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<pb facs="00057246_0001"/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
?hc iEaai Carolinian<lb/>
Vol. 54 No. &amp;<lb/>
s.<lb/>
S<lb/>
8 Pages<lb/>
Thursday, February 7,1980<lb/>
(Greenville, N.C<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Unfinished<lb/>
Parking<lb/>
Lot Open<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
The unfinished parking lot behind<lb/>
Mendenhali Student Center is now<lb/>
open for parking until until the lot is<lb/>
dry enough to complete construc-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The decision was made at a recent<lb/>
chancellors meeting to help relieve<lb/>
the parking shortage near campus.<lb/>
"1 conferred with the engineer of<lb/>
the parking lot said SGA Vice<lb/>
President Charlie Sherrod. The<lb/>
spokesman for Barrus Construction<lb/>
Company said that until the weather<lb/>
is "dry and warm they will be<lb/>
unable to work on the lots.<lb/>
Until now the lot has not been<lb/>
open for parking.<lb/>
Because of the large amount of<lb/>
wet weather that has plagued North<lb/>
Carolina in recent weeks, it is<lb/>
doubtful if the lots will be com-<lb/>
pleted in the near future.<lb/>
According to Vice Chancellor<lb/>
Elmer Meyer, the construction com-<lb/>
pany will have to re-grade the lot.<lb/>
Sherrod thought it made "good<lb/>
sense not to close the lot for months<lb/>
until the conditions get right. It will<lb/>
certainly ease the parking crunch<lb/>
Photo by JILL Adams<lb/>
Jarvis Students Won't Be Left Out In The Cold<lb/>
Local Man Runs For President<lb/>
Pofo Oy JILL ADAMS<lb/>
Willis Stancill<lb/>
for president<lb/>
By TERRY GRAY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
With so many presidential can-<lb/>
didates running around these days,<lb/>
it's getting hard to remember all the<lb/>
names: Baker, Bush, Reagan, Ken-<lb/>
nedy, Stancill, Anderson <lb/>
Stancill?<lb/>
Willis Stancill. It might be in-<lb/>
teresting to remember his name, for<lb/>
this 40-year-old Greenville native<lb/>
says he is going to make mincemeat<lb/>
out of President Carter in New<lb/>
Hampshire's Democratic primary<lb/>
on Feb. 26.<lb/>
"It sounds preposterous, me run-<lb/>
ning for president, but I've talked to<lb/>
thousands of people in eight dif-<lb/>
ferent states who have pledged their<lb/>
money and support said Stancill<lb/>
Wednesday.<lb/>
Stancill has no working ex-<lb/>
perience in government, but claims<lb/>
to have read enough books on<lb/>
economics, politics and science to<lb/>
hae earned several doctorate degrees<lb/>
by now. He said he got his Master's<lb/>
at ECU in 1962, and has since<lb/>
taught high school science while do-<lb/>
ing various other jobs on the side,<lb/>
including stockbroking and real<lb/>
estate sales.<lb/>
Although he plans to run on the<lb/>
Democratic ticket, Stancill<lb/>
represents the philosophy of the<lb/>
Clean Government Party. The party<lb/>
line is not hard to guess ? clean up<lb/>
the waste, the corruption and ineffi-<lb/>
ciency in Washington. Stancill isn't<lb/>
sure how big the party is, but said<lb/>
there are "thousands of members all<lb/>
over the country<lb/>
Stancill said he went to observe<lb/>
the candidates in the Iowa caucuses<lb/>
last month and came away with the<lb/>
belief that he could win in New<lb/>
Hampshire.<lb/>
Stancill on Carter: "Nobody real-<lb/>
ly likes him, he just doesn't have<lb/>
any competition On Kennedy:<lb/>
"He's already been eliminated, and<lb/>
won't even carry Massachusetts<lb/>
Reagan: "Over the hill Bush:<lb/>
"He won in Iowa mainly because of<lb/>
a lack of Republican candidates<lb/>
Conally: "No chance<lb/>
"I didn't do any campaigning in<lb/>
Iowa because I didn't want to an-<lb/>
tagonize any of them, I just wanted<lb/>
to wait and let them fight among<lb/>
themselves Stancill said.<lb/>
The first impression one gets is<lb/>
that Stancill can't be serious about<lb/>
this. How can an unknown who has<lb/>
never held public office come up<lb/>
against nationally known, ex-<lb/>
perienced politicians?<lb/>
"How? I'm going to convince the<lb/>
voters by telling the truth said<lb/>
Stancill confidently. "Everybody<lb/>
NCR Considers License<lb/>
First Nuke Since Three-Mile<lb/>
KNOXVILLE, Tenn.(AP)?The<lb/>
Nuclear Regulatory Commission's<lb/>
staff is ready to license a new<lb/>
nuclear plant for the first time since<lb/>
the Three-Mile Island accident last<lb/>
March, officials said today.<lb/>
Frank Ingram, an NRC<lb/>
spokesman in Washington, said the<lb/>
commission's Office Of Nuclear<lb/>
Regulation has concluded that the<lb/>
Tennesee Valley Authority should<lb/>
get a restricted license to load fuel in<lb/>
one of two reactors at its Sequoyah<lb/>
plant near Chattanooga.<lb/>
"The commission presently has<lb/>
time scheduled for Monday to hear<lb/>
a staff review of Sequoyah In-<lb/>
gram said. "It is the staff's inten<lb/>
tion to recommend that the commis-<lb/>
sion offer a license for low-power<lb/>
testing<lb/>
Officials said NRC's staff has<lb/>
concluded in a 150-page report that<lb/>
Sequovah satisfies exisitng license<lb/>
requirements and all new recom-<lb/>
mendations made by various task<lb/>
forces since the Three-Mile Island<lb/>
Inside Today<lb/>
3<lb/>
" Rmh Rtv V?" Rcvtvwctf <lb/>
? tmtfaa Tnmb<lb/>
T No CotMmP7<lb/>
???? Mra Cmt ?? ????????? <lb/>
,mmtfuttt ftmi<lb/>
nuclear plant accident last March<lb/>
28.<lb/>
If the five-member commission<lb/>
approves the recommendation, In-<lb/>
gram said, Sequoyah would become<lb/>
the first nuclear station to receive<lb/>
any sort of license from NRC since<lb/>
the Harrisburg, Pa accident.<lb/>
NRC had a team of inspectors at<lb/>
the Chattanooga plant three days<lb/>
last week making a final check of<lb/>
the safety measures implemented by<lb/>
TVA since Three-Mile Island. .<lb/>
Denwood Ross, director of pro-<lb/>
ject management in the NRC's Of-<lb/>
fice of Nuclear Reactor Regulation,<lb/>
said the commission could impose<lb/>
some conditions on Sequoyah's<lb/>
operation, "but they'd be benign<lb/>
"There are no unresolved issues<lb/>
as far as we're concerned, and the<lb/>
only bad thing that could happen<lb/>
would be for the commission Thurs-<lb/>
day to adopt some new policy in ef-<lb/>
fect requiring us to put Sequoyah<lb/>
off he said.<lb/>
The commission is scheduled to<lb/>
hear a staff briefing Thursday on<lb/>
the impact of a 2,000-page report by<lb/>
a special inquiry group into the<lb/>
Three-Mile Island accident.<lb/>
The NRC commissioned the in-<lb/>
quiry, directed by Washington<lb/>
lawyer Mitchell Rogovin, as part of<lb/>
its own investigation of Three-Mile<lb/>
Island. The Rogovin inquiry is in-<lb/>
dependent of a study by the Kemeny<lb/>
Commission appointed by President<lb/>
Carter.<lb/>
"The briefing Friday is focused<lb/>
on the impact of the report in terms<lb/>
of licensing Ingram said. "It<lb/>
would be premature to speculate<lb/>
now how that might effect Se-<lb/>
quoyah. As of this moment, it is the<lb/>
staff's intention to recommend Se-<lb/>
quoyah's licensing<lb/>
TVA has contended since Dec. 3<lb/>
that Sequoyah meets the Kemeny<lb/>
Commission's guidelines for new<lb/>
licensing requirements. The NRC<lb/>
placed a moratorium on licensing of<lb/>
all new nuclear plants after the<lb/>
Kemeny Commission issued its fin-<lb/>
dings last Oct. 31.<lb/>
Larry Mills, TVA's manager of<lb/>
nuclear regulations, said that even if<lb/>
Sequoyah gets a limited license<lb/>
Monday, it will likely be mid-<lb/>
summer or later before the plant<lb/>
begins commercial operation.<lb/>
Corrections<lb/>
In last Friday's issue, two names<lb/>
were left off of the visitation com-<lb/>
mittee in the Visitation Survey<lb/>
Story. MRC officers belonging to<lb/>
the committee are: Grady Dickerson<lb/>
and John Quinn.<lb/>
In the Tuesday, Feb. 3 issue, a<lb/>
headline was incorrectly placed with<lb/>
an article. On page 3, a headline ar<lb/>
peared reading, "Nazi Leader Calls<lb/>
For Right-Wing Demonstration<lb/>
The article following this headline<lb/>
concerned eight additional staff<lb/>
members being hired at a center for<lb/>
mentally retarded children. We,<lb/>
apologize for any confusion this<lb/>
mistake may have caused.<lb/>
knows that politicians never tell the<lb/>
truth. I'm going to be all over New<lb/>
Hampshire, in the schools, the col-<lb/>
leges, in town halls ? wherever I<lb/>
can speak<lb/>
His comments on the ills of<lb/>
America are simple and straightfor-<lb/>
ward. To stop inflation, he proposes<lb/>
a battle against the monopolies that<lb/>
are part of the "international cor-<lb/>
porate power structure that is break-<lb/>
ing the back of the middle class<lb/>
The Iranian crisis was "staged by<lb/>
some of Carter's people to help cut<lb/>
Kennedy's throat says Stancill,<lb/>
who also thinks we should cut<lb/>
defense spending because "most of<lb/>
it is wasted<lb/>
He added that the Russian inva-<lb/>
sion of Afghanistan was the "major<lb/>
boo-boo of the century ? they<lb/>
think we're pussycats but he is<lb/>
against any military moves. Instead,<lb/>
the United States must convince<lb/>
world leaders that "the world has<lb/>
become too small for war<lb/>
Stancill, who said he has already<lb/>
spent $3,000 of his own money on<lb/>
the campaign trail in several states,<lb/>
has a unique proposal for fund-<lb/>
raising. He only wants $5 from each<lb/>
contributor, and suggests that they<lb/>
offset the expense by selling old<lb/>
clothes or by cashing in on bottle<lb/>
refunds and the like.<lb/>
As the snow was covering Green-<lb/>
ville and Interstate 95 Wednesday,<lb/>
Stancill wondered whether he<lb/>
should go ahead and drive to New<lb/>
Hampshire or wait.<lb/>
He's anxious to go. Whatever lays<lb/>
in store for him there, he doesn't<lb/>
betray the slightest hint of doubt<lb/>
about his seemingly impossible<lb/>
quest.<lb/>
"A lot of people think I'm a<lb/>
crackpot said Stancill, "but if I<lb/>
can get just a few delegates to the<lb/>
convention, I'll have made a<lb/>
mark<lb/>
Jarvis Co-eds<lb/>
Given Option<lb/>
By DEBBIE HOTALING<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Jarvis Dormitory is going co-ed,<lb/>
and some students are now wonder-<lb/>
ing where the women from Jarvis<lb/>
will go.<lb/>
Dr. Elmer Meyer, vice chancellor<lb/>
for Student Life, assured the Jarvis<lb/>
women a place to live. "We are<lb/>
planning, and we had always plann-<lb/>
ed, to find equal housing for those<lb/>
girls who are losing their rooms in<lb/>
Jarvis<lb/>
The Residence Life Committee<lb/>
will meet in a closed session Thurs-<lb/>
day, Feb. 7, to discuss options for<lb/>
the women being moved out. Thurs-<lb/>
day, Feb. 14, an open meeting will<lb/>
be held to discuss the different op-<lb/>
tions and to hear any new ideas<lb/>
from students.<lb/>
"Everyone is welcome to give<lb/>
their opinions and speculations on<lb/>
the decision to be made Meyer<lb/>
said. "There are several questions<lb/>
that need to be answered: What's<lb/>
fairest for the girls in Jarvis concer-<lb/>
ning places open for the girls? Who<lb/>
will have the first choice of rooms in<lb/>
Jarvis? Which girls will have to<lb/>
leave Jarvis?"<lb/>
Title IX calls for equal housing<lb/>
with no discrimination in facilities.<lb/>
Brett Melvin, SGA president, is a<lb/>
strong supporter of Title IX on the<lb/>
ECU campus. "I worked for mak-<lb/>
ing Jarvis co-ed. This was mainly<lb/>
because I wanted to represent all of<lb/>
the students. Why was there a dorm<lb/>
substantially better than the others<lb/>
limited to only females?"<lb/>
Two dorms on the hill have been<lb/>
named as possible solutions for the<lb/>
co-ed problem. Belk and Scott are<lb/>
the only two dorms with suites. At<lb/>
the open meeting next Thursday,<lb/>
students will be able to voice their<lb/>
opinions on which dorm should be<lb/>
made co-ed.<lb/>
"I think Belk Dorm is the best<lb/>
choice Melvin said. "The<lb/>
facilities are more appropos to the<lb/>
females' needs in Belk rather than in<lb/>
Scott. I think the girls will like living<lb/>
in suites.<lb/>
"To live in a co-ed dorm, one<lb/>
must be an upperclassman, so those<lb/>
students living in a co-ed dorm will<lb/>
have already become accustomed to<lb/>
living on campus and away from<lb/>
home Melvin said.<lb/>
Virginia Carlton, president of<lb/>
Jarvis, commented, "As a<lb/>
spokesperson for the Jarvis girls, I<lb/>
can say they want some sort of com-<lb/>
promise. They want suites ? mavbe<lb/>
first floor Scott. The girls on first<lb/>
floor (Jarvis) should be given top<lb/>
priority on the rooms coming open<lb/>
in the dorm on the hill which will be<lb/>
made co-ed. The girls have never<lb/>
been given a chance at suites before<lb/>
and Title IX says equal facilities<lb/>
There was much confusion last<lb/>
week concerning the placement of<lb/>
the Jarvis women. Many women<lb/>
were under the impression that they<lb/>
had to find their own place to live<lb/>
without the administration's<lb/>
assistance. They also didn't realize<lb/>
that a fair exchange of dorm rooms<lb/>
will be made.<lb/>
"The girls were not informed ap-<lb/>
propriately Melvin explained.<lb/>
"The problem came in the way that<lb/>
the situation was handled and not in<lb/>
the situation itself.<lb/>
See JARVIS COEDS Page 3, Col. 3<lb/>
Pnoto by RICHARD GREEN<lb/>
Snow On The Tracks<lb/>
New Iranian President Sadr<lb/>
Denounces Militants' Actions<lb/>
By The Associated Press<lb/>
Iranian President Abolhassan<lb/>
Bani Sadr yesterday angrily de-<lb/>
nounced the Moslem militants<lb/>
holding the U.S. Embassy hostages<lb/>
in Tehran as "dictators who have<lb/>
created a government within a<lb/>
government<lb/>
Bani Sadr's attack, his strongest<lb/>
yet on the embassy militants, came<lb/>
after they broadcast allegations that<lb/>
the minister of information and na-<lb/>
tional guidance, Nasser Minachi,<lb/>
had "close links with the CIA<lb/>
Minachi was arrested by revolu-<lb/>
tionary guards without government<lb/>
authorization at about midnight<lb/>
Tuesday,<lb/>
The minister had denied the<lb/>
allegations before being seized at his<lb/>
home.<lb/>
The new tension between Bani<lb/>
Sadr ami the militants arose as Ira-<lb/>
nian officials gave conflicting<lb/>
signals on whether the establishment<lb/>
of a U.N. investigation of the ex-<lb/>
shah's regime would lead to the<lb/>
release of the approximately SO em-<lb/>
bassy hostages.<lb/>
It was announced Tuesday night<lb/>
that Bani Sadr had been chosen<lb/>
chairman of Iran's ruling Revolu-<lb/>
tionary Council, strengthening his<lb/>
