<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057240_0001"/>
?lje iJzust GLataliman<lb/>
Vol. 54 No<lb/>
3"K<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Thursday, January 17, 1980<lb/>
(Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
WECU-FM Gets FCC License<lb/>
John Jeter, station manager of WECU<lb/>
Photo b Kip Sloan<lb/>
By ROBERT M.SWAIM<lb/>
WECU General Manager John<lb/>
Jeter announced yesterday that the<lb/>
long awaited WECU-FM broadcast<lb/>
license has been issued by the<lb/>
Federal Communications Commis-<lb/>
sion in Washington, D.C.<lb/>
Jeter said that on Mondav he<lb/>
telephoned the office of Con-<lb/>
gressman Walter Jones, who was<lb/>
asked to intervene on behalf of<lb/>
WECU several months ago, to in-<lb/>
quire about he progress of the<lb/>
license application.<lb/>
Then on Tuesday Jeter received a<lb/>
call from Congressman Jones office<lb/>
informing him that the license had<lb/>
been granted that day. Jeter was<lb/>
told that the license would be mailed<lb/>
"in a couple of days<lb/>
"It's definitely been approved<lb/>
and granted said Jeter. "It is due<lb/>
in the mail any day now<lb/>
According to Jeter, the Media<lb/>
Board will meet today to release the<lb/>
WECU budget which has been<lb/>
frozen pending approval of the<lb/>
license application.<lb/>
Jeter's efforts to obtain an FM<lb/>
license for WECU took a year and a<lb/>
half of research and long unexplain-<lb/>
ed delays.<lb/>
The original license application<lb/>
was filed on June 6, 1978. In May of<lb/>
1979 an amendment to that applica-<lb/>
tion was filed in ordc to allow the<lb/>
station to increase power.<lb/>
Jeter said that the first step in get-<lb/>
ting the station ready for broad-<lb/>
casting is getting new equipment.<lb/>
The ECU purchasing office is ex-<lb/>
pected to begin accepting bids on<lb/>
the equipment very soon, Jeter said.<lb/>
The estimated cost of the equipment<lb/>
is $27,000.<lb/>
An additional $3,000 will be spent<lb/>
on renovating and refurnishing the<lb/>
studios, including the control room,<lb/>
news room and production room,<lb/>
according to Jeter.<lb/>
Before the WECU tower can be<lb/>
placed on top of Tyler dorm the<lb/>
original architects of the dorm will<lb/>
have to be consulted and will have<lb/>
to confirm that placement of the<lb/>
tower on the dorm would be safe.<lb/>
Jeter said this was being done at the<lb/>
insistance of the administration.<lb/>
The purchase, installation and<lb/>
testing of the new equipment will<lb/>
take about two months.<lb/>
 "The station should be on the air<lb/>
by the third week of March said<lb/>
Jeter.<lb/>
Once the station is on the air it<lb/>
will broadcast album rock and ja7<lb/>
on an 80-20 ratio.<lb/>
News, including local reporting.<lb/>
United Press International, and<lb/>
possibly network news will be<lb/>
broadcast everv hour.<lb/>
SGA Plans To<lb/>
Meet With HEW<lb/>
Bv TERRY CRAY<lb/>
staff Wriler<lb/>
Student government association<lb/>
presidents from universities across<lb/>
North Carolina will meet with HEW<lb/>
officials soon to discuss the<lb/>
egregation case now pending<lb/>
tinst the UNC system, said N.C.<lb/>
Stale Universit) SGA President<lb/>
I.I). Hayworth Wednesday.<lb/>
The SGA presidents have suc-<lb/>
ceeded in setting up a Jan. 30 au-<lb/>
dience -vith Jeff Champagne, direc-<lb/>
tor of HEW's Office of Civil Rights<lb/>
after eight months of lobbying<lb/>
through the UNC Association of<lb/>
Student Governments (UNCASG)<lb/>
and North Carolina congressmen,<lb/>
said Hayworth.<lb/>
Hayworth cited a "lack of stu-<lb/>
dent input into a case which will af-<lb/>
fect students' lives" as the purpose<lb/>
of the meeting.<lb/>
The court battle began in early<lb/>
1979 when the UNC system refused<lb/>
to meet federal guidelines to further<lb/>
desegregation in some of its univer-<lb/>
sities. Although the number of<lb/>
black students enrolled in the<lb/>
system's M predominantly white in-<lb/>
stitutions more than doubled bet-<lb/>
ween 1973 and 1978, Washington<lb/>
officials charged that North<lb/>
Carolina had not done enough to<lb/>
desegregate.<lb/>
Former HEW Secretary Joseph<lb/>
Califano said the system was still<lb/>
"fundamentally segregated citing<lb/>
figures which showed that less than<lb/>
seven percent of the students atten-<lb/>
ding the predominantly white<lb/>
schools were black and less than 10<lb/>
percent of the students attending the<lb/>
system's five predominantly black<lb/>
schools were white.<lb/>
Hayworth charged that the<lb/>
federal government "has overstep-<lb/>
ped its boundaries" and has been<lb/>
"downright arrogant" in its<lb/>
response to the requests of the<lb/>
students to have their opinions<lb/>
heard in an official setting.<lb/>
Hayworth said that he has led the<lb/>
effort to set up the meeting, adding<lb/>
that the former SGA president at<lb/>
N.C. State first wrote to HEW<lb/>
about the matter last spring.<lb/>
"They declined to hear us, and<lb/>
they later told people from Pem-<lb/>
broke State (Lumberton) that they<lb/>
had been forbidden to discuss the<lb/>
case<lb/>
The 16-campus UNC system<lb/>
stands to lose some of the $89<lb/>
million in federal funds it receives<lb/>
annually if the matter is not settled<lb/>
to the satisfaction of HEW. Federal<lb/>
money accounts for about one-<lb/>
seventh of the $634 million the col-<lb/>
leges spent in 1978, but state of-<lb/>
ficials fear also that the controversy<lb/>
will portray North Carolina as<lb/>
obstinate and segregationalist.<lb/>
Specifically, the UNC system<lb/>
refused to honor HEW's suggestion<lb/>
that similar programs at neighbor-<lb/>
ing campuses in the state be<lb/>
eliminated to increase desegrega-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
"I'm not a states-righter or a<lb/>
George Wallacite or a racist, but I<lb/>
think that both black and white<lb/>
students in North Carolina are con-<lb/>
cerned about what is happening here<lb/>
and want to preserve their right to<lb/>
choose schools Hayworth said.<lb/>
Hayworth added that he and<lb/>
others have had three meetings with<lb/>
UNC President William Friday, and<lb/>
that the UNC administration has<lb/>
been "most helpful But he<lb/>
that the SGA presidents are<lb/>
"mouthpieces" for the<lb/>
ministrators, noting that<lb/>
students have ideas of their<lb/>
about the dispute.<lb/>
Of the five predominantly black<lb/>
schools in the system, only three<lb/>
See HEW Page 2, Col. 5<lb/>
ECU Student<lb/>
Dies<lb/>
in Traffic Mishap<lb/>
An ECU student, Edgar Jones,<lb/>
21, died due to injuries resulting<lb/>
from a car crash at 11:50 p.m<lb/>
December 31. Jones was the son of<lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. J.R. Jones of<lb/>
Washington, North Carolina.<lb/>
According to Highway Patrol<lb/>
Trooper R.G. Mills, Jones was<lb/>
driving an estimated<lb/>
speed of 70 to 80 miles per hour<lb/>
when he ran off the right side of the<lb/>
road on a curve. Trooper Mills also<lb/>
stated that the car was apparently<lb/>
out of control when it overturned<lb/>
and struck a tree, the impact cutting<lb/>
the vehicle in half. Also according<lb/>
to Mills, Jones was heading north<lb/>
returning to Washington from a<lb/>
party in Greenville. "Apparently,<lb/>
he was going from one party to<lb/>
another, and trying to make it to the<lb/>
second one before midnight<lb/>
Trooper Mills stated.<lb/>
Edgar Jones lived in a house on<lb/>
Fourth Street with six other<lb/>
students. One of his roommates,<lb/>
Thomas McCarley, offered com-<lb/>
ment about Jones. "He was a real<lb/>
fine fellow  kind of quiet, but he<lb/>
didn't party a lot. He liked to stay in<lb/>
his room and study or read his<lb/>
books, but he was a real fine<lb/>
fellow Mike Farmer, another<lb/>
roommate, said, "He was a very<lb/>
unique fellow; he cared a lot about<lb/>
other people<lb/>
Jones was an English major at<lb/>
ECU and a very good student. A<lb/>
friend and graduate student, Tim<lb/>
Wright, said, "He was an excellent<lb/>
student. We traded books and<lb/>
albums a lot. He liked contem-<lb/>
porary novels. He liked to talk<lb/>
about what he'd read. He was a real<lb/>
laid back fellow, never got mad. It<lb/>
took a while for it to hit me, you<lb/>
know. It's his absence that I<lb/>
notice<lb/>
said<lb/>
not<lb/>
ad-<lb/>
the<lb/>
own<lb/>
Klan Leader Arrested<lb/>
For Cross Burning<lb/>
Reception To Be Held<lb/>
By DEBORAH HOTALING<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
A reception for the North<lb/>
Carolina Student Legislature will be<lb/>
held Jan. 24 at 7:00 p.m. in the<lb/>
Multipurpose Room, Mendenhall.<lb/>
East Carolina delegation<lb/>
chairperson Anne Northington in-<lb/>
vites all interested students to the<lb/>
reception. "The Poli-Sci depart-<lb/>
ment, faculty and the city council<lb/>
are also invited. We would like to<lb/>
see faster communication with the<lb/>
deans and city council. That's why<lb/>
we are urging all interested persons<lb/>
to come<lb/>
The reception will include the Stu-<lb/>
dent Legislature compendium which<lb/>
is put out every year as a way of in-<lb/>
forming students as to how other<lb/>
students are speaking out on the<lb/>
issues. One of the issues to be<lb/>
debated is whether or not the North<lb/>
Carolina school system should be<lb/>
allowed to cut its own budget.<lb/>
Northington explains the reason<lb/>
for the compendium being included<lb/>
in the reception. "Each school gets<lb/>
so many compendiums. We decided<lb/>
it would be better to give our com-<lb/>
pendium in person. Each school<lb/>
delegation has been invited from<lb/>
across the state, and we're hoping<lb/>
for a good turn-out<lb/>
The East Carolina delegation to<lb/>
the North Carolina Student<lb/>
Legislature will be traveling to<lb/>
Greensboro College this weekend<lb/>
for debate on several resolutions.<lb/>
These resolutions include: 1)<lb/>
Budgetary limitations in regard to<lb/>
the UNC school system; 2)Rights of<lb/>
Iranian students to the freedom of<lb/>
peaceful protests while residing in<lb/>
the Unite J States; 3)Resolution call-<lb/>
ing for ratification of SALT II; 4)<lb/>
Resolution for increasing the use of<lb/>
nuclear power as a safe and reliable<lb/>
energy resource; 5) Resolution to<lb/>
raise the marriage license fee to fund<lb/>
a spouse-abuse, center; and<lb/>
6)Resolution to provide funding for<lb/>
UNC system professors to attend<lb/>
professional meetings.<lb/>
Inside Today<lb/>
Puffed Wheat<lb/>
CigarettesUp 3<lb/>
Rebel announces<lb/>
Art show winnersPage 6<lb/>
Lady Pirates<lb/>
Defeat UNCPage 10<lb/>
A Look At "RadarPage 10<lb/>
J<lb/>
LINCOLNTON, N.C. (AP) ?<lb/>
Virgil Griffin, grand dragon of the<lb/>
North Carolina Knights of the Ku<lb/>
Klux Klan, was arrested Tuesday<lb/>
night in connection with a cross bur-<lb/>
ning in Lincoln County.<lb/>
Griffin, 35, was charged with<lb/>
reckless driving and aiding and abet-<lb/>
ting a cross burning. He was releas-<lb/>
ed shortly after the incident under<lb/>
$5,000 bond.<lb/>
Lincoln County Detective L.C.<lb/>
Underwood said an off-duty prison<lb/>
guard was on his way home when he<lb/>
saw two men run to a car after set-<lb/>
ting fire to a cross on the lawn of<lb/>
William and Diane Ingle, near<lb/>
Boger City.<lb/>
Underwood said the guard<lb/>
recognized one of the men as Mark<lb/>
Jeffrey Sherer, a man who served<lb/>
time in prison for armed robbery.<lb/>
The guard followed the two men<lb/>
and radioed a local REACT<lb/>
emergency team for help. The<lb/>
REACT team in turn notified both<lb/>
Lincolnton city police and Lincoln<lb/>
County officers who took Griffin<lb/>
and Sherer into custody about five<lb/>
miles from the cross burning.<lb/>
Underwood said Griffin was driv-<lb/>
ing the car.<lb/>
He said officers confiscated two<lb/>
.44-caliber pistols, a sawed-off<lb/>
shotgun and a .22-caliber automatic<lb/>
rifle. Underwood said all the<lb/>
weapons were loaded and there were<lb/>
boxes of ammunition in the car.<lb/>
Underwood said Sherer, 19, is<lb/>
charged with burning a cross and<lb/>
possession of a firearm by a felon.<lb/>
The detective said Sherer could<lb/>
receive one to five years in prison<lb/>
for cross burning if convicted.<lb/>
Sherer is in the Lincoln County<lb/>
jail under $6,500 bond.<lb/>
Underwood said Sherer currently<lb/>
is on parole for a Dec. 15, 1977,<lb/>
conviction in Mecklenburg Superior<lb/>
Court for armed robbery.<lb/>
Both men were to make an initial<lb/>
appearance in court today.<lb/>
CORRECTION<lb/>
In the interview with Iranian<lb/>
students, it has come to our atten-<lb/>
tion that one comment was deleted.<lb/>
It was printed that the United States<lb/>
had attacked Oman, but the person<lb/>
interviewed actually said that there<lb/>
was a United States military base<lb/>
established in Oman to control the<lb/>
Persian Gulf.<lb/>
Unexpected warm weather brings students to the maH.<lb/>
t<lb/>
4<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057240_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROL INIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 17, 1980<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Ski Snowshoe<lb/>
Spring Break March 4 14<lb/>
Options Son si edit<lb/>
I redit I'lOl 101)0 PHVI II0<lb/>
Includes: Slopcsidc aetomodalions<lb/>
lilt tickets, lessons, and equipment<lb/>
(. im Pa according to package<lb/>
(. Ofltacl Mis lo Sauiuletv n<lb/>
Memorial (.ain, Kooni 205, ot cal<lb/>
'57 NIOt)<lb/>
SI! Kntertainer<lb/>
I he student I nion is now accepting ap<lb/>
ideations foi Major Attractions<lb/>
.hairperson and ntertainci chairnci<lb/>
ns nitcrcslcd pei sons should pick<lb/>
ip applications in the Student t nion<lb/>
Room ;u. Mcndcnhall Stu<lb/>
km i cntei ppheations musi he puk<lb/>
,i up hs I iid.i. Ian is. iso<lb/>
Major Attractions<lb/>
Studenl I nion Maioi Mtraetions<lb/>
i ommiltce will meet ruesday, Ian <lb/>
J 00 p in ni Room 2M ol<lb/>
Mcndcnhall student C entci Ml<lb/>
Bed ' ' attend<lb/>
Poetrv<lb/>
1 he last Carolina Poetrj I orum smII<lb/>
hold a rcgulai woikshop and meeting<lb/>
on Ihursdav. Ian I at H IN) p in in<lb/>
Room 24K McndcnhaH I he puhlu. is<lb/>
otdialK un itcd<lb/>
Ski<lb/>
ECGC<lb/>
i in luesdas. I.in 22. at 5:00 p.m the<lb/>
l .isi Carolina Cias lommunily ssill<lb/>
leature a jtuci spcaket al win I Ninth<lb/>
street (the Ncuman House) Brothci<lb/>
i ovinos Mill xptik on e.i retreats and<lb/>
Ming week ilte<lb/>
 ia will I 1.1 a hinlul.is pans flu-<lb/>
I ('(I<lb/>
MSI<lb/>
I lie North C arolma si udenl<lb/>
laturc will meet tonight al 7 no<lb/>
? m al NK ndenhatl in Room 221<lb/>
- lo he discussed ssill he iliis nion<lb/>
I c and the legislative reception lo<lb/>
he held Jan 2' ll members should al<lb/>
Organizations<lb/>
ll organizations Mhich haven'l tilled<lb/>
.nit a registration form should go b the<lb/>
i the nee v haneelloi 's lot stu<lb/>
denl affairs m 2'U Whichard The<lb/>
(ration i foi the organizations<lb/>
director) I1 ? ?; organizations which<lb/>
Jo noi ?. i ui he able<lb/>
,ampu .irid will not he in the<lb/>
alt tiloe<lb/>
a rat ion<lb/>
lortit . d ill i- Ian 2 It iltc<lb/>
deadln ihe information<lb/>
in the organi al ri<lb/>
Kamih Child Assoc.<lb/>
 ?ill meet<lb/>
lai<lb/>
l Room<lb/>
v<lb/>
people<lb/>
10 .Hlcnd<lb/>
Brotherhood Weed<lb/>
n! iik will he observed in<lb/>
I avetleville, I eb 10 I lvwi I he<lb/>
I as cites die Human Relations dvisor<lb/>
mission .mJ Department will<lb/>
ire a special program on Sunday.<lb/>
1 eb 10. I "WO ? m in the<lb/>
 loi luin. on the campus<lb/>
? I iv el lei die Stale I nivcrsilv<lb/>
Guest speakei will he Ihe Honorable<lb/>
Wallace I) Muhammad. I eadei o) the<lb/>
World I i<lb/>
?<lb/>
have done<lb/>
d ol human<lb/>
v 11'l I Inez<lb/>
I :<lb/>
VI <lb/>
: loens, essay - and<lb/>
Aha! Bi<lb/>
ski Massannulien, lanuarv 25 I lie<lb/>
price is S44 25 with youl own equip<lb/>
inent Without soui .ssn equipment n<lb/>
is Sf2 2' I he equipment is 4 pel dav,<lb/>
Ihe llll is ).l(s pel d.is and Ss al nielli<lb/>
Room lent is S2n lot two nights I here<lb/>
's a mandaioiv meeting in Memorial<lb/>
livnion lucsdav, I.in 22 at 4 p in lot<lb/>
those who plan lo go i .ill "2 '2X lot<lb/>
tnlot mation<lb/>
Art Business<lb/>
"Interview rechntques, Resume<lb/>
Writing and Portfolio Preseniation" is<lb/>
the look ol ihe third Business ol n<lb/>
Seminal ol the IV7S so school ycai<lb/>
I lie seminal will he conducted b 1i<lb/>
I nines lames, direct Ol ol the It I<lb/>
P icement Office, and Mrs Dot Naltci<lb/>
held, . ni theommumcation rts<lb/>
Dcparimcni ol the School ol n. on<lb/>
the evening ol fucsday, Ian 22. at 7<lb/>
p m in Ihe lenkins udlloi nun il<lb/>
students preparing lo siitei ihe proles<lb/>
sional job maikei in the ncai future<lb/>
should lake advat tagt ol ihis I Kl I<lb/>
seminal sponsored hi the I t I Punt<lb/>
l i iHip<lb/>
