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<pb facs="00057239_0001"/>
?he<lb/>
dtarfllttttatt<lb/>
Vol. 54 Noj?"<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Tuesday, January 15, 1980<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
('irculalion 1(1.(MM!<lb/>
Iranian Students A t ECU Discuss Crisis<lb/>
B MARIANNE HARBISON<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The following is an interview with<lb/>
three Iranian students: Roya<lb/>
Shokoufan, Asghar Memarzadeh,<lb/>
and Mahmood Seyed-Mozaffari.<lb/>
I he statements below are the opi-<lb/>
nh ns of the participants and should<lb/>
he regarded as such.<lb/>
tast Carolinian: Have am of you<lb/>
had problems at Last Carolina<lb/>
which have resulted from the crisis<lb/>
in Iran?<lb/>
I nanimously: No.<lb/>
East Carolinian: What steps did you<lb/>
take in order to comply with Presi-<lb/>
dent Carter's investigation of Ira-<lb/>
man students, and how did you feel<lb/>
after having fulfilled the re-<lb/>
quirements?<lb/>
Memarzadeh: We had to go to an<lb/>
immigration office in Charlotte and<lb/>
take papers from the school (ECU)<lb/>
saying we were full-time students.<lb/>
We had to verify our address. Also,<lb/>
we had our pictures taken.<lb/>
East Carolinian: And, then, how<lb/>
did you feel?<lb/>
Skokoufan: We were made to feel<lb/>
like criminals  because of the way<lb/>
the Charlotte immigration officials<lb/>
treated us.<lb/>
Memarzadeh: The earlobe had to be<lb/>
shown in the pictures  it is like a<lb/>
fingerprint.<lb/>
Seyed-Mozaffari: I had to have my<lb/>
picture taken four times  my hair<lb/>
or my beard was in the way each<lb/>
time and my earlobe didn't show<lb/>
until the fourth picture.<lb/>
East Carolinian: Sort of like mug<lb/>
shots?<lb/>
Memarzadeh: Yes. It was just a way<lb/>
to harass Iranian students. We were<lb/>
investigated like we had done<lb/>
something wrong against the<lb/>
American nation. It was almost like<lb/>
the American government treated<lb/>
the Japanese in the United States at<lb/>
the time of World War II. I agree<lb/>
that illegal students should be<lb/>
deported.<lb/>
East Carolinian: Have American<lb/>
students at East Carolina been sym-<lb/>
pathetic to your presence here?<lb/>
Memarzadeh: Those who know<lb/>
about the situation and are inform-<lb/>
ed are sympathetic, but those who<lb/>
know only about the fifty hostages<lb/>
and nothing about the causes behind<lb/>
the capture of those hostages are not<lb/>
sympathetic at all.<lb/>
East Carolinian: Do you feel that<lb/>
those who aren't informed are<lb/>
hostile toward you?<lb/>
Unanimously; Yes.<lb/>
East Carolinian; Many American<lb/>
students would probably like to ask<lb/>
you questions about Iran, the<lb/>
hostages, etc but are fearful of<lb/>
asking because of hurting your feel-<lb/>
ings or perhaps offending you. How<lb/>
would you react to their questions?<lb/>
Search For<lb/>
Rein Suspended<lb/>
CAPI CHARLES, Ya.<lb/>
( VP) I nless more debris is sighted<lb/>
and recovered, the wayward flight<lb/>
and plane crash which apparently<lb/>
killed 1 ouisiana Slate football<lb/>
coach Robert "Bo" Rein may re-<lb/>
main unexplained.<lb/>
I he Coast Grard said Sunday it<lb/>
has suspended its search for<lb/>
wreckage ol the plane carrying<lb/>
Rein. 34, and pilot Louis Benscot-<lb/>
ter, both presumed dead after their<lb/>
ne Cessna 441 crashed ear-<lb/>
? 1 iday nearly 1,000 miles from<lb/>
where it was headed.<lb/>
1 t. Gene Brooks said the search<lb/>
was suspended at sunset Saturday<lb/>
"pending further developments<lb/>
He said the search would resume on-<lb/>
ly ii more debris were sighted or the<lb/>
rch area expanded.<lb/>
rwo Coast Guard aircragt and<lb/>
vessel made eight or nine trips<lb/>
igh the area in which the plane<lb/>
K)0 miles northeast of its<lb/>
ided flight from Shreveport,<lb/>
! a to Baton Rough, I a.<lb/>
A memorial service for Rein, who<lb/>
had gone LSU just two months ago<lb/>
after serving as head coach at North<lb/>
Carolina State, was held Sunday at<lb/>
Cary, N.C. In an emergency<lb/>
meeting Saturday, LSU named<lb/>
Jerry Stovall to succeed Rein as<lb/>
football coach there.<lb/>
Rein and his pilot had taken off<lb/>
from Shreveport shortly after 9<lb/>
p.m. Thursday for what was to have<lb/>
been a routine 60-minute flight to<lb/>
Baton Rouge.<lb/>
Instead, the plane went into a<lb/>
spin, plunged into the Atlantic<lb/>
Ocean about 1(X) miles off the<lb/>
Virginia coast and disappeared at<lb/>
1:30 a.m. Friday as Air Force Capt.<lb/>
Daniel R. Zoerb watched helplessly.<lb/>
c oast Guard officials believe an<lb/>
aluminum wheel sighted Friday<lb/>
night by a Norwegian ship 1(X) miles<lb/>
cast o Cape Henry "definitely<lb/>
belonged to the aircraft, after talk-<lb/>
ing to the owner Brooks said.<lb/>
Memarzadeh: I would welcome<lb/>
their questions. I feel it is a duty o<lb/>
mine to answer their questions.<lb/>
I would like to do this.<lb/>
Skokoufan: Yes.<lb/>
I'ust Carolinian: In the minds of<lb/>
some students there is an uncertain-<lb/>
ty about the Islamic republic and the<lb/>
Islamic religion. How would you ex-<lb/>
plain these, and do vou ove<lb/>
them?<lb/>
Memarzadeh: lv personal 0<lb/>
isn't important. I he Man<lb/>
want ii and<lb/>
See STUDENTS Page 21 <lb/>
Ricky Lowe<lb/>
Late Professor Respected<lb/>
Parks<lb/>
By DIANE HENDERSON<lb/>
Managing F.ditor<lb/>
"He had a tremendous love of life<lb/>
which was reflected in his<lb/>
teaching ?<lb/>
Dr.Lon Slone Felker, ECU<lb/>
political science professor, spoke of<lb/>
his friend and colleague Dr. Oral<lb/>
E.Parks, who died December 30 of<lb/>
leukemia.<lb/>
Students of Dr. Parks agreed that<lb/>
this outlook enriched his teaching.<lb/>
"He tried to get you to relate<lb/>
things that happened in everday life<lb/>
with the material in the course. He<lb/>
told stories to make the points more<lb/>
interesting said Marianne Har-<lb/>
bison, one of Dr. Parks's students.<lb/>
One aspect of his personalitv that<lb/>
both students and professors<lb/>
recognized was Dr. Parks's will-<lb/>
ingness to help, to listen and to talk<lb/>
with his students, in short, his car-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
'The term 'pro-student' could<lb/>
I he Headache Of Registration Is Over<lb/>
 .for this semester<lb/>
definitely be applied to Oral. I don't<lb/>
think he ever lost track of why he<lb/>
was here commented Herbert<lb/>
Carlton, an associate professor in<lb/>
political science.<lb/>
"He was dedicated to students.<lb/>
He liked students, and they liked<lb/>
him said Dr. Lawrence Hough,<lb/>
associate professor in political<lb/>
science and assistant dean of general<lb/>
college.<lb/>
Dr. Parks was also considerate of<lb/>
students'problems.<lb/>
"He was willing to bend to make<lb/>
allowances for student needs. If you<lb/>
hsd a problem you could come to<lb/>
him, and he'd try to help noted<lb/>
Libby Lefler, a former student of<lb/>
Dr. Parks.<lb/>
"Dr. Parks took an interest in<lb/>
students. Anything he knew about,<lb/>
he'd be willing to sit down and<lb/>
discuss with you. He was a super<lb/>
teacher said Lynn Calder, a<lb/>
political science major.<lb/>
Although teaching was his major<lb/>
concern, Dr. Parks shared many<lb/>
other interests with friends and<lb/>
family. One of his main interests<lb/>
was collecting unusual or valuable<lb/>
rocks.<lb/>
"I remember one experience in<lb/>
particular. Oral and I went to the<lb/>
See PARKS Page 3 Col. 1<lb/>
Soviets Veto UN Sanctions<lb/>
UNIT! D NATIONS (AP) ?<lb/>
The United States called on other<lb/>
I . N. members to join it in<lb/>
"meaningful" action against<lb/>
Iran after the second Soviet veto<lb/>
in a week killed a Security Coun-<lb/>
cil resolution authorizing sane-<lb/>
Inside Today<lb/>
Editorials Page 4<lb/>
Olher Opinionspage 5<lb/>
'I nain' OnstagePage 6<lb/>
Dramap?Ke 6<lb/>
Madison Downs Ml Pajje<lb/>
lady Piralfs ,femsonPa?e 8<lb/>
tions until the American hostages<lb/>
are released. But Iran's foreign<lb/>
minister said the hostages would<lb/>
be kept until the shah is returned,<lb/>
even if this took "forever<lb/>
We urge all other members<lb/>
of the United Nations to join<lb/>
with us in the application of<lb/>
meaningful measures against the<lb/>
continued holding of the hostages<lb/>
in defiance of international law<lb/>
U.S. Ambassador Donald<lb/>
McHenry told the council after<lb/>
the veto Sunday night nullified a<lb/>
10-2 vote in favor of collective<lb/>
punitive action. "Only thus will<lb/>
we demonstrate to Iran that their<lb/>
lawless actions are viewed with<lb/>
disfavor by all nations<lb/>
The council in a resolution<lb/>
Dec. 31 called on Iran to free the<lb/>
hostages and said if they were not<lb/>
released by Jan. 7, it would<lb/>
"adopt effective measures<lb/>
McHenry said this was a<lb/>
"binding obligation" to adopt<lb/>
sanctions which the Soviet veto<lb/>
thwarted, and "the membership<lb/>
of the United Nations at large re-<lb/>
mains obliged  to take effective<lb/>
measures consistent with the<lb/>
U.N. charter to carry out that<lb/>
resolution<lb/>
The Soviet Union abstained on<lb/>
the first resolution, adopted by a<lb/>
vote of 11.0. McHenry said the<lb/>
Soviet veto on the sanctions<lb/>
resolution was "an act of<lb/>
political expediency designed to<lb/>
buy Iranian silence on<lb/>
Afghanistan and Soviet advan-<lb/>
tage in the area<lb/>
On Jan. 7, the Soviet Union<lb/>
cast its first veto of the new year<lb/>
against a council resolution pro-<lb/>
testing the Russian military in-<lb/>
tervention in Afghanistan.<lb/>
Among steps against Iran be-<lb/>
ing considered by the United<lb/>
States is a naval blockade to en-<lb/>
force economic sanctions and a<lb/>
reduction of Western diplomats<lb/>
in Tehran, U.S. officials in<lb/>
Washington reported. Deputy<lb/>
Secretary of State Warren<lb/>
Christopher will discuss this with<lb/>
America's allies in Europe this<lb/>
week as he tries to line up allied<lb/>
action on Afghanistan.<lb/>
But Iranian Foreign Minister<lb/>
Sadegh Ghotbzadeh said if the<lb/>
United States continues to "play<lb/>
politics" with the embassy im-<lb/>
passe, the hostages will remain in<lb/>
captivity. He told a Tehran news-<lb/>
conference shortly before the'<lb/>
U.N. vote that his government<lb/>
was prepared to wait "more or<lb/>
less forever" for the extradition<lb/>
of ousted Shah Mohammad Reza<lb/>
Pahlavi,<lb/>
Lowe's Job<lb/>
In Question<lb/>
By DEBORAH HOTALINC<lb/>
and<lb/>
MARIANNE HARBISON<lb/>
SGA Treasurer Ricky Lowe, after a<lb/>
medical drop from final exams, officially<lb/>
withdrew from classes before Christmas<lb/>
holidays, technically relinquishing anv<lb/>
position held while enrolled at ECU.<lb/>
Several questions have been raised by<lb/>
SGA legislators about the validity of<lb/>
Lowe's reinstatement as treasurer because<lb/>
of the statute in the SGA constitution<lb/>
concerning vacancy of positions.<lb/>
Rudy Alexander, assistant director of<lb/>
student affairs, stated, "As I understand<lb/>
it, the onstitution says that one holding<lb/>
an executive position must have a 2.0<lb/>
average and must remain a full-time stu-<lb/>
dent during the term<lb/>
Lowe's apparent abrupt withdrawal has<lb/>
prompted speculation that a special elec-<lb/>
tion will need to be held to fulfill SGA<lb/>
constitutional requirements. Alexander<lb/>
said that the decision to hold a special<lb/>
election should be turned over to SGA At-<lb/>
torney General Drake Mann for con-<lb/>
sideration.<lb/>
According to Alexander's interpreta-<lb/>
tion of the constitution, "The Attorney<lb/>
General has three weeks in which to call<lb/>
the special election<lb/>
Attorney General Mann commented,<lb/>
"Nothing official has come to my atten-<lb/>
tion concerning this matter<lb/>
When asked for comment. Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Student Life Dr. Elmer<lb/>
Meyer said he thought that since classes<lb/>
had not been held during the Christmas<lb/>
break and Lowe had withdrawn before<lb/>
the break (when school was not in ses-<lb/>
sion), he couldn't see anything wrong<lb/>
with Lowe's reinstatement to office.<lb/>
"Unless there is something specifically<lb/>
against it in the constitution, I don't see<lb/>
anything wrong with it Meyer said.<lb/>
"The attorney general would have to rule<lb/>
on that ? it's not my rule<lb/>
The present constitution of the SGA in<lb/>
Section 7, Article IV B. states, "Should<lb/>
any other executive office become vacant,<lb/>
there shall be an election to fill the vacan-<lb/>
cy within three weeks of its occurrence<lb/>
Therefore, upon official withdrawal,<lb/>
Ricky Lowe relinquished any executive<lb/>
Journalism Meeting<lb/>
position held in SGA<lb/>
When questioned, Lowe<lb/>
had in fact officially witl d i<lb/>
school after earlier receivine a n<lb/>
drop from his courses. - did oil<lb/>
withdraw, but I decided tocomt<lb/>
semester. I technically finished<lb/>
semester (fall). I was not aware of tl<lb/>
blem of readmission to scho<lb/>
problem oi finishing m<lb/>
treasurer<lb/>
Spring semester, 1980 cla .<lb/>
ficially on Friday, January 11<lb/>
an approximate 1" day period<lb/>
call a special election for the I<lb/>
position of treasurer of SGA.<lb/>
Goldsboro Man<lb/>
Shot By Police<lb/>
GOLDSBORO (AP)?A U<lb/>
man was listed in stable cond<lb/>
day night after he uas ihi polk<lb/>
the end of an hour-long spree in which he<lb/>
held a Goldsboro city alderman and three<lb/>
other persons hostage.<lb/>
Authorities filed five charges ol assa<lb/>
by pointing a gun and tour counts<lb/>
assault with a firearm on a police ofl<lb/>
against John Ed Hobbs. 27, who was<lb/>
hospitalized Saturday after he was shot<lb/>
the leg during a confrontation with pol<lb/>
Hobbs was reportedly upset becaust<lb/>
was not to receive a tax refund<lb/>
Officials identified Hobbs  he<lb/>
who entered the office of Goldsboro<lb/>
torney and city alderman Earl <lb/>
Saturday afternoon and held h ted,<lb/>
another attorney. a secretary and a<lb/>
at bay for several minutes.<lb/>
Whined said the man described himse<lb/>
as "being upset with the system<lb/>
especially because he thought others wv<lb/>
getting tax refunds and he was not.<lb/>
After Hobbs escaped from he build.<lb/>