position and raising hopes among<lb/>
those who expect him to try to get<lb/>
the American hostages released.<lb/>
The new president, stung by the<lb/>
arbitrary arrest of Minachi, told the<lb/>
Tehran daily newspaper Kayhan<lb/>
that although the militants may not<lb/>
realize it they are paving the way for<lb/>
lawlessness in the country.<lb/>
"How could you expect a govern-<lb/>
ment employee to go to work feeling<lb/>
secure he said. "When there is no<lb/>
legal or judicial security in the coun-<lb/>
try, that will undoubtedly lead to<lb/>
disorder<lb/>
Bani Sadr also attacked the state-<lb/>
owned television network for acting<lb/>
without prior government approval<lb/>
in giving the embassy militants air<lb/>
time Tuesday night to broadcast<lb/>
their allegations.<lb/>
The militants found documents in<lb/>
the embassy files "proving the ex-<lb/>
istence of close links between Nasser<lb/>
Minachi  and both the U.S. Em-<lb/>
bassy and the CIA Tehran Radio<lb/>
reported in a broadcast monitored<lb/>
in Kuwait.<lb/>
Until today, Bani Sadr's criticism<lb/>
of the militants had been confined<lb/>
to statements to the effect that the<lb/>
new government alone must make<lb/>
decisions for the country.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057246_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 7, 1980<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
remember<lb/>
We wish to remind all students and<lb/>
faculls that we will not accept any an-<lb/>
nouncements for the Announcements<lb/>
column unless they are typed<lb/>
doublespace and turned in before the<lb/>
deadline No exceptions will be made<lb/>
The deadlines are 2 00 p.m Knday for<lb/>
the Tuesday edition and 2:00 pm<lb/>
Tucday for (he Thuay edition We<lb/>
reserve the right to edit for bresitv We<lb/>
cannot guarantee that everything turn<lb/>
ed in will appear in the paper, due to<lb/>
space limitations, but we will do our<lb/>
best<lb/>
Poetrv Forum<lb/>
1 he I .isi Carolina Poetr Forum will<lb/>
hold a regutai workshop and meeting<lb/>
I hursday, Feb " at X p m in<lb/>
Mendenhall, room 24X I he puMk is<lb/>
cordiallv united<lb/>
Rho F.psilon<lb/>
1 he Htn Epstlon meeting was<lb/>
rescheduled tor Ihursdas, I eh 7, at<lb/>
4 mi p in in room 221 Mendenhall Ml<lb/>
members and interested persons are<lb/>
urged to .mend<lb/>
Chem Society<lb/>
I he I astern North t. arolnia Section of<lb/>
ihe American Chemical Society will<lb/>
hold its I ebruary meeting al 7 p m on<lb/>
Wednesday, February 1' .ir ihe Cap<lb/>
Iain's Table Restaurant in -den Ihe<lb/>
speakei foi the evening will be lit<lb/>
Rishard N I eppk of the I noersitv<lb/>
ol Missouri (. olumbia During his talk,<lb/>
entitled "Nitrosamine Cat<lb/>
cinogenesis he will explore the<lb/>
chemical .md biological ramifications<lb/>
of the question, 'Are nitrosamines<lb/>
causative agents in human cancer?"<lb/>
Dinnei reservations should be made<lb/>
through the Department ol Chemistry<lb/>
lest (s'lll bv Mondav. I eb I!<lb/>
SU Chairperson<lb/>
Ihe application deadline tor Student<lb/>
I mon chairperson positions has been<lb/>
extended lo feb S Anyone interested<lb/>
in seeking one of these positions should<lb/>
pisk up an application Irom the student<lb/>
I mon Office, room 2'4. Mendenhall<lb/>
studententer, or call 757-6611, exl<lb/>
210<lb/>
Draft Registration<lb/>
Interested students arc invited to torn<lb/>
the Greenvilk Peace i ommittee<lb/>
sidenng tin upcoming draft reg<lb/>
. begins with a potluck<lb/>
; ? "? I J.iv night at hill S<lb/>
Fim S blocks east of campus<lb/>
call 4h or<lb/>
. with I dith Webber in 218 Austin<lb/>
ECGC<lb/>
On Tuesday, Feb 12, at 5:00 p.m the<lb/>
East Carolina Gay Community will<lb/>
feature a discussion group as part of the<lb/>
weekly meeting at 608 E. 9th St , the<lb/>
Newman House You may bring your<lb/>
favorite beverage<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma<lb/>
Phi Fta Sigma honor fraternity will<lb/>
have a speaket and business meeting at<lb/>
s (X) p m on Thursday. I eh 14 in 221<lb/>
Mendenhall The speaker will be I I<lb/>
I olonel Car! I Tadlock. chairman of<lb/>
aerospace studies at ECU His topic<lb/>
will be "Communication techniques<lb/>
before Groups Members and in-<lb/>
terested persons are invited<lb/>
Study Help!<lb/>
1 he lust ot a series ol studs techniques<lb/>
and methods tor improving vour GPA,<lb/>
sponsored bv Delta Sigma Phi Iraterni<lb/>
tv on Monday, I eh II downstairs in<lb/>
Ihe Methodist Student (enter<lb/>
Small cookies without messages will<lb/>
also be sold in the Student Book Store<lb/>
lobby.<lb/>
Allied Health<lb/>
The Allied Health Professions Admis-<lb/>
sion Test will be offered at ECU on<lb/>
Saturday, March 8. Application blanks<lb/>
are available at the Testing Center,<lb/>
Speight Building, Room 105. Registra-<lb/>
tion deadline is February 9.<lb/>
SNEA<lb/>
There will be a Student National<lb/>
I ducators Association meeting on<lb/>
Wednesday, I eb I' at 4:M) in<lb/>
Mendenhall room 244 I here will be a<lb/>
guest speaker. Ml members and in<lb/>
terested people are urged to attend<lb/>
GMAT<lb/>
Ihe Oraduate Management Admission<lb/>
Test will be ottered at ECU on Satur<lb/>
dav, March I Application blanks arc<lb/>
available at the Testing Center, Speight<lb/>
Building, Room 105 Registration<lb/>
deadline is February 22<lb/>
Discount Day<lb/>
(iet one third oft regular prices al the<lb/>
Mendenhall recreation centers on<lb/>
"Discount Day "<lb/>
Wednesdays, 3 00 p.m -6:00 p.m. ?<lb/>
Billiards "and Table Tennis, one-third<lb/>
off<lb/>
Fridays, voo p.m. 6.00 p.m ?<lb/>
Bowling, one third off<lb/>
Bowling Specials<lb/>
Kl NT A I ANF: Every Saturday from<lb/>
12 noon-6:00 p.m you can rent a lane<lb/>
$3 00 for one hour<lb/>
REP-PIN-BOW I ING- On Sundays<lb/>
win a FREE GAME by making a strike<lb/>
when the red pin is the head pin from<lb/>
7:00 p.m 10:00 p.m.<lb/>
SU Flashes<lb/>
The Student Union Travel Committee<lb/>
is sponsoring a trip to Ft. I auderdale<lb/>
and Disney World for Spring Break<lb/>
(March 7 16) Only $175 for quad oc-<lb/>
cupancy. For more information, call<lb/>
757 6611, ext 266.<lb/>
The Student Union Minority Arts<lb/>
Committee will be sponsoring a Jewish<lb/>
Arts and International Festival. Feb<lb/>
3-9.<lb/>
The Art Exhibition (ommittee an<lb/>
nounces the showing of the ludaic col-<lb/>
lection of the North Carolina Museum<lb/>
of Art (Feb. I 28)<lb/>
Women's Soccer<lb/>
Help support women's spo.is at ECU<lb/>
by joining the newly formed Women's<lb/>
Soccer Club The team needs well over<lb/>
20 members, so anyone who is in<lb/>
terested in playing soccer should con<lb/>
tact Kris Soil al 7S8-5756 or Will<lb/>
W'iberg at 752 4553 as soon as possible<lb/>
An organizational meeting will be held<lb/>
Wednesday, Feb. 13 at 2 p.m. at 922<lb/>
14th St. (the brick house behind Belk<lb/>
Dorm) Practice will begin when all the<lb/>
preliminary work is completed, which<lb/>
should be within the next couple ol<lb/>
weeks. Come out and give soccer a try!<lb/>
Car Wash<lb/>
CSO<lb/>
1'hi Fpsilon Kappa will he holding a cat<lb/>
wash at the Tina Gas Station on Green<lb/>
ville Blvd on Saturday. Feb 23, from<lb/>
10:00 a.m. until dark Cost will be<lb/>
SI 50 m advance and $2 00 day of<lb/>
w ash<lb/>
UFDC<lb/>
LSAT<lb/>
iw Scl admission lest will be<lb/>
i I i l on Saturday. April 19<lb/>
Regi ration deadline is February II.<lb/>
1980 pplication blanks iwhich must<lb/>
be completed and mailed lo I ISi may<lb/>
be obtained from the III Testing<lb/>
? Room 105 Speight Building<lb/>
Notary Service<lb/>
1 ree notary public services are available<lb/>
? -III students at Mendenhall StU<lb/>
dententer, room 22s). the S( office<lb/>
The East Carolinian is<lb/>
not responsible for any<lb/>
meetings which are<lb/>
cancelled due to<lb/>
adverse weather condi-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Ihe I mversitv Folk and Country<lb/>
Dative slub would like to invite all who<lb/>
are interested in tolk and country danc-<lb/>
ing lo attend meetings of the UFDC<lb/>
Ihe meetings are everv Wednesday<lb/>
night from seven to nine p.m. in<lb/>
Brewstcr D 109 It you're interested.<lb/>
come on over or call "52-0826<lb/>
Faculty-Staff Night<lb/>
1 very Monday from 5 00 p m. until<lb/>
s on p m is I acultv Ntatt night at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Bowling (enter Am II<lb/>
faculty or stall member with proper<lb/>
identification may bow! two games and<lb/>
get a third game I Kl I Relax alter<lb/>
work and take advantage ot the savings<lb/>
al Mendenhall<lb/>
Moonlight Bowling<lb/>
"Moonlight Bowling" is bask al<lb/>
Mendenhall Student (enter. Bowl in<lb/>
ihe moonlight plus get a chance to win a<lb/>
1 Kl I GAME ot bowling Every Sun<lb/>
day from 5:00 p m. until 00 p m<lb/>
Alpha Sigma Phi<lb/>
Ihe Alpha Sigma Phi little sisters are<lb/>
sponsoring a Happv Hour at the I Ibo<lb/>
Room on Thursday. Feb  Irom<lb/>
p m. until 9:30 p m Bestnest con-<lb/>
ies! will be held for male contestants<lb/>
All men who wish to put their bodv<lb/>
where their mouth is are united to<lb/>
enier'<lb/>
It you have or intend to declare a major<lb/>
in a science or health related cur<lb/>
nculum, sou may qualify for COST-<lb/>
FREI services made available through<lb/>
the (enter for Student Opportunities<lb/>
K SO)<lb/>
CSO currently has openings for<lb/>
students wishing to receive tutorial ser-<lb/>
vices There are also openings for<lb/>
students to participate in individualized<lb/>
or group speed reading, notetaking and<lb/>
lesttaking techniques, effective<lb/>
organization of lecture notes, and Ac-<lb/>
tive Reading - knowing more about<lb/>
what vou read in a shorter time<lb/>
Counseling services include career plan<lb/>
ning assistance, academic, personal.<lb/>
financial, test anxiety, and-or group<lb/>
counseling.<lb/>
If you would like to be considered lor<lb/>
participation in any of these COST-<lb/>
FREE services, contact Dr. Bridwell.<lb/>
( enter for student Opportunities. 216<lb/>
W hichard Annex, or call tor an jp<lb/>
pointment at 757-6122, 6075, or 6081<lb/>
Tutors Needed<lb/>
The (enter tor Student Opportunities<lb/>
( St M currently has openings tor tutors<lb/>
in the following atcas: medicine,<lb/>
premedu.ne. nursing, allied health.<lb/>
biology, chemistry, physics, and related<lb/>
science and health professions You<lb/>
may earn an income at standard cam<lb/>
pus rates Contact Dr Bridwell. CSO,<lb/>
216 Whichard Annex, or call 757-6122,<lb/>
6081. or Mi's tor an appointment<lb/>
Gameroom<lb/>
It sou like pinball. pool or foosball. the<lb/>
place to go is the MRC gameroom.<lb/>
1 ocated in the basement of Aycock<lb/>
Dorm, it is open from 10 a m until<lb/>
midnight 1 he gameroom also serves as<lb/>
the checkout area lor tents, canoes, car<lb/>
racks and life preservers Remember.<lb/>
the Men's Residence Council provides<lb/>
these services<lb/>
Valentines<lb/>
Personalize your valentine a valentine<lb/>
cookie! "(otten Hall's Valentine<lb/>
Cookie Sales" will be taking orders on<lb/>
1 eb 7, 8. and 11 from 4 to 6 p m in the<lb/>
lobby ot (otten Hall. Orders mas be<lb/>
picked up on Feb. 14. Large cookies<lb/>
with message are 60 cents and small<lb/>
cookies with no message are 25 cents<lb/>
Gong Show<lb/>
Ihe Ripple Raiders are having a fund-<lb/>
raising "dorig Show on Monday.<lb/>
Feb II at the Attic, starting at 8:00<lb/>
p m Entertainment will be provided bv<lb/>
The Ripples, teaturing Mike<lb/>
"lightning" Wells, f arl White, John<lb/>
Worthinglon and Roy Rower; and the<lb/>
Auto's, (ireenville's answer to the<lb/>
Cars The Gong Show will be hosted bv<lb/>
Jeff Blumburg comedian The<lb/>
judges are: Allen Handelman, radio<lb/>
personality; Tom Haincs, manager ol<lb/>
the Attic, and Shep. promoter and part<lb/>
time musician. To enter, call Kay or<lb/>
Teresa at 752-9883. All acts par-<lb/>
ticipating in the show will receive<lb/>
prizes.<lb/>
HEAPING<lb/>
PORTIONS.<lb/>
tiny<lb/>
price.<lb/>
THURSDAY FEATURE<lb/>
ONLY189<lb/>
Feb. 7th<lb/>
i'<lb/>
TROUT<lb/>
ALMONDINE<lb/>
with Hot Slaw and French Fries<lb/>
SUNDAY FEATURE<lb/>
ONLYJ99<lb/>
Feb. 10th<lb/>
TURKEY<lb/>
WITH DRESSING<lb/>
or<lb/>
COUNTRY STEAK<lb/>
with any two vegetables<lb/>
Come home to eat at S&amp;S ? we're located in the<lb/>
Carolina East Mall in Greenville, at the intersection of<lb/>
West Haven Road (U.S. 264 Bypass) and Hwy. 11. Plenty<lb/>
of free parking too.<lb/>
Carolina Eaat Mall<lb/>
Serving continuously dally<lb/>
froailla.ai.till8p.ai.<lb/>
(8:30 Friday &amp; Saturday)<lb/>
Two Non-Credit<lb/>
Courses Offered<lb/>
HOW TO PLACE A WANT AD<lb/>
in The East Carolinian<lb/>
Massage<lb/>
Do you have a tired, stiff neck? tiaylan<lb/>
Hoyle. a physical therapy student, is<lb/>
now conducting researVi which in<lb/>
solves a MASSAGE to Ih - upper hack<lb/>
and neck If you suiter from a tight<lb/>
neck, call Ciavlan at 756-2787.<lb/>
Easter Seals<lb/>
Volunteer work can play a vital role in<lb/>
getting the job you really want If you<lb/>
are interested in work experience which<lb/>
will help vou after you graduate, con-<lb/>
tact the Faster Seal Society at 758-3230.<lb/>
Summer Orientation<lb/>
The Office of lames H Mallorv.<lb/>
Associate Dean. Orientation and<lb/>
Judiciary, is now accepting applications<lb/>
lor counselors for Summer Orienta-<lb/>
tion Applicants must be rising seniors<lb/>
or graduate students Applicaiions niav<lb/>
be picked up in Whichard Building.<lb/>
Room 210 Deadline is 1 ridav I eb 1<lb/>
Trout Aimondine. Golden Fried Shrimp. Veal Parmesan. Barbecue<lb/>
Ribs. Rare Roast Beef.<lb/>
There's a selection like this at S&amp;S Cafeterias ? more than 100<lb/>
delicious things to eat, homemade fresh from scratch every day!<lb/>
Best of all, they're served in heaping portions at a tiny price.<lb/>
Mmmm  S&amp;S! Get a taste of the feast you can afford on these<lb/>
special days!<lb/>
SGA Loans<lb/>
All students needing SO A loans can<lb/>
now get them Irom ihe SGA office in<lb/>
Mendenhall ur Irom the I manual Aid<lb/>
Office in the Old Cafeteria Thes are no<lb/>
longer available in Whichard room 21(1<lb/>
? James b Malloiv. Associate Dean.<lb/>
Orieniatu'ii and iudiuarv<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Parents, teachers,<lb/>
day care personnel and<lb/>
others who live and<lb/>
work with young<lb/>
children are invited to<lb/>
enroll in two new even-<lb/>
ing course offerings at<lb/>
ECU this spring.<lb/>
"Teachers Teaching<lb/>
Art" (Mondays, Feb.<lb/>
4-March 3) and<lb/>
"Language Develop-<lb/>
ment in the Child"<lb/>
(Tuesdays, Feb.<lb/>
5-March 4) are offered<lb/>