RAPE SEMINAR<lb/>
 seminai on "How l oon ici a<lb/>
Kapist designed loi law enforcement<lb/>
olficers, emergency room nurses,<lb/>
medical personnel and others will he<lb/>
sponsored Ian 21 22 hs the last<lb/>
i arohna I niversit) police department.<lb/>
ni the puhlu tnteresi<lb/>
"less crimes have motivated the<lb/>
merican puhlu lo wanl to .ismsi and<lb/>
?opei.lie with iass enforcement ol<lb/>
ficers more ' he crimes of rape<lb/>
and sexual assault ihe setninai spon<lb/>
s.Ms s.l.J<lb/>
I aw en I officers are<lb/>
tremendously frustrated in mans<lb/>
aspects ol ihis type ol crime (often)<lb/>
it becomes ihe responsibility of the law<lb/>
enforcement officet nol .nils to solve<lb/>
? .  . Ii k Is prepare ihe<lb/>
ise lot court lhev added<lb/>
l)i los s stu.iu. n.iiioualls known<lb/>
authoritv in the field and loundei and<lb/>
directot ol ihe Rape risis Education<lb/>
and Research Centet and Sexual<lb/>
ssauli Ireaimenienter, will conduct<lb/>
ihe seminai Sessions will he from <lb/>
a m to 4 so p m in the Willis Bide .<lb/>
f-irsl and Reade Streets, Greenville<lb/>
I urthet informalion mas he obtained<lb/>
Irom I rancis bdd lit Police<lb/>
Department, 757-6l5t. oi through ihe<lb/>
PIN i Police Inlormai s ?ork) by<lb/>
calling the I 1 police department<lb/>
I J , initial<lb/>
open i all law ei<lb/>
i pre<lb/>
PHI ALPHA THETA<lb/>
On Ihursdav, Ian 17, there will be a<lb/>
meeting ol Phi Alpha Thcia History<lb/>
Honor Sosieis at 7:30 p.m. in the<lb/>
Manuscript Collection located in<lb/>
loynei I iht.uv. Room li Featured at<lb/>
this meeting will he a slide presentation<lb/>
inscii hv Mr Donald I ennon. Dues lot<lb/>
ol the I C I Manuscript t olleclion,<lb/>
concerning the nature ol archival and<lb/>
manuscript preservation Ml members<lb/>
arc teqtnieil to attend. Ihis presema<lb/>
lion is open 10 the pttblis Ml sistlors<lb/>
are welcome lo attend.<lb/>
RUGBY<lb/>
Ruehv practice has now slatted lot all<lb/>
interested persons al 4 00 p m lues<lb/>
through I Inns "here will he an<lb/>
organizational meeting Ian. 22 at 7 to<lb/>
p in . Room (U Memorial Gym New<lb/>
members are welcome<lb/>
PAIN RELIEF<lb/>
Do sou want teliet ol pain? Ihe<lb/>
Department ol Physical lherapv.<lb/>
School ol Mlied Health and Social Pro.<lb/>
fessions, is testiiiting volunteers lo pat<lb/>
tisipate in a research project, lot lur<lb/>
thei information on hoss you s.in he a<lb/>
subject lo relieve pain, conlacl the<lb/>
Departmenl of Physical lherapv "s<lb/>
sestet.ns or Paul 1uipln al  hM<lb/>
PHYSICS<lb/>
will<lb/>
Ihe Society ol Physics Studenl<lb/>
hold a meeting on ruesday, Ian 22. a<lb/>
7 JO p in m I ?ol of the Physic-<lb/>
Building Ml members should plan ti<lb/>
attend since plans svill he made concet<lb/>
nine Ihe forthcoming trip lo the shar<lb/>
ton Harris nuclear power plant.<lb/>
PAPER MAKING<lb/>
Ihe Student Union Ml I xhibinon<lb/>
Committee is sponsoring a paper mak<lb/>
ing workshop to he held on campus<lb/>
Ian i and again on Ian IX from one<lb/>
to lout p ni II interested, students<lb/>
should sign up in ihe Programs Office,<lb/>
Mcndcnhall Registration tee is one<lb/>
dollar, tills, cents<lb/>
BILLIARDS<lb/>
Sign up todav lot the MSt handicap<lb/>
hilliatds league al Mcndcnhall billiards<lb/>
ccntci (ici a discount n ihe ptisc ot<lb/>
plav I opines arc awarded lor various<lb/>
achievements Ihe organizational<lb/>
meeting will he held al Ihe Hilliatds<lb/>
C enler on Ian 2S al fvOO p m<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
(lamina Beta Phi will meet Ihursdav.<lb/>
I.in 17, al 7 00 p m in Room 244.<lb/>
Mcndcnhall<lb/>
Models Needed<lb/>
Models are needed lot figure drawing<lb/>
classes lot Ihe spring semester, f acitltv<lb/>
members who should he contacted hv<lb/>
applicants are: C larence Morgan,<lb/>
lenkins 215a; Wesley C i.iwles. lenkins<lb/>
1340; Iran Cioidls. lenkins 1307; Ras<lb/>
hlmore, lenkins 215; and George<lb/>
I).inheres, Jenkins 12.1 Students should<lb/>
he apptosed hv anv of these stall<lb/>
members<lb/>
POETRY<lb/>
NTE<lb/>
1 he Nal una fcachet I - an i<lb/>
iS 11 i ssiii be given ai the 1<lb/>
i entei Saturday. I eb lh<lb/>
Scores from ihe examinations are us<lb/>
cd hs states tot teachei certification, by<lb/>
school systems foi selection and iden<lb/>
lificalton of leadership qualities and hv<lb/>
olleges and universities as part of then<lb/>
graduation requirements<lb/>
Bulletins describing registration pro<lb/>
cedures and enclosing regisira<lb/>
forms are available Horn the It I<lb/>
resting Center, 10? Speight Building.<lb/>
III. Greenville. N i 27834<lb/>
Persons wishin) I i<lb/>
? Jan 23<lb/>
TYPIST<lb/>
Means<lb/>
lo lh<lb/>
puhlu is tm<lb/>
attend<lb/>
? ? 6 M'plv<lb/>
in the Bik ?, Publtca<lb/>
tions Center, M w from one lo three<lb/>
No experience necessary<lb/>
'Not too<lb/>
long ago<lb/>
I was<lb/>
speechless.<lb/>
Now<lb/>
I'm teaching<lb/>
Ben<lb/>
how to talk:<lb/>
i onaId Stevenson<lb/>
Don Stevenson<lb/>
had cancer of the larynx<lb/>
voice box). He's now<lb/>
cured and talking aain.<lb/>
And helping other<lb/>
people who had the<lb/>
same cancer learn how<lb/>
to talk again.<lb/>
Cancer of the<lb/>
larynx is one of the<lb/>
most treatable cancers.<lb/>
If discovered in time,<lb/>
9 out of 10 patients are<lb/>
curable. Of these, two-<lb/>
thirds learn to speak<lb/>
again, thanks to a<lb/>
rehabilitation program<lb/>
of the AX.S. Early<lb/>
detection and prompt<lb/>
treatment can save your<lb/>
life and your voice.<lb/>
plaza<lb/>
cinema P2'3<lb/>
PITT-PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
Held Over<lb/>
5th Fun Week<lb/>
STEVE<lb/>
MARTIN<lb/>
ihe jerk<lb/>
Fvnshows<lb/>
3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00<lb/>
have been active in the<lb/>
efforts of the UN-<lb/>
CASG to be heard in<lb/>
Washington, said<lb/>
Hayworth. "But we're<lb/>
trying to keep them fur-<lb/>
ther informed he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The court fight pro-<lb/>
mises to be drawn out<lb/>
and expensive, with<lb/>
teams of lawyers from<lb/>
UNC, HEW and the<lb/>
Justice Department<lb/>
contesting the case.<lb/>
As of Oct. 23, 1979,<lb/>
North Carolina had<lb/>
already paid out<lb/>
$381,284 to a<lb/>
Washington law firm,<lb/>
and in a recent inter-<lb/>
view, ECU Chancellor<lb/>
Thomas Brewer<lb/>
predicted that the case<lb/>
could drag on for three<lb/>
years and cost the<lb/>
state's taxpayers as<lb/>
much as $1.3 million in<lb/>
legal fees.<lb/>
Jennifer Salinger, an<lb/>
East Carolina Universi-<lb/>
ty graduate who is now<lb/>
the assistant to the<lb/>
secretary of education<lb/>
at HEW, was in-<lb/>
strumental in arranging<lb/>
the meeting, according<lb/>
to Hayworth.<lb/>
New Kennedy Study<lb/>
RALEIGH, N.C.<lb/>
(AP) ? A Research<lb/>
Triangle Park scientist<lb/>
says a computer<lb/>
simulation he con-<lb/>
ducted shows Sen. Ed-<lb/>
ward M. Kennedy's car<lb/>
was traveling faster<lb/>
the car at various<lb/>
speeds, taking into ac-<lb/>
count such factors as<lb/>
the type of car, the<lb/>
angle of inclination of<lb/>
the bridge, the height<lb/>
of the wooden curb, the<lb/>
distance the car travel-<lb/>
than he reported when ed and the approximate<lb/>
it ran off the Chappa- position in which it<lb/>
quiddick Island bridge<lb/>
in 1969.<lb/>
Raymond McHenry,<lb/>
a specialist in the<lb/>
analysis of automobile<lb/>
accidents, said Tuesday<lb/>
he performed the<lb/>
simulation last month<lb/>
at the request of<lb/>
Reader's Digest<lb/>
magazine.<lb/>
His study placed the<lb/>
speed of Kennedy's car<lb/>
at between 30 miles per<lb/>
hour and 38 miles per<lb/>
hour. Kennedy testified<lb/>
during an inquest into<lb/>
the death of Mary Jo<lb/>
Kopechne, who drown-<lb/>
ed in the accident, that<lb/>
he was going about 20<lb/>
mph.<lb/>
McHenry said he<lb/>
simulated the path of<lb/>
came to rest under<lb/>
water.<lb/>
"Since there is no<lb/>
reason for him to have<lb/>
been watching his<lb/>
speedometer, I can't<lb/>
realy comment on<lb/>
whether there was any<lb/>
deliberate attempt to<lb/>
underestimate the<lb/>
speed McHeim said.<lb/>
"I'm sure the reason<lb/>
for the interest in this is<lb/>
political, but I have<lb/>
tried to avoid getting<lb/>
into the political<lb/>
aspects<lb/>
Kennedy's campaign<lb/>
manager, Stephen<lb/>
Smith, disputed the<lb/>
study Monday, citing<lb/>
Kenned testimony, <lb/>
Massachusetts Motoi<lb/>
Vehicle registrv inspec<lb/>
tor's determination<lb/>
that the vehicle speed<lb/>
was 20 mph to 22 mph.<lb/>
acceptance of Ken<lb/>
nedy's testimonj b the<lb/>
inquest judge and <lb/>
private studv sup;<lb/>
ting Kennedy'<lb/>
testimony.<lb/>
THURSDAY NITE JAN. 17<lb/>
a t<lb/>
It l I'octts fi'tuni meets Ian I" jl S<lb/>
pm in Mcndenhall 211 flic puhlu<lb/>
.itul interested parties are welcome<lb/>
Please attend!<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
IV you ' ise questions without answers<lb/>
about stu? you are and where you're<lb/>
going, about life uJ.is and situations<lb/>
sse face? tome lien .nul barken 10<lb/>
Htblis.il iitiths ih.it will eise sun the<lb/>
answers sim need I mos fellowship<lb/>
and fun with Knsk t lunch Studenl<lb/>
fellowship on Wednesday sal " iki r m<lb/>
221 Mcndenhall Kveryone is<lb/>
SK.N LANGUAGE<lb/>
fhe 1 C I s . ? I ,r auatclub ssill have<lb/>
ihe in -i meel . 1480 I hursdas.<lb/>
Ian I al JOp tin in Brewstet H ;iu<lb/>
fl - t .ill pi ?ns interested<lb/>
deal awareness, n in<lb/>
it pi ? nji (hen sign language skills h<lb/>
.iss.v - deaf studenls and sign<lb/>
language students )?'? thi not need<lb/>
be abk to sign lo oin the Sign<lb/>
Ig I ' ? , . lies planned tor<lb/>
the Spnne sfmcstei include tirsi ol<lb/>
the se.r parts on Ian 18; participation<lb/>
m Speech .md Hearing Symposium<lb/>
tleh 24 21. performance hs Sign<lb/>
t .menage Musual Interpretation<lb/>
C'loup. jnia-a. . .<lb/>
Maior prsijeets of the slub will in<lb/>
elude IVaf wafenc5x Week al 1(1<lb/>
and a t icUf trip lo GaMaudei (<lb/>
(Washington; D.C.) In Apnl rhe club<lb/>
meets every other rhursday in Brewstet<lb/>
H risi Ml students, faculty. and<lb/>
Greenville residents are united<lb/>
OPENINGS<lb/>
1 ss.i j.is iudeni representative (obsare<lb/>
open Vpplicaticms are being taken in<lb/>
the SCiA office in Mcndenhall until<lb/>
. i 2 Screenings ssill be done on<lb/>
Monday, lanuary 2s al foul fifteen<lb/>
p in<lb/>
I1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<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/>
Allan Handelman's<lb/>
T.V. Show<lb/>
will be taped<lb/>
Mark Dillard from Atlantic,<lb/>
Atco, and Virgin Records as<lb/>
well as other very interesting<lb/>
people and YOU are invited to<lb/>
discuss MUSIC of the '80's.<lb/>
THE COMPLETE<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
4 oo a oo pm<lb/>
SALAD?50? EXTRA<lb/>
ASST. VAR.<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
$<lb/>
1<lb/>
99<lb/>
TUE.<lb/>
WITH FRIES &amp; COLESLAW<lb/>
FRIED<lb/>
CHICKEN<lb/>
WITH GARLIC BREAD<lb/>
ITALIAN<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
$199<lb/>
1<lb/>
WED.<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
WITH FRIES i OLE SLAW<lb/>
FRIED<lb/>
FISH.<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
$199<lb/>
1<lb/>
FRI.<lb/>
Magazines and<lb/>
Paperback Books<lb/>
752-7649<lb/>
STARTS FRIDAY<lb/>
TTS NOT THE SIZE<lb/>
THAT COUNTS"<lb/>
What you<lb/>
think its<lb/>
about<lb/>
its<lb/>
about!<lb/>
<lb/>
American Cancer Society<lb/>
UPOQOOO pnfkt lighting cancer<lb/>
?SSCXK01SK ?MSfMHHCOOS<lb/>
FUN SHOWS<lb/>
Motif ri: 7:05 and 9:00 p.m<lb/>
Sal-Sun: 3:15- 7:05 - 9:00 p.m<lb/>
0?f<lb/>
M ? R<lb/>
SUGG<lb/>
Hf TAIL<lb/>
Records and<lb/>
Tapes<lb/>
gsSsfsi<lb/>
Up<lb/>
To<lb/>
8<lb/>
rwha s the easiest way to complete pour<lb/>
plans?no matter what youe pa c'<lb/>
By making one convenient trip tc ?<lb/>
Kroger Sav-on where you II ' z<lb/>
everything from apple cider to ?ra"s stor<lb/>
radios to footballs and more a a<lb/>
cost cutter prices No matte' mrhel ?-<lb/>
plans, complete them with oe eas ?? p<lb/>
to your Krogef Sav-on<lb/>
REFRESHING<lb/>
Coca-Cola<lb/>
$<lb/>
16-Oz.<lb/>
Ret.<lb/>
Btls.<lb/>
us Deposit<lb/>
PABST<lb/>
Blue Ribbon Beer<lb/>
1?$388<lb/>
Cans W<lb/>
COLONY WINE<lb/>
Chablis, Burgundy<lb/>
&amp; Rhine<lb/>
FRESH<lb/>
Cheese<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
Priced<lb/>
From<lb/>
199<lb/>
Each<lb/>
Busch<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
688<lb/>
HCTAIC<lb/>
12-Oz.<lb/>
N.R.<lb/>
Btls.<lb/>
A<lb/>
AMP<lb/>
mORAHCiS<lb/>
DISCOUNTED!<lb/>
TO<lb/>
Al Brands<lb/>
Motor Oil<lb/>
SOLO<lb/>
ATI<lb/>
mm<lb/>
20<lb/>
OFF MANUFACTURER S<lb/>
SUGGESTED RETAIL<lb/>
Little Debbie Snack Cakes &amp; Archway Cookii<lb/>
Chips, Snacks &amp; Bagged Nuts<lb/>
COUCH P?C?<lb/>
Sauces &amp; Gravy Mixes<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of thM ?dvftiMd Items Is required to be readily available for<lb/>
Mia In each Kroger Sav-on Store except as specifically noted in this<lb/>
ad If we do run out of an advertised item, we wlH offer you your choice<lb/>
of a comparable Ham. when available, reflecting the same savings or a<lb/>
ralncheck which will entitle you to purchase the advertised Item at the<lb/>
advertised price within 30 days.<lb/>
REG. OR DIP<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
Potato<lb/>
Chips<lb/>
8-Oz. Twin Pack<lb/>
59<lb/>
Copyright 1980<lb/>
Krogar Sav-on<lb/>
Quantity Rights R?.?r,M<lb/>
"oo. sotd to Goals, or Wholesales<lb/>
on<lb/>
FOOD, DRUG, GEN<lb/>
MDSE. STORES<lb/>
NONESOLD<lb/>
TO<lb/>
DEALERS<lb/>
OPEN 7 AM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
OPtr SUN0?<lb/>
v A M T 9 P M<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. ? Greenville<lb/>
' Phone 756 7031<lb/>
<pb facs="00057240_0003"/><lb/>
Smoke It<lb/>
Or Eat It?<lb/>
B JOHN C. EAGAN<lb/>
?.s?K'iated Press Writer<lb/>
SAN FRANCISCO<lb/>
(AP) ? A new non-<lb/>
tobacco cigarette made<lb/>
of puffed wheat, cocoa<lb/>
bean husks, citrus and<lb/>
molasses went on the<lb/>
market this week with<lb/>
the blessings of a<lb/>
medical expert who<lb/>
as it could help curb<lb/>
heart disease.<lb/>
"There are 50<lb/>
million smokers in this<lb/>
country, and we can<lb/>
certainly help a lot of,<lb/>
them quit or greatly<lb/>
reduce their consump-<lb/>
tion of cigarettes said<lb/>
I ee I Donna, board<lb/>
c hair m an of the<lb/>
manufacturer. Interna-<lb/>
tional Brands Inc. of<lb/>
suburban I os Altos.<lb/>
The nes smokes ?<lb/>
claimed to be the first<lb/>
ma-marketed, mass-<lb/>
pr oduced non-tobacco<lb/>
cigarettes ? do not<lb/>
carry the familiar<lb/>
surgeon general's<lb/>
health warning because<lb/>
they contain no tobac-<lb/>
co. Nor are they subject<lb/>
to the heavy tax levied<lb/>
against tobacco pro-<lb/>
ducts.<lb/>
Danna discussed the<lb/>
firm's new product,<lb/>
called "Free at a<lb/>
news conference Tues-<lb/>
day. He was accom-<lb/>
panied by Dr. Donald<lb/>
C. Harrison, the chief<lb/>
of cardiology at Stan-<lb/>
ford University School<lb/>
of Medicine who is a<lb/>
consultant to Interna-<lb/>
tional Brands.<lb/>
"I'm against smok-<lb/>
ing in its fullest ex-<lb/>
tent said Harrison,<lb/>
"but 1 have patients<lb/>
who won't quit<lb/>
Harrison said that<lb/>
nicotine-laced tobacco<lb/>
causes cardiovascular<lb/>
diseases that kill about<lb/>
2U0.000 people a year.<lb/>
He said about 20<lb/>
million Americans suf-<lb/>
fer from cardiovascular<lb/>
disease.<lb/>
"Ninety percent of<lb/>
the smokers want to<lb/>
quit, but only 20 per-<lb/>
cent do ? about the<lb/>
same percentages as for<lb/>
heroin addiction<lb/>
Harrison said.<lb/>
The new cigarettes<lb/>
still have about 3 to 4<lb/>
milligrams of tar,<lb/>
about the same as low-<lb/>
tar tobacco cigarettes,<lb/>
Harrison said. That<lb/>
means that they still<lb/>
pose a cancer threat.<lb/>
"Free" cigarettes,<lb/>
which come in regular<lb/>
or menthols, "don't<lb/>
have a great deal of<lb/>
taste Harrison said.<lb/>
He explained that he<lb/>
doesn't smoke, but that<lb/>
was the opinion of the<lb/>
people he knows who<lb/>
tried them.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
s. ?. -v iht i jiiipus t ummtinily<lb/>
far $4 iturv<lb/>
. ?r I undi and l"Kuf?in dur<lb/>
? . '?? ii nil mm vew ??i 'v? Jrdncid?v<lb/>
??- amawmt.<lb/>
I -?? 1 j ' irolinun u ihr oMiaal nep?vn<lb/>
I ?r 4-n,u I unami. otrteA oprnlrd.<lb/>
and puMuhrd ? and b nr ?'ud"i? o? Ka?l<lb/>
( afJirw t nivr"i'v-<lb/>
Suhtcnplion Hairs<lb/>
I5 v-ark<lb/>
UOyowh<lb/>
?? i ? U? j??ua- p?id ai Gwuuilc. N-C.<lb/>
?? Eal Cmitmmn Mxn ut located m (be<lb/>
oath Hu'lding m thr rampus Ed .<lb/>
relrehonr. 757-bi6b. b it7. bi09<lb/>
"Free" cigarettes are<lb/>
the result of seven years<lb/>
of research costing<lb/>
more than $3 million,<lb/>
Donna said. The pro-<lb/>
duct has been test-<lb/>
marketed during the<lb/>
past two years in a<lb/>
number of cities, but<lb/>
this week they are being<lb/>