he apparently tried to enter other<lb/>
buildings, police said. When police caue<lb/>
up with him, he pointed his shotgun<lb/>
them and ran.<lb/>
Police Chief CM. Gilstrap said officers<lb/>
fired shots, but apparently did not hit<lb/>
Hobbs.<lb/>
Lemish Will Speak<lb/>
Donald Lemish, vice chancellor for In-<lb/>
stitutional Advancement and Planning,<lb/>
will be the guest speaker for the Society<lb/>
for Collegiate Journalists' Induction<lb/>
Ceremony Tuesday, Jan. 15, 7 p.m in<lb/>
the Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Legislature Room.<lb/>
Lemish<lb/>
Lemish previously served as assistant<lb/>
vice president and director of develop-<lb/>
ment at the University of Alabama in Bir-<lb/>
mingham before joining the East Carolina<lb/>
staff. His media experience varies from<lb/>
journalism teacher and director of<lb/>
publications to sports director. He receiv-<lb/>
ed his bachelor's and master's degrees in<lb/>
journalism from Ball State University,<lb/>
Muncie, Ind.<lb/>
"The Society for Collegiate Journalists<lb/>
is honored to have such a distinguished<lb/>
guest speaker said Joyce Evans, presi-<lb/>
dent of the SCJ. "Mr. Lemishs ac-<lb/>
complishments are numerous, and we col-<lb/>
lege journalists can learn a great deal<lb/>
from him "<lb/>
"We're inviting the English fraternity<lb/>
to share this valuable experience with us.<lb/>
Also, other interested persons who wish<lb/>
to attend may do so she said.<lb/>
The society will induct II student<lb/>
members and two faculty members. Lhev<lb/>
?include: Ramona Mills, Larry Zicherman.<lb/>
Charles Chandler, Alison Bartel, John<lb/>
Mueller, Btenda Vinson, Richard Green.<lb/>
Paul Lincke, Karen Wcndt, Hugh<lb/>
Johnson, Diane Henderson, and faculty<lb/>
members John Warren and Susan<lb/>
Donaldson.<lb/>
Refreshments will be served alter the<lb/>
ceremony, and inductees mav bring<lb/>
guests.<lb/>
5<lb/>
.<lb/>
'? !?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057239_0002"/><lb/>
Students From Iran Speak Out On Issues<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Seyed-Mozaffari: What aspect do<lb/>
you mean?<lb/>
Skokoufan: The rules basically<lb/>
come from Koran.<lb/>
Memarzadeh: Yes. The main pro-<lb/>
blem is mass media has been trying<lb/>
to destroy the whole idea of Islamic<lb/>
republic. Mass media tries to protect<lb/>
interests of, for example, Exxon,<lb/>
Rockefellers, Amoco, and they<lb/>
don't like it. When Iran says we<lb/>
have the power over the oil matters,<lb/>
the American imperialists don't like<lb/>
it, and so the mass media doesn't<lb/>
want to print this. The media has<lb/>
fabricated the story in order to<lb/>
allow the Americans to hear what<lb/>
the media wants and not the truth.<lb/>
Skokoufan and Seyed-Mozaffari:<lb/>
Yes.<lb/>
Memarzadeh: I think American<lb/>
government is going to try to show<lb/>
that Iranian people are detestable.<lb/>
East Carolinian: Do you think the<lb/>
outcome of the revolution in Iran<lb/>
will be an Islamic republic?<lb/>
Seyed-Mozaffari: So far in the<lb/>
world, traditionally, any new<lb/>
government must lean toward either<lb/>
the United States or Russia. If the<lb/>
government wants to stay away<lb/>
from these two, it is doomed to<lb/>
death. The revolution in Iran is the<lb/>
first time an Islamic republic has<lb/>
been attempted, and only the future<lb/>
will answer as to whether an Islamic<lb/>
republic will prevail. It has never<lb/>
been allowed before.<lb/>
Skokoufan: I personally don't think<lb/>
the Islamic republic will succeed.<lb/>
East Carolinian: Do you agree with<lb/>
the idea of an Islamic republic?<lb/>
Skokoufan: No, but the Iranian<lb/>
people must be united regardless of<lb/>
my opinion or ideas.<lb/>
Memarzadeh: The majority of the<lb/>
Iranian people believe in the IslarHc<lb/>
republic and that is what is impo.<lb/>
tant ? not individual opinions or<lb/>
ideals. Unity is what is important.<lb/>
Seyed-Mozaffari: I approve of the<lb/>
foreign policy of the Islamic<lb/>
republic. It doesn't want domina-<lb/>
tion of Iran by any other govern-<lb/>
ment ? and I don't want this sort of<lb/>
domination on my conscience. I<lb/>
don't want my government to be<lb/>
pro-American or pro-Russian. I<lb/>
don't want my government to give,<lb/>
concessions to either superpower.<lb/>
East Carolinian: Did you approve<lb/>
of the deposed shah when he was in<lb/>
power in Iran, and how do you feel<lb/>
about his presence in Panama and<lb/>
the United States' influence in his<lb/>
move to Panama?<lb/>
Unanimously: I don't like the ex-<lb/>
shah and never have.<lb/>
Skokoufan: The Panamanian<lb/>
government is a puppet of the<lb/>
United States, regardless of what is<lb/>
said, and their people don't want<lb/>
the ex-shah there.<lb/>
Seyed-Mozaffari: Any government<lb/>
which harbors a criminal should be<lb/>
ashamed ? not particularly the ex-<lb/>
shah, but any criminal. The United<lb/>
States sent the ex-shah to Panama<lb/>
because they felt it was a good move<lb/>
in order to get the hostages back.<lb/>
After the hostages are returned, the<lb/>
ex-shah will come back to the<lb/>
United States.<lb/>
Skokoufan: It will be a quiet return<lb/>
? no big thing.<lb/>
Memarzadeh: The ex-shah has $35<lb/>
billion in gold and assets of the Ira-<lb/>
nian people, and it is in American<lb/>
banks. Because of this, the ex-shah<lb/>
thinks he has the right to return<lb/>
here.<lb/>
Skokoufan: Yes, he has friends<lb/>
here.<lb/>
East Carolinian: Do you think that<lb/>
the shah will ever get what he<lb/>
deserves according to the Iranian<lb/>
people?<lb/>
figure in the Iranian government,<lb/>
and do you think that he would<lb/>
release the hostages before risking a<lb/>
war with the United States?<lb/>
Memarzadeh: We hope that at least at home to understand what was<lb/>
justice will be attempted. really going on, but again, the mass<lb/>
Skokoufan: Do you really think he's media destroyed their intention.<lb/>
going to get it? Skokoufan: Sometimes one does<lb/>
Seyed-Mozaffari: It takes patience, wrong things for the right reasons. Seved-Mozaffari' Force will do no<lb/>
Memarzadeh: Yes, I think he'll get One can't judge the situation by the ood Khomeini nas stated that<lb/>
it. last days or weeks. If you want to force wiU nol get the hostages back<lb/>
Skokoufan: I don t think so. judge the situation, go back and<lb/>
East Carolinian: What do you feel is look at the facts of history.<lb/>
the ex-shah's destiny? East Carolinian: Do you think the<lb/>
Memarzadeh: To me, he's definitely Iranian students at the American<lb/>
not staying in Panama. His stay in Embassy in Iran should release the<lb/>
Panama is conditional to begin hostages?<lb/>
with. He'll either return to the Memarzadeh: They should not<lb/>
United States, Israel, South Africa, release the hostages until they have<lb/>
into the United States.<lb/>
Skokoufan: No, Khomeini won't re-<lb/>
main in power in Iran.<lb/>
Hopefully, he'll return to Iran.<lb/>
Seyed-Mozaffari: The United States<lb/>
does not want the ex-shah to be tried<lb/>
in Iran. The United States has done<lb/>
many things in Iran and the ex-shah<lb/>
would be a good witness against the<lb/>
United States in such a trial.<lb/>
East Carolinian: Do you think that<lb/>
the students in the American Em-<lb/>
achieved the goal which they set out<lb/>
to achieve.<lb/>
East Carolinian: And which goal is<lb/>
that?<lb/>
Memarzadeh: To get the ex-shah<lb/>
back in Iran!<lb/>
Seyed-Mozaffari: I don't think the<lb/>
students have accomplished<lb/>
anything by taking the hostages.<lb/>
Seyed-Mozaffari: In many countries<lb/>
people attack the American people<lb/>
? it is not the people, but the im-<lb/>
perialists who are to blame. A lot is<lb/>
heard about the Russian attack on<lb/>
Afghanistan, but you hear nothing<lb/>
about the United States attacking<lb/>
Oman. Do you know where Oman<lb/>
is?<lb/>
East Carolinian: No.<lb/>
Seyed-Mozaffari: That's my point.<lb/>
Memarzadeh: If American people<lb/>
believe in human rights, I feel they<lb/>
should stand up <lb/>
Skokoufan: 1 feel that they should<lb/>
search for the truth <lb/>
Memarzadeh: The thing is, I talk to<lb/>
Americans evry day, and they say<lb/>
they understand and they are sym-<lb/>
pathetic. Understanding and sym<lb/>
pathy is one thing, but doing<lb/>
something about it is another thing.<lb/>
Understand the situation isn't just<lb/>
for Americans, but should be for<lb/>
everybody. I think that two years<lb/>
ago if you had reported that people<lb/>
had been killed in Iran or South<lb/>
Africa or somewhere, that people<lb/>
would have said, "Who cares?" But<lb/>
now it is different, and what hap-<lb/>
pens affects Americans and<lb/>
everyone all ovct the world. Now is<lb/>
the time lo care.<lb/>
bassy in Iran were justified in taking Skokoufan: I don't think they<lb/>
the hostages, and do you feel that<lb/>
they have gained enough recogni-<lb/>
tion from that act to free the<lb/>
hostages and still obtain their goal?<lb/>
Seyed-Mozaffari: To gain recogni-<lb/>
tion was not their intention. The<lb/>
students wanted the killer of their<lb/>
families to be tried ? the exshah.<lb/>
Memarzadeh: Nobody justified get-<lb/>
ting hostages. The hostages are in-<lb/>
nocent, generally, but the American<lb/>
should have taken the hostages to<lb/>
begin with, but since they did, I<lb/>
think they should not let up or give<lb/>
in until they have achieved justice<lb/>
for the ex-shah.<lb/>
East Carolinian: Ayatollah Kho-<lb/>
meini has been a controversial<lb/>
figure both in Iran and in the United<lb/>
States. Considering the recent op-<lb/>
position to Khomeini by the<lb/>
Ayatollah Shariat-Madari, do you<lb/>
government has admitted that some think that Khomeini is a permanent<lb/>
of them are spies. The students<lb/>
wanted to get the American people<lb/>
LONELY?The1<lb/>
Depressed?MushroomWANTTODIE?<lb/>
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Center 1117 Evans St.we care about you<lb/>
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? 30 days vacation annually<lb/>
? fully financed graduate programs<lb/>
? superior family health plan<lb/>
? more responsibility and leadership oppor<lb/>
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CURRENT OPPORTUNITIES<lb/>
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? SHIPBOARD OPERATIONS<lb/>
Most liberal arts majors are also eligible<lb/>
The Navy Officer Information Team will be<lb/>
visiting your campus: Tues. Thurs Jan. 22-24,<lb/>
in the Book Store lobby.<lb/>
Or contact your Navy Officer Programs<lb/>
Representative at:<lb/>
Navy OHicer Programs .<lb/>
1001 Navaho Drive<lb/>
Raleigh, NC 27609<lb/>
Or call TOLL FREE 1 800 662 7568<lb/>
ATTENTION nursing STUDENTS<lb/>
PIP YOU KNOW THAT:<lb/>
?M OF THE ECU NURSING STUOENTS IN<lb/>
THE AIR FORCE ROTC PROGRAM HAVE<lb/>
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GRAM<lb/>
hotc<lb/>
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IF YOU WOULD LIKE<lb/>
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HOW TO PLACE A WANT AD<lb/>
in The East Carolinian<lb/>
OVERDOSE?<lb/>
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If you are looking for<lb/>
a free, confidental,<lb/>
hassle-free way to<lb/>
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t14t?-7?<lb/>
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For Information About<lb/>
Other Centers Outside NY State<lb/>
CALL TOLL FREE<lb/>
800-223-1782<lb/>
Canters in Major US Cities<lb/>
Puerto Rico, Toronto, Canada<lb/>
&amp; IttMMM, Smitiwland<lb/>
You may place a want ad (for<lb/>
rent, for sale, etc.) at The East<lb/>
Carolinian office MWF, 3-4 p.m<lb/>
and on TTH, 11-12 noon. OR you<lb/>
may mail your ad to our office with<lb/>
payment. All want ads must be paid<lb/>
for in advance (we accept in-state<lb/>
checks). Want ads cost $1 for the<lb/>
first 15 words and 5 cents for each<lb/>
additional word. NO ADS ARE AC-<lb/>
CEPTED OVER THE<lb/>
TELEPHONE.<lb/>
Announcements for meetings or<lb/>
any event are not considered ads<lb/>
and should be submitted to the<lb/>
NEWS DEPT. as Announcements.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057239_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN JANUARY IS, 1980<lb/>
Parks Was A Warm And Sensitive Person<lb/>
Cowee Valley Creek<lb/>
rockhounding. There<lb/>
we were, sitting in our<lb/>
ponchos in a pouring<lb/>
rainstorm wiih 10 quart<lb/>
buckets of gravel and<lb/>
mud beside us. For<lb/>
three days, we sat there<lb/>
m or seven hours at a<lb/>
time, water and mud<lb/>
slopping on our feet,<lb/>
searching for stones-<lb/>
rockhounds are crazy!<lb/>
When we started to<lb/>
leave, the rain finally<lb/>
stopped Dr. Hough<lb/>
reminisced.<lb/>
That trip, Dr. Parks<lb/>
came away with a<lb/>
beautiful ruby, and Dr.<lb/>
Hough brought home a<lb/>
sapphire. Dr. Parks<lb/>
made these sojourns all<lb/>
.ner the country, and<lb/>
part of the attraction<lb/>
was his love of nature.<lb/>
According to Dr.<lb/>
Hough, both neighbor<lb/>
and colleague, there<lb/>
was nothing Oral Parks<lb/>
liked better than the<lb/>
mountains.<lb/>
On the wall of Dr.<lb/>
Lon Felker's office (at<lb/>
one time Dr. Parks's<lb/>
office), is a poster<lb/>
which readsLife is<lb/>
either a daring adven-<lb/>
ture or nothing Dr.<lb/>
Felker explained that<lb/>
the poster was there<lb/>
when he came, and it<lb/>
gave testimony to its<lb/>
former owner.<lb/>
"His outlook always<lb/>
reflected his deep love<lb/>
of nature, a concern for<lb/>
his fellow man and his<lb/>
search for truth and<lb/>
justice both in his<lb/>
academic work and his<lb/>
life Dr. Felker ex-<lb/>
plained.<lb/>
His colleagues all<lb/>
agreed that Dr. Parks<lb/>
was very much a family<lb/>
man. His wife, Helen,<lb/>
who teaches at Lenoir<lb/>
Community College,<lb/>
and his 9-year-old son,<lb/>
Duncan Stuart<lb/>
Michael, shared many<lb/>
of his interests.<lb/>
"He loved to play<lb/>
golf, and he taught his<lb/>
son how to play. Dur-<lb/>
ing the summer, they<lb/>
played three or four<lb/>
times a week. He also<lb/>
belonged to a model<lb/>
furniture club, and they<lb/>
made six or eight pieces<lb/>
over the last year said<lb/>
Dr. Hough.<lb/>
As Dr. Hough<lb/>
pointed out, Dr. Parks<lb/>
enjoyed working with<lb/>
his hands. Besides<lb/>