by the ECU Division of<lb/>
Continuing Educa-<lb/>
tion's Non-Credit Pro-<lb/>
grams Office. Both are<lb/>
scheduled for 7-9 p.m.<lb/>
each session.<lb/>
The art course is<lb/>
designed to help adults<lb/>
stimulate a child's ar-<lb/>
tistic attempts during<lb/>
the early years when<lb/>
natural creativity is<lb/>
freely expressed.<lb/>
Participants will<lb/>
work on a variety of<lb/>
projects which can be<lb/>
adapted to school,<lb/>
nursery or home use,<lb/>
and each will be analyz-<lb/>
ed and discussed in<lb/>
terms of its ability to<lb/>
help a child reach max-<lb/>
imum artistic potential.<lb/>
Instructing the art<lb/>
course is Roxanne<lb/>
Reep, a graduate stu-<lb/>
dent at ECU in metal<lb/>
design and drawing<lb/>
whose work has been<lb/>
exhibited widely<lb/>
throughout<lb/>
Southeast.<lb/>
the<lb/>
The language<lb/>
development class is<lb/>
planned to help adults<lb/>
understand techniques<lb/>
of gentle, positive and<lb/>
effective guidance as<lb/>
they work with young<lb/>
children learning to use<lb/>
language.<lb/>
Topics to be discuss-<lb/>
ed include the nature of<lb/>
language, the process<lb/>
by which children learn<lb/>
to talk, the age at which<lb/>
"baby talk" is no<lb/>
longer "cute what<lb/>
parents and teachers<lb/>
can do to enhance<lb/>
language skills, making<lb/>
play time a learning<lb/>
time, and selection of<lb/>
age-appropriate books.<lb/>
Instructor is Patricia<lb/>
McMahon, who holds a<lb/>
master's degree in child<lb/>
development from<lb/>
ECU and now works as<lb/>
a training specialist in<lb/>
the Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina Day Care<lb/>
Training Project.<lb/>
Further information<lb/>
about these and other<lb/>
spring "credit-free"<lb/>
classes is available from<lb/>
the Office of Non-<lb/>
Credit Programs, Divi-<lb/>
sion of Continuing<lb/>
Education, ECU,<lb/>
telephone 757-6143.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
? 4  ,?s<lb/>
Published every Tuesday ind<lb/>
Thursday during the academic<lb/>
year and every Wednesday during<lb/>
the summer<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the erf<lb/>
ficial newspaper ot East Carol'<lb/>
man university owned operated<lb/>
and published tor and by<lb/>
students ot East Carolina un.ver<lb/>
Sit<lb/>
Subscription Rates<lb/>
Alumm $15 ??<lb/>
All others S70 pearty<lb/>
Second class postage paid a?<lb/>
Greenville N C<lb/>
The East Carolinian ottices ar.?<lb/>
located in the Old South Building<lb/>
on the campus of ECU. Greenville<lb/>
N C<lb/>
Telephone 7S7 6344 6367 6309<lb/>
You may place a want ad (for<lb/>
rent, for sale, etc.) at The East<lb/>
Carolinian office MWF, 3-4 p.m<lb/>
and on TTH, 3-4 p.m OR you<lb/>
may mail your ad to our office with<lb/>
payment. All want ads must be paid<lb/>
for in advance (we accept in-state<lb/>
checks). Want ads cost $1 for the<lb/>
first 15 words and 5 cents for each<lb/>
additional word. NO ADS ARE AC<lb/>
CEPTED OVER THE<lb/>
TELEPHONE.<lb/>
Announcements for meetings or<lb/>
any event are not considered ads<lb/>
and should be submitted to the<lb/>
NEWS DEPT. as Announcements.<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
The decision may well be " -It<lb/>
but the abortion tselfdo re to be<lb/>
We do our best to make it ea. : : . .<lb/>
Free Pregnancy Teat<lb/>
Very Early Pregnancy Test<lb/>
Call 781-8880 anytime<lb/>
The Fleming Center<lb/>
Friendly Personal I i ? rial Ca<lb/>
it<lb/>
Riggan Shoe Repair<lb/>
across St. from<lb/>
Blount Harvev.<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
111 W. 4th St.<lb/>
Parking in front and Rear<lb/>
MARDI GRAS<lb/>
MONEY<lb/>
Paying Cash<lb/>
for<lb/>
GOLD &amp; SILVER<lb/>
TANDY LEATHER<lb/>
across from<lb/>
Book Barn E. 5th St.<lb/>
VlCllTZ. b Nature's Wav<lb/>
pecialiina in natural hau cut for <lb/>
Downtown Mali<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
THE COMPLETE<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
miKN no cam ran<lb/>
SALAD-50' EXTRA<lb/>
ASST. VAR. $?? gg<lb/>
PIZZA . .? I<lb/>
WITH FRIES ft COLESLAW<lb/>
FRIED<lb/>
CHICKEN ?y<lb/>
TUE.<lb/>
$199<lb/>
1<lb/>
WED.<lb/>
$199<lb/>
WITH GARLIC BREAD<lb/>
ITALIAN c 4 s<lb/>
SPAGHETTI! r,<lb/>
1<lb/>
WITH FRIES COLE SLAW<lb/>
FRIED $4 99<lb/>
HSH ??Lr 1 ??<lb/>
What' the aaaleat way to complete your<lb/>
plans?no matter what you're planning'7<lb/>
By making one convenient trip to your<lb/>
Kroger Sav-on  . where you'll find<lb/>
everything from apple cider to tr?n$utrx<lb/>
radios to footballs and more a at<lb/>
cost cutter prices. No matter what your<lb/>
plans, complete them with on? m?t trip<lb/>
to your Kroger Sav-on<lb/>
MELLO YELLO OR<lb/>
10<lb/>
Magazines and<lb/>
Paperback Books<lb/>
SUGG<lb/>
jg? aaa bit<lb/>
Records and<lb/>
Tapes<lb/>
laSCOUMTED<lb/>
Up<lb/>
To<lb/>
Coca-Cola<lb/>
9<lb/>
Plus<lb/>
Deposit<lb/>
GIACOBCZZI<lb/>
Lambrusco<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/>
Priced<lb/>
From<lb/>
199<lb/>
Eech<lb/>
32-Oz.<lb/>
Beg<lb/>
169<lb/>
0?<lb/>
AMP<lb/>
immml<lb/>
AM<lb/>
Motor OS<lb/>
SOLO<lb/>
Little Debbie Snack Cakes &amp; Archway Cookies<lb/>
Chips, Snacks 6 Bagged Nuts<lb/>
POUCH PACK<lb/>
Sauces 6 Gravy Mixes<lb/>
PfPPfMOOC FAMtS<lb/>
Bagged Cookies &amp; Snacks<lb/>
REG. OR DIP<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
Potato<lb/>
Chips<lb/>
B-Oz. Twin Peck<lb/>
20<lb/>
SUOOCtTEO RETAIL<lb/>
ACVIRTIStD fTIM POLICY N<lb/>
?flCft Of fifMettafi MwaMtiaftW tm  ? . . - .  ,? ? ? ,?<lb/>
???" ??ew eiu. f imaeil wofwi? e MPQUeTBQ CO OB) fBriB0BJV SVewlBnMB) VOf<lb/>
aruolSlSSSUff ? C?2K2J?ote!<lb/>
?awra-S ertoa wSNw 8 asja. J<lb/>
NO'NE SOI D<lb/>
to<lb/>
Dt AURS<lb/>
OPEN 7 AM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. Greenville<lb/>
<pb facs="00057246_0003"/><lb/>
Southern Bell<lb/>
Increases Rates<lb/>
RALEIGH(AP)-S-<lb/>
outhern Bell was ?<lb/>
granted slightlv more<lb/>
than half the $45.3<lb/>
million rate increase the<lb/>
company had asked for<lb/>
by an order issued<lb/>
Wednesday by the<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Utilities Commission.<lb/>
"It's rather difficult<lb/>
to be completely pleas-<lb/>
ed about an order gran-<lb/>
ting slightly more than<lb/>
half of the amount we<lb/>
requested in our up<lb/>
plication said vice<lb/>
president Alan E.<lb/>
Thomas in a reaction<lb/>
statement.<lb/>
"The $45.3 million<lb/>
we asked was well<lb/>
within the president's<lb/>
wage and price<lb/>
guidelines Every, dollar<lb/>
was ital to our con<lb/>
tinned abilit to finance<lb/>
ever-widening and ever-<lb/>
impro ing communica-<lb/>
tions in North<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Because of inflation,<lb/>
Thomas said. Southen<lb/>
Bell has been unable to<lb/>
earn the rates of return<lb/>
authorized by Southern<lb/>
Bell in more than a<lb/>
decade. Inflation, he<lb/>
said, "tends to obsolete<lb/>
rate orders, so that they<lb/>
are often too little and<lb/>
too late<lb/>
The Utilities Com-<lb/>
mission granted the<lb/>
company an increase of<lb/>
5.7 percent, instead of<lb/>
the 10.2 percent the<lb/>
company had asked<lb/>
for. The 5 percent<lb/>
will result in a revenue<lb/>
increase of 525.5<lb/>
million.<lb/>
The commission's<lb/>
action on Southern<lb/>
Bell's proposal came<lb/>
after seven months of<lb/>
investigation into the<lb/>
request and hearings<lb/>
across the state.<lb/>
Under the utility' s<lb/>
proposal, the residen-<lb/>
tial rate tor local ser-<lb/>
vice would have in-<lb/>
creased an average of<lb/>
45 cents a month for<lb/>
one-part) service and<lb/>
approximately 25 cenl<lb/>
a month for two-party<lb/>
service.<lb/>
The commission<lb/>
order allows an in-<lb/>
crease averaging 35<lb/>
cents per month for<lb/>
one-party service and<lb/>
25 cents per month tor<lb/>
two-party service, for<lb/>
an average increase of<lb/>
four percent on<lb/>
residential rates.<lb/>
Bell had asked for an<lb/>
increase from $31.10 to<lb/>
$59.70 for installing a<lb/>
residential telephone<lb/>
for a new customer. It<lb/>
got an increase to<lb/>
$36.75 under the com-<lb/>
mission's order.<lb/>
The utility also<lb/>
wanted an increase for<lb/>
installing a business<lb/>
telephone from $40 to<lb/>
$73. The commission's<lb/>
order will allow Bell to<lb/>
increase the charge to<lb/>
$48.10.<lb/>
The commission rul-<lb/>
ed that the approved<lb/>
rates under the 5.7 per-<lb/>
cent rate increase<lb/>
would allow Bell to<lb/>
earn a 10.19 percent<lb/>
rate of return on its<lb/>
property. The commis-<lb/>
sion said the increase<lb/>
was granted because of<lb/>
the impact of inflation<lb/>
on Bell's costs.<lb/>
Bell's last rate hike<lb/>
went into effect on<lb/>
April 26, 1978, when<lb/>
local service rates were<lb/>
increased bv 1 percent.<lb/>
A ward<lb/>
Given<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Dorothy Hennigan<lb/>
Bowser of Virginia<lb/>
Beach, Va senior stu-<lb/>
dent in the East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
School of Business, is<lb/>
the recipient of a SI00<lb/>
annual scholarship<lb/>
award from the Green-<lb/>
ville Credit Women In-<lb/>
ternational.<lb/>
Ms. Bowser is con-<lb/>
centrating on manage-<lb/>
ment and plans to pur-<lb/>
sue a career in person-<lb/>
nel or labor relations<lb/>
upon graduation in<lb/>
May.<lb/>
She is a member of<lb/>
Phi Kappa Phi honor<lb/>
society and the<lb/>
daughter of Gabrielle<lb/>
Hennigan of Virginia<lb/>
Beach, Va.<lb/>
T h e Greenville<lb/>
organization presents<lb/>
the award each spring<lb/>
to recognize an<lb/>
outstanding female stu-<lb/>
dent enroUed in the<lb/>
ECU School of<lb/>
Business. It was for-<lb/>
mally presented at the<lb/>
GCW January dinner<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
Jarvis Co-eds Are<lb/>
Given An Option<lb/>
Continued from Page 1<lb/>
"The girls will sides of campus<lb/>
definitely have a place Meyer said. "It (co-ed<lb/>
to go. Dr. Meyer will living) makes for a bet-<lb/>
see to it that the transi- ter total environment,<lb/>
tion will be made as<lb/>
pleasant as possible for "I hope everyone<lb/>
those girls being mov- understands that<lb/>
ed nothing definite has<lb/>
Many state colleges been decided yet as far<lb/>
have begun the transi- as Belk and Scott are<lb/>
tion from separate liv- concerned. There are<lb/>
ing to a co-ed environ- still a lot of questions<lb/>
ment. to be answered: If Belk<lb/>
Until Jarvis Dorm is made co-ed, should<lb/>
was considered for co- Jarvis girls have<lb/>
ed living, East Carolina preference there, or<lb/>
had only two co-ed should it be open for<lb/>
dorms. Umstead and everyone? I think we<lb/>
Slay. have to look at the<lb/>
"I'd really like to see dorm system as a<lb/>
a better distribution of whole. What is best for<lb/>
men and women on all everyone?"<lb/>
Patronize<lb/>
The<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FFBRUARY7. 1980<lb/>
East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Advertisers<lb/>
Classified<lb/>
Thank you<lb/>
iJlwrsduyMti<lb/>
RKI) FOIL HF.ART<lb/>
1 LB $4.75<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
ROOMMATE: wanted to share<lb/>
two bedroom apartment. Within<lb/>
walking distance from campus<lb/>
One halt rent and utilities. Call<lb/>
758 3074<lb/>
STUDIOUS MALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
needed to share rent and utilities<lb/>
in one bedroom apartment at<lb/>
Kinqs Row Call 752 732S after<lb/>
11 00pm.<lb/>
RESPONSIBLE: female room<lb/>
mate needed to share two<lb/>
bedroom apartment at Village<lb/>
Green Half rent and utilities<lb/>
Call 758 6186 after 6:00 p m<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 SALE Korean Sun<lb/>
burst six string with case and<lb/>
strap Very good condition $70<lb/>
Call 752 7279.<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
ANYONE INTERESTED in for<lb/>
mmg a weekly Bible study group<lb/>
please call 756 4443 after 5 00<lb/>
DANCE AUDITIONS for Dance<lb/>
festival held every spring For<lb/>
more information call 756 7235<lb/>
SUNSHINE STUDIOS offering<lb/>
the following classes Ballet Jan<lb/>
Belly Dance. Yoga and Disco<lb/>
For more information call<lb/>
756 7235<lb/>
COUNSELORS for western North<lb/>
Carolina co ed 8 week summer<lb/>
camp Room, meals laundry<lb/>
salary and travel allowance E<lb/>
penence not necessary, but must<lb/>
enioy living and working .vith<lb/>
children Only clean cut non<lb/>
smoltmg college students need ap<lb/>
ply For application and brochure<lb/>
write Camp Pirn-wood 1801<lb/>
Cleveland Rd Miami Beach Fla<lb/>
33141<lb/>
HELP WANTED I am looking for<lb/>
two friendly outqomg people for<lb/>
weekend and holiday vyork Job<lb/>
pays well tor th, right individuals<lb/>
Vusj b. .nVIq.n' quick witted<lb/>
and .n,oy happy pi opu Travel<lb/>
involvi-d transportation furnish<lb/>
ed Job is idiai for educator or<lb/>
stud, n! ?v.kinq ctra SSS Not<lb/>
sales work Interested1 Call<lb/>
?58 6449 for application<lb/>
TYPING for students and pro<lb/>
fessors avaialable can r$3<lb/>
after 6 00p m<lb/>
DISCOURAGED or LONLEY<lb/>
iom B.bii- s'udy ,md f. ilowsh.p<lb/>
Call 756 4443 after 5 oo<lb/>
LOST on Aviry Street larq. wh,t.<lb/>
cat yvith three black spots and no<lb/>
tail ?52 8089<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
1175.00 "all inclusive"<lb/>
preqnancy test, birth con<lb/>
trol, and problem preqnan<lb/>
cy counseling For further<lb/>
information call 832 0535<lb/>
(toll free number<lb/>
800 221 25681 between 9<lb/>
A M 5 P M weekdays<lb/>
Raleigh Women's<lb/>
Health Organization<lb/>
917 West Morgan St<lb/>
Raleigh. M.C. 27603<lb/>
SATIN HF.ART<lb/>
CAftD I<lb/>
ASSORTED<lb/>
CHOCOLATES<lb/>
1LH. $3.75<lb/>
CASH PAID FOR DIAMONDS AND GOLD<lb/>
FLOYD Q.<lb/>
ROBINSON JEWELERS<lb/>
407 EVANS MALL<lb/>
GREENVILLE. NC 27834<lb/>
GREENVILLE S SEIKO WATCH HEADQUARTERS<lb/>
DIAMONDS LOOSE AND MOUNTED<lb/>
GOLD FILLED STERLING. AND 14K GOLD JEWELRY<lb/>
F oyd G HoOinson<lb/>
i9l9) 756 1423<lb/>
Home<lb/>
Business<lb/>
(919)758 2452<lb/>
INDEPENDENT JEWELERS<lb/>
Mike RoOmsoo<lb/>
(919)756 3667<lb/>
Home<lb/>
Quality e Competitive Prices ? Service<lb/>
911 Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
752-7105<lb/>
6th St. &amp; Memorial Dr.<lb/>
758-4104<lb/>
MUSHROOM<lb/>
BESURETOVISIT<lb/>
the MUSHROOM<lb/>
DURING DOLLAR DAY<lb/>
SALES FEB. 7,8,9<lb/>
318 Evans Mall<lb/>
We Accept Visa and Master Charge<lb/>
Thursday and Saturday<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057246_0004"/><lb/>
Site Saat (Earnliman<lb/>
Serving the campus community for 54 years.<lb/>
Marc Barnes, senmr Editor<lb/>
Diane Henderson, ?????, ?.??<lb/>
Richard Green, copy Edm<lb/>
