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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057251_0001"/>
?he lEast (Uaroltmatt<lb/>
Vol. 54 No.r"4 3<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Tuesday, February 26, 1980<lb/>
Greenville. VC<lb/>
Circulation 10.000<lb/>
Festival Is<lb/>
A Success<lb/>
By ARAH VENABLE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Black History month was<lb/>
celebrated Saturday, Feb. 23, at the<lb/>
Greenville City Carver Branch<lb/>
I ibrary. The Black Arts Festival,<lb/>
which wa open to the public, was<lb/>
called a success by Mrs. Wilamay<lb/>
Ciibbs, librarian and planner of the<lb/>
event.<lb/>
The morning segment was plann-<lb/>
ed for children's entertainment. It<lb/>
consisted of films, a dramatic rendi-<lb/>
tion of "The Creation" by Sheila<lb/>
Harrel, negro folksongs and black<lb/>
folktales by Joe Stines, the<lb/>
children's librarian at Sheppard<lb/>
Memorial Library. ECU Art In-<lb/>
structor Clarence Morgan and his<lb/>
wife featured a black art exhibit<lb/>
consisting of charcoal etchings,<lb/>
paintings, and a slide presentation.<lb/>
The afternoon portion of the<lb/>
festival was geared for adult<lb/>
enlightenment, beginning with a<lb/>
dramatic performance of "The<lb/>
Creation" and "Noah's Ark" by<lb/>
Mr. Edward Love.<lb/>
A history of the black man was<lb/>
given through a sermon by Ken<lb/>
Hammond, program director at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. He<lb/>
talked of the parallel between the<lb/>
black man's struggle and the bon-<lb/>
dage of Israel when Moses pleaded<lb/>
"let my people go Emphasis was<lb/>
placed on the role of the black<lb/>
church in the black community.<lb/>
Mrs. JoAnna Tyson recited<lb/>
poetry selections by Paul Lawrence.<lb/>
The film, "A Black Experience<lb/>
then presented the folklore of black<lb/>
man from slavery to the present.<lb/>
The program ended with music by<lb/>
The Wilson Singers ? Onession<lb/>
Brooks, Barbara Rodgcrs and Helen<lb/>
Peterson.<lb/>
I<lb/>
Photo hv CHAP GURLEY<lb/>
Temperatures Soared<lb/>
to record highs this weekend<lb/>
Student Consumer<lb/>
Card Little-Used<lb/>
By WAYNE TALTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Have you used your NSCC lately?<lb/>
The National Student Consumer Card issued to all<lb/>
ECU students offers many items and services from<lb/>
several Greenville merchants, but most businesses are<lb/>
dissatisfied with past response from students.<lb/>
The card offers discounts from the twelve following<lb/>
merchants: The United Figure Salon, The Tree House<lb/>
Restaurant, Mike's Bike Shop, The Pierced Ear, Glen-<lb/>
da's Beauty Salon and Boutique, Pitt Motor Parts,<lb/>
Greenville Quick Copy Service, Phidippides, Cleaner<lb/>
World A-l Quality Cleaning Center, the Mushroom, C.<lb/>
Herber Forbes, and the Olde London Inn.<lb/>
Most of these businesses were dissatisfied with the<lb/>
response they have received. Only three of the 12 mer-<lb/>
chants were happy with the support from ECU students.<lb/>
They include the Tree House Restaurant, Pitt Motor<lb/>
Parts, and Cleaner World A-l Quality Cleaning Center.<lb/>
The Tree House Restaurant has entertainment four<lb/>
times a week and the bearer of the NSCC receives a free<lb/>
beverage with the purchase of a salad.<lb/>
When contacted by The East Carolinian, the manager<lb/>
of the Tree House said he has had a good response.<lb/>
especially from female students.<lb/>
Pitt Motor Parts offers a 10-25 percent discount on<lb/>
popular brands of auto parts such as niters and igni-<lb/>
tions. The owner of Pitt Motor Parts said he was<lb/>
satisfied with the response, saying that main more<lb/>
students used the card than he expected.<lb/>
The Cleaner World A-1 Quality Cleaning Center,<lb/>
which offers a 10 percent discount on drv cleaning and<lb/>
the first 12 minutes of drying time free with iuo wash<lb/>
loads, has also had a good response from students usine<lb/>
the NSCC.<lb/>
The response of NSCC cardholders is onl avei<lb/>
for Greenville Quick Copy Service. Phidippides and C.<lb/>
Herber Forbes. Greenville Quick Copy Service otters a<lb/>
10 percent discount on all copy services to students with<lb/>
a card. The management said the response vas average<lb/>
at the beginning of the year but has decreased.<lb/>
He added that many times students have to be<lb/>
reminded if they even have a card.<lb/>
See CARD Pane 3. Col. 1<lb/>
Police Offer Warnings<lb/>
By MARIANNE HARBISON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In light of the capture of two<lb/>
"Kissing Bandits" by the Greenville<lb/>
City Police Department on Feb. 13,<lb/>
Assistant Director of Security Fran-<lb/>
cis Eddings and Greenville City<lb/>
Police Chief E.G. Canon had some<lb/>
tips to offer students, on how to<lb/>
recognize "rip-off" artists.<lb/>
Eddings noted that in order to be<lb/>
on the alert for these types of<lb/>
criminals, one should be aware of<lb/>
their different methods of opera-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
"These people might approach<lb/>
you as a magazine salesman work-<lb/>
ing through college; a housewares<lb/>
Student Involvement On Rise<lb/>
By TERRY GRAY<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Ranita McGee is an ECU senior<lb/>
majoring in health education. For<lb/>
the past few weeks, she has been<lb/>
working with faculty members and<lb/>
administrators in helping plan cam-<lb/>
pus health services for the years to<lb/>
come.<lb/>
Cornell Allen is a psychology ma-<lb/>
jor who helps evaluate suggestions<lb/>
about ECU's academic planning.<lb/>
Gary Blevins is a junior business<lb/>
major. Like Ranita and Cornell, he<lb/>
is also lending a hand in shaping the<lb/>
future policies and programs at East<lb/>
Carolina University. He recently<lb/>
finished working with a committee<lb/>
'hat examined how Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center operates and how its<lb/>
services might be improved.<lb/>
In fact, there are scores of ECU<lb/>
students whose voices are being<lb/>
heard by the people who are looking<lb/>
into the school's functioning during<lb/>
the next decade.<lb/>
According to Dorothy Homer,<lb/>
the student government associa-<lb/>
tion's secretary of academic affairs,<lb/>
almost 125 undergraduates are cur-<lb/>
rently involved with the planning<lb/>
process at ECU.<lb/>
Their presence in this process is<lb/>
intended to ensure that students ?<lb/>
the group most likely to be affected<lb/>
by changes ? will be represented in<lb/>
the opinion-gathering phase of plan-<lb/>
ning.<lb/>
"I volunteered because I was in-<lb/>
terested in involvement, but also<lb/>
because the faculty can't really see<lb/>
always what the students want and<lb/>
need said Gary Blevins Monday.<lb/>
Blevins was one of two students on<lb/>
the Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
committee. The other members were<lb/>
drawn from the ECU faculty.<lb/>
Ms. Homer says she spends about<lb/>
25 hours a month in her SGA job,<lb/>
acting as a liason between the<lb/>
numerous committees and the<lb/>
students who are interested in serv-<lb/>
ing on them.<lb/>
"There has never been an<lb/>
overabundance of people who want<lb/>
to sign up Horner said, "but most<lb/>
of the problem is in making people<lb/>
aware. Once they understand what<lb/>
it's all about, they get interested<lb/>
Comments trom at least four of<lb/>
those students seem to bear out<lb/>
Homer's remarks. Cornell Allen,<lb/>
the psychology major, said that<lb/>
"besides being important in itself,<lb/>
the work is helping me better<lb/>
understand the decision-making<lb/>
process. And it will be interesting to<lb/>
come back in a few years and see<lb/>
how my opinion has affected the<lb/>
university<lb/>
Ranita McGee: "I was the only<lb/>
student on my committee, but I was<lb/>
treated as an equal. My opinion was<lb/>
as important as the others, and I en-<lb/>
joyed working with the other peo-<lb/>
ple<lb/>
Gary Blevins made similar corn-<lb/>
See Blevins Page 3, Col. 1<lb/>
salesman; a Bible salesman; or a<lb/>
cosmetics salesman Eddings said.<lb/>
After deciding upon their ap-<lb/>
proach, the rip-off artists must then<lb/>
establish "contact" with one who<lb/>
can put the "salesman" inside the<lb/>
dorm or apartment complex. Accor-<lb/>
ding to Eddings, "Maybe the rip-off<lb/>
artist found a girl in a bar<lb/>
downtown and became friendly with<lb/>
her; letting her know he was work-<lb/>
ing his way through school,selling<lb/>
cosmetics and he needed X number<lb/>
of sales to win a scholarship.<lb/>
Perhaps she would agree to take him<lb/>
into the dorm to solicit sales This<lb/>
girl would be used by the artist as a<lb/>
"contact" to the dorm students.<lb/>
Eddings commented that the ar-<lb/>
tist would use the individual to get<lb/>
into the dorm where he would have<lb/>
a captive audience to listen to his<lb/>
speech.<lb/>
Eddings also stated that quite fre-<lb/>
quently the "salesman" will by-pass<lb/>
the rules and regulations and not get<lb/>
permission from Dean of Women or<lb/>
Campus Security to solicit on cam-<lb/>
pus.<lb/>
After having obtained his captive<lb/>
audience, the "salesman" will<lb/>
knock on the door, and begin giving<lb/>
his sales pitch. According to Ed-<lb/>
dings, "He's going to ask for a<lb/>
check for part of the amount off pur-<lb/>
chase.<lb/>
"Sometimes he'll tell you to leave<lb/>
the 'Pay to the order of blank emp-<lb/>
ty because he has a stamp with the<lb/>
company's name on it and he'll<lb/>
stamp it in the blank later. That's<lb/>
where he's going to write in his own<lb/>
name and find some store thai wl<lb/>
cash it without any I.D Eddings<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"In most of these cases he add-<lb/>
ed, "the merchandise is never seen<lb/>
or received. The salesman did not<lb/>
See WARNING Page 3. Cat. I<lb/>
Interpreters Give<lb/>
Show At Hendrix<lb/>
Appeals Board Decision Unchallenged<lb/>
Ruling Called 'DangerousPrecedent9<lb/>
By DEBBIE HOTALING<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The stage is set and the audience<lb/>
is waiting for a quiet evening of<lb/>
music and entertainment.<lb/>
There is a difference between<lb/>
most musical programs and the one<lb/>
being given in the Hendrix Theater<lb/>
on Thursday evening, however. This<lb/>
program is being given by East<lb/>
Carolina interpreters for the deaf.<lb/>
The "signing" group is called<lb/>
Fantasy and includes: Jim Haslup,<lb/>
Bob Coltrane, Shannon Gilley,<lb/>
out and see what the program is all<lb/>
about. I really think they would<lb/>
learn to appreciate sign language<lb/>
from another point of view Ernest<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The ECU Sign Language Club<lb/>
and Fantasy will perform at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. on Feb. 28 t the Hendrix<lb/>
Theater. Tickets will be S2 for<lb/>
adults and S.50 for children and can<lb/>
be purchased in 114 A Brewster or<lb/>
from any club member.<lb/>
Profits will go into the club's fun-<lb/>
ding to help sponsor other club ac-<lb/>
tivities.<lb/>
Mike ernest, and Kathy Beethan. <lb/>
The program will also include sign- QtoHli1P CTYiltK<lb/>
ed songs and skits performed by stu- OnVffCWi i"?J<lb/>
Photo by CHAP GURLEY<lb/>
Lynn Bell (Left) At SGA Meeting<lb/>
Reservations Slated Soon<lb/>
<lb/>
Students who plan to return to<lb/>
East Carolina University Fall<lb/>
Semester 1980 and who wish to be<lb/>
guaranteed residence hall housing<lb/>
are required to reserve rooms during<lb/>
the week of March 3-7. Prior to<lb/>
reserving a room, a student must<lb/>
make an advance room payment of<lb/>
$60.<lb/>
These payments, which must be<lb/>
accompanied by housing<lb/>
applications-contracts, will be ac-<lb/>
cepted in ? the Cashier's Office,<lb/>
Room 105 Spilman Building, begin-<lb/>
ning February 28. Applications-<lb/>
contracts may be obtained from the<lb/>
residence hall offices as of February<lb/>
25.<lb/>
Room reservations are to be made<lb/>
in the respective residence hall of-<lb/>
fices according to the following<lb/>
schedule (Exceptions: Assignments<lb/>
for Fleming Hall will be made in the<lb/>
office of Jarvis HalJ.)<lb/>
Monday, March 3 and Tuesday,<lb/>
March 4: Students who wish to<lb/>
return to the same rooms they<lb/>
presently occupy must reserve such<lb/>
rooms.<lb/>
Wednesday, March 5 through Fri-<lb/>
day, March 7: All other returning<lb/>
students will be permitted to reserve<lb/>
rooms on a first-come, first-serve<lb/>
basis.<lb/>
<lb/>
Lynn Bell warned the student<lb/>
government legislature Monday that<lb/>
last week's Appeals Board ruling on<lb/>
an SGA bill that sought to change<lb/>
an election law could set a<lb/>
"dangerous precedent" for future<lb/>
legislation.<lb/>
Bell, chairman of the Rules and<lb/>
Judiciary Committee, introduced a<lb/>
bill on Jan. 28 which would have<lb/>
taken away the SGA President's<lb/>
power to appoint the elections com-<lb/>
mittee chairman. The change was<lb/>
ruled unconstitutional by the Ap-<lb/>
peals Board on the grounds that it<lb/>
violated a constitutional article for-<lb/>
bidding the passage of laws affec-<lb/>
ting an incumbent president, except<lb/>
as directed by an established judicial<lb/>
body.<lb/>
SGA President Brett Melvin<lb/>
vetoed the bill and opened the floor<lb/>
up to its discussion, but the<lb/>
legislators had no questions.<lb/>
Melvin said afterward that he was<lb/>
"surprised" that the matter went<lb/>
unchallenged.<lb/>
In other comments before the<lb/>
group, Melvin proposed that there<lb/>
be a $2 increase in student fees to<lb/>
cover transit costs, and a $1 increase<lb/>
in fees to help cover operating costs<lb/>
of the Student Government Associa-<lb/>
tion. As a means of cutting student<lb/>
fee expenditures, Melvin also pro-<lb/>
posed doing away with the legal<lb/>
fund in favor of a less costly legal<lb/>
referral service.<lb/>
The savings in legal fees and the<lb/>
$3 total increase in student fees<lb/>
would give the legislature an addi-<lb/>
tional $12,000-14,000 to work with,<lb/>
Melvin said.<lb/>
The legislature approved a $917<lb/>
funding request from the Student<lb/>
Planners Association. The money is<lb/>
intended to pay for the expenses of<lb/>
an upcoming professional planning<lb/>
conference which the group wants<lb/>
to attend. Steve Nelson spoke on<lb/>
behalf of the organization and add-<lb/>
ed that much of the money will be<lb/>
recycled into ECU services that the<lb/>
grodfc needs.<lb/>
After several rounds of debate,<lb/>
the legislature also approved a $365<lb/>
appropriation to the ECU chapter<lb/>
of Pi Omega Pi to help finance their<lb/>
alumni newsletter. Some legislators<lb/>
questioned the bill, saying that stu-<lb/>
dent funds should not be used to<lb/>
pay for such limited causes. Others<lb/>
argued that Pi Omega Pi was a<lb/>
highly respected sorority and that<lb/>
the university has a valid interest in<lb/>
keeping ties to its alumni.<lb/>
The Model Organization of<lb/>
American States also won their bid<lb/>
for a $350 appropriation to defray<lb/>
the costs of attending a conference<lb/>
with similar groups. A political<lb/>
science club, the Model OAS<lb/>
simulates international diplomacy<lb/>
and policy of the nations in the ac-<lb/>
