wed Dec. 128 AM - 3 AM<lb/>
Thurs Dec. 138 AM - 3 AM<lb/>
Fri Dec. 148 AM - 11 PM<lb/>
Sat Dec. 159 AM - 11 PM<lb/>
Sun Dec. 162 PM - 3 AM<lb/>
Greek news<lb/>
Alpha Xi Delta All-Sing successful<lb/>
Mon. Dec. 17<lb/>
8 AM - 3 AM<lb/>
Tups Dec. 18 8 AM - 3 AM<lb/>
Music Library hours<lb/>
during exams<lb/>
Dec. 12, 13, 16, 17, IS<lb/>
Extended Hours to 11 PM<lb/>
Dec. 19 Regular Hours<lb/>
By RICKI GL1ARMIS<lb/>
Greek Correspondent<lb/>
Response for the 19th Annual Alpha Xi<lb/>
Delta All-Sing has been great so far. The<lb/>
Alpha Xis remind everyone to hurry and<lb/>
turn their songlist inthe sooner, the<lb/>
better.<lb/>
Alpha Xi Delta won the sorority<lb/>
division in Intramural Bowling last week.<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma held its annual<lb/>
tree trimming and Christmas dinner last<lb/>
Wednesday night. This festive occasion<lb/>
was highlighted by the presence of five<lb/>
new pledges. Tri Sigma welcomes these<lb/>
five girls.<lb/>
The Alpha Delta Pis would like to<lb/>
remind everyone of the "Football<lb/>
Sunday" on Dec. 16 at the Attic from 1<lb/>
p.m. until 6 p.m. Tickets will cost 50 cents<lb/>
in advance and 75 cents at the door.<lb/>
Door prizes will be given and beverage<lb/>
prices reduced. Free refreshments will be<lb/>
provided as well. Afternoon entertainment<lb/>
will feature the game between the Dallas<lb/>
Cowboys and the Washington Redskins to<lb/>
be shown on a giant television screen.<lb/>
Everyone is encouraged to attend this<lb/>
exciting Sunday afternoon.<lb/>
The Alpha Omicron Pis would like to<lb/>
congratulate Alpha Sigma Phi fraternity<lb/>
for receiving their charter Friday and wich<lb/>
them continued success as a brotherhood.<lb/>
Special acknowledgment goes to IIOA<lb/>
Jeff Betcher who received the award for<lb/>
Most Outstanding Cicizenship given by<lb/>
the Little Sisters.<lb/>
The AOII pledges worked hard on the<lb/>
house and yard Sunday in fulfilling their<lb/>
duties so they can be initiated soon.<lb/>
On Monday, the AOIIs will be<lb/>
celebrating their Founders Day. The<lb/>
traditional Christmas dinner and the<lb/>
opening of the presents will be held<lb/>
Tuesday.<lb/>
Congratulations to Patsy- Willis for<lb/>
being accepted into Gamma Beta Phi<lb/>
honor fraternity. We would also like to<lb/>
give special recognition to Cynthia Ann<lb/>
Simons who will be leaving ECU to pursue<lb/>
a career.<lb/>
The AOIIs extend best wishes to all<lb/>
the fraternities, sororities and students for<lb/>
a Merry Christmas and good luck on the<lb/>
upcoming exams<lb/>
Saturday night the Phi Taus held their<lb/>
annual Christmas party. Holiday snacks<lb/>
and drinks added to the festivities, as they<lb/>
were entertained by a live band.<lb/>
Sunday night the Phi Taus held their<lb/>
elections for executive offices. Elected<lb/>
President w?s Mike Newsome, Vice<lb/>
President Steve Mattocks, Treasurer Bill<lb/>
Hilliard, Secretary Scott Elmore, and<lb/>
Sergeant-at-Arms Mike Prencipe. The Phi<lb/>
Taus would like to congratulate these<lb/>
people and thank the out going officiers<lb/>
for the outstanding job they have (June<lb/>
The Phi Taus will be holding their<lb/>
"Gag Gfts" tonight, aftrr which they plan<lb/>
to see the Fat Alman's Band at the Attic.<lb/>
Greensboro attorney<lb/>
has evidence problems<lb/>
Mendenhall to stay<lb/>
open during exams<lb/>
Students who will be<lb/>
tudying into the wee<lb/>
hours of the morning<lb/>
during the upcoming exam<lb/>
period can look forward to<lb/>
a new service offered by<lb/>
the Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
A spokesman at Men-<lb/>
denhall said Monday that<lb/>
the student center will be<lb/>
staying open until 3 a.m.<lb/>
on Dec. 12 and 13, and<lb/>
Dec. 16 through 18, and<lb/>
will offer facilities and<lb/>
services which will make<lb/>
studying there easier.<lb/>
The extended hours,<lb/>
which coincide with the<lb/>
longer exam-period hours<lb/>
at Joyner Library, have<lb/>
been suggested in-order to<lb/>
"try and provide, a comfor-<lb/>
table place for people to<lb/>
study according to the<lb/>
spokesman.<lb/>
The snack bar will<lb/>
reopen at 11:00 p.m. on<lb/>
the above dates, and will<lb/>
selling coffee and light<lb/>
snacks until 2 a.m said<lb/>
the spokesman. In order to<lb/>
accomodate the students,<lb/>
themulti-purpose room will<lb/>
also be set up with tables<lb/>
and chairs, and the<lb/>
conference room will be<lb/>
opened for those who want<lb/>
to study in groups, he<lb/>
added.<lb/>
The center will also be<lb/>
selling a limited assort-<lb/>
ment of school supplies<lb/>
during the extended<lb/>
hours.<lb/>
The spokesman said<lb/>
that these new services<lb/>
are being offered for the<lb/>
 quit y.ttwuiiftge.ti atuflsate<lb/>
.mvyuiiagsti atudeataLamp<lb/>
ike advantage of tne to tn<lb/>
to take advantage of ttie<lb/>
comfort and companion-<lb/>
ship that are so helpful<lb/>
while pulling all-nighters.<lb/>
GREENSBORO, N.C. AP<lb/>
Guilford County Dstrict<lb/>
Attorney Mike Schlosser<lb/>
says he's running into<lb/>
some problems producing<lb/>
evidence against 15 per-<lb/>
sons charged in the five<lb/>
shooting deaths at an<lb/>
anti-Ku Klux Klan rally on<lb/>
NOv. 3.<lb/>
Schlosser says some<lb/>
spectators and participants<lb/>
at the rally don't want to<lb/>
discuss the case.<lb/>
Five members of the<lb/>
Communist Workers<lb/>
Party, which sponsored<lb/>
the event, were shot wile<lb/>
people were gathering for<lb/>
the rally. The 15 persons<lb/>
charged in connection with<lb/>
the deaths are self-pro-<lb/>
claimed Klansmen and<lb/>
Nazis.<lb/>
Schlosser said resi-<lb/>
dents of Morningside<lb/>
Homes, the predominantly<lb/>
black housing project that<lb/>
was the scene of the<lb/>
shootings, have "express-<lb/>
ed .apprehension- oncoming-<lb/>
tar4<lb/>
discuss details of the event<lb/>
and "Ku Klux Klansmen<lb/>
take vows of secrecy not to<lb/>
inform on each other<lb/>
Members of the CWP<lb/>
have requested they be<lb/>
allowed to hire a private<lb/>
prosecutor but Schlosser<lb/>
has insisted on handling<lb/>
the prosecution himself for<lb/>
what he calls political and<lb/>
philosophical reasons. He<lb/>
admits the case has him<lb/>
walking a legal tight rope.<lb/>
"The whole world is<lb/>
watching and asking if<lb/>
there is justice in Greens-<lb/>
boro he said. "I'm<lb/>
confronting the myth that<lb/>
Southern justice is differ-<lb/>
ent from justice else-<lb/>
whereI'm caught in the<lb/>
middle in a no-win situa-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Schlosser added that<lb/>
he's having to make<lb/>
complex legal interpreta-<lb/>
tions including a decision<lb/>
on whether to use televi-<lb/>
sion films of the shootings.<lb/>
Under state law the<lb/>
in<lb/>
trod<lb/>
licet<lb/>
Ml lllefr<lb/>
and the Nazis<lb/>
He said CWP members<lb/>
have refused repeatedly to<lb/>
tuuia cau t<lb/>
only as corroborative evi-<lb/>
dence, or as evidence to<lb/>
support testimony by a<lb/>
witness.<lb/>
Hurry, we can't<lb/>
start without you<lb/>
Now is the time to get involved. The Student Union will be accepting applications<lb/>
for the following positions on the following dates.<lb/>
Student Union President<lb/>
?tudent Union Committee Chairperson<lb/>
Student Union Committee Members<lb/>
Nov. 26-Jan. 16<lb/>
Jan. 18-Feb. 1<lb/>
Feb. 4-Feb. 18<lb/>
The Student Union is responsible for sponsoring social, recreational, fine arts, visual<lb/>
arts and cultural presentations for you, the entire University community. There are<lb/>
many events going on, and lots of places to go<lb/>
come on, join in s<lb/>
mm<lb/>
"Do I take chances and<lb/>
risk taht, if the judge<lb/>
allows me to use the<lb/>
film the Supreme Court<lb/>
won't reverse him on<lb/>
appeal?" Schlosser asked.<lb/>
Steeplechase cafeteria<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
(formerly Balentines)<lb/>
2 Specials Daily<lb/>
One item in each column on special<lb/>
99<lb/>
$1.29<lb/>
Meat Loaf<lb/>
Stuffed Peppers<lb/>
Beef w Macaroni<lb/>
Lasagna<lb/>
Liver &amp; Onions<lb/>
Chuckwagon Steak<lb/>
Spaghetti w meat sauce<lb/>
Tuna Casserole<lb/>
Ham &amp; Noodle Casserole Broiled Fish<lb/>
Cabbage Rolls Fried Chicken<lb/>
Chicken &amp; Dumpling BBQ Chicken<lb/>
Turkey &amp; Dumpling Broiled Chicken<lb/>
Open face beef sandwiches<lb/>
Open face turkey sandwiches<lb/>
open face pork sandwiches<lb/>
w two veg. &amp; roll<lb/>
w two veg. &amp; roll<lb/>
l.lll<lb/>
I?ii ?t??l I<lb/>
Weekly Specials for Lunch &amp; Dinner<lb/>
Open Sunday 11:30-2:00<lb/>
Phone 756-0885<lb/>
.<lb/>
Students Supply Store<lb/>
?<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
Your on-campus supplier of Texas Instrument,<lb/>
Sharp and Hewlett -Packard Calculators.<lb/>
J<lb/>
We offer free 30-day replacement<lb/>
of any defective calculator. If we do<lb/>
not have in stock the calculator<lb/>
you want, we will be happy<lb/>
to order it at no extra charge.<lb/>
Stop by for ail your calculi tor<lb/>
and calculator accessory needs.<lb/>
,<lb/>
I<lb/>
i <lb/>
S<lb/>
<pb facs="00057237_0004"/><lb/>
he East i.aroli<lb/>
Jiditorials<lb/>
&amp; Opinions<lb/>
Tuesday, December 11, 1979 Page 4 Greenville,N.C.<lb/>
They need our help<lb/>
Here we are at the end of the<lb/>
International Year of the Child, but<lb/>
thousands of children are starving in<lb/>
Thailand.<lb/>
These children are Cambodian<lb/>
refugees. They have been forced to<lb/>
leave their country not because of<lb/>
anything they have done, but because<lb/>
of military action that their parents<lb/>
began.<lb/>
According to information from<lb/>
Oxfam-America, over eighty percent of<lb/>
Cambodia's children are suffering from<lb/>
the worst forms of malnutrition.<lb/>
There are ten deaths to every birth.<lb/>
Thousands of tons of food and<lb/>
medical supplies have been shipped to<lb/>
the area, but it may not be enough.<lb/>
Within the next six months these<lb/>
people will need 165,000 tons of rice<lb/>
alone to survive.<lb/>
Adults may recover completely from<lb/>
the absence of food for this lengthy<lb/>
period of time, but children under the<lb/>
age of four may be suffering permanent<lb/>
brain damage and bone deformation as<lb/>
a result of malnutrition.<lb/>
Several agencies are attempting to<lb/>
help the refugees, including OXFAM<lb/>
and the Save the Children Foundation.<lb/>
Save the Children is now caring for<lb/>
100.000 refugees, OXFAM has shipped<lb/>
over 6,000 tons of food to the refugees,<lb/>
and both are in the process of sending<lb/>
more.<lb/>
But these amounts cannot possibly<lb/>
save all of the refugees from starvation<lb/>
and disease.<lb/>
Yet this tragedy, which has been<lb/>
called the Auschwitz of Asia, has been<lb/>
almost ignored by the press and the<lb/>
American people. We have been<lb/>
concerned with other things, such as<lb/>
the crisis in Iran and who will be<lb/>
running for president.<lb/>
But these people need help. They<lb/>
need help in the form of money and<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Five dollars will buy a twenty-five<lb/>
pound bag of rice, which will feed ten<lb/>
Cambodians for a week. Ten dollars will<lb/>
give an orphan a supplementary diet of<lb/>
rice sugar, edible oil and vitamins for<lb/>
one week. Twenty-five dollars will<lb/>
provide 40 pounds of soy bean seeds<lb/>
and four hoes to help plant for a spring<lb/>
harvest.<lb/>
Many people may say that they are<lb/>
not our responsibility. Yet the United<lb/>
States as well as many other nations<lb/>
were involved in the Vietnam War. The<lb/>
fighting that still goes on is partly due<lb/>
to our intervention in a war that was<lb/>
none of our business.<lb/>
Other countries are also trying to<lb/>
help the refugees. Australia, Great<lb/>
Britain, Canada, Norway, Austria and<lb/>
others are cooperating and aiding social<lb/>
organizations to get food and other<lb/>
necessary supplies to the people.<lb/>
Yet food alone is not enough. With<lb/>
people so hungry they are forced to eat<lb/>
seedlings out of the fields, there will<lb/>
not be much of a harvest in the near<lb/>
future, so the problem will continue<lb/>
unless there is massive aid given.<lb/>
Everyone has the ability to help in<lb/>
one way or another. Any contribution<lb/>
you are able to give is welcome,<lb/>
whether it is money, time or merely<lb/>
your signature. The help is desperately<lb/>
needed.<lb/>
No one should have to spend<lb/>
Christmas starving.<lb/>
Letters to the Editor<lb/>
Paper said to be 'repulsive'<lb/>
Will board control?<lb/>
In reading over the proposed<lb/>
amendments to the constitution of the<lb/>
Media Board, we can only remember<lb/>
that old song by Simon and Garfunkel:<lb/>
"I'm just one step ahead of the shoe<lb/>
shine,<lb/>
Two steps away from the county line<lb/>
I'm just trying to keep my customers<lb/>
satisfied<lb/>
Satisfied<lb/>
We at the newspaper feel that way.<lb/>
We feel that we are just one or two<lb/>
steps away from having some<lb/>
old-fashioned things taken away from<lb/>
us ? those things being such various<lb/>
items as freedom of the press, and the<lb/>
freedom of the editor to make his own<lb/>
choices concerning who he wants<lb/>
working I the paper.<lb/>
Specifically, one of the proposed<lb/>
amendments calls for the Media Board<lb/>
to choose the editor, AND the chief<lb/>
business officer. This means that for<lb/>
the business side of the newspaper ?<lb/>
the side that pays the bills and sees<lb/>
that everyone else gets paid ? the<lb/>
editor has no choice whatsoever in the<lb/>
matter.<lb/>
This is wrong, we feel, and entirely<lb/>
out of the board's jurisdiction. The<lb/>
board was set up originally to remove<lb/>
newspaper funding from the treacher-<lb/>
n s reaches of the SGA ? tat<lb/>
organization which in Us former lives<lb/>
threatened funding to the newspaper if<lb/>
the newspaper dared to print the truth<lb/>
about them<lb/>
To begin with, the burden of<lb/>
responsibility in The East Carolinian<lb/>
lies on the shoulders of the editor. He<lb/>
is responsible for everything that<lb/>
appears in the newspaper. He should<lb/>
be an accomplished journalist, with at<lb/>
least a smattering of management<lb/>
background.<lb/>
Therefore, since all responsibility is<lb/>
his, the editor should be allowed to<lb/>
name his own team. He should search<lb/>
around for his staff, recruit those who<lb/>
are the most qualified, and manage<lb/>
them once they are hired. If they get<lb/>
out of line, he should fire them. If they<lb/>
do well, he should praise them.<lb/>
What will the Media Board do next<lb/>
year? We don't know yet, but like the<lb/>
young man who had his hair dyed, we<lb/>
are afraid to look. Next year, we can<lb/>
see visions of the Media Board deciding<lb/>
that the editor is unqualified to pick his<lb/>
own managing editor. The year after<lb/>
that, the board will decide that he does<lb/>