Anita Lancaster, production m?m"<lb/>
Marianne Harbison, n &amp;m<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim, amor ,j Advem?<lb/>
C HRIS LICHOK, Business Manager<lb/>
Charles Chandler, spans Editor<lb/>
KAREN WENDT, Features Editor<lb/>
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7 1980<lb/>
PAGE 4<lb/>
This Newspaper's Opinion<lb/>
Close For Safety<lb/>
The East Carolina University ad-<lb/>
ministration should cancel classes<lb/>
whenever the N.C Highway Patrol<lb/>
declares the roads in the Greenville<lb/>
area extremely hazardous.<lb/>
It doesn't make sense to hold<lb/>
classes at this university when snow<lb/>
removal crews are hard pressed to<lb/>
clear snow that has already fallen,<lb/>
not to mention the snow that is fall-<lb/>
ing now. Sidewalks and roads are<lb/>
icy, and everywhere people are fall-<lb/>
ing down or having traffic ac-<lb/>
cidents.<lb/>
On a campus where at least half<lb/>
of the students live off campus and<lb/>
must drive or find a ride to class, it<lb/>
would only be reasonable to assume<lb/>
that the administration would<lb/>
cancel classes.<lb/>
The campus administration<lb/>
should listen to those who are<lb/>
specifically trained to deal with road<lb/>
conditions. When local law enforce-<lb/>
ment agencies such as the Greenville<lb/>
Police Department and the N.C.<lb/>
Highway Patrol say that roads are<lb/>
hazardous, they should heed the<lb/>
warning and close ECU for the day.<lb/>
Students who live in outlying<lb/>
areas such as Farmville or Winter-<lb/>
ville would not have to risk their<lb/>
lives to come to class. The recent<lb/>
tragic accident on an icy road in<lb/>
Raleigh which claimed the lives of<lb/>
two young girls?in a car that<lb/>
authorities said was going only 25<lb/>
miles per hour?should serve as a<lb/>
warning to us all to stay off the<lb/>
roads.<lb/>
There are some who will say that<lb/>
our purpose is self-serving, that we<lb/>
would rather play in the snow than<lb/>
go to class. For some students,<lb/>
especially those who might have a<lb/>
test today, that might be true.<lb/>
But from a practical standpoint,<lb/>
think of how many cars would not<lb/>
be on the streets of Greenville if<lb/>
school were to close for a day. That<lb/>
would probably make an extremely<lb/>
hazardous situation a little better.<lb/>
All of the ECU traffic would be off<lb/>
the streets, and essential personnel<lb/>
(such as emergency vehicles) would<lb/>
have almost empty roads for their<lb/>
use.<lb/>
Remember, the needs of a city the<lb/>
size of Greenville must be placed<lb/>
above the needs of 13,000 people to<lb/>
attend class for one day. Our<lb/>
neighbors in the city number about<lb/>
35,000, and when they take to the<lb/>
roads in icy weather, it is often to<lb/>
earn a living or perform a needed<lb/>
service. They don't need 6,000 extra<lb/>
college students on the roads when<lb/>
it isn't necessary for them to be<lb/>
there.<lb/>
The Department of Institutional<lb/>
Research testified last year at a<lb/>
highway right-of-way hearing that<lb/>
70 percent of ECU students came<lb/>
from west of Greenville. Given this<lb/>
fact, and the fact that a clear ma-<lb/>
jority of students come from the<lb/>
Carolinas and Virginia, it should be<lb/>
considered that most of us have not<lb/>
had a great deal of experience driv-<lb/>
ing in snow in ice. Frozen weather<lb/>
conditions do not come our way<lb/>
often enough to provide experience<lb/>
as in other regions of the country.<lb/>
Often people have a tendency to<lb/>
boast about their talents of driving<lb/>
in the snow. This bragging can<lb/>
cause overconfidence?and result in<lb/>
traffic accidents and tragedy.<lb/>
The administration should realize<lb/>
the danger some ECU students will<lb/>
face coming to school when condi-<lb/>
tions are serious. The highway<lb/>
patrol should be the standard for<lb/>
making the decision to cancel<lb/>
classes.<lb/>
Scrutiny Is Needed<lb/>
ABSCAM, the FBI's code name<lb/>
for the contoversial congressional<lb/>
investigation, has opened another<lb/>
"Watergate Brand" can of worms.<lb/>
Examining the contents reveals an<lb/>
unhealthy mixture of questional ac-<lb/>
tions by the investigated and the in-<lb/>
vestigators.<lb/>
Although Attorney General Ben-<lb/>
jamin Civiletti has assured everyone<lb/>
that the investigation was<lb/>
"respectable it will be interesting<lb/>
to discover how FBI agents manag-<lb/>
ed to offer and successfully pay<lb/>
bribes without being guilty of en-<lb/>
trapment. If entrapment indeed oc-<lb/>
American Journal<lb/>
curred, the legislators still must face<lb/>
ethics committees.<lb/>
The nine accused are throwing up<lb/>
the smokescreen of entrapment in<lb/>
an attempt to hide the real<lb/>
crime?that they did accept bribes.<lb/>
Even if the FBI has to swallow their<lb/>
pride with entrapment charges, they<lb/>
can at least enjoy the fact that they<lb/>
exposed dishonest elected officials.<lb/>
The acronym ABSCAM should<lb/>
stand for something more impor-<lb/>
tant than Arab scam: Americans<lb/>
Better Scrutinize Carefully Ad-<lb/>
ministrators' Morals.<lb/>
"HoWp IdU ICOoO I uvifb GofOGUpCoccfG H? 0HCf<lb/>
Letters To The Editor<lb/>
Pro-Greek Letter Rebutted<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
This is in response to the letter by Ricky<lb/>
Cannon that appeared in the Feb. 5 issue<lb/>
of The East Carolinian. I would like to ex-<lb/>
press some feelings that 1 think are held<lb/>
by the majority of students here at ECU.<lb/>
I am tired of seeing the numerous<lb/>
advertisements in The East Carolinian<lb/>
that espouse the "Greek" way of life. Re:<lb/>
"Greek Week Of course, I realize that<lb/>
these are paid for by the frats and<lb/>
sororities, or the "Panhellenic Council<lb/>
If Greek organizations are so noble and<lb/>
virtuous, why do they find it so necessary<lb/>
to sponsor such gaudy self-promotion?<lb/>
I question adn object to the use of stu-<lb/>
dent transit buses for the purpose of<lb/>
transporting students to and from rush<lb/>
parties. How in the world did they<lb/>
manage that? Perhaps the fact that<lb/>
"about one third of the major positions<lb/>
of The East Carolinian, SGA, Buccaneer,<lb/>
the school radio station, and other school<lb/>
related functions" are held by Greeks<lb/>
may have something to do with it. I say to<lb/>
Mr. Cannon that it is very possible for the<lb/>
frats to vote their "brothers" in. I ask<lb/>
him to refer to his Poli Sci 1050 notes<lb/>
regarding the "vocal minority I regret<lb/>
such gross misrepresentation of high of-<lb/>
fice on this campus. To be sure, it is the<lb/>
fault of the silent, non-voting majority of<lb/>
students here.<lb/>
It is my hope that someday this majori-<lb/>
ty will somehow unite for the purpose of<lb/>
placing the Greek life in proper perspec-<lb/>
tive on this campus. I appreciate and ap-<lb/>
plaud all charitable efforts by Greek<lb/>
organizations.<lb/>
However, I suspect that the energies us-<lb/>
ed in politicking, partying, and promoting<lb/>
far outweigh those used in humanistic and<lb/>
academic pursuit.<lb/>
Tony Hopfer<lb/>
to take property which belongs to so-<lb/>
meone else. I would think it even worse to<lb/>
steal from one of your peers. Why steal<lb/>
from someone who has no more than you.<lb/>
If you felt the urge why didn't you steal<lb/>
something from someone who had an<lb/>
abundance and wouldn't miss it.<lb/>
What you stole represented Christmas<lb/>
for me in 1979. It was less than 2 months<lb/>
old. Since I am a graduate student here<lb/>
and have just gotten married it will work a<lb/>
hardship on my family to replace what<lb/>
you took.<lb/>
I just want you to know that I am spar-<lb/>
ing no effort to find out who you are. If I<lb/>
can find you I promise to break your face.<lb/>
It's worth $25 to me to find out who you<lb/>
are. Any that can provide me with any in-<lb/>
fo that leads to the opportunity for me to<lb/>
realize what I promised two sentences ago<lb/>
is urged to leave a note for me in my box<lb/>
in the Econ office.<lb/>
Donald Pack<lb/>
Value Of Sacrifice Disputed<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
I refuse to believe that the ragged old<lb/>
potato chip van sacrificed to the snow<lb/>
gods early Thursday morning was even<lb/>
worth $2,000.00. It had sat out in front of<lb/>
Aycock broken down since last September<lb/>
and had become an eyesore.<lb/>
It was also a traffic hazard, being<lb/>
responsible for a couple of fender benders<lb/>
and ugly bike smashups, and smearing<lb/>
powdery, dead paint on passing clothing.<lb/>
I also refuse to believe Aycock's<lb/>
counselor attempting to cover up the<lb/>
mob's endeavor. I'll bet he enjoyed the<lb/>
story more than anyone.<lb/>
Daniel C. Couch<lb/>
Reader Chastises Thief<lb/>
Editor's Note: The following was written<lb/>
as an open letter to the ECU student<lb/>
body.<lb/>
Crowd Support Needed<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
Dear<lb/>
777777.<lb/>
I would just like to take this opportuni-<lb/>
ty to tell you what I think of you for steal-<lb/>
ing my T.I. 58C calculator out of my of-<lb/>
fice in Rawl. It's bad enough for someone<lb/>
Saturday night's basketball game with<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington pointed to two pro-<lb/>
blems of the East Carolina basketball pro-<lb/>
gram. They are problems however that<lb/>
cannot be remedied by the players or<lb/>
coaching staff. The solution has to come<lb/>
from the East Carolina student body as<lb/>
well as Greenville and Pitt County<lb/>
citizens.<lb/>
The problems that surfaced again<lb/>
Saturday night have to do with fan sup-<lb/>
port and what are loosely termed the<lb/>
cheerleaders. Both are related.<lb/>
Coach Dave Odom got more response<lb/>
in ten seconds of activity on the sideline<lb/>
than the cheerleaders did all night. Coach<lb/>
Odom brought everyone to their feet.<lb/>
When was the last time the cheerleaders<lb/>
did as much? Coach Odom obviously has<lb/>
more ability in cheerleading but this is not<lb/>
his job. He has more important things to<lb/>
do.<lb/>
The past two years have done a great<lb/>
deal to turn people off to ECU basketball.<lb/>
Odom and his staff have turned things<lb/>
around and have the program headed in<lb/>
the right direction. But to get the program<lb/>
to the level of respectability of our foot-<lb/>
ball team, crowd support is needed. A<lb/>
visitor from Duke was surprised to see<lb/>
ECU students sitting during the game. At<lb/>
Duke and UNC she said people never sit<lb/>
down. There is constant noise. Never is<lb/>
there a quiet moment.<lb/>
In order to help encourage the team<lb/>
more students need to come to the games.<lb/>
More noise has to be generated. Minges<lb/>
has to become a place where teams don't<lb/>
want to have to come. Minges has to be<lb/>
elevated to the likes of Clemson's "Death<lb/>
Valley UNC's Carmichael or Reynold's<lb/>
Coliseum. Only the students can do this.<lb/>
We also need cheerleaders who can excite<lb/>
the crowd. If we want to see pyramids we<lb/>
can go to a tumbling demonstration.<lb/>
If the basketball program is to become<lb/>
a strong one, we students have to support<lb/>
the team and coaches. And if the remain-<lb/>
ing four home games are like last Satur-<lb/>
day's people who don't come will be miss-<lb/>
ing a treat. It was the best game played<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
John Lambeth<lb/>
Steve Reid<lb/>
Letters To The Editor<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes let-<lb/>
ters expressing all points of view.<lb/>
Mail or drop them by our office in<lb/>
the Old South Building, across from<lb/>
the library.<lb/>
Letters to the editor must include<lb/>
the name, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the aulhor(s) and<lb/>
must be typed, double spaced, or<lb/>
neatly printed.<lb/>
Mohawk Indians Question Site Of Olympic Winter Games<lb/>
t<lb/>
By DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
When the Winter Olympic Games<lb/>
begin near Lake Placid, N.Y. this<lb/>
month, the Mohawk Indians native<lb/>
to the region v ill have more on their<lb/>
minds than whether Soviet athletes<lb/>
should be allowed to compete for<lb/>
gold medals. They're already<lb/>
wondering what the long-term im-<lb/>
pact of the games will be on their<lb/>
lovely but poor and increasingly<lb/>
polluted region, a stretch of ter-<lb/>
ritory they say is theirs by virtue of<lb/>
historic treaties.<lb/>
Most places that have hosted the<lb/>
summer and winter games in recent<lb/>
years have lost money. There i? a<lb/>
sudden influx of high-spen<lb/>
tourists and a leap in local emK<lb/>
ment that looks promising at first.<lb/>
But the tourists go home with that's<lb/>
left of their money and the jobs<lb/>
created to service the crowds soon<lb/>
disappear. The Lake Placis area<lb/>
faces those problems, and one more<lb/>
besides: Housing for athletes in the<lb/>
Olympic village is scheduled to be<lb/>
converted into a federal prison after<lb/>
the games. And a large number of<lb/>
local people, especially the<lb/>
Mohawks, don't like it.<lb/>
"This area doesn't need a new<lb/>
prison said John Mohawk, a staff<lb/>
member on the activist Indian<lb/>
newspaper Akwesasne Notes, jn a<lb/>
recent interview. "We need decent<lb/>
housing, and jobs, and pollution<lb/>
Control to stop the acid rains that<lb/>
are killing the conifer trees and<lb/>
poisoning the lakes around here.<lb/>
The Olympics and the prison were<lb/>
planned with no attention what-<lb/>
soever to the needs of the area<lb/>
The Mohawks can do nothing to<lb/>
stop the games, and show no sign<lb/>
that they want to. They hope to use<lb/>
the Olympics to focus national and<lb/>
international attention on their pro-<lb/>
blems. And they have a dramatically<lb/>
different design for the future of the<lb/>
OlympL Village.<lb/>
"We got together with the New<lb/>
York State Council of Churches and<lb/>
proposed that the village be con-<lb/>
verted into a permanent center for<lb/>
the study of 'appropriate<lb/>
technology' after the games John<lb/>
Mohawk said. "We'd like to see<lb/>
solar power studied there, and what<lb/>
to do about the dying environment<lb/>
and how to put up efficient housing<lb/>
in one of the most difficult climates<lb/>
in the continental United States. We<lb/>
think those are much better uses of<lb/>
the facilities than a prison<lb/>
The Mohawks' proposal was for-<lb/>
warded in verbal form to the White<lb/>
House last fall. But, according to<lb/>
Nader Maroun, a New York State<lb/>