mass-marketed in Nor-<lb/>
thern California and<lb/>
will be distributed "as<lb/>
quickly as possible"<lb/>
across the nation and in<lb/>
perhaps 70 other na-<lb/>
tions, he said.<lb/>
The no-nicotine<lb/>
cigarettes will be com-<lb/>
petitively priced with<lb/>
tobacco cigarettes,<lb/>
about 75 cents a<lb/>
package, Donna said.<lb/>
The company's Los<lb/>
Standardized Tests<lb/>
Are Questioned<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN JANUARY 17, 1980<lb/>
CHRISTOPHER<lb/>
CONNELL<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
WASHINGTON<lb/>
(AP) ? The school sent<lb/>
home the first danger<lb/>
signals when the child<lb/>
was in the third grade:<lb/>
he had not scored well<lb/>
on standardized tests<lb/>
and might be steered<lb/>
down a remedial track.<lb/>
His mother refused<lb/>
to believe what she<lb/>
heard.<lb/>
"I thought<lb/>
something was<lb/>
haywire. This was a kid<lb/>
who had designed<lb/>
year medical student at<lb/>
the University of<lb/>
California at Irvine.<lb/>
His mother, Shirley<lb/>
Mount Hufstedler,<lb/>
stayed on the fast<lb/>
track, too. Last month,<lb/>
after 18 years as a local,<lb/>
state and federal judge,<lb/>
she became the nation's<lb/>
first secretary of educa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
This small, forceful<lb/>
woman, daughter of a<lb/>
school teacher and a<lb/>
building contractor,<lb/>
brought from the bench<lb/>
a deep concern about<lb/>
After her son's ex-<lb/>
perience, one of the<lb/>
things she discovered<lb/>
"going on" was a lot of<lb/>
tracking ? putting<lb/>
She said she did not<lb/>
mean to criticize the<lb/>
schools "nor to say<lb/>
tests don't have their<lb/>
use. They do. But they<lb/>
youngsters into slots by also have been seriously<lb/>
their early test scores.<lb/>
"Kids ended up with<lb/>
labels that were in<lb/>
many respects almost<lb/>
as destructive as tattoo-<lb/>
ing numbers on<lb/>
prisoners said Mrs.<lb/>
Hufstedler, who was<lb/>
active in both local<lb/>
school affairs and on<lb/>
state education com-<lb/>
mittees. "Kids became<lb/>
how people and institu- prisoners of labels and<lb/>
Altos plant is capable wnole 8arnes and could<lb/>
of producing about 100 work three-dimensional<lb/>
million cigarettes a<lb/>
month, but the early-<lb/>
production is expected<lb/>
to be 30 million to 40<lb/>
million, he said.<lb/>
Donna said the com-<lb/>
pany has made no<lb/>
scientific study to<lb/>
determine if anything<lb/>
in the new cigarette<lb/>
might have unsuspected<lb/>
harmful effects on<lb/>
humans. But he<lb/>
pointed out that two<lb/>
major ingredients, puf-<lb/>
fed wheat and cocoa<lb/>
bean hulls, are current-<lb/>
ly being used in some<lb/>
tobacco cigarettes.<lb/>
prec.iooler she<lb/>
recalled.<lb/>
"I took him to a<lb/>
specialist in educational<lb/>
psychology, who said<lb/>
he was a very, very<lb/>
bright, very creative<lb/>
kid, and then I went<lb/>
back to the school and<lb/>
said, 'O.K what's go-<lb/>
ing on?<lb/>
The public school in<lb/>
Los Angeles' Eagle<lb/>
Rock section backed<lb/>
off, and Steven<lb/>
Hufstedler was kept on<lb/>
the fast track. Today,<lb/>
at age 26, he is a third-<lb/>
tions treat children.<lb/>
She told senators at<lb/>
her confirmation hear-<lb/>
ing that one of her top<lb/>
priorities in the new $14<lb/>
billion Department of<lb/>
Education would be to<lb/>
weigh every federal<lb/>
people no longer think<lb/>
about them to find out<lb/>
what they really can<lb/>
do<lb/>
She calls it "a per-<lb/>
sonal bias: I have never<lb/>
had much use for true-<lb/>
false tests, nor for<lb/>
policy for its impact on multiple-choice tests<lb/>
individual children. "I recognize they are<lb/>
"We have not been a easy ways mechanically<lb/>
child-caring society, to grade large numbers<lb/>
really. We pay a lot of of papers. In many<lb/>
lip service to being respects, they test the<lb/>
child-caring, but to my ability of the people to<lb/>
take true-false tests.<lb/>
mind w: have not con-<lb/>
spicuously<lb/>
demonstrated a com-<lb/>
mitment to children<lb/>
the 54-year-old Cabinet<lb/>
officer said in an inter-<lb/>
view last week.<lb/>
But for the imaginative<lb/>
person, these tests are<lb/>
very difficult to take,<lb/>
unless one is simply<lb/>
asking for rote infor-<lb/>
mation.<lb/>
?<lb/>
.?<lb/>
.?<lb/>
r<lb/>
?t<lb/>
EXCEPTIONAL<lb/>
MANAGEMENT<lb/>
OPPORTUNITIES<lb/>
WE OFFER<lb/>
? starting salary up to $15,000 increases up to<lb/>
$26,000 in 4 years<lb/>
? 30 days vacation annually<lb/>
? fully financed graduate programs<lb/>
? superior family health plan<lb/>
? more responsibility and leadership oppor-<lb/>
tunities<lb/>
? world wide travel and adventure<lb/>
? prestige and personal growth potential<lb/>
CURRENT OPPORTUNITIES<lb/>
? NUCLEAR ENGINEERING<lb/>
? BUSINESS MANAGEMENT<lb/>
? AVUAIWON  . LAW .NURSING<lb/>
MED?CAL SCHOOL SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
 PERSONNEL ADMIN 1ST RAT ION<lb/>
?CIVIL ENGINEERING<lb/>
? SHIPBOARD OPERATIONS<lb/>
Most liberal arts majors are also eligible<lb/>
The Navy Officer Information Team will be<lb/>
visiting your campus: TuesThurs Jan. 22-24,<lb/>
in the Book Store lobby.<lb/>
Or contact your Navy Officer Programs<lb/>
Representative at:<lb/>
Navy Officer Programs<lb/>
1001 Navaho Drive<lb/>
Raleigh, NC 27609<lb/>
Or call TOLL FREE 1 800 662 7568<lb/>
!2ndH<lb/>
THEREJ? A<lb/>
DIFFERENCE!<lb/>
PREPARE FOR:<lb/>
VQEECFMG FLEX<lb/>
NAT L MED BDS.<lb/>
NAT L DENTAL BDS.<lb/>
NDRSING BOARDS<lb/>
MCAT ? DAT ? LSAT ? GRE<lb/>
GMAT ? OCAT ? PCAT<lb/>
VAT ? SAT<lb/>
KAPUN<lb/>
EDUCATION <lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
TEST PREPARATION<lb/>
SPECIALISTS SINCE 193?<lb/>
Visit Any Ctsttr<lb/>
And See F?r Tssrstlf<lb/>
Wky Wt Mt TIM Difference<lb/>
Fltublt Frsf ranis Hssrs<lb/>
Call Day , Eves &amp; Weekends<lb/>
919-489-8720<lb/>
13<lb/>
INTRODUCTORY<lb/>
OFFER<lb/>
ATTENTION PARTY<lb/>
GIVERS<lb/>
Overtoil's is now offering a wide selection of draught<lb/>
beer in half bairels and pony barrels<lb/>
Buy your draught beer at Overtoil's low, low prices<lb/>
instead of convenience store prices<lb/>
S<lb/>
$39.99<lb/>
pony barrels $23.99<lb/>
QUANTITY DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE<lb/>
?.??. N.C. 2777<lb/>
For Information About<lb/>
Otnor Centers Outiide NY State<lb/>
Call Toll Free<lb/>
?00-223-1782<lb/>
Ceftten in I US Cities<lb/>
<lb/>
Overton s<lb/>
Suprr mat kt . In<lb/>
misused in a number of<lb/>
circumstances. They do<lb/>
not test all kinds of<lb/>
subjective matters ?<lb/>
judgement, intuition,<lb/>
creativity, imagina-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
"1 dare say if you<lb/>
gave these tests to some<lb/>
people who became the<lb/>
leaders of our country<lb/>
who didn't look at the<lb/>
world in the way that<lb/>
the testers do, these<lb/>
gifted people would<lb/>
flunk she said.<lb/>
A I SHIR"<lb/>
Exclusive<lb/>
Il siud.i<lb/>
I art xlli Stall 4 1 OO<lb/>
fubl? St OO (no?p?tlH<lb/>
nK I Student L nio<lb/>
IHIMRt RIS PRODI CTION<lb/>
LET YOUR<lb/>
FEELINGS<lb/>
SHOW<lb/>
Available on your<lb/>
choice of t-shirt<lb/>
only at<lb/>
sH!?fs<lb/>
110 a.m9 p.m.<lb/>
Mon. - Sat.<lb/>
CELEBRA TE THE NE W<lb/>
DECADE<lb/>
with the<lb/>
PHI KAPPA TAUS<lb/>
Start Mon. Jan.2lst. at 8:00 and go<lb/>
until!<lb/>
Mixers and Women on Tues. the 22nd.<lb/>
and on<lb/>
Wed. the 23rd. a Big Beer Blast!<lb/>
Come on over and Party!<lb/>
?H !????? on Wtfinrmy 11<lb/>
4KT RUSH<lb/>
?A fgmnd for All Tim"<lb/>
73-4979<lb/>
HELP<lb/>
The East Carolinian needs YOU<lb/>
We are currently in need of good writers, reporters, and<lb/>
editorial commentators. We currently have an assistant desk<lb/>
editor position open (in the Features Dept.), and ail sections<lb/>
are desperately in need of writers.<lb/>
If you think you can help us out, or if you wouldlike to get<lb/>
into the journalistic field on the university level, or if you want<lb/>
to work within one of the best extra-curricular activities at East<lb/>
Carolina, come see us.<lb/>
Here are the people to talk with:<lb/>
For Questions About<lb/>
News<lb/>
Features<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Editorial<lb/>
Contact<lb/>
Marianne Harbison<lb/>
Karen Wendt<lb/>
Charles Chandler<lb/>
Marc Barnes<lb/>
Our telephone numbers are: 757-6366,6367,6309<lb/>
We are an equal opportunity employer<lb/>
jv<lb/>
fraCag iST jjEg<lb/>
<pb facs="00057240_0004"/><lb/>
?tie lEaat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the campus community for 54 years.<lb/>
Marc Barnes, semor Editor<lb/>
Diane Henderson, Managing Editor<lb/>
Richard Green, copy mw<lb/>
Anita Lancaster, production Manager<lb/>
Marianne Harbison, ?? &amp;?<lb/>
ROBERT M. SWAIM, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Steve O'Geary, ?? Manager<lb/>
Charles Chandler, sports a?<lb/>
KAREN WENDT, Features Editor<lb/>
THURSDAY. JANUARY 17, 1980<lb/>
PAGE 4<lb/>
This Newspaper's Opinion<lb/>
WECU Signs On<lb/>
There comes a time in every<lb/>
man's life when he hears a call to ac-<lb/>
tion, a call that tells him that<lb/>
something needs to be changed. We<lb/>
believe John Jeter, the determined<lb/>
and perseverant station manager at<lb/>
WECU heard such a call several<lb/>
vears ago.<lb/>
Jeter decided that what ECU<lb/>
needed was a high quality FM radio<lb/>
station ? not a mere carrier current<lb/>
system like other second rate<lb/>
systems throughout the country ?<lb/>
but a real voice of the students that<lb/>
would carry the music the students<lb/>
wanted to hear instead of the simple<lb/>
bubble gum which characterizes' the<lb/>
airwaves in this area.<lb/>
Once Jeter started on this quest,<lb/>
he began to solicit support from<lb/>
other individuals and groups in<lb/>
university community. The student<lb/>
newspaper helped some by lending<lb/>
financial and editorial support at<lb/>
times when the entire project looked<lb/>
hopeless.<lb/>
Jeter came up against some of the<lb/>
most powerful opposition any stu-<lb/>
dent leader has ever seen when try-<lb/>
ing to complete his application for<lb/>
the FCC license. His application<lb/>
came up at a time when the entire<lb/>
administration was being changed.<lb/>
A new chancellor came to power<lb/>
and a new Media Board came into<lb/>
existence. This costed Jeter time ?<lb/>
time that could have been used to<lb/>
gather information for the FCC.<lb/>
At the same time, other media<lb/>
under the jurisdiction of the Media<lb/>
Board were having difficulties. A<lb/>
yearbook was cancelled last year,<lb/>
the administration thought it best to<lb/>
divide up the money between the<lb/>
media and various other campus<lb/>
groups. A shortage of money this<lb/>
year has caused Jeter ? and the rest<lb/>
of the media ? to cut back on his<lb/>
budget to find money to hel the<lb/>
Media Board survive its financial<lb/>
woes.<lb/>
Also, a reported shortage of FM<lb/>
frequencies throughout North<lb/>
Carolina threw another wrench in<lb/>
the works. Rumors abounded in<lb/>
Washington and elsewhere that the<lb/>
powerful National Public Radio<lb/>
network was considering a move in<lb/>
court to refuse FM frequencies to<lb/>
student owned and operated radio<lb/>
stations. Simply put, Jeter now has<lb/>
to fight Washington on two fronts;<lb/>
first, on the FCC front, where the<lb/>
federal agency is dragging its heels,<lb/>
and on the National Public Radio<lb/>
front, where a powerful national<lb/>
radio network is trying to keep him<lb/>
from getting his frequency request<lb/>
approved.<lb/>
Jeter, more determined than ever,<lb/>
now has his voice in the halls of<lb/>
Congress. A phone call to Con-<lb/>
gressman Walter Jones finally set<lb/>
the rusted wheels of federal<lb/>
bureaucracy to turning. A strongly<lb/>
worded letter from Jones to the<lb/>
FCC is apparently what convinced<lb/>
the agency to grant the request.<lb/>
So now, with the acquisition of<lb/>
the license, and the bidding process<lb/>
on the transmitter begun, it looks<lb/>
like WECU-FM will finally hit the<lb/>
airwaves sometime during March.<lb/>
We hope the station is a big success,<lb/>
and we hope it doesn't fall prey to<lb/>
apathy, now that it is almost here.<lb/>
So, we extend to John Jeter the<lb/>
best of wishes for a job well done.<lb/>
We know as well as he did for<lb/>
awhile there, it didn't look possible.<lb/>
We are all better for the knowledge<lb/>
that one person took on what seem-<lb/>
ed like the whole world ? and won.<lb/>
Bad News<lb/>
Now, for the bad news.<lb/>
Even in the light of Jeter's<lb/>
achievements, we believe that one<lb/>
thing must be clear: the fact that it<lb/>
was STUDENT (in capital letters)<lb/>
fees that paid for the construction<lb/>
of the radio station. We paid for it,<lb/>
through the Media Board, and we<lb/>
should have the final say in all deci-<lb/>
sions regarding station operation.<lb/>
We paid for it, so it logically<lb/>
follows that the station shouldn't<lb/>
fall within the realm of faculty and<lb/>
staff in terms of content or control.<lb/>
Despite what anyone says, it is ours,<lb/>
and we should fight any effort by<lb/>
any individual who is not a student<lb/>
to take it away from us.<lb/>
Pop 9s People<lb/>
Ads Are An Art Form<lb/>
vaulters and hurdlers advertising everything<lb/>
from candy bars to beer.<lb/>
And remember Schlitz, the gusto that no<lb/>
one dared to take away? Schlitz is now plug-<lb/>
ging itself as the official beer of the Olym-<lb/>
pics. Drink up, you jocks.<lb/>
? The Liberated Look. Women have<lb/>
paper? That we spent our time listening to gra(iuated from cleaning ovens, wiping up<lb/>
finicky cats talk about their food? That we spiijs an(j washing soiled shirts. Now they're<lb/>
I've often wondered what explorers 2000<lb/>
years from now would think if our entire<lb/>
civilization were wiped out in a nuclear war<lb/>
and the only thing that survived were a few<lb/>
television commercials.<lb/>
What could they think? That in our day<lb/>
we amused ourselves by squeezing toilet<lb/>
all had little men on barges floating in our<lb/>
toilet bowls?<lb/>
When it comes to fine art no one ever<lb/>
thinks of those obnoxious 30-second blurbs<lb/>
on the tube between "Charlie's Angels"<lb/>
and "Mork and Mindy No one except<lb/>
J.W. Anderson.<lb/>
Nine years ago Anderson, a 20-year<lb/>
veteran of the TV commercial biz, founded<lb/>
the U.S. Television Commercials Festival ?<lb/>
now recognized as the Academy Awards of<lb/>
TV commercials ? to honor these fine<lb/>
works of American art.<lb/>
This year he and about 100 other advertis-<lb/>
ing managers, directors and producers judg-<lb/>
ed more than 1,100 commercials to select<lb/>
winners in 69 categories. Awards were<lb/>
presented recently at a special banquet in<lb/>
Chicago.<lb/>
McDonald's led the way with five winn-<lb/>
ing 1979 commercials, including one called<lb/>
"Morning Glory which was voted co-<lb/>
commercial of the year. The NBC "Proud<lb/>
as a Peaeock" ad was the other commercial<lb/>
of the year, winning awards in four<lb/>
categories. Other winners included the sing-<lb/>
ing cats for Meow Mix catfood, Levi's fly-<lb/>
ing jeans and a "Close Encounters" takeoff<lb/>
by Stroh's beer.<lb/>
shooting pool, smoking cigars and doling<lb/>
out bank loans while pushing products.<lb/>
There is a new wave of liberated commer-<lb/>
cials, featuring business women in domi-<lb/>
nant roles. The woman asks the man over<lb/>
for drinks. The woman tells the man what<lb/>
kind of cologne to wear. The woman wears<lb/>
a Wembley tie.<lb/>
Say goodbye to Mrs. Olsen.<lb/>
?More T&amp;A. We've seen long-legged<lb/>
women in Hanes panty hose, sleek women<lb/>
in Mercury cars and "great balls of lather<lb/>
What's left?<lb/>
Lots. Many of the sexiest ads have never<lb/>
made it on the air because of network cen-<lb/>
sors who must approve each commercial.<lb/>
Because of their strict guidelines in the<lb/>
past, products like Playtex bras have been<lb/>
advertised by stretching tape measures<lb/>
across a woman's chest. Censors, you see,<lb/>
wouldn't allow the company to show<lb/>
human flesh underneath its product.<lb/>
And if you ever wondered how the Ty-D-<lb/>
Bol man came about, you need look no fur-<lb/>
ther than the censors.<lb/>
Since they didn't allow the company to<lb/>
show a real, live toilet on the air (too<lb/>
obscene, you know), Ty-D-Bol had to show<lb/>
something inside a toilet bowl. And that's<lb/>
Amongst this barrage of flying, singing when someone got the idea of having a little<lb/>
and screeching objects, a few dominant man with lemons on a barge.<lb/>
trends are cropping up on the airwaves as<lb/>
we head into the '80s. Here's a sampling:<lb/>
? The Bruce Jenner Syndrome. It's an<lb/>
Olympic year, and every true American will<lb/>
be buying the shoes, breakfast food and<lb/>
beer of champions, right?<lb/>