not have enough sense to pick his own<lb/>
sports editor, or features editor. Finally,<lb/>
the editor will have to lead his troops<lb/>
into battle with an entire staff of<lb/>
sergeants who were handpioked by<lb/>
someone else.<lb/>
So here is the editor ? ten years<lb/>
hence. He has all of the responsibility,<lb/>
and none of the control. <lb/>
We hope that ECU journalists of the<lb/>
future are a lot more foolish than they<lb/>
have been in the past.<lb/>
I Candidates for editor would have to<lb/>
be, to take the job.<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
About the only thing I<lb/>
will credit The East<lb/>
Carolinian (or Fountain-<lb/>
head) with is repulsive<lb/>
consistancy in reviewing<lb/>
music. On June 22, 1978, I<lb/>
wrote a letter to the<lb/>
Fountainhead expressing<lb/>
views that will likely be<lb/>
repeated in this letter.<lb/>
?j<lb/>
First of all, my opinion<lb/>
of Mother's Finest is a<lb/>
high one and the group<lb/>
deserves every bit of the<lb/>
attention they are getting.<lb/>
It is a shame that their<lb/>
popularity had to sky-<lb/>
rocket in Europe and<lb/>
result in the production of<lb/>
their "Live" album in<lb/>
order to get recognition<lb/>
somewhere other than the<lb/>
southeastern U.S.<lb/>
My sentiments concern<lb/>
the unwarranted reviews<lb/>
of, first, Nantucket's debut<lb/>
album and, second, the<lb/>
concert here Dec. 1st.<lb/>
Green and Bachner (one of<lb/>
which may be the guy on<lb/>
the staff that Mike Uzzell<lb/>
blew away at an after<lb/>
concert party) not only<lb/>
exceed in under-rating a<lb/>
top band, but are evident-<lb/>
ly very poorly informed.<lb/>
However, to say that<lb/>
Mother's Finest is ten<lb/>
times superior to Nan-<lb/>
tucket is, at the least, a<lb/>
very unpolished an misin-<lb/>
formed judgement. The<lb/>
"professional considera-<lb/>
tion" of Nantucket playing<lb/>
last is a result of<lb/>
friendship and considera-<lb/>
tion between the two<lb/>
groups. Nantucket never<lb/>
referred to themselves as<lb/>
having top billing -the<lb/>
agreement was reached<lb/>
because the night before<lb/>
(in Florence) Mother's<lb/>
Finest had closed the<lb/>
show. There was no<lb/>
conflict between the<lb/>
groups-why should there<lb/>
be a battle of the bands<lb/>
attitude about a good<lb/>
concert? You evidently<lb/>
weren't present or weren't<lb/>
listening when "the home<lb/>
boys" started playing "Is<lb/>
it wrong to Rock and<lb/>
Roll?" and the crowd<lb/>
roaredwith the opening<lb/>
lines that Larry Uzzell<lb/>
sings, it was enough to<lb/>
make anyone that knows<lb/>
their history cry.<lb/>
1 am sick of the<lb/>
opinions about Rommy<lb/>
Redd and his lyrics. As I<lb/>
told Chris Farren (who so<lb/>
disgustingly reviewed the<lb/>
debut album), Tommy's<lb/>
lyrics "involve a no frills,<lb/>
natural approach to rela-<lb/>
tionships with women"<lb/>
and he has been asked to<lb/>
write for other popular<lb/>
artists. He is ,one of the<lb/>
most creative and imagina-<lb/>
tive people in music today.<lb/>
He can afford to dress any<lb/>
way he wishes.<lb/>
You also state that<lb/>
originality is not one of<lb/>
their best points-why do<lb/>
you think Epic signed<lb/>
them to begin with? It<lb/>
certainly wasn't just be-<lb/>
cause they were from<lb/>
North Carolina. They<lb/>
sound like no one else.<lb/>
Furthermore, at least two<lb/>
magazines this month-<lb/>
"Grooves" and "Hit<lb/>
Paraderhave great arti-<lb/>
cles on Nantucket, calling<lb/>
them "Epic's brightest<lb/>
new hope<lb/>
Take a look, consider,<lb/>
and compare; next time<lb/>
maybe you'll be ade-<lb/>
quately informed<lb/>
Debra Page<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
The East Carolinian" s<lb/>
article on and interview<lb/>
with Mother's Finest has<lb/>
prompted me to write this<lb/>
letter. I can not sit idlev<lb/>
by and read superlatives<lb/>
being tossed around about<lb/>
pure trash. Mother's<lb/>
Finest is just like Disco. It<lb/>
is too loud,overbearing tnd<lb/>
written by a bunch of no<lb/>
talent bums. The inter-<lb/>
viewer asked if Mother's<lb/>
Finest might end up like<lb/>
Emerson, Lake, and Pal-<lb/>
mer; "one album every<lb/>
two or three years?" No<lb/>
such luck!<lb/>
For one thing, ELP has<lb/>
had three albums in the<lb/>
last three years. Most<lb/>
important, Emerson, Lake,<lb/>
and Palmer is the world's<lb/>
most professional rock and<lb/>
roll band and that is one<lb/>
distinction that Mother's<lb/>
Finest will never hold.<lb/>
Ronnie Stallings<lb/>
Goolsby praises SGA<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
The student body of<lb/>
East Carolina University is<lb/>
super. Having been on the<lb/>
band staff at University of<lb/>
Notre Dame and the<lb/>
University of Georgia, I<lb/>
have, many times, been<lb/>
frustrated with apathy<lb/>
apparently resting with the<lb/>
students in regard to Band<lb/>
half-time shows. It is<lb/>
certainly different at ECU.<lb/>
Not only is the band a<lb/>
great deal better, but the<lb/>
audience (especially the<lb/>
students) response<lb/>
support makes all the time<lb/>
devoted worthwhile. The<lb/>
first time the students<lb/>
gave the band a standing<lb/>
ovation, it did more for<lb/>
morale than any "pep<lb/>
talk" I could ever have<lb/>
given.<lb/>
This is my first year<lb/>
on the faculty and the<lb/>
support from my collea-<lb/>
gues in the School of<lb/>
Music, the Athletic<lb/>
Department, and the Uni-<lb/>
versity Administration has<lb/>
made for a very pleasant<lb/>
year. I especially would<lb/>
like to thank the Student<lb/>
Government Association,<lb/>
led by Mr. Brett Melvin<lb/>
for their support. All of us<lb/>
sincerely appreciated the<lb/>
Resolution passed by the<lb/>
SGA Legislature entitled:<lb/>
"Thanking the Marching<lb/>
Pirates During my first<lb/>
week in Greenville, Mr.<lb/>
Melvin came by my office<lb/>
to introduce himself, and<lb/>
on behalf of the students<lb/>
welcome me and offer<lb/>
support to the band.<lb/>
Melvin has held true to<lb/>
that assurance, and obvi-<lb/>
ously represented the stu-<lb/>
dent's true feelings.<lb/>
The Marching Pirates<lb/>
plan to continue to repre-<lb/>
sent East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity as best as we possibly<lb/>
can, and look forward to<lb/>
an even better season next<lb/>
year. Thank you all.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Tom Coolsbv<lb/>
Director, Marching Pirates<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
MANAGING EDITOR<lb/>
Richard Green<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER<lb/>
Anita Lancaster<lb/>
NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
A88T. NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
FEATURES EDITOR<lb/>
ASST. FEATURES EDITOR<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Marc Barnes<lb/>
DIRECTOR OF ADVERTISING<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim<lb/>
ASST. DIRECTOR OF ADVERTISING<lb/>
Terry Herndon<lb/>
ASSISTANT TO THE EDITOR<lb/>
Cheryl Holder<lb/>
BUSINESS MANAGER<lb/>
Steve O'Geary<lb/>
Karen Wendt<lb/>
Terry Gray<lb/>
Bill Jones<lb/>
K.C. Needham<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
ASST. SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
COPY EDITOR<lb/>
AD TECH. SUPER.<lb/>
Charles Chandler<lb/>
Jimmy Dupree<lb/>
Diane Henderson<lb/>
Paul Uncke<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN Is the student<lb/>
newspaper ef East Carolina University<lb/>
sponsored by the Media Board of ECU<lb/>
and Is distributed each Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during the<lb/>
weekly durlno the summer.<lb/>
Offices f located on the<lb/>
the Publications Center Old South<lb/>
Building. Our mailing address Is- Old<lb/>
South Building, ECU, Greenville, NC<lb/>
27SS4.<lb/>
The phone<lb/>
?re: 7S7-S3BS, 6367,<lb/>
?? S18 annually,<lb/>
-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057237_0005"/><lb/>
Carter<lb/>
lauds<lb/>
efforts<lb/>
By BROOKS JACKSON<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
w shi(;ton ap-<lb/>
President Carter Monday<lb/>
enthusiastically endorsed a<lb/>
national effort to reduce<lb/>
world hunger over the<lb/>
next two decades.<lb/>
Carter spoke as he<lb/>
officially accepted a presi-<lb/>
dential com mission report<lb/>
trt.it said a global food<lb/>
crisis, worse than present<lb/>
energ) woes, is likely in<lb/>
iho nexl 20 years unless<lb/>
the I nited States and<lb/>
other nations take bold<lb/>
action<lb/>
"This i an opportunity<lb/>
for our nation to embark<lb/>
upon a long-range, excit-<lb/>
challenging, princi-<lb/>
pled effort to alleviate the<lb/>
problem of world hunger<lb/>
over the next two de-<lb/>
cades the president<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Hi predicted "a recep-<lb/>
tive American response as<lb/>
an educational program is<lb/>
pursued to explain the<lb/>
hunger problem.<lb/>
The report said the<lb/>
hunger problem is getting<lb/>
worse instead of better.<lb/>
and that correcting it will<lb/>
require rare political cour-<lb/>
age in the I nited States<lb/>
and elsewhere to correct<lb/>
underlying social and poli-<lb/>
tical problems.<lb/>
Even after three<lb/>
straight years ol good<lb/>
harvests, hunger around<lb/>
the world is -till growing,<lb/>
the panel said, and called<lb/>
the Cambodian famine but<lb/>
a vivid reminder of the<lb/>
larger problem.<lb/>
Th commission, head-<lb/>
b) Carter's special<lb/>
Mideast peace envoy. Sol<lb/>
Lino wits, said. Even<lb/>
ailer three years oC<lb/>
successive good harvests,<lb/>
the world food situation is<lb/>
still precarious<lb/>
State authorities to investigate<lb/>
11 December 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Page 5<lb/>
ECU student has legal woes<lb/>
ECU petitioner<lb/>
(Photo by Pete Podeszwa)<lb/>
By TERRY GRAY<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
When she started cut-<lb/>
ting people's hair in her<lb/>
room at Umstead dormi-<lb/>
tory, Marlene Young never<lb/>
thought that anyone would<lb/>
get upset about it.<lb/>
However, someone is<lb/>
complaining to the author-<lb/>
ities. And what at first<lb/>
seemed like a simple way<lb/>
to earn a few extra dollars<lb/>
is now threatening to<lb/>
square off into a con-<lb/>
frontation over Marlena's<lb/>
constitutional rights.<lb/>
It's not that the ECU<lb/>
sophomore isn't qualified<lb/>
to cut hair; Marlene said<lb/>
she went through 1200<lb/>
hours of instruction at<lb/>
Troutman's College of<lb/>
Hairstyling in Raleigh to<lb/>
get her license. She then<lb/>
worked for three salons in<lb/>
Raleigh before coming to<lb/>
East Carolina University in<lb/>
September, 1979.<lb/>
The problem is that<lb/>
ECU is a coeducational<lb/>
institution. If it were an<lb/>
all-female school, Marlena<lb/>
wouldn't be breaking the<lb/>
law by her part-time work.<lb/>
A phone call in early<lb/>
November started the<lb/>
trouble. Marlene had been<lb/>
advertising her hair-cut-<lb/>
ting service by index cards<lb/>
placed on campus bulletin<lb/>
boards, and someone call-<lb/>
ed her to say what she<lb/>
was doing was illegal.<lb/>
"They said that it was<lb/>
against the law and that I<lb/>
should stop before 'some-<lb/>
body does something a-<lb/>
bout it she said.<lb/>
The caller identified<lb/>
himself as a Mr. Boyd, of<lb/>
Boyd's Barber and Hair<lb/>
Styling in Greenville, ac-<lb/>
cording to Marlena. When<lb/>
Melvin Boyd, Sr. was<lb/>
asked later about this, he<lb/>
stated that no one in his<lb/>
shop had made such a<lb/>
call.<lb/>
"We didn't do that.<lb/>
Whoever it was was using<lb/>
our name said Boyd.<lb/>
"But if she's cutting hair<lb/>
over there, it's against the<lb/>
law to do that in this state.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
N.C. No. 3 1 Nightclub<lb/>
Wed. SUGAR<lb/>
Thur.<lb/>
6th ANNUAL<lb/>
BRICESTREET<lb/>
HRISTMAS PARTY<lb/>
Over $500 in Door<lb/>
Prizes Including a<lb/>
FREEtro trip to<lb/>
Atlanta<lb/>
? 79 5<lb/>
Tues. 18<lb/>
DUSTY RUFF<lb/>
Thurs. 20 RULL<lb/>
WAnother $500 Giveaway<lb/>
with a FREE Trip to<lb/>
Busch Gardens<lb/>
Fri.RRICESTREET<lb/>
at. PEDESTRIAN<lb/>
Sun.JERRY THOMAS<lb/>
Fri. 21 Columbia<lb/>
Recording Artists<lb/>
THE AMAZING<lb/>
RHYTHM ACES<lb/>
Sat. 22<lb/>
THE<lb/>
Adelphi<lb/>
Recordist<lb/>
X?i3<lb/>
V<lb/>
cse1<lb/>
Xtf<lb/>
X6M<lb/>
Wendover &amp; Carnegie Place<lb/>
Greensboro, NC 27409<lb/>
919-852-3775<lb/>
Other locations: 1Qam 6pm Sat.<lb/>
Boone, NC r<lb/>
TpmtllSpmSun.<lb/>
10am til 9pm Mon. - Fri.<lb/>
For one thing, you have to<lb/>
have rooms at least 14 feet<lb/>
wide with running water<lb/>
and bathrooms to operate<lb/>
a barber shop<lb/>
A few days later, on<lb/>
Nov. 8, Marlena said she<lb/>
received a letter from the<lb/>
North Carolina Board of<lb/>
Barber Examiners. The<lb/>
letter stated that she was<lb/>
I "in violation of the law<lb/>
and should discontinue the<lb/>
practice upon receipt of<lb/>
this letter<lb/>
By now, Marlena had<lb/>
taken down all of her<lb/>
advertisements on the<lb/>
advice of Dr. David B.<lb/>
Stevens, the university<lb/>
attorney at ECU, since<lb/>
advertising private ser-<lb/>
vices violates the solici-<lb/>
tation policy at ECU.<lb/>
"I can understand the<lb/>
policy because they<lb/>
wouldn't want the bulletin<lb/>
boards filled up all the<lb/>
time said Marlena, "but<lb/>
no secretary every called<lb/>
from downtown to com-<lb/>
plain about students who<lb/>
advertise for typing<lb/>
Dr. btevens, who had<lb/>
looked at the state laws<lb/>
regulating private business<lb/>
on public property, said<lb/>
that "solicitation for a<lb/>
business is illegal, but<lb/>
students are exempt if<lb/>
they don't advertise<lb/>
So Marlena kept cut-<lb/>
ting hair.<lb/>
However, when the<lb/>
people at the N.C. Board<lb/>
of Barber Examiners were<lb/>
contacted, they said that<lb/>
the 1979 state legislature<lb/>
had changed a previous<lb/>
law that allowed students<lb/>
to practice barbering, add-<lb/>
ing that Marlena was in<lb/>
violation of the law.<lb/>
Marlena replied to the<lb/>
charge, saying that "first<lb/>
of all, I've been falsely<lb/>
accused because I never<lb/>
advertised to do barbering<lb/>
services ? I'm a cosme-<lb/>
tologist, and barbering<lb/>
and cosmetology are two<lb/>
different things<lb/>
The law agrees on this<lb/>
point, since the regula-<lb/>
tions concerning the two<lb/>
occupations are separate.<lb/>
But when Catherine Munn<lb/>
of the N.C. Board of<lb/>
Cosmetology Art was con-<lb/>
tacted, she said that<lb/>
Marlena was indeed in<lb/>
violation of the law, but on<lb/>
entirely different grounds<lb/>
than those given by the<lb/>
N.C. Board of Barber<lb/>
Examiners.<lb/>
Munn quoted a North<lb/>
Carolina general statute<lb/>
which states that only<lb/>
students who attend<lb/>
"female institutions of<lb/>
learning, who defray the<lb/>
cost  of such attendance<lb/>
by the occasional practice<lb/>
