<?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="00057238_0001"/>
concert, Court Action Pending Against Former<lb/>
liay ciash Officer In Greenville Marijuana Case<lb/>
I<lb/>
v.Rll NxBOROAP) A concert<lb/>
promoter ms he "leaning<lb/>
toward" holding a concert in the<lb/>
eciiofo c otiseum the same day<lb/>
ot an anii-ku Klu Klan march to<lb/>
the facilit)<lb/>
Lawrence Toller, promoter for<lb/>
the Danville, Vabased Anew Pro-<lb/>
ductions, says he's considering<lb/>
whether or not to cancel the concert.<lb/>
The Feb. 2 Mobilization Commit-<lb/>
tee is planning to hold the march<lb/>
from downtown Greensboro to the<lb/>
coliseum on Feb. 2. The group was<lb/>
denied a parade permit Monday<lb/>
because City Manager Tom<lb/>
Osborne said Toller's option on the<lb/>
coliseum kept him from issuing the<lb/>
permit.<lb/>
Toller said he'll meet today with<lb/>
Lucius Walker of the International<lb/>
Foundation for Community<lb/>
Organizing, one of the groups wan-<lb/>
ting to hold the rally.<lb/>
A spokesman for the Southern<lb/>
Christian Leadership Conference<lb/>
says the group is considering<lb/>
withdrawing support for the rally<lb/>
because of insufficient community<lb/>
support.<lb/>
The march was scheduled in the<lb/>
wake of the shooting deaths of five<lb/>
Communist demonstrators at a<lb/>
"Death to the Klan" rally last Nov.<lb/>
3 in Greensboro.<lb/>
In related developments:<lb/>
The U.S. Civil Rights Commis-<lb/>
sion has concluded that southern<lb/>
regional director Bobby Doctor<lb/>
acted "within his bounds" when he<lb/>
remarked that the Nov. 3 shootings<lb/>
sent Greensboro's race relations in-<lb/>
to a tailspin.<lb/>
Rep. Richardson Preyer, D-N.C,<lb/>
had asked the commission to in-<lb/>
vestigate the comments.<lb/>
Guilford County District At-<lb/>
torney Michael Schlosser says he'll<lb/>
seek a delay in the trials of the 14<lb/>
men charged in connection with the<lb/>
shootings. He says the postpone-<lb/>
ment is needed because the FBI is in<lb/>
control of most of the physical<lb/>
evidence in the case.<lb/>
Inside Today<lb/>
Job Prospect BrighterP?ge3<lb/>
M Hints PreviewedPage<lb/>
In Defense Of Star TrekPage<lb/>
Major rootfcoMSIgoeePage 9<lb/>
iMiyftrgUi??-ftaVaca Page<lb/>
iftafccUaartPag 9<lb/>
Court Action Is Schedule<lb/>
 .for former city policeman<lb/>
Computer Aids Paper<lb/>
Court<lb/>
Upholds<lb/>
Ruling<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP)?The state<lb/>
Court of Appeals has upheld a rul-<lb/>
ing by a Wake County Superior<lb/>
Court Judge that dismissed a con-<lb/>
stitutional challenge to North<lb/>
Carolina's liquor-byhe-drink law.<lb/>
The Court of Appeals found<lb/>
Tuesday that the case was properly<lb/>
dismissed on all grounds but one '<lb/>
the court found the judge erred in<lb/>
addressing the constitutionality of<lb/>
the law in ruling on the motion to<lb/>
dismiss.<lb/>
The appeals court didn't make<lb/>
any finding on the 1978 law's con-<lb/>
stitutionality. The law allows com-<lb/>
munities with ABC systems to hold<lb/>
lcal referendums on mixed-drink<lb/>
sales.<lb/>
Four persons had filed the suit<lb/>
last January against the state Board<lb/>
of Alcoholic Control, the state at-<lb/>
torney general and others. It asked<lb/>
the law be declared unconstitu-<lb/>
tional.<lb/>
Judge James H. Pou Bailey<lb/>
dismissed the case last March. He<lb/>
concluded the plaintiffs had no legal<lb/>
standing to sue in the matter. The<lb/>
appeals court said that to have stan-<lb/>
ding, the four would have had to<lb/>
show that the law would invade<lb/>
their legally protected interests and<lb/>
would cause them immediate harm.<lb/>
But the appeals court ruled that it<lb/>
was improper to decide the constitu-<lb/>
tionality of the law in ruling on a<lb/>
motion to dismiss.<lb/>
Today's issue of The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian is the first to be produced with<lb/>
the aid of a new computer system<lb/>
which makes us the "best equipped<lb/>
college newspaper in the state in<lb/>
the words of Senior Editor Marc<lb/>
Barnes.<lb/>
The $30,000 system has made the<lb/>
typewriter almost obsolete in The<lb/>
East Carolinian newsroom. In the<lb/>
past, staff employees had to type<lb/>
their stories before giving them to<lb/>
the typesetter to be processed into<lb/>
print. With the new system, stories<lb/>
may be typed directly into video<lb/>
display screens and edited elec-<lb/>
tronically before going into the<lb/>
typesetting process, which is now<lb/>
done automatically by a central<lb/>
computer.<lb/>
According to Barnes, The East<lb/>
Carolinian's video display terminals<lb/>
are state-of-the-art print media tools<lb/>
which are becoming indispensible to<lb/>
modern newspapers. The new<lb/>
system was specifically designed for<lb/>
use by small newspapers, although<lb/>
systems like it are used by all major<lb/>
newspapers in North Carolina, said<lb/>
Barnes.<lb/>
The equipment consists of three<lb/>
video display terminals, a wire<lb/>
recorder that encodes Associated<lb/>
Press copy for later retrieval, and a<lb/>
?? V yS i.<lb/>
' ? ,<lb/>
:????<lb/>
?gaaj<lb/>
central computer which processes<lb/>
the stories into reproducabk print.<lb/>
Manufactured by the Com-<lb/>
pugraphic Corp. of Decatur. Ga<lb/>
the equipment represents a major<lb/>
step upward from the previous pro-<lb/>
duction facilities which were intend-<lb/>
ed for educational use in high school<lb/>
graphic arts classes.<lb/>
Barnes noted that the funds for<lb/>
the purchase of the system will be<lb/>
drawn exclusively from The East<lb/>
Carolinian's advertising revenues.<lb/>
The $30,000 price tag also included<lb/>
training sessions for the<lb/>
newspaper's staff and all installa-<lb/>
tion charges.<lb/>
The capabilities of the new equip-<lb/>
ment have also made possible cer-<lb/>
tain changes in the paper's layout<lb/>
style, notably in the design of the<lb/>
paper's name, in a more readable<lb/>
typeface, and in the flexibility in<lb/>
choosing type sizes and styles.<lb/>
Barnes said that there were also<lb/>
other advantages in the equip-<lb/>
ment. "This newspaper exists for<lb/>
basically two reasons-first of all to<lb/>
inform the students and faculty of<lb/>
the university. Its other function is<lb/>
to teach students the essential skills<lb/>
of journalism. Systems like the one<lb/>
we are using now are becoming<lb/>
practically indispensible to modern<lb/>
commercial newspapers, and<lb/>
students who learn their way around<lb/>
this kind of equipment will have an<lb/>
advantage over those who do not<lb/>
Photo by JILL ADAMS<lb/>
Compugraphic VDT's<lb/>
awaiting eager newspaper staff<lb/>
Scanner Will Aid Diagnoses<lb/>
By DOUG HINSON<lb/>
ECU Medical Writer<lb/>
A fast, safe and painless pro-<lb/>
cedure that provides detailed<lb/>
diagnostic information and reduces<lb/>
the need for exploratory surgery is<lb/>
now available at Pitt County<lb/>
Memorial Hospital in conjunction<lb/>
with the East Carolina School of<lb/>
Medicine.<lb/>
The computed tomographic scan-<lb/>
ner, or CT scanner, is a<lb/>
sophisticated device which produces<lb/>
cross-sectional images of the body<lb/>
to detect diseases, tumors, blood<lb/>
vessl damage and other disorders.<lb/>
The CT scanner not onlt produces<lb/>
detailed pictures of organs but<lb/>
replaces many painful and risky<lb/>
diagnostic methods previously used,<lb/>
according to Dr. William Trought,<lb/>
ECU clinical assistant professor of<lb/>
radiology.<lb/>
"Ordinary x-rays give us only<lb/>
two-dimensional view and do not<lb/>
reproduce subtle variations in tissue<lb/>
density said Trought. in some<lb/>
cases, a lesion may be hidden or<lb/>
overshadowed by another struc-<lb/>
ture<lb/>
"But with a CT scanner, we're<lb/>
able to get marvel ously precise pic-<lb/>
tures of internal organs. They are<lb/>
highly accurate and efficient, and<lb/>
the noninvasive technique makes it<lb/>
more attractive to patients because<lb/>
there is no pain.<lb/>
One risky and painful test which<lb/>
the CT scanner eliminates in some<lb/>
cases is the pneumoencephalogram,<lb/>
and x-ray mehtod in which cerebral<lb/>
spinal fluid is replaced with air to<lb/>
provide contrast density.<lb/>
The procedure, which employs<lb/>
principles from physics,<lb/>
mathematics and computer science,<lb/>
takes less than an hour to perform,<lb/>
with the actual scanning process<lb/>
lasting only five to 10 seconds. A cir-<lb/>
cular scanner that sends and detects<lb/>
x-ray beams revolves around the<lb/>
body and takes multiple "looks" at<lb/>
the anatomy from 270 angles.<lb/>
The information r transmitted to<lb/>
a computer which integrates the<lb/>
data and reproduces it a? a picture<lb/>
or "slice" of the area. The image is<lb/>
usually very clear.<lb/>
"It's very much like getting a pic-<lb/>
ture from Mars said Trought.<lb/>
"The computer is the key. It deter-<lb/>
mines a math formula, then solves it<lb/>
and puts it on a screen similar to<lb/>
television<lb/>
According to Trought, the CT<lb/>
scanner is particularly useful for<lb/>
diagnosing brain abnormalities. It<lb/>
can accurately identify and locate<lb/>
tumors, blood clots and birth<lb/>
defects. Such accuracy is important<lb/>
because symptoms of some diseases<lb/>
are the same, but treatment is dif-<lb/>
ferent.<lb/>
Trought noted that because of its<lb/>
fast efficiency, the scanner is ex-<lb/>
tremely valuable in emergencies.<lb/>
The CT scanner may pay off in<lb/>
other ways -too. "I think it's impor-<lb/>
tant for ECU and Wtt Hospital to<lb/>
have the newest and most modem<lb/>
radioiogk methods available<lb/>
Trought say.<lb/>
By JFRRY ALLEGOOD<lb/>
The following article is reprinted<lb/>
from the Raleigh Sews and<lb/>
Observer, Jfea. 0, !9?n<lb/>
Five men convicted in an attempt<lb/>
to sell 8,500 pounds of marijuana in<lb/>
Pitt County last summer hae<lb/>
received prison terms, but action is<lb/>
still pending against a former<lb/>
Greenville police officer and four<lb/>
others in the case.<lb/>
Superior Court Judge Henry L.<lb/>
Stevens III on Monday imposed<lb/>
fines and prison terms ranging from<lb/>
three months to two years on the<lb/>
out-of-state defendants who plead-<lb/>
ed guilty to possessing or conspiracy<lb/>
to possess with intent to distribute<lb/>
the controlled substance.<lb/>
The marijuana was seized on July<lb/>
23 on property owned by Douglas<lb/>
H. Ross, a sargeant with the Green-<lb/>
ville Police Department who was<lb/>
suspended after his arrest. Ross,<lb/>
who is planning to take a lie detector<lb/>
test, was hospitalized recently with<lb/>
circulatory illness, court officials<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The five sentenced by Stevens had<lb/>
pleaded in Pitt County on Oct. 18.<lb/>
Stevens ordered the arrest and<lb/>
forfeiture of $60,000 bond for a<lb/>
sixth defendant who had pleaded in<lb/>
October. Manuel A. Garcia of<lb/>
Miami, Fladid not appear for<lb/>
sentencing.<lb/>
In addition to Ross and Garcia,<lb/>
charges are pending against Ross's<lb/>
wife Marga and his sister-in-law,<lb/>
Louise Johnson Whitehurst of<lb/>
Winterville. Conspiracy charges<lb/>
were dismissed against two others.<lb/>
Assistant District Attorney<lb/>
Thomas Haigwood said Ross pro-<lb/>
bably would be tried within the next<lb/>
30 days and Mrs. Whitehurst, who<lb/>
has pleaded guilty to one charge,<lb/>
will be sentenced later.<lb/>
State, federal and local law en-<lb/>
forcement officers arrested eight<lb/>
people in a raid on Ross's land near<lb/>
Greenville as more than 150 bales of<lb/>
marijuana were being moved from a<lb/>
rental truck to a trailer. The mari-<lb/>
juana was valued at $3.5 million.<lb/>
Ross and his wife were arrested<lb/>
several days after the raid. Defense<lb/>
attorneys have asked the court to<lb/>
suppress evidence gained during a<lb/>
search of the premises because they<lb/>
contend that the search was illegal.<lb/>
According to a search warrant<lb/>
issued prior so the raid, Ross was<lb/>
linked to the operation by a con-<lb/>
fidential source.<lb/>
The applies: icn fcr the A2rr.??.<lb/>
prepared by SBI Agent J 1<lb/>
Wilson, vaid federal and slate of-<lb/>
ficers had observed other defen-<lb/>
dants in the case on Ross's propem<lb/>
before the raid.<lb/>
The search warrant said a special<lb/>
agent of the U.S. Drug Enforcement<lb/>
Administration identified one of the<lb/>
defendants, Armando Abreu, as a<lb/>
principal in at least 33 separate drug<lb/>
investigations involving felony<lb/>
violations.<lb/>
"The confidential source stated<lb/>
that Abreu is closely associated with<lb/>
and is receiving inside information<lb/>
and protection from a sargeant who<lb/>
is on a police force in or around<lb/>
Greenville and that Abreu is also<lb/>
associated with the wife of this of-<lb/>
ficer the application said.<lb/>
The application further said that<lb/>
Abreu was in the Greenville area to<lb/>
distribute about seven tons of mari-<lb/>
juana, most of which was stored "in<lb/>
a building on the premises of the<lb/>
police sargeant who is providing the<lb/>
protection It also said agents<lb/>
observed Abreu and associates<lb/>
opening doors of a truck body or<lb/>
outbuilding located behind Ross's<lb/>
residence.<lb/>
Ross's attorney, Milton C.<lb/>
Williamson, argued in a pretrial mo-<lb/>
tion that the search was illegal<lb/>
because the warrant did not specify<lb/>
the buildings that were searched, the<lb/>
reliability of the source was not<lb/>
known and because electronic<lb/>
surveillance allegedly was used.<lb/>
Abreu, 35, received a two-year<lb/>
prison term and $10,000 fine for his<lb/>
involvement.<lb/>
Other defendants and their<lb/>
sentences included Daniel Lee Cui-<lb/>
nand,23, of Homestead, Fla a<lb/>
five-year split sentence with three<lb/>
months active and the remainder<lb/>
probation and $5,000 fine; James<lb/>
Robert Bohanon, 42, of<lb/>
Camelsville, Ky a five-year split<lb/>
sentence with four months active<lb/>
and the remainder probation and<lb/>
$5,000 fine.<lb/>
ECU Professor Dies<lb/>
During Holidays<lb/>
An associate professor in political<lb/>
science at ECU died of leukemia<lb/>
over the holidays.<lb/>
Dr. Oral E. Parks, 48, was a<lb/>
member of the ECU staff for the<lb/>
past 11 years.<lb/>
Dr. Parks died in Duke University<lb/>
Hospital on December 30. His death<lb/>
came as a shock to his colleagues.<lb/>
"His death was very tragic and<lb/>
very sudden. He had been suffering<lb/>
from leukemia for five years, but no<lb/>
one in the department knew about<lb/>
it said Dr. Tinsley E. Yar-<lb/>
borough, chairman of the political<lb/>
science department.<lb/>
"I suppose he wanted to keep it<lb/>
within the family at least in part so<lb/>
that people wouldn't treat him any<lb/>
differently said Yarborough.<lb/>
Dr. Parks was born in Draw,<lb/>
Texas and earned his bachelor's<lb/>
degree from Texas Technological<lb/>
College in 1957. A Fulbright scholat<lb/>
in the Phillipines during 1959-60,<lb/>
Dr. Parks went on to receive his<lb/>
master's in 1960 and his doctorate in<lb/>
1972 from Michigan State Universi-<lb/>
ty.<lb/>
Dr. Parks joined the staff here in<lb/>
1968 as an assistant professor. His<lb/>
specialty was in party systems and<lb/>
political methodology.<lb/>
An officer in the North Carolina<lb/>
Political Science Association, Dr.<lb/>
Parks also served as editor of that<lb/>
organization's journal. He was also<lb/>
a member of the American Political<lb/>
Science Association.<lb/>
Dr. Parks is survived by his wife,<lb/>
Helen, and a son. A memorial ser-<lb/>
vice was held on January 2 in Green-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
As was his bequest, Dr. Parks'<lb/>
body was cremated and his ashes<lb/>
spread over the Teton Mountains, a<lb/>
part of the Rockies which ranges<lb/>
between Idaho and Wyoming.<lb/>
1$ ra&amp;rog HeW T oosy<lb/>
J? Wright Auditorium<lb/>
I<lb/>
V<lb/>
<pb facs="00057238_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 10, '980<lb/>
ECU Manuscript Collection<lb/>
Receives Family Letters<lb/>
The personal papers of<lb/>
the only father and son to<lb/>
serve as lieutenant gover-<lb/>
nors of North Carolina<lb/>
have been donated to the<lb/>
East Carolina Manuscript<lb/>
Collection in J.Y. Joyner<lb/>
Iibrary.<lb/>
H. Pat Taylor Jr a<lb/>
prominent Wadesboro at-<lb/>
torney, served as lieute-<lb/>
nant governor from 1969<lb/>
until " 1973. His father<lb/>
Hoyt Patrick Taylor Sr.<lb/>
held the office from 1949<lb/>
until 1953. ECU has.<lb/>
received more than 20,000<lb/>
items of personal cor-<lb/>
respondence, speeches,<lb/>
reports, political cam-<lb/>
paign files, clippings,<lb/>
photographs and other<lb/>
materials reflecting the<lb/>
public affairs of the<lb/>
Tavlors between 1918 and<lb/>
1973.<lb/>
NAACP<lb/>
Charges<lb/>
Brutality<lb/>
GREENVIl LE(AP)?The Pitt County branch of the<lb/>
NAACP has written state officials to complain about<lb/>
the Pitt County Sheriffs Department's "blatant police<lb/>
brutality' against blacks.<lb/>
D D Garrett, president of the Pitt County branch of<lb/>
the National Association for the Advancement of Col-<lb/>
ored People, complained about the problem in letters to<lb/>
state community relations officials, the news media and<lb/>
Sheriff Ralph Tyson.<lb/>
Garrett cited one incident in which he said a sheriff s<lb/>
deputy struck Julius Wright of Greenville in the mouth<lb/>
with a flashlight without provocation. Garrett said the<lb/>
deputy was questioning Wright in connection with a<lb/>
stolen property investigation.<lb/>
Tyson declined to discuss the incident because of pen-<lb/>