agate slicing and mak-<lb/>
ing jewelry, wind<lb/>
chimes, and other ar-<lb/>
ticles from rocks he<lb/>
found (many of which<lb/>
he gave to staff and<lb/>
faculty members on<lb/>
campus), Dr. Parks<lb/>
made a stained glass<lb/>
window, collected<lb/>
stamps and learned to<lb/>
play the cello. His wife<lb/>
said that music was one<lb/>
of his greatest joys, and<lb/>
he loved to attend con-<lb/>
certs at ECU.<lb/>
Part of his love of<lb/>
life may have come<lb/>
from his Texas upbr-<lb/>
inging.<lb/>
"He was very<lb/>
reminiscent and ap-<lb/>
parently had a very en-<lb/>
joyable childhood in<lb/>
Texas. He was a true<lb/>
son of the panhandle<lb/>
commented Dr. Felker.<lb/>
Texans are famous<lb/>
for being storytellers,<lb/>
and both his students<lb/>
and friends noted this<lb/>
as one of Dr. Parks's<lb/>
principle<lb/>
characteristics.<lb/>
"He was a great<lb/>
storyteller. If you'd go<lb/>
to his office, he'd be<lb/>
willing to sit and talk to<lb/>
you about whatever<lb/>
you were interested in.<lb/>
Hed say the most in-<lb/>
teresting things said a<lb/>
former student.<lb/>
"He was a super<lb/>
teacher and a versatile<lb/>
person. He knew more<lb/>
about more things than<lb/>
anybody I ever met<lb/>
Lynn Calder stated.<lb/>
According to Dr.<lb/>
Hough, "He fit the<lb/>
Texan stereotype as far<lb/>
as being a talker .<lb/>
Dr. Parks's death<lb/>
came as a shock to his<lb/>
friends and co-workers<lb/>
in the Political Science<lb/>
Department. Although<lb/>
his friends knew about<lb/>
his rhumatoid arthritis,<lb/>
the leukemia which Dr.<lb/>
Parks suffered from<lb/>
for years was never<lb/>
brought to the atten-<lb/>
tion of his colleagues.<lb/>
Dr. Parks's attitude<lb/>
toward life was<lb/>
reflected by those<lb/>
around him.<lb/>
"He had a way of in-<lb/>
spiring the students to<lb/>
learn, moreso than any<lb/>
other professor 1 ever<lb/>
had Ms. Lefler said.<lb/>
"A lot of people are<lb/>
going to miss him, and<lb/>
I know I am said Dr.<lb/>
Hough, one of many<lb/>
who made the same<lb/>
statement.<lb/>
Geology professor<lb/>
Dr. Stanley Riggs sum-<lb/>
med up perhaps Dr.<lb/>
Parks's most<lb/>
memorable qualitites.<lb/>
"He was a sensitive and<lb/>
warm human being, a<lb/>
very gentle person, who<lb/>
was very much in tune<lb/>
with the world and the<lb/>
people around him.<lb/>
"He always had a<lb/>
smile on his face<lb/>
"BuccaneerMOVIES ii?i<lb/>
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Large Selection of Ski<lb/>
Rentals in all sizes<lb/>
Gordon Fulp<lb/>
Located at<lb/>
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Off Memorial Drive<lb/>
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hamburger at regular price<lb/>
get another for<lb/>
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plus 'd<lb/>
Cheese and tomato extra<lb/>
Offer expires Jan. 31, 1980<lb/>
Good at participating Wendy's<lb/>
in Raleigh. Durham, Wilmington, <lb/>
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piP,ttP<lb/>
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Now is the time to get involved. The Student Union will be<lb/>
accepting applications for the following positions on the<lb/>
following dates.<lb/>
Student Union President Now. 26-Jan. 16<lb/>
Student Union Committee Chairperson Jan.l8-Feb.l<lb/>
Student Union Committee Members Feb.4-Feb 18<lb/>
The Student Union is responsible for sponsoring social,<lb/>
recreational, fine arts, visual arts and cultural presentations<lb/>
for you, the entire University community There are many<lb/>
events going on, and lots of places to go<lb/>
m<lb/>
come on, join in S<lb/>
l.Low Prices<lb/>
The University Book Exchange<lb/>
has thousands of used texts<lb/>
that save you 25 over the<lb/>
price of new texts.<lb/>
2 ?Great Textbook<lb/>
Selection<lb/>
The UBE has made an all out<lb/>
effort to have every book<lb/>
used at ECU.<lb/>
3?Quick Service<lb/>
This Spring we will have 8<lb/>
cash registers to get you<lb/>
through our store quickly!<lb/>
Buying books<lb/>
imple<lb/>
UBE<lb/>
528 S. COTANCHE<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057239_0004"/><lb/>
?tje iEaat ?arnltman<lb/>
Serving the campus community for 54 years.<lb/>
Marc Barnes, semor Editor<lb/>
Diane Henderson, Mam,g,g ????<lb/>
Richard Green, copy Editor<lb/>
Anita Lancaster, rttn Manager<lb/>
Marianne Harbison, m&amp;m<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim, Director o ??<lb/>
Steve O'Geary, mm Manager<lb/>
Charles Chandler, ?"??'<lb/>
KAREN WENDT, Features Editor<lb/>
TUESDAY. JANUARY 15, 1980<lb/>
PAGE 4<lb/>
A Decision Must<lb/>
Be Made Soon<lb/>
There is a dichotomy which is<lb/>
found between politics on the cam-<lb/>
pus level and politics on the national<lb/>
level. Politics on college campuses is<lb/>
simply not as important to the<lb/>
world at large, or to how that world<lb/>
operates.<lb/>
Politics<lb/>
Politics on campus is indicative,<lb/>
however, of the larger whole. It<lb/>
reflects all we have learned from<lb/>
history classes and the CBS Evening<lb/>
News. We have all watched political<lb/>
rallies on television, read articles<lb/>
about the upcoming Iowa caucauses<lb/>
and listened as skilled reporters<lb/>
have dissected major candidates on<lb/>
national television.<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
Then we come to the campus.<lb/>
Some of us choose to get involved in<lb/>
local or state politics, and some of<lb/>
us get inv Ived in national politics.<lb/>
Some of us make our own politics<lb/>
(like our own SGA) without benefit<lb/>
of professional parties like the<lb/>
Democrats or Republicans.<lb/>
Little Trust<lb/>
The problem with politics is that<lb/>
there is little, if any, trust involved<lb/>
between the so-called professional<lb/>
politicians and the public. Such is<lb/>
the case here at East Carolina, and<lb/>
such is also the case almost<lb/>
anywhere there are two groups of<lb/>
people who oppose each other as<lb/>
vehemently as they do on this cam-<lb/>
pus.<lb/>
Controversy<lb/>
The SGA treasurer, as all elected<lb/>
officials within the SGA, must be a<lb/>
full time student to keep his posi-<lb/>
tion. There is some discussion, in<lb/>
light of Lowe's recent withdrawal<lb/>
and subsequent return to school,<lb/>
that he must relinquish his post.<lb/>
Full-time Student<lb/>
Student Government Association<lb/>
treasurer Ricky Lowe's time in of-<lb/>
fice has been marked in the past by<lb/>
controversy. This time, Lowe made<lb/>
the decision, based on personal<lb/>
reasons, to withdraw from school at<lb/>
the end of fall semester. He did<lb/>
return to register for classes this<lb/>
semester, however.<lb/>
Decisions To Be Made<lb/>
There is some discussion, further,<lb/>
than an election should be held to<lb/>
find his successor.<lb/>
Without going into the merits of<lb/>
either discussion, we feel that, quite<lb/>
simply, some decision should be<lb/>
made in open legislation if necessary<lb/>
in this case. Failure to do this<lb/>
borders on irresponsibility on the<lb/>
part of the judiciary arm of student<lb/>
government<lb/>
It is incumbent upon SGA at-<lb/>
torney general Drake Mann to offer<lb/>
an opinion or a solution to the ac-<lb/>
cusative speculation that has sur-<lb/>
rounded this case since it began dur-<lb/>
ing Christmas. Mann can end all of<lb/>
the arguments, in one fell swoop, if<lb/>
he will decide what the Constitution<lb/>
says, and if he starts action of one<lb/>
kind or another.<lb/>
So Official Word<lb/>
We find it difficult to believe that<lb/>
Mann has not done anything yet<lb/>
about the rumors that are surroun-<lb/>
ding Lowe and his problems with<lb/>
withdrawing from school and stay-<lb/>
ing in office. His statement that no<lb/>
"official word" had come to him<lb/>
concerning the matter sounds like<lb/>
an easy out to us. For Lowe's sake,<lb/>
and for the Melvin Administration's<lb/>
credibility sake, this problem should<lb/>
be dealt with promptly.<lb/>
Admitting A Mistake<lb/>
Now about Ricky Lowe. Despite<lb/>
his apparent problems, both in of-<lb/>
fice and in private life, Lowe has re-<lb/>
tained a dignity that is rare in public<lb/>
office. He openly admitted that he<lb/>
withdrew from school, and he<lb/>
remarked to an East Carolinian<lb/>
reporter that he did not know the<lb/>
ramifications of his actions.<lb/>
Fairness<lb/>
Lowe was wrong, and if the Con-<lb/>
stitution says so, he will be remov-<lb/>
ed, we are certain. But we feel that it<lb/>
should be done in an aboveboard<lb/>
and fair way. Government should<lb/>
always be of the people, and human<lb/>
dignity should be afforded at all<lb/>
costs.<lb/>
75 THIS THE END OF THE LINE?"<lb/>
4<lb/>
<lb/>
3<lb/>
Pauling Fights Cancer<lb/>
By DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
You might say Linus Pauling is ac-<lb/>
quainted with controversy. In 1954, he suc-<lb/>
cessfully fought a State Department effort<lb/>
to block his trip to Stockholm to accept a<lb/>
Nobel Prize in biochemistry. In 1962, he<lb/>
won another Nobel Prize, this one for the<lb/>
very thing that enraged Cold War<lb/>
bureaucrats eight years earlier, namely, his<lb/>
impassioned work to stop the testing of<lb/>
nuclear weapons.<lb/>
In recent years, Pauling has largely for-<lb/>
saken the political arena for medical<lb/>
research. There, too, he has made waves,<lb/>
first by claiming that vitamin C is of great<lb/>
 ilue in Heating the common cold, and now<lb/>
by claiming it is an effective weapon against<lb/>
cancer. Neither assertion is accepted by the<lb/>
medical establishment, but Pauling keeps<lb/>
on keeping on. Now 79, he's meeting the<lb/>
latest controversy in his long career the way<lb/>
he's always done it: head-on.<lb/>
With Scottish surgeon Dr. Ewan<lb/>
Cameron, Pauling has published a new<lb/>
book. Vitamin C and Cancer, that details<lb/>
the two men's unorthodox approach to<lb/>
cancer and offers hope that the disease may<lb/>
be prevented, controlled, and in some cases<lb/>
cured, with very large doses of vitamin C.<lb/>
The book is a fascinating, provocative reap-<lb/>
praisal of a disease that strikes one in four<lb/>
Americans.<lb/>
In a recent interview in his Menlo Park,<lb/>
California office, Pauling discussed his new<lb/>
book. "We were getting letters here (at the<lb/>
Linus Pauling Institute of Science and<lb/>
Medicine) about vitamin C and cancer, so<lb/>
many that we could no longer answer each<lb/>
one individually. They came from cancer<lb/>
patients and their relatives and friends.<lb/>
Many also came from medical doctors. We<lb/>
wrote this book to sum up our work for<lb/>
them and the public at large<lb/>
In Vitamin C and Cancer, Pauling and<lb/>
Cameron assert that megadoses of vitamin<lb/>
C?10 or more grams a day?help most<lb/>
cancer patients and cure some, especially<lb/>
when the vitamin is used in "combined<lb/>
regimes" with conventional therapies, such<lb/>
as radiation and surgery. Cameron himself<lb/>
has used vitamin C with terminal cancer pa-<lb/>
tients in a Scottish hospital, finding, he<lb/>
says, that the patients taking vitamin C liv-<lb/>
ed an average of 10 months longer than<lb/>
those receiving only conventional<lb/>
treatments.<lb/>
"We believe that vitamin C works largely<lb/>
by poteniating the body's own immune<lb/>
system Pauling explained. "Most cancer<lb/>
therapies concentrate on the proliferate<lb/>
properties of cancer cells i.e they trv to<lb/>
kill the renegade cells with drugs or radia-<lb/>
tion or remove them through surgery.<lb/>
"Vitamin C concentrates on their in-<lb/>
vasive properties. We believe it acts to in-<lb/>
hibit the production by tumors of the en-<lb/>
zyme hyaluronidase, which eats away at<lb/>
nearby normal cells. Vitamin C also ap-<lb/>
pears to encourage the synthesis of collagen<lb/>
fibrils the long chains of protein that<lb/>
strengthen the intercellular "cement" of the<lb/>
body.<lb/>
In other words, vitamin C may fight<lb/>
cancer by isolating diseased cells rather that<lb/>
by blasting them outright.<lb/>
Pauling and Cameron's theory is con-<lb/>
sidered unproven at best, and quackery at<lb/>
worst, by conventional cancer specialists.<lb/>
Media accounts recently gave considerable<lb/>
play to a clinical trial by the prestigious<lb/>
Mayo Clinic in which an attempt to<lb/>
duplicate Cameron's startungr.s?oqeps with. <lb/>
vitamin C apparently ffflff1, ?<lb/>
But Pauling is having none of it. "Nearly<lb/>
all of the patients in the Mayo Clinic con-<lb/>
trol group had extensive courses in<lb/>
chemotherapy Pauling said, "while only<lb/>
four percent of Cameron's patients took<lb/>
anti-cancer drugs. We believe that<lb/>
chemotherapy suppresses the immune<lb/>
system rendering vitamin C much less ef-<lb/>
fective.<lb/>
"On August 8, 1978, I wrote Dr. Charles<lb/>
Moertel, the head of the Mayo Clinic study,<lb/>
and urged him to choose patients how<lb/>
hadn't had chemotherapy for his study<lb/>
Pauling told me, "but I didn't hear<lb/>
anything more until I read an account in the<lb/>
newspaper of the results of the study<lb/>
Pauling's own attempts to receive fun-<lb/>
ding for clinical testing of vitamin C as an<lb/>
anti-cancer weapon have fallen on deaf ears<lb/>
at the National Cancer Institute and<lb/>
elsewhere. "I applied for funding seven<lb/>
times since 1973, and seven times I've been<lb/>
turned down. My eighth application is<lb/>
under consideration now<lb/>
I asked Pauling if he thinks there is a<lb/>
political dimension to his problem. Is there<lb/>
a cancer establishment which feels threaten-<lb/>
ed by his work?<lb/>
"Well, there probably is an establish-<lb/>
ment he replied. "There are a whole lot<lb/>
of specialists, oncologists, whose profession<lb/>
is that of deciding which anti-cancer drugs<lb/>
cancer patients should be given. I imagine<lb/>
that they're not especially imerested in<lb/>
something that would take the place o the<lb/>
anti-cancer drugs<lb/>
According to Pauling and Cameron,<lb/>
vitamin C is not, like other anti-can<lb/>
agents, a dangerous "invasive" drug. In<lb/>
fact, "It is not a drug with the specific abili-<lb/>
ty to fight cancer they write. "It is instead<lb/>
a natural, essential substance that mav par-<lb/>
ticipate in all of the chemical reactions that<lb/>