Council of Churches staffer in<lb/>
Syracuse, prospects of establishing<lb/>
the appropriate technology center<lb/>
are shaky. "We were making some<lb/>
progress with the White House last<lb/>
fall he said. "Stuart Eizenstadt<lb/>
sent staff members to Lake Placid<lb/>
to see the complex and they agreed<lb/>
the appropriate technology center<lb/>
could work there. But then the Ira-<lb/>
nian crisis broke and we haven't<lb/>
heard from them since<lb/>
Just after the Mohawks announc-<lb/>
ed their alternate plan for the Olym-<lb/>
pic village, the U.S. Olympic Com-<lb/>
mittee, sponsors of the games, hur-<lb/>
ried to the Indians with proposals of<lb/>
their own. The Mohawks could sell<lb/>
Indian crafts at the games, the Com-<lb/>
mittee said, and make a cultural<lb/>
presentation ? speeches and dances<lb/>
? to the world's athletes. The<lb/>
Mohawks accepted the offer. Now<lb/>
the cultural presentation is off.<lb/>
"The Olympic Committee hasn't<lb/>
told us why John Mohawk said.<lb/>
Nader Maroun said he feels the<lb/>
Committee's offer may have been a<lb/>
ploy to draw attention from the<lb/>
Olympic prison and the overriding<lb/>
issue of Indian land claims. The<lb/>
Mohawks claim the site of the<lb/>
games as their own, citing treaties<lb/>
with the U.S. government in 1784<lb/>
and 1794.<lb/>
Regardless of how their proposal<lb/>
for the appropriate technology<lb/>
center fares, the Mohawk nation<lb/>
plans to dramatize the Native<lb/>
American heritage of Lake Placid.<lb/>
When runners bearing the Olympic<lb/>
flame reach the outer edges of the<lb/>
original Mohawk lands, Indian run-<lb/>
ners will be there to meet them, and<lb/>
will escort the torch all the way to<lb/>
the Olympic village, in the heart of<lb/>
Mohawk country.<lb/>
(The writer is a syndicated colum-<lb/>
nist.)<lb/>
<pb facs="00057246_0005"/><lb/>
Features<lb/>
Dinner Theater Presents<lb/>
Comedy 6 Rms Riv Vu<lb/>
FEBRUARY 7, 1980 page 5<lb/>
By JAY STONE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"6 Rms Riv Vu" premiered at the<lb/>
Helen Hayes Theater in 1972. It was<lb/>
nominated for an Emmy after being<lb/>
adapted for television in 1974, and<lb/>
Bob Randall, author of the play<lb/>
received "The Drama Desk Most<lb/>
Promising Playwright Award" in<lb/>
1972.<lb/>
It is a play with a pronounced<lb/>
Neil Simon-ish essence. The writing<lb/>
strives to make a statement on the<lb/>
human condition while avoiding<lb/>
odious or cumbersome attempts at<lb/>
profundity.<lb/>
Randall's characters deliver lines<lb/>
that drip with a banal kind of<lb/>
ludicrousy that satirizes bourgeois<lb/>
sensibilities and Victorian ethics.<lb/>
"6 Rms Riv Vu" revolves around<lb/>
the characters of Paul Freidman<lb/>
(Mick Godwin) and Ann Miller<lb/>
(Rosalie Hutchins), who become ac-<lb/>
cidentally locked into an empty<lb/>
apartment while shopping for a<lb/>
place to live. After-a number of re-<lb/>
joinders, self-reproaches, and false<lb/>
starts, they fall into an adulterous,<lb/>
mad embrace. Their subsequent<lb/>
dilemma transforms the play into a<lb/>
satirical look at American sexual<lb/>
mores.<lb/>
We are not asked to "believe" the<lb/>
characters of Paul and Ann, merely<lb/>
to laugh at them. They represent the<lb/>
refugees of a maturing process that<lb/>
has left them feeling stagnant and<lb/>
purposeless. It is, in part, through<lb/>
each other that they finally discover<lb/>
themselves. Ironically, because of<lb/>
their lack of credibility as tenants in<lb/>
the real world, we are afforded<lb/>
laughter. Paul and Ann are earthy<lb/>
enough to earn the adjectives<lb/>
"bawdy" and "irreverent yet<lb/>
they are sufficiently chaste and<lb/>
caricatured to qualify as non-<lb/>
entities.<lb/>
Dr. Helen Steer's direction of the<lb/>
play was adequately perceptive and<lb/>
acute. Larry (played by Ronald<lb/>
Cherry) had considerable fiasco<lb/>
potential. The character was con-<lb/>
trived, awkward, and generally<lb/>
over-acted; however, after the first<lb/>
scene he was never permitted back<lb/>
on stage until curtain call. Mick<lb/>
Godwin did an effective rendition of<lb/>
Paul; however, his performance on-<lb/>
ly began to achieve a plateau of<lb/>
quality drama during Act Two.<lb/>
Rosalie Hutchins' interpretation of<lb/>
Ann Miller was convincing enough<lb/>
to give substance to lines like:<lb/>
"You're willing to kill yourself<lb/>
for me. How big of an ingrate do<lb/>
you think I am?"<lb/>
High moments during the produc-<lb/>
tion ebbed and flowed until they<lb/>
found themselves beached and sub-<lb/>
ject to inspection. In Act Two the<lb/>
ominous character of "The Woman<lb/>
in 4-A" (Hazel Stapleton) walks<lb/>
onstage bearing a book entitled<lb/>
Things Fall Apart.<lb/>
The parts of Richard Miller and<lb/>
Janet Freidman were played by<lb/>
Marvin Hunt and Anita Lancaster.<lb/>
Karen Baldwin played a pregnant<lb/>
woman and Eddie was Willie Tyson.<lb/>
"6 Rms Riv Vu" will be presented<lb/>
in Mendenhall Auditorium 244,<lb/>
Feb. 6-9, as a dinner theater produc-<lb/>
tion. The buffet dinner will include:<lb/>
sliced roast round of beef, chicken<lb/>
paprikosh, baked Idaho potato with<lb/>
sour cream, buttered green beans<lb/>
with toasted almonds, glazed car-<lb/>
rots, sliced French bread,<lb/>
margarine, congealed lemon-<lb/>
pineapple salad and mixed fruit cob-<lb/>
bler.<lb/>
All other performances will be<lb/>
$7 for students and $9 for others.<lb/>
A dministrators:<lb/>
6 Kim Riv v<lb/>
??? A Dinur f'frcat:<lb/>
P GUS<lb/>
U<lb/>
A Complex And Elaborately Designed Hierarchy<lb/>
11<lb/>
It Came From Outer Space<lb/>
A Science Fiction Classic<lb/>
Special Late Show<lb/>
3-D Space Film<lb/>
Will Be Shown<lb/>
"It's something that we've<lb/>
wanted to do for a long time said<lb/>
Steven Bachner, chairman of the<lb/>
Student Union Films Committee.<lb/>
"Late shows have been extremely<lb/>
successful at UNC and N.C. State<lb/>
This Friday night the Committee<lb/>
will present a special late show, the<lb/>
science fiction classic "It Came<lb/>
From Outer Space" at 11:00 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center's Hen-<lb/>
drix Theater. Admission is free with<lb/>
a student ID, activity card or MSC<lb/>
membership.<lb/>
"It is experimental continued<lb/>
Bachner. "If it works well, we will<lb/>
try to schedule one or- two each<lb/>
semester. But the problem with hav-<lb/>
ing a late show is that the Student<lb/>
Center is only open until midnight.<lb/>
?'For It Came From Outer<lb/>
Space we had to get approval to<lb/>
keep the building open until the<lb/>
movie ends at 12:30, and we had to<lb/>
have the money to pay the ushers<lb/>
and other personnel for their over-<lb/>
time.<lb/>
It Came From Outer Space' has<lb/>
another interesting characteristic<lb/>
which makes it ideal for a late<lb/>
show said Bachner. "It's a 3-D<lb/>
movie. We've got enough pairs of<lb/>
3-D glasses for everyone at the<lb/>
movie; there are 800 seats and we<lb/>
have 800 glasses<lb/>
Three-dimensional photography<lb/>
is a process based on the scientific<lb/>
principle that the eyes have a slightly<lb/>
different perspective, and it is this<lb/>
change in this perspective which<lb/>
creates depth perception. A 3-D<lb/>
movie talus 9&amp;Bm th,s b<lb/>
filming with two cameras, set inches<lb/>
apart.<lb/>
When "It Came From Outer<lb/>
Space" premiered, the movie re-<lb/>
quired two projectors working<lb/>
simultaneously. But if the two prints<lb/>
were not synchronized perfectly, the<lb/>
result was hundreds of headaches.<lb/>
The more recent process superim-<lb/>
poses two different tinted prints ?<lb/>
red and green ? onto one reel.<lb/>
When viewed through the specially<lb/>
tinted 3-D glasses, the illusion of<lb/>
depth perception returns.<lb/>
"It Came From Outer Space"<lb/>
was filmed in 1952, making it one of<lb/>
the oldest of the science fiction<lb/>
"invasion" films. It was the success<lb/>
of 'Outer Space' which convinced<lb/>
filmmakers that sci-fi was a viable<lb/>
movie market and led to the crea-<lb/>
tion of such classics as "The Inva-<lb/>
sion of the Body Snatchers" in later<lb/>
years.<lb/>
The townspeople in rural Arizona<lb/>
suspect nothing when a bright flash<lb/>
streaks across the sky, but soon<lb/>
friends and neighbors change, and<lb/>
people realize something is going<lb/>
on. Further investigation leads to<lb/>
the discovery of the alien beings and<lb/>
to new heights in terror.<lb/>
Creative camerawork plays an im-<lb/>
portant role as the desert of Arizona<lb/>
becomes an eerie hiding ground for<lb/>
the aliens. Director Jack Arnold<lb/>
also uses a cinematic twist ? he<lb/>
changes the viewpoint from the ear-<lb/>
thlings tc that of the aliens, who see<lb/>
the earth creatures as bumbling little<lb/>
folk.<lb/>
By LINDA J.ALLRED<lb/>
If you have ever attempted to<lb/>
handle a problem (no matter how<lb/>
trivial) that involved contact with<lb/>
academic administrators, you have<lb/>
no doubt discovered that they are a<lb/>
strange, fascinating, and sometimes<lb/>
exasperating breed who seem to<lb/>
function by a system of logic that is<lb/>
totally alien to the rest hJfetfcW civiliz-<lb/>
ed world. ' <lb/>
You may have begun to feel there<lb/>
is no logic to the system other than<lb/>
to make things difficult for you per-<lb/>
sonally. However, this is not the<lb/>
case. Academic administration is ac-<lb/>
tually a complex and elaborately<lb/>
designed hierarchy, whose opera-<lb/>
ti nal guidelines have been the most<lb/>
carefully guarded secret since the<lb/>
recipe for Kentucky Fried Chicken.<lb/>
This week a highly confidential<lb/>
document entitled A Handbook for<lb/>
Academic Administrators was<lb/>
discovered in Spilman by an under-<lb/>
cover agent posing as a befuddled<lb/>
student attempting to track a "lost"<lb/>
tuition payment. The unidentified<lb/>
agent managed to camouflage the<lb/>
document as a pizza by covering it<lb/>
with tomato sauce and cheese and<lb/>
left the building unnoticed.<lb/>
Following are a few exerpts from<lb/>
the handbook:<lb/>
?THE PRIMARY GOALS OF<lb/>
ACADEMIC ADMINISTRATION<lb/>
ARE SELF-PERPETUATION<lb/>
AND PROPAGATION. As an in-<lb/>
dividual administrator, it is your<lb/>
responsibility to keep the system go-<lb/>
ing and growing. This process can<lb/>
be facilitated in a number of ways.<lb/>
?Maximize the apparent impor-<lb/>
tance of your own position. This<lb/>
may require considerable creative<lb/>
input on your part, but in the long<lb/>
run, the positive effects will be ap-<lb/>
preciated by everyone in the hierar-<lb/>
chy. Keep in mind that the perceived<lb/>
value of any job is directly propor-<lb/>
tional to the number of people<lb/>
working under you, the frequency<lb/>
of your signature on official<lb/>
documents, the necessity of your ap-<lb/>
proval for an outsider's activity<lb/>
within the system, and the number<lb/>
of file cabinets or computer banks<lb/>
necessary to store your records.<lb/>
The activities which can potential-<lb/>
ly require your permission are vir-<lb/>
tually unlimited, but it is highly<lb/>
recommended that you limit them to<lb/>
only those which can be handled<lb/>
between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. For ex-<lb/>
ample, requiring that every student<lb/>
get your written permission for each<lb/>
trip to the bathroom would require<lb/>
your presence 24 hours a day and<lb/>
should therefore be avoided.<lb/>
?Maximize the apparent impor-<lb/>
tance of all positions beneath you.<lb/>
This is easily accomplished by assur-<lb/>
ing that everv employee under your<lb/>
supervision has at least one<lb/>
employee under their supervision,<lb/>
and that every document that re-<lb/>
quires your signature or approval be<lb/>
processed through at least one other<lb/>
person before reaching you. It is ob-<lb/>
vious that such a tactic will i<lb/>
produce an infinite number<lb/>
tions within the system; theic<lb/>
is highly<lb/>
?Minimize actual work while<lb/>
maximizing apparent work. Stan-<lb/>
dardized forms, computerized pro-<lb/>
cessing and storage systems, rubber<lb/>
stamps and Xerox machines are<lb/>
your greatest allies here. Remember<lb/>
that your goal is only to appear<lb/>
overworked. The more paper you<lb/>
generate, the more impressive and<lb/>
crucial your position will seem to<lb/>
the outsider, particularly if you can<lb/>
keep your desk piled high with<lb/>
mounds of documents which need<lb/>
your personal attention. (It does not<lb/>
matter what the paper actually is,<lb/>
although unopened boxes of blank<lb/>
typing paper and stacks of comic<lb/>
books obviously would not generate<lb/>
the right impression.)<lb/>
?Remove all traces of economic<lb/>
efficiency. You are not working in a<lb/>
profit-loss situation, and as the cost<lb/>
of operating your division increases,<lb/>
its perceived worth to the system<lb/>
will increase. Remember, however,<lb/>
that to the outsider it must not ap-<lb/>
pear that you are deliberately<lb/>
wasting money, so luxurious office<lb/>
decor should be avoided Opera-<lb/>
tional cost can easily be kept high if<lb/>
you observe a few simple principles:<lb/>
1. Never use one form when a<lb/>
dozen will do.<lb/>
2. Require at least three copies of<lb/>
every document. In addition to in-<lb/>
creasing cost, this will also con-<lb/>
tribute to the amount of storage<lb/>
space you need, thereby increasing<lb/>
the importance of your position.<lb/>
3. Use as many paper clips and<lb/>
staples as possible. (This is a small<lb/>
item but in time can actually be<lb/>
quite expensive.)<lb/>
4. Update all forms annually and<lb/>
print at least twice as many as you<lb/>
will actually need. At the end of the<lb/>
year, the unused forms can simply<lb/>
be discarded and replaced. (This has<lb/>
an additional advantage in that the<lb/>
constantly changing forms will<lb/>
create confusion for outsiders and<lb/>
thereby increase the importance of<lb/>
your role in helping" them.)<lb/>
5. Never use the least expensive<lb/>
product available<lb/>
See RED, Page 6, Col. 2<lb/>
Thriller 'Halloween'<lb/>
Runs This Weekend<lb/>
l-Ji v.<lb/>
Ha ???<lb/>
???This Week M jrreja<lb/>
From the opening frames,<lb/>
"Halloween" grabs you by the<lb/>
throat and hangs on, squeezing<lb/>
every possible bit of terror from the<lb/>
audience. It is hardly the type of<lb/>
movie that can he watched while<lb/>
leaning back comfortably.<lb/>
This Friday and Saturday night at<lb/>
7 and 9 p.m the Student Union<lb/>
Films Committee presents<lb/>
"Halloween" in Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center's Hendrix Theater. Ad-<lb/>