of cosmetology art" may<lb/>
cut hair.<lb/>
The penalty for viola-<lb/>
tion is a maximum fine ol<lb/>
$100 and up to 30 days in<lb/>
jail. Where it applies, the<lb/>
person's license may also<lb/>
be revoked.<lb/>
Mrs. Munn added that<lb/>
she had also received a<lb/>
complaint about Marlena<lb/>
recently, and the board<lb/>
would have to investigate<lb/>
See HAIRCUT, page 6<lb/>
The world is waiting.<lb/>
If you've got talent, we want to see it. And then<lb/>
we'll let you show it to the world at The Old Country<lb/>
Busch Gardens, in Williamsburg, Va.<lb/>
During our 1980 Audition Tour we'll be looking for<lb/>
more singers, dancers, musicians, costume charac-<lb/>
ters, mimes, jugglers, puppeteers and light and<lb/>
sound technicians than ever before<lb/>
Show off your talent to thousands of visitors<lb/>
daily in one of seven stage productions or six<lb/>
"street shows" in our unique European theme<lb/>
setting. And with the addition of our brand new<lb/>
country, Italy, our world just got bigger. And so<lb/>
did yours.<lb/>
You'll work with other outstanding talents and<lb/>
earn a good salary while you're at it.<lb/>
So get your act together and show it to us<lb/>
Audition dete: Ti?<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina -Sl<lb/>
Fri. Jan. 11,1-5 p.m.<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
A J. Fletcher Recital Hall<lb/>
Then get ready to show it to the world.<lb/>
Accompanist, record player and cassette recorder will be available<lb/>
An equal opportunity employer MFH<lb/>
Jlpp&amp;'locotids<lb/>
208 EAST 5th SI<lb/>
"Home of the Discount Top 100"<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C. 27834<lb/>
PHONE 758 1427<lb/>
-Jhe<lb/>
Country<lb/>
lAwwu wAtUbtmaA ECU<lb/>
The Staff at Apple<lb/>
Records would like to<lb/>
wish all of you hard work-<lb/>
ing students a most enoy?-<lb/>
able Christmas Holiday<lb/>
vacation. We would also<lb/>
like to express our sincere<lb/>
appreciation for your<lb/>
continued support in<lb/>
these times of inflation<lb/>
and uncertainty.<lb/>
aso w hih r - s 9 G?<lb/>
NEW YEAR! y g- ? <lb/>
Wed. Dec. 12th Carolina Opry House proudly Presents In concert<lb/>
DOC WATSON<lb/>
Also Plum Hollow<lb/>
Two shows 7:00 pm &amp; 10:00 Ppm. for advance ticket information<lb/>
call 758-3943 only 450 people admitted for each show<lb/>
Student tickets available at door for $4.00 with student I.D.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057237_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 11 December 1979<lb/>
EXAM SCHEDULE<lb/>
Times Class<lb/>
Regularly Meets<lb/>
Time and Day of Examination<lb/>
8:00<lb/>
8:00<lb/>
9:00<lb/>
9:00<lb/>
10:00<lb/>
10:00<lb/>
11:00<lb/>
11 :00<lb/>
12:00<lb/>
12:00<lb/>
1:00<lb/>
1:00<lb/>
2:00<lb/>
2:00<lb/>
3:00<lb/>
3:00<lb/>
4:00<lb/>
4:00<lb/>
MWF<lb/>
TTh<lb/>
MWF<lb/>
TTh<lb/>
MWF<lb/>
TTh<lb/>
MWF<lb/>
TTh<lb/>
MWF<lb/>
TTh<lb/>
MWF<lb/>
TTh<lb/>
MWF<lb/>
TTh<lb/>
MWF<lb/>
TTh<lb/>
MWF<lb/>
TTh<lb/>
11:00- 1:00,<lb/>
11:00- 1:00,<lb/>
11 :00- 1:00,<lb/>
11:00- 1:00,<lb/>
2:00- 4:00,<lb/>
2:00- 4:00,<lb/>
2:00- 4:00,<lb/>
2:00- 4:00,<lb/>
2:00- 4:00,<lb/>
2:00- 4:00,<lb/>
8:00-10:00,<lb/>
8:00-10:00,<lb/>
8:00-10:00,<lb/>
8:00-10:00,<lb/>
8:00-10:00,<lb/>
8:00-10:00,<lb/>
11:00- 1:00,<lb/>
11:00- 1 :00,<lb/>
Monday, December 17<lb/>
Tuesday, December 18<lb/>
Wednesday, December 19<lb/>
Thursday, December 13<lb/>
Thursday, December 13<lb/>
Friday, December 14<lb/>
Monday, December 17<lb/>
Tuesday, December 18<lb/>
Wednesday, December 19<lb/>
Thursday, December 20<lb/>
Thursday, December 13<lb/>
Friday, December 14<lb/>
Monday, December 17<lb/>
Tuesday, December 18<lb/>
Wednesday, December 19<lb/>
Thursday, December 20<lb/>
Thursday, December 13<lb/>
Friday, December 14<lb/>
HAIRCUT<lb/>
<lb/>
continued from page 5<lb/>
the matter. She would not<lb/>
say who had filed the<lb/>
complaint.<lb/>
Charles McLawhorn,<lb/>
an ECU attorney who<lb/>
often counsels students on<lb/>
their legal rights, thinks<lb/>
that such a law may be in<lb/>
violation of the consti-<lb/>
tutional right of equal<lb/>
protection as outlined in<lb/>
Amendment 14.<lb/>
"If they can proscecute<lb/>
her for something that<lb/>
SANTA<lb/>
would otherwise be legal<lb/>
at a girl's school, then it is<lb/>
clearly discriminatory he<lb/>
said. McLawhorn added<lb/>
that the 14th amendment<lb/>
guaranteed that all citizens<lb/>
be treated equally for the<lb/>
same crime.<lb/>
Marlene is still cutting<lb/>
hair.<lb/>
"I went all the way<lb/>
through cosmetology<lb/>
school and a special<lb/>
haircutting school, and I'm<lb/>
not going to throw it all<lb/>
away for some silly law<lb/>
that I don't believe in. I'm<lb/>
not going to conform<lb/>
she said. <lb/>
TR 4NSIT<lb/>
continued from page 1<lb/>
mine the most efficient<lb/>
use of the buses.<lb/>
Fleming stated that<lb/>
such a survey would be<lb/>
done after Christmas<lb/>
break.<lb/>
For the present, Flem-<lb/>
ing pointed out that he is<lb/>
helping to cut maintenance<lb/>
costs by purchasing some<lb/>
replacement parts for the<lb/>
buses from a local auto<lb/>
parts dealer instead of<lb/>
paying the higher costs at<lb/>
Hastings Ford.<lb/>
"For example, Hast-<lb/>
ings would have charged<lb/>
us $6.60 a gallon for<lb/>
antifreeze, but I got ?<lb/>
across the street for <lb/>
he<lb/>
Fleming<lb/>
12<lb/>
th.t the' buses require<lb/>
gallons of ?nti-freeeG<lb/>
Haley said that Green<lb/>
viUe officials expect com-<lb/>
riocateon 14.H<lb/>
Street, in late 1980<lb/>
continued from page 1<lb/>
GOOD LUCK!<lb/>
one customer came up and<lb/>
slapped Santa on the face.<lb/>
One of Clements' employ-<lb/>
ees who was working in<lb/>
front witnessed the inci-<lb/>
dent and almost started to<lb/>
cry.<lb/>
"I think it is sad<lb/>
Clements said. "Someone<lb/>
slapped old Santa Claus,<lb/>
man ? is nothing sacred<lb/>
anymore?"<lb/>
"We were just trying<lb/>
to be in the Christmas<lb/>
spirit Clements said.<lb/>
"That's really in the<lb/>
Christmas spirit, man ?<lb/>
to slap Santa Claus<lb/>
"It was really neat,<lb/>
until this happened<lb/>
Clements said.<lb/>
"I am just looking to<lb/>
get the things returned ?<lb/>
I am just looking to get<lb/>
them back Clements<lb/>
said.<lb/>
PETITION<lb/>
continued from page 1<lb/>
know what he wants me to<lb/>
do about Cambodia. I<lb/>
didn't create it<lb/>
According to a recent<lb/>
news release, the Save the<lb/>
Children Foundation is<lb/>
now caring for 100,000<lb/>
refugees. OXFAM inter-<lb/>
national has shipped more<lb/>
than 6,000 tons of food to<lb/>
the refugees and is in the<lb/>
process of sending more.<lb/>
At this point, there are<lb/>
ten deaths to every birth<lb/>
Children under the age<lb/>
of four may never recover<lb/>
from possible brain dam-<lb/>
age and bone deformation<lb/>
caused by lengthy periods<lb/>
' without food.<lb/>
In some places, people<lb/>
are eating the seedlings<lb/>
out for the fields, which<lb/>
will create future problems<lb/>
for the refugees if not<lb/>
enough food is growing to<lb/>
feed the people in the<lb/>
future.<lb/>
Carson pointed out that<lb/>
aid for survival is not<lb/>
enough. There must be<lb/>
increased amounts of food,<lb/>
or malnutrition will still be<lb/>
prevalent.<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
i?T CAROUMA UWVBKITT<lb/>
Arse's Brt? l3et?,i<lb/>
109 E. Arlington Blvd. Greenvdle N. U<lb/>
756-1744<lb/>
rwrvrarorwipni<lb/>
??<lb/>
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? Backpacks, B-15, Bomber <lb/>
?Field, Deck, Flight. Snorkel J<lb/>
? Jackets, Peacoats, Parkas,<lb/>
t Shoes, Combat Boots.Plus <lb/>
? 1501 S. Evans Street <lb/>
rrTTT77i i ? ? tiiA.<lb/>
WM<lb/>
WE HAVE<lb/>
MOVED<lb/>
New Location<lb/>
WASH<lb/>
HOUSE<lb/>
hie. tosr.<lb/>
across froi<lb/>
KRlSpy KRtME<lb/>
DOAJOTS<lb/>
i 422<lb/>
Arlington<lb/>
Blv.<lb/>
(next toTaff's)<lb/>
AT BARRE<lb/>
LTD.<lb/>
"A FULL StfiVC? UlOM'ORY"<lb/>
. NtW MAYTAG VJAShCRS<lb/>
? Carpeted ?v. Ljith Color TV.<lb/>
.fluff a?va FOld Service<lb/>
.PiNteil machines<lb/>
.Excellent prok'hiomi dnjCkmiOc<lb/>
3 For Jingle Bells and g<lb/>
I Angels Music<lb/>
Boxes and Pyramids'<lb/>
and All Good<lb/>
Things for<lb/>
Christmas<lb/>
VISIT THE M<lb/>
MUSHROOM<lb/>
'V.V<lb/>
7<lb/>
f<lb/>
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Everything<lb/>
for your perfect<lb/>
. wedding.<lb/>
O<lb/>
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fr<lb/>
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Qfe, utih cVxi ti Soft CfrinfC<lb/>
wo - too diiflut ? ?r v 67?<lb/>
S Evans Mall<lb/>
WH<lb/>
e<lb/>
k<lb/>
WHAT CAN A<lb/>
DO FOR YOU<lb/>
? A Balanced Diet<lb/>
? Convenience-three locations<lb/>
? Many selections to choose from<lb/>
? Pleasant atmosphere<lb/>
?Budget your income<lb/>
? More free time<lb/>
?Three Programs-one to suit your needs<lb/>
THINK ABOUT IT<lb/>
Make reservations at the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office<lb/>
(50 spaces available)<lb/>
? Plane fare, hotel accommodations, tips<lb/>
flight meals and baggage handling<lb/>
are included in price.<lb/>
ft Alt students, faculty, staff,<lb/>
alumni and their families<lb/>
are welcome.<lb/>
Available in JONES CAFETERIA<lb/>
January 7, 8, 9th<lb/>
9:00 am- 5:00pm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Servomation Corporation<lb/>
?v?.i.v Student Union Travel Committee<lb/>
V<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057237_0007"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
man l<lb/>
features<lb/>
Tuesday, December 11, 1979 Page 7<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
The decade<lb/>
is nearly over<lb/>
By SAIL PETT<lb/>
AP Special Correspondent<lb/>
The decade is about over, and who is sorry? A new<lb/>
decade approaches, and who is optimistic?<lb/>
Clearly, these are not the best of times nor the worst<lb/>
of times. Mostly, the color is gray, a stubborn,<lb/>
frustrating gray we can't seem to shake. The trouble<lb/>
with our times, someone said, is ,hat the future isn't<lb/>
what it used to be.<lb/>
It used to be un-American to think that. Probably<lb/>
more than any other nation in historv, this one has been<lb/>
propelled by a sense of the future.<lb/>
For 300 years, with the possible exceptions of the<lb/>
Civil War and the Depression, we moved through good<lb/>
times and bad with a sense that things would get better.<lb/>
The next valley would be greener, the line on the graph<lb/>
would climb, problems would be solved, technology<lb/>
would save us, the right man would come along to lead<lb/>
us.<lb/>
But in the 'TO's. something new, something alien,<lb/>
crept into our psyche. We woke up one morning and<lb/>
didn't recognize ourselves or the world around us. We<lb/>
began telling the pollsters, for the first time, that the<lb/>
next five vears likely would be worse than the last five.<lb/>
We said that our lives have been better than our<lb/>
fathers1 but we don't expect our children's lives will be<lb/>
as good as ours.<lb/>
Among thinkers, the pessimists say this view is a<lb/>
malaise that goes with the downhill slope. Thinking<lb/>
optimists saj no: it is, a long last, a sign of national<lb/>
maturity. John W. Gardner, a thinker and a doer, says<lb/>
we have lost and will never regain our "morning<lb/>
eagerness and, he says, this is just as well. The facts<lb/>
of life, discovered by older nations long ago, are that the<lb/>
line on the graph cannot go forever up.<lb/>
In the last century, Toequeville, the acute French<lb/>
observer, found Americans to be totally convinced that<lb/>
"their whole destiny is in their hands Forty years ago,<lb/>
Henry Luce was proclaiming the start of "the American<lb/>
century Nothing so knocked hell out of either idea as<lb/>
the decade now ending.<lb/>
Buffalo chips fall in Alaska<lb/>
Folks are feuding<lb/>
Snow!<lb/>
With Christmas approaching, the desire for that fun,<lb/>
white stuff grows stronger. Perhaps next semester<lb/>
nature will favor us with a few days of snowball<lb/>
weather. (Photo by Kirk Kingsbury)<lb/>
By ROXINNE ERVASTI<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) - Folks up<lb/>
north in Buffalo Center and Delta Junction<lb/>
are butting heads over where the chips<lb/>
should fall.<lb/>
the bison have grown aecu- i to the<lb/>
noise, and to the helicopter id posses<lb/>
on horseback that have chased them.<lb/>
"It's nothing to see a herd of 100<lb/>
buffalo 50 to 60 feet from your front<lb/>
door says farmer Lee Spears. "VI hen<lb/>
you get up in the morning, you don't want<lb/>
That's chips as in buffalo chips, just to stagger out with your eyes closed<lb/>
Nun wins Nobel Prize<lb/>
one of the annoyances that have people<lb/>
feuding over their local bison herd.<lb/>
The bison are the ever-prospering<lb/>
descendants of a Montana bunch imported<lb/>
to the Fairbanks area in 1928 for the<lb/>
pleasure of big game hunters. To the<lb/>
people of Buffalo Center ? named for the<lb/>
huge beasts ? they are a joy.<lb/>
"They're fantastic animals says<lb/>
Greg Cooke, executive director for the<lb/>
Fish and Game boards. "They gallop,<lb/>
their baby calves in the spring are so<lb/>
graeious to look at, they're a sociable<lb/>
animal, motherly, pairing off, well,<lb/>
they're the romance and mystique of the<lb/>
last frontier<lb/>
But they are a plague to people in<lb/>
A few bison are lost each winter.<lb/>
clobbered by cars along the foggy Maska<lb/>
Highway, which is sort of a divider<lb/>
Farmers grow barley to the north of it.<lb/>
and the buffalo are supposed to stick to<lb/>
the south, where the Legislature this year<lb/>
set aside 72,000 acres as a buffalo<lb/>
preserve.<lb/>
The idea, as one legislator put it, was<lb/>
that "the state will plant barley and<lb/>
grasses for the buffalo at one place ?<lb/>
they won't eat the people's barley in<lb/>
another place The Legislature decide<lb/>
to give it a three-year chance.<lb/>
But Bob Palmer, who works in the<lb/>
governor's office and also heads the Delta<lb/>
Farming Project, says the Fish and Game<lb/>
Delta Junction, which has acres of barley people planted the buffalo barley too (<lb/>
thriving under the midnight sun and the to the people's barley. He told Gov. Ja<lb/>
care of a state-sponsored agriculture Hammond to halt the project.<lb/>
By PAUL CHUTKOW<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
See DtCADt, pe tt<lb/>
OSLO, Norway (AP) -<lb/>
The Norwegian Nobel<lb/>
Committee today delivered<lb/>
the 1979 Nobel Peace<lb/>
Prize to Mother Teresa of<lb/>
Calcutta, praising the Ro-<lb/>
man Catholic nun who has<lb/>
devoted her life to India's<lb/>
poor for her respect for<lb/>
the individuals she helps.<lb/>
In a speech prepared<lb/>
for delivery at the award<lb/>
ceremony in Oslo, the<lb/>
chairman of the commit-<lb/>
tee, Prof. John Sanness,<lb/>
Taid mmer-T&amp;vsr-msv<lb/>
served the prize "because<lb/>