But the censors are getting more and<lb/>
more lenient these days and maybe pretty<lb/>
soon they'll even let us sec what a toilet<lb/>
looks like.<lb/>
?Talking Animals. Morris the cat<lb/>
became a national celebrity after just 30<lb/>
Just because someone filed a complaint seconds of finicking. But the secret to sell-<lb/>
against Bruce for never having eaten ing is not in the animal's personality, spon-<lb/>
Wheaties as a kid, does that mean he can't sors have found. It's merely in being an<lb/>
plug them? Uh-uh. Bruce is back along with animal that talks or sings,<lb/>
a barrage of smiley young gymnasts, pole The singing ("meow-meow-meow-meow.<lb/>
meow-meow-meow,meow") cats are the<lb/>
hottest thing on the tube these days. A feu<lb/>
years ago when the first singing cat commer-<lb/>
cial was shown to a test audience, 75 percent<lb/>
of those watching were able to to recall it on<lb/>
a written test afterward ? the highest recall<lb/>
ever for a commercial (the average is about<lb/>
20 to 25 percent).<lb/>
Since then we've been bombarded b<lb/>
talking cats, imbibing chimps and beaven<lb/>
that play with chainsaws. Don't be surpr<lb/>
ed if someday soon you see Mr. Ed talk<lb/>
about hemorrhoid relief.<lb/>
?Comparisons. We've entered the age of<lb/>
the Pepsi vs. Coke taste test. Or the<lb/>
"spray-our-deodorant-under- our arm"<lb/>
test. No longer are advertisers requiring you<lb/>
to rely on their judgement. Thev want y .<lb/>
to try it, vou'll like it.<lb/>
And when they have comparison tests on<lb/>
the air, no longer is it against some ominous<lb/>
Brand X that no one gives a hoot about.<lb/>
The war is on. Advertisers are naming the<lb/>
competition. Maybe Brand got a r.<lb/>
name by losing all those contests.<lb/>
?More Stars. Celebrities sell Of so a the<lb/>
admen. So every advertising team is out<lb/>
signing on more stars to push its products.<lb/>
Miller Beer, for one. probablv ahead) has<lb/>
enough ex-jocks to fill three teams.<lb/>
But the jocks are getting smart, too, and<lb/>
charging higher and higher fees for their ser-<lb/>
vices. Reggie Jackson, for example, after<lb/>
becoming a World Series hero in 1977, rais-<lb/>
ed his price from $25,000 to S35,000 pc<lb/>
spot.<lb/>
Sponsors these days are dishing out a<lb/>
total of about S100 million a year to their<lb/>
stars. Jocks. Movie Stars. Musicians. Even<lb/>
New York models. You think Cheryl TiegS<lb/>
takes those pictures for kicks?<lb/>
But while all these are trends, none of<lb/>
them explain the two Commercial of the<lb/>
Year award winners ? NBC's "Proud as a<lb/>
Peacock" and McDonald's "Morning<lb/>
Glory<lb/>
According to Anderson, there i o w<lb/>
to define a true work of TV commercial art.<lb/>
It either plop, plops or fizz fizzes. Or<lb/>
sometimes both.<lb/>
Let's just hope none of them are still fizz-<lb/>
ing 2000 years from now.<lb/>
East Candidacy Will Challenge Democrats<lb/>
"The race for United States<lb/>
Senate is like applying for a job, ana<lb/>
the voters of North Carolina are the<lb/>
employers. There are two applicants<lb/>
for the job and rather than one ap-<lb/>
plicant trying to tear down the<lb/>
other, each applicant should stress<lb/>
what he can do and why he should<lb/>
get the job.<lb/>
??<lb/>
This is the philosophy of Dr.<lb/>
John P. East, an East Carolina<lb/>
University political science pro-<lb/>
fessor, who, barring unanticipated<lb/>
circumstances, will face incumbent<lb/>
Democrat Robert Morgan in the<lb/>
1980 race for North Carolina's<lb/>
United States Senate seat now held<lb/>
by Morgan. East is widely known as<lb/>
the "house conservative" at ECU<lb/>
where he has taught since 1964, and<lb/>
he realizes that he faces an uphill<lb/>
climb in his challenge. In North<lb/>
Carolina, where 75 percent of the<lb/>
registered voters are Democrats,<lb/>
"the Republican professor from Il-<lb/>
linois" has his work cut out for him.<lb/>
East is not without support,<lb/>
however. The Republican National<lb/>
Committee, the North Carolina<lb/>
Republican Party and, most impor-<lb/>
tant of all, the Congressional Club<lb/>
are throwing their weight into the<lb/>
East campaign. The Congressional<lb/>
Club, the personal political machine<lb/>
of U.S. Senator Jesse Helms, will<lb/>
deHver key support for East.<lb/>
The Congressional Club<lb/>
acknowledges the fact that East will<lb/>
ave a rough and rocky road to<lb/>
travel before election day. Despite<lb/>
the obstacles, which to many<lb/>
political observers appear unsur-<lb/>
mountable, the Club feels that East<lb/>
will win.<lb/>
East does, of course, have some<lb/>
advantages other than just pure<lb/>
cash. The national trend toward the<lb/>
right combined with the rise of<lb/>
Republicanism in the South, as well<lb/>
as independent ticket-splitters, are<lb/>
all pluses for a candidate such as<lb/>
East.<lb/>
East held in esteem<lb/>
Despite his conservatism, East is<lb/>
held in high esteem by all segments<lb/>
of the university community where<lb/>
all too often, according to East,<lb/>
"liberalism is equated with in-<lb/>
telligence, and conservatism with<lb/>
lack of same He is viewed by his<lb/>
colleagues as an intellectual conser-<lb/>
vative with a tremendous amount of<lb/>
energy. His counterparts in the<lb/>
political science department at ECU<lb/>
say that he is motivated much more<lb/>
than the average professor in terms<lb/>
of academics and political interest.<lb/>
His students respect him for his ar-<lb/>
ticulate ability as a speaker and for<lb/>
his vast knowledge in the political<lb/>
science field. Even those who<lb/>
disagree with East hold him in high<lb/>
esteem for his gentlemanly manner<lb/>
and his intelligence. Intellectually,<lb/>
Robert Swaim<lb/>
East is viewed as being just a notch<lb/>
or two above the average professor<lb/>
by his students. He is a man who<lb/>
works hard at his teaching job and<lb/>
expects equally hard work on the<lb/>
part of his students. Academically<lb/>
he is seen as a man with strict and<lb/>
very high standards.<lb/>
Lincoln philosophy<lb/>
Abraham Lincoln once said that<lb/>
"The philosophy of the classroom<lb/>
today is the philosophy of govern-<lb/>
ment tomorrow East is a great<lb/>
follower of that Lincoln<lb/>
philosophy, as he teaches the con-<lb/>
servative intellectuality to all who<lb/>
cross the threshold of his classroom.<lb/>
Unquestionably, East has the sup-<lb/>
port and well wishes of most<lb/>
members of the university family,<lb/>
but many have qualms about how<lb/>
successful his candidacy will be.<lb/>
Even his advocates suggest that<lb/>
North Carolina may not be ready<lb/>
for two Republican senators. East<lb/>
himself sees the grip of political par-<lb/>
ties loosening. He believes that the<lb/>
independents hold the key.<lb/>
"Partisan labels mean less and<lb/>
less says East. "This campaign<lb/>
will be a media and grassroots ef-<lb/>
fort The conservative political<lb/>
philosophy of East is typically Jef-<lb/>
fersonian: "Big government is bad,<lb/>
and that government is best which<lb/>
governs least East, like Helms,<lb/>
sees the government as more of a<lb/>
creator of problems than a solver of<lb/>
them. Too many taxes, deficit spen-<lb/>
ding, government regulations, and<lb/>
excessive foreign aid are the roots of<lb/>
inflation that stifle the economy, ac-<lb/>
cording to East. Thomas Jefferson<lb/>
said, some two hundred years ago,<lb/>
"I predict future happiness for<lb/>
Americans if they can prevent the<lb/>
government from wasting the labors<lb/>
of the people under the pretense of<lb/>
taking care of them Dt East is in<lb/>
strong concurrence with that opi-<lb/>
nion.<lb/>
Thinks like Eisenhower<lb/>
East, like the late President<lb/>
Eisenhower, believes that when<lb/>
shallow critics denounce the profit<lb/>
motive inherent in our system of<lb/>
private enterprise, they ignore the<lb/>
fact that this is the economic sup-<lb/>
port of every right we possess and<lb/>
that without it all rights would soon<lb/>
disappear. Their conclusions em-<lb/>
phasize the results; more and more<lb/>
bureaus, more and more taxes,<lb/>
fewer and fewer producers, and<lb/>
finally financial collapse and the<lb/>
end of freedom. Conservative<lb/>
philosopher Dan Smoot once said<lb/>
that our government cannot make<lb/>
men prosperous any more than it<lb/>
can make men good. The govern-<lb/>
ment cannot produce anything, but<lb/>
can merely seize and divide up what<lb/>
individuals produce. Government<lb/>
can give the people nothing which<lb/>
government has not first taken away<lb/>
from them. The amount which<lb/>
government doles back to the peo-<lb/>
ple, or spends to promote their<lb/>
welfare, is always less than what it<lb/>
takes because of the excessive costs<lb/>
of governmental administration. It<lb/>
is with the Jefferson-Smoot ideals<lb/>
that East win hit the campaign trail<lb/>
? with the conservative philosophy<lb/>
deep in his bosom and dear to his<lb/>
heart.<lb/>
Domestically East would like to<lb/>
see the government assume the role<lb/>
of "protecting men and leaving<lb/>
them to the fruits of their labors<lb/>
The government should protect the<lb/>
right of people to be productive.<lb/>
Unfortunately the federal govern-<lb/>
ment, in its present role, stifles pro-<lb/>
ductivity, in Fast's fv?<lb/>
On foreign polic<lb/>
On foreign polics, the professor<lb/>
wants the government to stop trying<lb/>
to buy friends with expensive<lb/>
foreign aid programs. He sees the<lb/>
United States as the leader in the<lb/>
worldwide fight to preserve freedom<lb/>
and democracy against the tyranny<lb/>
of communism and socialism.<lb/>
"Repressive and brutal communism<lb/>
is our enemy, and it is the duty of<lb/>
the government to combat the<lb/>
spread of such says East. "Our<lb/>
foreign policy problems are self in-<lb/>
flicted. For too long we have tried to<lb/>
buy friends. The Soviets are the ex-<lb/>
ternal force seeking to destroy us,<lb/>
and freedom, throughout the<lb/>
world<lb/>
With his strong conservative<lb/>
views ? win, lose or draw ? East<lb/>
will definitely be a recognized<lb/>
spokesman on the issues, and he is<lb/>
determined to sell himself as a<lb/>
spokesman. East will undoubtedly<lb/>
receive the support of business, pro-<lb/>
fessionals, white collar voters and<lb/>
the true blue conservatives of both<lb/>
parties.<lb/>
With the same strong coalition<lb/>
that marched doggedly to the polls<lb/>
in 1972 and 1973 to send Jesse<lb/>
Helms to Washington, East wttt pre-<lb/>
sent a formidable challenge to the<lb/>
Democrats<lb/>
I<lb/>
???-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057240_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
JANUARY 15, I98U Page 5<lb/>
The Rebel<lb/>
Awards Announced<lb/>
In Competition<lb/>
By KF??F5!torNDT ? in the Autumn Wind. It was a Small Part of the Pan-<lb/>
tomime<lb/>
The winners have been announced. n the photography category, Brenda Davis receives<lb/>
The Fifth Annual Rebel Art Show which is now hang- r,rst D"ze for her photo, "Glass House and Sid Davis<lb/>
ing in the Kate Lewis Gallery, in Whichard Building, in- recejved second place.<lb/>
eludes the winners in categories such as paintings, draw- First Place in tne drawing category went to Michael<lb/>
mg and Photography. Loderstadt.<lb/>
Prize money totaled over $1,000, which was donated<lb/>
by the Attic and Jeffrey's Beer and Wine.<lb/>
The show and judging has not been without con-<lb/>
troversy. One piece which had been entered as a drawing<lb/>
was ruled by the judges to be a mixed media piece and<lb/>
was disqualified from receiving any monetary award.<lb/>
However, the judges felt that the piece should be includ-<lb/>
ed in the show, which it has been.<lb/>
According to Sue Ayadellete, Associate Editor to the<lb/>
Rebel, the judges were very surprised to find out that<lb/>
they had awarded one person two of the prizes. The<lb/>
names are covered before the pieces are judged.<lb/>
According to one judge, Tom Haines, the show was<lb/>
"strong in some categories and weak in others<lb/>
He also expressed disappointment in the Rebel's in-<lb/>
ability to have the show in Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Also because of the small amount of photos which ,f thev had been able to do this they would have been<lb/>
were entered in the photography division, the two ab,e to delude several more categories, including three<lb/>
categories, color and black and white, were merged dimensional pieces.<lb/>
The Rebel Art Show<lb/>
on display in Whichard building<lb/>
Free Flick Reviewed;<lb/>
Will Feature Matinee<lb/>
By Steve Bachner<lb/>
Feature Writer<lb/>
Editor's Note: The film "Close<lb/>
Encounters of the Third Kind" will<lb/>
be shown in the Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
this weekend. However there have<lb/>
been two changes from the regular<lb/>
format.<lb/>
First the film will include<lb/>
"Surroundsound This is the first<lb/>
time this type of sound system has<lb/>
been used in the Hendrix Theatre,<lb/>
in terrorizing his little sisters in ways<lb/>
inspired by science fiction movies he<lb/>
had seen on television. A movie buff<lb/>
since he was old enough to change a<lb/>
channel, the adolescent en-<lb/>
trepreneur made a sci-fi flick when<lb/>
he was only 16. The movie ran some<lb/>
two and one half hours and con-<lb/>
cerned itself with visitors from outer<lb/>
space.<lb/>
Foruteen years have elapsed since<lb/>
and it is expected to improve the that first effort, and the 30 year old<lb/>
speculation about their son's future, the unknown enables the filmaker to<lb/>
Speilberg, a teenager, would delight whet an audiences curiosity by pain-<lb/>
ting a horrible picture of the films<lb/>
major attraction and never letting us<lb/>
get a good look at it until the climac-<lb/>
tic sequence. You save the best<lb/>
special effects until last and as long<lb/>
as the situation is resolved, we are<lb/>
sure of what is going to happen to<lb/>
our favorite characters, then<lb/>
everything is fine. Alfred Hitchcock<lb/>
See REVIEWER Page 9, Col. 1<lb/>
Each category had received five entries each.<lb/>
A statement of purpose for the show reads, "To pro-<lb/>
vide a showcase for quality art that is representative of<lb/>
ECU students. All show pieces have an equal opportuni-<lb/>
ty to be selected for the Gallery section of the Rebel<lb/>
magazine<lb/>
The Rebel magazine is an award winning publication<lb/>
which received a second place award nationally last year<lb/>
only because no first place award was given. It tied for<lb/>
the honor.<lb/>
Judges for the competition were Edith Walker, of the<lb/>
Greenville Art Center, George Brett, a local artist, and<lb/>
Tom Haines, of the Attic, who holds a B.A. in art from<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
The winners are as follows (Not all categories have<lb/>
the same number of positions such as first place, second<lb/>
and third; some only have one winner, that being first<lb/>
place. This decision was left for the judges' discretion.<lb/>
Also, titles are given where available.):<lb/>
The first place award in the printmaking division was<lb/>
Michael Loderstedt, with second place going to David<lb/>
Larson.<lb/>
In the painting category, first place went to Robert<lb/>
Daniel for his painting called "Figure Seated Second<lb/>
place went to Lisa Bateman, and third place went to<lb/>
Mark Peterson.<lb/>
All students are invited to view the show which will be<lb/>
up until January 19.<lb/>
?MM<lb/>
One of the Many<lb/>
In the mixed media category first place went to Ella one of the entrants in the Rebel Art Show<lb/>
Mallenbaum for her piece called "The Blackbird Whirl-  o??p?<lb/>
sound quality tremendously.<lb/>
Secondly the film will be shown<lb/>
one extra time. In addition to the<lb/>
shows already scheduled at 7:00 and<lb/>
9:15 on Friday and Saturday there<lb/>
will be another showing at 4:30 on<lb/>
Saturday afternoon.<lb/>
The following is part of a film<lb/>
review which was run when the film<lb/>
first was released.)<lb/>
Spielberg is now one of the most<lb/>
successful directors in Hollywood,<lb/>
ans has yet to grow up. The film in-<lb/>
dustry should thank it's lucky stars,<lb/>
it doesn't have many any more,that<lb/>
he never did. For a while most of<lb/>
Speilberg's concepts require inor-<lb/>
dinatley complex treatment and a<lb/>
weatlh of technology, the final ef-<lb/>
fect in every case has been<lb/>
Student Observes His Peers<lb/>
By CHAD BUFFKIN<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
As a young boy, director Steven marvelously simple.<lb/>
Speilberg's singleness of purpose Speilberg used two old tricks fro<lb/>
left his Darents little room for the 50's here: First, fascination with<lb/>
THE NODDER: This student<lb/>
doesn't actually sleep, he just dozes<lb/>