dine court actions.<lb/>
Wright was charged with possession of stolen proper-<lb/>
tv Nov 29 but the charge was voluntarily dismissed<lb/>
D. 13. After a warrant was issued Nov. 29, Wright<lb/>
was convicted of resisting arrest.<lb/>
The warrant said Deputy Lee Pascasio was trying to<lb/>
arrest Wright for possession of stolen property but that<lb/>
he resisted "by swinging a wooden chair at the otiicer.<lb/>
Wright was sentenced to two years on probation but<lb/>
he has appealed the conviction to Superior Court.<lb/>
Garrett also said that Stanley Daniels was injured by-<lb/>
officers seeking information. Daniels is scheduled to go<lb/>
on trial in Pitt County Superior Court on charges ot<lb/>
breaking and entering and receiving stolen goods.<lb/>
According to Manu-<lb/>
script Collection Director<lb/>
Don Lennon, "The<lb/>
Taylor papers constitute<lb/>
two extremely important<lb/>
state political collections.<lb/>
ECU is extremely for-<lb/>
tunate to receive these<lb/>
significant research<lb/>
materials which will be in-<lb/>
valuable to anyone study-<lb/>
ing state government and<lb/>
state politics between 1936<lb/>
and 1973<lb/>
Taylor Sr. (1890-1964)<lb/>
served as an offficer with<lb/>
the 371st Infantry in<lb/>
France during World War<lb/>
I. As a result of personal<lb/>
heroism in combat, he was<lb/>
awarded the Purple Heart,<lb/>
the Silver Star and a cita-<lb/>
tion from General John<lb/>
J.Pershing. Taylor later<lb/>
served in the N.C. General<lb/>
Assembly (1937-1944) and<lb/>
held prominent positions<lb/>
such as legislative assis-<lb/>
tant to the governor (1945)<lb/>
and chairman of the<lb/>
Senate Finance (1939) and<lb/>
Appropriations (1945)<lb/>
committees.<lb/>
Taylor Jr. was a Marine<lb/>
Corps officer before and<lb/>
during the Korean War.<lb/>
He subsequently practiced<lb/>
law in Wadesboro and<lb/>
served in the General<lb/>
Assembly for a decade<lb/>
before being elected<lb/>
Speaker of the House in<lb/>
1965.<lb/>
He was elected lieute-<lb/>
nant governor in 1968, 20<lb/>
years after his father.<lb/>
Robert W. Scott, whose<lb/>
father had been governor<lb/>
during Taylor Srs term,<lb/>
was elected governor in<lb/>
1968.<lb/>
The collections will be<lb/>
properly arranged and<lb/>
described for research<lb/>
purposes. They will be<lb/>
housed with other<lb/>
manuscript holdings in<lb/>
Joyner Library. The ECU<lb/>
Manuscript Collection is<lb/>
open to the public Mon-<lb/>
day through Friday from 8<lb/>
Relax And Enjoy Registration t f ??x.0r<lb/>
it won t last forever.<lb/>
a.m. to 5 p.m.<lb/>
Give To<lb/>
The<lb/>
Red Cross<lb/>
L<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO 12TH<lb/>
WEEK OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
$175.00 "all inclusive'<lb/>
pregnancy test, birth control andl<lb/>
problem pregnancy counseling Fort<lb/>
further mformat.on call 832-0535 (toii-1<lb/>
free number 800-221-2568) between<lb/>
9AM-5PM weekdays<lb/>
Raleigh Women's Health<lb/>
Organization<lb/>
917 West Morgan St.<lb/>
h. N.C. 27603<lb/>
Pizza inn<lb/>
AMERICAS FAVORITE PIZZA<lb/>
PIZZA BUFFET<lb/>
ALL THE PIZZA AND<lb/>
SALAD YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
MonFri. 11:30 2:00<lb/>
Mon. ? Tues. 6:00 8:00<lb/>
Evening buffet 0S.S9<lb/>
758-6266 Hwy 264 bypass Greenville . It. C.<lb/>
April?<lb/>
A Medical Miracle<lb/>
THE COMPLETE<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
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hat's the easiest way to complete your<lb/>
plans?no matter what you re planning<lb/>
By making one convanient tnp to your<lb/>
Kroger Sav-on . . . where you II find<lb/>
everything from apple cider to transistor<lb/>
radios to footballs and more all at<lb/>
cost cutter prices No matter what your<lb/>
plans, complete them with one easy trip<lb/>
to your Kroger Sav-on<lb/>
SALAD-50? EXTRA<lb/>
April Murphy, 6, of Marshfield, MA made medi-<lb/>
cal history even before she was born. She was the<lb/>
first infant treated for a rare vitamin metabolism<lb/>
defect while still in her mother's womb. After the<lb/>
death of April's older sister, from the same brain-<lb/>
damaging disorder, methylmalonic acidemia<lb/>
(MMA), March of Dimes-supported researchers<lb/>
found a clue that ultimately saved April's life.<lb/>
While pregnant, her mother was given massive<lb/>
doses of vitamin B-12 which reached April through<lb/>
the placenta. The result ?a healthy baby.<lb/>
1<lb/>
TUE.<lb/>
WITH FRIES &amp; COLESLAW<lb/>
FRIED $-499<lb/>
CHICKEN PLY ? ED<lb/>
WITH GARLIC BREAD<lb/>
ITALIAN<lb/>
SPAGHEmionlv<lb/>
WITH FRIES &amp; COLE SLAW<lb/>
FRIED<lb/>
FISH.<lb/>
Magazines and<lb/>
Paperback Books<lb/>
WITH FLYING COLORS, April passed her physical. She's<lb/>
healthy, thanks to prenatal detection and treatment.<lb/>
Records and<lb/>
Tapes<lb/>
rnscoffil s<lb/>
PABST<lb/>
Blue Ribbon Beer<lb/>
12-Oz<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
COLONY WINE<lb/>
Chabl's, Burgundy<lb/>
&amp; Rhine<lb/>
$<lb/>
3-Ltr.<lb/>
FRESH<lb/>
-a i Cheese<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
Priced<lb/>
From<lb/>
UM-UM GOOD. April was five before tasting chocolate,<lb/>
ik, or every child's favorite ?peanut butter.<lb/>
?<lb/>
7 4<lb/>
AMP<lb/>
FBAGMHCES<lb/>
iMSCOUNTEDi<lb/>
UP TO<lb/>
Little Debbie Snack Cakes &amp; Archway Cookies<lb/>
BAGGED<lb/>
Chips, Snacks &amp; Bagged Nuts<lb/>
POUCH PACK<lb/>
Sauces &amp; Gravy Mixes gll t 1<lb/>
PEPPERIOGE FARMS M,<lb/>
Bagged Cookies &amp; Snacks<lb/>
OFF MANUFACTURER S<lb/>
SUQQESTEO RETAIL<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057238_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN JANUARY 10. 1990 3<lb/>
A Maturing Work Force Comes Of Age<lb/>
By ROBERT REINHOLD<lb/>
Reprinted from The New York Times National<lb/>
Economic Survey, Jan. 6, 1980.<lb/>
Odd as it may seem after so many years of having to<lb/>
cope with unemployment, the next decade is likely to<lb/>
mark the beginning of a major labor shortage for<lb/>
American business and industry. Because of a continu-<lb/>
ing decline in the birth rate that began with the "birth<lb/>
dearth" of the 1960's, fewer people will enter the labor<lb/>
force in the I980's than did over the last 20 years when<lb/>
the post-war baby boom generation matured and swell-<lb/>
ed the ranks of workers.<lb/>
With fewer young people going to work, the<lb/>
American labor force will increasingly be dominated by<lb/>
older workers, a reversal of historic trends. By 1990, ac-<lb/>
cording to Labor Department projections, the number<lb/>
of workers between 25 and 54 years of age will swell to<lb/>
83 million, a 40 percent increase over the 1977 figure.<lb/>
This will mean that there will be a surplus of skilled<lb/>
older workers in the 1980's, limiting the opportunities<lb/>
for promotion and movement at the top end of the labor<lb/>
scale.<lb/>
Adding to that trend will be the impact of the 1978<lb/>
law that pushed the mandatory retirement age from 65<lb/>
to 70 years old. Faced with the growing difficulty of try-<lb/>
ing to live on fixed incomes in the age of steep inflation,<lb/>
many older workers may be forced to stay on the job<lb/>
longer, further clogging a system already top-heavy with<lb/>
older workers.<lb/>
The decline in the number of young people entering<lb/>
the job market will presumably open up more oppor-<lb/>
tunities for women and minority groups. It will also<lb/>
create a shortage of workers to take lesser-skilled jobs,<lb/>
the kind that young people 16 to 24 years of age usually<lb/>
help to fill. This could spur further immigration, both<lb/>
legal and illegal, from Latin America and the Carib-<lb/>
bean.<lb/>
It could also solve the problem of teen-age unemploy-<lb/>
ment better than the most massive of government pro-<lb/>
grams. But the birth rate of blacks has not fallen nearly<lb/>
as fast as that of whites, meaning that the number of<lb/>
black teen-agers looking for work will not decrease<lb/>
substantially for many years. And even if suitable jobs<lb/>
are available, black youngsters often do not live where<lb/>
the jobs are likely to be.<lb/>
This period of change for the American workforce in<lb/>
the 1980's will follow a decade in which even more<lb/>
radical upheavals took place: Women, freed from the<lb/>
burden of large families and impelled by the rising cost<lb/>
of living, took paying jobs in massive numbers in the<lb/>
1970's. Additionally, blacks and other members of<lb/>
minority groups made greater strides in obtaining skill-<lb/>
ed well-paying jobs than in any comparable period.<lb/>
Women took more than 60 percent of the increased<lb/>
number of jobs generated over the decade, and today<lb/>
half of all women over 16 years old hold jobs. In addi-<lb/>
tion, about six of every 10 women with school-age<lb/>
children and four of every 10 with preschool youngsters<lb/>
are working. Women now bring in on an average about<lb/>
30 percent of family income where there are two work-<lb/>
ing spouses. This has helped considerably in the fight to<lb/>
maintain standards of living in the face of inflation.<lb/>
The huge infusion of women helped raise the nation's<lb/>
total labor pool to more than 100 million in May 1978, a<lb/>
20 percent rate of growth in a decade during which the<lb/>
population grew by only about 8 percent. Unfortunate-<lb/>
ly, there were not enough jobs for everyone in the 1970's<lb/>
and unemployment became a chonic problem.<lb/>
Moreover, new female workers, who entered the market<lb/>
relatively unskilled, were competing for the same kinds<lb/>
of jobs normally taken by minority-group teenagers.<lb/>
Thus the unemployment rate among black male teen-<lb/>
agers grew from 28 percent in 1970 to about 40 percent<lb/>
today. This occurred even as the proportion of<lb/>
employed black adults working in white-collar, profes-<lb/>
sional and managerial jobs increased markedly, sug-<lb/>
gesting that the gap between successful and unsuccessful<lb/>
blacks is widening.<lb/>
Most experts do not expect women to continue enter-<lb/>
ing the labor market at the high rate of the 1970's. But<lb/>
Ralph E. Smith of the Urban Institute, estimated that 52<lb/>
million women will be working or looking for jobs by<lb/>
1990, about 10 million more than are doing so today.<lb/>
Currently, more than 40 percent of the American<lb/>
workforce is female, and that share is projected to rise<lb/>
to 45 percent by 1990. However, a major question for<lb/>
the coming decade will be whether women can break out<lb/>
of the traditional "female" jobs in which they still<lb/>
predominate and whether they will reach pay parity with<lb/>
males when today their salaries average only 60 percent<lb/>
that of men.<lb/>
Russians Threaten Veto<lb/>
UNITED NATIONS<lb/>
(AP)?The United States<lb/>
was successful in its drive<lb/>
to arraign the Soviet<lb/>
Union before the General<lb/>
Assembly for its military<lb/>
intervention in<lb/>
Afghanistan, but the Rus-<lb/>
sians announced that they<lb/>
would veto any resolution<lb/>
in the Security Council<lb/>
calling for sanctions<lb/>
against Iran.<lb/>
With Security Council<lb/>
action on Afghanistan<lb/>
blocked by the Soviet<lb/>
veto, the council adopted<lb/>
a resolution Wednesday<lb/>
night asking for an<lb/>
emergency session of the<lb/>
152-nation assembly to<lb/>
deal with the situation in<lb/>
the Central Asian nation.<lb/>
Secretary-General Kurt<lb/>
Waldheim announced that<lb/>
the assembly, which ended<lb/>
its regular 1979 session on<lb/>
Monday, would meet at 3<lb/>
p.m. EST today.<lb/>
The emergency session<lb/>
is expected to last several<lb/>
days, and the debate is ex-<lb/>
pected to be a replay of<lb/>
the debate in the Security<lb/>
Council last weekend,<lb/>
with most of the members<lb/>
attacking the Soviet action<lb/>
in Afghanistan and the<lb/>
Soviet Union and its com-<lb/>
munist allies defending it.<lb/>
The United States and<lb/>
its allies were reported<lb/>
confident that they could<lb/>
muster the two-thirds ma-<lb/>
jority necessary for adop-<lb/>
tion of the resolution<lb/>
Scott's Funds<lb/>
Trail Hunt 9s<lb/>
RALEIGH(AP)?For-<lb/>
mer Gov. Bob Scott's<lb/>
campaign for governor<lb/>
has raised approximately<lb/>
one-twelfth the amount of<lb/>
Gov. Jim Hunt's re-<lb/>
election campaign, but<lb/>
Scott says he's just started<lb/>
money-raising efforts.<lb/>
In its annual financial<lb/>
report filed with the state<lb/>
Elections Board on Tues-<lb/>
day, Scott's committee<lb/>
showed it has collected<lb/>
$57,103.11 in contribu-<lb/>
tions and has spent more<lb/>
than $31,000.<lb/>
Hunt's re-election cam-<lb/>
paign reported raising<lb/>
$707,937.99.<lb/>
Scott's report shows<lb/>
that more than 21 persons<lb/>
have contributed $1,000<lb/>
or more each to the cam-<lb/>
paign. The list of con-<lb/>
tributions includes $1,500<lb/>
from Scott's wife, Jessie<lb/>
Rae, and contributions of<lb/>
$250 to $300 from each of<lb/>
his four children.<lb/>
The former governor<lb/>
said Monday he hopes to<lb/>
raise $250,000 before the<lb/>
May 6 Democratic<lb/>
primary.<lb/>
"Jim Hunt has the<lb/>
ability to raise large<lb/>
amounts of money simply<lb/>
because he is the incum-<lb/>
bent said Julian Mann,<lb/>
Scott's campaign<lb/>
manager. "We've only<lb/>
held one fund-raiser to<lb/>
: date, and most of the<lb/>
! money has come un-<lb/>
solicited from old Scott<lb/>
' allies<lb/>
Scott said he is confi-<lb/>
dent enough money can be<lb/>
raised to "put on a credi-<lb/>
ble campaign<lb/>
"He (Scott) has said we<lb/>
could run a viable cam-<lb/>
paign on $250,000, and I<lb/>
think we can said<lb/>
Bryant Haskins, Scott's<lb/>
press secretary. "We will<lb/>
just have to spend our<lb/>
money wisely<lb/>
Hunt's report showed<lb/>
his committee has spent<lb/>
$238,000 and has put<lb/>
$450,000 in high interest-<lb/>
bearing savings cer-<lb/>
tificates.<lb/>
Republican state Sen. I.<lb/>
Beverly Lake Jr. of<lb/>
Raleigh reported raising<lb/>
$65,375.50 for his guber-<lb/>
natorial campaign.<lb/>
Another candidate for<lb/>
governor, Republican<lb/>
Charles J. Carstens Jr<lb/>
reported that he has<lb/>
received $50 in contribu-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
vetoed by the Soviet<lb/>
Union in the Security<lb/>
Council. The big-power<lb/>
veto does not apply in the<lb/>
assembly, but adoption of<lb/>
the resolution will have<lb/>
only moral and propagan-<lb/>
da value since the<lb/>
assembly has no power to<lb/>
order punitive action.<lb/>
The resolution deplored<lb/>
the armed intervention in<lb/>
Afghanistan and called<lb/>
for the withdrawal of all<lb/>
foreign forces.<lb/>
The opponents of the<lb/>
Soviet action took their<lb/>
case to the General<lb/>
Assembly under a pro-<lb/>
cedure established in 1950<lb/>
to deal with situations in<lb/>
which a veto prevented the<lb/>
Security Council from<lb/>
taking action to preserve<lb/>
or restore peace.<lb/>
The resolution asking<lb/>
for the assembly session<lb/>
was submittted by the<lb/>
Philippines and Mexico,<lb/>
and the vote in ?kw<lb/>
15-nation council "was<lb/>
12-2, with the Soviet<lb/>
Union and East Germany<lb/>
voting no and Zambia<lb/>
abstaining.<lb/>
The council vote Mon-<lb/>
day on the resolution call-<lb/>
ing for withdrawal of the<lb/>
Soviet troops had been<lb/>
13-2, with Zambia voting<lb/>
with the majority. But<lb/>
that was an issue of<lb/>
substance on which the<lb/>
negative Soviet vote<lb/>
counted as a veto, while<lb/>
the resolution to go to the<lb/>
General Assembly was a<lb/>
procedural matter exempt<lb/>
from the veto of the five<lb/>
permanent council<lb/>
members ' the United<lb/>
States, the Soviet Union,<lb/>
Britain, France and<lb/>
China.<lb/>
Meanwhile, Tass, the<lb/>
official Soviet news agen-<lb/>
cy, announced that U.S.<lb/>
plans to get the Security<lb/>
Council to vote sanctions<lb/>
against Iran were doomed<lb/>
to defeat.<lb/>
"As regards the USSR,<lb/>
it will not tolerate any in-<lb/>
terference from the out-<lb/>
side in the internal affairs<lb/>
oTTran, ana win not allow<lb/>
the United States to im-<lb/>
pose a decision to apply<lb/>
economic sanctions<lb/>
against it said Tass.<lb/>
MARCH OF DIMES 1980 National<lb/>
Poster Child Betsy Burch repre-<lb/>
sents more than 250,000 babies<lb/>
born annually with birth defects.<lb/>
Betsy, 6, from Stone Mountain,<lb/>
Ga was born with webbed fingers<lb/>
and a malformed right leg. She<lb/>
has had 14 operations to correct<lb/>
both problems.<lb/>
Support The<lb/>
Diamonds for Any<lb/>
and All Occasions<lb/>
(Lose or Mounted)<lb/>
Complete Line of Quality Jewelry<lb/>
14kt Gold, Sterling Silver,<lb/>
and Gold-filled Chain<lb/>
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J.O. Pollack Fraternity<lb/>
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March<lb/>
Of Dimes<lb/>
WE PAY CASH FOR<lb/>
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IN STORE SERVICE<lb/>
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Floyd G. Robinson<lb/>
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407 Evans Mall<lb/>
Floyd G. Robinson<lb/>
Vafarie Hawis<lb/>
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Mike Robinson<lb/>
Rhonda Marsh<lb/>
Your Independent Local Jewelers<lb/>
STOP RUBELLA and other messages about prevention of birth defects<lb/>
are circulated by members of Future Homemakers of America (FHA).<lb/>
Blindness, deafness and other birth defects caused by rubfilla can be<lb/>
prevented if the rubella vaccine is given maximum use<lb/>
DAIRY CUP<lb/>
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Offer good Jan. 10-16<lb/>
