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<pb facs="00057245_0001"/>
Bhz<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Vol. 54 No. as-1<lb/>
Tuesday, February 5, 1980<lb/>
(.reemille. VC<lb/>
( inflation HMMMI<lb/>
Downtown Snow<lb/>
Photo by RICHARD GREEN<lb/>
While snow was carpeting the unusually bare streets of downtown Greenville atlam stripn,c<lb/>
gathering on College Hill for some snowy action. " af am" s,uden's were<lb/>
Snowstorm Vandals<lb/>
Overturn Parked Van<lb/>
by MARIANNE HARBISON<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
What began as a snowball fight<lb/>
early Thursday morning resulted in<lb/>
$2000 damage to a 1948 Chevy van<lb/>
when it was turned over on College<lb/>
Hill Drive.<lb/>
The owner of the van. Leland K.<lb/>
Williams, said, "One person climb-<lb/>
ed into the van and held down the<lb/>
brakes while the remaining 50 peo-<lb/>
ple pushed it over and rolled it down<lb/>
College Hill<lb/>
One witness said, "As they were<lb/>
pushing the van over, someone else<lb/>
was smashing out the back win-<lb/>
dow<lb/>
Williams claimed that other<lb/>
witnesses knew the identity of the<lb/>
vandals but were reluctant to name<lb/>
them.<lb/>
Williams is offering a $300<lb/>
reward in Blue Chip stock for infor-<lb/>
mation leading to the arrest and<lb/>
conviction of the person(s) responsi-<lb/>
ble. Williams is also offering an ad-<lb/>
ditional $100 bonus to the person(s)<lb/>
who brings the incident before the<lb/>
appropriate authorities.<lb/>
As to the identity of those involv-<lb/>
ed in the vandalism, Assistant<lb/>
Director of Security Francis Ed-<lb/>
dings stated, "We don't have any<lb/>
idea who did the damage, so there<lb/>
really wasn't anything we could do<lb/>
about it He also noted that since<lb/>
at least 500 people were involved,<lb/>
there was no logical reason to send<lb/>
two or three security officers to con-<lb/>
trol the crowd.<lb/>
Chief Eddings also commented<lb/>
that the snow "riot" ran its course<lb/>
and calmed down. Carolvn Fulgum,<lb/>
dean of women said, "After the van<lb/>
was turned over, the whole thing got<lb/>
worn-out There were no arrests<lb/>
made, according to Eddings.<lb/>
Williams said his insurance would<lb/>
not cover the damage.<lb/>
Don Joyner, counselor of Aycock<lb/>
Dorm, told Williams there were at<lb/>
least 50 people involved, and there<lb/>
was another car damaged during the<lb/>
incident. While Joyner was speaking<lb/>
to Williams, a student who had been<lb/>
in the snowball fight came into the<lb/>
room and began to explain how<lb/>
much fun the event had been.<lb/>
At that point in the conversation,<lb/>
Joyner introduced the student to<lb/>
Williams. According to Williams,<lb/>
this was an evasive tactic intended to<lb/>
prevent him from discovering who<lb/>
was responsible for the damage to<lb/>
his van.<lb/>
Student Fee Increase Predicted<lb/>
by TERRY CRAY<lb/>
Vice Chancellor for Student Lite<lb/>
Dr. Elmer Meyer told the SGA stu-<lb/>
dent legislature Monday that in-<lb/>
creases in student fees "have got to<lb/>
come and said that the only ques-<lb/>
tion was in which areas they would<lb/>
occur.<lb/>
Meyer mentioned the growing<lb/>
needs of the intramural sports pro-<lb/>
gram and the inflationary pressures<lb/>
on student health services as ex-<lb/>
amples of the reasoning behind any<lb/>
future fee increases.<lb/>
Melvin also reported to the<lb/>
legislators about his recent trip to<lb/>
Washington, D.C in which he and<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Residents<lb/>
Injured<lb/>
Two Greenville residents were in-<lb/>
jured in an accident Friday morning<lb/>
on Greenville Boulevard, just east<lb/>
of the Elm'Street intersection.<lb/>
Gwendolyn Dianne Tyson, 20, is<lb/>
in guarded condition at Pitt County<lb/>
Memorial Hospital, according to<lb/>
Greenville police. Ms. Tyson is a<lb/>
student at ECu and is the daughtei<lb/>
of Pitt County Sheriff Ralph L.<lb/>
Tyson. Philip Wayne Gibbs, 21, is<lb/>
listed in stable condition.<lb/>
Investigating officer W.R.<lb/>
Robertson reported that Gibbs was<lb/>
traveling east on Greenville<lb/>
Boulevard when his car collided<lb/>
with another car driven by James<lb/>
Gregory Starkie, 22, of Grimesland.<lb/>
The officer noted that Starkie and a<lb/>
passenger, Kenneth Ray Buck, 23,<lb/>
of Greenville, complained of pain at<lb/>
the scene, but that neither was<lb/>
transported to the hospital.<lb/>
Robertson said that Ms. Tyson<lb/>
was trapped in the Gibbs vehicle,<lb/>
and it took members of the Green-<lb/>
ville Fire and Rescue Department<lb/>
approximately 40 minutes to free<lb/>
her. She was unconscious during the<lb/>
procedure. Both Gibbs and Ms.<lb/>
Tyson were transported to the<lb/>
hospital by the Greenville Fire and<lb/>
Rescue Department.<lb/>
Police reported that no charges<lb/>
were filed in the incident.<lb/>
<lb/>
10 other SGA presidents spoke to<lb/>
HEW officials about the current<lb/>
legal battle over segregation in the<lb/>
North Carolina university system.<lb/>
Melvin criticized HEW's methods<lb/>
of gathering statistics for their study<lb/>
of the case and said that the<lb/>
assembled SGA presidents tried to<lb/>
stress individual choice as the most<lb/>
important question at stake in the<lb/>
issue. HEW has brought charges<lb/>
against the university system in part<lb/>
because it is making insufficient<lb/>
progress in fulfilling racial quotas<lb/>
set by the federal government.<lb/>
SGA Vice President Charlie Sher-<lb/>
rod reported that the construction<lb/>
company responsible for paving the<lb/>
new parking lot behind Mendenhall<lb/>
could not continue work until the<lb/>
weather becomes dry and warmer.<lb/>
Sherrod said that Dr. Elmer Meyer<lb/>
would present a proposal to the<lb/>
Chancellor's committee this week<lb/>
recommending that the company<lb/>
pull off the job completely until spr-<lb/>
ing or summer, thus allowing the<lb/>
unpaved lot to be used immediately.<lb/>
A resolution asking local towing<lb/>
companies to reduce their rates for<lb/>
towing student vehicles illegally<lb/>
parked off-campus was adopted<lb/>
almost unanimously by the student<lb/>
legislature. The present off-campus<lb/>
commercial towing rate is $25, while<lb/>
cars are towed on-campus for $15 or<lb/>
$20, depending on whether it is day<lb/>
or night.<lb/>
The resolution asked that the rate<lb/>
for off-campus towing for ECU<lb/>
students be dropped to the on-<lb/>
campus rate. In return, the resolu-<lb/>
tion stated that all companies agree-<lb/>
ing to do so would be considered<lb/>
"favorable businesses" by students.<lb/>
In other business, a bill to ap-<lb/>
propriate $1,850 to the Visual Arts<lb/>
Forum was tabled until the next<lb/>
meeting due to improper paperwork<lb/>
in preparing the bill for presenta-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Two requests for money for<lb/>
political science department groups<lb/>
were turned down on the basis that<lb/>
the groups had no written constitu-<lb/>
tions and were therefore ineligible to<lb/>
be funded under the present SGA<lb/>
policy.<lb/>
'Life Of Brian'<lb/>
Picketed By Local<lb/>
Christian Citizens<lb/>
by MARIANNE HARBISON<lb/>
News Cdilor<lb/>
"Brian is Judas, not Jesus<lb/>
That's what one picket proclaimed as several<lb/>
ministers and concerned Christians picketed the movie<lb/>
Life of Brian" at Bucaneer Theaters Sunday Feb 3<lb/>
Rev. Van Dale Hudson was issued a permit'to picket<lb/>
by the Grenville City Police Department on Jan 29 n<lb/>
officer was there to oversee the demonstration<lb/>
'The picket was for the purpose of objecting to this<lb/>
type of satire which is directed against the life of<lb/>
Christ said the picket leader, Rev. Van Dale Hudson<lb/>
of Trinity Freewill Baptist Church. "The picture was a<lb/>
satire against the life of Christ, and we felt that it was<lb/>
not wholesome for the community to be witness to it "<lb/>
Rev. Hudson said the concerned group tried once<lb/>
before to ban the movie in Greenville, and their efforts<lb/>
were successful. "The Bucaneer movies are under new<lb/>
ownership of Consolidated Theaters in Charlotte We<lb/>
were able to prevent the movie from being shown when<lb/>
we spoke with the old owners, but the" new owners<lb/>
would not yield to our requests said Hudson<lb/>
Alex White, the owner of Consolidated Theaters<lb/>
said "We felt that the people have the right to eo to see<lb/>
anything they want to see, including 'Life of Brian ' The<lb/>
movie was screened here in Charlotte bv a<lb/>
ministers and religious leaders, and thev came out ,<lb/>
ting to know what all the fuss was about "<lb/>
The ministers and other concerned 6<lb/>
participated m the picket voiced their opi<lb/>
film was more than just a satirical pom  the I<lb/>
ot Christ. It went toward mockery and blas.ihei<lb/>
Christ, said Jim Nason of Parkers Chapel <lb/>
Baptist Church. "Jesus Christ is God him<lb/>
we see this kind of mockery made of tl<lb/>
we tell that this was the final straw<lb/>
A Methodist layman, T.R. Jones stated "<lb/>
see or know what's in a can of garbage ir<lb/>
point of looking down in there0" Jones �<lb/>
sonal relationship between God and ma<lb/>
should be publicly defended. "I just wante<lb/>
and be counted as a Christian and to i<lb/>
to this film Jones proclaimed.<lb/>
"This violation is one of co-mission rail<lb/>
sion if people go to see it because it drew<lb/>
tion Jones added.<lb/>
Bob Clyde of the Baptist Student Center<lb/>
like the film was more of a charicature of the w<lb/>
pie misrepresent Christ. It was like a comments .<lb/>
See CHAPLAiJS pQge 3<lb/>
Photo by RICHARD GREEN<lb/>
Come Down On Wednesday<lb/>
the weather is fine<lb/>
ECU Classes<lb/>
Unofficially<lb/>
Cancelled<lb/>
By DEBBIE HOTAUM,<lb/>
Assistant Sens Kdit.tr<lb/>
Several unconfirmed news<lb/>
broadcasts announcing<lb/>
cancellation of classes last T'r<lb/>
i�y caused manv BCU vidcns<lb/>
to miss classes.<lb/>
The local stations made several<lb/>
broadcasts, the first at 7 a.m<lb/>
reporting that classes would be<lb/>
cancelled until 2 p.m. Thursdav<lb/>
John Moore of WRQR in<lb/>
Farmville was one of the<lb/>
jockeys who broadcast the class<lb/>
cancellation. "Weil, we aren't<lb/>
the only ones who broadcast this<lb/>
information. Several other radio<lb/>
and TV stations also said that<lb/>
East Carolina had cancelled<lb/>
classes.<lb/>
"One of the other emplovees<lb/>
(at WRQR) told me that he had<lb/>
gotten the word that school was<lb/>
closed. I don't remember who he<lb/>
said he got it from<lb/>
The campus police station<lb/>
received calls throughout the da) .<lb/>
according to Francis Eddings,<lb/>
assistant director of security.<lb/>
"People just didn't know what to<lb/>
do. They had heard on the radio<lb/>
that class was cancelled, and thev<lb/>
wanted to make sure so they call-<lb/>
ed us. We do try to have all of the<lb/>
information, but sometimes it's<lb/>
hard to get it that early in the<lb/>
morning<lb/>
Chancellor Brewer's secretarv<lb/>
also said there was much confu-<lb/>
sion. "We received a lot of calls.<lb/>
The radio and TV stations should<lb/>
have gotten their information<lb/>
confirmed before they announc-<lb/>
ed it. Chancellor Brewer is the<lb/>
only one who can make such an<lb/>
authorization.<lb/>
Young Politicians Ponder Upcoming Candidates<lb/>
By TERRY GRAY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
It's a long way to election day,<lb/>
but two groups of politically-<lb/>
minded students at East Carolina<lb/>
University have already formed<lb/>
some early thoughts on the 1980<lb/>
presidential, gubernatorial and<lb/>
Senate races.<lb/>
Of course, the 20 members of the<lb/>
Young Republicans and the 23<lb/>
members of the Young Democrats<lb/>
do not represent any other opinion<lb/>
than their own. But these are the<lb/>
people on campus who will pro-<lb/>
bably be most active as the cam-<lb/>
paigns get into full swing.<lb/>
Closest to home is the Senate race<lb/>
between ECU professor John East<lb/>
and incumbent Robert Morgan.<lb/>
What does Young Republican<lb/>
Chairman Mike Elbertson think<lb/>
about East's chances?<lb/>
"As far as I'm concerned, he's<lb/>
the number one candidate said<lb/>
Elbertson.<lb/>
How does Young Democrat<lb/>
Chairman Joe Fink feel about<lb/>
Morgan's chances?<lb/>
"Optimistic � I think he can<lb/>
win said Fink.<lb/>
Both chairmen agree that the<lb/>
financial support given to East by<lb/>
the North Carolina Congressional<lb/>
Club will be very important in the<lb/>
election. Morgan's chances will be<lb/>
directly affected by the amount of<lb/>
funding East can get to get his name<lb/>
and his message around the state,<lb/>
said Fink.<lb/>
Fink criticized East for not runn-<lb/>
ing a more "positive" campaign,<lb/>
recalling the strong attack East<lb/>
made on Morgan's Senate record in<lb/>
his first campaign speech on the<lb/>
ECU campus Jan. 26. But Fink add-<lb/>
ed that his organization had no pre-<lb/>
sent plans to go "all out" in support<lb/>
of Sen. Morgan.<lb/>
In contrast, Elbertson said that<lb/>
the Young Republicans had<lb/>
"devoted" themselves to East's<lb/>
campaign. He noted that since East<lb/>
was still teaching classes in the<lb/>
political science department, there<lb/>
wouldn't be much to do until the<lb/>
coming months.<lb/>
The Young Democrats will be ac-<lb/>
tive in getting ECU students to send<lb/>
in absentee registration cards in<lb/>
April for the May primary vote, said<lb/>
Fink.<lb/>
According to Fink, the members<lb/>
of his organization are solidly<lb/>
behind President Carter in his<lb/>
reelection bid, while Elbertson said<lb/>
that his group is almost equally<lb/>
divided between Ronald Reagan and<lb/>
George Bush.<lb/>
Judging from the talk of both<lb/>
chairmen, one thing is clear: 1980 is<lb/>
not a banner year for alternative<lb/>
liberal politics on the ECU campus.<lb/>
The presidential choices of both<lb/>
groups generally reflect the results<lb/>
of various nationwide opinion polls<lb/>
that show Carter leaving Kennedy<lb/>
behind while Bush steals the thunder<lb/>
from Reagan.<lb/>
"Kennedy is too liberal as far as<lb/>
North Carolina politics are concern-<lb/>
ed, and I don't think the<lb/>
Democratic Party will support any<lb/>
far out liberals in the South said<lb/>
Fink.<lb/>
What about Kennedy's criticism<lb/>
that Carter is running a non-<lb/>
campaign by refusing to debate the<lb/>
issues in public?<lb/>
"There's no reason for Carter to<lb/>
debate when he's so far ahead � it<lb/>
would be a potentially dangerous<lb/>
situation where he could only lose<lb/>
said Fink.<lb/>
Things on the Young<lb/>
Republican's side of the fence are<lb/>
not so clear cut. According to Mike<lb/>
Elbertson, Reagan is slightly ahead<lb/>
of Bush in popularity among the<lb/>
members, while Connaly has a small<lb/>
showing.<lb/>
"We're still looking at the issues<lb/>
and the candidates said Elbert-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
In the gubernatorial race the<lb/>
situation is similar. Fink reports<lb/>
that the Young Democrats are<lb/>
unanimous in their support of Jim<lb/>
Hunt. Elbertson said that although<lb/>
he and several other Young<lb/>
Republicans supported I. Beverly<lb/>
Lake for governor, there was no<lb/>
concensus in the group.<lb/>
Inside Today<lb/>
tajafy Ink T� Saor�gr i<lb/>
Orafl Rcgbimtear 5<lb/>
AIbot Rr��I"a�r a<lb/>
Pirate (asm<lb/>
tafttallMraitP�r�<lb/>
<pb facs="00057245_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 5, 1980<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Research Project<lb/>