or catnaps. He can distract almost<lb/>
Ever wonder by teachers and pro- as many students as the sleeper. The<lb/>
fessors usually become gray at an students close by him like to watch<lb/>
early age? The obvious reason is the his head doddle. It looks like it's<lb/>
students. They come in many connected to his shoulders by a<lb/>
shapes, sizes and styles, each with a "Slinky Occasionally while doz-<lb/>
different view of what school is all ing, he will flinch or jerk, thus<lb/>
about and an unlimited supply of knocking a book off his desk and<lb/>
cute idiosyncracies. successfully interrupting the entire<lb/>
The following types of students class.<lb/>
crunch. His papers always carry the nities. This guy is on financial aid.<lb/>
distinct odor of a Big Mac, usually His dad is a dog catcher,<lb/>
attracting flies and stray dogs if left THE QUIET STUDENT: You'd<lb/>
lying around. never know this one was in class.<lb/>
THE WELL-PREPARED STU- Sometimes you think there is only<lb/>
DENT: A tape-recorder, calculator, one word in his vocabulary, "here<lb/>
slide-rule, pencil-sharpener, brief- The only time he was called on he<lb/>
create the professors' gray hair,<lb/>
hardened attitude, agree-with-<lb/>
everything-but-don't-really -give-a-<lb/>
damn personality, or drinking pro-<lb/>
blem:<lb/>
THE SLEEPER: "And can so-<lb/>
THE MIDDLE-AGED WOMAN<lb/>
STUDENT: This housewife student<lb/>
and mother of two teenagers sits<lb/>
front and center. Because she takes<lb/>
only two courses and devotes six<lb/>
hours a day to the study of each, she<lb/>
meone tell me asks the professor, unfortunately knows more about<lb/>
"what were the famous words of<lb/>
John Paul Jones?"<lb/>
"GLPPGLPGLPAZZZZZZ"<lb/>
comes a snore from the guy asleep<lb/>
on the back row. During the guf-<lb/>
the course than the professor does.<lb/>
She is the first one in class and the<lb/>
last one to leave. She smiles all the<lb/>
time and takes lots of notes.<lb/>
Whenever the professor walks in<lb/>
Close Encounters of the Third Kind<lb/>
this weeks Student Union Free Flick<lb/>
faws of the entire class, he awakes, and says, "Good morning class<lb/>
looks sleepily around the room she quickly jots it down in shor-<lb/>
through half-closed eyes and thand on her little pad.<lb/>
wonders why everyone is laughing. THE EATER: This student<lb/>
You'd think this guy didn't own a doesn't take time for lunch like<lb/>
bed. Any day you expect him to talk everyone else; he takes his meals in<lb/>
in with a pillow and a teddy bear. class. He has a very attentive<lb/>
case, thermos, coffee cup, stop-<lb/>
watch, battery-operated fan, ink<lb/>
pen that writes 12 colors and a back-<lb/>
scratcher are standard equipment<lb/>
for this pupil. He looks like a walk-<lb/>
ing student supply store. He most<lb/>
started crying and ran from the<lb/>
room.<lb/>
THE ATTENTION SEEKER:<lb/>
There's one in every class, normally<lb/>
found on the back row. This good-<lb/>
looking chap will do anything for a<lb/>
always forgets his book and has to laugh short of setting fire to his<lb/>
look on with the guy beside him. clothes. He can mimic any professor<lb/>
THE POOR STUDENT: on campus and charm his way<lb/>
Everyone feels sorry for this stu-<lb/>
dent, including the professor. He<lb/>
wears the same shirt every day and<lb/>
has the holiest jeans in class. He<lb/>
finally got enough money to buy his<lb/>
books right after mid-term exams.<lb/>
All he talks about is food. You'd<lb/>
never know he drives a 914 Porche,<lb/>
and his dad is a bank president.<lb/>
THE RICH KID: This is the best<lb/>
dressed student in class. Even his<lb/>
note pad has a little alligator on it.<lb/>
All his fees are paid a month in ad-<lb/>
vance. He attends all school func-<lb/>
tions and belongs to two frater-<lb/>
through a brick wall. He never has<lb/>
to speak, the class cracks up when<lb/>
he raises his hand.<lb/>
rHE DISTRACTER: This volup-<lb/>
tuous young lady is a challenge to<lb/>
many male professors. She too sits<lb/>
on the front row. When she lights<lb/>
up a cigarette in class, the smoke<lb/>
drifts toward him like a beckoning<lb/>
finger, causing him to stutter and<lb/>
drool all over his lecture notes.<lb/>
Everyday she wears a tanktop and<lb/>
jogging shorts; even when it's snow-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Sa v oy Bro wn Disappointing<lb/>
By PATRICK MINGES<lb/>
and KEVIN McGALEY<lb/>
From the first moment of our<lb/>
hearing that Savoy Brown, one of<lb/>
rock history's greatest blues bands,<lb/>
would be playing in the Attic, we<lb/>
were tremendously excited. The first<lb/>
concert each of us had been to as<lb/>
mere adolescents was none other<lb/>
than the Savoy Brown Band in the<lb/>
dawning of the last decade. To say<lb/>
that Tuesday's concert at the Attic<lb/>
in the beginning of this decade was a<lb/>
disappointment would be an<lb/>
understatement. To say that it was<lb/>
an outrage would be perhaps stret-<lb/>
ching the point a wee bit.<lb/>
Somewhere in the middle of that<lb/>
void would be approximately where<lb/>
our feelings Ik.<lb/>
The crowd seemed to be having a<lb/>
big time, yet there wasn't exactly a<lb/>
big rush to get to the dance floor.<lb/>
Truly Kim Simmonds is an<lb/>
astronomical guitarist and an in-<lb/>
dividual whom we hold in the up-<lb/>
most regard, but he seems to have<lb/>
I<lb/>
lost his sense of direction and<lb/>
reaches out in the darkness in search<lb/>
of musical values. The show was<lb/>
definitely one of the most rocking<lb/>
performances ever at the Attic, and<lb/>
to borrow a phrase from Paul Mc-<lb/>
Cartney, it was a splendid "rock<lb/>
show<lb/>
Yet we did not go to see a rock<lb/>
show; we can do that any night of<lb/>
the week. We went to see Kim Sim-<lb/>
monds and Savoy Brown. Savoy<lb/>
Brown was one of the more influen-<lb/>
tial blues groups to emerge out of<lb/>
the midus British blues boom, in-<lb/>
fluenced directly by such American<lb/>
artists as Robert Johnson, Muddy<lb/>
Waters, Huddie Ledbetter, and<lb/>
Willie Dixon. Other groups and in-<lb/>
dividuals to emerge from this era<lb/>
were Fleetwood Mac, Eric Clapton,<lb/>
Led Zeppelin, and Free. It was one<lb/>
of the most influential periods in<lb/>
rock music history.<lb/>
Savoy Brown most directly ac-<lb/>
quired their early style from the post<lb/>
depression blues born in the halls<lb/>
and taverns of Detroit and Chicago.<lb/>
<lb/>
Delta bluesmen went north to seek<lb/>
work and were forced to change<lb/>
their style, by amplification and ad-<lb/>
dition of instruments, to ac-<lb/>
comodate the more raucous<lb/>
demands of the crowd. This<lb/>
derivative, minimalist sound that<lb/>
first emerged in Savoy Brown's<lb/>
music elevated them to cult status<lb/>
during the late '60s in the United<lb/>
States, however they remained<lb/>
unaccepted in their homeland.<lb/>
The early Savoy Brown featured<lb/>
Chris Youlden, a deep, poignant<lb/>
vocalist and composer, and their<lb/>
style was smooth, technically<lb/>
dynamic slowhand. The group<lb/>
grew, despite personnel changes,<lb/>
and their peak appeared to come<lb/>
with the release of the album Raw<lb/>
Sienna, which featured superbly<lb/>
written and performed material sup-<lb/>
ported even by strings and a brass<lb/>
section. Chris Youlden levt, and<lb/>
shortly afterward guitarist<lb/>
Lonesome Dave and drummer<lb/>
Roger Earl departed (to form<lb/>
Foghat). This seemed to leave Kim<lb/>
Simmonds both musically and<lb/>
spiritually impotent. Simmonds has<lb/>
found replacements, but if Tues-<lb/>
day's performance was indicative of<lb/>
the present level of inspiration, it<lb/>
may once again be a deteriorating<lb/>
band.<lb/>
We arrived at the Attic in time to<lb/>
hear the front band, who in perspec-<lb/>
tive seemed to be the better of the<lb/>
night's guests. Tommy G. and Com-<lb/>
pany are a nice bunch of fellows,<lb/>
and the lady is a very pleasant addi-<lb/>
tion to the band, musically and<lb/>
otherwise. The lights dimmed and a<lb/>
scrappy looking roadie shouted,<lb/>
"Well, I am just a Chicago boy, but<lb/>
1 am asking you folks in Greenville,<lb/>
South Carolina  are you ready for<lb/>
Savoy Brown?" Well, we definitely<lb/>
were not ready for this Savoy<lb/>
Brown.<lb/>
Perhaps the roadie's statement<lb/>
put it most succinctly, the band did<lb/>
not know where they were, obvious-<lb/>
ly did not care, they were just there,<lb/>
See Special Page 9, Col. 1<lb/>
l"W? tvorw i mc Mi<lb/>
Savoy Brown in Concert<lb/>
some enjoyed k some did not<lb/>
<pb facs="00057240_0006"/><lb/>
6 THE EAST CAROLINIAN JANUARY 17, 1980<lb/>
Kappa Sigma<lb/>
The Kappa Siema Fraternity is located at 700 East<lb/>
Tenth Street beside Darryl's here in Greenville. One of<lb/>
our national fraternity's major themes in recent years<lb/>
has been "in pursuit of excellence We here at Theta Pi<lb/>
Chapter are also striving to obtain this goal. You have<lb/>
probably heard that many senators, congressmen,<lb/>
presidents and many other major executives ot<lb/>
America's largest corporations have been fraternity men<lb/>
in the past. This obviously shows that fraternities help<lb/>
to develop leadership characteristics in today's college<lb/>
man.<lb/>
We here at Theta Pi are looking for such men. We<lb/>
want young men who are willing to contribute their in-<lb/>
dividual qualities to help Kappa Sigma continue its<lb/>
growth. Since its formation in 1966, we have obtained<lb/>
excellence in various fields ranging from intramurals to<lb/>
scholarships. However, we need future leaders. If you<lb/>
feel you have these leadership qualities and wish to fur-<lb/>
ther develop them, come and visit us during rush. You<lb/>
are just the person we have been looking for!<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
You come to take youi places in an ongoing entei<lb/>
prise a umvers.tv. It was here before you same It pi<lb/>
bably will be here after you leave. But you .an n ?<lb/>
vour mark upon it.<lb/>
The Creek experience is invaluable in providing lean<lb/>
ine opportunities above and beyond academics 1 c<lb/>
abilitv to get along with others is often a lesson scl<lb/>
ing misses and fraternities produce. Phi Kappa la .<lb/>
certainly no exception<lb/>
A special blend ol social, academic and athletic<lb/>
cellence promises to make this another one ol our I<lb/>
years. We are involved in eerv phase ol the e eg ?<lb/>
perience.<lb/>
Through fund raising projects we heir,<lb/>
positive self-image for all ol 1 asi c arolina.<lb/>
We are all proud of the spin! and accomplisl<lb/>
Phi Kappa fan.<lb/>
Come on over and part) with the Phi T<lb/>
Rush schedule:<lb/>
Mondav ? Celebrate the New Decade<lb/>
until.<lb/>
Tuesdav ? Mixer ? 8 p.m. until.<lb/>
Wednesdav Big beer blast ? s p.m. until<lb/>
Tau Kappa Epsilon<lb/>
Beta Theta Pi<lb/>
L<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity was founded as a<lb/>
chapter April 15, 1961. Since then, it has grown from a<lb/>
relatively small idea into a growing brotherhood with<lb/>
high ideals. The three cardinal principles ? virtue,<lb/>
diligence, and brotherly love ? have helped Sigma Phi<lb/>
Epsilon rapidly become the second largest fraternity in<lb/>
the nation.<lb/>
The fraternity house is located across from the art<lb/>
building on Fifth Street. Fund raisers, all campus par-<lb/>
ties, and the aspect of brotherhood make it a fun and<lb/>
active fraternity.<lb/>
There are no stereotypes in Sigma Phi Epsilon. The<lb/>
fraternity offers individuality, yet functions as a unified<lb/>
organization. So, when considering rush, consider<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsilon.<lb/>
Mon. ? Keg Party<lb/>
Tues. ? Keg Party<lb/>
Wed. ? Keg Party<lb/>
Thurs. ? Formal Rush<lb/>
Fri. ? Formal Rush<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
The Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity was founded in 1904 at<lb/>
the College of Charleston in South Carolina, in the<lb/>
great southern tradition indicative of Charleston's<lb/>
heritage. Today, the Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity continues<lb/>
its effort to keep up that great heritage with chapters as<lb/>
their representative in over 100 locations across the na-<lb/>
tion. With the contributions of these chapters, the na-<lb/>
tional fraternity has been an innovative leader among<lb/>
the nation's fraternities, with such accomplishments as<lb/>
the fastest growing and fourteenth largest fraternity in<lb/>
the nation, the first to establish a real estate holding<lb/>
company for its chapters, and the creation and<lb/>
maintenance of the fraternity's own national philan-<lb/>
thropy ? Project PUSH.<lb/>
The Beta Phi chapter at East Carolina University con-<lb/>
tinues to pursue the traditions of the national fraternity<lb/>
because of the strong ties between the two entities. Pi<lb/>
Kapps on this campus are among the leaders in Greek<lb/>
life. An exciting balance is maintained by putting em-<lb/>
phasis on the growth of the whole individual, so that<lb/>
members may not only have a social outlet that is a part<lb/>
of Greek life, but they also may have a chance for per-<lb/>
sonal fulfillment in the areas of leadership, academics,<lb/>
athletics, and a very special borid of friendship that is<lb/>
often referred to as "brotherhood Pi Kapps have<lb/>
always taken pride in the belief that not everyone will<lb/>
become a Pi Kapp, and East Carolina can offer a person<lb/>
many alternatives to Greek life.<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
Sigma Nu<lb/>
Sigma Nu Fraternity was founded at Ml ,n 1869 and<lb/>
is nourishing on college campuses nationwide. Our<lb/>
fraternity has set goals and ideals. The ideals of love<lb/>
truth, and honor are the cornerstones of Sigma Nu As<lb/>
Sigma Nu s, we participate in various campus activities<lb/>
and have a strong intramural program. Our men wot<lb/>
the fraternity d.v;?on.soccer championship W c ;re<lb/>
strong contenders for the president's cup Sigma Nu h is<lb/>
the strongest and best little sister program "<lb/>
Sigma Nu is genuinely an uncommon fraternit" We<lb/>
cannot be stereotyped. So during rush week come bv<lb/>
and see if you can. We dare YOU! -<lb/>
???II- ?TW?!f ? <lb/>
<pb facs="00057240_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 17, 1980<lb/>
Sigma Tau Gamma<lb/>
The dream was conceived at the beginning of the fall<lb/>
semester 1977. A group of 34 ECU students joined<lb/>
together to form a brotherhood. The Delta Alpha<lb/>
chapter of Sigma Tau Gamma is composed of men and<lb/>
little sisters who believe that an individual's uniqueness<lb/>
shou.d not be restricted by an organization. Our<lb/>
members are encouraged to have their own lifestyles and<lb/>
not to fit into any stereotype. We are a social fraternity<lb/>
that enjoys an atmosphere unique from the others.<lb/>
Please visit Sigma Tau Gamma. Give us a call at<lb/>
758-4140 for directions to our house. Sigma Tau Gam-<lb/>
ma CARES!<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha<lb/>
I<lb/>
Delta Sigma Phi<lb/>
Delta Sigma Phi Fraternity is based upon three<lb/>
specific principles: leadership, scholarship, and<lb/>
brotherhood. We'd like you to know what this fraterni-<lb/>
ty can do for you, as well as how you, as individuals,<lb/>
can help us grow and prosper.<lb/>
Scholastically, Delta Sigma Phi has the highest<lb/>
overall average on campus for any social fraternity.<lb/>
Leadership capabilities are more than welcome in the<lb/>
fraternity. We offer the opportunity for talen'ed men to<lb/>
eventually lead this fraternity through elected offices as<lb/>
well as through appointed offices. The fraternity does<lb/>
offer a full calendar of Greek and chapter events<lb/>
because, after all, we are a social fraternity.<lb/>
We just ask that you come by and meet the brothers<lb/>
and find out more about the fraternity.<lb/>
am<lb/>
THOSE PART ICI PAT<lb/>
ING BRING RECORD<lb/>
OF TOUR SO NO<lb/>
lSTPRZ?-<lb/>
2-PRIZE-<lb/>
3WPRI2E-<lb/>
- KEG ?mY<lb/>
-IBA.<lb/>
-T.&amp;V<lb/>
EXCuwSiveor TTK6<lb/>
Call<lb/>
Jjio dchr<lb/>
HOW TO PLACE A WANT AD<lb/>
in The East Carolinian<lb/>
findl COll! ToSaveOnAHW<lb/>
inter Fashions<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/>
Downtown, Evans St. Mall<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
752-8965<lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
756-8242<lb/>
<pb facs="00057240_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 17, 1980<lb/>
Reviewer Presents List of<lb/>
Best, Worst In Year's Films<lb/>
By PAT MINGES<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
It's me again. Nobody asked me to do it, but<lb/>
everyone else is doing it. Time magazine does it.<lb/>
Rolling Stone (Ugh!) does it. Even educated fleas<lb/>
do it. Andrew Sarris, Tom Allen, J. Hoberman,<lb/>