HP-31-E<lb/>
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STUDENTS<lb/>
SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
<pb facs="00057238_0004"/><lb/>
SI?e iEaat (Earolinimt<lb/>
Serving the campus community for 54 years.<lb/>
Marc Barnes, semorEduor<lb/>
Diane Henderson, Managing Editor<lb/>
Richard Green, copvEdnor<lb/>
Anita Lancaster, production Manager<lb/>
Terry Gray, , u?<lb/>
ROBERT M. SvVAIM, Director of Advertising<lb/>
STEVE CGEARY, Business Manager<lb/>
Charles Chandler, sponsEduor<lb/>
KAREN WENDT. Features Editor<lb/>
<lb/>
r?<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
:<lb/>
i<lb/>
THURSDAY, JANUARY 10. 1980<lb/>
PAGE 4<lb/>
This Newspaper's Opinion<lb/>
The Angry Bear<lb/>
p<lb/>
Rarely has a world started out a<lb/>
new year, and a new decade with so<lb/>
many things wrong in the world.<lb/>
American hostages are still being<lb/>
held in the American embassy in<lb/>
Tehran, and the situation in<lb/>
Afghanistan worsens before our<lb/>
eyes each night on the six o'clock<lb/>
news.<lb/>
For the first time since 1945,<lb/>
Soviet troops, which some estimates<lb/>
places as high as 100,000 blatantly<lb/>
walked across the Afgan borders to<lb/>
install a puppet ruler into power. It<lb/>
was the first time since World War<lb/>
II that Soviet armies have been used<lb/>
to dictate the Kremlin's will on a<lb/>
foreign country that was not<lb/>
previously under Soviet control.<lb/>
Immediately, President Carter ac-<lb/>
cused Soviet Communist Party<lb/>
Chief Leonid Breshnev of making<lb/>
the false statement that Afgan<lb/>
laders had invited the Russian army<lb/>
into the country. In turn, the Soviet<lb/>
state controlled press establishment<lb/>
said that Carter's comments were<lb/>
"bellicose and wicked<lb/>
Carter then went into a week of<lb/>
consultation with his top aides. An<lb/>
unprecedented Carter administra-<lb/>
tion move saw the American<lb/>
diplomat recalled from Moscow ?<lb/>
a move that some saw as a growing<lb/>
indication of a new American<lb/>
toughness in that troubled region of<lb/>
the world.<lb/>
President Carter, in one of his<lb/>
toughest speeches yet on national<lb/>
television decide to cancel remain-<lb/>
ing Soviet fishing privileges and<lb/>
cultural exchanges brought strong<lb/>
protest from the Soviets.<lb/>
Yet, what other options did<lb/>
Carter have? He could not have<lb/>
launched a massive military attack,<lb/>
because this would have only started<lb/>
World War III. He could not have<lb/>
ordered troops into the bordering<lb/>
countries of Pakistan and Iran,<lb/>
bcause of how his actions would<lb/>
have been seen by the Soviets.<lb/>
The Solutions<lb/>
The only solution we can forsee is<lb/>
for the United States to hold off, if<lb/>
possible, further Soviet intervention<lb/>
in the Middle East until we can<lb/>
develop technology to free ourselves<lb/>
of foreign oil. We have for too long<lb/>
been at the mercy of foreign powers<lb/>
who hold the pursestrings to our<lb/>
economy ? pursestrings which, if<lb/>
pulled too hard, will wreck the<lb/>
economy of the United States,<lb/>
Japan, and the countries of eastern<lb/>
Europe.<lb/>
Invasion Of Privacy<lb/>
It has long been a common prac-<lb/>
tice at ECU for fraternities,<lb/>
sororities, student government and<lb/>
numerous other student organiza-<lb/>
tions to ask the administration to<lb/>
verify whether their members have a<lb/>
minimum gradepoint average of<lb/>
2.0.<lb/>
Normally, a list of names or I.D.<lb/>
numbers are submitted with the<lb/>
question: Do these people have a<lb/>
2.0 or does this person have a 2.0?<lb/>
That is why Congress passed the<lb/>
Family Educational Rights and<lb/>
Privacy Act of 1974.<lb/>
The major thrust of this law is to<lb/>
prevent administrators for revealing<lb/>
a students grades to a third party.<lb/>
More often than not the un-<lb/>
suspecting student does not even<lb/>
know that his grade point average<lb/>
has been somewhat revealed.<lb/>
The law is very specific in stating<lb/>
that administrators and faculty<lb/>
members may have access to a<lb/>
I<lb/>
Washington Merry-Go-Round<lb/>
ino<lb/>
Pop's People<lb/>
New Year's Resolution<lb/>
students records without the<lb/>
students prior written consent, but<lb/>
that's as far as it goes.<lb/>
Administrators and faculty<lb/>
members have no right whatsoever<lb/>
to reveal a student's grade point<lb/>
average to a third party, and such<lb/>
revelations are in violation of<lb/>
United States law.<lb/>
The ECU administration should<lb/>
give serious thought to revising<lb/>
some of its procedures in answering<lb/>
inquiries from student organiza-<lb/>
tions about how high or low an in-<lb/>
dividual student's grades are.<lb/>
Any student who wishes to seek a<lb/>
position or an elected office that re-<lb/>
quires a 2.0 could simply sign a<lb/>
release form. This would protect the<lb/>
unsuspecting student from having<lb/>
his grades revealed with out his con-<lb/>
sent.<lb/>
Invasion of privacy is a grave<lb/>
constitutional concern, and the<lb/>
right to privacy must be protected at<lb/>
all costs.<lb/>
By LARRY POPELKA<lb/>
It's a new year, and time for us all to sit<lb/>
down and draw up this year's crop of New<lb/>
Year's resolutions.<lb/>
New Year's resolutions have always<lb/>
played an important role at my house.<lb/>
Every New Year's eve we'd all gather<lb/>
'round our ktchen table and Sis and I<lb/>
would resolve to get better grades in<lb/>
school, Mom and Dad would vow to go<lb/>
on a diet, and we'd all throw in a few<lb/>
more noble thoughts, like resolving to<lb/>
have more fun.<lb/>
Of course, none of it ever made any dif-<lb/>
ference, because New Year's resolutions<lb/>
? like politicians' promises ? are never<lb/>
meant to be kept. My Mom and Dad<lb/>
weigh no less now than they did 20 years<lb/>
ago. Sis and I never did any better in<lb/>
school. And none of us really had that<lb/>
much more fun.<lb/>
The nice thing about New Year's<lb/>
resolutions is that they sound impressive<lb/>
when you make them, but two or three<lb/>
weeks later you can forget all about them<lb/>
and no one will ever give a hoot. That's<lb/>
the whole point.<lb/>
So in the spirit of the new year I've<lb/>
come up with a few "meaningful" resolu-<lb/>
tions for 1980. Since this is also a new<lb/>
decade it's a particularly important year<lb/>
for resolutions. Therefore, I've been<lb/>
working extra hard on these. If you're<lb/>
having a hard time with your own resolu-<lb/>
tions, feel free to take any of mine and<lb/>
adopt them as your own.<lb/>
1. Jog one lap around my refrigerator<lb/>
every night.<lb/>
2. Never get up before 9 a.m.<lb/>
3. Swear more in front of my mother.<lb/>
4. Never move to Cleveland.<lb/>
5. Get drunk more often.<lb/>
6. Never tour a nuclear plant during a<lb/>
meltdown.<lb/>
7. Gain lots of weight and belch alot.<lb/>
8. Never buy a kissing Barbie doll until<lb/>
they make a kissing Ken.<lb/>
9. Buy some plaid pants and a plaid shirt.<lb/>
10. Never go to a Who concert in Cincin-<lb/>
nati.<lb/>
11. Hang out in a sleazy bar at least once a<lb/>
week.<lb/>
12. Never let Mr. Hand show me how to<lb/>
make a milk shakeOhhh Noooo.<lb/>
13. Seduce Bo Derek and fly to a tropical<lb/>
island for a month.<lb/>
14. Never visit Iran while the Shah's on<lb/>
vacation.<lb/>
15. Learn how to smoke stogies.<lb/>
16. Never buy pas for less than SI a<lb/>
gallon.<lb/>
17. Seduce Linda Ronstadt and fly to<lb/>
South America for a week.<lb/>
18. Seduce Suzanne Somers and have her<lb/>
autograph my Ace power drill.<lb/>
19. Never seduce Elizabeth Ray.<lb/>
20. Never watch a TV show sponsored by<lb/>
Gentoi. (<lb/>
21. Pick my nose every Tuesday morning.<lb/>
22. Never listen to disco music at White<lb/>
Sox park.<lb/>
23. Never trust a politician who makes<lb/>
things "perfectly clear<lb/>
24. Never trust a politician who has a<lb/>
brother who drinks beer and belches alot.<lb/>
25. Never trust a politician.<lb/>
26. Buy a Ronco egg spinner.<lb/>
27. Never let Mike Wallace interview me.<lb/>
28. Never let a fat kid in a fraternity try to<lb/>
sell me 10,000 marbles.<lb/>
29. Never let my readers talk me into<lb/>
shaving my head.<lb/>
30. Buy a "Kill the Bee Gees" T-Shirt.<lb/>
31. Throw a "Thank-God-the-Bee Gees-<lb/>
broke up" party.<lb/>
32. Never drink purple Kool Aid.<lb/>
33. Earn a 0.0 grade point average or bet-<lb/>
ter this semester.<lb/>
34. Never buy an Oldsmobile without<lb/>
looking at the engine.<lb/>
35. Never buy an Oldsmobile.<lb/>
36. Subscribe to Hustler magazine.<lb/>
37. Never try to make Egg Foo Yung in<lb/>
my sister's Easy Bake Oven<lb/>
38. Cheat on my taxes.<lb/>
39. Never fly a DC-10.<lb/>
40. Sleep in the nude more often.<lb/>
41. Buy a Mr. Tea machine.<lb/>
42. Never eat dead cats tor breakfast.<lb/>
43. Brush my teeth at least once a month.<lb/>
44. Never drink Perrier water without a<lb/>
twist of lemon.<lb/>
45. Quit school and become a Chicago<lb/>
bus driver for S20,000 a year.<lb/>
46. Never try to have sex with a hampster.<lb/>
47. Buy a copy of the Pope's album and<lb/>
play it full blast at 2 a.m. on Sunday mor-<lb/>
nings.<lb/>
48. Never read another newspaper article<lb/>
about the highlights of the '70s.<lb/>
49. Ask the National Weather Service to<lb/>
name a hurricane after me.<lb/>
50. Never make another resolution  un-<lb/>
til 1981.<lb/>
Letters Policy<lb/>
Letters to the editor must include<lb/>
the name, address, phone number and<lb/>
signature of the author(s) and must be<lb/>
typed, double spaced, or neatly<lb/>
printed.<lb/>
Letters should be limited to three<lb/>
typewritten, double-spaced pages. All<lb/>
letters are subject of editing for brevi-<lb/>
ty, obcenity and libel.<lb/>
Personal attacks will not be permit-<lb/>
ted. Names of authors will be<lb/>
withheld only when inclusion of the<lb/>
name will cause the author embarrass-<lb/>
ment or ridicule, such as letters con-<lb/>
cerning homosexuality, drug abuse,<lb/>
etc. Names will be withheld only on<lb/>
the author's request.<lb/>
Nixon Named Panhandler Of The Year<lb/>
By Jack Anderson<lb/>
and Joe Spear<lb/>
WASHINGTON?In this holiday<lb/>
season of charity and giving, profes-<lb/>
sional panhandlers enjoy a harvest<lb/>
of handouts with their hard luck<lb/>
stories. We're generally a soft touch<lb/>
for most of them. But we'll have to<lb/>
draw the line in this column on our<lb/>
nominee for professional<lb/>
panhandler of the year.<lb/>
The well-heeled winner of the<lb/>
award is former President Richard<lb/>
M. Nixon who has his hand out for<lb/>
more dollars from the U.S.<lb/>
Treasury to subsidize his life in<lb/>
political exile. Since resigning from<lb/>
the White House in disgrace, the<lb/>
unindicted Watergate conspirator<lb/>
has luxuriated at his San Clemente<lb/>
estate on the shores of the Pacific<lb/>
with the government picking up the<lb/>
tab for his office expenses. It's been<lb/>
costing the taxpayers about<lb/>
$300,000 a year.<lb/>
With the wanderlust of a deposed<lb/>
shah, Nixon has decided to abandon<lb/>
the sunny clime of California and<lb/>
move to New York City. As a<lb/>
former chief executive, the pardon-<lb/>
ed ex-president is entitled to collect<lb/>
eight dollars a square foot for office<lb/>
space to house a staff, seclude<lb/>
himself in writing self-serving<lb/>
memoirs and make phone calls to<lb/>
still sympathetic adherents.<lb/>
Nixon has discovered that office<lb/>
rentals in Manhattan amount to ap-<lb/>
proximately $30 a foot. He wants to<lb/>
be compensated for his more expen-<lb/>
sive high-rise Ivory Tower. Addi-<lb/>
tionally, he's trying to put the bite<lb/>
on the government for moving his<lb/>
operations for the West Coast.<lb/>
Members of Congress are quietly<lb/>
getting ready to rebuff Nixon's<lb/>
panhandling approach, especially<lb/>
since he's been reluctant to pay up<lb/>
to $66,000 he owes the government<lb/>
for fancy improvements to the San<lb/>
Clemente property he sold for a<lb/>
substantial profit.<lb/>
Nixon's solicitation for more<lb/>
public largesse is now being weigh at<lb/>
the White House. It will be up to<lb/>
Jimmy Carter whether to request<lb/>
Nixon's extra funds form Congress<lb/>
in the budget he sends to the Hill in<lb/>
January.<lb/>
Expensive Protection<lb/>
The unwanted shah of Iran is also<lb/>
bemoaning his high cost of living<lb/>
now that he no longer sits on a<lb/>
Peacock Throne padded with his<lb/>
country's oil millions. Members of<lb/>
his family confide that the shah may<lb/>
have to sell some of his real estate<lb/>
holdings to maintain his luxurious<lb/>
life style in Panama or elsewhere if<lb/>
he moves on.<lb/>
On of his new expenses is for a<lb/>
security guard which used to be<lb/>
taken care of by the Iranian govern-<lb/>
ment. The rabid revolutionary<lb/>
regime that supplanted him has<lb/>
threatened openly to assassinate<lb/>
him. The warning took on a deadly<lb/>
serious aspect when the shah's<lb/>
nephew was gunned down recently<lb/>
in Paris by boastful agents of the<lb/>
Ayatollah Khomeini.<lb/>
To protect his life, the shah has<lb/>
hired Jack O'Connor's Protection<lb/>
service, a high-priced agency run by<lb/>
a former New York police detective.<lb/>
During the shah's stay at the New<lb/>
York Sloan-Ksttering Hospital<lb/>
Center, two of O'Connor's heavily<lb/>
armed men stood guard outside the<lb/>
convalescent monarch's 17th floor<lb/>
medical suite. His private quarters<lb/>
were shielded by specially installed<lb/>
steel dors and bullet-proof win-<lb/>
dows.<lb/>
Another six guards, half of them<lb/>
O'Connor's agents were positioned<lb/>
around the clock inside the shah's<lb/>
room itself. All wore bullet-proof<lb/>
vests and they kept handy a bomb<lb/>
blanket in the event someone tried<lb/>
to kill their client with a bomb or a<lb/>
grenade.<lb/>
When the shah slipped out of this<lb/>
country to Panama, eight of<lb/>
O'Connor's most trusted operatives<lb/>
accompanied him to the island sanc-<lb/>
tuary. They were instructed to be<lb/>
ready to travel anywhere in the<lb/>
world at a moment's notice. They<lb/>
coordinated their security precau-<lb/>
tions with the Panamanian govern-<lb/>
ment which provided additional<lb/>
help.<lb/>
O'Connor's protective blanket is<lb/>
now extended to all members of the<lb/>
shah's family. Among those being<lb/>
shielded are a son at Williams Col-<lb/>
lege in Massachusetts, a daughter at<lb/>
a Connecticut boarding school and<lb/>
three other children at private New<lb/>
York schools.<lb/>
JudiciaUollity<lb/>
There wasn't much ho-ho-hoing<lb/>
at the Christmas party tossed this<lb/>
year by the nine brethren of the<lb/>
Supreme Court for their law clerks<lb/>
and other underlings. The press<lb/>
corps which covers the Court was<lb/>
excluded and only a few select out-<lb/>
side guests were invited.<lb/>
We've learned however that there<lb/>
was precious little jollity in the wake<lb/>
of our disclosures of the hair-pulling<lb/>
that goes on among the justices<lb/>
behind the velvet red curtain that<lb/>
separates the public chamber and<lb/>
their private quarters.<lb/>
The fare for the festive occasion<lb/>
was gallons of spiked punch,<lb/>
catered gourmet appetizers and fan-<lb/>
cy pastries. The invitations to the af-<lb/>
fair gave the impression that the<lb/>
justices had paid for the Christmas<lb/>
goodies out of their own pockets<lb/>
and a court spokesman insisted to us<lb/>
this was so.<lb/>
The employees, however, were<lb/>
aware that the party was funded at<lb/>
least partially by profits from ven-<lb/>
ding machines located around the<lb/>
building. Most of the nickels, dimes<lb/>
and quarters in the machines come<lb/>
from snack-hungry employees and<lb/>
tourist visitors.<lb/>
Watch On Waste<lb/>
A University of Wisconsin resear-<lb/>
cher has found a Shangri-la project<lb/>
in the Andes of Ecuador at the ex-<lb/>
pense of the American taxpayer.<lb/>
The Nationaal Science Foundation<lb/>
last year coughed up$30,000 for<lb/>
Prof. Richard Mazess to study why<lb/>
the natives in the mountains manag-<lb/>
ed to live so long. Many of the peo-<lb/>
ple claimed to have been born more<lb/>
than 100 years ago.<lb/>
Mazess discoverd fro his on-the-<lb/>
spot research that the Ecuadorean<lb/>
elders were fibbing about their ages.<lb/>
Church records showed they were<lb/>
younger than they claimed.<lb/>
Nonetheless the federal agency<lb/>
doted out an additional $26,000 for<lb/>
Mazess to pursue the Foutain of<lb/>
Youth in the Andes.<lb/>
Copyright, 1979, United I'eatrues<lb/>
Syndicate, Inc.<lb/>
I<lb/>
t<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
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<lb/>
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s<lb/>
t<lb/>
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n<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057238_0005"/><lb/>
Carter Fights Illiteracy<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN JANUARY 10. 1980<lb/>
WASHINGTON<lb/>
(AP)?The Carter ad-<lb/>
ministration, grappling<lb/>
with the stubborn youth<lb/>
unemployment problem,<lb/>
is mounting a frontal<lb/>
assault on functional il-<lb/>
literacy and bankrolling<lb/>
the campaign with a 50<lb/>
percent boost in spending.<lb/>
Informed administra-<lb/>
tion sources said President<lb/>
Carter will unveil a new<lb/>
approach to youth<lb/>
joblessness Thursday bas-<lb/>
ed on attacking functional<lb/>
illiteracy?the inability to<lb/>
read, write or do simple<lb/>
math. Coupled with this<lb/>
will be a broad effort to<lb/>
bring the nation's schools<lb/>