mission is by student ID. activity<lb/>
card, or MSC membership.<lb/>
"Halloween" begins one hallow-<lb/>
ed eve when a young boy dons a<lb/>
mask, grabs a butcher knife, and at-<lb/>
tacks his sister and her boyfriend.<lb/>
Then the film progresses 15 years to<lb/>
the time when the psychopathic<lb/>
young man returns to stalk un-<lb/>
suspecting Halloween revelers.<lb/>
Halloween' is a horror master-<lb/>
piece said Richard Corliss of the<lb/>
New York Times. "It's a horror<lb/>
movie in the classic tradition<lb/>
Newsweek called the movie "a<lb/>
superb exercise in the art of<lb/>
suspense It is the most frighten-<lb/>
ing flick in years<lb/>
The storyline and acting take a<lb/>
back seat to the violence and gore,<lb/>
yet the intense suspense and<lb/>
savagery of the killer arc enough to<lb/>
leave the audience gripping the ar-<lb/>
mrests.<lb/>
Halloween' is a sleeper that is<lb/>
here to stay wrote Tom Allen of<lb/>
the Village Voice. "It can stand pro-<lb/>
ud along side of 'Night of the Livina<lb/>
Dead' and Hitchcock's 'Psycho It<lb/>
is a movie of almost unrelieved<lb/>
chills<lb/>
Variety said "a film 1HC<lb/>
'Halloween is judged by the<lb/>
number of screams it can raise t"un<lb/>
the audience This one raises quite<lb/>
a few, especially during the last 3D<lb/>
mi Antes<lb/>
<pb facs="00057246_0006"/><lb/>
IHLLASI CAROLINIAN<lb/>
hhBRUARY7, 1980<lb/>
t<lb/>
As Congress Debates Issue<lb/>
Draft Registration Reviewed<lb/>
A World Record In Volleyball Photoby kipsloan<lb/>
how long will it last?<lb/>
Record Broken<lb/>
In Greenville<lb/>
At 10:50 p.m Sun-<lb/>
day, Feb. 3, 1980, a<lb/>
new world record for<lb/>
marathon volleyball<lb/>
was set at the Elm<lb/>
Street Gym. The two<lb/>
six-man teams claimed<lb/>
a spot in the Guiness<lb/>
Book of World<lb/>
Records at 75 hours, 30<lb/>
minutes.<lb/>
The teams were led<lb/>
by Jeff Sutton and<lb/>
Ricky Tolstoy, who<lb/>
currently hold the<lb/>
world record for<lb/>
marathon tennis at 105<lb/>
hours. The two were<lb/>
joined by ten other<lb/>
residents of Kinston,<lb/>
N.C Sutton's<lb/>
brothers, Kyle and<lb/>
Kurt; John DeVechio;<lb/>
Dave Eudy; Gary<lb/>
Baker; Ed Dupree; Ed<lb/>
Smith; and Tolston's<lb/>
brothers. Gary, Mike<lb/>
and Mark Baker is a<lb/>
student at ECU.<lb/>
The marathon,<lb/>
which raised pledged<lb/>
proceeds for the Special<lb/>
Olympics programs in<lb/>
eastern North<lb/>
Carolina, began at 7:20<lb/>
p.m Thursday, Jan.<lb/>
31. The original goal<lb/>
was to break 70 hours<lb/>
and 33 minutes, but<lb/>
during the competition,<lb/>
word was sent that a<lb/>
THERE JS A<lb/>
DIFFERENCE!<lb/>
PREPARE FOR.L<lb/>
VQEECFMG FLEX<lb/>
NAT L MED BDS.<lb/>
NAT! DENTAL BDS.<lb/>
NURSING BOARDS<lb/>
MCAT ? OAT ? LSAT ? GRE<lb/>
GMAT ? OCAT ? PCAT.<lb/>
VAT ? SAT<lb/>
California group had<lb/>
set a new mark of 75<lb/>
hours.<lb/>
The teams were<lb/>
allowed five minute<lb/>
breaks each hour for<lb/>
rest and refreshments,<lb/>
which were contributed<lb/>
by numerous local<lb/>
businesses. Deducting<lb/>
the time spent off the<lb/>
court, the teams still<lb/>
played ?w i t h o u t<lb/>
sleep?for 68 hours, 45<lb/>
minutes.<lb/>
College Press Service<lb/>
If Congress endorses Presideni<lb/>
Carter's Jan. 23 proposal to begin<lb/>
military registration, it will be the<lb/>
Selective Service System's first stirr-<lb/>
ing since 1976. But it will not be the<lb/>
first time registration has been<lb/>
brought back from the grave. The<lb/>
U.S. has employed various kinds of<lb/>
conscription systems periodically<lb/>
for over a hundred years. A brief<lb/>
history, as gleaned from the<lb/>
published works of Boston Univer-<lb/>
sity Professor Michael Useem:<lb/>
n,e nation's first draft law,<lb/>
enacted during the Civil War, was<lb/>
easiest for the moneyed classes to<lb/>
avoid. The law allowed draftees to<lb/>
hire substitutes, and to buy exemp-<lb/>
tions for $300. Thus the war, accor-<lb/>
ding to a popular saying of the day,<lb/>
was fought "with rich men's money<lb/>
and poor men's blood<lb/>
The law, moreover, was ineffi-<lb/>
cient. Of the 300,000 men called up<lb/>
in 1863, nine percent hired<lb/>
substitutes, 18 percent paid the<lb/>
deferment fee, and a whopping 70<lb/>
percent resorted to medical and<lb/>
other exemptions. Only three per-<lb/>
cent of the draftees were formally<lb/>
inducted.<lb/>
Peace ended the draft, which was<lb/>
not reinstated until World War 1. It<lb/>
was considerably more efficient the<lb/>
second time. Draftees accounted for<lb/>
the majority of American soldiers<lb/>
for the first time in American<lb/>
history.<lb/>
Around 145,000 college students<lb/>
served instead in the Study Army<lb/>
Training Corps during the Great<lb/>
War. Almost half the draftees<lb/>
claimed physical or occupational ex-<lb/>
emptions.<lb/>
Others protested more directly.<lb/>
Numerous anti-draft marches on<lb/>
Washington ended with the jailing<lb/>
of the march leaders. Various<lb/>
unions ? notably the Industrial<lb/>
Workers of the World ? organized<lb/>
resistance, and were nearly<lb/>
destroyed as the result. Charles<lb/>
Schenck, an officer of the then-<lb/>
formidable Socialist Party, was ar-<lb/>
rested for merely circulating a peti-<lb/>
tion arguing the draft violated con-<lb/>
stitutional strictures against in-<lb/>
voluntary servitude. His case ended<lb/>
with Supreme Court Justice Oliver<lb/>
Wendell Holmes' historic ruling<lb/>
that limited freedom of speech in<lb/>
times of national emergency.<lb/>
In all, the War Department listed<lb/>
325,000 missing war resistors two<lb/>
years after the Treaty of Versailles<lb/>
was signed.<lb/>
The draft ended with the war, and<lb/>
remained inactive until 1940, when<lb/>
the U.S. began its first peacetime<lb/>
conscription program.<lb/>
The draft expired in 1947, but the<lb/>
Truman administration worried that<lb/>
volunteer rates would be too low to<lb/>
sustain Cold War military policv.<lb/>
and successfully sponsored another<lb/>
law which, with certain modifica-<lb/>
tions, remains in force today. But<lb/>
the nation's second peacetime draft<lb/>
did excite protest. Resistance was<lb/>
loud enough to force a liberalized<lb/>
deferment system.<lb/>
Indeed, the deferment system was<lb/>
so discretionary that a dispropor-<lb/>
tionate share of the 1.5 million men<lb/>
drafted into the Korean War were<lb/>
from working class families.<lb/>
The pattern continued through<lb/>
the Vietnam War, when draft<lb/>
resistance hit its peak. Some studies<lb/>
suggest as many as 250,000 men il-<lb/>
legally failed to register, while<lb/>
another 300,000 either refused in-<lb/>
duction or emigrated to avoid in-<lb/>
duction.<lb/>
Resistance was so broad that bv<lb/>
the early seventies the milttarv<lb/>
system was under attack bv a large<lb/>
proportion of the young men who<lb/>
were supposed to staff it. In 1973,<lb/>
President Nixon ended all phv<lb/>
exams and inductions. Registration<lb/>
was suspended on April 1. 1975, and<lb/>
the Selective Service System was of-<lb/>
ficially put on standby st??l is n<lb/>
Januarv. 1976.<lb/>
Red Tape Handbook Released<lb/>
Cont. From Page 5<lb/>
?Avoid talking on<lb/>
the telephone. If you<lb/>
can be easily reached by<lb/>
phone, it will appear<lb/>
that you have nothing<lb/>
better to do. Have your<lb/>
receptionist follow<lb/>
these simple guidelines:<lb/>
1 . Never put<lb/>
unscreened calls<lb/>
through to you.<lb/>
2.Ask who is calling,<lb/>
a. If it is your superior,<lb/>
the receptionist should<lb/>
be instructed to state<lb/>
that you are in a<lb/>
meeting but that you<lb/>
requested to be notified<lb/>
H that person called.<lb/>
The c.Uer should be<lb/>
let! on nold for about<lb/>
30 seconds before you<lb/>
answer.<lb/>
b. Calls from your<lb/>
stock broker, realtor or<lb/>
lawyer should bt put<lb/>
through immediately.<lb/>
c. If the caller is a<lb/>
faculty member of stu-<lb/>
dent, the receptionist<lb/>
should state that you<lb/>
are not available and<lb/>
that the caller should<lb/>
leave a message. Calls<lb/>
from students may be<lb/>
disregarded. Calls from<lb/>
faculty members<lb/>
should not be returned<lb/>
until the faculty<lb/>
member has called back<lb/>
at least twice,<lb/>
d. If the caller refuses<lb/>
to identify himself (or<lb/>
herself), the recep-<lb/>
tionist should place<lb/>
them on hold in-<lb/>
definitely. Eventually<lb/>
the caller will give up.<lb/>
(This tactic may also be<lb/>
used on students who<lb/>
persist in trying to<lb/>
 ARMY NAVY STORE <lb/>
Backpacks, B 15. Bomber. <lb/>
Field, Deck, Flight, Snorkel ?<lb/>
Jackets, Peacoats, Parkas. <lb/>
Shoes, Combat Boots, Plus. <lb/>
isoi S. Evans Street 4.<lb/>
reach you.<lb/>
?Always answer<lb/>
negatively to any stu-<lb/>
dent's request. Most of<lb/>
the time the issue will<lb/>
simply be dropped. If<lb/>
the student persists,<lb/>
resort to the next tactic.<lb/>
?Always answer<lb/>
positively to any facul-<lb/>
ty member's request.<lb/>
This does not mean<lb/>
that you must actually<lb/>
SAAD'S SHOE<lb/>
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OPTICIANS<lb/>
ft<lb/>
opnan<lb/>
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Centers in Major US Cities<lb/>
Puerto Rico, Toronto, Canada<lb/>
A l?f ano, Swtterlantf<lb/>
OVER 1000 FRAMES<lb/>
TO CHOOSE FROM<lb/>
Single Vision-White Glass Lenses$ 19.50<lb/>
Bifocal Lenses-White Glass 30.50<lb/>
Single Vision Photo Gray Lenses$26.50<lb/>
Single Vision Photo Gray Extra$30.50<lb/>
Bifocal Lenses Photo Gray$38.50<lb/>
Trifocal White Glass Lenses$37.50<lb/>
Trifocal Photo Gray Lenses$47 50<lb/>
(HI DIVISION LENSES) <lb/>
CONTACTIENSES<lb/>
by<lb/>
Bausch 4 Lomb Soflens ?Nuearautj<lb/>
Soft Lens 9uaran,e1,i'orr?funo<lb/>
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ART&amp;CAMERA PLAZA CAMERA<lb/>
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Down Town<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Shopping Center<lb/>
$149.50<lb/>
Semi Soft Lensf.$T30.00<lb/>
Hard Lens $i 15.00<lb/>
15 Student Discount On Glasses.<lb/>
EAR-VUE opticians<lb/>
752-1446<lb/>
??-itor ??<lb/>
OREENVILLE. N.C<lb/>
PHYSICIANS QUADRANGLE<lb/>
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ltN?Pl<lb/>
MOM TUf TMUM ?M<lb/>
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BUILDINQA<lb/>
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&amp;$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$&amp;<lb/>
KODACOLOR S<lb/>
gfc Developed and Printed<lb/>
$275<lb/>
"?<lb/>
-?<lb/>
?<lb/>
12<lb/>
EXPOSURE<lb/>
ROLL ONLY<lb/>
No Foreign<lb/>
Film<lb/>
20<lb/>
EXPOSURE<lb/>
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&amp;<lb/>
KODACOLOR m<lb/>
Developed and Printed<lb/>
FAMOUS PIZZA<lb/>
50 OFF any Pizza with this Coupon<lb/>
Offer expires Feb. 15. 1980<lb/>
NOW SERVING YOUR FAVORITE GOLDEN BEVERAGE<lb/>
24<lb/>
EXPOSURE<lb/>
ROLL ONLY<lb/>
No Foreign<lb/>
Film<lb/>
PIZZA Small Urge<lb/>
Tomato &amp; Cheese<lb/>
On,or<lb/>
Pepper<lb/>
Mil sl 'OOTl<lb/>
On. ,n &amp; Pepper<lb/>
Z.So 4.K<lb/>
Pepper<lb/>
Sausago<lb/>
Htmliu - j.<lb/>
Ani.hovy<lb/>
Canadian B n on<lb/>
&amp; Pingapp e<lb/>
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3 jva<lb/>
House r;p?(<lb/>
las ?<lb/>
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iTji4L<lb/>
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is sjr<lb/>
12.<lb/>
?3-is ys9<lb/>
&amp; -<lb/>
' ?o<lb/>
SPAGHETTI<lb/>
3.?y I 7AS<lb/>
DESSERTS<lb/>
Cnaese Cake I Jff Apple P.eLy<lb/>
I Blueberry Pi? fjf<lb/>
SUBS Small Large<lb/>
Meatball<lb/>
Sausage<lb/>
Italian<lb/>
Ham<lb/>
Tuna<lb/>
Roast Beef<lb/>
Pastr<lb/>
BLT<lb/>
Pepper &amp; Epjg<lb/>
Veal<lb/>
Super Sub<lb/>
Pepper Steak<lb/>
win 'j,i ice<lb/>
with Meiijjii<lb/>
with W ishiooms<lb/>
?vi ;h Veal<lb/>
wv.th Pepper<lb/>
zsc<lb/>
OJL<lb/>
rai 1<lb/>
Sorv?tl with yilid ?nd paritc breadj<lb/>
2.00<lb/>
3L0<lb/>
???.<lb/>
i??<lb/>
luS<lb/>
Z.9o<lb/>
3e?<lb/>
?Sl<lb/>
2?k<lb/>
Xi?<lb/>
2J<lb/>
2.e<lb/>
Tfcgj<lb/>
it WT<lb/>
<lb/>
Slide<lb/>
FILM DEVELOPING<lb/>
20 EXPOSURE<lb/>
KODACHROME<lb/>
AND EKTACHROME<lb/>
PROCESSING ONLY<lb/>
SALADS<lb/>
Greek Salad<lb/>
Anti Pasta<lb/>
Tossed<lb/>
hJL<lb/>
zW<lb/>
lasayr<lb/>
Ravioli<lb/>
Sec-<lb/>
JOQ<lb/>
Ve.il Mji iar ? 11<lb/>
,Scrcl v. 111j vjlad and paftit bicjd)<lb/>
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BEVERAGES<lb/>
Coffee<lb/>
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M.lk<lb/>
Taa Hot or Cold<lb/>
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J.<lb/>
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EXPOSURE $S 5<lb/>
ROLL ONLY <lb/>
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KODACHROME<lb/>
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act on the issue. If the<lb/>
person contacts you<lb/>
about the progress of<lb/>
their request, respond<lb/>
that you're working on<lb/>
it, but these things take<lb/>
time.<lb/>
?Always follow<lb/>
through on requests<lb/>
from your superiors.<lb/>
After all, they are try-<lb/>
ing to maintain the<lb/>
system too.<lb/>
March of Dimes Funds Enable<lb/>
Specialists to Reach<lb/>
Outlying Areas<lb/>
A FORMER TEACHER or the Nava r- ervation - C near <lb/>
Elizabe- V, - pple 1 -? a. Alexandra.? ' (Cath-<lb/>
erine soon after the r -cer died. M 11 eni Emily 4<lb/>
Adam. V 2 have been added tc the fam f. Each<lb/>
and requires scec a attention<lb/>
Support March Of Dimes<lb/>
February 14 is<lb/>
"I LOVE YOU day!<lb/>
<lb/>
SSB<lb/>
m-i<lb/>
ft .?'<lb/>
V<lb/>
<lb/>
vV<lb/>
Valentine's Day Cards<lb/>
team Aeeasm<lb/>
Creative excellence is an American tradition.<lb/>
Central News &amp; Card Shop<lb/>
321 Evans St. Mall<lb/>
Open 7 Days a Week<lb/>
MM ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057246_0007"/><lb/>
ed<lb/>
Hi ! M . koi M N<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Host Illinois State Saturday<lb/>
 BRl AR 7, ivho page<lb/>
Pirates Travel To USC<lb/>
o<lb/>
low<lb/>
? ? ? byCHAPGURLEY<lb/>
 i i 's I rank lloh.son Rebounds<lb/>
B CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Kditor<lb/>
The Fast Carolina basketball<lb/>
team begins its toughest week of the<lb/>
season tonight (Thursday) when il<lb/>
visits South Carolina, a learn the<lb/>
Pirates upset last season 56-55 in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Following the matchup with the<lb/>
Gamecocks, ECU hosts powerful II<lb/>
Imois State on Saturday. Delaware<lb/>
State on Monday and travels<lb/>
sixth-ranked Maryland the to"<lb/>
ing Wednesday.<lb/>
This is a tough stretch for us<lb/>
admitted Pirate coach Dave Odom.<lb/>
"We'll just take them one at a time<lb/>
and hope tor the best<lb/>