take place in our bodies and is required for<lb/>
many of them<lb/>
Pauling reports that cancer patients have<lb/>
taken up to 150 grams of ascorbic acid (one<lb/>
form of vitamin C) daily, and healthy peo-<lb/>
ple as much as 20 grams daily, with no ap-<lb/>
parent side effects, except diarrhea in some<lb/>
of the healthy ones. He also maintains that.<lb/>
contrary to prevailing medical opinion,<lb/>
most vitamin C is not lost in the urine, but<lb/>
is .put to work in the body.<lb/>
 Erueto'his activist past, Pauling believes<lb/>
j hat cancer .can be preiwed by a combina-<lb/>
tion of social and personal action: first, by<lb/>
eliminating carcinogens in the environment<lb/>
("that includes cancer-causing chemicals<lb/>
and radiation from nuclear testing and<lb/>
nuclear power plants"), and second, by<lb/>
strengthening the resistance of the public to<lb/>
the disease. That, according to Pauling, is<lb/>
where vitamin C comes in, along with other<lb/>
key vitamins and minerals, a healthly diet<lb/>
and exercise, "especially for older people<lb/>
Pauling practices what he preaches. He<lb/>
takes 10 grams of vitamin C every day, in<lb/>
the crystalline sodium ascorbate form.<lb/>
Despite the uphill battle for acceptance of<lb/>
his theories?a struggle that has made the<lb/>
two-time Nobel Prize winner a virtual<lb/>
pariah in the world of science?Linus Paul-<lb/>
ing is optimistic about the future. He credits<lb/>
much of his optimism to his colleague,<lb/>
Ewan Cameron, with whom Pauling joined<lb/>
forces in 1971, after reading an earlier book<lb/>
Cameron published on the biochemistry of<lb/>
cancer.<lb/>
"I think muses Pauling, "that the<lb/>
value of vitamin C in treating cancer will<lb/>
eventually be recognized as perhaps the<lb/>
leading contribution of this quarter cen-<lb/>
tury. And most of the credit for that will<lb/>
belong to Ewan Cameron<lb/>
Washington Merry-Go-Round<lb/>
Congress Is In A Demanding Mood<lb/>
By JACK ANDERSON<lb/>
and JOE SPEAR<lb/>
WASHINGTON?Congress<lb/>
comes back to work next week in a<lb/>
grim demanding mood. The<lb/>
legislators want some tough answers<lb/>
from Jimmy Carter on Iran and<lb/>
Afghanistan.<lb/>
Since the seizure of the Soviet<lb/>
takeover in Kabul, Congress and<lb/>
Carter's potential White House suc-<lb/>
cessors, Republican and Democrat<lb/>
alike, have observed a reluctant<lb/>
cease-fire while Khomeini and the<lb/>
Kremlin have treated him as a<lb/>
pygmy president.<lb/>
They've been patient as he's pur-<lb/>
sued a course of caution through the<lb/>
United Nations and econimic<lb/>
pressures that were scoffed at by the<lb/>
captors of the hostages in the em-<lb/>
bassy and the Soviet leaders who<lb/>
overran Afghanistan with raw arm-<lb/>
ed aggression.<lb/>
The political sands are running<lb/>
out on Carter at home in a presiden-<lb/>
tial election year. When Congress<lb/>
reconvenes on Jan. 22, questions<lb/>
will be asked on the Senate and<lb/>
House floors about the caliber of his<lb/>
'? o hp and his advisers.<lb/>
Members of both the Senate and<lb/>
House Intelligence Committee are<lb/>
preparing for early top-secret hear-<lb/>
ings. CIA and administration of-<lb/>
ficials will have to explain the Iraian<lb/>
fiasco starting from the precipitous<lb/>
White House decision to allow the<lb/>
shah to enter this country for<lb/>
medical treatment.<lb/>
The Senate Foreign Relations<lb/>
Committee is also anxious to in-<lb/>
vestigate the handling of the crisis.<lb/>
Our sources say the prestigious com-<lb/>
mittee wants to know why in-<lb/>
telligence agencies failed to predict<lb/>
" the shah's entry would touch kofi<lb/>
the violent response by Ayatollah<lb/>
Khomeini's henchmen; why no ade-<lb/>
quate response to the outrageous<lb/>
embassy seizure was forthcoming<lb/>
and why no one in Washington<lb/>
knew who was really calling the<lb/>
shots in the frenzied Iranian hierar-<lb/>
chy.<lb/>
Congress will also want to know<lb/>
why the Cart- administration ig-<lb/>
nored advance warnings by<lb/>
Pakistan that the Russions were<lb/>
about to embrace neighboring<lb/>
Afghanistan in a bearlike grip.<lb/>
We've learned that only a few weeks<lb/>
before the airborne Soviet invasion<lb/>
of Pakistan and Iran, a delagation<lb/>
of Pakistani diplomats met with<lb/>
Secretary of State Cyrus Vance and<lb/>
his aides to sound the alarm.<lb/>
They predicted that Red Army<lb/>
units were prepared to move in on<lb/>
the puppet regime, But our Foggy<lb/>
Bottom policy makers ignored the<lb/>
clear alert and Carter had to confess<lb/>
that he was caught by suprise by the<lb/>
Soviet move.<lb/>
The president says he has now<lb/>
learned to distrust the Russians-<lb/>
almost as much as his State Depart-<lb/>
ment experts disbelieved the<lb/>
Pakistanis.<lb/>
AMBITIOUS REDS: The Soviet<lb/>
thrust into the Persian Gulf may<lb/>
next claw off a bit of Iran according<lb/>
to our intelligence sources. They say<lb/>
Soviet troops now occupying<lb/>
Afghanistan may provide help to<lb/>
anti-Khomeini rebels in the<lb/>
southeastern Iranian province of<lb/>
Baluchistan. Red Army troops can<lb/>
easily funnel arms and supplies to<lb/>
the Baluchi insurgents across the<lb/>
border to help undermine Kho-<lb/>
meini's support.<lb/>
We've also been toto to look for<lb/>
the Soviets to offer the Baluchis<lb/>
support in establishing an<lb/>
autonomous state in return for the<lb/>
Russian fleet being given access to<lb/>
the port of Shabahar. That would<lb/>
give the Red Navy a commanding<lb/>
strategic port on the Indian Ocean.<lb/>
WATCH ON WASTE: The<lb/>
government took a hefty bite out of<lb/>
every wage earner's paycheck begin-<lb/>
ning this month for higher Social<lb/>
Security deductions. The Social<lb/>
Security Administration is crying<lb/>
poverty as the excuse.<lb/>
But we've learned that the ad-<lb/>
ministration paid out nearly $20<lb/>
million two years ago to the states<lb/>
for administrative costs. Four<lb/>
states, California, Colorado, New<lb/>
York and Texas, overcharged the<lb/>
federal government by nearly<lb/>
$750,000. That's a 3.75 percent<lb/>
ripoff. The Social Security tax rate<lb/>
for the average American this year<lb/>
amounts to 6.13 percent of his earn-<lb/>
ings. Next year it goes to 6.65 per-<lb/>
cent.<lb/>
?Old Air Force generals don't<lb/>
always fade away. Sometimes<lb/>
they're kept alive on movie film at<lb/>
taxpayer expense.<lb/>
In recent years, film technicians<lb/>
at Norton Air Force Base in Califor-<lb/>
nia have gone Hollywood in<lb/>
shooting "TMs-Is-Your-Lifc" type<lb/>
movies for retiring brass hats. Here<lb/>
are two examples of the military ex-<lb/>
traganzas:<lb/>
Upon his retirement in 1977, Gen.<lb/>
Paul Carlton was presented with a<lb/>
13-minute reel hailing his ac-<lb/>
complishments as commander of<lb/>
the Military Airlift Command. It<lb/>
cost $14,000 of the Pentagon's<lb/>
multibillion budget.<lb/>
Strategic Air Commander Gen.<lb/>
Russell Dougherty was the star of a<lb/>
27-minute film when he left the ser-<lb/>
vice. The tab was $2?,220 and<lb/>
would have cost more except the<lb/>
narrator, Tennessee Ernie Ford,<lb/>
donated his services. A recent Air<lb/>
Force investigation has finally writ-<lb/>
ten an end to the spendthrift<lb/>
scenario.<lb/>
?Here's another bit of govern-<lb/>
ment waste to make you weep. The<lb/>
National Science Foundation has<lb/>
ladled out $63,100 to Dartmouth<lb/>
College researchers to study what<lb/>
makes you laugh or cry. The title of<lb/>
the project is known in scientific<lb/>
jargon as "The Role of Facial Ex-<lb/>
pression of Emotion in the Activa-<lb/>
tion and Conditioning of Emotional<lb/>
Behavior<lb/>
Letters To The Editor<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
welcomes letters expressing all<lb/>
points of view. Mail or drop<lb/>
them by our office in the Old<lb/>
South Building, across from<lb/>
the library.<lb/>
Letters to the editor must in-<lb/>
clude the name, address,<lb/>
phone number and signature<lb/>
of the authorfs) and must be<lb/>
typed, double spaced, or neat-<lb/>
ly printed. Letters should be<lb/>
limited to three typewritten,<lb/>
double-spaced pages. All let-<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for<lb/>
brevity, obcenity and libel.<lb/>
Personal attacks will not be<lb/>
permitted. Names of authors<lb/>
will be withheld only when in-<lb/>
clusion of the name will cause<lb/>
the author etnbarrassment or<lb/>
ridicule, such as letters concer-<lb/>
ning homosexuality, drug<lb/>
abuse, etc. Names will be<lb/>
withheld only on the authors<lb/>
<pb facs="00057239_0005"/><lb/>
I HI EAS1 CAROL INIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
I l KV. 15. I ?<lb/>
I'auo i<lb/>
Theatre, Arts<lb/>
Sponsor 'Twain'<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
Features r dilor<lb/>
Have you ever wondered what<lb/>
Mark Twain was really like? Well,<lb/>
you may have an opportunity to see<lb/>
at least one man's vision of Twain<lb/>
when John Chappel visits the ECU<lb/>
campus January 21.<lb/>
With the aid ol make up,hap-<lb/>
pel recreates I wain on stage,<lb/>
relating his opinions and thoughts<lb/>
on a wide variety of subjects.<lb/>
The Student Union Theatre rts<lb/>
Committee calls the performance<lb/>
"The Recreation ol Mark I wain,<lb/>
out on a raid<lb/>
Ghappel looks quite a bit like the<lb/>
Saturday Night<lb/>
At The Movies<lb/>
Mark Twain On Stage<lb/>
 as portrayed by John C happel<lb/>
Drama Makes Plays<lb/>
Music tilled the air.<lb/>
Shuttle on to Buffalo" were the<lb/>
lyrics.<lb/>
s I looked out into the hallway,<lb/>
I saw a young man doing the old<lb/>
burlesque shuffle to the tune he was<lb/>
singing. Listening in on his conver-<lb/>
sation I discovered that he was a<lb/>
drama student who was graduating<lb/>
after this semester ? a good reason<lb/>
for singing.<lb/>
I was in the drama department ?<lb/>
a department about which jokes are<lb/>
made (the general concensus of<lb/>
some students is that drama is for<lb/>
people who are to weird for art), but<lb/>
it is greatly underrated by many<lb/>
students.<lb/>
If you think about it, the ECU<lb/>
Drama Department and the ECU<lb/>
Playhouse do an outstanding job<lb/>
with a wide variety of plays.<lb/>
So far this school year, the<lb/>
playhouse has presented "The<lb/>
Streets of New York by Barry<lb/>
Grael, "For Colored Girls Who<lb/>
Have Considered Suicide When The<lb/>
Rainbow Is Enuf by Ntozake<lb/>
Shange, and "The Childrens'<lb/>
Hour by Lillian Hellman.<lb/>
Planned for the upcoming<lb/>
semester are three new presenta-<lb/>
tions, and all are expected to be<lb/>
received very well.<lb/>
The first play will be a comedv<lb/>
called "Boy Meets Girl by Bella<lb/>
and Sam Spewack.<lb/>
Vietnam<lb/>
Portrayed<lb/>
The Academy Award winning<lb/>
film for Best Documentary in 1974<lb/>
will be shown at the Hendrix<lb/>
Theater Wednesday at 8 p.m.<lb/>
"Hearts and Minds" is one of the<lb/>
most talked about films in the past<lb/>
decade.<lb/>
The film deals with the Vietnam<lb/>
War and the many different views<lb/>
on the war.<lb/>
Starring Walt Rostow, Clark Clif-<lb/>
ford, and Gen. William<lb/>
Westmoreland, it was produced by<lb/>
Bert Schneider and Peter Davis and<lb/>
directed by Peter Davis.<lb/>
"It is an exploration of the<lb/>
American psyche and a look at the<lb/>
cherished ideals in conflict with<lb/>
reality according to one writer.<lb/>
The film features interviews with<lb/>
many U.S. policy makers of the<lb/>
period and also with Vietnamese<lb/>
leaders and veterans.<lb/>
The play is based in old<lb/>
Hollywood with a plot detailing the<lb/>
attempted revenge o( two writers<lb/>
whose story is stolen.<lb/>
However, their revenge backfires<lb/>
and only a questionable business<lb/>
deal between their studio and a large<lb/>
foreign filmmaker saes them from<lb/>
ruin.<lb/>
The play, which was very suc-<lb/>
cessful on Broadway, will be<lb/>
presented in the Studio Theater,<lb/>
Feb. 13-16 and again Feb. 18-23, at<lb/>
8:15 p.in Tickets are expected to be<lb/>
available the first week in February.<lb/>
"An Evening ot Dance<lb/>
choreographed by the ECU Dance<lb/>
Faculty, will be presented at a new<lb/>
date. Though they had been<lb/>
scheduled for early March, they<lb/>
have been rescheduled for March<lb/>
19-23 at 8:15 p.m. in the Studio<lb/>
Theater and a special show March<lb/>
23 at 2:15 p.m.<lb/>
The presentation will include a<lb/>
variet) of forms ranging from<lb/>
modern through jazz.<lb/>
Hey! Wanna hear something<lb/>
outrageously funny?The other night<lb/>
a friend and I went to see Superman<lb/>
at Mendenhall. We sat down in the<lb/>
balcony and proceeded to do illicit<lb/>
things like putting our feet on the<lb/>
backs of seats and eating candy,<lb/>
wantonly violating rules o( conduct<lb/>
(that's not the funny part).<lb/>
Here is the funny part: We were<lb/>
sitting there in the balcony minding<lb/>
our own business when we felt the<lb/>
floor start to shake. At first we<lb/>
thought we were too high, or<lb/>
perhaps having simultaneous<lb/>
flashbacks. Then we thought maybe<lb/>
it was a minor earthquake, but we<lb/>
ruled that our because earthquakes<lb/>
only occur in California.<lb/>
You know what it was? It was the<lb/>
whole balcony shaking from people<lb/>
walking down the balcony steps.<lb/>
Not fat people, mind you, nor a<lb/>
multitude of individuals, but just a<lb/>
few people. The whole floor shook<lb/>
like it was not supported well. It was<lb/>
a riot! It would really be funny as<lb/>
hell if the whole thing collapsed and<lb/>
killed hundreds of people. Now that<lb/>
would be big fun?a major attrac-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
You know what else During the<lb/>
same movie the fire alarm went off,<lb/>
and everybody just sat there as if<lb/>
protesting the Iranian situation. The<lb/>
movie kept running?can't worry<lb/>
about a fire when Superman is mak-<lb/>
ing his big bid for Lois Lane. Sure,<lb/>
it was a false alarm, but who knew<lb/>
that? Certainly not everybody!<lb/>
It would have been deliriously<lb/>
funny it the entire audience<lb/>
until the last moment n there<lb/>
was a fire?Cincinnati a i<lb/>
again. It would have been more<lb/>
than a football game because<lb/>