into a battle that has been<lb/>
waged largely through<lb/>
Labor Department job<lb/>
training programs.<lb/>
The proposal will con-<lb/>
tain the only major new<lb/>
program and one of the<lb/>
largest spending increases<lb/>
in the budget Carter sub-<lb/>
mits to Congress Jan. 28.<lb/>
The proposal results<lb/>
from a nine-month study<lb/>
of the $4-billion-a-year<lb/>
youth employment pro-<lb/>
grams by a task force<lb/>
under the direction of Vice<lb/>
President Walter F. Mon-<lb/>
dale.<lb/>
The sources, who re-<lb/>
quested anonymity, said<lb/>
the president will call for<lb/>
additional spending of<lb/>
$1.2 billion in fiscal 1981<lb/>
and $2 billion in fiscal<lb/>
1982. If Congress ap-<lb/>
proves, that will bring<lb/>
total spending to $6 billion<lb/>
in the 12 months beginn-<lb/>
ing Oct. 1, 1981.<lb/>
An unstated side benefit<lb/>
for a president challenged<lb/>
for renomination is that<lb/>
the proposal may shore up<lb/>
his support among lalor,<lb/>
urban, civil rights and<lb/>
other Democratic Party<lb/>
constituencies.<lb/>
The target is four<lb/>
million youths, aged 14 to<lb/>
21, who face serious<lb/>
employment problems in<lb/>
the 1980s. Half have<lb/>
already dropped out of<lb/>
school and are<lb/>
unemployed; of those, 40<lb/>
percent are minorities.<lb/>
The other two million are<lb/>
still in school, but in the<lb/>
poorest districts and in the<lb/>
bottom third of their<lb/>
class. Carter's planners<lb/>
hope the new program will<lb/>
reach three million of<lb/>
these youths.<lb/>
Administration sources<lb/>
said the task force made<lb/>
three discoveries about the<lb/>
seemingly intractable pro-<lb/>
blem of joblessness among<lb/>
the young: it will be worse<lb/>
in the 1980s for some<lb/>
youths and some com-<lb/>
munities; employers say<lb/>
their biggest problem is<lb/>
finding youths who have<lb/>
mastered the three R's;<lb/>
and they base their hiring<lb/>
of such youths mostly op a<lb/>
record of reliability in a<lb/>
previous job.<lb/>
The shift of the<lb/>
economy from blue- to<lb/>
white-collar jobs has been<lb/>
dramatic. In 1950, 34 per-<lb/>
A Jangle In Your Pocket,<lb/>
A Tiger In Your Tank<lb/>
WINSTON-SALEM(AP)? A<lb/>
pocket full of silver will buy a lot of<lb/>
gas at a Leon Cooke's Shell station.<lb/>
Cooke is offering $18 worth of<lb/>
gas for $1 in silver coins as long as<lb/>
they're real silver. That means coins<lb/>
minted in or before 1964.<lb/>
The offer started last Saturday,<lb/>
and Cooke originally pumped $15<lb/>
worth of gas for $1 in coins. But he<lb/>
increased the amount to stay in line<lb/>
w ith the rising price of silver.<lb/>
In silver markets in New York<lb/>
Tuesday, the precious metal closed<lb/>
at $31.75 an ounce. A dollar's worth<lb/>
of siKer coins weighs about three-<lb/>
quarters of an ounce.<lb/>
Cooke flashed a grin when he was<lb/>
asked how the offer was going and<lb/>
quickly produced two silver dollars<lb/>
from his pocket.<lb/>
"We collected $20 worth of silver<lb/>
dimes on Monday he said. " <lb/>
People like a good deal<lb/>
Cooke said he had been thinking<lb/>
about trading gas for silver for quite<lb/>
a while but had held back until silver<lb/>
prices began to rise. He admits to<lb/>
making "a little extra profit" on the<lb/>
deal.<lb/>
For the most part, he said,<lb/>
customers have reacted with sur-<lb/>
prise when they learn of the offer.<lb/>
Some tell him they are going home<lb/>
to get their silver; others seem a little<lb/>
skeptical, he said.<lb/>
But Cooke said he thinks more<lb/>
people will begin bartering metals<lb/>
such as gold and silver for gas and<lb/>
other items.<lb/>
"With the economy the way it is,<lb/>
this could develop into a trend in<lb/>
this country he said.<lb/>
cent of all jobs were open<lb/>
to workers without a high<lb/>
school diploma. By 1970,<lb/>
only 9 percent were, but<lb/>
the high school dropout<lb/>
rate has remained at 13<lb/>
percent.<lb/>
"Once there were more<lb/>
such jobs than dropouts;<lb/>
now there are increasingly<lb/>
more dropouts than jobs<lb/>
for them one source<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The problem for<lb/>
business was illustrated by<lb/>
a telephone company that<lb/>
told the task force it has to<lb/>
interview 12 to 15 persons<lb/>
to find one qualified to<lb/>
take orders for<lb/>
telephones.<lb/>
The task force found<lb/>
the heavy emphasis on<lb/>
previous job experience<lb/>
left youths who had never<lb/>
had a job in a Catch-22<lb/>
situation, but almost as<lb/>
bad off were those who<lb/>
had worked only in<lb/>
government-financed job<lb/>
programs.<lb/>
As a result, the Carter<lb/>
program will add a Basic<lb/>
Employability-Skills<lb/>
Training program in the<lb/>
new Department of<lb/>
Education. Of the new<lb/>
money, Education will get<lb/>
$900 million in 1981 and<lb/>
$1 billion in 1982; Labor<lb/>
will get the remainder.<lb/>
Carter's planners hope<lb/>
the Education segment<lb/>
will reach one million<lb/>
youths in junior highs and<lb/>
high schools through these<lb/>
five components:<lb/>
cIt will finance the<lb/>
teaching of basic reading,<lb/>
writing and mathematical<lb/>
skills. The task force<lb/>
found that federal aid to<lb/>
education has left a big<lb/>
gap between the pre-<lb/>
school Head Start and<lb/>
elementary school Title I<lb/>
programs, on the one<lb/>
hand, and a series of col-<lb/>
lege aid programs, on the<lb/>
other.<lb/>
cIt will provide money<lb/>
for school systems to hire<lb/>
employment counselors to<lb/>
set up part-time school,<lb/>
part-time work programs.<lb/>
The task force found such<lb/>
programs are attractive to<lb/>
youths and can provide<lb/>
private job experience.<lb/>
cIt will pay for school<lb/>
systems to develop classes<lb/>
and information about<lb/>
local labor markets.<lb/>
"Everybody's out there<lb/>
telling kids to become key<lb/>
punch operators, but<lb/>
those jobs will decline in<lb/>
the 1980s one source<lb/>
said. "We hope schools<lb/>
will bring in local person-<lb/>
nel managers to talk about<lb/>
their needs<lb/>
cIt will pay for training<lb/>
teachers in literacy in-<lb/>
struction. "More than one<lb/>
teacher told us something<lb/>
like, 'I'm a biology<lb/>
teacher and I don't know<lb/>
how to teach reading<lb/>
one source said.<lb/>
cIt will provide money<lb/>
to expand and integrate<lb/>
existing vocational educa-<lb/>
tion throughout local<lb/>
school districts. "Public<lb/>
vocational education has a<lb/>
good track record with<lb/>
kids and private in-<lb/>
dustry a source said.<lb/>
At the Labor Depart-<lb/>
ment, three youth pro-<lb/>
grams will be combined<lb/>
into one, giving local of-<lb/>
ficials more flexibility.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
AFOQT<lb/>
The r Force Otter Qualifying Test<lb/>
FOQT) mil be adminMered on Jan. 16<lb/>
jnd M ai 8 W a m , m nghl Annex, room<lb/>
:) This test n open 10 all qualified in-<lb/>
dividuals desiring io enter the Air Force<lb/>
ROTC program during their last to sears<lb/>
at ECU and all FROTC CMC cadets<lb/>
Those people interested ir uking the AFO-<lb/>
QT program should ontac captain Moser<lb/>
 757 MT.6598 or stop b Wright Annex.<lb/>
room 209<lb/>
Learn<lb/>
 art program for increased learning effi-<lb/>
-cincs ill be offered by Dr. George<lb/>
WcN!und begmnning Januars 2 There vsill<lb/>
be t?o groups, one meeting MVt at I 00<lb/>
P m and one meeting TTH at 1:00 p.m. in<lb/>
room J0J V right Annex The class is<lb/>
available to all students Attendance is<lb/>
:ars no tormal registration is re-<lb/>
jutred<lb/>
NTE<lb/>
The National Teachers Examination (NTE)<lb/>
?iU he gr.en at the Fast Carolina Lniversits<lb/>
Tevting tenter on Sat Feb 16 Bulletins<lb/>
Je-ihing registration prt:edures and con-<lb/>
taining registration forms mas be obtained<lb/>
from the ECL Testing Center, room 10?<lb/>
Speight Building, or direvtls from the Na-<lb/>
onai Teacher examination. Educational<lb/>
Testing Setsice. Box 911. Princeton NJ.<lb/>
iMV4l The deadline lor registration is<lb/>
lanuar 23 .<lb/>
SINGERS ? DANCERS -INSTRUMENTALISTS $190 to $230week<lb/>
TECHNICIANS?$155 to $190week<lb/>
Seasonal Performers being auditioned for<lb/>
KINGS ISLAND, Cincinnati, OH KINGS DOMINION, Richmond, VA<lb/>
lAROwlNDS, Charlotte, NC Hanna-Barbera s MARINELAND, LA.<lb/>
Preliminary Auditions<lb/>
East Carolina Univ Greenville, NC<lb/>
Music Bldg AJ. Fletcher Recital Hall, Tues Jan. 15; 4-7 P.M.<lb/>
Univ. of North Carolina, Chapel Hill<lb/>
Student Union, Rms. 213 &amp; 215, Wed Jan. 16; 4-7 P.M.<lb/>
Preliminary and Call-Back Audition<lb/>
Carowmds. Charlotte<lb/>
Paladium Complex. Sat &amp; Sun Jan. 19 and 20.2-7 PM.<lb/>
Round-trip airfare paid for hired performers traveling over 250 miles To work at the parks<lb/>
ICINGS PRODUCTIONS. Cincinnati. Ohio 45219<lb/>
CAROLINAl<lb/>
PORTRAITS<lb/>
TEN<lb/>
RESUME<lb/>
PHOTOS<lb/>
$5.00<lb/>
Extra Bonus of Two 5x7's FREE<lb/>
With Every Order<lb/>
MONEY BACK<lb/>
GUARANTEE<lb/>
758-3903<lb/>
FOR APPOINTMENT<lb/>
40<lb/>
C?<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
<lb/>
.<lb/>
ks<lb/>
<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT JAN. 12. AT AAP IN GrCCnvilt IV C<lb/>
f'jj8 WELCOME BACK PIRATES<lb/>
yWrTH SUPERMARKET PRICESV,<lb/>
AAP QUALITY CORN-FED FRESH<lb/>
PORK ROAST OR<lb/>
PORK<lb/>
STEAK<lb/>
CUT FROM BOSTON BUTT<lb/>
LB.<lb/>
$119<lb/>
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH FRYER<lb/>
BACKS &amp; NECKS<lb/>
FOR SOUP<lb/>
OR STEW!<lb/>
LB.<lb/>
19c<lb/>
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH<lb/>
FRYER LEGS<lb/>
LB.<lb/>
iEJi<lb/>
AT AAP<lb/>
CALIFORNIA CRISP. FIRM HEAD<lb/>
LETTUCE<lb/>
OLE CAROLINA<lb/>
SLICED<lb/>
BACON<lb/>
U.S. 1 EASTERN ALL PURPOSE WHITE<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
SAVE 56c<lb/>
PER HEAD OVER,<lb/>
LAST YEAR'S<lb/>
PRICE!<lb/>
tit<lb/>
TATOES<lb/>
10<lb/>
BAG<lb/>
REO RIPE?GREAT FOR SALADS<lb/>
TOMATOES<lb/>
GENERIC WMfTE<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT<lb/>
AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS<lb/>
OR WHOLESALERS.<lb/>
Pepsi ColaS9<lb/>
 liter bottles<lb/>
NOW OVER 85 GENERIC ITEMS<lb/>
v Good Products jk<lb/>
Lowest Prices "<lb/>
26 OZ.<lb/>
FAMILY<lb/>
PACK<lb/>
89?<lb/>
TANGERINES 120 SIZE - OR TEMPLE<lb/>
ORANGES<lb/>
EACH<lb/>
JUMBO<lb/>
100<lb/>
SIZE<lb/>
I0?<lb/>
BATHROOM TISSUE S3 69c<lb/>
75e<lb/>
200-FT<lb/>
ROLL<lb/>
GENERIC<lb/>
PLASTIC WRAP<lb/>
GENERIC<lb/>
STRAWBERRYpreserves jar oO<lb/>
GENERIC<lb/>
FLAKE TUNA<lb/>
MM<lb/>
LEMON JUICE<lb/>
?OZ.<lb/>
CAN<lb/>
32-OZ<lb/>
BTL<lb/>
GENERIC<lb/>
APPLE JUICE<lb/>
GENERIC RINK LIOUIO<lb/>
DISH DETERGENT<lb/>
MMC<lb/>
Vi<lb/>
BTL.<lb/>
32-OZ.<lb/>
?TL.<lb/>
59s<lb/>
69s<lb/>
57?<lb/>
 T -v<lb/>
ACTION PRICES ARE SPECIAL<lb/>
SAVINGS ALL OVER THE STORE<lb/>
15fSFFSfi ?OZEN, DAIRY,<lb/>
HEALTH A BEAUTY AIDS AND<lb/>
GENERAL MERCHANDISE<lb/>
Special Savings<lb/>
GREEN BEANS 3 "SS I00<lb/>
ANN PAGE CREAM STYLE OR WHOLE KERNEL<lb/>
GOLDEN CORN 3 ??2 $1??<lb/>
ANN PAGE<lb/>
TOMATOES 3 'c? $100<lb/>
CAMPBELLS<lb/>
CHICKEN soup"<lb/>
HOMESTYLE OR BUTTERMILK<lb/>
4wz $100<lb/>
CANS I<lb/>
a&amp;p Biscuits 6 ss 99c<lb/>
89e<lb/>
1-GAL.<lb/>
CTN.<lb/>
- NN PAGE LOOK-FIT<lb/>
ICE MILK<lb/>
? I white meat 82.99<lb/>
DRY DOG FOOD 25 ? $2M Turkey Breast g3.89<lb/>
v Imported Danish 1 lam<lb/>
l<lb/>
A&amp;P COUPON<lb/>
"cOtJPOS no. 1Pirate special COUPON no. fc Two great<lb/>
 Is still here . Ribey e steak with steaks for one low price SS.&amp;f)<lb/>
 toast, potato, &amp; FREE AIX yon J Two V lb. chopped steaks<lb/>
 can eat salad, tfello or puding j with toast, potato, FREE<lb/>
 &amp; choice of beverage $3.99 H yon can eat salad<lb/>
AAP CHILLED<lb/>
ORANGE<lb/>
JUCE<lb/>
UNIT ONE<lb/>
WITH THIS<lb/>
COUPON AND<lb/>
S7.M ORDER<lb/>
ORANGE<lb/>
JUICE<lb/>
SAVE 51c<lb/>
-GAL.<lb/>
BTL<lb/>
AP<lb/>
UMfT ONE COUPON OOOO THRU<lb/>
SAT, JAN. 11, AT AAP IN<lb/>
A&amp;P COUPON<lb/>
10c OFF LABEL<lb/>
SCOTT<lb/>
TOWELS<lb/>
voupwt<lb/>
?7.SB ORDER<lb/>
SAVE 19"<lb/>
2 BIG<lb/>
ROLLS<lb/>
99$<lb/>
JAN. 12. AT<lb/>
?SO W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
(S64 Bypass), Greenville<lb/>
264 BYPASS<lb/>
GREENVILLE.<lb/>
SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
<pb facs="00057238_0006"/><lb/>
Ran<lb/>
 new ye<lb/>
: many<lb/>
: Ameri<lb/>
: held i<lb/>
 Tehra<lb/>
r<lb/>
Afghi<lb/>
eyes i<lb/>
news.<lb/>
Fo<lb/>
Sovit<lb/>
place<lb/>
walk<lb/>
insta<lb/>
was<lb/>
Ilth<lb/>
to d<lb/>
fore<lb/>
prev<lb/>
Ii<lb/>
CUS'<lb/>
Chi<lb/>
the<lb/>
lad<lb/>
int<lb/>
sta<lb/>
sai<lb/>
"b<lb/>
CO<lb/>
un<lb/>
tic<lb/>
dii<lb/>
a<lb/>
<lb/>
ti<lb/>
st<lb/>
n<lb/>
ti<lb/>
v<lb/>
n<lb/>
2<lb/>
!<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
10. 1980 PM6<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
Films Committee<lb/>
Plays The Hits<lb/>
LAMPM.<lb/>
ANIMAL IMUtV<lb/>
Close Encounters, Superman, Animal House<lb/>
a few of the free flicks this Spring<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
Features F.ditor<lb/>
 The Student Union Films Commitee has released<lb/>
"their schedule of films for the spring semester, and the<lb/>
list looks incredibly good. The commitee will be offer-<lb/>
ing a variety of films to students with the schedule show-<lb/>
ing a multitude of films varying from love stories to<lb/>
science fiction.<lb/>
The first film of the semester will be "Superman"<lb/>
which will be shown at 7:00 and 9:15 on Friday and<lb/>
Saturday nights. The film stars Christopher Reeve,<lb/>
Margot Kidder, Marlon Brando, Gene Hackman, Glen<lb/>
Ford, and Jackie Cooper.<lb/>
The films brings to life a 'hero' that we have all<lb/>
known since childhood realisticly and with remarkable<lb/>
special effects. As they said in the commercialsyou'll<lb/>
believe a man can fly A film well worth going to, as<lb/>
anyone who has seen it can tell you.<lb/>
Another of the films which will appear in January is a<lb/>
box office blockbusterClose Encounters of the Third<lb/>
Kind<lb/>
Called " one of the most spectacular movies ever<lb/>
made the film employs an incredible variety of special<lb/>
effects to achieve an audience belief that there are<lb/>
creatures from antoher world who have the ability to<lb/>
come to this planet and communicate with human be-<lb/>
ings.<lb/>
As Frank Rich of Time magazine stated "At the end<lb/>
of 'Close Encounters' the audience is sitting with him<lb/>
(Steven Speilberg, Director) in the lap of the universe,<lb/>
ready and witing for new magic to fall into their lives<lb/>
This film will be appearing on January 18 and 19, also<lb/>
at 7:00 and 9:15.<lb/>
The last film of January will be "Clockwork Orange"<lb/>
directed by Stanley Kubrick and starring Malcom<lb/>
McDowell, Patrick Magee and Adrienne Corri. -<lb/>
Kubrick, who was also the creator of "Dr<lb/>
Strangelove" and "2001: a Space Odyssey" helped to<lb/>
create what Rex Reed of the New York Sunday News<lb/>
called " one of the few perfect movies I have seen in mv<lb/>
lifetime<lb/>
A chilling film with futuristic photography and set-<lb/>
tings.<lb/>
Also in the month of January the films Hearts and<lb/>
MindsThe Forgotten American and a Detective<lb/>
Double Feature, showing "Death on the<lb/>
Nile"and"Murder by Decree"will be shown.<lb/>
In February the commitee will be showing the films<lb/>
"Hooper "Halloween "Last Tango in Paris,<lb/>
"Blazing Saddles and "Dracula<lb/>
Special attractions will include "Days of<lb/>
Heaventhe Unquiet Deaths of Julius and Ethel<lb/>
Rosenberg "Beware of the Holy Whore" and a sixtie<lb/>
double feature fauturing "Carnal Knowledge" and<lb/>
"Getting Straight<lb/>
March will highlight the films "Godfather" and<lb/>
"Love at First Bite<lb/>
Special features will include "Citizen Kane a<lb/>
Shakespeare double feature including "Henry V" and<lb/>
"The Taming of the Shrew " and also the film "Day for<lb/>
Night<lb/>
April will spotlight the films "Animal House which<lb/>
is expected to be a tremendous crowd pleaser, "Gone<lb/>
with the Wind and "Monty Python and the Holy<lb/>
Grail<lb/>
Special feature will include a concert double feature<lb/>
which is expected to draw a large crowd featuring Rod<lb/>
Stewart and the Rolling Stones, and "The Diary of<lb/>
Adam and Eve<lb/>
For exam week they will be showing "Fantastic<lb/>
Planet<lb/>
The films are free to most students and all that is re-<lb/>
quired for admittance is an activity card and a valid I.D.<lb/>
Sfciy Q,le in Accontvinv PRINCIPLES OP<lb/>
It's Just Another<lb/>
New Year's Eve<lb/>
?? hi i<lb/>
Study Qnfc ? Actt-npatn<lb/>
litu in<lb/>
!<lb/>
AM<lb/>
Study Ciwte t f(-omp,im PRINCIPLES<lb/>
ce lie eMMHu?<lb/>
??<lb/>
Buying Books Once Again<lb/>
Photo By KIP SLOAN<lb/>
Humor<lb/>
Welcome Back Sucker<lb/>
9<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
Oh the joys of moving back into<lb/>
the dorms.<lb/>
Everyone should be coming back<lb/>
to campus today, if they are not<lb/>
already here, and what do we have<lb/>
to look forward to?<lb/>
Well ther arc the joys of drop-<lb/>
add. Waiting in line to get inside a<lb/>
building to wait in line for a little<lb/>
longer to find out that the class that<lb/>
will fit into your schedule closed out<lb/>
l<lb/>
two people before you and the only<lb/>
one left is underwater basketweav-<lb/>
ing. Ah the joys of college.<lb/>
Then there is the first day of class<lb/>
when all of the professors put the<lb/>
fear of God into all of the unsuspec-<lb/>
ting freshmen and transfer students.<lb/>
Not by all means fair, but effective<lb/>
for about the first half of the<lb/>
semester.<lb/>
Then there is buying books.<lb/>