The South Carolina matchup is a<lb/>
most interesting (me considering the<lb/>
Gamecock loss at ECU last season<lb/>
must have been a grave disappoint<lb/>
ment to CSC" coach Frank McGuire.<lb/>
He would like nothing more than to<lb/>
avenge that loss.<lb/>
I he game is also of interest<lb/>
because the present season is the last<lb/>
at USC tor the legendary McGuire.<lb/>
rhe man who once led North<lb/>
C arolina to a national champion-<lb/>
ship (195) and broughl the<lb/>
Gamecock program to national pro-<lb/>
minence in the late 10's and earh<lb/>
70's is being forced into retirement<lb/>
by the ISC administration folio<lb/>
ing this season.<lb/>
"I'm sure their players wi<lb/>
tired up said Odom. "1 kn<lb/>
it IS<lb/>
ey'll pro-<lb/>
extra just<lb/>
tw -<lb/>
low last<lb/>
Rosie's '10'<lb/>
To Be Retired<lb/>
year's game lingers in their minds.<lb/>
rhey would just love to avenge it.<lb/>
"Also Odom continued, "they<lb/>
will be double tough because<lb/>
McGuire's last season. Ih<lb/>
bably he giving that little<lb/>
for him<lb/>
I lie (iamecocks have tared excep-<lb/>
tionally well at McGuire Arena, los-<lb/>
ing only to Marquette.<lb/>
'They're probably playing at<lb/>
home as well at home as any team<lb/>
we've placed proclaimed Odom.<lb/>
' I hey otter us quite a challenge,<lb/>
but I look forward to it<lb/>
I he Gamecocks are led bv 6-8<lb/>
senior forward Cedric Hordges,<lb/>
who leads the team in both scoring<lb/>
and rebounding with 20.3 and 8.7<lb/>
averages, respective<lb/>
Guard Mike Doyle averages 12.3<lb/>
points while burlv 6-11 center Jim<lb/>
Strickland averages 9.3 and 8.5 re-<lb/>
bounds.<lb/>
"The have the biggest front line<lb/>
we'll play said Odom. "W<lb/>
have a tremendous matchup<lb/>
blem<lb/>
To compensate Odom noted that<lb/>
Mike Gibson and Frank Hobson,<lb/>
two 6-8 post men, would see more<lb/>
than their average playing time.<lb/>
"Mike and Frank will have to<lb/>
plav io compensate tor their size ad-<lb/>
vantage claimed Odom. "I<lb/>
expect to use Kyle Powers<lb/>
deal tor the same reason<lb/>
In the Saturda) matchup<lb/>
State,<lb/>
of the<lb/>
' I hey<lb/>
the<lb/>
top<lb/>
would<lb/>
Minges with Illinois<lb/>
Pirates, 1 1 -H. face one<lb/>
teams in the countr.<lb/>
well be one of the nation's top twen-<lb/>
ty teams Odom said sternlv.<lb/>
I he Kedbirds. 16- are led bv<lb/>
seven-toot center loe Galvin, who<lb/>
averages 10.9 points and 6.1 re-<lb/>
bounds per game Guard Ron lones<lb/>
is the leading scorer with a 1" 3<lb/>
average. Forward Del Varborough<lb/>
tallies 12.6 and 6.7 caroms.<lb/>
'They're probabl) the best team<lb/>
to come into Minges Coliseum since<lb/>
the Jacksonville team that Artis<lb/>
Gilmore plaved on Odom said.<lb/>
"People holler about getting name<lb/>
teams in here-well, this team is the<lb/>
surge of the midwest<lb/>
Odom had special praise tor the<lb/>
seven-foot Galvin. "He's a super<lb/>
player aid the First-year Pirate<lb/>
coach. 'N.C. State wanted him<lb/>
badlv when he came out of high<lb/>
school<lb/>
Redbirds 'It n<lb/>
game I<lb/>
onlv wa for u<lb/>
shot at winn<lb/>
frJ<lb/>
e il<lb/>
pro-<lb/>
Ot the Redbirds on the whole<lb/>
Odom said he expected to see the<lb/>
play much in the same style<lb/>
diana.<lb/>
as<lb/>
:m<lb/>
In-<lb/>
also<lb/>
a great<lb/>
L<lb/>
 H Win R<lb/>
- ? ? m a<lb/>
? nn<lb/>
.<lb/>
illege<lb/>
FCU'?; all time<lb/>
I oilovving<lb/>
s<lb/>
? -ev<lb/>
I<lb/>
"1<lb/>
hat<lb/>
she<lb/>
when<lb/>
Hil 1 saw<lb/>
1 eels<lb/>
1 hat sure<lb/>
ii ib'lit it<lb/>
:ords held bv<lb/>
? e are 1 C I<lb/>
? mnding<lb/>
. . ?. I hompson<lb/>
. ' and 1.119 re-<lb/>
tging 18.3<lb/>
 ; pei contest.<lb/>
a (mid be<lb/>
need a<lb/>
the past<lb/>
? i ten games,<lb/>
red in double<lb/>
; C o r e her<lb/>
pei game.<lb/>
i i I uesdav at<lb/>
v tallied 25<lb/>
? it of the<lb/>
ays, there<lb/>
h ? recent lack<lb/>
guards and for-<lb/>
tuning their<lb/>
real well she said.<lb/>
laking the shots.<lb/>
i need for us to<lb/>
I fiev wei e :<lb/>
I here wa<lb/>
nside : me.<lb/>
"I tried oneentrate more on<lb/>
defense Honestly, I tee! during<lb/>
thai 1 was playing as<lb/>
 II all around as 1 ever have. I just<lb/>
wasn'r scor ing as much<lb/>
Miss rhompson's contributions<lb/>
to the 1 ast Carolina women's pro-<lb/>
im have surelv been many, not<lb/>
onlv on the floor but off.<lb/>
Few people realize, for example,<lb/>
she has never had an athletic<lb/>
scholarship until this season "They<lb/>
?av s told me I could have one<lb/>
pson explained, "but I refus-<lb/>
ed because I already had an<lb/>
tcademic scholarship. 1 wanted our<lb/>
coaches to use the scholarship that<lb/>
was ottered me to be used to get<lb/>
quality players in here<lb/>
How did Miss rhomspon a<lb/>
"quality" player herself, arrive at<lb/>
EClBelieve it or not, former<lb/>
Pirate football coach Pat Dye had a<lb/>
tremendous influence on her deci-<lb/>
sion<lb/>
"Coach l)ve encouraged me to<lb/>
come here she said. "I had plann-<lb/>
ed to wait a vear after 1 graduated<lb/>
from high school<lb/>
Though she did not wait that year<lb/>
before coming to ECU, Miss<lb/>
Thomspon is finishing out her<lb/>
career at the same time as if she had.<lb/>
"1 onlv played lour games my<lb/>
sophomore vear she explained,<lb/>
"because o! an injury<lb/>
I he experience is not one that she<lb/>
likes to think of. "It was horrible<lb/>
exclaimed the senioi forward. "We<lb/>
were 6 16 that yeai and I couldn't<lb/>
stand just watching. 1 don't know if<lb/>
our record would have been better<lb/>
had 1 plaved. but at least I could<lb/>
have tried<lb/>
I hat was four years ago. The<lb/>
I ad) Pirate program was come a<lb/>
long wav since then, now owning a<lb/>
16-8 record.<lb/>
"Bob Donewald (ISl head<lb/>
coach) served as an assistant under<lb/>
Bobby Knight at Indiana for a<lb/>
while he said. "I think you'll see<lb/>
a lot of Bobby's coaching in him<lb/>
Odom noted that his team would<lb/>
have to be mentally readv tor the<lb/>
Center Joe (ialin<lb/>
 7-foot Reclhini<lb/>
Lady Pirates<lb/>
Fall To Heels<lb/>
Rosie Thompson<lb/>
"The major change said Miss<lb/>
Thompson, "is that Coach (Cathy)<lb/>
Andruzzi is getting good caliber<lb/>
players in here. You really need that<lb/>
now because everybody we plav is<lb/>
tough. You can take nothing for<lb/>
granted<lb/>
One thing Thompson is not tak-<lb/>
ing for granted is her own future.<lb/>
She is presently engaged and has<lb/>
ambitions to play professional<lb/>
basketball.<lb/>
If she makes it in the Women's<lb/>
Basketball League (WBL), she will<lb/>
join fiancee' Zack Valentine to form<lb/>
a family of pro athletes. Valentine,<lb/>
former ECU defensive end, is a<lb/>
linebacker for the World Champion<lb/>
Pittsburgh Steelers.<lb/>
Miss Thompson said that though<lb/>
she had not spoken with scouts, she<lb/>
felt her chances at a pro career are<lb/>
good. "Coach Andruzzi has a lot of<lb/>
connections Thompson said. "1<lb/>
just hope some of them will pav<lb/>
Something else in her favor is the<lb/>
fact that two former ECU mens<lb/>
coaches, Larry Gillman and Terry<lb/>
Kune, are coaching in the WBL.<lb/>
Ciillman, who ended a stormy two-<lb/>
year ECU tenure last season,<lb/>
coaches the St. Louis Streak while<lb/>
Kune, Gillman's assistant last<lb/>
season, coaches at Minnesota.<lb/>
"I guess it will help me since<lb/>
they've seen me play Thompson<lb/>
said. "I used to talk some with<lb/>
both of them<lb/>
As for Saturday's game with<lb/>
George Mason, Thompson said she<lb/>
had no extra feelings because of her<lb/>
number being retired. "I'll treat it<lb/>
just like any other game and any<lb/>
other night<lb/>
She may, but the fact remains it<lb/>
will be more than just another<lb/>
night. It marks the end of an era.<lb/>
B JIMM Dul'KI-t<lb/>
Iwislanl Spurls I tliinr<lb/>
 H MM 1 Mil 1 tter ha<lb/>
led bv one at the half, East<lb/>
Carolina's women fell to North<lb/>
Carolina 85-71 I uesdav afternoon<lb/>
at Carmichael Auditorium.<lb/>
The lead changed hands wt <lb/>
times in the action-packed first half.<lb/>
with neither team able to mount<lb/>
more than a three point advantage.<lb/>
?prille Shaffer opened the second<lb/>
half with a bucket to regain the lead<lb/>
for the Heels, but EC I forward<lb/>
Kathy Riley quick!) answered with a<lb/>
drive once agam shifting the narrow<lb/>
edge. Center Marcia Girven added a<lb/>
field goal to put the Pirates up bv<lb/>
three.<lb/>
Then the poised lar Heel- com-<lb/>
bined a pair of field goals from<lb/>
leading seorei kathv Crawford,<lb/>
another from Shatter and a follow<lb/>
shot by team captain Bernie<lb/>
McGlade to post a 39-34 advantage.<lb/>
appearantly taking command of the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
The teams exchanged field goals<lb/>
before Girven added a three-point<lb/>
play and Lydia Rountree chipped in<lb/>
a 15-footer to knot the score at<lb/>
41-41.<lb/>
Crawford drilled home three<lb/>
straight for L NC, countered bv a<lb/>
pair from Rosie Thompson to set<lb/>
the score 4-45 in favor of the hosts.<lb/>
But then the nightmare began for<lb/>
the visiting Pirates.<lb/>
UNC capitalized on four Pirate<lb/>
turnovers and blitzed to a 63-45 np<lb/>
on 16 unanswered points to silence<lb/>
East Carolina's hopes of victory.<lb/>
Riley posted 12 of her 19 points<lb/>
on the evening in the final eight<lb/>
minutes of play, as the I ady Pirates<lb/>
made one final run for the rrionev<lb/>
Heidi Owen's jumper with 1:40 on<lb/>
the clock cut the score to 79-67, but<lb/>
it was too little, too late as ECU suf-<lb/>
fered their eighth loss with 16 wins.<lb/>
Crawl<lb/>
.oitk . ? <lb/>
Bern added 2) points from<lb/>
perimeter and Shafft<lb/>
! ? omps<lb/>
.lt1M .<lb/>
v, v. :<lb/>
with 25<lb/>
while R<lb/>
Sikes 12<lb/>
"Thev<lb/>
win<lb/>
Cath nd . . . a I<lb/>
1-3 N( 1 vv<lb/>
weren't intense.<lb/>
"We d<lb/>
Hill has. You need<lb/>
ballplayers.<lb/>
Craw ford picked - st<lb/>
cond half and hurl is;<lb/>
team picked up ii ? set.<lb/>
w e had to p<lb/>
she missed the shots<lb/>
unfortunatlv she d d<lb/>
East Cat olina<lb/>
Mason Saturdav a I 5 p<lb/>
change from the prt isl<lb/>
nounced tipofl time <lb/>
Thompson <lb/>
celebrated, with<lb/>
' 10' jerse being<lb/>
ECl ("D<lb/>
Thompson 8 9-11 25, R e 8 - "<lb/>
19, Girven 4 1-1 9. Rou tree4<lb/>
Sikes 5 2-2 12. Bravbo 0<lb/>
Owen I o-i) 2, Denkiei<lb/>
Barnes 0 0-0 o 1 otals 28 15-2! '<lb/>
I N( (85)<lb/>
McGlade 3 1-2 7, rawf, rd<lb/>
8-10 30, Walls 0 2-2 2, Shaft <lb/>
8-11 IS. Berry 9 2 4 20. Hiomas 2<lb/>
0-0 4. White 2 0-0 4. BoykinOCM<lb/>
Jones 0 O-o o. Totals 2 21-29 85<lb/>
Halftune: E( I JO, I C 29<lb/>
fouled out: Rilev. Totals <lb/>
ECl 23, I NC20. rechnicals: none<lb/>
A-150.<lb/>
Willie Mays Set To Visit Green ville<lb/>
isually a month tor<lb/>
I valentines. But for East<lb/>
i and Greenville, this<lb/>
will be a month<lb/>
! hv baseball,<lb/>
i istern North Carolina<lb/>
illlink will be held at ECU<lb/>
lay, I cb. 9 with several big<lb/>
upectted to be present.<lb/>
I ? Kansas City Royal and<lb/>
( ?al md 's manager Jack<lb/>
McKeon, now the assistant general<lb/>
it San Diego, headlines tne<lb/>
,p of guests. Also par-<lb/>
ring will be Jack Krol, third<lb/>
base coach of the St. Louis Car-<lb/>
ds. Bobby Guthrie, assistant<lb/>
h at UNC-Wilmington; Tony<lb/>
Guzzo, head coach at NC W'esleyan.<lb/>
Also, ex-Atlanta Braves' manager<lb/>
Clyde King, now pitching coach of<lb/>
the New York Yankees; Boston Red <lb/>
Sox scout Wayne Britton; plus ECU f ' fe '<lb/>
coaches Hal Baird and Gary Over- J gjJCS<lb/>
ton. <lb/>
The clinic is open to all persons<lb/>
junior high school and high school<lb/>
age.<lb/>
Charles Chandler<lb/>
Later in the month of February,<lb/>
one of the truly great basebali<lb/>
players of all time will be in Green-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
Wilie Mays, the "Say Hey Kid<lb/>
will speak at the Greenville Sports<lb/>
Club on Feb. 28.<lb/>
Mays, a real superstar for the<lb/>
New York and San Francisco Giants<lb/>
before spending his last few seasons<lb/>
with the Mets, ranks as the third<lb/>
leading home run hitter of all time,<lb/>
just behind the immortal Babe Ruth<lb/>
and Henry Aaron.<lb/>
Recently, Mays was named to one<lb/>
of the top three outfielders in<lb/>
history when he was named on<lb/>
baseball's all-time all star team.<lb/>
Mays has a controversial side of<lb/>
him to that will almost surely be<lb/>
discussed at the Sports Club<lb/>
meeting. Recently the Hall of<lb/>
Famer was banned from his baseball<lb/>
connections due to his ties with a<lb/>
gambling ring.<lb/>
Some have supported the move<lb/>
made by Baseball Commissioner<lb/>
Bowie Kuhn while others claim<lb/>
Kuhn gave Mays too grave a punish-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Nevertheless, the man who made<lb/>
the "shoestring catch" famous, and<lb/>
made baseball a sport of all-around<lb/>
athletes will speak on the 28th.<lb/>
Mays had earlier been scheduled to<lb/>
speak on the 14th but had to cancel<lb/>
for business reasons.<lb/>
Odom with a chuckle. "We were<lb/>
beat at Duke by 19 and Maryland<lb/>
just beat Duke by 19. That's 38 and<lb/>
add the ten points for the home<lb/>
court advantage and you've eot<lb/>
48<lb/>
Who says basketball coaches<lb/>
don't have good common sense1<lb/>
ECU head basketball coach Dave<lb/>
Odom faces a stern task on the 13th<lb/>
of this month when he takes his<lb/>
Pirates to College Park to face the<lb/>
sixth-ranked Maryland Terrapins,<lb/>
ACC leaders at this point.<lb/>
He seems to realize just this.<lb/>
"Heck, I guess we're 48 point<lb/>
underdogs at least, aren't we said<lb/>
An interesting note concerning Il-<lb/>
linois State, a team that comes to<lb/>
ECU for a Saturday night game in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum concerns an early-<lb/>
season loss.<lb/>
The Redbirds, an impressive 16-5,<lb/>
lost a 72-70 overtime decision to<lb/>
second-ranked Syracuse earlier this<lb/>
season. Syracuse has a sparkling<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057246_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
I HI EAS1 C ROl INIAN<lb/>
M-BRl KN 7. yso<lb/>
Top IM Teams<lb/>
Dominating<lb/>
B FREDDIE FRAZIER<lb/>
HI Intran al Department<lb/>
1 he intramural basketball season<lb/>
is off to a fast-paced start. The<lb/>
season is now in full suing although<lb/>
the lop teams have et to be match-<lb/>
against each other. Most of the<lb/>
nes involving the top teams were<lb/>
one sided<lb/>
1 lie dorm division does not have<lb/>
r top teams, but the ones the)<lb/>
excellent. 1 he top-tanked<lb/>
? easers destroyed the Supei<lb/>