would feature audience pv<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Even better, what it nv<lb/>
fell and tore the elect! - al w iring <lb/>
started a fire That would I<lb/>
best o both possible disaster It<lb/>
would get national a m?EC I<lb/>
would become fa Maybe<lb/>
Hollywood could ? . the<lb/>
greatest disastei flic! er in<lb/>
W ow ! I iusi ,an'i -land it'<lb/>
author and du<lb/>
he is able I<lb/>
I Aim charav' '<lb/>
humorist and tl<lb/>
( happel has<lb/>
around the C<lb/>
decade gi ing mai ?<lb/>
Hi- tir-t solo pei'<lb/>
(raying a cl<lb/>
Clarence Dai<lb/>
( happel<lb/>
motion pictui<lb/>
pea" ing in the<lb/>
files" and in<lb/>
such a- "I he I i .<lb/>
 I a aid<lb/>
Some ot his<lb/>
's.naior Karl Mui<lb/>
the Army -Mc ai<lb/>
irt in "Nicl<lb/>
Reynolds and k . O<lb/>
made an appeal i<lb/>
Side ? M I<lb/>
cla m thai<lb/>
1 ickets for t<lb/>
ow on salt ?<lb/>
n Mend<lb/>
v' idents - - Sl.50; F<lb/>
53.0<lb/>
$4.00 For fu<lb/>
the Centra Del<lb/>
757-6611. ext. :? ?<lb/>
I)iar Of Adam And Eve<lb/>
in April the I re Arts (<lb/>
tion ol the pla  I<lb/>
Vdam and Eve" pi<lb/>
in the Hendrix I<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Strasberg And Carney Also Star<lb/>
Burns Is Back And'Going In Style'<lb/>
By Marc Barnes<lb/>
Senior Kditor<lb/>
"doing in Style'1? starring<lb/>
George Burns, Art Carney, and Lee<lb/>
Strasberg?rated PG<lb/>
Have you ever wondered, just for<lb/>
the fleeting moment, what it would<lb/>
be like to be 80 years old? With any<lb/>
luck at all, we will all make it to that<lb/>
age. to wit out our days on park<lb/>
benches, reading newspapers and<lb/>
generally feeling that we are wor-<lb/>
thless.<lb/>
"Going in Style" explores aging,<lb/>
in a trigicomedy which combines the<lb/>
elements of the beginning and the<lb/>
end at the same time.<lb/>
Burns and company play three<lb/>
old men in just such a predicament<lb/>
They are first seen living out their?<lb/>
meager existence in a pocket park in<lb/>
Queens. They look like millions of<lb/>
elderly people, except that they are a<lb/>
little different.<lb/>
They decide, at Burns' urging, to<lb/>
rob a bank to bring some excitement<lb/>
into their lives. As Burns points<lb/>
outWhat do we have to lose?"<lb/>
They figure that if they get away<lb/>
with it, they won't have to live on<lb/>
Social Security for the rest of their<lb/>
lives. They figure that if they get<lb/>
caught, they will only have to serve<lb/>
a short time because of their age. If<lb/>
they are sent to prison, they will be<lb/>
given free room and board, and<lb/>
when they are released, the value of<lb/>
their combined Social Security<lb/>
checks-unused while they were in<lb/>
prison-will be waiting for them.<lb/>
Either way they have come up with<lb/>
an ingenius plan to beat the system.<lb/>
The first hour of the movie is<lb/>
devoted to the comic?the plans for<lb/>
the heist, including'the theft of han-<lb/>
dguns, the hilarity of sorting out a<lb/>
sackful of bullets by trying to fit<lb/>
them into the several guns, and the<lb/>
final consideration of what to wear,<lb/>
how to travel, and even whether for<lb/>
not to shave on the day of the heist.<lb/>
The first thing the three must do<lb/>
is to find a bank-a big bank with<lb/>
lots of money and slovenly security.<lb/>
For this ihey must journey into<lb/>
Manhattan for the first time in twen-<lb/>
ty years and the resulting search<lb/>
provides for much hilarity. The trio<lb/>
<lb/>
feels younger that they have for 30<lb/>
years.<lb/>
What happens next, according to<lb/>
co-star Art Carney, is "both funny<lb/>
and touching, but not what you<lb/>
would expect<lb/>
Casting for the movie began when<lb/>
the script was delivered to Burns<lb/>
who characteristically remarked,<lb/>
"When you get to be my age, the<lb/>
competition thins out How many<lb/>
83 year old guys can you call on to<lb/>
do comedy?"<lb/>
Carney, for years Jackie<lb/>
Gleason's sidekick on the hit T.V.<lb/>
show "The Honeymooners" and<lb/>
lately the star of the film "Harry<lb/>
and Tonto is playing a man twen-<lb/>
ty years older than the actor<lb/>
himself.<lb/>
"I was born old Came) said.<lb/>
"1 was playing old gaffers when 1<lb/>
was in my thirties. '<lb/>
Lee Strasberg, for vears<lb/>
America's most influential drama<lb/>
teacher (and who won an Oscar<lb/>
nomination for "God tat her II")<lb/>
was initially uncertain about the<lb/>
script, because unlike Burns and<lb/>
Carney, his roots are not in comedv .<lb/>
"That concerned me wwhen 1<lb/>
read the script he says, "it is fun-<lb/>
ny. But it's not farcical. It has a lot<lb/>
of heart and a point of view.<lb/>
Strasberg was also vocal in his ap-<lb/>
praisal of the film's point of view.<lb/>
Burns, Carney And Strasberg<lb/>
star in 'Going In Style'<lb/>
" The idea of an age at win.<lb/>
pie turn into vegaiables is repugi<lb/>
to me. Think of what we would ha<lb/>
lost if George Bernard Shaw<lb/>
been ordered to stop writing play - a<lb/>
age 65 oi roscannini had hi<lb/>
ed into retirement at the<lb/>
hi poweis<lb/>
One of the movies man) str ths<lb/>
lie in its incredible reali- n. Pro-<lb/>
ducers Bill and Fred F. Gallo decid-<lb/>
ed to film the movie in the same<lb/>
neighborhood in Queens that the<lb/>
original short stroy was<lb/>
published in. Astoria was the <lb/>
that ihe late Edward Cannon chose<lb/>
for his unpublished work<lb/>
finally became Going in St vie"<lb/>
The neighborhod, coincidently,<lb/>
which houses the fourth lar?<lb/>
sound stage in America.<lb/>
This is a film that is. we feel, tot<lb/>
those who like to come out of a<lb/>
movie theatre and think about what<lb/>
they have seen. The implications ot<lb/>
old age are somthing we should con-<lb/>
sider, because no matter what else<lb/>
happens to the real world between<lb/>
now and then, there is a g<lb/>
likelihood that we will all get old<lb/>
The point of view that we sec here<lb/>
is a delicate balance between the<lb/>
comedy ot three old men try me to<lb/>
beat the system, and the IcrrtNc<lb/>
reality which comes much i.iicr. a<lb/>
reality which we have to pon.lci<lb/>
Go see the movie. It's a treat for<lb/>
all. But be forewarned you mav<lb/>
have to reexamine your feelings<lb/>
about the way the elderly arc treated<lb/>
in this country. In terms of social<lb/>
commentary, it is unsurpassed.<lb/>
<lb/>
14<lb/>
<pb facs="00057239_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY IS. 1910<lb/>
New Album Releases: Buzzcocks<lb/>
Parliament ?<lb/>
GLORYHALLASTOOP1D<lb/>
crested. Just like in the mid-sixties when Night. Mike Chapman has succeeded very well in<lb/>
American music was dominated by the California tearing Tanya apart and piecing her back together<lb/>
sound, a new sound came out of England which to create his own commercial Frankenstein. This<lb/>
forever changed the popular music scene. The ain't what country-to-pop crossover is all about.<lb/>
corporate rock scene of the seventies must meet Poor Tanya.<lb/>
the challenge of the New Wave, a music of power .<lb/>
and sincerity. Perhaps the rule of the eighties will Dr. Hook? Sometimes You Win<lb/>
be one of getting back to the basics. The Buzz-<lb/>
cocks are a group with a future.<lb/>
Tanya Tucker? Tear Me Apart<lb/>
This album would be okay if it were not such a<lb/>
sent, the new Beatles, has been offered for three<lb/>
years by the Buzzcocks. Their music is composed<lb/>
of short, simple, yet strong musical statements<lb/>
Friends laugh and just can't seem to dig it when about adolescent love and the sturm and drang of<lb/>
I put on George Clinton and Parliament on the adolescence. These guys are at the core of the new<lb/>
stereo, and that's just too bad that they let pre- British invasion which is assaulting the more<lb/>
uidiee interfere with their appreciation of a good banal sounds of the American rock scene.<lb/>
thing. It is the same way when I put on the Clash The songs on Singles Going Steady area an an-<lb/>
or the Talking Heads. We have got to get our thology of hit singles in the United Kingdom,<lb/>
heads out of the sand and look around us, pieced together chronologically to present the<lb/>
because there is a whole big beautiful world out unacquainted with a dose of rock and roll,<lb/>
there, and we shouldn't let anything stand in our Buzzcocks-style. It is a delightful mixture of inno-<lb/>
way of enjoying it. cent desires and street-wise enlightenment, full of<lb/>
Cieorge Clinton is perhaps the most dominant pleasing hooks and nice backing vocals. This is glaring example of what the commercial rock<lb/>
black performer to arise from the previous rock and roll gone back to its primitive roots ? scene can do to an individual. Tanya Tucker used<lb/>
decade, excluding Stevie Wonder, who began in sheer power and simplicity without the overin- to be a mild, unassuming young girl who was<lb/>
 es. Clinton began receiving national ac- dulgent production and multi-tracking that has once the darling of country music. She had a long<lb/>
i 1972 with such catchy ditties as "Maggot dominated the American sound. Forget Blondie string of country hits beginning when she was just<lb/>
' and "Cosmic Slop and his first big and Cheap Trick ? this is unadulterated New a child, and even had a few religious songs in her<lb/>
i vas Chocolate City. In 1974, P-Funk was Wave.<lb/>
li itely recognized as a driving musical force This chronological ordering of songs on Singles<lb/>
v ik of the most experimental, guitar-oriented Going Steady is a very interesting procedure. It<lb/>
bands in R&amp;B or rock. It wasn't until George enables one to hear a group become more<lb/>
gave up on "honky-baiting" and took off into developmentally sound, and the Buzzcocks seems<lb/>
space funk via his Mothership Connection that he to grow tighter with each progressive cut. It also<lb/>
bcean to receive commercial success. shows the compositional development of leader<lb/>
His new album, GLORYHALLASTOOPID, Pete Shelley, the pop stylist, and his writing<lb/>
cohort Steve Diggle, the power guru. The rhythm<lb/>
section, which always drives the New Wave<lb/>
sound, features John Maher on drums and Steve<lb/>
Garvey on bass (aargh-aargh).<lb/>
The Who and Johnny Rotten and The Sex<lb/>
to emerge in 1979, for it sets the standard for the Pistols (a vastly underrated rock group) started and simply plugs Tanya in, but it just doesn't<lb/>
dance-trance psychorhythms (Barry Cooper, something in Britain which has not yet even fully come off as well as Pat's In The Heat Of The<lb/>
1979) of the eighties. It is also one of the most<lb/>
self-searching and intrinsically revealing efforts<lb/>
to emerge from the "me decade<lb/>
Sometimes you don't!<lb/>
All albums courtesy of the Record Bar,<lb/>
Carolina East and Pitt Plaza, except Singles Go<lb/>
ing Steady, courtesy of Apple Records.<lb/>
has become an immediate success. The album is<lb/>
already in the top one-hundred albums on<lb/>
Billboard album charts and is in the top five on<lb/>
the Soul charts. GLORYHALLASTOOPID may<lb/>
be one of the most eclectically-influential albums<lb/>
tally of hits.<lb/>
Hollywood, and exclusively Mike Chapman,<lb/>
her producer, took her and made her into a rock<lb/>
and roll animal, full of lust and steaming sexual<lb/>
excitement. They sell her like a playmate who<lb/>
plays up to your sexual fantasies by singing about<lb/>
going out and getting some. This is not liberation,<lb/>
it is exploitation, and it gets me deep in the gut.<lb/>
It is not that the music on Tear Me Apart is all<lb/>
that bad ? it is some pretty heavy rock and roll<lb/>
? but it just don't seem kosher to me. It does not<lb/>
appear to be sincere. Mike Chapman takes the<lb/>
same musical formula he created for Pat Benatar<lb/>
mem wmmmm mm ??. mm m a mw in<lb/>
GKEESVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
'<lb/>
What Bob Dylan has done with his Slow Train<lb/>
Coming, Clinton does more stylistically on<lb/>
GLORYHALLASTOOPID, being a search for<lb/>
religious identity revealed through lyrical and<lb/>
imusical imagery. It is difficult to tell whether<lb/>
George is in the process of recognizing God as the<lb/>
(force in his life, or establishing himself as a god<lb/>
ind presenting this album to start his own church.<lb/>
he cartoon pictorial on the album cover further<lb/>
romments on the American scenario of media<lb/>
riind control and the seventies egocentric orienta-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
This latest Clinton release is one of his finest<lb/>
ndeavors, released from the depths of the "black<lb/>
holes" (Harlem, Watts, Johannesburg ? the<lb/>
(world is full of them). Clinton, as Starchild,<lb/>
weaves some of the most potent funk ever, pro-<lb/>
pelled by Rodney Curtis and Bootsy on bass, and<lb/>
keyboard-wizard Bernie Worrell. Michael Hamp-<lb/>
ton on guitar and the sparkling horn ar-<lb/>
rangements provide the perfect counterpoint for<lb/>
the rhythmic palpitations of the low funk. As<lb/>
always, the vocals are dynamic, featuring the con-<lb/>
trasting sounds of Ray Davis and Jessica Cleaves,<lb/>
and the pop-magic of Phillip Wynne (formerly of<lb/>
the Spinners).<lb/>
The only song on GLORYHALLASTOOPID<lb/>
that is not too impressive is the boring "Party<lb/>
People a watered-down version of funk pro-<lb/>
ably aimed at those on the fringes of funk.<lb/>
heme From The Black Hole" and "May We<lb/>
 You?" are definitely hit-bound, and<lb/>
lour Me Funky" is Clinton's Finest since<lb/>
hlight" (the definitive dance song of the<lb/>
seventies). James Brown, who invented funk and<lb/>
black consciousness, is payed tribute in "The<lb/>
Freeze<lb/>
GLORYHALLASTOOPID is an album that<lb/>
will prove to be a powerful influence over a wide<lb/>
variety of musical styles. It is an expose of Clin-<lb/>
Ws self and questions many values we hold<lb/>
Ilosophical and religious. It is a spark to in-<lb/>
ectual discussion. Moreover, it stirs those in-<lb/>
r desires to put your body in motion and leave<lb/>
ur inhibitions behind. This is what the music of<lb/>
e next decade will be all about. A progressive<lb/>
llbum.<lb/>
iuzzcocks? Singles Going Steady<lb/>
Power personified. This is the future of the new<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057239_0007"/><lb/>