More fun for all of you folks who<lb/>
like to stand in line, but with an ad-<lb/>
ded plus: you can spend money too.<lb/>
How much joy can one person take<lb/>
in a day (or two, or three, or four).<lb/>
By this time the first of the<lb/>
semester letters to home is about<lb/>
due. " Dear Mom and Dad, How<lb/>
arre you. Please send money. Your<lb/>
loving son:daughter. The nesxt joy<lb/>
comes when you get the answer.<lb/>
NO.<lb/>
But seriously ther are some things<lb/>
to look forward to in the coming<lb/>
semester. I just can't think of any of<lb/>
them right now. 'But after ail<lb/>
tomorrow is another day.<lb/>
By Jay Stone<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
I rolled back into Greenville on a<lb/>
fine sunny Monday, December 31 to<lb/>
the biting throb of "Physical Graf-<lb/>
fiti. "Ah, Rock-n-Roll won't you<lb/>
show me the way.<lb/>
I did not particularly suprise me<lb/>
to discover that Greenville was<lb/>
almost entirely deserted- utterly<lb/>
devoid of its student population.<lb/>
"For God's sakeI thought,<lb/>
"What a dismal prospect. New<lb/>
Years Eve in this ghost town<lb/>
I proceeded to unload all of the<lb/>
Christmas presents I had from the<lb/>
car and stash them in my house, and<lb/>
then to rush over the a neighbors<lb/>
house and exchange Christmans<lb/>
tales and wine. New Years Eve was<lb/>
almost upon us.<lb/>
We had come to the realization<lb/>
that the only intelligent thing to do<lb/>
was to see this thing through<lb/>
together, and besides she knew of a<lb/>
couple of parties and by combining<lb/>
forces we could double our options.<lb/>
It was upon that optimistic note<lb/>
that I left to get a celebratory bottle<lb/>
of champagne. As I turned into the<lb/>
"Pirate Pit Stop" I spied ? an<lb/>
ominous message. "Roxy New<lb/>
Year's Eve Party- Monday, Dec.<lb/>
31<lb/>
Seeing it glaring out at the passers<lb/>
by like it was, I knew that it would<lb/>
certainly attract a crowd. I would<lb/>
probably be among them.<lb/>
By and by both myself and my<lb/>
New Year's Eve comrade began to<lb/>
achieve that fine high mental<lb/>
plateau of intoxication that one<lb/>
seldom attains more than once in an<lb/>
evening. 1 took it as a sign. An in-<lb/>
telligence far more evolved than<lb/>
mine was obviously trying to tell me<lb/>
something. I downed my last glass<lb/>
of champagne and left to get dressed<lb/>
for the first party that my friend and<lb/>
I had slated for the evening.<lb/>
It is difficult to fully grasp all of<lb/>
the ramifications of getting dressed<lb/>
for a New Year's celebration until<lb/>
one is confronted with it. 1 felt that<lb/>
it would be necesary for my clothes<lb/>
to convey my message. But my<lb/>
message was obscure even to me. f<lb/>
wanted to communicate a general<lb/>
theme of optimism for the decade<lb/>
ahead and perhaps scam, yes, even ,<lb/>
loathing for the one we would be<lb/>
leaving behind. Finally my mind<lb/>
spoke to me and it told me what it<lb/>
wanted me to do.<lb/>
It was with such a relief to have<lb/>
the dilemna of my wardrobe cleared<lb/>
out of the way that I rushed back to<lb/>
my friends house only to discover<lb/>
that she was facing the same issue<lb/>
with only moderate success.<lb/>
Finally aftger some deliberation,<lb/>
she seemed satisfied with her reflec-<lb/>
tion and we left for a small private<lb/>
sort of gathering at the home of an<lb/>
aquaintance.<lb/>
When we arrived we discovered<lb/>
our contemopraries sitting in a loose<lb/>
half circle sipping gin fizzes and<lb/>
bobbing rythmically to some man-<lb/>
ner of heathen background music.<lb/>
Out of nowhere paraphenalia<lb/>
materialized and hemp incense filled<lb/>
the air. The condversation became<lb/>
patently abstract, but we were all<lb/>
following it- if for no other reason<lb/>
than to see where it would lead. My<lb/>
friend however was becoming<lb/>
restless in an obvious way and that<lb/>
was our cue to wind it up and leae.<lb/>
or perhaps take wing would be a<lb/>
better terminology here. Ana ?e<lb/>
bid our farewells and proceeded te<lb/>
the house of Omens where I had<lb/>
been told we could find some<lb/>
amusement.<lb/>
We knocked on the door in eage-<lb/>
antic pat ion. After a few minutes a<lb/>
handsome man with a mustache and<lb/>
a long kaftan answered the door and<lb/>
made a sign that seemed to beckon<lb/>
for us to come in. As soon as c<lb/>
walked thorugh the door my friend<lb/>
and I knew we had come to a<lb/>
strange place.<lb/>
In the center of the room wa a<lb/>
steaming jacuzi with a lot of nilde<lb/>
people splashing aroung in it. On<lb/>
one side of the room was a beautifu<lb/>
woman clad in a diaphanous robe.<lb/>
She looked at me and winked, while<lb/>
at the same time our congenial host<lb/>
in the kaftan led my companion to<lb/>
the jacuzi. We seemed to me sim-<lb/>
See EVE Page 7, Col. 1<lb/>
Fans Loved,<lb/>
Critics Hate<lb/>
By PAT MINGES<lb/>
(Writer<lb/>
Earth to EnterpriseEarth to<lb/>
EnterpriseScotty, beam me up.<lb/>
There is no intelligent life among<lb/>
critics on this planet.<lb/>
It is a sad commentary on the<lb/>
cinematic arts when a movie as<lb/>
grand as "Star Trek" is panned<lb/>
almost universally for all the wrong<lb/>
reasons. "Star Trek" is one of the<lb/>
most intelligent and entertaining<lb/>
movies in its genre and one of the<lb/>
most significant films of our<lb/>
lifetime.<lb/>
The problem may be that each<lb/>
endeavor is expected to live up to<lb/>
the criteria establishes by its<lb/>
predecessors. Why can't a film be<lb/>
judged in terms of its own value<lb/>
"Star Trek" suffers from endless<lb/>
associations with "Star Wars "<lb/>
Obviously, not being totally ob-<lb/>
jective is my big flaw, but "Star<lb/>
Trek" is not Just another space fan-<lb/>
tasy movie. It is a homecoming!<lb/>
"Star Trek" is not a cult; it is a<lb/>
religion. The trekkies have made<lb/>
their pilgrimage, have met with their<lb/>
apostles aboard the Enterprise and<lb/>
have emerged fulfilled.<lb/>
Perhaps the finest moment in the<lb/>
movie comes when Capt. James<lb/>
T.Kirk once again greets the love of<lb/>
his life-the Enterprise. His expres-<lb/>
sion of delight is only matched by<lb/>
the glee of the viewers.<lb/>
The criticisms are many and often<lb/>
reflect a tack of understanding on<lb/>
the part of the critics. The movie is<lb/>
overindulgent. In an effort to go lot<lb/>
the big bucks of "Star Wars til<lb/>
motion picture industry forced their<lb/>
cheap thrills technology on Gene<lb/>
Roddcnberry. The movie could have<lb/>
been produced on half the budget<lb/>
but so could most of the production<lb/>
from Hollywood!<lb/>
The motion picture was made<lb/>
mainly lor children; thus ovcrem-<lb/>
?eSTA? TUtm Fag CaL I<lb/>
-<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
:<lb/>
former chief executive, the pardon- January.<lb/>
V-CTOHt, ?-???<lb/>
<pb facs="00057238_0007"/><lb/>
Album Review<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN JANUARY 10. 1980<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
:<lb/>
t<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
Top Albums Of 1979 According To Critic<lb/>
By Pat Minges<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
It just seems the thing to do<lb/>
Each year critics seem compelled to thrust down a<lb/>
suspecting puohe's throat their own selection of the best<lb/>
Thif?L 8 ? thC Precedin year. In their ignorance,<lb/>
f ,L USKally W0? before the year is out and<lb/>
often the.r choices are premature. Before feelings of in-<lb/>
adequacy overwhelm me, I would like to inflict me '<lb/>
selections upon you, just to cajol you<lb/>
Let's call these awards The Jukes, after a notorious<lb/>
family known for their corruptness and stupidity.<lb/>
Maybe if we revolt against such egomania, these critics<lb/>
would go out and get a real job.<lb/>
So . . here we go. . . the first international Jukes<lb/>
award goes to the following for excellence in their<lb/>
chosen field.<lb/>
Top Male Artists<lb/>
1 The Clash (honorary)<lb/>
2.Stevie Wonder?The "Little blind boy" is the<lb/>
greatest phenomenon in the recording industry.<lb/>
3. Neil Young and Crazy Horse-Still crazy after all<lb/>
these years.<lb/>
3. The Who?Who is still the greatest rock and roll<lb/>
group in the world.<lb/>
4. Frank Zappa?The most prolific genius in rock.<lb/>
5. Talking Heads?Pairs the Doobies danceability<lb/>
with perhaps the most complex rock of the year.<lb/>
Top Female Artists<lb/>
1. Donna Summer?You have got to have acute<lb/>
discophobia not to admire this lady's tremendous<lb/>
talent.<lb/>
2. Barbra Streisand?A perenial favorite<lb/>
3. Joni Mitchell?Her ventures into jazz are im-<lb/>
pressive.<lb/>
4. The Roches?Once called the Andrews sister on<lb/>
acid, this trio produced one of the most lovable albums<lb/>
of the year.<lb/>
5. Rickie Lee Jones?Leader r the doo-wop divi-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
Top New Artists<lb/>
1. The Buzzcocks?You probable have never heard<lb/>
of these guys, but you will.<lb/>
2. The Police?Honky Reggae at it's best.<lb/>
3. Instant Funk?Thank vou for funkin' up my<lb/>
life.<lb/>
4. Rickie Lee Jones<lb/>
5. Dire Straits-Flash in the pan category.<lb/>
Black Artists<lb/>
1. Stevie Wonder<lb/>
2. George Clinton?No competition in this<lb/>
category.<lb/>
3. Donna Summer?Here she is again.<lb/>
4. Chic?Tops of the pops.<lb/>
5. Earth, Wind, and Fire?The basic elements of<lb/>
good music.<lb/>
6. Teddy Pendergrass?Ten million times a night,<lb/>
fo1ks go to bed with Teddy.<lb/>
7. Rick James?The philosopher of punk-funk.<lb/>
Country Artist<lb/>
1. Waylon Jennings?Walks away with this one.<lb/>
2. Kenny Rogers?Has made the crossover well.<lb/>
3. Dolly Parton?She crossed over the other way<lb/>
country to pop<lb/>
4. Willie Nelson?Would've been higher, but over<lb/>
extends himself.<lb/>
5. Emmy Lou Harris?Should have had her picture<lb/>
on the silver collar.<lb/>
Artists<lb/>
1. Pat Metheny?The best thing to hit jazzing in a<lb/>
while.<lb/>
2. Chick Corea?Not his best year but still strong.<lb/>
3. Flora Purim?The best female jazz singer.<lb/>
4. Al Jarreau?Top male vocalist.<lb/>
5. McCoy Tyner?The finest instrumentalist.<lb/>
Best Albums<lb/>
1. No Nukes?Various Artists?Muse Concert<lb/>
2. Journey through the secret life on plants?Stevie<lb/>
Wonder<lb/>
3. American Garage?Pat Metheny<lb/>
4. Joe's Garage?Frank Zappa<lb/>
Fear of Music?Talking Heads<lb/>
Armed Forces?Elvis Costello and the Attrac-<lb/>
Eve Seen Through Bleary Eyes<lb/>
Continued from page 6<lb/>
patico with each other and knew<lb/>
that we would stay here for a while.<lb/>
Two hours later we emerged from<lb/>
the house of omens, our karma very<lb/>
much intact and progressing splen-<lb/>
didly. My friend and I exchnged a<lb/>
warm hug. We were allies against an<lb/>
indifferent world and we had reciev-<lb/>
ed an omen together.<lb/>
We had no other recourse under<lb/>
the circumstances, but U. proceed to<lb/>
the Roxy New Year's Eve party.<lb/>
After quickly dispensing with the<lb/>
five dollar cover charge we becam<lb/>
immersed within the dark, smoky<lb/>
bowls ofthe Twin Rinks Skating<lb/>
facility.<lb/>
Strange people in aluminum foil<lb/>
masks forged about unihibited, ex-<lb/>
ercising wreckless abandon as if it<lb/>
were a yoga asana.<lb/>
At the stroke of midnight<lb/>
everybody hugged and kissed<lb/>
everybody and there was some<lb/>
general partying and merriment. At<lb/>
some point my friend and I manag-<lb/>
ed to wish each other a happy New<lb/>
Year after which we lost track of<lb/>
each other.<lb/>
I left and on my departure I<lb/>
looked skyward at the moon. It<lb/>
hung in the sky seeming detached<lb/>
from the concerns of mortal men yet<lb/>
inextricably linked to them. Behind<lb/>
me someone screamed something<lb/>
profane and yet something pro-<lb/>
found "Happy FNew Year and<lb/>
may the 80's be a hell of a lot more<lb/>
interesting and dramatic that the<lb/>
70's<lb/>
Star Trek Is Not Star Wars<lb/>
Continued from page 6<lb/>
phasis of a point was necessary at<lb/>
rimes. What lags into monotony for<lb/>
most adults is appealing to the in-<lb/>
tellectual facilities of a youngster.<lb/>
The movie was stimulating both<lb/>
intellectualy and philosophically.<lb/>
What a Time critic called boring<lb/>
"metaphysical meandering" seemed<lb/>
to me interesting dialogue about<lb/>
technological and human values.<lb/>
In one moronic comparison to<lb/>
"Star Wars critics have decried<lb/>
the lack of a sinister evil being like<lb/>
those which terrified us in "Star<lb/>
Wars" and "Alien Who needs it0<lb/>
The old good versus evil theme is in-<lb/>
finitely more shopworn than the<lb/>
"Star Trek" premise.<lb/>
The tenet behind "Star Trek" is<lb/>
more intelligent, that of the forces<lb/>
of good attempting to overcome<lb/>
that which they do not understand.<lb/>
Is that not the ultimate goal of all<lb/>
scientific, religious and academic<lb/>
pursuit"<lb/>
The evil in life greets us everyday.<lb/>
Darth Vader was the most popular<lb/>
character in "Star Wars Are these<lb/>
the positive human values we would<lb/>
like our children exposed to0<lb/>
There is one thing that has con-<lb/>
sistently disgusted me about<lb/>
Hollywood's attempts to portray<lb/>
characters from other worlds. Are<lb/>
we such egotists that we expect alien<lb/>
creatures to be humanoids0<lb/>
Speilberg's creature in "Close En-<lb/>
counters" looked like an infant with<lb/>
a thyroid problem. "Alien's"<lb/>
monster resembled Jimmy Carter in<lb/>
leather drag, and Darth Vader let a<lb/>
cloak and mask girth his humanity.<lb/>
"Star Trek" presents a creature so.<lb/>
vast a?4 complex tha?, it is almost<lb/>
beyorrtt man's capacity for<lb/>
understanding; yet it was created by<lb/>
man. The alien in "Star Trek" is<lb/>
boih innovative and attractive and<lb/>
deals with the aforementioned pro-<lb/>
blem very well. Persis Khimbassa<lb/>
sure don't look like no alien.<lb/>
The critics wailed about the<lb/>
absence of big battle scenes in "Star<lb/>
Trek" as well. Must we have<lb/>
violence to be entertained0 If these<lb/>
guys want violence, we'll send them<lb/>
to see "Dawn of the Dead<lb/>
perhaps that will satiate their<lb/>
desires. They would probably never<lb/>
ask for violence again. "Star Trek"<lb/>
leaves the battle scenes at home, and<lb/>
1 applaud them for it. Hopefully it is<lb/>
the dawn of a new day.<lb/>
Best Song and Dance<lb/>
1. Oil industry<lb/>
2. Nuclear Industry<lb/>
3. The Shah of Iran<lb/>
4. Brett Melvin and his S.G.A.<lb/>
5. Pat Minges<lb/>
Rickie Lee Jones?Rickie Lee Jones<lb/>
Rust Never Sleeps?Neil Young and the Crazy<lb/>
5.<lb/>
6.<lb/>
tions<lb/>
7.<lb/>
8.<lb/>
Horse.<lb/>
9. Briefcase Full of Blues?Blues Brothers<lb/>
10. Minute by MinuteDoobie Bothers<lb/>
11. Evolution?Journey<lb/>
12. Bad Girls?Donna Summer<lb/>
13. Flag?James Taylor<lb/>
14. Parrallel Lines?Blondie<lb/>
15. Down on the Farm?Little Feat<lb/>
16. The Roches?The Roches<lb/>
17. Everyday;Everynight?Flora Purim<lb/>
18. Outlandos d'AmourThe Police<lb/>
19. Single Going Steady?The Buzzcocks<lb/>
20. Mystic Man?Peter Tosh<lb/>
20. Into the music?Van Morrison<lb/>
Top New Wave<lb/>
1. The Clash<lb/>
2. Talking Heads<lb/>
3. The Buzzcocks<lb/>
4. The B-52's<lb/>
5. The Police<lb/>
Tops in the Third World<lb/>
1. Bob Marley<lb/>
2. Peter Tosh<lb/>
3. Peter Grant<lb/>
4. Steel Pulse<lb/>
5. Ayatollah Khomeini<lb/>
Missed the Most<lb/>
Welcome Back<lb/>
Dancers!<lb/>
Grand Opening Sale<lb/>
at our New Location<lb/>
20-50 OFF<lb/>
Leotards Warm-ups<lb/>
Skirts Milliskin tights<lb/>
At Barre, Ltd.<lb/>
422 Arlington Blvd.<lb/>
756-6670<lb/>
A BEAUTIFUL SALE:<lb/>
20 OFF ALL BEAUTY<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
?The perfect perms<lb/>
?We feature precision haircuts<lb/>
?Up to date styling techniques<lb/>
?Highlighting, Hennas, Frostings and<lb/>
Color<lb/>
1. Jackson Brown<lb/>
2. Bruce Springsteen<lb/>
3. Al Green<lb/>
4. Steely Dan<lb/>
5. Fleetwood Mac<lb/>
20 discount good AAon Tues.<lb/>
Wed. for 2 weeks only.<lb/>
and<lb/>
THE HAIR SALON<lb/>
756-2355<lb/>
HELP US<lb/>
STRIKEOUT<lb/>
BIRTH DEFECTS<lb/>
MARCH<lb/>
OF DIMES<lb/>
THIS SPACE CONTRIBUTED<lb/>
BY THE PUBLISHER<lb/>
Yfciws-Q<lb/>
ECU, buy a single<lb/>
hamburger at regular price<lb/>
get another for<lb/>
plus tax<lb/>
Cheese and tomato extra<lb/>
Otter expires Jan. 31, 1980<lb/>
Good at participating Wendy's<lb/>
in Raleigh, Durham, Wilmington,<lb/>
Goidsboro, Greenville and Jacksonville<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
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l<lb/>
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Electrolysis<lb/>
Permanent Removal<lb/>
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Free Consultation<lb/>
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Licensed Electrologist<lb/>
103 Oakmont Dr. Greenville<lb/>
756-3780<lb/>
Tues. Wed. Fri. 10:00-5:00<lb/>
Thurs. 2:00-7:00<lb/>
Discount to college Students<lb/>
fimnOSM 0EUGB<lb/>
Featuring<lb/>
SKI WEEKENDS<lb/>
Jan. 24-27 at Wintergreen<lb/>
$66.50 each, 6 occup.<lb/>
March 9-13 at Wintergreen<lb/>
$109.00 each<lb/>
includes lift tickets and ski rental<lb/>
All accommodations with fireplace<lb/>
Length of stay may he<lb/>
extended or shortened<lb/>
-yvi <lb/>
?,i<lb/>
W<lb/>
:? i -???<lb/>
:<lb/>
iy<lb/>
Zi<lb/>
Friday, January 11<lb/>
3-30-7:0Qp.m.<lb/>
Admission 25$<lb/>
Canned beverages<lb/>
only 50$<lb/>
A17TI<lb/>
Call now for hooking details<lb/>
Quixote Travels, Inc.<lb/>
319?otaneheSt.<lb/>
phone 758-3456<lb/>