and Stuart Byron of the Village Voice do it. I feel<lb/>
almost driven to burden you once again with my<lb/>
selections for the better cinematic endeavors of<lb/>
the year.<lb/>
Let's call the awards the Jukes once again, for<lb/>
consistency, and to accentuate the fact that 1 am<lb/>
no more qualified than the bums on the corner of<lb/>
Tenth and Pitt in determining the best pictures of<lb/>
1979. These are just opinions. Opinions are like<lb/>
other things, and I don't know if I am opi-<lb/>
nionated or one of those other things. The less<lb/>
said about that, the better. So  here we go with<lb/>
the First International Jukes awards for<lb/>
Cinematic Endeavors.<lb/>
1. Kramer v.s Kramer<lb/>
2. Manhattan<lb/>
3. Breaking Away<lb/>
4. Apocalypse Now<lb/>
5. Dawn of the Dead<lb/>
6. North Dallas Fortv<lb/>
7. Star Trek<lb/>
8. Hair<lb/>
9. China Svndrome<lb/>
10. "10"<lb/>
Kramer vs Kramer was the obvious choice for<lb/>
ilie best picture of the year. It featured two poten-<lb/>
tial Academy Award winning actors, Meryl<lb/>
Streep and Dustin Hoffman, in one of the best<lb/>
written screenplays in years by Robert Benton,<lb/>
whose direction is superb  even better than the<lb/>
Woodman's. It deserves the critical acclaim it has<lb/>
been receiving for it presents one of the finer<lb/>
looks at the emotional bonds which affect people.<lb/>
It presents the disintegration of a relationship<lb/>
where there are no winners or losers, only sur-<lb/>
vivors.<lb/>
Woody Allen's Manhattan is my next selection<lb/>
as one of the better movies of the year. Woody<lb/>
and Marshall Brickman's script, Woody's direc-<lb/>
tion (some of the finest scenes ever done in black<lb/>
and white), and Dianne Keaton, Meryl Streep,<lb/>
Mariel Hemingway in the same movie. I was over-<lb/>
whelmed by feminine beauty. Allen is one of my<lb/>
favorites.<lb/>
Breaking Away is everybody's sleeper of the<lb/>
year, and I don't really know what it means. The<lb/>
story was delightful and enduring, that of coming<lb/>
of age in America, and the cast was a fine collec-<lb/>
tion of unknown, but respectable, actpersons. Big<lb/>
fun. If this is what a sleeper is, it gets my vote,<lb/>
too.<lb/>
Coppola's Apocalypse Now and George<lb/>
Romero's Dawn of the Dead were two shattering<lb/>
and stunning motion pictures by the finest of<lb/>
American directors. Both depict a hell on earth,<lb/>
random madness, and possess an emotional depth<lb/>
that performs a deep catharsis within the in-<lb/>
dividual. Both were eagerly awaited efforts, and<lb/>
were greeted under peculiar circumstances <lb/>
Romero's flick could not even obtain a rating<lb/>
from the M.P.A.A so it was released privately.<lb/>
North Dalas Forty is one of the finer movies of<lb/>
the year. Peter Bent's indictment of bigtime pro<lb/>
football is the grandest attack on corporate ethics<lb/>
since Paddy Chayefsky's Network. Nick Nolte,<lb/>
Mac Davis, Bo Swenson, and John Matusak were<lb/>
superb in portraying a world where players are<lb/>
the equipment, and the conglomorate is the team.<lb/>
Equipment can be replaced. The movie cannot.<lb/>
I told you about Star Trek last week. Hair was<lb/>
great. It was one of the finest musicals ever pro-<lb/>
duced. Milos Forman took his movie miles<lb/>
beyond the Broadway play; his screenplay and<lb/>
direction made a whole new story. See it on<lb/>
cablevision if you get a chance. John Savage and<lb/>
Treat Williams were excellent.<lb/>
China Syndrome was good, but more for its<lb/>
theme, timing, and Jane Fonda than for its<lb/>
ultimate worth. It carried a good message. Final-<lb/>
ly, for number ten, I'll have to go with "10 for<lb/>
the movie was a ten, and Bo Derek is an affir-<lb/>
mative ten. Action, pretty girls, the beach  how<lb/>
could it miss?<lb/>
Finally, we will have a list of the losers. These<lb/>
guys finished last in our voting. You will definite-<lb/>
ly see these on TV soon. Be sure and miss them.<lb/>
1. Black Hole<lb/>
2. Amitvville Horror<lb/>
3. 1941'<lb/>
4. Nightwing<lb/>
5. Invasion of the Body Snatchers<lb/>
6. The Jerk<lb/>
7. Buck Rogers in the 25th Century<lb/>
8. Animal House (no reruns)<lb/>
9. Killing Me Softly<lb/>
10. Blonde in Black Silks<lb/>
Welcome Back<lb/>
Dancers!<lb/>
Grand Opening Sale<lb/>
at our New Location<lb/>
20-50 OFF<lb/>
Leotards Warm-ups<lb/>
Skirts Milliskin tights<lb/>
At Barre, Ltd.<lb/>
422 Arlington Blvd.<lb/>
756-667J)<lb/>
Send Your<lb/>
Help<lb/>
Now<lb/>
Through<lb/>
CARE<lb/>
buccaneer MTT3S ??<lb/>
756 3307 Greenwille Square Center<lb/>
BEDFORD ond FONCA <lb/>
THE ELECTRIC<lb/>
HORSEMAN<lb/>
 HI A S I Ml liim .<lb/>
ihc I ? Wen,  u H<lb/>
11 <lb/>
March of Dimes Funds Enable<lb/>
Specialists to Reach Outlying Areas<lb/>
The Marathon Restaurant says<lb/>
"Welcome Back Students"<lb/>
To Show Our Appreciation<lb/>
To Our Old and New Customers,<lb/>
All Soft Drinks are<lb/>
Vz Price This Month.<lb/>
Come In and Try Our<lb/>
Delicious Steak Sandwiches.<lb/>
Want to be a<lb/>
writer? Apply at<lb/>
The East Carolinian.<lb/>
KjaiR. by Nature's Way<lb/>
specializing in natural hair cuts for men &amp; women<lb/>
appointments only<lb/>
758-7841<lb/>
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I<lb/>
FAMOUS<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
NOW HAS EVERYTHING SPECIAL<lb/>
8" small sub $1.95<lb/>
12" large sub $2.55<lb/>
10" small pizza $2.50<lb/>
Spaghetti with Salad<lb/>
and garlic bread $2.25<lb/>
1 ITEM PER COUPON<lb/>
Otter expires Jan. 31, 1980.<lb/>
SWASH<lb/>
HOUSE<lb/>
me. .osr.<lb/>
"A<lb/>
across fkom<lb/>
KRlSpy KRtME<lb/>
DOAJUTS<lb/>
FULL S?VC? LAUNDRY<lb/>
Downtown Mall<lb/>
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2 Ribeye steaks with<lb/>
Texas Toast, Baked<lb/>
potato, Plus FREE All<lb/>
You Can Eat Salad Bar<lb/>
$6.99<lb/>
Banquet Room Available for<lb/>
meetings or parties.<lb/>
For Reservations call 756-2633.<lb/>
BONANZA<lb/>
520 W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
264Bype?<lb/>
PROUDLY<lb/>
PRESENTS<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
Sigma Phi<lb/>
Epsilon<lb/>
8:30 p.m. :<lb/>
: Monday<lb/>
?Tuesday<lb/>
?Wednesday t<lb/>
 505 E. 5th. Street <lb/>
B<lb/>
<lb/>
Beer Served<lb/>
 Call for a ride 752-2941<lb/>
ft u<lb/>
?????????????????????????????????????????????<lb/>
????????????????????????????????????????????A<lb/>
ADELPHI RECORDING ARTISTS<lb/>
fflE BILL BLUE BAND<lb/>
FRI. and SAT.<lb/>
JAN. 18 and 19<lb/>
Playing the best in Southern Blues and Rock<lb/>
Blues.<lb/>
And don't forget our soon to be famous TGIF<lb/>
from 6:00 - 8:00 p.m. This week with special<lb/>
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V<lb/>
msMPH<lb/>
-<lb/>
i -?? <lb/>
<pb facs="00057240_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 17. 1980<lb/>
special Effects Highlight Film<lb/>
;ontinued from page 5<lb/>
K)k this idea one step<lb/>
irther in THE BIRDS<lb/>
v simply leaving us<lb/>
hanging' in the end.<lb/>
w second trick is to<lb/>
jmpK let the camera<lb/>
icak up behind the au-<lb/>
ience and yell "boo<lb/>
ne good screen jolt<lb/>
k an audience on<lb/>
edge of their seats<lb/>
an t ic ipat i o n o f<lb/>
aher. Hitchcock<lb/>
ice again,this time in<lb/>
ivcho. Speilberg's<lb/>
rution of cinematic<lb/>
n and names, CLOSE<lb/>
ICOUNTERS OF<lb/>
HI 1H1RD KIND is<lb/>
culmination o' his<lb/>
.vtorial expertise<lb/>
v far. Special effects<lb/>
tan more to the film<lb/>
m the) have to any<lb/>
icr motion picture in<lb/>
its. In the period<lb/>
its release around<lb/>
istmas of two years<lb/>
the til m has<lb/>
tome not only a<lb/>
?tuai success but a<lb/>
COmmerical success as<lb/>
pi I he director of<lb/>
sc ience fiction films<lb/>
of the 50's grossesd<lb/>
nearly $40 million aftei<lb/>
only 20 days followikng<lb/>
it's release.<lb/>
The $18 million vehi-<lb/>
cle had to bring home<lb/>
the bacon. Like the<lb/>
movies premise, the<lb/>
hype that has accom-<lb/>
panied it is also out of<lb/>
this world. First Col-<lb/>
umbia Pictures released<lb/>
full page ad-mats that<lb/>
appeared in national<lb/>
publications almost a<lb/>
year before the films<lb/>
Lighter in tone tha<lb/>
some science fiction ex-<lb/>
travaganzas, most<lb/>
notably 2001; heavier<lb/>
than others, the film<lb/>
focuses more on the<lb/>
human element than<lb/>
people might think.<lb/>
Just as in Speilberg's<lb/>
invitation which will<lb/>
lead to the first big<lb/>
meeting of the aliens<lb/>
and the earthlings. This<lb/>
meeting lays the fonda-<lb/>
tion for the film's<lb/>
climactic spectacle<lb/>
which fills the final<lb/>
twenty minutes of the<lb/>
film. The landing of the<lb/>
cupation with children-<lb/>
-four year old Cary<lb/>
Guffey gives a<lb/>
marvelous performanc<lb/>
and , as performances<lb/>
go, he steals the show.<lb/>
The rest of the<lb/>
characterizations are<lb/>
well above average for<lb/>
this kind of fare<lb/>
release. The mats gave Jillian Guiler (Melinda<lb/>
the project an aura of Dillon) represent a<lb/>
mystery. Next came cross section of the<lb/>
trailers exhibited in American public. And<lb/>
theatres around the the unknown force that<lb/>
country, some lasting compels them in their<lb/>
as long as five minutes, plight is a fascination<lb/>
exploiting the all star with the extraterrestial<lb/>
previous film's, a small<lb/>
group of people are mother spaceship, (especially Drey fuss')<lb/>
depicted and their beatuifuly photograph- An added treat for<lb/>
fascination with the ed by the Dennis<lb/>
unknown is explored. Muren, is a sequence so<lb/>
In this case Roy Neary dynamic that it defies<lb/>
(Richard Dreyfuss) and description. The special<lb/>
effects for this scene<lb/>
rank with those in<lb/>
"parting of the red<lb/>
sea" sequence from<lb/>
DeMille's THE TEN<lb/>
COMMANDMENTS.<lb/>
film buffs is the casting<lb/>
of brillliant French<lb/>
director Francois Truf-<lb/>
faut in his first movie<lb/>
role as international<lb/>
UFO expert Claude<lb/>
Lacombe.<lb/>
tribute to<lb/>
director turns out to be<lb/>
a good choice for the<lb/>
people who were more<lb/>
realistically in awe then<lb/>
their on screen counter-<lb/>
parts.<lb/>
The television in-<lb/>
dustry is ever expan-<lb/>
ding and with the cur-<lb/>
rent use of video tapes,<lb/>
if theatre chains are to<lb/>
survive the boom, more<lb/>
movies like Close En-<lb/>
counters are a must.<lb/>
Hats off to Steve<lb/>
Speilberg, He has taken<lb/>
the carnival at-<lb/>
mosphere out of the<lb/>
amusement park and<lb/>
brought it back to the<lb/>
Speilberg' movie where it belongs.<lb/>
the great<lb/>
ART&amp;CAMERA PLAZA CAMERA<lb/>
526 S. Cotanche St.<lb/>
Down Town<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Shopping Center<lb/>
Send food<lb/>
and medicine<lb/>
to hungry<lb/>
and sick<lb/>
REFUGEES<lb/>
THROUGH<lb/>
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1618 Thompson Avenue<lb/>
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Specials m <lb/>
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sW.<lb/>
For authenticity, the il- pat and Truffaut gives<lb/>
personel and finally<lb/>
feature stories in all the<lb/>
principle newspapers<lb/>
and magazines.<lb/>
Needless to say, the<lb/>
special effects are so<lb/>
much suberb wizardry<lb/>
enacted by the technical<lb/>
genius Douglas Trum-<lb/>
ball (Who performed<lb/>
similar feats in Stanlev<lb/>
Kubrick's 2001: A<lb/>
Space Odyssey),<lb/>
vehicles that they have<lb/>
both had close to them.<lb/>
Fascination soon<lb/>
lusion is created.<lb/>
Certainly one of the<lb/>
films most attractive<lb/>
qualities is a freshness<lb/>
turns into compulsion of approach that sets is<lb/>
which in turn becomes appart from other<lb/>
a vivid psychic implant. Speilberg Productions.<lb/>
The vision is shared by The film exudes in-<lb/>
all who are uninhibited nocence and displays<lb/>
enough to follow the the directors preoc-<lb/>
the film an exotic<lb/>
flavor with his french.<lb/>
However the majori-<lb/>
ty of the time the cast is<lb/>
simply asked to stand<lb/>
transfixed, eyes wide,<lb/>
and mouths agape. At<lb/>
one point in the movie 1<lb/>
took a second to look<lb/>
around me and saw<lb/>
J<lb/>
eviewer<lb/>
naffected<lb/>
The Student Union Coffeehouse Committee<lb/>
presents<lb/>
Lisa Anderson<lb/>
Dan Hamilton<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
12th WEEK OF<lb/>
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J175 00 "all inclusive"<lb/>
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800 221 2568) between 9<lb/>
AM. 5 P.M. weekdays<lb/>
Raleigh Women's<lb/>
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917 West Morgan St.<lb/>
Raleigh, NC 27603<lb/>
ptimit (I from page 5<lb/>
g in their two<lb/>
worth. It was<lb/>
run of the mill<lb/>
show. The bam<lb/>
headlined Kim Sim-<lb/>
moncK on guitar, back-<lb/>
ed op b a pretentious<lb/>
egoist (stage presenta-<lb/>
tion, " course) on bass<lb/>
and a drummer who<lb/>
seewu.<lb/>
Robe' Plant assimila-<lb/>
tioja complex. I he<lb/>
show was outlandishl)<lb/>
lotrfnnd our cars ached<lb/>
ev8?though we had the<lb/>
? sense to stay away<lb/>
kthe front of the<lb/>
Ber cabinets. The<lb/>
group sounded more<lb/>
like Ted Nugent or Kiss<lb/>
al Hies than the dear<lb/>
boys e had come to<lb/>
?v and love. It was a<lb/>
bit disheartening.<lb/>
Indeed. Simmonds is<lb/>
a phenomenal guitarist;<lb/>
tie carried the band.<lb/>
Tile thm secti<lb/>
mere . appeared to<lb/>
sen. a vehicle<lb/>
through which Sim-<lb/>
niftnds could send wave<lb/>
upon w a e of hard rock<lb/>
Blisin. The beautv of<lb/>
his slow hand seemed<lb/>
lost in a forest of<lb/>
Beaming and dive<lb/>
Bmbing lead breaks<lb/>
pd walls o( three<lb/>
lord progressions.<lb/>
hat was once an ar-<lb/>
?rulate spokesman for<lb/>
generation of<lb/>
?uesmasters became a<lb/>
?cared kid protecting<lb/>
pimself through<lb/>
usical masturbation,<lb/>
fraid of failure if he<lb/>
ursued the thing he<lb/>
ved, Simmonds settl-<lb/>
ed for the self gratifica-<lb/>
ion of the rock star.<lb/>
kVhat once were vices<lb/>
re now habits.<lb/>
Outside of Sim-<lb/>
monds, the band had<lb/>
virtually nothing to of-<lb/>
fer, their composi-<lb/>
tions were generally in-<lb/>
sufficient, their total<lb/>
group performance left<lb/>
much to be desired, and<lb/>
even they didn't even<lb/>
really seem to be enjoy-<lb/>
ing themselves. They<lb/>
played a few<lb/>
recognizable songs like<lb/>
"Street Corner Talk-<lb/>
ing" and "Hellhound<lb/>
Train" (agonizingly<lb/>
weak encore), but most<lb/>
of the songs were about<lb/>
rock 'n' roll panacea.<lb/>
Occasionally, Sim-<lb/>
monds would slow it<lb/>
down and give us a<lb/>
taste of the blues, but it<lb/>
was mostly appetizer,<lb/>
for the main course was<lb/>
put on your boots, rojl<lb/>
up your pantsleg rock<lb/>
V roll without direc-<lb/>
tion, sincerity or in-<lb/>
spiration.<lb/>
We were prepared to<lb/>
do an interview with<lb/>
the group, had resear-<lb/>
ched their history and<lb/>
influences, but when<lb/>
the concert was over<lb/>
most of our questions<lb/>
out blues and Savoy<lb/>
own seemed either<lb/>
nappropriate or irrele-<lb/>
vant. By the time we ac-<lb/>
quired the courage to<lb/>
ask the questions con-<lb/>
cerning musical com-<lb/>
promise and the demise<lb/>
of a once former idol,<lb/>
the group had split, not<lb/>
entirely to our dismay.<lb/>
The entire night<lb/>
seemed to be like an act<lb/>
out ol'ct'aretR Cfagi<lb/>
comedy, where our<lb/>
dreams and expecta-<lb/>
tions seemed to go<lb/>
astray in a frenzy of<lb/>
black humor. What we<lb/>
had hoped would be an<lb/>
epic homecoming to a<lb/>
renaissance of lost<lb/>
youth proved to be<lb/>
nothing more than a<lb/>
diluted dream. Well, as<lb/>
Thomas Wolfe, a<lb/>
fellow North Caroli-<lb/>
nian, once said, "You<lb/>
can never go home<lb/>
again<lb/>
,<lb/>
Fri.&amp;SatJan.l8&amp; 19 9&amp; 10p.m.<lb/>
Admission 50c Free Snacks!<lb/>
AUDITIONS Jan. 25 &amp; 26<lb/>
Look for the Union Label <lb/>
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REPAIR<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
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Quality Shoe Repair<lb/>
KAPPA<lb/>
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Feb. 5th 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
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"11H11.<lb/>
MONDAY NITES<lb/>
- NOTICE-<lb/>
TOALL<lb/>
JUNIORS &amp; SENIORS<lb/>
ATTENTION: COLLEGE RING PRICE<lb/>
INCREASE EFFECTIVE ON 1 2680<lb/>
We HI write letters home for you. .<lb/>
twice a week!<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/>
If you are thinking about buying a college ring,<lb/>
we urge you to place your order before January 26,1980.<lb/>
Our ring manufacturer, Artcarved, has given<lb/>
us special advanced notice that prices will increase<lb/>