I'HI EASTC KO: INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
I M R i isn Paced<lb/>
Madison Downs ECU<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
HARRISONBURG, Va. ? The<lb/>
East Carolina basketball team<lb/>
found out the hard way last night<lb/>
that this small Virginia town had<lb/>
more to brag about than Ralph<lb/>
Sampson as it fell to a tough James<lb/>
Madison team 63-52.<lb/>
It was surely a happy night in<lb/>
Harrisonburg, home of both Samp-<lb/>
son, the Virginia center, and<lb/>
Madison, the university, as Madison<lb/>
rallied after being deadlocked with<lb/>
the Pirates 31-31 at the half.<lb/>
leading the way for Madison was<lb/>
freshman Dave DuPont with 17<lb/>
points. Forward Mike Gibson led<lb/>
the Pirate scoring with 14 points.<lb/>
Senior swingman Kyle Powers was<lb/>
the only other ECU player in double<lb/>
figures, adding ten to the Pirate<lb/>
cause.<lb/>
Just two days before the loss to<lb/>
James Madison, the Pirates over-<lb/>
came a suprisingly game Atlantic<lb/>
Christian club for a 72-63 win in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Trailing 34-30 to the small Wilson<lb/>
college at halftime, the Pirates came<lb/>
back in the second half behind the<lb/>
strong words of Coach Dave Odom<lb/>
and the strong play of senior for-<lb/>
ward Herb Gray.<lb/>
The 6-8 senior from Seat Plea-<lb/>
sant, Md scored 12 second-half<lb/>
points, including two exciting slam<lb/>
dunks, to ignite the Pirate com-<lb/>
eback. Gray finished the game with<lb/>
17 points and seven rebounds.<lb/>
Gray spent much of the first half<lb/>
on the bench, scoring only 5 points<lb/>
due to three early personal fouls.<lb/>
Also scoring in double figure for<lb/>
ECU was sophomore forward Dave<lb/>
Underwood, who tallied 16. Under-<lb/>
wood shot well all the night, making<lb/>
six of his 12 field goal attempts and<lb/>
all four of his free throw tries.<lb/>
Senior Herb Krusen, a 6-5 sw-<lb/>
ingman, finished the night with 13<lb/>
points, giving him a total of 59 in his<lb/>
last three games. The sharp-shooter<lb/>
nicknamed "Radar" had scored 23<lb/>
points in each of the Pirates' last<lb/>
two games.<lb/>
In addition to his own offensive<lb/>
production, Krusen dished out four<lb/>
assists in the win over ACC. Guard<lb/>
George Maynor had five.<lb/>
Following the win over Ac C and<lb/>
the loss to Madison, the Pirate<lb/>
record stands at 9-7.<lb/>
This mark i one game better than<lb/>
it would be because ot an ineligible<lb/>
player on the Kent State club that<lb/>
defeated the Pirates 73-72 in the<lb/>
Wolf Pack Classic in Reno. Nevada<lb/>
during the Christmas holidays.<lb/>
I he Pirates no t weel<lb/>
before hosting winless Baptist Col-<lb/>
lege in Minges Coliseum next Mon-<lb/>
day night second consecutive<lb/>
home contest will follow on Satur-<lb/>
day, when Ml -s i sc<lb/>
Asheviile. Both games :at I 7 ;<lb/>
p.m. tip-off tin<lb/>
Michael Gibson<lb/>
HiTh dra<lb/>
Riley, Thompson Honored<lb/>
Underwood Up For Shot<lb/>
Lady Pirates Split In Clemson<lb/>
<lb/>
gttmm<lb/>
Charles Chandler<lb/>
trip to visit the War Eagle campus<lb/>
and came away pleased. Evidently,<lb/>
VCU coach J.D. Barnett convinced<lb/>
the big man that the cowboy state<lb/>
was not tor him.<lb/>
Ol IVER MACK, ex-ECU cage<lb/>
star, appeared on national television<lb/>
for the first time Sunday when his<lb/>
I os Angeles 1 akers took to the<lb/>
floor against the Boston Celtics.<lb/>
CBS-TV billed the game as a<lb/>
rematch between I .As Magic<lb/>
Johnson and the Celtic's Larry<lb/>
Bird, the two stars o last season's<lb/>
NCAA finals.<lb/>
As it turned out, Johnson's groin<lb/>
injury limited his playing time while<lb/>
Bird was at his best. Nevertheless,<lb/>
the Lakers came away with a two-<lb/>
point victory.<lb/>
Mack did not play but appeared<lb/>
on the tube while the team huddled<lb/>
during a timeout. The Queens, N.Y.<lb/>
native has seen limited playing time<lb/>
all season long, averaging 2.2 points<lb/>
per game and dishing out a total of<lb/>
15 assists.<lb/>
There is good reason for Mack's<lb/>
lack o' time, though, as the Lakers<lb/>
are as loaded as any team in the<lb/>
league at the guard position.<lb/>
EX-ECU HEAD football coach<lb/>
Pat Dye is now almost completely<lb/>
part of the Steeler special teams this settled at his new home in Laramie,<lb/>
season, often being the first man Wyoming. Dye said via telephone<lb/>
downfield on kickoffs and punts last week that his family had just ar-<lb/>
and making hits on many of those rived and were presently moving in-<lb/>
occasions. Early in the season to the house provided them by the<lb/>
University of Wyoming.<lb/>
In attempting to build the<lb/>
Cowboy's fortunes. Dye will run in-<lb/>
to many roadblocks. First of all, the<lb/>
Cowboys have not had a winning<lb/>
season in ten years. Secondly, and<lb/>
perhaps most importantly,<lb/>
recruiting will be a problem as the<lb/>
Pac-10 powers will surely grab many<lb/>
of the horses that Dye will need to<lb/>
get his Cowboys galloping instead<lb/>
of grazing.<lb/>
"Guys wait a lot longer out here<lb/>
to sign Dye commented. "Most<lb/>
wait until the national signing date<lb/>
because of the influence of schools<lb/>
like Southern California and<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
Wyoming's schedule should af-<lb/>
ford Dye to win at least six or seven<lb/>
games a year beginning possibly this<lb/>
season. He should then have the<lb/>
Cowboy program on strong footing<lb/>
after three or four years then, right?<lb/>
Maybe.<lb/>
The Cowboy schedule will get<lb/>
By JIMMY DaPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports F.ditnr<lb/>
CLEMSON,S.CAfter being<lb/>
upset in the opening round of the<lb/>
Clemson Invitational Tournament,<lb/>
the Lady Pirates bounced back to<lb/>
soundly defeat James Madison<lb/>
93-68, to take third place honors.<lb/>
Forward Rosie Thompson's field<lb/>
goal with 11:41 remaining in the<lb/>
first half gave ECU a 10 point lead,<lb/>
but Madison forward Anne Sonoga<lb/>
came off the bench to help her<lb/>
squad cut the margin to 49-41 at in-<lb/>
termission. <lb/>
Pirate junior Kathy Riley came<lb/>
alive in the second halt, scoring 19<lb/>
of her 23 points as the ECU fast<lb/>
break swamped the Duchesses. Fast<lb/>
Carolina silenced Sonoga and fiesty<lb/>
guard Barrie Grice in the final frame<lb/>
after allowing them to tire in 13 and<lb/>
11 points respectively in the first<lb/>
stana.<lb/>
"This is the first time we've<lb/>
played a better second half than we<lb/>
did first half praised second year<lb/>
ECU coach Cathy Andruzzi. "I can<lb/>
honestly say we played the best se-<lb/>
cond half we have all season<lb/>
Thompson, who recently passed<lb/>
the 2018 career points amassed by<lb/>
Bobbv Hodaes to become the all-<lb/>
NOTES AND COMMENTS.<lb/>
SUPER BOWL XIV is less than a<lb/>
week away and persons around the<lb/>
Greenville area are becoming very<lb/>
anxious for a very special reason.<lb/>
Zack Valentine, a defensive end<lb/>
for the East Carolina football team<lb/>
last season, is a Pittsburgh Steeler<lb/>
linebacker and, as everyone knows,<lb/>
the Steelers are the favorites to WIN<lb/>
the Super Bowl.<lb/>
For Valentine it would mean go-<lb/>
ing from an Independence Bowl<lb/>
champion to a Super Bowl cham-<lb/>
pion in just one year, should the<lb/>
Steelers triumph over the Los<lb/>
Angeles Rams on Sunday.<lb/>
Valentine has been an integral<lb/>
Pirate Swimming Action<lb/>
time Fast Carolina scoring leader,<lb/>
held the hot hot hand throughout<lb/>
the night, netting 2v points and<lb/>
hauling down 10 rebounds.<lb/>
Junior I vdia Rountree added 16<lb/>
points, while center Marcia Giren<lb/>
grabbed 11 caroms and freshn<lb/>
larv Denkler 10.<lb/>
rhompson and Riley were award-<lb/>
ed all-tournament honors for their<lb/>
performances in the two day event.<lb/>
"When Kathy got held up on the<lb/>
fast break, then we went to Rosie in-<lb/>
side said Andruzzi. "Our g<lb/>
kept their cool when Madison went<lb/>
to the press.<lb/>
"When we can score 20 points in<lb/>
the first eight minutes of the second<lb/>
half while the other team only gels<lb/>
seven, then you know something has<lb/>
to be working right. The girls<lb/>
capitalized on the things which they<lb/>
do best<lb/>
Unlike the Madison effort, ECl<lb/>
held as big as a 34-21 ad van 1<lb/>
over Mississippi University for<lb/>
Women, but faltered in second half<lb/>
and lost 0-69.<lb/>
Mississippi leading scorer Sue<lb/>
Johnson drove the lane and con-<lb/>
nected with :04 remaining for their<lb/>
irst lead oi the game.<lb/>
The I ady Pirates had one final an<lb/>
opportunity to win. after point<lb/>
guard Laurie Sikes was fouled with<lb/>
:01 on the clock. Since ECL was not<lb/>
in the bonus situation, the ball had<lb/>
to be put in play. Rountree's 20-foot<lb/>
field goal attempt was blocked by-<lb/>
Carrie Ball as the buzzer sounded.<lb/>
I-asi i arolina, ? 12-4<lb/>
the 1 rat Hec UN<lb/>
V ednesday at 7p.m Minges (<lb/>
iseum in a NCA1AW i<lb/>
MISS. UNIV. FOR Wt ll 7<lb/>
Henson ; 1-1 7, Ba ? 2<lb/>
Johnson 9 2-4 20, Pow t 2,<lb/>
Hughes 3 1-2 7, 1  .<lb/>
Murphy 1 0-0 2. Satchei 2 5-6 S<lb/>
Kerlev 2 0-0 4, Dunn 0 0-0 0. r<lb/>
30 10-15 7<lb/>
I Cl (69)<lb/>
Thompson 8 2-5 18, Riley 7 2-2<lb/>
16, Girven 4 0-0 8, Sikes 5 0-0 10,<lb/>
R untite 4 o-o s, t od<lb/>
Hooks 0 0-0 0, Denkler 3 3 4 -<lb/>
Totals ?l 7-11 69.<lb/>
MADISON ? -<lb/>
M irsden 0 0-0 0, H ? I I<lb/>
2o. Railey I 0-0 2, :e 4 9<lb/>
Waddell 4 2-3 10,<lb/>
Sonoga 5 6-8 16. Meadows 0 1-2<lb/>
1 . eba igl ? ?' 2 I . 2- 2 :<lb/>
68<lb/>
I Cl (93)<lb/>
rhompson 12 5-8 29, Riley I :<lb/>
23, Girven 3 0-0 6. Sikes ; 2 2 8<lb/>
Rountree 7 2-3 16. Owen 0 2-2 2<lb/>
Ranieri 0 0-0 0, Barnes 0 0-1 0<lb/>
loodv 0 0-0 0, Ho, ks :<lb/>
Denkler 4 0-1 8. lotals 39 15-24<lb/>
Halftime: ECl 49, M<lb/>
fouled out: none. Lotal fouls: ECl<lb/>
24. Madison 21. Technicals<lb/>
A-350.<lb/>
Valentine saw some duty at<lb/>
linebacker while those at the posi-<lb/>
tion who were ahead of him were<lb/>
suffering from various injuries.<lb/>
PLAYING ON A POTENTIAL<lb/>
Super Bowl champion is not the on-<lb/>
ly thing in Zack Valentine's life that<lb/>
he has to concern himself with. He<lb/>
now has a bride-to-be to worry<lb/>
about.<lb/>
During the Christmas holidays,<lb/>
Valentine presented star ECU Uady<lb/>
Pirate basketball star Rosie Thomp-<lb/>
son with a diamond ring. This<lb/>
dynamic duo have dated for quite<lb/>
some time. Thompson, by the way,<lb/>
recently became the number one<lb/>
scorer in ECU basketball history,<lb/>
man or woman.<lb/>
REMEMBER AL TYSON? Sure<lb/>
you do.<lb/>
The 6-11 center who left the East<lb/>
Carolina basketball team at the start<lb/>
of this season after playing only one<lb/>
Pirate Tankers Dunk<lb/>
Touted Gamecocks<lb/>
season as a Pirate has finally found markedly tougher as time goes on<lb/>
a new home. Tyson is now enrolled says ECU assistant Henry<lb/>
as an official student at Virginia Trevathan, who recently returned<lb/>
Commonwealth University in Rich- from Laramie. "By the time Pat<lb/>
mond, Va. gets his sort of people in the pro-<lb/>
VCU, by the way, won over 20 gram said Trevathan, "they begin<lb/>
games last season and was invited to playing teams like Oklahoma,<lb/>
play in the National Invitational Nebraska, Arizona State and Co?-<lb/>
Tournament in New York following orado. It won't be easy<lb/>
the regular season. They have a dire That it won't. But Dye realizes<lb/>
need for a big man because 6-11 this. "1 know there will be tough<lb/>
Kenny Jones, a senior starter, will times Dye said. "But I have faith<lb/>
be departing after this season. that someday the word 'Wyoming'<lb/>
For a while Tyson seemed headed will be associated directly with win-<lb/>
for North Texas State. He made a ning football<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Kditor<lb/>
East Carolina's men swimmers<lb/>
recorded their most impressive vic-<lb/>
tory of the young season Saturday<lb/>
with a 5-8-55 upset over the Univer-<lb/>
sity of South Carolina.<lb/>
The Pirates established six new<lb/>
meet records, while the Gamecocks<lb/>
claimed five, but it was down to the<lb/>
last event to decide who would get a<lb/>
mark in the win column and who<lb/>
would scratch the right side of the<lb/>
ledger.<lb/>
The team of Mike Triau, Scott<lb/>
Ross, Jack Clowar and Ted Nieman<lb/>
captured the 400 freestyle relay,<lb/>
thus claiming six first-place points<lb/>
compared to USC's three.<lb/>
Senior co-captain Nieman posted<lb/>
meet records in the 200 and 500 yard<lb/>
free, while fellow co-captain Bill<lb/>
Fehling claimed honors in the 50<lb/>
and 100 free, as well as swimming<lb/>
anchor in the victorious 400 medley<lb/>
relay.<lb/>
John Richards, Kelly Hopkins<lb/>
and Clowar built to a slim lead in<lb/>
the 400 medley before Fehling<lb/>
brought home the gold with a<lb/>
3:32.52 meet record.<lb/>
"The key to the meet was doing<lb/>
so well in the freestyle events said<lb/>
ECU assistant coach John Sultan, a<lb/>
former Pirate natator himself. "It<lb/>
came down to the last relay and was<lb/>
the most exciting meet we've had so<lb/>
far.<lb/>
"It was really a total team effort.<lb/>
We needed every point we got from<lb/>
our second and third place<lb/>
finishers<lb/>
The Pirate women didn't fair so<lb/>
well, bowing 77-28, but the ECu<lb/>
coaches still expressed optimism<lb/>
concerning their performance.<lb/>
"We swam very, very well com-<lb/>
mented Sultan. "We weren't disap-<lb/>
pointed at all. They (USC) have one<lb/>
of the top five teams in the country<lb/>
in my opinion<lb/>
The Lady Bucs set numerous<lb/>
school and freshman records, with<lb/>
frosh Tammy Putnam leading the<lb/>
way. The Pleasant Garden native set<lb/>
varsity and freshman marks in the<lb/>
100 individual medley with 1:02.51<lb/>
and the 400 IM with 4:43.06.<lb/>
Putnam's 400 IM time along with<lb/>
sophomore Karen Daviason's<lb/>
4:46.21 qualified the pair for AIAW<lb/>
National cut-offs.<lb/>
The men, who also defeated<lb/>
Maine 69-43 Thursday, now stand<lb/>
at 3-0 and remain idle until a Jan 26<lb/>
matchup with UNC-Wilmington<lb/>
The women slide to 0-2 and venture<lb/>
to UNC-Greensboro Saturday.<lb/>
Thompson Sets On Defense<lb/>