esented by Sigma Phi Eosilon Fraternit<lb/>
M<lb/>
<pb facs="00057238_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN JANUARY 10. 1980<lb/>
MUSE Concert Better Than Woodstock<lb/>
By PAT MINGES<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
Never before has there been anything like it. The<lb/>
Monterey Pop Festival wasn't. Woodstock may have<lb/>
been a lot of things, but it really wasn't. Altamont cer-<lb/>
tainly wasn't. George Harrison's Concert for<lb/>
Bangladesh was really the closest thing ever to it. What<lb/>
it was. was a concert ? the Musicians United to Save<lb/>
Energy concert, held in Madison Square Garden from<lb/>
September 19-23 last year. Never in the history of<lb/>
dern music has an event procurred such a sparkling<lb/>
galax) of influential musicians.<lb/>
Yet never has there been such a severe threat to the<lb/>
well being of humanity. The menace of nuclear pro-<lb/>
ition is perhaps the greatest of all social evils: it<lb/>
t cuts the possible elimination of our society for the<lb/>
mization of corporate profits. It poses the threat of<lb/>
h to hundreds of workers involved with the nuclear<lb/>
kiustr and the chance of genetic abnormalities for<lb/>
ett offspring.<lb/>
The numbers in the loss category are insignificant<lb/>
when compared to the tremendous financial gains<lb/>
associated with the power industry. These are the same<lb/>
guys who are destroying the economy and well being of<lb/>
the United States through their manipulation of the oil<lb/>
industry, the same ones who are forging the Third<lb/>
World War. The Iranians are not mad at the people of<lb/>
the United States; they are mad at the corporations who<lb/>
have lobbied the government into support of what<lb/>
Amnesty International described as "one of the most<lb/>
violent regimes in the history of mankind" and possess-<lb/>
ing "the worst record on human rights in the world It<lb/>
is not the United States who should be brought to trial<lb/>
but the corporations. We must stop them, before they<lb/>
stop us. Perhaps the fight against the nuclear industry is<lb/>
the first spark of Karl Marx's predicted proletariate<lb/>
revolution.<lb/>
If the anti-nuke protest is the spark, then MUSE is the<lb/>
kindling. The struggling artists of the '60s have bonded<lb/>
together to take their commitments to the streets, and<lb/>
the politically and socially motivated youths of the '70s<lb/>
George Burns, Lee Strasberg, And Art Carney<lb/>
movie review in next issue<lb/>
will no longer just protest. As the Doobie Brothers put<lb/>
it, "You, telling me the things you're gonna do for me<lb/>
 Well, I ain't blind, and I don't like what I think I see<lb/>
 Takin' it to the streets The musicians and artists of<lb/>
MUSE are united to give our children's children a<lb/>
chance to enjoy the beauty of our world, troubled as it<lb/>
may be. They deserve it.<lb/>
The concert at Madison Square Garden was a gather-<lb/>
ing of the most impressive artists of the decade. When I<lb/>
first saw the promotion for the concert in the Villiage<lb/>
Voice, 1 was astounded and delighted at the array of<lb/>
stars and tried to get tickets, but they were sold out<lb/>
within 24 hours. I chanced to see a benefit concert for<lb/>
the Palmetto Alliance in South Carolina last spring<lb/>
featuring Jackson Browne, David Lydley, and John<lb/>
Sebastion in an all acoustic concert. It was more than<lb/>
just a concert, it was an event of truly social<lb/>
significance.<lb/>
The MUSE concert featured The Doobies, Jackson<lb/>
Browne, Crosby, Stills and Nash, Bruce Springsteen<lb/>
and The E. Street Band, James Taylor, Carly Simon,<lb/>
Grahm Nash, Bonnie Raitt, Tom Petty and The Heart-<lb/>
breakers, Raydio, Nicolette Larson, Poco, Chaka<lb/>
Kahn, Jesse Colin Young, Ry Cooder, John Hall, Gil<lb/>
Scott Heron, Sweet Honey In The Rock, and a host of<lb/>
studio musicians and technicians. Th proceeds of the<lb/>
concert and those of the upcoming motion picture go<lb/>
toward the fight against th nuclear armageddon.<lb/>
The concert has now been released in the Bread and<lb/>
Roses format of three albums, packed together in one of<lb/>
the most valuable production efforts ever released.<lb/>
Along with the albums comes an enlightening 16-page<lb/>
booklet on the MUSE organization, the concert and,<lb/>
most of all, on the nuclear threat. It also features a<lb/>
mindful of superb photographs and short essays from<lb/>
the stars themselves. It is the best deal that has ever<lb/>
come out, and all of the proceeds go to a non-nuclear<lb/>
future.<lb/>
There is not a bad song on the album, and it has many<lb/>
positively brilliant moments, but the biggest triumph o<lb/>
the concert was none other than the Boss himself, Bruce<lb/>
Springsteen. He certainly asks a lot of questions for so-<lb/>
meone from New Jersey! The critics were not over-<lb/>
whelmed with the concert, but they all sang praises o<lb/>
the mystic from Asbury Park. His rocking rendition of<lb/>
a Mitch Ryder medley included on the Vo Nukes album<lb/>
is the finest point of the album and shows that Springs-<lb/>
teen was far from an overnight sensation. He is the most<lb/>
dominant influence to emerge from the corporate rock<lb/>
decade of the '70s. Bruce and Tom Petty are the future<lb/>
of traditional rock 'n' roll.<lb/>
There are man) other fine moments on the album.<lb/>
Perhaps the finest single cut on the album is John and-<lb/>
Johanna Hall's "Power" featuring The Doobies and<lb/>
James Taylor. It is a dynamic tune that perhaps best<lb/>
sums up the concepts behind the album. Almost<lb/>
everyone joins in and the song's strength will bring tears<lb/>
to vour eyes  it does to these old cynical eyes, at least!<lb/>
Jackson Browne is the person who seemed to possess<lb/>
the material which seemed to best fit the scenario of this<lb/>
endeavor. His "Before The Deluge" has become the<lb/>
themesong of the anti-nuke movement because of its<lb/>
poignant lyricism and powerful presence. His new song<lb/>
"Crow On The Cradle heretofore unreleased, shows<lb/>
that Jackson is the top songwriter to emerge from the<lb/>
last decade. It is a frightening tune. David Lyndley's<lb/>
violin is at it's searing best, making one weak at the<lb/>
knees.<lb/>
The album also greets us with the homecoming to the<lb/>
stage of one of the finest vocal groups in rock history -<lb/>
David Crosby, Grahm Nash and Stephen Stills. Their<lb/>
vocals are not as tight as in the days of Deja V'u, but it is<lb/>
just nice to hear these guys again. Their "Teach Your<lb/>
Children" has just as much place in the zetgeist of 1979<lb/>
as it did in 1969. No Nukes is the album of the decade!<lb/>
Time was when we would let vested interest groups<lb/>
weave their wicked magic in the halls of Congress, and<lb/>
all-we would do is protest. Time was when people did<lb/>
not matter, only profits. Time was when we were so<lb/>
busy searching for our identities that we lost touch with<lb/>
our national one, which soon became subordinated to<lb/>
corporate interests. Well  as James, Carl and Grahm<lb/>
? put it, "The Times The Are A-Changin'  We are tak-<lb/>
ing it to the streets, and the cause is "Depending On<lb/>
You<lb/>
features Individual Weekly<lb/>
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The Pirates u<lb/>
I'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057238_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
JANUARY 10, 1980<lb/>
Page 9<lb/>
Martin Top ECU Signee<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
In announcing the signings of<lb/>
twelve high school players a few<lb/>
days ago. East Carolina head foot-<lb/>
ball coach Ed Emory said he was<lb/>
"glad to have them on our side<lb/>
'We have a good cross section by<lb/>
positions noted Emory, "and I'm<lb/>
Mire they'll all go on to successful<lb/>
careers<lb/>
Heading the group of the early<lb/>
Pirate signees is running back James<lb/>
Martin of Evergreen. The 5-11,<lb/>
2(X)-pounder rushed for over 2,000<lb/>
ards last fall in leading West Col-<lb/>
umbus High School to its third<lb/>
straight league championshhip.<lb/>
Martin gained 1,702 yards during<lb/>
the regular season and eclipsed the<lb/>
2.000 barrier in his teams' two<lb/>
playoff contests. He also lead the<lb/>
team in scoring, with an amazing 30<lb/>
touchdowns to his credit.<lb/>
Among the other top prospects<lb/>
signed by the Pirates is nose guard<lb/>
Tony Smith of Laurinburg, who<lb/>
was included on a number of lists<lb/>
naming the top prospects in the state<lb/>
as named by the media.<lb/>
Emory, who came to the Pirates<lb/>
after this season from Georgia<lb/>
Tech, also lured two top prospects<lb/>
frc, the Peach State to Greenville.<lb/>
Defensive ends Jeff Autry of<lb/>
Covington, Ga. and Derrick<lb/>
Strickland of Atlanta, Ga. both<lb/>
have earned recognition from<lb/>
several major colleges.<lb/>
Also among the early Pirate<lb/>
recruits is kicker Ted King of local<lb/>
J.H. Rose High School.<lb/>
Though recruiting has been first<lb/>
and foremost on Emory's mind, he<lb/>
has also been busy putting together<lb/>
a coaching staff. The new staff,<lb/>
though still incomplete, includes<lb/>
three coaches who have served in<lb/>
similar capacities at East Carolina<lb/>
before.<lb/>
Holdovers from last year under<lb/>
Pat Dye include Frank Orgel,<lb/>
recently named defensive coor-<lb/>
dinator, and Henry Trevathan, a<lb/>
longtime ECU aide who will handle<lb/>
the wide receivers.<lb/>
Returning to the Pirate fold is<lb/>
Wright Anderson, named offensive<lb/>
coordinator by Emory. Anderson<lb/>
was an assistant at ECU under Dye<lb/>
three years ago before leaving to<lb/>
take a similar post at the University<lb/>
of Illinois. Anderson was among<lb/>
the coaches who put in the wishbone<lb/>
during Dye's first season at the<lb/>
Pirate helm six years ago.<lb/>
Other recently named Pirate<lb/>
assistants include Jim Gudger, who<lb/>
will handle the offensive line.<lb/>
Gudger comes to ECU from Lenoir<lb/>
Rhyne. Jim Holland will coach the<lb/>
outside linebackers. Holland was<lb/>
an assistant at Clemson while<lb/>
Emory was there and was most<lb/>
recently the head coach at Garringer<lb/>
High School in Charlotte.<lb/>
The new defensive line coach is<lb/>
Rob Sanders. The one-time head<lb/>
coach at Fayettville's Douglas Byrd<lb/>
High most recently served with<lb/>
Emory as an assistant at Georgia<lb/>
Tech.<lb/>
Ex-UNC defensive standout Rod<lb/>
Broadway and Ron West were nam-<lb/>
ed as part-time assistants. While at<lb/>
UNC, Broadway became one of the<lb/>
great defensive linemen in Tar Heel<lb/>
history.<lb/>
Expected to be named to the<lb/>
Pirate staff this week is former<lb/>
William and Mary assistant Steve<lb/>
Schanll. Also mentioned as a possi-<lb/>
ble future staff member is Tommy<lb/>
Bowden, son of Florida State coach<lb/>
Bobby Bowden. The younger<lb/>
Bowden is also under consideration<lb/>
at several other colleges seeking<lb/>
assistants, including the University<lb/>
of New Mexico.<lb/>
Rams To Become ' 'New Jets9'?<lb/>
Remember Super Bowl III when<lb/>
Joe Namath and the New York Jets<lb/>
; of the upstart American Football<lb/>
: League upset the powerhouse<lb/>
1 Baltimore Colts of the established<lb/>
J NFL?<lb/>
If you do, then keep it in mind as<lb/>
Super Bowl XIV approaches. It is<lb/>
possible that some similarities could<lb/>
show up.<lb/>
The "super" matchup this year,<lb/>
featuring the powerful Pittsburgh<lb/>
Steelers and the much less potent<lb/>
Los Angelas Rams, has many of the<lb/>
same ingredients thai the Jet-Colt<lb/>
matchup had.<lb/>
One of the teams is from a con-<lb/>
ference that is much less powerful<lb/>
than the conference of its oppenent.<lb/>
The National Football Conference,<lb/>
of which the Rams are members,<lb/>
rates far below the American Foot-<lb/>
ball Conference in nearly every<lb/>
category. The Steelers, of course,<lb/>
are members of the AFC.<lb/>
The 1968 Colts, 16-7 losers to the<lb/>
Jets in the third Super Bowl, were<lb/>
<lb/>
r2R<lb/>
Charles Chandler<lb/>
y<lb/>
i . SP<lb/>
(ft<lb/>
s?<lb/>
considered one of the game's<lb/>
greatest teams of all time going into<lb/>
the contest. There was simply no<lb/>
way the Jets could stay in the game<lb/>
with them for the first half, much<lb/>
less the entire game.<lb/>
The Colts had perhaps the game's<lb/>
greatest quarterback ever in Jonny<lb/>
Unitas and a super backfield headed<lb/>
by Tom Matte. The Colt receivers<lb/>
were great, too, with Jimmy Orr<lb/>
and John Mackey on hand to haul<lb/>
in Unitas passes.<lb/>
The defense of the Colts was also<lb/>
hailed as great with all-pros like Roy<lb/>
Hilton, Bubba Smith and Mike Cur-<lb/>
tis on hand to chase away op-<lb/>
oonents' points.<lb/>
The 1979 Pittsburgh Steelers are<lb/>
now in the position that those '68<lb/>
Colts were in. They are the<lb/>
established power of the NFL, with<lb/>
both a super offense and defense.<lb/>
They are preparing to play a team in<lb/>
the Rams that is at least a ten point<lb/>
underdog.<lb/>
Is it possible that Terry Brad-<lb/>
shaw, Franco Harris, Lynn Swann,<lb/>
Jack Lambert, Joe Greene and the<lb/>
rest of the Steelers could become<lb/>
complacent and lose to the Rams?<lb/>
It appears that this is the only way<lb/>
the Californians could win, right?<lb/>
Wrong.<lb/>
Just as the Jets were taken lightly<lb/>
by the fans simply because they were<lb/>
not an established power does not<lb/>
take away from the fact that they<lb/>
were a great team.<lb/>
Much the same can be said for the<lb/>
Rams. They have fought adversity<lb/>
all season long to end up in<lb/>
Pasedena for the Super Bowl.<lb/>
Injuries to key players throughout<lb/>
the season kept the Rams from put-<lb/>
ting together a decent record, as<lb/>
their final 9-7 mark attests.<lb/>
Without those injuries Rams may<lb/>
well have finsished with as many as<lb/>
12 victories.<lb/>
Despite the fact that the Steelers<lb/>
are the defending champions and<lb/>
the favorites to retain their Super<lb/>
Bowl title, it must be remembered<lb/>
that the Rams are not patsies. They<lb/>
ar? capable of play.i.n<lb/>
championship-caliber football.<lb/>
Super Bowl XIV should not turn<lb/>
out exactly like Super Bowl III<lb/>
simply because the Steelers of '79<lb/>
could probably defeat any team that<lb/>
ever played the game. But, in case<lb/>
the Rams do pull an upset, com-<lb/>
parisons to the feat accomplished by<lb/>
the Jets over a decade ago will surely<lb/>
come from all over.<lb/>
Photo By CHAP GURLEY<lb/>
Mike Gibson Moves On NCSU<lb/>
Lady Pirates<lb/>
Bounce Back<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
;r a disappointing fourth-<lb/>
place finish in the Carolina<lb/>
Christmas Classic in which the Lady<lb/>
Pirates lost to currently 19th ranked<lb/>
Clemson (83-78) and then 20th<lb/>
ranked Mercer (81-66), East<lb/>
Carolina's Lady Pirates bounced<lb/>
back to claim a trio of victories dur-<lb/>
ing a tour of West Virginia and<lb/>
Virginia.<lb/>
ECU began the northern visit<lb/>
A t Oral Roberts<lb/>
Pirates Lose Thriller<lb/>
TULSA, Okla For the East<lb/>
Carolina basketgball team it was a<lb/>
case of "so close but oh so far<lb/>
away" last Monday night when it<lb/>
suffered a heartbreaking 83-82 loss<lb/>
to Oral Roberts.<lb/>
The Pirates trailed by as many as<lb/>
11 points in the first half before nar-<lb/>
rowing the margin to two at<lb/>
halftime, 48-46. Two free throws by<lb/>
George Maynor in the opening<lb/>
moments of the second half tied the<lb/>
score at 48.<lb/>
ECU went on to build as much as<lb/>
State's Nevitl And Parzych Battle<lb/>
ECU'S Szymanski And Miles<lb/>
an 11-point advantage in the final<lb/>
half before succumbing to a late<lb/>
surge by the Titans.<lb/>
Trailing 82-81 with nine seconds<lb/>
remaining, ORU signaled for a<lb/>
timeout. Moments later several<lb/>
Titan shots fell short before An-<lb/>
tonio Martin was fouled while going<lb/>
up for a rebound by ECU's George<lb/>
Maynor with but two seconds left in<lb/>
the contest.<lb/>
Martin made both ends of the<lb/>
one-and-one situation that he faced,<lb/>
putting the Titans up by one and<lb/>
forcing Pirate coach Dave Odom to<lb/>
call a timeout in an attempt to set up<lb/>
a last-ditch attempt at victory.<lb/>
Odom's plan was never given a<lb/>
chance as the Titans stole the ensu-<lb/>
ing ECU inbounds play.<lb/>
The Pirates shot n astonishing<lb/>
66.7 per cent from the floor, but<lb/>
suffered greatly from their poor per-<lb/>
formance at the free throw line.<lb/>
ECU missed its final eight attempts<lb/>
at the charity strike, a cardinal sin<lb/>
when playing on the road against an<lb/>
established team such as the Titans.<lb/>
ECU was led by swingman Herb<lb/>
Krusen's 23 points, most of them<lb/>
coming on long range bombs. For-<lb/>
ward Herb Gray followed with 18<lb/>
points Maynor added 14 while his<lb/>
running mate at guard, Tony Byles,<lb/>
tallied 10.<lb/>
Martin led the Titans, now 4-6,<lb/>
with Ms 16-point, 13-rebound per-<lb/>
formance.<lb/>
The Pirates, 6-7 following the<lb/>
loss, travel to Baptist College for a<lb/>
game tonight (Thursday) before<lb/>
returning to Greenville for a home<lb/>
matchup with Atlantic Christian<lb/>
College on Saturday. Gametime for<lb/>
that contest in Minges Coliseum is<lb/>
7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Duke Loses<lb/>
By The Associated Press<lb/>
Minutes after his 18th-<lb/>
ranked Clemson Universi-<lb/>
ty basketball team pulled<lb/>
off its upset of the year '<lb/>
an 87-82 overtime decision<lb/>
over top-ranked and<lb/>