significantly on both men's and women's gold rings, due to<lb/>
the rapidly escalating world gold price.<lb/>
NOW is the time to order. Prices will increase<lb/>
anywhere from $25 to $40 for womens and $50 to $95<lb/>
for men, depending on sty le. As your bookstore, we<lb/>
wanted you to know about this while you could still<lb/>
benefit- and save. Order Today!<lb/>
Joseph O. Clark<lb/>
Manager<lb/>
l<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
WRIGttr BUILDING<lb/>
 jj<lb/>
<lb/>
???-?? ?<lb/>
a -m ?? ?. ? ??   " '?  - ? i" ???. ?"<lb/>
"? ????? .Ve1r - ? - ? ?<lb/>
???m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057240_0010"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
JANUARY 15. 1980 Page 10<lb/>
Riley scores 32<lb/>
Lady Pirates Down UNC<lb/>
Marcia Girven rebounds<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Junior forward Kathy Riley scor-<lb/>
ched the nets for 32 points while<lb/>
leading the Lady Pirates to an im-<lb/>
pressive 71-68 victory over the Tar<lb/>
Heels of UNC a non-conference<lb/>
matchup of the two NCAIAW Divi-<lb/>
sion I schools.<lb/>
After the score was tied 34-34 at<lb/>
intermission, the Pirates took the<lb/>
lead to stay on a 20-foot jumper by<lb/>
Riley with 12:41 remaining to be<lb/>
played, but the Lady Heels never<lb/>
admitted deeat until the final horn<lb/>
sounded.<lb/>
East Carolina never trailed again,<lb/>
cruising to their biggest lead of the<lb/>
night with 2:48 on the clock as Riley<lb/>
flipped a Laurie Sikes around-the-<lb/>
back assist into the net for a 65-56<lb/>
lead.<lb/>
UNC's Anita Jones came off the<lb/>
bench to threaten the Pirate victory,<lb/>
netting 10 points in just 15 minutes<lb/>
playing time. Senior Bernie<lb/>
McGlade paced the Heels with a<lb/>
20-point, 14 rebound performance,<lb/>
connecting repeatedly with her<lb/>
delicate southpaw jumper. Deanna<lb/>
Thomas added 16 to the losing ef-<lb/>
fort.<lb/>
The Lady Bucs built to a 69-64<lb/>
margin as Sikes connected on a tree<lb/>
throw with :24 left to be played, but<lb/>
Jones' answered with a powerful<lb/>
drive to cut the gap to three with :05<lb/>
showing on the clock. The Tar Heels<lb/>
called time out and as Riley put the<lb/>
ball back into play, she was fouled<lb/>
by Aprille Shaffer as the clock<lb/>
wound down to three seconds.<lb/>
The poised Riley stepped to the<lb/>
charity stripe and connected on both<lb/>
attempts to seal North Carolina's<lb/>
fate. Thomas drove in for the final<lb/>
Tar Heel bucket as time ran out on<lb/>
the hapless visitors.<lb/>
"This is the greatest victory we've<lb/>
had at home since I've been at East<lb/>
Carolina praised coach Cathy An-<lb/>
druzzi. "I wish we play'd like this<lb/>
all the time.<lb/>
"It wasn't a conference game, but<lb/>
it was very important to us<lb/>
East Carolina kept the score close<lb/>
in the first half, though allowing<lb/>
UNC to slip away to a 26-20 lead<lb/>
with 6:17 before halftime.<lb/>
The Lady Bucs retaliated with<lb/>
eight unanswered points to again<lb/>
pass the Heels 28-26 as Riley scalded<lb/>
UNC with driving layups as well as<lb/>
jumpers from downtown Green-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
"I did not anticipate Kathv Riley<lb/>
being able to shoot trom outside the<lb/>
way she did admitted UNC coach<lb/>
Jennifer Alley. "We had seen her<lb/>
play in our Chrstmas Tournament<lb/>
and she scored most of her points by<lb/>
pulling up inside.<lb/>
"One thing I'm really impressed<lb/>
with is their hustle after the ball. We<lb/>
were standing around waiting for<lb/>
the passes to come to us, while they<lb/>
were meeting the ball. We let them<lb/>
control the boards, also<lb/>
Andruzzi, asecond year coach<lb/>
from Staten Island, N.Y is known<lb/>
for her enthusiasm and activity on<lb/>
the sidelines during games.<lb/>
"I'm glad the game is over?I was<lb/>
about to pass out on the sidelines<lb/>
she quipped. "Seriously, I think<lb/>
Laurie Sikes did an excellant job for<lb/>
our team moving the ball down<lb/>
court and playing so much of the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
"I know right near the end of the<lb/>
game she came to the sidelines dur-<lb/>
ing a timeout and her knees were<lb/>
giving her a lot of pain, but she<lb/>
stayed in and just kept plugging<lb/>
along<lb/>
With the victory. East Carolina<lb/>
improved their record to 13-4 while<lb/>
the snapping a four game Carolina<lb/>
winning streak. UNC now siands at<lb/>
14-5 including winning 10 of their<lb/>
last 11 games.<lb/>
UNC (68)<lb/>
McGlade 10 0 1 20. Thorna- 5 6-8<lb/>
16, Walls 2 4-6 8, Shatter 4 0-0 8.<lb/>
Boykin 0 0-0 0. Berry 0 0-0 0.<lb/>
Crawford 2 0-0 4. Cermola 0 0-0 0,<lb/>
White I 0-0 2, Jones 5 0-0 10, Bu<lb/>
0 0-0 0. Totals 29 10-15 68.<lb/>
ECU (71)<lb/>
Thompson 2 2-4 6. Rile 1? 6-7<lb/>
32, Girven 6 1-3 13, Rountree 5<lb/>
10, Sikes 2 1-2 5. Owen 0 0-0 0,<lb/>
Barnes 0 0-0 0. Bravbov 0 0 0 o<lb/>
Hooks 0 0-0 0, Denkler 2 -Z 5<lb/>
Totals 30 11-18 71.<lb/>
Halftime: ECU 34. L C 34<lb/>
Fouled out: none. Total fouls: ECl<lb/>
15, UNC 18. Technical: none<lb/>
A-700.<lb/>
Offense The Key To Super Bowl XIV<lb/>
DEFENSE, DEFENSE! The key<lb/>
to football, right? Maybe not when<lb/>
it comes to deciding who will win<lb/>
Sunday's fourteenth rendition of<lb/>
the Super Bowl.<lb/>
It is a distinct possibility that of-<lb/>
fense, rather than defense, could<lb/>
turn out to be the key on Sunday<lb/>
afternoon when Los Angeles and<lb/>
Pittsburgh collide in Pasedena,<lb/>
California.<lb/>
Both the Rams and the Steelers<lb/>
have superb defenses, ranking se-<lb/>
cond and third, respectively, in the<lb/>
NFL in total defense this season.<lb/>
Vet it is probably the offense of one<lb/>
of these teams that will decide who<lb/>
becomes world champions.<lb/>
The Steelers are favored and that<lb/>
they should be, if not for their own<lb/>
awesome offensive attack then for<lb/>
the seeming ineptness of the Rams<lb/>
Jusi take a look at the NFC<lb/>
playoffs. It took two miracle passses<lb/>
thrown right into the gut of the<lb/>
Dallas defense to give L.A. a win in<lb/>
the semis. The following game the<lb/>
Rams won the NFC championship<lb/>
over Tampa Bay via three Frank<lb/>
Corrall field goals, 9-0. This marked<lb/>
the first time in the combined ex-<lb/>
istence of the NFL and AFL cham-<lb/>
pionship series that neither team<lb/>
scored a touchdown.<lb/>
On the other side of the coin the<lb/>
Steelers were simply awesome offen-<lb/>
sively in the playoff semis against<lb/>
Miami and more than adequate<lb/>
against Houston in the finals.<lb/>
Quarterback Terry Bradshwaw<lb/>
displayed the same sharp, brilliant<lb/>
style that seems natural for him<lb/>
when playoff time arrives each<lb/>
winter.<lb/>
So the Steelers are a cinch right?<lb/>
Wrong. Believe it or not, if the<lb/>
Steelers win Sunday it will mark the<lb/>
first time that Pittsburgh head<lb/>
(<lb/>
?r<lb/>
-A<lb/>
yftP"<lb/>
Charles Chandler<lb/>
<lb/>
coach Chuck Noll has ever beaten<lb/>
the Rams.<lb/>
As a matter of fact the Steelers<lb/>
have only defeated the Rams once in<lb/>
a total of fifteen games. Noll has<lb/>
lost three to tfte Catifomatis, in-<lb/>
cluding a 23-14 dcision at Three<lb/>
Rivers Stadium in 1971.<lb/>
The latest loss came in 1978 on a<lb/>
special ABC-TV edition of Sunday<lb/>
Night Football. THe Ram defense<lb/>
totally shut down the Pittsburgh of-<lb/>
fense, holding them to a measly<lb/>
total of 59 yards rushing. The Rams<lb/>
finished with 192 yards on the<lb/>
ground, over 100 accumulated by<lb/>
John Capelletti. The 10-7 loss was<lb/>
the last for the Steelers in '78 as they<lb/>
rolled to a third Super Bowl win.<lb/>
In a search for a fourth win, Pitt-<lb/>
sburgh finds itself in an unenviable<lb/>
position. After ail, the last time a<lb/>
Super Bowl was rated this much of a<lb/>
mis-match (Pitt is rated an WVi<lb/>
point favorite) was back in 1969<lb/>
when Baltimore was a whopping<lb/>
18 pick over the New York Jets.<lb/>
And everybody knows what hap-<lb/>
pened in that one.<lb/>
So what must the Rams do to<lb/>
upset the "establishment the<lb/>
Green Bay Packers of the 1970's.<lb/>
First and foremost, they must shut-<lb/>
down the Steeler offense. Should<lb/>
the Rams force Bradshaw into one<lb/>
of his bad days ? he does have a<lb/>
habit of having then once every blue<lb/>
moon ? then there could be hope.<lb/>
By forcing Bradshaw, fullback<lb/>
Franco Harris and the remainder of<lb/>
the Steeler offense into early errors,<lb/>
the Rams could cause the defending<lb/>
champs to try not to lose rather than<lb/>
to win. This could do the trick.<lb/>
Even if the Rams do stop the Pitt<lb/>
offense to a degree the question if<lb/>
"can L.A. score enough to win?"<lb/>
Inexperienced QB Vince Ferragamo<lb/>
has a lot resting on his shoulders.<lb/>
Unlike Namath of the Jets in the<lb/>
Super Bowl III upset, Ferragamo is<lb/>
not an experienced and established<lb/>
quarterback. He must remain calm<lb/>
gainst tl.e vaunted Pittsburgh Steel<lb/>
Curtain defense. If he cracks, the<lb/>
Steel Curtain could turn into just as<lb/>
big an offensive weapoon as Brad-<lb/>
shaw is.<lb/>
The challenges taced by the Karris<lb/>
and by the Steelers, that in avoiding<lb/>
an upset, is what make the garr<lb/>
football what it is ? an enla-<lb/>
version of the game of chess. Sun-<lb/>
day's game should prove no dif-<lb/>
ferent.<lb/>
Prediction: The Ram are playing<lb/>
practicaly at home in Paseden. 1<lb/>
their first Super Bowl and they are<lb/>
overwhelming underdogs. This is all<lb/>
they need to dig deep and puiJ out<lb/>
an upset.<lb/>
It's too bad, though, that the<lb/>
Steelers just will not hear of this.<lb/>
They consider themselves the b<lb/>
team in the game and rightly so<lb/>
Pittsburgh teams of the pasi<lb/>
seasons rate wih any terams thai<lb/>
have ever played the game. They are<lb/>
3-0 in Super Bowl play and should<lb/>
make it four Sunday.<lb/>
Pittsburgh 2?<lb/>
Los Angeles 16<lb/>
'Radar' Is Red-Hot<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Just call him "Radar<lb/>
Herb Krusen, the 6-5 sharp-<lb/>
shooting swingman of the ECU<lb/>
basketball team, would probably<lb/>
prefer it that way. After all, he does<lb/>
dazzle fans with his seeming<lb/>
magnetic outside shots. His .558<lb/>
field goal accuracy exemplifies how<lb/>
he earned the nickname.<lb/>
But where did he learn to shoot so<lb/>
well? "My friends and I used to<lb/>
shoot all the time for money when I<lb/>
was younger Krusen said. "We'd<lb/>
play games like h. rse jusc for the<lb/>
fun of it. You know, I wasn't any<lb/>
better than any of them. When I<lb/>
came down here, though, everybody<lb/>
talked about my shooting<lb/>
And those folks haven't stopped<lb/>
yet. They're not likely to, either, as<lb/>
long as Krusen has performances<lb/>
like his 23-point game earlier this<lb/>
season against Baptist college, when<lb/>
he connected on nine of ten field<lb/>
goal attempts.<lb/>
"That night against Baptist was<lb/>
just one where everything went<lb/>
right he said. "I got the ball, and<lb/>
Herb Krusen<lb/>
I<lb/>
the first few shots started dropping<lb/>
in, so I kept shooting. Everybody<lb/>
was moving well on offense, and<lb/>
that makes a difference, too<lb/>
Krusen said that nights like that<lb/>
game at Baptist are a player's<lb/>
dream-come-true. "Every player<lb/>
hopes for a night like that, but it<lb/>
takes more than just the shooter.<lb/>
The whole offense must be click-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
The Baptist gairiw was not the on-<lb/>
ly one that Krusen used his "radar"<lb/>
to the fullest. He had a 10 for 14<lb/>
night against Virginia Com-<lb/>
monwealth, was 8 of 11 in the Nor-<lb/>
thern Arizona game, 10 of 12<lb/>
against Oral Roberts, and five of<lb/>
seven against both South Carolina-<lb/>
Aiken and N.C. State.<lb/>
Krusen's season has not been all a<lb/>
complete success, though. A<lb/>
December slump has kept his field<lb/>
goal percentage from being truly<lb/>
remarkable. The slump ended,<lb/>
Krusen said, in the State game.<lb/>
"That was the only game that I<lb/>
didn't start Krusen said. "I didn't<lb/>
because Coach Odom felt we needed<lb/>
a bigger lineup, and I understood<lb/>
that. But I guess I felt I had<lb/>
something to prove when I did get in<lb/>
the game<lb/>
After a shaky first half, Krusen<lb/>
shot exceptionally in the second<lb/>
stanza against the Wolf pack. "I<lb/>
told myself at halftime that I would<lb/>
concentrate and take the shot if I<lb/>
had it he said. "I played hard,<lb/>
and it payed off<lb/>
The early slump can be related<lb/>
directly to final fall semester exams,<lb/>
says Krusen. "I'm not making ex-<lb/>
cuses he said, "but I don't think I<lb/>
had my mind on the game then like I<lb/>
should have. I seemed to be concen-<lb/>
trating more on books<lb/>
The senior from Silver Spring,<lb/>
Md noted that this year's version<lb/>
of the Pirates, under first-year head<lb/>
coach Dave Odom, was a more in-<lb/>
tense team than those that he has<lb/>
played with in the past.<lb/>
"I look at our record, and we're<lb/>
8-8 (actually 9-7 due to a forfeit),<lb/>
and we were 12-15 last year<lb/>
Krusen proclaimed. "I keep asking<lb/>
myself how the two stack up. Coach<lb/>
Odom has us well-prepared each<lb/>
game. We probably had more talent<lb/>
last year with (Oliver) Mack and<lb/>
(Greg) Cornelius, but this season we<lb/>
have the unity that we've never had<lb/>
before<lb/>
Krusen noted that the Pirate<lb/>
record this season is dotted with<lb/>
close contests. Indeed, eight of the<lb/>
16 games were won by five points or<lb/>
less. Five of those games were decid-<lb/>
ed by a single point.<lb/>
Five of the eight decided by five<lb/>
or less have been lost by the Pirates.<lb/>
Krusen thinks he knows why.<lb/>
"The reason is a simple lack of<lb/>
confidence he said. "If you check<lb/>
back you'll see that we can always<lb/>
come back. Like at Oral Roberts ?<lb/>
we were 11 down and came back.<lb/>
Once we come back, though, we are<lb/>
trying not to lose rather than trying<lb/>
to win<lb/>
Krusen added that he felt the ear-<lb/>
ly defeats in those close games<lb/>
would help the Pirates later on.<lb/>
"We have 11 more games. We've<lb/>
played well against both State and<lb/>
Duke. I look forward to the rest of<lb/>
the season and am sure we will learn<lb/>
from our early season mistakes<lb/>
One of the games that Krusen<lb/>
anxiously awaits is the Feb. 13 mat-<lb/>
chup at Maryland. "That's my last<lb/>
chance to beat an ACC team said<lb/>
the ECU senior. "It's also the las'<lb/>
chance for me to play in front of my<lb/>
friends and family in Maryland. We<lb/>
play them right in the middle of<lb/>
their conference schedule. Who I<lb/>
knows? We might surprise some<lb/>
people<lb/>
So might the 6-5 Krusen if his<lb/>
"radar" is in true form.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057240_0011"/><lb/>
o<lb/>
Bv CHARLES<lb/>
CHANDLE<lb/>
sports Editor<lb/>
ftei its 63-52 loss to<lb/>
fames Madison last<lb/>
Monday night, the last<lb/>
rolina basketball<lb/>
n had a full week<lb/>
before resuming<lb/>
oa lanuary 21 at<lb/>
e againsi Baptist.<lb/>
could have<lb/>
le Pirate coach<lb/>
i Mum happiei.<lb/>
W e have been on<lb/>
-ally an NBA<lb/>
l1 the past feu<lb/>
Odom said,<lb/>
ith a week bet<lb/>
ames, I think we<lb/>
some time off to<lb/>
u ate, and I am<lb/>
l?' ul thai we've eot<lb/>
es Welcome<lb/>
Week Layoff<lb/>
?E!ASTCAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANLARV P. 1980<lb/>
veek ofl comes<lb/>
J foi both the<lb/>
and the<lb/>
 dom said.<lb/>
semester is just<lb/>
- "ell gel our<lb/>
- oncentrate on<lb/>
he said, jt<lb/>
give t h e<lb/>
stfi achance<lb/>
the road<lb/>
tot a aw hile,<lb/>
. - alter<lb/>
day span<lb/>
a trip to<lb/>
1 io (ace Oral<lb/>
definitely<lb/>
the rest. Foi<lb/>
b Krusen at-<lb/>
the loss to<lb/>
Monday to a<lb/>
obi em .<lb/>
played a<lb/>
a me said<lb/>
we jusi<lb/>
physical-<lb/>
re ready men<lb/>
seemed to<lb/>
n the second<lb/>
.iii,<lb/>
Hei<lb/>
;reed that a<lb/>
nhould help<lb/>
I think our<lb/>
guys need and deserve<lb/>
some time to rest and<lb/>
get away from the<lb/>
game he said. "In the<lb/>
second half at Madison<lb/>
we had our worst ex-<lb/>
ecution offensively of<lb/>
th-e year, h was'due<lb/>
Partly to Madison's<lb/>
Play, but fatigue<lb/>
definitely hurt us<lb/>
Eleven games remain<lb/>
on the Pirate schedule,<lb/>
eluding a stretch<lb/>
beginning Feb. 2 when<lb/>
ECU laces Detroit<lb/>
South Carolina, Illinois<lb/>
State. Delaware State<lb/>
and Maryland, con-<lb/>
secutively.<lb/>
"The bulk o our<lb/>
schedule is still ahead<lb/>
pi us Odom said,<lb/>
"and if we are to have a<lb/>
winning season, which<lb/>
ls our goal, then we<lb/>
must play well in every<lb/>
game. Sure some of<lb/>
'bem are against big<lb/>