she.promotes peace in the<lb/>
most lundamental manner<lb/>
? by her confirmation of<lb/>
human dignity<lb/>
The year's 10 other<lb/>
Nobel laureates, five of<lb/>
them Americans, were to<lb/>
receive their prizes today<lb/>
at a ceremony in Stock-<lb/>
holm.<lb/>
Recounting the 33<lb/>
years Mother Teresa has<lb/>
spent tending the poor and<lb/>
the sick in the sprawling<lb/>
slums of Calcutta, Sanness<lb/>
recalled she once said:<lb/>
"In these years of work<lb/>
being can experience<lb/>
"She believes San-<lb/>
ness said, "that the worst<lb/>
disease today is not<lb/>
leprosy or tuberculosis,<lb/>
but rather the feeling of<lb/>
being unwanted, uncared<lb/>
for and deserted by<lb/>
everybody.<lb/>
"The hallmark of her<lb/>
work has been respect for<lb/>
the individual and the<lb/>
individual's worth and<lb/>
dignity<lb/>
Sanness said the Yugo-<lb/>
slav nun, the sixth woman<lb/>
project. The bison periodically raid the<lb/>
barley fields.<lb/>
And then there are the chips. Says one<lb/>
resident:<lb/>
"Chips. Ha! They're something else.<lb/>
They call 'em Delta Frisbees. But they're<lb/>
People now accuse Palmer of "waging<lb/>
a hate campaign against bison<lb/>
"I like buffalo myself Palmer says<lb/>
"But this was enticing them to the<lb/>
fields<lb/>
In addition, soldiers from Fort Greeley<lb/>
more like giant chocolate drops, and they are to plant barley patches next spring<lb/>
freeze solid. Makes the road rough. One<lb/>
guy in charge of plowing the airport<lb/>
runway tells of almost being thrown<lb/>
through the window when he hit one of<lb/>
them chips. You curse the buffalo, but<lb/>
you love 'em.<lb/>
along a recognized buffalo migration<lb/>
route. Palmer says the state will pay the<lb/>
Army up to $30,000 for seed and fertilizer.<lb/>
Some say that's an attempt to thwart<lb/>
the buffalo range idea, spoil the<lb/>
three-year experiment and take over more<lb/>
The war between the two villages is, at land for barley.<lb/>
ajnoa0the people, I have . to win the Peace Prize,<lb/>
come more and mor$to shares the standard of<lb/>
' lattffiSl?r ?TrS?8Stng another Nobel laureate:<lb/>
unwanted that is the worst the "veneration of life" of<lb/>
disease that any human the late Albert Schweitzer.<lb/>
this stage, still a war of words. But Rep.<lb/>
Pappy Moss of Delta Junction warns with<lb/>
a smile, "We're keeping our powder<lb/>
dry<lb/>
The only shots fired in the battle have<lb/>
been automatic noise charges blasted over<lb/>
the fields every few minutes. Trouble is,<lb/>
'It disturbs us, it's like the old salami<lb/>
thing, one slice at a time and pretty oon<lb/>
you've just got the string left a-<lb/>
trapper Charlie Boyd, chairman of the<lb/>
Delta area Fish and Game Advisory<lb/>
Committed t f<lb/>
See FOLKS, page 10<lb/>
Dorm meals can be nutritious<lb/>
inexpensive and good-tasting<lb/>
Bv TERRY POLLOCK<lb/>
"and ED MOLNAR<lb/>
"It would take two<lb/>
hours to fix dinner in this<lb/>
room. Let's just run to<lb/>
McDonalds<lb/>
Surprise! You can pre-<lb/>
pare a meal that's good-<lb/>
tasting, inexpensive and<lb/>
even nutritious, right in<lb/>
your dorm room, and do it<lb/>
using a hotplate, toaster<lb/>
(Photo by Kirk Kingsbury)<lb/>
Fruit or any kind of food normally eaten at a meal are<lb/>
the suggested snacks from the Student Dietetic<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
CORRECTION<lb/>
In David Miller's<lb/>
article, The Sounds of<lb/>
the Seventies Revisited,<lb/>
which appeared in last<lb/>
Thursday's edition,<lb/>
Steve Hancock wished<lb/>
to include Lou Reed's<lb/>
Rock'n 'Roll Animal as a<lb/>
16th selection in his list<lb/>
of favorites.<lb/>
Animals used to aid sick<lb/>
By CHRIS ROBERTS<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
Walking in the moon-<lb/>
light one quiet night many<lb/>
years ago, the monk<lb/>
overheard the young tough<lb/>
? who wouldn't talk to<lb/>
the school psychiatrist ?<lb/>
pouring out his troubles to<lb/>
a Russian wolfhound.<lb/>
So, officials at Lincoln<lb/>
Hall, a home for wayward<lb/>
boys run by the Christian<lb/>
Brothers outside New York<lb/>
City, acquired some dogs<lb/>
to do what people<lb/>
couldn't.<lb/>
Today, dogs and other<lb/>
animals, from ants to alii<lb/>
gators, are being used<lb/>
extensively in the psycho-<lb/>
logical care of the emo-<lb/>
tionally disturbed, the<lb/>
mentally retarded, the old.<lb/>
"Whether it is a dog,<lb/>
eat, lizard or mouse, pets<lb/>
do not react to the color of<lb/>
a person's skin, his<lb/>
uncombed hair, his dirty<lb/>
clothes, or substandard<lb/>
speech says Dr. Boris<lb/>
M. Levinson, a psycho-<lb/>
logist and pioneer in the<lb/>
field.<lb/>
"A child who finds it<lb/>
most difficult to tell us<lb/>
how he feels about his<lb/>
dreams and relationships<lb/>
finds his tongue when he<lb/>
has to discuss his prob-<lb/>
lems with a dog Another<lb/>
pioneer, Dr. Samuel Cor-<lb/>
son, puts it this way: "A<lb/>
dog is a man's best friend<lb/>
because he wags his tail<lb/>
and not his tongue<lb/>
The results of pet<lb/>
psychotherapy, or pet-<lb/>
facilitated psychotherapy<lb/>
(PFP as" it is now some-<lb/>
times called), can be<lb/>
startling, if not completely<lb/>
understood.<lb/>
Take Jed, who in 1949<lb/>
was admitted to the Castle<lb/>
Nursing Home in Millers-<lb/>
burg, Ohio, after suffering<lb/>
apparent brain damage in<lb/>
a fall. Doctors believed the<lb/>
accident had left him deaf<lb/>
and mute. For years, he<lb/>
grew old in silence.<lb/>
Then in 1975, Corson,<lb/>
a psychiatry professor at<lb/>
Ohio State, took his<lb/>
"Feeling heart dogs" to<lb/>
the home. Corson says Jed<lb/>
stroked the fur of a dog<lb/>
named "Whiskey" and<lb/>
smiled. "You brought that<lb/>
dog the old man said.<lb/>
They were his first words<lb/>
in 26 years.<lb/>
"You can walk through<lb/>
a whole ward in some of<lb/>
these homes and they<lb/>
don't even know you're<lb/>
there" Corson says. "It's<lb/>
like walking through a<lb/>
See ANIMALS, page 8<lb/>
oven or whatever cooking<lb/>
equipment is available.<lb/>
Most people would<lb/>
agree that feeling great<lb/>
usually goes along with<lb/>
being healthy, and good<lb/>
food is basic to health.<lb/>
What we might really<lb/>
need to know is just what<lb/>
is meant by "good" food.<lb/>
A suitable definition<lb/>
might mention that a day's<lb/>
worth of chowing down<lb/>
should include the follow-<lb/>
ing: a wide variety of<lb/>
foods from the fruit,<lb/>
vegetable, milk, breat and<lb/>
meat groups. Making this<lb/>
variety part of one's diet is<lb/>
not as difficult as it<lb/>
sounds.<lb/>
A good day begins with<lb/>
a good breakfast. Eating a<lb/>
morsel is better than<lb/>
eating nothing until lunch.<lb/>
Breakfast does not<lb/>
have to be bacon and eggs<lb/>
or cereal. A cheese and<lb/>
tomato sandwich, peanut<lb/>
butter toast, a banana<lb/>
could do nicely. More<lb/>
traditionally, a bowl of<lb/>
oatmeal or cream of wheat<lb/>
(with milk, brown sugar)<lb/>
can usually be prepared<lb/>
and eaten quickly. Both<lb/>
are low-cost and provide<lb/>
essential nutrients like B<lb/>
vitamins.<lb/>
Lunchtime soups, sand-<lb/>
wiches and salads are<lb/>
easily prepared and even and, if put in a glass jar,<lb/>
faster if a little pre-plann- will remain fresh-tasting<lb/>
ing is involved. Tuna for about 2 weeks in the<lb/>
salad, made with canned icebox.<lb/>
tuna (drained), mayon- By now, it's time for<lb/>
naise, pickles and celery dinner. The real experi-<lb/>
can be stored in a covered ment begins.<lb/>
plastic container in the Julie Child says that in<lb/>
refrigerator. cooking, "you've got to<lb/>
Boil several eggs for have a what-the-hell atti-<lb/>
about 7 minutes, peel and tude<lb/>
refrigerate for munching You might begin by<lb/>
anytime. They're great stocking up on a few<lb/>
alone, seasoned, in salads staple foods that form the<lb/>
and even sliced into basis of many meals. High<lb/>
sandwiches. protein, low cost items<lb/>
Peanut butter sand- include canned tuna,<lb/>
wiches with a hand full of chicken, mild and medium<lb/>
raisins tossed in provide cheddar cheese, mozza-<lb/>
protein and iron. rella cheese, whole wheat<lb/>
Adding milk to canned macaroni,<lb/>
soups gives them more Cook the macaroni, and<lb/>
heartiness and nutrition, add shredded cheese and<lb/>
Remember that milk is a a little milk for a very<lb/>
good source of many filling dish,<lb/>
important nutrients at a Keep rice around to<lb/>
cost of about 15 cents per cook and combine with<lb/>
glass. chicken or tuna, onion and<lb/>
Some green pepper canned peas for a tasty<lb/>
sliced into a bean-based casserole,<lb/>
canned soup compliments Cheese added to any<lb/>
the flavor while boosting food enhances protein and<lb/>
the vitamin C content, calcium, not to mention<lb/>
Speaking of vitamin C, flavor,<lb/>
many people fail to get Other supper staples<lb/>
enough each day. Keep include canned vegetables<lb/>
orange juice handy or such as tomatoes (tastier,<lb/>
oranges themselves, which cheaper than the hot<lb/>
don't require refrigeration, house kind), lima, green<lb/>
Tomato juice is another<lb/>
good vitamin C source See MEALS, page 10<lb/>
Humor<lb/>
Welcome to Exam Week, peasants-<lb/>
May I begin by saying that it is rawther difficult to<lb/>
even be thinking in semi-humorous terms on the eve of<lb/>
exams.<lb/>
I've been sitting here, pondering the week in front of<lb/>
me and I realized that only someone with an extremely<lb/>
warped sense of humor can find anything amusing about<lb/>
exam week. The atmosphere of paranoia and panic u<lb/>
simply not conducive to a good laugh.<lb/>
So I guess I won't even try.<lb/>
I will however make a comment, just in passing, on<lb/>
the phenomena of the pre-reading day drunk. I pull one<lb/>
every year, and am heartily in favor of the practice. It's<lb/>
a nice way to relieve tensions (for a little while) and<lb/>
start exam week out with the degree of respect it so<lb/>
richly deserves.<lb/>
. At any rate, I'd like to point out that the Christmas<lb/>
holidays are thundering in on the veritable heels of<lb/>
exams and I, for one, am looking forward to that with a<lb/>
passion Saint Nicholas would have admired.<lb/>
I'll gain back every pound I lost while chewing<lb/>
No-Doze in an orgy of eating home-cooked food again.<lb/>
I'll drink an amazing amount of alcohol in an effort to<lb/>
wipe out the painful thoughts of grades and I'll sleep so<lb/>
much people will fear for my health. I'll watch TV until<lb/>
I'm blue in the face and will read all the trash novels I<lb/>
never have time for. I will, in short, live my allotted<lb/>
three weeks to their fullest.<lb/>
Which brings me back to the unfortunate realization<lb/>
that I'm not home free yet. Dammit.<lb/>
Anyway, let me go ahead and take this opportunity<lb/>
to wish the rest of you guys the best of luck on<lb/>
you-know-what and happy holidays too. Check you again<lb/>
Spring Semester for another round of Academia.<lb/>
So much for humor this week.<lb/>
Yours,<lb/>
775134<lb/>
LeAfWi htwr Colccgc -rwr ftau Wai<lb/>
5Y fiwip Mortis<lb/>
ShORT MM? MDI0<lb/>
twc (OMOsfHeaT, fao com<lb/>
LOrOG UMVt (Ufc? AM. MPrO)<lb/>
60CS THWOGH THf<lb/>
OUTCfc<lb/>
<lb/>
MiCr0 MftCflO rW.<lb/>
i I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057237_0008"/><lb/>
Page 8 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 11 December 1979<lb/>
AN I MA IS<lb/>
room lull ol stones.<lb/>
"Bui it you bring in i<lb/>
pet, the) brighten up. Vn<lb/>
inim ! offers a patient<lb/>
? . ittention and accep-<lb/>
r vvil hout ci iticism.<lb/>
I In reci nt<lb/>
studies i" show jusl how<lb/>
in institutions are us-<lb/>
as therapeutic<lb/>
n d u et ed a<lb/>
i 972 that<lb/>
he psveho-<lb/>
 irk state<lb/>
- Hie sort<lb/>
 Vnd<lb/>
vania a<lb/>
b the<lb/>
i for the<lb/>
Cruelt to<lb/>
the same<lb/>
to ilog,<lb/>
illigators,<lb/>
snaus<lb/>
.j eold<lb/>
am<lb/>
I  PFP<lb/>
I <lb/>
-<lb/>
I<lb/>
.1<lb/>
?' -<lb/>
. PFP<lb/>
th a big,<lb/>
?<lb/>
lias vritt<lb/>
subject<lb/>
nted<lb/>
Child Psychotherapy<lb/>
In his office, the<lb/>
goateed psychologist<lb/>
would introduce his young<lb/>
patients to Jingles. Then<lb/>
the youngsters would ask<lb/>
the dog to shake hands<lb/>
and dance, l.evinson says<lb/>
sometimes cookies were<lb/>
offered to the dog as an<lb/>
incentive.<lb/>
"One child said to me,<lb/>
T am also Jingles. I also<lb/>
want to dance" Levinson<lb/>
recalled in a paper pre<lb/>
sented to the American<lb/>
Psychological Association.<lb/>
"This chili! got down<lb/>
on his knees, started to<lb/>
hark like a dog, and asked<lb/>
me to give him a cookie.<lb/>
In great joy and glee, he<lb/>
then puked up the waste<lb/>
basket, scattered its con-<lb/>
tents, put it on his head<lb/>
ami started howling like a<lb/>
wolf.<lb/>
"This apparently re-<lb/>
lieved him and he went on<lb/>
with his pla as usual. He<lb/>
then said to me, "w hy<lb/>
. an'l you have two dogs<lb/>
and whj can't you take me<lb/>
as one of them?"<lb/>
"Interspersed with his<lb/>
request were questions<lb/>
about myself ? whether 1<lb/>
had a wife; how many<lb/>
children 1 had: how big<lb/>
they were<lb/>
"It was clear that the<lb/>
child wanted to become<lb/>
part of my family. It the<lb/>
human com lenient was<lb/>
full, the dog complement<lb/>
was not, and he would like<lb/>
to be considered, it a<lb/>
vacancy existed<lb/>
There arc some 740<lb/>
patients at the South<lb/>
Mountain Restoration Cen-<lb/>
ter near Waynesboro, Pa.<lb/>
They've come from state<lb/>
retardation centers or<lb/>
mental hospitals with a<lb/>
chance to return someday<lb/>
to life on the outside.<lb/>
Down the road is the<lb/>
Antietam Humane Society.<lb/>
managed by Ted Thomas,<lb/>
a 26-year-old sociology<lb/>
major and animal lover.<lb/>
Lately, he's been taking<lb/>
the shelter animals up to<lb/>
the center.<lb/>
"I'm not sure why it<lb/>
work but it 0 he<lb/>
says. "Even the quiet<lb/>
ones begin yapping with<lb/>
the dogs<lb/>
'Feeling heart dog<lb/>
? or "seeing heart<lb/>
dog as Levinson calls<lb/>
them ? have been lis-<lb/>
tening to kids' problems at<lb/>
Lincoln Hall, the school for<lb/>
wayward hoy for the last<lb/>
20 years.<lb/>
When Joe. a sullen<lb/>
13-vear-old, entered the<lb/>
continued from page 7<lb/>
990-acre facility 40 miles<lb/>
north of New York City, he<lb/>
was a hulk of hostility and<lb/>
silence. Three years later,<lb/>
according to school offi-<lb/>
cials, he was a well-<lb/>
adjusted, cooperative,<lb/>
above-average student.<lb/>
He attributed the<lb/>
change to a Labrador<lb/>
retriever named "Lucky<lb/>
one of three "social<lb/>
worker" dogs in his<lb/>
cottage.<lb/>
"Before Lincoln Hall,<lb/>
people meant a mother<lb/>
who deserted me, kids<lb/>
who hated other kids, cops<lb/>
who chased me, and<lb/>
judges who sentenced<lb/>
me Joe says.<lb/>
"Lucky needed me for<lb/>
food and affection ? the<lb/>