Funded<lb/>
Chaplain<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
Ihe S. M ill meel Wednesctaj night,<lb/>
I eh h, al f JO in Ute�vtei B 103 Dl<lb/>
I risl from lacksooviBe, N � will<lb/>
spe.ik so the ni si on state funded<lb/>
abortions Interested students art<lb/>
welcomed<lb/>
Notary Service<lb/>
Free notary publu service we available<lb/>
for 1(1 students al Mendenhall Stu<lb/>
dent i enter, room 22�. llteSCiA office,<lb/>
Valentines<lb/>
Personalize youi valentine a valentine<lb/>
cookie! "Coiten Hall's Valentine<lb/>
i ookic Sales" �ill be taking orders on<lb/>
I eh " N, and 11 lrom4tonp.m in the<lb/>
lohhs il i ullen Hall Orders ma) he<lb/>
puked up on I eh 14 I aiee ctxiliics<lb/>
Ml and small<lb/>
uiokics �nh �' itessai i an. 25 cents<lb/>
Small cookies without messages ssrll<lb/>
also he sold in tin Student Nk Store<lb/>
ohhv<lb/>
II o<lb/>
no tlntei national I anguage<lb/>
. i j . having a meeting on<lb/>
v das, I eb al 2 W in IK 05<lb/>
Ml people interested in foreign<lb/>
ies and eultures are invited to at<lb/>
lend New members are welcome Pai<lb/>
ms, lectures and mhei activities<lb/>
I - semeslei sll be discussed<lb/>
(SO<lb/>
II you have oi inicnd to declare a majoi<lb/>
in a science ot health related eui<lb/>
ricuhtm, you may qualify foi i()M<lb/>
I KM services made available through<lb/>
ihe C'entei lot Student Opportunities<lb/>
K soi<lb/>
iso currently has openings fen<lb/>
students wishing lo receive tutorial set<lb/>
sices. Ihcic are also ripenings For<lb/>
students lo participate in individualized<lb/>
" group speed reading, nntetaking and<lb/>
lest taking techniques, elfective<lb/>
organization ol lecture notes, and c<lb/>
me Reading knowing more aboul<lb/>
ssliat sun read in a shortet lime<lb/>
( ounseling services include carcei plan<lb/>
ume assistance, academic, peiMinal.<lb/>
financial, lesi anxiety, and-oi group<lb/>
counseling<lb/>
It you would like lo he considered loi<lb/>
participation in any ol these COS!<lb/>
I Kl I services, contact Hi Bridwell,<lb/>
(, eniei tor Studcnl Opportunities, 21h<lb/>
Whichard nncx, m vail foi an ap<lb/>
pointment al 757-122. 6075, oi n08l<lb/>
Discount Day<lb/>
del one third oil regular prices al Ihe<lb/>
Mendenhall recreation centers on<lb/>
"Discount Day "<lb/>
Wednesdays, voo p.m -6:00 p m<lb/>
Billiaids and I able lentils, one third<lb/>
oil<lb/>
I tidass, 1:00 p.m. MM) p m -<lb/>
Howling, one ilmd off.<lb/>
Faster Seals<lb/>
Volunteer woik can plas a sital mle in<lb/>
getting ihe ob you really want II you<lb/>
are interested in work experience which<lb/>
will help you alter you graduate, con<lb/>
ia. t the 1 astei Seal Society al 758 1230<lb/>
Women's Soccer<lb/>
Help support women's sports at II<lb/>
b joining ihe newly formed Women's<lb/>
Soccel C luh Ihe team needs well ovct<lb/>
2ii members, so anyone who is in<lb/>
leresled in playing soccer should eon<lb/>
laci Kris Soli at 7x s-sh ,� mii<lb/>
Wiberg al 752 4553 as soon as possible<lb/>
An organizational meeting will he held<lb/>
Wednesday, I eh 1.1 at 2 p.m al 422<lb/>
I4ih St (ihe huck house behind Bclk<lb/>
Dorm) Practice will begin when all ihe<lb/>
preliminary muk is completed, which<lb/>
should be within ihe nesi couple "t<lb/>
weeks onie out and give soccel a its'<lb/>
Rho Kpsilon<lb/>
Ihe Kho I psilon meeting was<lb/>
rescheduled for fhursday, I eh 7, ai<lb/>
4:00 p m in room 221 Mendenhall Ml<lb/>
members and interested persons are<lb/>
urged tn attend<lb/>
SI Hashes<lb/>
Moonlight Howling<lb/>
"Moonlight Bowling" is b.uk al<lb/>
Mendenhall Studententei Howl in<lb/>
the moonlighl plus gel a chance lo win a<lb/>
I Kl I (, MI ol howling I sets Sun<lb/>
das from 5 tm p.m until 7:00 p.m<lb/>
Rowling Specials<lb/>
RIM l M I seis Saturday from<lb/>
12 noon h (K) p m sou sail rent a lane<lb/>
St 1(11 lot one liout<lb/>
Kl I) I'lN BOWI l(. On Sundays<lb/>
win a I KIT GAME hs making a strike<lb/>
when the red pin is ihe head pin from<lb/>
7 00 p m 10 00 p in<lb/>
Family Child Assoc.<lb/>
! he I nulls t hild Association will meet<lb/>
I uesday. I eh 5 at 5 p in in the Home<lb/>
Economics Conference Room (141)<lb/>
Ml members are urged 10 attend this<lb/>
important meeting<lb/>
(.MAT<lb/>
rhe Graduate Management dmission<lb/>
lesi will he ottered at 1(1 on Satin<lb/>
das. March I" ppiication blanks are<lb/>
available al the restingenter. Speight<lb/>
Building. Room los Registration<lb/>
deadline i I chin.us 22<lb/>
S(.A Loans<lb/>
Ml students needing SOA loans Ljn<lb/>
now get ihein from the SGA office in<lb/>
Mendenhall oi from the Financial -id<lb/>
( Iffice in the )ldaletena I lies arc no<lb/>
longer available in vshiTiard room 210<lb/>
lame' H Mallors. Associate Dean.<lb/>
(Irientalioi, and ludiciars<lb/>
I lie Studcnl I nion li.nel Committee<lb/>
is sponsoring a trip in Kl I auderdale<lb/>
and Hivnes World loi Spring Break<lb/>
(Mar. h 7 lm i inly VI 75 foi quad s.<lb/>
. s Koi more infot mafion, call<lb/>
'57 6611, cxl I!rV<lb/>
Ihe Studenl I nion Minority Vrts<lb/>
(. ommitlce sstll he sponsoring a lewish<lb/>
V s and I al I estival. I i b<lb/>
i <lb/>
�ri I shihiuon i omntitlec an<lb/>
es the showing ol the ludau col<lb/>
ol the North l arolina Museum<lb/>
 11 h 1 2si so, on 1 eh 5 al "<lb/>
- it d bagels, and al " 30 p m<lb/>
l v itian Knoll. a majoi<lb/>
and curaloi ol ihe colles<lb/>
non, will speak in ihe Multipurpose<lb/>
Mendenha<lb/>
1 SAT<lb/>
1 he I ass School Admission I esl will be'<lb/>
I  I i I on Saturday, pul I1<lb/>
deadline i- I ehiuais I I,<lb/>
�- inks (which tuiisi<lb/>
hs completed and mailed to I Is<lb/>
d ' 'in the 11 I resting<lb/>
Ri ' Sr� gl Building<lb/>
Faculty-Staff Night<lb/>
Iseis Monday from 5:00 p m until<lb/>
S oo p in is I .Ktihs siall niglii al the<lb/>
Mendenhall Bowlingenier ns ECU<lb/>
t.Kiilis oi stafl inemhei ssuh proper<lb/>
identification mas boss I two games and<lb/>
gel a third game I Kl I Relas after<lb/>
work and ak advantage ol Ihe savings<lb/>
at Mendenhall<lb/>
Summer Orientation<lb/>
Ihe Office ol lame- H Mallory,<lb/>
Vssociatc Dean. Oticnlalton and<lb/>
ludiciary, is now accepting applications<lb/>
foi counselors for Summer Orienta-<lb/>
tion Applicants must he rising seniors<lb/>
iduate students Applications mas<lb/>
be picked up in Whichard Building,<lb/>
21 ; I) nlhne iv I ndas. I cb. 8.<lb/>
Chem Societv<lb/>
I � . Kasteri s Carolina Section o!<lb/>
American Chemical Societ) will<lb/>
ts February meeting al 7 p m on<lb/>
Wednesday, February I' al the Cap<lb/>
lam's lahle Restaurant in yden Ihe<lb/>
speaker 'or !he evening will he Dr<lb/>
j n I oeppky ol the I niversity<lb/>
� M ssouri . olumhia During his talk.<lb/>
ed " Nil rosa mine Car<lb/>
tnesis he will explore the<lb/>
chemical and biological ramifications<lb/>
 trie question, "Are nttrosamines<lb/>
causative ateniv in human cancer?"<lb/>
Dinnei reservations should he made<lb/>
through ihe Department ol Chemistry<lb/>
le� 6711, bv Monday. I eh II<lb/>
(iameroom<lb/>
ll sou like pn ball, pool or loosball. the<lb/>
place lo go is the MRi gameroom.<lb/>
I ocated in the basement ot fcycock<lb/>
is�,�. u ,v open lions IU a.m. until<lb/>
Ihe checkout area for tents, canoes, car<lb/>
,i.l and hie piesersers Remember.<lb/>
the Men's Residence Council prosides<lb/>
these services<lb/>
WRC Officers<lb/>
Ihe Women's Residence Council ex<lb/>
ecutive officers loi the Spring Semester<lb/>
are Stephanie Cianus, president. Oail<lb/>
Watson, vice-president; Nancy lubhs,<lb/>
secretary; Kaihs Stevens, treasurer;<lb/>
(.mger Wade, publicity chairperson;<lb/>
and Brenda Killingsworth, parliamen<lb/>
tarian<lb/>
I he k RC dorm officers lor (lenient<lb/>
Hall are Cind) Rouse, president; Belli<lb/>
Whitehcad, sice president; Irma<lb/>
I homas. secretary treasurer, tor I lorn<lb/>
ing Hall, Jackie lowrs. president;<lb/>
Stephanie Schaub, vjce-president; i .ail<lb/>
lacobs, secretary treasurer, for Garretl<lb/>
Hall, leiese Woodruff, piesident;<lb/>
sheila Keaton, vice-president; Beth<lb/>
Wolfe, secretar) treasurer; lor laisis<lb/>
Hall, Virginia Carlton, president;<lb/>
leanne Spivey, vice-president; Mthea<lb/>
Oliver, secretary-treasurer; for Cot ten<lb/>
Hall, I ottie Scott, president. Diane<lb/>
Hudson, vice-president; Myra Moses.<lb/>
secretary treasurer; foi Fletcher Hall,<lb/>
Sue Wrobel, piesident. Belli Rennicks,<lb/>
sue pies idem. Jo Ann Meads.<lb/>
secretary-treasurer; lor Greene Hall,<lb/>
Idie lekeie. president. Ilene Kusiiak.<lb/>
sue piesident. I isa Shaut. secretary<lb/>
treasurer; and lor I s lor Ha Missy<lb/>
Mdndge. president. Sandra leltman.<lb/>
vice-president; Elaine r u r ner,<lb/>
secretary treasurer<lb/>
Draft Registration<lb/>
Interested students are united to join<lb/>
the Greenville Peace t ommittee in son<lb/>
sidering the upcoming dralt regislra<lb/>
lion I he meeting begins with a pot luck<lb/>
suppei at � to I iidas nighi al mo s<lb/>
Elm Street, two hhvks east ol campus<lb/>
I or more information, call 758 4VOfs or<lb/>
check with I d,ith Webber in 21H Austin<lb/>
SI) Chairperson<lb/>
Ihe application deadline lor Student<lb/>
Union chairperson positions has been<lb/>
extended to I eh x Anyone interested<lb/>
in seeking one of these positions should<lb/>
pick up an application from the Studenl<lb/>
Union Office, room 2'4. Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, or tall 757-6611, esi<lb/>
210<lb/>
Alpha Sigma Phi<lb/>
Ihe Alpha Sigma I'hi hole sisieis are<lb/>
sponsoring a Happy Hour al the Elbo<lb/>
Room on Ihuisdas. I eh 7, from<lb/>
p m until 9 K) p m A Besthesi con<lb/>
lest will he held lor male contesta '<lb/>
All men who ftish to put theii b.nls<lb/>
where then mouth is are invited lo<lb/>
entei'<lb/>
UFDC<lb/>
Ihe I nisei sitv I oik and Country<lb/>
Dance club would like to invite all who<lb/>
are interested in folk and country dans<lb/>
ing lo attend meetings ol the I I IH<lb/>
Ihe meetings are every Wednesday<lb/>
night Irorn sesen lo nine p m. in<lb/>
Hrewstei I) I0S II you're interested.<lb/>
come on oscr or call 2 OK26<lb/>
FC'U News Bureau<lb/>
GREENVILLE � A<lb/>
total of SI,363,102 in<lb/>
outside funding was<lb/>
received by ECU in<lb/>
November, 1979.<lb/>
Among the research<lb/>
and training projects<lb/>
receiving funding were<lb/>
several sea grant pro-<lb/>
grams funded by the<lb/>
National Oceanic and<lb/>
Atmospheric Ad-<lb/>
ministration.<lb/>
These included<lb/>
$159,296 to the ECU<lb/>
Institute for Coastal<lb/>
and Marine Resources<lb/>
for marine advisory<lb/>
services; $36,335 to<lb/>
Drs. Peter Fricke and<lb/>
John Maiolo of ICMR<lb/>
for individual research<lb/>
on North Carolina's<lb/>
recreational fishery,<lb/>
hard clam management<lb/>
and shrimp fishery;<lb/>
$44,748 for a continu-<lb/>
ing education program<lb/>
for commercial<lb/>
Circle K<lb/>
I his is Circle K week, so some hs and<lb/>
see whai this coed service stub is all<lb/>
aboul Pie Circle K club of ECI meets<lb/>
on ruesday in Mendenhall room 221 at<lb/>
- ixi p m 1 his week's speaker IS 1 ren<lb/>
ton Davis, and he will he speaking<lb/>
aboul environmental health Anyone<lb/>
who is interested is invited to attend<lb/>
lishermen; and $17,938<lb/>
for a leadership train-<lb/>
ing program in marine<lb/>
education offered by<lb/>
the ECU Department<lb/>
of Science Education.<lb/>
Also receiving fun-<lb/>
ding were ECU's pro-<lb/>
gram in rehabilitation<lb/>
counseling ($41,965<lb/>
from the U.S. Office of<lb/>
Rehabilitation Ser-<lb/>
vices), and the ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine,<lb/>
which received two<lb/>
grants totaling more<lb/>
than $1 million from<lb/>
the Eastern Area<lb/>
Health Education<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Dr. Richard Mauger<lb/>
o the Department o!<lb/>
C.eology received<lb/>
$54,651 from the Na-<lb/>
tional Science founda-<lb/>
tion for his research in-<lb/>
volving geologic and<lb/>
petrologic studies of<lb/>
the Sierra Calera-del<lb/>
N i d o area of<lb/>
Chihuahua, Mexico.<lb/>
I continued from Page<lb/>
tSpeaks<lb/>
ways people are easily<lb/>
misled Clyde also felt<lb/>
that "Life of Brian"<lb/>
was sacreligious and of-<lb/>
fensive, but, "There<lb/>
was also a great lesson<lb/>
to be learned from the<lb/>
film in terms of<lb/>
misrepresentation<lb/>
Clyde was not<lb/>
associated with the<lb/>
picket but was the only<lb/>
person who had actual-<lb/>
ly seen the film. Neither<lb/>
Jones, Hudson, nor<lb/>
Nason had seen the<lb/>
film when the) picketed<lb/>
on Feb. 3.<lb/>
Alex White. Con-<lb/>
solidated Theaters<lb/>
owner stated. "Mosi<lb/>
the people who were<lb/>
picketing hadn't even<lb/>
seen the picture<lb/>
were voicing a<lb/>
judgemental opin<lb/>
about it<lb/>
Contrary to the<lb/>
attempt, the picket n<lb/>
unsuccessful,<lb/>
"Life oi Brian"<lb/>
showing at<lb/>
Bucaneer Theatei<lb/>
Come to<lb/>
Tutors Needed<lb/>
Ihe Centei tor Studenl Opportunities<lb/>
� si ii currently has openings foi tutors<lb/>
m the following areas medicine,<lb/>
premedictne. nursing, allied health.<lb/>
biology, chemistry, physics, and i<lb/>
science and health professions You<lb/>
mas earn an income ai standard cam<lb/>
u 11- Bi idwcll,m )<lb/>
216 Whichard Vnnex, cm call M22.<lb/>
. - � so7? foi an ippointmenl<lb/>
DON'T FIGHT<lb/>
Join our membership now<lb/>
Non-aggression, 10 Commandment<lb/>
Church that is peace and<lb/>
charity oriented Established<lb/>
in 1978. We are seeking<lb/>
sincere, God dedicated people<lb/>
to become part of our<lb/>
membership. Please send a<lb/>
self-addressed, stamped<lb/>
envelope to Christian<lb/>
Council Of Ideology Box<lb/>
1131, Roanoke Rapids N C<lb/>
27870. Please do not respond<lb/>
if you are simply a<lb/>
curiosity seeker<lb/>
Help prevent<lb/>
birth defects<lb/>
Allied Health<lb/>
I lie HieJ Health Professions Admis-<lb/>
sion lest ssill be offered al ECI on<lb/>
Saturday, March S pplieation blanks<lb/>
are available at the Testing Center.<lb/>
Speight Building, Room 105 Regislra<lb/>
lion deadline is I ebniais �<lb/>
lo sou hase a lued. si it l neck ' Ciaylan<lb/>
Hoyte, a phssieal theiaps student, is<lb/>
iiovs conducting research which m-<lb/>
solses a MASSAGE lo the upper bask<lb/>
and neck. It sou suiter from a tight<lb/>
neek. call Oaslan ai "O'H1<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda<lb/>
The Phi Beta 1 ambda business<lb/>
organization will meet Tucsdus. I eh J,<lb/>
at 4-00 in l()t Rass<lb/>
Greek News<lb/>
By RICKI GLIARMIS<lb/>
Greek Correspondent<lb/>
The members of<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
sorority are celebrating<lb/>
their 20th anniversary<lb/>
as a chartered sorority<lb/>
at East Carolina today.<lb/>
Sigma was the first<lb/>
sorority founded at<lb/>
ECU on Feb. 5, 1960.<lb/>
Sigma is also very<lb/>
proud to have the only<lb/>
chapter advisor who<lb/>
has been active for 20<lb/>
years. Virginia Minges,<lb/>
an alumni of Sigma<lb/>
Sigma Sigma, has been<lb/>
advisor since 1960 and<lb/>
helped form the<lb/>
chapter here.<lb/>
To celebrate this oc-<lb/>
casion, Tri Sigma will<lb/>
be honored with the<lb/>
presence of several na-<lb/>
tional officers, in-<lb/>
cluding a former na-<lb/>
tional president, Mary<lb/>
Hastings Holloway<lb/>
Page. Congratulations<lb/>
to the pledges, sisters<lb/>
and alumni of Sigma<lb/>
Sigma Sigma.<lb/>
The Kappa Deltas<lb/>
held initiation for their<lb/>
fall pledges Saturday<lb/>
evening. Mrs. Marjorie<lb/>
Hopkins, the mother of<lb/>
a member off the sorori-<lb/>
ty, was made an<lb/>
honorary initiate.<lb/>
The Chi Omegas<lb/>
would like to con-<lb/>
gratulate the members<lb/>
of the Alpha Rho<lb/>