names, but each one in<lb/>
important to out goal<lb/>
In Baptist, the<lb/>
Pirates face potential<lb/>
disaster. Baptist js<lb/>
winlessat 0-10 and was<lb/>
humiliated by ECU<lb/>
Jan. 10, 99-77. A let-<lb/>
down against such a<lb/>
club eon Id really<lb/>
dampen Odom's<lb/>
troops.<lb/>
In addition to their<lb/>
10 losses this season,<lb/>
the Buccaneers lost the<lb/>
final 14 games of the<lb/>
19 8-79 season, making<lb/>
i heir losing streak a<lb/>
depressing 24 contests.<lb/>
The Bucs are lead bv<lb/>
6-7 forward Eddie<lb/>
ralley, who averages<lb/>
16.7 points and 6.8 re-<lb/>
bounds per contest.<lb/>
Junioi guard tiric Ten-<lb/>
nille contributes 14.6<lb/>
points per game.<lb/>
George Maynor, a<lb/>
6-3 guard, leads the<lb/>
Pirates' attack averag-<lb/>
ing 14.1 points. Krusen<lb/>
averages 12.7, and for-<lb/>
ward Herb Gray has<lb/>
been contributing at a<lb/>
rate of 10.8 per game.<lb/>
Gray is also the leading<lb/>
rebounder, averaging<lb/>
7.8 per contest.<lb/>
PIRATE NOTES:<lb/>
ECU is averaging 71.7<lb/>
points a game com-<lb/>
pared to 70.7 for their<lb/>
o p -<lb/>
poncnts surprisingly,<lb/>
the Pirates are out-<lb/>
rebounding their op-<lb/>
ponents despite a<lb/>
height disadvantage in<lb/>
most games, 37.6 to<lb/>
35.0forward Herb<lb/>
Gray is the only ECU<lb/>
player who has started<lb/>
all 16 games played<lb/>
thus faras a team<lb/>
ECU averages 48.6 per-<lb/>
cent from the field and<lb/>
63.4 percent from the<lb/>
free throw<lb/>
lineKrusen and Gray<lb/>
figure to become the<lb/>
fourteenth and fif-<lb/>
teenth Pirates to eclipse<lb/>
the 1,000 point mark<lb/>
sometime this season.<lb/>
Krusen currently has<lb/>
965 and Grav 896.<lb/>
Dennard out<lb/>
DURHAM<lb/>
(AP)? Duke University<lb/>
basketball player Ken-<lb/>
ny Dennard has been<lb/>
admitted to Duke<lb/>
Medical Center for<lb/>
treatment o complica-<lb/>
tions involving a bruis-<lb/>
ed thigh.<lb/>
The injury means<lb/>
Dennard will not plav<lb/>
in Duke's Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference game<lb/>
with Wake<lb/>
Forest.<lb/>
Dennard, of King,<lb/>
N.C was admitted<lb/>
Sunday night for treat-<lb/>
ment of the injury he<lb/>
received in practice on<lb/>
Jan. 4.<lb/>
School officials said<lb/>
Tuesday that it's<lb/>
doubtful Dennard will<lb/>
play in the ACC game<lb/>
Saturday afternoon<lb/>
against North Carolina<lb/>
State.<lb/>
11<lb/>
WELL BABY CARg<lb/>
I<lb/>
PE0iAx - M,<lb/>
? - ? ? a .s s<lb/>
examines a healthy : ? s a<lb/>
leac? March - : .<lb/>
?pnB?T<lb/>
Distributed<lb/>
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Taylor<lb/>
Beverage Co.<lb/>
Goldsboro<lb/>
IMPORTED<lb/>
ECU's Tony Byles<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
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FOR SALE<lb/>
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79 vw VAN must sell reduced<lb/>
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bottom $40. 756 0895. 757 6961 ext<lb/>
268.<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED to share<lb/>
three bedroom house, one mile<lb/>
from campus. Call 758 5681<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMATE needed to<lb/>
sharer half rent and utilities<lb/>
Apartment 5 blocks from campus<lb/>
Call 758 0631<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed<lb/>
immediately to share large housL<lb/>
on Woodlawn Graduate student<lb/>
of professional preferred. Call<lb/>
758 7140 after 5:00.<lb/>
Female Roommate, Needed im<lb/>
mediately, preferably grad stu<lb/>
dent Would have private room,<lb/>
can be furnished Within walking<lb/>
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rent, utilities, and phone Call<lb/>
758 1636<lb/>
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HAS A 24 HOUR<lb/>
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Monday Jan. 21 thru Wednesday Jan. 16<lb/>
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Complete with Idaho King Baked<lb/>
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LET VICKS HELP YOU<lb/>
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regS 1.85 NOW NOW $1.35<lb/>
Vicks VapoRub 1.5oz.<lb/>
regS1.52OW$1.03<lb/>
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reg$2.81 NQW $2.49<lb/>
Vicks Nycpiil lOoz.<lb/>
reg$3.77jow$309<lb/>
Vicks Sinex long acting<lb/>
nasal spray loz.<lb/>
reg$3.15 Now $2.39<lb/>
Vicks Oracin Throat Lozenges<lb/>
regular or eherrv<lb/>
reg$1.73 NOW $1.19<lb/>
Vicks Cough Drops<lb/>
regular, wild cherry,blue mint,<lb/>
or lemon flavor reg 30c each<lb/>
NOW 4 for $1.00<lb/>
Vicks Formula 44 6oz.<lb/>
reg$3.14 NOW $2.79<lb/>
Vicks Formula 44-D 6oz.<lb/>
reg $3.32 NOW $2.75<lb/>
tiwi<lb/>
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758-2712<lb/>
Located On Evan Street<lb/>
Quality e Competitive Prices e Service<lb/>
t11 DteMmon Am. ?h St. ? Memorial Or.<lb/>
75&amp;J105 7SM1M<lb/>
<pb facs="00057240_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 17, 1980<lb/>
NBA<lb/>
Standings<lb/>
National Basketball Association<lb/>
M K (.lance<lb/>
B? The Associated Press<lb/>
r astern onference<lb/>
Atlantic Ditision<lb/>
W I<lb/>
Hilton 2 II<lb/>
Philadelphia 2 II<lb/>
Washington 20 2 2<lb/>
New Noik 22 26<lb/>
New I ersey in s<lb/>
( i i! 11 j I Division<lb/>
MUnta ;x in<lb/>
N - Antonio J4 2 l<lb/>
Pel.<lb/>
744<lb/>
"44<lb/>
476<lb/>
4SS<lb/>
1v)<lb/>
(.H<lb/>
I I '<lb/>
12'<lb/>
15<lb/>
H<lb/>
 n<lb/>
I) c I tl I I<lb/>
Ka sas<lb/>
( h cag '<lb/>
-  .<lb/>
I ju name nm intituled<lb/>
I nesd a j's<lb/>
Is). New York I 10<lb/>
u ishmgton 100<lb/>
 12J, New lersev I Is)<lb/>
II. Ka isi . I -?<lb/>
17 ! v tcrW<lb/>
<lb/>
20 25<lb/>
20 27<lb/>
II J5<lb/>
Western onference<lb/>
Midwest DiMMnn<lb/>
i 29 20<lb/>
26 21<lb/>
15 29<lb/>
In ?2<lb/>
13 3<lb/>
Pacific Division<lb/>
U I 3<lb/>
l 15<lb/>
29 I 7<lb/>
2h 23<lb/>
:4 :4<lb/>
14 1 I<lb/>
J I I<lb/>
500<lb/>
444<lb/>
426<lb/>
239<lb/>
S42<lb/>
ss A<lb/>
341<lb/>
33 <lb/>
:si<lb/>
72 3<lb/>
h"4<lb/>
630<lb/>
531<lb/>
500<lb/>
31 I<lb/>
Coaches Seldom Enjoy Flying<lb/>
17<lb/>
I I '<lb/>
12'<lb/>
14"<lb/>
4'<lb/>
s)<lb/>
10'<lb/>
19<lb/>
t? j in e s<lb/>
RALEIGH<lb/>
(AP)?College coaches<lb/>
who enjoy the<lb/>
recruiting aspect of<lb/>
their jobs are few and<lb/>
far between, and one of<lb/>
the most distasteful<lb/>
aspects is traveling,<lb/>
particularly in private<lb/>
planes.<lb/>
The subject has<lb/>
received its fair share of<lb/>
attention following the<lb/>
death last Friday of<lb/>
Louisiana State foot-<lb/>
ball coach Bo Rein in a<lb/>
light plane crash. The<lb/>
former North Carolina<lb/>
State coach and his<lb/>
pilot presumably died<lb/>
when their plane plung-<lb/>
ed into the ocean off<lb/>
the Virginia coast after<lb/>
wandering more than<lb/>
1,000 miles off course<lb/>
during a recruiting trip.<lb/>
Despite the fears<lb/>
most express for flying<lb/>
in small planes under<lb/>
sometimes questionable<lb/>
weather conditions,<lb/>
most say the practice<lb/>
will continue because<lb/>
it's the most practical<lb/>
way to do a competitive<lb/>
job.<lb/>
"You could drive it,<lb/>
but you would leave<lb/>
some recruits out. At<lb/>
times, it is necessary to<lb/>
fly said Monte Kif-<lb/>
fin, Rein's successor at<lb/>
N.C. State.<lb/>
"It's essential said<lb/>
Clemson football coach<lb/>
Danny Ford.<lb/>
"I don't think it<lb/>
crosses people's minds<lb/>
until something hap-<lb/>
pens. When you bring<lb/>
the situation close to<lb/>
home, you start<lb/>
wondering. But when<lb/>
I've got somewhere to<lb/>
get to, I've got to go<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Football and basket-<lb/>
ball coaches "need to<lb/>
be in 40 different places<lb/>
at one time said Bill<lb/>
Cobey, athletic director<lb/>
at the University of<lb/>
North Carorlina.<lb/>
"The way to expedite<lb/>
is private aircraft. They<lb/>
can't afford to spend<lb/>
their time waiting in<lb/>
airports Cobey said.<lb/>
The problem of short<lb/>
intervals between ap-<lb/>
pointments with<lb/>
recruits makes the pro-<lb/>
blem all the more<lb/>
acute, said Tom Flet-<lb/>
cher, Virginia Tech's<lb/>
head football recruiter.<lb/>
"You can only do it<lb/>
with private planes<lb/>
Fletcher said. "We<lb/>
have coaches that are<lb/>
really worried. But if<lb/>
you have a business<lb/>
that requires flying,<lb/>
you'll find a number of<lb/>
people in the business<lb/>
that are apprehensive<lb/>
about flying. Unless<lb/>
you made a commit-<lb/>
ment to the Air Force I<lb/>
don't think you'll ever<lb/>
feel as safe in the air as<lb/>
on the ground.<lb/>
"The Rein crash hits<lb/>
home. But statistics still<lb/>
point out that air travel<lb/>
is real safe in com-<lb/>
parison with the<lb/>
automobile Fletcher<lb/>
said.<lb/>
That may be so, but<lb/>
N.C. State basketball<lb/>
coach Norm Sloan sas<lb/>
he gave up flying in<lb/>
private aircraft three<lb/>
years ago after an un-<lb/>
successful recruiting<lb/>
trip to see Gene Banks<lb/>
in Philadelphia. Banks<lb/>
later went to Duke.<lb/>
"Flying doesn't seem<lb/>
natural to me said<lb/>
Sloan, who now<lb/>
restricts his air travel to<lb/>
commercial planes.<lb/>
"Height bothers me.<lb/>
not fear of crashes, and<lb/>
I'm edgy from the time<lb/>
I go up until I get back<lb/>
down. My last private<lb/>
airplane flight came<lb/>
when I flew to<lb/>
Philadelphia to see<lb/>
Gene Banks play. It<lb/>
was a real rough flight<lb/>
and I decided 1 didn't<lb/>
want am more o!<lb/>
them<lb/>
Wolfpack<lb/>
Improved<lb/>
B DICKBRINSTER<lb/>
Associated Press Wriler<lb/>
RAI EIGH?As far<lb/>
as v. oach Norm Sloan<lb/>
concerned, the dif-<lb/>
nce in this season's<lb/>
North Carolina Stale<lb/>
basketball team is its<lb/>
a b i I i t to handle<lb/>
pressure situations.<lb/>
For thar reason the<lb/>
I6th-ranked Wolfpack<lb/>
has taken charge when<lb/>
the going has been<lb/>
tough and carved out<lb/>
the onlv perfeci early-<lb/>
season record in the<lb/>
v antic Coast Con-<lb/>
x ate has in fact<lb/>
ad matched its en-<lb/>
victor total oi last<lb/>
u ing which it<lb/>
for last place in the<lb/>
AC C with a 3-4 mark.<lb/>
 -car ago we'd go<lb/>
to the tree throw line in<lb/>
a crucial situation and<lb/>
miss a one-and-one<lb/>
said Tuesday.<lb/>
his season we've<lb/>
thrust into those<lb/>
situations and we've<lb/>
made those shots<lb/>
Whatever the<lb/>
reasons, N.C. State has<lb/>
won 11 consecutive<lb/>
games 8 its longest<lb/>
streak since the na-<lb/>
tional championship of<lb/>
1974. That mark goes<lb/>
on the line tonight<lb/>
when the Wolfpack<lb/>
visits ninth-ranked<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
And the Pack,<lb/>
despite the always-<lb/>
difficult assignment of<lb/>
playing at Carmichael<lb/>
Auditorium, is a con-<lb/>
siderably more formidi-<lb/>
ble opponent than it<lb/>
was just one year ago.<lb/>
Two of the main<lb/>
reasons are senior for-<lb/>
ward Hawkeye<lb/>
Whitney and freshman<lb/>
guard Sidney Lowe.<lb/>
Both are products of<lb/>
DeMatha High School<lb/>
n Washington,<lb/>
perhaps the Rolls<lb/>
Royce of" secondary<lb/>
school basketball.<lb/>
 ARMY NAVY STORE <lb/>
 Backpacks. BIS, Bomber.<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
 Field, Deck, Flight, Snorkel <lb/>
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 Shoes, Combat Boots. Plus. <lb/>
 1 SO I S. Evans Street t<lb/>
Leather Belts<lb/>
$6 to $19<lb/>
Leather Handbags<lb/>
$10 to $25<lb/>
Shoes Repaired to Look<lb/>
Like New.<lb/>
jRiggan Shoe Repair<lb/>
3c Leather Shop<lb/>
111 West 4th St.<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
758 0204<lb/>
Parking in Front<lb/>
and Rear.<lb/>
CORRECTION!<lb/>
Due to error by Harris Supermarket, the coupon that appeared<lb/>
in their Jan. 15 ad should read as follows:<lb/>
Free 2 litre bottle of<lb/>
A&amp;W Root Beer<lb/>
LIAAITONE PERCUSTOAAER<lb/>
Expires Jan. 19,1980<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
VETERANS<lb/>
Kri.Jan. 18- 7&amp;9pm<lb/>
Sat Jan. 1?- Matinee: 4:30. 7&amp;9pm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
JSB Stutlmt I nion Films Committee<lb/>
BECOME AN AIR FORCE OFFICER<lb/>
YOUR PREVIOUS ACTIVE DUTY SERVICE, COMBINED WITH ENROLL<lb/>
ING IN AIR FORCE ROTC.MAY LEAD TO YOUR BECOMING AN AIR<lb/>
FORCE OFFICER. CHECK OUT THE AIR FORCE ROTC TWO YEAR PRO<lb/>
GRAM AND THE BENIFITSOF AN AIR FORCE CAREER<lb/>
Friday Special TGIF<lb/>
Thank God It's Friday<lb/>
3cked a pepperonf truck FREE<lb/>
PEPPERONISONALL PEPPERONI PIZ7AS<lb/>
6 f f1<lb/>
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$1$<lb/>
LWMlajH S<lb/>
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on any 10" Supreme Pizza<lb/>
With Coupon<lb/>
$1.50$ OFF<lb/>
on any 16" Supreme Pizza<lb/>
With Coupon<lb/>
$2.00$ OFF<lb/>
on any 14" Supreme Pizza<lb/>
With Coupon<lb/>
I BJ on any 20" Supreme Pizza <lb/>
Iwith Coupon Pus 2 FREE Quarts of Coke<lb/>
1i-rlN EtiQ 5<lb/>
NOTHING<lb/>
Free Pizza<lb/>
Every Thursday<lb/>
iwiNfiais<lb/>
CHANELO'S<lb/>
WyM.PZZaV0UR CHOICE<lb/>
2nd nmsFree<lb/>
NOTHING<lb/>
PIZZAS<lb/>
OOUOM MAOi FfttAMOMtr<lb/>
YOUR<lb/>
CHOICE<lb/>
CHANELO'S<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Special<lb/>
10"<lb/>
$2.90<lb/>
3.50<lb/>
3.50<lb/>
3.50<lb/>
3.50<lb/>
3.50<lb/>
OLIVE(Black or Green) olS<lb/>
ANCHOVY ago<lb/>
MUSHROOM 350<lb/>
HAM 3.50<lb/>
ADDITIONAL ITEMS .60<lb/>
CHANELO'S SUPREME 5.50<lb/>
CHEESE<lb/>
ONION<lb/>
GREEN PEPPER<lb/>
PEPPERONI<lb/>
FRESH SAUSAGE<lb/>
GROUND BEEF<lb/>
14"<lb/>
4.45<lb/>
5.20<lb/>
5.20<lb/>
5.20<lb/>
5.20<lb/>
5.20<lb/>
5.20<lb/>
5.20<lb/>
5.20<lb/>
5.20<lb/>
5.20<lb/>
.75<lb/>
7.75<lb/>
16"<lb/>
5.30<lb/>
6.25<lb/>
6.25<lb/>
6.25<lb/>
6.25<lb/>
6.25<lb/>
6.25<lb/>
6.25<lb/>
6.25<lb/>
6.25<lb/>
6.25<lb/>
.95<lb/>
9.50<lb/>
20"<lb/>
7.70<lb/>
8.95<lb/>
8.95<lb/>
8.95<lb/>
8.95<lb/>
8.95<lb/>
8.95<lb/>
8.95<lb/>
8.95<lb/>
8.95<lb/>
8.95<lb/>
1.25<lb/>
12.70<lb/>
UXE SICILIAN PIZZAS<lb/>
THICK CRUST EXTRA CHEESE<lb/>
Super<lb/>
Supreme<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
DAY<lb/>
1 mrta DlJ?e m ourDinm9 Room, call Ahead- Your<lb/>
OU IIUO y order will be ready when you arrive Better<lb/>
Cnorl-il Yet' 9ive "s a call at 758-7400 for FAST,FREE<lb/>
OpeCiai FRESH, PI PIN HOT Delivery in less than<lb/>
30 minutes.<lb/>
PepperonUtalian Sauajge, Mushrooms. Onions. Green Pepper<lb/>
GrggnOlive, Anchovy on request. '<lb/>
m SANPWICHES<lb/>
? BREAD BAKED FRESH DAILY<lb/>
Short Loaf $2QQ<lb/>
Long Loaf jo qr<lb/>
SUBMARINE " <lb/>
Ham,Salami,Sauce,Cheese-Baked<lb/>
HAM and CHEESE<lb/>
Ham,Cheese.Mustard,Lettuce &amp; Tomato<lb/>
HOGIE<lb/>
Ham,Salami,Mustard,Mayonnaise,Olive Oil,<lb/>
Lettuce &amp; Tomato<lb/>
ITALIAN SANDWICH<lb/>
Ham,Salami,Sauce,Cheese,Onions,Pepper<lb/>
&amp; Mushrooms-Baked<lb/>
VEGETARIAN SANDWICH<lb/>
Onions.Green Pepper.MusrKooms,Sauce<lb/>
&amp; Cheese-Baked<lb/>
VERSUVIAN STEAK<lb/>
Hamburger Steak,Lettuce &amp; Tomato,<lb/>
Mustard, Mayonnaise<lb/>
Chef's Salad $2.95<lb/>
Dinner Salad .89<lb/>
Garlic Bread .79<lb/>
CHEESE<lb/>
ONION<lb/>
GREEN PEPPER<lb/>
PEPPERONI<lb/>
FRESH SAUSAGE<lb/>
GROUND BEEF<lb/>
OLIVE (Black or Green)<lb/>
ANCHOVY<lb/>
MUSHROOM<lb/>
HAM<lb/>
ADDITIONAL ITEMS<lb/>
SICILIAN SUPREME<lb/>
10"<lb/>
$3.50<lb/>
4.10<lb/>
4.10<lb/>
4.10<lb/>
4.10<lb/>
4 10<lb/>
4 10<lb/>
4.10<lb/>
4.10<lb/>
4.10<lb/>
4.10<lb/>
60<lb/>
6.10<lb/>
14"<lb/>
5.20<lb/>
5.95<lb/>
5.95<lb/>
5.95<lb/>
5.95<lb/>
5.95<lb/>
595<lb/>
595<lb/>
5.95<lb/>
5.95<lb/>
595<lb/>
.75<lb/>
8.50<lb/>
16"<lb/>
6 25<lb/>
7.20<lb/>
7.20<lb/>
7.20<lb/>
7.20<lb/>
7.20<lb/>
7 20<lb/>
7 20<lb/>
7.20<lb/>
7 20<lb/>
7.20<lb/>
95<lb/>
10.45<lb/>
rnrMtai,anwSaU$a9e'Mu,hroXT,s- Omon.Green Peppe<lb/>
Green Olrve, Anchovy on request <lb/>
Dinners<lb/>
20"<lb/>
8 25<lb/>
10.20<lb/>
1020<lb/>
10.20<lb/>
1020<lb/>
10.20<lb/>
1020<lb/>
10.20<lb/>
10.20<lb/>
10.20<lb/>
1020<lb/>
125<lb/>
13.95<lb/>
Spaghetti &amp; Meat Sauce Hot Game Bread<lb/>
Spaghetti &amp; Meat Balls Hot Garlic Bread<lb/>
Lasagna with Hot Garlic Bread<lb/>
Extra Meat Balls - each<lb/>
Dvrog$<lb/>
Coke -Root Beer - Sprite<lb/>
Tab - iced Tea - Coffee<lb/>
S? 35 Lg. .50 Qt. .89<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
MonThur. 4 p.m1a.m.<lb/>
Jri?Y 4 p.m2 a.m.<lb/>
S?urd?y 11a.m2ajn.<lb/>
&amp;?nd?y 11a.m12 Md.<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
2.50<lb/>
2.95<lb/>
3.50<lb/>
40<lb/>
Remember<lb/>
Tues.<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
All<lb/>
U-CanEat<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
$2.79<lb/>
From 5 to 9 p.m.<lb/>
Monday Big 10 Day<lb/>
BUY ONE GET<lb/>
All 10"<lb/>
ONE FREE PlZZaS<lb/>
LWLNlg&amp;fS<lb/>
p<lb/>
DELIVERY<lb/>
507E. 14th Street<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
758-7400<lb/>
YOU DESERVE THE FULL RICH<lb/>
LIFE, WHY SETTLE FOR f ESS<lb/>
-W4J&amp;BS<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057240_0013"/>
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