tion OAS and submits their resolu-<lb/>
tions to the parent organization for<lb/>
consideration.<lb/>
SGA Vice President Charlie Sher-<lb/>
Sec SGA Page 3, Col. 1<lb/>
dent interpreters.<lb/>
In the past, and in some places<lb/>
even now, sign language was looked<lb/>
down upon and regarded as inap-<lb/>
propriate for the general public's<lb/>
observation. A job as an interpreter<lb/>
was not considered decent work.<lb/>
"Interpreters were supposed to<lb/>
fade into the background and<lb/>
refrain from drawing attention to<lb/>
themselves. It's more respectable<lb/>
for interpreters to display their skills<lb/>
now explained Mike Ernest,<lb/>
director of the program for hearing-<lb/>
impaired students.<lb/>
Thursday evening's performance<lb/>
by the signing group, Fantasy, will<lb/>
not be their first. The group has<lb/>
been performing together for about<lb/>
a year. Their first performance was<lb/>
given in New Bern for the state con-<lb/>
vention of the North Carolina<lb/>
Association of the Deaf.<lb/>
They have also performed at<lb/>
Duke University, Atlantic Christian<lb/>
College, Winston-Salem Deaf<lb/>
Center, Asheville (Western North<lb/>
Carolina Association of the Deaf),<lb/>
and the South Carolina Association<lb/>
of the Deaf.<lb/>
"It's unique that we have inter-<lb/>
preters working together here at<lb/>
ECU, Ernest commented. "Most<lb/>
interpreters work independently.<lb/>
It's very unusual that so many good<lb/>
interpreters come together and work<lb/>
together like this.<lb/>
New musical-interpreting groups<lb/>
are springing up across the nation<lb/>
and the popularity of signing is<lb/>
growing. "Students should come<lb/>
Sign Language<lb/>
Offerings<lb/>
In the pre-registration list includ-<lb/>
ed in last Thursday's The East<lb/>
Carolinian, the summer courses for<lb/>
Sign Language were not published.<lb/>
The beginning classes for sign<lb/>
language will be listed under SLAP<lb/>
3001 at the following times, 8-9<lb/>
a.m M-F; 9:40-11:10 a.m M-F;<lb/>
11:20-12:50 a.m M-F; 2:40-4.10<lb/>
p.m M-F.<lb/>
The intermediate sign language<lb/>
classes will be listed under SLAP<lb/>
3002 and will be offered at 1-2:30<lb/>
p.m M-F; and 2:40-4:10 p.m<lb/>
M-F.<lb/>
Any interested students should go<lb/>
by Brewster A 114 and ask for Mike<lb/>
Ernest, director of the program for<lb/>
hearing impaired students.<lb/>
Inside Today<lb/>
New Poli-Sci MinorPage 2<lb/>
Oscar Nominations<lb/>
AnnouncedPage $<lb/>
New Wave Band<lb/>
Plays Auk?Pan 5<lb/>
1 My Pirates TWri<lb/>
In Mate TonrncyPage t<lb/>
CWttMW'WLiWUi<lb/>
<pb facs="00057251_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 26, 1980<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Alpha Sigma Phi<lb/>
The Mpha Sigma Phi fraternity wil.<lb/>
hold its second annual pre-Spnng<lb/>
Break bash on Monday night. March 3<lb/>
at the -iiic dnnssion by ticket ?ill be<lb/>
M and thete will be VII) draft beer all<lb/>
night Mso, ihere will be free pinball<lb/>
and free toosball for everyone bikini<lb/>
coniect will be held ?nh SMI lo the win<lb/>
ner and a S2 gill certificate from the<lb/>
Happs Place lor second prize To the<lb/>
most represented organization, a tree<lb/>
keg will be awarded Plus, a band will<lb/>
he plasmg so come down to the Mtic<lb/>
on Mondas night and blow it out'<lb/>
BKA<lb/>
The banking and linance fraternity will<lb/>
meet Wednesday, feh T at ' 00 in<lb/>
room 221 Mendenhall tluesi speaker<lb/>
will he Mi lerrj Powell ot first State<lb/>
Bank A slide presentation, put<lb/>
together h IBM and dealing with c<lb/>
peered changes in hanking and finance<lb/>
in the Inline, will he shown Interested<lb/>
pcis.his are welcome<lb/>
Physics Tutors<lb/>
I he ("enter lor Student Opportunities<lb/>
t. Mil in ihe School ol Medicine Cttl<lb/>
icntlv has opening, foi phyMCs unois<lb/>
"i on nuisi have at academic record of<lb/>
high performance in ihe subject area<lb/>
s, rm may earn an income at standard<lb/>
campus tales i oniact Or Bndwell.<lb/>
fi Vkhichard nius ni can 757-6122<lb/>
,v nis ,H an inlei s K'VS<lb/>
 Judge Candidates<lb/>
I he Nonh Carolina ("ivtl liberties<lb/>
l mon chapter in Greenville will spon<lb/>
an introductory forum of sun<lb/>
didates seeking ihe Democratic<lb/>
nomination foi ihe Dtstricl c omi<lb/>
ijtcship currently hclJ b the<lb/>
Honorable Norris Reed ot Ne? Bern<lb/>
Reed will retire m Scptembei<lb/>
Ml candidates foi ihe udgeship<lb/>
have accepted ihe invitation to attend<lb/>
trn forum, whwh will be held al Ihe<lb/>
1 hodisi Student i enter. 5M I 1 itth<lb/>
Si ,ii s im p m on luesday, I eh 26<lb/>
public is invited<lb/>
SNEHA<lb/>
Greek Sing<lb/>
The Student National (nvironmental<lb/>
Health Association will meet on Thurs-<lb/>
day. Keb 2H at 5:00 p m in the In<lb/>
vironmcntal Health lab Ml members<lb/>
and interested students art welcome<lb/>
Contest<lb/>
The Most Beautiful Man on Campus<lb/>
will be selected at a Disco party at the<lb/>
Tlbow Room on Monday. March 24.<lb/>
Applications are now being accepted.<lb/>
C all Treddv Jacobson. W(XW Radio<lb/>
Station. 758-1171<lb/>
Counseling<lb/>
Planning<lb/>
! ndevided on a major? meeting foi<lb/>
. l! in a m.uor 01 minor<lb/>
an .ni Regional Planning will be<lb/>
lay Kh 26 ai 7 JO p m. in<lb/>
209. Brewstet Planning faculty<lb/>
hers and ihe President ol the Slu<lb/>
Planning Vssocialion will he pre<lb/>
answer tpjestions regarding the<lb/>
planning curriculum and career oppor<lb/>
cs ni sin and regional planning<lb/>
.more .inJ uinioi level students<lb/>
I , planning eer are urged<lb/>
to attend additional information may<lb/>
??- William<lb/>
v Hankins oi Mulaiu Wubnch al<lb/>
-  m .?  isji.s nend<lb/>
Radio Staff<lb/>
v  n working oi<lb/>
? v ho station Sews and<lb/>
lit should s.ill Mel<lb/>
-4- ? come to :he<lb/>
I' ursday night al 6 ?<lb/>
,nei ?'<lb/>
The ECU Department of Counselor<lb/>
education is offering free peer counsel<lb/>
ing to all students These services will<lb/>
be provided bv masters degree can-<lb/>
didates as pan ol then career prepara-<lb/>
non 1 hev can provide assistance in<lb/>
such areas as academis. vocational and<lb/>
problem cenleie-d oriental ion. but are<lb/>
essentially independent ol the Counsel-<lb/>
ing I enter I eel tree 10 drop b Room<lb/>
lit) Speight Irom ?i M lo 5:00<lb/>
wcekdavs<lb/>
Phi Sigma Tau<lb/>
Phi Sigma Ian. ihe Phtlosophv Honor<lb/>
Society, is holding a paper reading<lb/>
Ihursdav. I el 28, 7 00 p m at 40V N<lb/>
Biltmorc lames 1 erov Smith will pre<lb/>
sent. "A Question of Intention His<lb/>
papet concerns the topic ol aitistie in<lb/>
lention, having significance in all<lb/>
aesthetic orientations Ml disciplines<lb/>
are encouraged to attend<lb/>
Rho Epsilon<lb/>
I here w ill he a Rho I psilon meeting on<lb/>
Ihursdav. I eh 28, al '00 P ? in<lb/>
Raw I I'D The spring banquet and ihe<lb/>
symposium planned tot pnl If. will be<lb/>
discussed Ihe symposium will be<lb/>
designed u benefit people seeking a<lb/>
careei in real estate Ml members and<lb/>
interested per. mis should attend<lb/>
Jazz Educators<lb/>
Ihe 111 chapter oi ihe National<lb/>
Association ol Jau I ducators will meet<lb/>
on I uesdav. 1 eh 26 al -? it) p m in ihe<lb/>
concert studio ol V I Ftetchei Musk<lb/>
C enter Ml interested persons are in<lb/>
v ited to .mend<lb/>
Essay Contest<lb/>
The Department ol English is pleased<lb/>
to announce ll ' fifth annual Paul 1 ari<lb/>
Memorial I ssay i ontesl I he contest is<lb/>
open 10 all undergraduates enrolled hi<lb/>
I nglish sourses 1 nines should be<lb/>
essays ol literary criticism, nol research<lb/>
papers, and should have been written in<lb/>
partial fulfillment ol an 1 nglish course<lb/>
unce Apt il ol last yeai Ml essays must<lb/>
K accompanied bv the recommenda<lb/>
lion Ol the isnirucior tor whom Ihev<lb/>
were written and must be' submitted hs<lb/>
March 21, 1980 rhe writer of l new inn<lb/>
mg essav will receive an award ol ISO<lb/>
.inJ othei recognilM n VV youi in<lb/>
structor for complete Jei.nK<lb/>
Alpha Xi Delta presents the s)th An-<lb/>
nual All Sing, in Wright Auditorium,<lb/>
Tuesday, Feb. 28 at 7:00 p.m There is<lb/>
no admission charge, so come see the<lb/>
fraternities and sororities perform<lb/>
BSPA<lb/>
The Black Students' Psychological<lb/>
Association will meet Thursday, Feb.<lb/>
28 at 6:00 p.m. in the Psi ("hi t ibrary<lb/>
on second floor Speight. All members<lb/>
are urged to attend. Any interested per-<lb/>
sons arc welcome.<lb/>
MCAT<lb/>
The new MCAT (Medical College Ad<lb/>
mission Test) packets have arrived in<lb/>
the Testing Center, Speight 'M)5 Test<lb/>
dates lor 1980 arc April 26 and Oct. ?<lb/>
Deadline for the April 26 lest is March<lb/>
28. and for the October 4 test is Sept 5<lb/>
Road Race<lb/>
Now is the time to start getting rcadv<lb/>
for ihe Second Annual drecnville Road<lb/>
Race This 10.000 irictcr (6 miles) fool<lb/>
race through Greenville is scheduled lor<lb/>
Saturday, pril 5 The race is spon<lb/>
sored by Bond's Sporting Goods Pro<lb/>
eeeds will go to the Taster Seal Socielv<lb/>
Merchandise awards will be given to Ihe<lb/>
top finishers overall and to the top<lb/>
finishers in each age division The first<lb/>
sOO to enter will receive a com<lb/>
memoralive race T shirt lor furlhei<lb/>
information, call the Taster Seals Socie<lb/>
iv al 758-3230 or Ken P. Murray at<lb/>
-Sh sa-s<lb/>
Holy Communion<lb/>
There will be a service of Holy Commu-<lb/>
nion of ihe I piseopal Campus<lb/>
fellowship al 6:00 p.m Wednesday,<lb/>
feb 27. at the Methodist Studenl<lb/>
C enter, 501 E. Fifth St. Supper will be<lb/>
served at 5:30. These services arc open<lb/>
to all students on campus. The Rev. Bill<lb/>
Hadden will celebrate the service<lb/>
IVCF<lb/>
The Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship<lb/>
meets every other Wednesday night in<lb/>
the Methodist Student Center. On Feb.<lb/>
27, at 730. there will be a special<lb/>
speaker loin us for lun in fellowship.<lb/>
Bible study, prayer and praise in sing<lb/>
ing. IVCF also has small Bible study<lb/>
groups which meet weekly al different<lb/>
times I vcrvonc is welcome (The<lb/>
Methodisi Student Center is on I ilth<lb/>
Si. across from Garretl Dorm.)<lb/>
Snowshoe Ski<lb/>
Ihe Snowshoe Ski Group will have an<lb/>
important mccling Teh 26 al 4:00 p.m<lb/>
in Room 108 Memorial Gym There<lb/>
will nol be a bus going, so travel plans<lb/>
must be arranged. Some still need<lb/>
transportation Everyone should attend<lb/>
this meeting Please be prompt.<lb/>
Ripple Raiders<lb/>
Ihe Ripple Raiders are having a Guys<lb/>
and Gals Bikini C ontesl on luesday<lb/>
Feb. 26 al the I Ibo Room starling al<lb/>
8:30. I irsi prize is $M) hose wishing<lb/>
lo enter should cither eall Kay or Teresa<lb/>
at 752 W8J ot sign up al the door I ues<lb/>
dav mehl<lb/>
ECU Holds Second<lb/>
Library Competition<lb/>
A total of $150 in The three prizes-<lb/>
prizes will be awarded first, $75; second, $50;<lb/>
to winners in the se- and third, $25<lb/>
cond annual ECU Stu-<lb/>
dent Library Competi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The competition,<lb/>
sponsored by the<lb/>
Friends of the ECU<lb/>
Library, is open to full-<lb/>
time graduate or<lb/>
undergraduate<lb/>
students, whose per-<lb/>
sonal libraries will be<lb/>
evaluated on the basis<lb/>
of quality.<lb/>
be awarded during Na-<lb/>
tional Library Week,<lb/>
April 13-19. Formal<lb/>
presentation will be<lb/>
made on April 16 in<lb/>
ECU's Joyner Library.<lb/>
Eligible for the com-<lb/>
petition are libraries of<lb/>
all types: collections<lb/>
centered on one sub-<lb/>
ject, collections of<lb/>
works of a single<lb/>
author or a few special<lb/>
authors, or general col-<lb/>
lections. Entire student<lb/>
libraries may be entered<lb/>
or a minimum of 15<lb/>
books from a personal '?"??'??? e.or .h"<lb/>
the public<lb/>
Poli-Sci Offers<lb/>
New Minor<lb/>
The department of political science depart'<lb/>
political science is now men commented.<lb/>
offering a minor in "e v,ould like<lb/>
public administration. students to learn more<lb/>
Because a rapidly about our program and<lb/>
growing number of wh<lb/>
employment oppor<lb/>
library.<lb/>
The deadline for sub-<lb/>
mitting entries is March<lb/>
1, 1980.<lb/>
Entries will be judg-<lb/>
ed by a panel consisting<lb/>
of a board member<lb/>
from the Friends of the<lb/>
Library, an ECU facul-<lb/>
ty member and a<lb/>
library services faculty<lb/>
member. <lb/>
department faculty<lb/>
believes that comple-<lb/>
tion of the new pro-<lb/>
gram will greatly<lb/>
enhance job oppor-<lb/>
tunities tor students<lb/>
majoring in political<lb/>
science and a anet ot<lb/>
related fields.<lb/>
Dr. Tinsley Yar<lb/>
borough, head ot the<lb/>
a really good program,<lb/>
and with p r e -<lb/>
registration going on<lb/>
this week, now <lb/>
good time n introduce<lb/>
it<lb/>
A n interest<lb/>
students -should contact<lb/>
Dr Young-dahl S<lb/>
(Brewstei -120)<lb/>
Mr. Herbert k (<lb/>
(Brewstet -127)<lb/>
department ol<lb/>
science<lb/>
Handicap<lb/>
Ihe Office ol Handicap Student Ser<lb/>
vices otters free registration services<lb/>
and information regarding special<lb/>
testing and learning for handicap<lb/>
students for assistance or informa-<lb/>
tion, come lo W hichard 211, or call<lb/>
757 6?W nl no answer, call 7S7 6772 I<lb/>
Russian<lb/>
Russian anyone? Russian 101 will he<lb/>
offered MVN T WM Fall Semester Rus<lb/>
sian I neraiure (translated) will be<lb/>
taught MWI 12ot! Interested students<lb/>
contact Or Malbv. office hours<lb/>
2:10-3:00 MWI<lb/>
Twig<lb/>
I he vav C ampus Outreach is a biblical<lb/>
research fellowship ihal believes ihe<lb/>
Word ol C.iHl is the Vv ill ot (vd<lb/>
nvone who loves God and desires an<lb/>
accurate knowledge ol (.od's Word<lb/>
warmly invited to attend ihe nevi l"?ig<lb/>
fellowship which is being held on<lb/>
Ihinsdav. Fee 28, a) voo p m in<lb/>
loom 24" Mendenhall<lb/>
ECGC<lb/>
I he I asi c arotina t .av i ommunit) ?ill<lb/>
feature a speaker on I uesdav, I eh 2h<lb/>
at 5 ? P ni al NIH Nmih Si . the<lb/>
Newman House Bung yOUl favorite<lb/>
hev e- aae<lb/>
Kissing Contest<lb/>
Ihe kappa Sigma Pledges are having a<lb/>
kissing contest al ihe Tlbo Room on<lb/>
Ihursdav. I eh 2H trom MXI1 ? p m<lb/>
live lucky guvs will be rated bs live<lb/>
beautiful gnls I ust prize is a sase ol<lb/>
youi favorite beverage<lb/>
Remember<lb/>
We wish to remind all<lb/>
students and faculty that we<lb/>
will not accept any an-<lb/>
nouncements for the An-<lb/>
nouncements column unless<lb/>
they are typed doublespace<lb/>
and turned in before the<lb/>
deadline. No exceptions will<lb/>
be made The deadlines are<lb/>
2:00 p.m. Friday for the<lb/>
luesday edition and 2:00<lb/>
p.m. luesday for the Thurs-<lb/>
day edition We reserve the<lb/>
right to edit tot brevity. We<lb/>
cannot guarantee that<lb/>
everything turned in will ap-<lb/>
pear m the paper, due to<lb/>
space limitations, but we will<lb/>
do our best.<lb/>
REMEMBER TO VOTE FOR YOUR OUTSTANDING<lb/>
PROFESSORS<lb/>
From Monday, Feb. 25, until Friday, Feb. 29, ECU students will have the op<lb/>
Dortunity to vote for the outstanding teachers they have had for at least one<lb/>
Undergraduate course for credit during the fall or spring semesters of the<lb/>
1979-80 school year.<lb/>
The computer processed voting card can be obtained from the student's<lb/>