pledge class on their in-<lb/>
itiation Jan. 28. The<lb/>
fall pledge class is hav-<lb/>
ing a lockout the<lb/>
weekend of Feb. 8, and<lb/>
the winter pledge class<lb/>
has just completed a<lb/>
successful raffle.<lb/>
The Chi O's are in<lb/>
the process of holding<lb/>
Spring Rush. Last<lb/>
weekend the Chi O's<lb/>
held their White Carna-<lb/>
tion Formal to present<lb/>
the fall and winter<lb/>
pledges.<lb/>
The Alpha Delta Pi's<lb/>
were busy last week<lb/>
with a new pledge class<lb/>
of nine and plans for<lb/>
sorority recognition<lb/>
week.<lb/>
On Wednesday, the<lb/>
ADPi's had a speaker<lb/>
from the Body Shop<lb/>
who led the girls in ex-<lb/>
ercises.<lb/>
The ADPi's pledges<lb/>
held their lockout Fri-<lb/>
day and sold donuts to<lb/>
raise money.<lb/>
The Alpha Phi's held<lb/>
a money-raising car<lb/>
wash last Saturday.<lb/>
Thanks to everyone<lb/>
who supported this<lb/>
project.<lb/>
The Phi's are proud<lb/>
to announce their vic-<lb/>
tory during the spirit<lb/>
contest at the ECU-<lb/>
UNCW basketball<lb/>
game.<lb/>
On January 28, the<lb/>
Alpha Phi's inducted<lb/>
the members of the<lb/>
Beta Gamma pledge<lb/>
class. Congratulations<lb/>
and welcome to the new<lb/>
pledges.<lb/>
The Phi's would like<lb/>
to congratulate Tom<lb/>
Hardy for being the<lb/>
lucky winner of the<lb/>
Dinner Give-Away at<lb/>
Three Steers<lb/>
Restaurant.<lb/>
Sigma Tau Gamma<lb/>
has moved to a new<lb/>
location. The fraternity<lb/>
is now located at 508<lb/>
W. Fifth St. in the<lb/>
oldest home in Green-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
Because of this move<lb/>
and the confusion,<lb/>
Sigma Tau Gamma will<lb/>
hold a second spring<lb/>
rush beginning Feb. 11.<lb/>
AH interested students<lb/>
are invited to drop by.<lb/>
The Sig Ep's woul<lb/>
dlike to thank all their<lb/>
Little Sisters for the<lb/>
party Saturday night.<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi invites<lb/>
everyone interested to<lb/>
Pantana Bob's Tuesday<lb/>
night. Everyone is<lb/>
welcome.<lb/>
THE COMPLETE<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
4M-lMni MCAMYMT<lb/>
SALAD�50 EXTRA<lb/>
ASST. VAR.�<lb/>
PIZZA. .o?Lr <lb/>
1<lb/>
99<lb/>
TUE.<lb/>
WITH FRIES A COLESLAW<lb/>
FRIED<lb/>
CHICKEN g"<lb/>
$199<lb/>
1<lb/>
WED.<lb/>
WITH GARLIC BREAD<lb/>
ITALIAN<lb/>
MALIAN S4QQ<lb/>
SPAGHETTIotl thur<lb/>
WITH FRIES Ii COLE SLAW<lb/>
FISH .f.<lb/>
1<lb/>
FRI.<lb/>
What's the easiest way to couplets your<lb/>
plans�no matter what you ra planning<lb/>
By making one convenient trip to your<lb/>
Kroger Sav-on . . where you'll find<lb/>
everything from apple ode' tc transistor<lb/>
radios to footballs and more ai! at<lb/>
cost cutter prices No matter what your<lb/>
plans, complete them with one easy tnp<lb/>
o your Kroger Sav-on<lb/>
Magazines and<lb/>
Paperback Books<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
MFR<lb/>
SUGG<lb/>
RETAIL<lb/>
Records and<lb/>
Tapes<lb/>
nsscoiil! uop<lb/>
MELLO YELL0 OR<lb/>
,Coca-Cola<lb/>
16-Oz.<lb/>
Ret.<lb/>
Btls.<lb/>
Plus<lb/>
Deposit<lb/>
GIACOBAZZI<lb/>
Lambrusco<lb/>
28<lb/>
BUSCH<lb/>
Natural Light<lb/>
6<lb/>
12-Oz.<lb/>
Cans or<lb/>
N.R.<lb/>
Btls.<lb/>
FRESH<lb/>
Cheese<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
BARBARA DEE<lb/>
Assorted<lb/>
Cookies<lb/>
V 4mm Bjfev<lb/>
Priced<lb/>
From<lb/>
Off<lb/>
sue<lb/>
NCTAK.<lb/>
hU<lb/>
IMP<lb/>
iDfSCOUNTED<lb/>
REG. OR DIP<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
Potato<lb/>
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8-Oz. Twin Pack<lb/>
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f ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
I yyy w"cn mWfWHwi you to purchaoa the m&amp;t<lb/>
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NONE SOLD<lb/>
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DEALERS<lb/>
OPEN 7 AM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
� M � � 9<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
Phone 756-7031<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057245_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN FEBRUARY 5. 1980 3<lb/>
Rain Is Preferred<lb/>
but snow is what we get.<lb/>
Nazi Leader Calls<lb/>
For Right-Wing<lb/>
Demonstration<lb/>
GREENSBORO,<lb/>
N.C. (AP)1 Eight addi-<lb/>
tional staff members<lb/>
Nill be hired at a center<lb/>
for mentally retarded<lb/>
children to care for a<lb/>
1 2-year-old<lb/>
child who is<lb/>
retarded.<lb/>
autistic<lb/>
severely<lb/>
Guilford County<lb/>
commissioners approv-<lb/>
ed the hiring Mondav<lb/>
night. The hiHng of ex-<lb/>
tra personnel to care<lb/>
for Danny Hunt was<lb/>
the result of a com-<lb/>
promise among state<lb/>
and county officials<lb/>
and Danny's parents,<lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Rav<lb/>
Hunt.<lb/>
The commissioners<lb/>
delayed action last<lb/>
vcek on a request by<lb/>
the Hunts to hire the<lb/>
extra personnel to care<lb/>
for the boy, who is self-<lb/>
destructive and needs<lb/>
around-the-clock care.<lb/>
They were waiting for a<lb/>
promise from the state<lb/>
that it would not aban-<lb/>
don Danny after June<lb/>
30, when his emergency<lb/>
committment to Ken-<lb/>
dall Center is scheduled<lb/>
to end.<lb/>
The Hunts contend<lb/>
the state is required to<lb/>
provide education for<lb/>
the boy under the<lb/>
Federal Education for<lb/>
All Handicapped<lb/>
Children's Act.<lb/>
The salaries of the<lb/>
eight, some of whom<lb/>
will be part-time<lb/>
employees, will cost the<lb/>
county $16,000 through<lb/>
June 30. The total cost<lb/>
of his care is expected<lb/>
to be about $23,000<lb/>
through that period.<lb/>
The state has promis-<lb/>
ed to reimburse the<lb/>
county for the money it<lb/>
spends on Danny's<lb/>
emergency care. Area<lb/>
Mental Health Board<lb/>
Director Daylon<lb/>
Greene said he was told<lb/>
the promissory letter<lb/>
pledges to continue to<lb/>
pay for D nny's care<lb/>
after June 30, if funds<lb/>
are available.<lb/>
The case already has<lb/>
cost the Hunts<lb/>
thousands of dollars<lb/>
and has exhausted a<lb/>
privately funded trust<lb/>
fund.<lb/>
The state's decision<lb/>
to provide emergency<lb/>
care for the boy was the<lb/>
result of an agreement<lb/>
between Frank Johns,<lb/>
an attorney represen-<lb/>
ting the child's parents,<lb/>
and state agencies. The<lb/>
agreement put off a<lb/>
lawsuit which Johns<lb/>
had planned to file on<lb/>
behalf of Danny and<lb/>
his parents.<lb/>
"It is not our inten-<lb/>
tion to place this<lb/>
burden on this com-<lb/>
munity Johns said.<lb/>
But if the state does not<lb/>
make some kind of ar-<lb/>
rangements for Dan-<lb/>
ny's care after June 30,<lb/>
"you may well have to<lb/>
fund the needs of Dan-<lb/>
ny Hunt<lb/>
Johns left no doubt<lb/>
that if some ar-<lb/>
rangements are not<lb/>
made for care after<lb/>
June 30, he will go<lb/>
ahead with the court<lb/>
case, which County At-<lb/>
torney Bill Trevorrow<lb/>
described as a<lb/>
"landmark case<lb/>
Professor Co-<lb/>
Authors Report<lb/>
GREENVILLE �<lb/>
Dr. James Buck,<lb/>
visiting assistant pro-<lb/>
fessor of finance in the<lb/>
School of Business, is<lb/>
co-author of a research<lb/>
report prepared for the<lb/>
White House Con-<lb/>
ference on Small<lb/>
Business.<lb/>
Buck and his col-<lb/>
laborator, Richard F.<lb/>
Demong, are among 19<lb/>
persons who con-<lb/>
tributed to special<lb/>
economic studies on the<lb/>
status of small business<lb/>
in federal Region III,<lb/>
including Delaware,<lb/>
Maryland, Penn-<lb/>
sylvania, the Virginias<lb/>
and the District of Col-<lb/>
umbia.<lb/>
The studies were<lb/>
coordinated by the<lb/>
Pennsylvania Technical<lb/>
Assistance Program<lb/>
and sponsored by the<lb/>
U.S. Small Business<lb/>
Administration.<lb/>
Purpose of the<lb/>
research was not only<lb/>
to provide support<lb/>
material for the White<lb/>
House Conference, but<lb/>
also to provide an<lb/>
analysis of small<lb/>
business problems and<lb/>
needs which could be<lb/>
used for legislative and<lb/>
policy-making deci-<lb/>
sions.<lb/>
Buck is on academic<lb/>
leave of absence from<lb/>
the Mclntire School of<lb/>
Commerce at the<lb/>
University of Virginia.<lb/>
Girl Injured DueTTo<lb/>
Snowball Fight<lb/>
By Debbie Hotaling<lb/>
Assl. News Kditor<lb/>
In a meeting on<lb/>
Monday night, the<lb/>
Men's Residence Coun-<lb/>
cil voted to reject any<lb/>
responsibility for last<lb/>
week's snowball riot on<lb/>
College Hill.<lb/>
During the snowball<lb/>
fight last Wednesday<lb/>
night, a van was rolled<lb/>
down the hill, cars were<lb/>
vandalized, and one<lb/>
student was slightly in-<lb/>
jured when the car in<lb/>
which she was riding<lb/>
was attacked and a win-<lb/>
dow was broken.<lb/>
The student driving<lb/>
the car, Sandy<lb/>
Strickland, was attemp-<lb/>
ting to return to her<lb/>
room in Tyler. The<lb/>
crowd attacked her car<lb/>
with snowballs, break-<lb/>
ing the rear window<lb/>
and causing injury to<lb/>
one of the passengers.<lb/>
"I had no idea they<lb/>
would act like that<lb/>
said Strickland. "I've<lb/>
never lived here before<lb/>
when it was snowing. I<lb/>
didn't think they would<lb/>
go crazy like that.<lb/>
"I was just trying to<lb/>
go home Strickland<lb/>
continued. "They (the<lb/>
snowball-throwing<lb/>
students) broke the<lb/>
window in my car and<lb/>
then just kept right on<lb/>
throwing snowballs.<lb/>
They were laughing at<lb/>
the fact that they had<lb/>
broken my window.<lb/>
They behaved like a<lb/>
bunch of maniacs<lb/>
The MRC has refus-<lb/>
ed to pay for any<lb/>
damages incurred dur-<lb/>
ing the "riot Grady<lb/>
Dickerson, president of<lb/>
the MRC, stated, "We<lb/>
had a meeting tonight<lb/>
and it was decided that<lb/>
it was impossible to<lb/>
narrow down the list of<lb/>
people who did it to<lb/>
just MRC members.<lb/>
How in the world can<lb/>
they prove that? If we<lb/>
pay for one, we'll have<lb/>
to pay for them all<lb/>
Dickerson added<lb/>
"Dr. Meyer approach-<lb/>
ed me and asked me if<lb/>
there was anything I<lb/>
could have done about<lb/>
it. I said, 'There's no<lb/>
way I could have stop-<lb/>
ped it � peer pressure<lb/>
or not. I would have<lb/>
been one aeainst 500<lb/>
Dr. Elmer Meyer,<lb/>
vice chancellor for stu-<lb/>
dent life, said,<lb/>
"Whether or not they<lb/>
(MRC) had a moral<lb/>
obligation was the deci-<lb/>
sion they had to make.<lb/>
At least a collection<lb/>
should be taken up for<lb/>
the damages done to<lb/>
her car<lb/>
Dickerson admitted<lb/>
that the trouble on the<lb/>
hill should not have<lb/>
gone to such extremes.<lb/>
"Anybody that would<lb/>
break out a window<lb/>
and hurt a girl and then<lb/>
continue to throw<lb/>
snowballs has to be im-<lb/>
mature. I have per-<lb/>
sonally apologized to<lb/>
Chuck Williams (whose<lb/>
van was overturned)<lb/>
and he understood that<lb/>
it could have happened<lb/>
to anyone. I'm going to<lb/>
apologize to Sandy<lb/>
Strickland, but I<lb/>
haven't been able to<lb/>
reach her yet<lb/>
Dickerson explained<lb/>
the reasoning behind<lb/>
the MRC's decision.<lb/>
"It's all volunteer to be<lb/>
a member of MRC.<lb/>
You pay extra to be a<lb/>
member. So, many of<lb/>
those guys who were in-<lb/>
volved in the snowball-<lb/>
ing weren't members.<lb/>
I'd say about 85 per-<lb/>
cent of the guys on the<lb/>
hill are members.<lb/>
"It's not the money<lb/>
factor involved he<lb/>
added, "it's the princi-<lb/>
ple. We do try to<lb/>
benefit all, not just a<lb/>
few. We give $300 to<lb/>
$400 for foster children<lb/>
at Christmas, $1200 to<lb/>
SGA for student loans,<lb/>
help with Heart Fund,<lb/>
concerts, etc<lb/>
Upon hearing the<lb/>
MRC's decision not to<lb/>
pay for damages to her<lb/>
vehicle, Sandy<lb/>
Strickland commented,<lb/>
"The fact that they<lb/>
voted against it does<lb/>
not make me happy. I<lb/>
just question the con<lb/>
trol they had that night.<lb/>
I think it's a moral<lb/>
obligation. I think<lb/>
MRC should take the<lb/>
responsibility. Mr.<lb/>
Calder said that he<lb/>
thought MRC should<lb/>
pay for all of the<lb/>
damages. He also<lb/>
thought there was some<lb/>
obligation there<lb/>
Strickland added,<lb/>
"I'm not going to stop<lb/>
here. I'm not satisfied<lb/>
with the decision and<lb/>
I'm going to take it a<lb/>
little bit further<lb/>
The Fast Carolinian<lb/>
'�� 4 ttw<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057245_0004"/><lb/>
$!� last �arflltman<lb/>
Serving the campus community for 54 years.<lb/>
Marc Barnes, semorEd�o,<lb/>
Diane Henderson, Managmg Ed,tor<lb/>
Richard Green, coPyEd,ior<lb/>
Anita Lancaster, products Manager<lb/>
Marianne Harbison, News Edu�r<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim, anew of&amp;$<lb/>
STEVE O'GEARY, Business Manager<lb/>
Charles Chandler, spom Ed,�r<lb/>
Karen Wendt, emu� eaiot<lb/>
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5 1980<lb/>
PAGE 4<lb/>
This Newspaper fs Opinion<lb/>
See For Yourself<lb/>
lt seems .hat the , vhi.e church JgS �?&amp;�<lb/>
leaders who are decrying "Life of Bran' roug<lb/>
Brian" and its following are decry- TsJ�"Pi" showing 0f the film,<lb/>
ing something that they have not sign against ithe show ng o<lb/>
themselves seen. We contend that it which e nexVt<lb/>
is wrong to judge som.hing that you which was oorin a <lb/>
Have not experienced for yourself. "$��� for a time, despite his<lb/>
The demonstrations against follows urlan uia , v<lb/>
"Brian" were made by people who attempts to tell them that he<lb/>
have only heard that "Brian" is thess.ah. <lb/>
wrong. They arc being led like sheep Many com c <lb/>
,o the fold by their leaders - leaders � � slapstick antics of<lb/>
Brian facing down a crowd of his<lb/>
admirers while he stands nude in an<lb/>
open window.<lb/>
We wonder, too, about tne<lb/>
underlying causes which surround<lb/>
the mass hysteria of one movie<lb/>
which takes a differing view of the<lb/>
FORGIVE �FM� FOR THEV KNOW NOT UHAT THEV DO-LUKE 23-3H<lb/>
who have not seen the movie.<lb/>
Public Morals<lb/>
We also wonder about the<lb/>
plications of the control of<lb/>
public morals that these leaders pro- wQrld according to Python<lb/>
fess. We, on the other hand, believe<lb/>
in the implicit dignity of man,<lb/>
i-Letters To The Editor<lb/>
Weather Hazardous<lb/>
lm-<lb/>
the<lb/>
Suppression Of Freedom<lb/>
Could it be that a group of in-<lb/>
kc W.H �  dividuals would go so far as to sup-<lb/>
wonder about the wisdom of letting press artistic freedom for the sake<lb/>
whatever his station in life might be<lb/>
We feel, therefore, that man has the<lb/>
mental and emotional ability to<lb/>
make decisions on his own. We<lb/>
others lead us into something that<lb/>
they themselves don't know<lb/>
anything about.<lb/>
Meaning Of Cartoon<lb/>
There will always be those who<lb/>
will misunderstand. For example,<lb/>
the cartoon at the right side of this<lb/>
page appearson first glsmo<lb/>
of making sure their own beliefs are<lb/>
propagated to the masses? We<lb/>
would hope not. If this were true, it<lb/>
would not be outside the realm of<lb/>
possibility that other artistic works<lb/>
such as The Gulag Archipelago or<lb/>
the poetry of Carl Sandburg would<lb/>
come under suspicion by one group<lb/>
or another, just because their<lb/>
criticize something<lb/>
y eshouianot criticize somethn<lb/>
image of Jesus Christ. Look a little that we have not seen or experienced<lb/>
closer. It is actually a representation<lb/>
of actor Graham Chapman, who<lb/>
played the lead role of Brian. The<lb/>
setting is the artist's conception of<lb/>
how the character of Brian must feel<lb/>