first thing that ever did<lb/>
classified<lb/>
tor ?<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: ROOMMATE WANTED:<lb/>
Support<lb/>
East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Advertisers<lb/>
FOR SALE: 27" 10 speed<lb/>
J&amp;B Cycles of Miami Book<lb/>
Carrier and car bike rack.<lb/>
$95. Call Lou at 758-9791.<lb/>
TOYOTA '71: Man new<lb/>
tires, 10 miles. Good<lb/>
condition. $700 firm.<lb/>
752-0787.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Used furniture<lb/>
used small appliances and<lb/>
other miscellaneous<lb/>
household items. Call<lb/>
756-5413.<lb/>
jtorwnt 8<lb/>
WANTED: Female desires<lb/>
to move in immediately<lb/>
with one or two females in<lb/>
an appartment or house<lb/>
close to campus. Call<lb/>
Janice at 758-2424 be-<lb/>
tween 3 and 6 p.m. or<lb/>
Debbie at 746-4704 be-<lb/>
tween 9 and 10:30 p.m.<lb/>
RESPONSIBLE FEMALE:<lb/>
To share 3-bedroom house<lb/>
Spring semester. Within<lb/>
walking distance of cam-<lb/>
pus. $75 rent and 3 of<lb/>
utilities. Need bedroom<lb/>
furniture. Call 758-2850.<lb/>
To live in large two-story<lb/>
country home located sev-<lb/>
en minutes from campus.<lb/>
Grad. Student andor<lb/>
working professional who<lb/>
enjoys privacy and saving<lb/>
money. Must be respon-<lb/>
sible adult who plans to be<lb/>
in area one year or more.<lb/>
For a talk 'call 758-3151<lb/>
(ext. 233) between 8-10<lb/>
a.m. or 2-5 p.m. After 5<lb/>
p.m. call 752-2791.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED: To share two<lb/>
bedroom duplex !75 per.<lb/>
mo. plus V2 utilities. Close<lb/>
to campus. Call 752-8621<lb/>
and leave a message.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED: Half of rent<lb/>
and utilities. Call 752-7616<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATES:<lb/>
Two needed to share<lb/>
3-bedroom trailer located<lb/>
about 2V2 miles from<lb/>
ECU. Call Bonnie at 758-<lb/>
5316 or collect at 793-4129.<lb/>
$50.00 per month three<lb/>
says plus V3 utilities.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE:<lb/>
Needed to share two-bed-<lb/>
room apt. at Tar River.<lb/>
Rent is $210 per month,<lb/>
split two ways, plus ' 2 of<lb/>
utilities. Call'756-6897.<lb/>
Young professor or pro-<lb/>
fessional. Dynamite new<lb/>
house in country. Must be<lb/>
cool must be house<lb/>
broken. $150 mo. plust ! 2<lb/>
utilities. Call 758-5590<lb/>
after 9 p.m.<lb/>
TWO ROOMMATES<lb/>
NEEDED: To occupy V<lb/>
bedroom house on Chest-<lb/>
nut St. IVi miles from<lb/>
campus. Rent and utilities<lb/>
and full house privledges<lb/>
$85 mo. Call Jodj at<lb/>
758-3524.<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT: Spa<lb/>
cious room for smoking<lb/>
female. Kitchen privileges.<lb/>
Across from Jari Dorm.<lb/>
$90 per. mo. 752-5528.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Two bedroom<lb/>
apt. available alter Dec. 20<lb/>
for sublease. Contact<lb/>
758-1019.<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT: Fur<lb/>
nished with private bath.<lb/>
no kitchen priviledges, 175<lb/>
per. mo. Call 758-2585.<lb/>
D<lb/>
TYPING DONE: Term<lb/>
papers, thesis, resumes,<lb/>
etc. Reasonable. Call Jane<lb/>
Pollock at 752-9719.<lb/>
NEED X-TRA CASH Ka.r<lb/>
prices paid for gold and<lb/>
-ilver and silver coins<lb/>
Mixed Media. 120 E. 5th<lb/>
St. 758-2127<lb/>
LOST: Gold bracelet with<lb/>
Nancj engraved on the<lb/>
front. It found please call<lb/>
752-8245 or come by room<lb/>
1 12 Jarvis. Reward!<lb/>
LOST: Leather checkbook<lb/>
between Fifth Si and<lb/>
Flanagan. Reward Offer<lb/>
ed. Contact Flip al<lb/>
181 <lb/>
HORSE RACK RIDING<lb/>
I)a or night, individuals<lb/>
or ' groups. rri-Countj<lb/>
Stables, Grimesland Call<lb/>
2-6893.<lb/>
I PING: R lial b and<lb/>
speedy tvpisl at reason-<lb/>
able rate Call 752-2724.<lb/>
GOOD DOG FREE 1 ? -<lb/>
person. Thomas. Prel<lb/>
female owner needs<lb/>
Call 756-6644 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
B RTENDERS KND<lb/>
 STRESSES NEEDED<lb/>
For new night club. 1<lb/>
daj for applications <lb/>
12th between 3 and 6 p.m<lb/>
at 10th St. Station, Ri<lb/>
Bluff Road. For more info,<lb/>
call 758-7912.<lb/>
,ML3<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO 12TH<lb/>
WEEK OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
$175.00 "all inclusive'<lb/>
? gnancy test birt?i control and<lb/>
problem pregnancy counseling Forj<lb/>
further intorn e 00 call 832-0535 (to<lb/>
free number 800-2?i-2568) between<lb/>
9AM-5PM weekdays<lb/>
Raleigh Women's Health<lb/>
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917 West Morgan St<lb/>
Raleigh. N.C. 27603<lb/>
roiMTSitJ<lb/>
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No taKe-outs please<lb/>
Meal Includes:<lb/>
French Fries, Cole iliw,<lb/>
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 We are proud to<lb/>
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Locate On Even<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised lt?m? Is required to be readily svallable for<lb/>
Mle In each Kroger Sav-on Store except as specifically noted In this<lb/>
ad If we do run out of an advertised Item, we will offer you your choice<lb/>
of a comparable Item, when available, reflecting the same aavlnga or a<lb/>
raincheck which will entitle you to purchase the advertised Item at the<lb/>
advertised price within 30 days.<lb/>
Priced<lb/>
From<lb/>
NONE SOLD<lb/>
TO<lb/>
DEALERS<lb/>
OPEN 7 AM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
OPEN SUNDA<lb/>
9AM TO 9 PM<lb/>
FOOD, DRUG, GENERAL<lb/>
MERCHANDISE STORES<lb/>
Prices Effective Tues<lb/>
Dec. 4, thru Sun Dec. 9, 1979<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
Phone 756-7031<lb/>
<pb facs="00057237_0009"/><lb/>
Watson's decade<lb/>
11 December 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Page 9<lb/>
music is<lb/>
unique<lb/>
One of the few cultural<lb/>
phenomenon this country<lb/>
can truly claim is the rich,<lb/>
unmistakeable tradition of<lb/>
the music of the South.<lb/>
The type of music tht has<lb/>
been built around the<lb/>
influences of artists like<lb/>
Doc Watson.<lb/>
The legendary Watson<lb/>
and son Merle aren't<lb/>
mere interpretersthey're<lb/>
the real thing. They<lb/>
continue to dedicate them-<lb/>
sleves to teh form that is<lb/>
as much a part of our<lb/>
heritage as baseball, the<lb/>
Grand Canyon and steam-<lb/>
boats on the Mississippi.<lb/>
They've been wrongly<lb/>
lung into different cate-<lb/>
gories at different times.<lb/>
Some have called them<lb/>
folk artists while others<lb/>
have confined them within<lb/>
the country boundaries.<lb/>
But, the Watsons are<lb/>
multi-talented, creating a<lb/>
spectrum of moods.<lb/>
With the coming of the<lb/>
'60's and the folk music<lb/>
boom. Doc became a<lb/>
favorite of the devout<lb/>
folkies' who cherished the<lb/>
pure, unamplified sound of<lb/>
the true Southern music.<lb/>
Doc was suddenly<lb/>
thrust into the forefront of<lb/>
a musical trend. The<lb/>
authenticity of his material<lb/>
ami performance was the<lb/>
key. The unique quality of<lb/>
both placed him among<lb/>
the leaders of his field.<lb/>
His subtle wit and warm<lb/>
personality charmed<lb/>
audiences, but his adept<lb/>
musicianship held them in<lb/>
a spell.<lb/>
Even now, as Doc and<lb/>
Merle tour the country,<lb/>
audiences get caught up in<lb/>
the mastery of Watson as<lb/>
he tells the tales of his<lb/>
time, of our time.<lb/>
Doc Watson will be<lb/>
appearing at the Carolina<lb/>
Opry House on Wed. Dec.<lb/>
12. at 7 and 10 p.m.<lb/>
continued from page 7<lb/>
Relentlessly, Vietnam shredded our omnipotence,<lb/>
and Watergate befouled our trust in government.<lb/>
Inflation picked our pockets without mercy, and abroad<lb/>
the mighty dollar staggered like a collapsing drunk<lb/>
chased bv a lynch mob.<lb/>
The oil shortage gave us our first shocking taste of<lb/>
limits and made our foreign policy hostage to foreigners.<lb/>
Miasmas like Guyana defied our very understanding of<lb/>
human nature. In the United Nations, which we started,<lb/>
we found ourselves pilloried and outnumbered.<lb/>
In Iran, for weeks, we found ourselves helpless to<lb/>
free Americans held captive in our embassy, this near<lb/>
the end of a decade which would not let go of violence<lb/>
to our pride and self-perception. . (<lb/>
In the middle of the decade, a brief shining hour, as<lb/>
telling for its warmth as for its brevity. July 4, 1976, and<lb/>
didn't it feel good feeling good again? Wasn't it nice<lb/>
that everybody behaved? Nobody marched in protest,<lb/>
nobodv raised'hell, nobody took a shot at the president,<lb/>
nothing desecrated the moment. On our 200th birthday,<lb/>
we were allowed a sense of family, for a day.<lb/>
The previous decade, the bloody, mind-rattling<lb/>
cacophony called the Ws, also had its shining hour<lb/>
when we and the world, with a breathless sense of<lb/>
community, watched men walk on the moon. We had<lb/>
parted the curtain of an eternal mystery, we had beaten<lb/>
the Russians, American technology had prevailed and<lb/>
there was a promise of mastering the universe. Except<lb/>
for our part down here.<lb/>
Like the golden hour of the' '70's, it was quickly<lb/>
forgotten in a parade of earthly miseries and recalled<lb/>
only be negative refrain: Why can't a country that could<lb/>
put' a man on the moon solve the problems of the cities,<lb/>
pollution, energy?<lb/>
Ironv, it seemed, had been built into the calendar.<lb/>
Late in 1959, Look Magazine took the public pulse and<lb/>
found that most Americans were "relaxed, unadventur-<lb/>
ous, comfortably satisfied with their way of life and<lb/>
blandlv optimistic about the future Their kids'<lb/>
opinions, Look said, mostly mirrored their own and there<lb/>
was no sign of a generation gap.<lb/>
Then came the '60's.<lb/>
On the third day of the '70's, Gallup published a poll<lb/>
in which Americans were asked whom they admired<lb/>
most in the whole world. Richard Nixon, they said,<lb/>
followed by Billy Graham and Spiro Agnew.<lb/>
It was a hard time for prophets.<lb/>
If you were middle-aged in the '70's, you belonged<lb/>
to a generation that was asked to absorb more change<lb/>
than probablv any in history.<lb/>
When we married, we married forever, we thought.<lb/>
Wives would be content to be wives and mothers, we<lb/>
thought. Our kids would do better emotionally than we<lb/>
did because we were better prepared to be parents than<lb/>
ours were.<lb/>
It was as if you built a house at the end of the<lb/>
railroad line, built it of brick and mortar and heavy<lb/>
timber, and suddenly the railroad wasn't running there<lb/>
anvmore.<lb/>
Suddenly, you couldn't find your children anymore or<lb/>
the road signs you grew up with or, for that matter, the<lb/>
Boston Braves. Suddenly, there was alienation, the new<lb/>
math, a new wrath, pot, acid and rock, and who<lb/>
remembered Tommy Dorsey? Suddenly, somewhere in<lb/>
the '70's, the youth uproar subsided and , it seemed,<lb/>
the kids might be coming home.<lb/>
But they weren't marrying and they weren t having<lb/>
children and the thing called the American way of life<lb/>
now had to include the fact that nearly half of our<lb/>
marriages were ending in divorce.<lb/>
Suddenly, the money you earned was not what you<lb/>
took home and what you took home was not what you<lb/>
kept and what you put in the bank on Tuesday was<lb/>
worth less on Thursday. ,<lb/>
Suddenly, while you're still looking for the Boston<lb/>
Braves-were they in Milwaukee or Atlanta??it turns out<lb/>
that baseball gloves now come from Taiwan, the big<lb/>
hotel downtown belongs to the Arabs, the Russians are<lb/>
buying up our grain, the British now own Gimbels and<lb/>
the West Germans and British have bought the<lb/>
birthplaces of two American presidents in old Virginia.<lb/>
We are told to take heart, that this kind of thing reflects<lb/>
the confidence of foreign investors in our stability, but<lb/>
who will keep the Grand Canyon out of Saudi hands?<lb/>
Suddenly, it seems, we are all aware of the disparate<lb/>
world, rich and poor, fat and hungry, which it alwasy<lb/>
was, except that now instant communications make the<lb/>
hungry instantly aware of the well-fed. A world divided<lb/>
by nations ending the 20th century and by nations just<lb/>
entering it. ? (<lb/>
Change, change. Nothing holds still. Yesterdays<lb/>
solutions become today's problems. "Modern society<lb/>
wrote columnist George Will, "is like a Calder mobile.<lb/>
Disturb it here and it jiggles over there<lb/>
The need for clean air collides with the need for coal.<lb/>
Black progress runs into white rights and the singular,<lb/>
frustrating combination of inflation and recession defies<lb/>
everything we learned in Economics 1.<lb/>
Welfare, we begin to see, may always be with us;<lb/>
government spending now accounts for more than a<lb/>
third of the gross national product in the mecca of free<lb/>
enterprise; Uncle Sam tries to bail out Chrysler, and in<lb/>
Detroit, where they still remember the bloody sit-down<lb/>
strikes, the union now holds a seat on the company's<lb/>
board of directors.<lb/>
"There is an almost overpowering temptation to<lb/>
believe says John Gardner, "that somewhere along<lb/>
the line we made on big mistake, forgot one truth,<lb/>
overlooked the one key to salvation.<lb/>
"We want a simple answerBut the pat formula will<lb/>
never appear. Many things are wrong. Many things<lb/>
must be done<lb/>
Students Allied for Victory In Iran<lb/>
Today<lb/>
Tomorrow<lb/>
America at Sit for SO<lb/>
r in silent protest<lb/>
Gunpoint<lb/>
The first in a series<lb/>
of lectures<lb/>
 on the campus mall<lb/>
rhe first in a series<lb/>
of lectures I 11 ?"? -4 p.m.<lb/>
8 p.m. Hendrix Theatre Please, no alcohol.<lb/>
The First<lb/>
Miss East Carolina<lb/>
University Pageant<lb/>
Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Tues. Jan. 22,1980, 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Girls must be sponsored<lb/>
by an E.C.U. organization<lb/>
If you would like to enter<lb/>
phone 752-5543<lb/>
or come by Kappa Sigma House<lb/>
700 E. 10th St.<lb/>
Deadline Jan. 15,1980<lb/>
Support<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
Advertisers<lb/>
The Cashmere<lb/>
V-Neck Pullover.<lb/>
Soft and sensuous, cashmere is the ultimate in<lb/>
elegance.<lb/>
Lord Jeff knits this highly coveted wool into<lb/>
a sweater of unmatched quality.<lb/>
Fully fashioned with saddle shoulders and<lb/>
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Yours in fashionably tasteful colors<lb/>
vwwmwR aaawarpwas<lb/>
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ADVERTISED<lb/>
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Each of these advertised items is re- <lb/>
quired to be readily available for sale at or <lb/>
below the advertised price In each A&amp;P I<lb/>