faculty advisor. The student may vote for up to three undergraduate teachers<lb/>
and is to assign to each nominated teacher a rating of lO(highest), 8, or 6,<lb/>
depending on the intensity of the nomination. The falculty member's four die<lb/>
code number, as given in the Feb.21 issue of The East Carolinian, should be us<lb/>
ed instead of the faculty member's name. The voting card should be deposited<lb/>
in the voting box in the Registrar's Office in the Whichard Building, 8 a.m. 5<lb/>
p.m during Feb. 25-29.<lb/>
Students should bear in mind that the vote is for teachers whom they feel are<lb/>
outstanding. It is not a vote to find the most popular teacher or a vote to in<lb/>
dicate course preference. The best teachers are not necessarily the most<lb/>
popular and conversly, the most popular teachers are not necessarily the best<lb/>
Patronize<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Advertisers<lb/>
Pizza inn<lb/>
AMERICAS FAVORITE PIZZA<lb/>
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THE COMPLETE<lb/>
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758 6366 Evening buffet 82.79<lb/>
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Questionnaire For Task Force<lb/>
On Student Organizations And<lb/>
Activities<lb/>
Please answer each question truthfully.After<lb/>
completioplease turn in your questionaire in to<lb/>
your hall rep or residence hall director. Boxes will<lb/>
also be located in the Student Store and in the<lb/>
Croatan.<lb/>
1. Do you read the East Carolinian regularly<lb/>
yes or no<lb/>
2. Do you feel that the paper adequately covers<lb/>
the important areas of college life0<lb/>
yes or no<lb/>
3. Would you feel free in submitting some of your<lb/>
own ideas for improvements?<lb/>
yes or no<lb/>
DAILY LUNCHEON<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
JHOt DOgOnly1<lb/>
 Hamburger,<lb/>
I French Fries $199<lb/>
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SPECIALS<lb/>
4-00-8:00 HI NOCAMYOVT<lb/>
SALAD?50? EXTRA<lb/>
ASST. VAR. ? g g<lb/>
DIET PEPSI. MT DEW.<lb/>
7-UP. DIET 7-UP OR<lb/>
Pepsi-Cola<lb/>
2.<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
TUE.<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
WITH GARLIC BREAD<lb/>
ITALIAN hqq<lb/>
SPAGHETTIotvl thur<lb/>
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BURGUNDY, CHABLIS.<lb/>
RHINE OR ROSE<lb/>
Inglenook Navalle<lb/>
$<lb/>
Magazines and<lb/>
Paperback Books<lb/>
BEER<lb/>
Black Label<lb/>
or-F<lb/>
MFR<lb/>
SUGG<lb/>
RET All<lb/>
'&amp;.<lb/>
12-Oz.<lb/>
Records and<lb/>
Tapes<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
Cheese<lb/>
Balls<lb/>
Priced<lb/>
From<lb/>
Off<lb/>
MFN<lb/>
sue<lb/>
RETAIL<lb/>
l ?v<lb/>
4. Please list one aspect of the paper that you<lb/>
really enjoy<lb/>
5. What one aspect needs to be improved?<lb/>
Please return questionnaires by Fri. Feb. 29.<lb/>
Thank You.<lb/>
Please do not sign your name.<lb/>
mmn&amp;$ 20<lb/>
little Debbie Snack Cakes &amp; Archway Cookies<lb/>
?AOQED<lb/>
Chips, Snacks &amp; Bagged Nuts<lb/>
PTM1TM Pin<lb/>
I POUCH PACK<lb/>
Sauces &amp; Gravy Mixes<lb/>
PCPPEROOE FARMS<lb/>
Bagged Cookies A Snacks<lb/>
5-Oz.<lb/>
Pkgs.<lb/>
REG. OR DIP<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
Potato<lb/>
Chips<lb/>
8-Oz. Twin Pack<lb/>
59<lb/>
RrTW RftO PT?CR<lb/>
Eftocttv Tim Fab. 2S<lb/>
thru Sun Mar. 2, 1M0<lb/>
Kregar Saon<lb/>
Quantity fUghto i?<lb/>
Nona aoM te Oaatara<lb/>
OFF MANUFACTURER S<lb/>
?UOQESTEO RfTAIL<lb/>
ADVIRTISID ITIM POLICY<lb/>
Each of tfwaa aMWMMai Mama Is naajaMM lo bs rssdWy avaaabta for<lb/>
sale in ch Kroosr S?-oo Stors ?icpt ss apscMcMly rxrtad In IMs<lb/>
of s comparabts Horn, wr?Sfr svaiMbw, iaffecting fha sams sewings or s<lb/>
ratocbact wnJeh ?antts yew to purchass tnaadvarttsad Ham st tt?<lb/>
&amp;dvrti9od pnoo vntMA 30 oy -<lb/>
FOOD, DRUG, GEN<lb/>
MDSE. STORES<lb/>
M'<lb/>
NONE SOLD<lb/>
TO<lb/>
DEALERS<lb/>
OPEN 7 AM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. Greenville<lb/>
Phone 7$f- rfojl<lb/>
t. . 's ?. it i i?:<lb/>
<pb facs="00057251_0003"/><lb/>
SGA Legislators Hear Towing Report<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 26, 1980<lb/>
Continued from Page 1<lb/>
rod reported that<lb/>
another wrecker ser-<lb/>
vice, Hastings Ford,<lb/>
has joined three other<lb/>
wrecker services that<lb/>
have agreed to lower<lb/>
their off-campus tow-<lb/>
ing rates for university-<lb/>
registered vehicles.<lb/>
Like the others,<lb/>
Hastings Ford will<lb/>
charge $15 to tow stu-<lb/>
dent vehicles that are<lb/>
ticketed off campus<lb/>
before 6:00 p.m. and<lb/>
$20 thereafter.<lb/>
Sherrod also said<lb/>
that he would be work-<lb/>
ing to get approval of a<lb/>
no-tow policy on cam-<lb/>
pus. This could be<lb/>
achieved through the<lb/>
use of wheel locks in-<lb/>
stead of tow-trucks,<lb/>
Sherrod explained. He<lb/>
added that he will con-<lb/>
tact administrators on<lb/>
campuses that use the<lb/>
system to get an idea of<lb/>
how effective it is. .<lb/>
In other business,<lb/>
Steve O'Geary was<lb/>
sworn in as a new Day<lb/>
Student Represen-<lb/>
tative. It was also an-<lb/>
nounced that there is an<lb/>
opening for a Fletcher<lb/>
Dorm representative.<lb/>
Greek News<lb/>
Card Use Is Disappointing To Businesses<lb/>
Continued from Page 1<lb/>
A one-dollar dis-<lb/>
count on athletic shoes<lb/>
and a free can of tennis<lb/>
balls with racket string-<lb/>
ing are offered by<lb/>
Phidippides. They have<lb/>
an average response of<lb/>
one or two students a<lb/>
week.<lb/>
C. Herber Forbes of-<lb/>
fers a 10 percent dis-<lb/>
count on full-price mer-<lb/>
chandise. The manage-<lb/>
ment was satisfied with<lb/>
response, but they said<lb/>
response would be bet-<lb/>
ter if more students<lb/>
knew about the NSCC<lb/>
The remaining six<lb/>
businesses said they<lb/>
were not pleased with<lb/>
the respone they have<lb/>
received. The owner of<lb/>
Glenda's Beauty-Salon<lb/>
and Boutique stated<lb/>
that they "have not<lb/>
received good response<lb/>
because the cards were<lb/>
poorly distributed.<lb/>
The manager of<lb/>
Mike's Bike Shop also<lb/>
Blevins Helps Plan<lb/>
Continued from Page 1<lb/>
meitts, and Patrice Smith, another<lb/>
volunteer who has not yet begun her<lb/>
committee work, said that she was<lb/>
"enthusiastic" about getting<lb/>
started.<lb/>
Student opinion has not always<lb/>
been so highly valued at East<lb/>
Carolina University.<lb/>
Dr. Henry Ferreil, vice chancellor<lb/>
for institutional advancement and<lb/>
planning with 18 years of experience<lb/>
at ECU, said Monday that this type<lb/>
of involvement is something new for<lb/>
the university.<lb/>
Ferreil commended the students<lb/>
who are doing committee work, and<lb/>
noted that Chancellor Brewer "was<lb/>
very specific about having student<lb/>
representation" in planning.<lb/>
The current drive to examine all<lb/>
aspects of university life was begun<lb/>
by Chancellor Brewer shortly after<lb/>
being appointed ECU chancellor.<lb/>
Dorothy Horner said she still had<lb/>
several committee and task force<lb/>
seats to fill, and invited interested<lb/>
students to come by her office at 224<lb/>
Mendenhall to apply.<lb/>
"We try to put students on a com-<lb/>
mittee that they will enjoy or get the<lb/>
most benefit out of. It is especially<lb/>
good when a student can relate his<lb/>
committee work to his studies<lb/>
Horner said.<lb/>
said that half of the<lb/>
students did not receive<lb/>
cards. He added that<lb/>
students did not know<lb/>
about the NSCC.<lb/>
The owner of the<lb/>
Mushroom said only<lb/>
about two or three<lb/>
students have used the<lb/>
card, and she added<lb/>
that she gained ab-<lb/>
solutely nothing from<lb/>
it. Operators of the<lb/>
Olde London Inn, The<lb/>
Pierced Ear, and the<lb/>
United Figure Salon<lb/>
also claimed poor<lb/>
responses.<lb/>
The National Stu-<lb/>
dent Consumer Card<lb/>
offers the holder dis-<lb/>
counts from Greenville<lb/>
businesses. ECU<lb/>
students can pick one<lb/>
up at the SGA office in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. All Greenville<lb/>
merchants listed on the<lb/>
card stated they would<lb/>
welcome more support.<lb/>
Warnings Given<lb/>
Continued from Page 1<lb/>
represent a legitimate company<lb/>
The "salesman" usually will<lb/>
work in an area, such as Greenville,<lb/>
for two to three weeks, leave and<lb/>
pick up his solicitation somewhere<lb/>
else, like Chapel Hill, commented<lb/>
Eddings.<lb/>
Referring to how one can be so<lb/>
easily taken in by such artists, Ed-<lb/>
dings noted that most of these types<lb/>
of criminals have a very glib tongue.<lb/>
They are quick to defend their posi-<lb/>
tions as salesmen, and people just<lb/>
get "suckered in" by their apparent<lb/>
knowledge of the material.<lb/>
To spot the rip-off artist quickly.<lb/>
To Students<lb/>
Eddings suggests asking to see an<lb/>
ECU Security Office permit to<lb/>
solicit on campus. If the salesman<lb/>
does not have such a permit, tell him<lb/>
you are not interested and call the<lb/>
police after the salesman has left.<lb/>
Greenville City Police Chief E.G.<lb/>
Cannon also suggested that the<lb/>
customer ask the salesman to see a<lb/>
permit to solicit in the city of Green-<lb/>
ville. Cannon stated, "This permit<lb/>
has my signature on it and the<lb/>
photograph of the salesman. If the<lb/>
salesman does not have this permit,<lb/>
then send him away and call the<lb/>
police immediately. They will come<lb/>
and investigate the person in ques-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
i WHILE<lb/>
A MXJI i<lb/>
DAVIDOf <lb/>
? Vsstki ?????<lb/>
CHHISTOtn<lb/>
SHfilLA SCHONHNU<lb/>
kaUftn<lb/>
"Alluring to the<lb/>
point ot seduction<lb/>
U 9 &amp;&amp;<lb/>
8:00 P.M.<lb/>
Tuesday, March 4, 1980<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
.4 Si?drnl Ummm Arm Semi W????"<lb/>
Tk.tt ECU Studwti $2.00; Pubt $6 00 AM ticktu at th door ?re $5.00<lb/>
T.cken now on sle at the Central T,cket Offce. Mendenhall Student Center. 757 6611 ext 266<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
FAMOUS PIZZA<lb/>
Now Delivers To -yCO COOa<lb/>
Your Dorm,Call JO'DYOZ<lb/>
PIZZASmallLarge<lb/>
Tomato &amp; Chees&amp;AfH'lf<lb/>
OnioniJTo4.K<lb/>
P?PP??58<lb/>
Mush'OOnn??JUC<lb/>
Onion &amp; Pepper?A?Stif<lb/>
Pepper On iMIf<lb/>
Sausage7T<lb/>
Hamburgerw<lb/>
Ar ;ho?vK<lb/>
Canadian Baton &amp; Pineapple3rja<lb/>
2 way46.40<lb/>
3-vwav-??4??<lb/>
House Spec at7$<lb/>
DESSERTS<lb/>
Cheese Cake .ff 1 Apple PieHf"<lb/>
1 Blueberry Pie j jff j<lb/>
SUBS Small Large<lb/>
SPAGHETTI<lb/>
Meatball.2.0O2-6<lb/>
Sausagex?oXf0<lb/>
Italian.?2Jte<lb/>
Hama.o<lb/>
TuneV4<lb/>
Roast Beef2.1E1135<lb/>
Pastraminjnrn<lb/>
BLT<lb/>
Pepper &amp; Eggz?urn<lb/>
VealZ.ttoJLhQ.<lb/>
Super Subraanra<lb/>
Pepper SteakEF5)Fi:i<lb/>
with Saute<lb/>
wtth Meatballs<lb/>
with Mushrooms<lb/>
with Veal<lb/>
with Pepper<lb/>
1.SC<lb/>
JOS!<lb/>
m.<lb/>
101<lb/>
SALADS<lb/>
Greek Salad<lb/>
Anti-Paeta<lb/>
Totsed<lb/>
eKr<lb/>
'Hi<lb/>
I Screed ,ith jlad and garlic- bread)<lb/>
BEVERAGES<lb/>
Plavioit<lb/>
Veat Mjraariu<lb/>
jLss.<lb/>
Served with salad and garlic bread)<lb/>
By<lb/>
RICK1 GL1ARM1S<lb/>
Greek Correspondent<lb/>
The Alpha Phis<lb/>
honored their outstan-<lb/>
ding seniors at their<lb/>
Forget-Me-Not Ball<lb/>
this past weekend. Lin-<lb/>
da Greatorex, 1979-80<lb/>
president, was<lb/>
presented with the<lb/>
"Best to Wear<lb/>
Bordeaux" and the<lb/>
Leadership Award.<lb/>
Geri Keel was<lb/>
honored with the Best<lb/>
Supporting Sister<lb/>
Award by her fellow<lb/>
sisters and with the<lb/>
Sister of the Year<lb/>
Award by the pledges.<lb/>
The Scholarship<lb/>
Award for the highest<lb/>
grade point average<lb/>
was presented to<lb/>
Dorene Rountree. The<lb/>
Andrea Norris Activity<lb/>
Award was presented<lb/>
to Joanna Best for her<lb/>
participation in sorori-<lb/>
ty and campus ac-<lb/>
tivities.<lb/>
Eddie Walters was<lb/>
honored with the<lb/>
Bordeaux Beau Award<lb/>
for the most outstan-<lb/>
ding brother. Joe<lb/>
Hallow was made an<lb/>
Honorary Big Brother<lb/>
for his help and sup-<lb/>
port of the Alpha Phis.<lb/>
Congratulations to<lb/>
Burley Day and Martha<lb/>
Clark, the winners of<lb/>
the First Annual Alpha<lb/>
Phi Shag Contest.<lb/>
Thank-yous are extend-<lb/>
ed to all the par-<lb/>
ticipants, judges and<lb/>
supporters.<lb/>
The Sigmas were<lb/>
visited by Ruth Mc-<lb/>
Creery, national of-<lb/>
ficer, this past<lb/>
weekend. During the<lb/>
visit, Ruth met with the<lb/>
sisters and held<lb/>
workshops. Also dur-<lb/>
ing the weekend,<lb/>
several girls were in-<lb/>
itiated. Congratula-<lb/>
tions and best wishes to<lb/>
the new Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Sigma sisters.<lb/>
Sigmas would like to<lb/>
extend a special thanks<lb/>
to Sandy Burke, rush<lb/>
chairman, for all her<lb/>
hard work and for the<lb/>
wonderful job she is<lb/>
doing this semester.<lb/>
The Chi Omegas in-<lb/>
ducted seven new<lb/>
pledges this past week.<lb/>
They would like to<lb/>
welcome Lorraine<lb/>
Bradley, GeorgeAnna<lb/>
Chambers, Nancy<lb/>
Hughes, Rosemary<lb/>
Knapp, Dee Dee Ward,<lb/>
Lisa Ward, and Laura<lb/>
Woodard. Congratula-<lb/>
WESTERN<lb/>
SIZZLIN<lb/>
STEAKHOUSE<lb/>
Tuesday Night<lb/>
Family Night<lb/>
SIRLOIN BEEF TIPS<lb/>
$1.99<lb/>
Complete with Idaho King Baked<lb/>
Potato, Texas Toast and Margarine<lb/>
S903 E. 10th. St. 7B8-?71S<lb/>
CLIFF'S<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
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MONDAY-THURSDAY<lb/>
TROUT, CRAB CAKES<lb/>
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CLIFF'S SUPER<lb/>
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2 Golden Fried Crab Cokes<lb/>
French Fries, Slow, ond<lb/>
Hush Puppies. $.99,<lb/>
tions girls!<lb/>
Sigma Tau Gamma is<lb/>
proud to announce the<lb/>
addition of two new<lb/>
pledges to the spring<lb/>
pledge class. They<lb/>
would like to thank alt<lb/>
of the Sig-Tau Crew for<lb/>
coming over Sunday<lb/>
afternoon for the yard<lb/>
party.<lb/>
The Pi Kaps<lb/>
celebrated their<lb/>
Founder's Day on Feb.<lb/>
16. They had a good<lb/>
turnout with several<lb/>
alumni in attendance.<lb/>
The Pi Kaps would<lb/>
like to congratulate<lb/>
their new officers:<lb/>
Bruce Mullis, archon;<lb/>
Alan Britt, treasurer;<lb/>
Randy Langley,<lb/>
secretary; Chuck<lb/>
Milian, historian; Jeff<lb/>
Kearns, rush chairman;<lb/>
Doug Marlow,<lb/>
chaplain; Mike Sheaf-<lb/>
fer, warden; and Bruce<lb/>
Hayden, social chair-<lb/>
man.<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsilon<lb/>
announces the official<lb/>
opening of the Sig Ep<lb/>
beach!<lb/>
This past weekend,<lb/>
the Phi Taus held their<lb/>
annual Little Sister<lb/>
Champagne Breakfast<lb/>
at the Pipeline<lb/>
Restaurant. After the<lb/>
breakfast, the brothers<lb/>
and little sisters relum-<lb/>
ed to the house for a<lb/>
keg party.<lb/>
This coming<lb/>
weekend, the Phi Taus<lb/>
will be holding their<lb/>
Parents Weekend and<lb/>
Formal at the Green-<lb/>
ville Country Club. The<lb/>
festivities will begin at<lb/>
5:30 with a cocktail<lb/>
party at the house.<lb/>
Dinner will be served<lb/>
at the club, and follow-<lb/>
ing the meal, the Phi<lb/>
Taus and their parents<lb/>
will be entertained by<lb/>
the band "Sunny<lb/>
Skies<lb/>
The Phi taus are also<lb/>
participating in the<lb/>