about all the hubbub going on<lb/>
around him.<lb/>
This "Life of Brian" silliness has<lb/>
little to do with religion, or belief in<lb/>
God, or even a belief in the inane<lb/>
humor of Monty Python. It has to<lb/>
do, we believe, with the inability of<lb/>
certian groups to recognize the dif-<lb/>
ference between legitimate artistic<lb/>
endeavor and blasphemy.<lb/>
No Blasphemy<lb/>
It follows then, that we do not<lb/>
feel that "Life of Brian in and of<lb/>
itself, is blasphemous. There are<lb/>
certain parts of the film which have<lb/>
parallels in the Bible, but we do not<lb/>
feel that the film made a deliberate<lb/>
attempt to run down or insult the<lb/>
life of Jesus Christ.<lb/>
It seems that many religious<lb/>
for ourselves. We can, of course,<lb/>
criticize anything we want in this<lb/>
country, as long as we realize that if<lb/>
we do not know what we are talking<lb/>
about, we are not likely to be taken<lb/>
very seriously.<lb/>
Art Should Be Applauded<lb/>
Secondly, artistic endeavor,<lb/>
whether or not we agree with the<lb/>
end result, should be applauded.<lb/>
The British comedy group Monty<lb/>
Python obviously did not set out to<lb/>
make a great sociological statement<lb/>
about twentieth century religion �<lb/>
they only set out to make a decided-<lb/>
ly comic film about Biblical times.<lb/>
Must Be Experienced<lb/>
Criticism is good, and even<lb/>
necessary in a democracy such as<lb/>
ours. We hold with the belief that<lb/>
we should have the courtesy of ex-<lb/>
periencing that which we are<lb/>
criticizing.<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
At this writing it is snowing very hard<lb/>
with one to three inches more of snow ex-<lb/>
pected today. At this writing a campus<lb/>
policeman has conveyed the message that<lb/>
The roads are very slippery. At this writing<lb/>
all city and county schools have been<lb/>
cancelled today due to the snow. At this<lb/>
writing there is a North Carolina travelers<lb/>
alert in effect. At this writing the Green-<lb/>
ville Police Department has advised all<lb/>
persons to stay off the streets and roads<lb/>
unless absolutely necessary. Oh, yes, also<lb/>
at this writing, the concerned" ECU ad-<lb/>
ministration has decided to continue<lb/>
classes as usual. Apparently, these well,<lb/>
or perhaps over-educated, administrators<lb/>
have assumed better judgement than<lb/>
those licensed and trained to deal with<lb/>
adverse weather conditions. Evidently<lb/>
academia has been so over-emphasized as<lb/>
to exclude common sense. 4ilWt -take a<lb/>
nudent to taftrparaiyzed or killed in an ac-<lb/>
cident in route to class for health and<lb/>
welfare concerns to take priorit over<lb/>
academia? Will someone have to die in a<lb/>
car accident while being loyal to ECU's<lb/>
absurd weather policies regarding snow" I<lb/>
think we can learn a lesson from this ex-<lb/>
cellent, well-caring, concerned ad-<lb/>
ministration that cares so much about the<lb/>
welfare of students as to require classes in<lb/>
turbulent weather. Perhaps a return to the<lb/>
sixties tactics of civil disobedience should<lb/>
be considered when administrators<lb/>
become so powerful that their absolute<lb/>
power may indirectly snuff the life of a<lb/>
student being loyal to dear ole ECU. But,<lb/>
then again, who could ever question the<lb/>
humane, caring, concerned ECU ad-<lb/>
ministration?<lb/>
Bill Haney<lb/>
Women Will Not Be<lb/>
Asked To Register<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
I am writing in reference to the article<lb/>
by Debbie Hotaling concerning reinstate-<lb/>
ment of the draft registration. It was my<lb/>
thinking that a reporter's personal opi-<lb/>
nion belonged only on the editorial page<lb/>
and not in articles reporting the news.<lb/>
The statement by Ms. Hotaling, "ERA<lb/>
is getting just what it asked for is ir-<lb/>
responsible and shows that she is highly<lb/>
mis-informed concerning the ERA. First,<lb/>
as the ERA has not yet been amended into<lb/>
the Constitution, in no way can this<lb/>
legislation be responsible for women be-<lb/>
ing asked to register. Second, the U.S.<lb/>
Government has always had the power to<lb/>
draft women and was close to using this<lb/>
power at the end of WWII, long before<lb/>
ERA became the issue it is today. Finally,<lb/>
the true intent of the ERA is to guarantee<lb/>
"equality of rights under the law to all<lb/>
women of this country under the U.S.<lb/>
Constitution, the supreme law of our<lb/>
land. The ERA is a short, precise piece of<lb/>
legislation which would remove the many<lb/>
state and federal laws which discriminate<lb/>
against women (and men) solely on the<lb/>
basis of sex.<lb/>
The reason the ERA has not yet been<lb/>
ratified is because the opposition's<lb/>
strategy relies on misinformation, and<lb/>
falsified documents and statements to<lb/>
gain support for their side.<lb/>
As a school newspaper 1 feel that your<lb/>
job is to inform students of events that are<lb/>
important to both their present and future<lb/>
lives in a responsible manner. The ERA is<lb/>
one news item that deserves full and<lb/>
responsible attention by the press, as its<lb/>
passage would positively affect the lives,<lb/>
and especially the job opportunities, of<lb/>
every woman on this campus.<lb/>
In the future I hope that the articles in<lb/>
your paper present only the facts of the<lb/>
news being reported and that opinions are<lb/>
seen only on the editorial page.<lb/>
Margie McCormick<lb/>
of cigarettes, newspapers, c<lb/>
maeazmes. cand. and even a c<lb/>
six packs of beer.) In the future. Mi -<lb/>
ine vou and vour cohort<lb/>
moretime and effort toward<lb/>
President about the Iranian<lb/>
(shich the entire brotherhood<lb/>
Tau Gamma has done), instea<lb/>
time criticizing a campu-<lb/>
which was trying to help the h<lb/>
would also like to a thai bet<lb/>
icnorant remarks we had<lb/>
which 1 am sure the hostages �<lb/>
vou for.<lb/>
Also. Mr. Editor. 1 wou<lb/>
ment on the trashy ant<lb/>
have been appearing in<lb/>
num. Every issue since lh� .<lb/>
this semester has had an article<lb/>
ing by fraternities. No<lb/>
ask you how come ab<lb/>
major positions of Tht :<lb/>
SGA, Buccaneer, the schoolwte���a�o<lb/>
and other school relatec<lb/>
Washington Merry-Go Round<lb/>
Fraternities Fight Back<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
This is in response to the slanderous let-<lb/>
ters written to you in the January 29 issue<lb/>
of The East Carolinian. The author's<lb/>
outlook towards the "Go to Hell Iran"<lb/>
party is a Fine example of short<lb/>
sightedness, and acute criticism without<lb/>
accurate information. The proFits made<lb/>
from this party were spent on a care<lb/>
package of essentials that everybody on<lb/>
this campus takes for granted (i.e. cartons<lb/>
held by these "No good<lb/>
rats Sou can't sav that  -<lb/>
voted them in because the<lb/>
consist of about 5 percent of the<lb/>
dent population. Also. 1 wou<lb/>
you to look into the stal sties<lb/>
many of these "no good bun<lb/>
giving blood to the Red Cross, �<lb/>
for the Cancer Society, the H.<lb/>
and other service organizations II<lb/>
guys do is harass people, stav drun)<lb/>
cut class all the time, how have the<lb/>
nities continued to exist on the 1<lb/>
Carolina campus for over 30 vears1<lb/>
Rick Cannon<lb/>
Pres<lb/>
Siema Tau Rhc<lb/>
Letters To The Editor<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
pressing all points of view. Mail or dn<lb/>
them by our office in the Old Sour<lb/>
Building, across from the library.<lb/>
Letters to the editor must include the<lb/>
name, address, phone number anc<lb/>
signature of the author(s) and must be<lb/>
tvped, double spaced, or neatly printed<lb/>
Letters should be limited to three typewrit-<lb/>
ten, double-spaced pages. All letters mt<lb/>
subject to editing for brevity, obcenity and<lb/>
libel.<lb/>
Kremlin Attempts To Snuff Out Flame<lb/>
By JACK ANDERSON<lb/>
and JOE SPEAR<lb/>
WASHINGTON � The first an-<lb/>
cient Olympic Games began in 776<lb/>
B.C. as part of the glory that was<lb/>
Greece. The Olympic flame sym-<lb/>
bolizing peace and sportsmanship<lb/>
among amateur athletes died cen-<lb/>
turies later when the Romans ruled<lb/>
the world and their emperors fouled<lb/>
the ideals with crass corruption and<lb/>
political self-aggrandizement. For<lb/>
instance, the tyrant Nero won<lb/>
laurels in the chariot race by Fixing<lb/>
the event.<lb/>
The Olympic Games were reborn<lb/>
early this century in the hope of<lb/>
rekindling the original spirit of<lb/>
friendly competition among na-<lb/>
tions. The quadrennial sports spec-<lb/>
taculars were interrupted by two<lb/>
world wars but survived to bring<lb/>
' together athletes from around the<lb/>
globe.<lb/>
The flame of the Olympics is now<lb/>
in danger of being snuffed out at the<lb/>
hands of the rulers of the Kremlin<lb/>
who were awarded the torch to con-<lb/>
duct the games in Moscow this sum-<lb/>
mer by the sports czars of the Inter-<lb/>
national Olympics Committee.<lb/>
IOC President Lord Killanin is<lb/>
disdainfully rejecting President<lb/>
Carter's demand that the 1980<lb/>
games be moved out of Moscow<lb/>
because of the Soviet takeover of a<lb/>
defenseless Afghanistan. The Irish<lb/>
peer haughtily says the Russians<lb/>
have broken no Olympic rules and<lb/>
that politics should play no role in<lb/>
his organization's simon-pure<lb/>
Olympian considerations.<lb/>
Killanin and the Olympics are be<lb/>
ing treated as a cat's pay by the<lb/>
Soviet sports commissars, according<lb/>
to a long string of classiFied cable<lb/>
reports from our Moscow embassy.<lb/>
They have used the games as a<lb/>
springboard to present Russia as a<lb/>
communist success story to gullible<lb/>
visitors this summer. The Soviets<lb/>
have colelcted millions from<lb/>
capitalist enterprises such as the<lb/>
NBC-TV network to refurbish their<lb/>
dingy hotels and build massive new<lb/>
Olympic village dormitories for<lb/>
eventual use as public housing.<lb/>
Transportation and communica-<lb/>
tions facilities have been enhanced<lb/>
with the help of Western contractors<lb/>
to show Russia as a workers'<lb/>
paradise. The Soviet Olympics<lb/>
Committee, working as an arm of<lb/>
the Kremlin propaganda machinery,<lb/>
has issued four foreign-language<lb/>
magazines extolling life behind the<lb/>
Iron Curtain.<lb/>
"Finally for the First time one<lb/>
publication proclaims, "the Olym-<lb/>
pics is being hosted by a country<lb/>
which exempliFies the Olympic<lb/>
goals No mention is made of the<lb/>
detention of liberty-loving dissident<lb/>
Nobel Prize-winner Andrei<lb/>
Sakharov.<lb/>
Even the Soviet mascot emblem<lb/>
for the games, a cuddly little<lb/>
"Misha the Bear has been con-<lb/>
verted to propaganda purposes. The<lb/>
Soviet Olympics Committee<lb/>
describes Misha as "feared but lov-<lb/>
ed" and "very dangerous to<lb/>
anger<lb/>
There is a strong likelihood that<lb/>
our dedicated U.S. athletes won't<lb/>
compete in the Moscow Olympics,<lb/>
this year. Every American will sym-<lb/>
pathize with their frustration at not<lb/>
taking part in the sports tradition<lb/>
that began centuries ago in Greece.<lb/>
But it should be noted that even the<lb/>
idealistic Greeks of those days bar-<lb/>
red "women, foreigners and slaves"<lb/>
from their games.<lb/>
Whistle-Blower Blues: Whatever<lb/>
our young athletes sacriFice to pro-<lb/>
test the Soviet Afghanistan agres-<lb/>
sion, a middle-aged Commerce<lb/>
Department ofFicial has already<lb/>
paid for trying to warn that we were<lb/>
foolishly gullible in dealing with the<lb/>
Kremlin.<lb/>
We wrote last July that Larry<lb/>
Brady was courageous and far-<lb/>
sighted enough to tell a secret con-<lb/>
gressional committee hearing that<lb/>
the Carter administration was<lb/>
foolish in approving the sale of<lb/>
computers and other technology<lb/>
that could be useful to the Russian<lb/>
military machine.<lb/>
Upon learning of his forthright<lb/>
testimony in opposition to the ad-<lb/>
ministration's line, Brady's<lb/>
superiors issued a reprimand,<lb/>
demoted him to another job and<lb/>
told him to stop talking to con-<lb/>
gressmen.<lb/>
When the Soviet strike forces roll-<lb/>
ed into Afghanistan, the CIA quick-<lb/>
ly discovered that trucks, mass-<lb/>
produced with the help of our IBM<lb/>
computers, were transporting Red<lb/>
Army troops across the border in<lb/>
the blitzkrieg.<lb/>
The Carter administration hastily<lb/>
second-guessed itself and the presi-<lb/>
dent blocked further shipment of<lb/>
spare computer parts to Russia.<lb/>
The hindsight did Brady little<lb/>
good. After being hectored and<lb/>
made a pariah for his whistleblow-<lb/>
ing, Larry Brady resigned last week<lb/>
from his government job.<lb/>
Soviet Shins Barred? The Soviets<lb/>
are still vulnerable to another<lb/>
economic twist of the screw if Jim-<lb/>
my Carter decides to use it. The<lb/>
Russians could be denied use ot<lb/>
U.S. ports by their highly profitable<lb/>
merchant marine fleet. Their<lb/>
tankers and freighters are reaping<lb/>
hundreds of millions of dollars by<lb/>
carrying goods from this country to<lb/>
overseas buyers. Only 15 percent of<lb/>
the Red fleet's cargo is intended for<lb/>
consumption by the Soviet people<lb/>
The rest nets the Kremlin's bank ac-<lb/>
count hard cash or vitally needed <lb/>
goods from other nations.<lb/>
Rep. John Murphy, D-N.Y asl<lb/>
head of the House Merchant Marine!<lb/>
and Fisheries Committee, is urging!<lb/>
the White House to bar all Soviet!<lb/>
ships from U.S. ports. Amcricarj<lb/>
longshoremen on the East and Gulr<lb/>
Coasts have already refused to loac<lb/>
or unload Soviet vessels. Theit<lb/>
fellow dock workers on the West<lb/>
Coast have been more reluctant tq<lb/>
boycott the Red ships.<lb/>
I � ���, W�r. h<lb/>
1<lb/>
 .�. �<lb/>
<pb facs="00057245_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
rhBKl -IO . IVWi ��c5<lb/>
Students Lean Toward<lb/>
Dodging New Draft<lb/>
Fun And Games In The Snow<lb/>
got slightly out of hand<lb/>
Photo by RICHARD GREEN<lb/>
Snow Wars<lb/>
Winter<lb/>
Riot<lb/>
By BEAU HAYS<lb/>
ssislanl Features Editor<lb/>
It was an unspectacular beginning.<lb/>
A few Hurries drifted serenely to the ground, only to<lb/>
be returned to their original liquid form. But the clouds<lb/>
grew tiFed of watching their little white missionaries die<lb/>
peaceful little deaths, and soon the snow-flakes were fall-<lb/>
ing fast enough to cover Greenville in the proverbial<lb/>
blanket of white.<lb/>
The effect of snow on the average collegiate mentality<lb/>
is positively mind-boggling. If you take a group of<lb/>
students who are busy imbibing assorted alcoholic<lb/>
beverages, taking recreational chemicals, and exploring<lb/>
the copious virtues of the opposite sex and add a late<lb/>
night snowstorm, anything less than a riot would be a<lb/>
minor miracle.<lb/>
You can count on the guys on the Hill to provide a<lb/>
riot when the need arises. While a large portion of the<lb/>
campus was playing in the snow with admirable con-<lb/>
straint, the men of College Hill Drive � with con-<lb/>
siderable support from the female population � were<lb/>
busy participating in random acts of property violence,<lb/>
aggravated assault with snowballs, and general<lb/>
hooliganism.<lb/>
It was almost enough to have people thinking that the<lb/>
Iranian Embassy was on the fourth floor of Aycock<lb/>
Building. There must have been between 500 and 27,000<lb/>