shots 90-27 while the Belk Stylons<lb/>
: the ycock Desolation Angels<lb/>
 35 and the Jones Nads 56-40.<lb/>
In the fratemiu division, the two<lb/>
ranked teams had no trouble in<lb/>
first games. Kappa Alpha<lb/>
nolished Delta Sigma Phi 77-13,<lb/>
I au Kappa 1 psilon trounced<lb/>
Nu -14 IS.<lb/>
pendent div ision con-<lb/>
nosl of the better teams. The<lb/>
inked team on campus, the<lb/>
Supt 1 ight, had no trouble in<lb/>
he illage People 84-34.<lb/>
 tists easil got b the<lb/>
62-21, while the White<lb/>
uising past I ambert's<lb/>
lunatics 61-20. The Joint light<lb/>
handled the Golden Buds 85-43<lb/>
while the freshmen Sensations<lb/>
defeated the Village Green Buds<lb/>
52-29.<lb/>
1 he basketball quality should on-<lb/>
ly get better as the season wears on.<lb/>
1 he teams will work better together<lb/>
and the competition will become<lb/>
stiffer.<lb/>
Men's lop I en<lb/>
Belk Pleasers<lb/>
Super Eight<lb/>
Murphy's I aw<lb/>
V arious Artists<lb/>
v lute Hope<lb/>
Joint light<lb/>
Belk Stylons<lb/>
Kappa Alpha<lb/>
I au Kappa Epsilon<lb/>
0. Freshmen Sensations<lb/>
3.<lb/>
4.<lb/>
s<lb/>
8.<lb/>
9<lb/>
v omen's I op Five<lb/>
1 rylei Misfits<lb/>
: Mpha i Delta 1<lb/>
V Sharpshooters<lb/>
4. Alpha Delia Pi<lb/>
5. Diet Mr. Bills'<lb/>
ECU Hosts ODU<lb/>
IT'S ROSIE<lb/>
THOMPSON<lb/>
NIGHT<lb/>
Saturday, February 9<lb/>
ALSO,<lb/>
It's Ladies' Night<lb/>
ALL LADIES<lb/>
ADMITTED FREE<lb/>
The Lady Pirate Great's<lb/>
No. 10 Jersey To Be<lb/>
Retired During:<lb/>
BIG DOUBLEHEADER<lb/>
6:15 p.m.<lb/>
ECU Women (16-8)<lb/>
vs.<lb/>
George Mason (4-6)<lb/>
Afterwards<lb/>
ECU Men (11-8)<lb/>
vs.<lb/>
Illinois State (16-5)<lb/>
bast Carolina Playhouse Present<lb/>
 A FUNNY,<lb/>
FUNNY,<lb/>
VALENTINE<lb/>
Sponsored by ECU Sports Promotions<lb/>
Wayne Newnam, Chairman<lb/>
Bn t H Ri KS<lb/>
( H VMM IK<lb/>
sports I dilor<lb/>
1 asi Carolina<lb/>
? 2 I ;am hosts<lb/>
inJav<lb/>
the<lb/>
o lasi<lb/>
itch of the<lb/>
 ; i in du<lb/>
Faces the<lb/>
V<lb/>
uimp<lb/>
1<lb/>
i<lb/>
nt.<lb/>
 realh he<lb/>
I I I<lb/>
Steers "We<lb/>
 rginia lech<lb/>
his year and<lb/>
ished second to<lb/>
Dominion m the<lb/>
. nent<lb/>
he w<lb/>
M narchs is All-<lb/>
 cai : idai e<lb/>
The<lb/>
has been<lb/>
. ranked<lb/>
two seas<lb/>
won the<lb/>
  - Eastern<lb/>
al championship<lb/>
?ars in a r ?w<lb/>
ng up against Lee<lb/>
he freshman Grey<lb/>
a ho owns a 10-9<lb/>
?n season.<lb/>
done a nice<lb/>
us said<lb/>
rs "Most of the<lb/>
: he has just been<lb/>
ng his feet uet.<lb/>
he's come a long<lb/>
He'll go at 'em.<lb/>
I ee will know he's been<lb/>
in a match when it's all<lb/>
over<lb/>
I eading the Pirate<lb/>
grapplers in the match<lb/>
will be heavyweight<lb/>
1)1 Joyner, 28-2, and<lb/>
1 77-pou nder Bu I ch<lb/>
Revils, 30-1. Both are<lb/>
ranked sixth national!)<lb/>
in their respecti e<lb/>
weight classes.<lb/>
" 1 hat's the highes<lb/>
rankings we've receive.<lb/>
year said Steers.<lb/>
"f oi that, we can real-<lb/>
l be pleased<lb/>
Ol the match with<lb/>
the Monarchs, Steers<lb/>
said the ke fot I C I<lb/>
was balance. "We :an<lb/>
gie them a good go<lb/>
said the first-year<lb/>
Pirate coach, "it we<lb/>
base a well-balanced<lb/>
attack. I wasn't able to<lb/>
recruit much because I<lb/>
arrived here in the spr-<lb/>
ing. Because ol that<lb/>
we've relied on good ef-<lb/>
fort. I just hope that<lb/>
will be enough Satur-<lb/>
da<lb/>
Steers noted that a<lb/>
change in his lineup<lb/>
should be a big help to<lb/>
the Pirates "Steve<lb/>
Milanese has decided to<lb/>
trim down and wrestle<lb/>
in the 118-pound<lb/>
class he said. "He<lb/>
had been a 'light'<lb/>
126-pounder. Now<lb/>
he'll be a<lb/>
'heavy' 1 18-pounder.<lb/>
That should make a big<lb/>
difference for us<lb/>
i mrn<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
ALL DAY HUMP DAY<lb/>
Tacos 29c<lb/>
WASH<lb/>
HOUSE<lb/>
 E. 10 ST.<lb/>
 'OSS FKCM<lb/>
11 n FW-L 96Mi'C? UWOkY"<lb/>
. OArfi ted Lomicje tot'ih 7 ? r<lb/>
? ?' i Irtd ? frj Si rviCX<lb/>
? frit re; 'V. ; ? ? ?,<lb/>
' : i )f I rofssCAM f citric ' '?? r <lb/>
3<lb/>
crfSiQji<lb/>
t<lb/>
GHz wis vw a. Soft drifti<lb/>
ii)ffh "thiS " n fjLpor<lb/>
, i - id tnjJ cAt h y<lb/>
)<lb/>
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Distributed<lb/>
By<lb/>
Taylor<lb/>
Beverage Co.<lb/>
? Goldsboro<lb/>
IMPORTS ?<lb/>
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HOLLAND BEER<lb/>
THE 1 IMPORTED Br E R l AMI Rl( A<lb/>
February 13-16,18-23<lb/>
Studio Theatre<lb/>
8:15<lb/>
Ticket Office<lb/>
Drama Building<lb/>
Students 1.5Q Public 2.5Q<lb/>
We've got more going for you.<lb/>
5 P.M - til - CLOSING<lb/>
Free Pizza<lb/>
Every Thursday<lb/>
BEATSA<lb/>
CHANELO'S<lb/>
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GREEN PEPPER<lb/>
PEPPERONI<lb/>
FRESH SAUSAGE<lb/>
GROUND BEEF<lb/>
14"<lb/>
445<lb/>
5 20<lb/>
5.20<lb/>
5 20<lb/>
5 20<lb/>
5.20<lb/>
5 20<lb/>
520<lb/>
5 20<lb/>
5 20<lb/>
5 20<lb/>
75<lb/>
7 75<lb/>
16"<lb/>
5 30<lb/>
6 25<lb/>
6 25<lb/>
6 25<lb/>
6 25<lb/>
825<lb/>
6 25<lb/>
6 25<lb/>
6 25<lb/>
6 25<lb/>
625<lb/>
95<lb/>
9 50<lb/>
20"<lb/>
1 70<lb/>
8 95<lb/>
8 95<lb/>
8 95<lb/>
895<lb/>
8 95<lb/>
8 95<lb/>
895<lb/>
8 95<lb/>
8 95<lb/>
8 95<lb/>
1 25<lb/>
12 70<lb/>
ThiCk CRUS Eu'RAC-EESE<lb/>
10<lb/>
I<lb/>
?-<lb/>
20<lb/>
Pepperon 1,Italian Sau?ge. Mushrooms. Onions, Green Pepper<lb/>
Green Olive, Anchovy on request<lb/>
CHEESE<lb/>
ONION<lb/>
GREE PEPPER<lb/>
PEPPERON<lb/>
FRESH SAUSAGE<lb/>
GROUND BEEF<lb/>
OL'VE Biac? or G'een<lb/>
ANCHOVV<lb/>
MUSHROOM<lb/>
HAM<lb/>
ADDITIONAL ITEMS<lb/>
SICILIAN SUPREVE 6 10 8 50 J.45 1395<lb/>
Peppe-on Ita an Sausage Minttroams Dn Mi.Grcen ?.<lb/>
Green Oiiv.e Anchovy or -eqoes:<lb/>
4 10<lb/>
4 10<lb/>
4 ?;<lb/>
6 1C<lb/>
5 20<lb/>
5 95<lb/>
5 95<lb/>
5 95<lb/>
5 95<lb/>
5 95<lb/>
5 95<lb/>
5 95<lb/>
5 96<lb/>
r<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
Cokes<lb/>
With Every<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
I Not Good During<lb/>
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I<lb/>
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F?i?v 4 p.m. - 2 i.m.<lb/>
S?ufd?v 11a.m2 a.m.<lb/>
Sunday 11 am 12 Md.<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
DELIVERY<lb/>
507 E.14th Street<lb/>
Greenville, N.C-<lb/>
758-7400<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057246_0009"/><lb/>
8 THE EAST CAROLINIAN FEBRUARY 7, 1980<lb/>
Top IM Teams<lb/>
Dominating<lb/>
By FREDDIE FRAZIER<lb/>
ECU Intramural Department<lb/>
The intramural basketball season<lb/>
is off to a fast-paced start. The<lb/>
season is now in full swing although<lb/>
the top teams have yet to be match-<lb/>
ed against each other. Most of the<lb/>
games involving the top teams were<lb/>
one-sided.<lb/>
The dorm division does not have<lb/>
many top teams, but the ones they<lb/>
have are excellent. The top-ranked<lb/>
Belk Pleasers destroyed the Super-<lb/>
shots 90-27 while the Belk Stylons<lb/>
beat the Aycock Desolation Angels<lb/>
55-35 and the Jones Nads 56-40.<lb/>
In the fraternity division, the two<lb/>
top-ranked teams had no trouble in<lb/>
their first games. Kappa Alpha<lb/>
demolished Delta Sigma Phi 77-13,<lb/>
while Tau Kappa Epsilon trounced<lb/>
Sigma Nu 44-18.<lb/>
The independent division con-<lb/>
tains most of the better teams. The<lb/>
second-ranked team on campus, the<lb/>
Super Eight, had no trouble in<lb/>
beating the Village People 84-34.<lb/>
Various Artists easily got by the<lb/>
Bouncers 62-21, while the White<lb/>
Hope was cruising past Lambert's<lb/>
Lunatics 61-20. The Joint Eight<lb/>
handled the Golden Buds 85-43<lb/>
while the Freshmen Sensations<lb/>
defeated the Village Green Buds<lb/>
52-29.<lb/>
The basketball quality should on-<lb/>
ly get better as the season wears on.<lb/>
The teams will work better together<lb/>
and the competition will become<lb/>
stiffer.<lb/>
Men's Top Ten<lb/>
1. Belk Pleasers<lb/>
2. Super Eight<lb/>
3. Murphy's Law<lb/>
4. Various Artists<lb/>
5. White Hope<lb/>
6. Joint Eight<lb/>
7. Belk Stylons<lb/>
8. Kappa Alpha<lb/>
9. Tau Kappa Epsilon<lb/>
10. Freshmen Sensations<lb/>
Women's Top Five<lb/>
1. Tyler Misfits<lb/>
2. Alpha Xi Delta 1<lb/>
3. Sharpshooters<lb/>
4. Alpha Delta Pi<lb/>
5. Tyler Mr. Bills'<lb/>
IT'S ROSIE<lb/>
THOMPSON<lb/>
NIGHT<lb/>
Saturday, February 9<lb/>
if<lb/>
Look for the Onion Label<lb/>
ECU Hosts ODU<lb/>
ALSO,<lb/>
It's Ladies' Night<lb/>
ALL LADIES<lb/>
ADMITTED FREE<lb/>
The Lady Pirate Great's<lb/>
No. 10 Jersey To Be<lb/>
Retired During:<lb/>
BIG DOUBLEHEADER<lb/>
6:15 p.m.<lb/>
ECU Women (16-8)<lb/>
vs.<lb/>
George Mason (4-6)<lb/>
Afterwards<lb/>
ECU Men (11-8)<lb/>
vs.<lb/>
Illinois State (16-5)<lb/>
 A FUNNY,<lb/>
FUNNY,<lb/>
VALENTINE<lb/>
Sponsored by ECU Sports Promotions<lb/>
Wayne Newnam, Chairman<lb/>
ByCHARLES<lb/>
CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
The East Carolina<lb/>
wrestling team hosts<lb/>
Old Dominion Friday<lb/>
at 7:30 p.m. in the<lb/>
Pirates' next-to-last<lb/>
home match of the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
ECU, 5-3-1 in dual<lb/>
matches, faces the<lb/>
Virginia state champs<lb/>
in the Monarchs, via<lb/>
their win in last week's<lb/>
Virginia Intercollegiate<lb/>
Tournament.<lb/>
"They'll really be<lb/>
tough said ECU<lb/>
coach Ed Steers. "We<lb/>
lost to Virginia Tech<lb/>
earlier this year and<lb/>
they finished second to<lb/>
Old Dominion in the<lb/>
Virginia tournament<lb/>
Leading the way for<lb/>
the Monarchs is All-<lb/>
America candidate<lb/>
Buddy Lee. The<lb/>
134-pounder has been<lb/>
nationally ranked for<lb/>
the past two seasons<lb/>
and has won the<lb/>
NCAA's Eastern<lb/>
Regional championship<lb/>
two years in a row.<lb/>
in a match when it's all<lb/>
over<lb/>
Leading the Pirate<lb/>
grapplers in the match<lb/>
will be heavyweight<lb/>
D.T. Joyner, 28-2, and<lb/>
177-pounder Butch<lb/>
Revils, 30-1. Both are<lb/>
ranked sixth nationally<lb/>
in their respective<lb/>
weight classes.<lb/>
"That's the highest<lb/>
rankings we've received<lb/>
this year said Steers.<lb/>
"For that, we can real-<lb/>
ly be pleased<lb/>
Of the match with<lb/>
the Monarchs, Steers<lb/>
said the key for ECU<lb/>
was balance. "We can<lb/>
give them a good go<lb/>
said the first-year<lb/>
Pirate coach, "if we<lb/>
have a well-balanced<lb/>
attack. I wasn't able to<lb/>
recruit much because 1<lb/>
arrived here in the spr-<lb/>
ing. Because of that<lb/>
we've relied on good ef-<lb/>
fort. I just hope that<lb/>
will be enough Satur-<lb/>
day<lb/>
Steers noted that a<lb/>
change in his lineup<lb/>
?WASH<lb/>
HOUSE<lb/>
10<lb/>
.<lb/>
across from<lb/>
KMSrY KREME<lb/>
POtfUTS<lb/>
 SW eSeSWeeiePF BSeSvPBSIV<lb/>
fi Full SEMitE tiWDM"<lb/>
c. Cdrpated Loustge ujiih dofoc tU<lb/>
. fluff 3atj Foi4 Service<lb/>
 Excellentprcfesziofa I dftjdentim<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
ALL DAY HUMP DAY<lb/>
Tacos 29<lb/>
one uo?h and a Soft driNk<lb/>
SlQjU t<lb/>
e pi nes F??B. ff, ftp- , i<lb/>
gvM-fc:oo ?vux one tee U&amp;tf<lb/>
m<lb/>
13-16,18-23<lb/>
Studio Theatre<lb/>
Ticket Office<lb/>
Drama Building<lb/>
1.50 Public<lb/>
Going up against Lee should be a big help to<lb/>
will be freshman Grey the Pirates. "Steve<lb/>
 .?m(r n R j<lb/>
Hiiru?kt?n<lb/>
Sours, who owns a 10-9<lb/>
record this season.<lb/>
"Grey has done a nice<lb/>
job for us said<lb/>
Steers. "Most of the<lb/>
year he has just been<lb/>
getting his feet wet.<lb/>
Milanese has decided to<lb/>
trim down and wrestle<lb/>
in the 118-pound<lb/>
class he said. "He<lb/>
had been a 'light'<lb/>
126-pounder. Now<lb/>
he'll be a<lb/>
Distributed<lb/>
By<lb/>
Taylor<lb/>
Beverage Co.<lb/>
Goldsboro<lb/>
We Ve got more going for you.<lb/>
5 P.M - til - CLOSING<lb/>
L-H-rlN ?ijG 5<lb/>
v r<lb/>
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Free Pizza<lb/>
Every Thursday<lb/>
 ttRNK?) S<lb/>
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tMPOWTED<lb/>
But he's come a long 'heavy'118-pounder.<lb/>
way. He'll go at 'em. That should make a big<lb/>
Lee will know he's been difference for us<lb/>
EASTCAftOUMA<lb/>
Heineken<lb/>
HOLLAND BEER<lb/>
THE 1 IMPORTED BEER IN AMERICA<lb/>
NOTHING<lb/>
BEATSA<lb/>
CHANELO'S<lb/>
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2nd pizza<lb/>
? PJBJRVP SAME VALUE<lb/>
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NOTHING<lb/>
BEATSA<lb/>
CHANELO'S1<lb/>
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CHOICE P,ZZA<lb/>
9EUIXE SieiUMi PIZZAS<lb/>
10"<lb/>
14"<lb/>
16"<lb/>
THICK CRUST EXTRA CHEESE<lb/>
STARTS FRIDAY<lb/>
$2.90<lb/>
3.50<lb/>
3.50<lb/>
3.50<lb/>
3.50<lb/>
3.50<lb/>
3.50<lb/>
msM Eommst<lb/>
H<lb/>
CHEESE<lb/>
ONION<lb/>
GREEN PEPPER<lb/>
PEPPERONI<lb/>
FRESH SAUSAGE<lb/>
GROUND BEEF<lb/>
OLIVEfBtock or Green) 350<lb/>
ANCHOVY 3.50 5.20 625<lb/>
MUSHROOM 3.50 5.20 6.25<lb/>
HAM 3.50 5.20 6.25<lb/>
ADDITIONAL ITEMS .60 .75 -95<lb/>
CHANELO'S SUPREME 550 7.75 9.50<lb/>
Pepperoni, Italian Sausage. Mushrooms. Onion. Green<lb/>
Green Olive, Anchovy on request.<lb/>
10"<lb/>
14"<lb/>
16"<lb/>
1.25<lb/>
12.70<lb/>
CHEESE $3.50 5.20 6 25<lb/>
ONION 4.10 5.95 7.20<lb/>
GREEN PEPPER 4.10 HS ?2<lb/>
PEPFERON. JJO H Jjg<lb/>
FRESH SAUSAGE J ? ? J;g<lb/>
GROUND BEEF 410 595 7 20<lb/>
OLIVEtBJeck or Green. 410 5.95 7.20<lb/>
ANCHOVY 4.10 5.95 7 20<lb/>
MUSHROOM 4.10 5.96 7 20<lb/>
HAM 410 5.96 7.20<lb/>
ADDITIONAL ITEMS 60 75 95<lb/>
SICILIAN SUPREME 610 850 10.45<lb/>
Pepperoni.ltaiian Sausage.Mushrooms. Onion.Green<lb/>
Green Olive. Anchovy on request.<lb/>
20"<lb/>
695<lb/>
10.20<lb/>
1020<lb/>
10.20<lb/>
1020<lb/>
10.20<lb/>
10.20<lb/>
10.20<lb/>
10.20<lb/>
10.20<lb/>
1020<lb/>
PPPr.<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
Gve" 9v<lb/>
;<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
MonTfcuc&amp; 4pjRlAJB.<lb/>
Frittey 4pj. 2?J?.<lb/>
Srturdey 11 ml.Sun.<lb/>
Sundtv llMt-ltlM.<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
FUN SHOWS 2:30-4:50-7:10-?:<lb/>
plaza HHEsaJ.<lb/>
cinema 1"2m3<lb/>
PITT.PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
HELDOVER<lb/>
2nd BIG WEEK<lb/>
ALAN BATES<lb/>
Cokes DELIVERY! Cokes<lb/>
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With Every j<lb/>
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307E.14thStr?t<lb/>
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768-7400<lb/>
YOU DESERVE THE RMJL RICH<lb/>
LIFE. WHY SETTLE FOR LESS<lb/>
jwith Every<lb/>
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Mel Good During<lb/>
Any Other Special<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057246_0010"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>