Miller Pick Up and are<lb/>
presently in first place.<lb/>
SdMitototufa<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057251_0004"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the campus community for 54 years.<lb/>
Marc Barnes, &amp;?<lb/>
Diane Henderson, rimm rti<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim, mh?vmmm? Richard Green, cmm<lb/>
Chris Lichok, ?.? .?,?? Charles Chandler, ?? ?.<lb/>
Terry Gray, ? mm Karen Wendt, ?iw &amp;<lb/>
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 26. 1980<lb/>
PAGE 4<lb/>
This Newspaper's Opinion<lb/>
Let Our People Go<lb/>
The confusion over the Iran situa-<lb/>
tion is much worse than the incident<lb/>
of the kidnapping of Americans<lb/>
themselves. The Iranians alternately<lb/>
support and oppose the release, say-<lb/>
ing at one time that they would<lb/>
release the hostages if the Shah's<lb/>
alleged wrongs against his coun-<lb/>
trymen were investigated. Then, the<lb/>
militants say that nothing short of<lb/>
the Shah's actual return (and almost<lb/>
certain execution) will cause the<lb/>
hostages to be freed.<lb/>
The newly-elected president of<lb/>
Iran, Abolhassan Bani-Sadr, has<lb/>
spoken for the ailing Ayatollah,<lb/>
saying in agreement with the<lb/>
militants that the election of the new<lb/>
Iranian parliament will almost cer-<lb/>
tainly delay the return of the<lb/>
hostages.<lb/>
The new parliament, said Bani-<lb/>
Sadr, will have to decide when and<lb/>
if the hostages will be released.<lb/>
Every spokesman in Iran,<lb/>
whether it be the militants at the em-<lb/>
bassy, or the Ayatollah, or the<lb/>
foreign minister, or any one of a<lb/>
host of others, every one of these<lb/>
people has a hard time deciding<lb/>
what the policy will be.<lb/>
One day, there is hope that the<lb/>
hostages will be released within the<lb/>
next week or so; in the next breath,<lb/>
we hear another report from Iran<lb/>
which says that the Americans<lb/>
won't come home until the Shah is<lb/>
brought back to Iran. Bani-Sadr is<lb/>
all at once critical and full of praise<lb/>
during the whole situation.<lb/>
The fact of the matter, no matter<lb/>
what any number of militants or<lb/>
others might say, is that the<lb/>
Americans should be freed now,<lb/>
and that it is virtually impossible for<lb/>
us to return the Shah to Iran. To do<lb/>
so would almost certainly result in<lb/>
his death, and nothing, save the<lb/>
triumphs of a howling mob, would<lb/>
be served by this.<lb/>
It is against the morals of the<lb/>
United States to send a man into an<lb/>
almost certain death. If a fair trial<lb/>
could be guaranteed to him, it might<lb/>
well be a different story.<lb/>
An almost forgotten group in the<lb/>
entire debacle has been the<lb/>
hostages' families. These few have<lb/>
stood by with patience ever since the<lb/>
taking of the embassy. They,<lb/>
especially, are the ones who are the<lb/>
most hurt by the conflicting reports<lb/>
that come out of the country.<lb/>
The Americans should be return-<lb/>
ed home, and the Iranian govern-<lb/>
ment should, as President Carter<lb/>
hinted a long time ago, pay for the<lb/>
entire affair. They should not be let<lb/>
off the hook with a slap of the wrist.<lb/>
To do this, or worse yet, to<lb/>
apologize to the Iranians for the<lb/>
alleged activities of the Shah should<lb/>
not be done.<lb/>
The taking of an embassy and the<lb/>
subsequent imprisonment of its per-<lb/>
sonnel is a flagrant violation of in-<lb/>
ternational law and should not be<lb/>
tolerated.<lb/>
We feel that our President should<lb/>
demand the release of the hostages<lb/>
now, and we also feel that he should<lb/>
use any sanctions that are necessary<lb/>
to insure this. Each day that goes by<lb/>
is but one more day of possible<lb/>
lasting emotional harm to the<lb/>
hostages.<lb/>
Iran, let our people go!<lb/>
Saved By The Bell ? Again<lb/>
The editorial writer went to his<lb/>
tiny office and sat down. After<lb/>
lighting up a cigarette and putting it<lb/>
out again, he thought and he<lb/>
thought and he thought. Nothing<lb/>
would come to him. He could not<lb/>
think of a good, exciting topic, and<lb/>
deadline was fast approaching. He<lb/>
pounded his head, and hit his<lb/>
typewriter in frustration. Woe<lb/>
descended upon him, and he was<lb/>
sore afraid.<lb/>
With fear and trepidation, he ap-<lb/>
proaches the sacred oracle of higher<lb/>
learning. He bows quickly as he<lb/>
walks into the small room, and the<lb/>
room has the eerie air of the land of<lb/>
Oz, with some machine-like noise<lb/>
running, and little pale blue lights<lb/>
glowing. This is the place called the<lb/>
Typesetter's Room, and the oracle<lb/>
of wisdom is the Typesetter herself.<lb/>
"Sit down the Great Oracle in-<lb/>
tones. "What's the matter?"<lb/>
"What on earth can I write my<lb/>
editorial about tonight?" the still<lb/>
fearful writer says, fumbling for a<lb/>
cigarette.<lb/>
"Boy, are you in trouble. Of<lb/>
course, you could write one on Bill<lb/>
Loeb, and the Manchester Union-<lb/>
Leader ? you know, the guy that<lb/>
was on 460 Minutes' last night. Or,<lb/>
you could write one on the<lb/>
Ayatollah, or on the Olympics, or<lb/>
on the weather<lb/>
"Are we in favor of the weather<lb/>
or against it?" asks the writer.<lb/>
"Don't be silly the Typesetter<lb/>
says. "Or, you  you could write<lb/>
one on how hard it is to write<lb/>
editorials. You know, that might<lb/>
not be a half bad idea<lb/>
A light comes on above the<lb/>
writer's head.<lb/>
Saved by the bell again.<lb/>
HOW WOULD YOU ATE<lb/>
THE NSW P?C6ISTItTlON<lb/>
SVS7CM ON A $CAL?<lb/>
Of 1 TO TO 9<lb/>
W?tl NUM.<lb/>
c m<lb/>
o" .rohshh<lb/>
gox?o:o o o:o<lb/>
Toroooo,a<lb/>
o o ? o<lb/>
3<lb/>
Pop's People<lb/>
Holiday Held To Herald Hams<lb/>
By LARRY POPELKA<lb/>
I have a hard time getting excited about<lb/>
holidays. To tell the truth, after 21 years of<lb/>
coloring Easter eggs, shooting off fireworks<lb/>
and carving jack-olanterns, I've gotten<lb/>
bored.<lb/>
Why do we always have to celebrate the<lb/>
same stupid holidays every year? Columbus<lb/>
may have sailed the ocean blue in fourteen<lb/>
hundred ninety-two, but who really cares in<lb/>
nineteen hundred eighty?<lb/>
If our holidays are going to be mean-<lb/>
ingful, we should be constantly adopting<lb/>
new ones to replace those that have gotten<lb/>
outdated or boring.<lb/>
A favorite replacement of mine is Na-<lb/>
tional Pig Day.<lb/>
Pig Day was established eight years ago<lb/>
by sisters Ellen Stanley and Mary Lynne<lb/>
Rave of Lubbock, Texas, and Jacksonville,<lb/>
N.C respectively.<lb/>
According to Ellen, Pig Day, which is<lb/>
celebrated on March 1, is "our own special<lb/>
holiday for pigs<lb/>
"When we were girls, we read stories<lb/>
such as E.B. White's 'Charlotte's Web<lb/>
telling of the joys of raising a pig says<lb/>
Ellen. "We both agreed that piglets were<lb/>
just about the most adorable animals alive!<lb/>
We didn't live on a farm and we were<lb/>
unable to ever own a pig, so we started giv-<lb/>
ing each other little figurines of pigs for bir-<lb/>
thday and Christmas gifts<lb/>
But pigs never seemed to tie in very well<lb/>
with the Christmas theme, so in 1972 the<lb/>
sisters set aside their own day, especially for<lb/>
pigs.<lb/>
To celebrate their holiday, the sisters<lb/>
send each other boxes of food to "pig out"<lb/>
on. They also have neighborhood parties in<lb/>
which friends exchange pig presents, such<lb/>
as piggy banks and pictures of pigs.<lb/>
Their children, who have also adopted a<lb/>
passion for pigs, take pig-shaped cookies to<lb/>
school.<lb/>
Part of the purpose of Pig Day, say the<lb/>
sisters, is to improve the pig's poor public<lb/>
image.<lb/>
"Pigs are not dirty, smelly creatures who<lb/>
wallow in mud says Ellen. "When they<lb/>
used to live outside, they would occasional-<lb/>
ly take a mud pack to cool off because pigs<lb/>
have no sweat glands. But today's pigs now<lb/>
live in clean, environmentally controlled<lb/>
'pig parlors<lb/>
Since the pig ? particularly its meat ?<lb/>
plays such a vital role in our daily lives (a<lb/>
much more vita role than St. Patrick ever<lb/>
did), Mary Lynne and Ellen suggest<lb/>
everyone organize their own Pig Dav<lb/>
celebration. J<lb/>
And so, to help you celebrate National<lb/>
Pig Day at your school, I've spent the past<lb/>
week digging up information about pigs.<lb/>
The following items are some of the more<lb/>
important things you need to know.<lb/>
?Pigs don't pig out. Unlike horses, dogs<lb/>
and other farm animals, pigs know when to<lb/>
quit eating. A dog, for example, if left on<lb/>
his own, will eat too much and bloat up and<lb/>
die. Pigs, however, know when they've had<lb/>
enough and never overeat.<lb/>
They also chew their food thoroughly<lb/>
(unlike dogs which gulp their food).<lb/>
Nor are pigs finicky ? like cats ? about<lb/>
how their meals are prepared, which is why<lb/>
farmers used to feed them garbage, slop<lb/>
and other such foul matter.<lb/>
?Pigs make better lovers. Hogs are loyal<lb/>
to their mates. Unlike other animals, male<lb/>
pigs don't fashion themselves as porky ver-<lb/>
sions of Richard Gere. Rather, they prefer a<lb/>
quiet sex life with only one sow.<lb/>
Since many boars are castrated at birth<lb/>
and there is a distinct shortage of fully-<lb/>
equipped males, this creates quite a ruckus<lb/>
in the pig pen.<lb/>
Some hog farmers claim that jealous<lb/>
sows push and bump male pigs who attempt<lb/>
to make love to their mates.<lb/>
The loyalty with which pigs preserve but<lb/>
one lover makes breeding especially<lb/>
troublesome for farmers. So does the fact<lb/>
that some pigs are homosexual and refuse<lb/>
to fraternize with any pigs of the opposite<lb/>
sex.<lb/>
?Pigoholics. A few years ago researchers<lb/>
at the University of Missouri-Columbia<lb/>
studied pigs' drinking habits and found that<lb/>
pigs ? like humans ? drink for social<lb/>
reasons.<lb/>
The researchers took seven pigs and<lb/>
determined their social pecking order. Then<lb/>
they let the pigs drink as many screwdrivers<lb/>
as they wanted. (Screwdrivers, it had been<lb/>
determined, were the pigs' favorite<lb/>
cocktails.)<lb/>
According to the researchers, at first the<lb/>
top pig drank heavily and lost his status<lb/>
Meanwhile, the number three pig which<lb/>
drank very little, became the new top pig<lb/>
However, once the number one pie<lb/>
sobered up, he redeemed his social standing<lb/>
and never got drunk again.<lb/>
The heaviest drinker overall was the pig<lb/>
ranked sixth in the social pecking order<lb/>
The researchers concluded this was because<lb/>
he is frustrated about his position and has<lb/>
resorted to drinking<lb/>
But the number seven : .<lb/>
drunk. "Number seven knows V<lb/>
has accepted that the researchers in-<lb/>
cluded.<lb/>
?Pig Stars. The most famou ? i<lb/>
(Miss Piggy doesn't count) , <lb/>
fel, who co-starred on I<lb/>
1968 and 1969. Arnold won the Pei<lb/>
Animal Television Star ol the Year A<lb/>
for opening doorv sucl<lb/>
wearing sun glasses<lb/>
For his work rnold ;<lb/>
and drew the attention ol<lb/>
gradeschoolers w ho wrote him k <lb/>
vowing never to eat pork d .m<lb/>
Once EvaGabor, Am<lb/>
peeved at the attention <lb/>
was quoted as complamir. <lb/>
if I'd powdered my nose I en :he pie<lb/>
ready, we began shooting In a<lb/>
most humiliatine to share b<lb/>
Pig<lb/>
?Singing Swine. I he gafl<lb/>
is Uncle Heavy's Pork.hop Reue, a iroup<lb/>
which includes three pig hodo dogtricts,<lb/>
such as pushing babv buggies, roW out<lb/>
carpets and playing on a eea.<lb/>
The group, which ha red on the<lb/>
Johnny Carson Show and been featured in<lb/>
Life magazine, includes a singing swine<lb/>
named Oink. Oink grunts aK ne<lb/>
of "Popeye the Sailor Manand 'Home<lb/>
on the Range<lb/>
?Hog Rustling. When the British col-<lb/>
onists settled in Jamestown in 160 ;he<lb/>
brought several pigs with them fot food,<lb/>
some of which escaped and were killed and<lb/>
eaten by Indians.<lb/>
According to hog historians, the Indians<lb/>
developed such a taste for pork :va:<lb/>
began "hog rustling" the swine from set-<lb/>
tlers.<lb/>
The settlers, in return, chose to confine<lb/>
their herds to a plot of land off the c<lb/>
called Hog Island. They also used -hog<lb/>
rustling" as an excuse for takinc over In-<lb/>
dian territory.<lb/>
?Pig Wars. In the fall of 1T0. several<lb/>
tribes in New Guinea went to war over the<lb/>
killing of pigs. One tribe that lost several<lb/>
pigs took out their vengeance hv killing<lb/>
members of the offending tribe. Eventual!)<lb/>
the war escalated to the point where 10,000<lb/>
natives from 29 tribes were battling oi<lb/>
few pigs.<lb/>
After two months Indonesian authorities<lb/>
arranged a truce among the tribal chiefs.<lb/>
But according to a Reuters report the chiefs<lb/>
warned that "if any more of their hiehlv<lb/>
prized pigs were slaughtered, thev would at<lb/>
tack the police<lb/>
Happy Pig Day!<lb/>
Boycott Of Olympics Is Called Because of Soviet Threat<lb/>
By CHARLES GRIFFIN ?<lb/>
National News Bureau<lb/>
The furor over the Moscow<lb/>
Olympic Games leaves the world<lb/>
sorely divided. The President and<lb/>
many other Americans feel we<lb/>
should not go to Moscow as long as<lb/>
the Soviets are holding Afghanistan.<lb/>
Allied governments around the<lb/>
world are expressing similar sen-<lb/>
timents.<lb/>
But the International Olympic<lb/>
Committee (IOC) is firmly against<lb/>
canceling the games or moving the<lb/>
site. And the IOC member for each<lb/>
nation ? including the U.S. ? is<lb/>
firmly against such action. They<lb/>
have to be. They are honor-bound<lb/>
to ignore any pressure of any sort to<lb/>
change, harm or stop the games.<lb/>
IOC members are chosen for life<lb/>
and they are carefully screened.<lb/>
They are not chosen as represen-<lb/>
delegates to their countries to guide<lb/>
the Olympic movement within their<lb/>
countries.<lb/>
Each Olympic<lb/>
country must be<lb/>
I<lb/>
in a<lb/>
of<lb/>
representatives of the governing<lb/>
bodies of each sport represented in<lb/>
the games. Each of these sports<lb/>
must have an international federa-<lb/>
tion with representatives from ach<lb/>
country's sport federation or gover-<lb/>
ning body.<lb/>
And every member is sworn to<lb/>
abide by the rules of the IOC. They<lb/>
must be totally independent and.<lb/>
autonomous and resist commercial,<lb/>
religious or political influence.<lb/>
They cannot do other than say no<lb/>
to the President ? their first duty is<lb/>
to the games, not to their countries.<lb/>
Reality is another matter.<lb/>
Western nations and non-<lb/>
communist nations do not generally<lb/>
attempt any sort of control over<lb/>
their sports to the degree that com-<lb/>
munist nations do.<lb/>
If the games were being held in<lb/>
America and the Soviets wanted to<lb/>
io th?ir dispJeaiire o sn sc-<lb/>
tion of ours by boycotting the<lb/>
games, you can be sure that the<lb/>
committees under their control<lb/>
would immediately kowtow and<lb/>
withdraw their support for the<lb/>
The very idea of amateur com-<lb/>
petition is alien to the communist<lb/>
nations. Where we have a clear<lb/>
demarcation between professional<lb/>
and amateur athletics ? profes-<lb/>
sionals get paid, amateurs don't ?<lb/>