f<lb/>
k<lb/>
<pb facs="00057239_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 15, 1980<lb/>
l?<lb/>
Pi<lb/>
1<lb/>
Stargell In Pasadena<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
By<lb/>
WII I (.RIMS! KY<lb/>
P speciaU orrespondeni<lb/>
When the champion<lb/>
Pittsburgh Steelcrs<lb/>
square off against the<lb/>
I os Angeles Rams Sun-<lb/>
day, in football's Super<lb/>
Bowl XIV, you may<lb/>
blink twice when you<lb/>
see a hulking man in a<lb/>
wild plaid sports jacket<lb/>
running up and down<lb/>
the sidelines snapping<lb/>
pictures.<lb/>
No, it's not a camera<lb/>
hug who slipped<lb/>
through the steel ring<lb/>
of security. Nor is it<lb/>
just another of the<lb/>
scores of pro<lb/>
photographers from<lb/>
the newspapers.<lb/>
magazines and wire ser-<lb/>
vices.<lb/>
lt the Steelcrs No.<lb/>
$S?a??SSSSSSSis!SsS?<lb/>
1 fan and the greatest<lb/>
booster of Pittsburgh's<lb/>
newest label, "The City<lb/>
of Champions" 8 old<lb/>
Willie Stargell, the<lb/>
most decorated athlete<lb/>
of the season.<lb/>
"Sure, I'm a big<lb/>
Steeler fan said the<lb/>
38-year-old first<lb/>
baseman o' baseball's<lb/>
World Series champion<lb/>
Pittsburgh Pirates. "I<lb/>
saw every game 1 could<lb/>
on television and the<lb/>
playoffs from the<lb/>
stands.<lb/>
"Since 1 was coming<lb/>
to the West Coast for<lb/>
the game anyhow, I got<lb/>
a job shooting sideline<lb/>
pictures for Sports Il-<lb/>
lustrated<lb/>
Every time you turn<lb/>
around these days,<lb/>
there is old "Pops as<lb/>
his teammates call him,<lb/>
picking up another<lb/>
trophy or endorsing<lb/>
some product for a<lb/>
good wad of cash. He is<lb/>
sports' hottest commer-<lb/>
cial commodity at the<lb/>
moment.<lb/>
"I'm friendly with<lb/>
most of those Steeler<lb/>
guys " Bradshaw, Fran-<lb/>
co, Mean Joe Greene,<lb/>
you name 'em he<lb/>
said. "Man, they are<lb/>
 tUilirr ?<lb/>
Ladies Night<lb/>
and<lb/>
Lightfoot<lb/>
Thur.<lb/>
Lightfoot<lb/>
Don't forget<lb/>
Friday aft.<lb/>
STOREW1DE<lb/>
CLEARANCE<lb/>
34<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
Vl <lb/>
Ski Clothing<lb/>
Warm-ups<lb/>
Assorted Basketball,<lb/>
Tennis, &amp; Running<lb/>
Shoes.<lb/>
r t<lb/>
Hunting Clothes<lb/>
H.L.H0DGES1<lb/>
AND COMPANY, INC.<lb/>
2LQ J 5th St. Phone 752-4156<lb/>
The Coffeehouse i a<lb/>
not so common place<lb/>
Auditions! jan.25&amp;26<lb/>
1 he C offeehoust is now taking applications for auditions. persons<lb/>
arc urged to come I ? the Student Union Off ice in Mendenhall. Please leave<lb/>
iui name, address, and telephone number with the Secretary<lb/>
Lcok for the Union Label mm<lb/>
DAIRY CUP<lb/>
v " Delicious &amp; Nutritious"<lb/>
FOOT LONG<lb/>
HOTDOGS<lb/>
only 85 ?<lb/>
CHICKEN<lb/>
FILET SANDWICH<lb/>
0111795<lb/>
Large<lb/>
selection of<lb/>
SUNDAES<lb/>
"GOOD FOOD FOR<lb/>
GOOD TIMES"<lb/>
FAVORITES r?<lb/>
? HOT DOGS<lb/>
? HAMBURGERS<lb/>
? FRENCH FRIES<lb/>
? FISH SANDWICHES <lb/>
? MILK SHAKES<lb/>
? MANY MORE ITEMS<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
50 off Minimum order<lb/>
of $1.50 I per customer<lb/>
1. D. Required<lb/>
Offer good Jan. 10-16<lb/>
family, too<lb/>
Stargell, the Most<lb/>
Valuable Player of the<lb/>
World Series, was nam-<lb/>
ed "Male Athlete of the<lb/>
Year" last week by The<lb/>
Associated Press and<lb/>
shared Sports II-<lb/>
lustrated's "Sportsman<lb/>
of the Year" honor<lb/>
with his gridiron<lb/>
counterpart, Terry<lb/>
Bradshaw.<lb/>
"The Steelers,<lb/>
they're like us said<lb/>
the hulking slugger.<lb/>
"They've got pride and<lb/>
determination. They're<lb/>
willing to go that extra<lb/>
mile<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE: Albums and 8 track<lb/>
tapes forilandtJ Artists Range<lb/>
trom A (America) to Z (ZZ Top).<lb/>
Come by (114c Scott) or call to a<lb/>
qood buy. Ask lor EO.<lb/>
79 VW VAN. must sell, reduced<lb/>
price; yellow kitchen table metal<lb/>
bottom S40. 754 0895, 757 496! ? 268<lb/>
FOR SALE: Aria bass guitar.<lb/>
Practice amplifier, extendable<lb/>
cord, case, strap and beginners<lb/>
book included. All equipment in<lb/>
good condition. Guitar is black and<lb/>
sunburst with brown neck. Will<lb/>
sell for st25 or best offer. Call<lb/>
Barry Hood at 752 7290, or come by<lb/>
104 Umsted.<lb/>
RANGES G.E. ELECTRIC 30<lb/>
inch. Clean, great condition 10 or<lb/>
more 545 each. Call Harry<lb/>
91973S8421<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
Wanted mature, responsible male<lb/>
roommate for nice three bedroom<lb/>
house with fireplace $92 per month<lb/>
plus utilities, phone. 752 7414.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: wanted<lb/>
to share J bedroom apt at River<lb/>
Bluff. One-half rent and utilities,<lb/>
apt. completely furnished with ex<lb/>
ception of your bedroom furniture.<lb/>
Call Lisa at 758 8529<lb/>
Female Roommate, Needed im<lb/>
mediately, preferably grad stu<lb/>
dent. Would have private room,<lb/>
can be furnished. Within walking<lb/>
distance to campus. Share half<lb/>
rent, utilities, and phone. Call<lb/>
758 134<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT in home, 920<lb/>
14th st. behind dorms Furnished,<lb/>
private bath, no cooking<lb/>
priveleges 185 Call 758 2S8S<lb/>
NEED FEMALE ROOMMATE,<lb/>
low rent, low utilities, near cam<lb/>
pus. Call 752 1792<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
DIDN'T get school pictures<lb/>
because they were too expensive?<lb/>
Get two color portraits and 10<lb/>
wallet for J5.00. Call 758 3903.<lb/>
BABY SITTER, Wanted for 18mo<lb/>
old baby boy. Occasional, daytime<lb/>
sitting after 1200 a.m. Tar River<lb/>
Estates Call 752 4444<lb/>
CLIFF'S<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
iMMMI<lb/>
ORANGE JULIUS<lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
2 For 1 Sale<lb/>
On any reg. price<lb/>
Julius Drink with<lb/>
this coupon<lb/>
Offer expires Jan.31,1980<lb/>
We sell Oscar Mayer Hot Dogs<lb/>
ALL YOU<lb/>
CAN EAT $2.95!<lb/>
MONDAY-THURSDAY<lb/>
TROUT, CRAB CAKES<lb/>
and FLOUNDER. $3.25.<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
il<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
CLIFF'S SUPER<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
CRAB CAKE SPECIAL<lb/>
2 Golden Fried Crab Cakes<lb/>
French Fries, Slaw, and<lb/>
Hush Puppies. $.99.<lb/>
THE COMPLETE<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
SALAD?50? EXTRA<lb/>
ASST. VAR.<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
NO CAMY0UT<lb/>
$199<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
1<lb/>
TUE.<lb/>
WITH FRIES &amp; COLESLAW<lb/>
FRIED<lb/>
CHICKEN p?<lb/>
$-199<lb/>
1<lb/>
WED.<lb/>
WITH GARLIC BREAD<lb/>
ITALIAN<lb/>
SPA<lb/>
WITH FRII OLE SLAW<lb/>
99<lb/>
THUR.<lb/>
FRIED<lb/>
FISH.<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
$199<lb/>
1<lb/>
FRI.<lb/>
'what s the easiest way to complete your<lb/>
plans?no matter what you're planning9<lb/>
By making one convenient trip to your<lb/>
Kroger Sav-on . . . where you'll 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/>
Magazines and<lb/>
Paperback Books<lb/>
Records and<lb/>
Tapes<lb/>
rSscouglS<lb/>
Up<lb/>
To<lb/>
REFRESHING<lb/>
Coca-Cola<lb/>
$<lb/>
Btls. Plus Deposit<lb/>
PABST<lb/>
Blue Ribbon Beer<lb/>
12388<lb/>
12-Oz. 1 W<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
COLONY WINE<lb/>
Chablis, Burgundy<lb/>
" &amp; Rhine<lb/>
FRESH<lb/>
Cheese<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
$<lb/>
Busch<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
Priced<lb/>
From<lb/>
199<lb/>
I Each<lb/>
6'<lb/>
12-Oz.<lb/>
N.R.<lb/>
Btls.<lb/>
88<lb/>
RETAIL<lb/>
7 ;<lb/>
KJ<lb/>
TO<lb/>
AM Brands<lb/>
Motor Oil<lb/>
SOLD<lb/>
AT<lb/>
IHVOtCf<lb/>
FRACMMC?$ 20<lb/>
Little Debbie Snack Cakes &amp; Archway Cookies<lb/>
BAGGED<lb/>
Chips, Snacks &amp; Bagged Nuts<lb/>
POUCM PACK <lb/>
Sauces &amp; Gravy Mixes g ? fc fl<lb/>
PEPPEP.IDGE FARMS<lb/>
Bagged Cookies &amp; Snacks<lb/>
10<lb/>
Of.MANUFACTURER'S<lb/>
SUGGESTED RETAIL<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of theae advertised Items la required to be raadlly available<lb/>
aata In each Kroger Sav-on Store except aa specifically ncted in<lb/>
ad If we do run out of an advertised item, we will offer you your choice<lb/>
of a comparable item, whan available, reflecting the same savings<lb/>
raJncheck which will entitle you to purchase the advertised Item<lb/>
edvertlaed price within 30 days.<lb/>
REG. OR DIP<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
Potato<lb/>
Chips<lb/>
8-Oz. Twin Peck<lb/>
59<lb/>
Copyright 1990<lb/>
Kroger Sav-on<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
None sow to Dealers or Wholesalers<lb/>
on<lb/>
FOOD, DRUG, GEN<lb/>
MDSE. STORES<lb/>
NONE SOLD<lb/>
TO<lb/>
DEALERS<lb/>
OPEN 7 AM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. Greenville<lb/>
Phone 756 7031<lb/>
<pb facs="00057239_0009"/><lb/>
hi<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 15, 1980<lb/>
Grapplers Pin West<lb/>
Chester State, 36-6<lb/>
By ED WILLIAMS<lb/>
Staff rotei<lb/>
The East Carolina<lb/>
wrestling team won<lb/>
their match against<lb/>
West Chester State last<lb/>
Saturday by a 36-6<lb/>
count. "We wrestled<lb/>
real well understated<lb/>
first-year coach Ed<lb/>
Steers.<lb/>
Steers ran down the<lb/>
(dividual perfor-<lb/>
mances, which included<lb/>
impressive wins by Jim<lb/>
Osborn, Steve<lb/>
Milanese. Scott Eaton<lb/>
and a host of others.<lb/>
"Osborn was a big<lb/>
surprise Steers com-<lb/>
ma "He replaced<lb/>
! rank Frew it t who was<lb/>
lied in the Carolina<lb/>
ten. But he did a real<lb/>
iob for us<lb/>
Steers also praised<lb/>
Milanese and Eaton,<lb/>
claiming that both gave<lb/>
"good, solid efforts<lb/>
Steve Goode<lb/>
defeated national<lb/>
qualifier John Licata,<lb/>
8-4, in his match in the<lb/>
167 weight class, Steers<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The Pirates go up<lb/>
against East<lb/>
Stroudsburg tonight at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum.<lb/>
According to Steers,<lb/>
East Stroudsburg is<lb/>
from the Easterns, a<lb/>
"167-team league. The<lb/>
conference is the best in<lb/>
the east and East<lb/>
Stroudsburg is a strong<lb/>
representative in the<lb/>
conference all the<lb/>
time<lb/>
Steers commented<lb/>
further on ECU's next<lb/>
opponent by saying,<lb/>
"They are a well-<lb/>
balanced, fairly young<lb/>
team<lb/>
East Stroudsburg<lb/>
features the wrestling<lb/>
talents of Jim Vargo in<lb/>
the 167 weight class. He<lb/>
is a National Qualifier,<lb/>
according to Steers.<lb/>
With only two other<lb/>
home matches remain-<lb/>
ing, the opportunity to<lb/>
see such outstanding<lb/>
performers as Revils<lb/>
(23-1 in the 177 weight<lb/>
class), Goode (22-4 in<lb/>
the 167 class), and<lb/>
heavyweight Joyner<lb/>
(22-2) is running out.<lb/>
Gymnasts Improve After<lb/>
National Clinic In Florida<lb/>
Gymnastics at East Carolina University took a<lb/>
step up the ladder of acclaim as they placed third<lb/>
in a five team meet Friday at James Madison.<lb/>
Madison placed first in the competition with an<lb/>
overall 122.2 total, followed by Maryland with<lb/>
121.4, ECU 117.9, Memphis State 115.3 and<lb/>
Montgomery Community College 91.0.<lb/>
"We made an 11 point improvement over our<lb/>
first meet (with UNC-Chapel Hill) and I'm really<lb/>
pleased with the way our girls are performing<lb/>
right now said first year coach Jon Rose.<lb/>
Rose credits a holiday training venture to<lb/>
Florida for the team's improved performance.<lb/>
They attended the National Gymnastics Clinic at<lb/>
C.rcus World in Orlando Dec. 31-Jan. 2.<lb/>
"Without the Florida trip there's no way we'd<lb/>
be as far along as we are now said Rose.<lb/>
Standout performers for the Pirates included<lb/>
Susan Mcknight with an 8.4 to establish a new<lb/>
school record and claim first place in the event.<lb/>
Rose also cited Cindy Rogers for third place in<lb/>
floor exercise (8.3), Kim Lowe second (8.1) and<lb/>
Lawrence third (8.05) in the vault, and Carol<lb/>
Layton third (7.6) and Elizabeth Jackson fourth<lb/>
(7.5) in the balance beam.<lb/>
"They're really starting to reach their potential<lb/>
now added Rose. "We should reach 120 points<lb/>
soon and that's where I want us to be. That would<lb/>
make us one Hell of a respectable Division II<lb/>
team<lb/>
East Carolina, now 2-4 overall, hosts Georgia<lb/>
College Friday at 7p.m. in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
???????????pnHi<lb/>
ECU's Elizabeth Jackson<lb/>
THIS WEEK ATTHE<lb/>
jan is<lb/>
Jan 30<lb/>
SUN<lb/>
TONIGHT<lb/>
Tues. Jan. 15<lb/>
SAVOY<lb/>
BROWN<lb/>
featuring<lb/>
KIM SIMMONDS<lb/>
WTommy G.&amp; Co.<lb/>
THURSIDEWINDER<lb/>
FRIPEGASUS<lb/>
SATPEGASUS<lb/>
SUPERBOWHon T TV )&amp;<lb/>
WHITE WITCH<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
S175.00 "all inclusive"<lb/>
ceanancy test, birth con<lb/>
trol ana problem pregnan<lb/>
cy counseling For further<lb/>
? ntormation call 83? 0535<lb/>
I toll tree number<lb/>
800 221 2568) between 9<lb/>
AM 5PM weekdays<lb/>
Raleigh Women's<lb/>
Health Organization<lb/>
917 West Morgan St<lb/>
Raleigh. N C 27603<lb/>
HfflfflTS<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Tuesday Night<lb/>
i Specials<lb/>
TROUT S2.9S<lb/>
PERCH $2.95<lb/>
We 7 write letters home for you<lb/>
twice a week!<lb/>
t C I MuHcnls ?! SO<lb/>
I ulK Mill Si OO<lb/>
PuhlK SI 00 (,rups I IMI<lb/>
An I C'l Student Union<lb/>
I HI M HI AR1SPROIH C I ION<lb/>
For the measely sum of $20 (or $15 if your<lb/>
parents are graduates of East Carolina), The EAst<lb/>
Carolinian will send copies of the paper home to<lb/>
your parents?or to your friends?or to anyone you<lb/>
choose.<lb/>
Not only that, but we will send them to you for a<lb/>
full year. A full year. That way, if you don't stay in<lb/>
Greenville for the summer, you can keep up with<lb/>
everything going on campus.<lb/>
Think of it. Your parents won't have to ask you<lb/>
what is going on at ECU. With the help of The East<lb/>
Carolinian, they can read about it.<lb/>
For more details, drop a note by The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian for the proper amount. Please make sure that<lb/>
along with the check, we have the address where you<lb/>
want us to send the subscription.<lb/>