Store except as specificity noted In this <lb/>
ad.y<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE SAT DEC. 15 AT AAP IN GREENVILLE<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
SQUARE kML<lb/>
SHOPPING<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
VX<lb/>
ASP QUALITY CORN FED FRESH<lb/>
WHOLE OR RIB HALF<lb/>
PORK LOIN<lb/>
SSOKTE0 FMtuv P?G '<lb/>
PORK CHOPS<lb/>
10 lbs on, ? nQc<lb/>
OLD CAROLINA<lb/>
SLICED BACON<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF m<lb/>
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WITH THIS<lb/>
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GOOO THRU SAT DEC 15. AT AAP IN<lb/>
671 J<lb/>
GREENVILLEJ<lb/>
A&amp;P COUPON<lb/>
y<lb/>
CRISCO SHORTENING<lb/>
3 i-? tsAVI<lb/>
PURE VEGETABLE<lb/>
LMtlT OMC WITH<lb/>
THIS COUPON ANO<lb/>
AOOITIONAL $7.50 ORDER<lb/>
I<lb/>
LIMIT ONE COUPON<lb/>
SAVE 50c 672 j<lb/>
f?jLdBW GOOD THRU SAT. DEC 15. T A1P ppr r UUII C<lb/>
m<lb/>
0CLOC<lb/>
AAP COUPON<lb/>
J<lb/>
1<lb/>
CONTAINS RICH BRAZILIAN COFFEES<lb/>
EIGHT O' CLOCK<lb/>
$359<lb/>
INSTANT<lb/>
COFFEE<lb/>
SAVE 40c<lb/>
LIMIT ONE<lb/>
WITH COUPON<lb/>
LIMIT ONE COUPON<lb/>
OOOO THRU SAT DEC. 15, AT AAP If<lb/>
GREENVILLE-<lb/>
l<lb/>
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GREEN GIANT<lb/>
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? CREAM STYLE ? WHOLE KERNEL<lb/>
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CANS<lb/>
GREEN,GIANT<lb/>
SWEET PEAS<lb/>
VERY YOUNG TENDER<lb/>
17-OZ<lb/>
CANS<lb/>
ANN PAGE 2 LOWFAT<lb/>
Grade 'A' MILK<lb/>
Plastic Gallon ?-? QO<lb/>
good only in greenville<lb/>
ANN PAGE FROZEN<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
PEPPERONI<lb/>
SAUSAGE<lb/>
CHEESE<lb/>
1MZ.<lb/>
PKQ.<lb/>
WASHINGTON STATE<lb/>
RED OR GOLDEN DELrClOU<lb/>
APPLES<lb/>
I4?<lb/>
EXTRA<lb/>
FANCY<lb/>
FLORIDA GROWN SWEET JUICY<lb/>
TANGERINES<lb/>
OR ? ORANGES<lb/>
? TANGELOS<lb/>
OR<lb/>
,15??1<lb/>
EACH<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOU SAU<lb/>
MEN'S SHOP<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057237_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 11 December 1979<lb/>
Weekly Album Review Latest Releases<lb/>
By PAT MINCES<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
Pat Metheny Croup ? American Garage<lb/>
American Garage is the best jazz album of the year<lb/>
and rivals Journey Through The Secret Life of Plants as<lb/>
the best album of 1979.<lb/>
Five years ago a friend of mine from Boston raved<lb/>
about a young guitarist named Pat Metheny, whom he<lb/>
had heard in clubs, and this guy would get real ezcited.<lb/>
Buying Metheny's second album, Bright Size Life was a<lb/>
turning point in my musical growth for never had I<lb/>
heard anything so different and yet so damn good.<lb/>
Pat Metheny is one of the second generation of the<lb/>
new wave of jazz artists bringing music that is both<lb/>
aesthetically dynamic and yet has tremendous popular<lb/>
appeal.<lb/>
The Pat Metheny Croup is perhaps the finest band to<lb/>
come out of the "me generation" of the '70s. This band<lb/>
is the antagonist of such an ideal. These guys know how<lb/>
to give of themselves to achieve popular acclaim without<lb/>
giving too much and losing their dignity as a jazz<lb/>
medium.<lb/>
American Garage is not as good as last year's Pat<lb/>
Metheny album mainly because Lyle Mays uses more<lb/>
synthesizers than in his previous endeavor. It is still a<lb/>
superb album, with the Beatles' influence once again<lb/>
showing up in the title cut. You will probably hear a lot<lb/>
of this album on the commercial radio, which is great<lb/>
because radio needs a shot in the arm like Pat Metheny<lb/>
can give. If you have heard Pat Metheny, you have got<lb/>
to love him. If not, American Garage will bring him to<lb/>
you.<lb/>
The best!<lb/>
The Bar-Kays ? Injoy<lb/>
These guys are hot, and this album is a scorcher. If<lb/>
Michael Jackson's Off The Wall wasn't the finest black<lb/>
album on the charts, Injoy would certainly be the<lb/>
number one Soul release in the nation. It contains good<lb/>
funk, some excellent dance music (the word disco is out)<lb/>
and a few nice ballads.<lb/>
Maybe it is just me, but there seems to be a strong<lb/>
Clintonesque feel to the funk in this album, especially<lb/>
on the hit single "Move Your Boogie Body The<lb/>
percussion on Injoy is superb, and the horn and string<lb/>
arrangements are perhaps its distinguishing facets<lb/>
adding a subtle but dynamic support. The Bar-Kays are<lb/>
a relatively large group, and this allows for a wide<lb/>
ari of instruments and vocal harmonies.<lb/>
I really like "Running In And Out Of My Life and<lb/>
you gotta like Injoy.<lb/>
Frank Zappa ? Joe's Garage Acts II &amp; III<lb/>
Well, my house is pretty well secured, I have got a<lb/>
big dog, no children or wife and have hospital<lb/>
insurance, so I guess now I can say something bad<lb/>
about Frank Zappa, even though I love him with all my<lb/>
heart.<lb/>
This album really has very little to offer and perhaps<lb/>
should never have been released, especially in the<lb/>
double album format. If this is the kind of stuff Zappa<lb/>
Records is going to release  thanks, but no thanks.<lb/>
Frank Zappa is a musical genius, and perhaps the<lb/>
greatest composer of the last fifty years, but I think that<lb/>
perhaps he was preoccupied with his new movie "Baby<lb/>
Snakes which will open soon in New York.<lb/>
Joe's Garage, last summer's entry, was an excellent<lb/>
album which predicted the kind of catastrophe that<lb/>
happened last week at The Who concert in Cincinnati as<lb/>
one of the evils of music. Acts II &amp; III details further the<lb/>
story of poor old Joe and his terrible fate at the hands of<lb/>
the scourge of future mankind, music.<lb/>
Since not everyone is the same, legislators pass laws<lb/>
making almost anything illegal, and this process of<lb/>
"total criminalization" makes everyone crooks, just like<lb/>
former presidents and corporate executives.<lb/>
Joe goes to an appliantology disco where he picks up<lb/>
a Sy Borg, a machine like your very own toaster, with<lb/>
which to have sex.<lb/>
Joe's golden shower shorts out Sy Borg, and Joe is<lb/>
sent to prison for destroying public property. (The disco<lb/>
was owned by the government ? clever means of<lb/>
intrapment, heh?)<lb/>
Joe's life becomes a daily gang bang from corporate<lb/>
executives, and he carelessly dreams his life away with<lb/>
imaginary guitar solos. The same horros can happen to<lb/>
you if you fall prey to the demon music.<lb/>
Acts II &amp; III has a lot to say thematically but not so<lb/>
much musically. Frequently it just drones on, not<lb/>
seeming to go anywhere at all, and that may be the<lb/>
point, but I doubt it. Zappa's guitar playing is perhaps<lb/>
as grand as it has been on any album. The<lb/>
compositions, however, are not up to par with what<lb/>
Zappa usually produces and sometimes seem to flog the<lb/>
proverbial dead horse. The musicians are as good as<lb/>
ever, but perhaps Zappa should have saved their efforts<lb/>
for a more worthwhile endeavor.<lb/>
Pink Floyd - The Wall<lb/>
Saturday Night Fever will soon fall from the ranks of<lb/>
the top-selling albums so that there will not even be a<lb/>
rival to Pink Floyd's Dark Side Of The Moon for the<lb/>
longest current best-selling album (on the charts for an<lb/>
earth-shattering 287 weeks).<lb/>
Pink Floyd's follow-up to this tremendous album was<lb/>
dismal, and their latest endeavor, The Wall, is pretty<lb/>
weak. The boys from Cambridge just seem to have lost<lb/>
that spark of genius that propelled them to messianic<lb/>
proportions in the late '70s.<lb/>
The Wall is a very nice production package, but as<lb/>
always you cannot judge a book by its cover. If you buy<lb/>
the album, you can pull the sticker off the front, and it<lb/>
gives you a nice window sticker, which I think is a nifty<lb/>
idea.<lb/>
The album cover itself is" kind of freaky, and the<lb/>
concept behind the album, the walls which we build up<lb/>
between us, is also commendable. The music on the<lb/>
inside is mostly humdrum material that would put all<lb/>
but a diehard Pink Floyd fan to sleep.<lb/>
The album is dominated by electric and acoustic<lb/>
guitars. This is logical because only Roger Waters on<lb/>
bass and Dave Cilmour on guitar are left from the<lb/>
original foursome.<lb/>
The driving percussion and the special effects<lb/>
keyboards are gone, leaving only a spooky ghost where<lb/>
there was once a terrifying Nazgul.<lb/>
Roger Waters writes all the tunes, and bass players<lb/>
tend to write morose ditties. The Wall is made up of<lb/>
bricks. Once again, an epic effort that winds up<lb/>
crumudgeon of mediocrity.<lb/>
Ppfffllltt.<lb/>
The Inmates ? First Offence<lb/>
Man, these guys really do bite the big one. I was<lb/>
disappointed in this album. It has sold a lot in all the<lb/>
right places and came highly recommended from the<lb/>
guys at the record store. It was bad enough when The<lb/>
Knack got famous copying The Beatles, but these guys<lb/>
carry the joke a bit too far.<lb/>
This is the first generation of Stones' clones, because<lb/>
if this isn't an exact copy of the late sixties Stones, I will<lb/>
go out on a date with Ron Wood.<lb/>
This is enough to make me start "Fighting In The<lb/>
Streets To take what talent one has and prostitute it<lb/>
by cloning someone else's music is the ultimate sin. It is<lb/>
alright for a group at the Attic to do this, but how could<lb/>
a major recording company promote such balderdash? If<lb/>
you like the Stones, you might like The Inmates, but<lb/>
probably you will be appalled.<lb/>
It may be their First Offence, but I say call on the<lb/>
Ayatollah to admister some Islamic Justice on these<lb/>
criminals.<lb/>
Albums courtesy of The Record Bar, Carolina East<lb/>
Mall and Pitt Plaza, Greenville.<lb/>
Support<lb/>
East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Advertisers<lb/>
SAAD'S SHOE<lb/>
REPAIR<lb/>
113 Crande Ave.<lb/>
758 1228<lb/>
Quality Shoe Repair<lb/>
Clapton,<lb/>
The Who,<lb/>
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Beatles, Stones,<lb/>
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MEALS<lb/>
continued from page 7<lb/>
kidney beans and<lb/>
en and blackeyed peas.<lb/>
Canned versions of peas,<lb/>
whole keraal corn, loma<lb/>
s and beans can always<lb/>
added to lettuce, onion<lb/>
and carrots for a tasty<lb/>
salad.<lb/>
Canned goods store<lb/>
anywhere, and while fresh<lb/>
tables are best, few<lb/>
students can grow produce<lb/>
in their window sills.<lb/>
Onions and potatoes, hw-<lb/>
ever, keep well in their net<lb/>
- in a dry place.<lb/>
Onions are high in<lb/>
some trace minerals and<lb/>
certainly perk up many<lb/>
dishes. Sauteing (brown-<lb/>
ing in a little oil) makes<lb/>
them friendlier.<lb/>
Learn to eat potatoes<lb/>
with peels attached. Wash<lb/>
and slice or chop so they'll<lb/>
cook faster. Season them<lb/>
and top them with cheese.<lb/>
Experiment!<lb/>
Highly salted foods<lb/>
such as potato and corn<lb/>
chips, Cheetos, or snacks<lb/>
that are high in sugar<lb/>
content should be left out<lb/>
of your basic diet. They<lb/>
are expensive and un-<lb/>
healthy.<lb/>
Acceptable snacks are<lb/>
popcorn, dried or fresh<lb/>
fruit, oatmeal cookies,<lb/>
yogurt or anything that<lb/>
you might have at a meal.<lb/>
Beginning next semes-<lb/>
ter, the Student Dietetic-<lb/>
Association of ECU will<lb/>
have a "Dear Abby" type<lb/>
of column in The East.<lb/>
Carolinian. The SDA is lhe<lb/>
student organization for<lb/>
Foods, Nutrition and Insti-<lb/>
tution Management majors<lb/>
or anyone interested in<lb/>
nutrition.<lb/>
Drop your questions<lb/>
concerning food or nutri-<lb/>
tion off at The East<lb/>
Carolinian office in the<lb/>
publications building, care<lb/>
of the Features Editor.<lb/>
LMUwrMts<lb/>
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Parking in Front<lb/>
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Providing the best in recorded<lb/>
and live entertainment. Located<lb/>
above the Jolly Roger. Use the<lb/>
Reade Street entrance and<lb/>
avoid the downtown traffic.<lb/>
WE KEEP YOU IN STITCHES<lb/>
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AMERICAS FAVORITE PIZZA<lb/>
?<lb/>
FOLKS<lb/>
continued from page 7<lb/>
There have been suggestions that the buffalo be<lb/>
!ared "domestic" so they can be turned over to<lb/>
cattle ranchers who want to breed them for "beefalo<lb/>
But that seems an unlikely proposal.<lb/>
"id say 99 and 44-100ths percent of the people want<lb/>
them kept free ranging says Cooke. "They're<lb/>
extremely emotional about them. It's like people who<lb/>
went bananas over the buffalo and Indian head nickel<lb/>
Cooke says the buffalo amble up to softball fields,<lb/>
halting the game action as fans and players stand<lb/>
transfixed. "Where else do you find that?" he asks.<lb/>
"People tell all kinds of stories about them says<lb/>
game biologist Bob Larson. "Buiialo will fall down wells<lb/>
and the guys come along with wreckers and pull 'em<lb/>
out. My gosh, those bulls weigh a ton and they're the<lb/>
size of a Volkswagen<lb/>
Moss champions the buffalo in the Legislature but<lb/>
admits they have caused him problems.<lb/>
'Momma and I got a homestead on the west side of<lb/>
tne Delta River, and we stacked 20 tons of hay around<lb/>
the chicken house to keep the chickens from freezing.<lb/>
The darn buffalo came and ate it, kind of like the Three<lb/>
Little Pigs<lb/>
But, insists Moss, "The people will get rid of the<lb/>
politicians before they'll get rid of the buffalo<lb/>
PIZZA BUFFET<lb/>
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stitches you'll laugh and love it, every step of the way.<lb/>
Regatta $39.00<lb/>
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"WE MAKE SHOES.FOR WALKING<lb/>
The Boetery<lb/>
301 IVANS MALL,<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GRIINVILLI<lb/>
it<lb/>
"When Clara Barton started<lb/>
American Red Cross back in<lb/>
the 1880's. its big job was to<lb/>
aid people during major<lb/>
disaster.<lb/>
I<lb/>
'Over the years. Red Cross<lb/>
has taken on lots of other jobs<lb/>
 jobs right around home.<lb/>
"But never forget that right<lb/>
along with all these important<lb/>
neighborhood jobs. Red Cross's<lb/>
v itai national job has never<lb/>
changed.<lb/>
Thank you very much for your<lb/>
business in 1979<lb/>
MERRY CHRISTMAS<lb/>
and<lb/>
HAPPY<lb/>
NEW YEAR<lb/>
Keep Red Cross ready.<lb/>
U.B.E<lb/>
to all ECU students 6gAvillejSc<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057237_0011"/><lb/>
I'he Kasl (Carolinian<lb/>
sports<lb/>
Tuesday, December It, 1979 Page 11<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