the communist countries operate on<lb/>
a non-profit basis and have no clear<lb/>
demarcation.<lb/>
The rules of the IOC state that<lb/>
each athlete must have a basic oc-<lb/>
cupation designed to ensure his pre-<lb/>
sent and future livelihood that he<lb/>
does not receive and never has<lb/>
received any enumeration for par-<lb/>
ticipation in sport.<lb/>
Of course, many athletes have<lb/>
devoted their school years and the<lb/>
period just after college to attaining<lb/>
mastery of some sport, winning a<lb/>
medal in the Olympics, and living<lb/>
off commercials thereafter. But they<lb/>
were teaming something else while<lb/>
i sstsee! snd sfey hsd u spon<lb/>
themselves afterward or depend on<lb/>
public or paternal help to continue<lb/>
training.<lb/>
The same is not true in the USSR.<lb/>
There an athlete k completely sup-<lb/>
ported by the state as long as he or<lb/>
she can compete and win. They live<lb/>
and eat better than the general<lb/>
populace. They receive allowances<lb/>
for luxury items when.on tour in<lb/>
foreign areas. They become coaches<lb/>
of their sport if they retire<lb/>
honorably. Their bodies are ex-<lb/>
primental playgrounds for Soviet<lb/>
scientists searching for ways to build<lb/>
better Russians through better<lb/>
chemistry.<lb/>
In international events, Eastern<lb/>
European and Soviet jduges have<lb/>
visibly favored athletes from their<lb/>
own countries when getting a gold<lb/>
medal becomes a point of interna-<lb/>
tional prestige.<lb/>
To the Soviets, there is a great<lb/>
deal of national prestige in being the<lb/>
best athletes in a given field, or in<lb/>
winning more gold than any other<lb/>
team. We do the same thing, but we<lb/>
don't put our hearts and souls into it<lb/>
? and we don't retire k?w?<lb/>
coaches and athletes to the north<lb/>
slope of Alaska.<lb/>
My point, at long last, is that the<lb/>
Soviets see the games as a means to<lb/>
show political superiority. If our<lb/>
government is to attempt 9<lb/>
demonstration against Soviet ag-<lb/>
gression short of going to war,<lb/>
boycotting the Moscow games or,<lb/>
the winter games as well. We can-<lb/>
not, in good conscience, accept the<lb/>
Soviets as equals if they continue to<lb/>
act like sharks in a feeding frenzy.<lb/>
We must use every economic,<lb/>
better, drawing participants away<lb/>
from the games to another site is the<lb/>
very best means at hand to humiliate<lb/>
them.<lb/>
We must recognize that the IOC<lb/>
cannot go along with the boycott or<lb/>
a change in location. Undoubtedly<lb/>
there will be an Olympiad in<lb/>
Moscow, but the only participants<lb/>
should be Soviet client states and the<lb/>
IOC.<lb/>
America should sponsor an alter-<lb/>
nate Olympiad without IOC sanc-<lb/>
tion using every incentive to lure<lb/>
other nations to attend. A neutral<lb/>
skc snouia oe chosen, perhaps in<lb/>
Egypt. The rules of the IOC should<lb/>
be rigidly adhered to even though<lb/>
the members of the IOC now living<lb/>
aseept any of the records<lb/>
r<lb/>
We must do this thing knowing<lb/>
full well that the Olympic eames<lb/>
may never be the same. We should<lb/>
have denied Soviet teams entrv to<lb/>
political or emotional resource we<lb/>
1 iQVcot0humniate and ensure the<lb/>
ubR. Our government should ac-<lb/>
tively seek to undermine and destroy<lb/>
the Soviet government<lb/>
Boycotting the games, refusing<lb/>
and withdrawing economic support<lb/>
from the IOC and the commit<lb/>
accepting the Moscow Olympiad is<lb/>
akin to the rich kid on the block net<lb/>
ling mad and taking his ball awav<lb/>
making ,t impossible for others .0<lb/>
Piay. But it is a move that must ?<lb/>
done and it should be just the fir<lb/>
step m a new aggressive policv to<lb/>
progress, vely destroy hc<lb/>
USSkMnamac diarchy of ,he<lb/>
btv 2nr ie " <lb/>
??WWIIIW1IHWM<lb/>
mm<lb/>
M?rtHmtU iMii IWIII ?Hi?II '? 1<lb/>
&amp;vm<lb/>
- ? - ?- -? ?<lb/>
"? -t ?? ? ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057251_0005"/><lb/>
FA<lb/>
pat<lb/>
ml vi?i<lb/>
11<lb/>
re<lb/>
k3<lb/>
I he Oscars<lb/>
Academy Award Nominations Announced<lb/>
Scheider of ' Ml ha( la'<lb/>
nominati it tot ! s ctor<lb/>
B HDH I MOM s<lb/>
ss(d lUlfd PffSN I t I<lb/>
HOI I NWO )l) ?) K ii f<lb/>
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.1 musical about a<lb/>
honoi ? in ihi<lb/>
tis todav<lb/>
V<lb/>
nan Vl nominal<lb/>
I ' ?dcst hud Hum I <lb/>
Ihc China S<lb/>
x n ? ?? l i " and " ! h, K<lb/>
ea.<lb/>
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1 Ik- Boh I ossc film had aroused<lb/>
'ali ' wot k and others eoi<lb/>
indulgent. Rov Seheidei was nominal<lb/>
??civ paralled i i lite<lb/>
(Hhers named toi he I letoi I) j<lb/>
"Ktamei s Kramei laek 1 emu<lb/>
" ndromc XI K jno. " n : ?<lb/>
Petei Sell . "Boint! I here "<lb/>
I ?o lime winnei lane I<lb/>
me .is k ?? 1C ?<lb/>
lso named: lill i "Statin<lb/>
-N- ' " ; Rae Mai sii,i Masoi<lb/>
Men Midlei. " ! he Ros "<lb/>
: '? i?o time w inner, Melv v i i <lb/>
among the nominee<lb/>
sd lot "Being I here Xhers ? ;<lb/>
! J ? all. '? poealypse Now I<lb/>
" I he Rose lustin Henrv. "Kramei s K- m<lb/>
? ? i one, '? I he Blacl Stallion "<lb/>
Moi ? Streep was eonsidered hv man .<lb/>
' olc in "Kra Ki<lb/>
<lb/>
 Mhei in the<lb/>
' ? Kramer" Bai<lb/>
X ' ? andiv e Bet L'en,<lb/>
Mattel II e in i ii ? w ,i <lb/>
' "Mil ha I l,i<lb/>
I ik vav Kramei<lb/>
I'<lb/>
Isir n lung, Ahich sav studios<lb/>
"ids lot h ;lde papei ads and<lb/>
?i ompetil ion will he<lb/>
 ne in each r<lb/>
 ' Nomii H are made In<lb/>
nie111 s.<lb/>
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21 7; directors, 2H I here is<lb/>
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memhei s nominate onl lot hesi<lb/>
mnotmce its choice tor hest<lb/>
' March 15 I suallv the<lb/>
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Is ?'  Bcnti mi lot "Kramei s.<lb/>
Kiamei ' has alreadv collected the lion's<lb/>
X iden . iwards iolden (ilobes. New<lb/>
M X til in critics, etc.<lb/>
1 '  'ill return a mcee lot the 52nd<lb/>
! ? Xngeles Musicentet pi<lb/>
l'( etnonies stai ting an hout<lb/>
? I m. 1 s<lb/>
BeatlesReunion<lb/>
Popular Myth<lb/>
- M XI Kl( I l(t<lb/>
! Ol nil<lb/>
onlv<lb/>
j<lb/>
the show<lb/>
'W,<lb/>
 lew weeks<lb/>
own arguing<lb/>
?<lb/>
? the<lb/>
1<lb/>
 all<lb/>
: the<lb/>
Rob Fosse. lu,t la" Director<lb/>
 ilm nominated for<lb/>
Hest Picture<lb/>
Campus Views<lb/>
Vary On Draft<lb/>
I he Romantics<lb/>
 eu If ave hit in Greenville<lb/>
The Romantics<lb/>
Group Debuts<lb/>
In Greenville<lb/>
?<lb/>
? idea<lb/>
t Ohio S<lb/>
sure wa<lb/>
67 pet <lb/>
m favot o! dral <lb/>
Mai shall I nivei sitv. 6-4<lb/>
the students suppi<lb/>
i the I niversitv ol I H<lb/>
60 percent ol thi<lb/>
favored a return<lb/>
Hist registration (<lb/>
(. loset to hon <lb/>
linia said thai ,i substantial ma<lb/>
iorit ol the student<lb/>
suppoi ted regist<lb/>
However, th? <lb/>
ported In all students <lb/>
I he latest demonstration-<lb/>
ing the first weeks ol<lb/>
if<lb/>
B e<lb/>
' I i<lb/>
'  Ill<lb/>
I<lb/>
Bv PA I MIM.I S<lb/>
Mat! rilrr<lb/>
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lie w hen lh Xttu<lb/>
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andish new<lb/>
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in a lot ! .<lb/>
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' Well,<lb/>
hand doin<lb/>
? ed.<lb/>
. iiii' ver<lb/>
heen on the ci<lb/>
? " ell, icported crowd was at Beil<lb/>
ip where about 2(KK)<lb/>
and about -too have hei<lb/>
almost daih eci<lb/>
also hosted a lat<lb/>
I here have been smallei<lb/>
MIL'S , I . i S , i<lb/>
and I c San n<lb/>
seem testors have been di<lb/>
ik now (conscientious ol<lb/>
Be<lb/>
issess<lb/>
.vho arc on<lb/>
' I irs!<lb/>
: ' . . i v e i v<lb/>
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In the I ast, lotio ?<lb/>
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m band lot the degenerated into<lb/>
ird working tnc lM1'N reports ol ?.<lb/>
"mo einenl "so fai<lb/>
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so, iologv pi ofessi ii XI<lb/>
"I pon reinstaten<lb/>
hut also there could be a lew months hoi<lb/>
"loon, where opposil<lb/>
plaved Ul" ht minimal, and i<lb/>
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ind,<lb/>
not<lb/>
oyed<lb/>
' I M<lb/>
intense<lb/>
ad<lb/>
ind<lb/>
Xttu<lb/>
hair,<lb/>
ind<lb/>
from the<lb/>
oil<lb/>
: I V,<lb/>
? smho<lb/>
<pb facs="00057251_0006"/><lb/>
?. v'<lb/>
THl tASTC AROIINIAN<lb/>
hfcBRl ART 2. IWO<lb/>
New Wave Debuts In Greenville<lb/>
Romantics At The Attic<lb/>
Music For A While1<lb/>
plays Hendrix Theater March 3<lb/>
'Music For A While'<lb/>
Presents Chaucer<lb/>
A reproduced segment of<lb/>
Chaucer's world will appear on the<lb/>
Hendrix Stage on March 3, when<lb/>
the Student Union Artist Series and<lb/>
Musk For A While present "La<lb/>
Fontaine Amoureuse"the Loving<lb/>
Fountain).<lb/>
The presentation was written by<lb/>
Guillaume de Machaut, who lived<lb/>
during the period of Chaucer and<lb/>
Petrach.<lb/>
The group will perform in<lb/>
authentically-styled 14th century<lb/>
costumes and will play most of the<lb/>
music on the instruments that the<lb/>
music was written for. Also on<lb/>
display before the performance and<lb/>
during the intt mission will be in-<lb/>
struments from the period such as a<lb/>
sackbut, recorders, a tambor, a viel,<lb/>
a rebec and a Turkish Kemence.<lb/>
Within the performance are<lb/>
Chaucer's music and verse, a court-<lb/>
ly feast, his amourous cor-<lb/>
respondence with Peronne, his<lb/>
awareness of the capriciusness of<lb/>
fate, his failure in love, the horror<lb/>
of the plague of 1343, and his turn-<lb/>
ing to the 'other' lady 'Virgin<lb/>
Mary<lb/>
The group maintains historical<lb/>
accuracy, but also insists on the<lb/>
freedom to keep the music alive.<lb/>
Music For A While has been call-<lb/>
ed one of "the most distinguished<lb/>
purveyors of the repertory<lb/>
The group is also part of the<lb/>
Artists-in-residence Program at<lb/>
Saint Lawrence College.<lb/>
Continued From Page 5<lb/>
yelled at intermission, "Bring on the<lb/>
punk-rockers<lb/>
A ell. the Ron antics nit tne stage<lb/>
in a flash of color and bravado,<lb/>
resplendant in the shiny, red leather<lb/>
pants and bearing witness to the fact<lb/>
that they were far removed from<lb/>
their setting. The boyish lead<lb/>
guitarist and the drummer wore<lb/>
their slim ties, characteristic of new<lb/>
wave dress. The lead singer resembl-<lb/>
ed Franki Valli with an overdose of<lb/>
speed, and the bass player was a<lb/>
blond bombshell who seemed very<lb/>
impressed with himself.<lb/>
The Romantics were perhaps the<lb/>
most famous group to appear at the<lb/>
Attic because, to the best of<lb/>
knowledge, no other group has ever<lb/>
had an album that ranks as high as<lb/>
The Romantics. The group's first<lb/>
album ranked within the top one-<lb/>
hundred in the Billboard charts and<lb/>
placed 44th in their first week on<lb/>
Rolling Stone's chart. Only last<lb/>
week the group headlined the Valen-<lb/>
tine's Day concert at The Bottom<lb/>
Line, one of New York's most<lb/>
famous night spots.<lb/>
The boys attacked their in-<lb/>
struments and the wall of sound that<lb/>
resulted was overwhelming ? they<lb/>
were so loud that my ears almost<lb/>
started bleeding. The group's music<lb/>
was really pretty good, but as loud<lb/>
as it was, the instruments jsut blend-<lb/>
ed together into one tremendous<lb/>
rock noise. They were so loud that<lb/>
the crowd was forced to respond.<lb/>
The sheer volume was enough to<lb/>
shake you so hard it looked like you<lb/>
were dancing There was no need<lb/>
lOt li io Oc tiMlt iOui.<lb/>
The music was good at times, but<lb/>
it was much more fun to watch the<lb/>
Romantics antics onstage. The lead<lb/>
singer acted like it was his last con-<lb/>
cert, and the frenzied look on his<lb/>
face was a bit psychotic, but it was<lb/>
all just food fun. The lead guitarist<lb/>
played just inches from the crowd,<lb/>
and drove those close to him into a<lb/>
pogo-jumping panic. Jimmy was<lb/>
having the best time of all. His fran-<lb/>
tic screeching and frenetic playing<lb/>
was perhaps the highlight of the<lb/>
night. The bass player just looked<lb/>
bored.<lb/>
The crowd had a relatively good<lb/>
time, but it seemed that they jsut<lb/>
didn't know how to react to this<lb/>
alien brand of music. They rocked<lb/>
pretty well, but they just didn't want<lb/>
to relinquish their inhibitions and<lb/>
engage in inspired decadence. It<lb/>
could have been a riot, but instead it<lb/>
was just a remarkably good time.<lb/>
Well, next time we will know what<lb/>
to expect.<lb/>
So, the new wave made its first<lb/>
assault on Greenville, and the even-<lb/>
ing was a magnificent success. For a<lb/>
relatively small admission price, we<lb/>
experienced one of the most profes-<lb/>
sional shows 1 have seen at the Attic<lb/>
and certainly had the most fun at<lb/>
the nightclub in a while. My only this rocking eve My compliments to<lb/>
reservation was the decibel level of Tom Haines and the Attic for a job<lb/>
the group and the crowd's inability well done, and wc ill be looking<lb/>
to break down and really appreciate forward to next time.<lb/>
Poetry Contest<lb/>
In Springtime<lb/>
International<lb/>
Publications announc-<lb/>
ed that it will sponsor a<lb/>
National College<lb/>
Poetry Contest this spr-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
The poems will be<lb/>
printed in the 10th edi-<lb/>
tion of the American<lb/>
Collegiate Poetry An-<lb/>
thology.<lb/>
Cash prizes will be<lb/>
awarded in the top five<lb/>
places with the first<lb/>
place winner receiving<lb/>
$100.<lb/>
Some of the Contest<lb/>
rules are as follows:<lb/>
Any student is eligi-<lb/>
ble to submit his verse.<lb/>
All entries must be<lb/>
original and unpublish-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
All Entires must be<lb/>
typed, double-spaced ,<lb/>
on one side of the paper<lb/>
only. Each poem must<lb/>
be on a separate sheet<lb/>
and must bear, in the<lb/>
upper left-hand corner,<lb/>
the NAME and AD-<lb/>
DRESS of the student<lb/>
and the COLLEGE at-<lb/>
tended. Name and ad-<lb/>
dress are also required.<lb/>
There are no restric-<lb/>
tions on form or theme.<lb/>
Length of the poems is<lb/>
limited . 14 lines.<lb/>
Each poem must have a<lb/>
separate title.<lb/>
The judges decision<lb/>
will be final.<lb/>
Entrants should keep<lb/>
a copy of all entries as<lb/>
they cannot be return-<lb/>
ed. Prize winners and<lb/>
all authors published<lb/>
will be notified im-<lb/>
mediatly after the<lb/>
deadline. IP. will re-<lb/>
tain first publication<lb/>
Hunts for accepted<lb/>
poems. Foreign<lb/>
language poems are<lb/>
welcomed.<lb/>
There is an initial one<lb/>
dollar registration fee<lb/>
for the first cntr and a<lb/>
fee of fifty cents Foi<lb/>
each additional poem,<lb/>
with a ten-poem limit.<lb/>
All entry fees must<lb/>
be paid with cash,<lb/>
check or money order<lb/>
to:<lb/>
International<lb/>
Publications<lb/>
P.O. Box -U92"<lb/>
I os Angeles <lb/>
9X)44<lb/>
Brewer Presents Introduction<lb/>
Symphony Enjoyed By Many<lb/>
Bv STEPHANIE<lb/>
K. TINGLER<lb/>
Slaff V rilcr<lb/>
The East Carolina<lb/>
School of Music "is the<lb/>
finest in the<lb/>
Southeast Chancellor<lb/>