people. Not since Woodstock have so many people<lb/>
gathered together without protesting something.<lb/>
' This was no protest � it was an extremely energetic<lb/>
celebration of winter's Jirst real snow. It's heart-<lb/>
warming to see that Americans can still participate in<lb/>
that great American pastime, mob behavior, without<lb/>
leaving a singlecorpse behind.<lb/>
The Jones vs. Aycock battle highlighted the show. It<lb/>
was an absorbing conflict, vaguely reminiscent of the<lb/>
Battle of the Bulge, with each side hoping to annihilate<lb/>
their opponents.<lb/>
Fortunately for the combatants on both sides, a<lb/>
group began by directing their snow-flinging at in-<lb/>
animate objects. Poor inanimate objects. An unsuspec-<lb/>
ting van was swept up by the tide and pushed down Col-<lb/>
lege Hill Drive. About halfway down, the truck flipped<lb/>
onto its side, thus preventing the mob from shoving it<lb/>
into Memorial Gym.<lb/>
A Greenville policeman pulled into the war zone.<lb/>
That was his first mistake. His car immediately suffered<lb/>
an awesome barrage of snow'and ice. The officer step-<lb/>
ped out of the car. That was his second mistake. He was<lb/>
promptly overwhelmed by a volley of amazingly ac-<lb/>
curate snowballs. Quickly realizing that nothing short<lb/>
of the 82nd Airborne would be able to contain the<lb/>
throng, the officer returned to his damaged vehicle and<lb/>
retreated to civilization.<lb/>
The crowd continued to hit cars, windows, and other<lb/>
humans until about 4 a.m when people straggled to<lb/>
their rooms, praying that there would be no classes.<lb/>
The sun came up and the snow was still falling, but<lb/>
the magic of the wee morning hours had faded. People<lb/>
trudged through the ankle-deep snow and slush to get to<lb/>
classes that weren't being held because the instructors<lb/>
didn't show up. A few isolated groups would pack<lb/>
togther a snowball and assault a passerby, but by 1 p.m.<lb/>
most of these had been rounded up and executed.<lb/>
A famous journalist once said, "There's nothing<lb/>
worse than three-day old snow Nature agrees, and as<lb/>
temperatures rise, the last remnants of snow will finally<lb/>
be snuffed out. Soon, the only thing remaining will be<lb/>
the exaggerated recollections of the participants and<lb/>
spectators of the violent non-protest that was the Winter<lb/>
Riot of 1980.<lb/>
By HELENCORDES<lb/>
College Press Service<lb/>
WASHINGTON, D.C. (CPS) �<lb/>
The phone won't let him finish a<lb/>
sentence. This time the call is from a<lb/>
Pennsylvania college student, ask-<lb/>
ing Jack Coljoun how to obtain<lb/>
conscientious objector status.<lb/>
"I don't know how the ad-<lb/>
ministration will set CO. status this<lb/>
time Colhoun confesses.<lb/>
"No he continues, "I think it is<lb/>
going to be even tougher to get into<lb/>
Canada now explaining that a<lb/>
sour Canadian economy has made<lb/>
immigration more difficult than ten<lb/>
years ago.<lb/>
Colhoun, director of the National<lb/>
Anti-Draft Teach-in Project, hangs<lb/>
up and sighs. It is two days after<lb/>
President Carter's Jan. 23 proposal<lb/>
to begin military registration of all<lb/>
18-24 year-old males, and Colhoun<lb/>
quickly collected a mountain of call<lb/>
back slips on his desk. "A good<lb/>
number of students are freaking<lb/>
out<lb/>
Colhoun and other veterans of<lb/>
the anti-draft movement of the Viet-<lb/>
nam era � people who still dot their<lb/>
speech with terms like "freak out"<lb/>
� wasted no time trying to organize<lb/>
that groundswell of fear and curiosi-<lb/>
ty in the aftermath of Carter's pro-<lb/>
posal.<lb/>
"I'm from a completely different<lb/>
background than students now<lb/>
observes the 34-year-old Colhoun, a<lb/>
former ROTC officer who fled to<lb/>
Canada in 1970 and edited a<lb/>
magazine for expatriates there. "It<lb/>
will be.interesting <lb/>
Colhoun readily acknowledges<lb/>
that many of today's students � the<lb/>
people who would be most directly<lb/>
affected by any new registration and<lb/>
draft system � were too young to<lb/>
recall the emotions and tactics of the<lb/>
anti-draft movement of a decade<lb/>
ago. ROTC, once the beleagered<lb/>
neighborhood symbol of war, is<lb/>
making a comeback on campus, a<lb/>
phenomenon suggesting that<lb/>
students may not respond to the old<lb/>
anti-military and anti-draft organiz-<lb/>
ing tactics. Recent campus violence<lb/>
against Iranian students, moreover,<lb/>
indicates a certain nationalism on<lb/>
campus that might accept registra-<lb/>
tion this time around.<lb/>
The anti-draft organizers remain<lb/>
optimistic, however. "I think a lot<lb/>
of students who disagree with the<lb/>
anti-Iranian talk on campus but<lb/>
didn't say anything will speak out<lb/>
now against the draft says Frank<lb/>
Jackalone, national chair of the<lb/>
U.S. Student Association (USSA).<lb/>
Washington Peace Center co-<lb/>
director Jane Midgely adds, "Many<lb/>
didn't talk then because of peer<lb/>
pressure She maintains the cur-<lb/>
rent anti-draft effort will be aided<lb/>
by "the example of Vietnam<lb/>
Midgely is the youngest of the<lb/>
emerging central anti-draft<lb/>
organizers in Washington. Members<lb/>
of Colhoun's teach-in project in-<lb/>
clude Bob Chenowith, a prisoner of<lb/>
war in North Vietnam for five years,<lb/>
former SDS officer Jeff Segal, and<lb/>
Dave Cortright, author of Soldiers<lb/>
in Revolt.<lb/>
It's too early to tell if students will<lb/>
actually revolt, too. A survey taken<lb/>
several days before President<lb/>
Carter's address by the Independent<lb/>
Florida Alligator at the University<lb/>
of Florida found more than 75 per-<lb/>
cent of the students favored retain-<lb/>
ing the volunteer army. Most also<lb/>
believed women should be included,<lb/>
and that there'd probably be a ma-<lb/>
jor war during the 1980s.<lb/>
Asked if they'd comply with a<lb/>
draft order if the U.S. were at war,<lb/>
however, 76 percent of the males<lb/>
and 64 percent of the females ques-<lb/>
tioned said they'd go. Of those who<lb/>
said they wouldn't comply, the<lb/>
overwhelming majority said they'd<lb/>
leave the country.<lb/>
Colhoun and the others didn't ex-<lb/>
pect to have to mobilize those sen-<lb/>
timents for another year. Both<lb/>
houses of Congress defeated<lb/>
registration proposals last fall, pro-<lb/>
pelling anti-draft activists � who<lb/>
were confident the draft issue would<lb/>
arise again � to lobby for a repeal<lb/>
of Congress' right to conscript. Col-<lb/>
houn himself got USSA backing at<lb/>
the same time for his anti-draft<lb/>
teach-ins and speaking programs.<lb/>
While Colhoun says he wasn't<lb/>
surprised by Carter's registration<lb/>
proposal, he hadn't expected a draft<lb/>
reinstatement effort until 1981.<lb/>
Ready or not, the calls have<lb/>
started at his project's headquarters<lb/>
in the USSA olfices. "About 25"<lb/>
schools are interested in his teach-in<lb/>
project. This day he gets a contribu-<lb/>
tion from a 71-year-old Florida<lb/>
woman, enrolls a black Vietnam vet<lb/>
for the speakers program, and<lb/>
counsels and 18-year-old who states<lb/>
"I want a student deferment, but I<lb/>
don't start school until fall<lb/>
"There wasn't much of a flap<lb/>
over the registration announce-<lb/>
ment" at George Mason College in<lb/>
nearby Fairfax, Va according to<lb/>
GMC professor David Keubrich.<lb/>
"We're a conservative campus<lb/>
and out students are good, but they<lb/>
seem to have a low level of political<lb/>
awareness he adds as he gathers<lb/>
materials on disarmament and the<lb/>
anti-draft project. The matefials, he<lb/>
says, are for a faculty group of<lb/>
"former sixties activists who want<lb/>
to become active again<lb/>
Olympic Date<lb/>
The 'Nighthawks'<lb/>
a great performance Sunday<lb/>
Band Performs<lb/>
Correction<lb/>
In the Jan. 31 issue of The<lb/>
East Carolinian there were<lb/>
two typographical errors<lb/>
which may have resuted in<lb/>
some confusion.<lb/>
in the article, headlined<lb/>
"Telerama A Success" the<lb/>
correct information should<lb/>
have read: "Skip Stevenson,<lb/>
of NBC's 'Real People' was<lb/>
one of the stars in the produc-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Also, Sherrod was awarded<lb/>
the Thomas Jefferson Film<lb/>
Award by the producers of<lb/>
"60 Minutes<lb/>
We regret the error.<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
Feature- hditor<lb/>
The Nighthawks, a blues band<lb/>
that performed in Greenville Sun-<lb/>
day night, are headed for Lake<lb/>
Placid and the Winter Olympics.<lb/>
"We're such fine examples of<lb/>
physical fitness" said Mark Wen-<lb/>
ner, laughing.<lb/>
Wenner, one of the founders of<lb/>
the group, seemed to be looking for-<lb/>
ward to his performance before the<lb/>
Olympic athletes.<lb/>
When asked how they got the gig<lb/>
in Lake Placid, Wenner replied,<lb/>
"through a couple of connections<lb/>
He also mentioned that there is<lb/>
heavy security clearance for the<lb/>
group, but anticipates no problems.<lb/>
The performance is scheduled on-<lb/>
ly for the athletes, and the public<lb/>
has not been invited.<lb/>
The Nighthawks have worked on<lb/>
eight albums, including some<lb/>
background work for such groups<lb/>
and people as Muddy Waters, B.B.<lb/>
King, James Cotton, Otis Rush, and<lb/>
J.B. Hutto, among others.<lb/>
Their concert Sunday at the Attic<lb/>
did them justice, even if the crowd<lb/>
did not. Tom Haines, manager ot<lb/>
the Attic, expressed disappointment<lb/>
over the fact that there was not a<lb/>
packed house, as there had been for<lb/>
other concerts by the group. They<lb/>
have been playing there for three or<lb/>
four years now.<lb/>
Wenner laughed this off, saying<lb/>
that when they had first begun play-<lb/>
ing at the Attic, they had been lucky<lb/>
to have a crowd of fifteen. The lack<lb/>
of a full house, though it was by no<lb/>
means empty, was blamed on the<lb/>
presence of snow, from several days<lb/>
before.<lb/>
Their music was a pleasing mix-<lb/>
ture of rock, blues and if you listen<lb/>
ed closely, a little classic jaz. I<lb/>
recognized the song, "When the<lb/>
Saints Come Marching In during<lb/>
one harmonica solo, though with<lb/>
the background of guitar and drum,<lb/>
you almost forget that it's not rock.<lb/>
Critically Acclaimed 'Days Of Heaven' Presented<lb/>
Days of Heaven' is a most elo-<lb/>
quent and important film said<lb/>
New Yorker magazine. "It tells us,<lb/>
with narrative restraint and a noble<lb/>
absence of open emotion, about the<lb/>
strength of Americanness The<lb/>
Student Union Films Committee<lb/>
presents this critically acclaimed<lb/>
film for one show only on Wednes-<lb/>
day, Feb. 6 at 8:00 in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center's Hendrix Theater.<lb/>
The movie will be followed by an<lb/>
informal discussion with coffee and<lb/>
doughnuts served at a place to be<lb/>
announced. Admission is by ID, ac-<lb/>
tivity card or Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Membership.<lb/>
' "Days of Heaven" was initially<lb/>
released in only a handful of cities in<lb/>
late 1978. While very few people<lb/>
saw the film, the critics raved Para-<lb/>
mount Pictures then decided to<lb/>
distribute the movie nationally, and<lb/>
it soon became one of thesleepcrs of<lb/>
1979.<lb/>
The film opens with some "old"<lb/>
photographs of poverty in the early<lb/>
20th Century. These become the<lb/>
Chicago slums and the oppressive<lb/>
industrial power of midwestern<lb/>
America. Suddenly, a train leads<lb/>
people to what might be the promis-<lb/>
ed land � the wheat fields of Texas.<lb/>
The role of Bill is played by<lb/>
Richard Gere, a character who peo-<lb/>
ple automatically feel the urge to<lb/>
help. Brooke Adams plays Abby,<lb/>
married to one man, and in love<lb/>
with another-a classic tale which is<lb/>
revitalized in 'Days Of Heaven' as<lb/>
an intensely htman conflict.<lb/>
It is this sweeping vision of the ex-<lb/>
pansive Texas panhandle which en-<lb/>
compasses the main characters of<lb/>
the film � a young man, a young<lb/>
woman, the man's 12-year-old<lb/>
sister, and the owner of the farm<lb/>
they settle on.<lb/>
The actors speak little; they do<lb/>
not even seem to be acting. Yet they<lb/>
stir the emotions and draw the au-<lb/>
dience into the film. The scene is not<lb/>
a pretty one. It is simply an<lb/>
awesome one. Director Terrence<lb/>
Malick makes his point; "Days of<lb/>
Heaven" is a visual experience.<lb/>
Charles Champlain of the Los<lb/>
Angeles Times said, "Its most spec-<lb/>
tacular sequences will stay in mind<lb/>
forever and so will its sounds.<lb/>
Without parallel in this or any re-<lb/>
cent year. Incomparable<lb/>
"Days of Heaven" is one of the<lb/>
truly excellent films of 1979. It is an<lb/>
extraordinary film which can<lb/>
energize, haunt, hearten and<lb/>
fascinate the audience.<lb/>
'Days Of Heaven'<lb/>
a Student Union Special lresentation<lb/>
-�  �� � �� �r m. �� KWKWil<lb/>
�m � m tm �"<lb/>
<pb facs="00057245_0006"/><lb/>
THt I'VsT CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 5. 1980<lb/>
New Album Releases: London Calling<lb/>
Bv PAT MINGES<lb/>
 Features Writer<lb/>
'London Calling<lb/>
New Wave Hit of the 80's<lb/>
Chaos Rules<lb/>
SGA Meeting<lb/>
By BEAU HAYS<lb/>
ssilan( Features Fditor<lb/>
East Carolina's long-<lb/>
running tragi-comedy,<lb/>
the Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Association,<lb/>
opened again Monday<lb/>
night to a Standing<lb/>
Room Only crowd. The<lb/>
cast was officially listed<lb/>
at 44 of a possible 51,<lb/>
the largest in recent<lb/>
history.<lb/>
The meeting began<lb/>
with everyone standing<lb/>
for a moment of<lb/>
sWctvce, a m.emoi-iMXv to<lb/>
persons or events<lb/>
undetermined. This<lb/>
was quickly followed<lb/>
bv an approval of the<lb/>
minutes, a lengthy<lb/>
document which few of<lb/>
the participants had<lb/>
read by the time the<lb/>
motion for approval<lb/>
was called. Then, most<lb/>
of the standing com-<lb/>
mittees reported that<lb/>
they had not met and<lb/>
therefore had nothing<lb/>
to report.<lb/>
Robert's Rules of<lb/>
Parliamentary Pro-<lb/>
cedure were strictly<lb/>
followed during the ses-<lb/>
sion. Inquiries from the<lb/>
floor were often phras-<lb/>
ticm?" The response<lb/>
from the speaker was,<lb/>
"Yeah, go ahead<lb/>
sC,A President Brett<lb/>
Melvin was allowed to<lb/>
speak. Melvin discuss-<lb/>
ed his meeting with of-<lb/>
ficials from HEW con-<lb/>
cerning its dispute with<lb/>
the University of North<lb/>
Carolina system. Many<lb/>
of the legislators were<lb/>
interested in Melvin's<lb/>
speech, but several of<lb/>
the members appeared<lb/>
to be more concerned<lb/>
with whether or not<lb/>
they were going to the<lb/>
Attic.<lb/>
The rules were<lb/>
suspended to allow the<lb/>
iwre to vojyon -a<lb/>
resolution concerning<lb/>
See SCiA, page 7, Col.l<lb/>
Let's not mince words. London Calling, by the<lb/>
Clash, is the finest recorded effort that has ever<lb/>
been released. Everyone has their favorite recor-<lb/>
ding stars, and with a little patience, perhaps you<lb/>
wilt understand why these guys are mine.<lb/>
The world of the eighties is one of turmoil, a<lb/>
world in which the political scene is an ever-<lb/>
changing and evolving masterpiece of enigma.<lb/>
The impoverished peoples of the world are begin-<lb/>
ning to assert their independence and autonomy.<lb/>
Iran, the anti-Soviet rebels in Afghanistan, and<lb/>
Panama are not the final blows to international<lb/>
imperialism, but only the beginning of a third-<lb/>