previously unbeaten Duke<lb/>
 Tiger head coach Bill<lb/>
Foster felt a little like jok-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
"Ah, just another dull<lb/>
win he said, directing<lb/>
the comment at those who<lb/>
had questioned his easy<lb/>
December home schedule.<lb/>
"One of these days, we're<lb/>
gonna have to get<lb/>
somebody in here who can<lb/>
play this game<lb/>
Duke coach Bill Foster<lb/>
admitted it was "one<lb/>
heckuva ballgame. I think<lb/>
it goes to show what we all<lb/>
have been saying all along<lb/>
' there are an awfully lot<lb/>
of good teams in the coun-<lb/>
try<lb/>
In other games Wednes-<lb/>
day involving Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference teams,<lb/>
15th-ranked North<lb/>
Carolina downed Wake<lb/>
Forest, 72-68, and<lb/>
Georgia Tech defeated<lb/>
Western Carolina, 70-60.<lb/>
Duke came into the<lb/>
game with Clemson with a<lb/>
12-0 record and a No. 1<lb/>
ranking. Clemson, mean-<lb/>
while, sported a 10-1<lb/>
overall record and a 2-0<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Conference<lb/>
mark. The Tigers had<lb/>
struggled into the Top 20<lb/>
two days earlier.<lb/>
A week ago, the Tigers<lb/>
gave Duke advance warn-<lb/>
ing of their capabilities<lb/>
with a 93-76 upset over<lb/>
See TAR HEELS Page 12, Col. 4<lb/>
Duke-Clemson Box<lb/>
Duke?MP FG FT RA F Pt<lb/>
Banks ? 43-11-20 9-10 75 4 31<lb/>
Dennard38 3-6 3-4 52 5 9<lb/>
Gminski43 13-20 4-4 100 4 30<lb/>
Bender43 3-8 0-0 45 5 6<lb/>
Taylor40 2-6 2-2 33 5 6<lb/>
Suddath4 0-0 0-0 00 0 0<lb/>
Engelland7 0-1 0-0 01 3 0<lb/>
Williams7 0-0 0-0 00 1 0<lb/>
Totals32-61 18-20 30 16 27 82<lb/>
Clemson?MP FG FT RA F Pt<lb/>
Nance40 6-11 2-5 111 3 14<lb/>
Wyatt37 4-10 0-1 33 3 8<lb/>
Campbell31 9-13 5-5 71 4 23<lb/>
Conrad25 1-4 8-8 17 1 10<lb/>
Williams41 8-14 3-5 47 3 19<lb/>
Wiggins12 1-3 0-0 42 1 2<lb/>
Dodds21 3-4 3-4 04 1 9<lb/>
Gilliam10 0-2 0-0 20 0 0<lb/>
Ross4 0-2 0-0 20 0 0<lb/>
McKinstry4 1-2 0-0 00 0 2<lb/>
Totals33-65 21-28 37 25 16 87<lb/>
Duke43 2 16-82<lb/>
Clemson4125 21-87<lb/>
Turnovers: Duke 14, Clemson 10.?<lb/>
Technical fouls:None.1<lb/>
Offfcaals: Wirtz, Nichols, Knight.1<lb/>
Att: 13,500.I<lb/>
with a narrow 63-59 triumph over<lb/>
Marshall January 3 in Huntington,<lb/>
W. Vir. Fran Hooks' lay up on an<lb/>
inbounds play with 5:35 WfOrerIn-<lb/>
termission gave the Lady Bucs a<lb/>
25-14 lead, but the Thundering<lb/>
Herd cut the margin to six with :58<lb/>
remaining.<lb/>
All-American candidate Rosie<lb/>
Thompson netted a pair of free<lb/>
throws and a field goal and<lb/>
freshman Mary Denkler added a<lb/>
field goal to make the score 37-25 at<lb/>
the half.<lb/>
Thompson talluxi 25 points on the<lb/>
night to lead ECU to victory despite<lb/>
a second half comeback in which<lb/>
Marshall cut the gap to two with<lb/>
9:45 left in the contest. Denkler pro-<lb/>
vided 13 points and grabbed a game-<lb/>
high 12 rebounds.<lb/>
"This is the worst win we have<lb/>
had to date said ECU coach<lb/>
Cathy Andruzzi. "The floor was<lb/>
really slippery and we weren't able<lb/>
to run the ball as well as we would<lb/>
have liked to. Offensively, we<lb/>
weren't getting the easy shots off.<lb/>
We just didn't play a good fun-<lb/>
damental game<lb/>
The next game of the series was to<lb/>
be more pleasant for the Pirate<lb/>
nomads. West Virginia University<lb/>
fell to ECU 67-56, but actually had<lb/>
the game tied with 4:59 before<lb/>
halftime, 21-21. The Lady Bucs<lb/>
managed to build to a 31-23 advan-<lb/>
tage at the half.<lb/>
WVU hit the first bucket of the<lb/>
decisive second half, but ECU rattl-<lb/>
ed off the next 13 points and cruised<lb/>
to victory behind Thompson's 23<lb/>
points and Kathy Riley's 17. Center<lb/>
Marcia Girven grabbed 12 caroms<lb/>
to claim honors in that department.<lb/>
"We knew if we played the way<lb/>
we did against Marshall we would<lb/>
be in trouble commented Andruz-<lb/>
zi. "When mistakes were made, we<lb/>
came back down the floor and made<lb/>
adjustments<lb/>
After building to a seemingly in-<lb/>
surmountable 43-20 halftime edge,<lb/>
East Carolina appeared to be out<lb/>
for one of their most impressive vic-<lb/>
tories, but the Gobblers had other<lb/>
ideas. The Pirates lead increased to<lb/>
as much as 25, but VP1 quickly cut<lb/>
the gap to 64-49 on a three-point<lb/>
play by Sandy Berry with 6:18 left in<lb/>
the contest.<lb/>
East Carolina struggled defen-<lb/>
sively, while VPI surged on offense,<lb/>
but time ran out as the before the<lb/>
Gobblers could deny the Lady<lb/>
Pirates their 11th win against three<lb/>
defeats.<lb/>
"I think by far this is the best<lb/>
game we've played in a long time<lb/>
said Andruzzi following the game<lb/>
played at the Blacksburg, Va. cam-<lb/>
pus. "We ran a tot of variations on<lb/>
our zone defenses today?you're<lb/>
going to win on defense.<lb/>
"We've had a tough season so<lb/>
far. Were really pleased with the<lb/>
record (H-3 so far.<lb/>
.<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057238_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 10, 1980<lb/>
ECU Grapplers Finish Third<lb/>
1980 March of Dimes<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Having claimed third<lb/>
place in the 'Rose Bowl of<lb/>
wrestling the Wilkes<lb/>
Open, East Carolina's<lb/>
grapplers return to the<lb/>
friendly confines of<lb/>
Minges Coliseum Satur-<lb/>
day for a 2p.m. match<lb/>
against perrenial power<lb/>
West Chester State.<lb/>
Seniors D.T. Joyner<lb/>
and Butch Revils climed<lb/>
championships in their<lb/>
respective weight classes;<lb/>
only the second time ECU<lb/>
has captured two cham-<lb/>
pionships at the Wilkes<lb/>
tourney.<lb/>
Joyner, a fifth year<lb/>
heavyweight who missed<lb/>
the 1978-79 season due to<lb/>
a football injury, also<lb/>
claimed the Most Pins<lb/>
Award in the tournament<lb/>
by pinning five opponants<lb/>
in as many matches.<lb/>
Joyner's record now<lb/>
stands at 20-2 on the<lb/>
season, with one of his<lb/>
losses to the number one<lb/>
wrestler in the NCAA.<lb/>
Revils captured the 177<lb/>
pound division with<lb/>
superior decisions<lb/>
(winning by over eight<lb/>
points) over each of his<lb/>
opponants.<lb/>
"Revils really<lb/>
dominated his weight<lb/>
class said Steers.<lb/>
"Joyner had very strong<lb/>
competitionby no<lb/>
means were his matches<lb/>
easy<lb/>
Steers also lauded Steve<lb/>
Goode for his third-place<lb/>
effort in the 177 class and<lb/>
Jay Dever in the 190 divi-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
The first year coach ad-<lb/>
mits that his team "can be<lb/>
beaten by a well-balanced<lb/>
attack.<lb/>
"We have to have a<lb/>
well-balanced attack to<lb/>
win said Steers.<lb/>
"They (West Chester<lb/>
State) have two outstan-<lb/>
ding guys in Jorge Leon in<lb/>
the 118 division and John<lb/>
Licota at 167. Both are<lb/>
national qualifiers<lb/>
The Pirates are at home<lb/>
again next Tuesday at<lb/>
7:30p.m. against East<lb/>
Stroudsburg.<lb/>
Scoreboard<lb/>
Wednesday's College Basketball<lb/>
By The Associated Press<lb/>
FAST<lb/>
MbanvSt ,N Y.64, RPI 56<lb/>
Alfred 66. Hobart 50<lb/>
Allegheny 82. Wash. ? Jeff 67<lb/>
Bethans.vj.Va. 58. Thid 54<lb/>
Boston U. 72 Colgate 65<lb/>
Bridgeport 61. Kings. Pa. 59<lb/>
Brossn 65 Providence 64<lb/>
BticVnell 64. BloomsburgSt. 5J<lb/>
Carnegie-Mellon 75. John Carroll 73<lb/>
Catholic 72. St. Anselm's 65<lb/>
Clark 62. Coast Guard 46<lb/>
Dartmouth 78. Amherst 41<lb/>
fcdinboroSt. 102. Darmen 77<lb/>
Fairfield 86, Marist 79<lb/>
Kairleigh Dickinson 64. Morgan St. 50<lb/>
Fordham 66. Vermont 63<lb/>
Gannon 95. Behrend 77<lb/>
I aRoche 69, California. Pa. 78<lb/>
1 aSalle III. W. Chester St. 70<lb/>
Maine 68. Biscay ne 56<lb/>
Mercyhurst 72, Westmnstr, Pa. 68<lb/>
Memmack 73 U of Hartford 71<lb/>
MonmouthCol 71. Dovsling62<lb/>
e? Hampshire Col 98 Bentley 80<lb/>
Niagara 95. Hofslra 88<lb/>
Northeastern 78 Suffolk 54<lb/>
Pace 77, Colby 65<lb/>
Pittsburgh 82, Geo. Washington 61<lb/>
Ptti-Jortnstossn 69. Slippery Rock 45<lb/>
Ramapo 74. kean 60<lb/>
Robert Morns 94. Tow son 66<lb/>
St. Bonasenture89. PennSl. 75<lb/>
Si Peters60. St Francis, NY. 4t<lb/>
Seton Hall "6. Manhattan 62<lb/>
Siena 67. CCNY 57<lb/>
Syracuse94. Baltimore64<lb/>
Trenton St. 85. Rutgers-Nessark 7<lb/>
Villanosa 92. Massachusetts 59<lb/>
York 93. Kings Col 73<lb/>
SOUTH<lb/>
Aseretl 52. Greensboro 48<lb/>
Birmingham-So. 78. AubMontgomery 71<lb/>
Campbell 77. Baptist 60<lb/>
Clemson 87. Duke 82, OT<lb/>
Clinch Valley 94. Emory Henry 87, OT<lb/>
Coastal Carolina 78. S. Caro-Spartanburg 71<lb/>
Col of Charleston 74. Pfeiffer 57<lb/>
Columbus 73. Shorter 65<lb/>
Fairmont St. 92. Alderson-Broaddus 71<lb/>
Florida So. 83, Holy Cross 81<lb/>
Georgia Tech 70. W Carolina 60<lb/>
Hampen-Sydney 89, Haverford 67<lb/>
Kentucky 79. Mississippi 73<lb/>
LaGrange 68, Georgia SW 66<lb/>
- Lnuuiana, Iecii6?. S. Mississippi 62 -<lb/>
Mfswsippi St. 88. Georgia 75<lb/>
Morehouse88. Fisk 7g<lb/>
Muskingum 71, Adrian 55<lb/>
N. Carolina 72. Wake Forest 68<lb/>
N Carolina-Wilmington 61, Appalachian St. 44.<lb/>
N Georgia 63. Georgia Col. 54<lb/>
Piedmont 54, Southern Tech 51<lb/>
Radford 65. Virginia St. 63<lb/>
Richmond 101. Oglethorpe 85<lb/>
St Augustine" s 85. Hampton lnst 80<lb/>
S Alabama64. Jacksonville63<lb/>
S Carolina 74. William ? Mary 67<lb/>
Southwestern. Tenn 80, Sessanee 74<lb/>
Tennessee 69. Florida 58<lb/>
Transylvania65. Berea 58<lb/>
Va. Commonwealth 87. Navy 67<lb/>
Virginia Tech 73, West Virginia 71, OT<lb/>
Virginia Union 78, St. Paul's 70<lb/>
W Maryland 95, Washington Col. 64<lb/>
Scores<lb/>
MIDWEST<lb/>
Ball St. 73, E.Michigan 58<lb/>
Bemidji St. 76, MinnMorris 57<lb/>
Bluffton Col. 77. Wilmington, Ohio 67<lb/>
Chadron St 65, Mars Col. 63 .<lb/>
Dana75.Tarkio73<lb/>
Doane72, Peru St. 66<lb/>
Evansville 88, Xavie Ohio 75<lb/>
rindlay 69. Defiance 62<lb/>
Howard 58. Dayton 56, 2 OT<lb/>
III -Benedictine 95. Rockford 76<lb/>
Indiana St. Evansville97. N Kentucky 76<lb/>
Kansas 69, Missouri 66<lb/>
Kansas St. 60. Oklahoma St. 59<lb/>
Kearney St. 83. Hastings 73<lb/>
McNeeseSl.6l, WisParkside 51<lb/>
Marian 69, Goshen 49<lb/>
Miami, Ohio 62, Bowling Green hi<lb/>
Millikin84. Illinois Wesl 72<lb/>
Missouri Western 47. Wayne St . Neb. 46<lb/>
Ml. St. Mary's 93. Naarelh 50<lb/>
Nebraska 58. Iowa St. 50<lb/>
N.lllinois67,KentSt.61<lb/>
NE Illinois 91. Wis-Platteville69<lb/>
NE Missouri 76. Westminster. Mo. 54<lb/>
NW Missouri 78. Missouri-Kansas City 75<lb/>
Northwestern. Iowa 91. Midland 81<lb/>
Nation<lb/>
By<lb/>
Boston<lb/>
Philadelphia<lb/>
New York<lb/>
Washington<lb/>
New Jersey<lb/>
Atlanta<lb/>
San Antonio<lb/>
Houston<lb/>
Cleveland<lb/>
Indiana<lb/>
Detroit<lb/>
Basketball As<lb/>
At A Glance<lb/>
The Associated<lb/>
Eastern Conference<lb/>
Atlantic Division<lb/>
W<lb/>
30<lb/>
29<lb/>
22<lb/>
18<lb/>
18<lb/>
Central Division<lb/>
25<lb/>
22<lb/>
19<lb/>
19<lb/>
18<lb/>
10<lb/>
sociation<lb/>
Press<lb/>
I<lb/>
10<lb/>
I I<lb/>
22<lb/>
20<lb/>
24<lb/>
17<lb/>
21<lb/>
22<lb/>
24<lb/>
24<lb/>
3 3<lb/>
Pel. GB<lb/>
.750 ?<lb/>
.725 I<lb/>
00<lb/>
.474<lb/>
.429<lb/>
10<lb/>
I I<lb/>
13<lb/>
.595<lb/>
.512<lb/>
.463<lb/>
442<lb/>
429<lb/>
.233<lb/>
3'<lb/>
5'<lb/>
6-<lb/>
7<lb/>
15<lb/>
Oberlin 54, Capital 52<lb/>
Ohio Wesl 73. Denison 55<lb/>
Ottcrbein 76. Marietta 62<lb/>
Phillips 69, NE Oklahoma 66, OT<lb/>
Roosevelt 99. Trinity Chris 75<lb/>
St. Joseph's, Ind. 90. Butler 88<lb/>
Toledo69.OhioU.62<lb/>
Upper Iowa 78, Mount Mercy 76<lb/>
W.Illinois 107, William Penn 83<lb/>
Westmar 67, Belles ue 56<lb/>
Wittenberg 87, Ohio No. 63<lb/>
Wooster 74. Baldwin-Wallace 73<lb/>
Wright St. 84, Indiana Central 74<lb/>
SOUTHWEST<lb/>
Angelo St. 62, E. New Mexico 60<lb/>
Bishop Col. 83,1 angston St. 81<lb/>
Denver 86. Ft. Hays Si. 79<lb/>
Houston Baptist 90, Paul Quinn 72<lb/>
t amar 91, S. Carolina St. 70<lb/>
SW Texas St. 104. Texas Lutheran 86<lb/>
FAR WEST<lb/>
N. Arizona 69. U.S. International 59<lb/>
So.Colorado 99. Fort I ewis74<lb/>
EXHIBITION<lb/>
St. Joseph's. Maine 75. I aval of Quebec 53<lb/>
A FAIRWAY FRIENDSHIP is budding between March of Dimes 1980<lb/>
National Poster Child Betsy Burch and Arnold Palmer The two have<lb/>
much in common, especially a desire to see the threat of birth defects<lb/>
removed. Palmer is National Chairman for the March of Dimes whose<lb/>
mission is prevention of birth defects Betsy 6, of Stone Mountain, Ga<lb/>
was born with webbed fingers and a malformed right leg She represents<lb/>
more than a quarter of a million babies born annually with birth defects<lb/>
National<lb/>
At<lb/>
By The<lb/>
Hockey Iraguc<lb/>
A Glance<lb/>
Associated Press<lb/>
Campbell<lb/>
Patrick<lb/>
Conference<lb/>
Division<lb/>
W L<lb/>
Philadelphia<lb/>
NY Rangers<lb/>
NY Islanders<lb/>
Atlanta<lb/>
Washington<lb/>
26<lb/>
18<lb/>
16<lb/>
15<lb/>
10<lb/>
2<lb/>
16<lb/>
16<lb/>
18<lb/>
23<lb/>
Smvthe<lb/>
Western Cinference<lb/>
MidwestDivision<lb/>
Kansas Cits2619.578<lb/>
Milwaukee2519568"<lb/>
Denver16283649'<lb/>
Chicago1426.3509<lb/>
Utah133030212<lb/>
Pacific Division<lb/>
Seattle2913690t<lb/>
Los Angeles2914.674.<lb/>
Phoenix2616.6193<lb/>
Portland2323.5008<lb/>
San Diego23.500a<lb/>
Golden State?g3283IT15'<lb/>
Tuesday '?' Games?.<lb/>
Philadelphia 111, New York 108<lb/>
Houston 118. Cleveland I15.0T<lb/>
San Antonio 137, Denver 134<lb/>
Chicago 110. Milwaukee 102<lb/>
San Diego 124. Kansas Cits 116<lb/>
Utah 124, Detroit 110<lb/>
Indiana 122. Portland 118<lb/>
W ednesdav sGames.<lb/>
New York at Boston<lb/>
Cleveland at Atlanta<lb/>
New Jersey at Philadelphia<lb/>
Los Angeles at W ashington<lb/>
San Diego at Milwaukee<lb/>
Denser at Houston<lb/>
Golden State at Phoenix<lb/>
Indiana at Seattle<lb/>
rhursdav's Game<lb/>
Chicago at Kansas C its<lb/>
Chicago<lb/>
Vancouver<lb/>
St. Louis<lb/>
W'innipeg<lb/>
Colorado<lb/>
Edmonton<lb/>
Buffalo<lb/>
Boston<lb/>
Minnesota<lb/>
Toronto<lb/>
Quebec<lb/>
Division<lb/>
15 13<lb/>
Wales<lb/>
Adams<lb/>
15<lb/>
15<lb/>
12<lb/>
12<lb/>
9<lb/>
Conference<lb/>
Division<lb/>
26<lb/>
21<lb/>
20<lb/>
17<lb/>
16<lb/>
Division<lb/>
19 16<lb/>
18<lb/>
16<lb/>
13<lb/>
9<lb/>
19<lb/>
19<lb/>
24<lb/>
23<lb/>
20<lb/>
II<lb/>
II<lb/>
9<lb/>
18<lb/>
17<lb/>
13<lb/>
13<lb/>
I<lb/>
19<lb/>
Norrls<lb/>
Montreal<lb/>
Los Angeles<lb/>
.Pittsburgh<lb/>
' fee'trolt "<lb/>
Hartford<lb/>
Tuesday's Games<lb/>
Moscow Dynamo 5, Washington 5, tie, exh<lb/>
New York Islanders 3. Vancouver 0<lb/>
Atlanta 2, Winnipeg 0<lb/>
St.Louis 6, Los Angeles 3<lb/>
Boston 2, Colorado 2. tie<lb/>
Wednesday's Games<lb/>
New York Rangers at Detroit<lb/>
Vancouver at Pittsburgh<lb/>
New York Islanders at Buffalo<lb/>
Montreal at Toronto<lb/>
Edmonton at Quebec<lb/>
Hartford at Minnesota<lb/>
Los Angeles at Chicago<lb/>
Thursday's Games<lb/>
St.Louis at Boston<lb/>
Winnipeg at Philadelphia<lb/>
T<lb/>
10<lb/>
7<lb/>
6<lb/>
5<lb/>
6<lb/>
12<lb/>
7<lb/>
6<lb/>
5<lb/>
4<lb/>
9<lb/>
3<lb/>
6<lb/>
8<lb/>
4<lb/>
6<lb/>
6<lb/>
8<lb/>
I i<lb/>
7<lb/>
10<lb/>
Pt<lb/>
s GF<lb/>
62 163<lb/>
43 158<lb/>
38 131<lb/>
35 127<lb/>
16 118<lb/>
42 115<lb/>
37 129<lb/>
36 120<lb/>
29 107<lb/>
28 127<lb/>
27 129<lb/>
55 152<lb/>
48 140<lb/>
48 156<lb/>
38 141<lb/>
38 124<lb/>
44 132<lb/>
44 166<lb/>
43 140<lb/>
33 12$<lb/>
28 120<lb/>
GA<lb/>
116<lb/>
150<lb/>
127<lb/>
136<lb/>
147<lb/>
115<lb/>
134<lb/>
135<lb/>
158<lb/>
149<lb/>
165<lb/>
107<lb/>
108<lb/>
111<lb/>
149<lb/>
131<lb/>
139<lb/>
150<lb/>
139<lb/>
I 33<lb/>
142<lb/>
STEEPLECHASE<lb/>
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Thursday1.14 Spaghetti w Meat Sauce<lb/>
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Saturday $1.14 Baked Lasagna<lb/>
$1.49 Baked Meat Loaf<lb/>
Sunday$1.14 Creole Spaghetti<lb/>
$1.49 Choice of Chicken<lb/>
Monday $1.14 Smothered Liver<lb/>
$1.49 Chicken Chow Mein<lb/>
SPECIALS SERVED w2 VEGETABLES<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057238_0011"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 10, 1980<lb/>
11<lb/>
Pirate Swimmers Return<lb/>
ECU Swimming Action<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
After a conditioning<lb/>
trip to Florida during the<lb/>
break in classes, East<lb/>
Carolina's swimming<lb/>
team returns to action<lb/>
tonight at 7p.m. at Minges<lb/>
Natatorium in a meet<lb/>
against the University of<lb/>
Maine.<lb/>
Coach Ray Scharf<lb/>
points out that the<lb/>
members of the squad<lb/>
paid their own way to the<lb/>
'sunshine' state, with<lb/>
many of them driving<lb/>
their own cars.<lb/>
"The kids had a<lb/>
wonderful time and<lb/>
they're really ready for the<lb/>
season says Scharf.<lb/>
The Pirate tankmen<lb/>
trained in Florida from<lb/>
December 28 through<lb/>
January 6, and according<lb/>
to Scharf, each swam a<lb/>
total of about nine miles<lb/>
in that period.<lb/>
There is good news and<lb/>
bad news for followers of<lb/>
ECU swimming, though.<lb/>
Standout freshman<lb/>
Mike Triau and steady<lb/>
senior Bill Fehling have<lb/>
been ruled doubtful for<lb/>
the matchup with Maine.<lb/>
Both reportedly were<lb/>
taken sick while in<lb/>
Florida.<lb/>
When the 'world goes to<lb/>
Moscow' for the summer<lb/>
Olympics, East Carolina<lb/>
could be represented.<lb/>
John Tudor, who com-<lb/>
pleted his East Carolina<lb/>
eligibility in the 1978-79<lb/>
season, had already<lb/>
qualified for the Olympic<lb/>
trials in the 200 meter<lb/>
freestyle and has been<lb/>
joined by Kelly Hopkins.<lb/>
Hopkins qualified in the<lb/>
100m breaststroke with a<lb/>
time of :57.2 and in the<lb/>
200rr v east with 2:06.00.<lb/>
Both will have to make the<lb/>
final Olympic team when<lb/>
trial are held at Austin,<lb/>