Brewer commented in<lb/>
his introductory<lb/>
remarks to the ECU<lb/>
Symphony Orchestra<lb/>
concert. The Sym-<lb/>
phony adequately<lb/>
represented that state-<lb/>
ment in its performance<lb/>
of Saturday, Feb. 16.<lb/>
The Symphony open-<lb/>
ed its program with two<lb/>
pieces especially ar-<lb/>
ranged by conductor<lb/>
Robert Hause. The<lb/>
Toccata in G Major by<lb/>
Bach is lovely, but it<lb/>
seemed a bit rushed, ex-<lb/>
citing, but a little<lb/>
pushy.<lb/>
The obvious gem of<lb/>
the eveningwas the se-<lb/>
cond Hause arrange-<lb/>
ment of the program,<lb/>
Brahms' Intermezzo in<lb/>
A Major. Originally for<lb/>
piano, Mr. Hause's or-<lb/>
chestration is not short<lb/>
of ingeniously perfect.<lb/>
The melody itself is<lb/>
transfixing, but the<lb/>
symphony's presenta-<lb/>
tion was lovely and sur-<lb/>
prisingly sensitive. It is<lb/>
often unbelievable that<lb/>
a group so large can<lb/>
sound like the outpour-<lb/>
ing of one spirit.<lb/>
The Concerto for<lb/>
Harp'and Orchestra, by<lb/>
G. F. Handel, was a<lb/>
landmark perfor-<lb/>
mance. Not only is<lb/>
Paula Scarangella a<lb/>
fine harpist, but tftfe<lb/>
symphony can adapt<lb/>
well to "mere accom-<lb/>
paniment The An-<lb/>
dante allegro which was<lb/>
chosen for the program<lb/>
was a lively addition<lb/>
for the evening's<lb/>
presentation. Miss<lb/>
Scarangella is destined<lb/>
for further study in<lb/>
Philadelphia.<lb/>
The Hungarian<lb/>
Dances 5 and 6 were<lb/>
further proof that<lb/>
Saturday's program<lb/>
was meant for the<lb/>
public favorites. A<lb/>
common tune to the<lb/>
Saturday c<lb/>
diets, number 5 Was a<lb/>
pleasant surprise judg-<lb/>
ing from the gasps in<lb/>
the audience. However,<lb/>
both dances were<lb/>
Minor. Pirated by the<lb/>
rock music industry<lb/>
several years ago, it<lb/>
further popularized the<lb/>
infamous tune which<lb/>
by now must be playing<lb/>
to Beethoven through<lb/>
those great headphones<lb/>
in the sky. Hause and<lb/>
his obviously en-<lb/>
thusiastic group were<lb/>
all fire and passion.<lb/>
y put the cherry<lb/>
oh'a delightful treat.<lb/>
The lilting melodies of<lb/>
the now immoralized<lb/>
motion picture can still<lb/>
sent the most unap-<lb/>
preciative listener into<lb/>
the skies above<lb/>
Tatooine or the cor-<lb/>
ridors of the Death<lb/>
Star.<lb/>
Anyone who ap-<lb/>
preciates a symphony<lb/>
can doubly appreciate<lb/>
the efforts of musicians<lb/>
striving to master an<lb/>
ancient craft. A sym-<lb/>
hony can say things<lb/>
relate. If you missed<lb/>
the East Carolina Sym-<lb/>
phony this time, you<lb/>
still have a few more<lb/>
chances. But you'll<lb/>
probably never hear a<lb/>
more moving, original<lb/>
premiering arrange-<lb/>
ment of a timeless<lb/>
Brahms Intermezzo or<lb/>
a more boisterous<lb/>
Beethoven's Fifth.<lb/>
The East Carolina<lb/>
Opera Theater will be<lb/>
presenting their spring<lb/>
production beginning<lb/>
Feb. 22.<lb/>
SPRING BREAK<lb/>
MONEY<lb/>
Paying Cash<lb/>
for<lb/>
GOLD and SILVER<lb/>
MIXED MEDIA<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
The decision may well be d ificult . .<lb/>
but the abortion itself doesihave to be.<lb/>
We do our best to make it easy for yox.<lb/>
Free Pregnancy Test<lb/>
JTmry Barijr Pregnancy Test<lb/>
The Fleming Center<lb/>
Friendly . . . Personal . . . Professional Care<lb/>
at a reasonable cost<lb/>
plagued by intonation<lb/>
Reunion Hoax Discussed SS vr<lb/>
Continued From Page 5<lb/>
rison, the whimsical guitarist known<lb/>
for his ties to the Hare Krishna<lb/>
movement, would more than likely<lb/>
favor the idea. Ringo Starr, the<lb/>
likeable drummer, would also sup-<lb/>
port a Beatles reunion.<lb/>
No one knows what exactly to ex-<lb/>
pect if a Beatles reunion actually<lb/>
takes place, but most groups break-<lb/>
ing up and re-forming have been<lb/>
disappointments. Such examples<lb/>
would include Crosby, Stills and<lb/>
Nash, the Moody Blues, the Byrds,<lb/>
the Animals and the Allman<lb/>
Brothers Band. The group Faces<lb/>
aggggggggggggm<lb/>
also had a small reunion that was<lb/>
not in the same vein as their earlier<lb/>
popularity. Some groups who got<lb/>
back together after splits have been<lb/>
successful, most notably the Bee<lb/>
Gees, but these didn't enjoy the im-<lb/>
mense popularity that the aforemen-<lb/>
tioned groups did at the time of<lb/>
their breakup.<lb/>
Could four almost middle-aged<lb/>
men rival the accomplishments of<lb/>
their exuberant youth? The Beatles<lb/>
once sang, "Wait till I come back by<lb/>
your side Perhaps that is all the<lb/>
public demanding a reunion can do.<lb/>
places. This did not<lb/>
seem to dilute the en-<lb/>
joyment of those pre-<lb/>
sent.<lb/>
As soon as the first<lb/>
bar of the next piece<lb/>
was sounding, an ap-<lb/>
preciative sigh was<lb/>
heard in response. Foot<lb/>
tapping was nearly<lb/>
audible, and an all-time<lb/>
favorite was again get-<lb/>
ting its due. The sym-<lb/>
phony shone in<lb/>
Beethoven's opening<lb/>
movement of the Sym-<lb/>
phony No. 5 in C<lb/>
STEEPLECHASE<lb/>
MONSAT.<lb/>
11:00- 2:00<lb/>
CAFETERIA<lb/>
PITT PLAZA<lb/>
CLOSED SUNDAY<lb/>
4:30- 8:00<lb/>
<lb/>
TUE.26Febl980<lb/>
$1.14 Franks&amp;Beans<lb/>
$1.49 BBQ Meat Loaf<lb/>
WED. 27 Feb. 1980<lb/>
$1.14 Chili&amp;Macaroni<lb/>
$1.49Pork&amp;Dressina<lb/>
THUR.28Febl980<lb/>
$1.14 Baked Lasagna<lb/>
$1.49 Pork Chow Mein<lb/>
FRI. 29 Feb. 1980<lb/>
$1.14 Franks&amp;Saurkrout<lb/>
$.49 Turkey &amp; Dressing<lb/>
$2.50 Fried Trout&amp;Hush Puppies<lb/>
Cole Slaw,FF Potatos, Coffee or Tea<lb/>
SAT. 1 Mar. 1980<lb/>
$1.14 Turkey Casserole<lb/>
$1.49 Smothered Liver&amp;Mushroom Gravy<lb/>
MON. 3 Mar. 1980<lb/>
$1.14 Creole Spaghetti<lb/>
$1.49 Pork&amp;Dressing<lb/>
TUE. 4 Mar. 1980<lb/>
$1.14 Chili&amp;Macaroni<lb/>
$1 49 Chicken Chow Mein<lb/>
The end<lb/>
off the<lb/>
Brown<lb/>
mBa9<lb/>
Blues<lb/>
Starting March 3,1980<lb/>
the beginning of an exciting new era in mid-<lb/>
day dining.<lb/>
Dimino's introduces a tasty alternative  piz-<lb/>
za for lunch. Great when your too busy to get<lb/>
away because Domino's will deliver it to you,<lb/>
hot and delicious, within 30 minutes.<lb/>
So break up the routine  have a pizza for<lb/>
lunch!<lb/>
Our drivers do not carry more than10.00.<lb/>
We reserve the right to limit our delivery area.<lb/>
FREE PEPSI OFFER STILL GOOD!<lb/>
4 cups for large pizza<lb/>
2 cups for small pizza<lb/>
OH<lb/>
o a<lb/>
?Copyright 1978<lb/>
Off any pizza<lb/>
at Domino's Pizza<lb/>
during the day shift only<lb/>
11.00-4.00 Mon -Sun<lb/>
i coupon per pizza<lb/>
Expires 3-17-80<lb/>
Fast, Free Delivery<lb/>
1201 Charlc Blvd.<lb/>
Phone 758-6660<lb/>
HOURS:<lb/>
11:00am- 1:00am Sun. - Thurs.<lb/>
ii:O0to-2:OftlmFriSat.<lb/>
???<lb/>
<lb/>
:?:<lb/>
ipvto<lb/>
mm<lb/>
&amp;Ss<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057251_0007"/><lb/>
Special Sixties Double Feature<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN FEBRUARY 26. 1980<lb/>
 Carnal Knowledge' Will Play<lb/>
"Carnal<lb/>
Knowledge" and<lb/>
"Getting Straight<lb/>
two movies about life,<lb/>
sex, and college, will be<lb/>
featured Wednesday<lb/>
night in a Student<lb/>
Union Film Committee<lb/>
double feature beginn-<lb/>
ing at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
roommates who have<lb/>
different perspectives<lb/>
on the meaning and<lb/>
performance of sex.<lb/>
Jonathan prefers to be<lb/>
loved while Sandy<lb/>
would rather be loving.<lb/>
Candice Bergen plays<lb/>
the woman who is in<lb/>
love with Jonathan<lb/>
'Getting Straight' Stars Elliot Gould<lb/>
and Candice Bergen<lb/>
Students Fill<lb/>
Out Survey<lb/>
Mendenhall Student while Sandy is in love<lb/>
Center's Hendrix with her.<lb/>
"I can't tell you that.<lb/>
I'm just following<lb/>
orders<lb/>
No, these were not<lb/>
the words of a<lb/>
demented scientisi in<lb/>
the latest horror flick.<lb/>
1 hese are the words of<lb/>
Dr. John Ebbs, a pro-<lb/>
fessor of English, and<lb/>
the campus represen-<lb/>
tativc for Na-<lb/>
onal International<lb/>
Fellowships and<lb/>
Scholarships.<lb/>
 bbs was attempting<lb/>
explain why only<lb/>
freshmen and seniors<lb/>
are being asked to par-<lb/>
apte in a global<lb/>
awareness survey<lb/>
sponsered by the<lb/>
Educational testing<lb/>
Service in Princeton,<lb/>
vi.<lb/>
1 he survey deter-<lb/>
mines 'how much col-<lb/>
e students know<lb/>
about world affairs<lb/>
said I bbs. It also tests<lb/>
their abilities in foreign<lb/>
languages and their<lb/>
perception and con-<lb/>
ns about world af-<lb/>
rs.<lb/>
On Tuesday night, 20<lb/>
students (ten seniors<lb/>
and ten freshmen) will<lb/>
have taken the test.<lb/>
However, Ebbs is not<lb/>
allowed to see the com-<lb/>
pleted surveys because<lb/>
they are sealed in<lb/>
envelopes upon com-<lb/>
pletion. " I never get to<lb/>
see what they say<lb/>
said Ebbs.<lb/>
East Carolina is one<lb/>
of 185 public and com-<lb/>
munity colleges and<lb/>
universities around the<lb/>
nation that will par-<lb/>
ticipate in the survey.<lb/>
According to Ebbs;<lb/>
most of the students<lb/>
were amazed to find<lb/>
out what they did and<lb/>
did not know about the<lb/>
world.<lb/>
"I'd like all the<lb/>
students to take this<lb/>
thing said Ebbs.<lb/>
Ebbs was not sure<lb/>
what the results of the<lb/>
survey would be used<lb/>
for, but he thought it<lb/>
would be for educa-<lb/>
tional purposes, and<lb/>
perhaps as a study of<lb/>
the effects of media on<lb/>
college students.<lb/>
Twenty people from<lb/>
each class were con-<lb/>
tacted for the survey,<lb/>
although some did not<lb/>
respond.<lb/>
Theater.<lb/>
"Carnal<lb/>
Knowledge" follows<lb/>
two men from their<lb/>
beginnings as sexually-<lb/>
inexperienced college<lb/>
students to their lives as<lb/>
sexually-bewildered<lb/>
adults. It creates a pic-<lb/>
ture of the twisted em-<lb/>
phasis on sex in<lb/>
American life.<lb/>
Jonathan (Jack<lb/>
Nicholson) and Sandy<lb/>
(Art Garfunkel) are<lb/>
This trio lasts for a<lb/>
time, but the pictures<lb/>
moves forward to the<lb/>
adult lives of Jonathan<lb/>
and Sandy. Here we<lb/>
find that, for reasons<lb/>
given us a beautifully<lb/>
performed film, achiev-<lb/>
ing special miracles<lb/>
with Candice Bergen<lb/>
The screenplay was<lb/>
written by Jules Fief-<lb/>
fer, a celebrated car-<lb/>
toonist who, in addi-<lb/>
tion to being syndicated<lb/>
nationally, often has<lb/>
work displayed in<lb/>
Playboy and Time. His<lb/>
characters are given in-<lb/>
creasing depth through<lb/>
his consistent use of<lb/>
monologue and<lb/>
dialogue.<lb/>
"Feiffer has grown<lb/>
starring Elliot Gould anti-hero<lb/>
and Candice Bergen. Director Richard<lb/>
"Getting Straight" is Rush pushes "Getting<lb/>
the story of Harry Straight" through its<lb/>
Bailey (Gould), a Viet- controversial plot with<lb/>
nam veteran who<lb/>
returns, to college to get<lb/>
a master's in education.<lb/>
But he has returned on-<lb/>
ly to be caught up in a<lb/>
student revolt.<lb/>
Bailey doesn't side<lb/>
with the dissident<lb/>
students, but he<lb/>
vehemently opposes the<lb/>
administration's policy<lb/>
for keeping the campus<lb/>
under control. At one<lb/>
a deft touch. However,<lb/>
he may be accused of<lb/>
forgetting about Can-<lb/>
dice Bergen ? she is<lb/>
not developed into<lb/>
more than a shallow,<lb/>
sex object when her<lb/>
character could be<lb/>
greatly enriched.<lb/>
"Directed with great<lb/>
skill by Richard Rush<lb/>
said Charles Champ of<lb/>
the Los Angeles Times.<lb/>
"Elliot Gould is a most<lb/>
ingratiating screen per-<lb/>
sonality<lb/>
not clearly explained, away from his roots as point he screams at the<lb/>
they are leading<lb/>
frustrating sex-lives.<lb/>
Director Mike<lb/>
Nichols makes his point<lb/>
with comedy and artful<lb/>
use of the characters'<lb/>
situation. L ife<lb/>
magazine said, "He has<lb/>
a cartoonist, wrote<lb/>
Newsweek shortly after<lb/>
"Carnal Knowledge"<lb/>
was released, "to write<lb/>
characters instead of<lb/>
caricatures<lb/>
The second features<lb/>
is "Getting Straight<lb/>
president, "You can't<lb/>
hold back the hands on<lb/>
the clock! They'll rip<lb/>
your arms off<lb/>
Judith Crist of New<lb/>
York magazine called<lb/>
Gould "perfection in<lb/>
his embodiment of the<lb/>
Visitation Tightens<lb/>
On Some Campuses<lb/>
While we at ECU are<lb/>
busy debating, filling<lb/>
out questionnaires, and<lb/>
forming task forces to<lb/>
discuss the expansion<lb/>
of visitation policies, at<lb/>
least two other cam-<lb/>
puses have cut<lb/>
drastically their present<lb/>
visitation policies.<lb/>
On Feb. 12 officials<lb/>
of the University of Pit-<lb/>
tsburgh einstated<lb/>
dorm visiting hour<lb/>
regulations. Prior to<lb/>
this reinstatement, all-<lb/>
night visitation on<lb/>
weekends was allowed<lb/>
for both sexes. The new<lb/>
rules prohibit non-<lb/>
reisdent visitation after<lb/>
2:00 am.<lb/>
About ten years ago,<lb/>
Pift abandoned their<lb/>
visitation regulations,<lb/>
but the murder of a co-<lb/>
ed in January 1979<lb/>
caused the rules to be<lb/>
re-examined.<lb/>
According to Mary<lb/>
Ann Aug, director of<lb/>
the Pitt news depart-<lb/>
ment, the murder of the<lb/>
co-ed "clearly piqued<lb/>
our concern for safe-<lb/>
ty<lb/>
This is the first time<lb/>
since 1971 that Pitt has<lb/>
not followed the<lb/>
policy of in loco paren-<lb/>
tis, "in parent's<lb/>
place<lb/>
"The university<lb/>
wants to make no<lb/>
moral judgements<lb/>
said Aug, "but we do<lb/>
need a program that<lb/>
allows i s to sweep the<lb/>
dorms, and allows the<lb/>
students to know that<lb/>
whoever is there<lb/>
belongs there<lb/>
Kent State Universtiy<lb/>
was another campus<lb/>
that has dropped its<lb/>
"liberal" dorm<lb/>
policies.<lb/>
According to Kent<lb/>
officials, security was<lb/>
also a reason for the<lb/>
change in policy.<lb/>
However, Kent<lb/>
students are mainly<lb/>
concerned with the lack<lb/>
of student input into<lb/>
the new policy.<lb/>
Kent Interhall Coun-<lb/>
cil (KIC) President<lb/>
Harold Robinson ex-<lb/>
plained, "You come to<lb/>
a university to become<lb/>
an adult. How can vou<lb/>
become an adult if you<lb/>
have restrictions?<lb/>
"Year by year, the<lb/>
policy has gotten more<lb/>
restrictive He says<lb/>
the issue is "whether or<lb/>
not students have some<lb/>
input into the policy<lb/>
changes that are taking<lb/>
place<lb/>
Kent also developed<lb/>
a policy about a year<lb/>
ago which kept dorms<lb/>
locked at all times and<lb/>
forced student to carry<lb/>
dorm keys with them.<lb/>
So far the system<lb/>
seems to have worked<lb/>
out well.<lb/>
Ann-Margaret and Jack Nicholson<lb/>
in a scene from "Carnal Knowledge'<lb/>
HEAPING ?i?v<lb/>
PORTIONS. price<lb/>
Break the junk food routine and get a good, hot meal with<lb/>
vegetables.<lb/>
WEDNESDAY FEATURE<lb/>
Feb. 27 ONLY$ 1.69<lb/>
SALMON CROQUETTES<lb/>
with Hot Slaw and choice of potato<lb/>
Spring<lb/>
Elections Chairperson<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
N.C. No. 3<lb/>
Tues.<lb/>
Cripple Creek<lb/>
( Phoenix Room )<lb/>
Nightclub<lb/>
Wed.<lb/>
Bull<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
Sutlers<lb/>
Gold<lb/>
Sat.<lb/>
Sugar<lb/>
THURSDAY FEATURE<lb/>
Feb. 28 ONLY$ .69<lb/>
STUFFED GREEN PEPPER<lb/>
with your choice of 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 East Mall<lb/>
Serving continuously daily<lb/>