world revolt casting off former superpowers in<lb/>
search of self-dignity and preservation.<lb/>
Forced to turn inward, we are beginning to<lb/>
question whom our government is really serving<lb/>
� the people or the huge multi-nationals (against<lb/>
whom most of the international protest is aimed).<lb/>
We are a stagnant society, alienated from our<lb/>
own government, indecisive about our national<lb/>
goals, and subservient to a technology that defies<lb/>
our ability to understand and control it. Seeds of<lb/>
unrest that lie deep in the unconscious psyche of a<lb/>
nation have begun to germinate in the fight<lb/>
against big oil, the nuclear threat, the multi-<lb/>
nationals in general, and specifically, a govern-<lb/>
ment which walks hand-in-hand with the corpora-<lb/>
tions, forgtting from whom its power is truly<lb/>
derived.<lb/>
Into this climate of revolution steps the Clash,<lb/>
and as music is usually in accofdance with the<lb/>
soul of nations, their music is revolutionary both<lb/>
in spirit and letter. Their first release, The Clash,<lb/>
in 1977, was the most cirtically acclaimed album<lb/>
of the last decade, receiving kudos from Time<lb/>
(which called the Clash the most powerful group<lb/>
since the Who or the Stones) to the Village Voice<lb/>
("The Clash is the greatest rock group in the<lb/>
world) L .<lb/>
The music featured "startling rhythmic shifts<lb/>
and harmonic extensions, counter-melodies and<lb/>
keyboards and horns, up-front hooks and hooks<lb/>
in the background and guitars everywhere<lb/>
(John Piccarella). Its lyrics mumbled of boredom<lb/>
and discontentment, alienation and hunger for a<lb/>
promising future, unemployment and worthless<lb/>
currency, corporate manipulation of the in-<lb/>
dividual and a single-minded idea that the only<lb/>
way we can change things is to take them into our<lb/>
own hands. Give 'Em Enough Rope, the Clash's<lb/>
second album, held its ground musically, but<lb/>
their lyrics turned from street politics to more<lb/>
global concerns. It was also very well received.<lb/>
London Calling may receive somewhat of a<lb/>
mixed reaction because its stunning power has<lb/>
been sublimated for a more palatable appeal, yet<lb/>
it is still the most absorbing music of its time.<lb/>
London Calling is a plainly-packaged, double<lb/>
album. Its no-frill approach is the most affor-<lb/>
dable endeavor ever released. It is the very an-<lb/>
tithesis to the slick commercial product that<lb/>
-abounds on tne ntr�t TKict av.production and<lb/>
music, although the album is more pop-<lb/>
influenced than any other Clash effort. The<lb/>
songs' varied influences range from Phil Spector,<lb/>
R&amp;B rockability, Beatles, urban soul, and reggae<lb/>
- especially reggae. This back-to-the-basics rock<lb/>
and roll so potently blends old and new that it<lb/>
almost takes on a mystical quality.<lb/>
Side one begins with the title cut, ' London<lb/>
Calling a song which offers London as an ex-<lb/>
ample of where we may end up. Ominous lyrics<lb/>
decry:<lb/>
London calling upon the zombies of death<lb/>
Quit holding out, take another breath<lb/>
London is drowning and I live by the river<lb/>
I've been shown up, but I've grown up<lb/>
And I'm not down. I'm not down.<lb/>
And I have lived that kind of day<lb/>
When none of your sorrows will go away<lb/>
It goes down and down and hit the floor<lb/>
But I know there'll be some way<lb/>
When I can swing everything back my way<lb/>
Like skyscrapers rising up floor by floor, 1 m<lb/>
not giving up.<lb/>
"Revolution Rock" is next, proclaiming the<lb/>
power of this new form of music and reassuring<lb/>
our parents that everything is going to be all right<lb/>
Brand New CadH.ac" foUows an Od song .ha, J��E&amp;!�r<lb/>
takes on a new meaning if you view it as a descrip-<lb/>
tion of the corporate lure of government.<lb/>
"Jimmy Jazz" is not like anything the Clash has<lb/>
done before. Its distinct horn section and acoustic<lb/>
guitar weave into a reggae ballad that examines<lb/>
differences in judicial systems across cultures<lb/>
"Hateful" deals with lower-class drug abuse, and<lb/>
"Rudie Can't Fail" is about the rude boys of<lb/>
Jamaica and their role in Jamaican culture.<lb/>
"Spanish Bombs" is a historical review of the Topper<lb/>
civil war in Spain, and its unique pop flavor is<lb/>
somewhat ironic in its relationship to the theme.<lb/>
Montgomery Cliffs demise, due to the excesses<lb/>
of his world, is detailed in "The Right Profile, a<lb/>
rocking ditty that blends chord progressions<lb/>
(characteristic of the Clash) and dynamite horns.<lb/>
"Lost in the Supermarket" is one of the finest<lb/>
scenarios of modern life ever, depicting an in-<lb/>
dividual lost and misguided from and because ot<lb/>
his environment. "Clampdown" is an assault on<lb/>
the corporations and their degrading influence on<lb/>
a society's morals and morale. It ends with ar<lb/>
album, reminiscent of "Police and Thieves,<lb/>
with its choppy guitar chords and rhythmic<lb/>
dominance, accentuated bv a nice horn arrange<lb/>
ment. The final cut is " I rain In Vain a pop<lb/>
soul romance that was included probably because<lb/>
of its commercial potential.<lb/>
The group is composed of Mick Jones and Joe<lb/>
Strummer on guitars and vocals, the new I en<lb/>
nonMcCartney, and Paul Simonon on bass, and<lb/>
Headon on druni percussion. The<lb/>
Clash's combination of anger, boredom, frustra-<lb/>
tion, streetwise experience and world class<lb/>
idealism, fuses with a complexity, that creates im-<lb/>
portant ideological approaches toward much<lb/>
the 70s. With philosophical implications that ex-<lb/>
tend beyond the field of music, the Clash are the<lb/>
most important occurrence in the history ot the<lb/>
rock genre. London Calling, because of its im-<lb/>
mense scope, is the finest endeavor the Clash have<lb/>
ever accomplished, fhe Beatles, ;he Sione<lb/>
Dylan and Elvis, and the Sex Pistols ire legends<lb/>
from our past. The Clash are our musical tuture.<lb/>
tack on Jimmy Carter and the possibility of a<lb/>
nuclear meltdown. This could easily be the<lb/>
revolution's themesong, but "The Guns of Bnx-<lb/>
ton" is a call to arms, asking:<lb/>
When they kick at your front door<lb/>
How you gonna come<lb/>
With your hands on your head<lb/>
Or the trigger of your gun<lb/>
and what a brilliant tuture. hs the<lb/>
themselves say in "Death and Glory"<lb/>
bov<lb/>
Side three is the weakest of the album, beginn<lb/>
ing with the justice among thieves "Wrong En<lb/>
Boyo" and ending with the same theme in "The<lb/>
Card Cheat a Springsteen-ish cut whose theme<lb/>
could be expanded to detail the power-mongers<lb/>
fascination with war (take note, Jimmy). In the<lb/>
middle we find "Death or Glory about man's<lb/>
search for meaning, and "Koka Kola about<lb/>
upper-class drug abuse and its lean future.<lb/>
The final side is definitely the strongest, beg a<lb/>
ning with "Lover's Rock a hitherto never-<lb/>
unexplored realm of rock � a plea for sexual<lb/>
equality. Listen up. feminists. "Pour Horsemen"<lb/>
is a bit'pretentious, somewhat of a self-glorify ng<lb/>
endeavor, but this is the greatest rock group in the<lb/>
world. "I'm Not Down" is the finest cut on the<lb/>
album, a proud effort that could easily be a theme<lb/>
song for America:<lb/>
I've been beat up. I've been thrown out.<lb/>
But I'm not down. I'm not down.<lb/>
From every dingy basement on every :<lb/>
street<lb/>
I hear every dragging handclap ovei<lb/>
dragging beat<lb/>
fhat's just the beat of time the beat<lb/>
�t� on<lb/>
If you been trying I <lb/>
already heard your song.<lb/>
Read Hie<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
We're getting togettte<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Tuesday Might<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
FLOCiYliEK $3.50<lb/>
TROUT $2.95<lb/>
PERCH $2.95<lb/>
all you can eat<lb/>
No take otstt please<lb/>
M��l luclnd:<lb/>
7�nch FrUs, Col� slaw,<lb/>
HmhpiippUi.<lb/>
W� are proud to<lb/>
announce that we<lb/>
have added<lb/>
one of the<lb/>
AREAS FINEST<lb/>
SALAD BARS<lb/>
tor your<lb/>
dining pleasure<lb/>
OPEN FOR LUNCH<lb/>
Dally ll.SO<lb/>
Sun. -Thur. ' �<lb/>
430-900<lb/>
Frl. and Sat.<lb/>
4i3o-losoo<lb/>
 w- � � ��� �<lb/>
<pb facs="00057245_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROL IMAN<lb/>
I I BRL AKi<lb/>
WHO<lb/>
DeMarco Will Give Lecture<lb/>
From<lb/>
The School of Art<lb/>
On Wednesday, Feb.<lb/>
6, at 8 p.m Richard<lb/>
De Marco will return to<lb/>
ECU to lecture on<lb/>
"Artists as Seafarers<lb/>
This free event is part<lb/>
of the Visual Arts<lb/>
Forum annual sym-<lb/>
posium and will be held<lb/>
in the Jenkins<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
The director of the<lb/>
De Marco Gallery in<lb/>
Edinburgh, Scotland,<lb/>
first visited ECU about<lb/>
this same time last year.<lb/>
This year he will be go-<lb/>
ing from here to UNC-<lb/>
Chapel Hill. He is cur-<lb/>
rently lecturing at<lb/>
American universities<lb/>
and recruiting students<lb/>
and others for his 1980<lb/>
summer voyage sear-<lb/>
ching for the origins of<lb/>
European culture.<lb/>
These annual<lb/>
voyages began in 1972<lb/>
as an offspring of the<lb/>
Edinburgh Arts<lb/>
Festival and they trace<lb/>
the origins of the Celtic<lb/>
people, whose culture<lb/>
serves as the founda-<lb/>
tion of contemporary<lb/>
American and Euro-<lb/>
pean society. Several<lb/>
students from ECU ac-<lb/>
companied De Marco<lb/>
on the 1979 voyage of<lb/>
the "Marque The<lb/>
voyage covered some<lb/>
10,000 miles and took<lb/>
64 days. Stops were<lb/>
made at numerous<lb/>
preselected points.<lb/>
The artists, who have<lb/>
been on these journeys,<lb/>
have discovered<lb/>
remarkable<lb/>
resemblances between<lb/>
contemporary art and<lb/>
Celtic artifacts.<lb/>
Remember The Good Old Days<lb/>
 when water flowed?<lb/>
Photo by ROSS MANN<lb/>
Grad Students Included In Show<lb/>
The North Carolina<lb/>
Museum of Art's<lb/>
1 ! aveling exhibition<lb/>
will include 25 pieces<lb/>
from Fast Carolina<lb/>
graduate art students<lb/>
when it begins its tour<lb/>
this month.<lb/>
The pieces, chosen<lb/>
b the School of Art<lb/>
Graduate Council, will<lb/>
be shown at university<lb/>
galleries and local art<lb/>
centers in the state dur-<lb/>
ing the exhibition's<lb/>
nine month tour.<lb/>
According to a<lb/>
spokesman for the art<lb/>
department, this is the<lb/>
first time that the ECU<lb/>
School of Art has<lb/>
received such<lb/>
widespread exposure in<lb/>
the state.<lb/>
There will also be a<lb/>
month-long exhibition<lb/>
of about 70 other<lb/>
works by 35 graduate<lb/>
students in Grey<lb/>
Gallery, on the second<lb/>
floor of Jenkins begin-<lb/>
ning Feb. 7.<lb/>
A reception will be<lb/>
held Sunday, Feb. 10,<lb/>
from 3:30-5:30 p.m<lb/>
and the public is in-<lb/>
vited.<lb/>
Also in the news<lb/>
from the school of art,<lb/>
Dr. Michael McCann,<lb/>
who recently written a<lb/>
book entitled Artist<lb/>
Beware, will speak at a<lb/>
Business of Art seminar.<lb/>
McCann, president<lb/>
of the Arts Hazard<lb/>
Project, was invited to<lb/>
ECU by the School of<lb/>
Art and the School of<lb/>
Allied Health.<lb/>
According to a press<lb/>
release, McCann is a<lb/>
recognized expert in a<lb/>
relatively new area of<lb/>
health and safety con-<lb/>
cerning artists' sup-<lb/>
plies.<lb/>
Some art products<lb/>
can be dangerous if us-<lb/>
ed improperly, and Mc-<lb/>
Cann is an expert on<lb/>
the subject.<lb/>
Val M. Cushing, pro-<lb/>
fessor of ceramics at<lb/>
State University of New<lb/>
York, will be the guest<lb/>
artist at the School of<lb/>
Art Feb. 13-15. The<lb/>
schedule for a free slide<lb/>
and workshop is:<lb/>
Wednesday, Feb. 13:<lb/>
Slide Lecture, 7:30<lb/>
p.m Jenkins<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
Thursday, Feb. 14:<lb/>
Workshop, 90-12<lb/>
noon and 2-4 p.m. in<lb/>
Jenkins, room 103.<lb/>
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DEFECTS<lb/>
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ITEMS OFFEREO FOR SALE NOT<lb/>
AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS<lb/>
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FAMOUS PIZZA<lb/>
50 OFF any Pizza with this Coupon<lb/>
Offer expires Feb. 15. 1980<lb/>
NOW SERVING YOUR FAVORITE GOLDEN BEVERAGE<lb/>
SGA Legislators<lb/>
Appear Confused<lb/>
C ontinued From Page 6<lb/>
the towing of vehicles<lb/>
from the campus. The<lb/>
resolution was phrased<lb/>
as a request to the<lb/>
businesses which tow<lb/>
cars from campus set-<lb/>
ting maximum towing<lb/>
�charges and initiating a<lb/>
"most favored trade"<lb/>
status with cooperative<lb/>
companies. The resolu-<lb/>
tion was passed by ac-<lb/>
clamation.<lb/>
A Visual Arts ap-<lb/>
propriations bill<lb/>
generated a great deal<lb/>
of confusion in the<lb/>
legislature when it was<lb/>
discovered that the<lb/>
committee version of<lb/>
the bill differed from<lb/>
the one which each of<lb/>
the legislators had<lb/>
received. A motion to<lb/>
table the bill brought<lb/>
on this comment, "Can<lb/>
we hold off tabling this<lb/>
until we get a<lb/>
blackboard so we can<lb/>
explain  The bill<lb/>
was tabled without the<lb/>
blackboard.<lb/>
Two bills concerning<lb/>
SGA funding for<lb/>
registration fees of two<lb/>
groups attending con-<lb/>
ferences were also<lb/>
brought to the floor.<lb/>
"Are we voting on<lb/>
these bills together?"<lb/>
asked a voice from the<lb/>
back of the room. "We<lb/>
might as well was the<lb/>
reply. Both bills were<lb/>
defeated.<lb/>
Old business, new<lb/>
business and committee<lb/>
reports done, notices<lb/>
were heard while the<lb/>
legislators shrugged in-<lb/>
to their coats and<lb/>
waited for a chance to<lb/>
call for adjournment.<lb/>
The SGA officially ad-<lb/>
journed and soon the<lb/>
room where student<lb/>
representation takes<lb/>
place was again empty.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057245_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
FEBRUARY 5, 1980 Page 8<lb/>
Titans Down Pirates;<lb/>
May nor Stars In Loss<lb/>
Tankers Drop<lb/>
To UNC-CH<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
It was a long night Monday in<lb/>
Minges Natatorium for East<lb/>
Carolina faithfuls watched as the<lb/>
men tankers lost 69-44 and the<lb/>
women 89-51 to UNC-Chapel Hill.<lb/>
The men led the Tar Heels 19-15<lb/>
after four events, but UNC swept<lb/>
first and second in the 200 in-<lb/>
dividual medley to go ahead 23-20<lb/>
and cruised through the remaining<lb/>
events to record their sixth win of<lb/>
the season against five losses.<lb/>
The veteran unit of Doug<lb/>
Nieman, Kelly Hopkins, Jack<lb/>
Clowar and Bill Fehling put the<lb/>
Pirates on the board first with a<lb/>
time of 3:27.50 in the opening event<lb/>
of the evening, the 400 medley relay.<lb/>
The group trailed by half a body<lb/>
length after the two legs, but re-<lb/>
bounded to set new school, meet<lb/>
and pool records in the event.<lb/>
Other first place finishes included<lb/>
Nieman with a time of 1:40.74 in the<lb/>
200 free, Fehling with a :21.74 in the<lb/>
50 free and a :47.28 in the 100 free,<lb/>
Perry Newman with a 1:55.66 in the<lb/>
200 butterfly and Hopkins with a<lb/>
2:08.54 in the 200 breaststroke.<lb/>
The Lady Tar Heels quickly<lb/>
capitalized on experience and<lb/>
strength to take a commanding 15-1<lb/>
lead after just two events and allow-<lb/>
ing the Pirates only first place<lb/>
finishes in the 16 event meet.<lb/>
Lori Ross took first in the 100<lb/>