Texas in May.<lb/>
Scharf reports that<lb/>
Tudor has since beat the<lb/>
defending national cham-<lb/>
pion with a time of<lb/>
1:39.00.<lb/>
To defeat Maine, the<lb/>
Pirates will have to over-<lb/>
come a 16 point deficit<lb/>
which will exist as soon as<lb/>
the competition begins.<lb/>
Though rich in swimming<lb/>
heritage, ECU has no<lb/>
diver?a situation which<lb/>
may cause the Bucs to lose<lb/>
meets which they could<lb/>
have otherwise won. "Their men are<lb/>
"Maine is exceptionally outstanding he said.<lb/>
improved over last year<lb/>
says Scharf. "Last year<lb/>
they shaved - for us and<lb/>
made it a real close match.<lb/>
I think we've got a shot at<lb/>
them<lb/>
The Pirates will host<lb/>
South Carolina Saturday<lb/>
at 1p.m but Scharf ad-<lb/>
mits his club has a limited<lb/>
chance at victory.<lb/>
"They beat North<lb/>
Carolina last year. We're<lb/>
very much of an under-<lb/>
dog, but don't count us<lb/>
out.<lb/>
"If we get beat, it won't<lb/>
be because of a lack of<lb/>
conditioning. It will simp-<lb/>
ly be because the other<lb/>
team is better than we<lb/>
are.<lb/>
AUTO SERVICE SPECIALS<lb/>
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Retread Tires<lb/>
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Debbie Meyer Speaks Out<lb/>
By WILLGR1MSLEY<lb/>
AP Special Correspondent<lb/>
Debbie Meyer, once the<lb/>
queen of the world's<lb/>
swimmers, has seen the<lb/>
best and the worst of the<lb/>
Olympic Games, yet feels<lb/>
that the great interna-<lb/>
tional sports spectacle<lb/>
should be kept free from<lb/>
government interference.<lb/>
"Unless you have given<lb/>
the belter part of your life<lb/>
to the Olympic movement,<lb/>
as I have, and unless you<lb/>
have actually lived in the<lb/>
Olympic Village, you<lb/>
shouldn't be too quick<lb/>
make a decision on the<lb/>
boycott idea says the<lb/>
dimpled heroine of the<lb/>
1968 Games.<lb/>
"Once you're inside the<lb/>
gates, there is a whole new<lb/>
attitude. There are smiles<lb/>
and handshakes and<lb/>
camaraderie. No matter<lb/>
what language you speak,<lb/>
there is communication 8<lb/>
Lady<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
Travel<lb/>
Having been victorious<lb/>
in a three game road trip<lb/>
through West Virginia and<lb/>
Virginia, the Lady Pirate<lb/>
roundballers travel to<lb/>
Clemson, S.C. to par-<lb/>
ticipate in the Clemson In-<lb/>
vitational Tournament<lb/>
Friday and Saturdav.<lb/>
The Lady Bucs open<lb/>
against Mississippi<lb/>
University for Women<lb/>
Friday at 6 p.m. in famed<lb/>
Littlejohn Coliseum, the<lb/>
sight of NCAA top ranked<lb/>
Duke Blue Devils'<lb/>
loss of the 1979-80.<lb/>
first<lb/>
ECU, now 11-3 on the<lb/>
season, returns to the<lb/>
friendly confines of<lb/>
Minges Coliseum January<lb/>
16 for an NCAIAW mat-<lb/>
chup with the Tar Heels of<lb/>
North Carolina in their<lb/>
first home game since<lb/>
December 10.<lb/>
it's eye contact.<lb/>
"You forget politics.<lb/>
All the international<lb/>
boundaries are down.<lb/>
Ideological rivalries are<lb/>
forgotten. If it were left to<lb/>
the youth of the world,<lb/>
there would be no wars<lb/>
Debbie, 27, of<lb/>
Hayward, Calif won<lb/>
three gold medals in Mex-<lb/>
ico City, where days<lb/>
before army troops were<lb/>
shooting down students in<lb/>
the streets. The Soviet<lb/>
Union had just invaded<lb/>
Czechoslovakia.<lb/>
Four years later at<lb/>
Munich, as a part-time<lb/>
journalist, she saw the<lb/>
West Germans strive to<lb/>
erase the memory of<lb/>
Adolf Hitler and for 16 of<lb/>
the 19 days stage the most<lb/>
pleasant and relaxed<lb/>
Olympics of all time.<lb/>
They festooned their<lb/>
streets with pastel colors<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
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for$)andS2 Artists Range from A<lb/>
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(114c Scott) or call to a good buy. Ask<lb/>
for ED.<lb/>
PUBLIC SALE: Stereo, sewing<lb/>
machine, cassette recorder and<lb/>
Shakoee make-up products at 1st State<lb/>
Bank Evans St. Mall Greenville, phone<lb/>
7S4 242V.<lb/>
79 VW VAN, must sell, reduced price;<lb/>
yellow kitchen table metal bottom $40.<lb/>
7 54 0895, 757 494! ? 26<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: wanted to<lb/>
share 2 bedroom apt. 1 block from<lb/>
campus. $85 rent one-half utilities one-<lb/>
half phone. Accounting or Business<lb/>
major preferred but not required. Apt.<lb/>
Ava.liable immediately. Call 758-9i?i.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: wanted to<lb/>
share 2 bedroom apt at River Bluff.<lb/>
One-half rent and utilities, apt. com-<lb/>
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share apt. at Eastbrook. Rent is $75<lb/>
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FEMALE ROOMMATE: Beautifully<lb/>
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on East 5th St. $100 per. mo. oil includ-<lb/>
ed. Call 758 3541<lb/>
instead of nationalistic<lb/>
flags, while security police<lb/>
moved through the Village<lb/>
like Miami Beach vaca-<lb/>
tioners in their white flan-<lb/>
nels and blue blazers ' not<lb/>
a gun or stick in sight.<lb/>
Then the Arab terrorists<lb/>
moved in on the Israelis in<lb/>
an ugly adventure that left<lb/>
16 people dead and almost<lb/>
resulted in cancellation of<lb/>
the Games.<lb/>
"I'm glad they didn't<lb/>
cancel them Debbie<lb/>
said. "The Israelis, most<lb/>
of all, would have insisted<lb/>
that they go on. You can't<lb/>
let the Games become<lb/>
hostage to violence. That<lb/>
way, you lose<lb/>
everything<lb/>
Debbie can speak with<lb/>
authority. The Olympics<lb/>
have taken up most of the<lb/>
years of her young life '<lb/>
first as a competitor, win-<lb/>
ner of 19 national cham-<lb/>
pionships and setter of 20<lb/>
world records in freestyle<lb/>
swimming, then as a part-<lb/>
time coach, commentator,<lb/>
advisor to the U.S. Olym-<lb/>
pic Committee and now<lb/>
good will ambassador for<lb/>
one of the corporations<lb/>
sponsoring the U.S.<lb/>
Olympic effort.<lb/>
The company is Life<lb/>
Savers, Inc.<lb/>
Soon with figure skater<lb/>
Dorothy Hamill she will<lb/>
launch a multimillion<lb/>
dollar campaign for U.S.<lb/>
Olympic funds.<lb/>
"We're going to dump<lb/>
91,650 packages of gum<lb/>
drops and candy on Lake<lb/>
Placid for the Winter<lb/>
Olympic athletes she<lb/>
said. The sweet tooth has<lb/>
no international boun-<lb/>
daries.<lb/>
Debbie was asked if she<lb/>
felt that nationalism in the<lb/>
Games should be<lb/>
downplayed by using only<lb/>
the Olympic anthem and<lb/>
symbols.<lb/>
"I don't know she<lb/>
replied. "I got goose-<lb/>
pimples when I stood on<lb/>
the victory stand and saw<lb/>
the American flag raised. I<lb/>
felt a part of the youth of<lb/>
America<lb/>
<lb/>
ZcOUPOH-<lb/>
hEELt<lb/>
r<lb/>
ForA?<lb/>
YOM<lb/>
No li<lb/>
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A ?<lb/>
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TUNE-UP<lb/>
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Leather Belts<lb/>
$6 to $19<lb/>
Leather Handbags<lb/>
$10 to $25<lb/>
Shoes Repaired to Look<lb/>
Like New.<lb/>
Riggan Shoe Repair<lb/>
&amp; Leather Shop<lb/>
ill West 4th St.<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
758 0204<lb/>
Parking in Front<lb/>
and Rear. <lb/>
OFFICIAL NORTH CAROLINA STATE INSPECTION STATION<lb/>
WE SERVICE NATIONAL ACCOUNTS<lb/>
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in progress<lb/>
All Ski Apparel<lb/>
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Large Selection of Ski<lb/>
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buccaneer M07IES ii?3<lb/>
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Every Doy<lb/>
A STEVEN SRELBERG FIM<lb/>
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2 00-4:30-700-9:20<lb/>
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2.30-4:45-7:00-9:15<lb/>
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7:15-9:30 PG<lb/>
REDFORD and FONDA-SIZZLES<lb/>
THE ELECTRIC<lb/>
HORSEMAN<lb/>
STEAKHOUSE<lb/>
Friday Saturday Midnight Special Box Office<lb/>
"Harold and Maude" Opens 1130<lb/>
ATTENTION ECU STUDENTS<lb/>
YOU MAY BE ELIGIBLE FOR A TWO YEAR AIR FORCE ROTC SCHOLARSHIP THE SCHOLARSHIP<lb/>
INCLUDES FULL TUITION, LAB EXPENSES, INCIDENTAL FEES, A REIMBURSEMENT FOR TEX-<lb/>
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SCHOLARSHIP STUDENTS ENROLLED IN THE AIR FORCE ROTC TWO-YEAR PROGRAM ALSO<lb/>
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Complete with Idaho King Baked<lb/>
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Complete with Idaho King Baked<lb/>
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7S8-S71<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057238_0012"/><lb/>
12 THE EAST CAROLINIAN JANUARY 10, 1980<lb/>
Tar Heels Down Wake<lb/>
Photo By CHAP GURLEY<lb/>
Pirate-Wolfpack Cage Action<lb/>
Continued from Page 9<lb/>
then fourth-ranked North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
At the half, the Tigers<lb/>
trailed Duke 43-41, losings<lb/>
a 10-point lead late in the<lb/>
first 20 minutes of play.<lb/>
The Blue Devils led by as<lb/>
many as five points with<lb/>
12:17 left.<lb/>
Forward Al Wood<lb/>
scored 16 points to lead<lb/>
15th-ranked North<lb/>
Carolina to a victory, but<lb/>
Wood's most spectacular<lb/>
contribution may have<lb/>
been a steal he converted<lb/>
into a four-point play.<lb/>
Wood appeared ready<lb/>
to dunk the ball when<lb/>
Wake Forest's Benny<lb/>
McKaig grabbed his waist.<lb/>
Nonetheless, Wood threw<lb/>
up a desperation shot that<lb/>
dropped through the<lb/>
basket.<lb/>
Because it was an inten-<lb/>
tional foul, Wood receiv-<lb/>
ed two shots and sank<lb/>
both.<lb/>
"I have clowned<lb/>
around, but you never ex-<lb/>
pect to hit a shot like<lb/>
that Wood said after-<lb/>
ward.<lb/>
Miki. O'Koren, whose<lb/>
stea' Jinched the victory,<lb/>
ag l. "You make a<lb/>
funy shot like that, it<lb/>
kin 1 of hurts you (Wake<lb/>
Forest), mentally and on<lb/>
the scoreboard, too he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The teams remained<lb/>
within four Doints of each<lb/>
other throughout most of<lb/>
the second half.<lb/>
Tar Heel co-uh Dean<lb/>
Smith, praised Wood and<lb/>
O'Koren. "We wanted to<lb/>
get Al the ball more in the<lb/>
second half. Wake did a<lb/>
good job defensively in<lb/>
the first half of keeping<lb/>
the ball away from'him<lb/>
Smith said.<lb/>
The Tar Heels entered<lb/>
the game 0-2 in the ACC<lb/>
and 6-3 overall. The<lb/>
Deacons are now 6-6<lb/>
overall and 0-3 in the<lb/>
ACC.<lb/>
Top scorers for Wake<lb/>
Forest included Guy<lb/>
Morgan with 14 points,<lb/>
David Morris with 12 and<lb/>
Will Singleton with 11.<lb/>
Len Horton scored 22<lb/>
points to carry Georgia<lb/>
Tech past Western<lb/>
Carolina. The Yellow<lb/>
Jackets K-ld a 29-22<lb/>
halftime lead and increas-<lb/>
ed it to 50-35 with 6:41 left<lb/>
to play.<lb/>
Rob Noyes added 15<lb/>
points for Georgia Tech,<lb/>
including five in the last<lb/>
1:37.<lb/>
For he Catamounts,<lb/>
sop'nomor Greg Dennis<lb/>
led the scoring with 26<lb/>
points. Freshman Ronnie<lb/>
Carr added 15.<lb/>
Tech is now 4-8 while<lb/>
Western Carolina dropped<lb/>
to 8-4.<lb/>
Forward Eddie Talley<lb/>
turned out a valiant<lb/>
26-point effort, but it was<lb/>
not enough to help wjnless<lb/>
Baptist as Campbell<lb/>
defeated the Bucanneers<lb/>
77-60 in a college basket-<lb/>
ball game Wednesday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
Braves Favor<lb/>
Pitchers In Draft<lb/>
Johnson, Threeths<lb/>
Back Says DeVoe<lb/>
KNOXVILLE,<lb/>
Tenn.(AP)Tennessee<lb/>
Basketball Coach Don<lb/>
DeVoe has lifted the<lb/>
suspensions of two of his<lb/>
ballplayers in time for<lb/>
tonight's game against<lb/>
Southeastern Conference<lb/>
rival Florida at<lb/>
Gainesville.<lb/>
Saying they have been<lb/>
punished enough, DeVoe<lb/>
on Tuesday welcomed<lb/>
back to the squad his top<lb/>
scorer, Reggie Johnson,<lb/>
and reserve center Chuck<lb/>
Threeths.<lb/>
The suspensions, for<lb/>
sneaking out of motel<lb/>
room in Memphis against<lb/>
coaches' orders last week,<lb/>
were to have run through<lb/>
Thursday.<lb/>
"I think Reggie and<lb/>
Chuck have been penaliz-<lb/>
ed enough DeVoe said<lb/>
Tuesday after meeting<lb/>
with the two players in his<lb/>
office. "Basically, I don't<lb/>
want to do anything that's<lb/>
going to hinder our<lb/>
chances of winning<lb/>
another important basket-<lb/>
ball game<lb/>
Playing without<lb/>
Johnson and Threeths,<lb/>
Tennessee upset then<lb/>
second-ranked Kentucky<lb/>
49-47 last Saturday to<lb/>
emerge alone at the top of<lb/>
the Southeastern Con-<lb/>
ference standings with a<lb/>
4-0 SEC record and a 9-3<lb/>
mark overall.<lb/>
One of those losses, a<lb/>
70-68 defeat by 19th-<lb/>
ranked Indiana a week<lb/>
earlier, came when<lb/>
Johnson and Threeths<lb/>
were out on suspension<lb/>
for missing a team meal in<lb/>
San Diego.<lb/>
"1 thought we had<lb/>
taken care of it when we<lb/>
were out in California<lb/>
Devoe saidBut I believe<lb/>
merit a return to tne<lb/>
squad<lb/>
Johnson, a 6-foot-9 for-<lb/>
ward and the Volunteers'<lb/>
leading scorer with a 19.2<lb/>
point average, and<lb/>
Threeths, a 6-foot-6<lb/>
reserve forward averaging<lb/>
better than 5.2 points,<lb/>
were suspended last<lb/>
Thursday after an assis-<lb/>
tant coach spotted them<lb/>
out after hours.<lb/>
As part of their punish-<lb/>
ment, they were not allow-<lb/>
ed to practice with the<lb/>
team two days last week<lb/>
and they were put on a<lb/>
disciplinary running pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
"Geez, they've handled<lb/>
it beautifully DeVoe<lb/>
said. "They've been there<lb/>
every morning and gone<lb/>
through a real workout<lb/>
every day everything from<lb/>
Jonnson will start against<lb/>
Florida, who will have a<lb/>
new coach behind the<lb/>
bench for the game.<lb/>
Coach1 John Lotz was<lb/>
fired after the Gators'<lb/>
82-62 loss to Auburn last<lb/>
Saturday and assistant Ed<lb/>
Visscher was named as<lb/>
Lotz interim replace-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
"We're looking for-<lb/>
ward to playing Tennessee<lb/>
like I am to meeting the<lb/>
Ayatollah Visscher said.<lb/>
ATLANTA (AP)?The<lb/>
Atlanta Braves picked<lb/>
four college pitchers in<lb/>
Tuesday's winter draft of<lb/>
free agent amateur<lb/>
baseball players.<lb/>
The first pick was Joe<lb/>
McMurtry, a 20-year-old<lb/>
right-hander from Troy,<lb/>
Texas. The 6-foot-5,<lb/>
195-pounder from<lb/>
McLennan Community<lb/>
College in Waco, Texas,<lb/>
was the fourth player<lb/>
chosen.<lb/>
Atlanta's second-round<lb/>
choice was David Chiono,<lb/>
19, a 6-foot, 170-pound<lb/>
right-hander from Yuba<lb/>
Junior College in<lb/>
Marysville, Calif.<lb/>
The Braves picked Scott<lb/>
Patterson, 21, a 6-foot-2,<lb/>
175-pound right-hander<lb/>
from Long Beach Junior<lb/>
College in California, and<lb/>
Daniel McFaddert, 19, a<lb/>
6-foot-3, 180-pounder<lb/>
from Spartanburg<lb/>
Methodist College in<lb/>
South Carolina, in the<lb/>
secondary phase of the<lb/>
draft for players who were<lb/>
previously drafted but<lb/>
never signed.<lb/>
Three Georgia players<lb/>
were chosen in the draft,<lb/>
all of them in the regular<lb/>
phase. They were Richard<lb/>
Felt, a pitcher from<lb/>
Snellville, chosen by Mon-<lb/>
treal in the first round;<lb/>
Timothy Greene, a pitcher<lb/>
from Macon, and William<lb/>
Taylor, a pitcher from<lb/>
Boston, Ga selected by<lb/>
Minnesota and Texas,<lb/>
respectively, in the second<lb/>
round.<lb/>
McMurtry is "a big,<lb/>
strong young man with an<lb/>
above-average fastball<lb/>
said Braves scouting direc-<lb/>
tor Paul Snyder. "He has<lb/>
a sinker and a slider. Like<lb/>
most young, hard<lb/>
throwers, control is his<lb/>
problem, which is to be<lb/>
expected<lb/>
"We'll make him an of-<lb/>
fer and try to sign him<lb/>
right now, but I think he'll<lb/>
want to play this season"<lb/>
at McLennan, Snyder<lb/>
said.<lb/>
McMurtry was second<lb/>
on the Braves' list of<lb/>
preferred prospects,<lb/>
behind right-hander Colin<lb/>
McLaughlin of Connec-<lb/>
ticut, who was chosen first<lb/>
in the draft by Toronto.<lb/>
Atlanta retains negotia-<lb/>
tion rights to McMurtry<lb/>
until the summer draft in<lb/>
June.<lb/>
Campbell, now 5-5,<lb/>
placed four starters in<lb/>
double figures, led by<lb/>
senior guard Fred Whit-<lb/>
field with 16 points.<lb/>
Campbell jumped out<lb/>
to an early 14-4 lead with<lb/>
15 left in the half and led<lb/>
by as much as 13 before<lb/>
Baptist cut the advantage<lb/>
to seven, 35-28, at<lb/>
halftime.<lb/>
The Fighting Campbells<lb/>
maintained a comfortable<lb/>
lead throughout the se-<lb/>
cond half and out scored<lb/>
Baptist 18-8 in the final<lb/>
three minutes to claim the<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
The Bucanneers are 0-8.<lb/>
xfffic<lb/>
THUR. I HxMym<lb/>
FR1. Aft. ZSfAZE 25<lb/>
ifruik!SatJ EAZE<lb/>
I sunday DIXIE ROAD<lb/>
DUCKS<lb/>
Imonday FULL CIRCLE <lb/>
East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
they both understand now basketball to weighthfting<lb/>
that they must abide by to sprinting<lb/>
the rules. Their efforts in DeVoe said he still has<lb/>
early morning workouts not decided whether<lb/>
NEW<lb/>
SUPER PLENAMINS<lb/>
EXTRA STRENGTH.<lb/>
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1st 25 People get FREE Attic T-Shirts<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057238_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>