from 11 a.m. till 8 p.m.<lb/>
(8:30 Friday &amp; Saturday)<lb/>
Filing for all persons interested<lb/>
in this position is Feb. 25-Mar. 3.<lb/>
Full-time students apply in SGA Office.<lb/>
(228 Mendenhall)<lb/>
OVERTON'S<lb/>
SUPERMARKET<lb/>
located on 3rd and Jarvis St.<lb/>
?<lb/>
Peking Palace<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
0' GrMnvilte<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
:or The Celebration Of Chinese New Year, We Are Of-<lb/>
enng These Specials February 1 Through February 29,<lb/>
1980<lb/>
Luncheon Specials<lb/>
Monday Through Friday<lb/>
i,264 By Pass.?Greenville<lb/>
PLUS ALL THE SALAD<lb/>
YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK<lb/>
?Sunday Buffet<lb/>
?We Specialize In Szechuan And<lb/>
landrtan Style Dishes<lb/>
10?o Discount Coupon 10<lb/>
10 Discount, With This Coupon On <lb/>
IUJI Or More Purchase, With The Ex- <lb/>
ceptton Of Luncheon Dishes, Family Din- I<lb/>
ner Selections And Buffet. J<lb/>
i<lb/>
tmmvXT69<lb/>
A Special<lb/>
RIBEYE<lb/>
FOR 2<lb/>
a 3<lb/>
25<lb/>
99<lb/>
10 Discount Coupon 10<lb/>
Dinner include steak, . potato,<lb/>
toast A all th salad you can eat.<lb/>
Coupon expires 4-30-80<lb/>
LUNCH SPECIALS<lb/>
Everyday from 11-4<lb/>
Ribeye 2.99<lb/>
Chop Steak 1.99<lb/>
Steak Sandwich 2.29<lb/>
Parkay AAargerine<lb/>
one pound pack<lb/>
Duke's Mayonnaise<lb/>
quart jar<lb/>
Hi-Dri Paper Towels<lb/>
Del Monte Catsup<lb/>
quart bottle<lb/>
Morton Frozen Pot Pies<lb/>
Chicken, Beef, Turkey<lb/>
8 oz. package<lb/>
Garner's Grape Jelly<lb/>
2 lb.jar<lb/>
Grade A Whole Fryers<lb/>
2$1.00<lb/>
88'<lb/>
28'<lb/>
98"<lb/>
4Vlb.<lb/>
Overtons<lb/>
includes potato. Toast,<lb/>
SALAD BAR.<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
A<lb/>
n<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057251_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
BRl Rt 26. 1980 Page 8<lb/>
Lady Pirates Crush Duke, Finish 3rd<lb/>
Photo by KIP SLOAN<lb/>
kathv Rilev Fires<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Kditnr<lb/>
Ralc'gh ? The Lady Pirates of<lb/>
East Carolina claimed third place in<lb/>
the NCAIAW Tournament Satur-<lb/>
day with a 99-65 consolation game<lb/>
romp over Duke, after falling 81-70<lb/>
to eventual champion N.C. State in<lb/>
the semifinals.<lb/>
The Pirates allowed the Blue<lb/>
Devils to tie the score only once and<lb/>
never trailed as they claimed their<lb/>
21st victory of the year against 10<lb/>
defeats.<lb/>
Senior Rosie Thompson fired in<lb/>
seven consecutive points, as East<lb/>
Carolina expanded the lead to 21-11<lb/>
with only nine minutes expired. The<lb/>
Blounts Creek native was forced to<lb/>
the bench in the latter stages of the<lb/>
opening half and also the second,<lb/>
but nonetheless led all scorers in the<lb/>
contest with 23 points on 10 of 17<lb/>
tries from the field.<lb/>
Junior speedster l.ydia Rountree<lb/>
netted 15 of her 21 points of the<lb/>
niuht in the first half, but sat out<lb/>
part of the second after injuring her<lb/>
right knee just over two minutes in-<lb/>
to the half. Rountree netted only<lb/>
four points after returning to the<lb/>
lineup with a bandaged knee.<lb/>
Juniors Kathy Riley, Marcia<lb/>
Ciirven and Heidi Owen added 10<lb/>
points. Owen, a defensive standout<lb/>
throughout the season, had her best<lb/>
offensive performance of the year<lb/>
connecting on three of four from<lb/>
the field and a perfect four of four<lb/>
from the free-throw line. Girven<lb/>
was the top rebounder of the night<lb/>
with 10.<lb/>
Junior point guard Laurie Sikes<lb/>
knocked in three 20-footers in the<lb/>
opening 2:30 of the contest to give.<lb/>
ECU a 10-4 advantage. Although'<lb/>
remaining scoreless the rest of the<lb/>
night, Sikes handed out 12 assists to<lb/>
bring her nationally ranked total to<lb/>
228 on the year.<lb/>
After trailing 50-38 at the half,<lb/>
things only got worse for the Blue<lb/>
Devil squad which upset the Pirates<lb/>
76-75 in the first NCAIAW contest<lb/>
of the season. ECU forged to a<lb/>
64-44 margin with 16:00 to play, on-<lb/>
ly to have Duke's Lisa Warren cut<lb/>
the lead back to 18.<lb/>
' It was smooth sailing down the<lb/>
stretch as the reserves maintained<lb/>
the advantage, although falling one<lb/>
point shy of hitting the century<lb/>
mark for the second time of the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
"They wanted to beat Duke<lb/>
tonight lor several reasons said<lb/>
coach Cathy Andruzzi. "They had<lb/>
been beaten on the road in their first<lb/>
conference game of the season and<lb/>
they felt we should have won. We<lb/>
respect Duke, but we were the<lb/>
stronger team.<lb/>
"If this is to be the last game of<lb/>
the season, and 1 certainly hope it is<lb/>
not, we can can go out with style<lb/>
The Pirate women dropped a<lb/>
heart breaking 81-70 decision to<lb/>
N.C. State in Friday's semifinal ac-<lb/>
tion. Riley posted the high game<lb/>
total of the tournament with 31<lb/>
points on 14 of 24 from the field and<lb/>
three of three from the line.<lb/>
The Wolfpack utilized a balanced<lb/>
offensive attack to burst to a 28-16<lb/>
lead with 5:24 till halftime, and sus-<lb/>
tained the margin to the buzzer.<lb/>
Rountree and Ciirven connected<lb/>
on jumpers and Rilev added four<lb/>
points as the I adv Pirates made<lb/>
their first second-half run at N.C<lb/>
State, cutting to42-34 with 16:31 on<lb/>
the clock.<lb/>
i The Wolfpack resorted to their<lb/>
height advantage to widen the lead<lb/>
again to 15 with 11:43 to be played,<lb/>
repeatedly lobbing inside to 6-2 Ml<lb/>
American Genia Beaslev and 6-5<lb/>
June Dob v.<lb/>
With iust under eight minutes re-<lb/>
maining in the contest. Beaslev hit<lb/>
her final bucket to give State 63-49<lb/>
edge, but the relentless Pirates<lb/>
weren't readv to surrender.<lb/>
Rilev hit a pair ol field goals and<lb/>
a free throw and Sikes added<lb/>
another of her patented 20-footers<lb/>
to cut to within nine of the regular<lb/>
season Wolfpack.<lb/>
State reserve Beth I iclden<lb/>
preserved the 11 point victorv with a<lb/>
field with :18 on the Jock and<lb/>
another high-archer as the final<lb/>
horn sounded.<lb/>
"I think thev were up tor this<lb/>
game more than we were said<lb/>
veteran State coach kav Now "I<lb/>
thought Genia played a little loo<lb/>
loose this game. She sagged too<lb/>
much defensivelj a! times<lb/>
1 ast C arolfna no awaits a com-<lb/>
mittee decision on M W r<lb/>
at-large berths which ?<lb/>
he made this weekend. N.C Sta<lb/>
automatically advances, ha<lb/>
crushed North C arolina in the fit<lb/>
ai the Raleigh Civicenter to cl<lb/>
their tilth consecutive<lb/>
State Genia Beaste<lb/>
tournament MVP,<lb/>
Mi-Tournament team, rcan<lb/>
ngie Vrm '<lb/>
Rogers, I C I 's Katl R<lb/>
North C arolinas Ben - Mc<lb/>
rounded out the all-tourne<lb/>
ECU Attempts To<lb/>
Stop Losing Skein<lb/>
B) CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
sports r dilor<lb/>
I he I ast Carolina basketball<lb/>
team hosts Campbell College<lb/>
Wednesday night in hopes of ending<lb/>
a three-game losing streak, all com-<lb/>
ing on the road.<lb/>
"Thev weie three er tough<lb/>
losses commented ECU coach<lb/>
Dave (Join of the defeats at the<lb/>
hands oi Mar viand. UNC-<lb/>
W ilmington and old Dominion. "1<lb/>
hope we can bounce back and win<lb/>
our last two games<lb/>
The Pirates, 14-11, host<lb/>
W isconsin-Milwaukee Saturday<lb/>
afternoon in their last game of the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The two contests represent the<lb/>
last rimes that Pirate seniors Herb<lb/>
Krusen, Kyle Powers, Herb Gray,<lb/>
George Maynor and frank Hobson<lb/>
will plav in ECU's Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum.<lb/>
Odom says special plans have<lb/>
been made for the two games. "We<lb/>
have dedicated this entire week to<lb/>
our seniors he said. "I've talked<lb/>
to each oi' them indiv idually and feel<lb/>
they'll be really hyped up.<lb/>
"I plan on started the five o<lb/>
them both games Odom con-<lb/>
tinued. "Hopefully, thev'11 give us<lb/>
some good leadership and the<lb/>
underclassmen will follow<lb/>
following a tough loss to<lb/>
nationally-ranked Maryland, the<lb/>
Pirates looked emotionally "out of<lb/>
it" at times in losses to UNC-W and<lb/>
ODU. Odom said senior en-<lb/>
thusiasm should help prevent this<lb/>
from happening this week.<lb/>
?Enthusiasm is something we've<lb/>
talked about a lot claimed Odom.<lb/>
"We need to try and generate more<lb/>
excitement. With all they've been<lb/>
through the last few years, 1 know<lb/>
our seniors will generate some this<lb/>
Photo by CHAP GURlEY<lb/>
ECU guard Tony Byles lays one in<lb/>
.<lb/>
Campbell, 14-10, presents the<lb/>
Pirates with an opponent similar to<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington said Odom.<lb/>
"They will really be up for us he<lb/>
noted. "We will probably be their<lb/>
biggest game o' the year. They'll<lb/>
come in here will all their guns<lb/>
ready<lb/>
Since the Camels will be fired up,<lb/>
Odom says the enthusiasm he wants<lb/>
so badly will be essential. "We have<lb/>
to be just as ready for them as they<lb/>
are for us<lb/>
Campbell is led by an experienced<lb/>
backcourt and a 6-11 center.<lb/>
Senior guards Darrell Mauldin<lb/>
and Fred Whitfield average 14.8 and<lb/>
16.1 points per game, respestively.<lb/>
Mauldin led the nation in free throw<lb/>
percentage last season.<lb/>
I he big man is sophomore center<lb/>
Tony Britto, who averages 12 points<lb/>
and 8.4 rebounds.<lb/>
Sophomore forward Ron Curtis<lb/>
(8.1 ppg and 7.5 rpg) is termed by<lb/>
Odom as the Camels' "best overall"<lb/>
player. "He can do it all said the<lb/>
first-year Pirate coach.<lb/>
The Pirates are led by guard<lb/>
George Maynor's 16.6 average.<lb/>
Herb Krusen averages 13.4 while<lb/>
Herb Gray tallies 11.7 points per<lb/>
contest.<lb/>
The game marks the twentieth<lb/>
meeting between the two schools.<lb/>
ECU leads the series 11-9, but this is<lb/>
the first meeting between the two<lb/>
since 1947, roughly ten years before<lb/>
most of the players in this game<lb/>
were born.<lb/>
The Camels were the first college<lb/>
team that East Carolina ever played,<lb/>
making this contest a trivial one.<lb/>
The matchup with Wisconsin-<lb/>
Milwaukee was moved from Friday<lb/>
at 7:30 p.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday due<lb/>
to the ACC Tournament, being<lb/>
played on both nights<lb/>
6-8 Pirate Mike Gibson (52) rejects opponents' shot<lb/>
Wild And Crazy ACC Tournament Expected<lb/>
The following is a satirical look at<lb/>
how the ACC tournament should<lb/>
Would) turn out.<lb/>
It's ACC tournament :ime again<lb/>
and as the saying goes, "This shapes<lb/>
up as the greatest one ever<lb/>
No doubt, this season's tourney is<lb/>
the most wide-open in league<lb/>
history. Any one of six teams, all of<lb/>
which have been ranked for most of<lb/>
the season, could come away the<lb/>
winner.<lb/>
N.C. State, Virginia, North<lb/>
Carolina, Maryland, Clemson or<lb/>
Duke all have an excellent chance to<lb/>
be the team cutting down the nets at<lb/>
11:00 Saturday night.<lb/>
How should it all turn out? Let's<lb/>
take it game-by-game until we have<lb/>
a winner.<lb/>
The tourney opener (Thursday 1<lb/>
p.m.) pits second-seeded and<lb/>
nationally-ranked UNC versus<lb/>
seventh-seeded Wake Forest. First<lb/>
of all, don't count the Deacons out.<lb/>
The game should begin for the<lb/>
Heels much like their last one<lb/>
against Duke ended. North<lb/>
Carolina will literally dominate<lb/>
play, jumping to a commanding<lb/>
first half lead.<lb/>
Senior Tar Heels Mike O'Koren<lb/>
and Rich Yonaker get so excited<lb/>
that they literally run in circles<lb/>
around the Greensboro Coliseum<lb/>
playing surface. This upsets Wake<lb/>
coach Carl Tacy so that he gets head<lb/>
spins and must be taken via stret-<lb/>
cher to the locker room. UNC leads<lb/>
at the half 48-26.<lb/>
The hotdogging by O'Koren and<lb/>
Yonaker so infuriates Tacy that he<lb/>
inserts Frank Johnson into the<lb/>
Wake lineup in the second half, kill-<lb/>
ing all chances for the senior guard<lb/>
to return and play next season.<lb/>
With Johnson, Wake makes a<lb/>
truly remarkable comeback as UNC<lb/>
coach Dean Smith benches both<lb/>
Yonaker and O'Koren.<lb/>
With the game tied 90-90 Wake<lb/>
has the ball at its own end with four<lb/>
seconds left on the clock. A<lb/>
desperation pass by the Deacons hits<lb/>
the Coliseum scoreboard and<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
Chandler<lb/>
bounds into the Tar Heel basket,<lb/>
killing the Wake rally and giving<lb/>
Carolina a 92-90 win.<lb/>
The 3:00 contest features<lb/>
Maryland and Georgia Tech. Tech<lb/>
gets the opening tap and holds the<lb/>
ball until the last few seconds, when<lb/>
a last second shot by Lenny Horton<lb/>
misses. The halftime score is 0-0.<lb/>
The Terps get the ball at the<lb/>
beginning of the second half and<lb/>
score quickly as Albert King ignites<lb/>
the crowd with a 360 degree dunk.<lb/>
Maryland leads 2-0.<lb/>
Tech decides to hold for a tie.<lb/>
With two seconds left Horton drives<lb/>
and misses a wide-open layup as<lb/>
Maryland comes away with a thrill-<lb/>
ing 2-0 decision.<lb/>
The 7 p.m. game matches Duke<lb/>
and N.C. State. The Blue Devils<lb/>
start out like the Dukes of old, surg-<lb/>
ing to a 22-6 lead behind the scoring<lb/>
and rebounding of Gene Banks and<lb/>
Mike Gminski.<lb/>
All the momentum is in Duke's<lb/>
favor until the Pack's Hawkeye<lb/>
Whitney drives through the middle<lb/>
of the Devil zone. Gminski prepares<lb/>
to block his tenth shot of the game<lb/>
when he suddenly sneezes. W hitney<lb/>
slams the shot home and connects<lb/>
on a free throw for a three-point<lb/>
play.<lb/>
State now has momentum and<lb/>
catches up. Duke is still in it until<lb/>
late in the second half when Devil<lb/>
forward Kenny Dennard is knocked<lb/>
senseless by a flying elbow from the<lb/>
Pack's Chuck Nevitt. State wins<lb/>
82-75 and Nevitt gets the Holly<lb/>
Farms Chicken Award.<lb/>
The final first round game pits<lb/>
Clemson against Virginia. Cavalier<lb/>
center Ralph Sampson nearly kills<lb/>
his team's chances when he collects<lb/>
his third foul after playing only 45<lb/>
seconds. Clemson takes advantage<lb/>
of this and leads at the half 42-25.<lb/>
Sampson returns in the second<lb/>
half to cheers of "Ralph who?"<lb/>
from Tiger fans. Sampson answers<lb/>
them with a 30-point, 20-rebound<lb/>
and 12-blocked shot second half<lb/>
performance as Virginia rallies for a<lb/>
75-70 victory.<lb/>
The UNC-NCSU second round<lb/>
game is a real classic. The teams<lb/>
literally trade buckets the entire first<lb/>
half and are tied 40-40 at intermis-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
Carolina scores quickly in the se-<lb/>
cond half and . following a State<lb/>
miss, has the ball and a 42-40 lead<lb/>
with 19 minutes remaining. Dean<lb/>
Smith calls for four corners at this<lb/>
time.<lb/>
After watching this nonsense for<lb/>
ten minutes. State coach Norm<lb/>
Sloan, who is headed to Florida next<lb/>
season, yells to Smith "Listen you<lb/>
idiot, this is my last tournament. If<lb/>
you keep this up, I'll go down look-<lb/>
ing like a fool<lb/>
Smith replies, "Yeah, I know<lb/>