free with :57.01 and 50 free at :25.97<lb/>
and Cindy Sailor claimed another in<lb/>
the 50 butterfly at :28.38. Diver<lb/>
Connie Wages captured first in the<lb/>
one-meter event, setting a new meet<lb/>
record with 221.35 points smashing<lb/>
the previous mark of 157.45 set in<lb/>
1978.<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
DETROIT, MichTwo clutch<lb/>
plays by Detroit's Joe Kopicki<lb/>
helped the Titans overcome a se-<lb/>
cond half 10-point deficit and claim<lb/>
a 69-65 win over stubborn East<lb/>
Carolina Saturday.<lb/>
The Pirates, who led at the half<lb/>
by six at 34-28 behind guard George<lb/>
Maynor's 16 points, scored the first<lb/>
two buckets of the final half to take<lb/>
a commanding 38-28 lead. The<lb/>
Titans quickly went to work and<lb/>
took over the lead with just over<lb/>
eight minutes remaining at 52-50.<lb/>
ECU was not finished, though, as<lb/>
the Pirates again captured the lead<lb/>
and appeared in good shape with a<lb/>
three-point lead and the ball theirs<lb/>
for nearly a minuted and a half.<lb/>
Ahead 61-58 at the 4:02 mark, the<lb/>
Pirates went into a semi-stall pass-<lb/>
ing offense. The two teams ex-<lb/>
changed buckets when afterwards<lb/>
perhaps the game's biggest play oc-<lb/>
cured.<lb/>
ECU lead 63-62 when forward<lb/>
Herb Gray spotted a seam in the<lb/>
Detroit defense and drove the lane.<lb/>
The quick hands of Kopicki,<lb/>
though, prevented Gray from com-<lb/>
pleting the play as Kopicki took the<lb/>
ball the length of the court for a<lb/>
staff, giving Detroit the lead again<lb/>
with 1:34 remaining.<lb/>
The Pirates never threatened<lb/>
afterwards as the Titans made five<lb/>
of their last six free throw attempts.<lb/>
A big key in the contest, said<lb/>
ECU coach Dave Odom, was the<lb/>
steal and stuff by Kopicki. "If<lb/>
Herb Gray had gotten through the<lb/>
gap Odom said, "it would have<lb/>
been a dunk and the game would<lb/>
have been over<lb/>
A perhaps shocking statistic in the<lb/>
contest was the Pirates dominance<lb/>
on the boards, as they outreboun-<lb/>
ding the larger and stronger Titans<lb/>
42-25.<lb/>
"I thought we rebounding very<lb/>
well said Odom. "It was a major<lb/>
concern of mine before the game<lb/>
Helping keep the Pirates in charge<lb/>
most of the way was Gray, whose<lb/>
defense kept Titan star center Earl<lb/>
Cureton silenced for much of the<lb/>
evening. Cureton, a top-notch pro<lb/>
prospect, did not score a field goal<lb/>
in the first half and finished with<lb/>
only 12 points and five rebounds.<lb/>
"I was very proud of Herb<lb/>
claimed Odom. "He did an ex-<lb/>
cellent job on Cureton and 1 think<lb/>
Earl is one of the best big men in the<lb/>
country<lb/>
Detroit coach Willie McCarter<lb/>
was impressed, to say the least, with<lb/>
the Pirate performance. "You have<lb/>
to give East Carolina a lot of<lb/>
credit he said. "We started out<lb/>
lackadaisically and had to bust our<lb/>
butts to get back into it<lb/>
ECU's George Maynor led all<lb/>
scorers with a season-high 28 points.<lb/>
Maynor connected on his first eight<lb/>
shots in the opening half before<lb/>
missing the last ten minutes of that<lb/>
half with three personal fouls.<lb/>
Gray was the game's leading re-<lb/>
bounder with 11 and Titan guards<lb/>
Wil McCormick and Dave Niles led<lb/>
in assists with seven apiece. ECU's<lb/>
Tony Byles dished out six.<lb/>
Supporting Maynor in the Pirate<lb/>
attack was Gray with 14 and Herb<lb/>
Krusen 10. These numbers give<lb/>
Krusen 1,001 points for his ECU<lb/>
career, making him only the fourth<lb/>
player in Pirate history to ac-<lb/>
complish the feat.<lb/>
Four players scored in double<lb/>
figures tor the Iitans, now V-9. Carolina for a Thursday game<lb/>
Niles led with 18 while Kopicki and before returning home for a Satur-<lb/>
Cureton both tallied 12. day matchup with Illinois State, a<lb/>
Sophomore forward Jerry Davis team that boasts a 15-4 mark and<lb/>
finished with 11. possible national ranking in this<lb/>
The Pirates. 11-8, travel to South week's polls.<lb/>
S E �<lb/>
Tony Byles sets ECU offense<lb/>
Avenge T979 Loss<lb/>
Lady Bucs Pound High Point<lb/>
Ptwtoby KIP SLOAN<lb/>
Freshman guard Donna Brayboy manipulates opponant<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
East Carolina's women took ad-<lb/>
vantage of a six minute High Point<lb/>
cold spell in the first half to jump to<lb/>
an 18 point lead and then cruised to<lb/>
a 92-72 victory Saturday at Minges<lb/>
Coliseum.<lb/>
The Pirates followed the hot out-<lb/>
side shooting of forward Kathy<lb/>
Riley and guard Lydia Rountree to a<lb/>
46-30 halftime edge. Riley pumped<lb/>
in 14 opening half points, with<lb/>
Rountree adding 12.<lb/>
High Point threatened the Pirates<lb/>
for the lead only once in the opening<lb/>
frame, cutting the gap to 39-30 with<lb/>
1:46 before intermission. But the<lb/>
Pirates exhibiting offensive poise<lb/>
spread the margin to 16 at the half<lb/>
with a pair of field goals by<lb/>
freshman Donna Moody.<lb/>
ECU picked up in the second half<lb/>
where they left off, building to their<lb/>
biggest lead of the contest, 62-39,<lb/>
with 12:05 remaining on 11 points<lb/>
by senior Rosie Thompson.<lb/>
High Point's Andreia Blanchard<lb/>
earned honors as the games leading<lb/>
scorer and rebounder with 32 points<lb/>
and 18 rebounds.<lb/>
Rountree led all Pirate scorers<lb/>
with 24, followed by Riley with 14<lb/>
and Thompson and Laurie Sikes<lb/>
with 12 each.<lb/>
Freshman Mary Denkler tallied<lb/>
13 points with only 13 minutes play-<lb/>
ing time. The Alexandria, Va.<lb/>
native connected on five of seven at-<lb/>
tempts from the floor and 3 out of<lb/>
five from the line.<lb/>
Rountree and Thompson grabbed<lb/>
seven rebounds each to lead the<lb/>
Lady Bucs in that category. Sikes<lb/>
dumped off a game-high nine assists<lb/>
in leading ECU to their 16th win<lb/>
against seven losses.<lb/>
"I was very, very concerned com-<lb/>
ing into this game admitted ECU<lb/>
coach Cathy Andruzzi. "Not just<lb/>
because we lost to them last year,<lb/>
but because they have a very good<lb/>
team.<lb/>
"We were pleased with the<lb/>
momentum both offensively and<lb/>
defensively. We caused a great deal<lb/>
of turnovers (36), and many of them<lb/>
were by slapping the ball away when<lb/>
they were trying to loft it inside to<lb/>
-Mary Denkler<lb/>
Blanchard.<lb/>
"We did well with the different<lb/>
combinations we had in there<lb/>
tonight � I thought we played good<lb/>
team ball<lb/>
The Pirates connected on 20 out<lb/>
of 27 free throw attempts for 74.1<lb/>
percent, considerably above their<lb/>
seasonal percentage of 66.2.<lb/>
"I was really pleased to see us<lb/>
shooting so much better from the<lb/>
line said Andruzzi. "We needed<lb/>
that game and we were not sure we<lb/>
could get it and certainly not by<lb/>
such a margin<lb/>
The Pirates face the Tar Heels of<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill tonight in their<lb/>
final NCAIAW Division I game of<lb/>
the season. The Lady Pirates go into<lb/>
the contest at 1-2 in conference ac-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
HIGH POINT (72)<lb/>
Rilev 4 3-4 11, Wardlaw 1 0-0 2<lb/>
Blanchard 13 6 32, Holt 3 0-0 6<lb/>
Henline 2 3-4 7, Wingfield 0 0-0 0<lb/>
Bowers 0 0-0 0. Warren 2 1-25<lb/>
Scriven 2 5-6 9. Totals 27 18-23 "2<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA (92)<lb/>
Thompson 4 4-5 12, Riley 6 2-3<lb/>
14, Girven 0 2-2 2, Rountree 10 4-5<lb/>
24, Sikes 6 0-0 12. Owen 1 0-0 2.<lb/>
Brayboy 0 3-4 3, Moodv 2 1-2 5.<lb/>
Hooks 2 1-1 5. Denkler 5 J-S 13<lb/>
Totals 36 20-27 92.<lb/>
Halftime: ECU 46. HP 30. Foul-<lb/>
ed out: Girven. Holt. Total fouls<lb/>
ECU 20. HP 24. Technicals, none<lb/>
A-500.<lb/>
Stampeding Terrapins Meet Potential<lb/>
i<lb/>
People say 13 is an unlucky<lb/>
number, right? Well, after wat-<lb/>
ching the events of this past<lb/>
weekend ECU basketball coach<lb/>
Dave Odom might just agree.<lb/>
For its February 13 that the<lb/>
Pirates must travel to College Park,<lb/>
Md. to face the might-stress the<lb/>
word mighty-Maryland Terrapins.<lb/>
Fresh off a 101-82 shellacking of<lb/>
Duke this past Saturday, Maryland<lb/>
is finally being recognized as a real<lb/>
power. Atop the Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Conference with a shocking 8-1 con-<lb/>
ference record and a 15-3 overall<lb/>
mark, the Terps are sure to climb in-<lb/>
to the Top Ten in this week's na-<lb/>
tional polls.<lb/>
All this comes as a surprise to<lb/>
many as the Terps of the past<lb/>
several seasons have been a team of<lb/>
go��d one-on-one capacity at best,<lb/>
lor several seasons, Maryland<lb/>
teams have beat themselves worst<lb/>
than their opponents have.<lb/>
But, ah, how things do change.<lb/>
1<lb/>
Charles Chandler<lb/>
The current Maryland team is a<lb/>
beauty to watch. Team ball is the<lb/>
name of the game for the 1980 ver-<lb/>
sion of the Terps.<lb/>
The individual talents of supers<lb/>
like Albert King, Ernest Graham<lb/>
and Buck Williams are blending<lb/>
together to make Maryland perhaps<lb/>
the most exciting team in the coun-<lb/>
try to watch. Forget Lousville, the<lb/>
Terps are the true "doctors of<lb/>
dunk<lb/>
Why are the Terrapins so much<lb/>
better this season than in the past?<lb/>
To answer this you must consider<lb/>
two things�Maryland is a more<lb/>
mature squad than the "kiddie<lb/>
corps" of the past and the Terps<lb/>
now have a King to lead them into<lb/>
the promised land.<lb/>
First the maturity. Graham and<lb/>
King are juniors, Williams a<lb/>
sophomore, guard Greg Manning a<lb/>
junior and guard Reggie Jackson a<lb/>
sophomore. Young? Sure, but con-<lb/>
sidering these five played most of<lb/>
the time last season there is a great<lb/>
deal of experience.<lb/>
On to the King. Junior forward<lb/>
Albert King came out of high school<lb/>
three years ago touted as the<lb/>
number one shoolboy in the nation.<lb/>
He was to be the man to save<lb/>
Maryland coach Lefty Dricsscl<lb/>
immediately-much in the same way<lb/>
that Moses Malone would have had<lb/>
he not turned pro.<lb/>
But things just didn't work out<lb/>
for King. He was a very shy, con-<lb/>
fused freshman. He seemed afraid<lb/>
to unleash his incredible talents<lb/>
because of his freshman status. He<lb/>
felt the juniors and seniors of the<lb/>
team should lead.<lb/>
The same was the case last season<lb/>
as a sophomore King looked to<lb/>
senior center Larry Gibson as the<lb/>
majn man in the Terp attack.<lb/>
This brings us up to the present<lb/>
season, to a Maryland team that has<lb/>
no seniors among its top eight<lb/>
players. The juniors are the elders<lb/>
and King is, of course, one of those<lb/>
juniors.<lb/>
He now feels he must lead and<lb/>
lead he has. He has now become the<lb/>
player he. was suspected to be all<lb/>
along. King is perhaps the best all-<lb/>
around forward in the league since<lb/>
the days of David Thompson and<lb/>
Walter Davis. And this includes<lb/>
Mike O'Koren.<lb/>
King is side-by-side with Duke<lb/>
center Mike Gminski in the running<lb/>
for the ACC Player-of-the-Year<lb/>
Award.<lb/>
What helps King do his job so<lb/>
well are his counterparts on the<lb/>
frontline, Williams and Graham.<lb/>
This trio gives Lefty one of the truly<lb/>
great front lines in the college game<lb/>
today.<lb/>
And just think, the entire starting<lb/>
lineup will return next season intact.<lb/>
This must throw chills into oppos-<lb/>
ing coaches bodies.<lb/>
So must the thought of February<lb/>
13 for Dave Odom.<lb/>
twinski silenced<lb/>
k Mankind<lb/>
IpiBKwavftK<lb/>
<pb facs="00057245_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
II-BKI AKY 5. 1980<lb/>
Grapplers<lb/>
Defeat<lb/>
Appalachian<lb/>
<lb/>
:<lb/>
Photo bv KIP SLOAN<lb/>
Center Mania Girven piimp<lb/>
B ED WILLIAMS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU's Pirates went<lb/>
to Virginia this past<lb/>
weekend and placed a<lb/>
"1" in every possible<lb/>
scoring column.<lb/>
The Bucs defeated<lb/>
Appalachian State<lb/>
28-12, lost to Virginia<lb/>
Tech 22-19, and tied<lb/>
William and Mary<lb/>
21-21.<lb/>
The result of these<lb/>
matches leaves ECu<lb/>
with a 5-3-1 mark on<lb/>
the year.<lb/>
The wrestlers' per-<lb/>
formances were summ-<lb/>
ed up by Coach Ed<lb/>
Steers, who said, "The<lb/>
key thing we did was<lb/>
thai we found we could<lb/>
push ourselves pretty<lb/>
well. We made some<lb/>
mistakes that were of-<lb/>
fensive, but I can han-<lb/>
dle that.<lb/>
"If we weren't try-<lb/>
ing, I couldn't handle<lb/>
that he continued.<lb/>
"But that wasn't the<lb/>
case<lb/>
Steers cited Frank<lb/>
Schade for a<lb/>
"superlative perfor-<lb/>
mance, the kind we've<lb/>
been leaking for from<lb/>
him all year Schade<lb/>
won all three of his in-<lb/>
dividual matches.<lb/>
Curtis Sendek also<lb/>
performed well in the<lb/>
158 pound weight class,<lb/>
Steers said.<lb/>
Sendek had only<lb/>
recently been inserted<lb/>
into the lineup<lb/>
"because he had a<lb/>
broken arm before<lb/>
Christmas according<lb/>
to Steers.<lb/>
Butch Revils and<lb/>
D.T. Joyner continued<lb/>
K(T wrestling action<lb/>
their winning ways.<lb/>
Both won all three of<lb/>
their matches and are<lb/>
ranked sixth nationally<lb/>
in their respective<lb/>
weieht classes.<lb/>
The only disappoin<lb/>
ting aspect of the mat-<lb/>
ches involved Danny<lb/>
Keene, who severely<lb/>
spained his ankle.<lb/>
Handball Club Hosts ASU<lb/>
Greene Dorm Wins<lb/>
Kl (.11 RMIs<lb/>
i ' itrrrspoiKtenl<lb/>
7 <lb/>
reps and persons<lb/>
responsible foi organiz-<lb/>
the tournament and<lb/>
the participants for its<lb/>
tendous success!<lb/>
Handball Highlights<lb/>
B Freddie fraier<lb/>
! C I<lb/>
: e am<lb/>
Handball<lb/>
to appalachian<lb/>
eekend<lb/>
series.<lb/>
 State is a<lb/>
. ed and<lb/>
tnized unit,<lb/>
! I showed some<lb/>
promise in w inning<lb/>
And keeping<lb/>
it games close and<lb/>
ought.<lb/>
M went to the na-<lb/>
tional tournament in<lb/>
last year and<lb/>
table<lb/>
ow ins This ex-<lb/>
, nee helped them in<lb/>
j a 25-18 win in<lb/>
game. I heir<lb/>
, �. Rand) Mc-<lb/>
eight<lb/>
e w in.<lb/>
ECU re. . ed for<lb/>
d game and<lb/>
1-14 primaril) by<lb/>
playii - n ac ious<lb/>
� en se . 1: veryo n e<lb/>
lyed haul for EC U<lb/>
.  n showed in the<lb/>
ural win. Joe Daas was<lb/>
- leading scorei with five<lb/>
�<lb/>
pi;<lb/>
goals.<lb/>
The third game of<lb/>
the series was won bv<lb/>
�Sl , 20-16, in a very<lb/>
physical match. 1 he in-<lb/>
ternational style of play<lb/>
is much more physical<lb/>
than our regular in-<lb/>
tramural play. I he<lb/>
leading scorer again<lb/>
was Rand) McCaslin<lb/>
with seven goals, while<lb/>
Gerald Hall scored five<lb/>
for ECU.<lb/>
I or the series, the<lb/>
leading scorer was Ran-<lb/>
dy McCaslin for AST<lb/>
with 20 goals. Joe Daas<lb/>
and Gerald Hall led<lb/>
ECl with eleven goals<lb/>
eac h, while Mike<lb/>
Swart had ni ne.<lb/>
ECU's goalies 1 arr<lb/>
W ebb and Ron Sistare<lb/>
show ed remat kable<lb/>
talent .nd determina-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
1(1 will nael to<lb/>
sl on I ebiuais 2;<lb/>
for a triangular tourna-<lb/>
ment against Chat-<lb/>
tanooga and Sl . I his<lb/>
competition will be in<lb/>
preparation lor the<lb/>
prestigious twelve-team<lb/>
international at West<lb/>
Point. N.Y March<lb/>
28-30<lb/>
Roller Hocke)<lb/>
This season. Roller<lb/>
Hockey competition<lb/>
has been exciting and<lb/>
hard-played. The Dole<lb/>
Sigmas defeated<lb/>
UnKappa Fifth while<lb/>
the Skater Daters rolled<lb/>