ECU downs<lb/>
USC-Aiken<lb/>
by 96-64<lb/>
BVRLES (II NDLER<lb/>
Sports Editoi<lb/>
levision commercial states 'Thanks, I needed<lb/>
lasl night, East Carolina basketball coach<lb/>
rid basically the same thing to his players.<lb/>
Pirates gained a much-needed big win by<lb/>
- ,tl I arolina- Viken -64 as five ECU players<lb/>
louble figures. The win followed a 92-73 loss<lb/>
? 1 Duke, ending Odom's worries that the<lb/>
ight suffer an emotional letdown after facing<lb/>
.ht Blue Devils.<lb/>
? their history Odom said, referring to the<lb/>
Pirates seemed to have emotional lapses the<lb/>
seasons. "But I ran see that we are growing<lb/>
? rhis was a verj big win for us in that we<lb/>
keep up our intensity for almosl the full U)<lb/>
Pirates jumped off to a quick 34-19 lead in the<lb/>
the game, despite the fact that<lb/>
ge Maynor -at on the bench tor ten<lb/>
the Pirates' fast -tart was the shooting of<lb/>
, , right of those first 34 points.<lb/>
- never got closer than U<lb/>
ime, ECU came out somewhat<lb/>
? saw it- load dwindle to 13 at<lb/>
- pie dunk with 14:02 left. It was<lb/>
t1 the Pirates reestablished the<lb/>
been theirs in the first half. In the<lb/>
p Seiple's dunk, the) outscored the<lb/>
 ehind the shooting oi Herb Graj and<lb/>
lead reached a peak of 34 points with<lb/>
te left as George Maynor hauled in a pass<lb/>
. and calmly slid it behind his bark l a<lb/>
. Miles, who slammed it homo, much to<lb/>
the Minges Coliseum crowd, giving ECl a<lb/>
 Odom noted thai the comlortable<lb/>
i most of the game allowed<lb/>
, night ? semi-relaxation. " Uter<lb/>
. Said, "it was a pressure-free game.<lb/>
? hange<lb/>
Pirates1 59.7 accuracy from the field must<lb/>
so been a "welcome change" to the rookie coach,<lb/>
, the team ha- had several sub-par games<lb/>
shooting in a row.<lb/>
"We definitely shot well early, said Odom. It -<lb/>
really g1 to see (Herb) Krusen and (Kyle) Powers<lb/>
me out of their shooting slumps.<lb/>
Both saddled with problems for the last lhr?<lb/>
tnd Powers combined to connect on<lb/>
an the field last night.<lb/>
ird Herb Gray led Pirate scoring with 17 point<lb/>
ime-high 11 rebounds. Mso ?rum<lb/>
r EC1 was Krusen and Powers with<lb/>
( rwood I I and Mark McLaurin with<lb/>
.s than 11 Pirates played at least 17 minutes<lb/>
 piaye i any more than the 22 logged by<lb/>
finished the game with (our assists<lb/>
I all along that we have a lot of people who<lb/>
timed Odom. "And I'm very glad that<lb/>
s, e a good amount ol time tonight.<lb/>
Pirates, now V-2. face James Madison at 2 p.m.<lb/>
- turdav in Minges Coliseum and. says Odom. the game<lb/>
hard-fought one. "They will come in here<lb/>
:? he said. "They're just crushing p ople<lb/>
Following the Madison game, the Pirates will I si<lb/>
.erful Old Dominion next Tuesday night.<lb/>
Ed Emory<lb/>
New Pirate helmsman<lb/>
set to assume duties<lb/>
(Photo courtesy of Tommy Forrest)<lb/>
Nen football coach Ed Emory<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
After over a week of<lb/>
speculation and contro-<lb/>
versy surrounding the<lb/>
resignation of head foot-<lb/>
hall coach Pat Dye,<lb/>
Chancellor Thomas B.<lb/>
Brewer Saturday announc-<lb/>
ed the selection of former<lb/>
Georgia Tech assistant Ed<lb/>
Emory to fill the vacancy.<lb/>
Emory had served at<lb/>
Duke, Clemson and Wake<lb/>
Forest after a successful<lb/>
career in the high school<lb/>
ranks.<lb/>
The Lancaster, S.C.<lb/>
native compiled an 80-12-4<lb/>
record during stops at<lb/>
Grainger High in Kinston.<lb/>
Wadesboro and Bowman<lb/>
Highs in Wadesboro and<lb/>
Brevard High, as well as a<lb/>
92-10-2 mark in wrestling,<lb/>
72-10 in track and 38-6 in<lb/>
tennis.<lb/>
Emory is an alumnus<lb/>
of East Carolina and<lb/>
reportedly that weighed<lb/>
heavily in the final deci-<lb/>
sion between him and<lb/>
Pirate assistant Dick<lb/>
Kupec.<lb/>
"1 am delighted that<lb/>
our next coach is an ECU<lb/>
alumnus said Brewer in<lb/>
an address to the media<lb/>
and a gathering of Pirate<lb/>
staff and supporters.<lb/>
Quoting Chan Tlor<lb/>
Emeritus Leo W. Jenkins,<lb/>
Brewer stated, "Vv e will<lb/>
play anybody, anytime.<lb/>
anywhere but added his<lb/>
own corollary in support ol<lb/>
athletics by saying, "ve<lb/>
will WHIP anybody, any-<lb/>
where, anytime<lb/>
Emory attended Cam-<lb/>
den (S.C.) Military V a<lb/>
dem w here he ??? i -<lb/>
captain ol the football<lb/>
team tor two years and<lb/>
all-Southern i- a senior.<lb/>
- a collegiate, Emory<lb/>
was selected co-captain his<lb/>
senior year and won third<lb/>
team All- Amen an honors<lb/>
He w as all-conferem e<lb/>
three seasons, and was<lb/>
named the top lineman<lb/>
and top blocker twice<lb/>
Emory said that he<lb/>
plans to continue to use<lb/>
the wishbone attack which<lb/>
paved the way tor the 1979<lb/>
the<lb/>
I<lb/>
"Wh<lb/>
?<lb/>
Car<lb/>
the<lb/>
Easl <lb/>
plai<lb/>
"You've it to hv patient, Vftcr all<lb/>
I waited 20 years for a chance to ome<lb/>
back here a roach<lb/>
Kcl Enion<lb/>
Pirate- to be ranked first<lb/>
nationally in rushing<lb/>
fense, second in ti<lb/>
offense and third<lb/>
scoring ffense.<lb/>
"1 am an option fo<lb/>
ball coach Emon -<lb/>
"1 havi lion<lb/>
for 18-20 years n<lb/>
Emory ?1 it d that the<lb/>
reason Georgia rech<lb/>
switched from the wish-<lb/>
bone to the I-formation<lb/>
was that they did not ;<lb/>
h<lb/>
Now that he has be n named head coach ol the East<lb/>
Carolina football team. ex-Georgia Tech and Clemson<lb/>
assistanl Ed Emory finds himsell under the microscope.<lb/>
This doesn't bother him in the least, though.<lb/>
"It a helluva challenge Emory said, "but that s<lb/>
to be expected Fhe I960 EC! graduate pointed to the<lb/>
fact that the Pirates would lose man) players to<lb/>
graduation before next season, that the 1980 schedule<lb/>
was very tough and that due to the resignation oi<lb/>
ex-head man Pat Dye the school was behind as tar as<lb/>
recruiting is concerned.<lb/>
"Combine all that and you've got some work to do, '<lb/>
said the Lancaster, S.C. native<lb/>
One of the first matter- ol work tor Emon is<lb/>
assembling a staff and getting them on the recruiting<lb/>
ra,l n s in the process now ol interviewing and<lb/>
narrowing down candidates for assistant coaching<lb/>
positions as qui kly is possible, in hope- ol salvaging<lb/>
some -on ol recruiting success.<lb/>
Emory is very serious about recruiting, an area that<lb/>
he i- known to be successful in, and is in a hum to<lb/>
secure some top notch pro-pert<lb/>
"Because he said "great prospects are like<lb/>
?eautiful women ? if you ignore them somebody else<lb/>
will get them<lb/>
For this reason, Emory is planning a tug recruiting<lb/>
extravaganza this weekend, with anywhere from 15 to 20<lb/>
high school player- expected to come to Greenville.<lb/>
The appointment of the robust Emory as Pirate head<lb/>
coach mark- the end ol a long road. "I've used every<lb/>
Freshman Denkler stars<lb/>
Emory ft<lb/>
-<lb/>
r<lb/>
?-7<lb/>
iL<lb/>
sV<lb/>
X<lb/>
?mm<lb/>
.31<lb/>
SL<lb/>
ULJ<lb/>
experience I've had for the opportunity to come back<lb/>
he said. It's the greatest thrill of my hfe to be able to<lb/>
corae back to my alma mater a, head football coach.<lb/>
"I've always dreamed of it he continued. 1 ve<lb/>
tried to prepare myself tor the time when something like<lb/>
this might happen: 1 -till haven't come off of the cloud<lb/>
etWhat kmd of coach will Emory be? To find that out<lb/>
OIU. should know first what kind of man he is,<lb/>
?Tm a tierce competitor he said. "I'm a tighter, a<lb/>
scrapper. Whether it be playing, recruiting or coaching<lb/>
I've always thought that vou should get after em.<lb/>
V, expect togsee a hustling bunch of Pirates when<lb/>
they take the field next season; that is, they take after<lb/>
their each. And, Emory says, that shouldn t be a<lb/>
problem.<lb/>
"I've always felt like the<lb/>
given me all they've had he i<lb/>
plaved inspired football. 1<lb/>
instil! tl ?? - ii ie type<lb/>
Emon says that h<lb/>
alw iv- like- ' <lb/>
explained, "is to know <lb/>
At least then you're one<lb/>
-land.<lb/>
 here Emory stands i I<lb/>
the head football at a un - -<lb/>
program i- blessed with a<lb/>
tall bet ause of the respect that<lb/>
of hi- present and former colh<lb/>
"I guess you'd say he a<lb/>
m recruiting says ECl Cl<lb/>
"I've had many assistants I<lb/>
coaches -aid Georgia Tech head co<lb/>
Emory's boss last season, "and <lb/>
as any ol them.<lb/>
- far a- any pressure that he m<lb/>
these compliment- and the expe<lb/>
who are accustomed to winning<lb/>
there i none.<lb/>
"I don't think I'll feel at<lb/>
Emory. "There's not as much press<lb/>
there would be if I were taking over<lb/>
"Heck he continued. "1 felt a<lb/>
1 wa- a high school each. "I felt that I<lb/>
That's just the competitor in me<lb/>
Lady Pirates pound Bucs<lb/>
(fhoto by Bob Hodges)<lb/>
(irav (left) dunks over Banks<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Last Carolina forward Rosie Thompson tired in 23<lb/>
points and grabbed 1 1 rebounds as the Lady Pirates<lb/>
downed the Bin cancer- ol East Tennessee State 73-63 at<lb/>
Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Forward Marcia Cowart and guard Sharon Allen kept<lb/>
the Buccaneers close in the early stages of the first half.<lb/>
East Carolina maintained a slim margin throughout<lb/>
the first half behind the 13 point effort of forward Rosie<lb/>
Thompson, buiding to their biggest lead of 33-25 with a<lb/>
Mary Denkler turnaround jumper on an assist from<lb/>
Laurie Sikes.<lb/>
Marcia Covvart's 11 kept the Buccaneers in the<lb/>
contest. Most of her points were on early field goals<lb/>
when East Carolina was attempting to pull away.<lb/>
East Tennessee fought back from a 33-27 halftime<lb/>
deficit and cut the Pirates lead to two on a field goal by<lb/>
Jackie Phillips with 10:50 to play, and tied the score at<lb/>
51 a minute later.<lb/>
Freshman sharp-shooter Mary Denkler came off the<lb/>
bench for the Pirates and netted her first field goal on a<lb/>
follow shot with 8:31 to play.<lb/>
Denkler provided the added offensive punch ECU<lb/>
needed, netting 16 out of 21 for the Pirates at one stage<lb/>
of the second half, and tallied 20 in just 14 minutes<lb/>
plaved.<lb/>
Sikes, a junior point guard, added 11, connecting<lb/>
repeatedlv from 15-20 feet.<lb/>
Guard Sharon Allen paced the Bucs with 22, while<lb/>
teammate Marcia Cowart poured in 15.<lb/>
"It seems every week we have a different leader on<lb/>
the court said ECU coach Cathy AndruzzL "They took<lb/>
us out of our offense a little in the first half<lb/>
Andruzzi stated she inserted Denkler into the lineup<lb/>
primarilv to provide rebounding strength, but the 6-0<lb/>
ViennaVirginia native proved her offensive prowess<lb/>
within minutes.<lb/>
"Denkler is an offensive player Andruzzi said.<lb/>
"She's a pure shooter and squares to the goal well. 1<lb/>
knew she would give us offensive strength; she's good<lb/>
off the ball<lb/>
Center Marcia Girven snatched a season-high 14<lb/>
rebounds to lead that department.<lb/>
"Marcia and Rosie did a good job rebounding<lb/>
stated Andruzzi. "Thev were much bieeer than us<lb/>
With the win, the Pirates are now 6-1, while East<lb/>
Tennessee drops to 2-6.<lb/>
(Photo by John Grogan)<lb/>
Thompson looks for pass<lb/>
<pb facs="00057237_0012"/><lb/>
12 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 11 December 1979<lb/>
Blue Devils survive Pirate attack<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREL<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
DURHAM - The na-<lb/>
tionally second ranked<lb/>
Blue Devils of Duke went<lb/>
into their Saturday match-<lb/>
up with East Carolina<lb/>
heavily favored to de-<lb/>
molish the probationary<lb/>
Pirates, but had to be<lb/>
satisfied with a 92-73<lb/>
second half victory.<lb/>
For the first four<lb/>
minutes of the contest, it<lb/>
appeared that Duke would<lb/>
easily trounce the Bucs as<lb/>
they jumped to an 11-2<lb/>
behind the hot outside<lb/>
shooting of forward Kenny<lb/>
Dennard and guard Bob<lb/>
Bender.<lb/>
The visitors narrowed<lb/>
the lead to five, but the<lb/>
sky-hook and slam dunk of<lb/>
concensus All-American<lb/>
Mike Gminski built the<lb/>
lead to nine at 15-6 with<lb/>
15:10 before intermission.<lb/>
Then the Pirate offense<lb/>
was cut loose to horrify<lb/>
those who had predicted a<lb/>
Devil romp.<lb/>
George Maynor re-<lb/>
bounded an errant Michael<lb/>
Gibson shot and followed<lb/>
with his own version of the<lb/>
hook shot over the 6-11<lb/>
Gminski. Strong forward<lb/>
Herb Gray laved in a<lb/>
Gibson assist; Gibson con-<lb/>
nected on a turnaround<lb/>
jumper; and Kyle Powers<lb/>
added a layup.<lb/>
During that span the<lb/>
Blue Devils had managed<lb/>
only a Vince Taylor free<lb/>
throw, and with 12:37<lb/>
remaining before inter-<lb/>
mission, the Pirates had<lb/>
cut the gap to 16-14.<lb/>
Dennard powered in-<lb/>
side for a field goal,<lb/>
followed by a Jim Suddath<lb/>
20-footer and a Taylor<lb/>
layup as the Devils built a<lb/>
22-16 lead.<lb/>
Maynor's tap in follow<lb/>
hot, Herb Krusen's 13-<lb/>
foot swish and a pair of<lb/>
David Underwood free<lb/>
throws knotted the score<lb/>
22-22.<lb/>
Gminski scored inside<lb/>
and freshman Chip En-<lb/>
gelland pumped in a shot<lb/>
from downtown Durham to<lb/>
forge a four point margin,<lb/>
but Underwood answered<lb/>
with a field goal and two<lb/>
strikes from the charity<lb/>
stripe to tangle the score<lb/>
at 26.<lb/>
Gray's layup with 3:16<lb/>
remaining gave the Pirates<lb/>
the lead for the first time<lb/>
in the contest.<lb/>
ECU built to a 37-33<lb/>
lead on a Gray dunk with<lb/>
:31 to be played, but Duke<lb/>
answered quickly with a<lb/>
Gminski inside move and<lb/>
Engelland connected on a<lb/>
22-footer as the horn<lb/>
sounded to tie 37-37.<lb/>
The Blue Devils re-<lb/>
grouped at haiftime and<lb/>
came out to put on a<lb/>
dunking clinic over the<lb/>
dwarfed Bucs.<lb/>
The first came on a<lb/>
steal by Taylor as the 6-5<lb/>
speedster raced down<lb/>
court and rammed the ball<lb/>
home with authority.<lb/>
Gibson retaliated for<lb/>
the Pirates with a turn-<lb/>
around jumper to cut the<lb/>
lead to 48-45 with 15:20<lb/>
left, but ECU would come<lb/>
no closer to the seemingly<lb/>
invincible Duke fortress.<lb/>
Gminski showed his<lb/>
versatility with 14:52 to<lb/>
play as he stole the ball at<lb/>
mid court and dribbled<lb/>
through for a two-handed<lb/>
slam.<lb/>
A Dennard steal with<lb/>
just under 13 minutes left<lb/>
set up the Eugene Banks<lb/>
version of the Darrell<lb/>
Dawkins "Chocolat Thun<lb/>
der" dunk, with the brave<lb/>
Powers attempting a block<lb/>
and picking up his fifth<lb/>
foul in the process.<lb/>
Action continued in<lb/>
favor of the Blue Devils<lb/>
until the 10:40 mark when<lb/>