Flounder $2.95<lb/>
all you can eat<lb/>
I No taKe-out? please.<lb/>
Meal Includes:<lb/>
rench Fries, Col slaw,<lb/>
 Hush puppies.<lb/>
 We are proud to<lb/>
announce that we<lb/>
have added<lb/>
one of the<lb/>
AREAS FINEST<lb/>
SALAD BARS<lb/>
tor your<lb/>
dining pleasure.<lb/>
? The Student Inion<lb/>
MM Films Committee<lb/>
ana presents<lb/>
HEARTS<lb/>
AND<lb/>
MINDS<lb/>
"Excruciatingly brilliant<lb/>
?Zimmerman, Newsweek<lb/>
Produced by BERT SCHNEIDER<lb/>
and PETER DAVIS<lb/>
Directed by PETER DAVIS<lb/>
A Touchstone-Audjefl Production for BBS<lb/>
A HOWARD ZUKER, HENRY JAGL0M<lb/>
RAINBOW PICTURES Presentation<lb/>
a release from rbc films<lb/>
roincro ???<lb/>
Wed. 8pm<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
ission: JLP. and Activity Card<lb/>
TEI<lb/>
CAFETERIA<lb/>
baily Specials Served w 2 veg. &amp; Roll<lb/>
Hair Designs<lb/>
VISIONS OF THE 80'S<lb/>
Styles That Are Adapted To<lb/>
Your Individual Taste Accented<lb/>
With Color And Perms<lb/>
OPEN FOR LUNCH<lb/>
Dally ll:30<lb/>
Sun. ? Thur.<lb/>
430-9:00<lb/>
Frl. and Sat.<lb/>
4:30-10:00<lb/>
Wed. Jan. 16<lb/>
Thur. Jan. 17<lb/>
Fri. Jan. 18<lb/>
Sat. Jan. 19<lb/>
Sun. Jan. 20<lb/>
Mon. Jan. 21<lb/>
Tue. Jan. 22<lb/>
$1.14 Chili Macaroni<lb/>
$1.49 Turkey w dressing<lb/>
$1.14 Meat Loaf<lb/>
 l .49 Liver &amp; Onions<lb/>
$1.14 Spaghetti w meat<lb/>
sauce<lb/>
$1.49 Tuna Casserole<lb/>
$1.14 Fish Patties<lb/>
$1.49 Choice of Chicken<lb/>
$1.14 Creole Spaghetti<lb/>
$2.49 SteamshipFresh Pork<lb/>
HamSalad2 VegDrink and<lb/>
roll<lb/>
1.14 Ham and Noodle<lb/>
Casserole<lb/>
$1.49 Chicken and Pastry<lb/>
$1.14 Ham and Yams<lb/>
$1.49 Stuffed Peppers<lb/>
New Geometric, Asymetric<lb/>
and Angle Cuts<lb/>
Cail Faye, Dora, Judy, or Clara<lb/>
For A New Look For You<lb/>
103 Eastbrook D<lb/>
758-7570<lb/>
r<lb/>
<lb/>
??1 -<lb/>
: ; 3 3 ?<lb/>
r<lb/>
<lb/>
 ?. ?- ??<lb/>
? lijr frIMjTri? Dfrift1 ?"?  kMMi<lb/>
<pb facs="00057239_0010"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OD-Ed ? Other Opinion<lb/>
S JANUARY 15. 1980 Paae 5<lb/>
How Far Should<lb/>
?<lb/>
Government Go<lb/>
The following column was written<lb/>
by Claude Sit ton, editor of The<lb/>
Raleigh News and Observer.<lb/>
The settlement of a lawsuit<lb/>
against the Raleigh Fire Department<lb/>
taises the old question of how far<lb/>
government should go to end racial<lb/>
discrimination. Some whites and a<lb/>
good many blacks say government<lb/>
has not gone far enough. Others say<lb/>
it has gone too far. Whatever the<lb/>
answer?and there's truth on both<lb/>
sides?the means of achieving the<lb/>
goal have taken a bad turn.<lb/>
Government has applied three<lb/>
different policies to the problem in<lb/>
the last 25 years. First, there was the<lb/>
so-called separate but equal policy<lb/>
of segregation, which permitted ma-<lb/>
jority discrimination against<lb/>
minorities. Next came equality of<lb/>
opportunity or non-discrimination.<lb/>
This policy in turn gave way to one<lb/>
demanding equality of results and<lb/>
permitting discrimination against<lb/>
the majority in favor of minorities.<lb/>
The result for the Raleigh Fire<lb/>
Department will be a firefighting<lb/>
and officer corps whose makeup<lb/>
will be determined first by racial<lb/>
quotas and only then by merit.<lb/>
Within three years, according to the<lb/>
settlement's terms, at least 16 per-<lb/>
cent of the firemen must be black.<lb/>
Further, the number of black<lb/>
firefighters promoted must repre-<lb/>
sent the same percentage of eligible<lb/>
black applicants as the number of<lb/>
white firefighters promoted<lb/>
represents the percentage of eligible<lb/>
white applicants.<lb/>
The fallacies of this "Counting by<lb/>
Race" and the judicial and<lb/>
bureaucratic carpentry that brought<lb/>
it about are recounted in a recent<lb/>
book of that title by two North<lb/>
Carolinians. They are William J.<lb/>
Bennett, director of the National<lb/>
Humanities Center in the Research<lb/>
Triangle Park, and Terry Eastland,<lb/>
editorial page editor of The<lb/>
Greensboro Record.<lb/>
The book examines the conflict<lb/>
between the ideas of "moral equali-<lb/>
ty" and "numerical equality<lb/>
Moral equality stems .from the<lb/>
Declaration of Independence.<lb/>
Because all men are created equal,<lb/>
say the authors, "no man should be<lb/>
discriminated against or benefited<lb/>
because of his race and no man<lb/>
because of his race should have his<lb/>
claim evaluated on a basis different<lb/>
from another man That concept<lb/>
became the linchpin of the civil<lb/>
rights movement, one endorsed by<lb/>
the late Martin Luther King Jr. and<lb/>
others of its leaders.<lb/>
Numerical equality came into<lb/>
fashion in the middle and late<lb/>
10's. Its basis is the contention of<lb/>
its supporters that America must<lb/>
compensate blacks for past<lb/>
discrimination by restoring them to<lb/>
the position in society they would<lb/>
have occupied absent that<lb/>
discrimination. "They offer the vi-<lb/>
sion of a society in which resources,<lb/>
rewards, and benefits are apportion-<lb/>
ed in accordance with the percen-<lb/>
tages of blacks, browns, yellows,<lb/>
reds, and whites in that society<lb/>
say the authors.<lb/>
the vision of a society in which<lb/>
resources, rewards, and benefits are<lb/>
apportioned in accordance with the<lb/>
percentages of blacks, browns,<lb/>
yellows, reds, and whites in that<lb/>
society say the authors.<lb/>
The results of numerical equality<lb/>
reach far beyond the Raleigh Fire<lb/>
Department. Reverse discrimina-<lb/>
tion, as it is often called, is com-<lb/>
monplace in college admission (and,<lb/>
i' appears, retention) practices, as<lb/>
well as in public and private hiring<lb/>
and promotion. The authors see it<lb/>
rightly as a source of racial bit-<lb/>
terness and potential conflict. And<lb/>
they dispute its founding principle<lb/>
as fallacious.<lb/>
Compensation by race is ground-<lb/>
ed in the false assumption that vic-<lb/>
timization, suffering and depriva-<lb/>
tion of blacks in recent years are<lb/>
group, as opposed to individual,<lb/>
characteristics, argue Bennett and<lb/>
Eastland. "As a result say the<lb/>
authors in reference to college ad-<lb/>
missions, "the remedial principle is<lb/>
denied in two ways. One, the pro-<lb/>
grams fail to distinguish the relevant<lb/>
differences among minority ap-<lb/>
plicants themselves, for some have<lb/>
suffered, others have not. And,<lb/>
two, the programs fail to benefit<lb/>
poor, disadvantaged white ap-<lb/>
plicants who have suffered as much<lb/>
as, or more than, minority ap-<lb/>
plicants<lb/>
No doubt many poor whites have<lb/>
been penalized in this fashion by the<lb/>
University of North Carolina's<lb/>
desegregation practices, even<lb/>
though those practices are under<lb/>
continuing attack by federal of-<lb/>
ficials as insufficient. But blacks<lb/>
will suffer, too. As the authors<lb/>
point out, respect and moral equali-<lb/>
ty may be denied not only by harsh<lb/>
measures such as slavery but also by<lb/>
such seemingly benign ones as<lb/>
special compensatory policies on<lb/>
race. A benign insult is an insult<lb/>
nonetheless.<lb/>
"The notion that blacks and<lb/>
other minorities 'just don't have it<lb/>
and must be 'given something in<lb/>
order to be something' not only<lb/>
violates the assumption of moral<lb/>
equality by which democratic socie-<lb/>
ty is ordered and by which other<lb/>
minorities have advanced; also, it<lb/>
simply isn't true contend Bennett<lb/>
and Eastland.<lb/>
The federal pressures for coun-<lb/>
ting by race are strong. Defending<lb/>
the principle of moral equality<lb/>
against demands for quota's is a<lb/>
costly, time-consuming process. It<lb/>
promises little or no success in view<lb/>
of recent Supreme Court decisions.<lb/>
Merit goes out the window. Stan-<lb/>
dards are lowered. The noble princi-<lb/>
ple of non-discrimination is<lb/>
destroyed. And all of society pays<lb/>
the penalties.<lb/>
The Appropriate Ending<lb/>
The following is an editorial<lb/>
reprinted from The Greensboro<lb/>
Record, Friday, January 4, 1980.<lb/>
The "Me decade a time of un-<lb/>
surpassed national self-indulgence,<lb/>
ended with some sadly appropriate<lb/>
fireworks. A New York woman<lb/>
baked her son to exorcise him of a<lb/>
devil-induced fever. A Quebec<lb/>
reveler incinerated 44 co-convives at<lb/>
a New Year's bash. And in North<lb/>
Carolina, Jerry Lee Couick, who,<lb/>
mistaking his t-shirted son for a<lb/>
white-tailed deer, killed him, tear-<lb/>
fully blamed the state for the death.<lb/>
If there had been a law requiring<lb/>
hunters to wear orange hunting<lb/>
vests (as all prudent hunters do,<lb/>
anyway), he argued, Roger Lee<lb/>
Couick would be alive today.<lb/>
In his anguish Mr. Couick<lb/>
brilliantly summarized the sen-<lb/>
timents of a nation that, despite its<lb/>
purported conservatism, wants<lb/>
government to regulate misery and<lb/>
conflict out of existence. The "Me<lb/>
generation" also is the<lb/>
"Do-it-for-Me" generation, a<lb/>
generation paralyzed by fear, crippl-<lb/>
ed by stagnant New Deal liberalism,<lb/>
dependent upon the guidance of Big<lb/>
Brother.<lb/>
Yet if the past decade has proved<lb/>
anything, it's proved that govern-<lb/>
ment cannot solve men's personal<lb/>
crises. Indeed, it is doubtful that it<lb/>
can solve even the public problems<lb/>
for which it has taken responsibility.<lb/>
An example: in Westfield,<lb/>
Massachusetts, two almost identical<lb/>
sewer projects are in progress. One<lb/>
is financed by the city, the other bv<lb/>
Uncle Sam. The first is on budgt<lb/>
and will be ready to take contracts<lb/>
in early spring. The second is only<lb/>
halfway through a four-step process<lb/>
required before Washington will ap-<lb/>
prove funding. In step three, the city<lb/>
must ask each and every citizen if he<lb/>
uses a sewerline, how effective it is,<lb/>
and so on. During steps one and<lb/>
two, the cost of the project<lb/>
quadrupled. The moral? Do it<lb/>
yourself.<lb/>
In a more perfect universe, in-<lb/>
dividuals would have the courage<lb/>
and common sense to dirty their<lb/>
hands and rebuild their com-<lb/>
munities. But the "Me generation'<lb/>
perpetuated the tragic mvth that in-<lb/>
dividuals are powerless and unim-<lb/>
portant, and that only government<lb/>
and business have the insight or<lb/>
power to achieve anything ? in-<lb/>
cluding spiritual renewal.<lb/>
We are not the venal and stupid<lb/>
creatures depicted by the "Me"<lb/>
manifesto: time and aaain<lb/>
Americans have shown the capacity<lb/>
to improve themselves and their<lb/>
communities, to support fairness<lb/>
and equality, to restore order, and<lb/>
to promote republican virtues<lb/>
without the avuncular assistance of<lb/>
the federal government. Uncle<lb/>
Sam's primary duty is to protect.<lb/>
not to mother. If he tries to do more<lb/>
than prevent lawlessness and<lb/>
violence at home and defend our in-<lb/>
terests abroad, he gets spread too<lb/>
thin to be effective and we find<lb/>
ourselves in messes like those we<lb/>
now face in Iran and Afghanistan.<lb/>
UN Is Impotent<lb/>
<lb/>
The following editorial is<lb/>
reprinted from The Greensboro<lb/>
Record, Friday, January 4, 1980.<lb/>
Perhaps nothing better sym-<lb/>
bolizes the impotence of the United<lb/>
Nations than the picture of<lb/>
Secretary General Kurt Waldheim,<lb/>
ostensibly on a peace mission to<lb/>
Iran, huddled like a frightened fawn<lb/>
in the corner of a van, trying to<lb/>
escape from Iranian students deter-<lb/>
mined to rip him limb from limb.<lb/>
And perhaps nothing better sym-<lb/>
bolizes world respect for the<lb/>
organization than the Iranian televi-<lb/>
sion biography of Mr. Waldheim<lb/>
that interspliced an accurate sum-<lb/>
mary of his diplomatic career with<lb/>
carnage filmed in the shah's prisons,<lb/>
the implication being that the<lb/>
genteel Secretary assisted in the<lb/>
murder of Iranian dissidents.<lb/>
Mr. Waldheim and his organiza-<lb/>
tion are the Rodney Danger fields of<lb/>
the diplomatic world. Their con-<lb/>
demnation of Israel and trade sanc-<lb/>
tions against Rhodesia amounted to<lb/>
naught. Their peacekeeping mis-<lb/>
sions have failed to stop wars in<lb/>
Africa and the Middle East. They<lb/>
get no respect.<lb/>
Even as Mr. Waldheim was strug-<lb/>
gling to remain intact, President<lb/>
Carter was announcing that he<lb/>
would combat the Soviet invasion of<lb/>
Afghanistan by requesting that the<lb/>
very same United Nations condemn<lb/>
the act, maybe even place sanctions<lb/>
on the venturesome Russians.<lb/>
The decision would have done<lb/>
Neville Chamberlain proud. With<lb/>
one swift stroke, Mr. Carter effc<lb/>
lively ceded Afghanistan to th.<lb/>
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics<lb/>
? just as Chamberlain made the<lb/>
Sudetenland a peace offering to<lb/>
Hitler. In addition, the President<lb/>
contemplated other "severe" ac-<lb/>
tions ? weakening trade relations,<lb/>
boycotting the Olympics, postpon-<lb/>
ing the SALT vote.<lb/>
Almost immediately the price of<lb/>
gold shot past the $600 mark. A jit-<lb/>
tery monetary market reflected the<lb/>
fears of a world already skeptical of<lb/>
America's willingness to defend<lb/>
itself and its friends.<lb/>
A side effect of the hike will be in-<lb/>
creased inflation here, and con-<lb/>
tinued weakening of the dollar. And<lb/>
that will mean greater economic<lb/>
hardship for the United States<lb/>
because the timid Georgian could<lb/>
not take a stand during the most im-<lb/>
portant crisis of his presidency.<lb/>
That, too, is appropriate. In a<lb/>
single act of indecision, Mr. Cartr<lb/>
consolidated some foreign and<lb/>
omestic woes into a single sj mboli<lb/>
mess. The plummeting dollar and<lb/>
the burning flag represent the inept-<lb/>
ness of his domestic and foreign<lb/>
policies, respectively.<lb/>
But nothing better symbolizes the<lb/>
weakness of his resolve to defend<lb/>
freedom than the decision to place<lb/>
Afghanistan's fate before the<lb/>
meekest of the meek and weakest of<lb/>
the weak ? the United Nations.<lb/>
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</div></body></text></TEI>