ov e r the W r o n g<lb/>
Numbers. The Chub-<lb/>
niks lost their game to<lb/>
the H.Rs.<lb/>
In other games, the<lb/>
Body Bruisers, Delta<lb/>
Riders, Sam the Slam<lb/>
and the Hammerheads<lb/>
aKo posted wins during<lb/>
the early season<lb/>
openers.<lb/>
Darrell Jones of the<lb/>
H.Rs is the season's<lb/>
high scorer so far with<lb/>
18 points followed by<lb/>
I ynn Barber with 14,<lb/>
Mike Wise with nine<lb/>
and Billy Dixon with<lb/>
eight.<lb/>
lop teams in the<lb/>
Silver Pucks League are<lb/>
expected to be the Body<lb/>
Bruisers Cola, Sam the<lb/>
Sam and the Ham-<lb/>
merheads.<lb/>
The Skater Daters,<lb/>
Dole Sigmas and the<lb/>
H.Rs are expected to<lb/>
lead the Slick Sticks<lb/>
League.<lb/>
Anyone interested in<lb/>
an afternoon of fun<lb/>
and excitement should<lb/>
make their way out to<lb/>
Twin Rinks where<lb/>
games are being played<lb/>
Monday through<lb/>
Thursday from 3:45<lb/>
p.m. until 6:30 p.m.<lb/>
Women's Soccer<lb/>
Help support<lb/>
women's sports at ECU<lb/>
by joining the newly<lb/>
formed Women's Soc-<lb/>
cer Club. The team<lb/>
needs well over twenty<lb/>
members and anyone<lb/>
interested should con-<lb/>
tact Chris Solt at<lb/>
758-5756 or Will<lb/>
Wibert at 752-4553 as<lb/>
soon as possible.<lb/>
An organizational<lb/>
meeting will also be<lb/>
held Wednesday, Feb.<lb/>
13 at 7 p.m. at 922 14th<lb/>
Street (the brick house<lb/>
behind Belk Dorm.)<lb/>
SAAD'S SHOE<lb/>
REPAIR<lb/>
113Grande Ave.<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
Qaalily Shoe Repair<lb/>
IT'S NEW IT'SGOOD<lb/>
ROAST BEEF DINNER<lb/>
Comes with mashed potatoes<lb/>
and gravy,Choice of 1 veg.<lb/>
Homemade biscuits,and All<lb/>
You Can Eat Salad<lb/>
Only $2.99 11am 4pm<lb/>
S3.49 4pm Closing<lb/>
ROAST BEEF SANDWICH<lb/>
Comes witfi French Fries,<lb/>
Choice of,1 veg and All<lb/>
You CarEat Salad<lb/>
Only<lb/>
52.29<lb/>
CHECKOUT OUR NEW<lb/>
LUNCHEON SPECIALS<lb/>
They include choice of<lb/>
potato.Choice of 1 veg.<lb/>
Texas Toast or Homemade<lb/>
Biscuits,and All You Can<lb/>
Eat Salad<lb/>
From SI.99 to S3.99<lb/>
Call 756 6508 For<lb/>
fKW-OIN ROOM RESERVATIONS<lb/>
 ARMY NAVY STORE<lb/>
� Backpacks. B 15. Bombe- <lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
pa<lb/>
Field. Deck Fhqht, Snork<lb/>
Jackets, Peacoats, Parka<lb/>
Shoes Combat Boots, Plus<lb/>
1501 S. Evans Street<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
���������<lb/>
Classified<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
$175.00 "an inclusive"<lb/>
pn-anancy test, birth con-<lb/>
trol and problem preqnan<lb/>
cy counseling For further<lb/>
information call 832 0535<lb/>
itoli free number<lb/>
800 221 2S68) between 9<lb/>
AM 5PM .veekdays<lb/>
Raleiqh Women's<lb/>
Health Orqannation<lb/>
VI 7 West Morgan St<lb/>
Raleigh, N C. 27603<lb/>
SPORTSWORLD<lb/>
COLLEGE NIGHT<lb/>
Tuesday Night<lb/>
6:30-10:00<lb/>
Bring I. D. and<lb/>
Get In For Onlv SI.25<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
- � '<lb/>
��S lor Dance<lb/>
. spring For<lb/>
� 35<lb/>
N - ME STUDIOS of<lb/>
Ba � Jaf,<lb/>
; and Disco<lb/>
ma 11 o n ran<lb/>
lor western North<lb/>
-<lb/>
�,a ar, and Ira E"<lb/>
nee not � � Out must<lb/>
. ng and ork.ng tm<lb/>
n On . "i cut non<lb/>
. . . � Ktents need ap<lb/>
p , r replication and Drochure<lb/>
Camp Pinewood 1801<lb/>
and R-1 ami Beach Fla<lb/>
DOG NEEDS HOME ov.ng dog<lb/>
free to carmq person Ten months<lb/>
old part Labrador Retriever Call<lb/>
'56 66-J4<lb/>
HELP WANTED I am looking for<lb/>
two friendly, outgoing people for<lb/>
weekend and holiday work Job<lb/>
pays well for the nqht individuals<lb/>
Must be mteliegenf guick witted,<lb/>
and en,oy happy people Travel<lb/>
involved Transportation furnish<lb/>
ed job is ideal for educator of stu<lb/>
dent seek ng extra m Not sales<lb/>
work interested Call 758 6449 for<lb/>
application<lb/>
HELP WANTED Exclusive<lb/>
pnvafe beach club at Atlantic<lb/>
Bach N C desires two<lb/>
Bartenders must be 21 or older<lb/>
Waitresses must be 18 or older<lb/>
Lifeguards Must have W S I<lb/>
Season begins approximately May<lb/>
20 and runs through Labor Day<lb/>
No hv.ng quarters furnished Rep<lb/>
i, f0 Mrs T Gaibreath Jr 2309<lb/>
Hardee Rd Kinston N C 28501<lb/>
No phone calls accepted<lb/>
DISCOURAGED OR LONLEY<lb/>
to.n Bible study and fellowship<lb/>
Can 6 ��41 after 5 00<lb/>
 WEWAKO S Lost I pair of gold<lb/>
tnrm r.mm.d giass.s and contact<lb/>
s. ns case Both w. re m brown<lb/>
solt leather cas Possibly lost m<lb/>
Brwst.r .�r Austin Contact<lb/>
H,chard Or-n at ISt 2V85 ihom-i<lb/>
 -s' Hit � �oork I<lb/>
TYPING tor students and pro<lb/>
lessors available call 752 7492<lb/>
6 00p m<lb/>
S lit WARD S 5300 in NYSE Iblue<lb/>
chips) certificates Leading to the<lb/>
t and conviction of most pel<lb/>
onts) responsible for the thieft<lb/>
rtnd vandalism of a 1948 Chevy<lb/>
.an on January 30. 1980 at 1 30<lb/>
a m S00 bonus to the personis)<lb/>
ho brings vandalism before the<lb/>
appropriate committee<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE 1978 Nova. 6 cylinder<lb/>
air conditioner power steering tilt<lb/>
wheel AM FM cassette, radials<lb/>
Call 752 3405 after 5 00<lb/>
GUITAR FOR ALE Korean Sun<lb/>
burst, six string with case and<lb/>
strap Very good condition $70<lb/>
Call 752 7279<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
ROOMMATE wanted to share<lb/>
two bedroom partially furnished<lb/>
apartment Within walking<lb/>
distance from campus One half<lb/>
rent and utilities Call 758 3076<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED for nice<lb/>
3 bedroom house Two other oc<lb/>
cupants 592 month plus one third<lb/>
utilities Call 752 7416<lb/>
TWO ROOMMATES wanted at<lb/>
Georgetown Apartments 602<lb/>
Cotanche St Stop Oy or call<lb/>
758 7198<lb/>
STUDIOUS MALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
needed to share rent and utilities<lb/>
in one bedroom apartment at<lb/>
King s Row Call 752 7325 after<lb/>
11 OOp m<lb/>
34th Year For<lb/>
This Great<lb/>
Event!<lb/>
In Downtown Greenville<lb/>
THURSDAY, FEB. 7th<lb/>
Is<lb/>
STEEPLECHASE<lb/>
CAFETERIA<lb/>
Pitt Plaa<lb/>
PRICES WILL<lb/>
NEVER BE LOWER!<lb/>
Now It's YOUR TIME To SAVE Downtown<lb/>
Sponsored by the Downtown Greenville Association, Inc.<lb/>
Mon .Sat. 1100 2 00<lb/>
4 30 8 00<lb/>
So'1<lb/>
.<lb/>
� $&amp; �&amp;<lb/>
Distributed<lb/>
By<lb/>
Taylor<lb/>
Beverage Co.<lb/>
Goidsboro<lb/>
Pizza iiift<lb/>
AMERICAS FAVORITE PIZZA<lb/>
�<lb/>
IMPORTED<lb/>
Heineken<lb/>
THI<lb/>
HOLLAND BEER<lb/>
1 IMPORTM) BUR IN AM. Rl( A<lb/>
PIZZA BUFFET<lb/>
ALL THE PIZZA AND<lb/>
SALAD YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
$259<lb/>
MonFri. 11:30 2:00<lb/>
Mon, �P Tnes. 6:00-8:00<lb/>
758 8266 Evening buffet �2.79<lb/>
Hwy 204 bypass Greenville , N. C.<lb/>
WED. 5 Feb. 1980<lb/>
$1.14 Pork wDressing<lb/>
$1.49 Chicken Chow Mein<lb/>
THUR. 6 Feb. 1980<lb/>
$1.14 Spaghetti wMeat Sauce<lb/>
$1.49 Stuffed Peppers<lb/>
FRI. 7 Feb. 1980<lb/>
$1.14 Beans w Franks<lb/>
$1.49 Smothered Chicken<lb/>
SAT. 8 Feb. 1980<lb/>
$1.14 Creole Spaghetti<lb/>
$1.49 Meat Loaf<lb/>
SUN. 9 Feb. 1980<lb/>
$1.14 Chicken Noodle Casserole<lb/>
$1.49 Shaved Ham &amp; Yams<lb/>
MON. 10 Feb. 1980<lb/>
$1.14 Baked Lasagna<lb/>
$1.49 Fish Patties wTarter Sauce<lb/>
TUE. 11 Feb. 1980<lb/>
$1.14 Tuna Casserole<lb/>
$1.49 Liver &amp; Onions<lb/>
All Dinners Served with 2 Veg. &amp; Roll<lb/>
TRY OUR NEW FRIED VEGETABLE PLAT1<lb/>
<lb/>
fl<lb/>
<pb facs="00057245_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROL INIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARYS, 1980<lb/>
Jesse Owens Faces<lb/>
Bout With Cancer<lb/>
B WILLGRIMSLEY<lb/>
AP Special Correspondent<lb/>
While the country<lb/>
wrestles with the dilem-<lb/>
ma of boycotting the<lb/>
Moscow Olympics, all<lb/>
of us should pause a<lb/>
moment and give a<lb/>
thought to perhaps the<lb/>
the greatest Olympian<lb/>
of them all, Jesse<lb/>
Owens.<lb/>
Jesse, now 66, has<lb/>
had to tight most of his<lb/>
life. Son of an<lb/>
Alabama sharecropper,<lb/>
he has had to overcome<lb/>
bias in this country and<lb/>
slurs o' being "of an<lb/>
inferior race" when he<lb/>
invaded Berlin for the<lb/>
1936 Nai Olympics.<lb/>
The swift, coor-<lb/>
dinated black athlete<lb/>
shamed Adolf Hitler by<lb/>
winning four gold<lb/>
medals and overcame<lb/>
numerous obstacles to<lb/>
emerge as a succesful<lb/>
businessman,<lb/>
America's Olympic<lb/>
"elder statesman" and<lb/>
most fluent<lb/>
spokesman.<lb/>
Now he is facing his<lb/>
toughest battle ' lung<lb/>
cancer.<lb/>
A telephone call to<lb/>
his Phoenix, Ariz<lb/>
home brought good<lb/>
news. He is reacting<lb/>
favorably to drugs and<lb/>
gaining strength after<lb/>
treatment at the<lb/>
University of Arizona<lb/>
Health Sciences Center.<lb/>
"He is up and<lb/>
about said his wife,<lb/>
Ruth, "and we are en-<lb/>
couraged, but he isn't<lb/>
up to a lot of conversa-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Asked if Jesse had<lb/>
expressed himself on<lb/>
the present Olympic<lb/>
situation, Mrs. Owens<lb/>
said: "Oh, no. He's not<lb/>
read) to bite that bullet<lb/>
yet. You know, he gets<lb/>
ver emotional<lb/>
There are few more<lb/>
emotional or dynamic<lb/>
men thai Jesse Owens,<lb/>
who is reminiscent of<lb/>
the late Dr. Martin<lb/>
Luther King when he<lb/>
takes the podium in<lb/>
defense of Olympic<lb/>
ideals and pride of<lb/>
country.<lb/>
'The Olympics have<lb/>
become the whipping<lb/>
pov; of politics he<lb/>
once said. "but. thank<lb/>
God, they are still run<lb/>
b man. Man has a way<lb/>
of over-riding such in-<lb/>
fluences<lb/>
There is no indica-<lb/>
tion how Jesse would<lb/>
view President Carter's<lb/>
call for a Moscow<lb/>
boycott. He un-<lb/>
doubtedly would be<lb/>
torn between<lb/>
patriotism and a strong<lb/>
belief in the sanctity of<lb/>
the Olympic code.<lb/>
While the press sen-<lb/>
sationally played up the<lb/>
theme that Hitler, sur-<lb/>
rounded by storm<lb/>
troopers, snubbed the<lb/>
black man who shat-<lb/>
tered the Fuehrer's<lb/>
theory of Aryan<lb/>
supremacy. Owens<lb/>
himself always has<lb/>
downplayed the inci-<lb/>
THERE2�A<lb/>
DIFFERENCE!<lb/>
PREPARE FOR:<lb/>
VQE ECFMG FLEX<lb/>
NAT! MED BOS.<lb/>
NAT'L DENTAL DDS.<lb/>
NURSING BOARDS<lb/>
MCAT � DAT � LSAT � GRE<lb/>
GMAT � OCAT � PCAT<lb/>
VAT � SAT<lb/>
TEST PREPARATION<lb/>
SPECIALISTS SINCE 1938<lb/>
Visit Any Center<lb/>
And See For Yourself<lb/>
Why We Make The Difference<lb/>
Flexible Programs ft Hours<lb/>
Call Days, Eves &amp; Weekends<lb/>
919-489-8720<lb/>
Su.tc 102<lb/>
Crott Bid?<lb/>
2634 Chapel Hill Bl.d<lb/>
Durham N C 27707<lb/>
for Information About<lb/>
Other Centers Outside NY state<lb/>
 til I II lct<lb/>
') ??. PK2<lb/>
Cent ,n Mjjfjr US Citiet<lb/>
Puerto Rko. Toronto, Canada<lb/>
 Lugano. Switzerland<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
"I don't know<lb/>
Jesse said. "I never<lb/>
looked toward the box<lb/>
where Hitler and his en-<lb/>
tourage sat. I was too<lb/>
busy worrying about<lb/>
fulfilling my childhood<lb/>
dream.<lb/>
"I was conditioned<lb/>
to discrimination when<lb/>
I went to Berlin. I was<lb/>
not politically oriented.<lb/>
None of us was. We<lb/>
were too busy working<lb/>
on our personal goals<lb/>
Patriot, preacher,<lb/>
ambassador, inspira-<lb/>
tion for the young,<lb/>
Owens refused to<lb/>
become embittered by<lb/>
early hardships and<lb/>
emerged as an un-<lb/>
wavering booster of the<lb/>
American way of life.<lb/>
"1 live here. It's all I<lb/>
know and all I have<lb/>
he has repeatedly in-<lb/>
sisted. "My job is not<lb/>
to complain but to try<lb/>
to make it better<lb/>
It was Owens, his<lb/>
name and his stature<lb/>
among the athletes that<lb/>
prevented a mass<lb/>
walkout of U.S. blacks<lb/>
after the clinched fist<lb/>
demonstration by John<lb/>
Carlos and Tommie<lb/>
Smith in 1968 in Mex-<lb/>
ico City.<lb/>
"I could appreciate<lb/>
their frustrations he<lb/>
said afterward. "I told<lb/>
them that they should<lb/>
light their war on<lb/>
another battlefield. The<lb/>
Olympics were not the<lb/>
proper place<lb/>
Jesse was picking<lb/>
cotton at the age of<lb/>
seven. He was nine<lb/>
when the family moved<lb/>
to Cleveland where he<lb/>
early established<lb/>
himself as a running<lb/>
prospect. He got a<lb/>
scholarship to Ohio<lb/>
State.<lb/>
ECU Gymnasts<lb/>
Down Radford<lb/>
Junior Susan McKnight<lb/>
photo by KIP SLOAN<lb/>
East Carolina's<lb/>
women gymnasts<lb/>
claimed their fourth<lb/>
victory of the season<lb/>
Saturday afternoon<lb/>
with a 115.2-113.15 vic-<lb/>
tory over Radford Col-<lb/>
lege in Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum.<lb/>
"They weren't as<lb/>
tough as I expected<lb/>
says ECU coach Jon<lb/>
Rose. "They didn't ex-<lb/>
ecute the way they have<lb/>
in the past. I hope we<lb/>
can beat them again<lb/>
when they have their<lb/>
regionals there later<lb/>
on<lb/>
Elizabeth Jackson<lb/>
came through once<lb/>
again for the Lady<lb/>
Pirates, claiming a first<lb/>
place tie in the floor ex-<lb/>
ercise with an 8.05 per-<lb/>
formance. She took se-<lb/>
cond in the balance<lb/>
beam with 7.25 and<lb/>
third in the uneven<lb/>
parallel bars with 7.0.<lb/>
Her overall total of<lb/>
29.6 was enough to<lb/>
capture second place<lb/>
honors for the Bucs in<lb/>
the all-around competi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Elsewhere, Cindv<lb/>
Rogers posted a 7.45<lb/>
first on the balance<lb/>
beam, a 7.05 second on<lb/>
the uneven bars and a<lb/>
7.95 third in floor exer-<lb/>
cise.<lb/>
Annie Loeschke add-<lb/>
ed a fourth on the<lb/>
uneven barss with a<lb/>
6.75 and a fifth in floo<lb/>
manuevers at 7.7.<lb/>
"I'm still looking for<lb/>
118 points from this<lb/>
team by the end of the<lb/>
season said Rose.<lb/>
"We still have a lot of<lb/>
potential.<lb/>
The Lad) Piratev<lb/>
now 4-5 overall, ti i<lb/>
to l NC-Chapd H .<lb/>
Wedneda for<lb/>
p.m. matchup with tin<lb/>
Tar Heeis before<lb/>
South arolina<lb/>
I u r m a n<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
&amp;-<lb/>
hast Carolina Playhouse Present<lb/>
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FUNNY,<lb/>
VALENTINE<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
The decision may well be difficult<lb/>
but the abortion itself doesn't have to be.<lb/>
We do our best to make it easy for you.<lb/>
Tree Pregnancy Test<lb/>
Very Early Pregnancy Test<lb/>
Call 781-8580 anytime<lb/>
The Fleming Center<lb/>
Friendly Personal . . . Professional Care<lb/>
at a reasonable cost<lb/>
Wk<lb/>
VALENTINE SALE<lb/>
ALL 10-SPEEDS<lb/>
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j Book Bags, locks &amp; cables, bike carriers. <lb/>
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ONION 3.50<lb/>
GREEN PEPPER 3.50<lb/>
PEPPERONI 3.50<lb/>
FRESH SAUSAGE .50<lb/>
GROUND BEEF JJJ<lb/>
OLIVEIBIack or Green) i1�<lb/>
ANCHOVY $�<lb/>
MUSHROOM 3 50<lb/>
HAM 3.50<lb/>
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14"<lb/>
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THICK CRUST EXTRA CHEESE<lb/>
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14'<lb/>
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PEPPERONI<lb/>
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Green Olive, Anchovy on requast.<lb/>
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4 10<lb/>
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ANCHOVY 4 10<lb/>
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ADDITIONAL ITEMS 60<lb/>
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