Nothing changes as the Heels gain a<lb/>
42-40 win.<lb/>
The Maryland-Virginia matchup<lb/>
is a dunking spectacular. Virginia's<lb/>
?ampson and Maryland's King and<lb/>
Buck Williams literally set the<lb/>
crowd afire.<lb/>
The second half is all Maryland as<lb/>
the quick Terrapin guards literally<lb/>
steal the game from the slower<lb/>
backcourtmen of the Cavaliers.<lb/>
Virginia coach Terry Holland is<lb/>
ejected from the game when he<lb/>
curses at Terrapin guard Reggie<lb/>
Jackson.<lb/>
"I don't care Holland says<lb/>
after the game. "Nobody calls my<lb/>
players a bunch of slow, no-playing<lb/>
white boys<lb/>
The championship game between<lb/>
North Carolina and Mai viand s<lb/>
tight and exciting. Terrapin<lb/>
Williams and Tar Heel 1 Wood<lb/>
play superb!).<lb/>
The game ends in the fifth o<lb/>
time when, with no time remaining<lb/>
and the score tied 124-124.<lb/>
Maryland coach lefty Dricsseil is<lb/>
called for a techimcal I V N<lb/>
James Worthy enters the game, c<lb/>
and all, and sinks the winning free<lb/>
throw.<lb/>
Later in the evening. Driesseil is<lb/>
rumoured to be on the phone long<lb/>
distance to California. Reliable<lb/>
sources sav he is talking with ev<lb/>
l CLA Bruin coaching legend lohn<lb/>
Wooden.<lb/>
"John, I'll be damned sav<lb/>
Lefty. "I guess ihere reallv is no<lb/>
such thing as a'LCI of the East<lb/>
It's got me worried, too. I think m<lb/>
hairline is reeeeding<lb/>
ttricsseU<lb/>
1<lb/>
? <lb/>
<pb facs="00057251_0009"/><lb/>
THF EAST CAROLINIAN H BJU M ? ?, !? 9<lb/>
Softball Entries Requested<lb/>
IM Roundball Playoffs Begin<lb/>
(ieorge Maynor on the move<lb/>
Photo by CHAP GURLEY<lb/>
Atkins Resi<lb/>
<lb/>
f<lb/>
UNAKI ES<lb/>
( II M)1 IK<lb/>
 1. 11 r I? I ?111 ? r<lb/>
c arolina<lb/>
spoils In-<lb/>
Dire c t o 1<lb/>
ias i esign<lb/>
1 the<lb/>
o enter<lb/>
had serv-<lb/>
sports<lb/>
: t o i at<lb/>
ked in<lb/>
ation<lb/>
while<lb/>
a i<lb/>
He i a 1972<lb/>
or of<lb/>
trk, Md.<lb/>
he will join The<lb/>
Meredith-Webb Prin-<lb/>
ting Co. of Burlington,<lb/>
N.C. He will serve as a<lb/>
salesman.<lb/>
Yesterday Atkins<lb/>
said that he had already<lb/>
been signed two ac-<lb/>
counts and would begin<lb/>
work on them im-<lb/>
mediateh after leaving<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
He also mentioned<lb/>
that Meredith-Webb<lb/>
a as interested in im-<lb/>
proving sports-related<lb/>
accounts, such as sear-<lb/>
books and game pro-<lb/>
grams. This is where<lb/>
Atkins comes in.<lb/>
Cain. "He will be dif-<lb/>
ficult to replace, but we<lb/>
certainly wish him and<lb/>
his family the best in<lb/>
the future<lb/>
Several names have<lb/>
been mentioned as<lb/>
possible replacements<lb/>
for Atkins, including<lb/>
the man Atkins replac-<lb/>
ed. Ken Smith.<lb/>
Also linked with the<lb/>
job is UNC-W SID<lb/>
John Justice along with<lb/>
Durham Morning<lb/>
Herald staffer and<lb/>
ECU graduate John<lb/>
Evans.<lb/>
Bv<lb/>
R1CKI GLIARMIS<lb/>
Intramural C orrespondeni<lb/>
The Intramural<lb/>
Basketball season is<lb/>
coming to a climax this<lb/>
week with the divi-<lb/>
sional playoffs being<lb/>
played in Memorial<lb/>
Gym and Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum.<lb/>
Fraternity playoffs<lb/>
begin Wednesday, In-<lb/>
dependent men on Fri-<lb/>
day and Residence Hall<lb/>
men playoffs also on<lb/>
Friday.<lb/>
Sorority and<lb/>
Residence Hall women<lb/>
are set to begin play on<lb/>
Friday, with the In-<lb/>
dependent opening<lb/>
round on Friday, as<lb/>
well.<lb/>
The quarterfinals of<lb/>
the Independent and<lb/>
Residence Hall men<lb/>
and Fraternities will be<lb/>
played Sunday. The<lb/>
quarterfinals of all<lb/>
women's divisions will<lb/>
also be played on Sun-<lb/>
day. All divisional<lb/>
finals will be played<lb/>
Monday, March 2.<lb/>
Softball<lb/>
Get your teams<lb/>
together early to see<lb/>
what your players look<lb/>
like. The pre-season<lb/>
softball tournament<lb/>
will include 64 men<lb/>
teams and 16 women's<lb/>
teams.<lb/>
Entries are accepted<lb/>
on a first come, first<lb/>
serve basis, and a five<lb/>
dollar entry fee per<lb/>
team will be required to<lb/>
cover the cost of balls<lb/>
and umpires.<lb/>
Play begins on<lb/>
Thursday, March 20<lb/>
and continues through<lb/>
Sunday, March 23.<lb/>
ASA rules with In-<lb/>
tramural modifications<lb/>
will be used. Sign up<lb/>
now in Room 204<lb/>
Memorial Gym.<lb/>
Sports Club<lb/>
Three new sports<lb/>
clubs are being organiz-<lb/>
ed for participation<lb/>
during the 1980-81<lb/>
school year. The new<lb/>
clubs will be Weight<lb/>
Lifting, Women's Soc-<lb/>
cer, and Physical<lb/>
Fitness. The Sports<lb/>
Clubs have been a suc-<lb/>
cessful facet of In-<lb/>
tramurals, especially<lb/>
with the addition of<lb/>
these three new clubs.<lb/>
Roller Hockey<lb/>
Roller Hockey<lb/>
playoffs began Mon-<lb/>
day, Feb. 25 with tour-<lb/>
nament competition<lb/>
continuing throughout<lb/>
the week. All this ac-<lb/>
tion can be seen bet-<lb/>
ween 3:30 p.m. and<lb/>
6:30 p.m. at Twin<lb/>
Rinks.<lb/>
Swim Meet<lb/>
Don't forget the In-<lb/>
tramural Swim Meet<lb/>
being held todas at<lb/>
Minges Pool. The meet<lb/>
will begin at 6 p.m.<lb/>
with entries being ac-<lb/>
cepted until 5:30 today<lb/>
You still have a little<lb/>
time left, so hurry on<lb/>
out to Minges tor the<lb/>
Swim Meet!<lb/>
IM council<lb/>
The next Intramural<lb/>
Council meeting has<lb/>
been scheduled tor<lb/>
March 6 at 4 p.m. in<lb/>
104 Memorial Ct ru<lb/>
pressed a<lb/>
ange" as<lb/>
for leaving<lb/>
n iust time<lb/>
o on to<lb/>
else he<lb/>
enjoyed m<lb/>
b si an op-<lb/>
;ame along<lb/>
id to jump<lb/>
ins to serv e<lb/>
1I Nil) until<lb/>
10 Afterwards<lb/>
"1 wasn't necessarily<lb/>
hired as a specialist in<lb/>
that area he said,<lb/>
"but they have told me<lb/>
that I'll be used a lot<lb/>
?here<lb/>
The search for a suc-<lb/>
cessor for Atkins will<lb/>
begin immediately says<lb/>
ICC Athletic Director<lb/>
Bill Cain.<lb/>
We recognize the<lb/>
dedication with which<lb/>
Walt Atkins served<lb/>
East Carolina said<lb/>
NEW YORK<lb/>
and<lb/>
PHILADELPHIA TRIP<lb/>
Ma 10-17<lb/>
Total Gut $256.54<lb/>
n unusual ?,rt,miK  we V York in a littrnt persjKv.ivf<lb/>
Drsignit -liMttMuim. lashMW designers. mwvhancW filers Ji<lb/>
( .rnw ti Village. Bmadwav museums, department store. .n) in<lb/>
W rtrkl Trade Center.<lb/>
 guided lour through Philadelphia- Renaissance Downtown. <lb/>
?.iMt 1.1 Winterthur. the most unusual ndtat'mn ol rooms in ihis i-oun-<lb/>
tr .<lb/>
DON'T MISS THE ACTION ft<lb/>
, I ? 11 X. Baskets. Runs And MORE<lb/>
Read Sports In The East Carolinian<lb/>
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School "t H?mi<lb/>
Call 757-6929<lb/>
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Deadline: Man h (1<lb/>
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JASON'S OFFERS DELICIOUS<lb/>
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t<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057251_0010"/><lb/>
- V<lb/>
1 ?<lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 26, 1980<lb/>
Banquet Set<lb/>
Members of East<lb/>
Carolina's 1979 foot-<lb/>
ball team will be<lb/>
honored at the school's<lb/>
annual football ban-<lb/>
quet, March 5 at the<lb/>
American Legion Hall<lb/>
in Greenville.<lb/>
The Pirates, 7-3-1<lb/>
last fall, led the na-<lb/>
tion's colleges in<lb/>
rushing at 368.5 yards<lb/>
per game, and finished<lb/>
second in total offense<lb/>
at 475.3 yards. Also,<lb/>
the 34.5 points scored<lb/>
per game made the<lb/>
Pirates third in the<lb/>
NCAA in that<lb/>
category.<lb/>
Among the junior<lb/>
honorees are all-<lb/>
America guard Wayne<lb/>
Inman and halfback<lb/>
Anthony Collins, the<lb/>
No. 16 rusher in the<lb/>
country with 1,130<lb/>
yards. Linebacker Mike<lb/>
Brewington, the top<lb/>
tackier for the second<lb/>
straight year, and cor-<lb/>
nerback Charlie Carter,<lb/>
will be among the<lb/>
seniors honored.<lb/>
In addition to the<lb/>
seniors who will receive<lb/>
special recognition, all<lb/>
1 e 11 e r m e n will be<lb/>
recognized, and special<lb/>
awards will be made to<lb/>
numerous players.<lb/>
ACC Tourney<lb/>
Predictions<lb/>
CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
Heiden In Limelight<lb/>
JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
DUKE<lb/>
DAVE ODOM<lb/>
ECU Head Basketball Coach<lb/>
DUKE<lb/>
JIM WOODS<lb/>
"Voice of the Pirates"<lb/>
MARYLAND<lb/>
ART CHANSKY<lb/>
Durham Morning Herald Sports Editor<lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
A.J. CARR<lb/>
News and Observer Staffer<lb/>
N.C. STATE<lb/>
RICH BRENNER<lb/>
WRAL-TV Sportscaster<lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
WOODY PEELE<lb/>
Daily Reflector Sports Editor<lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
By DANNY CUFFE<lb/>
Staff Wriler<lb/>
East Carolina's men<lb/>
won their second<lb/>
straight Seahawk In-<lb/>
vitational swim meet at<lb/>
Wilmington Saturday,<lb/>
and the Pirate women<lb/>
placed second.<lb/>
ECU's men, led by<lb/>
double winners Bill<lb/>
Fehling (50 and 100<lb/>
free), were on top from<lb/>
the first day and rolled<lb/>
up 565 points to<lb/>
William and Mary's<lb/>
342 and host UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington's 332.<lb/>
After getting off to a<lb/>
slow start, the Lady<lb/>
Pirates, led by Tammy<lb/>
Putnam's wins in the<lb/>
100, 200, and 400 In-<lb/>
dividual Medleys, mov-<lb/>
ed from fourth place to<lb/>
second with 448 points.<lb/>
Virginia Tech's women<lb/>
placed first with 584.5<lb/>
points.<lb/>
The Pirate tankers<lb/>
also received stong per-<lb/>
formances from Ted<lb/>
and Doug Nieman who<lb/>
won the 500 freestyle<lb/>
and the 400 individual<lb/>
medley. Cindy Sailor<lb/>
By WILLGRIMSLEY<lb/>
AP Special Correspondent<lb/>
A last reflection on<lb/>
the XIII Winter Olym-<lb/>
pic Games ? a fort-<lb/>
night that began with<lb/>
confusion and frustra-<lb/>
tion and ended on a<lb/>
note of elation and<lb/>
triumph:<lb/>
The incongruity of<lb/>
the Games' No.l hero,<lb/>
Eric Heiden, a garland<lb/>
of five gold medals<lb/>
around his neck, hailed<lb/>
as the greatest Winter<lb/>
Games' performer of<lb/>
all time:<lb/>
"I don't like to be in<lb/>
the limelight he says.<lb/>
"I was happier when I<lb/>
was just a plain person<lb/>
? just me<lb/>
Adds his mother,<lb/>
Nancy: "It galls us all<lb/>
that people assume<lb/>
we've raised our<lb/>
children with the sole<lb/>
thought of winning<lb/>
gold medals Do we<lb/>
really want to idolize<lb/>
won the 50 butterfly. peopIe that one.<lb/>
The Pirates also ex- dimensional? Our<lb/>
celled in the relays. The chiidren are not im-<lb/>
men won the 400 ed b the word<lb/>
S2,lZind.5f.?X) 'Olympics' or by<lb/>
themselves<lb/>
noto DyKIH bLUAN<lb/>
Marcia Girven goes for two<lb/>
ECU Swimmers<lb/>
Capture Tourney<lb/>
800 free relays. The<lb/>
ECU women placed<lb/>
first in the 800 free<lb/>
relay.<lb/>
ECU coach Ray<lb/>
Scharf was "pleased<lb/>
with the teams perfor-<lb/>
mances, especially the<lb/>
women, who defeated<lb/>
Old Dominion and<lb/>
William and Mary<lb/>
Scharf added that<lb/>
"the men's win was ex-<lb/>
pected due to the lack<lb/>
of competition.<lb/>
However, it was.a real<lb/>
accomplishment for the<lb/>
girls to beat Old Domi-<lb/>
nion, who are in Divi-<lb/>
sion I, and William and<lb/>
Mary, who finished 6th<lb/>
nationally in Division<lb/>
II<lb/>
The next event for<lb/>
the men's team, who<lb/>
are classified Division<lb/>
 is the Eastern<lb/>
Rcgionals in Morgan-<lb/>
town, West Virginia on<lb/>
March 5-8.<lb/>
DELBERI<lb/>
McCLINTON<lb/>
He sings with the sensibility of a<lb/>
man who has already witnessed<lb/>
more than he cares to tell<lb/>
The Rolling Stone<lb/>
OPTICIANS<lb/>
option<lb/>
aooaation<lb/>
of amenca<lb/>
CONTACT LENSES<lb/>
Soflens<lb/>
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Semi Soft $110 Hard $1.05<lb/>
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AVAILABLE<lb/>
CLEAR-VUE OPTICIANS<lb/>
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HYSICIANS QUADRANGLE<lb/>
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Greenville Store Only<lb/>
ADJACENT TO EAST<lb/>
CAftOUMA EYE CUNtC<lb/>
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752-1446<lb/>
OFFICE HOURS<lb/>
9 A.M5:30 P.M.<lb/>
MON.TUES.THURS.FRI.<lb/>
9 A.M. -1P.M.<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
10 Discount To E.C.U.<lb/>
Students On Glasses.<lb/>
r<lb/>
9<lb/>
If this be true, why<lb/>
sacrifice the years of<lb/>
dedication and training<lb/>
to become an Olympic<lb/>
star? Why hire a New<lb/>
York lawyer-agent to<lb/>
reap the commercial<lb/>
benefits?<lb/>
Heiden's five golds<lb/>
represent a remarkable,<lb/>
perhaps an un-<lb/>
touchable feat but on a<lb/>
per capita basis it fails<lb/>
to outshine the four<lb/>
medals picked by Han-<lb/>
ni and Andreas Wenzel<lb/>
from the wee prin-<lb/>
cipality of Liechtens-<lb/>
tein.<lb/>
Hanni won two golds<lb/>
and a silver, and<lb/>
brother Andreas a<lb/>
silver in Alpine skiing.<lb/>
Heiden represents a<lb/>
rich, powerful nation<lb/>
of 230 million people.<lb/>
You can cram the<lb/>
populace of Liechtens-<lb/>
tein, which is 16 miles<lb/>
long and eight miles<lb/>
wide, inside Madison<lb/>
Square Garden.<lb/>
Disappointment has<lb/>
no boundaries. The big<lb/>
television eye reached<lb/>
across the ocean to spy<lb/>
on Russians, watching<lb/>
the USA-USSR ice<lb/>
hockey game from out-<lb/>
side Moscow store win-<lb/>
dows.<lb/>
When Mike Eru-<lb/>
zione, the U.S. captain<lb/>
from Boston Universi-<lb/>
ty, sneaked in the winn-<lb/>
ing goal for the 4-3<lb/>
American victory,<lb/>
Soviet spectators walk-<lb/>
ed away in disbelief and<lb/>
disgust.<lb/>
What is the Russian<lb/>
equivalent of the<lb/>
Yankee "raspberry?"<lb/>
Said Tass, the of-<lb/>
ficial Soviet news agen-<lb/>
cy: "Perhaps we have<lb/>
stayed with the same<lb/>
team too long. We<lb/>
should use younger<lb/>
men<lb/>
It is the inbred fault<lb/>
of a state-governed<lb/>
society. It happened to<lb/>
the USSR track and<lb/>
field team in the<lb/>
mid-1960s. An<lb/>
overhaul took place.<lb/>
We can expect the same<lb/>
in Russian hockey.<lb/>
The most exciting<lb/>
race of the Games was<lb/>
staged in semi-privacy<lb/>
on Mount Van<lb/>
Hoevenberg ? the 15<lb/>
kilometer (around 10<lb/>
miles) cross-country<lb/>
won by Thomas<lb/>
Wassberg of Sweden<lb/>
over Finland's bearded<lb/>
giant, Juha Mieto.<lb/>
Wassburg won by the<lb/>
length of a finger, a<lb/>
margin it would have<lb/>
been impossible to<lb/>
decipher a few years<lb/>
ago before modern<lb/>
electronics could<lb/>
measure time to the,<lb/>
100th of a second.<lb/>
Our gold medal of<lb/>
extraordinary merit<lb/>
goes to Arturo Kinch of<lb/>
Costa Rica, who was<lb/>
his team's onlv com-<lb/>
petitor, doubling also<lb/>
as flag-bearer, trainer,<lb/>
counselor and national<lb/>
delegate.<lb/>
Largely overlooked<lb/>
in the awe over Eric<lb/>
Heiden's five medals,<lb/>
the giant-killing heroics<lb/>
of the U.S. ice hockey<lb/>
kids and the climactic<lb/>
glamour of the figure-<lb/>
skating finals were the<lb/>
gold medal victories of<lb/>
Ingcmar Stcnmark of<lb/>
Sweden and Annemarie<lb/>
Procll Moser o<lb/>
Austria.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057251_0011"/>
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