Duke coach Bill Foster and<lb/>
the crowd of 8,564 in<lb/>
Cameron Indoor Stadium<lb/>
watched with dismay as<lb/>
Gminski crumbled to the<lb/>
floor with an eye injury.<lb/>
All watched sedately for<lb/>
approximately four min-<lb/>
utes until the fallen giant<lb/>
rose to his feet.<lb/>
Duke led by as much<lb/>
as 22 in the late stages of<lb/>
the game, but reserve<lb/>
Bryant Wiggens' field goal<lb/>
closed out the scoring and<lb/>
set the tinal 19 point<lb/>
margin.<lb/>
"They did everything I<lb/>
asked them to and more<lb/>
said ECU coach Dave<lb/>
Odom. "Coaching did not<lb/>
win or lose this game.<lb/>
"George Maynor show-<lb/>
ed he can play with any<lb/>
guard in any league. I'm<lb/>
pleased with my kids right<lb/>
now. I think our season is<lb/>
more important than the<lb/>
Duke game<lb/>
ECU (73)<lb/>
Grav 6 3-4 15, Under-<lb/>
sNd 3 1-4 10, Gibson <lb/>
1-2 9, KruM-n 5 0-0 10.<lb/>
Mavnor 9 0-2 18. Powers 1<lb/>
2-2'4. Miles 0 0-0 0, Byies<lb/>
1 3-4 5. rlobson 0 0-0 0,<lb/>
McLaurin 0 0-0 0, W,y<lb/>
gens 1 0-0 2, Bat-on 0 0-0<lb/>
0. Totals 30 13-19 73.<lb/>
Duke (92)<lb/>
Banks 7 5-6 19, Den<lb/>
nard 5 1-2 11. Gminski 10<lb/>
6-6 26, Bender 2 0-0 t.<lb/>
Taylor 9 2-4 20, Suddath 2<lb/>
0-0 V. Engelland 2 0-0 I,<lb/>
Williams 1 0-0 2, Emma 1<lb/>
0-0 2, Tissaw 0 0-1 0,<lb/>
Corrigan 0 0-0 0, Linney 0<lb/>
0.0 0. Totals 39 14-18 92.<lb/>
Haiftime Duke 37, ECl<lb/>
Yl Fouled out Powers.<lb/>
CLIFF'S<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
-? V<lb/>
V-n0ar - (<lb/>
NC OEi? ?? HormCmrax<lb/>
Team handball<lb/>
provides upsets<lb/>
(Photo by Bob Hodges)<lb/>
All-American Mike Gminski<lb/>
By RICKI GLIARMIS<lb/>
Intramural Correspondent<lb/>
The intramural team<lb/>
handball playoffs proved<lb/>
to be exciting and very<lb/>
fast paced. The early<lb/>
rounds of the playoffs<lb/>
provided some upsets as<lb/>
both top-ranked men's<lb/>
teams were defeated. Af-<lb/>
ter Sunday night, the<lb/>
pairings for the finals were<lb/>
set. Belk Gola will battle<lb/>
the Renegades in the<lb/>
men's division while Alpha<lb/>
Xi Delta will play the Tyler<lb/>
Heartbreakers in women's<lb/>
play.<lb/>
In the Independent<lb/>
division, the Six Killers<lb/>
edged the top-ranked A-<lb/>
lien 16-14, while the<lb/>
Renegades defeated the<lb/>
second ranked King's<lb/>
Royal Netters, 16-11. In<lb/>
the independent finals, the<lb/>
Six Killers beat the<lb/>
Renegades 16-11 -ith,J<lb/>
Mike Swartz scoring nine<lb/>
goals. The Renegades<lb/>
made the all-campus tour-<lb/>
nament by winning the<lb/>
wid card berth.<lb/>
! In the fraternity divi-<lb/>
sion, Tau Kappa Epsilon<lb/>
defeated Kappa Alpha<lb/>
15-9. while Sigma Tau<lb/>
Gamma edged Pi Kappa<lb/>
Phi 16-15. In the fraternity<lb/>
finals, Tau Kappa Epsilon<lb/>
defeated Sigma Tau Gam-<lb/>
ma 13-10.<lb/>
In the residence hall<lb/>
division, only two teams<lb/>
were in the playoffs. The<lb/>
Belk Gola defeated the<lb/>
Scott Withdrawals 15-9<lb/>
with Phil Green scoring<lb/>
eight goals.<lb/>
These games set up<lb/>
the all campus playoffs. In<lb/>
the first semi-final game,<lb/>
the Belk Gola edged the<lb/>
Six Killers, 15-14 in over-<lb/>
time. Bill Rauss scored<lb/>
seven and Phil Greer, five,<lb/>
for the Gola to offset eight<lb/>
goals by Mike Swartz. In<lb/>
the other semi-final game,<lb/>
the Renegades edged TKK<lb/>
10-9 to gain entrance into<lb/>
the championship game.<lb/>
In women's play, the<lb/>
Tyler Heartbreakers have<lb/>
not had a close game all<lb/>
year. The playoffs changed<lb/>
nothing as they humbled<lb/>
the Fleming Goalie Trot-<lb/>
ters 20-5 as Ginger<lb/>
Rothermel scored 11 goals.<lb/>
AIX YOU<lb/>
$2.95 C AN EAT !<lb/>
MONDAY-THURSDAY<lb/>
TROUT, FLOUNDER.<lb/>
CRAR CAKES<lb/>
TEAis included with meal<lb/>
CUFF'S SUPER<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
CRAB CARE SPECIAL<lb/>
2, Golden Fried Crab Cakes<lb/>
French Fries, Slaw, and<lb/>
Hushpuppies. QQC<lb/>
Knee not<lb/>
made for<lb/>
football?<lb/>
By BRUCE LOW1TT<lb/>
AP Sports Writer<lb/>
It is a weekday.<lb/>
Players are straining a-<lb/>
gainst the resistance of the<lb/>
weight machines, pushing<lb/>
themselves as hard as they<lb/>
can ? grunting, twisting,<lb/>
stretching<lb/>
It is Sunday. Whistles<lb/>
are blowing, bodies are<lb/>
untangling ? and at the<lb/>
bottom of the pile some-<lb/>
one is holding a knee,<lb/>
grimacing in pain. Out<lb/>
comes a stretcher and off<lb/>
goes another entry on the<lb/>
injured reserve list.<lb/>
Is there a relationship?<lb/>
Does all that work in the<lb/>
trainers' rooms work to<lb/>
the detriment of players<lb/>
trying to strengthen them-<lb/>
selves against the possi-<lb/>
bility of injury?<lb/>
It has been suggested<lb/>
that there is a correlation<lb/>
between weight training<lb/>
? a fixture among many<lb/>
National Football League<lb/>
teams ? and knee in-<lb/>
juries. But Dr. James<lb/>
Nicholas, the noted ortho-<lb/>
pedist at New York's<lb/>
Lenox Hill Hospital, and<lb/>
other experts disagree.<lb/>
The knee, Nicholas and<lb/>
other stress, simply is not<lb/>
made fcrr pro football.<lb/>
"I think when God<lb/>
created man he should<lb/>
have put us on all fours<lb/>
jokes Ken Locker, the<lb/>
Dallas Cowboys' trainer.<lb/>
"Then we wouldn't have<lb/>
played football.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
xr t y f . M ft "??? ?<lb/>
3005<lb/>
E. 10th St.<lb/>
y?rTPm I OJOOBDBtel ?hcTQ f<lb/>
F?Hnjlliy<lb/>
December Specials<lb/>
Monday Choppd sw?ta<lb/>
C with gravy and potato<lb/>
$3.19<lb/>
1 ue sday $?? Bnd p0to BM?oH<lb/>
IT eClIieSQaypepper and onions or MW<lb/>
mushroom gravy and potato<lb/>
Thursday811ces ?L Beef $2.59<lb/>
MV Mm. mLML Km.m j peppers and onions or<lb/>
mushroom gravy and potato<lb/>
ter<lb/>
Friday ?r. $1.39<lb/>
Saturday8oap and 8aIad $1.79<lb/>
Sunday 8-(??fnpot.lo$2.49<lb/>
Monday and Wednesday STUDENT SPECIALS<lb/>
50 off any Item on the menu board<lb/>
OVERTOILS<lb/>
? Grade "A" Whole FryersIb.44<lb/>
? Coca-Cola Inflation Fighter<lb/>
only 1 per ounce<lb/>
32 oz. Bottle plus deposit32<lb/>
? Sunnyside Grade "A"<lb/>
Brown Medium EggsDozen 58<lb/>
? Tender Leaf Tea Bags 48 ct58<lb/>
? Charmin Tissue<lb/>
4 Roll Pkg78<lb/>
i<lb/>
? A Real Inflation Fighter ?<lb/>
Pride of the Farm<lb/>
? Apple Sauce<lb/>
? Cut Yellow Corn<lb/>
? Baby Lima Beans<lb/>
? Kajun Beauty Cut Yams<lb/>
or<lb/>
? Royal Gueat Tomatoes<lb/>
303 size cans4$1 .00<lb/>
?Fresh Green CabbageLb. 9<lb/>
<pb facs="00057237_0013"/><lb/>
11 December 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Page 13<lb/>
Duke awesome in comeback<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
<lb/>
DURHAM?"They're too good right now said ECU<lb/>
coach Dave Odom after the Pirates suffered their second<lb/>
loss of the season at the hands of the Duke Blue Devils,<lb/>
92-73.<lb/>
"The rest of the teams are going to continue to<lb/>
improve and I just don't see how Duke can be any<lb/>
better. Certainly they're ahead of where they were at<lb/>
this stage last year<lb/>
Odom admitted that part of the ECU strategy against<lb/>
the nationally second ranked Devils was to allow guard<lb/>
Vince Taylor and forwards Kenny Dennard and Gene<lb/>
Banks to take outside shots instead of working the ball<lb/>
inside to Banks to concensus All-American Mike<lb/>
Gminski.<lb/>
Gminski weaved, hooked and dunked his way for a<lb/>
game-high 26 and 11 rebounds.<lb/>
"Gminski is Gminski; what more can you say?"<lb/>
offered Odom. "The heart of the club lies in Bender<lb/>
(guard Bob) and Gminski. We were playing on the<lb/>
mentally<lb/>
In the end, the Duke depth was the clincher, as<lb/>
coach Bill Foster's Blue Devils forced turnover after<lb/>
turnover in the second half.<lb/>
"We came out playing well commented Banks<lb/>
after thf fifth win of the young season. "They were<lb/>
getting a lot of rebounds in the first half and that really<lb/>
kept them in the game<lb/>
"We stopped concentrating in the first half<lb/>
explained Taylor, who bucketed most of his shots from<lb/>
downtown Durham. "It's an easier shot when the other<lb/>
team is in a zone, like East Carolina was part of the<lb/>
time.<lb/>
"You put Mike and Gene down low and try to work<lb/>
the ball in to them, and if that doesn't work, we have to<lb/>
shoot outside and draw the coverage. The percentage<lb/>
shot is inside with them.<lb/>
"We hit the shots we were getting in the second half<lb/>
and that's the big difference. We played aggressive<lb/>
defense and worked our offense<lb/>
Taylor inherited the starting position from legendary<lb/>
Jim Spanarkle (now in the NBA), but says he feels no<lb/>
outside pressure to perform well.<lb/>
"It's a whole lot of pressure to have good games ami<lb/>
I just have to rise up to the occasion, but that pressure<lb/>
comes from within. I want to make my own name and<lb/>
my own style of play<lb/>
Gminski, a 6-11 senior from Monroe, Connecticut,<lb/>
has had to deal with pressure in each of the last three<lb/>
seasons from the fans and especially the media who<lb/>
have grown to expect displays such as the one agam-t<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
"You get used to it Gminski maligns. ) much<lb/>
rather have it this way than with the team losing al! the<lb/>
time and nobody really caring who Mike Gminki i<lb/>
(Photo by Bob Hodges)<lb/>
Dave Underwood pumps<lb/>
FAMOUS PIZZA<lb/>
Merry Christmas to all ? C U students<lb/>
Thanks for your business so far<lb/>
PIZZASmallLarge<lb/>
Tomato &amp; Cheese2.00 J 2.25 2.25 L 2.503.75 4.50 4.50 "4.75" "4.75" ?4.75' "4.75 4.50 4.75 5.25' -5.506.00" ' 7.25"<lb/>
Onion<lb/>
Pepper<lb/>
Mush room<lb/>
Onion &amp; Pepperr 2.60 2.50 2.50 2.50: 2.85 2.45 3.00 " 3.25 3.50<lb/>
Pepper on i<lb/>
Sausage<lb/>
Hambu rger<lb/>
AnchOvy<lb/>
Canadian Bn on &amp; Pineapple<lb/>
2 way 3 way<lb/>
House Spec ul<lb/>
SPAGHETTI<lb/>
with Saute2.25-<lb/>
with Meatballs2.50<lb/>
with Mushrooms"2.50 "<lb/>
with Veal.2.50<lb/>
with Peppei2.50!<lb/>
(Served nil s.il.ul .tid arlk bri jd i<lb/>
Lasagna2.75<lb/>
Ravioli2.75<lb/>
Veal Margarita2.75<lb/>
i Served ith al.iJ ji DESSERTSJ ihIk bread)<lb/>
Cheese Cake cApp'e P.e .70 !<lb/>
Blueberry Pie1 -70l<lb/>
SUBS<lb/>
Sm.ill l.irszc<lb/>
Meatball1.75 2.451<lb/>
Sausageil.75 2.5J<lb/>
1 ralian1.85 2.50'<lb/>
Ham1.85 2.50: T.85 2.50j ? 2.00 2.50! 2.00 2.50 : 1.85 2.5QL 1.75 2.50l 1.85 2.50 2.25 2.75 , .Z5 2.75 1 ? -<lb/>
Tuna<lb/>
Roast Beef<lb/>
Past ram 1<lb/>
BIT<lb/>
Pi'pper s, C gg<lb/>
Veal<lb/>
Super Sub<lb/>
Peppe' S tea<lb/>
SALADS<lb/>
Greek Sal ail<lb/>
And Past.<lb/>
Tossed<lb/>
BEVERAGES<lb/>
2.25<lb/>
LTYoj<lb/>
Co'Vt<lb/>
Tea Hoi or co? 11<lb/>
.30<lb/>
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.35<lb/>
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&amp;WINE<lb/>
Coming Soon<lb/>
Call In your order to go<lb/>
(Photo by Bob Hodges)<lb/>
Maynor lofts a shot<lb/>
321E lth Street<lb/>
Ricks Guitar Shop<lb/>
Announces<lb/>
"Winter Sale" (now thru Christmas)<lb/>
All instruments in the store will<lb/>
be discounted<lb/>
Check these specials!<lb/>
? Alvarez- Yairi Guitars 40 OFF<lb/>
? Banjos40 OFF<lb/>
? Violins30 OFF<lb/>
? Alvarez Guitars25 OFF<lb/>
? Amps30 OFF<lb/>
See our newest line of Vantage Guitars-<lb/>
the nicest electric guitars we have carried<lb/>
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? Sign up now for guitar &amp; banjo lessons<lb/>
? Complete Repair Shop<lb/>
207 E. 5th St. 752-2509<lb/>
<lb/>
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1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057237_0014"/><lb/>
Page 14 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 11 December 1979<lb/>
Lady Pirates<lb/>
shell Madison<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Forward Kathy Riley<lb/>
pumped in 26 points and<lb/>
Rush Ihornpson added 16<lb/>
and a season-high 23<lb/>
rebounds as Fast Carolina<lb/>
drilled the Duchesses of<lb/>
James Madison, 72-48, at<lb/>
Minges Coliseum Friday<lb/>
night<lb/>
EC1 's M, i Girven<lb/>
poured in two e irI field<lb/>
goals t.i enable the Pirates<lb/>
to jump n an 8-2 lead in<lb/>
the opening minutes of thr<lb/>
contest, and Rile) and<lb/>
rhompson piled on 12<lb/>
points as the Bucs built a<lb/>
21 -point lead u ith l? ss<lb/>
an 10 it.mutt- expired.<lb/>
Freshman Man Denk-<lb/>
added a 15-footer with<lb/>
2 r fore<lb/>
intei - ion, but ECU<lb/>
remained silent from thr<lb/>
floor until Lvdia Rountree<lb/>
d in a Laurie Sikc<lb/>
in the<lb/>
Meanw hil , Madison s<lb/>
Marsden and Deana<lb/>
Meadows had imllt'd their<lb/>
l<lb/>
team I striking<lb/>
listai e at 29- 1,J before<lb/>
the Rountree basket.<lb/>
"I wasn't worried a-<lb/>
bout the dry spell said<lb/>
ECU's coach Cathy An-<lb/>
druzzi. "After the Duke<lb/>
game last Saturday (a<lb/>
76-75 loss), we concen-<lb/>
trated on defense all week.<lb/>
We . didn't even touch<lb/>
offense until Thursday and<lb/>
then only for about 45<lb/>
minutes<lb/>
Anne Sonoga had 13<lb/>
points for Madison, 10 in<lb/>
the second half, followed<lb/>
by Meadows with 11 and<lb/>
Cath) Hanrahan's 10.<lb/>
Rountree aided the<lb/>
Pirates effort with 12 and<lb/>
Girven tallied ten.<lb/>
"This is probably the<lb/>
best game of the season<lb/>
for us analyzed Andruz-<lb/>
zi. "certainly the best<lb/>
defensively, we knew that<lb/>
we could be a good team<lb/>
on defense. This team IS a<lb/>
good offenshe team.<lb/>
'The shooting per-<lb/>
centage (38.4) doesn't<lb/>
bother me because we did<lb/>
play well on defense.<lb/>
"Kathy Riley kept us<lb/>
in the game offensively<lb/>
because Rosie was double-<lb/>
overed most of the night<lb/>
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(Photo by Jill Adams)<lb/>
Heidi Owen seta for free throw<lb/>
L<lb/>
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Get Your SURVIVAL KIT!<lb/>
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OF YOUR CHOICE, SALAD &amp;<lb/>
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STUDY STUDY STUDY STUDY STUDY STUDY STUDY<lb/>
I SANDWICHES 1<lb/>
? Bread Baked Fresh Daily w<lb/>
3 Short Loaf $2.05 Chef's Salad $2.95 ?<lb/>
o Long Loaf $2.80 Garlic Bread .79 ?<lb/>
1 SUBMARINE g<lb/>
? Ham, Salami, Sauce, Cheese-Baked -<lb/>
 HAM AND CHEESE 5<lb/>
? Ham, Cheese, Mustard, Lettuce &amp; Tomato c<lb/>
? HOGIE <lb/>
- Ham, Salami, Mustard, Mayonnaise, &amp;<lb/>
? Olive Oil, Lettuce &amp; Tomato c<lb/>
5 ITALIAN SANDWICH <lb/>
 Ham. Salami, Sauce, Cheese, Onions, co<lb/>
g Pepper , Mushrooms-Baked c<lb/>
? VEGETARIAN SANDWICH 3<lb/>
- Onions, Green Peppers, Mushrooms, <lb/>
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&amp;EXAMS EXAMS EXAMS EXAMS EXAMS EXAMS -<lb/>
Offer Good<lb/>
12-12-79 thru 12-20-79<lb/>
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Mon. - Thurs<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057237_0015"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>